Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 16, 1914, Page 8

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R TR ST = | 15GGERY SHOP The Kind You Have : Always Bought Norwich, Conn. Shirt Week Signature In] From SATURDAY, the 18th, to SATURDAY, the 25th, CHICK DISEASES. How to Overcome Them, A POULTRY RAISBR, only the strongest and best of stock, disinfect freely, clean up regularly, feed the best of food, give lots of good | ires hwater and use common sense. | ics, head lce, in particular, while! SPRING WORK IN THE : in themselves, are a fer- | RASPBERRY PATCH. trouble and disease. They | Sl found where the chicks| One of Our Most Delicious Fruits. v hens, the little fellows ! & ng droopy, e and with some" J. B. MORMAN. B D e e e e th a sood lice killer, spray the | The ms)\berrs'_xs fl!e queen of all ALCOHOL 3 PER GENT. ) disinfectant and rub a little | Small fruits. It is delicious both as a i ent on the chick’s head, un-|fresh fruit and in preserves, and for &s and around the vent. = |culture the raspberry is -adapted to 5o brevalent as sometimes | 1 oth the garden' or the truci-farm. F brovention is the| The canes grow rapidly, the better va- Gy CHrecd. from. stromg, | rieties produce heavily the second year ! it sthe and Avoid Cthe | and a pateh with proper care will last ¥ Ciow Hended nem, for | for about twelve {o Afteen vears. = e s t> | Soring is the best time fo set out| e gl e e | raspberry canes, If the canes. arel| i ness and RestContains neitier of ncubata | ante 5% o D T e ted | planted in the fall, alternate freezing Opiun Morphine nor e ind engent thonoughe | and thawing cause the rootlets to- e : it e e o wiite | cay, and the plants, unfortunately, | NOT NARCOTIC. i readily winter kil Among the varie- ties on the market, the Cuthbert red raspherry is still at the head of the list | o o barh BRsT Bt s | anatin the s the canes should | bt be planted about three feet apart, in | Don’t Overfeed. | rows at least three feet from each | to improper feed- | ather. For farm planting rows should : aken for white @ar- | he about six feet distant and the plants | hicks until forty- out about four feet apart, and, ifT— edy in the drinking water ret ten days. It will save 5, but will not cure the dis- ght s \(I-\.‘ fine b::i 3[\;‘2 ible, hpl;:nl the ro"\l:s nol‘t(h H?‘ s ® b i il soimbied ot g |0l e S S e i | IR | oo ot emonstrate an kxceptionally ry, or molsten with sweet | once or twice in a season. During the # || Worms.Convulsions.Feverisk not overfeced, buL|summer the most vigorous shoots { should be allowed to grow after being | placed ully between two wires which are stapled to posts placed about twenty feet apart in the row. To keep the wires firm during the winter clamp | them together with short pleces of nessanlLosS OF SLEEP: For Over Attractive Assembly of Exclusive Weaves, Novel Colorings, Different Patterns and Rich Fabrics - a wire. | X H e aun Winter Care. | o6 NEW YORK. 3 there In November, when other garden or Atbmonths old o e | farm work slackens, pay the raspberry | ~35 CENTS =z wrtpeec Db AP ERLA ¢ and trim out all the dead 135D0sEs 35 g 5 Y ity e should be burned to de- Eihea # Lt lurking raspberry _borers, | the live canes to about four | < compels the plant, when | rts in the spring, to throw nerous side branches and thus | increase their fruiting capacity. Then mulch the rows with leaves, if they are ! ibundant, and w avy coating of coarse farm ma- | “soud_compost or chicken manure. | “Farmers’ Bulletin No, 2 e decaying organic materials furnish | very complete list egs. Give them ) exercise, but do d. Bot- s back, never upward. & materials in the y »r shell meal, also every prop- | season and cost but 10 cents a pack- v age. In the same bed with the vines ok hais cou eaus oil. and humus is neces- | What to Plant. plant a row of purple leaved Barberry 3 SAge g he plants with suffi- o & ur | Pushes set two feet apart, costing . m or get ¢ Four sweet cherry trees and one sour | 5 *nos, 86t two feet apart = costof cient The rain and soll!one wil supply enough fruit for the e Sraad Erom. | oIS » the materials’ which . ai;q an SUPPIY enough fruit for the | house nearest the plazza (not morth) 7 = . L tabie a s for pies ollowing A plants need, and jsvhen the raspberry < st AU L S D plant Bush honeysuckle four feet apart O an l_]}/ y t b b ST R el P T e ST e B T uc our Summer Shirts from a re and hear profuse | ey Do L ontmorenoy | 800d start toward screening the piazza o bea vear - hiding_th dations, and now anes hear Sbout onie JeaT ' (June) for cooking. Eight pears should | 5 J000€ Jho, [ORIRECRS S00 T 5 TN oY eaP be ample and may all be of the Dwarf | B, viets 9 S¥0 ¢ voung canes, 5o that a patch {ype such as. two Bartletts taugust T % 1 above described Will bear nq September), Clapp's Favorite (Au- Planting the Annuals. markable collection, securing shirts worth Sipuerty ety P 8500 Sobties) Lous Bolut 0o | erent the gamnale ther wrpond the while and saving when stocks are new and or ¢ Teason TRAPUTEEY Anjon (Uctober), Vicar of Winkfield | the rows east and west if possible, Imost a certainty v . (winter). Plums may be grown in the | planting a row of sweet peas (Glant - | " FRUIT GA poultry yard and the garden SPace| Spencers, one ounce costing 30 cents) / ]Pl] 4 | e ey e camoen | ERTE o T Bt B o S when you can look forward to an entire ; .| Ways welcome, v seeds in a corner of the garden, trans- . . qtfs Baby Big Returns In Heaith and Pleasure. of the f,)”;,;“‘ni?:v,u ‘n{flo(:rzge a golod planting when well started. A pack- Season,s rear oy Chick Food E. upply: utchess, Moore's FEarly,|age of each of the following will give \‘ { fi“.w, sy | ircen Mountain (white), Concord, Ni- | 35 abundance of flowers guring the . a Fruit for the family table through ' agara, Deleware. I'or currant bushes mer” and cost 10 cents e package; the growing season and a surplus to | wry eight “ay Prolific. There are | j;rikspur, asters (single and double), gell need not mean a large orchard, but | endiess va es of raspberries, but| palsam, calliopsis, elarksias and nas- elected varieties prop- | ten Herberts, ten Cuthberts and ten St. | yyr-tiums. Flowers should have a fine . First, then, for a small | Resises are recommended: for black- | meliow sofl and respond dquickly to 1 only a fey erly ca list of . ‘and the dwarfs and half | beries, ten Eries, ten Snyders and ten | care and plenty of water. In planting dwarfs are excellent, as they require Wilson's v. Gooseberries are as| sweet peas dig a trench twenty inches less room ¢ ndards and come | easy to grow as currants, and fAive In-{ Geer ' Jay inverted sod in the bottom, rriea Remedy 4 com- he standard trees|yy the gardenless householders. dwarfs eight | into bearing the third or fourth year|dustry and five Smith's Improved Will | ther” «i¥ inches of well rotted cow s insist on Pratts. and are easi runed and sprayed. | provide a good supply. R A Gy e eI Lt g n s ¥ 5 = . # e X G cedorMoneyBack | | The trees id be set eight feet| Prepare the !and thoroughly, provide | joan "D (Ui P ceads one inch apart age Poultry Book {apart, and eizht trees will provide fruit | plenty’ of manure to start things and | 4ng two Inches deep. Sweet peas are an some re e s an 00 lse e . E ay, Jas, M. | iTom June to November. The variety | keep the soil cultivated under the trees | o, profitable, being in great demand 'y 'y y 2 The United States government's | thirty-five feet apart, ti | X | feet, the fruit bushes six feet ana the | canés tree feet. Frull irees, bushes, | MASSACHUSETTS PEN | renc anne i adras an inen o s . depends upon their vigor, shape and . ancestry, so be sure to buy only from =¥ 4";\ ~ 3 reliable dealer or murseryman and | Barred Rocks Produced 58 Eggs in | EAC éswg v %ab - when satisfied as to his standing do | Contest at Storrs. e not let the price govern the purchase. | — | etc., live many vyears, but their value LED THE WEEK | sk Ll e e o f Soft Cuff Shirts, Stff Cuff Shirts, Collar Attached Shirts or Detached greater loss later. Fi- Laying contest at Sotrrs continue to result in a muc gh records. On the last nally draw a rough plan of the garden, Take new A VOl marking where each tree, bush, etc., is day of the twenty-third week they pro- H : your Team d Farm Horses e e i | 200a. 136 okt or 1% maro: thas Lamy Feed for 7 an Mmeasure acording to the mirseyman's Previous single day's production since diraction. | the_contest began The total yield of | 3607 for the week is less by 39 ezgs | . | than the yield for the preceding week. FLOWERS AND VINES FOR $5 | This small loss, however, would seem | We guarantee you Perfect Fitting Shirts and a Treat e s if you attend this Demonstration It is well to buy plants and seeds SHOWInS i only after having in mind a picture of Progdiness o L the garden, just where the shrubs and | Ffst place for the week sgoes t vines are to be and for what purpose | 113 PRl Buds Maes: avhoue A 2 Barred Rocks produced 58 eggs. This they are planted. Let us suppose, then, that with a new house and a ) 53me Massachysetts pen also won the | bit of surrounding land, one is pPos- :“\{; \:J“’n; or first pr essed with the inevitable wish to de- | ®St month ze for the high- | | v vield during March and | d 223 eggs. A Connecticut pen rane and beauty, but | °f Wyandottes owned by Merrythought | velop one's property with an eye to Prod farm of Colu second place | color, seclusion, the amount to be spent yearly is limit~ 3 = o Tiamnito e Spen L yearly for the week to their | ennial | credit and another Conn COWS, PIGS, SHEEP and POULTRY. is made by a specially prepared process which pro- d absolutely unlike anyihing else in the world. s it has watched imitators come and go, OLASSINE MEAL is the one and only feed 1d that will produce the results your stock needs. i Nothing Will Take Its Piace It day being fed and recommended by Agricul-- t llege graduates, whe having carefully educated ¥ themselves in the theory of farm problems, now find ASSINE MEAL in every day practical farm life ces highest results. d all your stock MOLASSINE MEAL, as nothing its place. L»dll};) 5 for 1ed~ -’u:\ plan[fs, icut pen of There is a large choice of per icu of | % b | | Thero 1= & larse cholco, of perenninl | & rea™ Pivinoutn, Rocks . ownen " by 291 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. i o ot S5 5 hE wond. oxFeons | Waveny farm of New Canaan tied with s e M the. former it will _be re- | the English Wyandottes for third place pamted from time to time, and so vines | With 53 eggs each. Close seconds to £hould be the sort which take kindly to | th€se were a_pen of Buft TLeghorns v, Chinass wistaria. white and pur. | from Grand Replds Mich, a pen of e g Rowers clusi | Barred Plymouth Rocks from Long 1 e o land and a Connecticut pen of Rhode |- ers, is adapted for this purpose and is I 5 ) = £ For Sale NO?WICH GRA!N COMPANY twined about heavy ~wire, Ramoior Isand JHeds fram, Danbucy, that pro- Bad been faithtal for h ; | teachers, police officers, heaith offcer, | dozen snaikes in.the sime hole. They [ oy roses and honeysucile also twine on duced 51 eggs each he bride wore a ess of | junitor of town and school buildings, o all addes, 5 LecailyBy L poultry wire and add color and fra Monthly Prize. BRIEF STATE NEWS nckc crape do chine. She was al- |librrion and assistant and all other'| © G0 LR L § Write us for our latest book in Feeding srance: So s purple wistaria (39 eents): | The second monthly prize for March Sl b A0ie Aunie Conmit O Wi | omployes on Toads B 4 f o, Middfate ribt, ot 9 § nOT AGSIN a s honeysuc 20 cents) and @ was awarded to a pen Of English White | ~ s ————————— i B o o iantenced | emp Sy e o SRR & Bl MOLASSINE. COMPANY yye '+ BOCTON MASS: [ iriitin Rimbiee 60 ot hiis & 3 amanted Lo pen o Englien, wagee "= fea Eratorathers Tha SHRICE | Ty v vt s s found | KR ne s 1085 ob2 Gutine - dudl] Montreal Toronto. Winniceg Tmpcnfiower and - Colustrus - Scanden | Abeies nen s viaios 230 hes. Jejs | NP ana Mrs. John James Healey of o i Willitms of Windzor avemie from | ¢ nocnfiower and _Celastrus S ottes with a vield of 216 esgs. fs Mr. and Mrs. Jol mes ley of Il by seleibmar s Bave | which eptiles have been removed| New Haven.—The annuai luncheo viine,;as both grow from seed the fIrst jinieresting to note in this connection , Celarhurst J nw\'nr:»fl ces i nu‘x «(::“ lTAE‘: ‘)/MILVQ.K K?\ B “ul‘l er A“‘~l G P T \‘1.-\> R phii the AF h .\I‘n::;,;‘-‘n.?‘t\fi .’:‘ that Thix“same pen of White Wyan: | morning in 8t Mary's church, wiere | sured the I UL s ZHfon or e e s | dottes from Merrythought Farm pass- | & high nupiiel Wass wop SC SN0 (00 | throush the as £ Oscar B, Haase, | day ten more wero i) } m Foom at : ed durlng the week the pen of the e e riage vows to which | This includes all public officers, scnool | vear Mr. Williams saw altel o 1y, April 18 | same breed from Rhode Island which renewed | has been occupying third place in the competition for the past sixteen weeks and are now leading them by the small {margin of two eggs. i First Ten Pens. | The ten leading pens to date are as follows Tom _Barron, Catforth, _England, White Wyandottes, 943. Francis F. Lincoln, Mt Carmel. Conn., White | Leshorns, 791; Merrvthought Farm, | Columbia, Conn., White Wyandottes, Armours “STAR” Ham LR s S Al Fritchey, Harrisburg, or Bacon, full of juicy rich- Isfund Reas, 705: Cecil = For uervensmams, trritability, Beslache, beckaeda pressing- @ows pains, and other symptemn of genera! female weakness '}fi Woman’s Relief uernsey, E 1 White Leghorns, : P ness, the result of the famous Juleg T, Francall, West Hampton, L. 1 A i Courand e it it el T mr s - N. Y. Barred Plymouth Rocks, 546; Deen ~ yeers s llet™ «inoa 9 2 e ld 5 5 George P. Dearborn, Lake Como, Fla., e B - Wemau :h’” e = “ think Viburn-O-Gin is the best remedy for weak wemen (] \ - S, C. Rhode Island Reds, 620: Tom # has positively provem ita great valme Im treetment rmour —mi sugar cure. Barvon, Cottortn: Pasle e Veats o 1t 8ocs me more gued than eny medicine 1 have ever tawem ¢ A% womanly diseases. I will help you, #f you are a sufferer from any of the fls horns, §10; Pinecrest Orchards, Groton, Mass., S. C. Rhode Island Reds, 602. | Connecticut Pens. | The following is a list of the ten | leading pen: | Franeis Lincoln. Mt. Carmel, White Leghorns, 791: Merrvthought Farm, Columbia, White Wyandottes. 761; A. B. Brundage, Danbury, S. C. Rhode Island Red Glenview Poultry Farm, Rockville, §. C. Rhode eannot ratse ft streng emough I think 1t is the best womam® : medicine on earth.” < Wowll feel like writing & simfar letter if you try f. 3 Broil, fry, or bake,and the flavor remains to the very last scrap. @eculiar o women, which can be reached by medicine. It has helped thousauds of other sick women, as grateful tters from them claarly Gescribs. It contains =0 poisenvus arugs. $1.25 a bottie with directions. Island’ Reds, D. J. Ryan & Son ; Bridgeport. ' White Wyandottes, 565 : ¢ Isfant Roas, 958 Branigea Farmieas | * Franco-German Drug Co., 106 West 129th Street, New York ton, . White 'Leghorns, 538; J. Kil- | Stamford, S. 'C. Rhode Island ick H. Benton, Wal- | eford, White Plvmouth Rocks, 521: l 'AND ALL DRUGGISTS. ¥ - Dr. Krugers Viburn-0O-Gin West Mt Poulury Yards, Naugatuck, White Wyandotte: K § 99 The Ham What Am’ : Sog * % = '.S?ral’fmid.—l:\r claim that the prop- and Bac?n.,too} : S i e s R st e shore hotel keeper at Stratford, and A ow v of land at Laurel Beach and B - N by, Was worth $100,000, was mare Monday' in the superior ceurt. N

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