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~itered at the Postoffice at Nerwiea, 1 i~ as second-class matten %0 Telephone Calla: &y Jietin Business 1n Joh Office, Office, l.-! 2, Murray Telephone 210. ~.mantie Suitding. . SWAT THE FLY. 3 Aside from the, fact that they may Be carriers of disease, everyone, and particularly heusekeepers, know what a nuisance the fiy is and how much it is desired that the campaigns for “swatting the fly” shall be extended for the elimination of the pest. With this antagonistic feeling the Boston doctor who declares that all the talk about “swat the fly” is rot 1s not likely to stir up many friends in behalf of even the common housefly. It is the opinfon of this decter that if people ‘will keep their homes and themselves clean they have nothing to fear from the fiy ana he cites his screenless home and his five healthy children as an example, and holds to the idea that the fear of merms is carried too far. That he is able to exist without screens and without annoyance from the flies is a condition which everyone 1 N I heard a man say the other day, “that" in your eye,” as though the eye was mot true to vislen—that it was the seat of false cenceptions. The fact is the eyes are the tattlers -.f the hu heart. The wicked eve has to hn?e a bad heart behind it. It was Lavater who declared the “daring eye tells downright truths and down- right lies.” It is all in your eye in a true, not a false sense, Man is said to have two eyes and one tongue that he may see twice as much as he should ever speak of. Franklin said “the eyes of the master will do more work than Dboth his hands.” There is the the lave- 1t eye, the plercing eye, the wanton | eye, and the eye whose expression is | more beautiful than words. The world judges you and I by our "THE MAN WHO TALKS | (Written Spectally for The Bulletin.) “How wonderful,” was the unvelun. tary exclamation which fell from her lips as Rose Hendricks paused in her merning ramble about the streets of her summer heme. In us years she had gone to mere fashionable re- sorts for the summer, but something led her to cheose a more quiet retreat this summer and she had found it in this suburban village not far from her own city. The sight before her justi- fled her praise, for she was standing in fromt of a dwelling embowered with roses, whose fragrance filled the air, and might well call forth admiration from any lover of flowers: i Lo living alone hed led her into the habit of talking to herself, but this Her 1o ear aRd sdu- ago, seem more and more i1 to sever thelr connection with us. We older ones are ed at this, for no life seems so happy to us, that of gl ourselves up to being guided by the. inner linght, and the freedom from worry -and strife which come from the hurry and bustie of ordinary life. But James is & dear son to me, and T cannot compiain of him in any way.” GENT'S TRUNKS AND HAT BOXES. A large line of TRAVELING BAGS of Leather and Light Weight Suit Cases; a large variety of the latest improved is not able to enjoy. Flies and filth ooyt oogte i g, Lot v e il bt o closely associated and there are |conduct nas by our professions. Ta|reply. All thesg items did not come from e ot the garbage and stable | world does riot care what we pretend | "Z¥T0 oy f6nd of roses? responded |9n€ conversation, for Rose had won makes. ; Haait. m&r&n# scavengers to be parading through | fOF it 18 more interested in what w¢|a maniy voice, Come inside and see |the old iady's Beart by her admiration [ R ted and ch by us |eemfort 1 will show you samples ang thelr food. The removal of unsanitary |30 What we: think, we are rathel|tnem more closely. My mother will be |of the garden, and was repeatedly in- All these goods are carefully inspected and chosen by us | plans ot tne porcelain azd other tese eir food. Slow to make known. - We keep to! gheq! fo0%8 SloSeW: TY mecier Wil by |vited to the house by Mrs. Smithson. . and give you estimates for the work conditions and swatting the Ay &t- tacks the nuisance from two directions. Those who are satisfied to include the flies among their friends are welcome to do so, but the cleanliness ,which the doctor so strongly advocates can “Tell me of thy life in the city,” was the request at one visit. “I haye made thee listen to me too much I fear. So Rose told her of her life in her own home. A lonely life, for she was an orphan, and had lived with an aunt from selected stock. We know how to do this, it being our profession, and can assure you of supplying your needs in the right trunk, the right suit case or the right traveling bag ourselves things which, 1t were better 5 fo say, and say things which bet.cr | PFONG of her flowera™ | .+ voice have perished in the mind This 18| was heard to say. “It would ill become X e |is answering thysélf at my expense, tlons, but giye voice to that which js | 1> AnSWering thyedit at my expense,’ J. E. TOMPKINS, in no better way be accomplished than by eradicating the fly and the breed- ing places. Swatting the fly is a cam- popular, and perhaps, compensatina. The man who sells his vote is not_tie only victim of bribery; for a man/may sacrifice his. best sense to be in the came into view and addressed Rose. “Come in, thee is welcome, and I shall be glad to give thee some of my in a thoroughly respectable but unat- tractive part of the city, where she en- dured a dreary routine of patfent at- tendance upon a fretful, nervous n- at a RIGHT PRICE, a price that meets and vanquishes com- 67 West Main Stree: petition. When you buy any of the above goods, you want them strong, serviceable, trim and reliable; the kind you get here at lowest prices. Let us show you. : roses.” Rose availed herself of the offer, and soon stood in the midst'of such a garden as she had seldom seen. A valid. Since her aunt’s death a few years previous, she had remained in the same house with only the old ser- Brofusion of flowers of many other |vants for company. Her city friends Kinas than roses met her gaze on all |Were few, for her aunt's exacting de- sides, and she was more than delighted | ands upon her time had prevented paign for the removal of one of sum- mer's great menaces, a movement for better surroundings and the abating of a nuisance. Swat the fy. MEAT AS A FOOD. swinm, or may lose his individualty for the sake of personal prefermnt. We stand by what is popu- lar better -than we stand by what is the truth; and in our pretences -ons the pearl of great price. T. F. BURNS, Heating and Plumoing, Week of June 1dth.. B 475 YALE STILL FACES PROBLEM. Weak and. unsatisfactory was the exhibition which was given by the Yale crews in their contests with Harvard. The Yale freshmen gave the only in- @icatign of rowing ability in the en- tire opposttion which was offered Har- vard, end that was a defeat without a sting. If anything was required, af- ter previous Indications, to demonstrate o Yale the need of a revision of meth- ods, it was properly administered by the Harvard crews. Yale finds itself today in the same position Harvard Was seven years ago, following a long st of defeats. A change of the sys- tem af coaching, the introduction of new methods and a aifferent stroke put Harvard to the front, which po- sition has since been maintained. Yale crews are mot doing the Kind of work which charactenized them in their best days, ‘Whils Harvard under Wray has Justified every confidence. Yale's new English stroke may not have had & fair trial this vear. It was a radical departure which per- mitted of insufficient preparation, but the exhfbftion which was given of it was far from satisfying. Yale's strug- gle was pitiful. There was the grit and the determination, but they show- ed the lmck of training. Harvard had the heavier crew and finished strong, but Yale was exhausted in its effort to finish within eleven boat lengths. Better had they been given the proper handling under the stroke on which they had been brought up than to at- tempt the introduction of a mew idea with insufficient time to develop it. Tale has not yet properly solved its coaching problem. THE IMPERATOR. The maiden trip to this country of he largest steamship in the world, the Imperator, only marks in these days the march of progress in the building and equipping of transoceanic lners. Jt is & trfumph in the art of ship- building and will be the queen of the Atlantic untll #t is outdone in com- paratively & few months hence. In connection with the Imperator, how- ever, it is worthy of motice that not only is it equipped with all the lux- uries and attractive furnishings for the entertainment and comfort of its patrons, but partioular attention has been pald to overcoming the short- comings of other glant ships of the high seas in the direction of safety, Both in the manner of construction and in the equipment and operation of the big grevhound, Noticdhble is the size of the big ship in comparison with other world-beat- ers of their day, but also noticeable is the fact that on its trip speed was mnot the aim of the officials of the line, attention was paid to the warning of the presence of icebergs, a full com- plement of Mfeboats is carried and the wireless telegraph system is in oper- ation at all hours. The Imperator to- day is the pride of the Atlantic. How long it will be able to maintain its supremacy depends upon the speed with which other vessels can be con- structed. A while ago, even when steamships of seven hundred feet in length were considered marvelous, it was believed the Kmit had ben reach- ed, but modern developmnt knows no Tmit and the thousand foot ship must be anticipated. BETTER TRADE RELATIONS. In the cities which he is honoring by a visit Minister Lauro Muller of Brazfl is being given an enthusiastic welcome, just the kind which is de- served by the representative of another mation and it must be evident to the distinguished visitor that there is the best of feeling in this country concern- ing Brazil and a desire to perpetuate Jt. This of course exists not only so- clally, but commercially and while a better acquaintance is being establish- d during the visit of the forelgn min- ister there should be realized the need of getting better acqualnted in trade channels for mutual welfare, This country is a blx customer of Brazil taking Its exports to the amount of $125.000,000 which 18 ndarly a third of all the foreign sales which that cotntry makes, On the other hand Brazil buys hut about 336,000,000 worth of goods from this eountry each year or only & trifie mere then a tenth of ite total imports, This shows a wide division In the ameunt of trade between the twe gountries each year, Brazil is In the stages of early devel anment vet, and while Br, Muller is tn *¥his eountry & party of American buss forss men are now in Drawil stimu- 1a & hetteh interest in American R (ima 15 at hand when An neressed trade between the United Siates and Seuth Ameviean eountries be maintained and the import- in the way of trams- 1o farmish the solu- eceneerning the After having operated under the handicap of the restriction sanctioned in 1906 that meat did not come under the provisions of the Pure Food and Drug act but was géverned entirely by the meat Inspection act, it 1s an Im- portant | change which has been put into force by the joint action of Sec- retaries Houston, McAdoo and Redfield whereby such a ruling has been re- voked. Just why meat should have been removed from the provisions of the food and drug act is not plain in- asmuch as meat s certainly a food and extensively used and is in' need of as much protection as other ar- ticles of the food supply. Purity is demanded and the revocation brings meat under the same rulings as all other foodstuffs. This of colirse ap- plies to all meat products as well as to meats and leaves the packers liable to prosecution for engaging in inter- ate commerce in adulterated or mis- branded goods. The position of the attorney gen- eral that the two acts were intended to be used together and-not separately has a proper ring. It is unreasonable to suppose that because the products of the packers were alright at the time they were manufactured, that such in- spection will' serve to guarantee the continued good condition indefinitely. The meat inspection act has its jurisdiction and so has the food and drug act and both cover different and important stages In maintaining whole- some supplies of meat, and its pro- ducts. The way for taking action for misbranding and adulteration has now been opened. EDITORIAL NOTES. which pulls the best stroke Gales Ferry anq Red Top now dis- appear from the news despatches for another year. These cool June days only make it evident that the supply of icebergs is by no means exhausted. Now that Secretary Bryan has in- dorsed the nmew currency bill it prob- ably means the end of free silver for- ever. Those who are susceptible are suf- fering from the epidemic of vacation- itis which is spreading throughout the country. By the time congress gets through with the new currency bill there are good chances it will be due for the laundry. The kaiser may be having a good time with Andy Carnegie in Germany, but so are the Methodist bishops in the south, It all depends upon how Dr. Fried- mann looks upon the outcome of his trip to America as to whether it was a success or not. Undoubtedly Aguinaldo would like independence for the Philippines, but it is a curious idea he has of going to Japan after it, Happy thought for today: It is pos- sible the president is so firm a be- liever in short messages because he does his own typewriting. With so many degrees being passed out in university and college, there's little wonder that the weather has trouble in getting adjusted. Wichita, Kan, requires 1its police candidates to run a hundred yards in sixteen seconds, which probably applies to the women as well as the men. “Start something” is a good recom- mendation by ex-Mayor Buckingham of Bridgeport, but it is a poor plan to start something which you can't finish. When Vice President Marshall re- ports that the southern states are much pleased with the administration he naturally did not include Louisiana. New York judges are opposing the plans for a round court house building. It fsn’t so essential that the struc- ture be square as what goes on in- side it. President Wilson s keeping as quiet on the civil sundry -bill .ang fts vi- clous rider as he is on appointments of Connecticut men and Connecticut Judges. The new steamship Imperator con- tains evervthing in the way of the Jatest marine architectural ideas but it should at all times be equipped with the necessary umpunt of caution, Graduations were ocarrfed out this year with less frills, but they brought forth the diplomas just the same minus the oft attendant and never welcomed bills for costly graduation clothes. Twe days mere of the hunger.strike would be fatal to Mrs, Punkhurst her deetor declares, but when she does get over her fast she ought o be helter than ever sinee fastng removes the evil from the system, When Governof Biease promised to do his best to keep the State Press association members from buying frem »blind tigers” during the cenventien near Charleston, he admits a fault which he ought to frown upon een- It was Tryon Edwards who warned his readers “between two evils choose | nelther; between two goods choose | both.” 'Take all that is coming your | way that is good, and let the rest be added. to. the jetsam and floatsam of life. Let the thorns and the splinters float away on the tide of -time. Dis- crimnation {s something it pays to| cultivate; there is an advantage ia | knowing when to grasp and when to let go—what to hold and what to drop. | It has been said: “Discretion is ths salt, and fancy the danger of life; the ‘one preserves and the other sweet- ens it.” The reason sweetness geis out of life, is because you fancy tho | worst instead of the best. There i wisdom in choice and.also mastery. It is up to us to grasp that whiza blesses and to let go that which in-| jures. True manhood rests upon our strength as free choosers. Keep on the right side of yourself. Do not think your lot in life is the worst ever, for if you do, it isn't. The | most effective lying is done by one's self to one's self. This is the way ‘o the most depressing discouragam-nt Too many people have beaten them selves by false imagining. Who knows | whose lot is hardest? You and I do not. T have known peovle who thought | their life was the worst ever—studdod | with more misfortunes than a prima | donna’s necklace is with jewels—and | I knew their lives were a real picnic compared to the lives of some of their | neighbors. Do not get too keen sighted for your own path, and to blind to see your neighbors. If you must | decefve yourself resolve at least to be a_ cheerful liar. Do not make a| grouchy idiot of yourself. | As we walk along the streets and | hear the passing remarks we are not | impressed that “language is the dress | of ‘thought,? but rather that 1t 1s the vehicle of folly. Even, if language was | given to us that we might say pleasant | things of one another, or to each other it might be used much less volutly | without loss to man. Some writer has | affirmed that language is used moro | to conceal than to express thougnt.| At'all avents there is no denying that a man’s language discloses his mear- ness as well as his mentality—that it is a revelation of quality as well as acquirement. The man who says le is a gentleman must prove It by his conduct as well as his words: and it is indeed sad to hear a man who thinks he is a gentleman talking as no gentle- man should. To know what thoughts to put into words constitutes judgment and tact, and to these ends we should strive, The robins take quite a famcy to! the strawberry bed and daily watch its ripening fruit. I cannot teil why they puncture a berry, but never eat ons up—they spoll ‘more than they con- sume. Perhaps they jab at some tiny | insect which they fancy the flavor of | more than the flavor of the fruit. I confess they are entitled to thelr sha s of the good things of earth, as well as myself. I try to frighten them away, | but their courage and persistencs | makes one smile. They will come and peck the berries when I am not more than ten feet away; and they seem to sense that I would rather lose all my berries than my robins. We are mut- ual friends, and there is going to be no trouble between us. I like to hear | their song before 4 o'clock in the morning, and also when the sun is| hanging a picture in the west at even- ing for all mankind to admire. If we realized that meanness has to take more than half its own poison we should be slow to cherish and to mani- fest it. No one ever gets any real sat- isfaction out of hate or revenge, for they are both the agents of trouble. Our verbal measure of others is about a8 good a measure as the other fellow can get of us. An evil spirit harms most the ome who entertains it. No one is skillful enough to so explain a mean act that it will appear to be ra- tional, however talented he may be. Goodness shines and needs nether ex- | planation or defense. When the mind | takes on the mood to explain it needs a muzzle—let the other person ex- plain and you'll geb a revelation. The | sin of talking too much ig at the bot- tom of half our woes. Be still, and you will learn the truth. Do not feol too satisfied with your- self. You may be a wonderful success, you may be a distinguished scholar, You may have been told you are a. genius; and still, you may slip on a banana peel, fall and break your neck. You are not so great you can' feel se- cure against the small perils of ex- istence. One famous steeple-Charley who had done a HKundred steeples .in his time, fell from a chair and was fatally injured. A philosopher may drown while a fool swims ashore. None of us become 5o great we may | not become a victim on short notice. Few men are equal to every exigency; but they who avert disaster are tem- porarily great, or skiliful. Te feel too | satisfied with one’s self i to invite the | feableness of conceit, and that has wrecked many a worthy and aspiring soul. STORIES OF PLACES. One of the wonders of the Guatemala Jjungle Is the “water vine,” a black, snakelike, leafless stem, dropping from the cetba and mahogany trees to which it has climbed.. It Is sald to contaln a quart of water to every foot. When the stem Is cut the water spurts forth in a refreshing ‘stream. Molsture fs drawn up from the soll and filtered through the pores of the plant, Japanese love of flowers is said to have been bred in the people during the long peace of the Tokugawa era, when their eultivation became fash- fonable as n rellef to the monotony of peaceful days. German beer 1s steadily Increasing in taver among the peasantry in south- ern Russia and the village vodka houses are_mere and more being re- placed by beer taverns. In’ 1912 the amount of caviar ob- tained by the Casplan and Volga mar- tinually, It is strange the mewspaper kets was not more than 1.080,000 pounds, |er. | this is a great treat to me. with the flowers and their quaint own- “Thee has no garden at home, per- haps,” the placid voice went on, while with a liberal hand the quaker matron ‘was_cutting roses for her visitor. garden has been mine for many years, and has been a source of great pleas- ure to me, “James,” she called to her son, “cut some of those pinks for our friend. Then turning to Rose she said “What shall 1 call thee? 1 am frend Smith- son, and my son is James Smithson.” 'My name is Rose Hendricks,” re- plied that individual, “and my home is in a closely built city, so a garden like How de- lightful these pinks are! both white and pink. I've not seen so many in years. “They are a great favorite with me,” said Mr. Smithson as he placed them in her hand. Then as she turned to resume her walk, with many thanks for their kindness, she was urged to come again by both mother and son. Where she was staying, her roses were much admired, and it was re- marked that she must have been call- ing or Friend Smithson for no one else succeeded as she did with roses. She ‘wa also told that although Mrs. Smithson was a devout Quakeress, her son was not affiliated with those péople He belonged to what they termed the world’s people, having refused to meet all the requirements of the faith. He shared his mother’s fondness for flow- ers, however, and was unfailing in his care for his mother’. They made a very happy household ,and vied with each other in mutual devotion to each other's interests. Every one admired the placid old lady, and was outspoken In praise of both her and her son, whom they all said no one could win from his mother. Rose was not long in accepting the invitation to come again to the Smith- son home. There was something won- derfully attractive to her in the quiet, gentle manners of the quaker matron, ‘whose hospitality was evidently as sin- cerely given as it was thankfully ac. cepted. The son she seldom saw, though he was the theme of his moth- er's conversation, who could not say enough in praise of her only ghlld. SUNDAY MORNING TALK HOW OLD ARE YOU. Face and form, gray hairs or the lack of them, do not always tell the tale reliably. One's age need not of necessity correspond with one's years. Some die, as infants, at 80 and others die mature and rich in experience it 21. The seasons one has seen revolve are not the only measure of life. Truly sings the poet, We live in deeds, not thoughts not breaths In feelings, not in figures on a dial. We should count time by heart throbs. He most lives thinks most, acts the best. years; in Who feels the noblest, Measure life for a raoment, friend, by these standards. How much 1) you think? Analyze your thought world and see how ample and worthy it is. As a man thinketh in his heart so is he. You are no bigger and no bet- ter than the mental images you have set. up. You may be ranging the heav- | ens, exploring the eternities, and thinking God’s thoughts after him—or cherishing no concern beyond that for a full dinner pail. How nobly do you feel? What mo- tives spur you on Are you going through the world animated by greed, | by hatred, by lust for pleasure, or by | love, by pity, by hope of serving your generation? 'The mainspring of a watch regulates all its operations and the ruling purpose of a man both dominates and explains his life. How helpfully do you act? Are your fine ideals oeing carried out? Are your good impulses translated into goxl deeds? Are you making any contribu- tion to the welfare of your cormer of the world? Asking these questions and trying to answer them we find whether we are living or simply existing..One can think and feel and act a great deal in a very few years. A lad of 19 may have caught the meaning of life bet- ter than an octogenarian. Methusaleh existed a good many years. It is mnot apparent, however, that he accomplished much, “Methusaleh lived,” and this beside, “Nine hundred years and sixty-nine, Had sons and daughters, and he died,” The record ads no other line. Like some huge saurian on the strand Of some far-off oblivious shore. He left these tracks upon the sand Of his long wanderings, nothing more. But when & young man of 33 yielded up his life upon the cross, earth's greatest career was ended. That brief life had changed the whole current of men's thinking; it had made all things new as regards their courage for the present and their hope for the future. t is finished,” said Jesus of Nezar- eth, completing the sum of his earth- ly years at an age When most men are just beginning to live. How finished indeed? Finisted In divine thought and word and achlevement. Finishel In the supreme bestowal of power to all the sons of men. Every day the gates of eternity are swinging open before the-feet of aged men and women, of travelers in the middle of life's journey, and of little children. Whether they who pass on sare old or voung depends on the way they have grasped the great essential things. A human career is to be meas: ured not for its quantitative but for| its qualitative completeness. He lives longest who thinks most, feels the noblest, acts the best. Only in moral her forming many friendships, and she admitted that she dreaded the end of the summer, as she must return to a 92 tranklin Streat balances can one welgh the fulness of his years. dreary, “You can never know Tm!]ynur open door has been to me, finished. “It seems more to me than any I ever had.” “And 1 shall miss thy cal replied Mrs. Smithson. like a daughter to me. I knew thee had into patience been trained gentle, quiet ways James Smithson overhear versation ,for of late he them more than formerly. That evening he attended home in the village, and told her in manly fashion that he, too, should miss her very greatly ,and added, “Cannit 1 win your consent to of our household in the near future? secrets Mother and I' have no each other, and she kno telling vou this. self. What say you Rose means enough to insure comfort, and really believe very happy. “A little!” exclaimed Ros: been afraid of showing how much I The thought of living r dear mother seems | to cared for you. with you and i paradise to me” and she happy tears at the thought. The next day the dear mother was told, and very happy was news. “Don’t spend much time ready,” was her only dema: lonely life once more. had You have won my heart as well as my mother's, and 1 want to win you for her as well as my- 1 have sometimes thought you did care a little for me. much she like 'home how s greatly,” You seem Shetucket Harness Co. Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank C. E. WHITAKER Suacessor to 8. F. GIBSON, Tin and Sheet Metal Worker, Tar or Asphalt and Gravel Roofs, Walks and Driveways, by thy d this con- Joined her to her make one from s 1 intend ? 1 have you _every we shall be e, “I have burst into she at the in getting nd, and_do clothes. dantly with all you need, so do not let the lack of money worry thee.” “But I am rich” “money is all I have in plenty. everything else. is ail” “And that you will certainly have from both of us,” asserted James. EVERY DAY REFLECTIONS There are always a certain number of persons who have fallen in scramble for success, and are reduced the necessity of ‘watch or thelr dress suit, or thelr piano, to get money for bread and butter. These people are too honest to steal and too self-respecting to beg. They ought to have things made as easy for them as pessible. It is not fret thyself over buying fine |shameful to raise money on yeur fur- ‘We can supply you abun- Rose, I lack 1 need your love, that laughed AN IDLER. |tlon; lish Lending To -The Poor. the pledging their their books po more niture, prey of as consclenceless a in many picked’ the bomes of the poor. and over again the public press has rehearsed the story of their spolia- how the unwary made to pay at last too often to lose their principal. The remedy is plain and simple. Let the city lend to its own poor. municipal ~ pawnshop, branches throughout the city, to lend money to those who need it at a reas- onable profit upon the their personal effects. Is not this one little bit of decent helpfulness any city might undertake without fear of graft or paternalism or any such accusation? The business of lending to the poor 1s too vital, and suicide, private concern. matter for any hands except of the city itself. sharks, a The important question: going to pitch?” than it is to raise money on railway bonds. ‘As the custom now runs, those who are Torcen to puwnanops uro mede s | ROBERT J,COCHRANE aprsd &5 Weat Main St set as ever instances, an Kltting, Plub 10 Wems 2 St., Norwich, Conn. Agent N. B. O, Sheot Packing. anrid J. H. GEORGE THE PIANO TUNER Forty-five Years Experience P, O Box 205 Norwich, Conn. Telephone Over victims are Estab- with pledging of Drs. L. F. & A. J. LaPierre, 287 Main Street Hours 10 a. m.-8 p. m. excepted, and by appointment. Practice limited to Eye, Ear, and Throat. too near to heartbreak to be Intrusted to any It is too serious a Sundays ‘Who 1s Nose : Suits 194 Main Street HOUR SALE OF WAISTS 10 A. M. TO 2 P. M. On One Table Dresses Dresses 5 s ON ONE RACK In all the latest styles and materials. Sold up to $8.50. YOUR CHOICE ........ ON ONE RACK Sold up to $3.75. In Ginghams, Percales, Etc., and in all 4 ON ONE RACK Sold up te $32.50. White Serges, Poplins, Eponges, Serges, £ Linen Suit EVERYTHING REDUCED Etc. SOLD UP TO $12.50 A //ZCB 3 Sample, Sha YOUR CHOICE .... Norwich, Conn. [ Sold up to $1.50 38 in all : o e