Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 31, 1915, Page 6

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Miss;Gladys Ross guest of Miss Doris Wlleox in ‘The ‘Wakeflelds and Clarks will play baseball on the Clark grounds this aft- ernoon, No criminal cases were called at the session of the Third district court in Westvrly hlm Thackeray and Eliz- Hiscox ldt ‘Westerly mm tor two weeks® visit to Old Orchard, O The Hope Valley baseball t-.\'nll - ed for a game with the White afternoon. S T Clearances IN GARMENTS FOR WOMEN AND MISSES ‘Westerly, will be advanced to the rank admiral, ’s qu one way to do it— of rear U. 8! N, next Satur- WE’RE CUTTINCG THE PRICES on SUMMER CLOTHES Grand Sale Remnant- Store 261 MAIN: ST, NORWICH. TODAY--SATURDAY a-day-of wonderfulvalues which marks the reason -of . “no dull summer months” in this store. * $1.00:MIDDY BLOUSES. ... ...uniiaenammes e 59 $1.00: WHITE-LINENE SKIRTS cawiev o August 7. Samuel G. Cottrell of the Westerly fire distriot asked the town council at its last meeting to provide an ordinance that would give fire apparatus the un- disputed right of way, when responding to fire elarms, stating that he believed a ‘Mfle ordinance would be effective. ‘The matter was referred to Harry B. town solicitor, and he hu sent to the fire chief a communication of ‘which the following is a copy: Samuel G. Cottrell, Esq, Fire Chief, Westerly, R. L: My Dear Sir: ‘T*think that the pro- visions of section &7 of chapter 345 of the general laws, as amended by chaj ter 539 of the public acts passed Jan: uary, 1910, cover the case of the ol struction. of fire apparatus. Where a matter 1s covered by public statute, the town cannot enact an ordinance to cover the same matter. This statute provides that whoever wilfully or ma- liclously obstructs any fire engine,.cart or other vehicle or apparatus shall be fined $20. It seems to cover your point completely. Kindly advise me, if you desire any-further action in this mat- ter. Very truly yours, HARRYSEB,.AGARD, ‘There weressome attractions at-the gcmngwf the lawn fete given under e auspices of the Church of the Im- maculate Conception, and the result was a very large attendance. There ‘was qmusic_by the . Westerly band and forensic exhibition by Uniteqa States Senator I4ppitt and Representative O’Shaunnessy, but the-music and the oratory were not balanced, for after Robert C. ant night -flagman at Wood River Juncflon, age 67, was found .dead early Friday morning near his flammbby John R. Clark, the day Rowse,, medical exam- lner. attributes death’ to shock. Lieutenant-Colonel George W. Gat- chell, U, S. A, former ins ~in- structor of the Rhode Island National Guard, has been promoted to the ramk of colonel. He was born in Pawtucket and appointed to West Point from Rhode Island. Judge Nathan B. Lewls, of West Kingston, with law office in Westerly, as reelected president of the Seventh Regiment Rhode Island Veteran as- $6.98 WASH DRESSES FOR $3.00 Varfed styles, dainty colorings, smart models and excel- lent work distinguish these dresses which were priced as high as $6.98 earlier in the season. Many of the most favored fabrics are included—linen, yolle, ratine and the Lace Corset Cover Embroideries, 18- inch embroideries which were intendeqd for sale at 50c a yard. A good selection of very pretty patterns— SATURDAY SPECIAL $1.48 Silk G&v::?h:m " . 98¢ New White Dress.Fabrics, 19c a yard. Entire stock of Dresses reduced. Now showing: theJargestlme‘popuhr-prwed:Mmlm Underwear in town. Warner’s Corsets. < Special—Pillow Tops-for the>veranda-and-bunga.- low,:10c, values to-50c. $3.00 SPECIALLY ATTRACTIVE DRESSES FOR $1.48 sociation, at the annual reunion held An unusually low ‘price for dresses of style and charm— on Thursday at Slocums Pawtuxet charming designs for women, misses and juniors in pretty porsl T Compay "G-and servad. trom || Bambraya striped ginghams and crash. An excellent August 13, 1862 to June 9, 1865. st or o MUK 'Willlam J. Holliday, 85, after a brief RESSES FOR CHILDREN, 98c {liness, died Friday at his home, 169 WASH DI F! 2 Granite street. He was a granite cut. For children from 6 to 14 years of age we offer a selection ter and tool sharpener by occupation of pretty dresses all for the one small price. Dresses of and a lifelong resident of Westerly. gingham and strong galatea which are just the thing for the younger ones and which are pretty enough for anyone. popular two- clasp length which the longer sleeves demand, either white or black and all with double-tipped SATURDAY SPECIAL Nohon' Department < -pecl ! of good quality. SATURDAY SPECIAL Ocl 3 pairs for 250 Queen’s Own Pins—360 pins on paper, value 10c SATURDAV SPECTAL 7o SATURDAY SPECIALS WARSAW GIRDLED BY FORMIDABLE FORTRESSES. Surrounded at a Radius of About ! Miles From Heart of the City. (Specialzto TheiBulletin.) ‘Washington, D. C.:July 80.-— On: every fleld where theiGerman armies are now fighting in the environs of Warsaw, great battles have gone be- fore;. for ‘Warsaw has.always been.the treacherous. marsh land, the spring and “autumn’ rains,:this region frequently suffers from -disastrous floods. The4floods now andithen prove to be terribly destructive. Novo Georgi- evsk fortress lies upon the confluence of the B\lg and Vistula, and the swampy - stretcaes .near it are part of its ochame of defense. “The Vistula cleaves: through. this district, through fortresses before War- saw, through the heart of the metrop- olis, and un-onn fortresses toward the German frontler, in a broad ex- He 1s survived by his er, Patrick Holliday, - and brothers, omas M., Patrick H, John E. and Frank L. Hol- liday, and ‘a sister, Rosanna Holliday. STAFFORD SPRINGS New Teacher Engaged—Death of Philip Simon—Connecticut Company May Build New Freight Station. $4.50 SILK BLOUSES FOR $2.98 Crepe-de-Chine has been the silk of.the season, the supply ‘being hardly equal to the demand. We are now making a special offer of a number of smart models in Crepe-de- Chine and pretty Striped Silks, worth up to $4.50 for this low price, $2.98 the*band 9 2, chief stronghold for the defense of |Panse of between a quarter and a |the departure.of the speakers’ "Miss Lucy Nicholson of Southwick, P’L{?fn& the industrial, commercial, and | third of & mile in width, Parts of the | Played on. Mass,, has been engaged to teach the Mfl" s BF e Dep’t. financial center, as well as the physical | river’s banks are high, and Warsaw S - school on Stafford street next term. G"':;" L lfl_m- centersand the center toward which all | Stands over the Vistula on a steep| The body of John R. Freestone, who| Dr. John P. Hanley left Friday for TOM Sox e i i Polish lines of . communication take| terrace, lying Detween 100 /and 140|Wwas instantly killed Thursday after- |5 month’s vacation in. the Berkshires. ta-— noon while at work in. the plant of the "Winchester Repeating Arms company, his head being crushed by a hydraulic press used in the making of shells, ar- rived at his mother's home in Pawca- tuck Friday afternoon. The deceased feet above the river. Six great trunk- lines ‘traverse - the plain to Warsaw, connecting the Polish city with Pet- rograd, Moscow, Danzig, Berlin and Vienna, Over these railwaye and down the broad Vistula almost ‘the their way, Thergreatest of European conguerors have ‘passed that way, and Qealt with ‘Warsaw as one of the half- dozen most -important towns on the continent. As a military problem, ‘Warsaw is consclentiously studied by ‘Thomas Fitzpatrick, generally known as Steeple Tom, is visiting friends in Stafford Springs. Ralph Gold, of West Stafford, is at- tending the Silver Bay, N. Y., con- ference. He expects to return to ATURDAY SPECIAL 440 ents— 'RDAY SPECIAL 87¢ Wash Goods E hinist and up to last Febru- | Chi; floral in the most de- the leading soldiers of Europe, and|Whole. trade of Russian Poland jhas|W2as & macl na n month. i there are-few fields for which thopos- | takendits way through the first city.|&ry Wes employed in the Cottrell| Mighael O'Hailoran of the Baker e b Siiitties have 'Eean heftor raryrmscl All the country before Warsaw is| Works, when he-entered the employ of | store is having his annual-vacation. g7 e ko s Y SPECIAL 100 ‘The geography of the country immedi- open way of farm and factory.|the New Haven concern. Charles K. Infant’s Death. \ = < ately surrounding this great city, the ’Whflg the soils are not very fertile, ‘ant’s Death. = Domedu: o e S e SRl rop ot menic on e e/l MILLINERY NOVELTIES AT SPECIAL PRICES between Teuton and Slav,;is-described | 1aTZe crops are raised upon them, crops STONINGTON Mr. and Mrs. Simon Kaber, died at the that have been¥orcedshigher and high- er to meet themeeds of the great next- door market. Then, too, the 'Warsaw district 1s thesmost{modern and pro- gressive district in Poland, progres- sive in its agricultural as in its man- ufacture and trade. Thesindustry of the metropolis spreads out over the city, through the neighboring Villages and towns. For 20 years, the Poles have turned their energies to industry with all the seriousness which they formerly displayed in politics, and»with better organization. Warsaw, and the flat country in which it lies, are the heart and the inspiration of Polish in- Pequot Pillow Tubing—Pequot The “Millinery Movies” make a fascinating study—the rapid changes, | 15 he name which spells good the daring innovations, the diversity of style and color giving a variety | tying Two widths, 42 and 45- which is bewildering...Today we are presenting the most recent develop- | inch—. A m&a at prices which are far below the city prices for the same pretty SATURDAY SPECIAL WHITE SATIN OUTING HATS €33 ¢~ R, o e S JUST AS SMART AS CAN BE e this senscn. - Sold regularly for They have just arrived—the prettiest little Outing Hats which you | 85c a have yet seen and not one in the lot was intended for sale for less than % SA’ wU'R‘PA’V fEO'AI. $2.25. They are clever and right up-to-the-minute in every way. Silk and Wool Popline—This beautiful fabric, 40 inches wids, .in a bulletin just_.issued by the Na- tional Soclety, which reads> “Girdled by -agformidable plan of Jfortifications and by fortified towns, ‘which build.a circular line around the Jmetropolie, 'Warsaw is the best de- 'fended city-in Eastern Europe. Its Ammediate.line of forts are thrown be- ifore it at.a radius of about 16 miles from the heart of the city. In the im- ‘mediate line,of fortified towns beyond the Warsawiforts, varying from 25 to 40 miles in distance from the- city, are ‘Garwolin in the southeast, Grojec in the south, Skierniewice in the south- Johnson hospital Friday morning. Mr. and Mrs. William T. Willlams and daughter BEsther, of Boston, are spending a month with Mr. and OMrs. James Fitton. Mr. Willlams was for- merly principal of the Stafford high school, The Stafford club will hold a meet- ing at the club rooms Monday eve- ng, May Bulld Freight Station. The Connecticut company 1is consid- ering the matter of building a freight station on the Hicks lot, near the Mattesen woodyard. There has been much confusion and a number of com- Geographic Arrangements for Fire Parade and Inspection—Ptomaine Poisoning Due to lce Cream. Chief Teed and the other officers of the fire department, having in charge the annual inspection and parade, have arranged for the inspection from 2 to 2.30, when the procession will form in this order and march to the music of the Imperial band and the Chese- bro Fife and Drum corps: Fire police, Chief Engineer Teed and Assistant Chiey Main; Neptune Hose company; in seven diff: it colors is of- fered today lar a regul ';Vvessl:. ?lm:{le lxiloti}tehwesi,s P];?l‘;guw!k ;Elil; dustry. t Stoningwmn ‘Steam Fire Engine com- |plaints about the loading and unload- UU o'ltl‘l s"'ss To ”‘so “-‘umr; fz;'?foow? — .n n the We: i = pany; oneer Hook & Ladder com- ling of freight in the street. Officials ortunate in. secure a special genuine SPE {Segrie In thomorth, and'Praga across | Or-Start Another Revolutlon, |Dany: warden and burgesses. of the company have heen here and e B & P et - o SATURBAY seecial o Panama Hats at a very low figure—hats in several of the most desirable shapes and all perfect. Buy one for the summer outing,—they are clever. WE ANNOUNCE THE ARRIVAL OF THE NEWEST LATE SEASON NOVELTIES will form in Main street, proceed to the velvet mill district, bu:k through Elm street, up Main street, across Broad street and down Water street to Stonington point, then to Main street and to company quarters. The Since the President’s Jast note Mex- ico, ever willing to oblige, says«she'll fix 1t, all right. Shell elect another president.—Boston- Advertiser. looked over the ground and it now seems probable that a station will be built, If a station is built the tracks will be extended from the present ter- minus of the line to the station. Road Repaire. powerful ofithese fortresses is Novo Georglevsk. “The countrysaround.-Warsaw is a plain, low and flat, intensely cultivated, ,and dotted with many industrial vil- ‘lages. This -plain stretches away to Art Goods Stamped Pillow Cases for day use. These pretty cases with !)’eir GM“nJWFeg endjl‘;yuh for the place shams use. Villa’s-movements just now are nec- | parads 1 Al -umped the Prussian’ frontier. - To the south | essarily so rapid that he doesmt have | Betacdos S romeon ™ Wil be held next| s yop gressing of crushed-stone has YO, Sttn; Taffbin oni Felt iSats in the spart SIS SEEME0e I | on ‘o buule there are il clusters, while in the|time tocontinue. his purely Amarican the dressier shapes with wide drooping brims. These are the newest developments of fashion and plain black, plain white or black and white i lead all the colors. We display charming combinations of Silks and Vel- quality of tubing— » wvets which are strictly new and many most attractive Felt Hats. OATURDAV SPECIAL, 65¢ a pair SATURDAY SPECIALS SATURDAY SPECIALS SATURDAY SPECIALS Toilet Goods Department Rug and Dep’t. | Muslin Underwear Dep't.. been put on Main street. George O. J. Lanphere of Bast Now :comes a report that there are |Hartford was in town on business Fri- several cases of ptomaine poisoning |day morning. in the borough alleged to hzve been = -~ caused by eating ice cream. The symptoms Indicated poison in nearly all the patients, to a more or less degree, and Dr. Congdon, the town health officer, is:making an investi- north, throughout the reglon adiotning Not Pie Poison Now. the confluence of the “‘Warsaw and the Bug with the Vistula, there are con- siderable "stretches of tangled and SATURDAY r PECIAL, 750 a pair p.d low Cases on a su- ‘fwlitlfl!l'stunt of kissing ell the babies n every*village. And then again, pos- sibly the.young girls are too numerous —Bridgeport Telegram. Mr. and - Mrs. Matthew Baker, of Providence, are guests of Mrs. Baker's - Mid-Summer Sale —OF—4, Y. & . COUCH HAMMOCKS GO-CARTS - AND PULLMAN: CARTS~ s or:gnhmt&hmsonlywofiqfrm-uvmgg bargains- of | Movenmmdutnhm 3 day injusesin:almost: every part-of the-country. - These . . Couch*Hammockssare of”the-best: materialssand+are ; m‘vhatmwmtedvdwmg-fl:emedfl:a Beflu'z mflnng;ualorgood -assfresh- ain, andsone.of *our Go-« -§Cntnor??nlhlm0nb will-enable - the:littlerones to ! . gain that;greatestiof alk stimulants, “Fresh-Aif"lin thes : mod{oomfothfle manner. - Ask.ffor. the - prices- and” gation. Some:offthe Pawcatuck pa- tients who were poisoned nearly a month. ago are still in very:weakened condition and are unable to leave their homes, even for a brief'period, but it is not believed there will be any more deaths from that cause, Stonington Pointers. Mrs, Wililam Brandcamp and- fam- ily of New York are at Fernside, Lors Point, for the season. The Wanderers will play baseball with the msuc team on the Stanton field ,Saturday afternoon. It is the proper caper to visit the breakwaterfthese moonlight nights, in the good old summertime. the : pleasan taken as directed, Tegulate your candy and remo: cbnd’-—ufl. Bllmlder Mrs. Alden Fish. S, S, Brown is entertaining her Stephen Morgan, from Cuba. ing Mrs. Denison’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brown, in Richmond. Mrs. Heinz and daughter Irenme, of Boston, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Boylen. Mr. and Mrs. Willilam Palmer and sons Stephen and Robert Palmer, and maid, are guests of Mr. Palmer’s par- Rev, and Mrs. Byron U. Hatfield and family, of Deep:River, are spending a few weeks at their summer home Crest. Cedar Mr. ‘and_Mrs. Clis Gueney at Inton are entertaining Miss Thurber of .thntt City. Misses May_and ‘®velyn Holmes of Boston are {um of Mrs. Ellen Noyes. Charles 1dersleeve and family and Fred Gledhill and family are spending a few weeks at Lord’s Point. MrsiHenry /Hill, Mrs. Charles Wood- Fred Mrs. six weeks' ‘stiy at Lord’s Point and is therguest of her son, James Hempstead family at Willow Point. WILSONVILLE PERSONALS. Sanitol Tooth Paste, powder or lquid— SATURDAY SPECIAL 17¢ Olld“’:d Co.'s Dioxogen— SATURDAY SPECIAL 16c size— GATU RDAY -SPECIAL 310 Hosiery and Underwear Misses’ Ribbed Cotton Pants with lace trimmed knee. A very fine 25c quality in sizes 20 to SATURDAY SPECIAL w.m’- Union Suits in 50c and 65c_qualities. A small lot of low neck, sleeveless suits with lace trimmed or cuff knee, common $825 COUCH HAMMOCKS FOR $6.75 We have secured a very few more of these fine Hammocks to sell for this extremely low price, made of heavy khaki duck and furnished with felt top mattress, adjustable wind shield and adjustable head rest. It is in every way the TURDAV SPECIAL 59 | equal of hunmockl w‘blch have bee! 1d for arou! o O R ADAY SAECIAL 9675 TURDAY SPECIAL ; JMfatye itk Lisle Hose 12 The New Milanese Coats o oo hr:‘ %:' Silk Coats in a i P 3 g Y SPECIAL 18 | the rase : Wmu:l‘limnlo Hon in all the wanted they are t:: W'lfllblflfllolqhulmfl toe— great bargains— o= SATUWAV SPECIAL 500 borders or ‘,‘m Very pretty &"r‘fimv SPECIAL 100 MMW of fancy 2 for-Bo iy 2 forBo

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