Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 17, 1910, Page 7

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Gur Righ's of Less Importance Than Our Duies (Written Specially for The Bulletin) | restrictions which they may make. @ w1l to consider our rights, | They hedge themselves and their be- But it is much mere important to re- | longings about with prickly barriers to ard our duties” 1 read thesc worde, | keep others at & “proper distance’— or some very like them and to that | they themselves being sole judges of o n a speech recently delivered vhat is “proper” They are apt to x-Prosident Roosevelt. Now | don’t| have such very peeuliar notions of inow whether vou happen to admire | what are their rights that even life- m or to dislike him. Nor does it | long neighbors nover learn all the in- ske amy special difference. Truth is | tricacies and sinuosities which must wiways true, mo matter 1 what | be followed in approaching them. They ith when | are about as desirable companions ag when | 50 many sore-headed bears. siced by your friend. It isn't because | it e red by mes—no vour ws 1 emy than velt feaid this that it 5| Worst of all, these very critters who »rth thmking about: it would be|will spend their last cents and work miehty sound and salutary doctrine if [ their fingers to the bone in defel t bad been uttered by any other man. ‘“ hat they consider their rights are apt o, there is nothing new about it. | to be shamefully careless of the rights It has heen sald before many times | of others, The man who will spit sul- by many writers and speakers: it will { phur and vitriol for a week if your doubtless be sa in by many re. | rooster gets into his garden and eats turn e certain nd to thre peop t ought d times a in|a green tomato, will, very lik o be | his cow out to pasture by the road ay. {and think it so much clear gain if she d nd eats hould a begin to 1 ts into vour cabbage-patch a or get so tir ‘ that ‘ew dozen heads. If you don’t main- they w £ town 1 o “legal fence” between vour pas- ind his meadow, he calls out the ce-viewers; but he relies on & cou- » of loose wires and a bit of brush, Some of Mr. elt’s critics cor S 5 Al breaching |} ve and here, to keep his sheep on his 5. W “might d¢ ywn acres. 1T by any chance your it et Himesi o felonding by | Children of your stock annoy him. he corty GO Jen cmefending DY regards it as a_deliberate outrage; g hnd graft which certain machine |, .ident and expects you to ignore it S e th parties seem to con- |or laugh it off. He exacts from you Mertion. 1 e can, Tamaduam Of »O'if| the last letter of the law; he expects oty Bhiiel o ity ®lad. 1T you, on the other band, fo treat him SR vt aat e b V| With the kindest consideration. The “avs the right old things. and 1011 The world is full of this sort of men B 1 s Soions and women. We can't strangle 'em; ere o e | e can't banish 'em to desert fsiands: A : 1" 4l we can do is to remonstrate and : b ald ihat there|reach and try to. educate. There is s st 2 oo il need in' the nation, in every state, in $818 sven then. It - the little communities that make uldn't . - the whole, of constant reiteration e g new to A% of the trite truth that no man's rights A T e e |are =0 important as his duties. Of - e e N course, we must defend our rights M . hnaid | when they are wronglully attacked, or e ey mone o yautte candid | maliciously undermined. No people of compret 25 el OF pob can long endure which Jacks the virile ton so m WeRt and dquint energy 1o win and retain its real and that S Bave i important rights. But with every s Stihs of athics right thus won goes a duty and a re- B 3 b Bilote we cah roa sponsibility, and th duties, these Gt Siintinte the responsibilitics, bulk larger and loom more impogingly on the herizon of every true man's outlook than the This one about the relative impor- | mere defense of his own rights. The R@nce Of our rights and our Autiee fs|many are always more important than o exeeption Some spend their the f Number One is not the larg- lives In a constant squ. with their est in the world—in any sphere outside Peighbors for the maintenar of their | the pigpen The center of the uni- BAmietad or suf-ssseried rights. New verse fan't under my hatbrim. There England hae i's full quota—and some are a good many hats covering a good on’t suppose the [ @ heads, and, as my one is to their tes many, such is the ratio of importance of my individual rights to my duties. ity in_the six s more or less of this sort some sMght or some neglect or som It is my right to see that Neighbor picagume littl> trespass upon Hoskins' fence is not built over the horders € speaking true line on my land; it is my duty to talls are avs dragging gee that I don‘t build my part of it 2 the unwar over the line on his land. If there is . tread any reasonable room for doubt, 1 would : ¢ men who . rather give the benefit of it to him ars in pwsuit to r than get into a quarrel with him. I ents, ould rather build my fence a foot in- ey are always side the line on my own land than orm cre an inch over the liné on his land. He mpiaining about the feels exactly the same way about it, eaks upon thelr corn patch and so we never have had and proba- ater than upon that biy never shall have any trouble about They are a trou ir division fence. When two neigh- e fences ars ws live their lives out without even tre anyone A getting into a _row over the “line . & to trot occasiona ross | fence.” it may be assumed as reason- r lawns 1 sop of chickens to|ably certain that they have both been e them now and then with more interested in_doing thelr duty ackiing. The e awake o |than in squabbling for their rights. t w demands or new | THE FARMER. Children Cry 1 FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA NORWICH TOWN | Gardeners Losing Cucumbers—Pupils Who Have Entered Free Academy. rdeners who have planted cucum- Safs Medicine for Children. rs with the expectation of having #i°s Honer and Tar is a safe and |late ones for pickles are much disap- oot edicine for dren. as it nted. The vines are turning pre- . 1 plates harmn turely vellow, which does not gen- ¢ wly the =enuine Foley's |erally happen till after frost. Whether Ta ow package. | this I owing to the dry weather or 1 t | blight it is hard to tell. In some large en pi numbers of cucumbers ed after the vines were | de | News from Many Sources. o s | _ John Mitchell of Montville h sit here this weel. been J. Wattles has returned aft- — Mrs This is the season ‘ori:“;.’; the summer at Fishers On the Scotland roa don Thursday New Books_ engines illing silon from e 3-2’2 WE SHALL MAKE A SPECIALTY| . ™ OF BODKE FDM NOW ON [ Mrs. 3. R Doscher of the Scotiand (Tomd Was the guest of friends in New London Wednesday. | e All New Fiction as seon published ®r promptly ordered Mr. and Mrs. Trving Bushnell of the We have 2 new line of Small Gift Scotland road were in Willimantie th Books on Friendship by Hugh Black e RITERG the Taty Other volumes by Maltby an - T ° es by Mal and Bab Mrs, Prothero was in Westerly abck, William Jordon and Ralph Con- | for the day nor, Mrs U, G These Books are Thursda oon of the guest of ch street. very attractive. X trip in their Danielson. rs, L. 8. Ingalls of Verga- are taking week-end automobile to Brooklyn New Books by Norman Durcan and Wilfred T. Grenfell. Harry Northrop of Stonington ending the waek with GEO. A. DAVIS | i 25-29 Broadway Mr. and Mrw,. Bibles and Testaments. is = grandpar- Skinner of Mrs. Thomas Mullin ana " . son hmve returned to their home on v Ast Town street from several months' stay al Fishers island N and Mre George Geer of Plair Hill, Sult Cases \:.n‘ returned to their home in Provi- x L sie \Vn‘v_ x entered the Academy n:‘l - i a | Norwich Town. e F SHETU Mo cocd THE sl[‘l‘ (lfl !AINESS 0. Has a Good Sound. WM. . RODE. Proy Rev. Newell Dwight Hillis de- e man on earth who can throw doul (©. Dot STRARBERERISEE ) 0 ey RN BRI b S . ¥ ; An Impossibility. - | raine the next president.” MMy, Constistution Ve 1 BREWER = Man % Not Those Lawyers' Fault. - ook o the credit of the country, be ALl Sl i I L Vi, there arve a dozen or more rich ainess results Indians.—akinta Constitnt The farmer who waits for oppor- tunity seldom finds it. . 01d friends, eld chairs and old shoes seem a goed trinity for the old hearth, 3 to save the hay already stored in the lott. It is time to reseed the lawn in lean spots this fall to get good grass in the spring. do keeled over, picked off the vines green. pod speaks for maturity. not make money for woud be abandoned, work put fnto it. the be done to make life pleasant for an- imals, but farmers who can't life conifortable for themselves, think it necessary. When the horse is fitted to the col- lar there fs trouble: but when collar is fitted to the horse all goes well. A sheep is the only animal that will return 80 per cent. of what he gets from the soil back to it. Stray nails are poor things to leave Iying round where stock of any kind can get them in their feet. Bill Bangs says’there are just as many things that are not so in farm- ing as in any other business. Everybody agrees that Cy Cymball looks like 30 cents. but he never has that amount with him. Sariah says the devil has a mort- folkks who don't oses sudden. gage on a great man realize it. He forec The farmer who soaks in bug juice don't know the value of pure water to his stock or fowls. When Samantha Psalter tells what she can do, all the other women look as if they'd rather see her do it than to hear her talk about it. Sunshine is good for fruit and the judicious use of a saw opens the way for it to ripen the fruit JOB JOLT. BLOCK_ISLAND Hotels Close—Openin: Personal Mrs. McDonald and son, Louis Gaf- fitt, have been visiting Mrs. Nat. Hall. Homer Sheffield is very ill. Mrs. Mellissa Dodgz, widow of Rob- ert Dodge, has been ill. Schools opened Monday. Miss Isabelle Gillesple, who has taught the Gully . school for thirteen vears, is ill with whooping cough. Mrs. Simon Dodge and little son Henry left Saturday for threz weecks' vacation at Providence and Wakefield, R. 1. New York and Long Island. Schooner Clara E. has gone up the Providence river for a few days. Sloop Lewis T. Totman went to New- port last Thursday. George A. Smith was over to New- port the past week. Dr. Roberts, Rev. Richard N. Toms and Rev. John Dale, who attended the Narragansett association which met at Wickford, R. 1., returned home Friday. Hotel Season Ended. Most of tha hotels closed on Labor day Totta Smith of Providence and Bes- sie Tomlinson of Cranston are spend- ing two weeks with Nina Littlefield at Ocean Spray George Hyde of Norwich has closed nis cottage, Camp As-You-Like-It, for the season. Mrs. Bertha Wagcott is spending the week at Narragansett Pier. Mr. and Mrs, Walter Fields and Mrs. Lucette Havens of l.ong Meadow have been spending the week with Mrs. Si- mon Dodge. Mrs. John Tomiinson of Cranston recantly visited Mrs. Silas Littlefleld. of the Schools— ention. GODDARD-CLARK WEDDING, Fathers of Bride and Groom Officiate at Ceremony in Salisbury In the Congregational church at Sal- isbury there was a fashionable wedding at & o'clock Wednegday evening, when Miss Rose Goddard, daughter of Rev. John Calvin Goddard, pastor of the Salisbury Congregational church, was united in marriage with William Mans- field Clark, Ph.D.. of Washington, D. C. The ceremony was performed by Rev. Mr. Goddard, asdisted by Rev. Dr. Hu- ber Geary Buhlev, headmaster of the Hotchkiss sehool, Lakeville, and Rev. Dr. James Starr’ Clark, father of the “NO FRILLS,” Just Sensible Food Cured Him. Sometimes a good healthy commer- cial traveler suffers from poorly se- lected food and is lucky if he learns that Grape-Nuts food will put him right. A Cincinnati traveler says: “About a year ago my stomach got in a bad way. I had a headache most of the time and suffered misery. For several months I ran down until T lost about 70 pounds in weight and finaily had to give up a good position and go home. Any food that 1 might use seemed to nauseate me. “My wife, ha of Grape-Nuts food and try it. I told her it was no use, but finally to humor her I tried a_fittle, and they just struck my taste. It was the first food that I had eaten in near- Iy a year that did not cause any suf- fering. “Well, to make a long story 1 began to improve and stuck to Grape- Nuts. 1 went up from pounds_in December to 194 pounds the following October. “My brain is clear, blood all right and appetite too much for any man’s pocketbook. Tn made fac owe it all much about over and T talk so (e road bave Arape-Nuts,” but [ s Lealthy, roxy cheeked and man—a prety good example of whet the right kind of food will de You can publish this if you want to It is trne statement without any £rills. Read the little book “The Road to Wellville,” in pkg: " ere’s a Rea- son.” Ever read the above letter? A new one appears from time to time. They are genuine, trus, and full of human interest The September crop of rowen helps To keep the dahlias flowering the seed pods should be picked off close. Plants making seeds are getting through flowering. The hardy chrysanthemums look better made fast to a stake than they The lima beans for drying are better The full A pint of whiskey will make trou- ble eénough for a whole neighborhood. The silo makes work and if it did farmer it It pays for, the There are lots of things that can make don’t the Iy knowing what to do, one day brought home a package coaxed me 1o short. T am thoroughly to Grape- what s will do that some of the kngmed me today a third. 1910 Patience is the Balance of the Soul. THREE PRIZES MONTHLY: $250 to first; $1.50 to second; §$1.00 to Award made the last Saturday in each month. \ EVERY WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY. The Builetin wants z00d home letters, good husiness leiters; good help- ful letters of any kind the mind may suggest. Write on but one side of the paper. ‘Wednesday of each week. They should be in hand by Address, SOCIAL CORNER EDITOR, Bulletin Office, Norwich, Conn. COZY CORNER AND BUREAEJ OF INQUIRY It is & pleasure to mote that the members of the Corner are not only answering inquiries but also making requests nothing that can make the Social Corner more useful than writing as the Corner presents this week. for Green Tomato recipes that it may be one regarded There is reciprocal another. uch So many have answered the call as excessively pickle-y, but there is an exceptional opportunity for making a choice and doing the green tomatoes up to one’s taste. physical exercise. Some of the Sisters will be interested in the unfired food letter of “M" and the way of correcting stoop-shoulde The Corner is the place to question bearing upon domestic life or the welfare of by present and discuss every the household, and every woman who wants little problems solved should seek information of the Social Corner whence help will immediately be forth coming. Before the winter has passed the Corner will have attained a usefulness and pop- ularity which make it both a cozy corner and a bureau of inquiry for all The Bulletin readers.—EDITOR OF THE SOCIAL CORNER. A Simple Cure for Round Shoulders. Dear Sisters of the Social Corner While sitting in the park one pleasant afterncon recently, 1 could not help bur notice the number of young people that sed back and forth. In the course of a couple of hours I think as man- as a hundred young peop'e pass- e1 by and out of that number I think it is safe to say that more than one- half were round shouldered and var- row chested. 1 think this is appall- ing when we think that those young people are to be the fathers and moth- ers of the mext gemeration. Is it not time that we parents see what we van do to control this evil? If each of us would look little flock, teach them to walk , and learn a few simpic rules, en would think them fun ard yet how helpful they would be Take a_perfectly upright position with the heels together, and the toes at an angle of forty-five degrees. Drop the arms lifeless at the sid raising the chest to its full capacity, muscularly, the chin well drawn in. Slowly rise up on the balls of the feet to the greatest possible height, thereby exerclsing all the muscles of the legs and body. Come again into a standing position without swaving the body back and out of the perfect line. Repeat the exercise first on one foot and then the other. Another good exercise is to try and squeeze the shoulderblades together many times a day. Children while growing be permitted to sit on chairs with high -back. The back of the chair should not be up to the shoulder blades, SALLY PRUE. Norwich. after our should not Green -Tomato Pickles. My Dear Mrs. P. H. W.: Here is recipe for Green Tomato Sweet Pickle, which T think you will like. 1t calls for one peck of green toma- toes, two quarts of onions, two quarts of peppers, one gallon of vinegar, four cups of sugar, one tablespoonful of pickle spice. Chop the tomatoes. onions and pep- pers together and let them stand in salt over night. When putting the salt in, make a layer of the vegetables and sprinkle with a small quantity of salt, making a thin layer of salt be- tween each thick layer of vegetables. In the morning drain the salt off and add the vinegar, sugar and spice which.have been scalded together. Boil this mixture together for five min- utes. Make a small bag for spices and take them out of the vinegar and igar hefore the vegetab Fill the jars as full as poss senl. 3 Tt you have plefity of green tomatoe: ble try this recipe for Green Tomato Pre- | serve: Boil five pounds of sugar, ten ! I sendq pounds of green tomatoes and four | cipes lemons together all day. This is very sweet and much like jam 1 have another recipe for Green To- mato Sweet Pickle which is very dif- ferent from the other and not quit good. green tomatoes, three pounds of sugar one ounce each of stick cinnamon and whole cloves. Boil these until and then skim the tomatoss out. the juice until thick and add toma- toes. ey Preston PATTY How to Begin the Uhfired Food Diet. Dear Sisters: At the request of of our circle I would Hke to say a lit- tle something in regard to the unfired food question. In the attempt to return are not commonly cooked. The beginners may seiect from fresh and dried fruit the nuts, sweet salad herbs and tender and flaked or ground cereals. Many of these natural be o combined that when they chewed together their flavors blend in the saliva into a new and surpris- Iy_delicious taste. 1 imaging I can hear some sister say, How do vou know this? so T am going to tell you that my authority George I. Drew. who is the hook containing hetween two three hundred recipes that is worth a_place in our library. Fruit Salad- of peaches. pea of the small berries, currants Dberries, blueberr bananas, cut into small with one ounce of cocoanut one ounce of almonds or walnuts, or any soft nut meats. chopped, mix all well s.apples. plums, or any pleces, together, and if tart, drip over it one teaspoonful of honey. Apple Cream Pie—Take currants; mix and run through to a slightly oiled plate. Filling for the aboy of grated apple. three ounces of pignolias, flaked beat these inlo a cream ouncas of apple cubed: mix spread over the above crust: with four or six oroamental slices. One guarter of this ple equals 2 full and wholegome meal Prune Whip—8gak in ty Seven wd ound mix a again the pite removed) over nignt take the soft prunes out of the mash them with the potato mask water r ing water, add one-half ounce of piz- nolias, flaked. and beat untij il i even. then stir in one-half ounce of honey and serve in a neat dieh. Norwich M. s are added. and This is made of ten pounds of tender Boil » nature it is Dest to begin with such foods as the Toots, foods may are A. D, of Chicago. 1L, 1 acknowledged authority on thls question and who has published a and Take two to four ounces straw- grape fruit or mix grated, six ounces of sweet corn meal and three ounces of the flaker; spread the resulting dough in- half add six and garnish apple ounces of cold water one ounce of prunes (with then re- turn the mashed pulp into the soak- ¥ | ana Iw sized run T | xma | fon leas =gl place I the Tows: | lcaves o ngs, alt not o the sked of n: clov until when it good A towed emetic Plums, Peaches, boil 20 I am sure ning this way Norwlch. Sage Tea—Chili Social taken The Courier a good n and it is a very interesting paper. an. it is more £o with the “The Social Corner. wich; dear old Norw hills 'and many slopes and the beaut ful streets, with nice an ideal spot to live in. 1 tell you how I make sage tea. Jse about a spoonful water; tor cup of | cool; brush into the roots of the hair three times a tried and know from falling out. a wash. Chili wo or Sauce be tomatoes, ght onion: ; chop onions and peppe fine; eight cups of vinegar eight tablespoonsful of sugar. five ta- blespoonsful of salt: spice with cinna- mon and cloves; through a colander. the tomatoes you need not r a colander. have kept a year, and it Pequonoc Bridge. itor and bwing the | ial talks which to me are worth many times tie price of if we try ocial cerful be cheerful, X Do not drive your hushand and children away from home to find peace on earth. around they should, do not. but try and do your ard prightening the home. at first, ask help of ever ready ways looking on the bright side. the sisters a h T have tested Peach Mari very fine and cook until soft; then add one cup of SUBAT to every two cups ¢! cook the mixture till it th aches ens, or REditor Social Corner lette a mistake not call for boiling water Make sage tea by in Social Corner I n water for add as Clara of Plainfi will you very mu some very good thankful P the recipe for green tomato pickle. Green reen sprinkle ¢ Tomato v dry; one small mustard, tablespoon of per and one of allspice which the alternate and onions, until all with cold n are Hope you will musturd pickle, i Taftville. Social Sisters of are certain always call homely, | suits them bettel throat salt and water is just us effce ive as chloi ate of potash. It { and no harm results if a Httle is fact, it the 1hroat and allays irritat: Recipe for White Pulled Candy. Editor Social Corner pe for white pulled candy, i to ‘Pansys” three pounds of sugar; When boiled, work it like mo- candy till braid into any shape you wish. Things to know The amount of sugar to a_quart jar clzht o four ounc Peaches,” whole, four ounces, boil 15 minutes. s in halves, six ounc minutes. Sour pears, eight ounces, 30 minutes, Crah apples. minutes. Tomatoes, boil 20 minutes. the sisters Here is a reci- answer request: One pint of boil white, then twist or when canning fruit. boil 10 minutes , eizht minutes nce: boil 20 whole, eight ounc who try can- will have good success. "RANGIPANNA. Sauce. We have Ny year Corner: ‘armer’s Talk’ 1 love. Nor: :h, with its high hade tr es. It of sage to one boil and strain when week. I have that ‘it will stop hair It is not a dye—just forty-eight 10 green medium- peppe not strong cook three hours and If you peel n through 1 have some now that I very nice. LOUISE. Help One Another—Choice Recipes. Corner: toward teachings of Let us be everybody the editor- Jur paper. We can in our homes at but make it the sunniest Never mind if those do as you thin sha e It you who is again One aid us, and try ew choice re- lade—Chop the peaches - ur hours; stir frequ v to vent sticking. Put in an earthen. jar—cover tight. Baked Tomatoes—Season them with salt and pepper: flour them over, then put them in a deep plate with a little butter; in the oven. These ar: very Floating Island 30il one pint of milk the volks of three eggs: three tablespoonfuls of sugar. one ta- blespoonful of cornstarch: pour into | the boi milk Take the whit>s of the eggs, beat to a stiff froth and pour on the Brown in oven—season with lemon, Mystic. MRS. L. MAYNARD. An Error Corrected — Green Tomato Pickle. Tn looking over recipe No. 1: it should it is ol steeping sax letting them stand in cold two days: straln them and much bay rum as you have tea d: T like your little please state if the v the to be T think vou will benefit h, as you have ipes. I for one, am troubled with my H. W...of Yantic, has I am Pickle—Cut one peck toes in quarter inch r them one cup of stand 24 hours; then 1 ‘onions bott prepared blespoons of ground ground pep- then into the pickle is t0 he kept & layers of tomato, spice is packzd. Cover vinegar and let them stand tomato looks te clear good. Will s desived ELLEN Corner Helps. the Social Corner remedies which we but I think homey -, don’t you? For sor may often as one may helpe. for it “uch very effective fov |nave. 1 | green tomato pickle. 1 | recpe for botih sweet or sour with th purposes; use from one ) {yu* ten- Bpoonfuls in & half pint to a pint of tepid water. Tt is an excellent remedy for the bites and stings of insects, and is a good astringent in heorrhages or excessive bleeding of any kind, es pecially after the pulling of teeth’ Then there is the ever-ready mus- tard. as a remedy it also serves as an emetic, as it is Kept in cvery tWo or three teaspoonfuls of ground mustard stirced into a half pint of water will answer. Mustard plaster Is made by mixing equal parts of ground mustard with” meal and warm_waters spread on a piece of muslin and anoth- er piece spread over it is almost a certain cure for colic when f few, moments applied over the pit of the stomach. Our grandmothers used it as a remedy for all internal pains, and it still serves that purpose in severe cases of cramps. It is well to apply a plaster to the back of the child's place all the time but move it around. It acts just as well at o short distance from the place affected as directly over it. An excellent application for hands may be made by ounce of mutton tallow and ad teaspoonful of carbolic acid, mix thor- oughly and apply at night Green Tomato Pickles- are best when nearly full grown them and s tender: say one-half cup of two quarts of water, ond alum { of a hickory nut; skim the tomatpes out and put in a jar; take enough 200d vinegar to cover them; to every quart add one pound of sug Dic to suit the taste; scald the vinegar, SUg: nd spices together and over the tomatoes while hot. For indigestion try eating fresh fruit before breakfast. happed | melting pour I want to say to one and all, it does not pay to worry if affairs look dark You can't brighten them by fretting. There is always a bright side Ever Over Be strong in thy the sun the la shines somewhere d and sex th and cou There are summers yet for the Moosup. FRANK Sweet and Sour Pickles. Social Corner Editor: I am very much_interested in your Social Cor. ner. 1 read the letters written by th different persons and find many good recipes and other things on different topics. Not only the Social Corner, but The Morning Bulletin is a ve interesting paper. 1 would not be witheut it. In fact, no one would want to be without it after reading it as noticed that one letter, writ- ten by “Mrs. P. H. W." of Yantic. w mislaid a month. She wants to know if anyone can give her the recipe f will give her a greatest of pleasure, for I think she well deserves both, arter waitis patiently for a whole month. 1 hope she will not hold any ill-will against| | the or, for he certainiy meant right. Letters. as well as otl cles, will sometimes get misl is my first letter to the Social but I presume vou will hear Ir again some time in the future Green Tomuto Pickles (Sweet)—One peck of green tomatoes, sliced the day ! for pickling, a through before you are reads sprinkling them through an Jiguor thay will Hove A dozen E00A- conrsely siiced. Kettle and put in i sliced tontatoes, then o. h layer sprinkle morning drain off the draim from them. sized omions, take a suitabl layer of the onions, and between euc the following spices . Six red rsely, one cup of sugar, one tablespoonful of ground alispice, tablexpoonful teaspoontul of cloves, ful of mustard. Porteous:Mi GOMPANY chopped co; one_tablespoon- three phats This is a cholce recipe. These pickles | flavor is objectionable New (Goods FOR FALL We invite the attention of Sat- urday shoppers to our splendidly lines of newest Fall and Winter and slice wi peeling one peck of round, green tomatoes, put ar in layers with a slight sprink- neck, but do not keep a plaster on one | ling ‘of salt I done over drafn oft the liquor that has accumu- Have two dozen medium-sized onions peeled make some i of vinesa boil one-haif hour. tle, place in it some spiced vinega | whale spices in it: TAILORED SUITS, some black d, pour over s COATS AND SKIRTS, MILLINERY, DRESS GOODS, WASH GOODS, ¥ ~with cold_cider vinegar | and cook until tender. Turn into | ‘covered and set Come in and see the new Fash- jons whether you are ready to buy or not. ot extravig: ready-to-w because they do mot give | appearance, ntion to the fiat P ! Mew’s V Preliminary showing for Fall —Suits, Top Coats, Hats and | Furnishings. MEN’S FALL HATS appearance also buy her frocks { but she substracts showing fodaw Iall Hats, Hats in all the leading shapes of the at $1.00 and $2.00 1l the new Fall in demand, at $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00. & M. Special” to any $3.00 Hat with “satist Autumn Millinery A COMPLETE SHOWING TODAY. Women, Misses newest shapes | range 98¢ to $3.98. everything See our $5.00 Dress Hats THE GREAT Atlantic & Pacific TEA COMPANY lendid style. The Netion Sale It will end Tonight. day and take advantage of the many splendid opportunities for sure and substantial savinga on hundreds of every day needfuls. 1859--Fifty-one Years in Business--1910 BAKER'S COCOA, a can e COLMAN’S MUSTARD, a can LEE & PERRINS’ SAUCE, a bottle GOLD DUST. a box GRAPE JUICE, a bottle EGGS, a dozen Laces--Fiouneings LACES at 6c Today Last Day Anniversar hes wide—Special .50 to $2.00 FLOUNCINGS at 98¢ d with Lace $1.00 VEILS at 75c Each full line of value $1.00. 20 Ibs. of Sugar for $1.00 with Tea and Coltee. 100 Gold Stamps with a ean of Baking Powder <. For Saturday Only Gloves 15 $1.00 Duchess Kid New Fall e and all the SPECIALS SIRLOIN STEAK, Ib........ SHOULDER STEAK, Ib ROUND STEAK, Ib HAMBURG STEAK, Ib PRIME RIB ROAST, Ib BOSTON ROLLS, Ib LEGS OF LAMB, 4-6 Ibs. average. . RIB LAMB CHOPS, Ib. LOIN LAMB CHOPS, Ib SHOULDER OF LAMB, Ib s STEW LAME, b 25 SMOKED SHOULDER, Ib Native Fowl, Veal and Chickens. season. Fr Delivery. THERE 15 no adsertisi Eastern Connecticut en istin for businass r 1"to The Bul- | Fall Opening Days Carpet Bep’i. These are Opening Days in our Department. Opening Days, in addition to a of Carpets, Rugs, Oil Cloths and Linoleums, offer many special ments for that occasion. it a point to visit our Carpet Department on third floor Today. s e ms— Boys’ Clothing THESE SPECIAL OFFERINGS Spring Lamb, this is the finest that we have offered for sale this season. value up to We carry in stock Swift's Premium Pickled Beef Tongues, 2-4 Ibs. average. NEW FALL SWEATERS of Vegetables and Fruit in 1 $2.25, $3.00 and $3.5 The Gl Mantc & Pacc Tea o, 135 Main Street, Norwich, Gonn. rades in Women's Sweat- 5, $3.95, $4.80, and up The Porteous & Milcllo!l' "Phone 29-4 medium ip | medium in to The Bul- nnecticnt equsl ness results

Other pages from this issue: