Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 30, 1916, Page 4

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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1916 éar wicl Zinllefi and Qoufies 120 YLARS OLD It cesaes00tteenneonanzensaasens: Subseription price 1Zc o week; 50e a tonth: $6.00 a year. ntered at the Postofrice at Norwich, as second-class maiter. Telephone Calia: ess Office 450. Telephone 210. Norwich, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 1916. eaesecrreasessaccascesaser 0038000000000 The Circulation of Th" Bmsem has the paper in E del utnam u-~1 11uo and v is Eastern ine towns, Con CIRLULfiT’GN average. ecticut. ta th have not seen fit to discard their old fire department equipment. They con- sider that it_is possible to render all the service that is reguired with their existing facilities but with the growth of the communities and the recog: tion of the need of better protection the small city as well as the large serves its interests more wisely when it declares for motor driven fire ap- paratus. ot only does it insure a quick re- sponse but it is far more economical than to think of continuing the de- partment which is now operated under horse power while it would be a great mistake to think of equipping a de- rtment today in any such manner. ven which serves all s¢ satisfactorily and it is not surprising that it is being gen- erally adopted lNDUSTRVv— EDS BETTER PRO- TECTION. Strong support is given to the stand which Charles E. Hughes is taking in behalf of a protective tariff which will properly serve the industrial interests country by J. E. LaDow of th £ 05 and Rubber com- which concern the board of litically eight dem- one republican, in a let- New York Herald when he n Turope the average wage for r in rubber is §$1 a day. In Eu- rubber des get th. it is shipped g house, and xtra handling, rt from there here, to middlemen. cannot comrete on the situation the the ta from _with a few in the ad it not. been plants would of ihe demo- he globe depend ithan ever for “It had tucks runnirg up and down and crosswise,” enthusiastically re- ported the fluffy® little woman, “and the lace was put on—" “Cease!” interrupted her husband. who was not supposed to be listening. He laid_down his paper and shook his head. “You remind me of my Aunt Josie! Aunt Josie permeated my childhood days with an atmosphere or things sartorial until in my youthful | cyniciem I w accustomed to wonder why women didn't dress in Jeaves, if clothes madé them so much trouble and anguish! “When Aunt Josie came to visit the family she brought ten trunks and a worried face and an lity to sniff and recognize the presence of any- thinz new in the way of a waist or skirt pattern within a radius of flve miles. woman resident of our town who delvded herself into the be- lief that had bsolutely and unigu shrieking e to Aunt and I kn r herself. 14 I must the bodice would be 1 ntly in- =X7R,A\VA"~1'\IT CONG adjou was a billion pointed to » down t extrav: ection could “Ip it u ce would be the court af es of em- i 1des justice aw, the n adequate T to secure 11 m FIHF APFARATUS. te € that when communitie settle down to the ek of uring new ment for r fire departme they give ous considera e motor 1 hose the past ico depen the availa of the horses were designated for s in connection with their other duti But the increased are furnished by the pment of the automobile are not being lost sight of. There are many commurities which this upon to get ac- ied out it America NOTES. ntered the led forth some con- one would ent was I that the danci ng on rob nt p one the corner of the the people who change the name from Berlin to Kitchen everything whi would xpected the boys and entered a protest be- the delay in the never made lives. se four Missouri prisoners who their v to freedom had mnot oined the convicts' organ- g but formed a mu- e of their own. servants has resulted among English wo- s are to be believed this country are going 7 cannot get them. With t country displaying a willlugness o pay Denmark $25,000,- 000 for its olumbia may be spurred on to press a settlement of its claim while Uncle Sam appears to be flush. Kalamazoo adds another to the list of race track horrors where the craze for speed hastens death, but it is get- ting. to be so that the highway is tting to be an even more dangerous place than the auto race courses. Though he thinks well of his ac- complishments, it isn't likely that the kaiser will put the commander of the submarine that sank the Lusitania in charge of one of the underwater merchantmen coming om the c and of ntiguot annual se rock 1dded w the rays of One of the most that of Ronas: great subter an salt lake having a depth of n 300 feet. “Hunting for bear and lynx on the wooded slopes of the Carpathlans in the vicinity of Maramaros-§ favorite pastime of the ngarians. The accommodations for sportsmen are not as sati ry here as in the High Tatra mountains, however. The War A Year Ago Today August 30, 1915, Von Mackensen siarted a 4 turn- ing movement in the south. Russians won big victory on the Strypa in Galicia. Italians renewed th Tolmino. r attack on hodice de-! HIS VIVID MEMORIES “When she was not copying new gar- ments Aunt Josie was cngaged in al- tering ‘the ones che already owned. During her stay there our house pre- sented an aspect of ravelings, shreds of goods, stray buttons, needles, pins, tapelines and basting thread from the attic through the front hall to the cellar. Every chair had a skirt or a waist carefully stretched out over its back and the sofas held tue hats. “The placs locked like & bazaar wait- ing for the onslaught of customers, and there wasn't a' spot to sit down and be comfortable. We boys lived in the kitchen and father went fishing. Always when Aunt Josie’s visit loomed on the horizon father sighed and got out his fishing tackle, and if it was winter, he stayed downtown evenings and played cords with the bachelor roisterers in the back of Kelly’'s drug store, and mother couldn't say-a word. She knew that if the poor man did try main by his own fireside he would have to sit on the floor and hold his breath for fear of disturbing a dozen or so of Aunt Josit’s garments in the making, stuck full of pins and care- fully draped over the furniture. “We had a near-sighted minister in those days ana he called and got in the parlor before any one could stop him, and after he had chosen the sofa as a proper seat befitting his position he could have got good money in_a 2s the human pincushion. He hed an awful sermon the follow- bbath on t es of the fleld d woman’s vanity. “Altogether, vou e habblings of you women on tucks and notions of distress 1 don't hl\t‘ ou can just go sit out| ! I thousht when you really were going to —Exchange. to listen to it on the sun pore began that yi say somecthin: Stories of the War Sweden’s Trouble Remaining Neutra The more recent outbreak of uonlm for Sweden in tht Baltic bezan s ago when two ltussian submni: three Lissabon unu \\/o ms. edish pilots were captursd, but re- d after a week or so. The Rus- 1s claimed the Germans were just outside the territorial waters, but S ,|den maintains they were not and is | demanding their restoration. | This incident as scarce two days 4 when a German deso: boidly ne into the southern te ptured the me say not K)«arrls from shor _response to a Swedish reieased and e of capture. She {some hundreds of gallons of oil. other English ships on their way out altic in very tecth of the captured, led” and the Bct fwo Rus attempted to raid 3 za, Gretch “arl and Ke It rese ships were only a mil f from shore when the on- ussians signall them Gern: i not it was but the a_ little cl ussians, with black }ing from their bore dGown soeed, distan Tiore. ke pot very royer dtst cleared for been steuming i ssels all the way up t hot word: e de The waters, the placing many new inte seels” or as been pl and the and so termined ng and eve rdered to ome of waters the hould be careful to respect the wr s of the smaller neutral {the three sail flag flauntingl ad. They these craft occ over” and fall upon the In relating some of at Sea a Swed pondent of T “You see we t for the United The neutrality of theoretical. Here very practi ficult and e in the midst of tht war, ot of it. We are a small nation, but so far 2 ination and steadf: intend to main neu th point fighting for our neutrall || OTHER VIEW POINTS | and addres se and Frank B. 5 T ould not have foreseen that men heard of his execution would live to the greatest men of the country see do honor to his memory. One wonders how, In years to come, the world will deal with the memory cf Sir Roger Casement.—Hartford Courant. When the Deutschland’s arrival stimulated the interest and attention of the United States there was tended discussion of the future of such boats, and in this column we voiced the opinion, also expressed in other papers, that such a craft would not be commercially profitable except in the case of a nation blockaded as is Ger- many. Now announcement comes from Berlin to the effect that this is the German view, and that the cargo sub- marines will not be used after the war is over, because the cost is out of all proportion to the amount of goods tkb can be carried, and because they z n see why these retion. to | obey | | THOS. (and Repair Work DYSPEPSIA OF WOMEN Specml Treatment Required. Many wombn suffer from a form of indigestion or dyspepsia which does not yield to ordinary treatment. While the symptoms are similar to those of ordi- nery indigestion, yet the medicines usually prescribed ‘do not restore the patient’s normal condition. There seems to be a kind of dyspepsia ceused by derangement of the female organism. While this appears to be the same as ordinary indigestion it can be relieved oniy by a medicine which, be- sides acting as a stomach tonic, is good for female ailments. Reed what such & medicine did for Mrs. Williams :— She says: — ““Before I began taking Lydia E. Pmkha.m s Vegetable Com- pound I was trou- | bled with dyspepsia and bearing down paing in my back &nd sides, and after my meals my stom- ach would bloat up till I could scarcely get my breath. At | %3¥ times I was so weak I could hardly stand | ard my skin was yellow. Now I have ! a good color, have gained in every | way and can do my work without any | pains. I think it is the best medicine on earth for stomach troubles of wo- men.”” —Mrs. NELLIE WitLiams, 81 ‘West 3d Street, New Albany, Ind. n’s navy is unable | open for ships of com- safely send out its to convoy its merchant- Haven Union. with oor sys- w margin s the employers re most exposed to such ssibly in time the will come to unde ew London is a port san magznitude. The only s s»that New London, along with places along the Sound t developed to the extent and cities have in the past quarter ddletown Press. ~ourges of old, scourge g e the infa oes its wicked t and innocent 2 into the nce seems ver aund its prog s well as the laity those afflicted cries that were of old as the pop- r presence. Eter- not merely an occasional p week celebration, is the price healthful scourge points can_district mab spread unhappiness ury Republican. the lepe: ces from th ght to be allowed them the right to because ed in the performance of another be more than injustice. 1 opposition to the pub- urthermore, it would be n though ac: uty tory, as yet d, that the market 1cts has for rif acken along _for been askinz the war i happen th ty of DBridge- world peace as an the time for that i is t hand. and In the mean- will g0 on fighting and So long as that condition be in Bridgeport in Chndren Gry: o FOR FLETCHER'S CTASTORIA Most Clgars Are Good— 7 THESE ARE BETTER TOM’S 1.2-3 5c CIGAR GOOD FELLOW 10cCIGAR Try them and see. SHEA, Prop, Franklin St t to Palace Cafe M Cverhauling OF ALL KINDS ON AUTOMGBILES, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, TRUCKS and CARTS, Mechanical Repairs, Painting, Trim- ming, Upholstering and Woeod Work. Blacksmithing in all its branches. Scott & Clark Corp. 507 to 515 North Main St. GEORGE €. GRANT Uniieriae(ea’ amt Embalmer 32 Providence St, Taftville S2 Prompt attention to gay or night calls, Telephone 639. aprisMWEawl .| Willimantic, hereby forbid the 79013 HAVE YOU SEEN oyl THIS SHOW? 3 BIG TIME KEITH VAUDEVILLE ACTS LOVENBERG SISTERS and the NEARY BROTHERS Novel Effects In “AROUND THE COMPASS” In the Singin KITNER--TAYLOR--McCLAY “ABOARD S PARIS & PERU, Concertina, Dancers and Jumping Marvals WM. S. HART In a Five Part Trian And a Funny 2 Reel Spocial Scenery Skit 1P” le Feature eystone Comedy TODAY AND THURSDAY ALL SEATS 100 Matinee at 2.30 Evening at 7 and 8.30 THEATRE CRANE WIiILBUR in ““The L.ove Liar?’ A SOCIETY LOVE DRAMA IN FIVE BIG ACTS MUTUAL WEEKLY Current News THE TORTILLA Comedy Wednesday Change of Thursday MAJEST[C ROOF Pictures Today Specially Sefected Picture Programme VITAGRAPH AND LUBIN FEATURE REFRESHMENTS DANCING ‘MUSIC BY JACORS’ FAMOUS NEW YORK ORCHESTRA ADMISSION ...... R 15 CENTS Noticeld We, the undersigned, health officers of the towns, cities and borcughs of New Londor, Groton, East Lyme, Water- ford, Montville, Norwich and LYCEUM THEATRE NEW LONDON Saturday, September 2nd MATINEE AND EVENING Mrs. RICHARD MANSFIELD PRESENTS THE PLAY OF eatrance into the above namec cities, towns and boroughs of eil children under sixieen years of age, whe are resident of Mew York City or of any “Uid Heidelherg” A Romance of Youth and Love Prices 50c to $2.00. Tickets can be purchased at Engler’s Drug Store aEh e Wedding Gifis IN SILVER Lowest Prices THE WM. FRISWELL CO. 25-27 Franklin Street city, town or place where in- fantile paralysis is epidemic after 12:15 a. m., Friday, July 21, 1916, signed E. J. BROPHY, M. D. Norwich. E. C. CHIPMAN, M. D., New London F. H. DART, M. D, East Lyme G. M. MINOR, M. D, Waterford M. E. FOX, M. D., Montville GEO. THOMPSON, M. D. Taftville. C. S. JENKINS, M. D., Willimantio F. W. HEWES, M. D,, Groton G. H. JENNINGS, M. D., Jewctt City J. HENRY KING, Frenklin 6 HARNESSES TEAM, EXPRESS CARRIAGES Owr Doblar Sjecuals 1 Ib. Coffee 1 1b. Baking Powder . .12:: 1-2 Ib. Cream of Tartar ....... .20c C"N?ORDS’ procoans 10 bars P. & G. Naptha Soap ASc BUSINESS WAGONS ¢i.00 | SIDZ SPRING, THREE SPRING 10b. Tea ....oeeenen 25| AUTOMOBILE RORES 1 package Corn Starch Nae GOOD ASSORTMENT 1 package ldeal Raisins 2 ' 1 package Mince Meat .. 080 } Packess e "onar 2o ie| THE L. L. CHAPMAN (0. 1 box Cocoa Jdac |14 Baih Street, Norwich, Conn. 6 bars Bee Scap .. 25¢ e > $1.00 JOSEPH BRADFGRD, BOGK BINDER Biank Books Mzda and Rulsd to Orda. 10k BROADWAY i s . ke DAILY SERVICE STEAMER BLOCK ISUAND Chiieacs Watch Hill and Block Isiand United Tea Importers 218 Main Street A. M. A M. P. M. P. m. Norwich .... Lv. *8:55 **9:15 | Block Island . Lv. *2:15 ##2:45 New London . 10:25 10:45 | Watch Hill 3:45 4:20 Watch Hiil .. .. 11:30 12:00 | New London ceee 5:16 5:35 Block Island Due P.M. 1:05 1:30 | Norwich ...DueP.M. 6:30 6:50 *Daily, except Sundays. #Sundays only. RESTAURANT ON MAIN DECK Table d’Hote Service MEALS SERVED DURING ENTIRE TRIP AT 23c—50c. i SPECIAL EXCURSION TICKETS Sundays, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays, June 28 to September 1 WATCH HILL oAU | BLOCK ISLAND =&Unn Adults, 50¢c; Children, 250, Adults, 75¢c; Children, 40c. Shore Dinner Houses and Bathing Beach near iandixgs at Wstch Hily and Block lIsland. For further informatien, party rates, apply at office of company on Shetucket Street, Norwich. NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP CO. and 600 C. J. ISBISTER, Morwiuh, 852 o) Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of the dentai chair cause you to negiect themft Yoo need have no fears. By our method you can have your teceth fiiled, crowned cr extracted KBSOLUTEL‘I WITHOUT PAIN. ! CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES | STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE | TERILIZED INSTRUMINTS i CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRUCES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK 1f these appeal to you, call for examinatior charge for consultation. DR. F. G. JACKSON DENTISTS (Successors to the King Deatal Co.) 4 NORWICH, CONN. and estimate. Ne DR. D. J. COYLE 203 MAIN_ST. S EA. M to8P M Lady Asistant Telephone

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