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h 11 I Entered at-the Postoffice at Norwiol, muwmnm | States. ki & il Hein Hikslid AV RiciBLE OKEN IN Fourth Chapter The Bulletin has the-Targest §[ 278 1n ueo were in the Morth busy dusting the \ : i aieculution of any-paper tn Bast- Library activity for the past vear|jve. all riht Morter it alwaye the legitimate even - - : S G th :, . Aty (= Nerwiii M I S Sedarty 1 the ey “It's getting dark, Ma soing, Marjie? WHO TES THE LAW, 3 Reels With A. Johnson torover 3,000 of the 4,053 houses o A better drop another quarter . mind, Sam, 2 Reels, Anita 5 in Norwich, and read by minety- §|privileges on the part of cities to su ‘s On ; M. Williams Shies paf o, adithe honple. “ia 2;"&”25’:}"”?.?&':‘ of 186 aotn |y AT aeared il i 7 ..... Featuring Crane Wilbur . Windham:it is duivered to over i ° o Lo ‘yan in many states and her apron covered with flour. the apartment bell = e 900 houses, in- Putnam and 3, " . a) by a visibls growth in the ive you forgotten, Sam_Cariton, Ky ; Danielson to over 1,100 and in §| 0,50 00" Vioe that 1s characteristic | we have only five cents left in the| A plain ‘Dost-card “Cuticura, pol' An cun ELBC’I‘RIC FAN all of these places It is consid- $| G¢ many of the formal educational fn- | Word” ~ - C S G , $5.00 3 ered-the local daily. stitutions of today. The period of the . sres R 3 a known. Eastern Connectlout has forty- §|library as a mere storehouse of books | Satch 204 drew forth only the ticket responsibility of seeing : A Big Breeze for a Little Money - nine towrs, one hundred and seems to be safely past; it has yielded | glanced at the church clock. 0 efficiency to A Bixty-five postoffice districts, and §| to a period of direct community ser- |~ “We must get that 25-cent piece What & comfort an electric fan is on sweltering pred . : vicer mighty quick, Margaret, for Uncle 0 days and nights! The POLAR CUB FAN can be B "é':,',.:;:' ,f'l,“' ’.n':"v:',; New England still looms up for her | Theodore will be here in less than two | little parior he called to Margaret. . Bung in any position — turned in any direction — 1 hours and there is not a sign of din-| Statue-like, she stood in front of her| 1pe Jiguor Interests would do well ,E: ofl of the R'l F. D. mental acumen and literary activity. e yor” mirror adjusting the lace at her neck. |, x| qv.hdr (ot - B B B ‘well balanced, well made, handsomely fnished, is in Eastern Connecticut. EDITORIAL NOTES. The young couple grew silent while | Where had she heard that genial voice| yion this fall and let well enough absolutely free from shock, and can be carried in a look of adventurous mischief crept | before? alone. Waterbury is not the worst one’s trunk and even valise. Perhaps you have de- Some cf the food for thought put |into their eyes. Then without a word | Fixing her eyes on the gas jet, which | oisv in the world to do business in ived yourself of the comfort-bringing coo! CIRCULATION out x.,y. :..m writers is pretty mpm_ Sam _rose, removed his collar, tied a |but an hour ago would have beenblack | an3 the business is facing & erisis pri g coolness of oy handkerchief around his neck, changed | but for her strategy, the lobby of the | fo; ‘me, PUSIneSS is facing a erisis an electric fan because of the cost. The first cost 2 % VR his coat for a very old one, pulled a | hotel flashed before her like a picture | . 1o ‘Waterb of the POLAR CUB FAN is only $5.00, and the 1901, average ............ 4412 SR e eoutt spend | SlouCh bat over his face and coming |on the screen. “Palm reading, 1 sup- [COUntry aglow—Waterbury Demotrat. cost of operating is less than Bo a day. . Am take turn uare pose.” <1905, average- .-.........5'920 $24,000,000 to tickle thelr sneezer every o,‘,"' e Frd Ry Her feet grew cold and she trembled | President Wiison has revived the For Sale By to Margaret. L good old domestic habit of reading year. Huchu! “I may look peculiar, Marjie, but|as she approached the parior. What if . ok Bl it b Gioeas vesarohie w1 otk Theodore should recognize her |2i984 to his family in the evening THE C. S. MERSICK & CO. ‘When things are offered in the mar- | first class beggar. Margaret Carlton, | as the gypsy! ket at a sacrifice, look out that you|I'm going to beg & 25-cent plece down | Her fears were entirely elied Pk whive Doy g 274-292 State Street, New Haven, Conn. sacrif treet somewhere. Here goes.” i FSoSITEtIon e 2 —_—_————— e o .| Slouched out of ihe door like & -real | Theodore took her in his arms. *“You |Birs’ or Emerson’s Essays, or HAVE THE BULLETIN FOLLOW You “Critique of Pure Reason” at all. He| 4 = beggar. don’t look a mite like your picture. 3% omiers, Ilza, and the River | by the governments of Piotrkow on W‘h::e;r:en ::D:Ou beeona:.llnoltnl;:: :flor be. had e it occured to|You couldn't; you'ré t od look- rud:cr::tacuv. stories. — Waterbury | pyjies bave followed one another im|the w W W and Sdedice on the Margaret, “What if he ehould fail” | ing.” AT north. Lublin on the east, and Aus- citement in the family. Going into her room and regardless of |- There was not a sign of recognition upon trian Galicia and the Polish govern- polfl%le consequences, she arrayed her- | of their past meeting as the three| A Springfield man has recelved 1: central government of Warsaw, the|ment of Kielce on the south. Col. Roosevelt likes to be In the|self i a gypsy costume she had worn | walked into the dining room and took l::;m f'_l:m a brother ‘{’ME“&"'“Q,“ kernel of Russian Poland. The nature| “The military difficulty of the coun- Readers of The Bulletin leaving ||limelight, but he doesn’t always ap-|in her college days and started forthe | their seats at the table. b hloh e ;vflz,r‘ mo : ;u o of the country through which the Ger- [try increases toward the south and the city for vacation trips can have lf pear to be as wise as Solomon. tea-room of‘ a near-by fashionable| The dinner progressed happily. G. navy I:ma ng m % o nu, man advance from the southwest has|toward the west; for irregular hills it foliow them daily and thus keep hotel. dessert was an especlally gratifying|lerman sul rines s T been pressed is described in a primer|bulld its southern area and marshes in tovch with home affairs, Order Too many men who are engaged in| As she hurriedly passed _through | course, as Uncle Theodore unfolded his own. At least 100 submersibles of war geography just issued by and swamps border the sides of the British traps and de- | National Geographic Soci 5 N e et e e il by it caniiorte S {51 thae. been caught in < ety. unheaithy Pilica. The southern lands g g gz :;\!:?:n: m':;ifo ‘?;l;:":m::::m':f elderly man sitting somewhat apart| “I've had a plan in my mind all the |stroved, he says. At the same time| wRagom isa lar province with | Of the govérnment are taken up with triangu! o iro.” sald, | comes the news that, for the first Y B Snne imer ovidantly ‘. docp | "and T thougnt It was my own plan” | tme since (he war begun. & wesk B | intea aiveciy a1 Watsan: The so: | & Droad erier of samece ot ooy The girl who was never going to|fonc ' UG Hemoaphere of chance|my particular secret; but Il be|passed without the loss ‘of a British | SOnied directly at Wen o adite | et Nilla, their Tidses varsine Tooms get married usually leaves a hus-| onetrated to the spot where Margaret | switched if a little gypsy woman didn't | merchant ship by mine or torpedo. g e much of which is a# rich as any land | 300 to 1, feet in heig] and here band and several children to mourn|stood and oblivious of all else but the | come into the lobby of my hotel to- in More than 50 per cent of | and there pierced by valeys scoured FOREIGN INFLUENCES. The charge that foreign money has her loss. 8s: uarter, she walked timidly | night and tell me almost everything| An emperor bent with age, and|the total area of this government was | and t are bot- been used to inspire strikers among Tver to ihe man and sat down beside |I've thought for the last = three|clothed in the uniform of a general | under cultivation in 1906, by the richest of agricultural American workers in gun and ammu-| 1 Mr. Bryan Is Gving o win the | nim. monthe."—Boston Post. stands on the balcony of a palace. He | worp. government is bounded on the |!2nd and drained by tributaries of the nidon factories is plausible, 1f not addresses a throng of women. They Vistula. Nobel prize as a peacemaker he should west and north by the River Pilica, hold up. That is going to a pace- are widows. They wear new mourning. | ., q upon the north, east and south by Their husbands have been killed in maker next! battle. They demand the end of the |the River Vistula. (i Sommon, with all war. In whispering peech the = This country spends $73,000,000 in trembling old man, one hand resting | Jampening of its industrial and com. proven. . The fact that color-Germans so em- ployed have been threatened from Berlin with court martia] on their re- turn home is right in line with the|cigarettes, but no mention is made how Stories of the War on the hilt of a sword suspended from | Tercial development due to a lack of derman financial scheme to buy up|much is needed for doctors, nurses his Dbelt, says that the war must £0|},), River forms one its main the American steel works and shut|and caskets! X on. The emperor, the sword, war were | yyonyes of ‘while SAPTS asse; - things, them down to prevent their aiding the —_— mbiad; Thees ABIPNL AW allies regard.leZn of the effect upon| One year of neutrality has rolled rank growths of man's_hafred m:nd his American workmen. around and every day Uncle Sam has The Struggle Near Arras. :ensi&x: of lh‘l:m -:w-h'iovlr af:.; “a"’;: :1f Germany was respecting the laws | been charged with being on the Wrong | v, cnaracter of the town to town, | enthe ate sgid to hays dapSec 7o of neutrality in itis'country Which has| ifle of ‘the fenok house to house struggle that has been| Gent round that the moment for the| One can understand the emotions $100,000,000 worth of her ships pro- going on north of Arras is shown Inl.iiack had arrived; they were going|of the New York newspaper repre- tected in its harbors and 300,000 color- | The kaiser has given notice he shall | noariy all its details by the experi- 13 "Il "N SO face to face, with | sentative, accustomed to the trust and DAILY SERVICE men protected by the flag and her|enter ‘Warsaw in state, but a great|ence of Carency. An insignificant|;, carthern fortresses or ruined walls | confidence of men high in the word. || STEAMER BLOCK ISLAND DA% Sept. 7 o agents were not plotting here in every | Many patriots at the front will not|hamlet of about 475 inhabitants be- | petween them and fight it out in the|upon receiving aotice that the man- criminal way to cripple the enemy she | be in the procession. fore the war, this Village will have|gpen Men whose ears had been |ager of the Remington company was ; the honors of history. It first came|hardened to the thunder of artillery [ “too busy” to see him. He wrote: w ATGH HILL d BL"CK |SL ANn comainy Wonlf e sheve AL e Whiskey 1s no longer recognized as|into the zone of operations when the | montns'yerore stopped them with their | To Major Walter Penfleld: an protecting and feeding German women | Medicine by the American phar- |German movement toward the - 5€3 | fingers when the preparatory artillery | Sir: During the past six months I was bt than six lines | have Interviewed General Joffre. I in o belligerent country while German | Macopla. but 1t promises to be pop-|was f n&m’?s:m' B e L I il i L hare Ttk Aeh et -1 submarines are killing American cit- | War long as "bitters October 1at. secured a footing on the | the German trenches. The attack has|have had an interview with Presi- izens on belligerent ships. It is moble fo Dbe willlng to die|hills of Vimy and Lievin, the ith they | been officially described, but many de- | dent Wilson. 'Who in blases are you, ‘With facts like these staring them ~ ® | Were at Carency, Givency-en-Gohelle, |tails of individual heroism and many | that are too busy to see a newspaper- in the face the German government|ZCr OTe'S country, but the Britishers\ Noir *n,ing e Lorette, Souchez aud | anecdotes of the siege and the assauit|man? is mot in a position to taunt ua with | 566 more Willing to stand up before| Apiain Saint Nazaire, all of which | remain to be told. Yours Truly being specially dishonorable THY. WelE Nt W et have since had the honors of frequent| When the French and Germans held —Hartford Times. e . mentton in the official communique.|each sbout half of Carency, two A live ‘American in an Australian | The French cavalry with the Moroc- | houses in the center formed a sort of| 1t ig onme thing to strike and quite - THE BRITISH WARNING, city pitied the Belgians with such|can mounted rifiemen met them there | neutral zone because neither side |another to indulge in such murderous - ‘When Great Britain gave our gov-|impressive lament that $550,000 was|and opposed further pr..ongation of attacks and anarchistic tactics es SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS ernment notice of the presence and|raised for them in a day. the enemy's front by the valleys of h have been employed by the laborers at abtivity of German .epies here that the Authie and the Canche, forcing | cellar of the region. Several nighis|the S_'fi:l!dxra Ol plant in New Jer. Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and F ridays, July 7 to &pt.mb;'usbd £ fortify themselves on_ the g sey. sooner the DS AND government was forced to disclose| NO true e "i:“ s Tunk \he e AoTols and in the coalfields | their lines into the cellar and regaled | out the better for Bayonne, which is WATCH HILL r2}%~ | BLOCK ISLAND 277 that she too has spies here. - German note is all right and the Amer- | 4 Lens, thus saving Boulogne, | themselves. o‘rdha Fu[:cc le:‘r&:d :‘ . seriously threatened by the absolute- its, 50¢; Chil 250 Adults, 76¢; Children, 400 Governments spy upon governments | Ian note all wrong. Such a thinker | Calais and Dunkirk. and also visited the place—neither side |1y indefensible outrages committed by Adul ko is on the wrong side of the ocean fired until the Bavarians went so far|the misguided and frenzied foreigners in times of peace as well as in times . The French took about half of the A N SN S 1- nner Houses and Bathing Beach néar landing: Watch Hill This nas mot besn reparded as much | VIS8 oF Carency on e nignt of Oc_ | herrow®" 3 S “to0 "much for he | CEaries” Sre “companios. and s || and Block laland. For futher informetion, party ratee. spply st ofice jober 5, bu of a summer by the campers at the | considerable bullding of the town, the | FTench and the rifles went off almost |nouses and shot up deputy sheriffs || of company on Shetucket , Norwil Tew! rman: > and pélice indiscriminately. What |} NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP COMPANY C. J. ISBISTER, ASent beach, but they feel compelled to con- | Carency b ery, where, the Ge S | maineqd there and a six-inch shell soon fess it has been hot enough in|made their final stand and where they d g walle & 4 the bal- they need most is stern repression Fran malntained themselves all winter. Its | 3fter caved the walls in end the bal- if it Tequires all of the national soorhivo T 5 fall was the prelude to the conquest |27g® of the Wine Soaiced 1nto the enrih. guard of Jersey to apply it ; éret service men and this government ‘America’s tobacco bill is $700,000,- | Of the surrounding hills. In the mean- | ;moer who in the early days of the iwless force mu m n - K lars e come ywiul 1lessl; - S on or more of color|gmoke up rearly five times as much 2 approaching the lines ran into ervis 3 country had been so changed that it men and secret . si ice men of other money yearly as the careless and in- |is almost impossible for those who Germans. He told the Bavarians he of war, and we always have spies of all nations with us gathering infor- mation to quiet or disturb the coun- tries they represent. The maintenance of our neutrality has called for an increase of our se- countries who are doing What they can had come on behalf of six —AND er o imastrs it o, oy | onSlies bum up. o " betors e “war o' secognias | whl, SRied lo Wriendee, Junt o lesn | THE WAR PRIMER p iness and checkmate one another. | The man on the cormer says it | The owner of the brewery, an officer | weil treated. The Bavarians told him|| By National Geographic Soclety lm " l Germany is not the only country|would be a good thing if we had a|in the French artillery, was already |, go back and fetch his six comrades pe la in this regard, and the representatives policeman who knew more about re-|at the front. His wife and children, | who would be treated well. Of course of all other belligerent nations will| suscitating the drowned and less about | driven from their residence by the|the officer went back and forgot to bear watching as well as the Germans. | the requirements of the law, ‘:,‘:"“’";‘,’:.‘:“h gem-n f:; t::a&?:gs return to the German lines. “Nove Georgievsk, which the German themaelves when the place became armies are approaching from the north- WHAT THE WAR HAS DISCLOSED. “Un BOAT CAPTURED. the center of a violent conflict. While e L e & e The idea that men past 40 have hand to hand fighting was going on|| OTHER VIEW POINTS ||strongest of the fortresses upon the Clever French Ruse in Aegean Sea in the morning, French soldiers hitch- B ot Do Ot been 80 hard-| 4 telegram from Rome relates the|ea horses o & conveyance. sent the B ooy bo Las boen sramsioron obliged | following story, which appears in the | family back of the lines.and then with | For a country madly in love with e SISy Imisrenre { tuni fixed bayonets returned to the assault the dolar, as charsed, we tave betn 'AL BAR Al" The present conflict in Burope has|a large sailing ship in the Aegean Sea, | carry it, but succeeded in organizing | Co.08 Juite well in 2 study in war geography, issued a s made necessary the retirement of many | found that it belonged to fielzlunn the position with loopholes through m &l‘. w::fl::alg:?tm sasced tyy ta:t ::-yndmui mhn rl‘;: sPEG young men, and the calling lato ser- Bous 0l g WL S e oa wells 80 as to hold the enemy in | ciated—New Haven Journal-Courier. | amrset e e ot 25¢ HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS.......... vice of exps ent men from the re- ich command pon ed ome of his sallors in the The Arms plant ought to be pretty | just coming into prominence with the MER WINDOW SCREENS.......... Gen. Joftre increased the eMciency | lothes of the crew of the sailing ship Deeame the target for the German g | Well inciosed with the “cops™ telling | Fecent advances of the Germans. 35c HUM of the French army by discharging|and armed them. The eailing ShiD's |inch and 6 inch guns. As fast, how- | S SrYPody to “get a gait on” women 40c HUMMER WINDOW SCREENS......... 120 generals and calling to his aid a|crew were disembarked and the com- (gyer as the shelle reduced a bullding, | SOIRE ‘Picket” duty, and the men i & number of generals who were past the | mander went on board Wwith his dis- | tne French dug down and maintained ;‘lflenclnr' with the manufacturess e th STEEL SCREENS at Reduced Prices themsel: hegun to deteriorate and at 60 are in the gardens all round, at 1 o'clock first line of Ruesian defense in the EVERY ONE FULLY WARRANTED sented, A French destroyer, having boarded | of the brewery. They wers unable to ¥ efe which is tired lists, The Fren ler thereu Russian Poland's defenses, cl for age 1imit, and all of them have proven | Suised men. ves. Until the end of Novem- eight-hour day.—Bridgeport Tele- 20c 30c 35¢ T peom ey aooneral | the Garfian submarine. bo siaried of, sixy : o 2ot the | $4.50 LAWN MOWERS......ceuvevvnenve... $3.75 private iife when the war = becan, | sl appresched and feked Tor iho ol : 10 | o tne L Loneworth. whs - hat o | Gorman bord $5.00 LAWN MOWERS. .. .- $4.25 proved himself a potential contributor | supplies. Immediately machine guns hand to applaud Papa-in-Law Roose. - | already in winning the battle of the Marne.|appeared over the ship's side, and the velt when the latter, sneering at northern $S. S0 LAWN MOWERS. ... coscovssasisionssss AT ‘Age may mot exhibit the force of | German commander and his e yells Tematn “I Dijd Not Raise Quadrilal 2 youth, but' it is fortified experience | ered by the rifies of the French blue- Be a Soldler,” H and judgment to aowhn?muth can.- | ackets, had no alternative but to sur- end minor defenses, si GARDEN OSE ena e L O | 800 T Rl e sonve: 1 the Viseua| o £t 4-ply, 34-inch, $2.50, reduced to. ...........$2.00 gl Tty 1 DR a2 14 1o smacens.| PSSt 5 e SRSIner Eent The bart ot the vilt Ay g o S sovegetoe |25 £, Sply, 3inch, $2.75, reduced fo. ... $225 . THE-PEOPLE RIDE TOO MUCH. P L transforma e gn_u"“': 25 ft., 6-ply, Y-inch, $3.25, redu B $2. 3. Bryan ke 1 ls nobotye| SAL saroely savihing remeincg ‘oq | sloners have'taken aa acticn e port ne toris are-buil to"the | 5O ff: 6-ply, %-inch, 36.575, rfiuc;g Wi . .$5.50 business mflxnb:hfi Tuns for . oo tedionl SaS0R “Geormievar | 20 ft., 7-ply, %-inch, $7.50, reduced to............$6.00 creasing - tection of life and the more sanitary gqflm.umgn_ ) 3 Wasn’t Worth the Money. J The Colonel's suit against Barnes cost but all it made Will- |- fo Togh ke 1t waa 50 Gentar—Boaton p i vl e Th 3 H h ld * Force of Public Opinion. i : Radegr—For weeks German e Ouse 0