Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 28, 1913, Page 12

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A HALF CENTURY’S CHANGE IN METHODS (Written Specially for The Bulletin.) I well remember when, a small boy of six or elght years, my father took | me with him to the Pontoosuc Wool- | en mill. For a wonder I had been | “good” and the old folks permitted | this adventure into the outside world as a sort of reward for virtue. It was a drive of seme dozen miles and return, first “over the mountain,” | where we both walked to save the | horse and, incidentally, because \t( was more comfortable than being | jolted heavily from stone to stone up the steep trail that was misnamed a | road. Then we crossed a belt of | prosperous farm-lands which to my | boyish farm-accustomed eyes seemed | pretty stupid country. Next came | the big village, with houses frequent- | 1y so near together that there wasn't room for more than a walk between | them, and stores even cloger,—sd close they actually touched. And so, | finally, on the farther outskirt of the | town, to the mill. | It was perhaps sixty or eighty feet | long, three stories high, and of brick, with a smaller annex at the rear to | house the big water-wheel, Whose gurglings and grumblings and gplash- | ings and irregularly swelling roar- ings made me - snuggle up a little closer to father, as we drove around it to the shed where we hitched Old Doll and poured her oats into the lank trough just under the hitching- ing. The main factory appeared to me as probably the biggest bullding in the world. Moreover, there ‘was & gremendous clatter and whang going on_inside, and 1 had to, think twice [before 1 consented to ‘entdr, even with my hand in father's. Probably it was all right—but 1 didn't see anybody ookins out of the windows, and my mall mind couldn’t escape the sus- picion that there might be bears. It was not the governor's assurances that finally overcame my objections, but the logical reasoning on my own part that, as there were plenty of whirrings and slammings and such nofses but no growls, it might - be | monkeys. And I wasn't going to miss any chance of seeing the monkeys! So we entered a dark, dirty, nar- row lobby. A plank door at the end. A plank door at one side. A board door at the other side with a frame of six small, cobwebby panes set in it. That door we tried and found unlocked. It gave on a bare, barn- like room with a lot of big boxes ly- ing disorderly on the floor and a rough plank table or counter stand- ing on trestles in the middle. There was no one in it, but a doorway showed, opposite that which we had entered by. Father went over to it and pounded. After some interval it opened and a small boy, barefoot, with hair cut short and his clothes covered with flecks of wool, stuck out his head and said: “Hoojuwant?” Being told, he disappeared, and, af- ter & somewhat longer delay, a stout- ish, florid-faced, smiling old gentle- man came out. He recognized my father, knew at once that we had come on the annual cloth-buying ex- pedition, and was very nice. indeed, soing so far as to ask me which reader I was in at school, and wheth- er I preferred stick candy or Jackson balls. There was fQquite a little talk about the weather and the crops, and gradually the conversation brought around to “jeans” and ‘“kerseys” ana “cassimeres” and other things _that were all Greek to me. The big boxes were opened and whole rolls brought out for inspection and discussion. There was much talk about the “warp” and occasional disrespectful references to something called “floc Finally, after half or tkree- quarters of an hour examination of piece after piece, and repeated . con- cessions on price, father bought a long strip of what was styled “Ken- tucky Jane’—at least that is what it sounded like to my ears, and a couple of “remnants” of cassimere. Then we drove home, first stopping in the village to buy a penny's worth of Jackson bails, which I preferred as | eandy, because they lasted so lons. Later | learned that the stoutish, florid-faced old gentleman who had talked crops and cloth and chaffered about prices was the owner of the mill, and that this was the way the mill sold most of its product, directly to farmers who drove in once a year or so and bought what cloth they ex- pected to need for the season. When we had reached home and mother’s critical eye had passed final | judgment on the - purchase, I -was “aken to the local tailor who meas- ured me and cut out a paper “pat- tern.” For this he charged seventy- five cents. No new patterns were needed for father or my older brother as they had “stopped growing” and the old ones would serve. Then my iThen he went west, mother and my older sister cut out [ the cloth, according to the paper pat- terns, and made up the suits for the three of us. It took some weeks to accomplish all this. And candor con- strains me to admit that the clothes didn’t fit very smoothly in some | auarters. I also remember that all the bits of cloth _left from the cutting were treasured up with -care. The bigger pieces were rolled up and put away to mend with; smaller bits were made into “holders’ and the like; mere strips _and selvages were rolled into balls for ‘carpet rags.” Now-a-days, things go differently. We all know how, so there’s no need of my expatiating on the process of getting a new suit in 1913. Certainly we don't go to the mill our cloth. after of the owner or president would come out and sell it to us. There are other differences, too, between those days and this. For instance: ‘ape overcoats” 'were considered stylish at that former time. One was made for my older brother. This ‘was about 1860, mind you. He wore that coat a year or two around home. taking the coat with him. He wore it two seasons in and around Omaha, then a frontier post, hundreds of miles beyond a rail- road. Later, it came back to father, who wore it around the farm for many years. The coat itself played out and went into the rag-bag. The cape came down to me and I still wear it, on rainy evenings, to and from the barn, when I do my cRores. One button-hole has been “overcast” S0 many times that it is_ difficult to make the button take hold, and the outside is sadly faded. But it is still absolutely whole, without any prom- ise of fraying or wearing out for an- other fifty years. In noting the difference between “how” we buy now and sixty years ago, it might also be interesting to note the difference in “what” we buy. The other evening, I threw that old cloak over my shoulders as I went out to milk. All the while I was stripping the heifer, I kept thinking about the differences between the day “when that old cloak was new” and the present. And the more I thought the more clear it became to me that the main and fundamental difference is just that, now-a-days, we get poorer goods. at higher cost, but with less trouble to ourselves. That old purchase involved a day’s trip of man and team to the mill: another half-day’s trip to the local tallor: the women-folk, cutting and basting and trying, and sewing with needle and thread. The last time I bought a new suit I went into the big clothing store, mentioned my leg-length, waist and chest measures to the salesman, picked out the style and coloring 1 wanted, iried the suit, found it fitted, and walked out with it on, leaving the old one to be sent home by ex- press. And T paid more for that suit than my father pald sixty years ago, for the material for three suits, any one of which was certainly three times better, in point of wearing value, | saved a lot of trouble and delay. Sure.. That is, 1 saved myself trou- ble. But somebody else took all the trouble and did all the work, just the same, and 1 paid for it. Don’t forget that when you're boast- | of “modern conveniences.” YouTe paying for them, every single one.of them: paving not only all they cost, but several profits, in addition, the several hands who have taken your work to do for you. That woolen mill doubtiess made as big if not a bigger profit on the cloth it sold my father than a similar mill makes on a similar amount, now. But this was practically the only toll my father had to pay When I bought my suit and had it on in fifteen minutes, I saved myself a deal of trouble and delay But I paid toll, not only to the cloth-maker but to the manufacturer's agent, and to the wholesaler, and to the innum- | trades-unfons which ported by his workmen, and railroads, and to the carters, the storage warehouses, and to the retailer. They all took their nib- ble off me,—and I pald it, just (o save myself some work and some bother and rome walting, I didn't get any- thing like as much value, in the way of clothes, as my father got for less money, but 1 got a good deal more in the way of convenlence. erable are sup- to the and to To lazy folks, this is a big object. But I am coming to wonder as I grow older, whether, after all, the encour- Rich milk, with malted in water—more heal in extract, in powder form—dissolves ul than tea or coffee. Used in training athletes. The best diet for Infants, Growing Children, Invalids, and the Aged. It agrees wi th the weakest digestion. Ask for ““HORLIOK’S*’—at Hotels, Restaurants, Fountainsa. Deon’t travel without it. Also keep it at home. A lunch in a minute. In Lunch Tablet form, also, ready to eat. Convenient—nutritious. There is Comfort in knowing that you can obtain one tried and proved remedy thoroughly well adapted to who is troubled with h our needs. Every woman ache, backache, languor, extreme nervousness and depression of spirits ought to try L) (Tho Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the World) and learn what a difference they will insure better digesti the charm of g complexion and vivacious spirits; .7 the system the; nerves, and besi make. By purifying ion, sounder sleep, quieter rkl{ng eyes, a spotless rosy sands upon thousands of women have learned, happily,that Beecham's Pills are reliable and The Unfailing Home Remedy everywhere. In ‘every box are very v: The directions ‘boxes, 10¢., 25c. alual te women. If we did, I very much doubt | long hours of weary work for | to ! The freshest, spiciest ginger snap that ever popped out of an oven or satisfied a hunger. . . y' NATIONAL BISCUIT' | agement of laziness is the object of | modern life? Really, when you come to think of it, that's about what a large number of our boasted “modern improve- ments” come to,—just the making things easier for men and women who are too lazy to do anything they don't want to. I don’t know what we are going to do about it. Life has beceme com- plex and complicated—so full of or- ganization,—so cluttered up with ma- | chinery, wheels meshing into wheels in every direction,—that we are much |1ike fiies in a universal cosmos of cobwebbery. But | know one thing we can stop doing,—and that is whining about the high cost of things, if that cost is simply the price we pay for self-in- dulgence or weaknes i If I'm too shiftless or too feeble to hoe my own potatoes, then 1 must hire some one else to hoe them for me. | And why should I whimper because \ne expects me to pay him for doing my wark? THE FARMER. Burning of Rubbish on Though comparatively lightly taxed |there is no property here, or here- |abouts that is ciassed as being as valuable as water front property, es- pecially that section. which borders directly on the harbor of New Lon- don. Still but a very small part of it is being utilized by the railroad com- |panies which own the entire stretch from the Shaws cove bridge to the New England Carpet Lining factory |at the foot of John street, excepting the Chappell, the Stoll, the govern- ment, and the Ferguson wharves and that little bit owned by the city at the foot of State street. The only other part that is in use is the land- ing ~lace of the Norwich line steam- ers and Central wharf near the rail- way station. (This refers, of course, to the waterflont on the New Lon- | don side of the harbor and does not | include the section below Fort Trum- bull that is mainly devoted to priv- ate uses, some of which is held by people who have mo clear title to the property. The site for the state dock is over near the rallroad bridge and above the Long dock, so-called. and in the section designated nowadays as East New London, though it is as much New London as any other sec- tion of the eity. | While the water front as a whole [is not being used to advantage that | section between Atlantic and John | streets and owned by the Central Vermont Railroad company, has been actually fenced off for the whole dis- jtance, hiding the dilapidated _old wharf and freight sheds and bar- ring the public from any use or even a view of that beautiful has always been the pride of New | London. It is not much of an adver- | tisement for a _progressive city to have a big section of the water front |cut off by a fence, to see another | section over grown with weeds and !lade with rubbish, and here and there |large mill building being devoted to | storage and the whole property show- |ing lack of upkeep, enterprise and | prosressiveness. To the credit of the | Central Vermont be it said that the fence is of substantial build, uniform |and neat in appearance and is nicely | painted, with here and there a | “Danger: Keep Out” notice lest some | one daring might seale the fence and |tread on the deeayed and crumbling | planks on the wharf and perhaps fall | through inte the water and the rail- |road company held for damage for | injuries received. This is the company that, accord- ing, to the newspapsrs, sought the | water facllities at Providence at great expense, and then abandoned the | scheme, and which Is now talked of |as contemplating other blg expendi- ltures in securing additional water front privileges at Portland, while here in New London and with one of the best harbors on the coast the company is actually building a fence around the water front property to prevent anyone from doing business there, not excepting the company it- self. ' All of which is O. K. perhaps, but is not much indication of genuine progress, and is a_slightly discolored eye for New London. Some time in the long ago some chap who could tell a pear from an apple wrote that there was a place for everything and that everything should be in its place. But as stated that was a long while ago and is evi- dently forgotten by the health depart- !ment of the city of New London, | when a public dumping ground was selected in one of the most populous if not wealthiest section of the city and which, under present conditions, is prejudicial to the public health and a nuisance to a large section. This particular dumping ground is located off Shaw street. While the dump of itself, if the vegetable mat- ter were covered after -dumping, | would not be very objectionable, the custom of burning the stinking stuff is sickening to not only the residents but to all that the smoke reaches and beyond {to the limit of where the fumes are | wafted by the breezes, Complaint of ;Ihu conditions have not only been 1 made to the health committee by res- idents of Shaw street, but also residents as far distant frem the dumps as Ocean avenue, but the burn- |ing process continues with the ex- | pected results, lteply has besn made by the health committes that the stuff is burned se far as is possible in order that the public health may be protected, This exmianation may seund well to these who are not affected by the smoke amd the aecompamying stench, but te the other ciass there is belief that the alieged remedy is even worse than the digease, Complainants call NEW LONDON'S WATERFRONT Much of the Property is Not Being Used to Advantage— Opposition to Decoraton of Building Tops With Signs. harbor that | nearoy | within the area | by | Dumping Grounds Annoy— attention to the faet that the col- lection of swill with the garbage is vielation of city ordinance and sheuld not be permitted and that If this were done the nuisance would be abated materially, as no substantial objection weuld be made to the burn- ing of other material that did not emit offensive odors. The health committee has agreed to ‘take = the matter up with the health officer and have the nuisance abated through the regular channel. claiming that such matters are left entirely to the dis- cretion of the health. officer. Public dumping grounds are necessary and if they are to be maintained in popu- lous sections only material should be dumped that would not sicken those who were compelled to Inhale the al- most unbearable stench. Yes. there is a place for everything and every- thing should be in its place, and it would seem that the proper place for a public dumping ground should be far removed from the populous sec- tion of the eity. While the Municipal society and other like organizations in New Lon- don are busied in devising the ways and means to make the city beautiful roof artists, who have evidently suc- ceeded the rock artists who years ago disfigured the highways and the byways by painting advertisements on prominent rocks, are now counter- acting the efforts of those who are en- | deavoring to make New London the | city beautiful. These roof argsts are of course, in the business for the coin there is in it, and they are finding owners of buildings in prominent places who are willing, for the sake of rental money, to have big signs erected on the roofs of their bulldings advertising 'something, perhaps, that is entirely forelgn to what is sold by the regular tenants of the building. These disflgurements are on the In- crense here and hereabouts and . the peopls are protesting, but the fellows who rent the roofs of their buildings for advertising purposes chuckle and “Bill Tweed style, practically say: “What are you geing to do about it?" Alderman Marrigan, chairman of the committee on new building with- in the fire district, who came to the y from the Rose of New England several years ago, will try to answer the question by action and will try to solve the problem of abating this growing nuisance and public dis- figurement. There is an ordinance that forbids bullding within the fire Iimits, or anywhere else for that mat- ter, without formal permission being granted by the court of commen council, which acts upon the recom- mendation of its committee. Up to date no petitions have been received for permits to erect or build these signs which are to all intents addi- tions to the buildings. Stin these slgns are in existence and in viola- tion of law and the owners of the buildings are liable for the specified penaltles. One of these signs is par- | | tially constructed on a _building in State street owned by Former Gov- | ernor Waller and the attention of the |alderman was called to it as a viola- tion of city ordinance. Alderman Harrigan immediately ordered the work of construction stopped, threat- | ening arrest if the order was not | obeyed. The work was stopped and | now the roof artist proposes to make | application for permit to the next | meeting of the court of common | council. It requires no tip as to how |to place a bet on the action of the i counell on that petition. Alderman Harrigan did not end h reform work along that line in th | single instance, but he ordered the | building inspector to make investi- | gation of the roof signs now in exist- |eace and have report ready for the | council meeting, when action will be taken that may _result in several | prosecutions for the violation of local |law. The alderman took just an- other step and ordered the removal of {one of the big signs that the building | inspector reported as being In an un- |sate condition and liable to take a {tumble at any time. Alderman Har- {rigan’s action has the general ap- | proval of all citlzens, barring of | course the few who are beneficiaries {of the roof artists and the companies i they represent, If public sentiment is ecensidered the eeuneil will enderse the aetion of Alderman Harrigan and ‘give him unanimeus and heart; THE MUSICAL B gumdy mul 9,7 ERYERTainers T PICTUR RIFI' MDY CYCLISTS & MacRAE and CLEGG ° _. 'OLLIE WooD - The Buster Brown Kid ¥ HARVARD-YALE BOAT RACE O N AUDITORIU THE FAMOUS HINDU HYPNOTIST and HIS $10,000 MYSTERY, THE FLOATING PIANO A Real Piano and Player are Made to Fioat in Mid Air. Puzaled Milliens, it Will Puzzle You—CAN YOU SOLVE IT? Two-Reel Eclair Feature “The Faith Healer,” and 2,000 Feet of Comedy Film " Thurs.-Fri.-Sat. June 25, 26, 27 AlP It Has MATINEES EVERY DAY 5 CENTS THE HONOR OF A SOLDIER ‘War Drama THE BLACK HAND Screaming Comedy Ve Columb! H. which measures but .an inch in It was Children's night at the Grange week. At a spectal town m Thursday Columbia. Green > Bouwtn Entertained G. F. 8. Paul's church, Willimantic, at her Rev. Mr. Adams, and his wife. South _Coventry nine 19 to 9. attended the annual banquet of the Sangster of Norwich were with the night and Sunday. Mrs. James A. Utley exhibits a bou- and one-half inches acress. They were Mrs. Henry Isham Is spending a few Mrs. Theodore A. Lyman of Plain-- Successful Entertainment. Wednesday evening, the hall being by the elub, eight part. There spread was awarded Emily M. maker’ affair netted something over $35 which Fourth of July Celebration. n%wmm'r Burnham and two chil- with Mr. and ‘arren A. ia Green, Lyndon Little s in H. W. Porters Btore ‘vacation. ameter. ‘Wednesd: evening of last Preserving the Eim, afterncon of last week it was unani- mously voteq to. have the elms on ing was done by Mr. Huzen of Coventry early this week. Mrs. Weich entertained the meambers of the Girls' Friendly soclety of St. home by the lake last Saturday. About 30 were present including the rector, The local baseball team at South Coventry last Saturday defeated the S. B. West, Clvil war veteran and member of the Army and Navy club club at the Grisweld. Misses Lena G. Wolff and Gertrude former’s mother and brother at their home on Columbla Green Saturday iss Amelia J. Fuller is visiting rel- atives in Orange. . quet of pensies some of the blos- Soms measuring nearly three by two grown by Miss Mildred Latham of Chestnut Hill. weeks in Winsted with her daughter, Mrs, Herbert Gillette. ville is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs, James A: Utley. The W. §. 8. H. Ladfes' club an entertainment at Yeaman's packed to_capacity. The farce How the Club Was ‘was presented was vocal music between the acts. Mrs. Raiph Buell wwm_ The Rendall of Recky Ford, Colorado, who 18 spending the summer here, The will be added to the fund for the im- provement of Utley HIil. Plans have been made for an all day celebration of the Fourth of July, Ringing of belly at sunrise, ball game at 10, pienio at noen, Afler refresh- ments there is to be a o of An- tigues and Forrfhles. remainder | of the aftermoon will be apent in | sports ang games. It is proposed to | have fireworks in the evening. The entire program will be carrded out on Columbia Green. HEBRON Society Ap- For Fourth of Village Improvement Points Coemmittees Jduly Celebration, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Little and daughter of Hartford were in town over Sunday. Mrs. Holmes of Meriden and Miss Buell of Hebron visited at George Little's Wednesday. Mrs. Emily Rathbun was a visitor in_Willimantic, Monday. Miss Mildred Rathbone is visiting at Roger Porter's. Mrs. Sarah A. Holbrook is in New Haven visiting her daughter Mrs. Grover Clark. C. J. Strand left Tuesday for his| ho{z‘e in_Brattieboro, Vt. ss McNeirnay left Thursday for Brooklyn, N. Y. i Two New Teachers. There will be two new teachers on the Green, in the Fall. Mr. Henderson's goods have ar- rived. Mrs. Edmund Horton, attended the wedding of her sister Miss May Doyle at Unionville last week. To Celebrate The Fourth. The village improvement society held a meeling last Monday to see what they would do about the Fourth. A committee was appointed. Mrs. Roger Porter to have charge of the May pole exercises, on the park; Mrs. W. O. Seyms of the music, and Ches- ter Tennant of the fireworks. There will be fireworks on the park in the SOME overleoked. can invest them at once. hundred, as the ca Breed A HUMAN VULTURE 2000 fi.—Pathe Plays—2000 ft. HOTEL ST. DENIS Broadway and 11th Street, New York City HOME COMFORTS WITHOUT EXTRAVAGANCE The only first-class hotel near all s Within easy access of every point of Interest. Five minutes’ walk of Shopping District NOTED FOR:—Excellence of culsine, comfortable appointments, cour~ teous service and homelike surroundings The very best accommodations $1.00 Per Day Up 7 minutes from Grand Central Depot 10 minutes to leading stores and theatres ST. DENIS HOTEL CO. ALSO STANWIX HALL HOTEL, ALBANY, N. Y. A savings account at this bank have to be turned into mone: A COQ IN HOT WEATHER RELIGION AND GUN PRACTICE ‘Western Drama THE EGYPTIAN MUMMY A Comedy with Ruth Roland mship lines Half block from Wana- the city at POINTS There are some. points about the “Savings Bank-way” that are You can always invest small, odd amounts at interest, and you You don’t have to wait until you get an even hundred, or five may bej you can earn compound interest while you are acoumulating your investment fund. Your intersst return is certain, and can be added' semi-annually to your principal and begin to earn more interest, t—does not always a oash a it is money. You can begin to save here any day in the year, but today is the best day. The Chelsea SavingsBank evening, followed by a dance at the town hall. Ice cream will be served day and evening, Farmers have commenced haying. STAFFORDVILLE Funeral of Andrew Goodwill—Children Sing at Hospital Following M. E. Sunday School Concert. Mersick Water Supply System .ue Sprin Andrew Goodwill, 60, died at the WATER SUP, Hartford hospital Monday forenoon. He had been ill for many weeks. He years. Jan. 2, 1876 he married Mar- | Farmhouse Lighting Outfiis. tha Blodgett, who survives him. He also leaves three brother, Johnson THE C. S. MERSICK & CO., New Haven, Conn. of the year is just the time for you to instali a MERSICK LY SYSTEM on your farm. The outfit shown above consists of a geared power pump comnected to a 2 H. P. Gasoline Engine having a suction lift up to 25 feet. Capacity, 40 o oin Som of Mr. and Mre Guy| gallons per minute. The pump gear can be thrown out by an eccentria will and was born in Monson, | bearing, permitting use of engine for other purposes. A very satisfactory Mass, May 20, 1853, but has been a equ;gmn? for country homes. resident of Staffordyllle for many Bena for our Catalog T on Individual Water Supply Systems and and Justin Goodwlll of Hartford and James Goodwill of California. The funeral was held at his home Wed- nesday at 1.30 p. m. Rev. W. D. Hamilton officlated and burial was in | the local cemetery. s Children's Day Concert. The children’s day concert held in | the M. F. church last Sunday morn- ing proved very interesting and in- structive. The pastor gave a short | address on “Opportunity.” Mr. Lyon used his auto in transporting a num- ber of the children to the Johnson hospital where they sang some of ths | concert songs for the benefit of the patients, last Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Mathew Doyle left last Satur- day for Westerly, R. I, where she expects to spend the summer. Mrs. G. W. Miller was called to her home in Oxford, Ct. Wednesday on account of the critical condition of her father, George Hawley of Oxford, Mrs. Leo Schindler was the guest of her sister Mrs. Henry O'Brien in Springfield, last week. UNION Howard Barber and family of Rock- ville are visiting Mr. Barber’s mother, Mrs. Emily Barber. Miss Florence Barrows is home for the summer vacation, Dr. Jackson's ‘“Natural Gum” sets of teeth abso- lutely defy detection. GOLD FILLINGS $1.00 U OTHERS 50c. Dr. JACKSON, Dentist Successor to THE KING DENTAL CO. 203 Main St. next to Boston Store 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 195-3 FULL SET $8 8 TEETH My reputation for making the most life-like, finest fitting and best wearing plates is well known. No set ever leaves my office until the patient is fully satisfied. This rule is never broken. In addition on et is the nat- ural gum, the use of which makes it impossible to detect false teeth in the mouth. This wonderful invention is only to be had in my office. My sole aim is to glve the best at the least possible cost.. 1 give my personal guarantee for 10 years with all work. THE NEW< $5. SUBSTITUTE TE! This is the only office in Norwich ETH where gold crowns and teeth without plates (undetectable from natural ones) are inserted positively without pain. Dental Nurse in Attendance. Painless Extraction. C. J. Joslin of Worcester was call- ing on friends in town Tuesday. T. O. Newell and family visited frla?(ds in Sturbridge the first of the week, Part of the Game. The women whoe refuse to debate with Dr, Anna Bhaw beeause she said Lowest Prices unpleasant things abeut them dem- enstrate that they at least have ne and business in pelities.—St, Leuls Re- x . public, Satisfaction Guaranteed aup- ‘perl in his cemmendable actiem gn | trying te rid the city of these abemi- nations that ave beeceming toe fre- queat in too many. places. | Amsis‘au impests inte Eagland dur, R T A T R , n: 3 R the same peried in 1842 ALLEN’S “HAMILTON” WATCHES Factory Adjusted and Timed WM, FRISWELL MISS M. C. ADLES Hair, Sealp and Face Specialist FIGURE AND STYLE lose balf their effect if the hair 1is neglected. Miss Adles uses the same skill in developing beauty and health In the hair and complexion that she would in improving a plant or flower. Let her ald you. 306 Mal Street. F‘".‘IEE As! & Telephone 652-4. Next to Chelsea Bank, The Antiseptic powdes shaken into 25 and 27 Franklin St. Unhe ; shace g e : = D0 e menials ol . wHEN St septury, men| WHEN you Want to put yo: b - et T da STt it e i e R |t e e e e AS T e adverie: e MARWRSPDIIG EE S 18 FEE T as ocimns ot by i Sina of 'The Bullette

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