Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 28, 1920, Page 8

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NORWICH BULLETIN, "for the weelt.” The total production for all | Peus. was, 3,778 egas. 4 vield of 54 per cent. and 45 ‘eggs' better than:the five- year average' for, this period. = . All the pens'in the contest are in nice condition and apparently fit to. continue the grind. - The hens are expected to keep plugging right along and net permit themselves to be adversely affected by any exciternent die to the TFarmers' week meetings which will, be held “at Storrs making- preparations’ for 'the picnic ‘at Ocean, Beach, also a sail ‘to Figher's- Isl- 5.0, when the Stnday. schools of the First Congregational church and the Church of the Good ‘Shepherd (Universalist) are to units for a: good time. ; Miss Marion L. Bailey, who has béen | the ‘guest for a few -days of her cousin, Miss' Cassie Bailey, «laughter of. Town Clerk ‘Henry L. Bailey of Groton, is €x- all it .is capable of {8 to Dlant every ‘square foot -of Jland.in .gome erop use- ful fn the rotation: and, as ‘soon:!as ‘ghé’crop i -tdken off, plant”ancthér. The second b 'third -crops should’ be ' crovs that improve the soW if possible. Tlon in- 'stance, peas,. soy. beans, or .peahuts may follow -qats ‘and wheat” In the event it 18 mot_possible to piant before fall, clov- er. veteh .etc, might. be.planted -after small “grains. EIND OF POULTRY BEST ON THE GENERAL FARM The hen, first and last, is the main dependent for increasing the supply of white meat and ‘eggs on a farm, but she JAZZ FOR DANCING ' JAZZ is music all littered up with whzczes, sighs, greans, grass with- mature seed and géat hay over-the land where it was" to_establish .carpet-grass pasture.~ - To establish carpét-arass -pasture I8 open forésts or'on .cut-6ver ‘land, ] The legumes are very : & 4 pected to return. today - (Wednesdzy) o | [ mana = 2 requires the aid of turkeys, ~guineas,| 2 £0ME:to eg?eg;m,n nss. of d“{:;f.‘:g Gluable. cropé for feed “and fereilty, | during the first weck in Augist Tho | hier home on Tim avenus. i il .moans, astounding snorts, blasts, and a sweet refrain that pose - 2nid 3 aa T Shoaidhe. - deadened Di| ing they *stioutd. bs . lanted " Wheieyer | poultry days are Aug. 3 and 4. Of coursc| Mrs. Mary Allen of . West Newton, tch: s 1 S fhe cow redulses. the 410 Of Dics, Eirdling, . The 1ehd to lle’ sgeled AUORI L posatble. - Sl VST | baembars. of the poultry assocfation and | Mass., formerty.of Norwich Town. 18 vis: || Co onCs your fancy and holds it enthralled ! i k > Tt -is-ithe bslief of many.. authorities that shade increases the fertility of soal. One theory is that the beneficial effect of tjover an land is due to the srade it sheep and goats. The setting of the standard at 100 hens per farm is safe, but nmo Auch arbitrary standard can be set for the other kinds of poultry, say their friends frgm neighboring States will inspect, the competing pens and debate the chances of each pen to win:- Detailed information coneerning rooms, ‘accommo- iting'at the home of her cousins, Mr. and Mrs. ‘C.. Morgan Williams, of 299 Wash- ington. street. 3 Following move all the t4ll straw. of broom \sedge, wire grass ahd other bunch :'grasSes. y Plowing or diskin® is not mecsssary. Carpet grass at tle rate of five pounds ... Likeit ? Allright | We have ths best records you ever heard—and soms you never hzard ! a stay of /several ‘mks'ati s F ot I o - dations, ‘programs, etc, can bb obtained | the home' of her Sonidaw. snd. dacsn. the poultry specialists of the United b affords. No.crop grown shares soil more 3 D . and ' daugh ke 2 ; States Department of Agriculture. Dl nmer s BND At igetetty tian clover undsr aroper. man, | by simply addressing o card to,tho man- | ter, Mr._and dre. Sidney P Smith, of| Don’t like Jazz ? Allright | Here are records of opera, . smal , with grain fields of 2 : °. }-agement. lover - not only es, but| ageme! etst at Storrs, Conn. 1ppe ashington street, Mrs. Mary ! - . neafi,omgu ity to the| ferably when there is. amplo. motsture. * JEERCR - AFC 0y Cerlt "on the me- | Tho three best pens in each of the prin- | Smith, retarne todky (Wednesday) to ner ] SONES, etc., without end. ‘Sarn and doorvard, would, perhaps, be = chanical conditions of the “soil- Their | cipal varieties are as follows: | lome In Hast Walpole, Mass. - She will be REASONS ‘'WHY THE RS HENS. EAT THE EGGS Iigg eating sometimes becomes a se- decay. also adds plant-food. ~Clover oft- en has -roots which are heavier and weight more than the tops,”.as can be ‘better without turkeys. The farm through ‘which no streams run and which has no large pond would perhaps be better acompanied Ly her granddaughter, little .\}155 Lleanor Smith, who , will . remain through August Plymouth Rocks. Name your records and we will produce them as a Jules F.' Francais (Barred), magician does a rabbit ! West- | . 1629 1 D" . By . B - in= then igh- hampton Beach, L. I ...... Miss Mary Whits f West Sithout ducks. But the circumseribed | rious vice. fowls Secoming. very fond of|8Scertained by mashinz them and weigh o oh, 1 ies Mary o of West Town: pieat farm on which turkess would be a dis- cank fehih ey Rave arocd. to cat|inE them. On‘eoiknl;:;:? ]lL?r.ed). Westhamp- e x;]]sxtmg for several days at the home s edvantage may be well supplied With|tnem ‘and it oftens spreads from - fowl S 3 AR s o of her aunt, Mrs. Ann Bannister, of All the i 1 N Streams and ponds o that ducks would |ty fowl . Tt ususlly Begins through ac-| BAGEIS CLOSE IN EGG Merritt M. Clarkc (Barred), Brook- | |'Wakefield; also hor cousin, Miss Dillon, newest in music, and Y be unusually profitable, and the farM|cident by eggs being’ broken or frozen. " LAYING CONTEST AT STORRS (Rl Re S e e S 4847 at Point Judith, R. I. Before returning 7 has no streams and ponds Ma¥|Be careful to ee that this does Mot| “my. hens in the laying contest at Storrs White Wyandottes, e Miss White will visit Narragansett || service that makes your pur- range for turkevs. Each farMihappen. See that the Dosts are prep- fer are running about as good a race as de- s, Schuyler have to determi Mrs. R. W. Steve for itself|erly supplied with straw orother nest- . Mrs. George A. Peck of Otroband - 1 > 5 fender Resolute and Shamrock IV. For| Y. SRR e le M ; L o ave poultry can be profitably kept in 28 |ing material and have them darkened.|months a Massachusetts pen of Rhode | Patrick T, Sullivan, Geoum g rnet Sundsy puimink Bften a few chase a pleasure. g i e s N ula|S° that if an egg is accldentally brok- | ygjand. Reds looked like easy winners, but | Merrythought Farm, Columbia, C Tonoh Bt o howie 0t hexutqtiier ways that an adequate number should|en the fowls will not be. lkely W is- | iciin oy 4 Tong Island pen of Barred : : | Josenh Smith, of Colchester. Mra: Peck be kept of all the kinds for which frec foover it. Supply plenty of lime in the | Jone, & g & LoRE I8AnC Be O e Rhiode Teland Reds. accompanied fer elstér-in-law, Miss May Just Now We Suggest : range can be found form of oyster shells, bome, or similar! i " ocks; only to lose it again to the Bay | Pinecrest Orchards, -Groton, Mass.. 1620 | \.;m'_.'?f ;“‘%whes!er, who motored to _— substances, ('D .'sure a firm shell: .As State pen of Reds. Then the Long Island Deer Brook Poultry Farm. Short ;;“'ur;‘(‘.l\l c 'own. Mrs. Theodore D. Peck “JEAN" CARPET GRASS GROWS BEST [Soon as it i3 discovered that a foWl|jhirgs came back and have been leading| Falls, N. H. . gss . 1440 | fettrned home with her daughter: follow- oN WELL FIRMED SEED BEp |88 formed the habit the fowl should b3l gy s ur weeks, but only by ' the . small | Jacob E. Jansen, North Haven, Conn. 1418 | M8 & few days' stay at the home of her 2 o S removed in order to prevent the spread| % U FICE oo Pl e the best! . son on Otrobandp avenu 'HOLD ME’ On cultivated land carpet grass suc-|of the vice. Once formed, it is difficult = 2 £ Sy hite Leghorns, Miss Elsie Pefkins, danghter of Rect : pen of Leghorns 10 weeks ago was 138 | p > L : er of Rector 2 well-firmed seed bed. The| to eradicate and the safest remedy is the | P68 OF LeShoms °0 TR S50 TIU AL | B A. Ballard, Chestnut Hil, Pa.. Perkins of the Episcopal church in Col- ime from early : bens & 3 “EVERY PARTY” Richard Allen, Wethersfield, Conn. . George Phillins, Seymour, Conn. death pena’ Fow!s sometimes pluck feathers from this time the Leghorns have steadily cut | lin Wwill arrive today (Wednesday) -summer when the sses Bailey . at favorable. To down the lead a little over four eggs a and from each other. Which| % ag s . : . Miscell, nage on Eim avenu “SAHARA R ” { e e R week. If this is continued to the end, it Miscellaneous. & atsor 1 e ) | e ot nsset meaa emeRt: | looks as if both the heavy breeds would | A, I. Hampton (Black Le Tnomas Kelley, a member of the police i force of Brooklyn, N. Y., is spending- his vacation at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick J. Morley of Washington - street. Mr. ‘and Mrs. William Shea of Town street and th be relegated fo second place. In the’ 35th week E. A. Ballard’s “'hitc! A L. Anderson ( Leghorns. from Chestnut Hil, Pa., and a; _Windham, N. H. pun af White Wyandéttes owned by Harry | H. P. Cloyes (Bu town, N. J. proper feedi When some of the fls of a flock have formed -the habit wide range” with = changs of diet, including a plentiful -supply.,of “ALEXANDRIA” < ; 3 ; ] ir grandsons, E M . * |animal feed, and freedom from - insect; . Emmons from Plymouth, Comn, tied | FHartford, Conn. T e LA”A B, | Dests will usually correct the evil. Above | fo: first place with 56 eggs each. Oneok S e ) all, see that the fowls have: plentr- of- in- Qucement to excrcise. If the habit be- comes well formed it is very troublesome and may mecessitate the Killing’,of some of the fowls I order to stop’ it. HWOW SOIL MAYY BE IMPROVED. One way to make the farm produce 1arnrs Barred Rocks from Westhampton Beach, L. L, tied with Hollywood Farm's | Leghorns from Hollywood, Wash., for sec- ond place. -Each pen laid 54 eggs. W. H. Bassett’s pen of Russian Orloffs from Chester, Conn., tied for third place with Imperial Poultry Farm's Leghorns from Elizabeth,,N. J. Each pen scored 52 eggs TALKING MACHINE SHOP, 24-34 Franklin Street VICTROLAS NORWICH TOWNM At he First Congregational prayer ser. vice Thursday evening in tfie chapel th theme will be The Kingdom of God and Human Occupations: How Should the Laboring Man Think of the Kingdom? Much interest is being manifested in RELIEVED QUICKLY NO DOPE—NO ACETANILIDE TRY IT AND BE COMFORTABLE UDINE 175 LIQUID - QUICK EFFECT and Mrs. Charles D. Beckwith of York were recent callers on their Mrs. Benjamin Ackley and Miss of the Johnson home. Mary Troland of Otrobando ave- rned Tuesday from a few days’ friends in Bridgeport and New i i i i city. W. Herbert Larkham of Plain Hill s | attending the jumior short course at the Connecticut Agricultural college at Storrs. Mrs. Mary White, nurse at the Johnson home, and- her cousin, Miss Woodworth, are passing a week at the home of Mrs. White's brother in Sag Harbor. Mrs: John B. Hill recently moved from rived Monday a few days' visit with her cousin, Mrs. George A. Peck, of Otro- bando avenue. Nr. and Mrs. Charles Lamnhere, with their thres daughters, all of Westerly, R. 1. recently motored to Norwich Town and called on relatives on Tanner avenue ahd Towh street. “ Mrs. George Kelley and = daughters, Katharine ‘and Dorothy Kelley, have re- turned to their home on Town street from a few weeks' visit with relatives . in Northampton. While there they were guests, of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Kelley and Mr. and Mrs. George La Mountain, the latter ‘o sister of Mrs. Kelley. George Kelley motored to Northampton Sunday and. When returning home brought - his wife ‘and daughters with him. burfal ~wli b in Forest Hills cemetery, Bosion. Mr. Lecomple was taken critically il Sunday znd was immediately transferred to tie hospital, where an operation was performed in an effort to save his life. Mir. Lecompte was a retired dry goods merehant, with an office at the Broadway aGaress, and resided at No. 390 West End Drive, New' York. COMPENSATION AGREEMENTS ARE GIVEN APPROVAL Eight workmen's compensation agree- ments have/been approved by Commis- sioner J. J. Donohue as follows: Atwood Machine Co., Stonington, em- poyer, and Joseph Fernandes, Stonington, employe, finger bruised and cut, at rate Spring street, Norwich, to 55 Rast Town street. Miss Dais . Smith of Hartford ar-| Where the funeral will take place. but|rate of §$12.96. Ironsid ployer, plove, §12.84. Richmond Radiator Co., Norwich, em- ployer, and P. Brown, 20 Geer avenue. Norwich,” employe, crushed great toe of right foot, at rate of $18; and John Con- nell, Norwich, employe, sprained ankle, at rate of $14.78; and James 270 AVest Thames street, Ploye, strained back, causing lumbage, at rate of $17.70. Board Corp., Nerwich, em- nd George Decker, Norwich, em- injury to right side, at rate of ' Will Furnish Bail for Girl. Tessie Shinowski, the Polish girl, who robbed Pauline Lizinski, a laundress. of the latter’'s home on Douglass ew London, after drugging family with wine, and who is now being at the next term of the su- perior court in bonds of $2,000, will prob- ably be released from jail today (Wednes y), as relatives of the girl in Ne Haven are planning to come to New Lo; don at that time With security necessary cl her freedom. Lizinski girl received all the money stulen from her Monday morning at the New London police station excepting about §40. S NEW ¢ - of $13.91; and Homer Hill, Westerly, em- DIED IN NEW LONDON HOSPITAL { ploye, sprained back, at ratc of $1. AFTER OPERATION | Thomas Baudro, Gales Ferry, emplover, Frank E. Lecompte of 2478 Broadway, | and . Samuel Banning, Groton. employe, New. York, a mmer Tesident . at ' the ! lacerated wound of scalp, bruised back ! Hotel Griswold at Hastern Point, died | and spine, fractured big toe, at rate of Sunday night at Lawrence hospital, New { $9. London, following his admission to the in- tution a few hours before. He was 53 ears of age and is survived by his wife. The body Will be forwarded to New Yorl astern . Connecticut Power Co., Nor- wich, and T. Roseland, Montville, em- ploye, second degree burns on left arm and chin, -first degree burns on face, at .“hen the train came n back in 1910 EN years ago ycu might yAdvert e P Honest o HIS is a topic we all hear now-a-days because so many people are inclined to. exaggerate. Yet has any physician told you that we claimed unreasonable N remedial properties for Fletcher’s Castoria? Just ask them. : We won't answer it | ourselves, we know what the answer will be.” ! i ising. N n IR SR Y, That it hes all the virtues to-day that was claimed for it in its early days s’ to be found in its increased use, the recommendation by prominent physicians, and our assurance that its standard will be maintained. & S Tmitations are to be found in some stores and only because of the Castora tnat Mr. Fletoher created. But it is not the genuine Castoria that Mr. Fletcher Honestly advertised, Honestly placed before the public and from which he Honestly expects to receive his reward. - S S Children Cry E&¥ have scen onc or two There is one tire, at least, that makes nc distinction between small cars and large cars so far as quality is con- cerned—the U, S. Tire. A% automobiles waiting outside & the station, when the wweather was pleasant., Today the square is crowd- ed with them. And most of s cars you genecrally see there are moderate-pricecars. Ut Every U. S. Tire is just like every other in quality —the best its builders know how to build. eording to the roads TR \ they have fo travel: ’ 3 Draels 1In sandy or hiliy coun- @Net Contents 15 Fiuid Draefus try, wherever th= going h is apt to be heavy—Tke U. S. Nobby. For crdinary country roads—The U. S. Chain or Usce. For front wheels = The U. S. Plain. For best re‘s“]'it._ everywhere-U.S. Royal Cords, /4 Whatever the size of your car, the service you get out of U. 8. Tires is the same. It isn’t the car, but the man who owns the car, that sets the standard to which U. §. tires are made. Anybody who tells you tha. owners of moderate-price cars are not interested in the quality of their tires has never met very many of them. 7 7 7 | Z Special Care of Baby. That Baby should have a bed of its own all are agreed. Yot it is more reasonable for an infant to sleep with grown-ups than to use & man’s medicine in an attempt to regulate the delicate organism of that same infant. Either practice is to be shunned. Neither would ‘be tolerated by specialists in children’s diseases. Your Physician will tell you that Baby’s medicine must be pre= . pared with even greater care than Baby’s food. g : A Baby’s stomach when in good health is too often disarranged ' by improper food. = Could you for a moment, then, think of giving to your ailing child anything but a medicine especially prepared for In~ fants and Children? Don’t be deceived. Make a mental note of this:—It is important, Mothers, that you should remember that to function well, the digestive organs of your Baby must receive special care. No Baby is so abnormal that the desired results may be had from the use of medicines primarily pre- pared for grown-ups. We come in Gontact with the small car owner cvery day and we have found that heis just as much inferested as the Lig car owner. w We feel the same way about it, That's why we represent U. S, Tires in thig United States Tires MOTHERS SHOULD READ THE BOOKLET THAT IS AROUND EVERY BOTTLEOF FLETCHER'S CASTORIA GENVINE CASTORIA awways Bears the Signature of BAILEY'S GARAGE, 12 Bath Street, Norwich, Conn. THOS. J. HEALY, Norwich, Conn. NORWICH MOTOR CAR CO., 321 Main Street, Nor ich, Conn. 4 THE CENTAUR col NY, NEW YORK CITY,

Other pages from this issue: