Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Sk iers " Woman in Life and in the Kitchen 3 NEEDLEWORK SUGGESTIONS. 2 : COULD NOT SPEAK FOR THE PEO- Forwich Bulletiz eae aPied, Speaker Cannon will know some day snd Ko = | that he was the father of the insurg- ents and that every one of them are 134 YEARS OLD. the legitimate offspriffing of his tyran- ny. He carried his personal will too ! price, 12c m week 80¢ & ry; _ho got where he would. not rec- ' | ognize honest- men with honest griev- ances to right in the interests of the people, The Toledo Blade says when Joseph Cannon opposed a new member | who was himself endeavoring to cor- | Direct trom New York Hippodrome — MME. ANITA DIAZ MONKS — Positively the Best Monkey Aect in Vaudeville, P bl Mttt At i o P GAIOTESQUE RANDOLPHS,| BLOCKSOM & BURNS, he Chink and the Lady. [Ofi9inators | of & Burissque Ry £t Entered at the Pos! Conzn., as second-class matt Telephone Calla: é unetin Business Office. 489, Bollelin Bapinec? Scoms, se-s. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. limantle Office, Room 3. Murray ilding. Telephone, 210. Norwich, Thursday, March 24, 1910. Norwish, T e AN INQUIRY. ant reader of The Bulletin ‘{:necsonus; to define a good neighbor. We say he is a neighbor who minds his own Dbusiness; and he sayw he is 2 neighbor governed by the Golden Rule. These bot ppear to be pretty ac- tions, but the Golden- although rare, may be neighbor” is rather elas- tic, + apply to the mext-door resident, the next district, the: next erd or county, the next state or eoun- 3, and when the great commandment Sas given to love®your neighbor as urseif and the Lord thy God with it was intended to be giv- arrowest but the broadest said to be “somewhat of a disaster to ve near a bad neiglibor,” and this wwell-expressed sentiment finds Teady endorsement to this day. Pernaps one of the worst neighbors 1= the man who expects the other fel- low to live up to his ideals of what a good neighbor should be. Such an un- fortunate person is finding bad neigh- bors ell the time because they iusist upon living acconding to their own view of things. The law says “Neighbors are pre- sumed to have cognizance of each er's acts” and there it leaves them, ss it meets them at the bar of tice because they not only become -ognigant of each other's acts, but nterfered and exceeded their rights in the premises. Since It Jong ego became a proverb that “We can live without our friends, not without our meighbors,” it be- comes us to study the good-neighborly qualities more. It has been said for truth thet “All is well of him who is beloved by his neighbors,” hence it becomes every man to win, if possible, his meighbor's good will. In some residential quarters in these modern days, it Is not fashionable to have meighbors, people like so well to ive to self alone; but this is usually ere there is great wealth and little sense. On the whole, the world is neighbor- lv, and the good neighbor is the one e all enjoy and many of us have. There s only one neighbor we can cootrol and he resides on our gide of +he fence. Some persons act as If they Ala not know that ~The man who does things shamelessly should be torment- rect an homest abuse, he had discov- ered under an old law, the committee concerned would take no notice of the abuse, 50, as The Blade puts it, “the committee received the news coldly. It did not want to listen. It would not take any action, make any recommen- dation, reveal to the house the condi- tions as they were. The new mem- ber, still believing that the duty of a congressman was to do the best he could for his country, sought to address the house -uponm -the subject of the cheatings. Cannon would not recog- nize him upon the floor, He would not let him make a speech touching upon the disclosures he had to make. Furthermore, he would not permit of a change to be made in the appropria- tion to be voted which would save to the government that which was going to the railroads wrongfully. Happily, it lay <within the authority of Theo- dore Roosevelt to issue an order which did away with the abuse.” There is no question of Cannon’s knocking of Hill or preparing the roast for Lilley, which proved to be the most unjust treatment a Connecti- cut congressman was ever subjected to. Cannonism is dead; and let us hope that it 1s beyond resurrection. NINETY YEARS OLD. Fanny Crosby, the blind song writer, who has written 7,000 poems in the ninety years of her life, enters upon her 91st year at Bridgeport today. She took the right view of her condition in youth, when she wrote: How many blessings I enjoy That other people don't, To weep and sigh because I'm blind, I cannot, and I won't. When the girl was nine years old, the family moved to Ridgefield, Conn. Fanny’s gifts were noted by friends, who took a deep interest in her edu- cational advancement, so that at fif- teen she entered the Institution for the Blind in New York city. She be- came one of the most diligent and ac- complished pupils in that home for the sightless. While at ihe institution she met and assoclated with some of the most nota- Dble people of the world, Presidents of the nation, musicians of fame, and lit- erary men of ability listened to the blind poetess with interest and encour- aged her to continue her work in lit- erature. Thbere she met Grover Cleve- land, who was then the secretary of the president of the institution, and a warm friendship grew up between them which continued till Mr. Cleve- land’s death. He often copied her verse and showed her the kindness of a great souls She visited the Cleve- cd with the fear of his own example,” and of course they are not qualified to judge of the worst neighbor. The good neighbor is the one who kind, considerate and obliging, not mpatient of the conduct of others, but charitable end inclined to establish permanent peace at some cost to him- elf rather than quick to promote a ray whenever the little frictions of sorhood 1ife.mnnoy or frritate The man who has full command over himself is always a good neigh- bor finds Mttle occasion to com- ain of others. GONE TO SEE ROOSEVELT. Tt §s glven out that Mr. Pinchot has ne abroad to meet Theodore Roose- elt and to get his ear twith reference the way in which his forest conser- ation policies are being assailed by Mr. Ballinger, whom he openly charges ving the administration, and o reason to doubt that Mr. will make what he believes honest and well clinched statement to Mr. Roosevelt, who is Ikely to be largely influenced by what e hears from so competent an official and =o staunch a friend. Theodore Roosevelt does mot intend to get mixed up with polities until after his reception In New York; but there is no doubt that he will be taking a lively interest in public af- irs long before the summer is over will be heard from in the fall cam- paign. He will see no sense in the defeat blican party at the polls and it is not probable 4o anything which will ths administration, however 7 have seemed to weaken in its n to some of his policies, since aware that they would fare tter at the hands of the demo- Roosevelt is a republican and s in the malntenance of the par- 4 its policies the promotion of ers of the largest importance to = people. Pinchot may see Roosevelt, he may. ave a marked“influenge upon him, but t likely to succeed in making a of him. Beautiful Women Mar- Is the title of Nat Goodwin's aphical sketch. The four beauties might tell the reason more entertainingly if not better. e_are so many people who are Roosevelt may again run for e presidency that a great many other 'pl»lca.tch themselves hoping that wilL The wealth of the country is stated in round figures at $150,000,000,000. hn Rockefeller still has a great d open to his accumulative genius. Jack London thinks that the world ready to buy a book telling why he cialist. If he puts enough into it, the world may be: It is lucky that everything said bout congressmen dces not reach them by wirgless, for they certainly would be confused by them. A Boston man estimates that the 910 crop of babies will be worth $4,577,000,000, and no statisticlan ven- tures to correct his figures. A New York maglstrate ventures to <ay that it costs a man more to dress than it does a,woman. That depends upon who holds the purse, Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt says that woman has just as good judgment as man. She’ll have to get some woman to argue that with her. Some of our senators appear to take more pleasure in opposing the presi- dent than they do in promoting the|an place? Pocker—Th interests of the peapie, lands at Lakewood, reciting a poem in honor of Mr. Cleveland’s daughter Ruth, and she-also was a guest at the Cleveland home at Princeton. It was in her mature years that she began to sing to souls of sorrow the music of joy, and her best known hymns are “Safe in the Arms of Jesus,” “Rescue the Perishing,” O Gentle Saviour,” ance,” “Close to Thee,” “Every Day and Hour,” “I Am Thine, O Lord,” “'Tis the Blessed Hour of Prayer, and that most popular one which is sung in almost all the Christian churches, “Saved by Grace.” At ninety she is Mving in sight of eternity’s sunrise, seeking to werk out in her own life the will of her Heavenly Father. . RULES FOR LONGEVITY Few aged people can tell what to attribute long life to, but it is always safe to conclude that long life is the result of temperate living—that the aged person had wholesome rules for guidance. 5 Mrs. Leslie Sears Bellows of Wor- cester passed her 81st birthday this week in excellent health, and she was asked by a scribe what she attributed her excellent condition to. This is what she said: “Keep outdors as much as possible.” “Get all the slegp you can.” “Always be cheerful” “Don’t worry.” “I come from a long-life family. My grandfather lived to be 91 years old. My mother was 91 years old when she died and my father was 87. I have a brother who is going on 88 years, and his health is good. Many tell me I will live to be 90 years old.” Her rule was to breathe pure air; to take needful rest, always; to sustain | & cheerful spirit; and to let all worries take care of themselves. This looks like the bedrock of long- evity, the foundation upon which it is safe for any one who would lfve long and be happy to build. EDITORIAL NOTES. You can just bet that Theodore will be a Taft man just as long as Taft wants to stay. The papier-mache egg makes things a little pleasanter for Easter. It costs more but it lasts longer. The 1910 robin sings down the sun of nights now, just as if the gunners had no interest in him. The ,wily widow is seldom caught putting out her late departed’s insur- ance money on his successor. The man who has more dollars than there are people in the country does not hother often to count them. A great many men who had rather be right than be president never had a mention in the presidential class. The moving picture royalties vield Edison a third of a million a year. His ideas have always been golden. It is hinted that if Johnson hunts 'possum while Jeffries hunts bear, he may learn something to his advantage! — When a man in the pew thinks the sermon was personal, he furnishes the evidence that it was what *was sadly needed. Subservience is always a merit with a tyrant, but grit knocks out the ty- rant and puts the Goddess of Liberty in his place. Happy thought for today: Ability to gossip charmingly carries with it the Hability of saying™ a great many things that are mot so. 3 Knicker—How large is their suburb- ‘have folding beds for the flowera. York Sun. Paris Transfer Pattern No. 8026. Three yards of each edging and in- sertion design. Insertion one inch wide, edging two inches wide. May be developed in French and evelet as il- lustrated or all in French embroidery and is appropriate for children’s and infants' wear and for underclothes. It is splendid pick-up work for spare mo- ments and may be applied to any ma- terial, as well as lawn, nainsook, linen- lawn batiste, jaconet, linen or muslin. Price of pattern 10 cents. Order through The Bulletin Com- pany Pattern department, Norwich, Ct. Paris Transfer Pattern No. 8067. Design for combination corset-cov- er and skirt to be worked either as eyelets or solid embroidery on nain- sook, batiste, cambric, long-cloth or soft linen. The pattern contains four and a quarter yards of ruffiing for the skirt, two.and two-thirds yards of scalloping for the meck wnd armholes and the spray design for the front of the corset-cover. These undergar- ments are also made in China silk or dimity; crossbarred muslin is also used to a great extent and is particularly pretty when worn under thin material that shows the cross bars. Price of pattern 10 cents. Order through The Bulletin Com- pany Pattern department, Norwich, Ct. Puffs as Trimming. Pufred material appears as trimming on many of the best medels“in vary- ing fabric and for different occasfons. The puff is distinctly new as a tunic edge and those of chiffon lend them- selves exceptionally well to this dec- oration. White dresses of mull and batiste exploit the puff once more. It ap- peared between rows of lace insertion, it edges the fichu and the chemisette and heads the lace flounces of the skirt. On the velvet collars of - evening comts the puff four inches wide of the same matérial proves a rich finish in the absence of fur and is more readily put on than an effective quantity of embroidery. English Apple Pie. Mix_and sift twice two cupfuls of flour, four teaspoonfuls of baking pow- der, one-half teaspoonful of salt, one- quarter cupful of sugar, a little nut- meg. Work in one-third cupful of but- ter and one and a quarter tablespoon- fuds of lard. Add one egg well beaten, one-third cupful of sweet milk. Roli out three-quarters inch thick, cut with smell biscuit cutter and bake. Pour boiling water on, cut up four sour ap- ples and let cool; pour off water, add more and cook gently until done, add- ing sugar to taste. Pour over the lit- tle crusts (one to each person) and serve hot. Dried Bean Soup. / One pint of beans, one large onion (minced fine), four tablespoons of drippings or butter, three tablespoons of flour, a few dried celery leaves, two teaspoons of salt, half a teaspoon of pepper. ‘Wash the beans. Put plenty of cold water over them and soak over night. Pour off the water and put the beans in a kettle with three pints of cold water. Bring the water to boiling point and pour it off. Add two quarts of boiling water to the beans and let them simmer for four hours. Add the celery the last hour of cooking. Strain the soun. Brown the onion in the drippings. Add the flour and cook, stirring often. Add the thickening and seasoning to the soup and cook 20 minutes. Cooking Beets. If one would bave beets retain the rich red color after being cooked, do not peel them before cooking and nev- er pierce them while cooking. The slightest puncture of the skin of a beet | means a decided loss of the coloring matter. SALADS. Chicken Salad—Prepare a mayon- naise dressing. Cut the’ chicken in half-inch dice. To each pint of meat allow a half pint of cut celery. Mari- nate the chicken with French dressing and let stand an hour or two; then mix with the celery; moisten with thinned ‘mayonnaise with a little vinegar, turn in the salad bowl, garnish with let- tuce or celery tips and cover with some thick mayonnaise. This recipe may be adapted to other meats, espe- ciaily veal and pork Macedoine Salad—Peas. string beans, bits of caumlifiower, beets, white tur- nips, carrots, etc., may be used. Cook the vegetables separately In salted water and let stand in cold water at least 10 minutes to add brilliancy to coloring. Drain on a cloth, marinate dressing and serve with a salad gar- nish. When the vegetables are arrang- ed in separate Hnes (like a star) on the salad platter this is called a Rus- sian salad. Potato Salad—Dice raw potatoes; boil till just tender; drain, marinate with a Frenc more French dressing containing on- jon juice, nuts, cut celery, hard boiled eggs, beets, etc., with more dressing garnish Wwith cress or other greens. Hats do not display much glitter and shine in the way of buckles and metal- ic ornamets, but depend upon the fancy hatpins, which useful as well as -ornamental articles grow more and more ornate as to heads, and can be ef- fectively stuck in wherever their bril- liancy will show to the best advant- age. ‘The ones with closely set French Jewels in odd shapes look the prettier among the blossoms. Some of these pins b: ‘heads al- most the size of door Knobs. - > o The latess dexelopment of the h _dressing and chill, Add' i WAINNIE P. CRAWFORD, Y That Girl in Trousers. L D S b 3 43 ; E i color and es smoothly crown, a de and large cab- “being arrapged at the right ‘The is slightly lve of the Alpine, an@ is dented a very little to carry out this 3 I Althoash fairly this _model ] permits a close justment of the veil mwten desired, mldl g it excellent for salt. ‘Add also a cupful of walnut or pecan meats Droicen T eraall pioces nd a| —A HAPPY HABIT— e 72 FRIDAY, 24 ven- MARCH 25th Ginger Puffs. Drop the mixture on buttered tins, : e 2", Anoth whe t bargal 1oem, ocOmehalt cup ot mgar, one-ia | put 3 wicie wut medt on che tov f | Use Chappell's Coal| *yoner sryne oy ot peoenr oo s a habit you can’'t break very |Of the laughing success, - LRI 0UR NEW MINISTER HOME GARMENT MAKING. Chappell’s Coal 18 “Hot- Btuft.” By the author of “The Old Homestead.” The un@n LA Eo C“APPEL‘. Co. Same great company and all the splendid effects as originally produced, Central Wharf and 150 Maila Street teaspoon of ginger. ngnpmmmlnlmck oven. eat heavy cream stiff and pour over or make a hot pudding sauce and flavor with lemon julce. Coffee Cream. Melt two pounds of sugar, with as BARGAIN PRICES: Matinee, all seats reserved........ 25a little water as possible, in a vessel on Telophones. Night . . 26e, 36, 50 the fire. When the sugar begins to Seats on sale at the usual places om bubble pour in one cu of rich Wednesday, March 23, at 9 o'cloek. cream and _stir y, add two Cara to all points after performance, ounces of fresh butter and the extraot from two ounces of coffee, stirring all the while. ‘When it has cooled enough to be brit- tle in cold water, pour into a buttered tin and mark off into squares with a buttered knife. To Remember When Repapering House In papering any room it should be remembered that Mght is the first con- sideration, and that the paper must be chosen accordingly. Pure white is the best cholce when a ‘specially light room is wanted, as it absorbs only about 15 per cenf, of the light thrown upon it. Dark green on the other hand, is the greatest con- sumer of light, absorbing about 85 per cent. Next to white as a light-producer, the soft pastel tints and Hght blues, which absorb from 20 to 25 per cent. of the light: then comes orange at 30 per cent., apple and grape greens al- ‘most G0 per cent, and the popular brown is almost as bad as dark green as it takes up about 65 to 70 per cent. of the light it should throw out. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. A glass of milk just before going to bed is highly recommended by phy- sicians to build up over-thin persons who are comsequently lacking in vi- tality It has benefited numbers of girls with this trouble of lack of flesh. Local mdssage, almond oil or The princess styles seem to be in- gocon, putier s aleo good if epplied | ereasing in popularity ax the season Vances. The hair ix often improved by heat- | of several variations. may ing the hair brush before brushing the | with plaited or gathered flounce, high hair. or Dutch square neck, and long or iy three-quarter sleeves. The closing. is Frequently hold the brush to the et in_the 3 fire, then brush the scalp. The pattern is in three sizes—13 to 3 e e e <o s ol Home Comfort Using cheap soap. You will ruin|dress will require 5% yards o . reds wi your complexion and have to buy cold | 24 inches wide. T4 Yavds 27 DEMANDS THE rds inches wide, 4 “’3‘?.‘3"‘.‘,’;““‘33'5 k. Light is cheap- L B Kzthefl‘ha:mc. 33% yards 5. Instantaneous Automatic er than occulld‘ts'psllls. nches wide, w! 3% yard of l{l—flver Gas Water Heater Wearing thin clothing. lace 18 inches wide. It furnishes an inexhaustible sup- Price of pattern, 10 cents. cheaper and better than medicine. Order through The Bulletin, Company, Norwich, Conn. ply of hot water to all parts of the house at any hour of the day or Going without luncheon. You will| pattern Dept., night. injure your health and digestion if you Floral Designs and CutFlowers Turn the Faucet, For All Occasions. . GEDULDIG’S, The Ruund Does the Rest. Call and Telephone 868. 77 Cedar Street. Gas & Electrical Dep’t., jv26a Alice Building. maer2idaw J. A. MORGAN & SOV Coal and Lumber Central Wharf. Toelephone 8.W. dec24a ¢ Grand Easter Attraction! 13 MILE MARATHON —at 2% o bk 1ne ot Bhingle, Can us SACHEM PARK e ey, o+ | Saturday, March 26th, at3P. M. mnovisd — CONTESTANTS — co AL \ Hilton, Wicks and Tuckey. | Admission ...... < 350 Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh s g Boys under 16 . ... 260 ALWAYS IN STOCK. Qe THEATRE LUMBER 3036 MISSES’ PRINCESS DRESS. — ANl Seams Paris Pattern No. 3036 Allowed. Telephone 168-13 . A. D. LATIiROP, ‘B \ Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta .CNARLEI MeNULTY, LESSEE . oct39d Feature Plcture: THI PRESIDENT’S SPECIAL, THRILLING RAILROAD PIOTURE. Mr. Chas. J. Ray, Baritone. IN ILLUSTRATED SONGS. New Stage, New Machines and Ine creane Seating Cmpmeity. New Singen, Watch for the Great Features. Matinew, Ladies and Children, 6o Jan3cl —e MUSIC. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plano, v Room 48 Central Bullding. do. ‘Walking_when overtired to avoid car fare. You will save in money but undermine your constitutjon. ‘A bunion cure is made of one dram each of glycerin, carbolic acid and tincture of fodine. Mix and paint the spot several times daily and at night. It _is necessary to wear heels and ®road shoes, that there may be no presure on the joint, which should be covered by a corn protector made of a ring of felt. CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Music 46 Washington Street DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Denta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8 L. Geer's practwe during his last fliness. 161 Main Street. Norwich, Gonn, noviéd Embroidery Notes. Practical and attractive lamp mats are made of linen in gray or the nat- ural color embroidered in shades that harmonize with the furnishings of the room. Danish cut work is an effective dec- oration for a linen stock and jabot. A lovely centerpiece of fine linen was beautifully decorated with Mount- ! mellck eml in the most ex- | quisite design Bullion stitch works in effectively on_embroidery for gowns. The long monogram or initials of the narrow style at present used by the engravers is popular with embroider- ers. Four ana five inch letters are seen 3. J. C. GTONE. Proa upon sheets, bolster covers and tow- o els. And all of the linen used in one ——OPEN—— room is marked with letters in one pattern. When an extra strong buttonhole D 1 H ff f stitch may be desired the edge may be el=110. are Dbuttonhold twoce, the stitches of the second row coming between those in the first row. A dainty dressing table cover is of L. H. BALOOM, of Plane. 29 Thames Bt Lessons given at 1’ reaidence thefome of the pupll. same mm%_ d at Schaw Conservatery, i ookt one in operation. Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. @ » F. C. GEER ' TUNER 122 Prospect St, Tel. Bl Norwich, Go A. W. JARVIS is the Leading Tuner in Eastern Comnecticut. A5 Clairmount Ave. Business Men’s Lunch a specialty. Also Regular Dinner, fifty cents. white linen, with an evelet embroid- | 3¥9d HAYES BROS. Props. 0 ery border and medallions in colored 1 Sille ombrOJery. are in wigh tavor| We do all Watch and Clock Work 3 _— : i |Special Pri Eut-out shadaw embrotdery 1s = bit promptly and at the . 1. pecia rice odd and very dainty. ie o A3 > Madeira. embroidery s a favorite for right prices. e FOR 10 DAYS ONIX table linen. Fine feather-stitch, dome in a curv- trying to clean your own clothes, for M. FRISWELL, 27 Franklin St. ed line, is a simple and dainty trim- annot do it, and unless done right Mok for baby dressen. e You Same ae weil save i sione ¥ou |01 Tailor-made Suits Long and short puttonhole stiteh s 2an employ your valuable time more often 3 more decorative finish than the Y I e P ; Plain stiten, copecianty on tatee neide. | FUNERAL ORDERS };"‘;“: ,_,“,gz..:b::dfl:; nave faciitles tor oing. the : Codfish Balls. Artistically Arranged by quickly, too, and deliver the order at S. LEON., These are the genuime fish balls served in New England on Sunday mornings. Use the whole fish and not that which comes already _picked apart. Put the slice of fish into plenty of cold water and let stand over night, drain and pick enough into fine shreds to fill a half-pint cup. Pare and cut into small cubes enough potatoes to measure a heaping pint. Put the potato into a kettle, lay the Adam’s Tavern fish over the top, pour in bofling water to cover and cook until the l“l otato is soft. Drain, mash in the Rame kettle, add a. lovsl tablespoon of s Se_1Be Juhllo the Suase butter, a salt spoon of pepper. and | Bonemian, your home, charging but little for the work. Lang’s Dye Works, 157 Franklin St. FRESH FISH. Good and Ladies’ Taflor, ‘Phone 712-6. 278 Main St Jan214 HUNT .. * * The Florist, Tel. 130. Lafayette Stroet. Junisa gt Spring Styles including the best in design and fabrics ready for inspeoction. The prices are reasonable apd we produce garments with style and correct fit. Order Early. Easter comes on March 37th. HE JOHNSON Ce., Merchant Tailors, 65 Brosdway, Chapma Building. Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS 7 If so you should consui¢ with me and get prices for same. BxceMent werk at reasonable prices. aug11a C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Buildes, 218 MAIN STREET. ‘Phone 370. AN kinds in their season. Clean, Pricer Right. E. T. LADD, Agent. 32 Water St Beer, Burton, Mueir's Scotch_Ale, Guinness’ Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Bunker Hill P. B. Ale, "l:.lll‘l‘k-lr ana Panst. | Have You Noticed ths A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Increased Travel? Telephone 447-32. iyzie It's a sure sign of THE PLANK |Estasict teams you'll say the same. Headquarters for Best Ales, Lagere, Etc., in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Proprietor. Telephone 507. oct2e weather and Coughs That Hang On. 11 Freakiin Strect. the J. F. C. 100 Jantrg it i £ i i