Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 17, 1921, Page 8

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NURWICH BULLETN, FRIDAT, JUNE T7, T9Z1 ‘round its eage. It sat up at her bid.|ing several days in New York. were Mr. and Mrs. Clarerce G. Bengtson ding, lay down and rolled over for her| Rev. Willam S. Beard of New York|and Infant, also Oscar Olsen of East g delight. It opened its red bag of a|visited in the village last Friday. i = ‘Inmulh at her behest and—more to the| Mrs. John Botham is spending a few| ATirord, Miss Annie Grabb of Canter Do you know why ! point—shut it when she bade. It growl-| weeks with her daughter, Nrs. Henry Eg-| Pury Plains, Miss Olsen of Norwich and led. to be sure, and its tail*switched an-| bieston of Norwich Town. a girl friend from East Hartford. % S | grily. But it obeyed. T couldn't hon-| Graduating exercises were held Thurs-| Wednesday, June Sth, the Buell Union, You hre qmckly estly say it was a case of Reauty and|day evening in the assembly hall of the Cantesbury W..C. T. U, held:an all- ’ | the Beast. But it certainly was a casc|school building, The weekly prayer|: WG T U, lof a beast which knew its boss. meeting was omitted on this account. |@ay session at the home of Mrs. Hadley Yonrnerves etshaky As for the imaginary lions with which| Mrs. Charles Colton of Branford was|and Miss Hadley in the southern part g ’ too many of us have too mueh to do,|a Tecent visitor at the home of her sis-|of thes town by special invitation. they don't call for even an Imitatien| tcr, Mrs. Frank Calvert. wonderful dinner, beautifully planned Your blood ets or, hot poker. A pitchfork or a damp dish-| George Forgues, who has been visiting | and served in the dining room with two g Po ’ {eloth is usualfy quite sufficient weapon | recent'y at the home of his-sister, Mrs.| extra tables out of doors. The hostess 9 the way. Joseph, Morin, has returned to his nome| served dinner at 25 cents, t Y 2 -d todcare theiont o i Sorihbeinge Masa. 2 fort e ok Tar Ao T i) ou get run-down ! Indeed, not so much is necessary. It ; ocal a 2 1s wemerally. amply effective merely to| Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Avery and |ecight, including guests were present. It Walk 1ip to ihe bix bluff and say to ft: | children, Florence and Helen, of South|was the regular Flower Mission day for Because you exhaust your Foure mo lon. Tou're not even a de.| Windham, were recent visitors at the | which most brought flowers, making them 3 E | cent imitation of one. You're a mere Y;‘m{!.w of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Avery, on | into l;‘oum(xetlu foere ‘pntxc:ts kofmthe vital energy quicker than Josheet s o last | Hilitop. state hospital at Brewster's Neck. Many ; jsection of nok B ol ‘:,‘,"m_\.( way, or| Michael Rheume is havine a small| of thesc patients are fond of flowers but your body canreplace it RK AND T o von and KIIl vou Adeadw | bullding erected in front of his resi-| unable to obtain them, and arrangements LETTING LIONS INTERFERE WITH WO | s oo a8 ou sad Kilizon Aetar |BUIIBE remsh i troue of M e WERlSo oSl them, Shd memien mie DUTY velt and had real lions snarlng around| An interestl ¢ last Sunday was| Buel Union taken to the institution that | our tents at might such treatment might | the passing of soldiers with tractors and | night while fresh and beautiful. Inot have been appropriate or adequate.|Other army ecuipment en route to Camp! 1In the afternoon, the June business (Written Specially For The Bulletin) | was seein’ lions In the way he used Rut for the sort of lions we meet in our | Devens, for training. meeting was heid wi'h the usual report AP S Tan: 1 Al Wy fo add, “and somehow I couldn't see'dailv lives: the sort which our fears con- Lcinalng that t:eeun-;.:ux;slexd'rh::k of- 2 3 ' - v 7 eets ; s 1 ering 5 tne Yessir: yesm. Nobody will dispute|RCY Worsen dandelions, 'nd they danl.i\v)‘::"."nrvf{w“:;;s(‘;‘n;';‘;he i“on'\:: chw:;,(l WESTMINSTER DIt chmoh the e e or oo bt y probably is. - | st 2 725 o i t i e | "'Only the other day T was watching Rah! the man—or woman—who nermits| Children's day in Westminister was ;‘C'r;“':,g:i“’:é“tm‘:”‘r"“;:i:i‘hl"hf""e"“o““;g;': Thiis adrarvy Wil be two men putting back into place an au:them to intorfere on;o:nm:;:n"?-x:;\!w::‘c ST B e i e et . s SRaonta s ol tomobile engine they had Tepaired. A ' or duty, who even goes out vl platform was nearly banked by vases|SPeaker. Mrs. s e 2 Aot "HEARE: he ' raask eoh ml’;e\dmrza::'verlam bolt refused to enter its proper o get around them, IS lacking in one of| of laurel, columbines, weigelias, roses,| ¢ishtieth year, e Your body must be paid - g s Tkt s | hole. It would go in a bit and then the very primarv characteristics which{la {linieres of red and Alsace clov- | BY lllmen;mnu;-{{\qe‘:‘at:\: presincriieo PR There s .today when you know you|bring up, positively refusing to engage . ousht to distinguish ‘homo sapient” from|er, for w etc, and others on the pul- | Buell Union, Mrs. Martin Bus 2 o N % % Do- | threads. ~After five. minutes vain strug-'‘“bugbearibus bluffii! it and « knowledgment for these|instructed to convey to His Excellency Ev- s 2 sught to %o .out and cultivate those po G Sy ac & crétt J. Lake, governor of Connectlcut The body can't continue to su iatoes and would, if the sun wasn't sogle With the refractory bolt, Mecha THE FARMER. | being da wood Hubbard and 'some| BEth oo UARS EONELEE (0 (CRLnecHicRt AT G D zing, blistering, brofling hot o: 1 |!h‘n-w it du?“;‘x wenifien o of the ch dlrv'n of the school. The pro- ‘":: “:i‘;';‘ i ‘“mm ‘_u:" Ky e ply vital energy unless you keep “Thread’s™ jammed.” he drclarcd; gramme follows: - . 1i - - There witl bé tomorrow and tomeerew | have to take It all apart again #nd UNCASVILLE ’ri"h’:c T s Sunday bill, so-called, which would Ile- it supplied with the materials and tomorrow, to the last syllable of V"‘mu the hole” - Mechanis No& 2 D! i 5 . 2 Dible reading with -responses from| galize professional football and base- which produce vital energy. Bhive Steie b + man_crouches | in the bolt and looked 1t the threads. | Residents of the vill have long felt| choir and children ; prayer, pastor; scrip-| ball and commercailize Sunday. g Wincarnis enables you to pay o the last small oass of the Aving|Them he felt around in the drili-hote|the need of a traffic moliceman at the | ture, Matt. 15:155, by superintendent; | Johm W. Crofts of Hanover, supplied Speeta1 Distributors 5 world and hesitates to launch his ra-iwith a small wire. Then he hesan try-! four corners at the car station, as au-| G orcoc 1 of the Father's King-1the Westminister church Sunday and | — - your body for the work it does, m-driven a its way to an-ing hig hand with it. He turned it; he; ro 1o Pasreiler dom. He h and’ Anna O'sen;| w.l next Sunday in the absence of the ATIONA y ymineral elements planet lest . he may bump B il Oy S Ty LD M al v and New Testaments, | pastor, who, with his wife, has gone 3 5 5 ¥ | twisted he oiled it; he got a e - % i i I hich enable the body to produce some straw comet lon the end of a % h and oiled the in-| 1igh rate of speed, gmenerally without away for a few davs of greatly needed Drug S 25 5 Rt bloolsichbnl A lion in the way?" That's drawing! gide of the drill-hcle; he tried trick af- s ng. The need of such a man has . Zola Page.| regt. Mr. Crofts has often filled the tcres vitalenergy—tomakethe bleod rich an mild—Iless than even one-half of oneliar trick and scheme after scheme. All been more keenly felt since the recent . Dusenberri. | pulpjt here and is always welcomsd. Hain & Shetucier red_tostrengthen the nerves—andpro- r cent. of the actual truth that s, the time he kept his temper and never|accident to the Lutv and O'Connell boys,| 2°T lildren of the Pil-| * qe topie for thome prayer circle Wed- _Seld_Also By All m vitality. Try Wincarnis smoothed out the good-natured grin on | although acident occurred a short | 8Tims, Dorothy Merrifield, Bonita Deus-| nesday evening, Junme 22, is, Our Abi First-Class Druggists foryourself. Theresultswillsurprise you. g e #ndlons " and. *them b b et | srondred S CARNIT ininn t nce e the corner. However, it| ¢nberri: children of the present, leader,| ty to Help Others Depends On Our Re- Edwara Lassere B ghares Hous, 5 T e hota any watch on him. but T think he|is a dangerous road for the school chil-| Mr o Raymond, Bdgar = Goch | epect For Their Best Qualities and For Inc., Agents, 400 12} oz. AT ALL 26ez. e finie i dark door-| must have kept this up for a good half- dren as there are no sidewalks and they| Flaine Koch, Simeon Raymond, Marjorie| Their Possibilities. St. Matt. 8:8-10; St. West 23 Bottle oy e Bottle e v deiath] Then. all of a sudden, the bolt|are obliged to use the road where the au-| (226, Rosamond Page, Alice Binghanu.| john, 1:4-9; First Corfathians, 12:4-11. New York. $1.10 $1.95 Bk g Seg it and he caimly screwed it home|to traffic cannot be seen around :ho}}f““’f; ,T’hm;.l ”'\m'r‘"( _ Hagopian,[ A T. MacLeod has returned from a Ak “h =i where it belonged and went on to an-! curves and the trolley track runs on the| -“I'l £ i :1" ; as i SAEOpIAn, Ilrlp to Mt Kisco, N. Y., with his little ‘me(gfi\ cabainly i { other part of the job. other side of the highwa Ina Hofmn, Flaro.d il nlayspatriotiotex-|ip, y Victar WA7 Wincamis Cor shduty pukhes “How'dye do it?" I Children's day will be olserved by the | crcise. Dorothy Merrifield, leader, Bon-| payster Kinne, who was with Earl and o esolls. “Dunno,” he “Jest Kopt | Methodist church Sunday morning. June }2 m":r;‘a::\n“r’u \mx?;’“:x:' E}xax"mt D s ”wrhf“lm"r\ab-' wnno, e resy < ont | 2 S X Koch, Zol; age, Edil Isen, ice | co 3 in Nor- always “terrible Taw-| giggin' away at it til sumthin' had tol (th With & Special prosramme in the! y,_ihian " Earl Macleod, Johnnie Soo| wip o suitgedto iy dome | Some marriages are f 0. but always fright-i pappen.” lsacis gervice. The Sanday | derberz, Douglas MacLeod. Harry Held- are, but YOMPORALY CImITasen se who want to be| T have heard—and hal some experi-1 101 se Will be omitted on ac.|Strom, Marjorie Paze, Simona Raymond ; m. No record exists|once—of “the ct of imanimate| .oun¢ of the parade in New London at|SON&. choir; baptismal service, by tne| ' : ever hav n actually de- | things” Doubtless all have. Haven't| {\ 05 0 T ich the. school wiii| pastor; hymn, Faith of Our Fathers { them. but, if approached w ”“vr\u_ also, often found ihat patience, good i % ‘;m, o e r “,‘h.” Living Still; recitation, Beginners' class, v midity and linees to be|‘nature and ‘a certain quiet contempt for| hose BHeA st LTt st iGn | ATcenE am wion Bingham, Arnen scared death look carnivorous|ihem haVé many times resulted in thel at two o'clock daylixht sar.| Hagopian, Marjorie Page; recitations, it s T PR ssionary, hat and | eventual conquest? A < Taknc s Simona Raymond, Alice Hagopian, Annie OEY ang: Bewts PCO0L. 3 {1t you are a granger You have doubt-| Considerable damagze was done to one| Hagopian: offering; duet, Annie and Right there is the cnrious thing about! & Yol Bre f SFAnE at instafiation | of the troliey cars operated between Nor.i Alice Tagopia; Ladder Exercise, Char-!/il il SR ca '('";;f_i‘"’: AL iremonies| that Aimculeies e just] W d New London Saturdar evening| acter e =i P"."g“ Bf’"“l“ : 4 e e e wii_ | things to be overcome. Th some- | i ran into one of the large trucks r':ml:.mfi:vvv ' """““z ':Mrz:\n'»d;c ‘n‘;“m“ A - If. when you meet one, | tMng not at all hard to say. doca [or (hel Massssolt M Jou 0L Orkinla N Lhinsling, o the chureh vavine I ) an_ end, its eyes wili| Slonally harder to carry fnto effect. I| The truck was standing across the track| The shingling of the church having It vour knees quake its| Will not deny that it is possible for the|in front of the Dart cottage, in Uncas-| been complet ' by nt 1r ony yl‘ (6 thesn. Tt “your teeth | mind to conceive of difficultics which| ville. and the trolley was approaching| coSt mot Uy Sl ot i fangs will elash. If vou could not be overcome: difficulties in- m New London. As the motorman | Ot "]"‘-""('“ W Toha ity (5 "k-‘_"("‘s_fl T SA E v | start to run. Wow! but what | fuverable, unsurmountoile. unconquer- | saw the truck, he ‘applied his brakes but| —Some of the church workars met IF YOU WAP‘I TO V MONE a o will crack your re-|able. The capacity of the human mi 4| as the car neared the truck for some un-| ne: S Cl8 oy ;”’j‘“ s Sl Vnd darel i 3 {In that direction h limited. But | known re: . the air brakes let go and "‘“:"““f“'{ = e S"“‘"g, . However. you walk angoncernéaiy | ihe dctual zaiiculties al e [ithe “carcrashed iintosithe | truck, whichi: odtemorial day. ivisitorsat e BUY HERE iy AND Now 0 o 1, AE Bl ukiaily bedti-to hm_).(\\vlflnm of that ideal stu iornness. y { remained undamaged, but the front of | 3 = My “then it will turn|Aare generally amenable to argument or,| the trolley car was smashed. No ore ' A it tipa brot; Be URe Aoy wa ble to attack . | was hur the motorman jumned from ! ot wh seooting br meow ody to find a over a > g ne pitesusly hum between g ; - sl & mean and p z to be done over t's too One day day day you whatever its ways a lion in 1 char: our eyes, back at last Srad Tén herself on and dies of ou ,spend dolorou z r “bad lnck” to all nasture ba the cows bre and your a colie. ne! hours bew had been its sha distant hill | for hole for it to crawl who will st n wide difference between a| a ween a real lion round ve you've TS the best Oace upon a time an old farmer said never get hem steers.” all boy safe old, gray-head m tell that 2 B n € the outoome. He al- falrness enough to admit that | - . job.” and that he n re ild do it till after the lon t And in- == * Chicken Salad “Faultless”- Style Admrost everyone likes chick- en sllad. Almost everyone likesit best or would like it best{with Faultless Mayon maiseiSalad Dressing. Fault- less i3 of the rich creaminess and delightful flavor that characterizes the very best home-made dressings, FAVULTLESS MAYONNAISF, SALAD DRESSING Diseributed by Ceowa Food Products Corporation Previdence Sesssssscnannnet | | | | | at | hot | Nine h seems impresnable when looked |the time. The car was taken to an; at from either north or south, or east or | .ondon for repalrs. | will aisclose a chink | _ A Dbirthday “supper conducted by the, ciewed f: nornon v east| L d sociely of the Methodist or sou’ west by south west. You | ¢hur esday proved a success | never can tell till you've looked the thing{ About thirty-five membhers of Thames all over and all around and all through, 22, 1. 0. O. F., attended ge:- Perhaps not even then till you've poked t the Methodist church in a body it and pounded at it and 1 at st| Sunday morning. this being part of the: to the limit of strength and patience. <t | Memorial ¢ Pk the members march to Comstock ceme- sluggl Sircumstances oric | fery to, Gecorate the sraves, of deceased - sub- | are bigzer than you: whether you're| ¥ {0 deco SIETSRANES Legeas nondes. monsters of | afraid of on or he is afraid of you.| . - n ot monaters of fatra d o lion o raid of you.| "3/ e Y. they are| g jpave seen a small woman with a|Ma are ing Richard | thelr Inventors rod painted to look bu times out of ten the difculty | (l car and mo onewas on the truck at| ch Tuesd: iod amme out oif the annual' of the lodxe at which time . Ra!ph Melcer are =Get Horlick’s The ORIGINAL Malted Milk | " NO COOKING { 7 "Food~ Drink” for All Ages. 3 Quick Lunch at Home. Office =nd monntans 4sk for HORLICK™S 3 Avoid {mitations & Substituter SPECIALS For Suburban Day SATURDAY, JUNE 18th 100 WAISTS at 49¢ 500 Tailored Waists at $1.00 FRENCH, DOMESTIC VOILE BLOUSES, AT.......... $1.95 EXTRA SPECIAL! New Minuete Blouses, in Tie- Backs and Long Models. All colors and sizes,at............. 120 $2.95 PLENTY OF GEORGETTE WAISTS AND OVER-BLOUSES, AT... $3.95 HAND MADE WAISTS $2.95 THE NEW WAIST SH 194 Main Street 0P Norwich, Conn. : exception. that we could not pass them up. Boys’ Good Suits $10.00 to $12.00 Values : Men’s Fine Silk Sox 59¢ Perfect $1.00 Quality, Cordovan —Also Black and other colors— | Come and see "em. WOMENS |MENS WORK SHIRTS Ready, Friday 10 a. m.| Fine Blue Cambric GREEN, GRAY AND BROWN MIXTURES. SUIT NEW, AND OF THE LATES™ DESIGN. INGS AVERAGE $5.00 TO $6.00 A SU.T. Men’s $1.00 and $1.25 Union Suits Athletic, knee-length and full — The price should warrant a buy of two or more suits 618 PAIRS [JUST 87 DOZ.|68 DOZ. HOSE { 56,000 Worth of Fine Men's Furnishings | and Boys' Suits Bought at the big June Auction Sales, in New York City — We do not handle either Boys’ Suits or Men’s Furnishings as a rule, but this was a decided In the first place, we were in New York, and the Auction was a National event, and in the second place, the goods and prices were so exceptional, o d 550 SUITS IN THE LOT, SIZES 7 TO 18 — DARK EVERY SAV- 19 Children’s Women’s 16c Pair Men’s AT THE SELF-SERVICE SHOE STORES Thayer Building Franklin Square, Norwich N

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