Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 6, 1915, Page 4

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& . before ships can be allowed to pass. The Bulletin has the largest circulation of any paper in East- ‘ern Connecticut and from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is dalivered _ to over 3,000 of ths 4,053 houses in Norwich, and read by threo per cent. of the peop! Windham it is ¢ l.vered to over . 900 houses, in Putnam and Danieleon to over 1,100 and all of these places it is consid- ered the local daily. Eastern Connecticut has forty= riine towns, ons hundred and sixty-five postofiice districts, and cixtv pural free delivery routes. The Bulletin Is sold In every town - - on all of the R. F. D. routes in Eastern Connectlout. _ CIRCULATION 1801, average 1905, average something very from this country|important to attend to and I can't i the|stay but the very littlest bit of ap- ut indicating that taken seriously Tur TARDY, BUT NOT TOO LATE. can slaughter said, “because I've got minute. “A lttle bit of a minut than no minuté,’ neighbor cheerily, apologized the couldn’t just thek bocanser—ehe Save & little squeal ang clapped her hands over her mouth. Then she suddenly removed them, twisted her mouth into The conference at ‘Washington be- | s°Viit] jittle button and fastened a tween the president, the secretary of | Dair of large, serious eyes on . her the navy and the chamirman of the|friend’s face. a secret,” she announced sol- for super battle-cruisers, bigger, faster and more heavily armed than any warship now afloat, togethér With | eq¢ 2 dreadnsughts, - submarines and aero- planes indicates that there has been | ously. a democratic awakening. The necessity the earnest little countenance. “Is it she ventured, ‘something to The small neighbor giggled raptur- she said emphatically, “you “N, of providing that which the navy has|couldu’t eat it, mot if you lived a mil- long lacked and which it has been|lion years. There couldn't anybody urged been n congress to authorize ognized. can be advanced today. ‘While this country has always taken pride in its navy and its provision for the defense of the mation, democratic influence has nevertheless been exert- ed in this and the past administration to prevent adequate preparation. The ‘war in Burope has®been an eye open- er in many respects to those who have previously taken such a position and the result is a right about face which amounts to an admission of the lack of wisdom in their previous action. There is no good reason why battle cruisers should not now be rumbered among the naval vessels or at least under way Instead of being projected in the future, but the lesson in this case is much ifke that which surrounds ‘The country must go with- out what it needs while those in pow- er are going through the experience of having their theories disproved the tariff. throligh personal experience. S - SAFEGUARD FOR AMERICAN BUS- INESS, There is a disposition to look upon the successful outcome of the Anslo- French loan as an expression of sym- pathy with the cause of the allies. As & matter of fact it is nothing of the kind. The participation of this coun- try in that loan was for a different yeason and the fact that this record- breaking foreign loan, made in a short time under existing -conditions, was put through was due to the bearing ‘which it has upon business in this cotintry. ‘Without such a loan, all of which money 1s to remain in this country, the business which this country s do- with the nations of Europe now ‘war and which it has a perfect right o engage in wopld show a tremen- dous falling off. ' It was necessary to ‘gstablish credit in this country which would take care of future business and it is the loan which is going to do_this very thing. The Industries Which are concerned in the supplying of the wants of these European nations which can do business with us is not confined to the manufacturers of mu- nitions of war. There is a big increase in the demand on this country for foodstuffs and the usual products of peace which those countries require for supplying every day demands. The floating of the loan means that Anglo-French demands will continue to be filled and it gives the assurance o/ the business houses of this coun- try that the goods will be paid for. ‘That furnishes the stable basis which is required and shunts to one side the uncertainty which was threatened. The ~ interests of this country have been safeguarded. THE CANAL SLIDES. Never has it been believed that the trouble from the slides in the Cul bra cut at the Paname canal was en- tirely overcome! Tremendous efforts have been made to cut away the hills at that point o that the pressure on :>!u,. unstable embankments would be Telieved, but it has been fully recog- nized that a continuous fight must be ‘made for a long time to keep the wa- terway open and safe for steamship travel at that poin Z Thus while the pfesent slide is re- ported to be the worst that has oc- rcurred since the opening it is no more _than was o be expected in the natural 3 of events and simply goes to show that despite the large amount of work that has been done it was not sufficient to hold back the rock and earth which lack a firm foundation . and are steadily secking a lovel. It is a most unfortunate holdup of interoceanic travel and it is felt all the more severely because steamshipg had become accustomed to the con- venience which it affords and arranged their sailings and routes accordingly, but with the channel blocked there is nothing to do but to remove the ob- struction as fast as possible. During the month of September there was taken out a million or mare cubic yards of earth and when it is stated that a _ like amount remains to be dredged that point it is readily understood that the réquest for the closing of the canal until the first of November is no more - than what might be expected. It like- makes more uncertain the time PROTESTING TO TURKEY. ‘Though there is a limit to what fis country can do in the way of] Ak CARELESSLY ADDRESSED MAIL. From the amount of badly and in- correctly addressed mail matter re- ceived by each individual, to say noth- ing of the quantity of it which 15 de- livered by the postal authorities every day 'after much investigation, it can be appreciated that.there 15 a big opportunity for the exercise of more Not only would it _relleve greatly the task of post- office employes, but it would insure mail matter and add an important element of surety when it comes to the mat- ter of delivery. The weekly list of advertised letters shows how much de- lay is caused by negligence and care- although that does not be- gin to represent the amount of work that is done by postoffice employes in figuring out addresses and getting the letters where: they belong though the wrong address as o street or city and’even Wwromg nams s written on care in this direction. the quicker transportation of Iessness, the envelope. It is estimated out In Chicago that 43 per cent. of the mail handled by that office is incorrectly addressed and that the additional cost of handling it for that very reason amount$ to an average of $85.000 a month or a million dollars a year. There appears to be little excuse for such careless- ness for though that percentage of errors may include a lot of inconse- quential mistakes, employes of Uncle Sam ‘are not supposed to be ~ mind readers any more than other people little more thought, time and care by the indi- viduel would overcome much bother | and expense. Carelessness in what may and the exertion of a seem to be small things has such firm grip upon humanity that too much attention cannot be given to break- ing the habit. EDITORIAL NOTES. « It is time for someone to-attribute the canal landslides to republican in- fluence. The man on the corner says: In the matter of wishing few people are con- servative. . Those who reply upon speculation for getting rich quick are as liable to get burned now as fatally as at any other time. From the way in which the world's champlonship winner is being doped out it seems a waste of time to play the games. It is strange that Bryan's booking agency hasn’t received a rush order for the colonel and his peace lecture from the Balkans. Just as soon as the wireless tele- phone is put into more general use Pike's Peak can anticipate a corner on neighborhood happenings. ing about the atrocities in Belgium. Dr. Dumba says he would like to ex- Dress himself on his departure from ‘| America, but refrains. He probably appreciates the regret felt here over his leaving. War loans and appropriations are reaching staggering amounts, but they may soon be outdistanced by the ever- | Wacht am Rhein. has eat it, not daddy, It is not toq late, but it is nevertheless tardy action. It was sought at the last session and the arguments which were presented there were as strong as those which Possibly Turkey will direct an in- quiry to Germany in reply to its pro- test on the Armenian slaughter ssk- nor mother, nor grandmother, because it ain't to eat, you kno “Is it something to wear?" queried the grownup neighbor. “No,” replied the small. nelghbor. She cocked her head on one side and regarded the other for a moment si- lently. “I'll_help you just a little bit,” she said finally. “It's got—now—it's got wheels to it “Wheels,” considered the grownup neighbor, resting her forefinger on her chin with an air of deep reflection. “Now, if you had a baby at your house, T'd think it was a baby carriage, but as you haven't any baby, just a cat, and he wouldn't stay in it a minute— I dom't suppose—give me another hint” she begged. The small neighbor's eves twinkled. “Well,” she agreed, “Tll tell you an- other hint. It's got a good seat in it.” “Now I know,” cried the grownup neighbor triumphantly. “I had a feel ing all the time that it was a—wheel barrow.” The crudeness of this suggestion was too much for the small neighbor’s Ti- sibilities, and she laughed until she very nearly fell ‘Off her caalr. “Oh,” ‘she cried, “I think you're the funniest guesser I ever saw. You don’t guess anywhere near to a thous- and miles from it. You'll have to start out all over again.” ““Needs must, I suppose,” sighed the grownup neighobr. “Is it something alive?” The small neighbor considered this for a moment. Then she nodded. of a is better. " sald the grownup “and you haven't “If it's alive T it mzma' the grownbp nelgh ly. This alfo was an exquisite jest. The small neighbor ecstatically, Then her-face clouded sifghtly. " she admitted, ‘Oh, can it? What does it drink — milk 7 3 “Not, not milk, ever. And I can't tell you what it does drink because then yowd guess right in & minute” e grownup neighl sighed ‘Can it talk?” she asked appealing- " said the smail neigh- . “And it's got & an stum- By this time she was whirl- ing like a dancing dervish. “Tll give you just one more guess, and then you're out. Now, one, two, three, four! Guess quick!” S “Oh, T'm so nmervous” cried the grownup nelghbor. “I don't know, but 1 think, maybe it's a kitten, or—a pig —or—" The small neighbor shrieked with delight.| “Oh, you've guessed ‘em all up,” she screamed. “You won't ever guess right i all this whole world, You get cold- er and colder and colder, and don’t come anywhere near, o I'll have to tell you. It's a—a—nottermobile, and Jou'rs soing to have the very first ride n 1t” She flung herself violently into the { grownup nelghbor's arms and almost | exploded with Jjoy. After the first | paroxysm was over she drew herself | slightly away and fixed a more or less conscience stricken gaze upon her | friend’s face. | _“Now,” she sald slowly, “do you | think—now—maybe it wasn't playing | fair for me to say it had feet and & head and a stummick? You know it really has a kind of a sticking out thing in front that looks kind of like a head, don't it? And wheels are kind jof feet, I think, don’t you? And if it can’t really talk like it was a person, it can holler and tell you to get out of ithe way, so that It’s kind of like talking. Of course, 1 didn’t mean to | tell you a fib—" |, The grownup neighbor hugged her. “I think your words and actions have been entirely honorable,” she assured | her. | “I'm glad you think so,” eighed the small neighbor with relief. “Because if T said just bow it could eat and talk and everything you couldn’t have helped guessing right away, and hon- | est to truly, I didn’t want you to guess. T wanted to tell you all my own self.” —Chicago News. Celebrations in Germany. The war has for the time being united Germany into one solid body, but this unity does not alter the fact that the Prussians are vastly different from the Saxons and the Saxons dif- ferent from the Bavarians. 1f chance takes one from Beriin to Munich just as a great victory is being celebrated, for instarice, the full significance of the difference 1s apparent. The fall of Warsaw ands, Ivangorod was announced in Munich on Thurs- day, Auguet 4, and in half an hour every street in the Bavarian capital was brilliant with the German, Aus- trian, Hungarian and Turkish = flags, and with the colors of the various German states, the blue and white of Bavaria predominating. That is aproximately all any other city in Germany did, partly because the rest of Germany is rather intensely practical and not given to wasting time over celebrations. But the Ba- varian nature had to have more than colored flags for an outlet. Not only its intense patriotism but its deeply religious side had to display itself. Accordingly, the mext evening, the majestic Koenigsplatz, flanked by im- posing buildings and containing stand- ing room for over a hundred thousand persons, was filled'to overflowing with a devout band. Punctually, as all things German are, a great military band flared forth from the steps of the art exposition building—but the air was not a patri- otic song, it was an old hymn. Over- head in the twilight hummed six war aeroplanes. The vast crowd bared its head, and took up the words of the hymn, “Great God, we praise Thee.” The music rose and swelled until it could be heard in every part of Munich. The throng, uplifted and all but carried away by the fervor of its feeling, also sang the Te Deum. Still the aeroplanes wheel- ed above, the setting sun glinting on the Jower sides of the planes and luminating the sinister iron crosse: a ‘mark. The opening of the celebration with hymns was not accidental: it was typical of Bavaria. Religious feeling and epirit took and take precedence even over an intense patriotism. The Bavarian soldlers in Catholic North- ern France have more nearly bridged the gulf between themselves and the native population ly their plety than any other group of life at home. For a brief moment the Oberbuerg- ermelster or first mayor of Munich spoke to his fellow citizen in a voice at rang clear across the huge square. At his command a “Hoch” that rent the air went up 3 times repeated, to the honor of Emperor Willlam, King Ludwig and Emperor Francis Josepi. The band swung in again at just the right moment, and the crowd, hats waving, exhuberant with enthusiasm, sang the Bavarian national anthem, “Hall to our King, Hail” The tune is that of America, and the German “Hall dir im Siegerkranz”, impressive exactly in the ratio of the number singing. The German national hymn, “Deutschland, Deutschland ueber al- les” came next| followed by “Die And_then the increasing sums set forth /in breach |crowd concluded its celebration with of promise suits. — i Even ‘beforo the possibility of large increase M population there was There can’ be little surprise that|Dbeen at the T Switzerland moves more forces to the border inasmuch as it has just been an old-fashioned song of thanksgiving. ‘The songs over, that portion of the a|crowd that could, went slowly to the patiently beneath the balcony urtil he and spoke to them. unich is possibly the only German city that has really celebrated a not- victory in such a way. Certainl; the only one that to any degree Bas injeeted the religious element in- o its greeting of victory. The expla- natjon can lie only in the essential difference in_the an character— because, as & Munich official quaintly put it, “the sky looks a Ifttle bluer to us Bavarlans than to other Germans.” Italians Find Fortified Huts. The Italian troops have had eome 2 special De Lausanne, of Switzerland, who has says: “They have found at regular,in. tervals from the Stelvio Pass to_the Adamello Glacier, a distance of about sixty miles, a series of ‘huts’ for lodg- ing Alpine tourists on and near the peaks. Thege huts' have twrmed out STORIES OF THE WAR that each carried as a dlaunsumnnh] palace of old King Ludwig and walted | &, to be bullt on cement floors and the walls of the huts lined with sheets of steel sufficlently thick to turn bullets. Each ‘hut’ has accommodations for 20 persons. It is extremely rare to find 20 Alpinists together.in the high re- gions, but neither the size of the huts nor their number seemed to have at- tracted suspicion because few Italian Alpiaists ever go into that part of the Tyrol. Each of these armored lodg- ings is defended by machine guns. The approaches are so aMficult and exposed that it would seem as though a couple of machine guns and a dozen men could hold a hut against a regi- ment, but the Itallans have found ways of overcoming them. Where there are glaciers the Alpinists cut narrow trenches in the ice and gradually work their wAy up, protected from rifle and machine gun’ fire, to where they can rush a hut” Winter snows are already falling in these high regions and it is not un- likely that both sides will be reduced to inaction during the hard winter in the Tyrol, but military operations will continue ‘in the low countries at the head of the Adriatic and perhaps far- ther south should the Italians send an expeditionary force across the Adri. atic to operate below Trieste. - her Pensions Proposed. Higher pensions for disabled officers of the army and navy and for their widows, orphans and dependents have been proposed by a British Parliamen. tary committee of which Bonar Law i chairman. But even this falls far be- low the scale granted in the United States. Subalterns would receive under the mew arrangement 3750 a year when completely disabled, with an addi- tional $50 for each’ year of service in excess of 15 years up to a maxi- mum of $1,250. An officer or rank corresponding to major in the army would get a minimum or $865 if parti. ally disabled, and $1,000 if totally dis. abled. For Lieut-Colonels and navy commanders the minimum for 1 disablement is put at $1,000 and’ an addition to $250 to their ordinary pen- sions if entirely disabled. The widows and dependents of sub- alterns have a graduate scale pro- posed for them, with $500 a year in the case the officer is killed in action, 3375 if he dles of disease contracted on ac- tive service and $230 in the case of other injuries or diseases. It is proposed in addition to make educational grants in special cases for the education of officers’ children. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Medical Supervision of the Schools. Mr. Editor: I do not view the medi- cal supervision of the schools through Superintendent Graham’s spectacles, or colored spectacles of any kind, since we have had it demonstrated in our family and we have the vic- tim. I have a niece living in an up-to- date state where children have gone to school in their usual health and been brought home dead because they dtd not recover from an operation of which their paremts had not been ad- vised. It was a simple dental o] eration, and the dead boy may have been just one in 10,000, but one in ten million is too much for us if that hoy ours. My niece has an adopted son, about 14 years oflnwho'nluunm:-al); cally instructed schools. Bix y The War a Year Ago Today Oct. 6, 1914, Desperate fighting on the Oise. Allies gained at Solssons. German column was at Lille, Germans claimed vistories near Suwalki and Augustowo. R tio ussian foroes from Baitie forsod e S e imed vietory st Uzsok ‘wero b A o e e i French laid mines in the Adriatic, German prisoners in France sen- tenced to die for loting, through ‘Wworry, or other causes, ha this reliable lef in eat found re- Mi-o-na comes in tablet form and is sold in a metal box de- medicine in the pocket or: is pleasant to take, gives a: and showld help any of how long a standing. ‘successtul 0. will in future sell Mi-o-na under a positive guaran. tee to refund the money If it should | world. has been 8o unif The Leé & Osgood not prove entirely other dyspepsia medicine ever had a|ever direction, tage of cures ®o|ing. large eno satistactory. purse. It uick relief, no matter No balmier here than anywhere eise In the o completery eriady- Its beauty is an intimate beauty, “The scenery percen that it could be sold in this manner.| with which the stranger is soon upon A guarantee like this speaks volumes | easy terms, not the stand-offish, cold for the merit of the remedy. There is no time like the present to|is a gem of white houses, eet into the do a thi any one best time to begin curing it. ago notice was given he could not go to school any more unless his adenoids were removed. to recovery tamily not he done before h The medical supervisor w: ed and before he was 11'notice was served on the foster parents that hi must be operated or for the remov of adenolds or he could not go It was no easy matter get him excused and back into school upon the advice of the first physician. The little fellow then had scee develop back of the ear and he school. The family submitted the cferation, and the boy upon returned to reon who performed the op- eration told this lad's foster parents the boy would have to be operated on once more for adenoids, but it should school. e was 13. had another surgical operation which the skull had to be opened in order to relieve the pressure of the inflammed section and the puss, and it was some time before they could tell whether he would re- He finally got well and cover. turned to school afain. Then came the order for the moval of hie ‘adenoids again—a sur- Speration or no schooling—and ical odut of school he went to avol surgeon’s knife for the third time. This Is a true picture of what hap- pened to one bright lad who is not as if the poor people of Norwich desire to in- augurate such a system they have a bright now as he perfect right to. If this boy had been a doctor's son, or a superintendent's son, or a wealthy son, ‘there would have been no to have compelled three sur- was 14 man’s attempt zical operations years old. It is up to vou voters of Norwich to upon a subject AMOS WALTON. act intelligently this kind. Norwich, Oct. 5, 19 before was, and he 15. chang- to get rid of that ought to be done. If|dark green moun! dyspepsia, today is the The to to ab- in re- re- the ot THE WAR By National Geographic Socicty “Jalta, the Newport of Russia, which even such favored resions of the world as the garden lands of Califor- nia and the Riviera must yield when compared, stronghold of society utterly eclipsed by war, a lonely, unvisited little vil- lage whose prestige and fame have de- parted over night, a Newport unten- anted, forgotten by the press and by climates are all the people, who, eagerly read about ail the social splen. dors there,” begin: given out by the National Geographic “Jalta, normally, would just be entering upon the helght of its sea- most months of the vear, had not a world Monte Society. son, its gayest, war closed it, ‘toget Carlo, Karlsbad, Inte: of other places of “good tons and amusement low in their course. “Jalta is a beautiful place built on the shelf of a mountain bathes waters to be found coast of the Black Sea. This little sea- port, in the government of Taurida, on the 'southern coast oughly deserves the distinction of be- ing the vacation-home of celebrates. Behing it. and between it north, which shades are greenish-brown, of froms 2,500 to 3.0 the Mountals The tops are often covered in icy mist in Jalta and on its bay res est of spring weather. renheit. perior to that of N are not so opressively hot, less rain in autumn and in winter, the cool is less crisp in winter, and the eunshine of autumn PRIMER is tod in peace t! a statement important her with rlakon an whose in the biuest and mildest of all _around of Crimea, and solid mountain greens, Jere, into deeper and desper til at the bare summits they rise to heights These are the southern fringe of the Jalla 00 feet. s of these Snow Its climate is said to be su- Its summers there is ce. is sald to beauty The Imperial court, the statesmen, diplomats and members of the great Russian command, now carrying the intolerable burdens of the war, would be gathered there in times of quiet, and social Russia would fol- never falls in Jalta, which boasts an annual mean temperature of 56 degrees Fah- to imes, Just two cores toot the thor- the fall Save $5 to $10 by doing your own gry clesbing. Here is o simple and ive way to clean and brighten Children's ~coats, sults, = caps, woolen lawn, organdie and beauty of the major Alps. The town by steps to the upon which stand some of its most sumptuous vil- las. The hotels and pensions are mostly in/the lower town, the level which ep: just back of the beach and quay. Some of the homes higher upon the hillsides are the ificent | estates of the foremost of the Russian nobles. The present Tsar, his father and his grandfather, had palaces in Livadia, a near nelghbor of Jalta's. “There is no industry and little trade carried on by the people of the: village, who live almost entirely by catering’ to vacationists and regular | vistors. Smoke and soot do not de- face the picture, and even the rallroad does mot approach the town. The guests come by steamer from Sevasto- pol, Novorossisk, and Odessa. Living, of course, as befits a fashionable re- sort, is expensive. Hotels and boarding houses charge high, and the well-to- do Russian is generally a free spender. October and November are the first months of the year at Jalta, aithdugh people come to enjoy its beautles and | its climate throughout wall twelve months. Jalta ie not much sought by people outside of Russia, for the rea- son, perhaps, that it takes genera- tions to win the fame among distant people such as is that possessed by the German and Bohemian bath: Rivers and Tyrol. “Jalta has a population of 14,000. It is an afcient city, and is thought to have been a place of great importance in a remote past. The history of the place commences in the 12th century, when it was mentioned by the Arablan geographer, Ibn Edrizi. At one time, it belonged to the patriarchs of Con- stantinople. It began its career as a playground and recreation paradise for wealth and fashion in 1838, when it | was made the chief town of a district.” OTHER VIEW POINTS [-, “ONE Do you worry? Here is a recipe— | A sure cure. Write down each night a | list of the things you have worried about during the day. At the end of | 10 days count them up and you'll find | not one in 10 was real, and thereafter | and insistent enough to command con- sistent sup) you will figure every troublous inci- Qent as one of the nine not Worth wor- | rying about—Then you will have no| to the continuance of the spirit waich | the Yale News refiects from the under- New Haven Register. worries.—New Caanan Advertiser. Vincent Astor has taken an interest. in a fool-proof aeroplane which the scientists have a good deal of respect for because it is patterned largely af ider and which ha mischievous_winds. ing such an airship the lionaire seems to_hav deal of sense. There's nothing more fentific than nature, after all Waterbury Repubil In select young mil- been spasmodic and evanescent attempts to have some sort of military training at Yale in years past. They have failed, not because the policy of the university was in the least against them. but because of lack of support on the part of under- graduates. If there is a demand for such training now, and if it is general There have ¢ Ol;ildren Crf FOR FLETCHER'S IN ALL OUR NEIGHBORHOOD There Is Hardiy A Woman W’r/)_DouNotRebUpon Lydi.. E. Pinkham's Veg- etable Compouad. Princeton, IIL —“ I had inflammation, bard headaches in the back of my neck and & weakness all caused by female trouble, and I took Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound with such ex- cellent results that I am now feeling fine. Compoundand praise it to all. I shall be your J. F. JonnsoN, R. No. 4, Box 30, Prince- ton, Illinois. " Poland,N. Y.—*In my urse I certainly think am’ THUR. NOVEMBER 8, 8 P. M. m M Photoslsy, Fetire' S 5 Reels “THE TIGRESS™ 5 Reels Madame Olga P the Distinguished Russian A In Mer Most Powerful Dramatic Offering. Countless Thrills, Wonderfal Cast, Overwhelming Effects FORGOTTEN,’ e DANIEL SHOWS, 230, 7, 8.45 FROHMAN Presents DAVID BELASCO'S CELEBRATED STAGE SUCCESS ALL STAR CAST This is the Sensation of All the Largest Cities. Don’t Miss It. Exquisite Biograph Story of Love and Sacrifice AUDITORIU Mat. 10c; Eve. 1Cc and 20¢ “MAY BLOSSOM” A THRILLING DRAMA 14th EPISODE BROKEN COIN i PARAMOUNT TRAVELOGUE A Literary Pilgrimage in England OCTOBER 25, 8 P. ILLUSTRATED. NOVEMBER 1, 8 P. M. M. GEORGE S. WORCESTER The Picturesque Philippines Slater Hali Course POPULAR LECTURES OCTOBER 18, 4 P. M. WILLIAM LYON PHELPS, Ph. D, Yale ALFRED NOYES, L. H. D, Princeton Optimism in the Postry of the Future From Cairo to Peking Present Aspects of American Literature The Demand for Military Education A. Davis, 35 Broadway, on and after October 9. training. graduates. Mr. Garvin' rt, Yale will hav ture events will decl and reformatory tested and 16 years of service in the state of Connecticut in connection with prison ter the zanonia leaf which is a natural | Ought not to be ignored now that he been found to be | has retired to private life voluntarity. 50 shaped that it traveis steadily even | Mr. Garvin introduced many import- ant changes and improvements in the management of the State Prison. shown a great |can be truthfully said of him that he The C. S. Mer Distsi ibutors, such ticut has -bull mate skill. provement, but the credit of havh tution tional Wethersfield oldtime from principles of work mane treatment. with him in stimulating.—. Courler. It ew Haven inspected. W. H. P. FAUNCE, D. D, LL. D., Brown NOVEMBER 15,8 P. M. C. T. WINCHESTER, L. H. D, Wesleyan NOVEMBER 22, 8 P. M. ARTHUR T. HADLEY, LL. D, Yile Tickets for the entire course, §3.00 cach, on salc at store of George laid _securely the foundations upom which prison management in Connec- with such consum- Those who have followed him have continued in the line of im- r. Garvin _deserves g swung the insti- conven- punitiv VIKING SPARK PLUGS VIKING SPARK PLUGS are the result of many years’ experience, and are designed for cated heavy-duty motors. There is a VIKING PLUG for every type of Automobile, Motor-Boat, Motorcycle and Stationary Engine. Every plug carefully sick & Co. New Haven, Conn. SPLASHES WON'T HURT VALSPAR control to the modern principles of b He. retires. to pri. vate life with the best wishes of those who have at any time been associated work s0 untiring and Journal- Valspar is the only varnish that is fit for use in bath rooms. Experience of a Nurfe. Ordinary varnishes away and leave SPRING FLOWERING BULBS FOR FALL PLANTING Crocus, Tulips, Hyacinths and Narcissus The Household 74 Franklin Street . Telephone 5314 bare wood, if they are exposed to wetting. Valspar also is the only Varnish fit for use in the

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