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Th: end is here. home. LLETIN. WEDNESOAY, 1ULY 7, 1520 A Player Now on Sale at $450. Bench and Nice Selection of Music, 12 Rolls. In order te make a quick sale of this stock we have cu on this new player to the ridiculous figure of $450. e e if you can beat this pri late. Ask any of the sales foree to play this zpiayer for you,.at.._. TERMS $1.50 PER WEEK We are determined that this stock of piancs will Be disposed of,.and in order that we might realize eur ambition we have reduced the price on the @sed Pigno listed above to $54. READ THIS trip' railroad fare refunded te purchasers living within a ‘of 100 nfiles of New London, Conn. paid on out-of-town shipments a radigs of 100 miles. Your children are as i 2, i s . It is your duty to make your 8“"‘1;; ;’“"" neighbor's, Make the family happy with a Piano. ing. Nearly everything you buy has doubled in pric then come in at once, ar you THE END how they feel when they see their neighbors ¢. Piano prices are going higher. They may double. Buy now while prices are low. THE FINAL WIND-UP IS HERE! PRICES STILL LOWER! The-end of this great Piano Sale is here. The final curtain will soon be rung down on the greatest Piano Sale we have ever held. Shrewd buyers are coming for miles around, snap- ping up these great piano bargains. This stock of pianos is selling fast—they soon will be u?l’-—-tbe end is here. To the skeptical we say-call at our store and see for yourself. It will cost you nothing to investigate. In this day o? high prices, with the cost of manufacturing pianos increasing, we believe we are making one of the most sensational piano offers in the country today. We are offering a used Upright piano at $54. A new player, full size 88- note, at the ridiculous price of $450. Shop around, then come here, and you will be con- vineed that now is the time to-buy your piano. : = THE END IS HERE—Saturday at 10:30 p. m. this sale will be declared over. Your oppor- tunity will then have passed, and do not be among those whe will say: “Pm sorry I did not get there sooner.” You meet every day the pcople of Lost Opportunities; they could have become richer or prefited greatly if they had accepted their opportunities. Don’t be among these. Come to this great sale now. Come prepared to do business. Bring what you can for a first payment. We will arrange terms to suit you. THESE PRICES GOOD ONLY DURING THIS SALE ! STORE OPEN EVENINGS UNTIL NINE O’ CLOCK. e ————————————eer PP et We kindly ask those who have purchased Pianos with promise of immediate delivery to be patient, as our Shipping Department has been swamped with deliveries. Sensational Selling of Pianos Going on in Reality Now. Prices Lower on Many Instruments PIANOS ARE SELLING FAST ONLY A FEW MORE PIANOS LEFT Ehop argund, see 8450 HURRY OR YOU MAY BE TOO LATE! NOTICE AN IMMEDIATE CHANGE MAY BE NECESSARY ON ALL ADVERTISED PRICES, ACCORDING TO OUR STOCK AND THE SALE OF GOODS ' This Piano Now ‘on Sale at $99 This used instrument is for sale at the pnci and terms listed. Terms $2.00 a week. THE BEST PLACE TO Stock, Note the price. down and $2,00 a week. LIBERTY BONDS ACCEPTED AT FACE VALUE. OLD PIANOS TAKEN IN EXCHANGE VICTROLAS AND VICTOR RECORDS — NEW LONDON'S EXCLUSIVE AGENCY BUY .. D. S. MARSH & CO. IS HERE! IT IS NOW OR NEVER! Big Piano Sale Will Close Saturday Night at 10.30 This stock is selling fast — many people that delay will be too late. This is your iolde.n opportunity if you act quickly. It is your duty to educate your children in music. Your neighbors 3 getting Pianos and you refuse to have a Piano in your It is good business to buy a Piano now. Piano manufacturer’s prices are constantly going up. You will eventually get a Piano. Buy now and make a big sav- COME EARLY'! SPECIAL PLAYER ONLY §199 This used Player-Piano will be on sale at $199. rolls, also bench. This is your chance if you act quickly. Terms—8$2.50 week, Another used Piano from this vast Stool accom- panies the instrument. Small payment 10 @ AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS B | ance against a failure | Henry L. Dorsey AVOID SWARMING. I is very important fo keep the cof- onies of bees from dividing at this tinc of year. 'The two parts of a col:;z whten swarms will mot produce as oney 253 they had remained one colony. T1e regson for this is that the swarm wt ¢ dray oue a mew get of combs, and preduce @ new hateh of od re it eaf #top- surplus hapey. will take weel or_more, depeail‘t i the weather. The ofd colony Which the swarm /issued will nat produce any surplug for at_least two weeks after the swarming time since it has jost most of its field hees and must alse have & queen emerge and become fertiised. 1t will take 8 week or ten days for enoush of the older bees to become field wWorkers for them to bring in any quantity of honey. By this time the new queen will have & num- ber of larvae to be fed so that this col- ony can get to Btoring surplus. You will see, them, that a swarm takes out at least two weeks at the best part of the the honey flow. says L. B. Crandall, beekeeping specialist for the Exten- sion Service of Connecticut Agricul- tural College at Storrs, Conn. One of the hest contral metheds to vse on such a_colony is te re-gueeh ‘t' with & young Italian gueen before it has made preparations for swarming. Another method which works eut v well is the Demaree meihod. T efly is to place all the brood and eggs « one live body and all the combs of ney and empty combs in angther, fill- ing up. any empty space with frames of *oundation, and have the queen in the 10dy containing the eombs of honey and combs. Put this last body in old location, and place a Gueen ex- der on it. then put on two sypers, and the.body containiig the brood on method, the gueen is separated brood by at least two supers. b very effectually cheeks swarming. f the bees in the top body bhegin queen lis, it will cause no trouble since the ueens cannot get out to mate so will die vithout causing warming, KEEP MILK COOL The Dairy Department of Connectleut \gricultural college offers the following uggestion to housewives for the care of %ills in summer. fillk will-stay eobl ‘and sweet much er if wrapped in a cool. shady, place. The cloth should be redampened eaca- sonally. Placing mills in vessel with ‘old water will aiso be of grest help. vhere jce is not available. ve the milkman leave your milk shady place so as to protect it the direet rays of the sun, Of urse milk should be taken in s mpon after delivery in the morning as possi- ble.” B ‘f'hm euggestions apply only in homes a PINE BLISTER RUST. The agricultural experiment station at New Haven recently issued an interest- ibing the efforts beink n Connecticut {o stamp out the rite pine blister rust. Dr, B, H. Jen- Kins, director of the station, sa: large but there is always danger of it reading and causing great destruction. the effect of the blister rust on mewhat similar to that hestnut, it is. to- blight in that it n he easily controlled. Without eur- nt or gooseberry bushes of some sort in the immediate vicinity of white pine here Is slight possibility of these ng infested with blister rust. If vou wish to protect your white pines,you Shouid destroy all currant and gooseber- rs bushes (wild or cultivated) within 200 to 300 yards of them ALFALFA AND TIMOTHY. Wherg winter killing of alfalfa is fear- ed, one-fourth of the seed may be re- placed By timothy and twenty pounds ef the mixture seeded per acre. At har- 8 | vest, if there is+a good stand of alfaifa. there will be but a sprinkling of timothy in the first cutting. The second and third cuttings will be mearly pure aifal- fa. e advantage of the mixture is that the timothy takes the place of any alfal: fa that winter-kills or it serves as insur- of the aifaifa, Tests at Sorrs, Conn., show that such a, mixture becomes almost pure timethy af- ter one or two years, even when Grimm is used. Therefore this is not recom- mended where a long time stand of alfal- fa is desired. g As compared to elover, alfalfa is not a Qificult crop to produce. It requires thorough soil preparation as well as lime, manure, phosphorus, and potash. It will not grow on wet soils. To sSueceed well 1 with clover requires that the same éon- ditions be met. Failures of both erops may be expected occasionally. A single failure of a new crop s net sufficlent to warrant its being discarded when it has: as many good qualities as has alfaifa— Agronomy Depart- ment, Connecticyt Agricultural Coliege, Storrs, Cong, EVIDENCE OF CROOKEDNESS IN PARIS HOBSE RACRS Paris, July 6.—So many queer looking races, (despied outsiders defeating fl- lustrious horses) have been ungovered at | the metropolitan tracks since the open- ing of the racing season that Baren Maurice de Rothschild himself one of deputy for Pau has brought the matter to the largest owners in France as well aa the attention-of the French ehamber. Baron de Rothschild has -asked the chamber to pass a law for the suppres- sion of book making in Paris and largest cities in France, the books to be replaged by Pari-mutuel booths in the eities The French government receives ten per cent. on all moneys taken in at the I pari-mutual bouths at the varieus tracks, As the amounts bet at-the different tracks vary from 5,000,000 to §10,000,000 franes daily the Freneh government derives ftem the raeing industry a revenue of betwean 700,000 and 10,00,000 franes per day. - Baron de Rothsohild said in. the French chamber that more mohey was fl | bet with the books operating. in- Paris easih Ask to-be shown this particular instru- ment. WEwill not mention the name. Stool freé, Small payment down and $2.50 a week. Every Piano on our floors is fully guarantsed by their re- spective manufacturers er hy day that at the tracks; estimating that 10,000,000 francs per day were wagered in the city alone. This is a net loss of 1,000,000 francs a day for the government He charged that several races had been run wit hsuch flagrant evidenee of crookedness that had sueh raging been at- tempted in England- or America, the pwners, trainers or jockeys would have heen ruled off the turf for life. It has been -alleged that the bookmak- ers gathér in all the eity money in the forenoon, no- bet being accepted under any circumstapioss after ane o'cleek. This gives them ample time te jourmey fo the race track and. if they find that they are overloaded on any o hapse and stand to lose teo mugh. to use a Ift- tle persuasion on the jockey ifilottng the anim; rethet has just heen ruled off He was up on Zisanie 1T an overwheiming’ favorite with the publie. He did not finish in the meney and his bad riding was so evident, (he was an Apprentics joekey. not an expert in the gehtle art of pulling a hofse) that the N | iudges summoned him'into the stand, He nromptly admitted having pulled the horse but olaimde nat fo be acquaintsd with the men wie had made it worth his while fo lose the race. This is one instance out of mray whiek Baron de otfschild says will kill pasins in France unlegs the stern measures for the hookmaking Wateryille—The Connectiout has a gang of men busy on both m that come.futo Waterville, and when in~good