Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 7, 1918, Page 3

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INSURANCE ~~INSURANCE FOR EVERYTHING INSURABLE A L. LATHROP & BONS Norwich, Conn. 8 Shetucket Street " Insure against fire TODAY —for stoves, heating plants, etc., are now in operation greatly increasing the fire hazard. ISAAC S. JONES Insurénce and Real Estate Agent Richards Buiiding, 91 Main Street PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. CALL UP 734 With or Without ments but Always and ECONOMICAL— MODEL RANGES Wae furnish Repairs for all makes of Ranges A. J. Wholey & Co., 12 FERRY STREET Gas _Attach- EFFICIENT Phone 581 s essential in modern hou electricity is to lighting. tee the very best PLU by expert workmen prices. Ask us for plans and prices J. F. TGMPKINS 67 West Main Street as We guaran- BING WORK at the fairest "T. F. BURNS HEATING AND PLUHBING 92 Franklin Stres ROBERT J. COCHRANE GAS FITTING, PLUMPING, STEAM FITTING hingior Sq., Washington Building MNorwich, Conn. Agent for N. B. O. Shest Packing IRON C ASTINGS FURNISHED FROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY Co. Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry Strest ARE YOU OBLIGED to clear your throat often and do you wish you didn't have to. Just fry some of our BRONCHIAL LOZENGES and see how they clear away that thick feeling in your throat. 15¢ a box at DUNN'S PHARMACY 60 MAIN STREET New York & Norwich Lie - Hart Transportation Corp. Telephone 1450 Leave: Chelsea Dock, Norwich, Mondays and Thursdays at 4 P. M. Leaves New York, Pier 55, East River Wednesdays and Fridays at 5 p, m. F. V. KNOUSE, Agent You are sure of PROMPT SERVICE HERE for we have adequate STEAM EQUIPMENT, BEST MATERIALS and the real skfll that insures prompt satisfactory service. T, J. HEALY, Varquerite Bld'g, . Norwich, Ct. Madisow Square Garden, New York, Dec. 7.—The first serlous injury to a| * rider in the six day bicycle race this year occurred late last night on the last lap of the sixth sprint. McNdmara GEES TEAM WINSBY S TWO CLOSE SCORES ing its games by 3 and & 's team in the Elks duckpin i ent ook two out of three and the tried ‘to get through -to the front and |day night. The losers made their best crashed into Fred Weber's whetl. Both riders. were pitched down the banked track and it was found that Weber:| had fractiired his. nose so badly that he ‘will not be able to continue in the race. His .partner, Ray Eaton, has until 3 o’clock in the morning to find another teammate. McNamara escaped with a few scratchés. He and his mate, Magin, won four of the sprints tonight and are leading the field with 363 points scored in the sprints. Madden and Corry have 301 and Grenda and Hill are third with 231. At midnight the Weber and Faton team was officially declared out of the race. ‘The midnight score for 120 hours was 2058 miled and 4 laps. Seven teams were tied at this distance. Three other teams were one lap be- hind and the Bowker brothers were three laps behfnd the leaders. The record for 120 hours is 2,349 miles and 2 laps, made by Moran and McNamara in 1914, TO END SHIPYARDS’ RAIDS ON PLAYERS New York, Dec. 6.—The TUnited States Football Association threatens to deal harshly with shipyards oth- Ictic associations which have been ! iug star professional soccer players from league and cup competition clubs throughout the country with offers of easy jobs at “wages” as great as $21 per day in the case of a certain Brook!yn drydock club. Organized soccer football has had to deal this year with a coadition much the same as that which confronted or- gunized baseball in its late. abbre- viated season. Then diamond stars in great numbers were jumping.to muni- tions plant and shipyards baseball clubs. Soccer has had 1o contend with this difficulty since the 1914-15 seasou or the first year of the European war for ‘the kicking game was the first to be fostered by the shell-making and shipbullding «plants. ‘Baseball was taken up generally by these industrial establishments only lust summer. But the practice of tampering with signed soccer players by. agents of shipyards and steel plant teams did not reach & _propor- tions until this fall, when the soccer roanagers of the plants scemed to pat- tern after the baseball managers in thelr practices. ‘While frowning on the business of approiching signed vlavers, football's governing officlals did not act at once. They inclined to the belief that with the end of the war the "cvil would abate. They falled to recognize until recently that shipbuilding would 2o on indefinitely on a' large scale. Ther. came a sudden awakening when it be- come known that shipvards soccer managers were signing players 1o two and three-year contracts. to get.the decision in the middle game of the match, when Heath put up the high single of 115, but Hutchinson and Gee more offset when they each rolled strings of 100 or more, One man was absent on each team. TEach was credited with a score of 75 all through. The score! { % Gee's Team. Hutehinson 83 100 - 81— 284 Keating 80 87T 75— 245 Gee. wase . 84 110 81~ 275 *Hayes .., 7516 75— 225 322 32 3151009 Thompson’s Team. Madden 82 88 89--239 Heath . .81 115 98— 274 Thompson S1 88 95— 234 #Collins . %7 75— 2% 319 268 E‘x’—lfllfi *—Not rolling. Ali-Stars Win From Riverview. " The All-Stars from this city took two out of three games nnd the‘match from the Riverview duckpin team at the alleys at the Norwich state hos- pital on Friday night. The scores: Riverview. 96 91 89 84 9”7 109 95 30 110 1%3 527 506—14%4 Burdick 106— 328 J. Morley . 76— 285 Andrews 89— 301 Peckham - 97— 302 Follenius 119— 335 431--1529 Day Men Win Duckpin Match. The day men and the night men of the rifling departments at the Marlin- Rockwell Friday night. The match vent to the day men, two games out of three, The scores: Day Men. Pickeri: 88 Moll 92 Shea . 80 Bedat . 73 75 Bartlett 80 90 W24 405 Night Men. T 84 60 88 £ 84 Conrad 8 399 The sport season is over. day bixe race is on. FINANCIAL AND COMMERGIAL MARKET WAS DULL. New York, Dec. 6—Tradng in the stock market today, the cullest ses sion of several weeks, W: gain lim- ited fo specialties, notably tobaccos, at extreme advances of on= to five points. The movemernt in th: quarter was traceable to professional interests and derived its impetus from a revival of rumors suggesting a er Bf the better known manufacturers and pro- ducers. Irregular advances wera registered by other specialties, such as heet sugar. American Linsee¢ Common and i rred, Studebaker and American Woolen. the iatter scorins n material gain prior to publication of the declar- atien of the “extra” d : Rails vere a negligibic quality throughout. 1gart from the strensth of Canadian d several of the low priced western and southern is- sues and sicels, coppers and oils fluctunted a irregulor limits, Shippings favored the b 1ccou although ) eacerd fowards the close in c » rumors of unforeseen obstacle e proposed sale of the i tonnage to the Uni vernment. Sales amounted to 235,006 shares. Aside from the retenticn of regular dividends by the metal pro- ducers and ng of call money there was the dav's news to stimulate or outside interest. The investment, unsettled by a ‘con heavy sellinz of Lil tax exempt 3 1-2's 1. decline of 5 per cent. i best, while the fourth 4 lished yet another minin Total sales, par value, 700,000. Old U. SR. bo: altered on cail. = further the the of honds a7 P~y STOCKS. 100 Adims Fxoress 1006 Adv Romely 200 Adv_ Rumely pr . 300 Afax Rubber . 200 Alusks Gold A 2100 Alacka Juneay 5100 Allls Chalmers 400 Allis _Chalmer 200 Am 4000 Am. 2100 Am 200 Am 600 Am 500 Am 400 Am 00 Am 200 Am 100 Am 9500 Am 1400 Am 200 Am 100 Am 4200 Am 80 Am 200 Am 100 Am S 7190 Am 110 Am 1200 Am. 200 Am 5800 Am 20 Am o Sumatrs, pr Tl & Ta . T pr now Woslen Woel pr ' 600 Balt & Ohio 00 Balt & O pr 200 Barratt Co. 100 Batopilas 3 1900 Beth Stel B 200 Reth Steel '$ pr Nekiyn BT 200 Rooth Fish 100 Bams B 300 Rrunswick 200 Butte Cop & 3 . 520Cal Petl .. 1300 Cal Petml pe 8GN & S 200 Cae & VY 200 C St P 3 180 ¢ 8t P30 700 Chile Coppe: 900 Chino Con C 200 Col Gas Hlec 100 Compt Tab 500 Consol _ Gs. 200 Cont Can 100 Cont Can 100 Cor % gt 1060 Cuba, 109 Cuba 100 Del & 2008 Daen - 700 Gen Mot 500 Granby 09 Groen. C 60 Int Agd v 2600 Ins Copper 1099 Inier Cou .. Tuter Con D Har Com Mer_ Ma: ¢ 3 Mar 3 Paper . Nickel 1760 Kenneeott . 100 Lack Steel Lehigh Valley 0 Midvale 03 & St 700 Mo K Mo Pac 200 Pacific M 1400 Pan Am P 560 Phila_Co 200P CC&SL 1400 Pleres Arzum 20 Plerce 0Nl 200 Sinclair_ Ol 5200 South Pacifie 800 Southern Ry 200 South By pr 0 Studebaker 200 Stutz Motor 100 Tean C Chem 10900 Tex Pacg: . 500 Texan Co. .. 10500 Tobacco Pr 100 Traos & WV Steel 200 Union P . = 100 Tt Ty Tnvest WUSCIP&F . 24, wiidling 23,75, last loan 5 S-4 Ttank accep CHICAGD GRAIY MARKET. irx, plant met at duckpius ‘ond tch from Thompsoi's team on Fri- |- FLASH LIGHTS, BULBS, DRY CELLS, BATTERIES, AUTO LAMPS, TIRE CHAINS, READING LAMPS, GENUINE EDISON MAZDAS, ELECTRIC LIGHT BULBS, ' WELSBACH MANTLES ATON CHASE COMPANY 129 MAIN STREET, NORWICH THINGS WORTH KNOWING ABOUT TRAPSHOOTING By Peter P. Carney. It is always in season. 1t is not a proxy sport. It makes better citizens. It is a sport with a purpose. 1t is the most -widely advertised eport. 1t is sports. Twelve cltles have municipal traps. There are 35 trapshooting leagues. There hasn't been a serious accident in_its history. More money is invested in it than in any other sport, golf excepted. 1t is the king of outdoor sports. ) SPORTING NOTES. Military * training should be bined with college athletic Presdent J. G. Schurman of declares. He advises five i week military and athletic training for all students with intramural competition between class and class, college and college and other exist- ing units. “The whole could, it is be- lieved,” he says, “be organized and conducted in a way that would grat- ify the natural impulses of young men, awaken and sustain their inter- est and displace the vast amomally of organized intercollegiate athletics with its handful of highly trained players, its show games, its elaborate and - costly agencies and parapher- nalia, its gate receipts, its serious in. terference with work of students, i betting-and gambling and its conspic- ‘yous misrepresentation of the proper function and service of the universi- ties in the life of the nation and hu- manity.” Sturgis Pishon, former quarter- back, has made the supreme sacrifice over there in the great world war. Dartmouth’s smallest quarterback was a star. He knew no danger. Like a real gridiron warrior, he often was called upon to bring down opponents much larger and heayier than him- self, but he never shirked. While Dartmouth has added many golden stars to its flag of glory, nome will outshine that which is to honor the name of Pishon. Meeting his death falling from an airplane in France was typical of the little man, and more than one silent Wah! Hoo! ‘Wah! will be given in his memory by the sons of Eleazer Wheelock— Boston Herald. Pittsburg charges it was “jobbed” in that 10 to 9 reverse at the hands of the Cleveland naval reserves Sat- the fastest growing of all the com- activity. Cornell hours a grday. Strong remarks are beine made about the officials. Coach Glen Warner asks:,“Why did = Ray, the referee, declare the second period at an end just when my team was on the Sailors’ one-yard line and five minutes yet to play? And why did he make them play 26 minutes in the last' period to allow the Sailors to score? Jim Marks of Kiski kept the time, as the local timekeeper claimed his watch was broken. The whole thing looks fishy enough to be crookel and T hopg it will be straightened out.” The schoolboy football game Sat- urday between Scott high of Cleve- land and Marblehead high is sure to attract considerable attention. Mar- blehead has won all its games this season but its opponents were soft. However, that school team is credited with being even better than its record. The Great Lakés football team has turned down all challenges. No more games will be played until the team NORWICH FAMILY MARKET FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Head Lettuce, 15|Egg Plant, 25 Celer. 15|Red Bananas, -~ 70 Hothouse Dates, 12-15 Tomatoes, 20|Parsiey, 5 Cabbage, 5|Lemons, 45 CGarrots, Caulifiower, 25 oufavle, 1b., Sliint, " toms, 10 mions— nish_Onions, White, 10 !X;\e& doz., 15 Bermudas, 8{Garlic, In., 25 Potatoes, pk., 70|Figs, - 20 Yellow Bananas, 40|Muslirooms, 1b., 75 Grapefruit, 6-13(Table Apples, Turnips, pk., 5l doz, MEATS, Pork— Forequarters, Spareribs, 44| Cutlets, Shoulders, 33| Chops, Smoked Hams, 44[Inside Round, Smoked Shoulder Stealk, Shoulders, - 32{Lamb— Smoked Shoulders, _ Tongues, 42| Legs, i Dried Beef, 70| Chops, 60 Corned Beet, 13-36|Sausage, i Porterhouse Nat. Salt Pork, 38 Steals, 60| Fowls, 50 Sirloin 60|Broilers, 60 Roast, 44|Guineas; each, $1.25 Veal-- Ducks, 1b., 38 Roast, 28-40|Capon; 50 Hindquarters, 25 GROCERIES. Batter— Kerosene Oll, 15 Tub, 62{Sugar— Creamery, 65| Granulated, Cheese— 10 1bs. $1.00 Am. Cheese, Molasses— Comb Honey, Porto Rico, Eggs— gal, 80 Native, 30|{Maple Syrup, bottle, 28-53 LIVESTOCK. Cattle— Shee; Bee? Steers. i - 313.50@17.00 $15.00@20.00 Veal Caives, Hogs, $15.00@19.00 $18.40@18.90 HIDES. $13{Wool Skins, s13) b, 20 $12|Calves, 35 Wool, 58 Gory, EAY: GRAIN AND PEED. ‘orn, $3.60| Unieorn, $3.50 Oats, $2:90|Cracked" Corn, $3.75 Cornmeal, §3.65| Provender, ~ $2.50 Hay, baléq, Ground Oats, $2.50 cwt., $1.85| Barley, 33,40 Cottonseed Meal. ol Clover Teat. $238 | cwt, 8530 Dairy Feed, $2.50 Lin. 0il Meal. 33501 Giute oyt e i g goes to California, New-year's day. The Cleveland naval reserves have robbed the Great Lakes team of some attention. Glenn Warner has_surely been ' a great football coach for the university of Pittsburg. The record of that school since he became coach follows: 1915, 8-0; 1916, 8.0; 1917, 10-0; 1915, ed 902 points to 90 by opponents. ed 902 points ot0 by opponents. Big Bill Edwards says all sports will ‘boom_“100 per cent” because of [the war. He has shown a strong lik- ing for soccer because it is open and fast and predicts a great future for it in_this_country. i Jack Bgan of Providence must seek a new job. The Milwaukee club of the American association announces it does not want him as manager. {Joe Cantillon may succeed him. Stinchcomb of the Cleveland naval | reserves is another football hero. Of Cleveland’s 31 touchdowns Stinch- comb has scored 12. New Bedford has taken Boston's Iplace in the American' roller polo | league. The Massachuset soclation will have 70 dinner this year in connection with its annual meet- ng. The association looks for a busy season next year. Until this fall return football games between rival football elevens were |rather rare occurrences, but the dit- { ficulties of drawing up a schedul> and the lack of suitable opponents forced double bookings in more than one in- stance. Pittsburgh, beaten by Cleve- land Naval Reserves offers the spec tacle of not being satisfied with her defeat on Saturday and places her- self in the position of seeking ano- ther game. When a team has accom- plished a task such as the Cleveland Naval Reserves put across there is little likelihood that it will agree to another meeting, and so there was little surprise shown when it was announced that Glenn. Warner's team is not to be given the chance to play that Cleveland bunch zgainf Pittsburg occupies much the same position that Brown, after wirning from all her rivals, .finally suc- cumbed to the Colgate" tzam of sev- eral seasons back. As in many other instances, mem- Ders of the Cleveland naval reserve football team have been fovored. state golf as- FLOUR. % 3 There is no secret about the matter, They have been excused from drill, guard duty and the like, on the' aft- ernoons they have been on the prac- tice field while other members of the reserve were attending classes. 1'n- der the new orders, the football men must make up the time lost.—Cleve- land Plain Dealer. It is argued that if the major leagues agree on a player limit of 18 the grade of basebail will be faster That 1is, many of the ‘“nearby leaguers who have been carried along for Dench experiences will have t make room for those who “can” bl clubs intertl to get along with ~s few men as possible. “Most of the Pittsburz players were crying like babies as they walked slowly to the dressing room."—So says a story from Cleveland. It takes practice to cry like a baby and be- sides that sort of a crv ts not much of an improvement over the otner kind. 3 One is likely to that the averoge age of the college football player of i910 will he much differerit than that of 191S. Some must go back to high scheol to “finish out” and maybe thers are thoss Who will go to work to support their fam- lies. The Great’' Lakes football team in declining a challenge for a game de- clared it arranged its scheduic “one year aheod.” Wonder what its sched- | ule for 1919 will be. One day last month, wher: discussing pacers, Walter Cox asked for the name of the best one ha cver drove. urning towara a picture of Barie, Jr. that was hiiging on the wall, he said: “Tt looks rather rough t5 zc back on that pld gray fellow, but if the truth must be known it was Dul Rey. Sick- ness put a crimp in his clever career before the public had an opportunity to learn just how gool he was. In 1913, before he was taken sick, one day, after defeating Frank Bogash, Jr.. T worked him an extra mile in 2.03. the last badf being in 53 scconds, and he was' not «1l out at that” he_impression { 'NOTICE—JUST ARRIVED -~ Two Carloqu .°f, | BRIDAL VEIL FLOUR YOU CANNOT HAVE GOOD BREAD IF YOU DO NOT HAVE GOOD FLOUR —THIS IS THE PLACE TO GET YOUR { Charles Slosbérg and Son 3 COVE STREET LEGAL NOTICES. ATTENTION! Sidewalks The ordinances of the Clty ‘of wich impose a penalty of $5 upon any occupant or person having the land or building abutting where owner, care of an. the public there is a sidewal] paved. who fails therefrom all snow, sleet and ice with- T it shall have been| in three hours af; deposited, or within three hours after sunrise when the same shall _have ] fallen in the night season, and also g s o upon any such party who fails to have ‘Then we're engaged? ’ the snow on such sidewalk removed strictly comply decTs AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD at Norwich, witiin and for the District of Norwich, on the sth day of Decem-| _. Wpat's the matter with that he: D, 1918. yerr - ; Present—NELSON J. AYLING, Judge, uh? o state of John D. Benson, lite of| “Why does he keep vawping abdut Norwich, in said District, deceased.’' The Executrix exhibited her admin- istration account with sald estate to] . aiats th Ly Sou the Court for allowance; it is there-|3 Slam at a judge” — Kansas City fore Journal. Ongeres. gh?ytmme Jith day, of Del She—Georse, dear, here's a sclen stz Sk I the| tist who says: the carthi is wabbling forenoo the Probate Court Room : . 2 5 in the ¢ Norwich “In said District, | O ~its axis, What do you suppbes be, and hearing the same, and the said Exec s directed to.give notice thereof by publishing this order once in some newspaper having a circulation in said District, at least six days prl date of said hearing, and make return tor oper; ighways of the c . either graded to have anyone failing JAMES P. FOX, eet the same is, appointed to the Court. NELSON J. AYLING, Judge. The above and foreoging is a trus copy of record. Attest: dectd HELBEN M. DRESCHER, Clerk. [PRESS ILLUSTRATING SERVICE.NEW YORK SUCCESSOR TO McADOO Carter Glass, congressman from Virginia, whose nomination as secre- tary and treasurer, succeeding Me- Adoo, has been confirmed. Mr. Glass is chairman of the house banking and currency committee and was one of the authors of the Federal Re- serve Act, ELL ANS FOR INDIGESTION TEACHER OF VIOLIN will take limited number of “pupils. For rates apply 38 Union Street. GEORGE TOURTELLOT Musical Director at Davis Theatre ————— DR. ALFRED RICHARDS DENTIST OfficeHours: A 9-12 & m—130 to 5 p. m. Wed. an? Sat, Evenings 7-8 Room 305 Thayer Building 299 Tel. Residence tel. 1225 DR. R. J. COLLINS DENTIST ~ 2 2%, . risimas Nor- removed sanded within two hours Dbecoming 50 deposited durigg the v time, for each successive perlod of five hours thereafter that it so remaing after proper notice given. give notice to all affected by the fore- ®oing ordinance that the same will be enforced and therewith pr ime forward. This_will secuted from this Commissioner. for to the fl”’\ _ _deathless “Twas cradled in war's bl amid the roar of 1ts lullabies were shouts of Freed: S 1t 4s the old red, white and biue, 1o 1y SmBlem of The free the flag that floats above our. of liberty. . . 4 - greet it, when you meet it, T the flag that waves on high; ‘And hats off, all along the line, Wi Freedom's flag goes by. Chorus: Dncover when the flag goes 'Ix.u ’Tis Freedom's starry banmer Flag famed in song and story, Long may it wave, Old Glory, - The flag that has never known'.d ‘All honor to the Stars and Stripes, glory and our pride, ¥ All honor to the flag for which' fathers fought and died; On many a blood-stained - battl | on many a gory sea. 2 The flag has triumphed, evermore Ant shheb again mid Mot and nd since again, 'mi 8] its. :ohi‘s‘must be u{l’!ufl:g, God grant that we may Keep unstained before the worl 2 All hail thé flag we love, may 1 torious ever fly, And hats off, all along the line, Freedom's flag goes by. Chorus: 3 v 7 Uncover when the flag goes by. baye, “Tis Freedom's starry panner that you et, . aagg'z’amedT 1n_song and stors, < ng may it wave, &k The flig that has never known daf.@% —Charles L. Benjamin and George Sutton. HUMOR OF THE DAYE ] ‘olumbus boasted. 3% “These latost passengers meedm't <o stuck up, ho cried. I wasithe first man to cross the ocean in, ships.'—New York Sun. “My latest painting.” . Pe “T mever saw o sunset look, Hib i mere. copyist "—Pittsburgh Post. or 'gz ’ He was very careful.” ° that” o “Well, what do you think I am™a “My husbind considered a long time before ha proposed to “Ah, it's always those careful pée- ple. who get taken in!”—l.ondon ‘lzt- B “Of course ™ “And I am the firht girl you ever loved o, dear, but I'm harder to shit now than I used to be’—Kansas City Journal. t “Poor Maud! She got cruelly de- 3| ceived when she married that old man.” “Didn’t he have any money 4 s es, plenty of money; but he is ten years younger that he said he ‘was."—Boston Transcript. i taw- the learned judge?" ‘That's the only wa: vou can take they can do about it? George (absently)—Open the mmf- fier, roverse the lever, chut off the power, " lubricate the bearings and tighten ‘the wheel cap. — Cleveland Plain Deaver. 3 THE KALEIDOSCOPE Only one couple in more than 11,000 live long enough to celehrate. their diamond wedding. g A woman in Hartford, Conn.. has had four husbands, dll members of tfie same class at Yale. French ecientists have di that vegetable ivory can be obi from the fruit of a small palm gro prolifically in the Sudan: There were a boy of nine years, girl of 17 and a man of 7 in the cent Grand American Trapshootis Handicap in Philadelphia. Sea water will be pumped by ele- tricity and evaporated by ‘the sun a new plant that is expecled to suj ply New Zealand with almost its tire requirement of salt. Machinery for -ships in which steam turbins and an old engine coupled to each propeler, permit either kind of fuel to be used, been patented by a Swiss inventor. Agriculturs in_ Norwzy has b much changed by the war. Mo ground is now being tilled than ev before, and the country is more ind pendent in the matter of grains live stock. For the first time in 132 years services were held Sunday in the M sion at Santa Barbara, Cal, estal lished by the Franciscan Fathers $ 1796. This was on account of the fluenza. Army regulations require a man eep his hat on while armed and ruling_was upheld by a judge in New York (bunty court, alth court rules require all men to move their hats, | Because insects collect at the ! end of screen doors an inventor hal! brought out onme in two sections, pem | mitting children to enter through the{ lower section _without admitting irf | 5! A potato left over winter in sects to a house. ground in a garden at Larome, Me), Bulletin Building, 148 Main Street, Nerwich, Conn. Prone 1178 | Telephone 531-4 BUCK SAWS, AXES, WEDGES, ETC. The Household 74 Franklin Street { ! sent up. sprouts last spring and i duced 24 potatoes, all of marketablp! size but ome, and a number weighs | ing three-quarters of a pound each. & | ‘There has been incorporated | France a company, which is really §{ technical commission, for the pu: of conducting commercial operati useful in bringing about ' racomstru tion of the iron mines and steel worlg in the invaded regions. H OUR REPUTATION for fair dealing and the] high. quality of our wares is giving us a steady in- creasing patronage. Drop in and see our line of Phonographs, Watches, Jewelry, Clocks and Dia- monds. OPEN EVENINGS LEE CLEGG THE JEWELER 'Opposite Chamber of Commerce Suilding WHEN YOU WANT to put your b Iness before the public, there is medium better than through the' vertising columns vf The Bulletim. THERE 15 no advertisng medium | Bastern Connecticut equal to The ietin for.business resuits,

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