Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 21, 1919, Page 9

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and come to our store for them. You will not only find the things you want, but see many othe please yo All we our store and “leok cannot turn something to youthep We keep up the g . o ior want is J T a rice'you will buy. down the price. P————— e e DANIELSON wil ing for & Herbert Chase, U marine ¥ EE PUTNAM, s | & tite. romplex: 2orTe | in how y may always be reli Yisac aisa causing any Benefieial alike successfully used by world over, to to old and 0 “The Largest Sale of Any Medicine N wround.” around without seeing please you when we tell istake the bilious u feel so upset, dull, yes show yellow, Stomach and hen you get bilious— iver, stomach and s of this great family 1. Beecham’s Pills 1 on to re-establish healthy conditions, without weakening, or eeable after d young, and nd women the N vhich will you to come into You ality; we keep g 17e DL EE htful Norwich d as 10 mail to oodyear, and le organiz ion sallow ctive that difference effects. in order. ~ N s > Wy i Directions of special \,‘\\\\ value to women re with every boz. persen | 1ton been NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1919 % Jump from Bed fl | inMorning and Drink Hot Water fi Teila why everyone should drink 3‘ hot water each morning I i before breakfast. | Why is man and woman, half the : time, feeling nervous, despondent,. worried; some days headachy, dull and unstrung; some days really in- cagacitated by illness. f we all would practice inside- bathing, what a gratifying change would take place. Instead of thous- ands of hal ick, anaemic-looking souls with pasty, muddy complexions we would crowds. of happy healthy, rosy-cheeked people every- where. The reason is that the hu- man system does not rid itself each day of all the waste whi it accumi lates under our present mode of liv- ing. For every ounce of food and drink taken to the system nearly an ounce of 1 must be carried out. else it f and forms ntomaine-like pois are rbed into the blood. Men and women, ether sick or well, are advised to drink each morn- ing before breakfast, a glass of real which hot water w a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, as'a harm- less means of wash out of the stomach, liver, kic nd bowels the indigestible n ste, sour bile and toxi ons of p who had their at constip: bilious attacks, s days and the quarter pound of limestone phosphate will not cost much at the drus stos to and ttention from ! In the town court Thursday morn- ing, Judge W. Fenner Woodward i e Le » of Goods e tenced and Woonsocket to Leve was 1 d sque took 1 to hat must nment in ions paying 000 to $4,500 department w vernment wan lare open to In prepari » home here Mrs. Marind on has Selected many W she s distributing stitutions, organizations nd nds, Mrs. Rob- son has arranged two ve €1ty pictures for the Children’s room public 1ib ors of furnishing | At the first meeting of the |tee named to arr: welcome hy i rade in will be all industr in order that a . proper - Killing- 1 or’ who tentativ include pl prov convincing omc |is p rificed lans big feed | this to T The com Mo\da tail 15 to arr | Over at Goodyear a G en formed, ingenm is th | DAD BREATH |Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets Get i at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablsts, the substi i tute for calomel, act gently on the bo: | and positively do the work, People afflicted with bad bre: iquick relief through Dr. E Olive Tablets, The pleasar coated tablets are taken for b by all who know them. Dr. Edwarcs’ Olive Tablets act Sut firmly on the bowels and | stimulating them to nat | clearing the blood and ge the entire system. Thoy do that w dangerous _calon does without any lof the bad_after effects. All the bencfits of nesty, sicke: griping cathartics are Edwards’ Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects, | Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the | formula after seventeen years of prac. tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint, with the attendant bad breath. Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets are purely 2 vegetable compound mixed with olive gently ver, color. Take one or two every a week and note the effect. per box. Al druggist ight for 10c and 25¢ ab- | oil; you will know them by their olive | (Written Make the Farm Independent and Self Maintaining s lly For The Bulletin.) We've talied about it, several times, I think. Bu: that is no reason why we houldn’t taik about it some more, in view of its farm importan: I mean the subject of farm indey pendenc We don’t refuse to taik about the | weather today becauss we talked about it, yesterday. Sowmstimes 1 wish we did, a faw of us But we dom't and we Wwo tecause the weather is i ent and htily int subject with all farm .dwell hian_some- thing wi s ninwys through us. That be what weather ns to v folk, but to us of the n lan that by w ge 53 1 wi | fe of v | me | ih \ | w imp; out of us, tho: i to thereupon and ev fou nd sometim: neral and the more I 'aik them over th my farmer neighbors, the more ed I am with the unique im- rtance to < r of mak- have cemed produced little sim- easier Oh, the abominable profligacy of that phrase “less il It in t mouths of too many o should > utter it ne therei: avoiding vork and something our to suble” ind cow s to raise it flour for Less r bread to Luy tomatoes, p. Many it w 2s coal mar ¢ fuel in throu le list > needs. were th thei: tron the up the jointless ti of foresight and economy and ent that 1ld have Well, the war came whooping along and we found that we had to pay double and sometimes treble if not quadruple prices for the wupplies w had been so jauntily ordering ofi- hand from the grocers, ete. They came about as hard s forceps. And Lich we all had woren't pre- once morc on our own d to rely wn the othe low's crutches—after ahout a v some of us woke up to the re mbrance of old times rn our ow » butcher ed nerhaps for o briars stomed fiour from which to make Y not raise o own wheat and rye again and have it ground at the neavest mill? As our fathers thers did? j We had got into the habit of huy our horse and hen and cow feed from ters who in turn bo 0 {other dealers who bought . farmers—paving th he freight in addi iin. We excu d wastefulne that W own corn and not do it a our fathers in? Which we did, d grandfathe ed corn d tomatoes and ar-pr 1 that we B us p - proceed iht res: it we had etables of 1 hetter cier flay 1ch less sed to hav e to and the ply ifficien- | > some of us made maple me made beet and ted keeping be T to 1 sweets ola mestic needs 1 to pay war wot all we ne We rdless of o 1t Auld ! o regardc nly as an lex temporary in its use, to L {empor need. some of us, T think, £ ed through e we considered only is re tim money savi short-cut across economic Slough of Despond. We eastern farmers, with sman holdings of ledgy lands, and perhaps a dozen different soils on every ten Children Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA HAIR HINTS Helpful Advice for Care of the Hair Worthy the Attention of {; Everyone Who Would Avoid i! Dandruff, _ltching Scalp, Gray §| Hair and Baldness. | If your hair is getting thin or vou | are troubled with dandruff or itching | scalp use Parisian sage daily for a| week and you will.surely be surprised | to see how quickly it stops vour hair from falling and removes every sign of dandruff and itching scalp. “Before going to bed T rub a little Parisian sage into my scalp” says a woman whose luxurious soft and fluffy hair is greatly admired. “This keeps my hair from being dry, brittle or scraggly, helps it to retain its mnat-| ural color and beauty, and makes | easy to dress attractively.” Beautiful, soft, glossy, healthy and lots of it, is a simple mat those who use Parisian s e patch, raise cannot spect to harmless, inexpensive, rge crops for disposal in big mar- |sumed and mon.greacy invigorator i | ]‘(e‘;s_ nl; is 1‘._“ small "A‘{‘, intelligent | 5o1q by Lee & Osgood Co. and at all gconomies rather than by over-am-|good drug ard toilet counters. Be bitious out-reachings that we are most|sure you get the genuine Parisian | C: BaHaD o_compef + | money-back guaran rinted on Paul or Chicago markets with grain- | oty [0OCF Budritee P growers who cultivate thousands of 5 : level acres with tractors and twenty- gang plow LOUIS E. KENNEDY But we can compete with them for the market our own ta%es afid out DANIELSON i own Lorses’ mangers offer us. We can| i ompete it e or - oat| JUndertaker and Embalmer and beat them all hollow, both as to| 3Pecial Attention to Every Detall. cost and quality of supplies, e AR TS = It is our business to take our op- | F, H. & F. W. TILLINGHAST portunities as they come to us, wheth- | er we find them wholly desirable or not, and mak st and the be of 'them, We've always known thi but too many of us had been bitten by that pesky “less trouble” bug, and had gotten into bad habits. The exigencies of war have taken Funeral Directors and | Embalmers i Central Village, Conn. ! AUTOMOBILE EQUIPMENT Courtesy, Efficiency, Satisfaction “Bayer Cross” on Tablets. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” SUCCESSOR 75 10 QUININE Buy “Bayer” package: For Colds, Grippe, Influenzal Colds No Discomfort! No Head-buzzing! No Distress! Millions of people take “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” as the best means to prevent as weil as to overcome Colds, Grippe and Influenzal Colds—being far more efficient than quinine. Besides relief comes without discomfort or distress. “The Master of Colds’Dependable! Adults—Take one or two ‘“Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” witl Aspirin water. If necessary, repeat dose three times a day, after meals. “Bayer Tablets of Aspirin” Buy only the original “Bayer packages.” Look for the safety “Bayer Cross” always. 20 cent package—also larger packages. Owned by Americans Entirely. s the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid Telephone Connection. Moosup Div. | = scruff of our necks and me of the nonsense out of of members of San Jose council bers who already have arranged to from Putnam will fill The party will return here afternoon with members council to confer the upon a ciass of member For the land's sake, let's leave it in the discard, henceforth and hereafter! Here’s a little editorial 1 clipped from a city paper, last night: “Butter may drop in the wholesale market but that doesn't make butter cheaper to the consumer. The war council which now has Is over but not the war prices. High {all of the 100 new members it necessitate high wages and|out to get a few w . | hig ages necessitate high prices. Alferie Cordier, who has More people are ionging for farms an foned at Camp Dix, arrived | r aiter b | farm than ever before. e at his home here Thu uld b able”to grow theif M mustered out of service. own food and lat 1 the grocer. If |is to enter the employ only were able to buy land and |Cordier. his brother, who elt that they could make the landpro- ully established him in busi- |in duce when they had bought it, there Ln ss here .and will take care of the| wouldn’t be any” paed of * to the Poutside end of the busine traveling | 2 land” ganda. We should all be the land without any ve up the white excitement of city life for something to eat.” between Webster and Norwich News was received here Thursday morning of the death in a hos Germantown, , of Freder ney, who about twelve yea, Kills Al the Time it Takes Liniments, most too origin WUSTARINE CONQUERS TONSILITIS PLEURISY, LUMBAGO AND NEURALGIA Pains Poultices and Plasters. Mustarine is killer of pain on earth. rating and effective that neuralgia, _headache, iche and backache d 0 10 minutes- but it’s true. 11 not blister because it's the 1l substitute for the old reliable 50 pene ache, ea in 5 and Aches in Halfmustard plaster and is made of real | yellow mustard—no cheap substitutes are used. Use it to banish rheumatic painsand gout, for sore inflamed or frosted feet, \for chilblains, stiff neck or joints or d by tens of |cramps in legs. ousands of people who know that it {never fails to drive out inflammation is the quick It acts instantly and in any part of the body. Ask for and | get Mustrine always in the yellow box. some state- | | STOPS PAN STARIN OF BUS M S mers, many of us, fully ize the tremendous advantages our fords us? T | H are city nfen, smarting under [the exactions of profiteering dealers, wishing that they were able to buy {1and and that they knew how to work t, so they could raise for themselves “something to eat.” We farmers have the land. We know ow' to work it. We know how to make it produce food for both the acher in the Putnam High Whitney’s death was cau neumonia. The body is to bhe ta to Andover, Mass,, for burial on Sut urday. Mr. Whitney leaves his wife, who was Miss Florence Ethel Burneite, of | this e and also a former Putn 1 High school teacher, and two child Mr. Whitney has been acting as p cipal of a school at Germantown. There was a gathering of about a | pos s and the human beings who 1ive | score of -business men and freight on it. We have the very chance|shippers Thursday morning at the which the city men represented by |Chamber of Commerce to meet R. M this solicitant editor are covetous of.|Smith, superintendent of the Norwich Big farming problems, involving fand Worcester division of the New| s or nation-wide interests, can |Haven road, and other railroad iately solved only state or nation- for a_discussion of pertaining to freight vario servi matte in by big or; day for this city, making thr of two such days eacl k. The railroad men will also to expedite the shipm riving in the Putnam yards fr north. It is hoped to get ments out on the day they and not let them remain over next day. The Putnam men who attended the | meeting seemed well pleased with th manner in which they were able to do busin with the railroad’s represent- ativ The strike that has kept a number of the operatives away from their work at the North Grosvenordale mill {was not settled Thursday, as were indications on the previous d: instead |c ] ange | of freight ar- [a ast two years that we cant’ avoid seeing it. Why should any of us want to avoid eing it? Why shouldn't we be glad we have been shaken and prodded letharzy into which we shouldn’t we let “the profiteers of that we're tired of the sline for them? shouldn’t we resume the use of our farms and make them what the { used to be and may well be again, st ing and independent domains we want to. But we ecei until th and know never we slimp back into thelthat it might be. It v d [ old vice of considering anything de- Able it simply ause is {rouble.” i THE FARMER. PUTNAM Products of the Pomtret war garden, includng 300 quarts of canned goods, given to the Day Kimball hospital, are valued at $700. A special board meeting of Elizabeth Porter Putnam chapter, D. A. R, was heid Thursday afternoon. A farm tractor on exhibition near the railroad tion attracted much ttention Thu y afternoon. Members of the Circuit league of the Methodist church will be at Danielson turday evening to attend a meeting, The chemical truck from the central “less was called out Thursday rming for a chimney fire at the ster house on Railroad of relief in towns hereabouts their final sessions for wion Ballard has been confined to s home by illness the past few days. 11 take part in e: es commemorating Washington's hday today Miss Isabelle Byrne, who recently rived at Newport News from over- t her home here d Thursday which have t tate board of health and which gned to offset the spread of 1 diseases, may be shown in this hat two reels approval of It be called upon to con- sider appropriations amounting’ to everal thousands of dollars d@nd to be used in meeting curbing and sewer 2 improvements the cif meeting fcalled for March 3. The ig item in he list i 6,000 to meet the cost of | sewers into School street for a distance of abc 50 feet. exposition scheduled to be held in city within the present month is farmers in p their farms and ive the farm labor at has become so pressing | two or three | e better off than | most tor e in southern New | England as to an ice supply for next |summer. “Much ice has been stored {here ' Several rol were reported seen in fields beside the highway |near Day Kimball hospital. This |15 one of several reports of robins be- ing seen in this vicinity during the past week. Saturday will bring to Putnam a large number of the members of Quinehaug Pomo range for a meeting of very speciel interest. There will be morning and afiernoon ses- ons. Charles M. Gardner, high priest of demeter, will be present for the ses- sion. A number of members of Cargill il, K. of C., will leave this orning for Willimantic the afternoon at thy farring of thethird desree ubon a class -|o'clock Tharsday striker M pen The Ch: cvening that the ticking it out.” WINDHAM ay evening, the 21st, at 8 o'clock vill be given in the Congrega- B a public stereopticon lored slides entitled On Battlefronts of Humanity, illus- he work of the Red Cross. Iso_be patroitic music. her Josephson has returned ‘were still to South Windham after a few days' stay at her home_here. Mr. r New and . Walter Abbe are in a few weeks. Worcester York is wide in their control. out of Putnam. Miss Clara Johnson has returned But here is a personal and wholly| There was a fine spirit of harmony |from a t in Norwich with local problem, restricted in its terms |throughout the meeting, which se her si ettie Bolande. to the individual farmer. certain _to produce good resul The -y Missionary socgity tand on my own legs? Or|Among the matters discussed were the |held its fortnightly meeting Tuesday - on orutches from Dakota |E€tting of shipments out of Putnam, [with Mrs. R. T. Bixby. las “and Tiinois corn fields |20d it is likely that one of the res and Mrs. H. C. Lathrop attend- and canneries to hold me|Will be to get an addition: pping |ed the banquet of the Bankers' asso- on in New Haven last weekK, also few days in New York. stian Endeavor society held ne social in the chapel Fri- vening in charge of Miss Polly chairman of the social commit- was decorated with reen. There was a valentines for all. Games and music were enoyed. Cake cream were sold and the pro- which amounted to about $8, to go_toward the $25 which the vor society has voted ar toward the tercen- rish met in the ng to talk over pper. children of the Cen- e The N(n):tntifln ' Wheat and Barley is of especial value during the colder days of winter. For your cereai food think of- h (rape:Nuts Nothing more appetizing amons, ready-cooked grain foods=the cereal to use be- cause of its wheat € barley contenti € its richness insugan: Grape-Nuts needs no sweetening. “Theres a Reason” ter school are to have a musical and! literary entertainment in the chapel! to raise money toward purcahsing ad Victrola for the school. They will ba’ assisted by C. H. Caswell of Willi< mantic, the singing teacher. Captain Durkee of New London, who| has been on coast defense duty dur-| ing the war, spent Sunday with Col.| W. §. Chappell. At the Congregzational church Sun- day morning there will be a Victory: service, using an order of _exercises: sent out by the national service com-- mission, consisting of music, recita- tions, responsive readings, an address - by the pastor, consecration of service - flags, etc., the general topic being The Church, the War and the Days Be-. yond. The topic for the Christian En- deavor meeting Sunday evening is, Christianity and the Toilers of Japan~ The meeting will be in_charge of the. missionary committee, Miss Elizabeti Anderson, chairman. SOUTH KILLINGLY A. A. Jacques shot a fox last week, Several have been taken in this vicine ity ‘this season. 2 Mrs. Percy Bliven is canvassing thig * section of the town in the interest of- the Day Kimball hospital fund. Mrs. Raymond Barlow is able to up after two weeks' illness with influ- enza. L A.'E. Hall has moved his _steanr plant from Moosup, Valley to Volun= town. A. E. Phillips was in Pomeganset{_ Friday. Charles Young is able to be out af= ter an iliness of several weeks. Byron Baton of Arlington was here_ Tuesday buying cow:

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