Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 30, 1912, Page 4

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dorwich Bulletin aud gnnfincfi- ke < 82 YEARS OLD. ufll&hl peice. 12c & weck; bbe & " Kntered at the Postefice at Nerwich, Lotb., as second-class matter. Telephano Callss Rullotln Business Office, 436, 4 in Editcrial ann LLE N ia Job O Orfice, 8 | Have The Bulletin Foliow You | | Readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for the seashore, moun- idins, rural resorts or for urope may keep in touch with acings in | towa by having The Bulleun sent direct 1o them by mail for any veriod desired — days, weeks oI months. Hundreds follow this plan on their annual vacation and relurn tully informed as to what has been | 8oing on during their absence. | urders soould be placed with Thy l Bulletin business office. i1ie Circulation ol iike Bulletin. The Bulletin has the largest elr- culation of any paper In Eastern Commecticur, and (rom three to feur times larger tham that of amy ta Neorwdch, It flu delivered e over 3,000 of the 4053 houses i Nor- wick, and resd by nimety-three per cemt. of the people. In Windham it in delivered to over 508 houses, in Putnam and Damielson te ever 1100, and im all of these places it is comsidered the local dafly. Emvterm Commecticat has forty- nise tewns, onc humdred snd sfxty- fve postofce districts, amd aixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin s wold im every town and o of the B ¥, D. reutes:in Hasterm Commecticut. CIRCULATION D01, AVEERES ..o ons e s e Rl -5:920 1005, sverage ... August 24.. ACTION IN NICARAGUA. The trouble in Nicaragua continues © be the cause of not a Iittle ann ance to this government. It is the duty of this country to see that Ameri- cam cftizens and interests are protect- ed, and under the Monroe doctrine it s also incumbent upon Uncle Sam to protect the subjects of foreign powers. It was that undertaking which this \ountry had to assume in order to keep foreign powers from dipping into af- falrs in republics on this side of the vater. There is thus a daty of grave mportance upon this government in iew of the tales of frightful massa- res by the revolutionists. The ina- tty of the Nicaraguan government nsurg s9 makes Uncle Sam'’s nsibility the greater, but it is to »d that the marines will be able v take care of the situation without the need of the infantry, though the anding of one is po different than the other. It is not the first time that American troops have been called on for this very service Nicaragua finds itself deposing of Minister of who has previously given trouble to presidents of that republic, but Presi- ient Diaz had the courage to back his econviction when he removed him from nig cabinet. Politics has been the trou- ble and a formidable revolution was e h crippled by the War Mena, auickly started by the ousted official, | 80 old as she looks or feels, will here- who by family ties had a strong con- |after mean increased trouble for the vol over the war department and the | census taker, especially as women are army. The action of this country is |behind this new standard of jud not tn gain any political control over | 2ges to determine those who are Nfcaragua, but is in the interests of |are not, “young” women. American and foreign residents, in —e fact, a deed of kindness { EDITORIAL NOTES. e | Ap expert bluffer makes all things WHERE CANDIDATES STAND. 00k 108 B lmeei The consideration of the political | Huppy thought for today: Be care situation from the various centers of [¢q] not to become a total abstainer the country n those where it has [ when it is your turn to tr 'sen maintained that bull moose- B ik movement is strong, shows that the kngland has ang thought that we sober judgment of the voters is going to | should put our money out but do just be reflected at the polls. They are not | as she said. We have sald no before, | going to be hypnotized as a body into — iking away from a safe and pro- | Some one is trying to find out just gressive government of the people, for the people and by the people, to chase a rainbow Relative to Journal hes palgn is to be decided not by the noisy and the stubborn, but by the juiet thinkewrs who will weigh all ar guments carefully and vote in accord- ance with intelligence and patriotism hiy, the Kansas City this to say: “This cam- 'he party that has not a candidate g the million who appeals to this class of voters |&Rd @ half of women who have won | who are in the great though silent |€dual rights. najority, is placed in an unfortunate | SRVETNR P e predicament, and it is for thig reason gfield gave President Taft a that the adherents of President Taft |FOUing welcome —on his brief stop are hopeful. His administration and | there Wednesday—a forerunner of he material conditions existing after four & stands are a convineing testimonial the he is the right man. The situa tlon may be stated in other terms which nean the same thing. The Roosevelt ampaign has not a vestige of reason to support it. 1t is based on passion and prejudice, on @ spectacular per- wonality, on sophistry and discontent. Roosevelt stands only for himself; his ampaign is one of the man and not of measures. As a bull moose he has no pride of political ancestry and no hope of political prosperity, Wilson is personally an estimable gentleman but a nonentity as a candidate, and as a matter of principles he is on the wrong side of his paramount issue, which, so far as it has been decided in the rast. has been deecided against him sither by the voters or by the logic of events President Taft's candidacy is pre- nently one of measures rather than he man. Personally he might be | with no great detriment to e nation, perhaps, but the policies which he stands could not be re- pudiated without very serious injury to the best interests of the people. Such a fact is the strongest argument which could be advanced In behaif of & candidate.” The czar of Ru is insured for 5,000,000 in Fnglish insurance com- panies. He 18 a greai risk and a goed years of the policies for which | CIVIL SERVICE. ¥ollowing his Investigation of the civil service system in England and France James Creelman returns with the opinion that neither of them equal in apy way the system which is In vogue here. He was unfavorably Im- pressed by its operation across the water. How strong a hold civil serv- ice has In this country is indicated by the position which three of the presidential candidates take upon the important question. This has been strikingly demonstrated in one in- stance, while replies to inquiries of the National Civil Service Reform league indicates it with the other two, President Taft, Woodrow Wilson and ‘Theodore Roosevelt are all advoeates of civil service, President Taft emphasized his posi- tion in regard to the bill which would have term in office, and that the merit sys spoils system should be maintained. | Good government depended mpon it !and he prevented congress from mak- ling & change. This demonstrated | above all quibbie just where the presi- dent stands much more so than any statement of opinion might. He had the opportunity to use his power of veto to check it and he did so. The others have declared themselves in behalf of clvil service so that on one of the important questions all are of the same mind. The president is not only of that mind, but he has backed it up by action limited the he made it plain HELPING THE IMMIGRANT. immigrant anticipates a land of hope, a country where he will have the op- portunity to share in the blessings o the land. Many thousands reach these shores vearly and their opinions on the result naturally vary with the in- dividual and a great deal has to do with the location and environment that he finds himself in. There are many organizationa for helping the strangers, and probably nomne is do- ing a more needful work than the Con- necticut Daughters of the American Revolution in their publication of a guide to the United States for the aid of the immigrant It is the object of the organizatio “to promote as an object of primary importance, institutions for the gen eral diffusion of knowledge,” and in providing for the immigrant a knowl- edge of the conditions, laws and op- portunities it is admirably carrying out its aim in a most commendable manner. It is the extension of the hand of friendship to the alien and it will have its reflection in the bet- ter citizenship which it will create. The guide proves to be a veritable friend in that it has in readiness the informa- tion on the customs and requirements as well as chances for advancement, which the immigrant has no other way of obtaining except by chance or after long delay. It also gives them the inspiration to aim higher in the land of promise. THE AGE OF WOMAN. Nothing since the “How old query has so upset the serenity women of Chicago as the recent order of the Young Women Christian as Ann? of the | sociation of that city in arbitrarily | | ixing the time when the dorm Yy oc- cupants pass from the period of “young” womanhood. It promises to ‘be the cause of much trouble to the | directresses of the association when to accommeodate young women under who are acknowledged to be young women, those of that age and up to 30 are asked to vacate their rooms. In this order the idea is to give ac commodation to girls who it is felt are kept away from the city because of lack of quarters at the association. { Those beyond the prescribed limit nat- urally fee] that they need the protect ing arm of the association in the t ty and are prepared to r t being lifted into the aged class simply be- cause of their ages. The very idea of ejecting those pres- ent occupants instead of increasin: accommodations for the “young” wo- men is preposterous, as can easily be corroborated from most any of the ex. This passing lightly over the long established rule that a woman is only how old a girl candles on her favor, to be to irthday put the cake out of The anti-suffrage women be equal to disfranchisin, will hardly their acion in November. The place for ev republican to- night is at the caucus Tt s the chance he has for having his will rep- resented at the conventia Those who profit by the long sum- mer Vacation in New favor of adding a few the se: Engiand are in more weeks to son of closed schools. There is no fast motoring in for an expert automobil drive there over 15 mil to imperil one's life and st says to hour is machine, The Kansas 'l\u, City Journal claims has wrought such Allen White that bull moosing fam With all the serums that are calcu- mted to ward off diseases, popular will be the doctor who can innoculate the anti-bull-mooser so he can avoid the Ananias club. MeCormick, contribut- ing bull moosers, who believe in a better country for youth, and shorter days for labor, work giris twelve heurs & dav in the Hasuester MR oRmRABRL Perkins and it when he vetoed | em rather than the | In coming to the United States the | There are other get-rich-quick schemes no better than Police Inspec- tor Becker's, and they will not bear | the ligh | South Carolina didn't add anything | |to her record for improving cond {tions by declaring for another term for Cole Blease as governor Maine, | —the good trust—with only fifteen . minutes noening, and no chance to sit down, The Colonel’s claim that he will have all the republican states but four may be as true as was his claim that he would get the republican nomination on the first ballot. letters his office boy had opened for Did Abraham Lincoln ever use a | him. They were mostly business com- whole day preparing a defence against | munications. the aspersions of his enemies? His| But guddenly and unexpectedly there character was his defense and the na- | came from its tight-fitting envelope a tion's pride today. postal card. Robinson ught lus i gt breath in swift admiration. The face When T. R. referred to Knox's state- [ on the card was feminine, winning ment that Frick would make good any | 4nd beawtiful, Fo] loss from the Standard Oil, he must| .° Ve gtucy T ForpOttan. tHRE Ok hEA The of the face Robinson turned the card over: Steel trust back of him. “Dear Jack,” he read. “Here I am from Devonshire, We are having a gorgeous trip. My story is in the ! Beaux Brummel of April Get copy and tell me what you think of Address for summer, ~Southern Ex- Sirange , the Colonel is saving nothing now about the theft of delegates at Chicago. The misrep- resentation has done the harm he de- sired and now.he. drops it press, Haymarket, London. Sincerely, ,,,,, -0 A :| Robinson glanced back at the girl's | Elbert H\mbah' says the Teason|,iuwure with a puzaled expression in| Roosevelt is dangerous is becduse he thinks he is a part of the Day of his eyes, ! “The quemmn is,” he argued m(—m THE BULLET IN'S SHORT STORY. { ROBINSONS TWO e e e Robinson took up the neat stack of y er brother in all the world just like hers. “You are luoklng fine, told him. “Never better, Sis, How are the kid- dies?” “Splendid. But I do not see much of them lately,”” Jane smiled apologetical- ly, “there have been so many dinner parties and teas, Jerry, dear,” Jane looked appealingly at him. “It seems dreadful to drag you out the first night you are here, but I just had to t a dinner engagement for you. i mind very mueh?” “I am ready for anything from a ;{mu tea to a Dutch supper,” he told er. Jerry,” It was too late in the day to do any- | thing in the business line, so Robinson ' jumped into a taxi and went to the Southern Some greater force than his own de- sire seemed 1o be directing his movi ments He felt intuitively that he ~¢ the girl of the postal card. He went into the big lounge where Judgment. This is a favorite way for | ally, “is Bill real or is a | good men to go wrons picture lady? Could Bill | e i s e nickname for something feminine? i The reason the bull moose should be Robinson continued looking through | elecied o a third term is because the | N8 mail, 1{)?‘1 «lv\dms the eyes of the | : 4 ¢ . | postal card folowed him from her perch | tre were multiplied by ten in his | P2C . against his letter file. soven vears as president, and he left | ™ hat a mu"em“q thing & ‘girl's | a defleit for his suecessor to overcome. | he mused. ve minutes 20 k e 1 was bemoaning the fate that made | The Kansas farmer who went to|me sall next week for London. Now I own and captured a-drunk, carried | am glad and all because hy some lucky im te the farm and kept him busy | mistake I received the picture for a week at harvesting under the|fOr some other fellow. { | impression that he was 15 miles from |, Robinson picked up the envelope and i S looked at the address | home when but one mile a . wag a meant ; “J. Robinson, Hed., 09 er 019 West successful schemer. 34th St he read. “Bill is assuredly a ——— - girl. No man would be guilty of us- ing so unce address.” An amused gmile crossed Jerry IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN | fnce. ‘1 am going to commit my 1 dishonest act. J. Robinson of 019 not going to a..el this ire of Bill want it mys I On his way to lunch he stopped at a | magazine stand and inquired for ¢ copy of the Beaux Brummel for Aprii By good fortune one was left of Robinson's | LIBERTY. There is noching so nesdful as liber- ty, and nothing that needs to be more clearly understood. : ) that b inson seanned th After all, the real reedom life craves| Jist of contributor g iy is freedom to choose its own masters, i [\ When T say T want to be free to holmina Kill i) b .““.‘“L i e Bill stands for Wiihelmina Wicks j Repomb- analave. for lave. do. DEMBSE | oninsahe du gl autlior of Silen nor true except it be a bondage. | fin. " | The lover does not want to be un-| " pu b e tied 1 he lit chained. ~Freedom—from her—would| o bit of Sherlocking he was indulg ing in That he wanted know the was a certain fact. He 1d known t the moment his eyes beheld her The picture might be flatte till she could be divinely & Free love is a contradiction of terms. It is not love unless it binds me irre tibly How deep is the error men fall in- to_when they do not see this! | ¥ree-thought, when it Is a revolt | against conviction, is absurd; It only worthy when it means freedom to abjectly what seems to be truth. Freedom in religion really means the right to follow my own religlon, and zirl Robinson had known his life, but somehow the not appeared. He when he stood face to helmina Wicks she would immediz many girls in only one had ob. aly_ an : face not the absence of any reverence. s S o | Freedom then, does not signify 00 ap s Nomel B0l absence of restraint; truth and . 8 that he arrang- hbacngn; of ‘restraint, 4 ol ed his busine irs in preparation are both essentially absolute czars. that you shall not put traints upon me. for his trip. | married sister in me people seem to agree with | Would be with her e Galiani “Liberty is the |Di8 letter. o il Casdaln the oitaizs of| While on the acean Robinson thought out a plan of action which he consid | e et e ered orilliant. He would that he wrote that signifies simply vour re London almost as with tactful and write to Miss Wicks at the Southern | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. | Express and fuform her that he was in ! R possession of her picture; that he | Helped to Nominate Cleveland. would return it i letter reached h and if she so desired. In this v Mr. Editor: T was very much inter- | would at least get into corr spondenc | ested to read letter in Wednesday s | with her. fter that per | Bulletin on Backward Glances by C. B.| would be kind and brin about ‘ Montgomery. He asked us to go back | proper meeting. At any rate Robin |to 1895. I remember those times. I[son decided to spend all h > nof | was a practical newspaper woman in | absorbed by bt therr | those days, but not too busy to keep | Express offices, Perhaps the | both scrap and note books of items of | his dreams would have return | interest, and when I got back to 1835 | Devonshire, and in that event he would | T kept looking until T got back to 1892 | see her. She would call for her ma |and T saw the names of the delegates | surely. | trom Plainfleld to the state convention | And because he felt himself growin helped to nominate Cleveland (whose slection wag the cause of those rd times) and one of the names was rles B. Montgomery of Packervilie. Now I am glad that all of the farmers round Pittsburg were prospecous in foolish over a girl who mhe never geen Robinson plunged into @ fiirtation with th preitiest g board the boat Arriving in sister's house, 16 went to his was received London where he but it was not so everywhere, | with the usi how of iAd, n is not in 1912. There is mort ays hovered about her brot gaged property and mot every farmer as If there never had been anoth |Tides in an automobile (2nd some o | those ara mortgaged), and there are | still debts, trouble and poverty and there will be ten years from now, in spite of Taft, Roosevelt and ev: ontgomery. In the dark days 18 “God rules anc Washington still ' but that was before the days of and autos and times have thought before the con- ("hicago that nothing ceuld to what had already been | that was before we looked | have no chan New Haven Times-Leader acco-growing icut vailey during i imm of the The hest vear t industry in the Connec seen since 188 Taft’s administr follows the disso trust brought abc tion of the act. You- I General Garfleld said the government at live vention be 'TH BARBER Plainfield, Aug. 28 191 2 = Ivead of the “sec | rtment of the slander Waldo sioner in- New York for whoever more DEVOLVE. It is poss ——— NTHER VIEW POINTS I | Sm——————————— | | sistent than [ | Napoleon, and Flynn m ] Bridgeport Standar | — The “war” is over and now the bills | must be paid. The cost is heavy. Sup- | pose all that good money had been put | ;um. a g roads. s | class Outsiders have refrained from sayi South Carolina prim in the sensitive state the voters might ren Blease just as a rel the that opinion inate Govern. to the rest are nearly practice 000 lawye in New York ¢ " No wonder some of the people there pre- settle thelr disputes on the|the country for not minding its ow ets with revolver; Hartford Times. RFae | Seventy foreign geographers, now | touring this country, say we have been wasting our resources at a prodi- . ask Gifford Pinchot—New Britain | € ISdStrou Herald. Mr. Borden, the Canadian premier, takes the proper stand on the threats | of the suffragists. Now look out for | | militant methods"—and the Win- dow Smashers' unfon.—New Haven | Register, It was & noble band of exclusives | with - but we commence this many American travelers meet, and took a chair by one of the desks There, a pen in hand, he tried to com- pose a letter to Wilhelmina Wicks. Try as he might he could not write a satis- fa ot ge to the girl whom he not know. Then, because he was sitting close mail windows, he heard her voice, s there any mail for Miss Wicks? T want some,” she said, and Robinson knew t a smile went to the man be- window. “Three! Oh, thamnk hind the you.” irned & d it seemed to Robin- if she had known he was there or eves half smiled. After that lown in a chair facing him and read her Jetters, Robinson, sitting quietly opposite, could only with fascinated eyes at pioture he even then heart. That he might to her was certaln. How, » let her go and perhaps not s While he w mean gloomy and glowering at her with Imiration she arose and went have been wakt- open doors to xi must surely with he curb her. When Robinson reached | pavement there were taxis in ev- ery direction gnd the girl in one of them. He turned toward the Pieca- tube and home wequired a beauti- seem to have 4 told him. 8he | inking of ways and | " Jane with low- | amaxon Fabrics, will be ready BREED THEA FEATURE PICTURE TODAY “THE AN FROM DRAGON LAND WESTERN Full of thrills. Plenty of Cowboys. TAY AUDITORIUM TODAY ON THE FARM Wonderful Ventriloquil Production Coming Monday GAANDA HUMANUS OPENS LABOR DAY! The Big \ HfAT” IDAVIS THE L CONNECTICUT FAIR F=Ae et AND but Grand Circuit Races | a1 ENFULLER CO. { \ Charter Oak Park, Hartford, | . i bl o e | “It's Peanut Time” September 2, 3, 4, 8, 6| ,pVER & BLUFORD Day and Night. \ $50,000 in Purses and Premiums. in the Act Beautiful THREE GREAT RACES EACH DAY. and WONDERFUL MIDWAY SHOWS. FREE SHOWS—FIREWORKS. ‘ o e music—Gov's FooT GuARD Banp | 2-30 ifl the Afternoon Col. Theodore Roosevelt | Same Prices WILL MAKE AN ADDRESS ON GET THE HABIT MAMMOTH Agricultural EXHIBITS. THE MOZARTS |ROMAN HIPPODROME RACES. \M,,. ft ADMISSION — Day 50c., Night 25cr7,lw and 8.45 in the Evening LABOR DAY AT FAIR. | U . 4000 14 | About August 15th Our Fall and Winter stock of Suitings and Overcoatings, including a full line of Shack- for inspection. H 1 spite of himself. “A . I am a bear with a sore head just L!{.-_ 1] same Through the gloom he could | Mot sce the mockery in Jane's eyes nor 33 Broadway e e rates of her evening toilet, so an affectionate push she sent him to dress stairs and in the ented and feminine. 4 silvery, s confusion he apologized | mis- e.” Robinson felt s and i e Py Goods Their Annual , Remnants Billiard and Holiday e, T L L o | Carriage Cloths A — At the Fair Grounds the girl laughed, nes we both have, because his lor come to h she - cheeks What | eyves were making Brady & Saxton |, Sept. 2nd. (Bean Hill) heput in, banteringly “3hou | JunlZWMF admit upon conside fon that T is ot so bad se Wicks the first of the three big days. but not answer him, s all Jane's fault. ding my Robinson vou see it would come e knew don’t stop quarreling,’ ip to them, “we Wil \er party without you,' keep on quarreling?™ If you two ane's volee eame Shall we 31 said | She put picture to the SCHOOL SUPPLIES New Goods at Right Prices. Inks, Tablets, Pencils, Pens, 1{Rulers, Straps, (,ompnqtmw MBom and other articles t lnumemm to mention. As a lpecml feature of the day a Wrestling Match has {been arranged between the Irish Giant JACK McGRATH ’Hh Oh—we can quarrel—afterwards, Robinson said pointedly.—8t. Louis and the ¢ entirely safe that we down, He is a today, hope Blease dis- Waterbury Ameri- {The Broadway Store, i Champion of Great Britain 67 Broadway | ‘ JIM DOWNES. | BEST TWO IN THREE ¥ Don't Make a Mistake T t that Col. George W. HORSE RAC'NG s will resign soon as governor el ; e e i g Panama canal zone to become | gng overlock eur stock of Carriaxes O o o pace, phree. ...$3.00 el reral is unofficlal, but 1t 48 | Coneoras and Business Wagons A..l‘« cilt ok Be ; Gty has made good under | Work high grade. at medlum prices. Wy p - o'" Tlls nanstry has | are making & svesial arive on Car- TUESDAY, SEPT. g " o ities | Tiages this year. 2 lass, trot or pac o ate, Promotion to a brigadier ‘gen- | BAPESNS 1n used cara, Age 0 class, trot ,purse ) 320 fitting rec Diminishing Aristocracy. McAllister's 400 has been cu “h proves ti fewer they gre an. s Fire on Central Wharf will temporarily prevent large deliveries of either Coal or Lumber, P. M. filling who never saw Pinafore when pro- | ” d f b h ced a few years ago, A lik ble | o P band will be' the e ot smail orders ol both. the few who have not | been proclaimed liars.—New Haven | Journal-Courier. i O. H. P, Belmont says men s are ‘i'nsolent, arrogant and are to become tipsy,” and for that on she will employ only waitresses | | for her dinner to Miss Inez Milholiand. | More suffrage advertising.—Meriden | Journal, | transit we will fill Shall we further restrict immigra- tion—restrict it to the limit of saying that all who cannot read and write shall have no chance to earn a decent {living and educate their children, sim- they | | ply ‘V, because have had and can| | Hoods Sarsaparilla | Cures all humors, catarrh and | rheumatism, relieves that tired feeling, restores the appetite, cures paleness, nervousness, builds up the whole system, Get it today in usual liguid form or ghocolated tablets called $arsatabs, THE EDWARD August 29, 1912, Having both Coal and Lumber in all orders later. Fortunately our offices are unin- jured and the creditable energy of the Telephone Company has re-in- stated our Telephone service. CHAPPELL €O COAL AND LUMBER ognition ce to hig country.— own disciples, higher they go New York Am- wear (BT Russexs land cars WEDNESDAY, SEPT, 4 Horseshoer and Repairer. t You Can SAVE MONEY -i Five mile open Motorcycle 'Races each day. | Balloon Ascensions, Free by buying your Vaudeville and Music every TRUNKS, day. : suIT CA%Eg' BAGS, PRICES OF ADMISSION Single tickets 8¢ ETC., from Children under 12 18¢ " | Autemobiles and teams .. 350 The Shetucket Haraass Co., | Oppesite Chelsea Savings Bank. JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder-. ann Baoks Wiade and Ruleu to © 108 SROADWAY. Telepbons MM IS TS WILDWOOD PARK PUTNAM, CONN. 1Mo&t Beautiful Park in New ‘ England. | SPLENDID BOATING SPORTS FISHINC leMAIKIT HOTEL. | 6 Bogwell Avi E R Firat-class Wines, Liquors and Clgars. I’ G F | | TCTURES, VAUDEVILLE and Welch Ravebit served ta John Tuckie, Prop. Tel. i3-& euters Flowers <4 FOR ALL OCCASIONS We have a complete line of artistic wick olders, and specialize on daint rrd We ite vour inspection u;l"' Fireworks Labor Day Night or and china fern and flowes men wogifts and favors THIS HOT WEATHER H. Koehier & Company's Bottied Beer direct to your re- frigerator, 'y the dozen 60c, H. Jackel & Co., Cor. Market and Water Stre: Telephone 136-5, livered to Ay Parl of Norwich the Ale that is acknowledged to be the best on the market—HANLEY'S PEERLESS. A telephyne order w reosive prompt atiention. D. J. McCCRMICK, -0 Franxhin 8L F. C. GEER, TUNER Shane 511 122 Prospect 9 JEWETT GITY HOTEL New and Up-to-date in every partioular. IRA F: LEWIS. Proaristes,

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