Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 6, 1912, Page 4

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. ‘crw:h 3 lletin and g'nufiei?. pta 116 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 12c a week; 500 a nonth; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, onn, as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6. Willimantic Offics, Room 2, Murray Building. Telephone 210. 6, 1912, Norwich, Friday, Di wie' Cirenlation ol ihe Bulletin. Whe Bulletin has the largest elr- culation of amy paper in Eastern Commectjeut, and from three te four thues Mrger than that of any Wn Norwich, It iu delivered to over 3,000 «f the 4,053 houses in Nor- swich, and read by nimety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it s delivered to over 500 houscs, In Putoam and Danlelson to over 1,160, and In all of thewe places it is consldered the local daily. Eastern Connecticat has forty- nine towas, enc humdred and sixty- five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulleta ia sold 1n every town and on all ef the R. ¥, I routes in Eastern Coamecticut, CIRCULATION 1901, average 4m2 1905, average .eiweenne 5,990 November 30. STATE FARM FOR INEBRIATES. Before the coming the general assembly pre- sented a bill in b for inebriates, a similar me: ing been advocated at the sion but faileq to t the proper sup- port Many influences are at work on the proposition which has for its object the reformation of the con- firmed drunkards at a place outside the insane hospitals, to which so many are now sent as in: e patients. Such a farm would take care of such per- sons as now alternate between the jail and . the street corners, where they are a detriment to themselves and relatives and a burden to the community, because between their terms of imprisonment they return to thele former habits and again take thefr usual course through the police courts. At a e farm they would be kept and work al at- tention given thereby to their reform- ation. The state hospltals now recelve 4 many who are in need of a state farm § and such patients only serve to les- #8gEn the opportunities for those who a Teally need the hospital treatment. Wdnasmuch as insanity can be helped best by early treatment, the relief to the Institutions from the alcoholic pa- tients would permit the acceptance of . more patients In the early stages of mental disorder and thus tend to Sring about a greater percentage of cures and henefits. The need of the farm is apparent, but whether the state will feel, In the present situa- tion as to finances, that it should be rovided for remains to be seen. sesslon of will be av- last ses- THE RED CROSS STAMPS, With the approach of the Christ- mas season comes the Red Cross stamps, through the income from the sale of which so much comfort and cheer are steadily being dispensed to those 80 greatly in need of it because of Alseage. Throughout the country an fmmense interest {s manifested in this apnual contribution for the pur- pose of checking and stamping out the ravages of the white plague and every city and town is lending its ef- forts fo encourage the work and help fn the worthy cause. The fact that he sale last added a third of a million dolla the funds for the prevention of tuberculosis and care of those afflicted with it, indicates the eympathy of the people Tt is a c in w permitted to particip Nefted or not as pl. are to und and_every helps w! r it be Norwich has 180 ich everyone s te whether so- s for their sale little bit dimes or dollars. always done its part and it will this year. There is no better way of displaying the true Christmas spirit.. Every contribution means the providing of help for those less fortunate in purse and in heaith, If eyeryone in the town hought four stamps, Norwich’s ‘quota would be more than exhausted, an excellent contribution would be made and no one would miss the help thus given. Mest people will do batter than that, but the point is that everyome should do his part though it may be small THE CITY OF SALONICA. The stand taken by Greece In the Baikan affair makes an awkward sit- uation in the negotiations which are underway for the bringing about of peace in that locality. Greece has taken an important part in the war gainst Turkey and was prepared to 7 do even more in the way of assist- ing the Bulgarian troops both on land and on the sea. After having taken two of the important cities, includ- ing Salonica, a port of much import- ance to any country she now scents a deal whereby she may be deprived of this anclent city of historic fame. She fears that Bulgaria is not inclined to | ‘deal fairly with her and that Bul- herself wants Salonica. Her de- fnation to keep on fighting is Iikely to disrupt the alliance with the ‘other states concerned, and her determination to hold onto the great Jewish center, a city of large wealth 2nd prosperity and a valuable naval base, may turn her friends dgainst her. This is going to be one of the im- . portant questions for decision before the peace councll, a prize for which the allfes will be disposed to wrangle. g The spolls of war have always been b & @ hard question to settle especlally where the advantages centre about a _in which many are to by participating in the ghould reach an amicable it even it has to give in and &n open port from which " e would derive benefil. SECRETARY M'VEAGH'S ADVICE. T the apnual report of Secr MacVeagh of the treasury dep: ent he has glven congress much food for solid thought, a-statement which re- flects the experience of four years of service in dealing closely with the mattefs upon which he dwells and In which as the head of that important department he has been in direct con- tact thus enabling him to see the de- fects with the eye of an expert and the deliberation of a business man. ‘When he lays before congress the fact that it is responsible for the panics and other financial troubles which stir the country, it needs to pay strict attention and give faithful service in an endeavor to overcome the condi- tjon by proper legislation. Congres- sional action is important and cannot come too soon and this he emphasizes when he says: “The relief which is s0 urgently needed by the lesitimate business and enterprise of our people is not relief from a financial situa- tion built up by a financial world itself, but is from a system and con- conditions superinduced by the gov- ernment and forced upon the business community and upon American So- clety. The banking and currency sys- tem is the product of federal law and there can be no relief from it until congress act: This is deserving of careful aften- tion in the solution of one great prob- lem before the people today. To an- other administration Secretary Mac- Veagh has given sqme valuable ad- vice. The importance of it is unde- niable ang it rentains to be seen What use will be made of it. THE ORGANIZED MILITIA. Wherever a company of the state militta exists there is deep interest in the outcome of the bill before con- gress concerning the pay of the mem- hers of the national guard. This has been agitated for some time and with the increasing dutles given to the of- ficials and members of the ‘militia, it comes in for more serious consider- ation. Loyalty and patriotism are not lacking, but when it comes to giving two to three evenings a week to main- tain the efficlency of the organized militla it seems but fair that some slight compensation should be forth- ing. That it would result more eficlency is the belief of the Providence Bul- letin when it sa - “While it fs true that the national cause has been vicforious in every war in which troops have engaged, it is also true that the victory probably would have been won at less cost had the state military organizations been efficient and at once available.. The process of transforming the state bodies federal organizations has been a long one, and amounted to a n of the former. The Pepper bill remedies this feature by provid- that the entire organization of ficers and men shall become federal ents, br des or isions, as the = Dick bll has proven of much ry benefit, but the Pepper bill, it is claimed, offers a remedy for its discovereq defects, some' of which, as matters of law, would serious af- fect the national d e if permitted to exist until a war emergency devel- oped them.” mili EDITORIAL NOTES. The weather man is still the friend of the coal consumer. meeting this week. an inc the Pulitzer foundation, . NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 6, 1912 BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Talcott Williams Tells of Associations With Isaac H. Bromley —Change in System \of Entrance Exams—Yale Draws From All Parts of America—Reason For Lack of Keen Interest in Books and Scholarships. $ in the cities, New Haven claiming 88 of them, New York 83, Chicago 35 and Buffalo, Brooklyn and Hartford sent 15 men apiece. = There are 14 men from Philadelphia. Taken as a Whole, the figures are in- teresting to Yale men because they show a dontinued steady progress to- ward the ideal of Yale as a national institution. Of course, it is to be ex- pected that the East will always be more heavily represented than other sections, but at the same time, it is desired, and the desire is being at- tained, that Yale be just as much a university for the Southerner and the Westerner and the men of other na- tionalities, where each may learn the view point of his fellow-classmate and | thereby reach a liberality of thought not otherwise to be attained. /New Haven, Dec. 5—The choice ‘of Henry H, Ketcham, 1914, of Brooklyn, N. Y., as captain of next year's Uni- versity football team was one that has been generally endorsed by the student body. Ketcham at center this year has been a man who has been in every play in every game this year and has for the second time won his po- sition on the All-American eleven. He is 21 years old, 6 feet tall, weighs 115 pounds, and prepared at ' Polytechnic Preparatory school and Hotchkiss. The coaching plans for next year have not been announced. Follawing worthily in the foots! of his distinguished father, Morris Hadley, son of President Arthur Irving Hadley , leads his class in scholarship with a standing of 3.62 on the scale of 4.00. At the same fime, he is a member of the Freshman de- bating team, and took part in the fall rowing. Hadley prepared at Groton end rooms in Wright hall, the Fresh- man dormitory The reason why college students, so rarely take keen interest in books and scholarships ,and almost neve® show any genuine enthusiasm for learning, Professor Charles M. Bakewell, of the e chair or philosophy, in the university, The Yale Co-operative association | says, is because they have not early did & Ybusiness aggregating $99,608.0¢ | been brought to see ny vital connec- Guring the year 1911-1912, the superin- | tion between class-room pursuits and tendent’s- report showed at the fall | What goes on the real world. Prof. The sales were | Eakewell lays the blame Zor thls un- .12 re- | fortunate condition in American col- an increase of $180412 over the Bre- || e, on ihe family, the sscondary 5 school, ond the college, and he blames the coi'ege most of all. The normal stuawnt, he says, comes to. ccilege bristling with il sorts of half-aroused interests and curlosiies about nature life and life's problems, both individual and social. Then the college makes the work of the first two years as much as possible like that of the secondary schools, both in subject and method-drudgery, dull routing, and often it must be ad- mitted, bad teaching, kill the interest from the start. Prof. Bakewell would make three radical changes. He would devote a good portion of Freshman year to those pursuits which would give the student a broader outlook wpon the world and human life, and would. fieip him to discover his own ‘special in- terests. Then he wouwid have {ne best and most experienced teachers give courses in Freshman and Sophomore years, saving the services in teach- ing for more advanced courses, Final- ly, lecture courses should be siven, : the time when the personality cf the teacher and his_interpretations count for so much. “There is indeed no royal road to learning but there is a royal road that leads to the land of learning and happy the Freshman whose feet are set upon it.” On the Isaac N. Bromley endowment for annual lectures on Journalism in Yale university, Talcott Williams, di- rector of the School of Journalism, on ar Columbia university, delivered the first lecture Tuesday night on “Journalism and the State.” Dr. Williams paid_tribute to Brom- ley as thefsuccessful editor of a Con- necticut newspaper and later in a wider field, and told of his own gain from his acquaintance while stil a “cub” reporter with Bromley. His in- tectious humor, Which exploded o many fallacies, his capacity for home- ly and convincing exposition, and his loyalty to the political principles he supported so long in a critical period of our history, united to prove the public service of the editorial writer. - He wrote when newspapers still stood apart. Today, Journalism and the State have taken the place of journal- ism and the individual journalist. Education, legislation, and public opinion are today concerning them- selves, not with editors or newspapers, but with the whole fabric of the pres: Journalism must succeed as a b ness or it ceases to exist as an organ of public opinion. The problem of journalism today is how this relation with a great public need shall be maintained under the stress of materi- al profits. The pre: through the education of the journalist, will enter on the same evolution as the bench and the bar, and will serve the istate, as the journalist has from the begin- ning, with a larger sacrifice and a lesser material reward. In reply to the criticism that the plan of raising mopey for the new Yale stadium was opposed to the prin- ciple of “Yale democracy,” David Daggett, secretary of the committee of twenty-one states that the plan, was adopted by recommendation of the ad- visory board, after mature considera- tion and that the scheme of ticket privilege,—where $100 gives an option on one seat for 15 years, but with the maximum privilege of selecting ten seats for any size ofcombination,— has thus far worked out most- satis- factorily and large subscriptions are The faculties of the Academical and Sheffield departments of the universi- ty at recent meetings decided to in- troduce a change in the system of entragce examinations to these two \mder%radu&le departments. The new coming in daily. For the coliseum alone The Business Center of Norwich SHOP EARLY Buy your Christmas presents early — early in the day, early in December. ~ That will be your biggest gift of the holidays to the workers behind the counters and on the delivery wagons. OUR CHRISTMAS STOCKS ARE NOW AT THEIR BEST. VISIT THE CHRISTMAS STORE NOW. The Toy Basement OUR TOY'DEPARTMENT IS THE CHILDREN'S WONDERLAND. JOE DANIELS, He Imitates and is Funny Feet of Gr Carl Rosine & Gompany IN MAGIC THAT IS EXTRAORDINARY AND MARVELOUS THE MINERS QUARTETTE, Great Singing Four THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY—"On the Firing Line” 1000 it Italian-Turkish War Sce DAY AUDITORIUM TODAY Excellent Vaudeville ad Motion Pictures Toys That Teach And Toys That Don’t Toys That Wind Up Toys That Don’t Break Games of Skill Games of Chance Dolls Undressed Dolls All Dressed Toys of All Kinds for Boys and Girls At the Christmas Store while—well, You know the 4 of man t is one to do y the best way is to do what children of 13 or 14 not reag and W Press. BREED THEATRE Double Feature Today “NOUNTAIN DEW" Souther ~~and Marvelous Pathe Weekly, No. 46 |= GENTLEMEN \ | - No Chills, Pills or Doctors’ | bills hereafter if you don’t| sneeze at the suggestion but| |into your Winter Underwear | Inow. It is the sudden changes jin the temperature that get you and if you look over our| | stocks of all weights you can| be protected against the| changes. | Union Suits and Two-piece | Suits for moderate prices at| The Toggery Shop | J. C. MACPHERSON Main Street, Norwich, Conn. | 291 SLATER HALL Musical Course THREE HIGH CLASS ATTRACTIONS Alma Gluck, Soprano December 17th Adeles Margulies Trio January New York Symphony Orchestra 14th February 12th Course Tickets for the thres entertainments, $5.00, n sale the store ot The Ladies’ Si)ecial»tyu Store TWO BARGAIN DAYS THIS WEEK Friday and Saturday We make Special Reductions on Ladies’ and Happy thought for today: Plans for breaking the egg trust sound like an- other shell game. Greece seems to be looking at the olive branch which Turkey is holding out as a thorn bush. Those who change with/the seasons gardless of the weather are finding annels and steam heat a warm prop- ion. Now that angleworms can think, imagine the fish stories they must be holding back until the day they can talk, ¥ S A poor woman of Minnesota has won her suit against the great steel trust. Another case of the mouse and the lion. It looks like a life job for the mayor of New Bedford. He has been re- electgd for the sixteenth time by an increased majori Turkey is surely facing a different future.. When the women in the harems dare to run away their bar! is mo longer feared. 3 'he surprising thing of all this re- volting Johnson-Cameron match s that clergyman could be found who would marry them. any The democratic' congressmenselect will be ready for another Thanksgiv- ing day when the thousands of office appointmeats have been made. Loaded with Scotch whiskey: . the a very rough and unsteady passag it was quite a natural result. The democrats are too -eager to celebrate to put off inauguration fes- tivities until the last of April It is going to prove a long walt until the fourth of March, A Waterbury man found one of the Hawthorne propositions simply a hole in the ground. It is into such places that many New Englanders have put their hard earned cash. <If the smashing of two gavels at the opening session of 'congress by Speaker Clark is any Indication things will happen to the tariff when they get around. to it A big clipper ship had arrived in Philadelphia after a trip of 160 days from Honolulu. A little more than @ year, or after the canal is opened, and such a trip wiil be unheard of. Connecticut can be proud of the impression its governor made at the assembly of governors at, Richmond. It was quite in contrast to the reck- steamer Numidian from Glasgow hadlNew Jersey is next with 38, Ohio is plan intends that both departments shall use the same examination papers where it is possible and the required work s similar. The examinations will be held separately, as they now are, but the papers in many of the subjects will be identical, with the ex- ception of certain studies such as mathematics, in which the advanced | work required by Sheff would make | {ite oompalidation of ‘pepers {mpossl: e. The purpose In making the changes 18 to simplify the methods of instruc- tion in the preparatory schools, and it will also save the time and expense of preparing two papers according to the old system. The new plan will go into effect next June, and while the exact subjects to wich’ the change will apply have not yet been determined, the examinations in Ergslish, in Ancient and Modern his- tory and the modern languages will’ probably be identical. The same sys- tem is one that has been recommended and urged for a number of years, and its deciding upon this fall will| be pleasing to the preparatory and high schools. about $350,000 is required to seat 60, 000 persons. No benefactor of the stu- | dent body has come forth, and the plan !adopted for raising the money is the only plan yet set forth which will un- doubtedly do it, and without friction. As to what's termed “special privilege” and the ruin of “Yale democracy,” the ommittee are stmply following a rule of human nature in that we give something for what we get. All of the | seats under the privilege cannot pos- sibly amount to more than 10,000, and the structure being a perfect ellipse, almost any one seat i as good as an- other. The privilege means noth- ing more than reserved seat, and every ticket sold under it will bring the fuil price. Much ifiterest centers in the suit brought against Yale university by James Hillhouse for trespass on his property on Plerson-Sage square. The trial began Wednesday in the New Haven County Superior court. The trouble between Mr. Hillhouse and the university has been simmering for months. The Hillhouse mansion i in a three-acre reservation In_the center of a tract of 30 acres on Pros- pect street purchased about _seven years ago by the university and nam- ed after its doner, Mrs. Russell Sage and her ancestor, Abraham Pierson, first rector of Yale, Pierson-Sage square. Mr. Hillhouse desires to test the rights of the university, its servants, students, etc, to cross his “Manor Terrace,” a strip of land that divides the university’s property almost into two sections. His contention would apparently prevent the university from getting into the new Sloane Physics laboratory, and the case may | also indirectly involve the question of the uses of the entire property by the university. The Yale corporation has up to the present time authorized the erection on Pierson-Sage square of four buildings, representing gifts or subscriptions of about $300,0§0. These are laboratories for physics, already completed, for zoology, about half done and for botany and for forestry, Mr. Hillhouse objects to the erection and location of these buildings, which he | contends the contract of sale did not provide for. An analysis of the registration of th Academic and Sheff Freshman classes, made by the News, shows that Yale draws its men In gratifying propor- tions from all parts of America, the Western and Pacific coast represen- tation being especially large this year. In all 42 states and one territory are represented as are also Hawali, Porto Rico, China, Italy, Germany, Asia Minor, Switzerland and Cuba. Con- necticut, naturally. leads with 83 men in 1916 and 138 men in Sheffield 1915, a total of 221; New York is second with 195 men, of whom 104 are in Academic and only 91 in Sheff; Penn- sylvania sends 69 men to Yale, Massa chusetts 61, Dlinois is fifth with venth with 34.. All these states have increased representation - this with the exception of New Jersey. As many men are sent to Yalé by Oregon and Washington as are sent by Maine, New Hampshire and Vermont. The Southern states, Texas leading with seven, are well represented this fall in the new classes, The majority of the Freshmen live year, i deep seated and well developed evil, but simply as one of the periodical “jolts” needed to glve ‘things a Iiittle rearrangement and faclilitate their movement along the proper lines.— Bridgeport Standard. e There is no county in the state where reform is needed more than in New Haven. Hartford is much bet- ter but there was a time when it wasn't as good; -still there would be no regrets around here if the county government went out of existence. If the reforms suggested by Judge Math- ewson were put into practice-it would mean “good night” to tthe county sys- tem—New Britain Herald. OTHER VIEW POINTS The people who find fault with the elimination of the word “hell” from the new Baptist Bible are not gener- ally the ones who eliminate it from their conversation—Meriden Journal. The continued benign weather has made it easier to forward coal ship- ments and the fear of a coal famine is rapidly departing. Better still, coal prices to shippers are receding frac- tionally, with a popsibility of a fur- ther slight decline. The consumer waits his turn.—Néw Haven Journal- It does not appear as the result of nny‘I Courier. less abandon of South Carolina's chief executiv ‘When Prof. Hobon of the Chicago university declares the pampered boy | poration, Bridgeport is trying to save some of her streets from the trolley com- pany, but it will ralways be a fight, to keep anything away from the cor< which seems to want the However potwithstanding the fact that the metropolis may offer a.broad- er extent of variety to choose from, there is no reason why any shopper in Waterbury should travel one hun- dred miles, or even thirty. or forty to do his or her buying. Our own shopping district, while not as ex- of today is the grafter of tomorrow | whole of certain streets. -The people | are beginning to wake up, and the well | he holds to the opinion that the le son of responsibility is mnot enough taught. , When Speaker Clark tries to con- sole himself and the president saying, “Wall, we are better looking than the others anyway,” he has to admit that the prize s awarded dif- ferently in a heauty show. An’Tndlana bride of one day, told by a close friend that a neighber had called her old and ugly, shot and Killed the critic. Where does the re- sponsibility lie, on the bride or on the gossiping friend? Gossin {3 & dan- gerous weapop tensive as that of some of the larger cities, is as well equipped as any, of time will come when they will really | thom': Swaterbury Democrat. control. their own streets.—Bridgeport Telegram. Holland affords a good example of public school progress, in the import- ant matter of attendance! In 1900, about three in every hundred chil- dren dld not recelve instruction; in 1904 the number had gome down to two in every thousand; in 1908, it was one to a thousand;’ and more re- cently, the inspector at Nijmegen was Children Ory FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA Connecticut’s three-man fish and game commission is branded as in- efficlent—probably by someone who wants to be the one man on a one- man commission, at $3,000 or $4,000 per. -1t.1s a little odd, too, that some of the very men who would have this made @ one-man affair, favor having three men en the state road commis- sion.—Ansonia Sentinel. There has been a big shakeup in the police- dgpartment of Hartford, resulting in the transferring of prac- ticaily every patrolman in the city. , according to your and Thé most recer 00d Lord to let as little harm excess of men in Connectic was to have been expected icut is on the Atlantic se jacent to New Yor It large share of Eur immigration. A char movements of huma s K T 3 a proved conditions is - unconsci guard consists dom I oth 1 The men come first, selves, then bring Bridgeport Farme Colonel Ullman ha ferred to as a ‘“po has been and still is much mo; a “political leader"—he all the affairs of citizenship have to do with makin a bigger ang bet progress—a city success—a. city second to none in healthy, tireless enterprise. Ullman ' is respected by all him. Long may he live New Haven Times-Le: Conn The b s J. A. Spencer, ¢ nd gathers honey to inconsciously, she is another service, bearing flower to flower. So bout our own bus- y the ministers ng them if we are blighting them if we are their woman. he > than ider Off the Map. rstanding is that Armaged- »een abandoned as a political st—Houston Post. often been AFTER SICKNESS of How to Recover Strength. are asking how to h after severe publishing this r their benefit. pleurisy, pneumonia at you need is new d better blood. certain way to get this taking Vinol, our delicious cod preparation (without il strength, improves the | blood, sharpens the appetite and re- tores the entire system to a healthy yust condition Mrs. Alice Mill of s: “I had a very severe attack of grippe which confined me to my bed results we | for several weeks. After I was able new house | to sit up, I felt weak, tired and worn month, |out for a long time. A friend ad- college | vised me to try Vinol and before I training and the " youngster joins ken one bottle I was entirely circus_troupe; or he him out relieved of that tired, worn out feel- a good-for-nothing and the rascal ing which usually follows grippe and comes & bishop. You give a pitiable |1 had regained my strength and felt tramp a dollar and he goes and gets | well i 3 drunk with it; you refuse him and in [ Try a bottle of Vinol. Your money desperation hé goes to the Sal will be returned if it does not restore Army meeting and gets converted ty and strength. Broadway man who never gives a cent to ch G. G. Engler, Norwich, or church carries on a huge busin T and gives employment to a thousand If you have Eczemq try our amen, making their ‘lives bright and | Ive. We guarantee it. Horstalls IT PAYS TO BUY OUR KIND 9399 ASYLUM ST, Comnecting with 140 TRUMBULL ST HARTFORD; CONNECTICUT 5 Christmas Gifts that appeal to persons of faste and discrimination and useful things, too. For Boys ; Gloves Sweaters School Suits Moccasins Colonel vho know pros kness nforma = st Unconscious Influence. Sometimes it seems as if a greater part of all the good and evil we do is done unconsciously. What we do of set purpose dogs not, as often as not, bring th had hoped. A man build: and a wife dies in it il He gives his boy the b ton, N. C, s | s For Men Golt Gloves Silk Muofllers Cashmere Mufflers Angora Muffilers For Women Tailored Stocks Siik_Stockings Chiffon Blouses Angora Mufflers A warm MACKINAW COAT will keep the ¢hills | from running down your back—we have them for Men, Women and Juveniles. { 50c CORSETS for $1.00 CORSETS for 45¢ 248 Main Street REUTER’ They will be fresh stock, of the roses are like. take advantage of this sal Our business is increasing daily tomers. Roses. Franklin Square, This will be a speclal fgr Saturday only and Children’s Winter Coats. This means a great saving to those who buy. their Coats during this special offering. We have a large variety of Garments in all the most desirable models in the prettiest materials. LADIES’ COATS ......... CHILDREN'S COATS .. We also offer big values in Corsets and Kid Gloves. $2.00 CORSETS for $1.50 85¢ $2.50 CORSETS for $2.00 *~$1.50 CORSETS for $1.25 $3.00 CORSETS for $2.50 $1.50 Kid Gloves for $1.25 $1.00 Kid Gloves for 85¢c WE GIVE ROYAL GOLD TRADING STAMPS The Ladies’ Specialty Co. $7.98 to $18.50 $2.98 to $10.00 Norwich, Conn. 140 Main Street Phone 1184 5000 ROSES m cirs On Saturday, December 7th, we will sell 5000 Roses at 50¢ per dozen varieties. just to show you what our We want those who are ot alrc \dy acquainted with our flowers to the reason ls, satisfled cus- We would suggest an early selection as this sale is limited to 5000 ’ We are prepared to furnish thousands of homes with oliday Gifts FOR CHILDREN—Morris Chairs, High Chairs, Rockers, Sleds, , Doll$’ Go-Carts ana Carriages, Shoo Flys, Wagons, Desks, Rocking Horses, Blackboards. . FOR LADIES—Music Cabinets, Desks, Lamps, Sideboards, Buffets, THERE 18 no advertising medl Eastern Connecticut equai t« The letin for pusiness results Y China Closets, Dinner Sets, Rugs, Portieres, Sewing Machines, Planos, ' LOR GENTLEMEN—Smoking Sets, Morris Chairs, Turkiéh Rock- ers, Couches, Pictures, Roll Top-and Flat Top Desks, Book Cases, Li- brary Tables, Foot Rests and a' thousand other ubeful and sensible ar- ticles that make the best and most lasting, remembrances. SHEA & 3747 Main Street BURKE,

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