Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 6, 1912, Page 4

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@arn"ith &ulletin and Counfief. 116 YEARS OLD. FOR UNIFORM LABOR LAWS. Congressman McCall of Massachi- setts has introGuced a resoiution into congress for an amendment of the constitution, which provides that con- gress have the power to regulate the hours of Jabor to industital establish- ments. ‘The reason is to secure uni- formitys The prompting may be per- i ceived in the Massachusetts situation, Subacription priee, 13c & week; 50e & monthn; $0.00 a yeat. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, ComD. s wecond-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Businees Office, d! Bulletin Edito-ial Rooms, « Bulletin Job Office. 13 to which attentlon ls just now freshiy called by the Lawrence strike. That state has always usually led in legls- Jation improving to industrial condi- tlons. ‘“There is justice in the complaint that advanced reguiatlons put her manufacturers at a disadvantage in the Providence 0se who are permit- ted to employ men, women and chil: dren without dJiscrimination and on [he Circulation ol The Bulletin. The Bulletin kas the largest o culation of any paper i Eastern Commecticu from three to four times larger tham that of any In Norwich, It ia delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houwes 1z wich, and read by mimety-three per ceat. of the people. d 1m all of these places It ered the local daily. aecticat nine towss, one humdred and sixty- five postoffice districts, amd afxty rural free dellvery route The Bullctin is wold in every town and om all of the R. F, D. reutes in Eastern Commecticut, CIRCULATION 1901, .Ad12 5920 8,183 SHOULD STUDY ROYAL AMIABIL- ITY, 1005, mverage February 3 The plutocr ot ;ady view of and seem really o had the op- hand cheir d to the fact vy of Great Britain duties, and they to govern- oups indi- ate that the w real value of attentions and world-wide ad- s a as pho- | g . rge V. he spears neh a king ADIAN REJECTION OF PROCITY. of nd Saskatoon is larg the manufacture and the mar flered r crops. of th farm- S sisi he to ship their a ets which are nearer n St. John. Under present st s s rational to " for a sidera reci- E NKETED HORSE LOOKS MFORTABLE snimals kindly, law to do as a re law o horse ot dumb beests ficer who sees blank e exy s0. Ka as opera ave & car. state sev make owners In that horse any a stable and have it of the owner. to pay he the local court en sent to jail be ashamed of heartiessness which »se his horse to the of winter; and no without getting bad observing and intell refuse refore simony or m to ex \or with Colonel m to come away d have no oc- recommended Taft for wor ttain claim aius of a man which doesn’t appear to celebrated “Gallay ndrew Carnegle and John D. tockefeller deny they had @ voice in orming the great trusts, bul they can- not deny they had a hand in them. Since the Ohlo minister who kissed he organist says he repents, it is being asked whai kind of & compli- ment {hal.ls Yor Lhe-yeung 106y, ! in aping | stupendous | remain | ]| Pippin, and as j which | can take it to | any schedule. To a large extent the handicap, in course of time, tends to disappear. Other states fall into line, laws have teken up this matter noth- ing seems to bave come of it. An amendment to the constitution to per- mit federal regulation might be difi- cult to procure, however. Such a sur- render of police power by the tptes would not be made without cretul consideration, even were congress pre- vailed upon to submit the propo ‘We talk about competition being “the life of trade,” very much, while we say little of the injury to tiade of unfair and unrighteous competition. There are kinds of competition which are based upon fraud and injustice, and which by dishonorable practice degrades many industries of lbe land and oppresses the working classes. Such competition ought to be made & crime instead of being counted shrewdness, and the authors be -dealt with as criminals. There are many acts’ which deserve to be classified | eriminal which have wholly escaped the law, APPLES, | “How many apples were eaten by | Adam and Eve? 81 and that Adam 812, total 893. But | Adam ate §142 please his wife and Eve 81242 please Adam, total §9,384. Then again Eve $14240fy herself, and Adam also $14240fy himself, total 8,938,480."— change, But this is not the chestnut that gets our goat. An enterprising Mary- | land nurseryman sent us a sample apple, safely encased in a most up- to-date mailing carton, but some mafl- | service malefactor pinched the fruit in transit and only an empty case reach- jed us. That the apple was a good | one 18 evidenced by the attached postage stamps calling for a weight of elght ounces. We are not missing the food value of the apple so much las a chance to bet it with the first jon R any mooted land News. campaign question.— Verily, brother, you everything but the ar received a Nero app d and speak well The Bulietin e annd sampled it. 1t s large as & Baldwin a New E and tende: | was Y high q ¥ EDITORIAL NOTES. The way the bell rang on Monday indicated that the.booming flood was owing fast. * ] [ The devil has always been fearfully ! talked about, and you notice he values silence high, ave sent o . t nir If you ean to be more han for erdant age en and others for that would not be good for them. | The original Woodrow Wilson man | is being inquired for. They are afraid | there may be too ‘many of them. Happy thought for today: It does | not make so much |difference what slogan was after you get there, n you consider seriously this conspirs can't help e kept out of it. you remir In this direc row Wilson's Watterson ation that a nice old man" cepted as a compliment down Kentuck, n “ola Col. 1. Green. Mrs. Hetty Green's only boy, was proposed to by nine San Francisco girls in a single day. He | resisted temptation Dom Miguel has waived his claims | to the throne of Portugal. He was ‘amp]\- pald, doubtless, and will not suffer in retirement. | LETTERS T0 [HE EDITOR i A Dream. } Afr. Editor On account of eating | many turnips—to save potatoes this | winter— had the nightmare the other night. 1 dreamed that I went out and came to fine patch of turnips, and to | my surprise I saw the figure of a beautiful young woman. She was | ‘ressed llke the Goddess of Liberty ng down among the turnips: and pullsd up a fine specimen (of a | turnip), and around hetwen the tops and the turnip she placed a hand up. m which were the figares “1861! | Among the topk she placed a card b g (he werds, “The causes that |lead up 10 it and down upon the round of the turnip proper she made a | cirele wround It aud abeve placed a paper hard with (hese words on it: | “Lincon two ferms” Then another. ‘Grant iwo terms.” Another, “Hayes.” Now the vegetable hesan’ to taper fast. Then another, “Garfifield"—here she pasted on another, then “Harrisen,” then agein, and in like manner down to apd inoluding “Taft” and this looked all right, Then she cut the top root of another furnip and labelled it “Taft— 24" abd tried to add that on, but it did unet ft, It gpuiled the prapertions of the-whele juk, Fhe threw-that swey | If the state commissions on uniform ! We know that Eve | brother whe offers #o risk doughnuts | of | | was worthy of serving in a red-apple | ampaign. Berlin, Md., must be in| | the true apple-beit. 1 to the farmers | benefit vour NORWICH BULLETIN, TU “I gee you have brought home an armful of new books,” said Mrs. Turn- over, wearily, “and I suppose 1Us use- less to ask you to lift & finger, although the condition ot our front walk, since the smowstorm, is disgraceful.” Tl be glad to lift a fnger If that will bring any sunshine into your life, replied ‘Turnover, as le untied his package of books, “Whose fnger do you want me to 1ift? And what has iifting & finger to do with the condi- tion_oi our frent walk?" “You know very well what I mean, and I wish you wouid take things seri- { ously instead of being so flippant and foolish, Mr. Octopus, mext door, went | out with a shovel immediately after rhe | storm and cleaned his walk, and I'm sure that everybodygpassing this way { blesses him for it." “You have an unfortunate habit, my beloved, of holding up our neighbors as shining examples of what husbands | should be. I have no doubt that Octo- |{pus is a model husband, if domestic | felicity depends on clean walks and yeoman service with a snow shovel | But, belleve me, my dear, Octopus ha: his fallings as well as the rest of the boys. If you were married to him for a week you would be glad to come back here and dwell in this atmosphere of | refinement and indolence. There are |no perfect hushands, so the wife who |is truly wise makes the best of the | situation and tries to convince herself | that her own husband is as good as the average. “On the evening of Dec. 31 your hus- |band, whose glaring imperfections ause you to look upon Joshua Octo- pus with envious eyes, sat by his blaz- ing hearth reading the eighty-ninth volume of the Hawkshaw Hemingway | serfes. It is a marvelously interesting | book. It does seem to me that the au- ! thor of those incomparable romances | improves as time goes by. I feared, at | one time, that the well of his genius must run dry, but my forebodings ev dently were baseless. Each Hemin way story seems better than its im- | mediate predecessor. “The one 1 was reading on the even- THE BULLETIN'S DAILY. STORY. WORTHY MAN ing referred to was superb. In the sray dawn of a winter diy a policeman was found roaming the street stark naked, some flend {u human form hav- ‘ing chlorofermed him and robbed him of his uniform and helmet. Who com- mitted this dastardly crime? Who was so lost to ail the better impulses as to deprive a slumbering cop of his. raiment? The mystery seemed im- penetrable. The keenest minds of the detective bureau were baffled. Then came Hawkshaw Hemingway, the mas- ter sleuth—— “Oh, fiddlesticks! Mr. Pinkfoot lias | just fallen on our walk and when he | Bot up he shook his fist at this house.” “That won't hurt theshouse in the least, my dear. Pinkioot is weicome o shake his fist at it all he cares to. I wish you would oyercome your dis- agreeable habit of interrupting me when 1 have the floor. 1 was telling vou how I passed-the last evening of the old year storing my d with useful knowledge. In good season I re- | | tired to my downy couch and siept the | i dreamless sleep of inmocence. | erhaps you bent over my slumbering | form and brushed from my beautiful | blue veined brow all the wandering curls of gold, and wished that I were| more skilful with a snow shovel. ow, what was Mr. Octopus doing that evening? He held high wassall with a party of blithe spirits, humaen and liquid, watching the old year out and the new year in. I happened to be | gazing from the casement of my bower | when he returned home on New Year's morning, arid saw him trying to unlock the front door with his overshoe. He was wearing a tin pall instead of a hat, and his overcoat was on Wrong side foremost. I saw Mrs. Octopus let him in, and I cannot truthfully say that her face shone with honest pride in her husband. It is possible that she looked over this way and wished she had a husband who passed his evening by the fireside.” | “There's Mr. Pulsifer fiat on his back on our walk!" shrieked Mrs. Turnover. —Chicago New. (and picked wup another | “Roosevelt.” It was bigger than the ‘wthe of the first turnip, from top to root. She looked at it a minute, and {let it drive—bang! saying somethin that sounded like “Oh—(My!)"” It hit | me hard and woke me up. | AGRICULTURIST. Waterford, Feb. 1, 1912, Exploitation of Textile Workers in | Lawrence. | Mr. Editor: Thomas Carlyle said in speaking of the krench Revolution: | “Don't condemn the thunder. Condemn | the lightning that caused the thunder.” This has a direct application to the Lawrence strike situation. The lightning may be found in those | dry census reports on manufactures | which are surely not prepared in the interests of the workers. According to the Twelfth Census, 1300, Manufac- ures, Pert I, Page 20, and Special Jensus Report, 1005, Manufactures, Part 1, Page 2 ind the following Product $1,261, 1890—Produ 04 $1,637,848,484 §2, $1.261,693,604; labor's ent. 22 p Pro $1,637,348,484; labor's per cent. 1005—Produc 147,441,418, labor | share, 19.5 per cent. figures for 1905 are the latest available, Each year the textile worker receives for wages a constantly de- ](]U(-t of his toil, while the gross product is nearly twice as great in the 15 years { under consideration. In 1890 the pe cent. the cost of labor to the in- | crease in value of the product was 30 | cent.; in 1905 it was reduced to per cent. tile industrics must be the politicians {can fabor from kers nd Germany. Fif! ers produce as m ish workers to the fncrease in ontput le the wages his | brothers, or be scabbi; to_speal | “What are the official f 1904 the average weekly wages = on spinners in this country was $4.12 tor a 5 hour week. In Germany cot American dariven and workers ar the cheapest he output Percentage of wages to | total product in 1890 1905 Iron and steel .. 24.9 Other metals . 20.4 | Leather 20.1 | Paper . 26.5 | Tobacco . 21 | Textile .. 22 | The industrial lords have sown the they will reap the whirlwind. > masters of the bread are respon: Jor the ing--the thunder is lo in control of the {Lawrence situation have forgotte | result of the | strike and ot { which were 1 | creases in the ist v | election. If the workers can st gether and starve together, the time will come when they will voie togetk |and upon the po fleld | uses tremq ad n behalf the workers EDWARD PHRKIN Danielgon, Conn., Feb. 5 | (| Bible Question Box ‘ H Your Dible questions will be an- '| swered in these columns or by mall || 1 semt to our Bible Question Box Editer, Q~—Has woman a soul? We read that man “became a living soul,” but nothing is about the woman hav- ing a soul! Hence my question, (L. B.) Answer.—As the Scriptures are silent on this subject, and as much as the gentler and fairer sex Is to be admired, to be in harmony with the Bible, and to answer the question therefrom (however painful it mey be to state the jawful truth that women do not have souls! But what is still more painful | to relate, according to the Bible, man | does not'possess a soul, either! 'Some 004, weli-meaning people who have ead their Bibles, but not with careful nought, have been rather c the use of langt Scpiptural No ane v reathing creature is 1 the quotation above it is { ture—the soul. ‘oman, tier ! as much a soul as man. OBITUARY. Mrs. Mary C. Leavitt. Boston, Feb. 5. itt, for forty years an honorary pres dent of the World's Woman's Chris- tian Pemperance union and a -traveler 1 labelled | in many lands in behalf of temper- creasing percentage of the total pro- | ading in- | fore, is{ NE { { b ~Mrs. Mary C. Leav- |ance, dled in this city tod: Mrs. Leavitt was born in Hopkinton, N. H., in 1830, and had traveled 200,000 miles nd with the aid of interpreters spoke to people in 51 languages. i Monsignor Richard Laler Burtsell. Kingston, N. Y. Feb. 5.—Monsig- nor Richard Lalor Burtsell, a noted | Catholic priest and pastor of St.| Mary's church in Rondout, died ves-| terday of pneumonia at the Bened tine sanitarium here. Mgr. Burtsell | was 2 member of the suite which re- | cently accompanied Cardinal Farley | to Rome when the latter was invest- | ed with the robes of his new office. COTTON IN EARS | CAUSE OF DEATH Miss Elsie Little Did Not Hear Train and Was Killed. hurst, N. C, Feb. 5.—The body DAY, FORERUNNERS OF SPRING ‘In the Wash Goods Dep't. Although the grip of Winter is still strong we have ventured to put forth some of the new Spri gy fabrics which are all the more attractive as the ldnging for the warmer weather grows. Crepe Plisse’ A light weight cotton material with soft, creepey finish which will be used extensively for house dresses and for the pretty dresses for afternoon and general wear. riety of plain and fancy stripes, dots and figures It is shown in a great va- —about fifty different patterns—and in solid colors and white. no ironing as it will not show cre 25 inches wide and requires ases. Bright, new merchandise for the season 1912. For sale in the Wash Goods Department. PO A YARD 15¢ English Bordered Voiles ors. JUST RECEIVED—Beautiful Cotton Voiles of English manufacture with borders of same col- 45 inches wide. ard patterns. These come A PATTERN $3.75 in five BREED THEATER Monday Tuesday DOUBLE FEATURE The Return of Cardinal Farley TODAY'S GREAT PIONEER STORY A THLE OF THE WILDERNESS. Same Hours - Same Prices JAMES CLANCY POLI'S THEATER, ™% JU/ FOR THREE DAYS, commencing February 5th JEWELL Empress of Mysticism The Most Astonishing Performance ever presented to the public. Greatest woman of the age. Also Two Other Acts and Pictures Special Notice—No increase in prices for this attraction TODAY AU DIT O R I UM —T0ODAY Today and Tomorrow Only EXCELLENT MOTION PICTURES OF THE RETURN AND RECEPTION GIVEN CARDINAL FARLEY AT NEW YORK. THREE FINE VAUDEVILLE NUMBERS. Butter Butter @ Cre Fancy amery | | Elsie Little of the West Side club, New York, who was as she stepped in front of a| ccomotive at the station while suf- fering ffom an attack of temporary was taken to New York y Miss Little bad been examin ing her baggzge on the station plat-| ferm and suddenly started across the | track in front of a train that was| | backing in, Her companions shouted A warnin, ut too late, for she was strug instantly killed. ut she withdrew from tournament early in the week on account of a cold which af- fected her hearing. Last night she had | ‘ed cotton in her ears, and she is ved to have been confused both as P 3 to sovnd and direction when she start- | from Maysville, where annivi on the first | us direct from the choicest of the western creameries, and is scored ec across the track ‘F}f'.m officia 'nr nday in June. vy and selected by experts. We would suggest that you take advantage T | the remainder o § £ ke . 3 | MODERN WOODMEN TO 509 butley pool RE b BT Sy of this sh:rfp ded. ne, asd\:: & ;;amwebt:n :he market will n\;ivvanu FIGHT THE NEW RATES | (200,000 pounds 10| earhor 1n the Oukvills schoal ortyes | [ll in the next few days, and this decline is but a temporary one. We re- a4 = { Theodore H. Kirk ¢ innatl T har desk Biin other SriosntaR: oo sath serve the right to limit this sale to consumefs alone, and will not allow | Big Mass Mesting to Be Held at|™ Weas Said: to ke around (18 cents l"’l:‘x'lmomfimlds l’:lerx;‘e cd[&,uxipl;mtv{ either wholesale or retail dealers to take advantage of this price. Minneapolis on February 22 Will Missing got there, and none childven | \iinneapolis, Minn, Feb 3 i i he Tea scds of circulars lave been New Britain.— T} i g y proximat w Britain. police received & | by the Modern W s e 4 ) 3 el el Great Go. J against the adoptio Mo n Woodme z 1 | tee assembly will be held in St. Paul the evening of February 16 to make plans for the convention. DIES OF GLANDERS Contracted Disease by Horse Sneezing in His Face. New Haven, Feb, Ibert Naegel, | |a hostler, died yesterday from glan- | | ders after a nine weeks' lllness. Nae- | gel is believed to have contracted the from a horse suffering witi at Gu eree Favors Divorce for Sinclair York, Marsden, the second referee appo ed to take the testimony for divorce brought by Upt against his wife, Meta, file in the supreme court today, favoring | In his application for di New the decree, voree Sinclair dent Harry Sixteen Lexington, Captain aterbur ¥. Bar to th oner Walter D. criminally responsible for the death of Michael Iannuccl in tHis city evening. Brief Statie News Branford.—While cellar near the Ella Wheeler_ Wilcox | pri cottage, at Short Beach, workmien dug | unfinished memorial to President ( up the skeleton of an Indian, In the |fleld at Long Branch, where he died grave were numerous Indian relic londers, the animal having sueezed| Middletown, Naegel was born in Ger- | We ng § couniry | gift talk Englisa 1) hrie, denjed | tion for a writ of habeas corpus. Bur- ell is now In fail her teen for more than a yea Kemp, B bscript where he hes ‘ son for . s, t- in the suit n Sinclair his report Feb, Marshal leriden grange Windsor Lock hooks and the named he ©0-Tespon- mp poet.” Cents for Tobaeco. Che Ky., Feb. Barnes Exonerated. Hartford Coun,, Feb. 5.—Capt. | Struction of t nes of New Haven, ac- | ing has been aw e finding of Deputy Cor- |of contract & Makepeace, was not for the price of Friday ‘ granite found t Was] ington, day the passage ed by i excavating for a The elegation the Dill so .—President Shanklin of :iad for \as annou a, | 3ist anni om a Penn had been er of exp in B d speak an tong He 1 ka week it his na- old and tive was and Bequests of Newton Man. { Mass, ¥eb. 5 y | are contained in the | T. Kimball of New i probete today. The princi- | beneflciaries are the Americar | Board of Commissioners fo i Missions, the Am an Sunday School | union of Philadelphia, and the Moody school at Northfield, $10,000 each; the Bible institute of Chicago and | ca Normal and Industrial in- stitute of Utica, Miss., $5,000 each. “oreign Roosevelt Second Choice. Columbus, 0., Feb. 5.—That the Pro- gressive Republican league will throw its support to Theodore Roosevelt, should Robert M. LaFollette withdraw, was the announcement in a statement received today by John D. Fackler, chailrman of the league. l di Oklahoma City, Okla., Feb, 5—Hugh fact), it 18 necessary to set forth the | Embezzling Banker Must Face Music | pheathy ILOTS OF SOFT, FLUFFY, HAIR AND NEVER ANY DANDRUEE. You can d your hair with a When you | that glistens with beauty iant with e softness and is fluffy and lustrous, you ean at once conclude or woman is using Danderine, e nothing else accomplishes so much for the halr. Just one application of Knowlton's Danderine will double the beauty of and lots of it—no dandruff—no_itch- your hair, besides it immediately ie- stroys and dissolves every particle of ou cannot have nice, heavy, andruft; hai lite; oul little Danderine see a head of heavy hai and Is rad- | le faded, do has an incompa: that this man Dbecause desire soft, yeu must If eventua cent bof if you have dandruff. will Eighty Raymond laid a total | Brothers compan; the senate, which would ap; e $10,000 for the completion of an y t_hesitate, but ge| bottle of Knowlton’s Danderine at drug store or toilet counter; little as directed and ten minutes after you will say this was the best invest- t you ever madg. We sincerely bzlieve, regardless of everything else advertised that if you lustrous, ell's applica- [ man as the result of his recent quest of the | Ib. Bris “ actual C visit North Haven grange May 21 and | o8 s for support pullets W o anuary Wallingford.—The local grange w Oct. . acc The ac members of d burglars in t Grace and Hellbe icipal buil d to Mas will be of royal white limestone on ion. $10,000 Memorial to Garfield. Feb. 5.—A delegati representing the Garfield Memorial as- sociation of Long Branch, N. before the house library committee to- s of a bill, already pa ountants on unts of the Wind- Locks Savings bank have received | passbooks out of 1,630 the St. man’s Itallan club have al- f e celebration | the city board Noreross urged Guaranteed to be the finest BUTTER Procurable Below There has been a decided change in the Butter situation and the sharp rise in temperature in the best creamery districts of the west has caused dairy products to take a sharp decline in price, but let us' im- press upon you this is only temporary, as the actual demand for Butter far exceeds the supply; this is actually the real cause of the@igh price of Butter. This Butter which we are selling below actual cost comes to "Phone 29-4 135 Main Street Free Delivery g< NOTICE ! OUR OPENING OFFER For 30 Days we will sell our Regular $3.00 Glasses for $1 -00 in Sale, but made simply to ad- ng a on This offer is no Barga ked that the house} yertise r locating here i rwich, 4 it i Shar ihd Douss | vertise: oul locating here in \ul\‘\ ich, and is strictly legit veiling imate. We will do exactly as we say. versary LUSTROUS ut ected al y or t ta 2 dry, a oply Dbeautiful ing scalp and no more falling hair— | Knowlton's Danderine. | A 35- not now? truly ama e you. cent ha | All Examinations made by a Registered Specialist with all the modern optical instruments, and absolutely without charge. We guarantee all our glasses. Same proportionate reduction on all higher priced glasses. We do repairing and fill prescriptions. Special attention gi to Children’s Eyes Remember, no charge will be made for Examination or osen | Consultation. 1 nd ny a Gonnecticut Optical Company, Eye-sight Specialists, 140 Main Street, NO HIGH PRICES Ey the use of the King Safe Sys- Ground Floor, Norwich, Conn. air A. Burrell, the banker charged with | embezaling $679,000 from & ‘bank at { Prownstown, Ind, and who has re- sisted requisition for more than a year | must return to face the charge. Judge otterall toGay in the federal cou i No Excuse Now for Greasy Doughnuts in Greenville, 5. C, iend as follows: ears, after preparing doughnuts 5 man be ing soul t he was el & SOU Tha the energizing pr imparted to t pody by the Cre: wds not the soul, amy more t n the | hody alone is the soul. It was the un- {1on of the two, tlie life and the body, | | which produced the Intelligent crea- | with the utmost care, I wae disap- | | pointed to mee them come out greasy unwhelesome lpoking. Howe ang 18 first LW ige of Cottolene for fry- 5 deiightied, @ they were and_delicious. doughnuts, pastry, 1 biscuits, I prefer Coito- lene to any other shortening on the mar- ket. We even carry a pail of it on our 2niusl camping trips throusl the mous- ns.” Cottolenewthe perfect shortening—is made from vegetable-oil; it contains no hog jfat—no indigestion, | Need Printing ? 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 6466 Franklin Street ~gz N em of Painlass Dentistry your teéth i b > can be extracted, filled, crowned, | & bridged or cleaned without a particle of pain, no matter how nervous or sen- sitive You may, be. Hundreds of testi- raonials from pleased patients, Painless Extraction free when teeth are ordered | All Work Guaranteed. .M. to 8 p. m. Sundays Telephone King Dental Parlors DR. JACKSON, Manager, Lady Assistant, THDNAS JEFERSON KNG 0. 0.5, Originator of the King Safe System of Painless Dentistry. 2&?‘ Main Street, Norwich. % ou want To put your busie WHEN you want o Hut your busi- neniglfgr: tne public, there i3 Mo me- néss before the public. there fs no - @iim better thap :brough the advertige divi botier than iarough the advertis Ing columns of The Bulletts -& columns of The Bulletin

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