Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 5, 1914, Page 2

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' NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, JANUARY 5, 1914 What Is Going On Tonight. Natchaug Lodge, No. 22, K. of P, In Jordan Bivck. Tnion St. Jean Baptiste in Canadian | Club Rooms. FIRE AT STATE COLLEGE. Gold Hall, at Storrs, Burned Sunday Noon—Blaze Started in Rear Others Lose Their Belongings. Shortly before noon Sunday a was discovered on the roof o hall at the Connecticut Agr; burned to the ground. The building was of frame construction, erected i at the same time as the main and stood a short distance sou erly from it. At the present time eral stude s having a rear, and in addition there were seven or eight stenographers connected with the coilege living there and Instructor Hollister of the horticultural depart- ment with his wife. Mr. and Mr Hollister were married bt short time ago, and all their belongings were | practically new. Few About to Fight Blaze. There were few around when the fire started and a SUff breeze was blowing from the northeast. It is v cation time at the college and church time in the village, so th most of the inhabitants of the vicinity Murray's Boston Store Willimantic, Cong. Iniroductory Sale of The New Nemo Duplex Self-Reducing Corsets Every year there’s something gven better in Nemo Corsets. dust now we have an Intro- : @hnctory Sale of the BEST|5ion oo NEMO YET for Stout and full | otiers. figures. It is there, L - H brought her home, where she was glad tic, Danielsonand Putnam {7500 P — P T LSS RR e R PETEE Y of the roof, when it gave way. There was a ladder stretched along the roof nearby, but the roof itself was very slippery, and has a steep pitch, and | before " Hall could reach the he had gained momentum and slid down off the roof and to the ground in the rear of the building. Others ran to his assistaxce, and he was picked automoblles carried to St. Josepi's h he was found pushed the Giants down a pes, and (her mother, but she was. more than the Senators shoved the Red Sox out [willing to return home. When she left of sixth place. The Cubs kept UD|Danjelson she went to Putnam, where their steady work, which has been|che met a friend. From there they the feature of the past few weeks, and | went to Southbridge, the Bouchey girl are now not far from the leaders. The |jater going to Springfleld and Chico- standing and records follow: Dea | were inside, and the blaze had a good chance to get started. A telephone Alert Hose company and as the clock was striking e Chiet Foley, Engineers Ger- -r and two of the fire- men sfarted for Storrs m an auto. They rick and Webs around rthe spital, Where | a broken col- | broken fingers, Whetlter” or not he | of | spite of the intens Structure—Student Roomers _and | mar) severe bruises. | has suffered be known at presen Pirates ... 3 14526 484 . Athletics 10 5 2 Eunrax 2 22 William F. Vincent, 17 457 At East Killingly Saturday afternoon 15 Teems funeral services for William F. Vin- 19 cent, who died in Malden, Mass., were White Sox . 30 held, Rev. J. H. Barratt officiating. e equipped with chains cidents were reported on the although he was ‘comfortably. in Rear of Hall, excitement. nral | college at Storrs, and -before it could | be extinguished the whole building had | © Insured for $13,500. red to the value this amount of the loss suf- of the build- gl story [obe, ‘ | about eighty per cent {forad by tr In_addition there High team :[Y‘h}!. ,{Jhlfl(l S, - iBast Killingly. Burial was in the High single string Simmons (Ath.) | Chase family cemetery near East Kil- 140. < ¥ 9 lingly. A. F. Wood was in charge of High three strings, Wood (Cubs), |the funeral arrangements. 370. \High individual average, Pickett, B Essusi o, (White Sox) 103 5-30. Funeral services for Mrs. Emma J. (XNichols) Alton, widow of r: us Al- ton, were held in the Bap! church ings of the inmates the esterior by it | books, was used Ior TOOMINg purposes, sev- te in the |jam, | mates of Gold hall sustained. ‘Among those present, assisting at the of Buffalo, who has a summer home in Mansfield, Judge L. J. Storrs, of Spring i, one aved by the harles Pomeroy and many Willlman- | tyrned Saturday from a visit in Bos- | Dudley + ton. Mis WEDDING. Peters—Martin. Joseph's rectory formed by Rev. T. rsting into flame. Epworth League Sale, a bread, pastry and candy church parlor: y Books Saved, sale at the Methodist Saturday afternoon under the auspices The affair was isses Annie Battey d Arlene Loomis and Fred Clinten. taken from ¢ 2 of the Epwo n charge of the M it was seen that would be saved, were covered a: maining boc Banguet Com! | Postoffice Cler) held Friday ning, kdward J. Bagan, {#2d George H. Curle: s committee to arrange for a b to be held within | priv |lett the hospital last wee e appointed burning building Fifteen in Rifle Club. chimneys in Samuel Adams has been elected pres- newly-formed ere were fifteen went with a crash ifteen minute: is expected TWO RECORDS BROKEN, By two o'clock the ‘enth Week of Willimantic of home and din-i During . T | Student Breaks Collar Bone. Willimantie only | Duckpin league s oceurred. | en, of the main | ddition, there are now three -30,” Mathewson 101- 7. The Tigers owlers with 121l was holding den coping on the ridge |2 Simmons 101 | Leiper, who has gone to the New York | | mitls | rom. them whi iixa Myt Burroughs, returned to |36, MOk Welch had 4 fme overcont ( END INDIGESTION, DYSPEPSIA, GAS, | SOUR STOMACH--PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN IN FIVE MINUTES YOUR UPSET STOMACH WILL FEEL FINE. Keep this perfect stomach doctor in v andy—get a large ent case fram an |and then if anyone should eat some- thing which doesn’t agree with them; if e lead, ferments causes head- a; eructations of acid and undigested food—remember oon as Pape’s Diapepsin comes in contact with the stomach, all s I's promptness, in overcoming disorders is a revela- You don't want a slow remedy when or an uncertain ch | what the stomach is bad a harmful one—vour yfu mustn’t injure it jand sours is too valuable; speed in giving relief B vy |and Mrs, William Brennan of Hign | unfailing actio | street, side for the first time indigestion, istritis and other stomach made it famous the world ition to those who try No.327—low bust | $.00 No.328—medinm | Showing Beautiful In-curve of Semi-elastic Lastikops * Webbing. WISE WOMEN will appreciate these cor: *The H. C. Murray Co.| | with friend | members of th Ladies | home for a meeting Wednes | noon. SR Miss Marion Horton, Ear Wood | WEDDING. Who have been skl | and Lovimer Dix | university this “week. | in G. A. R. hall on Wednesday even | terncon by Rev. F. D. Sargent at the Leo Spaulding of the Boston Bible | Congregational parsonage. school ana Jacob Spaulding of | Preeaibod Cald Brvabet Naval I.am.)ngi >;hv‘:.w"‘ £ \"‘“\7“\"'\'5;‘ At a surprise p iven® by friends n guests of relativ n 8 at her home here Miss Yvonne Marti- The meeting of Congregattonal | goid! (07 (G0 Ste < { church society of Brooklyn s set for [a.d friendship was read M tomorrow (Tuesday )evening S S e Moy o = Judge Getty at Hartford Hospital. | T St « s | court, who has been in ill healt for | venordale and Williman | meveral maonths, ceiving treatment | Dobbrow-Chapman Marriage. | at a hospital in Hartford {i* Miss A ' Wda Dabbrow owh T Ice Nine Inches Thick. | month complered five vears of e | Coneerns in this and surrounding |as surgical nurse at the Day Kimball | | tewns that annually harvesi ice ex- |Ospital and left here fc r home in What Shall We Give FOR CHRISTMAS PRESENTS ? It’s dead easy.” These Chairs are just the thing fer either fafl:'er, mother, sister, brother, or best girl—and there are smaller ones | some time this w is wanted in most cases, but the wait | Derby A FE for that kind will nat be too long this Meeting of Mission Groups. | year, The meeting of the Woman's Mis- for baby. DR F. . JACKSON, Dentist Painless Extracting and Filiing a Specialty @52 Main Street, - - Willimantic Telephone LINCOLN'S FURNITURE STORE | quiem mass at the funeral se: | Bast Killingly. | poleon Allen, T, Racine, Alfred Morin | and Edward Merin. Burial was in St | Joseph's cemetery. Phone 285-3 Main and Union Streets, Willimantic JAY M. SHEPARD Succeeding Elmore & Shepard Funeral Director and Embalmer 60-62 North St., Willimantic Lady Assistant Tel. connection Auto Truck Moving LONG DISTANCE WORK A SPECIALTY Addeess P. A, WEEKS, or 'phone 850-2, 338-12 or 254-5, Willimantic, Ct. HIRAM N. FENN - UNDERTAKER and EM §2 Church St, Willimantic, Gf ER Incorporated 1842 | of Louis H. Kennedy, Rev. C. H. Bar- | sponding secretary, Everybody needs it, of course. Everybody is going ts need it mora in the future, tea, when the earning capacity is less than during youtn or middie-age, “Wherawithall” | strect, is back at her home here The best way to be sure to have some THEN is to save a little HOW —a little at a time, | she disappeared, causing distress (0| A sen The Willimantic Savings Institute 3. MURRAY, President. D. WEBSTER, Treasurer. George. Pill of Danieison. Rel- atives: o{lu.m :u-‘?'want to Holyoke and i,.:'l. rmflt .n&muving l; a la?lrfl< SasxREEsEssEsEIREERAN ¢ house, where e was foun s Siss Bouchey cried when she saw Won. Lost. Pinfall, Ave, The deceased was the husband of Miss High team total, Athlatics Bertha Chase. whose home was in Brief Mantion. . |at Southbridge Sunday afternoon at 2 Foward Elisworth spen: Sunday in|oclack, locul relatives attending. Hampton The deceased was mother of Mrs. W. E. Whittemore spent the week |Canova Chase le and of Mrs. end in Hartford - | Cassius D. Chase of Hartford, forme Howard Chaffee of Providence spent |1V of Danieison. Two other daughters i e O vience SpoRt |are Mrs. George Clemence of South. SedRy. Swih thie Ihten - Chal- |} age and Mrs, Clarence M. Nash | - of Webster. Her sons are Herbert of Mrs, Katherine Rafferty Pratt re- | Proiaen Mass., and William R = of Alton Was born in Holden and Lenore Vigeard has returned to |lived the greater part of her life in urg gfter a visit in this city | Webster and Dudley. She was 68 years with relatives. of age and died after a long iliness. Mrs, Josephine Gifford, who has been — in New Haven visiting “her brother, IN THE TOWN COURT. returned Saturday. BT Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Bacon re- | Harry R. McKee and Mrs. L. M. Moran turned Sunday evening from a few Plead Not - Guilty to Statutory days' stay in New Jersey, Charge. Mrs. Raymond Commins and son | = have returned from Rockville where | Harry R. McKee was presented in R e ke R the town court before Judge Harry E. 3 : Back Saturday afternoon and pleaded Miss Carrie Thorne returned Sat-|;gi guiity to the statutory offense al- urday for a visit with her mother, Who | joz§ against him. . His bonds. were is @ patient in the Hartford hospital. |fived at $1,000, but he was released on Mrs, Jennie Keon Carter has re- |his own recognizance after the time turned to Taunton, Mass, after & |for a hearing had been set for next week’s visit at the home of her moth- | Saturday at 9.30. Mr. McKee is rep- er in this city. resented as counsel by Attorney W. F. Miss Edna Pond. who for several | Woodward, vears past has been emploved in the{ Mrs. Lily May Moran of Bast Kil- ‘ate hospital here, has resigned and | lingly was also presented before Judge Back Saturday afte not guilty to the sta leged against her. vas rel under bonds of $1 rnished Jesse Smith of East Killingly, the hear- | g of her case being fixed for next | Arthur Moran, who is studying med- jcine in Baltimore, has been spend- ing the vocation in this city. He re- turned Monday to his studies, Miss Ruth B. Taylor and Miss Alice | Saturd: Kennedy of the American Thread Co. 3 office force, spent Sunday at thelr respective homes in Middie Haddam PUTNAM and Middletown, (Adlitional Willimantic News on Page | Chambers-Wimmaral Wedding—Wal- = ter Ross Found Dead—Automobile < Owners Suspect Nightly Joy Riders. | DANIELSON At the Y. P. S. C. B. meeting at| e ¢ rmgr»g.n:n_n(\l church Sunday el B _Ncw Bt aadant atie\s ng Miss Edith Dingwall leader. There were solos Cotton Mills—Judge Getty in Hospi- | Walden Wright of New tal for Treatment—Ice Nine Inches | Miss Josephine M. Gi Thick on Smail Ponds. IS e o A Lt n Putnam will open for the winter Samuel Dean of the Whitman milis | "% o | o e e o anen nxils eier Welch and Horace Haves, two e e itham men working in New Britain 1 of the Danlel i { Cotton company, where James . |fof @ lacal plumber. have ffered Hathaway is agent. Superintendent | {[TOUBR a the room | Dean succeeds Superintendent John | {pe¥ are o et Glaes pre Utica. erty they were out 't & stolen, East Orange, N. J. wher s)\é s Boke Wnas Cane | _Mitchell Benoit broke his knee cap | ing |When he fell in the vard near his | home. Philip L, B la visitor at h Sunday, Joseph J. R | atstrict sup teaching, Saturday after spe; holidays at her home here Mrs, George O. Thomas is vi With relatives in Springfield, Mas: Joseph Gamache Recovering. Joseph Gamache, Who was ren unconseious and remained so for eral hours when he fell down of Pawtucket was | home in Putnam over | an_has been appointed |at his home on the West Side last |of the Lo Thursday evening, is improving | the injury that he received to hi 2 Sr. ana Mrs F J. Nash of Wor- Common Council Meeting. cester spent the week end with rela- | Mayor Macdonald and the m . tives in Danielson. Mr. Nash 1s in |of the common council will meet this | a respensible position at the Worcester | (Monday) evening at = the | Wire worlk chamber and will take up matiers rel- Peter O’'Brien of Providence, for- |ative to appot merly of Mechanicsville, has been |ent year. spending a few days here with Mr. | If there is any b sidered, Judge J. Har tments for the pre ness to be con s Mann will pre 1 the city cour A meeting of the town hool com- |this (Monday) n ning. | mittee is to be held at the high school | _Cirenit league members from building Tuesday afternoon | Methodist church of this city will be Linwood Tillinghast has returned to {in Danielson next Thursday for a Boston after a visit with relatives in |Mmeeting of the organization. Danielson and in Putnam. | Week of Prayer. Home from Big Bend State. Mrs. F. P. Warren and son, R. Warren, have returned from a visit at_Knoxvil Mrs. E. H. Keach is to Art to b weel of | levenings. The members o e | gregatic at her | will hol al and Me! ; - |churches on alternate after 1 two nding the hoiiday recess th homes in Danielson, retu their Chambers—Wimmaral. o Brown Elsie B. Wimmaral, 28 Mr. and Mrs. Frank W ebster, and Edward F. , Webster, and an ove ro married here Sa Joint Installation, installation of 3 and S. of V., is 1o take place £ seer pect to be able to get at (he work | TOTTington, is to be married in_that k. On seme small | place next Monday to Reuben 1an of Derby. Mr. Chapman w 7 |merlv agent of the Adams t | company here and is mow agent at ponds there is nine-inch ice, while o the larger bodies of water there i inches and over, Ten-ineh ice is e sion groups of the Baptist church have FUNERALS. been arranged for this week as fol- llc\\ Group B with Mrs. Partello, | subject. From Ocean te Ccean: group At St, Joseph's church in Dasvilla |€ With Mrs. David Clark; group D Baturday morning at 9 o'clsck Kev.|with Mrs. B. Bowen. All of the Tgnatius Kest was celebrant of & re- | mootings are to be held Tuesday af- | ces | t Joseph Casuetts, ternoon. for Joseph M. Caoustte, who died in B AL € - Oass The bearers were Na- | 4_officers the Con- | v society These are the newly elect and heads of cemmittecs gregational Christiay for the ensuing ve William Bowen. | Warner; vice preside; Funeral services for Willlam Bowen |Son; secretary, Miss were held at the undertaking rooms | treas Kenneth 42l was in the Fast | Bureessi committee cha diss Liszie Child: leokeut, Je Beard: missionary, Wrs. W. L. LAURA BOUCHEY FOUND, Beard: sceial. Miss Marjorie Burgess: —— music, Miss Bertha Sargent; flower, Girl Missing Since Dec. 2nd Has Been | Miss Gerirude Jlall Working in Holyoke. An Unworthy Son. In the city court Suturday morning Taura Bouchey, 15, daughter of Mr.!judge L. FL Fuller presiding. Francis and Mrs James Bouchey, of Water | Cloutler wix presenied charged with | intoxication &nd the theft of n keg of, beer from his father, Louis Cloutier euce of 30 days war imposed ber officiating. Killingly cemetery, | meet having been away siuce Dec. 2. her parents aud induclng a publichty | on the prison on ewch count. a total campalgn in an endeavor to locute | of g0 days at juil, in xddition to the her as well as & search of three states. | oosts The wirl was found at Holyoke, Mass. N - where she was traced from South- bridge by Chief Giroux of the police FOUND: BEAD. of that city ,and he notified Chief | wojter Ross, Who Lived Alone at West Woodstock. CAUTION! Dishonest persons are wrapping rank imitations to look like cleam, pure, healthful WRIGLEY’S. will be offered principally*by street fakirs, peddlers and candy'departments of some 5 and 10 cent stores. . Refuse;them! Be SURE it's WRIGLEY’S. IT BY THE BOX of most dealers—for 85 cents Each box contains twenty 5 cent packages. o Qo Ly -~ P~ g, me dictator of the lodges | of val Order of Moose in this section of the state, | It brings smiles — saves digestion—pre- .—a Serves teeth. This inexpensive and long- out disadvantage. and benefit by. called on him as fre he savings on Seder's Clothing and Cloak Store |emba. Joy Riders Suspected. in Haven. | serve peaple this | taught has not announced by cir- |dently advertisements in | Substantial Retaining Wall. this paper tomor- | The cement retaining wall along the «ment of the raiiroad c rty from the Sou oint near Keith's st among certain this city that upon it The improvement being tuken out | the napy o of the their permission. | 5 decide ure and e ¥ & | remain present, as trom the | stop Postum is made onl molasses. Coffee drinkers can learn something of value by a 10 days Instant Postum—is a soluble powder. olves instantly A scant teaspoonful s Children 0ry Walier Ross, 55, who lived alone, was found dead in his home at_West Wood- FOR FLETCHER'S stock Friday afternoon. Mr. Ross The convenience of Instant Postum is apparent. directions, both kinds are exactly the same. ad | CASTORIA s e isnbomond and irioads and POSTUM —the pure food-drink that meets the desire of young and old for a palatable table bev- erage which is wholesome and satisfying. of clean, hard wheat and a small per cent of New Orleans It tastes much like the higher grades of Java, but is absolutely free from caffeine, the drug in coffee, which causes so much headache, sleeplessness, indigestion, nervousness and heart trouble. Then, as the coffee poison is eliminated from the system, the brain works clear, nerves become steady, and the gradual return of peace and comfort will show plainly “There’s a Reason” for POSTUM Postum now comes in two forms: Regular Postum—must be boiled 15 to 20 minuies. The cost per cup is about equal. —Grocers everywhere sell both kinds. lasting confection has deficiousness with- Don’t say you thought of your fam- ily. Prove it with this pastime that you wanf them to enjoy i’s clean, pure, healthful — if it’s WRIGLEY’S Chew it after sentences of six months, but the v- llesson that it was intended should b had a full effect, evi- f the Front street railroad bridge ble has been ted and a_solid boarded fen: the wall will from constantly change to Postum. irred in a cup of hod But, when prepared according td

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