Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 7, 1919, Page 8

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8 : o : ' UESORY, INNUXRT™Y, 1819 Power Co. Erecting High Tension Towers Franklin Square M“F‘,LN“ Vo ¥ Bl =\ Y "| ) NORWICH | thlllll fl.fl‘ .15 U L ‘Without doubt one of the largest | state, with authorized capital stock hllmm'fl[hmmumnnn"' it R il construction projects in this vicini- | of $2,375,000, compares favorably 1y in some years is the construction | with the figures for the like week of the million dollar power p‘.:ubxdt for | of prgccd;m: Y:amk,mwtm!e the‘ rec- the Bastern Power company at Mont- | ord of ve ~bankruptcy petitions, i | i ville, This plant is being constructed wtilh‘lla.;)ilmzz of $68.345 and assets i h|muuml"llmmmfl huuihlum ww the I\ T. Ley Construction compa- | of 37,734, loes not rary eatly #% of Sprintfield, the contracting firm | from the fizures for the corrcgpont S I LIVE STORE that made such an enviable record in|ing week of former years. the construction of Camp Devens at| " Scarcely any activity is shown in utbreak of the war. The plant | the building trade by th2 record of at Montville is now well along but is| permits graated during the past far from completion as it will be | week. In New Haven, Bridgeport, nany months before the company will | Hartford, ‘Waterbury, Stamford, supplyi power to Eastern Con-| New Britain, New Loadon, West icut. When completed this plant | Haven, Hamden. and Stratford only rank with the best in the coun- | 40 permits were jesued for the will be capable of supplying | week, for buildings cosiing $46,675. wer for all the concerns in| The number of permits granted his part of the state, Western Rhode | during the same week last year r rd M chusetts. The maln| was even smaller, " but included h n erected and is al- | Haven, the aggregate cost of -the r the installation of the | some important buildings in New rst of the machinery. buildings in th e various places A f f o re now at work | being $1,388,687. For the last week are to carry thelin December, 1916, 90 permits were across the Thames|issued, for buildings vilwed at smaug on the wess | $311,547. wuniain on the east| Norwich had four real estate sales ese towers are|last week with the same number for 0 or %0 feet in height| the same week last year. The mort- o dations. With | gage loans for the respective weeks were $8,500 and $9,900. In New London there were two sales of realty last week to four for the same week |dst year. 'The loans for 1al plan was to | the regpective weeks were $12,740 and to tha opposite | §o 5. GOING ON IN FULL SWING §12,2"0 Must Now Bo Raised In the Next 22 Days " ey ,‘?."‘,., the | BUILDING OPERATIONS | e e oo IN NEW ENGLAND Thousands of eager and wise buyers have thronged our store during the first week of the sale and have secured bar- Statisties of, building and engineer- New England as F. w Eraana e gains that were well worth waiting for. L L We still have many thousands of dollars’ worth of good, seasonable merchandise which we must sacrifice at rldlculouslv Cy umr'm\ to Jan. 198,874,000 STATE BUILDING AND BUSINESS. | Contracts to {an. ;gggggggg IOW pnces m order to ra|Se the money needed t0 pay our Gl‘edltors v 1 for the ‘(zrm; s to Jan. § ¢ 1 > Contracts to Jan. 1, 1911, Iozatsono| Bigger reductions have been made to induce quick clearance, and we mentlon below a few of the many extraordinary bar- Contracts to Jan. i 3 gams we ofler, this point. Tha = towers ~ orway. Contracts to Jan Contracts to Jan. 1 ‘unfrar‘h to Jan. 1, 5 to Jan, to COME EARLY AND GET FIRST CHOICE DRESSES ~ RAINCOATS 67 DRESSES IN CREPE DE CHINE, TAFFETA AND SERGE AT LESS THAN HALF PRICE MATERIALS, FORMERLY SOLD AT §$1098 AND $12.98 AND GIRLS' RAINCOATS IN POPLIN, ATNEY UE%‘?DS%IL&;Q 1 $3.95 | “ED MATERIALS, PLAIN AND BELTED SUHTS FORMERLY SOLD AT $10.98....%uns.......: Now-§ 495 | FORMERLY SOLD AT $12.98............0:v.. Nowi$'5.95 ................. SR Naw $19.95 FORM SOLD AT 8 s o e s e S N OWAS H7AOR 55O S YIS S C o, S A Cor e ...... Now $16.95 FORMERLY 'SOLD AT $18.98. ... iciviiiti i Now 51095 COATS VAISTS GARINSEE COATS TUst e B el C L Now $18.95 e e : 0 PLUSH GOATS 1100011111111 (G 50 WAISTS THAT WERE FORMERLY MARKED IN THIS f 7.50 MATLAM LAMB COATS............ L N 10105 ¢ A _ £ ST e N Now $19.95 NEW LIQUIDATION PRICE NOW Z9e 750 GEGMBEIPCOATS o o v v A ... Now $13.95 | EX-PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT (Continued frdm Page One) cepted this appointment was to be done 1 ion, and the ey becam reiorm bich was ob ith the events come raflic, gambling, vice of these evils he purged Iy Cannot Affard to Ignere e Remarkable Pyramids. nd « 60-cent ve..... Now $ 8.95 s viten A NOW: $ET:95 vesee.. Now $ 9.95 ....... Now $12.95 ....... Now $ 4.95 SOSISKIRES . h ol T L n s LT .... Now $2.95 CIe b e DRI R e § e e e S WO Now $3.95 OSSSKARAISH T 0 R 8 N S Tl veusis Sale v Now: $4.95 SWEATERS $18.98 €27 08 ¥ Pile ‘Irentment, $12.98 .... Now $ 6.95 § 298 SLIP.ON SWEATERS ............... oo Now g;.% $15.98 BLACK MUFFS .. ... SURURESRRR . ¢ - $ 5.98 SLIP-ON S \ G S R <1808 BIACK Ml % 8.98 SWEATERS ........... i e ciein... Now $4.95 s ""\"';‘C‘\ = :W’ $196'32 $10.98 SWEATERS ......... O $20.7 ON MUFFS ...oovviiio . Now $16. 11298 SWEATERS ... ...0oois N MUFFS . Now $21.95 nce. Xermit, failing to pass a minatien which would 1im to the United: States ury | to colonel—aa P Fhecdon psveel 1 until Strong FC' ‘P On’Efl"es“ “ © and was soon-in: Messpotamia. CALL UP 734 s i el B et DN SE———— 1 { national conven ‘the Bra Roose elt took keen* p;‘:;ie in e Gar _Attach- Bee o ‘ adelpt with_th i e ice button: he woresiwith its f nts but EFFICIENT v C:m Governor of New York } o Roose Cheodore. This was th Talking . with “pawgpape; faen ALl ed, | of Doubt’—so-called bes months after his boys hiad gone : R0oseve A in many quarters considered aut ‘rnafi h_e told them privately tha MANG | zubers : ] : whe > | Theodore had written him that he kad Al N\ ‘ b with the republican party in n»m ofa| . | been in a and that,a builet had i uu i cepable aendidate. ~Roosevelt was |SES co oo {struck his trench helmiet-and glanced Ewe koo N o mated. VAN W cki Mstaemocra- | o8 BRI SE L said, was|ofl; Theodore wrote home his father i | ', was defeated. The re-| SOCTET YIS ] or he did not|said, that he ragretted he I ot I f Rarges eed: form re republican nomination for { been wounded just’ for xhr experience. : = : ke he same time | At the of ‘this co Pub- t i Vhale | jor's ,tranon\ at the Ro |} follow th 1- | lie been. made ! ministers McKinley had ap- et secs e progressive | rank ant to_cap-~ i £ FEBRY STREEY ! pointed. = e 'q'gl Assassination Attempted. { prolific writer, le L% l};””}nf‘_‘h joain. with gleeto " had led a out into No Man’s Land 1 that the promotion had gallantry under fire Quring The colonel disclosed fur- }\'(rmi(. fighting with the in forces. also had been wm {lic speeches e own country Spain, South A {of the world | he made political One of the m republican in Roosevelt's dramatic incidents life occurred during s he was leaving a to go to a meet- ‘make a political address, | among the cpprmxorg next -*3'*.111 Moderr Plambing PHOSPHATE --... Foowevets eatog 1 | : i fore the p}imdpnudl — HOULD TAKE | F! tes 1. Zan t‘!l’u Phone 581 l o Wiiso: world he | der fire, a hi | m the street fired a shot which ‘stru the leader ‘of““a troop o - — Sresident, was moving forward | the colonel ed a rib. Roose- pro-Germans and other “‘“ ‘u\}xh“r”’ Deis indian cavalr. essential i~ modern hnu-" a8 | xo y state politics into national po =0 | velt ins not seriously urt ho speed; | Quentin was Kille . s to lighting. We guaran: | .'-:;"7..”:3—,..':"’&"..'.‘.'{.';"{’,",‘,’.1"‘ 18| S ohtical opponents professed pub- |and his onvesed him to "|in France, tee the very best PLUMBING WORK | Incrense Strength, Vigor and Nerve ! jiciv to believe: but it was their se- 't' e hall oke to an au- | bellizerent ; Roosevelt's disappeintment at mot | by expert workmen at the fairest| Force. icret desire to elve” the man and !dience which had knowledse of what elt e obtaln the | peing allowed to 2o to France wimuf . { 4 eliminate him from prominence in|had happened—sobbinz women and « to es-|army divi k us for plans and prjces i ging from the countless prepara-|iyoir own community, it was said, that -faced men shaken with cmotion ] which _he , -"‘L,‘nfi“‘fi"lfi,;’,‘d“'}fi."‘rfi. on- | prompted these political foes to ob~| by rance under such cireum- ance. D 0 making thin peeple fleshy. de- |tain for him the vice presidential nom- | sta Examination of the wound | _included man j F ‘GPK Ns | vel 4 meck and bust, and re-|ination, which he persomally did not|s rious and the candi- | who were h American, the emper- | | Diacing ugly hollowfs and angles by the | desire. 1 hurried special train to in the campaist d to have stated that thed 67 West Main Street B women who Keenly Toor st et Iy recovered the bullet w: £ e = iy CesBive thinness. ' Uhelr ex-| At the height of his public and po- e The assa: the formatien of s ot | Theodore Hooseyelt wearing = zas vea Roos ing f hinness und weakness are usvally , during the four due to starved nerves. Our bodies need | the te ORCE g besute T. F. BURNS |rore, phosphate than ie contained in|ed, Roosevelt accomplished _achiers » A modern foods. Physicians claim there |ments which historians will rank is mothing that will sent to an asvinm for the Roosevelt after leaving devoted life Ia k work, hun: nd c nllra”on i 0 Spanish Influenza can }’{::,{"h,i‘ whinston | be prevented easier than ates reren and other | 1t can Be gidred: At the first sign ol a shiver or sneezéytaka/™" g them re the public nlhflnd af d a nota- fy regard- Denied s. Th his fi ming thz ake over the conduct of privilege of fighting for heodore Roosevelt's inter- 3 s centered on his family’s par- r'har"t‘ was ‘\nhdr'fl\n in open |ticipation in the war. His four sons 3 pply this defi- he a dustr & el ..“\J AN V I | known among druggists bitro-phos. | ErosTess of A ntry. - Thes < Outlook in 1909, conti inz th for phate, which expensive and !s sold | cluded his influential nesotiations |five years, and later held e 5 by Lee & Osgood in Norwich and |Which, conducted at Portsmot sitions with The Metropolitan and the 92 Franklin Stres most all druggists under a guammre?'f-- effected peace betwegnuljus“ Kansas City Star. From 1882 to 1917 ;|Japan; maintenance of the Monroe |he published about y volumes of the nerves directly and by sup- | Doctrine at a period when Evropean 5 of na- OBERT J COCHRANE ing the body cells with the neces.|DOwers Wwere interested in the affairs story, hunting, biozraphy, the phosphoric food elements, bitro- | 0f Venezucla: the recognition of Pan- Riders, America: Nation- GAS FITTING, sphate quickly produces a welcome | 1Ma as a republic and his treaty with | alism, conservation of woms ihood and | Ing the pre 3 L1 . i ecrance; the | Panama by which the inter-oceanil |childhood, animals, exploration, the |a Michigan editor PLUMPING, STEAM FITTING increase in weight frevently being as. | Canal through that country Was put|vorid war and America’s participa- |Intoxication. ~Roosev Washingi 2g., Washington Building | toniching. under way. and the settlement, |tjon in it, and his autobiography. Hi: it for libel and m P This incrense in welght aiso carries|through his moral influence in the face | hunts for biz zame and his zest for |ble host of witnesses to t Norwich, Conn. Wwith it a general improvement in the|of a situation in which there was no |exploration took him into the Ameri- his private life and } M. B. O. Shest Pnun. ;:ul:m“ \er\uusnes;,‘ ;’leeploslsne..§s and |adequate federal legislation, of the|can west the heart of Africa and the imony was so ovs Ao |7 onergy, which nearly always|pennsylvania o ine strike, i - accompany . exéessive thinnsss, moon | Loy pi coul mine strike ¥or|wilderness of Brasil. Agent t w " his part in terminating the Russo- % " brought in a nom- [and his son-in-law, Dr. Derdy. carried IRON CASIINGS 31.”3’5::‘&'@?3{(;'35- ‘%7?&‘“?»"{{55‘,;- '”’ftfl"*“ conflict he was awarded the | Triumphant Tour of Europe. i i out a prediction made by the former of Nobel Peace Prize in 1906. Four years Upon bis return from his African {the ex-president. president before the United Statesy FURNISHED PROMPTLY-8Y CPAL’I'ION — Mflwugfi bitro-phos- | later, once more a private citizen, he |journey—a return during which he {Jr. of Albany, took up arms—that if war came.they: phno u unsuwn&ed for relieving wis special ambassador from the [made triumphant entries into Buro- |veit in 1914 o plessness and general slee United States at_the funeral of King |pean capitals and was received by |siatement assertimg that ihe “ ~| became a major and Archibald.a. cap-gs m VAUGHN FOUNDRYCO.. ",_;‘,";:,;ie“fl‘e“s‘;fi” e ing L0l | Kdward VIL of England. " | nations” rulers, inciuding the emperor | ness” of the New York siate sovern- | tain, both in France; Quentin entered: A ko @5ew not desica| A rift in the ~friendship between |of Germany—he arrived in New York |ment was due directly to the domi-|a French-aviation- squadran. andsDrs M. T A ey Qe -.‘:2’«..._ Boaeswall,_ and. his suecessor. 24 Dresi- 10 exDErienca-whet was Tenezally <on- rance: 6f ‘Tammany Hall in politics. ' Derby: thesme@lcaltsnervis,, also “Bot

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