Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 8, 1914, Page 4

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Bulletin B : ulletin Business Office 480, nmlm%u’ . tin Job Office 35-2. Office, Teom 3, Murray Willimauntie Bafiding. Telephone 210. B T T e T e Norwich, Friday, May 8, 1914, ———een Ve : Bulletin hes the largest circulation of any paper in Esst- orn Comnecticut and from three to four times larger than that of | any in jNorwich. It is delivered to over:3,000 of the 4,053 howses' in Nerwich, a: | read by ninety- three perioceat. of te people. ' In | Windham it 18 delivered to over $U0 houses, n Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in ali of these places it 18 consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural fres delivery routes. The Bulletin is seld in every town and on all of the R. F. D, routes in Eas Connecticut, CIRCULATION AVErage...c.cecseeeees 4,412 1901 1805, average..eeesveeems 5,920 CANNOT START TOO SOON. It is quite natural that the New London Globe in looking with approval upon the suggestion of a rose garden for Mohegan park in this city should likewise consider it an excellent thing for that city, and so it would be. No city can afford to ignore the making and keeping of itself attractive. To do so means that civic pride and in- terest are failing to measure up to the requirements of a live and grow- ing city and negligence is taking the place of enterprise. Norwich, however, has a handsome natural park, the available land for such an added attraction as a rose garden would provide, a park super- intendent who is particularly well fit- ted as his efforts therein have dem- onstrated to establish and maintain such a garden and it must not be for- | shrabs and vegetatiomgin general get. g £ g N-v'mnn.l(w'l.—mqnuflnlllhh-‘ of organizing a Yale chapter of the | ancien Mwm : ] . New. York is mueh pregent time over thi state by the gypsy mbth might be, when it. is rpalized what an undesirable and devastiating pest it is. Fortunate is the state which is over- i EATRE DA“VT’S:—IHQCCDW‘Y DREANO & GOODWIN ST jsevts Worer” ROBEOK 113 HOEes FUSTDEVERE TG 4 o 3F gt In_baseball, the Yale team is in- its %l mettie. it ig? ! ] About crew, the question is still but the spring regatta on Friday wi ashow in some degree where the oars- men stand, and the Philadelphia Hen- ley next week and the Cor- nell two weeks off will do show what the nmew rowing methods are likely to produce in June. In defeating Williams Wednesday at the fleld, Yale won from a team made up with the exception of the catcher, of last year's veterans, who broke into Yale’s long string of victories with a the | defeat of 2-0. And in swimming, | liams has had the habit of -beating ‘which must | Yale in baseball for at least half a be met.to insure election. It will not | dozen years. On Saturday she beat be an easy thing to make. Corneli, 4 to 3, and it drew out Yale's ——— ‘best p! ings thy or should | resulted.. A number of times Yale men to m'-l?.'. u':tln ool#flo’q-' filled the bases and. Hodge's wonder- d to produce a distinctive coliege { ful control and excellent support got spirit, is a certain social solidarity, a | Willilams out of the holes. Finally he kind of common 1 grou ‘weakened and with the score 4-4 and her students can meet with united in- terests. Y prompt and persistent. action in tak- ing all possible prevemtive measures, and keeping at it untll they are erad- icated is the only thimg, to do. There is.no. chance for medkttion where they are concerned. It means a fight from the very moment they are discovered and the sooner it is fought to a fin- ish the greater relief'’'will the trees, ] 5 i : it i ¥ g ant by the Taftville Pharmacy. P. S. Our Saxo Salve stops itching and begins healing at once. d i i 7 of the public prosecutor, Forquier- Tinvilie, a man who even at that time ‘was notorious as among the ! most inhuman of the monsters who | then governed revoluntionary | ‘The tribunal which ju d the queen was composed of a president and four judges, the public prosecutor, the chief registrar and fifteen jurymen. The witnesses, over forty in number, con- sisted of all classes. They appear to have been selected as much as possi- Dble from among those who were known or thought to be the enemies of the i Eg H Certain sections of New' England know to their sorrow}what the inva- sion of the gypsy rooth means and they -Hkewise furmish the best expe- rience in combatting {| . Still where great sums of money have been spent and city, state and national efforts made to overcome tif there is a great amdunt of good 'which has been done by the individual. ‘This is no better illustrated than by the results which hawe been obtained in this state for the eradication of the browntails and the tent caterpil- lars, both of which had become well established in certain towns. The in- teresting of the individuals and par- ticularly the school children has re- suited in the destruaifion of millions of egg masses and thereby prevented the hatching out of a, countless num- ber of caterpillars (o’ prey upon veg- etation. How much good has been done by the scoutinjy for these egg masses during the fall, winter and early spring can noti be estimated in dollars and cents and need not be, the satisfaction comes from the knowl- edge that the mowement of a merci- less enemy against vegetation has been materially cherked. Colonial Theatre 2,000 Feet “FROZEN TRAILS,” Sensational “THE SPEEDER'S REVENGE,” With Lill “SILENT TRAILS,” £ q Esk Pathe . Northwestern Drama Gk W n Walker and Wallie Van xquisite Vitagraph drama with Edwin August “ART for a HEART” . with Lillian Walker and Wallie Van “S8CENES in NORDLAND,”. ...... Glorious Scenio Trip in Nordland PATHE WEEKLY—With all the Mexican Trouble. Yale at bat in the last half of the ale has, from the nature of | ninth, let Cornish and Pumpelly walk, Its location in a city affording & va- | after Reilly had t on an error. riety of outside interests, from its | Hunter drove out a long sdcrifice fly peculiar social system, and from the [and Reilly scored. It was by far the diversity of its 'extra-curriculum ac- |best game Yale has shown this year, obstacies in the way of | compared with which the Virginia game, which Yale won 17-4, was a each other and develop =& common | farce ground. The classes are so larj The spring track meet Saturday af- the time and opportunities so limited | ternoon was held with a strong north for a man who is taking & busy part |wind blowing down the field and this have been often felt to be reasons |helped in getting the hundred yards why the men, even in & single class, | down to 10 seconds flat. Fast times very often leave college without | were made in most of the sports and knowing even all their classmates, Poucher made a new track record in A decidedly interesting movement | the mile with the time of 4 minutes, to bring about a closer class unity and | 25 2-5 seconds. In the 440, Wilkie more Yale spirit has been started this | ran the distance, against the wind spring. It takes the form of “class | halfway, in 48 4-5 seconds, almost the parties.” The idea developed in the | Yale record he made last spring. The senior class and it was advertised { class of 1915 won the meet with 30 1-2 with considerable mystery for a couple | points, 1916 second with 28, and the of weeks before the big event came |Tesults generally showed that for the in the form of a smoker at the Taft.|dual meet with Princeton Saturday An issue of a new Yale sheet, the |there is a very good prospect. Bull-Dog, announced the detalls. The party, with a lot of impromptu en- hourtnnmcnt by c.l.ea: tt:ll:ng ‘was &/l pa, NG mwoshe: week [he | mesting on May 12th, at which will ?:;‘;?P""‘;wf‘:‘n # umow:d &t | be discussed the matter of making a this sparkling event was held. It was tunnel or cut in one end of the struc- for the laudable purpose of Infusing | LS to Drovide for a 220 yard track Tore life and more of & set-together | Secretary Daggett has stated their po- spirit in 1915, and it succeeded S o Do comwitat snake dance through the city streets absolutely unbiased in the mattere, ex- cept that they hesitdite about spending and the campus, and then a couple of'| forty to fifty_thousand dollars to pro- es in the junior oval, untll thelyije for a 220 vard dash in which campus cop put them out, proved it. |few are interested, as compared with The Senlors are coming back With|the 60,000 people Who, it is hoped, will B D o et 1 et "oy | attend’ the foothall contests. R e e Tl 25, Dussott reports great dificuity raising funds -for the undertaking chapel tomotrow morning in Sailors'{largely, he thinks, because of the gen- jumpers, in honor of the ve day.|eral condition of business throughout the country; and not because of the nsettled track problem. Not a single subscription has been made dependent upon the track being placed in the Bowl. By the first of June the em- been unimportant. On her second ex- amination the queen was allowed a chair. The hall was densely crowded, many of the mob having come in order to enjoy the spectacle of the poor woman, once their queen, being for hours brow beaten by Forquier-Tin- wville. Throughout the trial there does not seem to have been lmnng the crowd any strong expression of feeling eith- er against or for the queen, but they frequently called on her to rise, so that she. should be better seen than when seated, and once at this demand she said: ‘“When will the people be tired of my sufferings?” At ten min- utes past 4 o'clock on the morning of October 16, after the queen had been in the courtroom twenty hours, the verdict of guilty-was pronounced, and a little after noon of the same day she was executed. VIOLATING AUTO LAWS, A warning which ghould have much influence with the dirivers of automo- biles in this state is the statement which has been made by Secretary of State Phfilips whenein he urges the strict “enforcement of the automobile laws and a lfberal | tion of jail sentences by cour! for violations. Such is a result of ‘cases which have been brought to his \attention through investigations in comnection with the duties of his office and the momentous fact that fourteen deuths in this state have been caused by :automobiles dur- ing the past four mbomths. The aim of the secretary’s wamning is to se- cure the prevention of .accidents rath- er than the infliction of punishment for while he has the power to sus- pend and revoke the licenses:of driv- ers, which deserves to be wused, for the beneficial effect it*will hawe when- ever occasion requires, the desire is The committee of twenty-one in of the new Bowl is to have a WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Cook vs. Secretary. . You know, I'd rather be cook in th' white house 'n be secretary o' state. If ye're secretary o' state an’ some day ye say to the president Let's light a match to one o them little fire- cracker countries down in th’ Panama district,’ an’ he looks out th’ windy an' says, ‘Aw, I don't know; we got no comeback,’ you got to take it But th' cook, oh, me! oh, my! she can make 'm jump through a hoop. She hollers upstairs before breakfas ye's want y'r eggs boiled or fried? an’ when the -president hollers back, nice like, ‘I want ‘em botl she Photo copyright, 1914, by American Press Association. Bluejackets In Action Aboard Michigan Bluejackets on the battleship Michigan are shown with machine.guns-and rifles trained on Vera Cruz. ises to be a glowing occasion. n for further ex- gotten that the rose is Norwich's flow- er, of which it cannot have too many and is never likely to have enough. Every year is revealing great strides in the development of Mohegan park through which it is more and more being realized just what the accept- ance of that gift meant, but there is nothing which would add a greater attraction than a rose garden which would be in bloom from the opening to the close of the season. It is of necessity an undertaking which would require several yvears to fully develop but the sooner it is attempted the quicker it would be realized and as| a stimulant to horticulture about the city nothing could be better. There is no reascn why Norwich should not become as famous for its rose garden and roses as for its other attractions. DISARMAMENT THE THING. The order which has been issued by the commander of the United States troops in Colorado for the disarma- ment of all factions in the mining re- glons of that state which are expe= riencing strike trouble is a course well calculated to restore peace and estab- lish law and order. It is intended to remove the unjust element which armed force brings into the labor dis- pute and it should be quickly recog- nized as one of the things following the arrival of the regulars which will do the most to prevent further un- necessary bloodshed. As a disinterested arm of the law the regulars have been sent there to put a stop to the lawlessness. The impossibility of any such thing being accomplished while firearms and mu- nitions of war remain in the posses- sion of either side is thoroughly real- ized, but there is the best ground for belief that the government troops will insist upon a full recognition of the order. Trying to defy the army de- tail would be the height of folly and mean a sacrifice of life for which there could be no justification. Thus is submission, full and com- plete as to firearms, the best policy to be pursued. It means the elimina- tion of what has no place in such a dispute and in the breaking up of disorder opens the way for a sound and sensible consideration of the la- bor question uninfluenced by death dealing force. There can be no doubt a8 to where the responsibility for fur- ther deaths there will lie. —— EXTENDING EDUCATION. What a benefit our educational in- stitutions are to the vouth of other countries and what justification those countries have for anticipating great and compensating results through the influence which those students will have upon the future of their coun- try, is well indicated by the fact that there were 4,222 foreign students in attendance at the colleges and univer- €ities in the United States last year. These students of college or graduate grade, are not concentrated at the larger and better known institutions, might be aexpected, but are distrib- ‘uted over 276 different colleges, uni- versities and schools of technology, Canada has the largest representa- tion with 833 but China Is very close with 694 and Japan a good third with 493. India even sends 162 students to this country while Turkey favors us with 143, Persia 21, Korea 13 and Siam the same number, There is a strong representation frem Latin- America, Cuban students numbering 209, Mex- ican 223, Brazil 118, Colombian 37, Ar- gentine 43, while all the other South .and Central American republics are represented, of the educational op- portunities . which are. afforded in ‘Great and continental Eurepe yammers back to ‘m, ‘Ye's "Il have 'em | fried’ Us American people ought to 'lect th’ cook in th' white house. I'd vote for one that'd make pie for breakfast and boiled ham an’ cabbage for dinner. They wouldn't be no lunch 'less th’ president carried it h ‘im in a tin pail. This country al gon- na be run right if th’ white hou bankment will be completed, it is es- he obi -ance of the law S utiie dhe R timated, but the question of its set- and the saving of life. Experience has showm that the over- looking of violations only results in repeated and more flagrant disregard for the regulations, and for the rights and privileges of others. Educating the drivers to the responsibility which been announced NEW ENGLAND STOMACH SUFFERS FIND SHORT ROAD BACK TO HEALTH the Yale facuity, under the auspices and support of Yale university and the National Geographic society. Some of the members of the party have sailed already and the topographers Harvard game on the upper half of ;.h. Bowl, which the embankment will form. leave next week in order to have maps cook makes fricasseed billy goat’ ictims H i - saved my life. T am better now thad. is imposed upon them by law and|of tne section of the country to be Al e Gott Enow bow. 0. Bound Vi of Digestive Disorders | I"zve been for 20 years. which they must recognize must come | explored ready when the main party FAMOUS TRIALS a rump steak till it's tender. Them Tell of Wonderful Effect polrs. Shaw had been treated boti through a strict enforcement ihereof. fl‘;i;l'e!. white houlf enu!;'s smyd nl flol:: wlul: uf-reo p:,r}:“::ronsi a;\d l:ild l\:mfdorx_ml:a lations are good or bad e nature and importance of the at th' table eatin’ an ¢ coo n ope . She found relief quick- Z‘f’:‘;"“:ozfi“ e thing amless they | work has been set forth by Director keeps 'em eating foolishness, us muts of Mayr Remedy. b These stathoaents come from le Gilbert H. Grosvenor of the National Geographic society. ' He considers the | TRIAL OF MARIE ANTOINETTE. discovery and umncovering of the an- at home might as well have kings and dukes rulin’ us. A fellow with Iice cream an’ duck in his insides can’t clent fortress city of Macchu Pichu, | The trial and execution of the ac- | tell a fellow with horse meat an' boll- built by the Peruvians centuries ago, | compiished, beautiful and unfortunate|ed Potato in his stummick what to “the most important archaeological | Queen Marie Antoinette is one of the | do. event in America last 300 years.” He|most pathetic es of French his- | ..“All out! All out! End of the line! says that the work Prof. Bingham hds | tory. She had married to Louis ok out gettin’ off. please. done, and’the work he has mapped | XVI of France when he was dauphin, atch your step!’ out fo do, promises to solve the mys-|and her uncommon loveliness fitted — tery of America’s past and throw 1ight | her well as the queen of a gallant na- amons thousands. The remedy is known everywhere for its true merit. Mayr's Wonderful Stomach Remedy clears the digestive tract of mucoid accretions and poisonous matter. It brings swift relief to sufferers from ailments of the stomach, liver and bowels. Many declare it has saved them from dangerous operations and many are sure it has saved their lives. are enforced. Between the authori- ties, the courts and the powers of the secretary of state this unpecessuy death list should be wiped out and the guicker the beiter. Warnings have had litile effect in the past. Action is what is needed. Many New England stomach suffer- ers and. in fact, people all over the United States have found remarkable results from the use of Mayr's Won- derful Stomach Remedy. Hundreds in this state alone have taken this remedy and tell today of EDITORIAL NOTES. - the benefits they received. Its effects That Tampico affair happened at|on the civilization and the era be- | tion, and as much she would have been i Because of the remarkable succesd Just ne right tlme 1o have flag day | fore Columbus reached the new world | honored in France, had she iived be- || OTHER VIEW POINTS || come quickiy—the frst dose con-of this remedy there are many imita- take on a new significance this year.|OVer four hundred years ago. The fleld | fore oppression had roused the peopl ! vinces; no long treatment. Here is|tors, so be cautious. Be sure it's of work for the new expedition is a|to madness. portion of Southern Peru on the east- | Antoinette was married to Louis at ern edge of the Andes. As one of the | Versailles on May 18, 1770. She de- most inaccessible parts of the Andes, | voted herself to the interests of her the region has been occupied by the | people with an aspiduity unparalleled ancieht peoples of Peru, and reported | in a sovereign of her age; yet, be- ruins there that have not yet been | coming obnoxious to the court party, studied make it an attractive ares. her character was assalled in every Prof. Bingham believes that an ex- { shape and quarter. She was accused amination of the ruins, studies of the | of setting on foot conspiracies which styles of architecture and of other | never existed and of entertaining remains that may be found fairly | views which never entered her mind. near the surface of the ground, should | The queen was termed “the Aus- eventually enable a classification to!trian” and it was openly asserted as MAYR'S. Go to Engler's drug store and ask about the wonderful results it has been accomplishing in cases they know about—or send to Geo. H. Mayr, Mfg. Chemist, 154-156 Whiting St., Chicago, I, for free book on stom- ach ailments and many grateful let-, ters from people who have been re- stored. Any druggist can tell you its wonderful results, what two who have taken it say: _— MRS, S E_JOHNSON, 61 Whit- more Street, Hartford, Conn., wrote: D e eough cougrops | My pains left me the next day after will provide = lot more soft snaps for | cing the treatment Tt is simply officials to look into matters other by than straight in business transactions,, | , MRS. CLARE SHAW, 21 Majestic but no remedy to make the guilty ones | Avenue, Norwood, R. I, wrote: I re- give back the lot.—Middletown Press. | ®#ived your sample treatment and it A rose garden in the park would be another argument for the extension of the electric line in that direction. There is no army which can mobi- lize on a bright sunny day and stick so persistently at its work as the dan- delion. Germany has a child which lived four years without a brain. It didn't The automobile s here to stay. It | is an ordinary, everyday means of | or have to worry over the interpretation of “ishkabibble.” It is a questioned right of any geo- graphical society to suppose that Col. Rooseveit doesn't know when he has discovered something new. From the manner in which Richard Olney declines a $12,000 job it must make the secretary of state shudder for lack of understanding. The man on the corner says: It is a good thing to guard against a rum- mage sale bringing back all that was discarded in a clean-up movement. The rescue of twenty-seven of the crew of the Columbian is only an- other important bit of every day evi- dence as to the value of wireless tel- egraph. It cost 368,307 to get rid of Lorimer according to the report, but a strong effort is being made in Pennsyl- vania to get rid of Penrose cheaper than that. —— e, How many other cities are there about the state which are in the same situation as New Haven over selling to minors, but which haven't been found out vet? Carranza gives noti to the wor'd that he is not a candidate for the peace prize, and strange to say Sec- retary Bryan is not trying to persaade him to the contrary. ‘While the budget for the coming year Is being made up it is weil to remember that the city took upon it- elf some time ago the obligation of widening Franklin street and the pro- ject has never been completed. Massachusetts is to get one member of the cabinet for the summer and Rhode Island another. Possibly the president 'will decide to locate the summer’ capital in southeastern Con- necticut. He could go further and do worse. It only requires a giance at the ‘business before eve: seasion of the criminal court to demonstrate how gredt are the opportunities and exten- sive the needs for reformation. There are ledsons there which, only & court- Toom. can teach, be made, which in connection with bi- ological, physiographic, linguistic and historical studies, ought to result fin- EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Forgetting Youth. One of the most striking of memory among us is the forgetting of youth. We fail signally to remember how it used to be with us when younsg, and hence fall into the most inexcus- able misunderstandings with the new generation. Don’t you recall, for instance, that at the age of 10 and under you did not care a whoop about quiet? Then | why do you squirm so now, and why arc you so amazed when the group of tots under your window shriek atf each other, scream out laughter at the top of their power, and howl like hurt puppies when they fall and skin their noses? You fail to see why on earth they need to make so noise. ‘The trouble with you is that you for- get. Rest, quiet and peace are no treat to youngsters. Then there is order. Did any human transportation and as a business pleasure vehicle it will every day be- come more numerous. well as privately Insinuated that her heart was estranged from the country of her husband and her mind solely occupled with the inteyests of her na- tive land. The affair of the diamond necklace created a great sensation in France and militated against Antoin- ette, although she was able fully to prove her innocence. But the long gathering clouds broke in revolution- ary storm in 178! On the 6th of Oc- tober the mob broke into the palace, murdered some of the bodyguard and threatened the queen in the most frightful manner. Marie Antoinette received a letter from a friendly clergyman imploring her to fly, as her life would be sacri- ficed. She resolved to remain and destroyed the warning letter. She was unable, however, to' stem. the tide of oprosition to her and she finally fled with the king to Varennes. They were arrested and brought back to rage did not fail in | legislative assembly, dy she was present | heard his disposition | pronounced and then went into the Temple where he was imprisoned. On 'the 2d of August, 1793, the widow | of Louis XVI. was torn from her children and _was treated like a com- mon felon. She was removed from the prison of the Temple to that of the conclergerie, there to linger until her Record. fruit trees have not blosomed pr has been the case some years. weather sets in and trees blossom forth, there need be no fear It is extremely difficult day observance. old puritanical style, and although times are changed they still to submit to any other ruling. -esidents of West Haven are not alone notions find their way into the legis- lature and prevent the passage of any law to bring about the change that th e majority of the residents of this state evidently feel is desirable. It is going pretty far when they refuse to acquiesce in the decision of a court of law in which tbe only question was of a blasting cold spell—Rockville Journ- | al. | 1f the law is| enforced this increase in the number of | automobiles need not necessarily be- H come a menace to the public—Meriden | The only grain of comfort in this! late spring business, is the fact that maturely only to be blasted later, as 1t is getting so late now, that once warm | to please | some people on the matter of Sun- | They cling to the| adhere o their old opinions and are unwilling | The | in this feeling. People with the sams | SCHOONER EMILY L. WHITE now discharging at our dock 500,000 Feet Rough and Dressed Gulf Cypress Lumber (The Wood Eternal) Everything for Inside and Outside Work Buying in large quantities for cash with water ship- ments enables us to sell at bottom prices.. We shall be pleased to receive your inquiries. CHAPPELL CO., being below the teens ever at any time want to put anything back where it belongs? r otherwise dread con- fusion? Order is another old age mi- crobe, attacking undly minds that have begun to go to seed. To be sure, children should be trained to keep still and to be orderly, but the point is that the average nor- mel child does not hanker after these virtues, and that we should fiet be so put out, and should not think our children exceptional and incorrigible When they are riproarious and love to_upset. It we remembered we should be more patient. Do you forget how you hated to have your ears washed, hated to go to bed and hated to wait to be helped to the pudding after all the grown ups were attended to? Come, come! brush up your recol- lection! ~You, too, mounted once the eaks of youthful - fancy, and be- ieved with your whofe heart what now seems nonsense, and had all the strange exuberances, infatuations and quixotic notions, together with the monumental disregard for order, | cleanliness and quiet that mark your children. % Teach your young, to be sure, discl- pline, lecture, or even spank them, if| queen, Torget! ‘u you will. but—don't Whether the public peace was disturb- ed. We surely have some queer peo- ple in Connecticut.—New Britain Her- ald release from human barbarity on the 16th of October. Her cell in the pri on was in the worst quarter, where the lowest scum of the nonpolitical prisoners were kept. She was not even allowed the dignity of colitude, but was obliged to be within hearing of the profanities of the lowest rabble in the world. The accusations m“fizfi against the unhappy queen on trial were mere- ly a?vpnnccd because her enemies had still respect enough for justice to mimic its forms in thelr guiity court. In the indictment she was pamed the “Widow C " She was charged with having dered the public money and wii leaguing in secret with the foreign enemies of France. The clearness of her innocence, the falsehood and frivolity of witneases, the eloquence of her defenders, were of no avail. On the 11th of September Marie An- toinette was transafe from the prison room she had occupled since the 2d of August into the dark and narrow underground cell still shown to visitors interested in her tragic life. The 10th of October was the-first day of the trial of Marie Antoinette, In the room in which it took place there werc only two candles lighted. The in her widow's cap and SAWR, Sl 08 3 800l in frans The Dansant’s Every Afternoon from Three to Five-thirty p. m. KENNETH RIDGE, Watch Hill, Rhode Island MISS E. L. HANDY, Instructor Demonstrations Every Thursday of the POPULAR DANCES. Dinner Dances can be arranged for The !(omuth Ridge Company. } I 1, st Your bath tub, sink, and all other fix- tures are quickly cleaned with GOLD DUST It cleans and makes everything sanitary. 5c and larger packages: =z FAIRBANK 5] CHICAGO

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