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- 00,000 buwbels shert, but Nee England COMMUNITY OF INTEREST. Attention is called to the fact that the Teport of the secretary of agricul- ture is in accord, inferentially, at least, with the every-day averment that the cold-storage methods control the mar- kets and are to a degree responsible for high prices. The Baltimore American, comment- ing upon this phase of the business, s: Horwich Bulletin and Causficp. OLD. 115 YEARS ust how the price of a universally consumable commodity can be arbi- trarily forced up by the cold-storage people is quite comprehensible. Take butter, for Instance, which is Now pro- duced mainly by big creameries that bandle the milk supply from hundreds of farms. In the west many creamer- ies scattered over a wide area are op- 4 Posterfics at Norwich, cond-class mattel Telcphome Calla: n B otfice, 3 Editosial R ia Sob Orfice, iwamtic Office, Roem 3 Murray iiding. Telephone 210. - —————————————| . 15{cd under one management. It is \orwich, Wednesday, Dec. 27, 1911 | conarally understood that the cream.- = ery business has been systematized and is operated upon a common bus- iness basis. This community of interest, it is quite conceivable, may render it pos- | sible to use the cold-storage process in a way to create a temporary short- | age, during which, the supply being s than the demand, the price natur- ally rises. Lessened consumption may | then be met by still further creating an artificial shortage and still further | boosting the price. The buying public, once convinced that butter is in short ize Circulation of e Bulletin. The Bullctin has the largest eir- ation of amy paper Eastern || accticut, and from three to four mes larger tham that of amy fim Norwich. 1t s delivered ta ever 2000 of the 4053 mes in Ner- read by mimecy-three per the peepre. Ia Wimdham || supply and that the price must range it 1s delivered te over 900 hemses, || high, censes to grumble and pays the in Putmam and Damlelsom te ever || jrice. And so butter cold-stored in 160, mmd tm =il of these places it || July is retailed in December at double ia censidered the local daily. Eastern the July price.” Fortunately a counter community of interest prompts the women to com- bine and refuse to pay such exorbitant | prices for eggs and things and the Botietia s weld i every || DL CCS, U SRR nips encouraEing- town and em all of the B F. D-|/). n many things a promptly less- routes in Eastern Cemmccticut, | ened demand works wonders. CIRCULATION average Commeoticut has forty- WHERE JAPAN EXPECTS TO PROFIT. There is no doubt the Russian bear very unapproachable mood just 101, sina 1905, aversge this or my the thin was but and ing i an = you neig pent with that wisd they to i forty ot I had 2 movi Terrowing things, horse and bugey. cordial with him, oratorical Rimself, nless o s soon as they camp in you things. rented, wove in and then #0 much Every Gravel street humble abode, borrowing T bootjacks B motnins? litte new neighbor, retired merchant. ed into the house T & from the pump welcome to whatever h lately he has been c helping himself withe By your leay lled i contest.” knew trouble w told me about “You wers perfe over him, He wa and well inform back fence infatuated laying up ghbors like gets he r sting take a s an ou them know tnat y libertles. neighbors and I The houses na f one inother, ~onfide: I took kindly to them a om teeth were cut re all chips pself in th ana then hard ve by h acre field be so much borrow My fairl and ~nsils you could t it feeling What have you got on your mind nguived the hotelkeep- disagreement with Hankinson, “As soom as he xt door he began wearing a path over to my place He borrowed every- handie to At fiyst 1 was pretty teling him that he asked for, ming t even say- and this morning n_down, and we had quite s brewing when that new neighbor 2 couple of weeks ago.” sald the hotel- keepes imstic ultured sort of man veu liked to tal with over the a man tly en a fine man, Jus Whe: with & troubl I bite like ser- oggone A determined Vielnity, won't you When I was keeping houss down on Gravel street I had lots of experience learned a few there family would wer ana 1 i human nature intil my I had my way, ighbors would be abolished, for b rom the same blocl bRl e required by Jaw midale of & there would thin and hink replied politics the over thus- t the never new e for dders. stand e all had this ana cats of. 1| a certain book was, and Mrs. Quilby had borrowed it. asked her to light the Jamp, end I'd read the cookbook, 1 felt my anger rising, and said: ‘Lat me have any old chair, 50 I can dose by the fireplace” Then it developed that Mrs, Jagway had borrowed the fireplace. VIt was that way all the time, and 20 1 sat down and figured over It, and realized that something would have to be_done, Next'day a family named Corping- r moved into the house next door. There was a grandmother, about 100 years old, among their assets, and my wife said that we should mvite her into our house until they got things traightened around, for the day was ‘0ld 2nd there was no fire in the house ihey were moving into. So we in- vited the old woman over, and as soon s she got into our vine-covered cot- tage she gave a yell and fell down in 2 heap. and we had to carry her to bed and send for a doctor. “We kept her there a week or so until she was convalescent, and then T asied her people to take her off my hands, but they said they'd see me in” Belglum first. 1 inveigled her into my house, they said, in a determined ©effort to rob them of the only grand- mother they had. and now I could keep her. Grandmoihers were not re. iurnable, the man of the family said. Well, sir, I actualiy had to go to law to get rid of that doggone grandmother and 1 changed my policy right there. “After that when nelghbors moved into my vicinity 1 handed them the ice tongs. I wouldn’t permit any fn- timacy or cordlality until time bhad shown that they were all wool. I let them kpow that they were on proba- tion, and if they came over to borrow apyihing I advised them to go to the pawnshop. When a neighbor showed t he was worthy of the honor I ad- ed him to my circle of friends, but now because of the Sulser resolution |and everything you conq ik 06 LI NUHES I Gl St Sany ey th @, ind the sudden abrogation of the | remember ¢ have a pleasant | if vou want to live happy ever after,” 5 tired and_expected io |irx to L reaty of 1832, e reading. I asked my wife where | —Chicago News. Decemier -23.. y Chose who think it may result in = the boycott of American goods are = en, for that would punish the| A1l scientists, all philosophers and ail = ® ssian people who like American | intelligent minds have arrived at thej rle a e ews UNFORTUNATE IN HIS FRIENDS. 15 and démand them in such quan- | one conclusion as regards the origin anker-convict, were deeply dfsap- | exceed our imports. thet it descended Irom O ming mto R vhn e Gcclined | * The suspicion. that thls: differemce| 2oL from several S o A e 0 B o » pardon him and are doubtless very | may strengthen the bonds of friend- | rational answer to the question. there- | 45 cents per dozen. SR S M | ship vetween Japan and Russta ap- | forc, is that the children of Adam and They do not recesnize that thelr own | pears well grounded since the | kove must have ‘intermarrigl Cali | Meriden —The assessors have com. cona e more to do two nations are now on te cer- | wife was his own sister. 3 CEN- | nlated their work on the city's gran. aything | increasing friendliness. Somehow e t B O e ey was from | hus come (o believe that Russian and | 1108 his half sister. 'L race, Sc | $200.000. d pot be- | Japaness interests in eastern Asla are | would not suffer from theyresults of | No., Bpitgin—A new camp of the @ prison was strong | identical, instead of hostile. And the | irtermarriage as at the présent time. |y qor, Waodmen of America is bein man of his financial | cause is China, Bach wants a slice | when it has so degenerated that even | o SA8IL, IVOSICUCR, No STEt, o plc and they have | of that colossal and deeply shaken em- | tnions between first «-&\;\fl:‘.(\;;'“:), Dron | starts with 19 members. maintatned that aifitude persistently, |pire. Fach sees that friendship will | Dibited by law, as the results of such while the people have been wondering | best gain the coveted territory. Both | UDIORSs ate manifested in & defolovallC| New Havan.—Mrs. 8. Z. Poll and her : ting t 30 il ‘& WG v 4 | _E ldiotle. oTRAEE o con. | committee, it is sald, have the record and waiting to ses if such a comvict, [now know that to work in stealthy | ?'fects aver the matter the more con- | SCTitles, it 1s wald, have the record no Detter defence than that he | concert is the only way to get results. | \inced will he become as to the truth | {08 the sals of Ted Cross Smpe 1 ad done no worse than others who| The announcement of the first din- | of the teachings of the scripture. that| /@ 858 o 08 MESS ool Featiagy unpunished was able to triumph [ ner in St Petersburg of the Russo- | mon was created. and that he did not| 18, “OF, o Breh, Fiyses arn. It is nfluence over justice. |Japanese society, at which the Japan- | €Volve from lower forms or conditions. Morse knew exactly | ese ambassador and the Russian pre- — e ng when he ignored |mier exchanged the most significantly ected ves and [cordial toasts, is a reasonable bass ers. He thought nei- |to rest such a suspicion upon. £ his own family.| These great games of diplomacy be- He was merciless in his greed for|ing plaved by the nations are the out- momey-and the power of The rights | come of a selfish love of power which of ethers were ignored brutally. It|bodes no good to the people. shing him to e EDITORIAL NOTES. Schedule K has come to be known as the black sheep of the tariff, and it | must go. serve mot acter that th sullty are < There is nothing char- ore needed in the Country than the dispelling of the e conviction prits that they| The things which have an anniver- of prison when |Sary on the 29th of February have though President Taft | their innings in 1912 eral hundred pardons, ey ares s case is not one| Schedule K is ready for shearing for the spirit | A0d_congress will be expected to do a emenc: th job at clipping. good from the start The fireless cooker has not been in- vented yet that will turn out buek- wheat cakes for breakfast. WHAT THE CENSUS DISCLOSES. g out sorts, and people Happy thought for today: » wish only It is well for those things you can X & s. | win by working for them. it Those who have no ear for music every might appreciate “Butter at cents a pound,” if played on the keyboard. 1903 ana | g ts dou-| The Jury selected to hear the cases 3 ed the value | 0f the packers must feel as though the B outvot four times, which | €V!dence may be a long while coming means that fro 7,000 it advanced E e One ais. | Kansas has a redeeming quality in Bedo e € @3-l the fact that it has the greatest per Tar excosds o imcrease in | COPItR Of Wealth of any state of the = -SEmaegn out ase In {y,pjon, on, wealth, salary, or personal L o - It represents a solid, wear- | 1t should be remembered that beauty mcy t[—nftn__ushi »’h'vu’r. a continuous advertisement and lers of that unfortunate class of peo- [can get along without rouge or print whom there doesn’t seem to be any Sil mpathy anywhere in the wide, wide| Those who like to be up to date N should practice on the name of the 1 yet, strange to sy, we do not the men are raging about re bearing it as meekly as v are smiling under the tor- | One of two things every American is are herolc-and uncomplain- | expected to do if he lives long enough = —be a juror or a candidate for a vice new king of Siam—Chowfamaha Va- jirarudh! ew of it 15 uggested that | presidency. per toast for all women's ban- - brses would be—*“The.mnen—God bless| The 1910 nickels are said to be . worth $95.30 so quick. The proba. 1 —_— bility is there is not more than a doz- SLAYING WOMEN AND CHILDREN | en of them “Loud applause” in the Congression- Record means that the member just thrilled over his own undelivered utterances. professedly tian nations warriors are merci- ore humane mod- for—the Italians women and chil- the Russians mer- he same thing at Ta- If the new naming her Chinese woman gets to baby Cheerup instead of e % Kiyi, the United States of China wi erly asked What | he moving on right lines. i e been prat- — — atrocitics, say to| From the Baltimore American: They ' complicity of lare now patching human skins with tussia has the Pow- | egg membrane. In due time the great seance upon those | American hen will come near filling for the | every need of human life, t above car- have not the merey. Bible Question Box r is not ex- or pity ol pursuits his definition minions of Editor. 5 ( ":gru in wars L.—If Adam and Eve were the only fon Jishonor and | ones created by the Lord of all the i °F thelr | human race, where did their sons and g daughters find wives and husbands? ows how wen- | (Inquirer) Heirig e Answer.—The mairimonial questl o not grasp thelr ex- [ coting one since the Arst wedding {th anything | down to the latest soclety event. Tl es boldness above question has long perplexed the e minds of philosophers whe reason e five-year-old whe atter | #1008 the line of the evolution doc- after | trine that the ~rags \has graduslly £ the portliness of Santa ided he conld not pass evalved frem lower to higher forms and conditions, onc rewching w more -or- a chimnes flue. gave goed|fect state whs the countiess sgesroll on . of Jevel-headednans, to the utmost hounds of eternity, The 3 answering - of thig ques i so @ be 50| thereus repudiate th ution b€ 30 | theory that there will be no, further room ta doubt the Bible nurrative con- cernipg the creation of the first man, srew enough o o round, AR i s o Peter, Peter, Pumpkin-eater, had a wife who wouldn’t work, Every Monday morning, the washing she would shirk, Till he bought Fels-Naptha and showed her how ’tis done, With cool or lukewarm water—hard rub or boil- ing none, Now she finds it easy and does it very well, And he never needs to shut her, within the pumpkin shell. Just as the capacity of automobiles is measured in horse-power, the cleaning value of Fels-Naptha Soap should be meas- ured in woman-power. Fels-Naptha Soap gets rid of more dirt in thirty minutes than three or four women in half a day. You've often wished for an extra pair of hands on washday. Fels-Naptha Soap is better than several pairs of hands. Because Fels-Naptha Soap actually at- tacks the dirt and dissolves it. No boiling is necessary; no hard rub- bing. You just wet the clothes, soap well with Fels-Naptha, put to soak, and think of something else. At the end of thirty minutes you rub them lightly, rinse out and they’re ready ‘All this in cool or lukewarm water, mind you in Summer or Winter— no boiling, no hot suds. For all uses of Fels-Naptha, follow | for the line. directions on the red and green wraoper, | pur of stamps ——f ) Today ls Free Stamp Day $1 worth of Green Stamps free with -chases 10c or over. with purchases of $5 or over. Great Reductions . In Every Dep't. Prior to Taking Inventory 121-125 MAIN STREET. The Leading Store in Eastern Connecticut devoted exclusively to Men’s, Women's and Children’s Wearing Appars! Lo=°=°=l° Double sald the highest sales ever made by a committee in the state hefore was $175. Ansonia.—Kounts Brothers of New York city were awarded the §75,000 issue of four per cent. refundmg bonds of the citv of Ansonia. Twelve bids were recelved, that of Kountz Brothers Dbeing $983.31. Bridgeport.—The American and British company will work its factory nights and employ 100 additional men for a year to get out contracts of 390,000 ‘for sheils awarded it by the war department. Ivoryten.—Rev. and Mrs, E. H. Burt of Ivoryton have announced the en gagement of their youngest daughter. Katharine Isabel, to Robert H. An irews of New sraduated from Mt 1911 brary of the way the voters of the town treated fusal to prov ters that rons shelves. cloudy Haven. the public to Seymour.—Patrons bave much cause institution in their de more adequate The stacks are so clos it is almost impossible to examine the boois This is especially aays. that for on true Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA = [fig Boston Store THE BUSINESS CENTER OF NORWIGH Prices Reduced Miss Burt was Holyoke college in 1i- BREED THEATER TODAY'S FEATURE PICTURE “At the Stroke of Twelve” Vitally Interesting Drama 2.30—7.15—8.30 P. M. Same Popular Prices TONIGHT AUDITORIUM TONGHT GRAND WALKING MA | GH Betweon BASSETT & BROWN, Distance 2 miles. Handicap for Bessott 1-4 LYCEUM THEATRE WALTER T. MURPHY, Manuger NEW LONDON THURSDAY, DECEMBER 28th THE SUPREME COMEDY EVENT MAY IRWIN In her newest messaze “She Knows Betfer Now’ of good cheer A ‘satirical farce In 3 acts With some new May Irwin Sor Prices 25c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 and § 1.50. Soats now on sale, ars to Norwich frer ALL THIS WEEK THE ROLLICKING ROARING tion, don't BUCCESS Come in flet us demon- = By strate to you what really “Hello Bill’ constitutes _good dentistry —the BEST dentistry. Let A LAUGH IN EVERY us introduce you te what Bright, Br nt you'll acknowledge to be ex- A Knookout, Perfectly Killir omplain ave ro- | quar- together | pat- | th pert work and at moderate charg PAINLESS Extracting and Filling *Illustrated Songs and Feature Moving Pistures Acts Botween the The Woman In the Case Nex! Week: King DentalParlors DR. JACKSON, Manager. music, Dr. Gallup Dr. Sydieman §|- Assoclates, P. . OEER FRANKLIN SQUARE. Hours — 9 a. m. to § p. m. TUNER 122 Prospest ¢, Tel. Bil. Norwieh, Gu | vz IF YOU WANT A FIRST CLASS PIANC SHONING E, T LOUIS H. BRUNELLE 10 Carter Ave. (East Side) &ot_a W Pies, Cake and Bread a8 sewin" A" 81, marivilie. Geo. £, pitcaer | U L0AIS | Horse Blankets Auto Robes Civil Engineer, the public t he has moved to 65| Broadway, Chapman bullding, opposite | the Y. M. C. A e WHAT'S NEW s | THE PALACE CAFE | Step in and see us. FRANK WATSON & coO., 72 Franklin Street. | The L. L. Chapman ( 0. 14 Bath Norwich, Cor Street, Fioral Gifts for ;(mas .| JOSEPH BRADFORD, | Book Binder. ank Books Made and Ruled to Order Potted Plants, Ferns and Cut Mowers, A large, fresh and varied assortment | 103 BROADWAY. to chooss from at ephone 38& . 4.4 u GEDULDIG’S, i Telephone 868, 77 Gedar Strest, | THE CLOTH SHOP AUTOMOBILE STATION, the plica Lo buy the 8 J. Coit, 6 Otls Strest. Automobils ade ults an and Bicyels Pepairing chine work. Jobbise | ‘ | For $20.00 T. DONOVAN V. CONANT. 11 Wraniiin Street White “igars are tha Dest oy (v hemn NEWMARKET HOTEL, [ 715 Boswsll Av WHEN yo want to put your busi- | AP atior than throush the sdvertis: LA AT B R NOTICE Change In Bank Hours On and after August 1st, 1911, the Jewell City Savings Bank of Jewett City, Conn., will be open every business day (except! Satur- days) from 10 o’clock a. m. fo 3 o'clock p. m., closing Saturdays at 12 o’clock. FRANK E. ROBINSON, e ———————————————— Treasurer. Do You Need Printing ? 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 Franklin Street