Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 25, 1912, Page 4

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NORWAICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1912 orwich ulletin nud Goufied. 116 YEARS OLD, =% bscription price, 13e & weck; G0e a + $6.00 a year. " mon Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn, as seco el matter, Telophome Calis: Bulletin Bus}i tfice, Bulletin Baitoriel Hooma: 26-. Building. T 10. % — Norwich, Monday, March 25, 1912. HIS BROKEN PLEDGE. the 4th of March next I shall served three and a half years, nd this three and a half years con- titute first term. The wise cus- om which limits the president to two °rms regards the substance and not he form, AND UNDER NO CiR- CUMSTANCES WILL | BE A CAN- DIDATE FOR OR ACCEPT ANOTH- ER NOMINATION.—Theodore Roose- elt, November 8, 1904. On ave | HAVE NOT CHANGED AND SHALL NOT CHANGE THAT DE- CISION THUS ANNOUNCED,—Theo- dore Roosevelt, December 11, 1807, | WILL ACCEPT THE NOMINA- TION FOR PRESIDENT IF IT IS TENDERED TO ME. Theodore elt, February 191 THE NEW ROOSEVELT. bef othe peopie haye not Roosevelt of ore them days, but ow Roosevelt with a new song condemn- ng every political eystem which he hen r gnized and was benefited by, In his interpretation resses he is of President unfair and in rance against him he condemns aft's a f. At Portland, Saturday, he aft's position is perfectly s that we in this coun- special class of persons wiser han the people. who are above the eople. who cannet be reached by the ople, but who govern them and to govern them. osevell was elected pre r the same political condi- e been the same sort Taft is, and he to make his friend essor and doubtless would pri- iefend it today as his right and rivilege as the chlef executive and e leader of his part When Abrabam Lincoin satd: ‘““This s & government of the people, by the eople, for the people,” he believed ©at was the kind of a govermment he was the head of, operated by the po- itical machinery the people had set P. He was aware of the political game when he said: “You can fool some of the people part of the time, and some of them all of the time; but ou cannot foel all of the people all time. Lincoln was alive today, Ancolr d doubtless apply this the Colonel’s political antics and wot L2 Ir. Rooseve §" shows t's book on “American at he thought of gov- ernment and the peeple when he wrote These are his recorded sentiments and how they differ from his utter- ances now “Governmental power should he mcentrated in the hands of very few en who wonld be 80 conspicuous that itizen help knowing all them, and the election should come too frequently “In our cities the misgovernment is e not to the misdeeds of the rich, t to the standard of honesty nd morality among our citizens gen- ally, 1d Sboat low ‘olonel Roosevelt knows that the tigens of each state regulate the ranchise and the election laws and sldent or congress cannot He knows the government »ndemning is a people's govern- and he knows if he was presi- he would have no authority to change the conditons which he is crit- ieising b nows today that Will- tam Howard Taf| honorable in every respect as he was when he w president of the United States, or any of his predecessors, and he knows a false pretense he s trying to win the support of a party under un- fafr conditions and largely through a reversal of all the polit precepts which previously endorsed THE ASSAULT UPON TAFT. surpr to the American at Senator Dixon, the m Roosevelt's campaign, she y chan Aft With being a ber of men and that Roosevelt should n silence abide such shameful and ecent campaigning on the part of Tt is apparent enough that Colonel tooseve s become convinced that e has not had a genuine call from the may safely sit on Saga ore H and accept the nomination f it is tendered to him. He is now tw \is hat on his head instead f in ing. and is bound to wrest from Taft is re is a e for hims POSS 4 g a conventional con- tion w will call for a ompro- s the acceptance of a candi- 1as not been in the field. original pretence is abandoned and he likes to increase the rent in s party and the insurgent & muitipl My Roosevelt has shown the peopls that he is not a sec nd Washinglon or lLincoln, but a man whe will put his party or his ountry to anv hazard to gratify his ersonal ambiiions. The Bulletin used to admire him as | s one man who helieved in a square eal for every man; and its disgust a magined when #t sees nim illing to elavat imself by any kind f a political theory it is possible for him to conjure up, or any kind of a pelitical deal he imagines he can win with. The Roos: of 1912 is not the Roosevelt of 1¢94. He I8 posing now as the peovle's friend while Perkins, Munsey & Co. are quietly lending them support, as are all the enemies of blican policies. moving picture promoter wil 1 find excellent material in the s Va, massacre, but It is sin- ped that such pictures will be | suppressed in whatever The mental picture velt appear. circumstance, , forth the situation there all too ividly, Suchk weather ax this ought to oughen the Yale rowing squad for heir annual® pull with Harvard on the Thames THE PRIMARY METHOD OF VOT- ING. The vote in North Dakota and the result of the presidential primaries there calls out the fact that they are not in theory what they prove to bein practice. This is what the Philadelphia Rec- ord has to say about the primary elections in that state: “We have here in Pennsylvania a primary election law with soap-box characterigtics. It has been in opera- tion long enough to have been thor- oughly tested, and its weaknesses stand forth conspicuously, Its lax provisions as to the eligibility of va ers have enabled the electors of one party to steal the nominations of an- other party at several successive elec- tions; and the fact has been demon- strated that when one party is numer- ically several times stronger than its rivals, its candidates, by clever ma- nipulation and division of their forces, can crowd out all the voters of all rival parties and appropriate all the nominations.” This is the primary Roosevelt is shouting for, and President Taft is opposed to. It is the kind which gave LaFollette a triumph over him in North Dakota, and it is the sort of primaries that are to be tried in one or two other states. Michigan wisely turned down the resolution which would have made them a law in that state, POLITICAL NAVAL EXTRAVA- GANCE. The late Congressman Lilley was not the first man to assail the main- tenance of navy yvards along the coast at points where they were not needed, for he found plenty of reports and data to warrant him in his assault, and he was vigorously sincere in his purpose. He was overcome because the enemy was stronger, although he was right. Maurice Low, who has been giv ing this matter his attention, has this to say in the current number of Harp- er's Weekly, “The three yards on the eastern At- lantic coast are at New York, Boston and Portsmouth, and these yards Mr. Meyer would abandon and in their place create a great modern estab- lishment on Narragansett bay, with anchorage grounds sufficient for the entire fleet and dry docks enough for six or eight of the largest battleships afloat to be repaired simultaneously, and with shops equipped 'with the latést machinery, so that the United States would have a plant second to none in the world. The consolidation would not only result in great econ- omy, but would Increase efficiency as operations in one yard could be ca ried on better than in three, and the establishment could be kept in opera- tion all the vear round. Of the yards that Mr. Meyer would abandon, Ports- mouth has no value strategically and has not much greater value as a man- ufacturing establishment; New York and Boston have also lost their mili- tary importance, and while their plants have been kept up to date, they are cramped for room and have not suffi- cient waterfront for ships to find a safe anchorege. It is a peculiar thing, as Mr, Meyer discovered after looking into the subject, that in Europe the large naval stations are not in great commercial centers, such as New Yor and Boston but at less important ports where there is less danger of inter- ference by merchant ships with ve sels of war. With the opening of the Panama canal, the! sirategical center will shift, and Guatanamo, which Cuba ceded to the United States as a naval base, will become one of the mest im- portant American naval stations be- cause of its proximity to the canal Tt does the friends of the late Gov ernor L good to read these com- ments, which so completely support his contention vernor Lilley was true to himself and his constituents. THE SPRING CLEANING. The housecl ally ning is on which precedes the regular spring yard cleaning and bonfires, It is a pity ¢ citizen does not realize the dan- of neglect seems impossi- to make izen or public official perilous and often expensive, Mayor O'Connell of Meriden has called the attention of the citizens to the advantages the community such a cleaning up and has asked the police of ihe city to e to the refuse lying about ards of the city n and later cause si may exercise his 1th pelling the untidy to only for their own good, but protection their neighbors. Many a slovenly family fall victims to their uncleanly habits and the cost of a run of fever usually twenty times what the cost of the annual d clean-up would T'he rake and the broom and the garbage can and the bonfire ought to enable the people to make all the backyards clean and the air we breathe less a menace to health, usu- the aver see that ge c it is have an the to ferment ack- in that he com- up, not for the in the kness, o clea of is EDITORIAL NOTES. will streets it the snow onl will last, the oil- of the be oby ated It are dicted 0 ore is pre brid men likely be vear. as F ificed to science this Voliva much of an img weak and simple. There's better nothing the mill In wage to employe increase Aw a sign of spring the garbage in the ashes at the new munieipal wharf is effectively polluting the air. It is up to Dr, Wiley's' successor to assure the people that the pure food department is what it used to he. An insurgent has the face to ridicule a republican who stands true; but that only shows how debased he is becoming. Happy thought for today men never try to beast about selves, and those who know not wonder. Some them- them do The men who ped out the Hills- ville court will expect leniency, al- though there is not one mitigating The last census shows less illit o8 in the vountry than ever before; but the standard « ng has not been | notl¢eably advanc Roosevelt and his campaigners are saying 80 many things that are not so, { came out to hear Colone! Bryan, and ‘ Woman in Life and in the Kitchen } e ABOUT PICTURES. Pictures are often neglected and al- lowed to get dull and faded from want | of a little attention. If they be en gravings or water colors, as soon as any deposit of dust is seen to have worked itself through the frame, the picture should be carefully taken out and cleaned by crumbling a. piece of soft bread and rubbing it over the sur- face of the picture. This will remove all dust and any other mark that has been made on the print. Oil paintings should be carefully sponged with cold water and polished with a soft silk cloth. Valuable oils should be protected with glass. This has all the good ef- fect of varnish without any of its dis- advantages. When choosing pictures, if you have no artistic sense, have some artistic friend or an artist go with you to buy. Also follow this rule when hanging the pictures. It will pay in the end, for pictures carelessly arranged will mar the beauty of an otherwise handsomely furnished room. KID PETTICOATS. A new petticoat has been invented for motor wear which is very practical and warm and takes up little room. This is of smooth kid neatly fitting over the hips and carried out in white or any pale shade. By way of trim- ming it has buttonholed and scalloped edges, or, for those who prefer it, a deep hem of satin to match. PAPER HINTS. To straighten out paper that has been rolled, open it with the inner curve away from you and run it over the sharp—not the curved or beveled— edge of a table, It is flat immediately. The sharp edge is good, too, for tear- ing paper; better than a paper cutter, in fact. Draw the paper to be cut stralght and qujckly across the edge and there will be a clean tear, produced equally well in tissue or wrapping pa- per. 1t is not generally known that bread crumbs are the finest of cleansers for white paper. Rub an old crust of stale bread over the paper and every sort of stain, fingermarks, dust, water stains, will disappear like magic. It is safer to use on fine books dnd pictures than - softest of rubbers. Blow—do not he crumbs off afterward. DICTATES OF FASHION. Jet, crystal and porcelain buttons are everywhere. Draped effects are rapidly forging to the front in millinery Wide, ecclesiastical filet lace appears on the newest lingerie gowns. Girdles and sashes are often in bright colors on black and white gowns. The newest jackets have long sleeves with slightly elongated armholes. Collars of plain cloth, bengaline, lace, satin or braid trimmed are much in evidence. Bengalines, both in plain colors and in two-tone effects, are being made up into coats. Some of tne chiffon tunics have an upper tunit; ending in a narrow length, which is knotted in some queer way. The kimono sleeve appears to have run its fashionable course insofar as the American woman 1is concerned An attractive toque has a soft, drap- ed crown of filet lace. The brim is of ermine and a small black aigrette trims the left side. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. One of the most beneflcial remedies for a poor s bathing the face for five or ten minutes in hot water, fol- lowed by a plunge into cold water. TUse a pure soap, rinse the hands w and dry them thoroughly, and it will greatly lessen the inclination to chap. A v healing lotion which can be ed hefore retiring and during the ¥, if desired, is made of glycerine, ounce, lime water, one-half ounce. A splinter which has been in the flesh can be extracted by the aid of steam. Secure a2 wide mouthed bottle and fill it with hot water; place the injured part over the mouth of the bot- tle and press lightly. This will draw down the flesh, and in a minute or so the steam will remove the splinter. he cold red nose can quickly be restored to its original beauty by gen- tle massage. But be sure that you rub down from the bridge of the nos its tip. Moisten vour fingers with cream before maesaging,and afte wipe off any grease that has not been absorbed; then lightly powder the nose. PILLOWS. Pillows and bolsters that have been a time in use often have an un- pleasant odor, especially if slips have not been used between the tick and the ases. When it Is obvious that necessary the practical housewife will find the remaking of the pillows a comparatively easy task A good quality of linen tick should be bought made to the required size then rubbed thoroughly all over the inside with beeswax, which prevents the feathers coming {hrough. Make an opening at one end of the old pillow, nd shake it gently tll all the feathers surely settled ifi their new home. inclination and It is intimated that the in ows down to get white. things black the Congress of Mothers, soon to meet in St. Louis, would like nothing better than to spank the high cost of living. J. Pierpont Morgan's search in Eu rope for famous ruins seems to be going o long way out of his course, with Wall street o near at hand. Young Theodore Roosevelt finds | Wall street looks good to him; so he | is going to be a broker; and he will see that the other fellow goes broke. The number of delegates who sup- port the candidate will determine who is to be the coming man. This hot- | air campalgn 1s only the hypnotizing ! process. e | Do not count too much on the crowds that come out to meet Roose- velt—just think- of the millions which , he did not get there. | i i If carefully done there is little danger of the feathers flying about in the house. DICTATES OF FASH!ON. ightdresses and chemises have nar- row Dblack velvet ribbon drawn through the hand embroidered eyelets around the top. Black velvet rfbbon, with interwov- en designs in brilliants, forms the new headdress. This band is worn tight around the head. For mourning some attractive and appropriate stoles and muffs are of crepe, shirred in bandlike folds. A crepe covered cord shows the stripes| in both stole and muff. Sits clese tn front. 18c.2for28c. Cluett, Peabody & 2"! lg m' = Bible Question Box ir Bible questions will be an- swered in these columns or by mall it semt to our Bible Question Box iditor, Sometimes the rolling or turnup of the brim of the hats reveals a dainty bit of lace, used as a facing, and very often this lace extends over the brim and is fastened to the top of the hat. Q.—The Scriptures state that Ged cre: i A new handie Tor an umbrella is| freaoy the earth net in vain, fashioned like the lower end of a la-| o'Med it to be inhabited. (Is dy’s riding crop, except that the leath- | 18.) And, also, that the earth abi er part, which is made of lizard skin, | forever. (Ecclesiastes i:4.) This ssems A oon sufficiently long to Nang(to imply that the earth will be pop- ulated forever. .If thi= be true, where will they get their supplies from, such |25 coal, minerals, timoer, etc., when | the present sources are eoxhausted? (E. M) Answer.—The earth is composed of | different elements. These elements, while they may change their forms and disappear from mortal vision, al- A collector of Japanese prints and|w remain the same elements, No embroideries who found that she had|instance has ever been known where amassed several beautiful specimens|one element changed into another. But of the art of the land ed an expert| there is constant change taking place Bow she should furnish a room in|throughout- all the realms of nature. which they were to play o prominent| Yet, nothing is gained and nothing is A Deautiful jeweled medallion is of| cyrstal embedded with diamonds in| various designs. The crystal takes the place of the filigree work. The chain from which this is suspended is of di- | amonds showing no metal setting. JAPANESE EFFECT. part. lost. Water changes from a solid (ic “The room is practically furnished|into vapor (steam) and then into ite alread:; said the authori Interro- | elementsry gases—H20. Then the op- gated. “In fact, the fewer pieces of|eration is reversed. The gases change furniture you have in it the better you| will be pleased with the result. “Have black walls. What would be| more beautiful as a background for the glorious splashes of blue -water, to vaper, the vapor to liquids, and the hiquids to solids. 'We may reason from this that wnen'the coal, miner- als, timber, etc, have all been used in their present form, and having been the radiant sunsets and the prints|transformed into some other state, crowded with figures in monotona| they will be utilized in tnat state or which you have here? condition, ,And this process could Screens you must have in black|go on throughout eternity without ex- wood frames, for some of ur em- hausting in tue sligntest degree the broideries will make exquisite panels, original elements. The process of and other pieces can be let into the wall so that you may sit near them and admire the perfection of design and eoloring you have secured. “I would have a black carpet, so that no alien color scheme may creep into your room, and, besides that, you| will yourself radiate color, for yow will| ave some of the gilks you have brought home made into gowns and i them always in this partic- apartment. Any other type ot toilet would look banal in it. “Let there be unobtrusive chairs, di- and when tea is served use china you have among change is axways in a circle, and all that mankind will need to do will be 10 follow the circle &round to its inftial point, and then repeat the process throughout alt the years of eternity. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Mr. Miller Regrets. Mr. Editor: Don’t blame the old man of 80 if he is inclined to be naughty, also a trifle saucy! when every day you score, 20 times or more, the peo- ple’s favorite—Theodore. But your courtesy exsanguous to the 0ld man so continguous relieves some- what the sore located near his pom- padour, Therefore this effulgence: “Among the recalls Mr. Roosevelt hopes to have omitted is the action of the people when General Grant ran for a third term."—Bulletin, March 12, 191 Now, dear Bulletin, the above recails to the mind of the old man an extra | reason for prayers for the final re- demption of some of the slow going and slow thinking editors of Connecti- cut, who clalm George Washington as authority for thelr arguments against third terms. Now George, who Wwas GLAZED NUTS. A dainty for the winter table that may be prepared at home with little cost is glazed nuts. Varlous kinds of nuts may be glazed excepting peanuts, which are not especially good for that treatment, but mone is better than hickory nuts and butternuts, Have the meats picked from the shell 3o0il . granulated sugar with enough water to thoroughly dissolve i, stirring it as little as possible. When it spins a thread stir in the nuts and let them cook a very little, for if left . too long on the stove the oils will be| #WAYS it in this old government of drawn from the nuts. Pour out on plat- | 0UrS, Was opposed to Jefferson on that ters, spreading them thinly, and when | YerY question. He said in 1788: “I can cold they will be found fo separate|See No propriety in precluding our- o | selves from the services of any man prepared this w a who in some great emergency shall be S R i, deemed universally iost capable ot ut one-half cup of sugar is suffi-|5erVing thie whole people.” And, deat { Wit Head e Bulletin, George had an excellent repu- jJeat v e el it F Duts | ration for seeing to it that the coun- | try got full value in all public matters, SUBGESTIONS EOR And right here, if it were possible to THE HOUSEWIFE.|step up to a mouthpiece and whisper |into the shell-llke ear of a peace at the other end of a wire and remark: Give me 160 H! this could be summa- rily disposed of, if George cared to take sides In the little tiit between William and Theodore. But the earth has rotated successfully a good many years without any intercurrence with George, consequently the people will have to compete with the political wireworkers of Washington D-esunt C-aetera, and the belligerent news- papermen J. W. MILLER. Jewett City, Conn, [Brother Miller's regrets seem hu- morous to The Bulletin, Colonel Roosevelt bad a right to change his mind, but that is not a good reason why The Bulletin should change its and join the insurgents. The Knives not in daily use should be well polished and buried in a box of sawdust until required for use. To cure sgueaking boots stand the| Loots in sufficient linseed oil to just| cover the soles. Leave them soaking| for 24 hours. If not successful on the| first treatment give another, which will remove all sound ik Staina. fromn., byown| paste of chloride ornmn‘; To remove boots make a and water. Cover the stains with this and leave it for a couple of hour Then wash off with cold water polish with brown boot cream. and To clean white marble mix togeti two ounces of common washing soda, mind one ounce of powdered pumice and| Bulletin is standing for President Taft one ounce of powdered chalk. Malke | for a second term—just as it stood for into a paste with cold water and rub | President Roosevelt for a second term. well into the marble. The stains will; There is something very strange then disappear |about the suddenness with which Mr. | Roosevelt changed his mind, for as late French chalk is excellent for clean-|2s Jan. 12, 1912, he was not a candi- ng embroidery that is wo fragile to be| date. and did not expect to be, and his vashed with soap and water. The chall | brother-in-law Cowles and his son-in- should be made quite hot and sprink-, law Longworth, Stimson and Meyer of led thickly over the embroidery, which| Taft's cabinet and Senator Lodge be- is then rolled carefully up so that the|!ng confirmed in the belief he did not chalk is inside. leave it in a dark| intend to run, committed themselves Jlace for a week or ten days, shake it| for President Taft, and the two rela- out well and the embroidery will be|tives and Senator Todge were com- quite fresh again. If the embroldery pelled to announte they should remain is wanted in & hurry, rub the hot chalk Neutral—a most embarrassing position through it. This process should be re- | for them, as they would have espoused peated several times, and it some dirt his cause. This is history, Brother gtill remains, use a little more chalk | Miller. sk and leave it over night if possible, | George Washington never favored a e | third term, and never uttered a word NEEDLEWORK NOTES. { which can be fairly interpreted to | show that he would favor a third term. In making a pincushion if a plece of | There is no crisis or emergency which pasteboard is inserted half way it not | ¢alls for extraordinary action on the nly prevents needles from being lost| Part of the voters of the country. Col in the cushion, but keeps it a better|onel Roosevelt has created two new &l ne. issues—the recall of the judges and the presidentjal primaries—neither of ¢| which were ever a part of a republican platform, and instead of waiting to be called he is to canvass the country in his own interest. The Bulletin and the voters recog nize a pretext when they see it, an A baby shoulder blanket is. made a re of silk warp flannel or cash- me This square is scalloped anc worked in buttonhole stitch with either pink, blue or white floss, while a dain- | ty spray of flowers is embroidered in on corner. The flower spray may taek the form of a wreath and inclose ba- by's initials. A shoulder blanket of | = this sort Is always an aceeptable gift. | are governing themselves accordingly. :r;n~ 4] Tweeds and other soft, Joose woven wools in the fawn, light khaki or leaf Lrowns and biscuit tones are popular coatings and are particularly pretty with relieving whites, though, of course they give better service without it Good looking diagonal woolens loosely woven, slightly rough, very soft and light, and In white and sand color, are used successfully for several tailored coats fastening with hig buttons of white pearl and lined with plain and lor satin. In these the lines of white ave so narrow and so mixed with the darker tone that the material will not easgily look soiled. i ' Children Ory | FOR FLETCHER'S We have opened our Gentlemen’s ‘GRILL-ROOM WAUREGAN HOUSE The Parker-Davenport Co, il Bl CASTORIA | Prepristory. Wiliilam Jennings Bryan passed his |=————————— day anniversary without being | I . i ised from a half dozen governors P d i bese hie) o 116W 1 use'of hiz, ~andascaping A . If you intend to do anything in th e |t Spring, now 19 ime <o neigibors geting acared | BESS s R 67 e dhrubi and QLALITY over the Willimantic smallpox situa-| Eatimates and plaus of plantin 3 tion, and the feeling there that unnec- | Eladly given. ®|in work snould alwass be considered essary steps are being taken hy out- siders, the Thread City people must that the campalgn is taking on the real Apanias complexion The importation of 130.000 tons of chalk to the United States eaeh year remember that an aunce of prevention is worth a pound of cure, GEDULDIG'S GREENHOUSES, marsd O. F. BRNST, Mgr. THEREK 's no 2dvertising medlum in Eastorn Tonnecticut equal to The Bul- letin for business results especially when it costs no more than the inferior kind. <killad mun are employed by us. Our price tell the whole story. STETSON & YQUNG Children Who Labor EDISON Produced in Co-operation With National Child Labor Committee, Portraying the Appeal of the Little Bread Winners Who Pass Through Child- hood Minus Its Joys. An Intensely Human Story, With a Far-Reaching Influence and Moral. MATT BENNETT, Tenor J. E. CALKINS, Baritone POLIPrS THEATER, G070 b TODAY HIS DAUGHTER 5. FOUR OTHER SUBJECTS ILLUSTRATED SONGS TNAY - AU DITORITUM-—-TODAY No. 1II' of the BISON Ser THE BATTLE OF THE RED MEN — 500 Indians THE EMPIRE STATE QUARTETTE, OTHER FEATURE Harmony Singers. ACTS AND PICTURES. MISS M. C. ADLES Hair, Face and Scalp SPECIALIST BEAUTIFUL WHITE HAIR Miss Adles can match perfectly white or gray hair. She is the only expert in the United States who has the true French art of preparing hair, so that the part is natural and defies the closest inspection. Spring Hats demand abundant hair! Come to Miss Adles if deficient in this respect., She will be in Norwich all this week. NORWICH—WAUREGAN HOUSE Telephone 7 04 HEADQUARTERS Lime-= éulphui' Solution rsenate of Lead and Agricultural Spréys of all knds. ° THE CHAS. 0S600D CO. Wholesale 45-47 Gommerce Street Retail PAY YOUR BILLS BY CHEQUE on the Uncas National Bank In this way you will know the exact cost of your living and always have the best kind of a receipt in the r turned endorsed cheque. Courteous and llbera! treatment ex- tended to every depositor whether the account be large or small. We solicit your patronage THE UNCAS NATIONAL BANK, ATIONAL BANK, | bleached, blocked and Telephone 65 42 hetucket Street.| ik | trimmed at The Toggery Shop, JAS. C. MACPHERSON, 291 Main Street, GENTLEMEN: It is time to have your PANAMA Delivered to Any Pari of Norwich the Ale that {8 acknowledged to be the best on the market—HANLEY'S EERLESS. A telephone order will receive prompt attention. D. J. McCORMICK, 30 Franklin St

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