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i G » NORWICH BULLETIN, JANURKY 20, Do you know that there is being held at Schwartz Bros., since the eleventh day of this month, the mest amazing fur- niture and rug opportunity that has ever come to the people of Nerwich and surrounding towns 7 Do you know that at this sale there are vast quantities of furniture and rugs being offered at prices that should have uncontrollable throngs of people clamoring for 2dmittance to this store every hour of the day? Do you know that if you have not been io 4.0 that you are committing an error of household 3udgment that will cause deep regret with the realization ¢ what you have missed ? EXTRA! A LARGE AND COMPLETE STOCK QF STOVES, COMBINA- TION RANGES, OIL STOVES AND HEATERS AT PRICES THAT WILL MAKE YOU MAR- VEL ! manship, formerly '$175.00— $175.00— Now Only $89. 75 SPECIAL---Beautiful Floor Lamps, | SPE CI AL — 45-pound Special complete with silk shade and ex- | Felted Cotton Mattresses, roll edge, tension, formerly $40.00— beautiful art tickings— Now Only $19,50 | Yow 0niy $6.85 9 x 12 Seamless Tapestry Brussels Rugs ....... $19.35 9x 12:8eamless Welvet Ruls . " oty oo oine'nios.. $23.95 9 x 12 Heavy Quality Axminster Rugs ......... $29.45 CHWARTZ BROS s ) REGARDLESS OF COST PEOPLE OF NORWICH AND SURROUNDING TOWNS! WAKE UP NOW!! NOT WHEN IT’S TOO LATE! The Way To Remember This Sale Is Witfl a Home Full of Furniture Secured at These Thrilling Prices. Sad Regrets That You Missed It. Don’t Remember It With the This sale at Schwartz Bros. is a whale of a success — those in a position to know, tell us that there has never been a furniture sale to compare with it in crowds and business in the history of Norwich — BUT IT IS NOTHING LIKE THE SUCCESS IT SHOULD BE! PEOPLE WHO HAVE COME AND BOUGHT ARE TELLING THEIR FRIENDS AND NEIGHBORS ABOUT THE AMAZING BAR- GAINS! THE BUYING SHOULD BE TEN AS HEAVY! TIMES AND THE ONLY REASON IT ISN'T SO IS BECAUSE THE MAJORITY OF PEOPLE HAVE NOT BOTHERED TO INVESTIGATE! 3-piece Overstuffed Living Room | Beautiful 4-piece Ivory Bedroom|9-piece Queen Anne Period Ma- BRASS BHED OUTFIT 2-inch Continuous Post Brass Bed, National Spring and 45-b. Special Felted Cotton Mattress— THINK OF IT Now Only $28. 75 35.00 Oak or Mahogany Royal Easy Chairs— Suite, tapestry covering, loose | Suite — Bed, Dresser, Chiffonette |hogany Dining Room Suite — spring seat cushions, besl work- | and Toilet Table, f ot m e r1y|Table, Buffet, China Case and 6 Chairs, formerly $300.00—: Now 0nly $149.50 SPECIAL—100-piece Dinner Set, all beautifully decorated, formerly $40.00 and $45.00— Now Only $69. 50 Now Only $21. 95 Now Only $]9. 85 Golden Oak Dressers, square mirror ..... ONLY $9.85 £50.00 Bird’s Eye Maple Dresser ....... ONLY $22.85 Golden Odk Chiffoniers.............. ONLY $10.95 9-11-13 o9 Water Street, How 0nly $96.,50 3-piece Golden Oak Bed Daven- port Suites, formerly $125.00— $22.50 Mahogany Library Tables . $50.00 Golden Oak Buffets ...... NOW ONLY $29.35 $40.00 Golden Oak China Closets . . NOW ONLY $24.75 Norwich, Conn. ... ONLY $12.95 STUDYING PROBLEM OF trolley service, and the value of tholley R to the public the committee may con- |representing manufacturers; Jomn The comtmittee on survey of freight ¥ Sl o mitt P SEsvEy O . sider the’ question of how the service | Heffernan, Waterbury, representing man- oi the Connecticut Cham-'|shoudl be economically divided between |ufacturers; Victor §. Curtls, reprosent. of Commerce met for luncheon at|trolleys, trucks and ihe realroad, toling “ship-by-trbBey¥-movemery, -Le. the Hartford.club thls week for its first |2V0ld overlapping. And these three agen- | Grand Cannon, New Haven, president cies co-ordinating or are they working |New England Wholesale Grocers' asso- e A general plan of action was at cross-purposes? s gl siv Y g oglilorol o clation, representing merchants; Alfred |8 changed co§itifs | i - transportgtion | Other questions which may be consid- M. Terty, consulting engincer, Bridge- eansed by fthe sholdf truck. This in-|Cred are the cost of taxation per ton- [POTt, representing _engineering ~profes- Cludes problebngat . inxatiof, value of |Mile on railroads and the same for trol- |Slon; H. H. Skerritt, Hartford, repre- securities and gervice to the public, A {1¢Y8 @nd trucks; and whether or not ~:"flm:‘ automotive industry ; §amum more completeiprogramme will be passed | (FUCK transportation should be subject- Resselly Jr., N{ddletown, gepresenting Wpoh &t u thesting 15 bé held ih 3 ed to supervision and required to make ultire George B. Chandler, secre- Haven next Wednesday. It was decid- | TPOFts the same as trolleys and rail- TR S e ask the executive committee of the | "°*9% 3 : o AR S o (ids Wy, Sraiiasy, " reprenstiing atiar Talt: | TR committee will meet again at New metor truck interests direc roads, pointed out that his company had |Haven next Wednesday, and Highway A tentative outline of tHe range of the {tg help M]‘ fosiahe l‘lf;‘"g“ committee's Wpfie Wds discussed. Ques. | competing line, while Mr. Sker: tions which Wil -come up afe: How the |Senting the trucking interests, replied | Vited to be present. changed canditions arising out of the |that the trucks are already taxed to help Commissioner Bennett and Commis mator truck transpbrtation affect the | Pad for their right' of wa VERDICT FOR $17% IN service to the public, how they affect the [ The main question to be considered by SUIT OVER STEAM BOILER expense to the public In the form of tax- |the committee in the end Is what, if S ation, and how sthay affect railroad vice, the valué of railroad securities, |to of legislation or the education of public sentiment. Thin, nerveus, underweight people|road securities; C. take on healthy flesh and grow sturdy | Division superintendent, New York, New #nd ambitiousrsyiven Biiro-Phosphate Haven & Hartford Railroad Compa jury was teed by Lee & Osgood is!J. O. Halliday, superintendent of trans. n r mmm portation, New York, New : Hazen & with ke ad street. dict at 2,45 Hartford Railroad Company, represent- ; SCOUT MASTERS INSTRUCTED FREIGHT AND TRANSPORTATION | Securities. In considering the service |ing railroads; John T. Chidsey, Briston, BY TRAINING The ninth meeting of the Scout Mas- ! training course was held Wednes- day night at Scout headquarters in the The attendance was v. Alexander H. Abbott was the first lecturer of the evening and. gave an m:pmng and analytic talk on Scout- , referring to the Scout motto, He said that all Scouts, as well other divisions of activity, might be ided into four classes. oncers, the men who found out things blazed the way. discipline that is there. Master is on time and has his programme planned, discipline i the older boy training to become Scout Leaders. Young always setting examples for If the Scout | BISHOP HUGHES TO SPEAK AT METHODIST CHURCH CUNDAY | Assoclation. Bishop Edwin Holt Hughes, D.D., LL. D, Who preaches in Trinity Methodist | “2 HOW 1 CURED the leading bishops in Methodism. He is now’ resident bishop of the New Eng- e CAIRI e e o “Y cATAnn“ was the California area. Before elected bishop he served some of the largest pastorates church and was a college president. =nannof bunlting after the young Scouts and help them. Scout Cheering was given . He spoke of the object of cheering and Scout ¥ Methodist First, the pi|a number of Scout yells. A. Benton told an illustrate the telling around the camp at first hand, m(erpretorsy those who Inler- ]\rs‘(?d the pioneer work and handed it on to the third class or the intelligent ac- And the intelligent acceptors ln turn passed )t on to the fourth class, the takers for granted. in the world hPlnng to one of these four value of story most orators and spreachers in America. him six 3 thing hedd er ;801 ithiul. Yot months_shead in_oTder 1o get. an 0pen | ot i s Liarains hesikiel. X It is a great honor to Trinity church and a privi lege for the city to| I am not a doctor, but I am t“mi and This| friends are cured. and you can be ner of Motor Vehicles Stoeckel will be in- colirse will be held at Mohegan Park, i have Bishop Hughes preach here. Dpeople is an opportunity come soon again so advantage will bs taken of it by many people seeking the best. Workmen's Compe mnowlng workmen's mouth, Fyecutive Berton, Davis will take part in the programme. which class do you beling: There Is al- ways the challénge to come up to the St 0 /ASKqtant Supieoith SpmoMLT John H. Conway, been appointed anything, the state of Connecticut can do | A JUrY in the court of common pleas d the situation either by the way |in New London Thursday afternoon brought in a verdict for $175 for Mrs. o Robert Seoville op |26 TOWSOR of New York, formerly of here were present, Robert Scoville ot |y, ; Sl 4 IHIN PEOPLE LakeviHe, chairman; Arthur M. Collens, | ¥ Lendon in her suit against Ar Hartford, representing owners of rails (thur H. Buffum of the same city for , HartfoFd |damage to a steam bofler at her house in B : n sued for $350. i ase just before s at 1 o’clock and ‘returned Scout Masters! It is & man’s work. The ant supreme sdc- finest of all appeals is for leadership in a vote of the supreme board of d J. B. Stanton talked on Discipline and |0f the organiation, His definition of aisci! “well trained,” 2 understood by !he orderly direction of werk, activity, and life. The well directed mind is the 1f a Scout troop 18 busy discioline is not mentioned, but Supreme _Secretary The Older Boy. He succeeds Harry ald, of New Haven, who died recently. Sien- and thigh injured, at rate of $14.50, If cme wowld see his own faulis he m%u—- should borrow his meighbor's epectacles, An optimist may be & mien who laughs at mhforuxm, never having had any him- trained mind. HUMOR OF THE DAY An Irishman who was signing arti- cles on board a ship began to write his name with his right hand, then, changing the pen to the left hand, finished it. P“B'o you can write with either hand, at!” . “Yis, sor,” replied Pat. “Whin I was a boy me father (rist his soul) always said to me ‘Pat, learn to cut your fin- ger nails with vour left hand, some time you might lose your right"— Harper’'s Magazine. “I'm not at all sure.” said the pro- fiteér's wife to the head master of the fashionable preparatory school ‘how your school is going to suit my dear boy.” The head master smiled confidenly. ““You need not worry about that ma- dam” he sald; “we've already taught him how to hold his knife.”—London Tit-Bits. “What are your ideas on the theo- ry of relativity?" “The same as my ideas about the posibility of Mars being inhabited” said Mr. Glipping. “T don’t know a darned thing about it and what's more if I did know anything about it that would- n't mean any more money in my pay envelope at the end of the week.— Birminghom Age-Herald. “I want some ¢' the tolet articles mentioned in your catalogue,” said Cac- tus Jos as he approached the young la- dy in charge of the novelty counter. “Just what kind?" “Playin’ cards an' poker chips,” “You don't call them tollet articles?” “I do; leastways the last Tew -times T've uséd ‘em they cRaned me proper.” —Washington Star. “Why does a woman's hat cost s much more than a man's? Surely, the trim- ming can’t account for more than a frac- tion of the difference.” “Certainly not, but you must remem- Dber that it costs more to sell a hat to a woman. A man seldom takes up more than two minutes of the salesman’s time while a woman will keep the entire sales staff busy for half a day."—Toronto Tel- egram. “What are you laughing at, Henry?" asked Mrs. Peck of her husband Wwho was chuckling over his evening paper. “Something I saw here,” he replied ‘“but it's ardly funny enough for two."— Boston Transcript. Tom—*"Ever have a girl ask you if her hat was on straight?” Jack—"Yes, once.” Tom—*"Didn’t you think §t a very feol« ish question?” Jack—“No. You see we were on an ex- cursion train and had just come out of a long tunnel"—Exchange. “You and your husband go away every summer, don't you?" “Yes, but I dislike doing it.® Then why do you go?" “I have to have Tom lrve in a stuffy hotel for a few weeks every year to make him appreciate the way I keep house."—Beston Transeript. Ha (full of news)—'"There's something going around that will interest you!" She—"“Well be careful, there are some pins 4n my waist !"—Cartoons Magazine. The teacher had asked, “Why did David say he would rather 56 & doorkeeper in the house of the Lord?” “Because,” answered a boy, “he could then walk outside whila the sermon was being preached.’\—Exchange. KALEIDOSCOPE Some rack crystal shave as many as 300 affferent sides. Seal find their way home after swim- ming 2,000 or 3,000 miles. The kangaroo has an appendix some- what similar to that of a man. In their first vote Belgian women out- numbered the” men by 700,000, ATl of the larger felines jump for their opponent’s throat in attack. Cireus animals are quick fo detect lost nerve on the part of their trainer. The hermit crab always takes for its habitation the shell of another amimal. Eighty-six thousand French soldiers fell victims to tuberculosis during the war. Crawfish by thelr burrowing habits often injure the levees of the Mississipp! river. Stevenson devised an Instrument eall ed a dynamometer to measure the force of waves. Sir Tsaac Newton was so small at birth that he might have fitted In a quart ‘mug. The staff of the Hbrary of the leasue of nations tn Geneva is composed entirely of women. No fewer tham 176 different kinds of bananas are grown in various parts of the world Astromomérs will meet in Rome ‘o Pe- form th, calendar and select a fixed date for Easter. Many bright plumaged male birdg sheq thelr ornamental eathers after the breed< ing seagon. A mother wasp will ruthlessly kil any of her offspring which she finds feebls or deformed. West African children, on reaching a certain age, have their teeth delfberate- Iy broken off. Ttallane often prefer t6 call their greaq men by their Christlan names or by the place of their birth. Eleven muscles work together to puc- ker up the mouth and twenty-one pairs help to make a smile. With a new micromqter internal eylin- drical surfaces can be measured to the ten-thousandths of an inch. The Chilean government is planning to electrify the sixty mileg of rafiroad be. tween Valparaiso and Santfago. Kepler, the astronomer, had weak eves and had to rely on the observations of others to construct his theories. Scpia is obtained from fhe cuttle fish which has the power of ejecting an inky fluid in order to hide itself from its enemles. A man's voice could be heard 300 miles away if it had the sam, carrying power in proportion to his weight as that of a canary. Football for women has becom &n or- ! ganized sport In Englan€, under the name of the English Ladles’ Football TOLD IN A SIMPLE WAY 11| Without Apparatus, Inhalers, Harm- is in constant demand for lectures and ful Drugs, Smoke or Electricity. HEALS DAY AND NIGHT It is a new way. It is something abss lntely different; no lotion, spray or sickening drugs; nothing to’smoke or inhile; no confine- do not have to wait and linger nd piy out & Jot "of mones, T will gladly tell you Bow, Your guffering will étop at once ike magic, Jkely | 1 am free. You can be free. My catarrh weg ithy and loathsome. It made me ill. It who are ulled my head. I undermined my health and_was weakeming my will. The hawking, coughing, spiiting made me ohnosious fo alf and my foul breath disgusting habits ‘made éven my la'!g ones avoid me secretly, compensa-| But I found a'cure and I am has been approved by | to tell thowsands of other sufferers that ssiondr J. J. Donohue: i uszko & Pulaski Corporation, of | 1o tirost—Mrm. E. ch, employer, an < CAMPHOROLE cured me ol catarrh of M Terrace, N.