Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 1, 1913, Page 4

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796 1918 THE RIGHT 8TAND, ‘We must confess we like the stand taken by William Kent of the First district of California with respect to the duty of the nation toward those who are doing business in foreign countries. In & letter to members of congress he says “The lives of Amer- ican soldlers should not be sacrificed, the people’s treasure should not be wasted, in protecting ‘the property rights' of those of our citizens, who, having gone beyond our borders, have ‘taken a chance’ on the laws and con- ditions of peoples beyond our control. “As one financially interested. in Mexico, inasmuch as I would not jeop- ardize my own life nor the lives of my sons to protect my property, I would be a coward and a murderer if I should send any of my countrymen to death in behaif of that property.” This is an honorable stand for Mr Kent to take; and his convictions as to the sacrifice of lives and money in the interest of private hazard is worth adoption by every intelligent citizen. A STATISTICAL COMPARISON, dlorwich §h iletin and Goufier. 117 YEARS OLD. Subscription price, 12c a week; 60c a month; $6.0% a y--- Entered at the Postoffice at Norwica, Conn., as second-class matter. Telephone Calis: Bulletin Business Office. 480. Bulletin Editorial Rooms, 35-3a Bulletin Job_Office, 35-2 Willimantic Office, Room 2, Building. Telephone 210. Norwich, Friday, Aug. 1, 1913. Murray The Circulation of The Bulietin The Bulletin has tue largest elr- N 5 oy The following comparative sta Culation of amy pamer im Eastern |\ ianje representing labor dondi- Ceommecticut, amd frem three to four ilmes larger tham that of amy im Norveich. It ia delivered to over 3,000 of the 4053 houscs sm Nor- wich, amd read oy mimety-tkree per cest. of the people. Im Windham tions in New York in June of this year as compared with the same month for the record years since 1900 as kept by the bureau of labor gives some idea of the industrial condition of the coun- i« in deiivered to over 00 houses, | UV’ tm Putnam Damicleon te over | Year No. of Woikers. Per Cent. Tdle | 1,100, and In all of these places it | 1900 173,516 18.3 is cemsidered the loeal daily. 1897 32.6 Eamtern Commecticut has forty- (1903 nine towss, omc hundred and sixty- | 190 dve posteffice districts, and aixty | 1906 rural' free delivery routes. 1908 The Bulletin i» sold fm every ]’;“‘i’ town mmd em all of the R ¥. rouirs in Easters Commcctioat CIRCULATION . On the face of this report parent 1913 has been the be two in the list for labo and an exceptional, first year - for the dreaded cholera or grouse 1901, average...........o..... 4412 |administration. Since June th | There are several kinds of common ' epidemic for two years in succession | “@Men whoshaveand shampoo with Ou- been quite a change come over New | birds now rarer here than the above killed nearly all the chicks near | _ticuraSoapwill findit best for skinand scalp. 1905, avorage................§ Q2 |Ensland, and we know that the | iwo great performers. Since the sprin | this place. B — y age of a tarifft bill two per|imigration hardly a bluebird has been | _— {day but hummers perched on this wire. b R et {11 | Seen, not a single house wren or PUr-| Two motor cars of bird observers, |1 had thought hummers fed and fought [ Wotde ‘h“ n ]‘}“(! “‘ils"“ :_“{“‘ e martin reported, and my usual list | in 4 run from Southbridge to New | often ards evening, but there Week ending July 26. JRaAns SBRE L ut dis- | of resident warblers i3 incomplete. The London down the Quinnebs and | were at the vine in the morn- ] tressing times for t part of the | pastures are silent that used to be | Thames valleys, told me that t w |ing, and the torrid heat of noon did 4 e | filled with the wailing of Kildeer plov-| o heard quail ‘every half mile of the |not keep away the feathered furies. R T 2 | er, mo crested fiyeatcher's stream in | way—not less than a hundred in all! | When the blossoms first opened sev- he woods, and I have hoped in vain {0 | they claimed. Certainly bobwl is females came and went quickly HHE ED\'IT"I)“RI:‘A)‘; N:TE\S;W‘ that | 566, & wood duck near the neighborhood | onee mere Stron A e food for_ their Voung, and could " & = erhaps 2 2 as disco at | ponds. the Quail Trap. Surely s call ha ve been trailed to their homes by Have The Bulletin Follow YU . u:h 1= stranger than fiction and muc h | — : ot et Tan Rarely s where, | the bee-hunters' rule—following with more perilot | Still, on the whole, it is a bird year | in 4] weathe nd | the eye till lost, then changing posi- 4 ¢ ok with us and an increas is seen all along ( We see him in our tion a rod nearer and picking up the Readers of the Bulletin leaving Mulhall must be surprised how easy | the line. There are more king birds, g | trail again, till by a few more shifts the city for the seashore, mountains, | [ it is for recognized gentiemen to rise | Orioles, bobolinks, redw Cchebec | the birds could be seen. setting on the i h 8¢ blaickmailer, | 21d swallows, and more than twice Bosaiy I have found several nests in rural resorts or Europe can have || up anc call ¥ e R ai | many robins. Two pairs of L over his r potato patch in | s v in Mohegan Park when the the Bulletin follow them daily and || 4pi book winl do for summer | Pred safely in our tent lot, one In | the middle of a covey of twent {hummers were taking lichen from Shes 38 biich With. fbite. afiss k o it 5 e six-acre lot, and a brood of six|qiail gbout five days old. rocks. In a few days the feeders at . ) | girl the hammock, for she naively ! young bobolinks left galow was some pr lively buz |the vine increased by every female Orders should be placed with The || vecrs over the top of I ot at flast week. In Anderson’s rd there |, minute about the head of the bringing her t%o young each as plain Bulietin Busineas Office., them. | was one least flycatc nest Iast|jeq man, The first set reported here 2lIf with no ruby throats. o | vear, I founa three e @ nests this | by haymakers was July 1 on the Moses | : males appeared the grey The Bulg that year with four eggs h nest, In| perrin farm, where an incomplete s t | throats wouid at once drive them B e [0t Bends K ot Do As Anderson’s strawberr a_ spotted | of ten e was disturbed, these ezgs laway, There was “little harmony SENATOR M'LEAN’S ADDRESS. | ung on the defensive the Turks are | Sandpiper laid four pvriform eggs, | knocked out of the nest by the nong the suffragettes themselves, If Senator MclLean in his address upon | eating them up. | ,pin the middle of winier in an apvle|chine and carefully replaced, were |two females got too near each other SREIE 16 Shich he showsd How: the "l E T & homee monurgud s s 1o G4st) pushed outside again by the mo |at the vine er on'the wire, there was o B B Gl wooiT ctisniy tho e e SLAsEIA e i, The last mest mowed ov [sure to be a rew, Fifty times a day Aot L e : e AR e the an naut of larks, bobolinks, and |a fighting pair weuld dart past my stries of this state took occasion e tormar 10 ca the teacher heard both mead- | gy,i] was a set of sixteen fresh |faca with gharp eries of rage, Maths to recall the promises made the voters | glances and winks along the line is k and cuail tyflw s in the mead- | on the Wm, Barrett farm, the third |and by driven away, The before the Novembe tion, 1912, by | more killing than trolley ca ows back of tf i e e | Weelk in Juiy, young birds were o fed en the wire Governor Baldwin and Congressman e o The olly b tulien ML L - by the mothers, put teek their feed Reilly of this state. What if government ol do Nhwf‘,*‘"'j;l_“'”-;““"”“" “’“‘ back of thel The compainies of swallows en the | wing and eould bo pieked, eut by While Governor Baldwin declared | below par, that doesn’t injure the gov- BArntontE ey St., two pairs of jays | Phone wires are being daily recruited, | rather siovenly and fluffy dress and by the democrats did not intend to revise | €rnment as much as it does those who | Path Gn 5 A e RN AR e the and glasses ecan |1ess rapid strekes of wings, Seme ef the tariff In a radical way the coun- | Sell them for less than their face value. | .} pine St is a | Plerce th ue ethe rom the high |the trumpets were elose to the greund 3 —_— + tent-lot hill, many mt lows can |Put were all explered pver and ever ry 18 mow confropted with tarift colony of cro No wer e aeh Fo % " o § 3 The aitempt of the democratic ad- | (here > your obins in n circling On the |again for heney and inseets. Bweet 2 per eent. worse n the old business 3 WEER . g T el de r pa S 1 1 rden fi S W - - ministration to give the p vicinity side of Sl N et tile Moo ndiin o 00 By paralyzing tariff in Cleveland days. oy e it v- directly main en- | glested for this big ereeper, and whea Complaint from the west and the | & Plack eye faiied. Tt t: — - - _ | the last trumpet has fallen there will east is that the proposed tariff puts |ifSelf and is being broadened might- T|not be wnether such a feast here anmd p G i ¢ holding anti-American mass | B ot Ewallg S e N be ke b e At i o Soliine antl A have been y times since eur hummers by that time will be in basis since pra verything they | . e R uftal press, | arrival of this celony of Cliffs he van ef the amazing rush for south- ofoduce 15 1 the free 1nt aod. it don. | Bvery New Bngland mayor fs called | wateh them select site inties led as usual by the rice- P % | “His Honor.” but certain classes of cit Anyway by repairing holink pels the west still to pay a tariff on |, 18 Flonor. But cert R stead of s feeding the manufactured products bought in the | “e1S tRIMK 11 18 (Relr Provi ek o home " nests, and { cast. o vy ekl Lo ' X White carpets Now when the| The chief’s choice of four favorite 1dwin nor Con- | P'T® ! New Haven Union. nd old is a-wing, |Singers was wise, and wo muat all ad- | il BibiGats e e s | o ting at int mit the compelling music of his gros- R tie few taA will slose o |0 ’“"‘”{ Ky count¥ with less than | England is disturbed over the S e | beak, robin, purple finch, and wren, R il itk Ghuek et thplRIX thousand pop s of Yankee words like “ele most interesting feath- | But lsten to my favorite four and i ries and drive some from Protestant. churche fall” and “hobo. iese are ¥ in the English neigh- |then say no more. Brown thrasher, or because the farmer is com- | {hem in thicker t > with the t prima ionna assclita, song sparrow. of all protection tiordot, n. It | i | spring inspiration, wood thrush-hau called for hand- RN S s This season’s spiciest bit of local | note meadow lark, i Sp. favors to Can- | The new street Inspector of Phil b _worry AZION.— | bird.|ife be seen now An equal suffrage persc side wocratic policy gives | delphia 1o a woman. and she proposes | Rochester Democrat and Chronicle SoRE Pl Bl thilete \on | Har: Wabdsy vel- ts with requiring | 1o ins the women and children with | T ~tashigned v Dredated Chhin v olh SLVaTT n S eitiof Clufniiness WHIch Wil Show To Senator Works we have nothing for two weeks has ind tanager. e also presents the e illigry win - Cokibbah i He is of the world. -He reat clusters of bloom, jclaim of what she calls herbtréxe blue , skill and knows. evil and believ single trumpet explored by quartette, bluebird, indigo bird, blue CONNECTICUT'S NEW MARRIAGE e A | necessit evil. B Senator d hundred times a day. | vellow-back, and blue jay. What! LA, Congressman Heflin has defined the | Works is a Christian Scic He ¥ of the ind “Blue jay no song?” Then you never g ' » as an unmarrie female | knows that there no evil except per s I spent on the porch | heard h nished fluting, re ven- After today Connecti will %6t be | fanatic. 1f Ehe sholld define an A verted human thou; ATiff bill iny spitfires. A tele- |triloquism, and perfect imitations of viting place to those who for any | hama congressman we bet he would be | cannot be ev it so.— runs through the top the red-shouldered hawk. ason would marry in haste. The |gurprised | Bridgeport F | the cre r and not a moment of either (o7 ' - & new law requires {hat non-residents Tt = <h e » day®’ notice of their | Julian Hawthorne gives notice when S ' arry, to the town clerk |k eleased from the Atlanta prison | wh prohibits | th, foot and t hearted h will ddenness in the mat- [ take the open road for New York. May | the walking be good | 0! sws are not published and These gentlemen who are so troubled i plg »fficials whose duty it is to | by e bifurcated skirt buld look | a S | he find difficulty in fully learn. [up and not down: and then their face g their purport. will be saved from blushes and their Eridgeport Telegram fs right | hearts from agitatio ous situation fs hard- | What is the use of the voters com- It is more o you than your own. - Then why try any other in any state than the |Plaining that the democrats are vio- hironts by ihis yean witn | lating their promises? Have they anv| remedy than new laws. Many of these | Fepuiation for ever haying kept their are elther already technically, in | Promises to their constituents? force or shortly to become of- = fective. but the officials whose duty it | When a better tariff bill than the to enforce them are absolutely in |Present one was presented in congress gnorance of the texts of the new |Seventeen democratic congressmen of | save New Ing New England voted t statutes and have no means, other than of knowing how to enforce |land industries, but mnow they are | pledged to support a worse bill oney spent to teach the law to the [ How will five congressmen from Con- wuthorities and the people is not an [necticut appear voting against Con- »xtravagance or waste of money. necticut industries and the interests B —-— of the working people? STEALING THE BEACHES. g The ai sition weaithy and spec on the part of the lative class to seize control beaches and shut eut the people from the bathing privileges »r resorting there is the fruit of mod- wrn monopoly and greed. These issues OTHER VIEW POINTS | A Sioux squaw has written an opera. \re going on in several Atlantic coast | mhere is every promise of the amount " and those waging them are |of bloodshed required by grand opera | wware of the unrighteousness of the |conventions, but what does a Sioux sndeavor. know about grand passions for affini- w Haven Register calls rt- | ties?—Louisville Courier-Journal. e gt oihat the beached | Senator LaFollette is taking boxing o beople it 18 M Senator LaFollette is taking boxin people, and it is right |, o, but as there happens to be no hat in the ring at the present time it d town should nip 1n | muy be that he is doing it merely for | ery private attempt to pre- | ine physical bencfit ne expects to des ortion of the waterfront |rive from the exercise Springfield belongs to the public Every | Union. should insist on his rights to ¢ s & Sedchi. Thibs 1k W0 alald “hflwlul’ .\ru."m ha s seen enough of he temper of his political opponents | hing . a8 pit each. The beach |o¢° Washington to be assured that | pay be so fenced in as to make it |mogt if not all of the amendments mpossible to reach it without tres- | which he offers to their tariff bill will ass. That, though it should never [be prompily rejected. IHe flies in the | jave been permitted, 1s unavoldable, |face of their theory. lle is of a dif- it if ome can reach the beach over |ferent ariff school.—New llaven Reg- blic way, no private ownership of |18ter. oWy X VIME | protect the Interests of Connecticut or in any legitimate way be |und of New England as a whole from es.” the injuries of the Underwood bill as modified by the senate finance com- Mrs. Bryan has gone to Nebraska Tmofil We doubt very much whether e g e will succeed against the anti-New can the farm products for Witer |y, fiona spirit which sebms to actuste Some editors are mean enough to it she would can Willlam she would win the gratitude of the coun- sse, it the democratic tariff re rs. But will eall attention to the discrimina tion against us and emphasize our grievance.—Waterbury American, - Ly It the American race jinzo would Think of the icemen going on & |y, (4 ges just how ha looks, he may etrike in dogdaye! That 18 what Cin- | fing a clese reflaction to himself in the ~inngt! ls experiencing and the situ Japanese race jingo, The Japanese tion is yery serious. Jingoes are doing all they can to make THE QUAIL TRAP A Tale of Tenagers—Citybred Grosbeaks—Decided Increase in Number of Birds—Bobwhite’s Census Greatest of All —A Community of Cave Swallows—Haunted by Hum- mers—Four Favorite Singers July 80, 1913) | In an apple-tree hole in Central walk through | Village early this season I found my bypaths of Rockwell's woods and |first English starling’s nest. The white the Park system Memorial Day, friends | marsh hawk has not appeared, but the | from Plainfield told me that they ‘saw | bitterns are often seen and heard. i more scarlet tanagers than in a year’s | | observation in Windham County. The | For all kinds of game birds the sea- walk continued cross the Cobb farms {son is opening well... Woodcock bred | Into the oak woods back of the Guiliver | early, and our dogs fiushed two sitiing | place and the Fitch estate at Norwich | birds from their eggs in our own white Town, where the saunterers declared birches. Woodchoppers brought me a Was & notable overfiow of tanagers | late set of four eggs deserted because | from Mohegan Park’ Leaving their |a white birch was felled across the (The Quail Trap, After a three hours’ DANDRUFF ON HEAD HAIR CAME OUT Head liched and Burned All the Timi Rash Formed a Crust. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. R. F. D. No. 1, No. Waterford, Me. — *1 had dandruff in my head for & year. My hair came out. My head itched and burned all the time. The dandruff secaled off and could be seen plainly in my hair. There was a rash on my head and 1t itched terribly and ran yellow matter which would form a crust and itch and burn. My hair came out in handfuls. 1 tried and a number of other tonics and they did no good. I sent for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and 1 used them and after I used tho samples up 1 bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and a box hotel early the next morning, these |nest. Aside from the markings, both birdlovers took a sunrise siroll up|American and English woodcocks Union St and Broadway, through |eggs show a ground color of pale | Yantic cemetery and down Washing- | cream or grey: but this set is deep ton St, and. have since maintained that | chocolate—an unusual departure from they heard more grosbeaks than they | type. Irving Paine's cat brought home ever heard before in all their lives. |an adult woodcock which was freed We do not now challenge these staie- | and flew away unharmed. ments, but simply record them. | A party of Maybasket hangers here I am not sure that the city of Hart- | flushed at midnight two pheas | | ford is not a close second to Norwich | were sure they were nesting, and ' in the matter of rosy bre 8. July, | then two broods of five young have after looking the rose display at|been often seen at this place. An ex- abeth Park, I went into the brush | treme bunch of nine young is reported ack of the rose-garden add in near by. No new Hungarian grous minutes found two nests of grosbeak |on this group of farms, but a few sur- —one breast high with three young,|vivors have been lately noted on and one six foot from the sround with | Woodstock Hil. four eggs which by their glossines Henry Murdock ran acros showed that incubation was well ad- | grouse covering theirteen esgs. vanced. t evening in the ed of our own Up here on the upper valley woods with two biddies with six or Quinnebaug grosbeaks are rare ven half-grown chicks were Seen. season, but eight miles east, on he woods east of us and many covers | | west side of Crystal Lake, the afternoon woods are alive with | songs of a dozen tanagers. v rufed | and of the this the late the west of us are filled with young grouse But that does not surely mean plenty | of birds for the gunners by and by, of Cuticura Ointment. I washed my head in Cuticura Soap and then used a little Cuticura Ointment. I was completely cured.” (Signed) Miss Luella Lord, May 10, 1913. RINGWORMS COVERED FACE 35 Hall St., Winooski, Vt.— *“My child’s face was covered with red ringworms that | would prick and itch and keep her from sleeping. At the time her face was all dis- figured. I tried all kinds of remedies with- out any success. I was advised to try Cutl- cura Soap and Ointment and in a short time my child’s face was all well.” (Signed) Mrs. Laura Barber, May 26, 1913. For more than a generation Cuticura Soap and Ointment have afforded the most eco- nomical treatment for affections of the skin. and scalp that torture, itch, burn, scale and destroy sleep. Sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad- dresspost-card **Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston." Physician prescr the signature of Sold only in one size bottle, never in bu to protect the babies. The Centaur Comparty. Fletcher’s Castoria Unless Your A Cool Place In Matinee Every 5 ireed ea Day 5 Cents Mid-Summer Motion-Picture Sensation SHENANDOAH 3,000 Ft. Three Thousand Foot War Drama—3,000 Ft. 8ee the Bombardment of Ft. Sumpter. See the Escape from Richmond Prison. See the Historic Sheridan’s Ride. See the Terrific Battle of Winchester. 1000 Soldiers in the Sensational Battle Scenes. Photographed on the ldentical Spots made famous in History. —ALSO— “THE TREACHERY OF A SCAR”..... ‘COUNT BARBER,” cesn Kalem . Vitagraph Comedy THE COOLEST SPOT IN TOWN ibes it? Remember there is nothing injurious in CASTORIA if it bears Ik, or otherwise; Pres’t T HEATRE L BROADWAY NIGHT ONLY MONDAY, AUGUST 4th Whitney Opera Co. Direction F. C. Whitney, Presents The Chocolate Soldier Same Company that played The Colonial Theatre, Boston, with the Original Casino Theater Symphony Orchestra, Director SIGNOR DE NOVOLLIS 60—PEOPLE—60 Prices—$1.50, $1.00, 76¢, 50¢; 35¢, 25¢c SEATS NOW ON SALE COMPLETE CHANGE PROGRAM TO-DAY SPECIAL FEATURE The Female Raffles IN 3 SENSATIONAL REELS The greatest Detective Story of the Century. A picture that will hold you in its spell—And 6 OTHER HIGH-CLASS PHOTO-PLAYS Matinee, 2-30. ... Evening, 7 & 8-40. OF -.5e, 10¢ .5¢ 10¢, 15¢ DAILY SERVICE Until Sept. 2, to Steamer Block Island WATCH HILL and BLOCK ISLAND AM A M A M. 29:00 **9:15 15 wug 1 10.49 4.40 1145 12,00 X 115 180 P.M. P.M. * Dally, except Sundays. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Mendays, Wednesdays and Fridays, July 7 to August 29. AND W atch Hl“ RAND Block Island RETURN ETURN Adults, 76¢; Children, 40e. M. Norwich .... New London Wateh Hill , Block Island Block Island Watch -Hill New London Norwich L. Due ** Sundays only. Adults, 505 Children, 28, Shere Dinner Heuses and Bathing Beach near landings at Watch Hill and Block Island. For further information, party rates, apply at office of cempany en Shetucket Street, Norwich, NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO,, C. J. FULL SET §8 = TEETH v reputation for making the most life-like, finest fitting and best wearing plates is well known. No set ever leaves my office until the patient is fully satisfied. This rule is never broken. In addition on set is the nat- ural gum, the use of which makes it impossible to detect false teeth in the mouth. - This wonderful invention is only to be had in my office. My sols is to give the Dest at the least ble cost. I give my personal guarantge for 10 years with aii work. THE NEW $5 [ SUBSTITUTE TEETH 3 This is the. only office in Norwich where gold ¢rowns and teeth without plates (undetectable from natural ones) are inserted positively without pain. Dental Nurse in Attendance. Painless Extraction. ISBISTER, Norwich, Agent. Dr. Jackson's “Natural Gum” sets of teeth ahso- lutely defy detection. GOLD FILLINGS $1.00 UP, OTHERS 50c. Dr. JACKSON, Dentist Suceessor to THE KING DENTAL coO. 202 Main St. next to Boston Store 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Phone 1282.3 MONDE-HELIX GAS MIXER REDUCES YOUR GASOLINE Bills 25 to 40 Per Cent Inserted in manifold like a cartridge m a gun. MONDEX SHOCK PREVENTER 2 REDUCES YOUR REPAIR BILLS 50 Per Cent Saves wear and tear of tires and eliminates all vibration. MONDEX POLISH For Auto Bodies and all varnished Surfaces. Dries instantly, leaving a brilliant lustre. Send for free Sample. SUMMER MILLINERY A FINE ASSORTMENT OF LATEST STYLES. MRS. G. P. STANTON, 52 Shetucket St A full line of WEDDING and ENGAGEMENT RINGS at WM. FRISWELL'’S, 25 AND 27 FRANKLIN STREET WHEN you want to put your Duai- ness befora the publié, thére is no me- dium better than ing columns WHEN you want to Put your bus: re tie public. there is no me. r thai: through ihe advases. of The Bulletin l hrough the advertis- Bulletin,

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