Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 12, 1917, Page 9

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~SYRUPBFFIGS FORCBOSS, SICK " FEVERISHCHILD 9P LIYYLE STOMACH i8 SOUR, f. . LIVER TORPIO OR BOWELS bad breathe, “igside cleansing” he treatment. ctions for babies, chil- and grown-ups are| 2 sYrups. e of “ | with eomtempt any other g syrup. MYSTIC Reception Temdered e, and M Charles Tinfer—Five Team Captains Appointed for Y. M, C. A. War Fund Canvass—Mrs. Abby Dewsy Imjured by Fall. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Tinker, who were married Saturday, Nov. 3, and who have just returned from their wedding trip, were given a recepiion mt the home of Mr. Tinker's parents, iMs. and Mrs. Edward Tinker, in O1d . Mystic, Saturday evening. About 76 were present, including relatives and frfends from Mystic, Westerly and Old Mystic. During the evening dancing was emjoyed end refreshments served. Mr. and Mrs. Tinker are o in OWd Mystie. Mre. Tinker was 3 ines Butten, daughter of Phiip J. Butten, of Mystic. £ . Preather from Vernan. O. E. Newfon of Vernon, Te v. ; ount; Ct., foccupied the pulpi flo M E ws«mr afternoon Dr. G, ¥, Genuyng of Brooklyn, ¥/ oecupied ‘the bulpit of the 1im- < dam : Sunday m:rning L4nd eveping.” | : ———— CAPTAINS OF TEAMS FOR Y. M. C. A. WORK. Five Prominent Local Men to Have Charge of Securing War Fund Aliot- ment, The work of the Y. M. C. A. war fund for the national camp is to be started in Mystic in a few days. Frank Coeok and Howgrd Bliven of New Lon- don Y. M. C. A have been in Mystic and have been the means of getting five team eaptains who have the privi- lege of selecting four men to assist them in the work. The captains are D, Johnson, Roscoe K. Burrows. Colby, Rev. A. ¥, Earnshaw aadi Morgan. At a meeting of theze men held Thursday evening the fol- erganizstion was perfected: K. Burrows, chairman: Fred . Colby, secretary; George D. Johnson, social and distributing committee; ‘Waiter T. Fish and Rev. A, F, Earn- ahaw, rally committes. Sunday, Nov. 18, there will be a prominent speaker frem Providence here in Community hall to tell of the work. Tuesday a will be served the captains and their committees In Community Bball, after which the work will be started. The men wili go to New London this {Monday) evening to be guests at the Y. M. C. A. and discuss plans. Mystic will no doubt do its share and the men will work hard to make a fine showing for the worthy cause. Vigited Groton Lodge. Miss Bertha Thomson, a_past grand of Mywtic Rebekah lodge, No. 56, 1. B. ©O. F., and district deputy of this dis- trict and inside guardian of the Re- bekah assembly, was in Groton Thurs- day ovul.-:h with the grand officers of the Rebe! assembly at Home lodge. Mre. Dewsy Injured by Fall. of Mrs. Abby. Dewey regret hat she reseived a to learn Raither of Newark, N. J., is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. James Jacksen on Reynolds Hill. Ire F. Noyes of New Haven spent ‘Bunday with his family on Willow street. Loule E. White spent Sunday in East Mass. Cottrell of Bridgeport spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Cottrell. - & Friends of L. E. Kinney are glad to ses him out after several days’ illness. Edward MgKo: gueat of his brothers, S. 8. Brown MacKenzie. Charles Gremley and navel reserve, who state pier in New been transferred to New- port and left Friday at noon to report Gl n hcon 2 business trip to am Ribtball has returned to New 'Y‘:t after several days’ visit in M; Mr. and Mrs. Walter Patterson and som of Mount Vi . N. Y., are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Barr. Chester Matthews of New York has been spending a few days in Mystic. Why Are Yoy Cray? Why look older than you feel? Now that so many &-—m have tha:: Q-ban Hair Color Restorer 2 3> dark l‘tfln!.llld. it to Q-ban. Ready to~use— % less—50c for a large RIS e o e 1 Try & < B flag that will show nine stars, (representing that many members who are in the army and navy. mhéro'fl' m"w"m‘afi e 2 -3 Axh»rho“ e for @ meeting this after- Watehing the Market. The slump in the stock market dur. the t few days has proved of 3 1’“ to @ considerable personal jnterest number of Danielson !peqp‘c, Private Meunier of the 38th com- peny was at his home in Danielson on ‘week end leave of absence. H. . Babson is en route to St. Petersburg, Fla., where be is to re- main for the winter, Taying e concrete in Main street will be this week, it is now ”M’ec ppofl'!‘e I; i fkm R o e Dayis park. This is the week during which all are jnvited to mmake contributions to the ¥. M C. A. war fund. Wil Hear Reports. Mrs. William Ingalls of Spring street wili have the members of the W. C. T. U, at her home for a meeting Tues- day, when a report om the etate con- ventjon is to be given. More Brush Fires. Many mere acres of brush land were burned over in Saturday fires that raged in this vicinity. country for the past week has been as dry as tinder and only extreme care on the pert of all persons traveling through such sections will prevent more disastrous #ives. Sugar at 16 Cents. There was some sugar available Lere at the end of the week and per- sons were glad to get it even at the advaneed price of 15 cents a pound. Getting Used to Trainin, Reports from ¥Fort Terry indicate that the members of the 38th cempany are having an easy time of it at pres- ent, compared to the intensive work that marked the first.few weeks dur- ing which the command was in camp. Rumered Payment of Assessers. A story gained ‘wide circulation here Saturday that there is a plan on foot to pay members of the board of as- sessors each a year and that the matter may be suggested to the citi- zens at this evening’s epecial town meeting, Water Service for Industrial Place. At Industrial place water mains have been run the entire length of Morin avenue. which, on its mortherly side 3¢ well built up, although the 'street was only recently opened. The water mains run through to Main street. The Sechroeder Quintet is the first of the Danielson Business Men’s associa- tion Lyceum course of concerts at the Orpheum theatre I Nov. 13. Splendid entertainment of strumental and vocal numbers. Buy course tickets for $1; exchange for re- cerved seats at the Orpheum theatre box office today. Five entertainments $1.—adv. Commissien Form of Government. Commission form of government for the town of Killingly Is now being talked in various sections of the town. This story comes along with many others pertaining to plans for manag- ing the town’s affairs .in the future and something may be said about the matter at the adjourned town meeting to be held this evening. LINK OF STATE ROAD If Completed Would Mean Much for Automobile Traffic, Automobile owners of the town of Killingly and other towns in this vicin- ity are going to be urged to combine their efforts toward the end of having the last remaining link of state road from Mazzerelli's farm eastward to the Rhode Island line constructed. This route from this section of the state into Providence is the shortest and most direct. In proper condition, it would be the favorite route between Hartford, Willimantic and all inter- véning points into the capital of Rhode Island, but delay after delay has been encountered in getting the work com- pleted. In the meantime the Rhode Island government is becoming dis- couraged with the delays on this side of the line and is letting what was a splendid plece of ma: . extending from the Rhode ~ Island-Connecticut line at Little Rest to the Providence city line, get into a bad state of dis- repair. The route frem Danielson eastward to the Rhode Island line is one section of one of the state’s great trunk line highways. It is the réd-banded route that most interests the people of this section, but for some reason that can- not be satisfactorily accounted for it is not being developed and traffic is being diverted over longer and less de- sirable routes. { n the past. several efforts have been made to get the state highway depart- ment to take up the work and com- plete it to the Rhode Island line. Now another effort is to be made and it will have the backing of a great many people in this section of the county. Dog Ordinance No Joke. Many Mog owners in Kfjlingly, prin- cipally in the sections ‘outside the villages of the town, are regarding the order to keep. their dogs confined as a Joke, but beginning this morning they will find that the order of the com- missioner of domestic animals was put in force to be abeyed and there is go- lnf to be & cleanup of loose dogs. n the borough.and in the villages of the town the- order -to keep the dogs confined is being very generaily obeyed, but out in the farming Uons dogs may be seen running at liberty much as they always have. Warden M. H. Grimshaw has been ill at his home in Attawaugan nearly all of the past week and -that fact is the answer to the question why @ogs at liberty have mot been picked up. This morning Mr. Grimehaw will commence his active campaign. He has been aware of what is golng on, for telepnone calls have come to him in ni telling him‘ of dogs allowed to roam while a neighbor’s T Ry " ive e to cv'ery nook and corner of the town and it must be.rigidly obeved if it i to bring aboft the effect desired- prevention of the spread Mr. Grimshaw Camp ‘ens, “were omes here over Sumday. Pomfret Team’s Good Semson. inning points against 3 in the season’s To Tostify in Murder Cone. Charles Bove, Albert Spines mnd Guy Zito have been sutgmones, ms wit. nesses to appear in the eupetior cwuri | at Worcester tomorrow, wnen the i of Gaeteno Barbate, wibc -will fage = <charge of having killed zm Ftakien nes- ident of this eity, will bagin. The lo- €3l men know nothing mbout the case other than to testify e 1o the char- | acter of the men involved. Red Cross Camvass. Red Cross workers maée @ canvass of the city Saturday 'for contributions i:r 3:»65 to buy Clumisy ¢ r ing 258 ponents who gave with great TO FORTRESE MUNROE. First Class Private Githert Perry Transferred From Fort Terry. First Clase Private Zitbert Perry of) the 38th Company, L’ LS., Fort Terry is visiting here with \his parents. ity Engineer and Mrs. Georme W. Perry, before leaving for the eooust artillery school at Fortress Mummw=2, Va. where! he will go as an emlistesd 5 Private Perry was a student at the Worcester Polytechmic Institute whem he heard his countm’s ~all fnd picked the coast artillery as the bransh of! service in which Ite wished fo serve and he enlisted at Danielson. Prjor 1o taking up his studies at Wercester he had two years of practice] werk mnder the direction of his father, whe s a civil engineer. Leaving the 38th Company et ort Terry, Private Perry was given a fine send-off and it was wih pregret that he Jeft the members of ihe command with which he entered the seryice. At Fortress Munroe he will iake a specig. course of studies and taa:; and the indications are that he will win nepsd advancement. — NOT INDEPENDENT CANDIDATE. No Truth to Rumor That Joseph J. Dupre Will Run For Alderma: Large. e —— Joseph J. Dupre, wepubiican candi- dats for the nomination for alderman- at-large at the republicanm city cau- cus, in which he lost/out to E. J. Mig- nault, said Saturday ‘that there was no truth in the story circulating then that he would be an independent can- didate for election as mayer. Mr. Du- pre says that he is not a capdidate for anythimg and that he will devete him- self entirely to his business interests He stated that he had beed a candi- &-(e for alderman-at-large not to gra: 'y 3ny persenal ambition, hut to serve the interests of the party and to help it nttain a victory in the approaching city election. ORDERED TO ATLANTA. District Men Among ®eventy-Eight Transferred Saturday te Camp Gor- don. 2 Seventy-eight men. including a num- ber from this district, left Camp Devens Saturday en route to Camp 1or, near Atlanta, Ga., where they are to be assigned to various regi- ments that are in training. They follow several thousanf New England soldiers who have gone south from Camp Devens during the past few weeks. In the group that went out Saturday was Howard W. Babbitt Some of the local men already at Camp Gordon are sending home souvenirs of the south. Captain J. A Ryan has received a hox of eotton from his son, Private Charles Ryai, tv:}m has been in the south for somc me. MAYOR M'GARRY URGED S TO RECONSIDED RETIRING Democratic Party Leaders ~ Would Have Him Run Again—Willis B. Carroll Not Keen For Place. Although the party caucuse; been held, the political lineup it may be before the biennfal city elec- tion December 3, had rnot ‘become quite settled Saturday. Party leaders stated that Willls B. Carroll, democratic nominee for may- or, was net anxious to run. During the day prominent members of the democratic party urgod Mayor J. MeGarry that he reconsider his de- termination not to run and again bé a capdidate. No statement was giv- en aqut as to the outcome of the inter- view with the mayor. MILITARY DRILL. —— To Be Required at Pomfret Schoo! at Onca. ~ With the close of the footbail season at- Pomfret school, wmilitary drill will be resumed there m-act\call¥ at once: This was hegun at the school last vear after the Easter holidays. and was suc- cessfully continued until the end of the school year.’ ‘The object of this drill was to give every boy in the school » knowledge of the fundamentals of military tac- ties and to prepare him in a all way to meet the requirements of his country should he ever be called upoa to _do sb. Though the drill consisted .merely of close and open order formations. this on account of lack of time to give instructions along other lines, it prov- €d o greatest help to the men who| later went into the service or attegd- 3 ffi;-muon il reaching and will afford ar opportunity that many of the students will make the most of. - At the schoo! it is being pointed: out rthat- every gain military knowi- be ?i;-m e who represent 'school may the | those h give the' fullest service to their coun- try when their time to answer the call 40| shall . have come.. Few of the students mm‘o‘:lmmu;‘bcduftd. ‘11!1; insti ; however, has men the % and hae done u aid F ath ers! ted Triangle Work ~ Serves Your Boys in War No expense is too great, noeffort toomighty which keeps our fighting men mentally, moraily or physi- eally fit. The Y. M. C.A.Red Triangle War ‘Work meets the sol- dier’s real needs! and I‘talyZ - $35,000,000 Needed Give Freely—Gladly! Shall the American people, and food to our brave Allies, fail toextend the Y. M. C. A. Red Triangle War Work to the armies of France, Russia HON. ALLYN L. BROWN, Campaign Director Shall the great-hearted American people fail to furnish seven million Prisoners: of War withthe V.M. C.A. Red Triangle War Work— their only hope? sian government because of slight im- perfections, but will admirably serve for drill purposes at the . Claims Exemption--Married. Louis Mongeau, Attawaugan, an en- listed man at Camp Deveus and salec’- ed from this district, has made appli- cation for discharge frorni the service on the ground that he is inarried. Such applications may be made under a re- cent ruling of the provost marshal general. At the time he passed his physical éxamination in this city Mr. Mongeau did not claim cxemption. He had been -a member of the Danielson Home. Guard company. STEPS TO STANDARDIZE . .IREW AND LOWER PRICE Bakeries to Be Under Govern- ment License December 10. — Washington, Nov. 11. “— Definite steps to standardize bread and lower Al lits price wijl be taken tomorrow when President Wilson issues a proclama- tion placing all bakeries under gov- ernment license December 10 and sub- Jecting them to food administration rules prescribing _ingredients and weights of loaves. Prices will not be fixed, but with_the standardization it is expected that natural competition and simplification of distribution will force down pr for pound loaves to-seven or . cents. . cy breads will be eliminated and the muititnde of sizes now pro- duced will be reduced to four with standard Ingredients. Tlie weights will be one pound one and a half, two and four he loaves will have a crease in the middle to permit halves. Only three pounds of sugar will be aliowed .for a barrel of fleur instead of an average of six pounds now used, and two_pounds table oil shortening mi n‘m} stead of six pounds of lard or oil. administra o The food s 100,000,000 o ¢ susar same amoun lard in way. Bakers may use only skimmed milk A SRR onl made in standard sizes of reg- n!ghn)t—d dough. Hoover hopes reforms in distribution n e & customers who pay cash and carry their bread home. On the “cash and carry” he says, bread can be soid at a profit of ome cent a pound icaf. An attempt wiil be made to persuade bakeries to sell their product direct to customers who wili pay cash and carry their purchases. —— - TO ESTABLISH TRANS- -CONTINENTAL AIRWAYS Aero Club of America to Charter the Routes and Select Landing Places New York, Ncv. 11L.—Plans for es- tablishing four trans-continental air- ways as the main arteries of air nav- igation in the United States have been approved by the executive com- mittee of the Aero Club of America, it was announceg by the club here to- night. The ‘club’s committee on land- ing places, Rear Admiral Robert E. Peary chairman, has been instructed to make_ all possible d in charting the routes and selecting landing The airways would be named the “Woodrow Wilson,” the “Wright Brothers,” the “Lai nd “Chanute and Bell.” it be charted from New York to San Francisco, touching Cleveland, Toledo, Chicago and other important cities. ‘The second would start from Wash- ington, running {ti Virginia, North Carolina, the state in which the ‘Wright Brothers made their historic first flight;* Georgia, “Aalaba, Missis- sippl. Louisiana, Texas, with a station Was tsed for the first fime. in history was used for the In_ his under conditions approximbting war- fare, then through New Mexico and Arizo ending at San Diego, Calif. The Langley airway, although de- BUTTER RECORD BROKEN BY A HOLSTEIN COW Angie Acme Yielded 15381.41 Pounds in ‘385 Days. qudland. Cal, NO\‘, 11. — The world’s records for butier production Jvave been broken by Angie Acme, a Holstein cow dbwned by A. W. Morris & Sons of Woodland, in a test con- ducted under the supervision of tl Unjversity of California, it was ai finite plans have not vet’made, would | run from Washington to Los Angeles. The Chanute Bell airway, nam- ed in honor of Octave Chanute and Alexas Graham would ryn from Boston to -Seattle, touching Al- bany, Svracuse, ‘Rochester. Buffala, Efle. Falls, ‘Bismarck. N. D. ont., and other citles. g Rocaime Bt dions B dd Detrojt, Grand Rapids, Mleh.é ncunced here today. elded 1,531.41 pounds of 167.96 pounds of of -butter in two. years. stance the records displace those e tablished by Keystone Beauty Johanna, a Holstein owned b: ens & Sons of Pennsylvani contended. Aungie Acme’s milk production in 6% days was 22,0928 pounds. . tarism and civilization have now become ificompatible—Viscpunt Gre: ORPHEUM THEATRE Danieilson Wednesday Evening Fo-. 14 Presents The Nation’s Funniest and Most Tunefu! Opera Only One Company Playing This Opera and This Company Plays All the Large Cities. = e Opera Prices 250, 50c, 75¢, $1, $1.50 SEATS NOW SELLING

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