Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 15, 1914, Page 4

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WES [ SsEx Postoffice at Norwien, | —_— < 5 a i S g 1P 1 A Whirwit Entered lv‘ the : jiaie Conn., as' X k el Calls: Business Office 480, . - ; Silictin Battorial Rooths 35-3. st b e as proposed, and if i, i - - E Bulletin Job Office 33-2. Willimantic Office, Room 2, Mursay Building. Telephone 210. e ———————— i ————— Norwich, Friday, May 15, 1914. e —————————————— ;Inwn tnxnl :tklnc a :n intelligent in the run |Interest in internatio affairs, and P, cking i e e with o | ekdenialy inle eefipe nte, tonch eac] ol e 3:’: r::::-ladoncfle il e other universities at home and abroad. Failsey fiying out to Its name, the International Polity club, naturally arouses® the other nations|i.nih” inning Cornish reached third, | Susgests the aim of studying foreign ‘who are much inf ed therein as to|the first and only Yale man to reach nfldn.:ndupmol:égranmov what course theyware going to pursue. | that base and here again with only one ment toward this sort thing in th e s L The chaneces 5 Rural Mail Carrier § _Singi; Comedian wver, that until|out Sayre held the Yale batters to great English unlversities, it is like. > there is a ‘:xotro;k for the col- | easily handled hits. In th:d tw;‘m 1’°Y to ibefi(:)l;l_e lhme:.t- inf-:orum:-l: - ; loctou"of b izcaay exitine Gohin| Haley DL 1Y grer geoond ST | PSP 0 rocemt it o Sorman OUR MUTUAL GIAL_AND OTHER PHOTG-PLAYS — | the floating n him -with the ball as he was making . Angell, the prominent English peace not be .“m“"m"td' firat Bld while Pumpelly was recover- | advocate. ‘Whether the provisions of the|ing the ball Irwin took second and| . . ~ | Monroe Doetrime! and the unsatisfac-| Haley went in to third. After Gile ale’s :.hovpvmg in the dual track tory situation which would result from | struck out Minds, Williams laid down | meet . - . =lCol 1 Furopean centrol of that republic, it|a short bunt and on the squeeze phyk ly better than was expected, 0 O n l a the winning run. | for only one of the thirteen first places ; Will result in this country taking the | Haley came in with was won by the Princeton athletes and supervision of its finances as it has|Ln fhe Wale half the men fiied out in | $27 WO, 78 % W O On BECFER S00 | ll “A LEADER of MEN,” ......Two-reel Feature With Arthur Johnson -~ 16 3-5. Yale took all three places in the 100 yard dash, the 220 yard hur- “THE SECRET of the WILL” seodwo _reol Kalem with Anna Nilsson dles, the high and broad jumps_ and the hammer throw. 'Out of the field “BOMBARDMENT of VERA CRUZ” Actual War, Retained by Request even Princeton secured only 3-5 Pants, In the two mile, after a stif |J§ ER FALLEN HERO” & "LOOKING for 2 FORTUNE Kalem Comedies race, Yale took the two leading places, but Princeton showed ,w: l;n the “A_RACE FOR A MINE” ....... .Sensational Kalem Western Drama mile, which gave the Orange and Black i its only first place. R S S G T R S S R R X R When Yale goes up to Harvard on s Saturday for the Cambridge dual meet, | from hence you shall be drawn upon a | therefore. the prospects are pretty | hurdle, through the open streets, to . bright, aithough there will be more of | th t ution, there to be ' ) a fight than with Princeton. Then ha:gl:'dac:ng cu:x;f:wn alive, :nd oyour EVERY DAY REFLECTONS done with goodp success in Santo Do-| "y, "tne game with Dartmouth, Wed- mingo, remains. to be seen. It 18 aln.cqay afternoon, Yale had improved problem which ts the govern- |in defensive work and the fielding was ment head on)and one which there | almost perfect, excepting a foul muffed should be no 'unreasonable delay in|by Reilly at short. but the batting was tackling. It isvno small task which|poor and the base running was not rests with the state department to|heady. Fulsey, who leads Yale's bat- b ati that the | ting order, struck out three times and Clige: Fhis. Sceiuy. (BTN he | John Reilly, who has had the fattest control of Haiti by this country Will|{ i¢ne average of them all didn't give proper prokection to the large|make a hit. The score of 2-1 was not Buropean interests, but under this|encouraging under the conditions, but country’s ,policy it rests with diplo- | all along through the nine ipnings ‘macy action to accomplish it. | there were phc;s wher:hu cle‘;n ;gfi Fails monie . n conaerva::r h“: ‘:h: E.‘Z"lgx.}'&'f-i b?n;nth“epindgca’:i‘on: are | In two weeks at Cambridge the inter- | body shall be opened, your heart and e e can be obtained the Better: | {0t "Yale will develop this little bit | collegiate will be held and here Yale | bowels plucked out; ' then your head elay means 3 s by. | has a better outlook than for several | shak be struck off your body and your T IR Deore IRy IDIe a0 T L eats hast. Dody shall be divided into four avar- THE ONLY WAY. It is found probable by the Alumni ters, to be disposed of at the ng‘s' i 7 i After their class party at Morris | pleasure. And God bave mercy upon : 7 have realized before | Weekly, judging from the present state P " P % Unnoted heroism, of hich th “‘;‘:fi:hzn? gm;"“"“" to put an end|of affairs, that Yale will have mot a|Cove last wesk, some of the seniors | your soul world is full, is the best kind. Spectn: augurated the custom of wearing Sir Walter Raleigh besought the earl sailor costumes around the | of Devonshire and the lords to seek | cg 7 Deroism is always a little taint- Unnoted Heroism. . | single veteran oarsman in the varsity to such dlsturbamoes ol X eaq|four mile race dsainst Harvard in N e White that the|June- “This unprecedented ‘situation, carried out by Bouck - ®1it goes on to say, has its most regret- firm pressure, of a restraining hand|taple side, inasmuch as few Yale ath- cannot be witthheld. Such at least is|letes have been given so much of UNVEILING THE NEW HAVEN. the attitude which was taken by the thamse)w\‘r:: or ";‘"“;‘,“ im;‘:;;tafi %\x‘;‘- It is impossible not to. admi +the | magistrate whio sentenced him to six tions suc] ne sp! E Counsel Polk for the interstate com-|Same time scored s Ami; ““ to put Yale rowing back on a solid merce commission in connection with|to “jusfify his elations by talking £00l- | ;i i0r and trust that he will be able the unveiling of the financial opera- | ishly and egotistically about the right| ¢, continue as the crew leader and tions of the New Haven system when | of free speech.” captain, although his condition may he inststs upon getting at the bottos White’s sentenice is in keeping with not permit him to catch up in his < e i e % g that which was %mposed upon Tanen- e in the regular boat. Many of baum, though lass severe, but there iegre’s friends are expecting to see was in White’s less excuse for{him again in the first eight the offense whi he .committed. He is older in ¥ and older in ex-| .4+ New London is endorsed by the|What has been termed “an honest ef- | he produced his remarkable "H!n.oryl omes o perience and bas the Denefit of a| Alumni Weekly. The system under | fort at economy and democracy” has | of the World’ ever'cho’. nm ’::d‘;o‘?lxv:t&:;: college education 'and training which | the new coaches’ work this year has |suffered a slump and there are not so As the Spanish demanded his vun-| mm‘., and inferen necessarily goes vhu:'tha position of | been largely after the “two-varsity- | many haval clad forms rolling about | ishment, following his unfortunate h;sdlu has bean! m.dsc:; shoul- | an ordained cl ‘Whatever may | elght” plan, whereby a second boat is |the campus. Perhaps it is because | Guinea "venture, already referred m.l | %‘n.;‘npua during the succeeding days. | out the king in his begalfboandipo:‘rill ‘hen it came to appearing in class | out to him the place he re in s \ reom in white trousers and jumper. | majesty's time and thereby to request | 1973 In the city street, or the man most of the instructors made no ob- |him that the rigor of his judgment | Lo CVER ARd Fescues a drowning Jection. But in the case of Professor | might be qualified and his death hon- ward in -the face of deathtfiees ,fi. Parr there was a remonstrance and | orable and not ignominious. but there is a better type. R he caused it to be made known that They promised that this would be Many can act under the spu ' the senior members of his German | done Raleigh was carried again to | o, 4den impulse and with an mx:\ ‘rri “ classes would not be favorably re- |the castie. When Sir Walter was left | Sugicnce; put to ive wupon the miE celved in the informal attire. The ire [to his majesty’s mercy the King | jane of self-sacrifice daily takes fin of the upper classmen being aroused | thought him too great a malcontent to er fiber. » 0% at this objection to their comfortable | have his freedom and probably too in- There is the workman who brin costume, they plotted revenge upon the | nocent to lose his life. He was there- [home his entire week's pay e\.eg' instructor. The result appeared when |fore, conflned to the tower and WaS | goturday night, that it may be usz the seniors, one after the other, in | permitted to enjoy the liberty of cus- = o solemn file, entered the professors |tody, and he empioyed his time in ob- {g;zm&em;:_l:xsc:flbi a:;lt CF,:ldl’;r:';;“,‘_’ ings bapk. Some look on him as tame and dull, a routiner with no spirit; but he would like to go to the ball game as well as any man, to take his beer in the saloon and crack jokes with the boys, and to buy for himself the expensive luxuries men enjoy. He daily subdues himseif in little things; heroistn with him is a rule and not an -exception; it is of the kind the world passes by, often misjudges and despises. And how many women, unknown and unpraised, are living days of constant devotion to high purpose! They are hidden in homes, they are ted by petty economies, they have given up tastes soul deep and renounced ambitions dear as life, just to be faithful and joyval in the small corner where destiny has placed them. If'any one would drink of the un- The man who stops a runaway classroom decked out in dress suits, | taining learning and science of various Another event in the annual regatta | high hats and canes. But since then | kinds. It was while thus confined that 14 § 2 mal t lanc far as - | exams are only two weeks off and the | King James was willing to sacrifice load of criticism which has|be his ideas, and his career ln:lm umftfi‘&“’n&b&nfi,fi serve, t;?,‘n seniors have important matters before | to the advancement of peace with made following the New Haven |that they run at \a tangent, he had| WS, BT 'C7a SO §7%, S0 “for | their attention. Spain. When he arrived at Plymouth revelations. Much interesting testi- | N0 excuse for the lack of restraint|,y, argt squad to try themselves out Sir Lewls Stukley, vice-admiral of the mony has been heard concerning some | Which permitted hifn to carry his s0-|on. It is to this second. eight that Important and instructive and epti- | county o von, d” =) m ; t. of the methods which were carried on | clalistic tendencles tol such length. It{ Captain Denegre has been reduced, | mistic are the articles in a series being | Prought him mmh T A e in the extemsion of the system and ]IS such men as White who do many | but the result of the spring regatta | written for the News on the advan- | Piaced in Wi er - s \rout pr t YS! an times the harm of a,Tanenbaum, for | Friday afternoon, showed that the |tages offered in the graduate and pro- | thence was carried to ti ethn el olua_ yet throughont it all there are many | P78 0€ (o ave heen able to have | marsin between ‘the boats is small { fessional schools of Yale university,|and the next morning to the parlia P oo ihe enlightenment such| ¥ ducted his debate, wisely It is the|'ndeed. And it is to give this second [Dean Henry Wade Rogers finds that | ment yard. “where he had the favor o as Mr. Mellen can give is much desired. | O™ “mh“ 1 demon- | ¢i8ht, Which needs for its greatest ef- } the Law school at Yale, all things | the ax granted ":i a that old As the former head he is in a position 'mr :;omnmw o o!“ tout::xar; ficiency to be kept until the Harvard | considered, is the most desirable place | All persons wondered how that o to straighten out some of the tangles|S for the undergraduate to pursue his|Sentence, that had lain dormant for and from his indicated willingness to | Who neither know norjcare for law and studies. Aside from the fact that un- | SiXteen years, could have made use of tell his story and from his jocular er to take off Sir Waiter Raleigh’s head. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR | 3o he, combined s etem o e | Raleigh's appearance on the scaffold statement that he is now “assistant academic studies a student can obtain the degree in Arts and that in Law in | 90 the day of his execution, Oct. 29, to the interstate commerce commis- order in view of suchleadership. White knew what he was doing. He knew he was exceeding, his rights and failing spring of optimism, feed on Salus Populi est Suprema lex. six years, the dean calls attention .to | 1618, was with a smiling countenance, | iy treasures of hope, learn the secret e e e T SN il s i e a0 2| . Mr. Editor: Tsw't my text true? Isn't | the law ifbrary of 40,000 volumes, ‘to | Saiuting the lords, knights and gentie- | ;o "TSERUTER O DORE: 17000 SHE sefred parent that much more light is going | fore k& ) : ith others of his acquaintance : it a fact that the ~ people’s welfare | the golden opportunity now offered, | Men, Wi sweet, strong quality in - spirit that ting forth his ideas. He knew better| g;;,1q pe looked after first, last and | while the higher standards of entrance | Who Wwere present. He made a long but he knew the walue of the publicity. bt corresponds to the unh;lry and peace . found in nature, let im study to The only strange thing about the en- | power? temporarily low, of getting individual | baving ;“_“fll'"l’dl,“"’d“ "“"d‘;‘““" g‘_’ know and to love the common peo- tire affair is that White was surprised| Then if it is a fact that “Salus pop- | instruction and to the fact that the ,"_;.hl‘;‘” % e ;l‘edfc?""m‘;:?“ o | Ple. for theirs are the infinite re- that he should be sentenced. It is, [uli est suprema lex.” where do the|Law school will next vear reach the | T ‘d" 'f‘ "m o e, 3 ‘when | Sources, the rich supplies, of unnoted however, the only wWay. American people come in, in the pres- | high water mark in the efficiency of | PhvZiclan foF all G seases.” 20d Whe | heroism. 4 ent slipshod policy of President Wood- | its leac'::ing staff. ‘:y ;";’.-maehe ‘r’_p“ed, fi's:, s Noart S il R T EDITORIAL - NOTES. row Wilson and his piffie member of For the Medical school Dean Blumer oad to be gained from him and others as friendly rather than hostile witnesses. That he has an interesting story to tell cannot be questioned. That he is prepared and willing to tell it is evi- dent and even though he only hits the high places he ought to be able to tell some of the things which everyone all the time by those we entrust with | requirements keep the student Ilist | SPeech before he was executed. After gh is no matter which way R ¢ cabinet, Mr. Bryan, of Nebraska? We | has shown this week the opportunity | P® Tight it is = ~ . : ‘wants to know. Interest rallies at the No particular enthmsiasm has been| read iIn the papers of President Wil- | of likewise combining academic and tEh"o h,“‘dm, “:::' te “;“d' tdr::d Q“:'r"e’ Chlldren Cr start, but no lullaby can be expected. | manifested over the opening of the| son standing by the dead bodies of the | medical school work and the benefits » Seoury: A siraw hat season today. 17 American heroes who lost their |of university affiliation, of the ample | 204 terror of Spain. FOR FLETCHER'S & lives in a fool attempt at piffie at Vera | clinics in New Haven and of the CASTORIA The t to get out and do the Cruz, that is, if the present policy is|chance for students in the small class- gt correct. es to get more thorough work. The whole season’s plamting is never 80| " Tpe attack on Vera Cruz was to pre- | school is placed in the A-plus class by active as on a cold and rainy dav. vent that German vessel from landing | the Council on Medical BEducation. the abundant snow was good for the = ol t_l: = bt arms for Pr\;aident Hu;‘rta, a ms.nhwho cTops. ew London continues to poin has over and over again proven him- 5 ! % considerable pride to the fact that it is| seif superior to any ruler of Mexico Canada’s fruit industry is-to _be still operating its fine department on a | except Porfirio Diaz. Now then, after "“"“':d 0?{; a new government bu- olitess bast lifs has been lost, men landed and reau &l e, 5 killed for nothing, if Secretary Bryan India is just now proving the best Jack Rose must have undergone a ’u.ec:-:tabr.} b::f;;’ed' by fl:gm;h“ct‘nmbe“’ market for Birmingham jewelry. a1 reformation, as he says, otherwise he for Huzrgta ending mediation, never could have shed crocodile teafw i e 2 -but the sensible Germans step in and | TRIAL OF SIR WALTER RALEIGH. to say nothing of the real things. say Nay, nay, take them back home. e eI President Wilson does not say much | Sir Walter Raleigh, the eminent WHITE Advice is being offered Col. Roose- | 2bout “my Mexican policy” these days, | English exporer and author, was sev- SCHOONER M-Y l. velt that his London critic deserves no| Put another Latin quotation comes to| eral times imprisoned, the first time now disch - at our dodl % my mind that just hits President Wil- | heing when he was accused and found attentlon. Is it possible for anyone| son's case in connection with Secretary | guiity of conspiring o raise Tasy to suppose such advice will be heeded? | Bryan and Mexico: “Qui facit Dper| Arabella Stuart to the th . Th 000 : Shm rasit per se. s rone. The 500, Feet i P trial upon this charge took place in The man on the corner says: Ner- Therefore, in sizing up the foreign | 1603 and ended in his being condemned Rougb Il’ld Dr:u e i be-expected reply. They are not inter-| yvous breakdowns in the spring de- | policy of Secretary of State W. J.|to death at Winchester, Nov. 17, 1603. ested in such a scheme and when the | pend largely upon whether fishing con- | Bryan it is utterly impossible to take | Foliowing this trial he was kept for situation is looked over they can|ditions are reported to be good or bad.| any of the mistakes from the presi-| thirteen vears confined in the tower, “'f c .‘ess I "m hardly be blamed. —_— ‘“I"f‘ l:h:h:‘:ll‘:;:é Jogr AR DR ‘but flnallyrgecove;ed Bk:sfl:ibe’r!',\lr. but They have no more use for Huerta Now that it has been denied that the - of our | 20t bis pardon, throu e Influence than this country has. We are in-|Colonel asked for or obtained pay for public 1 sugrems isw. the head o2 ouf | o7 Villjers. (The Wood Eternll) nation should be the chief executor of bl sisting upon his elimination and so |his speech in Brasil, there is a chance| that law. and if my second Latin quo- | go0oneS L. who had been responsible AGAINST A COMMISSION, Hverything is in the dark as yet as to the oOutcome of the mediation efforts concerning Mexico, but the sug- gestion which has been advanced that that republic be administered by a commission to be made up of two se- lected by Huerta, two by Carranza and one by the mediators deals with the internal rather than with the inter- national phase of the situation, and it is the latter which is coming before the mediators next week. Such, how- ever, looks to the establishment of peace and order in Mexico, but the sounding of the constitutionalists upon the commission proposition, they not being a party to the present under- ¥ taking to adjust troubles between this country and Huerta, brought the to- From the Consular Reports. Following the war, Turkey's trade became better than in years past and WHIT’S WHITE ELEPHANT CAFE Ales, Wines, Liquors and Cigasr ! Corner of Watar and Market Sta for his Imprisonment, gave him an v“ythin’ H H are they and from the success which | for the Ananias club to have its mem- | tation is true, the only good thing that | simmmta bomonieing Sod o on E for Inside and Outside Work has attended their efforts they appear | bership increased. Pre:ment fW(I‘:mn S do L o fordt?t'e with his fleet for the discovery of his a 3 to be in a fair way to accomplish it ey weifare o e whole people, an © | promised El Dorado, in Guinea, but; as : = Y 2 - before very long by their own meth- It Huerta is preparing to fles to|®ave the lives of more soldlers and|hjs expedition was a failure and the Buymg m hrge quantities for cash with ‘water Illlp- ods. Their gradual movement south|Puebla he should make up his mind |'sallors, is to get rid of his pie mem- > bei: -3 H Ber of the cabinet as soon as poasible, | CTSlsh government being on fflendly ments enables us to sell at bottom prices. ‘We shal] be to make his get away complete. He Dumip bim ‘anywhere;' 1t ‘won’t:hutt terms with Spain and Raleigh having tion by hi pleased to receive your inquiries. realizes the inevitable and the quicker | nim: the hide, consclence and gall of | oqnocd that nation by ,‘;y’ &1“‘;:;“:;‘ it is over the better. * Admiral Grapejuice can stand any kind of hard treatment. Drop him, Presi- | in™s 0i° Sentence of death promounced Central Wharf - p P xe- - With our avallable manufacturing|dent Wiison, before the whole world | in 1803 Wa& stil valid, he was exe- +s Norwich, Ct. sites changing hands it is to be hoped | 1aughs itself to death over his horrible | gter on Oct. 29, 1618. it will he followed by e revival of in- | Mistakes. Tis gross ignorance, 1ack!. ‘\yhen Raleigh was arraigned for A M- | of Americanism or anything else man- 03, the indl t terest in having them occupied. They trial in 1603, e ctment read ly. The ple are very tolerant of . have stood idle long enough. g{g“’ rulgr?e\'?u( it may be well for you against him was that “he did con = =pire and go ahout to deprive the king to always bear in mind: Salus popull| o¢ 1i5 government; to raise up sedition While the supreme court laid stress| est suprema lex. within the realm: to alter religion, to has been greatly strengthened by the « capture of Tampico. They are strong- er today than the dictatorial head of the Mexican government. Naturally they are not in the mood to abandon their bright prospects and thus a com- promise with Huerta with a recdgni- tion of his position is out of the ques- tion. There is doubt whether it would end the trouble should such a course be adopted. As has been the demand for a.long time, it is the elimination of Huerta which is likely to do the ‘most for Mexico, aided by whatever assistance and advice which may be offered and sought from friendly neigh- bors in the following readjustment. B. MONTGOMERY. upon the fact that the contempt pro- <. . bring in the Roman supersition and ceedings were too long delayed, Gom-| Facker, Conn, May 13, 1914. to procure foreign enmemie to Invade L] the ki om.” A b L Frri History vs. Fistion. Fo fie hdictment Raletwh pleaded Mld = eason : Mr. Editor: In reading the trial of | not gullty. The trial was long drawn . Mary, Queen of Scots, in yesterday's|out and fortunate for history it has The effect of the large list of dead Bul?a’ur?. the undersigned was amused | been preserved almost in its entirety. in the West Virginia mine disaster| at the copy of a letter sald to have | Raleigh had been committed to the upon the gtate’s workmen's compensa- | been written by Mary to Queen Eliza- | tower on July 19, 1603, and it was not tion insurance shews what would| beth, in which Mary cails Elizabeth my | until November, before the indict- happen te municipal insurance in case| ‘Most dear sister.”” Permit me to | ments were all ready for his prosecu- | i} Efi RESERVE BOARD MEMBERS. The disposition which is evidenced by the allaged statement by Sen- e that Mary, Queen of Scots, and | tion. From the very starf the trial at ator Owen that the upper house of|Of a comflagration. o P 3:3 Queen o?riy‘rance, was not related | Winchester was conducted with such . congress would not confirm the ap- to Elisabeth, who is known to Britons | outrageous unfairness as to shock d M 2 pointment &f Messrs. Warburg and It doesn’t make mueh difference | as the good Queen Bess. To correct a ; even the opinion of the time, and his II S tfl ay, ay e ‘Whseler- to the reserve board is one| Whether it is his epinion abeut the| wrong impression. let me say that| gallant bearing, even in the fact of the . ! . which if true reveals a wrong attitude in behalf of this important plece of re- form legislation, Throughout the ceun- 5 try these men have been recognized as: of the desirable high, seund aad properly qualified type which the beard harm of cigarettes or abeut Villa he- | Mary Stuart, Queen of Scotland and ) brutality of the attorney-general, Sir ing the mest practical man in Mexico, | France, was thé daughter of James| Edward Coke, turned public opinion in Mr, Edisen is beund te find n“m; Stuart (James V) of Scotiand- and | his faver. That Raleigh was .cogni- on the ether sid Mary of Guise. Queen Hlizabeth was | zant of the conspiracies against the fe .____"‘ the daughter of Henry VIII of E; d | government appears probable by the and Anne Deleyn, The Qu of Beots | testimony, though the evidence pro- The real fight new centers about| has been miistaken by ma: y Aor Mary, | duced against him was Insufficient to needs if its interests and the interests| whe is geing to bring out the truth| Queen of En;gmd. whg}1 m:gled Q}\Ix:j'tn S'y‘"{; his l’\llht l%ncg,x‘ w’u kept b-:nk of the couniry «re to be properly and| first, the inters cemmerce com- lisabeth and was s ~ e council an e jury was in- consclentiously sérved, The only sur- | Mmissien er the department of justice. | Sister; being a daughter’of Henry VIII| fluenced by knowing that the council ‘Whi and Cathering of Arragen. The sove- | thought him guilty. prising feature In cennection with their chever does it hurry it slong and Shison 5€ ety shenendont b Whe iury that mat in.judgment &t "~ appolntment ia that they could be per- | $ive the reerganiied road a chance. | gngiand, and the Stuarts were not fe- | the trial was enly out a quarter of an suaded to give up thelr other business e p— lated at ail to the Tudors, that being | hour befere they returned a verdiet of interests to accept and as yet the lat- The many Greeks in this country | the family name of Elizabeth. “guilty.” Thereupon the lord chief ter hasn't, whe oppesed the visit of the queen Hoping the foregoing may be cemsid- | justice read the following “judgment™: The impression seems to be gained | of Buigaria te Amerita on the |ered satisfactery te readers of The “But, since you have been found ‘that they are out of touch and eut of | greund that she was coming te ‘cause ‘Bulletin and stimulate an interest in fuuty of these herrible treasens, the sympathy with the new currency law, | them trouble have a right now to claim | MStoricsl facts, T remain, e e Ry et R MR L but in view of the confidence which has another victery thseugh m her from whence you came, there to hf < ; ST, s

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