Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 27, 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)

RS Co nterfelts. ‘Read what-one of the GREATEST NHWSPAPERSINA]EBIGAM‘:O .yunthismlueot. ; “The manufaoturers of Castori=. kave been oompalledtospend hundreds of . .thonsands of dollars to familiarize the public with the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. - This has been necessitated by reason of pirates counterfeiting the Castoria trade- ‘mark, : This counterfeiting is = orime not only against the proprietors of Castoria, . ‘but against the growing gemeration, All Oastoria bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, if they would guard the health of their children. # Parents, and mothers in particular, ought to carefully examine the Oastoria advertisements which have been appearing'in this paper, and to- re- member that the wrapper of every bottle of genuine Castoria hears the fac-simile signature of Chas, . Fletcher, under whose superviston it has been manufaotured cunfinuounly for over 'dnrty years—Phiadelphia Bulletin. | . At bn v_ ',,JSD‘“” '35( 'v Exact Copy of Wrapper. Tz, GrTaun GOWPANY. NEW YORK. satisfaction.” Hoagland CENUINE Letters from Prominent addressed to Chas. H. Fletcher. Conger Bros. of St. Paul, Minn,, say: {full of merit and worthy of recommendation.” C. G. A. Loder, of Philadelphia, Pa, says: “For 20 years we have sold Fletcher’s Castoria and are pleased to state that it h.‘sl given universal The Scholtz Drug Co., of Denver, Colo., says: ‘Fletcher's Castoria has gurely become a househeld word. Seemingly every family where there are childrea uses it” & Mansfleld, the In Use For' Over 30 Year; The Klnd You Have Always Bought TAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK €17 persons should be careful to see that USE THE FARM . WOODLANDS WISELY Farm woodlands” are being upon for large quantities of timber for war purposes. There is a bif demand for logs of black walnut, white oak, lacun!! yellow birch, yellow wph.r rock elm, ash, white cedar (in the southern states), and also for the bark of chestnut, oak #nd hemlock if near tannin-extract factories. = Large, sound trees of these :peclau should be cut and marketed for war purposes, and under no considera- tion used for cordwood except as their tops and branches may be utilized for this purpose. Farm woodlands are also furnishing perhaps double the ordinary: amount of wood for fuel. This increased de- Arawh | cording to the bulletin. After a tew of Boston, Mass,, =aj: good to say about your Castoria and we do not hesitate to give it our snqualified endorsement.” Riker's Drug Stores, of New York Clty, say: of the oldest and mést popular prmnuanl in our stores. We have nothing but good to say about it.” Tol-Wilson Drug Co., of St. Louis, Mo., says: “Of the thousands of patent medicines for which we have demand there are a very few of them that we can conscientiously recommend and your Castoria is in- ciuded in this few.” D. R. Dyche & Co., of Chicago, Ills,, say: “The increasing demand for § your Castorla shows that a discriminating public is not slow to seek out a remedy of merit and once convinced that it does all and even more than claimed they do not hesitate to recommend it to their friends.” The Owl Drug Co., of San Francisco, Cal, says: “We have always been a believer in the ‘original man protection’ and have been particular never to sell anything but the genuine and original Castoria (Fletcher's). ‘We Lave many calls every day for this article from people who say they 1 not he without it in their homes.” CASTO RIA auwars mand may result in considerable and I=sting damage to the woodlands un- less precautions are taken. On the other hand, the cutting of cordwood affords each owner of woodland an opportunity to clear his land and put his timber in better condition. To accomplish this, the idea to keep in| mind is to remove for cordwood the poorer, less valuable trees, leaving the better ones to stand. In removing the fuel wood the greatest precaution should be taken not to injure the more valuable trees or the young growth. Briefly, the material which should be removed is as follows: Sound sticks lying on the groumd, including ' tops left in logging opera- tions, and trees blown over by wind, crushed down by snow or otherwise toppled over; dead trees which are sound and - still standin®; trees which are diseased, or are so serious- ly injured by insects that they will probably die; and dlso trees which are specially subject to serious disease or insect attack; crdoked trees which are crowding out straight ones; large old trees unsuitable for lumber and having | big tops which shade out numerous | smaller trees growing beneath them; small trees which are overtopped and stunted by larger and better ones; trees of the less valuable kind which are crowding good trees of the more valuable kinds; trees which by some chance are growing on ground unsuit- ed to them; slowly growing trees which are crowding out equally valu- & able kinds that grow faster; trees badly fire-Scarred at the butt, which | usually becomes rotten and are among the first to be blown over by heavy winds. The ideal trees for cordwood are those which range from four to about | ten inches in diameter. The yield of | ! cordwood from trees smaller than four; nches in diameter is very slight and | | trees larger.than ten inches in diame- | ter are usually more valuable for some | other purpose, unless they are de- fective. { ~ Drugists ‘“Fletcher's Cnxturln. is certainly “We have nothing but : “Fletcher’s Castoria is one FEED SHEEP GRAIN WHEN PASTURES BEGIN TO FAIL| By P. .. HOLDEN. | A little grain fed to the sheep in the fall, when the pasturcs begin to fail, {rate of one ton per the poultry v: nd 2 good of freshly su.ked lime Be applied, to the entire surface of the groumd, ac- days it should be plowed and then cultivated three or four times at in- tervals of a week, and finally sowed with oats, rye or other grain. . It is best to leave the ground .unoccupied by fowls until the winter has passed. ‘Afger the fowls have been returned the rremises must be frequentiy cleaned and. occasionally disinfected. 4 The drinking fountains and feed troughs must be washed every. week with boiling water or other disinfect- ant, and if any lice or mites are found on the birds or in the house, the roosts and adjoining parts of the walls should be_painted with a mixture of kerosene, cne quart, and crude carbolic acid o¢ crude creosol, one teacupful. The house may be ' whitewashed with ireshly slaked lime or sprayed wifi kerosene emulsion. In case of an act- ual outbreak of a virulent disease.it is well to add to.each gallon.of white- wash six ounces of crude carbolic acid. Good disinfectants destroy the germs of contagious diseases, thé ex- ternal parasites such as lice and mites; and in some cases the eggs 'of parasitic worms, and should be used frequently in and about the poultryhouse. LIME ON ALFALFA. The result of three years’ experi- mental work on the growing of alfalfa without lime and with different quan- tities of lime ranging from half ton acre has been announced by the New Jersey Agricultural Experiment Sta- tion. Three cuttings.were taken each year. For the first vear the highest Vield was two and a half tons, with iwo tons of ground = limestone per acre; for the second year the.highest vield was three and a quarter tons, also with two tons of limestone, fol- lowed closely with a_yield of nearly three tons on the plot that received limestone at the rate of one ton.per acre; for the third year the highest vield was slightly above three and three-quarter tons péer -acre on ,the piot that received limestone. at the acre, followed ciosely by the one that received two tons and the half-ton plot the yield @i not fall below two tons or %o much above two and three-guarter tons. During the second and third years the total yield for the three cut- tings increased ' gradually from ‘the | unlimed plot to the plot receiving the t lime, with only one exception. s0 during these two years the ave- rage percentage of nitrogen in the dry | matter” increased gradually from the i no-lime plot to the plot receiving the tmost lime, with only one exception. URGES FISH MEAL FOR HOGS. To stimulate greater interest in the {production of fish meal, which is a zood substitute for tankage in the fceding of hogs, E. Z. Russell, in arge of swine Investizations for the United States Department of Agricul- will' bring greater returns than that|lUre recently visited a number of s At T anan ihal | fisheries along the Gulf coast as well ignature of A i ieep the sheep strong |28 & number of marketing centers ‘in it and thriving | to withstand the winter. As cold | wool is of good lensth and hides the! | physical condition of the sheep. It is| | then that only the experienced sheep ! ! grower or close observer will notice | that the animals are shrining in flesh | —that instead of improving, they are really growing thinner. and in better condition || weather approaches. the | the south. Tests conducted by the de- show that fish meal is equal nz value to tankage. It con- about 7 per cent. protein. = by { arinding It is drying nonedible . fish and fine. * This meal is being {used at the government farm at Belts- jville, Md., to replace tankage. The mflnhaden fisheries on the Atlantic coast can produce annually 10,000 tons It is poor economy to withhold grain feed until snow covers the ground or the pastures are frozen. . | Mlace a trough in the pasture and feed | the sheep once a day. is dry, it is a good plan to feed the sheep ‘ear corn direct from the field. STRESS OF BUSINESS A nation’s necessity has plunged many thousands of boys and girls in their teens into the vortex of business before their time. strain upon vitality and energy and llkew1se the Many will feel the need for the nourishing and tonic virtues of SCOTTS EMULSION | A very little, taken regularly, is far more beneficial than It when taken by fits and starts. Scott’s Emulsion is concenirated nourishment that contributes to strength and helps confirm the body in vig tor end health. { « Scolt & Powse. Bloomfield nging IN THE LEAD Mrs, l{ome Pl R. Fires ching. A he prologue rea who was dr Mi: Jul spirit of ¥ Praver, pro- Con- evening M. R hour be- of pa- including solo sung Plumb, Poter, 1824 and Keep the ¥ Mrs. olo, b geant opened with the a Guild erl-«senmd the the Education, ALWAYS That's where we are with our splendia stock of feedstuffs of all kinds—Hay, Grain, Oats, Chicken Feed, Etc., Etc. —all clean and wholesome, and of the highest quality at the lowest prices such can be sold. A SQUARE DEAL EVERY DAY OF THE WEEK Chas. Slosberg & Son 3 Cove. Street cpirit of Home, Nelson The ears can be pulled or hueked, carried to the pasture, cut in two or split and scattered on the sod. sheep will gather every kernel. It will pay well, mutton, if the sheep a little bright clover or placed in a rack, either housg of stable or in the pasture. It requires much feed to keep | the sheep thriving than it does to| bring them back to good condition after they have suffered from negle: i H Helen Hop-{ :y Sherman, lotte’ Lathrop ns which included ed High, aith of Ouy’ Feople, | [ Oehir Miss 16 | | The Red « {opened this week. A Thnnksgvvmg servi { will suifer, but they will use up much! feed in maintaining their hodiiy. heat ! while drying the fleece. MEANS OF FIGHTING POULTRV DISEASE until dis- :\nd then ross rooms will not be will he held | cvening at s W. spent clean, The Christian Endeabor [u» hold a A. Bonhest of Williman- Sunday with W. Mrs. 1 society is : the chapel every -one cen asked to wear Pur- old fashioned costume, Prepara. to mak are likel: cases. try specialis of thc Ln!led St:lto Department o iculture, is to care for the flock in such a at dis- ease will not appear. rolling the ases of pou add, to learn how to prevent them ra- ther than how to cure them. To en- lighten pouliry owners as 0 the char- acteristics of the more important di cases in order that they may intelli gently use the most improved methods cf combatting them, Iarmers’ Bulle- tin 957, Tmportant Poultry Diseases, has recently been published by the department. The causes, symptom and treatment of poultry ailment from aspergillosis (brooder pneumoni: to worms, are given in this publica- tion. As all poultry is susceptible to -|many diseases, some of which are highly infectious and resist all efforts of treatment, the bulletin suggests that - " | when birds become sick it is often the Emma Lar-|best plan to kill them. The greater the number of. birds kept upon any farm or plot of ground, ani the more they are crowded together. the more important are the measures for ex- cluding, eradicating and preventing the development of the causes of dis- When a young man climbs into a|eose. barber chair to be shaved for the first| When disease appears among poul- time he feels like a bare faced fraud.|try the fowls should be removed from Delicate Children Vinol is What They Need More than eight thousand druggists recommend . Vinol because it contains in deliciously pa.latable form the oldest and most famous reconstructive tonics known to medicine. During the last sixteen years it has brought health and happiness to thou- sands of puny, ailing, anaemic children. HERE IS PROOF ‘1 used Vinol for my little girl five | *‘The wl ©old for & rundown, rervouscon- 'henulhl ition. She was thin, xmhbladlth- !Ppom frail, Mdredlllfluhne. Mtet umundb-dnol.ppeuu. In a week else had failed Vinol R e | s a 2ppe fio‘&bflm as well as ever.”'—Mrs. James H. Hall. . in flesl m%dln ot "] |Iln—nn. Hawkins are guests of 3 Harold Shellington, in Mr. and Mrs. Charl Bessie ‘Woodman with Mrs. George Keency. Miss Anna Claas: Stckes have clos ‘|home here and zone to Brooklyn, N. | Miss Maud of New York and Wallace Kelley of Yale, will join the rest of their family at the me 0! es Johnson for Thanksgiving. who wil spend of town are Rev. |Guild to Brooklyn, Larrabee to Norwich James Lathrop and Mi: rabee to Willimanti Mrs, Parsons, Miss Kent and Miss Young, who Lave been at the inn for two weeks, returned to Providenee Monday. plenlnur‘ For all sasernte or all run-down, narvous, ©old people and dallcate childrem, ¢ We should | ¥ If the weather | ' The ! in the sheep | in clos We m not let sheep stay out remains. imes were | cold, heavy s in the fall. Light| And don't forget the dam. Go over and \mJ showers no harm, but if the | it carefull; d repairsany weak spots. | ficece sets soaked, the sheep not onty | Then close ihe gate and let the pond The aim in con- | s, they | of fish meal. Fisheries along the Gult States and Mississippi River have been ufacturing as fertili- zer large quantities of non-edible fish. Russell's visit to the Gulf states | to (investizate the feasibility and ‘m urge the fisheries to manufacture {these nonedible fish into fish meal' for {swine feeding. GET THE ICE POND READY. Maybe you dom’t think that winter is here, but it is on the way and is likely to arrive most any time. This is a good time to get the ice pond ready for the winter. Drain off the | water and clean the bottom and sides of the bed with a rake or harrow. and {a hoe or scraper. See that no decayed egetation or objectionable material , examining the dam again careful- L1y for leaks. Of course, you are careful that mo contaminatien can drain into your ice pond. soon as fall work slackens, get GROWING WINTER GREENS. In the milder portions of the country it is possible by the aid of a cold frame to grow lettuce, radishes, spin- ich, kale and parsley throughout the winter. The cold frame may be any size from three feet by eix feet—this being the size of the standard cold frame cash—to six feet by any multi- ple of three feet. A four-sash frame ~—that is, one six by twelve feet—would he large enough to supply the average family with winter, greens, WATERING COWS, During the winter, when cows are stabled the greater part of the time, and unless arrangements have "been made to keep water before them ali the time, they should be watered two or three times a day. If possible, the water should be 15 to 20 degrees above the freezing point, and should be sup- plied at practically the same tempera- ture every da: DAYVILLE Mr. and Mrs. Harry Rpeearley and sons, ‘Ralph and Norman. -are to spend Thanksgiving at Fotter Hill, LT, James F. Blanchard and family had as visitors Thursday, Bdwin S. Budlong and Samuel James of Cran- ston, R. L Mrs. Arthur Bruton Ruth, spent several days socket, last week. William Mcran and Josenh Weaver who are in service in the U. S. N. R, daughter, in Woon- to' two fons of ground - limestone per | right at the ice pond. Don't put it off. | Begins WEDNESDAY, Nov. 27, at 8.45 a. m. Ends SATURDAY, Dec. 7, at 10 p. m. WE KNOW OF NO BETTER WAY IN SHOWING OUR APPfiEch'TfON""’GF o ‘FHE, PAST PA"IRONAGE REGEW.ED THAN BY GIVING TO THE WOMEN OF NORWICH AND VICINITY RARE VALUES DURING THIS CELEBRATION F OURS ON uits, Coats, Dresses, Skirt Waists, Petticoats and Furs You will see for yourselves that the Garments are MARKED EXCEPTIONALLY LOW for this time of the year, as EVERY GARMENT WILL BE TAGGED WITH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATION PRICE. Prices are too numerous to mention MILLINERY DEPARTMENT 50 REAL SMART Sport and Trimmed Hats values to $8.50 ANNIVERSARY PRICE | Your choice $2,98 FOR YOUR OWN ADVANTAGE, IT WILL . PAY YOU WELL TO LOOK HERE, BEFORE PURCHAS- ING ELSEWHERE. 194 Main Street were at their respective homes for jthe week end. Mrs. Ekjah Evans has been se- riously ill the past week. The olay, “A Dutch Dctective,” is to be given under the auspices of the Men’s club. Samuel e Berriman and famil Mr. and Mrs. id, had Jesse Berriman of Boston and Mr and Mrs. Frank Crowther of Providence. Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Greiz will spend Thanksgiving in Boston. Mi: Kate lle of Blackstone, was a week end guest of Armand Henault and famil Mr. and. Mrs. J. R. Bowen are to move to Dan’elson, Deccmber 1, Sergeant Richard Lenrer h‘um Camp Devens was at his heme here Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. F. W. spend Thanksgiting day davghter, Miss Ruth, at Hartford. Mrs. Ida J. Field and family ha? ag zmests Sunday, Misses Mary C’Lark and Ruth Arnold of Putmam Miss Helen M. Kelly will be a nnett wifl with _their - | Thanksgiving = | chard said had Thanksgivi Mrs. Helen Tucker at Ballou The Woman's Migsionary society which is waiting for orders for civi- lian goods. Ernest St erciges have b pils of All-Hallo Jean and Fred Chartier| Frivate Lester ; will meet next week Wadn: aft- {motored to Vountowa Sunday, cali-|vat [yv Are home ernoon with Mrs.” William Swainson, | ing on friend: hasting boen mven an “henorable ‘dis- with Mrs. W, C. Calvin Killian, Edgar -Dupuis and|charge on account of husiness re- i belfricnds motored to Providerce Sun-|quirements. latter's day evening. Henry Chaitier and, E Preparations for Thanksgiving ex- St. Jean are in Prbvidence spen parents at Mansfield Ce: Harold Ticld visited b Denald, in Doston one day last week. The Red Cross branch will Tmeet| this weeék on Friday afternoon, owing! to the holiday. Thanksgiving services at the Con- lzmvuu\mfl chureh = Sunday . were pleasing, “with excel)ent brother, Mrs. Myrtice E. Blanchard, has re- ceived s letier from nar som, Ser- geant Leon N. BEVch % seas, cxpressing ‘nis” appreciation of he received from hec in October which contajned .. other things a frilt cake, which ' ‘Sérgeant Blan- mmkrc hemey oflor “'E of tho a‘»Goverlnr of Iowa; for- 2ble as organic iron—Nuxated - mer United Tron,” says D: formerly physician (Outdoor Dej ‘Westchester. Iron often’ endurance. of peple i two weeke’ time. '] eing nse B ...mfi. including such. ; MO Mr. and Nrs.'Vd u’?tm _motored to

Other pages from this issue: