Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 3, 1913, Page 4

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Giarwich Fulietin aud Gaufiesd. 117 YEARS OLD. Subscriptien price, e a waek; 500 a $6.00 a Lutered al the rustoice at Merwica, a8 seconu-ciuss mEsilels Telsprwne Sails: Oflics, Hosm 2, eshane 210. dide Liicuiadion of a4 baadln cuiacion 1 Comncciicni. ctia e inrgest pagec in ascs Lirar Gice to isur any W oeres B asw fases bmages cuRl e » cwiew. i1 U0 of the [ s dcbiveres A00E Bousss T o) masedy-thoee poi the pewgle. im Nasx- anc ot cont. im W inans. 1s GeusErEd Ge ever DOU Muwecs s f'a ama o Wil [ET (d all @€ tueae plaves hatacsod tme local daily. Lasterm Commecticut kus forty- wun, ome buudred and sia: fre pestoifice disiricis, ams cural free delivery reates. f Gulicda i» wold in uwa and om ali of tue K. 4l wuicw in Kastcrs Coancclient CIRCULATION 1901, average... ansa Gamsisua an . - evesy Owne H. Oat eXpiTe E—— REPUBLICAN TICKET. ctmen. CHURCH BUSHNELL Assexsor. FPRANK WOODWORTH. Bourd of Relief C RIE GILMOUR, JAM W. BLACKBURN Ageuts of the Town Deposit Fumd. c S1.LO 1APPITT, CHARLES W. GALE! FRANK L. WOODARD. Collertor of Taxes. THOMAS ROBINSON. Tewn Clerk. CHARLES HOLBROOK. Town Trenasurer. CHARLES 8 HOLBROOK. Registrar of Votors. TYLI LEW CHARIL H B ROBERT Constables. DAVID R _KINNEY, T, RGF A Anditor. DANTEL F. M'NEIL Tree Warden. LEWIS R HL CHUT TIME FOR UNITY. Back of every back of every need of strong understood. od movement, of des ur every successfu dertaking and necessity of such should be by the republicans of Norwich in the coming town election. Whatever the efforts to diminish the party strengin, it gnition that such ors are simply contributing in n indirect m r to the election of the democrat et. Through party strife and internal trouble the republicans have been aid- n the alection of the opposing can- ates long enough, _T time that he a getting together of the factions and instead of pulling apart for the hest interests of the town” and the democrats, pull together and put inte oper the principles of town management which will resnlt he greatest The ranks masy sibly dax rty wd of the gr breach in the no greater han that local est republican ngh pos- which Ademocratic is to stand of the candi- qualified her. more exists anen t 1l that i in the su who are to give t to- in required port in every way e town a businesslike, eco- nomical and effiefent administration which fs the ambition and purpose of the republican from first to last, and victory w D yward pa gether dates can will Wita taxes mounting the time is ripe for united aection. them A comm n in New erk declares after careful investigation that bill hoard advertisin i® le=s profitable than other methods, a fact which should require but 1little experience with newspaper advertising to deter- mine. With on dollars’ worth of forelzn goods waiting In the warehouses until the tariff bill pass- it s a bhind<ome additional profit which should result to those who have waited for th ing of the doors. ea, Tust how much Proesfdent Wiison be. lieves the country needs the retention of the commerce court%will be deter- mined by hix freatment of the defi- fency bill. through which congress ans to kil ft, Massachusnits denles lberty to a yman paranolac but New Hamp- hire 18 regu o long e to de- : wheth hest ein New York regain its dangerous ctarge who ns escaped VWhe it iz for & voor or a decads ‘ust o lone as Dsan Rogars can make it pessibla (s remain B¢ the head of the Yele Law schosl it will be a ben- ofit to the undergradustes and the in. stitution, —— Tf Peru ean producs first eclass ten sent besf the expendituve for the E\n. direcsed. ame capal hes deen weil num- | | NORWITH BULLETJN. F RIDA’(, OCTDBER 3. 1913 DEMOCRATS AND CIVIL SERVICE, | Just hew far the demeecrats are pre- pared to go in the curtallment of the olvil mervice is diffleult of estimation, but it their efforts in belialf of lessen- ing its powers can be used as an indi- cation of what they hope to accomplish during thelr termy, it is plainly indi- cated that they are prepared to go the limit, throw merit and abllity to the winds and build up a strong spoils sys- tem. The endeavors which are being made for the avoidance of civil service in the collection of the income tax strike a savage biow when it is made pos- sible net orely to agpoint em S 3 of the freshman class. now practically for such work without an examination, | cotaglete, indivates thai the entering bat te have them do the work for which | class in college is larger than any pre- vious one. There are 391 men in 1917, BULLETIN'S SPEC Flights. ) £ eivii service men are now required. B en more laiquitous rovi | @ud 356 in the Sheff freshman class, Hon: b Ahas: ARich alswes the lp_(:,he latter figure being a ‘(nnslde‘l[uble — © oivil service men 1o |decrease from last year. Comnecticut | pointment of < sends $4 men to academic and 121 to jsuch work when by such designation | Sheff, while the New York students | ! they must lose their civil service stat- | in academic number 110 and in the fus. sclentific school 73. From lllineis i This with the provisions which have | comes the third largest number of | been added to the appropriation biil | freshmen, 03,' frl‘om Pe‘x\psy]!:r'anm‘.dl‘ { taking ‘deputy marshals and revenue ‘,‘f““ HOIN Bl SehEDsy ST D"‘Z‘,""‘h‘ collectors out of civil service is not | .OrBia there are 11 men, fom Wash : & gl it el ington 7, and 40 states are represented only decidedly unfair but is in direct | iy aj] | opposition to the democratic platform | Eastern Connecticut does not send which declares that “civil service shall } down a large representation of stu- be honestly and rightly enferced, to|dents this year, although the Shef- the end that merit and ability shall be | field men outnumber their academic the standard of appointment and pro- | brothers. 'In the college the enroll | .. e Sl i S "lude Howarc v B | i 'j’:h"f' than Par e '_”‘d";d Lol of Central Village, Edward Northrop | 4 Pollticac Bart e action of the | Chapman of Lyme, and Raymond T. J. | { democrats, regardiess of their tform | Higgins of Norwich. The Sheffield indicates that promises are things to | freshmen are Leroy Amos Swan, be forgotten rather than carried out.|Charles Downer Prentice and Harold John Alex Franc Watson White of Norwich, It is to be hoped that the better judg- nder Prior of Moosup, John ment will prevail before n, such 2 % it l,a: ;Pa‘““ s action, X! Suliivan of Plainfield and David Leon- it . s e ard Bacon of Assonet, Mass a for- SR S mer Norwich young men who is a ROAD BUILDING. member of 1916 S. Prom coasf. to coast there tsine mat-] | Niehaiag, \.* Walth 5T Norwich a ter of more importance before the|&Taduate of Trinity collese, Hartford, ople than that of cood roads. It ie | ]88 retnrned for his sécomd year of EEOIS S¥an DR 9L.Eond RoRTY 8 | graduate work in the Scientific school. =omething in which every city and S town s deeply interested. The bet- Through the week without a let-up New Haven, Oct. 2.—The registration ; IAL YALE LETTER Freshmen Who Have Entered From Eastern Connecticut— Much Activity in Athletics—“Old Town and Gown” ‘Feeling Still Exuts—Undergnduatu Active in Aeroplane et s hopes to make arrangements so that ! the varsity eight may meet Princeton ;on Lake Carnegie this fall William Thaw, a Yale undergraduate and a member of the class of 1915, is the man who has been making hydro- i aeroplane flights along the Connect- jicut and Rhode Island shore during the past summer and he and his com- | panion, Stephen MacGordon, find aero- :planing so interesting and apparently so lucrative that he will not return jto college this fall. Instead, Thaw, who is not distantly #felated to Harry K. Thaw, of recent newspaper notori- ety, will . pass the winter at Palm Beach, Florida, instead of in the doubt- ful climate of New Haven, Thaw came down from Newport, where he has been taking society folk® up into the air, on Sunday. Because of motor trouble, he had to come down at Watch Hill, but that was familiar ground to him, for he flew from there for a couple of weeks last Aungust, charging his passengers a nominal sum_ for their experience that aver- aged a dollar a minute, sometimes more. He did the same thing in New Haven earlier in the summer and at Newport later. Palm Beach will yleld him a still richer fleld, he thinks. The distance of 105 miles from Newport | was covered in actual traveling time of 93 minutes. The stop at Watch Hill was six hours. A chance that a $700,000 bequest may not run in a direct course Into the coffsrs of the university treasury de- terment of the highways is as vital to the Yale football team has been per- the users thereof and the communities B fecting its old plays and taking up new rain Wednesday s is the bringing of the transportarion | Ones and even in the ; ¢ 1 lines to the highest degree of perfec- | ;,.","':"'( e "’;;3( b5 "‘,‘;‘p";’jr 5 = A 5 ' roaches s: a enty-fiv, e ‘r?’;‘- T"‘T MEcElan OF the counie “M”‘“ cent. improvement in the eleven as it afls to glve atlention to its roads fafls| jjaveq against Holy Cross, Saturday, to note the march of progress, over the Weslevan game. The forward In the building of modern roads.|pass has been in the focus of atten- | however, too much emphasis cannot | tion and the work on this play and on be placed upoen the necessity of puild- | new formations were enc ging in ing well. It is far cheaper in the end | their results this vea M to comstruct a road which will stang [ S¢uted forward B et he w S ear o ( P B % s 0 the wear and t f proper ; . i Rave the (oUChAeWI in thi through putting into it time, material | foly Cross game, after Guernsey ha and attention, than to build a fine 100k- | drop kicked a goal from the 22 vard ing piece of road at small cost, which [line ea in the Captain Ket- | will require a similar outlay within | cham seems to almost in- | w vears. All is not zold that glit- | fallible goal i ie moni B it and it might be said that all mod- | €2T1¥ on* W Hiokepory tha { rad onsiruction is not w road | Be 18 10 be cesiavst ““n‘-‘.(‘ T30 CONS )‘ g Sl 4 ilglm!'xl permanently is an inter 1 is completed. Experience 1 with Maine h that univ hown that the nearest to permanency | the ed wit rsity, if roads of today can be built, the|is not ed that Yale will eq | cheapest and best they will prove in | Harve = 34-0 score. At the sam Ihz anit time it will give some comparison be- Too close attention niot the: paid | Lo cR (helmark DEhD P € dmé by, maitebality. of, m Any stone| The Yale Baskethall association has does not make g roads. Tt must | decided to put its team back into the | be suitable to withstand the conditions ! intercollegiate’ leagué. aft havtn of traffic and climate to which it wili { withdrawn it last vear for independer be subjected. Such with the requisite | Eames. The vear before that the te binder and the proper bed and con- | 2ad finished in ‘";l’h tere struction. all enfer into the securing ;Zr']""}“fv Hea of permanent roads, and it is the per- | forost in R manent road which gives the best ser- | sate, Princaton. Dartmouth and Penn- vice and economy test. sylvania that are on 'Im schedule. On the occasion of the Sheff. rush last Saturday nmioht Qherfl was more WILL IT AFFECT THE PR!CE? little ¢hance of the man who does the | the outlook for the fall meets is bright. Whenever coal is mentioned it | evidence to the effect P brings to mind a subject which is of | casion offers. the old feeli veen deep interest to a widespread body of | “town and gown” bas not vet died consumers. The announced declaration | 9own. TRoaming »ut the streets in i of ‘the Pennsylvania railroad that it | (e neighborhood of the college and ; g ; Sheff. town, In bands of from 5 to 30, intends to dlspose of lts coal proper- | fitf (OWEy T DORCS B ore 1s the ties and relieve itself of the coal com- | tachnical name for them), swoop down ¢ which it controls, and the almost | upon ted students and relieve them neous statement from the zov- |of b and any other articles that that it is planning to come away easily. On High t, fust on against the companies w on rkeley oval and under “the control the coal market, concern a |Windows of the dormitories, a town 4 : aulied two junlors Saturday matter of intense public interest. The hey knocked onme down and progress in h Instance will be close- toot e other miknia s Hd" v followed looking for »d results. [ and the atti and the clubs The action of the railroad is in | score of “muckers” not o cordance with the law which demands | resi ce. But occasionally the town | the i of railroads from 'su chaps meet their match properttes. As one of the nine T them encountered a lone st t P s. though they did not know it, one which control the anthracite coal mar. | W% NOBER They G0 Aot 0 om e ket it is insufficient to break the com- | wor horribly surprised. He gr bine though it may have a good In- |two of the vouths and knocked finence upon the others. The action, | heads together, then procecded to lay however. is apparently an anticipation | out the others in one, two, three or- of the inevitabie, der. e T e tne et ita| A call for track candidates brought ’ . : {out 75 men Wednesday night to the effect of such dissolution upon the | oo 1o Ao B midst the troo price of the commodity. If coal har-| phies of former athletic victories plans ons continue to control the market. | for another championship vear were whether it is through railroad or sep- [ made. Coach Queal has a cross coun- arate ownership. there seems to be | trv squad of 40 out this week and. veloped this week when application was made in the New Haven probate court for a redistrfoution of the es- tate of Henry O, Hotchkiss. He died in New H n in 1883 and left prop- | erty that was worth $275,000 under the management of his wife, the estate grew until at the time of her death recently it had grown to $700,000. Mary O, F. Hotchkiss lived in East Rive Conn., and by the terms of her wi the life use of Miss Marie O. Hotch- death the Sheffleld was te reeeive the A granddaughter of ijs one of the heirs by the terms of the petitioning on the distribution was this sum was left fer her davghter, fter whese sehool hequ Hotchkiss | who shut out | will and who is greund that a proper not made. | Seienti | entire Mrs, Every year the problem of caring for the freshmen, phyvsically. mentally, so- | cially and morall the men of the faculty and the upper who have the welfare of the body of Yale men at heart. the freshmen, unless abso- ualified, are given a com- pulsory course of exercises or their equivalent in a sport in the big Yate gvmnasium throughout the yvea Dr. Jorn of the gymnasium staff gives the men an exami ion before and after and it is the ide of Yale that her graduat y leave stronger as well as in mind. Men- rd is set, which some which for the ma- men in b tally, too, a standa think too low, but jority, serves purpose. In the social way, it is much harder to infuse the right sort of spirit into s of 400 men and this year a 1eme provides for dividing the into four par each of which have a reception in Dwight hall the mem get acquainted with How the four guarters will together is not announced. Stephen’s soclety med for the freshmen this outcome of the new ar- | rangements going to be watched | with interest by those who are in touch with student problems. has been f | Tall . 'The The annual report of Goorge Parm- irer of Yale university, n funds. er- organi- of $19,- by ac- t able for such ! departmental or special xhaustion of the for- ims‘r the tre: * points out the po: | sibility of a deflcit for the university account, unle: there shall be further increase of funds, and emphasizes par- ticularly the needs of the medical and | divinity schools, of the Peabody mu- | seum and the Yale university press. i The dining hall last year was run at a profit, in contrast with a deficit | of about $3,590 the yvear previous. The average atiendance at the dining hall | was quite a little higher than a year justifiable coal prices must go on for- eve LETTERS TO EDITORIAL NOTES. Next to September. October finest month of antumn. 1= the T¢ is to be hoved that the pen which Medical Inspection. 16 BTl <l Sail. signs the i tarife ‘.‘"; ol Mr. Editor: In proposing medical in- lotine the American industries. spection of school children it would i T = % seem {hat the reasons advanced by the With all parties agreeing o an im- | chjef advocate of the scheme are en- mediate election politics ‘n China are tirely insufficient to warrant us in in- looking up. Mexico please take notice. | augurating a measure of this kind. Nor —_— the attendant expense the chief ob- jection that can be urged against Again. the fact that Norwich is When President Wilson does begin to travei it is quietly surmised that £ 2 he will spend but little of his time | OBy town of the size in the state w Aol g ° | out medical inspection should no weight in considering the question, as Dr. Cassidy makes nec attempt to show that the heaith record of our schoel children in the past has not been equal to any if not superior to most towns in Connecticut. There are There is lots of Bird talk flying about Massachusetts just at present, since A. Gardner has proved to be much more than a Tecrow. i R R B valld reasons for bellev that the The grest danger from the new speed | introduction and prosecution of the proposed innovation will in the long records made by the French aeronauts is that every amateur auto driver will be trying to break them. run result in greater injury than ben- efit to the young and the subject is so gravely important that conscien- tious educators and parents should With race suicide being advocated it | not permit alluring sophisiries or glit- might seem that Colonel Roosevelt had | tering generalities based on unsound something on hig hands besides South | premises to prevent them making a America and the Bull Moose party. careful and impartial study of all sides i Lk of the question. Few facis have been From the proficiency of the Mexican | demonstrated so conclusively as tRat fear is one of the greatest promoters rebels in blowing up bridges it might E of disease. This is a fact so well es- be inferred that they had tmported| apiished that the ablest and most some of the dynamite gangs from this | goientific s G e B country. to divert patient's mind from dis- i ease. Furthermo: what is true of the baleful effects of fear on the adult mind who 18 not perfectly cer- of overating Tha voter tain as to the method voting machines should take advantase | 19 dvU’?ll'd trite of ity effectson; the of ‘the few ‘daya rematning to become | Bustic and highly imaginativg mind of Informed, At no fime In life do we receive such D S {2 lasting impressions as in childhoc When the Danish premier declares | and at no time is fear more potent for that the women vote iust the same a<|evil than then. 'The disastrous their husbands do, the only hope of | fects of creating alarm in the mind of the suffragettes lles In breaking up | the child and having those dread la- the home. den thoughts centered on his body or some organ of tha body cannot be over- Tha men on the OTRET-EAYS: An koon e!llmn;ed, 5?., evil resulting from the e . 5y compulsory dissemination of fear that es we hale hrought peace to Mexico 4 A Py BBl g il le 1ta Ake: must necessarily follow the pro- posed examination, woule greatiy over- turbed annditions Inside the 'ocal dam. | balance the good ciaimed for it, In- slances ire not wanting to show that with highly sensitive children the dec- tor's dictum has serlously Impaired the health and evem proved fatal to the veuthful vietim, peratis party, Forty-sight wears behind prisen bars the neeord of Ceonnectieit's eldest pris. ener sheuld he & strens deterreat fer X The editer of - 1 any wha are imelined te plase a light ul'nrll thus (;xp:qs:::fl:fm?;egmfncf estimate upen the vahie of human life. Jate number: 15 ef- | 5 S Thursday night the crew meetin was | ag0. paving receiving much in the way of | TRArSAay QIERL TAE CIOW MUCHTE WAS | 25N o report shows total investments relief. The result of the test will bel 1ong for the bhetterment of the Yale |of the university to be $14.376,936.69 to show whether the consumer is g0- | nayy were outlined. Captain Snowden | with an average vield of 5.01 per cent. ing te recelve some consideration in 5 ; the mame, or whether the pursnit of THE EDITOR if recognized the effects of fear in other “It would be well sanitariums of public health work. Un- do not, and it is part of the work of public health officials to excite, foment, stimulate, encourage and spread abroad a state of fear and anxiety, “By hot house methods of culture an | unreasoning dread of contagious dis- | eases has been artificially raised and encouraged until it exists to an ener- mous extent. “Invisible, mortal dangers are adver- tised to lurk in the dust, in water, in milk and in air, until the modern child is brought up in an atmosphere of terror at deadly, unseen enemies and modern man is walled in by invisible lethal microbes that cease not, day or nifgh(, to threaten his health and his life. “There are few poisonous drugs as powerful in their effects as fear; it can drive a vast volume of blood from | the. periphery to the internal organs | blanching the skin and cengesting the spleen, liver and other organs. It c¢an alter the volume, rate and character of the pulse in a few seconds until the very life is threatened. It can produce a copious, exhausting sweat, and it can dry the mouth and throat until the subject is voicele: It can paralyze all of the voluntary so that its subject when there is mos need to escape cannot move a single mt bran es happily they Il of these obvious and profound ects it can produce in less fhan two minutes. It there amy drug outside of fresh, strong hydrocyanic acid that can equal it in the rapidity and extent of its effect Is there any morbiflc microbe as potent and as sudden in action or as destructive in effect as But fear has no wicrobe; its cause cannot be demonstrated by the microscope and so, forsooth, its in- { jurious effects are ignored by health board [n order to avoid a quite neg- | glible risk of getting tvphoid, in order to secure one from smallpox, that does not threaten, in order to protect one { from pestilence that is imaginary fear life depressing, health destroyving, peace | shattering fear, is spread broadcast over the land. It invades every ham- let, it enters every home; everyone is urged to be afraid to eat natural frult, to drink natural water or milk, to breathe the very alr of heaven. There will be a penalty for this false teach- ing—as sure as the rise of the Rnext | r ending re 30 last, nd bequests to both d principal during the vear ! 5.8%, with a net o muscles | R Colonial Theatre MATINEE 5¢ CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. EVENINGS 10c “THE INVADERS,” ....Two Reel Feature—Xalem Dramatic Bpisode of the “Rustler War, 1892" “CUPID VS. WOMEN’'S RIGHTS,”..... Costello in Egypt “FORTUNE’S TURN,” .. Vitagraph All Star Feature “AROUND BATTLE TREE, Beautiful Love Story ABY INDISPOSED,, and “THE LUADY IN BLACK,” ..........Comedy Admission 10c ke AUDITORIUM Eimsor tezoc HONG FON A REAL CHINAMAN | Singing American Coon Songs ! George and Lillie Gardner . .. Up-to-date Entertainers ! C l 1 E Two Reel Rex Feature WEEKLY A ROSE AT 16—A CACTUS AT 60 argain 5 3y ALL NEW Matinee VIS THEATR E FEATURES Daily 5 & 10c EROAY TODAY POWERFUL 3 REEL THE BLMJ( SHEEP DR eart s e, IHE STOLEN WOBIAN TCLIANCE DRAMA IN TWO REELS e———————————— WHEN DREAMS COWE TRWE CALAMITY ANIN HEROINE A Keystone Seream [ American Comedy tide. Tt will probably be in the mext | immunized against typhoid by receiv generation in the form of a regiment [ing a series of innoculations of of neurotics, hypochondriacs, neumas- |iphoid vaccine.’ themics, insane and mentally unbal- | For the last few years the nurses anced people. ifl the ospital have been asked to vol- “Here is the kind of sanitary a- |unteer for immunization but few have vice that is needed: il’PSpUnd(‘fl: now it is compulsory. Com- “Live with a lofty indifference ito [PUIS0ry medication means for every unssen, health-board-horn dangers. . |fortunate nurses. In an article in the mm" ‘l’; ";;m-v‘mem_p Ppicilea Jow jfcurrent number of the Century Mage 4 ipte.] i zine on the health of New York city anxlety, dread and timidity from your ()'I‘]‘;""".f‘;,m," s ;'“’:f“,l,':"'(-‘,;p“'";’;‘fi minds. If you follow these few and (136 Pt arge, ; i P b s p y s but a strong movement is felt in the simple *rules you will probably havey ity to make it so.” the pleasure of attending the funerals Y A. W. DAVIS, of all the members of your local health: board and of those who follow its Norwich, Oct. 2, 1913. adviee.” — If any person doubt that the pres- Forest officers in the Payette na- ent movement to place the political ¥ onat forest are using a m{mprncged doctor in charge of our schools means |, i+ qyi1) in road work on the for There is considerable road wo; and the drill saves time and money e anything less than compulsory or state medicine with its attendant evils of } compulsory serum therapy let him read 700 1A¢ B0 0 ST Tl oin Foads the following from an article in the [f = 5 New Yomk Times of May 27th, 1913: fmsm — “At a joint meeting yesterday of the | board of directors of the Mount Sinai Children Cry Hospital and Training School for | r el Nurses it was decided that all nurses FOR FLETCHER’S members of the house staff, 8, | fmpresses 1tself ipon |laundresses and atlendants must be | C A $ T ORI A Business - Centeral Norwich Trolleys . Lezd Te We're Here! Who's Here? THE ROSE O°NEILL “KEWPIES' Everybody tells us we are the cutest, most lovable little creatures made to smile at people and make them smile. We came from Rose O’Neill’s pen, then we’ve been dolls for the children, and now em- broidery designs for the grown-ups. You can buy us Kewpie Royal Society Package Outfits Kewpie Royal Society Cut- fits are imade in a charming line of Pillows, Dresser Scarfs, Bibs, Fancy Bags and other novelties. ' The packages con- tain everything needed — ma- terial, sufficient Royal Society Embroidery : Floss and com- plete instructions for making. KEWPIE\PACKAGE OUTFITS 25c¢, 50c, 75¢ Autumn Sale of Notions and Sewing Nieeds Autumn Opening Floor Coverings and Draperies A beautiful display of the new things for the home. There are many special values also to be found. (Second Floor) This annual event is now in progress. Everything the home dressnuaker re- quires will be found here at a pronounced :saving.

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