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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRID, APRIL 12, 1912 &\nu;x:rh Bulletin nud Couvief. price, 12 & week; 30e a at. Entered at the Postotfice Conn., ag secend-class metl e 'hlun-. Callas e 5' Hetin :3{' iletin letin 3 mim Norw.oh, Friday, April 12, - ROUSEVELT'S CASE HOPELESS. 1912. Jdition of the twelve delegates | MeNt is necessary and the best in the »m Maine must have n cheering | (eaching line can only ve had by an , wing as it did the | Improved salary list, a fact in all col- a1 it now these two | I°€es, but one which is particulariy “ v hemselves, hig | 7¢It by the smailer institutions, which re he can| sir hest professors at the call t " Though he | of ¢ institutions able to pay. Wes delsintisns, It i now has raised $859,000, amfl chang: ook raft, | Brown has received pledges amount- o states which tin- | ing 1o § 1, leaving good-sized | Iy figured ia the Roossvell columa | “UMms (o be raised in the mext two! are standing by the Penn- | Months, anla, on Sa where Roose-| The officials of both institutions a ¢ « his efforts this | confident of success and believe that | \ larger boost | the addltional endowments will be se- | yoseve Then | ¢ within the allotted time. Both y he lowa del- | re deserving of the most liberal treat- | n Jegation, Ken- | Ment by their friends and philanthro- | er part, and Michi- | PIStS in general, who can readily ap- < for Taft. | Preciate the advantages that the en- k will name le raft, though ill not b e eno in and sther place to hezn deiegates, vith two exc a and Missourl, is stead hem for is cladmed he ng « ied, wh eed a majo has e > edged ded TAFT WILL SETTLE TARIFF RIGHT. e busines: A Into line with arring tarift abandonmie STATE PENSION ILLEGAL g Bovernme: if rate among needed done, ot 0 portance { propuny - | dowments - | RAISING COLLEGE FUNDS. VFew educational institutions are so fortunate as Massachusetts Institute of Technology which recently received a1 anonymous endowment of $2,500,- 00D, Universities and colleges are | continually in need of additional funds | for the carrying on of their important work and are steadily applying all their energies to secure the needed funds, » endowments have to be obtained In order to provide the nec- essary income for a growing Institu- ton At the present time, the effort of twe of the southern New England col- leges to raise funds of a miilion dol- [ ng interest among the , undergraduates and friends of Brown, the lead- and Baptist colleges. Hoth are institutions with high stand- rds of olarship which it is pro- posed to maintain, but ample equip- arous sthodist will bestow h the cost o high, newspapers has nothing to | with i r his Middle- Professor Fisher is now expected to subsid wn he spring s hats for as if it girls A won- > result of up with the excite- | me in this cold | 3 her to ke | One Quarter of the Yule Undergraduates Are Earning Their | the Untversity The Bulletin’s Specml Yale Letter Way Through College — City Not Helping on New Diamonds—Crews Getting Stif Work in Harbor and Ball Team Shows Up Well<~Commencement During Week of June 16. (Special to The Bulletin.) | John Goetchins, '85, and other gradu- New Haven, April 11.—The uniyersi- | ates, showing the interest in the de- aster | velopment of the Yale boat this year. Tecess of a woek. The spring term ends | AS a result of the showing of the third in seven weelks, with the close of reci. | boat, there has been a big shake-up in_the first and second crews: tations/ on- May 28, but the examina- tions wiil take the week following and | TWwo freshman eights also remained v opened this morning after the the commencement exercises wiil be | or the recess, the entire crew squad hond duting he week pogining June | having started on the training table at 18. Commencement day is on Wednes- | the Hotel Taft. day 19, and on the same day 5 e coll entrance examinations begin When the autemobile in which they Al nations DM | wero descending a hill mear Philadel- Manager John J. MoGraw of (he | Phla siruck a stone and left the road, ants thinks this year's Yaie team is | colliding with a telegraph pole, John L. Hoffman of Raduor, Pa,, Ryerson of Haverford, Pa | the Yale sophomore c | out on Monday of th and Arthur , members of were thrown week and died Yale nines t e ever played. Afte n Wednesday 4t the which the Giants won, Yale grounds, 710 2 and 11 to 3, Manager McC several' hours ‘later of their injurfes. #aid he Ya team shows » | Hoffman had just returned to his home promise than e of T for the er recess, with Ryerson as nced and not weak in | Dis gue The jar caused when the Tt does, of course, | CAr struck the stone caused Hoftman need a lot of practice, but in my opin- | to lose control of the steering wheel. fon will have very likely a successful | Both \men received fractured skulls. | se From present indications the | The former was a son of the late J. | graduate coaching system should prove en Hoffman, a partner of Andrew | successful.’ | Carnegie in the steel industry. On the Easter trip that ended Wed- nesday at New York, Yale won three | A pamphlet has just been issued on of the other five games. eorgetown | Seif-Help at Yale and les distrib- defeated Yale, 4 in the st game, | uted by the executive committee of the Yale defeated Coi 11, 4 to 1, tled \\Hh F ated School and Sectional clubs. Virginia in a te hrotigh the three official sources of OUR MILLINERY STOCK FOR THIS SEASON PROVIDES A GENEROUS GATHERING OF BECOMING STYLES. ing game, 3-3, and won the t , the bureau of appointments, the with Johns Hopkins by sco: office of the dean of the college and the to 1 and 7 to 5. The team has |office of the director of the Shefeld developed consistently from game to | game and is in excellent condition for the opening of the intercollegiate school, 551 men were alded , that is, practically one-quar- f the men In the two undergradu- son with Wesleyan on Saturday l;&)“:‘ de; pnn‘nnmus!nr IYalu Hrha "Bul’nlr;]' d — r way rough coliege, whol or in il i R P B “"r‘W.W':;"m';‘i;yr:; e il e o e e e eral new baseball diamonds to b Jaid | i FaR T e xn)nn».‘z’mi‘: has been a most excellent one, for such altogether o e :,f,‘f;?:i‘:.fi;;: sonh from whicn svo was | lovely and becoming hats have seldoen before been {eahmicaity, (he o 51" ‘Widetpen | loaned to 145 siudents ana 37 meccsof || displayed here. acting on the petition of W tion had b furniture to 81 students. The bureau gives out annually approximately $40,- Every taste—preference has been catered to— ard of compensations. | 000, and in addition last year secured 2 £ be transacted 283 positions for 375 men, “The posi- | every style—wish anticipated and fulfilled. You omplication g on table 36, clerical 45, can- will be certain to find many hats of extreme in- nent entirely ewriting 5, church and vel work 7. posed i e e dividual becomingness—hats that seem to have nting to 35,650 to 18 " last F j ity. ing it (6080 40 18cmen Tast been made to fit just your own personality. ough monitorships and 30 academic men in the choir earned $35 each. 0 the Scientific school 95 men re- | ed 37,500, mostly in the form of | loans., There’s a hat for every purse and for every oc- been & : 0 Payne Whitney, '98, . All casion—so of course there’s a hat here for you. 99, A | ment in ampaign, | | | ) Clark's “dawg” has fattened | | ) fast since the Illinois primaries | that they dont dare kick it around | \ row Wilson m: feel | B appre ted in lllinois, for K gave a knockdown blow fore the close vear, New York expects to have 150 motor ma- | es doing service in its fire de-| partment | Dy thought for today: Those maintain a g even disp m\\'\un 1 never expect to have the ac- g of the streets will b em a y the department ployes much more when the good old summer comes. No one the Colonel fog teeling we complete capturd of Maine is equal to ¢ ing the ring of trout Thermos | ause for of town re- the pledges. the ropes,” 1 1e count,” are the latest s he candidate who de- 1 pol a game, | The New York ¢t who declared ding In autos develops the chest was unable to pass on the | on ts developing a bank a sh sparrow mitti for itself to the hing, but tatement ing s managers w i n his le to start some s. Many al happiness. hymn-wr ng who feel the same, eto of the $30 pen- is a fact that the spirit he old veterans appeared | in following up the law age. We have an attor- | Inr sfon bill, it mity ard to the B. GOTTHELF & CO., “The Store of Good Values.” s, during this of e is termed ree that dispen; il world m an Cortlandt Lesses and Man. POL'IS THEATRE ESSANAY FEATURE POSITIVE PROOF 4—OTHERS—4 Miss ETHEL STUART, Soprano TONIGHT AMATEUR NIGHT Return Engagement of the Favorite Tragedian, Mr. GONRAD McDOWELL ALSO 5 OTHER ACTS OF SPECIAL INTEREST BREED THEATER FEATURE PICTURE TODAY ““HER LAST SHOT” DRAMATIC PORTRAYAL OF PIONEER LIFE Miss Mae La Jess, Contralto. J. E. Calkins, Baritone —IlN—A UDITOR 1 U M—Illl\— VALVENO & LAMOORE, Clever Comedy Acrobats PRISCILLA—Dainty Singing and Dancing DODSON & LUCAS—Colored Comedy Couple Lyceum Theater SATURDAY, MATINEE AND NIGHT, APRIL 13th Joe Weber Presents the Sensational Fre “ALMA, WHERE DO YOU LIVE"" Exactly as played all last sea 14 musical numbers including the world famo Prices Matinee, 250 to $1.00. Evening, 25c fo t‘so Sale opens Thursday. Cars to Norwi rman "A B e @ A The New Window Draperies NEW LONDON . WALTER T. MURPHY, M. nch Vaudeville We are making a timely display of all the new ef- fects in draperies of all kinds. Now that Spring has real- siren of New England than hi the o ord with the shot and shell of the enemies | My Tinmacas s not ot Hi of his country who man fashion stood | 2 up and fought for what they consid- OTHER VIEW POINTS land gontle gerly en prevailed seexing | ——— | ¢ed Tight, no matter how badly they | . were mistaken. Had the will of cer- for “peace a e,” there would have been lit being hestowed upon cld sol- 10 saved the un today. ere is anly one name t the vituperous, poi hater of the old veteran todey, is the name of one | poisonous serpents, | Just velt af ple: real season opens now in and many will be to0 b with trifling e afte dletown Press LAWN RAKES, HOSE, FISHING TACKLE, POULTRY NETTING, nan r most f Tho muckrakers, (% politics fs @ candi- | SHERWIN-WILLIAMS PAINTS. ors and soclaiisti n who goe: ira g th onte 14 stir wln loody 'mr! times agahm iz =i g s spca EVERYTHING IN HARDWARE. that the people are longing for)some one n er ho if he ope: permanent rell>f from the turmoil, and | and continuously opposes giving well- name ¢ e ticket with him, nblic democratic or The Eaton Chase Co. king in de 1, rw‘”‘\' o ot ; nd, it is Y‘.‘v“:‘. ‘;‘[r nay \‘rl’lh A 2 Pl el tng it vt o trii on Gty s vers 129 Main St., Norwich, Conn. r was known the fact of following up had been enacted New Haven | L fi n | 5 15 a If women | ! aws, 1 suld be different ' | re old pew at Springfield, 1l once pied oln, was reserved for | 1 ho ¥ Roc is s western farm iproc aut he d abou! be an- by mali memi to our Dible Question Box Q. —Who is the “Princs of the world mentiened i the following Scripture and o R world the “world g} nes Prince” or. ruler clscwiery Teiers (o Baian Cummins has fallen o the dential rac Prob: | 1ought he read the signs aright when | is own state of Towa we ild give him in the conv “Golden Sunshine- Golden Pie-crust” ats n ldiers, and Mr. Barnett of Jewet to me about not ‘expre opinion of Baldwin say: "I say no ways did und ‘always shall 816 DOCTORS' BILL. The old-fashioned idea that only a good strong stomach can diges Paa:With Sery Fest 3seads o on) i MieeTust has (hoen's exnloded, Its simply up to the kind of ple. Them—A True Story. Vouchea for by Lescngood and crust. Lard-soaked pies are hard to digest, but a Cotiolene p b o reat being free from hog fat and grease, is light, fiaky and easy to dIZESt- tearge Unoitin : It won'’t haunt yom stomach for hours after. Eat all the pie you [ pucicanos o 0. & , want if made with Coftolene, the economical shortening. Cottolene is made from pure vegetable oils, and is | i “Nature’s Gift from the Sunny South” 1 s "‘ et aft Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY and who is fully capable (\f' 94-100 Main S Lerf sns the law without aid from i ain dtreet. < 1”' i '-[“ utive And as in the case of e g a certain governor and Theodore ow; and | Roosevelt, the courts don't always | Pt o il 2 the governor. To be plain, | o o o on where Roosevelt was { ; ntil ¢ time for Him o o have seen whore | without his signatur o 50, stood when poor Lincoln was facing take unto pawer | B —certainly favors of dicte p and | mighty foe on the field of battle, and authority ATt R the days of dictators short. | with the grass at his back full of cop- Kingdom in_t} t Abraham Lincoln, our sainted presi- | Let's break up old records this year | perheads. e |6t “oend nthaed i ohinacos b and find just where our candidates! B, MONTGOMERY. F vét-toned sons of tne copp = ly come, the cleaning of the house is next in order, and if draperies need replacing now is the time to do it.. . In our department, on the third floor, we are showing a most complete line of desirable Curtains and Curtain Materials at unequalled prices. Quality counts. Buy the best. MUSLIN CURTAINS . SCRIM CURTAINS .. CLUNY LACE CURTAINS 1RISH POINT AND BRUSSELS LACE RENAISSANCE AND REVERSIBLE ARABIANS $4.25 to $8.75 A PAIR | $1.35 to $675 A PAIR $2.00 to $9.00 A $4 50 to $9.75 A We show many new and dainty effects in Scotch and ( Curtains in a wide range of patterns, 65c to $6.75 a pair DRAPERY FABRICS. We have an unequalled assortment of dainty materials for Curtains by the yard. The latest and best designs in the newest materials SCRIMS..10c to 3% A YARD — MADRAS 25 to 8% A YARD MUSLINS 10c to 28c A YARD LACES,12 to $1.25 A YARD CURVED END RODS one of the best. Regular price 20c. 15¢. BRASS RODS. 10c. Special e | CURTAIN RODS OF ALL KINDS—WOOD OR BRASS | Special | STRONG AND DURABLE, White ends. Value SOME INTERESTING SPECIAL VALUES. Ruffled or straight Curtains Finished with fine edging SPECIAL 75 made with f Value 89 A PAIR MUSLIN CURTAINS tucks. Full 22 yards long SCRIM CURTAINS. Dainty Cro ed Scrims with filat insertion finished with pretty edging. Either white or ivery Value $3.00. SPECIAL $245 A PAIR Attractive Cluny Lace Curtains, nished CLUNY LACE CURTAINS with edging and inserted bands 5 SPECIAL 32.75 A PAIR Valus AIl new and Vahue $6.50. SPECIAL $545 A PAIR long These are three yards IRISH POINT CURTAINS attractive patterns, suitab! 1y g o for parlor er i REVERSIBLE CURTAIN SCRIM. Pratty patterns, printed alike on both sides. Full 36 inches wide. This sells regularly for 19c a ind, SPECIAL 12/2¢ A YARD WE REUPHOLSTER FURNITURE AND LAY CARPETS WaBK you want w0 put our usl. WS )0 better R&B BTAUER tiie advertis- | dlum beite &5 the sdvertie. ing columns ef The Hulletis ips columna of The Bul o st