Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 25, 1920, Page 6

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SPECIAL ING SOON. Monday, June 28th you Waists and Skirts. White Voile Waists (long or short sleeves), fine quality French voile — $5.98 to $7.98. White Batiste Waists, with colored collar and cuffs, all sizes—$3.50 to $5.98. White Wash Shirts of ga- bardine, pique and poplin, nicely trimmed with patch pockets and buttons, all sizes—$5.98 to $13.50. Bugbee Our friends will have an opportunity to get relief from all foot troubles, as THE FOOT RELIEF MAN IS COM- WE WILL HAVE AT OUR STORE OK Tuesday, June 29th June 30th Dr. Clark, the Wizard Foot Relief Man an expert in diagnosing ard relieving foot troubles scienti- fically, positively and permanently with WIZARD Light Foot Arch Builders Come in and consult Dr. Clark, his disgnosis will cost NOTICE! Wednesday, Seasonable Hats Semi-Tailored, Tailored and Dress Hats of fine milan, braid, all to be sold far be- low usual price. We are also showing a beau- tiful new line of Georgette and Organdie Hats in white, pink and blue. & Wolf SOUTH WILLINGTON James Service, Miss Harriett 7 and Miss Phoebe Green ave attend- M at! Memorial church will be closed for re- n at New London. epairs until further notice. Sunday school will be hell in the hall ower the 3 High nday morning at 1) o'clock. deavor service beginning on v of next week will altw be held The preaching servige will in the church on Willingten Hill unday next at 11.30 o'clock. Miss Beatrice Malo is visiting in New with Rev. and Mrs. W. Wisterfield. Elmer Matthews attended the mencement exercises of \7illimantie chool at Willimantic last week Thursday. At the communication of Tlriel lodge, A. F. and A. M., at Masoriic haFl, Merrow, he New Bedford v evening next, there will be work e M. M. degree. Mr. and Mrs. James Service attended ne graduation of their son Louis from Textile school last fhursday. Hartford epent Sunday Mrs Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mafher and son ar] and Mr. and Mrs. Alhert Mather of vstth Mr. and Walter Mather. The visitors were speaking contest held Friday Walter Mather's father and grandfather. At the graduating exercises and ing in the Memorial church the following pupils were awarded prizes: Speaking contest— ¥ H- irst prize, won by Miss Caroline Mirtl, in gold, clase A, Center echool; secs nd prize, Marion Wondrasek, $2.50 in 14, South Willingten school, L. C. Sta- of Ellington, Mrs. I. T Jewett of Tolland and A. W. Gr Greér of Williman- ic were the judges. Class B—First prize, | F.H. & F. W. TILLINGHAST Central Village, Conn. AUTOMOBILE EQUIPMENT Court, Efficiency, Satisfaction Telephone Connection, Moosup Div. LOUIS E. KENNEDY DANIELSON Undertaker and Embalmer Soeci Afild'vn to Every Detall the summer school of religious edu- | Willington scheol ; Ethel Wraight, $5 second prize, Mary Blahusiak, §2.50 gold, Daleville school. History of Willington— First prize, Emily Parizek, $5 gold, Center schodl, §5 per cent. on test; sée- ond prize, Munroe Usher, $5.50 gold, South Willingtori scheol, §2 pér esnt. on test. Spelling—Miss Franees Hall of the South Willington schaal and Emily Pari- zek of Center school Were even in the mateh, each péllinig 144 words éut of the 150 given. Hall prize for sewing, judged by Miss Viélet Srow of Columbus, O.— First prize, Grace Servies of the Seuth i sécond prize, Ruth Davis, Centér school. prize for gradés below the sixth—First, Beatrice Malo, South Willington school ; second, Josephine Kalbee, Fast Willing- ton scho6l. Teacher receiving the $15 in gold for school makifg the mest points Wwas awarded Mrs. Kathryn Gahafi, Cen- ter school. The Gardimér Hal, Jr., scholarship prize 6f $100 for the attain- ment of 80 per cant. standing at Willi- 1d, Center echeol; mantic High seliol was awarded Miss | Helen Poshisil of this village. EAST KILLINGLY Friends of Mrs. Clarence Smith hung her a June box ThurSday evening. After the round up the evening was passed very pleasantly, playing games. A. M. Painé has commenesd haying on the Battey farm, récéntly purehased by Him, Several from hére atténded chureh at North Fester, R. I, Sunddy aftérnoon. Mr. and Mrd. A E. Saylés and chil- dren of Rotkland, R 1, were weéek-end £ésts of ‘Mrs. Sayles' parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. Albert Brooks. Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brooks snd ehil- dren werein Providence Tuesday. The schiools have closed for the sum- mer vacation. Miss Olive Aldrich has been the guest of friends in Netth Oxtord, Mass., for several days. > Miss Bleather Shetdon 16 1L Mr. Nichols, fathér of Mrs. Walter Wood, has gone to Greene, R. I, for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith have movad to their new house on the Pike ———— Thomaston.—About 50 delégates were preseént at the 35th annual conventien of the Litchfield County Woman’s Témper- ancé union held in the Plymouth Congre- gational church. R — RS R i o YA B S TR B THE UNIVERSKL €XD We are the exclusive agents Motor Company, in the following towns: Putnam, Grosvernordale, Thompum,. the Woodstocks, Pomfret, Abington, Eastford, Elliott, Dayville, Goodyear, Killingly, Danielson and Brooklyn. - Elmer Automobile Co. - PUTNAM, CONN. Telephone 71 WE OPERATE 11 STORES for the products of the Ford 90 SCHOOL STREET it AR R S A i Palmer sewing.| DANIELSCN Much of the new issue of stock of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber company I8} finding its way into the possession of Danielson people, who have come to look upon the company’s big plant in this town as a great boom to Killingly. An ing®neé of purchasing that created in- terest pertains to a block of 39 shares taken by an alien operative who has been with the company for several years &nd owns shares of other issues of the stock. This employe plumped down $3900 in.cash when he came into the office anl gaid he would like to buy a little stock. The new stock issue is for $30,000,000 and will boost the capitalization of the great tire concern from $200,000,000, Shares here are being sold in blocks of three—two preferred, paying 7 per cent., one of common, paying “not less than 10 per cent” As a matter of fact the eommon has steadily yielded 12 per cent. Seventy per cent. of the outstanding stock of thé Goofiyear company is own- ed among the 47,000 employes in various parts of the country and in Canada. From Charles Leavitt of the Mani- la, P. I, division of the United States department of agriculture to Miss Myr- tis Blanchard, of Dayville, has come a letter reauesting that she furnish him with a history of the remarkable Span- ish hen which Miss Blanchard's family owned and which died a few months ago at the age of 32. Mr. Leavitt writes that he, read in an agricultural paper that came into his possession in the Philippines about the hen that receiv= ed world-wide publicity as the result of an_article originally appeared in The Bulletin. \ Peter Bouthffler, 83, died Wednesday afternoon at his home on Allen Hill in thé Town of Brooklyn. He was a na- tive of Canada, but for many years had lived in Wauregan and Brooklyn. He léaves his wife and nine children, Mrs. George Benard, Mrs. Philias Lavigeau, Mrs. Henry Brodeur, lal of Waurégan, Joseph Napoleon, George, Andrew, Aime all' at home and Sister Mary of Acphine, who is in a convent in Maine. Next Monday morning at 10 o'clock in the superior court at Putnam Judge Hinman will hear arguments of mo- tions, or applications, of attorneys for Miss Gererude A. Wardell, who is suing the town of Killingly. One of the applications filed by Miss Wardell's attorneys, Geary, Davis and Keefe, of New London, is for an order in the nature of a madamus to require Sidney P. Marland, as secretary of tHe town school committee, to complete and correct records of the town school com- mittee in accordance with actions that it is alleged were taken by the com- mittée in regular meetings, which ac- tions, it will be claimed, do not show in the records. /giother application is for an order, also in the nature of a mandamus, to require the town school committee to is- sue a téachers’ certificate dated back to Octobeér. 1917, to Miss Wardell, as, her couneel claims, the town committee wds ebligated to do upon employing her. Anbther application is directed toward the end of securing an order requiring Miss Emma F. Pilling, Robert W. Boys, #iembers of the town school board, and Horace F. Turner, supervisor of schooly, to issue a certificate to Miss Wardell. Miss Pilling, Messrs. Boys and Turner Were mfembers of a sub-committee that interviewed Miss Wardell prior to her coming to Killingly to teach and were Present when she gave demonstrations in 8chosls in towns to establish her pre- predness to teach musfe. Counsel for Miss Wardell will seek to have written into the records of the town school committee an allegation that Mies Pilling, as chairman of the sub- committeé here mentioned, made a re- Port to the town school committee of What the sub-committes had done rela- tive to Inquiring Into Miss Wardell's qualifications as a teacher of music and rem:e zohme sub-committee’s action in engaging her to teach in Killingly" Snetein Killingly's Counsel for the plaintiff also will ask the court to order that the records of the town school committee be amplified to show that during the school year 1917-1918 bills aggregating $600 for Miss Wardell's salary were approved YV the school committee and that dur- ing the year 1918-1919 other bills amounting to $400 for Miss Wardell's salary were approved and ordered paid. It is understood that the town school committee records, as they have been kept, do rot show in detall what bills were approved and ordered paid. All the applications or motions filed In béhalf of the plaintiff will be opposed by Attorney E. L. Darbie and Attorney C. E. Searls. counsel for the town. _Here’s a funny angle to the prohibi- tion duestion, which persists in being mear-paramount, notwithstanding the death and burial of old John Barleyeorn, A Hartford paper, which, evidently, has been seeking interviews, calls attention to the fact that some Connecticut towns | which were®no-license up to last Oc- tobér voted license at the annual town meetings in that menth. The point 1s, should there be any modification of the Volstead act, that towns voted last fall —and Killingly was one of these—will, under Connecticut law, remain license | towns until there is a change made to| no-license by a majority of the voters at An annual town meeting, and a liberaliz- ed enforcement act Would find these li-! cénse towns in a position to start right| 6ut wselling beer and light wires, or w?slever the modified act might per- mit. On_the subject of voting for license, the Hartford paper quotes Town Clerk Frank T. Preston of this town as say- ing: “The license people put in a pe- tition for a vote on the question last fall in spite of the passaze of eighteenth amendment, and it is possible their op- ponents will petition this fall for anoth- er vote in the hope of changing last year's decision for license by a vote of 566 to 403. However, I haven't heard a thing in the way of talk about the mat- ter and I haven't the slightest idea what will be done. Such a vote, whichever way it went, would, of coure, amount to no more than an expression of public senti- ment as to the justice of national pro- hibition.” July 10 has been set as the date A ponderous 5-ton truck owned by The Interstate Trucking company, of New Bedford, plunged off the state highway out on Killingly avenue, Thursday at noon, crashed through a fence bordering the state highway and brought up with a front wheel jammed solidly Between two bouldérs, The driver, who stuck to his wheel, was not injured, and the truck es- cdped with no more serious damage than a bent forward axle and other minor in- juries. The truék was bound for this eity when the accident nappened. How it came to plunge off the highway on the léft hand side of the road was not among the things that the truck crew were lo- quacious about. The best explanation obtainable was that the driver lost his cortrol when the wheels on the inside rolled into soft dirt and caused the big truck to smash through the fence and down a little embankment into~a mass of boulders. There is solid macadam sur- face to within a foot of the fence through which the truck plunged. Three other big trucks owned by the Interstate company were on the scene within a few minutes after the accident, these vehicles usually traveling in fleets and théy hooked onto the ditched vehicle and hauled it back into the highway, af- ter _some difficulty. ‘While they were operating in the sal- vage task the state highway was block- ed and a string of cdrs lined up at each side of ghe scene of operations. The truck that went off the embank- metit had no lead. Once back on the state road the truck was able to %imp off under its own power. The fleet of trucks was engaged in hauling mill sup- plies to Darielson. Four men who are residents of the town of Thompson were before Justice Charles Johnson at North Grosvenordale Thursday morning to ansyer to charges that they had violated provisions of the dog laws. All pleaded guilty and paid fines of $2 and costs each. The men, Joseph Galaski, Rudovic Desaulniers, William Johnson and Joseph Dechamps. were arrested by State Officer Howard Elliott, representing the state bureau of — for holding hers in Danielson a compe- titive examination for filling positions as clerk and carried at the Danielson post office. The-entrance salary is §1,- 400 a year with advance at the rate of $100 a year until the maximum of $1- 800 is reached. Captain F. 0. Armington of C com- pany, State Guard, has issted an order for members of the command to note the fact that the shooting season for 1920 opens or Sunday, June 27, at the state range, south of Danielson. ~The men are to leave Danielson in the morning on the 10.20 car. The command is going to camp at Niantic, July 19-24. Although the fast, scrappy Goodyear teamn has béén having a hard time this season to get teams anywhers near its class, it is balieved the players now have a hard echédule ahéad of them. Sun- day, June 27th, they tackle the fast traveling Emmetts, who were champions of Pawtucket last year and who come to Goodyear ufidefeated this season. The Goodyear team has not forgotten the defeat hardeéd them last season by the Emmetts and they can hardly wait until Sunday to.get revénge. Following the Emmetts, such teams as McDermott's Nbrth Grosvdnordales, Connolly'y All- Stars, Orioles, Inter-City champions of Pawtucket, Fisk Red Tops of Chicopes, Mass., Goodyear Akron, and many other strong teams will be seen on Goodyear field. Another delegation of devotees of light harness went from Danielson to Woon- sockét Thursday to see the races. The story is circulating hereabouts that one man has a contract to supply 17, 000 ties to the Rhode Island company for use il the roadbed of “the Danielson- Providence line. The significance of this, if true, is that there is no intention of abandoning thig line at present, as many have declared would be done. Sométhing of the cotton manufacturing industry in China, where employes la- bor twelve hours a day, seven days a week, and are compénsated at from 10 to 40 cents a day, was told*in entertain- ing manner to the members of the Good- year Cotton Mills council, made up of overseers and hedds of departments, on Thursday aftérnhoon at Goodyear, by Jo- seph Windle, sales manager for the Woonsocket Press and Machine company and the Fales and Jenks Machine com- pany, of Pawtucket. Mr. Windle has just returned from a trip to China, hav- ing been away from the states since late in February.’ China needs American cotton seed that she make grow a longer stavled product Mr. Windlé declared in telling of the de- gree in which cotton spifining has been developed in the land of the Rising Sun, and he beliéves, too, that the introduc- tion of the eight hour day will serve to make Chinese cotton mill workers enthu- siasti cover their work—and that with the enthusiasm will come greater inter- est and higher skill. Practically all of the cotton used in China in the mills is native grown and of about 5-8 inch at staple. Mr. Windle declared that he believes that it is the right thing for Americans to teach the Chinese the higher art of cotton spinning without fear that they will become competitors of American nfanufacturers in the markets of the world, but the speaker was not so opti- mistic about letting the Japanese in on our highly developed processes of cotton manufacturing. China has but 2,000,000 spindles in the entire country today and only 5,000 leems. Most of the machinery is of British manufacture, but some of it is American. Mr. Windle's visit likely will -be productive of greater sales of American mill machinery in China. The entire forcé of whole departments in one mill that Mr. Windle visited quit work to follow him, another American who was his companion and their Ameri- canized Chinese sponsors, about while they were inspecting one plant. Depart- ment after department quit work as the Americans passed through the mill and when the time came for Mr. Windle's de- parture all of the operatives, some 600 in number, were out on balconies of the mill to wave goodbye wWhen the visitors de- parted. Employes may possibly smile when they think of anything like that happening in a New England mill “The Chinese seem the mest content- ed and happiest people I ever saw, and they are a clean people,” Mr. Windle de- clared, in diseussing the personality of this anclent race. ‘“The vast majority of YOUR FAMILY PHYSICIAN wflltflm&nflnmfin& #fgi olive oil Castleis . g MADE IN SPAIN ;< o Firm, white, and .so pure.and good for the skin that the:new-born baby can be safely bathed with it. Every:cake carefully wrapped in Foil. % 7 P ~-2 &} TRY A 3-CAKE BOX g FOR SALE AT ALL GOOD :DEALERS LOCKWOOD, * BRACKETT | COMPANY, “BOSTON IMPORTERS | - < Lldid | man who hauled our car wore a smile, b L bl o L L 0 It e them are poor and are destined to lead lives of laberious toil, but even the wo- as did her husband who walked behind and did nething.” : Mr. Windle's talk threw many side- lights on Chinese life and his mention of dinners to which he was bidden and how the excellent food was served—with some featurés that rather strained the American standard of etiquette, descrip- tions of a night at the theater, visits to cafes temples, walled cities, rug mak- ing industries, etc., held the closest at- tention of his hearers. Mr. Windle's talk alse included a de- seription of the trip a¢ross from Victoria, Vancouvér, on a ship that carried 2200 coolies, hemeward bound from France, where they had labored during the war; of stops 4t Japanese ports, where, at Nagasaki, he saw Japanese women coal- ing ship by passing baskets of fuel up from barges in an endless chain, all proved highly entertaining. Endorses CINOT Mr. Harry Lahn of 164 Main Street, Norwich Endorses the Tonic CINOT “As a Wonderful Remedy. Among the many endorsers for CI- NOT ‘in Norwich is Mr. Harry Lahn who is too well known to need any in- troduction. He says:— “For a long time I have been bother- ed with my stomach and my food did not seem to agree with me and the consequence was that I had no ap- petite and lost flesh and felt tired out most all the time and I tried many things to get back to my normal con- dition but nothing did me any good, I happened to have a friend of mine who had gotten wonderful results from CINOT and I gave it a trial and I am mighty glad I did for it sure put me on my feet and I feel jubt great.” _CINOT is being demonstrated in Norwich by an expert at the H. M. Lerou Drug Store, 208 Main St. It is also for sale in Dayville by W. E. La- Belle; in Mystic by the Wheeler's Drug Store; in Greenevill by Pitcher & Service; in Taftville by The Taftville Pharmacy; in Jewet City by Chas. R. Carey: in Central Village by H. Elmer Lewis; in Plajnfield by The Mercier Pharmacy; in Baltic by The Baltic Pharmacy; in Moosup by J. W. Tuckérman; in Danielson by Bur- roughs’ Pharmacy; in Putnam Dy Jas. F. Donahue, and can bé obtained at ali first class druggists. domestic animals. responsible for the arrests had not been The dogs that were registered and in some instances roaming about. were At the annual state cenvention of thé order of Eagles held this week at New Britain, George Lewid, Jr., of this eity was elected inside guard of the staté de- rie. Mr. Lewis is the only staté officer of this organization from this section of casterp Connecticut. There was interest here in the story relative to a rear-end collision in which a_ Willimantic jitney - owned by Stokes Watson, formerly of this city, and a truck owneéd by staté highway depart- ment figured. Although three passéngers who were riding with Watson were in- jured, he escaped withiout being hurt. His car was wrecked in the erash. Included in the mass of matter that is now being written about political cam- paigns, past and present, is mention of the fact that the late John Addison Por- ter of Pomfret of Hartford was a ploneer in the McKinley movemeént in_Connecti- cut, which has long had a McKinley as- sociation, holding annual dinners on Me- Kinley's birthday. Mr. Porter became secretary to President McKinley. Patnam may see one-man e eration on the electric railwa: that is not definitely promised yet. of these types of cars is at Central Vil- lage now and will get its tryout on the Central Village-Moosup branch of the Connecticut company’s lines in this part of the state. Revenue for the road from passenger carrying is not heavy on the Putnam lines, and the one-man cars will help reduce operating expenses, although a man operating one of these cars will get more than is paid to either = mo- torman or a conductor operat ) g the car in present use. Following are the newly elected offi cers of the Putnam Delphian society re. cently organized: President, Miss Edith M. Kent; vice president, Mrs. George Rawley; secretary and treasurer, Mis¢ Emma Roberts. The organization will not hold any more meetings until Sep- tember. A missionary pageant was held on the lawn at the home of Mr. and Mrs. F. J. Daniels, Ring street, Thursday after- noon. In the first episode the characters appeared in colonial costumés and rep- resented the period at the opening of the nineteénth century, when, in 1803, at Southampton, Mass., the foundations for the Congregational Woman's board were laid. Another episode of the pageant was intended to emphasize the fact that one- halt_the world Is without doctors, the claims of many countries for medicy service being Tergsented by young wo- e MARRIED SPINK—RATHBUN—In Groton, June 20, 1920, by Reg ‘George R. Atha, Miss Beatrice Rathbun and Clarence C. Spink, both of Noank. RICE—SHORTER—In _this city, June 24, 1920, by John Holyoke Barnes, ass Trenor A. STANKAVITCH — DALUER —-In this city, June 21, 1920, by John Holyoke Barnes, J. P., Mrs. Annie Daluer of 22 High street and Joseph Stanka- viteh of 90 Yantic street, both na- tives of Poland. DIED. BRAND—In this city, June 24, 1920, Georgius A. Brand, aged 74 years. Services at Gager's funeral parlors Sat- urday afternoon, June 26, at 2 o’clock. Burial in family plot in Yantic cem- etery. GIPPO! NE—In Westerly, R. 1, June 23, 1920, Vito Gippone, aged 7 years. BACKUS—In Danielson, June 23, 1920, Abby Gay Backus. Funeral at her home Saturday at 1 p. m. Church & Allen 15 Main Street Funeral - Directors. ~—AND— Embalmers Lady Assistant He was cheered by the Goodyear men at the close of his talk, when time was taken by all to inspect a rollection of photographs and curios that Mr, Windle obtained “in the far east, B Telephone 328-3 HENRY E. CHURCH WM, SMITH ALLEN e Station, Norwich, | WE WISH TO CALL YOUR ATTENTION TO THE CONVENIENCE OF OUR LOCATION LOCATED AT 9 CENTER ST. a short step from Main Street, directly opposite the Orpheum and Majestic Theatres. The nearest store to the U. S. Post Office, or any store in our line of business. Handy to most of the markets, groceries, laundries and stores in every line of business. Come tc; this store for your needs in Men’s and Boys’ Furnishings, Hats and Caps, and you will notice what a convenient location it is to the rest of your shop- ping. Allen’s Men’s Shop 9 CENTER ST., DANIELSON, CONN. OPPOSITE ORPHEUM THEATRE TRY OUR Battery Service ALL WORK GUARANTEED CHARGING REPAIRING THE NORWICH ELECTRIC CO. EXIDE DISTRIBUTORS 42 FRANKLIN STREET men in the costumes of the lands in!Grosvenordale has' another class of ean. whose interest they wers taking parts. didates preparing to receive the degree There were various scenes in pantomine, ! of knighthood. music by an orchestra of women play-! About $3,000 has been expended in ers and various other features to round making mo: ble the de- out an interésting afternoon. tour on the y between this The invitation of the city's business F T TP e at houses for peaple to shop early Thurs- |y, “oind™e 8 OICNS day seemed to be more generally accept- ed yesterday than has been the case ! I8 already indicated that this sea- heretofore on & half holiday. Inciden-| gz ‘(00U oy esses which run tally, the business people drew a pleas- [ 2 this city will be extremelr ant Thursday afternoon this week for weCLYS W their half-holiday and there were sev- eral parties on outings to favorite re- sorts in the vicinity. A petition of Danielson members of Putham lodge of Elks for a charter for a lodge of the order in the neighboring town has beéeén denied by higher author- ities of the organization. There are about four score members of the' Putnam lodge who live in Danielson and vicinity. Upwards of half a hundred school chil- dren have received certificates from an agent of the state board of education and will be permitted to werk during | erated upon for removal of tonsils to re- the vacation season. Jcel\'e attention from a New York speeia St. Bernard council, K. of C., of North'ist, who will be in this vicinity. OMMUNITY SHOP COQUINA SQUARE CONNECTICUT VILLAGE, CONN. Takes this opportunity to express to its many friends, ap- preciation for interest shown in our new quarters. It is indeed gratifying to know we have pleased you. We as- sure you our efforts to serve and please you are sincere, Everybody Is Cordially Invited to the Special Demonstration SATURDAY, JUNE 26th when we will serve attractive dishes prepared from LOBSTER as delicicus as any fresh boiled lobster ever served. TELEPHONE 354 Mrs. G. A. Shepherd, of New York, is |at her summer place near here for the season Matthe® Chase t at t suffering fre of Pomfret Landing, Day Kimball hospi- a torn eve ball an wound in the face, the result of being struck by a fiying bit of wood hurled off a stick by a circular saw about which he was working. An opportunity is to be given durins the vacation period for every pupil o1 Putnam's schools who desires to be op m MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE (All Goods Covered by Insurance During Transit) NORWICH—PROVIDENCE—NEW LONDON—PUTNAM FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD - and Connecting Points EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PiERCE-ARROW TRUC:S E. P. WINWARD & SON Phone 1250 17 WILLIAM STREET 135 WATER STREET NEV/ BEDFORD NORWICH Phene 3337 492 SOUTH MAIN STREET 138-142 DUPFEE STRI®P PROVIDENCE ‘ALL RIVER Phone Union 3842 Phone 3619

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