Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 5, 1918, Page 8

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)

iy mm gy l)mu“,mmu T JLEVSO ll\ \un.!nhuumun‘fllmmuull SATURDAY THE LAST DAY :: . OF THIS GREAT MARK DOWN SALE A CLEAN SWEEP OF ALL GARMENTS AS PER THE LIST BELOW ‘Shop early Saturday for the best selection of these wonderful price inducements. gl [lllmlllw «.,.u,..\..l..‘nnmlmmlflu Regular Sale tity Ddteription rice Price 45 LINGERIE WAISTS.............$ .98 $ .55 12 SOILED SILK WAISTS.........§ 6.75 $ 2.95 15 SOILED SILK WAISTS.........$ 295 $ 155 9 SERGE SKIRTS................$ 295 § 1.95 14 STRIPED SILK SKIRTS.........5 395 $§ 2.75 7 STRIPED SILK SKIRTS. .$ 695 $ 475 8 ‘WOMEN’S COATS ............3 .7.95 $ 5.00 15 WOMEN’S COATS ............3 15.00 $10.00 24 WOMEN’S COATS ............5 18.50 $12.00 37 WOMEN’S COATS . L% s $222:50: 181376 27 WOMEN'S COATS ............$ 25.00 $14.75 'Quan- l <R R N 18 WOMEN’S SUITS .............$ 18.50 . § 9.00 14 WOMEN'S SUITS .............$ 22.50 $13.75 26 WOMEN'S SUITS . .$ 25.00 $14.75 19 WOMEN'S SUITS . $ 29.75 $16.50 2 EVENING DRESSES . .$ 25.00 $15.00 2 EVENING DRESSES .....$ 2250 $13.75 2 EVENING DRESSES ........... $ 1850 $11.757 4 WOMEN'S SWEATERS ..$.7.00 $3.50% {1 WOMEN'S SWEATERS ........5 875 $ 4381 i1 WOMEN'S SWEATERS.........8_ 975 § 4.88] WOMEN'S SWEATERS ........$ 10.50 $ 525§ 8 WOMEN'S DRESSES 15 WOMEN'S DRESSES 14 WOMENS COATS ...0uo0 i 005 2750 31650 _9 WOMEN'S COATS, upto........8 45.00 $25.00 P e i .8 675 $475 -........2£ 1075 $8.758 ..% 16.50 $11.75 @ 9 WOMEN'S DRESSES 18 WOMEN'S DRESSES 4 PLUSH COATS .$ 25.00 $16.75 $ 25.00 $16.00 & PLUSH COATS Sl s D29 75 $197518 i3 O UD IO OO R R 0 3. PLUSHCOATS' . icnz o iomviis s o5 :35:00:1.$21.75 High Grade Furs Reduced 7 JRED.EOX.SETSy. 1_TAUPE FOX SET ....$ 27.50 $19.75 $ 45.00 $33.00% 1 SKUNK SET .......c..........$100.00 $79.75 1 KOLINSKY MINK SET $100.00 $79.75 RED:FOX:SCARE. vl vimiial $ 35.00 _$21.75 _1 SABLE FOX SCARF ...........8 3275 $25.00 1 HUDSON SEAL STOLE ........ $ 35.00 $27.50 | [NEAR SEAL STOLE . .$ 32.50 _ $25.00 NEYEMUEES $ 10.00 $ 7.50 | | i1 BROWN CONEY MUFFS ....... $ 10.00 _$ 7.50 B 44 KID CONEY SCARFS ......... .$ 10.00_$ 7.50 f 2 RACCOON SCARFS ...... .. B 1275 $ 9.95] RACCOON SCARFS 3 25.00_$i5.00f B ARACCOONMUBESE . ak: CCOON MUFFS .$ 18.30 $12.75% ... . ..8 25.00 $15.00 8 Sunday school, and the usual [C. E. service was also omitted. AT s Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Smith are being Cold, But N in 03— | .ntertained during the holiday week Holly Rec cf Wash- | by relatives in New York. ington, | Deputy Albert Buell of Clinton was — present Wednesday evening, Jan. 2, to Deacor John ! been en- | install the officers of the granga, tertaining iam . of Not So Cold as 1903. Chest-* for 1 we Sunday morning was the coldest of the season, the temperature ranging from 18 to 22 degrees below zero in different localities. Although inclined to think this is the coldest weather ever experienced, it ‘is- well to remem- ber that in 1303 the mercury stood at 25 degrees helow zero. in this section. Holly from Washington." A -belated *Christmas remembrance in the form of a box of holly was re- ceived by Mps. Walter M, Gillette from Mrs. 1. Newton Cone of Bellingham, | N is i1l Miss us .s assist- er on friends in this locality Thursday. A. 8. Bugbee is improved in health s0 that he is able to be out of doors a while each day. Owing to the geverity of the weather anly 11 attended Sunday morning ser- vice.” There was no session of the Main street. building . meeti are and wenhi:. ‘np | charge -of the. i worship and sermon, “Sunday school church. 8| church. ¢ | be The Old Tim §|and sermon in the evening and the i Visitor to Camp Devens. The Holiness ‘At eflm regation nk will: raing . top] % vice at the’ ‘Sh'lhmm Arms. held ln or% ‘afternoon: lervh&" ¥ At ~Tr1mty a ‘wifl be holy ™ oam d& ¢ 10.30-a." ., and. o’clock. There will be no’ evenlns aer- vice. 5 At the Taftville Cuurogaheml church, Rev. . Arthur. .. pastor, there will- be - holy - oommun on .in the morning and an address by the pastor in the evening. At Grace church, Yantic, Rev.'J. W. Areson, pastor, there' will - be .holy communion and sermon in the morn- ing, Sunday. school at noon and evpn- ing service at 5-o'Clock™ - The Associated “Bible. Students will hold service in the Buckingham Me- morial hall, 307 Main street. There will be Bible study in the afternaon and. the subject wiu be Prnehmg the Kingdom, At Park Congregatjonal ehur:h the Lord’s supper will be observed at' the morning service., There will also be a sermon. At 4.30 in the'afternoon there will be.a musical vesper service with brief sermon.’ At Grace Mamun-l Baptlst church there will be .preaching. morning.and evenink by the pastor and Sunday school at noon. ~The Lord’s. supper will be observed after the evening sermon. Rev. R. B. Haxns is paslnr of the church. e l At the Leffingwell Baptist church the morning sermon will be on the topic A New Year Message: Darkness and Dawn. Communjon will be held. In the evening the topic will be Becom- ing a Christian. “Rev. L. O. Gates is pastor of the ‘church. At the Second Congrégational church there will be .morning - worship, fol- lowed by communion._ The Sunday School will meet at noon. The even- ing service will be omitted to unite with Broadway church 'as vespers at 5 o'clock in'the afternoon. At the McKinley Avenue A. M. E. Zion church there will be morning t 5 _and-evening worship. with the ration of the holy communion at | . A cottage ‘prayer meeting will held during. the' coming week. Rev. dward F. Ban'ows is pastor of the At the McKinley -Avenue A, M. E. Zion church there will be morning worship and eermon, Sunday school at | 12.15, and evening worship with the celebration of the holy communion at ! 7.45. A cottage prayer meeting wllh be held during the coming ‘week. Rev. | Edward F. Barrow is pa.stor of the : | At Mt, Calvary Bnpmt church there will be preaching in the ‘morning; u baptisma] ceremony at 12.30, a preach- ing service in the evening - at ABDI o'clock and holy communion at 8.43. The_topic at_the evening service wmx Religion is Needed.! Williams is pastor Now. Rev., of the church. At the Greeneville Congregational church there will be a sen?cge of praise | and prayer Saturday evening at o'clock. Sunday morning tRere ~will be preaching by. the .pastor: Subject, | Goals to Be Reached in 1918. Preaching | service will be followed by the com- munion season.” The Sunda.y schaol meets at noon. B. W. At the First a:ptm church, Rev. George Henry Strouse, pastor, will preach in the morning on .Dead in Earnest. The Lord’s supper will be observed at the morning service, and there will be Sunday school at noon. he B. Y. P. U. will meet at'the usual ho'.u and the' evening theme will ‘be The Book of the Hou At - Trinity © Me st - "Episcopal church’ there will " be..a -communion service in the morning, short address by the pastor; Sunday school at noon | and a meeting of the Junior league at 4.30 in the afternoon. There will he' a voung -people’s ‘mzeting at the usual hour and Miss Olive Riley wili be:the leader. There will. be a song service topic will be 'A'Lésson in Addition.’ At the Central Baptist ehurch thare will be morning service at the usual hour, and at 10.45 there will be a ser- viee in Italian: conducted by J. W. Carlevale. The iSunday. school will meet at noon, and the City Bible class will also meet-at noon.’ The questions for the City ‘Bible class will'be: What did John come-for? . Whatare.we here for? What ~does the baptism of the Holy Spirit mean? How: may ‘we have | The B..Y.. .. U. will meet at the sual hour, and the pastor will preach at the people’s service in:the evering. The subject’ will be How'to Become a. Milliohaire. "‘Carl- Webster, the noted Boston “cellist, will p].l) at the even- ! B | ing - serv e, BOZRAH inds 1t 34 Degrees Below Zero—Personal ltems. On account of th= very Lflld ‘weather there were no services: in-the Congre- gaticnal church Sunday. Lebbeus Larhmp is with giip. Mande G. Y_,thrOp hac been Hsitv ing her brother, Harry L. Lathrop of Camp Devens. While: she was there the thermometer registered thirty-four degrees beiow zero. 7 - Maude Eiler shas “been spend- ing a few days with her mother, Mrs, Henry Pike, of Worcester. Harry L: Lathrop from Motor Truck Company’ No. 2, Camp Devens, was:one of four drawn from:the company to spend Christmas at home. Alice Bishop ' is imding part of her vacation in Yantic. at his hoine il Wash. Mrs. Cone, “ho was _betore marriage Miss Grace Bigelow of ‘Ham- burg and East Haddam, is nleasantly remembered by many. friends. here. was a teacher in-the public uehonls m several years. ' *| phere! “At the staple Oxford grays deal less than they are really worth. than we are selling them for. 2 0vercoats, 28 Overcoats, -9 Overcoats, 76 Overcoats, 11 Overcoats, 19 Overcoats, were were were were were were and black kerseys. mer OVERCO ATS An event of unusual lmportance this year, because of the hlgher pnces pPevalllng both in cost - of material and labor. ~ 35 30 28 25 22 20 Also let us add, an unexpected opportumty, because up to a few days ago we had practically “decided NOT to reduce prices this year. To leave them at their regular prices would have meant we were selling them for a great These garments actually cost us more to buy today Your Choice | Now $18.2 The sale includes all the season’s choicest styles in a splendid selection of fabrics, including [Every garment has the quallty and fine tallormg that distinguishes Kuppenhelmer clothes, regardless of price. This Sale Is Worth While--Come Early Special Reductions On All Men s Suits The Marhattan THE KUPPENHElMER STORE IN NORWICH 121-125 Main Street 1=l_ll=ll==l01=u=fl==fl=fla CLARK'S FALLS Death of Mrs., Eugene Congdon—Her Husbard ' Critically 1ll—Forty-Eight Enroll in Red Cross. Corporal Thomas Tallahan of Camp Devens, has returned, after a fur- lough of several days with friends here and in New London. Death of Mrs. Eugene Congdon. Mr. and Mrs. J. Bard Bill have been caring for Mrs. Bill's' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Congdon, north of Laur- el Glenn, who have been very ill with lung troubles. = Mrs. Congdon died on Monday morning.and Mr. Congdon. is still critically ill. Mrs. Congdon was a daughbter of Erastus Miner . and leaves three’ daughters, Mrs. Hattie Bill, Misses Grace and Aniie Cong- dor. Thrift Stamps For Sale. Postmaster E. D. . Chapman thrift stamps on sale: Mrs. Eibert Clark enrolied eight names .in.the. Red Cross. School in this distridt began Wed- nesday morning after a vacation. Week of Extreme Cold. The cold for the last week has been intense, the thermometer registering from twenty below zero to ten above. The people have. had to keep busy to keep vegetables from freezing in their cellars. John B. Perry was at Ston- ington Center ‘on businegs Tuesday. " Miss Effie Maine has Been the. guest of 'her sister in Weste: Temperatures of 23 and 30 Degrees Below Zero Registered—Meeting to Decide if Peck District School Is tc Be Reopened. Ecclesiasts 12:1, But'a span between the cradle: and the grave,” “Remember now thy Creator,” was the message of the last Sunday-of 1917. Thirty -Degrees Below Zero. New “England ‘weather ‘seems to be turniag into that of Labrador, with its awful temperatures, more ' unbearable because Of humidity of the atmos- parsonage . Sunday morning at 9 o'clock, the thermometer registered twenty-three below zero. A little earlier the same day, Fred Meade’s was at 30 des S ro. . Sunday service: of the morning. were omitted on ac- cmmt of the reme cold. Reminders of Christmas. The three beautiful: Christmas trees, minus- the Christmas fruitage, and the other decorations, have been left in e in the church, to add to the while [he\ retain thelr be: son. Frank R. Linnell is row werking in Willimantic. g Herbert Lyman is visiting' relatives in_Columbia ; The monthly meeting of the Ladies Ald society as omitted on account of the weather, Special School Meeting. There wili- be a special meeting Sat- urday, in Peck School house. to de- termine if it shall be reopened. Tt was closed at Thanksgiving, the n piis being divided among the other dis- tricts. Seaod s begin the winter term next all Westminster's - districts I‘etalnm” all of last term’s teachers. Thomas Campbell Douglas is recov- ering from illness which has tside hlm prisoner for a month. The new progressive system of re- s, given to the children or 's church-schooi for at- 11 be begun next Sunday. astical society of West- day afternoon, January 7, at 2 I The communion of the Lord's Sup- per ‘will be observed Sunday morning USQUEPAUGH Everybody Busied Trying to Keep Warm—Frost Dangers Vegetables in Cellars. Dr. Kenyon was a visitor in Provi- dence Tuesday. Every one. is busy trying to keep varm. 5 2 Several of the farmers complain of having vegetables 1roz\.n in their cal- lars. R. L. Knight has moved to his cot- tage which he has been having ren- ovated. Mrs. Eva Webster, who teaches at Point J¥dith, returned to her schocl duties Monday, after spending the Christmas vacation at her home here. Bradford Sutton has returned to Usquepaugh, after a visit of seweral weeks with relatives in Providence. No services were held at the church Sunday on account of the cold. - * ‘William Sherman of Exeter was a caller here, one day recently. Mrs. Emeline Sutton is visiting her niece, Mrs. Horacé Hall, at- Lafayette, intense | HAMBURG Forty-Two Added to Red Cross Mem- bership—Christmas Festival For ‘Sunday School. Forty-iwo new members were add- ed to the local Red Cross society dur- moing the recent drive. ty-eight compresses and forty-eight knitted garments. Mr. Boss of New London Friday the work. Festival For Sunday School. A Christmas tree was New Year's eve. recitations by the children. Alfred Upham was a guest on Bill Hill the first of the week. Mrs. Lester Fowler spent the holi- th AT W, house party the homestead on T;mker Hill. Birch Brush For Mill. Birch brush has the Starling Burrell entertained mill. A New Year's dance was enjoyed by the o people Tuesday, evening. The Hosfords have Work done in.the month of D2cember was twen- chapter visited the rooms at Grange hall last and seemed weil pieased With enjoyed by the members of the Sunday school on There was music and . Mrs. Warren in, and went Tuesday to Water- - where Mr. Fowler is employed. a during the holidays. at sgun to arrive at closed their T mond and Harold Bitgood spent Christmas at the home of K. A. Peck- ham and son. Mrs. Santhe Tucker -who is ilt at the home of her son, Andrew Chesboro, is reported more comfortable. Mrs, . James. Leary is enteriainis: her mother, Mrs. Hoxie, of Voluntowr. Arba Browning lost & driving horse recently. . Never Put a Croupy Child to aDoseof Foley’s Honey and Tar Mothers kriow it stops croup because it cats the thick chok- fi mucus, clears the throat of phlegm, stops the hoarse me- tallic cough, eases the difficult ° breathing, then quiet sleep. Mrs. T. Neureuer, Eau Claire, Wis,, writes: “Foleys Honey and Tar com- Bouse on Bill Hill for the winter. P'“}:g%fg”%z:fi&z% jence that it is a wonderful rem jor . GRISWOLD toughs, colds, croup, whooping cough.” WS R D Lee & QOsgood Co. Visitor in' Local Homes—Vacation = Week Notes-and News. Rev. over Sunday. T. . Edmond, Herman Bitgood, Mrs. W. A. Edmond, Bertha Geer and Sibil | Browning attended the Christmas ex- ercis evening of last week, in Mystic and Westerly, Mr. ‘and Mrs. Geors: tic visited at Samuel Norman's re- cently. The . man friends of Mrs. of her brother. s Blsie Lord. spent Christmas at the home of her,mother, Mrs. Levie Lord. On Vagdation Visit. _Walter Truesdell. a teacher in’ New ¢ is spending the vacation at Imm( . and Mrs. George hdmond Norwich visited friends in lwn cently. WA Edmond and ferm]\ A. Livingood was entertained at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Truesdell at Preston City Baptist church Jane Lester is visiting friends Geer of Bal- White- ‘ze with her in the loss 0\ re- '1. F..Ed- 2y Ladies’ Who Wish a Toilet Cream compiexion in al- most perfect condition are invited to try the kind we ‘are offering today which: contains enough peroxide in it to make it the Ideal Cream. Dunn’s Pharmacy -:50 MAIN STREET :GEER The Piano Tuner 122 Prospect St., Pl»onc §11

Other pages from this issue: