Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 22, 1921, Page 10

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1921 1 MAKE. And don’t forgst you get Cur- lana Service, so well-known ‘and appreciated by all Phonograph owners, which guarantees to keep your machine always in good order. No other store can give you Curland Service. $1.00 DOWN $1.00 WEEKLY No Extras or Interest of Any Kind. LIBERAL ALLOWANCE FOR YOUR OLD PHONOGRAPH OR PIANO Down WE HAVE JUST 75 BRUNSWICI& OUTFITS TO DELIVER:ON THESE CLUB TERMS. JOIN THIS CLUB AND GET THE SAME PRICE AS IF YOU HAD COME TO ANY STORE AND PAID CASH. TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS SPECIAL OPPORTUN- ITY AND SECURE THE BEST PHONOGRAPH THAT MONEY CAN BUY. YOU DON'T HAVE TO PAY US ONE PENNY MORE FOR THIS HIGH-GRADE PHONOGRAPH THAN YOU WOULD PAY SOME STORES FOR A CHEAPER Samuel Hall of Mr Mer| and Mrs. A ave pur C. D. Salisbury .. Gooman A. Babcock Atwood obinson 1 omplete Qutfit TALKING MACHINE SHOP, NORWICH, CONN, Please send me full details of your BRUNSWICK CLUB PLAN, Name., Address. . PIANOS — PHONOGRAPHS — VIOLINS — MUSICAL GOODS. THE TALKING MACHINE SHOP 24-34 FRANKLIN SQUARE CONSISTS OF : 1921 MODEL BRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPH 10 RECORD SELECTIONS (5 Records) — Your Choice. 1 EDISON POINT 1 PATHE POINT 200 STEEL NEEDLES 1 BOTTLE OIL 1 OIL CAN Join, This Brunswick Phonograph Club NOW! .00 The Brunswick Phonograph Plays All Makes of Records *THE ONLY EXCLUSIVE MUSIC HOUSE IN NORWICH.” Per Week DELIVERED " FREE ANYWHERE NORWICH, CONN. WAUREGAN he Dav He “James Moffit and Mrs. Jc anc b motored to Oakland he Sunday school icnie: shich of this week w non & Sunday Mlie Sunday Wildwood par’ from the ion at half d to go With sehoo! Dpect he-aver more of Judgment man thinks selecting a ¢ is some has used ar than sel teott are plan ting a wif | ter lcut company barns in Hart- (_nmn meetings. Now don’t get Serra was caught between | gee mixed up with Sam McGee. His left log was so badly crushed|The Northern Lights have = Bu her wings with much frequency in gatuck last month, a3 45 babies first saw the light in as ‘many visits by Mother Stork, Who slipped one over on Mr. Hard Times by hanging up & new rccoyd. The old record of 41 stoed for 2 number of | | Thomas Clock company' were notified by the foremen of the different departments this .week of & reduction in wages. The reduction ranges from 10 to 20 per cent. and affects practically every emnloye in! thie threo factories of the company, rum- | Lering several hundred. CAMP-MEETINGS AND | BARBECUES MADE IN U. S, “Oh, this is a great country, you fel- lows don’t half appreciate the land you lve in,’ writes Dan Beard in Boys' Life, the official magazine of the boy scouts of America. “When . Eric the Red was fighting the Skrae- glings, the sald Skraeglings had pal- jsadged council grounds with a fire in the middle, and among the Indianw gathered to discuss tribal affairs. Ls on, after we had civilized the| Cherokee Indians, if we may use that term, the Cherokees used the council| S| fire for barbecues, and this started @ing schools. fashion in Kentucky, which to this day Harold Hannon Wright of this ph]w is followed by the politicians who give| . barbecues where whole beefs and sheep | are roasted. Then, over in Tennessee, McGee und his brother, John Mc- in 1799 used the council fires for Bill Mc- en queer sights, But llw queerest they ever did {Was the night on the Marge of lALe Lebarge I cromated Sam McGee. “I guess we will quit this verse, for the next one ‘sounds sort of profane. | This Sam McGee that we are now talk- |ing about was from Tennessee also. | After reading Service's verses. I great- tear that Sum McGee was not a fal- len from grace. Bill, however, was a | Presbiterian, and his brother, John Mc- | Gee, was a shouting Methodist minis- ter—a sort of a pioneer Billy Sunday —and wherever he preached immense |crowds of buckskin-clad men with their s and their little tow-headed ch dreddren flocked to hear him. So big were the crowds that the litle log churches could noi hold them and con- sequently they gathered around the blazing council fire, where there | more room. Frim this beginning c the at wave of religious re which swept the borderiand, the ef: Naugatuek—Old Mother Stork flopped | of which may be seen in Ohio, Ken- au- | tucky, Tennesseeand all through the sce Middle West, whefe some people pre- serve a refreshing and healthy relig- ious atmosphere, where some really say grace at the table as their ancesters did tie mstory and ct English 48 the only’langidge in pos - private . schools, and ~Americar cs_as requirements fo: and whers a lot of people go to’ church igraduation from Iifsh and’ elementar: instead of the golf grounds on Sundays. Now Bill McGee from Tenneme.‘ popularized the council fire and thus ools were commended. The called for continued campaigniny for federal aid and, a, cabibet secretary & You sec America also ave to the world |education. Protest was - made esolu againsf the camp-meeting and the council fire,| submerging of education in a proposcé both bully outdoor affairs.” NATIONAL EDUCATIONAL ASS'N |m choice of © foderal department of public welfare. intendents. county or city, by lay boards of educa- state WANTS ENGLISH IN SCHOOLS : tion elected by the people, Was favored. “Dirty kitchens lead to marital dissat-| 1sfaction, Especially noteworthy ~was {eral support for a single salary sche d Superintendent J. W. Go-lule for all teachers, irrespective of their the zen wans of Winfieid, Kan., at the conven- grade. The schedule, it Wak said. would Uo not the National Education Associa- 7ot be zo differentistes as fo stirac S = teachers toward positions uol suitable tion, which closed ity sessions in Des you g LRyl oo ent 3 M. Gwinn Moines last week. “A §ood cook,” he of Xew Orleans, said a superlor teacher said, “makes for a good home and bad wiih equal qualifications should find the cooking lerds to divorces” He com-|sy ghest where she served best, d farm projects in school Aurelia H. Reinhardt president | Maurice R whether in first grade or’im high schoo! cker of the edueational di- of 1.000 col- sraduates would in- 100 years from of Mills College. Oakland. Cal. scored vision.of the United.States Bublic Health women who lead an artificial life and Service, said the progeny shun pagnthood. Sho sad they eould jege learn sGiething from the Women .who|now be ved ir Uic centuries when there Were Resolutions were dopted urginig the need for fewer than fifty. erate foreigners, would be multiplied 100 while 100 fui- more liberal support for cduca- ¥ New T ctaries. tion and for larger state funds to equal- | ew; Teleshingt Pogge burdens and _opportunities through-|_The new telephone director out the states. A competent. well-train- “Ul by mail her for every class was demand-'f he should have permanent te-| nure after probationary services, and| After a woman has {a¢~quate pension. A single salary sche-|two y ul {servi bused o e, preparation and eflicient | irrespective of the ' grade in|told her d Friday. ted from the Norwich exchange. 4000 being been married she wonders how she could have believed the things her busband ng their cot Cone ... 1EF STATE NEW! Liberty street! and Stillman avenue. Lynch 21 BRIEF STATE NEWS Misses Ethel and Edith Smith have re-|F. Congdon 50 79| ‘Portland.—The - Martford-New Yeork turned to their home in East Braintree,|R. Greene 21| steamers have a big passenger list every Mass., after & short visit with Miss Alice) C. Budford evening. | Baker of Granite street. E. Murphy .. : SRR Several more yards of macadam were|L. Lamothe . s it a Thursday, but the, ; B 5 s g i laid on Broad street day. b Thtfsday, the 28th, the junior mem-|July 30th. : ; street is yet much cut up and traffic must|hers of the Community assoclation are tol oy Ponds R e Another autemoblle came te grief en,dempiorist Order of New York ¢il¥:imove slowly. have ‘a - swimming meet in the tank at] o Ui the laborst Monday Bfter s o) Burial was in St Michael's old cemeter¥.|" It is expected that Harry de Coster.d tha Community house. Theer arc ty we|opencd the laboratories Monday B e R e Tt Fore 1y were much | the aviator, will return to Pleasant View| girls'<and boss’ events. 4 namber g¢|Shutdown of tWo weeks. road Thureday mornbiz when the Ford| Users of gas in Westerl TCTC Juoy | this summer, following the recent acei-f ontries have been received. Danbury.—Butchers of the city are to tearing car of ¥rele H. Rover of Provi- |inconvenienced Wednescty SIS 0¥ ) "o |dent to the'plane of Lieat. Wesley| Local people were visitors at Moosup|hold their annual outing a;m\_nexdFfl_ay dence skidded and struck a tree. In ad-|jor apout two hours while water was|Keough. vorid-Sunday, and many went in bathing. 1°Xt Sunday at Barse's pond, New. Fa'r- on to Mr. Royer, his wWife was an oc-| pumped from the main on Canal street. (It is useless to send news items, per- | §¢ld. F: s | & new 12-inch main is being laid tarough PLAINFIELD sona)s, obituaries, etc., for this column| Bssex.—Mr. and Mrs. James Royal of DARL OF Sh BRE R4 Woth wive badly [/ N sineas mection:of. the town, snd it & unless tliey are sighed with the name of | Brooklyn recently celebrated their 26th p in the accident. Mrs. Rover was | the business section o0 % U0 ong each| Card Toom No. = won Manday even-|the writer. Unsigned commun'cations | wedding anniversary at the home of Mr. through the windehleld and Rer | Nening at Quilling tme. but his Dreca- | ing's. game, in tho Sunset loagus eeries Bosltively. will not. b used—Correspon- | and Mrs. F. W. Ridgeway. was_} gainst the steer- |€ven gt P g b, eie ence Tiditor.) 5 t e en neglected Tuesday might, 384 | erom Card Room No. 1, 12-10, in a game| dence Fiditor) s eestis Bekigh e Dl el i E e o were bl Sk AB0UL| e heavy rainstorm caused Waier 10 floW | wnere neavy. hitting and loose felding| 'Plainfield Erange No. 10, P. ot .1, FUMGSY Dhcdas been awarded the ce y, and Mre. Ro T Ciie Sact was IN Y i ts feprareaTHe lacore: visited Ekonk _grange, ‘No. 89, Friday| Y of this piace nes boen amarics e v escaped fatal injuries. Soon after the|lnto the opeh €nC "Mool inio the Seie o evening last. Worthy Lecturer George | poRt"4SL 00 100 SIS o /6 U Dr. E. J. Brophy of Norwich|i0ie (o0, iev. and then service had Sl R H. Dawley furnished a very interesting¢" SWimming o i me along and he ruehed the injured|Plant WedBeCrET: SL. T o “water wasl AB.R. H.P.0. A E.|program as follows: Piano duet, Misses| Hartford.—According o the returns ous {0 the office of Dr. M. H. Scanlon | (o be suspended whit N VO Lol Allard, ss. ... pilTaisy toa Gendrno and Sibyl L. Kennedy; | from the superior court —of Hartford EETRI praces Sy B Fhven tgals P from the sewerage contractors. . | Greene, 1b. ... § i 0 0 ation, Miss Ella Gardiner; vocal|county during the past year 305 divorces » " K adol 5 3 A ilkrgcrom G 5 1:: 0 1lsolo, Miss Helen Gardiner; reading and|were granted, the largest in any yéars in Ascacling to the atory of the incident| Alpettus B. Mazson of Westerly, whose | Fournier, b .. 3 0 2 2luic Jason Lathrop; piano solo, Miss| the history of the court, Mr. Rover, he was bound from |, badly fractured in an Beausolel : - opkins ; gecitation and encore, % | co to Westerly und had Just| 3T Metiaent on the Waic Cleveland i 1 e 1 e ton jand gncote:| Watertown—Invitations have been re- S e turn in the Shore road about | jyjy 2 operated on for the fourh | Dawley, fngd 21 10 Diier: vooul solo, Aiss Florenca O [ Celved in town to the wedding of M on_with th Jol wospital in Provi- chie, P. ... § 03 0| e e e M Fans " Seurome | Hiilda Constance Jones of Louisville, 4 Pierce-Arrow tour-| jonce Weanesday m has not been St 1 0 1lHgg Done for Woman's Work, Mrs. Edith 5 s the curve in the op as well as the physicians de- )| e Ry 1 0 0 Kennedy | ‘o o'ciock. H on and crowded the Ford oft and the condition of Mr. Muxson — — — —| At the mest meeting of Plainfield, ) Lo e of the road into some| syt as good &s & weck ago, but a “ 37 1080 Laiee mup % Biork ‘srange will caraish | SShoo) same time e of one | 5 i given that he will recover. | A i s | —Two cars came together at wheels was punctured and i Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Ch L SetCE n y Wilcott Chapman, 50, who died | 2 an 2o rise ek A el e e i 1| Nerney and daughters were visitors in | - 1 4 el o e i T b 3| Rhode Ieland Sunday, soing by automo.| that it Was amputated at the hospitul i s G R R & e ndling of a switeh caused the| ’ v e wody will be|Cournoye 1jtained Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Jord 1 Grasby.—Whil> playing Wild West ‘a | e Rt ; riul, and ser-! Petersor 1 o|sons of Providence. 1! 1. Sunds ' ays ago, Albert Norbert, § years| SRR Nt scing: i b et HE o] Joraan is w milk distrivutor i e city of Granby, was shot and_ serl 2 g F. and A. M. ! Whipple, 25 1ot Providence and has milk from a wuni-| wounded in the lungs by Ernest Gru B e eadeats it Ba R (et T 0 1| ber of Moosup farme {2 year o "The boy fs in the Har p . | basebail Sttraction mn Westerly ‘Sanday| i | Mr and Mrs 1 ospital and the docwrs now believe he = e oo 5 up | 5110 15 3 | relatives Sunday I recover. i - v Score by innings Mrs. Henry Buell sons and (WO [ Bristol,—Dr. Joseph I. Woisard, heal : Mye Care Rotm Mo, 54 0 6.5 102 o s—yg]dausht Buell and |, of the ety of Bristol, said last| ema requiem Nigh mass for Re Card Room No. 2.4 005 10 2 ¢ +—2|daushl nd his grand. | e e 5 13 it thd mat e s Card Room No. 1.1 00 01 3 4 0 119 three . hat he intended to bring the ma 28I between the j C2rd Foor 2 : { mother, cousins,” Miss a bathing inspector before the a Mi. | locals been arranged | Two base Clovelng e oo jiCarie <o | £ health, which will probably hold Ml and the eczerap y-thren ‘f o ii% pBereron this (Thursday) evening, Jul ¢ fe s S0 Souley : it by pitcher, Allard, Clove: | ? ; e as_dea e thass g e Sl ot by Goweiginid| ~—sSumucl Keloe and Pat- will tw the Kaceys : stuck_out 4 : wo students from the by F. Pechie 10; umpires, Alexunder, ¢ more members of I : ! ¥ 1 be on the receiving - LRl Eeies ) 5 Gie Alubama university, are studying at the In un_exciting game of baseball piayed | 55 : g | plastation of the Connecticut Sumatra el isant View T & alternoon el dgor headquariers on the Canterbury company. Bolli Souns men.are taking 3 SRS (/Pleasunt View Juniors dejealed BICbOYS Fiogn ‘satubgay fattarndti. © Most of ‘th ClbIG STNCT tas e T S o Hill, 14 to 13. A kel orpers were present and had an enjoy- formation. - e bt el ““”,I able afternoon at the trops. Georse i < d fouzht 1al| ¢ uss was in rare form, breaking WA 341 Gut of 50 ducks. i Watch H aving many sh . o tors watched the shooting and ALL READY THIS MORNING AT 9 Six New Lots of Shoes 1265 PAIRS Women’s Fine White Canvas Oxfords and Ties, covered heels and hand-turned soles —Values up to $4—All sizes and widths. Neothing over a Dollar Children’s Fine White Canvas Oxfords with white enamel leather soles — Hun- dreds to choose from l $1.00 $1.00 shapes Honored By Royal graphical Society Of TSORYRISHTXESTONE VEW €O, NEw YORK cousin’ of Wwho was recently made a Fellow the Royal-Geographieal Society London. as x result of the tinents. Geo Mrs, Mildred Clemens Schenck, Mark Twain—humorist, of wide- | spread distribution of Geographical knowledge as well as her explora- tions and travelogues on two con- saleat Boys’ and Girls’ Tan Play Oxfords—Solid leather oak soles, sewed — Wide tie Seconds of Women’s Fine Low Shoes and Pumps—TLots are limited and you must come early and do your own picking. Hundreds of pairs Children’s Shoes— Both boys’ and girls’ Allkinds Women’s High White Shoes—Hood's Leis- ure Shoe—Finest made—Worth $3—On / o | $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 $1.00 Self-Service Shoe Store FRANKLIN SQUARE NORWICH

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