Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 17, 1914, 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)

1796 5 1014 Jorwich Bulletin and Goufied 118 YEARS OLD Subscription price 12c a week; 50o a month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as second-class matter. Td-pho_n- Calls: Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Editorial Rooms 85-3 Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantio Offics, Room 2 Murray Building. Telephone =~ Norwich, Tuesday, March 17, 1914, The Circulation of The Bulletin The Bulletin has' the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Connecticut and from thres to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses Danielsen to over 1,100 and in ali of thess places it is consid- ered the local daily. Bastern Connectiout has forty- nine towns, one hundred and 1905, averag - 5,920 March 7 . ceeee 8,800 Tecseesssssscoesercasseossrsessessecsees. 40000400008 0000 0004 900000000009 805000000 40404040 094005 50009040000900000040000 04400005 000805000¢ 5000000000000000000000000000000000000006000000000000000000000000000000800000006006008006005680609000. CONNECTICUT WATERWAYS. The movement in behalf of an or- ganization in this state to labor for mproved waterways is something in which every town in Connecticut should have a keen interest. The condition of the waterways of this state today proclaim as poghing else can the need which exists for such an association. Connecticut has many miles of navi- gabie rivers which are crying out for attention and improvement. It has a long coast line from which too little benefit is being derived for the advan- tages which it possesses, with its har- rs and large cities. The proper development of its wa- terways is ome thing in which Con- necticut has too long manifested a backward disposition. We have been content to receive what we could get without manifesting any great inter- est in securing the greater advantages which are waiting to be developed and which can be greatly influenced through a strong state organization. Unless Connecticut is alive to its own interests and possibilities it can hard- ly expect anyone else to be. It is frequently sald that those who have or are in a position to obtain the best facilities for transportation are the ones who too frequently show the un- explainadle lack of appreciation. Con- necticut should be alive to its natural advantages. Its waterways are of great economic importance to its man- ufacturing and business interests and through them to the state in general and its citizens should be deeply con- cerned in any well directed effort which has for its object their betterment. GOVERNMENT ROAD BUILDING. After the varied experiences with £ood roads and the many methods of construction, it is not strange that there should be a decided opposition to the pushing through congress of the plece of ‘“pork barrel” legislation known as the Shackleford bill. By this measure It is planned to place $25,000,000 at the disposal of a com- mittee for distribution in road con- struction about the country without 2 safe and practical method of being assured that the funds are properly used devoted to the construction of roads in a manner to secure last- ing results, In recognition of the necessity of preventing a wasts of government funds, though realizing the benefit of g00d roads if properly built a Kansas federation of commercial clubs has adopted resolutions opposing this new method of filling the “pork barrel.” While approving the idea of govern- ment participation in road building they comsider that there should also be a community participation in the apprepriations made for such roads in additien to the government funds, that there is a burden resting upon the sections most directly benefitted to do their share in not only receiving but in giving, and that some such pro- tective influence is needed if the real benefit of the outlay of money is to be_gained. Experience has shown in most every state that there is need of the wisest direction of road building and that the further such can be put away from political influences the better are the results, or A SLIGHT EXCUSE. As a reason for opposing the bill creating the rank of vice admiral in the navy the matter of increased ex- penses because of a higher salary for such officials, is being advanced. One &uggestion is made that such officials be but temporary, to be named only when occasion requires, while another would require such officials to receive the same pay as those of lower rank. The increase in salaries which would be occasioned by the new offices is too slight to occasion any great delay. It is in fact a poor excuse for com- batting the proposed and nesded legis- lation, The laborer is worthy of his hire and in urging it in this instance the Hartford Times well says: “At u low estimate the vessels of the Atlantic fleet in normal composition are worth $128,000. They cost more. Mauning that fleet are some 14,000 officers and seamen. As & rear-admiral the man respousible for that fleet’s safety and efficiency receives $8,000 per year. The world probably does not know a single $128,000,000 private corporation which pays its executive head such a nig- gardly sum. Is the government so poverty stricken or o acutely sen- sitived in the matter of mean bargain- ing that it must guard itself agalnst the allotment of fitting reward for capable service?” ‘When the many ways in which much larger sums of money are spent an- nually for a less worthy cause are realized the balking at the salary ques- tion seems like making & mountain out of a molehill. FIDDLING WHILE ROME BURNS, Senator Weeks dldn't present the sit- uation any too strong when he de- clared relative to the New Haven rail- road matter that “they are fiddling away while Rome is burning” and in this respect it {8 New England as well as the rallroad which is suffering. The department of justice is pursuing a course in an endeavor to secure con- formity to the law and it is the an- nounced purpose of the road to meet such requirements without a contest insofar as it is possible, for the pur- pose of conforming to the law’'s pro- visions, preventing friction and sav- ing expense. The purpose of such a course is to uphold the law and at the same time to benefit the public, and vet it is a serious question, as viewed by those who are included as the pub- lic, whether' of the stockholding, trav- eling or business man class, just how much benefit can be expected from the carrying out of the dissolution as it is being outlined. It is true that the demands of the government if carried out will result in a breaking up of the system, but it is a question whether the situation i i : as it exists calls for the severity which fn Neewich; ot Lictes 2y ninvtys is proposed in some of the desired thres par ceat- of the people. In changes. Not only does the situation e N = demand proper attention ‘but the fact 900 houses, in Putnam and must not be lost sight of that the pub- lic is an important factor therein. If the government, in the insistence upon the carrying out of certain provisions, short term trusteeships and the aban- donment of its electric and Sound lines g for the overcoming of what it consid- SEELY=HVE, = emISHIES e ers a combination in the restraint of and sixty rural free delivery trade, brings about conditions which routes. will be a detriment to New England, The Bulletin is sold in every who is going profit from the disso- town and on all of the R. F. D, §|lution? Those who should get the ben- ' i efit are likely to be the omes to suf- iy Corifisotiout. | fer unless wise and considerate action CIRCULATION prevails. Let there be progress, but iah‘o good judgment in the demands. 1. Averags.coo- i 4 fia FLOOD PREVENTION POLICY. One of the stupendous tas hich has been faced by this country for a long time is the problem of overcom- ing the floods in the Mississippi val- ley. The need of directing attention to the solution of this menace is constant, but it always rises to the high record mark each time the great loss of life and prope revealed following an inundation. orces are constantly at work, however, in its behalf both in actual work and in advocacy of a new government policy concerning fit. In the opinion of Col. Goethals there is meed of establishing a definite plan of procedure and its consistent pur. suit before anything like a solution will be obtained. He intains that no permanently efficient work can be done in the improvement of the Mississippi until the present piecemeal plan of appropriations is changed. In order to get the benefit of what little is be- ing attempted constant and much greater effort must be made. In his opinion if a similar policy had been applied to the construction of the canal that tremendous enterprise would to- day be little advanced to completion. The value of such advice can be readily recognized in connection with most any undertaking which lowed to drag along for lack of financial backing. Benefits can undoubtedly be gained in the way of improving the river for mavigation by the present method of attack but when it comes to the checking of the floods it will only be by getting at the bottom of the difficulty that the quickest and best results will be secured. EDITORIAL NOTES This will be a magnificent day for the launching of the green wig. The man on the corner says: How easy it is to reform other people at long range? There is no reason why, if March wishes to meet with popular approval it shouldn't go out like a lamb. What college graduate is there wh will not sympathize with the Prince- ton students’ rebeilion at a long ser- mon? Nothing quite touches the language of the baseball enthusi but the new dance cranks go a long way toward it. The cowardly manner Venus was stabbed in the ba the kind of guerilla warfare itants are making The way the White House weddings are being scheduled mfay give some | support to the president's conversion |to a one term policy. Now that the seniors have decided that Yale's greatest need is a major { sport championship it ought to inspire the athletes to go out and get Carranza shows the good result taking a sober second though 1 n't always possible to hit the right note the first time, as every beginner know. ter and life saving service intend- ed by a vote of the senate. It is combination which will not be disturb- ed by the trust policy The question over the age of school teachers in Meriden may vet result in the adoption of the Japanese ides where special styles of dress are pro- vided for the different ages. In the sale of the state bonds over the counter the treasurer of Massa- chusetts. has reason to endorse the ef- ficacy of advertising as did the treas- urer of Connecticut recently. A rigid investigation of the St. Louis have received better protection are be- yond help and experience shows that few others profit from such things. The suggestion is made that the re- cent session of the South Carolina legislature would have made a capital movie film. Such might be so but a bad enough impression of legislatures already prevails. When it 1s reported from Kansas that the Bull Moose party is going to pleces so fast as to resembla a stam- vede it is probable that the Conmecti- cut members hope to get busy while there is a chance. Senator Fall has provided a list of sixty-three murders and violent deaths of foreigners in Mexico in two years It would be a lengthy list of much the same kind of deaths which could be 8ecured in this country which has no wac The consolidation of the revenue cut- | fire is promised but those who should | the shadow of Diamond Hill—miners, teamsters, prospectors, traders and cattle men—but when oid John Dyer, one of the mine bosses, brought his daughter Kate from civilization to live with him there and keep his humble cabin, he had faith in that chivalry that has always made the western man respect the other sex. He knew that she would have many admirers, and that there would be quarrels on het account, but he was a widower and she motherless, and he hoped he was doing what was best. The cabin, like the rude and strag- gling village, was backed by the grim mountain, while along its front as far as human eye could reach, there glit- tered the white sands of the Mohave desert. Here and there, out of that dreary waste were patches of usly cacti, and intuition told the girl as hev eyes searched the desert for the first time that out there under: the blazing sun the rattlesnake basked and the lizard glided swiftly over the bones of men and animals. The desert was not always at peace, its surface resembling a placid lake. Now and then a wind. born up in the guiches of the mountain, came down and went sweeping across the sands, and then the spectator saw great clouds of dust as the were caught up and driven here and there to <ut and gash and wound whatever lived. The sands never swept in from the desert, but always were driven the other wayv. Had it not been so Diamond Mine and the town around it could not have been. The coming of the girl among the thousand men was an event. There were a few old women there—cooks and laundresses—but here was a girl, a handsome young girl. Her influence felt almost immediately. The ne manage aid that more soap, combs, handkerchiefs and looking- called for from the com- in a week than were the preceding three glasses were pany’s store bought during months. At least eight hundred of the thous and men determined on an introdu tion at once, but when it came to the point, and even after three months had passed, there were not a dozen call- LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Saw the Stars Fall in 1833. Editor: i In your paper few months ago a question if there w nyone here that remem- bered when the st member the tme happened yesterds v f children and we all saw the commo- tion of the sta I also remember go- ing out in the morning to see if 1 could find any on the ground. This happen- ed the same yvear that Andrew Jackson the pri dent, came to Norwich to vis the grave of Uncas, the Indian chief. I went with my father up on the Plains —then called Yantic—to see the presi- dent. They raised a marble slab off the grave of the Indian chief and held some kind of a service. After that was over. the Washington crowd went down to the Landing and had dinner. The landlord’s daughter crowned the presi- dent with a wreath of roses. I remem- ber going to Norwich Town and seeing in a front yard some statuary called Adam and Eve. In 1835 my father moved to Willi- manti man Ke In 1851 T was married to Free- on in the Methodist church Tady. 1860 my husband in Ashford, Conn. We children, three sons and one daught: We had a very pleasant, happy My oldest son died in 1882 with typhoid fever. We laid him to rest in rd cemetery. My other two sons got tired of farmi and went as engineers on the railrc We were left with a big farm, but help was plenty and we got along fine. In 1891 my husband passed away after a short illnes I was left alone, so T old my farm and went to live with my aughter. Wh in-law, bought told him I Mr. Whitford, my son- a farm in Norwich I essed I had come back to my birthplace to die. 1 was born in Norwich on March 14th, 1825. My father was Asa Avery of Preston; my mother was Desi iddings, also of Preston grandfa ph Gidd m Joss ers, Ebenezer both were through the revolutionary 89 vears old today, and kept very busy attending to lers and eiving presents, and 1 t to_tell I had 84 birthday I rer embered? T hat sent me me, and I e the best nds here embered Hetin ould Norw any out No SARAH B 45 orwich, March 16, 1914 Chapter Three. 1T = n Ct him to I and o MRS wich, N, m Street. N Mr. interested refer in the road is p! I respectfully nielson correspondence Bulletin, that is, this e beef is here, but the Good, sweet butte nts per pound.”” The W sonized Underwood tariff is responsible for the coming | but what the lower ing? 1If the news from not enough. look a you will read from St. L dozen eggs have arrived from China The pri cents pe ket reports in the sa cold st s per dozen.” 1 egg = dozen s_to admit foreig not lower the cost of lis | inevitable reduc rods could ng without the on of the cost of pro. of Chinese eggs greatly benefit the Chl nese; but what about that democratie 10 cent beefsteak What out thos { the hide duty was g removed? Answer: Increase in price 15 per cent. What about coffee increasin removing the tarift on the price 5 cents per pound? “T told vou so” is not just the right way to use the other fellow under any circumstances, but when the less- on of low tariff and cheap living cost, going hand in hand, are plainly proven to the contrary day after day, who can blame a fellow for saying I told vou so? When cheap foreign goods that re- | quire skill to manufacture commence |20 arrive, as they certainly will in time, Eyrm will then not have to look to the papers for Chapter 4, neither will yon read of Kelly millions, L V or anything e s army, Coxey's ary W. ralds on se of the kind. ot churches You will find just w you should expect at vonr door. If bu. uvive a few more months, it accidental dem- ocratic congressimen get sent back home, where they may have mank enough to stand for what they bel is right, instead of bowing to the wi of » man who E s political b the confiden { business in future will return and | goeds of all kinds will be ardered more than a day ahead. Godspeed the da C. B. MONTGOMERY. Packer, Ct, March 14, 1214, s, They were a rough lot of men under . flinty particles y e | rid duction tr never yvet added to a man’s bank . here or anywh The cost rted, | as has been said over 1 over again, by the one great law of supply and de. mand. The thousands of t beef coming in make Argentine, while the thousand H ers at the cabin. later it was said- that onlg dozen stood a chance. By they meant marriage. It never oc- curred to any of them that a girl might come among them without ing in love and marrying one of thelr mom- er. It was strange that among Kate's earliest and most persistent admirers was Pedro Diaz, a full-blooded Mexi- can. He had charge of the company’s transportation, ‘ and he managed through the father to force an intro- duction. He was kindly received by the girl, but no more. He was toler- ated by the father, but there was no welcome for him. Pedro was a swag gerer. He was an egotist. He thought he was in love, and once having made up his mind to this he was ready to maintain what he called his right by fair means or foul. The thousand men sald that Pedro's rival was Tommy Britt, the keeper of | the company’s store. He was an Amer- ican, young, fair looking, and down on | the books to be promoted for his ener- | gy, ambition and integrity. Perhaps | he admired as all others did, but he ! had never asked himself if Le was in| love. He found both father and daugh- | ter congenial company, and that would | have been his excuse had any one; asked him why he pald two visits a week to the cabin. There came a Gay when Pedro Diaz | made up his mind to know his fate. He chose an hour when he knew the girl would be alone, and he dressed in his best and knocked on the cabin door. He believed himselt irrestible, and he smiled and smirked and offered his love. There was a moment of as- tonishment, and he found himself re- jected. The girl tempered her Te- fusal as much as possible. It was her first offer, but womanly instinct told het to soften the blow, even though the man was obnoxlous to her. “What! You refuse Pedro Diaz!”| exclaimed the man in reply. “You re- | fuse me—me, who am worth $5000 and could marry any senorita in my own country! Do you quite understand | me?" “T have no love for you,” replied the &irl. But that makes no difference. You hall love me later on. I am Pedro Diaz. It is the first time I ever did a woman the honor of asking her to marry me The girl's reply was a firm one, and Pedro flung himself out of the cabin| with anger raging in his heart. He had been snubbed, humiliated, made a fool of. There was a man in the case, of course, and it could be none than the storekeeper. Whoever opposed Pedro Diaz in any of his cherished schemes must die. He was not five minutes deciding on the death of Britt. That morning the young man had | ridden away across the desert, a stretch | of 20 long, hot miles, to strike the railroad on the other side and order | further supplies by telegraph. The ride was 20 miles over and miles back. He would cover the distance in day, but it would be late in the even- g When he returned. “I will meet and kill him when he returns,” decided Pedro; and when | | darkness fell he eluded observation as | much as possible and rode out on the desert There was no trail across the sands He who would hold a straight course {must depend upon the compass, and he must consult it often. There was | fair starlight—light enough to see his | rival many rods away. The sky was | clear of those scudding clouds which | might be taken as warnings that the whirlwinds were being born in the cold | air of the gulches, and no noise came from the mountain except the whispers of the pines to the cedars. When Pedro had made five miles aizht out from the base he pulled | horse and sat and waited, his face to the west and his ears alert for the slightest sound. For an hour he walit- ed, and then of a sudden a cold chill | struck the back of his neck. He whirled his horse about with an oath on his lips. it is the sandstorm!” he muttered he leaped to the ground. He had a blanket for himself and one for his horse. The animal lay | down at the word and suffered his | head to lie wrapped, and just as the | first sharp grains began to fly the man | snuggled down beside the anmal and | muffled his own head and swore. | He had seen a hundred sandstorms on that desert. They came with a puff and went the same way. In five min- A month or two, two of the 1 i utes he would be up and watching again. But when five minutes had passed the gusts were stronger. At the end of ten they began circling and running across the sands like wraiths They also dug deep Into the sands, and when they met with an obstruc- tion they covered it in. Man and | | | i horse were soon in danger of suffoca- | 1 and had to struggle up to throw | e weight. They were just in| | | i | time to be caught by a circling breeze | and spun around as if they were straws, and when the man was flung on his face at last and covered a foot deep in an instant; the horse uttered a neigh in terror and galloped heavily | away. “It ‘will pass—it will pass, and I will | > my revenge!” muttered Pedro, as | 0od up with his back to the blast did not pass. was flung this way and that— arried along or left half-senseless on | lthe sands, and not for a fuil hour did | the wind scream out its good-bye to | the desert and Teturn to its sleep. | Then the surface of the desert was | smooth again, and the man who came from the west could not tell under’s his horse’s feet lay a | that ng four months of the campalgn = the readers of The Bulletin and for Americans first, after them the best al'y . 8 fellow, told their readers 2 after day that the reduction of tariff in such -And We D For years we have di: on one side of her head, color by Mary T. Goldnu'lGn{ have seen with their own eyes t Hair Restorer to restore the original color to gray and faded bair. MM&TMM’.’- Mary T. Gold- man’s Gray Hair Restorer is the original preparation, so beware of imitations with names that ook and sound like the original. ‘There are now many imitations being sold. ‘They havecopied , boxes and style of bottle as nearly as dare. Bat it's ‘what's inside the bottle counts. Poor imitations mads to sell at & low wh Further Proof at My Expens A B r that m T¢ does :3:‘:33:"5- Bair o Vdyed’ 23 13 i ortpina solar RAE will b restor ,ln_{ru'm‘!a‘:n:r‘ o, clght dive. “g&n ; Bz ok A Sou ReUBRISE & ik ofie ur fwo Sup)icatione. e e fas aaid ovas 1.0 astis: users have proved it. g{‘l’) " 10 ha days only. 8o write tods full bottle that is Bt ot lo 1 sent prepal L 3ol Bldg., St. ™y 'his offer i Mary T. Goldm. offer is good for. Tember. we sen: alary sold for ¢ Mary T. Goldmar Paul, Minn. Yee & Osgood Co., 123133 Main #t. | raise a army. | promoted | That's why none of ’em’s rich. | won't | ing engineer | reporting to President Hustis, with of- | features Will Restore the Original Color to Gray and Faded Hair layed in drug e other half of her hair being restored to the Hair Restorer. Th: e truly wonderful powers of Mary T. Goldman's The Original Preparation SALT RHEUN | Small Water Pimples on Fi . ltched and Burned. Painful and * Sore Cracks. Cuticura Soap and Qintment Cured in a Month. ——— worse and began to itch and burn and one after another cracks appeared around the nails, on the inside of the fingers and on the bend of the joints until I was discouraged, as they were very painful and sore. I had to omlt work that required putting my ‘bands in water and could hardly work at all on account of the bleeding cracks. +I finally procured some Cuticura Soap and Ointment, and I found by washing my hands in quite warm water and Cuticura Soap that, they were improving. I began wrapping my fingers nightly in pieces of soft linen, after a good application of Cuti- cura Ointment which was very soothing. In a month my hands were completely cured and I have mever been afflicted with the trouble since.” (Signed) Mrs. C. L. Parker, Nov. 22, 1012. ‘When you buy a fine toilet soap think of the advantages Cuticura Soap possesses over the most expensive toilet soap ever made. In addition to being absolutely pure and re- freshingly fragrant, it is delicately yet effec- tively medicated, giving you two soaps in one, a toilet and a skin soap at one price. Sold throughout the world. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address post-card ** Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston. A@-Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- ’ DAVIS Our Mutu al Gir The Great Tango Number, .Everybody’s Doing It SEVENTH REEL GRENO & PLATT Comedy Novelty Wire Artists FRAZEE Gl Shadowgraphist l THE GREEN EYED DEVIL Two Reel Reliance Drama DELAY & HOLCOMB ' Comedy Singing and Dancing Duo, LBERT COVINGTON CO. Western Comedy Sketch ‘E_MARION, Jr Comedian KEYSTONE COMEDIES Usual Time and Prices ] DAV AUBITORIU BIGGEST BILL OF THE SEASON ALEXANDER THE MOST TALENTED ANIMAL IN THE WORLD A Member of the Highest Order of the Ape Family. Dresses, Walks, Eats and Smokes Just Like a Man WIXON & REHAN THE.WONDERFUL Comedy Duo Big Comedy Photo Play FLORENCE LAWRENCE | MAXINE HEAVEN WILL PROTECT A WORKING GIRL THE GREAT LADY VENTRILOQUIST A BEAUTIFUL SCENIC REEL IN A 2 REEL FEATURE THE LAW’S. DECREE Colonial MATINEE 5S¢ CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. 2000 Ft.—The Sword of Damocles, Patheplay—2000 Ft. Featuring Eleanor Woodruff and Irving Cummings “THE EDUCAAION OF AUNT GEORGIANNA," “BRONCHO BILLY'S FIRST ARREST,” “THE SMUGGLER’'S DAUGHTER,” . Theatre EVENINGS 10c ....With M. Costello With G. M. Anderson .. Thrilling Lubin Drama ticura Soap will Aind it best for skin and scalp. human body buried two feet deep. There had been a Pedro Diaz. The sands of the Mohave had blotted him out.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR St. Patrick. “Hooray for Saint Pat! My grand- father was a Orangeman, an’ _my grandmother—well, she wasn't. How them two ever trotted together fifty one vears, I dunno. Every time granny went to 5 o'clock mass old granddad'd get up an’ play ‘Crossin’ th' Boyne Water' on his jew's-harp till break- fast time. When my daddy was a boy them two nearly pulled him apart tryin’ to make him religious, the way they was. It's a good thing people got more sense nowadays. If a fellow wants to be a bull moose or a demm crat or a catholic or a presbyterian It's like he wants pie for breakfast. Ain't it his breakfast, an’ what's it to you? You eat your own pie an’ have pickles with it if you want to. This world's gettin’' better ause people is gettin’ bigger. I ain’t good enough to b'long to no church, but I'm goin’ to put a green shamrock on an’ holler like ‘lec- tion night when them Hibernians go by. They's one thing bout the Irish that gets me, all right. Every one of m's got some kind of a religion. If the good Lord was lookin' for friends that little green island ain’t got noth- in’ else. An’ you better not hold your breath till a "Irishman kills himself. He'd ruther kill the other fellow. No, he won’t kill him, but he’ll push his face in. Th’ Irish can’t make money fast, an’ can’t keep what they make, but if they’s a joke in it they get it. When the judge was goin’ to sentence old Doogan th’ other day down in Rhode Island, and his honor a Doogan, awful solemnlike: ‘Hav got annything to say why senten death shall not be pronounced upon ve? old Doogan locks all aroun’ and says he to himself like: ‘Isn't he th’ gloomy divil” Th' reason why Ire- land ain’t free is ’cause all th’' Irish- men wants to be officers an’ then can’* If a Irish soldier wasn't in'a week he'd go home. They work for another fellow long enough. An’' you dorn’t have no trou- ble gettin’ a idea in a Irishman’s head. You find he had it 'fore you did. Saint Pat drove out all th’ boneheads along h th’ snake Come on! tep up lively, please Watch your step!” Both doors! Murray as Consulting Engineer. New Haven, Conn. March 16.—To- W Murray was appointed by the New York, New Haven and Hart- ford Railroad company to be consult- in general charge of all electrical engineering and construction, fices at New Haven. lowing the substantial completion the construction of the system for complete electrical operation west o New Haven, will enter into closer re lations with the railroad company His_jurisdiction will hereafter be ex- tended to also inciude the electrical | of operation in addition to electrical construction He will con- tinue with the firm of McHenry & Murray in general consulting practice as before. Mr. Murray, fol- of Gray Hair Restorer O Prove It!: store windows a woman with gra; h:xl' ose who have seen thisdispla gpice arefound at dealers' who want tomake to 75 per cent more than they can make selling the o Mary T. Goldman's iy Hair Restorer. Some dealers buy these poor imitations so cheap that they can and do pay their clerks lic commission on everybottle they sell. And you mission and get a worthless ‘Think 7 the com- sides. it over. Then insist on the genuine —$1 Bottle FREE! MARY T. GOLDMAN, Goldman Bldg., St. Paul, Minn, s ks H Meal Timein cake or pastry. HECKER-JONE New FLOUR Should Mean Good Bread More and more the average family on account of the advancing cost of meats is relying on bread and cereal foods. Home-made bread, made with Heckers’ Flour, stands at the top for nutritive value! Don’tbedooled—no other has the quality. Heckers’ comMbines both Spring and Win- ter wheat. It hasthestrength of the Spring wheat and the fine flavor of the Winter wheat. Heckers’is equally good for bread, Book of practical*home-bak-. ing recipes for the asking Your grocer has it in little or big sacks. True economy—buy it by the barrel S-JEWELL MILLING CO. FEvery Home York Just Rub— Clean floors with Cleans everything. It cuts the dirt and grease and makes work easy. 5c and larger packages. [wen FAIRBANK S CHICAGO “lot the GOLD DUST do your work” TWINS FOR TODAY ONLY MAD RIVER BUTTER, Ib. 33c We also carry Potato Salad, Cabbage Salad, a complete line of Delicatessen, daily. Celery Salad, Boiled Ham, Frankfurters, Bologna Sausage. Also a fine grade of Sausage, Saratoga Chips and Drake’s Cake. The following may be had at reasonable notice: .T\_m; Salad, Shrimp Salad, Lobster Salad, Chicken Sa*ad, and Chick- en Croquettes. The Quality Store OTTO FERRY, Proprietor, 340-342 Franklin St. ORDER IT NOW Ropkins & Co’s Light Dinner Ala fisc_per doven. Koehler's Pilsner, $0c per dozem. Trommer's Svergreen, .5c per ogen Free delivery to all parts of the ty. N{ JACKEL & CO.Teitphone 136-& | Talaa ool and Bliard Parrs | 8ix Tables—five pool and one Billiard, " Tables sold und repairing dome | at reasonable prices Supplies at all times 48 MAIN STREET

Other pages from this issue: