chronicling america€¦ · ft 4 5 j--x : vol. lix. ill tuesday, june 23. (891. yale commencement....

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ft 4 5 J- - X : Vol. LIX. Ill Tuesday, June 23. (891. Jratrclers' (Snide giscetlaneans. Ijfittjmjcial. YALE COMMENCEMENT. Personal. Hon. Henry G. Hubbard, president of Americans.' If .you want a mad Bull call him Irish. THE STOCK PROM Oil NEW BRITAIN STORE MUST BE SOLD Before We Take Inventory. on lea's, Young Hen's The prices given below- - . and Boys' Suits will cost of the cloth and trimmings. READ THESE PRICES : Men's Suits for $4.75, Marked down from $8.50. Men's Suits for $6.50, Marked down irom $12.00. Men's Suits for $7.50, Marked down from $13.00. Men's Suits for $7.65, Marked down from $13.50. Men's Suits for $7.90, Marked down from $14.00. Men's Suits for $8.60, Marked down from $15.00. Men's Suits for $9.65, Marked down from $16.00. Men's Suits for $9.90, Marked down from $16.50. Men's Suits for $10.00, Marked down from $15.00 and $18.00. BOYS' FLANNEL WAISTS, ages 4 to 13 years ONLY 17 CENTS. ROYS' FLANNEL CENTS, ages 6 to 16 years. BOYS' SUITS FOR $2.50, Marked down from $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00. BOYS' SUITS FOR $5. 00 and $6.00. BOYS' SUITS FOR $7.50 and $8.00. BOYS' PANTS 50 CENTS, Marked down from $1.00. SEERSUCKER COATS and VESTS, ONLY 60 CENTS for the two garments; worth double the Sew York, Sew liaren and Hartford R. R. Jmm Tth, lltl. THaCra LEA VI RXW HAW AS FOUVOWS FOR KBW TORE M:SO. IM. tT 17:80. te:10. 8:0, :, 110:80, tUA a. an.. 1:00, l:aO, 1:45, S SO, f:45, t.M, 4 0. 4:80, !aS, :8S. 6:80, TrCS, S:10 t:l Bridgeport aeconunodatioa), :lt :I5 p.m. BntDATH-- M SO, 4:50, 8 00 a. bl, 00. 4:16, 8:10. 8:16, S:10 p. m. FOR WA8HTJ4QT02C na HARI.m BXTE- E- 13:01 aja. (dally). FOR BOSTON via BPBDfGmXD !:, 11:05 am., 1:0S, Bcat 1 ; fkight), :& p.m. FOB BOSTON rtx KIW LONDON awe PBOT-IBKNC- ?: a. m.. 13:06. t:0& aad p. m. Bchbats S:lJa. nu, "66 p. as. FOB BOSTON tia HARTFORD am NEW TORE asm KEW ENGLAND R. &. 1:80 a.aa. (dally). '4:05 p.m. FOB BOSTON u AIR UOTC an N. T. an H. E. B. K. 4:55 p m. Braoan 46 p.sa- - FOB VERIDEN. HARTFORD, SPRINGFIELD. Etc. 1: night, '1.30 night (to Hartford). 6:40, 8:00. 1I0:, a. r- - 1:06 ClOS to Hartford eoly), 1:16, 6:06, (6:16 to Hartford). S Si 8:30, 10:06 p ta. Scx-dat- s 1: Bight (1:80 aight to Hartford), 5:Sa p.m. Saere Line fMvtsdoau FOB NEW LONDON, Ere :1 Bight, T2 6, 11:0 a. na.. S.M, ! OS, :1S, 4:1 6:56, (9:06 p. m. Guilford aooomiaedsttoa). 8caDATS 8:11 Bight, i5 p. m. Air Lis DtTlaloa. FOR MIDDLE-TOW- WILU1IANTIC, Erc-Le- aTe New Hares for all Stations at $M aa, 4:&s, 6:04 p.m. 4:S6 p.m. Ooc Beet at Middletowa with OnnaectJctit Valley R. R--. and at Wmimaate with N. Y N K ad K. L. and N. R.B.; atTarnerrillewUaOolcbeeier branch. Trains arrive at New Haraa at S.DL, rw, e:as bubs. Kaacatnrk DiTlaloau FOR WATERBUBT aad war Btataoas via fn patuck JuncUua :00 a. Ea.(lftnxiA-- h Iraia), 11:&0 a, m. oobata 6:O0 a.m. Rortkaanptom DlTtatoB. FOR SHELBtTRKE PAXXfL TURNER FALLS. WILLIAMSBURG, HOLTOEE aad NEW HA-K- l ruiUJ and Intermediate at arsons, w Harea at 7:0, 11:04 aja. aad 4 JSU FOR NORTHAMPTON. WTT.I.1 AMRRirmi aa potnta this side at S:5X put. FROM WILLlAMHBURa train arrrret at a nu, l:SS 4 21 aad 8:06 p. m aad from 8HEL- - nut.-- - (auji ana utermeaiaxe eiaooa at 1:31.4- - and 8:05 p.m. L1C118 TI TTLG, uei. mounter. C.T. HRT1 PTKA I, Oea. Pan. AceM- - Expraaa Tralaa. tLocal Express. Uoosatonio Kailroad. Train Arrangement Oomnieaciag June 14, 18H. LEAVE NEW HAVEN At 6:S0. 8:10. 9:40. 10:00 and lStOO noon, 1:05, :38 4:15, 6:36, 6:00, 7:85 and 11:16 p.m. LEAVlfrAKSONIA At 13:16, 6:48. 7:85, 9 OR. and 11:3 a. as., 12:58. 3:05. 4:08, 4:45. 6:10, 6:50. t JO p.m. Sunday trains leave Xew Hare at 8:19 a m. 6:10 and 11:15 p.m. Sunday trains leave Ansoaia 7:80 a.m 5:0-p.- Trains for Waterbury leave New Haven 6.50. 10:00, 15:00 noon, 3:88, 8:8 7:35 p.m. Sunday-8:- 10 a m. The 6:50, 9:40 am., 4:15 and COp uu trains oat of 2e Haven connect at BoUford for all potnta on the Houaatooic R. the Weat. Paseenirars from the Housatoiuc R- - R-- arrive tw New Haven at 8:0 and 9:59 a. ca, 1S:, 5:18 aad 8:56 p. m. WILLIAM H. STEVEN SOS, Vice Pres. and Oea. Manager. A. W. Pcuua. Gen. Paas. Agent. Starin's New Haven Transporta- tion Line. Ev.r Dst Rsrsst i.l.rJ,v ijeave Afv uavea rrom eiarta ZDock at 10:15 o'clock a.m. Tne N H. STAR1N. Captain McAUater. even Sunday. Tuesday aad Thursday. Tbe ERASTpft CORNING every Monday, Wednesday and Frl day. Ret urn inc. leave New York from Pier 18, N.B-- , foot of Oourtiandt street, at nm ; tbe Btarin every Monday, Wednesday and Friday, the Corning every bun day, Tuesday and Thurs- day. The only Sunday night boat from Kew Vork. UFare, wtti. .ertii tn cabin, 75c, stateroom f Excursion tickets 81 .25. Free ataee leaves the depot oa arrival o Hartford Iraia, and from comer Cburca aad Chapel streets every half hour, commeBctng at 8:80 o'clock p.m. Tickets and staterooms can be porehaaed at the Tontine hotel, at the Downes New. Oota-pan- g Ctpelstreet, and at Peck Bishop li H. VAN VALEENBURG, Agent. New Havea, Oona. NEW HAYEK STEAMBOAT COMPANY. STEAMERS leave Kew Haves daily feasor at 10:15 a.m. and 12 o clock sud. sight. Returning, leave Peck Slip. New Vara, at 8 and 11 p m. Btaieraoms for sale at Peek st Bishop. No. 792 Chanel street, sad at Ksocka drug store. Sunday boat leaves New Havea at 10:30 p.m. Btausoonis tor latter sold at Elliott Bouse. Fare 75 cents. Round trip tickets f LB (gooa for six days). JAMKB H. WARD. AwU-- :ttsccUancfl:us. New Haven Town Tac. THE subscriber gives notice to ail persons to pav taxes in New Haven oa ust of IWiO, and payable July I. lf.'l. for tbe Tows. Cttv, New Haven Oly School lUMrict and Westville School I '11 riot, that he will commence to receive taxes on said list on July 1, Igpl.at his ofllue.No. 6 City Hall. Church street. Regular office hours 9a. m. to 12 m. and 2 to5 p-- TIIEOIOl;e A. TCTTI.K. Collector of tbe stave earned Taxea. New Haven. Conn.. June 10. IHid. dl jyl Optical Goods AND Toilet Sundries. Field (J lasses, Spyglasses. Colored Spectacles and Eje-glasse-s. Compasses, Barometers and Thermometers. rocket Flasks, Drinking Cnps and Picnic Sets. Pocket Air Pillows. Medicine Cases, filled or emp- ty. Hair, Cloth, Tooth, Nail and Bath Brushes. English, French and Ameri- can Soaps. Choice Perfumes, Colognes and Bay Rum. Manicure Goods. Toilet Powders, tuffs and Cosmetics, of every description. Bath Sponges and Towels. Our Stock "and Prices Will Bear Comparison. E. L. WASHBURN, 81 Otal 1 61 Center sis. COMFORT FOR HOT WEATHER. We are Uie agents for the celebrated money. 100 BOYS' KILT SUITS old, for $2.50 and $3.50, $6.00, $7.50 and $8.50. The prices of course represent a large loss, hut we prefer to sell them at once and reduce our stock. C. E. L0NGLEY & CO., the Russell Manufacturing company, of Hiddletown, is seriously ill, and it is feared that he may not recover.' - K. O. J. society's newly elected officers: Philip H. Weil, president; Louis P. Weil, rioe president; H. Kraft, recording secre- tary; John Pagter, financial secretary; B. Jiersteui, kiwvaox, uigiua guaruiail, Q. Roxenberg; grand master, Louis Gom- - Dertz. Editor A. P. Wilder of the Palladium sails Saturday next for two months' sight seeing and recuperation in Jurope. He goes with the party organized by Mark V.- - : 1 11 TIT , . 1 i ir;.txnan, pruiuini wi ma yt uuxeey bcuoui. . Bice Wincneii, will officiate on the paper during his absence. Charles T. Hemingway of East Haven will be married on Wednesday at 4 p. m. to Miss Libbie M. Semser. The marriage will take place at the bride's home in Johns- town, N. Y. The bride is the sister of Mrs. L. H. Bates of this city. Mr. Hemingway is the well known popular town clerk and merchant of East Haven. At Sanbem's Head. The county commissioners yesterday heard the case against W. S. Barker, who wants a beer license for his place, the Barker hotel, at Sachem's head, Guilford. Some of the neighbors and cottage owners object, decision reserved. Will Prove Fatal. Nobwaix, June 22. John Rice, who was found insensible on the street Friday night from knife wounds cannot recover. William Hanlon, a Wall street broker, whom he accuses, nas disappeared. More Incendiarism. Norwalk, June 22. The barn, of Uharies u. James at Konnd mu was burned by an incendiary fire yesterday with contents, including three valuable horses. Loss unknown; small insurance, Frightfully Injured. Harry A. Thayer, aged sixteen, son of Benjamin B. Thayer of Seymour, is dying at the hospital from injuries received Sat urday ty the explosion or a cannon at his home. His arm was shattered and his skull fractured. Funeral of Miss Anna M. Coombs, The funeral of Miss Anna May Coombs took place from her late residence, 92 Wil liam street, yeBterday afternoon, a large number of sorrowing friends being pres ent. Among the number was a large dele gation from the Dessauer Opera company, of which organization the deceased had been a much beloved member. The ser vices at the house were conducted by the Key. Mr. Foster.formerly pastor of the St, John street M. E. church, assisted by the Eev. I. N. Lewis of this city. Mr. Foster spoke in most feeling terms of the exem plary lire of the deceased and ot his own association with her in the Sunday school me ttoral offerings were Doth beantitul and numerous, embracing every conceiv able design. The interment took place in the Westville cemetery, where the service of committal was read by Kev.A.JN. Lewis, The bearers were H. U. Fuller. Uharies Hitchcock, Everett Taylor.Mr.Barrows and Mr. Draper. Westville Items. Dickerman Hose company No. 1 of West ville will give a lawn party this (Tuesday) evening on the grounds adjoining the hose house on Alden avenue. Ice cream and strawberries will be served, a large tent raised and music in attendance, that those who wish may enjoy dancing. An efficient committee are making every effort to make tne occasion an enjoyable one. A large at tendance is desired in behalf of the hose company, which has already during its short existence rendered valuabe service to village property owners. Wednesday1 evening, June 24, the New Haven (Jhoral union will give an entertain ment at the Masonic hall, Main street, un der the auspices of Ethel chapter No. 28, u. a. THE FRONTIER CAVALRYMAN Re Manes IHasnlflcent Irregular Soldier. T. A. Dodge in Harper's Magazine. Our frontier cavalryman is the beau ideal of an irregular. The irregular horseman of all ages was recruited from among rov ing, unintelligent classes, and had, except in his own peculiar province, as plentiful a lack of good as he had a superabundance of bad qualities. Our trooper is intelligent and trained in the hardest of schools. Few civilians, who find it so easy to criticise the operations of the army in the west would make much of a success in hunting a Dana or a tew nunnrea Indians in a path less wilderness or a waterless desert bigger tnan jNew ifors: ana jNew England com- bined. And yet, thus handicapped, what splen- did work our cavalry has done! While one civil department of the government has for years been busy sowing the seeds of strife and furnishing the red man arms of preci- sion, the best of cartridges, and plenty of them, how ably our handful of blnecoats, under orders of another,' have managed to quell tne Indian uprisings! A farce ot ou, 000 men constantly on foot would have been none too great to do justice to our In- dian promblem since the war; the actual force has been less than a third of this number. Let whoso is tempted to criticise the army make himself familiar with some of the deeds of heroism of the past twenty years by our soldiers on the plains. Unti- cism blenches before their recital. Bat the soldier is no boaster. You must seek his story from other lips than his. IN NEBRASKA A farmer takes bis hogs riding in a lumber wagon when they lose their appetite, jolting them over tbe roughest roads. Such severe treat- ment may do for the porcine, but not for the human race. To restore the appetite take G. O. Taylor Old Bourbon or G. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskey. They are pure and medicinal, and have been known and used for years for invalids as well as social purposes. Druggists and Grocers sell them. Our firm name is on the label and over tne cork. uuisaTJCK H. liKAViSS & SONS, ouiorrupriBHwa, DWtUD, mass. A DOCTOR Says that a man 1 meter 70 centimeters (5 feet 11 inches) tall should weigh 80 kilograms or 160 pounds. That is just as many kilograms as he measures centimeters in height. Good health is essential to good proportion. When debilitated or sick use ludicrously the G.O. Taylor Old Bour bon and G. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys. They are standard beverages, well aged, pure and meaicinai. rnysicians recommend tnem. Drug- gists and grocers sell them. Our firm name is on the label and over the cork. CHESTER H. GRAVES & SONS. Sole Props., Boston, Mass. , BISMARCK, It is said, derives his name from ancestors whose castle protected "the Marea" boundary or line of the river Riese.it being a point of defence against invaders. The popularity of the Q. O. Taylor Old Bourbon and G. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whis keys is aenvea irom tne tact or their age, purity and strength. Thousands of users in every sec- tion of the ennntrv will hulnnu, ihta .t.,, Druggists and Grocers sell them. Our firm name s uu me mini una over tne COrK. CHESTER R GRAVES & SONS,Sole Proprietors, Boston,Mass. CAUTION. The greatest care should be taken in preparing medicine for the sick. It has been taken in the distillation of the articles known as G. O. Taylor Old Bourbon or G. O. Taylor Pure Rye, bottled by C. H. Graves & Sons, and for sale by all lead- ing Druggists and Grocers. Physicians can safely prescribe them. C. H. ORAVES &; SONS, sole proprietors, Boston, Mass. HONESTY Is the best policy, and an old and well worn maxim, but if the headline serves to call your at- tention to the fact that the G. O. Taylor Whis- keys are honest in purity, natural flavor and old age, and the truth that a multitude of Drueeists and Grocers in this country sell these Whiskeys, our purpose is partially accomplished. Be hon- est to yourselves and buy these whiskeys when you need them. Chester H. Graves & Sons' firm name covers the cork in each bottle. Unbrand-e- d cases sent on request. CHESTER H. GRAVES & SONS, Bole Proprietors. Boston, Mass. RUSSIA Covers a territory of 494,228,000 acres, the largest in Europe. It Is an exceedingly large country, and, as a nation, the Russians are great and pow- erful. The G. O. Taylor Old Bourbon and a. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys are great beverage- s- the fact ot their age. purity and general excel- lence. They are suited for sick room as well as sideboard use.' Physicians recommend them Druggists and Grocers sell them. Onr firm name Is on the label and over the cork. CHESTERH GRAVES & BONB.Sole Proprietors, Boston, Mass Gold Thft highest honors have zihw.r i w i been award. Bay State Guitar;, MANDOTJN-- and BANJOS , slao Wm. B. Til ton & Kaynea Bxoelalor Guitars. Send for Catalogue for all Kuaioal Instruments. J.C. JUIHE fc CO, Boston, Msum Dott Ctntn Guitars These havs received the UaDlOS highest honors in competition. Six Silver, Three Bronza, Ons Gold Medal auQ Three Diplomas. Musical Instruments of ever eluding Bonnet BxetUior and Wm. 2. Titton Strings, etc Bend for Catalogue. ... 1UF0RN1A, TEXAS AKO MEXICO. Parties, pereonalrr eoadoctra combining comfort, low rates, quick time, Pui-- man sleeping cars. Call on or aaidress K. K. CUR- - BiKK. New Eunana a resit fiontben FactlVo Oocaeaav. ltt waabbutos) fttiwat. Bantam, HAVE YOU TRIED IT- - WILL SURPRISE YOU. Trial Quantity Bent Witboet Csarg. SOLO EVERYWHERE. THE ELECTRO SILICON CO., 72 JOHN ST., W.V. KENTUCKY RYE Grown on limestone oil, makes. If properly ma nipulated, the best of whisky. G. O. Taylor Pure Rye is made from grain ot that sort. Ask your druggists or grocer for a bottle of it, and see that our firm name is on the label and over the cork of each bottle. CHESTER H. GRAVES & SONS, Bole Proprietors. Boston. Kasa. THE LARGEST Organ in the world is building at the Roosevelt Organ Works, New York, for the Auditorium building. Chicago. It will be operated by elec- tricity. The human organs get out of tune, but a wise use of G. O. Tavlor Old Bourbon and O. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskey will often restore them. These fine beverages have age and are remarkably pure. Physicians recommend them. uruggisu ana grocers sen tnem. uurnnniwu is on the label and over the cork. CHESTER H. GRAVES & SONS. Sole Props.. Boston. Mass. AGENTS WANTED Id every house to the country to advocate the parity or O. O. Taylor's Old Bourbon and Pure Rye Whiskies. By aeents we mean people of mature aire, that know and anorvciate a eood thing when they see it. Many o A he best Phys- icians write for, and advocate the worth of, these pure stimulants. Druggista and Grocers of reoutation sell them, as do the oroDrietors. Ches ter II. Graves A Sons, whose firm name is over the cork in each bottle. I n branded cases if wanted. CHKSTEK H. GRAVES Si SONS, Sole rropnetore. posum. aiase. AN EAR Of corn grown on Kansas soil was recently ex- hibited which is SiH inches long and inches tn circumference at the base. The number of kernels is not given, but no doubt reaches among the hundreds. He that has ears to hear let him hear the words of wisdom that the O.O. Taylor Old Bourbon and Q.O.Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys are the finest in the world well aged and pure. Druggists and Grocers sell them. Our firm name is on me lanei ana over tne cork, chestlk U. GRAVES Sons. Sole Proprietors. Boston. Mass. THE ATLANTIC Ocean, if drained olT, would reveal billions of hidden wealth. There is also untold wealth in good health and Ions life. The judicious use of pure stimulants is not only wise, but profitable suchastheO. O. Taylor Old Bourbon and O. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskies. They lead the world, being given Iiil-I- i rank because of an and nuritv. DrufRistM and (irocors sell them. Our linn name is on t he lalwl and over the cork. CH ESTER H GRAVES A SOXS. Sole Proprietors, Boston, Ms! WE SHALL USE Our best efforts to retain and increase our repu tation of offering the public, through the Drug and Grocery trade. Pure Whiskey (Rye or Bour- bon) under the brand of G. O. T. Our firm name is on each label and over the cork of every bot tie we sell. CHESTER H. GRATES & SONS, sole proprietors, Boston. Mass. Pure Rye Whisky Is bottled by us, under the brand Q. O. Taylor Pure Rye. Rock candy is pure sugar. The twe in combination make a syrup tnat will relieve the meet stubborn CouRh or Lung trouble. Buy the candy and any leading; druggist ortrrocer will supply the O O. Taylor Pure Rye by the wm. wr uuscn. uur ami bum mnuia D ns each lahle and over each cork. CHESTER IL GRAVES & BOSS, sole proprietors, Boston, HEW HAVEN POSTOFFICL Opening and Closing of Malls. .Honey Orders, Registered Letters, etc. Offlce Hoi-r.- April 1 to November 1. 7 am. 10 S p.m. Noreinlier 1 to April I, 7:30 am. to p.m. Sundays from li m. to 1 p.m. vYsMbulrt opon ftr the accommodation of the holders of lock boxes: From March 1 to Novnu-he- r 1. from 5 a.m. to 13 midnight; from Novem- ber 1 to March 1. from 5:80 am. to 14 midnight; tiunday nights from to 11 p.m. ARRIVAL AND OEPAItTrRE OT HAILS. Xew York Open 7. :30. II am., IS m r:30, S:,A;30i T:rt. T:.V)p.m. flow S:S0, 9, 10, 11:19 a.m., U::, i,.T:15 dally, including Sundays), 11 p.m. New York R.iilroad Way Open 8:80 19 noon, 8 p.m. l'losD .'tii.0a ni .ap.ni. Iialtimore. Washington. Philadelphia and Southern States Open 7. K:, II a.m. aof&:30, v a.m., 4 (7:1.", daily, tnclmlinir Sundays'!, II p.m. ChioMro and Western States Open 7.11 am.. 8:S0. 9:30 p.m. t'tneS:.V. 9 a.m.. 5 "Fast Mail" C7:T5daily, including Sundays.), 11 p.m. Albany and Northern New VorV Open 7, 10 a.m.. S::, 9:30 p.m. Close 3:30, a, li:cJ p.m, , 9, 7:1 II p.m. Sprinirueld Railroad Way Open 10 am- - 2:39 p.m. Close7:l. li:30 a.m.. :80. II p.m. Boston and Allmny R. P. O.. West of Ppring. field-O- pen 7 am., l J:3rt, a, :30 p.m. Close 7, 10:30 am., 8:30, 5. II p.m. Boston Open 7 a.m., I, S:3(. 4. 7, 9:30 p.m. Close 6, 7:15, 10:) a.m.. 14:39. je:30, 9, II p.m. Maine, New Hamisliire and Vermont Open 7. I(h.'a.m..:3(,4:',9:: p.m. Close 7:15, 10:30 am.. 5, 11 p.m. Sprinctleld Orn 7, 10 a.m . S:30, 4 and p.m. t. lose , :io, iu:j a.m.. 18:30, :a9, 5. II p.rr Hartford Open. 7, 8:3H. 10 am.. 1. :30, 5:' 9:30 p.m. Close 7:15, 10:30 am., 1S:30, 9, 7:19. : p.m. Meriden Open 7:3(1, 10 am., 1. 8:30, 6:55, 9:30 p.m. lose i :ta. jirau am., iz::m, 5, li p.m. New Britain -- Open 7, 10 am.. S:30. 9:30 p.m. Close 7:15. 10:) a.m., lisjn. a;so. 5, 9: ji r,,nu n allingfurd Open 10 am., 2:91, 5:55 p.m. Close , . iu.w :.jm. 9 p.m. Willimantic Open 7:30. 10 am., 3:30, 9:30 p.m. Close 7:15. 10:30 a.m., 4:30. II p.m. Kensington Open 10:30 am., 3:30 p.m. Close :13 a.m.. K:3up.m. North Haven Open 10 a.m., 8:30 p.m. Close 1:13. ju:aua.m., o, 11 p.m. Bridgeport Open 7. (1:30. IS am., :), 8:39, 8:95. 8 p.m. Close 5:30, 9, 1 1:15 am., 13:30,2, 7:15, 11 p.m. New T .1,1,1 riT, An.. 1 in . m . K.U ft. W, rp.m. Close 7:15. 10:30 a.m., 2:30, 4:30, II "p.m. ' xtew liondon Railroad vt ay Open 10 am., 8:30 p.m. Close 9 a.m.. 4:30 p.m. Branford. Guilford, Clinton Open 10 a.m., 2:30 p.m. close o, iu:flo a.m., 4:39 p.m. Norwich and Eastern Connecticut Open 7:90 a.m a, a, :ju p.m. close 10:30 anu, 2:30, 4:30, v li. iu. ovidence and all Rhode Island Open :30, 10:J am., 3, 6:30, 9:30 p..m. dose 9, 11:15 -- :', 11 p.m. r.ewport, R. L Open 7:80 ajn., 3:30 pjn. Close i.i.i, iu:.-- a.m., z:oo, 11 p.m. New Haven and Northampton Way Open 2:30, ... imvr v B.UI.. o p.m. lAjiiiosvuie, riamsviiie, umonvuin. Southing-to- n Open 10 am., 2:30, 9:30 p.m. close 6, 10:30 am., 5:15 p.m. Naugatuck Kailroad Way Open 10:30 am., 8 p.m. Close 9:30 am., 5 p.m. Waterbury (pen 7:30, 10:30 a.m., 8:30, 6:30 p.m. Close 9:30, 10:30 am.. S, 5. 11 p.m. Birmingham, Ansonia and Derby Open a.m., 3, 5:30, 8 p.m. Close 6, 9:30 am.. I2:3i 5 p.m. Seymour and Oxford Open 10:30 am. and 8 p.m. close o:.jw a.m.. 0:10 p.m. Tyler City I Open 10:90 a.m.; close 5 p.m. Orange Open 10:30 ajru. 9:30 n.m dose 9:30 am., 5 p.m. Housatonic Railroad Way Open S, 7 p.m. Close bhepaug Railroad Way Open 11:30 a.m 9:30 p.m. Close 6, 9 a.m., 3 p.m. Connecticut Valley Road Way Open 2:30, Close 9 am., 2:30. 11 p.m. Air Lina Railroad Way Open 2:30, 9:30 p.m. fJIOBe7:15 a.m., 4:30 p.m. Durham. Clintonville and Northford Onen 10 mm (1 '.li, n, " 1 ... ,.it aiiuuietown oiien 1, 10:30 a.m.. 2:30. 5:30. 9:30 p.m. close 7:15, jo.au a.m., 12:30, 9:15 II p.m Dan bury Open 7, 11:30 a.m., 2:30,8p.m. Close o:nu, v, iu:au a.m., x, n, 7:15, 11 p.m. Milford Open 8:30. 12 noon. S:3d. R n m n. 5:30, 9, 11:15am., 2, 5:15 p.m. coicnester upen 2:30, a:ao p.m. Close 7:15 m., a:ia .m. West Haven Open 8:30 un 70 n m i i' w . 111 . . i;ou, o p.m. Rranch Office Open fi:1A 19 noon A n Close 7:15, 9:30, 11 a.m., 5 p.m. Weetville Open 9:15 am., 1,7:30 p.m. Close 7:15, 11 a.m., 5 p.m. Itorui tsramord and orth UuuTord open ;i am.: dose 1 p.m. Foreign Open at 7:30 a.m.. 4:30. 7:49 cm. Close 9:30, 9, 11:15 a.nr, 12:45, 4,7:15, 11 p.m. earners leave tne omce at :iu snan:wsjiL, 30, 8:49 and 4 p.m.. making four deliveries in the business section and three, two further out, according to distance from the office. Collec- tions are made from Red street boxes hourly from 7 am. until 10 p.m. From Orange boxes seven times daily, last collection at 10 p.m. All Green boxes are opened by the carrier oa his regular trips, making two and three coUeo-Lio- further out. Sunday collections from Red boxes at 4.7, p.m. Orange boxes 4, 9 p.m. Green boxes 4 p.m. Money order and registered letter windows open from 8 am. till 8 p.m. The fees on orders in tbe United States are: Orders not exceeding (10, 8 cents: over $10 and not exceeding $15, 10 cents: over $15 and not ex- ceeding $30, 15 cents; over $30 and not exceeding $40, 20 cents: over $40 and not exceeding $50, 29 cents; over $50 and SMK-- exceeding $60. 30 cents; over $60 and not exceeding $70, 35 cents: over $70 and not exceeding $eD, 40 cents; over $80 sad and not exceeding $100, 45 centa. Postal notes are issued in amounts leas than $5. Fee for same only 8 cents, and Uiey must be pre- sented for payment within ninety days after the same are issued. Letter postage in tha United States 2 cents per ounce. "Request to return" will be printed across the end of stamped envekM furnished by the Post offlce department withoA additional cost where such ere ordered in iota not less thaa 900. -- v . N. D. BFKRRY, P. JL A Brilliant Scene on Yale's Campus The Class lay Exercises The Ora- tion and Poem Bead Fun and Hi- larity at the Beadlne of tbe Class Historic. Tale university's commencement was in full blast yesterday. First and paramount in general public interest were the class- - day exercises. There is an old saying, Bain never comes to interfere with a Yale class day," and yesterday surely was an in- stance proving the truthfulness of this an- cient tradition. For if there ever was a day when the rain apparently fairly ached to come down in torrents yesterday was that day. Nearly all the night previous the flood gates of heaven were open wide, and early in the morning, though the rain had oeased, the outlook was far from en- - oouraging. Heavy clouds hid the sky and sun from mortal gaze and the air was si vo with a muffcv heat. But fortune came to the rescue and a good day for all the ezeroises was the result. THE CLASS ORATION. The first exercises of the day were in Battell chapel at 11 o'clock, where the large assembled audience listened to the class oration and class poem. The former was delivered by Francis Theodore Brown of Olens Fails, . x., on tne suDjeci, "Culture and Service." and proved a mas- - terlv effort. The oration was not only written extremely well, Dut aenvereo as only few orations, at Yale have ever been delivered. It is in brief as follows: Modern philanthropy itself has Invited many criticisms p we are told with much justice that she seldom makes great sacrifices; is often os- tentatious: often injudicious, defeating her otto ends by a false humanity; and were the instru- ment not defective there is call enough for effort in the magnitude of the remaining work. Despite all prophecies, the millenium is doubtless far dis- tant: and we in these days of prospective billion aires and muttering masses, with our political. ecoBomy lounueu upon seinsnuess, our wnoie science "so careless of the single life" we "Who trusted God was love indeed, And love creation's final law." are sometimes staggered at the mystery of it all. The enemies of "culture," as- the term has been appropriated by its modern disciples, have Drougnc against 11 many serious charges, "per- haps the very silliest cant of the day," says Mr. Frederick Harrison, "is the cant about culture. Uuiture is a desirable quality in a critic of new books, and sits well on a possessor of belles but as applied to politics, it means simply a turn ior Bmau xauic nnumg, love or seinsn ease, indecision in action." The religion of humanity forgets too that pow er! ui uuu suuiune uiscipie which for eighteen centuries has been developing the God in man which it would now enthrone; it plucks the fruits of Christianity and denies the tree. What- ever, my classmates, has been said this morning of the duty of service to which we have given our assent, has appealed to us because of that pure and eenerous atmosphere in which con sciously or unconsciously every gentleman has been bred and which is itself the a: irect product of this disciple of the centuries. To President Dwight the class orator said There is not a man of us but has been made con- - stantlv to feel that in vou he had an accessible friend and adviser whose interest in his highest welfare was deep and vital. You have devoted yourself, sir, to years of ar- duous toil, but with them comes the rare recom- pense of the life of ministry,and I can leave with you no niener nope than mat; witn tne si faithfulness which you have exercised toward us you may long continue to touch the springs of the unnumbered days to be. His address to his classmates was: We have been dwelling upon the duty and the power of its strengthening and exalting of personal motive. But there is a richer reality in the generous life than even the consciousness of high achievements a reality which the past ivru yeurs vi inemismp nave Deen steadily re yealing and to which these final days are bear ing tenaeresc testimony. In those frequent meetings, above which the elms have lately whispered, when the hand has lingered in another, and the voice has strange- ly trembled and the eye grown dim meetings which description almost desecrates, we have learned as never before, the deep blessedness of of unselfishness, and have felt that to be truly lovca, is more man an mat neartiess Druuancy or power may gain or know. May the years of the rougher schooling that await us be as rich in the treasures of airection, as these have been their story as well will soon be toldi the morrows be memories and the very rays that leap from many a star be gleaming on the cypress trees above us all. When that hour comes may some tears like those of Jean v aijean ten or a me in wnicn our own is living. udu uiess you ami lareweii. THE CLASS POEM by Luther H. Tucker, jr., of Alhany.N.Y. proved a delightful treat, coming from poetic and thoughtful mind. Some of the verses are the following: O years, you have vanished like shadows, Like ghosts you have glided away; And the light that was yours has faded And darkened before the day, You have faded and fled and left us, And only now and then In the weird wild night of memory Your faces glimmer again. As in a dream I heard tbe music swell, As in a dream I heard it die away; And all the hall was vacant, and the bell Above tolled out the final parting day, And I arose alone, and wound mv war Among the buildings known for four long years, Ana lovea, ana lett at last witn lingering tears. And passing these, then out into the town Beneath the over, arching elms I went, Full little looking either up or down. With straggling step and pondering head low- oent. Considering the varied season spent, And all held treasured in them, and how fast The future fadeth into the past. And sorrow o'er my heart won mastery, That I should see no more as then I saw The campus full of faces dear to me, And so familiar, and a kind of awe Possessed me pondering, "IF again I draw Near this loved place, 'twill be a stranger's home, Aim i as irom a aiuerent woria may come. Then suddenly I thousht of those old men. "And sure," said I, "their lot like ours must be, let sadder, for they come not back again But cross the black stream for eternity; And they yield not to despondency, But one savs gladly. 'Good is any state: Take heart, go forth; obedience conquers fate.' Classmates, to you I need not say farewell; We bid farewell to pleasant years now past, Of light-soule-d college life we toll the knell. But not of friendship, let us still hold fast To Ninety-one- , though scattered by time's blast, In love united Good is every state, Take heart, go forth; obedience conquers fate! THE CLASS DAY HISTORIES. Long before 2 o'clock, the appointed time for the beginning of the class day ex ercises, crowds of people began assembling on the seats just south of the treasury building, all in great anticipation over the coming events which are and have been so popular at Yale from time immemorial. There were nearly two thousand people present when the seniors, some dignified, others not with their caps and gown, marched in to take their seats, smoke their pipes, sing their glees and make merry over the pointed remarks of the different historians at some unlucky fellow's ex- pense. In the big crowd there was the usual large proportion of ladies, young and old, mothers and sisters, who had come on to see some beloved member of the family go through all the necessary exercises of commencement week, and young ladies, too, were there who seemed just as well provided with masculine attentions, though not from a brother or even cousin. The standard of beauty present in town this year is above the average. The historians, as predicted, need their victims mercilessly. Particularity so was l nomas li. Uuy, portions or. whose re- marks are as follows: "Ladies and Gentlemen: The other day George Walton, "Pigeon-toe- d Jack," came up to me, his eyes deluged with scalding tears, and said: 'For heaven's sake, Tom, don't say anything about drunks; I am going to have my father, mother and best girl here.' No, Jack, not a word. I'll not even mention the Arion ball. "Strange things are hapjpening every day, Dut wnen uert rsarcisy ot smoKy Pittsburg was announced in all the New York papers as salutatorian of the class, even King Whichkiss feared for the sta- bility of his throne. Bert is the individual who slanders the college in the Register and tells tne gooa, aear people aoont tne naughty boys who swipe fezzes, arouse the wrath of elephants and play horse with sheriffs. " The Princess Kingsbury had- - been a candidate for every honor in college, from secretary of 'the Freshmen Debating so- ciety to valedictorian. He got the former. Howard has spent most of his time his soul in Dwitrht hall, and hopes some time to pmll the celestial eight against nodes. "Cold Bush Bushnell, the boy professor and incidental grind, recites so fast that the only way his professors follow him is to have him speak into a phonograph and then turn it out slowly, "Piggy Street modestly tells this story about himself: "He was invited out to dine with a par- son, and in the coarse of the dinner the minister, who had taking quite a fancy to George, said: 'George, yon are a pretty good sort of a fellow; I'd like to have yon marry my daughter.' "To this, George replied: 'Hard lack, dominie, but I'm a married man myself.' "Richard Banoker, the Fifth Earl of Duyckinck, would consent only under pro- test to order his cap and gown, but lie ought to remember that they, like charity, cover a multitude of sins. "Boll Moyle loves Fair Haven. He says it's the scenery, but Gage says it is ani- mated nature. Moyle is the most particu- lar man in the class about nationality. He invariably speaks of fweEngllah' and 'you 'Fauntleroy' Holcomb has played foot ball for three years, sometimes with his zeet, sometimes with ma nanus, dui gen- erally with bis mouth. He has calmly withstood do. KHoae's auegea proianity,. Gill's rage and, Uorbin's favorite epunet you darned big cow,' not so mucn ior tne ;lory of representing xaie in tne gna-iro- n eld as to win a so-b- made witn r rana: Hyde." Joseph Rogers Herod kept the audience it constant laughter with bright reference to his classmates. He said in part: Gentlemen of '91: Gentlemen you all must be, inasmuch as you are unanimously averse to hearing any scandal concerning those of your number. But if, nnf ortu-natel- v. there are anv in this assembly, any like the cap and gown minority, small but noisy, wno uiko a aeiigni in uietw BBuim-ou- s attacks, I shall waive the point for them and address you as 'gents.' Since a gent is a gentleman lacking a few necessary reamrements. ana a lav may oe saia to vo the same thing, I shall again waive the point, and address vou as 'iavs.' Mr. ueroa elicited many snouts ui laughter from his reference to "Bonnie" .brown, sam (joisate. wno is to oecome a missionary. Luther Tucker and Charles Capron Marsh. J. Barry Sears told some interesting stories at his class mate's expense as fol lows: Now let us now glance into the nursery, are they not lovely,always bright and beaming, Dut like an cnuaren, some- times naughty. First then is Nobby Wricht. bnbbiincr over with childlike .sim plicity and the results of his years' work on the news. It is Said that Bunno has declared a monthly dividend, that his fam- ily miorht wear diamonds. Glen, however. is a precocious child and that monumental nerve of his may sometime put him in the class with Slade. the neraer ana tamer oi TTnnlA Yarn's aacrles. Back and romeroy are asieep m uuur cradles; let us not wake them, tor tneir milk is not ready; and Kenerson, as usual surrounded by those jovial pals, Reynolds, TW1 and Penfield. has just cracked a bot tle of red ink. lou will not regret, itavmg the babes in charge of the nurse? when you are told that we shall now go down Chapel atrAt and look for Chippy uen Morrison, There h is. and needless to say, he has not been unsuccessful; but why should he be, with those calves divine, asBoDL-'oope- r OftVR. Isham's forte is tha ladies, and for ref erences as to his abilities as a courier you are referred to Ives, Doane and Tom Young. "It once happened on a Sunday after noon in May that Ish desired to take a small drive. Not beme satisfied with a male companion, he sought one ot tne gen- tler sex. for whom, as usual, he was fruit. Betas rather proud of the quality of his catch, he proceeded to toule out Whitney avenue, much to the delight of all who knew the Dutch butcher. Wright's gall is sure to get him into trouble, although' some of his trickB may be excusable from his extreme youth, even the patient and sad-eye- d Uorson would condemn ms action in bathing with ink a party of lady visi tors on the campus who disturbed him at his play. If in three years Wright does not own the eartn it will oe Decause nis gail is worn out from overwork and his controlling interest m Aiutfnua ueumuus his entire attention. Bob. it is said, has a great head for business, and even now has plans for booming a benefactor to the hu- man race. A magnificent sign on Broad way proclaims to the passer-b- y that R. W, Pomeroy is prepared to furnish filters to the world at large. This, I assure you, is true, and all who intend to become cold water fiends, would do well to apply early to him." The histories by Harry Hallam Tweedy and Ashbel Green, jr., were also spicy and interesting. PLANTING TBE IVY. Immediately at the conclusion of these exercises came that solemn duty of plant- ing of the class ivy, whose tendrils will soon cling lovingly to the walls of the new library. THE ODE. The ode, which was sung, was written by Harry Hallam Tweed, and was as fol lows: "Ivy green with pinions bright, Our life at Yale has winged its flight, ?rn the distant land where dwell, Fond memories which our hearts love well. And as our day draws to its close, Each heart with sadness overflows, Filled with a love that ne'er shall fail, The love of Ninety-on- e for Yale. As climbing toward bright summer skies, They tenderly ever upward rise. So shall our thoughts, while life shall last, Turn backward toward our happy past. O, may our hearts be ever young, Our lives reveal the love we've sung, Praying till death our lives assail, "For God, for Country and for Yale." ATARDED SPECIAL HONORS AND FELLOW SHIPS. President Dwight announced the follow ing special honors and fellowships at the close of the exercises at Battell chapel yes terday: Special Honors. Two years: Political sci ence, history and law Nathan Gliksman, Ed ward N. Loomis. Charles C. Marsh. Lafayette E. Mendell, Samuel C. Shaw, Ray B. Smith, William JS. Thatcher. Modern languages Howard La Field. National and political science Theodore Hart, Hyppolite w. Gruener. Mathematics Joseph Bowden. ir. One Year Honors. Philosophy : Cecil K. Henrv L. Pane-burn- Political science, history and law Grosvenor Atterbury, Joe G. Kstill, Raymond H. Gage, Charles P. Howland, Robert G. McClung, George f, Kobbins, William l. Kover, uerDert Bmitn, Harry H. Tweedy, George S. Walton. Ancient languages Edward P. Drew. Modern laneuaees William T. Bartley, Hen L. Paneburn. Clarence S. Davis, James Richari Enelish Hildreth J. Ackroyd, George B. Adams, Francis T. Brown, R. T. Kingsbury, Ray li. smith. Natural and physical science Edward W. Ban ner, Clement G. Smith. Fellowships. Douglass fellowship Herbert A. smitn '6f, reappomtea. Siliiman fellowshirj Edward W. Danner '91. John Sloane fellowship John Whitmore '86. reappointed. Foote scholarships Gerald G.Beard '87,Arthur W. Colton '90, Joseph Bowden, jr., '91. Extra Foote income for one year $135 to Wal ter J. Low '90. Macev scholarship Hipnolyte Gruener '91. Larned scholarship, class of '89 Philip W. Wells; for "91 Lafayette B. Mendel. Additional Larned scholarship George L. Amermann, '90. Clark scholarship, '90 George L. Amermann; for '91 Curtis C. Bushnell. Deforest for '91 James Richardson. Cobden club medal for '91 Nathan L. Glicks- - man. Scott prize In German, '91 Henry L. Langbra. Lucius F. Robinson Latin prizes '91 and '92 First, William T. Bartlett; second, Richard B. Monarty, '91. CONTINUED ON SECOND PAGE. ' THE COURT RECORD. City Court Criminal Side Judge Pickett, Michael Sull, burglary, nolled; same, attempt at rape, same; same, carrying concealed weap- ons, same; same, burglary with intent to commit rape, bound over to the July term of the superior court; Charles Bootsky, breach of the peace against natnan Simons, judgment suspended : same, trespass in private yard, $2 and $6.02 costs; Joseph Kane, trespass. $3 and $3.78 costs; Frede- rick Reilly, same, same; William Hemps tock, vagrancy, continued to June 30; Patrick A. Deg-na- obstructing Bidewaik. continued to June 23: Michael Egan, breach of the peace against uvurgv uuu ciieu hi i: iki ii ujll, uouea on pay- ment of $0.34 costs; . Charles F. Graves, breach of the peace against George W. Ladieu, continued to June 23; Frederick Cisco, breach of peace against Celia Hill, judgment suspended: Joseph Pickett, breach of peace against his wife, $7 and $6.24 costs; Thomas Whitley, breach or peace against William Brown, $3 ana b.t costs; Thomas F. Stanford, breach of peace against his wife, $1 and $6.24 costs; same, drunk, $3: James Curley, breach of peace, $1; same, drunk, $5 and $5.77 costs; Frederick Cisco, injuring private property, $7 and S7.88 costs; Mary Dresser, trespass on private property, con- tinued to June 23. Court Notes. The decision of the supreme court has just been handed down in the case of Antonio Mos-col- a vs. John Montesanto, In which a note of $80 is involved. Action was brought to recover on a note given by the defendant to secure the release from arrest of his son upon another process. The case was fought several days in the city court, the ground being taken by the defendant that there was no consideration for tne note and Judge Pickett decided for the plaintiff. The defendant appealed to the su- preme court and the case was argued at the session in this city. Tbe ieasons were by Chief Justice Andrews. Pond & Pond for plaintiff and J. P. Qoodhart for defendant. r Ot Historic Interest. Plainvillb, June 22. In your notice of the wedding of Miss Bessie S. Moody and some of the presents, one of great value and historical significance was omitted. It was a rooking ohair, formerly the property of "Ifadam" Trumbull, wife of the cele- brated Doctor Trumbull, historian of the state, and resident of North Haven,Conn., for many years. - TWKflTY-FIRS- T ANNUAL, The, Connecticut maaonle Veteran Association... :'. Meets at Bristol Thursday, June 25, at 11 a. m. New Haven veterans must take the 7:25 a.m. Northampton train, the only one by which they can reach there fat time. An attendance of about one hundred 1b ex- pected? They meet in the hall of Franklin lodge No. 56. The business meeting will be held, officers elected and a banquet, served. W. W. Lee of Meriden is the ven- erable master. This is the Twenty-fir- st annual meeting of ihe organization. It was founded in 1870. The declining powers of old age may be wonderfully recuperated and sustained by the daily use of Hood's Sarsaparilla. Origotal. No. 43. Strawberry Cottage Pudding. by Mrs. Dearborn, Principal Boston Cooking School. Cream i cup butter ; add cup sugar gradually, beating all the time ; then add I egg beaten till thick and light. Mix together a generous pint of pastry flour and 2 tea sp. Cleveland's Baking Powder; add this to the first mixture alternately with one cupful ot milk. ' Beat well together, pour into "a buttered baking-pa- n and bake about thirty minutes in a moderate oven. Cut in squares and serve with stewed and sweetened strawberries and cream. (Copyright, 1891, by Cleveland Baking Powder Co.) Use only Cleveland's baking powder, the proportions are made for that. An even teaspoon ful of Cleveland's .rtjti!,. casing rowaer Npr does As much as a ssSr heaping teaspoon- - ful of others. A large saving on a year's bakings. Try a can, Cleveland's. FOR DELICIOUS MUFFINS BE SURE TO TRY IT. SCOTT'S Fram LSION Of Pure Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites Of Lime and Soda. There are emulsions and emulsion, and, there is still much skimmed milk which masquerades as cream. Try as they will many manufacturers cannot so disguise tlielr rod liver oil as to make it palatable to sensitive stomachs. Scott's Emulsion of TURK NORWEGIAN COD JAVKlt OIL, combined with Hypophos- phites is almost as palatable as milk, For this reason as well as for the fact of the stimulating qualities of the te, Physicians frequently pre- scribe it in, eases of - CONSUMPTION, SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS and CU ICONIC COUeil or SEVERE COLO. All Druggists sdl it, but be sure yon get the genuine, as there are poor imitations. DELICIOUS MINCE PIES EVERY DAY IN THE YEAR. NO NE SUCH CONOENSED 1V t igce AVeat HIGHEST AWARD 4 UnWW IB- t received at all Pure food Expositions for Superior Quality, Cleanliness, and convenience to housekeepers. Each Fctckane contains materialor two large pies. orocors oft en substitute cheap Imitations, to make abetter profit. ReiuRftfmch urticles, and insist on having NONE RUl.'H lrnnd the best. MERRELL&. SOULE, svracuse. n.y. apSO eodnr WHY NOT DRINK j) WILLIAMS' IniOOT BEER. HrJOTTtfi MAKES Jacl WILLIAMS! KGALlONa lffl EXTRACT PROPRIETORS 'Is DELICIOUS, CASILV AND CHEAPLY MADE AT HOME. Taki No Try Other, SPARKLING, It. BEST TEMPERANCE HEALTHY. BEVERAGE KNOWN. How Lost ! How Regained ! A. Great Medical Work for Young and Middle-Ag- ed Men. New Edition. KNOW THYSELF. Or SB A new and only Gold Medal PBIZB ESSAY onNEKVOUS and PHYSICAL DKBItlTY, ERRORS of YOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY E DECLINE, and all DISEASES and WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pages, cloth, 125 Invaluable prescriptions. Only $1.01) gilt; mail, doable sealed. Descriptive Prospect us wun enaorsemenia pnrri crMn ...f iha Pm.. . vnlnnl.rv . LULL . I OEJIL v..u - j .III testimonials of the cared NOW. Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treat ment. INVIOLABLE SECRKCT and CER- TAIN CURE. Address I)r. W. II. Pnrker, or The Feabody Medical Institute, 140. 4 or Post Office Boxl89fi. The Peabody Medical Institute has many imi- tators but no equal. Herald, (Copyrighted.) BRAND NEW GOODS! OUR STOCK OF CARPETS Has never been so complete as It is this season. Housekeepers intending to purchase will do well to do so now ; have the OarpeU made and ready to put down when wanted. CHINA MATTINGS. A arfre shipment of the handsomest colors and patterns Just received. Smyrna Bugs, Ingrain Art Squares, Linoleums and Oilcloths. LACE CURTAINS AND PORTIERES In great variety. LACK CURTAINS LAUNDERED IN THE HOST PERFECT MANNER. Curtain Poles and All Sorts ot Window Trimmings. NEW HAVEN TOOT SHADE COfflPT, 8, 70, 72 Orasge Street Open Moadayanfl Saturday evenings Tbe Opening; Lowe- r- Inalsinineant Losses Forenoon Tne Close Dull and Weak. New Yoni. June 22. Railroad bonds were dull and featureless and while displaying in the mam a steady tone, yielded slightly to spots without material change in anything. The business of the day was only $451,000. Stocks opened slightly lower and further small fractions lopped off from time to time un- der the hammering of the trading element. The losses during the forenoon were insignificant, however, and intense dullness marked the trad ing except in silver, which rose to 10 but later fell back again. The announcement of the tak- ing of $600,000 more gold for export encouraged further efforts on the part of the bearish profes- sionals and more decided pressure was brought to bear, North American being selected to be the special object of attack. The selling forced its price off 11 against i Saturday and while the list of active shares sympathized, though no other heavy decline was seen. The extreme losses, however, ranged up to i per cent.- with the grangers, Goulds and specialties leading the downward movement. The market failtd to rally and' although North American recovered a fraction, the closing was dull but weak at the lowest prices of the day. Closing prices: Bid. Adams Express . 146 Alton & Terre Haute . 28 Alton & Terre Haute pfd . 125 American Exnress . 113 Canada Pacific Canada Southern uanton 65 Central Iowa t Pent-rn- Pjtift 80 Chesapeake & Ohio 16H Chesapeake & Ohio lt pfd M Chesapeake and Ohio 2d pfd. 376 Chicago & Alton . . t;mcago Alton pra. . Chicago, Burl. & Quincy 87; Consolidated Gas Del. & Hudson Canal 1 Del., Lack. & Western . 135 Denver & Kio Urande a9i East Tenn. Va. & Ga &8t Tennessee, 1 st pfd East Tennessee. 2d pfd 13 Erie 19M Erie, pfd ou Hocking Valley 25 Tllinnin nontrn.1 93 Kansas & Texas 14 Kincrston & Pembroke 9 Erie & Western 13J Erie & Western, pfd 56 iaite snore Long Island ! Ijouisville and Nashville 73J Louisville, N. Albany Manhattan Beach 4 Manhattan Elevated 100 Memphis & Charleston 34 Michigan Central 90 Mil. L. Shore and Western V3 Mil. T.. Shore and W.. nfd 106 Minneapolis and St. Louis 34j Minn, and St. Louis, pfd 9 Missouri Pacific 67 Mobile E Ohio i Nashville and Chattanooga 106 New Jersey Central 1096 jNorroiK ana western, pta Northern Pacific .' 23: nortnern racinc. ptu 009a Chicago & Northwest 10494 Chicago & Northwest pfd i- New York Central 100 N. Y., Chic, and St. Louis 12 N. V. flhirv and St. T,nia. nfd 66 Ohio Mississippi Ontario and Western 1&H Oregon improvement o Oregon Navigation 69J North American 12 Pacific Mail 35 Peoria, D. & Evansville 18 Pullman Car Company 180 Reading 30! Richmond and West Point 15! Rock Island 71! Rome. Wat. &. Oed 109! St. Paul 68s St. Paul and Manitoba 103 St. Paul & Omaha 234 t. raui omana prer Tenn. Coal and Iron 32 Texas Pacific 13' Toledo & Ohio Central, nref 76 Union Pacific 437$ United states Express Wabash.... 10 Wabash, pfd 22 Wells. Farso Express 141 Western Union Tel 79U Wheeling and Lake Erie 744 Silver certificates luz American Cotton Oil 22 New York and New England 344 Chicago & ttast ill od Ohicaero & East 111. pfd 92 Atchison & Topeka 31 Northern & Western I194 Union Pacific, Denver Gulf 18 Oregon Short 25 Sugar r. 61 Lead Trusts 17Ji Denver Rio Grand, pfd 506 Cattle i2 Colo-ad- o Coal 3i Hocking Coal 154 Homestake 11 Ontario 39 uicksilver 56 uicksilver.pref 35 Southern Pacific S4 C C. C. A St.Louta C. C. C. & St. Louis.pfd 91 St. Paul and Duluth 31 Wisconsin Central 18 N. Y., N. H. and Hartford 225 Government Honda. The following were the quotations for United States bonds at the call 10:15 a.m. 4Us, '01, Registered 100 4Us, '91, Coupons 100 S4 4s, '07, Reg 117MJ 118 4s, '07, ex. Stamped 118H 119M 4s, '07, Coupons 109 Currency 6s, 1895 Ill Currency 0s, 1890 114 Currency 6s, 1897 U63 118 Currency 6s, 1898.. 119 JOHN KERLEY & CO., Dealers in Choice Western In vestment Securities. EAL estate mortiraire bonds a SDecialtr. Xv Eastern agents for the Central Kansas Land Co. Bonds, stocks and other high grade securi- ties. I have associated with me in the above. Mr. John Morse, former Iv of the firm of Hinman & Morse. Mr. Morse will also continue his former business of real estate, rents, insurance, etc. with myself, under the firm name of John Morse & Co., offices Benedict bulldlnfir, 83 Church street. JOHJ KERLEY, ap25 formerly 514 George st Securities for Sale. 3,000 Northampton EB. 6's of 19011. 3,000 Peoria Water Co. 6'g of 1919. i 5,000 Mystic Valley Water Co., Conn., 5's. 3,000 Denver Water Co. 7's. 5,000 New London Northern RR. 4's, 1910. $2,000 N. Y. & New England RR. 6's, 1902. 50 sh Consolidated Rolling Stock. SO sh American Bank Note Co. 20 sh N. Y.. N. H. i Hartford RR. Co. Small lots Water Co., Boston Electric, Air Line RR., N. i. & N. J. Telephone. Agents Checque Bank, London. KIMBERIr. BOOT & DAT. INVESTORS ' Should get information about our GUARANTEED Mortgages Bonds srf SUGAR CC. Stocks WE HAVE HAD 20 Years' Experience IN INVESTMENTS. NEVER LOST A DOLLAR In every instance Interest and Principal has been paid at maturity. WE Have RETURNED to INVESTORS $13,800,000 realizing 6 per cent, to It per cent, interest. We never handle any security that we do not abso- lutely control. The investments we now nave are aa secure as any we have ever offered, and pay more In terest than any we have offered in the last ten years. We can refer to the leading banks in New York, and to our 4,009 patrons. We are under the supervision of the Banking Department of New, York State. J.B.WATKINS L.M.CO. Wall St., Cor. Broadway, New York HKNEY DICKINSON, Msnacer. $75,000. FIRST MORTGAGE FIVE PER CENT. GOLD BONDS OF THE Mem New EiM Teleioie Co. OF CONNECTICUT. Dated March 1, 1891. Payable March 1, 1906. Interest payable on the first days of March, June September and December of each year. Total Issue $300,000 ot which $225,-OO- O have been sold. These bonds are secured by a first mortgage upon all the real and personal property of said Company, made to the Union Trust company of New Haven, Conn., as tinstee for the bondhold- ers. These bonds are fnee of taxes to the holder. The capital stock of said company Is f 1,600,000, fully paid. All the net earnings of the company for the past Wo years, as well as the proceeds of these bonds, have been and are being used in perfect- ing the plant and property, including the real es- tate, underground work, etc We offer and recommend the bonds as a verv safe home investment, netting the investor five per cent, free of taxes. jrnce r ana interee. - H. C. "WARREN & CO. p8tf . E. P. . All VINE, Attomoy at IUaw BOOKS 11, ; 69 Church Street. not begin to cover tne BLOUSES. ONLY 25 $3.50, Marked down from $4.95, Marked down from to fit boys 2j4 to 6 years marked down from $5.00. Church Street WEDDIM RIMS AND WEDDI1T& PRESENTS. Durant, the Jeweler, 40 CHURCH STREET, Manufactures all his plain Gold Rings, which he sells at manufacturer's prices. Quality Stamped on Each Ring AND GUARANTEED. MARTIN COOPER Repairer and Adjuster of Fine Watches At Moderate Prions. 817 Chapel Street, Boom 1, Mew Haven. WEULS & GUNDE T ewelers, No. 788 Chapel Street. A URGE LINE SOLID SILVElt and SILVER PLATED WARE. Repairing of Watches and Jewelry A SPECIALTY. gaittls, Oils, tc. THE FINEST LINE OP WALL PAPERS AT LOWEST PRICES, ON EXHIBITION AT The Broadway Wall Paper Store. Come and examine our goods and yoa wil be surprised at our prices for beautiful coombina tlons. E. It. JEFFCOTX. PAINTING and DECORATING in all their sev- eral branches done well and promptly. Esti- mates given. E. R. JEFFCOTT. 165 Elm street, corner of York SEND TO US FOR QUOTATIONS On anything you need in our line and we will Save You Money. THOMPSON & I1ELDEIV, PAINTS, OIL and GLASS, 396 & 398 State St. . Courier Bngdlns: To 1 Carol Inrestor. 9 9. 9 9 9 a Are you looking for & safe lO per cent, investment for your $100, or $500. or $5,000? THE ATKINSON House Furnishing Company, OF MAINE, ORGANIZED 1887, CAPITAL $1,000,000, Has paid its stockholders 5 per cent, every six months, January and July, since organ- ization, and earned a handsome surplus. To further Increase the business with a view to earn greater dividends, the Directors have au- thorized the Treasurer to issue $120,000 ot Trea sury stock at par, $10.00 per share. The full 5 per cent, dividend will be paid aa usual to all stockholders of record. May 15th. Write the Company for Prospectus, and list ot stockholders now numbering over 40 Address " Tba Atkinson House Furnishing Co., 27 Scbool St., Boston, Mass 101, 103, 105 Eiuauctal. THE! National Hcsm's Bat, NEW HAVEN, CONN., Draws Bills of Exchange Alliance Bank (Limited), London, Provincial Bank of Ireland, Dublin, Union Bank of Scotland, Credit Lyonnais, Paris, And on All the Principal Cities of Europe. (sues Circular Letters of Credit Available Xbrougnout Europe. - GEO. A. BUTLER. President. WM. T. FIKL.DH. Oaakier. VERMILYE&C0 Bankers and Brokers. Dealer In Investment Securities. 16 and 18 Nassau St., nsro-- Yorls. Oity Security Insurance Co. OF NEW HAVEN. OFFICE 37 CENTER STREET. Cash Assets Jan.l,91, $732,443.47. DIUOTORS Chas.S. Leete, Cornelius Plerpont. Jas. D. Dewell, A. O. Wlleoi, Daniel Trowbridge, Joel A. 8 perry, Jas. M. Mason, 8. E. Merwin. wm. K. Tyier, John W. Ailing, H. Mason. CHAS. 8. LEETE, H. MASON, President. 8ecretarv J. D. DEWELL, H. C. FULLER, Asm1! ftmiretar PRICE WILLBE ADVANCED July 15th. Notice is hereby given that the price of stock in the Boar Valley Irrigation Co Wilt be advanced from the present selling price of $108 per share, for either class of stock, to SI 03 for Preferred Stock and $105 for Common Stock on the 15th of July. The Semi-Annu- al Dividend Of 4 per cent, on preferred stock and 5 per cent, on common stock will be paid at tbe Na tional Park Bank, New York, July 1. The earnings of the Company are far in excess of its dividend requirements, as above, of 8 per cent, per nn'ini on preferred stock and 10 per cent, on commen stock. The Increase of capital will add largely to the earning power of the Company. If you want A SAFE AND PROFITABLE IN- VESTMENT, call on KIMBERLY, ROOT & DAY, NEW HAVEN, CONN., Or CHAS. W. 6BEBNE) Murray Hill Hotel, New York City. a8 Cm BURGLARY, FIRE DEFT FORGERIES, BY HIRINO A SAFE IN THE VAULT OF Mercantile Safe Deposit Co. Annual rental of safe from FIVE to SIXTY DOLLaARfl. Absolute fieenritv for Bon flu. Stock. WUla, Bullion, Plate, Jewelry. Precious Stones, and all evidences of value. Accr- - to vault through the bankinfr room or tbe iUKCHANI X BAN lw. Tsf Ctanrcb, Cor. Center Streei. Oouxxki rooms for convenience of patroi all persons Interested a re cordially invited to uj act the oompanyYpremlaee. Open from 9 m. to 8 p.m. Thomas 11. TaowBaiDeK, President. vUTUD. whits, v . vBAHs tu xmowsiinon, pecana KNICKERBOCKER SHOULDER BRACE, ( Which is the most comfortAble Brae evw- - wrw-- n t Wo take the chest nteuure ia flitlns ud var-an- t ttom lo lit periecUjr. Thcj are Mpecialljr adapted for youn people, as tbej keep tbe (boulders upright and will prevent roand aboul-der- . HEWITT & CO., 744 Chapel Street, jgi APOTHECARIES. Photographic Supplies, FOR THE Amateur or Professional. CHARLES W. WHITTLESEY 1 CO., AT OCR NEW STAND. 281 STATE STREET. HORSES ! TV Fmt yKenruckr aad Illinois Bos dri vera saddlers, draft and roadsters. rVHSALB. New and SMOod-han- d waeons. esniarea mm. revs, pbsetons, beach wagons, Ooooord. bujoriea. etc.. etc. Unburn farm n annua double aad saneta b. on hand and made to order. IKwoie ana amarie team and boegr harness Wagon Jacks toe best wson ack in the i kei for I trot and heavy wont. fceveral wagons and oarriaeea tart witli na h sold. Hv Vre& and Threahlnv IIscIiIsashiis.u at a sacrifice. moras, trnckise, exprasstne. Bsrfns mrntahed for partiaa. city 8 MEDLEY BROS. Co!" J U6tat street sl to lTJBrswvXTStrist. r

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  • ft 45 J-

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    Vol. LIX. Ill Tuesday, June 23. (891.Jratrclers' (Snidegiscetlaneans.Ijfittjmjcial.YALE COMMENCEMENT. Personal.Hon. Henry G. Hubbard, president ofAmericans.' If .you want a mad Bull callhim Irish.

    THE STOCKPROM Oil NEW BRITAIN STORE

    MUST BE SOLD

    Before We Take Inventory.on lea's, Young Hen'sThe prices given below- -

    . and Boys' Suits willcost of the cloth and trimmings.

    READ THESE PRICES :Men's Suits for $4.75,

    Marked down from $8.50.Men's Suits for $6.50,

    Marked down irom $12.00.Men's Suits for $7.50,

    Marked down from $13.00.Men's Suits for $7.65,

    Marked down from $13.50.Men's Suits for $7.90,

    Marked down from $14.00.Men's Suits for $8.60,

    Marked down from $15.00.Men's Suits for $9.65,

    Marked down from $16.00.Men's Suits for $9.90,

    Marked down from $16.50.Men's Suits for $10.00,

    Marked down from $15.00 and $18.00.BOYS' FLANNEL WAISTS, ages 4 to 13 years

    ONLY 17 CENTS.ROYS' FLANNEL

    CENTS, ages 6 to 16 years.BOYS' SUITS FOR $2.50, Marked down from

    $3.50, $4.00 and $5.00.BOYS' SUITS FOR

    $5. 00 and $6.00.BOYS' SUITS FOR

    $7.50 and $8.00.BOYS' PANTS 50 CENTS, Marked down from

    $1.00.SEERSUCKER COATS and VESTS, ONLY 60

    CENTS for the two garments; worth double the

    Sew York, Sew liarenand Hartford R. R.

    Jmm Tth, lltl.THaCra LEAVI RXW HAW AS FOUVOWS

    FOR KBW TORE M:SO. IM. tT17:80. te:10. 8:0, :, 110:80, tUA a. an..1:00, l:aO, 1:45, S SO, f:45, t.M, 4 0.4:80, !aS, :8S. 6:80, TrCS, S:10 t:l

    Bridgeport aeconunodatioa), :lt :I5 p.m.BntDATH-- M SO, 4:50, 8 00 a. bl, 00. 4:16,

    8:10. 8:16, S:10 p. m.FOR WA8HTJ4QT02C na HARI.m BXTE- E-

    13:01 aja. (dally).FOR BOSTON via BPBDfGmXD !:,11:05 am., 1:0S, Bcat 1 ;

    fkight), :& p.m.FOB BOSTON rtx KIW LONDON awe PBOT-IBKNC-

    ?: a. m.. 13:06. t:0& aadp. m. Bchbats S:lJa. nu, "66 p. as.

    FOB BOSTON tia HARTFORD am NEWTORE asm KEW ENGLAND R. &. 1:80 a.aa.(dally). '4:05 p.m.

    FOB BOSTON u AIR UOTC an N. T. anH. E. B. K. 4:55 p m. Braoan 46 p.sa- -

    FOB VERIDEN. HARTFORD, SPRINGFIELD.Etc. 1: night, '1.30 night (to Hartford).6:40, 8:00. 1I0:, a. r- -1:06 ClOS to Hartford eoly), 1:16, 6:06,(6:16 to Hartford). S Si 8:30, 10:06 p ta. Scx-dat- s1: Bight (1:80 aight to Hartford),

    5:Sa p.m.Saere Line fMvtsdoau

    FOB NEW LONDON, Ere : 1 Bight, T2 6,11:0 a. na.. S.M, ! OS, :1S, 4:1

    6:56, (9:06 p. m. Guilford aooomiaedsttoa).8caDATS 8:11 Bight, i5 p. m.Air Lis DtTlaloa.

    FOR MIDDLE-TOW- WILU1IANTIC, Erc-Le- aTeNew Hares for all Stations at $M aa,4:&s, 6:04 p.m. 4:S6 p.m. Ooc

    Beet at Middletowa with OnnaectJctit Valley R.R--. and at Wmimaate with N. Y N K adK. L. and N. R.B.; atTarnerrillewUaOolcbeeierbranch. Trains arrive at New Haraa at S.DL,

    rw, e:as bubs.

    Kaacatnrk DiTlaloauFOR WATERBUBT aad war Btataoas via fn

    patuck JuncUua :00 a. Ea.(lftnxiA--h Iraia), 11:&0a, m. oobata 6:O0 a.m.Rortkaanptom DlTtatoB.FOR SHELBtTRKE PAXXfL TURNERFALLS. WILLIAMSBURG, HOLTOEE aad NEWHA-K- l ruiUJ and Intermediate at arsons, w

    Harea at 7:0, 11:04 aja. aad 4JSUFOR NORTHAMPTON. WTT.I.1 AMRRirmi aa

    potnta this side at S:5X put.FROM WILLlAMHBURa train arrrret ata nu, l:SS 4 21 aad 8:06 p. m aad from 8HEL- -nut.-- - (auji ana utermeaiaxe eiaooa at1:31.4- - and 8:05 p.m.L1C118 TI TTLG,uei. mounter.C.T. HRT1 PTKA I,Oea. Pan. AceM- -

    Expraaa Tralaa. tLocal Express.

    Uoosatonio Kailroad.Train Arrangement Oomnieaciag June 14, 18H.

    LEAVE NEW HAVENAt 6:S0. 8:10. 9:40. 10:00 and lStOO noon, 1:05, :384:15, 6:36, 6:00, 7:85 and 11:16 p.m.

    LEAVlfrAKSONIAAt 13:16, 6:48. 7:85, 9 OR. and 11:3 a. as., 12:58.3:05. 4:08, 4:45. 6:10, 6:50. t JO p.m.

    Sunday trains leave Xew Hare at 8:19 a m.6:10 and 11:15 p.m.

    Sunday trains leave Ansoaia 7:80 a.m 5:0-p.-

    Trains for Waterbury leave New Haven 6.50.10:00, 15:00 noon, 3:88, 8:8 7:35 p.m. Sunday-8:- 10a m.

    The 6:50, 9:40 am., 4:15 and COp uu trains oatof 2e Haven connect at BoUford for all potntaon the Houaatooic R. the Weat.

    Paseenirars from the Housatoiuc R- - R-- arrive twNew Haven at 8:0 and 9:59 a. ca, 1S:, 5:18 aad8:56 p. m.

    WILLIAM H. STEVEN SOS,Vice Pres. and Oea. Manager.

    A. W. Pcuua. Gen. Paas. Agent.

    Starin's New Haven Transporta-tion Line.Ev.r Dst Rsrsst i.l.rJ,v

    ijeave Afv uavea rrom eiartaZDock at 10:15 o'clock a.m. TneN H. STAR1N. Captain McAUater. even

    Sunday. Tuesday aad Thursday. Tbe ERASTpftCORNING every Monday, Wednesday and Frlday. Ret urn inc. leave New York from Pier 18,N.B-- , foot of Oourtiandt street, at n m ; tbeBtarin every Monday, Wednesday and Friday,the Corning every bun day, Tuesday and Thurs-day. The only Sunday night boat from KewVork.UFare, wtti. .ertii tn cabin, 75c, stateroom fExcursion tickets 81 .25.

    Free ataee leaves the depot oa arrival oHartford Iraia, and from comer Cburca aadChapel streets every half hour, commeBctng at8:80 o'clock p.m.

    Tickets and staterooms can be porehaaed atthe Tontine hotel, at the Downes New. Oota-pan- gCtpelstreet, and at Peck Bishop li

    H. VAN VALEENBURG, Agent.New Havea, Oona.

    NEW HAYEK STEAMBOAT COMPANY.

    STEAMERS leave Kew Haves daily feasorat 10:15 a.m. and 12 o clock sud.sight. Returning, leave Peck Slip. New Vara, at8 and 11 p m. Btaieraoms for sale at Peek stBishop. No. 792 Chanel street, sad at Ksockadrug store. Sunday boat leaves New Havea at10:30 p.m. Btausoonis tor latter sold at ElliottBouse.

    Fare 75 cents. Round trip tickets fLB (gooafor six days). JAMKB H. WARD. AwU--

    :ttsccUancfl:us.New Haven Town Tac.

    THE subscriber gives notice to ail personsto pav taxes in New Haven oa ust ofIWiO, and payable July I. lf.'l. for tbe Tows. Cttv,New Haven Oly School lUMrict and WestvilleSchool I '11 riot, that he will commence to receivetaxes on said list on July 1, Igpl.at his ofllue.No.6 City Hall. Church street.

    Regular office hours 9a. m. to 12 m. and 2 to5p-- TIIEOIOl;e A. TCTTI.K.

    Collector of tbe stave earned Taxea.New Haven. Conn.. June 10. IHid. dl jyl

    Optical GoodsAND

    Toilet Sundries.

    Field (J lasses, Spyglasses.Colored Spectacles and Eje-glasse-s.

    Compasses, Barometers andThermometers.

    rocket Flasks, Drinking Cnpsand Picnic Sets.Pocket Air Pillows.Medicine Cases, filled or emp-

    ty.Hair, Cloth, Tooth, Nail and

    Bath Brushes.English, French and Ameri-can Soaps.Choice Perfumes, Colognes

    and Bay Rum.Manicure Goods.Toilet Powders, tuffs and

    Cosmetics, of every description.Bath Sponges and Towels.

    Our Stock "and PricesWill Bear Comparison.

    E. L. WASHBURN,

    81 Otal 1 61 Center sis.

    COMFORT FORHOT WEATHER.

    We are Uie agents for the celebrated

    money.100 BOYS' KILT SUITS

    old, for $2.50 and $3.50,$6.00, $7.50 and $8.50.

    The prices of course represent a large loss, hutwe prefer to sell them at once and reduce ourstock.

    C. E. L0NGLEY & CO.,

    the Russell Manufacturing company, ofHiddletown, is seriously ill, and it is fearedthat he may not recover.' -

    K. O. J. society's newly elected officers:Philip H. Weil, president; Louis P. Weil,rioe president; H. Kraft, recording secre-tary; John Pagter, financial secretary; B.Jiersteui, kiwvaox, uigiua guaruiail, Q.

    Roxenberg; grand master, Louis Gom--Dertz.

    Editor A. P. Wilder of the Palladiumsails Saturday next for two months' sightseeing and recuperation in Jurope. Hegoes with the party organized by MarkV.- - : 1 11 TIT , . 1 iir;.txnan, pruiuini wi ma yt uuxeey bcuoui.

    . Bice Wincneii, will officiateon the paper during his absence.

    Charles T. Hemingway of East Havenwill be married on Wednesday at 4 p. m.to Miss Libbie M. Semser. The marriagewill take place at the bride's home in Johns-town, N. Y. The bride is the sister of Mrs.L. H. Bates of this city. Mr. Hemingwayis the well known popular town clerk andmerchant of East Haven.

    At Sanbem's Head.The county commissioners yesterday

    heard the case against W. S. Barker, whowants a beer license for his place, theBarker hotel, at Sachem's head, Guilford.Some of the neighbors and cottage ownersobject, decision reserved.

    Will Prove Fatal.Nobwaix, June 22. John Rice, who

    was found insensible on the street Fridaynight from knife wounds cannot recover.William Hanlon, a Wall street broker,whom he accuses, nas disappeared.

    More Incendiarism.Norwalk, June 22. The barn, of

    Uharies u. James at Konnd mu wasburned by an incendiary fire yesterdaywith contents, including three valuablehorses. Loss unknown; small insurance,

    Frightfully Injured.Harry A. Thayer, aged sixteen, son of

    Benjamin B. Thayer of Seymour, is dyingat the hospital from injuries received Saturday ty the explosion or a cannon at hishome. His arm was shattered and hisskull fractured.

    Funeral of Miss Anna M. Coombs,The funeral of Miss Anna May Coombs

    took place from her late residence, 92 William street, yeBterday afternoon, a largenumber of sorrowing friends being present. Among the number was a large delegation from the Dessauer Opera company,of which organization the deceased hadbeen a much beloved member. The services at the house were conducted by theKey. Mr. Foster.formerly pastor of the St,John street M. E. church, assisted by theEev. I. N. Lewis of this city. Mr. Fosterspoke in most feeling terms of the exemplary lire of the deceased and ot his ownassociation with her in the Sunday schoolme ttoral offerings were Doth beantituland numerous, embracing every conceivable design. The interment took place inthe Westville cemetery, where the serviceof committal was read by Kev.A.JN. Lewis,

    The bearers were H. U. Fuller. UhariesHitchcock, Everett Taylor.Mr.Barrows andMr. Draper.

    Westville Items.Dickerman Hose company No. 1 of West

    ville will give a lawn party this (Tuesday)evening on the grounds adjoining the hosehouse on Alden avenue. Ice cream andstrawberries will be served, a large tentraised and music in attendance, that thosewho wish may enjoy dancing. An efficientcommittee are making every effort to maketne occasion an enjoyable one. A large attendance is desired in behalf of the hosecompany, which has already during itsshort existence rendered valuabe service tovillage property owners.

    Wednesday1 evening, June 24, the NewHaven (Jhoral union will give an entertainment at the Masonic hall, Main street, under the auspices of Ethel chapter No. 28,u. a.THE FRONTIER CAVALRYMANRe Manes IHasnlflcent Irregular

    Soldier.T. A. Dodge in Harper's Magazine.

    Our frontier cavalryman is the beau idealof an irregular. The irregular horsemanof all ages was recruited from among roving, unintelligent classes, and had, exceptin his own peculiar province, as plentifula lack of good as he had a superabundanceof bad qualities. Our trooper is intelligentand trained in the hardest of schools. Fewcivilians, who find it so easy to criticisethe operations of the army in the westwould make much of a success in huntinga Dana or a tew nunnrea Indians in a pathless wilderness or a waterless desert biggertnan jNew ifors: ana jNew England com-bined.

    And yet, thus handicapped, what splen-did work our cavalry has done! While onecivil department of the government has foryears been busy sowing the seeds of strifeand furnishing the red man arms of preci-sion, the best of cartridges, and plenty ofthem, how ably our handful of blnecoats,under orders of another,' have managed toquell tne Indian uprisings! A farce ot ou,000 men constantly on foot would havebeen none too great to do justice to our In-dian promblem since the war; the actualforce has been less than a third of thisnumber.

    Let whoso is tempted to criticise thearmy make himself familiar with some ofthe deeds of heroism of the past twentyyears by our soldiers on the plains. Unti-cism blenches before their recital. Batthe soldier is no boaster. You must seekhis story from other lips than his.

    IN NEBRASKAA farmer takes bis hogs riding in a lumber

    wagon when they lose their appetite, joltingthem over tbe roughest roads. Such severe treat-ment may do for the porcine, but not for thehuman race. To restore the appetite take G. O.Taylor Old Bourbon or G. O. Taylor Pure RyeWhiskey. They are pure and medicinal, andhave been known and used for years for invalidsas well as social purposes. Druggists and Grocerssell them. Our firm name is on the label andover tne cork. uuisaTJCK H. liKAViSS & SONS,ouiorrupriBHwa, DWtUD, mass.

    A DOCTORSays that a man 1 meter 70 centimeters (5 feet 11inches) tall should weigh 80 kilograms or 160pounds. That is just as many kilograms as hemeasures centimeters in height. Good health isessential to good proportion. When debilitatedor sick use ludicrously the G.O. Taylor Old Bourbon and G. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys. Theyare standard beverages, well aged, pure andmeaicinai. rnysicians recommend tnem. Drug-gists and grocers sell them. Our firm name is onthe label and over the cork. CHESTER H.GRAVES & SONS. Sole Props., Boston, Mass.

    , BISMARCK,It is said, derives his name from ancestors whosecastle protected "the Marea" boundary or line ofthe river Riese.it being a point of defence againstinvaders. The popularity of the Q. O. TaylorOld Bourbon and G. O. Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys is aenvea irom tne tact or their age, purityand strength. Thousands of users in every sec-tion of the ennntrv will hulnnu, ihta .t.,,Druggists and Grocers sell them. Our firm names uu me mini una over tne COrK. CHESTER RGRAVES & SONS,Sole Proprietors, Boston,Mass.

    CAUTION.The greatest care should be taken in preparing

    medicine for the sick. It has been taken in thedistillation of the articles known as G. O. TaylorOld Bourbon or G. O. Taylor Pure Rye, bottledby C. H. Graves & Sons, and for sale by all lead-ing Druggists and Grocers. Physicians cansafely prescribe them. C. H. ORAVES &; SONS,sole proprietors, Boston, Mass.

    HONESTYIs the best policy, and an old and well wornmaxim, but if the headline serves to call your at-tention to the fact that the G. O. Taylor Whis-keys are honest in purity, natural flavor and oldage, and the truth that a multitude of Drueeistsand Grocers in this country sell these Whiskeys,our purpose is partially accomplished. Be hon-est to yourselves and buy these whiskeys whenyou need them. Chester H. Graves & Sons' firmname covers the cork in each bottle. Unbrand-e- dcases sent on request. CHESTER H. GRAVES& SONS, Bole Proprietors. Boston, Mass.

    RUSSIACovers a territory of 494,228,000 acres, the largestin Europe. It Is an exceedingly large country,and, as a nation, the Russians are great and pow-erful. The G. O. Taylor Old Bourbon and a. O.Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeys are great beverage- s-the fact ot their age. purity and general excel-lence. They are suited for sick room as well assideboard use.' Physicians recommend themDruggists and Grocers sell them. Onr firm nameIs on the label and over the cork. CHESTERHGRAVES & BONB.Sole Proprietors, Boston, Mass

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    KENTUCKY RYEGrown on limestone oil, makes. If properly ma

    nipulated, the best of whisky. G. O. Taylor PureRye is made from grain ot that sort. Ask yourdruggists or grocer for a bottle of it, and seethat our firm name is on the label and over thecork of each bottle. CHESTER H. GRAVES &SONS, Bole Proprietors. Boston. Kasa.

    THE LARGESTOrgan in the world is building at the RooseveltOrgan Works, New York, for the Auditoriumbuilding. Chicago. It will be operated by elec-tricity. The human organs get out of tune, buta wise use of G. O. Tavlor Old Bourbon and O. O.Taylor Pure Rye Whiskey will often restorethem. These fine beverages have age and areremarkably pure. Physicians recommend them.uruggisu ana grocers sen tnem. uurnnniwuis on the label and over the cork. CHESTER H.GRAVES & SONS. Sole Props.. Boston. Mass.

    AGENTS WANTEDId every house to the country to advocate theparity or O. O. Taylor's Old Bourbon and PureRye Whiskies. By aeents we mean people ofmature aire, that know and anorvciate a eoodthing when they see it. Many o A he best Phys-icians write for, and advocate the worth of,these pure stimulants. Druggista and Grocers ofreoutation sell them, as do the oroDrietors. Chester II. Graves A Sons, whose firm name is overthe cork in each bottle. I n branded cases ifwanted. CHKSTEK H. GRAVES Si SONS, Solerropnetore. posum. aiase.

    AN EAROf corn grown on Kansas soil was recently ex-hibited which is SiH inches long and inchestn circumference at the base. The number ofkernels is not given, but no doubt reaches amongthe hundreds. He that has ears to hear let himhear the words of wisdom that the O.O. TaylorOld Bourbon and Q.O.Taylor Pure Rye Whiskeysare the finest in the world well aged and pure.Druggists and Grocers sell them. Our firm nameis on me lanei ana over tne cork, chestlk U.GRAVES Sons. Sole Proprietors. Boston. Mass.

    THE ATLANTICOcean, if drained olT, would reveal billions ofhidden wealth. There is also untold wealth ingood health and Ions life. The judicious use ofpure stimulants is not only wise, but profitablesuchastheO. O. Taylor Old Bourbon and O. O.Taylor Pure Rye Whiskies. They lead the world,being given Iiil-I-i rank because of an and nuritv.DrufRistM and (irocors sell them. Our linn nameis on t he lalwl and over the cork. CH ESTER HGRAVES A SOXS. Sole Proprietors, Boston, Ms!

    WE SHALL USEOur best efforts to retain and increase our reputation of offering the public, through the Drugand Grocery trade. Pure Whiskey (Rye or Bour-bon) under the brand of G. O. T. Our firm nameis on each label and over the cork of every bottie we sell. CHESTER H. GRATES & SONS,sole proprietors, Boston. Mass.

    Pure Rye WhiskyIs bottled by us, under the brand Q. O. TaylorPure Rye. Rock candy is pure sugar. The twein combination make a syrup tnat will relievethe meet stubborn CouRh or Lung trouble. Buythe candy and any leading; druggist ortrrocerwill supply the O O. Taylor Pure Rye by thewm. wr uuscn. uur ami bum mnuia D nseach lahle and over each cork. CHESTER ILGRAVES & BOSS, sole proprietors, Boston,

    HEW HAVEN POSTOFFICL

    Opening and Closing of Malls.

    .Honey Orders, Registered Letters, etc.Offlce Hoi-r.- April 1 to November 1. 7 am.

    10 S p.m. Noreinlier 1 to April I, 7:30 am. top.m. Sundays from li m. to 1 p.m.vYsMbulrt opon ftr the accommodation of theholders of lock boxes: From March 1 to Novnu-he- r

    1. from 5 a.m. to 13 midnight; from Novem-ber 1 to March 1. from 5:80 am. to 14 midnight;tiunday nights from to 11 p.m.

    ARRIVAL AND OEPAItTrRE OT HAILS.Xew York Open 7. :30. II am., IS m r:30,

    S:,A;30i T:rt. T:.V)p.m. flow S:S0, 9, 10, 11:19a.m., U::, i,.T:15 dally, including Sundays),11 p.m.

    New York R.iilroad Way Open 8:80 19 noon, 8p.m. l'losD .'tii.0a ni .ap.ni.Iialtimore. Washington. Philadelphia andSouthern States Open 7. K:, II a.m. aof&:30,v a.m., 4 (7:1.", daily, tnclmlinir Sundays'!, II p.m.ChioMro and Western States Open 7.11 am..8:S0. 9:30 p.m. t'tneS:.V. 9 a.m.. 5 "Fast Mail"C7:T5daily, including Sundays.), 11 p.m.

    Albany and Northern New VorV Open 7, 10a.m.. S::, 9:30 p.m. Close 3:30, a, li:cJ p.m, ,9, 7:1 II p.m.

    Sprinirueld Railroad Way Open 10 am-- 2:39p.m. Close7:l. li:30 a.m.. :80. II p.m.Boston and Allmny R. P. O.. West of Ppring.field-O- pen 7 am., l J:3rt, a, :30 p.m. Close 7,10:30 am., 8:30, 5. II p.m.Boston Open 7 a.m., I, S:3(. 4. 7, 9:30 p.m.Close 6, 7:15, 10:) a.m.. 14:39. je:30, 9, II p.m.

    Maine, New Hamisliire and Vermont Open 7.I(h.'a.m..:3(,4:',9:: p.m. Close 7:15, 10:30am.. 5, 11 p.m.

    Sprinctleld Orn 7, 10 a.m . S:30, 4 andp.m. t. lose , :io, iu:j a.m.. 18:30, :a9, 5. II p.rrHartford Open. 7, 8:3H. 10 am.. 1. :30, 5:'9:30 p.m. Close 7:15, 10:30 am., 1S:30, 9, 7:19. :p.m.

    Meriden Open 7:3(1, 10 am., 1. 8:30, 6:55, 9:30p.m. lose i :ta. jirau am., iz::m, 5, li p.m.New Britain --Open 7, 10 am.. S:30. 9:30 p.m.Close 7:15. 10:) a.m., lisjn. a;so. 5, 9: ji r,,nun allingfurd Open 10 am., 2:91, 5:55 p.m. Close

    , . iu.w :.jm. 9 p.m.Willimantic Open 7:30. 10 am., 3:30, 9:30 p.m.Close 7:15. 10:30 a.m., 4:30. II p.m.Kensington Open 10:30 am., 3:30 p.m. Close

    :13 a.m.. K:3up.m.North Haven Open 10 a.m., 8:30 p.m. Close1:13. ju:aua.m., o, 11 p.m.

    Bridgeport Open 7. (1:30. IS am., :), 8:39,8:95. 8 p.m. Close 5:30, 9, 1 1:15 am., 13:30,2, 7:15, 11p.m.

    New T .1,1,1 riT, An.. 1 in . m . K.U ft. W,rp.m. Close 7:15. 10:30 a.m., 2:30, 4:30, II "p.m.

    '

    xtew liondon Railroad vt ay Open 10 am., 8:30p.m. Close 9 a.m.. 4:30 p.m.Branford. Guilford, Clinton Open 10 a.m., 2:30p.m. close o, iu:flo a.m., 4:39 p.m.

    Norwich and Eastern Connecticut Open 7:90a.m a, a, :ju p.m. close 10:30 anu, 2:30, 4:30,v li. iu.ovidence and all Rhode Island Open :30,10:J am., 3, 6:30, 9:30 p..m. dose 9, 11:15

    --:', 11 p.m.r.ewport, R. L Open 7:80 ajn., 3:30 pjn. Closei.i.i, iu:.-- a.m., z:oo, 11 p.m.New Haven and Northampton Way Open 2:30,... imvr v B.UI.. o p.m.lAjiiiosvuie, riamsviiie, umonvuin. Southing-to- n

    Open 10 am., 2:30, 9:30 p.m. close 6, 10:30am., 5:15 p.m.Naugatuck Kailroad Way Open 10:30 am., 8

    p.m. Close 9:30 am., 5 p.m.Waterbury (pen 7:30, 10:30 a.m., 8:30, 6:30

    p.m. Close 9:30, 10:30 am.. S, 5. 11 p.m.Birmingham, Ansonia and Derby Opena.m., 3, 5:30, 8 p.m. Close 6, 9:30 am.. I2:3i 5

    p.m.Seymour and Oxford Open 10:30 am. and 8

    p.m. close o:.jw a.m.. 0:10 p.m.Tyler City I Open 10:90 a.m.; close 5 p.m.Orange Open 10:30 ajru. 9:30 n.m dose 9:30

    am., 5 p.m.Housatonic Railroad Way Open S, 7 p.m. Close

    bhepaug Railroad Way Open 11:30 a.m 9:30p.m. Close 6, 9 a.m., 3 p.m.Connecticut Valley Road Way Open 2:30,Close 9 am., 2:30. 11 p.m.Air Lina Railroad Way Open 2:30, 9:30 p.m.fJIOBe7:15 a.m., 4:30 p.m.

    Durham. Clintonville and Northford Onen 10mm (1 '.li, n, " 1 ... ,.itaiiuuietown oiien 1, 10:30 a.m.. 2:30. 5:30. 9:30

    p.m. close 7:15, jo.au a.m., 12:30, 9:15 II p.mDanbury Open 7, 11:30 a.m., 2:30,8p.m. Close

    o:nu, v, iu:au a.m., x, n, 7:15, 11 p.m.Milford Open 8:30. 12 noon. S:3d. R n m n.5:30, 9, 11:15am., 2, 5:15 p.m.coicnester upen 2:30, a:ao p.m. Close 7:15m., a:ia .m.West Haven Open 8:30 un 70 n m

    i i' w . 111 . . i;ou, o p.m.Rranch Office Open fi:1A 19 noon A nClose 7:15, 9:30, 11 a.m., 5 p.m.Weetville Open 9:15 am., 1,7:30 p.m. Close7:15, 11 a.m., 5 p.m.

    Itorui tsramord and orth UuuTord open ;iam.: dose 1 p.m.Foreign Open at 7:30 a.m.. 4:30. 7:49 cm.

    Close 9:30, 9, 11:15 a.nr, 12:45, 4,7:15, 11 p.m.earners leave tne omce at :iu snan:wsjiL,30, 8:49 and 4 p.m.. making four deliveries inthe business section and three, two further out,according to distance from the office. Collec-tions are made from Red street boxes hourlyfrom 7 am. until 10 p.m. From Orange boxesseven times daily, last collection at 10 p.m.

    All Green boxes are opened by the carrier oahis regular trips, making two and three coUeo-Lio-further out.

    Sunday collections from Red boxes at 4.7,p.m. Orange boxes 4, 9 p.m. Green boxes 4p.m.

    Money order and registered letter windowsopen from 8 am. till 8 p.m.

    The fees on orders in tbe United States are:Orders not exceeding (10, 8 cents: over $10 andnot exceeding $15, 10 cents: over $15 and not ex-ceeding $30, 15 cents; over $30 and not exceeding$40, 20 cents: over $40 and not exceeding $50, 29cents; over $50 and SMK-- exceeding $60. 30 cents;over $60 and not exceeding $70, 35 cents: over$70 and not exceeding $eD, 40 cents; over $80 sadand not exceeding $100, 45 centa.

    Postal notes are issued in amounts leas than $5.Fee for same only 8 cents, and Uiey must be pre-sented for payment within ninety days after thesame are issued.

    Letter postage in tha United States 2 cents perounce."Request to return" will be printed across theend of stamped envekM furnished by the Post

    offlce department withoA additional cost wheresuch ere ordered in iota not less thaa 900.

    --v . N. D. BFKRRY, P. JL

    A Brilliant Scene on Yale's CampusThe Class lay Exercises The Ora-tion and Poem Bead Fun and Hi-larity at the Beadlne of tbe ClassHistoric.Tale university's commencement was in

    full blast yesterday. First and paramountin general public interest were the class- -

    day exercises. There is an old saying,Bain never comes to interfere with a Yale

    class day," and yesterday surely was an in-stance proving the truthfulness of this an-cient tradition. For if there ever was a

    day when the rain apparently fairly achedto come down in torrents yesterday wasthat day. Nearly all the night previousthe flood gates of heaven were open wide,and early in the morning, though the rainhad oeased, the outlook was far from en--

    oouraging. Heavy clouds hid the sky andsun from mortal gaze and the air was si

    vo with a muffcv heat. But fortunecame to the rescue and a good day for allthe ezeroises was the result.

    THE CLASS ORATION.

    The first exercises of the day were inBattell chapel at 11 o'clock, where thelarge assembled audience listened to theclass oration and class poem. The formerwas delivered by Francis Theodore Brownof Olens Fails, . x., on tne suDjeci,"Culture and Service." and proved a mas--terlv effort. The oration was not onlywritten extremely well, Dut aenvereo asonly few orations, at Yale have ever beendelivered.

    It is in brief as follows:Modern philanthropy itself has Invited many

    criticisms p we are told with much justice thatshe seldom makes great sacrifices; is often os-tentatious: often injudicious, defeating her ottoends by a false humanity; and were the instru-ment not defective there is call enough for effortin the magnitude of the remaining work. Despiteall prophecies, the millenium is doubtless far dis-tant: and we in these days of prospective billionaires and muttering masses, with our political.ecoBomy lounueu upon seinsnuess, our wnoiescience "so careless of the single life" we

    "Who trusted God was love indeed,And love creation's final law."

    are sometimes staggered at the mystery of it all.The enemies of "culture," as- the term has

    been appropriated by its modern disciples, haveDrougnc against 11 many serious charges, "per-haps the very silliest cant of the day," says Mr.Frederick Harrison, "is the cant about culture.Uuiture is a desirable quality in a critic of newbooks, and sits well on a possessor of belles

    but as applied to politics, it means simply aturn ior Bmau xauic nnumg, love or seinsn ease,indecision in action."

    The religion of humanity forgets too that power! ui uuu suuiune uiscipie which for eighteencenturies has been developing the God in manwhich it would now enthrone; it plucks thefruits of Christianity and denies the tree. What-ever, my classmates, has been said this morningof the duty of service to which we have givenour assent, has appealed to us because of thatpure and eenerous atmosphere in which consciously or unconsciously every gentleman hasbeen bred and which is itself the a:irect productof this disciple of the centuries.

    To President Dwight the class orator saidThere is not a man of us but has been made con- -stantlv to feel that in vou he had an accessiblefriend and adviser whose interest in his highestwelfare was deep and vital.

    You have devoted yourself, sir, to years of ar-duous toil, but with them comes the rare recom-pense of the life of ministry,and I can leave withyou no niener nope than mat; witn tne sifaithfulness which you have exercised toward usyou may long continue to touch the springs ofthe unnumbered days to be.His address to his classmates was: We havebeen dwelling upon the duty and the power of

    its strengthening and exaltingof personal motive. But there is a richer realityin the generous life than even the consciousnessof high achievements a reality which the pastivru yeurs vi inemismp nave Deen steadily reyealing and to which these final days are bearing tenaeresc testimony.In those frequent meetings, above which theelms have lately whispered, when the hand haslingered in another, and the voice has strange-ly trembled and the eye grown dim meetingswhich description almost desecrates, we havelearned as never before, the deep blessedness ofof unselfishness, and have felt that to be trulylovca, is more man an mat neartiess Druuancyor power may gain or know. May the years ofthe rougher schooling that await us be as richin the treasures of airection, as these have beentheir story as well will soon be toldithe morrows be memories and the very raysthat leap from many a star be gleamingon the cypress trees above us all. When thathour comes may some tears like those of Jeanv aijean ten or a me in wnicn our own is living.udu uiess you ami lareweii.

    THE CLASS POEM

    by Luther H. Tucker, jr., of Alhany.N.Y.proved a delightful treat, coming frompoetic and thoughtful mind. Some of theverses are the following:O years, you have vanished like shadows,

    Like ghosts you have glided away;And the light that was yours has faded

    And darkened before the day,

    You have faded and fled and left us,And only now and thenIn the weird wild night of memoryYour faces glimmer again.

    As in a dream I heard tbe music swell,As in a dream I heard it die away;

    And all the hall was vacant, and the bellAbove tolled out the final parting day,And I arose alone, and wound mv war

    Among the buildings known for four long years,Ana lovea, ana lett at last witn lingering tears.

    And passing these, then out into the townBeneath the over, arching elms I went,

    Full little looking either up or down.With straggling step and pondering head low-

    oent.Considering the varied season spent,

    And all held treasured in them, and how fastThe future fadeth into the past.

    And sorrow o'er my heart won mastery,That I should see no more as then I saw

    The campus full of faces dear to me,And so familiar, and a kind of awePossessed me pondering, "IF again I drawNear this loved place, 'twill be a stranger's home,Aim i as irom a aiuerent woria may come.

    Then suddenly I thousht of those old men."And sure," said I, "their lot like ours must be,

    let sadder, for they come not back againBut cross the black stream for eternity;And they yield not to despondency,But one savs gladly. 'Good is any state:Take heart, go forth; obedience conquers fate.'

    Classmates, to you I need not say farewell;We bid farewell to pleasant years now past,Of light-soule-d college life we toll the knell.But not of friendship, let us still hold fastTo Ninety-one- , though scattered by time's

    blast,In love united Good is every state,Take heart, go forth; obedience conquers fate!

    THE CLASS DAY HISTORIES.

    Long before 2 o'clock, the appointedtime for the beginning of the class day exercises, crowds of people began assemblingon the seats just south of the treasurybuilding, all in great anticipation over thecoming events which are and have been sopopular at Yale from time immemorial.There were nearly two thousand peoplepresent when the seniors, some dignified,others not with their caps and gown,marched in to take their seats, smoke theirpipes, sing their glees and make merryover the pointed remarks of the differenthistorians at some unlucky fellow's ex-pense. In the big crowd there was theusual large proportion of ladies, young andold, mothers and sisters, who had come onto see some beloved member of the familygo through all the necessary exercises ofcommencement week, and young ladies,too, were there who seemed just as wellprovided with masculine attentions,though not from a brother or even cousin.The standard of beauty present in townthis year is above the average.

    The historians, as predicted, need theirvictims mercilessly. Particularity so waslnomas li. Uuy, portions or. whose re-marks are as follows:

    "Ladies and Gentlemen: Theother day George Walton, "Pigeon-toe- dJack," came up to me, his eyes delugedwith scalding tears, and said: 'For heaven'ssake, Tom, don't say anything aboutdrunks; I am going to have my father,mother and best girl here.' No, Jack, nota word. I'll not even mention the Arionball.

    "Strange things are hapjpening everyday, Dut wnen uert rsarcisy ot smoKyPittsburg was announced in all the NewYork papers as salutatorian of the class,even King Whichkiss feared for the sta-bility of his throne. Bert is the individualwho slanders the college in the Registerand tells tne gooa, aear people aoont tnenaughty boys who swipe fezzes, arousethe wrath of elephants and play horsewith sheriffs.

    " The Princess Kingsbury had- - been acandidate for every honor in college, fromsecretary of 'the Freshmen Debating so-ciety to valedictorian. He got the former.Howard has spent most of his time

    his soul in Dwitrht hall, andhopes some time to pmll the celestial eightagainst nodes.

    "Cold Bush Bushnell, the boy professorand incidental grind, recites so fast thatthe only way his professors follow him isto have him speak into a phonograph andthen turn it out slowly,

    "Piggy Street modestly tells this storyabout himself:

    "He was invited out to dine with a par-son, and in the coarse of the dinner theminister, who had taking quite a fancy toGeorge, said: 'George, yon are a prettygood sort of a fellow; I'd like to have yonmarry my daughter.'

    "To this, George replied: 'Hard lack,dominie, but I'm a married man myself.'"Richard Banoker, the Fifth Earl ofDuyckinck, would consent only under pro-test to order his cap and gown, but lieought to remember that they, like charity,cover a multitude of sins.

    "Boll Moyle loves Fair Haven. He saysit's the scenery, but Gage says it is ani-mated nature. Moyle is the most particu-lar man in the class about nationality. Heinvariably speaks of fweEngllah' and 'you

    'Fauntleroy' Holcomb has played football for three years, sometimes with hiszeet, sometimes with ma nanus, dui gen-erally with bis mouth. He has calmlywithstood do. KHoae's auegea proianity,.Gill's rage and, Uorbin's favorite epunetyou darned big cow,' not so mucn ior tne;lory of representing xaie in tne gna-iro- neld as to win a so-b- made witn r rana:

    Hyde."Joseph Rogers Herod kept the audience

    it constant laughter with bright referenceto his classmates. He said in part:

    Gentlemen of '91: Gentlemen you allmust be, inasmuch as you are unanimouslyaverse to hearing any scandal concerningthose of your number. But if, nnf ortu-natel- v.

    there are anv in this assembly, anylike the cap and gown minority, small butnoisy, wno uiko a aeiigni in uietw BBuim-ou-s

    attacks, I shall waive the point forthem and address you as 'gents.' Since agent is a gentleman lacking a few necessaryreamrements. ana a lav may oe saia to vothe same thing, I shall again waive thepoint, and address vou as 'iavs.'

    Mr. ueroa elicited many snouts uilaughter from his reference to "Bonnie".brown, sam (joisate. wno is to oecome amissionary. Luther Tucker and CharlesCapron Marsh.

    J. Barry Sears told some interestingstories at his class mate's expense as follows: Now let us now glance into thenursery, are they not lovely,always brightand beaming, Dut like an cnuaren, some-times naughty. First then is NobbyWricht. bnbbiincr over with childlike .simplicity and the results of his years' workon the news. It is Said that Bunno hasdeclared a monthly dividend, that his fam-ily miorht wear diamonds. Glen, however.is a precocious child and that monumentalnerve of his may sometime put him in theclass with Slade. the neraer ana tamer oiTTnnlA Yarn's aacrles.

    Back and romeroy are asieep m uuurcradles; let us not wake them, tor tneirmilk is not ready; and Kenerson, as usualsurrounded by those jovial pals, Reynolds,TW1 and Penfield. has just cracked a bottle of red ink. lou will not regret, itavmgthe babes in charge of the nurse? when youare told that we shall now go down ChapelatrAt and look for Chippy uen Morrison,There h is. and needless to say, he hasnot been unsuccessful; but why should hebe, with those calves divine, asBoDL-'oope- rOftVR.

    Isham's forte is tha ladies, and for references as to his abilities as a courier youare referred to Ives, Doane and Tom Young.

    "It once happened on a Sunday afternoon in May that Ish desired to take asmall drive. Not beme satisfied with amale companion, he sought one ot tne gen-tler sex. for whom, as usual, he was fruit.Betas rather proud of the quality of hiscatch, he proceeded to toule out Whitneyavenue, much to the delight of all whoknew the Dutch butcher. Wright's gallis sure to get him into trouble, although'some of his trickB may be excusable fromhis extreme youth, even the patient andsad-eye- d Uorson would condemn ms actionin bathing with ink a party of lady visitors on the campus who disturbed him athis play. If in three years Wright doesnot own the eartn it will oe Decause nisgail is worn out from overwork and hiscontrolling interest m Aiutfnua ueumuushis entire attention.

    Bob. it is said, has a greathead for business, and even now hasplans for booming a benefactor to the hu-man race. A magnificent sign on Broadway proclaims to the passer-b- y that R. W,Pomeroy is prepared to furnish filters tothe world at large. This, I assure you, istrue, and all who intend to become coldwater fiends, would do well to apply earlyto him."

    The histories by Harry Hallam Tweedyand Ashbel Green, jr., were also spicy andinteresting.

    PLANTING TBE IVY.

    Immediately at the conclusion of theseexercises came that solemn duty of plant-ing of the class ivy, whose tendrils willsoon cling lovingly to the walls of the newlibrary.

    THE ODE.

    The ode, which was sung, was writtenby Harry Hallam Tweed, and was as follows:"Ivy green with pinions bright,Our life at Yale has winged its flight,?rn the distant land where dwell,Fond memories which our hearts love well.And as our day draws to its close,Each heart with sadness overflows,Filled with a love that ne'er shall fail,The love of Ninety-on- e for Yale.As climbing toward bright summer skies,They tenderly ever upward rise.So shall our thoughts, while life shall last,Turn backward toward our happy past.O, may our hearts be ever young,Our lives reveal the love we've sung,Praying till death our lives assail,"For God, for Country and for Yale."ATARDED SPECIAL HONORS AND FELLOW

    SHIPS.

    President Dwight announced the following special honors and fellowships at theclose of the exercises at Battell chapel yesterday:

    Special Honors. Two years: Political science, history and law Nathan Gliksman, Edward N. Loomis. Charles C. Marsh. Lafayette E.Mendell, Samuel C. Shaw, Ray B. Smith, WilliamJS. Thatcher.

    Modern languages Howard La Field.National and political science Theodore

    Hart, Hyppolite w. Gruener.Mathematics Joseph Bowden. ir.One Year Honors. Philosophy : Cecil K.

    Henrv L. Pane-burn-Political science, history and law Grosvenor

    Atterbury, Joe G. Kstill, Raymond H. Gage,Charles P. Howland, Robert G. McClung, Georgef, Kobbins, William l. Kover, uerDert Bmitn,Harry H. Tweedy, George S. Walton.Ancient languages Edward P. Drew.

    Modern laneuaees William T. Bartley, HenL. Paneburn. Clarence S. Davis, James Richari

    Enelish Hildreth J. Ackroyd, George B.Adams, Francis T. Brown, R. T. Kingsbury, Rayli. smith.

    Natural and physical science Edward W. Banner, Clement G. Smith.

    Fellowships. Douglass fellowship Herbert A.smitn '6f, reappomtea.Siliiman fellowshirj Edward W. Danner '91.

    John Sloane fellowship John Whitmore '86.reappointed.

    Foote scholarships Gerald G.Beard '87,ArthurW. Colton '90, Joseph Bowden, jr., '91.Extra Foote income for one year $135 to Walter J. Low '90.

    Macev scholarship Hipnolyte Gruener '91.Larned scholarship, class of '89 Philip W.

    Wells; for "91 Lafayette B. Mendel.Additional Larned scholarship George L.

    Amermann, '90.Clark scholarship, '90 George L. Amermann;for '91 Curtis C. Bushnell.Deforest for '91 James Richardson.Cobden club medal for '91 Nathan L. Glicks- -

    man.Scott prize In German, '91 Henry L. Langbra.Lucius F. Robinson Latin prizes '91 and '92

    First, William T. Bartlett; second, Richard B.Monarty, '91.

    CONTINUED ON SECOND PAGE.

    ' THE COURT RECORD.City Court Criminal Side Judge

    Pickett,Michael Sull, burglary, nolled; same, attemptat rape, same; same, carrying concealed weap-

    ons, same; same, burglary with intent to commitrape, bound over to the July term of the superiorcourt; Charles Bootsky, breach of the peaceagainst natnan Simons, judgment suspended :same, trespass in private yard, $2 and $6.02 costs;Joseph Kane, trespass. $3 and $3.78 costs; Frede-rick Reilly, same, same; William Hemps tock,vagrancy, continued to June 30; Patrick A. Deg-na-

    obstructing Bidewaik. continued to June 23:Michael Egan, breach of the peace againstuvurgv uuu ciieu hi i: iki ii ujll, uouea on pay-ment of $0.34 costs; . Charles F. Graves,breach of the peace against George W. Ladieu,continued to June 23; Frederick Cisco, breachof peace against Celia Hill, judgment suspended:Joseph Pickett, breach of peace against hiswife, $7 and $6.24 costs; Thomas Whitley, breachor peace against William Brown, $3 ana b.tcosts; Thomas F. Stanford, breach of peaceagainst his wife, $1 and $6.24 costs; same,drunk, $3: James Curley, breach of peace, $1;same, drunk, $5 and $5.77 costs; Frederick Cisco,injuring private property, $7 and S7.88 costs;Mary Dresser, trespass on private property, con-tinued to June 23.

    Court Notes.The decision of the supreme court has just

    been handed down in the case of Antonio Mos-col- avs. John Montesanto, In which a note of

    $80 is involved. Action was brought to recoveron a note given by the defendant to secure therelease from arrest of his son upon anotherprocess. The case was fought several days inthe city court, the ground being taken by thedefendant that there was no consideration fortne note and Judge Pickett decided for theplaintiff. The defendant appealed to the su-preme court and the case was argued at thesession in this city. Tbe ieasons were by ChiefJustice Andrews. Pond & Pond for plaintiff andJ. P. Qoodhart for defendant.

    r Ot Historic Interest.Plainvillb, June 22. In your notice of

    the wedding of Miss Bessie S. Moody andsome of the presents, one of great valueand historical significance was omitted. Itwas a rooking ohair, formerly the propertyof "Ifadam" Trumbull, wife of the cele-brated Doctor Trumbull, historian of thestate, and resident of North Haven,Conn.,for many years.

    - TWKflTY-FIRS- T ANNUAL,

    The, Connecticut maaonle VeteranAssociation... :'.Meets at Bristol Thursday, June 25, at 11a. m. New Haven veterans must take the7:25 a.m. Northampton train, the only oneby which they can reach there fat time.An attendance of about one hundred 1b ex-pected? They meet in the hall of Franklinlodge No. 56. The business meeting willbe held, officers elected and a banquet,served. W. W. Lee of Meriden is the ven-erable master. This is the Twenty-fir- stannual meeting of ihe organization. Itwas founded in 1870.

    The declining powers of old age may bewonderfully recuperated and sustained bythe daily use of Hood's Sarsaparilla.

    Origotal. No. 43.

    StrawberryCottage Pudding.

    by Mrs. Dearborn,Principal Boston Cooking School.

    Cream i cup butter ; add cupsugar gradually, beating all the time ;then add I egg beaten till thick andlight. Mix together a generous pint ofpastry flour and 2 tea sp. Cleveland'sBaking Powder; add this to the firstmixture alternately with one cupful otmilk. '

    Beat well together, pour into "abuttered baking-pa- n and bake aboutthirty minutes in a moderate oven.Cut in squares and serve with stewedand sweetened strawberries and cream.(Copyright, 1891, by Cleveland BakingPowder Co.)

    Use only Cleveland's baking powder,the proportions are made for that.

    An even teaspoonful of Cleveland's

    .rtjti!,. casing rowaerNpr does As much as assSr heaping teaspoon- -

    ful of others. Alarge saving on ayear's bakings. Trya can, Cleveland's.

    FOR DELICIOUS MUFFINS

    BE SURE TO TRY IT.

    SCOTT'SFramLSION

    Of Pure Cod Liver Oil withHypophosphites

    Of Lime and Soda.There are emulsions and emulsion,

    and, there is still much skimmed milkwhich masquerades as cream. Try asthey will many manufacturers cannotso disguise tlielr rod liver oil as to makeit palatable to sensitive stomachs. Scott'sEmulsion of TURK NORWEGIAN CODJAVKlt OIL, combined with Hypophos-phites is almost as palatable as milk,For this reason as well as for the factof the stimulating qualities of the te,

    Physicians frequently pre-scribe it in, eases of- CONSUMPTION,

    SCROFULA, BRONCHITIS andCU ICONIC COUeil or SEVERE COLO.All Druggists sdl it, but be sure yon getthe genuine, as there are poor imitations.

    DELICIOUS MINCE PIESEVERY DAY IN THE YEAR.

    NO NE SUCHCONOENSED

    1V t igceAVeat

    HIGHESTAWARD4 UnWW IB- t

    received at all Purefood Expositions forSuperior Quality,

    Cleanliness,and convenience to

    housekeepers.Each Fctckane contains materialor two large pies.

    orocors oft en substitute cheap Imitations, to makeabetter profit. ReiuRftfmch urticles, and insist onhaving NONE RUl.'H lrnnd the best.MERRELL&. SOULE, svracuse. n.y.apSO eodnr

    WHY NOT DRINK

    j) WILLIAMS'IniOOT BEER.

    HrJOTTtfiMAKES Jacl WILLIAMS!KGALlONa lffl

    EXTRACT

    PROPRIETORS

    'Is DELICIOUS, CASILV AND CHEAPLYMADE AT HOME.Taki No TryOther, SPARKLING, It.BEST TEMPERANCE HEALTHY.BEVERAGE KNOWN.

    How Lost ! How Regained !A. Great Medical Work for Young and

    Middle-Ag- ed Men. New Edition.

    KNOW THYSELF.Or SB A new and onlyGold Medal PBIZB ESSAY onNEKVOUS andPHYSICAL DKBItlTY, ERRORS ofYOUTH, EXHAUSTED VITALITY E

    DECLINE, and all DISEASESand WEAKNESSES of MAN. 800 pages, cloth,

    125 Invaluable prescriptions. Only $1.01)gilt;mail, doable sealed. Descriptive Prospectus wun enaorsemenia pnrri crMn...f iha Pm... vnlnnl.rv. LULL. I OEJILv..u - j .IIItestimonials of the cared NOW.

    Consultation in person or by mail. Expert treatment. INVIOLABLE SECRKCT and CER-TAIN CURE. Address I)r. W. II. Pnrker, orThe Feabody MedicalInstitute, 140. 4

    or Post Office Boxl89fi.The Peabody Medical Institute has many imi-tators but no equal. Herald, (Copyrighted.)

    BRAND NEW GOODS!OUR STOCK OF

    CARPETSHas never been so complete as It is this season.

    Housekeepers intending to purchase will dowell to do so now ; have the OarpeU made

    and ready to put down when wanted.

    CHINA MATTINGS.A arfre shipment of the handsomest colors and

    patterns Just received.

    Smyrna Bugs,Ingrain Art Squares,Linoleums and

    Oilcloths.LACE CURTAINS AND PORTIERES

    In great variety.

    LACK CURTAINS LAUNDERED IN THE HOSTPERFECT MANNER.

    Curtain Poles and All Sorts otWindow Trimmings.

    NEW HAVEN

    TOOT SHADE COfflPT,8, 70, 72 Orasge Street

    Open Moadayanfl Saturday evenings

    Tbe Opening; Lowe- r-InalsinineantLosses Forenoon TneClose Dull and Weak.

    New Yoni. June 22.Railroad bonds were dull and featureless and

    while displaying in the mam a steady tone,yielded slightly to spots without material changein anything. The business of the day was only$451,000.

    Stocks opened slightly lower and furthersmall fractions lopped off from time to time un-der the hammering of the trading element. Thelosses during the forenoon were insignificant,however, and intense dullness marked the trading except in silver, which rose to 10 but laterfell back again. The announcement of the tak-ing of $600,000 more gold for export encouragedfurther efforts on the part of the bearish profes-sionals and more decided pressure was broughtto bear, North American being selected to be thespecial object of attack. The selling forced itsprice off 11 against i Saturday and while thelist of active shares sympathized, though noother heavy decline was seen. The extremelosses, however, ranged up to i per cent.- withthe grangers, Goulds and specialties leading thedownward movement. The market failtd torally and' although North American recovered afraction, the closing was dull but weak at thelowest prices of the day.

    Closing prices: Bid.Adams Express . 146Alton & Terre Haute . 28Alton & Terre Haute pfd . 125American Exnress . 113Canada PacificCanada Southernuanton 65Central Iowa tPent-rn- Pjtift 80Chesapeake & Ohio 16HChesapeake & Ohio lt pfd MChesapeake and Ohio 2d pfd. 376Chicago & Alton . .t;mcago Alton pra. .Chicago, Burl. & Quincy 87;Consolidated GasDel. & Hudson Canal 1Del., Lack. & Western . 135Denver & Kio Urande a9iEast Tenn. Va. & Ga

    &8t Tennessee, 1 st pfdEast Tennessee. 2d pfd 13Erie 19MErie, pfd ouHocking Valley 25Tllinnin nontrn.1 93Kansas & Texas 14Kincrston & Pembroke 9Erie & Western 13JErie & Western, pfd 56iaite snoreLong Island !Ijouisville and Nashville 73JLouisville, N. AlbanyManhattan Beach 4Manhattan Elevated 100Memphis & Charleston 34Michigan Central 90Mil. L. Shore and Western V3Mil. T.. Shore and W.. nfd 106Minneapolis and St. Louis 34jMinn, and St. Louis, pfd 9Missouri Pacific 67Mobile E Ohio iNashville and Chattanooga 106New Jersey Central 1096jNorroiK ana western, ptaNorthern Pacific .' 23:nortnern racinc. ptu 009aChicago & Northwest 10494Chicago & Northwest pfd i-New York Central 100N. Y., Chic, and St. Louis 12N. V. flhirv and St. T,nia. nfd 66Ohio MississippiOntario and Western 1&HOregon improvement oOregon Navigation 69JNorth American 12Pacific Mail 35Peoria, D. & Evansville 18Pullman Car Company 180Reading 30!Richmond and West Point 15!Rock Island 71!Rome. Wat. &. Oed 109!St. Paul 68sSt. Paul and Manitoba 103St. Paul & Omaha 234

    t. raui omana prerTenn. Coal and Iron 32Texas Pacific 13'Toledo & Ohio Central, nref 76Union Pacific 437$United states ExpressWabash.... 10Wabash, pfd 22Wells. Farso Express 141Western Union Tel 79UWheeling and Lake Erie 744Silver certificates luzAmerican Cotton Oil 22New York and New England 344Chicago & ttast ill odOhicaero & East 111. pfd 92Atchison & Topeka 31Northern & Western I194Union Pacific, Denver Gulf 18Oregon Short 25Sugar r. 61Lead Trusts 17JiDenver Rio Grand, pfd 506Cattle i2Colo-ad- o Coal 3iHocking Coal 154Homestake 11Ontario 39

    uicksilver 56uicksilver.pref 35

    Southern Pacific S4C C. C. A St.LoutaC. C. C. & St. Louis.pfd 91St. Paul and Duluth 31Wisconsin Central 18N. Y., N. H. and Hartford 225

    Government Honda.The following were the quotations for United

    States bonds at the call10:15 a.m.

    4Us, '01, Registered 1004Us, '91, Coupons 100 S44s, '07, Reg 117MJ 1184s, '07, ex. Stamped 118H 119M4s, '07, Coupons 109Currency 6s, 1895 IllCurrency 0s, 1890 114Currency 6s, 1897 U63 118Currency 6s, 1898.. 119

    JOHN KERLEY & CO.,Dealers in Choice Western In

    vestment Securities.EAL estate mortiraire bonds a SDecialtr.

    Xv Eastern agents for the Central Kansas LandCo. Bonds, stocks and other high grade securi-ties.

    I have associated with me in the above. Mr.John Morse, former Iv of the firm of Hinman &Morse. Mr. Morse will also continue his formerbusiness of real estate, rents, insurance, etc.with myself, under the firm name of John Morse& Co., offices Benedict bulldlnfir, 83 Churchstreet. JOHJ KERLEY,

    ap25 formerly 514 George st

    Securities for Sale.3,000 Northampton EB. 6's of 19011.3,000 Peoria Water Co. 6'g of 1919.

    i5,000 Mystic Valley Water Co., Conn., 5's.3,000 Denver Water Co. 7's.5,000 New London Northern RR. 4's, 1910.

    $2,000 N. Y. & New England RR. 6's, 1902.50 sh Consolidated Rolling Stock.SO sh American Bank Note Co.20 sh N. Y.. N. H. i Hartford RR. Co.Small lots Water Co., Boston Electric, Air Line

    RR., N. i. & N. J. Telephone.Agents Checque Bank, London.KIMBERIr. BOOT & DAT.

    INVESTORS' Should get information about ourGUARANTEED

    Mortgages

    Bonds srfSUGAR CC.

    StocksWE HAVE HAD

    20 Years' ExperienceIN INVESTMENTS.

    NEVER LOST A DOLLARIn every instance Interest and Principal has been

    paid at maturity.WE Have RETURNED to INVESTORS

    $13,800,000realizing 6 per cent, to It per cent, interest.We never handle any security that we do not abso-

    lutely control. The investments we now nave are aasecure as any we have ever offered, and pay more Interest than any we have offered in the last ten years.We can refer to the leading banks in New York, andto our 4,009 patrons. We are under the supervisionof the Banking Department of New, York State.

    J.B.WATKINS L.M.CO.Wall St., Cor. Broadway, New YorkHKNEY DICKINSON, Msnacer.

    $75,000.FIRST MORTGAGE FIVE

    PER CENT. GOLD BONDSOF THE

    Mem New EiMTeleioie Co.OF CONNECTICUT.

    Dated March 1, 1891.Payable March 1, 1906.

    Interest payable on the first days of March, JuneSeptember and December of each year.

    Total Issue $300,000 ot which $225,-OO- Ohave been sold.

    These bonds are secured by a first mortgageupon all the real and personal property of saidCompany, made to the Union Trust company ofNew Haven, Conn., as tinstee for the bondhold-ers. These bonds are fnee of taxes to the holder.

    The capital stock of said company Is f1,600,000,fully paid.All the net earnings of the company for thepast Wo years, as well as the proceeds of thesebonds, have been and are being used in perfect-ing the plant and property, including the real es-tate, underground work, etcWe offer and recommend the bonds as a vervsafe home investment, netting the investor fiveper cent, free of taxes.

    jrnce r ana interee. -

    H. C. "WARREN & CO.p8tf

    . E. P. . AllVINE,Attomoy at IUawBOOKS 11,

    ; 69 Church Street.

    not begin to cover tne

    BLOUSES. ONLY 25

    $3.50, Marked down from

    $4.95, Marked down from

    to fit boys 2j4 to 6 yearsmarked down from $5.00.

    Church Street

    WEDDIM RIMSAND

    WEDDI1T& PRESENTS.Durant, the Jeweler,

    40 CHURCH STREET,Manufactures all his plain Gold Rings, which he

    sells at manufacturer's prices.

    Quality Stamped on Each RingAND GUARANTEED.

    MARTIN COOPERRepairer and Adjuster of Fine Watches

    At Moderate Prions.817 Chapel Street, Boom 1,

    Mew Haven.

    WEULS & GUNDETewelers,

    No. 788 Chapel Street.A URGE LINE

    SOLID SILVElt andSILVER PLATED WARE.

    Repairing of

    Watches and JewelryA SPECIALTY.

    gaittls, Oils, tc.THE FINEST LINE OP

    WALL PAPERSAT LOWEST PRICES, ON EXHIBITION AT

    The Broadway Wall Paper Store.

    Come and examine our goods and yoa wil besurprised at our prices for beautiful coombinatlons.

    E. It. JEFFCOTX.PAINTING and DECORATING in all their sev-

    eral branches done well and promptly. Esti-mates given. E. R. JEFFCOTT.

    165 Elm street, corner of York

    SEND TO USFOR QUOTATIONS

    On anything you need in our line and we will

    Save You Money.THOMPSON & I1ELDEIV,

    PAINTS, OIL and GLASS,

    396 & 398 State St.. Courier Bngdlns:

    To 1 Carol Inrestor.9 9. 9 9 9a

    Are you looking for & safe lOper cent, investment for your$100, or $500. or $5,000?

    THE ATKINSON

    House Furnishing Company,OF MAINE,

    ORGANIZED 1887, CAPITAL $1,000,000,Has paid its stockholders 5 per cent, everysix months, January and July, since organ-ization, and earned a handsome surplus.

    To further Increase the business with a viewto earn greater dividends, the Directors have au-thorized the Treasurer to issue $120,000 ot Treasury stock at par, $10.00 per share.

    The full 5 per cent, dividend will be paid aausual to all stockholders of record. May 15th.Write the Company for Prospectus, andlist ot stockholders now numbering over 40Address "

    Tba Atkinson House Furnishing Co.,27 Scbool St., Boston, Mass

    101, 103, 105

    Eiuauctal.

    THE!National Hcsm's Bat,

    NEW HAVEN, CONN.,

    Draws Bills of Exchange

    Alliance Bank (Limited), London,Provincial Bank of Ireland, Dublin,

    Union Bank of Scotland,Credit Lyonnais, Paris,

    And on All the Principal Cities of Europe.(sues Circular Letters of CreditAvailable Xbrougnout Europe. -

    GEO. A. BUTLER. President.WM. T. FIKL.DH. Oaakier.

    VERMILYE&C0Bankers and Brokers.

    Dealer In Investment Securities.

    16 and 18 Nassau St.,nsro-- Yorls. OitySecurity Insurance Co.

    OF NEW HAVEN.OFFICE 37 CENTER STREET.

    Cash Assets Jan.l,91, $732,443.47.DIUOTORS

    Chas.S. Leete, Cornelius Plerpont.Jas. D. Dewell, A. O. Wlleoi,Daniel Trowbridge, Joel A. 8perry,Jas. M. Mason, 8. E. Merwin.wm. K. Tyier, John W. Ailing,H. Mason.

    CHAS. 8. LEETE, H. MASON,President. 8ecretarv

    J. D. DEWELL, H. C. FULLER,Asm1! ftmiretar

    PRICE WILLBE ADVANCED

    July 15th.Notice is hereby given that the price of stock

    in the

    Boar Valley Irrigation CoWilt be advanced from the present selling priceof $108 per share, for either class of stock, to

    SI 03 for Preferred Stock and$105 for Common Stock

    on the 15th of July.

    The Semi-Annu- al DividendOf 4 per cent, on preferred stock and 5 per

    cent, on common stock will be paid at tbe National Park Bank, New York, July 1.

    The earnings of the Company are far in excessof its dividend requirements, as above, of 8 percent, per nn'ini on preferred stock and 10 percent, on commen stock.

    The Increase of capital will add largely to theearning power of the Company.

    If you want A SAFE AND PROFITABLE IN-VESTMENT, call on

    KIMBERLY, ROOT & DAY,NEW HAVEN, CONN.,

    Or CHAS. W. 6BEBNE)Murray Hill Hotel, New York City. a8 Cm

    BURGLARY, FIREDEFT FORGERIES,BY HIRINO A SAFE IN THE VAULT OF

    Mercantile Safe Deposit Co.Annual rental of safe from FIVE to SIXTY

    DOLLaARfl. Absolute fieenritv for Bon flu. Stock.WUla, Bullion, Plate, Jewelry. Precious Stones,and all evidences of value. Accr- - to vaultthrough the bankinfr room or tbe iUKCHANI XBAN lw.

    Tsf Ctanrcb, Cor. Center Streei.Oouxxki rooms for convenience of patroi allpersons Interested a re cordially invited to uj actthe oompanyYpremlaee. Open from 9 m. to8 p.m.Thomas 11. TaowBaiDeK, President.

    vUTUD. whits, v. vBAHs tu xmowsiinon, pecana

    KNICKERBOCKER SHOULDER BRACE, (Which is the most comfortAble Brae evw- - wrw--n tWo take the chest nteuure ia flitlns ud var-an- tttom lo lit periecUjr. Thcj are Mpecialljradapted for youn people, as tbej keep tbe(boulders upright and will prevent roand aboul-der-

    . HEWITT & CO.,744 Chapel Street,

    jgi APOTHECARIES.

    PhotographicSupplies,

    FOR THE

    Amateur or Professional.CHARLES W. WHITTLESEY 1 CO.,

    AT OCR NEW STAND.

    281 STATE STREET.

    HORSES !TV Fmt yKenruckr aad Illinois Bos

    dri vera saddlers, draft and roadsters.rVHSALB.

    New and SMOod-han- d waeons. esniarea mm.revs, pbsetons, beach wagons, Ooooord. bujoriea.etc.. etc.

    Unburn farm n annua double aad saneta b.on hand and made to order.IKwoie ana amarie team and boegr harnessWagon Jacks toe best wson ack in the ikei for I trot and heavy wont.fceveral wagons and oarriaeea tart witli na h

    sold.Hv Vre& and Threahlnv IIscIiIsashiis.uat a sacrifice.moras, trnckise, exprasstne.Bsrfns mrntahed for partiaa. city8MEDLEY BROS. Co!" JU6tat street sl to lTJBrswvXTStrist.r