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Jlorwich Bulletin and Geufice IZQ YP.ARS OoLD sul--mpm... price 2e a week' u- a ronth: yeoar. Entored at the Postoffice at Norwlch, Conn., as sccond-class matter, Tele ne Clllll Bulletin Businass Of Bulietin' Editorial Rooms 35-3. Bulletin Job Offica 35-2. St. Willimantie Office, 67 Church Telephone 210-32. Norwich, Friday, Dec. 15, 1916. : H The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper In Eastem Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It'is. delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,053 houses 'n Nor- wich and read by ainety-three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is delivered to over 900 houses, in Putpam and Danielson to over 1,100, and in all of these places it is considered tbe local daily. Eastern Connecticut bas forty- nine towns, one hundrved and sixty- five postoffice, districts, and sixty wural free delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of he R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connecticut. ! CIRCULATION 1901, average......eeeeeev.es 1805, average. 20000000000000000000000080080000 0008000000000 e THE NEW CHAMBER OF COM- MERCE. Norwich has reason to expect much from the new officers who have been selected to mako the Chamber of Commerce of this city the active and responsible civic organization which it is expected to be. For several e the jcity has si from the valrd! WBlchxSted "B SRVERAI the two gzm s 'to” which this new Chambér of mmerce is the successor. The lack of harmony, and unity which followed the efforts of those organizations to cover the same ground for the same purpose needs no review, but there is £o0d cause for rejoicing on, the part of the community in general that it has been brought to an end. 4 With a united organization, made up §F the business men and citizens who have the welfare of the city at heart, the time has arrived for all to buckle down to.business, to unite.for the pro- motion of the development and in- dustrial growth of the community, to get out of the rut of factional differ- erices and to give a boost to whatever nds for a bigger and better Nor- wich, and the development of this end of Connecticut. Well known and active young men have been placed in the offices, but in this as in other organizations it must be realized that the greatest results are to be obtained by the general co-, operation of, all the member: 3 therefore behooves this organization starting off afresh-to develop the get together spirit in a manner which will e a credit not only togitself but to the community for which it stands. There is plenty to be done and results wre what count, VILLA'S THREATS. Experience has ‘shown that reports which come from Bl Paso must be taken with a grain of salt, when they pertain to conditions in Mexico and plans which are being made there for operations against this country, so that_there may be good and sufficient reasons for discounting the latest tale, which is to the effect that Villa an- nounced while in' Chiinaliua that he intended to divide his men into groups of 25 each and distribute them along the American border and in “the in- terior of the United States to loot and burn property That Villa is capable of making such plans cannot be questioned, and he recognizes that nothipg would do s0 much to m: a'faree of the un- derstanding“ which is likely to reached between this ‘country and Mexico, and to show up the lack of control on the part of Carranza, than the successful carrying out of such raiding eperations. Villa hes- been doing; his: utmost, since it appeared that the two repub- lics were likely to agree on a settle- ment of the border trouble, to show up_the'wealkness of the de facto gov- ernment-and to make plain the fact that he is still a power to be reck- oned with. Villa knows of course how vowerless Carranza has been in the past to prevent border raids and by his reported statement he adds em- phasis to it, but he must realize that this country is not going to leave the border entirely to the protection of ‘arranza ‘or the mercy of the bandit hieftain. ] INDIAN LEGISLATION. In spite of all’that bas been done In the way of legislation, the corrup- xion and unjust @ractics which are carried on in connection with the ad ministration of the Indian * agencies have mever been. brought to an end. There may have bzen improvements through changes and through the ef- forts of comscieritious administrators of Indian affairs, but thers are others who fail, tb ‘aspume their tdbonsibili- ties in such a manner. The action of ;Senator Johnson of South Dakota in introducing 2 bill which provides that the secretary of the interior shall immediately remove the agent or nnudnlandent at any lpdhn agency in that staje uoen the . 5 | for the éstablishment of a state re- whether the ‘selection in such a wo{tho}nfim shall have charge.of their affairs.will be epproved remaind.to be uenl 3 The -government is responsible fo: m m the proper-superv ision of the Indians | M If there .is corruption -and misman- “|agement the sovernment is ‘the dne that should cérrect it. The m: ity of a tribe upon protesting shovld get full respect and be entitled to a ghor- ough investigation of the plaint, but to so legislate that govern- ment's representative musat be dis charged upon plotest absolutely ties the hands of the secretary of the in- terior, regardless-of whether the pol icy of the government is being car- riéd out or not. - While this bill may appear on the surface to be imnocent, it should have and doubtlessly will get the scrutinizing attention: that it deserves. A WOMAN'S REFORMATORY. Action which must be looked upon as timely, is that which has been started by the meeting of the Connec- ticut Prison agsociation’s eommittee on delinquent women looking towards the securing of the necessary legislatién New Haven, Dec. 14- —3. w. Overto‘n, 1917, captain of theé University cross country team and twice intercollesi - ate champion, took third piace in the national senior championskips at New, York last Saturday. Despite a cramp which troubled him over the hardest part of the course, Overton, ran a strong race.throughout md{u only ‘beaten by the g Finnis| ‘Kyrmen and Kolehmainen. wind and rain the time made by | the first three men was yemarkable During the col uk. a cam- paign will be eondu:“d by the college class committees to raise funds for four scholarships at the Connecticut Jumor Republic. It is hoped that each class will be able to give $100 for one of these ! scholarships ,which will suport ong boy for a whole year at the Republic- formatory for women. This is by no mieans the first effort that has beenm | made in that direction. The_proposi- tion has heen before two or three ses- sions of ghe legislature. The merit of it has failed to receive, recognition but faveable action has been prevent- ed becalse of the lack of available funds and the need of practicing economy. Connecticut had gotten to the point where it was rolling up a big debt, its expenditures were con- stantly exceeding its income and each year meant an addition to the bonded indebtedness, with the resuit that a woman’s reformatory was listed among the things which could wait. Most every community, however, has its cases, which show that there is a need of a reformatory for women as well as for men. Frequent are the instances where there is an The University closes for the Christmas recess 2 week from Friday, the fifteenth, at one o'clock and re- opens Tuesday, January ninth, at eight-thirty for academi¢ students and eight o'cloci for the members of -the Shefi ld Scxenhnc school. Tho Norwxch Club is pllnnmg o have one more informal banquet be- fore the holidays when reports of the different committees, regarding the various plans for the next term, will be made. Last Friday, R. L. Johnson of Nor- h suffersd considerable . loss by fire. Fortunately Johnson happened to return to his room before every- thing had been destroyed and though he was unable to extinguish it, the opportunity of reclaiming those who have gone wrong, if there was but-an institution for such ‘work. Instead of sending them to jail or prison, where the punishment often results in mak- inz hardened criminals of these who could be reformed under proper in- fluence, a correctional institution would in many cases be preferred by those who have the say as to what should be done with the erring. ones. Connecticut without . any question needs what it is being urged to pro- vide. AN IMPORTANT CONFERENCE. What promises to be the beginning of a definite movement for the, Te- clamation of a large amount of what is today -waste land, or land which cannot be utilized -on the scale which it should be, is the conference ar- ranged to take place at Atlantic City the last of next month under the aus- pices of the New Jersey Mosquito Extermination association. It is 2 well known fact that thére are firemen, whom he cuiled for. with chemicals soon got: it under their con- trol. The University holds insurdnce on Dhoth the building itself " and the studens’ property, 5o in all probability the loss will e comparatively small. The Yale battery has at last been formaily disbanded, honorable dis- charges being granted to all privates and non-commissioned officers. The carcer of the Connecticut 10th Fleld Artiliery witlle short, was most I orable, an admirable spirit having been shown at all- times by its mem- bers. Its success in meeting the rigid requirements_of thi©_training camp at Tobyhanna, last summer, has caused the War #Department much pleasure and as rsult the authorities at Wash- ington have decided to _establish = training school for officers at Yale and the university is to grant @ certain amout of credit to al those who com- plete the course successfully. The new armory is now well above the ground and will probably be completed by the first of Marek The will of Mrs. Mary Warden Harkness, disposing of an estate of ; about $15,000,600, of which $1,100,000 valuable tracts of land which are mtlgoes to philanthrophy and education, improved or €lltivated because of the!was filed for probate in New York mosquito, which is not only a great| Wednesday. Mrs. Harkness died at nnnover but an extensive spreader of |the Presbyterian lospital on . the disé@gse. What can be done to con- |MOrning of Dec. 5. Off that day the such a pest.has heen. shown in ] her husband,” Charles-'W. Harkness,, canal zone, In Cuba and!gt: dara Oil Director,-was filed. show- | in Indfa. " ‘There. are methods which, ] ;; that of his ~estate of - about if followed, will resuit in the mak- | 360,000,000 o gave $1215L,655 to her ing available of large stretches of ter- | Tie largest sigle public bequest is ritory by adopting" just such tactics as | $300. ('flot to “iale E(;‘n t§r§l| . ;‘0!' lp"‘r’ i poses of endowmen e insame to be e e et ey oases. 21 | uised only In the payiment cf salaries of considered and which discussion will{°Micers Of instruction. Mg Harkness probably result in a start being made. If New Jersey can demonstrate by the act'on which it takes that the mosquito can be exterminated, it will be an excellent lesson to other states where certain Sections are similarly infested and . .therefore undeveloped. There are-tremmendous rpossibilities at stake but nothing-@vill come’ from simply talking about it. What is needed is a near at home demonstra- tion of just what can be done and once that is given there can be little reason to believe but what it will be followed by general action in every state where a similar condition prevails. No state more than New Jersey needs such im- provement but there are many wh would hasten to follow its course if successtul. THE WAR PRIMER By Naiional Geographic Sncg(’ Falmouth—*“After being practically neglected by ‘ransatlantic ¥essels for more than 60 years, the English port of Faimoutn has entered upcn a new era of prosperity. This isproved by the fact that the passengers who left ew York aboard the Cunard liner Alaunia on its last voyage had been janded there before the munitions- a mine, while proceeding to londos accoraing to a war geography bulletin of the National Geographic Society, EDITORIAL NOTES. If we are to bejieve the central pow- ers, they have found the silver lining to a dark clond. With its excellent deep-water har- bor capable of affording anehorage for ihe largest modern steamers, Fal- mouth continued to be a port of re- fuge even though its importance waned when it ceased to be the chief packet station for American mail in 1850, after having enjoyed that dis- tinction” for more than 150 years. Situated at the mouth of the Fal River, this quaint. tropical-looking seaport of 12,000 inhabitants is very near the southwestern _extremity of Englend, being only 18 miles from The Lizard, the most southely cape, and less than 30 miles in' an airline from Land’s End, the first point of the English mainiand sighted by tramsat- lantic voyagers. The harbor of Falmouth has an area of 42 acres and as steamers enter it passengers are frowned down upon on one side by the imposing mass of Tudor masonry known ds Pendennis Castle and on the other by St. Mawes Castle, both dating back to the time of Henry VIII and both celfbrated for their share m the Civil War. n recent vears Falmouth has been one of the most popular watering places on the coast of Cornwall. Its climate is exceptionally mild. Palms, banonas and citrons grow in the open without protection throughout the year, thus lending a foreign aspect to the town. “Falmouth occupies the site of an older town which was known as Smithick and also-as Pennycomeqyick. The man on the corngr sa¥s: It is useless to try to love one's neighbors as they love themselves. S v o With all the talk that is . soing around f@vorable to compulsory mili- tary training Colonel Roosevelt has a chance to say “T told you s0.” In England it is apparently the con- sensus of opinion that George should do it, and France thinks 5o well of hig ldea that it is following his example. It is nét a very emcouraging utlook when the authorities admit that they expect only slight results from the federal investigation' of the high_cost of living. 1t now remains to be seen whether tife kaiser can do this year, what Hen- ry Ford was unable to do last year— get the troops out of the trenches by Christmas. It isn’t too early to begin to think that much in the way of fire preven: tion can be done By using care in the selection and arranging of Christmas decorations. After past experiences the entente allies can be expected to realize that the king of Greece is sparring for time in order to help out those with- whom he sympathizes. It is unfomtunate that the peace proposals’ should come from Eerlin just a few days after it was decided that there would be no Nobel peacas prize awarded for 1916, Whether the investigations are start- ed by state or federal duthorities there is no reason’ why any leniency ‘should be shown to those who ares respon: ble for the abnormally high prices. When ‘the navy department reports that " the cost of- subsistence in th navy is less than it was before the war, there is shown excellent reason why the government should- interest itself in the fight to bring down prices. The supreme court has upheld the 25,000 fines imposed upon the pack- ers for the. violation of the Missouri anti-trust laws.” That means that they will have-an oppoftunity , to apend some Of the profit_they Mn making off the war ufl.theomum- The Thursday falrs, which were es- tablisbed here in 1680, just a quatter of a century before the port became an important packet station, are ne 3 lonzer heid. “Just an hour’s ride by motor car from Falmouth is the interesting old town of Redruth, the center-of the tin- mining industry of Cor and =s: Dec\allv noted for its f: wennap $the grass-covered hitheater Jl re Charles Wesley usefl to preach the mirers’- and where -open-air gs are still held occasionally, when from 20,000 to 30,000 Wesleyans gather for the day. TFalmcuth, on the other i‘andl was once a_stronghold of Al Jt is a raflrcad journey of 506 miles from Falmonth to Lendon, while the trip by steanfer—a bi-weekly” service is muintained 1in “times of peace—re- quires a_day and a_half. The statement that passengers for Longon @e now .landed at Falmouth by Cunard liners susgests the expla- nation that the DBritish authorities have adopted thig guarding passengers f! the Tnglish Channel war o For- L‘,fly most of the Cunarders Gocked at vewpool. transfer tax report of the estate of had previously given a half mnunn to the University. ~ s Wehile the date of Febuary 6 has been set for tI unior prom of the class of 1918 at Yale the committee in ciargh of the affair is in a yuan- dary as to where the great event will! be held. It was hoped that the com-’ ‘mittee would be able to get permission from the military authorities of the state for the use of the Secovd | ment armory, but the petition froin the: prom committee hasg been denied. was iearned that the committee has been considering Woolsey nall and if that is used prom invitations will be- Come scarcer than ever becaUse the attendance will 1 be limited. h ‘Morgan, secretary of the In- urui egiate ~basketball “leagus, be- lieves that Captain Taft's Yale team stands the_best chance of winning the chamrpionship this season. In review- fhg the prospects of the various teams, Morgan declares thazt the competition for high honors will_rarrow doxn to two teams—Yale and Pennsylvania— Wwith the former possessing the bright- est prospects. Princeton, Cornell, a dark horse, Dartmouth and Columbia will threaten in the order’ named, ac- cording to the opinigi of Morgan Yale, Zays Morgan, looks best be- £ the wealth of veteran ma- i h in- Captain a dependable who should ".improve this : Mallon a star guard; Garfield. a fair center, trom whom = great im- provement is expecied this year; Kin- ney,.a forward, who was rulned last r by Dbeing placed as a .roving but who should show. good form in his regular position. . With pro- per support from Mallon, Kinney shoud easily rank as one of the best forwards in the league. Olson, a 1915 forward, completes a list. of veterans of mere than ordirary strength, LETTERS TO THE EDITOR A Tri Mr. Editor: Kindly allow me space in your paper for a few words- sive of appreciation of the lnte >ug Kammo Larsen, words that I know will be heartily endorsed by those who knew her as f) s, and who mourn the departure from their midst of this excellent lady. She was of Danish birth, and her early womanhood was spenf, first training for, and later in ocey sitions of Tesponsibility in privai ilies of the highest educiition and ture, and also in public institutions, and being gifted with a mind capable of readily appropriating and assimi- lating that which is worth while in the world of intelligence. she developed a taste for the best. both in men and wo- men as’well as in art and literature, that showed out in her whole iife. Sha came to this country twenty-four years ago and had spent the whole of that time in this city, and while, she neve. took active partsin such enterprises as many of the women of today are so interested in, either social or organ- ized church work, shé chosesthe quie -of a.home, and lived- there ‘her own; Yife ‘out, in as far as she was able to, and her taste and fpeans allowed. She was a great lover of flowers, and her home, inside in the winter and out- side in the summer. was a continual feast to a lover of flowers. She prov- ed it to be a fact, that flowers are re- sponsive to the touch of a loving hani as much as peoble, and it really seemed as if they bloomed twice as biz and beautiful as elsewhere. Her tastes in literatkre, both secular and religious, was of the highest order. In this, as well as in the many things of intersst to the real women of today, her whole life showed out and Jeft an impress on everything that told In _stronger language than words, the kind of char- acter she possessed. Her ideals were most clearly expressed in the words of the, Apostle Paul, “Whatsoever things ave true, whatsoever things are whatsoever things are just, ever things are pure, whatso- things are lovely, whatsoever thgngs are of good report, if there o any virtue, if there be any praise, thi on these things.” And this was certainly Larsen. Having been brought up a Lutheran, she held to the simple. plain . doctrines of that creed,” and showed in her ‘whole life. that her faith was mot good or bad, we believe she will be found at that great last day ute to Mrl‘ Larsen. true of Mrs It} among those who have “washed their difficulties. the effort and, thanks to U is sure of another year of ample liv- i robes and made them white in the Blood of the Lamb.” AN APPRECIATIVE FRIEND. Norwich, Dec. 14, 1918, STORIES OF THE WAR Diplnmnu for Ov.renmmg War Diffi- culties. Among the war reompenses that will be handed down with greatest pride from generation to geperation in French famiies are the diplomas, now framed and hapging on the walls of many a farm house, attesting how the peasant women and farmers’ wives, widows and daughters overcome war The soil has well repaid , France ng. > The actual cash returns will.equal a record vear in time of peace though, excepting oats and potatoes, the yield was below the average. This country of the Brie, which is generally second only to the Beauce in wheat production and first of all for oats, stands at the head for both, yet this crop was sown almost entirely by women, girls and boys too younz or women too o0ld .to shoulder a rifl There is a good example of what Wa done on_a Jittle farm just outside the shade of the forest of Foumtainebleau at Villemer, where in a modest farm housc hang the framed diplomas ac- corded by the Syndicat Central des Agriculteurs de France (Central Un- ion of French Farmers). in the names of Madame Beaujouan and her daugh- ters, Raymonde aged 12 .and Jeanne aged M. Beaujouan was mobilized while the grain was still standing in 1914; Mad- ame ‘Beaujouan and her daughters have harvested three crops from that farm since. The third is the vest of the three, for they “lacked the wris as Jeanne Beaujouan puts it, until they had had the experience of two crops. They are proud of the crop for the crep's sake, but théy don't séem to be aware of the remarkable effort i quired of them fo do the fertilizing, plowing, harrowing, seeding and har- vesting. When one talks to them about It, they tell him to go and see the crop that: Madameiselle Marthe Bon Feve got fro ma 40 acre farm at Serrigm en-Bresse, Whith promises to com: tute the record for girl farming during the war when the yield is finaily meas- ured. Like the soldiers of France, these heroines of the rear take no there are so many, they say, who have done as well. Red tape, the paralyzing force that even the reawakening of this epic pe- riod has not yet vanquished, withheld from the farms the aid the government wished to supply, excepting in rare cases, in the seeding of tMe farme German prisoners of war, volunteers trom the camps of interned civilian Austrians and Germans, Annamites imported from Indo China, Kabyles brought from the mountains of Alge- ria, Sengalese from the West®Afri coast, a few territorials on last, but not least, the Amer bindéer Helped with the harv with the exception of the self-bi the help was available ony in tered spots. A majestic German porte!’ of a Ri- viera palace hote, who in time of peace wore more gold braid than any ganeral in the war, and one of the head w: ers of the best known restaurants Paris, bound wheat side by side on a farm in Beauce. Instead of the_ gold braided uniform, the porter with his fellow prisoners wore a suit of blye A Victrola for her Christmase=- andanew;qymberhfe Is there anythmg the world that can bring her' of entertainment. Its singers are the budothemostfamoul Marsh Building ‘230 State Street, uch pleasure as tlmchtrala. *“‘instrument of the world’s greatest artists ?"’# Tts music is a never- endmgaoumeofuupratxo&.a.ndaw And it is such a simple, convenient matter to get a Victrola from us thatsevery home can afford one. Our terms make a Victrola the easiest thing you can get for Christmas. Victrolas $15 to $400. THE HOUSE OF MARSH test in theworld. its instru- funniest, its THE FIRST rnooue-non m HER owu GUIDANCE wEcTaR FoRNeuLL =7 REELS-- »W A PRODUCTION THAT SETS A NEW ERA IN uovmpwnza An intensely hutm story of & mthmm in the pic- " Matinee st 2:30 Eve. at 7, 8:30 All Seats 10c Paramount sesse L. LASKY Presents - Pictures WALLACE REID and CLEO RIDGLEY in “THE SELFISH WOMAN” - A Story of a Woman’s Unsuccessful Attempt to Wreck Her Husband's Work Because of Her Love for Gain. A Play Every Man, Woman and C hild Should See. _PATHE WEEKLY | LONESOME LUKE COMEDY SHOWS 2:30, 7 and 8:40 Mat. 10c—Eve. 10c and 20c Friday Saturday AUDITORIUN MIGNON ANDERSON AND PAULA SHAY In The City of IHusion A STIRRING SOCIETY DRAMA IN FIVE ACTS Number 12—BEATRICE FAIRFAX—Number 12 £ WHY NOT GIVE YOUR BOY OR GIRL Rk & SAVINGS BANK BOOK FOR A CHRISTMAS PRESENT The Chelsea Savings Bank Franklm Square, Norwich, Connecticut . oversaals with the letters 1. C. (stand~ ing for interned civilian) on their backs to identify them as Teutons in case of a on to escape. They garned the equivalent of 45 cents a day and were clothed, lodged and fed by the farmer. Their fare was exactiy the same as that of the farmers hiring them and of the soldiers guarding them. That they were satisfied ap- pears from the fact that, out of sev- eral thousand, only three of them tried to get away. The severai thousand German sol- diers employed in the harvest gave no trouble at all. To the great major- ity of them French farm life was a revelation and a satisfaction that found expression in frequent inqu:ries as to whether there was any prospect that they might be allowed to esiab- lish themselves in France after the war. Not, all_of these improvised farm- hands make good harvesters, though (hey did the best they could. After all it was the American self- binder that saved the harvest; with- out it much of the brave effort of the women of France would have been iost. Every machine was utilized to its ut- most capacity. In communities where there were none and where the farm- ers could not afford to buy one, the commune procured a machine for the common use of the farmers In turn. Traction plows aided only slightly in the preparation of the soil. It is the recognized necessity of the future, but the outlay required is too much fo: the small farmer. Further organiaztion of syndicates for the purchase of ma- chines in common is necessary. The elephants of a well known cir- cus played the leading role in an ex- periment at Lavilledieu du Temple, near Castel Sarrazin, which the people of the region comfidcently expect will Children Cry revolutionize farming. Hitched to & FOR FLETCHER'S plaw, these animals replaced BTz it oxen it wore reasion-| CASTORIA ed by, thé army, and proved by the regularity of their galt to be far su- perior to either the horse or ox; each animal did the work of three yoke ofg oxen; whether they ate more than six times as much the reports to not tell It is only the meridional imaginzti of the region, however, that contem- plates . the practical extension to France of the working elephant. \ OTHER VIEW POINTS The progressive proclamation in fa- vor -of helping Wilson liberalize the democratic party and Johnson liber- aiize the republican party does mot mean mueh yet. It will have to be worked out.' The progressives will have to go to Wilson. He won’t com to them. The republicans realize by sad experi- enc t where the progressives are as in the Johnson mneighbor- hood, they demand everything and will destroy if they ean't rule.—Waterbury American. One would naturally expect the in- struction as well as the discipline to be given by men in all military but, according to current news, a lldy run away from & private military academy -because he was “tired of women teachers.” This story is Jikely hands of women.—Torrington Register. GOOD, BRIGHT, SNAPPY ¢l ’ ll“% S DIAMOND RINGS unted In All the Latest Settings be in the city for Other Rings m“’""sls".'osrs? Gents it Ladie’ Real Stome Birthday Rings in fled“lldy «BRKCELET WATCHES, in Hamilton, Elgin, Wd- tham, Illinois andSwemenh. WATCHES are our specialty, and in this line w8 can suit everybody. We can show you some fine Watches at $15 to $25; Mhmfm$10b$75. 8 . PENDANTS to suit the most particular, in handsome Diamond and Fancy Stone designs—our leaders, $6 to 515 others $2 to $25. A complete line of FRENCH IVORY TOILE'I SHAVING and MILITARY#SETS at popular prices. ENGRAVING FREE % OPEN NIOHTQ THE WM. FRISWELL CO., 25 and 27 Franklin Street “ OUR BUSINEESS IS TO PROTECT YOUR SECURITIES AND VALUABLES " .. Inspect Our Safe Deposit Vault (Street Floor) The Thames Natioaal Bnnk 16 lHETUOKIT 7 -