Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 25, 1913, Page 7

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| \ EMALTED CEREALS (05 MALT BREAKFAST FOOD OMP0UNDos HHEATAOMALE | t I Your Physician Says: That the soft, gray matter f}f your brain and nerve centres is made largely of phosphates, al- | bumin and water; muscles are | built from protein. Malt Break- ! fast Food supplies the organic vitality your brain, nerves, mus- cles and flesh demand for ov coming everyday wear and tear. Begin the day right for half a cent a dish. Hamilton Coupons in Every Package | At your grocers. | Malted Cereals Co., Burlington, Vt. ~MINNESOTA AGROUND ON | THE JAPANESE COAST | Most of the Sixty First-Class Passen- | gers on Board are Americans—No One in Danger. Yokohama, Japan, Nov. 24—The steamship Minnesota, from Manila for Seattle by way of Hong Kong and Yo- | kohama, went aground yesterday on : on board i safe and Everyt s: apparently the vessel is undamaged. She is being lightened and it is expect- ed she will be refloated 00 The Minnesota went hard aground in try- ing to avoid collision with a sailing vesseL. Up to a late hour this evening tugs had pot sucreeded in getting her off. Most of the sixty first-c sengers on board are Americcans. | = | built at Grot- built there was Japanese coast. | | | The Minnesota we on. Her sister ship als tolally wrecked on the Breach of Promise Suit Goes Over. Winsted, Conn., Nov. 2¢—The $10,000 breach of promise suit of Miss Mabel | Scultetus against Clinton C. Buck, a| well known druggist, will go over to! the next term of the superior court be- | cause of the iliness of Sheridan Barne: of Canaan, one of the jurors. One of the largest and most valuable timber trees of the country is the tu- lip tree, known to lumbermen low poplar. It is related to the mag- nolias, but is the only tree of its kind in the world. Get Rid of - Piles at Home Simple Home Remedy, Easily Applied, Gives Quick Relief and Prevents All Danger from Operation. Send for Free Trial Package and’ Prove It In Your Case. | Don't even think of an operation for | piles. Remember what the old family | doctor sai Any rt of the body cut | away is gone for . _Omne or two ap- | plications of Pyramid Pile Remedy and | all the pain, fire and torture ceases. | In remarkably short time the con- | 1 gested veins are reduced to normal and | you will soon be all right again. Try | this remarkable remedy. Sold eve ! vhere at drug stores. Send for a free | 11 package and prove bevond ques- | it i the right edy for your | en though you may be wearing 5 i coupon below at 1 treatment. It vely what Pyra- Pile Remedy will do. Then you get the regular package for i cents at any drug store. Don't suffer another needless minute. Write now. —————————————————————— FREE PACKAGE COUPON once will show you conclus mid can Pyramid Drug Company, 452 Py- || ramid Bldg., Marshall, Mich, Kindly {| send me a trial treatment of Pyra- || mid Pile Remedy at once, by mail, | 3¢ in plain wrapper, so 1 can prove its splendid results, Name....eceese00000a | TTANKSGIVING NEEDS CARVING SETS ’ ROASTING PANS ! MAZDA LAMPS TABLE LAMPS GAS MANTLES CUTLERY ASH CANS ASH SIFTERS, PERFEC- TION OIL HEATERS GATOI HASE {is up to the good | organization of a men’s equal suffrage | was | the bailot from the men and giving it | pleas: RAGBI WISE ON EQUAL SUFFRAGE Local Equal Suffrage League—Advocates Equal Suffrage Because He Believes in Democracy—Rev. J. Eldred Brown Was Chairman. put her back to the age of paganism. The important part of the question is not that the woman shall “interest men,’ but that she shall interest her- self. Is the woman who shrouds her- self in mystery going to be the right king of a mother? She may be a de- lightful occupant of a harem but will she produce a strong race? If all wo- men had homes and were free to re- main in them this mystery might be all right, but what of the seven mil- lion of women In America who are wage earmers outside the home. These seven million perhaps would like to retain their mystery but in its place they know misery. The first class to have the ballot, were we to make any distinction, would be the wage earners. Rabbi Stephen S. Wise of New York city addressed an audience which filled every seat in the town hall Monday evening on the subject of Equal Suf- frage, under the auspices of the Nor- wich Equal Suffrage league. He pre- sented strong, forcible arguments and his address made a marked impression on his audience. The president of the local league, Mrs. William A. Norton, explained the purpose of a petition which was later taken through the audience for signa- tures. The petition is to be presented to the next legislature and asks for an amendment providing for woman suf- frage. She then presented Archdeacon J. Eldred Brown, rector of Trinity Episcopal church, as chairman of the | meeting. j It is not the woman who pays a big Get Off the Fence. Rey, Mr. Brown spoke bri t ing that woman suffrage is coming, whether we believe in it or not. If it is a good cause, he said, and its argu- ments are true, then it is the duty of every good citizen to climb down off the fence and work for it. If, on the property tax every yvear but the wo- man who has nothing but her life, who needs the protection of the bal- lot. fly, stat- Women Will Unmake War. Florepce Nightingale instituted a new era for women in warfare and | today we call them ministering angels other hand, it is a bad cause, Ils ar8U-, o the pattiefield. But woman is go- ments false and it would be bad 1T} jng 5 have a larger influence on war. ;hef;;glet i T;‘”f‘,ff'fi':‘,'figir O ene | She has borne children and they have been sent to the jaws of war’s ruth- less hell and the most terrible toll has been exacted of the woman. In the next generation we, will have the be- ginning of the end of needless Men have made war but women will unmake war. They will refuse to raise sons for sacrifice. good citizen to get down off the fence and work against In either case it zens to get busy on the one side or the other. Rev. Mr. Brown also spoke in favor of the leazue in this city for the active sup- | port of the women in their cause. He introduced Rabbi Stephen S. Wise, who ted with a burst of applause. e opened his remarks by stat- he s n a believer In > but in equal suffrage. | He made the distinction, he explained, | because e men might think that] woman ¢ age meant the taking of | Believes in Democracy. If I were not a believer in democracy I would oppose equal suffrage as ar- dently as T now favor it. Democracy means the rule of the people, not half the people. This i{s one reason why you oppose equal suffrage though you may not realize it. You don't belleve in ~democracy. Suffrage for woman to the women. He said that the suf- is not a gateway to heaven but a frage movement should not be judged 0L or misjudged from certain things sald | D«?[L?WI)[ ):o earthly human opportu- lof it or by acts of certain suffragists. | DIV, t has proved successful wher- Whether {n sympathy with the move- | &Ver it has been in operation. Thers B v |18 no state or country in the world ment or not, one has no right to judge it by the exceptional and isolated acts of violence on the part of some over- zealous devotees of the ca Through Suffrage to Larger Life. If I thought, said Dr. W that where equal suffrage has been exer- cised without the elevating of social standards. It is clalmed that equal suffrage will take woman away from the home. It may a little but what a fuller, richer life she will bring back 1al suffrage would lead to no more | into the home. Some persons question s for women, I would never | the foreign vote but z a foreigner the trouble to come here; Inyself this question does mnot trouble taken t. - The ballot but a symbol, | me as it may some of you who pride that symbol nds for something | yourselves on your colonial ancestry. So suff more than a | America means something to us for- symbol. the suffrage | eigners. It means just as much to me movement be lieve that wom- | @s the religion of my people of Israel. an must pa through ffrage and | This country is a great ideal to us, citizenship to er life which is| we love it and are just as truly de- u who have lived calling to her today. I believe in the | Voted to it as are v emancipation of women because I be- | here for generations. lieve tha v era is coming to the G s grenat g oy orad g ‘JI;P of the | Audience Enthusiastic. vor of equal| Dr. Wise was interrupted at inter- pirit- | vals with bursts of applause and was men | applauded at the close of his address. life of woman in our time. greatest o is the gr arguments in at moral and s 1 accrue to 4 izenship to | An appeal for support in the work of ‘women. ne cannot uplift the whole | the league was made by Mrs. Willis nation by lifting half of it. In the | Austin and a collection was taken. Dr. Wi later answered questions from various individuals on the movement, The platform was brightened with bay trees and ferns arranged by Ged- uldig and C. A. Gager Jr. provided chairs to supplement the seats of the pines efforts were made to edu- e men for citizenship, but it was ble without educating the wom- The women are going to drag the men down to lower levels where we | have left them. Men cannot drag women up, though women could 1ift the men. We will never reach greatness |hall to accommodate the large crowd. until men and women — ——— together. Woman is THIRD WEEK IN creating member of the race, and that is why the woman must rise with the EGG LAYING CONTESE nan. Increased Production Shown—White No Longer Bound by Ancient Prece-| | eghorns and Wyandottes Neck and dent. Neck. Pe nality a secred thing, indi- viduality a high inviolate quality. Wo- man has the same right to love the free and independent life as man. She shall have the same opportunity and duty to rise to the same heights as man. Woman shall become an abso- lute being, no longer bound by ancient precedent. Woman must cease to be solely a sex. She must have the same opportunity to lead a self chosen, self determinate life and realize the same heights as man. The 3d week of the international ess ance on the right side of the ledger. There was an increased production of 88 eggs or a total yield of 539 for the week. The Wh Leghorns and White Wyandottes continued to run neck and neck for first place. The White Leg- horns owned by Francis F. Lincoln took first place for the week with 38 eggs. An experiment pen owned by the Storrs station was second with 31 eggs, and Neale Bros’ White Wyandottes were third with 29, Equal Suffrage Coming Before 1925 The new women's movement gives One of C. 8. Scoville’s Rhode Tsland women the ght to enter mar- | Reds enjoys the distinction of being riage under new condition. She 18 | the first hen in this contest to contract | now v not as she | “broody fever.” This means that at - 7 she was forced | ®east one particular hen at Storrs has . Is it not a question of the i no conception of the eternal fitness of morals that woman be placed | things. It i8 an almost unpardonable 1 {sin for a hen to want to set when eggs to mari highest on a equal with man in every right and war. | suffrage | laying, contest at Storrs showed a bal- | Now while you are sure to find fl1e~ number you want. Our stock of Standard and National Diaries is now com- plete. Cranston & Co. OQur Pressing has developed into a big thing. We are tak- Club 1 care of clothes for some of the leading men of Nor- wich. We will call for and deliver— clean and press your clothes on the club plan. It will pay 'you to 'in- vestigate, If you haven't looked over “The little * store around the corner’— better make a note to do so. Phone 771 ANTONELLIS , | f The Littls Store Around the Corner Main and Market Thanksgiving Novelties TURKEYS, PUMPKINS, FRUIT, NUTS, BASKETS, FANCY CHINA, POST-CARDS, NAPKINS and FAVORS MRS. EDWIN FAY Franklin Square The success or THE NOR- WICH BUSINESS COLLEGE is in no small mea$ure due to the character and quality of the teachers at all times employed by THE NORWICH BUSINESS COLLEGE; none but the very best being at any time allowed to fill the role of teachers in this institution. All are men and women of aracter and ability who have had practical office experience | i : i i as well as many years' experi- ence in teaching commercial { i branches. Each instructor is a specialist in his or her department and iliar with every detail of the and Evening session. Be- | @ gin at any time. | 99 to 105 Main Street, | W. E. CANFIELD, Proprietor. Child’s and Misses’ SCHOOL SHOES | See the solid and durable School | Shoes, button and laced, we offer at | $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.75. FRANK A. BILL, 104 Main St. | { don, Charles M. Murphy of Manches- ter, and Charles L. Ransom of Hamil- | ton, Mont. Defense Rests in Richmond Trial. | every wrong of marriage? In Eng- |are 65 cents a dozen. land a man must be habitually faith- | The experiment pen which took sec- less before his wife can free herself | ond place for the week was one of five from him, while does she do Wrong |such pens entered by the Experiment but once he can sever the bonds which | Station for the purpose of testing out bind them. Whether you choose to |the use of sour milk for laying hens. bind man and woman for life or to di- | The tremendous advantage in the use vorce them on the slightest prtetxt, | of sour milk for growing healthy chicks let the sam la wgovern man and wo- |ang iy man with no double standard. The |already been reported by the Storrs new life and the new calling for o= !slalirm in Bulletin No. 74, which is still man demands the equal ballot, The fflvai]ay,ie for distribution to any one cause is won and 1 night to assist in the shouting. Before | 5 thre fourths of the women of ica will be citizens, d to a well known - and opponent of movement, chief am only here to- | who cares for it. When the Experi- ment station found that sour milk was of so much benefit to the little chicks, it then thought perhaps sour milk might also be useful for,laying hens, and so the sour milk question is being Who | tried out fin charm+is | known the equal ‘woman's laying contest. The particular pen that 0 % Jo woman Jean. :ifffvrd got second place for the week is fed to lose s charm. The woman who | the rezular ration fed to all the com- demands the her mystery petition' birds except that the Deef ang does not interest men. This means, id Dr. Wise, that he thinks of wo- scrap, one of the expensive parts of the ration, is omitted and sour milk substi- man only as a desire provoking an- |tuted for it. One week’s result is not, imal. - He would have her excluded |of course, conclusive, but it is expacted from all rights and duties of the World | that some interesting. things will de that she might the . move | Geloh from. the. ude. of £his. Hour. sllk | strongly to his pa He would ration before the experiment pleted. The ten leading pens to date are as follows: Neale Bros., Apponaug, R. I, white Wyandottes PN L R 97 Francis F. Lincoln, Mt Carmel, white Leghorns Merrythouzht farn white Wyandottes ......... Soia g P. G. Platt, Wallingford, Pa., white Leghorns PR Charles N. St. John, Greene, N, Y. white Leghorns ............ SRS Thomas Barron, Catforth, England, white Wyandottes .. Pinecrest Orchards, Groton, Mass. single comb Rhode Island reds Experiment pen, Storrs, Conn.,w Leghorns is com- Ten Years of Pain Relief In Two Days RHEUMA Worked Wonderfully Fast in This Obstinate Case of Rheuma- tism. Celumbia,Conn. 66 61 e Ten years of hard tious experimenting in study, conscien- sanitarium and i private practice, with the most obsti- | C. H. Savage, Storrs, Conn., white nate cases of different forms of Rheu- LeghownB e o a0 n .+ 45 matism—Sciatica, Inflammatory, Mus- | Windsweep farm, Redding Ze, cular ,Arthritis, Myalgia—resulted in Conn., white ILeghorns...... 5% 4B the discovery of RHEUMA. It has| The ten leading Connecticut pens are since been used successfully by |as follows: thousands of sufferers. RHEUMA acts | Francis L. quickly and brings permanent relief. Columbia, So. C., -May 5, 1913— Lincoln, Mt. white Leghorns Merrythought farm, Columbi I have been a great sufferer from Rheu- Wyandottes s 66 matism fer about ten years, having |C. H. Savage, Storrs, white Leg- it in my knees, ankles and joints, Was horns , 45 Windsweep farm, Redding Ridge, white Leghorns & Mrs, K. B, Woodruff, New iaven, on crutches about one-third of the time. The first of last December I commenced to take RHEUMA; in twe days I laid down my erutches and have ‘white Leghorns $ias o 44 since given them away. I new be-|C. 8. Beoville, Bast IHaven, rose lieve that I am a well man; six menths comb Rhode Island reds........ 89 ago I never expeeted to be.well again. | Frederick M, Peasley, West Chesh- have taken some ENGLISH MAR- ire, white Leghorns .. . . 37 HUE in connection with RHEUMA. I|Charles W, Sherwoed, have never spent but $2.00 for RHEU- a Point, white Leghorns MA. Yours unsolicited, J. R, Crocker, A. B. Hall, Wallingford, white Leg- 614 Sumter St, Supt. Palmetto Ferti-| herns . 32 lizer Co.” West Mt. Poultry Yards, Naugatuck, Go to The Lee & Osgood €o. and! white Wyandottes ............... 31 get a bettle for 50 cents, and they will return your money if you are not sat- isfied. _Some of the visitors to the competi- tion during the past week were W. S. Starr, H. J. Nsilan, both of New Lon- combatting white diarrhoea has | connection with the egg | | | | 5 Pittsburg, Pa. Nov. 24—The de- fense rested today in the trial of Alex- ander Richmeond, Jr., a director of the, defunct Cosmopolitan National bank, | charged with misapplying funds and | aiding the cashier in making false en- tries. Assistant United States Dist Attorney Robert M. Gibson will ! rebuttal testimony tomorrow morning and the case is expected to reach the Jury by noon. New York, Nov. 24.—Friends of Park Commissioner B.. Stover, wha_has been missing. from the city for more than five weeks, arranged today to have his | likene: thrown on moving picture | | screens in 10,000 theaters on Thanks- | giving day, together with a brief state- | ment setting forth his diseappearance. In this way they hope to obtain a trace of his whereabouts. R SIS vl T BE JEALOUS OF THE BEAUTY OF YOUR HAIR. In other words, be careful of it. The beauty of your hairidepends upon its health. If it's beautiful, it's healthy. To make it glossy, bright, silky?soft— to make it fall more easily into the | graceful, wavy folds of the coiffure— to make it stay where you put it— | use Harmony Hair Beautifier. This | dainty liquid dre: s just what it ! is named—a beau is beautiful now, If your hair | use it to make it | even more so, and to preserve its | loveliness.” If it is not beautiful now, | Harmony Hair Beautifier will improve | its appearance in a way to please you, | or money back. Its rose fragrance will overcome the cily smell of your hair. | Easy to apply—simply sprinkle a | little on your h: each time before | | brushing it. Contains no oil; will not change color of hair, nor darken gray ! | hair. To keep nair and scalp dandruff- free and clean, use Harmony Shampoo, This pure liquid shampoo gives an instantaneous rich lather that immedi- | ately penetrates to every part of hair and scalp, insuring a quick, thorough cleansing. Washed off just as quick- | ly. the entire. operation takes only a few moments. Contains nothing that can harm the hair; leaves no harsh- ness or stickiness—just a sweet clean- liness, Both preparations come 1in odd- shaped, very ornamental bottles, with sprinkler tops. Harmony Hair Beau- tifier, $1.00. Harmony Shampoo, &0c. Both guaranteed to satisfy you in ev- ery way, or your money back, Sold in | this community only at our store—The | Rexall Store—one of the more than | 7,000 leading drug stores of the United | States, Canada and Great Britain, | which own the big Harmony labora- | tories in Boston, where the many cel- | ebrated Harmony Perfumes and Toilet Preparations are made. —N. D. Sevin g Son, 118 Main Street, Norwich, onw. SPECIAL DISPLAY and SALE Of Men’s FUR and FURLINED COATS By The Hugh Wallace Company FOR TWO DAYS ONLY Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 25 and 26 We believe that this is the most complete showing of Men’s Fur and Fur-lined Coats ever made in Nor- wich. During these two days—Tuesday and Wednesday, November 25th and 26th—a representative of the com- pany will be in our Men’s Department to explain the merits of the various kinds of Coats. The assortment includes every fashionable kind of Coat—for dress or for automobiling—and the prices in every instance are Amongst the different kinds shown are— Men's Fur-lined Coats " Marten Lined Belgian Lynx Lined Marmot Lined Natural Muskrat Lined Russian Mendel Lined Japanese Mink Lined reasonable. Mer's Far Coals Cub Bear Black Marten Manchurian Lamb Domestic Pony Russian Calf . Black Galloway Raccoon’ The Hugh Wallace Co. is one of the best known and most reliable manufacturers of Fur Coats in America. They buy all hides and furs in the raw and finish them in their own plant, and give a liberal guarantee with every Coat. This is what they say in this respect: “DRESSING AND DYEING All our hides and furs are bought in the raw state and in the largest markets of the worid—our Mr. Wallace making an annual trip to Europe for this purpose. We dress and dye them in own plant, every detail superintended by men who are experts in their line—every endeavor being made on our part to give customers the perfect result of scientific work. our The dyeing of furs is probably the most important feature in the making up of these goods, the diffi- culty being to dye the fur without injuring or burning the hide itself. To produce a combination of materials which will do this is a science, and one which the head of our dyeing department has thoroughly mastered. The hides used in our Coats remain in their natural state, while the fur is col- ored in a beautiful and lasting manner. OUR GUARANTEE We guarantee our Coats for one season. By that we mean that if during that length of time the garment is found to be defective in material or workmanship, we will make good the defect free of charge. This should prove a sufficiently liberal offer, for the reason that should there be any flaw whatso- ever in the make-up of a Coat it will most certainly manifest itself during the first season’s wear. We extend a general invitation to the Men of Nor- wich and vicinity to visit our Men’s Store during the display days — Tuesday and Wednesday, November 25th and 26th. Bear in mind that a visit incurs no obligation to buy. You will be just as courteously received whether you come to look or to buy, and moreover, you will have the benefit of expert opinion as to the merits of the various kinds of Coats. The Porteous & Mitchell Co.

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