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YHE LAWRENCE TROUBLE. P . It 1s a serious sftuatfon, ineed, which is threatened by the state of affairs in Lawrence, where utter disregard is paid to the law, if the utterances from ' BREED THEATER AMERICAN PATHE FEATURE PICTURE “THE PENALTY PAID"~udian THE WIDE AWAKE CIRCLE Boys and Girls Department &orwich Builetin ‘mesd Guufief. 116 YEARS OLD. given the mills would bave been highly i ] titled A World of Girls. I am resd- resented had it happened to the em- ing it and think it interesting. the ployes. Fair play is always loudiy Richard C. Moran of Norwich: 1 H ) 9 e | called for by the mil operaiiven it Pt A i 9 2 Thrilling Story of the Plains Lotb. A8 tter. when they have the opportunity to _Elsie Lang of Norwich: I thank you . Than "Gy "have s Gl sewta S R MR. EARL P. COLBY, Barytone sure I will enjoy it. Hattie M. King of Lebanon: I thank you very much for the prize book I re- celved last week. Margaret McVaei thank you for my Bulletin Business Office, 489, ullet:n ;‘d‘w:g Eooms, 36-8. ! : 166, s ) g -k'.:v;'-m- ?n‘l::'m::fil Murvay dress plainly at the bettom of the 7 Ad “ Norwich, Thursday, Oct. 3, 1912. ] e J‘:rd:un:xlxle S:mgzg‘mhu to Un Such demonstrations as have been of Norwich: 1 It was lovely. AUDITORIUM ;") fresuem REPUBLICAN TICHET. For President, gmubody did 3.§old$ % TS YRR WIS ; WILIIAM H. TAFT Somebody proved a frien need. 1—Edward Kuchle of Hanks 3 of Ohio. danger threatening Somebody 'fifi beautiful song, “Th, eshi rst o Por Vice President isobeyed. Every efort o Somebody 'flh whole day loung. wuz."ng;nli’rnpk 33'}3-:"' i , 3 JAMES 8. MAN made to influence the trial of Ma - MABEL MORGAN, Lyrie Soprane, WILL ARGYLE, 3 2—Marguerite Farrow of Manefield, Lyric Tener, ;z”Nuw jixr, & and Glov.nnm‘l' and f.h: obtaining of s “Automobile Girls in the Berkshires,” h, W. HOWARD, Basso Cantante. by Laura Dent Crane. JOHN P. STUDLEY or not. Thers is ne reason to believe 3L E. Carter of Scotland, ) ARRO Por :(‘nuun Qovirids but what they will have & full and “Black Beauty,” by Anna Sewall Kathryn - McFARLAND - Carroll T‘x""‘h‘h' A CHARLES 8, PECK . 0L FANNIote of $he Moms- 4—Lloyd Rathbun of Norwich, “The In their Own Original Act of Dambury, n. If guilty they should be High 8. ‘C”:\‘Lh of the Team,” bY EriiNe NRW THI'"W h‘m WEEKLY For Secretary of State, H. Irving the kind, which might ald him C es- | GUSTAF B. CARLSON 5—Bertha Fuller of Hanks Hill,“Bird olffluumwn. sway justice is agaifist American ideas Storfes for Little People,” o glad green world of ours. For Treasurer, but it is indicative of what may be lh'g'u be of the I ldfinch . 6—Bianche Demuthe of Baitic, “The | caj » o i t came to the one day Automobile Girls at Newpert,” by wolf, moved with emnaudon And plucked at the thistles’ downy |Laura Dent Crane. 4t his misfortune, could not forbear 7—Rose B. Breckenridge of Nor- | ®*P CORINE. .. : wich, “The Automobile Gitls Along the u“' Ly P;g‘figg-h fl’hz emf WE REFUSE TO STOP THE GOOD Hudson,” by Laufa Dent Crane. vamenluyld You possibly come into this WORK-—ae witnesseth: Then flew, singing “sweet, sweet,” away? . of Hartford. FALSE TO HIS FRIENDS. s Or, ceme to the wood, little Alice, 8—Mildred Swanson of Baitlc, “The|sad condition?” TOM UR -.;’,';,u..,‘.’fl“ The Clapp investigation committee| Margaret, Mabel, and all, Circus Boys on Flying Rings,” by Ed-| “Nay, friend,” the fox, “if Great Aerial Act. of Waterbury. has only commenced its work, and yet| And list to the voice of the wood- | gar B. P, Darlington. you wish me well do not stand pity- W8, lisbury. Its &mm call. of Sterling. - |ing faets connected with the contri- butions to the Roosevelt campaign|y, ine neage the catbird is singing, SECOND DISTRICT. funds in this and other campaigns, It} \ [ onderful singer is he; " WILLIAM A. KING of Willimantic. is shown that the people who were| And the bobelink’s bubb) laughter iy State Semators. and are so anmlons to have the third-| Floats over the meadows free. For termer for the presidency are Per- Wfi of Norwicn | O e, Hanne and Fiinn, but | Through sunihize sud rain sings the ; L, k. of Miadie- | from the @eclaration which went uunrlu. Y & ;& Middistows. it has dug up & whole lot of interest- Winners of prize books may call for | I8 me, but ead me some help as fast Real !Mcrt..n‘ nmflvfin Dance them at The Bulletin business office |38 You can. For pity is but cold com- : when one is up to the chin in| co, any time after 10 a. m. Thursday. water and withipn & hair's breadth of :.A .. > “The C and L drowning.” PHOTO PLAYS—4—PHOTO ruwg STORIES WRITTEN BY WIDE- AWAKES. The Peddler and the Monkeys. v, SOPHA THOMA, Age 1L ck_ Beaut; a TnciiEn" WERSY,' 2 4 throughout the land from “me” thé in- " Once a peddler was carrying his . For Judge of Probate, Jerense was that practically all the | enn meric myond tne rebin SI83 | pack through s forest in South Amer- P by ica. The day was warm and the way ng J, AYLING republicans and most of the democrats - was ] hew 5 | of Nerwich, sought him for the bresking of the|Then listen, my desr Tittle girlies, s Jong. ofte may Taftville J M“i in ARGV eris s ons i AN elds and meadows By and by he grew tired, and sat 1 18 % " and ‘ BARREL GATHERING. euitons whish sl ofther 454 grester ey B by down to rest.u.ndn the shade of'a ‘Es .‘. o - I am the second largest and most | Stor: tree in the world; my nate is Caoutchouc, but I belleve you call me India Rubber. Though The lmr Tree. ' b ey R sy g dglie N Come, listen, while I tell you what HOT COURTSHIP. v | presidents lad refused, or been de- tree. He opened his pack and took out | wonderful thi 1 'or man- ) two months away the boys|nied. In the campaign of 1904 it i Than eny thet l_‘_‘fl“wmi. Church. | Some caps. Putting on one of them, he GET THE HABIT. :t“ Alymm{;na i ’fihgn nme:ns ;hown that mxmm dld‘n;ntflbule g !0%211 &l;leep. PR by making o e e s 3 &, anpnu ankegiv- | handsomely funds ‘was an o caps lots o es 80 ing fires, and they are naturally fol-|advisér of the president, and later he UNCLE JED'S ’;M‘K WITH WIDE ;r’:humflmn“."{‘x:“ these ,‘&“‘ = and 18, huge ju.:m]* dj’.,m 2o 'mwt habit' of & long line of| was throws down. He had served the AV/AKES. the branches of & trée, he looked up. | then 'Omatmm:-‘c‘n?g‘m & ré in making their collec- | purpose aad was cast aside, without ——e There he saw & number of My friends, the Indians, make thelr sad shook it into a hive. tions| ag ossible. Because|all of his wishes being compiied with. Do yeu know the litile bird that]|and, strange as it may seem, some ‘! h.is pecullar t0)| mHe New York Evenming Post 100ks|takes flies away from the alligater's |them upon the claim of no promisé and no| tongue for food is not the only bird bargain in their relations in this prac-| which for the purpese of a supply of | put on ki ; tical light: “By the men with Whom|o,q gegpctate with animals? . Our own eowbird .takes its name | tfe® ‘gz’ picked up the caps, from the fact that it is often seen on | 'he ponlr;-nWm the v to_bring hack his The mere o '3:"‘ ttered. i and bottles of this dried juice; believe In your country ‘l‘;m L ] i -§3 5 | S £ £ g f man took their money they expeeted|the back of cows catehing flies. The im to aet accordingly, And this must | cOWbird has many peculiarities. I be- called, the louder’ they chal iy Heve it 48 called the lazybird beeaus: N.'l'hom hcpt:rwmu it does mot feed its own children and gollm- rascals to “ bring thém up but lays its eggs in | th e tried many plans, b 3 other birds’ nests and they bring them : K:‘:':::“;:. e l:.:g:,;‘. up. We have one little bird that wili Ao B o Rt iR them.. 7 not be imposed on in this way, and it |he cried, “if you little rascals will 2 ™ is the blue-winged yellow wasrbler, |keep all the rest, you may have this gomnummm&:;g:‘:q do:u | which, recognizing the cowbirds' eges, | °%, 1900 t buildings, and | geif-centered politician todey that he|rebullds its nest over it to avoid|tne was then. He was as deep in the mire | hatching it with its own eggs, and W. | pulled the ca as they were In his effort to be re- | H, Gibson tells of one five-storied nest | threw it on the eround ~Then the elected, He got and used their money. { which had heen constructed to keep | hic wny.n : \{ - He was in the 3 Dut! didn’t play | the sowbird's eggs from the true nest, FLOSSIE MEYER, Age 10. #‘ ;*;’:a “’?11""%'::;:\!e Lfl:"mdh'm":b :; which shows -ihis warbler not oniy | Taftville. u:? oot Lt e Tl knows a cowbird's egg when she sees ; cause with proper tespeot | that E, H. Harriman did? Being false|, iy o whidh 1t 1 tala | Mope Weers Bewnt Wit the Fisiniey We ot home. T will writs again ‘gangs, but balf the| to his friends, what can others expect? t, but the purpese ch time. 15 lost tinless thera ls an adven- g ' in her nest. And this also demon- | Margaret Collier was a little girl of LLOYD RATHBUN, Age 10, - ure eonnected with EDITORIAL NOTES, strates that the blueswinged yellow | E18Ht years, who left Southampton, he price of els higher than ever| The newest dance is called “the sea- few at that, gathering | sick step.” It must be & long reller. to suffer at.the hands of an indignant public and lose its popular-| The white-siave industry is hatd to e % squelch because it has the support of tainted money. i s i i § g the ba Ey 11 5% Ri g 1 t abeard Titani warbler is mentally superior to many Efim;‘d .::Rn:r wn‘: other birds. sleeping wheén the Titanic struck the The starlings, which are getting to |iceberg. Margaret's father awoke them be common hereabouts, are often seen ::gn“dlgck‘fm'}q: 1",'::’ gt nnl% to in England perched on the backs of [her doll, Mops, l(u‘t:# Jeft b&n i ; gE £ i il 2 gheep searching for imsects in their |bed, thinking she could get her PROSPERITY OR.AN EXPERIMENT Yol But when Margaret came on When it comes to a disoussion of g argaret They use ‘The address 91( President Taft to the The jackdaw and the deer have a :fl‘:fi::, m‘:fi' K,‘ : am ”‘: vaters of ‘?qve! y upon prospetity and gimilar alliance, and when a herd of | garet cried for Mops, but her er . e fate, if the -upubuetnu. who ner- deer 18 lying down and the biting flies | WOuld not let her get the dell 8 Doy t,’” majority, fall to real-| Hearst's letters are now branded as ; Wher at length the Carpathia came, thelr duty and thinf of turning typewrit win Sro Annoyipg hsti ey Ate glad to Mai t's mother was u,u.m te Wilson in their determination to :fi::";: :’; Inv::tlfll‘:fl‘o:? s see the jackdaws coming and the birds | When they at least New defeat Roosevelt, was ‘of timely import. A jump from deer to deer in DUPeUIt of | York, a doctor there piti 80 : shoiild appeal to those who| the flies, and sometimes when the bird | fuch m&h& took l:!um h_g i . owing in the wake of the third- aceldentally pricks the deer with lts | 10 until their relatives o 5 sharp bill in catching the fies the | While Margaret's mother was sick, for them. deer shakes him off for a short time. |and mourning for her husband, the There are doubtless many other | 8tory came out about Mops, who Mar- v garet had not forgotten. queer alliances of thls sort in mature, | ™ ;.o girlg all over the country sent and it shows how from selfish pur- | Margaret some of their dolls; even poses GoE's creatures help one another | rag doils were sent to her, But Mar. 2 Bedoms’ Srbeeds garet :‘ilm u::. a:ho:rl: rather have Mops MILDRED SWANSON, Age 12. LETTERS OF ACKNOWLEDGMENT, | Baltic. § PUTRTRCE A s S President Taft is giving his atten- tion to business as if he recognizes it has the first call upon him. at free trade and its consequences. Hz{ppy thought for today: The wild & course is entirely against the joat crop never fails, but it never is ;W.M lot ‘t‘!;o col‘:'d.ry and every in-[included in the profitable crops. ual, ore ;& steady falling away from the strength which the third-termer claimed and his tour of the e¢ountry has had the opposite ef- what t k S t‘;:m JRK: itanerd - The If the Missourians need be shown, papty Is simply to carry out personal h revenge, and in 86 doing 1s playing | (heY can be that Ca}dldate ‘Wilson is h%flw hands of the democrats, not a chestnut in New Jersey. Alfr:g. hE.bBr:':fhi‘l;t of Norwich: 1 The Fox in the Well, surpri | ; : recefved the bool you gave me a3 | A fox, having fallen inte & well, - ; attitide of the democratlc Dar-| ey prosperity ought to be £00d | a prize a few weshs g0 thank 011 | triea by stiekt g Dis claws nto the # i “’r?: l’ut'mx’n m::a‘:d... fa T‘I b, nn?::':y ehoir sotion In the ot | ROUED for any sensible voter. A Wil-| very ek foL 1 0 thank You |sides to keep his head above water.|found myselt on e et session. ghe}{ Bada majority tn the] 38 8%k o8 1t W] b & Zeallsh cholée. gahu you gave me ;l'htl;;:l}'. Sept. 12. uvgga?h:t;erh: wolf came and pésped heuse and the mepsures which they ey are very interesting. To him the fox appealed very earn- pépsed should be eviderice endugh to g § Ruth B. MoCullom of Mansfield De- |estly for assistance, begging he would semvict & thinking voter that It would e T torry “enmiaet | pot: Many thanks for prifs book en- |help him to & rope, or something of # most unwise move to give them | aeh ? been. full power. Their dangerous slashing K B, M'COLLUM, Age 18 Praposed for the tariff bills show the gy to free trade regardless of the businesa of the country or the em- almo%t of the worklngman. Tt would n 9 folly to make a change in sdministration for an experiment when| Someone has sald Candidate Wilson the ¢eunitry has \bfieh brought te its|seems almost good enough to eat! But ?‘tt 'ggzen‘e‘:lhcondltlon in years, | no one charges thé Colonel with have al i ead a man who is|ing said it. eommitied to sound, businesslike con- duct of the affairs of the country and the upholding of the constitution. It was 'at Atlanta and Knoxville in particular that the Colonel found a frost this early in the season. . is\| the little girl. to me. I Des Moines, Towa, has a Good Fel- EDWARD KUCKLE. 8he Visited the White City. HOW A CHEQUE TRAVELLED || w85 i o i it oo 2 They say in the west that Profes- sor Wilson {8 gaining ground as a con- versationalist, but losing it as a can- didate. they live in a city far out on prai- ries in Illinois; and Harry ie much th shmin Dad | other veey i MR Prose A b . 1 eall it ‘How a Cheque | Velopa which e n o a ravaiadlss opaounted Uacle Harrs, | thrown away? And how had it ever | grest Gpal. It makes Willy'a iittle ; 5 1 | B0t to the farmer's field—a place miles | man to play with his elder brother, looking round on five eager 8mall|gway from the town where it had beea | and Harry & better man to play with faces. “But, in the first place, chii- | written? his younger. dren, do yeu know what a cheque | “Mr. Brown went down to see the Datite, HAROLD BLAIS, albibiinps meana?* w'l'fi"c“gd;"u‘;”'x hltm tofllo what he Milly, alwaye' first to reply, burst | 0@ to z : e;s .;:;k" hat het & . Which you get What chance was there of finding 4 LETTERS IS_ENGLE JR0. You go up & long and steep hill and out with her answer: “A paper that a | v, out * Unois _Hary: [goshed e J0/8 f1at tiny plece of paper in wide acres of | pow Bertha Spent Her Vacation. m:‘hl il ']':3‘ g g bank pays money for. i 2 il, more especially as & be - definitien would do very well. Then e Dear Uncle Jed: I thought I would ! very fast rate, It is qut 1 ride, he begen. = ?fi,",’;flh?‘flfifihfic Smg | write and tell you about my vaeation. | and 18 buflt so vou §o up and dows “Some yéars ago there was a gen- |, ou. con promised he would make | I Went up to Grandma’s and stayed | and arcund curves a geod share of the A tleman, a certain Mr. Brown, Who | attempt. So he set to work, and | Pretty near all the time, and had lots | time. If the men the Celenel praised four|ljved in a town near Edinburgh. Well, for a whole long day he tofled—going of céndy, The Old Mill has little canals rem. years ago are 50 bad now, what can|it happened that Mr. Brown owed a| ... "iy. furrows foot by foot and yard | My Grandpa hes a stere, and some- | ning around through the buildl those he is praising mow expect of|friend of his, a Mr. Smith, a big sum | " g times I g6 on thé routé with him, got into & boat and & him four years hence? of money—exactly one hundred pounds. | ™.a ot evening his patience was| W® go after the cow at night, af’e 0::“,?:,{ 2:“1 pln: ‘guitnn‘zhzgggmfgg rewarded—the envelope was discov- 1 eame home, and Mamma and not have to row, A New York justice declares if he had the power he would put all candy out of the market. He is in the foe to trade class. The Colonel says he is “the naked issue” and his followers do not try te clothe him in verblage, but talk of less important issues. The dip-the-dip is a little ratiroad MUCH GOMPLAINT ABOUT DEER There - dontinues ‘te be mugh trou- ble throughout the state from the m_u- done by the deer, which injure tpeda apd erops in the freedom which %’luoy by siate law. Bvery farm- er Mnows ‘What ‘a nulsance they are 4nd the town officials in partieular find ‘that the damage they are doing amounts to respectable sums at the close ‘of the year, The deer are pro- 3 Westerly, R, I;-enq stayed | dark places, once in & while passing a teetsd law .ter a perl o] It is time to begin getting material . Z | erea! Ret P Py o e years l:n’.nr. or until 1%17,011“ fm-?;; together for hunting stories. The open S?ed.s up':n )ge Sel:é[e?ospenxzn":tda::g- ¢ “B“tH‘herfi gt:fl remin!ettlhth% e m“m:emfieyxn.hld s v ltm wl‘&h:’pl':\nv ::l & v .o:“E Been extended from 1911. season will soon be upon us, and the| eq it and sent it to the post. 0T SIS SRR O SHRT i T e D;rlx“" A Vgllge lvtvl:i it s igrg sty ed“Atta;- v.s}fxr; g{r.DBrvw% RGN o There was no mark on the stamp |, My tncle has & good many cows and | There wefe =2lso Iimitations of sea more of the matter, But when several | £©© show that it had been through the | tWo black herses. Their names are | monsters. find deer damaging their crops can i ed and Dick. He has an auto. that stood shoot them, the burden of £ 3 In the recent hyglenic congréss it|days went by and no word came from postt. P ":‘em}i" pleoptle puzzled the Nlda::“ Il‘:m Labor day and went té mzh:!?a ::'t;.‘;“.‘pl‘k had 4 e dser was, actually doing him durs| Was stated 1,000 bables dle daily in|Mr. Smith to say he haq received the | IIAUICr oul, and at Iast someone 'aw & { ..y 56} the next day. ships aittached to it, and they age rests upon him. It is not u::‘;-l this country. It s a big loss to ug, | cheque, Mr. Brown grew anxiona end THA kfufll Age 9. |ing Yaster until you swung h G “The stamp was clean, and so plain- but they escape no end of trouble, - | Ment to call on Mr. Smith—io fnd that ly the envelope had never feen thtough Haaks Jok. el (L R it ok e o R s A ™ TR the post. r. Browh, instead o " & There is & law in Illinois which en- .a::;, much slarmed, Mr. Brown set pmgw})ng letter, as he had intended, |:: A Visit to the Country. About half-past five !vo';t:fln:.d‘ ables wives to sue saloon keepers fof | oy there and then for the postoffice, | 0 the post, had dropped it into the| Dear Unele Jed: i' am a little girl [home, and reached Sou talking from their husbands money | but the postoffice knew nothing of the | Waste paper basket! In time the bas- | elght years old and thought I would | elght o'clock. u 4 would Jihe which should go for the support of |lost letter. It seemed to have wholly | ket was emptied into the ash bucket. | llke to write a letter to you. 1 will| We had a lovely ""Y‘"m Thevs, the tamily, dlsappeared, leaving mo trace behind! | Later on the dust eart called for the | tell p’n about my v on in the | to fib again "?Ey?ihaow Ags 14, : Several days passed without anything | 88h bucket, and in the dust cart the | coumify this summer. ARGUERI . i the lost letter co to | cheque traveled to ‘the city dust hesp,| I was away all and had a| Mansfleld Depot. Mr. Roosevelt is telling the pecple| ¢ofcerning the lost leiter coming : Nere ! — ht, Then a curlous thing happen- | and there was thrown among the eity | fine time. wers eleven cows and what sacrifices the candldates of his Mo, BRowh ® letter from a | refuse. twe Hitle ealves and “#a to dst Mas a 8hapherd Deg. party are making to serve the peoplé. or livige several miles m“fig “By and by it was time to seéll th B every Deat Uncle Jed: 1 am & lttle 1t it is so painful they can easily get|inburgh, whose mame he had never | refuse to erent s to hg- and Die out of it, Den'‘t smile! b enclos| own letter | on their flelds, and that part of w & Have twé cows : .fl‘ ! |heap in which the n 168 ¢othe | liave got havs a8 Bave It {s with g desire to kmow of his ;&t : NN&E:“ s, ar 'up mui‘u“:u‘m [ r :.;fi olm g.f'etat, big shepherd deg. will presént attitude that Judge Har) weats ! the cheq been | aWaAY, lown close. benefit they will be after 1917 except| asks Roesevelt, if he voug as m-:: found h"!‘: fl;!.dnb%‘%nq o }::l. !p)ieufl'h fl.l’mi' er whose ploug discovered ?“m e M"‘I‘;!G F % Ayl \anuc._—_wmt. t | 1 i i men! e open: e en- ' it. v 3 ;1:’;”;’1:;.;:‘::’: ';:,“: h‘::““,i:’;: ;‘?e.n:‘rrim.m,_" 'Ah? 7“1"‘ """'m the velepe and then thrown it away, and “That,” ended Uncle Harry, as the gett and dog's Buster. | Torringten.—J. J, Twohill, formerty othing bealds deer i lai Steel trusi, and allow 1t to absord 118 |y,nded the contents to his master, | children breathed a sigh of relief, T lfked to watch the tour'gigl. They l of The Shorsham, of "",«“"" Bas som g beaids deer iz lable to be | rivale as 1t dld the Tennessee Coal “Two questians how arose that were | the story of how a cheque traveled”— |lived in a big pan filled with mud. |been angaged as clerk st Conley's inx heought down, & Iron Co, hard (o enewer, Where wes the en- Children’s Friend, . While up there I went Ruckleberry- te sueceed K. A. Blllard that the farmers see the deer when they are doing the damage, but they find where they have been upon look- ing over their fields, and then the bur- den of expense falls on the town. So extensive has become the damage which the towhs have to settle, that it is not strange that the feeling is growing that the deer are a luxury which could be well dispensed with, Therq has been a strong advecacy af the repeal of the act eoncerning deer and it will be quickly done if suffi- Clent towns are made to feel the ex- penge. It is rather uneeftain what }. nine years old, I live en a farm. We : e —t— e - ————. O, . X : o Wk i