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Horwic hBulleti and gnnfit? 118 YEARS OLD Subscription price 12c a week; 50c a month; $6.60 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich, Conn., as 'second-class matter. 2 Telephone Oalln: Bulletin Business Office 480. BaTlotin® Baltorial Reoms 35-3. Bulletin Job Office $5-2. Wilimamtic Office, Room 2, Murray Bullding. Telephone 219. Norwich, Thursdgy, April 30, 1914 Yhe \Bufletin has the largest circulation. of any paper in East- orn Conmecticut and frem three to four times darger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered to ever 3800 of the 4,053 houses in Norwioh, ail read by ninety- three per cent. of the peopfe. In Windham itws delivered to over 900 houses, in Putnam and Danielson to over 1,100 and in ali of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern.Connecticut has forty- nine towns, ons hundred and sixty-five posteffice districts, and sixty rural fres delivery routes. The Bulletin Is sold in every town and en all of the R. F. D. routes in Eas Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 average... 1206, average.. Aprit 25. CONCENTRATE ON HUERTA. There is every reason to believe that the task which the mediators have before them will become fairly simple if they can successfully ac- complish the elimination of Huerta. This has been the insurmountable Qif- Aculty during ail the Mexican trouble and it is likewise the grounds today ipon which the undertaking for peace will succeed eor fail. Iet it be im- pressed upon the dictator that his greatest act of patriotism to the Mex- ican people can be displayed by with- | drawing from the position which he has taken and thus permit the estab. lishment of a government which will have tPe confidence of the people and which will receive the recognition and | support of the rest of the world. If he is giving the situation the thought which it deserves realize that his dictatorship is out of tune with the entire world. Whatever small recognition he has received is half-hearted and regretted. American as well as European coun- tries are dissatisfied with his govern- ment and are using their influence for the readjustment of the situation which he has brought about and yet the wily general has not apparently given any sober serious thought to the possibility of error in his own' posi- tion. When the proper time comes the concentration of efforts upon the one man part which Huerta can play in bringing about a readjustment of he 2ad plight of Mexico will be strik- ing at the kevnote of the entire sit- uation. Though the course of events may have been slow, they have all tended to this very point, and once Huerta is dispesed of either by his own act or the persuasion of others, the better will be the progress with the other questions confronting that nation, CHANCE FOR TIMELY ACTION. Even though other matters of an international character have been in- teresting congress, the advisability of early action upon the matter of canal tolls has not been lost sight the senate committee he closed, it is but proper to exp there will now be earl senate thereon. should be determined without needless delay or extended debate for the good influence such action will have con- cerning our forelgn policy which at the present time is none too clearly defined. In the realization that the passage of the bill repealing the exemption clause just at this tie would be a timely exhibition of international fair dealing The New York Tribune says with proper consideration of the Mex- ican trouble that “It is important that both Buropean and Latin American powers have shown a disposition to help us in our work of restoration (in Mexico). We ask them to believe that our motives are generous and al- truistic. But we should belie jour rds if while we are seeking their friendly aid we should refuse to make amends for our fallure two years ago to recognize thelr equities in the use of the Panama canal, when we stretch- ed the Hay-Pauncefote treaty so as to remit tolls on American coastwise shipping.” Even without the Mexican question that the matter of tolls is one which we | owe it to surselves to give honest con- sideration and honorable treatment without taking unfair advantage of treaty interpretatioms which differ with the interpreter. PERJURERS AND THEIR_BUVERS. Now that that gang of perjurers who | sought to gain personal profit through their endeavors to free the zunmen by false testimony has been placed with- in the grasp of the law, speedy jus- tice should be afministered, both fer the punishment which is deserved and for the benefit of the corrective in- fluence it will have. Two things contributed to the purt which they plaved in the eleventh hout effort to prevent the execution—the opportunity which was offered for the | reception of such testimony willingness which existed on their part te de anything fer pay, aad in the latter they were in much the same ciass as the gupmen themseiyes though the aetual cmime in this in- stamce ‘wes less. The confessions have shewn what encouragement is given to just such a class of witnesses and the evidemce wiich they can produce. No stone is left unturned for the de- feat of justice whether it can be ac and the complished by fair means or fowl and | the kind of servic he must ! Latin | of and | having |, It is a matter which & jand faise testimony should be made to pay the penaity. & Good success has been attained thus far in securing the connecting links Dy District Attorney Whitman and the time is ripe to make the most of the disclosures. However, all attention | should not be directed to the actual false witnesses, for while plenty of men may be obtained who would sell their word for pay, the greater wrong lies In the maintenance of a market Wwhere such testimony can be sold. ‘Every opportunity to discourage it should be exercised to the limit. A PEACE MOVE. After all the vicissitudes of the home rule measure before the parlia- ment of England there is no telling what may become of the new peace move which has been urged upon Sir Edward Carson by Winston Churchill first lord of the admiralty, even though it was made solely upon his own initiative. There is littie ques- tion as to the advisability of attempt- ing the compromise as suggested by Lord Churchill since the desirability of peace must be recognized by both sides of this controversy over Ulster. Unless some move of the kind is made trouble of a more or less serfous char- acter can be anticipated. The time is getting short wher this legislation can be expected to re- main before parliament. It is ap- proaching the time when the final vote “is golng to be taken and the sugges- jtion to work for a compromise instead of preparing for a ciwil war and blood- shed is both timely ‘and sensible. As the result of Lord Churchill's offer to compromise on the federal basis John Hedmond hastdeclared his pead- inegs to exert his efforts to placate the Ulstermen and to reach an honorable settlement of the; question. Such be- ing the case with! Bonar Law showing a willingness ito renew negotiations it would seem that Mr. Churchill had =aid the Tight thing at the right time. Surely it was!fortunate to receive the approval of these two leaders and most happy indeed would it be if when home rule is passed, and it is diM- cult to-see any other outcome at the present time, it should pass with as little friction as possible. MORE' PEOPLE, LESS CATTLE. While 'official estimates are being made of population in the bie cities and the states of the natien, it is an interesting estimate which has been given of the number of meat animals in the coumtry and it is & noteworthy fact that ‘while the number of people shows a marked increase there is an important - decrease shown in the sup- ply of meat animals. Where there Is| 2 gain in the.one there is a loss in the other, the estimate showing a de- crease since 1910 of 00,000 cattle and 2,700,000 sheep, leaving the total of beef cattle at 33 00. Thus is it well pointed out that where the’cattle/and sheep raising in- dustry of this country should be on the increase it fs as a matter of fact | showing a serious decline, and serv- {ing as onelof thejimportant factors i the high cost of liv When co | ditions are 'being 'maintained in direct contradiction to the law of demand | and supply it is impossible to expect | 1& great amount of relief through de- crying high prices. High prices do prevail and they are likely to until some determined effort is made to overcome such conditions The decreasing supply of cattle is nothing new. It has not all taken place | within the past year. It has been going on for some time and the fig- ures given out are simply a fulfil- ment of what was predicted. It can- i{not be expected that with millions {more people to feed and a constantly lessening supply to draw from that {the meat problem or the attendant | high prices in connection" therewith |can be solved. The opportunities for | successful and profitable cattle rais- |ing are increasing every day. EDITORIAL NOTES. Oh that we were Maying. Vera Cruz will have reason to be- lieve that sanitation follows the flag. There is plenty of opportunity to revive interest in the bad lands of Colorado, The man on the corner says: Some people pray for the necessities of life and work for the luxuries, The A. B. C. republics realize that | the Zapatistas are the last thinzs to | be reckoned with in the alphabet. With a flag raising in Vera Cruz ds like the o] of a polit- mpaign of not so many years The persuasive {be as good as his figk {when Carranza capitulates to hi plomacy. The queen of Bulgaria doesn’t think much of coming to this country to | study peace when there is so much | war talk floating about Everyone can appreciate the fact that the siogan has been temporarily changed from “On to Mexico,” to “Give the mediators a chance. Strange to say no one has suggest- ed bringing the matter of mediation and conciliation before the weather- man and the long sufiering people. When reports show that new con- structicn by rafiroads is practically at a standstill it cannot fail to serve as an important barometer for business. Huerta has made unconditional sur- render to the “good offices” of the A. | B, C. republics but it is within mem- | jory that he agreed to fire the saiute {and then fiuked T 1 The president of the Chinese repub C is to have an adviser located in thi v at $1,.860 a month. 1t is a pity oesn’'t know of all the free advi h is going to waste, a grear many who realize that they ar they v ¢ and are only i for another 0 expr minds on t riff question. demoerats getii 3 More cause for fretf | @overnment cemsus estimators given Hartferd only 107,000 popu | While the lecai claims are 135,000. Ne | 1 fussing. The | fauit of the voting machine theugh. If you are de ous of working in ibig figures just down and total { army iato ee years, cost to get it {up the cost of sending | Mexico for a period of ti and then what it will out, Americans have cause to feel grate- ful for the services rendered refugees by the representatives of other na- | tions. They have rendered Americans | they could expect il whe ake Qounesled With such plols” from Americausin like circumstances. “You needn't talk, in the ruffled dress. ‘Let your hus- band have gardening fever ten times a year if he enjoys it, but if you value You sanitary inoculate him against the spring golf germ! I have just con- ducted James through an especially ulent attack and I'm completely f“gvd out! ‘ames does not dash out on mild days and play golf through the win- ter as some men do,” went on the ruffled woman. “In the autumn ali his togs are put away and apparently he forgets golf. Nevertheless the poison is working in his veins, be- cause as early as January a slightly warm day will make him restless and he will seize an umbrella and knock the baby's rubber ball around. This year he was terribly excited when he found in a technical magazine a new invention to make playing possible on soggy ground. He said it would revo- lutionize the worid and drew dia- grams over all my best and most ex- pensive note paper. But trouble realiy began when he commenced looking for things. “I came home from a tea and found the upstairs all tumbled, in a heap as if ready for moving. Bvery bureau drawer had been spilled out in the middle of the floor, everything was off the closet hooks and draped over chairs and all the boxes were off the shelves. In the midst was my hus- band. “What {s 1it, James,” shakily. “Wh-what are from? “He looked at me in bland surprise. Tm not hiding,’ he said. Tm looking for a golf ball that I know I put away somewhere. I must begin to get my things together!’ “If this is but the beginning,’ sald weakly but firmly, “it will be your second wife who will be here at the finish, because I never shall sur- vive’ And he had the nerve to look still more innocent and ask what on earth he had done to upset me so! “I had to houseclean the whole up- stairs to repair the damage that had 1 grasped you hiding been done because of one missing golf | The time ha had the furniture | ball. moved down in the back yard and the rugs taken up was when he was searching for his golf cap that looks as though all the moths in the nation used it for a convention hall for_years. He put the cap with the excavated golf ball on the top of his chiffonier and forbade me to move them. He sald he wanted to get all his apparel together. “Then he began to mourn over a flannel shirt which he declared was the only shirt possible for golf on early spring days. 1 explained - that the shirt in question had shrunk un- til it would not fit Willy and that he must buy a new one. He insisted it had been laid away carefully in lay- ender in the fall and added, that he would not throw good money away when it was not necessary. James did not quite remove the wailpaper in his search for that shirt but might just as well have. We had to re- paper anyhow because he looked be- d a large steel engraving which and gouged out so much plaster hat we almost had to bulld the house over. “When I found him pawing under living room _couch—which gets moved ont and cleaned under every week of its life—he explained in a red- faced tone that he was searching for his golf trouders, that he had Jjust WATCH YOUR STEP! BY THE CONDUCTOR Why is a Stiff Hat. “I ‘almost laughed to spit th' other | day lookin’ down my car and seein’ every man in it with a stiff derby hat on, lookin' like frozen toads goin' to war. Say, who wished them chop- pin’ bowl hats on all us guys, any- way? Ain’t it 'bout time to sign a declaration o' independence ‘No more stone hats for mine?" ain't th’ worst of it. Them Willle boys hats settin® has got me confuddled so bad I can't tell & pawnbroker from a gentieman. They's no use to them bowler hats ‘cept to keep from havin’ your brain smashed if a brick drops on your cocoa. Anybody that'd wear one o' them hats ’d put a copper Kettle on his head next. It's no wonder we got a crop o' bald heads. You couldn't grow nothin’ under them vacuum pans. I tell ye we ain't civilized till we put th’ kibosh on them hard lids. I see pictures when 1 was a kid goin’ to school o' them fellows running aroun’ with short skirts an’ meat cleavers in their hands, an’ wearing heimets. If one o' them muts got fresh they hit him on the head with the meat chop- per. Right there's where Mr. Helmet got in % work. That’s where th' derby hat goes, with the meat cleaver. Just llke them hree cornered hats went with knee buckles an’ wigs. The more we get civilized them flats are goin’ to drop out. All th’ angels I ever seen never had no hats on, any- way. You'd make a fine lookin’ angel with one o' them derby hats jammed down on your ears, Wouldn't us fei- lows guy a chap if he was born with a bowl hat on? That kid ’d_ draw money soon as he drawed his breath. Them bhowler hats make anybody a frealk. “Hold fast! Here's your hat mister! “Wind bilows stiff, don't it? “Step along, please, lively! “Watch your step!” EVERY DAY REFLECTONS Health. Health depends upon the elimination of waste. The first thing the physician pre- scribes usually is a physic. No mat- ter what ails the patient, it hardly ever can be a mistake to see that the body is well rid of its waste. If the organs of excretion go on a strike it is fatal. The same law holds in affairs. Every business man knows what pains he must take to keep his desk clean, and how papers wiil accumulate on the table and get choked into pigeon- | holes and obstinate letter flles and pils up in drawers and cases. There are sp many things we are not quite ready to do to-day, and to-morrow finds us still indecisive, and so the documents drift into forgotten holes and before long the den is a jungle of undone matters. 1t take: 1 courage to use the waste b goTously. The art of life is to discard. Progress is clogged by the persist- ent remnants of the outworn past. Clogged iwth moth eaten ideas, with is the story of the church, the school, the state, Cleged with meths eaten ideas, with traditional passions with antiquated ideals, with petty meralities! The curse and woakness of the law is precedent, of which it boasts. All unjust privilege is but the con- stipation of life. When justice re- fuses to flow, is dammed up by custem and wiil not-follow in the new chan- nels of reason there we find the in- jquitous. stagna'e® pools of privilege, tull of peison, parasitic lives. What a world it would be if we couid swing forward unhampered by the past. The past is to teach us, net te bind us. It is a bame and not a blessing if it does net invigeraie us 10 59 98, ) Just | 1] ‘'way back on their cars happened to think of them and could- n't for the life of him recall where they had been placed. “‘When 1 produced these articles he added them to the golf bail and the cap on the chiffonier. He kept piling other stuff with the loot until one day the maid in desparation laid them all away again and as I discl ed her the next week James had to hunt all over again because I didn’t know where she had put the things. We found them in the cedar chest in the garret eventually, but not until James ‘had moved the pile of kindling in the basement. He becomes somewhat frenzied when he hunts for his be- longings, you know, and there is sim- ply no teiling what he will do! “Then James said that he had & game with Smith on Thursday and he spent all evening piling up the clothes he was going to wear. And Thurs- day it poured rain and he couldn't go. I put him to bed with cold com- presses on his head because he took the disappointment so hard. The first day he did manage te go out to the <lub he telephoned me he could not find the gold pin he had used last year to fasten his loose tie and would 1 please send it out by a messenger? It snowed before James got through | the eighteen holes and I heard that | they had to thaw him out carefully | before they shipped him home on the | golf_spectal. |~ “We now have golf clubs draped | along our hall, golf balls lurking in odd | corners to turn one's ankle, muddy | shoes in the bathroom and awful l looking hats on the piano—but it will obably wear off by summer and ames will become a human person once more. He siarts up in his sleep now, raving that somebody is a duffer and that he did make that drive in | one thousand and ten or something like that. I just say sharply, Fore!’ | when he acts that way and he ducks under the covers and goes to sleep | again. But it is a wearing life! “I believe after all it is best for my husband to go crazy on vegetable | seeds,” agreed the other woman.—Chi- cago News. i I '] The World’ Famous Trials D i P LSRR THE TRIAL OF WILLIAM PENN. Willlam Penn, the Quaker whose name is so closely linked with the early colonization of our country, and for whem Pennsylvania was named, had a stormy time of it during a cer- tain period of his life, owing to his Ppuritan principles and his insistence in expressing his views at times and places not in acord with the law. Aside from his persistence in speaking his views he #0 published a num- | ber of tracts, which were industriously distributed. A public disputation with the pres- byterian, Thomas Vinecent, oocasloned the onee celebrated tract, “Sandy { Poundation Shaken,” in which he as- sailed the Athanaslan doctrine of trinity and the Calvinistic theory of justification. Its publication without license wae visited by his committal to the tower under a warrant dated Dec. 12, 1688. It was while thus con- fined that Penn wrote “No Cross, no Crown,” an eloguent and learned dis- sertation upon the Christian duty of self-sacrifice, which has been fre- quently reprinted. Penn's confinement was close, and he was told he must recant or remain |a prisoner for life. “My prison shall be my grave before I will budge a bit,” sald Penn. He was, however, able to tion of the duke of York. But a year later, becnuse he inslsted on address- {ing his Quaker congregation in the | open air he was arrested with Willlam Msad and was committed to Newgate on Aug. 14, 1670. Penn claimed he had broken no law. When the recorder of the court asked Penn to plead guilty | to his indictment, he repilied: “The ilaw has no foundation, and unless the court can show me and the people what ground the indictment is upon, it will be impossible for the jury to agree to bring in a verdict.” Penn was ordered to be taken to the Bale dock. The trial occurred on the 1st to the 5th of September, 1670. The indictment read as follows: “That the said William Penn and William Mead, with divers other per- sons to the number of 300, on the 14th of August, in the twenty-second year of the king, @id unlawfully and tu- multuousiy assemble themselves to- disturbance of the peace; and that the said men did there speak and preach, whereby a great concourse and tumult was made and continued, to the great terror and disturbance of his majesty's lioge people, and against the peace.” When they were brought to the bar of justice they appeared with thelr hats on their heads and the recorder demanded if they did not know it was the King's court, and why they did not they ought? Penn answered he knew it to be the court and he supposed it to be the king’s but he did not think the removal of a hat showed any respect. Then the court fined them 40 marks apiece for their contempt. | to pay the fine, they were ordered to | be taken to the hole at Newgate, the filthiest place of 4il prisons in Eng- land. The jury retired and after an hour and a passed court and said that they could not agree. The four outsanding men were called into the room and reprimanded and then all were sent back again. After a longer time they were again brought back, as were also Penn and Mead. Howell asked them if they had reached a verdict and the reply was 15 The verdict was “guiity of | speaking in the Grace Church street.” The court asked if that was all and the foreman replied: “That is all I have in my commission.” The jurors wers sent out the third {time and again returned a verdict, to a small half had same as the first, convicting Pean and acquitting Mead. This was not ac- cepted and the jurors were sent out and were not given food, water or to- bacco. After a day and a night they were returned to the court, but the ame verdict prevalled. Thereupon !the fourteen men were sent to New- | gate. From his chamber Penn wrote o hils father, who was dying at the Penn home. Eleven days had passed since the | trial when Penn's father died, leaving | all his lands and belongings to his son. Fearing that uniess his son were up- held and supported by powerful friends his life would be one continual act of martyrdom, Sir William Penn sent from his deathbed to both the king and tbe duke of York a petition to solicit at their hands those offices to his son which had been alw, tended to him, The trial shows the great courage and patience that Penn possessed, It was such trials and hardships as these that enabled him to gain the trust and respect of the people. Penn’s work in America followed his trial at Old Bailey. ‘Phe barsing of meving pieture men from the @isturbed zome of Mexice is & blessing or a misfertune aceordiag ito the point of view. The best class of moving pictures is that which depicts jactual happenings of world impertance, | but there is a question whether actual war and its aftermath is a proper sub- ject for reproduction and presentation ta the. public.—New Hauen Registes, obtain his release through the medla- | gether in Grace Church street to the | pull off their hats and pay the respect | Refusing | room | eight of them came into the | written in pen and ink, that was the | Morgan, Wads- worth, 0., R, F.. D. 2, writes: “I was & constant. sufferer for twelve years with chtarrh in my head and nose, ‘sick head- mches, stomach troubles. I used to get cramps in my stomach that nearly” killed me. I at once got a bottle of Peruna will never be with- out it. I find Pe- runa an excellent spring and sum- mer medicine and am glad to call the attention of my friends to 1t Words cannot ex- press my appreciation for the good Peruna has done. “I know by experience that Peruna is a good medicine, and always recom- mend it wherever I have an_oppor- Gafe Chantant Auspices of College Club ARMORY, Friday, May 1st, 8 p. m. The proceeds to establish a scholar- ship at the CONNECTICUT COLLEGE FOR WOMEN Refreshments Vaudeville | | Dancing OTHER VIEW POINTS According to the census office, the population of ‘“continental” United States on July 1, next will be 98,781,- 224, That's getting it down pretty fine. Why not make it 325, for ex- ample, for the last three figures?— ‘Waterbury American. After they get things fixed up as re- gards Huerta and the Mexican situa- tion Mr. Ultimate Consumer ought to secure the services of the gentlemen from Chill, Peru and Brasil to adjust the price of coffee 60 that his break- fast and dinner won't cost 5o much.— Waterbury Repunlican. Bridgeport is what it is, because it is a coast town. It harbors made it in the first place; because of its harbors it has become the industrial capital of an industrial State, and upon the adequate development of its harbors depends its future growth. To fail to take the fullest advantage of every natural adventage of Bridgeport's lo- cation would be the most shortsight- ed policy imaginable—Bridgeport Standard. The house to house canvas by the| school children for signatures to the | cleanup “contracts” lends a personal‘ touch to the scheme which ought to | | result in greater achievement than in | past years. The cleanup idea has been given wide circulation and all over the country communities big and little have adopted plans for making the preservation of health easier and the appearance of municipalities more at- tractive.—Meriden Journal. Instead of using money in the Sun- day gambling that has been unearth- | ed at different places in the ’'Grand | avenue precinct, the gamblers, ac- | | cording to the police, use brass | checks. This discovery was made | | during 2 raid on an alleged gambling | | spot in that territory last Sunday. | | And another way they have for get- | { ting around the violation of the law, | | as they think, is to furnish the win- ners in the game with pastry, tobacco or confectionery, or other articles that can be used In the household.—New | Haven Union. When the average citizen learns that War means a stamp tax placed upon all of the necessities of life by a pa- ternal government, which is in urgent need of funds some of the enthusiasm for cledning up Mexico will die away. The direct tax that hits everyone every day hurts more than the indirect method, which deftly separates one from his money by a painless and in- visible process. It is easy to see why the government does not wish to try the stamp tax until it is forced to do S0 by stress of circumstances.— An- sonia Sentinel, i i _If the state is in such financial dif- ficulties as the governor has called BIG SPECTACULAR MiLI- TARY PHOTOPLAY IN SIX PARTS. SAME CAST A8 QUO VADIS. See the Battle of Austeri 16,000 Sotdiors T NEW SHOW TODAY 5 — Headline Acts — 5 Wi 4_UROTA JAPS—4 Moriv. BILLY DEWEY Colored Entert: THE ORIGINAL ANIMATIZD DOLL LIKE FATHER, LIKE SON 2 Reel American Drama Keystone Comedy 1 JOE EDMONDS MONTI DUO Singing' Comedian Classy Musical Act KENDALL’S AUTO GIRL OUR MUTUAL GIRL Great Naval Special A BATH HOUSE BEAUTY. Colonial Theatre 2,000 ft. “SEALED ORDERS” ....2 reels. Story of Mexfican War Lubin Powerful Story of Recent Difficulty between Mexico and United States “BUFFALO JIM” Vitagraph Western Drama with Myrtle Gonzalez “THE SMUGGLER’S S8ISTER” Wonderful hypnotic story of Pacific Coast “SETTING the STYLE” Exceedingly Dainty and Amusing Comedy “GOODNESS GRACIOUS”-3 reels. 1 year Vitagraph Thea Coming Friday- attention to it, it would be mighty |turned to paying interest on the easy to stop some of the leaks in- | bonded debt and the taxpayers of stantly. Our State Police outfit | every community of the state relieved coupled with the new Public Utilities | instantly. Ot course that would be Commission could be dispensed with, | too radical to think about, and as one the salaries in that direction turned | commission dovetails with the other, to paying interest on the bonded debt | nothi probably will be accomplished. and the taxpayers in that direction | —Middletown Press. Our leader for this week, NATIVE MACKEREL, BUTTER FISH (first of the season.) with a large stock of Fresh Fish to select from such as Shad, Blue Fish, Chevit, Halibut, Flound- ers, Steak Cod, Smelts, Haddock, Boston Blue, Elouse, Sea Bass, Striped Bass. This stock is fresh not cold storage. Prompt delivery. Broadway Fish Market Phone 517 0. LACROIX 40 BROADWAY Give us an order. - Attention to Lawns IT IS TIME TO DO IT RIGHT NOW You certainly wish to have a nice velvety lawn during the entire Summer. Then you certainly ought to do something about it right away. WE WOULD SUG- GEST that you leave it to us to FIX IT UP as it should be done. We have a SPECIALLY PREPARED LOAM, the right kind of TOP DRESSING and the best LAWN SEED to put your lawn in proper shape for the Sum- " ROSES Wouldn't you like to cut ROSES all summer from your Garden? Ask us about it. We can show you how. GEDULDIG’S THE LEADING FLORISTS Phone 868 77 Cedar Street Thin Folks Who Would Be Fat in Weight Ten Pounds or Mors A Physician’s Advice “I'a o be “able stay slvely thin man or woman, ertainly give most anytiing to to fat up a few pounds and that way,” declares every exces- Buch a re- despite past gult is not impossihie, fallures. Thin people are victims of | mal-nudritfon, a condition which pre- yents the fatty elements of food from belng taken up by the blood as they are when ers of nutrition are normal of gotting into the hlood, the fat and flesh producin eleme. stay in the intestines unlfi v:)x'ey from the body as waste. To wct this condition and to pro- duce a healthy, normal amount of fat the nutritive processes must ba artifi- clally supplied with the wer which nature has denied them. This can best be accomplished by eating a Sargol tablet with every meal Earg)l is a scientifie combination of six of the best strengtii-giving, fat-producing ele- ments known to the medical profes- sion. Taken with meals, it mixes with the ‘food &nd turns the sugars and starches into rich, ripe nourishment for the tissues and blood and its rapid effect is remarkable. Reported gains of 'm ten to twenty-five pounds in a single month are by no means infre- quent. Yet itg action is perfectly nat- ural and absolutely harmless, Sargol is sold hy ‘the Lee & Osgood Co. and other gaad druggists everywhers and every package contains a guarantee of welght increase or money back. Cuutien:—While Sargel has produced remarkable results in the treatment of nerveus indigestion and general stom- ach diserders, it should net. owing to its remarkable flesh forming effect, be used by these who are not willing to increase their weight ten pounds or nore. > A Splendid Cure for Headache EYES EXAMINED. GLASSES FITTED Try us and be Convinced. Hundreds have tried it and found it most satisfactory. Glasses Ground on the premises Prompt Service. Satisfaction guaranteed in eve}y case. THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO. Optical Department Plaut-Cadden Building