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Friday morning a flock of 19 small Native Turkeys. The first ten will sell for 38 cents, the balance for 40 is just to have you order Xmas Trees Roping Holly Princess Wreaths Cukes Grape Fruit Tomatoes Sweet Oranges Mushrooms Tangerines Cauliflower Calarab Figs Sweets Fard Dates Pomegranate Persimmons SOMERS Mr. H. T. Miller’s SCHOOL FOR DANCING, 28 Oak Street. Saturday Cla for Beginners 2.3C Advanced, 4 p. m, Call for Circulars. Telephone 1082, WE ADVERTISE EXACTLY ASIT IS ©oy pright Hart Schaffner & Marx. We want to call your atten- | tion to o«e particular detail in | this Suit illustrated here. Notice the new style soft, roll front, three buttons, two to button. It’s nobby. Your size is here ready to put on. new, it’s Overcoats? Yes, all kinds. Better come and look at them. i) s The Radioptican Picture Machine Use postal cards, photos, or any kind of pictures, reveals colors as they are on cards. Nice for an evening entertainment. Call and see them. Just thing for Christmas. The Plant-Cadden Co., OPTICAL DEPARTMENT 144-146 Main Street PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING the FURS FOR CHRISTMAS ! cent Beach and two houses and $50,009 | ~ Whe Bullenin, | Norwich, Friday, Dec. 1 VARIOUS MATTERS receiving big 2, 1913, Florists .are already Chrisunas orders, Choirs are holding extra rehiarsals of Christmas music. Full moon tomorrow, the 13th, which is favorable for pre-holiday activities. . Julius Kaplan gave a tea in honor of the official staff of the Boys' Social club. Freight cars loaded with Christmas trees are going down on the C. V. road. Remember the cigarmakers’ dance in Cadlllac hall tonigh adv. Some of the churchs and lodges are giving up their meetings until after the holidays. Some of the clubs and lodges are with very good imitations of mistletoe and holly. €. E. Brett, 13, of the Rhode Island State college, is now managing a poul- try farm in Thompson The Wednesday evening prayer meeting at Preston chapel was led by the Rev. Dr. J. B. Slocum Owners who had left boats. in the river are finding many of them dam- aged since the recent gale. A Norwich man Northwestern in Connecticut Thursday found plenty of snow in the towns visited. Fifty printed calling cards for 25 cents at The Bulletin Office.—adv. Prominent grangers from this s attended the Massachusetts grange meeting in Boston this week. Nearly every one of the Daughters of Liberty state councillors, is expected to be in Danbury this (Frida) ing, guests of Lady Wooster council. The postofiice at West Ashford, | Windham county. has been discontin- ued by order of the department, Mall must now be sent to Mansfleld. It is always fair weather to the housekeeper who can do her daily work ady by telephone. Reports of cottage burglaries at Gales Ferry have set owners of hou at other shg res ts to visit their property on tours of inspection. The officials of the State Humane society hawe been in Saybrook looking up a good man who will logk out for | this cvening on Th their interests in lower Middlesex and New London counties. Bring vour tradesmen, your friend, your doctor to you by telephone—the quickest method.—Adv. At Phonenixville, Windham county, for the first time, a flag is flying over the South school, where famous Gen- eral Lyon as a boy was a pupil. In his day there were 90 children in this school. Bulletin No. 1, which is a bulletin of preliminary information on the workmen’s compensation commission, has been received by the town clerk. He has a number of copies for dis- tribution. a Former pupils recalled the fact Ihursday that it was on Dec, 11, 1907, that Benjamin Champney, the artist, who once had a class here, died at Wo- burn, Mass. He was born in Ipswich, N. H.. Nov. 20, 1817. Sale of Christmas novelties by Miss Maud C. Buckingham will continue un- til Christmas at 68 McKinley avenue. Home mornings; hours afternoon and evening by appointment.—adv. At North Ashford, Rev. P. S. Collins keeps Rose Combed Rhode Island Reds and Orpingtons. George Upham made a cross of these breeds this year, with gratifying results. Pullets hatched in July are laying well now. During this month the Apostleship of Prayer members in the Catholic churches are studying the life of St. Andrew, who wax the first disciple of Christ, and whose constant effort was to lead others to the Saviour. Every farmer who emplovs help should inform himself on the compen- ation act, and get one of the proper blanks and fill it out before January 1. Those who fail to do so make them- selves liable for injuries received by help. Good weather has favored the school children throughout eastern Connecti- gaged in gathering cat- ses. 1In a single school one bov has brought in another has 3,700 to his cut who are el erpillar ege m: at Hambptor 88, while cred The Tax Collector's office will ba open Friday, Saturd: and Monday evenings until 8 o'clock to receive ail unpaid personal taxes. After Mon- day the 15th the delinquent lists wiil be made out and turned over to the prosecuting attorney as the law di- r Adv Members of the Girls' Friendly so- ciety hereabouts have learned with sorrow of the sudden death from heart disease in a Stamford hospital Wed- nesday of Miss Kate Daniel, 50, long identified with the work of the organ- ization. At the Methedist church at Stafford Springs Thursday. afternoon funeral services were held for Mrs. Charles M. Cummings, 43, who died in Norwich sanatorium Tuesd; from pulmonary tuberculosis. Her husband and two children survive Her. Dr. A. M. G. Lapenta arrived in New London Wednesday after a trip to his former home in [ia for eight weeks.! With him came his little daughter, 10 years old, who will remain, joining her | little bother, who has been in this country several years. | Mrs. Richard K. Nash of Webster, | Mass., observed the 89th anniversary | of her birth at her home Tuesday. Mrs. Nash is the last of a family of ten children. She was born in \Vest‘( Thompson, Conn. She married the !ule1 Richard Nash, 29, 1849. i Left Crescent Beach Property. | Ferdinand A. Hart, who was a sum- | mer resident at Crescent Beach and died recently at his home in Hart- | ford, left a summer cottage at Cres<‘ to G. Brainard Smith, deputy United are most acceptable, and when bought here they combine style with econ- omy. Most artistic line of FUR COATS for Men and Women, as well as n ng in & ur ne Uxpert remodeling and repairing of your furs. A Visit Will Pay Us Both M. BRUCKNER, 81 Franklin Street —— oo 1 WHEN you wamt to put your bus ness betore 1ne oablic, there 15 no me. @&ium better Ln&n \hrough the adveriis I in& celumms «* Ths Bulletim. e States marshal at Hartford. Mr. Smith and Mrs. Hart were cousins and there | had been a strong bond of affection | between them since their youth Mr. | Smith and Mrs, Hart's mother wera first cousins. Miss Tower Imoroving. All who saw Miss Catherine Tower in the role of Mary Turner in Within | the Law at the Duvis theatre u few | woeks ago will be pleased to know that | she is recovering rapidly from an op- | eration she underwent at New Haven ! for peritonitis and that she Is able to ride out. She will be able to leave the hospital In a few days. The government of Panama haa Eiven a new concession for the estab- ishment of w hippodrome near Pana- | ma City l rough any way Frank Arnold of Norwich spent Wed- nesday in Groton. " Mrs. J. Harrison Davis was a visitor in Springfield on Thursday. Constable Thomas Griffin has return- ed to AMiddletown from a two days' business trip to Norwich, Charles Courtney Haskell has gone to Germantown, Pa, wheie he speaks Gospel of Health, address in Phila- 2. NURSE UNDER OBSERVATION AT STATE HOSPITAL. Chickenpox, "Dr. Pollock Says— Taken Sick Last Tuesday. With an eruption which was diag- nosed, Dr. H. M, Pollock sald, as chickenpox, one of the ward nurses at the Norwich state hospital was quar- antined on Thursday at one of the cot- tages and is under observation to de- termine whether anything more seri- ous will develop. b The young woman was taken sick last Tuesday, Dr. Pollock said, and when an eruption developed it was decided to quarantine her in her quarters. In ordinary times, the hos- pital superintendent said, the disease would have been declared chickenpox, without doubt, but in view of the prev- alence of smallpox it was decided to take every precaution and place her under ‘observation. He has had two doctors from the city to examine her and they concur- red with him that it w chickenpox. If anything more serious develops she can be isolated more thoroughly. He makes ancth delphia Sunday cve WHEELS OF BICYCLE FOUND AT HIS HOME. Pasqual Bartenulli Arrested on Suspi- cion of Taking Wheel. Pasqual Bartenulli, aged 14, was ar- rested on Thursday evening on suspi- | mittee from | which it is desired ABER FARM Professor Jarvis From Storrs Consulted With Business Men’ Association Committee—County Meeting to be Held to Enlist General Support. C. D. JARVIS, Prof. C. D. Jarvis of Connecticut Agricultural college, who is in charge of the extension work, was here on Thursday evening for a meeting of conference and instruction with a com- the Norwich Business Men's_association on the matter of a farm bureau for New London county o establish he cion of having stolen a bicycle belong- | as the natural center for the county. ing to Frederick McCord, son of Wil- | m R. McCord, The bicycle disappeared from in front of the Y. was left standing by its owner. bicycle wheels were found by lice at Bartenulli’'s home on Main street, opposite the Reliance wor- sted mill, and were identified by young MecCord, but no other parts of the bi- cycle were discovered. The accused was allowed to go on assurance of his city court this morning to answer to the charge. The arrest was made by Sergeant John Kane at the boy's home. DEMONSTRATED THE EDISON. New Phonograph Had Many to Hear It in Wauregan House Lobby. All Thursday afternoon and through the evening the lobby of the Waure- gan house was a magnet for music lovers, who gathered to hear the new recently perfected Edison photograph, which was demonstrated there by J. W, Scott. Intense appreciation of the splendid music given by the phon- ograph was evident with all who came to listen and many found it hard to leave, S0 great was their enjoymen: of the full, rich and natural tone pro- duction which the Edison machine gave. Both Mr. Scott and F. T. Keeney, who accompanies him, wera heartily congratulated on the meri of the Edison. In the evening a party of musicians from an orchestra re- hearsal came in and added their praise after they had heard several of the selections. Mr, Scott gave some as- tonishing demonstrations of the inde- structibility of the records when he tossed them down upon the hard ter- razo floor unharmed and then put them up on the machine to show that this treatment had not harmed in the record that was con- them. During the day he tained on placed the contract for the local agency with the Porteous & Mitchell Co. and also reported the sale of five or six of the phonographs. Some Lower Railroad Fares. Commutation passenger fares on the New York, New Haven and Hartford | railroad between points in Connecticut and New York®city were ordered re- duced Thursday by the interstate com- merce commission, according to a Washington despatch. The charges fixed by the commission for 60-day trip tickets follow: Green- wich $8.65, Coscob , Riverside 25, Sound Beach $9.65, and Stamford The commission held that genérally the commutation rates of the New Haven from other points in Connecti- cut and New England than those spe- cifically named were reasonable and it declined, therefore, to further reduce them. Held for Superior Court. In the Groton court Thursday morn- ing Silas Binks, black, and Mrs. Brid- get Crandall, white, were arraigned before Judge Hewitt, charged with adulterq, Bach pleaded guilty and botn were held for trial before the Jan- uary term of the superior court in bonds of $300. Neither could furnis a surety so they went to. jail No Opposition to Brandegee. It was 'the statement in Bridgeport this week of a well known politician who is a salaried officer of the Con- nec ut state government that United States Senator Frank B. Brandegee would have no opposition to his desire for a remomination. Rehearsal of Orchestra. The members of the Young People's orchestra held a rehearsal on Thurs day evening at the studio of E Baker for a concert they are to give. Superior Court Short Calendar. There is to be a short calendar sion of the superior court here thia morning with motion list, bar meeting | and assignment of case: Norwegian wood pulp is being im- ported into C.nada. TEACHING ADVERTISING IN THE COLLEGES Advertising is reaching the dignity of a science. Some of the country’s leading universities have put in classes of advertising this year. Active clubs of business men are meeting every where to study the appeal of the types. You can see the progress ad- vertising is making if you study the columns of this newspaper from day to day. You can see it calling daily for better writers for cleverer Ppicturers, for new ideas. It is most interesems to watch. If you could run over the flles of this newspaper year back—or better yet, five years back—and compare Lha udvertising of to-day with that of the other days. you would be amazed at the improvement. 1t shows that the world is moving and that we are im- proving each day and going forward. o P. S.—Are you an ‘“early shopper” this year? These are the last of the ‘early days.” father that the boy would be in the | M. C. A. building. where it | Rogers, E Two | William the po- | about three hours in the discu Nortl | the subject. | | | { deputies | is not ! a dark red, wit bottom. In the Business Men’s association several weeks ago. rooms in the Shannon building he met and talked over the matter with W. 0. . 1. Smith and C. Jewett, C. 1 H. Cruickshank, spending ion of In the development of this extension movement through the farm bureau, Professor Jarvis told the Norwich com- mittee, the state is ready to give $1.000 for the work in this county, and it is figured that about $3,000 should be spent the first year in the work that would be done. It would be expected that this $2,000 would be raised by the citizens of the county either through membership fees or in other ways that might be sug- gested. All this extension movement is intended to help the farmer to help himself, and wherever it has been de- veloped in other states it has been found that the farmers eagerly avail themselves of it, and once it has been established and demonstrated its val ue, they become its ardent supporters. But it is not alone to the farmer that it is an ald, for its effect is seen in all lines of commercial life, and it is all ‘| classes of cltizer | licited to come . | movement is v oi i w | ually support isc.r. | The intent.Ui: is Lo mauii every per- | son in the county intcre.ed in K. With thal end In View, it Wis »sboCol€d 0 hold a grand couniy meeting at which a representation of all classes would be sought—farmers, merchants, manu- facturers, bankers, clergymen, school teachers and, others. In the west the movement has been taken up with en- thusiasm, and in the national bankers’ convention an endorsement of this farm bureau and extension work has been passed. In the plan of cperation it was ex- plained that the county farm bureau would be administered by a paid offi- cial in charge, whose effort would be to dissenminate for the benefit of the farmers the information that the state agricultural colletge wouldr have to furnish through its extension work,and he would also have acquaintance with and bei n touch with such local ex- perts in various agricultural lines as lived in the territory. As an example of this side of the wark the names of Allen Latham in bee keeping, Frank W. Browning in orcharding and W. O. Rogers in poultry were suggested in this territory. Their practical knowl- edge would be av expected, in developing the success of the farm bureau work. There would also be a service that could be ' rendered for the farmers through the press, as it would be ex- pected to give out hints on methods and suggestions in this way. Professor Jarvis spoke of the work done in Hampden county, Massachu- setts, in this line, where the increased | prosperity of the county has N { made the object of a similar kind of service in which about $15,000 is to be spent. It is to touch economic, educa- tional, social, civic and religious con- ditions. The New London county farm bureau, however, would hardly be as extensive in its work as this. Farming on a business basis, crop adaptation and _rotation, livestock, milk production, fruit growin, poultry, market gardening, forestry, orcharding, boxing and marketing produce are all some of the points in the Hampden county programme and which would be followed in a degree in the New Lon- don county farm bureau which it is desired to establish through the help of the state. The local committee will hold further moetings at which the plan will be still further discussed with the view working towards the big county meet- ing which would be an organizatiou meeting and at which-one of the ob- jects would be to get a very large and general representation from - every town in the county. ‘that ere to be so=- support. I tie e it will eve.n- REFRIGERATING PLANT AT STATE SANATORIUM To Be Put in to Cost About $2,000— Will ‘Furnish All Ice Used. Secretary George I, llen of the state tuberculosis commission was a visitor here on Thursday at the Nor- wich state sanatorium on his monthly tour to go over the books. There are now 45 male and 35 female patients at the sanatorium. An employe of the Hartford com- pany which is to put in a refrigerating plant at the sanatorium at a cost of about $2,000, was also here taking measurements. It is expected that the new plant can be in running order in about six weeks after the company starts to put it in. It is of the same type that is in use at the Norwich state hospital, The ice making machine is to be placed in the basement under the ad- ministration building and a new ice box is to be placed in an areaway ad- joining the kitchen Up to this time the sanatorium has been buying ail its ice of a local dealer, using probably half a ton a day in the summer time. The néW plant will furnish all the ice used in the future. At the present time there is-a little outdoor work going on at the san- atorium, consisting of finishing up some grading around the administra- tion building and around the shacl NOT TO ARREST FOR FEDERAL LAW VIOLATIONS. Instructions Issued to County Game Wardens from Game Commission. Supt. John M eries and game structed county in reply comm game warden: to inquiries in their proyince to arr i lators of the federal law concerning game.: There is a conflict between te and federal statutes in regard to shooting of ducks, the federal law fix- ing the close season at Dec. 16 and the state law at Dec. 31. Mr. Crampton told his subordinates to leave the'en- forcement of the federal law to the United States officer: MAY BE DORY FROM MISSING BARGE. Dark Red Boat Picked Up on Block Island. A dory which m have belonged to the missing barge Francis M. Hamp- shire, believed to have been lost off Block Island. with her crew of three men on Tuesday, was picked up at the Sandy Point life saving station on Block Island Thurs: , according to a report received by Capt. H. M Knowles, superintendent of the life saving district. The keeper of the Sandy Point station reported to Cap tain Knowles at Wakefield, R. I, that the dory bore every appearance ol having belonged to some ce. The | boat is 15 feet over all and is painted a canvas patch on the YALE SECURED LAND IN EAST LYME About 900 Acres to Be Used for the Engineering Classes. Six parcels aggregating near] were purchased sentative J. V. Beckwi for the Sheffleld Scientific Yale university. The cost of the Jaad appreximates $10,000 and will be used by. the engineering classes- of the school. Representative ckwith has [hnen negotiating for the and for ses - | eral months. FALL RIVER I, W. W, SEEKS WAGE RAISE Manufacturers Will Ignore the De- mand, It Is Announced. Fall River, Mass, 11--A sec- ond demand for a wage advance of 25 per cent. for the textile .rill employes was forwarded to the Cotten Manu- facturers' association today by the In- dustrial Workers of the World. “The manufacturers will ignore this demand,” said President Hills of the manufacturers’ association. It is the purpose of the manufacturerg not to have anything to do with thé Indus- trial Werkeps.of the World.” GILMAN HALL NAMED FOR SON OF NORWICH Largest Building of the New Group for the Johns Hopkins University of Which He Was_ Long President. Conceived in the minds of some of the best architects in the Unlted States, and made possible by the gen- erosity of thousands of people and the state of Maryland, ~impressive buildings are rising on the new sife of the Johns Hopkins university at Homewood, Baltimore, says the Bos ton Transcript. When completed, these | buildings will comprise one of the fin est and most stately university groups in the world. But the day of com- pletion is far in the future. Five years ago, even the prospect of Hop- kins getting to Homewood seemed to the student and professor a pleasing but unrealizable gream. At present however, practically all of the grud- ing has been done; the largest buildin of the group, Gilman Hall (so name in honor of the late Daniel Colt Gi man, first president of the university and a native of Norwich, Conn.) is two-thirds completed, and will be fin- ished before the time stipulated in the contract, next Jure. It will be the home of the library and of the human- itles, or non-laboratory subjects and will cost when fully completed over $600,000. Gilman Hall, Home of the Humanitie gan as a librarian and ended an or- ‘ganizer and guide of a university, Gilman Hall will be a fitting memorial. At the outset this building will serve sentially the same purposes as the present McCoy hall, except that the offices of the university agninistra- | tion and assembly room are omitted and the department of mathematics is at present it will be have separate homes for and undergraduate work e te which the complete plan contemplates it v is hoped will come be- ars. But in spite of this been arranged so that and undergraduate quar- ters will be as distinct as possible. It was at first thought that the cleavage might be by floors or wings, but this was made impossible by the arrangement of the library. The square vestibule by which the building is en- tered leads to a chamber 28 feet by 59 feet, whose function is not yet de.er- mined. Across this court is the read- ing room of the library, stretching the full width of the building and having a floor space of 6,000 square feet. The |two ends have another story oser them, bui the central part not thus affected is covered with an arched roof and expands westward into a serai- circle, from which the botanical gar- dens can be seen. There is room for and which fore many the hall has the graduate 200 readers, Library Stacks. In both wings of the bu stacks will run from ing library the ground finor there wlil be ample room for the ! brary to expand to several times its present proportions, 175,000 volum: In addition, the present system of having some of the works in rooms with the professors will be done away with, For the undergraduaies in Gilman Hall there have been provided twice as many classrooms as at preseat, ranging in size from 240 to 1200 square feet. There is a 350-square-foot sem- inar room for each graduate depart- ment and in four cases two of them. There will also be an office for nearly every officer and instructor. Down in _the basement there will be a post office, storage rooms for the Hopkins Press, cloak rooms, a barber | | been | In Gilman Hall the Carroll Mansion’s | be tempted to skip has been left out prophecy has come to fulfilment. | or rewritten. The result of this edit- Homelike, .simple, dignified, preserv-| ing js that John Bunyan's Dream Story ing the old portico multiplied by two, | hecomes a dedightful fairy tale, pociis | it is at once marked as the capito' of | i, form and surpassingly inte t | the campus by the clock tower which | I jts new form it should hav ide | rises 120 feet from ground level. in-| ., pylarity for ~hildren's reading. The| evitably carrying one's mind back to | jjlustrator has well caught the sp | Independence hall. To one who be- | a5 90 an open collection around the walis of 15,000 volumes. and 500 periodicals. | In every direction stretch tables for .| will improve its appearance. to the roof. With these the graduate work will be linked, each semmary being placed near the stack in ch are to be found the departmer bocks. Hence the front and rear are ! to be given up to undergraduate and the sides to graduate work. To arrange adequately for a growing library was a big problem. Mensare- ments disclosed the fact, that McCoy hall has now five miles of shelving. Ten miles were thought to be a wide provision for Homewood, but _th meant a mile and a. half of depart- mental walls, Hence the conciysion that the stack type is necessary and Makes Kidney, Bladder, Uis-| orders and Rheumatic Pains Vanish If you suffer with backaching kid- ney irouble; have disagreeable b.ad- der and urinary disorders, or aie .ui- tured with rheumatism, stff joints and heartwrenching pains, you_ wil be surprised how quickly and sureiy Croaone will relieve all such misery. It svaks right in through the walls, mombranes and linings, cleans out and strengthens the stopped up organs neutralizes, dissolves, and makes the kidneys sift out and fliter away the | uric acld and poisons from the blood. and leaves the kidneys and urinary | organs, clean, strong, active and nealthy. It matters not how long you have! suffered; how old you are, or what| you have tried. It is practically im- possible to take Croxone without re- sults, for it starts to work the minute you take it. If you suffer with pains in the back or stdes; if you are nervous, tired and run dow! bothered with urinary dis- orders, or have any signs of kidney. bladder troubles or rhcumatism, don't | spend another needless day suffering. | Secure an original package of Crox- one today, and prove for yourself! right now, as thousands of = others have done, just how quickly it will| end your misery 5 | Croxcne is inexpensive, and every druggist is authorized to return the purchase price if it fails in a single c shop, a bindery, offices, a garage aad miscellaneous rooms. Everything will be made fireproof as far as possible and ample exits and entrances are to be provided. Financial Problems Still Ahead. Although Gilman Hall will be ready for occupancy by rext summer, it i not probably that moving dar willl | come then. The laboratories must first be constructed, and for only one of these are funds vet avaifable. But instruction at Homewood will begin next fall in_the school of engineering, | a building for mechanical engineeriag | and one for mining engineering being time provided. by that SUPPORT PRESIDENT AND SECRETARY OF STATE. Taft Says That is Duty of Citizens in| Mexican Affair. New York, Dec. 11.—“We are inter-| national trustees of the prosperity we have and the power we enjoy, and we are in duty bound to use them when it | is both convenient and proper to help our neighbors,” declared former Presi dent William Howard Taft tonight in | a lecture before the New York Peace| soclety on the Monroe doctrine, which he held should be continued in full force despite the hostility to it express- ed in some quarters. “When we come to Mexico,” he said, “where anarchy seems now to reigm, the question is a most delicate one. intervention by force means that ex- penditure of enormous treasure on our part, the loss of more valuable lives and the dragging out of a most tedi- ous war against guerrillas in a trat- less country. All that those of us who are not in the government can do is to support the hands of the president and the secretary of state, and to present to the European powers and the world a solid front. In spite of the discour- aging conditions in Mexico, the present situation illustrates the beneficent in- fluence of the Monroe doctrine on the attitude of the KEuropean powers, which, in spite of the injury to the property and persons of their nation- als, look to the United States as a guide whom they are willing to follow in working out a solution.” NEW BOOKS, Dream Story. By Cloth, 12mo, 198 American Book York. Price 5 John Bunyan's James Baldwin. pages, illustrated. company, New cents. The Pilgrim’s Progress here retold for children in a form adapted to school reading. Wherever it cen possible, Bunyan's own words hava been retained, and much care has b n taken to preserve the beautiful und quaint style of the original. Of course, much abridgment has been uec Ty, and whatever the modern reader wouli R | He Should Worry. Senator Hitchcock remains ag obdur- convinced do ate as a man who is firmly the administration cannot worse to him than it has done burg Dis any Pitts- Takes Care of Himself. Mexicans are doubtless beginning to take note of the faect that while Hue is making his valiant display of obstinacy, he is nmot among those who are starving and being shot at.- ‘Washington Star. Question of Latitude. ‘When a man attacks the character of our judiciary in South America is he reformer or a defamer?— Florida Times-Union. TO MAKE YOUR HAIR MORE BEAUTIFUL To give Your hair lustre and wavy silky-softness, uss Harmony Hair Beautifier. It takes away the dull dead look of the hair. and makes it bright—turns the string- iness into fuffiness—overcomes the | oily odors and leayes a sweet, tr rose fragrance—makes the hair e to put up neatly and easier to keep in | place. It is just exactly what it is| named—a hair beautifier, and whether | your hair is ugly now or beautiful, it You'l be proud of and delighted with the r | sults, or your money back. Very e | to apply—simply sprinkle a little | your hair each time before brushing | it. - Contains no ofl; will not change | the color of hair, nor darken gray | hair. { | To keep your hair and scalp dand- ruff-free and clean, use Harmony Shampoo. This pure, liquid shampoo | is most convenient to use, because it | gives an instantaneous rich, foaming | lather that immediately penetrates to every part of hair and scalp, insuring a_quick, thorough-cleansing. Washed off just as quickly, the entire opera- tion” takes only a few moments. Con- tains nothing that can harm the hair; | leaves no harshness or stickiness—- just a sweet-smelling cleanliness. |~ Both preparations come in odd- shaped, very ornamental bottles, wi | sprinkler tops. Harmony Hair Beau- | tifier, $1.00. Harmony Shampoo, 50c. | | Both guaranteed to satisfy vou in { every 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 | laboratories in Boston, where the ! many celebrated Harmony Perfumes {ana_Toilet Preparations are made. N. D. Sevin & Son, 118 Main Streey | Norwicn, " Connr gloss and hat on For the convenience of any whe de« bank will be open during the months ef December and January to receive de sire such accommodation this ! posits - or cash for safe keeping wpem Saturday evenings and every weelk day evening preced’'ng a logal holiday from 8 to 9 o'clock and upon othed arrangement ta meet any demand occasioned by any special sales. The Uncas National Bank evenings by special CUMMINGS & RING Funeral Directors and Embalmers 337 MAIN STREET Opposite Post Office. 'Phone 1052-2 Lady Assistant ——e e A Rash Man. President Wilson refused to see & great Chicago meat packer. What does the White House keep a chef for? —Chicago Nes. Meriden— J. Danaher was the principal speaker at the memorial ex- ercises held by the Danbury lodge ef Elks Sunday afternoon. OUR FEED and watch results. Your horse will do twice as much work, your ¢hickens lay more eggs and become plump, We sell FEED that strength- ens animals. We will be pleased to attend to your GRAIN and FLOUR wants today. CHAS. SLOSBERG 3 Cove Street Come On We have the Christmas Novelties you are looking for, ELECTRIC FANS Run on dry batteries TELEGRAPH k INSTRUMENTY With book of instructions All styles at lowest prices ELECTRIC TOYS ' Practical and Entertaining SATOCHASE 129 Main St., Norwich, Ct Buy a Basket of Christmas Goodies