Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 19, 1911, Page 4

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INLEPENDENCE CF THE COURTS. ' g ————— There appears to be no doubt the f§ - S comers apre, 5, . 2t | THE MAN WHO TALKS his vetoing of the Arizona statehood i bill because of the clause which would P ————— - —‘ It would be well if those people who make the judiciary sub'ject to popular Eineiion. apds seRalr think their religion prepares them for death. would just reslize that it should 2.30 7.30 8.45 P.Mm, Serwich Bulletin e : ; : ar : 3 - Referring to the recall clause in.the B 115 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 1Zc & week; Soe & Arizona constitution, he says: “This provision of the Arizona con- dtitution, in its application to céunty and state judges seems so pernicious brepare them for life. Death under any conditions is not a prospect to be constiercd or cherished; but regarded as an inevitable incident which a good life defers and an ill-lived life hastens. binos—Another Daring Hold Up—Mephitis Mephi- tica and Her Kittens—A Royal Dish For the Gods. months; $6.00 m year. in its effect, so destructive of inde- The vietims of iznorance are legion, = > o 3 i so likely to > < s pendence In the judicia, S ndividuey | nd the way cf intemperance is the | The Quail Trap, Aug. 16, 1911—The{nest. Though much is said to the s wecond-class matter, Telephone Caliss Bulletin Business Office, 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms. $5-8, Builevin Job Office, 3 Willimaatic Office, loom 3 Murray Butlding. Teiephone 210. Norwich, Saturday, Aug. 19, 1911. The Circulation of The Bulletin. The Beiiletin bas the largest eir- culation of smy paper In Enstern Comuecticut, and from three te four (imes larger than that of amy im Narwl 1t is delivered to over 3,000 the 4,033 houses ia Nor- wioh, and read by mimety-three per || VOIS B TN SONTON e fact that| i Killing them by the thousands &8 | no hawk or owl lers has & second | giving them more time in the har- nt. of the preple. IJa Winduam - 0 5 men and boys have been doing ever jclutch, and woodcock and grouse breed | vested grain fields ‘bring heavier i > s it Seltvered to over 900 heuses, || it Was made directly to Highway | since this country was settled. If there | but once. = Dbirds to the scatter gun. I've just| Presenting “A BAD MAN FROM IDAHO.” Special Scenery, Etc. in Puinam and Dasfelson to ever || Commissioner Macdonald, while the|ever was a bigger simpleton in his re- one well substantiated record of a 1,100, and 1u all of these pinces it is considered the loeal daily Connecticut hi Sive posteffice districts, and forty- ome gural free delivery routes. The Bulletia s wold fn every town and om all D. routes in Kasters subject the rights of the to the possible tyranny of a popular majority, and therefore to be so in- jurious to the cause of free govern- ment, that I must disapprove a con- stitution containing it.” The president gave good and suffi- cient reasons for not endorsing the re- call; but he did not fail to point out it could be accomplished later, if ona. wished to enter upon such an serimnent. e dees not think it to be MR. PLANT’S GENEROUS OFFER. Wouid that Connecticut had more such men as Morton F. Plant—not because of his wealth, but because of his splendid public spirit. The re- newal of hi to pay one-half of the cost of ¢ some 100,000 worth of macadam highway in the vieinity of New London is most gen- two were on the sita of the proposed highway. we look to see the commis- sioner take advantage of the offer, providing the proposed road is so lo- cated that it will be a state road that will serve public rather than pri- vate interests and providing the offer can be accepted within the law. Judg- ing from a news account, the section which Mr, Plant desires to have im- way to death in every direction. It i not our relation to death which is worthy of our thought as much as our relation to our fellowmen: and it is our relation to our fellowmen which makes secure “our relation to our Heavenly ifather. “As you do unto the least of these,” said the Saviour, “you do unto me.” “Kind hearts,” de- clared Tennyson, “are more than cor- onets, and simple faith than Norman blood.” This question by George Eliot was well put: - “What do we live for, if it is not to make life less difficult to one another?” Orderly thought is one of the truest blessings the mind of man knows anything about. The English sparrow is out of favor with those who do not study him and recognize his ability in various direc- tions. He is charged with driving away the native birds; but he cannot be charged with robbing them of the | trees in which they like to nest; or lation to things in ‘nature beneficial than man I have not yet been able to find it out. The English sparrow is one of the most versatile birds it is my privilege to know anything about; and he adapts himself to any climate man can endure from the tropics to sub-arctic regions, and stays the year round. Of a recent evening just after sundown I noticed a paiv of English sparrows on a maple tree running-up mugic of the birds is fast becoming a memory, tree and barn swallows are lining the 'phone wires, and bobolinks and some other birds have gone to the rice fields and beyond. No orioles have been about here for weeks till the 12th, when a family of eight spent half an hour in the tops of our ash trees. For many months we will miss the sun- up roll of the grosbeak, and the noon- day drene of the seven-year locust is a powr substitute for the oricle’s all- day cheer. Katydid does her best to make up for whippoorwill's plaint, but the whirr of cicadae cannot console us for ‘the thrasher's evensong. After a long silence we again heard a single ‘whippootwill at 2 o’clock on the morn- ing of the 13th. I have no data to say that nigkthawk s and whippoorwills breed more than once, but kingbirds and cedarbirds raise but one broed. A few robins, phoebes, sSong Sparrows and bluebirds are now busy with their second families. - Unless broken up, Bobwhite is the last to begin houss- keeping, with the exception of the American goldfinch, who is waiting for the earliest thistledown to line its ried by Fear created by men. Waen our own conscience rings the alarm. it is time for us to take notice. There is nothing illustrates the contrary, the tiny chicks the mother quail is leading in August and Sep- tember are in_her first and only bevy. ‘When Mr. J. J. Dodds, the fascinating New London writer on sports afield, lately referred to the June bevies of voung quail, he m have been dreaming of his own'earlier nesting English partridge. While picking straw- berries, the third week in July this season, on the slopes of | Woodstock | ‘Academy hill, 1 saw five mating fe-| male quail, and the males were calling on every hand. In fifty years afield in Windham and New London counties I never found or had reported a quail's nest in June, though I have seen and heard of a hundred July nests. The Bulletin last week reported a set of quail's eggs, taken into the Storrs ex- perimental station, which hatched on the first day of August, about the av- erage time. Few bevies of young quail | were big enough to kill at the end of | the old close season, but the new law second bevy of baby Bobs in Col- chester, and I saw them October 10th, no bigger than least fly catchers. My only other double record was in Wood- stock, where a female in a corner lot, in almost daily surveillance of O Irving Paine, left her half grown chicks and raised a second bevy of October quail. Both sections of Hungarian part- ROBERT MILO ] Whistling Mimic ADMISSION 10c. DUNLAP & FOLK Two Dainty Musical Misses = AUDITORIUM = SOMETHING NEW IN THE LINE OF MOTION PICTURES MONDAY AND TUESDAY,.AUG. 21 AND 22—0OUR OLD FRIENDS Mutt & Jeff WILL APPEAR ON THE SCREEN IN A TALKING FOTO FARCE You Have Laughed at Them in the Papers—You Will Scream Now First Time Ever Shown Hene—Actual Motion Pictures of The Goronation of King beorge V of England SPECIAL VAUDEVILLE FEATURES FOR FIRST THREE DAYS RAYMOND, GILBERT & GO. EVENINGS—RESERVED SEATS 20c @elicate, palate-tickling food shouid not be mentioned to suggestive ears at the table. Mr. Main would ask guietly: “Can I help you to some of this, M needed to say climber. Stoddard, “’kunk” to our veteran who had eaten too freely of the savory food, to see him as seasick i BT i the trunk hunting insects like a pair . sl i - well, but sev- s as 1 was once riding in an CIRCULATION proved is ‘“the worst between New | ¢ ihaicnos, the male pressing the | mwam tom epimere ek st ole more ;‘;?,?':,J{,;"‘né‘sm Tt ot geass | R.77 “May 1 fill your plate again, Mr. | empty, rocking Concora London and New Iaven” and “the|irunk hard with his tail in imitation, land are always at work. These early | in mowing lots, to their undoing. Mr. | DeWolf?" * But once when our app:- |from Fort Willium Henry e veae 4413 || only piece that not macadamized| hut they could not run down. He does | mornings we see their webs in liitle | Harold Hibbard mowed over a clutch | lites were not on the keenest edge—u | George, to Glens It's known and in fine shape”” If the situation|not drive the native hirds from any [round patches of jewelled lace, the |of nineteen eoggs, clipping the old|bit cloved perhaps—and an unmistak- |that a womlan's whim sways empires 5920 Wesk ending 8 | GG August 12.......... Uy €Y YOUNG'S CAREER. Cy Young's retiracy from the nation- | al game after vears of continuous rvice not only tells for his skill and popularity, but also for the correctness of his habits. As a bright particular star of the Cleveland team he has pleased millions and commanded the admiration of his countrymen. 'y Young has added 50 per cent. to the age of retiracy, since he endured until 45 where others left at 30. He re i i - re = i t - legally, there is no question as to the|sary than aedicine. A resolute and |venomous one among the billions on | May very few chicks come from the leaves baseiall as an endnent exam-|{gtate highway commissioner’s willing-|oPPosng mind can sometimes Arive |this continent. Spiders are in evers ! shell HI June. On . Memorial day, pie of what right living will 4o in | necs (o enter upon the work with des- | Out disease that the doctors cannot [house and every garden; and it ‘s | when looking for ladies slippers, Cyril he way of prolonging a man's Pow-| ,a(ch, Commissioner MacDonald neith- | fem to touch. Talking about ail-|questionable whather man could exiet | Paine disturbed a biddy grouse from ers. It is to be hoped that whatever vocation he takes up he may give an- other illustration cf powers undimin- ished lar beyond the years at which the world has been accustomed to ook for declin THE QUESTION OF DIVORCE AND is all that the news account makes it appear, the offer of Mr, Plant is a doubly desirable one for the state to accept. In fact. it is a kind of gen- erosity which is becoming increasing- ly popular. Tt is in line with some of the Whitiemore henefactions in Nau- satuck.—Ansonia Sentinel. ted citizens are a blessing to the town and the state in which they live. Mr. Plant is second to no man in the state when it comes to do- ing generous acts in behalf of the pub- lic. The highway commissioner has no law under which he can accept a do- nation for a specific public purpose from @ private naividual. If a way can be found to accept this proposition Public s er takes license nor gives license, and it is this sturdy quality which excites the wrath of many people against him. A public official who has inaugurated a good road tem like this in Connecti- cut, and disbursed the funds honestly for fifteen years has a record to be plave, and the goldfinches are more than a match for him in _combat. There is too much being said about the English sparrow that is not so. Those people who become chranic invalids and then like to talk of their ailments do not appear to be quite as numerous now as they were once; but we venture they are not and will not become a thing of the past for “Lo these many vears” The truth never dawns upon them, their exploiting of disease breeds disgust In the minds of their friends. If there is anything in life that is distressing to the well it is the harpings of the sick upon their troudles, for most people understand that to get one's mind fixed upon dis- ease is not the way to promote health- fulness. To overcome diseased con- ditions_resolution is often- more neces- ments is a_bad habit, and the sooner it is abandoned, usually, the quicker the patient shows signs of recovery. The invalid who can say constantly to | himself “Brace up!” will find himself | soon obeying orders. To the brave be- long the fair, and everything else good and desirable in this life. dew not having been dried off by the sun, on the grass and on the bare earth; and in the fields and meadows and on the shrubs these webs appear in countless thousands; and represent only one tribe of hundreds, many of which are not web-spinners, but plati and tree spiders. Then there are aquatic and subterranean spiders. They are everywhere active and helpful: The wasps are their great enemies and hunt them to stock their nests with food for their young; and one tribe of spiders hunt the wasps and subsists upon them. The birds find the silk of spider's webs useful in making the'r nests, and the vireos and humming birds use the silken threads to firmly fix their nests to boughs and brakes. Thousands of persons shudder at men- tion of a spider, although the natura- lists assure us that there is not a in comfort upon the earth without their daily assistance. SUNDAY MORNING TALK | generally supposed; though laying in bird’s win; This set was eaten by later breaking two eggs Wwith the horse rake. The old bird kept near the nest for two days, calling, when crows ate this set also. A divining road seems tobe held by Mrs. Rawson over the re- treats of young game birds. On_the 12th of August she saw a mother Hun- garian helping her bevy over a wall, Tater surprised the whole bevy at closej quarters, and when again flushing them at short range, the air seemed full of the flying brown bullets. Not once did the female fly, but steadily called and kept up the characteristic twitching of the slightly erect and narrow tail Ruffed grouse also breed later than her clutch of nine eggs, and took an- other peep in June when there were eleven eggs Our state ornithologist on the same date also took a set of eleven for state hatching, hoping to do better than the Clark university man whose partial success in raising grouse 1 had the pleasure of witness- ing severa] years ago. I suppose that d of, whether the governor cares i R ish t Ay - > EVERYBODY" z pEgnel, 2 : It might seem like a fish story to last in New England, five BODY'S BIBLE QUES to continue his services or not. hear 1+ $aid they eatch trout in Mon- |THE HABIT OF PICKING UP|frst and last n e acre boys TION ‘BOX. J S et e tana by tickling them on their sides, HORSESHOES., have placed partridge eggs under hens The questions sent to the Editor of EDITORIAL NOTES. if one did not Know this was a primi without any step toward domestica- ERYBODY'S BIBLE QUESTION Pars I nad the hottest day for 154 | tive w of ‘_chmg some salt-water Everyone knows that the horseshoe ! tion. It was also onc Decorationt day )X develop 1hany curious and in- | vears, which shows that 1911 is going fish, It ¥ig ded of the Indians in {is a5 emblem of good fortune. Most | that Mr. Trumbull and I could go {0 this part of the country that they of us will stop on the road to rescue fifteen nests of sitting biddy grousé; ::""‘s:sins__‘u;:dilmus _t;r min; 3 YU,:E some, if n:(_im)rv.» caught rr'E;x fish ttl—.z~_<>\‘z(gh_ U:«;‘eicea:g one from .the dust. We have & hazy | with the sets averaging el’t:ven lin num- 3 3 m a widow, pas orty & X Jigging. hey put sticks in W ‘' Inotion that somehow this discarded | ber and not a single set heavily incu- vears old, with a small income, Will| Out west the meanesi man is the one | 3gainst which the tomcods rubbed like | equine footwear will bring us luck. We | bated. [ do the right thing if I accept a pres- ent opportunity to marry?’ The an- swer to this question in the near fu- ture in EVERYBODY'S BIBLE QUES- TION BOX will be ed entirely on the Scriptures and will therefore not be the opimlon of John Jones or Bill Smith. If the inquirer believes and desires to be guided by the Bible we to an inteligent understanding of the who declines to cheer for the home team every time it plays a game. Arizona is not so offended that she will not find the door and knock once more for admission to the Union. ngland family reunions are one feature of the summer season that seems destined to be made permanent. cats and put a stick with a bare hook upon it down through the ice, ther}( when the fish became sufficiently un wary, with a quick jerk hooked and! threw them out upon the The manager of a park in Montana calls attention to the fact that anglers there i catch -trout by tickling them. It is claimed that after ihe fisherman has quietly tickled the sides of a trout under the overhanging bank of a nail it up on the shed door and wait for the fairies to begin delivering their gifts. If jt is left lying in the road, there is no telling how soon we shail lose money or break a limb or mect some other calamity. The old superstition comes out of a remote ‘past. It is part of an early Dbelief that the horseshoe was & pro- tection against witches. It is said that A trio of calico robins were on the George Childs place in East Wood- stock this season, and I think notes cn the mating and breeding of these rari- ties have been kept by the Lindemans, present owners of the farm. I took a harlequin robin from the hat of a Noank lady, and the theft was for- given, as 1 had sdbstituted a fine ton borough one season, and it is to able odor came in the windows from | some black and white skins on the barn_door, the charm was broken by our host's’ three vear old boy shovinz his tin plate across the table and shouting: “I want tum more "KUNK!" At this dread word. certain city gen- tlemen turned pale, there was a quick rush for the back yard, whence sounds wers heard strangely like those iss ing from the ladies’ cabin during rough passage around Point ‘And on the road driving home and I think the incident just recorded childisa shows that a singl, word will move the thy of mighty man. 4 Tel. 611. r. c. ceem TUNER 122 ®rospect ot Norwich, Cu GET THE HABIT O Attending the New London Gounty Fair F... «AND... Grand Carnival of the believe she will, as a result of the s T e E kot {flr thig lll'e;mn a hz;!?!hfle Wudfls Onesawwhet owl. Four voung snow-white . TION able PR g m. or the shadow rock, ime nailed over nearly every door in |y, 3 - 52 TION BOX, be enabled to come| A yquisville preacher says there is|the fish seems to lose all his natural |London. z Y robins were the sensation of Stoning entl’a a 0[‘ nlon . Secriptural injunction. If she does not accept Bible teaching as a fixed rule for action, she will, nevertheless, re- ceive the Bible view, which will be 500d to have in the way of general s knowledge. The Editor of EVERYBODY'S BI- BLE QUESTION BOX will not in any case venture nor intrude upon his questioners or readers his own person- al opinion en the questions submitted. He fulfils his promise to all when he funishes a Bible answer to Bible ques- dons, and to further elaborate, by quoting other authorities, he positively refu: to do. Bvery Bible question sent in will be answered within sixty day: EVERYBODY'S. BIBLE. BOX or privately, by n address for reply is given. THE LATEST STATISTICS. i ¥ T looka o it the n by and | perfectly sodd men are the one who is |of law. Every effect is praceded by alMrs. Paine that she was too late for he latest statistics from the census|ne micht skip over to England in a{dead, and the one who is unbor; cause. Nothing, absolutely nothing.|the train. The does and bucks de ne: bureau show that we gained 10| couple of days and skip back again, as | and_the western world is not contra- fcomwes to pass without adequate ground | have ail the boldness, for a fawn in ver cent. in population the past decade, | o wock end o : * @5 | Gicting them. “A zood man is better |deep down in the texture of the umi-|Mre Eddy's pasture was lately seen V, othiat ithie tutsl. ot e to his enemies than a bad man i verse. As regards every minutest od- | drawing lacteal nourishment from one 14,756, his friends.” 30 it is mot so difficult |eration of naturs, science upholds the|side of a cow, while a calf was busy . Olimticnt hos 1l Gitior s Tavis of to mark their.Many people who think | proposition of those enterprising peo-|applying atmospheric pressure to the ac ay as 0 ows . the cities have a population of 25000 ut who, if they feit sure their | they are good are simply inert. which |ple who tell us wiy we should use a | ther side. I was the vietim of a hold- or more. New Haven, the largest city, | ¥ive8 Would fly, would bring an aero- | instead of veing akin to virtue is akin | Certain popular cereal, namely,"There’s | up last week in the village road by a or aven, argest city, [ D ome with them. to vice. a reason.” .. |large black skunk, whose peltags was i 3 4 has & population of .605, while R el And if all tins is true of nature if|worth three dollars, in season, of any ? Aridgeport, the second city, has a pop- 2 ¥ i . |is true also of human nature. Chan:e|gkin collector, This same skink was M d S t 4th ulation of 102,034, There are two cii.| 1f the aimanac day for September ia “,'rfp,‘:,: ander N oo nat cons |is rulea ouk of thFmeokelwenld B0 1855 [ sac nper the asme pace IAtr ol o on ay’ ept. ies having 00 to 100,001 {nfigb. | BiCH 2 (radd =s was te almansc day the das. Notone hour at'a time dos | {40 out S ap el Sk e | amall kittens. T have Sjwiys a¥micen - tants, a from 25,000 50,- | for 4 . e e ¥OT | the landscape look the same. The |We Mus: notice 4 ¥ e nerv: o e intrepid old Noank O.M l O R f M C 1 809 Fhiors Sig He-clties hmi““,"rr:m abolishing almanac da changing lights and shadows form the | SUANL success in pos | world nhilellady, bothered by a large family of 1 1ie pen ace Ior otor ycles 10,000 to 20,000 inhabitants. i 7 Fion Tnoramy ph -1 fadnet s "mm!r m,l'il St Uk:‘u:lan' e | oocats WHO Teaced ot of Nieriientyy s oy Yl Dr. Wiley’s enemies are wasting |that morning parties have been ti ““m“(h”‘_ i Ao e it “"-‘h"’_" window to an offal heap and with a X es previously mentioned, | ;10.l “showving that he is not scien-|VOSue for young women this season, |[oF others it is rose-strewn. There is|iong pair of tongs caught NINE half- New Britain shows the highest per- | ’ ’ for it is in the early a great irequality in human lots, grown skunks in succession and car- ues ay, ept. centage of increase during the last decade, namely 8.9 per cent. W look the brightest, and the skies the | S04 " and threw them into Mystic river. And 3 s . % 8 e 3 dition occupied by man we should s 4 o - Haven, while having an absolute in- oluest—then all nature looks freshest. - 3 72| I cannot forget the niczly prepared and - in population from 1900 to 191y | There is one advantage in being a|It is when the shadows ars long that :I":n‘ ““"0 Sk ;;‘x’;eff";h‘g‘e{;\f’;‘r‘f.e' well cooked. mephitis mephitiea which e RaCC fOl' S‘ng e ylinaer %, has a lower percentage of in- | 5iN&: The king of England has no num- | I like the pictures best: and I have | /2% 00 TREE S8 SOMER SR SO IO0 8 | our hostess on Rose Hill used to give st FEg i L S dew | ber on his nutomebile to give him away |@ constant fancy for the gray days [0 © At ik us when we came out of the woods at Motor C Cles SKQAR K, f0r $WOC BréTIOURAdaCH e sy e 4l which have subdued colors and soft |(h, (1€ 1ast analygis of the matter|night tired and hungry and ready t> sridgeport also shows a reduced e Y & distances. The flowers have a tired |t e‘::\vl;;nnfl';aflf Mcur‘fi“&’h flifln Cfl;"flfi | eat anything. But it was tacitly un- centage of incres the e duorin; L3 corif gerstood that the 2xact name of our the past decade being less than for any other gince 18 Of the 18 ties con- sidered, there are only three for which no politics in heaven. There will be where the politicians get their reward, though! The Toledo Blade calls attention to the fact that Harry Atwood is doing all he can to fulfil one of Mother Ship- tom's prophecie: If Togo does not have a American banquet will make way with care the him before he becomes aware of its deadly character "The cartoonists are being severely criticised because they put three hairs on Colonel Brvan's head one day and only two the next, The Worcester aeroplane which used to disturb New England at night is not expected to figure in the coming avia- tion meet at Boston. tific. Since he is honest and faithful. the people will waive all the rest. on advised that Dr. Wiley be censured, what does he expect is coming to him as the re- variness and finally the fisherman !reaches in his hand and deliberately takes the fish out of the water. This man says if he had not seen this done himself he does not know as he should believe it, so those who read it will not be blamed if they coubht it. Some men are good today because they are devoted to Leeping what they | did vesterday from getting out. This is not a very high type of goodness; but it is quite an improvment upon a contiunation of evil; and through fear a few men are brought to better con- ditions just as through night some are brought to light. The way to better things are many, and some of them appear to be cast upon the idea that the farthest way round is the nearest way home. It does not make much difference whetper the line is straight or crooked so long &s the goal is at last reached. The merit of righteous- ness is not in beinz merely good, but in heing good for something. The Chinese have a proverb that “the two morning light that the air is sweetest, the flowers look at night after the heat and wor of the day: and natura going to res | seems to welcome the weary eve s {much as man. We rather like | gloaming “when day is done and dark What value now really inheres in Dobbin’s old shoe that you so caié- tully carry home? The value of the old iron that you have savad; the amount that the junk man will give You- for vour treasure—no less and no more. As a guarantee of fortune you may as well have nailed up an oil can or a scrubbing brush or a pine shingl~. We are led, as you see, gentla reader, into a discussion of the whole subject of luck, a subject on which not al of us Coubtless will agree. We make boid to ask whelner there really is any suc! thing. May we rightly speak of chanci in this universe? Does anything ever merely happen? 1Is the world run by caprice and are we the creatures of conditions that are without rhyme or reason? Of course the wholz spirit of present cay thinking answers no. If there is one thing which modern science is one thing of which modern science is convinced it is that the universe is une All we mean to claim is that if we could see deeply enough into any con- with law and order. It is bad theory and bad practice both to sit around waiting for “luck” 1o the credit of the boroughites that no effort was made to capture the beauti- ful thrushes. Tha pure white Califor- nia_squirrel in my collection 1 saw oing in and out of holes in the trolley anks at Santa Monica, and the white crow is also from the far west. Here albinism is commonest with birds among the European house sparrows and robins, and among the mammals with red squirrels and weascls. The pure white porcupine sent to Baron Rothschild by F. B. Webster was a beauty, and the albino woodchuck still held by him is not a common type. The last audacious hold-up on ths public highway was by the real olid monarch of the glen himself. Mrs, Albert Paine was driving from Wood- stock to Quinebaug, with-scant time to meet a train, when a large deer standing in the road so frightened her horse that it swerved, turned, and re- fused to g0 on. The deer was not startled by the team, was in no hurry to get out of the road, and so delavel ried them down to the end of a wharl OPENS LABOR DAY—THE BIG At NORWICH, CONN. Sept. 4, 5th and 6th More and Better S pecial Attractions than ever before Wednesday, Sept. 5th 5-Mile Race for Two-Cylinder the rate of increase during ‘the past|sult of Dr. Wil statements about X ring us our desires. Success comes decadé exceeds that during the preced- | him? el f:‘.;\lfifi"‘-v:‘l:?n Y ',.“,},d‘.”!,‘g’fi"{_ ‘o |to those who fulfill right conditions. CONNEC I ICU I b LT L Lo hen misht is selting ready o drels | We'gain the prises of Jife for which Motor Cycles Britain and Norwich, That Will Help Some. wtar” | Ana 1 Nike tha night because of fplitlua oy ‘é“fi%fiim?"ieri.?néi"é“ T z y . Connecticut has eight counties. The so, Mr. Leishman, formerly of | its silences and its sounds. Like Byron, | the o ory ddin e at o Tub FA'H population of these counties ranges sburg, now ambassador to Ger-!"in her starry shade of dim and soli- ;},‘: .",{;‘,;‘;”,.fi,‘;"&“,.}‘,.‘,‘,’.,:,:"5}’,,2::}: 50 CUBICREH (i LR, from 26,459 in Tolland county to 387,- | many, h a mustache that can take |ar\'hlo\'ellnes< Tlearn the language of [pon;i who satisfied his avery whim. AND- in New Haven county. the upward slant of the kaiser's— | another world.” But that sort of talisman exists only in R A 4 x : Eh Bt ; x y in 3 Byory Gobats. in Lo oate iie” tas] Pitisiure St= i g et el e b Entries for [lotor Cycle Races to be made with C. creased in population during the last decade, the percentage of increase Might Be So. 1 am not inclined to look out upon the world and see poor degraded to men are named effort, voresight ana endurance. GRAND CIRGUIT RACES V. Pendleton, Jr., No. 10 Broadway. P e, ! 2 2 2 mortals. I do not try to convince my- | Where is there a stronger state- ranging from 3.2 per cent. in Windham [ A congressional committee is hare | T o ara 4 lot of Poor. mMISCrABIe | ment o tins el Trooager | state: county to per cent. in Fairfleld | to probe the “money trust,” whatever|sinners. I like to think of my fellow- | New Testament words, ~whaatsoever s | Oharter Oak Park, Hartford . H . county: and the absolute increases | that is. llfruhdghv Vot o find out 3f | men as sons of God as I am & son of [ man sowsth, that shall he also reap.” - 4 e from 1,500 in Windham county to 68, | money talks.—New York Evening Tel- | God. When it comes to dividing them |1t is simply an &ssertion of the Dres- sE" 4.9 amplon ee 1 iver 119 in New Haven county, which con- | ©578™- fa into good and bad I fecl like asking Lo |ence of law in the lives of men. It L tafi s el of. XL H v, - T ehs R S i P e excused. ave no way of telling |leaves no room for chance. It bars 2 g . Case of three counties the mevcentanny| ¢ Considerate Statesmen. how much better 1 am than the man | cat the horsoshoe conception of tings | 990,000 in Purses & Premiums 2 inords il 3 i Senator 15 amd Bl who isn't thought to be as good as|completely. It asserts that we ou ibi of increase are lavger thar that for S = he. &t crhaps s i o i Mammoth Exhibits of Cattle, Sh . rab e et o S L A P &" the country with | he Should bei perhaps some one thinks | selvos are the fashioners of cur own | pouftry, Horass, Agriculture, Pom gl e Rediiiond A cheap meat and flour. So is the meai | of you an n this Something | carcers. e A TT stated. was 22.7 per cent. Four coun- | (rust.—New York Warld. 51y f0 me, “We are all human and not | It is easy to blame our “luck” Zor | B yorare, mone)! prarm Products, MANY OTHER STAGE ATTRACTIONS. tles show a higher rate of increa T 5 ous of us perfect.” A - great many |the failurcs that we encountor. We| ' Suoorerss o aaiey Bto o E e for this decade than for the preceding seem 1o swell with pride over their {:re tmyted to assume that men ar M“:mg:t D':' lll vial o e\;n,. & :r;n m——————— decade. . And Then Some More. professions and thelr virtues: and then |like leaves to be blown ' hither it Y, PRNIRY BRI e t & n nd S et rhirteen questions may be unlucky,|I Temember that pride is not a virtue, |yon hy the chance winds of destine. | & he B f H [ d but Mr. Bryan will not think that 14 |so there you are. We have not had|But ail that is wrong reaspming, Eaci THE GREAT MIDWAY e es o orse, acin, a a It is hard work for the people of this country to get a parcels post: but when it is once inaugurated there will be no such thing as its discontinuance. is until he runs for office 13 times.— Atlanta Constitution. Happy thought for today: When we think we know it all, we are exploiting in & way which reduces respect for us. Baldness and Age. Ollie James has just celeb: 40th birthday. You'ean ne old a man is by loo ‘Washingtor. Post. the same chances in life, are not at- tuned alike. and’ have not the same capacity for work or wisdom. The more I gee of the judgemoents of men the more I sense that the world needls 3 thing better. The more the 1 f mon e disclosed the mor sincerity is questioned. We bef ter be assured by Love than to be w. iuman beirg may say with (he po Henle: am the master of my That puts the ultimate responsibi v.hire it helongs. Plck up horseshoes if you will, don’t expect that thev will bring arythinz more than the market pri, for old iron. THE PARSON. Teaming With New Features from American and European Centers, Big Spectacular Outdoor Acts. eworks Show Evary Night. Admission, Day 50c, Night 25¢ (Children Under 12 Years, Half Price) EXCURSIONS ON ALL RAILROADS Concert Each Day, THEODORE W. YERRINGTON, Secretary. Office with A, D. Lathrop, President.

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