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e[ Boston otore THE Millinery Shop ‘THE BIGGEST, BRIGHTEST AND BEST IN EASTERN CONNECTICUT We Invite Your Inspection of the Beauti= ful Autumn Millinery on Display Here. THE BUSINESS CENTER OF NORWICH | HATS MADE UPON THE SHORTEST NOTICE | The Reid & Hughes Co. PURIFY THE HORSES BLOOD! Capital Stock FRemedy One goo package. The Shetucket Harnzss 50 cents a box »d Whip Free with 321 Main Street, Cle: CLOTH 8 'Phone te you Shoes Free Bring this Free WM. C. BODE, ..also.. aning and Repairing. HOP, Main St each Co., Prop. High Grade Tailoring JOS. T. DONOVAN 591 327 Are all in 2ad ready for your In- spection. All grades and prices, in- cluding our Eng! Imported Papers. | Moldings to Match. Decorations and general painter’s supplies. We are now receiving orders for paper hang- | Ing, decoration, aud ainting. P. F. MURTAGH, 92 and . 54 Wes. Main St THE FIREST 35c DINNER| IN TOWHN DELL-HOFF CAFE From 12 02 Telephone. r regular stamps. Our Advertising Policy In addition to our business policy of always selling the most de- P -,\»,\,AJE STROY? Y d§TRADING H 5 pendable footwear that is made by the leading manufacturers, we wil. issue the famous Rowal Gold Trading Stamps with every purchase. To introduce this plan we will give (20) Gold Stamps extra in addition PRESENT THIS COUPON give perfect satisfaction. GOUPON _coupon to our store, make a 50c purchase or more, and we will give you twenty (20) Gold Stamps Free. FRANK A. BILL Free Free | Little journeys to Frank A. Bill's store will save you mony, as our Geod Shoes for little money is our aim. Frank A. 104 Main St. Boots, Shoes and Rubbers you want to put your busi- . the public, there is no me er than through the adverti ns of Th- Bulldtin WHEN you want to put your busi: ness before the public, there is nq me- dium better than through the advertise 147 coiumns of The Bulletin, The 65th annual meeting of the Con- necticut State Teachers’ association will be held Friday, Oct. 27,with simul- ianeous meetings in Hartford and in New Haven. The general meeting in Hartford. will be at Foot Guard armory. The annual business meeting of the association is to be held in the high school building in Meriden on the day Saturday, Oct. 28. The re- pnu of the treasurer, Edward B. Sel- s receipts for the year end- . 15 of 32,256.88, and a balance 5. The general meetings in and New Haven are each entitled to send ten delegates to this business meeting, and these twenty transact the necessary business. The Néw York, New Haven and Hartford railroad will sell round trip tiekets at one and three-fifths of the regular one-wayt fare, and tickets must be countersigned by the association secrerary to make them good for re- E hey may be used going on Oct. , and returning Oct. 27, Not good on Sunday. Programme at Hartford, The programme for the meeting in Hartford Oct. 27 is as follows: GENERAL MEETING.- oot Guard Armory. m.—Preliminary business meet- 1€.00 a. ns. Addre The Spirit of Profes- Service Applied -to Teaching, Dr. Henry Suzzallo, Teachers’ col- | lege. Columbia university. | 11.00—Intermission and business meet- | ing. 11110 —Addre in sation, commissioner ington, D. C. sio The Nation’s Interest Hon. P. P. Claxton, of education, Wash- SICK, SOUR, GASSY, UPSET STOMACHS ARE REGULATED Out-of-Order Stomachs Feel Fine Fivé | Minutes After Taking a Lit- tle Diapepsin. he question as to how long you are going to continue a sufferer from In- digestion, Dyspepsia, or out-of-order Stomach is merely a matter of how soon you begin taking some Diapep- sin. If your Stomach is lacking in di- gestive power, why not help the stom- ach to do.its work, not with drastic drugs, but a re-enforcement of diges- tive agents, such as ‘are naturally at work in the stomach. People with weak Stomachs should take a little Diapepsin occasionally, and there will be no more Indigestion, no feeling like a lump of lead in the stomach, no heartburn, Sour risings, Gas on omach or Belching of undi- gested food, Headaches, Dizziness or Siclkk Stomach, and, besides, what vou eat will not ferment and poison your breath with nauseous odors. All these symptoms resulting from a sour, out- of-order stomach and dyspepsia are generally relieved in five minutes after taking a little Diapepsin. Go to your Druggist and get a 50 cent case of Pape's Diapepsin now, Ia:m:i you will always go to the table with a hearty appetite, and what you eat will taste good, because your stgmach and intestines will be clean and fresh, and you will know there are not going to be any more bad nights and miserable days for you. They freshen you and make you feel like life is worth living. It's Equal Don’t Exist. No one has ever made a salve, oint- ment or balm to compare with Buck- len's Arnica Salve. It's the one per- fect healer of Cuts, Corns, Burns, Eruises, Sores, Scalds, Bol Ulcers, Eczema, Salt Rheum. For Sore Eyes. Cold Sores, its suprem it Only 2 Chapped Hands or Sprains TUnrivaled for Piles. Try > at The Lee & Osgood Co. FOLEY’S KIDNEY REMEDY (Liquid) Is a great medicine of proven value for both acute and chronic kidney and comfort it gives them. good Ce. The Lee & _Os- Leam To Distinguish THE BEST FROM THE REST E HANDSOME- 1 NEW SHADES i in VELOUR HATS Rich Qualities And Chock Full of Style at The Toggery Shop, 291 Main Street. / JAS. C. MACPHERSON Halloween Decorations Halloween Stationery Halloween Post Cards Halloween Seals Halloween Tally* Cards Halloween Place Cards Halloween Favors ..and.. 2 BLACK CATS vCRANSTON S for the coming am\avmnw Sixty-Fifth Annual Session Will be Held October 27 at| Hartford and New Haven. bladder ailments. It is especially rec- ommended to elderly people for its! wonderful tonic and reconstructive | qualities, and the permanent r and "SECTION MEETINGS. (Principals.) Park Church Chapel, High Street. Leader, Edward B. Sellew, Supervising Principal, Lovell District, New Ha- ven. 2.00—“What the school principal can do to make the work of the young teacher effective and how to improve her teaching’ ability during the first ar of her service,” Arthur B. Mor- rill principal State Normal Training school, New Haven. Discussion open- ed by, Edgar C. Stiles, superintendent of schools, West Haven. High School 2 to 4—High school build- ing. Anr ed by William A.Wheat- ley, supefintendent of schools, Mid- dletown. 2.00—General address, main hall, sec- ond fioor, high school buildins The Professional Growth of the High School Teacher, Dr. E. €. Moore, Yale university. After the general address the section will be sub-divided into six round ta- bles, at each of which several theses will be presented on topics of interest to the particular group of teachers in attendance at each round table. The remainder of the session will be de- vcted to an open discussion of the sub- jects presented in these theses. = All topics have a close relation to the practical need of the various depart- ments, and all teachers are urged to participate in’ the discussions. . 2.45—English round table, room 21, high school. Leader, Miss Julia Brazos, Middletown. 2.45—Classics round table, room 34, high schoel. Leader, P. F. Parsons,} Meriden. 4 2.45—Modern language round table, room 35, high school. T.eader, Miss i n M. Osgood. New Britain. round talbfle. room 42, Leader, W. K. Holmes, IN STOCK BY F. E. & E. L. PATTISON, 13 BATH STREET. high school. room high school. Leader, Homer W. rainard, Hartford. History round high school. TLeader, Perry. New Haven. 2.45—Commercial round table, room high school. Leader, E. A. Sam- Stamford. GRAMMAR Park Church, Corner of High Streets. Leader, Arthur D. Call, Supervisor Henry Barnard School, Hartford. 2.00—English Composition, Stratton D. Brooks, superintendent of schools, Boston, Mass. PRIMARY. Foct Guard Armory, 159 High St. Leader, Miss Katherine T. Harty, Su- perintendent of Training, State Nor- mal School, Danbury. 2.15—The Work and Some Ideals of the Primary Grades, . H. Beede, super- intendent of schools, New Haven. 3.15—Reading, Arthur B. Morrill, prin- cipal State Normal Training school, New Haven. RURAL SCHOOLS. Jewell Hall, Y. M. C. A. Building, Cor-}{/| ner Ford and Pearl Streets. Leader, Charles E. Pratt, Superinten- dent of Schools, Woodstock. 2.00—Practical Hblps for the Rural Schools, Miss Lillian I. Lincoln, State Normal school, Farmington, Me. 300 — Rural Schools Readjusting Themselves to Especial Conditions, table, room 22, Walter H. SCHOOL. Asylum and If Your lNeiAg-hbor Has Electric Light and you have not, just step into his house some evening and ask him if he would now tolerate any other kind of to the Signs of the Times, Isaac Freeman Hall, superintendent of schools, North Adams, Mass. MUSIC. Brown School Hall, Corner Market and Morgan Streets. Leader, W. D. Monnier, Supervisor of 2 g 5 B 5 Music. South District, Hartford, lighting in his home. You'll feel the same way about it 2.00—Addre The Place of Music in & 3 ;! & the Public’ Schools, Osbourne Mc- | gfter you have once tried electric lighting. Conathy. supervisor of mu , Chel- sea, Mass. = : 2.45—First lesson in chromatics (illu Find out from us how easily your t trated by fourth grade class, Wasl] R 3 ington district school, Hartford: Miss house can be wired. > See the new Edi- Minnie Engle, teacher; Miss Jennie E. Langdon, supervisor.) .15—Some problems of the teaching son Mazda Lamps that give twice as | Y 2 = *4 . & . ¥ ] feta e much light as ordinary electric lamps 1, Ha ford: Mi; Winifred . Kemme', toacners Ralph L. Baldwin, that use the same current. New Edison ! S ANUAL ARTE: Mazda Lamps are strong enough for all i . High Street. ordinary usage, being many times stronger than the old tungsten lamps. Andrews, Director s, New Britain. of Inspiration Monte, State field, Mass. Design, Fred ied »r of the department town, Mass. r t Manual Arts Teach- association plans to have each year AREST GENERAL ELECTRIC AGENCY, THE EATON CHASE CO 129 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. he Conne ng and manual work from different parts of the state. This sar the exhibit will be in Hartford, at e Henry Barnard school. { PENMANSHIP. High School Building. Moody, Supervisor of . New Britain. al Writing for All ser, Columbus, O. At New H:ven. programme for the meeting at sim n every ‘way as etc.. to that in Hartford. < will be from towns and :tion and the western 4n exhibit of drav eom 3§ Leader, The NOURISHMENT ‘FOR THE AGED AND PHYSICALLY IMPOVERISHED BORDEN'S Malted Milk PALATABLE SUSTAINING STRENGTH -GIVING For Sale at Your Druggists NE\vV DAM BUILT. Constructed of Ccm.reto at the Ford lce Pond. dam which has seen vice at John H. Ford's t Great Plain, has been a mew concrete dam, 75 to 12 feet high, and at point about four feet fact that the old dam apidated and required ‘jatching up of leaks, i“ord to put in the new up crete dam. Last yvear the m let the water down to 20 inches below the proper level s small, much of e pond replaced iong. thicke 12h. s becoming deri.ble 1 10 e about and the ice crop w: it being unfit for use on account of the dirt and grass in it. The new dam is built to last and a full pond is always assured. A sixteen-inch iron gate h been built into the dam.: Since July Mr. Ford has been bringing ice from Massachusetts on account of the smallness of the local crop last win- | I 'anl ( tI n Bal galns ter. i Nearly all the local ice dealers were | unabie to secure a full supply of ices at home last year and had to purchase ! out of town. Conditions this vear, it | is expected, will be much better than x '50c Lantern (See window display) 39¢ Outdoor Rifle Practice Extended. _mavy as a substitute. The length of the outdoor rifle prac- tice season for local members of the C. N. G., has been extended until Oc- tober 14, savs the New London Day. The season unless otherwise provided ends on October 1. As there was a great deal cof stormy weather early in 50c 75¢C ‘Dashboard Lantern g sl an | Storm Lantern tant General Cole for the continuance £ of practice until next Tuesday. Quali- fying scores made by the guardsmen PECIAL F - S =-Folding Lunch Boxes L h the Mormon pictures omitted and sinca October 1 will be credited to now offer it to the secretary of the Bulle‘in Bullding 74 Frank“n Stl;eefi_ 8¢ them. Those Who Oppose the Acceptance of a silver tray bearing the figure of Erigham Young and the Mormon tem- ple, made for the new hauleship l‘tah. hav