Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 3, 1919, Page 6

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NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 3, 1519 FIRE SA James M. Pendleton, manager of the An ; e | company, and Samuel . Davia, We are offering our entire stock of Paints along with part of our stock of Sash and Doors, at greatly reduced prices. This stock has been shghtly damaged in appearance by smoke. It consists of the follow~ Cold Weather Underwear Ly ing: MIXED PAINTS in White and Colors FLAT INTERIOR WALL FINISHES BARN and ROOF PAINTS CARRIAGE and AUTOMOBILE PAINTS and VARNISHES SCREEN PAINTS INTERIOR VARNISHES FLOOR VARNISHES SPAR VARNISHES COLORS in OIL COLORS in JAPAN ENAMELS in White and Colors OIL STAINS VARNISH STAINS WOOD FILLERS FOR WOMEN SHELLAC, White and O:: nge MURESCO ALABASTINE PAPERHANGERS' DRY PASTE would have the Slq(n (:omm ttea do, J#inter is Just Beginning vided by fhe state as a w S A Large Assortment of BRUSHES g el MR R “ioo § THIS SALE WILL OPEN TUESDAY MORNING Representative Dav's s M n :er‘“r.rl. UNION SUITS VARIETY If you have planned to paint this spring, you cannot afford to let = q erd of the state, as provided in his is one thing to which we can all subscribe a ready belief f| measure proposing a $1000.000 bond % e, now before the house finance —and that is that we will have some cold winter weather committee. This plan and that of a1 memo: auditorium in Providence, were op before summer comes around again. Be ready for it flniionoh Gt CroReeRe Nl when it comes. Buy the heavier underclothing right Lo thas dnlependent pction o { | he p'ut of the state was the proper away and be comfortable while the less provident ones SRR L R 'h' of a Memorial Hall of Just shiver. ch would house the state supreme | superior courts and law I Women’s “Harvard Mills” Underwear For vears “Harvard Mills” has meant underwear of highest ty and a rare ability to wear well and long. This derwear is made in all the desirable cuts and weights. ! the discuss ny xaluo they um Weight Vests, Drawers and Tights, sizes 4 § ¢ u...ll‘! $1.35. : svidence »»1« yration Medium Weight Vests, Drawers and Tights, sizes 7 Jiin honor of Battery for $1.35 Artillery that ra, I D9 for _demobiliz WOOL-AND-COTTON UNDERWEAR FINE MEDIUM WEIGHT nd Drawers in an agreeable nixture of wool and cotton. They are warm with the warmth of wool, | neck and no sleeve mode ailors in the & The programme i “SILKOLINE” UNION SUITS Look and feel like silk but you don’t have to pay the silk price. Low s in the This e the welcome | desirable knee length. | . . & of a Liberty Memorial highway, from The seasons seem to be somewhat twisted about, but there §| Woonsocket to Westerly, from end to nittee on (‘Ml 5 |the Rhode Island senate nex MADE OF COTTON fay, it wil committed Pink Lisle Suits—suits «f fm- mer- §! Bkt Sl il | e o this opportunity pass. If you have not, come in and let us convince you or comfort and wearing splendid selection for your B° 1 make the moti . . . Rl o ek i s ; ] o e “was notfu that it will pay you well to do so. Sizes 5 and 6 only id i i ; eorting it Our entire Paint Stock must be removed to make rcom for a new PINK COTTON BLOOMERS. . ... e 15 stock. FRED C. CROWELL 87 Water Street mendation of p. i of the renort the BLACK WOOL TIGHTS........... npression i; but not enough votes have | recommit prevails 1t tter will then committee and the There Rhod «ommit to report d to them. aimed 1 S il pigeon- no rule in tho ruls Te- all pastor_of vich Acac and he wa ception I he boarding whe he enter i the eveni BILL TO RA!SE SALARIES OF CITY COURT CFFICIALS A bill to ease the sala Norwich city court officials w nt servi the th in- ment of havi: in this di se. troduced in irtford on — inemployment. y ) t w ) ki . | The community labor bosrd is to ! eme Iy 5 forms el ¢ link : b x of edral in Providence. has been pro- | COMMUNITY LABOR BOARD “\‘(1 the : moted to suceeed the late Archbishep | a HAS PROBLEM IN CITY lar meeting soard of d ited \pv“ emplo, . t\ll( T iU IE EOR AR : John Ireland in the metropolitan dio- cese of St. Paul To encourage agricultural, mech nd industrial production, ills troduced in the general ma ng these propria‘iorg at 28 ollowing Washington county | member at ations: Westerly Poultry and | cle association, $500; Wash'r County _ Agricultural Soclety, < own and Narra- aciation, rth Kingstown Poultry 2 which the these officials 00 deputy jud Vs Charls Binsham i | POMFRET CWTER Dbeen selected of emplovers upon the ¢ o Herbert R. with oth conducted a! sterly financial town meet- iay, an appropriation will b | In connection the erection of an arch|employment ser United COLCHESTER & am wept| 9 L winner home the soldiers and sa’l- | munity labor board of 1 ey | mordt 1 Hartford. : nd in their honor for at |censisting of two men, one represe M. C Al rown was in Worcester, | len ars. Tentative plans of | employes and the other S izl were submitted at the | and t - Sty i with ‘he , : : an United hat the functi e uar etine of the {own counc’l|senting employ - ,A.n‘,,‘,,, oehe e . in Col- Thomas McKenzie, and the obj-ct | zers or employers r X t a district Brown who re ford ill last week, has so cxplnined by u James M. Pendl-- | representing the fede d | fon, of tho committee appointed bv |In Connecticut there are ‘minal cases ttorney $1200 v g Tjfhe governor to give the heroes = |these community labor n s 1095, | ¢ 1 as to be able to sit up, but | home-welcome in every city and town |state being divided into remain 1 the state. and the Tenth ¢ S, 1 - N3 brother, Henr: Ale-asder Kenneth, formerly of |Prises the tdWns in the nor £ thine ‘niaoe | Westerlw died Saturdav at h's home |of New London county. Ay e Sl ot Brooklyn, N. Y., after a brief ill-|2ll thirteen employmei to prevent and part-time empl meet probler His wife United State P er in Cali- | Connecticut fornia with mother, Mrs. M. P.| The problem wi Kenneth and her e'dest son, Henrv P, |Community labor board, as the local Eorne Mr. Kenneth was born ency of the federai emplovment se not have the " i T S S s e T 1\;1‘- esterly the son of the late vice, is quite the reverse Ry __TEiurlied | 180 A existed last summer ¢ R 3 : | der Kenneth. Besi is wif New Lon- | unsecured. T n, David, he 1s by two |the board i others. Henry P. Kenneth of the community t amine determine how Th G i i Ki C Store Closed All Day Today SALE OF High Grade Shoes For Men and Women STARTS TUESDAY, FEB. 4TH servie anley E. Kolwicz, a 1SS With t has filed a peti- ey -/ GAUSE OF EXTRA WEAR “After a trip to Kilauea, the active volcano of Hawaii, my Neslin-soled shoes \\ere the only ones not abso- lutely ed. Many in our party | wore hcb—namd boots," said Miss Jean | P. Lane of Seattle, Washington. The <narp jagged lava of Kilauea | cuts an ordinary sole to pieces quickly. That Nedlin Soles stood the test but emphasizes their toughness and dur- abili These qualities are built into them by a scientific process. Women —and men and children, too—who are hard on shoes should buy them with Neolin Soles. They:come in many s, and because of the extra wear they give, are a great economy. A d any repaxrman will re-sole your olin Soles, which are fiexible and waterproof as well as long-wearing. They are made by The (-ood)ear Tire & Rubber Co., Akron, , who also make Wingfoot Heels, g__:antned to outwear all other heels. Tleolin Soles & Mack Reg. the Uni oath I th in ch confronts the | \tes court ve an op- em- Local Laconics. Thomas Rodman, of South King: wn, has been confirmed shington county repres al and Cha term enc was taken to fu information for pa 'y\l"\lfi?fl before een made t tice caused such a tions that since Leen no need fo by the community The problem nbw not to find peo- 1 il the J find jobs ut employ- the local been 1 by orders f"rr"'\ the 'rdm> director ington to the effect that the fur facilities ployme home in , for more tk in polit an. and the h town and state offices. The councilmen held a_ses- night and canvassed the to be used at the ancial ext Tuesd amnlin, who served t at Camp Devens, tant under t! 1in, has been promoted to | tending demo dated Jan. 28 1319, | mohilizati Winthrop Fersuson, daushter | was still n'\ and Mrs, Orville M. Randolph. | T erly, .has recovered from a se- | perintendont o vere attack of pneumonia and has ployment offic | turned to her home in Topeka. Kan- | Ravmond. I reports of meeting on and emp City e {'ation of 25 a00. risdiction During 1 333 ecriminal c far he has ! seventy-five registr ing soldiers and sailors for eferred forty-five, twenty adv been ed placed ¢ t this eit Gilbert < making regula Mrs. R. Livingstone Beeckman has een appointed by Governor Beeck- ) nwm‘mr of the board of female in various lines o f the number of registr sople seek th~ comm district lahor as been sendine the war indr | beard at Washinzton |cceded by Miss Eva Frochette, numter of emploves John Wilson has been missing from [lected representative zroup of i hw home in Pawcatuck since Thurs- |tries in this distri on each & d also the number expected & yed by the same 1'1!1\|=(n9< ucceeding Sa ion is laid before which has the question of cancell tion of war contracts to de’mmP Deeb-seatéd Colds |:na vitn this tatormation as 1o e lected, |120OT_situation in cach district develop serious complications if neglected. | jroughout the countrv is enabled to Use an old and timetried remedy that C the HERE fur we have adequate STEAM act more intellizentlv as to effect Essex: Right hundred and st H e has given satisfaction for more thanfifty years | o0 "oronoged cancellation. the idea be- succeeds Judge Charles A. Pel- | mora were Fandled the EQUIPMENT, BEST - MATERIALS ing that where there is a la num- | ton, of Clinton, who has held the of- | coranared with those of the vear 1014 |and the real skill that insures prompt ber of unemploved workers, cancella- | fice for several years as prosecuting |while the compensation remained the | satisfactory service. tion of government contracts will be|agent for the lower Middlesex towns, |same. | . i deferred, and that where there is alhaving been appointed by the county| Showing increase of cash turned T. J. HEALY, shortage of labor such cancellation will commissioners. over to the city by Hscal vears from Marguerite Bld'g., Norwich, Ct., criminal stant judge no n, prosecn prosecs: } as expe- | % this con- ese men may b least possible of the birth of Re\' H—zm lee, president of Fast Green- What Is Needed In other words, what is needed is a |l lezgue that does not have any power at is able to compei the whole world to keep the peace—Wa Judge Thomas D. Coulter, of Biggest Bargains We Ever Offered You are sure of PROMPT SERVICE attornev was one

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