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® - ‘ Hair Tonic Al Over America the News of the Marvelous Dandruff Cure of Parisian Sage Has Spread. A few years ago there was intro- duced into America a cure for dandruff, falling hair and all scalp diseases. News of the Jduick action of this wonderful invigorator spread rapldly. And today, without any sensational or untrue advertising, Parisian Sage is used extensively in almost every town im America. And what has pro- duced this great demand? Simply this: Parisian Sage does just what we are telling the readers of The Bul- letin it will do. We claim, and we back our claim with The Lee & Osgood Co’s money back guarantee, that Parisian Sage is the most invigorating and rejuvenating hair tonic. It cures dandruff, stops falling hair and ‘itching scalp; it makes the hair grow strong and vigorous, vet soft end lustrous. It is the only hair dressing that reaches the root bulb of the balr and destroys the dandruff germ. And to the women who are reading this simple statement of fact, we want to say that Parisian Sage works won- ders with women's hair. It will turn dull, harsh and faded hair into beauti- ful, radiant and lustrous hair in a few Gavs, and is the most pleasant and sat- f<fying dressing any woman ever used. Druggists_everywhere and The Lee & Osgood Co. sell Parisian Sage for §0c a large bottle. The Conservation of Nature’s Resources applies as well to our physical state as to material things. C. J. Budlong, Washington. R. 1., realized his condi- tion and took warning before it was too late. He says: “I suffered severe- 1y from kidney troubls, the disease be- ing hereditary in our famiiy. I have taken four bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy and now _consider myself thoroughly cured. This should be & warning to all not to neglect taking Foley’s Kidney Remedy until it is too Wate” Lee & Osgood Co. MOTHER GRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, Preventics—those Cafdy Celd Cure Tablets—will satisfy and quickly check aN colds and the Grip. Try them once and see! 48-S5c. Sold by Lee & Os- Eood- NEW DEVICES. t Drag and Sacrificer to Do Fine work on the Waterbury Suburban Roads. Superintendent of Streets Benjamin Chatfleld has had both his King drag and the new sacrificer at work on the outiying roads of the city and they made a faairly good showing. but not s good as can be secured later. when. they have been improved according to the ideas of the superintendent. The King drag was designed for use on the mud roads of the west and south and it meeds to be shod with iron when it tackles the stones and gravel of the roads of Waterbury This has been done now and it is expected that its work will be much improved. It wes given a tryout on Prospect street. The sacrificer needs more weight, and this will aleo be sscured and both ma- chineg Wfll& put to work during the coming we This week® repairing the macadam on West Main street will be under- taken by the street lepartment and five or six loads of crushed stone will be taken up to the scene of operations on trolley cars, this being the easiest way to get it to its destination. The road there {s much in need of repair. ~—Waterbury Republican. NEW POST OFFICE. Plastering Completed at New Britain —THe Mosaic being Laid and Marble Finish Being Installed. Work at the new federal building en West Main street which Is to be occupied by the post office when it is cempleted, is progressing in a satis- factory manner and from now on the rogrees will be more marked than bas during the past few months, mays The New Britain Herald. The wide walls and ceilings have all been lastered and this portion of the work s completed. At present the tile mo- malc floor is being laid. _This is an in- teresting process. A base of cement is first put down and while it is still ft the pleces of tile are fitted into placa n the whole has hardened and become firm it is ground level and polished with an ingenfous machine which is operated by electricity A dark marble baseboard is to be installed as soon as this floor Is com- pleted and above the baseboard the waingoot will be of white marble. Thers will be a finish of darker marble &t the top of the wainscot. The Procession Over the Line. Champ Clark, democratic leader in congress, calls attention to the fact that last year 86,000 citizens of the Tnited States left this country for the Canadian Northwest. They went, says Clark. because they could purchase products. including American farm implements, cheaper in Canada than they could at home. Eighty-six thou- =an@! Too many to lose, and vet it would not be diffieult to check the exodus. Change conditions so they can afford to live in the United States and people will not leave. It is all a matter of bread and butter. So long 28 American goods can be had more cheaper in Canada than at home, so long as the tax systems of the Ca: dian Northwest are more progressive than ours. the procession oveR the line will continue.—Puck. < CHALLENGE FROM THE LEE & 0SGOOD CO. The Lee & Osgood Co. are seeking the woret case of dvspepsia or consti- pation in Norwich or vicinity to test Tx. Howard's new specific for the cure of those diseases. So confident they are that this re- markable medicine will effect a last- ing cure in a short time. that they offer to refund the money should it not be successful. Ia order to speure the quickest pos- sible introductipn, The Lee & Osgood Co. will sell a regular fifty cent pack- age of this medicine at half price, 25 This epecific of Dr. Howard's will cure sick headache, dizzy feelings, constipation, dyspepsia and all forms of malaria and liver trouble. It does not simply give relief for a time: it mukes permanent and complete cures. It will regulate the bowels, tone up the whole Intestinal tract, give you an appetite, make food tastse good and digest well, and increase vigor. What a Summer Cold May Do. A summer cold if negiected is just as apt to develop into bronchitis or pneu- monia as at any other season. Do not neglect it. Take Foley’s Honey and Tar premptly. It loosens the coughs, soothes and heals the inflamed air passages, and expels the cold from the system. Lee & Osgood Co. Pains of women, head pains, or any n_stopped in 20 minutes sure, with . Bheop's Pink Pain Tablets. See on 25c box. Sald by Lee Parliamentary Miiup at Ne Morris W. Seymour Made C A parliamentary mixup which oc- curred Wednesday morning at the ses- sion of the Protestant Episcopal dio- cese of Connecticut at New Haven, re- | sulted in the appointment of a com- | mittee to revise the canon under which deputies are elected to go to the gen- eral convention. The canon péads that the clerical delegates must vei- separately for the deputies. Bishop Brewster ruled that this could be done by dividing the house into lay and clerical wings but the laymen, led by Burton Mansfield, rose in a body and left the convention to allow the clericals to perform the election legally, and holding a meet- ing in the vestibule of the church, ratified the election of the deputies. A debate oy the matter occupied over an hou "he contention of the lay delegates was uphel rton ansfield and A. Heaton Rot on The convention showed the largest attefidance ever in the h of the diocese, there being pre clergymen and 200 lay The convention then an sat as the church s cie The report of E was submitted by Rev. George T. Linsley secreta It was accepted and placed on file. The report of Ward C. Powell, treas- lay and urer, was read and accepted. A re- draft of the by-laws was presented and read. The redraft was adopted and the election of a board of trustees was taken up. Rev, J. DeWolf Perry, Jr. nominated the following: Rt. Rev. Chauncey B. Brewster of Hartford, Re Francis Goodwin of Hartford, Rev. Frederick D. Harriman of Wind- sor, Rev. Oliver H. Raftery of Pori- land, Rev. George T. Linsley of Hart- ford, Rev.“Flavel S. Luther of Hart- ford, Rev. Benjamin of Meriden, John F. Tracy of Vernon Center Ward C. Powell of Hartford, Rict J. Goodman of Hartford, Thomas Vermilve. Smith of Hartford, Geor: W. Ellis of Hartford. The convention th together again Committee on Salaried Archdeacons. | n came The committee on the hiring aried archdeacons was anr follows: Rev. T. W. Dave Danbury, Re I. Bodie Britain, Rev Schmidt of Ans Burton Mansfield of New F ver Gildersleeve of F In accordance with t vesterday Hon. Morr port as ballot cast named | were chosen as follows Rev. O. H tery. Portland: Rev. J. N. Lewis. Jr. Waterbury; Rev. J. H. George, Newtown; Rev. J. F. Plumb, Hartford | The committee on finance then pre- tion fund 1 per cen or the immediate relief of the bishop, $1.500 The committee believed that a per- | manent committee on finance shoulé be appointed. The reryort @s accept- ed and all its xmuvn)jl-nxlu(mn: adopted | It was voted that the commi permanent comprising Rev mes Boodwin of Hartford, Mr. Skiddy of Stamford, and Elliot Morse of New Haven Rev. J. DeWolf Perry, Jr.. then read the report of the Sunday school co mission. An appropriation of $70 the commission was voted. An am ment to make it $200 instead of was defeated by a standing vote 42 to 24 Report of Division Committee. The committee on division of the di- ocese reported as follows The committee appointed fn 1999 to consider and report to the next ~on- vention upon the advisability of div ing the diocese, on wha* lines, and i provision for future support—: other provision to meet the difii cuities suggested by the bishop or | | is bouna sented resolutions that an assessment | g be laid of 1 1~2 per cent. on the amount | of current e ses of last year for the bishop's f and for the conven- w Haven on Second Day— hancellor— _ fficers Elected ecking a division of the dio- heg leave to report as follow: ‘nder the present constitutfon and canons of the church, here are only two methods of permanent relief for These are (1) the election coadjutor; (2) the divisioa diocese. “(1) We do not recommend & bishon ijutor, because the bishop does not e it nd furthermore because we believe t#it very few members of this convention are ready to select a man who might become bishop of the dio- cese by right of succession at some future time. “(2) As to division of the diocese, while the committee are divided as to its_desirability, they are agreed that it is not at présent feasible. “The mmittee, therefore, recom- mend, as the best method of tempo- relief, that a sum not to exceed )0 in addition to the present appro- priation of §300, be appropriated from the income of the bishop’s fund, to rovide. in the bishop’s discretion, the asgistance of a private secretary or tions by >ther bishops. committee furthermore calls ttention to the fact that if the pro- poscd amendment to article II. of the of the Protestant Episco- irch in the United States «2 v _the addition of a section the. consecration of suffra- s be adopted by the general onvention in October, 1910, more a1- equate relief for the bishop may be ed by the election of a suffragan bishop. suffragan bishop. it may be ex- one who, while he has the bishop of the diocese, is the right of succession, and orately illuminated by electric lights. It is estimated that there will be suf- ficient room for at least 30,000 persons to witness the fireworks display on the lake.—Mexican Herald. 4 Parenthood the Same, World Over. That was an intensely human scene enacted in a New York department store the other day when Prince and > where the bishop of the dio- | Princess Fushimi and their attendant s nds him went shopping. But the purchases it is generally agreed among the del- | they made ‘were not for themselves, egafes that the division of the diocese | but for the four little Fushimis in far- to come. away Japan. A resolution for the selection of a | The things purchased were all toys. an bishop was tabled by a ris- | Wonderful bears, strenuous _xicking te of 171 to 61. horses, tops, wide-eyed dolls that Officers Elected. walked, marvelous mechanical trains = ey v G 5 of cars and dozéns of other things that orhe following officers were elected | woyld delight even little princes and =0 et ey little princesses used to everything ter DD 98- childish hearts can wish. > Through an interpreter Princess Fushimi said that her little ones, whom she had not seen jn over two years, and for whom her heart is really hun- ing v Chauncey B. Woodland street, ng Committee—Rev. D.D., president, DD DSLe. secs | gry. would be delighted with the won-. N Sieeart | derful tovs so unlike anything they v 100,V | nad ever seen. hwich (1806, | There is something strangely pa- o Fredesicl W. Har- | thetic in the picture of this stately s i couple thousands of miles from home ecretaries —Rev. John T.|and the babies. losing themselves for = o Milford (1901); Rey, |hours in a big store foregoing the F of Middletown. " | pleasures and the entertainment of- casnren_Jonn Hall Saze. Port- | fered thesm by a generous and enthu- (1900). s !:'as“tct l_'\eotpla. t;‘xr the ?ci]n:iplfi :ul;;;‘o.‘e . 1 of getting toys that would delight their Vo Samucl Hart. D.D., | oulpring at their homecoming in the e e hn | far-off land of the cherry blossom. ¥ proves one thing, that parental love knows no race, creed or color, but that it is as universal as the ve Middletown _ (1872); ymour, D.D. Litchfield R orenadas; BD: | winds of heaven.—Hartford Post. (1905): J. DeWolt Perry, New Haven (1906) James Norway. ze Newtown (1908): James| The new scenic railway in Norway, B.D., Hartford (1909) recently completed from Christiania Chaplain_Rev. William P, | to Bergen, is proving exceptionally at- D.. Middletown (1905), of [ tractive to tourists. It is the lopgest ¢ of New Hampshire mountain railway in Europe, and has no fewer than 177 tunnels, one of which cost $800,000, and took 12 years to build. Unlike other mountain rail- ways_ which merely go to the edge of the snow and ice, this line, after pass- of the commission on read favored the con- mday as a day of rest as opposed to “restric- carried to extremes s ed of the plan of ti ing Finsen—a station whose name in union for the appoints |@ year or two is sure to become as governor of an excise | well known as that of any favorite f three men in “whose | resort in Switzerland—proceeds across the snow fields for a long distance. Two snow plows are kept busy on the road as late as June, and there are lakes along the route which do not lose the power to grant all in the state. rather ow in force, “where- of liquor licénses s 3 inty commis- | their ice until August, and in some office neither by | places do not thaw at all. Snowsheds nor by popular | have been constructed with shutters in their sides, which can be opened ¥ summer to permit an unobstructed consisted of Rev. commission Do Meil af Hartford. Rev.|view of the magnificent landscape, An N. Lewis, Jr.. of Waterbury, Rev. | international ski tournament is to_be James DeW, Perry, Jr.. of New Haven, | held in Finsen in midsummer. This P. Waldo Marvin, Norris G. Osborn, | mixture of wintry experiences with e Nior Thornton F.|Summer touring is a novelty sure to t and . s attract to Norway an increasing num- ber of enterprising travelers.—Zion's Herald. INDIAN MONEY. Hearing Before a Committee of Su- perior Court Concerning Deposits in Derby Savings Bank. The suit known 3 Indian suit, brought to determice tI ownership of money on deposit in if Savings Der bank, was aily he: day in New Ly the committee. James Kingsley Diake, a by the superior court. lhe |t was adjourned until Monday | I piece of land in Derby where Mt. Peter's cemetery is now located. In 1871, the overseer. Watrous Wakelee, sold’ this land and at the same time deposits were made in the T ings bank to the credit of the From time to time t#he Indians secured | 1l except | their share of this mo™, Nathan | Phillips of New Haven, and Thomas Phillips of Oxford, who, it claimed, left their shares on deposi and Mrs. Sile, who has a small amount on deposit. ' The sum in dispute, it is said, was in the beginning about $16 but has accumulated until now it round numbers $1,000. The banlk s ed the proceedings to rt- whom the money should be paid. No | overseer had been appointed for a number of vears, until last summer the superior court appointed Judge A. Mc- | T t suit akelee He brou Watrous W alleged to belong to Clellan Mathewso, against the heirs to recover money the Indians. The overseer wa Ilw} feated in the superior court and on i peal was also defeated in the supreme court | The present suit involves the ques- | tion of whether the money which is | now in the bank is a trust fund to be held by the overseer and to be di | tributed among all the heirs of the | tribe alike. or whether it is the in- dividual property of Nathan and Phillips The overseer claims mone trust fund. while claim that it belongs not be distributed | YLeirs of the tribe. as their share re not In- le Indian n Phillips and Thoma working in amonz they have in is a voter Phillips is ¢ Oxford.—Anson " Hard Times for Cotton Mi The Fall River cotton mill owners do not scem to be suffer greatly from the high cost of raw slow market for zoods and reduced The 35 reporting corpora. = for the arter | zing cent. production. tions are pavi | ial, | dividends ave: ! per Only three times in the last 16 years has this average been exceeded. On- | 1y one mill reduced its rate from that of last 3 six increased the rate, and tne others are unchanged. Poss bly surpluses suffered from this main- | tenance of dividends in the face of | greatly restricted business, but pre- | sumably the dividends were fully | | | earned in most cases.—Springfield Re- publican. Many toilet soaps are sconfel with | the oil of petit grain which is distilled in Paraguay from the leaves of the | wild bitter orange ticeg determine to | §will HERMIT’S $100,000 ESTATE. A Gracious Recognition. An interesting feature of commence- ment exercises_at Wells college at Aurora, on Cayuga lake, was the ceremony of breaking « sod for the Frances Folsom Cleveland library, the gift of Andrew Carnegie in honor of the wife of the late president, and who is a graduate of the institution. Mrs. Cleveland turned the firét sod and thus initiated work on a structure which will be a fit memorial to her gracious American womanhood.—Troy Times. Left to Connectcut Baptist Association —Heirs to Contest Will. i1 “the lone Cheshire Her= by his death, brought up peculiar will cases sefore any court in the ite is estimated as be- $100,000, and he left to the Baptist- Associa- t, although he has a x relatives, including well known residents in New The nieces were mnot forgot- left $100 apiece out of the )00 by the hermit. case will be hotly contested by tives' and Cheshire is wondering er or not the $100,000 church going to be built as the will directs. It is necessary first to prove the will, se was heard before Judge ber of afternoon, in the pro- irt of Cheshire. A large ar- talent engaged by the dis- e CLEANSES THE SYSTEM EFFECTUALLY; DISPELS Centennial Fireworks. Deoh maered into | COLDS, AND HEADACHES rnment, and Emilio | g the firm of Rug- s, for a grand pyrotech- on the night of Septem- play will be of a re- ite -character. and will ture naval battle. orpedo boats and all risite he pyrotechnical naval agement will be brought here from 5 the fireworks manufactur- ere will send men to arrange the lay and conduct the battle. There be an attack on land fortifications mine explosions, the sinking of ships and all the horrors of war, in the finest eworks that can be made. The 0 andles and rock- will be a blaze of erb colors in fire. he woods around the lake will be without illumination, so that the bat- tle may be seen to the best advantage. Other ‘parts of the park will be elab- DUE TO CONSTIPATION. BEST FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN-—YOUNG AND OLD. TO GET ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS-ALWAYS BUY THE GENUINE. MANUEACTUREDBY. THE SOLD BY ALL LEADING DRUGGISTS ONE SIZE ONLY. REGULAR PRICE 50°A BoTTLE DON’T BUY OLD STYLE TEETH If you are proud of your personal appearance, buy a sét or partial set with Dr. g’s latest invention, that wonderful improvement, the “NAT- URAL GUMS,” which makes it impos- ble to detect artificial teeth in your mouth. PAINLESS EXTRACTION Teeth extracted and filled painlessly for the most nervous and delicate people. Dr. King’s method is the only absolutely SAFE treatment known to dental science. Full set teeth 38, and up, with the Natural Gum! Gold ~ Crowns and Bridge Werk $5.; Gold Fillings $L. up. Thomas Jefferson King, D. D. S. KING DENTAL PARLORS, Franklin Square, Norwich HOURS—9 a. m. to 8 p. m.; Sundays 10 to 2. .Telephone. bear out that view. It does, how- ever, show the heavy hand of the dic- tator In a land that is a republic in name only.—Bristol Press. A Contented Republic. President Diaz of Mexico has an Indian war and a rival presidential as- pirant to handle, and he deals with both in about the same fashion. Amer- icans who are familliar with Yucatan conditions say that the Sndians have mighty good cause for rebellion, and Candidate Madera believed he had rea- son to indulge in a popular campaign. He spoke plainly and told some un- palatable truths about governmental methods. ~Although he is perhaps the wealthiest man in Mexico he is under arrest for his temerity. How much of a real republic Mexico is can be gath- ered from this incident. A letter to us from an American resident of Mex- ico states that Madera recently made some of the first independent cam- paign speeches ever heard in that land. People were astonished and immediately assumed that there was a secret undersanding between Mad- era and Diaz. The arrest does not Schobl Children Saving Money. So far this school y r and since September, the sum of $675 has been deposited by the pupils of the Strong district, Fair Haven, in one of the sav- ings banks. This plan was begun three years ago under the direction of Su- pervising Principal Graves. his object being to inculcate the habit of sav- ing, and already over $3,000 is on de- posit. Each pupil thus saving has a bank book and takes great interest in adding to the savings from time to time. A new electric desk lamp has the fila- ment stretched out in a long line tc distribute the light' over a greater area. MoHICAN COMPANY THE Thursday and Friday —NONEY SAVERS —— teas PORK CHOPS - v |8c teav- Smoked Shoulders 2> » [4ic CONFECTIONERS” SUGAR 4 » 25¢ PURE LARD [5¢ cao: FRANKFURTERS [3c teaww POT ROAST b |4g SIRLOIN STEAK I8¢ croce JRIED BEEF 23c § wra JELLY 25¢ eox GREAMERY BUTTER - » 298¢ - v |fo | SicED 2% PRESSED BACON = Tc HAM 80c FULL GREAM CHEESE FLOUR ».86.30 &.83.15 21 Ibs. GRANULATED SP%R $I. with 1 Ib. of our Famous 60c TEA 1b. 1b. Ib. Ib. Ib. Ib. 1-8 sack Custom Grinding Joseph F. Smith, TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. FIL.ORIST “vephone - ™G.Si™ 1 200 Main Streel, Norwich. OUR WORK " s the approval of the eritical OLIVF ‘OIL Pl beands, Senported. | THoS nHest quality | Rogers’ Domestic Laundry. | i 07 o ceetst Tel. 958. Rear 37 Franklin Street. sepi27d : QUALITY in work should always be considered. | espectally when it costs no more than jthe inferior kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the | No. 336 Franklin Stry DR. JONES, Dentist, §5 SHETUCKET ST. t. whole story. A Room 10 "Phone 32-3 STETSON & YOUNG. may17a may27a | C. S. FAIRCLOUGH $2.50~The Waldort Shoe for Men and Women, Superior to all others in style, qual- ity and comfort. | P. CUMMINGS, | (Premiums) 50 ‘Central Avenue, | Stativn is the Thamesville Grocer ‘Phone 116-ring 3 » Norwich, Conn, _“ No use trying to get along tongew without ice or with the old, ill-ven= tilated and ice-consuming Refrigeratory We have an excellent line of Tce Safes, also Water Coolers, Llectric Fans, Screens, Garden Hose. ___..g. ~ Seeds, Garden Hardwarg, Tools, Junisa « WATGHES At the Lowest Prices. All Warranted Good Timekeepers. The Plaut- Cadden Co. Jewelers and Silversmiths, Established 1872 PLAUT - CADDEN BUILDING Latest Novelties Chignon Puffs Cluster Curls «__for the New Coitfures Bibson Toilet Co. 67 Broadway ‘Phone 505 The Enudmurset and Lingerie MODELS f.OI EVERY_FICURE. CORSETS ALTEREO AND REPAIRED. From the smart shape for the young man to .the dignified shape for the older; from the stiff straw to the softer models — L. & H. Straw Hats are made to suit the individual tastes of every man and in fproportions to suit. With rough, rounded or knife-like edges, each L. & H. is particularly treated to stand the hard test of summer wear. The peculiarly smooth and regular texture of the straw, the special L. & H. sizing,and-the exquisite trim- mings, are but a few points that have awarded the seal of Public Approval to L. & H, Straws for 30 years, * Satis- fied customers have given a reputation to L. & H. Straws. For Sale by . P. J. MORLEY, Frank'i~ Sauare, Nerwich, LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confdent our Ples, Cake and Bread cennot be exoqlled. Give us trial