Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 20, 1916, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY..OG.TOB'EH 20, 1916 oA V4 <, Jlorwieh Bulletin and Goufied 120 YBARS OLD Sulseription price 12¢ a week; 50c a ‘mont) $6.00 a year. ) Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Businass Ofrice 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms 33-3. Bulletin Job Office 35-2. Willimantic Office, 67 Church st. Telephone 210-2. Norwich, Friday, Oct. 20, 1916. -— REPUBLICAN TIC President. FATRBANKS of Indiana. 1ors, HIRAM: LUCIUS WHITON THOM L. ] WILLIAM P 1LOUIS B. C THOMAS H ARTHUR E. GEORGE P. ) Represen: Lon- Gove HOI MARCTUS F Lie D E CLIFI FREDERICK Havy FF New MCRRIS C I meeting tonight a large -and. re of the taxpa improvement: sideration tention which t At the tha resentative. of . the sathe of the city the betierm: the center of the < vision for work becar of such chan ing permanen: In arrangi to Thames in a deplors closed the need of v and making one j sooner or the requirements has been delayed tc the economy doir than some years later m parent. This is the most several propo: come before benefits which through the w streets are manifold been accomplished to meet It impo: whicl ant the to | of are without burden. It ow time that this othe improvement, ich if sanctior v; be one of eatest whi has undertaken The part which ¥ will take in it 18 worth taking advantags of, and if Norwich is for pr it cer- tainly claims to be, time that it should be The example which other cities set in this respect cannot be w erloolsed. AGAINST THE THIRD HOUSE It may ‘be all right for democratic leaders to talk ab dispelling in- visible government, but little can be said about it by the admin- istration. Charles I in one of his recent middle west went to the pith of the matter when, as if in answer to the presi- dent's attack upon invisible govern- ment he said: “I desire government through two houses and not three.” The prominent part which Col. House has taken in the affairs of the present administration has been such that the audience was thoroughly ac- quainted with what Mr. Hughes had reference to. President Wilson has re- sorted to the practice Quring the past three and a half years of seiecting and sending out special representatives to get in touch with ghe corditions about which he wanted information. It was a practice which did not display much confidence in his diplomatic corps, and it is entirely po: good re- sults were gained. As to that, how- ever, the people have no way of judg- ing. The president has talked about tak- ng the people into his confidence and wbout pitiless publicity, but mum has bsen the word in connection with the rctivities of his special corps of ad- visers. Their acts may have entitled them to the fullest approval and they nay have been like the civil service soard's work which has been padlock- d because the opening of them to publie scrutiny might result in em- barrassment to the administration. Mr. Hughes doesn’t stand for that kind f government. A SORRY PICTURE. In connection with all the distress hat prevails in Europe as the result if the war and the willingness which mxists among those nations which are jot involved in the fight to render | have been me | transportation ciples and give the proper Drotection to its own Industries? That is an importa: tion which will be de- cided N Are we going to 1ook o s first or for Can- | ada n nations? agreement to permit the sending of supplies to the people of Poland, Ser- via, Albania and Montenegro and giv- ing assurance to each other that such relief would actually go to the non- combatants who are suffering untold deprivations and not be devoted to the maintenance of the armies. It is a situation borne of distrust but it is nevertheless the imposition of unjustified hardships upon those who are taking no part in the war, but who find themselves in their horrible surroundings because of the ravages and desolation that it causes. The failure to give attention to the proper needs of these people, the pro- vision of sufficient food to keep them alive and well rests upon those who have taken possession of that terri- tory, but the. responsibility is not as- sumed. Rather are they crowded down, desolation added to desola- tion and everything available in the shape of crops requisitioned for the use of the army. It is because of this the realization that whatever is sibuted to these people from the de would release just so much more for war purposes that an agree- ment cannot be reached, but it is nevertheless a sorry picture which ivilized nations present in their re- MERCHANTS’ WEEK. Tomorrow the business houses of Norwich inaugurate another Mer- chants’ Wee The purpose of this al attraction is to advertise the < advantages which are furnish> the stores of th Many | acquainted with 114 facilities which ar coming to and leavin and. They have se found that Norwich is a busy of business, with stores that are appointe iving to meet the city. de available for the Rose of New F like hive well nt of the trading public and car- stocks of goods in such variety a to meet the de- es. It has in fact Norwich merchants the wants of the r better and with action than and in ma assortment ds of all ¢ und that jle to suppl chasing public f; ater of size 1 of the merchants on this working cooperatively for the pt of increasing the interest in trading in Norwich, is made to all stern Connecticut. Those who have not done so in the past will find it to age to come and be con- e those who have become with fhe superic ding es here require second rpose no week should ing the Weelk offerings, the rebates which fered. e fall and w stocks of goods were never better and the mer- hold out the same hand of t is always to be found. Merchants’ ben welcome British t conducting for the smmission has ns in Can- ermining promoting imperial and dominion export trade once the i It has taken cognizance which are furnish- investig surpose of of tr it red the c United States congress that will not alter the Underwood tariff is the hope of the British manufacturers and es- pecially those with facto: in Can- v And why wodldn't it be? The bars dow is been let and it y be to. f pro- for their advantage 0. Understanding ducers ortunities which are thus fur- there is plainly indicated place if they continue in their fa- has by the law thrown open a bi ation, while as one Ca- correspondent writes: “If the of the British trade commi work out the tariff wall around Canada will be raised so high that few if any of the products of the United Sto factories will be able to reach market, while at the same time it is hoped to sec the Un- derwood tariff continue in existence to the end that the trade balaace with the republic will substantially in favor of Canada.” Canada has already somely from the present tariff. Are the people of this country going to vote for a continuance of that or are they going to support republican prin- be profited hand- EDITORIAL NOTES. Wilso that he is sure to win. That nother case where he has refused to conmsult the people. says The man on the corner says: Fash- ion can dictate, but a good westerly breeze easily upsets calculations. A Chicago despatch prices soar. says wheat Inquire of the consumers and it will be found that they are sorer. Great Britain cannot understand why American warships should get out of the way so that a German subma- rine could attack merchant vessels. A western girl claims to have be- come an auto bandit just for the fun of the thing. And these are the days when entertainment is so scarce. Ambassador Bernstorff says that Germany always keeps its promises, but then the Belgium incident occur- red so long ago that everybody has forgotten it. With all the big nations planning to worlk for part of their trade, the South American republics will have more reason than ever to think they amount to somethin: The duty of those who have had their names placed on the list of to- be-mades is to appear before the board for making voters and carry out a good intention. While the Episcopalians failed to eliminate the word obey from the mar- riage ceremony they probably recog- nized the fact that it makes little dif- ference whether it is there or not. The petitions which have been filed with the Interstate Commerce Com- mission for the retention of the Sound lines by the New Haven road show that New England is thoroughly hem assistance, nothing is more de- Jlorable, barring the sufferings and \trocities themselves, than the fallure #bs . delligerent nations to reach an L) united on_this important matter of transportation, and it should be for it 1s of deep concern to this end of the country. BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Everything in Readiness for the Pageant on Suturday—w‘lll © Celebrate 200th Anniversary of Removal of Yale to New Haven—Norwich Club to Yale Republican Club. Make Special Effort to Interest Norwich Boys in Yale—Large Gift to Alumni Fund— New Haven, Oct. 19.—The Yale pageant, the spectacular feature of the Yale-New Haven _bicentennial, will celebrate the two hundredth anniver- sary of the removal of Yale College to New Haven. The pageant is to be given in the Yale Bowl on Saturday afternoon, October 2ist. The Yale pageant, a dramatic review of the history of Yale as college and university, will be presented by a total of eight thousand five hundred parti ing actors. This multitude of per- formers is made up of volunteers from the University, the city of New Haven, and from ma ities in Connecticut, and other n states. rches and religious eocieties, fraternal orders, the collegiate alumnae, the New Haven schools, the Doy Scouts and Campfire Girls, military companies of New Yorl and Connecticut, patriotic orders, the League and the Anti- the Police and Fire labor and de- | have con- tment in the University tributed to the stuperdous total of actors who will step out tpon the green surface of the Yale Bowl and live over again the picturesque and stirring episo: and of the The Bowl for 60,000 spec duction of ing capacity to view the pro- The dramatic spectacle, which is in| charge of Francis Hartinan Markoe, Yale 1906, Ps nt Master, clude the following princ Prelude, showing the me procession of aret ap Ien founder of the Yale v is by scenes of the founding of the col- ony of New Haven with purchase of the land by John Davenport andj Theophilus Eaton from the Quinnipiac Indians; the founding of the college e gift of books by Congr by picturesque « of the remony men of th force of the I brook to N encement colony college T and the Haven. Follow- d the wve world , come ring, tion colle century. of the natic sodes the Hale that the first Uni Civil w! 1 by scen adrill by Artillery or as Militin duri The pageant close two hundred ¥ achievement, leges her contributions and by helped to shape nation, looki future world mulgitude, both ptrformers, join Yale psalm. influence 1s out in in suc] of Nath: rop, in the e followed ding with m of Field and in | and ded foundec i o the eminent “The Yale armory will by December 1st, unless sc forseen a 3, Colonel Danford nced this foundati dy been comnvleted i eding rap! built | much planned and will accommodate one hundred and twent; RS In the event of the formation of a Reserve Off ing School at Yale, the | become its headquarters. The Armory was planned last Feb- ruary to accommodate Batterfes. 1f should be dis Reserve Officers tablished in promises to portance. More than five its be | hundred Yale repub- licans met in an enthusiastic meeting | in Lampson Lyceum this week to or- | ganize a Republican Club of Yale Uni- Officers wer dopted and elected, con- ans were dis- stitution |fare of our |the politi a |citizen ¢ cussed for the active participation of the club in the work of the present presidential campaign. The president of the club was au- thorized by a unanimous vote to ap- point a comittee to wait upon Professor William Howard Taft, 75, and ask him to accept the honorary presidency of the club. The first Yale Republican Club was organized at a meeting of the Brothers in Unity Society in October, 1860. It Is an interesting coincidence that among the vice-presidents of the Club of that year were the Hon. Simeon E. Baldwin, ‘61, subsequently Democratic Governor of Connecticut, and the Hon. Franklin McVeash, '62, who was Sec- retary of the Treasufy in President Taft's Cabinet. A gift of $125,000 to the Alumni Fund was announced from Robert W. Kelley, '74, of New York City, at the regular October meeting of the Yale Corpora- tion held last Monday. Some of this amount is subject to annuities, but the §ift is the largest single one to the principal of the Almni Fund vet made. The corporation meeting was given over almost entirely to a discussion of the budget for the present year. shows estimated cxpenses of $1,- 874 with an estimated deficit of The first mecting of the Norwich Club was held last Wednesday eve- ning, President R. L. Johnson, '18, pre- year were dis- and it was resolved that the 1b should make a special point this vear of interesting Norwich boys in Yale. It was decided that no definite action ehould be taken until after the next meeting which is to be held the second Wednesday in November. The new members of the club are: E. B. Jones, H. Brogan, G. B. Wiler and J. J. Horigan, Norwich all graduates of the . LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Entitled to Enough Light to See One'’s Way Home. Mr. Editor: It is pleasing to, us common people, who do not cut much ice in matters pertaining to the wel city except io pay taxes value of our little homes t is handed out to us by ans after we elect them, to have some of our representalive men ke up the question of the rotten ser- e handed out to us by the Gas and Electric department in the way of gas and light. Only a short time ago large ums of money were spent to increase e facilities for producing more gas. »day we are worse off ‘han ever. nicipal ownership may be all right r politicians and political purposes but the way it works in Norwich for rotten. We as tax responsible for over $750,000 and electric plant and we don’t own one dollar of it. Ex-Mayor 1 told on the full and take w us when in office it was r $1,000,000, but by what the stockholders are getting out of it in the way of service it is apparently not worth fifteen cen I heartily agree with the women folks who have to furnish the patience to run their gas stov under present conditions and hope giv they w 1 the in the privilege of near future be having a vol in the management of municipal af- f and, untll that time with the aid of the broom if necessary, influcnce the head of the family to assert him- self in the cause of better gas and . Editor, I am sorry A. B. Plumb- 0 hard hit and sincerely hope he s his al- calls knockers is conc n show a more public s rned, ited X - one who has done more for |the wel of the c of Norwich |than M iland let him tell us who he Is. the successful business man erned the Laurel Hill knocker Spends his money in Jorwich, pays one hundred cents on the dollar, owns just as much of the gas and electric department as A. B. or any one else, and is entitled to light enough to see his way home after dark. As far as the trolley is concerned that Fourteenth Year Attention, Farmers! DOLLARS BONUS They must be natives—hatched The Bulletin will buy the prize For Fattest and Big- gest Turkey Raised $10.00 Next Best $5.00 Third $5.00 The Bulletin proposes to capture the three fattest and largest Turkeys to be offered for_the Thanksgiving market in Windham and New London Counties. and grown in these two counties. birds at the regular market price in addition to the prize to be awarded. The turkeys offcred for prize must have feathers off, entrails drawn ind wings cut off at first joint. H The first prize of $1000 to the second prize of $5.00 to the second third prize of $9.00 to the largest London or Windham Counties. eads must not be cut oif. largest and fattest young turkey; largest and fattest young turkey: and fattest turkey raised in New The eontest is open to any man, woman, boy or girl residing in these counties. The turikeys must be submitted for examination and weighing the Tuesaay kefore Thanksgiving at 12 o'ciock noon. For the largest and fatiest you in addition to tho market price. Rock Nook Home. To the raiser of the second you in” addition to the market price will the Thanksgiving dinner for the Sh ng turkey $10.00 will be awarded This turkey will be given to the ng turkey in size a prize of $5.00 be given. This turkey will furnish eltering Arms. To the raiser of the largest and fattest turkey over a year old a prize of $5.00 in addition to the market price. This will go to the County Home, for Children’ for a Thanksgiving dinner. The judges will be disinterested persons who will weigh the turkeys at Somers Bros. market. All turkeys that are e test is sure oi selimig the bird whet ble for competition will be purchased at the market price, so any turkey raiser who enters a bird in the con- her a prize is won or not. For Catarrhal Deafness and Head Nois Here in America there is much suf- fering from catarrh and head noises. Amerlcan people would do’ well to con- sider the method employved by the Eng- lish to combat thls insidous disease. Everyone knows how damp the English climate is and how dampness affects those suffering from catarrn. In Eng- Jand they treat catarrhal deafness and head noises as-a constitutional disease and use an internal remedy for it that is really very efficacious, Sufferers who could scarcely hear a watch tick tell how they had their hearing restored by this English treat- ment to such an extent that the tick of a watch was plainly audible seven and eight’ inches away from either ear. Therefore, i you know someone is troubled’ with catarrh, catarrhal deafness or head noises, dut out this formula and hand it to them and you will have bzer the means of saving some poor suiterer perhaps from total deafness. The scriptionscan be easi- ly prepared at home for about 75c and is_made as follows: From Lee & Osgood or any druggist obtain 1 oz of Parmint_ Double Strength), about 75c worth. Take this home, and add to it 1-4 pint of hot weater and 4 ounces of granulated su- gar; stir until dissolved. Take a ta- ‘blespoonful four times a day. Parmint Is used in this way not only to reduce by tonic action the inflamma- tion and swelling in the Eustachian tubes, and thus to eoualize the air pressure on the drum, but to correct any excess of secretions in the middle ear, and the results it gives are usually remarkably quick and effective. Every pérson who has catarrh in any form_ should sive this recipe a trial and free themselves from this destruc- tive disease. —_— is a public utility and the people who pay their fare take a transfer and when they get to Franklin square find themselves stranded for thirty minutes have a right to knock and the place to do it is in the public press. Bill you are doing more to show up the rotten conditions due to politics and personal pelf than all the clvic bodies Norwich ever had. And let us hope that the condition in regard to valuable space outside of what A. B. uses himself in our public press will not excite A. B. to the extent of a rest cure at Brewster's Neck. If it does would advise him if he goes down by the way of Laurel Hill avenue after dark, to take a lantern with him. BILL, THE SECOND But not quite as dignified as A. B. Plumber. Senator McLean Saved the Birds. Mr. Editor: Herbert K. Job, the cele- brated ornithologist, lecturer and head of the department of applied ornithol- ogy of the ational Assoclation of Audubon Societies-——a Connecticut man, by the way—has many moving pic- tures of bird life, taken all over the country. None of these does he prize higher than cne taken cn the estate of Ses or George P. McLean at Sims- bury, Conn. This film shows the sen- ator inspecting the birds of the place as they move in and out of the nu- s birdnouses and feeding stations h he has placed there. When ex- ted before audiences of bird pro- tectionists and ornithologists as it con- tinually is this reel is always received with most appreciative applause, for naturalists the world over realize the great work for protection of our native birds which has been done by Senator McLean. The senator has endeared himself to his Connecticut constituents through his good eervice at Washington in many ways, in none more than in the effective work he has done on the bird Dbills there. In the Capitol City it is freely scated ihat he has done more to give the wiid birds of the country a chance and increase than any other man in congress. cucut is a bird-loving state; s of its citizens belong to the n societies, state and national. a town but has its bird club or st its coterie of associated bird and every one of them is an enthusiastic supporter of Senator Mc- Lean for the results he has obtained in the two most important pieces of bird legislation the country has ever seen. The first of these is the fed- eral migratory bird law which was passed three years ago. This bijl in rious forms had been before con- gress since 1904—eight years—and it never had a chance until in 1913 Sena- tor McLean took hold of it. Imm ately things began to happen. only a single dissenting vote—and that was erward withdrawn--the ill passed the senate and was made an amendment of the agricultural appro- priation Dbill. This is spite of the rush of other important legislation insured its being voted on by the house, and it became a law with President Taft's signature March 3, 1913—an eight- year fight won by the senator in a single session. It is generally conced- ed that this is one of the greatest steps in practical conservation that any nation has taken, and Connecticut is rightly proud of her favorite son who s0_ably helped the nation to take it. But the senator’s good work In this vital cause has not stopped here. On April 7, 1913, he introduced a resolu- tion calling the president to propose an international treaty with Great Britain for the protection of migratory birds. This resolution, reintroduced into the #4th congress, was duly signed by Secretary Lansing, President Wil- son and Ambassador Spring-Rice amd ratified by the senate in the first half of September, 1916. This treaty has now gone to England for the final for- mality of King George's signature, which will make it the law of both lands. This gives national protection to migratory insectivorous and game birds in the United States and Canada probably for all time. Again, in spite of many other very important matters before the senate which might have delayed or crowded out the bird bill, Senator - McLean was able to success- fully put through this second great advance in conservation. Not only in Connecticut, but throughout the coun- try, the supporters of national conser- vation hope that Senator McLean will go back to Washington for. another term, when he will be able to continue service in this work, which is second to none in the welfare of the nation. The migratory bird bill is a law, the treaty is passed, but there will be needed an enabling act and other im- portant supplementary legislation. Through his experience and proven ability no man is better fitted to rep- resent_the bird-lovers of the country than Senator McLean. They look to Connecticut to see that he does it. MASSACHUSETTS AUDUBON CIETY. Boston, Mass., Oct. 13, 16. POLITICAL SO- Pulitzer’s Selection As Trustee. No humane man will withhold from the World of this town his sympathy in its present distress. In behalf of President Wilson it worked itself into a fury of denuncia- tion because certain citizens of Teu- tonic_extraction decided to vote for Mr Hughes: and now Mr. Wilson's supporters, represented by the chair- man of the Senate Foreign Affairs Committee, are disclosed seeking dili- gently for the voters of those abhorred electors. It sought tc identify Mr, Fughes as the candidate of capital, “lnd nes Judge Lovett of the Harr DAVIS THERTRS Mat. 2:16; Eve. 6:45, 3:45 3—BIG KEITH ACTS—3 TRIANGLE PHOTO-PLAYS HAVILAND & THORNTO Sobless Comedy Trifle “At Trouville” — Special NIP AND TUCK Eccentric Talkative Pair MAYMARSHin . THE LITTLE LIAR 8 Part Griffith Production Friday Saturday FIFTH Episooe Beatrice Fairfax KARLTON & CLIFFORD Painting Novelty LINTON & WATSON... ‘ CHAS. AUDITORIUM From the Story Now Running in The Boston American THE AUSTINS................Comedy Wire Artists Harpist Comedy Singing and Talking JOSIE LENHART Clever Character Comediennes CHARLIE CHAPLIN ‘latest and funniest 2-reel; comedy “THE PAWNSHOP” 5—High Class Acts—5 DIAMOND DAILY & PARKS Sister Act NOW DRAMA- TIZED FOR Coming to the AUDITORIUM Next Week MOTION PlCTUmJA_FFRE TAKEN FROM THE BOOK AND SERIAL STORY WHICH RAN HARPER'S BAZAAR A Play That Appeals to Red Bloodsd Men, Romance-Loving Women and f Healthy Children WILLIAM J. LOCKE’S GREAT STORY IN Today and Saturday A WONDER STAR METRO TRAVEL SERIES REE THEATRE Mat. 2:30 Eve. at 7 and 8:30 || All Seats 10c | IN A WONDER PLAY ! MABEL TALIAFERRO in “GOD’S HALF ACRE” | A METRO MASTER PRODUCTION AND SUPREME THRILL IN FIVE ACTS OF ROMANCE || DREW COMEDY and Fred Underwsod of the Erie are revealed as Wilson men. It denounced Mr. Hughes with a violence that only cowardice, inca- pacity and moral obliquity could jus- tify; and then the will of Joseph Pulitizer, in which Mr. Hughes was nominated as a trustee of his estate, was read for the edification of an amused public. The business of conducting a pick- thank journal ‘has its difflculties.— New York Sun. STORIES OF THE WARI Holland, a Children’s Refuge. The question whether German chil- and fattened there on Dutch milk and butter has led to a storm in a tea- cup at The Hague. Columns of the newspapers have been devoted to ar- ticles on the subject by learned pro- fessors and editorial writers. “Germany is a besieged fortress,” it is declared on the one hand “and it is unneutral and, what is more, op- posed to all Holland's interests to help defeat the cbject of the besiegers by relieving distress there” “How can that be” is the question posed in re- | ply, “when Germany has free access to Holland, Scandinavla and Switzer- land. ‘Holland is sovereign of her own | frontier, and the feeding of hungry German children is our good right, and not the faintest violation of neutral- ity” If you have money to spare for | poor children,” is the retort, “give the benefit of it to many thousands of half- starved children in your own cities, who are suffering from too large e: ports to Germany; or lavish your pity upon the millions of suffering children in Poland, Serbia, Belgium and north- | ern France, the countries ruthlessly desolated by Germany. Moreover, vou | are endangering our own food sup- plies by giving the Allies ground for | thinkirig that the goods imported herc will indirectly help their enemy to hold out.” | “Not assuming that Germany is a | besieged fortress,” runs another argu- ment, “does not a belligerent some- | times allow the siege of a city to be prolonged by sparing the women and children as much as possible. And if | vou say we are helping Germany to hold out, so does such noble work as that of the Red Cross, which is uni- versally recognized to be within the province of neutrals, strengthen the forces of the belligerents.” “It is but an act of chivalry and compassion; it would be a shame to exclude it by carrying logical strictness to extremes,” says another. “That's all very well,” is the answer, ‘“but to nourish German subjects is to pro- long the war and so sacrifice more of the Allles’ men; and if the Dutch gov ernment is to permit Germans to have recourse to public charity here, at least et it point out to Germany its obligations towards this country and to the civil population of the regions occupied by German armies.” | So runs the strange controversy, and meanwhile, all unconscious of the mild | storm they have raised, little parties of Germen children, many of them pale-faced but.some looking in fairly goed condition, arc daily crossing the Dutch border. They come in parties varying from a dozen to several hun- dreds, and are being accommodated about the country; mostly in children’s holiday camps and such institutions, ‘but also by twos and threes in pri- vate families. The work has been.organized by various committees set up by Hol- landers with family ties in cfermany and others, ard naturally the German authorities have willingly extended DEMIOCRATIC RALLY AT THE TOWN HALL Monday Evening, October 23rd, 1916 at 8 o’clock Speakers will be the HON. THOMAS M. WALLER or New London 3 and DANIEL P. BDUNN of Wiliimantic. their cooperation. There are now be- tween 1,000 ard 2,000 such ildren in ;he country, and they are still acriv- ng. A movement is also now on foot to bring children from the occunied tricts of France, so that Holland ises to develop into quite a chi refuge, following the claims upon its hospitality made by the flocks of Bel- gian fugitives, part of Antwerp’s es- | caping garrison and many hundreds of fleeing prisoners of war. Knowing Old Brute. The Wilson administration {s now; bearing gifts to Tammany to placate | it, but the Tiger persists in winking | the other eye—Wheeling Intelli- { gencer. H Missouri labor unions have no.uz‘i | dren should be entertained in Holland, |members. Tacesimite of bottle and package. For your health’s sake do not ac- cept a substitute for Duify’s pure M A TT vrisrey Itisin a class by itself, as time has proved, and imitations that may be offered to you cannot possibly do the same amount of good. You will always find the genuine Duffy’s wrapped in Duffy’s Annual, as shown in the above illustration. After the Annual is removed the well known “Old Chemist” trade-mark is on the label and on the seal over the cork, the name of the Company is also blown in the bottle. Study the illustration and you will be able to avoid substitution. “@ot Duffy’s and Keep Well” At most dru%- A gists, grocers an dealers, $1.00 If | they can’t supply you, write us. Useful household 3 booklet free. ‘The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co., Rochester, N.Y. WILLIAM C. YOUNG Successor_to STETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BUILDER Best work and materials at right prices by skilled labor. Telephone 60 West Main_ sg.‘{ / ”

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