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a week; 50o 480, - Rooms 358 Job, his the largest of any paper in East- ana from three than that of is delivered 1 . e 4412 3905, averagecseacesens 5,920 ~ REPUBLICAN CITY TICKET. 3 Mayor s 3 ARTHUR D. LATHROP J Aldermen GEORGE R, HAVENS CASPER K. BAILEY Councilmen Y BEAUSOLEIL S. MURRAY, AL W. CHAPMAN - :tr'mémn CHAPMAN P ity Clerk ABYRUR G. CrowELL o) City Treasurer FRANK H. WOODWORTH ©_ City Sheriffs E W. ROUS S W. BURTON “HELP TO GET OUT THE VOTE. Today o'clock in the morning until _ o'clock in the afternoon, permitting the every voter should use every effort to get to the polls and discharge “the which he owes to himself, _ Stay-at-home voter. Such but con- | tributes to Indifference ana laxity in _ the conduct of city affairs. = There “hould always be a live, active inter- & in municipal contests for from such a manifestation upon the art of the citizens at large is the cue o be given to those placed in office. the idea prevail that any kind of will do and that is what given. but with the proper toffice at Norwieh, matter. Ofrice 85-a, the polling places in all the will be open from nine four instance warning ' in deavored to ibator Whe' {to others, ‘only to receive ‘blow and disappear. Pploughing ahead through the fog with- out régard for anything. It 15 high time that there was 3 Mixed method of procedure in time of fog. Today it is left chiefly to judg- mont and in these two instances it has been the freighter operated under ths full speed shead principle which has nullified all the responsibility which the passenger vessel realized and as- sumed. From all accounts the collier couldn't have done.worse had it failed to et aha respond to the signals from the Bmpress of Ireland. Fog still continues to be a terror to all navigation and it is likely to be until all navigators show fear and respect for it. The disasters oceurring with such frequency show that ft fam’t something for half or a part of the navigators to pay attention to, but for all of them. Had the care used by Capt. Kendall been shared by the cap- taln of the collier it is reasonable to belleve no such tragedy would ever had occurred, It should awaken such attention as to make it the last of such an inexcusable type. The polls will be open in all dis- tritte today from 8 a. m. until & p. m. for the city election. SHOULD HEAR CARRANZA. Bven though the petition of the representative of the rebels does come at a late hour, it is but proper that the medtators at Niagara Falls should give him a hearing. Carranza hasn't | from the first indicated a willingness to enter into an adjustment of the questions which they offered thelr heip to settle but the manner in which they have gone at it has apparently had its good effect upon the constitution- alists, and after all it is the benefit and education of all Mexico which is sought and the constitutionalists at the present time form no small part of that republic. The effort to enter at this late hour upon the part of Carranza means de- lay, but even that is permissible if greater good can be accomplished, and the rebels must be reckoned with sooner or later if any form of inter- regnum government is to be instituted. When the South American ministers extended their good offices it was for the adjustment of the trouble between this country and Huerta, a matter in which the rebels were not interested, When it comes to the settlement of the internal question in Mexico they are decidedly concerned, even though they are slow to realize it, or that the mediators are considering a imore extensive programme than they had Dbeen led to belfeve. Giving the unrecognized head of the Mexican government and the precipi- tator of all the trouble a share in the say of the future, without. giving consideration to the strength and pow- er of the rebels, now that they have sought an audience, is to disregard an important element in that country which 1s certain to be a force for suc- cess or more trouble. Any slight de- lay the rebel representative may cause is likely to prove the quickest method of reaching a satisfactory adjustment. EDITORIAL NOTES. It 1s about time for Huerta to offer to exchange Vera Cruz permanently for Atlantle City or Bar Harbor. The holiday special will slow up a bit for the circus and Flag day and then it is a straight away rua to Fourth of July. The only thing necessary to push that sale of two battleships to Greece | through js a promise to slide the price into the pork barrel. by a large vote for the best a bubiness administration, de- fesults will be obtained, ftoday the voters have the oc- to M oit and make their vote$ ch wants the best gov- Tt wants the disniay of ef- eeonemy and the polis is to make it understood, The eandidates have been nom- such a service and and de- in view they should of the thoughtful Srrespective of Apathy has pre- regrets long enough, Get ‘&F and take your friends with at the same time consider the :rcn are to be obtained by the use of the republican lever, and ‘election of the ticket of competent e spirited citizens headed by thur D. Lathrop. Don't throw your away, make it count for zood I — This s the one day in the year Wwhen the voter has his chance to be heard and respected in his say about the city government, If Yale spirit can be depended upon to supply the deficlency there may vet be a chance for something better than a procession on the Thames. One of the greatest aids to the best government is to be rendered by go- ing to the polls ond voting. Over- come that habit of indifference. The man on the corner says: The only straw hat which doesn't change in style from season o season is the one which 18 worn by the horse. Unless congress is prepared to act quickly upen a lot of measures which are hanging fire, it might as well set- tle down to a continuous performance. Hot wegther may prevall but the fellow who fs getting In his winter coal realizes that ‘here is plenty of chance for the coal barons to relent even now. interest has been centered in which have been put for- o make the Langlev fiying ma- %0, and the fact that Aviator was able to make a fight a8 a vindication of s0 ns is pointed out Republican when it 8 y ~celebrated test of w % b #8 not failed he would 3 ~ hay = the gap between ‘father of aviation’ ts, and éven his untime- have prevented him as the inventor le fiying machine. ‘been plenty of cred- who, by patient were qualifying flight, and whose the utmost value, strated flving ma- 1d it might have heen :.c g to -maintain Is country a or the devotion of _his hobby has, itke After the’ mediators get their pro- gramme all ready, revised and en- dorsed, it might be well to look ahead and determine for enforcement. With the proper spirit encouraged by the clean-up weck movement it must be evident to the many that a considerable contribution can be made 10 it every week. Secretary Bryan says he “took it for granted” that no arms would be landed by the German vessels. So that is the basis on Wwhich our ship of state is navigated, If all the voters who favor a bus- iness administration of city affairs will get together and vote for it there can be. no question of the success of the republican ticket toda The day of marine disasters has not bassed and it s not likely to be re- moved until the problem of fog has been overcome or a proper amount of respect for it established, In thelr undertaking to comvert the on the responsibility | ters, cereal and spice jars. Then place having - ‘given a fog:to the on- woming vessel, stopped and thenm en- out of the way of the gave lnefcient ‘heed e ataas 1t 'was the passenger vessel which was giving thought to the lives of its pre- clous cargo, while the freighters were each color. No Pping into the wrong color. To remove water stains from en- gravings or paper, flll a sufficiently large, clean vessel with pure water, alp the engraving in, waving 4t back- ward and forward until wet through. fasten it to a flat board with wing ping, and let dry in the sun- shine. 5 Clothes props kept in one place where they can always be found in good condition on washing days is easily accomplished by following this pian: Fasten two loops of stout cord or leather against the wall of the house mezwhggh‘nqarh the ' laundry, one _ plac the : Through these loops insist that the Wwasherwoman slip the poles as soon as they are no longer needed. HANG ON CURTAINS. Tn the small apartment where wh dows openin-— on the street must fre quently be thrown wide to admit ven- tilation, lace or madras curtains. ho ever carefully hung at the season’s beginning, are apt to become stringy and askew by midwinter. No cur- tain of filmy stuff will retain a fresh, presentable appearance if allowed to dlow in and out with the breeze, col- Jecting smoke and dust from the street, vet one never does happen to have a pin conveniently at hand when the window s thrown up. Sew & small loop of tape on one corner of the curtain, under the hem at the bot- tom, and drive a tack or small brass hook into the window casing, on the same side of the window, and as high as you can conveniently reach. When the window is to be opened, catch up the corner of the curtain by the lov toss the opposite corner of the cur- tain across so that the looped up part holds it lightly, and then attach the loop to the tack or hook. The cur- tain thus lightly draped up will be safely out of the way and when the sash is lowered, it will take only an instant to unfasten the loop and al- low the curtain to fall back in place. When there are two curtains over the pane, there is a tendency for them to sag apart at the lower edges and many housekeepers pin them together: A better way is to attach small snap buttoms which will not slip out, or show like pins, and which may be ad- justed in a twinkling when it is nec- essary to separate the curtains and open the windo SET FOR ICED. DRINKS. A set for iced drinks is tempting as spring days remind us of thirst producing weather. One set that is attractive consists of a wooden framed tray, a tall pitcher of engraved glass in a silver frame. a dish of glass in a silver frame for 4:_?‘?1(0«-)t fce and glasses to match, e tray costs 36.50, the pitcher $3.50, the glasses $150 and the ice dish $3. HEALTH AND BEAUTY. Warts will _disappear if touched several times & day with acetic acid; apply with a small camel’s hair brash or the end of a match. Oily hands may be made comfortable and touchable by wetting them once or twice a day, while clean, with co~ logne, alcohol or toilet vinegar. Bismuth s the most rapid and ef- fectual cure for chafing. Use as any olher powder. One or two applica- tiens will be sufficient in the worst cases. 2 Do not forget that the woman who smiles rather than frowns will have a skin more free from wrinkles than the woman who knits her brows. Clover tea is admirable for purify- ing the blood, for removing pimples and whitening the complexion, and bas also good repute as a sleep induc- ing draught. Mosquito bites may be rendered speedily painless by rubbing the place with a piece of soap slightly moist- ened to produce a lather, which is al- lowed to dry. An infant should be given no food containing starch until it cuts its teeth. Starchy foods include biscuits, corn flour, taploca, sago, rice, potato etc. An infant cannot digest any of these untll its teeth are cut. Lemon, orange and cucumber peels are excellent for the complexion. Let them soak in vour water jug, for they not only soften, but tonify and fresh- en the complexion, keeping the flesh healthy and firm. Be sure that yvour child breathes through his nose and not his mouth. The nose may be clogged by a growth or adenoids in the throat may obstruct the air passage. Habitual mouth breathing creates a tendency to tuber- culosis and should be prevented by operation if necessary. PLACE FOR SPICES. How many minutes are lost times by looking for a can or bottle which has been pushed behind some- thing eise on the shelves? Here is a simpie idea which can readily be adopted: Have made a set of little steps of various widths, haying the top step the narrowest. Make them ag far apart as the rest of your canis- some- the smallest cans on the top shelf, the larger cans on the lower shelf, and so on. In this way vou will have only one object occupying the width of a shelf, and will never have to look be- hind’ one thing to find another. PRINTED STOCKINGS. Printed stockings are now the thing. The designs, small flower clusters, birds, butterflies and odd futurist pat- terns, are printed on the white silk instead of being embroidered. and as the printings rup from the tip of the toe almost to the knee, up the instep, the stockings are suitable for wear with buttoned boots as with slippers or pumps.’ Skirts are so short now that the stockings are in evidence al- most as much with buttoned boots as With slippers and buttoned boots for summer wear are so dainty and desir- able that many women prefer them with formal costumes on account of the style and correctness they give the street costume. DICTATES OF FASHION. Plaitings of net are very much used king the English militants are oper- ating on the theory that it tpesn't require much of a certain kind of ac- tion to mske a man wild. ‘William Rockefeller in declaring h inability to testify, but stating that it should be the auditors and book- ers, mey be right after that tes- my about +his, clerkship” signing on the new caps for bables. Sepafate skirts of linen or plaue for line and have pateh poeket: Veils of extremely- fine’ mesh ~are worn over the small hats and cover Frocks of white taffeta have super- seded the ones of white crepe de chine popular T 3 rinined with rucbes pufings snd shirrings. 3 e Smart little eton jackets of accompany children’s frocks of crepe batiste. ~These are sometimes ‘bordered with small bullpt buttons of coral,_jet or amber.” Parasols with centers of plain ta and borders of plald chiffon are among the latest novelties. Thi have long handles ti or enamel to match & plaid. Black and white squares is the latest idea. SACHETS. The latest sachets are flower crushed and dried, then highly to which is a dash-of sachet powder added. This mixture is then inclosed in net bags which have been lined with a thin serim and tied about the top with satin ribbons. These make the most attractive and the sweetest (literally) sachets to tuck Into chif- ;om‘:r dmwt‘r-‘, to hang from a closet 0ok or, in fact, to put any place ‘where clothes are kept. TO PICK UP GLASS. Instead of picking up pleces of broken glass, wet a woolen cloth, lay on the floor over the, fragments and pat lightly, The tiny particles will stick to the cloth, which may be burned. DON'T FORGET. A little minced ham added to the omelet makes a savory change Small sweet peppers are excellent mixed with celery in a potato salad. Vegetables which under the ground should be c with the 1id on. Breaded veal served with tomato Sauce and epaghettl makes a deliclous sh. Clean nickel and silver pleces with ammonia applied with a flannel cloth. Black stockings should be rinSed in blue water to give them a good color. Discolored gilt frames can be bright- ened if rubbed with a sponge dipped in turpentine. NEEDLEWORK NOTES. When fringing anything requiring deep fringe, tear it up as deep as you want the fringe at intervals of & fin- ger or so all the way across the end, then fringe out these short pieces one by one which is a much easier way than pulling out a long thread every time and having it break and being obliged to hunt for the end with pin or needle. For the busy woman who has little time fo embroider sofa pillows there is one that works up very quickly. It Is the couched pillow. Many designs can be done-in couching, but the fav- orite one for this stitch is school work. A cord, soutache braid, wool or rope silk is laid about the design and tack- ed fast by far apart buttonhole stitch- es or finer silk or thread. A rather pretty fashion is to have the button- holing thread of a contrasting color to that used for the large couching thread. Tho buttonhole stitches should be about an eighth of an inch apart. WITHOUT COST. That proverbial French housewife who can teach the equally proverbial wasteful Amertcan how to live on what she wastes is said to make her Justly celebrated soups at a cost of nothing at all. Here dre some of the ways by which the magic is accom- plished: She saves every bit of meat or gravy, thins the latter and chops the meat ‘up in it, adding the leftovers from the dinner the evening before, for soup for lunch. Every little bit of leftover vegetables can be used for soup. If there is not a great deal of nourishment in the ingredients the soup will serve as a delightful appetizer for dinmer. The meat bone, whether cooked or un- cooked, can be added to the soup pot. The ' really economical housewife brings every scrap of bone which she pays for home, as well as the trim- mings of the meat, and uses it in the soup. Then there is the bit of red and groen pepper which many housewives throw away, as well as the pepper seeds. wlich can also be dried and added to the soup herbs. A slice of grated rind of lemon is a great addition to the soup pot, and so on indefinitely. TENDER STEAK. When broiling round steak, should you feel it may be tough, pour a table-: spoonful of veinezar over it when part- ly cooked, first on one side and then gn the other.” This will make it ten- er: LINEN CLOSET. Linen stored in a closet warm end poorly ventilated will become yellow | and will crack earller than If stored | otherwise. The properly constructed linen closet should be in & cool, dry place. Each shelf should be covered | with linen elips fastened up with drawiug pins. Have the linen slips broad enough to f0ld back end cover the econtents of> the shelves. Old sheets may be used for this purpose. CONCERNING WOMEN. The Mexican federal army has wo- wan flag bearers. Uriguay has appointed a woman to its diplomatic corps. Several Kansas and Wyoming towns have woman mayors. A French village has six whose ages total 457 years. sisters London women are mow bu frocks to match their furniture. i More than 42,000 births were re- corded in Philadelphia during 1913. The international Olympic games will hereafter be onen to women. During the last year 16,132 marriage licenses were issued in Philadelphia. “;’.: sised til the mixture Have meem wel Chicken Gumbo—Cut up_2 chickens fitele Satter in' the. frying pam the ittle er in Place in & stew pan’ Shice's’ good onlon_and brown in the butter remaining from the chicken brown- ing, add 1 quart of tematoes sliced and ! Fry all of these toget i minutes, then add to the chicken in the stewpan, pour over all 1% pints of | ; buling water, 1 tablespoon of salt and | ! a little pepper. Allow to stew slowly | until tender, then add 1 cup of cream | or milk. Boll up once and serve with bolled rice. EVERY DAY REFLECTONS The Matter With Art. Shortly after the first production of the opera “Nail” at Paris its com- poser Isadore Lara, was asked “What's the matter with art?”’ “The trouble is,” /he sald, in sub- stance, “that opera is controlled by a small class of people. It ought to b long to the whole people.” In other words that same thing is the matter with art that is the matter with almost everything else, to wit, class. Like every other department of hu- man activity, art awaits the liberat- touch of democracy. ke everything else, art can have nothing so bad happen to it as to be patronized. So long as the artist is dependent upon the caprice of millionaires and kings, it will be i ‘The, best friend of the artist is the What he needs is a public, not a patron. To serve the public gives a man freedom, mastery, inspiration. To please & patron invariably produces the spirit of a valet. First of all, the public must be brought to realize that art is mot the playthis of the rich, but the food of the whole community, That it is civ- l}mfllh‘. refining, has distinct human u When it reaches this point it will Baia pubii Balle. Shuraney. pellocs n , chur eries and parks for the painter and sculp- T It will maintain each city ité own opera house, where the masterpieces of all ages can be given at prices the Deople can afford to pay. It will abolish the ‘star” nuisance. TRIAL OF THE “MOLLIE MAGUIRES. In the Pennsylvania mining _dis- tricts during 1873 to 1875, labor trou- bles became unusually common. Or- ganizations of laborers became so Strong as to be able to tyrannize over thelr own members and boyjcotting became such a nuisance that it had to be abated by law. A common method of intimidation was for ten or twelve roughs to form a and, armed, to sweep through a mining camp, forcing every man to join; the numbers so collected soon being sufficient to overawe any in- clined to resist. On June 3, 1875, one thousand men | thus gathered, stopped work at sev- | eral mines near M y City, and a similar band did the same at Shen andoab. At night there was an at. | tempt to ‘derail a passenger train ap- | proaching Shenandoah, but the piot was discovered in time. The _same night a ‘breaker” near Mount Carmel went up in smoke, and a few days later two contractors at the Oakdals mine were shot Depredations of this charecter be- came so common that every passenger train passing _through the affected | ection had to be preceded by locomo- tive carrying an armed poose. Watch- men and station [ents were beaten; loaded cars and other obstacles were put upon main tracks: switches were misplaced and warehouses were plun- dered. Boeses and “scabs,” particu- larly hated by the desperats miners, were served with notices swearing engeance on them if they didn't leave Such threats, uniess heeded, were nearly always executed. The chiet source of these atrocities was a secret society known as. the “Mollie Maguires.” They _terroized the entire Schuylkill and Shamokin districts. A superintendent or a boss was attacked, beaten or shot down somewhere aimost every day. Gangs of these thugs would waylay & victim in the field or by the ide 1¢ they could, but, failing in this, they sur- rounded his house, forced him out, and did him %o death. Among the most brutal of _their murders was that of Alexander Rea, & mine superintendent, who was bea: and shot to death in October, 1888. Law abiding people feared to stir out after dark, or even by ", unless well armed. The Mollies their signs and passwards for use when necessary, but they grew 80 bold thut such de- vices were rarely needed. It had got to euch a state that superintendents of jobs had to hire and discharge men at ‘the Mollies' behest or be shot. Jack Kehoe, & leading Molile, when in prison for murder, boasted that if he ere convicted andsentenced “the old man up at Harrisburg would never iet him swing: a " n posing an suj s T e Tawyer, ot th time Dresident ¢t en, a lawyer, it o the Philadelphta and Reading Cos! and Iron_company, elicited the services of the Pinkerton detective agency. The chief of these detectives was one James MoParlan. H The best looking ’-‘lfln a0d_young ive along the women in Germany Rhine. WOOD RESTORED. ‘Woodwork which has grown duil with time and the accumulation dust may be restored by first clean- ing thoroughly with keérosene on fasiost cloths 1€ ancia thas_ng_palc mixture of two parts Rk o only the upper half of the face. The cap crown of taffeta finighed moire, sath or with & ""‘f cording EOIf or tennts are severely plain in one of linseed ofl. Ap- ply this with a soft cloth and rub l‘l’ ):‘ lannel nntlll ;:cry trace of the i) seema 0 ve sappeared. £ o Ingratiated himself into the m‘m of lead- ing members of U i order, and became one of thelr members. i¢ wi privy unately vent, so clodely was he wal of these was & you miner, These murders practi- cally the culmination of the onl for McParlan had secured evidence to bring the perpetrators to and, b "Satablizn And 0ing upon the witness st o demolighed the shiam & the culbrits sousht to Professional Men ; Y.M. C. A. Thursday, dune 4th, at3P. M. Norwich State Hospital Grounds. Admission, 25 cents. MUSIC BY TUBBS BAND Wasterly trolley for ball grounds. In case of rain game will be played following day. ve clews which led to the extripa- tion of the entire gang. Schuylkill county, where the worst crimes had ocurred, rose in its might and stamped out the conspiracy. A small army of alibi witnesses was nunished for per- jury, nine of the Mollies were sen- tenced to death and most of the other leaders were imprisoned for long terms, The polls will be open in all dis- tricts t.‘-{ from 9 a. m. until 4 p. m. for the city election. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR “Look at "em.” Mr. Editor: Bachelor's letter, of Sat- urday, May 30th, reminds mb of & story 'In_Parker’s “Golden Age of Ora- tory.” Says Parker: ‘“We heard Webster once, in a sen- tence and a look, crush an’ hour's ar- gument- ; it was most intellectu- ally wire-drawn and hair-splitting with Grecian sophistry, and a subtlety the Leontine Gorgias might have en- vied. " It was about two car-wheels, wkich to common _eyes looked as aNks as two eggs; but Mr. Choate, by & fine line of argument between tweedle-dunh and, twwedle-dee, and a discourse on the ‘fixation of points’ so deep and fine as to lose itself in obscurity, showed the jury there was a heaven- wide difference betweeh them. ‘But,’ said Mr. Webster, and his great eves opened wide and black, as he stared at the big twin wheels before him, ‘Gen- tiemen of the jury, there they are— look at 'em;’ and as he pronounced this answer, in tones of vast volume, the distorted wheels seemed to shrink back again into their original similari- ty, and the long. ment on the ‘fix- ation of points’ died a natural death. This is what is bound to happen to the effusions of Bachelor and the ut- terances of the anti-suffragists when the existing examples of equal suf- frage or the arguments for it are fair- ly and fully faced. Since the formation of the Equal Franchise league in tl citythe attention of the Norwich pub- lic must have been calied to both. All that I need to therefore, is: Wom- en and men, there they are—look at ‘em! 1t knowledge is worth $1.50 to Bach- elor, I humbly suggest that he expend thaf amount in the purchase of a Iittle book, called “Social Psycholos by William McDougall of Oxford universi- ty. In the world of science Prof. Mc Dougall ranks rather highly as & thinker in his line. I do not recall that he has been called a fatallst until Bachelor named him o indirectly when he criticised the writer's para- graph on instincts, temperament and moral nature in her preceding letrer. That paragraph was based on the first third of MecDougall's book. When Bachelor has read the complete book he will, I think, be a wiser and better man. 1 have given Bachelor an authorlty for my own statements. Will Bachelor give me an authority for his statement that “The laws of heredity are strong. but nowadays it must be admitted that those of environment are as and sometimes stronger.” What psycholo- gist admits this, please? has made later research than Wiliiam Mc- Dougall? “We do not meekly accept and lie down under the burdens of hereditary insanity and disease; pitched battles are foughbt and won with these two dread evils of humanity.” What has “hereditary Insanity and disease” got to do _with anything in my nreceding letter? That letter was not a treatine on medicine. The para graph slready referred to discussed character, so called, If Bachelor knows of any way in which he or any other ! human being can change the basic de- | sign of the pattern of the individual. | not _only L but-all the world, will hang | on his lips while he tells us how it is | done. It {s for this power that hu- | manitarians in all professions are still seeking. When # is found and rightly | used we shall have no more prisons, no | more ssylums. We shall have heaven | right here. This obstacle is the re- | formation of the world religion met | in its early existence and called it pre- ! destination. But to go back to thera- utics! 1t we never lie down to eredity, why have we any incurable cases in'any of our asylums hospitals and homes? 1f-Bachelor can tell me of one pitohed battle which we have won | with absolute insanity, I shall rejoice | to learn of jt. In the treatment of B prowrans since " the mew | n psychology, the ph: peychol- oxy, was discovered. 1In the line of preventive work we are doing great work. But, 1 repeat. 1 wait for those examples which shall demonstrate the er force of environment over eredity which Bachelor is to show. us. Tf Bachelor thinks to discount the effect of heredity, predestination. call it what you. will, he has not yet found out what every large dealer with hu- I as if the theory he were this: The more ignorant a mother is of life a= it really is, the more bread 8d butter thers ls going to be In the ki Brocze fram ! EE—TY 2 Part Majestic Drama Tn the Funny C: T the Funny Comedy Sketeh BESSIE FOX In a Lively Comedy Skit ‘A K'hkvilh." ——— I MUTUAL WEELY No 71 Pull of Timely Events AND TWO REAL FUNNY KEYSTONE COMEDIES Big Bargain Matineo at Colonial 2000 Feet “THE ADVENTURES of One of the Most Thrilli “AN HOUR of TERHOR"' !'r.tfl'mmas IN THE ROSE. “THE LOVE ROUTE VIA PITTMAN" Coming Tomorrow, “MYSTERIES Matines tlons which concern human beings we | must take these things into considera- tion or we can't do business. The close of Bachelor's letter sounds is _propounding GRACE C. MOORE, Norwich Bqual Franchise League. | May 30, 1914. o] How Many Avail Themselves? Mr. Editor: In the report of the suf- frage banquet held Friday evening, May 29th, the following statement was made: ‘“There are 305,619 women who own stock in their own name. I mo- among the women present at the P -fimm.nm«m..-m.n mmme receive notice from the corpora- asking them to either in person oF by Proxy represent their interests at the meeting of the corporations. Will the ‘Who spoke for gentleman m’mm from the financial point inform the writer how many women avail themselves of the privi- leges sccorded them of learning about the management of their financial In- terests and voting on the same? There was an important meeting called recently at the office of the Nor- wich Savings society. A number of Norwich women are interested financially in the corporation ‘whose management called the meeting. understand that two women were nt. ¥ Outside the home there should be no greater influence brought to bear 2.30. All Seats 10c Theatre KATHLYN,” Two Reels. 2,000 Feet Events in this Enormous A, 1 Pi g ‘eaturing Chas. Gr-hnm“li firase " Hirets irene Horoley Edison Drama . "Essanay Comedy of PARIS.” 5 Reel Exclusive Feature Evening 10c upon “child welfare” than through our spublic schools. o How many women avail themselyes of the opportunitles given them of voting upon the school matters? When women do not use what is already theirs, how can we believe the: will be more ‘faithful when larger op portunities ane given them, or are they still honestly willing to have the men Tepresent them? AN INQUIRER. 1914, Practical Remark. AMr. Editor: Bachelor doesn't believe in theories, but wants something prac- tical. A very practical remark was made by a woman—not a suffragist— Who redd his letter. She said: “Well, ihe can stay a bachelor, for all me.” Hé is himself a shining example of a-case af atavism. His ideas about women are antedilugian. 1 am sure his own mother did not train him prop- erly. Probably heredity was too strong for her. He needs io get into a suf- frage environment. Or possibly his mother only had the brains of one hen and so could not help him to find his own sense of proportion. 1t is indeed too bad that his mascu- line sense of fair play rebels at the idea of any woman having as much brains as he thinks he has! Poor, deluded old Bachelor. A _BRAINLESS WOMAN. Norwich, May 30, 1914. . Norwich, May 30, Ohildr;n dry FOR FLETOKER'S CASTORIA An l'rml, R Th ‘Business * Genter of Norwich THIS WEEK IS “Junior Week” Commencing this morning and con- tinuing for all the week we will make special efforts to demonstrate our splendid preparedness to com- pletely outfit infants, children and juniors. You will find Large and Complete Stocks of Ready-to-wear Clothing, Underwear, Hosiery, Hats, Materials for all Clothing and All Accessories for Children’s We ar pe At the Most Moderate Prices Watch Our Window Displays and Our Advertisements