Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NORWICH BULLETIN, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1921 S ool NORWICH BULLETIN WILLIMANTIC OFFICE Telephone 105 23 Church 8t | e | A short calemdar session of the Wind- m county superior court was held in Friday, court opening at 10.30 | udge L. P. Waldo Marvin on the| llowing the calling of the docket by “dgar M. Wamer, the following allowed to stand: Wal- ons vs N. Y, N. H. & H. John Laine, second for September 27; James P, Me- i W. Whipple et al, first | . Septmber 2§; George B. French v Janet C. Sheppard second Wed. | needa: 28, Emma M. Wain- wright vs Judson A. Wainwright, third for Wednesday Sepfember Denis J. 3 s Nathan W. and Batrice E for Wednesday, Septem- calendar. n days was plaintiff to file a biil of se of Wheston Build- Company va Mary NTIS Cennection | ros. | AND \ Willimantic, Conn, Plore <99 (Lady Assistant) | season with. much lo of their creations. COAT MODES— Designed upon long and straight lines give to the new wraps an appearance loose and flowing, but charmingly becoming. Many novel touches in the form of collars, sleeves, pockets and trimmings help to bring out the gen- eral beauty of their lines in a way that is admirable. DRESS MODES— Again fashion says : “straight and narrow,” and though not a few models exploit light girdle hips and flaring gkirts the majority are modeled along the slender silthouette. SKIRT MODES— Though simplicity is again the dominant note — several novel and chic effects are attained by pleating, flaring and in the arrangement of the pockets, THE H. C. MURRAY CO. {and beatings. About & year ago she ana | mantic where her husband failed to sup- r & Lmbaimer| ANTIC | —= BOSTON STORE Willimantic, Conn. Fall Styles ew secason approaches, one is confronted with the question as to which garment will be the best to start the A few minutes of your time here will de- cide for you the proper garment to wear, and at prices than they have been in a long time. SUIT MODES— Styles are many and varied, differing in le;ngth and modeling of the jackets and skirts as well as in the trim- mings, exhibiting in their many originalities the genius B. Blgnchard vs Harold I Blan- was Weard, Mrs. Blanchard being granted a divoroe on the grounds of “ruelty and was allowed the custody of her tbree minor children. Mrs. Blanehard told the court a story of continual cruelty on the part of her husband, in several lecations in the state, and of his liking for other women. They were married in Providence April 17, 1897, her husband being a railroad passenger conductor, and they resided in cities in many sections of this state. Sho t0id of deveral mistreatments, one tak- ing place at Manchester where he struck her and broke nose, and said, “I ought to kill you," After she learned of his running around with other women she ke to him of it and she received abuse erine chard her family moved to Clark street, Willi- port her and their family. He was ar- and ordered to contribute $20 a week for the support of his family. He did this for a time, but now four weekly pay- ments are due. She did not know of his owning real estate but knew of money d in a Danbury bank. He also kept automobile. The divorce was grante so the custody of the children; the jon of alimony gees over until next Loeal merchants are pl: ing to pat- nize Willimantic day at the Mansfield The merchants hope to get fogetfier 1 delegation as large as the one that in- 1 Brooklyn Thursd: The date is A Thursday and as it marks the last halt liday of the season all stores being osed it is expected that the transporta- n committee will find plenty of work cad. Tho Munchester Motoreycle club is to otorcycle meet at Hosmer Moun- September 2 , prizes ag- to be awarded riders who in climbing the mountain started from the rear of the home of William E. Clark, No. 215 Mountain street. The hill s 337 feet long and the grade averages r cent. If rains prevent hoiding the sts the meet will be postponed one | The meet is public and if reports | ave come back from previous at- (s to climb the mountain ara true, part of the participants, ham High school goes into ses- 9 o'ciock beginning Monday, the ue to the shift of time on railroads. ¥ tions will begin at and wi jssed and (Saturday) daughter. Cecelio | morning for S their vacation. MANSFIELD CENTER 3 mantio Y. | Ipits of Spring Hill & most ae- 5 expeoted that who lid e v bo preach h a8 pastor. rday a de- waa received from Mr. \ting that he would be un- the call. N avorable im eare { made for ai “gtam to be October, under the library. ose who | welow's address on Mex- Hill, are glad to to hear him agan o his home in are_being al the teachers of ted and found guilty of non-uspport | il be some daring riding Sunday |1 on at Wind- | ¥ | Legion, |out the support of the public, There entertainments. The Wo- to the post has volun- LAD YOU CAN GET Turkish Towels at 10c each " AND THE NEW Felt Tams at 97c AT ALL OUR STORES The Pasnik Co. SEL FoR LEss IES! township was held Tuesday afternoon at the Center school. Jesse Eno and daughter, Miss Alber. ta, are motoring to New Hampshire, where they will visit Mr. Eno's daugh- ter, Mrs. William Reed and family. " B. Eaton was in Hartford Tues- day, and Wednesday accomwanied his son Alan to Providence, where the lat- ter took the entrance examinations for Brown University. Willard_Stearns is a_student at Mt Hermon, Northfield, Mass. Mrs, G. H. Wyman left Thursday morning for Watertown, Conn., to visit her daughter, Mrs. Willis Home and. Mrs. Gus Clausson tertaining Mrs. Clausson's sister and children from South Manchester. being urged that many v send efhibits to the Ma held at resour people’s club } Mrs . g F. D. Brow Boston today (Saturd attend in Shoulder Where Are Your to over one ti printed t pear Wwith letters Jennings' bird dog. Nick, | Wednesday was drowned and Spot, an informal canine steam road roiler onstruction worl nt got un. carnival was | ‘s bulldog, Tk on v, in som wont 1onga t0o. Mr. Rojesk! for Wiih the show at New London an to pay a week's board Defore the s péople would let him g Orville LaFlamme is to conduct cours? this | Pust, American | an ente ment | fall and winter, they hope to add funds to their tre ury and furnish the b : ment also. This cannot be aone witk teered to cover the streets tickets. Pachaug will be taken by Miss Susie Morgan; Glasgo, Mrs. L Pe_ chie; Voluntown, X Ola Tanner; Sylvandale, Mrs. John Godek: the oute lying distric Miss Mabel McBroome. In Jewett C J the raiiroad Mrs. E. H. Soule street, | Sehool street and Fa ng court, Rosina Allyn, East Main strest to Textile mill, Rose stree 3 North Main | street through ole, Ella Oakes WOMEN WHO | Read Mrs. Corley’s Letter and Benefit by Her Experience Edm: S. C.—*I was run down with n::vd&nmm and female trouble end suffered ev- not abletodo any | work and tried a | lot of medicines fibut got no relief. | 1 saw your medi- | bottles of Lydia | E. Pinkham’s - poun: could see it was helping me. I am keeping house now and am able to do all of my work. I c&nnot say enough for your medici de. It k&u done mgr: for me than any doctor. Youmay prinf this letter if you wish.”’—ELIZABETH . CORLEY, care of A. P. Corley, Edmund, S. C. Ability to stand the strain of work is the privilege of the strong and | healthy, butdhoc‘l'(\om heaflsm e‘for the weak and sickly womenst i With thelr daily rounds of housenold duties, with backaches, headaches, nervousness and almost every move- | ment brings a new pain. will | not the mass of letters from women | all over this country, which we have convince such women been publishing, that Lydia E. Pinhkam's Vegetable Compound will help them just as | mfi?.. it did Mrs. Corley? | was | I New Life for Sick Man [Eatonie Works Magic] “‘1 have taken only two boxes of Eatonic and fe¢l like a new man. It has done me more good than any- thing else,” writbs O. O. Frappir Eatonie is the modern remedy for acid stomach, bloating, food repeat- ing and indigestion. It quickly takes up and carries out the -&my and gas and enables the stomach to digest the food naturally. That means not * only relief from pain and discomfort but you get the full strength from the food you eat. Big box omly costs a trifle with yonr droeeist’s pusrantee. LEE & 0OSGOOD ailroad avenue, Mathewson street ex S upper Aspinook atreet and street, Jennle Blake and McDermott. Watertown, 5. M. Norwich Johns Thursday. fa end with reiatives he z the two large s landale farm. Mr. Youn, ng from twelve to fifteen Lou Por vis w. nson and, wers e ves here. PLAINFIELD th rela Joh 8 p.m Thurs, evening to o ad 1. Tues,, Wed. Caviar and Cholera in Astrakhan. “Sugestive of luxury and wealt because of its importance as a sl 3 ing point for caviar and because it has given its name to the fine ‘fur’ whic s made from the s new-born Persian now faces des lamb, Astrakha; the mouth of the Volga.” A bulletin from the Washington, D. C., headquarters of the National Geo- graphic Society “Although it is ‘more than shelving bottom which makas hallow, Astrakkan is regarded b {many the main Caspian port and act- ally has put one rival for that honor, the oil city of Baku. “It is at Astrakhan that the traveller| from Russia first feels that he is in From Kazan south, | here have been Tatar hamals leading | the comfortable passenger boats which ; long since made the monotonous Vol { But in Astrak- ian the number of Persians, Tatars, Armenians and Kalmucks that i meets gives a distinctly Oriental and the Near East. ga a pleasure route. Asiatic touch to the Russian city. “The burning of Astrakhan, if rience. city have beep raged. Originaily, Wfiy Do You: Coddle Corns? Simple Touch Csn End Them and at Once & corn and it? W R y treat crude and uncertain? Yo\:"dm‘u‘nh- ; Liquid of Plaster ' Blue-jay ‘stops pain~-ends corns a Bauer & Black product Gladwin visited and George of stlage corn averag- feet § T. Barry has epened a law office ¢ in the Lawton Inn Annex. Office hours and in of unborn or uction by fire because nothing, less than fire seems to pro- | mise relief from a cholera epidemic which is sweeping the alluvial plain at sixty | miles from the deep waters of the Caspian, the Volga having built up a the northern portion of the Caspian very | one kes place, will not be a new ex-| Time and again the city es which correspond to the present 1t SHhsclobnibe) emsommmmee most modern automdbile plant in the world, this car. designed especially for the production of Studebaker manufactures in this plant its own drop forgings; its own castings, stamp- ings, motors, axels, transmissions; its own steering gears, springs, bodies, tops and other vital parts. the home of Mr. and M f Chatfeld K | 131 Main Street miles on tires. JEWETT CITY {Brown avenue and adjacent strects, kit e S anna Des Jardines; Tracy avenus Royal \'\'-H'“ lias return Al i Ashland street, to Bridge, Mabel i Pari Hill, High and Wilson, Mre. : e - Prentice Chmse; Mathewson street 3 n =d. Conn., summer at Wheat LIGHT-SIX TOURING CAR SPECIAL-SIX 2-PASS. ROADSTER. Rogers, Miss Vio- SPECIAL-SIX TOURING CAR .... Conn.. tpent Sunday SPECIAL-SIX 4-PASS. ROADSTER brother, Loren W. BIG-8IX TOURING CAR ..... ceenen omber of Newport | Under these favorable manufac'turing con- LIGHT-SIX NOW $1150 - Why Studebaker can sell the LIGHT-SIX at the new low price The LIGHT-SIX is built complete in the ditions and because of its enormous produc- tion and standardized methods of manufac- ture, Studebaker is able to make important savings—these savings are reflected in the price of the car to you. The LIGHT-SIX is a real step forward in automobile engineering. No other light, six-cylinder automobile yet produced has a motor so free from, vibration, nor so flexible and powerful. What you should know about the LIGHT-SIX POWER—40 /H. P. in a detachable-head motor of great flexibility, remarkably free from vibration, and with the ! exclusive Studebaker inclined valve feature, ECONOMY—I8 to 22 miles to the gallon—12,000 ta 18,000 BALANCE—You could cut the LIGHT-SIX in two garts or four parts and find that each section would weigh the same. Such pgrfect balance means steady roade holding—there is no side sway or creeping. COMFORT—Equal distribution of weight means easy riding and easy handling. The touch of one hand om {10 steering wheel is sufficient to keep it on the read, 321 MAIN NEW PRICES OF STUDEBAKER CARS f. 0. b. Factories, effective September Sth, 1921 COUPES AND SEDANS 1 TOURING CARS AND ROADSTERS LIGHT-8IX 3-PASS. ROADSTER . $112 1150 1585 LIGHT-$IX 2-PASS. COUPE-ROADSTER. LIGHT-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN SPECIAL-SIX 4-PASS. COUPE BPECIAL-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN B3iG-8IX 4-PASS. COUPE BIG-81X 7-PASS. SEDAN ... ALL STUDEBAKER CARS ARE EQUIRPED WETH COR{ TIRER THIS IS A STUDEBAKER YEAR was & prominent Ta capital, al- though the ancient site is seven farther up the river than the presen sprawling city. This city was destroy ed by Timur, the lame Tata: chiet. partially destroyed by fires and ages of cholera have been felt and again, the epidemic in 1830 Wip- ing out thousands of its people.. In the spring of 1918 a large portioa of the city was_ again burned in fighting between the Bolsheviks, who held the city, and their enemies, who advanced over the flat alluvial plains fthat are threaded by the various mouths of the Volga. “A white walled Kremlin, dominated by a bell tower which the Bolsheviks used as an observation point and a viper nest for snipers, occupies the center of the city and outside the principal gate there was held one of the picturesque ‘thieves markets' for which Russia is famous. Only a junk dealer could enthuse over such a col- lection of odds and ends, to which only those in a dire state of poverfy. cowid ascribe a value. “More interesting than thi of cast off goods or of the ri h h n 7 market h shops | New Lord Chief Justice Of Ireland it yomvict. wew. Mr. Danis Henry, K. C., M. Pu for South Londonderry, Ireland, ‘who has been appointed Lord Chief Justice of Ireland. He has been Attorney Gemeral for Ireland since 1919, | of the real bazzar, where many an Austrian war prisoner captured the simple hearts of the Russian girls with uniforms which were frequently exchanged for new ones from Vienna, is the river front where the fishing boats line up after the day’'s catch. Many of these contained deep tanks and the custom was for purchasers to pick out their fish according to their agility and color. There was also a large tank in which live sturgeon swam around as peacefully as ‘he strutting globber on the eve of Thanks- giving. “Some of the fish secured are huge specimens several hundred pounds in weight but the main profits were from the roe or caviar from the sturgeon. That of Astrakhan was usually of the coarse red varlety although there was enough of tae delicate black kind to spice the makushka which formed the preface to the hugé volume of Russian eating from Kief to Kiakhta. But in general only a small portion of the world’s caviar and almost none of the astrakhan fur’ actually come from Astrakhan, -To the traveller who lands in the lower Volga city in autumn the charm of hors d'ocuvres and Persian lamb is likely to be subordinated to the delight that one experiences from sampling the delicious grapes from which Astrakhan and its neighbor port Petrovsk are famed. “During the war the market in Cav- iar declined sharply since the Fair at Nijni Novgorod, nearly fifteen hundred miles up the Volga, where most of the cavia was sold, rapidly declined with the breakdown of transportation which preceded by many months the triumph | of the Bolsheviks. Although Astrek- han is a center for much crude cattle raising by exotic Kalmuek and Kirg- hiz breeders, it has had to depend for much of its grain upon the North Caucasus or the black earth delt high- er'up the Volga. Astrakhan is one of those cities whose approximate loca- tions are determined by geographical forces and if the city which is now endangered by famine and cholera Is destroyed by fire, there is every rea- son to feel that another nondescript, polyglot river city with its packing houses and cold storage plants and fishing fleets will rise above the low lying flats upon which the present city stands.” BEES TRAVEL BY MOTORCAR That bees like to travel over the country in a motorcar, gathering hon- ey in different localities from day to day, is indicated by the fact that a colony of the busy Insects. recentiy took up their home in the gear box of a motorcar beionging to B. M. Hat- field, an oil operator who is inves. gating_the jetroleum possibilities ot West Texas. For ine first day or twu the bees were slow insreturning io their improvized hive and a few of them may have been left behind when Hatfield started vut on his tripe. He says, however, that it did not take the bees long to learn the sound of the horn, and whanaver he toots it they come hurrying in from the flow- ers and sweet-scented desert shrubs and crawl into the gear box. They are quiet as ong as the car is moy- ing, but the moment it stopz they hus- tle out and hegin gathering Leucy. Hatfield contzmpiates Lixing up sev- eral hives in the baca part uf the car for the accomodation uf other colonies. | Gura. As law and order come into the wild and unsettled mouatains of Mesopo- tamia, especially when new roads and the eventual railway connect the northern Kurdish country around Mo- sul with the rest of the world, many % now useless tree and shrub will doubtless be put to service as a con tributor of gum. The gums of Meso- potamia have many commercial uses, and the unsystematic tapping and trading that now brings the product no pack animals to Suleimanaya, where merchants buy it from the Kurds and sell It again to other mer- chants in Bagdad, is a mere sugges- tion of the industry that may be de- veloped by enterprising promotors who may have observed the extent of this natural resource in Mesopotamia and looked further afield than Aleppo and Bagdad for markets. Now that<Brit- ish occupation has opened the land to western ideas, it would not be sur- prising if the sum industry grow to be a source of considerable national Its Sale is Phenomenal s Its Quality is Irreproachable SALADK TEA Is the Purest and Most Cleanly ia the World Prepared Tea See this car—drive it—test it. You will be won by it. You will understand why it is the Studebaker ideal of what a light, six-cylinder car should be. Norwich Motor Car Co. Phone 1298 STREET wealth, and an importaint facter is creating a new Mesopotamia. — IBx- change. New Battle of Brandywine Another fiying squadron of “dry” ag- ents iz sald to be taking the fleld under the Volsteadian banner. As they are moving on Philadelphia, they may be expected to stage another Battie of the Brandywine—New Orleans Times Picayune. Ol D SEEVED EVERY SUNDAY At Ome 0°Clock, Standard Tham WINDHAM INN Tel. 35-4, Willimantle 4 Nickel Plating UNITED METALS MFG. COMPANY, Inc. Norwich, . .« . . Cons To New York NEW LONDON LINE Steamer Lvs. New London 11 p. m. daily except Sune day. Daylight Saving Time. “You Can Da No Better Than Buy Our Wurst.” No Salad Complete Withowt Thumm’s Home-Made Mayonnaise THUMM'S DELICATESSEN STORE 40 Franklin Street Shea’s News Burean MAGAZINE SPECIALIST’ BRSNS ST