Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 1, 1913, Page 20

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FULL ASSOCIATED s PRESS DESPATCHES POETRY . RING OUT, WILD BELLS. ad ~ i B Ring out, wild bells, to the wild sky, The flying clouds, the frosty ight; G ke 2 i D, FOR SALE or T0 RENT, Tho year is dying in the night KING CORN AGRICULTURALLY NATIVE AMERICAN (Continued from Page Eighteen) . Ring out, wilg bells, and let him dfe. Ring in the valiant man and free - —either clover or alfalfa or cow-peas or soy beans or something along To which must be added, as o all other farm propositions, a fair 2 ARE INSERTED AT THE RATE OF The larger heart and kindiler 1and: - that line. Wheat, rye, barley, timothy,—all, like oats, draw from the amount of “git-up-and-git” on the part of the farmer. % g o %ngn?ul the dariness of the land: soll and return practically nothing to it. But the legumes draw more It isn't if corn wers a new thing,—an experiment,—possibly a = 2 ing in the Christ that is to be. from the air than from the dirt and Teturn to the dirt elements of fertil- e T e e et C er ne, six words to the line s ity for the use of other crops which no ordinary farmer could afford to ate with, but of late years grown a little seedy in Connecticut estima- * 5 \DOX OF TIME buy in any other form. tion. It deserves a renewal of the old friendship. In all other parts — e goak iy ou Fay b, Ab,. ot Probably the best of all and the one mostsuitable to New England of the country it is slowly improving in yield and profit. From 1866 3 AJReF THDA sey. o s T gonditions is common clover. Alfalfa sometimes does wonders,—anc to 1886 there was a slight decrease in the average yield per acre of WANTED. FOR SALE. TO RENT. Or else were this not so. Sometimes it fizzles out completely. Anyway It's a sort of exotic with corn. throughout the country. About that latter date the effect of | ——— | what need fo chain tno hours us. Cow-peas seem a little tender for our winters: so do soy beans. better farming methods began to show. Since then the average yield, WANTEDShingle mill, boiler and| FOR SALE—_At a low price, two| 710 BENT -Furnished rooms, ¢6h-| For vouth were always ours? But clove s £ the land. It will i - engine; must be in first class condition | Safes. Call at W. H. Cardwell's, 2-9 | trally located, steam “Time goes,” you say . ah AR aer, Elongxie s &8 fuulies jto any part ot-the Jank e per acre, has'increased by about seven per cent for each ten-year e s et Cl o Ys | Market St James M. Young. . décstd | veniences. ~Inquire . Bulletin Office. ek y?—ah, no 0w on any decent soil, decently cared fon and the beauty and wonder period. That is, the land which used, in the 1880s, o produce a hun- A nactan R BTG 5 Nocwicn o oot Bt _James T Touns noved RE : of it is that the more is grown the betcer the soil becomes. dred bushels, produced 107 in the 1890s and is producing 114, now. dec3oa i 70 T—Tower tenement. _LOUF| Of/men whoss fising feot z I've heard cccasional farmers complain that their land was “clover- In what little we raise, Connecticut leads the list with the biggest WANTED A" palr oF voung (BEeers | on paentet o | rooma.” SBnguire ). Bra Rk B I orbh e Teesncae low 5 sick” They used the phrase as if it meant that the land had been average acre-yields of the country. We have ng call to be ashamed on I ®. Button, R. F. D. 5 or telephone | 31/5¢"orq, 32, oA, S i dh iy 1 :'on'niirr S "’tm ~THce andad.| Ve Bass, and think we see cloved with clover, as a fatting steer sometimes is cloyed with too much that score. - 2l e lard. _Tel! §46-6. deczbd R Ry decorated, | The earth's fized surface fiee- more acres, as well as WANTED Hall's.Barber Sghools, 814 | ~pom gy oo o~ | doining amal oo, B aiing Norwic Alas! Time stays—we go But there is room for more of us to ra still more bushels to the acre. ‘Washington St., Boston, Mass. Wages. % P 5. 24 5008 barn sultaple for ‘Warage;.mood | Savings Society. Inauire James & foom, poard, ritlroad {icket furnished | Fllson’Tor solling. | Indulfs at 148 Mc- | Fuller & Co. deciea Quee, in the days of ol cern-meal. But that isn't what happens. Clover doesn't grow in the gesert of Sahara. Nor on any other sand-dunes and rock-heaps. It . must have something to start on, the same as any other crop. Fewer B i e L83 5 o 2 - road- farmers would admit that their soil was “clover-sick” if they realized y dec28d TO. BT —The _Btore Moy B8 RO Apd mine had sham R ihat, by the statement, they were indicting themselves for cruelty to THE BOYS’ CONTESTS OF 1912. WANTED—Cotton loom _nxer, ive | ;oONM LATE MODEL seven passenger | way, noxt to the Wauregay Hotel and| . [nq mine Bad shames the farm,—for neglect in letting it run down. When soil is absolutely Lo o % PR Yoo AR It family PYET | mings; recently overhauled and in per- |as & grocery storé. ~Apply to Willam | T Weve reached the silver agey used up, played-out, stripped of all elements of plant-food, then, of 2 1s All 2 S E accsda” | Lot Fupning order. brics very low, The | H. Shlelds. apri2 Milis tocasyon say7 b o course, nothing will grow on it, neither clover nor anything else. But A Crippled Boy Excel Competitors. AT T iz, FTRNISIED RO OME — Ceniral 160a- orabi. ss. There's generall . cap; 21 r | TTHINK IT OVER — 250 noteheads | tlon. Mrs. Kmma Morse. 18 Union St | Once, when my volce was strong, very few solls ever get to that Geplorable pass. There's generally i, Eenoral housework; & references Te- | and. 300 6% (resular Lovinees sise | Rovid TP T A s g e thi cYIeED watan, Lo stir robullgig fram. They oy Junt need Returns of these corn contests for 1912 are not complete, vet, but et B tarofits APPIY 12 Tsa™ | envelones, Jieatly printed, for 31.90; 507 | ~9¢ mmMT_Btore at 61 Franklia St: To praise your “rose” and. w ‘manure; hey may need a little lime; they may need year's fallowing. sqme scattering reports indicate that the interes: is still swelling into : e e o e s et od Jocution for Any retail business. | My bird that sang s doad Each field must be studied for its needs and treated accordingly. But e RV ANEED. Raw furs, at & A Heen- | prices [or any printng vou are ln need fre Gt Bullstin Office. iyzia Where are yvour Toses fled > > ;,::’; Sondiene s Snde bollly ich will grow clover will ordinarily there were at least 70,000 boys in the rivalry for the past season, to WANTED_ALl \inds of raw furs, 3| FOR SALG_O . Cpigs tnorougn: epsem moTpE Teenae I A | T ct . = o vi oF 2 e will meet at Joseph_Connor ne' | breds, registered, none better in (he ® - traversed ways The chief secret of modern corn-growing is in the clover. Fertilize say nothing of others who will not Teport to the department at all, but Sary Ssturdaz. "R £ Wooaworthn, | country. Ludlow’ Farm, North Stoning. | _ UP T DATE furpished rooms. Mar- | What backward Fate dels 8 & = Sl have shared in purely local contests, gotten up by county fairs and novod ton. R. F. D. 5, Norw! Conn. H. F.| guerite building. Mrs. Lees. 376 Maln. hopes we used to kno: for that, iwhenever necessary, and let the resultant clover fertilize for village improvement associations and the like. Recent western papers Button, s % % oct2éd e are our old desires ?- the'corn. | It will do it. And, as a rule, barnvard manure s the best sy ogaannth e ekl notis o A A o T e T Ah! where these vanished fire SEseEeee. jeten: for cloyar. - THOBEI e farmers miust never: fonget that Up in North Dakota, for instance, the “Better Farming association” Pointments. coming; pull uUnnecessary; | 6% envelopes (regular business izo), Time goes, you sa ah, nol Sy Somusipladn Saoneelbat duesded: plaut-food. - 1t hasimore last spring started what is called an “Acre Yield Corn contest.” Five Norwich examinations soon. Candidates | card printed in corner, $1.40; 1 4 FOR SALE. nitrogen than anything eise, and clover is, in itself, a tireless nitrogen x > i T coached free. Franklin Institute, Dept. | $2.00; 5,000, $6.0(; 10,000, 10.00. How far, how far, O Sweet! 4 = i i Y hundred and thirteen farmers entered, with 7,630 acres of corn. The SoRohed N ester R SR S Ctehen o 6ot srinted 14D e v o e e S A e R A M el contestants had an average of almost fifteen acres each.—You'll agree S - $2.10; 5,000, $6:30; 10,000, "312.5 G At ; vi it many ears. In that case, the addition of either lime or phos- <3 i pes . WANTED—Piano_tunirg. A. G. Gor- s 81 L, in the even-giow withoul oy S > e oot e s s with me, I think, that fifteen acres of corn is no “sarden patch."—The acn, 208 Prospect Bt..City. TelL 683-2, | Yo 0. cound, “fossy Srinted 31 Now, on the forward wa phate o potash—as the soil may require, 1 even things up. highest vield per acre was T13-4 bushels, and the average vield of the vid Taitaa 00 b als C0,000, S8 FOR SAI E Let us fold hands and prey In cultivation the true ;“"' :‘ the °°:1"‘9"°“’h°'l‘9 ‘;’ kezpfil‘he top- contestants was something over 55 bushels. This same season, the 2105 5,000, $7.00; 10,600, $13.50. ' 500 Alas! Time stays—we go! soil light and muich-y and free from weeds, without injuring the corn- average yield of the state, outside the Acre Yield contestants, was less statements,” 536x83%. = printed $1.40; —Austin Dobso Toots. Not many of us appreciate how much harm can be dome to the e WANT L0007, Susn” Fool it 1001} NO. 88 WiLLIAMS STREET, 2 erop by injury to its wide-spreading rootlets. Investigation has shown Down in Arkansas, Willie Brown, 18 years old, has just made a romptly. Send for samples. The Bul TWELVE-ROOM HOUSE HUMOR OF THE DAY & that, in a good soil, with proper treatment of the crop, the roots and record for the state and, it is said, for the entire southwest, by pro- Cooks, Waitresses, General House |lotin Co., Printers and Binders, Nor- WITH MODERN rootlets from a single corn-hill will practically fill the earth for more ducing on a measured acre 172 2-3 bushels of corn, at a cost of fourteen Girls and Housekeeper (middle aged. | Wich, Conn. e S e o ihan two feet all avound it, and from within two inches of the surface céts: per bushel —Axa Willis Brows 1s'a ciipDie, <withent the,nse of 3. B. LUCAS, [ SACRINIOD SATE_Pleasanily loc CONVENIENCES AND ABOUT ||, hey sav that Mrs. Newrich w to a depth of often two feet. As the plant gets all its strength from his left foo 5 73 acre farm, 35 ucres excelient | : 1 Jmald- bafore she: m X ’ e s s s o Room 32 Central Building | land, balance pasture and wood, Eood | THREE ACRES OF LAND. { “That accounts for her ability tc the foeding of these Toots, the cutiing off of any great number of them The giris are In it too, in Arkansas. The same paper which reports 9 |l P el om H K. Sation and | up stories and roast her neighbors must manifestly decrease ‘.lxslvxgnr. hecph r]flwm‘x] = :iefl) as l:;e Willle Brown’s suceess, tells the story of how little Miss’Brandon of - —- | Yillage, hear markets. T4 room colonia | Inquire of Judge. Zertile top sofl whi permit, heips enlarge the poesible hunting grounds Searcy, 15 vears old, a member of the county “GIrls’ Tomato club,” LEGAL NOTICES. gl S e map SC N “Our college won t hé & % SeRET, bE .8 D (Somnts Hby | outside and in, large barn, painted. i ) ge won v of the hungry roots, Buf cultivation should be ac shallow as prac raised, this past season, garden truck to the value of $162.35 on one- | Renhouse, cost’ 3365, sheds, outbuildings, | JAMES L. CASE, ah! Rah! Ran! What dic ticable, to prevent breaking them, and should ve entirely-stopped by the benthof Sn thone, WHIEK: metled tity A’ Cledr: DESHE! of 310890 mfterail £ | Dillainas" worth: 35,0005 price 339500 | | 40 shetucket St Noreich. Gonn. The debate.” *Oh, pshaw . time the com s haif grows, wien the danger begins to De sreates expenses of raising and marketing had been deducted. ATTENT"]N' S8 T nclides nBuschold tur . ington' Herald ANES fput whet Jittls wesding is required should be done by hand and Elmer Austin of Frapklin county, Arkansas, didn't win any prize 1 Tryon's 'Agency, Willimantic, Gonn. " | Son—Say, mamma, faty with great gare—If this sort of final hand-work was practicable and because he was tco busy supporting a widowed mother and Lwo sisters. | _sanat == | yase before’ he went o IEptaple:tfor’ DieviA JRaxkin, the wirld s sreatest: eom grower, But he raised five bales of cotton, 300 bushels of corn, kept two cows autiful majolica vase! Wai o 18,000 acres, it isn’t “all peppyeoek” for the small farmer on and a big drove of hogs, and cut a lot of hay. He maintains the G family in comfort, and paid off the mortgage left at his father's death. T All this from a 25-acre farm. ‘ ‘ e | - THE YIELD CAN BE INCREASED. Elmer Austin fsifousteen yeatwalll o < o | Fisht ‘SWay: to maxe room for Ancther gmmended to you e How . Right in our own state, 19 years old Alfred Rooke of Meriden has 2 | ch Wil be here about Jan . et ne turn out Oh, he e just won all the grand prizes on vellow dent corn, awarded at the At O 1 e e Hobsgcof SEaREsud aib all ight—Boston Transcr Connecticut Leads With Biggest Average Acre-Yields of Tecent New Ensland Corn Exposition at Boston. He isn't even the son e S e A > SON. | csoa | With 10 acres of clear tillable “I should advise you to j the C. of a farmer, his father being a workman in one of Meriden's silver The ordigancek ofjthe Gity of Nors land, located 5 minutes’ walk Sl gErevention o e 'y s. They hav vo- Jac ckwheat Hill 3 > vichiprpyife et bt e o ; i Hving, he unenthusiastic e Country. factories. They have a two-acre piace on Buckwheat Hill. Alfred, the wich provide that the owne: owners, | | B ey er a0 atstent walk KB e o L usina occupant or occupants, private cor: or any person having care of i For Sale or Exchange son, works out days. They keep about a hundred hens and have been in the habit of devoting an acre of their back vard to raising corn for ere ‘isn't anything you car from Franklin Square, Dprice s SO T T poratio; 3 any bullding or lot of land, bordering | ‘might Room Cottage, Grist Mill, Saw To sum it all up;—corn is the most important crop raised in tha United States: the biggest in point of acreaze and production, the the fowls. This last year, Alfred-took charge of the lot, giving it such on'amy stroct, square, or public place |y BiEht Room Cotiage, Grist M reasonable. than advice."— : biggest in point of money-returns, the most important in its relation time as he had, mornings and evenings. after his regular day’s work within the City, witere there.ia & side—| Mill, Cider Mill, Barn, Hen Hot i N Ve to the country’s dwindling meat supply was attended to. Hen manure was the chief fertilizet used. He had e Eraded,” SRCErsdediugng paved, n;;fif nd excellent water pri FRANCIS D. DONOHUE, s s s s Do ® It has been too largely given up in many of the older states because to carry this out in bran sacks, and put on about a huhdred of them, any and all snow, slcet and ice withi =" Do Wt minslthis; Central Building, Norwich, Conn. R | responding wif come other ¢ - ation, inadequate fertilization, and injudicious culti- with a little commercial fertilizer to help give the corn a start. The three hours after the same snall have | E. A. PRENTICE Rastus—Nope, but sin o : o o fallen, heen deposited or found, . or | . A Y ——— | R0 ted in poor, non-paying crops. It can be rehabilitated acre had been in corn the year before, mind you. It was planted rather D een CeDoR R A T s 206, Pl A I readin’ in de papers ‘b to service as an important and profitable late—May 29th,—in rows three feet apart, thinned after the plants were The same. siall have Yallon {5 the migHt sclence funds” ah kind o c 1 production; Dy the simple plan of increasing the average well up 0 one stalk in a hill, about 18 inches apart in the rowse - season’ aiso, that whoncver ihe sife- $1,750 might possibly git a lettah frc 1d and Gecreaging the labor-cost of produck There was nothing unusual about the cultivation, except that it e e Dl Slenhe | will buy a tarm consisting of 75 acres | 1" a 1 hd 1 v at is ca P - h - re wi T DU . LR 1 cotta 1 “How many servan have The cost is reducible by the larger use of labor-saving or labor- L L a o e e e oo street, square, or publio place; shall be For Sale | Rorss (meash nows: & large barn, chib: | your Ittle suburian home; 2 bushel has actually been reduced by three-quarters in the last half- R s e ocoupants, private corporation, or any HIGH GRADEWSTOCKS AND | 8om; Rleniy of wood and Some faw: | one would be enough. How It can be cut still more by keen, alert management. three years ago, with the finest strain of Illinois dent he could get, an person having the care of such build- | Blace 18 situated Ay trotiey ana’s 354 | find employment for three ela ean creanedihy2 acclimated it. For succeeding crops he chose oniy the best ears from {nEox ot to fokaae aucli-eidgwalic ‘o BONDS, to Net INVESTORS | mites from Westerly, R. I. Here is a | We always have one £ap: be ixcreas: . b e made safe and convenien re- % A I = staking braeding and selection of better seed: £1e Sestiatalks ol SRexfout rom e eyl iookul b uka e oud Toving the.ice therettom: oF covering || From § to 7 per cent. lIssued in || chance to buy a good farm cheap. In-|Ins gand ome the devel nent of better rotations, each one fitted to frost. ihe same with sand or some other sull- amounts of $100, $500 and $1,000. $750 ohig able substance. Write for list of offerings for Where do you get the plots f Largely as the result of this care in chogsing seed, he produced a will buy a 76 acre farm, over 800 cords | plays?’ “I hy meet the conditions of the individual farm The failure to do so-for two hours your January purchases. e never 1 by Third, the intelligent use of manures, farm-made and commercial, O e f“.’,i.?\,:fi"‘e’n"iafsr?mf'{fifbL’QL"-.:;e‘\;?;' quring the'daviime eXpodes The parly of standing wood on place house'ls in | replied the neted dramatit lied in acco o wi o ngland in its class, o s 2 E 5 n defau! e penal rovided by . barn, some fruit, L le noted —dramati urth, effe 2ge. cass Sof Ay Niglalion Wi Any ‘of ‘the|| 40 Shetucket St. Norwicn, cr || terms. $a50 Dt . Lt Blot in 2 R e e el | BERNGER TRABSS CO- will buy an 80 acre woodiot, about 15 | 384 ROW I'm working it up nts i i career a e 50 will be shown, con- !appointment, however, is mitigates Y | them shall pay a penaltv of five dollars Y. « - e e A the Dportant events ot | the fact that the Diclens Christmas | for svery four houts of neslect, after on macadam road, three miles from | “Ola men may have some drawbs stored away in his brain until ha calls Many views of interna- | spirit is far from being dead; it is | notice from o = pollceman of the clty. e Ll e A Lo but they are not much intereste out into glare of the foot- st are .shown, and the | very much alive today. and, curiously | oo THS, °Ejinances alst malke It the duty Send Tor wilcox's Farm Bulletin. | football, horseracing, mandolin | lights. " The company that will be seen | whole will contain five bis resis. | enough, has been one of the most Po- | a1l penaitics IncUrred under the fores St arettes,’ ragtime, Joy-ridin in this city is composed of thoroughly | Shows today at 2, 7 and 8.30 p. m. | tent factors in opposition to the “Dick- | going provisions, and if they are not FOR SALE WILLIAM A. WILCOX, | sirls, poker, pooi, ckpins, & 1s | caDuble plavers, many of whom wes ! —— ens Christmas—away from home.” | paid to him on demand, to r‘sggr:hlm' < Real Estate Broker. [f'l‘t;&';];gpb-xgunx;\‘x|\g o tic S i A2y dbers of the rigiagl cosl ud et Tha Dicksns Christse Party. herefore, anyway, we have the sat- | Jii8,ilta the party offending. Seven-room cottage mnear Clift ||| No. a1 West Brona st. mooms 1 and 2. | iime (o thivk abt ) mple. i e B o g The Dickens Christmas party, which | (5ractlo! owine SRROLL C. LILLIBRIDGE, street; modern improvements. Westerly, R. L Kansas City Journal mple o R o, | Acters they crealed. was planned by disciples of the npvel- \'&?ffiflfflafi?flgggf‘“-fifl; e e an . Secatg Sirest Commissioner. Lot 85 feet frontage by 120 feet ||| ‘Phone connection. noviid =2 s et e Do e ist and shares of his Yuledde Spiit, | TR, (UeYSAT® ofnY TS pRo dece S o v it FHE K AL EIDOSCOPE % Tmmergruen lodge, No. Sons of 2 e e miien o e Pf,:,;zm,::‘,j O ED e e TRAVELERS' DIREGTO» o e el e = | K i SCOPE . Hermann, meets in Germania hal B e e 5 )ne of the commiitee in charge, A o | e Heheican Iodee Morsi, 16, 0. | g} Senuine, holiday show with the|wiiicen to the London papers thé fol- | = . 2 1 THOMAS H. BECKLEY, FOR SAI E Horiag the jamt 0 b ¥, meets in Odd Fellows' h S R ering an act that{jowing letter: E. H. Harriman's estate is now said . : | of raw Broduce of farms in Polishers and Bufters union meets n | 145 never been equalled in the Nouse | “Sir_I¢ is with very much regret that | to be worth $120,000,600. IN 1 d Vay Building, Phones 724 e oF Ancios e Cifr perigers’ hall i since Mr. Davis opened it. I ask you to be good enough to give i L= %% OMNCAAOTY ||| 275" vain Street. 368-2 s T TR RIeen Ly 3g g o e iare The Minstrel Four g0 at entertain | publicity to the hard fact that it has (NORWICH) | i y ing in just a little different way an ks g = i i 3 - | Fire Insurance in Reliable = B T U Salataction of inins, thele | Unfortunately, been found impossible ine - | Cottage of 9 rooms, steam, | Bombay sets its water supply fron Abdience cvery time. ‘The plan ot add. | 10 et together o sufficient number of L. Companies. ko bkt sl Jumb. | three artificial lakes that depend u - e = & another feature picture. usually a | 37C< S sonsiany T Iuahe b 2 e 7 | & ectric lights and open plumb- thegrainfall in the monsoon season fo AT THE AUDITORIUM. two-reel subject, seems to. meet the | Proposed Christmas party to the Bull, For Infants and Childr ; t 84 River A Wil | thel® replenishment Sor e, s o s mel popula g All the old "res;xmm“ ‘hrzfi?s:: : ;‘Andr l‘(uhfan:z]x'a:i;mz::‘s. or 8 en. NEW YORK ing, a iver Avenue. pi = = Today is the last chanc are still coming, 2nd new friends are S = - R Bl made in'dle Tacds! ala . all-feuture Dill PIEYINE At this POPURT | heing mada Srsy Hay. celled ) ; ""| The Kind You Have Always Bought STEAMERS CASH FOR YOUR FARM |be sold cheap on easy terms. |, 7y brick made in (ne vards af theater the first half of the week, and - W ARSI I should like to take this opportuni- Mline and city °f Lfiwfiu 1901, if laid 11 bl m all whovenjoy a real good vaudeville BREED THEATER ty of thanking the press for the in-| Bears the _ Several good farms wanted at once N. TARRANT & CO. |ttt fal ponld make s Show should try and attend either the - terest they have taken and the ap-| L 2o0 & (o Ghoose this route mext ime you k. |for cash Must be good bargains. . 18 2] valk et wide around wor tin e i erss ance - |« PR S R - reciativ o i % is- ignatu.e o) o New Yorl ou’] ave a delight! ru! n. £ with e front- - = S ———— matinee or evening performance t0° | “Norwich Fire Department,” Big Local | SO puihid s Oain voraes o0 Long "fsiand Sound &nd o | uze preferred. Send particalars i 117 Main Street, City | o While the use of electrica tight-wire experts have won much ap- Feature. £h: Hlew ol i misid efel aky 1 nyoN ery in London factories he pléuse. for thelr . daring stunts and| S R R A g | doubled in the 1ast ten n feats of equiitbrium on_the iver The long looked for local motion | iy et Buraavh GUa MR Eark, Pl WILLIAM B. WILCOX .... Auctioneer | ber of accidents has no wire, Two pretty girle, Victorine and | Pictures made by the Breed theater, Zoiar, have a neat singing, dancing |are in sections, the first one being and fencing movelty, entitled “An Af- | Presented today. It is “The Norwich fair of Honor,” which is one of the Department,” and is a most com- pretiiest electrical novelties seen here ketch, showing the ringing of in a long time, while Cleary and Tracy arm and the responding compa- are more than making £00d with their action at the fire, coupling the S GN 0 SAF E ‘Y “NORWICE @ 1. '801Peck s Real Estat> Agency | uunsoss savvans 3. 10 | et of B feadini evernica sna *y gt 200U | FARMS A SPECIALTY [ana conchit% “Simh .0 iy 1o | a7 Paved with that materia SWINEHART NEW YORK Dusiness of the late Charles I Brady | A ecial expedition is “Get Rick Quick Wallingford,” the| 1In addition to the above, Pathe sreatest comedy success ever produced, g comes to the Davis theater January 2 for one nisht. The play is a dramatization of George Randolph Chesters famous “ccentric comedy act ' Today the fa- With the adaed” aftraction of e i Tous Gaument Weelkly wil be shown | Several well Known men superintend- / g Siel. Willimatiz, Chmerican 1 SeaRoE | Toare el Sxaaciiitn "1a ah. as well as several other interesting |iPg and advising how the fire should be : New England Steamship Co. P St. consisting Horser cringes. | 10 Nove e 0, Savlote for copg pictures. nched. “The sounding of the recall — - B Bl codches ; Blggics, sur: | i Nova Zembla. It is known U » ‘ 3 _— 5.one of the most perfect parts of the g cabs. sf gon poics, mar- | loland s very rich in coal. irc n 5 . 5 x E & film, and will undoubtedly be one-of = wagons, es (both double | other minerals it has never Get Rich Quick Wallingford : : n 3 of § S SinEle); amd many other things | thoroughly exam'ned. Rich New York Farcy aisesior higa lanc sithateon | Thin. is an’ oRportinity: Or. Nuyone | Ly Haieisen arsiuow bein stato macadam road overlsoking the | having use for any of these things to | a et them at the right price, Sale will Sl ST AT | S LA SR To the bi ; {Terrible Suffering |2 RS AT presents ‘lndoubied ad Ecze; ’, <, RAN b3 - any other country in the r Eczema All Over Baby's Gody. i are | Long_Distance’ Teleghone. LOST AND FOUND. the sportsman Who wishes (o n my baby was four months & High Street. . Westerly, R L 3 Eowat g saae Lo wishes: to ac 5 Freight and passenger service old his face broke out with eczema, atreot to New Fork” gechl LOST—3$40, 1n viclnity of Maln and | the supreme scale, so far 4 s e and at sixteen months of age, his face, , e ek ety Thura: Broad streets, between 4 and 6 p. m.| concerned, Portugtese Bast af . % ¢ s &nd arms were a dreadful “@ays, Sundays. at 5.15 p. m. Saturday. Reward if returned to this|fers a fleld that is unsurpas 3 e The eczema spread all over his z i"‘";‘Y'"k T ke et birar, oEfce: geesna —_— : . We had to put a mask or cloth | o o St Mpnaayy MONEY LOANED B There being a considera over his face and tie up his hands. Freight received wntl § p. m. e Diasbbis Watants, Jewar of heavy vehlcular traffic in 1 Finally we gave him Hood's Sarsapa- F. V. KNOUSE, Agent. |l 2na Becuritias of any iind At the 1647 the streets are paved pri ally with «rilla and H"A 1;\; mu:(hs‘ he was en- i an;lxi l(at;s' of ln(derels:. 1‘\: old ’ A%X;“M;B set upon a concj runda Mrs. Ines Lewie, Buctng, Maine i CEstabiisned 1972 Adam’s Tavern |5l me i rese < ar .;ipnrma“urf's blood dis- 5% z - Z I "’i‘i" C:L‘IAA?FB:L‘!-‘)A‘\IL.CD,, ping centers, but the arca, compared eases and builds up the system. | 2 Wanin Street, Upstairs. with that of granite paving, is T e o e e or New Year Gifts| 1861 Do, 2ha $a Sitmaced St tEout 1505 " < offer to the public the finest standara | 000 square yards. chocolat tablets called Sarsatabs. H brans f Be of K Americ e da of Beer of Europe and ina e of Goods Suitable Bohemian, Pilsner, Culmbach Blv.l": Barbadoes is still receiving a - For Beer, tass Pale and Burton, Muelr's | revenue from its peoplo Who are em | DOLLS, TOYS, BOOKS, | a run GAMES, POST CARDS, | Npw YEAR'S PRESENTS |80 415, Supases Dublin_Stout, | ploved“gm 'fho lefimian canai. ~ 31 1913 ‘mistakably Cohan humor. Of the twen- % or more characiers by far the great. h" B- Rlng A“to C ~ 6 5 716 Boswell Ave. Tent six ‘months & semi-annual divi- | meet military requiremer e : %, z dend at the rate of FOUR PER CENT. equisitic o § er numer are creations of the yersa Chestnut Stiest : See Oll!' for 5¢ First-class Wines, Liquors and Cl por annum, payable to depositors enti- | ot |Gauis Hon In care B sude_author m L aie 55 S e PR | £ Meals and Welch Ravebit served t | Hea theretd on and atter Jan. 15 1013, P rp"“f‘;cf)‘“w‘,?féh, i Ffico bov; Bessie Meers, the head wait- P . . N‘Ew YBARS CARDS X nckies B TALSOLE | facthi A pabilitien furnishes demonstractl ! g - o1 or the pubvention trinis. The « C OVERLAND CAR * BOOKLETS, COIN BOXES, At Eul P. B, Ale Frank Jones Nourish- | money orders cashed that werc a ha . Throw away your chains. MASKS, WIGS, HORNS, |FRISWELL’S, The Jewelers, | Soaweiser. Scniitx and Pabse oo | etlis 3 20 00, o7 e Telephene 904-5 and get a . FAVORS, ETC. 25.27 FRANKLIN ST. A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town. port sows (nat laborers returning demonstration of the best car, CUStomers using these Tires have ; F. C. GEER, TiAn ot v S RS = ot e sou ol | for the money on the market| = o Le sy TUNER 177TH DIVID e il TR e | ey : i : the safety smile. : MRS. EDWIN FAY | oo erwiah. Conn. | O6fce g FEL Nogpioh Bgvings spctatr |, The Gslopment of ine inaaie Chester’s plot bined with. - eGtor 7 ive | 8 y ] vernment shiais A L | : \ NEWMARKET HOTEL, e Rt ot R e | et = * WIHES you want { Jour ‘pus: Abe Gunther, the 'bus driver, and | .ess beiore (he neolic Caaca? o0 bus! WHEN you want to put Uc” Chere’in ok 3 oy tion allotments ore then distribu HHarkins, tie reporter, are all real T Bo R & 5 2 2 i % - | rEmERE rising . iy e cope g gl e lm.\.c;;;‘;'x“nfi.:o;m e Sl | NOR 1IciH NEW LONDON/| C LHILL n,fmklm st. §£;a;£%. %‘ifil”“;‘“‘fi‘:g“"m' m;&%,’:.‘:z‘a‘c‘a'c‘a T Y accondance witn' the result of 1 £ LT Ty

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