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Horwich ulletin uund Goufied. 116 YEARS OLD. uuzl‘b.-m.ll-n-uuu-. . a vear, Culi. a8 second-c! Telephono Oallss Ruiletin Business " iitdiwe. T ‘elephone 314 Norwich, Saturday, Oct. 5, 1912 RERUBLICAN TICKET. For President, H. of Ohio. For Vice President JAMES S. SHERMAN of New York. For Governor, JOHN P. BTUDLEY of New Haven. For Lieutenant Governor, Tor Becretary of State, GUSTAF B. CARLSON ‘of Middlgtown, For Treasurer, W WALTER ‘W. HOLMES i of Waterbury. For Comptroller, PAYETTE L WRIGHT of Pomfret, Presideatial Electors. of Hartford. NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 5 1912 BANKS FOR FARMERS. this. gested this scheme: “At firsf confined in its operation to assi farmers in the purchase of their hold- 8 Mermy|ings with the ultimate intention of ex- tending its scope as the medium for the buying of seeds and manure, the purchase of pedigree stock, and the The neces- sary ‘capital to enable the bank to be- gin bperations would be placed by the state at the disposal of the managers selling for farm produce. of the institution. Interest would be paid to the government at on the amount of capital advanced and outstanding from time to time. The government got money from the post- office savings bank depositoss at 2 1-2 per cent. Purther sums required would be obtained from the public by the issue of bonds, which bonds would be guaranteed, both as to principal and interest, by the state.” " This makes of it an institution in which the government would be inter- ested. together with private corpora- tions, and it would insure the obtain- ing of money at a low rate, through the postal savings system, and a rate which would relieve the farmers from F of New Haven | paylng in many cases prohibitive in- 0 0! BCOVILLE of Salisbury. B. MOWRY of amun’x. in Congress. BECOND DISTRICT. Dist. 10—CURRIE GILMOUR of Norwich. 20—EDWIN H. KBACH of Killingly. town. L RUSSELL, JR., of Mi For Judge of Probate, NELSON J. AYLING of Norwich. TURNING TO TAFT. "~ | have been in view of its repetition BUSINESS ACTIVITY. Businees throughout the country is far from being at a standstill, It is, tn fact, at a top notch and steadily in- creasing to such an extent that it is impossible to keep up with it, Fac- torles, overtaxed with-orders, are ex- periencing difficulty in getting raw material and supplies. There 15 a growing scarcity of labor, both skilled fmechanics and laborers; railroads in many sections are finding their equip- ment insufficent to meet the demands #5 the high tide of prosperity is pre- paring to sweep over the country. Tn the steel industry, in particular, Is the need of help felt, and at Pitts- butg 10,090 hands could be put to work n_excess of those now employed. Con- lon work has to be held up to a derable extent, thereby, and the wame situation ig existing in the ce- iment trade, where it is impossible to get enough cars to handlé the busi- ness. Such is the condition of business throughout the country that passen- ger and cattle cars are being used to deliver cement shipments, . ,Such a condition augurs most aus- pletously for everyone, though it pre- sents numerous problems as to taking eare of the extra business, all of which can and will be gradually met. Addi- tional facilities must be'provided, bus- iness must not be allowed to lag, and from every séction the reports give promise of extensive development in »ll lines through the encouragement Wwhich the bringing ot the country to its present state has resulted in. It is & welcomed state of affairs. THE BALKAN TROUBLE. Turkey has realized that the trouble facing her was more than she could care for and in acceding to the peace terms of Italy she has gotten rid of a serious handicap. In her impending Balkan conflict it seems unlikely that there will be an adjustment before there is a clash o0f forces. Greece, Bul- garia, Servia and Montenegro are seeking self-government and Turkey is strenuously opposed to it. The Turks do not intend that the empire shall suffer by conceding anything to the aspiring quartette of states. On both sides there are large forces as- sembled. The steps taken by "Turkey are indicative of her determination te suppress the revolt, while it is evident that there is equal determination on the other side. The ultimatum indi- cates this, and even with a smaller united army they have the courage to face the Moslem forces in their en- deavor to get from under the heel of Turkey. The spirit of independence is aflame throughout the Balkan states, the sev- °ral provinces being in full revolt against Turkish misrule in Mjicedonia. What, if any, part the powers of Bu- rope will take, remains to be seen. Advice has been given to the Bulgars, through Russia, to remain out of the trouble, and that the powers would set- tle it. Tt has not appeared that any “"" field viaduct a little over a year ago. terest. Such a scheme could be ad- justed to this country, and it is likely that the movement for such institu- tions will result in some such plan. RAILROAD ACCIDENTS. Almost precisely the same kind of & railroad catastrophe occurred to the Springfield express at Westport as there did to the fast express at Fair- In hoth these cases the blame for the wrecks and the loss of life rest upon the engineers, both of whom were kill- ed, An investigation followed the wreck of last year, when fourteen were killed, and an investigation is undet way for that of Thursday afternoon. These Investigations establish the cause of the derailment and the wreck and from them is supposed to result action which will prevent similar ac- cidents in the future. How inconsequential the lesson of the Fairfield viaduct accident seems to within a year and a quarter. From present indications it appears to have been identical, and that there was a violation of rules in making cross- overs at full speed, when the trains should be slowed to fifteen miles an hour, and a disregard for signals of danger in the one mad rush for speed and making up lost time. The engi- neers have pald the penalty for the disregard of rules and signals, and many others have been made to suf- fer for their negligence. Unavoidable accidents are bad enough, but to have such distressing affairs repeated shows the need of a more rigid enforcement of rules, or a better arrangement of #ignal systems. The public deserves every effort in behalf of safety, even to the point of running slower trains. EDITORIAL NOTES. Both at Baltimore and at Syracuse, Murphy was at the wrong end of the argument. ’l'urhy'll aware by this time that Ireland isn’t the only place looking for home rule. Happy thought for today: The pos- tal card can carry all the love it is safe to make in writing. George W. Perkins, the idealist, would haye been an agent for the trusts had he endorsed Taft. English prisons ought to be emptied quickly if all prisoners are treated allke who go on a “hunger strike,” Since the battle for the Lord was opened by faking 160 contests, it peems to have lost its divine aspect. As a campaign candidate, Wilson shows a lack of experience. Gen. Prosperity denies a great deal he is saying. If the Colonel was like other men, 'if “the dead cock in the pit” should win, his disappointment would be the more poignant. The ambition of certain suffrage leaders to fill men's shoes is, to say the least, an unexpected breach of feminine pride. New York hotels are charging for bread and butter served with meals. Patrons would not object if this didn't requiré a tip to get it. " The party that made the Colonel may be as black as he paints it; and then he does not rise above the bird that defiles its own nest. 2 . With all the talk about the time be- ing ripe for a change, there is no workingman who sees the policy of | cutting his pay enyelope in two. America has been shown what is called “a live president,” and it has been so thoroughly mortified that it doesn’t ever care to see another! It seems as if Great Britain can only prevent a civil war in Ireland by keeping Ulster under the direct rule of Great Britain. That ought to be easy enough. If Taft represents the party of bosses he has shown conclusively that he can't be bossed by the bill moosers, or the weak-kneed “sisters” of his own party! Vermont has again shown her hand Just as expected. Fletcher was chosen as governor by a large majority in the legislature, The state will do the same by Taft, “I didn’t keep books. I spent the money as fast as I got it,” 1 Man- ager Dixon of the third-termer's cam- paign fund. It is quite ecasy to be- lieve that he was strong on the spend. Colonel Roosevelt says the progres- sive movement is religious, and he still shows his charity for the mistaken by calling them thieves, pickpockets and liars. That doesn’t sound like Bible- class talk. Roosevelt and be elected governor by steps have been taken to that end, but it must soon come, it it is to avold bloodshed. The states are eager to accomplish their object through their the republicans—in other words. political hallucination something this in 1860, The establishment of banks for !.hel assistance of the farmers is one which concerns many other countries besides Some banking houses which would permit the farmers to gain pos- session of farms in meny Instances, at low rates of interest, and conduct them as a profitable venture, is what is be- ing sought here, particularly through the vast farming sectlons of the west. It is likewise a problem in Great Brit- ain, and to the British assoclation at Entered at the Postoffics at Norwiel, | Dundee, Scotland, Allen McNell sug- lass mattee, the institution would be ting Stubbs of Kansas wants to vote for he ave the state and disrupt the The southern democrats had a Iikpl THE MAN WHO TALKS Isn't it strange that for freedom from it? not live without it. “the don't want to's” seems to be inherently laay. natural feeling, quite with all declared Jereny Taylor; envy the so-called elite. wrote: “Ten thousand harms doth hatch.” if they could. the people now support the upon cur industry. depravity? You may think life is a gift, but 1 ‘We may it as “one grand sweet song,” but that is a dream. Goethe likened life to “a quarry out of which we are to mold and chisel and complete a This view of it gives force famous It isn't flnatic, but rather flinty, and we must, f successful, work the beauty out pf think i is a responsibility. dream o character.” to the Fiske Jubllee singe: sOng: eep a Hammering.” by well directed and purposeful effort. The ideal we have for a model is God- likeness. When we get to the end of life most of us confess we are human —the likeness is not all it should have been—it is not exactly what we ex- pected to make it, even if we kept “a- hammering.” Those who take life easy make a mesk of it. We cannot see a dwarfed soul, but it must look like any other abnormal thing. It can't be beau- tiful although it may excite curiosity and interest. Someone has said: “Hu- man Jife I8 a constant want and there- fore should be a constant prayer.” That is why we should ever keep re- ting the refrain: “Keep a-Hammer- ng, O My Soul!” Do not cultivate the habit of being positive about things, for it seldom creates a good impression if you are right 19 times in 20. Knowing it ail is no virtue, but it is the best of grounds for suspecting a counterfeit. Exact knowledge is not so common as to produce possessors of absolute truth. Postivity stands for conceit and inex- perience 99 times in a hundred. . Per- haps you have met persons who could not with safety be contradicted. If you wadited . their good will or friendship you must humor their conceits and stand before them as an interested and amazed admirer. This is a big price to pay for something that has become sodden with false pretense. The men- tal world of a man who thinks he knows it all is a little world. It is ke Rhode Island, of which a recent visitor who, being asked what the qutlook was replied: Rhode Island is all out- hat's all there is there! Just think of yourself always as a student, never as a sage. When you come tc county fairs, most of the early September fairs are mainly horse-trots, dog and hen shows with the agricultural whiskers attach- ed to give them a bucolic appearance. It is the betwixt and betweenness of them that makes them weak affairs. It has always taken something besides big hogs and squashes, log-cabin bed quilts and crude art to make a fair. Before the dawn of the “Midway,”the beach pond horse traders showing the mettle of their horse-shadows, which were slatty enough to frighten an Ara- | blan steed half to death, were the real attraction. In fact. a county fair that was a good imitation of what they had in this county 60 years ago would today be a drawing card; but it would be more expensive to reproduce it than it would to hire a flying man or the presidential candidate of the progres- sive party to servé as a magnet. No fair should be unfair in its judgments or awards. We all think we know what friend- ship is—true friendship. Now you think what it is while I rehearse what it isn’t. The person who takes a flat- terer for a friend will get a counter- feit. If he takes a lame duck for a friend he will have to reduce his speed, sacrifice his time, and perhaps carry him at last. If he becomes intimate with one who thinks friendship is a mainstay he will always feel the strain of a need which becomes trying. If he finds in a professedly friendly per- son an amiable critic of his conduct, he will not warmly regard him, be- cause the bore thinks he should do his duty. If intimacy with a person de- velops in him a leach, the relation soon becomes onerous. It is not safe, it is said, to make yourself the fourth friend of a person who has repelled three. It, however, takes a friend to be a friend, and he must have pru- dence and patience and charity and be able to see the charm of personality ;vhilch makes one blind to all ordinary aults. Who do you suppose have the most serious time in the world, those who are looking for good help or those who are looking for good bosses? You will have to admit there is an affinity be- tween the two if they do not appear often to get together. When they do come together the labor problem and the servant problem comes pretty near being solved. Goodness is soothing. There are so many definitfons of goodness, though, that some one may feel like asking us to define a good man, If you will just keep in mind that “a good man is better to his ene- mies than a bad man is to his friends” | this may assist you in knowing a good man when you meet him. ‘An ideal employer wins the .confidence of his employes and keeps it—they respect him because he respects them. Mu- tuality strengthens honor and efficien- cy almost anywhere. People who get together right never fly apart. If goodness was more prevalent the labor troubles which harass the land would fade away. Few of us realize what a shifty thing a dollar is. Its value is not al- ways what it seems to be. The Amer- ican dollar once upon a time would buy two Mexican sllver dollars greater weight than itselr, and when the trade dollar was in circulation it fell below the standard dollar in value, although it contained more silver. Prof. Kemmerer of Cornell university has been studying into the variability in the purchasing power of the dollar, something the average wage earner never thinks of, and thrifty man thinks he has $1,000 he hasn’t. He illustrates it in this way: “If a man bought at $1,000 a ' per cent. bond on Jan. 1, 1896, maturing Jan. 1, 1912, he boughi a secured right to draw $30 a vear for 16 years and to principal which was repaid was equiv- purchasing power to only dollars which the investor paid for the bond.” This has happened in at least three years of the studied by Prof. Kemmerer that the line in the purchasing power of the eater than the aver- In 1899 the decline alent in re: 667 of tk originally dollar has been age inter rate. vas 8.2 per cent and in 1908 would be w mare in 1909 8 per cent U was 1 for all the variability o of us to study the dollar. manners, where would you iook for man never yearns for work, but is always longing If you hear any- one say they like to work, it is a per- son who through training has become inured to it, and who thinks he could Most people have oftener than they go to meeting.. It seems to be & wild thing to say, but the whole race It is this likely, which mekes the annual vacation regarded as 8Uch an incentive to work the rest of the year. Men work to gain respite the zeal they do to earn money, and idleness is a curse, we are assured—"the burial of a living man,” and this s one of the things which makes us Shakespeare more than the ills we know, our idleness Most people would loaf It is sald two-fifths ot other three-fifths, and we pride ourselves Doesn't this seem to support the doctrine of man's total of shows when a k his principal at the end of that period. On the average his $50 a vear :nterest declined in its purchas- ing power about 3 per cent, a year, and when the bond matured the $1,000 5.4 per cent. It 1 If you were going to hunt for gunii OLD FA ¢ \ (Written Specially for The Buletin.) The human family always gives forth signs of weakness as well as of strength. It apparentlyy was never designed to become sagaclous; but was endowed with ability enough to give essurance that man had power to rule the earth (which appears to be a con- celt), although he has not yet demon- strated that e has power to contrcl himself. One of the evidences of advancement is changes in language, dress and opin- fons, which make the prior generations appear somewhat ridiculous in the eyes of the rising generation by new enunciations of words or different manners, which are no improvement upon the old forms. have lived long enocugh and been ob- serving have seen style frequently re- treat from its own decrees. You and I cannot tell why people who have seen half a century should be generally called old-fashioned; or octogenarians be looked upon as a relic of an almost forgotten past. Have you ever thought of some of the good things which are now looked upon as old-fashioned by the rising generation? There is an old-fashionel love, and old-fashioned homes, and old-fashioned manners, and old-fash- joned chivalry, and I fear some people really think there is such a thing as old-fashioned virtue. They do not seem to realize that virtue cannot be- come old-fashioned any more than the sun, the stars or the rainbow. It is nauseating to elderly people to hear younger people say flippantlv “Chivalry is out of date.” They do not appear to know the meaning of the word—they seem to be totally uncon- scious of what they are condemning. Ask such a person what chivalry means, and he is likely to be found totally incompetent to say that the word inclides most that is in goodness and truth—fair play, courtesy, honor, reverence for age, and every ood and holy thing. In trying to make things different, are not the leaders of men in their selfishness and conceit guilty of leav . ing darkness occasionally where there was once ight, and ignorance presid- ing where intelligence once reigned. In these days of quick divorces, when 24 couple can be separated in 120 min- utes—when’ the nuptial knot can be untied much faster than it can be duly sealed, or, when limited marriages are openly and sincerely discussed and en- tered into, and when the parties to mercenary unions make pacts brazen- ly to give one another beastial liberty, it is not surprising that a large class them? This may seem likb a foolish jestion to you, but what little experi- ce I have had in life has taught me that bad manners turn up where you least expect to meet them, and that good manners meet you in all sorts of company. The bad man often has tho most entrancing manners, while the good man may have bad manners, or no manners worth speaking of. This question of manners can never be a dead issue, for bad manners will never let it become so. It is because good manners are profitable that bad men find a constant use for them. They are frequently skilfully used to de- celve all who are expecting to get something for nothing. I guess all of us look to the home for good manners and really do not dare look anywhere else. SUNDAY MORNING TALK OBLIGATO PLAYERS. The siger may not have realized how much the effectiveness of the song depended on ‘the delightful violin obli- gato. To us who listened the delicate tracery of sound which the instrument ‘wove around the voice was a charming and indispensible feature of the per- formance. The young fellow who stood in the background with the violin tucked under his chin did as much as the soloist to make the beautiful ef- fect possible, | once knew a college baseball pitch- er who was remarkably effective as long as a certaln broad and squat com- rade was behind the bat to receive his delivery. Let some other backstop come into the game and the star twirler was up in the air at once. It was really the catcher who was responsible for the pitcher's wide reputation. Many a wife does just that thing for There is nothing 1o be said against any advance which has sufficient merit to warrant a change; but those who SHIONED e e e | #peak derisively of old-fashioned love | and old-fashioned homes, for those whose instincts have been degraded to those of the beasts of the field are not to be expected to sense what blessings true love and constancy and sincere, conflding home life means. Health applies to spiritual as well as physical perfection and harmony, and how few seem to realize this. Bowen says: “To become a thor- oughly good man is the best prescri tion for keeping a sound mind in & sound body. Beecher declared: “Half the spirit- ual difficulties that men and women suffer arise from a morbid state of health.” Tyndale averred: "The morality of clean blood ought to be one of the first lessons taught us by our pastors and teachers. The physical is the sub- stratum of the spiritual, and this fact ought. to give to the food we eat and the air we breathe a transcendent sig- nificance.” It 18 only the path of degeneracy which leads to degradation that makes things which should be held sacred seem old-fashioned. p What is old-fashioned love? The kind Longfellow said “Gives itself but cannot be bought,” the love Milton de- fined when he wrote “Mutual love, the crown of ali our bliss!” and described by Bulwer when he indited “the ac- cents of love are all that is left of the language of paradise.” ‘What misleaders of men liberty and advancement be when they are misin- terpreted. There are many things which are now called old-fashioned which the world must go back to because in them there is safety and abiding peace. The currents of life do not all run toward the New Jerusalem. Men rather drift on the tide than, to row against it; and as the illusions of life are so many, it is not strange that we drift away from the things which are most elevating and comforting. Good things cannot become old- fashioned. ~While fashion controls mostly the dress and the manners of the people, the world is constantly caught going back to its old style of dress and calling it new, and. to its oid and almost forgotten formalities and callin~ them better. ‘That old proverb,“Variety is the spice of life," is deeper set in the human heart than we think; and it is the love of change (for change is the basis of all we call style) that makes things in common parlance old-fashioned and naf¥-fashioned. In neither of these do we find that which enriches our own lives or en- nobles the soul; but in the things which cannot become old-fashioned or new-fashioned. THE SUBSTITUTE. her husband. She creates the atmos- phere in which he can do his work. The applause goes to the man; the woman has produced the tones ‘that have filled in the harmony. She stands behind him and plays the obligato. One may speculate, for instance, as to what would have been the fate, in its early days, of the Salvation Army or its founder without the counsel and encouragement of the general's wife, Catherine Booth. In a multitude of American homes the same truth is exemplified. There obligato players. Father who strug- gles and saves that son may go to college, or mother bending over the wash tub and ironing board that daughter may shine at the party are among the number. 5 At the funeral of his mother, Gen. ‘Grant sald to the officlating pastor, “In the remarks that you make, make no reference to me; mother gained noth- ing by any position I have filled or honors that may have been paid me. I owe all this and all I am to her honest, modest and sincere plety.” The name of Colunibus is a s; m for bravery in all ge tions, ut who could name a single one of® the crew that safled with him? t do we know of the men who hauled on the ropes and trimmed the salls and held the clumsy tiller over leagues of trackless ocean? History makes slight mention of Rodrigo de Triana, who; from the lookout of the Pinta, was straining his eyes through the gloom on the fateful early morning of Oct. 12, 1492, when a new world swung solemnly, into view. Yet he and his comrades were essential parts of the enterprise. Where would 'Columbus have been without his ord sea- men and what would Napoleon hase done without the common soldier? There are, of course, multitudes of people in the world who refuse to play any except solo parts. They must stand in the calcium ray and receive are to be found millions of humble | and wholesomeness. e > sealing them. ORDER FROM culty in getting your order the applause. As rhen advance into a nobler and more Christian temper they are content to be obligato players. They gladly contribute what they can to the world's welfare, caring noth- ing for personal pralse, but only, like J’:J{m uuldnupuntd of old, that the use be advanced. . b THE PARSON. OTHER VIEW POINTS | b T RSP S T RA ‘We wonder how much of the lmtfll the Atlanta newspaper rej ‘when it handed Roosevelt his after his speech, and told him to \light out for home.—Waterbury American. After the candidates have occupied the thres minutes of their automobile speech in eulogizing the scenery and complimenting the civil war veterans, the voters feel that they are familiar with the true significance of the cam- paign—New Haven Union. b iy One more aviator {s gone, Walsh, who originated the “dip of death’ tried it once too often. The “dip of death” added little or nothing to the advance aerfal sclence, It was merely & s&acmuhr aeroplane trick. Any man w! 8 ‘lndmnd in it aid so ‘:: at risk. course, any man wl 53 so was aleo foollsh—Hartford Times. Governor Wilson accepts Sulzer as a patisfactory candidate for governor of New York, but the democrats who are fighting to down Tammany’s grip on the democracy of that state may not do so0. They talk of naming an inde- pendent ticket. The progressives clear Iy have the pole in the Empire state as the gubernatorial race begins.— Springfield Republican. ‘Colonel Roosevelt says that the re- publican. party has been rotten for thirty years. Strange, s it not, that he never made the discovery till last ltkoquégmynih of air, and keeps in every bit of flavor, sparkle In cur new bottling piant, the brew : flows into the bottles directly from . mmthlpoehdhnh. placed on them, hermetically 'Brewery Botiling means Narragansett with all its flavor, sparkle and wholesomeness intact. YOUR DEALER We do not supply consumers direct, but if telephone or write the brewery and we will see that you are supplied thru a distributor. The price is but a trifle more than ordimary Bottling. have you diffi- for Brewery Bottling filled, -andest political _organization \"i&fld ever knew.—~New Britain Ree; 0 Job Hedges says he will make a cam- ign “in_sym) with the humen g:art" and thu%'l call anybedy a Har” We imagine that Mr. W will find that Ltmho public 'fi!, rwd-“': - open arms. e 'm::‘nd‘ baser instincts pas- -i"fin? #lh:hd‘mmm- have been ran- sacked for invecfive ammunition. Tt will .be ng to hear a new vo- cabulary.—M Record, IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN Waters and Laziness. What is there l::out water that is conducive to iness m;“e sleeplest towns I ever saw, when 1 was a by, were the river towns in mm&x;'.na Mllnpfl.wheu I used to Ing. 'oNnbodf moves so slowly as a fish- erman. i No of people have such an air of Infitite lejsure as they who loaf along river whlr{u. l;:‘cple instinctively go to the sea- side to rest. You can sit interminably and look at the ocean or a lake. You cannot do that with land. The ulflln!:n.flu- 1 have ever led, days when doing nothing whatever was reduced to a sclence, were those on an ocean liner, There it is impos- gible to work. You have no time, only eternity. 1 w-wwhu! a loafer once standing on tfe quay at the bay of Naples. 1 watched did ho He but “change legs. And the most solemn of all birds are storks and cranes, who watch water. choice of styl elegant styles. for your choosing. been questioned. : BEST STYLES, priced. 121 FINE SHOWING OF Manhattan Clothes! Manhattan supremacy means more to you this year than ever before. We are first not alone in magnitude, variety, e—but in value giving as well. Every garment is strong evidence of this fact. We never showed so many styles—and such good values as this fall. Kuppenheimer Clothes head the list for Here are beautiful Suits and Overcoats ready Fabrics of quality, skillfully tailored that have a deserved reputation for worth and style that never has men want this season. KUPPENHEIMER SUITS AND OVERCOATS $16.50 to $25.00 Good Suits and Overcoats at $10.50, $12.50 and $15.00 made by other prominent makers. FALL HATS BEST VALUES We are selling more hats than ever before and we be- lieve it is just because we have the hats most men and young Smart styles in new Low Crowned Derbys, Rich Velour Soft Hats in all the good shapes and shades—$1.5Q to $3.50. Complete stocks of Fall Shoes, New Neckwear, Shirts, Gloves, Hosiery, Underwear, Sweaters, Etc., all sensibly THE MANHATTAN -125 Main Street The Leading Store in Eastern Connecticut devoted exclusively to Men’s, Women's and Children’s Wearing Apoars/