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e e e e HOME Two and three burner Oil Stoves, wick or wickless. Ovens—one or two burner. Toledo Steam Cookers. Asbestos and Pyramid Toasters. Full line of Pure Aluminum Ware. Pyrex Oven Glass Ware. O-Cedar Dusting and Pol- ishing Mops and Polish. Electric Flat-Irons, $4.00. Bulletin Building THE HOUSEHOLD SEASONABLE GOODS FOR Paints and Varnishes for all purposes. The Household Telephone 5314 o GARDEN Rakes, Hoes and three ‘and: five prong Cultivators. Italian Grape Hoes. Planet Jr. Wheeled Hoes, Cultivators, Plows and Seed- ers. Sprayers—hand and knap- sack, Pyrox. Arsenate of Lead and Bor- deaux Mixture. Black Leaf 40. Galvanized Watering Cans. Garden Hose. +4 Franklin Street ted 1916 by Presten Bros. Ine. P Thaver Building WaosdBi s it THE THAVES NATIONAL BANK 16 Shetucket St raining g whalarale and ~etail prices. TAILOR SHOP Mrrket Stmant, Telephons 5375 1 GLASS THE Picture Tells The Siozy he Picture Advertisers, Box 1!, Oregon City, O Ready Mived e Paint vha PROVIDENCE arnishes, 0ils and Brushes Sl and Meksla €6 Franklin St. Tel. 1133.3 AND FOCKFT THUMM'R BILLARDS . DOOLEY & Delicatessan SIMPSON 40 Franklin St Basement Tel. 1309 g 3 3 § 3 3 4 L o PSSP S, BUTTY — PAINT Hardware — Tools — Cutiery Examine our line of A! HCUSEHOLD Bulletin EBuilding, 74 Franklin The Everything Pure, Clean and Good —— Need a Plumhber? Tel. 877 J. . BARSTOW & CO. 23 W ater Street DR. C. B. ELDRED 42 Eroadway . Tel. 341.3 inum Ware SHOE REPAIRING The Broadway Shoe Repair- ing, Shoe Shining and Hat Cleaning Parlors SOLICIT YOUR PATRONAGE. ALL WORK DONE BY EXPERIENCED WORKMEN GIVE US A TRIAL 52 Broadway DR. JOHN W. CALLAHAN Physician and Surgeon HAS RESUMED PRACTICE 308 MAIN STREET Tel, 426-2 Residence Phone 428-3 You are sure of PROMPT SERVICE HERE for we have adequate STEAM EQUIPMENT, BEST MATERIALS and the real skill that insures prompt satisfactory service. T. J. HEALY, Marguerite Bld'g, Norwich, Ct. JUNE The month of weddings is fast npproaching.. Buy your En- gagement and Wedding Rings and Wedding Gifts at the old reliable store of The Wm. Friswell Co. 25-27 Franklin Street Norwich, Conn. EVERYTHING GUARANTEED WILLIAM C. YOUNG Buccessor to BTETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BUILDER ";tkm materials ‘st ' right .é._m labor. 50 West Main St GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embaimer 32 Providence St., Taftville Prompt aitention to day or night calls Telephore €30 apriéMWFawl 190th Dividend Office of The Norwich Savings Society Norwich, Conn., June 7, 1919. The Directors of this Society have declared out of the earnings of the current’ months - a semi-annual dividend at the rate of FOUR PER Cent. per annum, payable to deposi- tors entitled thereto on and after July 15, 1919, COSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer. GEE The Piano Tuner 122 Prospect St. THERE '3 no advertising medlurm in Phone 511 Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bul- letin for busiress r s, | Taftville, were held in the parish lm T | delivered an eloquent addres |did acting. j tion: {or Through the Fires A | Forty-three boys and girls received diplomas, at' the graduation. exercises of St. Patrick’s, school which were held in St. Patrick’s church Sunday evening at 7.30; o'clock. The address to the graduates was made by Rev. H. Broderick, rector of the church, and the sermon was delivered by Rev. Dolin of St. Lawrence church, Hart- ford. The honor pupils were named by Rev. Myles P. Galvin and Rev. Broderick made the presentation of diplomas. The church 'was well filled for the exercises; the programme be- ing as follows: Processional, Prof. F. L. Farrell: Ave Marie, class; naming of honor M. P. Galvin; presenta- pupils, Rev. tion of diplomas, Rev. J. H. Broder- ick; act of consecration, class; Sacred Heart hymn, class; address to the graduates, -Rev. J. H. Broderick; Veni Creator, choir; sermon, Rev. P. Dolin: Salve Regina, choir; benediction, Rev. Peter Cuny; Sacred Heart devotions, Rev. Peter Cuny; Laudate Dominum, choir; recessional, Prof. F. L. Farrell. These exercises tonight, as I take it, said Rev. Dolin in his sermon, are not a mere scene, a mere formality. We have gathered here tonight to partici- pate in a sacred service. Tonight marks the graduation of St. Patrick's parochial school. I feel it unneces- sary to dwell on your achievements from a 'scholastic standpoint. You have been trained in lovalty to your God. You have been shown there is a law of heaven and a law of earth. Be ever faithful to your teachings. Rev. Dolin said that the parents and the friends of the graduates will watch their future with the same devotion as they have watched their progress through school. If you but be faith- ful, he said, to the teachings of St. Patrick’s school, then you caznnot but be successful.. Be not wanting in fi- delity. Be Semper Fidelis (ever faith- ful, the class motto). See that at all times you let your conduct be such as to win the admiration of all those among whom you move.. In the battle of life realize thag you are called upon to fight to the end. The forty-three graduates follow: Frank Joseph Appleb: mes Aqui- nas Bowen, Mary Anastasia Burns, Katherine Frances Burns, Margaret Josephine Barry, Margaret Mary Car- roll, Patrick Joseph Coughlin, *Mar- garet Genevieve Connell, Julia Agnes negan, John Stephen Donegan, An- na Teresa Driscoll, *Edmund Fanning, Katherine Virginia Farrell, *Frances Mary Fenton, *Katherine Delphina Finnegan, David George Fleming, Walter Furlong, Edward Joseph non, Edith France Grave: Mary Guilbeault, Katherine Henry Joseph Harriman. ! _Eleanor Huntley, Cornelius Francis Hori , Mary Gertrude Ke Mar: | Rosalie ' Keenan, Rose Louise Lari- i viere, Paul Cornelius McNamara, Ca- | therine Cecilia Malady. James Court- ! ney Marshall, James Joseph Murphy, thew Aloysius MecCaule: John atrick O’Brien, Mary Mad e O'- nell, Jeseph John Schaffhausen, abeth Teresa Shannon, John Wil iliam Sherry, Margaret Frances Shu | grue, Albert Joseoh Shugrue, Marga \ret Frances Sullivan, Frank Anthon; | Suntheimer, James John Way, Joseph | Earl White. | —#Honor pupils. A group picture of the class was taken in front of the school before the CGorman, i graduation ~exercises in the church. | Sunday morning at the imass, the forty-three gfaduates _re- celved holy communion from Rev. Myles P. Galvin, who read the mas: Af the offertory, Miss May Ansell and Henry La Fontaine sang a duet by Wiegand and Miss Clementine Jordan played a violin solo, Schubert’'s Sere- nade. Organist LaFontaine ,in recog- nition of the signing of the peace terms, made the service a patriotic one, the large congregation standing| The Star Spangled Banner was ayed at the close of the mass. Taftville Parochial School. The annual commencement exercises | of the Sacred Heart parochial school. hall h 9 o’clock 8 o'clock Friday evenin was a large aitendance to en; one of the finest programmes ever presented | {to the public. Rev 0. Bellerose | { conferred the diplomas and pri and to the lclass. The chief feature of the pro- ramme was a Grama in which the! ils of the seventh and eighth| grades won great applause for The singing was ex v fine and showed t | training_received by the i the plen- ep- excellent recita- | was very beautiful d ‘graceful costumes. The following was the programme: Salutatory, Isola Blanchard: Dolores of Sorrow, a acts and five scenes. | Mrs. Norton, a proud and passionate, Augusia, her eldest| ma in two nne Arpin; 32 YEARS’ SERVICE. Waldman, 4 Glenn writes “When was fever and it left me with ery winter. . Thirty-two vears ago I read about Foley's and Tar and bought some and it i 1 use it yet and it halps me everv time. I am a widow 66 years old” There . is ng better for broncatal, grip and similar lingering coughs a colds that hang on. Just fine for chi dren—for croup and whooping cough. Contains no opiates. The Lee & O good Co. Ave., Cal., FLOUR {Costs a Little More Than Others — Worth It. A. R. MANNING Yantic, Conn. Phone 960-2 STEAMER CAPE COD | Whitehall Transportation Co. Inec. Leaves New York, Pler 43, Ne River, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri days, at 5 p. m.; . Norwich Tuesday Thursdays and Sundays at 6 p. m.; J.| Jsabelle, sisters, Agnes Gaffney, ' | in Palmer system of writing, awarded OCCIDENT = Thames River Lme‘ : lin variou: | New London 9 p. m. Passenger rates between Norwich and New York, $2.50. Staterooms, all outside, $1.10, cluding war tax. ¥. B..KNOUSE. Agent in- WHITESTONE CIGARS Are $48.00 Per Thcusand J. F. CONANT 11 Franklin St —‘—.*_;SR’S—EXPRESS. The Big Trucks and Little Prices. Long distance moving a_specialty. §0 Thames St., Norwlich, Conn. Telephone 779, je2T WHEN YOU ARE IN OUR CITY VICTORY LUNCH ROOM, RIGHT. ON_THE.SQUARE, 252 ZAIN ST, Hertiord Pastor Addresses Graduates daughter, haughty 'and °vain, . Marie Rose “Caron; Pauline, afterwdrds Do- lores,” has talent for painting, Helen Fontaine; Nellie ‘Claghern, Mrs."Nar- ton's niece, Pauline Hasler; Grace iaad. baby na Bissonnette; Constance, P.{niece, Theo Allard; Mrs. Worthingten, a benevolent widow and a cripple, Lil- lian Molleur: Fanchette, her = maid, Annie Hasler: Tom Pincher, police- | man, Joseph Welch: Aunt Bétsy, old| nurse in Norton family, Leona Sulli- van; .Sally Ann Tompkins, wicked: t- tle street singer and pickpocket, ‘Eva Dugas; fashionable friends of “the Nortons: Miss Edith Temple, Eliza- beth Ward: Miss Clare Meredith, Leo- na Bergeron; Miss Heloise Zacharie, Leona Lambert; Miss Esther, Welling- ton, Marguerite Benoit. - Gold ' rhedal for scholarship, Joseph - . Bernard Welsh; graduating hohors ' conferred on Rosanna -Anita Arpin, ~Marguert Marie Benoit: TLeona Mae = Sullivan Elizabeth Agnes Ward, . Joseph Ber- nard Walsh. Diplomas, for excellency to Rosanna Anita Arpin, 'Margueritai Marie -Benoit, Leona Mase smuv;u.l Elizabeth -Agnes Ward, Joseph - Bér< nard Welsh, Leona Bergeron, Albina Bissonnette, Marie Rose Caron, “Eva Dugas, Annie Hasler, Leona Eucharist! Lambert. Valedictory, Joseph Ber- nard Welsh. X The following were the highest ave-l rage: Grade TA—Marie Rose Caron, Ma- rius Reguin. Grade 7B—Abbie Murphy, Trudeau. Grade 6—Laura Carignan, Murphy. Grade 5—Cotanna Paradis, Wili... Durr, Eva Durr, Austin Keeley: Grade 4—Lina Dion., Arthur Benoit, Henry_ Lucier, Stephanie Dudeck. Aubray Thomas Grade 3—Agnes Pothier, Antonio Caron. Clement Dufresne, Melinda Germain. Grade 2—Alice Blals, Alfred Pothier, Adrien Bazinet, Ethel Roy. Grade 1—Irene Casavant, = Armand Boldue, Catherine Swain, ~Robert Welsh. Sub-primary—Yvonne Benas, Roger Surprenant, Anna May Hurd, Nicholas Bontempo. WILL BEGIN GOVERNMENT MARKET SERVICE HERE Details of the marketing guide for canSumers. which the bureau of mar- kets of the United States department of agriculture, In co-operation with the Connecticut Agricultural . college, -'is planning to start in Norwich Tuesday (tomorrow), and how it is hoped to better local marketing conditions, were made plain in 'a statement given out Sunday by H. Bruce Price, local repra- sentative of the bureau. The guide will be prevared by the bureau on Tues- days and Thursdays from data obtain- od it and will be published in The Norwich Bulletin. ) “The city market reporting service,” says the bureau's statement, “will be conducted for the-benefit of-consumers and growers alike.. Dealers also should find the service beneficial as a stabil- izer of the market. Within: the city, however, interest will no. doubt center on the possible usefulness of the ser- vice to the housewife.” Uil bureau of markets feels that wh many forces operate ~ to . bring abolit an increasing cost of living and while there are perhaps numetous‘de- fects in the prevailing marketing ma- chinery, one of the 'important ¢onsid- erations in both connections is a gen- eral lack of knowledge on, the part of consumers, and to a large degree also on the part of producers, as'to fust what is going on in the market. : The market quotations- usnally published are not in terms which make them umn: l derstandable to the average consumer. It will be the aim of.this servide, inso- far as the consumer is concerned, to strip away all technicalities from mar- ket reports and to present them 'in'a simple, straightforwar intelligible form. In addition, the ‘quotations. will be accompanied by interesting- and helpful comments on market conditions | and a non-techn interpretation of. the market quotations. - A uséful fea< ture of the renorts will be a:¢lassifica~ tion of the most important ‘products he headings “abundant.” “nor- | and arce.’ This should be a valuable guide to consumers who wish to concentrate their = purchases - on products that are most plentiful. in or- der that they may help their pockets The most plentiful products aily the cheapest. 'They are,.at the same time, those —on which the growers are running the zreatest risk of financial lnss, and 'y are those on which waste is most likely to oocur, due to ma t glut: Another feature which should ’find favor with the housewife is advice on me to can and vegetables and fruits, and . to e preserves, jellies, etc. Many!: housewives complain each year that the periods of abundance for certai before they. realize it, must then” buy their materials for canning, ete., at relative- ly high prices. The city market r porting service wil] attemnt to keep housewives informed somewhat in ad- vance when the most advantageous canning periods are approaehing. The market guide, will cover frem sh_fruits and vegetables. s and probably some other foods will be included later. These are all items of a perishable nature, the supplies and prices of which' fluctuate i The prices ‘at which the} re being supplied to'store- hucksters and - other retail by farmers and wholesale and commission firms will be collected early each morning by a trained mar ket reporter who will take grade an quality into consideration. The prices paid by retail dealers will form the basis of the reports. How- wver, the nrices quoted will‘be given on such measures and weights as “the housewife is accustomed to buy fronr| her retailer. This feature of the ser- vice should be a valuable guide te con- sumers. since' it affords an oppertunity to study the comparative costs of ‘the different foods: moreover, it may:be used as a check on retafl prices. i The bureau of markets will be- glady to receive any suggestions as to how. the Norwich marketing service:can bs useful. Although the sers ated in a number of cities parts of the countrv, it is! recognized that local situations vary;} and every effort is made to best adapt; the service to Ervva ng conditiong:” | MOTORMAN CARFIL IS NOW OUT OF HOSPITAL Joseph Carfil, motorman of the East Lyme trolley car that overran the Oswegatchie switch and crashed inte another car a week ago Saturday night, has recovered from ° his.. juries sufficiently to be dismissed from the New London hospital, to which. he" was taken following his.lking faund in the road in an unconscious coungi- tien. = Hp resides in New, London. Motorman Carfil is still unable- to relate what caused the accident or how he came to be found in the road- way some distance back from the scene of the accident. He does not { remember in what ‘magner he left the vestibule of the car. Has Position With Savings Society: MM dith Fellows, who has been'| in Washington in the employ of the ordnance depariment; has . Teturned from there and has taken a position in the Neorwich Savings Society, where she hegins work today (Monday). Pure ¥ Turkish Tobacco G I T T 0 HOgInaun Every mail brings us the strongest voluntary indorsements of Helmar. Not because they are Helmar—but because Helmar - is 100% pure Turkish Tobacco—the Mildest and Best ! tobacco for cigarettes. . ; “Bundle” éigarettes, to be sure, contain a “dash” of Turkish—but a “dash” of Turkish, compared with 100% pure Turkish, is 2 joke. We are talking plain—but it’s the Truth. DR. KAPLAND MARKOFF HAS <pital. L ! state Farm at’ No from' th woff has just graduated from | New Nolio some time BRIDGEPORT APPOINTMENT | [0 o0 Lniversity, receiving his de- | o 500 ickod 6578 Dr. lapland K. Markoff, of this city | gree lasi week. {280, Eseaped _and ‘Weis, picked Yp . gn leave, .oday (Monday) for Bridgeport, . i the street in luat city day night-by. - where- he has- accepted the appoint- A man from New Britain. John Mc- | Office» Clarence Sanfield, The farm ment as bouse physician in St. Vin- | Enroe, who was committed to the i officials were ritified.