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NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1912 New London’s Mu nicipal Art Society It Will Take Rank With the Board of Trade and Business Men’s Association WILL PROMOTE BEAUTY OF THE CITY The Firemen’s Monument to be Placed Back of City Hall— The Men and Religion Forward Movement—Street Cleaning and Garbage Collecting a New Expense—New London Ambitious to Become a Convention City. The New London Municipal Art so- ciety is srganized and is so broad in its scol t it at once tak standing with the New London Board Trade and New London Business | len's association in aid of all that tends to advancement of the city | alomg industrial, educational and beautification lines, and goes a step | r th rganizations by ling t a4 social center. s new society has already made appropri ywards the securing of e practical settlement worker ties will be almost as varied in na- | re as the ociety itself. Interest is ing tak vosed abolishment parklet on the parade, which rally is a city government matter the province of the council nite action. However, be doné by the Munic v and the kindred organ- aturally have a moral ouncil and perhaps re- It is an open question ipon th t in action ther the space occupied by the parklet is not actually needed for pub- traflic and that expenditure in the ay of bea fving the parklet would STOMACH DISTRESS, GAS AND DYSPEPSIA WILL GO. Heartburn, Gas ' and Indigestion Go Five Minutes After Taking Pape's | Diapepsin. s there is often someone in your family who suffers an attack of indl- eation some form of Stomach rouble, you keep some ¥ 1ouse handy lessing will digest eat without the smfort, and overcume a tomach five minutes pharmacist to let you read e niy printed on these 50-cent cases of Pape's Diapepsin, then you will readily see why it makes ndigestion, Sour Stomach, Heart- srn and other distress go in five minutes, relieves at once such les as el ng of Gas, Eructa- of sour, undigested food, Nausea, Teadaches, izzinees, Constipation and ther Stomach disorders. Bome folks hava tried so long to find elief from 3 with the cures advertised ve about made up their hey have somethimg else Wromg. or balleve theirs is a case of Nervousness, Gastritis, Catarrh of the Stomach, or Cancer. This, no d s a serious mistake. Your real trouble is, what vou eat does ot digest: instead, it ferments and »urs, turns to acid, Gas and Stomach son, which putrefy in the digestive - and stines, and, besides, vigon the breath with naumeous odors, A hearty appetite, with thorough di- gestion, and withoy slightest dis- comfort or misery of the Stomach, is h Pape’s Diapepsin T»-g Sound Sleep of Good Health or those suffering from kidney and__ irregularities. The n Kidney Pills will . eumatism, heal 3 weak and alling o rmal action, and strength. Mrs, M, p Sterling, 1, says: “I pain in my back and not sieep at night, and hands over my bottles of Foley Kid red me. The Lee & Os- E“m'ed a Good Worker. my heart for severs dis- side for two years, Danville indigestion, as Dr, ’r- Pills completely cured stomach, liver and kid- constipation, headache or Lee & Osgood THE BLESSING OF MOTHERHOOD Healthy Mothers and Chil- dren Makec Happy Homes ns, Motherhood is woman’s highest sphers ' ° n life. Itis the fruition of her dearest nu; es and greatest desires; yet thou- sands of noble women thmuzh some de= rangement have been denied this blesing, In many homes once childless there are now children because of the fact that Iydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound makeswomen normal, healthy andstrong. San Antonio, Texas. —*To all women who desire to have children in their homes and to be well and happy 1 recom- mend Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetabla Compound. 1 suf- _#]fered from a-dis- placement and other female weakness. 4 Lydia E. Pinkham’s VegetableCompound was the only remedy that ever helped me, and now] am a happy mother and highly recommend your med- icine to all my friends.””—Mrs. A. B, MARTINEZ, 121 S. Laredo St., San Ane tonio, Texas. Brooklyn, N.Y.—“1 was ailing all the time and did not know what the mattep was. I wanted a baby but my health would not permit it. I was nervous, my side ached and I was all run down. I heard that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound was good and took the medi- cine. 1 have now a beautiful baby and your Compound has helped me in every way.” ~Mrs. J. J. STEWART, 299 Hum- boldt St., Brookiyn, N.Y. It you want special advice write fo | Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confle .dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will he opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidences \ in the matter of the | or improvement | be justified under tlons. With all these organ | for the good of the cit the existing condi- working as auxiliary to the court of common council, and each { working in harmony, much should be accomplished for the advancement of the City by the Sea. Plans are well under way for the early beginning of ations a general cleaning up of the city in {the early spring, of course with the co-operation of the whole people, and | before the heat of summer is at its height there will be gratifying evi- dence of the existence and activity of this new organization. Alderman Thomas E. Donohue, fore- man of Nameaug Engine company, is very persistent in lis efforts to have the firemen’s monument, be moved from its present s v loca- tion in front of the courthouse to the backyard of the city hall, and adjoin- ing the Nameaug engine house. Despite the fact that the monument was given to the city of New London by the late Sebastian D. Lawrence as a memorial to the volunteer firemen, and is there- fore the property of the city absolutely, the alderman is getting the consent of the heirs of Mr. Lawrence, who are strangers to New London, to favor re- moval to the backyard of the city hall and directly in front of the old ladfes’ home. And all because the statue of a volunteer fireman is‘a likeness in granite of Frederick L. Allen, a for- mer foreman of Nameaug Engine com- { pany, a chief engineer and _mayor of | the city. When the memorial was pre- sented the whole fire department was equally interested in the monument, and there has been no change in senti- ment. The resolutions that were en- grossed and presented to Mr. Lawrence in appreclation of the gift came from the department as a whole, and not from any special committee. sirs of Mr. Lawrence have no speclal interest as to the future loca- tion of the monument, and naturally will comply with any request in that respect that is made by Foreman Don- ohue, who was in New York during the present week securing the consent for removal to the site he has selected Just what the heirs have to do with that monument is difficult to under- stand. but their solicited approval may have a moral effect when the time for removal arrives. It was practically settled that the monument was to be given prominent location in Memorial park, and so far as known this site | has not been ndoned by the court of common council the park com- missioners. It would seem to be a more ble site than in the back yard any public building. The Men and Religion Forward Movement has struck New London and is now in full blast, under the dix tion of Judge Alfred t, assisted b: a committes of one hundred conscien- tious church workers, and that consid- erable good will resuit is unquestioned, This large committee will render per- sonal or individual service in the main as the principal mee specially those in the Lyceum theater Sund afternoon and evening, wili be ad- dressed by experienced workers from other cities. Laymen will supply some of the pulpits and take part in the conduct of the services at the Y. M A. rooms. The religiovs movement was opened with a4 banquet at the Y. M. C. A. rooms Iriday sning. when the several features of the campaign were explained in seven-minute speeches by ur men who have had experience in lm.\ special lines of work. At noon to- day (Saturday) there will be meetings fat the Bro stton Gin and the D. Whiton -ompeny machine —shcps, at which brief addre s will | by team experts. The end | campaign will be to reach men who are not now active in church work, in the hope of enlisting them in *he cause of religibn and without relat'on to any particular creed. Practical talk will take the piace of theology and by this method it will p bly get the indifferent thinking of the good that | Would surely result from united ef- fort It is many years since religio | vices have been held in any of the workshops of the city, and the | dreds of empioyes in the two shops |named have arranged their noonday meal so that they can attend the meet- ings and cement to th days’ campa | held ana it L so the interest the time iill he similar meet- ings in th Tha eity: of INew Landor. Has gone into the street cleaning and garbage collecting business, which has here- fore been lel out by contract to the west bidd the successful bidad: t imes being inexperienced and suble: ing at a profit, which nt practic iy a loss to the city. Under the n plan the street committee promises im- proved service and at no increase of expense in the department ent the man who had rk under the most re yut who was the contra seen to supervise the work, 1 hired by the city This change is agreeable to the con ractor, for it is more advar m. than when he held ‘the con- He has a stipulat atisfactory and in lear profit on his vhich totals up more net profit than nder the old order The street committec aged in ‘eparing plans for the v will b submitted at the next meeting of e court of commen council for ap- roval and will include some radical | 1anges from the old system that will ove beneficial to the public. The oposition of Alderman O'Leary that the garbage collectors not only take | the garlage receptacies from the yards | but that the their place, instead of being left n the sidewalks, there to remain in some {nstances the balance of the day. in-this particular the alderman has he moral support of the New Lon- ion Municipal Art society and the ap- H roval of the general public. New London has ambition to be- ome a convention city, as was shown )y ths manv conventions held he: luring last summer, and the succest ful efforts of the mayor and a jolnt omumlites of the New London Board f Trade and the New London Bus sy Men's assoclation in securing for o clty the big deep waterways con- ertfon that was held In Richmond {last summer, Already several con- ventions are scheduled for this city, induced to come here by represent: tlons that the delegates would receive roval weicome by local' members of the organizations, This feeling has spread all through the state and b come contagious and there s no doubt but many state conventions will be ELPE A S T R receptacles be returned held here unsolicited, all of which is due to the extensive and favorable ad- vertising that has hedn given the city for the past few years in gemeral, but for the past two years in particular, for delegates want to come and see the’] city they have read so'much about. Announcement has been made this week (hat the executive committee of the Catholic Total Abstinence union of Connecticut, representing a member- ship of over 10,000, that the union will hold a_two days’ convention in New London in August. There is a men’s, a ladies’ and a cadet soclety of this organization in New London, all con- nected with St. Mary’s Star of the Sea parish, and it is probable that in the near future joint committees will be appointed to arrange for the conven- tion and the entertainment of dele- gates. This does not mean that the delegates are to be lodged and fed at the expense of these societles, or by the parish or the people of New Lon- don, as the expenses of the delegates are borne by the several societies they represent. But there are other ways of entertainment which would serve to show welcome and hospitality and which cannot be done but at some ex- pense. Therefore, it is expected that the local societies will receive some as- sistance from the general public along this line. Hardly had the new = automobile chemical hose wagon been commis- sioned in the Pequot hose house when along comes a chemical wagon with non-freezable tanks for the T. M. Wal- ler Hose company at Ocean Beach, a company of volunteers for service dur- ing the summer season and composed in the main of beach cottagers, al- though with a force sufficient to handle the machine in emergency during the winter. This is a hand drawn appéra- tus, but s considered ample to hold in check any fire that may be discovered in the early stage until the arrival of the apparatus of the general depart- ment. While the Pequot machine is practically owned by the company, it has been formally turned over to the use of the department and under the direct orders of the chief, as is all other fire apparatus in the city. The chemical wagon at the beach is owned by the city, but the Waller Hose com- pany is no part of the regular fire de- partment. These little incidents go to show the interest taken among those who vol- unteer their service for fire duty, and also demonstrates that the general efficiency of the fire department is be- ing gradually improved by the addi- tion of the latest there is in the fire fighting line. : There is need, however, in for a combination chemical hose and pumping apparatus that will do the service of a chemical and hose wagon and also a steam fire engine. With a view to the purchase of such a ma- chine, and the very best that is made, as the best Is none too good for the firemen of New London, there was in- cluded for the purpose in the annual budget an appropriation of $6,500. While that sum will buy a fire fighting apparatus, it is not adequate for the purch of the very best, with the pumping attachment. Such a machine costs about $9,000, and therefore the mayor and the fire committee are in the doldroms. But there is a solution of the problem that is worthy of con- sideration. the city Whils there is perhaps some senti- ment in owning the first automobile- chemical hose wagon to be used in a fire department in the United States, strengthened by the ten years of good service, still it is believed that the Niagara Engine company would be willing to part with its machine, pro- vided of course the company could get the use of the most modern of fire fighting machines in existence. It is thought that by giving their machine in exchange it would be possible for the city to purchase the kind of a ma- chine desired within the appropria- tion. This plan iz believed to be the only reasonable solution of the prob- lem, and the Niagaras should have the first call for a. new fire apparatus, es- pecially as the members chipped in $5,500 for the purchase of the present machine and have given with it the best possible service to the city. The company has not only main- ained a cgpi driver without adding to the salary of the city, but also has provided for a working crew make quick response to calls in night season by furnishing well pointed sleeping quarters in the en- gine house and to have men in readi- ness to make immediate all day calls. Therefore this company would be in readiness to take charge of the machine with the present working force of firemen and at no increased expense to the city With the modern and complete ap- paratus, which is of the highest speed, response to the Niagaras could reach any section of the city, equipped for duty, in in- credibly short time, and the general fire protection of the city would be so much increased that the insurance peo- ple could be invited to sit wp and take notice. Such a machine under systematic management, such as now prevails at the Xiagara house, and which is equal to that of any pald fire department, would be appreciated by the general public. City Man a Q ter. The poultry raiser from New York, who purchased the Ogden Tyler place in Tylerville, started into business with much enthusiasm; set his incu- bators, purchased a horse, etc. It took about two weeks to cook the eggs ind sell them to the market, dispose of the horse, etc. and take the train Had a Horrible Death. We have heard so little lately of the Cumming 1l boom we t Senator 1 rilette may on it and wied News. Wrong Side of His Resignation. Sccratary Welson unfortunately has | penchant for being on the wrong| Si6 all the scanda that develop ju his department.—Chicago News. No Reason For It WHEN NOR’ /ICH CITIZENS SHOW THE WAY. There can be no just reason why any reader of this will continue to suffer the tortures of an aching ba the annoyance of urinary disord the dangers of when relief is so near at hand and the most positive proof given that these flls can be cured. Read wha! a Norwich citizen says: serious kidney 1lls | | Mrs. Catherine Goode, 89 Thames St., | Norwich, Conn., says: 1 suffered for years from kidn2y trouble, the first symptom being pain and weakness in the small of my back. The kidney se- cretlons were unnatural and caused me much annoyance, Spots often ap- peared befors my eyes and my health was badly run down. I finally began using Doan's Kldney Pills, procured at N. D. Sevin & Son’s Drug Stere and they did me & world of goed, strength- ening my back and restering my kid- neys to & nermal conditien, I cannet find werds to fully express my gratl- tude to Dean’s Kidney Pills,” For sale by all dealers, cents. Foster-Milburn Ce,, Price 50 Buffales, New York, sele agents jor the United. States. Bemsiber take ng ofher, the name=Dean's=and The Bulletin's Special Yale Letter Washington’s Birthday Cane Rush—Plans For the New Sta- dium Submitted—Tributes to George Jarvis Brush—The Health of Athletes — Yale f College Entrance Re- |/ quirements—The Yale-Harvard Wrestling Match—Presi- dent H‘ndley's Telephonic at Chicago. (Special to The Bulletin.) Yale College, Feb. 22,—Amid a flurry of snow and with the campus a mass of mud from the rain of the night, the annual Washington’s birthday cane rush between the sophomore and fresh- man classes was held this morning. Immediately after chapel the two class- es formed, the upper classmen with canes and high silk hats defending the sophomore fence, while the freshmen gathered at the other side of the campus ready to capture the “fence.” The rushing in the slippery ooze lasted for 15 minutes, when the time-honored decision in faver of the freshmen was given. Arthur Howe was head marshal and the other “Y” men of the sentor class were the marshals. With this rush ends the spirit of rivalry between the two classes. The Washington's birthday rush ic a relic of the old days at Yale when it was adopted as a speedy means of set- tling differences between sophomores and freshmen. At Yale, as at other colleges, it was found far preferable to petty hazing. But the old “Banger” rush of 30 yvears ago was far different from the cane rush of today. The| strife began after chapel and lasted all day, and blood flowed freely '«nd bruises ‘were/ plentiful. Snowballing | was a feature then, as it had been in the past“few years. It came 10 be felt that this style of rush was a little too strenuous, the “bangers” were abolish- ed, and the high hats and canes came in, Plans for the new stadium at Yale field were submitted at the February meeting of the Yale corporation Mon- day afternoon. The report of the com- mittee of 21 was read by Secretary Daggett of New Haven and showed that propérty directly opposite Yale field, approximating $0 acres, had been purchased at a cost within $90,000 for the putpose of providing general play- grounds for the undergraduate body In a general way it is proposed to use part of the land for parking pur- poses, from which revenue can be of:- tained, as soon as the football i up. It farther posed to e the use of the students a large c house with a large lounging room. grill, bathrooms, lockers, and sqi courts adjoining. The rest of the land will be laid out for footbali fields, baseball diamonds and tennis courts, while the old field will be used for baseball and football practice and for track, the removal of the present stands giving three acres addi land. The present baseball stand will be replaced by another permanent fire- proof stand with a seating capacity of 000. The committee expects $700, 000 to be the total cost of the project, of which $275,000 will go to the big footbalt stadium that will seat over 60,000 peo- ple. According to these provisions at least half of the undergraduate body, or 1.600 men, can exercise at one time. Fifty thousand dollars for the pur- chase of land came from the funds of the Yale financial university, the re- mainder being advanced by a member of the committee. High tributes have been paid memory of G Jarvis Brush, first director of Sheffield Scientif school, who: death occurred in New Haven on Feb. 6. President Hadley's words were “There was no man among Us who realized Yale's ideal of public vice so fully as George Jarvis Brush. No one could Jook at him or talk with him without realizing the essential largeness of his mind and interest Yale has had a number of scholars of equal eminence in the ranks of her faculty. She has had during her hi tory two or three leaders of equal - ganizing power. She may have had one or two other men who came in contact with the life of the community about her on so many different sides. But we have had no other man who combined as Brush did the character- istics of the s the nrgmlzer and the public spirited citiz The late Professor member of the fi from the scientific department of Y in 18 the Sheffield school from 1855 to 1871, and from then until 1898 was director of that school. He was the last mem- ber of that class of '52S, numbering seven, of which three others besides Professor Brush became distinguished scient , William Henry Brewer, also at the Sheffield Scientific schocl; Wil- liam Phipps Blake, at the School of Min University of Arizona, and Wil- liam Arthur Shepard, at Randolph- Macon college, Ga. The statistics in regard to the health athletes, recently published by D llam Anderson, director of the Yale gymnasium, show that not of health of the men engaging in them, but that athletics re bettering the physical condition and lowering tl h rate of the college men Dr. Anderson’s figures refute the idea at “the highly developed at te 8 sbe muscie and more lung power than he can use when he graduates and | takes up his long apprenticeship in some sedentary occupation, that if ha deat was professor of metallurgy in § only | are college sports not endaugering the | is not careful the power of lung and Address to The Yale Alumni heart which made him a force in the long four-mile pull becomes a danger to him,” that if he does not keep up some pretty vigorous exercise outsige of office hours the lung tissues dev oped in his college life fall into disuse and may be an indirect cause of cqn- sumption, or the heart, forced to o overwork in the strain of the compe- titlon in the big sports and over- developed, may retaliate in after lfe by refusing to do its work in seMne great stress, like pneumonia. Out of 808 men who won their “Y” | from 1855-1905, only 58 are dead; a percentage o Out of the 10,922 students who were not distinguished athletes in the/ same length of ume.‘ 1,406 have died since graduation. The, percentage . Of the athletes, consumption killed 12, which was 22 per cent., while in the muin group the mortality was 45 per cent. Pneumonia was the cause of six deaths, heart fail- ure of four. The rest were scattered. So Dr. Anderson concludes that the | Yale athlete does mot dle young, and not from the strain of athletics. A revision of the Yale college en- trance requirements is discussed by the last issue of the Alumni Weekly. | “That some way will be found” by the faculty committee now considering the | matter “of making the Yale college en- trance requirements at least more hos- pitable to the college inclined yotth of the country is most desirable, and so far as the general faculty feeling on | the matter can be guaged is the prob- | ably outcome of the present investiga- | tion. Yale does not want, and cannot | in the last analysis, afford to enter into ompetition with other institutions for students—least of all with the estab- lished state universities and with those other rapidly growing institutions in the east and west that are making a determined effort to 2 themselves into somewhat the p on of the top rungs of the ladder of free public edu- cation. Competition for students is not, and should not be, a factor in the Yale situation. It is doubtful whether Yale coliege could handle with the greatest suc any marked increase in her present undergraduate body of 1,200 or so men. It is not more students that Yale college wants, but the best stu- dents.” When Yale is not recei as_is shown by the freshman reg tfon, the American high school boy, or boys from a large numbe but, on the cont: r of private schools, ary, has to depend on a limited number of preperatory schools and a few local public sehools, the Alumni Weekly believes the situa- tion calls for “some radical change in the machinery of entrance regulations, The solution probably lies in such a readjustment of the entrance require- ments as will, on the one hand, leave the college free to impose ceriain es- sential and specific conditions of prep- aration, and, on the other, meet the schools halfway in the matter of gen- eral preliminaries. The Yale wrestling team met the Harvard wrestlers at the Yale gymna- sium Monday night for the first time. It was a Yale victory, the seven bouts being taken in exceptionally short —about six minutes each The university basketbail team was defeated for the second time Monday night by Dartmouth, the score being the hockey rink Wednesday after- ROVAL BAKING POWDER ABSOLUTELY PURE The only Baking Powder made from Royal Grape Cream of Tartar Saves Butter, Flour, Eggs, and makes home baking easy senior cla E awarded on a basis sproved Chris- tian cha and in theo- ! logical The recipient receives for after graduation. The ss prize in the Yale aca- | demi rtment, open to all class- How to Gain 30 Pounds in 30 Days 80c Package of Remarkable Flesh-Builder, Protone, Sent Free to Prove What it Will Do. Send Your Name and Address Teday es, has been awarded to Philip B. Buz- zell of the class of 1913, Wilmirgton, ass., for his essay on the subject of A Desgcription of Yale Life The prize was founded with the idea of en- couraging descriptive newspaper writ- ing. two vears of 1868 al dep: noon Yal the Harvard seven by the sce which necessitates a third game to decide the series. This will be played at Boston on Saturday Ir. the dual meet with the University of Pennsylvania, Yale won the gym- nastic events, while the swimming meet, in whic two records were brok- en, went to Pennsylvania. Yale retal- jated by taking the water polo game The time for 600 foot relay, 1 minute, 48 oke the In- tercollegiate record made by the Yale | relay team last year at Princeton of 1 | minute, 51 1-3 seconds. This event | was won by Yale. In the 100 yard swim Shyock of | Pennsylvania brought the record down | to & seconds from flat. one minute Seated in his own home on Whitney avenue, President Hadley address the Yale alumni of Chle at thelr annual banquet last The toastmaster introdu then came the i the long distance tele brought into p In his spe ent said he saw no limits to t effects of this use of the telephone. “Will the offices of our deans and directors b come mere cen elephone e changes, resoun hourly with the ‘Connect E-2 Osborn with Ili- hois academic seniors,’ ‘Michigan sec- mechanical engincerin 0TS, t Mason laboratory. ¢ “Shall ana get eight marks ail around for not trying to connect W Battell pel last Sunday morning’ In the Yale Divinity school the Hooker and Dwight owships of about $600 a vear each have been con- solidated under the title of the Hooker- Dwight fellowship, and it is divided this year between Daniel S. Robinson of North Salem, Ind, and William B. Kline of University Place. 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