Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, February 19, 1920, Page 9

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L Tl dnge by 11, imel :eu:y 4y &nfi is ‘Thetter than this famous Cod Liver and Iron Tonic to cteate strength and build one up. The formula of Vinol is on every lnbt'L Your meney back if it fails, Engler's Broadway Pharmacy, Ner- wich. Vinol 1is sold in Danielson by Berthiaume's Pharmacy and d everywhere. . [ ] ~ JEWETT CITY All the birds are not dead from ex- posure this winter, for at James Crary’s farm four pheasants daily* to feed near the house and it is a common occurrence to see fourteen fifteen bluejays stealing the corn ed W. P. Holmes’ place in has made a paiv of skiis and. takes long trips on them. Last Sunday he went to Pendleton Hill and Monday he came through the streets in Jewett City. Mr. Karjala is familiar with this mode of traveling, having taken prizes at m n the old country, Mrs. Henry . Olsen, ‘been dangero ill with pneumonia and a n_of diseases, was better : Her mother, Mrs. F. C. who is also ill, was able to Tuesday. arm for fire was sounded at Cotton Co's. Mills at 11.30. night. ~The fire was in the oom, and ‘was soon under con- Perkins, who closes his du- t second hand in the weave shop at the Ashland Coton Co. Mills, was wesented fifty dollars by Miss Ananie n behalf of his shopmates, on Vednesday was observed with stomary services at St. Mary's et’s soclety, compased of of JewetiCity, held its hanquet at the Waure- vich, Wednesday ev- erwards attended Z thg Absut- Woad Engraving, Wood e ings of high class are made alm shusively of . hoxwood, locks are ‘made of small . tened togdther.” The engrayv- Ing is dene ’ss the end of the grain, Japanese 1 prints are made on tions - of cherry wood grain. son, P'm going to advice. Some day d taken it. It's the taken when Life. i i Life’s Priraipal Busineis. Half the busi ed with k g to use men gnd women, how to understand them, how to get on with them, Wiow to turn their faculties to the best acecount.—~Vis oount Bryee. 13y dad gave it to me, Yon can save -b-'n n‘..:u have » better remedy than the ready~ Tmade kind. Easily dene If you combined the curative proper- ties of every known “ready-made” congh remedy, vou probably could not get as much redl curative power as there is in this “simple home-made which is easily prepared in a m(';':t"?' armh' t 2 w&-u‘ Tom an Pinex, pour il’in&o a pint'/.hpt lfl #i11 the bottle with syrup, using_eil ahm gru:hwl Sugar syrup, . ‘molasses, 101 or corn sired. betk‘l‘“rg“"g is .g‘:'nk it fl really congh s; coul buy ~ready-made fo¥mt%ne the llng E\lfil pleasant mever spoil 4 This Pinex and Syrup preparation % 'htn:hoe-uunl:u“hnl ives - ost imsfih&enflet mm‘fi‘:' phlegm, asty i and heals the sore, ‘i.rrihhd na:b?!nel ab it is really so gently and easily- th: nmifl:i‘ng. 4 i n. Norwich firm to customers in Dar- i will be seen in his very newest pi }ture, “When the Clouds Rell By.— i adv. =3 of life is concern. | There are about 1,500 names on_th ersonal tax list of the town of Kil- . soms,” showing at the and Friday. is'| T ] ours, a it seemed as though m&e lmpre::k:’l; mad llmn e mass I:e & which the ‘bor- uried. Inspector Ralph C. as a witness for the ‘ednesday in the city court of Putpam in a case in which the state was taking action nst Napoleon Miour of the city for having a car on which nimbérs had been changed. The cise was & g In connection with the meeting of members of Sarah Willlams Danielson chepter, D. A. R, scheduled for this (Thursday) afternoon, it is noted that it is the 20th anniversary of the chap- ter, A special borough meeting was at- ten by about 50 veters who were unanimously in ezvor of providing an appropriation of $3,500 to be used for the extension of the sewer from a point in North street to provide sew- age connections for houses that are being constructed for the Connecticut Mills company in the vicinity of North and_Joyce streets. The work of ex- tending the sewer, which will be about 750 feet in length, will be undertaken as soon as the weather permits. The fact that the Goodyear Mills company stands ready to pay $25,000 toward the ceést of constructing a $100,000 eight-room _school building, with auditorium, at Goodyear, and in addition takeé the present school property in that village off the hands of the town at the price it cost the town, has very favorably Inclined many people toward favoring the ap- E:npflaflon that the voters will soon called upon to consider. During the thaw of Wednesday ve- hicles traveling between Danielson and Dayvifle cut through the snow and ice to the surface of the state road. Deep ruts are the result, but continued mild weather will be the means of increas- ing the athount of “land” now in sight Napoleon Miour was before Judge M. T+ Geissler in the city court Wed- nesday morning to answer to a charge that he had violated that pro- vision of the automobile law which requires that a person .coming into poalfl n of an automobile on which numb have been changed or ob- literated shall report the fact to the state commissioner of motor vehicles. It was claimed by officials repre- senting the state automobile depart- ment “and the state police department that Miour possessed such a car and that he failed to make such a report as is required. s The car in question is one of the so-called group, of ‘stolen” cars lo- cated in this cdty during the ast month by state officials. Mr. Miour bought the car from a local man, and knew nothing of its history. In their search for cars alleged to have been stolen state officers in- spected Mr. Miour’s car on January 27, and discovered that numbers. that would help identify it and trace its history had heen tampered with., A few days later the car was faken out of Mr. Miour's possession by the state officers and on Wednesday ac- tion against Mr. Miour followed in court. nied all knowledge of the fact that the numbers on the car had been tampered with until after it had been inspected by the state police and his attention called by them to the fact. After hearing all of the details of the case Judge Geissler found Mr. dismiss The séction of the motor vehicle laws under which the case was brought provides for a fine of net more than $300 and not more than six months in jail as penalties against those who knowingly Ppossess an au- tomobile on which . the numbers have been changed or obliterated and who does not report the fact to.the com- missioner "of motor vehicles. Writing from Tampa, Fla, where he has been spending the winter, ‘William S. Johnson of this city tells Mr. Miour, who was represented by ! Attorney Arthur § Macdonald, de- | Miour not guilty and the case was | of experiencing only one rainy day during his stay south and of tem- peratures varying from 75 to 80 de- grees in the shade. Cooling breeses from the gulf temper the air, Mr. Johnson says, so the days are splen- did, This week Mr. Johnson is de- voting the daily attendance upon the South Flerida fair, which is one of the big events of the February sea- son down there. “It seems good to have fresh vegetables and frait every day and to see the shrubs and flow- ers” Mr. Johnson - writes, and his many friends, here, wading through snow and slipping over ice, will agree that this is very true from a New England viewpoint. The funeral of Selectman Joseph and make traveling better than it has, ;. .1me who died Sunday of pneu- been for six weeks or more. A force of employes of the A. T. and T. company is making ready to run another line of cable through the un- derground system that runs through Danielson en the New York-Boston system. Swow that has piled up over ! the manholes thni Got this . under- ground sretern through the town of Killingl> via Franklin, street and | South Killinaly' is being retmoved SO | po oo and other societies, Burial that wires may be run through the conduits preparatory to hauling th¥ohigh the eable. Not mush has heen accomplished tawaml- hyingine Fast Killinglv back ipta wompal averland communication with Danis’=~= ani other villages of | the town «f Killingly. The state high- wav to that nfate does not offer af- tractive traveling conditions and the troliey, line remeins closed, as has heen s cas~ sinee it became snowbound twn weeks nxo today. A moies truck bringing planes from feisnn manamed t get .throngh Wed- nesi na permit of deliveries of the instroments. The truck made Pn tempt to get through last week, tut ! Lhe trin had tn be abandoned. The ronie nred Wednesday was from Cen- tral age to Wauregan and Brook- | Tyn. Another of the serfes of high grade picture offerings running at the Or- pheum theatre is booked for next Mon- flay and ‘Tuesdav, when the great soreén favorite, Douglas Fairbanks, Vaudeville® aets were added to the picture program at the Orpheum the- atre for Wednesday’s shows. Another 'bus, capable of carrying many passengers is to be added to the Danielson-Goodyear route in the spring, The 'bus is to be used in the sérvice maintained by the Goodyear company for the convenience of its op- eratives throughout the town and the residents generally in Goodyear, Many farmers ‘in this vicinity are practically discouraged over the pros- pect of getting help during the coming #pring and summer season. The sit- uation as regards procuring this class of help was desperate enough last year, but fufther advances in wages in many lines of indusiry are fesponsi- ble for a situation that now appears | almost hopeless, for the farmer can- Bot compete with wage scales offered to men who formerly gave their time to the tilling of the soil. To escape from the hecessity of paying the advanced water rates re- cently announced for Danielson, some property owners in a certain part of the business section are seeking to ar- rangeé for a supply from the srtesian wells that es a groun of build- at Main and Center strests. Memorial servicss have been ar- ranged to be held at the theatre here Sunday afternoon under the auspices ot Léo gg L'Homme post, American Lagion, time certifical -3 fllfll tes of the it e, will. be To telativas g local men who gave their lives in e war. o are such throughott the that many eellars are in dan- of eing flooded. Many persons, this ger, were ehgaged on dan; A day’s use will usually ednesday in cutting ditches through ordinr; cough and ior.mm the m';"“f ‘? in order that \::tger hoarseness and bronchial asthma, t‘hem’ — ’:' is nothing betur.t <habh is a most valuable comcentrated d of genuine Norway pine ex. to_break up severe coushs. 80 ae to cause littls The funeral of Mrs. Victoria Guida, Da n, Was held from comj tract, and has been used for generations | her home in Moosup 'Wednesday To avoid disappoin b, drugeist for “23, Ounces of m-'% b1 full directions, and don’t aeccept any. thing else. Guaranteed to give ?mvm P eatisfacti r_ MmO promptt - funded e Pinex Co,’ Fe.' Wayne, merning with & high mass of requi ut Al & church in that place i rthy beifig the ceie: sc,. Bural wae fn AT Haicws ery. o ‘was th - m” Kenn !. s the fu. monia, was held from his home on Wednesday morning with a solemn high mass of requiem at St. Mary’s church, Rev. Charles F. Bedard. Rev. Adrian Dykemans and Rev.- Routhier being the officers of mass, which was attended by a very large congregation of relatives and friends, ty cfficials, town officiais and delegations from the $t. John was in St. Mary’s cemetery. Street department men began on Wedne: of carting away the heavy accumulations of snow in the busincss section of the c Mild and sunny weather that c utcd to the soficning ¢ 1 made the ywork ca have been at alm recently. Putn; water v may have b long . espected The -rui re o be v other time ran with when what ing of the w set ia. > weath- day. ndes to rebuild , ‘though the uther end of ure, the leas aged of quarters for fi 1 there at the t ing the Putnam hich had its place of orner store for many years. Wednesday services at St urch was attended by many ry hundreds h-speaking members of the parish. An alarm from Box 34 called out the fire department at 12.50 p. m. on Wednesday for a chimney fire in the Van den "Noort street section of the city. The ringing in of a box alarm for such a fire created the impres- sion down town that a blaze of se- rious nature had broken out. €. Dwight Sharpe, who has beert seriously ill with pneumonia, was re- ported on Wednesday as much im- proved, _ Charles - T. Thayer, who has been seriously ill with influenza at his +home on Grove street, is above to be out. Shovelers are engaged in cutting away snow banks that line the space cleared in the state highway by state highway department plows in thd town .of Thompson. The open way is being made sufiiciently wide to ylermit of two vehicles passing read- ily. It was stated Wednesday that there is now enough coal on hand in the local railroad yards to supply the immediate need of the locomo- tives that coal here. Wednesday’s { thaw was appreciated by the railroad | men ad a big aid to removing the troubles caused by the storm. Taking advantage of Wednesday’s mild weather, the state highway de- partment motfor plow was put to work on the Putnam-Attawaugay route pushing aside’ masses of snow to make the open way wider than it has been since the storm. It was_stated here Wednesd: that n.fd{zilvs 15 to be made in this gection o e county to sell bonds of th Irish Republic, ‘ # & Judge L. H. Fuller has just round- ed dut 53 consecutive years in busi- ness in this city, and is still going strong. & William W. Allan and Bdward Me- | Keon are named as the delegateg from Oscar. W. Swanson post, Amer- ican Legion, of North Grosvenordale, to the state convention of the legion to be held at Hartford on Saturday of this week. At the home of Mrs. Jennie Rob- inson in Thompson today (Thursday)y the W. C. T. U. organization of that town will hold its annual Frances Willard memorial meeting. i 1 it would | of the Chickering hotel | , will be repuilt so | of persons. At St. Mary's| { Sunday will begin a mission for the | Engli: Vimeoe —which means that if you don’t like LORD SALISBURY - - Your taste never lies No judge ever decides a case until he #ries it." It wouldn’t be fair—it wouldn’t be just—and it wouldn’t be according to the laws of the land. No more would it be fair for you to judge Lorp SaLisBury without a trial. Your: Taste is the judge. Put the evidence before it. Let it #ry the cigarette and'then render the decision, You are bound to abide by it. You always do. Youalways wi/l. It’sinevitable. Andsois the cigarette. Just #y it today and see for yourself, A great many people have tried Lorp Saurssury Cigarettes, with the satisfying result that the sales of 1919 increased 25% over the sales of 1918, . 'Lord Salisbury. is packed in-an inexpensive machine- made paper package instead:of a cardboard box. YOU CAN’T SMOKE THE BOX. WHY BUY IT? B B LORD SALISBURY TURKISH ‘CIGARETTE is inevitable . Gigarettes you can get your money back from the dealer ing the income tax. He urges early filing of returns in order to avoid as much as possible the rush that sure to come in this work. The common council in estimating the budget to cover the expenses of various city departments for the en- suing year, figures a total of $45,130, an increase of $6,000 over the figures for last year. As the grand list has been increased it is considered that raise the amount required. The pres- ent city tax rate is & 3-4 mills, - The council unanimously approvéd the regulation made by Chief Arnold for the control of the fire department, al- 50 adopted resolutions pertaining to the death of “Selgctman Joseph La- ranged a game with the Southbridge] High quintet. special correspondent, ‘writer, will deliver a talk with stere- opticon slides on Peace and Recon- that her | tUrY lanterns for street lighting were daughters are dding her jusitce unless | Provided at the public gost in Paris. they provide her with sons-in-law. A mother doesi't think City Lighting Modern. ‘ Lighting up a whole city at night of the|ns early as 7414, but this contention Is disputed. During the 8ixteenth cen- ausismdsd: Big Namg, Tiniest vlant McQueen, |48 quite a modern invention, although | There is.a plant called volvox 5'"‘, the noted war|i{llamination-was used in some of the | bator so minute that millions of them ancient cities, Paris and London dis- | €0uld be placed i a smali wine glas This is the next to the last | Pute the priority in the matter of mod- number of the High School leNgire | ern street lighting. Landon claims to During the -summer Dr. Mc- | have lighted its streets with Janterns. Queen made a special ‘tour war region of Turepe, a 9-mill tax rate will be- sufficient to |, Their Use. $ If there were fewer fools aubout, th§ world would be a much more pleasangy place to: live in. Only it would harder to make a living. Cured His RUPTURE the representative of .the collector of | season, the Plainfield High game Life}cure without unnuoni if you writs to Cor. Shetucket St. internal revenue, will be stationed at|next ¥ridoy, has been postponed be-|me, ~Bugene M. Puilen” Carpenter, -] the Chamber of ~ Commerce rooms | cause of the illness of sevegal of the | 415F. Marcellus Avenue; fl'@m“nn, N. until the first 6f March. His office | Plainfieid players, together with the |J. Better cut out this notice and show hours will be from 9 until 7 daily, ex- | difficult conditions of travel. . So |it to any Oothers “;bo afe Tuptured— NATIONAL: - DRUG SToRES KALPHO is sold by the Lee & Og- g00d Co., Broadway Pharmacy, Smith| giveq g reliable drug- 4 i @nee comes-to mind at the mentton of| March il and 13 have been set as|Palme who for twe terms was-aider- i Nervous Peop @ | “The MIXA€s” or VH. M. 8. Pinarore»| the_date for holding the town and | man-at-large for the council. T %as baaly riptuted Whila Mettnkia = 3 ; ‘ - was the son of 8 bandmaster. 1o | Senatorial caucuses to elect delegated; Mrs. F, O. Marion died at her home | trunk several veats ago. Doctors said should use KALPHO and observe its mag- |- ¢ e - At the|to attend the republican state con- |here Wednesday after an fllness of my only nope of Cuze was an operation. AL B Wi S { ical in the treatment of nervoss. | 488 of elght young Arthur could play Yention to be held at New Haven on | only three days, with pneumonia. | Trusses aid me ho good. - Finally T ot Norwich’s Bes: Druy Sfore { mess, insomni, |,.-.,: fag, irvitability, B wind {hatroments in the orches thhcfi;ngé Ball in Woodstoek on | Putnam High tse}yofil basketball 7 o8 Se. " Foars nave phss. s L b ? 3 ! Bl ey . “KALEHD s : Toinepiatta el the e | 37 0%, f0 Eomirl tomien (hhurer | 120 64 el i HAASE The Utmost in Prompt, Gourteot's Service brain, nerves,musclesand blood cells; = :;t:bfe !::?klht'“them’ with addresses | in 5 posz‘;)oxed game. The last leagus|carpenter. There Was ng pperation, no Prices Are Right 3 % i C] interest. no tri 3 ave nof % o e A DANTELSON CASING, John H. Cunningham’ of Nerwich, | Sine of the season that Putnam High | Io*, fi™$ufwill ive runl ntormation 3 H = 3 B orwich, | quintet was stheduled to play this | absut how .you may find a complete|" s H H } i and all other cept Sunday, and he will be able to|that the fans might not lose out, | Job risers of suptire and thetrored P w = answer all auestions regarding fil-y however, Manager has ar- n‘x’:j i mnm “‘fllh-m_‘ iad =

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