Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
2 e e HOTHOUBE LAMBS AND GREEN PEAS, ROASTING CHICKENS, FANCY CELERY, WHITE CAULIFLOWER, 4SPARAGUS BERRIES ARE FINE, RADISHES 3¢ MUSKMELQNS, BEST ORANGES OF THE SEASON, LEMONS AND.EVERYTHING GQOOD’ You 1% S\)ME - Food Specialists All pcrsons de-ln\nx o Intending te mse hose for strest, lawn, e sprinkiing, or for any other puuw ring the season of “lt it fArel twin a written &u‘m{ Fram th office ot the Board of Water Commission: r‘ Any person us hose without ul v.mmh permit :hul mmnn-d 6. ile will str M o 1 8 RAYMOND, Clerk of nn Board of Water Cvmleu- w COLOMBIA Steam and French Dry Cleaning, Fancy Dyeing in Modern Shades of all kinds of Garments and Ostrich Feath- | ™ ers. Satisfaction Guaranteed. Office: 48 Franklin St. NORWICH, CONN. Dress Goods Remnants Billiard and Caflage Cloth Brady & Saxton (Bean Hill) Jun12WMF Norwich Town GEORGE G. GRANI, - e Builetin, | " Nerwich, Menday, May 29, 1912 VARIOUS MATTERS Sundey was Edik day a 1sh peonle Already ’h cases of ivy poisoning are | oing reported Open cars were appr: during Sunday's bright weather ted "he excuralon season on the Central mun( read will begin weather of Tields along the line of the Montviile trolley are yellow with the first but- | tercups, New that the we panar ers and | with orders, In several of the schools' Parents' day and Peace day will be observed together on Tuesday. whist and Remember the )mmd\lfl soclal at A, O, IL ay eve- ning. Admis: 25¢ The new moon which made its frst | avpeorance Saturday evening, wus of an orange tint indicating heat. Traffic on the steam roads Satur- oing day was unusually heavy, many to shore places to spead Sunday. in some towns of tho gelling at $38 a ton, highest . paid since Two sunny days have encouraged dealers in men’s headwear, who are having a brisk demand for straw hais. One of the densest and most annoy- ing fogs of the season prevailed at the mnuu\ of the Thames Saturday morn- Hebrew families from the city are arriving for apring visits with Oak- 3.!0 and Chesterfield friends and rela- ves, Saturday afternoon members of St. James' Sunday school, New London, bhad a picnic and botanizing trip (o Lantern HilL George Bridges and Bertha Cope- land, both of West Ashford, were married in that village May 17 by Jus- tice of the Peace Nathaniel Knowiton. ‘Willlam Grosso, a Stamford factors employe, was taken to the State asy- lum at Norwich Saturday by aatomo- blle. m man became suddenly insane ‘The fish and game commissioners of the state are heartily in favor of the bill introduced into the United States senate by Senator McLean for the protection of migratory birds, Mrs, Carrie DePage, 24, died at her home at Bast New London late Thurs- day afterncon, after a long illness. Ehe was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs Thomas E. Daniels of Waterford. Although last week's rain delayed the work of the water department, the service pipe for the new sanitarium on West Thames street has been laid almost as far as the Good place, Two open cara were used all day Underfaker and Embalmor [somey o e Tantie tripio Sacas modate the increased travel day was an ideal one f ook 12 Frovideace Sl Tafivill: Tompt vttemstion fo day or night calls ‘Telophone 630. apridM Wrawl ...uflaxter ufllental Skill As| the rid- piea ing, many Yaatic. the English 1 day as St Dunstan’s da en good luck for a year, a horseshoe must be hung over the door, the legend be- | ing that Dunstan was a blacksmith, who shod the devil The quariermasier general has no- tified Constructing Quartermaster x T. Arnold to adver e construc distribu- s l-‘::»RT. NO PAIN, NO HIGH PRICES! My prices are within the reach of all who appreciate good work Tnhesitatingly T ciaim to be the painless Centist in Nor- " FULL SET TEETH $5.00 WITH THE NATURAL GUMS St Sy Dnpee s Slenp Wer $5 King Dental Parlors 203 MAIN ST, Over Smith’s Drug Store, MNorwich, Conn. TAKY, Paimist ' in her predi irvoyant . reliable no matter what trouble - haye wilih yourself or others. Come and she will guide you. At 38 Franklin St for a short time only. aprif MISS M. C. ADLES Hair, ‘calp and Face Spacialis! DANGEROUS AND UNTIDY is a neglected scalp. It is also the source of many cases of baldness. Have your scalp treated by an ex- pert. Timely treatment will restore your hair to health. Miss Adles will be in Norwich all this week. Early Appointments Necessary, Everything for the Hatr. NORWICH—Wauregan House, Tel. 704 may20 MW¥ ALL THIS WEEK 1 BOTTLE STAFFORD'S INK GIVEN FREE With . Each 28 BOX WRITING PAPER, AT THE NOVELTY SHOP C. L. HILL, 56 ankfln Street. AWNINGS Let mg havo your evder now. Any size and any 4‘u|u| Prompt atteation. J, W, Tal106-3 fl uum ‘forw cents per len-qu.m can, R(‘\' C. M G:\nu;}, ffllm»\ ¥y qf Nor- u)d:\y take | through without change. {land Baptist Worcester, The wedding of Miss Ella Louise Lent, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mry, Richard Arthur Carden of Ney York, aud Lawrence i home { terford. INDOOR "AND OUTDCOR Gymnasium Class Ends Tennis About to Term Beqin. The indoor seazon of the Haile club was closed on Fri evening with the final lesson and e hibition of the gymnasium class, wit- nessed by an audience of 50 of the parents and friends of the members. who found much o praise in the work athletics of the class, reflecting the capabla in- | struction which they have received. Between the numbers the Halle club orchestra played, and there was also « soprano solo by Miss Catherine O'Nelll, with guitar accompaniment, The clas snumbers included a wand drfll, dumbbell drill, barn dance and other folk dances. Solo numbers werc the highland fling by Miss Catherine Curran and Indian club swinging by Miss Jennie Ciifford, The athleic activities will now be j directed toward the tennis ground near 1 the Norwich club which the committes { will visit this week and try to have in shape for opening on the first of June, Those of the club wishing to enligt in this branch of sport may hand in their names any evening at thne club, a fee for the season belng charg- | ed for the use of the courts, Two other interesting events for June are the supper and the whist, which come on' different evenings, a for each of which a special committee is at work, Phe workings of the new primary [taws now being tried in different | states are something wondeifui to be hold, and no one seems satistied with the resulis—aoi even L0 WiBuers.— $i, Bridgepers Telegrai song Swed- ghiful ride to | o ed by the | | | Hartford ' , | degree wili HAILE CLUB ATHLETICS | and | | PERSONAL Victor Pearson Is in Norwich visit- ing iriemls over Sumday. William H. MqGinnis of West Thames street I8 recovering after a long iil- Fred Engler of , now with | he Cunard Sunday at his Jome In t wilth grip | ghter, = Mrs. | Mr, and Mrs. Emil Stevens nf Nor- guests of Mr. a V{rs. 1 Rbgers at Niantie Sa York, Thomas Reeves, who is emploved u! A telegraph operator at Norwich, unday at his home in Thom- , hag recovered be around again, n & and is able to ]} Avery C, Smith has been in Noank, to look over the work being done on the boats which having built to r a two | and of Bos- n Sunday Family FIELD SECRETARY AT CENTRAL BAPTIST Vigorous Addrm Upnn What Chris- LEHMANN tian Endeavor Societies Are Doing. ¥or the Sunday evening service at the Central Baptist church Karl L mann, fleld secretary of the Y. P. 8. C. E., was the speaker before a good siz- ed audience, whom he held to close at- tention while he spoke upon the sub- ject of Conservation of Natural Re- Sources. Connscticut, he remarked in opening, was favored by having so many Young People's pastors, of whom he was told | Rev, Mr. Wright was one. Drawing a lesson from his native state of Colora- do, where the snow and raln of the mountains is saved and stored up for irrigution projects, he said that the formation of the Y. P. S. C. E. was very much in a parallel line, as it was: meant to be a saving and utilization of the enthusiasm and energy and meql | of the young people for work in the church. Orgenized 31 years ago, the Christian Endeavorers now number more than four million young people and with the Epworth league make this total six milHon. One of the points that Mr. Lehmenn { made was that if the church of tomor- | row is to be stronger than the church of today we neod more of denomina- tional loyalty. There is a vast differ- | enca between denominational loyalty | and sectarianism. We need more fo the formier and less of the latter. The Christian Endeavor is attempi- ing to try to train the young Chris- tians in the great need of giving for God, he declared, and in this connec- tion he presented a vigorous denunci- atlon of strong drink. The time is coming, he declared emphatically, when the church must either renounce faith in Jesus Christ and fight the Weo spend drink, $900, ,000,000 £ dy, peanuts | g gum, 40,000,000 for moving pictures, §$220,000,000 for edu- cation, $1790,000,000 for home church expenses, but only a remnant for mis- sions, The old Script ur“l ru ontinues There i Conne moderr de»,rues, from clusive. T e 32d in in the | 20th degree in the afternoonm, uanqnet| 1t 6.15, and in the evening the 27t | be worked In Ansient | | Springneia, officiating, a son of Har Beth Israel field jed his funeral | strons. in over 100 | Appointed Real Estate Committes. Allyn 1. Brown, W. W. Lang and Shepard 'B. Palmer have been named as a rea] estate committee by the di- Irectors of the Norwich Industrial I provement association, They will hueg churge of the laying out of the land at the Mason place on Laurel Hill which remains after the Thermos com- pany’s plot of seven acres is taken off. The laying out ef streets, pipe lines and other detalls will tome under thefr charge, THE LATI PMIL ARMOUR of Chi- eago sald any man was foolish who pald over ten cents for & ecligar, but some do not agree with him, It is said | that Piérpont Morgan emokes these | that cost $5.00 each, ly treated, Armour had the best judgmesnat, There's a triek jn meking geed eigars that cemes with years of ex- perience. We are the oldest menufac- | turers in the stute and helieve the | NORWICH FALLS ov the CLUB HOUSE CHGARS aie the best enes made for 10 ]cenu RAPHAEL & SON W0 BOYS STRUCK | pact The P worth {groes, who | street, occupied by the families of Wil- ] Members—Reperts from Cenvention. jan Interesting report of the session, He gets the to- |and It Iz probable that u delegation baceo from Havana and has it speecial- | Of the two men, we think | BY AUTOS Neither Badly Hurt—Bartholomew Knocked Down in Thames Street—Twelve Year OH’Parman Sage Peringer Boy Run Over in Thamesville—Got Up and | Walked Away. Barthelemew Hannifin, whe will be Brown, but foriuns.c. ve his next birthday, son of Bartholo- | Ol brulses on his knees and Hannigin, of 118 A - prpnae i g was struck and knoc pear bis home Bunéay ail 630 o'clocik by an automobile driven by B, A Cudwerth, but the boy waa p:vh.hxy net -:L:ou-ly 1njured, atcord- ing to t of Dr. Patrick a 1€ o. Th d dc en apout mes | treet, " wn | wh Bro: bile with hls sen. As Mr. Brown's automebiie was re- own, who was riélag in ibe sutomo- turning towards the city, traveling at him i the perrow ming . ven Pag aae end the MeCrum-Howel plant. 5 Mr, Cudworth waa driving his maciine . ' s Bt a slow rate aiong the street, it was | dutomobile. The driver of e ont stated, when the small boy tried to |®ounded his alarm and put on the crogs In front of the car and was hit and kuooked down, put not run over. automoblle wag and the boy was fal in the wmmah uries to consy hrakes, the other occupants of the au- | tomoblle shouting at the boy, t na@ and Ulm! to xpx out of the miy ' th way, hef i opaaion o help he gave n.uz:Ky Escape for Peringer Bay, 4 afterncon, near the | ¢ Thames street, 12 | fon 1 ar old Frank Peringer was run over | to the by an automodiie driven by Carl W. ! dent. NORWICH BOY ARRESTED | TRIAL THi§ WEEX OF AS MADERO SPY{‘» NORTH STONINGTON CASE. James J, Murphy Had Exciting Exper- ience in Juarez, Mexioo. Dwight L. Minor Will Be Before Jury on Mnml-ughhr Charge. James J, Murphy, formerly a Yale medical student, of Providence, R, I, and who has been working in 1 Paso, en route to Los Angeles, and M. K, Perkine, formerly of New York, who now a member of the White 8ox team i1u the city bassball leage, wers arrest. ed yesterday afternoon In Cludad Jua- red by the Red Flaggers and held In the unspeakable jail of that tewn for three hours on suspioion of belng Ma- Revoral 1mportuz( cases remain to be tried before the superior courl now in seswion at New london for the May state vs, Dwight 1. Minor, the 17 year old North Stonington oy, charged| with maenalaughter In brother Robert, aged 20, It ls expected that the Minor case will follow the trial mow under way, that of Willlam Pero, the "young man dero aples, says the Kl Paso Times of | charged with arson in setfing fire to May 9. The men were unable to speai | the Bulley stables in this city. The Pero ish and entertalued fears for | case was started Friday afternoon and thelr ltves when they saw armed men xbr;mhln‘ around the place and bugles 0 Murphy and Perking were arrested at 2 o'clock yesterday afternoon by a detachment of Red Flaggers, whose ceaptain was intoxicated. The Americans belleve that they were de- nounced as Madero sples by two ne- declered they saw the | Mr, Fitzmaurice. Americens coming cut of Mexican| Young Minor is very much uncon- Consul Liorente's office in El Paso.|cerned. He says very little, but | After three hours spent in jail they | watches everything happening in the| were given a sort of trial and told to | court room interestedly. He has ex- leave the town. pressed no sorrow since the shooting J. J. Murphy was formerly of this !or his deed. city, having been graduated from the In the court rcom every day since' Academy in 1806. He caught on the |the court opened have been Minors I:cl.demy ball team, He has been in | grandfather, well past 76, with flowing | El Paso two months, hair and beard, and Minor's younger CHIMNEY FIRE DRAWS ‘brulhel. a boy of about, 10. CROWD SUNDAY AFTERNOON.|2r¢ sl | charged Damage Slight at House No. 13 North ,\‘"“’“h Clff Street, Owned by Mrs. John hid © Wi Walsh, will probatly last through Tuesday. The witneses for the Minor trial have been on hand since the opening of the term. Among the witnesses are Coroner Franklln H. Brown, Dr. Scan lon of Westerly and Walter Fitzmau- rice. Dr, Scanlon was summoned to the Minor home immediately after the shooting, and went accompanied by | Among the other cases to be heard! the case against Bdward Stacey, with bgamy in marrying 2 woman this \hrnh \\"lcn he nd ¥or a fire alarm rung In from box 98, Cliff street near Qak, at 5.4 Sun day afternocn,the department respond- amor or of § ¢ ed promptly, with the auto chemical gre In County Probation | making a fast run, the fire being on; Officer Ma Among the ocon-}| - the roof and in the chimney at the finued cases are those against Abra- dwelling house No. 13 North CHff | ham Daniel Kudlik, George An upstars and F X "'ALcTu,m P"RFHA‘E OF P BRINGS LAWSUIT. fires at he the town amue} mer vs. Lyceum ° of New Londen was settled when judgment was entered by agree. ment with the clerk of the & er'ur court Norwic | Preachers from Baston and Westerly to Fill Central Baptist Pulpit. P at, n the absence of Rev. v fo ot “x C‘enventlon . Wright an the thres | had broken | aw mon, will r the semmer sin. CLASS OF ELEVEN IN WHITE CROSS COUNCCIL Knights of Celumbus Gaining with relatives in V v"nn. oss} Chinese nCnnnl children sit with thei backs to their teaciners. At a well attended meeting of White Cross council, No. 13, in Foreste hall, Sunday afternoon, the first de- gree was conferred on a clas sof 11 candidates, Grand Knight B, G. Burkel and Past Grand Knight P, F. Bren nan, delegates to the annual state con- tion hold in Waterbury last week, gave | | A committee was appointed to arrange for the exemplification of the third degree on a large class early In June. The exercises to be held at the un- veiling of the statue of Columbus at Washington on June $ were dlscussod, i from White Cross council will attend, Chicken Thieves on Prospect Street. | A Prospect street resldent informed the police on Sunday that chicken thieves had been busy in his eoop over COLLAR Summer Wear, 2for 28c. New Y night. Sunday merning he found only the severed hesds remaining of u roas- | PROF. ASFARINE SHAN, ter und four hens out of & flock of & |y, mig; und . Clairveyant, can. advise deze | xou all uios lite, anything y % i Tells your name. es of some men oft Temind us wxv.(m s, Neswleh, | Prita 30 can ‘Whasa the nse2 4168, ' Abundance. {No Poisonous Sugar of Lead |$2.50, [ grower, ady, you have mis: a koeps the scalp N clean, and causes t}v ‘hair to come in thick and abundant. Wio | goes not 018 lead i Ada 1 at Pomfret Youn on & street is LUSTROUS HAIR FOR WOMEN b { ] Increases Its! Fing ‘e Crov Delightful, in or Sulphur >A...s AN Sage, the beautifier and d'a real treat. 18 PAR{GIAN aruff ar luster ¥ dve. pomnh or any PARISIAN Sage is not a rontain a particle to dls the triot Austin ards are . Wiklis Ric Learned M Bela P. and Mrs. 1! ti an- son of New York, i term. 'The principal one is that of the | Nerwich Golf ¢ the Saturday Evening club at the club house. £ Mr. and Mrs. Nelson C. Taintor of ! shooting his] New Huven were guests over Sunday | of Mr. and Williams street. street has returned to her home after a visit with Mrs. ory cards for an afternoon tea on Wed- nesday in homor of Mrs. and the Misses timore, urday evening. Mr, and Mrs. Edward Childs and son, Sterry Childs, were guesis over Bunday of the Cogswell of Lincoln avenue heir anto- mobile from New York. Mrs. Charles coln ave: friends of Warner, Sat were played sont Miss Louise B. Meech entertained Mrs, W. Russel Baird ul' Mrs. Henry L, Bennett of Williams Charles C. McGreg- of Brook Mrs. (George D. Coit has! sent out Fitzpatrick Fitzpatrick of Bal- The Misses Luca of Sachem street music h played their home m Sat- and refr Dr. and ou Starts Hair! . rez Teler Have phone in home? ark | son are slated ]'()l'i WATCH FOBS, INDIAN POST CARDS, ETC, AT Frankiin, tquare. Norwich, Conn. | C. Wright SAY PO‘V AB(“ T THAT { iaty you. tome: Y gst !u(_lu»vn»‘ C. M. WILL 216 let's IAMS, Iain Street. Leituce, Radishes, Dandeiions, Greea Beans, FRESH EVERY DAY | i Peoplie’s Market & Frankiin 3t. I JUSTIN HOLDEN, Prop. WESTERLY HOUSE, Ales, Wines und Liquors always In stock. evening, JOWN C. KENTON & ©0,, San2bd Proprietors. F. CCNANT. 1 Fraaklle Street ~e 8¢ and the J. ¥. € 10¢ the meat ar ihe markei 3 10n you e————— . Dustbane ¥ ‘X2 Gl { Lx LN Padllc Stemograpker J83 Minia St oV fhke Lunches served fres every Saturday . - 'Dla you get ma iever yesterday? Do jou realize that bunch o vou D you Auring aro eso. heaut Ox mlull,' v