Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 14, 1913, Page 5

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WATCH THIS SPACE s : MISSIONS IN CHINA. g s s SRR T \ = e = pgg T Gool 01 Summer Time Bulletin. GULOSIS tég\“hmgz Perrin ;‘f Wea(t W:od A st k has e ¢ N FRESH PEACHES Norwich, Fridey, March 14, 1915, | tn Norwicn. —. TToiite ‘a fow days FRESH STRAWBERRIES VAKIOUS MATTERS. John Wood has returned from a_two Clnn'g to Tfih' Name Suggested at Anti-Tuberculosis Com- Bide ":::.";.;::‘ gty tivd s e Yflur stomach ni BUETESSC Stop Neglecting weeks' trip to Washington, Baltim BN -~ FRESH HAMBURG GRAPES - and Putbuce, o i Thursday—Draft of Constitution in F For| Mission work in China was the sub Y e R R peBRRers are already taking orders forf ol e mittee on Ly n Form ject for the interesting and tustruc- | Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets w.ana.e:. T MR Yok (o praer T ot 3 H i 3 tive meetings of the Women's Foreign | Work of the Strongest and He FRESH STRING BEANS A number of the rural sehools end | With relatives. > - Submissien to Public Meeting on April lst. e ovenine i ther Hunday| loot Swsmach and’Afford Instant Re- the winter term today. school rooms of the Trinity Methodist lief. New Beets, New Carrots Miss Clara Hamilton of Norwich was Poultry raisers are finding this an | Bachelor unusually favorable spring for their | week. The weather was cold and there | Trade rooms. One of the changes sug- | with his application a certificate from | amounts spent by this country on its 3 : ns S Episcopal church, with an unusually atm Gyt e Constderable orchard removation and | 4, Ko e o et M| At a meoting of the executive com- | retary, treasurer and five directors, | large attendance Miss Jessic. Alice | | The worst case of indigeation s sim. th Ciitstonin 5 T general € is geing on. i " mittee of the Nerwieh Anti-Tubercu- | Makin~ an executive committee of | Marriott and Miss Althea N. Todd, who | PLY neslect to giv . dishes Pimes | The Boston muto show has heen at-|| Miss Annie Buckley of the Backus|icais assscintion heid e Thursdn af- | TS, (It jo_{hought advieable “tnat|are in chargd of a mission school at | SUSERCS 1000 doss mot digest — Mushrooms, King Oranges, tracting visitors from (his seetion hospital training school is at her home bt B | mccptithis oWl e wrrer. Tehwa, In the mountainous COURLEY | ;en gases form, when you experfence = < 3 on West Main Stret for a few daye. | etnoop, President J. B. Stanton pre- | An annual membership fee of $1 ‘s|of southern China. spoke upon their | When gases form when vou BXpEr s rape Fruit, plenty, 5 cents| Twne Bulletin is in ecalion b " | sented’the draft of a constitution and | proposed for active membership. In|work in that country in a manner ‘“: e bosetn s il o tonwus Voo s e, MR erer A arecoinh ol Be Mentioned among clergymen at the | by-laws which had been entrusted (s | response te a question from Mr. Kel'y | which held the close attention of all. R gD e e r 13 ’ and and lots of, ordination of Rev. Barl H. Thayer in|Mm to prepare, and after discussion|as to how a person desiring o go to |- The walls were covered with ban- | COLeX and (haf <our fase '8 0. ¢ he ase other ‘goed tings War in the Holy Land $50.000 pro- | Somers is Rev. C. H. Ricketts of Nor- | aud suzgestions made by the commit: | the county sanatorium as a beneficiar | ners, and flags the latter including | OUth ~(ae & SIUEr & Capeni R Bo o 4 duction. Four reels, Auditorium, | wich. tee members; these were approved and |under the funds in the hands of the |the old empire flag and the nmew re- | ¢t 4Bd WAIEH PO HECEE, * S Monday. will be offered before the nublic meet- | assoctation would proceed to securc |public flag, sentimental expressions in | Of these sympto : ERS L. Tinkham of Hanover was in|!R8 Which is to be held on Tuesday | entrance te the samatorfum, it was|Chinese on huge pleces of red cloth, ille, N. Y. throuzh last | evening April 1st, in the Board of | brought out that he would need to file [and tables of figures comparing bueiness. was excellent sieighing. gested in the by-laws is In the nam. |a local dector that he had tuberculosis | fuxuries and on its missions. There f : of the organization, which it is sug- |and the proper credentiala from the |were also many curlos which were oo _Spring millmery opening today and| Miss Julia Newton, who has_been | gested shall be called the Tuberculosis | committee of the association that he | examined by those present. Miss Agency Saturday at Christmann's, 22 McKin- | Spending the winter with Mrs. Susan | Rellef association of Norwich, Conn. = | was one who was coming under the | Marriott spoke to the members of the S o€ ley avenue—adv. A. Hawkins ai New London has re-| Those present ah the meeting were | provisions of its fund. society: at 3 o'clock, after which thers The Standard Patterns 5 tirned to Central Village. President Stanton, Secretary Charles & | | Before the public meeting, general|was a short business session. At & ©Oné of the judges for Trinity college 3 Smith, Frank J. King, Michael J. Kei- | invitations will be sent out fo the 59 | oclock Miss Marriott spoke to the FOR WEAK ARCHES : 8 scrap this evening is Alfred J. I'Heu-| Howard Tanner, for some time at|ly and C. D. Noves, in whose ofilce the | or more persons who acted s ageus | children, of whom there was a good Al S. The D:Slglet llgulle Teux of Jewett City work in the woolén mill in Norwich | meeting was held. of the assoclation In the different | sizeq attendance. Miss Marriott Town, has returned to Ashaway, R. I,| Tt is suggested that the officers of | shops or stores and these persons | dressed eight little boys and girls in The Best One Made. Chureh workers are receivi & notices | and is now emploved in the finishing | the reorganized association shall coa- | would be expected to circulate the ia- | Chinese costume and seated them on Patterns 10 and 15 cents that this year's Silver Bay conference | room of th T 3 % a: vear's Silver Bay c e[ room of the Pawcatuck mill at Potter | sist of a president, vice president, see- | vitations to the meeting. the platform where she explained the Magazine subscription 75 cents | Will be from July 17 to 20. HilL s B 5] BT 4 Various customs of dress in that land. April Fashion Sheets are out, The D. AR rerents’ A novel coat shown was of red cloth, - . A. R. regents’ and delegat Rev. John H. Broderick and Rev. I e i v > i Step in and get one free. mecting at Cheshire is to be held| V. Maciejewski of Norwich, Rev. J. H. | 1= PRACTICAL SIDE YAS oNE OF THE e e e P S grquson arponngal The S March 35 nst€ad of March 1¢. Fitzmauioe ot ‘Greenoviile ‘and Tev: EXPRESSED IN RELIGION FOUNDERS OF THE BULLETIN | leutons, ' On ihe front In the midst of Broadwa: ore 5 . Stapleton of Taftville atiended e — L intricate desisn was a dragon's 67 Broadway At the Methodist conference in Bol-| (he pastors’ conference at Hartford | Characteristic of the Present Age |Death of Wi ;:ldna;:ic‘jue!l ;:1:: it a small mirror. FRANKLIN SQUARE Opposite the Y. M. C. A. ton Rev. George Wright of the Quarry- | cathedral Thursday. Says Preacher at Episcopal Lenten | at the Age of 94—Most of His Life | The two ladies have a school of 100 ville church declined a reappeintment. — . B ;e i s 1 their i MEDIATION TERMS Sarvige. Spent in Norwich. listle girls and live alone with tneir P %) The Lenten preacher in French at : — servanis far from any other o PIANO St Patrick's church. Collinsville, Thurs- OF THE ALLIES.| With a congregation of good pro- | The long and exemplary life of Wi:. | people. ' Miss Todd hag been there 17 TUNING is my frade, | as citnine war mev U0 Siierese ; portions, the seventh of the united |liam D. Manning came to a peaceful | years and Miss Marriott for 12 years. emnants Alld 1 1 b of Baltic. Fighting to Continue Until Peace Ej«e:uen services [wa; held on Thursal clnahe .uh 10 o'clock Thursday forenthn se;\\leg 0‘;"1!0011\'-:;361:;’:11::; !!L:]l;ll?:‘!‘_“:: . ay evening ai Crinity Spiscop: at his home, No. 37 Grove street, fol- v B - " was taught it ot locul Sttt aacrtias sty isiSigred. church, where the rector srchdeacon |lowing an iliness of several weeks, Ho|the members of the regular supper and noted Wednesdays which was cele- Sel ] =2 v J. reg rown, an ev. . R. Gra- | had been seriously ill but a short ti . Where they are made. Bralod M over s wetia as totemie | nencisrade, March 13— Axovernment|jin Gt ol L iRG Cananeten: ves | ud Bin dein wus e e ik adwanced} Starecnticon at Evening Session. . e e et tional day Which the Balkan allies are willing to | 1% Praver and the preacher was Rev. | age. ' He was In his 95th year Mr.| The evening session opened with the arpet trlps Telephone 19 Hamlin Street Mrs. Lottie F. Plerce, a native of | g Tare to oponiamicdlation. Hostill- | church, Wi Tingford. T - 5 E TR eiustos otiesvcral by a s el paeh o EBimate ? | ties are to continue until the peac = i - . B rotrecn by Rev 5 5 Etun g.’;fi::‘rfi.‘?}f;ufif;.‘\h"\-,},‘}}"" treaty {s signed. The basis of nego- | Rev: Mr, Greenleafs sermon, per- |B e there was a large attendence. Rev:dr. [ (Bl L from SECOND ANNUAL MEETING. She was 5 fore the Orttoman delmne ot P be | commendation by his congregation as |k " Eas S i D B ] Grow OId, if You Depend Upon | Palmer Bros.” Quilt Mills i 4 on Dec 23 The e Yines wndor | he ‘spoke from the text Matthew: 23 Lo el T A SRE DI e Banced Ubon g Notices Issued by Norwich Industrial | When the « 5 Clear, iihe briliant | extena ‘from Midia to Rodosto. T |23 - I o T y L : toms, her talk being illustrated by in- A, oo srepsin T abletsl We are Selling Same by the Poun Improvement Corporation. nt moon i making & sight well | C2lpoll peninsula is to remain in | o5 ATRPCTICR TOT Ve € ihe mIRk Snd teresting stereopticon views. All that was needed was to diges oty e Cope R Turkey's poseession. but all territories | $0%¢ And eimmin. and have loft un- 1 Referring to the dragon op the old | that lump of food In your stomach, Scrap lIron, Metals, Rubber or any es for the second annual meet- to the west, with the exceptlon of Al- | (OB the Welghtier matters of the law, | |flag of the empire, hanging on the|and the glance. whose duty it is 1) |waste material that is corroding awa ing of the Norwich Industriai Im- provement corporation have been is- | Thompse e vy a una e $god his week. calling the meeting £or | imou invitation Lo retarn by Clasgn| . AdFianoble and Scutarl must he sur- Monday affernoon, March 24, at the | Meihodiat Lhocrh ¥ (Glasgo| rendered before the negotiations begin. Thames Natlonal bank. put It o peoc | Mot - The Aegean Islands are to be cede i posed that adjournment shall be taken { ~ The Aquaero Manufacturing com- | {0 Greece, and Turkey must pay an at once till the evening of the same | pany of New London has certified that | indemnity. the o PPt wall, Miss Todd sald that this is what | cupply the gasiric juices, had simpl: has held the people back, prevented | zgiven out from overwork. So whea progress for so many vears. It has| ;ou took that little tablet you were |US: always been thought that the dragon pplying exactly what was necessar: We pay the market prices. of China was asleep in the earth and|ic complete_the process of ge n A if angereq would rise up and destrov | that the stomach had begun but wa- |The American Waste & Metal the people. Thus it took us three |urable to finish must be surrendered to A former Norwich pastor, Rev. John [ 240! can be turned into dollars by advis these ye ought to have done and not to have left the other undone. If we read this chapter with the | thought of the religion of the Pharisees in mind, we come back to compare our relizion’ with the principles and doc- trine laid down by Jesus Christ, said day in the town hall Thi % 5 be determine v 2 T e riar e liefol;;:: «;f ame has been changed to the | D¢ determined FASEEEe cunt | the preacher. This Seems a verse es- e to_secure IA‘r‘:d f’n'r{)pr’\ur ;::rm;‘ ir \nk.”\\r\uhl continue to take a Company, :t : 5 quaero company. irkey guarantee the iy appiicable oren uilding because the people feared | Stuart's Dysp sfter each shareholders, who can them be present chis of subjects restding: In | BeCially applicable 1o the present age. BRRT AT s ooiis i ted » PUNnG AheS | el tor -ttt mach wolid [210 Weet I Main Streat, Norwich, C £oF the Franbantinn Of the Bt o g While not meaning to infer that this s 5 le, ach would est Main Street, Norwic . on of the business of | The Centraj Vermont Railway com- | Turkish el it would rouse the dragon. We finally | have a chance o re nd get wel et the meeting. The corporation was or- A 29 < is a pharisaical age for never ‘have . u 2 a et we = antoea D&, The corporation was or- | pany will contest the pavment of its — - imien Hees) mioyn® Hessiy in cacseat (i1 4 secured one seventh of the piece of | and strong again e e er- | taxes in Montpelier for the vear 1811, OBITUARY. the-age of the text, the expression of {3 . i ground in guestion leaving six sevenths | Tr t one bodand vou will never | FINE CANNED 2 and the vaf»_wm be tried at the com- N e has spiritual life had become largely rit- . for the dragon. However, we havs|wani to be without this wonderful i ing term of court. ; rs. Samuel F. Buck. e o e o ; the privilege of using this land for a|litile remedy for stomach iroubi HE DAVIS. 5 Fidella Weston, widow of Samuel F.|inz of (ithes and ofher ohservances . playground o long as no bulldings | Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets contain ar S At a meeting of the Waterbury Poul- | Buck, died al i o'clock Wednesday | In the histors of the Christianit are erected on it Ingredient, one grain of which will Vaudeville and Photoplays. try association Thursday evening the | morning at the home of her son-in- | there had been three different iypes But the days of the dragon are gone | digest 3,000 grains of food. They = g Big houses at the Davis theatre on|SPeaker was General V. Smith of Will- | law, Frank R. Rose, in Bozrah. Her|of e 5 and in his place is the flag of the new | entirely harmless because they . g f emphasis in the expression of the P & at Rallion Thursday viere evidence fhai Victop| IBSton, sccretary of the Connecticut|deaih came unexpectediy, as the Tesult | religions. 1ise, republic. Modern civilization s | absolulely no effect on the system one and his musical melange as the head- | POUItrY association. oi heart trouble, although she had) There was first the age of faith, spreading through the country. Ther: | way or anoth to do just the i B e vaada e e el son : ; been in poor health for some time. the devotional age, and men paid little are now. 40,000 milex of telegraph in | one thing—dige == tinue o' be 'a drawing card for the |, Sovernor Baldwin's Fast Day proc-| “She " Was horn in Wiliameburs, | attention (o the plher sides of exnress China and many miles of railroad. We | Evers druz sto SeHcreanils t rest of the week while the change |2Mation has been received TEY- | Mass., De 1539, and passed the [sion, Men were satisfied with the however, are three days from a tele- |and recomme wares Dyspersia | The B d S in the other act furmished an addi- | MeR and public officials. Town Clerk | arcatér part of her life in' Massachu- | cathedral worship and so long as a | graph line and 700 miles from u rail- | Tablets at 50 cents e roadaway ore tional attraction that was alse greet- | Uhavles S, Holbroolk's regular allot-|setts. Mr. Buck died a number of|man observed all that was set down | Toad. The sedan chalr is still the We are one_ vear old Saturds ed with marked favor. These are The | Ment for Norwich is thirty years ago and Mrs. Buck had made her |in the devotional and religlous laws only means of locomot'on in our sec- | = TR S S arar bt | We: she Eolok to colas Haymakers, a comedy singing trio The palms from the south for dis. | UM With her daughter, Mrs. Rose, [of the church they were satisfied. = tion. But the dui of the dragon phy took occasion on behalf of the |hrate. See the 50c, T5¢ Whose tuneful voices are heard in some | s B NS ST JAE SOUTR 20T Q18- | since last July. She was a member of | Then came the upheaval of the re- zone, and the idols have gone with tc | jadies to present George McCormick a | Jiicies in window of the told time favorites and also in | TiDUton on Palm Sunday at St I Methodist Episcopal chureh in | formation, introducing a new age and dragon The ancestral halls Lave been | pretty stickpin in recignition of his | Lhnile“they last on Saturday at Up-to-date popular successes. The | RUCE CRMTOh have beem received by Pepperell, Mass. She was ore|a new emphasis in the expression of tirned into churches and &chools, | services in decorating he Charity Y v e gt Yictor number proceeds along the same | ; o000, 200 L T Broderick. £ s children. spiritual. life, Ne longer were men WILLIAM D. MANNING. ed'cts have been iscued forbilding | bail and presented Mr. ( oran a gold 5 lines as in the first of the weeic and | vear. Bugk leaves a son, George S |not satisfied with the ritual of the binding of tie feet and the opiun. |lead pencil as a apprecia- C repeats its success at every per- | An engagement that was announced | D of Windsor Locks, ‘an adopied | church, but they were even hampered | Mannin = 2 smoking tion for all the assistance' he had . 7 X formance. The feature photoplay sives | jai; week of local interest 16 that of Lesiie C. Buck, of Cocniuate, |by it, and théy threw it away. Then | of Hne Buistin and aee erounders | ™It is only 100 years ago that Robert | given One artilcle only to a omer the adventures of the great Italian | Miss Jeannie Averige, daughter of Mx | and a daughfer, Mrs —Rose. | they laid the emphasis upon the in- | with the paper up te 1895 Morrison was refused admittance to| The ladies in charge of the after-|p oo o Ll o tecttve, Lieut. Petrosino. and Mrs. W. A. Averige of Stamford, | There are also two brothers, Chauncey | tellectual side of expression of re- He was born Oct. 19, 1518, at the |the country. After gaining admit- | noon programme were Mrs. M. V. Mur- | Reme! E e E i s - ; Conn., formerly of Omaha. and LeRoy | Weston of Washington, D. C, and | ligious faith.” That type of religious | maile, ‘and spent bractically’ all hig |tance it was 27 years before three|pny, Mrs. T. . Murphy, Mrs' Jonn Rescued Ladies from Washington | Robbina of - Norwich - Conn Omaby | Frank Weston of Goshen, Mass, and | expression lasted down (o New Eng- | o and spent practically all his| J7C0 0 free nciocwle Christ Starphy, dirs, W. 0. Sturpny, Mrs | The Broadway Store “Roughs.” Bee. Iho st Hrv-‘ {“r-"n; "\*"‘;N“ xf land times, and men, struggled 5o | Asa and Betsey Butler Manning. Asa | 1hus the gespel with civilization liam P. McGarry, and . John Ny Tonta Settgheih s e bR n, Mass. ,and Mr ¥ it | sharply that they sometimes forget [ Manning fought In the war of 1512 and |#avancing in China for in 1909 at the | R. McNama Opp. the Y. M. C. A,, 67 Broadway o NI (e S0 of Remington, Tnd. that quality of forhearance which | wac s prandson of Diah Manning, one | time of the test thcre were 10,000 wio sk known waiter at the Wauregan house, o < i o A : Teturned Thursday. morming troose: | soclation of Bridge and Building Su- Mrs. Henson Williams. fhould mark the discussions of relig- | of Washington’s life guards during the | Btvod faithful, refusiyz to _disown| qpiy Company Accepts Invitation. Ton ans VIBIC o W anhineisy M, 2 | pervisors of the New Haven road at- Ann Watson, widow of Henson | lous bodies. =~ Revotution. Christ as the price of life. So there| 1hird | o g — his stay in the capital ha met seversj| tended the quarterly meeting of the | Williams, died at 3.80 o'clock Wednes- |, Now the davg of discussion of re- | "‘4g a bov Mr. Manning worked wits [arc now “ve confiwunces in China. Wo| AL the resular drill of the Third Z former Norwich people, and speaks | Sesoclation in New London Wodnesday. | day_aficrnoon at tha home of her | 1Z19us probioms bave passcd away but | the Baldwin Locomotive works in Phil- are _located —in ~Fukein. province) tumbuny, G 0 o O N 0 in el ) ockets, Bracelets very highly of the manner in which | OMICers were elected for the ensuing | daughter, Mrs. Alexander Carrington, | Mon deep down In thelr hearts are as | adelphia as apprentice, but ae the|in Southern China, opposite the | e invitation: of: Sedgwislc post o 4 ’ b B i BBy e i S at No. 30 Fountain street foilowing | Feliglous as ever were their faihers. |york dia not agree with his health he | 1siand of Formosa, :n i land the grea:- | SOl S B the suffragette parade Mr, Boiton res- ness of six weeks. Death was due | Today o most significant expression |returned to this city in a short time. |8t in the world' for its productive- | Lo ety it {he ufiragette parade Mr. Boltom res-| Richard Lamont predicts a shower | fo Iheumatiom and FiD of spiritual life wae that taken up by | I3 "Norwich he was dentificd With the |mess and “atural resources. Miss Todd | o be neid iriday cicning < rooches onghas and® was' compiimenteq for | before the 15th of this menth. The | 'she’ was born In Jrederick, Md,, 74 | the Federation of Churches In Ciiicago. | printing husiness exclusively. On his | told of the work in the oy el uekinsiem Mkcmaniab Lol A one SF the ‘oficials for the a1 he save|CDlY cold snap he can sce in’ pros-|years ago and was the daughter of | I! I8 the gospel of social sersice. Men | fotury from Philadelphia he hecame as | Siowed pictures cf the En apq i coRnaing Bl ] Tttt the 1adies. pect Is one or two days in April. If| Henry and Phillis Watson. She was e el omall we d0. | apprentice in the office of Hon. Johu |0f the Wurkers e I and Pendants the ice now on the ponds goes off Mr.|married in Frederick to Mr. Williams { how make men comfortable in their | pynpam who then owned The Nor-| A scene of especial interest, very |company ure attend the officers Boeak F 4 Lamont gives no hope for the forma- | and spent the greater part of her life | homes. how fight disease, how remove | GEYEN [0 g™ Voars after sarv. | uniike arything Ecre was a picture of | meeting in Dridgeport tonight. Cap To Speak at Fraternity Banquet. | tion of more. | Mr. Willlams died some vears | the pressure of poverty. And men . ing his' (ime as appremtice Mr. Man- | the terricid mouiain, each terrace Tarbox and Lieutenant Nichols of Solid Gold and Former Congressman Edwin W. : . | i ind since that time Mrx. Williams | are saying today that this is ihe mes. |08 NS S0 85 RepTeRiice ME AT || Geviica o the nicduction of rice | Ifth eompany and Major Hagberg gins is to go to New York on Barbers are opposing a new bill be- | ha< made her home in this city. She | S28e of the church and that (he church | L& SRR, RTAUER T 2o TE 0 HITE | or sweet poratoes. Muny of the moun- also attend Gold Filled 1 day, where in the evening he is {o be | fore the legislature, the principal argu- | was & member of the Quinn A, M. . | that is not doing this will surely fafl. | Fho BoUSht fho Courler of Mr. Dun | 07 el ROl oot A vered with bam- S e one of the speakers at the 40th anni- | ment being that ‘the present system | zion church of Frederick The emphasis for the coming years | [ (Ui, "{"guay from the Water strect | bco trees snd somo of the hills are Versary of his fraternity, Phi Sigm-w | has resulted in sanmitary barber shops he jeaves one daughter, Mru. Alex. | IS to be on soclal service. If " that {000 (0 " Sy 0 "00iioq he had fall [Tow & mass of ccicr, being covercd | 2 % T Kappa. The banquet is o be held at | throughout the staie and that it would | Carringion and two grandchildren, A. | IS %0, there will come a time, when men | JE0 20 b i Svkes' | with brilliant red a-el as, which grow | | Sas meta b TRt et Al B | Gzl A e, ST, & el et el T | (R of (b€ oiner g er Skt | with briiagy ra wietfes whin e ||| Incidents In Society. |\ rpe plant-Cadden Co - e ; 5 D he spiritual life, will 1 . 1 3 : : 9 i - 3 3 . ik s has proved so effective, nette L. Tington, the pyiioual Uife, Then will men €omo | ohaces of Mx. Dunham iue jon oce tn | uople, 1t ‘Lome ot worle and || = C 2 = k = » | Shetucket street, which had been |School were shown and their customs | < | ywe co c a v ression. knowledge gc hand R na the 1 " COAL AKD LUMBER. R et Clifornia vl " Sloan at White House. |[repeion. Falth and knowledse g hand | flosed, and conducted it with marked {and peculiarities expiained in anin- | oo TIon L Jdewelers and Silversmiths, to April 14 Personally conducted | ashin in the great expression ST i R L B S S e York for al days | Established 1872. ecret service man who has | vice which is to be characteristic for hing- | Sloan, the tourist sleeping cars from Wi et Mr. A cho. cel _— gested it Mr wauming. Who on rece Wednesday club met this week || PLAUT - CADDEN BUILDIN Richa ton without change dally, except Sun- | guarded presidents of the United |the coming age, The empiasis is to v ThE coal day. "Berth $0. 13 Milk and 334 Wash. | Giatcs for (he Jast (e venrs, wus as- | be on the nractical, but if we negleci |in= considerable encouragement decic WEDDINGS. wilths Mrn: Charics Sioion ghecets. B ey gned today by Chief FIynn te be head | either the reli ihehationsliehe | A8 Lo lanueli o datly, James oY, Peny = ngton streets, Baston.—Ad of th e s O e ational, the | censolidating his office with Mr. Man Benjamin—Swan. et s arles Coit of Broad ice detachment at|Master will surely say this ousht ye Mrs. (¢ ning’s, and with them were J. Hemer The certificate of incorporation cf|the White House. Sioan has traveled | to have done and not to have 16ft the v The marriage of Everett D. Benja- | Wednesday for in Baitimore. All Sizes the Mystic Auto Station, Inc., of Ston- | several hundred thousand miles with |other undone. But in the blend of | Bliss and Isaac Bromlev as partness. |min and Miss Minnic S, Swan, both ington, -has been filed, the company | Presidents Roosevelt and Taft and |all together will be & step nearer to B rm rame being Manning, Perry | ot ‘breaton, took place Tuesday even- | Mr. and Mrs Crowell and being incorporated at $50.000, and be- | knows more public men prebably, than | the measure of the stature of Jesus ;& company ing at 6 o'Clock at “The Manse,” Pres- [ Mr. and « n are i ning business with $3,000.” The in- | any m out the White House. Christ in whom dwells all and fe all. | The frst paner was published Dec. | (o Tiry *the ceremony being perform. | New Yo John F. Noves, Abbie - T ooriory sole; Fhere Ts a Green | 15, 1658 on Franidin square, over tha | Son CILY, (he ceremony being perform | 3 corporators are 5. 2 3 E. Noyes and Robert A. Noyes. Baltimore plans to lay miles of | Hill Far Away, was expressively ren- | cAr statlon, In what Is now known as | churen, Rev. Luther M. Keneston. The Miss Mart . . | paving in 23 streets in 1913, dered in admirable volce by Mrs. Wal- | Foresters' hall ~With Isasc Bromley | bride was attended by her mother. |y A. Tirrell ¢ Relatives from Norwich were in Mid. ter M, Buckingham as an editor the paper was a success i frox € Mr. Benjamin is a large and prosper- | in New York dletown Wednesday to atiend the 2 from the start and the tri-weekly | or who has owned and eper- — Full Assortment funeral of Christopher ' Kelly *‘at St BOYS IN TROUBLE Courler soon abandoned the field an’ | oreg he Bamiee mare fnctand oper-t o el church. The beautiful floral was taken over by The Bulletin in | 4t megiey Dlace. losttwo | My Cha Roverts entertainea X itmmeer of Sormen” || Does ¥ Ten Found Guilty—Santence Deferred | Sopsmens for 13 yiure o Chpiia | 10 and a member of the choir of the | Yoric GHAPPELL cn i 0es Your Till April Sth. Platt succeeded Mr. Perry as business | CONETesatlonal chureh. o ice Mr. ¥ = 7 ' At the 27th annual meeting of the 4 manager the company became Man. | v SGesiepnalriage service Mr M. and Mrs. Leonard O. Smith, w 1 State Woman's Congregational Home | e “Ten hoys from the neighborhood of | ning. Platt & company. After Mr. | yore ‘and held an informal reception | it _Davtona. Fla. Monday, have becn Central Wharf Missionary union in the First Congre- Conversatlon Lack Boswell avenue and Baltic st Plati’s death a company was formed | (0 their neighbors and. friends. A |In_ Philadelphia for eever s and gational church, New Britain, Wed- | before the city court on W and Mr. Manning disposed of his in- | \f.amant. evening was spent with phot | Will reach their beautiful home, Old BN 2 80 et Stidat nesday. Mrs. B. P. Bishop, Mrs. H. H. | attornoon at & special seasion. charged | terests in the paper, although he con. | Dieasant evening was spent with pho” | & "Today or Saturdas Osgood and Miss Rudd were elected | with breaking $30 worth of windows &t | tinued to be the foreman of the job t | Telaphones members of the executive committee. | || Human Interest? ||| 5" Cuanas Mk Compiny miant. | department for a mumber “of - vears | 320,27 abundant ccliation, The suests | which is now not in active operation. | longer. For the past 22 years he was | ara of good wishes for the bride a e One of the boys was defended by Ai- |not actively employed. &room. LSRR O torney Thomas M. Shields. City Attor- | Mr. Manning married twice. his first ney John D. Hall prosecuted, the com- | wife being Ellen Smith. His second | The public dedicatory service for the Pope memorial organ at the Secon Congregational church takes place this i evening at 8 o'clock, when the musics | Hill—Briggs. Leroy Hill and Miss Tnez O If you are not familiar with e cas: ing ey 5 age wa o M Nancv M al 272 £ | | plainant in the case being Attorney | marriag to Miss Nan Tad oy Hil M programme as arranged will be car- ||| ;o nows of the day, the happen- ||| Charles 1. Stewart, who is in charge | Mr. Manning was the last of the ninth | Briggs were united in marriage 7hurs Z8ia 4 Just received cargoes of Nut, | Hed o0t 27, the oreanist Mise Lobiee ||| [0, "of the world, the Tatent st ||| of.the propert Eeneration of Mannings in the United | day evening at T oclock by Rev. Jo It is time to think of Spray- o iR o R A || e s Bl Some of he bove pleaded guilty and | States. He fs survived by two chil- | SBR I Cobh at ais residence on Maple - Pruni Sovi Soad Stove and E i ang at least an every-day knowl- ||| some not guilty. Two witnésses testi- | dren, Lemuel A. Manning, by the first | Strest, the tridal covple being unatc ng, lruning, Sowing, Spa 82 Valentine Bletchnig and Miss Anna ||| ©48e of music. literature, art ana ||| fed posttively that the bov whom (he | wife! and Fred B. Manning, bv_the | tended and ihe ceremony bheing s aule . Patati d oth iG Libitsky Were marricd st their fature ||| sport vou are missing hait the ||| atiomey defendeq was conccrned in|second wite There is one erand- |3, 3G Slae with marto cor- ing, Painting and other early- home, No. 214 Frankl venue, Hart- enjovmes nd pleasure of life. the window bréaking, and Judge | daughter, Mrs, arveyv N Rrigee. e a 2 Ty fors W iuendns) hes =aro Shienten sy andinee £ Barnes found all gullty, He spoka of | Al the time of his death Mr. Man |TeSRORD L in-the-season activities. by the bride’s parents, Mr. and Mrs A charming woman, when ||/ not wishing to give the bovs court|ning was the oldest member of Uncas| i4o'ci"(he home of the graom, Ne. 39 . A Fred Libitsky, her brother, William ||| asked how she kept so well post. ||| fecords and intimated that he might |lodge. No. 11, Independent Order of|piiigion street. He Is the son of the Housecleaning Necessities Libitsky, and her sister, Miss Martha bR i R fine each one $1, dividing the costs, | Odd Fellows, and was probably one of | DIVISION SIFert, TE Jo e 2on OF the bank which extends i Office 67 West Main St., Telephone 510 | Libitsky, all of Norwich. ed regarding so.many interesting || but he gecided to defer sentence untll | the oldest in the cowntry. He joined|;5ying resideq here all his life and been proper accommoda.- Garden Tools, Seeds, Pouliry ! Wharf, Ts he 884 S RS T S things, answered significantly, T Saturday morning, April 5th In the [ Uncas lodge in 1846, and thus was an| ... o number of yvears head usher at i > é # Yard Central arf, Telephone read my paper thoroughly and meantime, he suggested, there would | Odd Fellow for 67 vears. He was a| .30 Brosdway theater under the late tion to local industries Wire, Steel Field Fence, and be opportunity for the parents of the | Magon for over 40 years, having join- | \pe, SUORIERY (ReaITr, VRRAr TA0 S48 PROMPT DELIVERY Two Engagements in Choir. = el Beep asEmm Dok Boys to sea what couTd be done about | ed St. James lndge, No. 23, F. and A. | Manager Jacksop, T FUT Wwas aiso is a vital and beneficial £ When the choir of the Huntington SRS SLh i other lines of Hardware Mer. street Baptist church of New London TLLETIN i settlement with Mr. Stewart When [M. in 1872, He was at one time a | lorc T8 S (RCMCr s B o boen force in the community. k met in Waterford at the home of Mrs. S mheind cn Al Ty Attorney Shields said that the real | member of the Broadway Congrega- | [ potmaol® (% 8 NE0 PRST as Deeh The steadily increasing chandise can be found of de- Fred Saunders for rehearsal Wednes- | postel Ohanll the fmportant ||| trouble in the matter was that the |tional chutch. but In 1863 joined the | ¢ o news store on Franklin street. & o < £ day evening the occasion was taken for R b property had not been looked after | Trinity Episcopal church, of which he| . ride has been employed as book- patrqnage . enioy Y pendable quality and just the announcement of the marriage en- nierest in the business world. ||\ Cfope enough, Attorney Stewart took | was a member at the time of his death. | xeaper in a sewing machine office and the Thames Loan &% 2 3 sagements of two of its members. The It will tell you of adventure and exception to the statement and ad- | Through all his long vears Mr. Man- | was previously cashier at the Broad- St O aans prices at 129 Main Street. ine Kind d Lehigy | cnsasement of Miss Blanche Merric achlevement, of \fawhions ehd dressed the court on a matter of per- [ning enjoved the best of health until | way - theater. She is the daughter of g free Eumlng inds and Lehig) | f0%Georse King ana the engagement women’s work of domestic ||| gonal privilege on this point during the last ten years he began to | Gatwin L. Briggs of No. 31 Pemob. assurance that its policy &5 LWAYS IN STOCK of Miss Lena Saunders to Merton La- sclence and sconomy, After the court it was stated that |feel the advances of age. Charitable|geot street and has a wide circle of is broad 'and suited to . ALWaYS I3 2 tham were each made. Mrs, Friak | : the parents of three cof the bovs had |and generous, honorable and upright | gcquaintances in the city. ’ 7 To securs the greatest good |||y edn iy conference with Attorney |in hig dealings, he was always highly from your newspaper every day and become well informed upen the important topies of the heur D. LATHROP gave a humorous recitation on mar- : e g b e 2 T AT R o ’ riage and Herbert L. Avery presented Stewart and had agreed ro pay about [respected in the community in which e MASE D SR e AN to the young women gifts from the | 30 upicce for the dumage, he was for so long an active worker. | GIFT D men 1 NI E R / He wus of & religlous nature and dur- TWO WHO HELPED : AL Office—cor Market and Shetuc- ¥ SR (SCEE Dol rRRaN el heror vtk you must resd it carefully and |f| b A Telepbone 168-13. Sprseiniinly and’ e, Sontimmousty, It will alse be ta ||| Walking ‘Arcund With Searlet Feves. [INE his last years spent much time s €t eiauan = = your interesi to read the sdver- Jemes Mberhardt, 40 years old, [in Ghat that he . found his greatest | Catholic Woman's Club Remember pany M"’E GnAL Pendistan Upsst Haviland's Chanse. ||| tiscments in THE BULLETIN ||| wiiked into’ the ofiee of the losith | pleasurs and the'Christian lite he fives | George McCormick and J. P. Cer- THE THAMES = In the Arcanum club peel tourra closely &nd constantly for they ||l department a nien ation New | ghoweg that he had closely followed coran. = ment on Thursday cvening Pendleton will ensble yeu to purc Londen, this week, and asked if any |its teachimgs. He gave falthful ats S CALA R e ne o || BN et || S S R [N O e e | | OAN & TRUST cO. (LT F03ZRV NS : burns up clean.” hiopes of the prize winners by defeat life (o best advaitage | mutcer with him. Dr. Ross ek, | iempied, tosk a deep Interest in help- | after Lent was held on Thursday af- 2 ing Haviland, who needed onmly this | brothor of thie health effieer, Dr. Ben- |ing others and the communily was | srnoon at the Buckingham Memorial NORWICH, CONN i DAN MURPHY & Co. d w d gaine to be sure of fire prize, It was juwain N, Peunell, veterinarian-in- | bettered by his having passed his long | by the Catholic Woman's club with & B TiERAncOF Ales, Wines, Liquors and Cigars Well Seasoned Wood | = i oz o ms i, s b TG e R R T T R e R [ Pendlston and Haviland 6. The lat- spector Rey A. Damon were present. | the many virtues with which he was | noan u deiegation from the Holy Name [ FRIENDLY HELPFULNESS a/ Corner of Water and Market Sta gl R A e R o YO 5 sad o Tiow was wompGnng. fhe Hedewed an RIn fong 1o ke bad |Sibw. Conéising < of Mayor,To O 0 ON -SAVINGS 2 jeaves Haviland and Pierson tied for 5 a | matter with Eherhardt, and Dr. Black | made living a science. ~His interest | Murphy, Thomas H. Beckley and John i Y C. H. HASKELL. fiffrst place with B pessibilily (hal | masieen Gonnoetiont eqakitte Tos Buls | who ‘made a- diagnosis, prencunced it fwae centered in his home, his business | P, Corcoran visited the meeting_and R St e, el dn 402 — Phones ~— 489 Friswell may also tie them letin for business results scarlet fever. and his church and he lived by the ' while they were there, Mayor Mur- fetin for pusiness resalis - : N

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