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@eewich Bulle and g-:u?i-?. Liv 114 YEARS OLD. - Scbacription price, 1Ze u week; 50¢ a Q"" 00 o year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Tonn., as second-class matter. Telepkone Calla: Bulletin Business Ofdce. 480. Bulletin Fditoriel Rooms, 35-8. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantie Offce, Reom 2. Murray Building. Telerhone, 210. Norwich, Saturday, May 14, 1910, o There is no reason to doubt that there is cause for alarm in Boston over the quality of the veal which is being supplied to that eity not only from Mew York but from points in New Bngland. Very fesyg New England farmers are irying to raisd calves, for they have @ notion that it does not pay, and sell them Defore they are two weeks old, the buvers seeking profits professedly upon their pelts, and turning the veal into distant mar- keds for a cheap price. Carloads of calves from New York reach Brighton neglected and many so nearly dead “rom neglect that permits have to be obtained for their slaughter on the v they arrive especially if that day is Sunday, when butchering is not ai- lowed. A handler of these amimals cafis threugh the press of Boston pub- tic attention to the fact that the calves rriving in that city are what is imown as “bob veml” He declares that hy the thousand these calves have heen slamghtersd there, hundreds of them only a few days old, and the mmark of the meat inspectors of the »oard of healih has beem found upon them. To our knowledge calves starv- ing to death and Qdying have been passed and them exposed for sale in ¢he markets. This food no sane man ~eowld est if he knew it. Why have wome of the butehers dealing in thess ealves seewred the withdrawal of fed- eral inspection for two months till the calf season is praetically over? Can It mean anything else except that they can get this poor, wretched stuff wpon the market through inspectors of the Boston board of health, but could 20t if they hed United States govern- fhant inspection? n not strange that the people suer from cancers and all kinds of disecse when such stuff as this is be- ng palmed off upon the public for onsumption: and whet is being done in Boston is being done in many New England eities where there is no in- spection of meat and no moral prin- ciples which prevent dealers from handMng mests which are mot much Letter tham poisons. AN OLD LEDGER. Am cld ledger, if it is old enough, usually comtains many Interesting facts and figures. One recently un- carthed in New England shows that flour in the 1Sth century was $18 a barrel, while everything else was m cheaper than todey. For in- stance, during the years hetween 1794 end 1815 amd the present time, a day’s board of the kind now costing seventy-five cents was then twenty cents. A veke of oxen could be pas- iured twenty-two weeks for $4.25, while at the presemt tlme it would cost over $20. Jurors reo ed sixty cents a day. A pound of butter cost welve ts and a jug of rum only twenty-five, or about ten per cent. of “he cwrrent figure. Potatoes were on- ly thenty cemts a bushel By work- | ng ten to fifteen hours 2 man recelved sixty cemts for his labor. Horses could se kept for tweive cents e day, and soth man and beast could be enter- ained for a fourth of what it costs ow. Among all the items there is o mention made of milk. Not omly hat but various other th s that to- iay have attained the dignity of prob- | ems Were in the “good old days” so sheaply considercd as to be negligible egomic guantities. Viewed from fhe workma point these good old tlmes were not so much better than the hard times of tofax. Ten day® labor at $6—long iays at that—made a month’s wages Now | 's stand- eguivalent to a barrel of flour. he average weel’s wnge Is elmost | :agal to a barrel of flour. Babor is np worse off toiay than it was in the days of yore. NOT A GOOD SIGN. The population of Cuba is increas- ing, dbut not in a way which teils for he Improvement in the conditions of the $fland which the gowernment had oped Stdtistics just pwblished by the de- r(nm: of immigration show that w populstion of the “sland has been Increased by 25436 males and 2,989 lemaies. The greater number of these :.Imt! came from S n, of whom were men, 2,748 being under the age of Sourteen vears. Caba really needs a more enlight- ened and progressive eloment than nis to make*her the island republic which we Americans have dreamed that she might become. These immi- rants are narrow and superstitious nd tend to hol® back the progress of the istand because they have no idea of ghe principles which undertie self- goFernmment. It is certainly a disap- pointing revelation so soon after Cu- Ppan liberty has been declured to learn that fhe trend is medieval rather than medern. CONFESSING THEIR SINS. When we come te bribery it is just & important who furnishes the mon- ey as who takes the money. Tt seems 10 be the fashion to punish the bribed while the briber walks away smiling. 7his is not Yhe way to make an end #f bribery. The fact Is now vefore the country that three members of the Iliinois lexislature have confessed that they received bribes of $1,000 cach to vote fer William Lorimer for United States senator. They acknowledged also thet they had shared in the “jack-pot” which was made up of the sums paid as rewasds by grateful corporations for “services rendered.” These men and the political agent who distributed the momey are to be indicted and punisheg, but it is doubt- ful ¥ the trail of corruption will be uncovered until Lorimer is shown up | thing { his friends or as the bargainer with and corrupter of the people’'s representatives. There is ne more @oubt that Lerimer had a #uilty &nowledge of the business and the furnishing of the money than there §s that Hediey's comet iz coming this way: but it is net fashionabie to reach up and puil dewn the star criminal, We know that the most dsngereus crooks are the men who have the money and the Son te gerrupt public serv- ants. It s mot for Lovimer to sit in the senate, smie and «draw his or such Wlaeckening expos- wres Wave back made in his case; but 5 O We have always thought that the American woman took as rauch pride in dressing her feet as her head, but a Lynn, Mass, shoemaker has the temerity to say that while the aver- age woman will pay a big price for a becoming hat she gasps at the idea of paying five dollars for a pair a shoes. t takes an exvert only a few min- | utes,” continues this shoe-designer, “to note that the wrong hoes have got on the feet of nine in ten women. Shoes that were meant for slender ‘women are on the feet of stout women, shoes designed for high-arched feet are on low-arched feet, and shoes that should appear on pointed-toed feet are found on square-toed feet.” And whose is the fault? Chiefly the retailer's de- clares our critic. The manufacturer and his expert give lonz hours of se- rious thought to the “fitting qualities of new styles; but the average clerk in the shoe shop thrusts a pair of shoes on a woman's feet, tells her that they look well and are strictly mod- ern, takes her money, and turns to the next customer. The clerks in the shoe-shop will not relish this assault upon their ef- ficiency as salesmen, Just as if such a clerk did not know a square-toed or pointed-toe woman the moment she | entered the shon! It is probable they know more about the tricks of man- ufacturers than they dare to tell. EDITORIAL NOTES. | China has recognized that freedom | for all lends strength to a nation. | Society appears to have a way Jf keeping an even keel whatever hap- pens. The man who makes a living does not always feel sure that he has earned it. ‘When it comes to wear and tear, Roosevelt’s throat has stood a tremen- dous lot of it. Flappy thought for today Those who are hired to be good never think it is easy mone The people who saw Halley’s comet in 1835 find that they are now rated among the distinguished. The middleman doesn’t appear ‘o feel red if he is being unmerci- fully thumped just now 1t ed that John D. Rocke- | feller takes to paper ve: a mat- ter of economy without blushing. els post and postal savings get taken out of the pigeon- looked at occasionally. bank bilk holes and If Emperor William will take a Tit- tle horseback tide with Color Roosevelt he may give him points. “Joy riders” appears to be a gentee allusion to drunken drivers who never ought to have a license to run an au- tomobile. Most of the Norwich automobilists do not knmow what a square cor means, but it will be required before many years. Norwich has a way of putting up rtisan tickets and then having a non-partisan vote. She is about to do it once more. Maine is setting out 150,000 3-year- 1@ spruce trees to bring the state up to its primitive importance. Better late than neve The man who coughs up all that is burdening his conscience is not as likely to have the hectic flush as the | man who doesn't | Halley’s comet, <which has been eeding for twent e centuries, the fastest old veteran ‘the world knows anything about A scientist ventur the opinion that dreams are fulfilment of wishes. [ This is why a man always whips his mother-in- in his sleep Reckless drivers of automobiles may not be aware that iftheir names are | sent to the secretary of state it may be hard for them to get a license. When a public official has done any- he doesuw't dare to confide to| family, he has lost his self-respect if he doesn't fully realize it. BIRD CLUB Holds Seventh Annual Meeting in Nor- walk—Purpose of Organization. The seventh annual meeting of the orwalk Bird club was held, .\Iflnduy‘ evening, at the home of Charle Quintard, 148 Main street. Norw: Officers for the year were elected, as follows: President, Wikbur Smith; vice- president, Miss Hurd: ‘tary, Mi M. K. Jennings; treasurer, C. A. Quin- tard. The Norwalk Bird club was formed, says The alk Hour, with a tw fold object, to study the bird life of the Norwalks, and to work for a better protection for the song birds, and in both these directions it has been signal ccessful, and at the present time our town stands close to the top, it not at the top, of those towns work— ing for bird protection. An idea of some of mong the rare birds is of a pair of Tough wing swallows each year in the north part of the town.| Hooded sarblers nesting mine, prairie and worm es blers breeding. as well wren, and the occurrence of Henslow eparrow, one of the ra local birds. the best finds the nesting Horned larks are seen regularly on | Great Marsh in the w er as well as the snow buntings, occasional foundl amide w i th the Ipswich spar while in the season t spa Tow breeds, and the « ail as | well i One of the largest® colonies of fthe | black crowned night herons nest each | year within the limits of the town, | and another in the town of Westport. A pair of red headed woodpeckers have lived within a few minutes of the Main street of the city for some time, and at the present time two partiaily white robins are known and | thought to be nesting. The check list showed 60 of birds seen during April. They were:—Canada goose, herring gull, great blue heron, black-crowned ight heron, wood cock, wilson's snipe, spotted sandpiper, quail, ruffled grouse, mourning dove, march hawk, red-shouldered hawk, sparrow hawlk, posprey, great horned owl, kingfisher hairy ‘woodpecker, downy woodpeck- er, red-headed , woodpecker, flicker, phioebe, biue J ow, starling, cow ‘ird, red-winged black bird, meadow lark, purple grakle. gotd flach, Eng lish “sparrow, white throated SparTow, tree sparrow, chipping sparrow, fleld SPAITOW, JUNCO, SORE SPAIroW, SWamp sparrow, fox sparrow, chewink, barn swallow, bank swallow, black and white warbler, yellow plam thrueh, Louisiana water thrush, oat bird, brown thrasher, Carolina wren, house wren, brown creeper, white brasted nuthateh, ehickudee, ruby-crewned kinglet, olve-backed thrush, hermit thrush, rolia, blue bird, black duek. species | | mo: ia Doy | craft You say anvthing to some about invisible forces and they because they do not know that law eternal, while all visible matter is . stantly changing form and is 2 able. The two greatest forces ture are cohesion and gravitation, forces which hold and bind all together and make planets and life upon them possible. Without cohesion the world would have no foundation or atmosphere, and without gravitation ihey would not form about a center. These are two of the great forces of the universe, and they control the mil- ilons of suns and planets swinging in space. Without them there would be no rising suns or starry heavens. Some peoplo live and gle without over. know. ing this, and their souls never get a grip upon the wonders of the wuni: verse. There is always a lot of good ad- vice abroad; and this is the one good thing which is frightfully repudiated. Even those who recognize its quality decline to take it. Some cymics ex- plain this by saying that the best of medicine offered free of cost is in small demand, while the worst smelling and worst tasting medicine on earth is in demang at a high price and hopefully taken; which is a way of declaring that man is controlled more by his no- tions than by his sense. When a man iries to tell you where he mrissed it, it it will p o say, “Please don’t,” for it will probably be at this point in Iffe. Those who set small value on good ad- Vice are the ones who can usually tell you why they failed. Those who were past the meridian ife used to say that a man jis no han he feels; but in this age of dietists and drugless cures of disease you will hear him declaring that no man is older than his stomach. This is not a contradiction of the old say- ing. but rather a confirmation of it, for the condition of the stomach regulates the feelings, and it is the stomach that has become second-handed, as it were, that makes a man look like the last rose of summer and feel like it, too! It is the stomach that is always crying for more that gets inordinate in ze and crowds the heart and hugs the liver and puts a whirl into the brain of the immoderate eater. If the stom- | ach is in the pink of condition, the whole man is lilcely to be—if not, the man is what his stomach malkes him. It may take nine tailors to make a ma it one poer tailor picked up any- wh n dress a fool so that he will | look like a fashion-plate, or a philoso- pher so that he will look like a monke: Many women, and not a few men, ad- = clothes, regardless of what is in v; but jumping-jack in royal robes’ is a jumping-jack still. There | a great deal to appearances, but not Jf as much as there is to speech. le cannot stand for quality any > than lack of it tan squelch gen- The tailor who knows how to| ju dress a patron never puts the clothes ofa dude upon a scholar; or a business suit upon a clergyman. He is endow- ed with a genius for the fitness of things, and governs himself accord- ingly. It may have been the men who never pay the tailor who have left a cheap pen-picture of him in litera- ture; and perhaps it was the tailor's filiteracy which gave birth to the say ing: et every tailor keep to h Carlyle tried to balance mat- ature, mavbe, when he lent and labors to Sartor Resart- ‘he patched-up tailor.” The ghost a pri ive scarecrow which no amount of education can eradicate from a man if it is a part and parcel of his inherited remains. One of the ablest men I have ever known said he always expected to see one, and when passing a cemetery at night he caught himself whistling like to keep his courage up. I knew a man who tackled a ghost once up- on a time and he was badly injured when the conflict was over because he ran and threw himself against a solid st instead of against a thin, flimsy vapor in the semblance of a human being, He always expected to see one after that, but he never reck- cast himself. at one. Half the world has lived and died expecting me day, somewhere, to meet a ghost. a white,weird creature; but those who allege that they have seen them say look just as natural as any c. 1 have alwavs felt that make no more fuss over a than over a butterfly. ~Why that they ghost should we I rather like the man who is always finding fault with the weather better than T do the man who is always find- ing fault with religion or with his wife, simply because he seems to be a man of better taste if mot of better 1t is a bad habit to be grumb- ling constantly about anything: but chronic hubite like chronic sores are persistent and have to be endured. The man who finds fault with the weather has less time to find fault with other things. and he is less annoying than most other kind of a fault finder. The man who finds fault with the ther is not so apt to cuff the chil- or to kick the dog when out of He snarls at the weather about as a dog bays at the moon, and his conduct is just about as commendable. habit: It is more than likely that no one hears more lies told than a debt col- for the man who can’t pay has Jector. to rake up some other excuse than the true and if he should venture to tell ¢ he might get into jail. Some men who never had a dollar owed them in the world say they'll pay when the other fellow pavs them. A good many are néver at home to the collector and make | their partners stand them off when caught at home. If caught on the street by the collector they'll say: “By 1 was just coming down to and after feeling in all their 3 sad look and “I've lost my mon These peo- e never in any danger of losing character, for they mever had Jov. their any. Show me the man who thinks that he has always done the right thing, 1l show you a man who thinks | < pious just hecause he is not as| he might be. You may he ! ed, but there is no more depth | than that io some folks' piety. A good | many professedly pious folks sail their | in mizhty shallow water. Get | onceit that you are good and you are more than half damned at the | start. The need of other people is a | Detter thought than self-righteousness. How the declaration “Not ~everyone who cries Lord. Lord, =hall enter in | but he that doeth the will of my Fa- | ther” is overlooked by well meaning men. It is not words that save men, but deeds. Self-adulation is not a deed that counts. the Some folks think that the man who gets mad ought to be pitied, but I think he ought to get thumped; and I get mad sometimes, teo. I have met men of the cloth who could .get madder than March hares over small issues and make themselves more uncomfort- able than they could wnyone else; and then ever after decline to spes to the offénder, while the offender was just smiling to himself all the while over the guelity of their piety. There nothing capable of making a bigger fooi of any man than a bad temper, unless it 1 a woman who bosses her husband in public. Too many bad- tempered men verd their spite on their wives and children, and this is the pity of it! There was never a truer saying than this: Some men get as meuch fun out of a toothpick as other men do out of & cigar. 1 call ta mind ®he fact that anywhere to choke the of laughbter in our hearts. Laughing ‘was natural to us then, and the whole of our pretty world laughed with us. You remember how light-hearted we were, running or jumping or singing and whistling—you could whistl couldn't—rowing on the river, g old Bobby, skating, dancing. You re- member how we climbed the tallest trees, and scaled the ridgepole, and crept on our hands and knees across the rafiway bridge, quaking as we glanced down at the deep black water under the ties, yet never really afraid, and laughing always. Those were days when to do delightful things and do them all the time seemed to us precisely what life was for. I should like to -live them over again. Would you? Ah, I know you would. I love to believe that some day, when I am old enough and have grown gentler and wiser, T shall be a child again in my Father's house, a laughing, joyous ohild at home. “You say, brother mine, that you, 100, will jot down for me all that you cen recollect. But you spoll it by sug- gesting that the two sets of letters, bound up together, may be enjoyed by our future great-grandchildren. No, Willy, dear, not for my own possible grandchildren, nor for yours, nor for anyone else’s, will I lay bare my heart ana soul. If T do as you ask, It shall be for you alone. No eves but yours must ever scan the pages, or ear but yours must catch the sobs within the laughter, no heart but your _own strong, brave, true heart, ‘my Willy, must_ever count the throbs of mine. not for ‘anny sich as No, brother, nor for the outer thim® will I write, world, the reading public—ye who like me mnot (God love you)! as Browning says of those who neglect- ed him—not for any of these, not for any one but you. And fer you, only because you are bone of my bone, gesh of my flesh, my alter ego, my other self, my twin bother, who came with me ‘out of the everywhere,’ and with whom, so far along the road of life, I have journeyed lovingly, hand in hand. What a journey it has been! How different from the one we would have planned of it! And oh, how bit- ter—vet bitter sweet. “The heart knoweth its own bitter- + mine which even you will never see. Strange It is, that of two who love each other well, .each journeys alone. The individual soul dwells ever apart. As near together as two can be, you and I are to each other, twin brother mine; yet you have your inmermost, with Yohich the stranger intermeddleth mot, and I have the secret soul of me. It must be so. is right that it should be; and not only right, but comfort- ing. It seems like isolation, the deep- est, profoundest isolation of the soul. But this is only in the seeming. In the innermost of us, in the isolation of the veiled chambers, dwells the Eter- nal. Knowing this, T would not if I could let you in, Willy, dear, not even you. And it is no ionger the chamber of desolation that ¥t once was, no longer a cavern of gnawing loneli- mness and pain. “Brother mine, T am willing to put on paper everything I can recall of our child and youth-days together. T will do it gladly. But I warn you that my letters may turn out the queerest jumble of things past, pres- ent, and to come. The recolections of our babyhood may mix themselves in with the events of vesterday, or with thg studies I am interested in to- day, or with other things about which I have never thought before. If I be- gin to delve into the depths, there is no predicting what may be brought to the surface. I may sSurprise myself and you. “Please remember that | am no writer. I mix my metaphors and have never learned the secret of style. Never mind! As my letters to you need not pose as literature, it does not matter. And as no one but you ds ever to read them, I may mix and sift and blend in any way that it natural to me. one will-care; I myself least of all. As for you, broth- er mine, I know you well enough to know that you like 'em mixed. have not forgotten vour pession for Shekes- peare. Imagine Hamlet asking leave of the critics to ‘take arms against a sea_ of trouble: “Thinking it over, Willy, dear, 1 be- lieve I am glad to write out my heart to you. I am glad you have asked me to let well up from within and bubble over all that makes the real me. I wonder if you have done it ‘to pur- pose’ as we_used to say when we were little, You and I care for our- selves and for each other, and we care for all and everyhing that in ou strange, sweet, dual, united life comes to our hearts as divinely human, di- vinely true, divinely beautiful, divine. We care for all that has made and 1s still making—just you and me. Fur- thermore, you and I beHeve that what- ever differentiates one ‘T from hig fel- lows, the T of you from the ‘T' 6f me, and from every other on earth, s worth recording. We know, and are glad, that your deepest experiences and mine are written into the twin soul of us, to bear record forever. THE RECLUSE. PO B . T RS AN P e P SRR e R L SRR the man who eats at a cheap restau— rant and picks his teeth on the steps of the best hotel in the city is such a man. He loves to be seen of men picking and picking with a delibera- tion which jndicates a substantial din- ner and leisure for a great diner's per- formance. He can assume the air of a first class diner on toothpicks that sell 100 for a penny—can pose like a banker just for the joy of appearing to be something he s not. To his credit be it sald, he knows how to ook Hke the best if he isn't it, Pittsburg turns to its baseball club as a body of public servants whose honor has never been impeached.— Washington Star. | i | | | A Rare Figure. A hero who is not his own horn- blower is a rare and inspiring figure in the modern world—Loulsville Courier-Journal. About His Siz If Mr. Roosevelt would like a man’s size job he might get himself deputized to see that nobody steals Alaska.— Chicago News. There is only one railroad in opera- tion in Nicaragua. It traverses a com- paratively small district In the ex- treme western portion of the republic, and, including its several branches, represents a total length of 171 1- miles. / Home tings, Patronize Industry by sending your orders for Steam or Hot Water Heating, Sanitary Plumbing and Plumbing Fixtures and Supplies, Gas Fitting and Gas Fixtures, High Pressure Steam Fitting, Engineers’ and Mill Sup- plies, Hub Water Pipe and Fit- Excavating for Sewer or Water Supply, to BROWN. Get the best goods and workman- ship for the least money. Honest Goods and Honest Prices. Robert Brown Estate, 55, 567, 59 West Main Strast. ARTHUR M. BROWN, Manager Telephone 133 Open from 7.30 a. m. to 5.30 p. m. e In_FRIENDSHIP, SEABACK & CO. WORLD'S GREATEST BAG PUNCHER! Carmontelle & Russell The Auto Bugs ADMISSION—10c. A8 THE POWER OF A COMMON- PLACE TRUTH | Because a thing has been said be- fore is no argument against its repe- tition. Circumstances may make its reiteration exceedingly valuable and timely. What maiden ever tires of having her lover whisper in her ears the words that Jovers have been pas- sionately saying to their sweethearts ever since Adan and Eve were alone the garden. There is no sweeter to @ mother's ear than the lsp- her darling baby saying ‘What some cynically-minded persons are proune to stigmatize as platitudes have recently been wafted from the continent of Europe to all parts of the civilized world and have been read probably by millions of persons' Here are a few of them in substance; It Is not enough that a man should be sa)d he should also be eficient. e should all have our ldeals, but let us beware that we do not become mere theorists. ‘The cynical attitude toward life is one of the worst moods into which a man can fall. It is @ little short of a crime delib- erately to shirk the responsibilities of parenthood. Not the mere fact of wealth, but the way it is used, entitles a man fo credit. A man must pull his own welght be- fore he can be of any advantage to others. Class hatred and religious intoler- ance are equally obnoxious. ‘We have heard all these observations betore not only from this distinguished gentleman, but from moralists, teach- ers and preachers in more than one l1and. And yet we make a big mistake when we toss them aside as thread- bare and trite. The question fér you and me is have we taken these truths to heart, no matter who spoke them, or when or where. This nation desperately needs not a totally new message, but a sensitive- ness to old yet never outgrown truths, and we ought to be thankful that events have recently thrown them up- on such & broad canvas in such large letters that the whole world must, per- fore, take notice. True, they are but the whole A. B. C. of morality and re- ligion. But no greater blessing could come to the modern workl than its arousement to the imperativeness and indispensableness of a few of the sim- plest, most elementary and most fa- miliar moral truths. A commonplace deliverance is al- ways in order, provided it has behind it the sincere conviction of the man putting it into language. The greatest preachers seldom go far afield for thelr themes. The Spurgeons and the Beechers, the Moodys and the. Philips Brooks’ have two or three great, deep self-evidencing truths on which they dilate and which they apply in vari- ous directions. If this very day all the preachers in America would select the truth that means most to them, no matter ‘how many times they have ut- tered it and restate and enforce it with all the power which they possess. a revival of religion would begin ali over this country. Yet one other requisite is essentlal in order to make effective a common- place truth and that is the illustra, tion of the truth in the life of him who utters it. Men will listen willing- iy to discourses on familiar matters provided they know the speaker prac- tises what he preaches. Shun not, then, friend, the common- place message. It may be the one you most need. And hesitate not to speak such a word to someone else, provided it comes out of your heart and life. THE PASTOR. Home Team is Winning. The baseball season is two weeks old and not a single umpire has been mobbed. Is that a sign that the world is growing better or worse?—Augusta Herald. Like Old Tim Reading Colonel Roosevelt's Sor- bonne speech, one had the illusion for a moment that it was the president’s annual message—Atlanta Journal. The Wisest Thing. In some ways, however, it is more desirable to check graft beforehand than to check it up afterward.—Chi- cago News. 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Junisa s WHAT'S NEW s, THE PALACE CAFE Step in £nd see us. FRANK WATSON & CcO, marsd 78 Franklin Street, W i INL Ve A - A o SR o arier Rige ) 4