Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 30, 1916, Page 5

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EAT THE BEST CULTIVATED BLACKBERRIES CULTIVATED HUCKLEBERRIES ROASTING CHICKEN SQUABS BROILERS WAX BEANS VARIETY VEGETABLES PINEAPPLES CELERY ETC. ETC. SOMERS FuLL FRESH YOUR VACATION will not be complete without you have an ANSCO Camera along with you. 2 For. best results use an ANSCO. THEPLAUT-CADDENCO. Established 1872 PLAUT-CADDEN BUILDING Let us do your Developing and Printing NORWICH BUSINESS COLLEGE €9 Main Street There are thousands of zraduates of high schools who 1ave received the ordinary commercial school education, but find it necessary to attend a Business College in order to prepare themselves for a position where real ability and general knowledge of business methods are required. Bus- iness Men Demand Real Business Training. The Norwich Business Col- lege offers the best that money can buy in the way of Practi- cal Business Training — the kind which Dbrings to the graduates the Best Paying Positicns. There is but one Business College in Norwich and that is the Norwich Business Col- lege, where many successful business men of Eastern Con- necticut received their train- ing. We Assume All Risk; If We Take Your Money, Your Success Is Guaranteed. Enroll Today. NORWICH BUSINESS NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1916 Norwich, Wednesday, Aug. 30, 1916. VARIOUS MATTERS Light vehicle evening. The Worden has left New York Navy yard for Block Island. lamps at 6.56 this L. B. Smith of Massapeag has re- cently had his house wired for electric lights. Several local art lovers {ll go to Lyme for the closing day of the art exhibition today. Tuesday was the coolest summer day since June 22nd, when the mer- cury down to 52 degrees. Some of the visitors for the Day ) oidays will begin to arriv town by tomorrow or Friday. bor in Passenger traffic on the railroads continues heavy, unaffected by the possibility of a national strike. Trad- g was above The temperature recorded at ing Cove early Tuesday mor) 42 degrees, but ten degrees treezing. Come to Wigwam, Mohesan church, Aug. 30 and 31; afternoon and eve: —aav. At Coventry, Emil J. Koehler and Byron W. Hall are to have charge of sports for the coming Coventry Grange fair. Sextons are preparing those church- es which have been closed during August for reopening the first Sunday in September. A e demand as in tte grring, city bu t> came tc Connecticut small farm purchase: The beautiful borders of shrub | hydrangeas at the summer pla on Iiaughton's Cove are being admired by passersby just now. tain Henry Wilcox of Eleanor, 2nd, while dredging ng_the beach at Noank, caught a| 15 1-2 pound lobster in his net. the power Announcement is made by the Nex rk. New Haven anad Firtford i-ail- ad comraay 1 train from w Lorgon to F duy. A Waterbury Attorn: correspondent v John H. C: men- idy a_reunion of the C: dy'| 2 at the Ocean View hotel, at Block Island. St Thomas' Seminary, Hartford, which is attendeq by Eastern C nicticut students, is to open Mon September 11th, with entrance e; inations the same day. Workmen started Tuesday at Rock- vile to c'ean up the new post offi e site. Ncst of the stone and bric the foundation has been brought tle city’s street department. by The county commissioners sion at New London Monda: in ses-j grant- ed a liguor license to the Italian clu which has headquarters in the D building, corner Bank nd Pearl streets. Of former Stafford Springs resi- dents a Sa spondent Profe. and Mrs, Miles % B s left Monday for Albany, N. Y., There are about three companies of actors operating on Block Island, and more companies are com- ing. Many of the pictures are taken from the cliffs on southeast sides of the i The patients from _the Darrach Home for Cripp Children, N York, have been_spending the mer at the olg Palmer place al Directo! Yorwich mem- Hartford, Sep- Allyn str Tree inn, the Connectic association, which has bers, will be heid i tember 6, No. 29 dinner at the Elm ington. The anny dile club is Lake Thu there were reunion da rociation of Connec Rev. the ption of . Broderic! o fthe !mma en Laker |, Pequot, through the courtesy of § Palmer, formerly of Norw! The twenty-eighth annual outing of | PERSONALS A. A. Guile of Kinney avenue spent the week-end with his family at Wal- nut Beach. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Weyman and son, William, of Norwich are at Twin Oak .cottage, Quaker Hill Albertus Brown of Norwich was a week end guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Brown of Mystic. Mrs. C. Church strect is Joseph A, Ambler, L Norwich friends learn that Miss Ray Briggs of Galve: rmerly of this city, is now in Washington, D. C. Ambler of ing -her son, Dr. of Poughkeepsie, N. Dr. Mrnest J. Jones of this city re- turned on Tucsday after passing a va cation on Fisher's Island. His family still remains ther Alfred Vaudy and Joseph Buckley of this city and Louis Pratte of Taft- ville, have returned m a week's stay at Walnut Beach, Milford. Attorney James E. Conway of the civil service commission, Washington, D. 8. has returned after visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Conway of Main street. Miss Alpha Gaudette of Voluntown | is the guest r cousin, Mrs. Haroid Atwood of Dani She 1leaves Thursday to spend the w in Webster, Mx: Miss Lillian Katz and Miss Evelyn Shragowitz of New London, were guests o the w x of _Reuben in Notwich Sunday. John_ Mitchell of Lyme, M Champlin and M B. Massapeag, nday Willimant Grounds, Recent visitors at and M were C 1, William ' § 1 Freq Schmit, Fred Libby and George Bueltman, all of New York city. OLDEST CONDUCTOR WILL STICK BY RAILROAD Peter M. McCabe Says He Will F fuse to Quit Work in Event of Gen- eral Strike. Peter M the ice in oldest the uit work Iroaa i conc and in the co - will not qu : in the employ for more xm s I receiv believe road, for i SHORE LINE EMPLOYE Five T]?\lurce Suits Are Filed Four Wives Petition Superior Court for Freedom From De- serting and Cruel Husbands—Ledyard Woman Sued for Divorce On Ground of Desertion—Papers Filed Tuesday With Court Clerk. Papers in five divorce suits were on Tuesday filed with the Clerk of the Superior court in this city. Four are wives seeking freedom from deserting husbands in two cases and from cruel husbands in the other two cases. The | fifth case is that of a Stonjngton man, William B. Brown, who asks freedom from the wife who deserted him. Elizabeth Maud Hurlbutt Hewitt of Hartford Las petitioned for divorce from Cyril Hewitt of ontville on grounds of desertion. They were mar- ried Jan. 10, 1910 and it is aileged that he deserted in Feb. 1912. The plaintiff | asks a divorce to resume her maiden | name, Frank B. Tillinghast of North Stonington has been sued for divarce | Jesse M. Tillinghast also of \onhl Stonington, on grounds of intolerable | crueity and a statutory offense. They | were married April 10, 1909, and have wo m Charles W, six, d Hazel The plaintift claims a divorce, cutody of the child- ren and alimony, both permanent and pendante lite. Alice May Beale Carreira ras peti- tioned for divorce from MManuel Car- reira, Jr., formerly of Stonington, now of Fort Rodman, Mass., on grounds of desertion. They were married Sept. 2, 1909. It {s aileged that he descrted about June, 1918. They have one min- or child, aged six years and the plain- tiff claims custody of the child in ad- dition to her divorce. Carrie Shepherd Roe of New London has filed_petition for _divorce from William L. Roe of St. james, L. I, on grounds of intolerable cruelty plai 's maiden name for Shepherd and she was marrled to the defendant Sept. 3, 1901. They have one minor child. She claims divorce and_custody of the child. William B. Brown of Stonington, is secking divorce from Bertha R. Brown of Ledyard on charges of desertion and also of a s y cffense. They were married Sept. 22 ,1911. Her maiden name was Bertha R. Williams. There is one child, five years cf age. WANTS $1,200 DAMAGES. Thurber Brings Action Morris Feldman for Auto Wiiliam Against Aceident. attachment was served on n, proprietor of s leathe i London, Mond: illiam Thurb: ? the Shore Line Electric 2 for $1,200 damasges the resvlt of an auto- ccident. The accident happen- , when Thurber was struck t the corner of ile about . Feldman was accident and for- in the New Lon- Monday morning. bod ASKS $10.000 FOR INJURIES TO CHILD. Brought Against Auto Owner by Charles S, Starr. Action Helen Starr, daughter of Mr. es S.'Starr of Willlams London is the defendant $10,000 brought by Sadi ughter of Mr. and of Main street, v, for injuries as the result of an autémobile accident. She brings suit through her father. Papers served v afternoon and are e he superior court in October. hich is the bast Main_stre for of et, New e little girl was treet when the defend- ie driven by her broth- Sterr, struck her and| It is alleged that | sustained concussion of the of aw and other have permanently dis- abled her. carelessn " control of ma- LEGAL HOLIDAYS NAMED ‘ In Communication from Postoffice De- partment Relating to Clerks’ Over- time Compensaticon, no legal national designated, the closest on of national I to] come from the po ngton in a holidays are men- nnection with a new rul- <le have worked the needs of lire the emplo; 5 in the first and letter who are vs following the form such i proved the ;and the Natior GOVERNOR APPROVES LEASE OF THE STATE PIER. Sastern Forwarding Company to Pay $6,300 For Six Mecnths’ Use of One Tenth of Space. Holcomb_ Tu lease of New London to the E ing company at a m ers, harbors and bridges commission. The Bastern Forwarding company takes under the contract one tenth of the space or 35.000 square period of six months, paying ..6,300 as rental. The company has already spent in the neighborkood of $40,060 Governor ay ap- e siate pler at ern ard- in the stryction of warehouses, etc. The commissi 5 do not pretend to know remen will dock at New London but money which the 7 infer from the company has spent in the dcvelopment of the new dock that they will use it for their mer- chant submarines. The corzmission tract for the build superstructy heidlehalm Construction company of York for ,000. The entire wosk will Be finished By Jasuary 1, 1517. Commissioner C. was ar warded the con- f the state to the L. er of the sub- INSTRUCTORS FCR THE WQOMAN'S CCLLEGE. NEW Additions of As- Departments. Changes in $ sistants in Sever; sistant pro- doing r in the beer in 1 Other sty with of mathematics, of a member i soc: of Mathema A the author advanced al- Tuentary an- thecry of in- tory new Miss Mary the colle H. is term been s has ng of col- Dooks > the clos arranging the £ of the riv-| feet for a| Avery of Groton | CUMMINGS & RING Funeral Directors znl Embalmers 337 MAIN STREET Copesite Peat Offiens *Phone 321-2 Lady Aczi-tant BOZRAH HAS CASE OF PARALYSIS NOW. One Developed There and Another in This Town on Tuesday. After the infantile paralysis sftua- tion had seewingly simmered down to quictness, two new cascs, one in Nor- wich and one in Bozrah, on Tuesday changed the complexion of Fhealth af- fairs in this vicinity. In neither of the cases is the means of infection at 21l clear to the physicians. Dr. A. C Freeman discovered the Norwich case Tuesday morning in the family of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Brown- | ing of the the Backus corner, East Great Plain. Their 3 year old son, Kenneth Brown- found that a slight paralysis had set in in both thighs of the infant. Dr. Edward P. Brewer was called in con- sultation and he agreed that the dis ease was infantile paralysis. Dr. George Thompson of Tattville, the town health officer, was straightway informed of the case, and the proper quarantine was established. While the case is considered a mild one, it raises the bafiing problem of the source of the infection, for the child had been nowhere, its home is isolated, and there was no hint of e posure in the history of the case. There s one other child in the Browning family, a younger infant. This is the irst Norwich case. The other case developed on the Post form on Wauwecus Hill, not far from the Norwich town line This is Doro- ter of nd Mrs. \Ieytr Zuckerma senpcrz.ture and fever, and on Tues- da paralysis manifested itself in its ew London turnpike, near | ing, became il a week ago and at his| visit yesterday morning the physician | thy Zuckerman, the 2 year old daugh- | | | I says: ““T’other morning I leff my LIBERTY Long Cut at home, (and before nocn I thought it {of N. ¥, who has been iil since Fri was’ first attended o Sunday by Dr. H. Higgine of tk city. On Monday e child had a high | | was a week from Thursday. t arm and in the neck, Wh)le it this farm and the Zuckerman child was taken to the Backus hospital, wherc Tuesday night it was said her condi- tion had not changed, The child came to the far: hilip Rosenbers takes board ber mother and since that ti | Zuckerman has paid several v his family from Broc . and considered that he may have bro the infection with him. But as th are many other mothers and children boarding on the farm and the of these come up occasionally Mr. Znckerman did. the po tazion are correspondi d. Mr Zuckerman came s ago_an. Tuesday jinfect the house on’ proceeded and pl ug. 3. This rs old, and se, there were nea children in the im but no ca ve Geve there vet, and the s reco at the hospital. A pected case was reportc from the northern part of the tow of Waterford, but the disease had not fully developed Tuesday boy was detained on board th w Yor back press. Chesterfield has another case of in- | fantile paralysis. The victim 18 _the six months’ old son of Mr. and Mr: Bonsield of New York. The Bonsleld with their child. are staying at tic ne of Herman Ariewitz in Chest London line steamer from Nc Tuesday morning and was sent to New York on the 11 field, where they arrived about a 1| month ago. | The case was reported to Health Officer Frederick H. Dart of East Lyme Mon: 2y night and ho asked per- nission of Health Officer Edwin C. Chipman to admit the child to the contagion warg of Memorial hosplts® which was granted. Because of the age of the child, the mother is to be admitted with the child and it w expected at the hospital Tuesday aft- | “To save me from starva- tion I borrowed 4 chew of Bonehead's Joy from the fore- - man, but I might aswell have chew- the rag with the cornet cop far ail the good I got out 1 of ik.2> | The job that pulls hard on the muackas cafls for a snappy, n?n s-size tobac \,o. LIDERL‘J. gives the big all- day brace to the husky Lds who make the werld go-round. T‘xem’arm}-imin LIBERTY but clean pure honestKenta ucky tobacco. » No short, broken leaves—no hard loose stems. Andit’s age ed from three to five years to bring out the sweet mellow favor of the leaf. | LIBERTY makes a long, free-bummg, "agtnnr smoke and a lesting, juicy chew. it for both.- Compare LIBERTY with bi ae:—lookug packages filled watt oy Bzt X £1Y o I : £ v, many of which have | ernoon. | s e ,T‘\"',”‘, 3 he purpose of this |y n™ o ocived during the summer| It is thought that the Bonsleld child | COLLEGE and: Rev. Bater 3 Cuny af Norwich, months contracted the disease from s Salepmated the ma ; Another appointment of interest| Bashlaw, who was the last victim B. M. HINMAN, Principal e e D which has been made Gur trom (‘;hlfi%tc‘rfie!dthami he <;nl"nct» vers in this section few months i ed the discase at the Arlewitz house, t|~:€p{5hfl‘m¥uhr}1;?d;hlx g - Di Six additional coses of infantile pa- abroad are being received e Jiige Dickenson ralysis were reported to the _stato York for American a st Gl Gl T, board of health Tuesday, making a are experiencing sreat diffculty in team on acco fotal number in the state to date of | getting cargo space, while steams requirs of the| PTOCtor, Who 1 = 442, Dr. Black, the secretary of the compar e ask exceedingly o Of theltory. Miss Di on made many | board said there was every reason fo | Fieh ates foritomiahi = y such service| friends guring av at the college | think that the worst of the epidemic | s e ot sar of her ap- | Was over. | Never in the history of The Gri L Sh menom St | wold has there been such a large num. it il g o instructors who will take up | Distinguished Themselves In New | ber of children at t otel and be- compensation time to i:‘p_‘;n;‘(‘x‘hqéf ening of college in Hampshire. | cause of the expressed ‘ntention of the tled in 30 days|September a . ! parents to remain as late le, oliday .’md gnt}:‘l“dayo = Slow S ED e vhf:nxeyfh‘?e “;f\ealfx:t{?r?swr'vxtfurn;gr%‘;fh‘ Manager II. D announced rvices can best be dispensag|and Miss Carola i Willls Austin _and = Masters Willis For Fruit Picking, Etc. We have Baskets, Ladders, Fruit Pickers, Rope, Binding Twine, Corn Knives, Hoes, Wheelbarrows, Etc., for harv- esting crops, fruits and vege- tables. Farmers, market gardeners and owners of the small culti- vated plots about the city should call on us for their supplies. EATON CHASE €O, 129 Main St., Norwich, Ct. Hardware and Elestrical Goods THE DEL-HOFF European Plan Rates 75 centa ner day and up HAYZE EROTHERS. Teleohone 1222. 26-28 Broadway F. C. GEER Piano Taner 122 Prosyoct Street. Nerwich, Conn "Peons 511 ... -+ tign-ofehighmayint Eantam that he will keep September 2 at least. open until According to t! @ of thig country, one of the nine chil- dren of the late Willi isa Matthewson Johr stock Johnson, of Uncasville Aug. 29, 1837, comsequently years old Tuesday. ex-senator F. A. Johr Seven New Britain pol at the Norwich fair of next w reques from New ing extra police protection Britain as well as other nearby ci fes. Chief Rawlings will detail seven supernumeries for the work Owing to the quarantine resula- tions adopted in many of the cities and towns of the state, due to ihe infsrtile paralysis situation, *he an- nual -Epworth League fiel day, which was to have been held at ti:e Flainville camp ground on La- bor ¢ay, has Deen called o for this vear. The forty-seventh annual reunion of the FEighth Regiment. C. V., will be held in Nathapiel Lyon post hall, Hartford, Saturday, September 16. The reports read to the members of the association wili show that comrades who have dled during the year in- gl\ige Benjamin J. Watson, of Plain- eld. ‘the bara at the Coun'y Home at fiodam ¢as destroyed by fi nday mcri.ng. Mrs. ‘voi matron wae aksent for -he th3 assistants were unaware 2 fire originated. It was thought, how- ever, that the fire starteq tarough some of the children plaving with matches. Litchfield.—A special town meeting will be held in Litchfield Sept. 4 tc act on e petition:to_discontinue a sec- preserved, well-nourished body and brain. Grape - Nuts food stands preeminent 2s a builder of this kind of energy. It is made the entire nutriment of whole wheat and barley, two of the richest sources of food strength. Grape-Nuts also includes the vital mineral elements of the grain, so much emphas i these days of -investizs real food values. Crisp, ready to eat, easy to digest, wonderfully Rourishing and deliclous. “There’s a Reason” for Grape-Nuts ed by the Norwich-New London trol- 2 ley car due in New Landon at 445 Everybody needs it— Monday evening at the corner S'fo\‘éd fOr emere cy in illiams and Main streets. When ey 5 s ilammond arrived at the scene, a well-developed, well - report of the accident was made C—————— | COVeTed. RasoYeEed & NORYICH CAR RIPPED OFF AUTO WHEEL. Trolley Coliided With Cadillac in New London But No One Was Injured. A large Ca . owned by London wa ac__automobile, No. A. H. Hislop of New struck and badly damag- police headquarters, the driver of wuto was_the only one at the ma- One forward wheel was ripped nd the car was damaged arouns the body. No one was injured, Mayor Rogers to Take Charge. Mayor Rogers announced Tuesday, that becsuse of the possibility of the need_of ater police protection La- bor day as the result of the threaten- ed railroad strike. he had arranged ¥ i event such a contingency > the reserve police signal should be sounded on Norwich Guests Were Preaent. A family reunion and picnic was held at Riverside park Sunday after- noon in honor of Mrs. S. D. Rand of Waldick, N. J. Luncheon was served at noon. _Those present included Mr. nd Mrs. F. Cowman, Mrs. S. D. Rand, and Mrs. Albert Huntley of Nor- Boy lost from Tender. ro'ld Delaney, aged 17 years, was tender of a schooner at New London harbor Monday. captain started to come a small boat and the lad overboard. His Lody was not re- instructer in romance languages. Storrs’ Fall Term. The fall term of tk Connecticut Agricultural Colle, 1l open on Tuesday, September 12. The pros- pect is at any time itution. Th young men W larger enrollment than in the history of the in- mand is urgent for have had training in for a agriculture an udents are able to secure satisfactory positlons upon graduation. in Preston. an Equal Suffrage nal church Suffrage Meeting There will be ing at the Congregadt; in Preston City on v, September ist, at 8 p. m. Rev. Luther Keneston will preside at the meeting, and the speakers will be Miss Katherine Lud- ington, chairman New London Coun- ty; Mrs. Willis Ausiin and Miss Da- phnc Selden, County Organizer. Geological Specimens for Cellege. Announcement is made that a of geological specimens has been re- ceived at the department of biology at Connecticut collese. The gift, which comes from Mrs, John W. Hield, con- tains many interesting specimens gath- ered from all parts of the world, some of which were procured in the Holy Land. Attending Market Growers’ Outing. Frank E. Peckham and son, Oliver H. Perry Peckham, of Corning avenue, East Side, are among the large num- ber of representatives of the Connec- ticut Market Growers’ Assoclation, who are.attending a two days’ outing given by the Providence, R. I Grow- ers in that city. Ansonia.—Dr. Wilkam J. DIcGrath and Dr. Joseph A. McGrath, who have resided here all th. life, have re- moved from Crescent street and w make their permanent home on Haw- thorne avente, Derby, with their sis- ters, Misses Alice and Margaret Mc- Phipps and Malcolm Austin returned this week to their home on ‘Washi ton street. The week previous M Austin had been playing golf at Man- chester, N. H., where in the tourna- ment he came taking the qualificatior medal, while his sons have been passing seve weeks at the Mowslis camp on New Found lake, Bast Hebron, N, H, Mal- colm, aged 9, was the youngest boy to qualify in the swimming test of 100 vards with clothes on, and Willis P. Austin, 13 years old, won first prizes in the croquet tournament and in the relay race, Danbury.—The Connecticut Agricul tural college fair exhibit will be dis played at the Danbury fair in CctoX: REMOVAL E Coal Office of J. 0. PECKHAM E fl from 52 Brosdway to MARSITALL’S, 101 Main, after Sept. 1st. Ernest E. Bullard VIOLIN TEACHER All String Instruments repaired Violins sold on easy terms For appointmenta address E. E. BULLARD, Bliss Place, Nor- wich, fann. ithin two strokes of | | | | Then you’ll Enow t.’xati | LIBERTY |is the - | biggest 'mickel’s worth of real tobacco. THE AMIRICAN TOBACCO COMPANY d. SIN? E‘eenéist 18-19 Alice Building, Norwich Phons 1177-3 AHONEY BROS., FALLS AVENUE Hack, Livery and Boarding Stable We guarznteo our service to be the ‘At ho most reaso: Rooms

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