Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 11, 1921, Page 10

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ouring Car oadster edan oupe - . | Light Delivery Wagon - Like a true friend, the Chevrolet will wear well. It will not fail you in time of need. It will not be a burden to keep. And the closer your ac- e “’f’""ii?"‘,‘..‘i i i quaintance grows the greater will be the charm in its possession. o i The Chevrolet represents an unusual value. This you will appreciate at first EFF “FOUR All prices f. o. b. Flint, Michigan - NINETY know more of the efficiency of its service—its capabilities for practical time and labor saving utility. ity that Chevrolet cars have attained is a reflection of the sound judgment of the thousands of discriminatin were convinced that the vast resources and sound manufacturing policies of the Chevrolet Company had produced results. T T | Telephone 8-2 New Chevrolet Prices ECTIVE MAY 7th, 1921 NMODELS | i i The present-day value of an automobile lies in its degree of utility. The more it serves the more it saves. ' And in measuring the value of the Chevrolet by these standards, its real worth is revealed. glance. But toknow thefull extent of its real worth, you must g purchasers who The Putnam Motor Mart, Inc. PUTNAM, CONN. | rield of mearly 67 per cemt durng irst week of the month. The hens 10 thave laid one-baif their egxs for ear until about the 21st of May « swans that they are expected 1o yield .any egys in the last twenty-three weeks 7 th hen year as they 4o In the Gps( venty-nine weeks. . A total of eight pens including Barped ocks from Cazenovis, N. Rhode ix nd Re@s from Longmeadow. Miss Juthboro, Mass., Gossville, N. J.. White gnorne from New Paltz N. Y. ihd perstown, N. Y. snd Wlhite Wyas Jites from Bridgeton, . I, haveall iai- iore than a thousand egps per pem’as ‘ompared with only seven pens (hat Bac ~cached this*point at the correspondeny seriod last year. The average individp:l xcore of eighty birds in ihese eight ;1|< 5 108 cxgs as compared wilh §0 o he average of all birds participating in he contest. During the twenty-sevenih week, Mrs J. L. Theusen's white leghorns frem New Haven, Comn., tled for first place with W. H. B. Kent's barred rocks ffom ‘azenovia, N. Y. Each pen scored -6 gEs. E. H. Scott's leghoms from Farm ‘ngton, Conn.. tied with noiher pen « the same breed entered by White Sprin: Farm, from Geneva, N. Y. These pen made g mark of 59 ezes each during the week. - Jacob E.. Jansen's Mbode Isiand Reds from North Haven, Conn. tied fo third place with two pens of leghorrs one owned by Emory H. Dartlett, of En field, Mass, and the other by Hollyweo Farm from Hollywood, Washingion. Ti production of these (hrec pens was-5: eggs each. Four pens of White Leghyrr from Leo A. Grouten, Farmington, Coffn Small's Pe ry Farm. Cheshire, Conn. Tanglewood Farm. Moriches, I Jack Trevethan, Vineland, N. for fourth place with 5 score of 57 e; each. ‘ principal varistes are as follows: Flymouth Rocks W. H. B. Kent, (Barred) Cazeno- Rock Rose Farm (Barred , Westhampton Beach, L. L Rhode Island Reds Charies L. Lane, Southbore, Mass.. T3t H S. Bickford, Gossville, N. J. .. 1§43 40 . Cooperstown, N. Y. 1" Hollywcod Rarm, Hollywood, Wash. 1012 Ernest H. Scott, (Wh. Leghorns) Farmington, Conn, 5 Other Varieties Obed G. Knight (White Wy Bridgeton, R. L .... - - P dn B P. Cloyes (Bufft Wyandottes) - Silver Lane, Conn. H .. m A E. Hampton ‘(black Leghorns) ottes) H Pittstown, N. J. ......... i Harry D. Emmons (Wh. Wyan. dottes)) Plymouth, Conn. . d MAKES EXPLANATION OF LEDYARD QUAKERS' ATTITUDE A defens. Ernest Watrous of Gro- ion, d4 Quaker, was offcred emphatically id, | as disioyaity nation. ‘Quaker children to the Constitution to American princ! . ident of t tion —_— e ——— r; at the flag the i e AR 7 ——————— = - the ' R’ '0p wit AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS I hich the gonse 1s laving, sh w I usuni.| then et the cans of milk in & well in | Soxwicn art assocrarion Morgan Cronin aressed in French shep- . Mk, “WAIINSH AT M| horeti G Sas b " [0 a2 ek sconer than i T folatel e h water below 40 XHIBITE RARE FANS | herdness costume. s Tyler Brown, Mrs. Traver Bris- | peopie to the d oroken up by confi | cooted wi ittt ang Diea| Nondsy evening the snnex of Siater | The second ubleau was a Spanish pic- \ Alle Coggwell, Misy Hianath |action arises o SELAY IN TREATING ats placed close together. The| dri NI e ) B 0 L AU Meerees | Dalimasicondon o e em o mn Lucille Howard | Dwyer, Mrs. Edward Fuller, Miss Gilman. | the New. Testa EXPOSED HOGS COST flow through tr and | two iRl e o Erees in 20 min- | bers of the Art Students’ Associtalon and |y Mrs. Gardner Greene. Mra Richard Gra- | that ‘we must | escape at the joints into f . Th 6 Jeoose. exps SRl ot 2 ‘ cir guests. The program was an unus- | Eastwood. This tableau was accomp-|ham, Mrs. John iss Louise Howe.|over, we do not believ < vernaps the best method of apply. | under siemdsce el v e L Cooter 18 o5P%" | ual one, very artistically presented. 'His- | anied by a Spanish Bolero of Moskow. | Mrs. Frank Hempstead. Mrs. Haley, Mrs |and state. for a true water to garden crops wherever the! under 2 goose or turkey. s set | an hott T wa | torical 2nd ancestral treasures in the | 3KY'S &nd followed by a group of gemu- Martin Jensen, Mrs. Olive Johnson. Mrs |a politician™ H tions are suitable for it suse, as|under a hen shouid be turned by hand | milk is run over a ade cooler and | form of rare fans were loaned by people | ine Spanish folksongs from the Pyrences|Eben Learned, Mrs. Lane, The Migses —_— H ier goes direct to the roots of the | the sam n an incubator, as they | then set in a tank of water cooled o |in town and these were on exhibition in | *UB8 by Miss Lucille Howard. Doces, Mes PRI Exnr, ML ENete “Mary” Coming Back H 1ts and the surface remains dry, mak-| are too la or the hen to turn them | 40 degrees or below, d nof A e ove antiine and mod.| The last tableau depicted three maide|ETeSton: Miss Ruggles. Miss Matilda Ran- | 0 0 M COF AR > ange Jt bossible to keen up continuous cal-| readlly. liens used for hatching goose, hard to cool milk to cos Wi fans, the property of Miss |Of Japan arrayed in gay colors and|gam; M7 Charles Tich msticat G bt wlayen baeh ‘,a'",’; TRt 1018 Father mpert ot b s ewes tnust. be_gusted withInscct powder | an’ hour ‘atfer imilkine. . ¢ here in 1372, including | Erouped under as0l, represented by | Say ; Trumball Mra, | the winter will have a chance t5 sce € D to install, but| and have zood attention, because the p; Milk sours ver: emperatures Rt 37 Mrs. Dana Ceit, Mrs, Phillip Welis, and | 5P} - 3 i when once in place it will serve for | riod of incubation of goose exgs ! i s o | Miae Doty Myott . picture was foi. | Frank Weodward, the Misses Willigms. | Production mext week = his : iany years. er than for hen e ey o i ns sold to the | Mis: - flhns fyott. This picture was fol rl been booked at Davis theatre 1. ] t0 30 davs. Dust the hens t e en rout ¢ for the lowed by two Japancse songs suns by of next week and carries the same S s v sl There were a: £:< Myott. Middlefield.—Tow carloads of Jumber| celint cast that played here early ini% a o atch. Goose Tt R s e Cuban, he singlng was under the supervision | arrived from the Arrigoni forest in | Year. s T (about February 1 in the northeast-|®acoesstully raised in brooders, although cd fans with exquisitely | were accompanied by Miss Gadbo . |Middlefield station, which indicates that| Madisen—Delivery of mall commeriped section of this country) or so that | I8 not a common practice. ks of mother of pearl, Fans were kindly loaned for the exhi-|some new bulldings may be erected before | on the shore May 2, with about 25 fapui- goslings will be hatched by the time |, GOSHRES hatch slowir, especlally under PUTNAM nd sandal wood. bition by: Mrs. William A. Aiken, Mre, | tone: lies occupying their cottages. 4 re is good grass pasture. They are|Dems. and they are usually Temoved from | S % £ fan loaned by the Misses H EXPENSIVE BUT EXFECTIVE | allowed to make nests on the floor of the n:n; henis or geese as soon as hatched, (Continued from Page Six) " ix .n.« n carried ‘:U”ssu]x:;“‘: = w r xes, ant ept in a covered basket or hox lin- = por yed the al suif 1 :::s;.m‘:ul‘:(’ir‘:nrbal‘heai Zi?;‘i’.i‘e,‘" DS R | Sy Ewith twavir cloth or flasmehin et | D002 Lonione Jofnthe Derodis confer-| supject of Abraham sacrificing Lgaac. Au- [3 a The eggs should be collectod dafly and | 8tove, until the hatching is over, when [ *n°%S Of employes in the trafilc depart-|iique Spanish fans purchased by the v aw X=pt in a cool place where the contents| tBey are put back under the hen or '“‘Zl',‘h' & e L | Misses Mexico were among the int| will not evaporate too freely; if kept|E00%¢. Goslings hatched under hens|q, 28, ’“D“’“’{)"f’“‘h"fi’: being done inlgems of tion as was also the for some time they may be stored in | Should be examined for head lice and a)GrOVe street by the Connecticut com-yedding William _A. Aiken The | loose bran. The first eggs are usually | liftle #rease—lard or vaselime—applied | P32V I8 practically completed rricd by her mother, Mrs. Wil- apart, | set under chicken hens, while the last| With the fingers on the head and meck|2 Very few days th 5o they | ones which the goose lays may be hatch- | Some breeders who patch with both geese |be In'the best condition ever. ler Browne in the cos- In | ed under cither hens or *he gocse, If the | 2nd hens give all the zoslings to tne | -Attorney Frank H. Foss of Williman- of a lady of the court of Louis be level | czgs are not removed from tue mest i E%ese, Which make the best mothers. A |tie, assistant clerk of the suncrior court | Xy yeaq a most interesting paper on > few breeders prefer to breed the goslings | Was on duty in the superior court herelf, . ed her audience greatly artificially, keeping them from one to |Tuesday during the absence of Clerk E.| 1 Cleanable Refrigerator Come in and zee them , i | i Prices very reasonable | ent laying houses, to brooder houses, in- i water that a cow will drink at every sea- | house 28 to which type is t be pre- | prevent the wood from getting rotten. three weeks in the house at might In a M. Warner, who was attending court at| covered basket. Willmiantic. b Rev. Boynton Merrill was at Daniel- son Tuesday to attend the annual con- ference of ‘the Windham county associa- tion of Congregational churches and min- isters. J. J. Whitehead, Jr., was in Boston Tuesday on a business trip, It was stated here Tuesday that some of the union trolleymen who went on strike nearly two years ago, when the Shore Line company was operating the local lines, are to return to the road. The strike mever officially was declared off. Nothing that would help shed light on the recent burglaries at closed sum- mer homes in Pomfret has developed re- cently. McDermott's Braves, who gave the Norwich K. of C. a 12-inning battle rast Sunday and lost out 2 to 1, are golng to Willimantic to play next Sunday. Local delegates who had been at Mer- iden attending the K. of C. state con- vention, returned to Putnam Tuesday evening. Many Massachusetts people who come into Putnam find that the fact that their state is on daylight saving ttme while most of Connecticut, including all of this section, clings to standard time, sets up many little difficulties and in- conveniences for them to overcome. WATEE FOR COWS. The amount of Water that a cow Trinks ‘will be found to have dicect relataicn to the amount of milk she yroduces. In gen- eral, the more water the mors milk it wis {mportant, then to prov'de all the son of the year. BEST POULTEY HOUSE FLOOR. Cement floors for poultry houses are championed by Some pouitry growers, while others declare a good dirt floor is the only Kind to umss. The fact is, poultry specialists in the United Staates Department of Agriculture say that there is no one best ¥ind of floor. It all de- pends on the soil, and the use of the ferred. On light, sendy, well-drained sofls a dirt fioor is satisfactory, especially for small or colony henhouses. Such floors should be from 2 to 6 inches higher than the outside ground surface, and it is ad- iseable to renew them every year by emoving the contaminated surface down to clean soil, and to refil with fresh sand or fine gravel and earth. A board floor is generally used where the level of thelfloor in the house is from 1 to 3 feet above the ground surface, and in portable houses on land which is not well drained. Board flocrs harbor rats, and rot quickly, snd should bs Miss Marjorle Bradford was in Willi- mantic Tuesday on a business trip. enjoy to lligently the collection on view. Mrs. Brown made a close studyof fans e bited in the Metropolitan Muse- um and elsewhere, preparatory to writ- ing this paper in which she gave the history of this accomplice of comfort, courtship and convention, beginning with the first standard fan invented in China in 2689 B. C. As early as 1106 B. C., the fan was mentiored in a Chinese poem. At Boulak, near Cairo, i a wooden fan handle taken from the tomb of Ahenho- tep, 17th century B. C. The folding fan was invented in Japan in the 7th century and its first form is in the hands of the figure of the Japanese God of Happiness, 670 A. D. The bending fan belongs to the period of Charles V on France in the 14th century and the first folding fan in France came with Catherine de Medicl in 1533. The period of the Louis’ brought the art of fan making to its zenith, and in the reign of Louis XV the very finest work was done in its history. A perfect representation ef & folding fan with sticks 13 feet long was erscted at the front of the hall. In an opening tn the middle where a picture might be painted, three successive tableaux were posed. 'The first was a Watteau picturs exquisitely French and dainty in every detall, charmingly posed by Miss Hazel Fletcher, Miss Marian Williams, and Miss Ruth Iering. During the tableau Boe- cherini’s Minuet was played and it was followed by a group of Arcadian French songs of the 17th century sung by Mrs. [ aised some distance cff the ground so that cats or dogs can get under them, and, allow a free corculation of air to Cement floors are adapted to perman- cubator cellars, and to all permanent houses where an artificlal flocr is re- quired, and can be built on e ground WANTED Have Ever Made Good as Goodyear Tires have always - been, they are even better now. More improvements have been made in them in the last few months than in any equal period in our history. Larger, stronger, heavier, and more durable than ever, Goodyear Tiresin every size and type are today by a wide margin the most economical and satisfactory you can buy. You can get them now of your nearest Goodyear Service Station Dealer. THE GOODYEAR TIRE & RUBBER COMPANY MARINE ENGINEERS WITH OCEAN LICENSES CLASS B. D. & E. SHIPS Apply Sup’t PORTO RICO LINE Pier 35, Atlantic Basin Brooklyn, N. Y. Jevel ‘These floors are asy to clean, very N.S. Gilbert & Sons |= &2 ! inexpenstve, if obe has a cheap supply Shetucket Street Er==treof ol SURFACE COOLER KEEPS MILE SWEET LONGER In order to keep milk swest for *hree | or four days if necessary 1t musi be maiutained at a temperatuze of 50 Ge- grees Fahrenbeit. This is best accom- plished by the use of a surface cool- er. Use the coldest water available and OPPOSITE LAUREL HILL BRIDGE e A e SR B 2

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