Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 25, 1919, Page 5

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NORWICH, BULLETIN, FRIDAY, APRIL 25, 1919 To Have Clean, Healthy Blood Bright Eyes, Clear Complexion Take Famous Springtime Tonic and Blood Purifier “Celery King” Three times a week for three weeks, brew yourself a cup ¢f Celery King and drink it just before retiring., Give it to the children, too. Y '11 be | surprised how gently yet effectively| CELERY KING creates a normal action of the bowels, | cleansing and strengthening of th: system, banishing pimples, = scrofula and other blood disorders. Cel King keeps the blood pure and h by freeing the system of all waste matter, . | The Lyons Co CORSET BARGAIN Starts Saturday Morning One lot of Warner’s| Corsets ..... $1.00i One lot of Warner’s Corsets ..... $1. 50;‘ They are low and medium| bust and long hip-—the popu-| lar models—and actual valuc‘i‘ at $1.75 and $2.25. The quan- tity is limited, but a bargam for all who avaii themselves of the opportunity. No ‘ changes and no refunds. the M. E e Bulizti ™ Norwich, Friday, April 2, 1919 5 VARIOUS MATTERS April 23th is St. Mark’s day. This is almanac day for Ma; Light vehicle lamps at 8.07 this evening. The first of the cherry peared Thursday., Today will end the for most of the schoo Come to the Owls’ whist tonight and | a good time.—adv. During Ap: the planet: Neptune in Cancer, but is too faint for naked tion, The quarterly x“ectmg of the { Optical ty 1d at th Tuesday Bet\. een the fear.of fire 1y- ness of rats, this is an anxious season | for chicken raisers’ who have brood- ers full .of eggs. blossoms ap- ring vacation llflltl evening. nd the i an, John E. Sellers e discharge from April 4, and is employed as k in Hartford. of ss at St. F h(ld the r daily parish mass continui Officers electe | holidays church tod The : Holloway in street, from 10 a. 3 p./m. A special meeting of Tierney league was held evenint at New Londo eived of d Baker, with a Fren on of 1 sermon Owing to ame of M Brassieres ...... 50c : A regular 75¢ quality, in em-| broidery trimmed-—si: 44, Childre~"- < A Crush Woe! § value, $4.98, for 10 years, in roz> 00 3 ) < weater actual | , Copenhagen, | < zes 36 to ] Sweaters yellow and green, with sailor - G eollar, belt and pockets. Th model all the children like, For Men and Young Men% : Large assortment of all-wool fabrics, in attractive colors and t-line model as well as regular sack modzls patterns, in wais! . for those desiring a more con-! servative style for business or|? dress wear, Hats, Caps and Men'’s Furnishings| —THE— F.A.WELLSCD. “GOOD CLOTHES STORE” SHOE R.EPAIRING 1, throwing If you would Broadway. BROADWAY SHOE REPAIR SHOP Steak Cod 10c a pound; Middle Cuts 15c; Fancy Eastern Halibut, Smelts, Flounders, Haddock, Market Cod, Cod Tongues, Long, Round and Little Neck Clams, Lobstcrs and DOysters. Sait Pork 32: a pou WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus. iness before the public, thers is no miedium better than through the ad vertising columns of The Bulletin kS ings of the c children of Amc Major James H. that the child a little city Nicol, who f Americ |1t follows: “Tell to feed the also stores, nd’ ed Dby childre: make them a ¢ of the count “One hundred saved in co thousand g uted in March 5 “Children of Easter greeting ica. At the same t reached at the foot ark rested when the great ‘!m:.l\ abat- ed, declaring that typhus w raging on, medicines were nd conditions were “inde- scribably bad.” One of the mess to children of \me = in Eri- E: very thousands of live of the relief workers there were 330,000 gees in the Cauasus a e who quired aid. The wise man alw: ters on a cake of ic ‘ru“d“ of the famous 26th Di ex- | “Food | PERSONALS Thomas Jones has returned from bus. Hartford, where he has been on a iness trip. Patrick J. Vlcl\erney is to be in Dos: ton to see the parade of the 26th Di. vision today. J. Brophy will be one of the rich people to see the parade of | the 26th Division in Boston. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Kenerson of Norwich have been guests at the home of Carlisle Graham in Stonington. Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Twist of Prospect street are cpending the week-end in New York and Larch- mont. Mr. and Mrs. Byron Bates and Mr., and Mrs. Tranklin Walker of West ock were recent motor visitors 1wy | Arthur E. Story, {at the Merchants’ National Ban! {111 with grip at his home on Laurel| | Hill avenue. | M rdie Hogan of Harrisburg, ing at the home ss Kittie Throwe, eet. 2 Ernest Ball, who has been un- der treatment at the Backus hospital !for the last four weeks, has returned {to her home at Poquetanuck. F. A. Dolbeare and Erwin, motored to to view the grand sion. and Mrs. Thomas J. Lynch and daughter have returned home to Haven after spending the Easter!| with their uncle, Michael Lynch, of Lebanon. over five \\'Eek assistant cashier of 22 Boston Thursday M nfluenza, ith lrumbufl chapter, ! William Tyler Browne, out on gaining ber| FUNERAL. Mrs. James B. Bliven. afternoon at one thirty, & e was held for Annie M. ner, widow of James B. Bliven, at ome on East Town street. At two o'clock were held in” Grace t which there was Rev. M. McLean , a former rector of this church conducted the sérvices. Relatives were present from Brom: N E \\lndhflm Franklin and choice fOAdl were J. E. Alfred G. Burial was in 1 1¢ham cemeter:; nl\ e read ort service at the ‘ndertaker Charles A. Gager, in charge of the funeral ar- large Goldie of pieces. Vrederi La Rue the Rev. n's death, following of her ajth i | 3 l William Hamilton and James Calla- ihan of New York, the two 16-year-old oys who were caught in. the act of ing the store of Murphy & |McGarry, 207 Main street, early | Thursday morning, were presented in jthe city court on Thursday. Their lcase was bound over to the |session of the cuperior court and {default of ‘bonds of $1000 they taken to the New London county jail to await trial. Both boys were well dressed and seemed not to mind the rious situation in which they {placed. ( han in the court his name as Murphy. According to members of the! “midnight crew,” who were frequent- |ing Franklin about the time { the two bu were rounded up i Policemen Michael Carroll and Daniel J. O'Neil, there was a third yeuth in the burglary job who e: d. After Policeman O'Neil prisoner in each hand, volver jammed up under the ear one of them, had led his two capt! to. police headquarters, accompanied by Officer Carroll, and things had quieted down a bit, the third youth | appeared in Rose alley. He was white as a sheet, when seen by some of the jmen there, and he made off through in gave | hold with his r of s THREE YOUTHS IN MAIN ST. BURGLARY | criminal | were | are | the raiiroad yards where he was scen by some of the truckmen who werc carting the scenery of the Chauncey Olcott play to the baggage room at the station. Murphy, alias Callahan, was on the point of making a dash up through ranklin square into Rose alley, ac- cording to some men who saw him, but'as he rounded the corner of the |rear of Preston Bros.' building on the {run, he saw the crowd*of men on the crosswalk at the head of the alley. He saw the game was all up then, turned around and threw un both hands as he surrendered to Officer O'Neil. In the city court Hamilton said he {was born in Govan, near Glasgow, Scotland, on September 22, 1902, the | on of \illiam and Nellie Hamilton, | and the parents are still in Govan. He has been living on the east side New York since he came to ountry eight months aunt at 58¢ Greenv | _Callahan said S 1 York city o . 1902, and he i ithe son of John and Mary Murphy. His home is at 169 Perry street where the has two cisters and two brothers. |He has an aunt in Groton and hasj | worked at the Groton -Iron Works. IThey came to Norwich Wednesday. ind FAITHFUL WORKERS MADE ORGAN ?EC]TALS SUCCESSFUL | The s of organ recitals and t conclu at the old Sec- | egational church u’xflor the {auspices of the Y. M. C. {called for an er tail to accompl successful f jeral chairman, 1gins, who w |may well be 1 effi v ) | ‘Cunling to th Edwin W. Hig- ble committees ion of the truste, , who were intes of the United once put in first I “will use the building in a parish house and a enter for any religious organization. Much help rendered _through. E Hill and the D. Sevin, to Fred- | pervised the e ser- c com- ~_Through the courte all silver and c for the f the United ina were sup- so! after that of her husband, has T d S0 much happiness in their new humc . NCIDENTS IN SOCIETY Miss Frances D. (‘m! has been “ulx he George D. Coit e din visit. | Mrs. Alex: er of se have leased Carl W. street .md will occupy the it} Graham, est for 34 who had several weeks of R. S. Ger- York to ome in London. P. Huntington of New! iday with his moth- | Manor and had as his| coln \\ddk\\orlh of Loslo'} panece lacauer ily embroidered h won by M , were 2 Miss Mary ploy of the Shore Line company have been at Jitney v London, lerstood that the figures ob- determine the a half hour erl(’) 1 the two cities. e o ael Aldi of this ci the 102nd i Y. M. C. A. Bible Study. Block to lead the grammar school Bible 1 A. this (F' ndaw passenger in_ its public uf the r.ulroads faces an- have add- the payrolls, in 1916 and by $330,000,000, increase in three The Interstate| in 1916 s to increase ,000,000 a year. The year added more than | "The total rate increases orlingly upward of $1,100,000,- ), \\lmo the wage increases are $1,- i 260,000,000. The coal bill of the roads been increased $250,000,000 in dflllmndl r(ef‘l bill of $1,750,000, ODD, and n increase in rate of $1,-| | st (loss Iood for an appetite ike mine, while | and | as) | was the gen | bile o i the transpor ;bA k of the out of to + automo- who offered their cars for London and Lach church ting her own ! sub-committees. Perhaps noth! ted more to hour thani Brownim e orchestras i gladly for he cause. Among the mu: d so materiaily toward Ssupper_gue: W ho gave Fontaine, Id[l‘ '| through the Storms, Livingstone Noyes. Sybil and EI ! \du[rh QP"AKER WALSH PRESIDENT OF LEGISLATIVE CLUB| a meeting s of il of the called to order by Senator Heal motion of Senator Hazen, the ‘appointed a committee on nominations ced of S tor Hazen An-‘] 1J‘}’1~ the, land the officers nz | President—Speal renort ned ele James was i idents—Senators George r 3 H Heald, Arthur dnd H. A. Townsend C Senators Putnam George Dillon, I'rench, (28 North , Pomfret; Oliver R. e H. B. Putnam ; William John H. Y. Hcm\ Kent, Norwich; d. ill Fires Since Campaign Began. 13 months ago the United partment of Agriculture I | r; = | ited by lhc field It was found | fcurred in men of the departmer at the outset that, for workmen in plants were ed with the conditions explosions would occur, | conditions were mostly not acquaint- | under though the i o d $!that could be men. Field men ha throughout the cou demenstration plant They have Sisted mill and elevator owners in re- g dangerous equipment and in the and and | were | fires in whicl much property frequent. de flro\ ed Homes for the Homeless. 000 saloon buildings that will be for rent after July 1, it looks il ihe changing of some of them o into apartments will be undertaken in crder to meet the great demand felt!| for piaces to dwell in—Boston Tran- | With Announcc—mem that the fare on the transatlantic atr schedule is to dically premature; hen we've got to keep the show ‘mo ving when the biz acts are so slow. the State lrdu:— trial commission should be comwosed of an equal number of represen‘atives of employers and employes and an ad- ditional neutral commissioner. 1 in reopen- | more, | . Charles | he good of! lizabeth | the most part, ’ o death was, discov- | ILLINOIS SAILOR WRITES APPRECIATION OF Y. M. C. Al The following letter of appreciat has been re Cel\ed at the Norwich Y. M.| C. A. from a sailor formerly at the| ine base: Hillsboro, 111, April 20, 1919. ASTHMA SUFFERERS A HMevs Fiome Cure That Anyone Can Use Without Discemfort or Loss of Time. ‘We have a New Method that cuves Asthma, and we want you to try it at our expenze. No matier whether your case is of long-standing or recent de- velopment, whether it is present as cc- casional or chronic Asthma, you shouid end for a free trial of our method, No matter in what climate you livs, no matter what your age oOr Occupa- tion, if you are troubled with asthma, oul method should relieve you promptly. We especially want to semnd it to those apparently hopeless cases, where all forms of inhalers, douches, opi preparations, fumes, “patent smokes, ctc., have failed. We want to show Edwin Hill, Norwich, Conn.: Dear Fri I suppose you have be-| gun to think I have forgotten you, but| I haven't. I left the base ireat Lakes to th on Dec. 10th for\ be discharged, v kept me at the Lakes until Jan sth, on which date 1 was discharged, nd I'll tell you I was sure glad to get home again. although I sure do m the good old times I had at the Nor- wich Y. M. C. A, for I sure was royal- 1y treated there and will never forget! ume you are all there ! |o emember me to them all. of the old bunch visit you yet efrom the base? Do you still entertain | on Sundays and sing the war songs? Am again working with father in the monument _bukiness and business is sure good this yea | Wishing vou and the Y. worlds of succes ret. 1 i M. C. A.f , I beg to remain A. C. PURDY. OBI!TUARY. Dr. Herbert M. Bishop. A telegram Arthyr H. Brew Norwich, annou . Herbert . of Norwich. “hmh was from Dr. son, Julian, stated "al was to be held this | (Friday) rnoon. A similar tele- gram was received Thursday by Dr. | Bishop's broth Dr. Adam Bishop, of Main street, Niantic. Dr. Bishop was a native of ! London, one of the four children i Charles and Cynthia Dav | His only sister, Charlotte, former Governor Thomas M. Waller, Y London, died a number of a"rx and younger brother, G long Norwich dentist, o ut twenty years of New of son Bishop. | the wife of | | Georg 20. e family is antic. Dr. Bishop cerved as a surgeon and for three Phil Sheridan’ tent Grand years was_in division. He Army man. all the degr while in Nor 8 in the histor; and_especially conversant with cottish Rite traditions and lore. Although he had a large practl a homeopathic physici wich and later in California, he had studied in both schools of medicine. In March, 1902, he sold ‘out his prac- ltice to Dr. Jonathan H. Allen, of Rockvifle, Conn,, now of 76 Church street, Norwich, and a member of the staff of the wich State Hospital Bishop left for 2 and had been most _successful since locating in Los Angeles, where his of the finest in tk | house, equipped with an observatory, | .| swimming pool and every comfort and luxury. After locating in Norwich following the end of the Civil war he married| Miss Ella Spalding, daughter of Mr. and Mr: Spalding. They had two s Cecil, now 2 resi- , and Julian, at one time| a lawyer, later cashier in the railroad | London, who for several ed with his father in| Dr. and Mrs. Bishop| and the latter is |of New Haven, who died in that city labout a year ago. They had seps nd after locating in Los Angeles, Dr. Bishop a lthy woman ia whose death fol- |lowed a long period of invali {result of an accident while ¢ ng school. is fourth wife, who wa “|a native of Pittsburgh, died Jan. 2 1817, and Dr. Bishop brought the 1,021 ru returning to| 1c<xdm" in Norwich he 3 op was courtly and in speech and manner, most ag and emcrtainin; in conversation. He ynl‘ his “‘1011 for Nor- c frie -hexP and was de'.lqhtml to | hospitality to | who visited his Californ: s last visit east ne , when he was the guest Niantic, former London and Bave it - |falling, although he had continued his ! practice and th in a w While in Norwi dence was on the Site of the McGrory block, on East Main Max Cherkasky. Max Cherkasky, best Bnho known Jewis v at his home, day afternoon. s born residents, 160 Shaw in K , and located ¢ London about 30 years ago. al business, v, in He 1 re- | tiring about five The deceased le: Ichontz of r of New London, S Benjamin Cherkasky, both of New London. Be sides he is su vived by 14 grandchiliren and two great-grandchildren. | a specxal qu"utL“o a r been introduced at the 1919 sessi {'the Calof: pose of cl | the m E proof that the date of of gold at Coloma, Sutter’s Mill, as shown on the Marshall statue at Co- loma, Jan. 19, 1848, is wrong, and that the correct date is Jan. 24, 1848. iturned to matc he stands for the good old now | ¢ | should | member of | | si s| ¥ foular |orsar it \1:)4191" 2815 A COMFORTABLE PLAY SUIT. mono waist d 4 requires 1 1-1 yards for materia ration Democrats Are at Cdds. Mitchell reading each other out o cratic_party d the ing d Bailey sa democrac Ll:&res s which he de- ation !vus repu- and in'a its provi “T beli right to with the free as - and good order of rigid econom: There be it wouldn't SCHOO CHILDREN KLY one of New Lone| r it while you have the use of it— set in 14K gold. The P laut-{adden mailed Palmer | ARE -1 everyone at our own expense that this method is designed to end all gif- ult breathing, all wheezing, and all ‘LIIO(L terrible paroxysms at once and for all time. This free offer is too important to {neglect a single day. Write ‘now and | then begin the method at once. Send | no money. Simply mail coupon be- low. Do It Today. FREE ASTHMA COUPON ASTHMA CO. Room a and Hudson Sts, We advertize exactly as it i “Don’t Start Any- thing You Can’t {Finish.” We entered the war and start- ed something, The fighting is over, but pavmg the bills isn’t, and now we've got to finish the job. BUY THE NEW VICTORY BONDS. They’ll pay you a good reve- nue—but that isn’t the point —you ought to buy them be- cause they help to “finish the job.” Bonds and Our Clothing. Both high class security, and {good investments. Bonds are backed by our government and our clothing is backed by our guarantee ot satisfaction. You Can Buy Both. Murphy & MeGarry 207 MAIN STREET KVACUUM CLEANERS We Can Explain Advantages of the Torrington I“!n:n..-n reciers iv:rr‘ 2 Main Street Commarcy B Assislant WHITESTONE CIGARS Are $8.00 Far Thousand J. F. CONANT 11 Franklin 8t

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