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COLONIAL THEATRE. of | Charlie Chaplin in Biggest Two-Reel DAVIS THEATRE. The Earl-and the Girls, Another Keith Foature-Entitled Work. ‘This 1s-the of w‘hleh Ch.i.flia description. Don’t miss this film to- day. Lily Leslie s the featured ome in e massive Lubin drama entitled The White Mask, & story of royaity. This is in three reels. The ramme Includes & splendid Eaux Wila apimal film entitied The Jungle Stockade. Tomorrow the third episode of The Goddess, featuring Barl Williams and Anita Stewart, in two parts. MICHELIN REDUCES TIRE and the songs are catchy. This company carries all the scenery used in the act and electrical effects. The t-nm picture to be ‘shown here and tomorrow is called A Man end His Maté, a four-part Mutual master ‘thief and lsnbvuttn-behung by an enraged mob of cowboys when Bi's wit saves him from 4 felon's death 1d & women’s patience and skill cures are some big moments in the playyend the scenes are alive with action of the most satisfying kind. There is an ex- citing football match, a running fight on horseback, a man to man duel be- lay of dramatic talent of the high- Pst order, and he insures his place as a omantic' star of the first magnitude. Gladys Brockwell makes an appealing heroine and a strong supporting com- Tounds out s splendid flm. The stone comedy with Mabel Normand And Fatty completes the programme. dally_at 2.30; all seats 10c, Shiidren g Evening at 7 end $.45; 10c, 15¢ and 20c. Don't let the warm wegther keep you away from the Davie, is always 20 degrees cooler in- Sido than 1t is oat. The cooling sys- tem here is the best in the state, AT. THE NUDITORIUM L3 ‘ Tom Carroll nnd Happy McNally, ¥Nith the Parisian Girls company of 1§ beople, will be the attraction at the Auditorium all this week, with matinee laily and two evening performences. l'hm will be three changes of bill on ihe week, Monday, Wednesday and MRS, WILLIAMS’ LONG SICKNESS Yields To Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. Elkhart; Ind.:—“I suffered for four- teen years from organic inflammation, umxe wealness, g'm The in es. pains my sides were in- 456 | nortn, and PRICES 10 PER CENT. Michelin prices have just been re- duced 10 per cent, yet no change has Docn maas in the quality of these well known tires. This good news is sure to interest all motorists, especially as Michelin tires have been seHing for some time at prices a little too high THE TONQUA BEAN. The Real Source of the Perfume Known as “New Mown Hay.” “There 1s a wWitchery eabout the smell of new-mown hay that appeals to human kind of high as well as low degree"—writes Edward Albes In a re- cent mumber of The Bulletin of the Pan American Union, Washington, D. C. “There seems to be & tendency to Tevert to the primitive and bucolic in most of us, however effete and blase our tastes have become, and the fragrance of the flelds gratines the olfactory nerves of prince and pauper, of scullery maid as well as the pam- pered soclal butterfly whose more or less remote ancestors doubtless breathed in the perfume as it rose from the dew-covered, tender grass they mowed with shining blade and gathered with their own strong arms. The attraction of the perfume has lingered even through many genera- New-mown hay, however, is not al- ways available, so the art of the per- fumer has been called upon to gratify the.sense of smell which longs for this particuler aroma, and “new-mown Bay” has been added to the varied “perfumes of Araby” used as toilet accessories In liquid form by the de- Yotees of fashion. Perfumes, however, like many other things, are not al- ways what they seem. Grass, freshly cut or otherwise, has had nothing to S1do with the production of the sweet- g d Standard of quality of Michelin tires. The present substantial reduction, while in a measure due to the surpris- N. J, on account of the extremely heayy demsnd in forelgn countries. it is stated, was former- 1y .uppued from one or the other of Michelin factories abroad. COAST GEOGRAPHY OF BRITISH ISLES. Shows Many Difficulf in Way of Maintaining Effective Blockade. (Special to The Bulletin) ‘Washington, D. C., July 18.—“A sur- vey of the coast geography of the British _Isles shows some things of tremendous interest when considered with reference to the blockade under- taken by the Germans, the first serious blockade ever attempted against the United Kingdom,” beging a bulletin just issued by the National Geographic Soclety, which sketches a few of the difficuities in the way of maintaining an effective blockade of the many- harbored, sea-encircled nation. The bulletin continues: “Great Britain is a land of herbors and highly developed ports. Its foreign commerce clears from more than 120 seaports, that are situated upon every sea washing the islands. To shut off English commerce with other lands would require an almost impossible sea-strength. Moreover, besides its wealth of widely scattered harbors, the United Kingdom has a particularly irregular coastline, which would serve | to greatly multiply the labors of a blockader. “Broken by rocky headlands, bays, and deeply penetrating inlets of the sea, the English coastline alone stretches for e distance of 2,350 miles. To the south, upon the English Chan- nel, lie the great seaports of Plymouth, Sotithampton, Portsmouth, Brighton and Dover; to the east, toward the North Sea, are the ports of London, Harwich, Great Yarmouth, Hull and Bristol, Cardiff, Swansea, and Liver- pool. ‘Hundreds of smaller ports are sprinkled in between these great har- bors of world-fame. “Of these English ports, Liverpool is sald to have the best developed harbor in the world; more coal is shipped from Cardiff than from any other seaport; Grimsby is the fishing capital of the world, and London is more intimately' connected with the ports on every sea than any other har- bor. England has expended with frechanded foresight in the improve- ment of her seap and so the war finds her with adequate harbor facil- ities upon every hend, with dry docks and shipyards in every more important harbor, with equipment to carry on a great foreign trade from more than 100 different points. “Scotland is a_still more baffling its coast upon the east is shielded by an intricate mass bold, rocky islands. Though much smaller in area Scotland hes a coast- ports upon the North Sea in th Inverness sends its shipping to the Glasgow, With its famous shipbuflding works end vast foreign trade, lies toward the North Chaennel and the open Atlantic. Few places in Scotland lie more than. 40 miles from the sea, and smaller ports dot the entire coastline, Bcented liquid labeled "nm-mown bey” The source of the essence really a bean. Not the prosaic, ednna bean of our vegetable gardens, but a bean that grows in that section of the world where one Fl1 Dorado, the “Gilded One,” was thought to rule in glittering splendor; that fabled land in the fruitless quest of which so many daring, goid-loving edventurers spent money, time, and even lives most lav- ishly. "It is known as the Tonqua or Tonka bean, and its habitat is to be found in the tropical countries of South America, chiefly in the valleys of the Orinoco, Caura, and Cuchivero Rivers in Venezuela and certain sec- tions of Colombia and Brazil. The bean is the seed of Dipterix odorata, a tree belonging to the leguminosae or pulse family. The genus comprises about 8 species, all large trees, to be found in the forests of the countries named and having no representative in northern localities. The Tonqua-bean tree in some cases reaches a height of 60 feet with a trunk as much as 3 feet in diameter; it has pinnate leaves and large pan- icles of flowers, which are suceeeded by a pod containing a single seed. The pods are about 2 inches long, almond ehaped, and very thick; the seed is about an inch Jong end shaped like a kidney bean; ‘it has a wrinkled skin of shiny black color when ready for the market. The odor, which is remarkably strong, resembles that of sweet clover or new-mown hay, and is due to the presence of coumarin, a crystallizable, volatile, neutral sub- stance which is soluble in alcohol or ether and somewhat so in_ boiling water, from which it crystallizes on cooling. The beans are often frosted with crystals of this substance, giving BULLETIN'S PATTERN SERVICE 1335 A NEAT AND WELL FITTING APRON MODEL AND SMART CAP. Ladies’ Apron With Princess Panel. This style is nlco for prett; o gingham o seersucker, for 3 east "Yfl&fn la or wn, Ilm -l.tean or The princess is Jolne‘?"a’o rmed the deva!omnl of com- erick, upon the River Shannon, gives Ireland an important Atlantle harbor, while Queenstown is an outlet in the south and Londonderry in the north. “With its more than 6,500 miles of | I ne, and its well-developed. har- 3 bor- all um nu way, the United its a problem of bric. isde shoul d e pr! panel rtions, that meet er, A pattern of (hil 11lustrati RER s i“LEE CLECC nutriment in feeding stuff. They are rich and bulky, and required to maintain the health of the animal. CHAS. SLOSBERG 3 Cove Street THOMAS J. DODD Contractor 99 Clifi*St. Excavating, Masonry, Sewers, Cement Walks. Portland Cement at lowest prices Phone 822 Gism the sppearamce of being sugar- e Venesuela the tres is kuown & sarrapia, and the men in the collection of the beans are called sar- rapieros. These collectors in Venezuela and Colombia usually eet out for the forests in February, when the fruit begins to ripen, They go up the riv- ers in canoes or skiffs by the hundreds, stopping wherever the trees are plen- tifal, and when the fruit begins to fall all get busy. The pods are gathered and taken to some open space where sunshine is plentiful, and there care- fully crushed and the beans extracted and then spread out to dry. When thoroughly dried they are loaded into the boats and transported to Ciudad Bolivar, or some other convenient port, where they are sold to the exporting merchants.- Here they go through a Process of crystallization by being steeped in strong rum or aicohol for about 24 hours, and then again dried. 1t is the drying process which causes the shiny white crystals to appear on the surface, and which causes the beans to shrink and gives them their wrinkled ap; During the year ending June 30, 1913, the United States imported 783,- 888 pounds of these beans, valued at $1,140,409. They lend their to high-grade to soaps, to “brillientie” and other hair dressings and dyes dainty cosmet- o e softly $0Rt the chocks and igs ‘Thus has an important Most of Japan's pearl divers are women who begin to learn|the trade at the age of 13 or 14. TRAVELERS’ DIRECTORY TO NEW YORK $1. CHELSEA LINE AND _PassEnaER RVICE BETWEE| NORWICH AND NEW YORK §1. TO NEW YORK $1. Mast-Clgars are Good— THESE ARE BETTER TOM'S 1-2-3 5¢c CIGAR GOOD FELLOW 10c CIGAR Try them and see. THOS. M. SHEA, Prop. Franklin St Next to Palace Cafe SOUND ADVICE. cen protect your car and smootnly by uetak Jelvet Shock b safbera. Wor acerptiand dotredt e Jice, phone or mail your order to o distributor, A.’ P. Peterso Ribeny Ave, Hartiora, Conne "3ekod Plants. he Think of i an your Clock or. Watch refusss o e e Pmptl-e’o‘l'lodn service 128 WASHINGTON STREET ‘wanted; government 3 376 month; write immedi- ons_ obtainable. -Local managers, ‘surrounding active ambitious; must have sxecutive abllity o promote new business snd menage own corps o l’. WI!«;!M.:", ANTED—] New London, drulP.O. “wuvls::—.u:uqn- fraftury “:n old silver; icgs pal ruckner, Praniiin S5 Teb 117-3: mnm Laurel Hill A the water; also sutomobile parties accommodated.” Phone 785. ot VARTED—To Buy sows “and o sl kinds; Mnnr sl o= oV caiv K. Giau- Colctioater, Conn: un-ln Advertising _ soliei luuuuo- sstablished €% Tears Wrle 3;Earkburst, New Haven, Conn, for wu’l'ln—ruu uning. A. G. Gor- don, 298 Prospect Bt. City. Tel s¥i-3. FOR SALE FOR SALE 298 THAMES STREET Two Tenement House with 5 rooms each in excellent condition and on trolley line with 3 acres of good tillable land, barn and henhouses. Good opportunity for some ome ‘wishing to keep cow and do a poul- try business or market gardening. FRANCIS D. DONOHUE, Central Building Nerwich, Conn. Two New Bungalows FOR SALE Seven rooms and bath each, every modern improvement. ~You may rent one of them for $32 monthly. Other good rentals from $15 to $30 per month. ARCHA W. cCoOIT, The Mutual Bensfit Life Agency 63 Broadway one 1334 FOR SALE OR RENT Three minutes’ walk from Peck's corner two new Cottages with garage and all modern improvements, For particulars inquire of JOHN A. MORAN, Real Estate Broker Franklin Square, Norwich For Sale FINE NEW BUNGALOW, Six Room All Modern Price $4,000 A Rare Opportunity JAMES L. CASE 37 Shetucket St., Norwich, Conn. $1,800. wifl buy an almost new Bungalow on Fisher’s Island, on lot 50x150 feet, in- cluding furniture, power boat and row boat.. Fine water in house by pump and driven well. E. A. PRENTICE Phone 300 86 Cliff Street SUMMER RESORTS. 4, Colchester. KING’S REST_Grot Conn., boating. hn.h!n% Romé oakiug’ terms 313 D in_room. $18. Ackerman. LOST AND FOUND ch_of keys. Finder re R Store and recelv: vita STRAY HEIFER — White and red; Lande bu turn to Smith’ reward. o DlameRiss. of any Sowast Rates of interest. An ‘established firm to deal TERAL SALE—A tew thoroughbred White ‘Wyandotte breedl: ens, Indian Runner_ducks. Miss Marjorie 1nnfws ree miles a “scnools R. F. .D. 4. Jyisd of grass i o Yantic. house. R. E. Bwaln, FOR SALE—Fift; lots to sult. A. T. Hoxle, P. iy19d Dawley. Jy1id e cyiin n ‘price FOR SALE_Tour home Fore Bl Road orwloh. e e o fec inning l’l rea- oondi FOR '0 §ood express or furniture wagons, one nearly new; one Bronnell covered ambulance with all in good condition, and Wik pole or In- iy17d quire of Shea & B «ru'&.'. ohnle nockln e agominal beits. T * & Gagood Co. "l{: L B pedigree ntle in_ every way. For. tiuiars fnquir one’ 1027 portable motor; od on 815 nstantly; for ’tuu by 8. J. &: Bath Bt fyia FOR SALE — Three-room portable Kenyon house In d _con: amom price reasonable. Write Mrs. H, Fried- mann, Musicolony, Westeriy, %X FOR SALE—Queen Gentry, a_han. some brown mare, 5 years old, will be s0ld_reasonable, 15 taken at once. Tel Inquire P. A. Barry, Cigar Mfr., 43 Reynolds St. Jyied HORSE FOR SALE—A good driver, for lady or kentleman, weighs about 1200. Telephone 221-12: yisd FOR SALE—Five acres of grass and three of oats standing, on Peckham farm, Laurel Hill. James E. DeWolf, Trading Cove. Iyl4d FOR SALE—Underwood typewrite model ¢, in cxcelient Sonarden: pei low for cash. Address Underwood, Box 39, Norwich Bulletin. Iyisa STOCKED poultry farm, 8% miles out near village, fine 7-room cottage, nice shade, good barn, nine poultry houses, 30 acres. Fruit, wood, nice stream. Half acre potatoes, other crops, 550 famous Tom Baron strain White Leghorns, horse, wagons, tools, etc., $2,200, rea. sonable terms. Tryon's Agency, Willi- mantic, Ct. yizd FOR LE—At a bargain, one new Metz xnnlhou!. N. Eugene Smith 90 Main St Iyda torey 920 uun?;. to qulck for liing, llcknlll. Mck Box 5, Oneco, Conn. FOR SALE—At W. 5, Brvwn ard Hill (Wauregan) farm, one two- row corn.planter, new 1915, through using, Wili"sell low or exchange tor stocki als hayforks side ~dslivery rakes, dump-rakes, mowe: iders, Crushed rock by the ton of carioad: Let me know your wants and 1 will try to please you. Brown. Write or Daslelson or Wauregan, Conn. FOR SALEReo touring car, In first class condition, newly nted and gverhauled: v will sel cnup Ht°So1d at dress Cl: Mountain St. Willimantic, Ct. Te us-x. may! 54 1AM BUYING 'muuzr Anyons Baving o5 postal o one ha a.-iu..o rs Colsbinie a urd. A Rers T30 B | 646-12, TH e ] land E30" ¢h (ieguiar Dusiness sise enveiopes, neatly printed. (or Si each’ 33.00. .Sena for samples ~an prices for any Printing you are in B o.fhe Bulletia Company, Norwicn, Neponset Shingles kinds of Masons’ Building Materials for sale by Peck, McWilliams & Co. P P 13 e R e R FOR SALE A BEAUTIFUL 8 ROOM COTTAGE Fully furnilhed, well located on Fisher’s Island. Can have .nhglnrgunlf.aflutmwe. or particulars see JOHNA.MORAN Real Estate Investment Broker NORWICH, CONN. Groton Long Point 1 bave for sale & new cottage, just Selng bullt, one of the best, your own private beach, electric lights, water, bath and all that makes life worth living. Also several of the best lots on the Point. Also two of | the best lots &t Glenwood Park, Ocean Beach. Inquire of JOHN CAMPBELL, 2§ Liberty St, Westerly, R. L, or JOHMN A. MORAN, Real Estate Broker, Norwich, Conn.; also JAS. J. SMITH, agent Groton Long Point Land Co., 50 State St. New London, Conn. n-.-t-:-ln; PR e e i ST R ol 5) 55 RENT—Upper bath, hot_and coid Apply C. F. Whitney, aysd £2 55’ six_ rooms, gas, ter, 11 Eim St iorwich Bulietin. ABent, Micnards Buiiding, 31 Main St maylod FOR RENT—Goiden Spur, bungalow, 5 rooms, iurnisned, season, running water, -hclnc‘ b veran: ow, batn boa: lng, ng pa- viiion. Stepien scaulién, New Lun- TO RENT—Rooms for light house- Keeping. inquire 8. G. Congaocn, 3 Mc- Kiniey Ave. Jesa TO MKNT—On Washington street, upper tonement of Six re oot and lower tenement of nve inquire of Bradiord, Hookbinder, 108 Broadway. may. 6 Two desirabl, fices in Central bullding; ais0 two nice- ly furnished rooms, suitable for man and wite or for single genteman. J. B. Lucas. aprild STORAGE ROO! ning, 52 broadway. TO IKNT—Furnished yeniences ior nousekeeping VURNISUZD ROOM-— Ceatraily io- caied Emma Morse, 18 Union St FURN] ‘modern con. HED ROOMS,all veniences, 35 Union st Fhone 106 FOR RENT oR T, room, cottage at Pleassnt oo™t dectrie: nght 204 bathing houses, [or the balance of July and from Aug. 28 to Sept. 30; three minutes’ walk Ifom station, ~ocean front. Inquire LOUIS WUNDERLICK, No. 4, Box 28, Norwich, or Iyl4d FOR RENT Stores and Offices in new Tha: Building, Franklin Square. Fire- proof, of elevator service, jani- tor. Everything up-to-date. Apply to WILLIAM F. HILL, Agent, Room 108. R F. D. Tel. 61 TO RENT QUONOCHONTAUG—Ten-room cot- tage. 3 acres land, 1000 feet from Ocean and Salt Pond; sown Jower and vegetable gardens: hardwood floors, plumbing and heat. Rental $350. Others $200 to $4000. Send for booklet. FRANK W. COY, ‘Vesterly, R. I. TO RENT 8IX-ROOM TENEMENT Heat Furnished. Modern. Price $16 JAMES L. CASE Rental Department 37 Shetucket St, Norwich, Conn. FOR SALE WATCH HILL BUSINESS For Sale A store on leased land (long term lease), with all fixtures, doing & £00d business; for sale at & Cottage at Pleasant View. A Jo;room cottage at Pleasant View, lot 50 by 200. This place is centrally located, 5-minute walk to trolley and postoffice, and the price is very low. Inquire about it. A Lot at Grotom Long Point. pelogated on the water side, sandy not far from board walk. Boice” 1F takon tnis monu: o only $690. A bargain. Cotta around it Farms. Cholce of 400—prices from $275 to $20,000. Send for catalogue, WILLIAM A. WILCOX, Real Estate Broker, No. 41 West Broad St., Rooms 1 and 2, Westerly, R. L Phone No. 365 FOR SALE Seven Room Coitage House Electrio lights, heat, set- tubs, large lot, in fine locatjon. Price $3,300 N. TARRANT & CO. 117 Main Strest, Norwich FOR SALE Fine Residential Property, No. 59 McKinley Avenue, containing eleven rooms and bath, and ail modern conveniences. Interior finely finished in beautiful hard wood. For full information, ask THOMAS H. BECKLEY, Fire Insurance and Real Estats May Building 278 Main St. 724—Phones—474-: - I eldest mfir Y Dflfl" Smong the rute half-epent, m pained bewildermeat* “And 1" another spoke Baw i Bt 5 Fectle glow, ‘shell-torn e, Heaped with the harvest of the dead” —Gml‘wth the Chicage 1t looked to me M 'y common day, 1 slouded. aul and Eray: id not dream. I did not guess 35" Fappiness! Swittly she came and sudden near me nnn: Ha in gay and froMe She looked from out a face once known and dear. Unseen for many s yea: A look and smile T aned to know My friend tmd come and called me by my Our hands m ‘clasped, and friendship the same. —Elizabeth French. HUMOR OF THE DAY “Why is Miss Oldgirl marrying that awful rounder? He's sure to lead a double life.” “Evidently she's fired of s single one.”—Hobart Heral “Does young Jl'my come by his RS Taother was & Grasd 0p- era singer and bis father was a left- handed pitcher.”"—Puck. He—Now that we are soom to be married, dear, how much money shall you want to spend? She—Oh, Freddie. how much money is there in’ the world?—Florids Times- nion. He—Then you are not interested in my welfare? but if the two syllables d T'd not only be in- enthusiatic. — Boston long ago’ “Dad, what s meant by carrying to Newcastle?” “It's a figure speech, my boy. Lik trying to tell something to a grad ating class that they don't know."— Pittsburgh Post. From a physical point of view,” remarked the parlor philosopher, “we are much inferior to prehistoric man." “Well, for my part, I would rather be inferior than prehistoric,” replied the mere man—Judge. iPeople sy you have had relations with the trust: “I have” replied Senator Sorghum. “And 1 may as well eay in complete candor that none of them were Door relations, either."—Washington Star. Detective (2 A. M.)—Hey, yousel Wotcher hanging around this .‘ere front door fer? Supposed Burglar—I'm waiti the lady inside to git asleep. married—Philadelphia Bulletin, ;The One With the Eyeglass—I went into @ restaurant and sald; “What have you for dinner “Everything,” said the waliter, “Bring it in” of bash,” yelled the for e're Making the geography lessons as initeresting as possible, the teacher asked the name of one of our Allles. ‘France,” cried one little boy. ow name a town in France.” returned the youngster—Tit-Bits. THE KALEIDOSCOPE A jitney service is planned for Ma- nila by a $50,000 corporation proposed by Leonard C. Moore. More than 400 conventions are echeduled to meet in San Francisco during the exposition. Rubber imported into Great Britain during December, 1913, totaled 13,073, 800 pounds, and Over 2,000 mosques are provided for worship. =y Germany averages oné practicing physician for each 2,000 fnhabitants, the proportion being higher in some of the cities end lower in the yural districts. ‘Wild pigeons were known to be the most voracious eaters of the animal kingdom in proportion to their size. One consumed 1,000 grains of wheat in a day. The lakes of oil in the Western oil flelds prove death traps to the ducks which” alight on them under the im: pression that it is water. The birds rarely escape. Consul Lorin ‘A. Lathrop reports that a weldless tube company which Sw: ‘Wales oning consumers of ‘the steins’ con- tents. o necanfly. for 3:0 first time {n more