Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 5, 1914, Page 4

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m:—-w—kp’-- he Postoffice at Norwich, . __Bntered at the ~ ©Ovnn., as second 1n Business Offce 480. e = rial Rooms 35-8. edin B Tietin Job Offce 35-2. Willimantie Ofice, Room 3, Murray, Bullding. Telephone 210. ‘Nomwich, Wednesday, Aug. 5, 1914, The Circulation of - The Bulletin The Bulletin has the largest eirculation of any paper in East- orn Connectiout ana from three to four times larger than that of any in Norwich. It is delivered in Nerwich, a: i read by ninety- three per oent. of trie people. In Windhem it is delivered to over 900 nouses, in Putnam and Danislson to over 1,100 and ais of these places it 18 consid~ ered the local daily. Eastern Connectiout has forty- mine towns, one hundred and sixty-five posteffice districts, ond sixty rural fres delivery routes, The Bulletin iz sold in every town and on all of the R. F. D. rowtes in Eastern Connecticut. CIRCULATION 1901 AVerage.cececraseses 4412 3905, aversge, uasevene 5,920 wos .. 3040 Have The Bulletin Follow You Readers of The Bulletin leaving the city for vacation trips can have it follow them daily and thus keep in touch with home affairs. Order through The Bulletin business office. AMERICAN GRAIN SHIPMENTS, The supplying of grain to foreign purchasers is to be no easy task; and there is not the assurance it will Prove profitable which is inviting to the traffie, America has millions of bushels of grain which Furope needs, but war means & blockade of the ports of the contending nations, and a blockade means that ships carrying contraband of war will be shut out. Grain is of the very essence of contraband for such manufacturing nations as Great tain, France and Germmny. The in ships must sall under neutral flags, and the grain must be.consigned to neutral ports to escape seizure. But even though consigned to neutral ports it 18 by no means ceértain that it would be exempt if any of the combatants helieved it was fatended ultimately for the enemy. A grain ship headed for Genoa with a cargo that could be shipped thence to Austria and Germany, says en au- thority, might be regarded as the proper prey of English, French or Rus- sian warships. The seizure of such a cargo would immediately call for a protest from Washington, and he who framed the protest should have all the precedents of the past at his instant command. In addition, he should be backed by the whole United States navy to enforce our views regarding the rights of our commerce. The trade relation toward these war- ring nations is full of peril. How can America keep from being entangled in the confiict is far from Deing a fickle inquir: SENS!TIVENESS OF WHEAT. It is surprising how quickly flour took a rise on the declaration of war in every local market. It went up from 15 to 25 cents a barrel the first day, and now the optimistic wheat #peculators tell us that wheat will Probably g0 to $1.50 a bushel To make dear wheat thers is an dvganized movement being made on the part of the farmers of Kansas to bold back a part of the ‘crop to raise the price. The fact is the price of wheat is 5o _longer fixed in New York, but in London, and the competition is a World competition, not merely an American competition. The wheat of this country has to enter into compe- tition with that of the wheat growers of Russia, Fgypt and other countries, %0 the Kansas farmers should take heed lest they lose. The holding hack ©of 193,000,000 bushels of wheat is not sure to produce the effect they desire. The local dealers everywhere have & very tender touch for a rise, but when there is a drop in value they have to take som time to realize it. 1t is probable prices will be feverish for a little while, MERCHANTS’ DAY. While Merchants’ week means six long days of toll, Merchants' day stands for one brief day of pleasure #nd poor indeed is the merchant who he cannot afford to take it and all the enjoyment there is in it himself and his clerks and his Only the dull are likely to be em- ‘barrassed by the closing of the stores, live citizen is not only aware they will be closed to bustness conscious of the fact that the ‘world needs more of them, -grubbing 312 days In the may be profitable and satiafying if money gave all the zest to life ng would be lost, but it doesn't. human belng is benefited by from the dally motl of life ‘the fresh air, and sports and the of play of every sort.. The mer- need the day off and they have it, and only the supremely sel- Il find fault with amy {ncens which may arise from closed an_extremely Interesting indl: ; ‘We are directed in youth to have a purpose in life; but there is no pur- pose broad enough to cover the short- est life unless it is the aim to acquire all the knowledge possible and at the same time fail not to gather ali the wholesome enjoyments of existence. A one-ideaed man s as much of & bore or a crank as the most indolent rider of a hobby—one who never gets, deep cnough into any subject to make it interesting to himself, or himself interesting to others. To have @ hobby a person must de- vVote himself to some special study or sport or game or thing which has in it both work and pleasure; and it is not saving too much for a hobby to aver that because of a hobby some the joy in work which produces the skilled workmen in every calling in life, Collecting birds or insects or flow- ers, coins, postage stamps, or agates, sea sands, sea shells or seaweeds, woods, rocks or colored earths is & means of enjoyment and of discover- ing wonderful natural facts. A hobby is a diversion and a diver- sion leads some people to better thought and others it keeps from vice. THE WAR CORRESPONDENTS. The readers of American papers woke up on August 3rd to learn that | the war was not oy, that the nations were rapidly preparing for battle, but still parleying, hence that in the ex- citing despatches heretofore there was more fiction than truth, The reading public and The Bulletin recognize that there is much room for | reform among the news gatherers of the press. It believes no news is bet- ter than the false stories which are sent abroad to interest and excite the people. The war correspondent's lot Is far from being pleasant. He is in a po- sition where the truth is often denied him and where his employers are look- ing for something interesting every day. from being inviting. You remember admonition to his son: “Get money! Honestly if you can! But get it This has been short- ened by the vigorous to two words: “Get there!"” and this is the admoni- tion live newspaper correspondents hear ringing in their ears all the time, Those who know the difficulties and hazards of the work are more im- pressed by the accuracy of their fore- cast§ than the errors they make muz- zled and handicapped as they are. There isn't a newsgatherer who would not be dee-lighted (excuse the word) to have exact information all the time. the father They have to work llke laymen cross questioning Philadelphia lawyers to get at the facts and then hazard com- necting up the crude results. The parties who demand the mews | are not half as responsible for the! gross misrepresentations as ‘those who withhold it and would rather have it false than true EDITORIAL NOTES, In the whirl of madness Mexico has dwindled to a fly speck. California’s apricot crop this year will bring four million to that state. The facility with which nations go to war leaves no doudbt it was pre- meditated, If a senator does rot do as the pres- ident wants him to do Is he against the government? Cape Cod hasn't realized any cli- | matic changes since it was severed | from the mainland, The man on the corner says: ing checks the s patriot like the crippling bullet.” “Noth- Why shout for peace so long as we | swat the fly, oil the mosquito and smash and poison the army worm? It is proposed to have a Maiden Aunts’ day. That ought to be every- body’s day, for we have all had ’em! The map-makers are not able to keep their work accurate, the crown- | ed heads are so finicky about boundary lines. A number of Nebraska banks have returned to the state bank system.| They are not cause of this. made any stronger be- . To get Colonel Roosevelt's endorse- ment a candidate must endorse Colonel Roosevelt. This is progressive politics in its purest form. When Mr. Mellen told “the dear peo- ple” of Massachusetts he was there to steal away their liberties, he knew they wouldn't believe it. The American camera fiend would like to have a free rein In the fight- ing nations, but Uncle Sam has no Power t> give him a pass. The Furopean press censor is not| sWorn to tell the truth, the whole truth and nothinz but the truth. He colors the report to please his eve! The American boy can outrun a giraffe. outeat a‘laborer and outshout a rolitician, but it gives him a pain to have to do an errand for ma! The west s Qiscovering the polit- ieal primary is not a panacea for cor- | ruption. The political briber and boss | never found a better field to work. Now that the oceans are being s it 1s to be expected that some recklessness will scouted by hostile na manifest itself—some overt acts be re- corded, In many states the sale of & bad egg calls for $100 fine, but the sale| of worthless stocks 15 not a mis- demeanor. This is gasping at a gnat! and swallowing a camel Dream Comes True. “Connecticut,” remarked the man on the car, ‘has produced u cail with two noses, two mouths, and three eyes. It's the cat 1 dreamed of once afier eat- ing minee ple, but [ never thought it | peers present concurred In this aa- 2 ‘mm Thirgs did look homelike, after all, and men have had brought to their minds | Tiie competition n newsgatbertig v more intense than can be descrived | and the peril of the business is far| { was raised against him. of war in al days. He looked up. { red hall lamp just as it should be, and beyond it the stars on the ceiling. Lewis had just begun to feel really iike Lewis again when a repetition of | the tiny squeal from above put him ! back upon unfamiliar ground once! more. His lips quivered. He breathed hard two or three times and then, like many anbther hopelesa optimist, tried to close | his mind to things as they were and imagine thém what he would like them to_be. 2 “I don't care” he muttered resolute- ly; “there ain't any baby. 1 know there ain't. So there! But wishes had to give up in a min- ute more to undeniable realities, for the baby's intermittent wails now be- | came a steady stream of howls calcus lated to convince the most sceptical of brothers that there was a baby in the house. The room began once again\o seem foreign. Lewis, like the old lady of the nursery rhyme who was so un- fortunately deprived of her petticoat had the odd sensation of Wwondering forlornly “If I be 12" The old lady, Lewis reflected, had a littie dog to heip her find out. He wished he had one— no, he didn't, either, because the uid lady found out with the help of her little dog._that she wasn't herself, aud perhaps it he had a dog he'd find out that he wasn't himself and that tne baby was real. There! It was howling again. O, dear! It was a bad game for fathef to bundle him and Louise off to the farm and pretend it was just to give them a good time with grandma when all the time he was planning to sneak an old squally baby into the house. lle wouldn't fool them again, no sir! He wondered how Louise liked it. She had been as angry as he was when the telegram came from father, but he hadn’t seen her since they ot home. A noise behind him made him look up. 1t was Louise, ail smiles and 1ok~ ing anything but ang: “Oh, Lewis,” she said, “come up, quick! 7Aunty says we may see the baby if we come upstairs. Come on.” Lewis started to shake his head, but the thousht of having Loulse ahead of him in anything made him change his mind “I guess I'll come up and see if it's worth saving,” he remarked loftily. “I guess it ain't. It yells too much. Don't you think s0?* FAMOUS TRIALS | TRIAL OF LORD CARDIGAN. There has been only one trial of a peer of England before the sovereign in parliament since 1776. This was Lord Cardigan, whose very name was odious to the people, and who, by what may be inferred from the words of Macaulay, could not go into a theatre without being insulted, and could not got into a railway train unless a hiss Lord Cardigan at the time of his trial was commanding officer of the 1ith Hussars, and many were the in- suits given to other officers of the same regiment, by the sending of insultiig messages, the flogging of a soidier on Sunaay between the services, where half an hour before the soldier’s com- rades had mustered for worship, and finally Lord Cardigan went so far as to fight a duel with a lieutenant who had left the corps and shot him through the body. In September, 1840, a letter was in- eerted in the Morning Chronicle de- nouncing Lord Cardigan with refer- ence to his insults and, in other words, writing a letter which, although true, was not expected to make the public any more friendly toward the despotic officer and lord. It was signed “An Old Soldier,” but was written by a Capt. Harvey Tuckett, Wwhose name and address were (with his consent) given to Lord Cardigan on his appi- cation to the Chronicle. A challenge was sent and the two fought a duel on Wimbledon common near a windmill. At the second ex- change of shots Capt. Tuckett was wounded and the parties were taken | into custody by the miller at the windmill, who had, to prevent recur- rence of duels on the commoh, some time before been made a constable. Under the Magna Charter a peer tried for felony must be tried by his peers, and on Feb. 16, 1841, a brilliant array of these dignitaries was assem- bled at the peers’ chamber. Cardigan was first taken to task by the bishop of London for his language, and Lord Eidon expressed his inability to under- stand how a man could fight a duel without some amount of delinquency, while the bishop of London stigmatized dueling as “a_shame and a scandal, the remains of the system of chivalry, barbarous, wicked and unchristian.” The milier, whose name was Thomas Hunt Dann, was first called. On Sai- urday, Sept. 2, 1840, about 5 o'clock :n the afternoon, he sald, two carriages stopped on the edge of the common from which Lord Cardigan and three other gentlemen alighted, after which he witnessed the duel. 'He took all four into custody, but allowed Tuckett, having been wounded, to proceed 10 his home on giving him his visiting card, But the prosecution suddenly found themselves in a quandary. No witness to the transaction could prove the real Christian names of Capt. Tuckett—the only Christian name of his they knew was “Harvey.” A chemist knew him as Harvey Tuckett, and Mr. Codd, an army agent, knew him as Harvey Gar- net Phipps Tuckett, but had not seem him at Hamiiton place or Poultry place and consequently could not connect him with the Tuckett mentioned by the milier. Lord Denman was not the man,where a defendant's liberty was in peril, to refuse him the benefit of any flaw, trivial. There was, he ob- n absolute want of circum- stances to connect the individual at whom the pistol was fired and who af- terward was seen wounded at Hamil- ton place, with the half pay officer known o Mr. Codd as bearing the names set forth in the indictment. The mere fact of the wounded person hear- ing some of the names used by the half pay officer is no proof that the former and the latter are the same.” The peers concurred in the proposal, strangers were readmitted and silence prociaimed. The lord high steward tiien put the question individually to every peer, calling the names from a list. Addressing the junior baron, h» inquired: “John Lord Keane, how sa-s your lordship, is James Thomas, earl of Cardigan, guilty of the felony where- of he stands indicted, or not guilty? Whereupon, Lord Keane, standing up in his place tncovered, and laying his ight hand on his breast, Isn't she dariing? Lewis wants to see if she's worth——" white apron, “you children must run| along or you will tire your mother and disturb the baby,” and she pushed Louise towards the door. Boston Post. LETTERS TO THE EDITOR “Not guilty, upon my honor. sister, mother? Can she What's her name? She isn't very big, is she? When will she be as big as I am? Will she go to kinder- " garten with me? When will she go? | Will she play in my dolly house? Can she pour tea in my littie teapot?” It was not from Lewis that this lor-' rent of questions came. He stood by | the wicker basket gazing anxiously at the wee red thing poking her arms about so aimlessly in the air. His | mother glanced at him, in her turn a little anxiou: the lady in the white' apron winked,. but Lewis did not see " that. Neither did he see both ladies smile at each other as if well pleased at something. “May 1 hold the little new sfster? ‘Shut up, you,” commanded Lewis in pantomime, and Louise had' the good sense to do so. Lewis continued to| gaze as if fascinated. ‘Now,” commanded the lady in mul “But what does my little boy say?” asked mother. “Does he like the little | new sister?” i Lewls looked at his mother earnes‘iy | a moment, then at the baby, then he pointed to’ himself. | ‘One,” said he, with emphasis, “and Louise is two, and she—" waving his hand towards the wicker basket—“she is three. ~Four comes after three, mother!™ And his surrender was complete.— A Cons n and Suggestion. Mr, Editor: The bay fever will soon take the place of the war fever; and it may be now more pleasant for one to think of his sneezin' than his cof-| fin. If the goldenrod produces the hay fever, it should be turned under the plowshare; and if the spear meant for medicine produces the war fever, it should be cut down by the pruning- hook. { After that, the sword should be beaten into a plowshare and the spear into a pruning-hook. Eventually, so mote it be. C, H, TALCOTT. Norwich, Conn., Aug. 4, 1914 Gardening at State Héspital. Mr. Editor: I am pleased to note Lhe prompt and generous manner in which Norwich people responded to a pa- tient’s appeal for flowers for the state hospital. I am sure anyone who tries to cheer the sad places of earth by the gift of flowers will have their reward. | Last_spring Dr. Pollock very kindly ! had ground prepared in back vard of ladies’ parior ward building so those who wanted could have flower beds; they were eagerly taken up and now make a bright spot in a waste place, ! besides furnishing flowers for the ward and have been a source of much pleas- | ure to the ones who have cultivated them. | Two of the most enthusiastic gar-| deners have also added a vegetable garden and planted those kinds that can be served in the raw state, as Jet- | tuce, radish, cucumbers, onions, toma- | toes, cabbage and muskmelons, and now they hear the exclamations at meal time from the less fortunate ones, “How good that fresh cucumber smells! | In this age of the world hospitals for the insane are not looked upon wholly as places of confinement for in- curable mental diseases, and those who are dangerous to be at large; but rather as sanatoriums for nervous in- valids who have had breakdowns from various causes; and they find that. many cases, if taken in time, can be permanently cured. { All medical authorities agree that the Fest treatment for nervous troubles is the out of door life—the getting back to mother nature. I would suggest that ail hospita's for the treatment of mental and ner- | vous diseases should be furnished with | land enough so all patients of both ! sexes who were able should be forced to till a plot of ground, either for pleasure or profit. It would make something to be inter- | ested in, and the knowledge gainad! from each others' experience might be | useful to them in after life, | 1 believe it would have greater cura- | tive power than all the drugs that couid be employed. I speak from par- sonal experience and not theory. 5 CLARA J. BALDWIN, Norwich State Hospital, Aug. 4, 1914, EVERY DAY REFLECTON People do mot dislike the practice of teetotalism, says Mr. Chesterton; it is the theory they object to. Neither do they dislike either vegetables or vegetarians, “What is resented,” he goes on to s the religious atmosphere that goes with teetotalism. What is re- sented is the ethical atmosphere that goes wth vegetarianism.” “What men resist,” he says again, in one of his whimsical paradoxe “what men resist, in short, in all thes cases is not the moral conduct, but the moraiity. Nothing can be immoral except morality. I am one of those who take Gilbert Chesterton seriously. He cannot focl me with the humor with which he coats his pills of wisdom so as to get the crowd to swallow them while laughing. He is not a literary vaude- villlan. He is one of the most sane philosophers of our day. In the above quoted sentence he hits the nall squarely on the head Morals are the salvation of men. Morality, on the other hand, has been a chief factor in making men immoral, I loathe an ISM. I like Americans, but most all of the Americantsm I have seen is bumptious and vulgar. 1 Delieve in many of the ideas of the soclallsts, anarchists and single tax- era; but socialism, anarchism, and sin. gle’ taxism find me cold. Christians I regard as superior to pagans, yet what crimes have been committed in the name of Christianity? The trouble is that when you make ! an ISM you squeeze all the humanity out of ihe thing and get & purely intellectual product, a_seet, cult, or system, a non-human affair: and what ceases ' to be human easily becomes diabolieal upon occasion. We become convinced of the truth /| of a eertain idea; we want to advance the trath; we thersfare form & party | or movement; we are dassled, hum- the newest 1deas, black, white and colors —Special value at. Venise Lace Collar and Cuft Sets, white and ecru, regular 50c value at.. Venise Lace Collar and Cuff white and ecru, $1.50 and $2.00 values at . Venise Lace Collars, very fine thread, white and ecru, $1.00 and $1.50 values at.. Hand-made Irish Crochet Lace Collars, $3.00 and $4.00 values Here are some of Black Silk 25¢ ‘Women's Black Silk Boot Hos- iery, gauze weight—price a pair Extra Value Silk Hosiery at 50c Black Silk Hosiery our epecial value Silk Hosiery at 50c a pair. Tan Silk at 39¢ Women's Tan extra fine quall ilk Hosiery, value at 39¢ a pair. Tan Silk at 59¢ ‘Women's Tan Silk Hosiery, fine thread, good 75¢ value at 5% a Black Outsize 50c Women's Black Silk Hosiery, wide tops, very special, value at 30c a Here is an offering that shot Hats—no two alike—our entire stock of Dr and $5.98—you may choose no n this price, and the Hats are suitable for.present First choice is the best. Women’'s Fine Quality Panama Hats Blouses, Dresses, Shirts, Suits, Etc. materials_are French Linens, Fiowered at $1.98. $1.98 WOMEN'S WEAR Women's Summer Dresses, s ‘and Rice C regular 36.50, $7.50 and $8,95 Dresses, Women's Spring Suits—a to $30.00, reduced now to. Middy Blouses 75¢ Balkan Middy Blouses, with blue and red trimming—Blouses that sold at $1.00 and $1 '1$3.98 Blouses $2.50 Women's Silk Crepe - de - Chine Blouses, chic models, prettily trimmed,| , reduced to 7ac. Women's Wash Skirts, newest models, in a splendid assortment—prices are 98c, $1.50 and. $1.98, MEN’S WEAR licicr, Underwear 15c Hosiery at 10c Men's Half Hose, black and colors, 11—our entire stock of Men's 15c Hosiery at 10c a pair. 35¢c Underwear 27¢ Men's Black and White Mixture Un- derwear, long sleeve shirts, double seat Arawers, regular 36c value at 27c. 39¢ Underwear 29¢ Men's Balbriggan Underwear, shirts long .and_short, arawers, regular 3% value at 29 Nainsook Suits at 69c Men’s Nainsook Union Suits, athietic plain and cross-bar materials, regular $1.00 suits at 69c. HEEARESOMEOF'IHELEADINGVALE Women's Neckwear, including the Gladstone or Lily Collars, made of organdie, Oriental and Shadow Lace, value 25¢ and 50C, 8t ........ ' Windsor Ties in the new ombre effects, all colors, regular 3%c and 50¢ values at. 'Women's Vests of Muslin and Organdie, lace trimmed, with roll collar, regular 50c value at Oriental and Plain Net Vests, trimmed ~with buttons and jewels, $1.00 value af Camisoles of Plain Net, Orien- tal and Shadow Llace 75¢ value at ...... Camisoles of Shadow Lace, with wide ribbons, regular $1.00 value @t.......- Camisoles of Silk Crepe, Chif- fon Cloth and China Silk, white and colors, $1.50 and $2.00 values at ...... Sleeveless Guimpes of Plain Net, Shadow and Orlental Lace, with Giad- stone Collar at these special prices At 39c—value At 58c—value $1.00 At 79c—value $1.50 T5¢ WOMEN'S SILK HOSIERY Complete stocks of all the kinds that are so desirable for Summer wear, the leading values: Tan Silk 25¢ 25c|wamen'u Tan Silk Boot Hosi- ery, gauze weight—price a pair White Silk at 44c Women's White Silk Hoslery, gauze| hioned, regular weight, full- value at 44c a pair. White Silk at 59¢ Women's White Sillk Hosiery, extra) fine thread, good 75c value at pair. ‘White Outsize 50c Women's White Silk Hosiery, wide tops, very special value at pair. Women’s $1.00 Silk Hosiery, Black, White, Tan at 85¢c Wamen's Fine Silk Hoslery, in black. white and tan, with lisle garter tops, our regular $1.00 Silk Hostery at 85 Women’s $1.25 Silk Hosiery, Black, White, Tan at 98¢ Women's Fine Silk Hosiery, in black, tan and white, with silk double tops, a regular $1.25 Silk Hosiery at 93c a pair. We carry all the leading makes in Women's Silk Hosiery—McCallum's, Onyx and the Phoenix guaranteed Silk Hosiery. Women's Fine Dress Hats at $1.98 d in terest many women: About 100 Dre: s Hats that sold at $3.95, The materials alone are worth a pair. oths, Russian, Tunic models, Teduced t0 . ..vvnsue . hoice of our eatire stock that sold up regular $3.93 value at $2.50. $1.00 Union Suits 79¢ regular $1.00 suits at T9c. Bathing Suits Reduced Suits, reduced to. - Suits, reduced to. .. en’s $2.50 Woolen Bathing Suits, reduced t0-........... g Suits, reduced to ORY OF THE SLUMS REE-| ;gn. BISON The Most ify “THE SONG IN_THE D. Il\.;"?- Wateh Hill, . . . WATCH HILL =& and Block , with fine lisle tops COLONIAL THEATRE Twe _Reels—Ti PERILS OF PAULINE—Two Reels ity ‘Beantitcl 3 ael Eaea “THE GAP™ The Man Who Disappsared with Mare MacDermott. Lubin Sensation with the Laughs Hfi-fl st Sept. 3, 4 WATCH HILL Anp BLOCK ISLAND AN AN Norwich, . . . Lv. *8:55 **9:15 | Blockisland,. . Lv. *2:15 *°2:45 New Londom, . . . 10:25 10:45 | WatchHill, . . . . 345 420 1i:30 12:00 | New London, . . . 6:10 535 Block Isiand, . Due 1:05 1:39 lflmfl. + «» . Due 630 6350 CAM. AN A | *Daily, except Sundars. | **Sundzva only. SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays BLOCK ISLAND &7 Aduils, 75¢; Childres, 48c. Adults, 50¢; Children 25c. Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beack mear lendings a¢ Watch Hill slans. For furthes iniormation, part a3sly at cifice Sampany on Shatmcket Street. Norwich. iy Sp il " NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO. or early fall n's Ribbed Union Suits, white and} { ecru, short sleeves and ankle length, Men’s $1.00 Two-piece Bathing en’s $1.50 Two-piece Bathing $3.00 Woolen Bathing reduced to....... : Men's $2.50 Fine Quality Bath- THE PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. bugged, deceived by apparently rapld In reality we have stabbed the truth under the fifth rib. Any truth or group of truths taken away from the human beings who hold them becomes half false and encrely Browning was wonderful. ingism, the cult, is piffie. sonism and Emersonism and Marxism, When a man has a moral conviction and rules his is like a green tree in & desert land unto his fellows; he organizes and begins to impose his system of morality upon others we flee him as the pest. The tyranny of a bad man be bornes than For the tyranny of the wick- ed is usually entirely personal, while orah becomes a perfected utterly without bow- So are Berg- So in morals. lite by it he more easily to that of the juggernaut car, And why cannot a man speak forth the truths he sees here and there with- out somebody running up to him and clapping a label on him? When I meet a deepiy moral man. who keeps his mouth shut and does not_try to uplift me. I am uplitted. 1 am made more moral by his pres- When the professional uplift- mnmummflrmflmt_ morality T have a strong desire to rob a bank, HOTEL WOODSTOCK 43D STREET, NEAR BROADWAY TIMES SQUARE, NEW YORK 360 ROOMS 270 BATHS EUROPEAN PLAN ONLY ROOM WITE BATH $2.30 & $3.00 DITTO FOR TWO $3.30 & $4.00 COURTEOUS ATTENTION HOMELIKE ATMOSPHERE MODERATE PRICES —AND— IN THE CENTER OF NEW YORK W. H. VALIQUETTE, MGR. Also THE BERWICK, RUTLAND, VI IBean Hill Athletics Won. GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Providence St., Taftville Promu: m—qau-ggmm FARRBL & SANDERSON, Props | ppone Special Rates to Theatre Troupes, Livery connection. = Shetucket Strget P desirous of i ‘and successful Accountants, ersons. bmmw o s with assurance of employment, will find in the BRYANT & STRATTON COMMERCIAL SCHOOL BOSTON Now locatein its new-school building, 334 Bovlston Streetia most desirable opporvanity for stady and practice-under the direction and supervision of & large corps of well known and enced teachers. . URSES — General commercial course, Stenographlc course, Secretarial course, Civil service course, Commercial toachers course. o Every possible te is afforded for personal safety, Tapid progress, cheerful And healthbal surroundings. | 4 This school does not employ agents. solicitors, cagwasers or runners. Persons who cannot call for personal interview may have printed information of terms and conditions by mail. Will reopen September Ath. . E. Hissarp, Principal, 334 Boylston Street, Boston. oSample fhg FINAL CLEARANCE ¢ CONTINUED RESSES Any Summer Dress in the house regardless of cost or former price for TODAY - $3.95 NO CHANGES NO APPROVALS/ THE PLACE THAT SAVES AND SERVES YOUR PATRONAGE DESERVES Wauregan Biock 194 Main Street Adell Automobile Jack venient to. handle and operal 11Y inches; height raised 16', inches, weight 41, lbs. Will lift any touring car. Delivered to any address in Connecticut on re- ceipt of $1.50. > THE C. S."MERSICK & CO., 272-292 State Street, that cantiot be excelled. your order. - Traveling Men, Etc. C. J. ISBISTER, Norwich, Agest New Haven, Conn. American House PES, CAKE AND BREAD Prompt servics.

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