Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 18, 1911, Page 14

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The Biggest Clothing Victory of the Season We Place on Sale Today the entire Surplus Stock of the well-known A. Jacobs’ Sons & Co., 625 Broadway, New York, - FOR 10 DAYS ONLY | This is the time of year when manufacturers are anxious to dispose of all their remaining stocks. We stood ready with the cash to take advantag: : the situation—the result we bought heavy at the greatest sacrifice in price ever known, and this is the reason we offer to you the most remarkable lots of strictly high-class Clothing ever shown in Norwich at Sacrificed Prices. ’ £8.00 SUITS and $16.00 SUITS and Men’s and Young Men’s $4.00 FIN OVERCOATS 3500 2 _90 GVERCOATS ».... <. ..oonvs ALL WOOL PANTS WORSTED TROUSERS .... 2_95 regular £3.00 $| 95 #1.25 FIN Now ...... N cconioacosenss . PANTS $5.00 IMPORTED WORSTED PANTS ....... $3_45 $10.00 SUITS and - OVERCOATS . .ihiiossevony & HOVERCOATS ... $10.9 . WORKING 890 2 RSTED $10.00 —O\"Fj}‘?C(i.\'l‘.\' ......... 0“ sale 32.25 $18.00 SUITS and $lz 9” OVERCOATS $2.00 MEN'S CORDUROY PANTS - - 95¢ $1.50 SHOES $3.50 DRESS SHOES BOYS' SHOES 1%2.50 HIGH CUT STORM St . > = $2.00 SHOES $4.00 DRESS SHOES DOW s 5 ovss K SKIN SHOES in on Men’s and Boys’ Shoes, High-cut ’\17';:\ D AR~ Wl My v vioe i DML Wow .1 .. brown, black and tan— """" now .. Storm Boots, PSR i $1.00 LIGHT and HEAVY $ 1.95 RUBBERS .. now ... * 5 ¥ - | Arctics, Rubbers and Felt Boots | Proof, Rolled Edge ... Sale Starts Saturday, November I8th 10-Days Only-10 Sale Ends TuéSday, November 28th WE ADVISE EARLY SELECTIONS IF POSSIBLE, BUT UNDER NO CONDITIONS SHOULD YOU REMAIN AWAY. Surhrlsmg Sacrifice in Men’s and Boys’ Furnishing Goods 8.50 BOYS’ SUITS 2.00 FUR HATS 10c D and BLUE T5c BOYS’ COAT 50c EXTRA HEAVY $1.00 MEN’S and BOYS’ 35¢c MEN’S and BOYS’ ¥ S:)le grlce L ........... $2.25 g (Seal Skin) ...D ......... $1.39 | H,\A\DK‘E’RCHH‘ S 3%c| SWEATERS ............ 8c| WOOL MITTENS ...... 25¢ FURLINI::D BAPS. e CAPSO TR 21c $4.00 BOYS’ OVERCOATS 75¢c FELT HATS toc CANVAS GLOV 5¢c SHIELD TECKS 15¢c ME. and BOYS’ 35c BOYS’ KNI SElE Price U............ . $BI5} ‘Sale Price .. ... ........ 29c| Sale Price .....L:, o e G BN Sillese s UL S s e SUSPENDERS . ...l PANTS $3.00 SUITS $1.25 DERBYS v }50c OVERALLS 10c BOW TIES 10c SOFT FINISH 75c PRINCELY SHIRTS Lo AN — BOlE PR <oovocovven.- SO0 SalePrice 1. .....50....T0c| Sale Price ....... Woeness MC]BHIE PHEE ... 500ess0s et HANDKERCHIEFS ... 8cl : Sale-Price ... ... it .y 45¢c Men s and women s $8.00 OVERCOATS $1.50 SOFT HATS 50 MEN’S COATS $1.00 BUCKSKIN 10c RUBBER COLLARS 15c BLACK and TAN Sale Price .. e Sale Price ... : 5 - EATERS .. 89¢c MITTENS .. Sale Price . S . Bc HALF HOSE . 7%%c Ho“se Sli ers $6.00 BOYS' SUITS $2.00 SOFT HATS 1$2.50 ALL. WOOL 25c MULE SKIN 50c DERBY 19¢ WOOL pp SWEPRbE oo ulreisl $4295| Sale Price ............. $139] COAT SWEATERS ... $130] GEOVES - it o o v oo el "REBBED ... osevseses 39c| s HALF HOSE ... 0voess 10 $5.00 BOYS’ OVERCOATS $2.00 DERBYS 3 $1.50 DRESS KID 35c BOYS’ FLEECE 75c BLUE JERSEY l ; C Sele Peiee ..o $: Sale Price <....c000000 . SW LR M CE GLOVES ....cicqi000505 Sel UNDERWEAR ......... 81c] OVERSHIRTS ..... 1 R BROOKLYN OUTFITTERS|[ o WHES. - 266, 268 and 270 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. EVENINGS 3.45 3 «THE STORE THAT SATISFIES” = S > = - ) f Marysborough. We learn PUTNAM loyalty toward the maidens of thelr |to Mystic abotit 4 o'clock in the after- | Friday with hel Mrs. Charles : 1l off his chair on the veranda home city when they desert them to be |noon. The coromer gave his- opinion | Stoddard, 6 o'clock yesterday morning. | v enamored of the charms of Putnam’s [that death was due to accident, and | JIsaac Miller of Woodvillc 1 had been in declining health tor]cny to Have Tag Day—Concert on |fair young women. gave permission for the removal of | priday with Welcome Fiddie » past twelve months or more, and | Apniversary of Congregational Or- | It has become a habit of various |the body to Wilcox & undertak- | 3 N XAt 2 W < ached the venerable age of 74 Installation—Republican City | 1\ ¢PSter swains to spend much of their [ing rooms. Just what caused TR ! ona. “"“_ OF: JW aterbur . e - D L Y | time .evenings each week courting | to jump at that place cannot be ex- | yislling his mother, BMrs. Peter D) ; 1881 he had been one of our ommittee Organizes. Putnam girls. Naturally, while these | plained, s the train goes at a good | HO¢ DANIELEON ‘|T4C D!s_':le_s Early ]Ffl'déy Morning. 1wwn and most highly respected young men are down here saying pret- |rate of speeed there. | sorge Cummings of Waterbury is e var s b e zens, and discharged his responsible | Eaward Burt, Henry Wheelock, Per- |ty things to yetty creatures, some of Visit from Grand Deputy. |6 Brmith of Soath Norwac spent Mercury Dropped to 14 Degrees Friday |2above zero were reported on Fr Morning—Extra Police Patrol Denied | MorDing, when the ground was.f =tis Dialabon Wedr Wadk—: Union Thanksgiving Preacher. much gbility until old age | Fd: - fo | the dear girls up at Webster are left Sy Watdmen and G Harold Gilpateis | o0 (M d with an. opportunity to B their winter's knitting. Friday evening in A. O. Scme reckless man has been 5o rash | had an official visit f The Fraternal Benefit league met on | Friday in Mysti W. hall and | Dudley Pember of Scritico is spend- and Dep- | ing & ¢ days in town, it neces: ry for him to|.;. among those from Putnam attend- ing the Yale-Princeton game at New 1sed gentleman was born in i Rey. Elliott F. Studley of the < ave ¥ BRah & Bhwd Flty. odist church is to preach at the Ireland, in 1837, and there re- | Haven '"“"1’;‘ D T as to ask the Webster girls about it; ' uty Hubbs of New Hav | er of Norwich spent Fris T—— Thanksgiving morning service to education and served his = g hence the verbal turmoil now in prog-| Mrs, Daniel Geary of vard spent Mrs. Everstt Maurice of Norwich |held in the Baptist church. trade. In 1854 he | This is Tag day in Putnam and | ress. to America and followed for |+he ladies will be after everybody for | The deserting young men plead that e e his occupation there, at the [ small sums (or large) for the soldiers’ | Webster giris are all right, but it is Narragansett Brew- Bas been the guest of Mr. and M7s.| At the home of Mrs. Sidn. Jehn Fournier of the West Side. on Riverview the Mr, and Mrs. Ira D. Martin are en- | Missionary society of Stone oreign | * Methodist | ch time he returned to his|monument fand. cold weather now, and as they do not Mr. and Mrs. Milo Warren of Seuth | take their gentlemen friends into their tertaining Misses Lillian and Ellen |¢hurch held a meeting after " o Hurst of Leominster, Mass. | Roon. he came to Brisbdne and|Main street are entertaining Mr. and | homes, but make them walk the street, f 2 Killingly Juvenile grange is to hold | Thomas Hanley is employed at the d to.Roma for a time. Then|Mrs. Warren W. Greene of Worces- | Putnam, where the cozy parlors are llg(o.i%wfil'cw. @ meeting this (Saturday) afternoon. |baggage room at the local railroad s to Ipswich he took part in | ter. R always open for them, looks llke a Laaves Pilich Bebid tion. g of the first stone in the| "Mrs. A, J. Blanchetie is visiting With | better proposition until the roses & v R '\urn railway, on which he|lrelatives in Lowell. bloom again—and by that time they Ralph Young has resigned as a mem- POLICE PATROL H me yes He was also| Futnam men who were lucky were | will probably like someone here on the Br ane extension and | jn possession Friday of tickets for | enough to keep coming. < government service in the|the Yale-Harvard game at Cambridge | The Webster girls say: “Piffie! Let raulic engineer's department, sub- |ga week from today (Saturday), them go to Putnam if they want to! iently superintending the construc- | = George L. ¥enton of Berwick, Me, | We never cared much, anyway, for , Toowomba and|was a visitor with friends In town on | fellows of that brand, and if they ck_w g Friday. haven't been invited into our parlors came to Maryborough and | Jsrael Putnam lodge, I O. O. F., is | it'is because, in_ our opinions, they ree of the construction of the | to jnitlate cardidates st a meeting next | don’t deserve to be!” at Teddington. Tinana |Tyesday evening, when the members | The Putnam girls are kaying noth- and on their completion carried | gre also to have an oyster supper. |ing. Why should they? It is their ber of the Danielon police force. There was much enthusiasm at the all-day meeting at the Pentecostal | ASked For by Re church Friday. ev. Thomas Feltman will preach at 2 e S the Advent chapel Sunday afternoon. |, Before their next meeting the war- Missionary Meeting. recelved a petition asking that a police | Mrs. Frank T. Preston had _the | patrol be provided from 6 p. m. to mid- members of the Woman’s Missionary so- | right of each day on Main street from ents on Portion of | Main Street. the Ipsw cieties of the Baptist church at her)the Consgregational church northward | . <y me for a meeting Friday afternoon. |to the borough line. The petition is | o7 Private work for a year. ' He super. | Tetreault Elected Manager. turn to smile and to keep the boys The members of the choir and chorus | signed by many of the taxpayers an = v, ris’ .:rammar Schools. Spl. Bt Francis Tatreault has been elected a-coming. met at the Baptist parsonage Friday |property holders resident on that sec- evening to practice for the Christmas |tion of Main street cantata S o) Harry C. Harwood Improving. MISS DANIELSON | Harry C. Harwood, i in the & i and benefit to the town for | was reported Friday as resting some- automobile accident at Engaged in Field Work of the| " vears, his Te tion taking | What more comfortably. Monday, continues to im Eugenic Record Office. | place about two year 4 District Supt. Rev. J. H. Newlands | The newly elected republican city recover fully in a short time ” ¥ 3 4lso for manv vears super- | of Norwich is to be at the Methodist | COmmittes has organized with Her- Peter Figalo of Providence is spend- | A New York paper of Friday con- of the fire brizade. in which | church and will preach at the eve- |man G. Carver chairman, Representa- ing a few days with his sister, Mrs, |tained this item of local i rendered valuable service. | ning service Sunday. tive Hector Duvert treasurer, and Mary Salotti. “Miss Florence H. Dan . one of Bron: his 610 That Sithe Eait Colt Sart bl ihiass. John B. Byrne secretary. The com- | Mrs. Joseph Halle and Mrs. Fred |the field workers of the Eugenic Rec- 4 Kerr took up his| 5 o mittee will meet again in a few days Lavallee won the honors at the weelly | ord office, Cold Spring Harbor, L. L. oY aniE Eernnin: The coming week will be the last {to map out a campaign for the city of ihe open season for hunting quall, j election. The campalgn this vear, it | n's Pre erian church, and in | manager of a basketball team that is J ¢ Y ¢ app ted municipal foreman |to represent St. Aloysius T. A, and B. REPUBLICAN CITY COMMITTEE and waterworks. a position | Jeremiah Curran, who has been in PR held with mnuch credit to |a critical condition for several weeks, 'man’ G. Carver Prospects. Organizes with Chairman—Pol meeting of the Bijou Whist club. has been engaged in the collection of % ¢ The county commissioners were at |Dbedigrees of epileptic families In Mas- \nd one sem. R.|Pariridge, woodcock and other pro- |is admitted, will not be a very stren- | the jail in Brooklyn Friday for another | S2chusetts and Connecticut. All the A danehters, | tected birds. uous one, as there is no contest in | meeting. families she has studied ‘are o Kerr, to | Public Concert on Organ Anniversary. | sight, except for alderman-at-large. | related. and she has been workihz un. To maric the twentleth anniversary | Mayor Macdonald is without opposi- | % e ks pery Sign LO8 D Erveret s nlso the step- [of the installation of the organ in the |tion In the way of a nominee, the - ow's Thin? | o mer, Mass #ord, so- | Congregational church, a comcert is | Ward aldermar candidates are just e offer One Hundred Dolis | This item was printed in connection to be given Monday evening. L. O,|Dumerous enough to fill the places to f'.'c‘.'i.f"e'u?é’é’ ;;a;!;lzrsaé;{ar:_.flxxmx‘m: [th 2 feature story telling of how it vaper | Willlams .organist, Miss Mary T, Dan- | be filled and all Wil ba elected, s such e o < n learned that Mrs. Mar jels, soprano, Miss Myra Ellis, planist, | clectioneering as is done will be prin- ;- Toledo. O. = avioindo: O @, | Harriman, widow of the great ra and John A. Morse, violinist, will have | ¢/Pally for John A. Dady and George king, is the “mysterious good ar i P, Mi raspectively repuhllcun and | this eugenics movement, which GIFT °ii25- P o i o paSramme arranged: To® | démocratic candidates for alderman- | neial braces a scientific study of heredity, | = 2 %o | lovers. ¥ at-large, with which office goes the ! e a gble o carcy out any obligations made ihie ultimate ebject being to liminnic 130; o F‘"{_"" P;S*"d' °°"“""“;"fl_ LoTge! ol Bessam balance of power m the city council w ¥ defectives an. rcrease genius. | edecoration un, ar erlin = of nine members, WALDING, KISNAN £ MARVIN, | Hariman has =iven liberally of her | Church. i Tfifrfi ML be an cut of town spesk. eeI'WIM I'Ae real _ | fortune of $100.000.000 to the cawse = er at the e : 0 be hel na eking Birectly: wpon e iand | Tho WO of the burar with wiret letter from Henrs A. Tbbias of |2 Eutnam lodge of Eiks on the frst mysTiC .vner Zasle ~ and ‘mucous surfaces of the Miss Danielson is connected inclide ey “inis | Sunday in December. An orchestra Teatimon the collection of data from al : - : e and a Jauartette’ will ‘be heard in the | GHAUFFEUR KILLED i per bottle. the world, to the end that the 1 mmittee hich is rais money | musical parts of the programme. S T eatlon of defccffies may he ste oration of the In€érior of | Game Pie Supper. WHILE JUMPING FREIGHT. . and the more talented strains Berlin. Enclosed | At the Methodist church Friday | John J. Keefe, 29, of Bost $220, e o 3 4 z , 29, on, Had Starts Much Trouble. . ~ manity measurfibly increased. for the redecora- | evening from 5 to 8 o'clock and under But Risked a Free R g —_— 2 the auspices of the Epworth league, a % i Tf all people knew that neglect of DAVID KERR DEAD. the only surviving | zame pie supper was served. The me- John J. Keefe, a chauffeur, formerly censtipation would result in severe in n, vellow jaundice OF. yIrnlent mily of Rev. Roval i nu included rabbit pie, chicken Die, | amployed in Boston and Watertown, \as pastor of the First| rolls, pickles, cake, and coffee. | Mass, was instantly killed late Friday i Promm'n( in Indus(rlal and So liver trouble they would soon take Dr. = King's New Life Pills and end it. It's| cial Life of Maryborough, Queens- | iy a:gnw?; coie | Home made candy was sold. by & westbound freight train approach- the only safe way. Best for biliousness, | land. i Fone mental snd phynical SHamEES Will Close Branch Store. ing the Mystic drawbidge. Keefc tried headache, dyspepsia, chills and debili- < father was one of the favorite| Charles Seder, who has had a |to board the freight and lost his grip, ty. 25¢, at The Lee & Osgood Co.'s. ‘The following obituary of Dav »rs of the church, remembered by | branch store in Danlelson for the past |falling under the wheels of the cars, of the older members of the con- | ¥ear, is to close it today. which cut his body to pieces. In pock- . TR BB Kerr, brother of Mrs. John Waldo anc Backache, Headache, Nervousness |Miss Sarah Kerr, Danielson, and At- | o and rheuwmatism, both in men and |torney Robert Kerr, Colorado Springs, women. mean kidney trouble. Do not |iscontained in a Maryborough, Ques ol 3,. to progress bevond the reach |land, Australasia, paper just received |ge. tom It s natural that the son | Webster Romeos Accused of Bisloyalty | §53 °F his coat were ound a check for man so long identified with the to Local Juliets. River National bank, of Cambridge, h should be int ted in th ration Of the edifics in prepata. | UP in Webster a discussion of suffi- [ Mass., signed H. S. Wyatt, three dolars icine, but step it promptly with |here: Ton' for Ate S50 3 > ; cient magnitude to attract newspaper | in money and a gold watch. A broth- Kidnéy Pils. They regulate thef The exd news reached town last ton: for Ais JHIO0 SabEEa attention is in progress and over the |er in Boston was notified of the acci Tonis gl o e.sudden death of avi R IIT a TR L very vi Droposi ol er cer- e was a B le. f.,;e;“m i ‘:‘7;..‘3 Kerr of Willow Gienn farm. Tinana, | The thumb is sironger than all the |tain young men of Webster n-.m Dr. Gray was m?.a ang Dr. George Co formerly for many' yvears muplcipal ' fingers put together. ing a nm-rvm-‘w Stanton, ceromer of Stonington. gemse

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