Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 27, 1916, Page 10

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D D R T T i AT R DX G AR BUILDING AND BUSINESS. Decided Gain Shown Over Same Week Last Year. ‘Sales of real estate in Connecticut by warranty deed last week numbered 360, as with 355 in the cor- responding week a year ago, while mortgage s for the week reached the sum of $1,000,943, as compared with $904,083 last year. New companies formed during the week in the state numbered 15, with SOUTH MANCHESTER. NEW WARD FOR STATE HOSPITAL| s’ s o awarded the contract for a house to be erected on West Center street for Charles Lashinsk’s. It will be 28x48 feet, aranged .for two tenements of five rooms each. S. C. Holmes has started the foun- @ation work for a new house which be will build for himself on Strickland street. It will be 28x30 feet, provid- ed with all modern conveni Will be 45x260 and Erected Just South of Ball Grounds—2 Tenement House for Division Street—Bungalow on Hedge Avenue. aggregate capital stock of $804,000. Last year there were six incorpora- tions with total capital stock of §147,- 000, ‘and in 1914 nine companies with total capital of $2,271,000 were or- ganized. The three bankruptcy petitions last week have assets of $41,197 and lia- ‘bilities of $37,601, comparing with four petitions having assets of $3,297 and liabilitles of $7,922 filed in the cor- responding week a year ago. The volume of building business as shown by the permits issued in the larger cities of the state continues to show a decided gain over the same week of last year, and there is every indication that the coming summer months will continue to_show the same or larger increase. Permits is- sued last week in the cities of New Haven, Hartford, Bridgeport and Wa- terbury numbered 159 for buildings costing $545,346, while last year in the same cities but 113 permits were is- sued for buildings costing $290,017, large increases being noted in Bridge- port, New Haven and Hartford. Important new projects reported last week include a hospital ward build- ing in Norwich, new bank building in Greenwich, schoolhouses in Bridge- Plans are being drawn for a new ward to be erected at the Norwich State hospital. The building will be 45x260 feet, three stories high on each end and four stqries high in the cen- ter. It will be ed just south of the baseball grounds facing the ‘Thames river. The bullding will be made of brick mate with stone trimmings. The floors will be con- crete and the building will be made of fireproof material throughout. In the basement will be located the hydrotherapeutic baths, the dining room, kitchen and boiler room. On the second flcor the head physician and nurse will have offices and liv- ing quarters. Also there will be or- derly rooms and a reception room. The second and third floors will be devoted to three dormitories, day rooms, sun parlors and a number of single rooms. On the fourth floor there will be two dormitories,. tub room, etc. The building will be equipped with an electric elevator and it is expected work will be started some time in June, ‘The building will be known as the Pyhcopathic or acute ward. All new Stonework Started. The laying of stone for the founda. tlon for the Palmertown schoolhouse which was recently burned, has been started and is_well advanced. Con- tractor C. M. Williams has the ‘con- ct. Putting in Metal Ceilings. ‘The metal ceilings are being put up in the building of the Triple Link In- corporation are erecting on Franklin street. The plastering has been com- pleted. The frames for the plate glass windows have been erected and the glass will be set in place as soon as the plastering dries. H. Blackledge & Co. are in charge of the work. Frame Boarded l!'. The foundation for one of the houses Caesar Del Carlo is erectin; on Fanning avenue is all complet: and the frame has been erected and boarded in. The men are now en- gaged in shingling the roof. The other house Mr. DelCarlo intends to build will be started as soon as possible. Contractor Charles Rathbun is doing the work. Two-story Bay Window. H. Blackledge & Co. are construct- contract for a frame bi erected on Summit ences. Arthur Patton has been awarded the ungalow to be street, for John Robb. It wil be 25x38 feet, provided with all modern conveniences. A permite has been granted for the be_erected new_recreation bullding to on School street, by will be 49x208 feet, basement, built of brick, of fireproof construction. on Eldridge street for John McClus- xe_%. is now being plastered. - two houses which he is erecting on port and Waterbury, residence work in patients admitted to the institution New Haven, Hartford, Stamford, New London, Norwich and Greenwich, store and_apartment blocks in New Haven, Bridgeport and New Britain, factory in Waterbury. Contracts let include threo large brick dormitories in_Bridgeport, fac- tory construction in Bridgeport, Stam- ford and New London, apartment hotel in Stamford, residence work in_New Haven, Stamford, Greenwich, Hart- ford and New London, fireproof gar- age in Greenwich, three-family houses in New Haven, New Prit Bridge- port and Hartford, six-family houses in New Haven and Bridgeport, brick store and apartment building in New Britam. Norwich had eleven sales of real es- tate quring the past week to eight a year ago. The mortgage loans for the respective weeks were $12,575 and New London there were five sales of realty last week to 14 a year ago, the mortgage loans being $16,025 and $20,400 for the respective weeks. AN AID TO SORE FEET For sore, tired, aching feet, reduce the inflammation that causes itching, burning and swelling by applying Minard’s liniment as directed. Any druggist wiil supply you with a bottle of this wonderful,delightfully creamy liniment. It soothes and cools, does not stain and is absolutely effective because of its healing, antiseptic prop- erties. It gives relief quickly. It frees you from fcot misery. e STETSON & YOUNG, will first be sent to this ward for their initial treatment and then will be later transferred to the other buildings. Other patients who are in need of observation will be quartered in this building. The building will accommodate 100 patients, 50 _male and 50 female, and there will be no male nurses in the building. On each floor there will be a male orderly. All the very latest hydrotherapeutic equipment will be installed. The su- perintendent nurse of the training school will have her headquarters here and nurses belonging to the training school will be in this build- ing. One special feature of the build- ing will be the roof garden, a sort of recreation place for the patients and it will be so arranged that patients who are unable to zet out of bed can hava their beds wheeled out onto the garden. Cudworth, Woodworth & Thompson are drawing the plans. Hedge Avenue Bungalow. Work on the foundation for a bun- galow Mrs. Mary Peck is having built on Hedge avenue has been started and is well advanced. The house will be 28x39 feet. one and a half stories high and will have five rooms and a bath. The attiz room will be unfinished. The interfor will be finished off in hard wood and electric hts, steam heat and other modern improvements will be installed. The outside will be shin- gled and gray neponset shingles will be laid on the roof. There will be a plazza S$x16 feet constructed and co- lonial pillars will support the piazza roof. Housing Company’s Buildings. Seven of the houses being erected for the Norwich Housing company on Spring Garden avenue, Thamesville, have been plastered and three have had the case work finished. The houses on Rockwell street being erect- ing a two-story bay window addi- tion for Miss Benjamin on her house at the corner of Seventh street and Central avenue. The addition will project out about three feet and will be 10 feet long. Ready to Alter Building. Work was started the early part of this week on the clearing ouf of the interior of the house opposite Hop- kins & Allen Arms Co. on Franklin street, recently purchased by Emil Fox, who will convert the house into two stores and a tenement. H. Black- ledge is in charge of the work. Two Tenement House. Mr. and Mrs. William Lynch are having plans made for the erection of a two-tenement house on Division street at the corner of Clairemount avenue. The house will haxe six rooms upstairs and five down. It will be of wood material, #6x27 feet, with a shingled roof and clap boards on the sides. The interior will be finish- ed off in hardwood and will have steam heat, electric lights, baths and other modern improvements. Will Make Three-story Building. Mrs. Annie Cunningham, who is erecting a building on Franklin street, has decided to put up another story, making the building a three-story structure instead of two. The upper floors will be devoted to temement purposes and the lower a store. The brick walls have already been laid to the second story level on the south side and the work in general is ad- vancing as fast as can be expected. Thomas F. Craney is in charge of the work. Two-story Shed. | The work on the raising of the shed in the rear of Frederick Huntington's house at the corner of Otis street and Broadway, is well under way. The Agricultural opening of the Gilbert School of Prac- OPENING OF GILBERT New School It two stories and | struction with the exterior stuccoed and will be arranged for two cars. Patrick D. Kinniery will have work started son on the erection of a two- story house in Home avenue. . Sage of Cromwell is to erect a new cottage .at his place on in street. The two-family house being_ erected 'homas G. Wright is finishing the AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS Agent In abarge of Boys' and Girls® FARM SCHOOL S&‘lfi.r‘{"fiy“ S. Department of Agri- gy <3 “T wonder if you have had delicious in Practical Farming | ummer squash, beet greens, little Begins its Work. nlrae:t tender carrots, lima be!-l'lh el S t, corn on the ear, that taste The trustees of the Connecticut|[iia pese in January. Thers ia no rea College announce the | son why anonc having land to plant a garden should not have all these any tical Agriculture. Applicants must be|many othefs. 1 years of age and residents of Con- necticut. of other institutions. be given and few, “If the garden is planned on paper first, there need be no delay later in The plan of the school is unlike that| what, when and where to plant. The N3 lectures wiil| arrengements can be so made that the f any, textbooks|ground 1s never ldle from the time of wili be used. The farm, the dairy, the| early planting until late fall. As fast poultry plant and the garden will take|as one vegetable Is gone, remove the the place ;of class rooms and labora- | stalks, stir up the ground, feftilize and tories. Students will be given practi- begin again. The ground should be cal instruction in carrying on the op-|used until late in the fall, for caui- ! erations of the farm in all its depart- ments in the latest sclentific and most | sprouts are all delicious approved manner. i Georgetown, sisting of 250 acres was a gift of the late Edwin Gilbert, a wealthy manu- facturer who became interested in the precmotion of agriculture and especi- ally in the development of live stock and the production of beef animals in New England. ents will be received at the present time. taught successfully in a_school cg this character is therefore, when the school is in full operation will not exceed 30 pupils. GREEN FOOD instructor at the farm school at Doyle: town, Pa. has been selected as pri cipal. All the sct ments, instruction and expenses should be addressed Should Be Provided on Second or flower, late spinach and bressels canned. | Gilbert Farm School is located at will eat these vegetables and often| Conn. The farm, con- they do not like the root crops. They must have the mineral elements which are combined in vegetables to help them through tie next school year. PUT IN GRASS SEED THIS WEEK. This week is the time when all oats and peas and grass should be put on One should be careful, however, mot to overcrowd the grass seed by put- ting In such a larze amount of oats for seed purposes. One and one-half bushels of oats should be the maxi- mum amount of seed to be used when seeding with grass. They should be cut for hay or grain purposes, for in such a case they will Not more than ten or twelve stud- The number whidk can be limited and the number Mr. Georze Eaton, Jr., for six years communications regarding ool as to admission réquire- to The Gilbert Farm the ool, Georgetown, Conn. the o is to grow the rest of the season. thrifty growth obtained this fail will be very desirable in aiding prevention of winter killing. When putting in the grass seed divide it in half and seed both ways to eliminate having FOR LITTLE CHICKENS. WHAT THE BOY SCOUTS ARE DOING #glute to the flag. of Troop 5 on Monday evening, April 74th. After the business part of the meeting was over with, the following tests were Sterry, Jullan Rangus: Man Rangus and Philip Luther. headquarters is a statement of scout enrolimert in proportion to population not take | cils having 100 or more registered the moisture from the soil and rob the | scouts. grass seed. By all means lime this|the list of Connecticut cities wtth soil and fertilize liberally, not only for | nine troops and 145 scouts, or s, but also for the grass which | scout to eve , but also for the graca which | hoped to have 200 scouts enrolled by AfJuly 1st. by May first at the latest it will be impossible to buy one at the price of today, so act quickly and buy right. Richmond Ranges have been recognized for generations as the best on the market. We carry all styles. It will be a pleasure to show them to you. Don't delay if you want to get one before the advance occurs. J. P. BARSTOW & CO. Troop 8. capacity in which the knluol may have nee dof them. ‘e know t our e T s S omsmanter Srot; | country needs strong. eflicient men, some of the scouts in second and we have set ourselves to the task The entire evening was |°f helping the bovs of America tobe- come that type men. The meeting adjourn- | “rp,¢ is the kind of preparedness that has been the impelling motive back of our motto “Be Prepared.” Congtant insistence on this point has been made necessary by the contro- versy on the question of military pre- paredness. This agitation naturally has attracted a greatdeal of attention to our organization, and we now are being subected) to a scrutiny more se- vere than ever before in the history of the Movement. People are watching the Boy Scouts to see what attitude they take on this big national ques- tion. This scrutiny imposes on us both a heavy responsibility and a splendid op- portunity. Peoplg are watching the scouts both collectively and individual- 1y, so it is our duty to see to it that as a result of this scrutiny we lose none of the good impressions that the Movement has made on the people of America. But this responsibility is more than outweighed by the opportunity that comes with it. We have always con- tended that the Boy Scout Movement The Boy Scout Movement stands for | has in it such elements of appe: A meeting was held by the Scouts Siznaiing, Clande Combies, Harold compass, Ju- Norwich Stands Well. In a recent {ssue from New York n cities crianized under local coun- Norwich stands seventh In ry 154 inhabitants. Tt is PREPAREDNESS 1 that S shed wili be raised so as to make two Third Day. Dike axsite, “Preparedness.” It has always been |all that is needed to have it universal- Carpenters and Builders| g, fox, e same company are nearly | stories. The first floor will have a = 2ht e our cardinal principle. By “Prepared- | Iy approved and adopted is to have it p - {xmsged, th:‘gr?fhn: wnrk\,ls ‘régw be- | concrete floor and will be uscd as a For the best groWth and develop-|BE SURE TURNIP RAPE SEED IS Best work and materials at nght i;‘=d0§1‘:‘;'thé";0’$‘°r C. M. Williams | garage. The second floor will be used [ ment of little chicks green food in for living purposes. Steam heat and electrie lights will be installed. Carpenter Manufacturing Co. prices by skilled labor. 50 some form is absolutely Telephons. WEST MAIN ST. This may consist of beets, PURE. The Weekly News Letter from Washington gives a warning to the necessa mangels, tab.é potatoes, sprouted oats, lettuce, lawn clipings or many other things de- preparedness that is now causing such | of our methods and purposes. And an amount of agitation | nour country. | nOw this investigation is coming un- Our ideal has been preparedness for | sought through the general interest in Barn Completed. The werk on the barn for the Texas Oil Co. on Erin and White streets has Build- PLUMBING AND GAS FITTING o - 4 5 e agron 8, S o TR ru‘l!zen:h_l'n‘ -m-h-ll the obnnzlq‘;s "‘lle hllhk;"t of rr:p.-l:.rvdnu;‘un;l'.‘»; o c S AL P pending on the season and available|farmers not to buy rape seed unless|and privileges the word implies. We |plies to all organizations charg: t e e ek wooptractor C. M. | 7The foundation for the building C.|supply. Whatever is used, feeding|they. know it is pure. It states that|have devoted our emergies to instilling | the responsibility of training boys. R delli Ol Sehbolh . Carpenter Manufacturing Co. is|skould begin on the second or third | 200,000 pounds of turnip rape seed, |in our boys spirit and honor, and re- lemodelling choolhouse. erecting on Newton street, has been | day and pains should be taken to teach | Or enough to sow 50,000 acres, has ! sourcefulness, and bravery, and the Prizes for Anti-Cigarette Stories CALL UP 734 The old schoolhouse Ilocated on|completed and the work on the build- | the little chicks to eat, otherwise|bcen imported from Japan and Ar-'idea of co-operation and other| The Twentieth Century Club of De- School street is being remodeled into | ing has been started. It will be 50x30 many of them may not develop the ap- 8entina and is being sold as winter | charatter qualities, a have given |troft, Michigan, offers three prizes for With or Without Gas Attach. || 2.12-tenement house. Fach tenement |feet, of wood material, and will have | petite for green food that they should. | rape. Since this turnip rape is not as will consist of five rooms and a bath. The work is well advanced and is un- der the direction of Contractor Phil- i lips. little thought as to thé ways in which these qualities should be given ex- pression. We believe that the quali- |tles are of fundamental importance in a high type of citizenship, and we be- jieve that they will be given proper expression under any circumstances. For this reason we have not concern- ed ourselves with the question of pre- paring our boys for any particular kind of service. We know that if the funda- mentals of their training are right, our boys will be equipped for service in any a non-inflammable roof. The outside will be clap boarded and it will be used chiefly as a stock room. C. R. Browning is putting up the addition. $20. $10. and $5. respectively, for the three best stories containing between 2.000 and 5,000 words, illustrating the effects of cigarette smoking. The ob- Ject of the club is to obtain high- grade material for a volume of anti- cigarette stories to be placed in school librarfes. Those desiring to compete should send their storiés to Mrs. O. E. Angst- man. 277 Putnam avenue, chairman of the Anti Cigarette Committee, by June 18, 1916. EFFICIENT ments but Always and ECONOMICAL— MODEL RANGES We furnish Repairs for all makes of Range: A. J. Whoiey & € 12 FERRY STREET All chicks should be fed sparingly of | desirable for forage purposes as is grain and kept quite hungry during | Winter rape, the farmers can usually the first few days, This maferfally |afford to take precautions to avold helps in teaching the chicks to eat|getting improperly labeled and impure green food. If mangels are used thef | Seed. The seed of the turnip rape is should be cut fine and scattered a lif- | Smaller and has a more deeply pitted tle at a time where the chicks may |surface than that of winter rape. The each have a chance to get a taste. As | government is willing to have samples soon as they learn what it is the man- | of rape seed sent to them for deter- gels may be cut in large pieces and|mination, and they will willing to placed over finish nails on the walls, | send samples of both*varieties upon the chicks will do the rest. The|aplication to the seed laboratory at same principle appliés to feeding any | Washington. green fod, use only small quantities at — first and take pains to teach the SPRAY BACK YARD TRESS. GROTON. Ship and Engine Co. to Build Addition to Pattern Shop. NEW LONDON. $10,020,000. Ground has been broken in Ocean avenue, just below Thames street for a residence for Hugo Momm, super- intendent of the New London Ship The New London Ship and Engine Co. is to build another addition to its plant. This will be an addition to the pattern shop and will be 188x65, ness,” however, we have meant some- | universally understood. All we have thing rather different from the type a‘mu of the public is an Investigation more check ‘rees and at the end of| 50 Jacob E. Ja . North - erected at the south end of the shop.|ang Esgine Co. This house will cost|chicks what it is. . L the year figure net returns from un- ven, Conn. nm — H-, Plans for the addition have been|about $10,000. It is from plans by Later in the season grass or clover| Work Can Be Done at Nominal Cost|sprayed trees as against that from| 37 Hillview Poultrs Farm, St. Phone 581 made and_the contract has been|Architect Donnelly and wil be built|runs make an ideal green food sup-| if Advice of League is Followed. |sprayed trees. Albans, Vt. * awa.rded.d “:'orkd will be started ;; by H. R. Douglas, Inc. ply. With a double yardirig system e g White Leghorns. once and the addition will be hurri A oats or rye may be sowed and the| The principal prod MoDERN PLUMB‘N along as the additional space is need- Black Jisil Residecos. chicks alternated from one yard to the | the county realize uh:(:fiu:'.,{"."ml‘ ,'-'.' ERTEAE O S D 69 WIll Barron, , Bartle, near ed as soon as it can possibly be avail- H. R. Douglas has also been award- | gther. With only a single small vard|ing and are spraying more carefully THREE LEADING FENS Preston, England ........... 28 5 W able. g ed the contract for a fine residence|it is well to spade in grain every few | each year, many of them spraying oft. —_— 68 Tom Barron, Catforth, nr. is as essential ir modern house as | ‘The Ship and Ensgine Co. plant has|at Black Hall for Matthew Fly of|days and keep the chicks Qigging for|cner each succesding vear A laree| The Week's Production at Sforrs Far Preston, England ...... .... $53 electricity is to lighting. We guaran- | been steadily added to until it is now | New York. This house will cost in|the sprouted kernels. trees to 7 h rcentage of th tee the very best PLUMBING WORK | more than the neighborhood of pe e t to be found double its original size. $20,000. rees oun: Frank R. Hancock, Jackson- It will A method of growing gmwen food Above Same !l_o:k Last Year. in the back and side yards of city and ville, Vi ..o 7% ; 5 be hurried along as Mr. Ely, who is a ] = . by expert workmen at the fariest |The company has plenty of business | e : which is quite original and at the same| village people. As a rule, these trees| The three best pens for the twenty- ! p:ice‘,p and prospects enough to keep it at|New York broker, wishes to live there| time very practical was displayed only | are not properly cared for and rarely | Afth week: of the laying contest at . Pt a i work indefinitely. The world-wide e " a short time ago. A brooder stove|sprayed. It is hoped that all people| Storrs were all but tied. They were . Assioultural ‘College Ask us for plans and prices. realization of the effectiveness of the our Houses. pas used in an ordinary - brooding | who have such trees, currant bushes| separated from ecach other by a mar-| oo (OreEons). Corvallis Ore. .. 755 e submarine has created an unpreced-; Four houses are to be bullt at|house. The floor was covered with|and shrubs or thelr iawns which are| ein of Just one lone eps. Tom Bar- SOty (e Lashorasd 3 gnted demand for the undersea fight- | Ridgewood park on Alewife cove for|sand about two inches deep, oats and | susceptible to scale will this week ap- | ron's pen of Enslish Wyandottes were | 100 e gy e i J F TOM PKINS ing craft. Cyrus W. Brown, B. A. Arm-|barley were sowed and the whole. wet | ply lime sulphur solution, one gal-|first with a production of €1 ezzs. A Schwarz | (Black Rhine- _ - R e el strong ang F. S. Newcomb by H. R.|down. In a short time the grain was|lon to eight gallons of water uniess — . o Douglas. They will contain seven rooms each and there will be a garage in cennection. Industrial Building Addition. Work was started this week on the addition_to the Industrial Co.’s build- ing. in Division street. The job must be hurried as the additional floor space is_sorely needed. Garage in Rear of Manwaring Block. Work will soon be started on the erection of a garage in the rear of the Manwaring block on State street. It will be a one-story structure, 22 by 90 feet, of brick construction. The com- mittee in charge consists of Messrs. W, Springdale Poultry Farm's Rhode lsl- and Reds from Durham. Conn. were second with 60 eggs and H. P. Dem- ing’s pen of the same breed from Win- sted. Conn., were third with a yleld of 59 eggs. All of the pens taken to- gether laid 4564, a substantial increase over last week’s lay and more than 600 eggs better than for the corres- ponding week last year. There were fifty-five hens including Barred, White, and Columbian Rocxs, White and Buft Wyandottes, Rhode Ts- land Reds, White Leghorns, Red Sus- sex, and White Orpingtons that made perfect individual scores for the week 67 West Main Street Robert J. Cochrane GAS FITTING, ~LUMBING, STEAM FiTTING, 10 West Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Agent for N. B. O, Sheet Packing. T. F. BURNS growing luxuriantly. The chicks were | the leaves are too far out. brooder under another stove at first and the green food was cut and thrown.| centage of scale trouble, also some of in to them. Later on they were trans-J the fungus and other insect troubles. ferred to the room where the grain| There are people who are making a was grwing which was virtually a|business of spraying for people at a green field. The stove kept the sand|nominal cost. . in the center of the rom dry and the dampness under the growing did not seem to have any injurious effect. It would no doubt be better to use two adjoining rooms, brood the chicks in one and use the other only for a range. keeping the temperature low during the day and allowing it to run up durirg the night to keep the grain ‘This ma- terial ought to control a large per- IN NEW ENGLAND. ‘Statistics of building and engineer- ing operations in New England as compiled by The F. W. Dodge Com- pany, follow:— Contracts to Contracts to Contracts to Contraets to Contracts to Cdhtracts to Contracts to Contracts to Contracts to Tragedy of a Friendship. Senator Stone, chairman of the For- eign Relations Committee, has appeal- ed for a navy big enough to fight ef- fectively that of any other power on earth. As Senator Stone for years has been a close friend of Pacifist Bryan's, here is the beginning of a friendship tragedy.—Chicago News. 17 1916. .$49,905,000 9 41,489,000 46,383,000 45,433,000 50,546,000 40,140,000 . 43,211,000 41,425,000 20,691,000 CARE WITH SEED POTATOES. Only by Intelligent Selection Yields be Increased. What are you going to use for seed potatoes this spring? Are your po- Can April These Included one-half of all the va - v .| tato seeds high yielders? Are they e — Heati d Plumbi Contracts to April 18, 35127000 | T. Hobson, F. W. Mercer and C. H.| fii0 e e of a doubls besedig | free from discase? Afe they the best| Ficties entered in tho confest =As galing an umping Contracts to April 15, 27,954,000 | Klin equipment but for those who must|that you can get? Increased ylelds| Udro“fugt twice as good in this respect ntracts to April 18, 24,199,000 Plans Out Soon. grow chickens during the winter, the|derived from the best sced 1is the| ..t veraze for the entire flock | = Contracts to April 18, 20,000,000 | qpe plans of Architects Payne & |extra expense may be warranted. profit that anyone can secure. Con-|\jore than eleven per cent. of the in- 2 treet e ot 24573,000 | Adams for the new building for the e gequently, If It is possible to get bet- | giviquals of this breed made perfect e e I 35329000 | New London Dairy on Williams street| SUMMER VEGETABLE GARDEN. |!er seed, you should do so. Potato scores whereas the average for =all| amounted to five and a half per cent. In Pinecrest Orchards’ pen of Reds | from Groton, Mass., there were five individuals or one-half the pen, that laid seven eges each during the weck. | ter This excellent individual work and | big average vield has been put om;m- in spite of a nearly solld week of either cloudy or rainy weather and vet fair mths‘rools ms:d o, Mtl as | necessary for results poultry | yeed annually f¢ Bronchi I;:m:n‘ul!hlnnnyotharwnel SHf Neck, Asthma, N s rming. > : ‘ The three best pens in each of principal breeds are as follows: Pen Plymouth Roecks 4 will be out for figures soon. The building will be 35x55 feet. two stor- ies, of hollow tile blocks. Addition to Plant. ‘The J. N. LaPointe Co. has pur- chase m-onart{ at the cornmer of Pe- quot and Maple avenues and will erect an addition which will double the ca- pacity of their plant. Bank Street Garag J. A. Dolan & Co. have been award- ed the contract to build a garage on Bank street for A. B. Collins. The bullding will be one story and base- ment, 40x80 feet, of bricks, with a gravel roof. It will cost $15,000. ROCKVILLE. The eketches for the new post office building hlvp:“m been ap- proved - by the Department. ‘Work on the final plans will be start- ed at once. ert has been granted iRON CASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY CO Ho. 11 to 25 Ferry Street ish | there is a tremendous variance in dif- i:":'""d ,A' to Furnish| orent strains and in | individual po- - tatoes in the same strain. If possi- ble seed should be obtained from hill selection. You should have a seed- FISHER'S ISLAND. ‘The cottage of H. C. Hansen is near- ly closed in and will make a pretty dwelling when completed. The work on the new school house is progressing nicely. It will be a large building, fireproof and construct- ed hostly of hollow brick, some of which is already laid. GROTON LOND POINT. Architect Willlam T. Marchant of Hartford is preparing the plans for a seven room frame cottage to be erected at Groton Long Point for E. Leschke of Hartford. It will be pro- vided with fireplace, bathrooms and electric wiring. MANCHESTER. Charles Laslinski has been granted & permit for a frame house, 28x48 feet, to be erected on Center street, at az | estimated cost of $4,000. “I dldn’t know your lttle boy had to wear glasses. The United States used one-fifth of the 40,000,000,000 pounds of sugar pro- dwud(h the world last year. e breeding experiments have shown that Should Be So wi Don't forget in planning the summer vegetable garden that it should pro- duce sufficient variety and quantity to furnish the winter's meals as well. All kinds of vegetables may be suc- cessfully canned by using the cold pack method, instructions for which Agent, in charge of Boys” and Girls’ Clubs at Storrs, Connecticut. After the vegetables are canped, there are so many ways in which they may be served, thereby giving variety to the diet, cutting the cost of living i.l“d improving the health of the fam- y. them into four pleces each, keep cut- tings from each tuber by themselves, planting them next to each other. COAL AND LUMBER GOAL free Burning Kinds and Lshigh ALWAYS IN STOCK A. D. LATHROP Offiu—wr.T"dllM and Shetuckst Sts, you can start your seedbed the fol- lowing year. One should be careful not to alow the seed potatoes to 2 . B far better 1o pat poteion . 1 it ar er potatoes tables of one KInd may be had the S| SUE In order to get & much stronger tire season ai¥l not one.planting so | SPTOUL opyhey ripen all st once end theiixggp RECORD OF SPRAVING COSTS. All who spray this year ter of good business try Holliston, Mass. Edward Poethne a permit for a two-family frame house, | bean: 28%37 feet, to be erected on Windsor avenue. Tom Barron, (White) Cat- leplione 463-12 ‘orth, England 1 Ol B should as a WHEN YOU WANT 1o put your bus- iness before the public, there is ne medium better than fhTough the ade * “agising columns of The.Bulletin. = ‘;Watl’l. y'know, he's not DM:;“ to, ut ey were a good pair of poor dear 'Enry’s, an’ I thought it such a pity to waste 'em."—] ) A T AT g £ 758 spraying 5 trees. It would be weil for them also if they are not entirely convinced of | 46 Assistant State| the value of spraying to leave one or is not only pleasant but extremely sat- istactory. M. Estella Sprague, . v v N~

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