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A DISTURBING ELEMENT. * The detepmined effort to cover the country “with the labor organjzation known as the Industrial Workers of the World /s Taising havoc in every 'section wihere il has been started. The ‘organizafion - appeals through agentyparticularly to the foreign ele- ment,n the securing of members and troublee immediately results, What e thesoutoome will be remains to be seen SR TR ™ © et B0 o o % hag bascesded 1 attirihe Wb Horwich Ea;lhlin and Goufier. ctions. An anarchistic ten- n Diego, to which city many cked, With the result that the authorities have their hands full in - —{ruging Ao /deal ‘elememt. 1g/the east the manufacturing cen- ters, aro. the -objective points for the trganizers,- New York has had its ex- perience With the workers trampling on the flag, while in Lowell and Law= rence . they were particularly demon- strative in the recent strikes. Willi- mantic,is‘now suffering from the ef- fects of ‘the new branch established there, the apparent danger of which has.cailed forth denunciation from the pulpit,, It is thoroughly un-American, is repudiated by the American Federa- tiop: 0f Labor, and is a menace to the untry, It operates among .the for- ‘eigners who are easily influenged and excited. The denial of the xight .of citizenship.to such an organization's members.would put a check on their dangerqus influence. HURTS ihie Cireulation ol {he Bulletin, The Bulletin. has,the largest. eir- culation._of auy paper,in Eastern Comnecticnt, rom thres to fear thmes larger than that of any in Nerwich. It iu, delivered to over 4,053 houses in Nor- read by ninety-three per cemt, of,the people. In Windham it fs delivered to-over 500 houses, tn Putnan Daslelson to over 1,100, and. fn All of these places It is comsidered the local dally. Eastern Conmecticut has forty- nine towns.ome hundred and sixty- five, -postoffice. districts, and sixty rupal free.delivery routes. The Bulletin is sold in every tewn and_oncall of the R. ¥l D, rowfes fn Fastern Comnecticut: CIRCUEATION 1901, average CENTRAL AMERICAN POLICY. Because of Khe guarantee clause, (he treaties between this country and Honduras and Nicaragua are not likeiy. to pass this session of congress af {least, The committee being tied on the_ matter will not make a favorable report, which means a further delay for the measure which President Taft and Secretary of State Knox have been urging for nearly a year. ing so soon after the secretai through Central America, the throw- ing down of the policy will serlously hamper the raising of the money need- ed by those countries. That, of dourse, has nothing to do with this country 1005, average TERM OF SIX YEARS, Probably nothing has.had more, in- fiuenes in the advocacy of six vear|©Xcept that by ‘transferring the loans termss for With no second | to American bankers instead of. Buro- teihie aa ¢ at puttt pean, the possibfiity of invoking the paign. S i Monroe doctrine would have been overcome. | ment The United States govern- would see to the collection of revenues of the country, which a t admiimistration has made it apparenc| Would insure beneficial results and 1d be taken, The|®t the same time such friendly offices s %41 two terms and | by Uncle Sam would have its effect « particularly good man |in stimulating trade not only in those et in good t Roose- | coantries would make good im- &b Sunt pressions on tho other Latin-Ameri- | i S ,|can countries in which the United | s e et | States has caused some distrust by its “otten to.a pofnt | PANama canal deal. The protecting afets demands it, | Inflnence of this country has beem and President Jack. | 0uSht and the bankers are mot in- cated such & law, pat|clined to negotiate loans without such Buropeans now hold the | | provisions. ¥ serlous con- region human remains buried 75 feet o oy b s s [paper of the debt-ridden nations and |in-a gravel bank, as they were page. | There s thought and feeling enough " hangs and the pro- | TOM them a scparation s desired, | ing along a highway. The main re- (In the commonest water-worn pebble posed legisiation has the support of | € 800d work of this country in San- |search of the coming expedition will “P‘"‘"u‘; g ';"* 4 ?vig‘!;«‘r eart i posed leg 1 3 s, | to Domingo having given the plan en- | be carried on in this region, and will | We ¢ L DETRERS L par IRENG I8 M) O et T8 i But nhtessl that | Pe mainly anthropological and geo. Things are pregnant with spiritual . varty leaders | Eot untrles of Central Am.|loBical. The Peruvian government [contents. It i prob- | 1 el look hete for ndvice anq|Das offered ~Professor Bingham its| In all matter there hide those mys- committee will | o7l id look or advice and | active ald In the new undertaking. |terlous vitalities we call forces. Fvery Root bill for | HeIP- On the trip last vear Professor |apple pulls the earth by gravitation as uch a constitutional amendment. The Biigham made several important dis- {much in preportion as the earth pully . nt of the country will be EDITORIAL NOTES. coveries in regard to the extent of the |the apple. Blectricity, That Puck of par sy \ a change and the| Tt Is mot surprising that the Mor.| ¢ civilization into the jungle, [lifeless things, runs through iron and Setinl i T - LR, e . Richooes climbed Mt Coropuna, and did other |copver, snd can “put a sirdle round is an elder in that faith, From present molst conditions, the cireus lot will offer a better buffalo wallow next week than it will a shew, | and petuation in office. » plan for self-per- will undoubtedly be found long the end of the season that the | is far more dangerous than foot- It | before MACHINES ADVANTAGEOUS. e preferen | canoe which | ¥ m he rough ht or help A cof itiful is all right, but ne can be beautiful In which unsan- | conditions are a menace to the heelth. public its | ‘(!muih( -of, followed by strikes and with the troudlesoma | Com- | v's trip iread the beok, while 21 state that a | 'BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Class of 1907 May Erect a Memorial to George Borup— Tribute to Borup and Case—Opinions on Dink Storer at Yale Vary—Dean Jones Explains Needs of New Recita- tion Building—Activity in Athletics. New Haven, May 3.—Dean Frederick city gave an address Thursday night Schutz Jones and Prof. F. E. Pierce |under the auspices of the Forum of are to speak for the university at the |the Yale law school on the question; j8econd annual dinner of the New Lon- |“Are our courts standi ng in the w:l}’ ‘:f don County Alumni association, to be loclflbl ax;:it‘:::l:‘::‘i‘f) Ji lt_fil":;é :n l, - by vich S: lay evening, |so, by Wi DNA My SN ¥ | Showed the tendency of the courts in this direction; and traced its develop- A suggestion has been made that ment. Nowhere have we given any the class of 1907 erect a memorial to|such power to our judges or courts. their classmate, George Borup, Who, They have taken it unto e: with S. Winship Case, lost his life by us’:;muon, to speak plainly, and by drowning two weeks ago in the|the only way to nullify and stop un- sound at Millstone. A number of ap- fair decisions is b);’ finx‘:;umuon:.l reciations of these two exceptionally lamendments as such decisions occur. Sitied young men bave been printed, | Mayor gaynor belleves, with Lincoln, among ' them the following in Tha|that a constitution should not outlas News by “An Old Yale Man": |a generation, or, in other words, that Save for the vastly greater number |it must keep pace with the needs of of deaths and the awful fact that|the people.” ‘The prime object o they were seemingly due to the greed |government is distributive justice o and parsimony of the steamship com- |all. pany, the sinking of tbe Titanic was no greater loss nor wag it more tragic than the pitifully sad deaths of Borup and Case. And there is no reason to think that there were any two men on the Titanic whose lives were, or would have been, more valuable to the world than those of these two dear tellows. “Borup had already begun his life of usefulness—young as he was—to the world as_an explorer, scientist, and writer; Case possessed the stuff which promised great thin, and both pos- sessed qualities, Wharacteristics and & fine manhood h should be, and is a source of pride to every Yale man, every. American. ‘High stand in scholarship, they took honors, gladly bestowed, from Yale; and in return they honored the dear old university by thefr high stand in manhood, citizenship, friendship and in their clean and wholesome per- sonal lves.” 1 _.In the Yale spring track meet Sat- urday, two. Vala track records were equalled, that of. the pole vault, 12 feet 9 1-2 inches, by Wagoner 19813, and the broad jump, 22 feet 1-2 lncl_i. by Diggs 1912S. In the pole vault, 3( was at first thought that the world’s record of 12 feet 10 7-8 inches had been broken, but the sag in the cross- piece prevented this, although making a mnew fIntercollegiate record. The runs and dashes were also satisfac- tory and considerably improved the outlook for achampionship track team. The freshmen scored 47 points in the d the jumiors were mext with Judging from the track meets, Yale's material compares very favorably with Harvard and Princeton, although there most of the places were taken by up- per class men. Yale's strength is in the pole vault, the two hurdles, the 100 yard dash and the broad jump. Her | weakness is in the mile ‘and the weight events. Harvard is strong in the 220, 440, and two mile, and Princeton in weight throwing, the high jump,-and the mile and half mile runs. The points made by the best men of the three colleges give Yale 37 1-2 points, Princeton 35 1-2 and Harvard 31. The intercollegiates are from May 31 to Jume 1 Application blanks for the champion- | ship baseball games and for the boat |race may now be had at the Yale | ticket department m New Haven. The first baseball game with Princeton is scheduled for Saturday, Jume 1, at New Haven, and the second game at Princeton a week later, The first game with Harvard will be June 18 at New Haven and the second game on the 19th ‘at Cambridge. The price of tickets to the covered stand for ali ball games is $1.50. The boat race is on Friday, June 31, and the | price of observation train tickets s |82.50. In applying for blanks the tick- et department requests that a self- { addressed stamped envelope be en- | | In baseball, rain has kept Yale from playing the scheduled game with New York university Wednesday. Tomor- row, Yale plays Georgetown for the deciding game of the series. At Holy Cross Saturday, Yale was defeated 9 to 4, after defeating Andover the previous day 22-0. o | closed. Prof, Hiram Bingham, who returned last Christmas from his latest expedi- | tion to Peru, is to make another trip to | that country this corhing summer, it is announced. It will be remembered that the Yale party found in the Inca IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN important. scientific “work. the earth in forty minutes” er less. The little but mighty gnomes we label chemi-al-affinity and molecular-attrac- tion toil away unceasingly in every dust heap. Nothimg is still. There is no death, nowhere ls there absence of motion. Light and sound travel their infinite meshes through the summer air. Heat throbs in the deadest stone. The uni- verse is a ceaseless workshop. Crea- tion 1s all a-tremble. Bestdes, there is Will and Thought and Emotion in evervthing for me, could my eye be touched with the right collyrium, Poetry and religlon are not mere Owen Johnsen's (1900) story, “Dink | Stover at Yale,” has been arousing | both in college and outside, a heated | discussion of Yale conditions and as to whether the book truly portrays them, The comments collected from | the members of Johnson's class, the News finds that of 56 answers, 12 could give no opiniens, not having true impression of Yale Is given to | the reader, while 19 others deny this, | and four ' are undecided, Twenty- | eight men belleve that the criticism eof | the soclal system 1s just. While the graduates of ten vears' | Delay in settling the coal strike is| ausing mischief in the coal - fields. reaks are the result of ldle- The d i cess d unrest, | a n ' P ey s Ak o | ne e s | If Richeson was never a Mormon | given o machine | elder, the assertion that he s cannot v N calling regarded as a serious reflection up- 1 his character. at machi The three-cent and one-half- | cent pieces are going to be the means For in new carki reducing the church and Sunday | r'e s was g had | school collections. i M n use would P Prbainly > awve voted| Mexico does not seem to be an in- sllowed by | Viting summer resort, thou Americans who | of rusticating there will have | hange their plans. The time 18 comMg when liquid oxy- some | €en Wil be as serviceable to man as machine | €lectricity, It will make a _teakettle been 1| boll that rests upon a cake of fce. thrown vot dis nore can| The judge who decided that a man's wife has a right to nag him is sus- pected of having had a dictator. She may have bossed the legal decision. kewise a preferenc andidate, w e them and not 1 The gift of a half-million to a sum- mer hotel keeper's daughter ought to put the money men in line for some pretty handsome coddling this sum- | mot correct the s of mer. end with be ice. vallc has marking no such assur- Happy how )WN meannesses others we saints, thought for today: . It beats caslly we can overlook our If we could do so should become near- i all | | OPPOSE EDUCATIONAL TEST. : Juntry's great questions and t likewise I'liera| John Jacob Astor did not forget his restric- | servants in his will. Some people who e h will| make pu bequests do nothing to erests of (he country, | mako the poor at their door bless their ch is | memory, problems. w des for The Allen bandits are said to have ed. It is be-|WO™M a coat of mail which suggests . i Legt. | he idea that bullet-proof gowns ba o imtaigrant | Provided for the court officials in that ¢ is wrong | 8ection hereafter. gnorant news | 1 and rife. | Roosevelt is telling the Ohioans that he doesn’t squeal when he is hit. Th Bulletin thought ‘Rooseveltian squeal- e o | ing was a striking feature of the in- education with | SUrSent campaign. . mvx;w?. Jf] Candidaté Jodoin may be the only c:te duly 18- | gemocrat who can win out in the not been concern- | gacond congressional district, but this 1, uprisings, at-| o oy from being the generally ac- that their per-|apted opinion In the Alstrict 1 Lear more | - T test in keep- | Cjreumstances alter 3 cases, tha «. Tt canhot he ex- | taking money from a thief js con ¢ people who are|giderad bad taste. Yet a Missouri girl aborers will be abla much elated over getting $4,000 e thelr own lan ym the man who stole a kias. * always the educated | 2L citizens, With| The 1 of the Astor for. » w-ablding allens | tune has temporsrily displaced the in- o the country the great diffi- (srest in the Titanic disaster on botn in distinguishing them from | sides of the water. There are very bad and distributing over the|few, however, who .are desply con- country rather than allowing them to | cerned huddle in the big centers (o their own standing think thus, it is interesting | to note the opinions of the class of 1912 on the same subject. Bighty-six | per cent. believe that the impression | given is utterly false of Yale today, while nine per cent. believe it true, and four per cent, are doubtful. Fifty- seven per cent, of the senlors regarded | the criticism of the social system as | unjust, and thirty-two per cent. sided | with Mr. Johnson, The main trend of optnion was that the publishing of the story was a bac thing for Yale, vet one-third of the class of 1912 see an influence for good in the book, at least within the col- lege, if not outside. On the whole, it is found that condl- vaporizirg. Thero was something in thet burning bush when Moses thought he saw God. There was something alive among the reeds by the water's marge when the Greek thought he heard Pan piping. Just because no one but the Poet sees these things is no proof that the Poet Is crazy and the stupld majority are san: Our moods are our interpreters. William Watson, n his verse upon “Autumn,” 18 reporting fact, fully as accurately as the newspeperman in the senate gallery is reporting fact. “And spectral seem thy winter—boding trees tions have changed for the better in |Their ruinous bowe f 3 the last decade, that Yale's social sys- | | " aee wes "o ers and drifted foli tem has undergone a great improve. ment since 1900, and that the empha- sis placed by the writer on social life and the indifference toward curriculum work, is branded as untrue to Yale life by many members of both the classes | of 1900 and 1912 O past and future in sad bridal net, O voice of everything that periskes, And Soul of all Regret!” OTHER VIEW POINTS The Yale Co-operative stors, oper- ated by the students for the students, has had sales for the present year up to date of $81,620.03. The board of directors represents all departments of the university and all classes in academic and Sheffield, Dean Jones has explained the need of a new recitation building this week to replace old Alumni hall and Osborn hall, ‘which is becoming useless recitation hall because of the i ing trafic on Chapel and streets. He said that “it is evident that a new hall, properly located, and containing a large examination hall, private offices and a number of good sized recitation rooms is the most ur- |Eent need.of the college, and it is { hoped that some generous alumnus or | benefactor of the institution will be | The man who goes to the circus with the boys is the man who will ever keep the banmer of youth in the full glare of glorious sunlight, with every one of its folds unfurled.—New Haven Times-Leader. The borough of Naugatuck elected a socialistic government last Monday. It wanted a trial of the fanciful and im- practicable in government, and it is #afe to predict that one trial will suf- fice—New Britain Record. Time was when eastern money went w to help out the poor farmers, Now, according to Iowa reports, the farmers of the middle west are gend- ing their money on east to loan at good interest. That is one answer to the high cost of living.—Meriden Journal. lfounfl who appreciates the necessity | of such a bullding, and who will contribute an amount sufficfent to in- sure its erection.” The Yale Taft club is to be ad- | dressed by Hon. Rollin 8. Woodruff, ex-gaveynor of Conmecticut, tonight and Taft buttons and_campaign liter- ature will be freely @istributed. The | democratic organization, 'the Wilson | club, “has been silent thi week. | ‘With 187 delegates for Shamp Clark, 102 for Woodrow Wilson, and 109 un- |Instructed, it is evident that the dem- ocrats of this country are not wildly enthusiastic over any one of the can- didates now before them. What a splendid chance for Colonel Bryan to | ride in on a dark horse.—Ansonla Sen- tinel. Mayor W.- 4% yor Bl SAmae of New: York | {anis 1y 3 tiha oF eiiaeiole. nasat, ness, it seems, among labor, organized and unorganized. Probably the politi- cal excitement which makes the air He lelectric may be to blame for some as w sick man |of this, and perhaps the air may clear would be for |When the spring is past and the con |ventions are over.—New Haven Reg- i | ister President Taft did not spare the | [ Harvester trust to save | Ben A. Tillman of South Carolina | wants to go back to Washington, is probably sironger |thah a new semator | vears, )hio to him-| In & five-line denial of the &harge | self and h ty 2 T lthat he sent $10,000 to Marvland for | s o R ML e i {use on Monday, ' Colonel Roosevelt's | dobb. - THet Hareasiar b i AVe | campaign manager uses the words, . e arvester trust supports |-y and “llar” five times. It that the: ex-praident | doesn‘t quality Congressman McKin- ley for The Club, Colonel Roosevelt | | Tt is shown that the Chicago press- men are wreng in their strike on the newspapers, That, however, Is not | £0Ing to return the $200,000 lost by the | papers In advertising or the $730,000 | lost to the merchants In trade from will add a few picturesque variants. | Waterbury Republican. | ‘We commend to the management of the Southern New England Telephone company a study in the field operations of the vexing nuisance of cailing a sud the country’s detriment Though broken In health, Seaator lack of advertising media during the number and then letting the receiver striks #it in silence at his desk several sec- ¥R 1 THIS OFFER GOOD FOR ‘ ® 6 Dinner Plates or 6 Cups and Saucers or, 3 Plates and 3 Cups and Saucers for Only 50 Star Soap Wrappers Regular Value, 150 Wrappers. This is the best semi-por- celain ware, beautifully decorated in floral designs in color. Can be obtained only by bringing Star Soap Wrappers to M. HOURIGAN, Furniture 62-66 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. The Procter & Gamble Distributing Co. ALIMITED TIMEONLY | onds before informing him what's wanted. It ought not to be a hard nut to crack.—New Haven Journal-Cour- fer. President Madero succeeded in driv- ing Diaz out of Mexico, and now it looks as if Madero might be soon stealing across the line with his suit case in bis hand. And after Madero— what? That was the everlasting ques- tion, from the time of Santa Anna to Diaz, and seems now to be likely to be continued indefinitely.—Bridge- port Standard. The complaint that the Titanic in- vestigation i3 “hurting business” is not entttled to the slightest consider- ation. No legitimate business can be matertally or permanently injured by this iquiry into the causes and eir. cumstances of a marine tragedy in which mere than 1,600 lives were sac- rificed, most of ~them - needless] Springfield Union. Thirty thousand_ banks have been called upon by the Meney frust inves- tigating committee for secret reports. ‘Well, maybe, after it's all over, we will find ‘out who's got all the meney and Bow he got it—and, maybe, we won't. These investigating committees always look promising at the start, but some- how they fail to maintain that prom- ise to the end.—Hartford Post. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR. An Important Product. Mr. Editor: The editorial on “Butter Production” in this morning’s paper gives the butter production of Connec- tieut tn 1909 as 5,943 pounds, Instead of 5,843,000 pounds. 1 have recently com- piled flgures showing the extent of the butter making ness in this state during 1914, as follows: The creameries of the state report a total output of 1,756,840 pounds, and there wad made on farms and in pri- | vate dairies about 500000 pounds, making a total of about two and a | quarter milllon pounds. | One creamery In the state reports an | output of 202,450 pounds, and there are | five others that made over 100,000 | pounds each. | The butter making industry of the state I8 on the decrease owing to the constantly increasing demand, from the clties, for market milkk. In 1900 there were 72 creameries in operation in Conneoticut, with a total | output of 8,000,000 pounds of butter. In 1911 this number was reduced to 23 and the production was 1,766,840 pounds. 2 EDWARD B. FITTS, Dep't of Dairy Husbandry. Storrs, May §, 1912, Can Norwich Have One? Mr. Editor: The following from ths Indianepolis News 18 worthy of notice: Speaking of themselves. in large and vainglorious terms s a weakness of | many large citles, and it often remains | for a smaller and humbler place to | polnt the way of progress. Last year & number of large cities—Indianapolis among them—started lower-cost-of- living campaigns. Efforts were made to found municipal markets where gen- uine competition might be had and where the producer could meet the | throughout the consumer without encountering the usurious clutch of the middleman. Des Moines was one of the unsuccessful. But it has remained for the city of Rockford, Winnebago county, Iliinois, to put to shame the way in which In- dianapolis treated the question of mar- ket reform. Rockford is a city of 45,000, about haif as large as Des Moings and one- fifth or one-sixth as large as Indian- apolis. A writer in a recent issue of the Farmers' Review tells of the ven- ture. The city prior to 1911 had no market, the farmers selling to the grocers—which plan operates about the same as selling to the commission man, for in these cases the grocers reap the commission house profit. A farmer, who was a member of the Winnebago County grange, saw the folly of small prices to the farmer and high price to the householder. With the grange's indorsement a plot of ground was ob- tained under approval of the city. A campaign of publicity was carried on through the press and by means of circulars. The farmers were urged to come and sell; the consumers to come and buy. Saturday, June 24, 1911, was set as the first market day. What hap- pened is best told in the writer's own words: “I arrived at the market at § o'clock. Not a single gardener's wagon was in sight. We had advertised that the market would be open at 4 a. m. I longed to disappear into some side street. People on their way to work would smile, and then pass on, Ovca- sionally some housewife who possessed an abundance of faith would arrive with a market basket and ask if all the gardeners had gone home, Finally the public men advocating the market literally had to go out and drag the farmers to the square as they came to town and headed for the grocery ores. The result was almost startling, The wagons that did come were sold out In a few minutes. The market grew rapidiy. There were three sales days a week. The rest of the summer there were never less than eighty wagons at the market. Several times there were more than 100 and once there were 117. Record breaking sales continued season. The county encouraged, appointed a com- o see that the market did not grange, mittee lag. The housewives of Rockford probably will enjoy cheaper produce this summer than last, for the market is to be enlarged. Indianapolis might have had the same excellent condition of affairs but for a council of oblique views. Would it be possible to have a “marks in Norwich? I can remember farmers with loads of wood standing on Frankiin square when I was a small lad. The farmer seems to be handi- capped. I am sorry the corn contest aid not go through. A FARMER. Norwich, May 8, 191 CASTORIA For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Z Tz Bears the Signatu.e of Attention TRY BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE BECAUSE We employ 32 hands. tion. it is cleaner NUGGETS Finest 10¢ Why ? itisa Blel;d of the Finest Havana To- bacco grown. it is made by Expert Hand Workmen. it is under healthful, Sanitary Cenditions. you eat. Sold at all First Class Cigar Stands in the State. Smokers CIGAR MADE than the Food Factory open for inspec- Poli’s Bmaay Theatre L i o AMATEUR NIGH Return Engagement of MR. CONRAD McDOWELL, “The Trans-Atlantic Comedian” Also A Complete Bill Of Other Acts, All New Motion Pictures “The Seal of Time” “The Bachelor and the Baby” “The Section Foreman” and Others TOM GASEY, Tenor Cortlandt m" Lesses Manager. Ile (BREED THEATER An Arizon Abounding in S Edward Meehan, Lyric Teno —lN—AUDIT WOODFORD'S ANIMALS, WON THRILLING ESSANAY PRODUCTION CLARICE BEHRENS—Lady Gymnast BAKER, McSHANE & BAKER—Thoss ALL FEATURE PICTURES a Escapade tirring Situations Mae La Jess, Contralto. T ORIU M—illl— DERFUL ANIMAL ACTORS Minstrel Boys. Shur-0 “They are the most wonde: .There are no lines of seps: Although giving distinct cal. Come in and learn What Are KRYPTOKS ? devised, giving in a single lens the two different magnifica- tions required for near and far vision. not drop apart, for there are no segments, coilect dirt in creases, for the parently single, colid lenses, handsome and thoroughly practs THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO., PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING OPTICIANS, ESTABLISHED 1872 Eye- glasses n rful bifocal eyeglass lenses yet ration and no cement. They do They cannot re are no creases. double m, they are ap- more about them. not ghow or rub off. DERMA VIVA THE IDEAL FACE POMWDER Makes face, hands, arms and neck as whige &s milk and Liver Spots cured in a few days. tlon for years and recommend it. Pimples, Blackheads, Freckles, M Have handled this prepa Ulley & Jonmes. Price 5oe COAL AND LUMBER. Lumber re- Complete assortment for pairs or building. COAL sities— E. CHAPPELL C0. Central Wharf and 150 Main Street Telephone: CALAMITE COAL “It burns up slean.” Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL. 402 — "Phonex — 489 COAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor- Market and Shetuckst Sts Telephona 163-12. JOBN A. MORGAN & SON, Coal and Lumber Central Whart Teeohone 884 Just to show our faith that brighter, warmer days are coming, we announce the ar- rival of our line of HAMMOCKS You'll Need One Later. Cranston & Co. THE FINEST 35¢c DINNER IN TOWN ‘DELDHOFF CAFE From 12 2 | Enough to meet actual neces- | ;TheD}meS yingsBank OF NO! DIVIDEND The regular Semi-annual Dividend | has been declared from the net sarn- | ings of the past six months at the rate of Four per cent. a year, and will | be payable on and after May 15. | FRANK L. WOODARD, apriz4daw Treasurer. WICH. | PAY YOUR BILLS BY CHEQUE on the Uncas National Bank In this way you will know the exa cost of your living and always have the best kind of a receipt in the re- turned endorsed cheque. Courteous and liberal treatment ex. tended to every depositor whether the account be large or small We solicit your patronzge. THE UNCAS NATIONAL BANK, Telephone 65. 42 Shetucket Street, NOTICE All_persons desiring or intendt use hose for streel, lawn, garden sprinkling, or for any other purpo during the season of 1912, must fir obtain a written permit from t of the Board of, Water Commi Any person using hose with written permit shall be flned $5 tly enforced. BERT 5. RAYMOND, se Board of Water Comm! stone: apri New Wall Paper Decorations and Cutout Borders. them before you select, with & full ling of Mouldings Murescos and Painty It will pay you to ses ready for use. Now taking orders for spring Palnt- ing, Paper Hanging and Decorating. P. F. MURTAGH 92 and 94 West Main St. "Phone. You cannot afford to use carbon lamps while Mazda Lamps are selling at such low prices as at the present time, 25 Watts ...eeeuseee $ 5 40 Watts © 60 Watts . 100 Watts . #. Manufactured by the General Electris | Company, FOR SALE BY C. V. PENDLETON, Jr., 10 Broadway. THERE s no aavertisifg mi Eastern Connecticui eyusl to istin for b results Bt