Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 21, 1921, Page 8

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NORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, SEFTEMBER 21, 1921 eating Engineer— you used to call him Steamfitter ring the first winter nearly one-half of their number died from exposure.” —ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA ‘Yj’ UST three hundred years § 2go they landed on Ply- mouth Rock. They were a courageous company— as sturdy and stout as the best of us. hich they came was in which we live; the winter was noc more severe than our winters now. But nearly half of them died from exposure. the Almost no one in America dies from exposure today. And why? Because of the service of a group of quiet, un- assuming men. Working without special notice or praise, the men whom you call Steamfitters and Plumbers have made the mewest nation the healthiest and varmed nation in the world. They have done a wonderful work nerica; and yet their work is hardly more than begun. Statisticians say that 17%2 million homes in America still have no heat except the heat of old-fashioned stoves. for the Heating Engineer’s wonderful new gift to the small home FOR years every Heating Engineer has longed for a hot-water heating outfit that would warm the small home as perfectly as the larger heating plants of the AMERICAN RADIATOR COMPANY warm mansions, cathedrals and even the White House itself. ARCOLA—a wonderful new invention developed after years of experiment—is the answer to that hope. 4 ARCOLA is unlike any heating equipment you have ever seen. It is radiator and boiler and hot-water heater com- bined to burn any kind of fuel. Set in the living-room, dining-room or kitchen, it radiates healthful warmth to every corner. American Radiators, connected with it by small pipes carry its warmth to every room upstairs and down. The kitchen tank, too, can draw on its deep fire- pot, providing an abundance of hot water for washing and bathing. See ARCOLA today in the store of any Heating Engineer displaying the red and yellow card at the right, IDEAL ARCOLA is not only a great inven- tion for the small home; it is a gift o the small homein a very real sense. For, in the fuel it saves, ARCOLA is guaranteed to pay for itself. If every man who can install a heat- ing plant should work every day, it would take a generation to give modern healthful heat to those 17% million homes. An almost overwhelming task! But think of the overwhelming economy! Every IDEAL TYPE A HEAT MACHINE substituted for a wasteful furnace or boiler means that one familv’s fuel bill is reduced one-third. Every ARCOLA, supplax{ting a furnace or old- fashioned stoves, slashes the fuel bill of another home. Of all the services rendered to the modern home there is none which pays for itself more quickly or more surely than the service of the Steamfitter and Plumber. Call your Steamfitter or your Plumber in now and have him go over your house and report; his counsel may save you money. Make it a point to con- sult him twice a year as you do your Doctor or your Dentist. And do not be surprised if the old name over his store has been taken down and a new one hangs in its place. For the men whose science and skill have robbed winter of its terrors and removed the breeding-grounds of disease, have outgrown the names by which you have been accustomed to call them. Their work has become a profession: the Steamfitter and Plumber of yesterday are today the Heating and Sanitary - Engineers. CAN RADIATOR COMPANY Makers of the famous IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators 125.131 Federal Street Boston, Massachusetts erop will b avoid any and careful sure increa: season. It | Soring to s apportunities wi ‘uu to get your seed directly from t feld. As soon as the corn crop matures through the fiel & across your sho from the stalks that most good corn with vantages, such as ture or fertility. ears which are time i the ear cause maturity. Do for disease. the very |field but amproved erage N acre over the no-fert plets on whi ou to AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS PRECATTIONS FOR STRAWBERERY BEDS strawberry bed needs attgason fye o it i3 to be at it best mext | the earlier the b Le gone over and P n to withstand the wil a vizorous growth in nts winterklll b Today “If I were left to prescribe a school luncheon, it would 2 cup of milk and an apple.” Dr. Harvey W. Wile Crown Food Prodmets Corp. 1217 Eddy St. Frovidemce Wholesale Distributers SHANNON BLDG. The Woodstock Dairy NORWICH, CONN. With Every Purchase of $1.00 or Over TODAY—Wednesday Only One Pound of Pure Leaf Lard WILL BE GIVEN FREE ed. { e home grown | with <hape 20 blos- | s00d sized ber- | will be much i yroper cars at the plants each having _ |the inquirer io see Mr. Hamiin. sumach here is o stem of sumach to be DID GUS MOKUS . #sgpsitns: : EMEBEZZOMMEIPNEASS Continued From Pag-iFieg on e icli appeaied to the oourt matler when he legEmer t this man did not testify in the loyer keeper. Attorney In said Melus also asked about some more money to put through another deal but Hamilr told Mokus ke could noi furnish amy more money. till he got this $400 back. Attorney Ireland further testified to. 3 telephone call he had on the evening of May 25 from 2 person who said he war Mokus and wanted $500 to put throogk another liquor deal The attorney tale when the money Mokus. Attorney {xu Lim, the county { ficsiilied. that he got the $400, gaves it} |to & man in SpringGeld named Nester.) d was given a check for 358 by Nestor i told to clear out for & few uotil the thing blew over. - argued that the state heft and i thers ington street and Syrian feliow to see if he could make 4 deal to deliver the Nquor in the Can- The witness- testified i in Hamlin's room af o the Moosup deputy | '@ and Hamlin. Frem Moosup Moku ¥ trolley te Ner | wich, staying one night, seeing Mr. Mor- rissey, and then going back to Spring. field where he saw and talked to Hamlin, Nestor and Ireland about selling 15 caser of whisker. Hamlin told him te e ahead and Ireland said not te be afrald am the boss me if this police deca: the Syrian aga in-law drives Captain Testifying about a trip to to Moosup in Hamlin's ear, tn 5o . said the meney was shown there, Lo |and Hamiln found a place to meet. ir |t2e woode and tnen they came t> Nor | wich. FHe went to see Merrisser an. told Famin Morriesey would net pay anr money Hamlin sald “We will give vou the momey. We don't cars as long as ws caich. Both pastiont Mokus dented tha der introdueed to Morrissey, But said a

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