Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 18, 1910, Page 15

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- —— equaled for bathing and toilet purposes. Sold by all druggists. Hill’ll'hitn_‘lwhhk-pv‘- black or Erown, 50¢c. —_— Oldest Known Specimen of Glass. In the British museum is preserved the oldest specimen of pure glass which bears any date. It is in the shape of a lion’s head. having on it the name of an Egyptian king of the eleventh dynasty. Game to the Last. An Indian woman named Partridge has been married to three men, named Robin, Sparrow and Qnayle, and has divorced each of them. This particular Partridge is certainly a bird.—Omahz Bee. Why Goodlee’s Vanilla Flavor ;s the Housewife’s Favorite B > Every woman who bakes wants re- & _puits. If she does not get them her » time, material and fuel are wasted. > ‘Goodlee’s Vanilla Fiaver “is a guarantee of Good - Results. WHY? 4. It never fails, but consistently pro- duces an elegant Vanilla flavor in cakes, pastry and ice cream. 2. 1t will not BAKE out. 3. It will not FREEZE out. 4 It is unsurpassed in strength- aroma and flavor. B. It is always UNIFORM. 6. It is always PURE. Price 10c, 25¢, 50c, $1.00. Che Lee & OSgood Company, Selling Agents, junlidaw ATTENTION! Auiomeobile Owners GET YOUR Automobiie Biue Book and legt Road Mlps Now £ céANSTo\z s junlsdaw JOSEPH - smml-'d_pn, Book Binder. Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY., Telephone 2&3. Norwich, Conn, oct10d A Fine Assortment MILLINERY AT LITTLE PRICES. MRS. G. P. STANTON octldaw LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and Bread canuot be excelled. Give us a trial order. 2 movis MME. 20 Fairmount Street. TAFT, PALMIST AND CLAIRVOYANT, 619 Bank §t., New Lendom, Conn. Jelsa = | S H. WARNER, General Agent. b H. C. LONG, Special Agent. ] Busdis SARTFORD, CONN. THERE 3 50 4GVertusing mea m equal te F>- Bule | ing to recent MYSTIC Last Day at West Mystic School—A. O. H, Committees Named—Sale of Lamphere Farm—Lineup for Today's Teams. The West Mystic school closed Fri- day. The following exercises were held at 2 o'clock Filag salute; lag school; recitations, grammar school: Song by the The Builders, The Village Black- smith, Walter Wolfe; song, Little Helpers, primary school; recitation, The Civic Creed, grammar school; song, Music of the Bells, Lucy Clarke; recitation Maxson; Gurner; Oviatt; lda Clarke, . Spelling Kit- The Children’s The Boy That song, Psalm of Laughs, Ros Life, grammar school; recitations, Clovers, Dorothy Lamb; What Did They Teach, Robert Grimley: song, Vacation, pri school; recitations, Guilty or Not Guilty, Ruth Dodd: J rusalem \10011 ight, Id Equestr The Blue : song, Hail to the by recitati as Her Name, Do n, \\ hat W othy T : recitation, dington; girls. Award c of diplomas. Weston Bud- primary nsy Willows Four Years' Stay Abroad. son of Rev. and Mrs. W. ad - Bates, for is expected home | Monday. spend some time | with his parents | Hibernian Committees. | the Mystic Divis- | meeting of ion 1, A. O. H., two applicants were iated. The following com- mittees were appointed: Standing committee, President Cornelius Don- | ahue, Adri O'Neil and James Gal- vin; financial tee. John M Fee and Williamn A 1 > ck com- mittee, James Foley, James Galvin and Walter Shea | Buys Lamphere Farm. | Mrs. Amos Turner has purchased | from the B. F. Lamphere heirs the | house and farm on Wes | nue and will oceupy | Thvxo | postgrad school in F turned to his h me !‘r\vu Flower Mission Day. { Friday was by the 1 W G T lP mission day rooms and taken to the each b uet a ver of Flowers were Game With Westerly Today. Ar booked interesting n for tods plays Weste baseball team time Manage together. »od makeup - s and 1€ obability will be in any Burdett here for ay on a week’s Ham- Ralph New Zesaland The wealth of New Zealand, accord- statistics, is $1,480 per person, and it is said to be the high- est of any country in the world. Village Life. In a small town-if a man stays up until 11 o'clock at night he is gen- erally counsidered a sport.—Topeka Daily Capital The Early Bird. The man who thinks he i{s going to succeed merely beca he gets up early is likely to be a failure. Annual Slaughter of Squirrels. Twenty-five million squirrels killed annually in Russia for pelts. are their Weoman’s Dual Death. Woman .dies twice; the day that she quits life and the day that she ceases to please.—Jean Jacques Weiss. SR Ineradicable Taint. A few things gained by fraud de- stroy a fortune otherwise honestly won.—German proverb. Decoration Originally Eastern. Paper hangings for use on walls were introduced into Europe {yom the east in 1675. The Sure Result. A Har ends by making truth appear like falsehood. —Shenstone. About one-fourth of the men in tre navy at the present time have re-en- listed. NEWS LETTERS BULLETIN REPRESENTATIVES Pai Sml.h. Millard Spink, Elizabeth Spicer, Josephine Vallette, ter Weeks. Gr-d- B to 6—Walter Ellis, Lloyad Fraser, Agnes Goddard, Walter Mallett, iPlorence McDonald, Helen Main, Mary Musante, Annie McLeod,Beatrice Rath- bun, Eddie Helen Vallette. Grade 6 to 7—Lloyd Brown,Lawrence Ellis, Florence Fitzpatrick, Norbert Hill, Gertrude Morrison, Robert- son, Clarence Spink, Gladys Strong. Grade 7 to 8—Nelson Brown, Annie Campbell, Marion Crossman, Joseph Doucett, Kathryn Latham, Ester Mc- Leod, Walter Nelson, Franklin Rath- bun, Carrie Roarke, Clara Schramn. Along the Wharves. ‘Fishing schooner Charlotte I. Kings- land left this morning for the fishing grounds. She is the first schooner to fit out for blueflshing. Inspector E. J. Harris of the United States engineer’s office at Newport was in the village Friday looking over the fishing schooner HEarle and Nettie, in regard to chartering her for the sum- mer for survey work in Vineyard Sound. Briefs and Personals. Miss Inez Chester left this (Satur. day) merning for Boston for a visit with friends. Mrs. H. B. Rankin, who has be@n vis. iting friends in Chicago for the past month, has returned. Steam lighter Rose A. of New Lon- don was at the machine shop Friday getting the machinery purchased by the T. A. Scott Co. Children’s day exercises at the Noank Baptist church will be held Sunday evening, June 19. NOANK Graduating Exercises at Grammar School—Norwich Boat Made Speed- iem—Pupils Who Have Earned Pro- motion. The graduating exercises of the No-: ank grammar school were held in the Baptist church Friday eveping. The recitations were well rendered and the compositions were exceedingly good, as was the music. An interesting address was made by Hon. A. S. Chester, who presented the diploma Rev. H. B. Rankin on behalf of the pupils present- ed Miss Helen Prentiss, the principal, a silver mesh bag. With the Shipbuilders. At the shipyard the large dry dock being built for Jomes Tregarthen, Son Co. of New York is being rapidly nished, the outriggers are nearly com pleted and the planking is finished. The dock was watered Friday by the | lighter Briareus. The lighter being built for E. N. Bel- den of Hartford is receiving a coat of paint, itory to going overboard. The Correction, recently launched at the yard, will not be tak- en to New York for the installing of her engines and boilers. The machin- ery will be brought here by a lighter, and when the steamer leaves she will be ready for service. ‘Mrs. H. W. Ranger rned t Planking will be commenced shortly ¢ e i B = Noank after a £ vi i v on the Lehigh Coal and Navigation DRV In Dm TPk company’s bas as the company - wants them as scon as possible. The superstructure of the first of the lighters for the Atlas Cement company is completed. The second one is ready for sealing, and will be launched in about a month. Work has been frame for the lighter Frank Taylor of New frame is to be of yellow pine, 50 feet lo n Webste Energy. Energy will do anything that can be done in this world; and no talent, no | eircumstances, no opportunities will make a two-legged animal a man with- out it.—Goethe. commenced on the building for Bedford. The 12 by 14 The Real Thing in Coffee, A German traveling in Brazil says that there are kinds of coffee there which, as prepared by the natives, are as superior to ordinary coffee as champagne is to ordinary wine. few 12 anta.nmi with which Mr. Morrissey ex- pects to make twelve miles an hour. Pupils to Be Promoted. Examinations are finished at the lo- cal school. Those to be promoted are as follow Grade African Forest Worth Millions, After investigating recently, a Brit- ish official reported the Kenis forest in east Africa to be 287 miles long by eight miles wide, and to conlain stand- ing timber worth $115,000,000. 3—Sarah Banks, Babcoc: arl Rouge, Jessie Carson, Louis Brassi, Lena Doucett, Cather- e Devean, Frances McDonald, Joseph Mallett, Viola Pray, Weston Rankin, Frank Porter, Janette Rafuse, Rosalie to Edna American Pearls. Grade 3 to 4—Henry Becker, Lois | American pearls. Those taken from Butson, George Banks, Morgan Ches- | the western waters last season were ter, I Chester, Lilllan Ellis, Hadley Fitch, Lurene >r, Helen Holaday, Victoria Mu- . ne Morrison, Lawrence McDonald, Sadie Mcleod, Louise Mc- Donald, Minnie Pray, M Pray, Ra mond Rathbuu, Annie Robertson, Lew- is Roarke. Grade 4 to 5—Fred The Kotten Suction Cleaner FOR SALE OR TO RENT Williark Doucett, valued at $500.600. As You Make Yeur Bed, Etc. ‘Who hangs himself in the chimney should not complain of smoke.—Ger- man proverb. Ashby, Albert | CAN BE OPBERATED BY ONE PERSON and do the same work as any high priced machine. It i irs with ease. light in weight, and can be compact, carried up and down \ The Suction is created by the natural motion of the body in mev- ing the nozzle back and forth, which throws the weight of the body from one foot to the other, thereby developing a strong euction at each stroke of the nozzle. Your Weight Does the Work THE HOUSEHOLD, Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street NEW YORK HERALD. A Elaze From the Yukeon! BURNING DAYLIGHT Jack Lendon’s Greatest Novel! This Gripping Story of Millions and a Maid Begins in the SUNDAY NEW YORK HERALD TOMORROW ORDER NOW FROM YOUR NEWSDEALER! makes the big white loaf with the - appetizing taste ondlir cured employment, Bert Edger, & former employe, has returned to the local office, S'I’AFFORD SPRINGS Seventeen Will Be Graduated from High School—Game with Rockville Eagles Today. B Use of tobacco is unive-sal In the Orient, and the word cheroot and iis use come from Madras. The first ci- gars seen by Columbus were wrapped with corn shucks. The high school graduation exer- clses will take place in Memorial hall next Wednesday evening. There are 17 in the graduating class and elght will read essays. The salutatorian is Miss Lillian C. Warren, and Miss Mil- dred P, Burwell is valedictorian. The members of the class are Edith E. Ad- ams, Blanche G. Barlow, Ruth E. Bar- low, Mildred P. Burwell, Harold B.| Butterfield, Matilda Rose Carey, Mae F. Chandler, Ethel V. Charter, Robert N. Drummond, Marjorie B, Eaton, Ma- ry E. Hanley, Annie J. Phillips, Blanche E. Soule, Gilbert A. Wagner, Lillan C, Warren, Lilllan A, Welsh, Mary Wildey. About the Borough. Mrs. Robert Stevenson and son of Dunkirk, N. Y., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Napoleon Pero. The Warren Woolen company is having the chimney between its old plant and that purchased of the worst- ed company built several feet higher, The Stafford baseball team will play the Eagles of Rockville on the fair grounds this (Saturday) afternoon. Telegraph Operator McNulty has signed at the local station and go to Brattleboro, Vt, where he has The second week of our great FIRE SALE will be made notable by the large showing of first-class Homefurnishings at a reduction of from 25 to 33%. This discount means a big saving for you, and just at this time you should take advantage of this opportunity. Furniture of the highest grade at prices so radi- cally reduced as to make it worth while withdraw- ing money from the bank or elsewhere to make purchases at this store. Can you afford to let it go by? $25,000 Worth of Merchandise at a Saving of 33 per cent. A veritable barvest of housefurnishiags - here, and you are as welcome to visit us as we can pos- sibly make you. Furthermore we can assure you that a call at our establishment will be to your ad- vantage. Come early while the assortment is large. SCHWARTZ BROTHERS, 9-11 Water Street. A EEs SAM, DI NN RRIGH GENUTNE must bear signature: qu Z A Storekeeper Says: “ A lady came into my store lately and said : “‘I haye been using a New Perfection Oil Cook-Stove all winter ’ in my apartment. I want one now for my summer home, I think these oil stoves are wonderful, If only women knew what & comfort they are, they would all have one. I spoke about my stove to a lot of my friends,and they were aston- ished. They thought that there was smell and smoke from an oil stove, and that it heated aroom just like any other stove. Itold them of my experience, and one after another they got one, and now, not one of them would give hers up for five times its cost.””” The lady who said this had thought an oil stove was all right for quickly heating milk for a baby, or boiling a kettle of water, or to make coffee quickly in the morning, but she never dreamed of using it for difficult or hnvy eooluu Now-—she knows. really appreciate what a New Pertoceing Ol Cook-Stove means 1o you ? No more coal to carry, R0 more coming to the dinner table s0 tired out that you can’t eat. Just light a Perfection Stove immediately the heat from an intense blue flame shoots up to the bottom of pot, kettle ar oven, But the room sn't heated. There is no smoke, no gmell, no outelde heat, no < ery in the kitchen where one of es s used. NeW‘Pc ©il Cook:=stove It has a Cabinet Top with a shelf for keeping plates and food hot. nickel finish, with the bright blue of the chimneys, makes the stove ornamental The and attractive. Made with 1, 2. and 3 burners; the 2 and 3-burner stoves can be had with or without Cabinet. Every dealer everywhere ; if not at yours, write for Descriptive Circular to the nearest agency of the Standard Oil Company (Incorporated)

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