Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 11, 1914, Page 11

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e Boulletin. | e Norwich, Wednesday, March 11, 1914, —_—— THE WEATHER. Forecast for Today. For Southern New England: Cloudy { Wednesday; Thursday cloudy; proba- | bly snow or rain; moderate variable | winds, becoming east. 2] Predictions from the New York Her- ald: On Wednesday it will generally { be clear to partly overcast and some- what warmer, with high to fresh west- erly winds, becoming variable, follow- ed by increasing cloudiness and by snow in the northern districts. The outlook for Thursday is generally over- cast, preceded by snow in the north- ern districts, with nearly stationary, followed by falling temperatures and by clearing. Observations in Norwich. The following records, reported from Lady Assistant when requested Overhauling and Repair Work —OF ALL KINDS ON— Sevin's pharmacy, show the changes AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES. in temperature and the barometric changes Tuesday: 3 UNS, TRUCKS and CARTS. T]?i'r' m‘: 7 2 30.05 38 Mechanical repalrs. oainting, tri- 12 m. i i Sl B 32 30.15 ming. zpholstering and wood wor: e 5 scksmithing in all ite branches. Comparisons. Predictions for Tuesday: Fair; west wind: 7 Tuesday's weather: As predicted. Sun. Moon aad Tides. | High || Muon Soott & Clark Corp Sun Mai || Rises. | Sets. || Water. || dels. 507 10515 Nerth b SL Day. || 4. m. | p. m || a m. || a m. g 611 | a2 0 il if Rrises. 2 ) 606 b J) 9 Giax I8 g el | ol 2081 Slx hours after high water 1t 18 i0W tide, which is followed by flood tide. GREENEVILLE NEWS Death of Charles Marsh At Hospital FIRE EXTINGUISHER FOR MOTOR CARS AND GARAGES. s wil got s bl Following lllness With Heart ance if you hav % Trouble. N FIRI EX- e ¥1Y.{((.FIT?IEHER Ettauhed About 1.30 nr?]m-k_.\‘[qndn\' nvfn-rnfmn to your car, ready to Charles Marsh died in the Backus hos- | operate. A few shots of pital, following an illness of some 11‘\(— Pyrene, evsn if directed ration due to heart ouble. He was through the radiator, will removed to the hospital only a few put out the most stub- hours previous to his death )1»rv born fire—so quickly that rsh was born in Palmer, Mass. it will surprise you. years ago the son of M Non-damaging. non-cor- Charles Marsh. He came here when a rosive and will not freeze. Delivered to your ad- dress complete with bracket for attaching to voung man and the greater part of hi jife had been passed in Greenvil He wuas a painter trade; but had not been actively emplyed for the past two car, on receipt of $7.50. and a half years, owing to his illnes. Mr. Marsh had made his home with | 1 Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Lavender of 491 | The C. S. Mersick North Main street. He was a Metho- by faith and was a member of the & Co., ers’ union. Some years ago he was united in SR . e age with Jennie Simonds who 11-27 Crown St., New Haven, Connecticut s him, together with two sons, Marsh and Clarence Marsh of ity and a daughter, M Vars of Norwich. There is also anoth- Mr. Marsh leaves fo t Marsh, Frank Mar Treasury Department | 2oy iioe, s Some oy Office of the Comptroller of the|of Norwich, besides other relatives. Currency. Mr. Marsh's mother died in this city Washington, D. C., Jan. 30, 1914, |about four years ago. He was known Notice is hereby given to the share- | 10 many Greenvelle residents and his holders of the First National Bankgot | 10SS is mourned by his friends. &_orwicn, Conn., that a meeting of the | ehareholders will be held at The Small Items of Interest. Thames National Bank of Norwich,| William Kramer Jr, was a visitor on Thursday, the i2th day of, 1, 1914, at 2 o’clock p. m., for the purpose of electing an agent to whom | the assets of the bank will be trans- ferred and delivered in accordance with the provisions of Section 3 of the in Moosup Tuesday. Thomas Geoghegan was a visitor in New Leondon Monday. Lloyd Herbert has taken up a course Aot of’ Congress lentitled) A metiaut| © L oT G BOpng : thorizing the appointment of receivers| Motorman Horace Smith has return of national banks and for other pur-|ed to work after an absence of several | posss,” approved June 3C, 1576, and of | weeks, ] the acts amendatory thereto, approved eses Aug. 3, 1892, and Mareh 2, 1837; or for| Mrs. D. C. Connell of Arlingfon, N. the purpese of continuing the receidr- | J.. is visitin - mother, Mrs. W. J. £hip in accordance with the provisions | Matthews o gtres of the last named act. Acting Comptrelier of the Cur o ohe e T this Sentaenie p » e Currency. to be given by the Senior class of v A TAFTVILLE AFFAIRS Organization of The Ever Ready Glee Club With Ten Members. Babies! Scon they will be big boys The Ever ganized at Ready Glee the home of club was or- Rot $ £ : J Iy Monday night. At present there are and girls, ana their faces wil! | but ten members, but the membership will be materially increased in the fu- be only « memory. ture. It is planned to hold weekly meetings and at the next meeting of- ficers will probably be elected. Bring the babies and we’ll catch their smiles, Game Cancelled. 1 xnl . nager m of the iftville t < e ketball te -d word Tuesday morning ths rrington would be un- able to come here to play Tuesday ev- ening and the game had to be can- h celled. The Taftville enthusiasts who had counted on seeing a gome Tues- ¥ > . day evening were not disappointed as The PrHOTOGRAPHER arrangements were made during th ¥y to have the Stonington Oppozite Nerwieh Savinas Socieiy. five come Told of Canal. At the monthly meetin Grape Fruit X | sion does not extend the e withi the Taftville Tribute to Frederick W. Bancroft. |which the railves A i ek Wi the railroad tai ) heid Tuesday — > terest tHe Providence-New : Oranges Vo g a very in his column. As the World Wazs, | steamers A ST Ly s the Panama Canal Philip Hale the famous musical editor | the railroad-steamboat di > followed. ston Herald, w 1 Betonis Sfective oo that Iangermes et Ll W Baae what aled | i "¢ n tha Notes and P Is. , W hown to many A % Skt o ¥ England and in the| SEaitas Wiy Got alaga rapes William Chartier is ill at his home Snd the wast Heaved in | . ney Getting Better. on Merchants avenue | Montpelier and being in comfort- | arter John Kinney, who has| Sl . 23 ree Y g it from his duties on Frank- ] Miss Alvina Lamare of bon has & detaléasion foand in square for more than a week, with eap e's Mapket recovered from a severe to support himself and « and bronchitis, was reported i 5 did not fret or whine or take ;K"r:l)'*\\‘?:x:il"tlllm])‘r‘n\\e‘>d ion ; Tuesday, lm'L M Patrick Sullivan of South B. street is advantage of the sympathy of still confinec iis home at Norwich 6 Franklin St. contined to the house by illness. Although his health Town and not able to speak out loud. g 5 S Ts stontly Wit | TIe caught cold from exposure and get- JUSTIN HOLDEN. Prep. ———— | 3 S A e i ting wet through at his work in the Desjeume of Occum left | He bad a light and pleasing voice; j : n the (eicume, of m 1 ; refined, and he had the gift | 128t {Wo snow storms. | 3 a month 1y in Quebec, makink friends and retain-| While he is away George Heroux is That sudden breeze, predicts endship. H studied intelli_ | ON day dnty-as starter at the square, ¢ Henry Fontaine has given up his po- in this countr a Jlater in|and John J. Shea the night sition Dejarials and has b el Tehan trick. a fr Be prepared- : : having sung in church choirs. eeze. prep cepted a position with Henry Mercier. | « volce was not heavy enough o TR o — a, or for important concert ile i ate Secretary. Get a Gas Hea r! Mrs. Arthur Lambert left for St. Jo- . he devoted himself to singing Documents have been filed as fol- | seph’s hospit Willimantic, Monday, | Irish, Scotch and English baliads and ; lows in the office of the secretary of where she was operated upon for ap- | fo He had a lively sense of i state 1 e atti hu is véeice was suited to music| The Anthony Adams company of| You a’l knew it's dangerous te eat o - pathetic character, and so0 | Stafford; certificate of lnm-p«rz—mmn‘ t-lreakmst in a cold reom, and 1 sides. artier Sndbaelds Floe describe himself as “a The J. C. Lincoln company of its not very comwortable. Whereas, B avidenios He I vocalist” People of all| Windham: certificate of incorpora- | with one of our Heaters installed, ycu uests of Miss Flor. | S and conditions enjoved his en- : capital stock, $24,000: to en- only have to light it a few minuten | ida Payette wE e - | tertainments, and he prospered. He| in furniture business, ets. e o s vptalipaaiy s L found time {0 translate the text of for- Sk e eakfast is call = | ngs for music publishers. These | Repairing Pool Table. have tae diaisg reer. cowfertably he wee! I.enten sermeon at the | preserved the spirit of the| £ th i Yeblassa Sai i At Sacred H church will be given this eIV, Mimger by the .| One of the pool tables ut the Klks o (Wednesd evening. The sermon | position of vewels and consonants, and | Po™® “"f been sent to »‘;‘“’ Haven to| We carry these Heatess ia three aig. | Will be delivered in French. Lenien | respected the musical thought and| ¢ comp etely repaired. It is expected devetions are observed at the ma ferent styles: at Resnor BeSecter Heater I two sixes | 7-30 O'clock each mornming. and — — — The 6©iicle, ssnuibing new im Gan Heatera. Call and see them at our office and le: us explain their usefulness. City of Nerwich Gias & Electrical Depactmen Alice Bldg., 321 Main St. HOLMS, Dentist GAGER Funeral Director and Embalmer Mll.u‘ St., Bulletin Bufiding Telephone 643-2 Prompt vervice day er night. Lagdy Assistant Residence 116 Broadway Opp. Theatre. Talephone §42-3 PR F. W. HOL Shannon Building Annex, Hoom A. Telcphone 526 octivd Arthur | ~ NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESD, MARCH 11, 19 FOR BETTERING WATERWAYS Call Issued For State Meeting—Seven Norwich Men Are on| General Committee—To Organize Connecticut Deeper | Waterways Association at New Haven Meeting. i For the purpose of organizing a | Connecticut Deeper Waterways asso- ciation a call has been issued for a get-together meeting to be held ax the Chamber of Commerce in New Haven on April 1 at 2 p. m. The call is as follows: Chamber of Commerce hall, New Ha- ven, at 2 p. m. on April 1, 1914, Please sign the enclosed card and return same to the chairman of the sub-committee at your earliest con- venience and let us know thereby that you are with us. 1 The general committee comprises Call for the Meeting. the following: Senator Frank B. Bran- | : degee, New London: Senator George | Everywhere greater attention is be- . : . seorge | ing paid to the meed and advantages | L, Mclean. Simsbury: Congressman | of water transportation. The railroads | AUgustine B""i‘?"""l“' Hartford: Con- | of this country are notoriously unable | 8Tessman B. I. Mahan, New lLondon; to handle freight with reasonable | COngTessman Jeremiah Donovan Bridgeport; Congressman Thomas L. despatch and at reasonable cost. This applies to the thickly populated sec- Reilly, Meriden; Congressman William tions of the east and especially to 5";:“9‘1 : :’a“fif,‘(’;i“ "‘E““k H. the New England states. fton, Y, SriEn., B The people of the west and south | Sridgeport: Hrmnle-d. Eing; have been developing their waterways | <HOmas o). Jm:fi’é‘f“- for years with the aid of liberal ap- i 5 ? leeve, Gildersleeve: J. Arthur propriations by congress, while we of | 3¢ 2 D et = e New England have been indifferent | icw Iondon; Capt. B _F. Wilcox, N A Mystic; J .L. Randall, New London; Millions have been spent by the |3: F. Willlams Norwich: William C. o e e e e i | McLaughlin, Nerwich: Charles O. H. the west and south because the mem- | (Falgle, Branford; Frank FH. Smith | bers of congress from those sections B".'t'w.‘"_“- I;{*‘“‘?“ (,R} Andrews, New have persistently pressed their claims. | Dritain; =Henry Gebrath, Norwich Connecticut has neglected to profit by | yayor Timothy C. Murphy, Norwich; | e e s DBl s have | rof | R. I Patrick, Sheiton: Dugald McMil- mained unimproved, its harbors have o, B0, ReGaha, An- | received but slight attention, although | 3onia: S. H. Weaver, New Haven: I.; the state occupies a strategic position | &z Branche, Norwich; J. B. Shannon, on_the Atlantic coast line. Sgowiohs Geoime M. Landers, New The time has now come, however, | Britain; Claude'Stevens, Berlin; J. M. when the manufacturers and business | ey, Middletown. =~ - men of Connecticut should realize the | Rdvantages of improving the water. | Composed of Theotore Bodenwein, New London: F. S. Valentine, Derby: Mayor | Tewys oL e There has been a | 3, onh M. Halloran, New Britain; Maj. t awakening in the New England ¥ P A i o Bt b e o tne [J % B Alenl Hartferd; dwin A | value of water transportation, Ship- | Reeves, Milford, A Nation Wide Movement. The movement for deeper water- pin y water can be done more expe- ! ditiously and at less cost with a mod- lern system of waterways than it is|ways has hecome of national import- being done by rail. ance and interest, all sections of the If the citizens of Connecticut desire | country striving to make the most to share in this movement so that our [of their rivers or harbors as afford- wate s may be rendered capable |ing the cheapest method of trans- | of utilization they must join in some | portation. Navigable rivers are being | | concerted effort to gain governmental | created from shallow streams and | aid Realizing the need of a strong state organization in order to accomplish | something in this direction, the dele- gates from Connecticut to the N tio er and Harbors con 2, 191 canals are being constructed to link | bodies of water together. Up to very recently Connecticut has { done little to improve her waterfront or inland streams nor much of anything been done for by the national government. at the pres- gress held appointed her t a a ent time there are ations that a ing for the purpose of { vew era has come. Surveys of a nav- Connecticut Deeper Waterw igable waterway from Norwich to | ciation, designed to ascertain the needs | Worcester and her at New Bri- | of Connecticut for better water facil- | tain will undo v be ordered by and to push the claims of the |congress, as an appropriation of before congress $330,000 for improving New London » committee a all citizens of | harbor and $10,000 for Thames river. necticut, particulariy its manufac- turers and business men, to lend their aid to this movement by attending the organization meeting to be held at These are but the beginning of other | vast projects for the develop: of | e tramnsportation facilities of ut, so long neglected. COMPENSATION AGREEMENTS PLACED ON FILE. NORWICH BARBERS LOOK OVER THEIR SHOPS. Prosecutions in New Britain Stir Up Local Men. Made in This District by Firms Where Employes Have Been Hurt. Norwich barbers are watching with interest ithe proceedings of the state barbers’ commission, which last week | caused the arrest of eighteen barber | shop proprietors in New Britain for| alleged violations of the state regula- tions referring to thelr trade. In accordance with a provision of the workmen's compensation act, Dr. James J. Donohue, commissioner for this district, has placed on fila with the clerk of the superior court the fol- lowing agreement covering cases whera employes have been injured and | grandmother | old, NORWICH TOWN How Minkmu"ywsoc_i;ty Got Its Name | —Jacob Hafner Recovers from In- juries—M The Lathrop Memorial Foreign Mis sionary society is to be meet this (Wednesday) afternoon in the chapel of the First Congregational church. This society received its name from the four Lathrop sisters, who during the first half of the last century went as foreign missionaries, 0 to India and three of them ending tideir lives in for- eign lands. One of the sisters writes: “When Mrs. Winslow went to India in 1819 the sending of missionaries to the heathen was, considered chimerical by the churches generally, Her pastor bitterly opposed her going, and her reproached my mother or allowing it.” ‘Mrs. Elizabeth Lathrop Hutchings, whose portrait is on the wall of the room where thé meetings are now held, went with her husband to India in 1833. She spent the later years of her life in this country. She visited Nor- wich Town in the nineties and found places little changed after an absence of sixty years. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Lathrop, are buried in the old cemetery, and on Mrs. La- throp’s stone is engraved the words ““Missionary Mother.” In a letter written in 1899 from Orange, N. J. Mrs. Hutchings says: “It is to our enemies the British that I am indebted for the pleasing fact that Norwich became the home of my father’s family. Under the leadership of our traitor townsman,Benedict Arn- they had previously set fire to New London, my birthplace, and in 1813 it w unedrstood that they again threatened it. My father having in his charge the court records was obliged to remove them to a place of safety, and so returned to the native town of himseif and my mother.” Attended Ministers’ Meeting. J. O. Barrows and Rev. G. H. Ewing attended tie interdenomin: tional ministers’ meeting held Monday in the room over the Otis library. Rev. Mr. Ewing gave a review of the book by Rev. Josiah Ro entitied The Problem of Christ R $50 Sent to Southern Mission. The secretary of the First Congrega- tional Home Missionary soclety sent $50 this week to Lynn, €., their part of the money sent by the Norwich churches for the support of one of the teachers, Mrs. Swartzburg. Ever Ready Circle Meets. Ever Ready circle of the King's Daughters held a meeting Monday evening at home of their leader, on Ez street. After the rou tine business a social hour was en- joyed. Death of Miss Steele. Friends were grieved to hear of the death of Miss Dorothy snia, which occurred last week. visited Norw made many friends here. Rough Traveling. along the route of the R & . carriers wonder how they can cover the disance in anywhere near the allotted time, because of the rough traveling. She Heard and Seen. Lewis Appley of Vergason avenue is New London on a two days’ busi- trip. in ness James Kingsley was a recent guest of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ray of the Can- terbury turnpike. _Among the charges made against the New Britain bark were that their| shops were unclean, that they failed showing the terms on which they re- | s under the act: and Mary Dunn, street, Norwich, Jan ploye recelved one broken arm and two ribs fractured on the left side. She @ 131 have running hot water, and that they | used the forbidden styptic pencils to staunch the flow of biood when a cus- | will receive $5 p week until she re- | tomer was accidentally “nicked.” What Grhd T Wl RO Tk (11 will be done with the accused New | H. R. Douglas, Inc., and Frank Al- | Britain barbers will he decided in the manta New London. On Jan. 8, em- | court there this (Wednesday) morning. ploye had left leg caught under con-| The news that the state crete mixer and was briused. He will | Was on its rounds cause | receive § weekly, n ning Jan.|ing around the Norwich barber shops | 22, the average weekly wage being |this week to see that they were fulfili- | $10.50. ing the requirements of the state law { John H. Hoffman, Norwich, und|2nd be prepared for a possible visita- | David Foster, Willimantic. On Jan. 3, |tion by the state officials. | at ton City emplove received s T T | punctured wound on right hand. He CENTRAL VERMONT PLEA. | received $7 for one week’s disability, TR . :1\\ ze “sdg.,. being $14 3 ¥*| Wants to Retain Its Water Line, New Thomas Newman, North Franklin, London to New York. and Clo vry. North Franklin. On $ employe injured little finger of | Relef from the provision of the % hand in operating saw. Weekly | Panama canal act requiring the di- $11. Injured was entitled to|Yorce of railroad ownership from | compensation for three weeks, two|Steamboats is sought by the Central : mounting to $18.33 { Vermont Railway company in an ap- red J. West and Peter Dorsey, New | Plication just filed with the Interstate Tondon. On Jan. 24 employe strained| Commerce Commissior at Washington { ribs and a broken rib. Dorsey recelv- | Teiative to the steamers of the | ed $5 weekly beginning Keb. 7, the av- | Yermont Tran | erage weekly wages being $6. | now plying betwe | R. Douglas, Inc., and Corneliug|\eW York and : S | London. On Jan. 20 em- | on intended to ply between Provi- lime in right eye. Begin-|dence and New York. ; | Rthe he received $10 weekly,| The railroad company is financially | The average weekly wage was ted in the Central Vermont 1 The T. A. Scott Clo., Inc., and Leon- rtation company, but the ap- ' s e e on says that the continued oper- | had mght les caught bae- | ation of the Sound steamers under the present arrangements would be in the een chain tog and frame, wrenching ’: interes L 4 for the cc i g | $12, the injured man was d $6] ¢ T od = : *Inow han ht for the Cent | weekly, to kb aid during e ' by o [ dll;.m‘:\ “‘ml;;;mm}l',"i; “HW““‘“ Vermont raflway and that exclusion, | g bt e et = reduction or prevention of compet A TRUE ARTIST tion would not be caused by continu- | e ance of the present arrangement If the Interstate Commerce Commi | Philip Hale, the Boston Critic, Pays back in a few days, and will have new banks and be in first-class order. " Red Blood Is good bloed—blood that neur- rhetorieal emphasis of the composer. | Thus Mr, Bancreft lived a useful and | happy life. He did not regret past| fortune; he was net unduly and un- comfertably ambitious. His cheerful- ness was Dot assumer, nor was it ag- Kind, genereus, theughiful < a true artist in his medest | way, he will be missed by many, !_h: | will long be meursed by (hose whe knew him well Teny Bricca in Tuberculesis Sanate- rium. Tony Bricca, fermerly night statien heuse keeper at New London, who has | been ill a long time because of tube ishes the whole body, and enabies | enlar trouble, was admitted Monc every organ pecform its func- fternoon to the Norwich state tuber- e tions naturaily. Many people owe it to HOOD'S SARSAPARILLA, which relieves scrofula, eczema, psoriasis, and all bleod humors. | culosis samatorium. is said, there was and eom elsciric Ten ¥ g0, it way China. Ligeeses d11 anto met for study the home of Mrs. Town street. ss in Espe 1 c evening at A. W. Dickey on E: This (Wednesday) evening there will be Le votions with sermon and nediction at Sacred Heart church. weeks' absence Jacob recovered from the injur- After sev | Hafner has —————— BORN. DENISON—In Norwich to Mr. and Mrs. W. R. McKinley avenue DIED. 12, at 2.30 lot at Yan- cemete POWERS . March 8, Anna, F t Church (Wed- BARSTOW In Lansingburg, N. Y., March 3, Mary C. Barstow, widow £ (xiae “or Barstow, M. D. ‘uneral e at Park Congregational “hurer Norwich Wednesday fore- noon, March 11, at 11 o'clock. ~ Inter- ment at Fiainfield CARD OF THANKS While our belc i Liia Christina Win hospital and in demise and fune showed rende: this meagre wa: ks and show our kindly act. We 11 to those who ratef sent flowers. All these deeds will be herished in our memories. MTt AND MRS. JOHN T. WINTERS Church & Allen 15 Main Street FUNERAL DIRECTORS —AND— EMBALMERS Lady Aesistant Telephone 328-3 HENRY E. CHURCH SMITH ALLEN | WM. The Fenton-Charnley Building Co., Inc. GENERAL CONTRACTORS NORWICH, CONN. Shea & Burke 41 Main Street Funeral Directors Steele of An-| *h Town last summer and | BURNED AND TCHED SOMETHING AWFUL Little Pimples on Hands and Arms. to Fester. Turned and Tossed All Ni Suffered Tor- ture. Used Cuticura S:ao and Ointment a Month, Hands and Arms All Better. 481 East 7th St., South Boston, Mass. — *1 first noticed little pimples on my hands snd arms and they burned and itched me something awful. They firss looked like little white lumps and then they began to fester and came to a head. The burning and itching were so intense that I scratched till I made bleeding sores and they pained me very much. 1t seemed when my clothing touched me that I would 1 couid not sleep at night; I would turn and toss all night. I suffered torture. It seemed as though I should go frantics 3 did not seem to care what happened; X @id not care whether I lived or not. “I tried -,——— and various othes soaps and ointments with no help. I did not know what to do until a friend teld me to use Cuticura Soap and Ointment. I had only used the Cuticura Soap and Ointmens a month when my hands and arms were all better.” (Signed) Mrs. Elizabeth B. Gustin, Nov. 1, 1912, Outicura Soap and Ointment do so much for poor complexions, red, rough hands, and dry, thin and falling halr, and cost so little, that 1t is aimost criminal not to use them. Sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed fres, ‘with 32-p. book on the skin and scalp. Ad- dress post~card “Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston."! & Men who shave and shampoo with Cue ticura 30ap will find it best for skin and scalp. scream. ! les received at Porter's shop, and has returned to his work there. Mrs. Carlos B. Eccleston of the New London turnpike purchased a dark bay horse Monday of a dealer in Montville, Miss Winifred Welton of Fort Point | has been for a few days past the guest of Mrs. Henry Butler of Otrobande avenue. Torrington—Rev. F. M. Hallock, pas: tor of the Bakerville church, fell thd other ght while on his way home from prayer meeting and broke hisd arm. T ——— PRICES CUT ON Horse Blankets (Street and Stable) ;‘ Robes (Auto and Carriage) Fur Coats (Fur and Fur Lined) e The L. L. Chapman Ce. 14 Bath St., Norwich, Ct. { | i Get a Copy of Capt. Dan’s Daughter JOSEPH LINCOLN’S NEW BOOK —A2 CRANSTON’S JOSEPH BRADFORD BOOK BINDER “iank Booke Made and Ruisd te Ordes 08 BROADWAY C. M. WILLIAMS Contractor and Builder Estimates Cheerfully Given 216 MAIN STREET | Telephone 370 | | DRS. L. F. and A. J. LaPIERRE 287 Main 8% PRACTISE LIMITED TO EYE, EAR, NOSE and THROAT | Hours 10 & m. t> 3 p. m., Sundays excepted, and by appoiniment | | LEGAL NOTICES ATTENTION - SIUEWALKS ] Ofiice of the i l Street Commissioner. Norwics, Jai 5, A& dhe Orfildlices ue L Wil PIOYIGe et LOS OWDel OF OWReOS, UCCupmlL Ul LGCUpadlia, PIIVale cofe poracions, or 4y Derson hmving care Uny bDuliaing wr 0l OL iana. on any sirecl, SQUATs, ui DUGLC Dladw within Lily, waere theve is a #ae- el giaded, U praded 4bU Peveds sn&ll CAuse L0 De removed laerstrous ANy diia il SDOW, S166L BLA ICE WiuuR tiifee LoUrs ailer Lhie sdme sAMl Duve Juiien, peen aeposilea ur Iound, er Wilhili toree hHours diier sUAfiée whem or 4lly Pari LNSFEOL 44JOLuILE T ouliding OF 0L UL i4Dd, Ur #ay lcel, pquaie, OF PUDLC Diace, ve Soversd wiid ice, IL BDALL De Lae wuly of tne owner Of UWhers. ¢ or CCoUpANLS, PriVais COLPOTAiivh, OF aby Person NAViDE Lhe CAre O BUCL DuLG- Tig Of i0L, Lu CAUSS BUCL MideWRIK Lo Do made sdie aDd COnVeRisAL By re- Mioving Los iCe LDEreLrom, Of coveiias The Saile Wil SOA OF BOME UCHEr BUi.- bie SuDSLADCE A e faiiure to do 80 for two hours during Lne dayUme eXPOses Lne Pariy In delauil to the penaity providsa Ly fg OTAiNANCeS. lA*n. erdinances also provide that in y Viewtion or any et toe sing Vrovise: sl B Qietnl‘e samply :"h“{hc‘. Lhe pariy Vielaling them Or N6t SOMPIViDE Will them snall pay a of five doliars for every Lour houss ef negiect, alter notice (rom & poilcemen Ol tDe u.nj. The erdinances aiso 1t the duiy of the Street Commissloner te couect ail penalties u-u-:: upder the fore- goillg Drevisiens, if they are net paid to him en demand, to repori tae case te the City Attern no shall prosecute the party effendin| ERRKOLL C LILLIBRIDGE, Jemed Bireel LOommiserenes. 107 &

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