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Instant Relief |DANV fnr snrfl Fe& Motorman Daniel S. Sore Feet, Tender Feet and Swolles| Feet Cured Every Time. TIZ Makes Sore Feet Well No Matter Whit Ails Them, Danvers, Mass., May 1 “The death of Daniel S. Doherty late today rang down the curtain on the final act of the swift tragedy which took place in his home here today. The only other actor on the fatal stage, so far as is known, was Doherty's (housekeeper, Mrs. Beatrice Rice, whose body was found lying on the floor this afternoon. ‘Mrs. Rice had been strangled. Do- herty calmly told a policeman who had come to investigate reports of a dis- urbance at the house that he had drunk four ounces of nitric acid, and 20,000 SUNSHINERS IN CONNECTICUT. More Than 350,000 in United States— National Convention at New Haven. New Haven May 19.—Sunshiners. as they call themselve: a thousand or more, gathered in the sion of the national convention of the Internationa! Sunshine society, The delegates represented most of the for- ty-one states of the union which have taken up Sunshine work, and also | more than three hundred and fifty | thousand members. The movement vas started sixteen years ago among ewspaper workers in New York city, ind four years later it began to haw;ie a_ wider scope and was incorporated. T T e et etowah Tor'12]| This is the twelfth national conven- ‘superior to powders or plasters. 1| tion. The next convention will go to an Keep my feet in perfeet endltln-.!! New York city. Reports today show- 1Z because TIZ 1t keeps feet in tion. Read what this policeman say: “I was surprised and delight, Beileve In my earmest gratitude for)| cq that the Sunshine movement has Z. I am a policemam and keep ol ., ..5q (o England, Mexico and Pana- ny feet all day.”—Emsy Barrell, Aws-( |, “ 110 e are delegates from Can- S on Baver ‘Gl Ske TIZ; ada in the present session. differen Over the gathering today presided ed anything 1 tzetor. Bor sons fest 1t b rom anything ever before sold. Mrs. Cynthia Westover Alden, the tg“[‘Z in :ot m- mg:’;o::: president general. Her father, Mrs. e o P e O i ®gROre®. || Westover, over elghty vears of age, who had come from California, sat on with the other national fons which bring on soreness of the,! 8d eet, is the only remedy that does. . e piatform Ir'TZ eleans out every pore and glori- fficers. es the fest—your feet. | After the official welcome to the You'll never llmp again or dr&w up; ciiy, given by Mayor F. J. Rice, the Dont our corme busions and oattener; | ZTecting to the state was made by Mrs. You'll feel like @ new person. ¥ -ucy Andrews of this city, represent- i .12 to Cor sale st all drugeists Bt 25| ing t twenty thousand Connecticut fents per box o it will be sent vou!! members, and Mrs. Alden and Mrs. irect if you wish from Walter Luther| Theodore F. Seward, the vice presi- ge & Co., Chicaga, Il i dent general, made the responses. At the afternoon _sessi reports were made by Orin W. Ward of M sachusetts, the historian, Rev, Wal A. R. Gardner, of New York, for the advisory committee; Mrs. Nellie E. C. Furman, Brooklyn. N. Y., for the committee of established features; Mrs. Stella Christian of Texas, on li- The brarie: Mrs. John S. Heald of Port- L] aje land, Me., on shut-in and wheel chair department; Mrs, Helen P. Schertz of Ia I I Louisiana, on olarship: and an addr by Col. Charles W. Pickett of this city OF THE Tonight the delegates attended a re- ception. l ] CONGRESS THURSDAY. ee sg“" ". s Senate Labors With Railroad Bill Amendment—Campaign Speeches in P L] tl House. Servi 50 Yea When you send your prescription to The Lee & Osgood Co. — YOUR PRE- SCRIPTION IS THE ONLY WORK our Registered Pharmacist has before him until your Prescription is delivered. We have three Registered Prescrip- tion Clerks for compounding prescrip- tions, and the three reasons why our prescriptions are daily increasing are: 1. Expert Prescription Workmanship. 2. Highest Quality of Drugs. 8. Individual Attention. Ghe Lee & Osgood Washington, speeches occupied while May 19.—Campaign the house today, the sundry civil appropriation bill, theoretically, was under consid- eration. Speeches were made by Rep- Tesentatives Hamilton <f Michigan, Byrd of Mississippi, Dixon of Indiana, Longworth of Ohio, Borland of Mis- souri and McLachen of California. 2 was a strenuous debate on which resulted in sending back for further conference a senate amendment to the agricultural appro- priation bill giving the states 35 per cent. instead of 25 per cent. of the gross receipts from forestry adminis- tration in thelr jurisdiction. The re- mainder of the conference report on the bill was agreed to. In the senate the Cummins amend—- ment to the railroad bill requiring the approval of the interstate commerce commission to aull increases in railroad rates before they take effect was under considerati hroughout the day, but pied the floor dur-\ session. There was ing the entire much effort to bring about an agree- ment among democrats whereb; the bill would b frustrated, howe & number of democr: the agreement. regular republicans and an early vote on sured. This was v the refusal of ts to enter into TOWN ALLOWED $11,000 Davis Estate Pays 6 Per Cent. on Gilford Claims. The hearing of the claim of the town of Guilford against the estate of the former Treasurer George S. Davis, in the bankruptcy court, in New Haven, Monday afternoon, is closed, with the estate practically settled. On the claim of the town, $11,000 was allowed. More On the various claims ten per cent. Ompany’ has already been paid by the estate and it was agreed yesterday to pay eight per cent. more. The case in- volving the estate of the E. S. Wheel- er Co. was also ‘disposed of and after some consideration, a settlement was brought about. Ten per cent. has al- ready been paid by the estate and six per cent. more will be paid $31-133 Main St., Norwich, Ci. FIFTY YEARS OF ABSOLUTE ACCURACY. maylfdaw KILLING SPARROWS. Manchester Man Says They Destroy Eggs of Song Birds. | James Cheney is of the opinion that | the decre in the number of song | birds is . greatly to the sparrows { which destroys the eggs of the song | birds, and in order to try and save | the song birds he has deciared war on the sparrow. People passing along | Main street in Manchester Wednesday were suprised to hear the sound of a rifle shot and later to see a man hustling along with a_ smoking rifle The man was in the employ of Mr. Cheney and was out hunting for he hopes the sparrows. Every time took a shot at it way 1o greatly de ¢ one in number. and For Wounds and Abrasions No matter how slight a skin abrasion may be there here exists The Disgrace of Tennesses. : é His offense is aggravated by the 4 hance for invasion of some || fact that the murdered man was his deadly disease germ. Many ser- political oppenent and the pardoned ious cases of illness and even death man one of his chief political sup- result annually from blood porters. The governor was himself poisoning. one of the chief witn s for the de- | fense at the trial to find a grosser When the skin has been broken, cleanse the wound thoroughly with warm_ water to which has been | | OF th® pardoning or a nearer approach added a few drops of of those Russian officials their protection to the B for murder and pillage posed political interest. vietion of Col. in their The Cooper and was a credit to the administration of Gabot’s Sulpho-Napthol Because it is a perfect germicids it not only cleanses thoroughl;: but absolutely kills "any germs that have already attached them- es to the wound, besides making the hurt immune from such foreign troubles in the future. This is - the same ‘“Liquid Cleanliness” that housewives use to make their homes sweet, clean and healthy. ey e froge W g SULPHO-NAPTHOL COMPANY . - ‘Torrey Bullding, 14 Medford Street SAWYER CRYSTAL BLUE CO., Selling Agts. 88 Broad Street, Boston, Mass. justice in Tennessee. There was no serious dispute over the facts, but political passions were deeply involved. The jury rose above partisan preju- dice: " the governor has yielded to it. The people of Tennessee will soon have opportunity to decide whether they consider him a worthy representative of the honor and dignity of their state. That personal issue should overshadow every question -of mere political or partisan expediency at the coming election, The Mexican National railways are about to build a branch line from ILa Capilia, 15 miles to T.ake <Chapala, while the Chapala Hydro-Electric and Irrigation company has completed sur- veys for a trolley line betwen Guadala- Jara and Chapala Doherty, Murderer, then Committed Suicide—Motive for Crime Not Known. to the number of | auditorium today for the opeming ses- ! ——eee e NGL to the effects of the poison he suc-— cumbed several hours later. Strangled With Clothesline. While no motive is known, it is be- lieved that Doherty strangled his housekeeper with the clothesline which was found about her neck. He was 48 years old and was a motorman in the employ of the Boston and Northern Street Railway company. Mrs. Rice |wa.s 47 years of age. It is understood that her husband is living, together with a son and a daughter. |BLA(:K HAND SUSPECT - UNDER “THIRD DEGREE” Confessed to a Murder Which Had Not Everns Been Suspected. | New York, May 19.—Through the al- leged confession of Luigi Ciresice, a Black Hand suspect, detectives of Newark, N. J., today unearthed a mur- | der which hiad not even been suspected | and found the body of John Kildare, | sometimes known as Collins, hidden under a pile of rubbish near South Plainfield, where Ciresice said he bad buried it. Two bulet wounds in the back told how he had met death. Detectives took Ciresice into charge. merely on suspicion and were sur- prised at the confession they say he | made under the “third degree” which a search apparently verified. Kildare was a laborer and lived alone in an isolated shanty. It was genera ly believed that he kept a considerable sum of mongy in the house. He had not even beejp missed, however. AN UNUSUAL LAWSUIT. . Damages Have Been Accumulating for a Period of Six Long Years—Eigh- teen Counts. At Torrington, Wiiliam A. Bir- den has brought a civil suit against Albert M. DeWitt, a colored laberer, in which he seeks to secure damages of $400. Eighteen different counts, cover- ing a period of six years, are al- leged. A bull dog is said to have started the chain of events when he chewed the bark from five fruit trees. After the voracious pup had filled up on bark he still had room for $5 worth of chickens belonging to plaintiff. The defendant must have been something of a hero, for he is charged with stealing honey from a bechive; also with breaking a wheel from a wagon, which he borrowed without permis- sion; with damaging a sho valued at 75 cents; breaking a mowing ma- chine, killing a pear tree, ruining a dollar blanket, breaking locks on two doors and damaging a water pipe by using too much ferce pump. The plaintiff also alleges that the defendant rented a piece of ground which he was to cultivate on shares, and that after raising $7 worth of turnips he neglected to turn over half of the cash receipts. Four claims are for rental of a horse and wagon and one is for water furnished by pl for defendant’'s stock. The surprising thing about the case is that there is only one charge of assault covering this period of hostilities. The case will come before the court of common pleas on the first Tuesday in June. 8 $75,000 FOR LIBRARY. Division of Root Estate Benefits Bris Something like $75,000 will come t¢ the Bristol free library by the will of Miss Minnie P. Root, who was fatally hurt in an automobile wreck at Ash- ley Falls, Mass., two yvears ago. The distributors of the estate of her brother Charles P. Root, who was killed at that time_have completed their work. Mrs. Root’s estate totalled $200,000, | and was divided equally between Theodore C. Root and Miss Minnie P. Root, brother and er. Miss Root died after her broth and by her will $50,000 of her legacy goes to the li- brary, and to this will be added the amount which will come to the Ii- brary through Miss Root’s will from the estates of Mi mother, making $: All Fri Must Be Covered. Waterbury police have been notified to s Root’s father and 5,000 additional. enforce the new city ordinance which prescribes that all fruit and vega- tables exposed for sale must be pro- tected with a proper cover from car- | riers of dust and other infections and that all fruit stands must not be less than two and a half feet above the sidewalk. The law relates particularly to the sale of such articles as sliced watermelon, soft kinned fruits like strawberries, anrd plums. Violation of the ordi- | nance is punishable by a heavy fine Already ance has been pub- lished in the papers and there can | be no good use for violating it. { What the English Mean by Corn. There is a use of the word “corn” | in England which is a perpetual mat- ter of mystification to the American. We use the word, not in the old bib- lical, but in a specific sense, The Lon- don Economist, for instance, talks about ‘“Mr. Balfour's pronouncement against the shilling tax on colonial Made of ¥ heal and Barley By scientific cooking— Grape-Nuts food Contains the elements i} which make_ strong men, beau- {] tiful women and happy chil- dren. This food, or has a with good cream fine- flavour, de- lightfully appetizing, and can be digested with ease by even the weakest stomach. Grape-Nuts food builds up body, brain and nerves rapidly, when many other foods do.not . agree. . A week's trial will prove “There’s a Reason” for _ Grape-Nuts Read “The Road to Wellville,” in pkgs. POSTUM CEREAL CO, Battle Creek, Mich. Ltd., | to wi | principal: saved on almost any make you want. This is possible by our new method, and a few cents every day soon pays for the best piano in the world. WRITE TODAY. Coupon below will bring full information. Send me at once catalogues, prices, terms and full description of your new method of easy pay- ment. 4 TR G SRR SRR e O W Street . o. THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO0., aut-Cadden Bidg., Norwich, Conn. GARDEN HOSE is selling for 8¢, 10¢, 12¢, 14¢, 16cft. at the Alling Rubber Co.’s Wholesale (s/:..) Retail P. WE ARE NOW READY to take care of all your Carriage and _Wagon Repairing and Painting. Carriage and Automobile Trimming and Upholstering The Scott & Clark CORPOBATION, 507-515 North Main Streat. MISS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist NEVER COMMON is the work which leaves Miss Adles’ ablishment. The woman who wears it may feel assured that she is never ridiculous, artificial lovking, grotesque, On the contrary, she will look natural, distinguished, youthful, because she will have the best of material and the latest New York and Paris style Miss Adles will be in Norw all the week of May 16th. MAKE AN BARLY APPOINTMENT. Wauregan House—NORWICH, 210 West 111th SL.—NEW YORK. Telephone 704, may16d corn.” The British colonies do not grow what we call corn, for export. What Mr. Balfour and the Economist mean is wheat. It is something of which bread is made, and in the strict Bible sense meant “the seeds of cereal plans used for » maize, barley, rye, wheat and oats,” as our own dic- tionaries show.—Wall Street Journal. A Different View of the Roosevelt Affair. The irony of fate would seem to h decreed that the illustrious Ameri whom the holy father would desire lcome, the one whom his Catholic fellow-citizens would prefer to see honored by the holy father, should fall to obtain what has been freely accorded to so many undistinguished Americans. The irony is deepened when Mr. Roosevelt’s published cable- srams, in which the audience was re- show us how desirous he was eting Pius X. Our late president certainly deserved of the tholic church; to Catholies any sp he has not done and conld nof without contravening his firmest but because, though he dif- us radically in religious fe from on the broad ground of our common American citizenship. He has not ‘b afraid to act on the principal that e are as fully entitled to our rights and to recognition as any other American citizens. Decided in his own opinions, no doubt, ke is yet singularly free from any taint of bigotry—he is honored and esteemed by Catholics of every shade of political belief. Whether or ot he was justified in his interpreta- tion of Bishop Kennedy's message, all sensible men perceive that he merely followed his own sense of honor; and Catholics are as convinced that he act- ed without the slightest feeling of hostility or disrepect towards the hply father as they are certain that Pius X desired to do whatever he could in conscience to grant an audience to this distinguished man whom he hon- ored for his own character and for the high office he had filled so filust>iously. That desire wus defeated by a con- spiracy of eircumstance, to the great regret of the holy father and of the cardinel secretary of state. The issue was unfortunate, and is deeply regret- ted by us all; but no great harm can come of it. Honest men will despise the effort of those who try to make political capital out of it; they may smile at them, too, for Mr. Roosevelt has lgst nothing by the incident. Though most Catholics, perhaps, be- lieve he acted hastily, all recognize his Bonorable motive views, he has‘stood with us squarely | extracts im Clicquot - Club Ginger Ale. We use only the best imported pro- ducts—ginger, con- fectioners’ A”sugar and oils of limes and lemons. We leave the chemicals—: saccharin,soap bark,tartaric and phosphoric acu:in, citrol, coal tar coloring, etc.—and the | stale ginger and red pepper for the ordinary ginger ales. \ l (Pronounced Kleck-o Club) *GINGER ALE “Cliquot Club” won its jreputa- tion by being the best;’and it must hold its reputation by con- tinuing to be the best. Not only the ingredients,’ but the: water, the « blending, the carbonating and 'the bottling are of unusually superior quality. Other CLiCQUOT CLUB beverages with the *“Clicquot Club” Flavor and Purity : \ Birch Beer Cy Root Beer " @ _ Sarsaparilla ;; Lemon Soda « Blood Orange For Sale by the Best Grocers Manufactared by The Clicquot Club Co. Millis, Mass. Offers you more than a piano or even a player- piano—for, at best, these instruments give you piano music only, while the Amberola plays 2/ of the best of 2// kinds of music. The Amberola plays both Edison Standard and Amberol Records, and you can change from one to the other at will. . Has drawers for hold-, ing 100 Records.’ Any Edison Phonograph equipped with the Amberol Attachment will play the New Records by Slezak the world’s greatest Grand Opera Tenor besides the other great stars who sing for the Edison : RiccardoMartin, Constantino, Blanche Arral,Sylva, Melis and Huberdeau Edison Standard Records . . . . . . . . + 3 Edison Amberol Records (play twice as long) . 5 Does your Phonograph play Amberol Records? If not, ask your dealer about our money-saving combina- tion offer on Amberol Records and the attachment to play them. NATIONAL PHONOGRAPH COMPANY 75 Lakeside Avenue, Orange, N. J. " THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO., Plaut-Cadden Building, Main Street, Norwich, Connd Headguarters for Edison I’hm_mgraphs and Records —EASY TERMS— clal rooms for demonstration. $3.50—BOSTONIANS—S$4.00 Famous Shoes for Men. Why not have Joseph F. Smith, the Best? Ask to see the Johnnie Jones and the Live Wire Last, It will | 25 you. ‘ FLORIST P. CUMMINGS, H Sole Agency, 52 Central Avenue.| 200 Main Streel, Norwich. | Ivia 'Custom Grinding SPINACH - - - - TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS R e at YANTIC ELEVATOR. Catolina’ Pesa atiailtring Basios choan gy OTTO FERRY, o 336 Franklin Street, DR. JONES, Dentist, 35 SHETUCKET ST. A. R. MANNING, ‘Telophone. OUR WORK meets the approval of the critical people. Domestic Laundry. Rogers’ Tel. 958. Rear 37 Franklin Street. | Room 10 ‘Phone 32-3 i | marita QUALITY i WELL! in work should always be ccnslflerod.i A word to the wise is sufficient, especially when it costs no more than |y, ;710 [0 e WiRe B SAERENt the inferfor kind. Skilled men are | 0 100 BUY go0ds Locarme the price employed by us. Our prices tell the | .4, quilily, We have the BRST at whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. may27a {1 | THAMESVILLE STORE | C 8 FAIRCLOUGH, Prog, | Have You Noticed the | Increased Travel? . |.ane roade: Fespls ilke tb get put uhe V\’c furnll"t LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and | the open air. bess d It you'll Bread cannot be excelled. Give us | foare voul] ey ine samme.. o0 o oW trial order. lMAHON!V ROS. Falls Avenua moyZ3 i marlid 20 Fairmiount Street