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Forwich Bulletin and Gousier. - = 114 YEARS OLD. rice, 12c m week; S0¢ a 2 year. ‘amonths; < Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class mattor. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 450. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-83, Bulletin Job _Office, 35-G Willimantle Office, Room 2 Mwrray Building. Telephone 210. Nerwich, Friday, Aug. 19, 1910. The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Bulletin has the Jargest eir- eulation of amy paper in Easters Cemmecticut, from three to four flmes larger tham that of amy In Norwieh. It is delivered to over 2008 of the 4053 houses in Nor- wvich, amd read by nimety-three per cemt. of the people. In Windham $t 4a deliyered to over 900 houscs, ia Putaam amd Daniclson to ever 1100, and im all of these places it is comsidered the local dnily. Bastern Commecticut mime towns, omé humdred wixty- Sve postoffice dixtricts, and forty- ome rural free delivery routes. The Builetin i sold In every of the R. F. D. forty- Weelk ending August 13 . A UNIVERSAL COINAGE. An alt world-wide coin would be of 485 much convenience in the transac- lon of business as a universal . wuage, like Esperanto which fn use in haif a hundred countri ‘e wniversal postage stamp. Prof. Wil- Oswald of the Leipsic ufiversity as conosived the ifea of a universal i wrorld colnage and has been invited by Lhe Merchants and Manufacturers’ as: ocigtion of Berlin to make the first Spublic exposition of his idea befors hat organization in September or Ov- ‘tober. Leading benkers and financiers i~wAN be invited to attend the meeting {4mnd take part in the discussion of the lan. Financial papers say that Prof. Oswald’s general idea is that com- ! aderce and inter-cemmunication of na- Iens would be facilitated and simpli- $ed by adeption of a money system ‘and ceinags common to the whole civ- 4lized world It is these cemmereial facilities wehich will bind the nations of the warth closer together, promote the %rotherhood of man and do muc ward establishing permanent SThe commercial interests of #ions are positively BOY $COUTS UNDER GEN. BADEN- POWELL. peace. all na- ar. A party of British Boy Scouts have ®rrived in America under the super vision of ut.-Gen. Robert Baden Fowell, hero of Mafekinz, on their way fo the province of Alverta 3 ten days' encampment. The #=couts of England approac whip of a palf million, and r mays the object of this great army of outk Is “to seize the boy's charact ¥n its red bot stage of enthusiasn and Wweld it imto the right shape and en <ourage and develop its individualit wo that the boy may become a g00d @nan and a valwable cltizen.” Whether this is more w ®doption than the junior rey @y which young bors wer tangh principles of commercial g ¥s a debatable question. TI e questio er, that 1 tary cast of the orsamization is mor s who love ad- wemturs, or that the scouting is an Savitatien to the spirit and imagino- om of youth in the character-buildinz Period. The bors are placed on ha @nd held responsible for the govern- mment of the organizatic Since_ the object of the movement is Better and more intelligent ¢ ‘certainly merits commenda:io; PARTY UNITY. the democrats th: was divided in tions to stay are not likely to be real- Ssed. If there is one thing more ti Mnother for which the republican pa v has distinguished itself it is for set- disputes within the party together for victery. There the for which promises gooa ha Bee looking over the westerr a on in repub- situation “It is plain enough also to est obser whether he be ®r republican, that the republicans are putting i r time to-day together.” ling whatev any hon- or. democrat snay have existed in their ranks 1 a may be t for granted t be able wnited fronc rouble majority in congress. This is eiaily desirable, not purely from a po- litical party standpoint, But algo from . the standpoint of the country’s geod ®or with a congress in harmony vith ent that part of the admin- »'s prosramme not completed at @he last session may be fully rounded wut_and ail the pledges on- which the ene » maintaining the republi present a formidahly that will have little riy won out in 1908 redeemed in nished form. “The best part of the harmons @novement now going on is that it rep- $esents concess on both sides— s and insurzents. No other ‘:rt of unity would be worth talking Sbout, but this sort is worth ever ®hing. It effaces Qifferences sud ef- Qects definite agreements and produces thorough determination to carry the @ay in November. That it has re- @uired more than ordinary skill and eagacity on the part of the léaders to mccemplish 2ll these tangible ro sufts will be gemerally admitted, for wgaigst sweh an oytcome has been ar rayed afl the subtle forces which the opposition could possibly muster No man ever could spend money faster than his wife could earn it but women hawe been known to bank 's credit until nothing THE COOL NIGHTS. Following. the -hot nights ef July the cool nights of August have been mo: refreshing, #nd the sleep that was iost then has been pretty well made ur. The law of life seems to require thai man shall sleep one hour in three—. that he shall recuperate his exhausted energies at the cost of one-third of his time spent in unconscieusness, or a tax of 23 years in a iife of three-scote and ten; and he doesn’t mind the tax. He enjovs the pleasure of going to sleep and tie refreshing feeling whick mar] his awakening. Of the mystery of sleep we know little—these who | have studicd the subject clgim that its benefits are psychical rather than physical—bit we know that the ani- mals who sleep least are fiercest. and the men who sleep least are of the dangerous classes if not thereby im- valided. he appetites, prepensitiss and siors are regarded as the un- relenting enemies of sleep: and that the purposes of sleep detach man from {the world and deprive him . of the | means of.enjoying what he pérsists in abusing. and thus of “withdrawing him | from nis purpose, keep him from the | pit,” is by some scholars taught. BEut most of us care little about the phi- »phy of sleep, since we know the ghts favor it and recognize the | blessinzs of comfort and repose. With |August over, we know that Septem- | will continue favorable for re- sieep and A LAND OF MURDERS. Since there are annually eight timea murders committed in this as country as in any other on the gloh we must accept the title, although it is Ry odious. Heathen Japan with its 5 000,000 peopie has one homicide to 29 in America where we boast of our in- telligence and larger liberties. The reason for this showing against this |republic is because' everybody is free | to posscss weapons and use them—be- se the ready weapon in moments f wrath multiplies these high.crimes |tenfold. There are laws enough |azainst the ecarrying of concealed weapons, but they are seldom en | forced. Mad men buy weapons to slas | befter men because of their efficient public service, and the sale of revolv- ers to irresponsible and degenerates any attempt being at restriction There were 9 000 vs in this country last year and crages run here It is not probable »f them were identified and r even 100 executed. It is {o detect murderers, but it not be made difficult to try or ct them; and there Is no good why it should cost the state to conviet an assassin, or execution of prisoners con- victed pital offenses shculd “he delayed for years. If the judicial arm of government was more just, and the action of the authorities more promgt, the number of murders would be great- Iy de Unti) this day of better conditions this land must be indicted murders. soes without m: as that 900 difficult should to eonv reason thousands why the cased. dawns a land of EDITORIAL NOTES. inclean towel Is often a detri- the ice cream trade. The ment tc Those who know say that it is easier to find a friend than it is to lose an enemy. Stowe, Vt, opened Old Home week with a game of baseball. There is fic- |ness in this, | = e The American architect who flies by and Briti the French prised _is pointing with pride d list shows an ad- thought Happy for to-day: What | we pray for and work for we are pret- |ty sure to realize. | Le Blane, the French aviator, haa shown that as a man-bird he could beat the flight of pigeons. watermelon mbake is a signal for a smile that > meal is finished. con stays till t the newly oiled road things aga it that ssed in words. The smell of one the d not be exp added 82,000 to its ten years. They to the town. Pittsburg has population in the pas lend fa not naal, it comes to signs, the small cnows what the return of cacher from her vacation means. Wher hoy schao he man who thinks that he is his brother's keeper should be able to keep a dog decently but often he is not. The Illineis man who knocked twe ns to an undertaker with his bare s didn’t need carry concealed: weap- The New Jersey minister who thinks t is a scheme to die on third bafe doesn’t realize that sometimes it can- not be helped, The man on the curb remarked this morning if his wife could keep money as well as she could keep a secret he would be pleased. toston’s swimming girls are in the light, and one of them for physi- measurements is deelared to be t woman. e the torial décree is that no pad- into the coat shouldérs for fall. They must stand for they are. n st a e J thi what The manufacturer of the kodak have approached 27 per . cent. divi- dends every year for the past five years. z The woman who has exchanged poor hushand for @ good alimony has n to take a little pride in her Speaker Cannon gives noticd he ex- cts to be a candidate for the speak- ip of the next consress. He doesn't knéw when he is fatally in- jured. 5 The. machine republicans of :New York take no stock in Roosevelt, but if the people shonld what will become of them? ¥ The Whole Hog. The’ thrifty man is the one who ia blessed with ‘success in this worke day world of ours, and the thrifty busis ness house is always on the lookout for leaks and is planning to make use all the waste products as much as tandard Oil company and the Chicago packers have developed to the itmost the use of Ly-products of their respective business. It has been sa that the packinz houses use the whole hog except the squeal. and now. comes 2 ywestern papér with a use for ths squeal. Save the squeal and sell it to automobile owners for signalis.—The the'f, “I don't see what welre going to do Up in our end of the town if that man Crowmartin' doesn’t move out” said the carpenter. ‘He' ble-maker in the United States. He's always talking about his rights and insisting that somebody is infringing on ’em. “The other day some smoke from my kitchen chimney blew over into his vard, and he made the blamedest fuss. 1f a man’s dog barks at night Crowmartin reports it at the police station first thing in the morninz. He spent 320 trying to find a law that would get me into trouble because m rooster crows at daybreak every morn— ing. - He Is always complaining to the palice, and he keeps the whole neigh- borhood in hot water. “There's only one way to deal with such a man” remarked the wagon- You have to beat him at own game. 1 have had experience with men of his kind, and I know it's |po use arguing or appealing to his better nature, for he hasn’t any. You just simply have to make up your mind to be twice as mean as Te is and awake nights thinking up emes that will break heart Read up. the village or voulll find a lot of rules and re ns that he is bredking every all violate the ordinances of our lives without khow Does Crowmartin let his hens loose? That's a_penitentiary offc at this sesason of the vear. Lock up vour own hens and then go to the po- lice station with a virtuous face and make complaint in the inter the public welfare. There is an ordi- nance providing pains and penalties for leaving tin cans in the alley back of vour premises. Are there tin cahs in Crowmartin's alley? If not, put some there, and then have him ar- rested Continue this pelicy for a lit- tle while and Crowmartin will come to fhe conclusion that reform is the best goods in the market qu day. every it. run We aay the worst trou- | of , ! half was worse than your friend Crow— martin. He had a grudge against me | for some trifling reason. He discov- | erea_that I can't stand the music of a violin. I don’t understand it myself, but violin music is torture to me. Well, he at once got an old fiddle and hed sit_and play it for hours, until 1 was frantic and my reason began to totter on its. throne. “I went to that man and argued with him and begged him to cut out the music, and he just laughed at me. I tried to have him arrested, but there was no law against a man’s playing the fiddle in his own house. 1 studied the matter over and finally -came to the conclusion that my only hope lay in doing him up by his own method. There was a_wide hall separating the two parts of the house. Half of it was supposed to belong to me and the other haif to my neighbor. After consulting' a lawyer and finding that T had the right to do it, I established hooting gallery In my balf of the and invited my friends to come nd_improve their markmanship. “We kept our rifles cracking away day and night. That man with the fiddle came over on his knees and begged me to let up. He and his fam- iy had their ears plugged with cot- ton for two weeks and got so nervous they'd jump ten feet at every report. When he had his lesson learned by heart I closed the shooting gallery nd after that he was a model neigh— Dbor and a good friend. An old aunt came to visit me one time and she liked the place so well | that she made Gp her mind to stay for zood. She had a tongue that mever rested and she was driving my wife as mean and cantank- ply wouldn't leave. I discovered that her pet detestation was cats, so I began buying cats at five cents each, and the place was soon_swarming with them. She last- ed about a week after the plague of cats was inaugu throw wclpded cause e shouting cc posed friends who a ably and creeping arounc him_ but their exhibitions tude only s to defeat t¥ Senator Bulkeley has a repu n of standing by his friends as by his fprinciples and these are qualities that appeal to fair-minded men, and fair-minded men have a habit of going about their duties with litle fuss It cannot be denied that Senator Bulkeley has been an effect ntious. semator. Few m catest brief an-experience,in the gr istative body in the world have p themselves so efficient and ir as he, and it indeed will be a striking instance of party f ke is not selected agair candi- te.—Saturday Chr ¥'s True, and the a ne of its force from the fa of those now. opposing Sena Bulkeley are holding high official positions and owed their first entrance into public life to the favor of Honorable Morgan G. Bulkeley. The senator, however, as loyal friends as any- man in public life today and they are of the stamp who will not pleas no mat- ho has been e enviable jing for can be turned aside by ter how specious. in public life as long as United States senat cut - and has. achieved reputation of invariab the Interests of not he relegated to the machinations of nation as is new opposir tion. The people, memories. It is however, since one was one of the leading our sta anitol, and a: feather flock together,” it that his political manager Henry Roraback, on lobbyists In recent I ford Opinion short vears Mel sbhyists of proverbial not Geor: Women Church Wardens. The recent appointment of a woman churel” warden at Walsgram-on-Sowe, to light the fact that no fewer than elght other women are exercising the same function in different parishes in England. There is, too, 2 woman sex- ton in a small parish in Lincolnshire. The office is hereditary, and has been held T =ty for 200 years The Meanest Ever. The meanest trick ever perpetrated upon a lg¥er was that which his girl's pa sprung upon an Arlington Heights youth who stayed longer than the old man’s stock of patience could last. He stairs and began to sing “The Morning Light is Breaking; the Darkness Dis- appears f Transportation. | A Texas evangelist says: “Persons ‘who speculate on the stock market or bet on horse races are bound for hell in a racing automobile” But the ex- perience of an observer is that those ‘who specnlate on horse races or bet | on the ‘stock market usually arrive {there ~as pedestrians—Louisville Courier-Journal. = Bearing Periods of Fruit Trees. Some 6ne has estimated from statis- tics that fruit trees and bushes will bear for the following periods: Apples, 25 to 40 years; blackberry, 6 to 14 years; currant, 20 years; gooseberry, 8 to 12 vears; pear, 50 to 75 vears; plum, 20 to 25 years; raspberry, 6 to 14 years. Few Hard Coal Stoves. In Great Britain anthracite stoves are rarely seen, and up to the present British-made stoves have failed to gain favor. The British seem to stick to the old custom of open fires, and even in the anthracite district the coal is invariably used in open grates. Wisdom From “West Africa. pithy saying “He who falls by foot shall rise again; he whno falls by his mouth shall not rise.” From the same region comes the retort, to one of waspish disposition, “If you were medicine you would be very bitter. . Cotton for the Chinese. The cotton cloth needed to clothe the fnhabitants of China is about eight billion cards. This amount would car- pet a pathway 60 feet wide from the earth to the moon, or cover one more than 20 miles wide from New ¥ork “I ‘used to live in a double house “It was a low observed and the man who occupied the other | the carpenter.—Chicago News. Senator Bulkeley. A Practical Suggestion. There issa considerable roise The proposal of the Hon. Gedrge M. bluster in the factional campaign Gunn of Milford that no person oust United Staes Senator Morgan should bhe appointed to any public Bulkeley from his se: but th sena- | utilties commiston who has served up- tor’s friends, and the are lezion, are |on the state central committee of any not apparently alarmed | political party within a series of five There are a few of his former sup- | vears from that would be the dat2 of in Warwickshire, England, has brought | finally appeared at the head of the | West Africa is responsible for the ! his his appointment, scems worthy of earn- est attention upon the part of those | who are working for. state regulation | of public seryice corporations. His assertion that such corporations have | for many years “kept their hands upon Ithe throat of the public through the agency of state central committees of political parties” can scarcely be dis- puted. These organizations as at present constitute. undoubtedly work against the welfare of the careless voters who permit them to exist. They |are also capable of combining at need against the common good. To permit men of this type to direct a move- ment which-should have for one of its | chilef aims the abolition of such un- | faithtul servants would be to render it an_expensive fare | Mr. Gunn's suggestion that at least a portion of the proposed commission should be elected by popular vote is also worth heeding. If the voters did their duty it would furnish a solution of the whole ‘difficulty. As it is, it would have the effect of rendering corruption more difficult on accownt of the uncertain tenure of office involved in popular election. Members of the | commission ~ so” obtained would be obliged to be careful in their dealinzs with corporations. Many enviows eyes would be watching them and it would | not be easy to escape their vigilance. | The danger in this case would be more from demagogy than from dis- mesty. No doubt the offices would e sought for ulterior ends (as they will be under any mode of choice) but perhaps office holders who are at the | merey of the voters would be likely fo do less mischief than those who would |be kept in office ifidefinitely by the influences that originally put them there. The eternal problem of “watching the watchers” is unusually complex in the present case.— Bridgeport Telegram. The New Way. The practical politician who In a cruder stage of his art kissed the ba- bies and showered the women with in- | ane compliments, now preserves more |'of his selfrespect, while achieving | substantially equal results, by telling { the fat men they are getting thin and the lean men they are getting stout.— | Puck. Morrified, | Valet (entsring chamber)—I heard you scream, sir. Wot's the blooming row, sir?” Algy—"You'd better sit up with me until morning, James. I just |bad the awfulest nigntmare! I |dreamed I was walking along the | avenue without me walking stick, | James!"—Chicago News. The Beet Sugar Industry. Beet sugar making is as yet an in- fant industry, with $130,000,000 in- | vested. It is mot old enough in this | country to be developed without pro- tection. But there are many indica- tions that tend to show how we may | some day compete with the world in | | the production of beet sugar. Confuses the Compass. 1 On account of the magnetic guali- ties of the hull and the ore which comprises the cargo, many of the ves- sels of the lake fleets experience great trouble in navigating owing to the in- | fluence of the metal hull and the carge on the compass. | The Calabash Pipe. | A well made calabash pipe posses- | ses all the valuable characteristics of | | all other pipes in most convenfent | {form. 1t is light and durable, and | the free space below the bowl insures | a cool, clean smoke, neither biting nor “gurgly. i Workers’ Big Drink Bil According to the syllabus of the board of education on temperance and | hygiene, about two-thirds of the United | Kingdom's total drink bill, or nearly $10,000,000 a week, is spent by the working classes. . Weaith of the Country. Think of an acre of ground covered with a pile of silver dollars 320 feet high. That would be-the sight pre- sented if the whole wealth of the country were piled together. It amounts to more thun $107,000,000,000. Buiiding Without a Window. St. Louis now has a concrete build- | ing fifty-seven feet high, which hasn't | a single window. It is llluminated in the daytime by means of a t in timental lot, the pugiists. | 18 your temperament which kesps you | shie was different from other people; é ‘Speaking of the eternal subject—that is to say, prize-fighting—Joe Ga is dead. It says in the paper, “The oid master died as he wished to—in the arms of his mother.” “They're a =en- You'remem- ber geod Mr. Johnson's 'remark. 1 promised my old black mammy-1 would win. The ring is all girt 'round with sentiment. ‘When Corbett slew John L. his loving parents telegraphed, “God bless you, Jim! W knew yoa would win.” And when the great Fitz- simmons assauited Corbett, who but Mrs. Fitz stood by, with Dooley listen- ing. These are the words Dooley heard from that devoted wife: “Niver mind his head, Bob! Cave in his slats!” Now, sentiment is a precious thing. It is getting rarer every day, and tha Clerk_grieves to see such great, bis, whaeking chunks of it used up by pu- gilism_ therefore, we take the per- sonal element out of pugilism. Then BREED THENTE, Ghas. Ny, Losoe. Goolest Spot in Town Feature Pisture. “OLD GLORY.” GORGEOUS PATRIOTIC SPEOTACLE. MIS8 LILLIAN LORD, SOPRANO In High Class Ilustrated Fonge i Ladies and Children, smoking does so, but hanged. anybody’s business but ‘hers andsMr. Longworth's —Houston Post. An Important Qualification. Lots of people will agree theoretical- 1y with President Taft on a proposition of 60-day vacations every year, but EASTERN CONNECTICUT. practically they don't want to get fired. | ‘Fhone 518-6. 16 Clairmount Ava —Washington Post. sept2za i To have encircled the entire South Amorican continent within thrce yoars, | Have You Noticed the to have been the first white woman ‘o Increased Travel? set foot upon many points reac y | her in her travels and to have endured | g s s ande Spasm Of B000 T on T o hardships and privations that many | See foaas Feopls like Lo get ou women could not survive—this is the Droud tecord of Mra. Hagriet Chal- | Method. and it youll take:ens of our Tel 511 Norwich, Cu A. W. JARVIS 1S THE LEADING TUNER IN Bo lecturer and mers Adams, traveler of Washington, D, C. writer, ROB., Falls Avenus. might we release the sentiment also Nor is the personal element so essen- tial to prize-fighting. In an age like ours can't it be done by machinery? ‘he Clerk in Boston Transcript Her Temperament. An Atchison girl was not looking well and her mother said to her: "It feeling badly.’ The girl walked around in a happy dream; she feit the had “temperament.” Her mother came to her in a;day or two with an ugly yellowish brown mixture and sald: “Take this surphur ahd mo- lasses; you hive a bllious tempera- ment.” The girl collapsed.—Atchison Globe. . . T Supply Foreign Stamps. A queer _bustness in New Yorkcity is the supplylng of current foreign postage stamps to business houses which want to send forelgn mail with stamped envelope for returning the answer. Of course Umcle Sam's 50- cent stamp is no good in Sunjel Ujong, upper Rbodesia or the Falkland is- lands, but a stamp of any of thes. countries of the equivalent value may be had for seyen cents by going to «one of the shops that sell them. Uncle Ezra Says “Gen'ly it don’t take more’'n a gill uv effort to git folks into a peck of trouble.”—Boston Herald. Many Kinds of Stamp: There are at the present time over Every cake of Lenox Soap is like every other cake—same size; same shape; same weight; same quality. If you buy a cake of Lenox Soap . and like it, you can keep on buying it with the knowledge that every 21,000 varieties of postage stamps in the world. HER PHYSICIAN APPROVES Taking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Sabattus, Maine.—* You told me to | take Lydia E. P¥ nkham’s Vegetable Compound and Liver Pills before child-birth, and we are all surprised to see how much good it did. My physic ® fcian said ¢ Without doubt it was the Compound that helped you.’ I {thank you for your kindness in advising | me and give you full | permission to use My name In your testimonials.”—Mrs. GED. GREENBERGER, 47 Franklin St. GEO. GREENBERGER, 47 Franklin St. Big Reduction Sale ON WINES AND LIQUORS At Our New Package Store FOR THE NEXT TEN DAYS Especially on Peach Brandies, Prune Brandies, Pear Brandies, Apricot Wines, Orange Wines. We have the agency for PABST MILWAUKEE BEER, 4 dozen for $3.00 GEO. GREENBERGER. 47 Franklin St. IS UIpuel [y ‘43943883349 039 H. W. MiTcHELL, Box 3, SBabattus, Me. Another Woman Helped. Graniteville, Vt.— I was passin throughthe Changeof Life and suffe: from nervousness and_other annoying 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 you should publish my letter.” — Mrs. CHARLES BARCLAY, R.F.D., Granite- ville, V. wersng- Custom Grinding Whar and Where to Buy In Norwich DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46, Shannon Building TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. THEATRE AUGUST 22 VAUDE HE BEST VILLE MOTION PICTURES £ CHANGE AM THURSDAYS 10 ‘amt 20 1€ 28th Annual National Roque Association ALL THIS WEEK AT ROCKWELL GROUND Tournam:n¢ Games in Progress from 8 a. m. until 10 p. m Season Tickets ..... General Admission . aug16d 560th Annual AIR OF THE New London Co. Agricultural Soc'y AND GRAND Central Labor Union CELEBRATION Norwich, Conu., Sept. 5th, 6th, 7th, 1910 Balloon Ascension twice daily, at 11 a. m. and 4 p. m. by Prof. Marsh, the original Pine-Tree Aeronant. Women who are passing through | . r. MANNING, Yantie, Conn. this eritical period or who are suffer- [~ Telephone. docidd | (ke ojevator Shetucket street en- | The Boy that made New Hampshire ing from any of .those distressing ills : famous with his Double and Triple peculiar to their sex should not lose Bitainute Bine-at ' the ‘Qrand Arm sight of the fact that for thirty years Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- sund, which is made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy of Remnants, ens, all at lowest prices. Good lengthi for' suits and skirts. NEW STOCK Silks, Dress Goods, OLIVE OIL “LA PURA” Lin Call and sel Re-Union, 1908. The Connecticut Agricul- ) Y < brand; imported. The finest qualit for temale lls. 1In almost, overy com e of Olive Ofl. Just recetved. ! P 2 2 " bave been rostored to health by Lydia SN BLOOK, Pron. OTTO FERRY, tural Experiment Station will E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Next to Fire Statlon. mar26d No. 336 Frankjin Street. education. 99 Perfect That is the world’s official record for accuracy, made by Salome L. Tarr, a writer & GREGG SHORTHAND, Shorthand Speed Contest. Miss Tarr is but seventeen years of age and did not have a High School She began the study of Gregg Shorthand less than two years before the contest, and with but one year’s office experience entered the contest against representatives of the leading Pitmanic systems. What Miss ‘Tarr has done can be duplicated with Gregg Shorthand by YOU. Her rec- ord conclusively proves the superiority of the system in both SHAPLIG- ITY and LEGIBILITY. BOOKKEEPING and TOUCH TYPEWRITING, as taught at the NORWICH COMMERCIAL SCHOOL (Broadway Theatre Building) Day and Evening Sessions begin August 29 in the Fifth International Insist on getting GREGG SHORTHAND, CHAS. S. DONNELLY, Principa! have an Exhibition Tent, 40x60, with an exhibit that will be of value to all farmers County Colt Races for four year old and under. Bring in your Town Team of @xen. A sure $20. for each team of 12 yoke. Better Free Attraction than ever. Band Concert. ARTHUR D. LATHROP, Prast THEO, W. YERRINGTON, Se augldd music. NELLIE S, HOWIE, Tomcher of Pla Central Bullding CAROLINE W, THOMPSON ‘eacher of Musloe 46 Washinggon Str Room L. M. BALOOM, Teackher of Pluno, 29 Thamas SL '..I‘.l::“. n I\l‘ n at " idence n~ prAL e ootild o