Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 11, 1912, Page 7

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P Henry Allen & Son FURNISHING UNDERTAKERS 88 Main St. Norwich, Tuesday, June 11, 1912, —_—_— THE WEATHER, Forecast for Today. For New Kngland: ~Fair Tuesday nd Wednesday; moderate west winds. |~ Predictions from the New York Her- |ald: On Tuesday continued fair and | warmer weather will prevail, with | ight variable winds, followed by in- creasing cloudingss, and on Wednes- day unsettled weather, with slightly lower temperatures. Observations in Norwich, The following records, Fegbrtéd from Sevin's pharmacy, show ihe change: in temperature amd (he barometriz changes Monday: ASSISTANT WHEW REQUESTED. SPINACH, = ASPARAGUS, GREEN BEANS, CUCUMBERS Ther. a mi. TOMATOES, ~ LETTUCE, |%27™ ETC,, - ETC,, Highest 77, lowest 5. .l Comparisons. Fresh Every Day Predictions. for Monday: Fair and warmer, Mondugy's weéather: As predicted. People’s Market 6 Frankiin 8 Sun. Soon ana Tides. ‘| Sun I _High || Moon | Rises. | Sets. || Water. || Rises. JUSTIN HOLDEN. Prop. {Day. |[a. m [ m [ & m || & m — | 15 1 T -1.20 351 || 1.08 11 w1 132 12 1 | 1.58 : p 16 o0l e | ;‘AB 4 SAIL and MECHANICAL BOATS, | .- 418 | PAILS, SHOVELS, SAND TOYS. | S'X bours affer high water 1t la iow | tide, which 1 CELLUOID DOLLS and FLOATING | e GREENEVILLE NEWS TOYS, KITES, CHARACTER DOLLS, | LUNCH ard BEACH BASKETS, X Children's Day Exercises in Congre- gational Church Under Direction of €ranklin, Square. s followed by dood tide. rogramme of Children's day Greeneville Congregational unday afternoon was as foi- Norwich, Conn. | | lows: o | Ordinance of vaptism to five littie - hildren; prayer, Pastor Ricketts Ringland The Fa . o Raymond Ha 3 Th in the hot weather Light ,rimary ciuss: Littie Work 2 3 KKramer, William Semple, Thomas Fur- w.fllh. Suit Cu.es ,“d e e e S with all accessories in leather Fest. primary class; Buttercups I . Daisies Gertrude Oelze; Wayside goods at lowest prices. Plowers, Lillan Karkutt; What a T, Child Mal do, by ten girls; The ( ande! The et he Stream, Annie “e Shekafl "a”L’) icy Buchanan, Sarah McGill, WM. C. BODE, PROP., Van Dyne, Marguerite Suthill; g wiie and Helen Crowe: 283 Main Street, ks hanan, ) Marguerite thill, Wini ; musical mono- We can show you Team !gue. M gland: Autur Anna Gorton Voices, primar: Harnesses and Express Har- s 1 unbeams, Agnes Fur- nesses—a number in different ! Mo it Beatrice Hall, styles and prices. Also a serviceable line of Summer Auto Robes at the The L. L. Chapman Co. 14 Bath St., Norwich, Cona. | IN JUSTICE T0 YCURSELF eing entirely new and . under the direction of i Miss Le an, Frank Ben- violin, and a chorus of The programme was arranged ant_Foster, Miss Marion P Miss Martha Ringland, und: ryision of O, W. Carpent }. FIRE IN PROSPECT STREET. Shed Belonging to Daniel McCormick | Burned to the Ground. You shoyld investigate my methods = before deciding where you will study | About 3 o'clock Monday afternoon Shorthand and Typewriting, Studens @n alarm was sent in from box 27 by stadyingswith me have the advantage Policeman Allen C. Matthews for of getting actual business practice be- | fir it d in the roar of 212 Pre fore taking a positien, thus gaining Dect street. The -shed -t owied by experience and confidence. and are bet- | Daniel McCormick vas bured to equipped ‘o undertake the work Chefhicals. were they wish to do. HATTIE L. JEWETT. Public Stemographer and Shortband | Teacher. | gro bu n th 10%1 90, \b The e > alarm. used at am rect- building was will that Arst an not thoug] hildr it the building cansed auto chemical and mpani respond 3 Main St Worcest Mul his ho of Villiam Mc siting at B :., at Miss Amy Whe t reet has returned from a PAINTING FEDARNTING are | Wity = et trom our speciz tford s with his P. E. MURTAGH 92 and 94 We | TAFTVILLE Wequonnoe School 21—Spraying Vi Summer Millinery A fine assortment of latest styles in Hats. Come in.and see them. | MRS. G. P. STIANTON, 52 Shetiscket ‘St. lage Trees. Pon mpa company The aying rees houses, yrother-in teeves of Pr York, A WEDDING GIFTS In Great Var: 'y at FRISWELL'S 1647 Adam’s Tavern il ; 1861 Hartwell G. Thompson of Yale is s ter the & pharmacy of ad employ as b s and " Bcoth Ale, Guinness' Dublin C. & C. imported Ginger Ale, Bunies Hul P. B. Ale, Frank Jones' Nourisa- | ing Ale, Steriing Bitter Ale, Anheuser Buawelszr. Schiltz and Pabst A A ADAM, Norwich Town. Tewpnone i-1% MT. HOLYOKE FELLOWSHIP FOR MISS A, P. COMSTOCK | New London Girl in the Honor at College. List -3 The students of Mt. Molyoke ecol . TR |lege nt South Hadley, Mass, colo- DR. C..R. CHAMBERLAIN |25 53 sonlr and sophomore pun. ors were ounced d th fellow- Dental Surgeon Shig fur the REXt year Wers awAtOeL =] Those receiving fellowships were A, 2 A D5 8 1. Bdets cract P. Comstock, 1910, New London; . 1903, Cheshiry wuliing, Conn.; h Had- 1912, Co- ng his Buildirg. o8 ess Noerwich, Conn. the grove and vy BUY YOUR BOOKS | Funeral for WBgAGER piresi Graduation Gifts and Embalmy: $ at | 70 Franklin St Bulietin Bidg. ~ : 5 | Telephone 643-2. LRANSTON S Prompt service Aay or night Zady Assistaxt. Restdence 116 Broadway. opp. Theatre. Telephone €42-3 WHEY before ou want to mut o public. there than _through the olumns o The Suiletin. were especially | young la- |\ Close on June Toe Bulletin._|THREE GOUNTY GASES FOR PARD o At the meeting Monday in Hartford of the state board of pardons to hear the applications of prisoners seeking their freedofn, the following withdraw- als were annouriééd: New London county—Addie Burns, Harry Wilson, Middlesex eounity—Cora Weir. Hartford county—Joseph Sarton. Falrfeld county—Joseph Eardl New Haven county—Guiseppi Fran- co, George, Kelly, Demenico Gricco, Frank McCarth: Litchfield county—Guiseppi Brignolo. The following constituted the bgard: Governor Baldwin, Judge Johu M Thayer, Morris W. Seymour Bdward Harland, Hon. Lew and Dr. George H. Knight. Among the cases to be heard were those of Kate Cobb, serying a life term for the murder of her husband; John Warren, life prisoner, who was sen- tenced for ‘the murder of his wife, and George Redding, who.was sentenced to death May 8, 1912, for murder in the first degree. The first petition heard was that of Joseph Toscano, who was sentenced for life in New London county, No- vember, 1904. = He claimed that he shot in self defense. Attorney Hadlal A. Huil the prisoner camo up from New York to New London, armad with a revolver, and he fired four shots with the inten tlon of iliing. Attorney Manton that ths shots wera sired in selt de- fense. The fact that 'e carried a revolver was characteristic of his race | and not an indication of a determina- tion to take lifo. anuel Sy)vie of New London coun- ty, sentenced in 1906 for life, apglied for a pardon for the first time. His attorney 8ald there is some doubt as to whether the ‘ma hose_death was the basis of th ge did not walk off the dock in New London. State's Atltorney Hadlal Hul that the victini was Charles W Grton boy. Four men, among cused, took Witter on the head and s made cl o the m was thrown i The injuries which he re- would not have caused death der was_committed in perpe- tration of a robbery e Cobb, who has been in prison ears, asked for a pardon on the d er, a whom to the Frou that she had heen punished sufficlent i that she wanted to save her children other offspring from the dis; her «d in state prison Taree Confessions by Bishon. Attorney John H. Barnes, Who w fermer Governor T. M. Waller appear- ed for the woman, said that he had a pefition signed by 120 persons and in- cluding ostello Lip- ayer, ex-mayor rdon of the s convicted on Bishop, who dence convicted with her, made three t. confessions. ~Which was On one cf these confessions Cobb was convicted. Mr. Barnes he confessions He said that Mrs, the confessions of I three times or told the truth once, but which time he did not know. Argument by sx-Governor Waller. Governor Waller s he did not appear as counsel, but in the execu- tion of a promise made many years Appiala Madds b dosephs Toscalo, ManshSriva: and Kate Cobb—Strong Pleas For Last Named by Attorney Barnes and Ex-Governor Waller—Addie Burns Withdraws Ap- NORWICH B ago that he would appear for Katc Cobb when she applied for & pardon. Whnen she first applied for pardon he (Governor Waller) was absent from the statz. He (Governor Waller) prosecuted, as state's attorney, Mrs. Cobb. Kor 33 years Mrs. Cobb has received the sympathy of pr ficials by her quiet womanly behavior. Tho warden of the state prison would, if official propriety permitted, ask that she be pardoned. Some of the jury- men withheld their verdict because they believed Wesley Bishop killed the man. They held out, but-finally agreed to a verdict of murder in the second degree. If she is guilty ought you not to extend her pardon even if it is for a small fragment of her life? If she is not guilty she should be pardoned. The confesslons of Bishop wWere ob- tained in installments. The first con- fession startel with making Bishop the paramour of ths woman. In the second confession there is the intima- tion that Kate Cobb killed his wife, In his third confession Bishop sald he kitied his wife, Kate Cobb was convicted on the testimony of Wesley Bishop. Without the testimony of Bishop, Mrs. Cobb could not have been convicted. Crime Committed by Arother. As the late Governor Richard D. Hubbard sail then,"that woman ought not to have been convicted on the tes- timony of Bishop,” There is no evi- dence that Ka‘e Cobd was a murder- ess. Kor 10 years Mrs, Cobb lived a life_of sweet domesticity with her hugband. She was tempted by a viler creatire than che serpent which crawl>1 i Eden. For many years it has brooded on his mind—not that he feared he had lone Wrong as State's attorney—that Kate Cobb is in state’s prison suffering for a crime commit- ted by arother. If It is the polcy of this board o grant no relief or if any- one on the board favors this policy these trials are idle. ey give hope to petitioners and lawyers to crush them Poiley should be settled by the legisiatire and not by the board of pardons. Bishop's Testimony Valusles: Governor Waller asked, in God's name, that the board of decision should show that a New England state has a board with & heart of mercy. There is not a man among the mem- bers of the board of pardons who would hang a dog on the testimony of. Wesley Bishop. The first confession of Bishop leaked out through a Masonic temple. When Mr. Wait suggested to him af- ter Kate Cobd's comviction if it was worth while putting the state to the expense of trying Bishop for murder in the first degree if he pleaded guilty to murder in ths second degree, he (Governor Waller) replied: “He should hang.” But he finally consented to accept a plea of guilty to murder in the second degree, Opposed by State's Attorne, State's Attorney Hadial Hull of New London county, on behalf of the state, opuosed elther a pardon or parole for Mrs, Cobb when the board reconvened n_the afternoon. Mrs. Caroline Buell of East Hamp- ton spoke in behalf of the prisoner, whom she did not know, and had only seen once. The board adjourned late in the aft- ernoon' until Saturday when it will 2gain be in session. No decisions were iven, WORK HAS BEEN STARTED ON LAUREL HILL BRIDGE. * | Present Concrete and Asphalt Cover- iny Being Removed—Electric Feed Wire Overhead. e r ck on the Laurel Hill started on dge wa Monday when takix of the asphalt and con- te dbed on *he bridge was s ed, I portion in between trolley track having been removed wesk. The use of the br except | by those walking has been stopped. | and it is expected that it will take six | weeks at least to co; hich W I be mad »f the bridge. entirely to the { The Connecticut company has run | the undersround feed wire, which | would be disconnected during the re- pairs, from the west end of the bridge | up v e sonth footpath,where tem | porry ‘ms have been placed, and | connection {s made with the track on | the east side of the bridge. A tool- house ' hs { been eracted by the bridge men at the entrance to Talman street. ON ARTILLEYME N’S BAGGAGE. | Receipts for Every Article When Men Go to Fort Wright This Year. There will be such a strict system zing baggage of the Connecticut ast Artlllery ;mén, who go to camp r ten days at Fort H. G. Wright next Monday, that ‘some of the men con il be to think it.a hard o receipts from the baggage 1 men, who unload the baggage Wright is is all due to the- los and individual property rps went to camp last glasses, overco: re among the 1 a tent lost articles of the 911 encampment. It s not proposed to provide an ‘opportunity for any- thing to be missed this year Captain Brajnard Tavior, U. § ingpector general of the C. A. C, C. N. @, met officers of the eastern t of the state at the New London ory last Friday night.. He outlin- ed the plans foy the encampment and showed {he weak points disclosed by 1o recent examinations of * officers, ‘which follow the camp of instruction 4t Fort Wright last month- SIX LINES OF WORK BY Y. M. C. A, COMMITTEE Open Air Meetings Planned to Begin This Month, | _The religious werk committee of the Christian association Y. M. C ans for the tneludes P, Bishop, | ' 0, Wright, R : W, Guard. The e for the year will ineluds work: Bible study, B ngs during the summer, and theater meetings e shop m work; devetional werk. | The first open air meeting will he | heid June 80, the plaee and speaker to | be announced later, A section where the Oily Beautiful den increases vearly is Hickery street, where the few househelders are deing their best to make ihe surroumdings aitraetive. plete the repairs, | quartermasters, loading t at New London, will have to non-commissioned officers in ) ge details written re. cach -article. The captain nsport on which the bag- ken must ocertify ipts: The quartermasters STATE ORGANIZER IS BOOMING NORWICH CONCLAVE Heptasophs Had Class of Ten Mon- day Night—Big Meeting Later in the Month, Norwich conclave, No. 424, Tndepen- dent Order of Heptasophs, is receivin; the biggest boom o its history through the efforts of State Organizer W. H. Duncan, who is in town for several veeks in the interest of the conclave. There was a Jargely attended session of the conclave Monday evening in Hibernian hall, when a class of ten candidates was initiated and seven ap- | iications_for membership were pre- | sented. Perparations are being made |for the inittation of a class of thirty | candidates on the evening of June 24, Supreme Organizer John W. Cruett of | Baitimore will deliver an address. | Members of Groton and New London { conclaves have been invited to attend and big delegations are expected from those districts. The work of initla- tion Mongay cvening was conducted | by State Organizer Duncan s 4 i | HINDMAN SETTLEMENT | SCHOOL IN KENTUCKY. | bz rioiah | Miss Ruth Huntington Tells of Its Work—Is Teacher Ther Miss Ruth Huntington gave an in- teresting talk on the work of the Hindimun settlement school fu Ken- tucky to a number of ladies at her home on Broadway Monday morning. Miss Huntington is a teacher in the chool, which is & two days’ trip from the iroa The houses about the localit far apart and isolated from the outside world, and the people are descendants of early ploneers, About ten years ago two Kentucky ng women started the school, and attendance Is mow about three | undred, one hundred being in the boarding department. In its require- | ments the school is modern, the girls | being taught domestic sciences, sew- ing, home nursing and laundry work, and the hoys agriculture according to modern methods and also shop work. Tha furniture of the school building made by the boys. As the people uf that loeality live entirely by exchange and barter, the children have no mon- ev for tuition. The scholars enough to pay for their board and | schooling, which amounts to about [3100. Many scholarships are contrib- uted by northern people. such as| | wornen's clubs, societies, church socie- | |tiew, etc, and Individuals. | | Mise Frelen Rue, also a_teacher of | | the school and a guest of Miss Hunt- | | Ington, sang several English baliade, including Barbara _Allen and the Brown Girl. Miss Rue also spoke of the conditlons surrouriding the schnol. During the meeting it was suggestad that a scholarship of $100 he raised, and Miss Delin Leavens offered to re- celve any contril-utions. T 1 STRIKE BREAKERS ARRIVE. i‘EigMy»fl«e Negroes from New York Come to Handle Freight at New |\ London. hiy-five negro strike breakers Yew York were breught to New Monday night to taks the of the freigh: handlers who on Sunday_ night at the dock | Central _Vermont railroad. heing moved witheut dela. |1t is said that seme of the strikers | have asked to be taken back, byt that | Superintendent Cestello intends to em- vloy the strike breakers permanently, I+ | from | Lendon W, W, erganizers, whe have been werking in eastern (pnmecticut mill towns, went o New Britain, but met ) reRuous eppos jon from the vnions, and had no success in offoria te ergunize LAe polishess, Wil ay A 8OIL SURVEY It l"r‘um Theroughly Dene and Ac- .. ‘complishes Widespread Good. Regarding soil surveys, the chiet of the bureau of solls fius this to say: In the fleld work of the soil survey ‘the solls are studied to determine their texture, or the relatlve amounts of coarse or fine particles of which they consist; their structure, or the rela- tionship of these particles ome to the others; their organic matter content. both quality and distribytion; their internal patural drainage, and their topographic relief. These factors op- erating togéther determine the charac- ter of the home which plants are to find n the sol. All masses or areas of soil which are found to be- closely similar in all of these respects are said to belong to the same soll type, Un- der similar eclimatic surroundings the type is capable of producing similar kinds of crops, and under the same «conditions of farm management and of farm efficiency. they may be expected to produce practically equivalent amounts of crops. It has also been found that several soil types in a given regton may differ only in their texture, being _identical or similar in all other respects. Such a group of soils is called = series. Again, several series have been found to be derived from the same classes of material by similar processes and to exist in a reégion having similar cli- matlc features in the broader sense fnuch a reglon constitutes a soil prov- ce. Many Types of So Careful consideration must be given to the fact that between 1,200 and 1,- 600 types of soil possessing distinctive properties are already known to exist. It rests with some one, whether a pri- vate individual or a public official, to determine the crop or crops to which each one of these soils i best adapted; o devise the methods of soil manage- ment by which each one of these solls may be made to produce a sufficient crop to repay all the expenses and to render a profit; to adapt the systems of farm economy -through crop rota- tions, tillage, and fertilization so that these diffgrent soils may produce their crops for'long periods of time at least without deterioration, and, if American farming is to become a science, with actual increase in crop-producing pow- er, Moreover, it is necessary that the discovery, introduction and culture of crops adepted to these -varifous types shall follow such lines that the great- est food values as well as the highest commercial values shall be rendered by each sofl. It is mlso a necessity that upon widely extended types such crops shall be grown as are subject to wide demand in the markets of the world. Otherwise the farmers engaged in crop production must face a destructive competlition or else portions of the soil type must be neglected or but feebly utilized. Has Dual Aspect. The soll survey Work thus possesses & dQual aspect: (1) It must deal with those problems of crop and soil adapt- ation which concern the present indi- viduals and generation; and (2) it must accumulate a fund of information in regard to soils which will assist in solving the ‘broad problems of the nation’s soil resources and the utiliza- tion of these resources, mot only for the support of the growing population, but also for maintaining a favorable balance of trade for the nation. The scientific classification of soils as given in the soil survey reports and the accompanying maps has a many sided value to different classes of peo ple_and business associations, and forms a fundamental basis for all oth- er agricultural investigations. The re- ports describe the origin, mode of for- mation, and physiographic features of the soils, and discuss their ph and chemical characteristics, fe factors and manurial requirements, their adaptation to crops and to rota- tion, and the methods of management required to achieve the best results in cultivation. Reports Much Used. These reports are now extensively used by experiment stations, univers ties, agricultural schools, and state of ficials, government departments and federal officials, boards of trade, mu- nicipal authorities, and business or- ganizations, banks, insurance compan- ies, attorneys, and others interested in local values, granges, practical agri- culturalists, and agricultural firms and are being more used. and more fully apprectated with extension and better understanding of the work The soll surveys giving, as they do, the orderly arrangement and classifi- caton of the soils of the state, are of value to the experiment stations in giving a soll-tvpe basis for investiga- tions of the fertilizer requirement, crop rotation, crop adaptation, plant breed- ing, plant diseases, and soll manage ment of particular farms or of large areas In any partlcular state, for the establishment of sub-stations on im- portant sofl tvpes, and for farm dem- onstration work. They material (the soil) assists them their work of mapping according (Continued on Page Three.) in t0 FREEMAN REPLACES BUGBEE IN YALE VARSITY Latter Goes to the Four-Oar—Fresh- men Cheered by Arrival of Thorne. There was another shakeup in the Yale varsity eight Monday when the coaches sent Freeman into row at No, replacing Bugbee, who was sent to the four-oar shell. The varsity wen downstream from Gales Ferry to t toree and a half mile mark Monday ht in each stretches and then row- | ed back the entire tch at a fas clip, The stroke sometimes went as high as thirty. The rhythm of the boat was somewhat broken, but other- vise the men showed some improve- ment. The varsity four oars and freshmen eights had a busy afterncon. The freshmen rowed six miles at a stretch while the four-oar men were first sent out in pair oars and later boated in fours for a two-mile spin. The arrival of Thorne, who has heen conditioned in studies, was hailed with delight by the freshman oars wnen. It is belleved he ¥ill materially cirengthen the freshman boat if he are of value to the state geo- | 1ngical surveys, as the mapping of the | NOR Christ Church Rector and Vested Cholr at Sheltering Arms—Loocal Alumnae Invited to Mt. Holyoke— Crowds Attending Mission Services. Rev. Richard Graham of Christ scopal church read the service of evening prayer at the Sheltering Arms Bunday afternoon. The subject of the address was The Ralsing of the Wid- ogv'u Son, and the text, I say unto thee, Arise. This raising of the young man, he sald, throws a light on a dark problem. Durh‘lg the course of His life, Jesus must have seen many other funerals, yet He did not put forth His power. Even though God does not wipe away ail tears now, we believe i t yleasure to listen to the sweet voices of the choir and Sunday was no ex- ception. Invited to Mt. Holyoke. Local alumnae have received invi- tations to the commemoration of the |t seventy-fifth anniversary of the founding of Mt. Holyoke college, Oc- tober 8 and 9, 1912, The programme includes alumnae commemoration ex- ercises, luncheon for alumnae, inter- collegiate commemoration exarcises an academic procession on Wednesday morning which will include as far a; possible one representative from each class of the alumnae, President Woo- ley’s reception to delegates, alumnae and other gueste. Interest 1s keen as to who and how many will constitute the group of “old- cst alumnae” at this anniversary, Mrs. Julla Hyde Clarke, daughter of a Con- necticut minister, Rev. Lavius Hyde, until her death a few months ago in her ninetleth year, was the oldest liv- ing alumna of Mt. Holyoke, having en- tered the institution the day it was opened in 1837. Mrs. Clarke was the early friend for many years of a local graduate, class of '60. on Opens at Sacred Heart Church Rev. P. J. Casey, S.J., of New York, opened the week’s mission at Sacred | Heart church Sunday, king at the masses, There was a vacant seat the evening ser- The subject was A Man's Des The speaker drew les from parable of those invited to the supper, who with one accord began to make excuse. There will be masses at 5and 7 a. m, and 7.30 p. m, and a service at 4 p. m, for the chiidren dur- ing the week. Requiem for Joseph W. Roon At Sacred Heart church Monda morning at 7 o'clock Rev. ¢, T. Mc- Cann celebrated a requiem high mass | for the repose of the soul of Joseph William Rooney. During the mass Mrs, B. M. Gough rendered most impres- gively the solos, Pie Jesus, and There's a Beautiful Land on High. There was a large attendance of relatives and {riends. Two Classes Graduated, Two classes were graduated Sunday from the primary room of the Sund: school of the First Congregational | church into the intermediate depart- | ment, Miss Witter and M Cecile | Hale being appointed teachers of thesc classes, News from All Points. Dr. N. G. Gray of Vergason avenue has purchased an automobile. Mrs. Frank Heubler of Hartford is the guest of Miss Marjorie M. Barber of Plain Hill. | Mrs, G. E. Wightman removes this week from 24 Bliss place to 274 Wash- ington street. Mrs. Herbert Boardman of Hollister, Mass., is visiting Mrs. George Rogers ot Wauwecus hill Enos M. Gray and son, Enos ay, of Ledyard, were guests recent- ; of relatives here. Mrs, J. B. Talbot of Monday to visit her sister Olgen of the n came Mrs. Louis Scotland road. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver P. Wattles of Cranston, R. were guests of rela- tives here for the week end. Miss Blakeslee, who teaches the Wauwecus Hill school, spent Sunday | with friends in New London. Mrs. N. D. Webster and Miss Faith Webster were guests Saturday of Miss Helen M. Lathrop of Washington | street, | Mrs. Willlam Risley returned Mo day to Hartford after visiting her sis er, Mrs, Norcross of West Town | Mr. and Mrs. Milo Gardner and Miss | Doris Gardner of Occum spent Snndm'i {with Mrs. Adelbert E. Geer of th | Scotland road. Misses Hazel Beebe and Ruth Long | of Uncasville were guests over Sun- day of Miss Gladys Isabel Beebe of | e Scotland road. 1 and Mrs. Byron Dexter and two ren of the Scotiand road spent Sunday in Bozrah with Mrs. Dexter's You Wilt Ml;(l No Mistake if You aisorders, dizziness and nervousnass, ment. of kidney trouble, and you should seek a remedy which is recommended for st, Norwich, Conn., s he kidney secretions to disappea after everything else had failed help me. I will always recommand Doan's Kidney Pills.” For sale by all dealers. Prica 50c. Foster-Milburn Co, Buffalo, N York, sole ecgents for the Unite States. Remember the name—Doan's—and N Follow This Norwich Citizen's Advice. N Wever meglect your kidneys. 1f you have pain in (he back, urinary t's time to act and no time to experi- These are common symptoms he kidneys. Doan’s Kidney Pills is the remedy to that God gave His Son, the relevation | e No need to experiment, It has L e thisior U8 Toe et passen | cured. many tubbofn sk in Nor- i SRt e wich. Follow the advice of a Nerweh The hymns for the day were sunz |y F 000 o O by the vested choir under the direction | “ItiZen: of W. I Habekotte. It s alwa Mrs. Catherine Hogan, 22 Hickory s: “I recom- nend Doan's Kidney Pills as highly oday as when I gave a public state- ment In their praise three years ago. This remedy cured ma of a severe at- ack of kidney complaint, causing the )ains in my back and difficulty with 1ke no other HARVARD VARSITY HITS STROKE UP TO 40 Wray Dri; the Crimson—8howing Made the Best Yet. All the Harvard crews were given stif practice Monday, particularly the varsity elght, Coach Wray took the vursity down stream from Red Top to the three mile and a haif mark in easy stretches, but drove them at top speed on the way back. The stroke was to nearly forty for the greater part of the course, and In some instances it went as high as 42, The freshman elght kept pace with varsity on the way back and their roke was also high. The varsity wae in fine fettle and the showing was regarded as the best yet. There was another shift in the freshman four- car shell today, the men now rowing as follows: Weatherbead, stroke; Storrow, No. 3; Lathrop, No. 2, and Hutchins and Payne, bow. The entire Harvard flotilla of racing shells with crews aboard left the quar ters at Red Top Monday morning, led by Coach Wray, All went down stream to the three mile ‘mark, where the couching began. The varsity eight and fresiman eight were glven racing starts of about 10 strokes each at a 36 clip. The freshman four oared went out with Lothrop stroke, Paine at 3, Weatherheal at 2 and Storrow bow After a time Paine went Jp &t 2 and Hutchins at Later Weadherhead went back to 2 aad Withington went in at 3 th Steamer Chelsea Scraped Bottom. The steamer (‘helgea of the Norwich and New York Propeller company scraped bottom when she tried to make a landing at the wharf at Groton Sat- urday morning at about half tide Stops will be made there by the steam- Annual Sale &—=0F =" e Toilet Good is now in progress and will continue up to and including Saturday, June 16th. This is the most comprehensive offering of Toilet Requisites ever be- fore offered in this store or this eity, embracing as\it does, complete lines of all the best known Toilet Articles. | Be sure and visit our Toilet Depars ment before this Sale is closed — nete the splendid array of Toilet Articles— note the substamtial savings in every instance. Here is.a partial list of the many offerings in this Sale of Teilet Articles. At 15c—Dr. Lyon's, value 25e At 16c—Hood's, value 26c, At 16c—Sanitol, value 2c. At 17¢—Sozodont, value 26c. At 17c—Rubifoam, value 25e. At 15c—Colgate's Dental Powdar, At 24c—Colgate’s Dental Powden At 20c-Colgate's Ribbon Cream. At 19c—Kolynos Tooth Paste. A% 25c—Hudnut's Dentaluze Powder, At 25c—Hudnut's Dentaluxe Pagte. TOILET POWDERS At T7c—Oriental Taleum, value 18e. At 10c—Bradley's Taleum, value 15e. At 11c—Mennen's' Talcum, value 16€. At 12c—Wiiliams' Talcum, valwe ibe. At 12c—Corylopsie, value 16c At 14c—Comfort Powder, value 19¢. At 15c—Colgate’s Taleum Powder. At 70—, Urailing Arbutus Telewss Powder, large, value Zbc. At 18c—Roger & Gallet's Rice Powder, At 19c—Riverts Powder, value Zbe. At-19c—Sachet Powder, ounce bottle, value . At 25c—Hudnut's Violet sec. At 29c—Comfort Powder, value 388, er regularly hereafter except at ex- tremely low tide, when it would be im- possible to effect a landing. It is ex- pected that it will be able to land there at other times. 1@ Mrs. Amy Lockwood McCracken Roy of Providence and Miss Clarinda Dufresne of Norwic months and 20 davs. 15 Main Street, Funeral Directors AND— Emhaflers. sigter, Mrs. Ira Wheeler, | 2rs. Charlotte B. Lamb_of Mystic {and her cousin, Mrs. Mary E. McCord, | re guests Sunday of Dr. and Mrs. | H. Lamb of Town treet | Woodbury 0. Rogers of Wi sireet left Monday for Jefferson, N.| H., being called there by the death of | his mother, Mrs. Lucy Rogers | o8 | Miss Florence Bennett, who teac! tagleville, closes her school ther {oday (Tuesday) and returns this week to her home on Vergason avenue for the summer vacation. | Plainville.—Local farmers are great- | 1y interested in the experiments th(‘ are being conducted by some of their | number with sugar cane. An effort is being made by four or five Plainville | peopla interested in agriculture to raise | thiz product here. an get into condition in time The freshmen expect their new sheil foday to replace the English shell, sed by the 1909 varsity, which th rien have been using since, their ar- ilval at Gales Ferry. The only visitor at quarters Mon- day was Dr. Walter Reet, the Colum- bla coach;y who, after waiching the men work, congratulated Bob Cook upon the general work of the ecrews. The second Yale varsity eight was again split «p into fours Monday morning and then sent down strong for two miles and back to quarters. The varsity eight had a*mile and a haif paddie and then was sent over e of the course under the e time was not given out 29 threugheut. Philbin wes at No, 6 in the eight. The freshinan ejght had a mile and a half row dewn stream, Gane, whe has Leen ill, was back at Ne. 3, and Henneti, who has been taking his place, was sent baek into the freshman feur at girake. The fours as made up follow: Ligpineott, stroke; Ives B; Bryee 2 Rirchards, bewe; , coxswain. York, stroke; Oldenburg 3; Freeman Pease, bow; Sheppard, cexswain. - Manciester.—The new spraying ma chine which the town recently bought to aid in the preserving of the trees abeul town was Dul inie cemmission this week P | || Doctor Tells How to ! Shed Bad Complexion || We cannot restore degenerated fac- |ial tissue any more than we can re- store a lost limb, It is useless to {attempt to convert a worn-out com- | plexion into & new one, The rational | procedure is to remove the complex- |ion instead—remove the devitalized e Not by surgical menns, | however, as the underlylng cutis I8 too thin, too tender, te withstand im- nediate cxposure. Appiving ordimary | mereolized wax will gradua absorb | {the offending cuticle. By degrees, a | new, vouthful ekin app a pkin soft and delicat th v Tuse No lady need hesitate te try Progure am punee of mercolized wax of the druggist. Spread on a thin layer before retiring, remeving this in {the morning with seap and water. {1n from ene to twa weeks the cem- vlexion is eempletely transformed An appreved treatment for wrinkles js provided by dissolving an eunce of powdered saxolite in a half-pint witch hazel. Bathing the face in the seiu- | | tion brings prempt results. — Dr. 1;«.‘«“ Mackenzie in Popular Medi- cine. Lady Assistant. Telephone call 328-3. Henry B. Church. Wm. Smith Allen. 1913, William Bagley. son of Alfred H. and Lura M. Bagley Pollock, aged 1 month. DAVIS—In Jewett City, June 10, 1812 Annie Louise Davis, aged 13 years, § CHURCH & ALLEN TOILET CREAMS At 17c—Frostilla, value 2ée. ———————————=1 At 17c—Woodbury’s, value 2%e¢. MARRIED. At 18c— Packer's Charm, small, valse BENJAMIN-M'CRAUKEN —In Preston, s June 8, 1912, by Rev B. Prindle, | At 19¢—Jergen's Benzoin and Almess Edwin Fitch Benjamin of Preston Lotion, value 26 of Brooklyn, N. ¥ At 19c—Satin Skin Cream, small, ¥ il value 2 Y—DUFRESNE—In this city, June Yo B oy Rev: Hugh Treanor, Albert | At 19c—Pond's Extract Cold Cream, value 2ic. At 19c—Daggert & Ramsdeil's Cold COLLINS —In Willimantic A ol e T Cream. small, vaius 26e. send, George Alden and Miss Hattie | At 19c—Sanitol, value 2éc. e BT At 19c—Peroxide Cream, vaiue 3. MORAN - CONWAY —iry. " PRMants | At 19c—Adorable Cream, vaipe e Mooney, Michael . Moran and Miss | At 19c—Willow Almond Cream, value Margaret J. Con 2e. b |At Be—Colgate's Coia Cream. POLLOCK-—In New London, Juse 4| At Be—Hind's Houay asd AMSSS Cream, value 50c. At 30c—Pompeian Cream, value #fe. At 30c—Daggert & Ramsdell's Cold Cream, medium, valus 3%e, At 37&6 Packer's Charm, large, value s0c, At 39c—De Meridor's, large, value Séc. At 39c—Pond's Extract Vaalsking Cream, value b0c. At 39c—Daggert & Ramasdell's Cold Cream, large, value S0e. At 38c—Satin Skin Cream, large, value 50c. At 45c—Cuticura Ointment, value §fe. At 50c—Pompelan, medium, value §be, At 50c—Biker's Violet Cerate. At B0c—Hudnutine Toflet Cream. At 50c—Hudnutine Cream sec. At 50c—iiudnutine Marvelous Cald Cream. At 69c—Pompeian, large, alue T6e, BLUE SEAL VASELINE At Se—Yellow Vaseline. At 10c—Yellow Vaseline, PATRICIAN Ax 10c_White Vasetine SHOES, OXFORDS AND PUMPS. | At 19c—White Vaseline Black, russet and white. $350 and |At 12/4c—Pomade Vaseiine 300 A woman's shos (hars right. | At 18o—Camphorated Vaseifne gt 15¢—Capsioum Vaseline. FRANK A. BILL, A JeoCamine 1oe 104 Main Strest y ANTIEE NOTICE . At 8c—-Anchor Brand Castils Seap, small, value bc. A At 7o-—Anchor Brand Castile Seam Womun's Suffrage Meeting, Y. M. C large, vaine 10c. A, Hall, tonight (TUBSDAY), at §|At Bo—Colgate's Turkish Bath Seap, o'clock. small. The speakers will be Mrs, Frnest| At 6e—Buttermilk Soap, value 18e. Thompson Seton, Mrs.Thomas Hepburn | At 7o—Colgate's Honey. and Miss Emily Plerson. Stereopticon| At 7o—Colgate's Oatmeal. i views. Admission Free, 10118 a{ 75—Coigats's Giyoirind At Te—Colgate's White Castile. At Te—Olivtlo Sonp, vahe 10e. At 7o—Lace White Caatile, value 10& | At 7e—syivan Soap, vahua ife. At B¢ Colgate’s Tarkish Bath Saap, large I]ry mea"er and I]yer At 100 Pears’ Unscented Soap, At 10c (olgate's Transparvent, At 100 Roger & Galle: Soap, smali 157 Franklin St At 10 Veduira, Violat Soap —_ At 14— Peurw’ Boonted, value 1he, SUITS PH[SSED 50 At 18c Woodbury'e, value 36e by At 180 Macker's Ter, value 3o At 190 Cutioare Boxp, value 855, Our Wagon Calls Everywharg | At oo Cutiearm Mot e et ----- e | At 28e—Hudnut's Vielet sea. Soap, At 24c—Roger & Gallet Boap, THE FINEST 35c DINNER IN TOWR DELL-HOFF CAFE From 12 12 At 180—Jergen's Vialet Glycerin 9 eakes in & box, at 180 & value 26e, THE POATERS # MITGELL 63

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