Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 28, 1915, Page 9

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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, RRIL. 28, 1915 Tryto Have This Beantiful fair Will Help You Shampoos with Cuticura Soap preceded by light applications of Cuticura Ointment do much to promote hair-growing conditions. Cuticura Soap and Ointment sold everywhere. Liberal sample of egch mafled froe, with 33-p. book. Address “*Cutioura,” Dept. 18F, Boston. Hartford.—Walter A. Cook, who has been appointed field agricultural agent for the Hartford County league, has written that he will arrive in Hart- ford next Friday to begin his duties. Mr. Cook has been busy winding up his affairs as manager of the Maple farm of Midlothian at Tinley Park, 111, where he has been successful in the last three years. - For Young and Old The acute agonizing pain of - rheumatism is soothed at once by Sloan’s Liniment. Do not rub—it etrates to the sore t, bringing a comfort not [ ed of until tried. Get a - bottle today. RHEUMATISM Say: hly recommend your Liniment 83 the best remedy for rheumatism I ever used. Before using it I spent large sums B to ef of the o 2 likbe Snd oty so 1 el Here's Proof “I wish to write and tell you about a £all I had down fourteen steps, and bruised neck and hip very bad. I could not b::'gnllL 1 sent my wife for a 35 cent. le of your Liniment,and in two da; time I was on my feet again.”—C! Hyde, 139635 Prairie Ave., St. Louis, Mo. SLCGANS LINIMENT for neuralgis, sciatica, sprains and bruises. All Druggists, 25c, Send four ceats ia s TRIAL BOTT! Dr. Earl S, SI Ing Dept. c'r.. WOMAN COULD NOT SIT UP Now Does Her Own Work. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound Helped Her. Ironton, Ohio.—*‘ i am enjoying bet- bealth now than I hnvin’fo?nmlvg e years. When I be- gan to take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound I could not situp. I had female troubles and was very ner- vous. I used the remedies a year I can do my wdtk and for the last eight months I have worked for other omen, t00. I cannot praise Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound enough ffor I know I never would have been as for a § DANIELSON Herbert C. Blaney Hl—County W. C T. U, Convention at Central Village May 13th—Dally Motor Freight and Express. Service to Norwich Needed ~—Obituary Notes—Ice Company’s Supply Low. E Herbert C. Blaney, formerly station agent here, is ill in a private , suffering a serious attack of mervous proatration. Joseph Lapelle of Waterbury is vis- iting at his home here. - Fred C, Goss of Meriden was a vis- itor with friends in Danfelson Tues- day. Teachers’ Meeting May 7th. Supervisor Albert S. Ames has an- nounced an advancement of the date for the local teachers” meeting from April 30 to May 7, on account of the E. C. T. association n Putnam Friday of this week. Nathan D. Prince Goes to Hartford. Nathan D. Prince has taken up his duties as a vice president of the Con- necticut Trust and Safe Deposit com- pany at Hartford, ° Rev. James H. George, Sr, of New- town, is visiting here with Rev. and Mrs. James H. George at St. Alban's rectory. Cadet Albert H., Warren of _the senior class at the United States Mil- itary academy at West Point was one of a party of about #0 cadets allowed a special trip to New Haven and a visit to Yale university. W. C. T. U. Convention. A county convention df the Woman's Christian Temperance union is to be held in Central Village May 13, and local organizations are naming dele- gates. . Former Local -Residents. Mrs. Georgiana Elizabeth (Newton) Geer, who died at Nerwich Monday, is remembered by the older residents of Danielson as lving here many years ago. She was the wife of Chauncey C. Geer. Cireus in May. La Tena's animal circle is said to be booked for an appearance in Dan- jelson during the latter part of May. This circus showed here last year, Peach blossoms “in orchards in ‘Windham county this spring have been forced rapidly by the unusual heat of the past few days. Owners are fear- ful that a frost will ruin their chances for one of the greatest crops in years. MOTOR FREIGHT AND EXPRESS. Badly Needed Between Norwich and Danielson’ Daity, There is a business proposition bet- ter than running a jitney line open to the man who will establish a motor truck freight and express service be- tween Norwich and Danielson and the intervening towns, giving a quick daily service, The trout fishermen are about dis- couraged. Weather conditions are charged with being responsible this spring for lack of good strings. Some of the experts have come away from the brooks with no more fish than the amateurs. Chief George M. Piiling, who has been ill with-pneumonia, was report- ed Tuesday as resting comfortably. He is slowly making progress toward Te- covery. Mrs. Pilling, who 1s also ill, ‘was also reported as comfortable Tues-. day. No lee After June tst. Patrons of the Quinebaug Lake Ice company received, anmoumncements Tuesday that the concern’s supply of ice will not last beyond June 1, and advising them to make arrangements for the summer's supply elsewhere. This is _due to having been unable to get a full supplv of ice last winter. The announcement states: “Had we been able to secure our ice this past winter we could have assured the peo- ple of Danielson ice at the usudal nrices during the coming summer.” OBITUARY. Miss Maria Johnson, ‘Miss Maria Johnson, 71, dled at her home on Oak street Tuesday morning after a long illness. She was born in Brooklyn, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Johnson, and had lived all of her life in that town and Danlel- son, being a resident here for many years. She lenvu}two sisters, Eleanor and Esther, both of Danielson, and two brothers, Henry of Worcester George of Seattle. Mrs. William Henry Reynolds. Mrs, Louisa Reynolds, 81, died at the home ‘of Mr. and Mrs. E, _E, " Griffiths street, Monday: Mrs. Rey- nolds, the widow of Willlam Henry Reynolds, came here four weeks ago from New York, where she had been spending the winter with a daughter, Mrs. Cornelia LeBars. The early part of her life was spent in New York, but for many yeéars she was a resident of Putnam and Putnam Heights and was well known in that section. She leaves the following chil- dren: Mrs. Cornela LeBars, New York; Mrs. “Eliza Aldrich, Webster; Frederick, Leominster, Mass.: Mra, Ida. Blanding and Mrs. Ida Perry, both of Danielson, and FUNERAL. Miss Am Barstow, At the home in East Killi ‘wher she was born and lved n!lnf,llym 7: Yiits. Aells, Daretow, 1, ss Ame w, ducted by Rev. E. A. Blake lyn, acting pastor of the Baptisi church at East Killingly, Burial was in the Barstow family plot in the Bast Killingly cemetery. The bearers were ARE YOU ALL- “RUN DOWN?" for if I had not taken it and I recom- | nd it to suffering women.”’ Daughter Helped Also. “1 gave it to my daughter when she thirteen years old. She was in school and was a nervous wreck, and could not sleep njghts. Now she locks o healthy that even the doctor speaks it. You can publish this letter if you jikke.”’—Mrs. RENA BOWMAN, 161 8. 10th Btreet, Ironton, Ohio, -« - ‘Why will women continue to suffer flay in and day out and drag out a sickly, half-hearted existence, missing three- fourths of the joy of living, when they can find health in Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabie Compound ? If have the slightest Goubt at ydhE.Plnkll'n‘gm'sVegemfl e Compound help you,write’ o Lydia E.Pinkham icine Co. lconfidential) Lynn, Mass.,for ad- Your letter will be opened, cad and answered by a woman nd held in strict confidence. WHEN. YOU WANT t0 put your bus. ‘before the puhllc.pthe,rs is no RE coly of The Bulletin. Rheumasalts Will Make You Feel Fine _ Y that “all-in" 'wa ; Rh its, %fi’m ooty 3 and cher drink. ° i For _constipation, m skin, coated tengue, tion, biliousness or rheumatism, Rheumasalts. There is no caffeine or calomel, dangerous drugs in Rheumasalts. be iised for adults, convalescents fants. ik your Sl ok o A e g e e fore breakfast M B d in a few days you any E2 and poisons clean ane It Be | meet the needs of a ne the famous Rheumabath neapolle, Minn. 25c, 50cand EEE Rheumasalts cl —out the PUTNAM First 8wimming Tuesday—Frank Au- gur, Axe-Wielder, Sent to Jail— West Thompson Brush' Fire Due to Cigarette—Christian Gredig Fatally Injured in Motorcycle Accident. Schools in. Putnam will be closed day on account of the teachers’ convention to be held at the high school. The Southbridge High school team will be here Friday afternoon for a game with the P. H. S. team. Try the O S8wimmin’ Hole. ‘Young men opened the local open air bathing season by taking plunges in the Quinebaug river Tuesday at noon. The temperature in Putnam Tuesday at noon ran up to 85 and 86 es. ‘The Spoilers was the feature picture shown at the Bradley theatre at Tue: day's show: A class Cargill council is to re- cefve the third degree at an important meeting to be held soon. Governors of Country Club Meet. ‘There was a meeting Tuesday after- noon of the board of_governors of the Putpam Country club to discuss mat- ters of special interest to the organ- izations Mail Unelaimed. Letters addressed as follows are un- claimed at the Putnam postoffice: John F. Blair, A. J. Bratt, A. R, Browne, John H. Giles, Mr. Remslae, Arthur Wallls, Mrs. C. B. Goyette, Miss Dorls. Michael, Mrs. David Minor, Miss Eva Threatened Shower. There was promise of a thunder shower Tuesday afternoon, when banks of heavy clouds swept toward the city, but were dissipated without the much longed for rainfall. Many wells and springs in this section have gone dry. Signs at Dangerous Curves. A ‘well known firm of automobile tire manufacturers has done the motoring public a service by erecting substantial red and white painted warning signs at the approaches to bad curves in the highways and railroad crossings in this vicinity, many towns being so favored. Used Axe Too Freely. In the city court Tuesday morning Judge M., H. Geissler sentenced Frank Auger to serve 90 days in jail. He has been wanted since Nov. 8, when he disappeared from the city after smash- ing in the door of a cellar at a rela. tive’'s house with an axe, because he found the home locked up. He was intoxicated at the time. Cigarette Causes Bad Brush Fire. Assistance was asked of the fire de- partment in this city Tuesday after- noon when a brush fire broke out near ‘West' Thompson and threatened to prove very destructive. The fire was brought under control by a large force of men, though no apparatus was sent from. here. Some buildings were en- dangered by the fire,which was caused, it is said. by a man throwing a lighted ¢lgarette butt into some dry leaves beside the highway. Agricultural Clubs Probable. Students in the schools of Putnam will be invited to form - agricultural clubs by the Connecticut State Agri- cultural college, as is being done in many towns of the state. The plan is to arouse an interest in agriculture. Students plant small gardens and cu tivate them .under: instructien, winning prizes if they are fortunate enough to get the best results. No New Railroad This Year. Inquiries here f{ndicate that the proposition of building a railroad from this city through the Woodstocks to Stafford Springs will_not be . given much consideration this summer. It is sald that industrial and financial conditions are such at the present time as to preclude any ltkelihood of successful promoting the plan, the ma- terialization of which is being awaited with much interest in the territory that would be opened up. High School Debate: The teams and the subject have be chosen for the final debl.t’:%! the ll’ltfl:"3 class series for the D. A. R. cup, The Junior and sophomore teams are to debate the resolution that thére should be a prompt and substantial increase in the army and navy of the United States. On the junior team are Joseph Flagg, M. Gould Beard, and the cap- tain, Malcolm Willey, with alternates, Della Davis and Donald Johnson, Pe; ey Ri son, Hazel Perry and the captain, Ruth Child, with alternates, Florence Gilbert and William Rafferty, make up the sophomore team. This is practicagfly the same resolution as that ds by the Yale-Harvard-Prince- ton c?llen teams, while some slightly Robert Dunfleld, ‘Arnold Rich, H. H. Heath and John Chase, Jr. Miss Bar- stow was the daughter of the lats Ebenezer Barstow and came of one of :he oldest families in that part of the own. 3 A, F. Wood was in charge of the fu- neral arrangements, Equal Franchise League to Meet. Miss Katherine Bill is to read th story of The War Brides at the meetf ing of the Danielson Equal Franchise 'league with Mrs. Rienzi Robinson Fri- day afternoon. Mrs. Robinson is to give a _talk on Suffrage in the South, where with Dr. Robinson she has been spending the winter and has had a snlcnn“ayo.nlx;onu&nylm!or fl;rb?e:vulon and ng the lines that her ad- dress will cover, e Forming Agricultural Clybs, & Kill high school boy, eor, mayhap, a :fli‘.’ sets up & new state record for blllhfl':l‘ef eorn, on an acre basis, this comi summer or beats all hollow all records heretofore heard of for potato production or makes to- matoes grow where they never grew befare, don't be surprised. Agricultural clubs are being formed at the school #8 the result of a visit from a repre- sentative of l:he Co'x:;xectlcut State tural college who is making a ;mw of ::huol. ?t t};et state for the urpose arousing interest in agri- culture among the students. Visits town included the graded school here also. It 1s likely that a number of clubs will be formed, each devoted to the cultivation of some particular vege- table. Principal Robert K. Bennett and teachers of the high school are much interested in the plan. The gardens will be small and indi- vidually cared - for. Imstructions for planting and giving the necessary care Wwill be furnished, observations made periodically and records kept. It is goulble -that local prizes will be given hrough & Danielson organization-and there is, of course,.the opportunity to compete for the state prizes. The plan to engage in gardening seems. to hold a special attraction for & number of students here and it is Vvery possible that great good may come of the plan that is being worked out, It has been held recently by one Sofic ToaeT, e o8, et £ e e coa{‘:? um 'bgu:olvold arm:; ! able y the planting o trduu. These need not neces- sarily be large to uce a variety of vegetables in clent quantity -to led, the work This is Chiarles Blow, of Dundee, I1L,, ‘who tips the age scales at 94 years. Mr. Blow is today, and always has been, a man who smoked his pipe liberally—and enjoyed it mightily. Mr. Blgw qualifies_ for the Prince Albert “old-time jimmy-pipers club™ and has been elected to full-fedged membership. We would like to hear from other eldwime smokers. Put your ear close to the ground every time you see a2 man drawing real joy out of a jimmy pipe, for it's better than a five-to-one shot he’s smoking Prince Albert, the tobacco high spot. You, like a whole lot of men, never will know what a barrel of fun can be dug from a pipe or a makin’s cigarette until Prince Albert passes your piazza ! For it can’t bite your tonguse, and it can’t parch your throat. That's why men the nation over know . their business when they demand PRINGE ALBERT the national joy smoke You should know this brand is made by a patented process that removes bite and parch. And let it drift in that you can fire-up P. A. until the cows come home and it just won't make your tongue tingle! So, you men with a sad pipe past, come ~around somemore and sort of get acquainted with Prince Albert. Let the light of jimmy- pipejoy break into your soul. You’ll wonder why you didn’t wake up earlier and hear the robins sing in the old cherry tree. Get started on the tidy red tin, then you'll graduate to the crystal-glass pound humidor with the sponge-moistener top that keeps your P. A. fine like silk. A Iof of men do - that thing! Buy P. A. in any neck of the woods. 5c toppy red bagss 10c tidy red tins; h humidors—and—that R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Winston-Salem, N. C. and half-pound tin classy pound crystal-glass humidor. varying phrase of the same subject has been the subject of most of the New England coilege -debates this year. The fact that in these college debates honors have been divided about equally between negative and affirmative teams seem to mark the question as an eminently fair one. The Jjuniors support the - affirmative, the sophomores the negative. ACCIDENT FATAL. Christian Gredig Thrown from Motor- cycle Monday. Christian Gredig, 71, formerly of this city, died at his home in Uxbridge Monday as the result of injuries he received in a motorcycle accident near the Blackstone line Sunday noon. He never recovered consciousness after being thrown from the machine. He suffered concussion -of the brain and gradually lost strength from the time of the accident. Thé shock of the fall paralyzed his right side. His collar- bone ‘and two ribs were broken. Mr. Gredig had lived in Uxbridge about 33 years, conducting for many years the first bakeshop started in Ux- bridge, and' retiring’ from active work about 17 years ago. Since that time he has traveled to a considerable ex- tent and enjoyed life with his poultry, bees and garden. He was born at Chure, Switzerland, ‘May 20, 1843, and when a young man enlisted under Garibaldi to fight for the freedom of Italy. Running away from home to join the uprising, he be- came an outcast from the country when the fight for freedom collapsed. He left Ialy hastily to escape the consequences that might follow to those who took part in the uprising, stealing away on a sailing vessel that landed him at a seaport in Asia Minor, from which place he made his way to Jerusalém. For the next few years he was a soldier of fortune, taking part in several smal] frays in various foreign gg;lntrle!. and coming to America in 2. In New York he was told to go west, where the streets were paved with ld. He took this advice and was gft!:rly disappointed, being forced to !“ a job with a pick and shovel on —— ENDS INDIGESTION AFTER EATING Just because the pepsin pills,_soda mints and other artificial digestive tablets you have been taking no longer give you the desired relief and you must take two, four or six instead of one to stop your heart- burn, bloating, sour rising, belching and stomach lump, it’s no sign there is. no quick relief for you, but a sure sign that it's high time you changed your medicine. Give up these so- called aids to digestion, that work on the food and do the stomach no actual good or youwll belch and bloat till doomsday. You need a remedy that will strengthen your stomach muscles and lining and in- crease the flow of digestive juices. Then your stomach will do its own digesting, $ ‘There is an old time remedy called Mi-o-na Stomach Tablets which give wonderfully quick relief in. such] They are a splendidly Pal- anced stomach ‘Anrumripucn and 0 matter how bad your stomach is, gaw long it has bothered or what or how much you eat, these little tab- lets will make your stomach digest every last particle of food in it. Lee & Osgood or most any good druggist in this vicinity sells Mi- o-na on a positive guarantee of sat. isfactory results or money back. railroad construction work to eke out|w: a livelihood. He was a natural-born cook and within a short time was given charge [ of the camp kitchen. Being so suc- cessful in this line, he gradually ad- vanced until he became chef of one of the large, old-time steamers that plied up and down the Mississsippi river. After a few years of this work, he entered the bakery business at New- ark, where he built up a good business and sold it. He repeated the process at New Ha- ven and then established a bakery in Putnam. Here he lost a good pertion of his savings when a fire occurred in the block in which he was located. Fearing that the whole structure was doomed, the excited people moved his stock in trade to the sireets, where it was soon carried off and ruined, Al- though carrying fire insurane he could not get any damages, as there was no fire or water damage to the end of the block in which his store was located. He went to Uxbridge in 1832. He married Miss Ida E. Smith in Putnam in 1875. She survives him with one daughter, Mrs, Ida Anderson, of Ux- bridge. Mr. Gredig was a remarkable lingu ist, reading and writing eight lan: guages, and frequently was called up. on to interpret in district court. He as a member of Solomon’s temple lodge, A. F. and NOAN Death of Mrs. Sarah Hewlitt—Meet- ing of the Reading Club Tuesday. Mrs. Sarah Hewlitt, 70, &isd at the home of her daughter, Mrs. George Spicer, Tuesday. She had been ill for some time from a complication of dis- eases. She leaves four daughters, Mrs. Nettie Derr, Mrs, John Chapman of Poquonoc and Mrs. Frank Park and Mrs, George Spicer of this place. Leverett Thompson has been on an automobile trip to Deep River. Mrs. Squires has returned to her home in Guilford after a visit to her nephew, Augustus Thompson. Leagder Johnson is moving his fam- ily and household goods from the vil- lage to Exeter, R. L Mr. and Mrs. Frank Howe of New Haven have arrived in the village for the summer. 3 Mrs. Joseph Hardwick of New Lon- don has been at her summer home at Groton Long Point. John Morrison has returned from a visit in Norwich. Entertained Reading Club. Mrs. Charles Fitch entertained the FISHK NON-SKID TIRES Compare With Plain Tread Prices Of Many Other You can't get greater safety. You can’t’ buy longer.mileage. Money won’t secure you greater depend- ability. Standard Makes 3ix30 4x34 4:x34 4:x36 5x37 = = 12.20 20.35 So whynot save money b equipping four wheel with the Fisk Non-Skid Tire? - Fisk Tires For Sale By All Dealers Fisk RUBBER COMPANY of N. Y. Factory and Home Office, Chicopee Falls, Mass. Reading club Tuesday afternoom. A social hour followed the hour of study. Mrs, Lydia Patterson is ill at the home of her niece, Mrs. Chester Frink, in Stonington. Jack and Herbert Porter of New London have been visiting Mr. and Mrs, George Porter. Charles Johnson has returned from Hartford. Rev. and_Mrs. A. J. Potter are en- tertaining Mrs, Howard from New London. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Capwell have returned to New London after a week- end visit to Mr, and Mrs, Otis Doug- Ias. Mrs. Philip Ross is il from grip and pleurisy. Mrs. Crocker has returned to New London after a visit to her sister, Mys. Emma Spencer. Miss Ada Chadwick of Newr Lon- don and Arline Card of Grotcn spemt Monday heres Mr. and Mrs, Eugene Smitla of Nog- wich have been visiting relatives here. Mrs. Mary Lewis of Uxbridge is vis- iting her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Bd- ‘win Carson, Milford—In the Milford town court Monday John Greenwald was fined $100 on the charge of reckless auto driving. 27.30 28.70 33.90

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