Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 24, 1916, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY. What Is Going On Tonight. Court Fabre, No. 3495, L. O, of F., 672 Main Street. e Natchaug Lodge, K of P, Jordan Block. BECAME SUDDENLY INSANE. Frederick W. Walker Committed to Norwich State Hespital as Matter of Precaution. No. 22, th th to s There W poiice hea day evening fro; reder! = | Wall and th Spring Cleanin Days are here, and no doubt you| will want something new to| brighten up the home. Perhaps a Ch Sideboard, a Bureau, a Baby:‘.‘ Carriage, a Couch Bed, a Mat- | I tress, a Rug or some Curtains. i | | Come in and let us show| | you at Furniture Telephone q 285- 3 Main and Union Streets Willimantic, Conn. | — = JAY M. SHEPARD | ceed: FuneralD 60-62 i ectorand is wh nco: e has done sortment of merecrized worsted and cement cloth, in following sale p 39, 7.89, We are showing a go Before he was taken to the state in- stitution he failed to recognize any- one. Telegraph Company Favoring Guards- rec border will be cut in half. some of th not included in their equipment, where Nogales. Oak street ir or Table, a|to men. The manager of the local office of he Western Union Telegraph company ived a notice Saturday morning iat the telegraph rates on money sent > the troops now stationed on the The notice | ating that on account of the hurried parture for the border many of the Vs failed to mnote the high cost of comforts and conveniences he " cut in re now stationed. The object of ates is to enable relatives of the guardsmen to the needed funds to Not Case of Paralysis. ns, the health officer for , was recently notifled that lil on We reet hat no physician had been called. day morning he visited the child found the case to be one of only kness and not paralysis, as d by some. OBITUARY. teliffe and . number of ispositior > am ciate we widow, Railroad Men Given More Pay. llar ploy hread ABERELLAS, $1.29. SILK AND LINEN COVER BRELLAS, X sale Prices en prices are cut down. and this and this is the last week to share Raincoats in rubberized magerial, black navy, tan and grey at the $9.89 and $11.89. THE H. C. MURRA Y 0. Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $175,000 Established 1832 Accuracy in accounting, courteous service, and liberality in dealing, and a promipine: sound business policy own affairs, characieriz NATIONAL BANK, which aims thereby to establish with customers relations that sh: prove reciproi profitable. lly p The Windham National Bank WILLIMANTIC, CCNN. rmanent, pleasant and m_administering its e THE WINDHAM took the horse to his home. Mr. Bush- nell was very glad to get the horse so soon and in good condition. Mention. Rev, and Mrs. W. O. Nuzum are vis- iting friends in Willimantic. James Taylor has started on his vacation, which he intends to spend in Boston and New Jersey. Mrs. C. . Woodward of Lewiston avenue has as her guest her sister, Mrs. L. F. Ticknor, of Eoston. Bdward Murphy, formerly of this city, now located in Indianapolis, Ind., visiting relatives in this city. Announcements have been recefved Willimantic from Mrs. Lettia E. Hauer of the marriage of her daugh- Harriet May, 5 reside in and will be at home and amford, after Sept. 1. Willimantic Camp Ground Piayground to be Put in Shape This Week—Seventeen Attend Sunday Scheol—Miss Thatcher in Charge of Children's Work for a Time. week under the Arthur J. Andrews, as- the young people, the play- to be put into shape So ers of the grounds its equipment and di- Sunday Scheo! Session. was h in the o’clock rd resent. . Starr of New r cottage on Havi London en ave- rew n with hi rt Boardm: ch have arr ding = umily. nd_ children t their cot- ney tingt in spent reene- « d is in spen Manches: has gone to I 1ers speat 1ley <-end er House Opened. Hayden .C { LABOR E PLAINF]ELD Local Foresters to Attend Savin Rock Field Day—Surprise Party Given Miss Lambert—Health Officers Not to Admit New York Children. The Independent Order of Foresters of Connecticut is to hold a Foresters’ outing and fleld day at Savin Rock on Saturday, Aug. 26. The high standing committee has received a number of favorable concessions from the man- agement of the resort, including the use of convention or meeting hall, the baseball parl and the track for races and other games, with good conces- slons from the railroad company for special rates from every part of the state. The programme will have spe- cial I O. F. features, including dinner from 1 to 2 p. m, ball game between Hartford I O. F. and Bridgeport L O. F. at 3 o'clock, a tug of war, open to all the companion courts, races and sports for all Foresters, boys’ and girls’ ces for Koresters’ children. Elab- orate prizes will be awarded the win- rers. At 6 p. m. members will ac- semble in convention hall and witness a drill by visiting degree teams initiation of candidates. The hig standing committee is made up of Jam MeGrath, mana of the or- 2anizing department, Providence, R. L. - Walsh, D. S. C. R., Hotel D laney, Hartford; W, W. Bent, P, H. C. R., Bridgeport, and James A. Hynes, H. S. of Waterbury. The local court of Foresters, Court Plainfield, 1837, is making plans to take a prominent part at this outing. Surprise Party. A number of Miss Viola Lambert’s friends gave her a surprise party at her home on Lawton Heights Saturday cvening. Variou played and instr as well as vocal se- lections rendered. Refreshments were se O Ar and Levi posted 16 ¥ Health lowed in town 2. At the out r in New many ch me here and a number of loc people have complained of the fact, I health officers have taken between Taftville for Su: y it of ra. poned on Plans for Picnic. annual picnic of opal cl rda ve. me be- nd the people w nd partic: dered D mmber of 1 London Satu r at Plain- meeting and How to « meetir ACTION will Taken as Bill is Di: Be ton, July proba days what will hreaten to demand unani- for the bill unless the T s notice of its inclusion in the legislative programme. To in cl eans that the democr caucus cement for adjournment Aug. 19 must be altered. Leaderse ar insistent, howov on adjournment in any event not later than Sept. 1. History of Ice Cream. Many persons _think that Dolly Madison_invented ice-cream, ~ but Thyra Samter Winslow, writing in the Ilustrated World, declares that Dolly Madison was merely the first i person to_serve it in A This ation of Pri liked ice ¢ asked how administ The gu that th the ison. it was and from this small beginning the ice-cream business has grown un- > s | | maa til, according to a creamery expert who has followed the development of the business in America, the Amer- ican people last year consumed 250,- 000,000 gallons, which, figured at 80 cents a gallon, means a business of $200,000,000. The first ice-cream was made by a London confectioner named Gunton, and from him others learned to malke it, and it was_introduced to America by Dolly Madison. But his methods of freezing were crude ‘and uncertain. It remained for Nancy Johnson, - the wife-of ~an Americanl Pictures from. Home. Give cheer to the boys at the border, or to the boys waiting in camp, by sending them pictures from home. There are likely to be some tedious, home-sick days down there and a little cheer up in the way of photographs of the home folks and the home doings will do them a lot of good. And some day when you want to give some- thing a little more substantial send along a Vest Pocket KODAK and ask your Soldier Boy to send pictures to you. At your Dealer’s. EASTMAN KODAK CO., ROCHESTER, N. Y., The Kodak City |A GERMAN FORTIFIED WORK DESTROYED. | In Less Than .Six Hours More Than|Had Conference With Republican Na- 2,500 Great Shelis Were Fired. de-| work | ad sther terrific explosion te occurre thrown ether Almost immedi: bm the undergrou a moment of in for now fire was > lieutenant in shouted wild- Then in the flames the dfficer men, Killing one himself burned em e upon h , and w n determined not to die which the French officers Precautions Should Be Taken. 1t syndicate should lend Car- money it might be desirable tc some provisions to prevent Villa ng it away from him. fon Star. Can Appreciate the Situation. John M. Parker left alone on the Bull Moose ticket is in position to appreciate the adventures of Robinson Crusoe.—Florida Times-Union. officer, to invent the ice-cream Zer. Today the ice-cream business_has outgrown the small freezer. Vast quantities are frozen by special ma- chinery. The industry has become so great that fortunes have been made out of it. And every year it increases. During the last 10 years the con- sumption of ice-cream in the United States doubled. In the Northeastern Stats there has been a steady growth The Southern and | for many years. Western States like ice-cream, es- in the summer, but in the ortheastern States it has become a winter as well as a summer dish, al- though, of course, much more is con- sumed in the summer. When ice- | cream became the national dish, the manufacturers demanded better dairy products and they have done much in the campaign for clean milk. The rise of the industry also created a large demand for flavorings, soda fountain equipment, etc. and it in- troduced a new and profitable feature | into the drug business. It is esti- mated that the average consumption | in the United States is 60 dishes a year for each person. lhm ed | cox men wer: Two w decapitated and Prran s “a man votes as he| oth ne whom a shell ex-/pleases in this country, and he cught not a vestise ined. Th Vall Street Jour crouched at bottom o Pkl rranean shelters and await What Was Spraking of fame, what was Molly of his chief and scaled ing to a slope of the! only to be buried under a block He died soon after in the ARRRANGING FOR HUGHES’ TRANSCONTINENTAL TRIP, tional Chairman Willcox. Bridge liam R. nations Charles in ph 1 which Mr. Mr. Will- e nominee's conferred w today on ce spent nominee ind Hughes 1pport tee of Utah. Rams y Dead. Sir Wil- emist, nce, Beech: a ¥ — Boston husba name? HARDING TAKES PLACE OF GOETHALS AS HEAD OF CANAL AND ZONE | President Wilson gave what was s: at the White House to be a very re- luctant consent to the resignation of Major General George W. Goethals from the governorship of the Panama canal zone and his retirement from active service in the United States army. The right to retire from active military service was granted to Gen- eral Goethals in the act of congress authorizing his promotion to the rank of major general. He will be suc- ceeded as governor of the canal zone by Colone! Chester Harding, corps of engineers, United States avmy, who was sent to the isthmus with a . view to the succession upon the retirement of General. Goethals. ito H BODY OF JAMES WHITCOMB RILEY TO LIE IN STATE. Poct Died Saturday at His Home in Indianapolis. Indianapolis, Ind., July 23, of James.Whitcomb Riley, poet, who died Saturday at his home here, will lie i at the capitol from 3 p. m. until p. m. Monday. Tha hours were fixed especially view of pro ng people ed by parents, might ing a and children, accom- view the v. Samuel M. Ralston in a letter rry Eitel of this city, brother-in- law of the poet, asked that the body lie in state at the pitol. The letter, which met with a favora and ready responsc from the poet’s relatives, fol- lows: “James Whitcomb Riley was loved the people of Indiana as was no r man. In an exceptionally tender, nse the people of his native state felt and believed that he belonged to them, and they mourn—bitterly mourn —his’ passing. 'As_governor of Indiana, I am anx- ious that the people be afforded an op- portunity to show the high respect in which they held ‘th man who sang of common things,’ and I am moved therefore to ggest that his remains be allowed to lie in state in the rotun- he capitol between the hours of! k p. m. and 9 o'clock p. m. Mon- y, July 24, 1916.” body will be placed under the, dome of the capitol, where a few years ago Mr. Riley stcod publicly reading poem “Old Glo o sent arra ments are for the, 11 services to be held at the home Tuesday morning. These will be pri-| e and simple in accordance with the hes of the poet. It w tentatively agreed today that, the burial be in Crown Hill cemetery near here. sands of persons to- 1 day D the Riley home here, 3 friends of the| poet entered the home to view the! body. Mrs, Charles F. Holstein, with whom Mr. Riley made his home many years here, suffered severely from the shock of his death. Her condition is believed to be not serious LEO XIII’'S BODY IN NEW RESTING PLACE., The Ceremony Was Private and Lasted a Quarter of an Hour. Paris, July 23—A despatch from Rome to the Havas agency states that at 8 o’clock Saturday evening the cof- fin containing the body of Leo XIII was transported to its new resting place in St. Peter's in the Chapel of the Presentation. The ceremony was private, the assistants being all high ecclesiastics. Cardinal Merry del Val, as archpriest of St. Pete formally inspected the coffin and found that while the wooden shell disclosed a split: some centimetres in extent, the inner zinc receptacle was intact. The cere- mony lasted a quarter of an hour. TRAVELERS’ DIRECTORY $1.25 To New York $1.25 CHELSEA LINE TO NEW YORK FREIGHT AND PASSENGER SERVICE BETWEEN NORWICH AND NEW YORK From Norwich Tuesdays, Thurs- days, Sundays at 5.15 p. m. New York, Brooklyn Tridze, Pier, East River, fcot Roosevelt Street, Mondays, Wednesdays, Fri- days, at 5 p. m, $1.25—F. V. KNOUSE, Agent—$1.25

Other pages from this issue: