Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 3, 1921, Page 7

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i 3 : / NOURWICH ' BULLETIN, FRIDAT, JUNE 3 T9z1 3 | TG 3 " : suspended Japanese lanterns. while the|Mildred Bousquet, Emma Chubbuck. Mary 'was buried beside her husbanda. o mwm CImY Princess Chan’s pagoda was decked wi}hinpmnor. Marion Ericson, Margueretta Nom LYME Oscar Fehrer and family arrived at . A number of people in the borough |huge lanterns and festoous 'of wistari; nsworth, Laura Hebert, Pthel John-! ypo and Mrs, William Stock of Hart- |y i o Banie hecy TilSay. Ta Lumps of Weather Who raise chickens have extended an |The operetta was directed by Miss Mar-| sgp, Melen Kimball, Harry Eno, Lennazt yilnes S b gl ummer - alectric wire from their houses and have | guerite C. Burns, who gave a vocal oM Johnson, Raymond Johnson, Harry Kel- Fehrer will spend a few days in light in their coops. One night this week l’{‘lwccn the nc{. hMiss B;!ms has won|ly, Harold Kenny, Walter Knight, rmxm\ on were v\eeL cgd pisitors at{york this week, elosing up the Noew | John Rlake, of Mechanic's street heard a | Sincere praise for her- work in music in| Kristek, Dorothy Kurzman, Stark’s. York heme for the summer. Have a lump of sugar in your cofi"ee{or youihte&—— noise out in his coop mot far distant l=u_~“l‘1;z:u§tcl;«;<;lgws_ jHelen “Mack, "Tose Nieviedzal. Vivian | Mra Heamh Webber! ‘mi ~ spenti the | Mie Guy Wisstes, Cigtston aSR D hke a lum Of wexlher as you g0 aiong wi me, from the house. He arose, snapped on the H 3 D 0“:1.01';; Anita ')eloquln‘ Olivene Prince, past winter in the south and has been |0thy Wiggins, left Monday for = P i yaug g electric light and saw two men make 2| princess Chan, a Chincse heiress, Dorie Reynolds, Putnam Livingston, John| 0%, FU0F Wik triend the past nine | York and sailed June first for E Just the way you’ll have it, Moutde qfNk get-away. Investigatior Mildred Logee|Q'Br®n, Stuart Swanson, Sylvia Ryan,|CAring for a sick friend the past wmine | ol "\ Mviring wir vistt her s t st by his son showed that the would-be | nrai k. a juggler maid Evelyn Kies|Pauline’ Sandstrom, Henriette Seney, |V S e R et tos et o Zephyr light or tempest strong: : thieves had over 100 small chicks in | & S & JAEESE malc, Elearior - Swanson, Frances Toohill,|Vetk®: o o | Sasust, e But always somewhere something L e Chin 1o, en attendans, TFed Bousauet! e ke, eon Daker, Prederiek| e first of the week with Mr, and Mre. wG B Py of Wallingtora & n Lo, an attenda: . 5 ks i 3 » = Like the sweetness of a song. lest the hens. ™ Eteanor Swanson| T, M I S. orchestra ncludes Harry | Hotrison Convay, of Sew Lendon | s tuon teveral dave, the Among the very many beautiful 0% | ran Tan, an attendant, Bovia, plane; Edward Grenier and Carli, TRE MOl legied obers ol WL Sk, It M BT ers to be seen blooming in the ouse Helen Kimball inton, violins; elix Y S eststant e 4 d‘ ' \_ Y s Stro C. R. Tiffany and Mrs. H. 7 o gardens are to be noted the handsome . * | The stage decorations were by Arthur F.|assistant superintendent, . 8. Brong. [ = oo qn . Takmg lumps of w cather as it chang & day by day lemon lily mow at ity best. Probably the | 150 ViR am attendant , o | Gouwld and the art decorations by Miss = e (s v s __2’ 5 ?\ot for us the choosmg, e Putnam Livingston| g 4 C0 4 acks at T. M. H. S the| C. F. dewett and Brwin Rogers moved |levan will deliver the baccalaures . 1 Ow Long, the tutor of the princess, - 55 the remains of Mrs. Dlsen from Hamburg | dress to the class of 1921 at the But for us to say and sing— summer is here—he is thé wood pewee. A Tohn O'Brien | Blacks won. The Reds sold 55 50-cent et 1 mbirg [ dress to Ceant 1921ttt ¥ . N Phate & pair evidenly intend to start housekeed- | = g..o. The Garden of Princess Chan. |tickets and 15735-cent, while the Blacks|cemetery to lyme cemetery, where she t chusch.$undsy. at- 7.30 o'closk. If it’s winter, then it’s winter; ing on Tast Main street in onc of the| srenc:) The Garden of Trneest CHAR| oo 92 50s and 21 dss. = If it’ ing, hooray for spring! vards where there are plenty of trees and | ;ropestra; prologue, The Land of Lets| Tuesday, May 3lst, a group of senior IU'S spring, . shrubs. ,Me Pewee is a handseme chap % 2 7 s e 4 5 £ s = Pretend. girls at T. M. H. S., accompanied by Mr. : wit hhis darke olive green coat and yel- | “TUSRT L Rimball, visi Bece N s ust I i bst £ feeling for the lif lowish white vest. To know the bird and | Jct LEretty Lifbs . e oy | School. 'Those mdking the trip were Mil- The savor’s in the substance of our feeling for the life theroughly apbreciate how well fthe e | o aor O & Dav Tons Ako; princces| 4red, Bousquet, ‘Helen Mack, Mary AMay, G n 5 2 ) ‘s disoosition is suited to his haunts | and chorus; On a Day Long Ago, princess 2 Contented with its beauty and resigned to meet its strife. §|and notes, It is enly necessary to imagine | and chorus: There Ought to Be a Law;|SYlVia Ryan, Mildred Logee and Bleanor him taking the phoebe’s place and singing | OW Long and chorus; Ghost Sons, Chin | SWanson. They were transported by au- | Have a lump of weather, the phoebe’s song. He was not Infended | 10; Juggler Song, Mai Ku and chorusf | tomoblle. Dinner and en oo il o ) vour heart and trud ¢ alon to adorn a bridgs or barn, but in the | Finale, chorus; vocal solo, Miss Mar-| furnished by the Willimantic Normal In you art aflih UGk = darkened woods, high up in the trees he | Suerite C. Burns; selection, orchestra. Jrauk Tonviciiotte, i ot o Just so, in balm or blizzard, finds a congenal home. Act II—Oh Beautiful, prince gesten Teohuils Mo Iop e Sumne X oA Postmaster Daniel F. Finn goes to |Have Daught Wee Ling, chorus S > You've the sweetness of the song! Bridgeport Saturday to be present at the | Beautiful Peacock, Wee Ling - . { annual convention of Connecticut post- | Sleeve, Fan Tan and Tsu Ying My| Suffield.—A fire was discovered in a pile The C ff f x : £ = co h- | Flands Are Empty, Mai Ku; Let Every|of tobacco in the bundle owned by Henry Ooffee o B. B h masters. Postmaster General Hays ha: 3 = —B. B. in the Baltimore Sun. promised to be present. If so, leave the | Place Be Searched, chorus; Oh. With Joy, Seymour of Halladay avenue which G d rest to “Dan”! rincess and Mai Ku; solo dance. Fa caused a loss of '$1.000. Thr‘.lhh.’u’(’fl was 00 &te = : v |Tan; Finale, ensemble. Accompanist, | piled in a barn and the fire is thought to B e —————— ) The A. A. Young, Jr. fire company i 25 = i S L = £ nnswered to one whistle alarm, and two A\n;;iemcl;ir;“inhcy;sr::.fiud HEEs have been'caused by spontancous com- 42 cents a pound still alarms during May. stion. HUMOR OF THE DAY |least bit fustered. At 5 a. m. Thursday the mercury had “Sugar's pretty cheap now,” she said |dropped to 40 only S desrees above freez- ike alligator pears?”[calmly. “Coul you make it straw-|ing. Frost was reported to been heen rs eat 'em.’—Ex- (berry shortcakeR'—Buffalo Commercial. |seen on low meadow lands in the south “Our guide talg a good deal about|Dart of the town by early risers. This | “heer up, old bay why |the danger o snfebite.” reading is almost a record for Jung 2nd. v “He wants to find out if you byought { This section has, however, seen a heavy anything along.”—Pittsburgh Dispatch. |frost in June of a previous year, mson tells me he has been very| A Jewett City woman, is no doubt right Sful at raising chickens.” when she savs that James Russell Lowell, s <" It took him only two years, When he wrote “What Is So Rare as a PDESY [y ot hack the money he lost the first| 02y in June” had in mind the first two e R e Ry davs of Junme, 1921 ,or some just like ®E e them. They were flawless in this section. s en- Eripes Mrs. F. E. Robinson and ¥ (Liondon), THE KALEIDOSCOPE | Thompson ~wint have eharse of the Chil e o 3 dren’s day coneert at the Congregational e lephone girl Who | 15311 was a French colony prior to|church. 11804, and, second News. ave poor busy. ou mean?” % \ e had a w it e 3 ) s Maine Nades cmowan;dustlost ‘ot £ North Grosvenordale : the family washing."— |F p = a | ly one Chinese woman out of 330| The operetta The Feast of the Little |8 s how 1o |15 able to read. Lanterns, presented at T. M. H. S. Fri- reecretary k o 2 oo i ¥ knows Norway is Europe's most thinly-settled | 4%, May 27th, was pleasing to the ear, Mailion delightful to the eve, and a success In every way. The solo parts were w oi dilofiad _ One London bakery turns out 140,000,-| cunf To¥- The Soie Parts were well erhaps, but he's had a|060 pounds of bread a year. Mildred Logeg, Evelyn Kies, Putnam Liv luable experience. Tn the rmor S n o 3 L] A A British clergyman has read the Bi-|ingston, Eleanor Swanson and John was a bartender. IMn through seventy-one times. O'Brien. Two of the most popular chor- | i Wwith biographers is that} The total number of new Furopean |uses Were What She Keeps Up Her Sleeve | S great man's |stamps issued is about 2,000, of which|and The Ghost Song. At different times = N bad ones.” |1,500 are the first stamps of the Euro-|spotlights were thrown from the gallery | B A M B th C Hall Cl k Wh T .I'h l > IR o femx o= Sunie | At 8:30 A. M. By the City ock, Whatever 1ime lhat Is NG ! “The practice of the jury challenge, | louse were turned of and on the singers an interesting | e Dractice OF the Jury challenge | was cast a ghustly green spotlight which Famous ~ Crimi- | coriod 1o In the British courts, has be-|Save a spooky ¢hrill to the audience. In Age-Herald. SR e b omon wers | the second act Helen Kimball as Fan Tan t an offer of $400 | made ol ‘ tae Tmare ury service, many pris- | danced gracefully before her highness | (s 2 1 188t en-| enere ool tried by women, | Princess Chan. The costumes of the Shastrdit H6 B to the thous- | P 0.000.000 wortt | chorus for the zirls were brilliant kimonas | § o loss than 350.000.000 worth offof every hue. for the boys loose Chinese ; . es."—Pirmingham | -HOXE i | coats and trousers and colored skull caps - | with long black queues. The stage setting w a Chinese garden 6,000 men green latticework, interwoven ure | = An- S v THAT YOU WILL NEVER FORGET bury, Mass. AR S%e"‘,gg%l}!g’flf}?m B By this time I need no further introduction, as you well remember my previous adgress: Outicar= Laboritories,Dept. X, I - . Sales here last year and the year before. They were both big and highly satisfactory to all concerned — Taxing both stock and floor space to the limit, but * More than fifty per cent .of our hosiery pur- i THIS SALE WILL BE STILL GREATER : sfytels gloisy cogn | " B A SOLID CARLOAD OF BRAND (| Every pair are brand new goods, with E It is worth your while to make the acquain- - tance of hosiery which has so many stanch NEW SHOES AND ABOUT sizes galore—in some lots there are : - peit of lous madng B s o , 70 CASES BESIDES. - | OVER 2,000 PAIRS OF A STYLE A, - o R AErasiaes fod Lk B Containing 36 Pairs to the Case. So yeu can easily find your size. = Nothing shopworn, none damaged, or % Z%}XLCEMM %ALS‘E @ somuch as even tried on before. Every Pair Perfect Goods ( 23 Oldet end one of the largest Hesiery Mills in the Uniled Sistes 400 P mms o s e y EN’S PRICES WOMEN'S PRICES Bl 93.95,$4.95and $5.85| $1.98,$2.98 and $3. 75 T e § - NONE HIGHER NONE HIGHER d it would !aq by the wolves, | have heen e house. - Many Retailers Say i THE MEN’S STYLES THE WOMEN’S STYLES B ' BOTH HIGH AND LOW PUMPS, OXFORDS, HIGH SHOES " | BLACK AND BROWN AND STRAP STYLES Every pair Goodyear welts—and the HIGH AND LOW HEELS < =g D A cheapest goods cost over $6.00 to Black, Brown and White ; : 1 manufacture, so you can understand Over 20 Styles the quality. All Sizes. TN Sale Starts Saturday Morning, June 4th, at 8.30 AND WILL CONTINUE FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE MONTH < e C. E. DUSTIN 3S Broadway ) : Norwich, Conn. .

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