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ROWTH Kemoved by Lydia E. Pink- ham’sVegetable Compound Holly Springs, Miss. —* Words are xundeqnne for me to express what yourwonderful med- cines have done for olly Springs, Miss. Ona of greatest ‘triumphs of ydia E. Pinkham’'s Vegetable Com- lnfl is the conquering of woman’s S:ead enemy — tumor. If you have mmysterious pains, inflammation, nlcera- tion or displacement, don’t wait for time to confirm your fears and go through the horrors of a hospital o] tion, but try Lydia E. Pinkham’s ga. E. Pinkham’s table oomponnd at once. For ¢! rs L; Vegetable made from roots =nd herbs, bas beenbhom&rdxemedy for female ills, and such unguestion- able testimony as the above proves the value of thiS famous remedy, and should give e nne confidence. If yon wo ke special advice about your case wrlta a confiden~ tial letter to DMrs. b a Lynm Mass. Her ndvice i!sna'efi md alwn.y! helpful. Rheumatism 1 have found » tried and testad cure for Rbeu- matism! Nota remedy that will straighten the Aistorted limbs of chronic cripples, por G bany srowths back to flesh again. Thas i3-impossible. Bot 1 can now surely kill the pains and pangs of freely as does sugnr when added to pure water. And then,, when dissolved, these DoiSonous wastes freely pass from the system, and the cause of Eheumatism is gone forover. Thero 18 NoW Do resl nead—no actual excuse to suffer longer with- outBelp. We soll, aod in coufidence recommend Dr. Shoop’s Rheumatic Remedy DONT WORRY; It Makes Wrinkies. orry over 1ill-health does yous Beaita no good and merely causes wrinkles, make you look oldee Tan ou are. 1f you mre sick, don’t worry, but about it to m-ko ‘ycurself weli. To -‘i: tis e ropest the words of thousands of other former sufferers from womans ty ills, similar to yours, when we say, lake Viburn-0. It 1s a wonderful female remedy, iy TERRIFYING NIGHTMARE EXPERIENGE| Ealloonish’i .Pligl:t Seen in Dream—Mrs. Forbes ‘usband Cry for i‘elp. is in New Londo E W n, Bridgeport, May 12.—Alrs. Bessie Livingston Forbes, wife of A. Holland Forbes, the aeronaut, whose balloon was wrecked near Glasgow, ., last night, declared today that in her sleeo she had a vision of the whole disaster and experienced the most horrible nightmare within her recollection. Mrs. Forbes’ Story. “T was sleeping quietl: she saild, “when suddenly I began to dream about my husband and his companjer, J. C. Yates. The dream gradually grew more and more vivid and I was terri- fied. I seemed to see them in the bal- loon which was out of their control. It secmed to me as if they had been in the car for many days without food or drink and were suffering terribly from hunger and thirst. “At times I could ses them and this balloon as clearly as though 1 w right at hand making the asceénsion, then again the vision would fade away and become indistinct. 1 seemed to hear my husband's voice calling re- peatedly for help. “I had the most terrifving feeling that he was in great danger and was overcome by the idea of helplessness which seizes one in dreams. It seemed to me as if 1 was paralyzed and watching my husband go to his death.” “I was =0 terribly frightened that I awoke at last and was in a cold perspi- ration. 1 knew then that it had been only a dream, but the vision was so CARUSO BLACK HAND MAN CONVICTED Jury Declared Him Guilty of Sending Blackmailing Letter to Singer. New York, May 12.—Antonio Misia charged with writing Black Hand let- ters to Enrico Caruso and demanding the payment of $15,000 under a threat of death, was convicted of attempted extortion yesterday before Judge Faw- tt in the county court, Brookiyn. He 1l be sentenced next Monday. { Mr. Caruso was not present when the verdict yas announced. He left for Europe on Tuesday, soon after he had testified against the accused black- mailer, and unless a_wireless message carries the news of his persecutor's conviction he will not learn of the dis- position of the case until he reaches foreign shores early next week. The jury spent about three hours dellberating before it decided that Mis- iani was one of the authors of the | letters which gave to the great tenor | the worst alarm of his life., The voung Italian defendant, who declared he was not a blackmailer, but an importer of oils, accepted the verdict without the slightest sign of emotion. STARTED TO PAINT TOWN RED. This Led to the Undoing of George Shanley and Joseph Brooks. Providence, May 12.—George Shan- 21 years old, and Joseph Brooks, years old, two young men who broke into and entered the distillery of the Abrams Brothers in the Second pre- | cinct recently, and stole a lot of paint and 35 yeast cakes, faced Judge Gor- ham in the Sixth district court yes- terday morning, and it was brought out in their arraignment that they started to paint the town red with the paint which they had stolen and this led to their undoing. Affer getting into the place’ they took the paint and started to slap the vermillion all over the front of a house owned by Annie E. Shay, This didn’t improve the ap- pearance of the house at all. Both men pleaded guilty to break- ing and entering in the night time and the larceny of the paint and yeast cakes and were bound over to the grand ju: {On the charge of damaging a bulld- ing -owned by Annie E. Shaw the two pleaded guilty and were fined $20 and costs each. i i Refused to Certify to His Fitnes Boston, May 12—Following the re- fusal of the civil service commission to certify to the fitness of former May- or Gegrge A. Hibbard as city collector. came the announcement today that Mr. Hibbard had contracted tubercul and would be unfit for work for some time. Mr, Hibbard was nominated by Mayor Fitzgerald, who was tw: opponent, but under the provisio the new city charter, the nomination to this office had to be confirmed by the state civil service board. I not sleep again. ! had strong that 1 had an overwhelming conviction that something was wrong. It was then early morning and I could 1 instructed my maid to get the earliest coples of the New York papers, and I called up the tele- graph offices to see if any telegrams come, for my husband always sends a message to me first of all when he lands from an ascension, When 1 found that there was no telegram I knew for certain that some- th! had happened, and my dream was confirmed when the papers were brought to me telling of the accident.” Under Doctor’s Care. At 6 o'clock last evening Mrs. Forbes received a telegram from her husband, the first dictated by him after his re- turn to consciousness. It was brief, stating that he had landed in Kei and would be at his home in next Tuesday was so shocked by her accident that she has been | under the care of Dr. W. H. Donalison 1 day. She received word noon from Williain Hall, a Imultimillionaire New Yorker, who was to have taken the trip with Forbes, but was prevented by business engage- ments. Mr. Hall stated that he had Jeft for the seene of the balloon wreck, that he had wired ahead for the best spe- ciali to attend Mr. Forbes and Mr. Yates and that no expenses were to be spared "airfield erd; e e R e AVIATION MEET TO BE HELD ON LONG ISLAND America’s First International Contest for the World’s Championship. New York, May America’s first international ~aviation meet for the championship of the world will be held on Long Island. The last internation- al meet at which Glenn H. Curtiss of Hammond: . N. Y., won the James Gordon Ly, was held last year at Rheims, France. The exact site for the course has not been definitely chosen, but it will be somewhere on Hempstead plains, Loag Island, just outside the limits of city will be cunducted by the International Aeronautic federation. of which the Aero club of America is a member, and will last for a week. The main contest for the world’s champion= ship and the Gordon Bennett trophy has been scheduled for October 22, but the dates for the minor events have been set. of the federation provide 2 races shall be held each year in the country represented by the vic- e contest of the year prevous. Last year Curtiss won the champion- the trophy, together with a ze of $5.000 as a representative sh pr | of the Aero club of America, and this vear the club representatives will de- fend it on their own territory. FORMAL ACCEPTANCE BV MR. ROOSEVELT Secretary of State Receives Cablegram Dated Berlin, May 12. shington St 'P Knox has x(—ul\bd from Theo- dore Roosevelt the formal acceptance of his designation as special ambas- sador to represent the United States at the funeral services of King Bdward VIL. The cablegram Roosevelt is dated Berhn, reads as follows: v of State, Washington. ept and through you beg to the president my appre- clation of appointment. (Signed) THEODORE ROOSEVELT.” As there is niot sufficient time for a letter of credence to reach Mr. Roose- velt before the funeral he will be a credited by cable to the American em- in London. TRAVELING MAN HAD HIS NAME CHANGED. It Was the Same as That of Con- fessed White Slave Dealer. New York, May 12.—The similarity of names which caused him to be con- fused with confessed white slave dealer was as his reason to to Aaron Manuel inson says he has been received today ] Having disobeyed his”father, who | objected to his marriage with a_ non- Catholic, Eugene O'Neill, son of James O'Neill, the actor, whose summer home demonstrating that a disobedient son makes an un- reliable husband. Wednesday's New York World said of the young man, who was married by a clergyman not of his own faith: Eugene O’'Neill, son of James O'Neill, the actor, whose romantic 0 Kathleen' Jenkins, was told of in Sat- urday’s World, and who was supposed New. York, terday. The two were married se- cretly July 26 last in Trinity church, HoboKken, but the wedding was not re- vealed until last Thursday. when a son was_born to Mrs. O'Neill, who lives at No. 549 West One Hundred and Thirteenth street. The young mother is still in ignor- ance of her husband’s presence In this city. She pelieves him to be in a mine in Honduras_working to make a fortune for her and their infant son. Since-O'Neill's return to New York he has not called upon_ his wife, accord- ing to her mother, Mrs. Kate C. Jei kins, at whose home Mrs. O'Nefll staying, When Mrs. Jenkins was told vesterday that her son-in-law was here she at first refused to believe it. She was so shocked she could say nothing for several minutes. Then, with tears of mortification flling her eyes, she exclaimed: “It seems impossible that Gene is in town and has remained away from his wife and their baby. There must be some mistake, but if there is not, Eugene’'s attitude is inexcusable. He knows how we all feel toward him and that he could have come to this house to live any time since his marriage to my daughter. There would have been no mother-in-law about it, either, and he knew that I felt toward him as if he were my own son. If he is livingin New York without coming to see his wife and baby I am pretty certain who is responsible for his behavior. No. I will mot say new who that pe: son is.” ©O'Nefll has had a room at No. 123 West Forty-seventh street for a week at least, according to a friend of his who is a lodger at that address. Mr. and Mrs. James O'Neill, the youti’s parents_ live at the Lucerne, Amsterdam avenue and Seventy-ninth Mr, O'Neill could not be seen but at the hotel it was said had been to see his mother and father Monday evening. At the Green Room club the clerk said tr young man and his father had din there together Friday last. “Gen also has been seen at Broadway res- taurants in the last few da; Not Looking for Too Much. “Dey sez poverty is a blessin’ in dif guise,” said Brother Dickey, “but w'en 1 sees him comin’ I prays de Lawd dat 't be blessed out er house an’ Atlanta Constitution. Those Deserving a Monument. Those only deserve a monument who do not need one; that is, who have raised themselves a monument in the minds and memories of men.— Hazlitt. imilarity. “You're not like lightning, anyhow, Dinguss,” said Skadbolt, reluctantly taking out his pocket-book. “You can strike the same man dozens of times.” About Men. Many a man would friends in this world, spend so’' much time cri friends he already has. have more if, he didn't cising the Pertinent Observation. “Some men,” says Hans, the baker's boy, “vas alwaye like der keyhole on der back of a clock. They vas behint time.” Provided For. Even when the man of few words hasn’t any money to do his talking he | usuaily has -Da Riga sent us_ $8,031,000 worth of Russian hides and skins in 1909. ‘The other day, when the trial the brakeman was There is but one mlh for each man and woman in the world and until they recognize'the fact and learn with patience to await the note of absolute conviction which is the one infallible guide to happiness, marriages will fail as they fail now and the church will give its empty blessing to those fll- assorted pairs whom God forever leaves unblessed.—Exchange. Food for Pet Owls. Young owls are easily raised on fresh meat. Up to the age of four or five weeks, beef and mutton finely chopped make a good food. After that, mice, rats and English sparrows, served whole, are in great demand and come nearest their natural food. These, if not too large, they will swal- low whole—St. Nichola By Order of the Deceased. An Atchison man died lately, and when his remains were viewed at the funeral a placard was lying on his breast which read: “Now, will you let me alone?” There is a good deal of talk about the affair. The undertaker says he placed tid: placard there at the last request of the deceased.— Atchison Globe. Kidnaped. Little three-year-old Margie was al- ways anxious to relate to her young friends the interesting things that her father read in the paper. She was overheard a few days ago telling her little neighbor: “Yes, Edith, my father readed it in the morning paper, a Ifttle boy just as big as me, was nipnapped. Proves the Odors of Metals. Every metal is believed by Grutin, & German chemist, to have its peculiar odor, which he rfegards as a gaseous transformation product. He has made some of the odors perceptible for a few moments at intervals by heating the metals to 122 degrees Fahrenheit. Lacking. The mechanical piano player can bardly boast itselt equal to the human performer until it renders music so finely and feelingly as to get itself drowned out by conversation when- ever it attempts to entertain company. —Puck. Ingrowing Nails, Perhaps. A man who can fall 3,500 feet out of a balloon and hit the earth so light- 1y as to injure neither himself nor the ground is not immortal, of course, but it would be interesting to know just what will finally carry him off. War Cry Affrighted Heathens. All¢luia or Hallelufah Victory was a victory by the Saxous under St. Ger- manus over the Picts and Britons. ‘The Christians all shouted “Alleluia!” and so terrified the hes(hen that they took to flight. Don’t Be a Robber. He that neglects his work robs his master, since he is fed and paid as | if he did his best; and he that is not diligent in the absence as in the pres- ence of his master, cannot be a true servant. i One of Life's Sad Facts. + Pay days come and pay days go, but | bilis go on forever. n early m i for the -eomu wnd’tell the tru the motto of the club, In Charleston Post. knows ‘m attached to the task look . Milwankeo uwpux.—x.wuvmo Courler= Latin— Why buy a piano and be satisfied with piano music only, when for a small frac- tion of the cost of a piano you can have ?fieEDISQN | Phonograpi bringing music of every instrument into your home, the whole band, orchestra, Grand Opera, the whole vaudeville show. FOR a good piano vou have to pay about $400.00. Think ! For one-half that price you can have an Amberola—the highest type of Edison Phonograph made, and just as beautifully finished as a $1000.00 Grand Piano. And you can get other types of Edison Phonographs at any price you want to pay, from $12.50 up. Does your Phonograph play Amberol Records? If not, ask your dealer about our money-saving combination offer on Amberol Records and the attachment to play them. The Amberola Other Styles s5c $12.60 to $128, 3¢ to $2.00 Go to the near- Edison Standard Records. . Edison Amberol Records (play twice as lnu) Fdison Grand Opera Records. . . . There are Edison dealers everyw est wnd hear the Standard and_Amberol ere. Edisan Phonograph play both Edison Records, and. get complete catalogs from your dealen or from us. NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH COMPANY 76 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N.J. The Edison B: Pl--ut-mlonu-n of the typist's actual transcribing tim: THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO., Plaut-Cadden Building, Main Street, Norwich, Conn) Headguarters for Edison Phonographs and Records —EASY TERMS— Special rooms for demonstration. makes the strongest and most uniformly colored concrete for building purposes .of any cement on the market. A concrete house made with Edison Portland Cement is practically as though cut out of solid rock. Uniformly 10% Finest Ground in the World and therefore more material—and binds it everlastingly. ce built it is built for practically all time. You can buy this.coment and get Fall information concerning it from. CRUTHERS & LILLIBRIDGE, Norwich, Conn -~y » 5 confounded by many persons with a ou will admit if you try 1 R '\\{'Mi ‘Y":a*_’\‘: D‘:? '"w"x id D‘?:'l man of the same name who recently DON’T BUY Direcsi iis Gee are pi New York, May 12.—What is said to | pleaded to a charge of trafficking in g, loneunces with every bottie.” Frlos | have icen, (e most valuabie dog In the e etA e e OLD STYLE TEETH world, Champion Chinehan Young | deriding him. Even his sister in To- 108 West 129th Street. N'w Yolx the Long Island kennels of his owner, | and wr m a reproachful letter. sppearance, buy a-set-or partial set PORT LIKE F| IHING marild J. Cooper Mott, who recently imported | justice Whitney considered the ex- | with Dr. King’s latest invention, that B ) him for $5.200 Richard Croker, Jr. | planation sufficient to grant the apph- | wonderful improvement, the “NAT- INo TACKLE EQUAL.TO.THE. BrRAND paid $5,000 for Rodney Stone, another 1647 English bull some years ago. . URAL GUMS,” which makés it impos- e g %3 sible to detect artificial teeth in your l Adam’s _Tavern : M Eiea tarn: | mouth. = Kissology. “It's a good idee to lay up treas- PAINLESS EXTRACTION | A girl can make a young man be- | ures in heaven, but at the same time F‘ W .186l | Heve she doesn’t want him to kiss her | don’t furgit the rainy-day possibility | :Jef},‘; i’é‘;“i‘é&fifi.“’.";‘d dexgg mne Quality LO Prices offer to the pubiic the.-finest standard Beer, 5" Burton, Muejr’ Scotch Gulme" owl?n !lolll. C & C unker Al B, Do Pnnx Jon-blvoufl-h. ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser Budweiser, Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Teiephone #47-12. vaza AMERICAN HOUSE, Fuarrell & Sanderson, Fropa. SPECIAL RATES to Theatrs Tronpes, Traveling Men, sta, Livery comnected SEETUCKET STREET. Belivered io Any Part of Norwich | the Ale that ts acknowledged to be the best on the market HANLEY’S PEIM.SSS A telephone oxder will promap: atteption. McCORMICK, 30 Franklin' St THE PLANK Headquarters for Best Ales, Lagers, Eto,, in Town. JAMES O'CONNELL, Proprietor. Telephoue BOT. oct2a BUTTER PAPER. Psinted according to New State Law. On sale 3t CARDWELL'S aprsea BJ. [ himself.—Smart Set. when she is almost dafly for fear he won't. Stick to One. ‘There is more than one road to sue- cegs, but no ome ever gets there by trying theém all—Detroit Free Press Usually. A judge of human mature usualiy makes a mistake in his estimate of ! A Great Artist. The great artist can paint picture on a small Dhdley Warner. 3 a great capvas.—Charles | Peculiarity. Happiness has a peculiar way . of 'coming and going without warning.— Chicago News, Officers of the civil service in New Seuth Wales must insure their Hv For Everyone who likes a dainty break- fast cereal Post Toasties ..are an economical, never- failing delight. : “The Memory Lingers” Pkgs. 10c and 15c. Postum Céreal Company. Tad., Battle Creek, Mich, U. S. A. i on the earth.” A Waste of Time. Most men fool away so much valu- able time trying to be like somebody else that they have no chance to amount to anything as themselves. Says the Philosopher. “Ef you can’t git up the ladder of success on your own feet, don’t grab the cut-ails of the feller ahead as a last resort.” If Not One Thing it Is Another. The ideal man does not exist; per- haps one who has & fine liver has a bunion, and in the most of us there is a screw loose somewhere. Turns Out Needies in Millions. A needle faciory in Redditch, Wor- cestershire. England, makes 70,090,000 needles every week Candlas and Gas. pounds of candies will produce amount of Hlumination as of gas Fifty the sz 1,000 fe Everybody Knows One. A man who has never had a cold has no idex how many good eures there are in the weorld for it. Germany’s State Woods. The state woods of Germany coever 10,000,000 scres and give employment to 100,000 persens. Talk and Fhought. The pmot is proof of the fact that therp may be much talk wi is littie shought. Thomas Joffersen King, (i D. D. S. HOURS—9 a. m. to § p. m.; Sunda $3.50— BOSTONIANS —$4.00 | Famous Shoes for Men. . Why not have | the Best Ask 1o _ses the Johnnie Jones and the Live Wire Last. It will pay you. P. CUMMINGS, Sole Agency, 52 Central Avenue. Custom Grinding TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. A. R. MANNING, Yantic, Telephone. Cona. | OUR WORK meets the -ppnw-l, of the people, Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. ol, 958, Rear 37 Franklin Street. . sept27a critical QUALITY in “‘work should always be consiered, especlally when it costs no moré than the inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. :.1'!1'80" & YOUNG. i people. , absolutely SAFE treatment known to 1 X 4 dental science. Crowns and Bridge Work $5.; Fillings $1. up. | KING DENTAL PAHLURS Franklin Square, Norwich What and Where to Buy In Norwich decldd i o Dr. King’s method is the only Full set teeth $8. and the Natural Gums; Gold Gold with ¥s 10 to 2. Telephone. Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Street, Norwich. via SPINACH Native, 12 cents the peck; North Carolina Peas and String Beans cheap OTTO FERRY, 336 Franki Stry DR. JONES, Dentist, 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 Phone 32-3 maylla WELL! A WOF@ to ‘the wise is sufficient Do not’ bey goods because the price is cheap, but see that the goods are good quality. We have the BEST at THAMESVILLE STORE € S FAIRCLOUGH. Prop. RODB | Steel Rods $1.25, $1.50, $2.25 and $3.00 Split Bamboo | Split Bamboo with estra tip und‘z Reels .. 65c, $1.00 and $1.50 case $1.00, $1.50 and $2.50 | 0 Split Bamboo Trunk Rod J e n Be to 9138 $1.00, $200 and $3.00 | Artificial Bait THE HOUSEHOLD The Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street. SCHWARTZ BROS., 3-11 Water St Complete Home Furnishers The Big Store with the Little Prices 76¢c nera is the place to buy furniture cheap, 0ur line of houshold goods is -completey Many vargains-you wifl find here Every business day in the year, Furniture at prices to suit your means Utsiities from bath room to parior, even screens Retrigerators, parior and aining room. seta galore Notning like our linoleum for' your kitchen floor, Incandescent 1amps we diave a variety to mhow i Tnm.- are-many, the price of carpets is low, | Undu-unuuz all competitors is our aius, Rsmtmbeflh: our customers should benefit by Every actiar possible o save you we vy, SCHWARTZ BROS, 9-11 Water 8t