Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 16, 1914, Page 4

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NGRWICH BULLETIN, THURSDAY, APRIL 16, 1914 Slorwich Fulletin ¢ and Goufied 118 YEARS OLD wl:;:: 12c a week; 00 & _ Butered at the Postoffice at Norwich, onn.. as second-class maiter. 5 Telephone Calla: ulletin, Business Office 450, Bulletin Editorial Rooms 36-3. Bulletin Job Office 85-2. Willinantie Office, Room 2, Murray Buliding. Telepione 210. Norwich, Thursday, Ap: 16, 1914, Yhe Bubletin has the largest eirculation of any paper in East- arn Cemnectiout and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,063 houses in Norwich, a::! read by.ninety- three per cent.of the people. In Windhom itass deliversd to over 90 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to/ over. 1,100 and in ali of these piaces it is consid- cred the local saily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural tree delivery outes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all uf the R. F. D. routes in Eas Cennecticut. CIRCULATION average......... 1901 . 4412 5920 average... LET'S HAVE THE SALUTE. In the new erisis which shape over the Mexican situs which a salute to the United States flag has been anded and so far withheld, evi been given very | quickly that the policy of “watchfu! w g" is revocab ot taking a firmer stand in ¥'s position hes been hinges about the salute at Tampico, and it was the arrest of the bluejack- ets there, even thoug ickly released and an apology submtted, which led up to the present affair, developments have shown that it was only one of the several “man £ il wil and contempt” which culminated in the o 1 of backing up the demands for ation made © and insisting upon The government has been 'in touch with affairs about which little or not ing was known by the public but which on being revealed indicate the restraint under which the administration has held fteelf, and show tha: the advis ¢ replacing any semblance of with power not beer has ded, particy is ed with th to other forel ion The expected and £ th desirable outcome demonstration is the firing of Jute and the note to Huerta gi: 1% him reasonable time In which to 1 the demands should im- press him with the wisdom of compli- ance. He has aeveral days In which to reach a decision, but whatever ac- tion becomes necessary it is belleved that this country’s authoritles will pro- ceed with due caution and a realization of the fact that the shedding of Ame: blood will come only as a last There should be beneficial re- the demands and demon- strati THE MELLEN CASE. The nolle of the manslaugh against former President C, S, Mell of the New Haven road follows the general trend of the cese since it was instituted. What was started with a great flourish has gradualiy dwindled until the bottom fell out of it, though from the report of special counsel named in the case it is a question whether any ever existed. Action was brought against Mr. Mellen because the wreck at Westport where a mber of lives were lost. This was the wreck e the taking of cross- overs at high speed was revealed and which resuited in the start on a serles of extensive reforms throughout the system which has done so much for the reestablishment of the “safe first” ‘poliey How much the prosecution of the road officials has had to do in hasten- ing the reform is uncertain, but ther; has been greater progress in that d rection than in the advancement al proceedings. These ha constant indication of weak st indictment whick in. a pumber of officiais met fits ange when the full responsi- was placed on Mr. Mellen, but i that form seric fauit was found with it and rec- ognized by the court. The resuit was that State's Attorney Judso abandoned his task and office and the attorney general of the state and the Hartford county attorney for the state Who were appointed tudy e dence found it of a rant « noMe. T it which showe conviction. The endh tire matter migh been dropped when th ed the r s to the former cha. nothing to chance of a indicates that better have state’s attorney from all the dent, the ¢ pre COULD BE BETTER USED. The gene ilroad conditions, he expenses which have been greatly in- reased by laws and decisions during se past few years and the dificulty which is being experienced in secur- ing a fair deal when it comes to ob- taining an adjustment of the rates which will permit them to do bus- ness on a proftable rafher than a dividendless and losing basis, have resuited in the compilation of figures as to the amounts which the roads have to pay in compliance with re- quirements from which they get no benefit and for which they are not givn a chance to recover. ch fig- ures show that in the twenty-ong states where the full crew bill is in effect it costs the roads $6.800,000 extra 1t would be difficult to figure out_just what-benefit wa= derived from this ex- tra cost -of operation-excepl. as the T r-axe! acter to war- | New York Tribune says: “It ‘may be that compelling theae réHroads to fur- nish employment to a certain numbey of men whom they consider unneces- sary and useless and whose worth has never been satisfactorily proved by the advocates of these laws Is a good thing for the public. Nevertheless, no man- mfacturer or merchant considers it a good thing for his business to have on his payroll men who do no real work. The railroads need the millions these extra men cost to spend on extensions and betterments. Such expenditure would bemefit them and the public and the general business world. It is & ity that fool lawmaking stands in the way, In the light of conditions which are being experienced by the railroads there is much better legislation which could be urged for the general good of all concerned. REVENUE CUTTER SERVICE. During any season the amount of work which the revenue cutter ser- vice is_called upon to do in the way of rendering assistance to vessels in | distress depends entircly upen condi- | tions, but while every winter can be expeoted to furnish enough trouble the last two' have been particularly severe on the coasters. This is well reflected in the report of the cuiter Acushnet which during its vear has saved fifteen vessels, their crew aver- aging ten men to a vessel and cargoes which had an estimaged value of $860,- 000, and this is but, one of the many instances where vafiant service has been rendered when' help was needed to preserve life and property. No ome | knows just what such a service means to those who are shipwrecked or at the mercy of ‘the storms because of | conditions and accidents over which they have no control, more than the followers of the sea. It is such accompMshments which deserve proper consideration both in acknowledgmentiof what has been ac- complished and the service which is always available. Tt should also res ceive the comscientious jattention that s demanded for the provision of the of vesseis flor such work. best type It isn't a case where!any old thing | will do, although onejof the cutters in the servige nearly a half . but where sgaunch, powerful and seaworthy ships) are reghired for proper response tp the demands and in justice to those who undertake such missions of mercy. The service each vear demonstrates it worthy and it | should be given full support. -| CARING FOR DEFECTIVES. | Capital puntshment; and its abolish- ment subject ywhii-h is always open [ to discussion amd’ it receives increased n whenever- the penalty for a ime is paid. Just at the present : is beingesaid about the sub- on of life | imprisonment instead deatn for miigler and vet others who have givem the question much thought urge greafer attention for the defectives, educacionaily and morally. This comes upj at a time when Eng- land has just puk dnte operation & new law for the control of defectives which | fective in Scotland next month. This applies not only] to idiots and imbe- | ciles, but mentali and moral defectives, those who cannotsprofit from ordinary schools, prodigals, outcasts and even aduits whether vich or poor, whose rel- atives or friends recognize their un- suitability to be at large. Institutions for the care, treatment and education 1 people,,of all ages are to take fof s | up ine work of prevention, hoping | thereby to mmterialiy overcome the habit forming conditions which lead to the various.degrees of crime. It is not, however,+a substitute for capital punishment The value of ithis law and the ben- efit of the heip" which it is expected | will be rendered:will be awaited with much”® Interest. As in all laws much depends upon the manner in which it is carried out, whether it reveals good or bad results and whether the good | ones are propenlysrecognized and de- | veloped. | EDITORIAL NOTES, The chances are that Huerta want- Fodia tigeer crowd: aronnn when: the| | salute 1 fired. fxa kserew watchcharm will | nereatter be a new addition to the L‘:“ of us gifts for the boys ia {1 ¢ mavy With carful of tarnishing | the hon Mexico, he must have| | undergo rsion since the mur- | der of Madero. ven the rhubarb pie promises to | reccive ar. unpopular setback by the | dawdling spirit which is being man- ifested by spring. When the I. W. W. egitators are un- | able to jump into prominence any other | way they find that the go-to-church scheme brings result: In order the to satisfy unsettled state of mind which exists over the | democratic platform, it might be well to get an early revision. In Kentucky all labels on poison bottles must carry a prescription for the antidote. In the navy it has been | decided to exciude the hotties, decided abering but | reason to suspect it will the Harvard siride or stroke, Tho mun on the corner says: A Dop- tashion take ton vut on the porch and raitic it for the bemelit of the neighbors. has course vard o inaugurate is to The erection of a statue to William ‘V!w Silent in New York city will be { something for the I W. W. to ponder jover. and should make John Lind | smite | % While it is being claimed that in five | years there will be no region of the worid unmapped, no assurance can be given that the maps will not require frequent attention. Tt will be first class Mexican di- plomacy now for General Villa to ob- ject to the approach of the North At- lantic squadron when he has Huerta already on the run. The New York bride to be who says she is new receiving $10,000 a vear but cannot live properly without half as much again, is probably rating her husband 10 be as a millionaire, Now that Governor Blease of South Carolina has pardoned 1190 prisoners and promises to let the others go, it 18 no wonder that Washington fears the effect of such a following if he ever makes the senate. The Harry Thaw case has been d l\.‘ldrd That is it has been decided | that the United States supreme court | should be allowed to settle the fate of a rich New York gunman. As Huerta says: “Why not The Hague?" | | i similar to onme which becomes ef- | there is no| affect | the family | | aaisy. | high school.—Meriden Record. | truck paten THE WATCH FEVER. “Come away,” urged the tall man, pulling his companion from the jewel- er's window in which was a display of watches. “Don’t 5top to iook at those pretty little things! First you know yowll be buying ome!” “Wel, I've got to do something soon,” protested the other man. B ol tutnip 1 have 38 worn outh “Thapk heaven 1 caught you in time!” breathed the tall man solemnly. “When you begin cailing a faithful old a sign that the tell you my sad experience. E gorm me AH my life I had gone around carrying dollar watches and watches thai canio as & prize with a can of baking powder or were given as a premium win a three years subscription to o maga- zine that nobody wan'ed! “Apd I boasted! My lips would curi with pale scorn when my fricnds ex- bibited the watches they bougat ‘n Switzeriand for the price o1 a small farm or the delicate chronomerers as thin as sheets of paper they o with their drees cloties! There oniy one time of diy, 1 said, w wasn't mada ans . cause & fello s wach that he had to go and hide ki whenever the “tax collector around, 1 caught trains by those dinky ‘watches of mine and I got maricd by the tiniest one of the lot. I stood just as high in the community with a 35 Waich as though it had csr §u00. “Of all ways to was‘e money, =aid T the buying of expsnsivs waiches 1s the limit; dn fact, 1 never had tavus: mugh abeut if, getting mine as prem- | lums and such, until the thiri time I | dropped my watch kersmash on a tiled | flcor. The repair man said 1t wou.l | cost $19 to fix it, 5o I dumped the re maine in the waste bashet ani when I had ffteen minutes t) spare dropaed in | to tavest in a dollar wa’ > | “What's that? I asked the clerk as I | noted s customer further down the | alsle looking at & queer object. | “Ob, that; said the gentiemanly | clerk, “is a new thing, very cleve He placed in my band a thin watch | shaped like a square instead of a ci ele. “Very mice little watch,” he mur- mured. ‘Good timekeeper, 100, for the | price. Of course one wouldn't expect | it to class with the really expensive | timepleces. It's only a hundred and | aty. “When I came to they were laving my brow with wet cloths. He had me biuffed. 1 said 1 guessed I didn't have time o look at watches that day. I kept thinking about the square watch, | however, and the next day I stunk in- | to the best ghop in town. 1 had a| child’s curiosity to see just what fool- ighness they did have in the watch | jine. They showed me watches up to | $1,000 and I lived through it. Of course | | camne I explained to the clerk that I had no intention whatever of buying. “There was one repeater that wus & It cost $300 and its beli was ill, as I said, 1 ever did | wake up in the night and want fo| know the time, and anyhow our grand~ father clock always strikes the quarter | hours. The gentiemanly clerk pointed out how nice 1t would be to be adle to put my hand in my pocket daytimes | fairylike and hear the time without even the trouble of pulling out my watch. Still, in that case, nobody would see my | handsome watch and, anyhow, I hadn't | reached such a decrepit stage that hauling forth a watch would put me in a condition to send for a doctor. | “T kept looking the next day nd all | that week. But I will skip the various | stages of my decline. Anyhow, I OTHER VIEW POINTS | e st e oot | Of course the parents are to blame | for the non-attendance of children in | the public schools for all fathers and mothers could keep the boys and girls in school if they tried—Meriden Journal. { “I haven't had a thing to eat alnqe} 1 left Torreon, madame,” was the piti- ful plea of a refugee on Broad street | Thursday. He got a biscuit tnat one | of the kids brought home from the | One guess is as good as another. Ours is that the reticence of the Bil- lard Co. will hurt matters more than it will heip. Here is where legal techmni- calities possess potential power for | | mischief.—New Haven Journal-Courier Tax dodgers who purger themselves should be gent to Wethersfield so says Governor Baldwin. This would be a calamity for Wethersfield. They are as thick as onions in a Wethersfield It would be necessary to enlarge the Jail greatly beyond its pres= ent dimensions—Mtiddletown Sun. Tourists glve the immigration offi- | cials much trouble, but there is strict and careful enforcement of the law all along the line on the theory that such immigrants as Mrs. Morse's autos and other_ foreign bugs are better on the outside looking in, than on the inside consuming American follage, crops and money.—Waterbury Republican, . What's the matter with now? The annual report of the New York Public Iibrary shows that many more men take advantage of its priv- ileges than women; that the men read the more imporiant and serious books; and the number of women users is steadily declining. Are women 50 ex- | | | the ‘ | | | cited over politics that they can’t mw' | sex time longer for literature?—Waterbury American. Cheerful acceptance of the inevitable will gain more for the stockholders than any otner course and therc is no reason, with the return of prosperous times, why the New Haven stripped of its encumberances in the way of trolleys und steamship lines should not eventually be reestablished on a firm basis and resume the payment of divi- dends. Chairman Elliott is_going at the difffeult task in a way toat snould give him the confidence of the stock- | holders, as it has won him the con- fdence of the public.—Ansonia Senti- | nel. | The strongest argument against the | initiative, referendum and recall is that most citizens are too much given to minding thelr personal business to care 1o be dragged into continual wrangles of a political nature. The in- stitution of these measures would pro- vide a beautiful opportunity for cranks to put through measures or whnich the | majority would disapprove, and for | soreheads to ‘bounce” public servants who were giving general satisfaction. Representative government gives good | results when the people are moral and | careful in their choice of office hoiders. | —Baptist Standard. FISH SPECIAL FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY. Live Lobsters, 1b. 20c; Halibut Cheeks, 15c. A nice choice line | of FRESH FISH with prices to suit Quality. This is all Green, | not a pound of Cold Storage Fish in the market this week. Let Your Order Come, Prompt Delivery. Broadway F Phone 517 | themselves and FISH 0. LACROIX emerged from that orgy with a watch that cost $1,000,000, more or less, 7nd was all duded up Wwith an ironclad contract to. the effect that I wouldn't iry to regulate it with an icepick or stand it on its head in a noriheasterly direction. It was guaranteed not to vary thirty seconds In one month and I wag to return it to the shop for regu- jation till it behaved. “One day it lost ten seconds and I dropped an tmportant case and sprint- ed for the Jewelry shop, pale and hag- gard. 1 found myself murmuring, “Will it llve, doctor? to.the Tepalr man, =0 great was my anguish. Why, I lost more good time chasing thet watch | back and forth ihan in all the previous | years of dollar affairs. Of course, you can’t let an expensive watch do tricks it shouldn’ “1 nearly had nervous prostration the day it stopped short, despite the fact ! that my previous wafehes could trot in | tango time Without my even knowing it. Wealth is a responsibility and o is anything with a lot of money n It. “I had been directed always to wind that watch at the same hour. As I nad | first performed this ceremony at 11.30 | p. m. 1 was terribly inconvienced by | having to sit up till 11.30 nights when I could have gone to bed at 9 just as well as not. All the rest of the house- hold would be sunk in slumber and there was I, nodding drowsily or walking the tioor, waiting like a nurse on that inexplorable watch. | “It dared me to neglect it. I didn't | haye time for anything else. I had nightmares dreaming that T had left it in the coal ceilar or had stepped on it or had sel it down otherwise than strictly north by northeast. I.com- pared it with every clock I passed and | everybody else’s watch and it was nev- | er the same, but of courge mine was right. 4 | “Just as my wife was about to al vorce me because of the awful disposi- | tion I had developed a holdup man one | night appropriated my watca. Then I| went home and slept soundly for the| first time in two months. Tho next| |day T bought this watch for §2 and I| can piay football with it and still catch | trains. Iam an entirely different man. | T hope you will profit by my experi- ence.” “Thank you,” said “And where did you say that square watch?’—Chicago News. | — | the other man. | they carried EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Noble Virtues. In all ages there have been some characters that huve tended to bigotry | and persecuting, there have been some | that tended to charity and largeness of heart. The majority have scquiesced acording to their leaders. As it was in the past, so it is now. AL bottom the L er number are H different. The philosophy of the leas ers has grown broaded, tolgration been the child of doubt and the many | follow where the few lead. it s a| bappy change in most respects, but we | must not glory in it too blindly. what we have to ask ourselves is this —are we tolerant where we have pas- sionately earnest convictions, or where | our immediate interests are affected? | It may be a glorious thing that we | have won a more generous faith, but | the tolerance of sheer indifference can | never be glorious. The charity of those who care nothing, of those who | have nothing to lose and are giving nothing, is merely a passive condition | of mental indolence; it may not be 8 For I crime, it i certal not a virtue. But, | contrary to this, true generosity, true | charity, are the noblest of vietues; | that is to say. the generosity of those who admit that other persons have as much right to an opinion s themselves | the charity of those who admit that other opinions, even if Wrong, may yet e sincere. To Put On Flesh Ant! lpciease Weight A Phys: | an's Advice | Most t | pounds ¢ of health nd =iren mukc them gain a s pound. All the fat-pr of their food Just stay in testines until they pass from the bo. te. What such people need Something that will prepare these fatly food elements o that their blood can absorb them and deposit them all about the body—something, too, that wil multiply their red bibod corpuscles and ¢ thelr blood's carrying p ition 1 atways a Sargol tablet with every | is not, as some neieve, & patented drug, bul Bination of six o and powerful | known to narmless, yet wonderfully effective und | a singlo tablet eaten with each meal | | orfen has the effect of increusing the Weight of & thin man or woman from three to five pounds a week. Sargol is sold by Lee & Osgood Co. and otne 004 druggists everyw on a posi- Tve g ntec of welght increase or ney 7Disc0u‘ragcdr By Drink Habit| ! Drink habit is a dis ging habit both to the drinker and o the drink- ers family. Drinking men promise Leir es they will but always fall to do so, | for k pawer 10 resist. | repeated stop drinking, because th ger than the discouraged stop drinking, investigate | Drink Habit Treatment, | a sure, harmless vegetable that removes the craving a for drink in three the use of hypoderm to Neal which i: remedy necessity injec- | tions. Call, or ‘phone for full particulars. proofs that the make you a_sober 302 Chapel tel. 5540 (day or | | Send for free book. DRUG HABIT SUCCESSFULLY TREATED. FiSH ish KMarket 40 Broadway | % omit work that required putting my | cura Ointment which was very. soothing. | ting HANDS BAD WITH SALT RHEUM Small Water Pimples en Fingers, Itched and Burned. Painful and Sore Cracks. Cuticura Soap and Dintment Cured in a Month. Yheum. At irst thero was an eruption of small water pimples on the'nside of the fingers, and by not paying any attention to ‘the humor my hands gradually became ‘worse and began to itch and burs and one aftor another cracks appeared around the mails, on theimside of the fingers and on the end of the jeints until I was discouraged, 28 they were very painful and sore. I had hands in water and could hardly work a$ all on account of the biceding eracks. and Ointment, aad I found by washing my | hands in quite varm water and Cuticura BSoap that they were improving. I began wrapping my fingecs nightly in pieces of #oft; linen, after a good application of Cuti- In & month my hands were completely cured and ¥ have never been afflicted with the troublo since.” (Signed) Mrs. C. L. Parker, Nov. 22, 1912, ‘When you buy 2 fine toilet soap think of the advantages Outicura Soap possesses over ‘N APRI Industrial Exposition » STATE ARMORY ; MERCHANTS’ WEEK Opens Saturday, April 18, at 2 P. M. Wonderfully Attractive Exhibits Beautiful Decorations Delightful Musical Program ADMISSION, ORWICH L 18 to 25, 1914 25 CENTS tho most expensive toilet scap ever made. 1In addition to being absolutely pure aud ro- freshingly fragraut. it is delicately yet effec- tively medicated, giving you two soaps in one, a toilet aud a skin 503p 3t 0ne prico. Sold throughout the world. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Address | Post-card * Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." #3Men who shave and shampoo with Ou- ticura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp. An Insect Which Eats Smoke. In a recent informal discussion of smeiting and its troubles, an expert spoke of the “sulphur bag,” an insect which, according to his . statements thrives only in supertropical temper- | atures with plenty of sulphur smoke, and has a remarkable knack of get on the hack of the smelt nuecic when both his hands are oc pied. Another smelter said he had noted them in California, where they had annoyed the Shasta County op- erators, but had not been known else- | where in the state until Shasta coun- | U ores were shipped to San Francisco | bay points when they had appeared there. Apparently, no entomologist | has vet on the genus and| species of isect.—Engineering | and Mining Journ; | Boy Who Can Do It. | T. R. will straighten us out on the subject of canal tolls when he gets | back, and he and Champ Clark can | shalie hands on it; see if they dom't— | St. Louis Globe Democrat. { That sudden breeze, predicts \Get a Gas Heater Be prepared—— a freeze. You all ¥new i's @anserous to eat oreakfast in a cold room, and 1 sides. it's not very comfortuble. Whereas with one of our Heazers installed, you only have to light it a few minutes ~ ore breakfast is called in order - beve the AQIuing guor: coinfortably We carry those Heaters in thres dif- terent styivs: zuor Reflector Heater In two sizes and The Oricle, somothing new in Gas Heators. Call and see them at our office and <t as explain their usofuiness, City of Norwich @ias & Electrical Depar imeat Alice Bidg., 321 Main St. THERID 15 ae agvernaing medium 18 Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul« ietin for business resulta An Trolleys » Lead To 3 SHOWS_ Matinee, 10c 2.30,7,8.45 Auanan“M Evening 10c and 20c THE MOST MARVELOUS PICTURES EVER TAKEN Paul Rainey's African Hunt A $250,000 PRODUCTION Six Reels of Thrilling Scenes and Experiences in Mr. Rainey’s Hunt For Big Game in the:Wilds of Africa. 350 Men Spent a Year Getting These Pictures. NO OTHER PICTURE OF THIS KIND IN EXISTENCE The Best Show of the EATR 4 Season—5— Big Acts— 5 DAVIS THE rea The Russells ¥ Novelty Scenery PIERMONT TRIO MARLOWE and HALEY Some Singing Act. Two Real ALLEN CARTER Comedy, Singing, Talking SHORTY'S SACRIFICE MUTUAL WEEKLY 2-Reel Broncho Drama All the Latest Events Keysone—THE STAR BOARDER—Comedy H B | i Comedians. MARGARET WOOD Classy Comedienne ™ Center! Norwich How Much Do You Want To Pay? Of course you can pay more than the following little prices for we have the more expensive toilet prepara- tions as well, but here’s a fine selection of those which cost little. Popular Standard Toilet Articles at small prices grouped at our Toilet Goods Department in like man- ner for your easy selection. JUST REMEMBER At 5¢ Caigate's Turkish Bath Seap Imported Castile Soap Copco Soap Lava Soap Williams' Shaving Seap Chesebrough’s Vaseline Johnson's Absort Cotton Orange Wood Sticks 1 dozen Emery Boards Chumois & Court Plaster, three $ Drinking Cups 1 pint Ammonia ors At 10c Munyon's Witch Hazel Scap Jergen's Glyc Paimolive Soap Amoline Ant Colgate's Qaf gate's Tar Colgate's Vioris Soap Colgate’s Mopad Violet wving Stick schanics’ Soap Paste Blue Secal Vaseline Osborne’s Pera Johnson's A D & Ramsd: Camphor 1 pho-Napthal Pyramid_ Deodorizer Household Am Scotts§ Tooth Brushes Powder-Puffs Pumice Stone Chamois Skin Aluminum Drini Soap Cottor I's Cold ng Cups R R e L WHICH GROUP 4711 Rose Glycerine Soap Colgate’s Cashmere Bouguet Coigate’s Colco Soap Cake Soap in Aluminum Box Lavender 4 Soap Wiiliams’ Talcum P or Carnation n Powder aere Bou- LaFrance — Woodland Violet Antisept Powder Talcum Absor Tooth Brushes ent Cotton hnson's At 19¢ Woodbury's Facial Soap Caticur Pompeian acial Cream Witch Hazel Cream X r, paste and ol Liauid Shampoo th Paste Swansdown Face Powder Lustrite Nail Enamel Diexiizen Nail -Buffers Bpiro~Perspiration Powder Tooth Brushes Busingsy ! Colonial Theater | Wednesday, Thursday, April 15, 16 The Perils of Pauline 3000 Feet—In Three Parts—3000 Feet Featuring Pearl White, Crans Wilbur, Paul Panzer. The Most Taiked of Serial Picture of the kind. A WINNING MISTAKE ........., .Farce Comedy THE FINALE BOOK AGENTS Comedy CRIMINOLOGY AND REFORM Biograph Drama MATINEE, 5¢ EVENING, 10c Colonial Theatre Fri. Only—“THE LION AND THE MOUSE”—Fri. Only 6,000 Feet—Chas. Kleine’s Mammoth Six Reel Achievement—5,000 Feet Special Big Cast, with especially Constructed Scenery, and Photography by Famous Lubin Company.. Bewilderingly Beautiful. Mat. 10c—Only Rival of “THIRD DEGREE”—Eve. 15c COME TO FLOWERLAND Grand Fair and Carnival for the benefit of I. O. O. F. Building Fund TONIGHT in OLYMPIC HALL Singing by a local quartette and M rs. Avery Park will give recitations. FLOOR MOPS | If you have polished floors, such as linoleum, painted or varnished floors, you are certainly missing one of the greatest | conveniences of the house if you have not a Dusting or Il?ol‘uh Mop. We have a line of the latest in O-Cedar and | Wizard Mops and Polishes. | PAINTS and VARNISHES Agent for Heath & Milligan and Wadsworth Howland Sapolin Varnish Stains and Enamels. STOVINK for red stove covers. kig MENBETS mend everything in pots and pans, water- bottles, etc. URO HAND SOAP, 4 10c cans for 25c. The Household Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street THE BEL - HOFF| fajse Faol and Biliard Pariors European Plan Rates 75 cents per day and up HAYES BROS, Telephone 1327, 26-28 Broadway . Cl i, . » | 3 F Fivocin ans surceon DR F. W. HOLMS, Dentist Room 1. Seeond Floor. Shamuon Eids. | Shannen Building Annex, Room A. Night ‘Dhose 1088 Fetepnons 628 cilid 8ix_Tabies—five pool and one Billiard Tables sold and repairing Goue «t reasonable prices. Supplie: at all times. 49 MAIN STREET

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