Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 12, 1915, Page 8

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g gt e "] ot j R, e i | i year, E? ] E 95 a&:{ j ; ‘35 | :ggi fi‘g‘gi i il i 'New London. . The volume.of new work for which lans are estimated pared very small this week., A business|rI in New Haven, Haven, store and in Bridgeport pared year and $67,800 4n :1913. 'BUILDING . OPERATIONS The true bungalow type of house 18 becoming increasingly popular in the east. In the western cities thousands upon thousands of the convenfent lit- tle houses, five rooms on one floor, may be found. through other sec es. In the bungnlow picture shown to- day, there is not a single convenience lacking. . The exterior is very at- tractive, the front plazza with #ts massive stucco posts. giving it a sy PR of ent ng, the roo eithered weathered or stained to suit other little es, ich as the cobble stone chimneys just peeping through _the r:o& the tou:th &! half-timbered effect at the peak e gable, the ‘swinging casement windows and the wide ter- TR §’§5§~§;gg i i g. g ( Decoratinig at Baptist Church it iy {5 p Eu ] § L f i o flg ! i 3 i g it 228 i i I &, e hotsl will' have & practically new appear- anoce. Wednesday _the Mariners Savings bank was gone over-in the same man- ‘The auditorium of %“Conh‘l Bap- | Main street. with the idly. Henry P. Beausoliel has re- moved the seats and is painting them. Boston contractors are doing the work of painting the Interlor end just mow engaged Outlines ot the work to be done have been announced and architects invited upon the stencilled | field exits and admitting light and To the right of the fireplace French doors 3dmit, directly to the - dining room, 129x11.8 feet. Like the living room. one side of ‘the dining room is almost entirely of glass, a duplicate Lof the group window being found here. Opposite this window is the china closet, which may be as plain or as elaborate as the owner desires. Two. doors open from the dining ropm. One leads into a well-lighted pantry, as well equipped with shelves, closet,” cupboard and drawers as any full-sized house, and thence into the kitchen; the other into a central hall, from which in turn access the kitchen is gained. This _kitchen, ? A R REEL 5& 5*& f f (kfiantgglnmprowetnenn:I;éagnxe-[)ata ‘By2County, . Agent miles long . | strets to attend the field meeting of the State Experiment Station at New Haven. look over our report. TELERY SPRAYING. cumulate on the Plant and Render it Unfit for Food. when ready for consumption. The use of salts of copper in food products has been officially pronounced injurious to health, and in previous seasans - the department has warned growers of the necessity of their com- plying with this decision. The copper is deposited on the celery in the worm of dried Bordeaus mix- ture (lime and copper sulphate), which is used extensively to prevent the destruction of the crop by blight. Un- less the plants are sprayed at certain periods of growth with this mixture, it has been found impossible to bring them to market in good condition. With proper care in spraying however, there is no reason why any undue quantity of copper should be deposited upon the stalks. The excessive amounts of copper soretimes found on the stalks of celery are due to faulty methods of spraying, a frequent cause being the use of knapsack instead of power outfits. The do not operate at a sufficiently high pressure to make a fine spray_or mist; hence, by their use the Bordeaux mixture reaches the plants in a mum- ber of fine streams, which fail to cover the leaves as does the mist or fog but run down between the stalks. The mixture thus accumulates at the base of plants, giving 2 Dblue-green ap- pearance to the base of the celery. ‘With an efficient apparatus working high pressure—150 pounds or is trouble does not exist. The knapsack sprayers | See F. C. WARNER Kansas an Apple State. A little strip of country, eeventy and three miles from Lawrence to Wamego, Kas., along the Kaw River, produces 90 per cent of the apple seedlings of the United States. The farmers in this small territory annually plant one thousand bushels of crab apple seeds and harvest a crop of 75 to 30 million yearling apple trees. There is not a single state to which szl g i i £ giéia an ordinary loop attached to my bdelt for cutting the sprouts end shrubs. It is also beneath Chick to Chick in Five Months. A rather unusual record of early lon is TR E?; 4 i i E; " Bihatt i takd aggg ;fi? I i 3 ! i & i i g i;a 2 E 4 i . n i T. F. BURNS Heating and Plumbing 92 Franklin Street IRON GASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY - THE VAUGHN -FOUNDRY (O No. 11 to 25-Ferry Street ficulty in getting two good cropsof the medium variety, and one crop of hay: and & balf sumer of flae pasture from alsike. Alfalfa cannot be pastured at' all unless.it is an object to destroy the:

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