Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, MAY 8, 1914. » EERALD PUBLISHING COMPANY. ®ropristora. 2s3ued dally (Sunday excepted) at 4:18 p. m. St Herald Bullding, 67 ~hurch St — % [} Entered at the Post Office at New Britaln &8 Second Class Mali Matter. N.':-;:a by carrier to any part of ‘:m otty Cents a Week, 65 Cents a Mon Subacriptions for paper to be sent by mall. payable in advance. 60 Cents & Month, $7.00 a year. ,n...-m profitable i dvertising medium 1in . Ry. Circulstion books and press T )m always open to advartisers. § ! | i | The Herald will be found on sate st Hota- i /iog’s News Stand, 42nd St. and Broad- way, New York City; Board Walk, Atlantic City. and Hartford depot TELEPHONE CALLS. Omoe . POLITICAL STAR GAZING. Friends of Governor Baldwin in New Haven now intimate that the gov- ernor is not quite as anxious to run \for office this fall as heretofore. It s whispered that he has been looking 'at the political skies and has inquired of the political seers and he likes ineither the signs nor the warnings. 'His position,: however, will not be made known until later. He still has scme hopes that conditions will change.—Bridgeport Post. The Post is one of the best newspa- \pers in the state, but somehow it has ‘never been able to see an appreciat- iive value in Governor Baldwin, yet he is recognized everywhere as an able !man and has proven it on several oc- lcasions. It is difficult to understand \whether his scanning the political skies as explained above was for his cwn: instruction, or in the interest of Homer Cummings, Congressman Ma- hanjor our esteemed friend, Mr. Lan- ders, as the Courant would say, all leandidates, aceonding to rumor, for United: \States senator. It is very de- {sirable that the weather should be [fine forvsuch an important event, but [the Post is a bit derelict in its duty in not chronicling what the governor iw when he scanned. What did he jee-or with whom did he confer as to e signs? Was it Charley Comstock, who has:also been doing some scan- ping and:is reported to have seen in [the milky way everything which tend- ed to prove that he is to be the next [governor of Connecticut? The. only [thing lacking was the plurality, but lhe may see that in the next look. Such experienced astronomers as jlienry Roraback, ‘“Bob” Eaton, “Sid” lMawley, Morris Webster, Herbert Knox Smith and “Joe” Alsop have all [been scanning, have been seeing things iz the nebulous masses in the skies nd some’ of them "must’ be 'mis- taken, if their predictions “are to be given any credence. It looks s if they.have been seeking in- [formation in the wrong place. There ight be some excuse for some of the canners, but we are surprised that ch a practice should be indulged in ¥ such an astute student as thte gov- mor. The Post is'mot trying to play trick on us, is it? LARGER ARMY NEEDED. According to telegraphic advices rom Washington today the war de- rtment is beginning to realize the pecessity of more troops in Mexico, not for the purpose of promoting p e, but to protect the lives and property of Americans. Tt\ has long been apparent to those, t least, who have not been favored vith confidential advice of those di- ly in' charge, that this country, jow that it has gone into Mexico, eeds a large army there if it is to Ty out its object and a still larger bne if the country is to offer resis- fance. The, latter was naturally ex- pected and General Funston appears o be confident, judging from the in- ormation given by refugees from fexico City, that the situation there far from satisfactory. If ' there jhould be a serious uprising there and lhe United States were unable to cope vith it without a large loss of life hich might be avoided if the army increased to the strength required General Funston, there would be ng and loud unfavorable comment. is no time for dillydallying, but one this government, now that it has one into Mexico, to do its work ex- editiously and get out again. It here should be a needless loss of life Mexico there Wwill be severe criti- , and the surest way to avoid it prepare for econditions which are ¥ A‘y to arise there any day. This £ is being pretty thoroughly im- ed upon the authorities at Wash- gton at present. . WORKHOUSE FOR MAN IN '9“ 7 SHROUD. here is no accounting for the ac- otis of some people. Those who have 'been parading up md._flown on the walk in front of the Rockefeller, Tesi- dence in New York were: joined last evening by a figure enveloped in a long black shroud, who at once began his march with the others. He was sted and in the night court wes Bt to the workhouse for sixty days. He said he was an electrician, and held Rockefeller responsible for the deaths in the Colorado strike because of the reports he read in the news- REborS It must be annoying to the occu- pants of the Rockefeller house -to see this parade in front of their home and not be able to put a stop to it. It serves no good purpose except to annoy the Rockefeller family and to block traffic on the street, people being | attracted by the strange figures pacing up and down on the walk, each wear- ing a band of crepe on which are the words “Thou shalt not kill.” This is the most peculiar campaign New York has ever seen, but the police are now likely to put a stop to it. The per- formance is so strange as to be in reality a nuisance. No organization. can hope to gain anything by such tactics and the par- ticipants are likely to cause the en- actment of legislation which will pro- vide such a punishment for similar offenses as to be so severe that those convicted -under it will pay dearly for their actions. It is unfortunate that people who profess to be friendly to the cause of labor cannot find any better method of remedying industrial wrongs than to practice the acts of those who have been parading up and down in front of the Rockefeller house. They are proving conclusively that they are not fit to be trusted with any work which carries with it any responsibility. “RIVER OF DOUBT.” It is regrettable indeed that such an eminent gentleman as Colonel Roose- velt should be so grossly misunder- stood.” It is impossible for him to do anything or say anything: oufgef the. ordinary without his ve n questioned. He has been | cation in the wilds of Biall, h# has Hic discovered a river, beenin it, swam and fished in it, &nd as s0on s he emerged from the 1“1!013 he told about his find, about his boilsend how much he lost'in weight. If it was a Jacksonian democrat or a ‘hard shell republican who doubted his word the antipathy might be understood, but for a geographer in London to say that the River of Doubt, which the colonel christened his discovery, is none other than a tributary of the Tapajos river which empties into the Amazon, is impertinent.to say the least. How does any oné' in London know what the colonel discovered? He simply made a brief statement when he hit civilization to the effect that he disCovered a river and told where it is. The London critic might as well doubt the - existence of the colonel’s boils as to say that he did not locate a new river. The United States will stand by the colonel’s discovery; he is a geographer himself, knows whereof he speaks and the average American will object to his being turned into a Dr. Cook. What a curiosity he will be when he takes the stump for the progressives in New York this fall. - His platform will be a new one and' rio matter who will be chosen to Tun against him. no one can meet him on the question. river ‘Workers For the Towns. (Brockton Times.): An echo of the unemployment dif- ficulties lately experienced by all large cities is heard in the new plan of the Boston branch of the Salva- tion Army, which purposes-to furnish workers for the small. towns of New England. On a small scale, the ar- rangement is almost precisely that recommended in suggestions for \a government-managed national emi- ployment bureau. In times of indus- trial quiet, one section of the é&m{ needs men, another does not, In thi absenee of a directing . agency, the oversupply and the shortage, .. hoth wasteful, remain until corrected by the natural course of events. -Ag.ifor turning city workers out to rural communities, no such scheme would succeed along broad lines. It has been tried, as recently as during last win- ter, when the uremployed in New York city refused to accept work in villages and on farms. Dealing with the unemployed * individually, how- ever, might produce better results. Though no great number of families could be placed in this way, some hundreds could be sent from a city of Boston’s size to smaller cities or towns within half a day’s journey of the distributing center. Kyen if the larger cities found no relief in the plan, the towns would. The trend toward the city, which persists even in dull times, leaves many vacant jobs in the smaller places along the way. Vincent Astor, who married Miss Hel- en Huntington a few days ago, is but twenty-two vears of age. '~ His bride is only twenty. It is almost a boy and girl marriage. How it sounds like old fashioned life, or a chapter out of the Waverly novels! To peo- ple whose future is assured, like the Astors, such a union at this early age involves no sacrifices and no heroisms. To the ordinary fellow and girl of twenty-two and twenty, in city life at least, it means renting an apart- ment on some unfashionable or even sordid street. Many former social comradeships have to be given up* e bridegroom may have to drop his [ubs, and the bride must be cleaning house while her former assoclates are playing bridge.—Bridgeport Farmer. | " FACTS AND FANCIES. Ex-Judge Dillon, who has just passed away, was an lowa lawyer, picked up out there by Jay Gould as his personal counsel. Brought to New York, he made good Jay Gould's selection. Judge Dillon used to say that he was not in any sense Jay Gould’s “counsel.” He never knew what Mr. Gould was going to do. When Gould did something, he came to Dillon and said: “Now get me out of this.” And Judge Dillon did. —Waterbury American. It is petfectly proper that the may- or should be absent from the city for a long vacation this summer. He has had too little vacation for, his health since he has been chief execu- tive, and the work is highly trying. No manager of a big corporation whose duties were anywhere near as duous as are the mayor's would have less than a month’s vacation each year, and Mayor Rice has had considerably less than that—New Haven Register. Wreaths of flowers covered a hand- some oak coffin, in which ‘“Tuck Lentz Crawford,” a sixteen-year-old bufl terrier, was buried in a lot pur- chased for the purpose in Cypress Hf¥ls cemetery, New York. Nearly $200 set aside ten years ago by the will of Harry Lentz, at one time a New York sporting man, was used in defraying the cost of the funeral. The dog had been Mr. Lentz's pet. It is such folly that gives us the socialist movement of protest and the in- flamed I. W. W. agitators. Is it any wonder that hungry men and women become desperate when they see such things done?—Hartford Post. It is now about time the author- ities in the small towns got busy and lenforced the law regarding carrying hts upon-vehicles. Those who go iforth into the night on the roads ['out of the city realize that little or no attempt is made to comply with the new law. It is time something was done. In these days of modern travel such precautions are neces- sary. It is as important for a rub- for an automobile. Every one who has driven a horse oves a shady road on a dark night knows the difficulty of seeing a yard ahead.—Bridgeport Post. ‘Naugatuck is no longer under so- cialist government. The administration has become republican. So have those of Winsted, Southington and Farm- ington, which held their elections Monday. All of the straws point one way. They indicate a steady wind blowing away from anything that could be constructed as an indorse- ment of radical democratic policies. It is natural that the republicans in view of recent .election = happenings 1ook forward to the fall congressiona elections with confidence and that the democrats shiver, when they think of the trouble about to overtake them.— Ansonia Sentinel. State Constabulary Best. (Philadelphia Record.) Pennsylvanians who remember the Homestead riots of 1892, when the killing of strikers by Pinkerton operatives led to such scenes of vio- lence that it was necessary to call out the entire national guard; the slaughter at Latimer, Luzerne county, when a sheriff’s posse shot down a number of armed miners, and similar incidents of other years, may. well feel grateful that their state has passed—and, let us hope, forever— that condition of barbarism through which Colorado is now painfully mak- ing its way in its treatment of labor troubles. In the old days the coal and iron police fulfilled here, in time of stress, the functions which in the Centennial state have fallen to the armed guard. This duty of protect- ing the property of employers from | Injury is, of course, an eminently proper one, and the only question arises as to how it can be best ac- complished, with entire justice to both sides in the dispute. Here in | Pennsylvania we have found that a non-political state constabulary is vastly superior to the armed guards, deputy sheriffs or militia, whose methods during the past two years in West Virginia, Michigan and now Colorado have aroused such fierce an- tagonism. At this distance it is impossible to estimate recent events in Colorado with entire accuracy, but judging by all accounts, the militia seem to have acted with almost incredible ferocity toward the strikers and their fam- ilies. Not much can be expected from armed guards, who are, of course, simply mercenaries drawn too often from the very dregs of so- ciety. In Colorado the strikers seem to have shown entire respect to the federal troops, and in this state the state constables have inspired the same. feeling. It is recognized that they stand simply for law and or- der, without any of that personal animus which frequently prompts na- tional guardsmen and armed guards to unjustifiable acts. Pennsylvania may feel justly proud that, alone among the forty-eight states of the ! union, it has found the solution of this most difficult problem. It has pointed the way, and if other com- monwealths, especially those where labor troubles are likely to occur, have neglected to follow, the blame is theirs. Capt. Groome and his hel- meted troopers form a model that cannot be improved upon. Their work has been so successful because of the high personnel of the men and the complete absence of all political mo- tives in their conduct. in ber tired carriage to carry a light as | WHAT OTHERS SAY Views on all sides of timely questions as discussed in ex- changes that come to Herald office. The Old Open Street Car. (New York Times.) The past winter having been one of unusual severity, it had been hoped that the open surface cars of the old type had all been split up and burned for fuel. Yet with the coming of warmer weather cars of this type have reappeared in no small number, espe- cially on the Broadway line. Like the men of Bunker Hill, these vener- able vehicles, with their transverse seats built like church pews and the running board on the off-side, have come down to us from a former gen- eration. We condemn as an exaggeration and out of place the statement that it is almost as hard to get aboard one of these cars as it is to climb Mount Mc- Kinley. The ascent of the mountain is much more difficult, of course, yet it does require great physical exer- tion to get into one of these old cars. To alight from them is in some Te- srects like Jumping off the Palisades. The sheer drop is not so great, but the risk is considerable, especially for the aged or the obese. They are undoubt- adly the most inconvenient type of street cars ever devised. But the crowning outrage is the way in which their construction com- pels standing passengers to tread, re- cline, and wallow upon those who are seated. There is no room for stand- ing passengers, yet passengers will get or board, and are permitted to get on bcard, after all the seats are taken. They at once become an object of hatred and profanity to the seated Ppassengers upon whose rights and per- sons they wantonly trespass. Over- crowding in this kind of surface car is so offensive and infuriating that we can readily believe the report that the deplorable increase among the clergy of the habit of carrying firearms is due to it. There are other types of the open car not open to these objec- ticns, and the contrast between these ancient structures and the stepless cars of tthe new torpedo-boat-de- stroyer type is really too great to be tclerated. The old open bucket and the old open car have no proper use in thesé days save as museum pieces. “Borrows What Brains He Can.” (Spokane Spokesman Review.) The wise man ‘seeks the wisdom of others, but, if also strong, decides for himself and acts on his own judg- ment. The unwise man relies first and last on others, for even if he seeks wisdom in a multiple of coun- selors, he is the plaything of the lat- est adviger and does what this man says, no matter if it flatly' contra- dicts what was first advised. . There exists confusion of thought between taking counsel and relying on oneself. It appears to be thought that asking ‘information about one’s course from those who have informa- tion” that he has not is leaving the decision to them. But the two things are not the same. An intelligent or sensible man knows that his judgment may be biased by looking at matters only from his own point of view or from having insufficient data for forming a judgment. But when he has consulted friends and increased his information, then, if strong and wise, he thinks for himself and steers his own course. This is the method of- such men as Socrates and- Lincoln, - Napoleon, Roosevelt and Wilson. Socrates did not believe he was the wisest of the Greeks, but he questioned his fel- lows everlastingly until he became convinced perforce that he was less unwise than they. emancipation for years with. every man who wished to urge it, but he did not grant it until he himself had persuaded Abraham Lincoln. that it was right and wise. Napoleon held’ a council of war with his field mar- shals before every great battle and heard and weighed their every argu- ment, but the final decision was made by himself. Roosevelt took his cabi- net freely into his counsel and gave weight to their judgment, but it was he himself who decided the course of President Roosevelt. Mr. Wilson, in his own picturesque phrase, ‘“‘bor- rows all the brains he can,” but the man has vet to be discovered who ‘de- termines his judgment as to what the president should do. The wise man knows his own limi- tations and tries to enlarge himself through the wisdom and counsel of others. Then, if also strong, he takes the tiller himself and steers , the ship. "The Ol National Road, (Indianapolis News.) All kinds of conventions come to Indianapolis, but none should be more welcome than that scheduled for Mav 7, 8 and 9, to commemorate the forefathers that built the old na- tional road. A distinguished com- pany is promised for tnis convention and it should be an important period of reminiscence and of re-dedication to the cause of good roads, Along the national road for many years a tide of immigrants flowed. Conestoga wagons, ox teams, troops of men and women on horseback, and all the im- pedimenta of a people: seeking new homes in the great west, rolled over this highway. It was better than an Indian trail, but there were long sec- tions of corduroy, and travel over it would not now be regarded as a pleasant journey; vet for its time it served a great purpose. Overhills and through swamps it led to the new world in the west. Overhead from either side the boughs of the trees touched and in the summer time the traveler passed through a shady lane broken only here and there with patches of prairie or the clearings of the first settlers. In time in those regions where there was gravel or stone the road was macadamized; but it was not the ma- cadam of modern times. It was a railroad, stage coach line and. post road combined. Its like will never Lincoln discussed again be seen in this part of ‘the world. Civilization has found other means of . transportation and meets with other scenes. Those who use more modern thoroughfares will nev- er see what the pioneers saw of the fauna and flora of the Mississippi val- ley. We should not regret that the old things have passed away. We should only have due respect for the memory of those who experienced them. Bet- ter things have come about; but we shall do well if we live up to our o portunities for roadmaking and ma- terial comforts of travel as complete- ly as our ancestors met the demands of their times. We shall be glad to show some of the visitors next week some good roadways, but we should also learn “from them how to make and especially how to preserve, good roads.” Sunday Outings and the Law. (New Lendon Day.) An extremely , persistent, unusually enterprising and undoubtedly sincere sabbatarian faction in New Haven and West Haven is trying to put a stop to the open Sunday, so-called, at Savin Rock. It is having a rather hard time in accomplishing the task, Lit so far there is no indication that it will let up. Reformers of the same type generally are engaged in eftorts to establish or re-establish what may quite properly be termed ite Puritan Sunday. Somewhere al- ways and most of the time in many rlaces throughout the country, the strictly religious Sunday is being forced upon people who do not be- lieve in it, whose training and con- v tions are opposed to it, and whose natural propensity to enjoy them- selves is interfered with by it. Suppose that the strict “sabbatar- ians, in the Savin Rock relation or in 1elation’ to any similar resort, should vin their fight, not nominally but ac- trally win it. Suppose they made it impossible to ride on a merry-go- r.und, to shoot the chutes, to witness a ball game, to attend a picture show, to have a photograph taken, to hear an orchestrion, to drink a glass of beer or eat a plate of ice cream, to buy a cigar or play a game of pool— what then? What would have been accomplisked ? They would enjoy the sati*acuon, these sabbatarians, of having done their duty as they saw it. Grant that. They would have impressed their will upon a great number of their fellow beings much against the inclination o. those fellow beings. Grant that. 1 Grant that it is for the good of the souls of the fellow beings to be inter- dicted of their amusements, which is granted only for the sake of argu- ment. What then? What are the fellow beings going to do with ‘the time they would have spent at Savin Rock or this White City or that Steeplechase park? Are they going to dévote it to pious meditation in their homes or to strolling praverfully by the still wa- ters in the meadows—in violation of the no-trespass signs—or to reading the Bible or to church going and soulful self examination? Are they golng to study-civics and good citi- zenship or utilize their leisure in a course in the Psalms of David? Are they going to be better, morally, men- tally or physically, for being led by the nose in the straight and narrow path as surveyed by the Connecticut legislators of 1702 or 17847 Or are they going to herd in kitchen speak easies and blind tigers, consoling themselves for their lost liberties in skunky beer and labora- tory whiskv? Or mope on back stoops and quarrel with their wives and slap the children and join revo- lutionary. societies and yowl about the oppression of the rich and the suf- ferings of the poor? Are the good people. who are so determined that the masses in Con- necticut shall not be permitted a lit- tle harmless amusement on_Sunday aware that these people whom they would drag into the odor of sanctity by the ears have their own notions as to religion and religious obser- vance, very often quite as strong as those of the sabbatarian, ‘and that these notions do not include erecting the name of a day of the week into & tetish? Tnder the laws of the state of Con- necticut any_person who listens to a concert of sacred music, played out under the blue sky, amidst perfect decorum, on Sunday, may be arrested and fined four dollars. Would the sabbatarians recommend the enforcement of that law? If not, why the other Sunday laws, two hun. dred years old, under which are pro- hibited such outdoor amusements as the people get ‘at the Savin Rocks on their only free day of the week? Are they striving to turn the people against all religion, all confidence in the church, all faith in the fairness of the law? Or are they simply blun- dering through an excess of th. less zeal? g SILVER SOCIAL W. ©. T. U. Plans for Reception on Next Wednesday Night, At a meeting of the W. C. T. U. held this afternoon at the home of Mrs. 8. H. Wood of West Main streeet it was decided to hold the W. C. T, U. silver sccial and reception in the banquet hall at the Y. M. C. A, on ‘Wednesday evening, May 13. A pleasing program is being ar- ranged and an invitation is extended to members and friends to be present. The annual free-will offering will be received at this time, HITS HUBBY ON HEAD, It was a very docile and worriied lcoking John Basalavich that entered police headquarters last evening to lodge a complaint against his wife. He had a cut on his heead and in~ formed Captain Grace that his wife, who he said ‘‘drinks too much beer,” had “bounced an iron pitcher off his bean.” INDEPENDENCE OF COURTS NECESSARY Justics Emery Says it Must BePre- served ‘and Even Increased. New Haven, May 8.—In the fifth Storrs lecture in Hendrie hall yes- terday afternoon the subject, “What Is Justice and How Can It Be Se- cured?” the lecturer, the Hon. Lucil- jus A. Emery, considered the question of where, for the security of justice shall be lodged the power to deter- mine the validity of executive or legis- altive acts affecting the individual. He said in part: “It should be evident that neither : the executive nor legislative is a fit depository of such power. Both from the nature of their proper powers are aggressive, They have policies which they seek to enforce. Hence they are interested to maintain the validity of their acts. They are parties to the controversy. To secure alike the the people against anarchy and the individual against tyrandy the power of authoritative interpretation of the constitution and laws must be vested in some impartial independent arbitrator. Department Not Aggressive., “The proper depository of this nec- essary power would seem to be the judicial department. That depart- ment is not aggressive, does not ini- tiate, has no policies. Yet it is con- tended by those whose schemes of legislation break against the constitu- tional rights of the individual, that the judiciary should have no such power and that its exercise of the power is an usurpation. ‘“‘History, however, shows that such a power in the judiciary is necessary for the security of liberty and jus- tice for the individual. The necessi- ‘ty of an independent 'arbitrator be- tween government and citt'un was recognized in republican' Rome when the persons of the tribunes were made inviolate. The medieval cities of Italy frequently selected their judges from some other city that they might be free from sympathy with any fac- tion. It is further necessary that the judiciary should be made inde- pendent in tenure and maintenance. For lack of an independent tribunal to interpret the Petition of Rights, its provisions could only be enforced by armed resistance to the king's inter- pretation. In the trial of the seven bishops in the reign of James IL two Jjudges, Holloway and Powell, ven- tured an opinion contrary to the wishes of the government. They were promptly recalled, and the people fin- ally had again to rise in arms It was not till the tenure of the judges was made secure by the Act of Set- tlement that Englishmen felt secure in their rights. Subject to King’s Will. “One of the principal counts in the indictment of July 4, 1776, against the English government was that it had made the colonial judges depen- dent on the king’s will for their ten- ure and salaries; As a consequence of their experience with a judiciary dependent on the government of the day for tenure and maintenance, the colonies in setting up their state gov- ernments provided a fixed term for their judges, nearly all of them mak- ing it during good behavior. The peo- ple of Massachusetts, who had suf- fered much, declared in their consti- tution of 1780 that it is ‘not only the best policy but the security of the rights of the people and of every citizen that the judges should held their office so long as they behave themselves well, and_that they shall have honorable salaries ascertained and established by fixed laws.’ This theory was generally accepted by the other colonies and adopted in the fed- eral constitution. Chafe at Restraint. “It is true that in most of the states the official tenurc of the judges has singe been fixed at. a more or: less brief term of years. This, however, is only another instance of the ten- dency of the governing power or fac- tion to lower, if not remove all the conetituticnal barriers set up against it for the protection of the individual. Majorities as well as absolute kings I restraint.” In the next and the last lecture will be further urged the necessity of pre- serving and even increasing the di nity and independence of the judi- ciary as essential to liberty and jus- tice. YALE HOLDS SPRING REGATTA IN HARBOR | Fifteen Crews and Five Single Scul- lers Compete in Seven Events on Program. New Haven, Conn., May S.—Yale's annual spring regatta was held on the harbor today with fifteen crews and five single scullers competing. Of the seven events on the program, in- terest centered chiefly on the race be- tween the first and second varsity and the first freshman eights, and that between the crew from the Spring- field High school, the only visiting eight, and the second freshman boat, although rivalry among the class crews was keen, The varsity and freshman boats were made up as follows: First varsity—Stroke, Appleton; seven, McHenry; six, Rogers; five, Titus; four, Sheldon; three, Low; two, Coe; bow, Harrison; coxswain, Mec- Lane. t Second varsity—Stroke, (Gilfillan: seven, Sturtevant; six, Ropp; five, Stillman; four, Fitzpatrick) three, ) their own-way. They chafe at any - ‘McMILLAN'S ALL CARS STOF /AT McMILLAN'S SATURDAY AT THIS STORE \d’ OFFER SEVERAL H COATS, SUITS AND DRESSES, ALL AT SPECIAL PRICES. The biggest bargains of the sefe son. Come early in the morning,’~ before the afternoon rush, look over these exceptional values in OConts, Suits, Dresses and Separate Skirts and you will readily see why there will be something doing at our Suit Dept. Saturday. COATS WORTH $9.50 TO $20.00 Saturday at $5.98, $7.98, $0.98, $10.98, $12.98 and $15.00. - SEE THE WOMEN’S SUITS ‘We are offering at $10.00, $15.00 and $20.00 each. Values $16.98 to $30.00. SERGE AND OTHER FANCY DRESSES For women, trimmed with silks, laces and buttons. Values $3.98 to $12.50. Saturday at $2.98, $4.98, $7.98, $9.98. 0 A s (6 THAN 300 SEPARATE 4 SKIRTS Injall wool materials, all new styles and évery one a bargain at the price. Saturday $2.98, $3.98, and -$7.50. « Values up to $10.00. $4.98, $5.98 OHILDREN'S WHITE ORED WASH DRESSES 3 to 14 year old sizes. Saturday at 49c and 98c each. We have néver seen their equal at these prices. AT OUR WAIST DEPT. Choose from dainty voiles, crepe de chines, cotton crepes, Swiss Batiste, priced 97c, SATURDAY Waists of silks, laces, lawns and $1.25, $1.49, $1 W. B. CORSET SPECIAL AT 896 For three days, Saturday, Monday and Tuesday, this special offer helde good, providing our stock lasts that long. So don't delay seeing this spe- clal Corset, as it'is usually sold at $1.00. HAVE YOU SEEN OUR DISPLAY OF SILK GIRDLES? Every color here, priced at #8o, $1.49 and $1.98 each. KNIT UNDERWEAR DEPARTMENT Underwear for Men, Women and Children. We are showing such well known makes as Carter's, Richelieu, Bedo, Winehester and Roxford Mills. Seits, nl A McMILLAN 203 MAIN STREET. Denegre; two, Meyer; bow, Cushman; coxswain, Moore. Pirst freshman—Stroke, Meyer; seven, Gamble; six, Coe; five, At~ kins; four, Whittlesey; three, Har: man; two, Walker; bow, Olsen; cox- swain, Oliver, TRAINS WILL CONNECT. For the benefit of New Britain people summering at points along the shore = between Saybrook and New Haven, the New York, New Haven and Hartford railroad announces arrange- ments this summer to have train 675 cver the Shore Line Sunday nights, reach Cedar Hill at 8:13 p. m. in time tc connect with train leaving New Haven at 8:17 p. m., making the de- sired connection, which in previous years train 675 has arrived too late at Cedar Hill to make connections. People spending week-ends at the shore were obliged to come up over the Shore Line electric, which *cars have always been jammed to their full capacity and patrons wereobliged to gtand up from Madison to New Haven. LAID AT REST. New Haven, Conn., May The funeral of Judge Richard H. Tyner took place from his late home today, an escort of the grave being made up of Company F, Second Regiment, of which Judge Tyner was formerly an officer, and the veteran reserves of the company. sent delegations, and the county bar was repregented. .. AND COL~ Separate garments and Union / Fraternal bodies also