Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 25, 1914, Page 6

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)

0 nual session of the Warren Baptist as- soctation, with which Calvary Baptist church of Westerly is affiliated, was 4e1d in the Second Baptist chureh, Hast Providence, Wednesday. Dele- trom the twenty-elght churches % iasion were present, and o ‘haaiton_as ono of the largest in A Somes, of the First Bap- ‘ehurch, the moderator of the as- soclation presided, and after prayer v, Frank L. Wilkins, pastor of the entertaining church, submitted the re- port of the committee of arTangements. The devotional services were led by Rev. Magnus Johnson, pastor of the i Swedish church, of Providence. The {annual sermon was by Rev. | €. M. Gallup, of the Central church, “Providence, on_the theine, “The Cut- Edge o% Christian Effort” The report of the treasurer of the'reliel fund followed byan offering for the reading of church letters, praver and ‘adjournment of morning session. The afternoon session was opened with_devotional service led by Rev. H. 'W. Watzer, D. D., of Providence. of the committee on affiliation $ terial relief with National Benefit Fund was opened with a state- Rev. Everett T. Tomlinson. D. 0 graduated from Westerly High in the class,of 1875, his father e Bt ol Ho I8 gon ~day Baj urch. © He . ‘Secrstary of the Minlsters and Densfit Bosrd of the ‘Baptist_convention. eral addresses were made un f § o ‘vention, On OQur State Work; Rev. Franklin G. McKeever, D. D., Our Fu- { as Baptists. ._“'THe election of officers resulted in chofes of Rev. Clarence M. Gallup d Rev. William T. Green urer. Rev. F. C. A. Bastor ot Calvary ' Daptist esterly, was elected a mem- ‘the permanent council and also committee on state of raliglon. yoted to holtl the next meeting tion at the Bap- 1 o Eig _such an arrangement would per- ) the Hquor business and retard presentation of plans-to pro- g\ud-.m- for the young the churches, by Rev. Wil- Greene; . address. Modern rrigo. M. D, Jolw";;fn:w' = : foint onary and Publication soclety: for relief fund; ad- Christianity, Rev. » D. D, of Provi- and adjournment. L. Peacock, of Westerly dirbotor, of the Women's Home | Forelgn Mission societies of the on, gave an address on Our. WESTERLY AGGIDENT PROVES FATAL Mirs. Joseph Burnet Dies From Injuries Received When Trol- . ley and Automobile Collide—Insurance Inspector Investi- gates Squadrito Fire—Welch-Budlong Marriage. { . at a union meeting at the noon recess, FHobart president. Miss Ma- Brown, of oston, gave an ad- on_Experiences at the Boston There were the usual devo- ‘exercises. nnie Stone Burnet, 69, died at Waednesday, at 'her Watch effects of injuries the afternoon of Septem- automobile in which 18 i i jue Because of its refreshing fra- grance, absolute purity and delicate emollient skin-puri- Caticura Ointment. at ‘which Mrs. ,;(u, Jeremiah Shea. _NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 25, 1914 "The one hundred and forty-eighth an- [building summer cottages and_selling or renting them. In this work Mr. Burnet was ably assisted by Mrs. Bur- net, who was possessed of unusual ‘business ability. Upon the death ot her husband, Mrs. Burnet continued in the development of her real estate and she assisted materially in' establishing ‘Watch Hill_as a fashionable summer resort. At the time of her death she owned proj at Watch Hill that is taxed for $40,000, perhaps one-quarter of its actual value. By reason of her many years at ‘Watch Hill, Mrs. Burnet was known to nearly every resident of Westerly. She leaves a daughter and two sons; also, two sister. Miss Mary B. Stone of Newport and Mrs. Phillips Clarke, of London, England An insurance inspector was Woesterly Thursday making inquiry and_investigation of the destruction by fire, last Thursday night, of the unoccupled three-tenement house in Pond street and owned by Anthony Squdrito, of Stonington. Mr. Squad- rito held a mortagage on the property and became the owner through fore- closure . proceedings against Santa Turano. After the house had been un- occupied for several - months, the place was rented to the former owner three days before the fire, but none of Mr. Turano's household effects had been moved thereto. The opinion prevails in the fire and public depart- ments that the fire was of incendiary origin. In the superior court Wednesday the etition of Lena C. MeN of West- erly for divorce from Lewis Stanton MoNeil was granted and petitioner was given permission to chdnge her name to Lena Clarke Chase. Other divorces ¢ | ETanted were: Mattls E. Williams from Cyrus Williams, Nina M. Driscoll ‘from Bugene F, Driscoll, George L. Brown- ing fromk ~Florence M. Browning, Grace Ydung . from Willlam _Hemry Young, . Greene from Wanton A." Greehe,- Frances V.~ Ausfin’’ from Ciarence A. Austin, Susan P. Rowland from Miner 4. Rowiknd, Mary J. Masi- ootte from Joseph H. Masicotte, Elna C. McLennan from Enlas A. McLen- nan, Iva M, Cahoon from Thomas B. Cahioon and custody of two minor chil- The case of Annie Babcock Brown against Alesander C. Brown was con- tinued ‘nisi: James Avery Pendleton against Alice May Pendleton was granted. he complint of Nicholas B. Lam- e against Isaac B! Miller was dis- ntinued from the docket. The case g""amu D. Caswell against John %, charged with reckless driving, was settled out of court by payment of fine and costs. The case of‘George H. Sheldon, appellant, against Everett B Jones was assigned for trial Nov. Upon the formal opening of court the Detit Jury was impanelied and they exoused until 9.30 . this (Thursday’{ marning. The funeral of James Shea, held od with a requiem mass in &t. Michael’s church, was attended by many relatives and friends. Rev. Wil- liam_ A Krause sang the mass. Pass- ng Beyond the Shadow was sung by Martin H. Spellman. Burial was In St. Michael's cemetery. The bearers were John J, Donohue, J. Joseph Mur- Phy, John Gallagher, Daniel Sullivan, Maurice J. Connors and Jeremiah Shea. The deceased was t s of Mr. and s age (was 18. s Jeaves three brothérs and!'a.‘:lsm:.s John, Patrick and Jeremiah and. Min- nie Shea. 50 s In the superior court for Washing. tan ocounty, session_at Kingston, Thurgfla, Pasquale Salameno plseariw] nolp to the charge of assaulting with intent to kill by shooting Sandy Brown In a saloon in Westerly. He was sen- ienced to six months In the Provi- dence county jail- Thomas B. Cham- plin, he who shot up the Girard lum- ber ‘camp and who was Indicted on four charges, three for assault with a dangerous weapon and one for de- facing a bullding, pleaded guilty to one charge of assault and the others were withdrawn. He was_sentenced to seven months in the Providence county jail. Frederick Fain pleaded guilty to breaking and entering 2 building in the da time and with lar- ceny. He was given option of ' serv- ing in the state reform school until he attatned his majority, four vears, or six months in the Providence coun- ty jail, Local Laconics. Alrey L. Maddock of the Hartford Courant is spending a few days at his home in Westerly. Misses Nell and Mary S. Fuller of St. Augustine, Fla., are guests of Miss Mary Starr Utter in Westerly. Mr. and Mrs. George H. Bennett, have returned to Westerly from a trip to Baltimore, Norfolk and Newport News. Several criminal cases are assigned for trial at the session of the Third district court which convenes In West- erly today. The steam heater that has been in service in the First Baptist church for- 2 quarter of a century is being re- moved and a new and modern heater is to be substituted. The Rhode Tsland registry number of his touring car is 4545 and he consid- ers himself the champion 45 plaver of the Catholic club. He resides at No. 45 High street and his name is Dr. Michael H. Scanlon. The members of class No. 15 of the First Baptist Sunday school, Mrs. J. F. Farnsworth teacher, held its month- ly meeting at Pleasant View Thurs- day. There were several readings and refreshments were served. So far as known there is no opposi- tion in Westerly to the renomination of the present delegation in the Rhode Iffand lesislature, Senator Louts. W. old and Representatives Joseph T. Murphy and Albert H. Langworthy. Only relatives and intimate friends attended the wedding of Edward P. Welch of Westerly and Mies Sarah Budlong of Ashaway Thursday noon. THe ceremony was performed by Rev, Clayton A. Burdick at the residence of the bride's sister, .Mrs. Charles C. €ross, in Charlestown. There will be a Vote on the liquor license ‘question in Pawcatuck as well as in Westerly. Unless there be chanze in the lajv, the vote in Westerly will decide the' license question for two years, as the law specifies ‘that the vote shall be taken in connection with the state election. which is held bie; nially, although there are annual, se: sions of the Rhode Island general as- sembly. ‘eutonic Russia, The Russians have rechristened St. Petersburg Petrograd, but Teutonism in Russia goes further than names; of the real Tulers of Russia are many Teutonic both in name and in blood. Most of them belong to the Teutonic nobility of the Baltic provinces, which is largely descended from the Crusad- ing order of the Teutonic knights .who conquered and converted these'prov- inces in the fourteenth century. But Russia has imported Germans on a censiderable scale ever since Peter the Great brought them to carry out his work of reorganization. If all the Ger- man names of men and cities in Rus- sia_are to be Slavised there will be a rechristening on a_large scale. The Russian|general in East Prussia at the Jpresent moment bears the Germar| hame of Rennenkampf. The Russian ambassador in London is Count Benckendorf. At the same time, curi- ously enough, the German ambassador bore the Slavonic name of Lichnowsky. The famous Russian defender or Fiev- na, by the way, in the Russo-Turkish war bore. the German name of Todle- Dben. . Among places, the czar's palace itself must. change its German name of Peterhof, and the great neighboring | fortress of Kronstadt (Crown City) must be given a Slav translation— Manchester Guardian, London consumes $4,980,000 worth of kerosene yearly. e reported destroyed by cannon .shells the city. The edifice is one of the m. stated that it might be possible to re Both history and art suffer.an irrepar been destroyed, universally conceded grandeur. bullt by Robert de Courcy, the const ed at intervals down to the fifteenth which marked the fulfillment of her thedral were no less wonderful than was a sarcop! to Christianity in 366 A. D. —— . cATeEbRALOTRREMES e FAMOUS CATHEDRAL OF RHEIMS, FRANCE S REPORTED DESTROYED BY GERMAN FIRE. This is a picture of.the famous cathedral of Rheims, France, which was Gothic architecture in existence, a perfect specimen of combined grace Begun in 1212 on the site of an earlier chureh which hod heen 1241, was pronounced the most beautiful the middle ages, particularly because of its deeply recessed triple portal and 2 magnificent rose window forty feet in diameter. All the kings of France from Philip 1I down to Charles X. were crowned in the cathedral of Hheime and it was before the great altar there that Jeanne d'Arc stood, banner in hand, after her victorious career to witness the coronation of Charles V1L stained glass and statuary were unsurpassed. plate of the early centuries, reliquaries containing a thorn of the holy crown and the skull of St. Remy and countless ancient and priceless tapestries, many dating from the fifteenth century. lendid collection of Roman and mediaeval sculpture, agus of Jovinus, the Roman prefect of Rheims, who was converted during the German bombardment of ost famous in the world. It was later store the cathedral after the war. able olss if the famous cathedral has to be the most wondefful plece of ruction of the cathedral was continu century. The west front, begun about structure produced 'anywhere in vision. The treasures within the ca- the structure itself. 1t sculpture, Also it contained church In a chapel adjoining the vestry . MYSTIC I Village Has Population of 5000—Many Advantages. but Some Needs. The Publicity committee = of the Men’s club of Mystic places the pop- ulation of Mystic at over 5,000, show- ing a nice gain in the last 15 years. But' there is Toom for many more. There are as fine building sites as can be found anywhere in Comnecticut either for summer homes or for homes for the year round. There are many beautiful places for rides or walks. It will be hard to find a better place for a boat ride than on the Mystic river. As a place for manufacturing, Mystic has many advantages. Mystic has one of the most beautiful ceme- teries in the state. Mstic has four or five clubhouses and several halls that are used as meeting places by a number of socle- ties. It has five chhurches and two up-to-date schoolhouses. But there a few things that Mystic should have, including a free public library with reading room, at least one playground and a park and a hall for the Boy Scouts of America. = There are many places in Connecticut of less than 1000 inhabitants that have all of these and the people are pleased with the benefits derived from them. Local children need such a place and have a right to havé it. There is a great deal of fcomplaint about children spending 80 much time on the streets. Where else can they go when they leave their homes or schools? If the churches, the clubs, societies and all the people of Mystic would take up this matter something might be done for the benefit of the boys and girls of Mystic. STONINGTON Mrs. C. T. Eaton spent the week end in Providence. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bradley have Du fy PureMaltWhiskey including the “Gains 22 Pounds in 23 “I was all run down to Gagnon. “I had to quit thanks to Sargol, I look i pounds in 23 days.” states W. D. Roberts. joy what 1 ate and enabl and pleasure.” Sargol. adds: year. from 150 to 170 pounds.” ‘When hundreds of men a; and corner of this broad lar them by Sargol, you must “Sargol has put Just 10 pounds on me in 14 days,” “It has made me sleep well, en- “] weighed 132 pounds when I commenced taking After taking 20 days I weighed 144 pounds. Sargol is the most wonderful preparation for flesh build- ing I have ever seen,” declares D. Martin, and J. Meier “For the past twenty years I have taken medi- cine every day for indigestion and got thinner every y 1 fook Sargol for forty days and feel better than 1 have felt in twenty years. dreds with more coming every day—living in every ncok increase ranging all the way from 10 to 35 pounds given Days” the very bottom,” writes F. work I was so weak: Now ke a2 new man. I gained 22 ed me to work with interest My weight has increased nd women-—and there are hun- nd, voluntarily testify to weight admit, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Thin Reader, that there must be something in this Sargol method of flesh building after all. ¥ adn’t you better look into it, just as thousands of others have done? Many thin folks say : “I'd give most anything to put on a little extra weight, but when someone suggests me plump. a way they exclaim, “Not a chance. I'm built to stay thin.” Nothing will make Until you have tried Sargol, you do not and carmot know that this is trpe. Sargol has put pounds of healthy “stay there” flesh on hundreds who doubted, and in spite . of their doubts. You don’t have to believe in Sargol to grow plump'from its use. You just take it and watch weight pile up, hollows vaunisi and your figure round out to pleasing normal proportions. tablet. Wou take one with food you cat for the producing ingredient: purlpqse of separating all of ‘its flesh s. It You weigh yourself when you begin and again when you finish and you let the scales tell the story. Sargol is absolutely harmless. concentrated It is a tin) It mixes with thie every meal. prepares these fat making cle- ments in an edsily assimilated form, which the blood can readily absorb and carry all over your body. Plump, well developed persons don’t need Sargol to produce this result. Their assimilative machinery performs its functions with- out aid. But thin folks’ assimilative organs do not. fatt; days’ test of Sargol in your *or not this is true of you. I A single package of Sargol test. portion of their food now goes to waste through tl bodies like unburned coal through an open grate. If you want a beautiful and well:'rounded figure of sym- metrical proportion, if you want to gain some solid pounds of healthy stay-there flesh, weight to normal, weigh what you should weigh, go straight to your druggist today and get a package of Sargol and use it as directed. Sargol will either increase your weight or it won’t, and the only way to know is to try it. This i A few case will surely prove whether sn’t it worth trying? if you want to increase your easily enables you to make this Sixty days’ use of Sargol, according to directions, is absolutely guaranteed to increase your weight to a satisfac- tory degree or your druggist will refund all the moncy you have paid him for it. Sargol is sold by leading d ig- gists everywhere and in Norwich and vicinity by LEE & OSGOOD CoO. An Easy Way to Get Ffli‘ Be Strong The trouble with most thin folks who wish to gain weight is that they insist n"drugging thelr stomach or Stuffing it with greasy foods; rubbing on use- less “flesh creams,” or following some foolish physical culture stunt, while the real cause of thinness goes untouched. You cannot get fat until your digestive tract assimilates the food you eat Thanks to a remarkable mew sclen- tific_discovery, it is now possible to combine huto simple form the very ele- ments needed by the digestive organs to help them comvert food into rich, fat-laden blood. This master-stroke of modern chemistry is called Sargol and has been termed the greatest of flesh bullders. Sargol atms through its generative, reconstructive powers coax the stomach and intestines to lit- erally soak up the fattening elements of your food and pass them Into the blood, where they are carried to every starved, broken-down cell and tissue of your body. You can readily pictu the result when this amasing tra formation has taken place and you no- tice how your choeks fill out, hollows about ;your neck. shoulders and bust disappear and you take on from 10 to 20 pounds of solid, healthy ‘flesh. £01 Is absolutely harmless, tnexpensiv. efficient. Lee & Osg00d and other le ing druggists of Norwich and vicinity have it and will refund your money if you are not satisfied, 1s per the guar- antee found in every package. Caution:—While Sargol has given ex- cellent results In ovsrcoming nervous dvspepsia and general stomach troubles it should not be taken by those who do not wish to gain ten pounds or more. How Thin People - Ca Pat n i A NEW DISCOVERY Thin men and women, that big, hearty, filling dinner you ' ate last night. ' What became of all the fat- producing nourishment it _contained? You haven't gained in welght one ounce. ~That food passed from your to TRAVELERS' DIRECTORY. New London (NORWICH) Line —TO— NEW YORK STEAMERS CHESTER W. CHAPIN . ) NEW HAMPSHIRE Choose this routé pext time you g to New York. You'll have a delightful voyage ‘on Long Island Sound and a superb view of the wonderful skyling and waterfrant of Manhattan Island. Steamer leaves New London at 1t p. m. week days, cept Sundays, dus New York, Pier 70, East River, 1 o’clock next morning. NORWICH to $ '- 8 o NEW YORK Ia Carte Meals Tickets and staterooms from ticket agent railroad station, NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO STEAMER CHELSEA To New Ygrk FARE $1.00 All Outside Rooms Excellent Dining Service Leaves Norwich Tuesdays Thursdays and Sundays at 548 P m. Léaves New York ° Mondays: Wednesdays and lays at 5 p._m. Express mervice at freight rates. | Tel 117 F. V. Knouse, Ayent body like unburned coal through an open_grate. but your food doesn't work and stick, and the plain truth is you hardly sct enough nourishment from your m to pay for the cost of cooking. This is true of thin folks the world over. Your ritive organs, your functions of as- ilation. are sadly out of gear and =i need reconstruction. Cut out the foolish foods and funny sawdust -dlets. Omit the flesh cream Tub-ons. Cut out everything but the meals you are eating now and cat with every one of those.a single Sargol tab- Iact In two weaks note the dlEe;:ncei Five to o good solid pounds o healthy. “stay thers” fat should be tho net result. Sargol, too, mixes with your food and ‘prepares it for the blood in easily assimilated form. Thin peopie galn all the way from 10 to 25 pounds a month while taking Sargol, and the new flesh stays put. Bargol tablets ate a scientific combination of six of the best flesh-producing elements known to chemistry. They come 40 tablets to 4 package, are pleasant, harmiess and inexpeneive. and Lee 00d | and other dealers sell them subject th an absolute guarantee of weight inciease or money back. Thin men and women who would like to increase their welght with 16 or 15 pounds of healthy, “stay there” fat should try eating & little Sargol with their meals for a while and note re- sults. Here is a good test worth try- Ing: First weigh yourself and measure yourself. Then take Sargol—one tab- let' with every meal—for two weeks, Then welgh and measure again. It isn't a question of how you look or fesl or what your friends ‘say and think. The scales and the tape measure wiil tell their own story, and most &ny thin man or woman can easily add from five tol éight pounds in the first four- teen days by following this simple di- rection. And best of all, the new flesh stays put. | Sargol does not of itself make fat, but mixing with your f00d it turns the fats, sugars and starches of what you have ‘eaten into rich, ripe fat-producin: nourishment for thé tissues and bloo —prepares it in an easily assimilal form which the blood can readily cept. All this nourishment now from your body as waste. But stops the waste and does it quickly and makes the fat-producing contents of the very same meals you are eating now develop pounds 'and - pounds of healthy flesh between your skin and bones.” Sargol is safe, pleasant, eff- cient and inexpensive. Tee & Osgood and other leading druggists sell It in large boxes—forty tablets fo a package—on a guarantee of weight increase or money back. sse: rgol left for a_visit with friends in Sara- toga, N. Y. Russell Jones has returned to Har:- ford afterja:week end visit at the home of his mother, Mrs. F. C. Jones, on Main street. NOANK Rebekah Lodge Members Visit Groton —Charity Chapter Invited to Water- ford. Mystic Rebekah lodge went to the meeting of Home lodge in Groton last night, several of the members from Ihis village being in_the party. The state officers were entertained. A Supper was served at the close of the vening. Ve tchimg Small Mackerel. Small mackerel are being caught in large numbers in the vicinity of Gro- ton Long Point. Mre. Nelson Morgan has been for an automobile trip apd shows much im- provement in her general health. Mrs, W. M. Hill is.fast recovering from the effects of a surgical operation in a New London hospital. John Patterson has been visiting in Providence. E. W. Munger has returned to East River after a business trip here. On 0. E. S. Mission. Miss Ethel Latham has returned from Collinsville, where she was on business connected with the Order of Eastern Star. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mabbett have returned to their home in Mystic af- ter a visit here. Miss Flora Morrison has returned from a visit in Massachusetts. Invited to Wallingford. Members of Charity chapter, O, E. S, have been Invited to Wallingford £0r Grand Masters’ day, Sept. 25, A large number have signified their in- tention of making the trip. \ JAPANESE TO BUILD NARROW GAUGE ROAD. On Northern Coast of Chinese Pro- vince of Shan-Tung. Pekin, China Friday, Sept. 25, 1:10 a. m.—The Japanese government, if it has not already begun to do so, ev- idently intends building a narrow gauge railway from the seaport of Lungkow, on the northern coast of the Chinese province of Shan-Tung, to Kiao-Chow, the German concession on_the Shan-Tung peninsula. Considerable suspicion has been arounsed among the Chinese officials by the supposed intentions of Japan because of the precedent of the An- tung-Mukden Railway which ultimate- ly became a permanent broad gauge line vinceroadwbyibd edw Reports received at the capital from railway material from the transports which brought the Japanese irmy to the Chinese coast. f4 Eki Hioki, the Japanese minister at Pekin intimated to the Chinese foreign office a few days ago the necessity of Japan constructing such a rallway, the minister explaining that siege artillery could not be transported over the Chi- nese roads The foreign office rerlied that the government hoped the Japan- ese would respect the soverignty of China. : Reports received here from Canton says that the Chinese there desire to institute a boycott against Japanese goods, but that the government, which already has suppressed a newspaper for writing anti-Japanese articles, is cpable of preventing the boycott. There haven been extensive move ments of Chinese troops in the coast provinces but the war department an- nounces they are designed only against possible revolutionary outbreaks and to prevent anti-foreign demonstrations. The ants of South America have been known to construct a tunnel Japanese Are Careful. The Japanese are so careful not to excite the suspicions of the United States that they are going right ahead with their preparations for a fine ex- hibit at the Panama-Pacific Exposi- tion—Kansas City Journal. i Too Nt wented growing Toe treat without pain. Comf assured. ) Shampooing, Manicur- ing, Scalp Treatment and Facial Massage. . Switches made from your combings: Miss Katherine Lanz Room 22, Shannon Building three miles in length. ! Tel. 548-5 (Take Elevator) Boiled Ham : Sausage Potato Salad Roast Chicken Shrimp Salad Otte Ferry, Prop. Lungkow say the Japanese landed the THESE CAN BE HAD AT REASONABLE NOTICE Crab Salad CLAM CHOWDER ON FRIDAYS BAKED BEANS ON SATURDAYS THE QUALITY STORE THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES ON HAND AT ANY TIME Minced Ham Frankfurters Sliced Bacon Fish Cakes Cabbage Salad Celery Salad Chicken Salad Tuna Salad The material was there,| RATES & o S $1.00 PER DAY of our patrons, who have tried our Feedstuffs. They are al- ways reliable, and give uni Our stock of Feed is full and complete, and our pricey are, as you know, as low as really first-class' Feed can B¢ sold for. 7 CHAS. SLOSBERE 3 Cove Street COAL AND LUMBER. Clean Coal Quick Service _ CHAPPELL CG. CentralWharf COAL: Free Burning Kinds and- Lehi — ALWAYS IN STOCK ¥ A. D. LATHROP H Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Stg Telephone 463-12 3 ALAMIT COAL “THE|BRIGHT KIND" JOHN 0. PECKHAM 58 Thames St. 52 Broada JOSEPH BRADFORD BOOK BINDER Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order 108 BROADWAY F. C. ATCHISON, M. D. PHYSICIAN AND Room-1. Secona Flooe, ShoEONar Night ‘Phone 1083 340-34% Franklin Street SRERE w et Rt EBastern Connscuie; & meédium b | letia or Dusiness resuiiy 0 Zhe But ¥

Other pages from this issue: