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FURNISHING _ UNDERTAKERS 88 Main St. Lady Assistant when requested MISS M. C. ADLES Rair, Sealp and FaceSpecialis! THE HAIR, NOT THE HAT should be the first consideration. Above glossy, abundant, stylishly dressed hair the plainest hat is becom- ing, whide Parisian millinery looks grotesque on a bald, faded, negiected head. Correct your hair hmperfections. Miss Adles can do wenders for you! 366 Matn Street, mext to Chelsen Bank. Telephone 632-4 Eroest E. Bullard VIOLIN TEACHER In Wiilimantic two days each vieek. For appointments address E. E. BULLARD, Bliss Place, Nor- wich, Conn. ow is the time for you to get out 1 guarantee all repair work at WM. FRISWELL'’S, 25-27 Franklin St. That sudden breeze, predicts a freeze. Be prepared——. Get a Gas Heater You all know 1t's dangerous to eat breakfast in a cold room, and ) -sides. s not very comfortable. Whereas, s ore breakfast is called in order have the dining roor: comfortably -m, - We carry those Healers in three dif- styles: Reznor Reflector Heater in two sizes and something new in Gas Heaters. Call and see them at our office and let us explain their usefuiness, City of Norwich (as & Flectrical Department Alice Bldg., 321 Main St. The Oriole, 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America. Ale, Frank J. Ale, Steriing Bitter Ale, Anheuser, Budwelser Secalitz and Pabst, A. A. ADAM, Norwich Town ‘Telephone 447-12 BE PROGRESSIVE Have your Optical Work done by a1 up-t.-date house, C. A. SPEAR, Optometrist and Optician, $18 Main Street, opp. Franklin Square (over Scaers) AUTO ROBES Just Received Montana and Plush—Large Siz : Rubber Interlined—inexpensive Wind Proof, Water Proof, Moth Proof Econemical Robe to buy. Come ~— get a look at them, The L. L. Chapman Co. 14 Bath St., Norwich, Ct. $950. Lower than ever in price. Better and more for your money than ever be- 1.314 Overland is here Demonstration will convince you it ic the autemobile of the year to buy. M. B. RING AUTO CO. AGENTS, - 19 Chestnut Strest Telsphone. Forgcast for Today. For ~Southers. New England: In- Joudiness and slignely cold- lotal smows or rains at (night or Friday; moderate northwest tand north winds. ki s i Predictions from the New York Her- ald: On Thursday it will be fair to cloudy. and warmer,. with winds, followed by rain or snow in the northern districts. The outlook for ¥riday is °for clearing and colder weather. Observations in Norwich. The following records, réported from Sevin’s pharmacy, show the changes in temperature and the barometric changes Wednesday: i Ther. Bar. 47 30.08 55 30.08 < 47 30.12 | Jowest 38. Comparisons. Predictions for Wednesday: Fair; warmer. Wednesday’s weather: Fair; slightly warmer; nerthwest wind. San. Maon and Tidem 8. Sar 1_High i Moon Il Rises. | Sets. [| Water. || Rises. Day. || a.m | p. m || 3T [ i | Six ‘hours after high water it 15 low tide, whnich 1s followed by flood tide. GREENEVILLE NEWS Kelly Hill Gang Will Have Five Poles of Barrels at Head of Seventh Street. il i s | {338 | li | The Greeneville boys do not intend to be outdone by the boys in other parts of the city tonight at the Thanksgiv- ing fires. The Kelly Hills, a local or- ganization of gatherers, have between 250 and . 300 barrels, and they will string them today on five poles at the head of Seventh street, as has been their custom for the past three or four There will also be several other fires at different points of Greeneville. The Kelly Hiils will start their fires at 7.45, and they expect a large crowd on hand. Visitors In and Qut of Town. James Murphy of Tufts Medical col- lege is at his home here over Thanks- giving. Edwin Sullivan of will pass today (T London. orth Main street ursday) in New Joseph Murdoch of Wauregan is spending the week end with friends on Central avenue. Thomas Logan, who ployed here, has gi and has gone to h er. has been em- ven up his position home in Fall Riv- Arthur Hinman of Hickory street 4 left Wednesday for his home in Law- M Hamilton Watches where he will pass Mrs. William P. Potier of Prospect street is at the home of her son,Charles Palmer Potter, in Dorchester, over Thanksgiving. Notes. The scchools in Greeneville closed ;\'mincsda,\' for the Thanksgiving holi- _Hizgh mass in observance of Thanks- giving day Wwill be held in St. Mary’s church this (Thursday) morning, and a large:attendance is expected. TAFTVILLE Game Supper Given Phi Kappa Sigma and Other Friends by The Bachelors. Merry The Merry Bachelors_gave a game sapper in Ponemah, hall Tuesday even- ing to members of ‘the Phi Kappa Sig- ma club apd other friends numbering about eighty in all. The supper com- menced at 8.30 o’clock and was thor- oughly enjoyed by all who partook of the hospitalities of the bachelors. On the menu were rabbit stew, squirrel Ppie and ’coon with all the fixin’s, and all Pronounced it a most delightful sup- pér. Following the pper the two long_tflblf— were cleared away and daneing was enjoyed until midnight, the music being furnished by an or- chestra of four piec The cammitte in charge of the affair was as follow. George Kramer, Robert Wilson, An- drew Frobmander and Chris Hedlar, The game w. 10t by George Kramer, ‘who_passed 1 week hunting in. the woods in the vicinity of Colchester. The committee in g are very eful to those who sted them in making the evening a ful one, c 1cc Birthday Anniversary. Monday was the birthday anniver- sary of Mrs, Geo. Simoneau, and it was obseérved by a number of her friends at the home of her mother, Mrs, Hen- ry Sigrist, on Ngrth B street, The evening was pleasantly passed with whist and er card games, and re- freshments were served. As a token of their esteem the g presented Mrs, Simoneau a handsome ring, o St Soccer Football, The' Taftville Soccer team journey 1 to Plainfield today to play their return game. The players will go on the trol- ley car which will leave Tafts station | at 9 a. m. Taftville will be strongly represented for th - and a large of enthus! s will accompany | The game will commence at 9.45 a. m. George R. Gifford has returned from Boston, = Quarantine Lifted. Raymond Girard, who has been quar- antined at his residence on Dion street, suffering from smallpox, is now recov- OLD , LR, HARRIS’ PILES REMEDY FOR PILES is now manufactured and sold by N. D, Sevin & Son, 118 Main Street, or can be procured direct from the owner of the original pre- scription, MRS. MARY A. HARRIS, R. ¥. D. 6, Norwich, Conn.. Price Ona Dollar. GAGER Funeral Director and Embalmer 176 Frankiin St., Bulietin Buildl Telephone 642-2 WHIEN yed wanl 1¢ put yeur busi- ness before the public, there is no me- dium better tnan throusgh ths adverus. ing colurins ef The Bailetim, the Boston Transcript. - The beauti- ful old village down in the corner Where the river which gives Conmect- icut its name, flows out into Lo I land sound, with its moors its meadows, its tidal rivers and salt marshes, and the fine old houses and as much else which is, with them, bainted into pictures' that hang on walls far and wide, ewuld not keep the plebian trolley off its.storied main street. . Truth to tell, there were persons who didn’t desire to and the artists’ colony never quite gets over its long fight against the desecration of Old Lyme street. Now there are the rails and the unsightly poles made of for- est trees denuded of limbs and bark, and the bulky, black food wires, and every hour in a cloud of dust, a yellow car goes clanging by that notable Colo- nial church the painters love. President Wilson on Petition. All this follows a fight of two years and more by some of the people of the town and by the painters and even President Wilson, who for years made this his summer home before he was elected president, to keep the trolley out of the centre of the town. They were ~willing it should come to Old Lyme, but they did want to preserve the distinctive beauty of Old Lyme street and to that end have the trol- ley line built over a shorter and less expensive route from near the head of the street to the new Connecticut river drawbridge, which drawbridge is the reason of its coming to Old Lyme at Inn Keeper Wanted Trolley. The proprietor of the Old Lyme inn ‘wanted the trolley to pass his door, else there was no good in its coming to the viilage at all and those farther south on the street were anxious that t be built the whole distance to the ailroad station; there was no trouble in their joining forces. 'The line wasn’t built to the railroad station, but this concerns the members of the artists’ colony not at all: what they tried tq do was to keep it out of the street altogether. Old L the Neck road, and the Neck road to the Connecticut i i right angle of a té short cut through the river road is the hypothenuse, Nothing could attract the Shore Line Electric Railway Co. to use that route, however, and finally it got legislative sanction for the other one, so that the injunctions of this summer have hin- dered but little and in the end have come to naught except tne saving of some old trees which would have been missed from the landscape indeed. Back to the Beginning. 0ld Lyme goes back to the very be- ginning of things in the Connecticut colony. About the time when those hardy pieneers with the Rev. Thomas Hooker had pushed through the wild- erness from Massachusetts bay to found the settlements at Hartford, Windsor and Wethersfield and Aga- wam, now Springfield, shiploads of colonists from England under the pa- tronage of- Lord Say and Seal and Baron Brooke came to the mouth of the Connecticut river and settled Say- brook. In 1635 this, was, and nine years later Saybrook, now grown from a fort to a flourishing settlement. join- ed the Connecticut colony. In Other Days. The colonists settled on both sides of the river and in 1665 the lands on the east side were set off as a separate town named Lyme, from Lyme Regis in Dorsetshire. Much later in Lyme, as in Saybrook across the river, the township was divided into two towns and the northern part became Lyme and the southern part Old Lyme. Here came seafaring men, masters and owners of ships, to settle when they left the sea; and, in the main, Old Lyme's fortunes have depended on the salt water. One of the retired sea captains was the father of Miss Florence Griswold, and when her father died he left her the beautiful colonial mansion which is the headquarters of the artists’ col- ony. Her conception of a summer home for artists was probably unique, and perhaps nowhere is there just such another coterie of painters gathered under her roof at first and later spread out into studios which she built for them about her own grounds or into homes in the picturesque village. Artists Who Came. Henry Ranger was the first to come, and be charmed by Old Lyme’s scenic beauties, and he kept coming year af- ter vear. Among those who followed were William Metcalf, Childe Hassam, Louis Paul Dessar, Carleton Wigins, the animal painter, W. H. Howe, paint- er of cattle, C. H. Dav. Monde, Jules Turcas, Clarke Voorhees, Harry L. Hoffman, Charles Bittinger, Edward 8. Rook, Will Howe Foote, William Robinson, Everett 1., Warner, Frank Bicknell and Henry Peor. These artists and their families have ney left the colony of which Miss Griswold remains the central figure. | That much misused word ‘“culture” really belongs to her, 8he is a lingu- ist of parts and® has a rare sort of | knowledge of art. very vear she manages the exhibition of the Lyme painters in the Old Lyme public libra- ry in the summer, and in the winter the exhibitions of different painters of the Old Liyme colony in the cities. Halted at the Drawbridge. Into the tranquility of this artistic | atmosphere in the -odd corner which had been all but passed by the jar- ring note of the twentieth century, the commercialistic trolley might not have come for a long time more, but for the drawbridge, . across the Cosg=ecticut river, which the state built three or four years ago. Since Capt. John Mason’s day the only means of cross- !ing the Connecticut, below Hartford, | had been by ferries. The Boston post road, beloved by automobilists now, came to the river at Old Saybrook and the only crossing to Old Lyme was |in an antiquated-tub which braved des- truction in the tidal currents at the | mouth of the river each time it put ered and was able to be out Wednes- day. The quarantine on the house has been lifted. Closed for a Week. The velvet mill shut down Wednes- day afternoon for the Thanksgiving holidays, and will resume operations next Wednesday morning. Personals. . Joseph Melville is spending some time in \Boston, Mass. James Pearson, who has been il the past weék ,is recovering. The Wequennoc school closed at noon Wednesday for the Thanksgiving recess, Willlam Gley left Wednesday for Providence, where he will spend Thanksgiving, Mrs, Beauregard of IHunters avenue, who has been seriously ill fer a week or mere, is on the read to recovery, Mr, and Mrs, John H. Gardner of Geuld, R. 1., are passing Thanksgiving with Mr. and Mrs, Frank E, White of Front street ; , Frank V. Du-~ | Unavailing To Keep Out The Modern Mode of Subur- ban Traffic—President Wilson Was On The Petition 5 Old Lyme has been invaded by the |out from either bank. variable | trolley, writes Weedon J. Bradlee in | bridge. | Hence the Meantime the trolley had come to Old Saybrook, from New Haven, and. Yellow crown. gone up on the river on the west side, and it had also come out from New Lendon on the other side to within eight or ten miles of Old Lyme, in Hast Lyme. Two years ago, there- fore, with the foresight which charac- terizes the macterialists who bwild trol- leys, application was made to the leg- islature for an extension of the char- ter rights of the company which was approaching Old Lyme on the east to build to the new bridge, then not quite finished, and by the other company for the right to cross the bridge and connect. Today both companies are owned by the same combination, and the extension and connection complete a through trunk line from New Ha- ven to New London, and is part of a new through trolley line between New York and Boston. Oppeosition in the Village. Old Lyme aroused to the facts slow- ly, but it did realize them.at length. Then came the excited putting together of heads. The defenders counseled with Miss Griswold and the many other Griswolds in Old Lyme and the Chadwicks and the others of the old families. They were firm in a knowl- edge of what they didn’t want, and their numbers were greater than those of their opponents, but their methods had not that rough and rugged char- acter which gains ascendency in a town meeting and there could easily have been a more exciting time than there was at the town meeting to consider this subject. Legislators Gave Trolley Rights. In the end the whole matter was taken to Hartford, but Connecticut’s rustic legislators made a poor court to which *to take an appeal for the preservation of old village beauties and the artistic verities and ‘finally the trolley company got what it asked for. Ears must have burned on capitalistic heads that summer and later on when- ever some of the Old Lyme colany got together, but ere another legislative session convened at the beginning of the present year the trolley company had started to construct the line toward Old Lyme. This was not the end, though they were not to get through that Neck road at their pleasure, and injunctions have held them up this past summer, until they agreed to widen the street to 50 feet and abandon all lines which would mean hardship for anybody. They have got the line open, but it will be some time yet before they can cross Lieutenant viver, and passen- gers have to alight and walk across that to another car. Nevertheless, the trolley has come and commerce has triumphed. Gowky poles and networks of wires mar the Jandscape and the roar and rattle of cars get on one’s nerves. Perhaps this had something to do with Presldent Wilson's establishing the summer dap- ital in the quiet of a northern New ¥England town. NEW TEST BOARD AT TELEPHONE EXCHANGE. Growth of Local Service Has Called For New Modern Board. Because of the continued growth of the telephone business in this city there:has just been instalied and put into operation at the Norwich ex- hange of the Southern New England Telephone company, a2 new local test board which is equipped with all the latest improvements and brings the local plant up to the standard of the best in the state in the locating of any trouble along the lines. Work in setting up the new test board has been going on for the last two months under the direction of Hlectrician Brown from the New Ha- ven office. It is located in the office . of Wire Chief H. R. Reed at the local exchange and is a complicated maze of wires to the outsider, but simple and effective enough in its operation to_the initiated. By the use of the new board, tests for local troubles can be made, either as to wire or instrument troubles or other contingencies which arise to in- terfere with the service, and the trouble can be located and remedied. The installation of the new test board is an expensive undertaking for the company but is in line with their policy to equip their plants with sat- isfactory service to their patrons. VETERAN STAGE DRIVER. Death of James M. Vibert in Wethers.- field—Leaves Daughters in New London. James Monroe Vibert, veteran stage driver and railroad man, died at his home in Wethersfield, Monday after- noon, He was the oldest man in the town and had he lived until December 12 would have attained his ninety- third year. He was born in Manchester. In his younger days he drove the stage be- tween Hartford and Litchfield and later between Hartford and Mlddle- town. When the Valley railrpad was com- pleted and there was no further use for the stage, he became baggage- master, starting with the first trip of a train over the line in 1871 and re- mained as baggagemaster on the same road for thirty-six years. Mr_ Vibert leaves seven children. Frank and Kate Vibert, with whom he lived; James Vibert of Bristol, Ralph Vibert of Wethersfleld, Mrs. Anne Horton of Glastonbury, Mrs. George Mix of New London and Mrs. C. Clutt of Boston. MARRIED IN WORCESTER. Willimantic Young People Announce News of Their Wedding a Week Ago. It became known this week in Willi- mantic that Siegfried Olson and Miss Mabel Doyle both of that city, were married in Worcester. Mass., on Tues- day, November 18, by Rev. John FErickstrom, pastor of the Swedish Lutheran church. 7The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs, Sven Olson of Jackson street and the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Doyle who recently left Willimantic for Lead, South Dakota. The young people are spending their honeymoon jn Willimantic and will reside in Nor- wich where Olson is to be empioyed as a chauffeur. Seasonable Window Decoration. One of the seasonable window dec- orations that gttracied attention on Wednesday at a Bath street saloon was a small table and sideboard set with dishes and accessories for Thanksgiving dinner and on the table as the plece de resistance a 20-pound sucking pig. It was designed and carried out by John MacInness, who was told by the proprietor, Louis Wunderlich, that the chair waiting at the table would be oceupied by his friend, Professor Treshold, from New, York, who was coming here to eat his Thanksgiving dinner with dir, Wunderlich, P Captured Twe Coons in Lyme, ,Rebert Champion and Jeseph Harrigan captured two coons in Tuesday night G, er—Holiday Dinner Parties and R unions—Mrs. J. A, Read to Assist in Revival Meetings. On a bird walk recently the famil- lar ‘brown creeper was seen near its old haunts. They are usually climb- ing tree trunks looking for larvae or grubs. When they reach the top of one tree thev drop to the foot of the next and bezin again. One is able to approach very near and note markings of brown and breast. The golden crowned Kkinklct was also in evidence with its lemon This b also comes (0 the states south of Canada for the winter. A\ . a Holiday Guests. 3 Among thosé returning home for the holidays are Miss mm Bennett from Waterford, Miss Brown- ing from Hanover, Miss Emily Wilcox, a student at the normal school at ‘Willimantie, Stanley Gay at Pratt In- stitute, Brooklyn, N. Y., George e dall from Yale Universily, and Miss Marien Randall of Hartford. Will Dine at South Canterbury. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Beverly Bliven and the the gray i Then Feel the Ecstacy When Your Complexion ls Made Perfect By Stuart’s Cal- cium Wafers. - Don't worry about your pimples. Stop that heart ache and regret. Just make up your mind that you ar ot ing to use Stuart's Calcium and make pimples vanish. daughters of Washingten street will dine today (Thursday) with Mrs, Bliv- en’s grandmother, Mrs. Abbie Bénnett at the home of Mr. and Mrs. E. Waldo Bingham in South Canterbury. This is the twelfth year that four genera- tions have met together around the table for Thanksgiving dinner. Custom of For-g Years. Mr. and Mrs, D. W. Lillibridge of Plain Hill will ~spend Thanksgiving Day with Mr. and Mrs. 8. N, Hyde at their home in North Franklin. It has been the custom for the past forty years for these two families to be to- gether on that day. Mr. and Mrs, Fred Lillibridge will be among the guests present, Three Generations. The home-coming today (Thursday) at Thurston B. Lillibridge’'s on the Scotland road will include three gen- erations: Mr. and Mrs. D. L. Under- wood, Miss Bernice Underwood, Mrs. Charles Lillibridge and sons, Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Lillibridge, and A. W. Lil- libridge. Family Dinner Party. Sunday there was a family gather- ing at the home of Mr. and Mrs, S. A, Beebe on the Taftville road. Twenty- one sat down to dinner, coming from Hartford, Willimantic, Montville, New London and Norwich. Vermont Visitors. Miss Ada Jamieson of Brattleboro, Vt., is the guest of Mr, and Mrs. Con- verse Smith of Town street. With them for Thanksgiving Day is How- ard Sharp of Brattleboro now residing in Norwich. N To Assist in Meetings. Mrs. C. A. Read of Worcester, Mass,, came Wednesday to assist in the meetings being held in the First Me- thodist church, and while here will be a guest at the parsonage on West Town street. Local Jottings. Miss Louise Karkutt of Otrobando avenue is spending Thanksgiving with friends in Hartford. . The local schools closed for the Thanksgiving recess at noon Wednes- day, to reopen Monday next. Charles = Alexander of Otrobando avenue sold a valuable foxhound this month to Massachusetts purchasers. Miss Eva L. Wilcox who is passing some time with her aunt, Miss Emily H. Wilcox, is in New York for a few days. Miss Isabel Bacheler, a student at the Academy, is passing the remain- der of this week at her home in Tal- cottville, Mr. and Mrs. Erroll Wilcox of New London will spend today (Thursday) at Mr. Wilcox’s former home on the Scotland road. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Green of Hunt- ington avenue leave today (Thursday) for Providence, where they will be the guests of friends. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Kinney of Tan- ner street have returned after pass- ing a few days at their cottage on Lord’'s Point, Stonington. Mrs. H. 8. Dowe and family and H. W. Clarke and family of Daniel- son will be guests today (Thursday) of Mr. and Mrs. E. U. G. Baker at their home on Blisg place. Mrs. Charles Alexander and son Al- ton of Otrobando avenue, are in Northampton, Mass., to visit a few days with Mrs. Alexander’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Farr. Miss Sadie Bennett of New Haven and her brother, Herbert Bennett from Boston, arrived here Wednesday even- ing and go today (Thursday) to spend Thanksgiving with relatives in Han- over, Mrs. Martha Cross, Mr. and Mrs. Woodbury O. Rogers and Miss Marion Rogers of Washington street will spend Thanksgiving Day with Mrs. —ee e DIED. BURKE—In New London, Nov. 24, 1913, Angela, daughter of the late Michael Burke and wife. BROWN-—In New London, Nov. 24, 1813, Mary F.. daughter of the late Moses and KElizabeth Brown. “I Don't Look Like | Did Since | Used Stuart’s Calcium Wafers.” The pores of the skin are little mouths. Bach has a sort of valve that opens into tiny canals connecting with the blood. These mouth-like pores become closed. When these canals fill up, the valve refuses to work and pimples, = blotches, rash, tetter, liver spots, etc., appear. Stuart's Calcium Wafers keep the pores open and the canals then carry off the waste matter the blood empties into thgm. Don't use cosmetics. They -will not hide pimples long, and then they clog the skin. You ought to know that the skin breathes in air almost like the lungs. The pores throw off im- purities every minute of the day. To plaster the skin with paste, etc., is to actually prevent nature doing her work. Stuart’s Calcium Wafers will In a very short time, cleanse the blood. open the pores and remove all blem- ishes so that your skin will become of a peach and cream kind so much desired. Stuart’s Calcium Wafers can be carried in purse or pocket. They are very pleasant to the taste and may be purchased anywhere at 56 cents a box. Look at your pimples and unsightly skin in the right way as a disease of the blood and pores and use Stuart’s Calcium Wafers to give you the com- plexion you want. —_— e Henry Cross's brother and family, King of Lebanon. Mrs. Enoch Worthington of West Town street returned Tuesday after a visit in Hartford, her daughter, Mrs. Brown coming with her to spend Thanksgiving here with her sister, Mrs. George Miner. GOLDEN WEDDING. Ceremony Celebrated at Niantic by Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Manwaring. Mr. and Mrs. Robert L. Manwaring celebrated their golden wedding anni- versary Tuesday afternoon and even- ing at the Odd Fellows’ hall in Ni- antic in the presence of a large num. ber of their friends. The presents were numerous and beautiful and among them -over $200 in gold was re- ceived. The hall was tastefully dec- orated in green and yellow with'yel- low predominating. A dainty buffet luncheon was served by caterers from New Haven and music was furnished by a New Haven orchestra. Guests were present from New York, New Haven, Hartford, New London and several other mearby citjes. Among the immediate family pres- ent were Mr., Manwaring's. brothers, Bilas of New Haven and Norman of Niantic. Winfield J. Wanwaring of New Haven. a son with his .wife; Norman J. Manwaring of New York, a son, with his wife and Fred W. Manwaring and Mrs, Paul Kumpitsch of Bridgeport, grandchildren, were present. Special Notice We will serve a regular THANKSGIVING DINNER on the American Plan THURSDAY, NOV. 27, From 12 to 8 o’clock p. m. Price of Dinner One Dollar and Twenty-Five cents each person. THE WAUREGAN HOUSE The Parker-Davenport Coe Dropristors. Del-Hoff Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN Special Dinner servetl daily from 12 to 2 p. m. First-class service by competent chef Church & Allen 15 Main Street FUNERAL DIRECTORS EMBALMERS Telephone 328-3 HENRY E, CHURCH ‘WM. SMITH ALLBEN STETSON & YOUNG Carpenters and Builders Best work and materials at rignc prices, by skilled labor. Telephone 50 WEST MAIN S8T. Shea & Burke 41 Main Street rFuneral Directors American House FARREL & SANDERSON, Props. Special Rates to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men, Eto. Livery connscted. Shetucket Street LEGAL NOTICE& PROPOSALS FOR STATE AOAG WORK SEALED PROPOSALS will ue re- ceived by the State Highway Commis- sioner, Room 27, Capitol, Hartford, Conn.,” until 2 p. m., weanesday, ou. 1¥18, for the construction of a sec- tion of Gravel road in the Town of North Stonington, a section of .sacad- am road in the Town of Norwich, and a_section of Gravel road in the Lown of Plainfield, in accordance with plans and specifications. Bids will state the price as per specifications. The State Kl{h"y Commissioner re- serves the right to inerease or decrease the number of feet io be improve; after the contract is let. All bids must be accompanied by a surety comrny bond or a certified check of not less than one-third of the cost of the work. Any bidder to whom contract has been awarded refusing to sign the contract at the prices offered and furnish a surety comj y bond, or a certified check, snall forfeit from his bond or ohnk‘n sum to differ- ence in price between his bid and the next lowest bidder. Plans and specifi- chtions may examined _for North Stopington at Town Hall; for Norwica t 'alwman'l Office; for Plainfield at ywn Clerk's Office, or at the office of Highway Commissioner, RO Blate Bighway Commissioner re lerv-.- tho‘r&n‘z to ynam any and ail blds. s 1aiisted at Harttord, Conn., Nov. 38 =3 C. J. B el EStRR R