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Jlorwich Bulletin and Goufied 121 YEARS OLD Sulscription price 12c = weel; S0e a novth: $6.00 a year. Entered at the Postoffice at Norwich. 2s seco: el Sonn., Bully _n Busin Billetin Egitorial mantic ne 210. nd-class mat lephone Calls: s Ofrice 4S0. Rooms Bulletin Job Ofica Office. 67 Churcn 85-8. 35-2. et il o MRS Y “Norwich, Thursday, A ug. 23, 1917, I The Cir cutation o ecticut larger of tha ch and re. 1o in Fa. wn and o n Eaz CIRCULA 1801, averag “at August 18, 1917... ed Putnam and Danielson consydered tern Connecticut postoffice dlistricts, d cuiation o iThe Bulietin bas the t any paper and from than that of any 4,053 houses ‘n N ad by ninety-three peopie. in Windh; w o all of these places tre local daily. has fort one hurzJred and sixty- and sixty elivery routes. tin s eold in e n all of ke R. F. stern Connecticut. Ti0 in Eastern thres to fo tw_over 900 nouses. rargest § H in or- per am ver It is delivered o nver$ itg i ty- H H . 48123 05, .vm,e............AA.s,szog TAKE THE BULLETIN ALONG THEIR sed 1o an tw ue- and cheape aron in tin, pay nd milk The Bulletin leaving on trips can have and thus keep home affairs letin busi- LAST PARADE. making its last| and Postcn and the Civil war are con- 211 and 'm and 1l t at T in ex- 5,000 men Army and of craft ebe: so dear a since cen a and 100 par quart w! and the a of suge a bag of fl juarts t the pick eyelash 10c and 0 pounds on-place contrasts ghtening—the patch is va’ make blue-berr cheaper and one of the necessa r is to that can get surpr! to words what ber: num protest be- ith- seller und or >ur. buy er's are defence a. fe: a ries good and sufficient democratic rea- sons that American hurrah was hushed. Now there is inguiry as to what has become of Gen. Wood who is the commanding general of American been superceded quietly and hushed up. The husher is on, but we still trust in high places. or Roosevelt of this talk Would Grant rerated action of a few senators in con- de the Gronnas and the La Fol- lettes shut up or take a traitor's pun ishment. inz has been sent. country it the sovernment draft men who do mot want to go. “That we hava no bosiness in th war to fight for Ensland. | “That Germany's submarifie war- fare is qu:te what it should be. ! “That bomb :hrowing on English schools was perfectly lawful and per- missible.” { It this is true of what service can A WORD TO OUR GERMANS. he be to this government either as 2 — citizen or a soldier. He shouid losc|By Charles J. Roccbault of The | his commission and Ee dishonorably Vigilantes. | discharced—he should be drummed -— | out of camp. Before feelinz runs too hizh for €o- There is tco much freedom of | ber thought, let us sit down and reason Ao i b e Moot | auietly. Just now we are enijoving Fmeeen Jotn _,;‘;‘"‘.’r-‘hf’mlff"’fv; %5 | moment of calm. The great majority . it O NS e, of Americans are leaving tc Washinz- A Stop to treasonable speech is t ton the orde g of events. Their biood let bse whe are not with the gov- | courses calmiv in their veins. It will ernment know it will not be toler-|not remain so long. ated. THE GERMAN AS A WORKER. The nations of the earth have much to learn from Germany, which counts for efficiency. A nation which had o imvort 2 miiiion doliars worth of foodstuffs an- to the lasted three .vears been for their ability work together and to for production escape This is what savs of starving Germany far greater danger of the of our- allies than of the of the Germans Every inch of greund in Germany is culti- ted and cultivated by the afd cf men, the bovs and women and t .000.000 prisoners of war. The ara- war ecould had it not to plan ana et no resource them. Ambassador _Gerard “There is starvation starvation available nually not have prior ol ble lands of Northern France and of Rumania are being-cuitivated by the German army with an efficiency rever before known in these coun- tries. and most of that foed will be added to the food supplies of Ger- many. Certainly the people still more certain ot be ended by Germany.” Working war prisoners is not erime, but an eccnomic necessity. Tt people of this great country sho th. utmost to make food ple heap, v this war w the s‘arvation nty EDITOR!AL NOTES. German “hand of peace” uck pon it. A Hartford suffragette is in jail Washington, and she deserves to be! has Patriotis there in “what is never for me m i it not disloval to h for peace; manly to be willing to fight can buy salt in Berlin without a permit, but not anyvthing you ca put salt on. hasn't one redeeming it puts up a fight wor better ca Do vou suppose we all taste alike to the mosquitc? There must be a bacon-to-veal variety! The souther boy w big sister's keep the fever d ho put quin face-powder an h didn’t Many an unpatriotic war gardens has sho vines but no beans this 1 sed the country most practicing in all parts of WE ARE HUSHED. Representatives of Deigium and sther countries are surprised by the merican demeanor in times of war, ind our apparent lack of enthusiasm There is forc in enthusiasm and 70 nation on earth can show more than the American when the is right a ady nd the popular lead ers b was fire enough when Theo- re Roosevelt spoke?up for defence ind for volunteers, and it tock him 10 time to get 125,000 volunteers sledged to go to France, and the noney needed tc' equip them. — — = t For | grown in Colbyviile. gressional American puk can get real was nothing new edict's peace proposals; presented them In excellent German Record is .the ication the Kai- comfort ont of! ser There in Pope but he form. A submarine commander can tafk like a saint, as well as drown men as though they were rats! You cannot make any sens man that the Germans prefer the The navy wants 2,000 wireless op- erators. The door of opportunity is cpen for Eastern Conrecticut - Down south they are hoping - that under government supervision the price of bacon may be at least one karat less Some one suggests encouragement of the Hoover should print every da that far the people Mr. is bill of fare The bravery of the Canadians should not surprise Americans. Didn’t 20,600 of them fight under Old Giory to preserve the Union? The woman's protest against wo- man suffrage is a handsome paper which looks as though there might be back of it. a millionaire A 16 vear old German boy has been taken prisoner on the field;: and a 94 vear old Frenchman. If the fighting blood is up what does age count for? Uncle Sam expects to have 23,000 flving machines; and Henry Ford is turning out 1,000 cylinders a day for them® These machines will all be in the air in 1918! A squagh stor rom South Caro- ling savs that the squash grows over three feet long, and that pieces may be cut off for cooking and the squash keeps richt on growing. It must have - - forces, and it is intimaled that he has evident enough that there is too much have the treasonable utterances As commanders in chief of the 1. .ted States forces they would have at there will be civil war in this tries to suffer: | B 4§ 'a | Trkat's politics! | LESSON NO. 8. (Infantry _ Drill paign.” Modern tre; paragraph 623.) quired in campaign; yet it soldier's training as it ever among t the cables then there be apathy in will not smile when the in the street cars tie reck's Weekly or the Germ: apers. the F will n Hindenburg. the ascendant. be popular on the highways. not be well then mentous decision sooner cr later, time to do so” The go00d or people for g in the ialance. Prior to of 1914 the sentiments of towards persons of Germai extraction w decidedly frie fact, none of the nationali ave sought our shores w come as the German Even sion of Delgium, which intense teeling among not immecaiately affect irds Germans domiciled in tates. Had they not d largely because its co the hands of the milita hom aione could be disregard for the rights of nation? Only when the guage press and so-called of Germa this country Prussian m ans generally n And German wi il itary machine | simiiation tonic extraction. Even now, however. the mind is not fully eectied. | are by nature sentimenta thy for the mental German bere has deterred m: antagonism. Their wrath is an sented by the Staats Zeitu Viereck suggest, let ion in calmness. crmans come to America? s at ng or find at home. Did they th they had anticipated? d descendants of German of these United States. of t! anv or to this look for happi will o2 nsidious propaganda | prospe: Germa clouded dispa; | moulders the issues. onately of of these selfish purpose? The press of dying of neglect when the war ve its hopes. ne money frankly poured counting rooms from abroa alone would not have made n ers. Germans in this country cans of German descent were lar was more succeseful. It frue then, but the un-Ameri hav way towards making it true. mains for the Germans and man-Americans to say whethe be entirely true. good will. Not very ever. The whole problem re: their conclusion as Our be loval Americans. hesitate too long, lest that grow celd. Let us ponder auences. well the latter has cunningly tried to possible, through his law of tionality, to permit them to cent, of couree, America will have none of choice must be made. For these who are resolved one eonclusion. They will morrows. And the sentiments the bloody upon children of those neighbors their children. Ave. and o children’s children throu years to come. Shall there be ostracism of man blood in this 1and? Shall ness the bovcott of German and German workers generations? Heaven events that will forbid This awful war should not more terrible by internecine & gether the many ai into one great nation. ergont Melting Pot to good purpose. throes of hirth. upon our German they be represented they be guided by Tt depends citizens the res: | common sense? Views of the Vigilantss American homes. pazes aroused Amerians, sentiment the Un left the father- | trol was in | o imputed such a weaker | German lan- | rugsles German opinion. | not patent that they are working only this country tinue in this country there can be only gh the long 23 the Hearsts. Vierecks. and the Ridders, who thrive upon unrest. or by thelr own sturdy |inches. HOME-READING COURSE FOR CITIZEN SOLDIERS (Issued by the War Department and ail rights to reprint reserved) Marching and Care of Feet. (Preceding Lessons: 1, Your Post of the American people to tear it off,e Honor; 2. Making Good as a Soloier; and to enthusiastically express them- e i selves whenever the' occasion de-| J,iae Qualifies of a Seldier; 4. Get- ting Ready for Camp; 5. First Days mands it. in Camp; 6, Cleanliness in Camp; 7, Your Health.) TALKING TREASON. The new soldler seldom understands There is no svidence that there is|how important it is for him to learn to march and to develop muscles so e r‘fi‘fi oo sosilpgae o “"‘"f that he can easily carry his arms and b s i s S |equipment. “Marching constitutes the princiya! occupation of troops in cam- Regulations, nch wa fare in Europe has for the time being =duced the amount of marching remais just as important an element in the was. In order to march for long distances the soldier's feet must be in good ¢on- dition. As has been aptly remarked, Coionel Carl Reichmann of the|‘“the infantryman’s feet are his means Twenty-fifth Infratry, U. 8. A, nomi- |of transportatien” Special attention nated as a_brfgadier-gerieral s re-|should be paid to che ftting of shoes o Ravd g = and the care of the feet. 1 P e e o1 send | Shoes should be quite a little larser B : "% |than shoes for ordinary wear. “Sores troops to France as General Persh- | ot misters on the feet should be promptly dressed during halts. At the end of the march feet should be bath- ed and dressed; the socks and if prac- When the news of wounds and death e loved ones at the front fills lonzer People ¢ see unfolded of Vie- language crving America and praising Passion will no be will to arrive at the mo- | which must be made | le there will of the American | tions to come hangs | the events Americ: birth or In teat wel- the inva- such did tow- | a! ndly. ties &0 party, spokesmen | and German-Americans in appiauded the acts of the Amer- begin to doubt the a. of their neighbors of Teu- a American Americans d sympa any only ngs s reason out did Either be- home were not to because they expected to find here opportunities denied them 1its The facts speak Millions of Germans | iti- Even tne Why e res are e future? country ness and of Is German r came to We will not discuss the That into d. ew read- But the cunning suggestion that and Amerf- unpopu- was not ican be- oir of these papers went a long It re- the Ger- T it shall There is still time to revive the old much time, how- sts upon to whether they are for America first or Germany first. | president has heid out the hand of friendiy welcome to all who wou'd Tet them not welcome conse- Are they contemplating be- | coming subjects of the kaiser? The make it dual na- be both Germans and Americans, with the ac- on the former: but A that. to con- have to face their neighbors through manv to- of those neighbors. as thev will be evolved from soon be s, will be the sentiments of the towards f those the Ger- we wit- husiness through many that we be_thus Givided. one against the other. be made trife. Tt can be made the means of welding to- elements Never was there an equal opportunity for operating the A real American nation is_struggling In the largely whether ult. Will the in not Will it | is etill ns | of the from de- ferred, however, if the attitude of these Germans continues to be fairly repre- and German Herols, the Hearstz and the the language press has doubtless But stop to think would-be it was ticable the shoes, should be changed.’ (nfantry Drill Regulations, paragraph ) You will learn In time the practical rules for tal care of your feet that ave followed by _experienced soldiers. You will avold considerable discomfort however, if you learn some of these rules now and put them into practice from the very beginning 1. See that your shoes are large enough. They will at first look and feel unnecessarily loose. This is need- ed because it has been found that feet swell and lengthen on marches, espe- cially when carrying packs. But shoes fitted this way will give you no corns: bunions, blisters, or other foot ills. in fact, they will cure any that you may already have. 2. Take pains to keep your shoes in good condition. It is 2 good idea to apply a light coat of neat’s foot oil Which will both soften the leather and tend to make them waterproof. Don't neglect to smooth out wrinkles in the lining of the shee. “Break in’ new shoes before wearing them on long marches. 3. Wear light weolen socke, such as will be issued to you. See that you have ro holes or wrinkles in them. if a hole has been worn and can not he mended at once change the sock from will not be irritated more than is nec- essary. 4. Keep your feet socks and shoes clean. When on the march try to wash your socks at night and put on a clean pair every morning. Bathe the feet ev- erv evening, or at lesst wipe them off with a wet towel. 5. Keep your feet scrupulously clean. A foot bath can be taken, when other facilities are not at hand. by scraping a small depression in the ground, throwing a poncho over it and pouring water into this from your canteen. Even a pint of water will do for a foot bath. You can bathe ali over by mak- ing or finding a depression of suitable size amd using your poncho as for a foot bath. ' 6. Keep your toe nails trimmed close- Iy and cut them square across the ends. This will tend ,to prevent ingrowing nails. By all means avoid the com- mon error of rounding the corners of the nail and cutting it to a point in the center. 7. In case a blister is formed while on the march. open the edge of the blister with the point of a knife or a needle that has been heated in a match {flame. Be sure to squeeze all the fluid out of the blister. To leave any in it |{may make it worse. Do not pull off the loose skin. but press it back. Then iput on an adhesive plaster. covering the skin well beyond the edges of the blister, putting it on as tightly as pos- sible without wrinkles. In the same way put an adhesive plaster over any red or tender spots. 8. In case any tendons become in- flamed or swolien (usually due to lac- ing the legging or shoe too tightly or to some other unnecessary pressure), soak the foot in cold water. massage the tendon and protect it as mi possible by strips of adhesive pla You should_report to a medical offic at your first opportunity to make sure {that the trouble does not grow worse. One sign of a green soidier is his tendency to drink too much water while on a long march. The experi- enced man gargles his mouth and throat once in a while but drinks only |in sips and does not overload his stom- ach with either waer or food. After vou have arrived in camp and {have cooled off vou can drink slowly | as much as vou desire. It is of course, | unwise to eat fruits, candy, soft drinks, ice cream. and the like while on the march. Arother sign of a green soldier is a | i i | i | | 1 and securely quipment not neatly | fastened. | depends very largely on the care and ! judgment used in getting ready. All |vour equipment has been so designed {ihat it need not interfere with the free | movement of your arms and legs. Your ! pack should be strapped to your back |in such a way that you can stand erect and breathe freely. There should be no presure of any of the soft parts of the body. You will march most easily if you keep vour body erect and do not permit vourself to slouch or sway from side to side. When the command is given to halt your pack and restyour backonitina sitting and lying position. If possible, lie with your feet higher than the head. so as to let the flow out of the legs into the body and rest vour heart. Du ing the first few halfs you may not feel tired but rest as completely as you can anyway. Look forward to the end of the march and try to handle your- self so that you will be strong and fresh at the finish. At the first hait it is well to readjust the pack or any part of the equip- ment not entirely comfortable. If vour shoes or leggings are laced too tightly this is the time to loosen them. A cheerful attitude is one of the best aids to a soldier on a trying march Singing and whistling on the march is ed. They help wonderfully to make the long road seem shorter. These are all very simple rules. but none the less important. Keep them in mind. - cept from their own hard experience but it is expected of the men in the National army that they will have the good sense to see the value of these suggestions and to apply them from the very beginning. CANNING LESSONS Apple Syrup from Windfall: This, of course, can be economically done only in the country. Wash your jars, wash rubbers, test rubbers for quality. Set empty jars with rubbers in pan of water to heat and keep hot. Fill wash boiler to cover jars two inches with water. Heat water in wash boiler. Put windfall apples through cider press. ! To seven Pllans of the cider add five ounces of precipitated chalk (car- bonate of lime), sold at any drug store. Boil in a kettle or vat vigorously for ke minutes. { Pour liquid into glass jars or pitch- ers. Let stand eight hours, or until per- tectly clear. Pour the clear liguid into preserv- ing kettle. Do not allow sediment at bottom to enter. | Add .me level teaspoonful of lime carbonate and stir thoroughly. | Boil down rapidly to a clear liquid | (one-seventh of the original volume). | Test: Pour a little into cold water; should have the consistenex of maple syrup: should not harden. Pour into fruit jars or pitchers. Place containers in buckets or wash boiler of hot water and allow to cool slowly. Pour ‘the syrup in hot jars. one Yoot to the other so that vour foot | carelessly adjusted pack or any other | Your comfort on the march | and fall out for a few minates loosen | usually not_only allowed but encourag- | Some men never learn ex- | TR ot starts on n to count ‘water to Remove jars and make covers air- tight. - Invert jars to discover leaks. If leaks are found, change rubbers and boil again five minutes. Readers of THE BULLETIN By sending this coupon to the National Emergency Food Garden Commission, 210 Maryland Bidg, Washington, b.c, with a two cent stamp to pay post- age a canning and drying manual free of charg All you have to do is fill out the space and enclose the two cent stamp for postage. These are twelve page manuals, fully il- lustrated and are sent out in so- operation with this paper as a part of the persomal service we at all times aim to give our readers. State Made-In-Connecticut War Interviews “What Serious Mistake of Great Brit- | ain Does Our Method of Raising an | Army Avoid?” An Interview With Dr. C. €. Ged- frey, Chairman of the Committes on Sanitation and Medicine. of the Connecticut State Couneil of De- tense. Dr. C. C.. Godfrey, of Bridgsport, who 'is chairman of the committee on sanitation and imedicine of the Con- necticut State Council of Defénse, contends that, from the m dical standpoint, the most serious mistake made by ‘Great Britain in the war was in the method of supplying the armv with medical officers and the disre- gard of the future need of medical men to care for the cfvil portion of the country. Dr. Godirey was asked | seniat Connecticut _Council_o: in a sertes | £ “Made-in-Connecticut War Inters | views" the guestion ~What serions ake of Great Hritain does ou method of raising an army avoid?” and made the following statemrnt ‘At the bezinning of the war, En- sland called_:nto service larze nim- bers of her best surzeons, and enlist- ed the able-bodied men from the corps of medical students for service | in the army. Th was done with the ~ne object of earing for the army needs, and without proper considera tion of the many other objec: require medital skill. For i as essential that medical care for the civil, as it should care for the mi ments “Depieting the hospitals and spa ly settled portions of the country medical men and the medical schools their faculties and students, sorn brought about a condition where neecd- ed medicai aid couid not be had, and the needed yearly increment to the numbers of "the medical = profession, ith internes for the neces-ary nesds of th hospitals, was cut off. “This may not have seemed so se- me, in the light that it generally believed in England that the war would not a vear, and when the statement of Lord Kit- {chener as to a three duration = ridivuled. It has resuited, however, in having Y a ilable man called to the eo and has caused great confusion in filling of medical offices with <om- nt men, as In boards of heaith, of hospitals, ete, well a5 roducing great hardship in portions £ the United Kingdom from a lack cf physicians, and placing a great bur- den on the older and disabled mem- bers of the profession unfitted for m H ttarv service “The Couneil 1t Washington {mined at me s that tary require- of of vear of XNational Defense very wisely deter- ! the start on what mizht be itermed a selective volunteer system, t which each hospital was asked to indicate how many of its staff couid ba spared and yet be capable of thor- rugh and efficient work. “That no Interne should be taken until he had completed a vear's work in some hospital. Thus insuring more thoroug! trained men for the iMed cal Officers’ Corps, and at the same time not interfering with the normal | of the hospitals, That the ities of our medical sghools should not be depleted so as '/ prevent the carrving on of their wr and medi- cal students were urge ¥ to continue | hattle THURSDAY [FRIDAY SATURDAY IST man e . o e OUNT AND TRIANGLE ATURES Daniel Frohman Presents the Delightful Parameunt Star MARGUERITE CLARK In the Beloved Fairy Tale and Her Greatest Stage Success 6 Acts—SINO WA A I 1T E-— 6 Acts ENID BENNETT in “THE MOTHER INSTINCT” 6 Part Triangle P| THE HOUSE OF SCANDAL—Trian Komedy COMING MONDAY—The Big 7 Reel Production, “IDLE WIVES” Pequot Manor “NEW LONDON. CONN. NOW OPEN SERVICE A LA CARTE AT ALL HOURS Afternoon Tea with Daneing, & 4:30 to 6:30 Tab!e D’Hote Dinner 7.00 to 9.00 Music and Deancing until 12 c’elock Pinta's New York Orchestra Veranda Restaurant Overlooking Harbor 50e. Venetian Serenaders Choice Outside Rooms with Private Bath a. W. BLANCHARD their stu. Thet medical men isolated icts, their a hardship to the su mean a ng community, should not e round called, e removal of a large forca 'a] men to foreign shores, at ten thousand to ea on of troops, will of necessity throw @ larze burden on those who remain especially when great numbers of troops, Incapacitated on the fields of return for care and treatmen but with the wise provisions that have bezn made devotion of the medical profes: is certain that neither our m civil pon- ulation 1 enffer of ndGe- mi n, it nor will guate medical attenti Majestic Roof Garden =—TODAY—— RECINA BADET fhe Vampire of France in The Colden Lotus Last chance to see the CHARBINO BROS. The World's Greatest Head and Hand Balancers AMATEUR NIGHT Two Complete Shows, 7.30 and 9.00 FRIDAY ADMISSION, REE B THEATRE TCDAY AND TON ETHEL BARRYMORE “THE GREATEST POWER” A Metro Wonderplay of Patriotism Burton Holmos Trav ELACK DIAMOND C Coming Friday and S 10 CENTS ANITA STEWART The M:essage of the Mouse IGHT clogue OMEDY aturday LITTLE WAR STORIES | Nature and the Battlefield. OF AMERICA. National Roque Association The valley of the Ancre, which was vo hideous lagt year when the trickle 56}h ANNUAI »f: the stream ran from ene h ag- & 4 1ant pool to another through a browh waste of shell-ikneaded earth, is now / 11l w g rushes doted wi m . and Lemp, rmony and | loosestrife. In Aveluy Wood t i ST LR August 21 to 25, d of acres of red r | Single admission . hoesGlilias | Transforable Season Tickets end t 1 PLAYING DAY AND NIGHT s over | Cars stop at grounds Rockwell true of popp LS Ok Bl | street. scarlet than tiegiounds, and thoush it | anc it seems t ich meadow home grow aller olor ars richer and ficnimOopN ALy Wt gow | where the fizhting R o T she o; me quite so_briiilantly as around | WeiOnal Patcues of epe X 4 the Butte de Warlencourt, on ok Hoi Ireadful expanse above the Zazentins | Pt Bhog cogor @i s, . owards High Wood, and on the face | it 1t were of the Thiepval slope, where the Ul- fentieny Y ermen passed on July 1. In these ugreondid i M oops aces the groun all popies for g g roods tozether. FElsewhere the-scarlet it is half veiled in the mist of flower-| I s " ing grasses, and mixed with them are |8Ple to & profusion of other blossoms, vellow Rarely outside the tropice have I ragwort, hawkweed, sow thistles, and {®een more butterflies than fut i adies’ bedstraw, mauve scablous and | shese w istes today, whites ar ¢ purple vetch and knabweed, tall cam- | shells and peacoc and s¥ipg ar panulas, bhie ehicory, and vipers' bug. | little crambite ~moths. T g oss and cornflower, and nearer to the | swallowtaiis are here, too, but o f ground pale fleld’ conveivuius and | nave chanced this summer to see only pimpernel, with, everywhere, whiie |one, and that was not among the flow- yarrow and camomile. ers, but on the mare w e summit of No vard of all this ground hut last | the RButte de n the vear was plowed up by shells and | king was th 1 bhutte beaten and plowed again, €0 that much | sailed round s ttl of the sofl which now lies on the sur- jand, as if récogniz Kinshi face must have been thrown uy from |than once made as o e Wwo or three feet helow and then it |king while he stood looking «as churned and churned again. Yet|®graves of the’gallant Du :he grass and the flowers are as in any | don Times Correspon®ence THE BIG FAIR A MASTODONIC EXHIBITION of Horses, Cattle, Poultry and Pet Stock, Vegetables, Farm Machinety, Automobiles, Carriages, Merchants’ Sheep, Swine, Fruits, Grains, Displays, Musieal Instruments, Flowers, Fancy Work, Pictures and Household Articles. WE WANT YOU TO COME AND S8EE THE BEST FAIR EVER HELD IN THIS COUNTY. Monday, Sept. LABOR DAY 222 Trot.. Colt Race PAUSE IN Place rubbers and tops in position, not air tight. . Place jars on false bottom in wash boiler. Keep tops of jars submerged two Put cover on wash boiler and let YOUR LIFE STRUGGLE Purse $400 §2.26 Trot.....Purse $300 |2.18 Pac Purse $100 § $2.25 Pace....Purse $400 CSIXTY-THIRD ANNUAL NEW LONDON COUNTY FAI e —— THE BESTFAIR e NORWICH, CONN. —on2 SEPTEMBER 3rd, 4th, 5th FREE VAUDEVILLE VAN NORMAN BICYCLE HIGH DIVER HOLMEN BROTHERS COMEDY ACROBATS LAMAZE & BLAZE Fini " PRETTY AND PICTURESQUE STUNTS ON THE WIRE THE ORIGINAL Albers Roller Skating Bear BALLGON ASCENSION and Triple Parachute Drop DAILY BAND CONCERTS 80 3 Tuesday, Sept. 4 GRANGERS DAY RICHTE I1CGCE ET EE 7 THAN EVER Butter, other edibles. Wednesday, Sept. 5 RED CROSS DAY Motoreycle Races PRODUCTS shed Table Products Cheese, ustrations of HAY WAGON COMICS Visarities 522 Bannid FGUR WILSONS Pickling, producing Jams, Butters, Relishes, Marmalades, Etc. A MODERN FA GET OUT YOUR PLANE AND BRING THE WHOLE FAMILY, ..Purse $600 YOU NEED THE RECREATION FOOD AND DAIRY Bread, Cake and ving Fruits and Praserving, such a Jellies, IR AERO-