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We are very glad to quote P v i ".::ém’ E much lower prices for “this 2etuley carnatians willbe the pop- | 167 {0 be hace and 36 the fine manner week, owing to the beef can i ! srean. e i d. mild enough t ti Iam a congress: d don’ houses being OVerloaded, | ouc diosomas omn rommn®™ @ “CHL Ve Sapired to” become w sevata from my state. He is & small man with due to the small demand for Patriotic socleties are making plans | * [2r5e army 5 Goneral Grosthhoe § mh mc‘m for the observance of Washington’ Ohio, who was born near here and i S birthday. said he had gained from him an opin- We certainly are vor of lower don of what this section of the coun- prices than we have had, and trust the At Voluntown the charcoal burners| try turns out, but-as a result of the market quotations will keep 6n a lower | have an unusually pig supply ready for | VISit here tonight I am sure Connec- + ARG T AN e, ticwt conesrvatism is very similar to Please note our low prices e . One of the later Connecticut school | He referred to Rufus Putnam, pre- siding over the Masonis lodge with documents issued deals with the od and remember it is on only| fruments Joseg o N Siate: ana Wiita Mol a2 this in Niles, O, stake ces- Local German residents observed in | tors of Wfl]laz.:mnncfl‘nnhy tx::d:n was an informal soclal way on Thursday|in going to Pennsylvania instead of the fifty-first birthday of the kaiser. | this state. He was one of seven boys; - I am one of eleven boys, I think I After resting since Tuesday night, | ¢an realize the circumstances of his LET US HAVE YOUR ORDER ! #he town clock began to ring out the | SRildhood. T am 2 member of a fam- Rib Roast Beef, 180 to 22 per Ib, | hours again, at 10 o'clock Friday morn- | 1V ©f scventeen children. being the selection of cut. ing. Porterhouse Steak, 23c to 27c per Ib., > salection of cut. ” Norwich. people who have relatives and frierds in Paris are greatly dis- Sirloin Steak, 180 to 23¢ per b, | {\;hed by the daily tidings of the flood selection of cut. damage. Reound Steak; 170 to 20c per Ib,, se lection of cut. Shoulder Steak, 120 to 14c per Ib., solaction of cut. Corned Beef, 8c to 14c per Ib. Pot Roast Beef, 12c to 20c per Ib., larded. Roast Pori, 16c to 18c per Ib. Butter is also lower, although it does not look to us as a staple hit. Oranges and Grape Fruit are cheap. Box of 200 or 250 Florida Oranges, $2.50, while they last. A-1 quality. Some of the eastern Connecticut col- lege boys and girls will have a Sun- day home because of the mid-year ex- aininations. Methodist friends in Norwich will regret to learn that Rev. J. H. James of Rockville is so ill that he requires the constant care of a nurse. Rev. P. C.. Wright will speak at the Central Baptist church Sunday. Bow- en R. Church, cornetist, and Mr. Pad- ley, flute soolist, will play. Do mot fail to hear them.—adv. From the attorney general's office at Hartford 400 notices are peing sent Smers Brw. out to delinquent corporations direct- ing them to file their annual reports jan2ed with the secretary of state. CONGRESSMAN COLE. An arbitration and peace conference | thirteenth child, and he recalled wh — REMOVAL — of the six New England states will be | he twelve went to school at o:e‘:mezg held in Hartford and in New Britain | it required three to carrv the dinmer Dr. Rush W. Kimball on May §, 9 and 10, under the auspices | for the others. My ancestors were has removed his office to of the American Peace society and the | | SinE A=tirioe MM s Yl Defore Roosevelt was 21 Broadway, Wauregan. Block | Connecticut State society. we are lineally descondants of Fest: Hours, 2 to 4 and 7 to 8 p. m. Sun- 2 dents of Connecticut. days, S to 4 p. m. Ofce telephona| Prof. J. J. Kennedy's children’s class| Ohio owes @ debt of deep gratitude 45-3. Residence, 167 Broadway. Tele- | will give a reception Monday evening, to the state of Connecticut. The an- phele 5= @ec2d | yan. 31. Solo work between the dances. | S3St0Ts of many of our most renown- 3 ed men came from this state, That HAILE CLUB The public is invited to dance the full| section of Ohio known as the Western programme. Admission 35 cents.—adv.| Reserve was peopled by immigrants from New England. The soldiers of the Friday’s Bridgeport Telegram said: | revolution, fresh from the fields of tri- 142 Main St. The engagément is announced of Miss | Umph. seftied in the wilderness and Josephine Case to Charles Locke }?g';i““;‘* Lo o & istat o as gone forth to the ends of French Restaurants Bhenst ot ‘Colchouter. Miss Case 18 e shrth. "W mos (angit 1 tie sohs a sister of Mrs. Willlam J. Lattin of | men cohsols g e 12t tive state to 100l Stratford, and a graduate of the Strat- | with pride and. venceation oy Mok Noen Dimmer, 12 te 2. * Ped ford high school,.1905. Mr. Shailer is finghind. It is the home of American 5 a native of Colchester. story. Liberty and enlightenment, Ladies’ Restaurant. 30 cents. twin daughters of civilization, have Gentlemen’s Restaurant, 35 cemts. About seventy-five members of | P€ld dominion here since the landing m f the Pilgri Supper—Mondays and Saturdays—S5 | boards of relief, representing fifty dif- | qualities ‘;f’;,,“‘,,i;{;‘}.':,flcfi“;.::"’h‘xg to ¥—85 cents. o ferent towns in the state met with Tax | the proud possession ow New England Tuesdays, Thursdays amd Fridays,| Commissioner Wilkiam H. Corbin on | is ever present in the citizenship Of the Supper a Ia Carte. Thursday afternoon in the supreme ;Voé'stern dReserve.t It is a part of the Wednesday Evening Disner—e court room at the capitol, to discuss wer and fruit of New England. This oo *® 8—| informally the duties and responsibil- | truth has become so patent it has itles of such boards under the statutes. (1o *R the basis of a maxim, “To be is to be a presidefitial _possibility." Dr. W, J. Hantord will not be at of- | When I contemplate & citizenship. in- ficé evening hours today (aSturday), or | Spired by the purest patriotism, char- afternoon hours on Monday, as he will | ®Cter in full orbed perfection, and man- b hood in its majesty, I instinctively turn QOur New Do n Sitondence st the New Tor*|toTimt scction Of Gur national Bocse Seut For sk wbetaNion Will - return I’wp]eqdent with the fame of Garfield o 9 o 1 n, and Giddings, Whittlesey and Wade, a es rl Monday evening.—adv. Hays and Hanna, and that other typ- - ical American in whose honor we are - now asembled—William McKinley. PE@" The life of McKinley is full of hope Mr, and Mrs, Henry Lewis of Fitch. | 27d inspiration to every American boy. It is typical of this continent. Tt jlus- wville were recent visitors at Lords|trates the wonderful possibilities of the Point. average American citizen, blessed with ‘ Equality of Miss Jennie Sutter of Norwich visit- | Opportunity is xe of this na- ed friends in Plainfield early in the [tion. Tt is the most sacred right which week. has been handed down to us from the early days of the republic. As long as that right is maintained men of merit Edward Leahy and Miss Annle Lea- | will hold positions of power.L jke Lin- hy of Plainfield visited in Norwich re- | coln, McKinley was born and reared on the first floor of the WAUREGAN HOUSE Is Now Open. cently. in humble circumstances. But by ™E M'El-ll_vflflll' d., means of his own power he rdse above b o Mrs. John C. Williams of Norwich | 10000, 0¥ S5t Sirnent surpagsed by fow was the guest of friends in Waterford | Americans. His life is a tribute to the on Thursday. < common school system of the state of Ohio. He received the rudiments of his Miss Marian Kimball is the guest of | education in that great American in- Miss Kate Lamb of Willimantic. Both | Stitutic Had he lived in New Eng- land, he would probably hold a degree young ladies are to attend the dance| st on Harvard or Yale, or some of the given by the young ladies of the Wil- | other great institutions which havi limantic Normal school Friday night. | their home in this section. But he liv €d_in Ohio. where there were many obstacles to a collegiate course. So he ho‘:rrn‘ess23A-PlEr;(‘a!lt>e¢&}:b¥; e ot berltook nis degree in the university of % reet, Thursday, to at- | ngture and entered the contest of life. tend the Third compeny’s annual ball | Law was hischosen profession. In com- and reception to his excellency, Gov.|mon with the rest of his voung fellow Frank B. Weeks. She returned to her | countrymen, he was suddenly called duties as nurse in the Day-Kimball | from the pursuits of peace to perform hospital, Putnam, on Friday morning. art in the mighty conflict for the . . Building - preservation of this republic. He ARE YOU THINKING OF DOING learned his lessons in patriotism un- THIS ? der teh leadership of Lincoln. The 4 H 2 = ‘hole course of his subsequent career Ir ®o you should censult with me and ty pry ety ; i . e el vitn me anal | INGIENIS N SOCiElY | i charcisndd o Gahiel senac oF at réasomabdle prices. duty which is ever present In the life £. M. WILLIAMS, —— and work of Abraham Lincoln. I shall The Fortnightly was entertained on|not give the details of his military General Centractor and Builder, 213 MAIN STREET. Friday afternoon by Mrs. George W.| service. Suffice it to say, he perform- “Phone 370. Jani7d NOW IS THE TIME TO ORDER YOUR Winter Suit and Overcoat. LET US MAKE YOU ONE. JOEN KUKLA, Merchant Tailor, ectaea Franklin Square. Carroil. ed his duty with soldier-like fidelity and bears an unsullied record for gal- The Misses Trumbull, who have been | lantry on the field of battle. visiting in New York, returned home last evening. the two taie Woanesany snamened | Ii’s Your Own Fault SWITC"ES for the yesterday afternoon. 1)) T ping | The Misses Young of sewer civ| [f YOU Have were guests this week of Miss Maud Turban Pins | Carew Buckingham. Spangled Ornaments Miss Flora Hall, who has been turned to New York. Mrs, George G. Lamb, principal of |or anything like it, because there’s FAMIE M. GllSfiN. :*hzb;r}:xn:? figfii’a‘?fihfid; positive relief in every bottle of for evenlng wear | icoinE, the winter in town, has re- Suite 26, Central Bidg., 'Phans 505 | iliness, has returned from New Haven. A.D.S. Chiropody, Scalp Massage and Sham- Mrs. Louis Lorenzo Blackstone has poecing, Faoi Treatments, Xsrsv;'lled ‘alnnogneement; of the wedding Rhenma“c Remedy‘ ol of her daughter, Justine, and Edmund - 5 Misten Webster Perkins at Christ church on| We have recommended this remedy Sandd k Friday, Jan. 21st. to local sufferers for several years and Mrs. Louis L. Blackstone, Miss Phyl- | almost without exception it has given lis Blackstone and Miss Harriet Ting- E 2 ley, who have been spending several | Prompt relief from Rheumatism and s L4 annn{.lls arbr;?fig, ;dlll sail for home from | kindred ailments, and that's what we 6Mi- ] (] e call pretty good evidence that A. D. S. George Coit Butts of Washington | Rheumatic Remedy will do the same On our st T ¥ 6ulb street spent a part of the week in Bos- 2 h B3t B b ngs M| ton with Mrs. Butts, who is passing|fom you if you will only give it a and Overcoatings we are offering the winter with her parents in Cam- | hance — try it now and suffer no a 15 per cent. discount during the [j| bridge, where she bas opened 2 studio. mext 30 days. Come carly and Fe b 50 . progressive dinner has be lan- have first choice. ned by & number of the young peopla| Price 50c and $1.00 the Bottie. s 3 for this evening, beginning at the m m. c.A home of Mr. and Mrs. W. Russell Baird el and ending with dessert and coffee with Merchant Tailors, 65 Breadviay, Miss Ruth M. Thayer. Chapman’s Building. Mrs. H. M. Pollock entertained at oy By T - s er . Shepard of Portland, Conn.,-and Miss Spalding of The Drug Man, Boston. Those receiving the prizes vere Mrs. Calvin H. Frisbie, Mrs. R. T oo any re T whiiow Mrs. R | Franklin Square, Norwich, Ct. Bullajta Deiat t~<reshments were Served. Jan29g dnto ge mati But every R i P coid. "By In ‘1883 McKinley voted against the 4ariff bill because it was not a pro- ve tariff measure and said he would never sign a measure which did Dot bear the stamp of protection. In 1888 the bill was passed. He stood for what he thought was right in ad- wversity as well as in prosperity. While Jhe was the first to ge down in 1892 he was the first to come up in 1896. Bryce showed himself a prophet when he declared ¥ McKinley was beaten for congress he would be made gov- ernor or president He was a princely man, and had graceful method of receiving men, es ecially voung men. speaker not to run more than twice for the state legislature. He took it, and went to congress. election was that the south is for pro- tection as is the north except for the zace question. They have caught the message and find that protection will do what is wvanted for their infant in- dustries. They want what they produce pro- tected, but what they consume they want on the free list and the same rights as all other sections. We are finding that our great competitors are not in Europe, but in the orient . The Japanese are going into every avenue of industry. Japanese work for one- fifth of what American Jlabor does. American civilization is based on a different proposition. The great com- ‘mereial rival of the United States will not be so much Europe as the Japa- nese, in the future. How can the man- vfacturers of this country compete with the work done there, which is &hree times cheaper? 1 think the present tariff bill will give entire satisfaction after it dis giv- en a proper trial. It Is a difficult thing to arrange a tariff bill affect- ing every industry in the United States. It it is done by skilled hands it will meet the needs, but unskilled work will cause a discord and a dis- order. The government is a great in- strument. If it is touched with skilled hands it will give forth beautiful re- sults, but if with unskilled democratic hands it will ‘spell discord and dis- aster. He was loudly and rousingly ap- plauded at the close for his magnifi- went oratorical effort. EX-GOVERNOR M’LEAN. Subject Was Representative Democra- <y, on Which He Dwelt at Length. In well selected words, President Lippitt presented George P. McLean, ex-governor of the state, and his ris- ing was the cause for another outburst and a rising of the entire gathering. He remarked that he thought Connec- ticat made a mistake when it sold Ohio for three millions. He said it Fave him great pleasure to rise In the great gathering of candidates. He referred in high terms to Mec- EX-GOV. G. P. 'LEAN. v, as well as to Roosevelt- and Continuing, he said: Representative Democracy. Let us look at the situation for a minute. We certainly see faith in the representative democracy swiftly and irresistibly taking possession of the peoples of the earth. The great war lord of Germany was recently scolded in public for daring to talk to a news- paper reporter, and today he doesn’t stand for much more than the head of his political party. In England mat- ters are still worse. Edward the VII is sick with insomnia and disgust be- cause he hasn’t been consulted by anyone in the present contest which threatens to exclude all - hereditary right to veto the voice of the com- mons. Recently, t0o, the czar of Rus- sia_ through fear has opened a door which through fear he dare not close, and out of which sooner or later he must walk, to return, if at all, with the consent of the Russian masses. In Turkey and Persia, and even in China we see that most ridiculous of all hu- man sophistries, the divine right of one man to govern millions of his peers, fading as surely as the darkness fades in_the morning. Now we Americans look upon_ this prospect with pride, with wondrous pride. We rejoice to see our ideas of the natural rights of men adopted by the Slav, the Arab and the Mongol. Do we see justice established and our natural rights growing more and more secure, or do we see a large measure of injustice and lack of social har- mony and an ever increasing tendency to revive the ancient belief.in the power of the government to perform miracles? Are we not beginning to see that it' is not so much the shape of the church as it is the character of the men that attend it that counts in the moral uplift of the community? Gives Anything Required. Are we not being forcea to the con- clusion that while a representative de- mocracy promises an ideal govern— ment it gives anything that may be required of 1t? Is it not true that a government of, for and by the people will be like the people, or, as Mr. Wal- las of the London Schbol 'of Economies buts it, a government controlled by affections and dislikes, ridicule, pride or the desire for property. From Plato to Bentham, from Bentham to Bryee, political scholars have tried to find what I will call the unit of measure for political contentment. That Is, some human characteristic or group of characteristics upon which a social code can be framed . that will be satis- factory and permanent. If you could take the fourteen millions or more of . electors in the United States and bail Taking up politics, the speaker said: The time has come when the south is as favorable ¢o protection as the northe The great proclamation at the last Ihd Desiaen 4 ‘we And & a perfect system, would it satisfy long? | Painkillér fay is not the dominant human | water or m il toe Jo 070 od avoided. % love of variety for sheer va- id bstitutes, there Is but one rlety’s sake? Must we not expect that | Bainkiller. Perry Davis. Price new fashions in gowns and tovemi 1 say that as he had no ic he dreaded somewhat mise of eternal measures upon We are all fond of, our and of companionship. but I Benjamin Franklin who said that fish and visitors go stale in three days. Poor Alciblades the Just| g i bv mall for w0 et Sl Y. o was banished because his fellow men couldn’t endure the humdrum of his name. Napoleon came to the front and was kept there during the first decade | rhe natural remedy for indigestion,d of his career because Frenchmen had grown sick and weary of having their lives and fortunes subjected to that genfus of the revolution, the voice of the people. And does not the demo- cratic party once in a great many years nominate a candidate for the presi- dency other than the Peerless Bryan through sheer love of variety? 1Is it strange that we must have variety in order to thrive? Any Kind of Treatment. And it is well to bear in mind that any kind of treatment can be had un- der any system of government. Some- where 1 have read that the Spanish inquisitors quoted the Code of Justin- ian, and we are told that Queen Eliz- abeth burned her enemies at the stake because she considered it her duty to begin in this world the punishment that Jehovah had promised to make permanent in the mext. There is no more elastic form of government than @ representative democracy, With a sympathetic supreme court and public opinion behind it, you can have any- thing you want from the reddest so- cialism to the blackest individualism. As Emerson once said, “Laws are mere memoranda. They follow. They never lead” Lincoln once said that any people anywhere having the de- sire and the power have the right to throw off an existing form of govern- ment and choose a new one that suits . Bhe -y DON'T GET RUN DOWN : pmuer et Electric Wiring e | We do all branches of Blectric Work Testimontals from grateful people who | ana carry . complete stock of Gus Demeds. As o repilawe it hes 69 FEIE | ang Tlectric Chandeliers, Lamps und Ask for Mother Gray's Austrafian-Leal at Drugeisis - ol PR By . 50 ots. Sample FEEE Ad- |nfantles. Visit our show room — the only one in town. and 5 For indig n and all stomach trou bies take. Foley's Orino Laxative. It WINDOW DISPLA rpm, heartburn, bad breath, l£= The varfety of our stock of Wire endache, torpid ifver, billousness an s il BEbItunt eonptipation .. Fajey’s Ofipe | 000ds cta Ds partially. appreolaied by Laxative sweetens the stomach and ]inspecting the few lines displayed in breath, and tones up the entire ali- | our show window, mentary system. Lee & Osgood Co. tionist restrictive or expansive bankers, and so on through the list of issues, we must remember that all " we have. got in this world so far has | [[y come to us as the result of compro- ¢ mise. And we cannot compromise [ unless we keep cool. Keep busy, keeo honest. or, as Sir Edwin Arnold put it to the Harvard alumni sove ca Company, ago: “Young gentlemen, in 1776 and 1812 you cenouered your fathers in| (29 Main Street, Norwich, Ct. 1865 you conguered -our brothers, you would preserve this glorious r: public you must ROW comquer yours selves.” SENATOR C. B SEARLS Gave His Recollections of mcKinley— wi the Big Man of This Genes tior. Hardware Electric Goods Jan26d - Home Gomfort Senator C. E. Searls of Thompson was the closing speaker of the even- ing and he paid a glowing tribite to and the late Williamr McKinley. He o ferred briefly to ‘being in Ohio at the McK el resented P Dot Had e 1iead ottt e | S aandiate end. Anding hut all. I DEPEND UPON day, he would have said, 1 think, that | spective of party, favored him for the any people anywhere under a consti- tution like ours can have any kind of & government they desire. Good judges ‘make good Jaws, just as good bankers make sound banks, where statutes don’t make it impossible. Strange things have happened in our own his- | tory. Chief Justice Taney declared that the black man had no rights that the white men were bound to respect. A few years afterwards Abraham Lin- coln gave liberty to two billion dol- lars’ worth of colored men, and in do- ing o he did what John Brown had been hanged for trying to do a few years before; all under the same con- stitution. Great men too change their minds. Did Daniel Webster make his 7th of March.speech because he loved the union, or wanted to be president Did Gladstone shift his musico-politi- cal entertalnment from the bagpipes to the harp because he loved Ireland, or wanted to be prime minister? Jef- fTerson Davis in the senate once de- clared mpst emphatically that his love for the union overruled all other in- stincts, And a few years afterwards he took the oath as president of the Confederate States cf America. This sort of things happens to good men and bad., It takes a greater courage and a better quality of courage to charge one’s mind than to adhere to it. Minds, like springs, must be con- stantly refreshed or they wili breed wiggler: 2 The Caucus Is the Constitution. But to return to our representative democracy. Whether governed for fweal or woe, it must be governed by political parties. And these parties are governed by the caucus. So that ithe American constitution today 1S |though the conferences extended for the caucus. It is in the caucus that the ezgs of sovereignty are lald, and you may hatch them jater on in the very bosom of unselfish patriotism, but you won’t change the breed of the ird. Gevernments, like horse races and ball games, represent different phases of human nature. We vote as our fathers voted, ninety per cent, of us. In 1865 I went to the old town hall with' my father to hear a lot of men sing “John Brown’s Body,” and rejoice over the salvation of the un- jom, A day or two afterwards my schoolmate called me a black rewib- lican. I called him a copperhead have never scratched my ballot I dow’t think he ever scratched his. hope I have been rieht part of the time. The first time I ran for the gen- eral assembly one of the prominent citizens of my community told me that he was goin~ to vote against me be- cause when I was a shaver I threw a rotten apple at his horse, Another prominent citizen told me that he was going to vote for me because when I was a shgver I put a rotten egg in a buggy cubhion belonging to the wo- man he worked for, and he had never | ven, Representative H Coffin of liked the womah. And yet such stuft [ Windsor Locks, Maj. William H. Lyon has thrown the scales where thrones |and Representative William Parker of have been the stake. “Had Cleopatra’ nose been shorter, Antony might have done as he had oughter.” And o0 on through history—it is the little horse- shoe nail of love or spite or fear or gain that many times decides who shall win and who shall lose. There is nothing in all this that should be discouraging. On the contrary, it seems to me that humanity has done exceedingly well under the circum- stances. Too many of us think that the world will end when we do. We must remember that a thousand years isn't a January day in Nature's cal- endar. Amnd if. as we are told, our ancestors in the jungles spent hun- dreds of thousands of years throwing stones and bad cocoanuts at one an- other, by sheer force of comparative biology we must expect to throw bad laws and old jokes at each other for many years to come. But we can eas- ily say to the man whose hands are too clean to meddle with politics, that no matter how bad the government may bpe, it is a better one than he de- serves. So, too, with the man who thinks we are in a leaking boat, the nulti-millionaire, perhaps, whose only interest in the government is to have it_let him alone while he gathers in what fel dollars there are left: it would clearly seem to be his duty to take hold and bail and help stop the leak, or else get out of the boat. Per- sonally, I have no use for the intel- lectual or rich pessimists who don't help better things. When I see a man do the best he can with the tools God gave him and who cannot even then earn more than $9 a week, my feel- ings are different. But I haven't time this evening to look upon his side or the bright side of the shield. As Mr. Bryce well says, there is plenty of blue Dehind the clouds. Liberty. There is just one thing that we must'nt lose sight of, or lose posse: sion of. It is the thing that loves and lives on variety and thrives in every corner of every human vagary. it is the thing that our ancestors took awith them when they left the shores of the Baltic sixteen hundred year: ago. It is called Liberty. But It is not the variety that Henry Ward Beecher deseribed In the man who prays on his knees one day in the sveek and on his fellow men The other six. It is the sort that loves its coun- try and its fellow men end gives to every muan the right to make the most of himself =0 long as hc does not d rive his neighbor of that same iy lege. And wnether we are strict or Joose constructionists, imperialists. an- ti-imperialists, free traders or protec- Chilaren ' Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTODRIA president. He told of being chosen a . . delegate to the St. Louls convention but was prevented from m'mh"\\gl\::i» is the sickness. Later he visited the House and called upon the president and desoribed in a pleasing way the| Plumbing t shiould be done cordial and aftable greeting he received | kind we dc and to his surprise an inquiry regard-| Open—every joint tght—sanitar ing his sickness which prevented him | 2B ety en from attending the convention, ' b a The name of McKinley will long re- | tubs—Ilatest devices In water closets, main in the minds of the people. Men | ginks, and everytl you can thini of our generation we can think of whol 0e'sy"the plumbing are gone and they have ben forgo ¢ e was not. a0 with President Mc Let us tell you what any of the Kinley, His name is often mentioned, | above will cost. Our prices s an is consistent with first-c this annual meeting is held, and all |, over the country, whatever the char-f o acter or politics, there ook of 3 A tenderness which crosses countenance as the name e ANDREW J. WHOLEY, cause he is the man, the be X A '2 F s] ' as a soldier, public speaker, statesman, the purity of his life, his unselfish- erry Sireet, ness, forgiving temperament and a|Telephone 200 an208 leader by persuasion. He is the man of our gener: th)!‘L - ‘ ' ‘We are living in troublous times and N B l H he Rutnan Yack will contino 1o five In 0 Boycott Here! troublous times, but the trend is up- i 5 ward and on, as the generations pass | Prime Rib Roast of Beef 1Ib. 15¢ the tendency is for a purer and higher @ g 4 government. So long as the people|Sirloin Steak - - - - Ib. 16¢ will choose to its highest office meo . like Cleveland, McKinley, Roosevelt Por(erhousc Slcflk ¥ A Ib. IXL and Taft we shall expect we will ad- .. We are child yet and for a has . o Yk fanee, | we are children yet and for +| 5 Jps, Honeycomb Tripe - 25¢ Eenaracion 18 eomine 08 270 Anigher, | Fresh Shoulders, g v gy il as long as they last Ib, 12%c Following this address the banquet 4 broke up and the party dispersed, al-| A fige line of Native Poultry, Cran- some time longer Nt frians berries, Celery, Nuts, Oranges oastmaster Lippitt. ; 4 As the toastmaster of the evening| Grape Fruit, Sweet Clder, and chosen and at all mes and in every detall was the affair a pronounced in havibg the next meeting Telephone 267. 36 Franklin St. Among those who attended we 264 Ansonia, the Connecticut member of the republi national committ President Lippitt was a past master g i iations were wenn | meny other good things. success, This was the consensus of Charles Hopkins Clark, editor of the| Jjan aL B in the art. His pr opinion, and Hartford is to be envied Hartford Courant; Charles Brooker of Attorney - Judson of _ Bridgeport SRR R s Goodwin of Hartford, ex- HERE are splendid oppor etary: ex-Lieut. Gov, F I tunities for young men Rallroad Commisstoner and women who have the s, Comptroller T. D. Brad right kind of training in Short Thomaston, Sheriff Sidney B. bl : sl of Bridgeport, Internal Rev hand, Book-keeping an 7 uperintendent S.'A. Eddy of New writing.' We give the right kind n, Senator D. A. F esley of ours is the standard for thi New Haven, J. Henry Roraback of B o Canaan, Cattle Commissioner, H. O, Averill of Washington, Dairy Commis- Al sioner Hubert Commercial Branches Catalogue for the asking Meriden, County Comn 1”‘""‘;‘:\:?‘:; THE NEW LONDON" liam Baliley, £ H;u'('(_urd. < E L Higgins ot South covintry, - | | Business (0llege weln, Representative George Knight of FADrubeck, b, NewLondon. Conn. Lakeville, Sheriff Preston B. Sibley of Windham coun the governor's staff, Brig. Gen, G. ) Cole, Col. R. Baton, Col. F. G. Graves, Col. A. } Shepard, Col. E. H. Havens, Col, J. M. Ives, Liefit. Com. ¥. A. Bertlett, Maj. ice, M B - M. Ullman, Col W. E. Landers, Col. M. J. Wise, Banks Are Not All Alike There is a vast difference be- tween a place merely to deposit your money. and check against it, and a place where every offi- cer and every employe takes a friendly interest in your account. We try to make every depos- itor feel that this a banking home. All Departments cf Banking. Keep the House Warm “There's no place like home,” if, The ]hamflSTl;" & Trust Co. it comfortable. Butif thedoors are constantly left open, home Shetucket Sirest, Norwich, Cona. might Josh as woll be &_barui) decl7d The Yale & Towne ~~ RALLION’S STORE |{ Blount Door Checks' will be closed for inventory R s oM a2 from Monday noon. it every time. Essily and quickly i | attached, simple, durablo and at- uniil ‘fuesday at 6 a. m. tractive in appearance. Made to Jun29d 8t any size or shape of door and to match soy hardware finish. THE AUXILIARY Wt and apply . of the Me Ml A jation A deseriptive folder on request. Preston Bros. will meet at the hu{u& of Miss Mary 211-213-215 Main L. Huntinton, 197 Broadway, Mon- Norwich, Conn. day, January 31st, at 3.20 p. m. A programme of unusual interest i promised. é Janzgd WHEN ¢ your bus! ness befors the public, thers is no mu- dium better than through the aduprtis. ing columas of Ths Bullatin. sanigdaw