Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 1, 1911, Page 4

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lerwich ulletin | Taund @ousice. at PEASN thin atier. Office, 430, EEE R N Office, Foem 3 Murray ‘Teiephone 210. Friday, Sept. 1, 1 —_— BLOCK ISLAND'S BIG DAY. All of Rhode Island and parts of Cemmecticut and Massachusetts arc in- in the celebration on Septem- ber 3, Saturday, Cow < e Hioek Island’s 250th anniversary of ssttiement. At this time, a monument will be dedicated to the memory of original proprietors and settlers. governor and his staf will be Present and the junior United States Senator will be one of the speakers. Commenting upon this point, the Boston Transcript say he island- #F8 Seem 1o be facing a series of in- teresting anniversaries if they care to take advantage of them Three years Denos Will arrive the tercentenary of the landing there of Adriaen Block and the Investment the island with his seme. He was the first American shipbullder, for when one of the ves- #els with which he had crossed the Goean burned he built 4 new one. He discovered the Connecticut and Housa- tonle rivers and was one of the most Intrepld mavigators and explorers of the country's early history. But tra- dition asserts that Verazzano was erable mail General no objection to the postmaster gener- al's proposal » handle second class matter by freight, but it is pointed out by some of the officials, that as second class matter comprises about 64 per cent. of all mail, according to the figures of the postal authorities, it will be, im ble for the roads to op- erate, ihe present number of fast mail olume of business that is still to be carried in regular mail cars. Unless the rates of pay which they receive greatly increased they declare that ' . {are nlbety years ahead of him in discover- ing this small gem of the ocean, so 8 1924 it can boast that it had been knewn to clvilization for four hundred year®. Possibly Leif Ericsson might Bave glimpsed it much earlier. but as We elaim to that effect has been made 1t might be unwise to suggest It PAPER-BAG COOKERY. It has taken a long time to dis- Cover the most important use for the PAPer-bag cookery; but it is on its WAY. to the joy and relief of cooks @verywhere. The American consul I8 London contirms in his reports the muecess of the paper bag in the kitch- en. ‘The scheme is to bake meats or veg- “etables In bags of specially prepared and sterilized paper which, once used. Be thrown away, saving labor in cleanings of pots and pans. The claim is three (1) Less liability 10 microbes: ( ing of nutritive * “values—meats, for example, roasted in the ordinary way, lose four ounces to the pound. but lose nothing in Ught bag®; and (2) a superior retention of flavor. The consul general reports ARt thess claims have been sustained by careful tests fhe Boston Post says: “Recently a Hoston housewife tried this experi- n Bhe divided a cut of swordfish ,‘ © paris. One part she broiled and the othor part s baked in an Smported paper bagz of the British type. The baked portion cooked in time than the other, was juicier, more tender, and had decidedly the hetter flavor. Morcover, it gave off, in cooking. no fishy odor. “When to paper-bag cookery shall have been added paper napkins and paper dishes, much of the worst drud- gers of housekeeping—dishwashing— will have ceased t0 vex. And the yacuum pleaner will complete the revo- lution.” With two thousand offices to be fllled, Massachusetts, under her new primary law. has over seven thousand who want the nomination: and this is five thousand less than was anticipat- elair and his wife sit to- Imly discuss their divorce. Mrs. Sinelair is lookinz for her true umate, but her mother thinks Upton is & troe son-in-law. “A Word t= Mr. Taft on lis Porch &L Beviris” was the title of a long- winded editorial in a western opposing mewspaper. It did not say anything about the porch. The most successful way of reduc- ing the gypsy moth in Massachusetts has been in making the trees sick by introducing a disease which wilts the foliage. With all the talk and all the enact- ments of law for the regulation of the salbon & Maine orator is challenging proaf that just one was ever regulated! The only man in the country who thinks his nomination for the pre: " Bency would be a great calamity ‘the one who made good th: " The fact that Professor Lowell has =i & new caual on Mars does not as much exci cment hereabouts ) the coming county fair. ts Old Farmers Almanac has to ed with haing told its pat- look out for storms and cooler -l_-? this time. B vn_u. wants to - PREPARING TO FREIGHT MAIL. There is 10 question but Postmaster General Hitchcock's idea that consid- matter can as well be. freighted as to be distributed by the more expensive methods, IS creating wide. Interest in all parts® of the country. The weighing in of the mails was begun at Chicago on September 1 on all the principal mail routes centering there, It s an- nounced that this action is made nec- essary by the decision of Postmaster Hitchcock to ship the larger part of the second class malil, what is known to postal employes as blue-tag matter. by freight instead of in mail ng on ‘this date. As the yment of the transportation rying mail for the mext wsed upon the results four of the oficial weighing, there would ving to the postofice depart- from the method of shipping mazazines by freight if the figures arrived at in the recent weighing test were used. The only legal way of get- new is of ‘payment appar- is to repeat the whole tedious ocess of weight-taking for anotifer 5 davs on the routes affected by the wrder. The railroads have offered of the small the on proceeds it will be necessary to cut off some of the fast mail trains and otherwise to e the extent of the railway mail ervice. Under the present system, the railway assert, the roads lose in the agzregate nearly $20,000,000 a year on mail transportation. With. the vol- ume of business cut down more than one-half, as it probably will be by this new order, it will be impossible for them maintain the service at its it IN THE GAME. aker Clark is excited and there is son why he should be, since he has discovered that President Taft understand the game of politics and is @ shrewd checkmater of his oppon- ents in the game He stood alone before a designing and came out with hi ngthened and pop- his colors flyng. The Worcester Gazette is right when it say The president came out of that fray with flying colors. He carries with him about all the honors won by any- body and he will go into the coming camp: fortified by those honors and the boldness to undertake greater things in the coming campaign. "he pres t has played politics, but he plaved a kind which the Clark and Lakollette type of politicians are not to—the kind which is out in the open. That is what has made Mr. Taft strong personally. It is what has created the inipression among the peo- ple that he'is ready to be their cham- pion and make a fight for the things which he deems will be most for their good. e can fight the campaign to be on the same lines which he followed in the special session without much fear of either democrats or insurgents, In short, President Taft has made a reptation. That, by the way, .is something which neither the democrats nor insurgents have to. date made much headwa ccomplishing.” GETTING NEARER CENTER OF POPULATION. New York has just lost a big indus- try to Chicago; and it is possible that New York, which can afford to lose in- dustries, is seeing them slip away to other parts every now and then. A despatch from Chicago says: “The west hag cut further into the business supremacy of the east by the removal from New ¥ o Chicago of the en- tre auditing department of the Wells ¥ Ixpress company. Five special trains, carrying 1.000 employes of the ompany, their families, baggage and household effects, are due in Chicago from Gotham September 15. There will he at least 3,000 persons in the trekking party. When the company first announced the impending change there were many and strenuous nb- jections upon the part of the em- ploves, and many native sons of New >rk put in hasty resignations, look ing with horror upon the idea of leav- ng Manhattan island for Chicago. These prejudices soon began to dis- appear and the company officials ex- pect to have their entire clerical force move intact to the western metropolis, This migration is the carrying out of a of the company to have the & part of its clerical work done from a more central point than New ork plan EDITORIAL NOTES. A Maine inquiry at Squantum? Going to squintum Because half the world does not ow how the other half lives, is no sign it does not want to, The man who is just as happy ‘after he has run for an office and lost it, is the one who gets there in the long run. Vermont expects to have five gov- €rnors present at her state fair and they are all of her own family, too, Labor day is rizht here, and organ- ized labor is ready to give it the dig- nified distinction of which it is worthy. In Seattle they have exercised the recall to fu and now they are hanging in effigy the judges they can- not recall. thought for today: 1t is ctuel to say that the woman speaks well of her husband has become a widow! President Mellen of the Consolidated must smile when he sees himself written up in a magazine as the Over- lord of New England. its Happy rather who The first congressman to navigate the air was Ben Johnson of Kentucky: but a great many congressmen got into the gir' before his day. Killed in Arkansas Mine Riot. Clarksville, Ark.. Aug. 31.—In a riot which broke out this afternoon at the Montana coal mining camp, six miles west of here, two men are known. to ive been killed and a third fatally injured. Officers have started for the scene. The cause of the riot has no: been learned. Wearing on the Constitution. There would he 2 gene velief if Senator Joseph W. yent women from becoming medicines, compounded by chemists, but when I see a man-going around with a Ii selling things made out of barks and buds. I say it's courts to interfere. “Oh, I know y fourteen or fiffeen children and parents to support, bu excuse. There are lots of o] living ‘without selling combi shellers and knife grinders. about broken legs, but sta: about sick grandmothers, “There was poor Mrs. Ci a mneighbor of mine, died in great agony after ki self with a horse, She wa. stick at, and her mother invalid for forty years and delicacies which cost mon left a_widow under such vice as to what she should vide for her family. : ‘Squillman, the druggist, “T dom't know what vou're selling and 1 dont care,” exclaimed Mrs. Cur- few bitterly, casting a scornful gaince at the strange woman at the door. think there ought to be a law to pre- d enough for a man to be an agent and pester busy women to buy his ow'll suy that you have ness knows how many sick husbands @ woman who wants to earn an honest caw't be an agent without pestering people and a woman agent is worse than a man agent, for she always tries to work on your sympathies with her children who are crying for bread and her husband with a broken leg and her grandmother with the blind staggers. On the other hand, a man agent doesn't talk about his starving children or door and bluffs you into buyi tract of pigweed, and I must say I'd rather be bluffed than listen to stories whose husband more children than you could shake a with her. being subject to fits, and also her husband's sister, who had been an sisting-upon having beef tea and other Mrs. Cuppleshaw came to ask my ad- urging her to go around seiling a new | medicine he had compounded, which | was'made of barks and buds and sev- | e I agents, It's celebrated grown wo- ttle satchel leaves and ime for the and good- t that's no penings for ination egg A person nds at the ing his ex- ‘uppleshaw, cking him- s left with was_living always in- ey. Being conditions, do to pro- had been REBUKED HER enteen other ingredients, and he. told t I her that a widow with so many af- flicted relatives could sell twenty thirty bottles a day. haing a group picture of the relatives made, mother having crying for bread and the sister-in-law waving her crutch and demanding beef tea and orange marmalade. who could logk upon such a picture and not buy a bottle of the medicine, said he, must have a heart of stone. impressed with the scheme, but when she unfolded it to me I denounced it in the strongest terms. said I, ‘are tired of buds and roots and government chemists and whole- some ingredients. tience with strangers, male or female, who come to their doors. trying to sell things which are indorsed by Theodorg Roosevelt and They want to be let alone, 8o they can do their housework, especially their married daughters are coming to spend a few days with them. Don’t pester people, whatéver you do, Mrs. Cupplesha them into the lake than pester peo- ple. ¢ woman, and absolutely refused to have anything to do with wholesome ingred- ients or government chemists, and I was so pleased that I used my influ- ence to get her a position as cashier at Goodwate's grocery, with a houseful of noisy children who needed a mother the worst way. enough, when Mrs, been ot work two or three months Mr. Goodwate proposed to her, and they’re going to be married soon, and 1 wish them happiness, although I don't see what they’ll do with all those children when the two families are combined. have to sell things with seventeen in- gredie: or He suggested showing, Mrs. Cuppleshaw’s a fit and the children The man “Mrs, Cuppleshaw seemed favorably ‘The people,’ W They have no pa- | oY Senator ~ LaFollette. when said 1. ‘Better sew all | 05 our relatives into sacks and throw Q.—A “Mamma, why that Genesis brews and rewarded with eternal life, with the Devil, will be destroyed. tan thinks he is thwarting God’s prog- ress, but God is overruling the effects of Satan’s course, church has been subjected to many trials and much -tribulation b; of Satan’s efforts, but the Lord agsures of the Christian will “work out for them a far more exceeding weight glory.” ™ due time he 15, , 14.) that “these Romans xvi, Satan was the first to do evil, and he has seduced both men and angels from the path of righteousness. The baneful effects of sin can best be learned by experience, permitting the Devil to carry his evil vs to the limit. Those who profit the experience will hate iniquity love righteousness and will All others, For instance, flery le girl asked her mother: don’t Ged . kill | have often wished to know nswer to this que answer it? Answer.- on; can yo ‘The Scriptures assure us that God has the power to destroy Satan, that old Serpent, the Devil, and (See | 20; He- will do so. reaso trials” hence God 1 be. Sa- the of eternal ofthe 1911-12 Season Saturday Night, Sep.2 WITH The Girl 25 Golden West By David Belasco SEATS NOW OR SALE PRICES Nights, 15¢, 25¢, 35¢, 50c Matinees, 10c, 15¢, 25¢ u n OPENS LABOR DAY—THE BIG “She took my advice, like a wise remembering all he time that Goodwate was a widower Sure Cuppleshaw had “So you see that a woman doesn’t in order to make an honest hicago News. iving.'—! LETTERS TO THE Mr. Editor necticut in_controvertibly geted by bath lay law as a Sabbath law; stated in Deuteronom: 1y the protection o animals; namely, * labor, and do all they worl seventh day is the Sabbath thy God: in it thou shalt worl, thou, nor thy son, daughter, nor thy thy maid servant, nor tai thine ass, or any of thy cati stranger that is within thy th may rest as well member that thou wast a the land of Egypt.”" Deul “Six day on the seventh day thou that thine ox and thine as ix days ranger, 1 may gladness. tional law, Its law was a c having to do religious than contempora; several other orfental nati custom was to promulgate in the name of the god of So far from being the outcos quated superstition, it was labor laws were hundreds, sands of years in advance the ancient world, supporte by wholesale slave labor, with _horrible are proved to have worked of thetr slaves, literally, tc the government has a rig laws for the regulation and of hours or periods of labo: to_the laborer. Perfect tions, Sunday or othe wishes that kind of freedo; accompaniments, is at 1 grate to the lands wher Sunday, no sacred Friday « even, where cverybod in a state of Nature, A day set apart foi of man is not a sign of superstition and ignorance ry. but of advaicing _en and _fundamental civiliza the former stronghold of tion, type of bigotry and of Sun; as to be ai tnights miscalled as coc laxity hasnot proved to be fare of Spain, nor of any which has had a similar the other extreme, in reve for the national Scotch. student of events the Scotch have risen as elgment in the world's affa Sunday sport” nations down. Our Sunda: sive measure, Thc man w the mouth an fail his ignorance of Connecti The Puritan necticut colony, establish General - Court, May, 1650, Sunday statule, nor even " mor, under the necessary. as Tacitus said of the “Good customs av than laws with us irit this continent, largely This spirit, . wern not restricted but possessed by spectable and Jaw-abiding ion and establ n civil t an anarchist e ¥ restrictions whatever: his mind agery; jorit. ciety riminal We and commandment _beginning against a restful dav though honest, useful nec is not the worst thing that on Sunday. yet for one wh as he ought to be after si ony The brain, especially, is in hammering away incessai line of stress. Nature's r man is when one is tired, tired to rest. Bunyan's man with the with_his face always never discovered the reach above his head without cessation, slave to his business, though he be; and bhy alienixis have found that the Texas would alse resign his job as the |exclusive. defender’ and champion. of Ly itution,—Kansas City Star. e things of life. Labor and Best Laws. The Sunday laws of Con- the Mosaic labor and Sab- which is as plainly a labor and its object ¢ was direct- laboring men and man_servant, man servant and maid as thou. thou shalt 'do thy work, and and the son of thy handmaid, and the be refreshed.” The Sabbath was included in the list of feasts, and described as a day with the treatment of one’s serving or laboring persons and animals, no more mercilessness, Egypt and the Roman Empire, which equal right to safeguard the rest time | savage peoples most freedom from statuto and erty is said to “live | the higher needs has been at the same time the the Philippine: other navion rest-day No observing and thoughtful laws are a defen- ‘onnecticut blue laws® of Puritan davs, simply betrays Code of Laws’ of Con- ting, was such statute found It might be said of this old colony ail more with them, | " It possessed the of constitutional government to such i degree that it was the author of | the first written constitution made on | the model the Constitution of the United States. and the exerc se of suf. and contributed greatly to the hment of Amer- d religious liberty. never satisfied as long as there are any governmental n other w ! reverts to primitive sav- no matter how great the ma- who want orderly and safe so- and who would restrict onl: the injurious actions. vet (o hear a comiplaint from those who obey in earnest, strenuous fashion, the first part of the shalt thcu labor, and do all thy worl an injury and certainly not the best. to the ground, crown i and who treads In_one monotonous round tends to become a way either to a long life or a hap- ither to a physical and cking and missing the best A man needs to look #nd around and 1o broaden his outlook: EDITOR were sug- thou shalt k. But the of the Lord not do any nor thy nor ne ox, nor tle, nor thy gates; that servant And re- servant in t. 53 13-15, shalt Test; s may rest, Exodus of il and na particularly ry laws of ons, whose their laws the nation, me of ant the Mosaic y of most of d as it was ground out instance multitudes | o death. If ht to enact 1 restriction v, it has arr have the restric- he who | with_its to em there is no or Saturday | m, antiquated or of bigot- lightenment: tion. Spain, | the Inaisi- days so lax and similar | kfighting in Such for the wel- On | bgard | the laxity. rent are to see that governing | irs, and the have gone ho foams at cut history. ed by the contains no the word conditions Germans for to church - all the re- members of ds, hearty ana Six ce 2 week; essary work can be done o is as tired x days, it is danger from ntly in one est-time for buit not too muck-rake, within the man self-driven glogists and hé is not on the | b il b | Again, ber, but many t 1 t t t 1 I t € 1 1 « 1 o often enough not to degenerate into a mere Least of burden, i drink and spleed only, and then die. Facts Which Should Be b distinguished as nruch The Turk is a Mohammedan, the East a Confucian, we find a man who will not acknow- Revelation, is used when the president of the national government is inaugu- congress, the legislatures of the states and opened with prayer by Christian men. Our legal and soclal ideals are Chris- tian. Sunday dred: man empire fourth the venerable day i« magistrates and people residing in the city closed.” on_Sunday. | published Sunday. of the day has been enjoined by stat- | American conduct on Sunday. and state constitutions to susta | Yes, to work, eat, As Paul said, immediately following his utterance on keeping or not keep- ng days, “For none of us liveth t himself, and no man dieth to himself. r the body is not one mem- to A MEMBER OF pose; ORGAN ED SOCIETY. imply that what law Mansfield Center; Aug. 30, 1911 Sunday was and vice versa; so Considered. Mr. Editor: The letter written by|al ‘Reason” that appeared in The Bulle- in of the 28th ought to be answered someone. If you will allow me a ittle spuce, I will state some facts hat your readers ought to know and hat “Reason” ought to consider. Religion is an’essential element in he constitution of man. Nations are by their re- igious systems as by anything else. ndian is a Brahman, the Chinaman is Germany, England and States of - America are The distinction is recog- Occasionall: ne United “hristian. nized the world around. edge such a distinction. That we are “hristian is demonstrated by the fol- owing facts: The Bible, the Christian's fellow man; every form, is actuated by right and elevate his race. account of (hat element of humanity, refinement and development are from one hundred to | | which in | a thousand vears behind our highest.| | | alike. and desives, ‘women. treat with and dispos people who either do not know any better, or are too selfish and mean to would be done by or to re- spect the rights of others. Criminal do as. they improvise or change their law intelligence, g another acts of kindness and to ren- der every assistance in nis power to relieve the needs and sufferings of his and not the strong arm of the law that induces him to be good or half as good as he ought to be. feel that a careful study of the history of our race, which shows its constant improvement and gradual d both mentally and morall: the assertion: in view has been to be good, prove his kind and make this world a better place to live in. erence to the human race and its prog- Tess as a whole, through a long term of years and do not pretend to say that erson, possessing velopmen It type of civilization, that the state has laws’ to apprehend and | punish, but which we do not believe any law will ever make g0os not mean to have inferred, i vious letter, relating to Sunda that no law was essential for any pur- | but we did mean to mosi fully | was needed on | was also needed on Monday, as well as by nature every day should be We did also mean to have i ferred that law cannot make men mo innate principles Correct breeding and ed- ucation are requisite to good men and Criminal law is necessary to class of that by law. e of tha should be so framed and so rigorously enforced as to per- manently eliminate from society, ev- ery day in the week, that element a portion of which now reside in jails and stae prisons. Voluntown, Conn,, August 31, 1911, REASON. The Ceylon production has decreased owing to the planting of rubber on tea lands. We warrants Mankind's main object to im- We have ref- the * human the desire to do is _on We did n our pre- laws, | CONNECTICUT FAIR —AND— CRAND CRSUIT AGES Charter Oak Park, Hartford, SEPT. 4-9 $50,000 in Purses & Premiums Mammoth Exhibits of Cattle, Sheep, Poultry, Horses, Agriculture, Pomal- o5y, Boes, Honey, Farm Products, Horticulture, Dairy, Etc. Womeh’s _Industrial Shows, Farm Machinery Display, Merchants’ Exhi it THE GREAT MIDWAY Teeming With New Features from American and European Centers, Big Spectacular Outdoor Acts. Fireworks Show Every Night. Admission, Day 50¢c, Night 25c (Children Under 12 Years, Hglf Price) EXCURSIONS ON ALL RAILROADS GAGGED NEGRO PORTER AND LOOTED THE SAFE San Francisco Mystic Shriners Visited by Robbers—Porter May Die. The an or- San Francisco, Cal, Aug. safe of the Islam Temple club, ganization of Mystic Shriners of this city, was looted some time today and the = negro porter. Charles Warren, bound, gagged and thrown intoa closet. He probably will die Members of the club found Warren unconscious in_ the closet. The rob- bers left no clue and the sum they secured is vet to be determined. rated, the sessions of the national the sessions of the courts are observance of e. b enacted for hun- of vears. The law of the Ro- in the early part of the read as follows: “On v of the Sun let all Laws governing the centur a and let all workshops be Constantine closed the courts Theodoseus in 386 A. D. a decree _suspending the | 1 shows and circus races on In England the observance | rest, theatric time: ‘The colonists enacted laws re- | lating to the day, and every state in the union has stwutas governing | ute from the earliest onal his | “Reason” quotes from the na tion. We do not know who » is, If he is a lawyer, he must know that constitutional and Etalu\r)r\w law is interpreted by an authorizzd | tribunal. Whatever our private opin- | ion of its significance, the interpreta- tion of the courts must stand. No pri- vate citizen can render a decision that will be recognized in the cour ’dndl when there is conflict between the pri- | vate opinion and the court the first named must give way. “Reason” says: | It is clearly evident, to us, that the| enactment of any Sunday law, restrict- ing the liberties of the people on that day, or making anything unlawful on | Sunday that would be lawful on any Sther day, is contrary mot only to the| spirit and intention but the letter of | both the constitution of the United | States and the constitution of Con-| necticut, and must be doubly uncon- stitutional.” In Lawyers' Reports Annotated Book XVII may be found the following: “The Christian religion and the sanc of Sunday as a holy day is part gf the fundamental law of the United States. The sanctity of Sunday is an inseparable part of Ch ianity e Nebraska Reports Peoples v. Ruggles, 8 Johns, 290, 5 Am. Dec. 5: Camp bell v. International 1 Assurance Soc.. 4 Bosu, 298: . Jeandelle, 2 Phila., 509; Davis v. ne, 406. | In Granger " 330.2 may be found Tt has | heen decided over and over again that| Chri anity is a part of the common | latw of the land. and upon this also | vests, in part. the decisions in sup- port of laws intended to maintain and defend the Christian Sabbath.” W. S. MACINTIRE. Conn., Aug. 30, 1911. Hartford, Rea- | || s E e T HATTTHE AN ‘The Peerless six-cylinder motor covered a try-out of 10,000 miles in 1908, with a consist- | ently satisfactory performance. “SIX-CYLINDER” 5 R The 1912 Peerless six-cylinder motors embody the princi- of that model. ples of construction accountable for the success The rigid tests of five seasons have called for no extensive changes. Three six-cylinder chassis are offered for 1912, the “38-Six,” **48-Six” and the “ 60-Six.” All are adapted for the new Peerless bodies, built very roomy and comfortable, in open and enclosed styles, with fore-doors and inside drive. Ask for a descriptive catalog. The drop frame introduced by Peerless models of 1906, has come into use as a standard for frame _construc- tion. The center of gravity of the car and load is brought near the ground without interfering with road clearance. This increases the comfort in riding and the car may be handled easily and safely over rough roads. You are invited to visit our Salesroom. The A. €. Swan Co. 276-278 Main Street 22 Norwich, Conn. Reply to “In Season.” Mr. Editor: Were we perfect itself a standard of character to which ‘we have never, as vet, laid claim, we should still trust {o being possessed of at least enough modesty to preclude | our proclaiming our goodness through the columns of a newspaper. 1t would therefore seem more pertinent and would certainly be much more to our taste, to have “In Season's” inquiry as to whether we act as we write, an- swered by our neighbors a. those thor- oughly acquainted with us, rather than by ourself. . While. disclaiming the least desire or intention of proclaiming our virtues, we do declare our purpose i to extend to every person every right and privilege we claim for ourself, sev- en days in the week, In Teply to “In Season,” we say, it is the natural inclination of mankind to do and perform to one CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought be open NOTICE hange In Bank Hours On and after August 1st, 1911, the Jewett City Savings Bank of Jewett City, Conn., will fress day (except Satur- days) from 10 o’clock a. m. to 3 o’clock p. m., - closing Saturdays at 12 o'clock. - every b "FRANK E . ROBINSON, Treasurer. - D THEA S MCNULTY AESSEE FEATURE PICTURI Minate Man of Lexluglon MISS ETHEL LAWS, Soprans. TRE - USUAL USUAL e AUDITORIY FRICES - VAUDEVILLE AND MOTION PICTURES TODAY KING BROS. "S180en o OTHERS ATHLETES PROGRAMME -.FOR... - LABOR DAY AT THE s New London Go. Fair AT 1 0’CLOCK WILLIAM A. JACOBS: Formerly Socialist Candidate for Gover- nor of Wisconsin will Speak AT 2 ¢’CLOCK The Racing Will Commence The Following Program between the heats of the races LAREX & LAREX, Ring Artists REED'S ACROBATIC BULL TERRIERS THE DENNIS BROS., Comedy Revolving Ladder Act DEWAR'S COMEDY CIRCUS The Verno's Double Trapeze Act Wréstlifi,é'MétcfiiBetween JACK McGRATH and DOANE BITGOOD Be Sure and See This. Science Against Herculean Strength. Mr. C. A. BIGNEY, High Diver. MOTOR CYCLE RACES Each Day as follows: Monday, Sept. 4th 10-Mile Open Race for Motor Cycles Tuesday, Sept. 5th 5-Mile Race for Single Cylinder Motor Cycles Wednesday, Sept. 5th 5-Mile Race for Two-Cylinder Motor Cycles 50 CUBIC INCH OR UNDER Entries for [otor Cycle Races to be made with C. | V. Pendleton, Jr., No. 10 Broadway. FULL BRASS BAND CONCERT And everything that goes to make an Up-to-date County Fair . 35¢c : Admission Only Children under 12 . 15¢ Teams and Auto’s . . 35c A. D. LATHROP, President.

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