Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 31, 1914, Page 4

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"NORWICH BULLETIN, SAThdAY, LCTUBER 31, 1974 against the government under Presi- dent Zamor, whe had been recognised by this wnv. promises another up- heaval in the affairs of that uneasy 1sland vepublic. Buch affairs are caus- ing constant to the business activity and the mational credit of that and Gonficd vernment. In view of the protect- 3t 19 the cause of { 118 YEARS OLD g Seii s S 4 od at the Postoffi Norwiss, | step tn there and protect Hayti from aa second-class m. "| #eelf and give assurance to its crod- ’ itors. It ia apother imstance which poTelevneme Culle: discloses the Zolly of early Philippine Bilein Battoral Reoms so, _'|indepepdenes. ¢ s o { ‘Bulletin Job Office §3- \_ Willimantlc Ofice, Room % Murray \nutiatng. Telophone 210. e NO TIME FOR APATHY. ‘There IS no reason’ why apathy — so‘:'” mnh:dm coming election. Norwich, 1, 1 e other there i every rea- ity Seturdny, Ot 310N, son why (e voiera should g0 to ihe g next Tuesday and expy mur REPUBLICAN TICKET. ;u = et 'mfi" "ot Uhited States Senator ;| he day. There is a sreat privilege ai ANE B. BEA ‘New TLem- | @uty involved therein which no veter L e oan aSord to alignt. It fn o servics every slegtor should render to M Bis neighbor, town, state and aation (3 s & time when avery Gube lo-epirited citizen, ‘and every voter should be included in that list, should 30 Mis past 1n piving expresgion o the demands In behal? of government. “Towns, the state and the country have undergone esperiences which call either for a vote of endorsement ‘or tain " Comptroller. The people have been IMORRIS C. WEBSTER, Harwinton. B. Representative in conlnu Second District-RICHARD P. FREE- { MAN, New London. | tate Senators. and continuing to find fault with gov- \g‘_ ernment_affairs, matlon or statewise. LUCIUS B. WHITON New Lan-|The thing to do Is to use the right of sufffege. Go to the polls and made it evident that it is & government of the and for the peo- 21 . TATEM, Eastford. 40 2 AT Bt e big vote which oxpresses the lvd!n‘ of the people and ean de no question that a bis mmn Al vot will mean the success of the re- e TURKEY’S ACTION. Bven though Turkey has delayed showing ity hapd for one reason and #nother there is mothing surprising it that 1t has MIME THE VOTERS DID THE(|the allies, Such has been portended _ SIDETRACKING. | Fdons Haxe Turkey could not he war has heen nally opened .up against|!s _THE MAN WHO TALKS The man with an ambition to got rich quick Is eventually surprised by the_suddenncss with which Ie was r. Dvery mad that looks|q = viting ~18 mot £0. As prover runs: “All that glitters is not gold.” The man who spends a penny less 2 day than he earns is sure in time fo have a surplus, just as the man who spends a penny & dey more tham he is sure to have in time a bank- rupting deficit. A few men get rich Quick becanse so many fools want to Zthe weak man contributes to the sudden success of the cunaing. Mman o get rich quick must Benow What he is doing, not guess at it. Suc- cess never has waited upon uncertain- ty in this world, and never will. is by making others belleve they can get rich quick that the deceivers amass fortunes. Do not take stock with the man who tells you he can give you twice the interest the banks and stoceed, for if. ho had credit e would be getting his money of the banks at the regular legal rate of i terest. _The way to get rich is te live prudently-end act wisely. Thoreau says: “Blessed is the man whose daily £00d is his medicine.” This must he the mam who does not eat (Written Specially for The Bulietin) ) the toy Sees tp their ausen, the wild As & man thinketh, so h ving south in the ummapped Soren of times we have h.ua tnis{ Gourse their leader follows, in scores quoted, but how few of us fully real. | of t—if we will but ize 1ts'meaning! e People sre fond of telling about the | the front ranks, others in the rear. old times, when thers was Dl Losing respect for everybody and and high thinking. The everything, the transition to flippancy, trast such a period with the present|rebellion, Anarchy, is easy. this 13 the” age of ‘high fiving and| WWho is the werkman ever in 2 plain thinking! “scrap” with m- assoclates? Biliously It must be honestly admitted that|diseatisfied with the regulations for some standards are jJowered, implying | bis xm.. is weges, with wur‘ a carresponding lowering of ideals. In no direstion is this more evident | has to take orders from someone than I "::nm.“‘ru of regard or dix better than I Ll'- Foegettul that the regard for authority. le we all|born leader will eventually lead, grow a trifie hysterical pees -ctul certain as xlquld-. by the principle o :mua o Bintntaby g Dipo¢| "1t 1s 1 thess un, irreverency {or thoss Righer up. in ev- | by | o sy pill of thetr lme ory dumflm the world's exists | I there fa certain to be vision, that & e by “"This begins -rimarily in the e home, spoiled and indulged_cnil of view would never Tippantly reter t6 LTt oetiof that & Vessel nevds ‘ner,” mu&n—m& all the craw, down to mother as 14 Woman.” the m.--nv--w-t- s the sall. gystem continues umnxn thoo! Tita, zay, should bave & rrtoc( Tight the smart boys and girls think up £o run ine mvu—dfiv - some nickname for their teachers. So|is absurd on th face of it; but -is is Tutter oo The Gors bly a3 “The Old Mea’ to o too much, or drink too much, or sicep too mueh, or exercise too little or breathe too shallow—the fellow who knows how to find his equilibrium and then keep it! He must be the man Who at 50 vears of age can say for a truth he never had an ache or a pain in his life, or the man of 100 years who finds himself wondering why folks grow %ld and die. There are such men, doubtloss, if they are rare birds Dbut they are blessed because of their temperance in all things (a divine |7 route to blessings), mot because of special _divine favor. knows himseH, knows the way, it is not likely the man who first to find this out. On the average man treats himself worse than he does his enemies but charges the effects of his gondust to the Almighty. We should poor coots if we had not a spark of divinity in us. Some people can put up more of a sront upon the Knowledge they hink they possess than others can on the money they know they possess. The superior man is the one who can do most on a little capital, Whether hu capital is conned from coined at the mint. A little Iflrnin( may be s dangerous ihing. but it is not nearly the burden:great learning is in the noodle of Mr, Doolittle. What hoarded in this life sings small beside what is accomplished. It is not an_ evidence of ability to have knowlcdge or money and not know What to do with 1t. ‘A bookworm ua- ually knows what other men think, but has himself no original thought. Getting and Dolng make a good work- a8 cal as.most men’s arguments— xt:?'e-!:n.m\.mt‘.‘u.‘:amulmmm‘:“ ot thantesivay 15 the op- 1ib]; “Woody,” or “T " oor “BYy Ay ‘eddy, s Bl The parson is affectionately referred to in the newest brand of slang, as “a Qub,” or a “has-been.” What ke teaches excites a smile or a snecr. of person with Christian belief will e’or uthority, as St. Paul explains it, from God; end ho_are, gre ordained of God. ese mortals who scoff at every=- g, fesl ns superior to Divine as ty human authority! The ancients, recag) of upon ‘body, took care to sur round thelr youth twith noblest ex- Seulpture, of architecturo, of ir minds developed trais by the greatest philoso- phers of the time. They appreciated the value of lofty ideals. eivic a It is counted—among small minds—a matter of merit to hold one’s self de- ng the effect ‘What an inconsistent state of mln‘. 13; 4 111?“ in t.hel'molt Pprosaic s e, authori! necessary. wes taught to disci- Who could fancy an army without | ,72¢ 1dian, boy wes TSRt 9, U §yhcad, an organization withont & pro ctice in those rude arls known (o any sort s of his tribe. withont a boss? Ko we do diferently! O, to be sure, we haye art museums, ive architec- Nature h-mlf izes this vie- empens! ceseity, ! eflb-l of lvr'. groat ohurches and Mbraries, £Be Dianets 1o, (hets movemien Jearned but we consid- the heavens, the absolute cub:-cunn of | e ou...lve. 0 .ubtl’w usu ‘we mere- Iy take these a_matter of coures! s«a a uf’d as Carlyle ad- a man of ideag”? Any of us would find | vised: “Say to ail kinds it rather difficult to define ides. Too|T can do wmuyut yo many of us itke the sound of express- | renunciation life begins!” lons without much Tegard for the | That is not our policy now! sense. Most of us think we know the| A every day and night a meaning of words, but when we = | mad whirl of Dl I‘A unending money Do with thom we diecover we ‘have| to every. forbidden book’ a n-w af ole | which deal with. subseots showing up men | the seamy aide of lifs o Incite held al- who read them, the ke e, o mot have them umtl apers. whose - Iurid. headl) Brown up. Someone has sai '&.g-wu lower ideals than is -we-dmonomaudo,uvtr ready by th in_another.” An ldes is -pi=- | theery that, human, mu expressed In w to tem] uuon quite out of the ques- in about all our philosophy resistance | My. have been forward- for the Influencing thet natfon. the allles to have Turkey discharge the crew of the two which Turkey was reported iean be hoodwinked into the belief that further allurements from sach & SQUIce mmount to anything? The recognised xnftnumsnnlmhrev- resentatives policies wera side- 'tn.ek-asntxmtnmutmm congressi | Russia’s army | serfous result With the mask removed Turkey took oocasion te strike even without the ‘It mow Russian fleet ‘something to 4o and A new’ distribution of ut perhaps the more be the involving of such action to fan their war spirit into flame. Turkey may yet find that it could not afford to-go to war. - EDITORIAL NOTES. Now that the Belginm conditions are being disclosed it 15 not surprising that a-wo- Holland thinks it time to worry. port ut ‘Brandegee and represent principles which mean fbetter times and prosperity. Likewise {do the interests of the state demand ithe election of the full republican state fticket. HALLOWE'EN PRANKS. The- arrival of Hallowe'en means o return of a. season of happy times fand as such there is no end to th famount of wholesome enjoyment to ibo had. It will be observed n the {cflt variety of ways which is pos- stble from the very fact that it is Mnight when witches, gobline and other mtischief malking things are supposed to be abroad on their baneful night er- rands, but to this autumn festival it is well that there should be applied satety and sanity, and espelally the latter. Hallowe'en pranks have come to mean all kinds of practices in Which there is apt to be a too great display }of vandalism. Instead of making the | obftervation appropriate and harmless }those participating too often comsider |1t unsuccesstul unless there is & flag- trant violation of law and decency and ja wilful destruction of private prop- yerty. Rlders will sympathize end join {in the sane but frolicsome observance but there Is sufficlent reason why {there showld he 2 proper suppression of the damaging spirit which often astuates a thoughtless crowd. The ea of mischief frequently knows ne Hmit upon such en occasion, when it 3¢ possidle to have as much real plessure by keeping within bounds. There must be a reasonable respeot for the property and rights of others on Hallowe'en as on any other night. 4t iy.n time when pleasure should £o restrafned and. joy be unconfined, But it i5 also an occasion when thers aiouid be a careful distinction mads hetween what is looked upon as fun dad what is actually interpreting priv- flage into license, LESSON FROM HAVII, The situation which exists today n Hayt! 4s much the same as prevalls In cxico. Both are suffering from too much revolution. The love for fight 1 preference to national welfare holds prominent place and as might be rected under such circumstances orraption is a great handicap to gov- ernment affairs, The need exists there of having the value of peace thorough- mpressed upon the people of that jcountry, while at the same time they necd to be taught the virtue of the kmvroc over the sword, > !, Tho. success of “the gevolutionists | Judge Marous Holoomirs personality and record meen that if elected he and no one else will be the governor. ‘Whether the ‘war is only beginning or not the entrance of Turkey is bound to start gomething in the B‘lkfln Te-~ glon, ¢ Ao Harvard is worrying over the de- cision against the red flag. Perhaps there will be _no chu;cc to wave the crimson _— It would be interesting to see what that commander of the-.cruiser Em- den would do were he in command of the German fleet, e s R The democratic polley of Teplecing | experience with Inexperierice hus heen practiced long enough and can hardly expect to be endorsed, —— South sea Islanders are clamoring for missionaries, The chances are that they also are suffering from un- kept democratic promises. The Uelegates to the peace confer~ ence at Aguascallentes carry a gun on thelr hips. Just what might be ex- pected of Mexican pacificists. The man on the corner says: War snd politics stir up enthuslasm but there is nothing which really com- peres with a lively world’s serles, e Only; these who have been satisfied mJ democratic . policles and are u\xioul to enjoy the effects of more of them should vote the o O ot Gemoeratic Hven the former secretary of thepro- sressive statp committee in Massachu- setts says in returning to the ropub- lcans that the progressives have served thetr purpose, — It is fmpossible for the Amerlean workingman to figure out that his eon- dition has been Improved by demo- all ef- ow where he has lost. The fact that a large New Haven arms_company is daily dropping em- ploves from “its payroll because of business conditions despite war or- ders from Burope doesn't furnish any | | strong argument for the endorsing of democratic policies. -Democratic promlses have heen tested. What this congressional dis- trict . wants is a representative who represents. Out of twenty-five im- portant roll calls in the last congress Congressman Mahan %vas present voted at only thirteen, be made practical to ing partnership. Knowledge that can. | PUrpO: not be wsed is little better than the stock left on hand from a rummage [Wh ‘| @overnment, they think. Those who gale. The man who cannot make his knowledge profitable 1s sadly burdened. It _does no good to send the boy to college who was born to beat the bass drum or clash the cymbals. A tight-wad is a man who earns his money,_and is capable of keeping jt. In this Christian world men have be called names because of their sin- gularities, their economies and some- times their virtues. It must have taken Sarcasm a long time to get his start, but he has & lead now which seems to be an assurance for all future time: In defls\ou it has been said of a tigh wad that he has more meney than friends and is glad of it. Somehow many people whose friends exceed their ability to entertain, look Tith envy tight-wad's way. It ought to be SUNDAY MORNING TALK . ALL SAINTS’ BAY. Togarded as something of a virtue to be financially self-sustaining and able to pay the taxes. It cannot be gain- 210 ihat tight-wad is a dependable elt.izen and immune from being re- od as’a snoozer. Those who ree- osnho merit never fail to call him Mr. Tight-wad, a sign of respect Looge-wad never gets. When it comes to being & wad the tight-wad seems to be the preferable variety. So sings James R; H o3 2 e g o = m It is usually the custom for married | women 0 pity gpinsters but in pip. ing times like these the pity of the bachelor girls goes out to the : women, for they have neither hus- | bands nor sons to be blown to piece in the game of war on the field of bat the great hosts of unknown dead through all the years before our time, paying to them’ onr triduts There is nothing men can be|tude and honor, this, zno,\:"fl:' ll:g‘ brought together for even when agi-iright. Herein lies the Gatod by fear as they can be to do |niAcance of ANl Saines” Doy wviolence. They are butchering their! OF the weird and -umuu.u. fellow men against whom they have no il-will to promote principles Of |tures of the season you and T are be- sinnlng to see the end. Su are made helpless . cripples _realize what a delusion this is when it is toc jate The government's appeal to us to ‘accept their versions as to where Lhe responsibility for these warring nations | Tests, but every sane man knows lack | of faith in God and distrust ol'flone‘ another—jealousy,. envy and selfish- |even stout h Tors—are always the cause of trage-|timo of laughter and L dies in_which men and nations ver-(lads and lassies play nfl- o ish. War represents the sins of the pranks with manufactured - fam nations visited upon themselves, There |and apparitions that s A toms is mothing truer than this: “Those |““Tnera is something whote m.mboflr' e who appeal to the sword shall die bY [reaction from. the e tersor the at op- ths wwopd t pressed the minds of former genera- = tions, What a night was w.‘.p in the experience of your gran er, omens and auguries that at witching hour of midnight” -»-ueé Do you realize that laughing draw. {hie comers of the mouth up, and ery-|especially it Lo hap live n ing draws them- down. In this way |some Dart of the Beltien Isios! 3t b habit impresses on the countenance an |probable that he sat with tense nerves expression of joy or sadnes, §o that o and bated breath in the chimney cops |Snoy" reader of psychical signs does not have |ner as the hour of midnight approsched | 2Rl to be told of the trend of our spiritual | waiting for the appeatance of those natures. The mouth doesn't do all |supernatural belngs supposed to the rovealing, for scores of hings we |revel at this season within the aphors have the sense mot to speak of find |of humanity. Better the harmiless Rome exprossion_through our looks and curltoolcr ducking for avpiss aad actions, There is a psychical com-!roastinz of chestnuts of the present munication between souls of which the |than the old-time somber -nc fearsome the world generally takes little note. |anticipations. Somehow nature impresses a man's| All Saints’ Day is not a carpival ot meanness upon his face and his |spocks and fantoms at all Sut b me grouchiness as well as his benevolence ison of remembrance of the good and and sweet spiritedness. We do not true who have overcome and have to winter and summer a man to know whether his conduct is approv- able or unapprovable, You know there |pect to behold the departed in Shade there are persons who are repugnant owy, spectral e, We aré t0.us and We can give no earthly rea- |content to think of those who have gon why. We say they are good(lived and labored” here, into wh enough but we want nothing to do with them and they usually have the same feeling toward us. This is one of mature’s discords which serves a |light forever, the glorious ey purpose. apostles, the goodly !ellowm ol m. Drophets, the noble army Do you think you are real good— ancient and modern elne., vmm secretiv emertain that I-am-holier- [names even we may not know, but than-thou spirit and are not conscious [Whose lives and works have made our. You are on dangerous ground? Lots |Wworld what it is, in whose debt we of people do. It was a happy day|must slways be. when 1 was positively convicted with ———e the idea that I was just human, and &no must thank them for the terlal good they bequeathed, for could mot claim this ‘supreme quality. truths they diecovered and handed on, into the larger Nfe. As such it hes & clear right to survive. ‘We do mot es- conceit, such a thought prevents You from knowing your place. You|for the moral impulses end noble ene can have good aspirations and be|thusiasms they put into the orid and kindly, but to assume to be what the [lo wwhich our spirita ere day Christ’ positively declared He was not | responsive s e entitled to be called is brazenness. On |become elrs of all the ages one celehrated occasion He said: its very cradle the rae Tesin Vone are good except my Father who [duary lesatee of “taithful *ana forgot- In this llght cherish- |ien millions whose ifts make up. 75,500 is o sin |total of your weaith aad mina. impediment fo | Let us remember them in gratitude . Your conceits |and love, Let us strive to be breed in others contempt far you. 1f|of their struggles and thelr sacrifices, Yot are geod for something it is bet- tex others should Decome consclous of |0 may thy soldiers faithful,. trae and Flght it than that you selff should. The the saints who nobly £ ity and it perilous to be 1d 'y fought in that direction. traveling of And win with them the victor's of gold. Alleluja! iRy s ~ THE PARsoON. What is meant when we say “He is tion, of life! et (A millionaire mey lack hish ideas; o Jaborer with ‘only a te em. that lower, to make no effort Emat oAt vl Gierapt. e home, corzupt the individual, disor- Banize soclety, it we scorn authority, aomeuu oivic, national, ethical, we are in the.depths though we be well- polished socially, the possess- ore_of fine housss end blg hank ac- counts. For we have missed what is the mflnm of every lofty aspira- tion! There is no mistaking the fact that reqi | this cheriahing of low’ Jaeals s the worldly succees, forget- ting that “these, too, will pass nw.y'~ Although they may not put it in so plain words, “Eat and drink, for is their philosaphy. street: fiithy, fraud in higi Mwll ismiss it all with an '2’:!-.'::;;1:“1: n‘nd the rm’or‘k.d 6 people we pay for doing form things! =Onr motto is, “Ne: 4o anything to make yourself u maru-bh n. man thinketh, so he is! vldull. 1t is said that in the great post office zg;:m. of a certain American city, per gallery an inspector, at any time, dl.y or night, can look down ¥pon every employs end determine Whather he s deing b duty honestly or not. It is a system which has prov- very efficacious. Infinitely preferable s the system which, in every mortal's mind, creates that ideal of Supreme .Authority which compels honest living without being ‘Which ghecks the un- ruly tongue, fills the heart with kind- liness toward all men, lifts the mind thoughts, renders is station, on a plane with the noblest, the holiest, the Bigh- As a3 man think: S0 he is! » m’mc‘l‘AGRAm LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Mn Jodoin's Record in Sounun Mr, Rditor:—There appeared »unt jssue of The Norwich Eul tn n ter from Mr. Raymond J. J 'Ndl he attempted to npldn tha reason for his defeat gg-lh- fl;ll(dnf_ wn on held in Eeanras o n. wflrfl Monday of Qc- mw Mr. Jodoin's selectman of the town gf Drague would indicate that there were nunn-mmmaom-rmmme w" Jolx{: was d‘.oétd first lele'e)v‘.- men of the town of Sprague on the first e of October, m’ mddiur. 14 ince B ‘.lu-:‘mu o{m:fl tita Dasition be tookoffice in October, 1899,the of fls- town were $62,700, the 4, end the indebtedness it st this year the nd e iRacbtedness 4911 v $01141: 20, o it thus sen that | 1 yoirs e 836,00, and the indebted- ness mnwu. nd remember that durine ten 1 #electman, and an examination of the not oecur in the four years of the 14 when Mr. Jodoin was not first select- man. Furthermore, When Mr. Jodoin stepped out of the office of first select. man in October of this year he left un 4 bills unountlnr to §8,177.55, :gw: which the esunty tox ] amjunting to $829, and due the first day of last July, and a Dill for board of inmates in the State Hospital for l.lwnnunl to 31,641.42, Phich Jast bill nad been accumulating since September 230, 1913, The report of the town school com- mittee of the town of Sprague for the year ending July 14, 1914, contains the which speaks for itself: tings, and have issued or- ders upon the town treasury, said ord- ers have been honored very irregularly, however, your treasurer i to be complimented upon the manner/ in which he has endeavored to meet ord- ers for teachers’ wages promptly, we ask of you .tsxpayers what can be done by any treasurer without funds? It is our bounden duty to Feport a “no | Unique experience in our school work furing. the yuer_just cloged, namely closing ~ of long before the time set by las pired, and were duly honored and ac- cepted by state; our claim amounted was $1.46 and March 1st, 1914 arrive your secretary made inguirjes at the capitol in Hartford as to why our monies were withheld and In re- ply we received from the comptroller the following,letter: l‘d. ‘March 10, 1914, John W. i ‘rofts, Secretary, School Board of Sprague, flmmar. Conn, filr: Amwflnuflm of 9th wouid say that the n that school money is not promptly paid to you 18 because there are bl due from your town to the state for repairs on roads, to which we have been ©oven the courtesy o ¢ Awalting lelllemlnl of the R way clalms by your tewn, when schoo money will be immediately n-id. 1 remain, respectfully your, Daniel P. Dunn, Comptroller. It 1s interesting to note that the as- sets of the town reported by Mr. doin as $21,894.50 at the close of the Iast year, are almost entirely made up of the Town hall $8,500, and the Public school property, $16,000. The above fig- uref taken from the sworn reporis of the selectmen of the town and can Dbe verified by an of such reports. Is it any wonder that Mr. Jodoin waus defeated at the last town election? Is it not rather a wonder that the peo- ple of the town of Sprague have tol- erated him as first selec as long 25 _they have? In view of his record as first select~ man of the town of Sprague, can the glectary of tuls County ireat with any serious consideration Mr, Jodoin's re- Oest that they elevate. him to the| office of sherift? e readers of your DIM to! thinke of these thines and to coni Jodoin's record as manager of 'hh: Sianey A. Brown's record s man- arer of the 'alls of thia county, which shows a balanc fiscal Jear of 1105036 that hu be-n Dald to ihe county tressurer, and vote Tuesdav as common gense u:d an in- terest in the welfare of the county will dictate. Sprague, Conn., Oct. 31, 1914, —— In Town Affairs Mr, Editor;—To the voters of the town’ of Franklin these few words are|" respectfully dedicated. In the ap- proaching election you are to select men (o' govern town and state Vote for the man who Is best fitted- for. the office—be he democrat, Wean or broggessive, In the government of sffairs, politics amount. to little or nothing, .{Please note natioual issues are'not included.) s that some voters would stick to their <hosert party even if His Satanic Ma- jesty was running for office in their party. Don't be a slave to habit or custom, but consider well the fitness of the office seeker. In times of sick- pess would vou congult a earpenter? In building a house, would you employ a lawyer to make your vltn-l’ l'n ‘bufld- ing your roads would you expect & doctor to be as satisfactory an an experienced man? No: you would em- ploy the man fitted for your wants— the man with whom you, could trust your affairs. This rule especially ap- plies to your town representatixe. Vote for the man wh understands the needs of the town—the man to whom you can trust business affairs—regard- len of party aflilfations. Our legisla- ture needs experienced men—men RAYMOND J. JODOIN " lm Sheriff of New London Coun- Ilw' '.?‘ """“.. man, to ”m; zfi'" I vl e S s If | am Sherifi of New Lenden 1 will ot permit the purcha es for sither jail from g' but il orders will go to the low- or thopiron, haa put e B Sus. o1 bk Jat day and night—but | am conducting my Sampaign personally and without & paid army of boosters. Business men fi! N.lw I.p||m .c-uno do you realize, in plain "{.‘ st of runnin, ur two Fhatoue el ol iy Sout G ai hi YOU ? thl. bullmu -;3 Ll received me of county busi popt of 1912 lh-w. mt of munlnl hlh Wae $14440.43. RAYMOND J. JODOIN. “IF IT SWIM§, WE HAVE IT” TODAY'S If you want New Stock Humnhr.y. Homeo, The report of the County Commissioners discloses the fact that the Jails in ‘Nogwich and New London are conducted AT HEAVY COST TO THE TAXPAYER, an unnecesary drain to be abolished under an efficient administration like the one promised,in the event of his William Street, New ment, Political Advertisement election, by ARRIVAL Telephone Powers Bros. RAYMOND J. JODOIN RAYMOND J. JODOIN WE RECE[VE FRESH STOCK JVERY DAY DON’T WORRY m erl~ fl!h winter, kno fow We more W-Imbymmh 106 Main 8t, Norwich. Phane 788 Go to Millstein’s (Ladies’ Tailor) far your pext SUPERFLUOUS HAIR PERMA- 'NENTLY REMOVED BY HARRIETT £ BREED, MgGrory Building Mn&umnhlqudlfiabmnnyhfi- ness undertaking—Honesty, Efficiency and Courtesy. They are what the taxpayers of New London County are Sheriff, ' THS IEAUI‘Y SIIOI' 3 Recognized and Endorsed by all Leaders of Organized Labor as the - True Friend of the Workingman - e

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