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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, JANUARY 10, 1913 Norwich Quite tin Jjr YRS OLD. Subscription prioe, 12o a woekj 60o a month; $6.00 a y--- W , .7 Entered at the Fostoffice at Norwica, Conn, as second -class matter. Telephone Calls: Bulletin Business Office, 4SO. . . Bulletin Editorial Booms, 35-3. Bulletin Job Office, 35-G. Willimantio Office, Room 2, Murray Building. Telephone 210. Norwich, Friday, Jan. 10. 1913. me Circulation oi ' ilie Bulletin. The Bulletin has the lure" flr euatioa of any paper la Eastern Coaneeticut. and from three to tour i-intea laxcr than that ox U7 in Xorwich. It i tlellvcrert over 3,000 ut the 4,(K3 house in Nor wich, aail reatl by ninety-three per CCK.C of - tho people In Windham it in delivered, to over CO bouses, in Putnam and Sanieisoa to evci i,tOO, nnd in all it these places II is considered the local daily Eastern Connecticut aaa forty nine towns, one. hundred aad sixty five postofnee districts, and sixty rural free delivery routes. Ths Bulletin Is sold in every town and on all of the II. F. J. routes in Eastern Cennectieut. CiaCULATIOI. 1901. average . ...4VM3 5.920 8,508 JB05. anniKe January 4.... GRATUITIES AND GRAFT. If the general assembly refuses to avoid the newspaper graft then the newspapers better do bo. Tho Jour nal-Courier here goes on record. No graft need be offered here. Next. New Haven Journal-Courier. a The Bulletin readily endorses this sentiment as it has in the past, and it is one to which every newspaper in the state should lend its voice. That the press should encourage for themselves what they would be tha first to denounce In others is the height ef inconsistency, a situation which destroys influence and respect, and it imply needs tho courage on the part of every newspaper to say No! and mean it, to wipe out the practice which is not only discreditable to the recipients but likewise to the state. The newspaper men who do legisla tlvs work are under salary to one or piore newspapers and the idea that they should be paid by the state for Jalthful attention to their duties Is jrefleetian npon their employers, and is .as far from the proper basis of doing the state's work as it would be for the members of the general assembly to double their salary for giving their time ami attention to the work for which they are elected and paid. The amount Involved is small but the prin clple is wrong. Governor Baldwin does well when he expresses the hope that none will be voted at this session of the general assembly and declares that they seem forbidden by' the terms of our constitution. Graft and gratuitieaj should be eradicated at every oppor tunfty be they largo or small. STAMPS AND BOOKS. If is only ten days now that the parcels post has been in operation and it has hardly gotten into good working shape, but the picking; of flaws and the suggestions for changes are fre quently heard. There is apparently a dislike over the requirement that spe cial stamps be used for that service and the fact that books are not in cluded therein. The system was not inaugurated as a perfect system it be ing realized that it was far better to work out whatever defects there might be in such new service rather than hold tip the new department until it could be perfected, the possibility of which without actual operation is very slim. In the requirement of the special stamp it is simfTar to the successful ' systems of European countries, and , has this advantage to the government that it is thereby able to readily de termine the returns from that service for any period which it may desire. In making the venture it is desirable to know the returns and the expenses and through the sale of the stamps the returns therefrom is "known from day to day, which would be impossible if the regular stamps were used. ' As Vie service progresses it is going - to be possible to make many changes and improvements. The government required the use of the special de livery stamp for many years and it is only recently that the regular stamps could be substituted therefor. It cannot be expected that the reforms, will come within such a short period but there will be worked out many im provements which it was realized " be fore the start would be apt to develop, and the stamp and book question will doubtless get attention in time. END OF THE CORNER. Though practically everyone had reached the decision that the "corners" which are so often practiced to the great advantage of the few and even greater injury of the many, were il legal combinations and ought to be forbidden, that judgment has now been substantiated by the United States su preme court and promises . to. correct a practice the absence of which will operate, though perhaps unconsciously to the benefit of the consumer. Now that the Sherman law stands as an op ponent of this kind of speculation, it is to be hoped that it will operate to free the future from all fraudulent features of speculative trading espe cially concerning commodities which contribute so extensively to susten 509. Especially reprehensible from the viewpoint of the average man is "enmerine" of ' ftnv ' comtnoditv wji?h sends tne price soaring and hc!5s It there while those in the ring continus to Bqueeze from the public tha toll for their smartness in realiz ing and taking advantage of the help lessness of those who must come to their terms. ' It is welcome news that tha "corner" is against the law and a relief to the people to know that they have a weapon at their command which, is for their defense and acainat fraud uient ; manlpulator- SEEKING GREATER SAFETY. Better protection fqr the navigators is made apparent and its a&vecacy taken up with acUred interest follow ing disasters vfilch occur along the coast, and it. is Buch which is stirring tha people -of New. Jersey at tha pres ent time for a better system of lights further, out to sea for the warning of tlvo presence of the dangerous shoals alcTig tha coast. ... The grounding '-of a Cjoitster there has emphasised tho sit uation 'and while itbrings the Jareey coast immediately to the front .there are many other points which require the same kind of agitation. It' la not possible to provide too much guidance In a matter of this kind, as long as there is a distinctiveness about the signals which overcomes any chance of their being mistaken for each other. Beacon lights at night are the friends of the navigators, without which coasting navigation at night would be extremely perilous. Wliat is going to be a great aid to navigation at particularly dangerous points along the entire Atlantic coast is the movement for making the inland wafprwavs Availa.bla. anri ths mpftntnr I of this is most plainly given -by the J example of the Cape Cod canal, by the itov.ux which um ua.iij;eruuts auu buixl- ing shoals to be guarded against in rounding the cape are to-be overcome, a much shorter route provided and the greatest step for safety ever attempted in that locality. This will not do away with the necessity of the lights, but it is one instance of what is being done in the interest of safety and an in dication of the general movement irj that direction, the value of which is Immediately recognized. MUNSEY's" PROPOSITION. The proposition which Mr. Munsey makes for the getting together of the republicans and progressives shows that he realized the old saying that in union there is strength and that the progressives of which he was an important leader stand in a position which is of benefit only to the demo cratic party. His proposition of form ing a holding company for. the fak ing over -of the two parties gives a "big business" touch to the idea which he holds against which however there is a decided opposition. i In its consideration of . Mr. Munsey's proposition the New York Tribune says: " If Mr. Munsey had read President Taft's epeech at the Republican club dinner the other night he might have obtained an inkling of the causes which keep the republican and the progres sive organizations apart. If those two parties get together again it will only be after the present causes of es trangement have been removed, and not because someone takes out a char ter at Trenton and imposes harmony from above through the vote of the board of directors of a holding com pany. . 'The Munsey amalgamation project is interesting because of its naivete and unintended humor, but it could hardly survive the tests of 'the rule of reason,' and its own father will not recognize it after it has established a speaking acquaintance with the 'Big Stick' at Oyster Bay' However Mr. Munsey would have it accomplished, it is evident that he realizes the inconsistency of the pres ent stand of the party he represents. He is evidently paving the way for a return and in that direction there are many others inclined after taking a careful, straight 'in ' the face look at the situation as it has been and as it is. ; ". - . EDITORIAL NOTES. Happy thought for today: Though young, 1913 is already showing it has a fickle disposition. The frequent ocean disasters only serve to show that safety on the wa ter is far from perfected. There is a chance for a new rural song in California, entitled "When the frost Is on the lemon." Turkey is being submitted to the pressure which will soon make her look like the canned article. Chance goes to New York with a promise of probably $40,000 a year. Who wouldn't be a ball player? The fact that the economy .commis sion has been worth millions to the nation is a sufficient cause for its re tention. - Governor Baldwin has come out for woman's suffrage without any women hiking up the Connecticut to call on him at Hartford. Beat it, is what the parcels post and the express companies are saying to each other over delivery records recently established. Though Mr. Webster was success ful for speaker of the house, it is per fectly apparent that he isn't going to nave tne easiest job in the house. -That the men who "corner" the mar ket are liable to the law is a decision which causes every consumer to be hopeful of different conditions in the future. Servla's act in withdrawing her in sistence upon having a port on the Adriatic is one of the etrong evidences that she is willing to do her part for peace in the Balkans. Ireland fell short 43,000,000 bushels of potatoes last year.' When the crop of potatoes drops off nearly a third It is liable to have an appreciable ef fect upon the Irish stew. The pulling forward of CoL Roose velt's name as candidate for presi dent' from Lincoln, Neb., only perpet uates the standing joke that anyone proposed from that city gets little consideration. Thirty million loss to the fruit crop of California by heavy frost is a sting ing blow but if it is no more serious than the yearly damage reported to eastern peach crops there will be plenty oi tne rruit. It was conclusively demonstrated on the opening' day of the general assem bly that the division of the members is going to make it necessary for a full attendance, which is a good thing. Every man should be there and do his duty. ' A probe of the entire traffic situa tion of New England is underway by the federal Jury.. It will show that in the-matter of trolleys and steam ship lines the states never received better service, or had such aids for der velopment. Rhode- Island Is determined that the railroad, started by the Southern New England shall be completed, and pro posed legislation" in accomplish it is underway. Hereafter grants to rall- " r" lo De Tery eareruny tied up er. It fla, aur prUoas and sun If tha general sentimsnt is say la-jpiia our never ending tragedy, idieatlw' 4 vLove is lit- Aad life is baffling.' BULLETIN'S SPECIAL YALE LETTER Festivities of Junior "Prom" Week Joyfully , Anticipated Consideration of Coaching System For Football Team Selecting President Marriage the Season' Sensation Getting Tips on Eng. . lish Rowing, New Haven, Jan, 9. Starting Satur day with Tolstoi's Russian play, "Fruits of Culture," by the Yale Pra matic association, the festivities of Junior Prom, week wil continue unin terruptedly until dayligat, or some hours after, on next Wednesday morn ing. Then the promenade itself, the most brilliant of the whole series of gay social doings, will be over, .except for the early morning "teas" that cus tomarily follow it. For once the uni versity authorities nave decreed a two days recess during the height of tne Prom., due to the suggestion of the Student Council, and perhaps to tha fact that" no precedent will oe estao lished, for next year the new semester schedule will provide an opportune break in the curriculum. Athletic events, teas and receptions on Sunday and - Monday, the Glee club's concert Monday night, followed by the Senior dance at the Taft, and the Junior and Sophomore germans, are the functions that lead up to the Prom, on Tuesday night. For a month or more the man have been filling out the long pro grammes of 42 dances, and everything is being done to make the dance as big as ewer. t 1 1 Yale football revision brought a num ber ef former players to New Haven Saturday night to discuss possible im provements. Captain Henry H. Ketch am outlined the, four plans that he had in mind as to the betterment of the coaching system next fall. The first was to continue the present system of xhaving the head coach appointed from, the graduating senior class; the second, to have a permanent coach, such as Harvard has: the third, to se- iure Walter Camp as head coach, with a number of assisant coaches, includ ing a couple of men from the team of the preceding year. His fourth plan was to. have no head coach, but an advisory committee, with one man at its head, who should have charge of planning the campaign, and a field coach, who should also be on this same committee. The majority of the graduates present seemed to favor a football committee, with Walter Camp at the head, and it was suggested that this committee have the power to se lect a coach and then keep in close touch with him. There was much op position to tha idea of putting the team into the hands of young men who, it was claimed, assumed that they knew more football than the older coaches. Tribute was paid to Mr. Camp as the "greatest football strategist that we have today," and to help him as field coach Frank Hinckey and Foster San- ford were favored by respective sup porters. Walter Camp said he was a, great believer in Frank Hinckey. He thought , that whoever was chosen should have with him two or three more men tp be back to start the early work in the fall. We must get away from the feel ing that a man of four jor five years back doesn't know the game as it is played today. y Captain Ketcham was given power to appoint five men with whom to con fer and . arrive at a definite decision He had already appointed Walter Camp as his athletic advisor. President Hadley and prominent men on the faculty have expressed themselves as delighted over President Taft's acceptance of the Kent pro fessorship of law in the Academical department of the university. . All that th ex-president will have to do in the way of his purely official duties will be to lecture three times a week, in re turn for which he will receive the in come of the Kent endowment of J5,000. But it is also expected that he will devote part of his time to the Yale Law school in addition to the college professorship and naturally he will re ceive a fitting salary for his teaching in both departments of the university. ' Just where Professor Taft is to re side when he comes to New Haven in the spring has not been determined, but Colonel L M. Ullman of New Ha ven has been looking over various sites, chiefly, on. Hillhouse and Whit ney avenues, and the building formerly occupied by the Cheecey sanatorium is favorably regarded. One Hillhouse avenue owner asked an exorbitant price of one property, but another was found, of wliich the purchase price asked was said to be J7o,00Q. The sensation of the winter, one that even drove anticipation of the Prom. out of mind for a time, is tho marriage of "Lefty" Flynn, the big football star of last fall, to a chorus girl, - Uraea LeClaire of the Winter Garden, New York. - It was a trick of the very first order that "Lefty" worked on relatives and college friends, and the newspaper headlines Wednesday had a stunning effect on the undergraduates. For Flynn can return to Yale no more, and the football, eleven of 1913 will .be without the giant fullback, ana the wonderful punter who was tha cause of such lengthy, and admiring comment last season. The rules of the Sheffield Scientifio school,, where Flynn was a member of the junior class, prohibit an under graduate who is married. The same is true of the college, although in tha graduate departments there is no such ruling. So that instead of starring on Yale field another fall, and also of featuring in the spring athletics as well. Lefty will reside in New York with his act ress wife, whose . photographs show that she is pretty, in spite of life at the Winter Garden, and help out in the big contracting business of his) Love and the Sax Instinct. Does love spring from the sex in stinct, and is it but a modification of that? There are some who believe this. I cio not. And for the reason that I love many persons where the sex in stinct does not enter into -my feeling at all; aa, for Instance, my brother, mother, daughter or friend. This, however, -is true, that love has a powerful affinity for the sex motive, as alcohol has for water. The sex feeling strongly inspires and intensi fies love. And loyal love redeems pas sion from its degrading tendency and makes it pure and wholesome. .But they remain two distinct things. Love is the forthputting : of the forces of life. We do not know what life Is, but we do know that wherever it appears it manifests itself by loving. Life moves in widening circles; so wo see love out from tb- Individual to the family, the state, mankind, God. For love .of God is the awakening to Ufa of the. highest functioning of the soul. ... It Is but natural that life should express itself in its intensest. form in the creative instinct. This is at once the most essential and the most dan gerous form of love. - Without it ths race would perish.- It la the inspiration of our art, our literature and ail the more interesting elements of : our ca IDEAS OF A PLAIN MAN Hom'lHfl Flyxm father, Numerdua stories are circulat ing, but the real . explanation of his sudden step has not yet coma forth. ' Yale men are at Oxford to get tips on rowing, captain onowaon or the university crew and Head Coach W, Averell Harriman; - son of the lata railroad magnate, sailed from New York last Saturday for a trip of a month. They have gone with the plan ef. studying the stroke an methods of tne .English crews, and the Oxford style" will probably go at Yale and be seen on the Thames next spring if the visitors . are sumcJently impressed. They will return about February 1, about the time that indoor practice be gins, - . In 1S' Bob Cook introduced a stroke he had learned in England, and his victory, after a string of defeats, made his a famous name in Yale rowing an nals, so much so that he was called back after last year's overhauling to give some supervision to tha crews. In 1877 Harvard won against the Cook stroke, and then the professional coach was brought in, with a short, rapid stroke in contrast to the long, easy English pull. ; That won for a few years, but defeat came again in 1882 and 1883. The English method came back once more. in 1884, and. until 1889 Cook's sweeping stroke continued to bring Yale victories. Then, and since, modifications were introduced by John Kennedy that have had the results that all Yale men deplore. Once more, in the old time-tested way, coaches and oarsmen are hoping to regain, aft er the routs of recent years, tha su premacy of the Blue. Mental Hygiene has been diaoussed in its variouG important aspects at Woolsey hall this week at a confer ence and exhibit conducted .under tha direction of the national committee and the Connecticut Society for Mental Hygiene. Anjupng the more prominent members of the Connecticut society, which was founded four years ago, the first in America, for the purpose of conserving and improving the mental health and efficiency of the people of this country, are: President, Dr. George Blumer, dean of the Yale Med ical school; vice presidents, Costelio Lippitt of Norwich and ex-Gov. Frank B. Weeks, presidents respectively of the boards of trustees at the Norwich and Connecticut state hospitals; Dr. Henry M. Pollock, superintendent of the Norwich state hospital, is a mem ber of the executive committee. One of the object of the conference is to increase the membership in this state, which, now 600, must be brought up to at least 2,000 to keep pace with the de velopment of its opportunities for ser vice. In five months, a,st summer and fall, the social service department had a total number of interviews, letters written, and visits made from its head quarters in New Haven. President Hadley endorsed the con ference and the movement strongly on AH Trolleys Lead To Pictorial From now on you will publications, including THE FASHION BOOK IlJLUSTRAlWeICTOHtU.BWCW'p Pictorial Review Patterns never have the home made look. They fit right and lend to the wearer that style and distinction which distinguishes the Paris-made gown. Mrs. L. F. Williams, an expert demonstrator from New York, will take great pleasure in showing you why Pictorial Review Patterns are the latest- always two and three months ahead of others and how you can save money by using them. The most beautiful of all fashion quarterlies, illustrating about 1000 styles of the latest fashions, will be presented free of charge to the first 2000 ladies calling at our Pattern Department. V No matter what patterns you have been using up to now we recommend you to try one PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERN. Now on sale at Pattern Counter the opening lalght, when a suggestion was made by Dr. Stewart Paton of Princeton that Yale university should have a chair of -payeariatry, and- that its occupant should be director of a proposed psychiatry clinic to be erect ed on the grounds of the New Haven hospital at a cost of $100,000.- Plans for such a hospital for the study and cure of mental diseases have already been roughly made, and the-help of a public-spirited benefactor is the only thing needed to carry out the progres sive idea.; -r;-- .. -, Yale's' hockey schedule has been nr ransed as follows: January 1, ' Boston Tech. at New Haven; 18, Princeton at New Haven; 18, Toronto at New Haven; 18, Prince ton at New York; , 25, Cornell at New Haven,;.. . , ' . February 1, Harvard at Boston; 4, Columbia at New , Haven;' 8, . Dart mouth at New Haven; 12, Princeton at New York; 19,. Harvard at New Ha ven; .J2, . Harvard at Boston. The first game of the season, with Columbia in New York, was won 6-0 Wednesday night... ... OTHER VIEW POINTS Frank A. Munsey has come out with a. plan for consolidating the G. O. Jr". and . the Rooseveltlans. That unity was best was decided away bacK in the Civil war time, Mr. Munsey. Bridgeport Telegram. . Coal has fallen $ 1 a ton in this city. which will be. welcome, news to all users. The price for domestic sizes delivered, is to be $7.50 a ton. Time was, within the easy memory of many men, when that amount would, have bought two tons of coal for the con sumer. But we shall not see that time againi Bridgeport Standard. For many years Waterbury has tried in vain' to get a new armory appro priation and it looks as if finally its dream was about to be realized. How ever, have the citizens of Waterbury questioned themselves thoroughly on this point, or have they failed to note a- far more beneficial necessity to the Grandmother Used Darken Her Faded or Gray Hair Mixed With Sulphur It Makes Hair Soft, - Beautiful. Cures Dandruff. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its nat ural color dates back to grandmoth er's time. She kept her hair beauti fully darkenened, glossy and abund ant with a brew of Sage Tea and Sulphur. Whenever her hair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaked appearance this . simple mixture was applied with - wonderful effect. But the brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays skilled chemists do this better than ourselves. By asking at any drug store for the ready-to-use product called "Wyeth's leview P find these celebrated patterns and all the Pictorial Review the Quarterly Fashion Books, on sale at our store. There are several reasons why - we have selected Pictorial Review Patterns, ac knowledged in centres of fashion to be the most up-to-date. . With each pattern is furnished a patented Cutting Guide, showing how to lay out the pattern as scientifically and economi cally, as an expert cutter would. You can not make a mistake or waste an inch of material. Other makes of patterns allow an extra, half yard or so of material to guard against mistakes in laying out the pattern on the cloth. This half yard you pay for. We guarantee that every Pictorial Review Pattern will save you at least one- i half yard of material. A child can cut any garment with this guide. With every Pictorial Review Pattern is also a patented Construction Guide, show ing how to sew the different pieces to gether correctly. Garments made from AJTERKSfe 2000 copies of the Winter Fashion Book GREATEST WAR DRAHA---In Two Reels ..See the i Collapse of the Burning Bridge crowded with Fighting Soldiers. See the Explosion of the Giant Mine, "The Crater," beneath the Confederate Batteries. The Big Battle exploited with Astounding Realism. , WAT-NEE EVEM PAY 5 GENTS community? What we have reference to is a state normal school. This is a crying necessity which the city in the way of appropriations stands in need of. Waterbury Democrat. The Connecticut senate majority be gins well in caucus by putting its feet on the absurd souvenir appropriation and the more wicked newspaper gratu ities. The latter steal dies hard and the feeling against it is not as strong as might be expected. But if it is killed this session in both branches much will be forgiven. Bristol Press. The report that the New Haven road is to establish a complaint bureau prompts the suggestion that such a department might be very efficiently conducted by some experienced news paper man. Who is more accustomed to receiving complaints and effectually, complacently disposing of them than the man . behind a newspaper? -An- so&la Sentinel. As long as the law permits trans portation companies to herd passen gers like cattle, little reform will take place. Trolley cars seating 60 to 60 comfortably, carry over 100 and with Sage Tea to Sage and Sulphur Hair Remedy" you will get a large bottle for about 60 cents. Some druggists make their own, which is usually too sticky, so insist upon getting Wyeth's, which can be depended upon to restore nat ural color and beauty to the hair and Is splendid for dandruff, dry, feverish, itchy scalp and falling hair. A well-known downtown druggist says his customers insist on Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur, because, they say, it darkens so naturally and evenly that nobody can tell it has been ap plied it's so easy to use too. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush and draw it through your hair, taking one strand at a time. Do this at night and by morning the gray hair disap-. pears; after another application or two, it Is restored to its natural col or and looks glossy, soft and abund ant. - TlieBasinss; , Center of Narwlci atterns Free 51 rrn THE THREE WILTONS, Bounding Trampoline "The Bast as Is." """" A TWO REEL FEATURE "THE DEAD PAYS" A Mastarpfece of Military Sensationalism "A Will and a Way" Foolshaad'a rearing comedy, entitled "Mabel's Adventure. TODAY AUDITORIUM TODAY EXCELLENT VAUDEVILLE AND MOTIOH PICTURES ventilatora closed tight, and then some people wonder where they contracted the different ailments from which they suffer throughout the winter months. -Middletown Penny Press. Governor Baldwin favors the, - re moval of all insurance against fire on all state buildings, which on the face of it appears to be an unwise rec ommendation. He has some good sug gestions, however, in his message. and if carried out would make for econ omy in the state, but there are others about which there is much room for dispute. New Britain Herald. We could have used a Waterbury speaker in our legislative business to advantage this year. Too . bad it couldn't be Speaker Thorns. ' But who would believe the poor old republican corpse could "come back" that way? If it can elect its speaker it can do any number of things. And the progressives whatever tip they got from Theodore must have been wrong. Waterbury American, We admit the strange and insistent demands of a hunger that has been long unsatisfied. In the old days the publTo would watch the charge on tha spoils without special comment. It would all be a part of the day's work. But at this time in the history of Connecticut, any yielding to the grati fication of this sharp appetite for the spoils of office, which involves the danger of weakening promised legis lative undertakings, will set badly on the Connecticut stomachs. New Ha ven Journal-Courier. The people of Connecticut who are looking to the "progressive" element in the legislature to point the way to better things must get a shq,ck when they find what was the course of the little band over the speaker Ship yesterday. They began by voting against a roll call ballot voted to conceal how they were going to vote on a critical issue. That was cow ardly and it was dead, against the modern drift and against the desir able effort to .improve political con ditions. It cannot escape notice, too, that the blunderers were fresh from EXCLUSIVE Universal Rubber We have carried this roofing for a number of years. Those who have once used this roofing when wanting more ask for the Universal. Note price. The lowest we have ever sold it for. l-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.50. N 2-ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.85. COMPETITOR ROOFING 1- ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.25. 2- ply, 108 square feet, per roll, $1.50. Above have nails and cement in each roll. SPECIAL Kelly Axes, unhung, 75c. Keen Kutter, warranted, $1.00. The Bulletin Building H COAT SWEATERS from 98c fo $8.09 Best values for yoar nnney C V. PENDLETON, Jr. 1 0 BROADWAY Do You Need Printing? 35-6 The BULLETIN Co. 64-66 FranKJin Street iThe Home of Seleoted Photo-!lay and Clean Vaudeville. FRIDAY and SATURDAY, Jan. 10th and 11th. - - SILVER A NORTH, Comedy Sketch "The Baahfi last Man" "A hit of the bill" aot X mas"'' Useful Sheep" ard a Knights of Colunibiis ML. January 10th, 1913, -IN THE ARMORY CADILLAC ORCHESTRA, 12 Pieces. CONCERT 8 TO 9. Admission (Lady and Gentleman), tl. Gymnastic Exhibition Y. M. C. A. TONIGHT 8 o'clock Springfield Gymnastic Team Admission, 25c. Reserved seats, 10o extra. an Oyster Bay conference as to the! political course here. Hartford Cour ant. Jacob Grover, Buried in a Coal Slide at Franklin Furnace, N. J., wore his fingers to the bone in effecting his es cape. AGENTS FOR Roofing ouseno .74 Franklin Street