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NORWICH 7 N BULLETIN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 3 WESTERLY- MIN 70 ATTEND FAI "¥illiam Latham Going to Norwich Next Week For 58'th Con- secutive Year—Horace Vose to Send President’s Turkey to the Fair—Westerly Members Favored at State A. O. H. Convention—Seized Liquors Ordered Destroyed— Choice Pigeons and Poultry Reach Town. of Westerly will sion. There are. 23 n the state and all ill send It is expected ‘that there wearing the black frock The annuoal conventions of the An-)ragansett counc cient Order of. Hibernlans and the | head ladies’ auxillary of Rhode Island were | coun held Thursday in Providence with over | delegations. expe 300 delegates in attendance. At the | will be 2500 men in line Joint opening, State President Thomas | usual uniform of silk he J. Mathews of Providence, formerly of | coat Westerly, presided. After prayer by Vicar General Thomas F. Doran, the delbgates were congratulated by Pre jdent Mathews and Mrs, Ellen Ryan Jolly, national president of the ladies’ auxiliary, recently electéd to that of- fice, and president of the state organ ization, on the splendid showing made by the order during the past two years | eties of Wester! Westerly w eches in of fire- Hiber works in the evening. | " The School Arts Magazine compli- ments Sally Andrews of Westerly for since the convention was held in West- | : of the trout lily-{dos- erly. The two bodles then separated a 1d says it”is an eye- and held their'conventions, | 16T The color When the time for election of offi- | of the flower and the foliage are cers was reached in the Hibernis matched as closely as possible in hue‘ convention, President Mathews, who [and in relative 1 and arranged up- had served in that office four yeal on a sheet tc her with a drawing of the for third term, and/ eventh grade school of Patrick J. Finner » complimented for for president, and e w: and his contribu- a contest, as contests prevailed tion asea sample plate all offices except that of secretary.|for thé guidance of pupils. Following is the list of office Patrick J. Finneran of I Proy Andrew C. Zabriski of New. York, president; John H, Lynch of Wes i with an estate of eighteen hundred vice president; Michael Ma Barrytown-on-the-Hudson, Providence, secretary; Patrick J. , discontinue the pigeon O'Gara of Pawtucket, treasuger. All ate which are new men to the offices except the | secretary, The new officers wer pointeq a committee to procure su | ble gold emblems for the retiring of-| ¢ ficers in appreciation of their work for the order. . The ladies’ auxiliary elected these | officers. Miss Elizabeth T, Doyle of | Providence, president; Miss Nellie Ne- | ville of Westerly, vice president; s | at Mad- garden, I ultry sho in-law Sdwin D. Price, Saunders of the village of Mystie, o continue In the same Margaret McGroarty of Providence, | given Mr. Price a treasurer; Mrs, Charlotte Martin of | choicest pigeons, Providence, sccretary; Mrs, Ellen | and ducks, which O'Nell of Newport, mistress at arms; Miss Mary Hanley of Providence, tinel. > Mrs. Michael Burke of V appointed & member of th to supervise the study in_the parochi: During the pa: s thie cient Order of Hibernians membershi in the state has increased from 1900 to 2600. The receipts during the period | were $28,665.54, and the expenditures | $25,608. There in a balance in treasury of over $12,000. The L suxillary in the state has a memt ship of over 1,000. re a will be care where they Price leaves i ams many the he Norwich and Upon special invitation of the man- agement of the New -London Gounty ricultural Ho 1 Two liquor seizure cases were dis- i i r e Vi of posed of by Judge Oliver H. Williams 5 HEzpte VDG S o in the Third district court Friday, the | ¢jq LY ff)"“l_ over complainant belng Sherift John R. Wil- | § Sbus ool q! cox, who personally condudted the | 1;2 [ prosecution withott the assistance of | a lawyer. The first case called was against zhe liquors seizéd at the home f Alexander Lafonti, near the 0 dike quarry in tie giving din- Vose has fown of Chagl M town, Deputy Sheriff Mitchell stated i o e that by virtue of a search warrant | ol and accompanied by assistants, he | Privtin searched the Lafonti p. c kept for sale illegally, on last Sunday. |} He found and conveyed to the station | bouse in Westerly one barrel of ale, | one barrel partly filled with ale, and | three bottles of lager beer. There | were eleven men in the place at the | time of the raid, and they were all | partially intoxicated. - He also found | on a round table three beer glasses | and twelve empty beer bottles. Edwin E. West, police agent, gave testimony n corroboration. Judge Willlams declared the seized ce for liquors Vose says he the turkey that is be- he presidemtial famil time, but he know to the usual stan- _William Latham of Westerly is plan- tend the Norwich fair fo ecutive year, openin and nex quors forfeited to the and | g that warrant be Issued for the de- | the grounds at struction of the liquors and destruction | on, and he be- or sale of the vessels containing the quors. . Latham says that : N | f course attend | TR ¥ * London | who also_resides neir the Klondike oo s{ . 792 Anc Livers Stable t5/86 Eract: quarry, Sherlff Wilcox testified that for remsons thap| Sd—Cereus Blooms in the Day. with search warrant he Sttended ali ] Panacer! place, with a Socioty- that wog| ., Sunday selzed and conveyed to ST police station 121 bottles of Iz Seven men were in the place drinking and quite & number of me > | n the Immediate vicinity, all more or | o ess intoxicated. He did not find any | beer glasses,. but there were many | g empty beer bottles ang indications that the men drank dlrect from the bottles. James Maxwell testified in corrobora- tion. , and an e npressed on It 18 probable that in due time Ta- | font! and Penaceri will be prosecuted | for keeping intoxicating liquors for Laconios. s planned to have the Labor day at 9.15, sale contrary to law, | The Knights of Columbus of Rhode | lsland are complsting ‘arrangements | mpany employes | friends in New London and viclnity, for observance of Columbus day with | at the Golden | Chlidren Iil. | a parade in the city of Providence |2 | Master Fr i ‘ JPeovider | A Prank Williams remaing in | - As usual, by reason of senlority, ,\ar-j 1 the e In the mern- | a critical state, and his sister Wdith | i : ZasHES. e will be nothing doing in |is The infapt daughter ef Mr. | A on Labor day, e | and Mrs, James Shea is ill with the | Children Ory. - at new arrives frem the | 5ame disease, | east ot & e until 3.18 FOR FLETCHER'S hteaber 1 R i Y afls BTG Garge, ‘ ~ = : ’ | aaries D, ‘olfe ig to eommencs at c' ASTO R A I # bicyele, not an autemohile, | aneo to erect a garage and livery on | ula for over 40 years. and inexpensive. e ——— s | has returned rd weight and of the very best qual- | that whe jstelen from in front of ‘the Girvin stere Thursday afterneon. at the Dixe use Mieh: ends his work' for the hotel tonight. ¥, A. Wilson of Mystic has loaned his valuable collection of Indlan relics | to the WesterlyyMemeorial and Library assoclation. "™ 4 s Several locdl firemen will attend the annual muster of the Rhode .Island Firemen's assoclation to be ,held in! East Greenwich Monday. 7 Louis H. Bddy's lgase of the Dixon house expires at midnight Saturday, { when the property will be released to the owner, Willlam Segar. There has been no noticeable in- crease in business at the local res- taurants since the closing of the Dixon house dining room, two weeks ago. been on vacation at Sagamore Beach ! will return to conduct services in the; Congregational church Sunday morn- ing. Michael Shea, a student at Middle- bury college, was a visitor in Wester- ly Friday. He is a graduate of Bulke ley school/ New London, was active in | baseball and general athletics. | The C. B. Cottrell & Sons Co. plant, which is usually operated on Sunday but not Saturdays, closed down day noon to ‘resume Tuesday ing, on account of Monday being Lii- bor dayi % Charles W. Willarg and daugh | Mrs. Grace P. Rcsinson, have go Colorado, where they will fish for { bow trout. Before returning to West- | erly, Mr. Willard will attend in Den- ver the annual meeting of the Ameri- | can ciation, of which he 1is t / Rowland Rathbun of Alton was injured by being hit in the head with a stone while on the beach at” Watch Hill, Thursday afternoon. The stone was thrown by her'grand- | son, age ten, -who was at play throw- |ing stones in the water. This one slipped from his hand, struck his grandmother and fractured the outer table of the skull and inflicted a se- vere scalp wound. Mrs. Rathbun is over seventy years of age. STQNINGTON. Extra Mails Provided—Crowd Enjoys Band Concert. | | | | M Owing to new regulations, Stoning- ton with other shore line towns is to an incoming mail from Boston an outgoing one to New York. ncing Sept. 2, the noon mail nects with 1 not go as it has for many | ¥ , but will come at 3.24 instead. ¢ Mrs. Michael Gilmore, Miss Agnes Gilmore and Edward Gilmore are ending a vacation at Oakland Park, b R Mrs. W. L. Dliss and son, Louis W. | Bliss, of Mt ion, N. Y., are guests | of Mrs. . Lathrop. | Mg, C.T. Eaton Has returned from |a visit to Fhst Douglass, Mass. Rev. J. H. Odell has returned to | | Scranton, Pa. > | Raymond Bailey and children | i | | | i | |and Miss Geraldine,Joseph, who.have been at Olamon, Mé., have returned. Many Enjoyed Band Concert. The band concert Friday evening as largely attended and the excellent programme rendered called forih hea applause. These concerts are | srowing in popularity weekly. Personal Briefs. Miss Marie Prentice, who has been the guest of Mlss Laura S. Palmer, to New York. Hon. Mortimer Roberts of East Nor- | valk was the guest of Alex P. Loper | this week. | Rev. and l | Mrs, | | Georgs B. Marston | have as their gues and Mrs. { Chapman of A N. Mr. and Mrs, Marston w leave Monday on { thelr annual vacation, which will be spent in New York state. W.IE. Chapman Injured. W. E. Chapman of Mystic, who was | in the machine department of the At- wood Machine company, caught his right hand in a lathe Friday and re- ceived a bad cut, five stitches being necessary to close the wound. JEWETT CITY | 1 morning at the Baptist rch Rev. E. 'W. Potter's subject will hat the church has done and what it ought to do for the working man.” His evening subject is The Christian’s Monopoly. The Congrega- | tional church will resume services on unday, and Rev. W, H. Gane's morn- ing topic will be A Personal Matter. The sacrament of the Lord's Supper | will follow, the service. The evening subject is What He Dldn't Want to 0. Miss Ruth Miller of Mt, Vernon, N. Y., 15 a Fuest at her uncles, John H. | Tracy’s. . M, Jennle Higgin ed after a four | 5 has return- weeks' visit with Rev. Samuel M. Cathcart, who has | | them again—Victor Hugo. | opinion. But really great men have a Insist on ) At Soda Fountain the Original "Ho‘r(iek’s" “Others are Imitatior_zs’f i | 1 M e { lower Main street. The building will be 26x50 feet. & Cerous Ahead of Schedule Time. ! Mrs. Augusta Ray has a night bloom- | ing cereus which-was in bloom during | the day. On arising in the morning“ she found two beautiful blossoms on | the plant. Miss Isabel Button is Providence. COLCHESTER The Pros and Cons club will resume meetings at the library, Sunday after- noon, after the summer vacation. visiting in Love Soule. Deep hearts, sage minde, take Ilife 28 God has made it; 1t is a long trial, an incomprehensible preparation for an unknown destiny. This destiny, the true one, begins for man with the first ‘step in the tomb. In the mean- while, love and suffer, hope and con- template. Woe, alas! to him who shall have loved only bodies, form, ap- pearances! Death will deprive him of all. Try to love souls; you will find | Never Changed In Nature. The bees which may have Iived longest in the woods undisturbed by man would if transferred from their wild abode to a hive and brought out ' to a modern apiary be as much at home and as tractable to man and | his methods as any bees in the yard. Their type, habits and instincts re- ; main unchanged whether wild or in so- called domestication. 1 To Clean the Coffes Pot. Never wash the inside of tea or | eoffes pots with soapsuds. If they be of granite or agate ware, and be- come discolored, nearly fill the pot with cold water, add one teaspoonful of borax and heat gradually until the water reaches the boiling point. Rinse with hot water, wipe and keep ‘on back of range until perfectly dry.— Suburban Life. Striving Must Prevall. Did ‘you ever hear of a man whe had striven all his life faithfully and singly toward an object and in no measure obtained it? If a man con- stantly aspires, is he not elevated? Did ever a man try heroism, magnan- imity, truth, sincerity, and find that there was no advantage in them— that it was a Vvain epdeavor?—H. D. Thoreau. Humility Proof of a Great Man, I believe the first test of a truly great man is his humility. I do not mean, by humility, doubt of his own power, or hesitation in speaking his curlous undersense of powerlessness, feeling that the grehtness is not in them, but through them.—Ruskin. Terriers Kept Busy. Three terriers racently kiltkd 250 | rats In half an hour when a wheat| staek was being threshed at Bishop's | Btortford, England. & | son delegates 'FRISWEL Brief Stafi New New MHaven.—McNulty Brotters,New York contractors, have placed a $17,- 221 lien on the new Hoael Taft here. Bethany.—Frederick A. Perry, a bus- iness man of New Haven, - died here from a paralytic stroke. He was 68 years old. New Britain.—The Luther league of the Swedish Lutheran church has se- lected Emil Larson and Josie Erick- to the State Labor league convention at Stamford, Sep- tember 2. % Derby.—John P. Wall has been cir- culating a petition asking the mayor | and the board of aldermen to Insert in | the call for the city election a pro- vision that will enable the voters to determine whether they would like the merit system made applicable to the appointive offices of the city. Middlstown.—Cards have been re- celved announcing the: marriage, at Gottingen, Germany, on August 8, of Rev. Charles Baker Hedrick, Trinity college 1899, professor in Berkeley vinity school, and Miss Hedwig,daugh- ter of Mrs. Katrina ‘von Botticher. They are to be at home after October 1 at No. 109 Broad street, Middle- town. Di- Chilidren Not All Alike. Thildren should not be harshly treat- ed because they are different in some respects to others. The difference ia the case of your own boy may mark him out for a genius later on. * | »“BE CAREFUL! DON'T BREAK the PLASTER1”§ No need to worry if your walls and ceilings are lined with Compo-Board, It can’t crack, chip, crumble, or fall down. Water can’t leak through and stain the paper. Any one who can drive a nail can put it up. Goes right on the studding. This is one of hundreds of uses for Compo-Board; screens, partitions, bulletin-boards, panels, show-windows, ward- robes, etc. In lengths of from 810 16 ft., 4 ft. wideand X{-inch thick. 4 Write today for sample and booklet. It will show you at least one place where it will pay you to use Compo-Board. L. L. ENSWORTH & Son 340-50 Front St HARTFORD, CONN, The s Jeweler | All goods guaranteed. { 25-27 Franklin St., Norwich 1 _~ BEST OPENING IN NEW ENGLAND LD BREWERY AND ICE PLANT - AT PUBLIC AUCTION BIG_OPPORTU EWERY AND I¢ '| New London, Conn., September 3rd, 3 p. m. ] and W Shresas i ve st sk Bobi Rt oo promios. T odlon September 3rd, 1912, at 3.00 p. m. his plant is located in the thriving city of New London, with no sther rewery within a radius of about 50 m n"'y'flufl are many good within "this radius, particularly Norwich. 8hipping facilities are excellent, the N. Y. N. H. & H. R. R, Central Vermont R.' R. and several steamboat lines come into New Lendon. Great piers are to be constructed at New Londen for ccean steamers to land. This i to be done at the expenditure of large sums of money, part of which the state will furnish. \ /It is also understood that the Crand Trunk R. R. and Union steam- ship Iines are to have new I-rr. terminals constructed ‘1:“"“ Londen. Not only will the city be um:‘ benefited by the expen: res of money, but the great and lasting benefits to this great seaport of the near future cannot be overestimated. Ofilng to New London and surrounding towns having a meny it ificial 'I':. and summer residents, there has been a good demand for art - good profit can be realized from this end of the business, This plant’ camge into the ha of present owner through mertgags foreclosure, due to improper mai -x-mz:t, and owing to ot g large inter- ests, he is unable to handle same. mortgage can probably be for part payment of purchase price, if interested parties wi icate with owner, setting forth their desires, experience, ste. $10,000 cash at time of sale and cenditions of balance will be announced at time of auction. Connectiout is one of the most liberal states in the Union, and prasths itation. Such a fa e location as New e plant and publio eceld in e thickly settled, - energetic, prosperous seotion of N lnflanx with thriving industries throughout Connectiout, with, ne other brewery - in such a large radius, affords an exceptional opportunity fer some one who understands the business, er for a combination of men whe control an output of the plant, a number of liquor dealefs could asseciate them- lves and brew their own Ale and Lager, saving the brewer's and middie- profits for themselves. For further particulars, address letters or telegrame: R. F. HAFFENREFFER, JR, Fall River, Massachusetts, THIS HOT WEATHER Ord H. Koshler & Comp Fid: o Bottled Beer direct to y":n A frigerator, By the dozen 60c, H. Jackel & Ca., Cor. Market and Water Stresta Telephone 136-8, Bassball Goods at Reduced Frices A few $1.00 BASEBALL BATS 709 At the Noveléy Shop C.L HILL, 56 Franklin Si first commun - of payments The Wigwam Cottage PLEASANT VIEW BEACH will continue open for the month of SEPTEMBER “The pleasantest month of the year.” Special rates to.eparties after September 2nd. For rates, reservation, etc, apply to €. B. BLIVEN, Pleasant View, R. L WHIKN yot WANT o JUt FOur bua- ness before the public. there 1s no me- dium bettar than through the advertle- The Ladies’ Specialty Co. We are now showing a beautiful line of Ladies’ and Misses’ FALL SUITS in very classy models and pretty novelty fabries. T‘len garments have been carefully selected from the mes( important mnufugtural in the country. These high class productions will be sold at our Spechlty Store at very moderate prices, with a guarantee of perfect fitting and of the most desirable styles. We also have a few special bargains in Ladies’ and Children’s Wash Dresses and Wash Skirts. Give us a call and save money. We give Royal Gold St:mm. The Ladies' Specialty Co. 248 Main Street Norwich, Conn, Franklin Square, VISIT OUR BOOTH AT .THE FAIR (Its situated on the south side near the main entrance of the exhibition hall) HIGH SCHOOL PUPILS AND INSTRUGTORS,'ATTENTION! i It will pay you to examine our exhibit of Chemicals and Crude Drugs, as it may be you will see some of the materials that you will take up in your studies the comiilg year. ESPECIAL ! * The man in charge will be glad to answer any question you may ask. We will have an interesting display of MERCK’S & POWER S and WIGHTMAN’S PURE CHEMICALS, such as we use in our Prescription and Family Drug Department. The ladies will be interested in seeing several varieties of VANILLA BEANS the kind from which our famous EXTRACT OF VANILLA is made: Manufactured by the same form- We sell barrels of it-! : DEMONSTRATION—We will spray the handkerchiefs of our callers during the three days with our new Toilet Water, R OYAL PURPLE LILAC WATER, a perfume that is pleasant ;},; September 2nd, 3rd, 4th next Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday THE LEE & OSGOOD CO., Wholesale and Retail Druggists