Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 14, 1912, Page 4

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REVELATIONS. Hoosevelt managers Horw aund Couvrigr. 116 YEARS OLD. tan 1y the iy f L n e Ve "‘ ~l vs X The idea that on on price, L3¢ & weck; L .00 u vear. goated by the national ¢ cred al tay Postoffice at Norwiel y a < 46 Sheohb-crese Mo A | thelr owh ¢ by voting on Pidopbinge ORIl dentials committee report outrages ev- Iiitetin Businees Office, 480 ery sensg of justice and moral sta Lulietin Editorial Rooms 3-8 ard known to man. For Buietin Job Office, 35-8, Whose seat is contested to help decide, Willimuntle O Hoow 3 Murcay ; 1 i Hulidioz, Telepione 210. \s owh case is exactly a e a = | fendant in a suit at law were sitting | Norwich, Friday, June 14, 1912, as a member of the FLAG DAY, « From evemts which are 'ranq\lrh\.l throughout the country from time ‘o | t g it is evident thut too grea porfince cannot be attached to las never contesting a 1 should it t ven spec or wbia the fourteenth of June, o cut the year it is due for publl rition at all times. Fla Las been observed since 1898 adoption of the flag of « h anniversary of t stars and & r count ry Old Glory should be fiying from |y, ahle to vote, Such an evefy home foday, the symbol of & | eipd ¢ $asias ot i mighty natlon, and coming as | x y x two weeks Memorial day i5 nittee passes on s ugain to kee sh | tcxta nd lessons which 1ts| rpe geep laid plans to he flag has | convention and force the nc » world and it | el madk sign of libert . flimsy ages for ever Some ins lisrespe flag. stimulated make apparent that patriotic nger at not societies, the American peopl | eral and particular o nols, | EDITORIAL NOTES, should arouse a it | 1t the weather doesn’t make in support of ssons of | ptism | oo e average which the es and eir | s loyalty and f to it : - — banner from hous and Acid rains on Cordova, Alaska —_— 1t i8 pr G CONGREGATION PICKS SERMONS, | gates. The up to date In order to give the congregation a - more direct intere and to pre pecial intere: the members, on topies wh es hop: n is one a murder tay in cov in Pittsburg. In or idea, which has oasistory of Reformed Rev. Robert J grim has p containing thirty subjec which 1as money to f » approval t of sermons includes trina o practical and social subjects, all of ™" 4! which are of direct interest to the congregation, and the church members Aot ve the privilege of selecting them for him to discuss at an date. The selection will be by lar vote, thus carrying the preferc primary em into the chu bl This id ould prove an import- ant one in dealing with the church at- tendance problems. is adopte | jcreate a closer interest betw ! lcongregation and the pulpit ted to stimulate a deeper inter "'- the preaching by taking up wh. !¥the congregation is particulariy inter- | ested in. For those who f sermons are drv things” it ought to have & direct appeal and by h a method the pastor can feel the pulse of his flock and give better service in administering to their wants. Th experiment should prove a valuabl mot only for that but for burches. A Maine man has jus that 1 ten days as he AGAINST THE WORKINGMAN. Many voung people lose their heads | t doesn’t seem (o make much dif- | o rence how much effor put ir or what ought to have been ving to escape from t gh cost of | cuuse ng, something usual rr | Lo iamper ths oppressed. Those who lit 1 . t flats and spartments are hopelessly [ makes th oft from the doorvard garden as|although it means sep down the expenses, | be ve whero thers is a back vard it had | his own en considered there was offered e opportu the time, at lea: out on these garden patches here seems escape, for a p conduc ar, jus ring about satisfactory resul w i o this It would be handy to natructions along agriculiu that fs hardiy a requisite = from the cou S 38 véar to forn, fua |, Reskevlt s wled from his ng cost seems opposed. | iy . | is now t | ing out for m pest 4s done harm This | ethe pre s are affected alike and the wester - - as well as the castern farmers are suf- | T progr whe talks fering from the same trouble. Ti Chi shouid makes 1t n nemorahle £ *80. T fican, nationat i n e The ng ! W rere e 23t L . wle e rom sver the country w Roosey mitteemen are voting to en assembled. The democrats re- | Stat Taft delegutes, the Colonel and sipe a two-thirds vot s well - hold for their nomj- [ Dixon may . With €0 many un- | 0 nee of th S sl BUIZNg 118 own alry existing be- | andidates, Wilson | o es of that convention will just b 0 when the first ballot 18 taken, 4 Wwhile claims of all kinds are being | 4 SN for the second ballot, Underwood h the claim that Wilso ten to him as so. s have gone, the attitude iy states which arn ot Justl States gupreme e sons wiil an import- just as soon as the first bhal- part Willlam Jen- n the cony r s no question Sing ize vather than Tyt 1o ou ed teelings between Wilson and | Clark. Whatever the result is ,,{ : is plenty of eppertunity for the poli- |1 Juve I viclans to make a busy week. It o ) seems impossible for il 10 carry out|nssic or fasin s werk la thres days, test 2 -Pittsburgiv Despatch By allowing them plenty of rope, ths dually get- | ting tripped in the tangle, It is stead- ain by making so many flim tests and carrying them befor committee. They exp of the conver- | which is evident | Dixon’s statement mittee have | jury in his own ove tion of their timely aid. commencement blican or democratic iabtittory k « number of del her they had mer em from vot- and sho; 1 the evening the c The baccaluure: Josevelt Sunday morn- | 1ld be sible given in Woolsey afternoon at 3 is nown before commencement dinner in ty_dining hall. s own statement = . The commencement exercises will be that | Kimball, |ters at the old Thatc! umni dinner at 1, sident’s reception in ! from 4.30 to 6.30. cloges the programme g the eastern Connecticut men receive bacheler’s degree as Howard Alofsin, Traver Briscoe, Allen Wheeler York, 191 ngton; Raymond Augus. of Willimanuc. ic school include Ja Barr of Moosup, Hart Ja S David Dow E ntley of New has demonstrated k Tilden of New Law school, will recelve their degrees next Yale students became “knights of the new Hotel Taft 7T them, went « just before dinner, up the servic added to the popularity of Taking advaniage of the ncement week, nning g start in life tion of the union will not fail t0 | with a refusal from the manager and, re paid off at once. centing trouble, essels that r of men on hand. The signed two to each table and in the cannot they performed h smoothness th: 1es and ships 20 and showed g a powerful influence if eds in ending the ug omi ro brought up in bu adents were T rs from New The strikebre: . which looked | morning with | {like a hospital Tuesday sons pa small army of cots. June 10 wiil country | hereafter bu known as strikebreakers' | day at the Taft, and it is said that all Y le students will get fed for nothing there on that day in commemora- ProfW illiam Lyen Phslps of the ned Monday Mrs, Phelps after spending his Sabbatical year in Europe, They pass- four months in Russia, one in Lal er lengths of time in Franc Germany and Great Britain. Prof. Phelps returned earlier than he had at first planned in order to attend the h reunion of the class of 1887 English department retur with Yale '56 will be the oldest class back this year, the class rewer was t] expects to have 38 me von next Tuesday for its 50th reunion, the mem- ser who will come the greatest dis- tance being Rev. Henry S. Barnum, D. D., of the Bible school at Constanti- nople. Other, members expected are Secretary of the Treasury Franklin McVeagh and Rev. Richard C. Morse of New York; '6%'s headquarters will be Dwight hall. The class of 1877 will bring back many prominent alumni, among them Judge E. B. Gager of the Connecticut superior court and A. E. editor of the Waterbury ; 1387 will have its headquas er house, 255 Crown street, and '§78, one of the few older classes to appesr in costumes, black and blue blazers, with white trousers, will convene at 118 Wall street; 1882 will have headquarters at Amerie: the Hotel Taft, which will be the scene of many of the class dinners; 1906 will appear in coolie costumes, and Walter Cowles of the Musie school has com- posed a Chinese march. A disagreement between James Hill- house and Yale university as to the use of the land sold by him from the Sachem’s wood tract in 1905 has been brought to the public attention this week, when Mr. Hillhouse had the en- ire correspondence in the case pub- {shed. There have been rumors of diffi- 4 for some time. - Hillhouse protests against what lievea to be violations of the greement made as to the future de- velop of the Hillhouse property by | the university, The original deed pro- that the “30 acre tract is to be wred for the Forest schgol, the 1 gardens, the proposed school of irrigation of Yaie unmiversity, or for similar purposes. and for ho other pur- poses, unless approvad by the corpera- tion of sald university." As early as June 16, 1910, Mr, Hill house cbjected to the new Sloane phy- al laboratory then in course of erec- and which has just been complet. ed, as being a use of the praperty for & purpose not permitted by the deed. 3" with {ts location, and he ob- jected, too, to the cutting down of sev- eral oak treas. This week Mr. Hiilhouse calls atten- tion to the second laboratory, that for zoology, that is going up at the corner of Sachem and Prospect streets, and protests again against this use of the land, saying that he never had any in- tention of zelling the property for gen- eral university purposes, and would have otherwise adhered to a plan of his own for developing Sachem's wood. Secretary Stokes of the Yale cor- poration in 1911 replied to Mr. Hill- | house “that the university would abide by its agreement, but would insist upon all of its rights to the property. was confident “that the use of the property for the Sleane physical lab- oratory is in no wise contrary to any agreement which the university has made or assumed.” As Secretary Stokes is in Europe, Mr. Hillhouse ad- dressos his letter of this week to the corporation. »t Chairman New | IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN froth at the mou to the public AR 2 provided you use it e day last week 17 people in Chi- en by dogs. Next week 1y more who will realize | : Roosevelt going g but to try to get the thing he holler “Who: mber that some | breakers may have hind this moment is men ams which an 1k of Darion { there is ne those parties have named. | ven Register. { chamber of ¢ n to realize | e country Mayor Gaynor makes the statement and is still growing. all speak at once | e his own way | but some of t& m who do not New Remedy medal for his chivalr won't have sell Is an unblushing bride us the hardihood to single for the rried to. each either will be | #1ve you a eclear complexion, the ex- | pense 1s trifiing, Slmply get an ounce of othine— | the negroes of the country any a dectslon of support ngled Ban- You ough shingie Is thin at one end and is like Perbaps he ihinks Clark is mt and pushing other | one unce needed far the worst ¢ u a deeper and more ' irec important significance, for invariabl; on that day is recorded a string of ac cidents which makes the front page | of the Monday newspaper resemble a description of the chamber of horrors, Meriden Record. As will be seen, we have nailed our colors to the mast and they will stay . | there. No political buccaneer can haul them down and hotst the red flag of | anarchy, nor will he ever be abla to scuttle the G. O. P. ship. We are for William Howard Taff, first, last and all the time—Litchfield Inquirer. The story of how Morgan lent $: 000,000 on stocks and broke the money panic in 1907 was related yesterday to the Pujo congressional committee which is in New York leoking for a | money devil. There may not be any | money devil, but the suspicion grows it thers might not be any meney ther if one man did not have 000,000 in cash to loan.—Water- Republican of the volcanoes in Alaska is 5 of violent eruption. Alaska and Mexico are in the same “vol- cano be and the activity of some Mexican craters may have led to sympathetic outbursts in Alaska, But similarity in pelitical con- ditions. Mexico is jn the midst of redhot revolutienary disturbance, while Alaska iy keeping cool and quiet. New Briiain Reco! > Wi en law which re- sidential electors who re- ority of the votes of any e for any stated candidate, tom of 130 vears binds them 1o party whose organiz: citlzens, the honor of mem- vship in parties which our form of nment makes necessary, bind n to vate for the candidates for president and vice-president whom New Ha- The member: of the American > in the Levant at the outset to has grown from FRECKLE-FACE. at Removes Freckles or Conts Nothing. Hore's a chance, Miss Freckle-Face, to try a new remedy for freckles with the ‘guarantee of a rellable dealer that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles, while i it does Be sirength, u Lee & Osgooid Low easy It 13 to rid yoursel? of | the hemely freekles and get & beau- tiful complexion, THarsly 1s more than o sire to ask Lee & Osgood for the double strength oihine, as this is the iy prescriplion yold under guarantas ) back If it fails (o remeve BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER 525550 ‘Commencement Begins With Dedication of Sloan Physical Laboratory—Degrees Coming. to Eastern Connecticut— | University Students Become Knights of the Napkin— Disagreement Between James Hillhouse and the Uni- Farm Where All Animals Are White. What 15 known as a “white farm” is located nead Puyailup,Wash., the’own- er of the place being Bugene Jacque- min, a lover of nature and livesteck. For years he has been gathering to- gether white animal§ and fowls, which &re all housed in spotless sheitérs and permitted to roam within the bounds of white fences. This “white farm” found in other parts of the globe, and is unique beca specimens of albino animals and bird: writes & correspondent of the St. P is one of severnll ‘White horses do all the farm work. ‘White ponles play with White cows furnish butier and mil ‘There are white hogs, sheep and goats. The pigeons, " s and guines fowls are The guinea fowls wero imported £20m | irlg have a habit of patronizing rath- A novelly is a pair of peacocks, pure the yard three and white Persi In the orchard Spitz dogs pia lounge on the porches. the farmer has pure white mag: Sticks to Sure Things. ve made up a pool to wage at Las, Vegas, e of John D. Rockefeller's manife: 10 remain a wealthy 0il man.—S we do not finy CONCERT by the Academy Musical Club Friday, June 14 SLATER MEMORIAL HALL Tickets 25c At Geo. A. Davis' or members of Club Cleveland is more or less excited at a report that high school bovs and skellers and getting drunk. the auit and a good many of the best talls ors think so, too—that Is why they use EARNSDALE P 2 Virgin. Wool) WORSTEDS fabrics, backed by our Seal of Guarantes. Give them your custem and ( { you will be bhetter clothed. For your pre tection ask te see th ““Guarantee.” ing, he thought, was “out of TRADEMARK " Welcome Soap “For Generations the Choice of New England Women” Manufactured by LEVER BROTHERS COMPANY, Cambridge, Maszs. (@ “My Hands Wc‘eré‘a Slgh Until I Used That 7 ‘Welcome' Laundry Seap’- “Now They Are Soft and Smooth” ‘““My hands were simply ferrible/ All red, h and wrinkled. All because I used the wrong laundry soap. “I certainly have learned the difference in soaps now. I won't use anything but ‘Welcome.’ ‘There is just emough Borax used in el come Soap—more than in all other soaps made in New England put together. Borax softens the water, is a wonderful cleanser, and is splendid for the hands. “I suppose, too, that's wh; my clothes look so white and beautiful. clothes whiteness was until I used ‘Welcome.’ et my wash out earfier nowadays than I ever did before. ““Your grocer sells it, for fwice as much ‘Wel- come’ is used in New Eagland as ary other. “Your hands will become white and soft. Your washing will be done better with less work. It costs but 5c. At your grocer’s.” I didn’t know what m. More than that the | Special Sale BRASS LINED FULLY WARRANTED SALE PRIGE THE HOUSEHOLD, 74 Franklin Street l night's treatment will show | Bulletin Building. CENT KNIVES BEST OF STEEL GENTS EAGH TODAY’S FILM “Tie Indian and the Child” G. M. Anderson as the Indian —l—A UDITO R I UM—iill— THE JOHNNY BUSH VARIETY ENTERTAINERS | OTHER FEATURE ACTS AND FIC TURES POPE-HARTFORD “SIX” IN A SIX-CYLINDER POPE-HARTFORD TOURING CAR SEVEN PASSENGERS CAN RIDE IN THE MOST COMFORTABLE, LUXURIOUS AND ENJOYABLE WAY YET DEVISED. Its riding qualities are su- perb and it holds the road perfectly at all speeds. Important features which make for comfort and smooth traction are soft upholstery; resilient 34 elliptic springs of a wheel base inches long; and a wonder- responsive, six-cylinder quiet, smooth-running motor of marvelous flexibil- ity effectively harnessed by the most efficient drivinE mechanism to a perfectly bal anced chassis. The Pope-Hartford “Six” is a handsome car of impos- ing proportions. Every structural feature and every detail of finish and equip- ment contributes to the beauty of this model as a whole. Furnishings, fittings and appointments are luxur= ious and in excellent taste. 6-CYLINDER TOURING CAR $4,000 THE POPE: MANUFACTURING COMPANY HARTFORD, CONN. REUTER’S braduation Boguets and Baskes ST EVER THE BE to the minute accessories, s pleasing many women. It enables the housewife to broil as well on the New Perfection Stove as over a coal fire. It uses all the heat. It cooks evenly. It broils both sides at once. It doesn’t smoke. And of course you are familiar with the ew Perféetion ©il Cook-stove It is sich a convenience all the year round. It will bake, broil, voas and 1oax just as well as a regular coal rasge, iove of veur adsomely fnihed in nicke, win Svery aove. Coal Vendiog 3 centato cover masho cou STANDARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW fORK AVLIANT. N. Y. BUFFALO, N. Y. BOSTON, Quite Busy Just Now— But not so busy but what we can promptly attend to anything you may need in our line, CONTRACT WORK of every de- scription promptly attended to by men who know how to do it. terials In stock at all times. Estimates cheerfully given. C. M.‘Vi}i.LlAHS, DR. JOHN W. CALLABAN Pliysician and Surgeon 2-4, 79 p. m. Telephone 426, Dr. Harriman Building ma- 314 Main Street. PAYYOUR BILLS BY CHEQUE on the Uncas National Bank In this way you will know ihg ezect cost of your living and always have the Dbest ki.d of & recelpt in the re- turned endorsed ¢ Courteous and iiberal troatment ax. | tended to every depositor wheihar the }ucrnuul be largs or small, e sollcit your patronage THE UNCAS NATIONAL BANK Telephone @6. 42 Shetucket Street. e ————————————— Ur.k. W, BOLES, veatisi Shannen Building Annex, Room A __Telephone 623, oct10d THERT “« G0 Advertimng mediu. a‘.l"':“-:flflflmt equal o tu‘w

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