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(g’rwi:i' ga,llf [4 and !!_I;nn?k?. SR 114 YEARS OLD. e Sebecription price, 12c a weeks 50c & month; $6.00 n year. Entered a: the Postoffice at Norwich Conn. as second-class matter. Telephone Caila: Bunetin Business Ofice. 480, Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 85- Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willlmantic Office, Rcom 2. Murray Building. Telephone, 210. Norwich, Friday, March 18, 1910. The Circulation ol The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest cir- culation of any paper in Eastern Connecticut, and from thif¥e to four times larger than that of aay ia Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses in Nor- wich, and read by ninmety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it ia delivered to over 500 houses, #u Putaam and Daniecls te over 1,100, and in all of these places it is considered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- mime towns, ome humdred and sixty- five pestoffice dimtricts, and forty- ome rural free delivery routes. The Bulletim is sold in every town and om all of the R. F. D. routes im E"Iler- Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901, AVETAEE -...cceeevrenens 4412 2000, avesags siepnssonsos BRG] SYMPATHETIC STRIKES ILLEGAL The United States court of appeals at Chicago has rendered a decision hat sympathy strikes are illegal, and the larger part of the citizens of Am- erica feel that the sooner this matter is taken up to the supreme court and settled forever, the better it will be for all concerned. There is involved in the issue the rights of organized labor and the rights of unorsanized labor, the rights of capital and the rights of govern- ment. This question of Individual and of corporative and communal rights is one that has been fooled with long enongh. When the rights of a few citizens annul the rights of many, and through ill conceived and unjust co- operation promise to become a menace to the government itself, the so-called rights of the few must be curbed in the interests of the many and for the well bveing of all There is neither sense mor heroism rced idleness, in destroying in- in e dustrial conditions and making de- penden of a large portion of the :ommunity and creating a condition )t disorder and lawlessness approach- ng anarchy. There is nothing about a sympa- thetic strike to commend it, for it is irrational and senselessly halts indus- tries, changes the current of trade and really acts agalnst the well being and progress of the communities in which such strikes occur. It is to be hoped that the day of all tkes is approaching en end, for in- strial peace, not industrial war, Is t counts for prosperity and good overnment A CASE IN POINT. he er from an ava- anche in Idaho on the 1st of March | vas a logical result, we are told, of | jast follles. Instead of the disaster | eine butable to natural condi- tors chargeable to unnatural onditions oduced through the ignor- | ance of the rallroad builders. This | aceident occurred in a national forest, | where by operations in building the rafiroad the forest on the slopes above | had been killed years ago and the lead timber rotted away. This made the mountainside a shute for the heavy gh altitudes when loos- | quick thaws. ern exchange very properly | “It might be werth while to inquire what were the forest conditions at the spot of the other recent snow slides. In the Alps, the maintenance intact of | | | | mountain forests has long been rized as a barrier against ava- In the Swiss, French, and Alps, larg to safegu engineering sum: ard are being ex- the valleys by of which forest on are import- the experience of might be of value to hout waiting for new count coun wi evidences here of what Kurope long ce learned. Anzhow, when these amples present themselves with of scores of lives we should not | neglect the del:iction.” DISTURBED HIS PEACE: OF MIND The -way in which the Englishmen hooted and hissed Patten, a cornerer 14 and cotton, pointed out we nce i grain o not only cct dety the gov- n may be right in conclusion that “if there were less ce of mind in the haunts of spec- ilation there would be considerable less speculation and fewer haunts’ el ey ‘The knocking member of any organ- ization §s the one who stirs the elec- tric eurrents of life. If it was not for the knocker, what a peaceful world shis weuld be, _ THE MOUND BAYOU COLONY. The Mound Bayou colony of negroes whose success has been written up for the Century magazine by Miss Lillian Tong Jones, of Griffin, Ga., has made even the defamers of the in all parts of the country sit up ahd take notice. Under the pen-name of Hiram Tong, she de- scribed how,. for nearly a score of years, 5,000 negroes have been living to themselves, commercially, indus- trially and in.every sense a colony that has come to be self sUpporting and that has grown from a cabin into a tract forty miles square. Negroes own everything: operate everything. ~The only institution in the town or colony not representing negro. capital is a Carnegie library. Slowly, but none the less effectually, the thriftless and the drones have been eliminated, -Those who remain now are bona fide, ambitionus and zeal- ous workers. The Atlanta Constitution, remark- ing upon the story, says: “It is a tradition of the southern Anglo-Saxon, whose experience, heav- en knows! has been superabundant, that the negro progresses only under the leadership of the white man. “Heretofore, the races has lacked both racial consciousness, racial ho- mogeneity and the faculty of racial initiative. “So that, in a way, the Mississippi colony upsets conceded precedent, and extends to both white and negro a new outlook upon a complicated prob- lem.” There appears to be no doubt that the negro can prove his right to rec- ognition as a man and a brother any- where if he is given an equal chance. negro raci | { PAULHAN’S TROUBLES. Paulhan, the French aviator, does not find it so easy to break away from his American obligations. He had a contract to fly in this country for seven months at $24,000 a month, and has failed utterly to make good. The Jamaica course, on Long Island, is illy adapted for flights, because of the high winds usually prevailing there and the imminent peril of being swept to sea. Crowds have gathered to wit- ness the flights, but only a flight of 200 feet has been made, Paulhan sens- ing the extreme danger of operating his machines at that point. He ex- pected to have sailed for home Thurs- day, but his manager procured from the courts an injunction on Tuesday, prohibiting Paulhan, in view of his breach of contract, from taking with him any of the four aeroplanes he brought to this country. There are in the lot two Bleriot and two Far- nam machines, With his craft tied up and Cleary threatening a damage suit for $150,000, friends tried to per- suade the Frenchman to veconsider his decision, but he appeared to be de- termined to sail on Thursday what- ever the cost or loss to himself. EDITORIAL NOTES. Guatemala has just borrowed $40,- 000,000, She takes to modern habits. There is no sentiment in this hat- pin debate, but there is always point. Chief Mullen of Boston says: “For every fire there is first a-fool!” The $10 hog has aroused the sus- picion that the $2 spring chicken is about. due, Happy thought for today: A high temper looks low-down when exploited in the courts. The meat bill and the tax bill are equal, for no householder can view either with patiencer Congress wants it understood that it cannot be hurried. Well, calm action is what we expect there. Pretty soon we shall expect to find the Sunday casualties to automobiles in the Monday papers, again, President Mudge of the Rock Island system began work as a water boy for his father’s construction gang. e = The ship-subsidy bill has more lives than a cat. It has been killed again; but it will not rest in peace, l The woman who has to depend upon her husband to button up her back has to be fairly respectful to him. If Congressman Higgins is insurging just a little, his constituents will praise rather than condemn him for it. Matt Hensen did not discover the | North pole, but he is the only man on earth who can identify the man who did. Jeffries is said to be hunting bear as a part of bis training. He can keep elear of the bear, but not of Johnson. Swanton, Vi, has just celebrated the rejuvenation of its board of trade with a bauquet. Some ocpen confes- sions do no harm If St. Patrick had a white day, the grass will be all the greener in con- sequence of it. It is the March snow that makes the lawns show up. the feminine taste for styles, it ‘would not en would like style of hus- Considering cha of 2 the roclaimed Goc Perl LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. A Skit from Mr. Miller. is either the latter Fditor: How with could you? Your your long editorial | vs in the week an xcept during divine | 10 dispute! Bu rdinary plug writer | oop and festoon the and touch o blush strike the writer iib av as a letter @ and rd-earned he ntence can be viewed in entirely ent lights, as to whethe one is'a “bump on a log” or the orig inal sawlog! ‘The Bulletin ig a rattling good daily and ranks high and has no sneaking proclivities and it is clearly evident that it can always kecp its trousers | up when it wears—a beit. | . MILLER. J. Jewett City, Conn. Milford—The plans on which sev- eral ‘contractors are figuring for the Catholic chapel to be erected at Wal- nut Beach call for a. Gothic building, 30 by 0 foet in size, and that will seat | spout 60¢ jit ! doubt, to recognize everything by way “Times bhave changed,” sald the re- tired merchant, after the shoe sate: man had left the hotel. ‘“Notice how Lusinesslike that drummer is? He comes into this town every once in a while, visits half a dozen dealers in an afternoon and then takes the next train oat. When I was a young man I was on the road for several years an: was considered a success, bat I couidn’t hold up my end now. “The world was more leisurely then. ‘When I landed in a town I never qnew when I'd get away again. A merchant had to be coaxed and jollied along, sometimes for a ay or two, before he was ready to talk business. If a trav- eling man bounced into & store and opened his grip and began lecturing on goods he was selling before he had said a word about the weather and the crops and- the Sullivan-Kilrain fight he’'d be pertty apt to bounce out again with no sales. “I made a special study of every customer on my route. I knew every man’s fads and pecullarities, and made the most of them. “DPhere was old man Joppy, down in Iowa. He was crazy on horse rac- ing, although he had never seen a real racehorse in his iife: His trade was worth having, and so I fairly soaked myself in racetrack figures and Sta- tistics, and when I blew into his store T'd give the history of every racehorse in’ the world, from Bucephalus down to the president’s saddle horse, and the way the old man would loosen up when I preduced my order book was a sight for sore eyes. “There were no airships in those days, but one of my customers had spent his spare time for yvears trying to build one, and when I loomed up at his store I knew more about aviation than the Wright brothers ever sus- pected. It was a great scheme in those days, but it wouldn't work now. If a traveling man tried it on a busy mer- chant the busy merchant would push an_electric button and a platoon of police would take the salesman and can him. “Well, my scheme fell down just once, and if I live a hundred years I'll never forget that once. I returned home from a trip and learned that an old customer in Iowa had sold cut to a stranger. That old customer Was one of my good friends, and the news didn’t cheer me up any. I wanted to know what particular fad afilicted the cago News. new man, and wrote to the hotel for information. 4 merchants ChIE, poceariity Whs an ‘s _chie: u Pnrcasonable hatred of . vegetarians, which was then being agitated a good deal. ‘If yqu want to make yourself solid with him,’ wrote the hotel man, Sflm sail into vegetarians with spiked oes.” “I must have been in a trance at the time or I'd have remembered a joke I had put on the hotel man on my last visit there and might have suspected that he was trying to get even. “In due time I landed in the town and went to the store loaded to the guards with useful information con- cerning vegetarianism. 1 had read up everything upon the subject, from the account of Nebuchadnezzar's stunt in a pasture down to a table of statistics showing_the annual yield of rice in| China. I opened up without loss of | time. The way I threw it into the vegetarians was a sin. I ridiculed the idea that a vegetable diet built up the muscular systém. “*A cow eats grass and succotash and beets and such wich-washy stuff,’ I cried, ‘and that sort of grub will do for a cow, which doesn’t know any better, but that's no reason why a man should live on greens. When a man has four or five stomachs, like a cow, it will be time enough to swear off on sausage. “Well, my dear sir, & tiger doesn’t weigh half as much as a cow, but it adheres to a sensible, wholesome diet. You never see a tiger going around eating cauliflower or string beans. When a tiger wants somthing to eat 1t goes to a cow and knocks that cow’s fool head off with. one blow. Why doesn’t the cow lick the tiger, if a veg- etable diet is such a muscle builder? ““There’s no use talking, sir: the man who eats greens when he can get sirloin steak has a leak in his head- piece.” “I got about as far as that when the mercahnt gathered me in his arms and shut me together like a jackknife, so that my heels made dents in the back of my head. Then he hustled me outside and dropped me down a coal hole, and sent my grips after me. ‘He was a crank on vegetarianism all right enough, but it happened that he was an enthusiastic advocate of the greens diet. The hotel man had crossed. the wires on purpose.”—Chi- Connecticut’s Growth. Striking and significant is the rec- ord of new industrial construction in Connecticut, as reported in a bulletin issued by the bureau of labor statis- tics, During the fiscal year ending June 30 1909, 219 separate factory bulldings, costing $2,064,100 and con- tainine 47.7 acres of floor space, were erected in the state. The shoying Is impressive and encouraging. During the first half of the fiscal vear the state was only beginning to recover from the panic and depression, and the statistics do not include new con- struction under way but not completed by June 30. These figures have no mercy on the theory of anybody who imagines that Connecticut isn’t still bounding for- ward, and they make short shrift of any notion that the state has devel- oped decadent tendencies: See_what the record has been dur- ing the past decade. The labor bureau shows that durine the past ten years 2,117 factbry buildings and ex- tensions were erected in the state. They revresented an agsregate total expenditure of $24,445,912, or an annual average of $2,444,594. These statistics of industrial build- ing operations in Connecticut touch on only a single phase of the develop- ment which the state is undergoing. While new factories have been going up, the processes of exmansion have been at work along various other lines. With a glorious past and a prosperous present _Connectlcut is facing a great future—Hartford Times, A New Potato Peril. It is not an altogether pleasant task that of calling attention to new perils. Humanity has been surfeited with alarmist warnings of one sort and an- other, and calamity howlers nowadays are mnot, as a rule, the people whose society is most generally and enthusi- astically sought. Yet, notwithstand- ing the nlethora of counsel, some of ise and some otherwise the world continues to exhibit remarkable pa- tience and receptivity—content, no of admonition that may come along, and subsequently to reject that which is useless, while retaining and apply- ing that which possesses value. Per- haps it is not, therefore, too much to expect that potato raisers will be in- terested in the wart disease of pota- toes, particularly as the United States department of agriculture, which has performed, and 15 performing, excel- lent service for the country’s farming interests, has seen fit to issue, for free distribution, a circular giving a brief account of the menace. The wart dis- case is a mew enemy of the potato crop wh is attractine great atten- tion in Furope, and which, according to the department of agriculture, is liable to be introduced into th United States at any time.—Manches- ter Union. Nearing Land Again. Does a “trip” pay? A traveler sel- dom sees as wonderful things as he claims to his neighbors, nor does he ever have as good a time as he ex- pected, but absence from the ordinary affairs will give him new vigor when he returns to them. I would rather remain at home than travel, but I find that the sea trips always benefit me. Blanks have been distributed to- day, and we are filling them out, in preparation for passing through the custom house at New York tomorrow. This examination will delay us at least two hours. Ever occur to you how numerous the tax gatherers are, and how much they anmoy you? Were it Dot for the tix gatherers in New York I should be alle to take a train which would land me ai home Sunday night. I doubt if the amount collected from the passengers of the Moltke will pay the cost of annoying us. I have nothing dutiable except one silver bracelet, which I bought from the wrist of a Hindu girl in Trinidad, price $1.75. This is the only present I am bringing home, and a certain little country girl I am in love with will get it. Most travelers “shop” incessantly. “Shop- ping” has an impressive sound, but it too often means wasting money. Col lecting taxes iz a good deal like col- lecting money for sufferers, the suffer- ers do not get it al\ I have often won- dered how much of the taxes the peo- ple pay goes to the collectors. I room alone on the main deck, and when I came up from dinner to- night I found arrangements had been made for a dance opposite my door. As I write this ladies and gentlemen are waltzing and two stepping within five or six feet of me, and lights and decorations are numefous. The band is also near me, and, at last, I am al- most in society.—Editor Howe in his Atchison Globe. Hartford.—Samuel J. Stammers. who built the Morgan Memorial buliding, the armory and arsenal and the State Bank buliding in Hartford, will leave this city and go to the Long Island shore, where he is to erect a mansion for J. P. Morgan, Jr., that it is said will cost $1,500,000. Hoods Sarsaparilla Will purify your blood, clear your complexion, restore your appetite, relieve your tired feel: mE, build you up. Be sure to take it this spring. Get it ioday in usual liquid form or tablets called Sarsatabs. 100 Doses $1. GOLD D 'sterilize your kitchen things and wholesome and sanitary GOLD DUST does more than clean—it steril- | izes and leaves your kitchen things sanitarily safe. The ordinary soap-washed utensil is not fit to eat | from, because soap does not cleanse as thoroughl | as it should—does not kill germs of decay whic are bound to lurk in oft-used utensils. F Besides its cleansing virtues, GOLD DUST g work quickly, and saving has the merit of doin, your strength. It will do most of the cleaning without your assistance, and doittoo,inaquicker and more thorough man- ner than will soap, or any other cleanser. GOLD DUST makes pot and pan spick and span. Made by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY Makers of FAIRY SOAP, the oval cake. UST will make them “Letthe GOLD DUST Tuwins do your work® ‘Different Types -and reformers that home is too often a | places. « THE HOME f of Its Manifestation— BROADWAY THEATRE %z i Suvder. GUS HORNBROOK’S BRONCHO BUSTERS, connisting of 8 people and 3 horses—A Sensational Wentern Novelty, WILLIE SOLAR AND IS ALICK Yate Stars of Gus Edwards’ Kountry Kids Ko. HENRY BOBKER, " I Positively The RBoy Behind the Sult Cnwe. CHILDREN AT MATINEES Se—3 SHOWS DAILY—32.30, 7, 5.45. B7 235y s Pary, 30, 7 AnD 8.%3 3 obiih A Contrast Between American and Dutch Characteristics. \ “Be it ever so humble, theré's no place like home,” we still s per- hops . in exalted mood, perhaps for the beauty of the melody; in sin- cere love of our own ablding place and all it means in the way of family ties and fond memories. But there is a good deal said by the writers and speakers of the day about the home feel vanishing; and there is a good deal the housing and living condi- fionllndvnth:mflmflffleuleof today to warrant putting some measure of belief in the judgment of the writers in. which to get ready to go to A recent traveler in the land of dikes and windmills h;" been lmvrellltd wl".h an apj something closer in EEmen e s and he offers as an oulward visible sign of this the names upoun the coun- try houses of the Dutch merchants. He quotes a few, in translation: Our Contentment, Joy and Peace, Lelsurs and Happiness, My Desire is Satisfled, Friends_and Quiet, My Wife and Not so Bad; and points In contrast to the impersonal names, the Bellevues, Cedars and so forth of the estates in his own land, that suggest a less close assoclation and sense of attachment, Of course the inferencg cannot be truly drawn from the difference in the scheme of house naming of the two races of people. Custom and fashion may control_the one as much as the other. The Dutch way may be only accorfllnfi to' a system, a departure from which might seem as conspicucus as the expression of his fondnass for his wife in the public naming of his house would be sure {0 seem to an American. There is a well ingrained dislike in most Americans against be- ing made conspicuous_ and an almost insurmountable disinclination to ex. hibit to the public thelv fondness for their “folks.” And yet, If it is only a custom without deep beart significance, the Dutch confession of contentment, of satisfied desire, of the prospect of peace and quiet in his home makes its appeal to a similar instinct that must exist in all, however they may seem to have crushed it out with a habit of place MAR 17th 18th 19th E’S MULE CIRCUS the Funniest of All Animal Acts. FEATURE. THE _TANAKAS—Oriental Top Spinners, WARD SISTERS Refined BILLY ELLIOT Singers and Dancers Black George Cohan WATCH FOR NEXT WEEK'S SPECIAL SHOW Vaudeville Wotlon Plotures and (lustrated ADMISSION—106, A wireless. telegraph apparatus, fm- provements in phonograph apparatus to increase the sound, and a patent for “certain useful improvements add- | ed to a system to alter the tempera- ture” were among the Important pat- ents granted for a ten-year period by the republic of Panama in 1908, re- orts Vice Consul Claude E. Guyant of anama City. A horseshoe designed to prevent the stumbling of horses was granted a patent for four years Monday, March 21, at 8.15 p. m. COHAN & HARRIS Present the World's Biggest, est and Most Famous Minstrel Organization, GEO. EVANS’ HONEY-BOY \ MINSTRELS | | | forsaking the home atmosphere.—New o Presenting all that is big, new and Bedford Standard. Concrete Stairs are | novel in minstreisy, The fantert, s iest and most extravagantly presented Better than Stone because they last longer and cost less to build, of concrete made with EDISON PORTLAND entertainment of the kind has ever offered. Prices—2be, 35c, H0e, T5e, 31, §1 Seats on sale at the usual plac Friday, March 18, at 9 o'clock. Carg to all points after performance marlsd the stage The Central Bank for Savings in Prague, Bohemia, has been insiru- mental in establishing in New York city the Bohemia bank to control, as far as possible, the banking business between the Bohemlans in the United States and the mother country. Orrine Does Cure DRUNKENNESS This is a positive fact known to tens of thousands of wives and mothers of this land. They know Orrine is a reli- able remedy for the cure of drunken- ness, because it has restored their loved ones to lives of sobriety and usefulness. ot Broadway Thealre BEETHOVEN QUARTETTE OF BOSTON. practically one piece of stone. There are no joints between the steps to crack Every one of these women bought Or- wd‘ &u l( Wil Md no re irs Md rine with full confidence that it would repa AV, 4 MILLA afl:C‘a&acul’. '.0':' lha:;’ xflonfe)h:nul%hlia wm h‘ as as thg E.nh m‘ | . B. I R Tefunded to them alled. H 2 | guarances s in each box. No other Edison P Cement goes f.rtl'ml OF NEW YORK Temedy for the cure of drunken H i hokds. faster oI i Slherat guarastes “put| than other cements o f hs. Orrine has been so uniformly successful | because it is | that the makers want the buyers to know that they have full protection if it should fail in any instance. We never publish letters of patients, but recently this letter came to us from |Y. M. C. A. Men’s Meeling Sunday at 3.30 p. m. Uniformly 10% Finest Ground in the World Dr. Nolte, Eighth and Race streets. S ¥ Y Philadelpkiia, Pa. Read uoan(‘l yn\:.wm Never varies in quality of light grey p Tea appreciate why Orrine is 50 Well thought of: % color, because the cement rock comes All Men Invited. “I nave hiad a remarkable case of in-| gom ‘one quarry. » | _mariia gbriaty under my personal observation. e patient drank heavily for fifteen vears and reached a degraded condi- See us about cement before you | tion, which caused the breaking up of undestake to build anything his 'family and separation from his - oy | wife. Every hope was given up of ever CRUT“ERS & LlLLlBR‘DfiEl gaving the man from his strong desire for drink, and only a mother's interest finally persuaded him to voluntarily take treatment for his diseased condi- tion. It was my pleasure to recommend Orrine, your liquor habit cure, and the treatment was taken faithfully. This was two years ago. and the patient is now in a healthy condltion and still abstaine from the use of stimulants. T have sold Orrine for a number of years and have always found it to be satis- BREED CHARLES MSNULTY.LESSEE . Norwich, Conn. Fenture Pleture: THE COWBOY AND THES QUAW. flactony, 1 b;hevg ‘you h.lve anh‘excdexn- THR NG INDIAN PIOTUN tonally good treatment for this dls- ; y case. Mr. Chas Ray, Baritonc. Orrine is prepared in two forms. No. 1, a powder, absolutely tasteless and IN ILLUSTRATED SONGS Qiorless, given secretly in ~ food or New New Muchines and In rink. Orrine No. 2, in pill form, is chadhps - i for those who wish to cure themselves. sveaned iy Oapasity. New Siages. Orrine costs only $1 a box. The guar- Watch for th reatl Featuras antee is in each box. Write for Free Orrine Booklet (mailed in plain sealed envelope) to Orrine Co. 947 Orrine Bullding, Washington. D. . Orrine is for sale in this city by N. D. Sevin & Son. 118 Main Street. They know Orrine is a rellable and etficacious remedy for drunkenness and they will not offer you a substitute. Matinee, Ladies and Children, jan3a Bo mMusie. NELLIE S. HOWIE, r of Plano, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street. A Magnificent Display of Women’s Suits ~=g@——Ready for the Early Easter Easter comes very early this ):ear. Only nine days left now to buy the Easter Suit and get it ready to wear a week from next Sunday. Early as it is we are abundantly ready of the best styles that will be seen this season are here for you to select from. Suits to meet the requirements of widely varying fancies, yet all bearing the impress of correct style and tasteful design. Throughout the great range there is an assortment of models, a beauty of style, and a high grade of materials, fit and workmanship. Our showing of Suits at popular prices we show styles embracing the most desirable models, materials and colors. Women’s Dresses, Skirts and Tailored Waists at popular prices. L. H. BALCOM, Teacher of Plano. 20 Thames St given at my residen or as pupll. Same method aa 4 Conservatory, Ber- ootild Lessor the home of the hl.‘-ea at Bchawen n. F. C. GE TUNER 122 Prespect St B11. Norwich, Cu Tel, A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Connectical. "Fhone 518-5. 15 Clairmoumt Ave sept22d Spring Styles including the best in design and fabrics ready for inspection. The price reasonable and we produce garments with style and correct it Order Early. Easter comes on March 27th THE JOHNSON Co., Merchant Tailors, 65 Brosdway, ' Chapman's Building. GEORGE 6. GRANT, Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Providence St., Taltville. Prompt attention to day of wight calie { | | | ALL ALTERATIONS FREE American Fur, Cloak & Suit Co. 140 Main Street, Norwich. WHEN you want to p ness hefo.