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P:&*fl————— i _ dorwich Bulletin and gnwvxer 122 YEARS OLD Subscription price 120 a.week;+50c a month; $6.00 a year Entered at the Postoffice.at Conns Norwich, as second-elass madter. Telephone Callst Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Bditorial Rooms 353 Bulletin Job Office 35-2 Willimantie Offics, Room 2 Murray Buildlng. Telephone °° Norwich, Thursday, Dec. 4 1913. The Clrculatmn of The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Nocwich. It is delivered to over 3000 of the 4,053 houses in Norwich, a: | read by ninety- three per cent. of the people. In Windham it is delivered to over 900 houses, in- Putnam and Danieison to over 1,100 and in all of thess places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Gonnecticuat has forty- nine towns, one hundred and sixty-five postoffice districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes, The Bulletin is soid in every town and on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 average essese 1905, average AGRICULTURAL EXTENSION SERVICE. One matter which is going to be fol- lowed with a great deal of interest | the plan of ceunty advisors for th purpose of getting the farmer and t consumer in closer business co: for their mutual benefit. This is the plan of the Conmecticu extension service of whi vis is at the head. It is increasing farm production the demands of the variou ties and the estab) apply s communi- ment of the re- vantage for all The plan is one sim has often been advo concerned. use in some states for the improv ment of agricultural conditi the imparting of the latest ideas to the tillers of the soil actual demoamstration and direct Wherever it is first tried in Con necticut it is bound to be followed | with deep Interest. There is much valuable advice which n be given to farmers through such a method of procedure if there the proper dis- position to receive it. It is a plan to educate the farmer in modern agricul ture and the market of or which the expense is the federal government, t the county, and nothing more than a demounstration of efr sbould be required to secure the earn- eat cooperation of the counties in such en admirable undertaking. It is wel known that Conneciicut not ting all it should from 1 and whatever will aid in it should be en arly with the state to furnish the D he- oretical help. | PUSBLIC NrEEDS PROTECTYON Attention is atiracted into the hands of concern ss relat through many states 2 large number of pe dem in dispersi wherever a cu It ig another ins attractions have caution and the making such also brings need a vaiue the stat h require that such security v ng must meet the sanction of a st authority which has had submitted to it th financial comdition of the company backing such propositions. a protection wherever it exists against | the wildeat schemes for sepa vestors from their money and 1 provides against the representation of bonds and stocks under false col The demand for such legislation | rasulted from fust such faflures and | just such opportunities which exist | for the umrestrained marketing of so curities which do not give chaser a square business d frequently turn out be the al, worthle pur toa | to or nearly so. Such experiences are re. | peated over and over again and call | for such protection as can be provided by proper legislative action. The | worthy propositions would thus be aid- | ed and the unworthy would be so stamped. ZELAYA’S CASE. The disposition which has been made of the Zelaya case removes this coun- from an awkward position in| ed through cir- | cumstances. rrest of the | ex-president of Nicaragua took placg | it was maintained that the charge of | murder against him was a polMical one and that he was no mare liable i conmection with any executions than | any authority in this country which does not interfere with the carry out of the ceurt’s orders in compliance with the law, Such was a plea upon which others had been refused exira- dition end as & precedent it furnished a defemnse uponm which tihe used placed the utmost reliance in believ- ing that the demand for his return to Nicapagua would be refused. That Zelaya has agreed to leave the try is & happy solution of the ir national tangle, particularly so as it | was the resuit of & conference in which bath ceuniries were concerned This ending of the case does not. bhowever, SXPIAIn how it was that Ze- laye was able to gef inip this coun- try with se little difficuity, It was This forms | ta well with pride that Uncle Sam should he considered h friend ment, bu ve v ore fear | ! of the gnif of that number | than the president has of thirteen. known that he wiis sought by Nicaraguan governn ient and there had been talk of holdin g him responsible for the murder of t o Americans but he passed the imi nigration officiais | without a question., That he sheuld ! have been detained s & évidenced by the | actien now taken. 3t is highly sirable that .this. ¢ buntry made the haven for t® who foment and continue strif b in the smaller repu and the q sieker this is real™ ed, the bette GROW|NG APPLES The question of 2 pale culture’is one which interests mo n ions eof the! country than one. Tt has come to be| made a specialty a1 neng the far west- | ern states where i 2 Washington and alifornia close att eagton is given to | ¢ detail of the business. The one strik fact iv firom it all is that the success of the W stern orchards is not and that eastern not be attained througlhs negiect The same careful det are worked out s in every other Pme of successfull enterprise, 1t is the o nly method which o ital advice in the a Culifornian concern- the | All the beautiful May morning Mary had wandered over he familiar old flelds—familiar, vet fiew to the re- cently graduated, Buropean-finished young woman who was the actual owner of these broad acres and state- Iy _house. The last time she had played here, an orphan of 14 her grandfather had watched her proudly from his chair on the terrace. Now he was gone, and the place was hers. She felt very lonely, At last she turned toward the creek. She wanted some quiet place to think and plan for the future. It had been came over the field. head. Clear, reguiar from the direction of the creek. paused an instant, listening intently then hurried on, of no change in the law that gardeners had always respected. Mary lifted her raisis g problem in the 4 s when says: © aeps or s wiond d api the culture 2 s I have witn 1pple o he owners of same one st.ar's crop brot 9 100 would in o mselves glen with its curving brook and oak irees, the big fiat rock and millions of violets was sacred to ker. It had always been hers since the days her pers pink toes in the water. one knew that! Yet some one was in her gl with an ax—and using it. SI toward an open space in the low now A ors, but they must | p roperly, spray and thay orchards as thor- v do ifor any annual crop. g (o do is to or apples |, which are given as orted to orm | ¢ in 1 I in bar- > sight out western smccess with the What has been done here is done there can be dupli England vsiith the same amount of attention and 3egard for the mod- | ern methods s¢ resul Brooklyn may only be 3 nte: in such a subjel teaching the art of housekeep and then as a o} @ritable undertak there are plenty of ‘other commun ties W avis long undersiood the | need of some undertak would solv & important see1 s 1o be necessary home the im 1larl for the of so ic good > moment servants old-fashioned <omm romies fror are hou employed who it wor pon the | servant q on | there i meed for such work| e nuraber of homes is easily | ood. In of the idea | ne says: “There | queer lapse in our pres- | | | Iseer ed h map. The bly rebel | she 5 worse, > has taken her place vishied or But Whe Who bri nd conscience to the 1sehold bus No one, The art of keeping ically in abeyas why showid not there be a renaissan brought sibout through expert tuition? Whatever can be done that will be | of real value is entitled to genmerous | support. If hot of n),mne{ days has been lost or is| in such ¢ it 4 regained bene erations. EDITORIAL { s week | night be- | relives fore Ch Xm. the rd bwn ahead | little | winter v no ir legislative gone iver indi- | lack of > of bu ceman & im- an pe weel two men to be hoped that| not bear wa ing. That pathetic w g which teneral | sends to this coun- | y. It ouzht to make President Hue challenger will star t if it was only confider ism which were d to win the cu” would have rested on Irish soil long | o. res tha ation ta | disrespect | der meets with lawful resist The as much | Qiffieulty in a bandit from | a mine in Utah as a great many 1 stors in getting out the for- tune have allowed to escape into just such hole What a benefit in corn grow- ing contests amo and girls revealed by th the state of Ohio in giving a trip to Washing- 060 young peaple for their corn growing records la st season. Wilson n that £ to the protests against n among government em- is going o make an ever- enemy Cavolina, of Governor Blease of { prosecution under the ! palm of his hand. and several loose stones dropped into the water. Then seeming to vaguely that something was and that he was in biame, dropped the his moving toward the girl so high him on the oth de of the creek “What do you m by chop down one of tree: ng ad does erman act, If the New Haven 1 the ape will have to be attributed| to the diplomacy and good 1t of Mr. Howard Elliott— New Hiven Regist or less It wa You must go | escape | MARY’S CLAIM e {an old habit of hers to carry her troubles to the little glen where she could sit under the old tree and think. Suddenly the sound of chopping | strokes sounded | She | | swimming pool—building a dam, you frowning. She knew | the | The | e flew | wil- | g . | prospect | nurse had stripped off the little slip- | and socks and let her dabble her | Surely every | not for sale. You are on my ground. Those are my trees. The creek di- vides the two estates and—" Which creek, miss?” Mary stared. “Why, that one over there. Th!s one never used to be here. | This must be a branch that has gotten looge fromy the old stream and swelled with the rain. Please tell your mas- ter what I say and that 1 shail be very much obliged If he lets my trees alone in the future. k The man lifted his cap again. miss”” He picked up his axe started to go. § “De you think the tree will die? she called after hilm, anxiously. He stopped. “Hardly, mis: whacked at a few of the roots. look of amusement was still in his| eyes. “Mr. Villard intended, miss, if you care to hear lt, to clear out this place and let in the sun. He was talking, I think of making it into a “Yes, and 1 only The sco, and having the sides and bottom of marble and making it very nice. He likes to be outdoors most of the time, they say. Has to be always do ing something and they say. too, when he takes a notion te a thing he's the ¥ Villard what 1 white Mr, ald told you, with fury. to make a few old house and down in i Her \l she got things started, a had been to with some re es in town until the work was dore. In now tele- graphed for L belongings, ir cluding a widowed aunt, and settled herssif to stay. S was ready for a fight. It was a shameless steal! Of and he 1 | meant! | low bushes where the old h used ! to be, but stopped with a startled ¢ Another step would have dropped her 10 feet into a_ rushing current of muddy water. With dazed eyes Mary looked around her. This brown stream with straight, steep banks, had never been there before. Fu r over her beloved old brcok still splashed and bubbled over the stones. Near it was {a man with an ax. ¥ keep away there,” he shouted n washed away five feet more last night! 'Watch out!” he | called sharpiy, as Mary didn’t move, 1 added, | Villara | ming over above | | | | | i away at onge He moved vet appeared unable to explain immediately just why it had happened. Surprise and amusement shone in his eyes. Mar flashed in righteous anger. Such im- pudence w intolerable! “Can’t you | talk? Who are you? You are evi- | dently not ome of our own men or you would know or than to touch | my trees. You are trespassing, and | I warn_you now to go away immedi- | ately. y, I do believe you were chopping at my playhouse “If you please, miss, T guess you have not been here long, and do not know about all the place v I'm not trespassing, neither do I work for the place yonder. He nodded _ toward estat i work for him,” jerking his head backward toward Lauden Hall, a rambling, low, white house on the crest of the opposite hill. “Mr. Vil- lard, you know, he just bought the I don't know and don’t care n't buy this. I know that. It [ | spealker and ! 1 shouting res for democratic act- | it has long been known that Clark's have been urned away hungry from the po 1 ple ccunter.- -\Wates smocrat. ougkt to be insisted on if | on the currency bill is to| 2 rd no a at all times to Nsten | L nator and everybody of all | gree with him.—Wa- | terbury American Bvery day of this mild w 24 hours off of e coal barans more worth liv ter, need not Y pearance in the 2 1 can get along without it very handlly Ansonia Sentinel n etts fied with their the- oretical aridity and the “wets” with their measures regulator: oyl e | cursed traflic,” the real temperance orator still phrases What's the moral >—Providence Bulletin s extraordi will have and business men w public’s ir hey ing profs more with th since every day private affaf to some degr erest in Vi are there, their t suffer again, it must be remembered this is-a big country with ever increasing interests of gigantic rpoportions, and that with most of these interests congress has a great deal to do—Hartford Post. When menace to health c: of spitting on_sidewalks and. other public places? Ten years ago it is re- alled that in one of the most intelli ent of the country an anti- itt ice was hooted out of | the ¢ . as an infringemert on every day privileg We have a law that should be better enforced in this city, and a few examples would give good warning—Meriden Journal. will some people learn the ed by the habit cltie: Dunn still holds the politi- in _Willimantic in the Mr. Dunn is not alone some runner, but so ote get- ter. Of course his majority has been cut to 99, but as long as “the ninety and nine” remains with him he will no @oubt continue to be mayor of Willi- mantic. By the by, the name of Dunn will be Eo engraved in the records of Willimantic tha will be all Dunn for years to come.—Middletown Press. What good Attorney General Me- Reynolds expeets to accomplish in his proposed tearing to pleces of the New Haven road system is beyond the com sion of ordinary mortals. The Sherman law should not be con- verted into an instrument of torture. Its provisions were never intended to “Danny” cal situation be appiied where the public is io re- c ive no earthly benefit from its ap- ations, and nothing but harm can I, Ordinary common —sense, it wauld appear, should be used in en- foreing the law. A law te be respect- ed should be a mereiful law, not a {yrannical weapon.—New Haven Jour- nal-Courier. ud,nr the :mevvh\n of liquor e | she found in a arrived comfortably ravine, and or argument. She that she might die or pneumonia, but grimly, that they could bury there then and she guessed the an wouldn't ewmfoy swim- her bones. And if neces- she coulid live in , for possession is nine points of law, and the only way he could get this ground for a pool would to drown her. So her aunt retreated to the house her aunt encamped large tent in the vious to entreaty conceded the fact of swamp fever When Mary her sary wa: the, ever be and Mary held the fort, receiving her ! friends and lawyers informally in the | ten An injunction prevented Mr. Villard from taking further steps toward pool and things settled down to await the law. OIld Jenkins. the butler, second tent and acted as page and cavalier, having to 00 off a stray cow lock one morning. at n limited in | course he knew which creek the deed | imper- | the glen al-| the ! AUDITORIUM an y SHOW MR. HAP WARD Presents “The Trouble Makal's” A MUSICAL SATIRE IN TWO ACTS Written and Produced by Hap Ward A Most Competent Cast of Comedians and Singers, including RAYMOND FINLEY TONY WILLIAMS LOTTIE BURKE DAN DALY, JR. RICHARD BARRY SUSIE KERWIN and many others with A PRIZE CHORUS OF PRETTY GIRLS 25—PEOPLE—25 16 MUSICAL NUMBERS ENLARGED ORCHESTRA 2 SHOWS DAILY 3, Mati 10c d 20¢ R od ts 1! t Box Offic Prices Nihte e sinsne | Moroed Sonts iorsle - Phane 772 N | MATINEE DAILY AT 230—EVENINGS AT 7.30 Whooping-Cough or Scarlet Fever i a critieal period—weshened throate, delicate tubes and smeomnd hengy some- times irtpaired sight or kearing. § But if 8OITIS EMIILSION is i § tokon premptiy and reguise] au- E tee o rulesidea 1_ | stures pare Plowd and the lungs. It neusisiing fure re- stores spuetiis, strength and energy SCOTTS EMULSION contains jwn the slegnenis nature iyt e iy from ulcobol or harmral dmp- CH" | Ak 33-11 E AT R Vaudeville I @idn’t care about los- ing the place. 1 saw a chanee for a| thrill—something unusual, you know, { after you took me, for a servant; and loving you even while you were scold ing me, I let you go on to—this.” He | touched “her “cold little hand gently | and rose to go “Giood-bye, kiary, T won't see again and 1 don't ask forgiveness. 1 high time wus going, anyhow. T've) made a fine mess of things. Stay here please, as long as you like, the whole house is at your disposal until you | wish to go home. Good-bye.” The nurse came in. “Call Mr. Vil- | lard bac! cried Mary, sitting | up in bed. n, as he appeared in | the doorway, she said, demurely, for the benefit of the nurse, “George, I've | changed mind, I'll be quite well | Dby tomorrow znd, of course, you can | drive me hom Louis = Globe. Democrat. ; do anything. nu' sROADWAY [T THE BIG LAUGHING HIT BOBBY LEONARD & CO. A In the Comedy Playlet “NEARLY A MANAGER,, FLYING LAMARS I STONE & SHELDON s_en ational Aerial Artists Eecentric Comedy Duo FEATURE THRILLING 2 REEL proro bLay The War Correspondent I/i Brama MUEUI\L EEKLV_‘D"D_: 47 A MUDDY R ANCE—Keystone EVEMING AT 7 and 845 p. m—10¢, G, 20c % Colonial. Theatre MATINEE 6c CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. HEVENINGS 10c 2000 Ft.—*“THE BRIDGE OF SHADOWS” Selig— 2000 Ft. Powerful Two Reel Drama of Circumstantial Evidence “OLD COUPONS,” v ..Exquisite Story of an Old Love ' “PATHE WEEKLY, .With “Buster Elionsky of New London “HIRAM GREEN, DETECTIVE «......Big Bgdison Comedy Hit AND OTHER FEATURES FOR FULL MEASURE THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. 100 FRANKLIN ST. | EVERY DAY REFLECTIONS | | A Course of Action. 1 I\]’ex’)‘ often whlen we have bel'n called upon to select a course of ac- | . * o Fion, ‘and hav o & decision, 1t C d Deal Electrical Supplies lox spatevs cumsisis ealgon i) ontractors and Dealers in upp made a mistake. When it is too late | we think that we have done the wrons | | thine. There is a tendency in many of us, | Our stock of EVER READY BATTERIES is al- ways fresh. We have Batteries for door bells, auto- Mr. Villard appeared not—but ev-|wherever we are, to wish that we were . ery day Mary saw “the man” across | somewhere else—whatever we are do- mobiles and pocket flash lamps. e creek. “But on his own side,” she | ing, to wish we were doing somethin thought triumphantly. Then she add- | clsc. This Is & somewhat perturbing | No Dead Ones On Our Shelves ed contemptuous “Proxy! Why | characteristic of our nature, one of the | doesn’t he come himself and size up | chicf elements of the discontent with | the old termasant that's squatted on/| which we are afflicted and which = o bottom of his bath tubr hampers all our progress unless we ! ; 3 ini One night Mary wakened suddenly. | sucoesstully combat it. The sense of | 8 admits of no questioning; we know | Buislyiabinevengs. Something was wrong. Men were | having made a mistake, of having | '8 have done the right thing, what- | Harry Kemp says he is going to shouting in confusion and above it all | chosen the wrong course, of having | SVer e the lssue; we could not have | write a lot of poems when he gets out was a queer muffled roar. Jenkins | foolish and precipitate choice, is very | done otherwise without thwarting the | of jail. That's a fine spirit of revenge. was calling her frantically to get up | disconcerting; it clogs our activities | direct tendency of our personality. No | _petroit i'ree Press. —to “run quick, misey but the road | and unsettles our purpose, | gue thwarts that ‘\lho\l} per\.l ki i 3 e was thunder in’ a_couple of minutes.| But we must learn to face the tend- | ST&ve 10ss. Only a higher duty can| Several European insurance compa- ipped into a kimono and reached flagh, and almost In- s struggling in ice cold water with the heavy sagging tent | welghing her down. That was the last she knew She opened her eyes in a beautiful robm bright with sunshine. Her head | ached when she tried to remember what had happened, so she closed her ves age d prepared to go to About a thousand miles away rd a watch snap shut and & ‘Five o’ciock. A tough pull ! Villard, but she'll pick up now.” Mary didn't go to sleep. Insiead she opened her eyes again and turned her head. She wanted to see Mr. Villard. ‘e sounded familiar. Where n white flannels was stand- ing near ihe window. He turned and came toward the bed. A distinet sho n through Mary. It was the man who had cut her trees! He 1 e closed her eyes and tried to think. Then she heard the doctor ay: “Well, V I've to get of here to catch that train. The to be here | before I go. , you are the best nurse that ever helped a doctor. Miss Mary would have died if I'd had her alone, with her aunt in hysterics when she was most needed. Second, i's no kind of a house without a woman. tter find the right one oon. Hello! I hear the nurse now. Well, I'll give her a few orders down in the hall as I go out. Good-by.” Mary opened her eyes wide. “You— you are—" ispered. George he said simply, 'and this is l“\\ldkn Hal But 1 will tell you all bout it. lowed to talk—not a moved nearer to the bed You are not al- e word.” H rapidly clearing brain was ; to understand a few things perhaps his clothes, per- haps the expression in his eyes, made him seem altogether another person from the one she had known in the woods. She turned away confused. He sat down by the bed and re- ded her simply for a few miautes. Mis Mas " very softly, “the n here. She will he in in a few minute; but before she comes I have a confession to make and may not have another opportun- ity. If you had died last night it would have been my fault. The res- ervoir at Browntown broke about 2 o'clo They warned the whale country by phone. We got to the creek just in time to see your tent go down.” We got Jenkins out first, but we couldn’t find you. It was—it was He .stopped. 3 ; Mary looked at him, wendering. She gave a short gasp at what she saw. His face was pale and drawn. In his eyes was a look of wretched- ness and misery “Oh, don't, please—" she began. He put out his hand and said: “You will never know how nearly dead you have been. We thought—you were, and brought you here He walked to the window and back again. “Mary, 1 love you,” he burst out, suddenly, “and because 1 love you I let you risk your life dewn in that hole. I thought it was romance have my lady love near - me, could go and look at her A lovesick fool will where I when 1 wanted, HEAD STUFFED? GOT A COLD? TRY PAPE'S “Pape’s Cold Compound” relieves warst celd or the grippe in & few heurs—No quinine used. Take “Pape's Cold Cempeund” every two hours until you have taken thres deses, then all grippe misery goes and yeur cold will be broken, It promptly opens your clogged-up nostrils and the air passages of the head; stops nasty discharge or nose running; relieves the headache dujl ness, feverishness, sore throat, snee- ing, soreness and stiffness. Dow't stay stuffed-up! Quit bls{ ing and snufling. Mase yeur thvol bing head—mothing else in the werld gives sueh prempt relief as “Pape’s Celd Compound,” whieh costs only 26 eents at any drug stewe. It aets witheut assistanes, lastes nice, and pauses no incenvemisnce. Aceept no substitute excuse it. nies will take risks on standing tim- | ency as in some part a symptom of | |5 ’our buman nature; we must learn to i feel that whatever choice we had made the result would probably have | been the same; we should prebably have been vexed by the same uncer- FROM THE CONSULAR REPORTS. This Will Interest Mothers. | E Most of the thousands of cattie that | tainty, “we should 'probably have feit | were held at Fort Torie, Ont, for the | Mather Grays Bwact, Rowders for doubtful concerning the decision and | American tariff to be removed were Headache, Bad Stomach, Teething | restless and unsatisfied. upfit for beef and will have to be bty e ek e | 1t is only when we have followed a | fattened In the United States. el and déstroy Worms.. They break up master passion, a lifelong desire and | - Gl SO TR B G it i yuengant impulse, a supreme ambition, that we | 10 [he Haate Chugran B A feel no incertitude, however much our | From 600 to §00 men are camped | ;3:007, testimoniiis, Used by Motners career may at times be clouded and |along the White river, Yukon, wait-| p\ g1 Druggists, 35c. Sample maile | disappointing. To some of us such a | ing for the snow, when they Wwill| frea Address Allén 8. Olmsted, Le Ro: call may come, such an oppertunity ' freight their outflts to new diggings. | N. ¥ . Manhattan’s Great Fire Sale Remaining Stocks Being Closed Out at Great Reductions TODAY WILL BE OVERGOAT DAY We shall devote most of our big selling force and all of our i energy to selling Overcoats at 1 Just Half Off Regular Prices | hrren oy OVERCOATS $15 Were $25.00 and $30.00 |8 CLOTHCRAFT MASTER OVERCOATS Were $18,00 to $22.00 Just think of buying High Grade Coats at these prices. Bear in mind that our stock comprises the season’s best styles, made ! of fine chinchillas, velour, meltons and heather cloths—every | overcoat guaranteed for style, fine tailoring and durability. Former Price Fur Lined Coats - - Special $18.50 3550 ‘ SPECIAL VALUES FROM OUR FURNISHING DEPARTMENT PRESS GLOVES ..., .00 89c ARROW COLLARS ... voesainieaTe Dent’s, Perrin’s, Myers, Were $1.50, $2 All Styles, Were 2 for 25¢ $1:00: SHIBTE .. 5. . 0o s i 00e $1.50 WINSTED UNDERWEAR ., .95¢ $5.00 SWEATERS ....,.......$295 80c NECKWEAR ......n...0.0...18¢ $10 '} COAT--VERTO COATS, SALE CLOSES POSITIVELY SATURDAY NIGHT 121-125 MAIN STREET