Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 14, 1912, Page 10

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DANIELSON AND PUTNAM NEWS { DANIELSON Mercury Again Below Zero—indica- tions of Political Activity—Decent Citizens Stirred by Suggestion of In- vasioh of Vice Rev, A. H. Withea of Eastford was a visitor in Danielson Tuesday. . Henry T. Morrisson of Northampton, Mass., visited friends in Danielson on Tuesday. Alonze Polter of North Attleboro is sarjously ill. Mr, Potter was former- ly a resident of this town, James ', Madison of Newport was a visitor with relatives in Danielson on | Monday. William Kilmurray, formerly an ov- erseer in the mil]l of the Danielson Cot- ton company, has been spending a few | | days with friends in town. There is interest in this section in a farmers’ dnstitute that is to be held in Eastford today (Wednesday) A, G. Beckley is confined to his<home by an attack of illness. Bli Dagenias of Georgiaville, R. L, formerly of Danielson, was a visitor with friends here Tuesday. Next week Thursday, Washington's birthday, will be a holiday for the pu- pils in the public schools of Killingly. Five Degrees Below Zero. The regulation temperature of five degrees below zero was again record- ed by the thermometers at the govern- ment station at Bitgood's Tuesday morning. Visitors from Honolulu. Mrs. C. H. Appleton and daughter, Juliette, of Honolulu, have been spend- ing a few days with Mrs. Charles Downs, Brooklyn, a sister of Mrs, Ap- pleton. Telephone service has at last pene- trated to the rock-ribbed town of Fos- ter, just across the state boundary in Rhode Island. Hopkins Mills and oth- er places in that section now find use for the talking lines. Unclaimed Letters. Letters addressed as follows remain unclaimed at the Danielson postoffice this week: John M. Bauer, Louis Yar- min, Sinopole Domenico de Pasquale, Mrs. M. L. Harris, Mrs. Domenico Sin- opole, Miss D. Reneauli. Guests of Raymond A, Preston. Raymond A. Preston of Brown unis | 9f public merality, This announcement | ature had drdpped below the zero|week Mrs, Nellie J. Brack has been ent meq at the | is net based on ann\\ing stronger than | mark, for a fire that was at first re-| Pmma Peckham, Oliver Laporte, Gia- of his parents, ) and Mrs. !uw gossip of the street, which often | ported at one of the - mills in the| viano Jullassa. Trank 7. Preston of DBroad street, | times is impregnated with germg of | Providence street section of the city, |* Noted He: 4 Th Stephen 8. Bean, Dana M. ”uhmrdwfm"( before they lodge on an official | but which proved to be no more than 8 ¢ e _ra an u‘re‘ and Norman L. R. Duncan, all of Wo- | nce, but it 1s a well deflned ru-ja shed at the George Potvin place on| F. Walden Wright, divisional en- i‘.|rn. M TS, and Hub- | hat may be the forerunner of an Chur ssze' _ The shed was de- | gineer of the state highway depart- bard are members of the Brown foot- | effort to set up the business of {1&««@‘ stroyed. The fire made a big l_zI ze | ment, is in Aew: Haven attending a pall syuad. Mr, Duncan is a member | and in an endeavor to give publicity to | for a time, lighting up the part of the | meeting of the Connecticut soclety of of th taff of the Dr 1 Herald. alked-of plan that can be t‘a.rrleo‘d‘l; where it occurred. Hot ashes is| civil engineers. . gt 4 | Mrs. Halleck Welles, wife of the pro- | through only and exclusively to pro-| given as the cause of the fire. _Merrill P. Paine of Clark' univer- | ptietor of the Putnam house, Brooklyn, | duce results that can find no degree - sity, Worcester, is ill with the mumps | has zn«hfl) improved in health during |[of approval from any but the thor- FUNERAL. at his home here, being one of those | the winter, which she and her hugband | oughly debased. : = | e afflicted by the epidemic of the®dis- | are spending at Center M s, Whatever else may be said of it, | Charles M. Ellis. ease prevailing at the institution. Mr. and Mrs. Welles exp Danielson has always prided itself in} fuperal services for Charles M. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Brunn and little | and reopen the Putnam ho | its indisputable right to be called a| Ellis, who died Saturday, were held | Son 1A~t\xrgnp\1 to their home in Brook- | April 1, | :an‘um-n]—nnz a perb'c-]ll town, 1_)lut Tuesday at 11 o'clock in the chapel | 2 T\x;mda(xh a]{tg{r l‘)s";lnt: .S-I x | one where decency generally prevails. | gt o] regational ¢ v, T, v Mrs, arlotte amplin Kut-Up Kids at Orpheum. | Whatever d ‘z'ex)\\.'l‘gs may n)‘(isi be- ?f !lfréc?,l;‘z:,“-“‘?fi,‘é \h\'}‘ry:‘l" M:N:s‘ and her family of Bradley street. 3 Jebarre’s Kut-Up K een iis on various matters | were 1. M. Barney, Frank Weather-| Miss Annie Wheelock of Uxbridge, | hits with the au publi matters not a fig in | head, George Baker, Willlam Dav 3 has been the guest of her cous- | um theater at the shows Monday and comparison with the unanimity with| john D: “ard FErastus Wheaton | M. Miss Fllen Wheelock ‘of Church | Tuesday. This troupe of sevcn do their | iy they may be depended upon to | he hod t to Belf street. « i stunt in a “stage” school setling, and | gppose any attempt to set up Wwithin | the boyhood of the dece Mrs. F. D. Sargent was in Williman- | it is quite W“‘"‘”"' that they T | {t5 limits a vortex of vice. The people | hurial. L. B. tic Tuesday. could successfy ular schoool any their good cid teacher h as to stand for, | = Political Activity Probabfe. | I will wa have a l]' and t organige along Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA similar lines this | | houses for | had only to consider the woman of the | { that the squirrels climb the stalks | vear, something they have not done for several national campaigns. New York Lawyer Buys Pomfret Farm Attorney Robert T. Varnum of New York has purchased from Mrs, Law- rence Nutal] of Pomfret roafii in the town of Brooklyn, her farm. 71t is ex- pected that Atterney Varnum may goon retire from business in New York and take up his residence on his new property. Supt. Small Trustee. The following item, in which mention | is made of Robert O. Small, formerly principal of Killingly High school, is from a recent issue of a Boston paper: After nine years’ successful conduct of | the school savings bank in Beverly, the stamp savings bank committee of the Lothrop club of Beverly has turn- ed into the club treasury $178. Dur- ing the nine years the expense has been but $5, and of this $2 was for re- | deeming a bank book lost by ‘one of the school children depositors. During the nine years $9,500 has been collected by the committee and credited to the school children. The work is now supervised Ly the school department, with Supt. Robert O. Small as trustee and the Beverly Sav- ings bank as depository.” Firomen to Attend Putnam Ball. The Danielson fire department will send a numerous delegation to Put- mam next week to attend the concert and ball to be given by the fire depart- ment of that city., Many of the Put- nam firemen came to Danielson for the recent firemen’s ball, and the visit of | the local men to Putnam will be in the | niiure of a raturn of the courtesy, The | Putnam firemen are making prepard- tions to entertain the local men as fit- tingly as they usually do upon such oceasions. The recent ball of the Dan- ! felson department was very much of | a success, financially and in various other ways. NO SOCIAL EVILS TOLERATED. Danielson, Always a Clean Town, Has No Welcome for Licensed Vice. Dantelgon has been free frem baudy | vears and years, and has streets, but {f rumors current are to| be given any consideration, there is| reason to believe that an attempt is to | be made to test out the local standard | are almost a unit ion. against this propo- | Munchausenisms. A New York journal s ys there are | cornstalks in Coanecticut “as large | as’ 2 small tree” How convenient! | Now, in the Ohio valley bottom lands | | the chief drawback to corn raising is | PUT!II ¥ Injured by Eulum of Sewer Gilu Mrs. Agnes Desautelles May Lose Sight—Shed Burned—Death of Miss | and common council chamber, and the Elizabeth Vinton—About 1500 Moths’ ‘Nests Destroyed. An explesien that was heard over a major part of the nerthern end of the city and was responsible for consider- able wreckage and the injury of two ! persons occourred at the Dauulesu:g The explosion is belicved to have been due to escaping bakery on Smith street, about Tuesday morning. Wluminating gas. The injured are Mrs. Agnes Desautelles, who, aside from re- ceiving burns on face and arms, may Ee sight of both eyes, and Will- fam Desautelles, 28, who, from pieces of flying wreckage, received a cut in lose ti the neck an inch and & half long. One story of the happening includes a description of the Desautelles nrop— erty, especially of a room with conerete floor in which a manhole v\as Since { Sunday there has been an odor of {;-s-t u placed, this over a cesspool. caping gas about the premises, efforts to locate a leak failed, Just before the explosion occurred, Mrs. Desautelies was at work in this room doing a washing. There was a As to just what caused the explosion there is a conflict of statements, one being to- the effect that the big flash fol- lowed William Desautelles’ investigat- ing with a lighted match over the gas- from “which the cover had been removed; another to the ef- fect that the explosion was induced by fire in a stove in the room. filled cesspool, the heat of the stove. In any event, both man and woman were injured, the concrete floor of the room ihey were in smashed, and the interior of the place made to look as if it had been through a hurricane. ’fhe injured Desautelles were treated by Drs. Omer Larue and J. J. Russell. The force of the explosion was felt Desautelles bullding and in adjacent streets blew from sewer man- elsewhere than in the off meveral covers holes. Just where the leaking gas came from was a matter of conjecture on Tuesday, but the story that sewer gas One theory advanced was that leaking gas | of some kind from some source foilow- ed along the sewer pipes as a line of in caused the explosion was denied. ieast resistance and accumulated the cesspool, Shed Burned—Hot Ashes the Cause. On an alarm from Box 42, the fire Jdepartment was calied out at 2 o'clock when the temper- Tuesday morning, rector. Miss Elizabeth Vinton. to be heid ¢ , th Ve services are dent of t Rev. P. § the rector, wil l officiate. be taken to Newport, R. I, NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1912 | Veterans, at a meeting held Monday Smith was funeral dl«; bR The body will § for burial. | The Misses Vinton [urmerly conduct- | ) on Church street to Joseph Gagne, the price being $215. The terms of the contract require that Mr. Gagne shall have the rooms to be occupied by the selectmen and as a city court halls, completed by February 28, the remainder of the contract to he com- pleted by March 9. Twenty-eight Horses Man. Twenty-eight horses filling a palace horse-car were received in Pufnam on Tuesday afternoon, arriving lere on the 3.10 p. m. passenger train from ‘Worcester. The horses were purchased at a big sale recently held in Buf- falo and are the property of . H. Davenport of Pomfret. John Jarvis of this city and W. H. Young of South ‘Woodstock returned from Buffaio on the same traln-with the horses, all of which looked well when unloaded late in the afternoon. Onn Thousand Moths’ Nests Found in Putnam, for \Yomfret One thousand browntail moths' nests, have been collected 8o far in Putnam in the campaign that is being headed by Donaid Cafirey, entomologist of the Connecticut experiment station, and about half as many more nests hava been taken in the neighboring towns of Woodstock and Thompson. This is far less than the number of nests tak- en in : crusade against the pests in this section, showing the eness of the work done and the reduction of possible impending dam- age from the .nsects. All nests taken are burned. To Witness Fourth Degree Work. Members from the councils of the Knights of Columbus in Windham county will go to Hartford Sunday to witness the exemplification of the fourth degree on a class of more than 100 candidates. District Deputy P. J, Hurlthe of Willimantic will head a delegation of twenty members of San Jose council of that city, three of whom will be candidates for the degree. 8. of V. Lincoln Programme. Past Commander E. F, Perry, M.D,, of George W. Child camp, Sons of evening, installed the appointive offi- cers of the organization. In connec- tlon with the installation there was a Lircoln’s day programme, and short addresses by members of the camp, which now numbers 54. Unclaimed Letters. Letters addressed as follows a med at the Putnam postoffi growth, makes perfec food, strengthens nerv corpuscles, builds up, safely and quickly, muscles and solid, healthy flesh, rounds out the figure. For women who never appear stylish in anything, of thinness, Protone may prove a revelation. nothing to prove the re- markable effects of Protone. injurious How to Gain 30 Pounds in 30 Days 60c¢ Package of Remarkable Flesh-Builder, Protone, Sent Free to Prove What It Will Do. Send Your Name and Address Today, - w A Few Weeks’ Treatment of Protone Will Make You Plump, Strong and Vigorouse It is astonishing to see the effects pro- duced by the new flesh-increaser, Protone. To put on real, solid, healthy flesh, &t the rate of a pound a day, i8 remarkable with this new wonder. creases cell- the assimilation of increases blood Protone indy nutrition, because It costs 4261 Protone Bld and addr not at all and It is non- to the most delicate system. The Protone Company, Detroit, Mi of your nam age of Protone ch., will send you on receipt : O prove that it does the work; also their book on “Why You Are Thin,” free of charge, giving facts which will probably astonish you. Send coupon below today with your name and address. Free Protone Goupon This coupon is good for a free §0o package, (all charges prepaid), of Protone, the “remarcable scientific discovers for building up thin beopie, together with our free book telling why you are thi if sent with ton cents in silver or stamps to d packing, and as evidance THE PROTONE CO., 4261 Protone Bldg., Detroit, Michigan Winfred Longden of Manchester, has heen the guest of his par and Mrs. W. H, Longden of N ston has been the . C. M. Eliis of been in the city the past few days. | F. Walden Wright is spending sev- ) his home in New | ied a boarding | and when safely out of rifle range | | eat the ears, while the airship in its | present development wabbles so that | | it is no good to sheot rrom‘—lmll-f;‘ ville Coarier-Journal. Pomfret. Contract Let for $215. Tuesday school for girls in | friend the ((:mmulu having | fter competi for pai H adys s Murfey is et entertained sterday the Tuesday afternoon. Social. Calendar e ( Guild of Windham f her mother, Mrs Slm street, Tuesday. D. A. R. Chapter Meets. club | ez e of the | g ngrega- tlonal church have planned for a cal- was Edgar Johnson has been visiting resting address upon Some Principles of Social Service. ns were rendered by Miss and Mrs. A, C. Luke 18 pleasingly. Lunch was . C. D. Sharpe, Mrs, A, , Miss Abbie Keith, Miss ifar- Lew ss Alice G. Morse . Embryo Politician. “What makes you think the waby is going to be a great politician?” asked s in New H"uen | The February g of LA.mhpm; . s ey Sty T Srtar Bt g e AR E tell you,” &pswered the young father, :liows’ hall Monday afte confidently; “He can say more things mrff—: :A:lcndml. Follow- | that sound well and mean nothing at i3 1{;_4‘;‘]'&"' d\“‘i\‘ all than any kid I ever saw.” Why Physicians Recommend Castoria ASTORIA has met with pronounced favor on the part of physicians, pharmaceutical societies and medical authorities. with results most gratifying. The extended use of Castoria is unquestionably the result of three facts: First—The indisputable evidence that it is harmless: Second—That it not only allays stomach pains and quiets the nerves, but assimilates the food: Third—It is an agreeable and pesteet substitute for Castor Qil, It is absolutely safe. It does nmot coatain any Opium, Morphine, or other narcotic and does not stupefy. unfike Soothing Syrups, Bateman’s Drops, Godfrey’s Cordial, etc. This is a good deal for a Medical Journal to say. expese danger and record the means of advancing health. The day for poisoning innocent children through greed or ignorance ought to end. To our knowledge, Castoria is a remedy which produces composure and health, by regulating the system—not by stupefying it—and our readers are entitled to the information.—Hall's Journal of Health. A)teetaue]’rcparanonfivrAs- statlating e FootandReguia- Wsmndsammwe Opuim, Morphine nor Minezal. ol Nor NARCOTIC. s old 33 Dosys =35 CENTS At oLl since its infancy. the health of Infants It is used by physicians It is Our duty, however, is to o~ The Kind You Have Always Bought and which has been in use for over 30 years, has borne the signa- ture of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been made under his personal supervision Aliow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imi- tations and “ Just-as-good” .are but Experiments that triffe with and endanger and Children—E xperience against Experiment. Letters from Prominent Physicians Addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Dr. W. L. Leister, of Rogers, Ark,, says : *“ As a practicing phy- sician I use Castoria and like it very much.” Dr. W. T. Seeley, of Amity, K. Y., says: “Ihave used your Cas- teria for several gears iz my practice and-have found it a safe and »cliable reraedy.” Or. Raymond M. Evarts, of Santa Ynez, Cal., says : “After using your Castoria for children for years it annoys me greatly to have an ignorant druggist substitute some- thing else, especially to the pa- tient’s disadvantage, as in this case. I enclose herewith the wrapper of the imitation.” Dr. R. M. Ward, of Kansas City, Mo., says : ‘“ Physicians generally do uot prescribe proprietary prepa- rations, but in the case of Castoria my experience, like that of many other physicians, has taught me to make an exception. I prescribe your Castoria in my practice be- cause I have found it to be a thor- oughly reliable remedy for chil- dren’s complaints. Any physician who has raised a family, as T have, will join me in heartiest recom- mendation of Castoris.” Dr. W. F. Wallace, of Bradford, N. H., says: “1 use your Castoria in my practice, and in my family.” Or. Wm, 1. McCann or Omabha, Neb., says : ¢ As the father of thir- teen children I certainly know something about your great medi- cine and aside from my own family experience, I have, in my years of practice, found Castoria a popular and efficient remedy in almost every home.” Dr. Howard James, of New York, City,says : “It is with great pleas- ure that I desire to testify to the medicinal virtue of your Castoria, I haye ased it with marked benefit in the case of my own daughter, and have obtained excellent resul s from its administration to othr children in my practice.” Dr. J. R. Clausen, of Philadel- phia, Pa., says : ““The name that your Castoria has made for itself in the tens of thousands of homes blessed by the presence of children, scarcely needs to be supplemented by the endorsement of the medical profession, but I, for one, most heartily endorse it and believe it an excellent remedy.” Dr. B. Halstead Scott, of Chica- go, IlL, says : “I have prescribed your Castoria often for infants during my practice and find it very satisfactory.” Dr. William Belmont, af Cleve- land, Ohio, says: “ You Dastoria stands first 'n its ciass In my thirty years of practice I ean say I never have found anything that so filled the place.” Dr. R. J. Hamlen, of Detroit, Miolx., says : I prescribe your Cas- toria extensively as I have never found anything to equal it for chil- dren's troubles, am aware that there are imitationsin the field, but I always see that my patients get Fletcher's.” Dr, Channing H. Cook, of Saint Louis, Mo., says: “I have used your Castor:a for several years past in my own family and have always found it thoroughly efficient and never objected to by children, which is a great consideration in view of the fact that most medi- cines of this character are obnox- jous and therefore difficult of ad- ministration, As a laxative I consider it the peer of anything shat I ever prescribed.” Dr. L, O. Morgan, of So. Amboy, N. J. says: ‘I prescribe your Casto~ ria every day for children who are suffering from constipation, with betger effect than I receive from any other combination of drugs.” Dr. H. J. Taft, of Brooklyn, N, Y., says: ‘I have used your Casto~ ria and found it'an excellent remedy in my household and priv- ate practice for many years. The formula is excellent.” Dr. Wm. L. Bossérman, of Buf- falo, N. Y., says: “I am pleased to speak a good word for your Casto- ria. I think so highly of it that I net only recommend it to others, but have used it in my own family.” Dr. F. H, Kyle, of St. Paul, Minn,, says: “It affords me plea~ sure to add my name to the long list of those who have used and now endorse your Castoria. The fact of the ingredients being known through the printing of the formula on the wrapper is one good and sufficient reason for the recom- mendation of any physician, I know of its good qualities and re- commend it cheerfully.” GENUINE CASTORIA Bears the Signature of ASK YOUR PHYSICIAN

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