Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 16, 1910, Page 13

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B.c'k to the Land a Distinctive 20th Century Cry—Stabil- ity Represents Virtue and Power—This Tendency is One of the Most Cheering Among the Few Hopeful Sl'n:ofdn'lunm et gmwv for The Bulletin.) “They divide up the human race in &l sorts of ways—by color and by descent, by shape of the head and slant of the eyes, by race and religon, by thickness of the skull and kink of the Bmir, etc. etc. Humenity might well, stable and The line which divides individual divides races. The do majority. For the most of us it is frue that about the deepest sentiment in our nature is this land hunger. men most submerged by the attrac- tions and distractions of city business find _themselves at times craving, al- most statving,, for some land of thelr own. It's the call of the blood, tl breaking out of the inborn instinct, the demand of the racial facuity. Of all the civilized nations of Europe none has heen more battered and hantefl in the last thousand years man It has recuperate ifs misfortunes, has recouped itself for all its losses in a way to command th admiration of the world. Yet &mn mothing mysterious about it; France is a land of small farmers. Paris is not France; had the country been like its capital it woudd have di ed in its own froth years ago. of small landholders who really make up the French people frugal, lmln-trl- ous, saving—these are and have hnc been the uw?un oi‘! Fu.nec.‘ gfw Asian lands, Japan is most notewor- thy in this same direction. Prutlu.l 1y the entire arable area of the do's empire led out into Httle farms, of from half an acre to four or five acres, Who shall say that J’lvln does not owe to 'this characteristic of her people that headship of Asia which she holds by indefeasible right? The landholder has a “stake in the country” which the ownership of noth- ing else can give him. He is & stock- holder in the greatest asset of the world, and at the same time he is czar and supreme dictator of the acres that he calls his own. He is, in fact, part owner of the world. Wll!lhfl d he not hold his head higher than before? Have you never noticed when your city or suburban friend has bought hjm a little place in the country, how ba pmnvt ae a new carriage of , 2 new mvlty of demeanor, Coreain witdity ot saristaction? e may have thousands of dollars in bank, and only a few hundred dnvested in land. But that laaded estate bulks larger in his consideration than all his s. No matter what subject youm:lno he is sure to bring it '\ny little place in the coun- try,” before m minutes. HEven if ‘e professes t it be wary, Bon't agree with him; the disparago- ment le only assumed and piayful, as one might uyc “Oh, you to his own first born. Tall into hie tone and address that as m.onotu.hoi: you'd soon find such connivance in his tone an errror ‘wants to appear de- cently humble, while he‘- rcnfly 80 stuck-up that he leans backwand in his awkward attempt to stand D or wandering Tartar trlb- of Asla and the seried ranks of or e M is thmnnllll@ofmon and of na- and of races which counts in the umctmma. And one of the outward signs of ite existence is in the tendency uunwimoy;ne-ls; to become landowners en dhol attenuated limit Of course there ®eonementa "than n d. But these are not the TOLLAND COUNTY. COLUMBIA s+ Ninety-third Birthday of Mrs. Harriet R. Yeomans—Selectmen of the Town to Decide Grade Crnulng Matter. Jewett S. Conlnq, in the employ of the Southern New England Telephone company, spent Saturday and Sunday with his father and brothers in this place. Fred H. Avery of Hast Hartford, commercial traveler for a rubber company, was in town last Saturday on a business trip. A bell game was plaved on Colum- bise Green last Saturday afternoon by members of the local order of A. O. T. W, and the local outsiders. Score 8 to 2 in favor of the order. Jobn W. Fuller had a valuable ox so aeverely injured by its mate last week, thet the animal is unfit for use. Ninety-third Birthday. Harriet R. Yeomans, or “Aunt Harriet,” as she is commonly called Mrs m %mlem—uud her ‘birthds; of last week. Ceoble, she. re- ..aana ‘many un. and congutulnuons from relatives and friends. Among the many gifts m an elaborate birt] ‘}l‘ly rfl by her niece, Mrs, W * ¥he schoals whitch fave been hav- ing a thres weels’ vmcation resumed sessions e? son of Mr. -.ld“‘r!. Jéhn W. , 38 1 with pneumon Grade MWM to l.lnt- At the -p&x. wn meeting last 1 to the One of the trite lamentations of lh. press Is that over the tendency of you be satd, win‘ unflcncy of to forsake the city for the country. It is one of the most cheer- ing among the tow hnoem! signg of the times—this ncy back to the land. In simple m it'is just the re- birth and renewal of our race instinct. City life in hired tenements or flats is not the real desideratum of our breed, but home life in our own houses and on our own land. That is the thing which, after all, calls loudest to mem- bers of a people with our ancestry and our inbred characters. Of course, there will always be farms fnr sale, just like ships and clty blocks Missiesippi _senators, . But the chnmgn which I think I see in the sit- uation now, as compared with that of , is that there ng for farms than farms munc for buyers. Given a country place with any sort of value or lveness, and the problem now is not how to sell it at all to some- body at some old price, but how to got the mews that It can’ be bought to the dozen or so land-hungry fellows who would gobble it up ln a flash, and be glad to pay well for it, too. it they only knew where to look for it. “Back to t ind” might fairly be sald to be a distinctive cry of this opening Twentieth century. It's a mighty good and wholesome state of mind wh‘ch that cry voices. It fore- tells a recrudescence of national vigor and virile strength; a subordination of conventional and effeminate luxury under the feet of manhood; a renewal of racial youth. “Who was the fabled glant whom neither men mor gods could overcome—so long as his foot touched the earth? That nation a ma- Jority of whose people foot firmly their own land, the land they have earned and bought and own—that mation is not likely to be overthrown by outside attack nor to fall from internal rot. V FARMER. the bridge and put up a new struc- ture, either of wood or iron, and leave the whole matter in the hands of the selectmen of the two towns, Co Ty and Columbia. If this project is/car- ried out it will necessitate a change in the plans of the railroad company, but will necessitate but little if any more grading than the plans proposed by them. To Spray Forty Eims. Selectman S B. YWest has contracted with a man in’ Hartford to spray forty of the elm trees on Columbia Green at the proper time, in accordance with a vote of the town at the annual town meeting last fall Miss Viola Lewis of this place has been engaged to teach the school in the Center district. ~She takes the place of Miss, Starkweather, resigned. WILLINGTON Wild Flowers Abund; of Mrs. Albert Watrous iIs very ill with typhoid pneumonia. For so early in the season wild flow- ers are abundant. The arbutus is un- u-u.ll fine. morning, Rev. Austin Gard- nar‘- topic _at the Congregational church was Manna. Text, Exodus 16: 81, He made the opening prayer at the Baptist church the afternoon at the request of Rev. Mr. Darrow, who found his text in John 4:14. Sub- Ject, The Living Water. There was a good attendance at the Sunday school and much enthusiasm manifested, B-‘toéd W. 1:::&: of Erovidéuce spen flnfl. ew. Sunday afternoon, . Mr. r- row appointed a committee to pur- °"";"§€"‘mt Sims Savan 1o Dun- con, F. rah 1. Dun- and M ‘*n- wunm.mm mflflons 4 No farnrer can make good COWS pay by giving them lean fare. That {sn't economy—iit's foolishness. Cows give ¢lean milk. It e clean milker who defiles 1t and’ disgrace to the COW. - This i= the day of the Mttle pig. The seven and eight hundred pound porker is a thing of the past. Bill Bangs says since he left off nursing grudges himself the whole worla seems easier to get along with. The man who takes oo much pride in his ancestors takes too little inter— est in work to be a model for his neighbors. 1 don’t blame any woman for want. ing to know when her day begins and ends, but I have never known one who could find out. e horse who does not get his bran mash once a week does Dot keep as healthy as the horse that does. A sow with a big litter of pigs se- cretes as much milk @s & cow and. needs to be liberally fed. : It is said that a mule » not ass enough to eat thistles because he likes them. The man who thinks that whiskey is the elixir of life is likely to think the devil is the boss of the universe before he gets through. It never took wo many dozen of eges to get a woman a bonnet as it does to- day. 1t some folks oduld stick ¢o work as they do to their dummed foolish opin- fons they would prosper more in life. It is so much easter for Cy Cymbal 4o get down in the mouth than down to business that he is there most of the time. Nance Nearman eays when she don’t know what to do next she goes out in the yard and hears t¢he birds sing. I rather think that's good sense. The man who only takes & bath on the Fourth of July and Christmas doesn’t see what a currycomb in the barn s good for. When you have prize steck never be afraid to put a big price upon #t. You can afford to keep it rather than have it said you didn't get half its velue. Josh Jordan says if he had patched up that hole in the barn floor the colt wouldn’t have broke his leg. Little negligences are mighty expensive. Old Ebenezer Plummer says his cows are all dehorned, but derned if he can see that they are any more contented chewing their cud than they were be~ fore. : who died at_the home for incurable children at Newington, was held at the home of her grandparents, Mr, and Mrs. Marlen Knight, Rev. B. W. Dar- row officiating. rial was in the new cemetery. Mrs. Merrick J. Pratt and two daughters joined Mrs. Pratt's husband at Deacon F. W. Pratt'’s on Monday. STORRS. Faculty Scientific Club Hears of Flor- ida Trip—Sophomore Senior Prome- nade—Local Mention. the Ladies” ock in Grove a Mrs. Lam- On Tuesday afternoon Reading club met at 4 o' cottage. Miss Hopkins son were readers. At the Factulty Sclentific club meet~ ing in the technical lecture room. Prof. A, J. Gully was the speaker on “The Ocklawaha River Trip.” He Bbenf. t.he month of February in Forida, b not speak of the fruit-growing whlda he saw. Sale Postponed. The cake sale on Wednesday at 4 o'clock was postponed on aoccount of the ball game on the home fleld with Willimantic high school. Lectured on Welding. Henry Cave lectured in Collexe hall on Wednesad: evening on -“The Oxyacetaline Welding and Cutting of Metals.” He gave practical demon- stration of welding steel and cast iron. Made Curtains and Other Improve- ments. On Thursday afternoon the Ladies’ Circle met in the church parlor. They made curtains for the windows and other improvements in the appearance of the room. T, L, Tryon lectured on “The Com- ing of World Peace,” at 7.30, in College ‘Sophomore Senior Prom. The sophomore senior romenade wes held on Friday, beginning the grand march soon after 8. Class are always enjoyed as the number of dancers is more near the accommods~ dations of the hall. Class colors were prettily blended and evergreens come pleted the decorations. Prsonals. Mrs, O, D. Fisher is making a visit in_Bostor Mrs. B, O. Smith was in Hartford recently. . J. Rush Foster has veturned from a three weeks' stay at her home in Lebanon, where she was called by the illness of her sister. BOLTON Albert D. Knight Called to Preach in Massachusetts. Mr. and Mrs. Dennison H. Loomis of Westfleld, Mass., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. William H. Loomis. Cary D. Carpenter is serving as ju- e at the superior court in Rock- ville. Albert D. Knight, who lived in Bol- ton a few years ago, has received a call to preach in the churches in South Sandisfield and New Boston, Mass. Mr. Knight has moved his family from Hartford, where he has been residing, to Massachusetts. Charles S. Baker is building a gar- axo on the farm of his mother, Mrs. L. H. Levey. H. W. Howell has moved from the Center into a tenement on Cemetery Mn. Kate Doody was = Hartford visitor the first of the week. Misses Carrie May French_ and Elizabeth Daly have entered the South Manchester high school. Dora, the seven 'ye{‘r.l old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pinney, -is ill with scarlet fever. TURNERVILLE. School Opens With Miss Pendleton as Teacher. Mrs. F. Jaquith was the guest of her nnrenu ln South Coventry a few dxy'l ..r.n.mmh D. 'I’Hl“ PRIZES MONTHLY: " to first; $1.50 to second; $1.00 to ‘third. Award made the last Saturday in each month. —_—_— + EVERY WOMAN'S OPPORTUNITY, wants good home letters, good business letters; The Bulletin fillhmnotuyundm mind may Week. > Write on But one Side of the paper. hl?; ‘They should mu. CORNER EDITOR, Bulletin Office, Norwlcb. Conn. ‘The Social Corner hopes to hear from. the wives and daughters in all parts of eastern Connecticut, and so many of the mien as may like to say & helpful or pleasing word, without expectation of reward. The prizes are not the best thing to be got out of the Corner. ‘We hope that the Corner Wwill develop such a spirit of fellowship and helpfulness and practicality, that it will yield to human hearts and hands what money cannot buy. The S. C-’s must become a great family that finds pleasure in working for the well- being of others.—The Social Corner Editor. Edc.".d Out Into the Sunshine, itor Social Corner. How 'ucd !t 1s of you to call this the Bocial Corn instead of the Social Circle! your crocuses are in bloom. ‘That called me out into thes sun- shine, eager to renew my acquaintance with the crocuses. How cheerily they Wwere holding up, their bright cups to to awake and do :‘\:Ir work in making the world beauti- Then I looked about to find, here and there, signs of life in m-ny a favorite, ‘which had been resting urhfla in Mother Nature's bosom. How delightful it h to watch ‘the re- turn of the plants in these early days of ring! How we exclaim as we find one after another has outlived the winter’s frost, and how we sorrow to miss oy of the familiar faces! They are, d friends, lost for & time, and very gladly welcomed on their return. For that ru-cn. I much pnter roots and shrubs that live th-m\ll’ the m- sons, year after year. here a pleasure in watching for uulr -w ance in the spring, far beyond that of cultivating annudls from seed. The difference between them is as great as that between the lifelong neighbor- friend and the transient summer Both have their uses, but old friends are best, I am sure. ‘There comes Jonathan now for his dinner, and w pen must be laid aside for a time. ‘e are to have our favor- ite dinner for this time of year——dan- delions, fresh from the fleldl Another old friend rm a . You city, dependent upon mluvn.ud dandelions, as ours, Wae get with the wild dande- lion the flavor of the open field; th'v remind us of the fresh green sod fro: which they were taken, the clear opan air of the upland, the sunshine and the dew, and all the delight we had in mhemg them. With come the hu of all the wild flowers and we noticed as we ed for the “greens.” All th.lu is lost to him who supplies his table from the market, for all this is_cultivated out of them, ‘The wild dandelion is an independent freeborn citizen, while his cultivated cousin is & slave, made to work for the profit of his owner. Then, too, with our dandelions and bit of sweet, home-bred, home-cured pork, we can laugh in the face of the meat barons and need not join the boycott. Glancing this over, I fear. it has no prlu!th:ll suggestion, such _as you de- sire in these letters. So I shall have to try again. Norwich. A Cause for Complaint. Editor Social Corner: I much interested in the Social and there is one subject I would like to have discussed. We rave about Ment trust Sugar trusts, and many other kinds of trusts, but did it ever occur to you that we have one as bad, if not -worse, in the Telephone trust. If one lives beyond the city line they must pay $3 monthly for telephone service, or spend a nickel every time they wish to talk across the line. In Ohio and other west- ern states, the farmers’ 'phone costs $6 a year, and if 1 am not mistaken, entitles one to call anywhere in the county. Now, if you were in Westerly and wanted to call a Norwich party, would cost you ten cents. If in Nor- wich and calling Westerly, it is ff- teen cents. Why the difference? I think it is time we send people to the HANNAH HOMESPUN. very 'orner Etndmothu’ Mrs. Willlams of East [ampton. Mrs. Louis Helm of Stafford Springs after spending several days with her daughter, Mrs. T. R. Prenuue. refurn- ed home Tuesday. Misses Gefi-fllde and Hel'n ‘Wight- man of Stafford Hollow were guests of their aunt, Miss Addie Rathbone, a few days recently. School opened Monday with Miss Susie Pendleton teacher. She supplies the vacancy caused by the resignation of Miss Alice Slater. ELLINGTON Funeral of Mrs. Carcline Pinney— Cemetery Association Formed—Per- sonal Notes. Miss Matie E. Niles is spending the week in Colerain, Mass., with friends. The funeral of ‘Mrs. Caroline Pinney widow of Henry Pinney, was beld at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Eloise Charter, last Sunday afternoon. Rev. D. E. .Tones, of whose church Mrs. Pln- ney was a member, officlated. burial was In the Center c,qmetery Mrs. Mary has been a&p- census taked for this town. & A mee;i‘n‘;u held on Mond.wa af— ernoon 1o make arrangements an ?::.t committees for the May brex: m ‘Warner and Mrs. Beebe ‘of Bast were in town to a.mM the e .‘l of l'rl. P‘lnncym: Sunday. m lost a valtable horse last week. E. B. Kibbe of Hartford was in town Sunday. A cemetery association mas been formed recently, Andrew Griswold and fnnu of Wo-t Hartford were in town ov ng:rk Barrows i3 able to -u u-p a Mr, and M. F. Willlams of Man- ] spent several days with Mrs. H“ Arth lfl' - vnl: ‘Mrs. l!-h‘ and Buell Stkew are the new eufld:tn for the grange. Allerton Kibbe are both bed with something Iy ofs igh llthlnm ‘who will work tvr the good ln u.': t;ho'hhh eon ( 1t count e o o Tight don’t forget there the ‘'wrong if we vm anlr fl-d uu way and then act. One a telephone and would ltke more privile Norwich, R. M. D. Cheap Books. Editor Social Corner: I was inter- ested in Rural D-ltvery'- letter upon the uses of and I wish to assure him that tan cent books now of such gensational A I found Vietor Hugo's Les Miserables I pronounced it of no interest—no good. Ten years after I becune f Mnated vlm it and still regard & most Wwonderful boo! Now l and that I can enjoy Emerson, Thoreau, Carlyle, Metchinkoft, any other writer on any heavy sub- ject, Professor Larkin on Holes in the ,_or ethnological subject. ‘Those start in an eddy of nnuuon do not abways end in the -luug crime. Lisbon. How to Cure That Tired Feeling. Editor Soclal Corner: I do not be- lieve m medicine to remedy what exer- cise and fresh air will correct. Most ‘women think m: they get exercise eir housew mho% air is m% This is the finest kind of ;‘r ‘woman. Many plead that they haven' the time. Take the time and get the vigor to do more in & few hours then can. Be in ONE WHO KNOWS. Wants to Get Thin. ‘Editor Socil Corner: It is easy for me to M fleshy and I have tflufl differ- ent methq reducing ‘my weight g g Sl you know easy way to reduce ona‘o ht? USTA. Norwich. (There is no easy way to do taske which call for persistent self contrul and self denial. The way for a persm to get thin is to eat less and oise & conetan £00d, and a substitute that frequen.ly satigfies the appetite is the juice of #n orange or of a grape fruit, without sug: A ocup of hot water, or ot water with the juice of a lemoa, alen without sugar, will sometimes yive for the stomach to act »n without increasing the flesn. sincers in Ler desire to lose flesh, and hot water taken several times through iho will hasten the loss. No liquid shewii be drunk at meals, but at least ¢, ee pints are necessary between the of rising and going to bed. Tem: ance in all things makes iife a blmln‘ as well as a success. Every excess is against good health—it ll violation of the law of our bdn..-—EdA Soclal Corner.) ne “The Correct Thing. Social Corner Editor: I the hint of “Experience” to young wives to check the thoughtless habit of young husbands who throw their hats down instead of hanging thom up is all right. Where all Mo’l the family have a care and hang up their clothing and replace their de- longings instead of leaving them for the work is made always @ patient worker and has long hours with no prospect of relief as the years roll by. The increasing family doubles and trebles the work, and the responsibilities in the home, and it is only by kindly and aympathetic co- goeration that the mother cag be kept a drudge. Domestic life, Is made crael Zor the wife by these omissions resulting from thoughtless- mess and selfishness. A HUSBAND. Good Cheer Made Practical. Editor Social Corner: Would it be intruding if a woman in the Boeial Corner should remark on the article, “The Farmer's Talk to Farmers” in last Saturday’'s issue of the Norwich Morning Bulletin? 1 think, Mr. Farmer, you have cer- tainly struck the nail on the head. The article referred to covers & great deal of ground; one needs to read over carefully and then when he is through read it all over agaln, and then pass it on thro 14 ‘We hal sm rag us to the earth, when our kind friend leads us on to - tures green and sweet and hel; I thank you, brother farmer, for the If one has health, dull care and the mere monotony of life should flee away like mist before the sun. Dorothy Dix says “The best way to t. rid of trouble is to crowd it off map. You can’t do two things at once, and it is physically: impossid) to fret and whine over the a ments of the past, if you are '3 atter -omounn‘ that looks good to you in the future.” ishes, hrn work. drud, with Soon n all probability) as there is mn life on this but. isters and brothers, we tired . prol A i v Neitschze, or | pri PR L b o think that The Prime Necessity of Life, Editor Social Corner: Necessity—the noc—nydllhh re afr. The erousl: rovfl.d in the pure, fresh all nrgu:d us. We insist upon it lh-l without taking food. He may be de- r.d o‘fn ’uflnk :‘o: some -mwl:‘n:\:: serious injury, deprive for a few minutes and death will result. Impure Air—Those who of the time in the open subjected to the spend most of their time indoors. And ye( all m{ suffer from the evil effects a poorly ventilated bedroom or & “ull' ‘where und;:tl forth .nt a and cONCRS into -aveRy. o4 M the house po disease-producing Onld Air—Don’'t be afraid to .o out doors betsuse it i & little colder than The cold eir will not 0-4 mm if you are properly rwl!y your h‘ood an -mm- your NETTIE J. 8NOW. South Coventry. 8pring Mlu. ant! fact that, according to Solomon, winter {s past, the rain is ovor .nfl gone,” thtu“newou ap) all its -ndnc reminders! Such variet: of reminders, tee, from fil Dbeat o practi- eal. But I wish t0 mention one com- head of the : the “traditionary dose” when the prop- er month for trying the same round—April being chosen momb— so would not the mnlu now be of ser- vice? To & cupful of New Orleans molasses (or the best molassés you in a teaspoonfu cream of Take & Mh-mful of this won umu every momln&. then leave oft fo. n.put this untfl the mixture nine times. It s a very *o1d zen yet often that’ ‘best sort—which certainly does make the skin chlr and urifies the blood. ‘gl‘“ * pale peoples have not & of a chance mrred with the merits of molasses, sulphur and cream of tar- tar biended together! At any rata, I can and gledly do cml? from true and tried e catching cold when using this rmndy, Another ucoll-ut ng remedy we have ly trded is sassatras tea. For that we -(m t— tablespoontuls of dried sassafres leaves and roots in quart of bom vAur for half an Th.n drink hot or E:l until the Ml‘:' that wi Now art 18 wno and a weoond E: these mlo to man; I trust, ever, they will be nnmmor(h “S, C.'s" who with meé may remembaer that u&r all there's nlll “nothing mew under sun.” OLD-FASHIONED GIRL. Norwich, Aprfl 11th. Liniments for Free Use. Boctal Corner: 1 will give the Boclal Corner a few ununonu like their grandma used many oroform Liniment lor -prun- nvd strains: Chloroform l.hm fiuid ounces, camphor gum_one’ aul shake well together till diswolved, \hn add olive oll three ounces, tinoture of cantharides White's Nerve and Bone Liniment: Gum camphor, olls of sassafras, cedar and origanum each one ounce, off of cajeput one-half ounce, aqua ammonia oné-half ounce, oll of tar one dram, it alvo. n vents blistering the hand with the when they are phyiw it is also for lame sldes, back or legs. Tt loosens the cords up in a few minutes. Golden O1] for Rheumatiem: L ol‘x‘h-nd spirits ;t turp‘l;}ln’;."o! ach eight ouncen; tinctur, ne o6 - aaon " Pour ammot ounces and Apply as otun and as freely a 1 hope theme few ll-lmnu will hlh somebody afiiioted with rheumatism -o;:nm. K. C. K. well. The Useful Yard, ng vegoiabies are| with i msmmn COUNTY, R. I. HOPKINTON. Horse Injured in Peculiar Way—Desth of Mre, James Bherman. Mrs. Albert Cla two children Th t:"n Ml N- from & vllh wit nter, Mrs. Albert Hocleston, at wnunu. Pooullar Injury te Hores, One of a pair of black hot recent. sed Dy Walter ¥. “IL- wan ng oye- Y oamm. e the pair o awner wi 5-:‘:-1& " sasoll; T was badly torn and a veterin Wutlfl;, was oalled to lr-‘"- th- ngln. Classes’ Reohoarsal. of the singing elasses Il Cc-0= het, tM Seventh-day tist meeting house this (l‘-d-n laws has been received here of the dut.h ol Mrs, h.a Sher; ate rriage. wes ll z» iller and her father f.lfli.l in Norwich, Ll George "F'he young coule resided here until recently. WEEKAPAUG. Club of Ten Mesting—Visitors of the Week. The Club of Ten met at the home of )ln sa T. Hoxle at Quonooconts: m-& bu-l.o-d pleasant Mhmln wers by Ounml 0 s been Lh. flm u ves in_Provid ence, tas huno here, Cope of Media, u. visite re over Bunda; lrh . Bliven, who hu been wur- rcu-lu with .np and bronchial trouble, mpro' is I Donald Dunn of New York city is the guest of hhhflnminm" for a few weeks, he will wvist bis father, Capt. H. O. Dunn, who 1s station a L5 st days and M Charlen Btanton of Westerly spent Sunday with thelr aunt, Mrs. G, H, Noyea ol ROCKVILLE Roead RMepaire—S8ale of Stoneridge. Miss Lottle Burdick and Mrs, Em- ory Kenyon went to Westerly Tuew- day. .5-.a Bdwards, road commlssioner, and men have besn working the roads sold _ his farm, laar Palmer. ter lnue ter in week. has nr--tnvm‘ ‘The mi] Lh ma t isit V.r-m s they ex) 0 v jont & "fiu‘ 5 J" .H.M has returned lengthy visit ARCADIA Special Exercises at Close of School. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P, ., Frank P. Chase and Miss m’ ‘went n‘ Providence Mon- : _,:nm.w i e lu Iast week with special ex- s hewing rafl- m-:z.m-* old is_at home RICHMOND Mrs, Fra B M it and M Avart oy are opending a Tew dec? Mrs, B. B. Barnshaw ahd Mre. X Moere spent Wednesday in Frove. Mabsl Kirby, who has heen a fow d-y- n :ldvr hom-hl.;; in’ Beaver llvar district Wed- "!““ g A I i

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