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“Why In my t be 30!.: clergym. e it I used to sit, who is now minis- | are about as many d % to a parish In central New |tions why farmers don't go ta church | yoke at the Wayd farm, Tolland side. | o the . i i have secured their en- y 1 . " ! s having dined at a cost of penny, which this year.is an on_Col T o Wit and - children of Néw e Ve ik 1o e him: dupsients. Chat v En ared th n are visiting Mrs. Swift's sis- . Margaret. Tyler of | fi in Eul country now.-—gwlell vidifime; o ihe T b tbe NAEL| Copr” “leg below_ ¢ a5 avis has purchased an | here. - a ten days’ visit ut 3 5 4 3 , SeEL : : ndence day celobratl sections Tgria by : S end Mra. Vialter Plolonts e (b Rhythmic Appeal to Bailey. lly for The Bulletin.) | While the other may find it efséwhere. e Gown were Foprove od Goraner m. o1 last | ond Mrs, Williams were at A.|tle son of Arkwight, wero @Uests Of| o sanate fathers, wise and gray, "t tarmbrs go'to church? |1 susgest ‘:‘: - one. possibility| Hall, and. guest and Col. : ‘oaper h:n‘{:}ovcd his family 7 prartind Sl s 0 R0 i et o s n ‘they don't come and |10 be considersd | Ao e ownéd by I C. Nichol- ESCOHEAG. | Piese Jabs trom Balley's hasty nand? made to. Take it up In g = : I 2 rite id [ Now come down to a few lesser 4 3 —Cleveland Plain Dealer, hlll.n ago; w;.q:enpgl' matters. I shrewdly suspect that there im asked nhim. i making UNION George A. Smith has gone to the . a&em explana- | Bu 3 - & . 2 Ocean Sl:rny ‘hou‘se, Bloek Island. i An Item Overlooked. Saly g remii SyeTane n * Prosperity forecasters have not yes ) 5 Y And he adds, later in his let- | as there are farmers who 't. Some | Miss Alice ng s on a visit to Hol- t - and family are at their | John R. Barber's house. tpken painy to figure on how Mr. “Don't fail to take this up.” few don't believe in the chu Well, | yoke and N on. ‘but summer hom, Mrs, Horace Turner for the first t estvil's vetura fronr. Afride willets ol n gl that surely 4sn’t the churches' fault. Mrs. Ralph Church, “who has been Mrs. Hattie Pmmp't of Southbridge | in years rode to Voluntown this wi When | read that, | shivered. It |1 may not. elieve in Gutchegan rock. | for a few weeks with her mother, Mrs: | ou is spending a few days at the Marcy | Everybody haying, and help scarce! gfl - lion skin market.—Washing- there are any two things which the | That isn’t the fault of the rock. Nor|Gibert Ide and daughter, Miss Jennie Dei“ . return hn?le Nlor; ‘homestead. : st B < 1k n Star. A average layman, talking or writing to | will it prevent my skinning my nose| Church, has returned toRockville, £t them, Bot logt a0 | iy ArNewell visited his grandmothef, | ~ john Maurice Sullivan, the actor en= 5 R & mixed audience of democrats, re-|if I attempt to walk wi 1 believe | Miss Daisie Buck is with relatives h% \;lt He _"I:Mm. Mrs. Carrie Clapp, in Hartford the | gaged for Farral Wand in Bugene W.| Chance for Peerless Leader. {-yue- and mugwumps—Congrega- | it isn’t but it really fs. Some don’t go|in West Stafford. a along ‘f:u erent h“h'l‘m- ‘m m’;: of the week. Presbrey’s new play, “The tof | ' Voliva, has been ousted from powes - tiomalists, Catholics, Methodists, Uni- | because they're too stingy to pay pew Miss Amy Moran, a_well known ed-| finally nd on the cco A rs. Luther Gardner fell and broke | Chance,” will study his part in Scot= | In Zion City, as was Dowie before him, “ versalists and agnostics, had better let | rent. Some don't, go because they [itor, Miss Madeline Benes and Miss | road in Lebanon, exhausted from his ‘?;:; l,::leiv :;;o injuring he¥ knee, one | jand Yard. —Milwaukee Sentinel. alon litics and relig- | don’'t like the choir, and some ‘because | Bmma Hughes of New York are at|long tramp. L “fon. e'»}:: ::to that Tr’wy are the two tshfl‘.d?’n’t like cggr atighn:l unmns. M’lrl;ll: Corl.e.l;;or ALl i d Tucker-Woodcock Marriage. — Ve ighest and most impertant top- [ Some don’t go ause minister e Jnd \ RaymosdiiD Fucker: ‘formerly. of 1::’0? iumln interest; for they are.|talks too long, and some because he | evening will be held at t:sa Co! l,‘ this My , now éngaged ok”m Y. M % A. WASMNfiToN WUNIY, K lo But because both words have come to | doesn’t preach “good, long, old-fash- fonal church, Rev. Austin Ga; +| Work i New ¥gre 'ana Miss Anna . have a popular significance quite dif- alact : c’ P joned” sermons. One doesn’t go be- | leader. The subject is “The ‘Woodcock of that’ city were married thel riginal and true | cause Mrs. Jones told her that she | Beautiful” and members are to brins" > \ ::;::ngm";vm: s “"olitics" 1t is | hears Aunt Sally Loomis say that she | their coples of ‘“Pilgrim's Proer;’ni:) "‘V‘”t".x.h{;‘*‘m"“_g:‘;‘f;:‘t’;‘efl_‘ Py ROCKVILLE. L 1 f “The sclence of government; that part | overheard Deacon ngle tell his wife | as there will be selections assign eymoon af the home of the groom's | Eastern Association to Be Invited to , + of ethics ulation and government of a nation | ing, not the hymn book, but a work on The dust by Rev. and Mrs. Darrow Colmiia Ceoate which has to do with the reg- | that he once found the parson read-| be read. mother, Mrs. Mary G Tucker, near Meet With Local Churche a4 GAS SUPPLIES state,” etc. Please note that word |botany, one Sunday afternoon. I don't|Sunday evening at the Endeavor mee! g o \ ; A :; 3 C&thics defined as "':‘he science of ;enl(liy pellevo“!dher;: Sl mnfihn{o l'r:a nfltn a?y“remndeg:; conference room e :-II l'mlcl:_‘to P..t'u L dem:}e‘?,';' ':{taflr;v;fi;.sm:l:’.urx; .;2 human duty.” But n one falks or [ be done . or s abou e “don't- . b ppears - like an attempt at | 4 o 3 X 3 writes of “politics” the average man | g0's. 2 A molo_was .sung by Mrs. Alice Van-| tricky legislation was unearthed at ; ?Eaf-emfifinfi?yx?"“v':’."v%'{.‘,‘dmgvsg‘ie ’Plpe, Fittings, Valves, Rubber Gaskets, Discs, Sheet understands him as*writing about that scramble spoils of office or for governmental | Our churches are almost invariahly accompanist. had been framed and worded as to vear. “graft” whigh is only a cancerous and | kept shut up six da of the week. disgustin, body of true politics. And what is re-| hour before service-time, they are gin- ligion? cepted a recognition of God as an object of | gard must be had to vaMous fears of derbilt Downs at the Baptist church| ths “capital -recently. It was a bill Sunday afternoon, with Mrs. Darrow,| regarding abandoned highways which m‘:‘c‘t’o “,’,,E‘fft‘"fl‘:;ffi";ffl"fifléfi’fi:} Packing, Piston Packing, Lubricators and Oilers, Whi tles, Pumps, Injectors, Separators, Tube Cleaners, Engi- neers’ Supplies of all kinds. Repairs and Specialties. for partisan success or for Here, however, is orie real. exactly cover.the ground of conten-|” Among the visitors at church were 0§ AL B o g excrescence on the real| Then, on a warm summer Sunda 3 tion . between the town of Columbia |y and Mrs. SOUTH WILLINGTON | e uhe Dixon who owan prop: | Miy,nnd Mrx. Thotias T Larkin of I quote again the same ac- |gerly opened, only a few windows be- | Kog of Beer Caused Trouble in Knight | érty.on the north shore of Columbia | Vajley and sister-in-law, Mrs. Ed- uthority in definition: “The | ing lowered or raised, because due re- . : .| 1ake, regarding a certain portion of 35> e, . Home—Son Fined for Abusing Par-| ;0 ngvny passing theough her :.l\:ghier, fiai:x::cgrr sifamrr:sarrffl{‘);m?" Pipe cutting to sketch with power. worship, love and obedience,” But |“drafts.” Thé congregation gathers to ents, ¢ premises. The bill had been favora- Mr. and Mrs, Dwight Merritt and when you talk or write about relig- | sit in semi-gloom, in an atmosphere g 3 hl{ reported by the committee to |grandchild E]l:;ube(: ?(en on"o( Ash- Mi 2 fon to the average man and woman |dead and stagnant from a week's im-| George Knight of this town wes &r-| whom it had been cefsrred, but its | away.were callers on Mrs. ). P. Greene ill Orders a specialty. they und ism or ecclesiasticism, two very dif- | to keep itself physical erstand by it denominational- 7 t, and t le valiantly | rested in Willimantic last - Tuesday| trye. inwardness was discovered i o ~ B 1o keep Itséif physiéally awake. Your |night by Constable Willism O. Eld- | time to have the bill recalled -and |apaas sferneey OVia Chester, Sat ferent things. average farmer is accustomed to days|Tedge on a complaint by Grand Juror| when the committee was informed in | Prof, Q. L. Burdick t Monds $ of vigerous activity, outdoors, in fuil|T. C. Denman and tried in tms’vl!hx; regard to the matter it was 1eported at Fiel, 2 Point. ey s noBEn' Bnown Es l A I E there are any things that | air, with the.winds blowing, and the | Wednesday by Justice . F. D34 ynfavorably and the bill was killed. Rev. B. Coon of Shiloh, N. J 3 y vindictively his party and his candjdate. And if | Jeaping in exuberant life around him.| The accused was represented by Law-| ;o pittie of this plac t re is age woman is “Sot” about it is her |in church? Or that he is so ashamed|Judge Robert Fisk of Stafford con-|iown on Tuesday. last, seeking infor- particula; farmer-man who has set to himself a | quent discomfort on account of it—|Was eclaimed to have consisted of| gatives supposed to be buried in Co- | Superintendent Greene Taking Vaca- simpler and, perhps, lower task—that | that he sometimes Comes to dread the | throwing 2 knife at Mra. Knight, strik- |} mpjs 3 of stimulating hl; his brother farmers | ordeal? ing Mr. lf“:(‘m; "‘;‘ “}:n;;;i:thghm: it Wbl N an interest in'the sclence of agricul- wronch, stri r. ; = T g X S Ture and higher ideals in the art of | Tai 2 : fists, and threatening both with a file. GILEAD. i St T B Ry farming—therefore he has thought it nig: ghother. guijgestion: The | e’ complafnants are the parents of - cu e pulpit at the Second Bap- - - \wise to avoid these two great prob- | bortoes ounday-g0-to-meetin' clothes” f 41e socused. Doge: Damage H. E. Buell's ‘Flock— | tio, curch ot Shansock Bundey e of . . lems, which are out of his limited | 145 become a slang expression in many | "y, oy ghown in the evidencé that a Party at Bungalow o I ey e Lt j f province, and before both of which the | Juarters. The farmer usually wears |, .. of peer was drank on the premises : R E A iy e . signboard of “Danger’ -is stuck up, | joe airioe (re tyeiniandsome cloth | during Sunday, the day of the troubled| Dogs entered a flock of sheep belong- | “afc- and airs’ Walter Re big and black. But this particular | «gress up” for l;"" Nrhel | oy ¢ put |, The court found accused guilty on|ing to H. E. Buell recently, Killing | providence were the gucsts ¢ ] friend is one of those rare examples | 0 5" ub for church. He must put|ine assault and breach of the peace|or wounding 33. Eeing and fumily Sinds Y -of chivalrie devotion to duty combined | 1y “toot and o' suit of conventional counts and imposed a 37 fine and 30| Miss Helen Hodgs is spending 8| Mr. and Mrs E. K. James and Mr. What It Does for Toothless People Yith a phenomenal capacity for tak- |plack which galls him at a dozen seams ing blam ders, and his plaint has moved me to, i An appeal was taken. Bonds of $150| Clarence Fogil has been entertaining 8 is, M v for once, a little Gash past that dan- | siao e up" with their Best iagpay | Were furnished by Wiliiam Bentley. Mr. Killum of St Louis, Mo, was ger-sign. 1 hope you'll /all under- | 3¢ simpl: g ford. Charles J. Gi . -intendent of . t n oth h h t d AW ‘- 4 ply wouldn't do for the Joneses * Charles J. Greene, superintendent the full set of teeth he or she start- may say. Aboye all, please accept the | p curried off, and the harness looked | No Quorim at School Meeting—Cat k. :;efi:‘ ‘o;:wa?eg;::?:::,elgg?:, ing Belfast, Castine and other points require is two or more teeth in each assurance, here and now, that in such | ouer to be sure it is bright and giit- a sacred his God and his own'soul, I assume no authority and attempt no guidance of | i sometimes turned into & period of -others. \ You see, in ::n o ar,_correspondent, I know him. He | menta) irritation and touchi: hich| A meeting of the board of education| Mrs. A, W, Ellis and children are isnM blaming the farmers who don't e oot aed at | g spending a few days with Mrs. Bllis | Rev. Mr. Palmer preached at the ;:on:; '°hh:' churrchh;ano l‘itme DIt Do is remembered with regret and antie- | was called for Tuesday .gvening, but g y! s, Bllis’ ev r. P! N the bottom of his self-depreciating | mine, who lived one summer in a|no business could be done. Mrs. ‘Quinn, §Mrs. Rogers and son ?:::Ld he;t- hllnflng‘_ himself because| house where father, mother and three| Mrs. Annie Braunfield and her son | Edison werefi ¥y oont come, (hinks that he has | children went four miles to church | Clarence of New York are guests of | comb last F failed in some particular, 18 lacking in | every Sunday, told me. v Mis f k v i 3 % , once, that she | C. Oehler and family. 5 ss p of Hartford has been | Providence. :;l:!h’:-!flectté n;:ld! he is rghcmnz brain | never saw them start off but all five| Mrs. Dan Frost and her little daugh. | Visiting hér sister, Mrs. J. L. Way. Mrs. Grace Kenyon has returned. ease. B tn Lo o hctm"t b at he Nas | were so snappish that she didn’t even |ter Eleanor-of Malden, Mass.; are the| Miss Helen Lord and her niece, Ma- | She has been spending several days|| THOMAS JEFFERSON KING, All of the teeth we supply are et ke ought 60t have done, | dare wave her hand at them as they | guésts of Mrs. Abbott Little. Ty, spent Sunday in Wallingford with | with her father in Vermont, D. D. S practical teeth; each set in its own or what he has left undone that he | grove dway. ~Cat Catches Snak Mrs. R. E. Buell, Isaac Prosser's family is here for the > socket following nature's plan. so ought tnhhave done. 'When a faithful b 8t atohes ! Miss Merva Day of Westchester is|summer. Originator of Dr. King’s Restor- that the strain is equally divided. ¢ servant holds that attitude about his Still aga If the farmer is up to C. H. Tate of the station grocery has| spending a few days with Miss Martha There was a meeting at the church ation Method for the natural One is able to bite on these teeth work and its outcome and about his | hig job and is worth his salt as a farm. | 2 Cat that appears to take special| Buej. Tuesday evening for the purpose of || restoration of teeth — originator and tse’ them®in exactly the same own relations with his fellow servants, | or 1o has done six day’s hard work | J€Ught in hunting snakes. One day| Mrs. Lewis of Willimantic is visit- | deciding about a pastor. It was de- || of the King Safe System of manner as he would his natural my heart boils over in a great ebulli- | 253 is tired. Sunday morni P last week it captured a four-foot water | ing Mrs. ‘Agnes Wood. cided not tofeall & pastor for the pres- || Painless Dentistry and Inventor teeth, They match nature’s teeth so tion of sympathy. Since getting his | hane he ought to rest on Satucday, se | Snake: Mrs. Charles Hanner of Wethersfield | ent. of the “Natural Gum" Set of | joeeiy as to deceive experts. They note I've been thinking a lot aboutlay to pe fresh on Sunday. Whethér he |, The drought is seriousty affecting |is chaperone for a party at Mr. Way's| All the farmers are haying here. || Teeth. Btc, Etc. All rights re- are beautiful to 100k at and a source the matter, and have been observing Ppeople within my own little bishopric. | the farmers wite 1x toce pecially. Some assert that the crop is g : ars the e A1 0 her job and Mr. and Mrs, Wychoff Wilson of |8, Lamond and Dr. Kenyon. wears them. ¢ TRt is worth her salt, she »df.,.“,, already reuined, while others are hope- | Hartford spent Sunday at W. S. Ellis.’ —————— In the first place, is it the fact that | days' hard work fnd is ired Sunday | f0l that rain, ifit comes soon, would [~ Mrs, Abble Buell is visiting her WEEKAPAUG A PAINLESS PROCESS farmers don't go to church? 'In my | morning. The demand of both for rest,| $ave it; ~ Meanwhile the weather 18| daughter, Mrs. O. E. Bailey, in’Buck- i dudbes fgy rural town there are five churches, a | the simple relaxation and inertia of | 19¢8! for haying and this is being | ingham, ™ : The hot dry weather of the past An impression has gone forth that there is some surgical operation ; been. bl fc esnnected with this method of resturing missing teeth. Some people Baptist, an Episcopalian, a Congrega- | the tired animal, is an insistent and | PUshed- tionalist, I find, by obseryation, that practically every Catholic farmer in the town | undesirable. Remember, please,” that Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pinney have re- i very " ®oes to his church regularly. The | thére’s a big difference between get- 3 gy turned from Washington, 1:)>. Cy a;d moks and ponds are drying up very Others have an idea we set the rew teeth into the sockets where the proportion who attend the Protestant | ting to church from the close-by par. | O"°ve Meeting of Mission Band—Per- | New York. - | "Dr. Bllen H. Gladwih 1s in Haritord || natural teeth wera originally. fthm,:gléstfl‘:c? ‘;l:;r.dige::l;(“e‘ni: 7 sk :n:d"fio;fifr?m}“"! \'tinaée Tes- sonal Items. e on professional business for a weex. It is quite natural that some unthinking people would ask such qites- C e fal b > o o - v " spirit between the two' great organ- | four, five miles back amone. the L | The Mission band met in a grove on - ~COVENTRY o 2mon the guests at Rocky Crest || tions, and in order that they may be fully answered we will state that {zations, the Catholic church and the | t Ar—— the premises of C. C. Davis Saturday G Cr f C. t 4 beth Taft and Eli o’"r ’Tafl and Geo. there is no boring, no cutting, no implantation about this method, noth- oF 108 Sfieraet it e 1y, these reasons which ||last. A basket lunch was much en- 8, st el IR. pber- | et of Hartford, Oliver Lee and Da- || ing about the work that is peinful while it is being done or aftenward. “practice ? e ggested why some farmers|Jove ies—Real e Sales. 4 I Voure v/ g lac t / Catholic chureh magnifies itself as a | don’t go to church, do not carry blame | Mrs.- Andrew Gurley of Willimantic gdBArgz:‘l;a:g f;; l\{fixw\rgfl( city end Patients leave the office with these teeth in place and at once begin / church and its priesthood as having| to the church, nor do they lay. it on | has been boarding at the Flaherty peculiar spiritual functions. It speaks | the shoulders of the ministers. They | house for a week. o Willimantic last week. fort they would enjoy if ev in their head had grown there. 4 . 5 o , 4 y would enjoy if every tooth in r hea ad g 4 i 3 iy er or even good re: . ompsonville hi school,’is home for e vis g the former’s brother, ‘ T i ¢ ’ hand, was originally and still is, in | dear hearts, vsr)q few of u."fl‘fiu B::i the summer. < Dr. Oshorne, in New York. M,Mn ;dr;& \ér:k H\'-vn hRBr;Zm;:);\" aorg storation Method would not be a succéss. It would be no better than § epirit, a “protest” ageinst this claim | from good reasont Miss Lottie MeNally of Ni -] Dr. Fred Johnson is sending off large | M58 el f i ordinary bridgework or partial plates. 4 7 I oning, in any functions ally of New Lon & Be | cupying the Bungalow for the past o of authority. It asserts every man's | of life. We act from habit, according a guest at Edgar Storrs. shipments of currants and raspberries. | PV U8 o€ SRRERON Tor el JPACT individual priesthood. Tts pulpits. are | to convention, because others do so, occupled, Zivers, but by ministers, i, e., sprv: to the congregation ossible, without expressi 5 " ve- | 8! . 3 . ooyt ’ ™ tentlon, :o.m!g:’ni the one pirit | all would b The ‘one clear thing| = Mrs. C. E. Havens and Miss Havens | were in Rockville one day last week. NS ook oampy g . 5 ening of ecclesias- | seems to be t! if I'do my ow of Norwich were guests &t B. M. Sears ymon erman of Hartford is. N AW bidke » tioal bonde, while the other tends to- | falthfully. "follow - the gt up Bo3 | the first of the week. yisiting _ his grandparents, Mr. and - HOPKINTGN. IR s B g g PR e 5 b R g R g & real disin- | gives me to see the right, lay no The ladies' aid society held a social TS, . Sherman. s very gl " C do t storati tegration of them? Assuming that two | temptation or hindrance in anothers|in the~ lecture room on Wednesday chel -Remsen of Georgetown, N.| Tie family of Rev. E. P. Mathewson || the very highest skl P b= A e B Sl 4 mmen, following the two lines, are | path'but always give my neighbor lov- | évening. tguuly religious, i..e, equal in their [ ing help wherr he needs it—then 1 Rain is sorely needed. The ground | George Baker has bought the Charles | weeks' visit -in Warrenville, Conn. ecognition of (Ged as an object of | cannot be held responsible for hi &/ baked in some places, Robinson place. He is having the [ Misy Jennie Crandall of Rockville worahip, love and obedience” it is | duct or its results. Norcan he be giy.| Miss May. Storrs is enterfaining a |house renovated and will move into it | was a business caller in town Mon- mnl that one must find his re- | en any blame for mine. party of young ladies at her home- in | 83 Soon as it is done. v day. i satisfaction. in his church, THE FARMER. Coventry. ¥red Wheeler has purchased George Charles Church of Wusterly is vis- . Baker's place and will move in as|iting at the home of Roger W. Lewi y f visiting her cousin, Miss Inez Wil- |ington village Monday. LE[TERS FRQM TWO STATES' Among the guests who have been en- | jiams, at Man-n‘gd‘mpot. George H. Holburton of Alton was 4 ¥ - . A . __ TOLLAND - COUNTY. Y Summer ite of the moast interesting bird | cal specimens ssen: ‘Windham. ‘who spoke 9th. He ‘uuwm' re on Ampect of Coloration in| from 4 to 7 p. m. A fancy table held| Miss Fru!cen Dimock is entertaining Mr. Fertes imitated several bird ‘The summer school has entered up- ue::dT::::; l:'mt“ weeks, | yille road, taking a picnie supper.. A Mrs, C. N, Turner is entertaining her man is prejudiced and | clouds drifting, #nd the birds chatter- [ Pratt’ The complaint charged assault,| sr and Mrs. Hubert Little of Mer! | has been th st of Rév. and Mrs. . tubborn about, they are | ing, and the whole world bubbling and | breach of the peace and intoxication. | ;qon ‘are guests of Mr, and Mrs. Alon- | & E: Sutton far o few dave, o 55, 57, 59 West Main Stroet. any one thing that the aver- | Is it any wonder that he goes to sleep | ver.S. B. Harvey of Willimantic, and| “'gorrest H. Clark of Clicazo was in RICHMOND. . Telephone 133. r chureh. Therefore the plain | of his lapse—and of his wife's conse- | ducted the prosecution. The assault| ,.iion regarding the burial place of g in jail on each count, together|few weéks in Rhode with the costs. shore. Island at the and Mrs. Charles Clarke spent Sat- urday at Charlestown Beach, e for others on his own shoul- and puts him into an unpleasant per- By means of this wonderful method we are able to give back to a patient his sister and her children from Hart- the guest of B. R. Moore recent of interest. b jaw to work from, and we shall not resort to plates or ordinary bridge- work iIn the process of the work. Your mouth will be free from in- cumbrances. f Before we accomplish this result we put the gums and the natural teeth In a healthy condition, tight- ening the teeth which may be loose §) and curing pyorrhea if the patient ¥ is afflicted with that dreadful dis- Catches Water Snake—Crops Drying rrtnflool at Amherst college, Am-| = ___ 5 A R P erst, ass, hlfln Earls H“it:)g?"n is visiting USQUEPAUGH. feverish stress amd discomfort by the| George A. Little, who has spent the | her grandparents in Glastonbury P IaE T S P supposed demands of vhurch-going et- | past six months in a Tennessee lum- | Miss Annie Hutchinson and C. W.|Church Decides Not to Call a Pastor at iquette. All this leads to a state of | ber camp, was in town recently. Hutchinson were in Hartford Monday. Present, matter as one’s relations with tering. The .carriage must be washed, perhaps. Sunday morning on the farm| Up. /] of this particu- church Sunday. Esther Hazzard was at Hope Valley uests of Mrs, E. S. New- | Tuesday. Mrs. Melissa Prue spent Monday in ipated with dislike. A neighbor of |there was not a guorum present and | parents in Hebron. day. served. of constant delight to the one who ought. to or not, he doesn’t. .And, if farmycrops. Potatoes are sufféring, es- | bungalow. Among those who have finished are J. H. P. Buell and Mrs. Buell of Col- chester were guests of relatives here Sunday. two weeks has been very favorabls for haying, but not as much for gardens. The ground is getting wvi dry and a Catholic, -and a Methodist. | sometimes constraining demand. Any ; g 06, Wik o £ d into the by d put th unusual activity becomes repellent and SPRING HILL. have written in to know if we bore down into e bone and pu o teeth in on pegs! % Fred Riley moved with his family Dr. C. E. Taft with his father and chewing meat, eating candy, toast, or anything else with the same com- WE ARE GENERAL PRACTITIONERS All Forms of Dentistry Treated by Experts. While the Restoration Mefhod Is our great speclait~ we are general Lizzie Smith of New Haven is|A large number of pickers .are em- Tuesda ; not by priests and law- |'with regard to our own. selfish desires, | Spending her vacation with Rev. and | Ployed by him. A Mrs, )‘Hmurd Butcher and three ts, | sometimes fn pure whim. If all of us’| Mrs. Leonard Smith. Mr. and. Mrs. Eugéné Carr and Jit- |, .iqrc, " (1o have been, spending fen Now, lsn't it|always, acted according ‘to intelligent| A party from the Hill attended the | tle grandson and Miss Bthel Green | g, "y i S Cin New Hamp- Y., is visiting at Irving oBtham's. returned last week Friday from a two dental students. We demand the finished craftsman, both at the oper-<£ ating’ chair and in the laboratory. #| e Mr. Bak 4 Mys. E. R. All d Miss Mary | GURLEYVILLE. **Hiss” Panay- Bilvonf Danileson is [ Leavans were caiiors ' North Ston || pr Jackson, Manager. Fraokiln Squaee, Norwich, Coan. - apri3TuThs tertained here recently were Afchie| Mrs. Eva Pearsom of Springfield is |[in town Wednesday. Burdick from Willimantic at G. A.{the guest of Miss a !:wi:fl i3 4 — Al i ‘Walker's, Mrs. George Allen and [isses Augusta gnd Mary Tilden are daughter Dorothy at Charles Hobby's, | in Norwich, visiting their brother, Ru- from his néw book, “Civie Biclogy,” | Earl Batés, Mr. and Mrs. Eddie Bates | fus Tilden, and family; in process of constfuction., Dr. Hodge | and Raymond Bates from Willimantic Miss Edna Bliven of Canterbury vis- ~ conducted an informal bird talk at|at O. H, Conant’s. ited her sister, Mrs. Herbert William: q § a. m. Thursday and one in the after- | Mrs. Spicer from Central Village is it E and i et i STORRS. © | noon of the same day. His evening | visiting her sister, Mrs. O. H. Conant. 'P;u Sunday evening meeting was led ——— lecture was on_the subject of ‘Na- Mrs. Olive Parker has returned home | by 'Mr. Owens. There was a large School—Bird Lecturer Fertes | ture Study in Relation to the Prob- | from Hartford, where she has been un- | attendance and the meeting was very lem r:g Slv?ng the Ameérican Game | dergoing treatment at a hospital, | interesting. Birde.’ Miss Maria Snow from Mansfield| Mrs. Sidney Perkins and her three On Saturday, July 10, some members | Depot is staying with Mrs. Martha | children are visiting her parents, Mr. of the summer school and faculty|Hanks for a short time. Mrs. Hanks and Mrs. William Corbit, at" Mansfield walked to the ravine on the Eagle- [ has been ill, but is slowly improving. Depot. N ——— £ood time was had and many botani- | niece, Miss Edith Coburn, from North ‘BOLTON e was Louls Agassiz Fert: The Ladies' Circle held a lawn so-| Rev. E. F. § i ld a - . E. F. Smith is making improve- | pa. i p on Thursday evening July| cial and salad sale on the lawn of | ments on his cottage at the Williman. | Miss Baker fo Sail for Europe—Vaca- is a bird painter, and besides | Prof, J. M. Trueman’ on July . 14, | tic camp ground. “{. tion Notes. pretty articles, and on little flower- | Miss Elsie GSumner from Williman Mrs. E. E®Fordyce, Miss Anita R- decorated tables was served ‘chicken Mrs. Martha Hanks is suffering ,,.fg Baker and . Benjamin F. Zimmerman fllustrated: with fine Jantern calls and made some rapid sketches | gajag tea, coffee ad sandwiches. pains | 1 5 in the head and 5 - | left Thursday for New York. Miss Ba- in crayon. He spoke before the reg- An informal midsummer: damce was | sician thinks an ,,»W,Jg; of:;:g;‘ ker sails today for England, where she ing and which he did. Rev., O. D. Fisher Alfred Baldwin. of New Haven vis- preached spoke at ular Bird Study class on Friday morn- | held on Friday evening. may be_necessary. Herbert R. Job, author of “Among the water Fowl’' was scheduled for a lecture on Monday evening. He was —_— dnvited to be present on Sunday morn- George Wilson was in Columbia this is to meet her mother, Mrs. L. H. Lev-/ ey, wi went abroad a few months S e [ TUR!EHVlLLE. ‘Mr. Phelps.of Wilbrabam has been | : a few days with his son, J. Y Little Notes of Local News. ‘esson_Phelps.. £ - P ras -Mrs. Myra Ward is a guest ats Miss Mrs. T. R. Prentice and two' chil- | Annie M. Alv % s in Chaplin. Mr. Job also|ited his mother, Mrs. A. G. Baldwin, |dren are spending a week with 4 'orna"' u Rl the outdoor vesper service.| this week. Louis Helm of Stafford Sprl:.L Mrs! l_‘urllucot mbm l:‘:d t};‘:l:' t{‘g EAST WILLINGTON. conduct the ‘mor! service, | week. v Miss Keith sang “Face to Face.” Mr. Leon Boswell and fm;iy visited Miss Minnie Slater o) Job's evening lecture was ilustrated | Mr. Boswell's sister in. Norwich this|sister from Middletow:n:r::'g‘ut'lg; Sum: TR e S g;’; a long serfes of lantern slides of | week. T. Brennan, foreman of the section m:::'- Mary. and, Bessie Daly have own make and coloration. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Watrous visitéd m, is boarding a - | been Passaic, - * visitin, 8 The lecture on Tuesday. evening was | Mr, Watrous parents, Mr_and. Mre | some oo E at Everett Thomp = by gt ¢ by Misy Social Center.” > uz:rflotdn'ho of ‘“Nature y and | has line boat, took the Farmer: e . author 7 a gasoline boat, ‘them on” a Tmers are improving th ’ _Life” who hn'besh identi with | pleasure ride down to see the three|spell“by harvesting thg h:y,h::td:u' Brimfield, on “The Town Library as a | Mrs. Boswell and family went to|ed at the biacksmith shop here for the wg: recent Boston visitors. "Robert ford is Anna Tarbell, librarian at | Herbert Watrous, & 5 } Qi tives. » L Willfam Tynan, who has been employ- | John H. Mhasey and Mrs, Masses Norwich last Saturday and Sunday. | past six years, has gone into business here. e of Clark university, Wor- | William Maypard, their nephew who | for himself, ‘7'" of East Hart- J ?Ihuvw- ‘weveral sunimer. -schools here, eame | warships and the training ship at New | crops are suffering f ‘Wednesday., He A a "on | London. They visited sveral isiands| -Travel 18 very disagrecsbio o nc . y : > and report & deslightful time, count of the dust. '