Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 3, 1913, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATU RDAY, MAY 3, 1913 b : rwich u iletin end Guonfied. 117 YEARS OLD. Entersd at the Postofice at Norwich, Coun, as second-class matten Telephone Calis: Bulletin Business Office. 480. Eulletin ¥diiorial Rooms, 35-3. Hulletin Job Office. 35-6. Wi limantic Murray Building. Office, Roem 2, Telephone Z10. mysterious entity, possessed of unlim to help anybody and everybody at all times, the INCOME AND EX-' PENSE. After the granting of increased wages to many of their employes, ith- er as the result of conference or ar- | bitration, the managers of the east-| ern roads have decided against grant. ing the demands of the trainmen on the ground that “they belleve that the present rate of wages is liberal and In many cases excessive." | The successive demands made upen MATTER OF Bveryone should = remember that are our wings and sorrows our Some people have the habit of using the spurs in life. too much. It may be that sorrows are just as necessary as jovs: perhups we could not fully appreclate the one without the other. The contrasts in life. all the railroads for increased wages have their values. Newton's law of causes the New York Herald to say Mmotion “to’ every action there is an that “The superstitious notion that eaual and opposite reaction”—might be extended to the law of emotions. The beauty of love would not be so well recognized were it not for the wickedness of hate, or the value of charity without ‘the manifestation of seifishness. What would experience in life be worth without: the natural bal- ances and counterbalances? When we ‘the government’ was a separate and would enable it ited resources which be now applied to seems to be neces- + to It appears railw ary to remind employes that the rail- | ances and inee e . ey N ays have no private mint. The lines ' &1k 0f the ups and downs of life Norwich, Saturday, May 3, 1913. | W0 00 B0 B e o e, which holds W are mot talking of disorder, for The Circulation of The Bulletin o af Craskporiation, Tmas taey | eleved: are promptly permitted to Increase | RS B The Bolletin s the targest i || eir charges they cannot continue to! 1t Was Thackeray who said: 4 fool . g 1§ e CRE an no more see his o v ths culation of mmy paper in East supply efficient service even On the can ee his ears’ hence he has fo Conaccticut, d from three to four present basis, and are assuredly unable have it pointed out to him in order | wes lurger tham what of asy Wl . thic time to comply with the un- that he may grow in wisdom. What 3t ta delivered o over | . ohovie demands of employes, in- | the fool does at last the wise man € the 4075 B Volving furiher enormous Increase of | d06s to begin with. Those are, indeed, 26 read oy mime - - ortunate, Who get a good start in life operating cost. | \ gk 8 Sy ¢ the people. im \Wins The claim for ncreased iwages DM make few errora. It In becauss W i selivercd to ever 308 heuscs 1S clnge mpon the granting of thir. | Lhere always has been and always will 3 TRl 5% comes i LS Ayt I~ be a preponderance of fools in the | in Puinam an ahi=lnon ty million additional pay to the train- | world that knaves exist and seem to 1,400, mnd in all of thrse places L men in 1910, Surely if the railroads prosper It was Hare who ventured ia vousidered the loeal wnily. are to he resirained from making in- to call attention to the fact that “only Eastera Commectiont has forty- | orogsed Jarg for transportaticn a fool is alwavs right” How fools Bine tewss, omc hundred and sixi there must be a time when they must May be recognized Is by the importance five pestotfice districts, sad wixis | he protecied against paving excessive {Ne¥ manifest over small parades and rural free delivery routes. wages. the income is to be check- .o s s (& Gt 1 d his own Importance never is conscious The Ballettn i sold in evers | cg ihe be no unlimited outg0. | of his own short comings. If you town and om all of the it = will lend vour thought to this subject routcs in Lnstern Cozmectic IMPORTING BEEF. vou will find there are fools in many | LATION it rpose of helping out the high and responsible places. supp dressed beef in this couns sy CRCULATIO! : el 8 s S0 | o . you Vi ot 1o pern < s d that Argentina wno “discovering an idea in a book A e X 1" Australia will become large con- fjoy e which thoy banant B n tributors to the demands of this counl- endorse, throw down the book and close P CGTeIRgS, yorr 5'919 tr has been demonstrated that their eves and their hearts to the book he cattle in rv in this couniry is forever after, and scorn the author on a decline while the demand would Some people are more responsive to © an increased produc- their dislikes than to anythinz else. Week ending April 26 naiurally requir creased produc: ey feel It is their duty to let ¥ ' n. It is but natural tha MUSt yno% when they draw the line: and .4 be met and being unat the ey actually draw is a bar thin, the supply must to enlightepment, They shut them- w the country. Extensive selves up like a box-turtle for fear s FHE PRESIDENT IN NEW JERSEY. Tands are available in both Argen- they mav get a broad view of Important questions, the reorganiza- (ina anq Australia and those cov things. Theyv are mighty uncomfort- n of the government, the extra seS- irics are already (urning out great able folks, too. for they are always sion, as well as rnational Prob- quantities of beef for England and the J1sblaving the traits which arouse an- lems have crowded he pening ppi) es. Bringing beef from such derestimate of the characters of esti- months of President Wilson's adminis- = gistan nts will entail additional mabie. evpler Mner are an orstone tration. There bas been and there iS costs so that while the supply will be in feeling and manifestation that they A pressure of business at Washington jncured it may have no appreciable become impertinent and wearving to which requires no small amount of at- airect upon the price. all who come in contact with them. tention, but in the midst of it the pres- The intention to develop the cattle Jdent is devoting several davs to Work raising facilities of the countries to| Of all the anglers, perhaps those who i2 behalf of his plan for jury reform is indicated by the establish = T compliments ’] e the most in his own state of New Jerse It of large refrigerating plants in Satisfactory season, for there is no bar 5 = 8 e 3 to it—their season is everlasting. They is undoubtedly true that he is deeply entina by packers from this coun- | naver Sneal of the bie Gen that. mot interested in t nprovement of con- and that four new steamers have away, or of the litile one they had to aitlons in that state and that ¥ been ordered and additional refriger- | throw back because it was not of legal | well qualified o urge the reform meas- ' aijon space secured in others to take Size. They fish in deep pools and get ure which he is so desirous +f SeCUr- . care of the meat trade which is car- | all kinds, of course. Compliments are ing, byt with so many matters of ried on between Australia and San SiTe o vary. and we have no doubt greater importance to the entire coun- Francisco. This of course means that \nere are “speckled beauties” among o ‘. et e : o moaRs SRS CeREny One writer declares some ‘“‘com- try 1t 13 questionable whether the idea (hose in contr ness are ;liments are -sented with a bow, as | of @ropping his duties as president and | simply looking out fo supply, | it to beg for paying them.” taking ampionshid in view of the decrease which is being | Tnese do not have to be angled for of a state iss: @ Proper Pro- steadily manifested in this country. | There is no such thing as telling how cedure at staze In his | What effect it will have, if any, upon | Compliments ever got so _sugary: administration. the high prices remains to be seen. | there is hardly ever a tart one among IR . scinetbion of . couise b them. Diplomatic compliments ar B the Gochident regards iny still defined as “lies in court dres e * mo EDITORIAL NOTES, Of all angling fishing for compliments e e e emi 22| Recent developments indicate that | is the most unsatisfactory, for it bears = gy ot aere . i Nicholas has been underrated pon it the mark of reluctance or in- gpportunity for waging as atrons n| .. one of the crafty momarchs of sincerity. he that he s alons in the demand for | “UrOP® | wn e . e th e is alona in the demand for | e en it comes to gay deceivers, sel the change of the New Jersey jury| mHappy thought for today: Tn his|Stands in the front rank. No one can System, and his m n ODPOSINE | gwn mind Dr. Friedmann's cure s a | dCelve anotier as he doceives himself | corruption cannot ioned, but| guccess. That e first qualification | {s {IncaYs0 novives = Siestion nat e ntll b That is the first qualification | {hat he is so easily taken in by the so- B eturay oy of a financicr. { called sharpers. You know you can- » e iy — not always judge of a man’s character | on every time an important measure| fThe British government has de-|from his obituary notice, or by any Is brought up In that state in the fu-!clared war to a finish on the mili- | man's own published estimate of him- | ture? tants ook them a long time | self, or of his convictions. If there is | - e to get futo action any policy about homestv it lies in be- FOREST RESERVATIONS. ) Wi o ing sincere with one's self. We do not & v the time the railroad employes | 0 85 We ought to, but as we want to. In the work of forest reservation Y L SR b To be honest every person should do | an important step has been taken by | make rounds in demands for In-!exactly as he sincerely thinks he the national commission In charge of | creased the engineers will be|chould. This is where all the world such work which has recommended | Feady to start over again. hedges and beats itself. It is our faith B s b7 tha soyeriment of| - P e we are capable of beating the other X . Vg E b Governor Sulzer of had | fellow which enables him to beat us: hree large t including on great faith in his primary bill, but | It is the assurance of our conceit that ew Hampsh. Sictn Have | BT M B e ek issialea el Eea Tt ne §IL E 18 5 . been investigated their approval : a8 i 8 e De: X ha e e ranted concerning it in the senates | Man to beat one's way that some men carries weight with the government : appear to be engaged in beating thelr :::::hl A\“h.nx taken a v\l:‘v‘?‘cf—\‘::“"l‘)v:“ Secretary Bryan's return from Sac- | V¥ into heaven. I e iivs trac: of 7508 accencis | AuCUt0 Is iot ehaTacterized by the| ‘Rl 0l vion i, Knacked down In . ot voluabe acauisition being 4 |ame satisfaction of accomplishment | 1; o Soct ot meceasarily mean et ho virgin forest which o (e ME | that followed the seige of Baltimore. | has boen knocked out! 2 b s R bionil Taardhtion o | sata T is the first step to some- B e Datioma Tvation of | 4 yale man held up two burglars| thing better” Where obsticles seem et = .0 5 $%: with a silver pencil, but that isn’t the | to be ins ble is the place to Such acquisition forest 1and| gro¢ time that such an instrument | find and to pluck up courage. ‘“Never means not e pro- | nag usurped the place of the pen ! 52y die” is a good American sentiment tection to of the country, | goainst wron | The way to make anyone take interest but it also means that the retention| = 5 in you is to make vourself interesting, IR il %6 of giedt besdfit as S T T | and can that be better done than by s such will be of great benefit as a| The New Hampshire senator who 1s| 0d can that be better done than by rotection to the water supplies of the ivate hear BTN el 2 e e Bl e P s % 0F promising a private hearing on tariff| test? The man who has been knocked States both as to its effect upon rivers | matters to some of his constituents is | down needs to get up and wake up at A OIS, patever use Is made | undertaking a task which demands | the same time! There should be no of the forests for lumber will be done | justice for all. looking back toward disaster, for the in accordance with approved methods A e ot | bow of omise is discharge obligations and | erties, must depeng upon receipts from | As’ free to see that n sour, more Some types of eally sinful for which we siould pray to be forgiven, as well as they are regulated by choosers it is up to we get more sweet th gladness than sadness, sadness are law. the managers, to to bondholders creditors and make returns their stocks, and othe: the investors who own the prop- of cutting and not by the tactics fo! The Massachusetts woman who left | found in i look lowed by sawmill gangs whose in-ia ten thousand dollar estate with| FIuCk i alwave getting : vasions of wooded territory are mark- | which to care for her two pet cats| \once ' vy WALl o the hovse to Tide. #d by the denuded hills and valleys. | showed a marked discrimination in|and “you won't” has seldom stopped It is an important endeavor which is | favor of animals | him. "The spoke of opportunity has no being carried out under the provisions = —_— | jewel set in it. If you wait for the of the Weeks' act from which not only | the particular sections which are h chosen as the reservations, but the o entire country will receive a henefit. | d Conservation of natural resources is | ci receiving more and each year mora attention | long distance record SPECIFIC OR AD VALOREM. fl i In The policy of doing away with spe- | 1, cific duties which is earried out in the tariff bill befors congress at the nn-,‘ ent time has aroused no little discus- | sion a to the merits of ad valorem and specific duties. It has taken up | it becomes apparent that the point | fUote: “Consider the lilies of the fleld, quite a little time ir congrese by the for emphasis is on “less.’ FheN.hesegtow, thex loll not.naither do they spin: and, vet, I sav unto B i Ths respeptive metiods e Vou that even Solomon. i all his glory, urging their views as to the opera-| If California continues to SUT UD | as wot arrayed e ane of (hames re tion of the methods. There are al. | anti-Japanese feeling the proposed ex- | who pointed man o the divina splens ways advocates of each of these plans | ercising trip of the American war- | dor of “the lilies of the field” would | the same as there are to be found ships may have to be made across|not have us stop there. Tt is up to uphoiders of both sides of any question | t but the difference between the specific | and ad valorem duties, while simple. | ften gerves as a puzzle. i When an ad valorem duty is imposed t 4t is a duty In accordance with the | C® California may vet realize that|is the way to power. Ecclesiasticus ¥aiue of the article Imported, while| discretion I the betier part of valor. | understond this for doos ‘h.jmm:(hh:];;\ a specific duty means a tax upon o, BT o Shazgs K tunl desplzeth amall, s the article without regard 1o its value,| The militant suftragette knows noshall fall little and iitle” or snail the value of the mported goods that | % BeSOED U S o e get | shadow. Tt is the accomplishment of the duty is assessed and not upon the | Secuves fhe ba o B ol hote | little tasks which creates self-reliance mumber of pins, while with pens a spe- | (0 that stuge It ia time to call a halt. | anqd awekens one to power, and pre- uty 1s fixed wnd so much for| . X e pares him to assume larger tasks. The B e e a5 | Great Britain is acmanding vay- | Blalans lave s Broverh whigh: rins s o sttention e peid to valug | Ment by Guatemala of a ten milllon | like this: ‘Do lite (hings now, so R e | dollar debt of twenty-five vears stand- | shall bix things « to thee, by and in this case. the fax belng upon (e |y, ,y which Interest hasn't been paid | by, asking (o be done.” The ‘capacity quantity. for fifteen years. It cannot be sald|for doing is measured by what has It is on the ground of being more| . ., ne empire hasn't been patient, |[Deen donme right. As the flnest hair equitable that the ad valorem duty | ‘" s ol casts [t shaddw so o littlext tasi urged but the opposition de- v oL v stage be. | Well done has ifs influence. No m B e ot fat tot ther e g o gL otage be- | ooy rige to o great occaston who has elops from that fact that there 13]fore a socialistic gathering in New | o8 yeiy conal to mane lesser occa- then offered the opportunity for under- | yorc city. With the efforts of the ! gjons. Results are what show the vaiue yaluation from which custom frauds |y w. W. throughout the country|of small things. Step in and push | develop, and that the specific duty S| gpreading such harmful advice to la- when you see others pulling. Tt is Hore certain and more easily adjusted. | por and President Wilson urging an | the push which may pull you onward inerease in efficiency on the part of |and upward. i s I the Califernians intend fo held | labor in order (o meet l.!w effect of | wpout 24 miles of wire ropes for the { fon_while | the (ariff cul it [s readily seen what|ievatars i the new Woolworth great harm will be done amonw cem looked after to a more or less extent, | tain classes Maine has yet to decide whether pro- | jeweled spoke vou are down and out. ibition prohibits, but the dismissal | f the sheriffs for neglecting their| It is a good thing to get some poe- uty shows that enforcement de- | fry in your soul if you' haven't any reases violations. | The world of beauty is God's mani- festation of love toward man—His way of awakening the soul. Wilberforce Guillaux, who has established a new in his aereplane | 4 " Iy flowers were the smiles of God's ying nearly a thousand miles brings | goodness; and Longfellow was inspired earer the day when the Atlantic will | {o write “Stars of earth, these golden e crossed in the'air flowers, emblems of our own_ great res- s - urrection; emblems of the bright and As Congressman Mahan said the | better land.” What e to hinder vou nanufacturers of our districts will be [ from gathering messages from ‘the flowers as well as to be content to us to recognize that voiceless flowers may be living preachers and to sense with Bovee. that “to cultivate a gar- | den is to walk with God.” The habit of doing little things well he Pacific instead of to Burope. opposition developing in is he east towards aiding California to make the Panama exposition a suc. Much buflding, New YVork. havel been made ) in Trenfon. N. 7 used to walk abroad feeling that love- | y | Kindness? The (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) On the old Post farm in New Eng- |1and there was a flourishing apple | orchard, the pride of its owner and the envy of his neighbors, who did not see why their trees should not | thrive and bear as did his. John Post | could have told them had he been o | inclined. " Many an hour had he spent |in caring for those trees, when his | critics had taken their ' ease and | trusted to luck for a harvest. And what a delight the trees were to him | fram spring to fall. In their time of | bloom how great a feast of beauty and fragrance they furnished! On | through ~ the summer how the | household shared his pleasure as he reported progress from time to {ime in the growth of the fruit! Then in the autumn all rejoiced with him at the wealth of the harvest. No one entered more closely inta his enjoyment of the orchard than his pet daughter Lucy, the youngest child among several brothers and sis- | ters. Her father knew he could al- | ways rely on her sympathy, and her fondness for out-door life made her a frequent companion when he was at his daily task about the farm. Especially was Lucy happy in ap- ple-blossom time. ~Perhaps because her birthday came then und was us- ually celebrated by a feast under the | pple trees. The entire family cir- | cle vied with one another in making | Lucy happy on that day for she was the darling of the household | At ihose birthday parties the neigh- boring children were often included, and a merry time they had under the frasrant apple boughs. As they grew older, it was plainly to be seen that of all those who favored Lucy, she favored Harry Weston more than any other, and so it was no surprise when it became known that they had prom- ised to join their lives in the near future. "How near, depended on | Harry's success in the far West. He | had decided that for him the open- ing Jay in the apple-growing ‘section of Washington on the Pacific elope. “There,” he declared, “apples are ap- ples, and young men have a chance o grow up with the country, pro- | vided they can get the right kind of | grl to help them on to fortune,” and he looked at Lucy as if he Knew | where the right girl for him was to be fonnd. She biushed and dimpled under his fond look, and evidently felt that life at the West with Harry would repay her for all she should acrifice In the exchange from home to}' Consent ents with was gained from her par- this condition. Harry must be certain of his own plans before he could take Lucy from the home circle. So to the far West he went to ar- 1ge for the future, saying laughingly en the apples bloom, you will see | me return for my bride.” Meantime { he wrote home frequent and glowing { reports of the country and of his own affairs. He had established his claim, he wrote, and his orchard was set out; he had found very pleasant people for | neighbors, not quite so near as at home, but neighbors counted as such | at greater distances than in the East, 1d they were all ready to welcome Lucy when she came. “The home is to be built, but my girl will not mind | roughing it a bit till a house can pe provided. Lucy’s friends felt that she was un- dertaking a great risk in entering upon a pioneer life, but if ever her heart quailed at the prospect, she kept Lit to herself, and to all who tried to condole with' her she only said. “I'd do | more than that for Harry. He is so | brave and ambitious. I am sure he | needs as-good a home as I can make for him. 1t’s no more than women di | here in New England in colonial times. | should I be afraid to attempt s | Why ‘ 1t | Even Harry realized that the life he offered her called for much self-sac- | | rific, and said to her on his arrival in | the Fast, “I feel that I am asking | much of you, too much perhaps. Take back vour promise if you decide that ! | frontier life is too much for you to ! | face. Are you sure that you can be | nappy in such a home as’T can offer | s e ——————— | A solemn duty rests on us all to be: | good looking. One who has come to mature vears with an unattractive face | guilty of moral failure. He has left | undone” something he ought to have | done. We our faces are the gifts of onr ancestors and this is partly untrue. Past generations gave the physical features we must bear through life. Any amount of wishing or working will not change the length of on nose or the color of his eyes or the soc of his chin. But the physical features can be molded and beautified by our own efforts. | | A close observer of the President | of the United States has said: “Wood- row Wilson is a handsome man but he has made himself so: nature set out | to make him homely” And then the writer who quotes the above remark goes on to say: “The handsome gray- blue eyes and long jaw were given him by nature, but the firm mouth, the rong lines of the face, the keen' but ndly look of the eyes, the thoughtful but untroubled brow—all these Mr. | Wilson has put into his own face by | years of self-mastery and mastery of Qifficult and arduous tasks.” It is open to us all to be handsome, buf on the same inexorable conditions He who makes a noble face must make first a noble soul. The picture will not be better than the artist who paints it. The tools really effective in face building will not be found on the toilet table. Cream from a jar or powder out of a box may do something for the complexion, but the rea] secret of good looks lies deeper. The spirt of a man or woman is the real architect. Tha face becomes through the yearsa pret- tv acourate register of one's inner thoughts and motives. ome of the most unattractive faces one sees in the street have been the most_carefully groomed. All that ex- | terior treatment can do has been done [ but still the result is not a pleasing | one. The lines of selfishness, the glint of greed, the marks of dissipation — these testify to a life lived disorderly | with God and men. All the rouge | and massage in a metropolls will not | change the indelible impression. But goodness, purity, kindness are face builders, too..There are people in the world one is drawn to instinctive- {1y. The evidence of nobility of charac- | ter is plain in their very countenances. | “I like that face,” we say, and really | mean we like the person behind fit. i It is thoroughly well worth while for 14 vouth to refiect on the presentment jof himself that his friends - e to be- | hola 40 years from noy. 1s there a | more disheartening speciacle than n lold man's face grown repulsive through the effect of ill-spent years? | | And is there anything more attract- | live than the serene expression of one | who Las lived well and-in exerclse of thoughts of mauy | years have registered themselves in a countenance that is at once beautiful | \d strong and winning. It is given to | |Some men, und to more women, to reach the beautitude of which Long- ! fellow speaks in Michael Angelo, | The light upon her face [ Shines from the windows of another world I £aints only have the face | Baints only have such faces. THE PARSON | fashionable ! health, and she claimed that the sim you? Tell the truth now before it is too late.” Lucy fearlessly: made answer that she was ready to go forward in their plans. “You will ind I am no coward and, If we have our health, In a few years a_comfortable home of our own Wil make us forget the h ips of the small beginning we must make. Don't worry about me. I am equal to all 1 shall encounter, I fancy, and such & life with you will make me happier than any life without you. Say no more about it. It s my choice to g0 with you.” So when the orchard was in bloom, there was a pretty wedding beneath the apple boughs, and & wedding feast was spread where so many birthdays had been similarly celebrated. A lov- ely bride was Lucy in her simple white gown and decorations of apple blos- soms. No money had she spent in furbelows, but she car- ried to her new home of goodly store of furnishings for that home in the wilderness She knew well that no time for sewing would be found for a long time after reaching her journey's en, Neither did she regret her .decision | to come to that dwelling among the wilds of the West. Strong and well, the out-door life in that wonderful climate kept them both in the best of | ple life was much more to her mind | than the formalities of her old life a the Kast. Attractive and winsome, she soom made friends with those she met and found that neighbors ten miles apart «ould prove kindly and helpful as well as though the distance between them were less. Most of these people were | young and enterprising, and braving hardships for a time that they mign be at greater ease later in life, and they found in the Westerners a Teal addition to the community. { Cheerful letters she sent back to her castern relatives, making light of her privations and boasting of her success as & home maker. How proud were they when their little shanty of two roome was reauy for occupancy! With what delight Lucy put in place the small stock of furniture they had obtained, much of it being the result of Harry's lelsure hours and Lucy's ingenious contrl ance. As she had predicted, a few years saw them established in a comforta- ble house on a prosperous domain of their own, and influential members of a thriving settlement. Harry's ability made him a marked man from the first, and Lucy’s helpful disposition led her to be valued as one to be re- lied on in any emergency where wom- an's wit and skill were needed. Never for one moment did she re- gret her decision to try the pioneer life of the West. AN TDLER. EVERY DAY REFLECTIONS A Protesting Minority. When you find three young cads and idiots going about together and getting drunk together every day vou usually find that one of the three cads and idiots is (for some extraordinary Teason) not a cad and not an idiot, writes Chesterton. The third man is a symbol eternal protesting minority race. Two men out of three will go with the crowd:: the third man may go with the crowd also, but he sees that the crowd is wrong. The third man votes with his party, not because he believes in it, but be- cause it is the best he can do under the circumstances. To the third man nothing he does is quite what he wante to do; all prac ticality is a makeshift. He has ideals. His models of perfection are all in his thought. Bvery deed is a poor of the of the Special Week Sale 194 Main Street, Saturday marks the last day of our SPECIAL ONE WEEK SALE. Of all our sales successfully conducted, this sale has outdone them all by a great margin. It simply shows the public’s appreciation of a GOOD THING. Suits - $14.95 Serges, Diagonals, Poplins, Bedford Cords and others are truly values up to $26.50 Suits - $18.95 This special has not been advertised during the entire sale. Contains all our BEST suits, values up to $37.50 Coats - $ 6.95 This special has formerly been advertised at $8.95. But at this price they GO MUCH FASTER Dresses $5.45 A full assortment of materials and sizes Waists - = 79¢ Values up to $1.50 Petticoats 1.99 Messalines and Taffeta—Nine Rainbow Shades Wauregan House Block compromise. The third man dissatisfaction, ant_subject. is full of mystery, | “Where were the mothers?” utopianism. He goes with the other two fellows i, R. L. because of his unconquerable instinct orwich, May 2, 1913. for human companionship. — He would be useless without the Doing H other two: they would be worse than| The new Viee Presd i, Mr Mar- useless without him. shall, has no a Loy o issue formal The third man does and_ doubts, | messages 1o Um to time, 8o he which is the way to better doing. | LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. Rebuke to Women Voters. Mr. Editor: May 1 ask you to find space in your paper for a rebuke ad- ministered to the women voters of | Berkeley, California, by their mavor himself a zealous advocate and le. turer for suffrage. It is one more of many evidences of the indifference that does tiie nexi best thing and deliveers an address about five days a week on every subject under the su Kansas City Star. Will Learn Soon Enaugh. to Congress to show that he is human. His mistakes will do that for him. Detroit Free Pres: | For The Canal Opening Suggestions for inaugurating traffic through the Panamp Canal—why not usually follows ‘the attaibing of an | e (e Colonel ewim through towing end built more on enthusiasm than el el iirolen to conviction, The mayor sayvs: a dreadnought?—Boston Transcript. “There is mob violence in some < e Py 2 countries and strident oratory else- | cana SOMme men talk t emselves because they like an appreciative au- Children Cry | FOR FLETGHER'S CASTORIA where on behalf of votes for women. Here in California we have woman suffrage, and Berkeley is one of the star centers of that movement. Surely adequate playground facilities for 7.000 children is a subject for woman' thought and vote, and yet, out of 8,000 women voters, only about 1,600 of them cared enough to vote on this import- 1 We Are Headquarters | ForShoppersof Norwich and Vicinity for the finest and most varied stock and line of \ Trunks, Traveling Bags and Suit Cases The largest stock in this city to choose from—all of the best makes and selected goods. Also LEATHER NOVELTIES A large and varied assortment of LADIES’ HAND BAGS, PURSES,” POCKET BOOKS, TRAVELING SETS; SLIPPERS, ETC., ETC. QUALITY THE BEST — PRICES THE LOWEST The Shetucket Harness Co. Main Street Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank President Wilson needn't have gone | Stop! Look! Read! DO YOU WANT Quantity or Quality? If you want geod ale or lager, say NARRAGANSETT, and you will get QUALITY. If you want quantity, the dealer who fills your four for ten cents or gives you three large glasses for five conts, rannot sel| The Famous Narragansett or any other good beer and make a profit. So if you want QUALITY, POINT TO THE TAP SIGN say “NARRAGANSETT” If the dealer does not display the TAP sign ask him WHY? Wa sell Narragansett beer on draught, no other. If you want a keg or zase, Fleass telephone us and vou Il find our service very prompt. We sall our own bottling of Narragansett beer for $0.60 a dozen. We also have al[ kinds of Besr in Brewery Bottling. The following is our list: BREWERY BOTTLING Budweiser . ‘ 75¢ Bohemian ... Obemier & Liberman ... ....$1.25 dozen <euies 250 dozen 250 dozen Narragansett Ale Narragansett Lager Narragansett Porter Pabst . . Bass Ale ... Guiness' Porter Schlitz’ Lager f Peter Dosiger Lager............ivis Geo. Greenberger & Co Wholesale and Retail Liquors FRANKLIN STREET, NORWICH, CONN. Telephone 812 MiSS ELLA M. POTTER Insiructor of Piano and Harmony Room 6, Alice Bldg. Tel, 968 'HERS 1s no agvertising medium Eastern Connecticut eaual to The Byl Istin Aor busipess results TO BE GIVEN AWAY For the week of April 28, A NEW HAT at the Palace Pool and Billlard Parlors, 49 Main Street THERE 1s no advertising medium in Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- lstin for business resulis

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