Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 20, 1913, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Cauliflower Fancy Alberta Peaches Dill and Leeks Red Cabbage Green Tomatoes Green Peppers Hot Peppers White Onions Bartlett Pears “Norwicn, Saturday, Sept. 20, 1913, VARIOUS MATTERS ‘Witch hazel mills abeut the county ;lll begin their busy season about ov, L Nice oysters 30¢c a quart at Church Bros'.—adv. According to the crop report, Con- necticut will produce 432,000 tons of hay this season. Next Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Irving Crouch of Groton are to in- spect Preston City grange. Passengers on the trolley line are watching with interest the handseme "flmht!BuLuflintg guest of friends in Davisville. Mrs. H. I. Brockway and Miss Ella Johnson of Niantic were in Norwich this week. Secretary Charles M. Greene of the New London Y, M. C. A. was a visitor at Norwich this week. Capt. Charles Potter of Norwich has been at his cottage in Riverside ave- nue, Noank, this week. Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Dow will move to the Ashby apartment house on Lower Broadway, Oct. 1st. Francklin LaPierre of Lord's Point is visiting his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. LaPierre, at Norwich. Mrs. W. Hardy and son, Wliford, of Haverhill, Mass., are guests over Sun- Mrs, James Pollard of Mystic is the gt GUILTY ON ONE SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1913 _ COUNT IS PLEA Made By William Henry Dennis on Charge of Wife Abandon- ment For Another Woman—Sentences For Pisceno and Dimetrio — Trial of Rubey Parker on Charge of At- tempted Arson Begun. Just as the superior court was about to adjourn here on Friday aft- ernoon for the week, State’s Attorney Hull informed Judge Gardiner Greene that he had a matter that he wished to bring before the court and he told the judge that Willlam Henry Den- the uncertainty of the number of men concerned in the holdup. . Dimerio was later connected with the holdup and he was traced to New York, where two attempts to arrest him ‘falled. The third time he was arrested by New York police at the instigation of two state policemen and extradited to this state and bound over in Boston, director of the Federal Trust company, trustee of the Boston Five Cents Savings bank and a member of influential Eoston clubs. BULLETIN'S PATTERN SERYICE. flock of sheep at Lord's Hill. day of friends on McKinley avenue. Mrs. Max Rabinovitch and daughter of Hill street have returned after spending several weeks in New York. Mrs. William Brand and daughter, Miss Edith, have returned to Mystic from avisit with friends in Norwich. Mrs. William R. Stevens of River avenue is spending a month in Cleve- land, O., the guest of her daughter, Mrs. Louis Taber, Children Love It The delicious flavor of Malt Breakfast Food makes it the fa- vorite with children, while its full food value, supplying all the elements needed to build up the growing body, appeal to the care- ful mother. It is most econom- ical, as a 15¢ package makes 30 big portions. to the higher court. Pisceno Goes to Prison. After disposing of the Dimerio case | Judge Greene pronounced sentence on John Pisceno of Groton, whase trial was finished late Thursday afternoon, and against whom the jury returned a verdlct' of guilty on two counts after | the case had been in their hands 30 minutes. He was given from four to five years on the first count and four years on the second. There were two counts in the accu- sation against Pisceno, one because of SOMERS nis was ready to change his plea. He ‘was accused on two counts of abandon- ing his wife and living with another Wwoman. Attorney Albert J. Bailey who has been counsel for Mr. Dennis, had been in conference with him an dwith the state’s attormey during the day and when Mr. Dennis was put to plea he pleaded guilty to the second count in the charge. State's Attorney Huil said he would defer asking for sen- tence until later. E. H. Shanks, from Norwich, is the { new agent at the Central Vermont rail- road station in Northfield, Mass. At Vernon, Tolland county, Rev. Fa- ther Riedy of the Sacred Heart church is organizing a Holy Name society in the parish. Big_night tonight at the Firemen's fair, Shannon hall, Baltic. Dancing and entertainment.—adv. Although many of the cottagers at Mrs. Jeannette Hoffman and her | Previously when presented, Mr. Den- b 3 2 Best View have left for their city | Sranddaughter, Miss Florence Rock- |nis had pleaded not guilty to the|DIs attack on Mike Scarrano and the Hamilton Coupons in Every homes. that attractive resort is by | Wood, of North Franklin are visiting |charge made against him. The charge | Other upon Albert G. Rivers, the Plant 9698 Package poultry farm manager. In both of the in Easthampton, Mass. to which he now pleads ilty is that | o v no means deserted. pton, Mass. 2 hea e mgp witr" :’:& Sl’“_mg i'tn | ussaults a revolver was used and upon | A PRETTY STYLISH W At your grocers. : | i : Mea i 5 both counts he was charged with as- _ e ° After the rain the woods will begin | _ Mrs. H. H. LaPierre has returned to |New York with a woman named 3 & | Blue Crepe With Bulgarian Embroidery || Malted Cereals Co., to show autumn tints more and more. | Norwich after a stay at Homewood, | Vivian Campbell, alias Mrs. St. Den- :—B}:”[ With ontent to kIl and o Eder | nnd SEadew Laics in Herc: Showas Burlington, Vt. er e hose ‘who have been prospecting | Stonington. with her son and family, |1s. The jury found him gullty of the predict a big crop of nuts. Dr. and Mrs. Leon F. LaPierre. Mr. Dennis was formerly from Yan- | (¢59eF degree of assault, that of Intent| ng fronts are made in surp} tic and is a carriage painter by occu- . o "Waist s _bloused. & s new general timetables affecting | A‘d”s\«‘}[ Helen Murphy, daughter of MI. | pation and said to \?p an expert at For Attempt at Arson. ,is gathere .“"r;“";, 3 all divisions will go Into effect on the (and Mrs. Willlam H. Murphy of No. |the business. He married a Norwich| About 12.20 o'clock the state’s attor- e i e S l ea ers New York, New Haven and Hariford | 44 Williams street, left Friday to en- |woman but deserted her and the fam- |ney called up the case of the state ve. | Seete T "Wt Lo S [l The Anditorium Hotel raliroad Sunday, Sept. 28. bl i ¥ C€ol- lily of children, and from evidence | Rubey Parker, a grocer of East Lyme, | In shorter length it has a lege, Washington, D. C. 4 b abig e which the police have pieced together, | whose arrest on the charge of arson The pattern is cut in five Genealogical research in Albany has | e 16700 anict T Hyeit for 72 tinie-1n "Poa. | Ratonishod Yib nelelivors when 16 on | 36, 35 and 40 inches, bust OHORECOEIARE RO o o ottty o O HUNTERSILICER e ton with & woman Wwho 18 now in Weat- |carred, The. Information agaimst Mr. | T e BUSIHESS ) Buy best whic a bras: g N P g F a0 ieg | €T1¥, but he deserted her without mar- | Parker charged him with attempted 4 ern o s ‘illustration mailed m M[“ l_ B est which has & DrassqShe is expected home this evening. ' |lesued by Town Clork—But No Copies |5/ 'iii o st count againat. Bl | raon on Tuge 9 It acttinie e 0 | to Brs Sathans on raseiat 5710 oonte o b S PIASR i The Connecticut Transcript an- of Huntingg Laws tc Distribute. as for abandoning his wife and liv- |barn owned by Israel Wilensky. N ar iar from 12 until 2 BoancasT that tHe Herty: SToitet Devo- Mown Clerk China 8 ko 1 ling with Loretta Davis of Boston. The charge had been arson but the | Order t tion begins Sunday in St. Andrew’s, | began " to leste huntors iorook has | According to information secured by |state’s attorney changed it to attempt- Culotiehter antl B\ Thomas’ Voluh: | oas oi8 el hunt icenses 10 |the state police, who arrested him in e darson when he found that the barn SPECIAL FOR TODAY town. * hose who would issu: forth into the|New York, it is believed that he was |had only been slightly scorched. The woods with rifle or shotgun, and has whom he Prosecuting Attorney Hall married to the woman with fire was started in a bastment part of lived there. the-barn. New England Boiled Dinner alcready taken in the $1.25 fee from Carriage Lanterns i There are many bayberries in the fields below Montville, In Windham |61, 0 = b £ who prosecuted the case when Mr. Parker pleaded not guilty. He county one woman makes good pin- n the law it is provided that the|Dennis was presented in the Norw is defended by Judge Bush and At- money gathering these to be made into | tOWn clerk shall issue with each license |city court said Thursday that it was | torneys Geary and Boyer. PRICE 40c a copy of th was mar- up-to-date game laws, candles. t understood that Mr. Dennis Civil Engineer George H. Pitcher | but so far Town Clerk Holbrook has |ried to one of the women with whom |was the first witness when court came | Dwight J. Cooley, 62, died at his|been unable to do this, as the fish and he lived after he deserted his wife. in in the afternoon. He explained a Evade the Penalty and Avoid the| 11 Hancock street, Springfield, | game commission have failed to pro-| In the morning session of court Mike | large map of the location of the prop- o ving at night by buying | ) Thursday evening after a short | Vide him with the usual printed copy | Dimerio. alias Michael Angelo Niezleni, | erty and also ten photographs that | # James and George Cooley of | of the laws for distribution. He has|f New London pleaded guilty to the,he had taken. The questioning of the | at approved carriage and ve- afford are his brothers. | written to them asking them how they | charge of assault with intent to Kkill | attorneys for both sides was much : hicle lamp. & - . | expect him to comply with the law in|and highway robbery on Melville Ma- |along the line of whether a view of Mrs. Alfred Ceit, wife of Judge Coit, | this respect when they have not done | son of Niantle and Willlam Messenger | the barn and the fmmediate surround- cottage. the follownng: William" J. Holcombe, 19 Italians who on Sunday, Aug. 4, 1912, | vening rise of land would largely cut Ebe who has been sorifmx, ill, is gaining | their which it is directed they |of New London in Niantlc Aug, 4 of | Inge to the south could be had from daily and the family will soon return | shall do. The commission has not yet|last year. He was given from five to | the house which shown on the road. — F to their home in Huntington street,| returned an answer. ten rs in state pr! n. Mr, Pitcher gave it as his opinion ‘u&‘:“j@ ; @[}{l&gE New London, from their Ocean —.«ch | Hunting licenses have been issued to| Dimerio was one of a quartette of | that some apple trees and an inter- Y E Business ) S aile | Frank B. Lathrop, William J. Banfield, |held up Mason and Messenger in|off the view slsworth Tracy of Thomaston, who | rving L. Hamilton, Henry Hamilton, | Niantic while the latter were driving | Court adjourned at 435 and he is Compan died recently, was chairman of the ed- | 2. J “Bohanan, J. A. Kossmark, W. H. | to the station about 4 o'clock to get | (o take some more photographs, ac- pany ucational committee in the last sesslon | Brown, . Cornelius Smith, George R | Sunday papers | cording to directions from Major Hull, RS ooy gl ‘;‘:‘nu‘?r‘i‘:';a;"‘t‘;_; Goowin, F. B. Swan, Ralph Diveto. J.| Later in the day three of the quar- | State Policeman Downing was with s ™ i 3 e oy i g o A. McDonald, Edgar ladd, Lindhay |tette were arrested in New London. | him when he took the other photo- 129 Main St., Norwich, Conn. | Connecticut. George Cormicr, Clifford La- | Dimerio made his escape by reason of | graphs on September 4th, Miss Emeline Austin, who died in | {hrop, Shermood B. Potter, Hovert f. Mass., after a lingering ill- | - v, Reuben B. Potter, Henry M. WE ADVERTISE EXACTLY '\mlu in ’)\‘imlhann lb}uL g\gd W]‘}lm;-ai 'rl.m‘; R!‘;;lll\:u‘ dl‘};&nea;gl STEAM SHOVEL USED IN ROAD WORK ntry for 30 ye: The body . Gl L e was sent to Coventry for burial Wed- Joseph Materino, Ernest L. nesday morning. Leonard, Joseph Rell, Leo LePagi William irban s LePage, Otis S. I t On Friday, Lincoln Wadsworth and | Daniel Caplat, Feli Sl l k h d t tanuck cove. Although there were \arles Singman, Julian LaPierre, " h 2 f many black ducks and whistlers, they aplet Leonard Purvi; Philip o with two pairs of did not rise, probably due to the un- | Simino, Archibald Mitchell, Archibald B S “ d p favorable weather conditions. Mitchell, Jr., W. Jennings e T us‘“ess uccess an 2 ai s, William H. Knickerbocker Pants [The department steamer Correction, | Callahan, Jacob Fenton, a & & which took the Gaynor party down the | Harry Trac: 3 William oo 't 'll will give twice the S e B e B Tuthill Mrank B Burdicls Wwillism minence--it will pay i | Gayno body, was built at the Palmer | F. Fromander, A, W, Hildebrand, Car- wear of an ordinary shipy o or three vears |jgs Ricker, William if. Lathrop, Joseph et OIS L i e Lo pa | P.” Farrell, Lincoln Wadsworth, Bruce 2680 " h- suit Gaynor. McMillan, Lawrence Colburn. you tg enro at t 1S uf KIMONO, The semi-annual meeting of the f 2 Woman’s Co; ¢ na Mis- Sh i nterest. 3 held in Putnam Wednesday, Oct. 1.| British shipbuilders say that it 1s ing Robe. ime n orwic $5., $6., $7., $8. and $9 This organization embraces all of the | almost impossible at present to obiain 5 (Y auxiliaries of Congregational churches|a contract for tne cunstruction of a “;}re"t‘rér;h ‘“;‘””‘f“f!'(\“‘R‘;’.',”‘,u" d ::’ " id & SR ipti of the state. teamer to show a profit, unless ave R YERIC C aith racing@s (ot ial S h l st B W e T e 1 v [ prices are cut very low the owners say i reniue o Swpeteb et i GOIYMCTCIA chool's merican Boy Magazine k Mrs. Sara T. Kinney is that they will wait until prices come silk or flannel. The garment is éasy to | general of the celebration of down, or try and secure a second-hand develop. It is finished with a new p o versary of the Conmecticut D. A. shaped collar and has sleeves in bell = asses g ¢/ to be held in Foot Guard armory, penditure of $20,000,000 by Con- shape. The pattern is cut in three ght l ‘ 7 ; (K / artford, Nov. 11. The vPlPhrunonl to complete the inland water- | IMPROVING ROADS The construction of the Jewett City | Slzes—8n i L TR T n1 ciasses. / L will be a genuine family affair and|way between Boston and Beaufort. Me. THROUGHOUT THE COUNTY. |Foad in Lisbon is being pushed rap-| {o"y iediim size. {/ none but Daughters will be admitted. has been recommended by general 2 *| idly along, but it will probably ba two A pattern of this illustration mailed Shannon Bld board of army engineers. It is pro- Traveling Will Be Better in All the months before the five mile stretch to any address on receipt of 10 cents in g- ”3”;; and Mrs. George S. Palmer of | poseq to construct a 12-foot canal, 90 he Pequot entertained at their beau-|seet wide, with an increase later to a tiful home the other day when their | gon level canal 25 feet deep, silver or Order throu Pattern Dept completed.. This is a sravel road. Th has been a stretch of road which driv- ers have execrated in times past, and Towns. Norwich, Conn L. M. Crandall, Pres. guests had the pleasure of listening to | ° Some Pacific Coast steamers are | There is considerable activity in the | it will be a great relief to the travel- b gl i Josa Zammels, o Pupil of JBugene|pesting the United States radio law, | construction of new roads and in road | ing public to have it put in such shape STORIES OF PLACES. Tt M Pl sans on ihe vielin. | which compels them to carry a Wire | opairing in this section of the state|8S IS contemplated. There has been Phone 721 or 1281-2 o A g eral selec- | jess outfit when the crew numbers 50 ¢ i ey Caiem ¥ ¢ | much cutting and filling to do in many It 15 the habit of the bigekeock ‘to g or more. The trick is to send away a |3t Presen|, and several stretches of|spots, and this has been done aecord-|strut and fight with his rivals in an | . . A Woodstock summer resident, Clar- | BOrtion of the crew when in British |new roadway are to be commenced |ing fo the best modern methods by |open arena, while the gray hens sit| ence W Bowen, writes enimusianticnly | Columbia waters, and reship the men | shortly. | the use of the steam shovel, which ac-| round as Gueens of the tournament of his ride in a’ Zeppelin airship at | PefoTe procecding to sea. In Old Lyme a stretch of macadam | compliskes a gr meunt of work in | The Russian sportsman builds a rough ‘_ Baden-Baden. . He rode for an hour |, J7 1is report on the trade of Japan |about a mile in length s nearly com- | a dav. : | hut of boughs on the spot, which does and a half, more than 800 feet high, a | for the past vear the British Com- |pleted, and in st Lyme a stretch of The Jewett City-Flainfield road| not seem to scare the bir Then he * | distance of 50 miles,and return. He |Mereial attache at Toklo states that |tarred macadam two miles in extent i3 | through Griswold is practically finish- | sleeps there and waits till the tour ome in and and his family il fa e, 4 |one of the most Interesting features |also nearing completion. On the New |ed. Two miles of this is of gravel and | ment begins in the morning, when he | Sept. 20, ¥*lhas been the business in steamships, | London turnpike in Waterford two |the other mile is macadam. | may blaze away at any of the cocks | _— | not so much of the extraordinary large | miles of tar macadam roadway have| In the town of Norwich the Occum | except the old one, whose death causes 5 Unclaimed Letters. increase, but because of the attitude | been finished and a piece of native|road is about completed. Here a mile|the spot to be deserted. An 'English e s anling . |udopted’ by the Japanese authorities | macadam on Logger Hiii has just been | of the road is macadam and a mile and | traveler in Russia says that he knew | e anlty e us Sshow unclaimed letters in the Nor- |in the Kwantung leased territory, | sterted. I o kit gravel. of Russians who had shot five or six | e T e heek ending | which permits ships obtainable the | . In Groton werk is well along on the| RBids have been submitted for the|cocks at one place several mornings < ows: G. H.|right to fly the Japanese flag and en- | pative maeadam road at Fort Hill, in | construction of a mile of road in Vol- | running, but, having bagged one him- Case . T ehery prembere, Mde Mary | foying mearly all the privileges of of- | length mbout & mile and a half. In | untown, but the contract has not as|self, he never had the heart to Kill ou a lne Geotes i Hasilnoths dinary Japanese steamers, while they | Stenington werk will be started next|yet been awarded, Next week bids | another. 2 . Howland, Hugh Hutehison: Mye. Wiy | S5C2Pe the payment of high import[week on a (wo mile streich of native | will be received for the construction| There was a hermit in the center of So many of woman's little kg 5 onen v Af Maze | duty—Darien and Pert Arthur being | faeadam, and in Nerth Stenington a|ef a picce of road in Voluntown, and | London only a few years ago, according needs are thoughtfully provided . tia, Mo sl i mile of gravel road will be commenced | also for a streteh on the Lebanon road | to the London Chronicle. His hermit- for in the latest Vanity Cases Mrs, W, {jordere Menard, | For years it has been the eause of gt the same time. | in_Frankiin, ago consisted of a cellar—the sole ves- t one of these compact and [\ eautiiu Mrs, He mith, Witiiee, | ¢omplaint among shipowners that they | “'rhe enly work in Presten at present| When all the work in hand has been | tige of a house in Clare market pulled | § dainty ry alls” has become Weed E ‘ 4m | have te pay large extra Bmeunts fOr | i on the Stemington read at Fox Hill, | eempleted considerable will have been|down and forgotten by its owners, He almost a necessi { ed. labor during strikes which sheuld i lived there for a long time, supported They come in_ Sterling silver, where werk is well along en the stre of about a mile of native macadam. the h | accotaplished towards improving principal highways in this section. and gold-filled in engine-turned de- properly be paid by the carge ewners, | The matter was discussed at a reeent meeting of the Internatienal Shipping silver plain signs. plate and by scraps of food from the tradesmen of the neighborhood, and might have lived there longer still if a journalist Fell frem Verandah, The youngest son of Robert Johasen | New Goods have opened today. GEO. A. DAYIS, 25 Broadway Have You a Kodak? It so this will h'terest you. the local agency for the Buash Co. of Previdence, R. I, a specialty of developing, nd eniarging. AH work fin- wn 48 hours after delivery at Quality of the work we are sure wil satisfy you, and prices so low that you car afford to have tats work done by a LEROU, The Progressive Druggist, 289 Main Street H ins s called to attend the case, Sodality Decides Upon Minstrel Show. At a recent meeting the Sodality ed to arrange for a mirstrel show and vaudeville performance this fall. The date was net determined upon, but will probably be before the end of Ne- vember. Socialists Gave Dance. The Nerwich socialist party conduet- ed an enjovable dance Friday evening in Freehlichkeit hai with a geod number in attendance. EDUCATIONAL NOTES, The whole oak tree is in the acers, and the whole man is in the child, All that is done to him, to help or hind- er him is of value or harm to him ac- cording to the degree to which he uses it and incorporates it into his will, words and works. We marvel why two children grow- ing side by side in the same family, scheool and seciety become the one strong and good, the other weak and bad. But it is no greater mystery than why of two plants in the same soil one will transmute muck inte white lilles and the other into red roses. The principal study in the schoolroom should be by the teacher, to learn and guide the child’s activi. ties. The chief moral help a child gets in the home is what he is inspired to do; what he is told not to do has litle to do with making character, The system of education ihat begins with the assumption that all children are alike, to be forced with a common system and tested by common grades, is doomed to sterility. The human be- vot- | rge in the interest of all cencerned. It was propesed that { haif of the additional expenses iR con- nection with a strike should be berne by the ship, and the other half by the | cargo. Baseball. “Baseball is one of the most highly and delicately organized activities in the world, and vet it is clean as moun- tain air, It i¥ an immense money- maker, but honest as daylight. It is nervous and strenuous and calls in- to play every source of brain gnd body, but every whit maniy and above- board, It is the sport of outdeors and free air, of open spaces, of hard, clev- er give-and-take, of whelesome temp- er and self-eontrel, Its honesty and wholesomeness, 1 thinik, are the ground of its universal appeal—the Teason, I mean, why all serts and oconditiens of men will stop a moment and watch while street arabs play on a cerner lot. It is a pause by the wayside shrine, a little uneonscious tribute te our ene great organized expression of honesty and clean handedness. “Baseball has given pur publie a fine lesson in commercial morals. It is a paying business, and it pays be- use it must be above suspicion, Ne- body ever dreams of crookedness or shadiness in baseball. The force of this example cannot be altegether lost, ome day all business will be reorgan- ized and conducted by baseball stand- aards, and then the big business game will get the popular confidence and support that it now seems to have lost. Tt can regain it any time that it makes up its mind to play by the same moral rules and principles that now prevail in baseball—American Magazine. Mayer Murphy Saw New Haven Road Official About Eighth Street. Mayor T. €. Murphy returned on Fri- day from Hartford, where he had been to see some of the New Haven road officials regarding the grade crossing at Eighth street, which he believes shouid be eliminated. Maver Murphy saw Hollowell and had a. § Division Supt. »mise from him that he would eeme here very soon to look at the situation regarding the grade crossing at Bighth street. it is the maver's belief that the do- jng away of this grade crossing would be a comparatively simple matter and ecould be accemplished by elevatig4 the tracks. Y. M. 8, CLUB DANCE. First of the S8eason Had Large Num- ber Present at Cadillac Hall, Fhe Young Men’s Sociai club gave a sueeessful social on Friday evening. the first elub dance of the season in Cadillac hall, and had a large attend- ance for the pregramme given by the Cadillae prehestra. Fhe eommittee in charge included Samuel Swatbzurg, Philip Smith, Julius Smith, Nathan Blumenthal and Meyer Budnick. Improvements at ¥. M. C. A. Gymna: um. Work of repainting the ¥. M, €. A. gymuasium, repairing and adding to he apparaius is nearly completed, and the floor will be ready for business in a short time. Physical Birector Nick- erson is now arranging his schedule of from Triumph Company. On Friday Clerk Spalding of the se- lectmen’s office gave Judge John H. | Barnes, attorney for the Triumph Vot- ing Machine company, a check for $6,000 for the ten machines, The pro- test of the Kmpire Voting Machine company against the use of the Tri- umph machine on the greund of in- fringement of patents has been with- | drawn and the patents and rights of the Empire company acquired by the makers of the Triumph machine. RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY. Adopted by Preston Grange Upon the Death of Sister Ursula R. Hall. At the last meeting of Preston grange, No. 116, P, of H., resolutions were adopted upen the death of Sis- ter Ursula R, Hall, a past lecturer of the grange and a member highly es- teemed. They extended sympathy te these bereaved in her loss and ex- pressed the high appreciation in which Sister Hall had been held in the grange. The resolutions were pre- pared by Hverett P. Barnes, Rev, Lu- ther M. Keneston and Mrs. A, B. Bur- dick as a committee. Men of Béston and New England. 'Phere has been published by the Boston American a 186-page volume entitled Men of Boston and New Bng- land, containing the pictures and short biographical sketches of leading citi- zens who are or apt to be in the public eye. It iz a finely printed. cloth bound volume of particular value in news- paper and reference libraries. | from the {to oust him from his hermitage and make him clean and respectable | process to which he succumbed Archibald Colquhoun relates | “there is a strong prejudice in Nicara | | while on a journey and for some days st is not washed off | afterward. The du the face for some days after arrival, especially If the traveler has come ‘tierras ealientes’ (hot coun- for a too sudden of the skin will try, or lower region opening of the per: certainly preduce fever, according to | popular belief. The people of Nicara- gua, according te Squier, are ‘generally serupulously clean in their persons, ex- cept when traveling, and then the use of water is prohibited.”” Busy School Teachers One-tenth of all publiic scheat- teachers in New Jersey are engaged in professional study at summer schools this year, There are over 300 at Rutgers College alone, attending the first summer session ever held by the State College. Three other summer scheols for teachers have recently been established by State apprepriatiens, Besides indieating a resolve te raise the standard of teaching, the meve- ment marks, the beginning of cleser relations between Ruigers College and the general educational needs of the State. “Ready made correspondence” cards have been in vogue in Brance for sev- eral years. On each card are printed some four dozen or so commenplace remarks with which holiday makers so fill up “Just arriv ‘Weather bad,” is a bad hotel dull here,” | blind eye toward him, were compelled | A, [ that | | gua ageinst bathing, and even washing | is making faverable pregress towards |} €deration, and a clause was suggested had not discovered him. He was In & recovery. after o fall lasi \lun‘d:\m:);:t"" insertion in_their bills of lading | PROMISES TO LOOK UP o ERoHECK terviewed and photographed to death, $2.00 and up. the verandah at 5b Cedar street, in | Whereby the shipowners should have GRADE CROSSING MATTER. FOR VOTING MACHINES. | for the workhouse authorities. nearly | s T w 1 c W e which his arm was broken, Dr. H. 1 |® ffee hund in the event of a strike to Eies el o next door, who had hitherto turned a 3 1 deal with the Town Pays $6,000 for the Ten Bought The Plaut-Caddzn Established 1872 JEWELERS PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING { Keep the Dust Down With Dustbane RALLION Sells It Ernest E. Bullard VIGLIN TEACHER In Willimantio two days each week. For appointments address E. Place, Nor- E. BULLARD, BI wich, Cenn. F. C. ATCHISON, M. D., PHYSICIAN AND BURGEON half a page of letter | Regm 1, Seeend Fleer, Shannon Bldg. Night ‘phene 10 Included in the list is Timethy J. Falvey of Boston, a former business man of this city and native of Leba- non. He is president of the Massachu- seits Bonding and Insurauce. company classes for the winter. ing is not a block of wood, nor a bean nor a horse: he is essentially unclassi- fiable: he i§ a miracle and a mystery, a new revelgEen of God. Kindergartens in Worcester, Mass., cost on an average $31.56 per pupil for the year; elementary grades, cost $34.64; high school, $45.50. WHEN -~y want to put your busi- Dess pelore lbe vublic, there is no me. lum betier than through the wvenu.l e conias o e Bitletin “Jolly peopie.” “Send me some meney,” |~ 0 ok e i and the like. One merely puts a eress HEN yoi want o " against (he senlence that expresses his | §iun Refare the o lig, m'".‘:é“ seniiment, - u ° Education is not what is done for a person, bui what is done by him.

Other pages from this issue: