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R S e 4o ¥ TODAY AND TOMORROW What Is Going On Tonight Vaudeville and Moving the Davis. the_Auditorium. meets in Owis' Hall. meets in Buckingham Memoriai. Hall (public). ANNOUNCEMENTS COLONIAL THEATRE. The Bludgeon, 5 Reel Equitable Fea- ture, Photography Par-excellence. all-star feature programs, changed daily, as has been the custom at the Colonial theatre for some time, Is gaining in popularity. As usual, takes some time for the public in gen- eral to be acquainted with the fact, and now that they are, expressions of the most flattering nature pour down - upon the management, in reference to the quality and class of the pictures. Only in metropolitan theatres has it been possible to see a big five-reel feature, and to enter the same thea- tre on the following day and see an- other absolutely as good, and vet en- tirely different, but such is the case at the Colonial theatre, and today is offered the mammoth Equitable-World Film, the highest type of high-class features, “The Bludgeon, presenting Miss Kathryn Osterman, the peerless leading_lady and favorite of Broad- way's biggest theatres in New York. The story is one of great interest and deals with Carl Bvendorr, a chemist, Wwho lives happily with his wife Irene and little daughter Rose, until he per- fects a formuia, which brings him a fortune and he is persuaded by his wife to move into more pretentious|use less than one pound of tea per quarters, where the wife falls into|capita, where the United Kingdom the hands of Mrs. Wharton, a social |uses nearly seven pounds. Canada is leech. At their first entertainment, |about two-thirds English and one- Irene the wife, persuaded by Mrs.|third American in its use of coffee and Wharton, appears in a costume of an | tea; it shows a decided preference for Odalisque, bringing the men to her|tea, but drinks less of it than the feet. Carl remonstrates, but to no|mother country, making up the differ- avail. Funds run low and Irene wins|ence with coffee. The Germans gnd large suins intentionally lost to her|the Austrians use only a negligible at cards. Mrs. Wharton, pressing|quantity of tea. Irene to pay her debts, finally telling “The coffee plant is a shrub which, | Mrs. Brooke, one of her admirers, |under cultivation, grows from 4 to| how to win Irene, starts somethi 6 feet high. In its wild state it grows| which she cannot finish, and the ba three or four times as high as in its ance of the firm tells in a thrilling [ cultivated state. The dwarfing of the manner of the big events that lead up | plant increases the crop and facilitates to the very thrilling and unexpected kKing. Th leaves are of a fresh climax. Photographica , this re een color the flowens re white is a wonder, and shows all manner of [and have an ode ongly resembling new feats never before accompl in motion picture photograph: e berry of commerce all means, do not miss les: than the | = = rffee . ‘cherry These | MRS. FISKE IN VANITY FAIR crimson on ripening. | T thy pulp is| Davis Theatre Wednesday Eve. s ¢, and the two | husks which lie hetween the pulp and Mrs. Fiske, who will be seen at the |the secds themselves are removed. Davis thcatre Wednesd: evening. | The coffee h to be thoroughly dried Feb. 23, under the auspices of St. A nes Guild, in the Edison film rendi- tion of Thackeray’s masterpiece, Van- ity Fair, has portrayed the role of Becky precisely one thousand and one times. The last time was for motion pictures so that her famous stage im- personation will be forever preserved Her Becky ranks with Edwin Forrest's Lear: Joseph Jefferson’s Rip Van Winkle and Richard Mansfield's Cy- rapo de Bergerac. It is improbable that Mrs. Tiske will ever again be seen in motion pictures. There will also be a program of lo- cal vaudeville, Admission 50c. theatre now. SHERIFF SEARCHING THE RECTOR FARM Where the Body of a Farmhand Was Found Under a Chicken Coop. Seats on sale at the Pictures at Vaudeville and Moving Pictures at Lecture by David Goidstein at Town It is apparent that the program of it WAR BOUND COUNTRIES LIKE TEA AND COFFEE More Than Two and One-half Billion Pounds of Latter Consumed by Peo- Moving Pictures at the Colonial. 4 Yearly: Shotucket Lodgs %o $1°7.°0.°6. 7. ple"of Worl y: meets in 0dd_Fellows' Hail. Norwich Nest, No. 139, 0. 0. O., (Spectal to The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, D. C., Feb. 21.—‘“With Wauregan Lodge, No. 6 K. of P.|their ports of import closed and thelr et Tyhlen AL trade with neighboring neutral ports pSecond Division, A.°O. H.. meets in| octricted, there must be & certain Court ‘Quinebaug, No. 128, F. of A, [shortage in the lands of the war- meots in Foresters' Hall, bound powers In tea and coffee, the Norwich Councll, No. 730, R. A.|twin harbingers of day throughout the civilized world. With the exception of Russla, all parts of Europe begin the day With coffee just as does this country. The Russian day _ begins, and steeps, and ends in tea. The Ger- man day begins In coffee and ends in tea and beer. In Austria, as in France, the day runs from a pot of coffee to a demi-tasse. In Turkey, coffee takes the place of the soda fountain and the saloon, beginning and ending _all things. A shortage in these two most widely accepted drinks must work a considerable discount upon comfort. In these words the National Geogra- Phic Soclety begins a pleasing little story of the coffee pot and the tea urn in their relations to the Buropean War and to_the comfort of humanity. The story then goes on: “The people of the worll annually consume more than two and one-haif ‘billion pounds of coffee—enough to load a train of cars reaching from Philarelphia to Pittsburgh. ‘Three- fourths of this is grown in Brazil, a country that has become rich from its coffee industry alone. Europe and North America bear approximately the same relation to the consumption of coffee that Brazil does to its pro- duction, these two continents using nearly four-fifths of all the coffee the world produces. “Holland is the greatest drinking nation on the globe. 15 1-8 pounds per capita while we use 9 1-2 pounds, Germany 5 1-8 pounds, Austria-Hungary 2 2-5 pounds, and the United Kingdom 2-3 of a_pound. On the other hand, we coffee- It uses annually, before the husks can be taken off, and on many plantations there are whole acres of concrete floors for this drying process. “When run through machinery for the removal of the husks, these lat- ter are blown away like chaff, and the coffee grains are run over sieves o | arranzed to grade them and bag them according to size, ready to be shripped to he world’s markets. “The growing of tea is largely an Asfatic industry, The tea plant is a hardy evergreen shrub, geowing from 12 to 15 feet high in its wild state, but dwarfed - under cultivation. It prefers a subtropical climate where the rainfall approximates 50 inches a year. After the leaves are picked the tea reaches its commercial state by two routes—one producing the black variety of tea and the other the green. “The leaves are first dried in the sun in the case of the black tea, and in pans o\'er' fire in the case of the| e green tea. In both processes the| Benton Harbor, Mich, Feb. 21.— |leaves are next rolled until soft. Black Sheriff Franz and several deputies to- | tea is next fermented, then fired, and day began a thorough search of the|finally sorted. Green tea is withered Rector farm, six miles south of here, | again folowing the rolling process, to determine, if possible, whether | sorted into bags, and then = slowly | o dthnn e murder had been com- | roasted. A gl mitted on the premises. “In China most of the tea H ‘ 4 5 s 3 gardens fahe body of Tony Sandrovich, a|are small, each farmer producing | farmhand, who was reputed worth | enough for the consumption of his own geveral thousand dollars, Saturday buried under £oop. According to the Chicago po- lice, Mrs. Teofii Zdrowski confessed that the crime was committed by her husband and Alexander Metelsi. An axe used a grave was dug before the victim was killed and robbery was the motive, it is alleged. Since the disclosure, it is claimed, human bones have been found buried in the cellar of a building on the farm Mr. and Mrs. Zdrowski and Metel- ski have been formally charged with murder. ARRESTED IN IOWA FOR BOSTON MURDER Frank J. Tracey Charged With Mur- der of Samuel Cohen, a Junk Dealer Boston, Feb. 21—Frank J. Tracey, whom the police here charge with the murder of Samuel Cohen, a junk deal- er, on May 29 has been arrested at Fort Madison, Towa, according to a telegram received today at police headquarters. Requisition papers will be_forwarded at once. Delevan J. Rogers, who is also said to have been concerned in the killing, was arrested on June 5 and is now awaiting trial. Cohen was 'killed in the basement of a house on West Springfield street, where he had been called to look over some ju The police obtained an account of the shooting from Morris Taitel, another junkman, who claimed that Tracey and Rogers induced both bhim and Cohen to enter the cellar, where they locked him in a closet while Cohen was attacked and rob- bed. The body of Cohen was found buried in the cellar beneath a pile of ashes, ASTHMA Simple Harmless Remedy Brings Quick Reltet, Many cases of Immediate rellef and rapid recovery from bronchial asthma of long standing and other diseases of throat and lungs are being credited to a discovery made by Dr. Eugene How.- ard of Worcester, Mass. Dr. Howard's escription, which is totally different From all sual methods of treatment for these afflictions, is called Oxidaze _and comes in the form of a tablet was found the chicken 2 * which the patient allows to dissolve slowly in the mouth. Its curative, heal- Juices thus mingle with the saliva _and enter every crevice of the irritated bronchial membranes, release the mus- . cular constriction the _bronchial ’tubes. open up the air ages and I the spasmodic lung action. tablets, though ?letunt to the taste, are so powerful and rapid in their action that many users who for ~ _years were obliged to sit up in bed saspl for h and unable to a]ae‘p Hh‘t they now put a single Oxi- in ‘thelr mouth when Soin to bed and can then lle down an Dreathe easily and neturally and get a Tight's Testful sieep. Lee & Os- end many other local family, and a little surplus which he sends to market. “The Department of Agriculture has interested itself in the production of tea in this country, and has issued a bulletin which reveals the fact that in South Carolina and elsewhere on the southern Atlantic seaboard America has proved a successful grower of this plant. TOTAL RESOURCES OF ALL NATIONAL BANKS Aggregated Dec. 1, 1915, $13,467,887,- 223—Increased $2,110,000,000 in a Year. Washington, Feb. 21.—Total re- sources of all the national banks in the United States which reported to the comptroller of the currency, Dec. 31, 1915, ageregated $13,467,887,223, an increase during the year of about $2,- 110,000,000. There were 7,670 banks reporting as compared with 7,581 in December, 1914. The increase over Nov. 10, 1915, amounted to $231,000,000 INDIAN AGENT LEO CRANE REPORTED KILLED BY REDSKINS Navajo, Apache and Yaqui Indians Planning to Go on Warpath. Flagstaff, Ariz., Feb. 21.—Leo Crane, Indian agent at Keams Canyon, Ari- zona, was killed by Indians last Fri- day, according to unconfirmed reports received here today from Gallup, N. M., and Holbrook, Ariz. Efforts to confirm the report have been unsuc- cessful. An Indian who arrived from Keams Canyon stated that the Nava- Jo, Apache and Yaqui Indlans were planning to go on the warpath within three months and that Mexicans would fight with them. The Indian said that it was intended to dyna- mite ralircads in Arizona. JOHNSON DENIES DIVISION OF CALIFORNIA DELEGATION Has Made No Offer to Make It Half Republicans, Half Progressive. Sacramento, Calif., Feb. 31—Gov- ernor Hiram W. Johnson denied today in a formal statement thaat an of- fer had been made to divide the Cpli- fornia delegation to be sent to the republican national convention and to make it half progressive. An assertion to that effect was made Saturday at a meeting of the republican state central committee by ‘Walter R. Bacon, the chairman, who reaffirmed it today. Waterville. — Sergeant Thomas A. Breen, of the United States army, who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs, John Brennels, of Perkins avenue for the past week, has returned to Panama, where he is stationed. Mr. Breen is said to be the youngest ser- ‘back | geant in the army, being but nineteen |a long time. Ask Lee and years old. Use Cocoanut Oil = For Washing Hair || vara, se It you want to keep your hair in good ‘condition, be careful what you wash it with. Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much alkall. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and is very harmful. Just plain mulsified cocoanut ofl (which is pure and en- tirely greaseless) is much better than the most expensive soap or anything else you can use for shampooing, as this can't possibly injure the hair. Simply molsten your hair with water and rub it in. One or two tablespoon- fuls will make an abundance of rich, creamy lather, and cleanses the hair and scalp thoroughly. The lather rinses out easily and removes every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and ex- cessive ofl. The hair dries quickly and evenly, and it leaves it fine and silky, bright, fluffy and easy to manage. You can get mulsified cocoanut ofl at most any drug store. It is very cheap, and a few ounces is enough to last everyone in the family for months. BULLETIN'S PATTERN SERVICE 1616 A GRACEFUL POPULAR MODEL. Costume for Misses d Small Women. This _desirable model becoming style features. —The fronts are cut low over a vest in surplice style, and are finished with a revers coilar. The waist is mounted on a lining. The sleeve in_ wrist length may be finished with a shaped cuff. In short length a smart flare cuff forms a suitable trimming. The skirt is es- pecially noticeable because of its pocket effects at the side seams and_the be- coming fullness of its lines. The pat- tern is nice for figured silk, crepe, em- broidered voile or batiste, also for nun’s veiling, serge. lawn and dimity, The pattern is cut in three sizes: 16, 18 and 20 years. It requires 5 3.8 yards of 44-inch material for an 18- year size. The skirt measures about 3°yards at its lower edge. A pattern of this illustration malled to’any address on recelpt of 10 cents in silver or stamps. Order through The Bulletin Company, Pattern Dept., Norwich, Conn. has new and 1597 AND EASILY ADJUSTED A UNIQU! APRON. This style has several good points. It has no cumbersome sleeves, the neck edge is low and free, and the fullness is held in place over the front by the Delt forming straps that are crossed at the back and hold the apron in posi- tion over the shoulders. Percale, gin ham, seersucker, sateen, drill, musl or_lawn may be used for this style. Tho pattern is cut in three sizes: 1, medium and large. It requires for a'medium size 5 5-8 yards of 36- inch material. A pattern of this fllustration malled to any address on receipt of 10 cents Ponter ihtoue The Bulletin Co er through The Bulletin Company, Pattern Dept.. Norwich, -Conn. MORE RHEUMATISM THAN EVER BEFORE Clergymen, Lawyers, Brokers, Me- chanics and Merohants Stricken. Our old friend Rheumatiz is having his inning this year, and a few words of caution from one Who knows ail about it may not be amiss. ‘Wear rubbers In damp weather; plenty of n keep your feet dry; & lemonade, and evoid strong alcoholie drinke. If rheumatism gets you, or sciatica, and you have sharp twinges, gnawing pain or swollen joints or muscles, you can get rid of all agony in just a few days by taking one-half teaspoontul of Rheuma once a day. All druggists know about Rheuma; it_is harmless, yet powerful; cheap, yet sure, and a 50-cent bottle will last Osgood Co. or any_drugeist. P LOST AND FOUND _ sT long, curly hair, collar and tas: $10 T Tare, P Culande, 118 Roosevelt Ave. LOST_Sunday, a Scotch collie, white e rellow; tag on collar. Finder re- nl‘ld{d EH rotu‘rnod to Henry Banker, Qccum. P. O. address, Norwich Town, R. D. feb17ThS _——— FOR SALE The best is cheapest. Safety Oil for Incubators, brooders and heaters. Does not give off sn ‘odor wiile, burningl will burn at full flame until the lamp is empty, does not crust the wick. You can run your whole hatch with this oil without trimming a wick. For sale by ATEAN Dealer_in Olls and’ line, 30 Town 8St, Norwich Town, Tel. 318, and Willlam Smith & Co., Norwich Town Green. Tel. 34-12. feb22a FOR SALE Looated in best residential sec- Mod- ern improvements, steam heat, Lot 161x85 Very low price and esy terms. THOMAS H. BECKLEY 278 Main St. May B FOR SALE The fine Bank Building of The Thames Loan and Trust Company, 2 34 Shetucket St., Norwich, Conn., about 70 feet front. Ome part of the main floor is finely equipped for banking. and the other part, also provided with vault, {s admirably suited for corpora- tion or other purposes. Offices, with elevator, on the second and third floors. Superior location for bank, insurance, trust, agency, or other business. AMOS A. BROWNING, Recelver. tion, Nine Room Cottage. cemented cellar. better chance that it will. is safe betting that one of th: The cost of a Bulletin mated. A three-line word times; 90 cents for a whole favor of the ad. Call 480, The results take For A Few Cents And a Little Action Yes, there is a chance that a Bulletin Lost Ad will not find your lost article, but there is a bigger and a There are many subscribers of The Bulletin and it Compare this cost with the value of the article lost, then you can make a fair decision. We believe that experience will make you decid» in em found your article. Lost Ad is often over-esti~ ad costs 45 cents for three week. The Bulletin Co. care of the cost. WANTED FOR SALE MAN wanted on farm; must be good milker and teamster. J. B. Ellott, Wauregan, Conn. feb22d WANTEI -A sh washer. Apply once. Rose Restaurant, 41 Broadway. feb2Zy | WANTED—Paul Revere original speed king. He went over Lexington Hill on high. Cobweb Cor- ner six for a quarter is the speed king in_ cigars. Fagan's Smoke Shop. feb21 t was _the Waterbury.—At the meeting of Mel- icent Porter ckapter, D. A. R, held last week at the home of the regent, Mrs. R. William Hampson, the an- swers to the fifty prize questions, given out to members of the chapter some months ago, were read. The questions and the answers were pre- pared by Mrs. Oscar W. Noble, as- sisted by Mrs. J. V. Reed and by Miss Anna H. Pierpont. They concerned Waterbury's past and present history. What to Do to Get Fat and Increase Weight The Real Cause of Thinness. Most people eat from four to six pounds of good solid fat-making food every day and still do not Increase in Weight one ounce, while on the other hand many of the plump, chunicy folks eat very lightly and keep gaining all the time. 1t's all bosh to say that this is the nature of the individual. It isn't Nature's way at all. Most thin people stay thin because their powers of assimilation are de- fective. They absorb just enough of the Tood they eat to maintain life and a semblance of health and strength. Stuffing won't help them. A dozen meals a_day won't make them gain a single “stay there” pound. All the fat- producing clements of- thelr food just Stay there in the intestines until_they pass from the body as waste. What such people need is something that will prepare these fatty food elements so that their blood can absorb them and deposit “them all about the body— something, t00, that will multiply their red blood corpuscles and increase their blood's carrying power. For such a_condition it is well to recommend eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. Sargol Is not, as some be- lleve. 2 patented drug, but is simply a careful combination of six of the most effective and powerful assimilative and flesh building elements known to chem- istry. It absolutely harmless, vet has’ been wonderfully effective and a single tablet eaten with each meal of- ten, according to reports of users, has the' effect of incréasing the weight of a thin man or woman from three to five pounds a week. Sargol is sold by Lee & Osgood and other good druggists ev- erywhere on a positive guarantee of welght increase ba or money back MONEY LOANED on Dlamonds, Watches, Jow and securities of any kind at the Lowest Rates of Interest. An ald established firm to deal with. THR COLLATERAL LOAN C@, 1O ASSaheed VA e e LEGAL NOTICES NOTICE The legal voters in town meeting in the Town of Bozrah are hereby warned to meet In the Hall of said Town on Monday, the 28th day of February, 1916, at 2 o'clock in the afternoon to'lay & tax on the Grand List of said Town just completed to raise money sufficient to defray the expenses of the Town the ensuing year. Also to see if they will vote author- izing the Selectmen and Treasurer, In case_there be no available money in the Town treasury, to hire money suf- clent to defray the expenses of the Town to such time as a tax becomes due and payable. Also 'to seo It they will vote to aying the tax change the time of hereafter instead of February as at present to the Annual Town Meeting eld in October of each year. And to transact any other business proper to transact at sald meeting Dated at Bozrah, Ct., the 21st February. 1916. ay of JOHN 8. SULLIVAN, ALBERT G. AVBRY, C. WHE] feb22d Selectmen. AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD at Norwich, within and for the District of Norwich, on the 21st day of Febru- ary, A D. 1916, Present—NELSON appeared in Court by counsel and filed a petition g £0r the reasons there- in set forth, that an imstrument pur- porting to be the last will and testa- ment of said deceased be admitted to probate. Whereupon, It Is Ordered, That said be heard and determined at tition fi:fim Court Room in the c"is“h( said Dietrict, on the SeloctS” in the ‘Forenosn, ‘ebruary, A. D. 1916 tice of thu 5 sata petition, of the no: on. nd of saia Dearing thereon, be Eiven by fhe publication of this 'order one time in some newspaper having s oir. culation in sald District, at least three days prior to the date of said hearing, and that return be made to this Court. ‘ NBLSON J. AYLING, Judge. The above and foregoing is a true ©copy of Tecord. Attest: M. DRESCHER, a - Assistant Clerk. ED—Room and board by young business lady; private famiiy preferred. L. Frazier, Box 212, Norwlel feb2id WANTED Boy to work in drug e at Bulletin Office. FOR SALE-—One bedstead, two bu- reaus, one large refrigerator, pool ta- 22 Cliff St’ between ble. Inquire at T to 10°a. m. and 6 to .30 hours from A yoks of oxen 5 vears Frank Lathrop, yantic. Telephone 12 feb22d FOR SALE—Four barrels clder vine gar four vears old, cheap If sold at once. G. 1. Wheeler, Packer, Conn. feb22d FOR SALE—12 horses, been used by the Conn. Creamery Co.: contract ex- pired reason for selling: ranging In weight from 1000 to 1300 Ibs.: ages 5 to 11 years; prices $i5 to 3150 each pairs, 2200 to 2600; must all be sold this week: all good wind and true to work. 1i73 Main St, Willlmantic. WANTED_Second hand heavy single work harness, Eclipse corn planter, hay rake, Syracuse sulky plow. Morning- sidc Farm, Packer. feblsa WANTED—Girl at 16 Laurel Hill Avenue. feb18d ADIBS—_Dr. Scott's magnetic corsets gives a perfect figure and perfect health. Abdominal reducing corsets a speciaity. All_goods guaranteed. Suite 25, Shannon Bldg. Tel. 660. Office 14 p. m teblid WANTED Second hand furniture of all kinds; we also sell second hand furnoiture. Bruckner, 55 Franklin St. Phone 717-3. febl4d and learner N examinations $50n; sample questions free. Frankiin Ingtitute, Dept'33-00" "Rochester, N. Y. e WANTED—AIL good cooks to try Liberty Flour. Ask your grocer o or call Greeneville Grain Co. Phone 326- jan3id The T it Tel. 46-2. feb22a FOR SALE_—Eggs for hatching: R. I Reds and Black Javas, the only black fowl with vellow skin known; $1 per 13. B. W. Peck, 85 Spruce St., Norwich, Conn.’ Phone 1181 eb19STuTh LICE — They cannot live on a bird treated with Konemah Lice Remedy: send 50c and try a bottle, pos Konemah _ Poultry Main St. Norwich, Ct FOR SALE—An electric coffee grind- ur.{ blznl?iui" at Rallion's Grocery, e FOR SALE A counter refrigera Inquire at Rallion’s Grocery. 1 FOR SALE Our 7-passen; 0 1916 model Hudson demonstrating car, as good as new; price reasonable. ~Shea & Burk, febisd EW milch cows for sale; cows due to freshen soon. A. ‘Parmetter, Poquetanuck. Phone 1891-13. feb18d FOR SALE—A lage modern refriger- ator naulre at Kaillon's Grocery. tor. a WANTED—To buy second hand fur- niture for cash. We also sell furniture of all kinds. §. Zelinger, Washington Square. Telephone 1022 Jan26d GIRL HELF wanted in finishing de- partments of the American Thread Company's Willimantic mills. Apply at office. dec3id WANTED_Raw furs, at H. A. Heeb- ner's every Saturday. A. C. Bennett. dec13d WANTED—Carpet _sweepers to re- pair; rubbers, Cyco springs, ball bear- ings renewed; brushes renewed and adjusted. E. A Aubrey, 22 Summer St jan Carpenters Wanted ADDRESS BOX 19, BULLETIN OFFICE ten General Housework Women, two Chamber Maids, three Nurse Girls, six Weavers, one Farm Hand and Spinners. Free Employment Bureau GEO. L. CHESBRO, Manager FOR SALE SALE HORSES. My car of Horses will not be here Feb. 22d, as advertised, on account of bad weather, my buyer not belng able to get them bought, but will be here for sale before March 1st. Notice will be given upon arrival E. R. PIERSON. FOR SALE SMALL FARM WITH GRIST MILL A place with 12 acres of good till- able land with a six room cottage having water in houss, alsa two barns and henhouse; all buildings in ood condition. A 2.aet grist mill for grinding all _kinds grains, having a 3 I.I‘- » "Nl er wheel, lo- cated in a village of a rosperous farming country. Price $2,800—can be controlled for small amount of cash. | Owner leaving town. FRANCIS D. DONOHUE Central Building Norwich, Conn. FIVE MINUTES’ WALK from the center of the city, in excel- lent neighborhood; house of nine rooms and bath, electric lights, steam heater. Lot is 46x150 feet and there is a garage for two mortor cars. Business changes force owner to sell, s0 here's your opportunity. ARCHA W. COIT, The Mutual Benefit Life Agency 63 Broadwas Telephone 1334 EXCHANCE for good farm; well located modern house in Norwich; large lot, nine rooms, steam heat, bath, set tubs electric lights, hardwood floors; owner wants _country home. Information from TRYON'S AGENCY, Willimantie, FOR SALE—Grist mill sultable for a 4 or 5 horse power gasoline engin: £00d as new, cheap. George Myers. Wiillmantic, Conn.. R. F. D. No. 2. feb1sd FOR SALE One fast driving horse, 10 years old, weight 1000, safe for iady to drive. H. A. C. Bullstin Co. feblsd FOR SALE—Eggs for hatching; S. C. Rhode Isiand Ked. “farm’ strain at 31, 32 and $3 per setting, and at $1 per hundred. Reuben P. Burgess, Leba- non, Conn. febisd FOR SALK—One cxpress wagon, one surrey, two _one-seated teams, one will sell cheap if taken at once. . Shaw, Lisbon, Con: feb FOR SALE—A gasoline engine and 5 h. p.; good as new; will be sold’ cheap. as 1 have no further use for it. Thomas E. McMahon, Mohegan. Get oft at the 5c fare limit, first lert hand road. feb! FOR SALE_Eggs for hatching from Single Comb R. I Reds, heavy layers, fine color. Deming strain, 15 _for $1. Phone_1076: Norwich. 'G. N. Brad- b16d E—Farm in town of Preston of the late Frederick Dombroski; 17 acres of land, i-room cottage and other buildings, located on state road, one mile from trolley and steam line.” Ap- ply on premises or to J. A. Macht, Ver- sallles febléd FOR SALE—Holsteln co ‘lvln'E is quarts per day. C. B. Davis, Franklin, Ct. Phone Lebanon. febild FOR SALE—-5,000 R. I. Red and White Leghorn baby chicks, March, April and May delivery. Geo. W. Adains, Yantic. e FOR SALE_The woodlot near Broad Brook, town of Preston. owned by Mrs. Mabel Aver. Inquire of Jewett City Savings Bank. feb3d BUY LAND and build to sult your taste; I will sell 10-acre plots at an average of $75_per acre; directly on olley line, at’ Trading Cove; best lo- ation out of Norwich; get particulars, J. A, Hagberg. 310 Maln St, or Phon 435-3. tebzd FOR SALE—One Mitchell touring car, just_overhauled, nearly new tires, first tlass every way; on. Overland touring 10-acre car, good condition and all ready to run; ° prices attractive. Inquire 98 Franklin St. *J. B. Stoddard. dec21d FOR SALEYantic West Farms of- fer young. sound, gentle driving horse, 10-week pigs, fresh cow, buil calf, Studebaker farm and business wagon. Tel. 111-3. decyd 1 AM BUYING poultry of all kinds. Anyone baving same. drop postal to Samuel Gellert, Colchester, Cona. THINK IT OVER — 250 noteheads and 250 6% (regular business size) envelopes, neatly printed, for 31.91 $3.00. . Send for sampl, Zor any printing you Bulletin Compan; FOR SALE A 38 Acre Farm on main road near Norwich. Good buildings and a de- he E. A. PRENTICE 86 Cliff Street Phone 300 FOR SALE. Cottage Houses, Tenement and Busi- ness Blocks, Bullding Lots, all in de- sirable locations. List your property if you care to seil or rent. as I have number of people looking for real es. tate investments. WILLIAM F. HTLL. Real Estate and Insurance. Room 108. Thayer Bldg. On scconnt of increase tn price llfl\.. the Whitestome cl.-r'nw d tro < $35 pex 1,000, ol rem e B CONANT. fan2 11 Frask! St THERE ts no advertising medinm ia Bastern toequal to The Bul: letin’ for_musizess resuita. TO RENT TO RENT—Small cottage No. §1 Ot- robando Ave. or_wili seil on favorable (erms. JoBU £ Fanning, 52 Broadway. el FOR RENT—Desirabie offices in_the Thames Loaa and Trust Building, She- tucket St._Inquire there. jeia coms, with modern improvements. § Wasningion St tebl9d FOR RENT—Two nicely furnished front rooms, with board: also _other pieasant rooms just completed at Thi Plymouth,~44 Laurel Hil Ave. Tele phone 78 febisd TO RENT. Ts_Boswell Ave.: per monta. John E. Fanuing, 52 Broad- Way. teb2d. TO RENT—Furnished rooms, well heuted; aiso conveniences for house- keeping. 8 School St. Jjan3ld TO RENT—Store No. 20 Central Avi rent 31u per montn. J. E. Fanning, Broadway. Jlel_ TO RENT — Furnished room. _ Laurel Hill Avenue. san27d TO RENT—Furnished rooms for light housekecping. 2i Division St. 1736-2. 3 ‘THE BRONSON, 12 Dyrkes Lane. Furnished rooms to let. lnquire base- ment. Janid TO RENT_Store at 61 Frankiin St St Builetin Office. decisd \Washiagton St: ail conveniences and stean; heat. Inquire of lsaac S. Jones, Insurance and Keal Estate Agent. Rich: 4ius guilding, 91 Main St novisd FURNISHED rooms, $1.40 up. 38 Un- ion St, all conveniences. Faons 119-%. soplt FURNISHED ROOM — Centrally io- cated. Em:na Morse, 18 Union St FOR RENT The offices and rooms, with large vault, recently occupied by the Shore Line Electric Railway Co. in the Thames Loan & Trust Co. building, Shetucket street, on main floor and above. s AMOS A. BROWNING, Reoceiver. TO RENT QUONOCHONTAUG—Ten-room cot- tage 3 acres land, 1000 feet from Ocean and Salt Pond; sown Jower and vegetable gardens: hardwood floors, plumbing and heat. Renta! $350. Others $200 to £4000. Send for booklet. FRANK W. CQY. esterly, R. I FOR SALE FOR SALE 25 Shares Preferred Stock United States Finishing Company JAMES L. CASE 37 Shetucket St, Norwich, Conn. FOR SALE The very desirable property known the *Walter H. Woodworth home- ad, 205 West Thames St. Wil be s0ld very reasonable. For full partic- ulars inquire of JOHN A. MORAN, Real Estate and Imvestment Broker. Franklin Square, Norwich. 50 ACRE FARM For $1,400 Cash New house of six rooms, surround- ed by beautiful shade trees, barn 16x30, one hennmery 8x12, two scratching sheds, 60 peach trees (will bear this season), 1% acres strawberries (will be in fruitage this Spring), % acres asparagus (will cut 100 lbs. daily in season— an income getter). Near railroad, scheol ana church; land free from stone and machine worked. Scnd _for latest catalogue issued Choice of 400. it in all New England. WILLIAM A. WILCOX Real Estate Broker, 41 West Broad St., Westerly, R. I. Just, Nothing like Offices 110 West 34th St. New York Telephone 2998 Greeley FOR SALE SEVEN ROOM COTTAGE HOUSE Electric lights, steam heat, sot- tubs, large lot, in fine location. PRICE $3,300 N. TARRANT & C 117 Main Street, Norwich FARM FOR SALE. Situated in North Stonington, three miles from Norwich and Westerly troj- Tey, near schoolhouse and church, con- sisiing of about 130 acres of land, with 5-room house and recessary buildings, all new. Immediate possession. Owner does not live in North Stonington is the season for selling. Easy terms. Ia- quire of H. F. BUTTON. R F. D, &, Norwlich, or telephone 1861-2. Agricultural Limestone makes poor land good and goed land better. Get our prices for any quantity Peck, McWilliams & Co. M. J. FIELDS, . . Florist 59 Ward Street Carnations. pecial _Forms and Plants. Telephous 657. WHEN YOU WANT 10 put your dus- fagee efors. the_pubiic_ thert it Bulletin. Long are tl And weil | THE l".tl OF BETSY ROSS. that it arifts dear and dim, s, visit to Betsy Ross t she made for him— e flag with the radiant a5 Ana’the starsidn the flela of blue “have ,we cherished all It That hes_tnrilied thr and at “nas_thr us throw through. | s - do we tréas quaint ol foids wit 15" is ‘Where the fragrs years ‘e 3ti1l the scenme uaker town, silken sheen ing down; Beside the door ‘breeze comes through, g The breeze that will weléome forever- The Red and the White and the Blue. And the eves of the seamstress. what do they see In the stars she has circled there? The sign of a Union tha: shall be Forever free and fair Bo_the vision grows as her needie fiie Tarough the hurrying hours, and e sun is low in the western The General comes agaim. All this we have read; but who can el Of the. flag that she made that day? What was its fate. and what befell When the General rode away® ©Oh, where it fiy, and where did it fade, And_ where was it last hauled down— The flag that Botsy, the seamstress, made In the quaint old Quaker town? Did it fix. perchance. battle moke, The target cf shot and shell? Did it hear the cheers when the enem: broke, 3 And the groans of the men who' fell? Did it wave o'er the ranks of buft and biue, . And th When th flew But a captive trophy there? in the favoring in the glory ‘of victory share. blood-red banner of Britain Did it fiy, perchance, breeze, On a ship that sailed afar Beyond the farthermost sweep of Vhere the Islands of Mystery are Did it know the lash of the roaring gaies. And the kiss of the salty foam? DIg it futter aloft when the weathered sails Were furled in the harbor of home? Did it fiy. town, When the land knew peace a, Where ever its gleaming stars on down Where every wind could know Brought a message fair and good. Of the spirit that blessed the square below, Where the church and the school- house stood? a8, perchance, o'er the teeming gain. ooked the ways of busy men? that its stripes Oh. where did it iy, and where did it it last hauled dow: The flag that Betsy, the seamstres: made In the quaint old Quaker town? It is vain to ask; we only know That the fabric fell in dust And went to the Land Where Lost Things Go, As every fabric must. The fabric faded and fell apart; Yet the beautiful flag we know Is the flag unfading that thrilied the ear Of Washington long ago! And in that flax tbroush the year to e. Wherever its free folds toss, Shall the eves of a loval people see The flag of Betsy Ross! 5 —John Clair Minot, in the Youth's Companion. HUMOR OF THE DAY “You know I hear better with my right ear than with my left.” said the Judge. “Perhaps that's why so many Deo- ple like to keep on the right side of you” said the court attendant. Yankee Statesman. “Politics isn't what it used to be” remarked Senator Sorghum. “Does - the crowd listen to you?" “Yes. They used to be satisfied to shake hands and listen to a brass band. Now, they pay so much at- tention to my remarks that I've got to be careful what 1 say."—Washing- ton Star. Old Lady—So, William, you've come back to us wounded, I hear. How did it happen? William—Shell, mum. Old Lady—A shell! Oh, dear, dea And aid it explode? William—Explode, mum? Not like- Iy. It just crept softly up behind— and bit’ me!—London Punch. “How is the eentiment for world peace in this community “It was pretty strong until last week,” replied the old resident. “What happened then?” ‘Our congressman announced that there was a good. chance of get- ting a munitions plant Jocated in this district.”"—PEirmingham *Age-Herald. A Scotch gardener was hammeridg away at the bottom of his wheelbar- row on a Sunday when his wife hur- ried out to him. on, mon!” she exclaimed, “you're making a dreadful clatter, What will the neebours say?” “Never mind the neebours,” returned her husband. “I maun get ma barrow mendit.” “Oh, but Donal, it's a vera wrang to work on the Sabbath” protested the good woman. “Ye ought to use screws.” THE KALEIDOSCOPE Nigeria is expanding its foreigv trade. That ostriches once grew 15 feet in height is shown by remains found in the Island of Madagascar. More than $80,000,000 worth of gold has been taker from the Juneau gold belt, the first to be worked in Alas- ka. e Five per cent. of the population of this country earrs its living directly or indircetly in the electrical busi- ness. - Siamese natives ‘obfain petroleum from the earth by digging pits about 60 feet deep and dipping it out with palls. The Royal Astronomical Soctety has just had its charter amended so that “women are eligible for election as fellows and associates. — e STOP PAIN MISERY Remove pain misery as many. thou- sands of others have done, by applyving Minard’s liniment, an old, . reliable prescription. No other remedy acts ®0 quickly or effectively. It is pure and antiseptic, wonderfully soothing, and is the most effective remedy for rheumatic pains, soreness and stiffriess of joints and muscles, lameness, sore tired, aching feet, pains in chest, sore throat, and for sprains, strains. and bruises. You cannot af- ford to be without it, for its use is never disappointing, and it cannot bly harm of burn the akin. not - ‘a bottle of Minv PP Shy Sl share,