Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 31, 1909, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

; Campers at Moos ‘office. of the United States Finishing |0 New Haven Sunday. | returned from a few weeks' outing at | 92Y for an automobile trip to Saratoga : church will go on their annual pic- | tended the Douglas camp meeting. g Worry Over—Scholars and Manufacturers Specializs e Tome i Sorsts 7o " fl&ho%cuuw~m_mm ‘ S2% e | weeks ot Amhorat ‘RS Crops—The Crops Suited to the Farm Are the Reli- 'éi'&‘u‘?"‘."‘."“‘ 84 iy, no | e trom Tondin v i | S RS é m&?fi%muw- Deacon and ming year. He is to s Wri Speciall he Bulletin.) | recall. Yet the farmer who should|ting his grandparents, o1 T Py o o Whicho | confine himseif solely to corn growing, o i Ry \ast | October 1, after that as That 1a :;yn °'.,'.’.t&:‘“. %00d many | 85 an illustration, must Jdo something | The infant son of Will Davis is seri- tor. Rl PO Oncas 1./ Burd fittnd f orry over; the | Quite comparable’ with that. ~ When | ously ill. 38 Mr. and Mrs. Hans Nelson Aoy gl thoughttpl farmars woITy 3 his corn is 4 and cultivated he | E. C. Carpenter spent Sunday at the by all.\ daughter have gone to Sweden £ one a good many, of equal intelligence, | ;o4 wast™diy for it to grow and rip- | south Coventry pond with Tony Jacob- ed post- | a couplé of months. ecticut Wednesday, ; SR divided , by “{"“"{',f;“.'.‘,."‘*, eee| en. When it s harvested his work is | son and wife at their X master &t Hepron. Mrs. Woodmansee, widow of Rey. |wich, Willimantic and Plainfield. and mgrfl&t'n&nu Do atveRity g?::, m;uoh ceru.tnlz mmmmrflw .':: Mrs. Burton and :.:gtn.; o lr:'lflchl'nw” is visiting her sis- was buried last % E;""‘ “ rers by the year Haven, Mr. Wightman @aughter er n. : P "l?du'c u“:'r( th‘ol-loy:‘t':er. ‘tz’t’i&:- ‘two month’s work out of them on a|(Qyster Bay, N. J., and Mrs. B. C.| The nm:a meeting of the stock- n m__ ) Sbaciline. Tho proverblal “men-up- com crop. Wy, his whole crop|Sleight of New York are guests af|nholders of the Gilcad Tall association | of J. A. Woodmansee. St died Yery | or g party at tree,” wouldn’t possi their wages. , Croft. corporation at their hall y. Boone Pond-—Stalen :u iu:rgctgsjl?:pn:g: l:m. m b‘: Just as comlnlyy, ?.:’o..-. hire them ‘:t Cozy nn? week. 07 w2 Ymkmdd <t Kenyoln t'.mk.m New Fowls Recovered. - all for the ghort and varying service .Lois Lord of Marlboro is visiting | York a day or two last wee : # puasled o liftle by the controversy aad | pis crop calls for. There are none to| - GURLEYVILLE. at E. W. Buell’s. Miss Annie Kenyon, who has been | John C. Lewis of Apponsugs R L, D e be had 0a such terms and conditions. T . ‘Miss Doris Hutchinson has returned | visiting at Slocum’'s, has returned | vigited his home farm here Sunday. e Welbn i ot Sl Mrs, S, D. Yeomans Entertains:for| i, her home in Princeton, Mass. home. Howard C. Barber of New York is | suspect that, like most other hu- F::r!hlormou. the .wun—:ood'moly' Providence Guests—Picnic—Person- o C'mt . lBEefl;A.e‘tt of Ludlow m:éuiflmmo-%nd is inspector on the &m m(“qf Bh::b. parents, Mr. and 0 can’t ra corn every yi 3 .4 ” al . . T . . o pierd e fried “,’e{:,' :‘;‘,‘-:’,‘: o;';obo?: ing com, that is. To parody Mr. Lin-| 4!% v . pent & few days.in| Minnie Webster of Providence is | Charles Ballou, who suffersd & loss B he endavioy CTof - human mature, | COIN'S fAmous phrase, any farmer can| . § D Yeomans entertained a|Moodus recently the guest of Wil-|visiting her parents o |last week by hen thieves, found and when once it has taken sides, to exag- | [2is€ corn -most years, l‘ he‘:: party of young people last Thursday | liam Fielding. ‘They left Friday m- S-Y‘d . Cahoone of el was here | recovered eight of his hens. gerate everything which tains. its ""‘;"‘ can raise “’&;‘V T corn | afternoon In honor of her guests, | ing for Seattle, Wash., to -tenl t: o, T i s e Allen Franklin and deughter of Wil- Contention, anfl to minimize everything | 30 farmers cannct talst OO SOTE | Misges Olive ana Helen Teomens, from R ety L Dy oy I . Limantic wero viaiting at ‘the Friskiia which seems to favor the otber View: | .. " in nalf your fleld; another year Provldoncba‘ The_guests were v s Ve e Tt ke S A 7. Q. Webster spent one fl‘;"”' i Cmol. Fun'kuwn. 'T‘“m" u{;ut o Of course, this isn't quite fair, but g s: still an- | Frances Dimock, Elsle Sumner, Arlene : sm'm “lLL -civkac a4 “ then, mighty few of us are used to be- | It May, be the army wotts; EC 857 Dunham, Marguerite Dunham, Ethel |- ofiily. . fu Provience’ dnd.down *the L, George Tillinghast of Prov- ing fair in anything, and why should il th fit: oyme, eaf 8 iats Simonds. The afternoon passed merri- g e r AY-C Ken¥: O St el ik idence and John Tillinghast of Olney« this be an exceptio ADOR P R I . 1y dee | 1y with games and a group picture Was | Many City Visitors—Local Guests at . C. KenVon and family ville, R. I, are camping near the shore spring frost may “nip” the tender|ioyen py Miss Helen Yeomans. A dain-| ™ " Hillsdale Sunda: ot Boone pond. They were formerly 3 oy hoots, or an early fall freeze may kill Bridgeport Wedding. Looking at the debate in’ gemeral [ FhO0LS, OF S8 CAT' BT HoeCtil “in the | tv,lunch was served by thé hostess. redis '""!",“‘ e be 'd"‘m:t"o:lh“ "': milk.” Or the season may be one of trw:n&mu .::c::::::““‘"‘ relatives| o .v. Leonard Smith exchanged pul- ESCOHEAG. s whote piel ?tlu: age’ tenas | those short. wet, cold half summers, | 50 Fo 0 Uhon and daughter Dor- | Pits with the Rev. Mr. Todd of Staf- Sip— 2 The whole spirit » . ag% : when the heat-loving corn grows half- | % FFOCER G S O umping station | {0rd Sunday last. Mrs. Edward Gorton's Death—Big towards specialization. The movemen heartedly and yellows prematurely and y‘ e ey Nt Pw“““ay %t| Miss Marion Storrs led the Chris- Bass at Beach Pond. it s ks is especially marked in sclence, Years brings forth nothing but “nubbins” and m Y E tian Endeavor service Sunday eye- e annoc| unday scl @ago one man devoted himself to botany .y " . les Hobby's. T make its annual visit to Matusuck and was suppased to be able to-cover | [aAvtritious “fodder, Among the guests here Sunday were nlg:. s ke bty adh John Cory of Providence was in | mMake its annusi vielt that field; another took up entomology | wwi.¢ is trus of any one crop is true Earl Bates from Willimantic at O. lfili n“: onard Smith ‘:Id wite ngmm- !h;{:rl':;esn:.o;m‘i: his :’un(:n:::u:.'* The Shannock Bapiist church held and was supposed to study and under- Conant's, Dwight Beebe from Norwich | [ G ltry. meetings at Storrs the | with L. I C. An‘""m.. a business meeting Wednesday eve- A f all. Whether you plant corn or po- x stand all about all sorts of insects; a |9 .|at G. R. Dimock’s, Mr. and Mrs. Delos % . 80! tatoes or wheat or oats or green peas; | o it o oo antie at Mrs. Ar- Mrs. Cha D. ‘Arnold’s grand- nu;‘gr.t!o ;?:;::‘Ql ellll::‘tt a t:‘r il third went in for chemistry and became raise es or grapes or 4 | from this town were in at- an all-round chemist. Then the pot- | Jrether YO ute APPISS OF STRCL S | vill Dunham's, Mr. A e vifise St tho TateoniArron; wed: | o e was in |DaB been visiting at Cliffmore is now ng::: tou:gttg:th?;e :: ht::ex;’l‘lbl:'“f:; to dairying or to early lambs or to g::z:g:’ from Willimantic af 3 d'g at_ Bridgeport, Tuesday evening, 3 g by g.. guest of Mrs. Hattie Forden at voting s time e 4 ; whether you go in for bees or { . Sehl! has 'a houseful of | n enyon. of herbaceous plants snd didn't have | FOFY WASHEE YO0 895 (0 WUl 5o | A cousin from Brovkiyn, N, Y., has |, 5 SCUIRE hep p ¥rank Sholes has gone to Providence | ™yjlas Mildred D. Church of Nyack, e o it he lzse 4nd, 88 | Contronted ny i Tk ot purren ears | PO SISUg A0 ME, TR, 1, | TR WO, Wi, ke bas besn i, R ke e o he unci, B B ¢ when your one hope oill fail you an ' 7 ‘eony: ing. oore, an mily. others took up those branches and he | O licome Wil ”nk to zero. And |Lanser uehrpenlg{ ‘thet eek ']1{? rel Bchfl‘;.lns s et x B fegogayl.»)nd e s R bt Mr. and Mrs. % J. Dawley spent dropped them. The enfomologist like-tf overy year you will' Be met by the | Stives In the vicinity of Sew Haver. on his lawn. 10 BEACH” pod. Sunday with friends in Westerly, Mg '°“""M'hel‘;’ Wers SO . IeEY. b“f; practical impossibility of sécuring ade- | Lt ARG Mre. A. S5 SEAREL FEOT ‘he Wheeler place has been rent-| The death Monday. the 26th in: —_— hn the world that no one mn: could | qyate labor to care for your specialty Hanks’ on Sunday. ty ed by a family from New York. Mrs. Phoebe Palmer Gorton, wi A Request. ope to know them all, 8o he Jjust|gi"ihe exact times when it must be g r.-and-Mrs. C.-B. Wyllye of Nor-| Bdward Gorton of Rockvilie, takes | o oo om0 “guian - oy wich are spending a week at the old | from this community a most estima- kindly put on & soidier’s uniform residents of this place. RICHMOND. rd Matcalf is here for a dropped all but the winged insects, and ty-five min- Miss Eunice Wood entertained others took up observation of the other ::;:d‘:"{h': ;2;,“.:‘,":';?“’,‘ hours to friends at a picnic last Saturday. classes. So with the chemist and the | . Mrs. Sarah Hanks is entertaining | homestead. Mr. Wyllys is a commer- | hle woman. Mrs. Gorton was born in tonal ampment student of animals. This first division | 1€ 9aY- i G Mrs. Norman Stoughton from Man- |cial traveler.. hing the | thI8 town. She leaves a nd. and | 3R e okl susrd "t Foet of the subjects has been since re-| No, it simply will—not—do for us|Chester. T ey eelar 18 Leaching thelsight small children, and THO brothers | nyje, pest month. -The State iy w divided and sub-divided, till now there | ¢, L\ 0.0 to specialize to this extent. We A very enjoyable picnic was held e Ty class 8 - Sui = and three sisters. anxious to see what you would like garbed out in the full dress re- Oh You Bwanna Tumbo. galia of commander of all the armies It will have to be changed to “When | and navies of the Imperial state of Teddy Comes Marching Home.”—Mil. | Kansas, U. S. A.—Kansas City Jour- waukee Sentinel. are botanists who study only one group o in | Wednesday in Henry Nason's grove R e e of plants like the fungi, or just one 3‘&:&?“&:‘%;&?&'&:{{} h;;: under .the auspices of the Epworth SQUTH COVENTRY. family of trees like the thornbearers; the twelve, | 1eague. There was about thirty pres- - and entomologists who work solely in ’v‘v’e",:",‘st"::::";h“:y"“:n%m time he | ene and all report a good tim Class Reunion at the Lake—Barn one corner of the bug world; and|jcoves us—actively and productively| Rev. J. F. Robertson and Mrs. Rob- Raising—Girls Enjoy Fish Fry. :h.mluu who do l:o!hln(f beyond work- busy. If we don’t those who do will ert&on :;lve ;:.fin Tueutlhy t'orAa vat- S ng out the reactions of one group of . ! . | cation roug] e mon O ugust. ¥ i hool, ealts; and zoologists who confine all Fe‘cvtfymt:u“epptr:tu?{o fi:g ’;:rl:n..r p::n They will go to their cottage on Long h,fl“ :' x‘:fu;l’:l:, :tv im:mwh:::“;lcb::;‘ their time and effort to learning the | o ataply know and handle all sorts of | Island. Tuesday afternoon, also visiting the Jast thing possible about just gas-| .. o." Nor will any one farm produce, Sarah Stoughton, widow of George| ;e of A. B. Peterson on Ripley hill, téropods, or just deep-sea animalcuia, profitably, all . sorts of crops. As a Philo Hanks, has received notice of the| , “gormer principal of the W. H. S. t00 smail for the naked eye to distin | FTIM 5700 3% n or wheat farm isn't | Tenewal of her pension claim of $20 & . J. K. Mansfield and daughter What and Where to Buy in Nerwich. sh. That's the reagon why sclencs | worin very much for potatoes. There | month. of Willimantic are occupying E. B. s becoming so technical and, also, 0| are Jimitations ‘of soll and season as Foster's place, recently purchased by CIAL SALE i B e o N i COLUMBIA oy s g ostoras, res- | CANMING Season e : X nomenal , " Likewise in industry the whole trend ok gt gos M e vllh:em;g:;:::l :“‘g: "”:';:::‘ the | Men's Calf and Vic Kid Oxfords, is towards specialization. Once each gouto crops, but rice won't live there. | prij| Strikes Water at 137 Feet—Suce ular $3.00, at 98e. is here and we have the best JAR in ‘exas may not be able to raise all the work of the elm beetles. ' Ladies' High and Low Shoes, regular :3:“21“'"'"- 'uhnflerttl)gkbto do nx;u; potatoes if eats, but it can grow rice by cessful Lawn Festival. .| “Miss sadie Woodworth of Spring-| 3250 ma‘gs.oo. oA the oity. No more porcelain lined Sutiaihing which could be done with |the shipload. ‘Connecticut and Rhode( . .. . 1 which Miss Whit. | €10, Mass., spent a short time in town P. CUMMINGS, caps. They are all glass. Give them - oy AN o, Make about everything |igland are not wheat states, but they T e R R, - | this’ week,” visiting her brother. i 53 Central A A trial. ch could be made from cotton. But | .oige the only turkeys thought fit for a | ey has been having sunk on her Mrs. Clara” Grant entertained at | Telephone. entral Avenue. At C. 8. FAIRCLOUGH'S. now most factories confine themselves | white House Thanksgiving, and buy | Prémises near Columbia lake, struck & | o iee” (oot Wednesday afternoon at| Investigate our premium system. 214 : closely to just one line of production, | 41 eir wheat from Dakota. good water supply at a depth of 137 2 ¥y seeking to excel, either in quality or feet. Nearly all the boring was through | 15, home on Wall street. =~ =~ = economy, along just that narrow line. “ " 1 i solid rock of granite formation. One tactory makes only cotton thread, | , Wit thent We can®t five if we| "My "dna Mrs. Raymond D. Tucker, | J-,i Vislting Mrs. F. 8 White HUNGRY HORSES J h F. Smit and another only cotton twine. Indeed, It thats your argument” I|Who have been spending their July va- |y ® pOd FE M€ CO0 E oy eorne osep . omi m‘hl]eyd lp:fllal}zetzhllctork. the | hoar vou say, “what's left but to give | cation with Mr. Tucker's mother on |- ' replaces one destroyed ’5, fire | 2re_poor nn;l :nntllllhct:ry wonrsgln She carrled still further untll all|,j ang ask the way to the poorhouse? | Columbia Green, returned = Friday | o g¢’ summer, when struck by light- | Leply® 10 feed well and use FLORIST various proccsses of a single man- | Wil T think the common sense mid- | morning to New' York, “where Mr. | N . FEED. You can get this at right ufacture are divided among workmen | gjo road is still left wide open—the | Tucker is engaged in Y. M. C. A. work. o prices from and machines, 50 that one man with Mrs. Mary B. Yeomans and her sis- | A Rumber of ‘the young lady em- - road which neither runs between the ¥ 8i8- | Jioves of the Kingsbury Box & Print- A. R. MANNING, 200 one tool does only one thing, day in|narrow stone walls of the one-track | ter, Mrs. J. V. B. Prince of Coventry, ing company enjoyed a fish fry at the | Telephone, Yantie, Conn. syia ate jy22a haps, and then passing on the jo th ai rairie of unfen: ‘Wood, among the Berkshires. another, who does another similar | 3 corsifioetton @ & P A large number of summer boarders diversification. \ ELL'NGTON. all-'round work: i We can learn what crops will, ordi- ¢ Y A gk 7 51 of !p&‘”i:t:re?:}? ngtoj;lah"oglmz narily, do_well on our own farms, in %:{enm reoinin . mitll . SebtRmber . or Elany P'c__"m__h Sprinyfiewd Patronize Remaant Store, 201 W. Mala St. eng day out—just punching holes, gem specialization, nor rambles Mml““‘i are spending & {éw weeks at Maple | wour shore of the lake last Saturday. Jy22a fraction of the work. In many big v b and those who have cottages on the . ’ P l w “' hx. M ‘ m factories and shops there are no more Jake shore are in town, many expect- Particalar People san rds of Fine b8 one thing better than anybody else | Qur Own climate, under local conditlons. | no\ ) Holbrook and his sister, Mrs.| Mrs. Everett Sadd of Willimantic ’ 2 Goven TlEmens Ten &tzn ao s, could do it, but does nothing elge. .vg:ie?;‘hgig{:r:u:f :fvmc;"sh:?l k‘:’e‘;""“l{ J. E. Randall of Willimantic, attended | 8 visiting at A H. Peck’s. Rflgel's n.mstlc hlldry. 20?‘ 75 yara lengths, for sale at one- len Matfe fi Niles has gone to Es- There's & good reason for it sex for an outing. - Mrs. Frank Holton had charge of | Tel. 903-2. Rear 37 Franklin St the programme for children's night jv22a IR, King’s Restoration Method Mr. Clapp of Dakota has been vis- What It Does for Toothless People iting his sister, Mrs. E. T. Davis. By means of this wonderful method Mr. and Mrs. Horton Noble arrived home from Pennsylvania on Saturday. we are able to give back to a patient the full set of testh he or sh start- The Ladi Ala . A They were accompanied by four of 3 r 4 - A e es’ society gave a lawn | Mrs. Noble’s nieces. you don't see it his way. He certain- :fi‘:fi:fl“flf’;‘"'&' ;: ;‘:"“ ' 28 l;‘v“: fete at the parsonage last Tuesday| Miles H. Aborn and family were the iynhu a sllrangb l:‘ljxgn;lent and an al- shall ,Aa"‘ The otgers to m'" back on, afternoon, more than one hundred be- | guests of Mrs. Arnold in Willimantic uring analogy behin im. not il OF which -are likely to tumble ing present. An excellent collation was | on Sunday. They made the trip by ed in with in the beginning. All we require is two or more teeth in each jaw to work from, and we shall not resort to plates or ordinaty bridge- work in the process of the work. TSI o X ed by the ladies, after which there | automobile. And yet, when it comes to applying | 40%n at tie same time._._ an informal entertainment, con- Your mouth will be free from in- cumbrances. this theory to farming, “I hae me sting of vocal music by the youn doots,” as ‘the Scotchmen say. I don't| The sp zing farmer gambler peopl: A number of .u.lmu vxynrori believe that any cotton factory, if it | who takes a gambler's chances and |were present, and the afternoon proved could make cotton thread during only | makes big winnings—when he wins.|a most enjoyable one, sen weeks of the year—if it must dis- | The diversifying farmer puts out an- Rev. W. A. Harris attended the fel- 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 charge its hands and shut down its|chors to windward against all the e machinesy for the other forty-two |Storms that may blow, from whatever 2;{";:,‘:1 Tfifi.‘:hs llnt E;;:,;l,‘:tvsg::::_ is aflicted with that dreadful dis- ease. It is this very narrowing of effort— busy from April to lNovember, av%d ;l;;xyrch service in this place last Sun- of regular ocost v"cs'on"tnl'ora: 1his restricting of i v give us a fairly regular income. e s . % the :ne nLne gmn wl:'l"l:‘r:ké::l xi'é':?,'n'éui‘} can study those half dozen or dozen mll\llhui1 Helern C;arke o[! Hamden is vis- excels—which makes modern econo-|Crops and get, at least, a primary w”'f deng a‘{ll varen s, Mr. and Mrs. mies possible in manufacturing, in | WOTKing knowledge of how best to| . e . Clarke, on Columbia ortation, and in scores of other | handle them on our particular farms. {:““-H i . Now ~doesn’t it seem reasona- | We shall probably not do as well with i 7 g and family of Hartford ble that it ought to work similarly in | 2DY one of them as some specialist | 2re oarding at Mrs. Mitchell's. tarming? Don’t blame the speclalist |y do on some special vear with that Aid Society Lawn Fel it he grows irritated with you, when [O0® But—if that one fails utterly, the 0 the door. Preparations are béing made to hold a Sunday school picnic at Forest park in Springfield. MASHAPAUG. Miss Gladys Munroe and Miss Agnes Bates are -visiting friends in Alston, Mass. John Fairbanks has been confined to his home for the past week by ill- ness. John Hebard was in Worcester on ming. business last week Friday. — Miss Mabel,;hesdx;ion. Miss Harriet ;Mr, and Mrs. George Galloway of | Sheddon, Mrs. F. Sheddon and son, F. Binghamton, N. Y., are visiting. Mrs. | Sheddon of Fitchburg, were callers at _ I Galloway’s brother, James F. Midburn, | MrS. - F.. 8. Suell's Monday, it being LETTERS FROM TWO STATES. (i dgifiais B a8 SE3EThS ‘ : e friends in Gloucester, Mass. o ; A N B, Miss Annie M. Alvord h "Miss Jennie Gilbert spent last week e e with relatives in Springfleld. “Munroe weeks—I don’'t believe any cotton fac- | quarter of the compass they may come. day. tory, under thoss conditions, would [ He may never “strike it rich” as the ;i PERORL T e confine itself dolely to making cotton | specialist sometimes will, but, at least, ™ - thread. It would have to find some- | he will be safe, with something always BOLTOh. thing else to hold its workmen and to |in the locker for today and a reason- - fesd its machines when it couldn’t |able expectation of fresh supplies for | Henry M. Loomis to Locate in Wyeo- make thread, or the machines would | tomorrow, 8 rust and the workmen scatter beyond THE FARMER. from Coscob, where she was the guest of Mrs. Ella Kennedy. y of Springfield was in B Rags v R . S0 g socket following nature’s plan, so Originator of Dr. King’s Restor- ation Method for the natura) | that e ol S restoration of teeth — originator d e them In ¢ ‘the “'th. of the King Safe System of “nnnu oy wmul i u“ Painless Dentistry and Inventor teeth, They match nature's teeth so of the “Natural Gum” Set of clouiy B & fl.celv' ! They Teeth, Ete, Ktc. All rights re- | ;.o%equntul 0 look at and @ source ST of constant delight to the one wh wears them. A PAINLESS PROCESS An impression has gone forth that there is some surgical operation p Mrs. L. J. Ward left Tuesday fo wmnfl‘l mmv, ABI“GTON her home in Jersey , after a) \‘l:llt- S G ry A former pastor, Rev. Joseph Kyle, | With her sister, Mrs. 8. M. Alvord. R Ve U Teenday night. STERL]NG. i to preach next Sunday. %;1{‘13:31 with his " sister, ' Mrs. W C EAST WILLINGTON. - The members and friends of the 5 i New York are visiting Mrs. Marschat's v picnic at East Killingly Aug. 4. abou If -2 has been harvested. ter's . Funeral. Miss Belle Brown,l:who 'hu- been d of South Braintree, Mass., is expected Eleazer Pomeroy of Windsor spent p Pond—James Pot- | Ladies’ Benevolent society will have a Mrs. 8. Marschat and children of Haying is’ nearty. finished. Only Miss Elizabeth Johnson is in the | SPending her vacation here, returned sister, Mrs. Charles Lee, Jr. R - Miss Donahue of Willimantic is at hav:“;“n‘.i!:p::éle;g‘:ge?:rv:‘;:- the McGurk cottage for the summer. 4 i Miss Ida E. Holbrook of Columbia é‘m':ttfi,b?";,‘.,:?:fifi sister Lois I8 spe ding some time with her cous- ml'db their grandmeother a flying visit. in, Mrs. William C. White. Mrs. Gilbert Ide is under the doc- Will J. Maxwell of Hartford was | t5r'g care. Her daughter, Mrs. Church Lou Willlams of Coal Springs, Pa, E 4 has been calling on acquaintances. Rev. O. H. Green and family have | Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Murray left Fri- company, succeeding Miss Mamie Car- BOrlacs. the guést of his mother, Mrs. A. N. " i her. connected with this method of restoring missing teeth. Some people o‘s‘:m"fl:' &h‘;inx hts of Ki gy AL B Maxwell, Sunday. o RpakTie, ].lsc:;x:g f::m gorwlch. have written in to know if we bore down into ths bene and put the me O e, ghts o ng Ar- HOWARD VAL ‘W. K. Suraner of Rockville has been talking of moving his i 1 thur are camping with the 1ocal pastor ARD LEY visiting his mother. teeth in on pegs at Moosup pond. Today (Saturday), July: 31, the Sun- day school of the Sterling M. E.| Wedge and Thomas W. Bradford at- Henry M. Loomis and Wililam R. frmily tth‘__ Others have an idea we set the rew teeth fto the sockets where the French left recently for Wyoming, natural teeth were originally. where the former plans to locate per- MOUNT HOPE. It is quite natural that some unthinking people would ask such qies- Miss Wy Barnes is visiting Mrs. Mrs. E. St. John and Miss Frances tly. k: . njc. They will unite with the Metho- | L. H. Hawkes and sister, Lura, spent z:n:!:hgrt 3{;,»1332'5" Y tions, and in order that they may be fully answered we will state that dist Bunday school of Moosup. Cres- | Sunday with their cousin, Mrs. Louis| there is no boring, no cutting, no implantation about this method, noth- 7 - J. H. Bacon. cent park is the place selected. Wilson of Pomfret Landing. F o Miss Mabel Lanphear has ben vis- fng about the rk that 18 inful while it is being done or aft a Mrs. T. J. Belanger is slowly con- Bernard B. Hawkes has left Long . Y walescing. Island and is in nothern Minnesota. STAFFOHDVILLE itl nll"").sfinnfi‘.‘:‘ and Miss Grace Patlents leave the office with these teeth in place and at once begin Mrs. Albert Wentworth' and Mrs, [ John Kemp and nephew, Andrew | Fifty Go on Outing to the Shore— | Russ called in Merrow recently to see || CPewing meat, eating candy, toast, or anything else with tne same com« Irving Anderson visited relatives in | Kemp, are in New York, seeing the -{-.mw"lty ngm“ Qu-rt.cr:. the grandson and nephew, ystanton fort they would enjoy if every tooth in their head had grown there. Blile Jetind W otaeader. iy e Russ Bupdick, st Mr. end Mrs. 4. T. It we couldn’t promise this and make good on the promise, the Re- Miss Alice Cole of Boston has been o The funeral of James Potter, a for- Miss Pauline Kern of Preston led the Burdis 1d tter mer resident of Sterling, was held at | meeting in the Valley church Sunday. | Mr. Kraft recently lost about fort: storation Method would not be a success. It would be no Dde than pending a few days with Miss Maggie E Y 4 Fa, " ordinary bridgework or »parthl plates, Miss Eva Brown of Springfleld, Greene, R. I, on Wednesday, July 28. chickens. He thinks hawks must have Mass., has been sspending a weqk at s WE ARE GENERAL PRAC TITIONERS m cl:ru\;lecl:n were held in the Metho- 'i-OLL AND co“NTY. them. —_— ) her home here. All Formas of Dentistry Treated by Experts. WASHINGTON COUNTY, R L ‘ Miss May Lutt: f Hartford h: {®" WILSONVILLE WILLINGTON. Uies Vinltion o o i While the Restoration Method Is our great specialt~ we are general I ——— her aunt, Mrs. Jane Fagan. e i Y dental practitioners as well. From the simplest lllln“ to the most “in- Bamuel Adams and daughter, MTs.| New Owner of Daleville Mills Occupy- | Over fifty from this place attended HOPK'"TG". y SECRN VINON'OL SURINS IR SRS S S, The SRTVIGR A W publie. Naturally we would do such work well, much better than it could be done in a one-man office, for the operators employed here are ali men of the very highest skill. They need to be to the Restoration work. | Bunglers would not be tolerated In our office for a day, neither would Miles, wére in Boston Thursday. ing Hoyle Residence—Personals. the annual excursion to Watch Hill ~ ! Misg Sophia Storrs and Bert Upham v % and Block Island last Saturday. Summer Guests—Recent Funerals. and daughter Esther attended the| Mr. Dvosky, the owner of the Dale-| Mr. and Mrs. Grant Hanner visited Methodist church Plcnlc Wednesday at ;r{mel mfllsl property, has opened *e :lerd"bmtheré F‘aa:;k Bowden, in Hart- w)lr. nnfii lu.co;:nn‘n?e dL. D\}:lrk:: of Bates’ grove. (s oyle residence, and is there with his | ford, over Sunday. ‘arrenville, ., vigited at the home Mrs, N, E. Converss of Worcester | family for the summér. His large tour- | T. M. Lyon has his store and_post: | of Rev. E. B. Mathewson, from Monday | | dental students. We demand the finished craftsman, both at the oper- spent Tuesday with relatives. ing car is one of the finest that has | office in the house vacated by M. H.|to Thursday. - ating chair and in the laboratory. Mrs, Jerolamon, who has been visit- | been seen in this seetion of the state. West. He intends to have his new Mr. and Mrs. Victor Crandall and fng the past week with her sister, re- | Mr. and Mrs. Lucian B. Clark have | store built soon. * | child of Providence are visiting-at the || . turned with her, & ¥ been visiting their son, W. L. Clark, at Mrs. F. 1. Hulett and daughter | home 6f Roger W. Lewis. They had Mr. and Mrs. Floyd C. May and son | Miller's Mass. Gladys of Providence have been spend- | an at Wincheck pond Wednes- 2 R T Ryt O Bl Ml | Cosgrove of Willington s the president ' G. P. Andrews house C L ES £

Other pages from this issue: