Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 3, 1913, Page 5

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- Qhe gsuileion. Norwich, Thursday, April 3, 1913. VAKIOUS MATIERS, WE HAVE Fresh Green Peas Fresh Asparagus April 3ra is St Richard's day. Fresh String Beans Smith college students left town yesterday, vacation closing. The Eastr offering at Christ church reached the handsome sum of $412. Fresh Parsley Freshk Broilers Received Every Day SOMERS Spring is here. cart was doing duty on Wednesday. properly fitted Best $3.50 eveglesses Main street.— for $1.85. Burnham 227 Adv. The Norwich Electrical company has the contract to wire the town hall at Chester. road’'s equipment The New Haven fiscal year will purchases during this exceed $2,000,000. + Don’t forget the Third company (for- merly Co. A) dance at armory tonight. THOMAS J. HOWARD Long Island Sound New York Harbor NS —Adv. IERSeoR MeYer Violent deaths in Connecticut during eaths in ectic TRANSPORTATION | March totaled 69, exceeding the rec- Scows and barges for freight or charter | ord for the preceding month by 1. Noei BROADWAY, NEW YORK. | The wind blew rubbish and dust about the streeis Wednesday in a ze the need of a clean-up g week. PILLS: PILEd: PILES! Mrs. Stephen Parker of Montville ’ INDIAN PILE Ol Center entertained at her home Wed Will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles nesday afternoon in honor of her It absorbs the tumors, aliays itehi at once, | birthday. acts as a poultice, gives instant ief. For sale by all druggists, mall 50c and 8108 | Annual convocation Franklin chap- | ter. No. 4, R. A. M., at Masonic tem- WILLIAMS MF6. C0., Props., Cleveland, Ohi# | ple this evening. Election of officers. For sale at Les & Osgood Ce. —Adv. Charles Hammell. who cared for the MME. W. G. TAFT, | roads at Eastern Point last season, the Palmist and Clairvbyant, can prove | Will be employed there the coming by Dhundreds right here thit her pre- | summer. dletions come true. Gives advice on business matters of all kinds, reveals | Workingmen's -unions about New :f;t;mmtns pagtn;‘;i‘rm!fiipl';w. agr!‘gr; England are receiving suggestions to riage, - (rue_ani e n nt | parade on Thursday, May Ist. known and spirit friends, lost or stolen prop- | b2 ,arflema‘ioml S B grty, and is the most reliable medium tional L. efore the ic, at 2 ranklin St. £ mAr22TaThS Ernest L. Davis of Putnam has com- menced work on another bungalow at | Lord’s Point. at the corner of Hamp- ton street and Boulder avenue. YOUR CHANCE TO GET AN AUTOMO- BILE. WHY PAY CASH FOR IT? £ G Select your automobile or delivery | Miss Josie Hart, who has ~béen car from your own dealer. We will i Spending the Easter vacation at her pay for it. You can pay us at your | home in Pa'mertown, returned to open morning. convenience, without advance in price. | school in Salem Monday puto Buyers' Co. of Am. Inc., 13 roadway. N. ¥. £ | _Mrs. Grace Manning and the Ever R S UNGE At - . | Ready orchestra, of Norwick, enter 35 Shetucket St. Norwich, Conn. | a Ki o 2 marsoTnS TG | tained at a King's Daughters” fair at Centra} Village Wednesday evening. Seniors at Holy Cross college re- sumed their studies Wednesday morn- ing. Members of the preparatory and coilegiate departments returned Mon- CLOTH SHOP SPRING AND SUMMER WOOLENS | Gay. HAVE ARRIVED. K ; s g SELLC 2 . 5 . Agnew today takes the :0“ STERES, T BECECE PROM | Seaciice of Dr Dson LA bletrs, efice - 5. it 1196 Central avenue, hours 1 to Strictly Tailor-Made Suit| 195 Centra avenue ho for $18.00 Gov. Simeon E. Baldwin and Secre tary of State A'bert Phillips ar MONEY TN N AT- : EY REFVDNDED'IFNOT BAT-) s the 4300 notars publle cortin. ISFACTOT. | cates which are renewed each two JOSEPH T. DONOVAN | Y= ain St f | _Take a trip on the Robert E. Lee 325 M ":h _2'1“"”":"' Conn. | rriday night and’ see the Shefucket one 5 Engine Co.'s Old Time Dixieland Min- | strels and Dance, at Olympic hall.— The new anda || A9V Mective rem-)| Postmasters have received notice of gc- ¢ || additional precautions which the de- | o 47 A artment at Washington has ordered et o to be exercised in the delivery of pen- ~umy i ST 8 -] sion letters. NJUre acio 0¥ Kormula of Dr. H. M. Tin- The flags on the steamers of the ker, Specialist }! New England Steamship company were A positive antidote tor uric placed at haif staff yesterday for acid poison. Price 50c and Sl John Pierpont Morgan, a director of Order through your druggist. the corporation. JESSE A. MOON, S At Christ church Sunday, in re- 485 Sank St. New Leondon. Ct. sponse to the suggestion of the rector $38.55 wae contributed toward flood relief fund. the SPRING MILLINERY A FINE ASSORTMENT OF LATEST N oeam AT asushith - o andg Mrs. P a hellens o SR Groton, died Tuesday morning. She is survived by her mother and father and five brothe MRS. G. P. STANTON, 52 Shetucket St. To show their respect the members of the Young Ladie: So ity of St Patrick’s church visited the home of Mlss ELLA M PflTTEH their deceased member. in a . body 3 Wednesday evening. Instructor of Conductor John O’'Neill of New Lon- - <on, injured in a railway coll Piano and Harmony cight days ago at Jewett City. is rap- idly recovering and expects to be out Room 6, Alice Bldg. Tel. 968 the end of this week | “You ought to see. you ought to see The city watering | Rev. Richard R. Grahame, the sum of | | 1 | I | i | i S {c the city have been invited by the Park Church Mei’s club to their meeting | on Friday evening, when Rev. Madison | Peters of New York is to be the| speaker. i you ought to see” thos blackface cut- | ups from Dixieland Friday might at ° { Olympic hall. Dancing after the show. ¢ Diamond [ | Miss Maud Mills of Westerly has ls THE STONE been appointed assistant matron of 3 :‘hfi Memorial hospi New London, | succecding Miss Elizabeth MacQueen, FOR APRIL | Pho: resighed rocentiv. The commission on the ate epi- a very fine stock o | - 0 3 vexy fine stack of leptic colony. Mansfield, of which Z Diamonds, perfect in cut, ex- R. Robbins of Norwich is a' membe cellent in color at very reason- | has submitted its report for the p able ‘piides: ‘Bvers store. fos | two years to Governor Baldwin. tively guaranteed just as we rep- J| At the William T. Evans' collection resent it =ale at the Hotel Plaza, New York, R | Tuesday. $2,000 was paid for “Wil- | lows,” ihe painting Henry W ! . < | ger, whose summer siudio is at 3 Tke Plani-Caddzn Co., || - i | . The board of county pension exam- | T g | iners—Dr. N. P. Smith and Dr. Lester ewelers and Silveramiths, | E. Walker of Norwich and Dr. C. F. Estadlished 1872 | Congdon of Mystic—met in Norwich | Wednesday, examining on applicant | for increase of pension. PLAUT - CADDEN BUILDING Prof. William F. Kirkpatrick of the Connecticut_Agricultural colleze spoke 0 s ) h {\)Qfi)rh the Poultry club at the Board ur = {0f Trade in Springfield, Mass. Tues- pring showing of | day night. The talk was illustraied | with slides and charts. CARRIAGES and HARNESS is open for your ‘The county equal suffrage chairman, Mrs. Frederick A. Johnson. of Mont: N H ville, has been busy in New lLondon inspection. with the members of the league in We have 2 large line of the best man- | 8etting clothing for ‘the sufferers in ufaétured in the country at the low- | the flood region in Ohio. est prices. Before trading this vear let us show you our line and quote your our prices. The L. L. Chapman Co. 14 Bath St., Norwich, Ct. At a_special meeting of the Connec- }NCII( Vegetable Growers’ ociation | at the capitol Tuesday a vote was | rassed favoring field meetings in July, | August and September, and the ar- 1angements were left with the execu- | tive committee. The Colonial Dames’ proposition, placed before the town voters of Say- Prook at the special town meeting on Monday, for placing a tablet at the old fort at Saybrook Point, was passed, and they will start work {mmediately or their plans. WHAT YOU SAY and WHAT WE SAY You say, I have blackheads, and an oily skin and hav, na?x‘Trfl: for years. I have used creams and ointments and am growing worse. I am_discouraged. : Twenty members of the Progressive | Missionary club of the Centra! Bap- | tist church met Wednesday afternoon | with Mra. George Brooks, 73 Prospect street, Mra. A, T. Utley presiding. After sewing and reading, lght r | i We say. No wonder. The skin has too much oil ‘already. Creams apgd | {resbments were served. i nts feed the diseas ! ©a"te ramedy. It ahorbe. ine SETZO| At-a conventton of delegates from e of the skin, ihe TOom i geries all over (ho state, the Eagles i b ,’,,,}',’m"‘“ T e ens | decided o hold the annial fleld nnd RZO | iracic meei for 1913 in Bridgeport on and the skilheosmes Ausr and mored TThosday gaiy 82, A Bis delegation was T is and "ils - iZ0, heats | Ll 16 aeries out of 31 in lhe .ue‘:m;?‘maERZO is & puvid‘:r 2‘,",""::«.1::“, being represented, and all the applied on retiring. It s sure (o |StAte officers attanding. please vou. $1.00 “postpaid, Becretary D, F, MeNell of Norwich has recelved motice from (he supreme regent that ciothing and contributions Tor the flood sufferers are to be sent to the grand secretary, C, B, Hoadley, Box 357, Ne;’ Haven ‘.“[dl nrging g-r;i €4 . on the part of al members NGl Ameamn. Bold by druggists and by LERDU, oreges™ Mrs. John H. Rane has returned, afeer severa] days’ visit with friends in Boston. Mrs. Patrick Hanley of Mystic has becn entertaining Mrs. Thomas Han- je ley and son of Norwich, Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Stanton of Springfield have arrived at their sum- mer hotel at Lord’s Puint. N s Misses Grace and Annie Hill have returned to Niantic, after spending several days with their aunt.in Nor- wich. Mrs. A, H. Ousley and daughter left Wednesday for Pawtucket, where they were called by the illness 0f Mrs. Ous- ley’s mother. Mr. and Mrs. Valentine Schellen- berz have returned to their home at Morris Cocve, after spending the win- ter in Norwich. John A. Owen of Providence, former- Iy connected with the Aspinook mills | at Jewett City, is spending a few days | with friends in this city. Mr. and Mrs. A. P, Williams and family moved Monday from McKinley venue to their new home, No. 97 Broad street, recently purchased from B M. Bliven. SUDDEN DEATH OF TAFTVILLE MAN. Joseph Geynet Stricken on Way Home With Heart Disease. About 6 o'clock Wednesday evening Joseph Geynet of Prospect park drop- ped dead near Baldwin's grocery store on Norwich avenue, Taftville, while on his way home. His death was due to valvular discase of the heart, with which he had been ill for the past or seven years. Wednesday morning he went to his work in the J. B. Martin _company, as usual. but during the afternoon he felt ill and left to go home early. His request was granted and he started for his home, but when he got near Mr. Baldwin's grocery store he dropped by the side of the road. Friends picked him up and he was taken into the home of a nearby French family and medical aid was summoned. Dr. Patrick Cassidy, who has had Mr. Geynet under his care, hurried to the house, but the man was dying when he arrived and in a few minutes had passed away. Mr. Geynet was the son of Breire and Francoise Gevnet and was born in France 34 vears ago. About 10 years ago he came to this country and Since that time had made his home in this city. He was unmarried and was em- ployed in the J. B. Martin company as ‘a bookleeper in the weaving de- The deceased is survived by one brother. Louis Gevnet. of this city and a sister, Mrs. Jerome Theve of Prospect park, with whom he made his home. Mr. Geynet's sudden death was a shock to his many warm friends and his loss is sincerely mourned by all who knew him. CARPENTERS ASK FOR NEW WAGE SCALE Want 45 Cents an Hour Where They Have Been Getting 40 Cents. partment. Repres union and ntatives from the Carpenters® the master builders of the city have been in conference over a req made by the carpenters for a change in the wage schedule which has been in force for the past vear, dating from April 1st to April 1st Under that schedule the carpenters | have been getting 40 cents an hour for | { a 44 hour week. They have now asked the master builders to agree to a wage schedule ¢ 4 cents an hour for a 44 hour week According to the carpenters, the 45 cent . i granted, would place them on an equal figure with what is paid in New London, while in numerous other cities of the state, among which Hartford, Stamford and Bristol are mentioned, the rate of pay is & cents per hour. It is expected that one of the gen- eral organizers of the national asso- ciation, John Potts of Boston. will be here this week to confer with the carpenters on the local situation. OBITUAHV.‘ Mrs. Charles Frederick Gladding. The death of Emma C. Moore, wife of Charies Frederick Gladding, occur- red Wednesday morning at her home in Hartford. Sheswas born in this city 67 vears ago and was the daughter of Davig and Jane Herskell Moore. She was married to Charles F. Gladding in this city by Rev. R. P. Ambler, June 4. 1869. Mr. Moore was engaged in ihe ice business and was one of the leading business men of the town. Mr. f;!:. dderg was engaged in the drug bus- iness. The family removed to Hart- ford a number of years ago. Mrs. Glaceing is survived by her husband and a daughter, Helen Glad- ding of Hartford. Allen L. Mcore, a | brother of the deceased, died in Nor- | wich in June, 1911, and another broth- | er. George Henry Moore, died in 1906. There is a niece, Miss Grace Moor in New York and a nephew, Frederick Moore of Hartford. Invited Men’s Clubs. clubs of the churches of The Men's Relatives of Silas Duncan Wanted. i Quincy, April 2.—Navy de- | partment have peen seeking | in vain for some direct descendant of | Commander Silas Duncan, an officer of | the United States navy in the wag of | 1512, o be sponsor at the launching of | the torpedo hoat Duncan from a local shipyafd next Saturday. If no such cendant is found. some young wom- an of this city probably will christen the craft. To the Manufacturer’s Best Friend You are the manufacturer's best friend Mr. Retailer. He will take advice from you, because he.knows that if he wants the people of this city to buy his product he must reach them through you. Therefore when the manufacturer comes along with a line of goods for vou to handle ask him what he expects to do to help you sell them. Ask him if he will tell the people of this city that your store carries his product. Tell him and prove to him that the only way to bring cus- tomers to your store to ask for his product is to create a DI- RECT DEMAND through the columns of THIE BULLRTIN and other good newspapers. Show lim that (he only of advertising that (wlit | YOU —and when he he helps himself—is the kind that eresies direet demand on vou and that the cheapest, best, and quickest medium for this purpese is the daily newspaper. kind benefit helps you WHEN you want to put your busi- gf & bbetore lhhe Du:llc. L’;-rs is me me. um betior than through the advertis. ing columns of The Bulletin bury Man Jolts Unscientific Farming. In connection with the two days’ institute and agricultural convention under the auspices of the Board of Trage, a Dbanguet stvled rural-urban was heid on Wednesday evening at the Wauregan house as a pleasant social side of the gathering of the agricul- turalists. The tables in the big dining room at the hotel were attractive in decorations in pink roses arrunged by Reuter and covers were laid for 60, among those attending being several ladies. During the banquet an orchestra un- der the direction of Mrs. Eljzabeth G. Danihy rendered a fine programme. per year. tivation, tne speaker argued Connecticut could be iroduce a food product { equal to its consumption. H. O. Daniels of Middletown. adviser to the farmers & Agricultural Convéntion—an. Wilson H. Lee ing Declares President Beach of State College—Dan- the average consumption of food by an average person per vear he estimated that it would take two acres to a per- son to yield. support for one -person Since Connecticut has two { million acres, of land available for cul- that self supporting under scientific farming, since it could practically H. O. Daniels of Middletown, expert of the state, was the succeeding speaker, giving an Fine Jewelry For Easter FINE GOLD BROOCHES PENDANTS BRACELETS HAT PINS DIAMOND RINGS and numerous other To Grow Hair on A Bald Head BY A SPECIALIST.® & Thousands of people suffer from baidness and falling halr, who, having tried nearly every advertised hair tonlc | anu hair-grower without resuils, have resigned themselves to baldness and its “attendant discomfort. = Yet their case is not hopeless: the foliowing sim- ple home prescription has made bair grow after vears of baldness, and is also unequalied for restoring gray hair to its original color, stopping hair from falling out, and destroying the dandruff germ. it will not make the halr greasy, and can be put up by any druggist: Bav Rum, 6 ounces; Lavona . - dc_Composes, 2 ounces; Menthol Crys- Nice Gifts tals, one-half drachm. If you wish Vl‘ perfumed, add half to one teaspoonful | of To-Kalon Perfume, which unites | rfectly with the other ingredients. | e | Fis praparation is nighly recommend- ed by physicians and specialists. and is absolutely harmless, as it contains none of the poisonous wood alcohol so fre- | Ferguson & Charbanneas quently found in hair tonics. Do not | APEIY Yo ‘the face of where hair 12 not | FRANKLIN SQUARE desired. | boys could be kept on the farm who E. RYTHER, | now go to the cities. Proprietor Norwich Nurseries, There is an era of prosperity relat- 'wiil be in town Tuesday and following The banguet was at § oclock with i e R D T ing to agricaltural conditions in New days ‘prepaved 1o furniah anything d b ollowing menu served in com- | 1 Wa b Ara | England approaching and a little fore- Sired in Jine of Shade Trees, Hvi mendable form by B ot staff an 1‘““""“5{_‘“‘ F"°d“"“l;’; ‘;’0"‘ "ge { sight will enable us all to share in the £reens Snrubs Vines Hedges Fruic o f Celery So S ieht Cmeth e b Miaroaing. e | benefits that will come with it. phone, care O. B, Letfngwell, R, D 3. T Celery Sou v s of far - e : s i Jong ioare. O L R NS Tt e spoke upon the subject of federal aid | Dairymen Will Demand Fair Treat- Nurseiy and office at Maplewdod ceme Thames River Bass, Tomato Sauce |for the farmers in the state in con- ment. b Pommes Care junétion with a fund which the state | president F B, Duffy of Meriden, of 4 Roast Stuffed Turkey, Giblet Sauce |Might establish. Today we are all{ihe Connecticut Dairymen's associa- | Potato Croquettes consumers of food, but enly about 30 (. followed Mr. Thompson. The dai- | Mashed Turnips Deér cent. are producers. It the r‘l‘m"" ! rymen of the state, President Duffy Cranberry Sauce of producing is all put on the shoul- | gaiq were producing now fully: 50| G Steamed Fruit Pudding Hard and Brand Neopolitan Ice Cream Fancy Cake Coffee Hon. Wilson H. Lee, Toastmaster. Hon. Wilson H. Lee of Orange was y Sauce scientific, accurate knowledge the state agricultural colleges ing to supply. re tr: work together. R. D. Tomlinson of Danbury. ders of 30 per cent. of the people they are deservin- of some help. and the which Changed conditions in | living have reduced the ranks of pro- ducers in all lines and we should all per cent. in value of the agriculutural | products of the state and were surely | deserving of consideration. Tle men- tioned some of the things that the | dairymen’s as=ociations of ihe country | had done. They hag secured an effect- ive oleomargarine law. They were standing back of the state agricultur- 1 college, for they were fully alive to can supply you with Parlor Furniture, Dining Room Sets, Kitchen Ranges, Oil Stoves. the acceptable toastmaster for the eve- la ning introducing ‘the post-prandial| What interest in the farmer have | the value of the college. Tresident Art Squares, Carpets, Lace part of the evening with some refer- | people not engaged in agricultural | Duffy said he believed the collége pursuits was the topic upon which R. should have a larger approptiation for > & % D oralinson of Danbury wae intro- | the sherier course there enoula be Curtains, Portieres, Window duced to spea | continued. it had been discontinued The farmer occupies He cther lines. unique position. whether they want the has to bu not, and Conditions have arisen, he said, that are gradually forcing co-operation be- tween the farmer and men engaged in is a manufac- | turer producing goods that everyone | to or farmer would adopt the’ business methods of other manu- | facturers the ycan make more money | were doing a lot of thinking, and they on the capital invested than anv man- Shades, Vacuum Cleaners, | because of lack of funds. The speaker referred to a threat that the dairymen were to be up against - . " a | frec trade on dairy products, and he Sewing Machines, Pianos, | wanted it understood that the dairy H rmers would never stand for any- Etc‘ Etc., 37-47 Main Streat | thing but fair treatment from any po- i litical party. The dairy farmers were | not making much noise now, but they be heard from with force and would - ufacturer not making a patented arti- | uffect if it becomes necessary. cle. Few people realize the fact that: president Duffy spoke of the valuable |~ — =T the agricultural conditions in XNew !uxtension work for farmers which Mr. CHAS. E. WHITAKER o Lngland are in a dangerous condition. I am informed that in 1860 there were Connecticut | under cultivation that today is grow- ! ing up to brush and poor grass land. Do you not think this has something | 800,000 acres of land in to do with the price of food? Reduce Production Cost. The cost of living has greatly S : 1le and telling them to strike for thelr ! the to | hts. Conditions will not aliow manufacturer to increase wages any great extent, and something H. O. DANIELS ence to the distinguished men who I tural lines in coming years and that in- got to be done to relieve the situation f farms in the United States are going Daniels was doing, which intensely practical. * Two Brief Responses i Tin and Sheet Metal Worker W. O. Rogers, past president of the | Connectocut Poultrymen's association, _ Agent for Richardson and Boynton made a pleasant but brief response Furnac when calleg upon, and Prof. C. D. Ja i vis of the Agricultural college also re- sponded briefly, speaking of an_orchard in New Milford. where 55 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. creased to a point where the man earn- | demonstration s 3 ing $12 & week and less can hardly | the farmers in three years had been | sopport his. family. The labor agi. | converted from a hostile attitude to- | a |ve Inac tators have been organizing these peo- | wards extension work into enthusiastic { | approval of it now. It was a practical work which showed big resuits and in chich good progress was made, al- | though meager funds were available. he banquet, which was in charge i : ac Railion’s e Rabbi Charged with Cruelty, WEDDING. have gone out from Norwich or whose B _ ancestors lived here, and reminding | I can see but one way out and that is | of the entertainment committe of them———————— === his hearers that the present day Nor- | we must reduce the cost of production | Board of Trade, A. S. Spalding chair- e D BUFFRRENS wich was a leader in the merging of | n farm products. | man, was adjourned at 1130 o'clock. | SR LODEB . business and agricultural interests ur friends at the experiment sta- Prosrilros Fady: Which this convention and banquet ar- | tion in New Haven and at the colle e L o utiene et ‘I“QRW"" Forwarded ranged for by the Board of Trade in- |at Storrs have been gathering infor- | —‘The Brosramme to! = rom Local Red Cre T e e e e e !ahm“ e iuxx 0330 & m— Poultry Wood- Mrs. Robert W. Perkins has senf a he said, when the business interests years: that is, those who will go anc e = o rs. Robe s s sen recognized the value of its agricul- | listen te their leciures, and those who Dbury O. Rogers Norwich. = . = check for $439 to the freasurer of the tural interests as they de teday, Un- | canmot go cam get their bulletins for 1850 4. heep lecture, - Shott- Red Cross society at Washington, the tll Just mow the agriculturalists never | the price of a postal eard, and 1 am | mueller : Chemical Needs CoREributions from this section for the got their fair share in Hartford, but | tcid that comparatively féw farmers| 11.30 8 m.—Lecture, Chemical Needs reiief of the flood sufferers in the mid- fn the last legislature they got not ! will take the trouble to send tne of the Soil, Dr. B. H. Jenkins dle west. 4 only what they asked for but they | postal. Farming is a manufacturing | v Lunch reces: pAmong the final contributions were i . And cas roug! e | proposition. All manufacturers seek 7 Pirst Baptist chure! 3, Miss Emily o Tralion "SE tne Dusimess 1ateresta. | bnd mopt the methods that will re- | ut, perkins, | 1. D. Davis, Dr. B Pike, ” . 1 duce the cost of his goods. H . Kk church 7.03, in a ition to gosod b Feade Rinwidion i | Jar checks from members of the church He introduced President James C. Farmers Slow About Changing. | i i amounting to more than $60; Second Macpherson of the Norwich Board of | i js an unfortunate condition. but DIVIDENDS DECLARED Congregational church $22; Universal Trade, who veiced a sincere weicome | ... = = aver: > ist church $2 Sympathize Central nevertlieless irue, that the average C t P to those who were present and Went | (irmer does not like to change his IN BANKRUPTCY COURT | ;. et Ghurch $59, Xens of First Bap on fo speak of the surprise it gave him | o o0 o s At was gobd bo: e tist church, Mrs ward D. Fuller to hear that the Norwich Board of | ECIGIS, Fe says WhAl NeS GO Final Settlements Reached Before (M GUil i, ‘WB. Birge, Grace eir- Trade was a pioncer in inviting eon- | jim ac far as the methods of farming | Referee Browning in Two Estates. | . §10. ventions of agriculturalists to the city: : ure ‘concerned. If manufacturers were | == i L 5 He mentioned the fact that the farm- : it Chein i : he | Before Referce in Bankruptey A. A = - {te conduct their business along the 2 ¥ : . E | Mob of 50 Loots Trains. ers of Conmecticut preduced only 35 !gome lines that a great pereentage of | Browning two final hearings have re- | hob of 5 s, per cent. of the food that was cen- !f.rmers are deing, they would be out ) cently been held and dividends de- | ,Buffalo. N. Y., April 2.—Using re med In. the state. which he argued | o¢ buginess as soon as they had used | ¢lared. In the estate of George P.|volvers to c¢rive away the train crews was a good reason for Boards of Trade | up thelr available capital. I firmly | Pooler of this city, the final dividend ja mob of fifty men looted the cars of to wake up and see that our farmers | peljeve that good Tarming will do | Was 10 18-100 per cent, which with a | two Iehigh Valley railroad freight were aided and encouraged to Increase | more fo solve the problem of the high | previous dividend made a totai divi- | trains wrecked near Lackawanns 1o and enlarge the productivity of their | osi of living than any other one|dend A" 15 18-100 per cent. . |night. The loss from the wreck and lands. He thanked the men and Wo- |-{hing. In the bankruptcy of B. Warren Car- | the stolen and burned property was men for their attendance at the meet- | 5w, .Collingwood, editor of thc |Penter of Stonington, the final division | estimated at $200,000. [our trainmen ings and the banquet and predicted | Rural New Yorier, States that within | 1S 6 55-100 per cent. A dividena of 10 | were injured an increasing interest in these agricul- | 49 years from now the best paying | Per cent. was declared last December. | e | | Norwich and asking that it would always consiger Norwich as a place where it might meet. To the toast The City of Norwich, His Honor went on to spealk of some of the assets of the city, saying that these included a water plant which could be sold at a valuation equal to the entire mdebt- edness of the city, an electric light department worth a million doliars, a new reservolr and a park system cap- able of much development. There is to also a beautiful river and a harbor second only to New London’s, and alopg the river the future may vet see a line of manufactories. Mayor Murphy commended the appropriation for New London harbor and said that the vote to curtail that appropriation was a vote to injure the state of Con- necticut. In the banking interests of the city was the Norwich Savings society with the second largest deposits in the state, and not a bank in Norwich had ever gone wrong. The business inter- ests of Norwich are represented by £5,500,000 which pass through them in a vear. The day is going : ll; bfi- lieved, said the mavor, when banks B At refuse to lend the farmer money on | E. DUFFY. mortgage, and he invited the farmers to come fo Norwich to do their bank- ing business. President C. L. Beach. Toastmaster Tee spoke briefly in commendation of the change in the attitude. of the banks towards the fermer, and thén introduced President ! C. L. Beach of Connecticut State Agri- cultural college at Storrs. Cornecticut’s ability to produce its own foodstuffs made the _topic for President Beach's short but interesting response. There has been a cry that | the city has robbed the country of its best young men and women. It is good that the couniry has been able to furnish- these young men and young women to the city. But now there is a revival of agricultural interests and the ery is now “Back to the land!” Two fitting quotations from Budha and Walt Whitman upen the attrac- tiveness of farm life as he continued ta speak of the relation between food supply and the high cost of living, race fayored excuse of the farmer who think they are telling the truth, {and has been taken proper care of broducing the best crops. Treat the Boys Right. I am going to refer to a phase farming that can be improved by little diplomacy. boye come to the cities, would very soon be in despair. surprising” how It father. . They home, but same as his father . Really, the bc not producing very much is that their farms are worn ‘out and no doubt they but the evidence all goes to show thal the land that has been farmed the longest [ ¥6ars. e T08 070 2 That is the fact that | S0 any boys are leaving the farms. | It is necessary that some of the farm or the cities many of the real big men in the cities made their start on o farm. One of the main reasons that the boy leaves the farm is because of | the manner in which he is used by his want the boy to stay insist that he do just the has always done. v is little better than the this helpful cooperation between city | be in a strip not over 100 miles wide Halifax. N , April 2—Abraham business interests and the agricultur- {ajong the Atlantic coast. When the | ol Leavitt, Hebrew rabbi for Halifax, was alists would grow to an important | New England farms have been brought | Byrnes—Bottsford. summoned to court today on a charge development. to a high state of fertility by proper | Ronald Muirhead Byrnes, son of Mr. | of causing an animal unnecessary pain Magor T. C. Murphy. management they will be the best|and Mrs. Frederic A. Byrnes, of this The animal, a heifer, was being slaugh. Mayor T. C. Murphy was the next |Pa¥INg farms in the country. The|city, and Miss Adelaide Swift Botts- |tered for food to be supplied to Jew- e R Y, 3 8 2 ford, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry | ish families. | speaker introduced, teliing the associa- s Bl Wea! ratten in: raade| oid tion that it would always be wecicome riage at the home of the bride’s par- | Flagler Shows Favorable Symptoms. | ents, No. 15 Claremont avenue, New York city, Monday evening. Miss Mary Cutler of New York was maid of hon- | of Chicago, West Palm Beach, Fla, April Henry M. Flagler, the multi-million- aire, is reported to have regained ¢on- on gud ff'f“‘{:’e""g‘iof;,"‘fi‘?i ot 14BO: | sclousness and to have shown other The service was ch;d‘\J('lPd by Rev. {a\_nr‘ulbh- mptoms at 9.15 c’'clock Neilson Poe Carey of St James |OnIERt N £ iflgi:ri‘lfl:;ylladison avenue, formerly ul" Gucmian Bhip Missing. The bride was charmingly attired in New York, April —The Germam white satin charmeuse with trim- | ship Columbus. carrying a crew of mings of rare lace and pearls. Her | twenty-five and a cargo of 8,000 bar veil was caught with orange blossoms | rels of petroleum, was bulletined as ond pearls and she carried a shower missing today on the maritime ex- bouquet of liliee of the valley Mies | change. Mary Cutler, maid of honor, wore e white lace over pale pink satin with for Strike Rioter. drapery of blue Dresden silk. She ! Little Falls, N. Y. April 2.—Philip carried Killarney roses. Boccini, recently convicted as a Tiot Mr, and M rnes left for @ wed- | or during the textile sirike disturb ding trip to Bermuda and on their re- | ances last fall, was sentenced to one wrn will_occupy a mnewly furnished i year in the Auburn state prison toda home at Glen Ridge, N. J. by Judge PeN at Herkimer. FUNERAL. | elling the truth accidentally . is ; — more or less embarrassing. Lawrence Redkitski. The funeral of Lawrence Redkitski was held from the parlors of Shea & | Burke Tuesday afternoon with services | EVER WATCHFUL s |in St Joseph's church. Burial was | in St, Mary's cemetery. Mr. Redkit- : % Sien A Ski died in this city March 30 at the |A Little g"'; g ?".r = ZI Ne: He was a native of wich eaders uture rouble. age of 45 years. Austria_and had resided here several ears. He resided at 78 Sherman strest | yaton the kidney. secratisng ; in the Falls mill et is | He leaves a wife and four children in | See that they have the amber hue Austria. of health; { Voo, The discharge not excessive or im- of | Suffrage Association Makes Offer. |frequent; & The Connecticut Equal Suffrage a,q~l Contain no “brick-dust like” medi- sociation has sent a communication to | officers of Norwich Grange offering to supply them a speaker, free of ex- pense to the grange. They give a list of 18 speakers and six subjects and offer any date from the 9Sth to the 16th of the month. ment. Doan’s Kidney Pills aré especially or weak kidneys. Let a Norwich citizen tell you how they work. | Michael Cox, 44 Summit Street, Nor- wich, Conn., sayi “I was in pretty | bad shape as the result of kidney and bladder trouble about a month ago. The kidney secretions were painful in passage, causing me much misery and is Fourteen Calls for Firemen. i In the month of March the Norwich | fire department had 14 calls, of which | two were bell alarms. These two were | for the fire in Foresters’ hall and the suicide and the increase of pepulation ' hired man. Verv few parents will | fire in the shed in the rear of the | through immigratien. willingly acknowledge this state of af- | Brewer heouse on Washington street, I could hardly get around, owing to bt ifalrs, but frem my observations It is | Beth of these blazes were of incen- |Pains in my back. Reading of Dean’s Feag Supply Questlor: true, diary origin, it 13 belleved. { Kidney Pills 1 obtained u box at N. D. 1t s & questlon how we are to In- The aversge man will remain where | Hevin & Son's Drug Store, and in three Crease our food SUpHlY to take care of | his financial inierests wre. If o father Gur incressing population, while ihe [could only see thie way clear te maxe | Record of 18 R. I. Reds. days after I began using them I noticed fertility of the land is on the decrease, the bay a pariner in the business ana Claude R, Wilson of Klizabeth street {tmprovement. The kidney secretions if anything. ‘This problem in Connec: treat him o litile betier, give him more | has a_pen of 13 Ithode Island. Reds | pecame natural ana I was soon ria of teut is of Impertance fo every muan, | responsibility und gel hi terested! | from which he has gotten in the 31 | >0C2Me ¥ i We have & populatien largely cngaged | Send him to all the farmers’ institutes | days of March a total of 481 eggs, | $VOrY symplom of kidney complaint. in manufacturing, It is a quesiion hew | that are within reuch and let him t Iy his means an average of praclically |1 eannot pralse Doan's Kidney Pills too long we can lkeep Up present cendi- cut seme of the things that are being | 14 czzs a day. nighly.” tiens and -maintain the present high |taught us by the experiment station. | L Gl Lhe wage seale. - Can Cennecticut be made {and in shert make him feel that he is R LA TN For sale by all deslers. Price §0 Self sustaining if the land new under Ian impertant facter in the firm. aid Dust at Fire Station. eents. Foster-Milburn Co., Mumtalo, eyltivation could be developed te its | I realise that there are many dif- | To lay the dust in Chestnut street | New York, sole agents for the United ghest preductiveness and that re- i ferent kinds of boyvs that require dif- | in freat of the fire statioen Chief Stan- States, ferent treatment, but u will claimed to cultivatien which has been allowed to go uncultivated? On fig- oy generally solve problems ures: wilieh the speaker used e shew (Rat kind, and 1 beliove thal maay litile diploma- ton had the. street wet down with a stream from the hydrant at the station | Remember the name— Doan's —ané ‘Wednesday ailermeon. _ take no other. 2y of

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