Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 14, 1919, Page 10

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)

In a previous letter he wrote as fol- lows:: We live tn a nice wood shanty and! have a stove and plenty of wgod to| keep warm with and we have a chair| and table and plenty of light at night. I have five Zood blankets only one is & German, and I am going to try and bring it beme if I can. I had a chance to get ciner things SOLDIERS AND SAILORS m Balloon Comparny. Clayton Hnr of the 69th Balloon n.mnan; A. B. F, wrote hume to his mothe: Hope of Baltic, that he o American I rst Army on J: His letter follows: Your Christmas package came last 3 fore I \vl-nl on main but it was too hard to carry them Q:fi\r;[d.!" as gt around, and you can sz the blanket, me, I so it came in handy to me. I have| e been all over France nearly, and at| letter from the front over one hundrel days be- with a money ¢ sides in some army camps over here. which was a gr We landed the 13th day of July 'Lnd: um still in geod 1 we are at a place about a four-hour| Army can't get m ride rfom the city of Toul, just wherru will if one is not strong enough to{Wwe were whoa the guns sm:\;»cd bark- tard it. ng. T dom't believe it will take lopg be- | fore we get home again. Now T} want to_tell you a little hout shell | fire ‘We could hear ¢ Germans shoot at us and then the shell woud' whistle through the air and then Lhe) arop. | 1 havo 1aid on the ground so close (so that the shrapnel wou'd not hit me), that you could run a steam roll- | er over me and not get me. waiting for a letter from I have a I am stil but we are at the front and from another. It n we were 1 the sec: we are in the first army day and ver shines. 1 it has snow- 56th Made a Reoutation, Frederick Geer, who is at the per- ' sonnel embarkation office, Brest, France, writes the following lett: under date of Jan. 13 to nis paren Mr. and Mrs. Henry C. Geer, R. F. No. 7, Norwich: 1 suppose the old 56th will be no | more by the time this reaches you. I only wish that'I could have gone home i with them. There are rumors around here to the effect that some of us| might be relieved in a month but If hardly think so. The work is very | casy and I am treated better than I ever 'was treated in the army. Our food is something wonderful. I'll never learn the French l’|nF’U3"\ as I can’'t summon up enou est. 1 can't figure out how they pic ed out men who had done their bit the lines to do this work when there were any amount of orl\ been in F‘ranrc it does not freeze hers, as soft and the farmers every. I thank you tmas pa e. In < ep now and od on g\la!dl ECTENA ON LIVRS, CUTICR HEALS Fermed Wa ‘.,‘yB[isters. Sore, Red! and Swollen, ltchedand Burned. D. I am not. sume as I did on the 1i complaint. It may seem s ou hax I was more contented I *-d eczema on both limbs and t until it got up to my broke out in a kind of , mncp 1 p there th rash and at last it seemed to form strange and inter watery blisters. The skin was sore | |every day. . I tried jters to you read as thousgh 1 W ing the time of my life but and red. snd my limbs were swollen. Thz bruk ng out itched and burned. lasted about three | |me, though, it was months tried Cuticura, They | | Fiefe, times that afforded relief in two or three days had quite a and in two wesks I was healed.” | |<omebody must have Signed) Miss Yelinek, 36 Belmont | |pretty hard for me. 1 St., Somerville, Mass., Aug. 3, 1918. to have been with c Soap, Ointment and Tal- e T need fortoilet purposes tatb to keep the skin clear and healthy. | 1,50 "0 1ost of ever: ther night when we w to supper Cuticura Talcum Powder pound. of | Do not fail to test the fascinating fragrance of this exquisitely scented % face, baby, dusting and o skin perfuming powder. Medicinal and toilet. Cu- icura Soap, Ointment and Talum for sale everywhere, 25c. oach. ! im: may try them before you bty err Sample Each Free by Address post-card: ** Cuti- ouea, Nept. R, Boston. " they hsued us all a half (l‘bar‘co I haven't r"m}\mi my ( mas package as vet so I have given up as 1 write th in my package as I know oking tnem. Wel v of them wh »honl all y to roll ciga DOLLAR DAY SPECIALS COLUMBIA RECORDS—Brand New 85 cent Size 2 for $1.00 $1.35 and $1.50 Size $1.00 Each COMBINATION OUTFIT, $1.08 1 Bottle Phonograph Qil. . . .. 5 $ .15 1 Record Cleaning Brush. ... .15 1 Record Album, metal back..... S 115 D N R 2 $1.45 ‘I( LS, The Best Quality Steel Need!es All sizes—Soft, Half Tone, Medium, Loud Wall Kave Needles are included if you wish— 2 PACKAGES (100 in package), $1.00 | These needles are sold everywhere at 15¢ per package, ! actual value $1.80. AT SPECIAL DOLLAR DAY TERMS By purchasing $10 worth of this wonderful Phonograph any- records we deliver where without a first pay- ment. Pay for it at $1.00 per week. This offer good only on Dollar Day. The Talking Machine Shop, - 46 FRANKLIN STREET The Only Exclusive Music Store in Norwich mmwgi The Talking Machine Shop, - |bought a pn»e wnh the first pay that 3 “ MMM $2.00 White Voile Waists ONE DOLLAR $1.39 Silk Stockings ONE DOLLAR vp ’s Gingham Dresses—2 to 6 years ONE DOLLAR 69¢ Children’s Bloomer Drawers—2 to 12 years TWO FOR ONE DOLLAR $1.25 Sateen and Batiste Bloomers ONE DOLLAR $2.00 and $3.00 Black and Colored Velvet Shapes ONE DOLLAR I RN STORE OPENS AT 9A M $1.39 to $1.50 1”47// Announcing Our First Dollar Day Since t!ze Great War Emled The whole store is just filled with unusual values provided for. We are going to Day one of the bigge:t events we have ever held. Ncte some of ihe values. White Middy Blouces ONE DOLLAR One Lot of Celored and White Dresses ONE DOLLAR CONE DOLLAR $1.25 and $1.50 Long White Muslin Petticoats ONE DOLLAR $1.25 to $1.50 Children’s Velvet and Felt Hats TWO FOR ONE DOLLAR 69c Ladies’ Hose lisle and silk TWO FOR ONE DOLLAR B. GOTTHELF & CO. “The Store of Good Values” MWMMMMfimmmmmmm Bungalow Aprons and Apmn Dresses 94-100 MAIN STREET /' ll\é'll. ¢ Z N make Dress Skirts | Black and White'Chadkce = J | ONE DOLLAR QOdd Lot -of- Silk Waists ONE DOLLAR _. Long Black and Colcr»éd" g House Aprons TWO FOR ONE DOLLAR Children’s $1.50 Billy ey Sleeping Garments—6 to 14 yrs. ONE DOLLAR" ] i } $1.50 Corsets I all sizes ONE DOLLAR . $1.50 Black and Colored Straw Shapes ONE DOLLAR STORE OPENS AT s 9A M. Hartford, January 11, it to be pre-eminently 1313 to declare fitting that we, Americans wm feeling fins, ght pleu- at is all ciples of | watering places in r»;mn were complain. 2 which threatened to|examined, about 16 es of water overwhelm the liberty of ibe English|were collected and to the 2 people in the days of 1776, should be|water-resources labors at Wash- AR, PASSES FRIENDSHIP among the first to welcome and pro- |ington, D. C. for ang and a gen- RESOLUTIONS WITH ENGLAND | mote friendship and mutual under- a speciul meeting of 50 chapters |standing between our tweo countries htees of the American|too long serarated by ancient strife Connect held inj|a but now uuited in a nuary 11, the following ; and that we do all in England and been fighting shoulder to should- world war ag:wst German olved, That we request the na- tional board of managemeut, through our state regent, Mrs. John Laidlaw for the same great princi-|Buel, at its next meeting, to take erty for which our ancestors, | such steps as it may deem practica- of the American Revolu-|ble and expedient to it these when _t sisted the |sentiments in behalf of the national of Gieorge 111 a German Kking |society of the Daughters of the Amer- on E nd's fl‘rm\rl and, ican Revolution to ¥ George, Whe S, Queen Mary and the p le of Eng- speaking per land. wl heirs of a \"nP RO"N\ Minor, Chairman, ture, law, E M 3 Alinor, m freedom, ell Committee. nz down their freedom might together that live; be it | er , giv s Resolved, That we, the regents of| SIGNPOSTING THE DESERT. id\::éfininfomt:':amo the fifty chapters of the I: The United States geological Suf-|The work done last the American Revolution Connecti- | vey, department of the interior, has ; compret ive plan fo: t, assembled in special meeting in|surveyed and signposted a great area marking t tering places in the en- of the most dangerous desert region gist and one outfitted with a camping equ eral exploration was geography madf available to th for publication. were erected at 167 lo fornia and 138 in A substantially “'uo of two of geology, s of the region. and the data ot signed_to Lrovcote friend- | our power as a society to increase the | gor" i) fo 0 : e ”; r‘gvlei States and | pre: \;tndsemxmen( of mutual good- miltary map of the 1d were adopted: Guides with maps are il s with maps are L Signs directing traveler: gn- long. hite, with d«rl\ h]uf‘ le % of which 5 of of the United States. = The region surveyed occupies about| 60,000 square miles in southern Cali- fornia and southwestern Arizona. In | California it includes the southern part of Death Valley and the region be-| tween this valley and the Mexican; border; in Arizona it includes thej region west of Tucson and Phoenix| and south of Wickenburg and Parker.! This region was selected because it isi the driest, hottest, and least explored! part of the desert region, and also be- cause of the strategic importance ofj} obtaining information on the water| | supplies along the 350 miles of na-| tional frontier that it includes. The 5. H. WILLIAMS, JR., Genoral Agent F. H. KENYON, Special Agent. GEORGE N. DELAP, Special Agent. Hartford, °°""'"~ Haven | fi€ld Work was done by four parties, Nww Yeri each of which consisted of one geolo- Humphreys' ‘‘Seventy-seven” breaks up Coughs, Colds, Influenza, Cold in the Head, Catarrh, Sore Throat,Quinsy, Tonsilitisand Grip. AtaliBruggist COLDS the ound-Watel| p. mejich; Sakata ; utes to the Tokio Chuo a seri water| ments, ali- war has practically come The . 1.9 inches in' dustrial devdopment of . ground | tween employers and emplo were tire arid region lying east of '.he‘ Sierra Nevada and Cascade Moun- tains and west of a line running ap-|u proximately from eastern Oregon through Salt Lake City and Sante Fe to the mouth of Pecos Ri ons who have habits of extrava- e are self-indulgent, depending on their rionetary ’.power, whereas employes work only for their pay. he emploves do not get enough pay leave. This condition is harmful to the sound developmen’, of industries in Japan and also from the education- al point” of view.==H#st and West News. Industrial Reforms Japan Needs. prcfessor of the Higher Schorl nf Technolo=y contrib- of :u'd- Only one-third -of the world’s pop- |ulation uses bread as a daily food. MARTIN T. BURNS Funeral Director and Embalmer DANIELSON, CONN. Telephone 193-12 les on the tuture or the anc world and the improvemernt of techni- cal education in japan. He empha- ance of developing in- tries rataer than increasing arma- especially now that the world t0 a close. | He draws lessons from the great in- the United relations be- are not able fact. States. In Japan the 'y close, ich is a lame: v HOUSEFURNISHINGS INCLUDING CARPETS, RUGS, DRAP! UPHOLSTERY, CURTAINS, BLAMKETS, AND COMORTABLES CLEANED OUR-REPUTATION—AND QUR-METFHODS-— ASSURE SATISFACILICN New London Auto Delivery 6 Montauk Ave, 87 Broad St. Norwich 10 Main St Tslephene

Other pages from this issue: