Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 14, 1913, Page 6

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100 CENTS’ WORTH FOR A DOLLAR Being better dressed or more appropriately clothed. having more attractive furniture in your house, living in a better apartment, or owning a better automobile than your neighbor, doesn’t necessarily mean that you have more money to spend than he has, It might, and probably does, mean that you are more alive to the possibili- ||/ tles and opportunities that sur- 1 round you. | i The same qualities of mind and inteliect which make one merchant a shrewder purchaser than another make you a bet- ter manager of your annual expenditure. The merchant or ing agent of any big organiza- tion knows all there is to know about the things he buys. His dollar is 100 per cent. eflicient. the purchas- It some large organizations | conducted their purchasing de- ents as loosely and thoughtlessly as some families they would be bankrupt before very lons. And yet there is really no ‘vod reason why every individual 100 cenis worth spends for BULLETIN advertisementis point the way. ! NormchVetermaryliospltal | DR. F. D. COLES, Proprietor Rear 17 Chestnut Street Phone Connection DO YOU KNCW {he best place in Norwich to have yo shoes ard heeled? If you don give us oue trial, them you will know for sure Goodyear Shoe Renai-incg A. VALLIN, Prop. 86 Frankiin Stre Tel. 817 IF YOU are thinking of a SPRING SUIT| call and see what I can do for you. COXETER, Tailor 33 Broadway se it is not a patent | her sisters could improve the morals pronied | and manmers of men if they were o e o may | Eiven the ballot. That evening, this s e iat i - little | same girl was at a fashionable dance. ANOTHER LOT OF She was gowned in an extremely cery mother of | coilette fashion, and the way & cnild in this | danced and bore herself was suge FINE antee, | tive 1o sav the least. I do not believe Engler, | this girl ever realized that, while her | peanut Butter vote he powerless in an election, the , i 3 . won. | Cut of her gown, the manner of her { . B. 8. Our Saxo UIY WON- | qancing, and the words of her con- at = | | 10c perih. |- Comse early and huy free | while this lot lasts. ALL BEST TEAS 25c per pound United Iea ';'mr.mtersfifi. Frankdin Sa., over Somers Bros. GWRGE E G2AA1 Undertaksr and nnbm. .2 Providencs 5i., Erompt attention to day or ni Telephona The Bean Hill Monumszntal Man MONUMENTS Cemetery Work of all descriptions. Lettering on work all ready erected in cemstery a specialty. Telephone 634-3 STETSON & YOUNG Carpenters and Bmld Best work and prices, by skilled labor Telephone 50 WEST MAI Ald m‘t}h‘l fiefi Uni, Ferre! & CSanderso~. Soecial Rates te Theatre Jraveiing Men, ete.. Livery Shetucsket Sireee rials at s-r.i — | Frop W roupes zonn J. F. CONANT Whitesione 5c and Cigars are ‘he 11 Franklin 3t the F. C. best on tns market them 180 | i | ‘ | i, ER]‘CHI“O‘{ M. D. | derful for Senator Penrose Declares Secret Caucus of Democrats on Tariff Bill is Its Counterpart—Senator Simmons Asserts That Public Hearings Are Not Necessary—Executive Session Cuts Off Debate. Washington, May 13—Senator Sim- jessary ,averring that they were not mons, chairman of the flnance com- |éven demanded. Amendment to Sugar Schedule. Senator Bristow offered an amend- {ment to the sugar schedule providing for graduated reductions for two three yvear periods at the end of which re- fined sugar would be taxed at $1.27 1-2 cents per hundred pounds and “ninety six Cuban sugar” at $0.972." When i the Kansas senator had concluded an attack on the democratic bill Senator LaFollette proposed an amendment to the Penrose amendment directing pub- mittee, and Senator Penrose, leading the republican fight to refer the Un- derwood bill with instruction for pub- lie hearings, delivered oratorical broadsides against each other in the senate today in debate on the Pen- rose amendment, which will be re- sumed tomorrow. Methods of Spanish | | Inquisition. | 1 Senator Penrose likened the secret | . caucus of the tariff bill to. t he|liC hearinss ) ; “methods of the Spanish Inquisition.” In Executive Session. Senator Simmons declared that if the Senator Bacon then moved that the tic purpose to eliminate hear- | senate go into executive session. This could be called repreheusible, it|was objected to but prevailed, 48 to 34, the first time the demoecratic | Senators La Follette and Works vot- party -had copied the methods of tne|ing with the democrats. 'This forced republicans an dhe argued at length | further ideration of the tariff oy why public hearings were not nec-'until tomorrow. URGE UNIFORMITY SUFFRAGE MOVEMENT OF LAWS A SEX DISTURBANCE. ON CUPS. i Women Talk About Fighting Vice and Follow Most Vicious Fashions. Surgeons Want States to Get Together on Public Drinking Rules. o) Chicago, May 13.—The : shington, D. of Railroad Chief Surgeons of \url.h’ view of what is happening in various America in_annual convention .r- I'parts of the country, it is high time mined to take up the un for every thinking man and woman relative to drinking water & to realize that back of the woman ing cups .in ilroad trains. It | suffrage disturbance is the question pointed out veral of the memb of sex—or ra(her, a distortion of the of the conference that great hardship | Sex question’ is entailed by the roads because of | Mrs.” Arthur M. Dodge, | president of the Na- the variance of the laws of the differ- iation Opposed to Woman pens a striking statement on the suffrage question given out at the Washingtor headquarters of her organ- ization of uncles and aunts forget that are born to make a noise in The only sure manner ——————————— | i;ig the real meaning or strength of the so-called suffraze movment,” con- FOR DELICATE CHILDREN. 1\imm& irs. Dodge, “is to see clearly T ¢ underlying reasons back A Mother’s Letter to Mothers. irbance is, in W. Cooper of Bloomfeld, | urbance. Many NG L n5Td S Be e e { n Y are suffragists do no pad cold and was wenk |Tealizé: this, ‘but it1is* aifact never- e e D eatth. "She | theless, just as the impulse of some vondition for about | other women to take up foolish fa { “began givins her | Cies and unneccessary movements i wonderful help to tae | the result of that uneasiness and g up her cold quickly |Straining after happines: and building up her strength besid nd unnatural which in- : o B \inol a most excel | dicates an unseitled and an unsat- for ying up (he chil- | istactory state of mind. ng a siege Of ! We who oppose woman suffrage are convinced that woman support thei i the whole situation from an unnat- ural angle. One morning in New York i heard a young wo with great eloquence suffragi s cause because they view wonder{ul combination of ned tonic h i medicine on how s Eczema. We guarantee it COAL AND LJMBER. Coal All Sizes fnfluence for good among her friends, men and women, and thus throughout the whole community. “She was women are, by morals and good manners legislated misled, as many other the mirage that good can be into men and women. Mor- als and manners are the fruits of women's minds, not of the voting booth. And, t so long, as women clamor for political ‘rights’ and vet I versation could be made a tremendous dress in garments that are the defl tion of bad taste, all the votes in the “ | world will not change the trend of | | ent In soclety and throughout | w m e r the whole population of the country. i ' | A WOMAN ADVOCATES . DIVORCES AT $2 EACH. Full Assortment i Proposes Estabhshmsnt of a License Bureau for Purpose. CHAPPELL €0, | Los Angeles, May 13.—Advocating the establishment of a divorce license bureau where a dnnno may be ob- : ! tained for the and a §2 fee, Ceniral Wharf Mrs. Harry Huston, director of the Parent Teacher federation, propc unique remedy for the es present divore: a BRANCH — 150 Main Street i evil. gain the vote more will help advance the This wa the admonition given to the suffragists by Rev. Christian T Reisner, pastor of Grace M. E. Church in speaiing on “The Progressive West- erner”. Dr. Reisner deplored the present day styles for women in east- CALAMITE GOAL vras nup Well Seasoned Woad ern cities, and asked what right Paris PriiSiviman AND SGURGRUIN, had, “with its non-beiief in a personal Yot Buansen idi G. H. HASKELL. God, to set styles for a Christian nation aboue 1J32 402 — P ones — 489 like oure.” “We had better take our { styles from the girl who lives in e & == —— e | “God’s--out-of-doors’” in the broad ON 17,000 ‘TON Assuring Arrival CINCINNATI = June 7 CLEVELAND - June 24 PLYMOUTR (iondon) BOULOGNE (Peri> HAMBURG HAMBURG-AMERICAN LINE | 807 Sizect. Bosten, Mass., or Local Agent West than to go to the ‘umderworid of Paris,” he said. “The modern style for women is disgraceful,” he continued. “The slit skirt, the airy stockings with Jlow shoee, the low cut dress and the paint- ed cheeks create a shallow artificial- in man. Woman has always been man’'s superior, but such habits un- seat her from the throme of helpfui- ness. It is not even civilized, much less Christian. Our craze for pleas- ure in the citics has grown so sirong ificlallity and got next to the wider and the sweeter air of couniry We must go West for decent | nte. | styles” | e 5 ! California Animals. A scien e discovered o ais eng ior 1eq predomir STEAMSHIPS Calitornla, u laler age it in Paris by Day Bl Mesge.—Fresno Herald, CINCINNATI - July 12 § | By Whose Orders? Vice Presi 3 CLEVELAND - July 29 ihe Presiden: ¥ ey an o meies i@ lyre visg METHODS OF SPANISH INQUISITION of estimat- ity in woman and appeal to the lowest | : that ihe flner sense of modesty has | been killed. City life is growing too {ast. We must avoid the blight of Emily Despathy has entered the em- | pioy of John C Lavalic Bros installed re- cent a fine fcu f marble, tem | ine |2 | clothing house in Norwich To you personally Read it! Think it over! Quotea from the New York Times: To decide a bef, a peddier stood all day on the Strand in London about a month ago offering gold sovereigns ~ ($4.86) for sixpence (12c.) He was only able to sell four. Of the thousands who passed, ninety- nine per cent. had sixpence but they were i skeptical and afraid the sovereigns were l counterfeits. 2 Only four men were clever encugh to know a real sovereign from a counterfeit, and to take advantage of the opportunity, and buy. Ask yourself if you know a real opportunity from a counterfeit. Are you ciever emough have you enough self-confidence— to take advantage of the real oppertunity ? ———— = e = = If SO go to the Auction Sale authorized by The State of New York Banking Department Liquidator of The Carnegie Trust Co. and The Northere Bank of New York Absolute and unreserved P ———— Sale of 3019 Separaie Lols formerly the Morris Park Race Track Bronx Borough, New York City i May 3151, and succeeding days 70% can remain en morigage. Titles insured free by Lawyers Title Ins. & Trust Co. | For maps and particulars apply to ! J. Clarence Bavies, 149th St. and 3d Ave., New York City Joseph P. Day, 31 Nassau St., New York City Agents and Auctionesrs Telaphones | “T would make divorces as easy to BABY THROWS SAVINGS AWAY. | obtain as marriages,” she “ | BALTIC -— | believe if a man or a woman wants - e | Father Durina Railroad Journey Lets J. A. MORGAN & SON | divorce he or she should be able to get | School Pupils Hear of War Exper- Infant Have Wallet. | it without legal disputes. The wa | iences from Rine Hart—Philip Car- 2o GGAL | 1:)';1:;1 Ia} dx_\'rorce is sufficient reason for | din with Norwich Clothing Company | Newcastle, Pa, May 13.—Acording )k “‘v((xl\lllg(z‘ x[, e [ i hal tabis. :.m u;A .;,‘\‘\-\,4 I\'n-l’.» rlll'om‘{ o‘llnandu Office 57 V 13 5 ink there should be a judge to re | - P | B s savings smal 2 Office 57 West Main St., Telephcne 510 | thinlc there should be a judge to ren-| 15 the local schoois Tuesday Rine Bl T s e Yard Central Wharf, Telephone 834 | | °0 (ECTORE 2000, “d'\’ : Tt a veteran of the Civil war, gave | were e e ;;h‘“‘ PROMPT DELIVERY | When tiese matters are in dis bt | T mEcHng gl pup v are stranded. { 1'd have no power whatever to | 2f, éach room. He to! exper- .nd children wers | e den o % | fences while fighting for y and sw Yorls, | where| | ¥ “ihere’ = no arians ment ' eaticy said that afs attle had man- | me 2. relattve | forces persons to m pa | 2850 t0 Ll L 1 of several years were e e i wandered about for some time in raes | . e it e the | them, if they prove to be unwise OWiE | and without a cent to name. The <ethook to play with and | ke W e | children were all interested and | tossed it- out a window. The | Eenn { vent the solving [Ee e g e s B fne Ii e oues I® traveled from to rise EMHH" Kmqs fi’]fl L2 11ig | ship, whicn, far more than an about his adventures, to all of which | it Soa et el mar and Tuin Jives: e answered fully and save a very L X X | instructive hour to the pupils. — e — B D. LATHROP NEED CLOTHES, NOT VOTES. | Workins intBioENlE | | | Joseph Blanchette of River stree | atoe ess e | Modestry Might Hasten Suffrage, Says | has moved his family to Plainfield | : 1“ : "‘1:“~ | ey ;V\]’\r‘(]“' he has _;u.uré\d employment in | he)ps to women ’s comfort, physical elephone ~13. ! the Lawton milis i 3 ty—su s your zeal toward reforming dress and | (V9 fine large dark gray horses for | VF sstion and eliminati H Y i £OF 3 ress a their teaming work. | OYESHSO GlgPS’!OH and elimination Employed hy Norwich Company. —the tonic, safe and ever reliable Philip” Cardin of High street has igned his position at Rood & Chap man's and has begun work with He is suc ded here by Mos=es Lafreniere, Mr. Cardin _has been in the employ of Rood & Chapman, formerly Hull & Hawkins, for many vears, and his ab- sence will be regretieq by many friends. Renovating Jodoin Cottage. Mrs. Rayrsond J. Jodoin and Miss Vicla Bui=<% have left for Pleasure Beach for a--seek’s stay Mr. Jodoin's summer home is at this beach and | Mrs. Jodoin has gone there to see that the cottage is renovated and made ready for the summer. Thomas Char- on and Arthur Lucier of this place are at present at work on the cottage painting the exterio and th will soon begin work on the interio Louis Beaudoin of Meriden spent a few days in town recently visiting rel- atives, BEECHAM’S PILLS - The Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 25¢c. feet long, wiin twelve » holders and every modern im pent =4 back & 0f manoganized SR the back s made up of an AR plate of gizss: 2 electric lghts, one on slde, serve to llght up the beau- M@NUMENTS founiain Mazil Unclaimed. cd lotiers adavert oftee For those who are as particu- deric jar about having the best as we are about making it. The (has. A Kuebler Ca. and Haven.- _Ger E. E, 310 for i e The Ame v pupil of Wes| et Tel. 392.41 Franklin St.' e TRAVELERS DIRECTORY. New L.ondon (NORWICH) Line -—TO — NEW YORK STEAMERS City of Lowell and Chester W. Chapin Choose this roule next time you ga to New York. 'Il have a delightful vovage on Lon and Sound and s superh view of he wonderful sky lins and water front of Manhattan Island. Sieamer leaves New London at 1i p. m., except Sundays, due New York, Pler 10, East River, and Pler 44 Y t morning. i Stateranme $1.80 NEW YORK New England Steamship Co. New Yorik CHELSEA LINE Fare $! Freight and passeuger serwice direct to New York, From, Norwion Tuesdays, Thurs- dags Sundays, at 335 E ew York, imr 2 foot Roosevelt St Wednesdays, Frld. s, ‘at Freight received uml! 5 p.m F. V. KNOUSE, Agent UNIVERSITY ‘ PLACE ©ne Blook Wost of Broadway NEW YORK CITY Wholesale and In-! Gn s Mn.rku. nnlmu -nl MODERN Aufl' U 7hY FIREPROOF| 300 Rooms (200 with Bath) RATES $i.00 PER DAY UP) Excellant Restanrant and Cdfe. BModorate Prices. Send Tor free illustrated Gutdoand’ Map of New York Citys WE WILL SERVE A Special Dinner Next Sunday May 18th. Music by the Orchestra WAUREGAN HOUSE PARKER-DAVENPORT CoO. Proprietore Dr. J. M. KING DENTIST May Building JaniTuWF Overhauling and Repair Work | —OF ALL KINDS ON— AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, W& . INS, TRUCKS and CARTS. Mechanical repalrs. bainting, tri- ing, upholstering and wood woric Biacksmithing in ail its branches. Seatt & Clark Corp. 507 to 515 North Main St ‘WALL PAPERS | A full llne of the above with new additions coming along, inciuding those 1wuh cul out bordees. Moldings and bands to match. Mized paints, muresco and tints; alse srt glass imitations. We are in the market for punm paper-hanging and decerating all gl & MURTAGH 2 and 34 West Main Strsel. FPhons, fle Vaughn Foundry Ca. Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry St., MILL, CASTINGS a Specialty, Orders Receive Prompt Attentiom TO BE GIVEN AWAY For the waek of May 12th. A NEW HAT at the Palace Pool and Billiard Parlors, | 49 Main She.t DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Sutie 46, Shaunou Building Take elavator BMstucket street aa- REOZE Csamcr . B JONATHAN SMITH, 30 Tewn Street, Norwichk Town, OILS Conn. and GREASRS al- GASOLINE ha on mayiZMws BRI 78 no TE | Ean &Cunuunw W

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