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2 WILLIMANTIC Morwich Bulletin Willimantic Office, 23 Church St. Telephone 105. What Is Going On Tonight. | _Ancient Order United Workmen. | Willimantic Lodge, No. 11, meets at 140 Valley street Knights of Columbus | Counell, No. 14, meets at street. Royal Areanum, Willimantic Coun cil, No. 123, meets at 702 Main street Olive Branch Couneil, No. 10, R. and | S. M. meets in Masonic hall. Whist in 0dd Fellows hall given by Obwebetuek Lodge. No. 16 Private Percy . Brooks who disd on| the battlefield in France just fiv months after their marriage. She was Lillian Porter. For the present the newly married couple will make " their {home in this city at No. 2 Temple street, They were ried by the Rev. Arthur D. Carpentor, pastor of irst Baptist church. ! The date of expiration for the cur- rent dog licenses is May 1 and not on April 1 as reported in Monday’s Bulle- tin. The new license tags will be ready on or about the 15th of April { County Datective William E. Jack- | son of this city, who has been confined to the house for the past week with | grip, is able to be out. i At the meeting of Natchaug Lodge No. 22, Knights of Pythias, Monda~ | night, the second degree was eonferred on a class of five candidates. There | was a good aftendance at the meet- ing. fsadore Berger of this city was pain- fully injured Sunday night by being | kicked Ly the horse which he was driy ing. While going down Brick Top hill the horse kicked over the shafts of the front wagon and one hoof struck in the right/leg just below the causing a compound fracture. e i red mau finally reached h 1 was taken fo St. Joseph's where Dr. J. A. Gi a re } S Jose n 1 Main An enthusiastic meeting of the clerks of this city was held Monday night in the Center street armory at which over one hundred were present Nelson A. Daniels was appointed temporary chairman of the meeting. It was voted to form a Protective Clerks' Associa- ton. a new organization. to take the plaee of the form association. A com- mittee consisting of George A. Bartiett, P. D. Donohue and Joseph Berard were appointed to bring in a list of nomina tions for officers of the new associa- | tion After conferring. the committee | presented sollowing names ang hey were unanimously ted: Pres Nels Daniels: vice presi Miss Julia Roy cording secre. i Ma Lafieur The Opening of Their Fine, New Store and Parlors In The Plaut-Cadder Building, 144 to 146 Main Street On Wednesday, March 26th | AT 1 P. M. Now for that Deferred Painting ! That affair across the water has postponed a lot of essential | things. It has made many products scarce. It has reduced | qualities in some things. But Bay State Paint standards are unaffected. We are using the same good old materials. Our | organization has met every manufacturing emergency. In pro- | tecting ourselves we have protected Bay State users and they can buy Bay State Paints knowing that they are getting the this line the reputation of beng “the paint with a New England Conscience.” - | hospital, George K. Allen, carrier No. § out of limantic poet office, received or his priz k for $100 award ving he made | city carriers | elling thrift | certifica s check w ompa i1 quality that has giv In-or-Out Varnish is all varnishes in one. It eliminates the dabbling round with half a dozen kinds of varnish for a dozen different jobs. It will take a beautiful finish that will withstand water, steam, wind or weather. WADSWORTH, HOWLAND & COMPANY, Inc., Boston, Mass. Largest Paint and Varnish Makers in New England You can buy Bay State Paint and li-or-Out Varnish from = This Modern Store is Fitted and Equipped for the Service of the Best in ICE CREAM, SODA, CONFECTIONERY and LIGHT LUNCH. Fine Packages a Specialty AT YOUR CCMMAND WITH \h A Quality E S i S e | Sl Service Moderate Prices stamps, 14847 M pendici ofl Bt her che, of Hartford, expected esday) ey Americaniz \mber MGOSUP : JEWETT CITY Commerce | WS’ couneil, No. communion members t defe ation o A Real Hair Saverz and Beautifier Found | SOUVENIRS BELL and MILTON 144 to 146 Main Street, Norwich, Conn. “WHERE GUALITY COSTS NO MORE” at Last—Shows Once or Nothing to Pay Results any a pack cost mu could eftert iy Yo first 2 much more abu life and e o i g of internatlonal com- g R merce by reason of the difficulty of strtak the portation and thelr comparatively soft and A During the re- = % sermany developed e of drying the po 0 in & man- S . hich it could be kept indefi- | — nsported as readii and the opportunity to economically increase and world distribution SEE WINDOW DISPLAYS e world are|it is at least comfort orth America | m $3.000,- per annum. time been ¢ importance from ced in wrope and 2 value of 100,000,000 MOHEG N to know that we may produce alcohol from potatoes t the rate of from 200 to 400 gallons per acre, the experts state that | of potatoes will produce a! alcohol and it is well known | { that potatoes can be grown at the rate | {of 200 bushels per acre In the United | | States and 300 to 500 bushels per acre | {in Germany. which country in fact] | produces nearly one-third of the pota- {toes of the world where attention has ! specially been given to the production | the alcohol potat The number of | today, said the lect 000,000 and t quire for 1t and easily produced |tenance enough land to pro man and beast. The | for 200,000,000 people. I mber of factories for potato drying |stitute the internal combustion engine rmany increased from 3 in 1903 |for the horse, we shall not only ut 1,000 in 1918, and they have |velop that great undeveloped area, the | romwell| an annual capacity for crushing 50,- | tropics, where the horse is unsde to match|ogp,000 tons of potatoes and turning|perform service. but also release for veek and|them into flakes or cubes for animal |the production of fc#1 for man enor- {food and various grades of flour for | mous now utilized in producing | human consumption. | food for horses which will then be no With this new facility for turning |longer required {the petato from its former perishable | state to one in Which it can be nerma- <|mently stored and easily transported, | ithfi world’s great potato producing Woodhouse, | area, now chiefly Europe and North committee of | America, may supply a much greater | auantity of world food than at pres- drive | ent. would amount to $1,200,000, for the two r period he church pension fund began op- tion on March 1, 1917, with $8,712, 000, raised in a § mpaign for $5,000,000, to protect clergymen then in office. The fund embraces $.000 parishe: tered throughout the United States and for- eign missi fi ind more than 5,000 cle re protected by bility allowances * their widows and or- ard Butcher z and AN a just been sent he church {n the ted out that the amount of annual grants of make it one of half dozen on granting corporations BRIEF Deep River. ed the ) March 18th a ) the world | avout 140 their sus uce tood we can eub- | JAY M. SHEPARD STATE NEWS Succeeding Elmore & Shepsrd Faneral Director & Embalmer 60-62 North St., Willimantic | Lady Aseistan import. SUppLY I¢ of the worl The Natio York opened a Matanzas, Cuba, Jan the third branch orened i Cuba, at Haban: nd Franklin Machine tank of New the city of D dividu: Tel connection asant evening was passed e m r Neigh 1 © home of pect ind luncheos guard ie_state sred 782 pof Farmington. ard fortnigh the op! out of Miss two being Cuba, S Suntiago the intere 1nior the moet of Providenc fter a and we ['s 2w & DEN Removed te 715 Main 3i, Heurs—t o = » 8 p ™ The Church Pension Fund. The Episcopal church contributed in two years $1 6 for the tion of its nen church pension fund. This was Willimantio Wethersfield, Phone 44 chatrman of the Red C Providence, R. L. Telenhones: Union 963 to New sotec- this through the KILLOUREY BROS. $467.96, of which > inmates el Union 1857 | Eaqually important. perhaps more <o, Company amount of the assessments paid into FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EM. BALMERS Willimantie, Conn. | “Lady Assistant) 86 Union St, Phone 29C MURRAY'S BOSTON STORE | Willimantic, Conn. ‘ Glorious New Fabrics For Spring All the charms of springtime seem to have been captured and incorporated into the exquisite textures and designs of these lovely materials. Rich in coloring and weave, these distinctive, shimmer- ing silks, soft woolens and attractive patterned cottons await the touch of the master hand to convert them into irresistible interpretation of the seazon’s most pleasing modes. Step in and let us show you the new colorings and patterns for Spring. THE H. C. MURRAY CO. Personal Representative Of Secretary Baker rnoon Gec Burial w he th cemetery ami t in Sc For Piles A Free Trial of Prramid Pile Treat- ment Will Be Just Like Meet- ing g Good Old Friend. Have you tried Pyramid? If not, why don’t vou? 1 Just mail 1 their deliverer—why not you? Mail coupon mow or get a e box from any druggist anywhere. Take no substitute. FREE SAMPLE COUPON PYRAMID DRUG COMPANY. 566 Pyramid Bldg., Marshal, Mich. Kindly _send me a Frea sample of Pyramid Pile Treatment, in plain wrapper. Name.. Chester W. Cutheil of New York who has been appointed by Secve- tary Baker as his personal repre sentative in the setilement of 4 questions growing out of the busi ness relations between.the War De- I ewned by {of the prison Middletown. | cal association |its season, repor treasury of about has been the mos history of the organ Hartford.—Of the for garden plots thi fourths have be took care of gardens last year, per cent. of the people have two garde Norfolk.—The rgest and best be open cause of war conditions this host MeLean of Plain ast, summer. The Middletown Mausi- | of hich has just clos ed a surplus th $100. The on | th i | tie ed |1 as closed a I Cheshire.—Accor made to the office Commissioner Thomas Guarino of Cheshire, ing watered mil ned $10 “Food and Holt accused of | power successful in the | tim continued he by rid, of nts ne (which automobiles, rm the th onld great the the the potato in which men may now develop | undeveloped tropies, increase the transportation facili- of the temperate zone and reduce | the number of food consuming animals S| which this zone employs. the intes: vould concluston prove not only a substitute for zaso- o but will in fact Y | perior to that of gasoline when utit properly lecturer, fiying | motors and others | character) have mar rapidly r petroleum and its varied product: quire the world to turn to some other is the future | the fund by churches throughout the supplying motive | country at the close of the two years of operation ed. Monell Sayre, secretary and mana- ger of the church pension fund, an- nounced that this total of $1,181,057. was 98 1-2 per cent. of all possible a: sessments pavable on the salaries of | Episcopal clergymen in the Unfd States and forcign missionary fields. | | Seven and one-half per cent. of all aries, which is the asse Engineers Founders Manufacturers of HARRIS-COR- LISS ENGINES. Brown Valve Gear applied to all makes of Gor- liss _ Engines, Engine Repairs, Shafting, Hangers, Pulleys, Bear ings, Couplings, Clutches. Large stock always on hand. General Mill Repairs, Special machinery of all kinds. Machinists] ar . and at of the he same Careful stu nal combustion en- include the engines machines and of similar of them reach- t alcohol will ender constructed engine. | growlng demand | costs, totalling $ 5, in the town| court in Cheshire. ‘ THE POTATO IN INDUSTRIAL | AND COMMERCIAL DEVELOPMENT | The potato, past, present and future, was the subject of a lecture recently | delivered in the educational depart- ment of the National City bank of New | York before a c in international | trade and commercial geography. | We have all respected the potato, ! said the lecturer, because it has be an extremely important source of the | daily food supply of man in the occi- dental temperate zones, next in im- portance to wh though in the trop- 1cs and the orien had' little con- slderation thus far t, how- ever, we sec great p s for it| in international trade bec man has | recently learned art of drying the | potato in a manner In which it may be! stored or transportéd long distances for food for man or animals, just as flour is now handled, while its future| may Include the operation of our auto- mobiles, fiying machines and farm mo- tors, and aid in the deveiopment of the tropics which have heen thus far undeveloped hecause of the inahility of | the horse to perform ice in the at M partment and’ Forcign: Govermment. tropical climate Most of the §,000,000,000 bushels of oxce. EDAL eboratories el BACK LIKE A BOARD? YOUR KIDNEYS There's mo use suffering from the awful agony of lame back. | tili it “passes off.” Find the cause and stop it. Diseased | conditions of kidneys are usually indi- cated by stiff lame backs and other wrenching pains, which are mature's sig- nals for help! Here's the remedy. the first twinges of pain er experi- ence any of these symptoms, get Go to your draggist and get a bex of the pure, Haariem Oil rted fresh every momth from the Haarlem, Helland. Pleasant aud easy to take, they instaut. ly attack the poisonous germs clogg your system and bring quick relief. For over two hunds have been hel; the siek. try them? mble druggista in Three_sizes not MEDAL" in Sols D you. Money back if they do and " be sure the in on the box. IT’S Don't wait It only comes back, 1lar? Resinol Don't be denied the picasure your friends enjoy a skin that is marred by unsightly blemishes. Here's the thing to do—give the Resinol treatment a fair trial. Use the ointment and soap jointly. Let the healing medication contained in both, correct and gradually overcomg the trouble that is robbing you of a clear complexion and a good time. ‘When you feel usy 1 GOLD Sapsules, im- nply because of red years they Why not everywhere by re- sealed packages. combived use of this ointment and £ or the treatment of eczema and ther 5 Por sule wt ali drugti espccially sait, diseases % Agk for “GOLD name