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saomth: and Coufied 114 YEARS OLD. o g T Conn.. as second- W Ulimantic tofdce at Nerwich, Entered at the [ass matter. Telephoue Calls: . Bujetin Business Office. 480, w e {torini Beoms. £5-3. in B Office, Room 2 Marray Telephone. 210. & o o a the gardeming spirit and to teach the people not only how easily they may help themselves, but that for a little attention, time and money they may bu: - - = thing man has as much cotton.co: oing as I nd reaps an and existence quoted for r ax season of & cemts per pound been aiscovered yet since the: s cheaper and grape suger can i be resoguized from the product of to 2o, szain dening cities are showing the peopls what may be done with small plots of earth. Four hurdred and fifty plots have been 2s- signod they will it {8 estimated, grow vege- 1a Taise garden truek which years, home to say to the people of Butte: experienced; Norwic Tussday, April 12, 1910 The Circulation of The Bulletin. TAe Bulletin has the largest elr— culation of may paper Eastern Cenmnecticut, and from three to four times larger thas that of amy im Norwich. It fu delivered to over 3.000 the 4,053 houses in Nor- wieh, read by mimety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it in @elivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1.100, in all of these places it in considered the local daily. Easters Commectient has forty- sime towns, onc humdred and mixty- Sve postoffice districts, and forty- ome rural free delivery Towtes. The Bulletin is sold im every town amd em all of the R. F. D. routes in Easters Commectieut. CIRCULATION -5.920 1005, average ...... April 9... NOT A PRODUCER—A GETTER. Patten the wheat and cotton specu- stor of Chicago, may be & very pious | of (hicago's contributions to the ash the world goes, but he lacks He is not a producer of any- n earth that can be bought or as 514, but he is high up in the tricks which may legitimately scoop ellow's money. It is not sirange that he was chased out of the | qugh (Okia.) exchange at-Manchester, England, for | aad Waco (Tex.) lost a $125,000 uni- probadiy talked too much. This Is at he sald recently to the New York Make it two milllons if you want two milllons in this sort of no more to me than losing would be to you. When a aght is have, he t-ien't the price affects hi orth wiile.” Patten just rolis in the wealth that profts. other men have sweat to produce. The Milwaukee Journal draws a perfect contrest between the farmers and the Puttens of the country when it says: When a farmer plants and sows d takes his products to he contributes real wealth for re momey that he receives in return. expioits mo ome. <coal and clothing and groceries axd farm machinery and the necessarics ts.and Httle luxities of his |ley's comet in 1835 say that it is all He is a real producer—the | that it is cracked up to b mfe: se worker In shop and fac- e Pattens produce mothing. e others sow they reap. The that others bake they eat. The = that ke they wear. houses that ot SCARCITY OF RUBBER. The imcreasing uses fo e demand for it far beyond the sup- = there is a speculative craze Three dollars per pound is the priee bber in London. A yoar it was as jow as 3L . During the pression it sald around 75 Corporations are going to estabMsh rubber planations, of which there are about 300 new ones, and the planters are hastening to get their trees imto he ground and new expeditions are formed to penetrate into untrodden d wild mountaln forests. Nothing just as good as rubber has The chemists e carefully analyzed rubber amd ven to invent a formaula which produce an acceptadle substitmie have =0t quite succeeded: but bave produced indigo that than the original artieie identically the same; and fsom turn out honey Dot hives, except ax, it is oul Succeed in jthe neal rubber that it lacks the fair to expect them this fleld. When théy will be cheap 3 OBJECT LESSONS. Just to promote an interest in gur- and horticulture, the larger to people in Philedelphia, and bies enough for 3,000 families. An experiment was tried in Kansas City last year upor am zcre of city property which shows what wonders may be produced with a modicum of labor and perseverance. all the work except plowing and har- rowing, and he was unable to give more than two or three hours a day One man did the task. The gardening was of the ordinary kind, no intensive methods being used or even known ta the | worker. When the balance sheet of the | trial acre was struek it gave this {llu- winating res syoss tncome, Oct. 14, 4908, to 14, 1508 = Net income for -e....31,106.85 And now other cities desire to have trial acre started just to stimulate for will After Miving in New York for seven McLane has returned | LENB: Mary left Butte crude, innocent mnd in- The speliing reformers can see no good in the second ® in esg. just one month from that tis 18th, the comet will be ouly 15,000, miles away and the earth will hours in passing through its tail, The earth and the cometary mass are moving in opposite directions and their mbined velocity is perhaps about fty miles a second. This is a speed equal to 100 times* the muzzle velocity of the swiffest shot fired from & gun. In this age of knowledge a very small per -cent. of the people are alarmed by the prospect of a collision, since there is no substance and so filmy 1s the tail that it does not ap- proach in power a heavy gale of wind, if it did there would be reason to be somewhat disturbed by it. The fear of the people may somewhere bring trouble or disaster on that day, but the comet wiil not. KEEPING UP THE AVERAGE. The fire losses In the United States and Canada during the month of March were so In excess of the loss of the corresponding month in 1909 that the average for the quarter ap- proaches the loss of the first quarter of last vear. The New York Journal of Commerce makes the value of the property de- stroved by them in the two countries $18, 16! ,967,200 more than the February total, $3,290,100 more than the January total, 34,670,150 more than the March total in 1909 and $1,742,260 more thant the March total in 1908. The fires of March for Commecticut footed up $140,000, as follow, Hartford—tobacco store, etc. New Milford—foundry ... 20,000 Merwinsyille—timber and houses 20,000 Stamford—celluloid plant ...... 15,000 Hartfoxl—paint and wall paper stora .. eee- 15,000 Unionwille, wool clip shop...... 10,000 < The Hambleton (W. Va.) - tannery represents, at $500,000, the heaviest loss_for the month. Tiw opera houses, one at Hancock (Mich.) end the other at Estherville (Ja.) were burned last month, One hesp was a chemical laboratory. One of the March fires destroyed the $15! 000 house of the Winnipeg (Man.) coumtry club. ~ Fort Edward (N. Y.) lost a $75.000 seminary building last month, Barnesville (O.) and Tahle- lost college buildings, versity bullding. The Journal of Commerce say: ‘“There is, furthermore, a feeling in @re-insurance circles that the sensa- Honal disclosures of the fire-insurance mvestigation are likely to result in sty and ill-advised legislation which, ming and |47 enforced, will milke Insurance more _hasn’t time 10 |expensive to furnish and: resultantly up low every little fluctuation |more costly to the property owner.” EDITORIAL*NOTES. Jack Johnson thinks timt he may permit Jeffries to stay in the game’ for 20 rounds The floyers on the Easter bonnets look just as fresh as ever, despite the cold nights. Happy thought for today: A woman He exchanges | who can smile when a rival is praised seat and pork and cotton and wwol |is a woman of power. The few living persons who saw Hal- The whiskey that kills at once is too eftective to license. It usually turns up in prohibition towns. Faft calls attention to the fact that build they live | republicans should both hear and heed, It is time they sat up and took notice, Kentucky raises more hemp than any + rubber puts | Other state and if it was given a good home use she would have fewer night result is that rubber has |Tiders. advanced three hundred per cent. and Bis is why over it in London. When a jag is seen of a Sunday morning it cannot be told whether he is a Saturday night left-over or a fresh start. With two six-million-dollar battle- ships a year, we are handed a certifi- cate of security. May it prove to be worth its face. The shooting of innocent girls and traveling evangelists just for the fun of it makes 1910 a perfervid year for inncent folka. California has decided that oral bet- ting is not gambling. There is no doubt the judge who enderses this sen- timent is a bird. Beverly, Mass, 1s likely to have cause this summer for jealousy of Oyster Bay, N. Y. ,The ex-president knows no “eclipse. To check spitting upon public walks, Sacramento wants a woman poliSeman to chide the fiithy and thus stimulate their sense of shame. . Mrs. Roosevelt does not talk much, but it is more than likely, that she talks to some purpose even when Theodore has the floor. 1t is believed at Chicago that soul mates got together when John Wick and Nellie Lamp of Fort Dodge, Ia., were united In marriage. When the New Jersey. legislature Broke up, it indulged in antics so dis- graceful to the state that the governor proposes to investigate them. ‘We shall not all of us meet the cen- us enumerator this week; but those wio do should not let him leave us fecling that he needs a friend. 3t is well that the government in- spectors think that poultry killed five years ago and eggs laid twelve years ago cannot be regarded as fresh food. Brewer at Yale. ¥indly permit one of thy’ twenty- nime suryivors of Justice. Brewer's class at Yale to attest the love, ad- mération and honor in which he was hekl through life by these old com- themselves | & be better than they can n'n?t'iu- of vegetal and Its | more wholesome than lard—and it is | whbsence makes the first g look lone- c::wer. 100, one«third less beiog parions of his boyhood days. Oringinally a student at Wesleyan “Mariony Harland,” HOL and Mra Sarsh Tyson Horer, ate 12 ramilins to. almost Svery Bbme Tach has ‘her own s o “It ‘has_given faction,” Mrs. factory; glad 2a: behind it, every il be safe la”;rm. at least a trial. is 2 ofl-> shortening, purer Te- (Written for The Bulletin.) As I was passing along the street the other day I came to the house of & well-to-do man that gave me no little surprise. Had it been in_some other section of the city, and before Some other house, there would have been no astonisment whatever. But John Bradiord Winthrop. did not live in the slums occupying a crowded ten- ement house with only o larfo back- yard and squalid surroundings. He owned a large ang comfortable house on’ Isior avenue that represented for the most part the homes of men in easy circumstances. Nabob Ter- race, where every householder keeps a gardener, Is not the only place that ought to be free of dirt and litter; even Narrow Alley, where no garden- er is ‘employed, filth is inexcusable. But here on Excelsior avenue, in the goodly City of Satisfaction, why men like F. Bradford Wintnhrop, intelligent, upright and influential, should take so Mitle intepest in beautifying their premises. s certainly hard to see, Severai things surprised me as I raused in front of his residence; why does he allow his house to take on a dilapidated appearance when a fresh coat of paint.would make it lock like new? Why does he let the tar walk wear out, and the curbing get out of plumb? 'Has he never heard that “a stitch in time saves ‘mine?” As a shrewd business man does he not know that there is no money in letting prop- erty run down It was while musing of these things that T thought someone was speaking behind me. Turning about and facing the lawn I saw no one from whom the sound procecded. And continued low, ciear and plaintive, and it was not until I had put my ear close to the ground that those conveyed any meaning. I could not catch all that was said, but the fol- lowing ‘was the drift of the conversa- tion: : “It's as mean dirt that I'm kept from the sunshine and air! _After my long sleep of months in the frozen ground, when the warmth and moist- ure makes stretch my legs and yawn. I do think they might give me a breath of fresh air! So curibus was I to learn where that voice came from that I took the lib- erty to overturn an old rotten board that Jay on the lawn close to the side- walk. There I found the sickly, dis- torted- form of Lady Daffodil vainly striving to reach the Mght end air “Oh, thank you!” she said in a feeble voic t have stood it much longer. at men keep rotten boards for on the lawn! They're unsightly and unhealthy, and they keep us from growing that, at least, have the merit of beauty and tragrance.” “Tt's a burning disgrace,” Crocus, nearby, turning red w dignation as fe spok “Ir 1 could batve moved from this spot 1 would have given you a lift. It remdnds me of the time I ha to this world that doe iate us. After the frost let go of me, I had to poke my nose up through a mass of Totten leaves and old dead grass and after I was fairly started, out came the iron rake—two wecks behind time and mutllated my side, s0 as to make me a cripple for a year. But the worst of it is the old simpleton of a man who came near taking my life bent over me this morning and then shout- ed to his wife “‘Martha, Martha, T don't think these crocuses are going to do much this year!” Why couldnt L have been d Mr. h in- till the sounds | a dahlia to be kept in a nice cellar, and then when all danger of frost vast to be planted in a rich gar- dfn aad blossom when I please? I teR you this is a very unjust worla!” “I've had the most humillating ex- perience of all.” remarked Prince Jon- quil, relative of the Nargissus family. ‘Af(er lifting y head up through the urfuce and getting tangled up in a mass of brush, _somebody threw a piece of carpet over the brush heap and here T am a prisoner. The only light I get is what comes the | occasional holes In that old carpet. Of course my growth s stunted, and yet my master expects Im to bé a thing af beauty and fragrance; I'm to make his grounds lovely, and later adorn s table and be admired by his guests, I wouldn't ask for much to eat and drink. but would like half a chance to fulfil my mission in the world!” | “Don’t you think, worthy sir ‘said Lady Daffodll, piciking up wonderfully in the warm sunsivine, “that this man | Winthrop was born tired? Here it is April, and only yesterday I heard—I could not see—him —trimming his grapevine. Unless I'm terribly off there's going.to be a great many | tears ‘shed a little later.” “Ho was both late and tired,” sald Mr. Crocus, “but he's no worse than halt the men on this street. Now this negligence is-not due t8 any lack of inteliigence, but to sheer indifference and want of enthusiasm. +I_should think that all thosé who Jove flowers, | and who likd to see their grounds | made beautiful by avalks, trees and shrubbery, would form themselves into | a society, and enter on a campaign of | education.” As no reply was made to this last remark, I began slowly to walk away thinking that the conversation was ended, when a new voice spoke up, somewhat coarser and harsher than | the others, and seemingly to come from the back yard. As it had a tinge of | sougness in it, I knew that it was the | voice of the Rhubarb. ; | . “I aon't pelieve that any of you have | troubles like mihe. Last fall when I went to bed they put on a lot of straw and leaves to keep me warm. That was all right because it was kind and thoughtful. It wae also all right to welght it down with boards and stones to keep the gales from blowing my | bed-clothes away. But why in _the | name of vegetation don't they-think to | take -off the bedding when the time | comes for me to wake up? Here I |am trving to poke my Ted mose up tirough not only straw and leaves but also bords and stones. The only thing | that consoles me s that my surround- ings In the outer world would not be very satisfactory. The sound of the coal-sifter tells me that there is a pile of ashes near by, and I know that the ! | 01a hencoop collapsed by the smow | | three winters ago, will be the same old eye-sore up in the corner. There will | be also the same old tangle of dead | | grass. brush, and general litter, that | usually greets my spring advent. If it | | didn't make my nose so sore rooting | about after the light I would as soon | | remain here in the darkness. | | “Now, as this goes on vear after | | year dontinuea the Rhubarb, after a | | Pause, “with no prospect of a change, | | Why ¢an we not formea union to pro- | | teet our rights just as workingmen do? |12 this man Winthrop treated the clerks in his store s he does us, they'd strike—what do you say to that, fel- low As the 1dea was novel, no immediat ly was made, but as I went away he Lady Daffodil and Mr. Crocus were | vety thoughtful.—By H. R, of Salton.| | university at Middletown Conn., hé entered the class of ’56 at Yale in the beginning of its junior year. He was a quiet Christian gentleman, as we knew him there, a faithful, finished soholar, urostentatious, vet unremit- ting and devoted. His ability as @ thinker made early conspicuous as a priz English _composition, and Wwas noted in the classics for of diction s while he ions, his ch as to carry him to a position of eminent distinction in the appointment ratings of his senior year. At graduation le stond third in"a class of ninety-seven members, and no man ameng his class- mates was held in more genuine ad- miration and pride by President W sey and his other instructors or more winner In | his rare | | hopeful honor and promise by his lom- panions of those delightful years.— Charles T. Catlin in New York Trib- une. ! Your Own Garden. | The pessibilities and the utility of | | thg home garden are getting pretty | well understood in Kansas City. Last vears wmumerous éxperiments brousht profitable_resuits. With the City club and the Athemaeum ready to co-ope: ate, ready to give practical suigestions | | to those who wish to cultivate garden | ptches, the home owners of Kansas | City should take advantage of this | means of bettering the condition of | their tables and participating in good, holesome outdoor _exercise at the same time. The high cost®of living | makes the utility of the home garden | | even if he had been sn disposed by na- | Taze whole villages for the purposes of Away_out iff Nebrasi named l:cr?ook. It is ::" ghon, o dry that & man’ once said that t ter enough in it to freshen a salt mack. grel. _But McCook had pluck and put in jrrigation dams an: 68 and the farmers ralse bll’qcmm ‘where the wind ufed to raise only a dust. More- over, McCook is @ division town on the groat Burlington railroad system, and this gives it position on the map, But the biggest thing about McCook jmst now is that it is the home and head- quarters of that Nebraska congress- man who made the earthquake In Washington the other day. For elght years now Mr, Norris has been the representative 3f the district. It is not a republican stronghold, and at the last clection the now moted insurgent got back to the marble capitol by the al- most invisible majority of 22 votes, It all things had then been known which are now known, powerful interests probably would have seen to it that in- stead of fighting at the Cannon’s mouth Judge Norris would bave been left to the quiet practice of law ip McCook. Congressman Norrls was born i | Ohlo on a farm. His father died when | he was a child and his only brother | went away to war and fell on the fleld | of battle. The family were poor and | the boy had to go out among lhe‘ nelghbors and work by the day. 13 winter he went to school, and by axn by he climbed high enough in his stud- | i to teach school. Then he went away to school and rounded off his. college . studies in Valparaiso, Ind., the refuge and resort of so many poor boys. Lat- | er he graduated at & law school and | . admitted tec the bar. i it was in 1885, when he was 24 years old, that Norris heard the com- | man. “Go west, young man,” and Me- Coolk 1ooked good to him, probably be- cause there was so,much room _out there. After the manner of MecKin-| ley and numerous other successful mcn, young Norris started up the political ladder by getting himseif elected prose- cuting attorney, He made so much suc- cess in this position that he was elect- €d district judge. Then he went to congress, and after a while he went for Cannon and all the unpardonable things which that grizzled old war-| horse and wheel horse stood for. | For Judge Norris was one of the original insurgents, an insurgent be- | fore the movement had surged to the | front, He lived out on the piains v hera | the winds are free and. men are I'ke | the air they breathe, and where pup- ulists _become numerous -when crops fal Therefore he could not stand pat, ture, which he was not. For this com- pound product of Ohi¢ and Nebraska, |* of early povérty end after success. seems t> be a man of principle and pluck, also of vision. Judge Norrls is able to look down the road and see coming everts beforg they have rais- | ed a cloud of dust and are making a racket which can be heard across the | country.— »ho” in the Advance. Back to Nature. Colonel Astor’s reported intention of restoring to a state of nature the four thonsand acres of land—much of it inbhabitd—which he has acquired near Rhinebeck, New York, appears to Life to involve “an object lesson of the uses of money which helped to raisa, hob In France and in our day hawe brought on the budget crisis In Englond. However this may be, it| seems unfortuhate that any multi-mfl- Monaire. should think it necessary to | providing himself with a tranquil tract of field and forest when there is so much land that might be obtained for such an end without disturbing any considerable number of Tuman habita- tions. There are townshipsin New England, for instance, that are revert- ing to the wilderness; three thousand acres in Connectlicut, close to the Rhode Island line, were revorted burned over | he other day without injury to any welll; Providence Journal. Shad by the Thousand. Ripples wihch covered acres of water at Butk Roe Beach on the Chesapeake recently first surprised pa- | tient fishermen there and then eston- None of them is the same in compeosition or effectiveness, so wholesome and eco- nomical, nor will make such fine food. ROYAL ‘Baking Powder Royal is the only Baking Powder made as substitutes for Royal. Absolutely Pure away. the surface told the fishermen that the and finally got their nets The nets were CALIFORNIA FIcG)SyrupXCo SOLD BY ALL LEADING: DRUGGISTS ONE SIZE ONLY. REGULAR PRICE 50*A BOTTLE ished them as the disturbance reached their seines and made them taut until it “secmed THAL they would be forn A shad or two pushed above force below was a great school of the fish which they had been long hoping would come their way. With all thefr might they tugged ut of the Still_ the water was rippling. returned and unother like haul was made. This was _re- peated the third time with undimin- ished success, and still the #ater ripy pled_apparently as much as ever, but the fish had tnen got too far away for another haul. Fifteen thousand shad had been taken and the fisherimen had had the best day of their liv Noghing like the number of shad at Buck Roe has ever been seen before in the Chesa- peake.—Norfolk (Va.) Dispatch to N. Y. Sun. IT’S YOUR KIDNEYS Don't Mistake the Cause of “Your Troubles. A Norwich Citizen Shows How to Cure Them. water. Many people never suspeet thelr kidneys. If suffering from a lame, weak or aching back they think that it is only. a muscular weakness; when wrinary Wouble sets In they think It will soon correct Iitself. And so it is with all the other symptoms of kidney disorders. That is just where the danger lies. You must cure these troubles or they may lead to diabetes or Bright's disease. The best remedy to use is Doan’s Kidney Pills. It cures all ills which are caused by weak or diseased kidneys. Norwich people tes- tity to permanent cures, D. J. Brown, 6 Summer Street, Nor- wich, Conn., says: “The results that followed the use of Doan’s Kidney Pills in my case were most satisfactory. I procured this remedy from N. D. Sevin & Son’s drug store, and in view of my experience can heartily recommend it as an excellent preparation for toning up the kidneys and relieving all com- plaints due to a disordered condition of these organs.” For sale by all dealers. Price 50c. Foster-Milburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember the name — Doan's — and take no other. WhY Do You Suf with headache, biliousness, constipa- tion and the ills it entalls when Foley's Orino Laxative will relieve and cure you. It tones up all the digestive or- gans, carries off the waste matter and stimilates the bowels to thelr normal activity. It is a splendid epring medi- cine. Lee & Dsgood Co. © LEGAL NOTICES/ NOTICE To Milk Dealers Any person selling Milk or Cream in the City of Norwich, are requested to call at the residence of the Inspector, No. 254 Franklin Street, and receive a License. After May 1st, 1910, any one selling without a License will be pros- ecuted according to the State Law. gned) . ¢ W. A, CHAPPELL, V. 8, Milk Inspector. aprod Individuality Is What Couats In Photography. Bringing out the real personality. the fine joints In character, the littls traits that make ,us what we ars. Toped down by the natural spirfs of an artist into perfect accord. Not & thing of paper and pasteboard with & ready-made look. If you want a photo of your real elf, or what your friends see to love and admire. call on LAIGHTON. The Photographer, Norwich Savings Soclety opposite augisa General Contractor All orders recelve prompt and careful attention. Give me a trial order. Sat- isfaction guaranteed. THOS. J. DODD, Norwich . Telephone 248-2. Norwich, Building ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING THIS 7 If 50 you should consult with me and get prices for same. Excellent wark at reasonable prices. C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor 'and Builder, 218 MAIN STREET. “Phone 370. jan17a THERE 1s no aavertising 1 10 THl Bubr s Feature-— BROOKS & Economy ~ In Painting Your House ‘Hoes not mean buying the Paint sold at the lowest price per gallon. It means getting the Paint—the oil—the white lead that cove the most sur- face per gallon and gives the greatest number of years of service—in other words—the best value for your dollar. Our Paints, Oils and WhiteLea cost fess: because they take less and last longer. Let us show you pieasing color combinations, estimate quantity needed or be of any service we can, whether you buy or nok The Lee & Osgood Co. 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. aprddaw Wall Papers Over two hundred patterns in neat and pretty Wall Papers from Be-a roll upwards. ALL BORDERS FREE We want you to inspect our Spring line of Furniture, Rugs, Carpets, Mat- tings, Ranges, Oil Stoves, Etc, Eto. Shea Eiurke Norwich and Taftville aprsd NOW BUY SEEDS All New Seeds FLOWER SEEDS VEGETABLE SEEDS Be ready when the right day for planting comes. PEOPLE’S MARKET, || Business, € Franklin St. aprid JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop. Headline—ELVIA BATES COMEDY SKETCH Frankie Melrose and Clayton Sisters Singing, Dancing and Acrobatic Work Premier Comedy Acrobats| The Man With 3 Voices ADMISSION—10c. & C0. FICKLE FORTUNE KINGMAN DAYTON EVENING) B CHARLES MeNULTY,LESSEE . Feature Pleture: Treachery of the Pequots. THRILLING INDIAN PICTURE. Miss Lillian Shuwny, Soprano, IN PICTURED MGLODINS, Matineo, Ladies and Chiiaren, music. NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacher of Plame, Central Bullding. Room 48, CAROLINE H. THOMPSON Teacher of Muaslc 46 Washington Street. L B PALOOM, - \ Teacher of Flame i 20 Thames 9 Lessons given at my r or et the home of the pupil Same method as ‘at Bohawenka - 8 'Phone 518-8. sept22a agine the Uniimfted Excellence and Beauty of Our New Line of SPRING and SUMMER | | SHIRTS They are perfect fit- ting and you will find them ditferent in char- acter from everybody’s shirt. Prices reasonable and fabrics good. McPHERSON The Hatter, 1 Main St UNDREDS of yowoy and women have cbisimed the foundation the Baate principies of success by o coures of nstruction in our sohool. We can help you I you will let us to & more successtul Write today — new — for Information. All Commercial Branches, THE NEW LONDON| lle.ge men I onreer. fuil RABrubeck. Aumiliew. re’s a difference in Hats. & careless mixture of furs can be moulded into a ftylish shape, but it won't 2y so. Lamson & Hubbard hats are made with a repu- tation. Just the right mixture of furs is used, L. & H. Fur-Felt is always tested at our laboratory, so that every L, & H. Hat is bound to hold its ftylish shape. Just the right dye is used, especially made to stand the test on the furs. L. & H. Hats never fade or grow rusty. , P. J MORLEY, FRANKLIN SQUARE, NORWICH. S GRS Ce ® Ceresota. Boy. esotaw Flour *“One more slice, Mammea—I want to look like the la AT