Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
117 YEARS OLD price 120 a weeks 500 a year. ‘month; impressed with the metheds and the attendant Success superiority of which has characterized the movement. in this country: With equal eertainty she must bave discovered the great opposition which exists here to the militant principles which have Te- tarded the movement so seriously in England. INDIANAPOLIS’ POSITION. Indianapolls has set an example ‘n Whether she has profited by visit and observations will be re- vealed in her subsequent action. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwieh, | the mixture of politics and labor trou- as second-class matter. Teiephone Calls: Sulletin Busipess Office 480 Bulletin Bditorial Rooms 35-3 Cona. Wwilli Building. Telephone 2~ Norwich, Friday, Nov. 28, 1913, The Circulation of | The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Conneaticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich, It is delivered to ower 3,000 of the 4,053 houses in Norwich, ar i read by minety- three per ceat. of the people. In Windhem it 1s delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in all of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connectiowt has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural fres delivery routes. | The Bulletin is sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. | CIRCULATION ‘ 1801 average..... -« 4412 | 1905, awerage........... 5,920 S S —— g . B, 198 MEAT INSPECTORS. A service of inestimable vaiue is that which is rendered by the meat spectors of large ciiies when duty is property performed. This e have no better fustration tha instance fu Philadeiphia where 25 pounds of turkey valued at $7.500 condaraned becaase it had spotled naturel infereace is that had the @pesters not been tanding to bus holiday food would have been disposed of to tk al good prices, regardiess of the re sxits. It ls because of such practic: in the past that the necessity of close | 1t was | { | N Protacted ageinet frand snd the health foei that it is receivin 1s ouly wha: the situation de What might have resuited nd thoss turkeys been dispossd of in the regular channeis of trade or even over the bargain counter can readily be im- agined. Not only wouid the publie hawe Been wromgfully separatcd from its money, but It would b been in- @uced to invest in & menace Physiosl wellare through the eat bad meat Tainted foodstufts no place on the table of any hom ‘whether it be that of the poor o However much the it inspectic must be admit- in the Quaker meut is eriticised ted that the inspe. city were slive to E and un- demstood the proper disposition of spolied turkeys when they acted week, THE VALUE OF BEING SHOWN. The meed of the careful scrutiny which is following the petition of ihe tion gives Indications of 2 healthy state of afiairs, a reasomable ground for be- Leving that good business has b it will continue, This makes a good showing for th Pprosperous ratiroad which ig quite in contrast with the showing which some of the others are making. All this must be taken into con- sidecation by the interstate commerce n reaching its decision which requires that it be shown the | such an sdvance will be allowed. many of the raiiroads will show the need of additional mest the increased ouigo foregone conclysion, but the proof of such & necessity existing which are making such the Lackawanna becomes such dividend action. 18 it & wise requirement of the commission that it be shown by the that thefr demands are in ac- with conditions, If the roads the necessity and undoubted- ¥ of them can the increa soems justifiable, but if the need can- be & WAS SHE PROFITED? Mrs, Parkburet has returned to Fng- land with the 320600 which she re- ceived for her leotures throughout this ountry, BSuch i« a contribution to militant movement. If, however, she is willing to say, ‘1 came, 1 saw, end 1 profited” some good may re- sult from this trip across the water for Qe refilling of her war chests, That she has been converted during hor stay hese cannot be claimed, much = it might be desived, but us the New York Post says “It comid not have taken Mrs. Fegkhurst long to perceive (hat in this country the preiiminary struggle for muMvage has reachsd u it where militancy of the Wnglish Dot Lrand is ussufled for, The tide runs steadity towands women's enfranchise- ment; and whefher it tskes & few | | mecessity of an increase in rates be- | The Bulletin 7 bles which every thrown Into undes): r other city should observe for the purpose of avoiding. That municipality has suddenly been ble publicity over the situatfon which has existed and adjustment of the but not itie d labor m demoralized the was an Indianapolis found bers of the pol to which they gned the p” o immediate before ders ir With further = 2 ndest % it SPECIAL CLASS omplis an atten special Many were the homes which gave additional thanks because those who | are able had been taught to improve the opportunity to help others. Massachusetts hunters shot 1521 | deer during the open season,of a week This could hardly have been exceed- ed had they been hunting cattle. which has not been entirely overcome. Arbitration was agreed upan for the differences of the! ibsequen a is indeed making b would 1 street railway men and the company, until the combination of pol- tters bad completely city goverament. unenviable position in which | itaelf when mem- orce refused to do | ing were assign: cquittal t ation followed justmen ng of now impe oh of th and | Taoed: 16 i of its threat- | hment th At a cry- and INSTRUCTION. 1d Ges possible fnd history In | that made it one of | the last ditch, was n on | than Scldlers’ law and reatest num- on | al | Now that the | call for a hearin fort to charge ip to the hen, tarife will 1 is an opt ed for a long From now on the advice which the merchant and clerk would offer the Christmas buyers is to “shop early and shop at home With the south of Ireland taking to arms against Ulster it's the natural conclusion that one bluff is to be called by another, With all the many causes for thank- fulne: prominent than the fact that this ry has not been rushed into a with Mexico or any other na- tion, A Washington suffragette been | brought into court and fined and the fine was paid, for chalking city walks. This with Mrs. Pankhurst in the coun- | try offers « strong lesson in respect for law and orde The resignation of Msjor Haghberg this year there was none more | from the CBust artillery service marks the end of & long and honorable career years meore or less for the suffrage W become there are few, we imagiae, doubt the finad outcoms, in the service of never had a more cupable or popular the state official in company er line, Ex-Mayer Tinker he offers to paying the way ida, of New Tondon Knows the harm of 4 precedent when personaliy the expense, but enjoins the eity from of council to the waterways convention in Fler- meet Norwieh delegates part of outbursts thousand when the wiumps and brought it back to a pitch teams £ Yale at The team the game. rity a of, and out o BULLETIN'S SPECIAL Confidence That Coachirig System With the Yale Spirit Will Retfi:velthmtelu-Mmdp!iflfile Popular Musical In- " strument—New England Alumni Association—Funds and Assets of Sheff—Thanksgiving Recess at University New Haven, Nov. 27.—The men who have been in Yale this fall have seen years they can point back to the time hat brought the rebirth of the old Yale spirit that In weeks has risen with such tremendous power throughout undergraduate Yale. Alumni whbo have been in New Haven recall nothing like ) its making In the after- | of the trustees by $21,059.20. the past two or three the that came from men of the student ue eleven was In spontaneous the three the | the forty odd vears of in- | 355. lootball rivalry. The spir- :, which fights, unyielding, to er more evident | last Shturday. | ing it bad into and it was by sheer physical | that Ha1v: ale batile t mi New. The Thanksgiving recess finds the university fie! put every or whose pecuniary Haven scenery. Ior the Sheffield trustees and payments for the year exceeded the annual income The con- struction of the new laboratory of elec- trical engineering on Hillhouse avenue will cost about $125,000, and donations to the amount of $100,000 have been re- ceived, leaving $25.000 to be met from the funds of the trustees, unless addi- tional contributions are made. The stock of the New Haven road, body | long carried on the books of the trus- tees at $160, has been written down to | $120 a share, the amount necessary to f the greatest fight- | accomplish this reduction being $15,- in Yale deserted by all | except the few who live oo far away embarrassment | following a football defeat is such that they are forced to limit themselves to | the men | Who did not join the stream that left | there were su their hat the world looks for in Yale and Yale men. A 1 hin fall undet footb: s in ster b ed W i's Wi irst time m The gam defeat, am wor of each mu The pla ually “c m fn the run over York city Saturday Y axy run | and ¢ finished The pr | the trus: | total in $322,408.7 est brought the satisfaction to Dort » much buildin ical instruments in his respe and assets of the Sheffi school are $3,083,866.99, the annual re- port of Trea the city yesterday afternoon Blue that they omething the nad shown clsewhere today. At the mission Supt. William F. El greatest has evef had, could crowd team score does mot refute the | system that was begun last Head Coactr Howard Jones ! ssistants. The methods that lowed are sound, most of 1 critics agree, and with rge_next spring and fall n will be still further devel- weaknesses eliminated, i oints emphasized. Yale is| ith huving gone baclk too fai for its football strates: of interference, the athiered about the man was advanced football method did not equal it. backs were perhaps no bet- | le's in kicking abilities, but | v was a little greater | Guernsey and Knowles, | fumbled punts for the the year. Yale's attack St to team work, but lividual excellence of Wilson line stood | due to its sta. was able to kick 34 of which he has at Harvard. into During the last few sleeping along. missio; in this philanthropi students, enterpr: “If a fellow didn't want hard boiled an’ q wear they wouldn't Whi: gettin’ shaved every morni People’d save big money by our hair cut. Nobody’d_die cigar: lot o saver. e nickels What's th’ telegraphin’? wt. He co {so much candies an’ in front o' him he'd a when vou showed him he'd a fainted agin Goin’ to th' opty buyin' big bunck your pants creased, breila when it ains, cards, playin' pool an pavin’ for a_bleacher baseball game. links, a. joy ridin’ in > his players to sell | none or 'em necessary newspapers, hel do take the'mazuma to ayers wear ni 't us Americans - games. and foolish mone hing - from the 44y night, T Princeton game e . poan out of Yale a week be- | buildin’s with elevatc Yale was given | we got oodles o' vac this fall, with stores’ on, eatin’ in yers; at all more linen silv ds attention ar ever seen, au ¥ no means with the r ied everything before it. if there debts. Cut that n out, an’ all th’ use o Your dn’t. That's mone if you'd set at Cambridge was an hon- for Harvard found a thy' of her best efforts. But y, and Yale wants | champion- <etcham on; so is Pendle- and other veterans; s may very | dly n- ot 1s_eligible eam will have resembling but dete above all a clean ) Ketcham's stand is fall deserves telep He a fai th' > new bowl chasin’ o 1o buy! bowl! seat vin' str mud i when { pu | wit Cae d: serimmaging b can read? fool nothin's we o buy bread on’ meat. Th on th' high cost o' livin'! All aboard. come ahead, “You ¢ y all that here, mister! Look where ain’t goy e sarding of the interests age student’ the janitor campus_and the number you step ory, The figures number Z Victrolas 5 3. flutes 3 and harmonicas ws have each a rang from a v, to help mandolins Wha ike th “by-t wheel bootjac become o' th’ hit steppin’ stone, an’ an’ th' livery It's th' an hand-ir 1 Th' livery sta keeper sold his old n of the New England Alum- irchiin down nags an’ tried his luck ni association to establish an Anniver- | on second hand autos. Now he calls New Haven e that is it a garage, an’ he's makin’® more uch intere: and getiing one da ‘n his ol@ livery | in a week “Something happered to shoes. Don't you remembe uig leather apron, wi ¢ req hot shoe right o t, an’' you could smell louder 'n ‘anythin’ else? zuys in th' bla for horses ax oline buggies. If (i’ cars tell th' truth, people got map for makin' money. ‘Automobiles 'ill hitchin’. Us Americans country if everybody else'd without a hitchin’ post. W much time hitchin’ things Every law we got is a hi Hvery judge we got is a h Bvery jury, all- th ns. For th time | th' doctors, all th" the race, the only two | genators an’ sheriffs an’ having gone one to | all_hitchin® posts. We don't one to Yale. Cornell ore of 68 for first highest score ever made by us team, showing the even | fed we ber annu: for in some city of s the same idea | day for Y. proposed. day set- th Yal da follows ot ready . them a mal life of the | ally is mot the A times when Yale men ome back to alma mater, for pionship football games and | commencement | them stan intercollegiate cross country | the Columbia course in New | e did not come | Jectat ns pos to some law or regulation. If a guy handles money give a bond. WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR What We Can Do Without. be no laundry kers is a durn sight cheapern wasn't an’ the money for 'em’d p: Soda water ain’t no life street cas granddaddy why he made | carryin’ humpin’ around-a golf takin’ baths every enough, portin newspapers 'n magazines 'n We spend so much money Hitching Posts and Human Beings followed ksmith shop quit tellows plumbers backed lawyers, congressmen tax eater nobody to stand without hitchin’ him If he talks to holiday festivities at Dwight hall and Yale Hope lis had the Thanksgiving _celebration it | s many hungry men as | the rooms mission were liberally fed and helped | of the | weeks the | accommodations have been taxed to the limit nightly and the interest has never been greater ise of Yale his _shirt in'_collars. Dills. ng, an' us not gettin' no a get get. an’ did- yowd »honin’ d fan ‘An’ bill bus lectric nted light e ses, movies havin’ um- picture tenpin; to see in’ in £ a 1f | by uto, ain’t they sure ghin’ up_af, reets when buildin® in ’em nt lots to restaurants ‘nJulius more anybody | en we kick 5 step lively! freight on er ¥ against him. shave his head, put him at hard labor, jsolate him, or even hang him, so tha { Innocent citizens may be safe from his perniciou Second, him make = i The Manhattan’s GREAT FIRE SALE Ready Again This Morning at 9 a. m. Stocks have been Rearranged EVE Why do we punish a thief or a rob- or three reasons only irst Third, to othe suade them All him keeper { Who has served and Remarked Mavhattan 121-125 MAIN ST. to society he went to prison. RY DAY REFLECTIONS a greater menace wealth than ever. to Concerning Criminals. to protect We the community incarcerate him, victs” he sald. activities charged with full we punish him to “teach lesson,” to change him end a worse criminal than when From being an ordinary man, who committed a crime by impulse. he has become a member of the hardened criminal class and is the common- At a recent meeting of the American Bar association at Montreal Moorfield Storey of Massachusetts declared the American penal system a failure. “Our prisons are manufactories of criminals, and it is time we changed our whole method of dealing with con- “All convicted persons should be turned over to a commission responsibility for their care and custody under an in- — Colonial Theatre MATINEE 50 CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. EVENINGS 10c SRR OUGRLRS MU N i RYENINGS 10 6 2. 99 2000 ft—*“In The Shadow of The Mountains”—200) Fi Edison’s Magnificent Western Scenic Drama “THE MATE OF THE SCHOONER S8ADIE,” ... ... .. Nautical Feature “GREED FOR GOLD,” .. apns ....Superb Selig Spectacle “OLD DOC YAK AND THE ARTIST'S DREAM,” AND OTHERS TO COMPLETE THE BiLL determinate sentence, with authority | E ATR to release them at such time and on | 1 such terms as would guarantee their | ROADWA future harmlessness to soclety. | £ HUWRY “In_other words, we should treat criminals rather as sick men than as bad men, and our places of confine- ment as hospitals rather than as FOREST NOTES To secure a merit in forestry, boy scouts are required, among ~other things, to mde:&y 25 kinds of trees. One of the prineipal by-products of | the natiooal forests of Japan is furn- ished Dby mushrooms, which have Ylelded in one yar a revenue of a mil lion dollars. Articles of clothing from wood fiber are being made in Kurope. The ma- | terial for a suit of clothing costs about | fitty cents.. Clothing made of this ma- | terial, however can not be washed. FRICES 26-7 SPECIAL OWING To v -.G DEMAND FOR SEATS THERE WILL BE A Matineeat 2.30 PRICES 25¢ to $1.00 SEAT§ NOW ON SALE will be held until 7.80 o'clock, Telephone orders for reserved seats $1 and $150 The largest tree in the United States is said to be the “Mother of the For: est,” a giant redwood in the Calaveras bigtree grove in California. It is sup- posed to contain 140,619 board feet of lumber. There are, however, many claimants for the honor of being the “largest tree’ and “the oldest tree’, and these claims, according to foresters, can not always be verified. COTTON SEED MEAL The Feed That Produces the Milk 43% Protein n’ honest man. it is also to give an example evildoers and by fear to dis- from crime. well. The only trouble i 1t 5 ulckl; e that sending'a man to the penitentiary | sofbts and masccles Tt on tem ! joes not result in any of these bene- | pains away iough left fitg, 5 P through your @ 50 cents and one do.ar. THE UROG which _any will verify, his time intelligent the conviet comes back rule, ootsd Urogen -- Uric Acid Solven CURES RHEUMATISM. sore, swol drives rheumatic Send’ for fres booklet. ruggist. co., New London, Conn. Price Custom Grinding at Reasonable Rates ilen chin® podt? the blas stable, i th' spin- on, an’ th' him, with hen _he put »n Dobbin’s orse hoof n wise look to fix gas- that own pair_shop off t' d without d have a bully d get along e spend too to a post tchin® post. itchin' po: most an’ is dare trust , he has to married aces among the col- | vd (of Harvard finished first | erd team took second | points. Yale was down | although Safford of fifth, with 146 polnts, | her than Brown. lady, her man gets a.dive don’t need_hitchin’ posts any more, but they sure d yei for humans. T called your street, mi Get aboard! ain’t hitched! “Look where you step Source of the Troul Most of the tr due to the fact people in it are men and th esent valuation of the fund ! Id Scientifie urer R. H. Chittenden to es of the school shows, The ome for the past year was 3, including $60,600 paid by Get aboard! le in this world is that about one-half the | half women—Chicago News, orce. They for horses 0 need ‘em | ster! This car ble. e other half Pots and pans quickly shed their grime and grease, and shine like new when you use GOLD DUST g Cleans everything, and’ o leaves purity behind it. be and larger packages. (R FAIRBANKEE] CHICAGO ““Lot the GOLD DUST TWINS do your work’’ The Porteous & Mitchell Co. Th Bear Brand Yarns DEMONSTRATION Now In Progress his demonstration includes an exhibition of knitted and crocheted articles with free instruction by an expert teacher as to the making of the various articles. of the well-known Bear Brand Yarns, is exhibition includes many handsome pieces made such as the latest designs in Scotch Caps, Bishop Caps, Tam O’Shanters, Jackets, Sweaters, Etc. on’t fail to se¢ this splendid exhibition. good to miss. he teacher will be in daily attendance during the exhibition and will give free lessons in all the It is too Get your lessons started early so thatyoumyleamtomkeummyupmsibleofthe pretty articles while the teacher is here. We carry in stock a full line of Bear Brand Yarns, Crochet Hooks, Knitting Pins, Etc. The Porteous & Mitchell Co e Norwich Grain Co. 37-41 Water Street THE NORWICH ELECTRIC COMPANY 100 FRANKLIN STREET You want to wire your house for ELECTRIC LIGHTS, but you don’t know how much it will cost, or the best way to do it, nor what it will cost ' *“ASK US QUESTIONS” Dayton Farmhouse Lighting Outfit The days are getting shorter and tne long winter evenings are ai- most here, but 1f you havea DAYTON Liuil+ ING OUTFIT instailed in your country home, it will turn the darkness into daylight. You can light your "house and barn at a cost so sUght s to be within the teach of anyone, Write for our Catalog “E" on lilectric Lighting Outfits THE €. 5. MERSICK & €O Sole Agents for Con- necticut. ONE I./OT 50c Pocket Knives 39c 5 gallon Galvanized OIL or GASOLENE CANS 50c THE HOUSEHOLD ALBERT BOARDMAN, Propristor BULLETIN BUILDING, 74 FRANKLIN STREET S TR A