Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 10, 1914, Page 4

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HAorwich Bulletin aund Courier 11& EARS OLD Subscription price 120 a weoks 506 & nonth; $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn. as eecond-class matier. Telephone Calis: Bulletin Business Office 480 Bulletin Editorial Rooms 85-3 Bulletin Job Oflice 35-2) Willimantic Office, Room 2 Murray Buildi "elephone ~ Norwl:h, Fnd-y, April 10, 1914. i The Circulation of i The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largsst circulation of any paper in East- ern Cennectiout and from threo to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to over 3,000 of the 4,055 houses in Norwich, a. | read by ninety- three per ceat. of tae peopls. in Windhem it i delivered to over nouses, i Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in cred the local daily. Castern Connecticut has forty- one hundred and postoffice districts, tres delivery nine towns, sixty-five and sixty routes. The Bulletin is sold in every tewn and on all «f the R. F. D. Connecticut. rural 4300000000 000030602405000 99508 0040945 045086002043 S AN 0000 D in Eas CIRCULATION 1901 average..cceceeenons 4412 8,742 1205, average. t was a w e by the ting when d the decision for the city el d to adopt | ction if the ma- are yned by | can be his was sensible thin be don is already the possess which are city sed differ of « be a SETT‘ II\G WITH COLOMBIA | i with the adjus(m‘-m of the Colombian <laim, the amount which has been ed upon in the proposed treaty ust perfected means the payment of a much larger sum than tk 1ad been in mat ive de Colombia at wror dered W henia ol 000,000 though it | $90,000,000 and free use A "he uation surround- matter has been th no small amount of ad wanted best | be | hich | nt for the good influence Hr-\RMON‘v IN OHIO. sections of cil said b, r The semior senator from Ohio as made a highly creditable record | an able and con lator, and men of his il be spared from the se in the habit of taking a pesitive stand on public questions. Some hi, attitude draws forth sharp criticism, and he is not always on the popular side. But, &rst and last, he has given spiendid service in the twenty years® his “ize and H H H H i § als of these places it is consid- i i H H H the new trial | ded not to tuated by the They had had a arate from Lieut. { Becker, had found guilty and| sentenced to death, and the review | of the case by the court 1 and more that he has figured in af-: fairs at Washington. He would ae- cept a reelection but he does not choose to engage in an unseemly scramble for reelection. This is a position which has not a little jus- tification, but the tendencies and con- ditions which are -withdrawing such men from the senate are not of a na- ture to sustain the hope that the cal- iber of our senators will be improved by, the new election devices.” Tt would seem that Ohio must real- the importance of semding it4 strongest men to the United States senate and not fix the price of har- mony on the chance that some weaker candidate may get by and possibly do as well, SOCIETY FOR MENTAL HYGIENE. A work which is bound to be of great and lasting value throughout the entire state is that which has been undertaken by the Connecticut Society for Mental Hyglene for the prevention of mental ease and treatment of those who are mentally sick. There is reason to labor for healthy con- s of the mind and the cure of insanity before it reaches the hopeless as there is for the prevention cure of bodily ills. When statistics show that insanity on the i despite the efforts h have been made to treat it, e once revealed the necessity ort as is being ation to check even greate: for such i made by its growth, an orga tention to thos through timely attention can be kept from worse { condition .and prevented from becom- ing a greater burde; The influence of suc ly commend efiort cannot fail valuable e and us support from tu- des increase ich that upon to = 2 who are in need of un- healthiness, a re- ceive it early are lik come per- manent tead of te 3 nts, and :s are not looked upon as h In endeavoring to advise individuals who fe: or mental collapsi s friends of such pat mental d to widespread THE GUNMEN’S CASE, ry other m e h led. which has ) case excited n that of the gunmen | who were convicted | of the It was not from e pen surpris whom tice was showed th when it 1 EDITORIAL NOTES. It the frosty toucl of 1 which makes the whole shiver. | s | nd voint strongly to a| merger be nd early mer. sum- The new was | f been different The ested man keepin: entire in country g to will be whom tha inter- Congres rreo. meaning i on fellow who the 2 own q he list of a ded upon brevity of ntion city's w to be the the resuit in New success declares would not wor ght with marry The Kansas juc a husband to buy e who has ord his wife an the three sccieties unless some reforms | to the committee of award, in the are made. To insure such reforms, | order of individual preference, and the there are to be certain suggestions {choice will be made therefrom. The ‘made to the senior societ One | first choice wili be this June, e most important that is under eration, and one of the most common ! BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Approach of Tap Day Directs Attention to Reforms in Senior Socicties—Major General Leonard Wood Addresses Students—Class Fund in Memory of Francis G. Brown —Not Ready for Honor System. 1901, scholar and athlete, a fund of $5,000 has Deen raised by members of his class, other graduates of the university and still other friends, both men and women, given to the univer- sity, and set aside to provide for a medal each year for the member of the junior class in Yale college who most closely approaches to standards of in- tellectual ability, high manhood, ca- pacity for leadership and service to New Haven, April 9.—As Tap day draws steadily nearer—it will be here in less than a month after the Easter recess, which began Wednesday and lasts one week—the -campaign against ome tendenci of the senior socie- s toward arbitrary elections is be- coming tangible. Tho men in the Junior class who are signers of the petition directed to the senior socie- ties for improvement in past methods have agreed, by a ballot taken the |the university set by Francis Gordon other day, to maintain and stand by | Brown. their present position. That means | The members of the junior class that they will not accept elections to {are to submit five names of classmates The academic and Sheff, faculties have passed rules this week that af- fect absences from New Haven at the robable suggestions, is that of hand- ing to the societies a list of men from the junior class from which the so- time of the out-of-town footb: he class m W -of- ootball game, | C[e-wds mui N};‘ l_h-d‘_:-r e ;"{‘j: either at Harvard or Princeton, The | “'rl-mq make l! S_; Hi "am_' c’;g T [team is not to be permitted to leave others of only 30. In any case ! |New Haven until the afternoon befors Tl be a Yory'-considerable resitio- |ihe big game and as. conosrns the | tion of thet elective lmlt'_"‘;’ g ‘“ehsov; undergraduates, cuts from recitations { SISHeN o ot (‘Nul?hnnju:u SOW | either before or after the game will | foets BacstwiIiia e i Sugs count triple. Evidently the faculty on. fear the annual footboll exodus. Major General Lecnard Wood, chief of staff of the United States army, addressed the undergraduates of Yale afternoon. He was in Haven for purpose of inter- students in the opportunities the summer military camps men. !n“ldnmal"' in formal ta General Yale college is not ready for an honor system in examinations—per- haps does not need it—judging from the result of the vote last week A three-quarters vote was necessary, in favor of the system, for its adoptlon. it turned the total vote was | than three-fourths of the rea Wood oiel | tered students in the academic depart- to college | course of hi ldicted a war for the Unitec ment. The vote was 587 in favor of | in the life time of his hearer hanpr gainst it Thua | General Wood was the originator | {he total vote was 942, and | S EtE e e nT n idea among |that 1s one hund less than three- | D it I the purs | Quarters of the college student body, | atonwhen ® duty, | Whose four classes make up a tota | i Aals i | Of ‘RISTY \Thersjane students in £ need, capable volunteer of- | the senior cl 4 1n the junior, 369 O T e e nflitary | In_the sophomore, and 439 fin the of this countty with that of | freshman clas t the samo timo | oo natione ihy Eeneral gave | the discussion about the honor system | e heen D a was a good thing. It brought atten- | el | tion to what a few men have been | : | guilty of in examinations and it deep- | Tase ened public Eentiment against such | would hri men. There will be less cribbing in Yale, though the amount in academ h: ever been large—than there was before the honor system came up. hundred led upon r or five that can it service Work on the Yale bowl was resumed on Monday with a full force a by neces the present contract, covering the ex- to be in a |cavation, the mason work of the en- the | tunnels, the embankment for college | the bowl, and the two main en- tarted. Last year the , this part must be finished by went down to Gettysburg, Then a second contract will | they are invited up to Bur- | cover the cement work on the em- | weeks of summer | bankment for the seats and other fin- ast conflict to their | ishing touches. The committee is con- f life, the students | fident that the Bowl will be ready for | e of the r | the Harvard ovember, al- | i | though the ground | | not be later | committe ccommoda- tions for in the Bowl at a meeting onth. Provision | for the 220 will en either embankment or the not Zn power to- a mere art in the| primeval form of seif- arly the form of diversion | uth shov lambs leap up, its Jjoy e calv R = A1 e s kick and rac the k its tail and the puppies e most twisted antics, in life e same T inging. factory out- OTHER VIEW PO!NTSI There i the way th m: a good deal of criticism of > {r can simpler the participa and ning it_is elp re-elect the con- Meriden Journa their busi gressme been that inste after dinr ing card shake their fon 3 i'»ut the the American people are not | corrupted izence, 0od sense and - t of decent people can be tHare are sUll o And, if not, then no amount SpiesiAe nircl and moral admonition rem any good. was a Hartferd as more mud Pebeco goes one « step further— # it isn’t half enough to J;st clean your teeth. ou must go one big step further. You must dofor them what Pebeco does scientifically and effectively. Pebeco Tooth Paste purifies the breath and cleans and whitens the teeth. Then where or- dinary dentifrices fall short—Pebeco goes on, gets at the cause of de- cay and overcomes it. The cause of decayed teeth is ‘“‘acid mouth’ and authorities say that 95 people out of a hun- dred have it. Of course you want to overcome your ‘‘acid- mouth.” Of course we can’t do more than tell you that Pebeco does overcome it and to offer to prove it with— Ten-Day Trial Tube and Acd Test \Papers 1o Test Your Mouth Jor Acid—Sent Free LEHN & FINK 120 William Street New York PRy J0) .\ NI Tuesday, April 14th Prices, $2.00, $1.50 $1, 75c, 50c, 25¢ SEATS READY TOMORROW GREATEST DRAMATIC EVENT IN'NEW ENGLAND A HISTORY H. H. FRAZEE'S omamna. ALL STAR R aTIoN EUGENE WALTER'S SENSATIONAL SUCCESS Fine Feathers Just as Presented all Season at the Astor Theatre, New York, and Direct from Its Triumph at the Colonial Theatre, Boston, Entire Cast of Famous Stars, including WILTON LACKAYE TULLY MARSHALL MAX FIGMAN ROSE COGHLAN FLORENCE ROCKWELL LYDIA DICKSON with its .- DAV IS THEATRE MATINEE TODAY OF THE TON[G“”‘ MUSICAL COMEDY TH[ THA“_ THE LONESOME PINE COMPANY _ISABELLE LOWE AS JUN E] In a Complete Change of Program “A Pair of Buttons” AND-NEW YORK:CAST Prices, $150, $1, 75c 50c, 35¢, 25¢ New Songs, New Specialties Everything Up-to-date SEATS NOW SELLING New. Photo-plays .Today THE SMUGGLERS OF SLIGO Powerful 2 Reel Irish Drama A WOMAN WITHOUT A SOUL Reliance Drama. KEYSTONE COMEDIES MATINEE AT 230 10c R e L _m,. Protect the Heart from Rheumatism RHEUMA Purifies the Blood Throws off Complicating Diseases. Weakening of the blood tissues by continued attacks of Rheumatism af- fects the heart and produces compl cations which result fatally. other diseases and matic conditions from the whole s: tem. Recommended for all Rheumatism. Osgood Co. you of its great value: “1 was so crippled with Seci 50 cents at The Lee Guy Torley, Summit of the four States caried 28,599,000 | n 1912 they Rheumatism had entirely left me. =1 |y S f e St | MATINEE 5o Paul, Minn. Expe:(s to be the Cvclone. § hat is in but ihares on Transcript. UUN I TRUST CA[[]“‘EEI | Thousands Expe.—‘ence Bad After E: fects From This Dangerous Drug. A Safe Vegetable Substitute is Dr. F. sician of has long been a foe h he recognized ong with its dange ' of the arted him v iment with the view s itute, and he h: s in possessi natio hers ja of them D salts Try them. The Olive "'ab All druggis throw mpaign than slingers are nothappy” todiy s A Siaple Medicin @ been had the; d many which must rt i l p e ich do not make votes on election day. It unfortuna that men. al- t dgment t be affected by g0 the to drag m bus: | No Self Respecting Group of | People Should be Without a | the only S 3 thing to which the fan: g man or the | {old lightl ly turns in| od ami Laxati spring. Cleaning up of house or yard Go Family . is an inherited tendency i \ A AN o P I uinose| It i inconceivable in this day of gen- | there 4. 3usny people | A1 toiciligence s e e ke without a_si or the | cek’ means o e disease 1y T and pride d health. headaches. 1 dose this LE'!TERb TO THE EDITOR The Death cf an O‘rl Poet. f good Ame rican out Ave., Long bie trouble such Zfi:\e“u\:;:tr‘u” kh:::; been located in a|{ ; HEeEnd LA e 4 2l t think of it! But how young trouble with him. They use it general- chance to express 3 : d with the age of Methuserah! in her home. L M LT | Who w be a poet if he could yrup Pe aves the health of the | o Shfiis Wprasisdons | Ose Ik slodiousiy that length | family, and it saves doctor's billa, It er comes to the job with some idea | Acgustania Wicure Sonieng il of | of requirements. He has certain of opportunity for displaying ability in handling a big man’s job, e ‘ Norwicn, Coan, April 9, 1914 liver and indigest e been a poem | stomach, ation, bowel trouble, \, billousness, con- gas YA LOVER OF THE OLD POETS. after eating, etc. Have ne hesitancy For E Every Family| LAWRENCE A. t to any roung or old. for injurious to WRIGHT. any n cents or convineed Sy Per 1 pills, salt ves generally shock to Fu rnll!es wishing to try a free s bottle can obtain it postpaid, @ressing Dr. W. ington st., Monticello, Il themselves A postal ca I on the stomach, headacnes, drowsiness | with your name and address on it will l are cordially invited to inspect same. do and | Rheuma | puts the blood in condition to ward off eradicates Rheu- | forms of This letter will convince | caried | the :lone coming.— Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets for the Liver. who member of the the | ¢ average system. mple by ad- B. Caldwell, 419 Wash- SPECIAL FEATURE THE FAMOUS PHOTO DRAMA ' SATAIN o the Orama of Humaniy IN FOUR ACTS FIVE PARTS A $200,000 PRODUCTION DEALING WITH TEMPTATION VARIOUS FORMS, PAST AND PRESENT. 3 Shows Daily—2.30, 7, 8.40 Matinee 10c—Evening 10c and 20c SLIM JOINS THE ARMY—A Frontier Comedy Coming Monday, Alexander Dumar’s 3 Musketeers 7 Reels. Now having a long run in New York. IN ITS | | lmsri"-F""AumTomu & Colonial CHARLES McNULTY, Mgr. Theatre} EVENINGS 10c 2,000 Feet “FITZHUGH’S RIDE” ..Two-Reel Lubin Military Spectacle 1,000 Feet “THE ENDLESS NIGHT,”......c.cocunnnn Superb Lubin Drama § “THE NEW MAID” and “WATER-SOAKED HERO,” Two Good Comedies § Monday—“A PASSOVER MIRACLE,” Two-Reel Yiddish Drama, with ; A Great Hit. & 1 | i Yiddish actors, and English and Yiddish Titles. | OME TO FLOWERLAND - Grand Fair and Carnival for the benefit of L. O. O. F. Building Fund April 13th to 18th inclusive, in OLYMPIC HALL Entertainments and Dancing each evening. One solid week of Fun and Frolic. If 1t Swims, We Have It its uncertain drusg rs ago, i1 THAMES RIVER SMELTS as Not the kind bought out-of-town and advertised as natives. Choice Shad Extra Fine Blues Live and Boiled Lobsters Choice Oysters Let us have your order for Lobster for Sunday POWERS BRGS.. 10 Rose Place 114—Telephones—777 ts. | FLOOR MGPS If you have poliched floors, such as linoleum, painted or varnished floors, you are certainly missing one of the greatest conveniences of the house if you have not a Dusting or | Polish Mop. We have a line of the latest in O-Cedar and | Wizard Mops and Polishes. | PAINTS and VARNISHES Agent for Heath & Milligan and Wadsworth Howland Sapelin Varnish Stains and Enamels. STOVINK for red stove covers. MENDETS mend everything in pots and pans, water bottles, etc. URO HAND SOAP, 4 10c cans for 25¢c. The Household Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin Street = | i it MRS. GEO. P. STANTGN | ; 52 SHETUCKET STREET ! FR'AF‘K’S INN | is showing a fine line of NEW MiL: Cor. Green |and Golden Sts. | LINERY for Spring and Summer. You mF;‘".:" :::: V°Wd,,:°, {::—:.?n); Pcl::: [ st et suey is mado by an Qriental chef. rd !

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