Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
‘cr.cgn!l’ali : and Goufied, 114 YEARS OLD. & year. Entered at the Postoffice at Nerwich Conn., as secend-class mnrtte: Telephoue Callas s Bullets siness Office. Bulletin Bdncial Mooms. 808 Bulfetin Job Office, 35-6. ‘Willimantic Office, Reom 3. Murray BullSieg. Telephone. 210. —— Norwich, Monday, June 13, 1910. BOARD'S EQUALIZATION WORK. The state board of equalization is spurring up the assessors in all parts of the state to get their grand lists up whers they belomg. There is not a town in the state that has not had 2 milllon of valuation added to it. By the last raise tem of the cities had their lists raised over three millions each—Neorwich's raise was twice that amount, Greenwich's over three times and Hartford’s over eight times that sum. The New Haven Times-Leader says with reference to the $18,607,000 added to the lists of 131 towns: “Phe law says that taxable prop- erty shall go into the list at its true market value. ““True market value’ is an elastic term and gemerally there is quite a difference between the estimate of the owner for tax list entry and his esti- mate of value to the customer who wants to buy. ‘9t the state board of equalization has not serfously erred in judgment, the tax dodging game is still playe: to an extent that is rather startling. The Courant says upon the same matter: “There isn’t a county without'a town that is jumped up at least a million. THE By eounties, Hartford is lifted most, Fairfield second and New London third. “The revisien of the lists is abso- Intely necessary, owing to the pre- velling qualities of human nature. If there were no such oversight, the town lsting its taxpayers the lowest would have the least proportionate part of the tax to pay. If we are to share that burden equitably, our lists must be on a common basis, and thers must be a supervising authority to asswre this condition. But after all, it presents our old-time compan- fon, hwman ndture, In no very be- eoming light. This whole task of re- vistng 131 grand lists and adding the magnificent sum. of $128,000,0086 would be emtirely superfiuous if each town and each taxpaver complied with the law.” This is @il very true; but where is the board of assessors capable of making the true value, or exactly 75 per cent. of that value; and where are the industrizl plants that will sub- mit te it. It is probable that there t a tax list in the state which re- iewed by e cempetent judge would roveal property in for its full value, and for 75 per cent. of its value, and for all other per, cents. of its face. Tt is argued that cost has nothing to do with the value of a piece of preperty; but that the price it will bring at a sale is its market value, and who can estimate that? A tax- payer making oath to his property’s value, swears to the assessors’ valua- tion gleefully if it is enough below his own estimate, The game of values is something of a chance game, and no board of assessors has been able to make What would be accepted as an equitable list. THE VACATION PROBLEM. The vaeation problem is very much less of a problem than it was a q ter of & century ago. It is & fact that persons who do not have the vacation habit do not have the vacation thought or expense and they form quite a large part of the community. Recent writers upon vacations have taken for their themes: ‘“Vacation in the Kitchen,” “Vacation on the Ve- randa,” etc. These seem to be vaca- tiens where those writing them know how to find as much joy in their work as some people do in travel and the ability to find rest whatever is re- quired of them and wherever they may be. Perhaps they are the happy-go- lueky people of earth. One wrote of “A Vacation Upon a Trolley Car,” which from the amount of time and travel involved must have been wearylng if extremely interest- ing. Vacations are often made up of more work than pleasure, and the indulgers in them return often without money or patience; but the rational vacation is too bemeficial a thing to condemn and ought to be more general than it really is The little rests, which are hardly of sufficient duration to be called vach- tions, have been greatly increased by the trolley systems; and the small cost of getting to the country and re- turning, and the summer night aip- ings which a dime will pay for on the trolley cars have been a boon to thousands of peopls of moderate means, and busy men and women. The trolley cars are both a convenlence for travel and a selief to thé weary. It looks as if the summer of 1910 wwas going to be & good stay-at-home summer; but Indications are not al- ways rellable. At ail events, those who delight in short outings may bave a hundred in various directions during the seeson @t small cost. Since the Vermont democrats pro- pose to have a convention on July 14, with 657 delegates, the Rutland News @sks if 8o many democrats can be found m that state. Boston has a reform charter and en old-form mayor. Result: Poli- ticiang getting all the offices and the pavroll increased a third of a mil- lion. Those who essay to start model newspapers never get them recognized as sueh. It takes something more than an ammouncement to do that, The country is crying as loud as ever for a parcels post, with a pros- pect that it will go to another session of congress. Mother’s bridge-whist has been abolished by Loulsiana while Daddy's poker game with its bad results is vermitted. Happy theught for toda: There are so many real trials in life that it doesn’t pay to have any imaginary ones. The heavyweight champions are queer fellows. They both decline to kave mamagers that they cannot boss. price, 12¢ a weeks 50¢ & | Victori ROOSEVELT AND THE WIRELESS Roosevelt and his family are on the ocean headed for New York and through the services of wireless teleg- raphy there is not likely to be a day that they will not be heard from. He is upon the modern liner Auguste- and the public has had his Quarters deseribed, the fact that he dined with the captain, that he has ‘had wireless messages of greeting from other ships at ses, and that he takes his daily walks on deck, and that he is keeping himself and his private secretary busy in getting the MSS? of his travels in Africa rapidly ready for the printer, who will get to work on them at once when he reach- es New York this week. New York is preparing to give him the greatest reception ever given to a private American citizen, and it is estimated that there will ®be 20,000 people in line to do him honor when he reaches port. Nobody expects Colonel Roosevelt to settle down, for he doesn’t know how, so the inquiry as to what he will do next is in order, but there appears to be no one capable of answering the question. Wall street expects him to go on - “making mistakes,” and the people expect him to speak for prog- ress and justice regardless of the ef- fect it may have upon the predatory rich. There is little use for speculation since Colonel Roosevelt will soon be on his native heath and will be ex- pected to say something pat and effec- tive. His first speech is not likely to be a political speech, and it is not likely that he will talk politics until the psychological moment when his ut- terances will be to the point and ef- fective. GETTING AT FACTS. It appears to be easier to get at facts than to remedy them, The railroad presidents have been forced to explain in self-defense since they were being severely blamed for the high cost of living. This is what a railroad president has.had to say on one part of the subject: The Florida farmer receives $2.25 for a bushel of green beans, the rail- road gets 50 cents for the S$09-mile haul to New York, and the consumer pays $6.40 for this same bushel of beans. There is 35 per cent. for the grower, 8 per cent. for the carrier, ané 57 per cent. for the dealer. This is not a fair division The Springfleld Republican seconds this with a statement that a Florida orange grower who received fifty cents a box for his oranges. The transpor tation costs were fifty-five cents and the price pald by the consumer was $4 a box. This simply shows that the whole- saler, the express companies and pub- lic carriers, and the retailers do the rest. That the present business sys- tem puts a tremendous tax upon every consumer is apparent enough, but the | remedy which is diligently is not ferthcoming. T story promises to remain a half’told story to the end of time, sought for EDITORIAL NOTES. Nature seems pretty mean to turn the hose on June like this. Those who sailed with might form an exclusive set Roosevelt Sunday wasn’t much of a day for flying from New York to Philadel- phia. Since the elite cannot safety smuggling promises to an obsolete game. mugsle with become Congress has passed 6,000 bills, bu five-sixths of them are said to be spe- cial pension act Russia is really more worried at the prospect of an epidemic of freedom than of smallpox. They say now in Illir that there were $900,000 in the jackpot which ix so annoying to Lorimer. Uncle Sam saved over half a million by lecating a cement mill of his own near the Roosevelt dam. A few straw hats venture out, but not quite enough to show what the | real styles for 1910 are. The census bureau tabulation of figures has been commenced and Nor- wich will soon know the worst. When a dollar starts out on a od time, if it feeds the hungry at fir: it may later leave someone drunk If the" political managers would yield as gracefully to Taft as th railroads do, they would be better. TAFT'S TRAVEL PROGRAMME. Will See Son Graduate at Yale and Visit Other Colleges. President Taft will spend three days at New Haven during Yale cpn ‘mencement week. He will leave Wash- ington Sunday night, June 19, and on the following day will attend a meet- ing of the Yale corporation. He will remain in New Haven on Tuesday, the , and wijll see his son Robert grad- uate on ednesday, the 22d. Mrs. Taft will go with the president, and on the morning of the 23d they both will go to Beverly, where Mrs. Taft her daughter, Helen, and the boys w remain for the summer. The presis dent will be back In Washington the morning of the 24th to remain until the adjournment of congress. These travel plans of the indicate that he will notgbe able to tend the meeting of ‘the Nation League of Republicans. to be held in New Yori, June 24 and It was at first thought Presideéht Taft and for- mer President Roosevelt would meet on this occasion, but the indications now are that neither will be present. President Taft has two out of town engagements next week. He will spend president at- 1 Wednesday at Marietta college and will be back in W; ngton Thursday morning, the 16th. The president will leave again Sat- urday morning, the 18th, for Villa Nova, Pa. to r from the fam- ous Catholic co that place the desree of doctor of juri dence. The afternoon of the 18th the president will go to Lincoln, Pa. to attend the commencement at_Lincoln college, a negro_institution. He will be back in Washington that night. While Presi- dent Taft is fliling his engagements that day Mr. Roosevelt wijll be the re- cipient of a notable demonstration of welcome in New Yorl city. They All Claim Roosevelt. ‘While he was in Rome the Italian newspapers extolled him as a great military leader and patriot, after the order of Garibaldi; in the Hamburg newspapers, in feverish anticipation of this advent, he is hailed ms another Bismarck; but the Paris Figa®o finds him the very persomification of the Boudbon tradition of pairician ele- gance, calm ana deliberate judgment and high idealjsm. The Frenchmen, with their hyper-impulsive natures, re amazed that his fellow- Americans constder their ex-president impetuous.! As for the English, they have long half-told | WOMEN HERE AND ABROAD. The women of Copenhagen have opened several reading rooms for chil. dren. » . An interesting curiésity shop has een opened in Florence by Mrs, Fred Vilmerding, formerly a social leader in Paris. ) 5 b Radcliffe colleze has a woman seuf- trage club, Its presidept is Miss Katherine Tyng. \ Miss Bessie Bernstein, a native of Boston, has been appointed a sanitary nspector in that city. The record for cotton picking in this country is probably held by Miss Mar- garet Montgomery of Stillwater, Okla. One day last fall Miss Montgomery picked 700 pounds of cotton. Mrs. Agnes G. Maynard of Chicago invented a stocking darner. Mrs. F. James Bowlker, president of the woman’s municipal league of Bos- ton, is a sister of President-elect Low- ell ‘of Harvard. Fads for Women. New casters, called the “domes of " are belng used in this coun- . They are bright little disks of highly polished steel, and furniture fitted with them will glide easily, si- lently and smoothly over carpets and other kinds of floor coverings. The domes can be affixed to small pieces of furniture by a gentle tap. They can be attached to the heavier articles, such as bureaus, wardrobes, etc., by placing these large pieces on the domes. By their use the heaviest kind of furniture can He moved with ease. These aids are in three sizes, smail, medfum and large, and cost only 15 cents for a set of four. Teddy’s Nig is the newest style doll. The bird doll is beginning to lose its novelty, 5o the African “native” is be- coming’ popular. As its name implies, the doll is of ebony and sparsely cl Its. costume consists of a fringed waistband, huge brass rings in its ears {and nose. Rings are placed at.inter- vals on the legs and arms. The doll's eyes are white pearl but- tons sewed with black thread. In presenting a young child with the doil | it might be wise to do it cautiously, | for the little one will be either de- | ignted or scared. HINTS. | | The most practical use for old corks | 1s to make a low fire burn up. Empty spools are also good for kind- ling, and neither should be allowed to accumulate in any guantity. “The label on a glass jar will keep clean and in place longer if pasted on the inside. Of course. this only applies where dry materials are used, such as rice, | tapioca, etc. To keep starch from sticking, use | fatirons that are perfectly clean, and when making the starch add a plece of borax and stirwith a tallow candle. A kitchen convenience s a medi- cine chest, such as is commonly sup- pHed for bathrooms. This is hung over the kitchen table, and ie designed to hold small coo ing supplies, such as baking powder, spices, etc., cocoa and flavoring ex- traracts. New Matting. Matting will last longer and look better if as soon as tacked In place it | is varnished with a clear varinsh. It | can then be wiped up like a linoleum and does not split or break so easily. When travellng carry a few pens in your bag, if_you do not possess a foun- tain pen. You will find that it is worth while, as the pens provided at some hotels' and other public places are often so bad that it is almost im— | possible to use them. Aled put a candle and box of safety matches in the bag. The space required for ghem is small, and when they are wanted they are wanted badly. In case of an accident “to the lights In the hotel or | elsewhere, they will be found very useful. ’ Nutshell Notes for Young Wives and Brides-elect. One or two tablespoonfuls of am- nia added to a pail of water will ean windows better than soap. Great improvement will be found In tea and coffee if they are kept in slass frult jars instead of tin bbxes. A teaspoonful of borax added to | cold starch will make clothes stiffer than anything else, though it adds no polish. 1" one teaspoonful of ammonia to a | teacupful of water will clean gold or silver jewelry. A few drops of clear amonnia poured on the under side of amonds will clean them immediate- , making them very brilliant. Oatmeal Bread. Two cups of fine oatmeal, a pinch of salt, a pinch of baking soda, tea- spoonful of lard. Mix well together with a little cold water, handling as | | | | | s possible. Roll out thin and on a griddie. Do not turn the cake, but finish it by toasting it in the oven or before an open fire, as they do in Scotland. Sewing on Buttons. When sewing buttons clothes, where the material to be but- toned is clumsy or stiff, place a coarse darning needle or wire nail under the | button. When the button is fastened remove | the darning needle or nail and the button will be tight, yet the stitch { will be long enough to allow it to but- ly. 1f shoes are a trifle tight, try this method of fastening the but- | tons, rather than eetting them over, | as that leaves the marks of the first fastening exposed. ton ea When Cleaning House. ‘When cleaning house turn the hose bedquilts as they hang upon the . Rub seiled apots with soap, and when the quilts have had a good soaking, Tub the spots until they dis— appear. then let them dry right on the line, and they wil be just as n as new after being treated so. Tt | is S0 much easier than the old way, and has proved such a success that all the women in the neighborhood are doing the same way. been impatient to welcome Mr. Roose- velt, and to do him honor as a man after their own hearts, whom they thoroughly understand, albeit his own countrymen may fajl to comprehend his essential greatness. They point out his purely English traits. There is, for example, his predilection for historical research and for moral es- says of a distinctly homiletic flavor. What other American politician ever read and wrote so much? But, accord- ing to his English critics, it is a fixed (tradition in Britain for the successful |statesman to be a man of letters—wit- | ness Gladstone,Balfour, Rosebery,Mor- ley, Curzon—one knows not where to end the list. |""Every country of Europe apparently would ltke to appropriate Mr. Rouse velt and keep him within its borders as {& naturalized citizen. Some of them almost seem ready®to crown him king |or establish him in a perpeual dicta- |torship. There is something Napole- onic about his conquest of the conti- |nent. In the meantime. though Eu- rope is willing to obliterate the fact, there fs mo likelihood that this country will forget that Mr. Roosevelt is am American.—Philadelphia Ledger. on heavy |" ‘ Woman in Life and in the .Kitchen i THINGS YOU SHOULD KNOW. . Turn a cut lemon upside down on waxed paper. It will keep fresh a long time, A small onion eaten just before re- tiring will often induce sleep. The taste may be removed by chewing a bit of parsley or celery. Cut thin slices of cheese, place on square salt crackers, dot nwith butter and toast in oven. Serve while hot with afternoon tea. Bread crumb pancakes are made by soaking stale bread In buttermilk, us- ing as a batter in place of flour. Add soda, salt and eggs and sufficlent flour to thicken. For rough and sensitive hands noth- ing better can be found than two ounces of listerine combined with gly, cerin. The surface will soon become smooth and less sensitive. When using grater for chocolate or lemon, don't dash in water, but have a little brush for that purpose and brush grater; will all come off and there won't be any waste. Parafin ofl for tops of jelly jars may be washed, dried and used again. A tin teapot can be bought at the ten-cent store in_which the paraffin may be kept, and when needed, can be set on stove umtil melted and easily poured over jelly. Keep twist- ed paper or cork in spout to prevent dlrt getting “in. How to Wash a Parasol. I wash my parasol about every two or three days in warm weather just the same as I do my gloves. Having tried every way, I find this the most successful: Get 4 tub half full of luke- warm water, take parasol and stand in the center of tub, get cake of soap and rub up and down untfl it is clean with the hand; lay across the tub and throw basin after basin of cold water on until all the soap is out. Take basin, fill with water, two drops of blueing, no more, as it will streai blue; now douse and squeeze the water out, open and tle handle to line. It will dry in a few minutes and is no work at all. Strawberry Flummery. Heat a quart of berries until the juice flows freely; then add a cupful of sugar, and two cupfuls of boiling water and thicken with two table- spoonfuls of water. r the mixture constantly until smooth. Draw to the back of the stove, add the stiffly-beat- en whites of three eggs, and then rn, into a mold that has been wet Let stand for sev- Serve with a s of the with cold water. eral hours to harden. cold custard made of the yol three eggs. Getting Rid of Ants. You do not say whether the pests are red or black ants. If red ants, a ‘H‘hr‘rul sprinkling of turpentine around {their haunts will be found efficacjous; | fresh tansy also is an excellent exter- lnator If black ants, try cucumber peels, or a solution of tartar emetic and water. Remember that tartar emetic is a poizon. You might take a sponge, dampen it and sprinkle the sugar over it. The sugar will attract the ants. Plunze the sponge in hot water and repeat till the ants have gone. Tea Cozy for the Piazza. For thoee who enjoy a cup of tea on the piazza one cannot find a nicer present than a tea cozy. One of these useful tea table adjuncts may be made of linen, deftly embroidered or out- lined In metallic thread’ or it may be made of some of the fi inating small- figured chintzes to be found in the | shops. To Savs Steps. One way to save steps is to nail a strip of varnished wood to the wall above the gas stove. Screw in a row of braes hooks and use them for iron spoons, strainers, broilers, small spid- ers and any utensil that goes direct from hook to stove. Horseradish Sauce. Take a heaping tablespoonful of grated horeraiish (if of the bottle va- riety squeeze dry), to this add a cup of stiffily-beaten cream, a saltspoon of salt and half a teaspoon of sugar. Pass the sauce in a cold dish. One and one-fourth cup of flour, three-fourths cup of oatmeal, one- fourth cup of sugar, a generous lump of butter, one egs, one cup of sweet milk, one-half seaspoon of salt, two teaspoons of baking powder. Cream butter and s add egg, milk, flour; beat well, then put in pan and bake. Wheat on Hats. ‘Wheat, which was used rather spar- ngly on hats early in the season, is now used in abundance. Instead of only & bunch or two the whole crown of the hat is npw covered with it, and sometimes the heads of wheat are spread like a great fan. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. finger nails nightly with m or vaseline. Rub brittl a little cold < When a nose is red through skin Don’t risk even one single penny And 1 will tell you why I sy this. Itis of Dr. Shoop't medicine mm w« 1t fails. No one noed risk gven one single penny. selocted d the sick entire risk is siane. But write me first for an order. I have an in slmost every commun- "&","‘,‘,‘.“‘” are not suthorized to grant 'S0 drop e & line, plense—and thus save all disappointments and delays. o3, you are free 10 consult me by letter | 83 you would your heme physician. Do so fully—if you desire. advice and the below are without cost: » 'M-To-,hm:d-;dfln.-rn::“ Which Book Shalt I Sesd You? No.10m .2 On the EIEEEE, trouble rub with a gooed skin food or cold cream each night. % Tea drinking and tight clothing oft- en cause a red nose. Indigestion is another reason for it. The great danger in flesh-reducing is flabby skin. ,Use an astringent lo- tion daily when dieting for flesh. Elasticity and firmpess can be re- stored to a flabby skin by massaging Wwithla gentle rotary motion twice a day. Powdered charcoal makes a good tooth powder if care is taken to rinse thoroughly. It removes any unpleas- ant odor or taste. Hair must be kept absolutely clean or it will not look bright and glossy. Neglect of the hair is more inexcus- able, since it responds more rapidly to treatment than any other part of the body. Fig or Date Layer Cak Cream one-quarter cup of butter and beat the yolks of two eggs until thick, then beat one-half cup of su— gar into the butter and one-half cup of sugar into the yolks; beat the two together. Add alternately one-half cup of milk, and one and a half teaspoons of soda and one teaspoon of cream of tartar; lastly add the whites of two eges beaten dry. Bake in two layers; put the layers together with one-half pound of chopped figs or dates codked smooth in a little water; cover the top with eream frosting. Ganning Berri An easy way to can strawberries, raspberries and red currants, and one in which they retain the very best fla- vor, is to do them raw. The jars mus be scrupulously clean and the Tubbers new. ‘Mash the berries, & few at a time, in a saucedish, to be sure every one 1s mashed; then toone cup- ful of berries add one cupful of sugar. Stir well, fill jars and seal. Very stmple. PHYSICIAN APPROVES Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Sabattus, Maine.—You told me to take Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable T Compound and 4Liver Pills before and we ford s Rh{:ut [doubt it was the Compound that helped you' I thank you for your my name In your te H.W. MircHELL, Box 3, Babattui Another Woman Helped. Graniteville, Vt.— *‘I was passin, throughthe Change of Life and suffere from nervousness and other s.nno,lng symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound restored my health and strength, and proved worth mountains of gold to me. - For the sake of other suffering women I am willing fifl\l should publish my letter. TS. CHARLES BARCLAY, R.F.D., Granite- ville, Vt. Women who are passing through this critical period or who are suffer- ing from any of those distressing ills peculiar to their sex should not lose sight of the fact that for thirty years Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- ound, which is made from roots and Kerbs. has been the standard remedy for female ills. In almost every com- munity you will find women who have been restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Special Sale THIS WEEK Rocheau’s VIOLET Toilet Water I See window display Che Lee & Osgood Company, 133 Main St., Junddaw WHEN Norwich, Conn. | ness beiore the public, there is no Hendline LAlputian Act, Fenture LANGWEED SISTERS GROTESQUE COMEDY ACT JAS. MURPHY, JOom Expert Xlyphome SMALLEST PERFORMERS ON VAUDEVILLE STAGE Amnl Eeeenfric Singing "-'l.bl”-u— MOTION PICTURES ot KING 120 WA RD! FUNERAL kem ouly | 0 Weekn Axo. | nu ADMISSION 100—EVENINGS, RESERVED SEATS 20c. zation, she Indignantly declines to do s0. An altogether t0o lofty conception of the wedded love do yon say? No, not #0, even though the outcome were as unfortunate as the story goes on to tell it was. If there were any fault in the relationship it was on the side of the man who did not fully realize, absorbed as he was in his work, just what he owed, ‘his wife until it was oo late to serve her. Ave you ready, happy bride, proud bridegroom, to give your life up to the one you now promise to love and cher- ish? Then I predict for you a lifelong honeymoon. THE PARSON, LUMBER AND COAL. GOAL IT'S KIND OF LONESOME NOW THAT THE COMET HAS GONE. BUT YOU CAN ORDER COAL IN JUNE HOWEVER. We can’t explain it, but there steals over one such a feeling of being rich when -the Coal is in the cellar, Pretty good stock to buy. Ivs always good. E. CHAPPELL CG. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street. Telephones. Lumber junizdaw CALAMITE COAL “It burns up clean. Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — 'Phones — 489 may24d COAL and LUMBER I the beautitul valley of Wyoming, in Penn., lies the beds of the finest An- thracite Coal in the world. We have secured a supply of this Coml for this season. Try it In your cooking, stove and heater. v/ We are the agents for Rex Flintkote Roofing, one of the best roofings known to the trade. JOHN A. MORGAN & SON. Telephone 884. wpriss . ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Markst and Shetucket Sta Telephome 108-13. oct29d PLUMEBING AND GASFITTING. JOHNSON & BENSON, 20 Central Avenue. SLATE ROOFING Metal Cornices and Skylights, Gutters snd Conductors, and all kinds of Job- bing promptly attended to. Tel 119. The Vaughn Foundry Co. IRON CASTINGS surnished promptly. JYarge stock of patterns, No. 11 to 26 Ferry Street sanzzd T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumbing, 92 Franklin Strest. markd S. F. GIBSON Tin and Sheet Metal Worker Agent for Richardson and Boynton Furnaces. 65 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Do It Now Have that old-fashioned, unsanitary plumbing replaced by and mod- era open plumbiug. It will re in the increase of health an Overhauling an: ftting thoroughly done, Let me give you a figure for replacing all the old Plumbing with the modern kind that will the sewer gas. The work wi and the price reasonable. J. E. TOMPKINS, sugisa 67 Wast Main Street. Have You Noticed ths Increased Travel? It's & sure sign of good weather and fine roads. People like to get out into the open alr. We furnish the best method, and if you'll taks one of our teams ycu'll say the sazie. MAHONEY BROS. Falls Avenue marl?d iose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. 3. J. C. STONE. Prop oct13d yOu want w0 put your busi- e advertis- faum better than thro columns of REE THEATRE CHARLES MCNULTY,LESSEE. Feature Plcture: GOLUMBUS DISCOVERING AMERIGA, and “RAMONA,” Blograph, HELEN JACKSON'S FAMOUS STORY. Mr. J. H. Loud, Baritone, IN PIOTURED MELODIES. Matinee, Ladies and Chiiaren. Se Music, NELLIE S. HOWIE, Teacl r PL Room 42, Central Bullding. CAROLINE H, THOMPSON Teacher of Musio hingten Street. Lessons the home of th b used at Schawenka Co: 1n. vatory, Ber- oct11d F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Pro t Bt Tel. 611, Norwish, Cs A. W. JARVIS 18 THE LEADING TUNER IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT. ‘Fhone 518-5, 16 Clairmount Avs septi2a UNDREDS eof young men and women have obtmimed the .foundation the basic principles of success by o cours: of instruction in our school. We ean help you If you will let us to & more successful career. Write today — now — for full information. All Commercial THENEW LONDON" Business Ollcge A, Arams . Conn SHEA & BURKE COMPLETE HOUSEFURNISHERS Prompt and Careful Attention Given To FUNERAL WORK Telephone Connections NORWICH and TAFTVILLE Lady Aseistant when desired. may28a WALL PAPERS The late Spring leaves a larger sock on hand of the above, and to move it we have made quite & reduc tion in the prices. It is a good time to buy now Also Paints, Murescs, Moldings, and a genoral supply of docerative mate- riale. Painting, Paper Hanging and Decorating, P. F. MURTAGH, 92 and 94 West Main Street. Branches. Telephone, Junia 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standar\ brands of Beer of Kurope and America, Bohemtan, Pilsner, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass' Pale and Burton, Muelirs Bcotch _Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout, C. & C. Imposted Ginger Ale, Bunker Hil P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anheuser- Budwelser, Schlita snd Pabat. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Telephone 7-32. P ol STATIONERY Box Paper, Pads, NoteBoohs, Time Books Invitation Paper, Glue, Pecns, Pencils, Pen Holders, Ete. WAS. EDWIN FAY, Franklin Squars Junld Ink, A full ine of Wedding and Engagement Rings WA HISWELLS, 25-21 Frankiors! 1 NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswell Ave. First-class Wines, Linuors and Ci Meals and Weich Rarebit order, John Tuckia Prop. . o -5