Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 4, 1912, Page 10

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States government, both for himself and his property, Parcels Post and Rural Delivery. We faver the establishment of a parcels post or postal express, and.also the extension of the rural delivery sys- tem as rapidly as practicable, Panama Canal Exposition. ‘We hereby express vur deep interest in the great Panama Canel exposition to be held in San Franciscoiin 1916 and favor such encouragement as can be properly given, Protection of National Uniform, We commend to the several states the adoption of a law making it an oftense for the proprietors of places of public amusement and entertain- ment to discriminate against the uni- form of the United S es similar to the law passed by congress applicable to the District of Columbia and the territories in 1911, Pension. We renew the declaration of our last | platform relating to a generops pension policy. e Ruls of the People. We call attention to the fact that the democrate party demand for a return to the rule of the people expressed in the national platform four years ago has now be he accepted doctrine | of a iarg of the electors. remind the untry that on r exer > f the reser power of the people can ey themselves from the mi ] gated power and the urpation of governme instrum ity by spe- cial 5. For reason, the national cenvention insisted on the overthrow of Cannenism and the in- auguration of a system by which United States senaters ceuld be elect- ed by direct vote. The democratic party offers itself to the country as an agent through which the complete overthrow and extirpation of corrup- tion, fraud and machine rule in Amer- ican polities can be effected Conclusion. Qur platform is one of the principles which we believe to be essential to our natlonal welfare. Our pledges are made to be kept when In office as well as relled upon during the campaign, and we Invite the co-operation of all citizens, regardless of party, who be- lieve in maintaining unimpaired the institutions and traditions of our country. Post Roads. ‘We favor national aid to state and local authorities in the construction and maintenance of post roads. Rights of Labor. We repeat our declarations of the platform of 1908, as foilows: “Th courts of justice are the bulwarks of our liberties and we yield to none i our purpose to maintain their dignity. Our party has given to the _bench long line of distinguished justices wh have added to the respect and confi dence in which this department must We resent maintained. be jealously 1 of the republican part the attempt to ise a jud ;. 1t is an unjust reflectio upon a great body of our citizens t assume that they lack respect for th courts. Soft, White ! Hands Are “Welcome’’ Hands : Laundry Soaps That Hurt should be banished. Hands Cracked, smarting, tender hands—rough and unsightly—are mostly some soap’s fault. The proof lies in soothing. Welcome S because and white. One reason is ' Borax.” every Try ashes them. a change to a soap that is yap outsells all other soaps in New England Yet it keeps the hands cool, soft We use frve times as much Borax - as all other New England makers combined. ‘Welcome’’ today—a big cake—5c, of your grocer., Guaranteed Your grocer will give your money back if you can find a better Jaundry soap. stake in this soap. TRADE, Our great reputation and a priceless good will are at MARK Welcome Soap ““For Generations the Choice of New England Women’ Manufactured by LEVER BROTHERS COMPANY, Cambridge, Mass. ’ (30) false issue respecting the 1t is the function of the courts : .NORVilGH ULLETIN, THURSDAY, JULY 4, 1912 to interpret the laws whieh the people enact, and if the laws appear to work econemle, social or pelitical injustice, it is our duty te ehange them. The only basis upen which the integrity of our eourts can stand is that of un- swerving justice and protection of life, personal liberty and property. As ju- dicial processes may be abused, we should guard them against abuse, BEx- perience has proved the necessity of a modification of the present law re- lating to Injunction, .and we reiterate the pledges of our platforms of 1896 and 1904 in favor of a measure which passed the United States senate in 1896, relating to contempt in federal courts and providing for trial by jury in cases of direct contempt. ngstions of judicial practice haye arisen, espe- clally in conuection with industrial disputes. We believe that the parties to all judicial proceedings should be treated with rigid impartiality, and that injuctions should not be issued in any case in which an injunction would involved. € | dustry n a o be regarded as illegal combinations i o restraint of trade. We pledge n o e represented separately dent’'s cabinet, in in fmd mining,” We pledge the democ: ic party, so far as the federal juris Conservation. We believe in the conservation an the development, for the use of all the people, of the natural resources of the country. Our forests, our sources of water supply, our arable and our min- eral lands, our navigable streams and all the other material resources with which our country has been so lavish- ly endowed, constitute the foundation of our national wealth. Such addi- tional legislation as may be necessary to prevent their being wasted or ab- sorbed by special or privileged inter- ests, should be enacted and the policy adhered to. ‘The public domain should be admin istered and, disposed of with fdue re gard to the general welfare. Reser vations should be limited to the pur not extended to include land unsuited therefor. The withdrawal from sale and settiement o enormous tracts of public land, upon which tree growth never existed and cannot be promoted, tends only to re- tard development, create discontent, and bring reproach upon the policy of conservation. The public land laws should be ad ministered in a spirit of the broadest liberality toward the settler exhibi a bona fide purpose to comply with, to the end .that the invitati this government to the landless should be as attractive as possible; and thy plain provisions of the forest r act permitting homestead entries to be made within the national forests should ulations which amount to a withdr; of great areas of the same from set tlement Immediate action should be taken by congress fo make available the v and valuable coal deposits of Alask | under conditions that will he a p | fect guaranty against their falling i the hands of monopolizir corpora- tions, associations or interests, oice in the inheritance of min- sources unequaled in extent variety or value, and in the develop-|g | ment of a mining industry unequaled | |in its magnitude and importance. We | { honor the men who, in their hazardeus toil underground, daily risk their lives in extracting and- preparing for | use the products of the mine, so es- {sentional to the industries, the com- fort and the commerce of the people | of this country. And we pledge our- i selves to the extension the work of | the bureau of mines in | propriate for national 1 | a view of safeguardi way ap- ion with miners, lessening the waste of essen- tial reseurces, and promoting the eco- nomic development of mining, which, along with agricult ‘future, even mere than in the past, serve as the very foundation of our national prosperity and welfare and our international commerce. opment of a modern gystem of agricul- ture and a systematic effort to im- vrove the conditions of trade in farm products, so as to benefit both the con- sumers and producers, and as an effi- cient means to this end we favor the enactment by congress of legislation that will suppress the pernicious prac- tice of gambling in agricultural prod- ucts by organized exchanges or others. tutional regulation of commerce, growth of a merchant marine, which e, must in the Agricuiture. We belleve in encouraging the devel- Merchant Marine. We believe in fostering, by consti- the not issue if no industrial dispute were “The expanding organization of in- makes it essential that there should be no abridgment ef the right of the wage earners and producers to organize for the protection of wages and the improvement of labor condi- tions, to the end that labor organiza- tions and their members should not the democratic party to the enactment of | charged with desertion, or with viola- a law creating a aepartment of labor the presi- which department shall be included the subject of mines i tion extends, to an employes’ compen- sgtion lay;‘ providing adequate indem- nity for injury to body or loss of life, shall develop and strengthen the com- mercial ties which bind us to our sister republics of the south, but without imposing additional burdens upon the people and without bounties or subsi- dies from the public treasury. We urge upon congress the speedy enact- ment of laws for the greater security of life and property at sea; and we favor the repeal of all laws, and the abrogation of sé much of our treaties n | with other nations, as provide for the arrest and .imprisonment of seamen BRASS LINED tion of their contract of service. Such laws ang treaties are un-American and violate the spirit of not the letter of the ution of the United States. We favor the exemption from toils of Am- erican ships engaged in coasiwise trade agsing through the Panama canal. We also favor legislation forbidding the use of the Panama canalyby ships owned or controlled by rallroad car- riers engaged in transportation com- d | petitive with the canal. SALE PRIGE Special CENT KNIVES BEST OF STEEL FULLY WARRANTED stockholders in the future of the New Haven road and its ability to maint PLANT HAS 6,500 SHARES e e i Road Ain New Sale GCENTS EAGH { THE HOUSEHOLD, holdings have been added to during the | tWo-thizds of them are women, chil- RS . . tax dren and guardians, and that two- r is significant of the faith of g | i g5 of the securities are owned in K gland. of their conservation should be rigidly poses which they purport to serve and wholly unnecessary | WOMEN’'S HOURS TOO LONG. ¥ lits s per cent. dividend. Such r selling of New Haven stock as has _— | been apparent in late months seems to | Factory Inspector Complains of Three “lhave emanated from smaller stock- 3 < \ s W New en Stores. holders who have been frightened out Prowiat e bmisn, o rather than any mportant liquidation. Haven system not be nuilifled by administrative reg- | Waldorf our | credited w 846 t 5,051 and Mo another now has 08 A fes t is the Inerease n the number steeships during | ¥ and the L that many wom- of 1,000 shares or Pennsylvania has based on the cur-ling and aiso for New Haven | or too many New England | john Fir ny is credited with a | jngs store es, compared with | New Haven no ance is attached to t are to all prac New Haven ireasu parucular large stockholders who | increased thelr hold- | » past r are the} company, which be- | t holder reasing | 12,831 share, nm} ling in its name be- | New Yor e liquidating 2 on the centrary Jider ¢ ~| The Pennsylvania railroad holds sec- Factory Inspector George L ;\“I‘Pdn | ond place on the list of New Haven |has entered three complainte for vio- stockholders, having passed the Mutual | lation of Chapter 220 of the public Life Insurance company, for some|gcts of 1911 regulating’ the hours of iy the largest stockholders, with | japer tor ni women in mer- i tion of the New England John R Navigation company, which 1s of C.ty aito for New Haven. course part and parcel of the New A.” Miner, proprietor of The Chocoiate Shop, No. 808 Chapel street, its in t In New Haven|gone of the Elm Citys' popular stores, ince April 1, 1910, from 37,400 | 1 chargea with employing two girié giving it an invest- | afier i0 o'clc on a Against 4,208 in New Haven Stock Last Year—Many Women 3 2.3s . F1a) 41000 iGhares. or Oust. Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street The fact that many of the larger 1 woeman after 10 o'clock on a Satur- aay everirg, and with failing to post a { notice of the hours of labor for women and ming Dora M. Levy of Mrs. M. Lévy & ns, owners of a millinery store at Nus. 58-70 Congress avenue, New Haven, i« also charged with em- I:.:o\im: a rinter of girls after 10 p m, on a Saturcay night. Mr. McLean taid that a fine of not mcre than $20 can be imposed for vach offerse, and that he hag asked the city = «rney to prosecute all of the cases. Hot Weather Regulations. The New Haven health board has sent out over 200 notices to owners of birns oraering them to keep manure piles ¢overed during the hot weather. A sysetewmatic crusade will begin upon ection of all milk depots and where milk is sold. Along the line the dealers in ice cream nd drinks have been visited {and warned to keep their receptacles clean and covered, Need Printing ? 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 Franklin Street Why Physicians Recommend Castoria ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, J pharmaceutical socicties and medical authorities. It is used’by physi- cians with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and perfect substitute for Castor Oil It is absolutely safe. It does not con- tain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. Itis unlike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial,etc. Thisisa good deal for a Medical Journal to say. Our duty, however, is to expose danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowl- edge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure: and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Health. Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. The Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under A\/b?tfiblci’rcpmalionfé.A\‘s-‘ similating theFood and Regula- ting the Stomachs and Bowels of his personal supervision Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi- tations and ‘ Just-as-good” since its infancy. Promotes Digestion Cheerful- ness and Rest.Contains neither Opsum, Morphine nor Mineral. Nor NARCOTIC. are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger - the health of Infants and % Children— Experience Fiavon against Experiment. Dr. W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Ark., says : *‘ As a practicing phy- sician I use Castoria and like it very much,” Dr, W. T. Seeley, of Amity, N. Y., says: “I have used your Cas- toria for several years in my practice and have found it a safe and reliable remedy.” Dr. Raymond M, Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal, says: ‘ After using your Castoria for children for years it annoys me greatly to have an ignorant druggist substitute some- thing else, especially to the pa- tient's disad vantage, as in this case. 1 enclose herewith the wrapper of the imitation.” - Dr.R.M. Wa‘rd, of Kansae City, Mo., eays : ‘‘ Physicians ggnerally do not prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren's complaints, «Any physician who has raised a family, as I have, will join me in heaitiest recom- Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, N. H., says: * I use your Castoria in my practice, and in my family.” Dr. Wm. I. McCann of Omaha, Neb., says : ** As the father of thir- teen children I certainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from my own family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. Howard James, of New York, City, says : It is with great pleas- ure that I desire to testify to the medicinal virtue of your Castoria. I have used it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent results from its administration to other children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : ““The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for eme, most heartily enderse it and believe it Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- go, 11, says : *“1 have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice and find 1t very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, of Cleve- land, Ohio, says : ** Your Castoria stands first in its class. 'In my thirty years of practice I can say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Mich., says : I prescribe your Cas- toria extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for ohil- dren's troubles. I am aware that there are imitations in the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr. Channing H. Cook, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castoria for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a great consideration in view of the fact that most medi- cines of this character are obnox- ious and therefore difficult of ad- ministration. As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything Worms Gonvulsions Feverish- pess and LOSS OF SLEEP. FacSumile Signature of GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of mendation of Casteria.” an excellent remedy,” that I ever prescribed.” Dr. L. 0. Morgan, of 80. Amboy, N. J. says: “‘I prescribe your Casto- ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with better effect than I receive from any other combination of drugs.” Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N. Y., says: ‘1 have used your Casto- ria and found it an excellent remedy in my household and priv- ate practice for many years. The formula is excellent.” : Dr. Wm. L. Bosserman, of Buf- falo, N. Y., says: “I am pleased to speak a good word for your Casto- ria. I think so highly of it that I not only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family.” Dr. F. H. Kyle, of St. Paul, Minn., says : “It affords me plea- sure to add my name to the long list of those who have used and now endorse your Castoria. The fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and sufficient reason for the recom- mendation of any physician. I know of its good qualities and re- commend it cheerfally.” ASK YOUR . PHYSICIAN

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