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i i i ‘E ke it kL Sg- i i ] g " Ei i i % 78 E i have begn, installed prove as valuable as may not have been j E: figiies g 4 i ] 185 b P i I 3 i anythine. eral months ‘llet’s have @ party to-night” {|teen at the end" without it and this country should |suggested “and imvite ali“the summer|a e Svund n was restored felt sp! since. I i sahh o =, = The Bulletin has the largest £2 sym culatipn of any plper in East-" 3| der of Leo Fraok, even though they ‘@rn: Cannecticut. and from three .3| may riot have taken an active part in " £0 four times larger than that of {3{'the crime, are anxious that it should : o O e, o seions Gt Shou | F ST a1 Tt SR THE COMMANDING OFFICER ‘amy-in 1 - cook, and 1 was not afraid to try|ly get dinner. £oovar 3,000 of ths 4,053 houses,’ §| Publicity which has been and is being | ot though 1 had never happened |day and waste such @ lot of §00d ma~ L in Norwich, and raud, by minety- §| E1ven to it insifle as well as outsido | (1S, (MOLED, oy e A FOUR PART %v FEATURING ALICE DOVEY 2 THE BROKEN COIN| P CANAL VIEWS T: by Paramount the state of Georgla. They realize| ' ulg 1t one of your mother's il s e e Gl o Loy T gt o "'::;"::"w:':, that it is through keeping the affair| '“No, T copied it from Frances Mars- |she followed the rule exactly.” : Sridey.y Wm. Fox presents A Woman’s Resurrection” ' to the front that public septiment is|den’s cake book. I'll. get started im- ‘That was _exactly the trouble. houses, In, Putmam and’'3|.oinz to be aroused to the point|mediately while you telephone the |There was no butter in it, and it cer ADanlelson to over:1,100 and in/ | where in time it will demand that|Buests, Gertrude. Won't it be fun to|tainly hed no résemblance otherwise ‘all ‘of these places it is consid- §| such disregard for law and order must | Surprise Carl with a party?” to a0 dnkel's food” 0l ®red the local daily. cease and that those connected with £ 0 4 e, | b g ot went forthwith to the kitchen. and | certalnly! pine towns, one hundred and Most : Colonial Theatre . @ |set Thelma, the majd, to work on| “Not in the recipe you gave Thel- s = That all Georgla s’ not endorsing | arkching fimonde. 1 was® glad ¥o|mar e 7 A Tl e -to,_ leure THE CUP OF 3 Reels, Featuring Alice Brady sikty-five postoffice districts, and/ §| the disposition of the Frank case t there was a large supply “Well, “then, inadvertently I must| o b oo ™ op take | “Lutsk E Former Brilliant Star in “As Ye Sow,” Big Colonial Theatre Hit 5 id d by th ‘hich rtain | them in the etore: because we [have left it out when copying the rule, 3 flxty rural fres delivery routes, ; §| Sidenced by the Dart wRch certalflehoula have to treble the recipe. oot °r ‘Shouid have (oGEh that Thel-| tablets instead of e o UNDER THE FIDDLER'S ELM, Massive Lubin 2 Resl Mystery Drama The Bulletinis sold In avery’ 3| Pabors and clergy afe taiing in de- ren't we lunching today?" asked [ma would have known enough to add | can get Peruna Tablets. ' “Ham and the Experiment” Ancther of the Famous Ham and Bud Films Watson and Mayor Woodward of At | Jrjonicy Jaying down his paper and | it. looking at his tch il sat “¥ cted hi follow the lanta who are endeavoring to stop the | the poroh. Do you realize, my dear, s But ¥ in Eastern Connectiout. R = g h, Do you reallze, my dear, | rule exactly. Lucile, but I's o mat-|common eense and others pessimistic | Hde of srestness and prosperity CUT e discussion of the case, Such an at-|that it's half past one? ter now. I'll get Carl to run over to|without reason. s over a considerable area where today - - CIRCULATION titude as the supporters of the Frank| Mrs, Bates, looking astonished, hur- | the village for some cookies.” —_— S e L oy emdine Se ons | 4 mob take {5 but a continuance of the|ried to the kitchen, followed by Ger- e LETTERS TO THE EDITOR |of the Polish wars in which it shared - 1901, Ty U surrender to mob spirit, and the up- trude, and about fifteen minutes later Unfortunately the stupld baker had In the latter part = . e holding of b deplorable. state of af-|'PQEPRE Bounded. . L g | Coned e o e o omtont. our Board of «Relief Members S e vy 3 ~ y . ® o . 3 -5,920 fim volch Qlsgraced the citissnzlip fay we teok’gur seate. \ selves with crackers to go with the| Mr. Editor: I have noticed in re-|¥ith fire ang aand Killed. Thelma has been blanching al- |ice oream. Gertrude wes very much|Ports of neighboring caucuses that[40.000 of its inhabitants were Much is apparently being sald which | mon ‘whole mornin, ertrus ‘mem| Lutsk never recovered from this blow. ds the whole ing,” &i rt: disturbed about it, but I told her that | members of the board of relief have is ;mct pleasing to the advocates of |answered a little crossly, I L 3 g A . . ; : onght. | true hospitality was 4more In the spirit el e & e e .2'.‘,5,“.1 F Sopt. 11....comeeris ff g . §| the mob spirit. Their 1deas and work | “It put all the work behind. than in the matter of giving, and that er since the devastation, Lutsk has ; jare belng shgwn in a Nght which is| I intended to mix the cakes prompt- |it really was of no consequence what . of jepot and a strong fortress could not eta lage to get the freezer of ice cream, bly, “but I must admit that I Norwich, Sept. 14, 1918, . WVE THE BULLETIN FOLLOW || 2% | b v colotgeinte il e T TS U g A L et 1 ~ utsk s the apex of's triangle ] Dubno- sentiment to a sane recognition of come along. Poor Gertrude has not sy own hap. | | According o chapter 108 of the |of forttessas, Whoss Sass BOG DUpRey WINDM coum AGleLTURAL SUC[ETY . of The Bulletin leaving || it lies right along those lines-and thosc i Wwait a moment till I get my|py faculty of rising above such a Public Acts of 1915, each town, 3 trtbu . this | been mantled in a mild decay which not favorable. They are having their |V after our afternoon swim, but when | we had to eat. in either of the cauCuses. W: n Imethods shown up in & manmer which |1 s drying my hair 1 heard Ger- % “That's all very well for you to s sa %:;;xshx or is 1€ exempt ven an important Russian military they do not appreciate, but Fespect for trude ask Carl to go over to the vil- | Lucile,” Gertrude laughed rather . e hy aniting out: for 1t 1 flew into my room and |small domestic contretemps, and she |Such as elects or ‘appoints its board |Situated on the River Styr, g A - wi al - the Pripet ises near | fhe ity for vacatlon trigs can have || o e 5 ooty of ot o~ |tried 'to do my hair in baste, but it|did not appear fo enjoy the party |of relief under the provisions of a|of the Frpel Which Coes AL €2 BROOKLYN, CONN. § lin toven with homs affatrs. Order || portance to Georgla, even though their | ¥a8 Wet and unmanageable and togk | greatly. But.I had a delightful time. |Speclal act or %or o period of two N arrange ws. years, is required this year to name , lies 51 miles | 4 oot souljon - shibinraready Bmers > o el T S B , September 21st, 22nd; 23rd task must be recognized as an uphill one. It points thé way to Georgia's ultimate reform. m Tho Bulietin business of- term of any member his succes- : P sor shall be named for the|hood comes from forwarding §oods| Tuesday, Entry Day. Wednesday and Thursday, the Big Days. WISE PREVENTIVE MEASURES. O e o o oe 8ight should not be lost of the fact| It matters little what the blage is, - m endeavor of the British and|or how serious the consequences, i ‘bankers who are at the pres- | whenever fire breaks out in the hold lent’ time conferring with ~financial | of a vessel destined to cquntries which " laders 1n' this country is not a mat- | are involved in the war, suspicion at| | oo Fight in Argonnes Forest. | one Rection of the trench untl 2!l OTHER VIEW POINTS ter which concerns solely the allies|once is directed to the secret agents| Considering the comparatively lim- 3 r Major Remy, who died fighting after the bankers, for there are consid-|of the enemies of those. countries. |ited extent of the operations, the fight- | haying been’ repeatedly called on to ~ erations inwolved which are vital to S'l;ORlFs OF THE WAR Sears and :m:;;!{oa:rx: o Wected 5y | Kief 15 the weanthiest, most tmport- | NOt only the best Cattle Show, but one of the few cattle this proviston—Ed. ant and largest city in the unmodhu‘m in Connecticut this Fall, path of the Teutonic idvaders, and one / S 2 of the oldest and most important of Every Department of the Fair will be crowded to capacity out by the National Geographic Soci- | Special Agricultural Exhibits—Woman’s Department the Russia’s towns. A ptatement given lace, ¢ greatest Exhibition orking Oxen Fires have occurred on ocean steam- |ing in the Argonnes Forest from June | surrender. ?gnerdxfirl\;‘:m::“ ;r‘“m::-‘l’-: cities”, bty - e of W very branch of American industry. |ships before and they will' continue|20 to July 14, in whicH the Crown| -The losses of the French in prison-| Relatives of Mrs. George W. Steph- | which is now threatened by the south- Town Teams. Big Poultry Show op bk Foan. Snthiated B o b out from patural causes, but | Prince’s ‘army succeeded in wresting ers,h{ lthd fighting -from Jane 30th|ens, a victim of the Lusitania tragedy, | wara sweep of the Austro-German i ‘Dro-German sympathizers but it is|the discovery of bombs and infiam- | from the French a number of highly | (o JAD; Bnd Were, according to the the sensible view which is taken by who were overjoyed at the announce- gt e S Ry B A A CLASSES PLEASE mable material forming no part of ihe |ImPOFtant positions barring the way | Oficial report, 37 officers and 2,519 men. | ment that her body was found float |the exstward advance of the Austrians SPEED SURE TO & leading benker among the pro-Ger. | cargo byt placed with oriminal tatons | L0 & Siege of Verdun,itakes rank for ing off the coast of Ireland and wou in Galicia. - o . e Sixteen hufldred French dead were|be shipped to Montreal, have suffered | i i features includes daily exhibitions the 1 £ the e shipped to Montreal, have suffes beautifully situated on the tertainment an banking houses when he declares,| permits of no other conclusion than |grest war. Mach of the Ashting wae |Buried. - The total French losses are es- | another sorrow. The body waa on the | board: Dnleper. among Big en o 38 no doubt in my mind that|ihat they are the work board Dnieper among a . - . : of enemy | hand-to-hand, and in the main attack, | $mated at 7,000 to 5,000 men. The| Hesperlan and went to the bottom in|golden hills. There are other citie Famoys Sterrett’s Animal Circus, free to all. | Mony banking houses with Teutonic|agents who aere willing tg endanger fon June 30th, the Germans advanced | SSTERT J0°NeS TS nob Aiated its casket when that ship was sunk|in Russia to dispute its claim of be- ' aMliations might be induced to take|the lives of non-combata for the[to the charge with their rifies slung - - result of the ‘fighting In | recently.—Hartford Post. , part ‘in this undertaking, despite the|gake of destroying material “which | Over their shoulders, carrying grenades | he Argonnes was to straighten the ing the cradle of the modern empire. | Daily Band Concerts / A g i but it is the ndisputs « e o T * ‘course of their smypathies, not T thels right hands and smail steel |German liles and at the same time| The colonel will note with the high- | thodoxy, the Dbirthplac Russia’s | EXHIBITS BY COUNTY GRANGERS Bocates 1t would Do el to fog|might be-used by the forces with | hicigy in their left. And . wearing |9riyé the French from positicns strat-|est, heartiest and most thoroushiy |Church, and it is stll a first religiou se it would be helpful to h6|whica they are not in sympathy. |respirators o protect . themseives | Setically important from the very na- |characteristic approval that China |center.” Holy Kief is known as the - 2 2 fl‘" Dbutdbecause 1t may be essen.i The suspicion is increased by the|against poisondus fumes. ture of the terrain. Droposes to make its presidency |Russian Jersusaiem. It is s city of| Nothing left undone by the management to make this fair fal to the)maintenance of the com-|outrages which have been commit-| Even the official communique writ- S permpnent and hereditary. ~Now. if| many churches, monasteries, sacred ‘merce and inddstries of the United|ted in other ways without any deter-|er was thrilled by it. Describing one| _Prisoners Must Empty Pocke the United States had only, known t. mined effort 4 counteract them. For- * ¢ This is a view which gives first|tunately, however, has the necessity 3 lon to the United States and | of establishing a close ghard along hat I8 where it belongs. Upon the|all steamsnip wharves béen recognized ‘uccess of the loan depends the|and met. relica and of numercus saints. More a great success. Every comfort for patrons. v than a quarter of a million pilgrims “The charge begins. Not with fixed|German soldiers taken prisoner is ss|%ome time in 1303 we shouldn't have|have regylarly visited the holy ecity| DON'T FORGET bayonets, as in peace-time training, do | thorough as at the beginning of the|Deen Put to the necessity of contem- |each year during times of peace. _As . the storming columns dash forward,|war, though it rarely discloses any- |PIating any progressive party.—Hart-|a place of pilgrimage, Russian Kief s Instead almost every man has his|thing important except occasionally in |ford times. ranks with Mecca, with Jerusalem and " amount of_business’ which 1The far Teaching wireless | rifie slung over his shoulder, a number | the case of officers S0 faken by sur- with Rome. o O e arich (0is coun- | has also- Scrved to give warning to|of hand grenades in his right hand. on | prise that they bad no chance to make| The time we belleve. | " it s a prosperous city, a modern iry can get from European countries ieuels which it was believed it has|his left arm, like a German of old, a(away with interesting documents. when all laws will be simplified by war, and this is not confined solely and a progressive one. In its hewer een intended to destroy by fire or ex- | Duckler though of steel and not of| The men drawn up In line must|€liminating confusing and useless|parts, the reets are broad and munitions of war but tq all ex-|plosion s0 that thus far preventive |bearskin axd over his mouth and nose empty their pockets on the ground be- phraseology and when not only 'the|straight, and' are bullt up with fine X jorts of products from ram}m and | methods have served to check anmy|® Fespirator for protection agatnst|fore them. ‘frat thing 8 generally | XOrdiog but the meaning will be tak- | homes and public buildings. In_the TUnless such a credit as is pro- fumes from the French bombs. a knife and the article most common |¢1 a8 the basis of interpreting them.|olg quarter, there are modern build- D = poan s By takipg. advantage of the charac- |after that s the note book. The|lLaws were made for the people and|ings from three to six sotries high. posed can be established it means that| Thus while every fire in @ steamshi; 3 9. Dote ® | they should be so clear that all per-|wiie Th B iy s soinc to muttor D | ter of the ground, the French had suc- | knife is confiscated and the note book > S " which is a rare thing in Russia. o 7 e e s, SO |10 souffer, | on. the high scas may not be the re- |ceeded in * Septémber in driving a|is held for careful translation, to be re- (%08 can understand them and not o . Krostchatik is a splendid thorough sult of a prearranged plan, there is|wedge Into the German lines between |turned if not found of military value.|DaVe to g0 to lawyers to get them |fare, cut ypon the most approved of pefit to the Teutonic allies. It would | nevertheless the best of reasons for |the troops at the west and those at|It is generally a depository of senti. | XPlained.—Meriden Journal. western city plans. However, like Pet- | mean that the supplies would | exerting effort to keep suspiclous|the east end of the forest. The | ment. often interspersed with verses,| . . . e rograd, the wide, regular streets of the 'be obtained elsewhere. It is impos- | characters off the vessels while in dock | 'Tench position occupied furthermore |addresses and minute accounts of | New York jbusiness men who bave|southern metropils are a heritage trom o ‘overlodk the opportunity which Jand to carefully watch the cargo sed |% commanding ridge of forest in this|money spent, lent or borrowed. Rarely | CHUENt climpses of the ereat exten:|ine founders. % Joak iives for Xeept b ction, making it doubly important to |does it contain any revelations of in- |5lons of factorles in Waterbury and| “Take away the churches, with their % & oan Elves [0 Keeping our|workers while ships are being loaded |drive them back. During the winter |terest to the staff., other New England cities during the|turnip, plneapple and shaped ~ ' B0ods before the world. and unloaded. It has proved thus far |months no week passed without bitter|ful cross-ex: thy sumer are wonderiag what's going to lgrims and the VOWAL IS NECESSA to be worth whik truggles, in each of which the French offic Decome of the great new acreage of | Sumcs fake away the pils Y struggles, in each of which the Frenc! i ers to brin visttl nts, an DISAVOWAL IS NECESSARY. were forced to give up one trenth or s " g Deasa : big buildings when the war munitions | hat 15 typically Russian. Witn the ‘In_imsisting upon the dlsavowal of EDITORIAL NOTES. blockhouse after another. During this| #obacco in some form is always to|demand has ceased. Then there will|growth of its industry and commerce, act of the German submarine com- | g, = 5 period, however, they erected extreme-|be found; mixed often with broken|De & demand for peace munitions, |it has adopted the rhodlern city habit, in the sinking,of the Arabic| . SOme Of the remarks about the|iy strong positions in their rear, and | pleces of chocolate and the last thing|¥On't there? New York caw't make|ngbit which is the same the = world /! weather ought to be sufficlent’to bring | finally came to a stand on the moun- | that is genorally produced, hesitating- THE DATES. DONT EORGET THE PLACE! BE THERE rt these charges, he wrote: The inventory of the pockets of |enoush to take that progressive step is coming, | them all—Waterbury Republican. | pround. e o merioan S lfe 1t) on.a frost, tain ridge running from near the Bag- |ly. from eome inside pocket is- pho- R “Despite its obtruaive newness, Kief othing ;‘q_"“‘“"“ il G;a'mm;":;'«;h:; atelle Pavilion westward to Servon.| tograph of & woman of & chil The 279,000,000 acres which thelis an ancient city. Its fortunes have o When Dr: Di hey also occupied three strongly for- ‘country by the United States than g cngintsp st oo 10 " government ygt has in hand for free intimately 1 ; tified points on a ridge running south- Siatribution odnaiata mostly of desert | borcunce. of Russie %o.bo expected. It has repeated: | on camomenr yoei COUREY Over | from the first line along the val- Inexpértness of War' Experts, |1opions and impossible mountain |atput the beginni aisregarded its obligations under 3 : ley 6t the Charme Brook. Military experts are the objects of a|country. There may be some et un- | century, and is au . law: it has not beem] It begins to look as If somamer haa} The ‘German infantry and ploneers |satirical article in the London Daily |appropriated spots glong mountain | gins with the arrival of the two Scan- ded by the promises which it has|resorted to trench wartare and intend- | WOrked forward with mines and saps L‘hwuch entitled, “The Inexpertness|sides that can be made to grow frulte|dinavian knights, Askold and "nade to this country; it has set up|et-to stick to the last. until in the middle of June, they were |of War Experts. or vegetables and some of the dry|who left Novogorod to take on = 3 S P -y e S within _attacking _ distance. —Before ‘Unhappily the only experts who get | lands mdy be brought under cultiva-|of it. Kief early became series of excuses for its acis which |\ o 4 op| the main line:coula be attacked. how={ into Print sad info funds” the [tion through irrigation, but there is neither satisfactory nor accept- ermany accuses England of the Greek faith was carried to ever, it was necessary to take the|article, “are those who simplify their |no doubt whatever that the best farm | of the Russians from here. In the 1ith nble; it has pursued a course in’this|lack of candor it might also have in- |French positions on the German t | prognostications by in Greek or |oportunities are mow to be found in|century, there are sald to have been egt ‘whieh* does not convince that|¢luded lack of preparation. flank, on the road from Bianardville | those who, when they have been un-|the Atlantic Coast States, where lands | 400 churches within its walls. The re- is sincere, and what this|' \ to Vienne le Chateau. This prelim-|able to fluke a single spec - ca ey not be had as @ gift but may be | lations between Bysantium and Kiel o . inary sttack was on ought at & low cost—Torrington |were close, and muc the Greek _ rountry wants is some conclusive evi-| Regardless of how other people feel 2t e dromant 08| behind s cimparison of Regist . ixed itself with i ce that Germany does mot back|2bout it o one has caught the ice- |20th. after a terrific bom 3 e J culture _that Ias That part | produced in the Tsars realm. while A 7 th sitions by the artillery.|{in Poland and the methods of em; - the empire by way -northeast of Odessa. | up such acts as have been committed |man making a kick over the weather. |1, PiSReh BOSIOnS, Y the SLUCR | e R Y Sindred years| Germany should pray carmestly to 5‘:“;§:"¢.'.‘§° s et A Junt betore the et pupiestion-had | by its submarines and that can be|. . < o trenches were all taken. > “Kiet hak o through a disavowal of them. nst at present. the mmier- Jussne be relieved from its plague offool pro- been badly battered In risen to more than 000,000 tons. tachment of German troops reached a fessors. Lately one of them has passed Germany does not approve of|teams ate doing their hest to take|point so decp in the enemy's lines that more than 1,000 years of wars and in- There aré innumerable rich refiner- from the reaim of theology to that of | ternal disorders, but it has had & eav- acts it is high.time that it said | ttention away from te European it was cut off and captured. ~Several | finds n prophecy amd beside volunteering a|ing way of quickly covering up its B0 aitali 6. manner As to assure| WA¥: counter-attacks of the French were riresses, “The f ; dec! tlon of the annexation of Bel- | wounds and beginning g -ghei o 1 P A O repulsed, and night came wi glum an with parts of France | doubled courags. At one time, it was| “Kiéf rankg next ek pro::ia:e:‘ e imcere 8nd| When death intervened to prevent|Germans In possession of all but a count:” while i pre to P and Italy to the German empire he ad- | the capital of the Russian State. Moscow in Sducational reputation, and during g # small Dlece of one French tion. Vises the imposing of the German re- | was subjéct for more than two genera- | stitutions. Its university is tis, | cent years they have been successfully from upler. st the Trst opportu- | £ 0 e e wa | Beven Titench ofcers 884 637 men| formidable’ milliary obstacle in Eu-|ligion, whatever that ia. on the people | ions to”he. mongote, when 1t fall t | and has more than 3400 students The competing oin| Boglen congerves, That .ore country were taken prisoners. e booty In- | r¢ 86." of the worl ‘here wi some ruc- e his side. been rapidly It wants o definite under-|%® cluded six machine-guns, fifteen mine- ne expert is convicted of contra- |tlons under the sun before the world |eipality for 239 years. and has iy adding numbers as ‘to Germany's future| wmnose who abandon fhe throwers and more than 1,00 rifles. |dicting himself in this manner. On|tamely submits to the substitution of |it was under the away of Poland, and |industry. This ind gy =g e e R - R s voen ose who abandon the siraw hat| From June 2ist to 29th the French the doctrine of ‘might makes Tight” |was finally reunited to Russia in 1636, |steadily gaining in importance. In|lies 270 miles Odessa and the S Hero during this kind of September weather | made almost daily attempts to regain “We know that and the creed of ‘blood and iron” for|It is far the most important city | 1910, 10,000,000 tons of beet sugar were | Black Sea on a line as the bird files. "-‘"‘t "'t"‘m an- | might as well wear the placard “slaves | their lost trenches. The German offi- W the saving, gracious tenets of Chris-|in meM g m“m ::::clbme.:) ;:; of fashion” fa! report accuses them of employing itions afe Sonie tianity—Ansonia Seatinel. Hes on the right, or west States o tas . o had gy ol the humiliation which comes capitals of the warring nations, there | 2rtillery bombardment. of ‘weeks after that country, like | will be dess reason for, the taken from the trenches after n It s 628 les sou Fhas sworn to Protect them. It | sag seppatio sttocke T Sibmarise o uneertain.®. ablest’ sons. and but ‘for the break- | $fiicow by rail, end 408 miles by rail for Germany to fish or cut| * — own in pis a few ssmn BB rs ago, ‘must realize that it cannot| The man on the corner says: great part of 'h trenches was ta of many Eritics, he would™ have gone higher in this question, pretend to do|fellow who starts an e Treasury Department 3 \ : argument these ooet h Aiied Pres councils of the stat - ‘xj L ing and aotually 4o 4nother, and| days can consider himself elected to i hels desd, -:mgun o s | important _information of aftairs. Brai The War a Y‘?‘;:EOT ay |t - ] 2 Indefinit 3 e lomal corps. artil. e S dary Brer wnd hombproots wers emash- 1o pion of what Tight, ~ : and With more tmportant matters hold- [ed tn on thelr occupants. Des u d g ot Wile b2 Owners of securities such as notes, bonds and other choses in action in- e The the oluding deposits in bank, (net a Savings Bank) are liable to taxation bravery. on, and e, ¥ 3 sither to the State or Jocally. mnmnbfiu::&owg:mm”w places in our 1 R The State rate is four mills on the dollar and MUST, BE paid BEFORE bad all been |mens lata "OCTOBER fat. Enquire of your banker or writs to State Treasurer, Hart-/ ford, Conn. ’ ‘ A HEAVY PENALTY - is fixed for avoiding this tax by a law passed by the last General Assemn< % bly. A copy of the law will be malled to any-one writing for it F 8. N:AI%M hertiny veered to this: The state jolns with Hartford in ' BN ot Acvacionn Tivas ov- | camin s s i et Orovplag' e Ine urning the ward W ) o STATE OF CONNEC“CA UT - 'west AT Ry s R i