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Herwich Fulletie and Goufied, 114 YEARS OLD. r:‘mu ..fh.w. 1Zc & week; Soc & nt at Norwich, ntered a: the Postoffics an. as second-class matter. Telephome Calla: Rutletin Bust 1 Falslin eaitgnal S5oem. W Billeiin Job Otfice. 35-8. Willimantic Offiee, Reom 3. Muremy Butldinz. Telephone. 210. Nonwich, Wednesday, March 9, 1819, The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest eir- culation of any paper in Commeeticut, and from three times larger than that Norwieh. 1t aine towns. ome hundred and sixty- Sve posteffice districts, and forty- ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold im every town amd om all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Commeeticut, 1901, average .. Martch 5... proudest record is hundreds of millions in her whaling days e fortunes which, when £ ceased to be a profitable in- made the foundation upon great manufactories were omes from New Bedford being re- | News the whale fishery Is at ved—that nine vessels are now being for service in that city. Sixty years ago whaling vessels went from New Bedford by the hundreds. ! sey made long voyages, had many ivantages and developed men of splendid fibre. but even the present high prices of sperm ‘ofl and whale- me with chances of ambergris will not restore this pecullar glory of the | o's past. | New EBedford has now more millions nvested manufacturing than she ever had in whaling, and is annually adding milll to her business and housands to her population. New Bedford has a distinctive ad- antage owing to the nature of her at- mosphere. in producing fine cottons. and ¢ not only making that city a competitor with Fall River but giv cial fame which is |il!l)" n: ere for investment water front with | NDERPAID YOUNG MEN. keeper Coleman, who looted a rnational rank of $140,000, is ed in some circles as an under- | =& and overtrusted victim of a dis- The Rev. Herbert S. | ster of Boston, condemn this system | 1day evening: ni young men to posi- 2nd responsibility, and them,” said Rev. Mr. equally guilty with the 2e steals the money and In other ways goes wrong, and I would n state prison. vank directors of the Cam- bank who chose George man and underpaid him at a salary of less than $12 a week, have an ponsibility with him for the sction of that institution. These are days when we worship moner and people imagine that they + obtain -happiness unless in pos- session of all the good things In life— achts and such things. you want to curse any under twenty-one years of age give him $10,000, an automobile, yachts and pink pajfamas. You may think that you are making & man, but you're turning out a fool. “Poverty is the best taing that can come to the young man of today. It will then be necessary for him to work nd hard work will make him an hon- est man. The future bank presidents, high government officials and men of mote are not our modern American boys. but the sons of what we some- times call ‘dagoes’ and Russien Jews. Soms of the suns of America will some ¥ ©e polishing the shoes of the boys who are mow polishing theirs.” Thie is plain tatk; it may be s2id to be slightly exaggerated, but 1t canmot be called unwholesome. There is too much transferring of responsi- biMity in this age of ours and punish- ing the man who is least responsible for his violation of law. Why should an automobile driver be taken from a car for cverspeeding and be fined when the owner of the car sits thers commanding him to do it, or a bartender be fined for keeping open after hours when the man back of him requires it? These things are common ut they are not right. | are TWhen we learn that a natural pond capable of < ring one thousand zallons of hot water per minute has een frozen over, we kmow what kind »f 2 winter Montana has had. It is not so strange that & mob at the south was led by 2 negro to lynch = megro, for it only shows he is capa- ble of following anywhere his white Srother may lead. The Beef barons think 2 country that can pay $15,000,000 for & battle- complaining hip doesn’t look well @t the price of steak. ought to kmow that the | Mr. Pinchot bes: evider fore apy inguir Bocy is what kaows, not wha 2% he March is as it it would not have us think it 4id net hold one more snowstorm for us. RAILROAD REGULATION. Fhe era of railroad regulation which ‘the country entered upon two or three years ago is siowly coming to an end, for it is being discovered that pros- perity is not advanced by too much political interference with the great carrying of the country. There have been 80 bills entered in eongress this year for the purpose of regulat- ing the reilroads of the country, a few of them doubtless entered in the in- terests of the people, and the remain- der in the interest of politicians who hope to benefit by menacing the busi- ness of these great corporations. It must be conceded that 80 separate laws are ten times as many as would be likely to be required to provide for the proper conduct of raflway affairs in this eountry. While the railroads are not wholly blameless for this condition of affairs, it is certainly time that the war upon them should cease and rational means be taken to get the concessions which are just, It does not take a philoso- |, “I!” cried his wife, indignantly. pher to discover that the political med- | “Why, T haven’t touched it!" Qling with raflroads, is far from being | “Well, if it comes to that, neither wise, and that there is a chance to | nays, | Totorted Morway, emphat- succeed in obtaining every just con- cession with less Dbills than with such a mighty number. The Railway Bus- iness association is trying to get these many measures formed into one sane and “helpful dlll, to have the law es- tablished and then to be left to pur- sue their business profitably and peace- ably as are other great industries of the country. There is no semse in such a shower of bills, a large portion of which were never designed to be- come law, TROUT FISHERMEN NOT EN- THUSIASTIC. Fishermen are not very enthusias- tic over the prospects of a good trout scason this year. In fact, most of the old-timers figure the coming spring will be one of the poorest in years. It is all on account of the very protract- ed dry season last f: Nearly all of the favorite little spots along the ‘brooks hereabouts went dry In the au- tumn and the beds of the streams lay baking In the sun for weeks. Even the Gceper holes along the larger brooke dropped down until they were nothing but mudholes. The trout had hard times right weather. As a matter of fact, there wasn't much water when freeze time came and the brooks froze pretty well to the bottom, so even though some trout went through the hot spell, they ended their wiggles in solid ice. The summer before last was a hard one or the fish, too.—Bristol Press. The extreme drouth and hard win- ters do not tend to increass the num- ber of trout In the brooks, but the call to the angler to get his outfit ready is always urgent, and he will soon be burnishing up his rod and selecting his [ YOSH 1L voursalet L e flies for the day out In April. It takes | ajgnantiy You know I'm so_afraid | the trout till appleblossom time to|in the dark! But what could have| wake up to a good fly appetite, but|taken it? I'm afraid to stay here the anglers wake up weeks before time | alone today and get a few. The brooks hereabouts are understocked and overfished, and if the only compensation was the trout taken the sport would be ahandoned, The jovs of spring are In the air as well as in the brook, and it does the| i shi 3 fr. Cudahy’s way of punishing a fisherman Zo0d to be out even thoush | perndions. friend s not ihe modern T way. but it ought to prove to be ef- e foctive. REILLY ON “THE FOURTH.” “Whether I favor a safe and sane Fourth of July depends upon what is meant by that kind of an observance. If it means cutting out the firecrack- ers, cannon, and pistol firing and other things that have Dbecome a part of the great national holiday, I am op- posed 1o it; if it means putting a dam- per on the ardor of Young America, T am opposed to it. I believe we can stand the racket for one day in the year and let young and old enjoy| , Re-Districtine the State. themselves."—Mayor Reilly of Meri,| ‘The recenc conference of republican den. party leaders from the Sscond con- it ossiona ct, at which certain aloubtless @ majority will agree with | Fircemants are supposed to have been yor Reilly In his expressed view,| made touching the political future of | and we doubt if the governor himself will greatly object. Ardor is always in keeping with the great and glorious day of independence, but it should be ardor that is governed by safety and by due regard for the rights of the sick and the aged. No one wants to spoil the fun of the small boy: no one ants him to go around with a'long face on July 4. On the otber hand, no one wants the small boy to spoil him- self, or to ruin his face by shooting oft 1ts ' various necessary attachments, The trend of the times is not for a Sunday-go-to-meeting observance, but instead for one that shall be safe and sane, and this is very possible with- out jeopardizing life, limb and prop- erty. What s wanted, we believe, is less’ of powder and high explosives, and therefore less of danger and use- less extravagance, but plenty of well- tempered fun, frolic and freedom.—An- sonia Sentinel. Mavor Reilly of Meriden shouM recognize that enjoyment as well as Itberty has its limits. The enjoyments which border upon peril are like the liberties which border upon infringe- ments, at the limit. That which is. extra-hazardous and modern does not belong to the Fourth of July, neither does that enjoyment of the individual which is a tantalization of other in- dividuals. Everybody wants the day celebrated right, and the noise of it is not the objection, but the indecen- cies and perils. EDITORIAL NOTES. Heappy thought for today: The women who have many children have fewest whims. The poets of New York have formed 2 union. It cannot be on wages so it must be on hope. A great crop of peaches from Geor- gia is expected. If the frost king did cavort there a little. Some men are so shocked by crime that they would have it covered up instead of uncovered. —_—— It is more than probable that Com- mander Peary's fame is secure, if it is not O.-K.ed by congress. If Roosevelt does not wake up Khar- toum it will be the first town that ever kept placid during his presence. Poriggdoes not often have o chance to look down or mutton In the mar- t, but that is lis privilege in 1910. York newstoy hecause of his @ politeness is now booked jllege education. Grace always ockefeller may scheme for laying at foundtations, but it does not look if he had saved his own cormer- stone. #ne Philadelphia strike is so much greater than the rest that the 47 other | net had turned the house upside down use talking, through the cold | ¥, and concealed Congressman Tilson and Colonel Shep- ard, appears to have Young Mrs. Morway stood on the bottom ~stair _surveying the library table at her left. On it still reposed the five-pound box which she and her husband had left there the night be- fore filled to the brim with the finest chocolates. She had eaten only one or two and Harold had eaten mone. Now the box was absolutely, utterly empty. If that was Harold’s idea of 3 joke it was a very foolish one! She turned as she heard him coming down. “What did you do with the candy?” she inquired, with some frri- tation. Young Morway blinked in surprise. “Candy ?” he echoed vaugely. His eves traveled to the box. Sceine that it was empty he whistled in surprise. Then he brightened and laughed. “Oh, I see,” he remarked. “That's a good joke, Janet. Where'd you put it?” They stared at each other unbeliev- ingly. Then Mrs. Morway tossed her head and went in to breakfast. If Harold really thought it was funny, let him keep it up. She would find the candy when she straightened up the house. As for Morway. he felt #hat he was being trifled with. several davs, the five k> The constraint lasted during which neither mentioned mysterfous disappearance of pounds of perfectly good candy. without finding the hidden sweets. ‘Then she brought home & bag of mo- lasses chips and the next morning when she came downstairs, Harold with ber, they both gasped. The mo- lasses chips bag was empty. Thereup- on they made common cause of the trouble. “There isn’t another the house but you and me! quavered, almost tearfully. ‘Even the maid s away on a visit. There isn’t a thing distured or taken but the candy and every door and window is locked, as it should be. There is no Harold, a living _soul in Janet we've got ghost! ‘Nonsense!” Morway . though he said till, the candy's gone. puzzling. “It's ghastly!” announced his wife, setting down the coffee pot with a little shivery bang. “Harold, did you ever walk in vour sleep?” » declared her husband: if a ghost didn't take the| must have done it” Mrs. Morway insisted. “You've probably dug a hole in the coal pile down cellar it. Please won't you shovel off some of the coal and see & hastened to nervously. t's decided- it 111 not!” said her husband, firm- 1y. “T'q rather endure a ghost. Be- sides, I tell you I never do anything | when T sleep except sleep! Maybe The Morway's candy ghost sprung {had returned home at midnight into immense popularity friends, who insisted on a ghost but the Morways objected. They said if it was a ghost they Gidm’t want to see it, because somebody would have hysterics, They Wwere sure it was a ‘hol’t‘bbinule after leaving candy on the 1 table they tied strings to and the other ends to the their wi e the brass rods of the bed to dis; sleep-walking theory. But the candy disay d. However, as Tommy Taylor pointed out, was noth- ing to prevent a clever sleep-walker from untying a knot in a string and Inter tying 1t again, Two or three weeks later still an- other box nearly full of candy was| emptied during the night, The Mor. ways could not resist leaving the bait exposed. They en so many thrills that they had developed an ap- petite for them. The question of the ghost had turned. into @ hing of se- rious consequence: Not a serap of the missing candy was to be found In the house. Even the coal pile had been explored by a boy spec employed for the serfvce.” “There’s no use beating about the bush,” Tommy Taylor said at ome of the Morway's Sunday evening teas which had grown _terribly popular because everybody talked solely about the ghost. “You've got a sea serpent in the house! No mouse could get away with five pounds of chococlates at_one fell swoop!” “Besides, there aren’t any mic said Mrs. Morway, with finality, There were shadows under her eyes. I shall g0 crazy if we don’t find out who— Wwhat does i The state of nervousness in which the Morways were tangled made the tension of family life too great. In spite of everything each suspected the other. Finally, Mrs. Morway _went away on a visit and the night before she left a candy box remaining below stairs was emptled as were the others. “Tm afraid to leave you alone in this house!” she quavered, as she and Morway started for the train. “Har- old—did you forget and leave that plate of chocolate fudge I made for you out on the table? I told you to put it inside the sideboard!™ “T forgot #.” confessed Morway nervously. ‘Oh, it'll be all righ The first letter Mrs, Morway got from her husband stated without pre- amble that when Morway, after put- ting her on the train and spendine the rest of the evening at his cousin's, s found the fudge plate empty. “This.” he wrote, “proves that neither you nor 1 have been doing it. I am going to bait several mousetraps, and if they | don’t nail the ghost I shall purchase a bear-trap, establish a salt-lick and spread a net for the sea serpent.” Left_alone, Morway devoted himself to catching the ghost. And three days later he wired his anxious wife: “Am having the ghost stuffed and mounted and shipped to you by express. It was a rat! “I'm _glad_we've found out what it was,” Mrs. Morway says. “Still” she adds regretfully, “a ghost in the house does make such good conversation.” —Chicago New; strikes in the country are getting no notice. Senator Platt's last days were not | his best days. As a great American he was a warning rather than an ex- ample. A great many different things have been Investigated in this country, but the results have not always been what was expected. timulated inter- est'in the re-districting of the state into five congressional districts. In certain quarters. at least, it is taken for granted that after the next census the state will be re-districted. In other quarters, the suggestion is lis- tened to with a doubtful shake of the head. The Hartford Courant belongs to the hopeful class. It says: “But a new census is to be taken this vear and it is doubted that re-districting can be longer deferred.” If we are to examine this statement in the light of the history, as written for over a tneration, it carries very little con- tion with it. It has always been understanding of the United States that Connecticut. like every other state in the union, would obey the laws of the land, but It has over and over again refused to do so. When James D. Pigott was a member of the house he undertook to induce congress to force the state to obey the law, but as he was in the political minority his campaign was unsuccess- ful. Mr. Lilley, when he was a mem- bei of the state house of representa- tives from Waterbury, presented a plan which would have fairly re-dis- tricted the state In accordance with the terms of the United States law. He was unsuccessful in his undertak- ing, not because he had gerrymander- ed 'the state, which he had not done but because influential politicians were not sure how the dominant party would fare under it. At the present moment there is no assurance that the influential politiclans are any more Farm to run for their ing homes Nashville the devoted to the re-districting plan than they have ever been. They are not likely to look at the question from a moral point of view and with the sin- gle_purpose in mind of playing fair. The one great obstacle in the way of a fair and just re-districting of the state is county politics, and the sooner that is recognized the better. And vet a great boon would be given the state If the eight counties were abolished and the five congressional districts represented men.—New Ha- ven Journal-Courier. The Man Without a Country. Poor Dr. Cook! He had his MNttle blaze of glory in the eve of the world and now he is paying the penalty. An exile, flecing from the sight of his in- dignant countrymen, ashamed to face all men, he sought to hide himself amonz strangers, down bebind the bulge of the earth. But he failed. Even in Chili there were eyes to see him and fingers to point him out as th most conspicuous liar of this genera tion. Cook deceived the world, and the many community to health by Lydia E. ‘We know of no other medicine which has been so sucy, cessful in relieving the suffering of enuine testimonials, as 'has Vegetable Compound. In almost eve have been resto women, or secured so Lydia E. Pinkham's you will find women who' Pinkham's Veg- etable Compound. Almost every woman you meet has either been ll?;nefited by it, or knows some one who has. In the Pinkham L_abouto?: taining over one million one women seeking health, in which many their own si taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege many women from surgical operations. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable C clusively from roots and herbs, and is perfectly harmless, these facts or doubt the ability etable Compound to restore their health. at Lynn, Mass., are files con- undred thousand letters from openly state over ignatures that the{,have ;elgm thurdl:alth by table Compoun le Compound has saved is made ex- The reason why it is so successful is because it contains ingredients which act directly upon the female organism, restoring it to healthy and normal activity. =~ Thousands of unsolicited and genuine testimonials such as the following prove the efficiency of this simple remedy. ‘Minneapolis, Minn.:~ %I was a great sufferer from b!emnlkpne ;nublu wh!chm c:'ulodm- w&knmm jand_broken down condition Plnkh.,‘l-n v an. Bry: haul away w by hundreds. Gold Production. It is difficult to realize the extent to which the production of gold has in- creased In_recent years. figures pudlished are at the best eply approximations, but the mints of the world should be able to form tolerably accurate estimates, and these are help- ed to some extent at least by tae state- ments of production at the mines. all events there seems to be a pretty general agreement among the auth: ties that from 1492, the vear that Co- iumbus_discovered when n their families heve had | familles have moved out, leaving the timber thieves to cut and Inut and hickory logs at will—which they are said to be doing it is not surprising to léarn that, on the edges of the thinly- settled territory in which the bands of depredators work, the farmers, armed with shotguns, night.—Manchester Union. precipitated the discus- say it {{months I was a perfectly well woman. «¥ want this letter made public to show the Dbenefits to be derived from Lydia E. Pinkham's S abie Compomnd..: o Mxs. John G Moldan, 2fi5 Second St., North Minneapolis, Minn. Women who are suffering from those dis- tressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of lives from their blaz- for miles south of close of 1909, the tion in 400 years. patrol the roads at Probably the made to invest | H ville %1 | paper.—Loussville America, to 1896, | ing an snap judgment. world will not soon forget that it owes him a grudge. For the world holds it- =elf wise, and is also inclined to hero worship, and when its intelligence is decelved and its instinctive applause of a fine deed is betraved, the world likes to punish the deceiver with exquisite venegance. The repudlated explorer knows now the full meaning of the retribution he must pay. In all the earth there is no place where he may hide. The fu thest continents and the isles of the sea cannot conceal him. Wherever | clvilized men resort there will appear accusing fingers and wagging tongues. Around him will be scorn,and within Dbim, i he is the deliberate llar the worid thinke him, there will be torture and a shrinking of soul. This is a dreadful penalty to pay for any fault— the knowledge that in all the world one has no friend—Cleveland Plain Dealer. The Timber Thieves. 1f reports from Indiana are correct, that state has a pest that is nearly, if not quite, on a par with the infamous “night riders” who but lately infested some parts of the south. The Indiana pest 13 the timber thief. Specimens of this genus are reported to have ap- plied the torch to a farm building in Southern Indlana for the purpose of | driving the farmers from that region. Houses and barns on 18 farms bav lately been destroved fn thls manner, according to reports from Nashville, the seat of Brown county, into which, until lately, no railroad penetrated.. Iwas in a house they had three nickel alarm clocks. » One had lost its bell, the other its legs, the third was so clogged with »dlllt it couldn’t tell There should be clock in that house and that’s an IRONCLAD.—It’s dustiproof, it rings A new shipment just in. THE HOUSEHOL.D, The Bulletin Building, oo IRONCLAD last week where the truth. § one more alarm knockproof, it’s to beat the band. 74 Franklin Street, ONE DOSE REGULATES THE STOMACH of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- ston of standards, the entire world pro- duction of gold Nad amounted toabout $8,779,000,000. That is a sizable figure, to be sure, but it Is claimed that sta- tistics show that in the 14 ginning with 1806 and down to the new gold mined amounted to $4,610,000,000, or a trifle over 52 per cent. of the total produc- Tt appears reason- able enough to belleve that such an enormous ,increase in the quantity of the worldjs standard of money must have had some effect upon commodity prices.—Manchester Union, In Wild Chicage, The great rise in real estate values in Chicago may be accounted for ul on the theorv that a rush Is being in something that a pickpocket cannot denrive the owner he is gleneing over his news- Courier-Journal. Is Never Impulsive As long as Senator Lodge is head- inquiry there is no danger of ‘Washington Post, Indigestion, Dyspepsia, Gas, Heartburn or a Stomach Head- ache Simply Vanish—A Little Diapepsin Makes Your gest but take a question as to how long you are going to continue a sufferer from Indi- Dyspepsia stomach is merely a matter of how soon you vegin taking some Diapep- sin. It your Stomach is lacking in diges- tive power, why not help the stomach to do its work, not with drastic drugs, re-enforcement of digest agents, such as are naturally at work in_the sto People with weak stomachs should little - Diapepsin occasionally, and there will be no more Indigestion, no feeling like a lump of lead in the no heartburn, Gas on Stomach or Beiching of undi- n, a stomach, ach. Stomach Feel Fine in Five Minutes. or out-of-order eat will taste stomach and Sour risings, gested food, Headaches, Sick Stomach, and besides, what you eat will not ferment and polson your breath with nauseous odors. All these symptoms resulting from a sour, out- of-order: stomach and dyspeps generally relieved In five minutes after taking @ little Diapepsin. Go to your druggist and get a 50- cent case of Pape and you will always g0 to the table with @ hearty appetite, and what you because your intestines will be clean will know there good, and fresh, and you are not going to be any more bad nights and miserable days for you. They freshen you and make you feei like life is worth lving. Diapepsin now, We Carry in Stock a great assortment of desirable WALL PAPERS in almost every Style and Coloring. Cutout Borders, The Spring Offerings include Panel Effects for Parlor or Sitting Rooms. Beautiful Floral Patterns with Cretonnes to match. Rich Tapestries for Dining Rooms. Varnished Tiles, Etc Complete Stock Furniture, Carpets. N.S. GILBERT & SONS, 137-141 Main St. , Etc. be- Dizziness or are 100—Sheedy & Jacks The World POSITIVELY COMPLITIS CHA BROADWAY THEATRE Mon., Tues., Wed. Bar.7, 8, 9 on’s Vaudeville—10¢ oA, Dagdle Comedl NGB OF PICTURES DAILY. CHILDREN AT MATINEES Ge8 SHOWS DAILY =250, 7, 540, Dramatic Playlet JACK WINTIR Danctng ADOLFH RIN hristn. THE LAW of ilie DESERT 355 Prewented by DAVID PORTER & CO. —HEADLING— X A Contume Ohunge Artis GLING & CO., European Novelly ooth Brushes i SPEBESALE 15 cents | A GOOD VARIETY [ T0 CHOOSE FROM \ See window display. The Lee & Osgood Co. 131-133 Main Street, | NORWICH, CONN. | marddaw NOTICE Dr. Louise Franklin Miner Is now locatsd In her row ofice, Breed Hall, Roem 1 Office hours, 1 to 4 p. m. Telephone 660. aug17a has been forced upon us by the pres- sure of public approval. Hecause we know how to buy and to sell goods so satisfactorily that they absolutely fly oft our premises. Just our stirring way of keeping WINES and LIQUORS up to tho mark. We expect to stir harder than ever soon, because of the extra good value Of ‘our new stoc Come 1n before the cream's off the top. Geo. Greenberger, 47 Franklin Street, Telephone 812. Norwich, Conn. fepla Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS ? 1f #0 you should consult with me and get prices for same. Excell at reasonable prices. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, work | | 218 MAIN STREET. “Phone 370. Rose Bowling>Al_Ieys. LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. J. J. C. GTONE. Prop jani7a | | ectlid WHEN you want to put your busi. Dess befors tne public, {here is no m um better than throigh the advertis. ing columns of Tne bulletin. EED THEATRE CHARLES MeNU| LESSEE FEATURE PIOTURE: Back Among the Old Folk SUPERB RURAL STORY MISS FLORENCE WOLCO! LD SONG P COURSE OF ENTERTAINMEN Managed By Young Men’s Christian Asio’n. Wednesday, March 9th tolner, authority Locture, “On the T Tnunigrant.” Tuesday, March 20th Bostonla Ladles Orchestra (16 pie and Dr. George Clarke All of Hoston, Wednesday, April 6th Dr, 8. Parkes Cadman of ¢ gregational @hurch, F ture, “The Puritan in Tuesday, April Weber Male Quartette Elizabeth Pooler, Read Course will be given tist Church Tickets $1.75 and $1.25 for of course marod Two We 26th ot ¥ 50 MUSIC, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Temeher of Plan Central Butiding Room 42, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music Lessons given roaldence of at | the Tome of the pupil. Same method as used at Schawenka Conserva Be itn. oot11d | F. C. GEER : TUNER 122 Prospect St. Tel. 611 Norwich, Ct. A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connecticul. | 'Fhone 5185, 15 Clairmount Ave. Individuality Is What Counts In Photography. Bringing out :he real permonality, the finc joints In character, the littie trajts that make us what we rs. Toned down by the natural spirit of an artst Into perfect eccord, Not & thing of paper and pasteboard wit a ready-made look, It you want a photo of your real self, or what your friends see to iove and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, Norwich Savings Society. oppos aug1sd WM. F. BAILEY (Successor to A. T. Gerdner) Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable 12-14 Bath Street. HORSE CLIPPING A SPECIALTY. Teloplione 883. Spring Styles including the best In design and fabrics ready for inspection. The prices are reasonable and we produce yarments with style and correct. it Order "Early Easter comes on Marc! THE JOHNSON (., Merchant Tailors, 65 Chapman's Building. Broadw