Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 13, 1922, Page 4

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y ne evening s company was the | that the spire recelyéd its first coat in-the B Das ro of paint ‘and that the job was turned off L .;?‘Qlil aifti= the total {ndebtedness of o R S s amounting to 2,200,000, | ponout On Aug. 1, 1922 when ft is hoped that | drop out unless the fans atténd A the remaining indebtedness will have Nlfim :mma(“nma br\,l:ft v;l::“ w:' been creditors committee | W) ons Jeonh, Tha Beien ~ season. The J‘ow:u cmm‘“:a king capital | here and all the fans who Wi o < Rglhgrdta, couraso the local piaers wil be on hén ! » ; na o s : On this date and until a permanent | to see what promises to a 8 wire ary, former residents tnam. - r. 0 3 % fi18 management can be obtained and a satis- j contest. ‘Broadhurst has A whn.n ‘f;eueong:u < ’ - 1t you will eut out this. advertisement next { for 22 years ‘mont r. Beau- . /the affairs of the company | and mail it to The Plaut-Cadden Com- | Winter's supply of coal, though some Ba¥8 | dry for 14 yearsand 9 months. Mention N will be dirscted by an executive commit- | pany, Norwich, Conn., together with your | done s6 and are not Wortying about is made in- the \magazine that the first present mo h M} tes consjsting of Charles Walcott, treas- | address, you will receive a Book of Old cold days that are to come. shipment ever out by the machine | Margaret TTOWS M.u % urer Newmarket Manufacturing Co., Dan- | Fashioned Songs, free.—adv. Dll‘:tl mmnmb ”T;sm :‘(& works, in 1863, went to Masonville, now [, & SOHCE 2 Wednes 1ee> Tavis Muiats, oxbang 8 Davia of Leons Chass, Mrs. Sarah Birch | s the court at Charles S, Hyde's plses. | OF 0T enordale; Conn. day morning to dlspose of som g juventie Blaks Bros & Co. and 3. Preston Rice, o | 2nd Mrs. Belle Keach have been named | nsusthe retst mw .7 _ In recognition of the increased Gmount | matters that have been awaiting atten- White, Weid & Co. 5 as a committee to arrange for the an-| 1 of business being done there, the post- | tion. . The publieation printing the forago- | DUsl plonie of McGreggor W R G at PUTNAM offics at Mechanicsville has been advanced | Aug. 23 set as the date for the Ing 1 recognized as one of the fnancmi | Wiawood park on July 10. As has been e from focrth to third class rating. Post-|fleld day of the Windham County Farm. authorities of New England. The in-|the Tule for years the members of the| yn, frst big aunual fafr of Putnam|master M. K. Kinney, who s the efficlent | ers” association. < formation in thé afticle will be partic- | 0rand Army and of the Sous of Veterdns official in is being congratulated. | ~Chief Special Deputy Howard A. Ellfott T raring b Dantslsns bespie, | and thelr families. will e included in the|lod8e of Eiks is now & matter of history. | 55 5 third class offics, Mechanicsville oW | of the bureau on domestic animals was in especial oper: It closed Wednésday evening after having | will be authorized to transact an interna- | this city on a business trip Wednesda; 1 This 1 . TODA{ 1 ¢ | party. v author! X Y o ip Y- at the bls"’vll:ntm:na t:m’me: ;‘::kg::a;., Persons loltering sbout the center of | scored a success outreaching even the|tiomal money order business. This hasl| .. - .., o'W Dm'. * /AT 2:30—7:00 AND 8:45 P, M. who, only a few weeks since, were very |the business section Tuesday evening | most enthusiastic forecasts of its biggest | 10t been possible heretofore, though there APSRL ‘oodstock ],.M Rm Thll have a meeting scheduled to be held next - tertained with a radio concert, has been a steady line of applicants for > » ?:::ml M TN G e P m“m’; hat some ‘of them had heard, | boosters. It drew thousands. of DeORlE | ine service, especiaily from people anxious gfiz?d‘;h:‘:f‘;z;‘:’:!:m ‘o’:“":.h that : Evemng. The fact that the company has arrived | Music was being picked out of the air by | night after night and reached the peak of | to send funds to their relatives in various | { & 1 gt $h Sl mmm.; MUSIC BY H &t 2 position of sufficient financial sta-|a radio set installed - in a drug stors | attendance Tuesday evening, when 5,700 foreign countries. Incidentally, the higher X e to representation on the state ecentral ison’ Sald admissions mers secorded Tn aadi. | FAting of the office will bring an increas | 10 Xeprese Ellison’s Harmony Boys ; in compensation for Postmaster Kinney, |“Ogmittee: = R August may mean that the company will | Notwithstanding the activitles of the | o f1SFe wefe seversl hundeed fres slali for abretsetive S o0 TENO- |15 tha AnnOIAENE TRRE. Mise. Macion §o forward to mew successes tplnromhh;‘l state police for weeks past in raiding|p,ngreds who were about the grounds, | grt»h needles has been presented to the | Ross, daughter of Charles Ross and the remarkable record made prior to the for stills and illicit liqours in this terri- brought the total who saw the fireworks | proper officiais at Washington by John M. | granddaughtér of Mr. and Mrs. Lowell g g g :{“m"’“‘fn‘{n‘f,‘.ml'; tory complaints continue to come in of | yp'1g approximately 7,000, Without a|Dean, representing the John M. Dean Ross, is to be married this week to l:" pole &e i others who are taking a chance that the | qount ong of the largest crowds evér as-|corporation of this city. Mr. Dean has Charles McClellan at her home in St. : ’ A a , al ces e the old- v 5 nd on ‘ednesda; ad another | in ompson. necticut Mills company| 18 of tremendous | ting booss’ Aghters seem Dikers &b o gl T B B, o S G e e ] A”"Z’;‘w PR L impvru;n.;i to D-.‘r:h:!lm& :}v‘mch. nv"fl“c_ expenditures. It appears that nsz brought another big crowd to the grounds, | Congressman Richard P. Freem;n at New | pariced on the grounds and along” the TONIGHT Mmueh. u.nnd lt;’:rmmm‘mu;‘ r‘t “etg‘ i ut onlehml: of mo;nlhlnen hl An‘n winding the fair up with no falling off in London. It appears that bl ;nlograph streets in the vicinity of Tatem field |~ ey 151 BtVALIAS 5 P out of business another comes along t0 | intarest in the greatest venture in which | needles now-rate in tariff schedules un-|Tyesday evening, which was Weébster A AT ot 68 Ahe Rakiagtio: Miliy L0 the YIRS plhades . Putnam lodge 8f Eiks has engaged. der the general head of musicl instru- | nigne at the Eiks' fair. Atter the fre.| Hill Top Casino Orchestra from a tiny industry into one employ-| Todsy (Thursday) brings the second | Thousands of dollars will be added to|ments and are not specifically protectéd. works every main artery of travel lead- S fne ‘several hundred hands with & pay- | half-holiday for the store forces in | the funds of the lodge through the falr, |Sharp competition from German mami | ing out of the city was fajrly-Shoked with Dancing from 8 to 12 MOVIE CHATS 7oll, during the peak of business, approx- | Danlelson. The majority of the stores | Which has drawn-attendancs from every | facturers 1g being experienced wWith the | automobile traffio, but it all moved with- 7 imating & milisn dollars & year. will close at noon for the day. In a num. | Nook and corner of Windham county and | revival of ‘“""“3'1"“‘1}. rade wé 2% out an accident. [The police department ADMISSION : "At present the outlook is for continued | ber of cases outings have been planned, from Massachusetts towns and across the | country, and the situation t" made DA€ | syrnished efficient’traffic officers at con- - progress by the company. Any concern |While others will indulge in baseball | border in Rhode Island. tieularly bad on account of the tremen- |gested places and and they did their work . Thas can sarn $8,000,000 in a little |and still other plan trips to nearby Suth-| Many of the Elks who took very active | d0us depreciation of the German mark. | well. One string of well over 100 cai Ladies 35¢—Gents 55c¢ more than a yéar was not regarded a8 |ing beaches. parts in putting the fair over are prac-|Mr. Dean, co-cperating "h"‘ other AT{“‘ headed southward over Killingly avenue = particularly favorable one for business| The next session of the state legjsls- MOy Shgieh: AL LN eT0eth Boibs e manu!actumr:;s e mer flm' and'not over aear length apart Just be- e may be depended upon to go forward to | ture will be asked to approve an amend. | Of them have worked until 3.30 a. m.|Nopes to get sufficient protection to offet | fore midnignt. this class will turn up. This is because even great things, once It is relleved of|ment to the chatter of the borough of |CHe¢KIng up secounts and attending to|mMuch of the competition that is unfalr| —rhe température ran up to nearly 90 | of the new 1921 federal law covering reg. | March 25 last and the Woods girl win the restrictions unde rwhich it has beer | Denielson so that the borough may take thé clerical and finaficial énd of the en- " < % degrees in this oity early Wednesday atf- | IStrations by syrup mixers. The law | bé 14 next September 8. Both the girls wperating. Jurisdiction over the sidewalks, instead | crPrise. Ballyhoo mén who had charge| New York papers 6f Wednesday con-|ternoon. went into effect January 1 and the syrup | make their home with Mrs. Margaret of leaving this in the hands of the of the booths welaome the reéspite that|tained references to a recent communi-| Good progress is being made this week | Men had until April 1 to register. Those | 1#¢, their grandmother, 18 Shapley iqaving this In the hands of the L0WN: | nas come to them with the end of the | cation of Hamilton Holt to Secretary of [on state highway building dperations that | Who did so before that time believed they | Street, the whereabouts of thelr mothers Tosidenta Tor robaldae Tt s &R | falr. An éxperlenced carnival man who | State Charles E. Hughes, insisting upon a | are under way at Mechanicsville and far- | N¢¢d bother no more untll next year. | being uBkBOWN 80 far as can be learn- g : 16 Trobabehle that the immam;:‘wi‘l"- be | 82w the fair said the Elks were to be | statemert regarding the League of Na- | ther north taward Grosvenordale, This impression is a mistake the ofticals | ¢d. Ak F ‘ put through without much 6ppasitio ; congratulated on their splendid achieve- | tions. Mr. Holt is making a persistent| Today (Thursday) brings another week- | eXplain. because with the end of the fis-| Thers I8 mo age limit for the marriage ‘Horlick Phat several miles of Sidéwats. will g | ment in carrying through such & large af- | campaign to obtain such a statément and |y half holiday. Business wiil be gener. | 21 yéar, June 30, they are requred to |.of either male or female in Connecticut R bullt here during 1923 fair practically without outside aseist- | points out in his-communieation that the |ally susmended in this city after the noon | TégiSter again for) the new year. The | Provided certain requirements are met. ‘ ¥ & 2 anee. \ conference on the limitatioh of armaments | hour. penalty for failure to do so dis $1,000.| In the case of a female between the age - ilted Milk s‘f Danlelson’s wets are again g 8| The booths ‘and other equipment ac-|was the work of the league and cguid A s e L Ry In kases where' no registrations were|of 16 and 21, the written consent of , ® |liitle vent for the rellst of their feelings | quired new this year are to be taken down | have been accomplished long 220, he| prve FoR APPLICATIONS made either befors the first of this | the parents, or legal guardian is neces- Mil about national prohibition. A New York | and stored for use in future years. Thé|holds, had thé United States been a . month or prior to April 1, the delin- | 8ary. In case the parents are déad and / ’ == ; e publication with a nation-wide circulation | expenses of staging the fair were very | member of the league. There seems to FOR THE: SPECIAL TAXES | quénts are subject to double penalty | there is no legal guardian, the writ- ‘~ ~ For Infants has sent out cards on whiél a request is e 4 3 ‘o penalty gal gua ™! v 1 bility to allow of the discharge of the | transmitted to the public through an t‘m- creditors’ committes with the coming of | plifying device. IN THE SPARKLING COMEDY MR. BARNES OF NEW YORK The Leather Pushers ROUND FIVE CHILDREN AT MATINEES 13" EVENINGS 15¢c, EXCEPT SUN- DAYS Y e ] INAL heavy this year, because so much equip- | be widespread intérest in awaiting the| Internal revenue department offices on | When the deputiés begin to check up. ten consént of the first selectman of the made for an expression of opinion as to|ment had to be purchased. but with all | secrétary’s reply to the questions Mr. Holt | Tuesday issued a reminder that. this tokn in which they reside is necessary. & lavalids | whether the national prohibition_amerd- | bills paid the Biks will be big Winners as | has propounded. Mr. Holt, -one of the| month is the only one left in which 1t under 16 years of age the written con- ment should be repealed and as to whath- NO a lodge, and this was the wish of the |country’s best known publicists, has a to file applications for the special faxes | T BICEN YEAR OLD GIRLS sént of the parents and the sélectman ¢ »a "Food - Drink® for All er one would be satisfied merely with the | public hére and hereabouts. summer place in Woodstock and spends | So-called, for the fiscal year ending on MARRIED IN NEW LONDON | is nécessary, unless the parents are dead, . o Ages | modification of the Volstead act. The| It you will cut out this advertistment | much of his time thers each year. June 30. 1922. This classification in-| Marriages of two girla of unusually | in Which case the consent of the se- Lunch at Home. Office, and | wets are voting—along with the drys, | and mail it to The Plaut-Cadden Com-| A strange injury is that sustained by | cludes stockbrokers and other sorts of | tender'age came to light in New Lon. | lectman only is required. ek for HORLICK'S :eho have nothing to lose; and seem to be | pany, Norwich, Conn., together with your | Beroni Morse, the youngest son of Mr. | brokers, including the pawn variety; | don Wednesday. The girls are Ocey Bo- In case of both the marriages, con- tting a modicum of satlsfaction out of | adqress, you will receive a Book of Old | and Mrs. George Morse of East Thomp- | OWlers of poolrooms, bowling alleys | Toland and Qlivia Woods, both negress- joned Songs, free.—adv. o | son. Seven stitches had to be taken in and theatres, cigar factories, storés es and each’13 years of age, although The body of Willlam ©. Taylor, for| The working érew of the New Haven | the boy's tongue to close lacerations made | the like. The time limit' for physiclans, | they both gave their ages as 16, in the sent was given by the selectman to issue the licénes which werg issued by Town Clery Henry L. Bailey of Groton. In so-Avoid Iniitations & Substitater |- many years a resident of the West Side, | road operating out of this city is going|by his teeth, druggists and others in which to register | marriage licenses. the case of the Boroland girl, however, DANTBESON- OASING, will be brought here today (Thursday) |out daily with a full complement of men.| Wiltred Ducette, graduate of Tourtel-| for sale of narcotics ended July 1 and| The Boroland girl married Newton | LNTOUSh an error, the consent was giv- STARKWERATHER BLOG. for burlal. Mr. Taylor was a resident)Some dissatisfaction that existed a few lofte Memorial High school at North | theére are some delinquents who will be | Speedwell of 132 Main street, and the | 0 DY Clark B. Whaley, first selectman of Brooklyn, West Side, for 60 years and | days ago over the wage scale has bien | Grosvenordale, where he is a resident, is | Subjéct to a penalty. Woods girl married Antone Andrews,|Of the town of Groton, although the BOWLING AND FOCKET BILLIARDS|was very well known here. adjusted. It was stated Wednesday that |to enter Boston university this fall to| The time of registering for syrup man- | also of New TLondon. Speedwell {g| £I7] 1ivés In New London. In the case FOUR ALLEYS THREE TABLES Many Danielson people were at Putnim | the men are now working a 10-hour shift | pursue a course of law studiés. He is a | ufacturers, that is owners of soda foun- | about 25 vears old and Andrews is sajd | Of the Wools girl, the consent was sign- WEDNESDAYS LADIES' DAY. Wednesday- evening for the closing ses-|and that upon this basis the scale of | graduate of the class of 1922. taing or establishments where$yrups are | to be 21. ed by First Selectman Lawrence Cook of Bowling is the sport for all Prizes | sion of the Elks’ fair. wages now in effect allows them to earn ‘William §. Johnson, who recently re-| mixed, also expired July 1, and reévenue The Boroland-Speedwell marriage took New London.’ given away every Saturdsy. Howard Starkweather is here from |about the same as they were getting un- | turned here after spending the wintér in | officials say quite a few delinquents in | Place June 27 end the Woods-Andrews % marriage took place on July 8. The cer- enmmfl;‘a in both cases were performed by Bm STATE NEWS ev. F. W. Haist, pastor of the Sea-| pgariford—The Butchers' ce and Sup- THE bury Memorial Episcopal church of Gro- | 51y company of this city has incorporated. The authorized capital stock is $50,000. PEOPLE’S STORE Berlin—Judge George G. Griswold fin- PUTNAM; CONN. THE monessioe | THE BYRNE COMPANY, Inc. ton. Both the girls-were pupils-in the fifth grade at the Bartlett school last year. The Boroland girl was 13 years-old on | ishes 11 years of service as judge of the Berlin town court this month. Ansonls.—Mrs. Anne M. Cameron of Boston announces the engagement of her daughter Evelyn to Dr. Conrad Frederick - ‘ ’ ’ Reiman of Ansonia. ) \ g Ivoryton.—ThHe Comstock. Cheney & ] > company factories have resumed opera- tions after a 10 days’ vacation for inven- \ WATER DAMAGED GOODS |==.4 Madison.—A nine-hole women's kick- ers’ handicap began Saturday at Madison at the Country club with over 40_‘en:r!es. New Haven—Mr. and Mrs. Frederick We are offering for sale our entire Reserved Stock of Underwear, Yarns, Corsets, Hosiery and : Toilet Goods, which were damaged by water, due to defective pipe which burst early Satur- : p T eré ll P e S S B day morning. Some of these gpods are badly damaged, others are just slightly damaged be- : Gixlmcrltzr Ale RoraRdams i reurine o b fome cause of the extreme dampness engendered by the flooding of the basement. This is an un- oed Fd melloved JR R usual opportunity to purchase first class goods at less than half price. v ; Underwear | HOSIERY LAST WEEK the prominent Connecticut people spend- - OF OUR Ladies’ Union Suits, $1.50 They are at their summer home at Dub- X% / lin, N. H. e grats; Bl o s, i 1 lot Union Suits . . 3 *MANY MORE BARGAINS One Rack of Odds and Ends .............. $5.00 Woulds't taste a quality ginger ale? Try Pepperell— High school. were shocked Sunday when Toilet Goods 1 lat Toilet. Goods Half Price , 1 lot Knit Pants, 75¢ quality. 25¢ ‘ YARNS Pants, each ........... 18 \ i CORSETS Al Hanks Yarns, in the high 1 lot Girls' Union Suits, loose "1 lot of Children’s Hi Mot b Comin (Omhnkineqpnltn4ball;5* SrYImES. . Tub Hats | 1 1ot American Lady Corsets - : Suits, athletic cut, now.... 78c || AL~ | 1Iot American Lady Corsets 1 lot Shetland Floss, bail. ... 10c g $2.00 and- 1 lot Shetland Floss and Ger- 1 lot Ladies’ Bloomers, Car- ' ’ “‘:;?:“ndc m, gt mantown, ball .......... 15c [| ters, $1.50 quality....... 69 1'3 Off - _ ~ JUST HALF PRICE i | J BAGS 1 lot Student’s Bags i 1 lot Ladies’ H&iery. eiese 19 1 lot Children’s Hosiery. .. 12V4c 140 MAIN STREET Expert Corset Fitter at Our Store All Next Week

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