Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 10, 1920, Page 6

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A1t Counterfeits, Imitations' and * F.xperiments that trifle mth and | enduger &e health of Infants and Children—] What is CASTORIA . Castoria is a harmless substi Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It comxins neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. Its age is its guarantee. For more than thirty years it has + been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and by regulnfi.ng the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children’s Comfort —The Mother’s Friend. cenumnE CASTORIA ALWAYS Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY. NEW YORK STV, How Frogs Protect Eggs. Making Improvement Sure. 2 In the manner of disposing of their We car a rk, for all that - directions lald | CBES many species of frog cxhibit re- e Thes ooe ible peculiarities. One of the It may be that t curfous, a tree frog, native of t .other people -, makes its mest in a bush a while it may be ing 'a pond. The lower ends 2 line for our- | ©f @ number of leaves are d ind that if we | 8¢ther and fixed 'in that po n in ‘the most | @ number of empty egg capsules. The y, we shall find ourselves | ®88S are also covered with a shield of empty capsules to protect them from the sun and air. When the eggs are hatched the plug at the bottom ap- pears to fall out and the tadpoles tumble inte the water. ng ar\l rising, <mp by step, in v York Evening To Renovate. Before you renovate the furniture P 1 dirt and the old varnish. Measuring Rainfall. y accomplished by using The quantlty of rain which falls 13 | B S e | S o 'BETTER DEAD Life is a burden when the body i3 racked with, pain. Everything worries and the victim becomes wmeasured hy rain-gauges or pluvio- meters, which are variously construct- ed. One of the best is that known as | Symon’s rain-gatdge. consisting of a i funnel-shaped receiving vessel to catch i the rain, and a glass measure of much ller. diameter to measure it. To uplify calculation, the internal area the measure is usually one tenth that of the mouth of the funnel. n of soda and water. of iny Bee. incident testi. te sagacity and efficiency e was being ied upon™ When wasps ascertain a worth atta 1z they often in ous the bees. . Every lie wasp proached the smali bee came o An whsn. was dend. ing despondent and downhearted. To | ‘bring back the sunshine take GOl LD MFD*AL a4 wasp. is coed hole The Meanest Man. The meanest man in the world, re- gardless of previous conclusions, is the of our acquaintance—yon ho took out card 1 Society of Astronomy doesn’t have to give excuses in at 4 a. m—Tampa TENTHOLATED HCARHIOUND OUGEH DROPS DREAK UP ANY COUGH OR SOOTHES AN ATED THROAT AND DYES TT qmcr"’ ‘,Je s%r.l%f e ALYS EE A BOX "flifled‘ J Warren, who died at ki D/»‘Khflball hospital in Putnam from burns, re- ceived at her home on Oak street, were held at the undertaking rooms 6f A. F. Wood on Mechanic street. The services were conducted by . Stocking, of the Methodist = church. The body.was placed in the vault at Westfield cemetery, burial to be at South Killingly in the spring. East Killingly citizens, cut off from all public service transportation as the result of the storm, are calling' for rélief after a week of being housed in or limited to the confines of the village. East Killingly is cne of the places to which bus line service has not heen established and the trolley line is buried deep beneath the snow and no effort being made to reopen it. Vehicles for hire are not plentiful at East Killingly, so the situation for the people up there is very unpleasant to say the least, Ineidentally, the leav- ing of the trolley line to ihe place un- opened cuts off the trolley express service from Providence to -Danclson and causes much; inconvenience to Danielson manufacturers and business men who receive daily shipments by this route. : _ -The trolley line from East Killingly cast ward across the Rhode Island border is being opened up so that com- cation between that place d Providence may be resumed as speeds ily as is possible. Fundreds of quarts of milk that usually go out of East Killingly for Providence each | morning cannot be shipped and = the ! manner in which the milk has been ac- | cumulating has taxed. the ingenuity’ iof its owners to keep it from going to waste. One man owning a herd of cows at Bast Killingly has 400 quarts a day to ship—and the trolléy line has been blocked since last Thu ¥, Postmaster Raymond Allen recei | complaints Monday from residents in East Brooklyn Decause they have not been getting their mail over the R. D. route out of “the Danielson office. Postmaster Allen said Monday after- noon that ti due to the condition [of the hig which have been in i such condition that the carrier could not negotiate them. i | i { Danielson was depending entirely on Monday on the Pellett 'bus line for all trapsportation to Putnam other that that furnished by steam trains. { The Putnam route again has been opened, although there are stretches of it that are in very mad condition. The ’'busses were making the run on Monday in about an hour, which is ouly about 20 to 25 minutes slower that the regular running time. Up to Monday afternoon highways used by the busses covering the Brooklyn, Cen- tral Village and Moosup run had not been broken out so as to permit of re-establishing the regular service on this line. but it is hoped to get it re- opened today. Nothing had been done up to Mon- day evening.to reopen the trolley line, so that if this work is attempted now it will be a long and tiresome job, as the tracks are packed with snow and ice so that a plow. would -have little effect upon the accumulation. ©0 one eould he reached. here Mon- day who could give any definite in- formation ds. toiiwhen trolley service may be expected. - Danieison’s business streets are still piled high with snow, as men whe will eventullv remove the bulk of it have been giving their at-: tention to breaking out highways in various parts of the town. The ex- pense of clearing the highways so as to make them at all passable is going to cost the town a yerv considerahle stvm winter. but the expense is no different than that which other towns hereabuts are facing at the present time. Patrick Kenealy, 75. for many years a resident of.the town of Killingly, dieq at Dayville, where he has been living ‘the past few vears. being removed to the underukin: rooms of L. E. Kennedy oca . . street. ‘Mr. Kenealy, a native of Ire- land, was engageq dur.ng the greater part of ihe many years he spent in this country as farm hand and for a long time was employed on the farm of Simeon Danielson, on the er road. He has no relatives in K llng]\ but it was said here Mon- a is believed that he has a brother living e.ther at Central Vil- some other part of the town A, Bn\.diord and Walter L. Hoyle were in Worcester Monday on @ business_trip. Schools here were again in session Monday, after being closed, on . ac- count of the storm, since Wednesday of last week, A crew of a railroad work train wag engaged here Monday in dig- g out the passing siding north ot CnticnraOintmént BestFor Rough Redflantls Mmaing Do not fail to test he f grance of this ex&uhm:lym' g DANIFLSOY CASINO, STARKEWEATHER BLDG. “D“Ll‘tgl‘d P(lChF‘l‘ mu,unm LES LA rrIEa‘ D\Y port for all. Prige v Saturday. . B INVITED. FRANK BARBER, From . the todv! the station. long string’, ol l’rolsht cars, a. tmin hmflzd in: there dur.ng w’dnenday night, has " been talled in the snow ban] 5 ‘l"hg.re ‘is ‘a decrease here in the grip epidemic which has kept so| many .people fll"at their home from ¥ week. Of the scores o1 persons wlm have beéen ill, no: - died, however, so the illness isi] -{ only rcmotely. comparable to. the in- fluenza epidemic of, the fall of 191§ and the winter of 1919, & _Practically all of ‘the force em- ployed at the plant ‘of ‘the Larkin Read company has been ill, forcing um ‘closing of the shop, - but all the ents ‘are recovering and opera- | nons will be possible again before long. . Motor vehicles carrying meat and other perishable products are again making their way into Danielson, bringing relief from a _threatened shortage of some articles of food. A light truck belonging to the Pal- ace Laundry company broke down and stalled in the snow near Putnam while making a trip between that place and Dgnielson during Monday. Shipments of manufactured goads are piling up here, as the resuit of the tieup: of the transportation sys- tem, The Tokio Girls, presenting a tune- ful musical show in an attractive way, opened their engagement at the Orpheum theater Monday even- ing. All outside building operations in Danijelson have ceased for the time being, but many carpenters are keep- ing busy on inside jobs. which have No‘ AI or D'nngafi‘iu's Druas LG VE . THEATPY 3 GREAT PICTURES With the Screens Most Popular Stars — Positively the Best Ever. MARGUERITE CLARK —IN— “LUCK IN PAWN” A Six Part Photoplay Crammed to the Brim With Fun, Love and Excitement DOUGLAS MACLEAN and DORIS MAY In the Famous Saturday Evening been awaiting ther attention for Post Story some time past. 1 0 RS’ LEA E There 'is well' maintained interest this year in Danielson's night school, 23/2 H L S v An Amusing Romance, Nothing About War, Just Youth, Dough- boys and Fun FATTY ARBUCKLE In His Latest Comedy “THE GARAGE” which is regularly continuing its ses sions at the School sireet school, the attendance averaging about 40. Eugene Reed of Yale university is visiting here with his mother, Mrs. Mary Reed, of High street. PUTNAM Putnam and all the surrounding country wag engaged Monday in the exasperatingly slow and tedious task| of dmgging itself out—the reverse of| the digging in experiences that the soldiers tell about as a part of their | work on the western front, Passenger train service was im-' proved on Monday and 'bus iines (o points north and south were in oper- atlon.. R. F. D. men out of the Put-, nam, office were making an effort toi get over the routes. which has been | practically impossible since | SPECIAL ANC WEDNESDAY EVENING Wednesday, and various other cfforts FEB. 11 were underway to restore trade and commerce to something like a'normal TICKETS 260 basis. Street Superintendent Frederick Dumas ‘had a scraper and a force of men breaking out streets within the city limits. Some of these thorough- fares have been blocked since the storm. Today Mr. Dumas hopes to get his force of men into the busi- ness section and to start clearing of the masses of snow that block all but the narrow lanes through which traffic has been. movinz for several days, The star route carrier between Eastford and Putnam has been get- ting in, but up to noon of Monday the carrier on the Woodstock route bad not put in an appearance, The railway express service i s0 uncertain and irregular fthat shipments out of here cepted on Monday. This rile, it was sald. had been established hecause the company was not in a position to guarantee deliveries and preferred to ———— BORN SPECIAL PRICE TO ALL ROWLAND’'S JAZZ 3AND BIG DANCE TONIGHT IN OCCUM PRIZE WALTZ Sleighing Parties Take Notice. wait until it could do so before get- ting quantit.es of matter piled up in tra The ’'bus line to Attawaugan, Day- ville and Danielson resumed Monday and proved ience, as the trolley tieq up all the chusetts state line tral Village, and no -eff conven- through being lent considering the frightful con- MARRIED £ G . i dit.on of some parts of the trunk line no‘lfi‘-fllflfl(‘fl\:’/‘é‘R _(" In Hadly highway between this ¢ity and Dan- &v. Gerhardt Wil-| feison. There are short stretcies on gon, William P, Rose and M - 5 i lian Brockway 'both M“Hadh‘,;f‘” this route througi which width of a motor veh dug out and it is at Lh a the way has DIED gustus Gould, aged 85 ars. Charles E. Petford, aged 60 years. should fing this line somewhat eas | e T o ot Roan Bemmarit:|to get over, but it will take and George A. Murdock, aged 14(0ays more to make it real years. {Funeral from his late home, 63 Oak street Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 11, at 4 o'clock. OSSETT—In _ Providence 4, 1920, at the home of ble move to venture over mere pleasure of rid‘ng. few places at which two vi pass it each other eas: t for the There hicles « so this C R. route. . Frances Bromley Cossett, aged A work train went south from this WHITMARSH—In Hallville, Feb. 9. 1820, Mary V., Whitmarsh, wife of Arthur “"hlflna.rsh Funeral from her late home, Wednes- day morning at § o'clock. Requiem mass at St. Patriok’s church at 10 o'clock. Automobile cortege. WHITMARSH—In Preston, FHallville, on Feb. 7, 1920, Josephine Gertrude, beloved wife of Warren Trumbull ‘l"m:ma"h, in the 50th year of her and switches clearing out siding: s0 as o make possibie the frefght. Difficulty continues to be causeq on the main line by melting snow running down the inclines caused by flangers piling up snow Church & Allen 15 Main Street Funeral Directors —AND- Embalmers Lady Assistant age. Funerzl services will he held at her late home, Wednesday afternoon, Feb. 11, 1920, at 2 o'clock. MOTT—On Block Island, Feb. 7, Albert H. Mott, aged 44 years. LEWIS—In Norwich, Feh. 6, 1 Clayton Lewls, of Colchester. SNOW-—At Poughkeepsie, N. V.. Feh. 1920, Chester K. SHOW of Cranbur: N.'J. formerly of Norwich Town, in | his” $5th year. 1920, Mrs. HADLOCK—In ‘Bast Jane, Fel, 1, 1920, Robert D. Had.ock, aged 31 years. GREENE—In New London, Feb. 7, 1920, Byron B, Greene. WILLIAMS—In New T.ondon, Feh. 6, liflo Anna S., wife of George C. Wil- ms. O’DONNELL—In New 1920, Catherine, O'Donnell. BRANCH—In Waterford, Feb. §, 1920, William W. Branch. - London, Feb. 7, Wi of James H., SYLVIA—I 1 4 o LA T L Telephone 328-3 Funeral from ate home, No. 29 HENRY E. CHURCH WM. SMITH ALLEN Union Street, W Gaitons 8.20 o'clock. Solemn SBt, Patrick’s churc] tomobile cortege. BRAY—In Norwich, Feb. 8, 1920, Miss Catherine M. Bray. Tuneral from her lite home, 23§ Cen- tral avenue, this (Tuesday) morning || 8.20 o'clock. Solemn high mass at St.' M&rva church 9 o'clock. Aatomobile || curtege. 8 HIENRICH-~In Liston, Feb. 7, 1920, Mathlas Hienrich, aged 73 vears, 11 months. f TFuneral from his late home in Lis- hon, Wednesday afterncun at 2 o’ '_clnck Plnpe omv. fluwerl. ‘i morning at High mass at/| h 9 QLIQLL Au-{ Shea & Burk Funeral Directors 41 Main Street : service made to ‘open it and r > opera- H3;32:3?1§1G .ng.: Jan. 31st, tions. The ’bus: out of here were | g Er P b e mak.ng -the run through to Daniel- st son in about an hour, which was ¢ been | S e the drivers have their troubles “‘\::QE‘JasL';nr\;flrmdey Ted. 9. 1920, of the vehicles are equi otice of funeral hereafter. means for d gging themsel Westerly papers . please cony. few serious dela are being met } MCMAHON—In this city, Feb. 0. 1920, | With. The worst of the dri Bernard McMahon, of 6 Durfey|from the Grove street cemetery F:fi’;i‘x e near the home of David Wednesday morning. at 8:15 o'aloci | SoliDgly avenue. Just over 3 Reaulem mass at St. Marys woeca; | lingly town Lne there is a few badly at 9 o'clock. drifted stretches, while from Atta-|{ 1eCLAYR—In Taf! e. Feb, 8. 1920, | Waugan to Danielson the road is fair- | Frank LeClair, aged 75 vears, 6|1V well broken out. All down to| months. > 2 Dayville, however, the route is ;vr:m-‘ GOULD—In Norwich, Feb. 8 1920, Au-|tically a one-way lane through | depths of snow. that pile up on either Funeral from his_ Iate residence, 57| side. ggp)flUSt;:e; o“ednesd“ afternoon,| As traffic moved- over the Danielson Ty & route during Mbnday the traveled P R "D is, city, Feb. 9, 1920,{way became improved and to are | nj another serious handicap to using the | vears, 11 months, 19 days. s 4 - 4 » city Monday morning with a force of T‘}!'l!l"‘bchu‘g;fiq-hfi "‘”‘"'g‘ Of (18 | men o ian Ao e aliDa Zabe! 1 7] : ’ igge? 2t 10.030 a. m. with - services a long passing siding upon which a Wood's "nderla_kmz rooms, \1ech:unc freight train has been stalled in the Street, Dan‘elson. snow since last Thursday. In the lo- cal vards men were also engaged in| moving of | SEAT SALE OPENS TODAY AT 10 A. M. DIRECT FROM THREE MDNTHS‘ TRIUMPH IN BOSTON, PRESENT Rr.cmu.n D:KOVEN'S GREATEST COMIC OPERA | ROBIN HOOD ENSEMBLE OF 75 ARTISTS AND A SPECIAL METROPOLITAN SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA § PRICES—50c, $1.00, $1.50, $2.00—PLUS WAR TAX = REED — TODAY — THEATRE America’s Premiere Comedienne _ ELSIE JANIS in “A REGULAR GIRL” :Miss Janis’ First Public Appearancs in Two Years—A Big Picture For the Biggest Favorite on the Screen Today A Sure-Fire Photoplay That Will Stir the Hearts of Every- body and Furnish One Hour of the Bast En- tertainment You Ever Enjeyed CHESTER CONKLIN and PRIZMA MACK SWAIN in S “OTHER PEOPLE'S WIVES" Natural Colers 4 BIG DAYS Commencing Wednesday, | | | | No matter how bau]y off you think you are; no matter how horrible your troubles pile up against you, be glo that thlnfls are not any worse. i .There s always sumelhing to be g’ad li)Ol{t. See in her latest picture of sunshine and charm “POLLYANNA” You'll learn the “glad” game too | Now in Its Seventh Week at the Tremont Temple, Boston, and Still Drawing Tremendous Crowds at Dollar Prices THREE SHOWS DAILY—2:30, 6:45 and 8:30 Matinees 25c Plus War Tax—Evenings 30c Plus War HIGH CLASS VAUDEVILLE STRAND AND MOTION PICTURES N Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday—Popular Prices—3 Shows e Y e JIM AND IRENE MARLYN MAN AND WOMAN IN AN EXCELLENT SINGING AND DANCING ACT—SPECIAL SCENERY MANNING, FEELY AND KNOLL THREE MEN IN AN EXCELLENT COMEDY TRIO WAKE AND LELAND SISTERS FULL STAGE NOVELTY MUSICAL ACT—SPECIAL SCENERY HERBERT RAWLINSON, IN A DANGEROUS AFFAIR SUPPORTED BY AN ALL STAR CAST, INCLUDING FLORENCE BILLINGS AND STEWART HOLMES—THIS PICTURE IS A SIX REEL SPECIAL—DON'T MISS THIS ONE. COMINC—EAfiLE WILLIAMS, IN A VITAGRAPH SPECIAL “THE FORTUNE HUNTER"—A LEAP YEAR PICTURE. Tax Mrs. Lipponen, wife of the murder- .l er, has returned to the home in Miss Susan Wilson, member of the | Brooklyn where Lippotien started his ong the track and freezing on the ls;-.m‘ of nurses at the Day Kimball|¥ampage of crime. She-has practi- hospital, and Kdward H. Burt, of | cally recovered from the effects of his Burl's pharmacy, this city, were|assault upon her and the hardship | married here Saturday evening. attendant upon her being driven. uuc iin the snow. within four days .after g.ving birth to a child, which is num- bered among those who died ag t result of the madmans rn* n of hor ror. Ao Mrs. Charles Ray, of Brooklyn, who was so termbly injured a tew weeks ago when she was assaulted by Vie- tor Lipponen, * the murderer who shocked all of W niham county wih his crimes, recoves 0g ot the Day Kimball hespital. Her hus- band stated on Monday that he hopes to see her removed to their home in Brooklyn within a w or ten da getting to their work. It this is possible, a special nurse | The body of Charies Belair, navi be procureq to care for her \mul she s well agam. (Continued on Page Seven, Col. 3) SgaTy ment of emp.oyes 'Of - QULY iu..udy for the first time since the biz siorm cut in and prevented scores from t

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