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3 &orvich Bulletin and Caoufier. L e 115 YEARS OLD. L e e RS YT — e Entered at tho Postoffice at Norwich, Cenn., as wecond-ciass mattel Telephome Calls: Belletia Business Office, 480, Bulletin Editorial Rooms. 35-8. Bulletin Job Office, 35-6, Nilmantic Office, Room 2 Murray Bullding. one 210. Norwich, Wednesday, Sept. 6, 1911. The Cireulation of .‘l’lle Bulletin. The Bulletin 3as the largest eir- cuiation of amy paper in Easters || Conmecticut. and from three to four times larger tham that of amy Norwieh. It la delivered to 3000 of the 4,053 houses 1 Nor- wich, amd read by ninety-three per cent. of the prople. Jn Winduam i delivered to 900 houses. ta Puimam and Danicised 1o over 1100, amd fa @il of th-se places it is comsidered the local daily. very routes. | Bulletin 1s sold In every ot the . F. D.|| routes i Eastern Commecticut. |1 CIRCULA 1905, aversge . Week o September 2 | HEAVY LEAKAGES. | LOCATING as surprised when eis of Boston gave that railroads i million de passenger & Readir along that it ix equipn agemer car repairs roads in the 000,000 This is r n ut it is a w single line nquir DR. PEARSON'S WORK FINISHED. No phila . attra mo: nt jern ti m to Dr him- D. de seven »ds than K s fellow tarily to ainder upon th ceeding S get that disir as accumulatior and know 1 The exhilara on consumes evitaole refuse to fa sons, who a cope with Dr. F blem mber sna efactions and iew s 2s impor it is all gon is near its « almost idyll lated int Postmas: ught his & o & pay sor of me and good onstrated he arjear nently qualified tiona. He regar s an experiment and he has announced that he wi recommend to congress the establish- ment of a parcels post system, the first steps of which shall be taken up- on the ail de routes This is the Mondell he Sixty-first eon- » reach the e opponents of any nd < help busines t er that the Bostmaster zeneral believes it will facilitate busi- ness and prove as much an advantage to the al free deliver al dis @0 no harm to try it: and it « hoped that congress will enter plan which means so t of the whole peo- v into ple At Williamsport, Pa., they find the lte of brick pavement on heavy- traffic strects from seven to eight years on lential avenues about twe A Mis the ax. has just died at had the bread mother chancing boughten =t lived still longer, he stuck to instead of > might have Tket. A litt bitl | ABE RUEF AS A REFORMER. Abe Ruef, the political corruptionist and boss of San Francisco, has dem- onstrated that ability counts in San Quentin prison as’ well as elsewhere, As a convict viewing prison life he has compelled one member of the Cal- ifornia prison commission to admit that the statistical estimates made in his statemefts are striking, and its Jogical deductions, -based on conceded or demonstrated premise seem un- answerable. It ix Abe Ruef's opinion that ffty per cent. of the prisoners “are not eriminals at heart or by nature; that they are capable of restoration to g00d citizenship and of entire rehabilita- tion,” is making a good impression; and he is as firmly convinced that, the remaining fifty per cent., half under proper treatment, be re- Indeed, he is inclined to even hopeful estimate, is really working with all his to help his fellow convicts and < not wholly unconscious that in do- ing so ke is making his own chance of be Ruef s scheme is very simple. It the conviets themselves to or- voluntary assoclation, whose ose is to tide its members over eritical days between their dis- the obtaining of perma- ment. He would include form. a more He ition the relatives and convicts who, sharing ace of their punishment, ally intcrested in their re- rehabilitation. An annual two or three dollars cach member, it is furnish the necessary plan succeed, it must be Fuaef will have complete- jcemed his character, which few possible to do under such men find i onditi interesting to the )f this country to learn what Canada are being told of reciprocity upon If the American the following from must be wrong: s whose prod- Tt is of rse right, en an farm New York and other cit- the rest n cent. of pay, the he Canad being promised his produce in into force, had bette a little dguring. He thai sixty per an New York prices will Jy under what he gets in the Canadian mar- thinking will dem- per forty mers middiemen. cons; pri for York prices i dc discover more te him that his Canadian, market being better than the Ameri- can farmer's American market, the r will send his produce over here, 1d of the Canadian farmer send- there.” his o EDITORIAL NOTES. ymez of Cuba has shown ¢ to be re-elected he must do some- <ides abide in p lent ¢ thought for today: _The way round is not the short- home in an automobile. man who forgets his obliga- s the man whose wife has to eminders tied to him most of d country between and Worcester, Mass., all the aviators on H., il to a month in which the sky play major parts have eyes to see view mber is and the tures. who do not know that than a class—that it humanity—still have rn. Labor really con- hordes on the ocean reful how”they try » Uncle Sam. Collector Loeb that unprofitable, venty-five million dol- Ia n the savings banks the gain last year was five and a half millions. k about boosting the town! The popu - is the man who not Goodwin thinks John Jacob As- ng himself in the most nd manly wayv: and doubtless Mrs. Upton Sinclair can see no harm in it. Standard Oil company of New died by the order of the su- eme court, but with shares at $ here is no doubt it died game. Lieutenant Milling, the regular army aviator, found the air lumpy in- his New England Labor day flizht, and his aeroplane roiled like a ship at sea. Colonel Watterson challenged the Kentucky democrats to stop and think, he did not realize how near to the impossible he was inviting them. The Chicago Y. W, C. A. has fixed of an old maid at thirty This is regarded as the first ruling ever made upon this The mayor of Denver having gone abroad to study municipal government | the auestion is be bly find with Denver! asked where he city to compare could pe Bible Quesiion Box Your Bible questions will be an- swered in these columns or by mail i qpent to our Bible Question Hox J.—In the Bible we read that “Jesus was made a little lower than angels, that He by the grace of God should taste death for every man.” mean that every man will get eternal life whether he wants it or not? Answe “Eternal iife is the gift of Jesus Christ” (Rom be no gift unle it, hence, un 1 dife ment his i under order in heritance, came h. In “onde edeem The Albans board of trade must in mighty bad odor. The Messen- of that place says it is dead and Ppeo: sinne < a v Adam Adam and’ all cendants ‘might be released fr eath nenalty a corps of painters with him was done in good great It Does this ptures answer, d_through Ther» nation of the race he equal Jesus that THE BULLETIN'S DAILY STORY | 3 DOING GOOD torn down the center, which converted them into notes for $20 each. Of course they put up the usual howl, but they had to pay just the same. They have been stung so often that they haven't any use for a man-who comes to town offering to put up a stunt for nothing, and when this mu- sic philanthropist blows into a coun- try town he will see the village mar- shal on his trail from the minute he gets off the train. “Another thing that's wrong with his scheme is his determination to furnish good music. Its a mistake to suppose that people are suffering for the real thing in music, will go around dishing up melodies heavyweight German composers, i they will be surprised and pained to see people leaving the tent with a bored look on their faces. And then when he goes uptown, after his con- cert, he will see all those people bunched around a street piano. “Good music is like good Doetry. It's hot stuff, in every sense of the xernggm only one man in 500 appre- ¢ “T've been reading about a western man who has made his pile,” said the retired merchant, “and now he is lool ing around for a-chance to benefit his fellow men. He wants to spend his money in such a way as to increase the happiness of the people and he has about decidel to ¢ngage the best band he can find and go through the country gaving concerts in small towns, where people don’ have many chances to hear hign class music. (it looks to me like a magnificent schem: t is a_magrificent scheme in the- replicd tiie hotelkeeper, “but in practice it will run up against a lot of snags, and after he has had a little experience the philanthropist will go home a a broken heart. ~Nobody will belisve rim when he says he is furnishing free -nusic just to entertain at> the people. He might put the large cities, but the people of the small towns suspi- cious, they have been sewed up so often by fruit tree agents and light- | ning rod peddlers and others of that | ory, .ast summer a man came into this town with a new kind of barn paint he was introducing to the people. In or- der to advertise his marvelous paint he was applving it to a certain num- ber of barns free of charge. He had and in week he had beautified twenty or rty barns. All he asked when the work was done was a written state- | b ment from each man whose barn had been painted, certifying that the work | hape. These certi- ficates, he said, were to be sent to the factory as evidence that he was at- | tending to his business | Well, all those prominent citizens whose barns had been made to blos- som as the rase thought they were in ciags it. Go into a phonograph store and watch the people buying records if you want a line on the public taste. Once in three weeks a customer drops in and asks for a record by Tetraz- zini_or Caruso and he spends the whole day in the music room, chewing his fingers and pacing the floor like a_caged lion before he can make up is mind to buy it. “There’s nothing more heartbreaking than to grind out a lot of swell music for a jay audience, and see the people laughing and telling stories when they should be listening ellbound and wiping tears from their pallid cheel That will put a erimp in your philanthropist, and when his show is over and he sees people running 'k and didn’t do anything but | away so he wom't have a chance to dance and sing for several weeks, un- | sell them any laundry soap or beeswax til they were notified that their notes | bi h p of misery will be over- were held in storage at the bank, and | . and he'll tell the members of they were invited to call and settle. nd to rustle into the country and ¥ lled, as one man, and found jobs in the cornficlds Chicago that their little testimonials had been | News ficially to all of Adam’'s race, hence|and obey the Lord. after recciving a the Scripture reads, “He tasted death | full knowledge of the truth for very man Jesus was raised from death by the Father and was Ghamp, Warkeglt Ot given the Divine nature. He now has| Of course, the presidential nomim.- the power to give to all of Adam’s|tion will seek the right man, - and race eternal life, and all who willing- | Champ Clark’s friends say.he's right, ly accept the free gifi upon the terms | and may go ahead.—Atlanta Constitu- shall live forever. This offer | tion. is given to some during this | = present Age, and to all others life will| Aluminum is now worth from $289.50 be offered during the reign of Christ.|to $482.50 per ton. One can easily ob- Al must receive the t tain a metal 99.5 per cent. pure, and in imony and the | offer “in due time” (I Timothy ii, 4-6: | Romans v, 18). But none will become the possessors of eternal life, except those who willingly accept the offer some cases the impurities do not ag- gregate 0.3 or 0.4 per cent. This metal generally contains a little iron, silicon and sodium. BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure The only Baking Powder made fromRoyal Grape CreamofTartar NO ALUM, NO LIME PHOSPHATE Anty Drudge sets Mrs. Boarder right as to the Modern Washday. Mrs. Boarder—‘‘Yes, my husband would rather be in his own home than boarding; but when I remember those dreadful wash-days and the sickening smell of boiling suds, 1'd rather board.”” Anty Drudge—‘‘You wouldn’t have had any sickening smell of boiling suds if you had used Fels-Naptha soap and cool or lukewarm water. Neither you nor any one else would have known washing was going on in the house.”” Plenty of reasons why you should wash the Fels-Naptha way. The least labor. The least bodily distress. The least wear and tear on hands and fabric. And the result, the cleanest, whitest clothes you ever saw. That's why you should use Fels-Naptha soap. Boiling and hard rubbing are done away. You soap the clothes, roll and place them in cool or lukewarm water. Then you rub lightly, rinse and hang out. Every fibre is clean and pure as it came from the loom. One trial will convince you. You will no more return to the old way, than you would strap a pack on your back to carry throughout the day. Follow carefully the directions on the As Adam’s condemnation resulted in death to all his descendants, the sacri- ficial death of Jesus must resuit bene- green wrapper. f red and pD: : ; This man [ L IWENT THROUGH Beforetaking Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound. Natick, Mass. — ‘I cannot express ‘what I went r.hrou?l; during the change carry ALL TROLLEYS CENTER LEAD TO OF NORWiCH NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1911 ; one day of the wonderful cures made by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound - and decided to try it, and it has made me a well woman. My neighbors and friends declare it had worked a miracle for me. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound is worth its weight in gold for women during this period of life. If it help others you may publish my letter.”—Mrs. NATHAN B. GREATON, 51 N. Main Street, Natick, Mass. Ge women through _this trying &ermd as Lydia E. Pinkham’s ble Compound. If you would like special advice about your case write a confiden- tial letter to Mrs. Pinkham, at ;ynn, Mass., and always helpful. Sponge Cake Tel. 952. ALL W. Belasco’s Pi ife before I tried lia E. Pinkham’s egetable Com- ound. I was insuch a nervous condition could not keep till. My limbs ere cold, I had ree) sensations, ind I could not sleep nights. I wasfinally [d by two_ phys- in stock here. Prices, EEK Matinees Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. The Poli Players Presenting David cturesque The Girl % Golden West One of the largest and most expensive productions ever seen Night Prices, 15-25-35-50c. 10-15-25¢. Next Week— ALIAS JIMMY VALENTINE. icians ‘that I al had a tumor. I read Tel. 611. 12 you buy il purchaser. MONEY SAV your Piano SELECTED INSTRU; whose tone, quality and beautiful case designs will please the most critical E. PARKHURST, F. C. GEER TUNER 122 Proapsct St., Norwich, Cu TS, ege- Removes and Tumo: all_severe and critic Corns, Her advice is free, for: assured. M’GRORY BLDG,, MWS at CARDWELL’S 3— Market Street you want ness before the publ wug columns of The The Boston Store School Time Hosiery Sale legs Bunions_and cures Warts, Ulcerations, Proud Flesh an‘l 1 cas: 287 MA Take Elevator. Office Hours, days and evenings. Sunday, 10 a. m. to 1 p. m. The Change of Life is the most criti- | *7, F'!l, Street: “"":u: o cal period of a woman’s existence. =3 = ‘Women everywhere should remember . that there is no other remedy known REMOVED to medicine that will so successfully acureo I, Chiropodist Wen Ingrowing Toz Nails treated without pain and com- IN ST. . there is dium better than through the advertis Bulletin. THE BUSINESS School time demands the BEST APPEARING hose, the youngsters’ active demand STRONGEST and BEST- WEARING hose. Whether you wish to spend much or little you will find here the very best. in quality and appearance obtainable At These Special Prices in this city. with double heel and toe THIS WEEK, a pair, tra fine ribbed and come from 5 1-2 SPECIAL THIS WEEK, a pair, 1ic. mercerized, lisle finished yarn subject to slight mill imperfections—SPECIAL THIS SALE, 3 Pair CHILDREN'S MEDIUM WEIGHT BLACK COTTO sizes from 6 to 9 1-2—Special for this Week—9¢c a pair, 3 for 25c. BLACK €O’ and 1 Ribbed N HOSE nd double knee. 12 1-2c. BOY'S MISSES' COTTON HOSE—in either black or tan. to 10. Regular w MLESS BLACK HOSE se are our regular CHILDR for 50c. which has never been equaled for weights and Ti a dozen. tremely in sizes 6 ta 9 1. RANTED TO WE Box, $1.00. “CADET” HOSE FOR BOYS AND GIRLS—Of black cotton with reinforced splicing at knee and heel and toe of goad, stout Irish linen which will stand any amount of hard wear. a pair 25c. The Reid & Hughes Co. ST MLE CHILI duall lisle finish. S FINE RIB, All s BR IN THE “LION™ the price. We ha *an s BUSTER BROWN HOSIERY, For & relief from the worry of the ever-present satisfactory—*“THE BUSTER BROWX This hose is packed four pair in R FOUR MONTHS s HOSE—in either ses—THIS SALE, a pair, 2c. WITHOUT DARD N HOS: these are madc Sizes 6 to 10—SPECIAL These are 13c —a fine ribbed hose of - grade, silk ND, we have a uniformly good-wearing hose ve it in t s at the uniform price of 25¢ a pair or $2.75 occupation darning we offer a stocking which we have proved and have found ex- single ribbed hosiery a box. W NG. At the popular price of We Re-upholster Furniture and L;ty Carpets quality— no m. the Al ex- hut liste hree of AR- A - BREED ‘FEATURE_PICTUR et o USUAL e AUDIT VAUDEVILLE AND MOTION Headed by THE MILLAR MUSI ORIUM SPECIAL LABOR OAY BILL ’ Music in Black and White USUAL PRICES New London Go. Fair AT 2 0’GLOCK 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 MOTOR CYCLE RACES 5-Mile Race for Two-Cylinder Motor Cycles 50 CUBIC INCH OR UNDER FULL BRASS BAND CONCERT And everything that goes to make an Up-to-date County Fair J Admission Only . . Children under 12 . Teams and Auto’s . A. D. LATHROP, President. |THEO. W. YERRINGTON, Sec’y. 35c . 15¢ 35¢ NOTICE Change In Bank Hours On and after August ist, 1911, the Jewelt Cify Savings Bank of Jewett City, Conn., will be open every busiress day. (except Satur- days) from 10 o’clock a. m. to 3 o’clock p. m., closing Saturdays at 12 o’clock. FRANK E. ROBINSON, Treasurer. Allow Me Please | to quote you prices or to give you es- | timates on ail kinds of contract wo jobhing, carpenter work, painting, etc. ete. Jobbing promptly attended to. Estimates cheerfully given, C. M. WILLIAMS, General Contractor and Builder, 218 MAIN STXEET. *Phone 370. THE FINEST 35c DINNER IN TOWN A'finz a in Millinery Miss Butis desivable, On Exhibition ortment of the Latest Styles for Summer wear at MRS. G. P. STANTON'S, No. 52 Shetucket Str Miss Butts’s School THE BEECH DRIVE School will begin on Wednesday, September 20th. will with parents who d dren in sehool, be glad to confer i sire to place chil- rly application is DELL-HOFF CAFE From 12 2| Fidelio Beer On Draft or in Bottles, Team Delivers Everywhere. H. JACKEL & C0. |~ Tel 136-5. cor. Market and Water Sta. ' le i | vest on THER Eelivered to Any Part of Norwich the Ale that 1s acknowledged to be tha | the marke: PEERLESS. A telephone order wil) recelve promp: attention. 0. J. MeCCRMIGK. 30 Franklin St 7% no adverticing medium in asiern Connoticut equal to The BWis tin for, businesy vesultr L o — \HANLEY'S