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MAINE STRONG EOR PROMIBITION 'The resubmission of the liquor ques-’ tion to the voters of Maine is making a lively campaign in that siate, but the outicok warfants the predictien that_the principlese of Neal Dow will be_upheld at the coming election. This indleatér from the Portland Express may prove intercscing to read- ers of ‘The Bulletin: “Willilam Hoyt, a yours man from Anson, says the Somerse: [nlependent. has made a house to house. uss qf that town and found tha! 73 per cent. | of the voters were to vote to sustain the prohibitory law, September 11. At a gathering of % A. R. men at South Solon, Thursday, of about a hundred present, an informal canvass made showed that 90 per ceat. wern for prohibition. ~Anson has a ant meat fe bt R | lthe at—Natl Bu fit. 42, Colchester, Conn,, K. D. No. 4 A Trip to Quebec. jviiiog On the steamer Quebec we see the construction of the bridge: that is to span the St. Lawrence; also the con- struction of- the railroad that is being || built from coast to coast. ‘As we come near to Quebec We see the beautiful city of Levis, on onr right; in front the Island of Orleans; to our left the great fort or citadel mhere the' Canedian miltia are quer- tered. We land on the dock of lower. Que- bec, walk across the way and see the | v Church of Our Lady of- Vie- ory. A little further on is seen the small- (i ‘étmd Uulletm and Coufied. 115 YEARS OLD. Eahecription .-:-“..'..'u- a week; 30 & _ Entered at tho Postoffice at Norwich, Coan.. as second-ciass mattel Telophone Cnllas 7 Bulletin Businces Office. 430, Bufletin: Editorial Rooms. 868, Builetin Job Ofiice. 35-8. Willlmantle Office. Room 3 Murray Building. Teiephone 210. Norwich, Thursday, Aus The Circulation of . Just of Jingles, a nd Fairy J., “Rhymes, Tales.” Norwich resi@ents will clease call for books at The Bulletin business. office any time after 10 a. m. Thursday. LITTLE ORIGINAL STORIES. A Dream. Rules for Young Writers. 1. Write plainly on one side of the baper only and number the pages. 2. Use pen and ink, not pencil. 3. Short and pointed articles will be given preference. Do mot use over 250 words. 4. Original will be used, 5 Write your name, age and ad- dress at the top of the first page. Address all _communications Uncle Jed, Bulletin Office. stories or letters only One day as I was gathering daisies fn the fields I saw one far ‘off that looked much more beautiful than the others. I started off to get it, when it seemed to walk toward me. I was ®oing to pick it, when it said: ¢ “Do not pick me, I am a fairy. And to prove it, I will give you anything you want.” “I want a dish of ice cream and to Golden West By flwij Belasco SEATS NOW ON SALE population of 2,200, n an interview a man of Skow- hegun who has been a leader-in poli- tics for & number Of years in Somer- set county stated that h= belleved the state would Vote to sustain the:pro- hibitory law by a majority of 2 to 1." 31, 1911. “Reach up as far as ycu can, and God will reach down all the rest of the wa: PROGRAMME ..FOR 'ne o i POETRY. cake,” said I & | est_street, Sous le Cap, only a few n“ “n. 3,000 ‘Behold it, then!” said the fairy. | hoises being on it. Then Champlain = 2 B e A Gal B over AEMOTEL My Country. And she Wwaved herself in the wir | street at the base of the ciiff. or, as{f Nights, 185c,25¢, 35¢, 50c 2 v The Bulletin hoa the largese eir- The Y. M. (. A of America Is u g s and it appeared, and I had a very nice | some call it, “the Rock of Gibraltar” Mati 10c, 15¢, 25¢ culation of amy paper im Enasters Nz institution—it has averawed By Helen Finlay Dun (Age 13). e e e 1 aael of North Afferica.’ tinees, 10c, 'y Cennectient, and from three te four 000 members a month added 0| We belong to different nations, o c:nnmol:““uu. Socutina: 1t 1t = M‘I):‘ was :;n mtel:ish .p‘r’:xg:c;hlfifrige times larger than that of aay i l|its supporters in the past year ani| And we heil from different lands, ecret,” she replied. “We have & Very | ing to take the cit But to each is each a brother, On whatever ground he stands. (Se_here's to “Mein_Vaterland,” “Ma patrie,” and the rest; But of all such words—"My country Is the nicest and the best!) Norwich. It holdings over incre seven millions, ased its property living with. our queen.” ‘'Who is your queen?” T asked. She is a fairy poppy,” she said. ‘Can I see her?” 1 asked. Oh, no! ~Because then you would know where we live, 1 hear her call- I must go.” nice time, Now we return to point of landing. walk across the street, step into the elevator and in less than two minutes we are in_upper Quebec. on Dufferiu Terrace. Here is the Chateau Fron- tenac_and Champlain monument. W3 AT THE New London Co. Fair 3,000 of the 4,053 howses wieh, and read by nimety-three per a Windham bara Kept Her Promise, The Little Girl Next Door, and lots of others. 1 like Nina Rhodes’ books best of all. I read lots of poetry, and I think The Land of Counterpane, .written by More thaa half @ million young men are now members of the Young Men's Christian association—536,037 to be ex- act, a gain of 39.446 during the twelve- cent. of the provle. it is deliverea n Puinam Dantelson 10 ever ol me wimeea It 4 I & e associ -« | For patriots we all are, ing. il saw Laval seminary, Hotel Dieu and B Sesiias oo togal amitse ki e B {he associatlon™ | . Though difterent tongues we speak; poust then a butterfly awoke me |General Hospital where Bendict Arn- | Robert Louis Stevenson. beautifal e o s ety || 7o BoE e Nor | T6Cently | And we stand up for the homelands = | Prisci resbrey, age gton, | 0ld was carried wounded. I like Hugene Field's poems, ioo, issued. Of these, ars’_tndin- | Wicther prent, or el on ek | N3 As we go_through the - parliament | especially Little Boy Blue and Winken trial workers and more than half take [ (So here's to “Mein Vaterland,” =3 buildings and are escorted through the | Blynken and Nod. nhysical (raining in 648 gvmnasiums. | “Ma patrie,” and the res My Garden. house of representatives we notice the | 1 like my studies, too. and try. to The net property sain for the year But of all h words—"“My country, ‘When school was over and vacation | bust of Queen Victoria on one side of |always pa\e them perfect. = was $7,162,00.. bringirg the grand total | IS the nicest and the best!) really and truly began, 1 got some |the chair and King Edward on the| I'am in the Fifth grade. ’ ap 10 86 000. Thrdughout the | The same flame fi : seeds and started to make a little gar- | other. 1 wish success to all my little friznds, AT 1 0 CLOCK O Waade Penmontiovt. 34 Ny 381 | . A el mat e e e ey den. I didn't have very much roorh | Someof the grand churches of Que- |and Uncle Jed. too.—Myrtle Swain, age ; continent (he association emploss 351 | A5 cach names s own dea land, | 36" 1 ‘made’ tne most of what 1 Bad. | bee ara the Dasiica, bult by Laval 15|19, Norih Stoninsion, Aug. 21, 1911 : % g 2 Some lettuce seed was given to me, 7 atrick’s, an e Anglican CIRCULATION e PP i e LS [T ‘Iam.ed it the best 1 knew how. | cathedral. Our Hydrangeas. i STYLE IN MILLIONAIRE-DOM. e ) e trind, It didn’t come up very good, though.| The battlefields we saw were the|® pear Uncle Jed: I am very sure all oy prre A tax of $67 a day for the support | Lyt of ‘il sich words—-My country,” |, hen L set my’ seraniume out: and | 'Plains of Abrahamy and “Montmoren-| the readers of the children's page . of #n uncongenial partner called for | Ig the nicest and the best!) " |aiso some slipe'l had. Next I planted | cr.” Montmorency is & beautitul place. | waurd like to hear about my mother's [ an explicit statement to the court in ZSt.. Nicholas. | TOrning slories and there are thirty- hydrangeas, for most. children like Week ending August 26. THE RAIN OF THE YEAR. This August downpour has proven to be the greatest downpouj of the the case of Mrs. Rose Keeling Hutch- ins, who demands for her support away from her husband about $25,000 # year. Mrs. Hutchins had no trouble in itemizing her needs which she stat- ed as follows ‘Servants §24 automobile, iivery and chauffeur milk $30; market- ing, groceries and wine $350: pew rent Polly wog On a log. Wiggly wagged his tail; Bumble bee Saw a flea Sitting on a rail. | Grasshopper one blossoms out this morning. geranium has four pink blos- My soms on it, and one of a big red blossom. 1 also planted some dahlias and they have come up fine. Every evening just as down, 1 water them; and you don’t know what fun it is to wake up every the slips has the sun goes high. They are beautitul to behold. They furnish power for the Quebec Railway, Light and Power company. morning and try to guess how many blossoms are out. of spruce and pine. worth while flowers. wo tans| . We have fou an elevator 276 feet high and in_less than two minutes are near the Kent house. Here are an old French can- non, a zoological garden: and groves All _makes it to visit—Richard W. Tobin, Jr, age 9, Norwich. with their white panicles Some years they ar rather small % Everybody admires them, there are few around here. I this year, and they on our front lawn, and just at this time they are beautiful abloom. quite large, but it has been so dry this season they are because My mother started five from cuttings are doing very Formerly Socialist Candidate for Gover- nor of Wisconsin will Speak AT 2 0’CLOCK From a chl year 1911; and although it s late, too | $16: music $15; ~confectionery ' &; Eating supper T Bate; 0t auistyciiiing aud 4 o LETTERS TO UNCLE JED. nicely. Also, she has one she started o # Bene charity §$15; theater tickets $10: sum- With a butterfly; too: but the violets won't blossom Jast year. That one is growing very . & L LAY e e A e iy e i N mea ot Tfired Sih | she Named Hor ol Rubye L 1 AP BT e Racing Will Commenc late crops. massage $5: drugs and toilet articles ool A TuE ase 12, Wilintis, o Dear Uncle Jed: I am very much g ety ‘Yr"}}’fn;’flg&'p?:;? (1 . v 5; el clotin 20; eard a cricket cry, : interested in the sto that are pub- . cCullom, e 12, . The most important consideration 1s [ #20; fiowers $13; cleaning cloties $20: . % The Autsbiegraphy oF a. Carringes " |DUSeMtdin t1C Rioetcy e BIE D REE S & Brings to New: England |yt "$200; rent of summer Katy Did Here 1 stand in Mr. Smith’s wagon | T live upon a farm and have as many £ cities, which are short of water, and e rait ot Parls Apaitient Ran and hid shop, brand new, with a black body | pets as I desire. My dog's name is Will Always Remember It. . BN SN Mte. that a ScOrE. cottage . rent of Paris ap: - In a maple tree; and red running gear, waiting for | “Sport.” He goes with me after the| Dear Uncle Jed: I thought I would e o“ow‘ng Program betwem fl\e For nearly a week we have enjoyed | $110: taxes Paris apartment $1 _Pgl" s Miller Mollar somebody to buy me. cows every night, 2s I have to 80 _a| write you about our Sunday school . showery days and the wet ground has |$2; miscellaneous $264; total 32, Stole a_dollar Three years previous I stoed a large | quarter of a mile, and it would not be| picnic “which was held at Rivesside heats of the races adee. sturdy oak in the middle of a dense forest, my boughs stretching out as much’ as thirty feet over the small shrubs and bushes. One day two men came and chopped me down. So now I am made into a beautiful carriage. But, look! _here is a man now looking at my wheels. Yes, he has made a bargain with my It is apparent enough that Mrs. H. did mot fail to anticipate every need, but her demands for charity and books were not so very large. EDITORIAL NOTES. The consumors of this country will pleasant to go alone: My father gave me a colt when I was seven years old, and I have had the entire care of her ever since. I am pleased to think that I have a colt to call my own forever. I have named her “Ruby.” I_will now close. Your little niece, HAZEL C. CRAIN. park last Saturday. We had a straw ride in a large wagon drawn by two horses, from Montville. We laft Mont- ville about 9 o'clock in the morning and got there about 11 o'clock. It was the first straw ride I ever had. About 30 children were in the wagon, and we had a fine time at the park, play- ing games and wading in th: salt heen in good shape take in the water to 0ld depths and thus not only 10 reinforce the deep wells and springs but also to put the sward in a condi- tion for a large aftermath crop. Then, as it has preceded fair week it ought to assure good weather for to UNCLE JED'S TALK TO THE LIT- TLE FOLKS. LAREX & LAREX, Ring Artists writers and corre- busy this , Our little story spondents have been very county fairs all over southern New |always love Dr. Wiley for making an [ week and the result is a total of thirty REED‘S ACROBATIC BULL TE Englandg which means large gate re- penemy of Old Ben Zoate. letters received, containing thirteen [ONCT, o oL bl hreugn| T oimam, Comilecticut e e dad loth ot cAke add . RR]ERS ceipts #nd good reports from all S e em—mat it takes | little original storles, ten nice letters [the Sand and get my nice wheels all FE e i A A e S «quarter; An expert loafer shows that it takes | ,.; soven letters of acknowledgment |dirt. But here I go, over stones and Has Had a Nice o nice time T ‘will never orget: it,” &k skill to be cireulating all the time and in idleness keep popular. Dear Uncle Jed: Our school va- cation is about to end, I hope all the children who write to The Bulletin have enjoyed it. I know I have. During vacation I have been to many places of amusement. Among them to Gales Ferry on a Sunday school picnic and to’ Watch Hill. ‘When I went to Watch Hill I went in bathing and had a fine time. The The clerk of the weather is on his job once more, and let us hope the re- mainder of the year will push the an- nual rainfall up near to the regular average. deep into_the mud. Alas! I have reached home, but no one would ever recognize me as .a brand new wagon, My new owner used me very roughly and soon the paint was all off from me, and I was never painted or even washed. One day T had been a long distance and on_returning my wheel broke down. The horse ran and broke the hope the same thing will happen next summer.—Glad. Carleton, age 9, Montville, Con: LETTERS OF ACKNOWLEDGEMENT The Book Just Suits Her. Dear Uncle Jed: Thank you very much for the nice book you sent me. of prize books. We shall be able to print only half of them this week; and this makes them draw just twice as many prizes as if we printed them all at once. So the little folks should be patient, for their letters will all appear in due time. One little tot of nine writes Uncle THE DENNIS BROS., Comedy Revolving Ladder Act DEWAR'S COMEDY CIRCUS Harry Atwood knows how to fly he does not appear to know ho play the game for big purse: The astrologers who said August, 1911, would break all heat records did but to REDISTRICTING THE STATE. There does not appear to be any real ®ood reason why the present legisla- not ‘quite understand the month. v V ; ol you sent = B s A prapace the ‘wa¥for 4 = Joi 'n lefiir of thanks and, inquires |ANSLL (1 Wax then drigyed Bume eiM|weter wan very WECR. o at Gaies] Xt Just suits me. as I like fairy stories. B e e e Of (he state at once.| Champ Clark is after President Taft, | what she received the book for. If| Several days afterwards the hired |Ferry, We went at nine o'clock and r Httle LNIE 2. MAIN, really should have been redistrict- | gng he is likely to be a long ways |she did not write the letter Uncle Jed | man came and took me out and split | got home at six. Norwich, Aug. 25, 1911, ed when a fifth congressman was awarded us on the growth of our pop- ulation prior so 1900, 1t is natural to expect that the state politically will be gerrymandered, but the change will not be likely to show up anything worse than the old shoe- string district of eastern Connecticut, which really is the worst example of gerrymander in six states, a case in which politically Gerry was out Gerry- jed. The art of redistricting a state is not T also expect to go to the fair and to_Ocean beach. ‘When school opens I am going to be in the seventh grade—Myrtle McCord, age 12, Norwich Town. me into kindlings. 1 was then taken in and burned to ashes. My ashes were thrown on a field and the heavy Tains washed them into the ground and made very rich soil. This is the end of the red running gear carriage that was purchased from Mr. Smith on June 1, 1907.—Carrie Whitehouse, age 14 years, Mansfield Center, Conn. A Pleasant Ride. One pieasant Saturday morning a girl named Ethel called to our house to invite me to take a ride with her ars to come. One would hardly believe it, but in the big cities the placards are out: “Do your Christmas shopping early.” No real live kid likes to have his attention caled to the fact that school begins next week. It is rather irritat- ing. behind him for some y received, he does not know; if she did, that is what won the book for her. Uncle Jed wishes to say that the boys and girls of no other state are writing better stories or letters than those he is receiving from the little wide-awake workers who compose The Bulletin's family. THE WINNERS OF PRIZE BOOKS. Thanks for Book. Dear Uncle Jed: T've received the book, The Little Earl, and thank you very, very much. Your niece, STELLA ZUSCIK. South Willington, ‘Conn., Aug. 25, 1911. The Kind of Book She Likes to Read. Dear Uncle Jed: T thank you very much for the lovely book you sent me. Tt is the kind of book I like to read. 1 The Verno’s Double Trapeze Act < Wrestling Match Between JACK McGRATH and DOANE BITGOOD Be Sure and See This. Vacation Days Almost Over. Dear Uncle Jed: Our pleasant va- cation days are almcst over, and many a good time we have had, reading and writing for the Children's Page, Although T expect to be a busy Boy this winter, T will try and find a little spare time for a letter once in a while. Upton Sinclair's wife regards him sinderstood by all, and those whe do|@s an over-intellectual being, which| 1—Richard W. Tobin, Jr, of Nor- e ; i i undersiand it may be parieving and | APPears to be a lovely synonym for & | wich “The Motor Boal Ciib of the | (o meet her brother from his work in e i e iz g e g Yeur e B oviion Science Against Herculean Strength. advising delay that. they may run the | CTank- Golden Gates,” by H. Irving Hancock. |the il | = ;14 she drove |lessons: my brother accompanies me | Mansfield Depot, Aug. 22, 1911, district lines on true political curves. _—h_ 2 2—Carrie Whitehous Mansfield | slowly alons. Dn‘\;he |p“noll simpl ieces, but try Ev The Journal-Courier is right when The prospect is that it will be many [ Center, Coni Narcissa, or the Road We talked of our coming scheol days e play only simple pleces, bu The First Book Ever Won. 2 h 2 1t ‘s “The law contemplates that | Years before we can buy a biplane at | to Rome,” by Laura E. Richards. and our kind and loving teacher, Miss | o do them well: and as we grow older| po,. Uncle Jed: 1 thank you very Mr.v C. A. BIGNEY, ng Dlvcr. the state shall he cut up into vorgres- | Dalf-price. We shall have to walk| 3—Mj i villi ic, | Snow. ope 10 d0 s : much for the nice book you sent me. P 81 n 3 ildred Smith, of Willimantic, 44 % " Your little nephew i sional districts which shall be s near- | for a while, Conn., “Adventures of a Brownie,” by | We sang, and saw many things 0| .y ook el e R ks =i amuse us. 2 - s M Your little friend, 1y exact in population as possible, with Miss Muloch. On our way back, of course, Ethel's RUBY SWA due consideration being, «t the same The Massachusetts boys who Kill 4—Ernest Sherman, of North Frank- | brother made it more pleasant for us Little Rabbits in the Tall Grass. North Stonington, Aug. 25, 1911 time, given the convenisnce of the | flise at ten cents a quart are in no|lin, Conn. “The Young Acrobat,” by |{by telling us funny stories, all of Dear Uncle Jed T am eight years voters and their social differences if |danger of ever thinking they were |Horatio Alger, Jr. which we enjoved very much. We ar- | Dear Uncle Jed® © am elght years Just the Book He Wanted. overpaid for their work. rived home shortly after two o'cloci AL Dear Uncle Jed: My flower book was just what T wanted. I thank you very much for it. during the school term: and in_vacation tend sheep for one of our neighbors, chard C. Moran, of Norwich, “Charley Codman's Cruise,” by Hora- tio Algér, Jr. and this ended our pleasant ride.— Miss Lena M. Hennison, age 13, Mans- field Center, Conn. REGIMENTS SLAUGHTERED, Chicago had a bandit who walked Each Day as follows : It was generally supposed that the [In and robbed two restaurants in i i Gor 5 I put the money T earn in the bank. Your little nephew, i BN G Suty, 1911, Yoas atr-ubjate|iwbnty: minuigs; wul o is'fn me dan= | Conn S AREA Y P T Ko The Seifish D. Soineiiee iy ke lanber b futp o B oc'the siicecon ok endanvr ov | £or oF mediin aeat i e PasSuitass Day. the Tiver and we have (o get down and | Norwich, Aug. 28, i91i. 3 RS At akte Sihb st r2onl a & i—Priscilla Presbrey, of Arlington, | One day a hungry dog found a piece | Iifi them up in our arms. ;.l ration: but it was = : =1 A 5 But, Uncle Jed,hlel me tell you what Very Thankful for Book. 2 anada is counselled mdt to be a funny thing happened the other | Dear Uncle Jed: 1 hope you will ex- M d S 4 l‘ The Journal of the American Medi- | alarmed, since after next Fourth of day. In the deep grass we came across | cuse me for not writing before, but as on ay, ep . 4{"] ld!!u;" lation has figured it up, a July there will not be room enough on o 99 a rnh;fl‘;x ne!}(‘ a l:\odlhel' and le’ T was very interested in my book 1 ound that 57 people were killed in the | “Old Glory™ 10 YE HAVE DONE lT UNTO ME little babies. ow glad we were. We | forgot all about it. M' ] A o, oovls wore Milg) in the [7010 Glony™ for anothér ster: LR SR LA R L TR T L 10-Mile Open Race for Motor Cycles MRS Whe catebration. Tan: ot.tN4es|. s Haif-foliday is fast 4 a basket to put the little rabbits in, ALICE J. HICKEY. BRI Cocied b foasr s | o Dl holiney iy tast approgehli H Boy B Soldier in the Cold W. and when we returned the mother had | Willimantic, Conn., Aug. 25, 1911, B ied to death: 11 Ste %r”"-‘ - \sdhvvz:l mg' ;)n :]"i[ ere would ow a Doy Decame a 0v ier in ti 0l ater Army carried -»ll tne “‘:17 hab;el n:fly. We e s— ok e Bt Txvionons | ot o e e yer? o : e e A e e iy | o Vi Vo Much Surocioed. uesday, Sept. ot Uf pdwder and dynamite: : from ex. s 2% .| 1t was an August afterioon. The the plain suffered many privations|We may come across ihem again. | Dear Uncle Jod: I was vers much i ¢ 4 ploslons of canmon: 2 from ziant fire- hot winds were sweeping over the | during the year of drough, but the Your-little nephew. S chi Tor whiahle menon Ve 5-Mile Race for “Single Cylmdcr crackers, and § from- ther forms of western prairies. Not a green thing | needy were never turned from their ERNEST SHERMAN, | owe g 4 was to be seen. The earth wa: fireworks. The mumber o e patch- 3 : 2 cerely, BT s Cireat S o Juthe Bible Question Box || 3% 5iiil;, and the heavens were rears passed by and the desert | North Franklin, August 23, 1911 Yo HaaiNH DESMOND, Motor Cycles B B 16 coteeer s e | { brass. Everything seemed to be ¢ry- | began o, “blossom as the rose.” Fertile Norwichi, Conn., Avg, 28, 1911, y BT bkt s i oty Teas than = ing, “Water! Water!"” thriving villages and populous Books Myrtle Likes to Read. b o o = 4 7 as large as llu\«x~4 st year, when Q.—What the meaning of the fol- Rachel stood in the door of the rude were to be xeen on all sides. Dear (Uncle Jed: 1 thought I would thy killed were 131 and only a ninth | lowing expression: “Upen this reck 1| €abin on the plain, and, shading her | 1L was then that the brave-hearted | write again this week and tell vou Prize For Chinese Student. denesda Se t 5th of the number wiiled nins voa will build My church7 e Hatthew svi, | V6% With her hand. looked far out [ people began “a peaceful war for God. | how much I like to read. Y. L. Tong of Yale won the sccond ’ o B i S0 s e i o 7| over the prairies. “Why don't father | and home, and native iand. During the school terms 1 take|prize 6f$20 and honorable méntion in 3 . number has beer d et o and mother come?" she said. “There, | Rachel was no longer a barefooted | books from the Wheeler library and | the oratorical comtest held by * the S.M 1 Race for T r0-C hndcr until now, and 37 b 1 i | i 1 Euess they are coming now girl, but had developed into a comely |love to read them so much. Chinese students’ _conference, in 11e s 5 w y R s e o Vialidn aeduih | A he Greek word for Peter | No, it was only an immigrant wagon, | mairon, and was onc of the most| Some of the books I have read are|session at Princeton, N. J. Tong is . 1 3 is p and means a stone, and |but it was following the t that | valiant soldiers in the great struggle. | Alice ir Wonderland, The Five Littie|nephew of the Chinese diplomat Tong Motor C rcles ‘;;m:;»;:n‘ 'm:;; .‘1‘mv 4 1 x..:...‘m.:h ‘:l ‘1!')". 4;:'\(‘;::::;\.;.-.:"{;2’ ock |5"'|‘p(-|fn|," ,\:’?'l;ldl::h;:," nh:-llih: y);a:e[r :oor.fl 'lr'v;o he had been the means of securing a | Peppers, Mother Goose Rhymes, Two| Shao-Yee, and has been In America 3 y last nine yearn, show. | The pren o age therefore | half-starving horses drawing a dilap- “known spes iver o lecs year Ing that “since 1903 there hive hean |18 “THou art Potros, a stone, and on | ‘daied wagon, « draken driver, a sick | tare 1o her ‘thomcer (0 deliver a lec: | Little Knights of Kentucky L 50 CUBIC INCH OR UNDER 1719 deaths nnd 37410 injured s a |(hie petra, rock I will build My |woman -and four children—these were | . o (nis country,” said the speak result of Fourth of July acsidents. of | anguie. M the Lo hgttbinte e o Bndeon s DBty s dibaons as he looked over the large audi- these, 103 were complefely hlinded, lost one eve each, 452 lnst legs, 7 arms “I shail always love it, for it s on these plains that 1 took my Entries for I'otor Cycle Races to be made with C. nd “this” is in the third. “Pe- is musculine and “petra” is fem- wrates “Whiskey ain't asked the driver. as cooling as_some or hands, and 1,624 lost one or more |inine. Jesus asked for a confession; | other things on a day like this.”" first temperance pledge. When 1 was V. leton, Jr., No. 10 Broadway. fingers, The grand tota! for tha nine | Peter gave it In thess words —oponi| Kot an. iastant Rachel hesitatp a lad, my father gettled in the western - Pend ” i y years shows tha giments of | ATt the Christ, the Son of the living | pail*of water stood on the bench be- | Mart ",’ t',‘,’ ate, but durfiig;ihe sui = = e Amerfcan men, women anfl children | G007 And this was the petra on | hind the door, but it was the very last | MCr Of the great drought we were lit- P have heen mutilatel for iife and tney | NPIch He declared that He would build | they would be able to draw from their | a1y starved out. Packing our few. emrls 1w regiments hova nrend thal | His chureh. “and against which the | well, and when that was gone, where | SfeCts into the wagon, we started back early two regiments hav: boen kited.” | gates of hell (hades) should not p was more to come from? A thin, white | ¢35t 1l vail. The Apostle (I Corinthians iii, | hand lifted the cover. and a pale face or days we traveled over the 11) explains that Jesu Peter) is the only Foundation upon which the true ~Chureh or Spiritual Temple is to be erected. St. Peter was Since the gypsy moths have resisted estermination all these years and finally settled in Lenox without being T e s through scorching winds and drifting sand, with scarcely water enough to moisten our burning lips. Finally we came to a house. It looked out. “God will bless you, my if you will only give us a little cha“ge In Bank Hnurs And everything that goes to make hesitated no She v v v longer. ;3::"."“:".:; ;::::y t:;\ o ¢ some | merely one of the ‘living stones” v took the dipper from the pail | Was only a shanty standing alone out 7 e 5 o' 15 T ety WA S| S Wi T huns, Shd vageied the Ball g he e imicn: bot 1t vas the : an Up-to-date County Fair ui of Christ, { to the wagon. The half-famished lome of e angel of our deliverance. Grahame-White confesses that all he | Which will be made up of many | creatures soon emptied it, and the dog | A sweet girl brought out a pafl of On and affer August 1st, 1911, the Jewett knows about his marriage is what he ‘;:""[“g‘fin‘l‘;';‘““n"‘*;‘“:;\ &34 Jesus is | came and licked it dry.’ “Remember, | water and gave us all we could drinic. sees in the papers. This shows one | %, ‘orinthians | child,” said the woman, as they drove ve since been afraid that it was 2 4. away. “who it was that said, ‘Inas- |}l she had, and have often wished City Sa Bank of Jewett City, Conn., will Ad O 3sc d } a2 ihe least of ihese v ireathren, ye | €up of cold water did in our family. L2 auantum Avision Maet Bisoked dlay | 105,500 ST RIERNE We held . praise meeting right therc be open every basiness day (exeept Satur- Happy thought for - today: = The sather. Ruchel watched them out of sight, | i the old wagon. My father (hrew < Children under 12 15c spinster's remark that in fishing for ;,n. Adverse eather rnu wn.—:. she turned and entered her u“'n,\‘l his w;;n-ks_v l:ollh-. ‘"nm i » » o d biggest fish . . - postponement | humble home she felt happy, despite ihank offering,’ he said. ‘Mume, ’ 0 B e o .10 ww o the TTarvard-Fo- | the fact (hat she knew not whence the iy - mother, shall he my bo days) frem 10 o’clock a. m. fo 3 o’clock p. m., ; ’ i et e | e D N e e R b e e ‘ ; eams an uto's . 'fl?@fl n. lay’s programme will be | the afternoon a still. small voice kept [ My life to be a Soldier in the cold- Mrs. Dowie and her unkissed boy e to try and build & new Zion City ; Michigan i they can get moncy _enaugh from confiding people to do it given on Wednesduy next if the weath- er permits. Although it was helieved earlier in the day that fair weather was in sight, frequent showers during saying. “Ye have done it unto me; ye have done 1t unto me.” It was dark before her father and mother returned They had zene several miles beyond the forenoon and a strong east wind resulted in the vontest commitice de- claring a postponement. the Villaze to a well where they heard water army.’V Rachel bowed her head to hide the tears that were coursi heeks, and she heard the still, ng down her small oice sa¥s.-Ye have done it unto me! waier Was to be had, and brought back two barrels full. The little family on Ye have done it unto Instructer me!”"—Youth's closing Salurdays at 12"0’clock. FRANK E. ROBINSON, Treasurer. A. D. LATHROP, President. THEO. W. YERRINGTO