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-2 Borwich Bulletin and oufied 117 YEARS OLD Subscription price 12c a week; 500 a month; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as second-class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Bditorial Rooms 35-3 Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantic Office, Room 2 Murray Building. Telephone 2°7. Norwich, Friday, Nov. 21, 1913, The Circulation of The Balletin The circulation of any*paper in East- orn Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered Bulletin has the largest in Norwich, a;4 read by ninety- thres per ceat. of the people. In Windhem it s delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in all of thess places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticat has forty- nine towns, ome hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. The Builetin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 498808000000000Teseerrenreeeeatenerarestsset et sennssetesmmBeressranstesens There is sincere for n the statement by ted Work- ers that its eomtributions show a marked falling off this year when financial assistamee is particularly de sired This great charitable organ- ization is deservimg of the fall support of the people of town. It even outdoes the town itself in Its efforts and accomplishments in behalf of the unfortunate, the sick and deservine. T continues its work so quietly persistently varfous branch that it comes to onsidered a fix- ture which will run itself withou outslde support. Thz ould do so has often been wished by those who kmow the f t d velue of its work. but t, should be sufficient to arouse public con- science point wi tiom est revealed. N vears profited from the founders and friends of the has for many of ed TUn Workers. There i be no curta ment of the magnificent work which is being done through the city mis Nonk Children’s Home Arms and t other theegh smaller departments of the main ergamization which are glving wholesome help and instructfon to the voung. The. Umited Workers the great home charity which is most de- serving of boumtiful = Is with local comditions just the peint bagin, ar where charity st "HEADED RIGHT. Wherever Chalrman E | New Have Temd has appeared *hrougheut New England speaking be- fore orgenizations of business men, he has made a wonderfnl Impression the somndness of his principl nd pollcy. Tt is therefore not sur ng that such was the result of his Haven adaress falowing shert time after his visit New | bury and Providemce. T ad- Aresses he had dealt wi the rela- tion of the commanity and state to the great raflrnad system. BEach Is necessary to the other Therefare when he seeks the opport to Te- eomstruct and pets forth and urees the nolicy of cooperstion for the bettering of conditions of communi state, New Fngland, the raftrond. he makes a sen- stble plea which camnnot fafl to draw #orth an egually semsTble recognition world Is growing better 1Is @nd respesse n for the clergy even Mr. Bott is engaged In the im- salary is but $600 portant task of restoration and up- | buflding. Not emly is he setting the | brakes on the attmcks which have| The chances are that Harry Thaw proved so damaging as directed agalnst | ;myst zet acquainted with the features past comditlons, but he is engased in| ot 5 New Hampshire winter whether the molding of new Telatlons and the | he wants to or not Imstttutton of needed reforms and res- At a0 ulations for the betterment of the road | With another strike epidemic devel- and fts patrons. The soundness of his | oping in Lawrence, that city is deserv— argument has an appeal which can-|ing of sincere sympathy. After.a while | nat fafl to Ywtme a realizatlon of its|it ought to get enough of such ev- nesessity. He mndnubtedly appreciates | perienyes the fact that Mis sb cannot he ac complished in a moment. The fact,| Pzavisional President Huerta will howeser, that he i headed in fhe|nof be surprised if he is invited by right @irectien i griing to prove a most | his new congress to remain. His con- valnghle factor T attaining snccess. gress might get a surprise if they didn’t invite him. AGAINST PHILIPPINE PLAN. The attack Which ex-President Wil- Mam H. Taft mmfe upon the policy of the ad@msmistration in the Philip- plnes mmst be recognized as having ‘been promptedl by a superior reall #lon of fhe exmct con@itions in the is- lands rafher than through any par- #isan opposifion. There are few others who are better qualified to discuss the eonditiors: in the islands of the east fhan fhe former president. Tiis knowledge has come fhrough expe- rience and in His position he is sup- ported by mren of prominence who have been I close vuntact with the islends and their peaple, twoth politically and religiously. That democratic experiments and in-, vestigations axe bound to hear ot his postfion is the helief of Mr. Taft. He sdvances the proper suggestion that the Filipines aught not to be de- cetved as to the pramise of indepen-; dence, which has diveays been the ul- timerte purpose of this country when they are reafly ‘to reeeive it. The dan- mer imto which the present giminis- tration’s policy is hkeader is indicated 3 H H H : to ever 3,000 of the 4,053 houses ; H i H H vy [ at cratic admintstration than they were under republican administration, they will think themselves decelved and this may lead to some agitation and some disturbance which will have to be put down with a strong hand.” Surely the Fillpinos are not in the proper mood to be decelved. Far bet- ter must it eventually. be for them to understand the necessity of making progress towards the goal slowly but surely instead of hastening ahead to a wreck. Deception never pays. THE LOGICAL COURSE. ‘When it comes to offering opposi { tien to capital punishment and work- ing for the commutation of sentences from death by hanging to life im- prisonment, the action taken by the socialists of Hartford seems to get right down to bedrock. There has been an average of over one hangang a vear for the past two decades and no great effort has been made to abolish the death penalty for crime in this state. A woman transgressor who has been found guilty and faces the gallows has caused many to urge leniency in her behalf regardless of the ct that three men are also sen- tenced to pay the same penalty at bout the same time. Many are the appeals which are being made for the woman by women and men without concern over the men who are to be d. The socialists however, in doption of resolutions, recognize the the need of treating all alike and urge commutation not of one, but of all the death senténces. | Such is the one logfcal course for {all who are opposed to capital pun- | ishment. How much weight it will | carry in view of the law and fair trials | is uncertain, but it is based upon the ground that the question of sex should ot enter into the cry for mercy. If re to be altered because it is time for a change in but if the provisions of the , be carried out justice de- t all be treated alike. Thus ciali 1 attacking the prac- upon general principles offer the and best argument for clem- indest NATIONAL INDEBTEDNESS. How national indebtedness is pil- ing indicated by the figures the department of com- » show that the national of the world now agsregate 42 billion doMars, or an increase of 20 | per eent. in the last decade and of per cent. In the past forty years. The interest and other annual charges mounted in 1812 to 1732 million dol- lars or an dverage of slightly more than four per cent. though in many | cases, especiglly those of the stronger nations, the rest rates are ma- ally below that figure. The zest national debt is that of { France, 6,284 million dollars and ac- cording o recent announcement it sti!l plunging ahead. The next largest ja with 4533 milllons, follow- h comes the United Kingdom ething may drop before the day headline, but from the procrastination it will says a experience with not be Huers A blizzard was recently experienced in Florida, but that of course was the same depended on for so long to To have the books of a bank cashier who commits suicide declared “abso- lutely correct” is the exception rather than the rule. All canmot be rightly judged by the same standard, From the attitude which General Fmerta has maintained and the inde- pendence of General Carranza it is quite evident that they are too much alike to be expected to agree. While eggs in 1858 were selling for “y5 cents a dozen and scarce at that” the same trouble with hens was e perienced as now, but there was a Qif- ferent regulafor of the price. “Whhat an important part of the ef- .eign nations is indicated by the state- ment that 92 per cent. of the foreign commerce is carried in foreign ships. The suceess which is attending the raising of the four million doliars by by r. Taftis statement that “When the Fllipimo people find that they are no nearer indepemdence under demo- . C. A, and the Y. W. C. A. in New York indicates most conclu- sively the great benefit which such institutions are recognized to the youth of the land, as bLeing nf; with 486 million, Traly with 2, 7 mil- lion, h, 1,515 million, British In- dia yn, Japan, 1,242 million and the United States, 1,028 million. The d of the German empire is million and the German states regate of mnational indebt- edness luding all countries for which can be had is twenty times larger than in 1800. Tt still, however, keeps a respectful distance behind the wealth of nations. Ac- ording to the latest fizures a dozen nations have the reputed wealth of 444,000 mifllion of which 130,000 mil- lion is accredited to this country which is not only the leader in wealth. but among the smallest of the big nations | in debt, though the debt of this coun- try has increased 100 million in’ the last ten Yyear EDITORIAL NOTES. With the Navajos singing war song Mexican distemper must be catch- ing. John Lind having an experience which ought to qualify him for an ex- pert at s aire. An Investment In an egz plant ap- be a timely and wise ex- » of extra ¢ izer still governor | it is about time he People's House” again. on the corner says: The the longest feather | s around in the nveliest is no nger the only great Some of the best men of the are being killed off by auto- forts for safety at sea rests with for-| Dean Brown Points Out New Haven, Nov. 20—"“Thres years ago Yale defeated Princeton and tied Harvard. This year Yale has tied Princeton and will beat Harvard.” This prediction’ by Fred Daly, cap- tain of the Yale eleven that “came back” in 1910, after a season almost as wavering as this has been, was made at a tremendous mass meeting last night. And it expresses the sentiment and the spirit that all un- dergraduate Yale feels. 1t was given vent in a meeting of the greatest en- enthusiasm in the baseball cage last night, and again at the New Haven station this afternoon, when the stu- dent body marched down and cheered for 20 minutes with a wonderful out- burst the team that left at 1.50 o'clock for Auburndale, Mass, to remain there until the day of the game. Captain Ketcham was given precedented ovation in the b cage Wednesday night. When the stalwart leader of the Blue. eleven entered the mass gf students broke into a roar of cheerifg that lasted for a dozen minutes and was: only stopbed when the cheer leaders got into action and ripped out a long cheer for the man who heads one of the stubbornest fighting teams that Yale has had in many a long year, and it “came back” last Saturday, fought back Princeton and clearly out-playeq the Tigers be- | cause the Yale spirit and the support | of the university is behind it as be- hind no other team of' recent years. It's the spirit with which the ‘eleven | will enter the Stadium Saturday aft- ernoon, and it will be enhanced by another week’s progress in weeding together and injecting speed into the team that last Saturday played a game that every Yale man was proud of. It was a game which Yale well deserved to win and missed by the narrowest kind of a margin. A few inches in| either of Guernsey’s drop kic have told a different story. be told at s would That wil Cambridge Saturday. Captain Ketcham would not predict a victory on Saturday, but no Yale team has ever had more loyal sup- port, he said, “and whether we win or whether we lose, that team is going | in with*everything that is in them, and we to do ach better than last Jones spoke very | briefly, but w he said was to the | point. “I do believe in my heart that this Yale team will give every ounce that is in them in the game on & urday and if it is in the team physi ly, we are going to win. We better team than a lot of people think Coach Bomeister esaid: “There are going turday.” C not going to be any individual star | Saturday, but every Yale man is going to pick his Harvard man and that brings success.” BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Confidence of Victory From Harvard Pervades University— Earn Their Way Through College. And better than a new spirit con- fined solely to football, is the spirit that is showing itself in the other de- partments of the life of the college | and university. Captain Ketcham re- | ferred to it Wednesday night, when he | said that he had never known such an awakening at Yale and not alone | tics but in other things. In the last few years, over- nization as been a criticism directed at dergraduate life in New Haven, bri ing a loss of the spontaneity | used to be, according to tradition, a part of the old college life. The healthy of democ vigorous spirit that the old days was distinctive of Ya was being lost, graduates i other; close to the situation fec And probably their suspicions e not been unfounded and the new condi tions of life have brought about Changes—More Than .E'ver changes that do not compare exactly favorably with the older ways of Yale. In one of his reemt Dwight Hall talks to the studsnts, Dean Brown had a word to say about the influence of the Hotel Taft on the university. It is true that too much Yale money and too many Yale ideals passed over the bar of the Taft last year, and there is not the same democratic feeling of good-fellqwship in the grill-room of | the Taft now that there used to be | in the informal meetings at the old Mory And even Mory's shows the changes that time has wrought. It is still existent, but is dead as far as | undergraduate life is concerned. It probably was too slow for the stren- | uous student of today. Then campu singing and meetings on the fence have no place in the hurry and com- petition of college activities. So that it should be encouraging to hear from a leader in college life such as Cap- | tain Ketch: that he detects this new spirit coming back into Yale. of men who the earning their way through college, the | Speaking are | that while it Alumni Week done less conspicuously, the numbe of men doing it is larger than ever, although the proportion to the whole is is smaller. The man fits himself for a job for self-support just as for en- trance examinations. in other words he uses his head, and does not go out after four years, as did the self-sup- porting student of former , with a fine ability to balance tend furnaces, ang little know the finer things and wider v coilege should give, in the v ultivation by reading and social and appreciation of mus and art, etc. The new type of self ipporting student doesn’t slave all the year, he makes his vaca his opportunity for earning money and in college time he is free for what col- | lege has to off Last Year the Bureau.of Appoint- ments had on its list 644 men in the university who were self-supporting and 249 of these furnished statistics of | their earnings to the bureau for the | revision of its pamphlet Self Help at | Yale. The total amount earned W 9 by these 249 men, of wh as in term time, $12, in Waiting on table is . the most common means of earning or money and in that $16 men. to _tutor! 17 men clerical their atte ntnm $7,042.00, while made $3,661.00. men earned $7,104.75 3 $5,489.45 wa ned by the care of furnaces, lawns , men derived $2,121.65; from (in the Universit ved $2.054 N S) 745.50 to 17 men 5 68 to 21 men; music, 20 | men earned $1,061.. summer hotels | ! 19 men earned nd in mer camps el Twenty T on ious wor men earned men earned $1,44( e library. | The class of 1915 last year, with 47 men working, ecarned t amount of money. § Sheflield Scientific juniors s of the e porting stude Loneliness. If we have any aspirations above | the common, if our are other than those must _often happen ourselves out of touch with ety. It is nc alw: a plea | sation; it brings loneline: less we are singularly loneliness is cne of life | trial The condition also | courage, and moral courage is a ver | rare ft. } Many persons lower their voluntarily because they are of this loneliness, because they fear being thought eccentric, or beca v long for s®mpathetic intercourse a great srrain to stand alone, to | be unpopular or misunderstood, to b | regarded as an outsider, or interioper most of u panionship and | sadly enough, it is often this natu and most wholesome instinct that leads to our self-surrender in matters where | seif-surrender is defeat. Our human sympathies, our longing to be at ome with our fellows, our desire to be a | good comrade, may bring us to & gradual degradation; we give way in little things till the big things also | siip from u Is the surrender Inevitable would take our place by the side others, if we would fitly play our as comrade and as friend? There is always a possibility that we yield too | much and too readily; there is also [T the possibility that we are buying at | |a high price something that is not | worth the purchase The friendship | the comradeship that can be secured only by loss of what we consider our | true manhood, our trus womanhood, may, perhaps, prove an Insufficient g2in, an inadequate purchase. The best things In life, the noblest friend- ship, the only real companionship, can | never be attained by a surrender of our -own best. If lonefiness must come sometimes— because as the poet says, “The lomely ome .is ever more the king”—bat loneliness may have its own dignity and its own compensa- tion.” i we of t | WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Apples. “Who's put all th' apples Dlink? “1 wim't seen a barrel of apples for 50 long I wouldn’t know how to kmock its head in. Tllfsefiscl;;ik;by ligitle ois sellin’ two for five ain'f es. | %: boys used to throw them m&“:g:u kids' heads when I went to schoal Whepe's all them hig pippins we used to have? I dow't remember ever yayin' enythin' for apples til I growed up. ey Gaiar weq o b e apniis early in th’ winter an’ fill a lot o' dry ods boxes with ’em down cellar. ‘hey was belleflowers, rambos, rus- sots, fireenmgs novthern spy, an’ tal- pahawkens. I knowed ‘em all by their taste. Now'days they ain't got none, an’ they're all punk. “Dad never got any good out o' his apples. Ever night he'd say to me: “Jerry, you take th’' choppin’ bowl an’ go_down an’ get all th’ big ones you can that’s got spots on 'em showin’ bruises where they commence to rot, an’ bring ’em up, Jerry. 17 Al winter long I done it. An;' by Jing, they'd be as many spotted ap- on tir o W £ TN ples to-nig couldn’t ke 11 win Deo nobody seein’ The ord a Probably Pa W lieved if Jessie over to all this son would and Fr altimore some and feathe, nei by a justice of the peace to marry them. New London D: Howarth was no more crazy than a host of other Individuais w their living by unscrupulous That the man must pay the o make methods y for his nef: proceed rather n in source for comgratulat Record. Naugatuck should get after that diph- theria outbreak in a basinesslike way. No growing community can afford to let disease-breeding ocnditions get out of control, and the quarantine laws are effective, if administered in the intes est of the ole community.—Water- bury Republican. Jf that leagne of women which is being promoted in Detroit to secure an equal division of family income be- tween husband and wife succeeds in its purpose some men will have more spendinz money than they thought there was in the world since their wed- ding day.—New Haven Union. The Post is for a New Eggland cham- ‘her of cothmerce, and believes that action toward formation of such a hody should be immediate. New is the time to strike, while the iron is hot and the eitles whieh were visited by the mem- bers of the Boston chamber of com- merce are in a receptive moed. ford Post. Antomobile owners in this sta to be saved 18 cents on the c their 1914 markers. The plates will be shipped by parcel post, and this metk od will mean a total saving of about $8,600. And $3,600 isn't to be laughed at in a report of pestal receipts in a small town like Hartford—Bridgeport Standard. Hunters say they never encounteretl 50 many “No Trespassing” signs as are hung up in the woods this year. For which the hunters themselves are to blame, as they have brought on this cordition by their utter disregard of | it up to the ge, and if not, can anything b d to take its place the on the Thankssiv- able? is on dish which | neither cold, rain, nor @ e can af- and that mince pie. It will i ace this year, and it always with a nice the outside and some- the cockles of 25 last |1 | THIN PEOPLE ting | \Rheuma-- !tsf For size of 2 nickel and scabbed over. My cloth- ing irritated the sares so that I put a damp handkerchief next to them. Some said it | was the itch and others the hives. “I took several treatments but got no relief. 1 was suffering for over six woeks when I began with the Cutlcura Soap and Olntment. 1 avashed myself with Cuticura Soap and hot water every night and when I had dried myself T rubbed the Cuticura Ointment thoroughly in and to my astonish- ment by the end of a week the whole troubls had disappearod and the old skin brushed off. 1 have not had a elgn of & spot on my. body since.” (Signed) C. W. Charles, Nov.. 9, 1912. Cuticura Soap 25¢. and Cuticura Ointment 50c..ave sold everywhere. Liberal sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad- dress post-card **Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." #3-Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- ticura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp. warm s w Britain , in good his re- , comfort- 70' promotes of the | down his motive iay s to, loses his nothing do The Dwight's case is active with »ndition” d body play- A can. ew Haven y just what s in the something that it ng time. Iroading- for a up, | CAN INCREASE WEIGHT. would 10 women who with will tell their own st n man or woman of what 3 ripe fat p blood can ment now | e. But and does it hoxes— Rheumatism Only, Many Forms of This Dreadful Diseass But All Due to the Same Cause—| Uric Acid. | Do vou suffer from Rheumatism? at once te The Lee & Osgood et a bottle of RHEUMA for When you use RHEUMA you use a femedy prepared for Rbeu- matism and its kindred diseases only —not a “cure-all” Lumbago, Sclatiea, Arthritis, Gout, Chronic Neuralgia and Kidney Diseases may all be perman- ently relieved by using REUEMA. They are caused by the same trouble—Urie ‘Acid in excessive quantity in the sys- tem. 1 RHEUMA cleanses the Bloed, Skin, Liver, Bowels and Kidneys and the chiet cause of Rheumatism quickly dis- appears. Do Dot proerastinate—get a bottle of RHEUMA today and you will quickly realize that RHBUMA will do exactly what is claimed for it. “I suffered from Rheumatism for six years. Tried different doctors, with no relief. I have taken three bettles of RHBUMA and am entirely W. Miller, free from the disease”—FP, Catawflsa, Pa. Such testimony is right to the peint and leaves no reom for dowbt. money returned if not satisfed. Mail oxgers filled by the Rheuma Co., Your The Vaughn Foundry Co. | Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry St., M‘ILL CASTINGS a Speciaity, the owner’s wghts, tearing down fences and ofherwise injuring proper- ty over which they have been permiit- ted to hunt.—Rockville Journal. Orders Recaive Promyt Attention -J Thurs., Fri., Sat AUDITORIUI IN LOOKING FOR BETSY T HOLMES & HOLISTER ———ODDONE | TED & CTARA STEETE A Musical Treat In Comedy EDWIN AUGUST in adath oren : Kirk Brown AND His EXCELLENT co. Presenting His Magnificent Productions The Great Shakespearean THE MERCHANT OF' V!NXCE Drama Mon. and Tue: Nov. 24-25 MATINEE DAILY 230, 6c-10c. DAVIST ANNOUNCEMENT EXTRAORDINARY DANIEL FROHMAN PRESENTS — James O’Neill “THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO” A Magnificent Photo Pla, HEATRE’ sROAD IN HI8 FAMOUS VERSION OF DUMAS’ MASTERPIEC in Five Reels NING at 7 and 8.45—8c, 100, 150 Colonial MATINEE Sc 2000 Ft.—“The Foreman’s ’l‘reacherg Sensational Two Reel “ON THEIR WEDDING EVE/ “CUPID AND THREE,” CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. Theatre EVENINGS 10c '—2000 Ft. Edison Wes tern Drama Costello in Japan, China and Egypt Screaming Essanay Comedy Other Feature F||ml to Complete the Bill Our Main Dining Room and Grill Rooms are open every day from 6 in the .c:ing until 12 at night on the European Plan Music Sunday Evening by the Orchestra from 5.30 to 8 p. m. THE WAUREGAN HOUSE The Parker-Davenport Cos Droprietors. ARKET HOTEL, Boswell Ave. First-class quuors and Clgars. and W&Ich Rarebit” served to Babies! Scon they will be big boys nd girls, and their faces wil! ¢ only 4 memory. Bring the babies and we’ll catch their smiies, il LAIGHTON THE PHHOTOGRAPHER Oppostte Narwieh Savings Society, THERE Is no navertising-medium It Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bui- ictin for Dv_siness results 1 | | | OLYMPIC HALL A Trip to Songland il £ oy ST. JOSEPH’S SODALITY November 24th Rabbi Stephen S. Wise On WOMAN’S SUFFRAGE at the TOWN HALL, Monday, Novembher 24th, at 8 p. m. ADMISSION FREE Please Take Notice! On ount of the fire in the Man- hattan Store last Friday, ..e antici- pated Jubilee Benefit Concert which was to have been Friday night, Nov, 28th, will have to be postponeu until Dec 16, Ail persons holaing tickets will bo udmitted on the above date. I am very sorry to bave this to do, yet I feel that the public, or thoa who may attend, will be better satis- fled, Most respectfully, 14 PROF WM. B, GEARY. nov DENTIST DR. E. J. JONES Suite 46 Shannon Bldg. Take elevator Shetucket Street en- Phone. trance. THERE 18 no adver ng medium In Eastern Connecticut egual to The Bul- letin for business results. ONE LOT Pocket Knives 39c 5 gallon Galvanized OIL or GASOLENE CANS 50c HANDLED AXES .. .. . 5050 dusois sin s » onby BBc THE HOUSEHOLD ALBERT BOARDMAN, Propristor BULLETIN BUILDING, 74 FRANKLIN STREET CUT YOUR T STORE BILL IN HALF We Save You That or Very Near It. sug Baking Powden Tt Coffge, Ib., . All Best Teas, ibe 12¢ c bottle Vanilla (p(: a) can Cocoa, .. .- gc pox Cnrn..tarck gf nco 10= box nmu > box Matches 18¢ box Cowanut. United Tea Importers Co. Franidin Sq. over Somers Bros. PIES, CAKE AND BREAD that cannot be excelled. Phone your order. Prompt service, LOUIS H. BRUNELLE 10 Cartnr Avi (Eut Side) Overhauling and Repair Work —OF ALL KINDS ON—- AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, WAG NS, TRUCKS and CARTS, Mochanical repairs. painting, trim- ming, upholstering and waed work Liacksmithing in ail its branches. Scoft & Clark Gorp. 07 to 515 North Main SL New Fall Millinery assortment of latest styles MRS. G. P. STANTON, 52 Shetusket Street THERE 1s 5o advertising medium in Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bui- How about the whanq crop? Is nx?elr‘ sehn-Tuckie. Prop, Tel. 43-8 ledn for business results g e T e T N