Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 12, 1913, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Slorwich Bulletin nud Gouried 117 YEARS OLD Subsription price 12¢ a wesk; 50c a monthy « yoan Enteret at the Posteflice at Nerwich, Conn. as second-class matten Tetephone Callst Bulleiin Business Office 480 Bulletln 1al Rooms 35-3 ulletin Job Office 35-2| is of course Willfmantic Office, Room 2 Murray | desires of fhe team owners. Telephone "~ " Norwich, Friday, Dec. 12, 1913, ES The Circulation of The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Comnecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Neorwich. It is delivered to over 000 of the 4,053 houses in Nerwich, ari read by ninety- per ceat. of the peopls. In Windhem it s delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danisison to over 1,100 and in all of these places it is consid- ered the lecal daily. Eastern Connectiout has forty- mine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every tewn and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 AVErage..eeeeeeee... 4412 1805, Fverage. . ocoeeeaca. 5'920 WRTIN T| | THE NEW HAVEN DIVIDEND. There were matters of deep con- cern befare the Girectors of the New Haven read when the question of a quarterly dividend came before them for comsideration and decision, The | situmtion was onme which requited a | straight Jook in the face and by their | action fhis appears to have been S0 comstywed by the directors. The duty befere them was plain’and they Tec- ognimed it. That they were actuated by the best of motives and the wisest | judgment wnder the circumstances is| apperent. With firm faith in the road | amd ¥#s future, it was by no means | easy to vote to pess a dividend for the first time in forty vears but the woundl businesslike fact that dividends shonld be earned before voted cowld not be overloked. Such was for the Dest herests of the road at pres- ent and in the fature as indicative of & safe business policy. The effect of the action Is zoing to be wilespread. There are those who ame vitelly interested becamse of ftheir holings and the dependence upon the earmings therefrom. In view of the finamcial conditions, the fact that the earmiing capacity has not war- ramted the dividend and that expenses it is evidem of the system which will Pplace It upon & firmer basis. It must be realized that the road s one of the best in the country. Its fleld is cer- tain and with the contral in the hands | «f those in whom confidence is placed the resharation 1o its former high Do- xition should be but a matter of time. FAKING WIRELESS. At the time of the Titamic disaster when the wihole world was eager to get ‘wond frem the limers which had gone to the aasistenee of the ill fated ves- sel, and learn of the extent of the catastrophe, much embarrassment and confusion was caused by the interfer— ence of smateur operators of the wire- less. Their eagermess to take an ac- tive part in the securing of the facts made the service almost useless and resulted in immediate steps for the adaption of reguletions which would overcome amy such trouble in the fu- ture. Jt-was easy to see that if wire- less telegraphy was golng to be of any commercial importance it must be respected and pretected from the heediess and semseless imvasion by in- considerate operatars. \ Since that time magnificent service has beem rendered to vessels in dis- tress at sea. The response to calls for aid bave always been prompt and widespsead, but the disclosure that the wireless calls purporting to come from the Rio-Gramde for immediate as- sistence, were faked promises to do an endless amount of harm unless promptiy checked. The govermment service and steamships are always wilting to render a helping hand but there is no cause for needless and faked alarms of such a eharacter. They only serve to ecreate doubt as to the sincerity of homest calls. The investigation which the government has started to locate and punish the fakers deserves to sueceed. These who bave been guilty of the practice de- serve the valuable lesson which the offense calls for, THE MEXICAN ELECTION. There is nothing in the actlon of the house of deputies in Mexico in declaring the recemt election null and void, and endorsing General Huerta an provisional president until the next elecdon set for July of next year, which will alter the positlon of this country in the Mexican situation. It is plainly indicated that General Huer- ta bas just the comtwol that he desired in that body end the action taken leaves the situation as it was previous to the October election. Huerta fs in full charge as dictator and the de- posed deputies are still langulshing in jail. Though the authoxity given to Huer- | ta means the extension of his period | of control almast another year the policy of “watchful waiting” which has actuated this country in the pres- ent Mexican situation fs ifi:mn much § such portunity for the coming election ar- rives. ¢ In view of the results of the last election, the larger control now held by the constitutionalists and the re- quirements for a legal election, the idea of another election holds out less possibility of accompiishing as much as did the last, if Huerta continues as the nation’s head. Much faith at present is placed in the strensth of the followers of Carranza. WILL HE RESIGN? Tt 1s an important change which has taken place in the presidency of the Nationak Maseball league, when President Lynch has been succeeded by Governor Terier of Pennsylvania a former baseball star. This action in accordance with the This is doubly indicated. by the raising of | the 'y to a point which would be acceptable to the new presfient. That the maznates are pleased at his ac- | ceptance goes without may not be the attitude taken | { by the people of Pennsylvania. What he will do about retiring from the office of governor or endeavoring to hold down both jobs has mot as vet appeared. His declaration, however, that he is to enter upon his new po- sition at once and with energy might indicate thet an early retirement from the office of chief exetutive of the state might be expected Such is but the natural expectation. an hardly be anticipated that he an give only part of his time to the new office and serve the baseball in- terests better than one who has been giving all of his time and at a less salary. There are also obligations ‘h he owes to the state of Penn- As governor they h claim upon him for his full services | and they should recelve it. If the| enticement of a much larger salary has won his attention and time for which he has already contracted, fair- saying but | It n that he relinquish his | office as governor. Tt ought not to require an umpire’s decision to show j him the play. PERIL IN SPOILS SYSTEM. A demonstration of the necessity of having men with the proper training fill the posts in the diplomatic corps is made to the administration by the charges of undiplomatic conduct against the new. minister to Santo Do- mingo. Such claims do mot establish | the facts in the case and may be en- tirely unfounded but the importance of placing the diplomats of this coun- try on the Dasis of known efliciency is one which ought not to fafl of rec- ognition. Men of experience, merit and established qualifications should be selected for every appointment as| ambassador or minister to a for ! country, In this connection it is a well point- ed statement which the New York| Post makes when it says: “Mr. Bryan | and President Wilson have removed | from the diplomatic service many men of long and tried experience. For San- to Domingo they chose a Park Row lawyer, whose chief claim to distine- tion in this city was that he had suc- cessfully defended ‘Jack’ Rose. The reason for substituting a white man | for the usual colored appointee was | that Mr, Sullivan would have work of a specially delicate nature to per- form. Well, we see now how he has performed it. Al of this simply in-| creases the regret that Mr. Bryan has | been unable to look upon our diplo- matic service as one requiring ex-| pert training, and some experience. He has reverted to the old spoils idea that any American citizen could ad- minister any office at any time or place.” The perfls of the spolls system have been too often fllustrated to expect that it can operate with the success | and satisfaction of the merit method of filling offices. Nothing fortifies agalnst mistakes like experience. EDITORIAL NOTES, Though he may be uninvited and un- welcomed “High Cost of Living” will be a guest at your Christmas dinner table, Although the Mexicans have no love for this country the United States border seems to be a pretty good place of refuge. The change in weather has changed the frown on the countenance of the dealer to the smile that won't come off, Chicago is to have a flve cent hotel. In order to be safe and popular fol- Boston experience it ought fireproof. lowing the to be The effort among the scientific farm- ers to substitute the dasheen for the potato is likely to start another re- volt in Ireland. Now that the 1914 regulations for golf will soon be issued one of the important additions to the vocabulary should be “tut, tut!> Now that Santa Cla is using the flying machines and electrics snow has ceased to be one of the necessary re- quirements for his trip. Bables needn’t cry, declares Mme. Montessori, but it is quite evident | that there are a lot of them who have the opposite opinion. Although a wmiversity professor de- ciares that the earth will eventually freeze he allows plenty of leeway for many a hot old time. If the mew president of the Na-| tional league measures up to what is expected of him the club owners seem to have made a ten strike. Without it being intended as such | congress seems to be undergoing a! test to the value of keeping the national law makers in session all the time, If the reelection of some men depends upon the retentien of | free seeds Secretary Houston must be prepared for some active log rell- ing. congress- The longer the Mexican revolution continues the better is the reading | public becoming acguainted with Khv[ geosraphy and prominent men of that | country. The man on the corner says: What become of those good old fash- ioned people who used to put down enough egss in brine or waterglass to last the entire winter? There are many places in New Eng- land where thé action of the New Ha- | ven direetors will be received as al joyless Christmas present ency . t through Bhe success attending soperations of the can- stit In on with utianallsts. combinati the financial difficulties which have been e sed, and which menace the futuze of the Huerta regime, the succaess of the revolutionists threatens The canard concerning the fire on| the steamer Rio Grande and the res- ue of 197 pass s shows what m the an do on the jok : - wireless as well as in any other di-| R - % g 4 op~ rection, | being primarily for the purpose BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE Musical Clubs to Make_m Unusually Long Xmas Trip—Arti- ficial Ice Hockey Rink to A bz A Rkl be Ready Next Month—Cam- paign in Behalf of Grenfell Work—Exhibit by the Art School. —_— New Haven, Dec. 1l.—Among the members of the Yale Musical clubs, which start on their annual Christmas trip on Saturday, Dec. 20, are Phillp A. Johnson, 1914, A of Norwich, who lays the guitar and mandolin in the ganjo and mandolin clubs, and A. H. Chappell, 1916, of New London, who sings second temor in the university glee club. The tour Is to the south this year, while the dramatic associa- tion covers the middle west, both trlp; o bringing the university in touch with its alumni in these sections of the country, and vice versa. The first con- cert Is at the Belvedere, Baltimore, on Saturday evening, and et Columbia; S. C., on Monday, Savannah on Tuesday and Atlanta, Ga., on Christmas evening are the next stops. Then Birmingham, Ala, and finally on Saturday New Or- leans, the farthest south any Yale or- ganization has ever been. Memphis, | Tenn. Louisville, Ky, and Pittsburg, Pa., are the other three cities for the musical clubs. The Dramat, inaugurating this year a new policy of substituting three short | snappy plays for one long one, a policy praised by Sir Johnstone Forbes Rob- ertson and other prominent actors, | completes its season of rehearsal with | a performance for the benefit of the faculty at the Hyperion Tuesday after-. noon. The cast will leave New Haven | for Rochester, N. Y., on Dec. 19th. | The Yale teams will be able to get| on to the new artificial ice hockey rink about the middle of January, it is now | figured by the management. The Arena | Centerfreeze company, which has un- | dertaken to build the rink as a private | venture in addition to a regulation/ ice-making plant, is prepared to speed | pionship game to be plaved on the old up the work on ‘the rink so that soou | field, there will he no further use for | G t d * after the Christmas recess the Yale|the stands, except in the case of un-| (S own schedule can be carried out under the | most favorable circumstances. The | rink is to be at the corner of Wall and | State streets and will be the second | largest in the country, the Boston | arena surpassing it in size. The plans | for up-to-date accommodations in- f clude a large foyer, coatrooms, a ladies’ parlor. and seats in the arena for 3,000, |- 300 windows will provide light, but in such a way that no direct sunlight can | strike and melt the ice in any spot, | and in addition to this precautien the surface will be frozen twice a day (o | insure a smooth surface at all times. | New Haven people as well as Yale| men are to have the benefit of the rink | and already a society skating club has | | ing tery of technique. Above all, Mr. Ken- dall is praised for his freedom from vagaries, his absolute sincerity shown in all his work. He paints, Mr. L. R. Hammond of New Haven savs, “in the spirtt of the modern American school, with its sane breadth of manner and its scrupulous regard for values. He suggests fine things for the future of the Yale Art school.” Secretary Anson Phelps Stokes has answered a criticism of the university for allowing the erectlon in Memorial hall of a civil war memorial in which soldiers both of the north and south will be honored. “Although announce- ments of the plan were sent to all liv- ing graduates of the university: less than half a dozen have written criticiz- ing it” said Secretary Stokes, “and hundreds, including many identified with the Unfon cause, have indicated their .appreciation of the plan to com- memorate the 50th @nniversery of the war by erecting a memorial which will | show that the wounds of the nation have been healed.” The last criticism came last week from the New York commandery of the Loval Legion. The historic old wooden football stands at Yale field will be torn down next winter, and the timber in them will be used for old lumber. The stands were' erected in 1897. and in the 16 years of their life have accommodated over a milion people. They have beer enlarged to twice their original size for the seating capacity at the Yale- Princeton game in 1897 was less than 16,000. The new Bowl will double the present capacity of 38,000. Since the Yale-Princeton 1913 is undoubtedly the last game of cham- foreseen delays in the construction of the Bowl. But it is quite probable that the old field will be used for all the minor games next fall.'so keeping the Bowl untarnished for a great victory over Harvard, On the old field football stand will be replaced, accord- to present plans, by a double decked covered baseball stand. The college faculty loosened up a bit at its last meeting and took a step in broadening courses which ought to have important effects. It was decid- ed to allow freshmen to start upon the study of Spanish, thus giving the stu- dent a much better opportunity than ever before to master a modern lan- the | | reserved the ice for | people gets one afternoon in| the week, while skating classes will be conducted mornings. The Yale hockey | schedule has not been completed ye owing to the uncertainty as to ju when the rink will be ready. guage that i8 important in various lines of work. Then the History ot Philosophy is admitted as a sophomore | subject, with the idea that this depart- ]mvnt_ Which 25 vears ago made up a major part of a college education, may again get a grip on the undergraduate. The recent visit of Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell of the Labrador coast to Yale has led to a campalgn to raise funds | for the purpose of buying & new motor | Announcement was made tonight that the new laboratories, just completed . j i - to be for the Yale, which has been chugging | on Pierson-Sage Square, are : efficiently up and down the Labrador | called the “Osborne Memorial lLab- coast for the past five or six years, | Oratories The funds, amounting to with the result that now her 10 horse- | half a million dollars. were provided power oil engine has gone almost be- | for in the will of the late Mrs. Miriam Yond repalr. The doctor told of the|A. Osborn.’ The laboratories accomo- Work of Yale when here in October | date the departments of zoology, com- and the Yale men who heard him feic | parative anatomy and botany. Dur- the importance of keeping the boat in | ing her lifetime, Mrs. Osborn erected, repair and so maintaining its activity | on the campus Osborn Hall, in mem- in carrying physicians and medical [ ory of her husband. stores to one of the most distant of | Dr. Grenfell's chain of hospitals. The round trip of 300 miles is made fort- | nightly from the last of June to the last of October. i The plan is to raise $1,500, which will | buy a new and larger engine for tha| Yale, which is an 18-ton auxiiiary ketch given by’ Yale students several | The Chrysanthemum. vears ago. A more powerful engine | will enable her to combat more strong- | After the roses have fallen and their ly the strong tides and winds along |leaves die, a dawn tinted carper, that bleak coast, and a few hours of- |around the shivering bush; after the ten means life or death in the Labrador | warmth loving heliotrope and sunflow- medical service. Three Yale men have|and petunia have smiled up at their EVERY DAY REFLECTIONS volunteered as crew for the boat next | cooling lover, the sun, and died; after | the Herod frost has stabbed all the Bareda little summer innocents of the garden, In the field of art an exhibition of|2nd they have dropped thefr head: the work of Director Willlam Sergeant | forever, then comes the splendid chr Kendall the new head of the Yale Art|anthemum, the last flaunting banner of school, succeeding Dr. John Welr, has the flower army retreating before the Been recetved with enthusiasm in New | enemy of ail life—the cold. Haven sinceiit was Spenad toihe pib- | I8 besmty isakin Lo iis; seaso; Ne in the Art scheol last week, The [ils colors sre not strong and eritics hail Director Kendall as a man | DUt touched with a pensive shad with a broad, human, common sense | PR SP K " = . attitude who doewrt run over into the 'L1c Color Of the mum, summer. not but that of the moon, and of the haze upon morning madness of the futurist and other | TOUT. e of ars shown 1 ihe| It is the flower of melancholy, not- south gallery; a few landscapes, but most of them are portralts and figure positions. Some of them are prize win- ners. There are, for example, Alis and An Interiude, loaned from the N Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA v Slater Memorial Hall, Friday, Dec. 12, 1913 EVAN WILLIAMS AMERICA’S GREATEST CON- CERT TENOR MISS ADA SASSOLI THE WORLD'S GREATEST HARPIST ADMISSION $2.60 ALL SEATS RESERVED Seats_on sale Saturday, Dec. 6th, at 8.15 a. m. at store of Geo, A. Davis. withstanding its assertive size and splendor. It is the flower that flour- hes on All-Souls’ day, the day of the dead. The chrysanthemum is one of the most striking examples of what man can do with the simple products of nature. The timid, small yellow flower that came to us from overseas has be- | come fantastic, monstrous, fulsome and bold. It has perked up its petals “like quills upon the fretful porcupine,” rolled them around like _serpents, crimped them as ladies do their hair. Little by little the horticulturists have made a queen of this Cophetua blos- som. There is nothing that so crashes upon one’s sense of beauty, that so comes over one’s splrit like a blare of trumpets, as a massed display of these royal flowers. The = chrysanthemum is summer's swan song, full of elegiac majesty; it is the summers last caress, sweet as the sweetness of that one more kiss we place upon the lips of the beloved who are about to die. 1 to facts! Pretty tubes won’t help your teeth. It's what's 2~ side the tube that counts! Measured by this stand- ard, there is at this writ- ing just one answer— Pebeco Tooth Paste It's a scientist’s answer to | the crying demand of the teeth — protection from | “acid-mouth” —the cause of nearly all tooth decay. i And Pebeco does protect, too. It overcomes the mouth acids which break down the teeth’s single- handed protection — the enamel. And besides this great work Pebeco cleans, whit- ens and polishes teeth beautifully. Refreshes and revitalizes the entire mouth. Its use is a daily pleasure, en-Day Trial Tube and Acid Test Papers 1o Test Your Mouth for Acid—Sent Free LEHN & FINK 120 William Street New York | JGSEPH BRADFORD BOOK BINDER Blagx Books= Made aad Rutad te Ords 103 EROQADWAY tional gallery at Washington: Inter- 20, from the Rhode Tsland School of Design: Beatrice, logned by the Academy of Fine Awts A semi-decorative painting, A Fairy | Tale, portraying twe girls seated on the bough of a tree in summer, while their mother is readng, was the win- | ner of -the Shaw ago, and is one of the mc 5 of his pictures. A series of nine por- tra show a charm eof composition, a keen appreciation of color and mas- WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR and gen 4 Clean Brain and Muscle. gentlemen. “What @'y'think o that preacher that’s sore 'case we all went crazy on baseball this month? “He's down on cards, an’ won't stand for th' ponies, an’ thinks pool ain’t decent, an’ now he's roastin’ th’ Cubs an’ th’ Sox. By jing, that man won't let us guys play mumbly peg, next. “Mebbe wou an’ meil live long | enough to see all th’ ball bats bung up in th’ museum, but, take it from rmge, | you're gonna have wattles hangin’ down like a white leghorn’s when you | see ’em. “Of all th’ games that is a game, it | is t game. Talk about football! | Right now, tl’ colleg, beys is warmin’ | up, ar th’ preacher man 'l get busy slampmin’ them. but that feotball fight ain’t one, two, three with a good ten inning game on th' dismond. How us Americans do love a swat! | 7d ruther hear a b bat crack a ball for a home run 'n I would to eat my supper. last week I sigod on one foot for iwe heurs in frent ¢ one o them ball playly’ score beards, aw' I was as ticikled when ) see a base hit wag made as if 1 soaked it myself. | this country, are thoroughly rel GOODS RIGHT If You Are At All Undecided about the gift for your particular friend, your mind will be relieved when you examine our line of lLeather Goods For in this line we have loads of choice articles for both ladies | | to see this line, as there are many new novelties. Those MAC DONALD TIE CASES are swell. WRITING CASES that are different. SHOPPING LISTS, SUNDRY LISTS, DESK PADS, TELEPHONE PADS, CARD and PASS CASES, CIGAR CASES, BILL FOLDS, BILL BOOKS, WRIST PURSES, COIN PURSES, GARMENT HANGERS, ETC., ETC. CRANSTON & CO. liable and priced right. Be sure PRICES RIGHT “rhat My, Preacher ought to be glad oVer a honest swditin’ bee ke a Daseball game. They alw't no crooked bu.s}.gfiss in ir, an’ a fellow can't have a white Liver an’ get fur as first Pase with 4t “fhis country alit got enough base- Wet Sale CHOICE WHITEFISH ball play in it. Ve got too many | BLUEFISH pigeon ~ chested, human mosquitoes, FLATFISH goin' around tfyin’ to sting peoplé HALIBUT endin’ tg thelr own business. If they's AR any game afloaf that makes a fellow BLACK keep his body an’ brains clean it's SMELTS Basehall < HADDOCK “Hard muscle an’ good sense ain't a Lo CrAMS bad mixture for a all around man. Let ’em off! LIVE LOBSTERS “Let 'em off first! “You got to get in off th' platform, mister! “Come on. Look where you step, 1 settin®ond” 3 weT A Fire Sale SPANISH MACKEREL SALMON MACKEREL CODFiSH BUTTERFISH 1 POLLOCK SCALLOPS OYSTERS . SARGAIN F ‘All Seats 14 In a Magnificent Revival of Gilbert & i@1e Fhindua Comici Opern ; : H. M. S.PINAFORE Special Scenery From «.’.-q:&‘.. Square Theatre, Boston COMPLETE CHANGE OF PHOTO PLAYS TODAY e e e ety sa - FARIEIR T WERENIIN 11, 12, 13 Romalo & Delano I Sonese A, Sensational Gymnasts' e e ——————— WILL KENNY, Singer | MATTIE %mn, Comedienne JEWARBEN KERRIGAN l The Pearl of the Golden West 2 Reel Victor, “The Passerby” | Burlesque on “Girl of Golden West" DAVIS jAT§ Monday, Dec. 15 2/ Matinee and Evening THE BARNUM OF THEM ALL! STETSON’S BIG SPECTACULAR UNCLE TOMS CAIIN On a stupendous and magnificent scale, with all the added features mechanical and electrical effocts, brass bands, colored bugle corps, sing- = dancers, beautiful _tableaux, handsome Shetiand geni ‘ATCH FOR THE BIG PARADE l rm is at. 22 ic, 25¢ It Beats a Circus | e Slsi0o 20c, 30, 500 Colonial Theatre MATINEE 5c CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. EVENINGS 100 2000 Ft.—The Taking of Rattlesnake Bil—2000 Ft. Season’s Biggest Western Two Reel Feature “HIS INSPIRATION,” Biog‘raph o ..Intensely Strong Drama “A LEMON PLANTATION,” ¢ Educational Scenic “SHOOTING THE FAMOUS HOZN RAPIDS, Japan,” .. .....Scenje “TOO MANY TENANTS,” ..................... Americem Pathe Comedy AND OTHER FEATURE FILMS Have You Heard The Wonderful New Edison Diamond Disc Phonograph ? NO NEEDLES! THE EDISOI s vt THE WONDERFUL NEW EDISON DIA- MOND DISC PHONO- GRAPH, the Greatest Musical Instrument in the World. DEMONSTRATIONS e WAUREGAN HOUSE by a personal representa- tive of THOMAS A. (L Estoony, EDISON. The crowning triumph of the great inventor may be heard this Afternoon or Evening. In this new instrument Mr. Edison has eliminated the needle, using a non-wearable diamond point instead. IT IS NEVER CHANGED. He has invented a new disc that is practically inde- structible. He has invented a concealed sound chamber that gives a wonderful volume. and purity of tone. TRADE MARK The Poricous & Mitchell Co. of this city has taken the exclusive agency for Norwich and vicinity for the new Edison Disc Phonograph, and beginning next week will be prepared to show a complete line of these Instruments and Records. THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. | FRANKLIN STREET Our Leather Goods are made by the best manufacturer in | - We have carefully selected a line of ELECTRIC HEATING APPLIANCES 0ONSISTING OF Electric Toasters Electric Bed Pads Electric Percolators Electric Irons Electric Cookers Electric Chafing Dishes The safe and satisfactory way of illuminating the Christmas Tree is to use ELECTRIC LIGHTS. Our fine of CHRISTMAS TREE LIGHTS is complete, including Plain and Fancy Lamps in fes- toons of eight, sixteen and twenty-four lights. Easily Attached by anyone and Absolutely Safe. Hamilton Watches as ‘WM. FRISWELL’, 25-27 Franklin St. PIES, CAKE AND BREAD that camnot be excelled, Phone your order. Prompt service. ‘LOUIS H, BRUNELLE 10 Carter Ave., (East Side) POWERS BROTHERS WHEN You want io Pu: your busi WHER you wanl te DPut your busi- ness beicie wie pubiic. there is N0 We- | ness bLefore the pubiie. there 1s no me- dium better than tnrough the adversis. ! dium petter shas thrsugh the advertis

Other pages from this issue: