Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 13, 1914, Page 4

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_NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, MARCH 13, 191 4 Borwich Gulletin and @oufFie? 118 YEARS OLD luhnvun price 12c a week; 500 a monthg a year. Entered at the Posteflice at Norwich, Cenn. as second-class matier. Telephone Calls: Bulistin Business Office Bulletin Editorial Rooms Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantis Office, Reom 2 Murray Building. Telephone -~ , Friday, March 13, 1914. The Circulation of The Bulletin The Builetin has the largest cireviation of eny paper in East- ern Commactiout and from three ts four times langer than that of any In Norwich, It is delivered te ovar 3000 of the 4,063 houses Ia Nerwioh, arnd read by ninety- thres per cent. of #he peapls. In Windham it 8 deliversd to over 900 heuses, in Putnam and Danislson to over 1,100 and in al of these places it is consid- ered the loeal daily. Eastern Connectiout has forty- nine towns, ene hundred and sixty-five peetoffice districts, and sixty rueal free delivery routes. The Builetin is sold in every town and on all «f the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 average............. 4412 1905, averag e 5,920 March ? . .ceee.e: 8,800 H Eescssasecensssencsnsassensasssassssssesasaseed g i i H : H i TRADE SCHOOLS, Norwich has reason to be partic- ularly interested in the effort to se- cure e trade school for this city. It is mot an institution which is going te Be handed to us gratis, but if is ems which cannot help being of partioular value to young people in learning a trade. It fills in an impont- ant ttme between the conclusion of the grammar school days and the time for taking up daily employment in a most valuable and profitable manner. Peeiltles of a high order are pro- vided for those who are secking a higher education but those who are in- clined in other directions and desire instructions In the various trades are left to the cold road of experience. It {8 the trade school which opens up the vocational training and provides the advantages in that direction in keeping with the opportunities pro- vided for those scholastically inclired. The trade school has passed the stage of experiment. The experience which Connecticut cities have had with them is highly pleasing. They have demonstrated their worth in many directions, been the means of overcoming much indecision as to the @irection in which one’s efforts should be turned to best advantage, and de- veloped a liberal and important edu- cation in the various lines undertaken, 1t iz & direct method of reaching many and starting them in the proper di- Tection at a time which will be of im- mense valus to the youth as well as the employer later on. Norwich should e prepared to give this matter care- ful consideration when the time comes. SUPER DREADNOUGHT TEXAS. The delivery of the super dread- nought Texas, the last word in naval architecture and the most formidable ship in our navy, makes a valued ad- ditien to our strength upon the sea Greatness stands out all over it, but it is & natural wonder as to when the limit will be reached in such cons tion. ¥or half a century wonde sirides have been made b such floating fortresses. The size of | the vessels has increased, the styles have changed, greater armor protec- tion has been secured, more accuracy has been gained in the control of the guns and a veritable revolution has taken place in the fighting equipment. | The Texas is the first battleship in the | world to be equipped with a battery | of tem 14-inch guns, but while this|? atep has been watched and the course followed by such countries as Japan, Germany and Chili, the largest guns on the latest battleships of Great Bri- tain are 13.5 while France plans to equip her ships under construction with 13.4 inch guns. How much more development such fighting machines are destined 1o un- dergo depends upon the amount of en cunncenw; whith is given to the “naval holflay” idea. Unless some such plan is adopted for the preven- tion of needless expenditures in the way of additional ships each year-as a recognition of economy without a saerifice of eficiency, there is no tell- ing what the next half century will bring forth, and while the Texas is today the pride of the navy such honor is not Itkely to be retained any great length of time. Every new addition t0 the navy should be asuperior to its Predecessors in some form or another. e AR R R THE COAL TAX. Among all the investigations and muits which are directed against the question of coal production, trans- portation and sale none is likely to be followed with keener attention than the suit which has heen brought by ® coal company of Pennsylyania against the state tn which It is con- ceded that all the coal producing com- panies are interested. This action re- sulte from the placing of a tax of two and a half per cent. upon all anthra- cite ¢oal which is mined in the state, ‘With characteristio regularity this tax has been placed upsn the consumer whe is thus directly cencerned in the outcome. It is he who is sailed upon to contribute the meney which will be devoted to the Lienefit of the towns and villages of the anilirasite region, whather they preduce seal sr met, From within as well as from outside the stale there is oppesitian to the tax for the same reasen that it is in- creasing the ¢ost of the preduct, and only & portisn of the plats is getting the benefit tharsof, Net only ara the maderity of con- swwers desireus of 3 preveniion of Lho tax but they are ajsy concerned over the manner in which it is collected. ‘While the tax as estimated would amount to about nineteen cents a ton the advance in the price which the consumer is called upen to pay is twenty-five cents, an overcharge of six cents which benefits the coal bar- ons. Thus the man who burns coal is anxious not only for the removal of the tax and the discontinuance of the extra charge, but he would also like to find a way to escape unjust taxa- tion. A VALUABLE TEST. The situation which is caused by the unemployed, who figure in that class because of circumstances over which they have no control rather than by ‘choice, calls for sober and serious consideration. They are to be easily determined from the preferentially idle by applying the test which is cohtain- ed in a legitimate offer of work: Tt is this which the governor of New York state realizes when he proposes to send them to the farms of the state to meet the double need of supplying work to the unemployed and of con- tributing to the demand for labor on the farm and overcoming the existence of the abandoned farm. That it is a task which faces many difficulties can- not be overlooked. Skillful tradesmen can be utterly useless on the farm, even though willing to accept such an offer of work. Others will jump at the opportunity and make good from the start, while dependent families and dislike for the country will oper- ate to cause others to wait for some- thing else to turn up. The experiment is one wh is go- Ing to be followed closely. Tt is to be hoped that New York's governor can make a success of it. The farming territory of the states of the east is in need of more help and greater cul- tivation. We are getting from it only a portion of what we should. If the sending of the unemployed to the country can be made to do what is expected of it, there will be furnished one of the best object lessons possible in dealing with the immigrant ques- tion as it exists in the large centers today. REFORM NEEDED. With the many instances of great delays which ar in the courts of the country nothing strange in the de is bedng made for the simplification of legal procedure. Rather is it wondered at that such demands have not been undertaken with greater per- sistency before. The recent decision in the case involving the patent righis concerning a photographic film, which fight has been waged in the courts for a period of twenty-seven years, dur- ing which time the inventor has pass- ed away without obtaiming the knowl- edge to say nothing of the financial benefit that his claim has been upheld, is only one of many which show the need of a change. Reasonable time for the proper un- tangling of ch questions must be taken but as the New York Evening Post weil says “such endless drawing out of the case, intolerable piled up obstacles and difficulties in its prosecution as are actually experienced in _instance after instance, cannot be nec ated by the power of things. It must be within the power of law making man to devise a method of procedure by which a reasonable claim can be brought to a decisive test in a reasonable time. constantly appearing there 1is Such is applicable to criminal as well as civil procedure. The need for a change it so urgent as to call for no extensive campaign in its behalf. Tt should be obtained without the nec sity of further exhibitions of this kind, EDITORSIAL NOTES. Next week ought coming out time for to prove a great he green wig. Charles with General war. Murphy may vet Sherman’s definition agree of There are vive moon few who are able to sur- an eclipse like the man in the Nothing 1 army of offer of the an so calculated to put unemployed rout like wo to There are in rule propos: he home a rather indigestible piece sroposed legisla- tivon, There is of fans who must now llegiance and join the he new league 3 Whether March has reformed or not no one will be inclined to place much trust in it v after t of April Eve. nator who is personaily ready to Mexico should remem- ber that senatorial courtesy doesn't go down agreed on hat low ch of a is completed. is Whether it suits perament or not Hackett seems likely to have the star rele of “The Millionaire” forced upon him. The man on the corner sa Tt only requires a glance into the miillinery shop to learn that the advance gnard of epring has arrived We were prepared to hear Senator Fall offer to lead that army of inter- vention into Mexico, but if he did it must have been to himself. Though she got a couple of seratch- es during her experience Mona Lisa doubtless smiles in appreciation of the fact that she wasn't taken to Eng- land The world is Interested just now in | learning . whether which Villa has 1e prohibition to een converted ap? plies to free speech or '‘a peaceful existence, When the weather prophets get so that they can change the date of big disturbances $0 as to fit in with the social calendar it will be something to blow about. One of the difficult problems of this period is to make heirs of a rich estate understand some of the ways in which the deceascd had censidered disposing of his wealth. * When Chairman Elliott announces that he is preparing a statement of the remd’'s financial cperglions for a period of ten years it is hound to be & valuable auxiliary te the AMorgun repert, A New Yerk bank official has been talien te prisen after three years de- lay made pessible by the multitude of ways whieh are open to criminals ta eseape the peralty .of the law and justice. The strungest thing is, how- ever that he didn't escape serving Lhe sentence, 'BI!E[ETIN’S SPEC IAL YALE LETTER Two l’;videncec That Spring Has Opened—Signia Xi Honor For Two Norwich Men—Society For Recognizing Ath- letic Merit Suggested—Yale Band Formed. New Haven, Conn. March 12—Two evidences there are this week that spring has begun in New Haven. One is the advent of the Seniors on roiler skates. It is the time-honored pre- rogative of that class, and that class alone, to gambel sportively around the campus on the rattling rollers. And the old custol holds on with more than the tenatity shown by several Yale traditions in the last two or three vears. For one thing, it is a splendid oppertunity for the seniors to become undignified—one of their last chances. Then the walks about the University provide a fine field for the art of roll- er skating. Of course the seniors are kept almost exclusively to the Uni- versity grounds. The moment they get outside on the rollers, the New Haven police loom up in the fore ground. And naturally, the well-dij posed student meekly retires within college confines. The other harbinger of spring is the open water work of the Yale crews be- gun this week, last Saturday being the first trial. And the oarsmen take to the harbor this year with livelier ex- pectations than for some years, it would appear. The conditions seem ito be ripe for a reversal of rowing con- ditions. Yale has a crew 10 pounds heavier per man than last year, a coach that is the peer of any in America, and a rolling body of men to work with. That was the spirit of enthusiasm and optimism that domin- ated a meeting of the crew men, Uni- versity and Freshmen Tuesday night, .to mark the end of indoor work, and the beginning of actual rowing. Coach Nickalls, who has the Univer_ sity squad in charge, reiterated the statement that he made last December, that there was no use of his coming here without active support from ev- ery man. He said that he had had it, splendidly, during the work thus far. He wants his men to be in a boat, whenever they have any spare time. “Get any kind of a boat, take it out and putter around in it” 1is Coach Nickalls' advice. “That is one of the best ways of becoming a waterman.” In outlining plans for the spring work, Captain Denegre sald that there will be a race with Cornell, May 23, and there will be sveral crews entered in the American Henly at Philadel- phia. Two Norwich men have been hon- ored by eiection to Sigma Xi, the sci- entific honorary society of the Uni- versity, whose members are chosen from the graduate departments and the senior classes of the two under- graduate departments on the basis of scholarship and promise. From the graduate school .Dickson Hammond Leavens, Yale College '09, was among the nine men of this department tak- en. Max Henry Foley, of the Senior class of the Sheffield Scientific school, was one of the 15 students chosen from that clasg, One of the most interesting ideas in regard to college athletics is the one that has been given publicity this weelk regarding the establishment of a so- ciety to recognize athletic merit. The promoters convey the idea that in the athletic world it will serve the func- tions of Phi Beta Kappa in academic scholarship and Sigma Xi in scientific fields.. They give it a Greek letter name, that of Sigma Delta Psi, and it is to be “secret in a general way.” General athletics exckbllence is the requirement for admission, and many of the athletes of the eastern colleges WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Times Have Changed. If Abe Lincoln was livin’ he'd be 105 years old, and Iilke as not he wouldn’t be on speakin' terms with th’ other ex-presidents. They ain't speakin’ to each other. “Look what he’d a-knowed he didn’t known in them days. An’ it'’s only fifty years ago, for all that. He could- n't telegraph to Europe, an’ he could- n't ride to California in a Puliman car an’ he didn't see no 'lectric lights. all about these here ’lectric fans an’ things, but, by golly, he’d have his work cut out for him tellin' you how to act on th' square. “It's got to be like your teeth. You can't tell another guy how to grow | good ones “Sixth street! No stops between Sixth and Seventh! “Look where you step!™ EVERY DAY REFLECTONS A Persistent Hunger. One of the most persistent hungers {of the race has been the hunger for | heaven. | The more highly developsd the per- sonality, the more removed it is from animality, and the more it is given to thought, to letters, to art or to re- { liglon, the more it rebels against the ideas of dropping at last back into the dust. | Over and over again the lack of sub- stantial proof of lmmortality is brought forward; mankind stubbornly insists jon dreaming of life continued, and on belleving {ts dreams and doubting its arguments. Nearly all religions have fed this craving by deciaring some sort of heaven wherein the souls of all men, who meset the religious requirements are to abide. Kven where this hope has been “sicklied o'er with the pale cast of thought,” aund philusephy or reasoning has set it aside as without enough foundatien, men have still displayed a strong tusle for living ferever and w revolt against the idea of exiinction. The artist, the auther, the states- muan, the king, the millionaire seek that ether heaven, the immertality of bo¢ statues and menuments. The pyvramid and ebelisk in Egypt, the mauseelum in Rome, spring from the same Jonging that ix found ip the au- thor who hopes (o erect a meaument more lasting than brass. He never seen & airship, or a split skirt. Th’ women wasn't votin® or | tangoin’, He never saw a guy fall off la an’ he never run to ketch car. They wasn't no tel- battle ships or addin’ ma- didn’t know no more siants gettin’ beat by th' [ n he did 'bout th' Panama | ) taikin' to him "bout some chauffeur takin' his car to th’® garage | | he'd like enough say: “‘Say that over agin, an’ say it slow. “It was a durn sight easier io be a| good guy in them days 'n it is now Ev'rybody went to church. Th’ bad men ail had signs on ‘em so's_You co keep away from 'em. They wasn't no cold storage houses, an’ hens laid eggs for 10 cents a dozen. “But Abe Lincoln would a been jus’ as good to-day as he was then. It ain’t what vou know that makes you decent. It's what you do with, it. You could set down an' tell old Abe . are in favor of it. Membership is to be won, according to the plan, by the ability to attaln satisfactory marks in a list of specified events. There are to be two grades. The requirements full honor will include these tests; 100 yard dash, 11 3-5 seconds; 120 vard hurdles, 20 seconds; running broad jump, 18 feet; putting 16 pound shot, 30 feet; pole vault, 8 feet;, 6 inches; throwing the baseball, 250 feet punting a football, 120 feet; 3-mile run, 18 minutes, 30 seconds; 10 mile walk, 2 hours, 30 minutes; 100-yard swim. A junior grade will require slightly modified tests along the same lines. That the requirements for full mem_ bership are not lax and that the man who gets a *“Reg” for athetic ability will earn it, is granted. Directors at leading American gymnasia strongly ly in favor of it, among them Dr. W. G. Anderson of Yale. Undoubtedly it will tend to strike a balance between the most common athletic events. There is many a man who can run three or six miles, who couldn't for anything, without practice, do a cred- itable pole vault. There are some football players who couldn’'t run a mile in 6 minutes, perhaps, and there whom a hundred yard swim would feaze. About the close of the college year Yale athletes may take the idea up, it is planned and those who qualify then, will make the charter membership of the Yale chapter. A major sport championship is re- garded as the greatest need that Yale now has, in the opinion of 54 members of the Senior Academic class, from the statistics gathered for the class book. This is a need that is strongly indicat- ed this year, more than ever before, while 37 members of this year's class in comparison fith 13 last year feel that the greatest need the col- lege is more professors of person- ality sufficient to inspire a greater in- terest in the curriculum. More money that is, a larger endowment, is placed first by 30 men. The scattering votes cover a long list of interesting topics. Two men vote for Dwight Hall off the campus and two others think that the abolition of the Hotel Taft would ba the greatest benefit Yale could have. One man insists that better food is the crying need. On April 4, is to be held the third annual conference between the Yale examiners and representatives of the secondary schools, in the entrance ex- amination papers for June and Sep- tember of this year. The purpose of the meeting, which is unique in giving the preparatory schools this opportun- ity is to make use of the experience of those teaching the subject in prepar- ing the examinations. The prepared examination papers are submitted, in proof, to the representatives of the schools, and there is a discussion of the questions and quite often the best means of teaching the subject, the proper age at which the subject should be taught, and other matters related. The teachers of the secondary schools have welcomed the opportunity in the RhAS R ORI RSl oo SRR AT SR W U SER A s o SR DS Ty past 2 years and 30 representatives at least will be in New Haven next month. A Yale band is the newest organi- zation to be formed.. Six or seven years ago such a band flourished and thrived and made itself generally use- ful during the spring activities. Then it died out and the Yale orchestra was left in sole possession of the campus music. This week twenty men met and pledged their support with a vari- ety of instruments and a Yale band for the Yale ball games seems to be assured. Besides the games, there are promised a large number of cam- pus concerts this spring by both the orchestra. after the usual custom, and the new band. OTHER VIEW POINTS i ! Glad that Governor Baldwin seized the occasion to talk to the state bus- ness men about the need of standing | by the New Haven road in this cris He is a great chap for the psycholog- ical moment.—Meriden Journal. Attorney General McReynolds is re- ported as believing that the problem | of the New Haven road can be settled to the consider of without recourse courts. It can if he will welfare and public sentiment New England. Otherwise, the owne: of the road and the public it serves are in a frame of mind to fight for their rights.—New Haven Register. peaceably, be Some seem able to buy new automo. { biles altho unable to pay their taxes. It is true, of course, that they are pay- ing not only the original bill, but nine per cent. interest on that bill, and yet it is doubtful if the nine per cent. is | sufficient to cover the expenses to the city- of financing improvements with borrowed money. Perhaps the chart- er should be amended.—Waterbury | Republican. ¢ Waterbury has been dallying with the idea of a new city hall for two years and more and now it finds that the plans prepared are ‘“utterly inadequate and ridicnious.” Out- siders will speculate as to the reason for this discovery being made at the eleventh hour when the plans are al- most ready to go to the bidders. Some one must have been absent minded.——Ansonia Sentinel The business men of New Britain have just taken a step forward in the decision of the Business Men's Asso- ciation to discontinue its existence and become part of a chamber of com- merce, with enlarged powers, and with a desire to not only interest itself in business matters Bt in public affairs ! as well. This is in line with the plan carrfed out In the larger cities, and provides one strong organization which can handle as & unit the vario problems which confront municipali- ties—Commercial Record. Of ecourse all citizens will thorough- ly appreciate the plans of City Forest_ er Cromie to béautify the back yvards ren and their parents interested in the move to improve home surroundings. But we think it would be a mistake as proposed to overlook the universal custom hereabouts for the school children to plant the class ivy in their own yards. Keep that cusiem up.— New Haven 'nion. Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA M. J. FIELDS . . . . Florist 39 Ward Street Cut Flowers. Designs, Forms and Plants Telephone 637 of New Haven on the coming Arbor day by planting an evergreen tree | thers, the work to he done by the school children. It 1s a splendid idea and may result in getting the child- AUDITORIUM Will Present The M. R. NUTTING SILVER SHOWER ONE CHEST AND NINE SETS OF ROGER'S SILVERWARE WILL BE GIVEN AWAY. CAMPBELL & McDONALD I BOB LEONARD IN THE LAW OF HIS KIND—2 Reel Rex ROSALIE ROSE The Demure Comedienne See the Silver in The Boston Store window today. SIN G NOVELTY Momwplm Scenes—4 ED. FORD & “TRULY” The Dancing Dog { MATINEE Se¢ “HER FATHER,” “THE JANITOR’S QUIET LIFE” “ONLY ONE SHIRT,” Colonial Theatre CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. THE REDEMPTION OF BRONCHO BILLY” ....With G. M. Anderson “THE LORD MAYOR’S SHOW,” L EVENINGS 10c -Railroad Wreck Feature Edison Household Comedy .Kalem Peerless Comedy -+..Educational Feature ondon HEATRE DAV S IH5ns LAST TWO @ DAYS NOTE—Positively the most pre- -entious plays and productions ever iven in Norwich. ASK ANY- Myrkle-Harder Co. MATINEE TODAY What Happened To Mary A wonderful book. A great play TONIGHT The Spendthrift Positively the Dramatic Event of all the 'season. . SATURDAY Quincy Adams Sawyer (A cyclone of fum) THE COUNTRY STORE SEE THE HUSKING BEE. THE SNOW STORM Nights 8.15, 60c, 30c, 20c, 10e. NOTE—Friday and Saturday— Matines, 10c-20c. Reserved, 30c. The Bind Musia A JOHN and MARY McCAY T. A. B. Hall, Monday Evening, March 16, A programme of high'grade popular, vocal and. Instrumental music. . Selec: tions from favorite operas. Humorous impersonations, rich Irish wit, Irish melodies, etc. Admission 25c. mar13d LEGAL NOTICES. TAX NOTICE All persons liable to pay taxes in the Town of Lebanon are he notified that I have a warrant to le and col- lect 4 tax of fifteen (15) mills on the doliar d ab April 1, 1914; also the Per- For the purpose of ¢ | { lecting the same I will be at the Town { House, Lebanon, Monday, April 6, from 10 a. m. to 3 p. m.; at J. H. Burrill's store, Liberty Hill,' Tuesday, 7 | | 2 ¥ April 7, from 10 a. m. to 12 m.; at W. W. Gil- lett's house, Goshen, Wednesday, April 8, from 10 a. m. to 12 m All persons neglecting this notice will be charged legal fees and addi- ticis. Dated at Lebanon, Conn., March 6, 1914, mari3F J. A. THOMAS, Collector. Taken by virtue n EXECUTION to me directed, and will be sol to the high st in tr PUBL1C_ VENDUE a v will’ Mareh, 1914, noon, to satist fees thereon, the following d property, to wit: One No. 2 sion induct motor; 1 shoe stitcher No. B1053, 1 shoe polisher leatner cutter, grinder and eme grinder about 20 feet long, 1 lot shoe nails. 1 can red diamond inks, 1 shoe stretches, 2 1 hoe ther, last repairing k 1 alarm clock, small piec ot shoestrin 1 lot inner 5 dozen 1 Dated 5 GEORGE H Depu STANTON, 3IFW INVITATION FOR PROPOSALS FOR SCHOOL BUILDING. Sealed proposais will be received at my ofhice until April 34, 12 o'clock, noon, 1914, for rais siate Toof, and ail paris theerof, and building a new second story, of brick, and alli parts thereof, and other aiterations and ad- aitions for the New School at Plaintield, Conn., now to have new second built on same, and other mentioned and shown work There will also be separate éstimates for heating the new aid second story by additional haater, and piping and other parts thereof, also changes in resent plumbing P acfording 1o plans and specifica- tions authorized by School Commit {as made by me, copies of which may be obtained at my office All estimates must be accompanied | by a certified check in favor of said Echool Committes, for an amount equal to 5 per cent. of amount of estimate. The right is reserved to reject a; By T of School Committee of latnfi conn e . Architect. 1¢ and 11 ng. Norwicn nn. marg The Chelsea Savings Bank Norwich, ( { Board of DI i this day de moniis CHARLES B. CHAPMAN, Secretary. DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Bldg. Take elevator Shetucket Strest eun- irance. FPlone. THE DEL -HOFF European Plan 75 cents per day and up HAYES BROS., Telephone 1227, 26-28 Broadway Ra on the Town List of 1913, due.| Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sta | | { i Trelawney of the Wells Presented by Members of the SENIOR CLASS, N. F. A. March 20-21 Tickets at Geo. A. pupils. Davis’ or from COAL AND LUMBER FRESH ARRIVAL Genuine Big Vein George’s Creek Blacksmithing COAL ALSO A CARLOAD OF READY ROOFING PAPER Economy snd satisfaction for those who are SHY on SHEDS by using a few loads of our COMMON LUMBER and READY ROOFING. Chappell Go. Central Wharf, Norwich, Conn. Telephones. M. C. HIGGINS COAL HIGH GRADE COAL Office and Yard 208 North Main S& Office Telephone 1257 GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK A. D. LATHROP ;- ., Telephone 463-12 y Ernest E. Bullard VIOLIN TEACHER In Willimantie two days each weeka For appointments addre: E E. BULLARD, Bliss Place, Nor- wich, Conn. MISS M. C. ADLES Hair, Scalp and FaceSpeeialist SPECIALLY PREPARED TONICS are a feature of M Adles’ scientifie treatment of the scalp and hair. Ia your hair falling out, or have you scalp trouble? Consult Miss Adles and see how quickly she can help you. At the same time ask to see the NEW SPRING HAIR STYLES. 306 MAIN ST., Next to Chelsea Bank ..Tel 652-4. Diamonds Diamonds Diamonds John & Geo. H. Bliss 126 Main Street 1914 Wall Papers A full line of the above with new additions coming along, including those with cut out borders. Moldings and Bands to maich. Mixed Paints, Muresco and Tints; awlso Art Glass imiiations. We are in the market for Painting, Puper Hanging and Decorating all the “ p. F. MURTAGH 92 and 94 West Main Street DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Dental Surgeon In charge of Dr 8. 1. Geer's practice during his last iliness. McGrory Building, Norwich, Cesc,

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