Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
All LADY ASSISTANT Calls Answered. Promptly . Day and Night 88 Main Street WE CAN SELL Team Harness AT THE RIGHT A good line of AUTO ROBES and small lot broken sizes of FUR COATS. PRICE. . THE L. 1. CHAPMAN C0. 14 Bath Strec t. JOSEPH BRADFORD BOOKBINDER Blank Books Made and Ruled to Qrder | 108 BROADWAY I'EAI\HNG AND TRUCKING OONE VERY PROMPTLY AND AT REASONABLE PRICES A. D. LATHROP Phone 175 s —— Norwich, Saturday, April 27, 1918, THE WEATH ER The condmons in the last 24 hours have changed with great rapidity, a severe syclonic storm appeared off the South Carolina coast Friday morning and has advanced to Cape Hatteras by Friday night, increasing consider- ably in intensity. P The 'temperature has fluctuated sharply in several parts of the coun- try, the greatest change being in the, Missouri valley, where it is now thir- ty degrees to forty degrees colder than it was Thursday evening. Rain is probable Saturday from Virginia northward to New England, also in the upper Ohio valley and-the lower lake region. There will alse be rain Saturday in New England and generally fair wea- ther elsewhere throughout the Wash- ington forecast district except in the east Gulf states and Tennessee, whera local thunder showers are probable. Storm warnings are disvlayed along | the Atlantic coast from Charleston to | Boston for Saturday and Sunday North and Middle Atlantic: Moder- 1 ate to fresh east gales with rain Saj- urday, becoming west Sundpy. Forecast. Southern New England: Fair Sat- urday, followed by rain in the after- noon; Sunday probably rain. Obgervations in Norwich. The following records, repprted from Sevin's pharmacy, show the changes in temperature the barometric changes Friday: and a Ccmpnrlsons. Predictions for Friday: somewhat "mer. Triday's w athcr' As predicted. “PROTECT YOUR A. G. Thompson, F. S. FOOT SPECIAL FEET IST LICENSED CHIROPODIST MF . Cummings’ Spring Arch Support Suite 7-8, Alice Building, Norwich Phone 1366-4 Formerly of Waterbury OVERHAULING AND REPAIR WORK OF ALL KINDS ON AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, TRUCKS and CARTS Mechanical ming, Blacksmithing in all Repaire, Painting, Trim- Upnolsttv‘lnq and Wood Work. its brances. Scatt & Clark Corp. 507 to 515 North Main St. Can You Imagine ing mo than refreshing and healin- DUNN’S TO0TH POWDER. er that preserves the teeth, ctens the old at DUNNS PHARMACY VMAIN STREET “4 iL.LMM € YOUNG Sucec:sor to STETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BU-LDR-_R| . materials at Best work and prices hy skiied labor, Telephone right %2 West Main St DR. A. J. SINAY Dentist Rooms Phone 1% of BROOCHES SCARF PINS RINGS PENDANTS WATCHES, ETC. John & Geo. H. Bliss Largest Assortment DIAMOND JEWELRY BRACELET WATCHES RADIOLITE STRAP John & Geo. H. Bliss i9 Alice Building, Norwich P. SHEA THE PALACE 78 Franklin Street Del-Hoff Hotel EUROPEAN PLAN HAYES BROS,, Props. phone 1227 DR.E. J. JONES . Suite 46 Shannon Building Take elevator Shetucket Stree) Phone antrance. 26-28 Broadway DENTIST| WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus- there is no befors the public, um better ne calitmne af Tha ) TTetin Sun, Vlnon and_Tldes, f High i \mon[ | Water. ! . m, | | = h water it is low 2d by flood tide. GREENEVILLE Large Number of Greeneville School) Children in Parade—Village Briefs. There was a large delegation of Greeneville school children in the Lt erty day parade in Norwich Frid: | The pupils assembled at the school huilding at noon and marched to the i town hall, where the parade formed. | They were led a drum corps form- { ed from their own number and carried | flag and Liberty loan posters. The line contained pupils from the Greene- ’\-mc grammar and St. Mary’s schools. i St. Andrew’s Guild Meets. On Thursday the Guild of St. An- drew's met to tie quilts in the guild | room adjoining the church. During the afternoon small donations were taken sufficient to fill five comfort tags for the Red Cre Afterwards tial :irmn"r nents were a concert to augment the fund v. There were about 23 ladies present. Local Boys in Draft Quota. There were several local boys in the ota which left and many of tendered fareweil parties night. All reccived some eem from vlwlr friends be- { Tenth district dra i for Camp Upton them were tion, this quota being lfl” first wh { has not passed through the village on its wi to camp. There was a large number of local people at the station to sce the hoys off. Baptism at St. Andrew’s. On Vriday afierroon at o’clock jverett Arthur Hyland, son of James v of Attleboro, f {iie late Mrs. a2 Smith of 26 Durfee str as Laptized in St. Andrew’s clurch, Mr. and Mrs. Joar Morton ed as spo sors and U or of the church, Rev, } William H. Smith, officiated. Mem: H | bers of the family brought tO:ethCAl ! by the death of Mrs. Sclina Smith | were present. ¢ C. E. to Meet at Federated. The Norwich Christian Endeavor! Tocal Union will meet at the Feder- | ated church in Greeneville on Satu: day, May 4, at 2 o'clock in the after- noon. There will be addresses by State President Merritt J. Hopkins of Seymour, vice president, Theodore T. Phillips of Bridgeport. and Rev. C. H. Rickatts of Green le. Gets Civil Service Position. | Charles Pion, forme: a conductor on the Shore Line road, has passed the | il servige examination for book- eeper and leaves for Washington to take fip his new duties on Monday. He has the best wishes of his large circle of friends. At the Federated. Rev. William Gartshore of Newton Theological Institute, Ecsion, Mass., | will again occupy the pulpit of the Federated church, Sunday, at both morning and evening services.. i The average man doesn’t amount to | much when measured by his neighbor's standard. $100 REWARD $100 The readers of this paper will be pleased to learn that there is at least one dreaded discase. that science has) been able to cure in all its stages, and that is catarrh. Catarrh being greatly influenced by constitutional conditions requires comstitutional treatment. Hall's Catarth Medicine is taken inter. nally and acts through the blood on the ~mucous surfaces of the system, thereby .destroying the foundation of the disease, giving the patient strengih by building up the constitutin and assisting nature in dolng its work, The proprietors have so much faith in the curative powers of Hall's Catarrh Medicine_that they offer One Hundred Dollars for any case. that it-fails to cure. Send for lst of testimonials, ’Address F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo, Ohio. Sold by all druggists, 75c. i GAGER Fumeral Divector | and Embalmer “Prompt servicedayor night Shetucket River Rose to Great Height—Freshet Expectod—- : Centl;l Wharf Iron Bridge Nearly Completed-g—Dredg- ing the Thames River. — In Norwich fifty years ago the She- tucket river rose to great height ‘and it was expected that a freshet would oceur. bridge at Central wharf was nearly compieted and the dredging of the Thames river was about finished. An employe of the paper mill at Palmer- town was thrown about a shafting and his injuries resulted in his death. Extracts from The Bulletin's files of '68 follow: April 20, 1368.—The Shetucket river has been on another “boil” for a day. or two, but is becoming more quiet. The current on Saturday was very rapid and an unusual number of whirlpools and eddies were formed iaround the rocks between tlie Laurel Hill and the covered bridges. Some people anticipated a freshet, but it did not materialize. A piece of woodland a short dis- tance south of Hardscrabble, West Side, belonging to George W. Geer, wus burned over Sunday afternoon and a large lot of valuable timber was destroyed. Some boys playing in the grass set it afire eithen by design or through carelessness. Propesed Railroad Line. April ‘21, 1868.—A’ noticeof petition is published for the incorporation of a company to build a branch railyoad from the Norwich and Worcester at a point in Jewett City to the Rhode Island line in Voluntown. The pro- posed line would be about eight miles in Jength and would run through sev- eral little mill villages in Griswold and Voluntown. It would also prob- ably encourage the improvement of several now used privileges in that vicinity. The assessors make internal reve- nue returns for the city of Norwich at $13,325.68. The fish markets are better supplied with fish than at any time for the past few months. Clams and oysters have appeared again in the markets at rea- sonable prices. The clams and oys- ters have been hard to get owing to the extreme winter. The coal market is well stocked and the price has dropped off from &0 cents to a dollar per ton. The work of laying water pipes in v is going on rapidly. A force 1gaged in East Broad street The work of building an iron .and the pipes .on. Warren Street are lajd and up the hill on Franklin to Bast Broad street. Iron Bridge Nelr‘y Complete. April 23, 11868—The new iron bridge over Central wharf to' replace :the structure which “slumped” last fall and was buried in the.bosom of the Yantic is fast nearing completion. It is expected that the carpénters will complete their work this week. The bridge has pregressed, thus far so rapidly as to call forth words of com- mendation on ail sides.’ ”* AMr: Rogers of New York, in com- pany with a friend from ‘this city, caught 137 pounds of trout from .a | pond in the southwestern - part of Stonington recently. Dredging the Thames. April 24, 1868—Two dredging’ ma- chines are now employed on the east side of the river at a point between the two rolling mills. . They are taking up from 600 to 766 tons per day and will finish excavating thig particular spot, which is the shoalest in the river, inside of two weeks. E 'There have been many swindling operations going on in the city and on Thursday detectives from New York to take over the local situation see if they can round up the crew that is working in this city. Fatal Accident. - 1868.—Solomon ' Woodman- employe of Robertson's paper Palmertown, was so severely injured Thursday afternoon that he died. He had been mending a: belt and when he started the machinery his hand became caught in a wheel and he ‘was whirled about the shafting. His arm was wrenched from his body ang he bled to death. The roof of the Shetucket foundry on Franklin street caught fire Fri- day afternoon. The blaze was extin- guished before any amount of dam- age was done. The need of another public han has long been felt in this city. John Stéi- r, proprietor of the Germania hotel, planning to erect a large building near the Norwich and Worcester rail- road. The hall will take up the uj portion of the .building, while of will take up the remaining space. A | April 25, see, an at floor iSCHOOL CHILDREN IN LIBERTY DAY PARADE More Than 2.200 Boys and Girls in Pa- triotic Demonstration. Evidently . there were none Norwich school, children who to play “hookey” from their on Friday afternoon for their Day demonstration. The: there, the grades from th of the wanted parade Liberty one of the more th one hundred per cent. American. Over their lines on banners they carried aristocracy and the appe: the Americans at home to back up Uncle Sam by buying Liberty bonds. It ‘was one of the finest and largest pvarades of school children that the town has seen. In well kept ranks bravely along, an every shoulder, dren stretching they marched American flag over and the smallest chil- sturdily out to match of the larger ones s the spirit was wili- ing but lhfl legs werg_short. School Superintendent J. Gra- ham, who had made the arrangemen for the patriotic demonstration on the part of the school children at the “u,,x,(‘fll(\n of the Liberty loan com got the line un- after the ap- ,;omtsd time of 1 o'clock from Union square, procecding down and over ihe line of march that brought them back again into Union square for the bri; ng exere Sergeant Kane with Policemen Dris coll, Diveto and Allen made the police -'uam at the head of the parade and the Italian band furnished the mu out 100 uniformed v immediately behind the band and the boys and girls from the Norwich Free Atademy, with Prin- cipal H. A. Tirrell and several of the teachers at their head, were the first| school representatives. Superintend- (;rL am marched with Principal The seai of the state of €on- necticut was carried at the head of the Academy section/ and there was also an American eagle with red. white and blue streame that were held by three girls. Make the Hun Run, Do Your Bit, Buy a Liberty Bond, were some of the banners they arried. Hebrew young men of th chool carried a Zionist flag made hy Mrs. Charles Gordon. Broadway schoo! brought the word, If You Cannot Fight You Can Save. Another banner said Come Across or the Kaiser Will. Broad street school carried Liberty hond poste: d she Tobart avenue: school spirit was given in Follow Us, Buy Bonds. St. Patrick’s parochial school made a particularly fine appearance, carry- ing a white and yellow banner at the head of their section with the name cf the school on it. They had their own drummer too, and the girls all wore white dresses with blue sashes and caps with red, whitz and blue bands. St. Joseph’s parochial school also had its own drummer to lead the more than 200 children of that section. The girls wore Liberty caps. A little Uncle Sam in full uniform { Taarched at the head of the Greene- > school, whic] also had a drum corps of four and four of the girls dressed as Red Cross nurees. Our record 5534 Thrift Stamps, said one of the banners and another was up to the minute with a reference to the Zeebrugge raid. A dozen boys of the school carried a big American flag. St. Mary’'s parochial school made a liberal showing of Liberty loan post- ers. The Occum school carried its name on a gold lettéred banner and the Falls school also carried a school han- ner and the slogan Invest in Victory. Mt. Pleasant street school spoke up for the navy with a navy poster bear- ing the picture of a girl and the words, Gee, I Wish I Were a Man; T'd Join the Navy. Pearl street had a good number of representatives with Liberty bond posters and the girls wore Liberty skull caps. ‘Wequonnoe school children did no- ticeably good marching and the West Town street boys amd- girls carried Liberty bond posters as did the Yan- tic school children. . Two prettv banners with the ini- tials N.. P, D. 8. were carried by the pupils of the Norwich Private Day School. After covering the line of march through Main street to Burnham square, back to Washington square and then back to Union square through Church street the marchers were massed in' Union square. - Here they made a wonderfully pret- ty picture as they waved their flags, recited the pledge to the flag and sanz Amerfea, 1 2,200 in line a} Broadway |3 . LESLIE GAGER WRITES FROM FRANCE Bears Witness to High Charaster of Men of U. S. Army. Writing from a base hospital in France, Dr. Leslie Tracy Gager, form- of The Bulletin reportorial staff, bears witness to the high quality. of the men in the American Bxpedition- ary force who have come under his ob- servation in hospital work. He writes as follows: Base Hospital 18, A. E. F,, France, March 26, 1918: Dear Mr. Oat: A day or two age a from you and Mrs. Oat made. its arance at our company post office, I can assure both of vou that it vas highly appreciated and that its contents are pleasing to a number of palates get more or less weary with the nomncux—though abund- » Although rather in a. quartermaster’s everything was in ex- *ellent condition. is half @ vear, T think, since ¥ last te you,-and during this time many things have happened, most of them having little of the spectacular but of fundamental importance in preparing for what now just ahead of us. We have seen hospital wards spring up al- most by magic in this little valley all IS ettt b i along with infantry and engineers, the . { colored troops of a draft regiment be- ing our latest arrivals. The newcom - stay a while and train, and s on, leaving us behind. I have been in the zone of advance—so- calied—si 1ith-—and my first ervice chevrons fell due on Jan- 11th. There are not many in'the ho are ahead of us—just a few out of Pershing’s First -di- sion who marched in Parls on July ith and then came up here a week ahead of us. In a professional way the past few months have been particularly illum- inating to a young medical student to ward work and the close touch h a wide variety of very human pa- tients. The more I see of the rank and file of our Expeditionary Force, the higher opinion goes up. They.are a splendid body of men. I think of men T had on my medical ward -last fall— There was a powerful chap who could hardly speak English and we thought he was pretty poor material until we learned he had seven languages other than ours on his tongue, was an ex- cavalryman of a famous Russian troop and had come to New York a year or so ago, only to get drawn hack into 3 n. Opposite him was an- other trooper—a sergeant in the Head- quarters troop of a division that has lJong since been at the front. He was a Harvard graduate, the son of a dis- tinguished PBoston physician, and was learning the cotton manufacturing business when the guard was called out—and soon after—quite unexpect- edly put en ship—while ostensibly on the way to 2 southern training sta- tion—and brought over. Next was a Brown man, the manager of a fac- tory—the Page and Shaw candy fac- tory to be ct—and next to him was another chap who .couldn't talk good English—though he could Italian and French, and was a competent bridge worker. and so it went down the ward. My old medical ward, there will never e another like it, with our fights and arguments over .diagnoses. " and our glory in siccesses, and our sOrrows, too, for not all who die for their coun- try fall in th trenches or over the top. Will not forget the vyoung en- gineer, a Boston Tech semicg and son of a millionaira who struggled so des- perately and so. bravely to ‘the last with a broncho-pneumenia that under the conditions of TFrance became al- most & new disease entirely. Nor one of my own classmates and best friends who, while working in the hospttal laboratory got in a way we've never fathomed—an oyerdose of typhold bacilli. He ran a most severe course of the fever. The night we discovered his first intestinal hemorrhage is in- delible in my mind.. Tt was Decem- ber, cold beyond freezing. It was -a clear star-lit night, the Boche came over on an air raid, every light in the camp went out. We had to work with a feeble lantern; we made our dis- covery with the aid of a match later, there was a perforation, wi within two hours: but he last week I got ‘a letter from his mother out in North Dakota—full of gratefulness for what little we'd done almost heart-broken, but ve: proud of her son in France. But I'm way off the track with these hospital happenings of what is going on outside. Well, we don’t know much maore about the war than - vou' do— but facf o But aver on o o n.l‘flea! erous. my prbnnt ward—which exm and wrist. It by ‘a Boche shell; all Uxesummshxdmdowutoclean He was a blacksmith before the w.{w, but he's not worrying ‘about the ‘war. In his blouse he carried a letter to Col. Theodore. Roosevelt and in it Cap- tain Archie Roosevelt tells his ser- gunts story and recommends him for a one-armed job. After -that pnrucuhu- hospital train came in’the other day from an evacua- ii:;x hospi r clearing station up ind.the lines, I found a little bright | faced chap running around thé ward In 2 big, mulatto colored sweater. You couldn’t _help asking him where he got that - szufl * and the reply, with some, pride was: that Captain Archie gave it to.him. He was Capain Roose- velt's: orderly. . They were wounded in ‘the sams “strof.” The orderly got a shrapnél wound.in the shoulder, but Archig hit in the knee by a shell fmgment and had his upper arm frac- tured by another. The Boche barrage kept him for fourteen hours from get- ting to the opemuug _station, where the operator, of cne of them, was my ward surgeon. who went up thh a “surgical’ team" several weeks And we story is told that “Archie” hau ordered a new uniform to replace that cut up by the shell. We expect him to| be removed to this base as soon as he can be moved. But this morning I had his orferly clezning out my office. ,|back to a vintage before the war. We Apart from hospital life, where we see as great adiversity of creatures and conditions as you do in newspdper life—my' lafest patient on_ the ward ‘was 2 lion-tamer on the 0ld days and has a lot of good stories on his tongue's end—and there is: even better copy. from the chaps who are back from the trenches—I have one chap whose wounds are from a grenade in the German trenches, that means over the top and past. the wire through No Man's Land and’then the Boche lines and a.fight in the dead of night. Apart from what we see and hear and do on the” wards, “thefe is the army life of a military post, so welliordered by bugle call and the rule of what we can and what we cannot do that terrible days are plainly -ahead of us whin we g'-t back, spies’ la guerre est finie, “op our own.™ - But for us, in a wonderful- ly. beautiful valley .away over in the T | northeast corner of France in ihe cen- €S | ter of a-region that is renowned in the history of all Burope, there are many things around us to make this present intensely interesting and worth while. The other afterncon’I set out in front of a peasant home, the lodge of the forester of a great chateau, high up on the hillside at the edge of the woods. with' the valleys stretching out below. one after another, until far away a line.of hills cut off the view. Bevond that, the-battle line. We had rambled over the country-all the aft- ernoon, had. stopped. to chat with peas- ant and poilus, had run into a group of artillervmen back .cn vepos after hard campaigns in the Champaign and at Verdun—had . skirted a liftle red roofed vigage at:the foot of the moun- tain and then'climbed up to the 15th century -castle at its summit we heard the story of its founding centuries ago by the brother ‘of a nearby abbol the chateau remains but there is not a trace of the anclent monasto: we visited the chapel and saw the effigies beneath — which are buried the an- cestors—chevaliers and fair ladies of old France; we heard how the prince of our: day is off at the front as a commandant. I'rom the battlements we logked up the valley to:a shrine that is famed through the world—the com- monplace little village where a peas- ant girl was born to lead armies to victory. Then from this grandeur of the past, we went down'to the humble hospitable lodge of the forester, where he and his wife prepared us 4 meal of potatoes, fried as the French love| them in France, and ‘ometlette and ham. There was also one last big yel- low apple, the gole suryivor of the win- ter, and of wine a hottle that went ate in a mose charming kitchen— small' pained- windows—things of the hunt onthe walls;, an 6ld grandfather clock ticking behind us; almost all of the picture might have been very much the sime a bundred years ago— or two hundred: It was a picture of peace—that home and that valley, but they had paid a price at Verdun and as T sat in front of that peasant home, a squagron of aeroplanes flew down the yalley, and troop trains and cars bearing "fiield pieces and munnitions and supplies rolied frontwards. There are many places already in some day—to sea people and places when the burden of the heaviest war in history is no longer on them. Th2 home of this forester is one of them There: is another home half-wap up 2 stecp road that -leads: to a village on top of a hill that kings fortified in years past as a citadel against ene- mies of the plain. - There is a little group of boys.and Acls in a town onlv a.few miles behind the lines. I'd like to see them grown up—every. one of them has a. father a prisoner of war in Germany. Their homes: were occu- pied by the Boche in the early days of 1914. There is a restaurant in the shadow of a-great cathedral in a great city that was bombed three . times in a night when T tried to slzep there on a'visit in the army one, and in it, T ate some of the most d=liclous meals I've had in my life. a dictionary when' you get Nome to find out what you had eaten and the saying is—the nearer the trenchey, the better the food. At home within the grounds of ovr the soldier, sick and well, ‘in =ood spirit. The Y. M. C. A. and Red Cross “hut” is a busy place—serves manv purposes. T've been trying for about four nights to get this letter written over at the “hut” It was interrupied that many ‘ times—and I'm finishing it now on a rainy Saturday afternoon. One night there was a lot of music. The next night there was a lecture by a chap named Butcher, on the Savages of New:Guinea. I thought after serv- ing in the “front office” of The Bul- letin T-could write through that. But he-was-a bleonrip’ Britisher and much too good to miss. Last night there was a lecture cn “Gas” and. we had to go to that—after a hospital train full of "gas” “gag” patients the other, day, were in- terested. I think I must have taken a vacation the other night—or written— somebody else. But it shows how busy things are. We've had Elsie Janis and Wil Trwin “and-a general or two— Many celebritles ‘and ‘much entertain- ment. But'the comonest question that, T- hear—it begins when .2 man has been here for a bout two days and his state ‘of health doesn’t seem to count much with ‘him—is. - thls question* “When'll I get hack to my company?® The company's. the thing. LBESLIE T. GAGER. ' NORWICH TOWN Many Ilaumm -at Funperal of James D. Mutphy, Held Friday. The! funerdl: of. .hmes B. Murphy wasg- held' at 815 Friday morning from kis home on Otrobando avenue. At 9 o’clock, ‘a mass of .requlem ‘was cele- brated. the - Sacred - Heart S¥the offer- France to which I want to come back ! You had to consult] hospital. there are many things to keep ! NERVOUS SI[:K - HEADAGHES “FRUIT-A-TIVES” Brouz‘ll W ThF'mthHsTrde TWith or Without Gas Attah: ments” but “Always “EFFICIENT and ECONOMICAL— MODEL RANGES We furnish Repairs for ail makes & FEBRY irneet T. F. BURNS HEATING AND PLUMBING 92 Fn’nldin‘ St:eét | ROBERT J. COCHRANE PLUMB(NG. STEAM FITTING Washington € ‘Washington Building Horwich, Conn. Agent for N. B. O.-Sheet Packing ! MR. C. E. BESWICK 160 Caroline Ave., Ogdenshurg, N.¥. ] suffered a great deal for three or four years with Nervous Sick Heed- ackeand Dyspepsia. Had to take two o four seidlitz powders every other day. Tried doctors—ate bran gems— took all kinds of remedies — buf nothing did me good until T used Fruit-a-tives’, cr Truit Liver Tablets. T was relieved the first day I used them. Zhey made me weid and keep sne well, and T am always glad fo tell people of the great things ‘Fruit-a- tives’ have done for me. X have many friendsin Ogdensburg now using ‘Fruit-a-tives’ on my zecommendation”, C. E. BESWICK. IRON CASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY (0. Nos. 1% tc 25 Ferry Street Phone 581 MODERN PLUMBING is as essential in modern houses as electricity is to lighting. We guaran- tee the very best PLUMBING WORK by %xpert workmen at tho fairest prices. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At all dealers or sent on receipt of Ask us for nlxn: @nd prices. J. F. TOMPKINS 67 West Main Street tory Miss . and as_a w‘min, Sweet Day. A kley sang Pie Jesu hymn gave Some v ‘was borne , sang e were | and there was =2 large attendance of relatives and friends. The Dbeare were Jame: Mara, ‘Joseph T.ynch, Frameis Thomas Casey, John i othy O’Hea in lxle family lot in Cummings & Ring wer the funeral : ments, Whist at Poquetanuck. The Young Peoples’ Aid Society of St. James’ church, Poqueianuck, a whist at the home’ of M Sauer, 3 7. B WILLIAMS, JR., General Agent. F. H. KENYON; Sperial Agent. GEORGE N, DELAP, Special Agent. Hartford, .Gena. on Thursday e & Haven was largely attended. The first prizes f V¥ York - Now TS. John H. Tavlor, Jr., an r and the consola- - x| DR R, J. COLLINS DENTIST 148 Main Street, Ncrwich, Conn. Phone 11723 Miss Telen | l Hiee vielen [45aThS MARRIED i Wh STANTON — COLRINS — Tn Mys 0 April 24, 1918, by Rev. Oscar Buddington, William . Stanton ar Miss Jennie G. Collir wants a | DIED i » BROWN - Tn Lebanon : Fredezick: J. B 8 11 ; P Victrola? Weil, we can show you a plan whereby the Ts.|expente of a few cents a day you ean own ene of the Gest Vistrolas in the world. (Cut out and mail eoupon today) (PLAUT-CABDEN BUILDING) 135-M3 Main St. Norwish, Coan. Pieasé' send me catalogue and fist Cescribing the conditicns, prices, terme amd full particulars . re- garding your easy payment plan. Namo_ Street. Funeral servi home of her mother. b:ev- 41 Hami At Apri Maplewood cemetery BELDEN—In Danbu CHIROPRACTIC ADJUSTMENT 64| Is a natural health method which en- ables nature to restore® your ' Health | more effectively and premanently than {any known health method. No medi- cine, surgery or osteopathy used. Chiropractic Institate J. 0. Zimmermann, A. T, CARD OF THANKS imdersig illness Fielding. | Also those who sent FAMILY _OF FIELDIN owers, ELIPHALET P. MR; Licensed Dr. of Chiropractic . .220'221 Thayer Bldg., Norwich, Cann. POWER CONSTRUCTION AND SUPPLY COMPANY ENGINEERS and CONTRACTORS Power Piping, Heating and Vantilatin, Mill Repair Work Promptly Attended ’te OFFICE, ROOM 112, THAYER BLDG. CARD OF THANKS, We wish to thank our friends and neighbors for the many acts of kind- ness and sympathy shown us during our recent by vement; also for the flowers sent to the funeral 2 \fl'q I C. I)"(L D, RS, F. P\‘LTI GTON, MRS, T. J. Church & Allen 15 Maip Street FUNERAL - DIRECTORS Dr. Alfred Richards DENTIST Office Hours: AN 9-12 a. m—130 to 5 p. m. 2 Wed. an? Sat, Evenings 7 Room 205 Thaver Building Tel. 299 Residence tel.’ 12¥5 Lady Assistant Telephor.e 323-3 HENRY E. CHURCH WM, SMITH ALLEN FLOWERS Biooming Plants, Cutflowsrs, Swest Peas of exceptional quality. Floral Designs for Funerals, Wedding Dec- orations. - Visitors welcome. P. VER STEEG, Florist. 57 Lafayette Street Telephone 7€0 | Now is ’thé,_time to find out how good ihe Falis Auto Paint Shop wil paint your auto... FALL§ AUTO PAINT SHOP 51 Sherman Street \ | i Shea & Burke 41 Main Strezt Funeral Directors