Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 14, 1916, Page 6

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“PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN® I8 THE ONLY REAL STOMACH REGULATOR KNOWN. “Really does”™ t bad stomachs in really wovm indiges- and eructate sour, un and acid; head is dizzy- breath foul; tongue coated: sides filled with bile and ine waste, remember the moment “Pape’s " comes in contact with the stomach all such distress vanishes. It's truly astonishing—almost marvel- ous, and the joy is its hu-ml.-nuu A large fifty-cent case Diapepsin will give you a hum dollars’ worth of satisfaction or your druggist hands you your money back. It's worth its weight in g6ld to men and women who can’t get their stom- achs regulated. It belongs in your home—should always be kept handy in case of a sick, sour, upset stomach during the day or at night. It's the quickest, surest and most harmless stomach regulator in the world. COAL AND LUMBER GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lehigh ALWAYS IN STOCK A. D. LATHROP Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sts, Telephone 463-12 The office of John A. Mor- gan & Son has been removed to the Davenport building, 10-20 West Main street, the old Elevator building. COLCHESTER State Road Repairs—Borough Left in Darkness for a Time. Joseph Kraft left Tuesday for New- ark, N. J., where he was called by the death of his father. Superintendent Kramer of the state roads in town and & gang of men and teams are unloading several carloads of trap rock and putting the same on Lebanon avenue and Main street roads. Three carloads have already bsex';LDIfl on, and more is expected fllil weel ‘S. H. Kellogg and Harry Elgart were in Norwich Tuesday. ‘Mr. and Mrs. Cumn E. Staples are in Hartford this week attending the sesiona of the state grange. layton D. Barton of East Hampton 'u a Colchester visitor Tuesday. Borough in Darkness. Owing to m? trouble on the line of the electric light company _between here and the power house in Leesville, | fa the town was in darkness Tuesday evening, there being no lights ln E,’.“'” and on streets. Superintendent erlock and men were out on the line during the night to locate the trouble. ‘Mrs, Etta Lom‘bl.rd left Tuesday for a few days’ visit in Salem. Misses Elizabeth and Susan Day and Miss Alice Kemp were on Salem Tues- day calling on Miss Dorothy Fauller, who is seriously ill at her home. Selectman George A. Mills of Leba- non was a visitor in town Tuesday. k A. Case and party were call- ers in Norwich Wedn: David Bresnahan, lnrmerly ‘brake- man on the branch railroad, was a re- cent caller on friends in town. LOOKATCHILD'S TONGUEIF SICK CROSS, FEVERISH |2 WHEN CONSTIPATED OR BILIOUS GIVE “CALIFORNIA SYRUP OF FIGS.” Look at the tongue, mother! Iz coated, it is a sure sign that your lit- tle one’s stomach, liver and bowels need a gentle, thorough cleansing at once. When peevish, cross, listless, pals, doesr’t sleep, doesn't eat or act natur- ally, or is feverish, stomach sour, breath bad; has stomach-ache, sore throat, diarrhoea, full of cold, give a teaspoonful of “California Syrup of Figs,” and in a few hours all the foul, constipated waste, undigested food and sour bile gently moves out of its m- As] tle. bowels without griping, and. you |C. have a well, playful child You needn’t coax sick children to take this harmless “fruit laxative;” they love its delicious taste, and it al- ways makes tiiem feel splendid, Ask your druggist’for a 50-cent bot- tle of "C.nll.fofllil Syrup of Figs,” which has_directions for babies, chil- dren of all ages and for grown-ups plainly on the bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. To be sure rou get the genuine, ask to u- that it s made by “California Company.” Refuse any ath-r ldns with contempt. NOTICE. The Annual Mecting of Pnllcy- ho\fl.n of lho New IA‘lndon w tual Fire Ina 1L M held at khe otflee of th. 59-61 Bro: hkmt Norwicl on Tuesday. "Tan. 1600, 1916, at 2 p. m., 23 (a) Tomnmflnmflllnul reports. (b) mumrourmm- term of three yi (e) To trn.n-u:t -ny om- Dbusiness proper to come before sald meeting. W, LESTER, Secretary. MISS M. C. ADLES HAIR, FACE, SCALP SPECIALIST Advance Spring Hair .*t:lo jeing shown "lray lvtq- :hlng for the hllr. m Rhode Island State Firemen's e...,.mm,m"mm:;: e are e] an- ot in Providence Wednes- iual meeting ht, when officers were elected | gr n;.g‘h:l Frederick IB. g“"kfi of tt, president; Napoleon Grembley, e- resident; David Robertson -§=Yy sécond - vice president. of Pa.wtuckat. third B president; Frederick W. Cady of %"?l ‘Westerly, tournament com- mittee; George Hunt of Providence, commissioner of firemen’s relief fund. ‘resenting 51 organizations. The port of the. treasurer showed a bal- ance in the treasury of $109.62 and al] bills paid. The Central Volunteer company, of Warren, was admitted to membersship. oThe d!-rycof Marasseh Miner, of OHH., coverin, eri e 16 1750 . mubhioneg by i Fh.nk Dnnl.lon Miner with the assist ance of Miss Hannah Miner, the edi- tion being limited to 150 coples, is just from the press and a copy has been secured by the Westerly Public library. Manasseh Miner was the sixth son of Thomas Miner and wife, Grace Palmer. He was born in New London, April 28, 1647, and according to the Caulkins history, “the first born male of that town” and “the first son of the town admitted to the privileges of an inhabitant” (February 28, 1669- 70) and “was the child of the soil.” The diary of Thomas Minor, of Stonington, 1653 to 1684, was prepared for publication by Sidney H. Miner and George D. Stanton, Jr., and pub- lished in 1899. Throughout this diary the father makes frequent mention of this son, 'sometimes written Manaseth. It is quite probable that after the death of Thomas Minor, in 1690, his son Manasseh, in reading over his father’s dlary covering so many facts in the eéarly history of the community may have considered it his duty to continue the record as long as pos- sible. Blvhlon No. 1, Ancient Order Hi- bernians, elected officers follows, at i recent meeting: Walter Fitz- gerald, president; Patrick J. Lynch, vice president; Martin Devine, finan- clal secretary; John M. ODonnell re- cording secratary; James urer; James Donohue, Ient.lne A. Bhfl. sergeant-at-arms; Law- rence J. Kelledy, chaplain; Wllllu.m J. Smith, trustee for three years. John Long, whose funeral was held Wednesday In Gloucester, wa: 89 years of age, and one of the oldest Mdmu ot the place. Mr. Long was born in Wiltshire, England, and, with his wife and daughter, came to this country in 1853 and settled in Cen- treville. After some years the fam- ily removed to Westerly and then to Chepachet. He was a loomfixer by cupation and worked in the Che- het mills until he became enfeebled by age. He is survived by five daugh- ters, one son. fourteen grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. years ago, when his ther was pastor of the Church of the Unity, has been chosen pastor of the First Unitarian church, Avondale, Cleveland, Ohio. He will preach for the ‘first 'time from his new pulpit next Sunday. The installation services are planned tentatively for Sunday, February 13, with Rev. Samuel A. Bliot, president of the American Uni- tarian association, as the principal speaker. — Charles W. Willard of Westerly, of the Rhode lsland Fish. eries commission, has urged Congress. man O'Shaunnessy to support an a propriation for the artificlal prop: gation of lobsters, based on the r sults of experiments in such prop: gation made by the Rhode Island co; mission. Lobster experts in conve tion at Woods Hole, not long ago, adopted resolutions in praise of the ;?rkd:fl lobster propagation in Rhode and &I e a piano recital Wed- Marion Collins, Agnes Cl'ld ock, Edith Ellis, Teresa Fallon, Fishwick, Margaret Fitzger- uld, Bertha Frye, Helen Frye, Mary Kiernan, Madeleine Higgins, Mary Le .Fontaine, Mary Lord, Julia Lom- bardo, Margaret McGuire, William Mc- Laren, Anna Moran, Irene Murphy, Marion Purtill, Mildred Purtill, Han- nah Sulllvan and Sadie Vincent. The program included these numbers: La Traviata, Verdi; Polonaise, Chopin; Caprice, Mendelssohn; Sonata Op. 49, Beethoven; Seven Sketches, Virgil; Fairy Circle, vocal, Spaulding; Con- certo in D Minor, Mendelssohn; Valse in E Flat, Durand; Capriccio, Virgil; To Spring, Greigg; Second Mazourka, At the annual session of the Wash- _mhn County Medical society, held rsday morning, at the Colonial club, Westerly, these officers were elected: Dr. H. D. Potter, of Wake- fleld, president; Dr. A. S. Briggs, of haway, first vice president; Dr. F. of Westerly, second vice Dr. W. A Hillard, of Paw- catuck, secretary. Teasurer; Dr. S. Webster, of Westerly, auditor; Dr. H. Metcalf, ot chk.forfl censor for three years; iner, of Wake- field, deleslts to Rhoda Island Medical society for two Dr. Russell B. Smith, of Wectafly, councillor for two years. Papers were read by Dr. Experiences _ in Barrows on P\‘I.nca ‘with _the Second Harvard Unit and by Dr. R. R. Robinson on Report of Case of Paratyphoid-Beta. Local Laconics. Westerly toda: Mothers Make This Home Made Cough Syrup The good, tender, thoughtful mother quickest can make a full pint of the uun- ermanent result giving cough e.nbomd yt.howho or ooughs and colds, thus pre- ven eumonia, sore throats, diph- fatal ust. theria M other of resumed studies in the New York university. The Third dil!flct court convenes in llllnltl‘l xnlvlm pink granite is o —— typhold fever, has In grand committee, -they call it oner for At_the midweek prayer mndnc of ‘Mr. Swan was cee glnuryc; :::r nine .:de.n. relltnln[ lbovut . PR ST SVERcoATS: ank. oW . ... ) = vi'm. the agreement that they would not be candidates for reelection to| Pedly UITS and the general ‘;lnemwd Xlg’. Go‘:rnAor Beeeka t- Mflmh m S man reappoi ram " LWOO to the stats board of public roads ana| ciae.r OVERCOATS—now. .. Oscar A. Bennett to the board of control and supply, for terms of five ksburg, vears. Senator Louis W. Arnold of| For forty years it has been making We‘terly is a member of the latter | women strong and well, and curing back- board, whose term of office expires\ ache, nervousness, uterine and ovarian FRSnSTY L ) lnflamm.fion,wul’m}n, displacements, RECOVERY OF BODIES isguisty and o s Y you want special vice wri OF [SLAIN AMERIOANS | ydia E. Pikhaw Mofictne o Story of a Newspaper Man Who Was| (configential), Lynn, Mass. on the Relief Train. $25 SUITS and OVERCOATS—now. 18 Americans slain near Chihuahua was told here today by a newspaper | Announcement Made by Attorney Gen- man who was on the relief train: eral Gregory Last Night. “Almost the whole foreign popula- e tion of Chihuahua -City assembled at| Washington, Jan. 13—Retrial of ;}Ie d:hxleui Nc:rthwe‘-_lr{hn tetrmln:; five former directors of the New Ha- onday evening to aw: e return \ the. train Which ned left the . same|ven Tailroad under indictment for con- morning to take the officlals and men [ Spiracy to violate the criminal pro- Qut to start work in the mines. Un- |vision of the Sherman anti-trust law confirmed reports had been received of | wag ordered tonight by Attorney Gen- the fate that had befallen them and|eral ~Gregory, Willlam Rockefeller, the Mexicans who were allowed to re- | Lewis Cass Lédyard, Edward M. Rob- turn unmolested had fully verified the|bins Charles F. Brooker and Charles sad news. M. Pratt are the five in whose cases Some Ran, But They Are All Dead. |a jury in New York disagreed last “‘We eaw them ordered off the cars | Sunday. and then the shooting began, they | Mr. Gregory announced at the same said. ‘Some ran, but they are all dead. | time that the cases against George F. he V' Baker, Theodore N. Vail, T. Dewitt The Villistas told us to go back home and tell the Carranzistas to send some | Cuyler, Francis T. Maxwell Edward o==:o==o==or=o=o==o Milligan and Alexander Cochrane, in- iy out o e et WK Laiter on, the same charge and granted Sirie Forelsncs Bant back to the | Separate trials, would be dismissed. club to awalt The result of an inters | The date on which the government View between Captatn ‘Scoviile. the |Will seek to begin the new proceed- British consul, at present representing | In€s was not declded today, but it is American interests, in the absence of | believed there will be little delay. New indictments are not necessary. M TARIeIF AU GRpOIAT Theving. The attorney general announced the Foreigners Given Permission to Arm.|nig,Attorney ee e T “The general promised to send out a | lowing seatementr o o o 1O 121-125 Main Street =O=O=OJ gave permission for all foreigners who |the dcfendants with respect to whom cared to go along to carry arms to as- |the jury disagreed, namely, Lewis Cas- sist in recovering the bodies. A num- |Ledyard, Edward D. Robbins, William ber volunteered and later assembled | Rockefelled, Charles F. Brooker and troop train early in the morning. He “As heretofore stated by Mr. Batts, I! Saves You Money Because the Merchandise offered o is desirable in every respect and just as good next .year as this. The only difference is the prices Nm:l.un 9:30 to 4:30 have been lowered substantially. For example— All our $30, $35 and $40 Suits .nd o'mh_m n4.m Norwich, Conn., Jam, 1, 191 first. In other words it is a sale of only desirable merchandise- We have no old styles or odds and ends to close out as we keep stocks moving and show complete new assortments each season. Buy your next year’s coat today or the suit you'll need before long—the savings are worth while and the styles and materials are particularly choice. .PEGK Fridays 10:80 to 4:30 ...... $10.50 Office of The Norwich Savings Soclety Norwich, Conn., Dec. 11th, 1916 The Directors of this Society have declared out cf the earnings of ‘the current six months a semi-annual dividend ‘at the rate.of FOUR PER CENT. per annum, payable to de- positors entitled thereto. on and after January 15th, 1916: COSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer. City of Norwich Water Works $19.50 { Water rates for the quarter ending Dee. gy 1915, are due and pavable at e Jan. 1, 1916. Ol open . . 1. 0 to 5 B P - Tal 13 hie . ator This sale is different from most uleo—v Different Ad.‘in‘lons wmmganmbnd;m to au bilis as0, Tex., Jan. 13.—This stary|peroiai o0 conuo ot s remaining unpald atier. Jan of the recovery of the bodies of the| " °m::c:'°:s Non:‘:snsn ‘because the last garment is just as good as the R T, SR Dr. J. M. KING DENTIST jan1TuWF R. R. AGNEW, M. D. Physician and Surgeon Room 214 Thayer Building Norwich, Conn. Gmnevme _office: Office Hours: 12- 2-4 p. m.; 7-8 uflvt Wednesdni 7-8 Wednesday and Satur- day evenings, and by Suturdnv appointment ACT WISELY ! Keep Dunn’s Cathartic Liver Pills in the house at all times. Their aec- tion is gentle but positive, insuring a freedom from headache and heavy ing caused by a torpid liver. at the Mexico Northwestern depot. Charles M. Pratt, will be re-tried. “We waited from zla. m. to 9 a m. l'"chen‘fm g:;endantn Dot conmectsd GOV. HANNA CONVALESCING Tuesday for the soldlers to entrain|with the affairs of the New Haven HOSPI their horses and then go into a small | company until 1910 or thereafter were A G N HoaEmar following train of three box cars and |granted a severance by the court. The | g o Start Next Week on His Return a caboose. It took us six hours to get | prosecution will be dismissed as to Teip s Antaion to Santa Ysabel, about 35 miles, and | them.” P o five miles short of the scene of the = Copenhagen, Jan. 13, via London, S e ANATIONCOF TASOUORT 6.41 p. m—Governor L. B. Hanna of ..r::" ::'d::: ::t:;:':o:'::'& s EXACTIONS BY BRITISH | orh Dakota, who was taken serious- s Ao bl realized that if we did not complete our | Object Is to Prevent British Subjects ‘FY ‘;‘ o ;‘;r":y o ‘;’;‘;x:;hx;h: ord pead task we might not get the bodies away. . We finally got Colonel. Garcie, in com- jSrosy Evating Conme hospital here, is now canvalescent. He mand of the troops, to put ten uldm-a r e _ | will leave the hospital tomorrow and In our train and permit us to London, Jan. 13, 540 p. m—The an- | 2.7, G % g return to America mext ahead. A mile from the scene of the | nouncement which the American em- | yack, together with his friend, Sam agedy we were stopped by two ex- | bassy gave last night to London news- | Clerk, who remained here with the S Skl urged the crew |papers to the effect that hereafter ap- |8overnor during his illness. to reverse the engine, and we moved e back to Santa Ysabel. Dlications for passports which it had | roRD PEACE PARTY HAS any reason to suspect were fraudulent Bandits Were Awaiting. - would be turned over to Scotland SELECTED FIVE DELEGATES “We there found that the two men|Yard, caused considerable feeling in _— had been part of the train crew of |the American colony here. When this | To Attend Conference .of Neutrals to Watsen's train and had been held pris- [ was brought to the attention of the Be Held at The Hague. oners, and that the troops, presumably | embassy today, regret was expressed —— bandits, were just over the hill awalt-|for what was termed an unfortunate| Londom, Jan. 13, 630 p. m.—The us. wording of the announcement and re- : : o iast iy ihele: SRVAGIL auen top- | sponsibility for its publication in the |American members of the Henry Ford ped the rise and walted there, leisure- | British papers was placed upon one|Peace party have selected five dele- ly counting our force. of the clerks at the ambassy. gates to attend a conference of neu- “We finally persuaded the colomel| The embassy authorizes the state- |trals to be held later at The Hague, to give us 60 mounted men to go with |ment that no bonafide American cit- |according to a Central News despatch us abreast of the train, on which we |izen will be subjected to any Scotland | from The Netherlands capital. had now moved two machine guns, | Yard inquiry and that the rule is| The delegates, it is stated, include Bo Were Stripped. meant to apply only to British sub- |Mr, Ford, Williams Jennings Bryan 3 < jects or individuals of other nation-|and Miss Jane Addams. “We got to the scene of the tragedy | plities attempting to obtain Ameri- —_—— {::ltnu th: :;In.v:ma':&“nwafiog;s %un pe.!‘:pogts fraudulently. The emr; 5000 CAVALRY TO RUN DOWN cam: assy etermined to lace sucl T dimly see the wrecked train that had [ cases in the hands of the pollce. as the REMAINING VILLA FORCES halted the Watson train, and then oUr | result of the Spencer “Dixie Kid” case . A £ eves fell upon a patch of white that|and the rush to obtain passports by a | Preparations Being Made by the Mil- showed up against the rocky cut.|number of British subjects who wish itary Governor of Sonora. Heaped in a pile were 14 bodies, strip- | to protect themselves against conscrip- ped of all clothing but their under- | tion. Douglas, Ariz., Jan. 13.—General P. shirts. Some of them were punctured Elias Calles, military governor of with many holes, while without excep- tion the features were so disfigured by | o1 1/SH STEAMER GLENGLYE Sonora, is preparing to send 5,000 cav- close shooting that identification was|TORPEDOED WITHOUT WARNING |alry in western Chihuahua to difficult. Without speech we ran for —_— in running down the remaining Villa blankets to carry the dead into the|Steamer Tafna Escaped Submarine by | forces, according to announcement to- car. Speed and Clever Manoeuvres. day by Ives G. Lelevier, Carranza con- “When they were all loaded our es- Ly ol sul here. cort started back. We only moved a| London, Jan. 13, 10.30 a. m.—The ITALIAN LINER SAILED Assurances Given That the Pieces Are liner Giuseppe Verdi sailed for Naples late today with her two 3-inch guns still mounted on her afterdeck. She was permitted to clear upon the re- ceipt of assurances that the pleces are | We guaranteo our n.rvle- to be the They Are Being Arrested and Charged and charged with vagrancy. partment. They're 15c a bottle at_ Dunn’s Pharmacy 60 MAIN STREET MAHONEY. BROS., FALLS AVENUE Hack, leeléy and Boarding WITH GUNS STILL MOUNTED to Be Used Only for Defense. New York, Jan. 13.—The Italian to_be used only for defense. best at che most reasonable prices. Word came from Washington today to the collector of the port, Dudley Deld Song, e’ ng Tutln covre” | ALES, WINES, LIQUORS Verafs" clearance bapers might 'be AND CI e Fresh, c aplete stock. ‘Best Service. DAN MURPHY 11 Bath Street VILLA LEADERS TO BE RUN OUT OF EL PASO with Vagrancy. iy New Styles El Paso, Texas, Jan. 13.—Miguel Diaz Lombardo, minister of foreign J illi e e Fall Millmery, arrested here today, charged with va- Brancy and held in 31,000 ban. Gen.| MRS. G. P. STANTON eral Jose Prieto also was arrested 62 Shetucket Street “Every Villa leader in El Paso is fain W, D, Grest of' the sonce d5.| JOSEPH BRADFORD, BOOK BINDER Southington.—Many of the factories of the town have been forced to burn 3 ) railroad ties under their boilers in or- | Slank Books Made ard Ruled to Order. der to keep the factories running. The ties having vine out, the factories were 108 SROADWAY forced to shut down. One of the man- a5ea o wvour meting e conr 2t THE DEL =-HOFF had the number of the cars and locat- ed them in the coal yards all loaded to European Plan be_ dell L. ik Rates 75 cents per day and um few yards when the engine left the|British steamsship Glengyle, sunk in back on > &R hour later we had It |the Mediterranean on senuny 2o | Doctor Says Nuxated Iron Will Found All 'Wires Down. to a Havas despatch today from Mar- pelo gctto Safe Yasbel sbout §|S0CS o) gerparen reports that the Increase Strength of Delicate down. We feared that they had been |Stéamer Tafna, which arrived at Mar- oy Vilas who ‘might be lanning |seilies from, Philippeville, escaped for People 200% in Ten Days e o ey e, hed a con-|speed and clever manoeuvres. o ey eeured Perme: | “Captain Chester of the Glengyle and | 1n many instances—Persons have sut- where early in the morning a commit. | {Wenty men of the crew were picked | fered untold agony for years doctoring tee took charge of the bodies. :&&y Ihesteamer Mossoul, the des- | for mervous weakness, stomach, Hver Train Looted of $20,000 in Silver. the ‘crew and seven Chinese were | F kidney discase or some other ailment ‘hen their real trouble was lack of “The train had been looted of $20,- ot pesgiy e Fov- i 990 inaliver and currency agert fromft . o =l o iron in the blood—How to personal belongings of the men. It engyle v was rumored in nc‘;mumu- City that|Teported in a London despatch on[ New York N. Y—In a foceny ais the bandits had been advised of the |January 2, when it was stated that of | Cpurse Dr. E. Sauer, specialist, of this departure of the train with the money. |about 120 persons on board, passen- | goiial blood test of all people who are R R Sl o R A PR AT S at the exceedin; o il o nix S Chinese were landed and that It was | ber Who Jack Iron and who ars il for CRUSADE AGAINST VIOLATION |not belleved any Americans were on p board. The Glengyle was bound from OF ANTI-SPITTING ORDINANCES | Shanghal for London. 140 Persons Arraigned in the Courts of Greater New York Yesterday. 85 DEGREES BELOW ZERO AT DULUTH, MINN. N —-On “n‘rgd —_— 1; ugh 11 -M"lzrtx;w:"u-i;.n' e u-:-;:m Most Severe Blizzard in Twenty Years | corn throush a x Qx!wm-un;n mnmm 2 fhe courls ‘of ‘Greater New York to- Was Experienced. X5 a result of this continuous day on charges of violating the anti- —_— and nerve starvation, people bec spitting ordinances. More flnn flvn Duluth, Minn., Jan. 13.—The most | generally weakened, nervous and all hundred have been _summoned severe blizzard Duluth has experienced | run _down and frmuenuy dwdovh‘“ OOt aision: the) rubiiis (0 Ghook Uia | e M roiTs L today after | S0Fi8 of copsons. Cine fiw too_lnfas joread of colds and grippe started a|causing the death of one man, the|Fi0'sio"are so weak they can hardly ago. In most of the cases|injury of several and numerous fires| waik: some think they have dyspepsia, nne- n! $1 to $5 were unuod. from overheated furnaces. The ther-|kidney or liver trouble; some can't he m« mxhhtered 35 below zero dur- Aloepiat nu-m, others ate a‘lmmd e n e Tussy an : s some -Mm:y I-Dd blooalau. but P hysical power 2nd endurance. In st lne et i stiaontie ook | SISt fore, Bk Toollimnees t2 & Mrs. Jennie Parsons of East Hartford S'r’.‘."u 1’1”1:‘5.: lcllgl;n whip up mnn fag- Bor. 28, and who, -nn the death of .-n: 'vital powers for the = moment, Mrs, Parsons in St. Francis® hospital fin t the expense of your life later on ‘military organization known as me Litchfield Mounted lull-c the following day, was held on tchugc on: N‘o mnnc hat any one teils you, was organized at a meeting held at the manslaughter, was discharged in the g you ue not strong: ;:u you owe | case town hall Tuesday evening: The Harttord ‘town court by Juage| test” %0 """"““ ‘will ‘be in no mum‘fi?m.x.mkqmmo Mol x“ HAYES BROTHERS. Telephone 1227. 26-28 Broadway “SALTEREA” CLAM CHOWDER g iy o g;;: s Something fine. Justnnvd. weel on test your stren nd see for yoursslf how much ' you| Grapes, Oranges, Lemons, have gained. I hlve seen dl’l.nl of A R O O Grape Fruit, Etc. gl ety Sirengih 334 cndurancs le’ t 1 1t d oth P u k i ampenete Tl ane st it People’s. Marke 1y b; 3t in th roper form, 204 hte atiar they Al 1o sooas. comas 6 Franklin Street beon doctori: for months without ob. taining any benefit. You can falk as JUSTIN HOLDEN, Propristor you lllt about all the wonders by no" r;modlol, but when Yo\l oomn down to hard facts there is nothing like good old iron to put color in your cheeks and g0od sound, healthy - fl::‘:om:n’do“: b:llch :tr:nnh.n.r‘ nnlé OINTMENT x n the best ‘blood builder In the world The ,,,,', fraukie was thet the. oMs “The Healer of Skin Diseases” lnm‘mll: iron like tincture of | Relieves and quickly helll cold sores, et hpect their stomachs had | Chapped skin, frost bites, chilblains, | eir “lete. Price 26c, every bex ted and for these rea- | it Frice 25 guaranteed. 3 2*::3‘,1. rasms WaeThon | STETSON. & 'YOUNG, not lné and is flmoll im- beneficial, Best worx and materials at right | prices by skilled laber, 3 Telephone. 50 Wu‘r mull 31'. DR. F. W. HOLMS, Dfllfil v"h-m Building Annex, u.fi.‘, Carpenters and Builders } | i i i ‘, l

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