Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 2, 1912, Page 12

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12 BREED THEATRE Unexcelled Feature Program “A Girl of the West” In a Hand-to-hand Battle on Horseback, She foils the Villain, and after Miles of Exciting Chase, and Daring Horsemanship, His Confederates are Captured. The rush and roar of deadly FARME ind TO FARMERS modern llerlS everywhere. 4 | SUCCESS DEPENDS UPON GETTING TOGETHER and worn, they are Lt - - overtaxed, strained v for The Bulletin.) | every separate member of the team 1§ ) to the breaking point. /s | con es his attention solely on ery furmer thinks he's|concentrates his s y Tand 'a “littie dawe | his personal part of the field and re- fuses to work with the others for mu- 5 Strengtllen them , now. I'm mot | tual—i. e. for team success. | . itali ] B roth ee ith . Whiah I'm plowing, 1 like to have ane build them, vitalize e hat, (N the furrow and one ¢ ; . about them, | horse walk in th v and one on them wlth a Food' I thought you | the land beside it. This seems to ac- * Tonic. Matt Bennett and Gene Calkins in a Selected Song Program Same Prices Same Quality - Same Hours team raplish better results than when both e trying to walk in the same furrow, o | o trying to pull the old plov idst | -gratu- b 3 e i L D gt vise while the other Is pulling . Bet 4 ‘ot ¢ t ahead. ot even as “those city fellers” |! g ) ’ let’s forget to be fair. The In other words, T want my two horses { . ast, on which the city |to Work as a team, not as contrary- it March kes a better showing than |minded individuals. are come home sick with a cold, Mon.. : i , - _Mabel E. Clarke, teacher in Dale- T > 4th 5th . But we farmers,—too many of us, ' n f | vile, is home sic ues., Shatiine Mo sined yway,—won't see and can't be made R ; Mr. Langhammer came home Tues- Wed. 6th He may be nd often does lack stability of | to see that just this same sort of pull- day with a span of mules. : )e and often is less | iNg together would be effective in | uld Springs is with her parents, having A nice desk and two new chairs ’ Kl 1. | advancing our interests as the pull- | / . have been placed in the schoolhouse at | Suem 4 gy u.;.:‘ll‘ ing together of the horses is in finish- ) ) is one of the oIdeSt) purest East Willington, TraVBIm a Ia car‘” :ren’n':l by s he is certainly | i€ the furrow. ! : J. Knox Garvin & Jennie Platt i 308 cohtion i and best-known of hig own way; less Why is it that the price of farm EXCEPTIONALLY FUNNY PLALET WITH SPECIAL SCENERY AND ELECTRICAL EFFECTS \Washington County, R. I. USQUEPAUGH. ' Visitors During the Week—John Phil- s he thinks must | Produce is always at the mercy of the : s "L,,‘r.],‘y' ,:", “nym | dealers, the buyers, the culators? 4 5 FOOD TONICS. | 1t we were really together in the back room of the store, actually talking this ) ALL DRUGGISTS i L r would —COMING— War on the Plains. CHESTER & JONES You sse, when a young chap from | the Farm £ocs to the city, he epecdily | <O i, Be- lips Recovering from Surgical Opera- Eocentric Dancers Watch for the date. - nting heads against some | Of himself and his own crop and will- s sess score of hundreds of other young men, | IN€ to cut his neighbor, any time, to S e ———— | Joseph Bagley of Providence visited Special Attraction uE hire (he only right Wees and | Come, Tiow, be honest with yoursel! Tolland Count e 5 e R ke his parents in this village Saturday and N "ot TS ey ot exgl e s Tokio Murata f the other Lundreds | I've heard that explanation frankly | STORRS. ed are inspecting building sites,| Mr. and Mrs. Amos H. Kenyon of € e same profound | given by scores of farmers, who - 9. in spite the icy con n Pawtucket visited the former's parents o - . Wher ocose professor | couldn't help but see it the truth, e v —_— Saturday and Sunday. Japanese Wonder Wire Artist. Don’t fail to see him. nce ask Simple Simon the famous |and who appreciated ad policy | Meeting of Book Club—Professer Kil- HEBRON Miss Minnie Webster of Providence it I B2 patrick to Succeed Professor Stene- sdicin o sy !nan been spending a few dl)"s with burn. Whist at’Mre, M, F, Frink's~Former :“'x parents, Mr. and Msa & €. Web- - T A i » : - fou Resident Makes Gift to Chureh. Mrs. Clark B. Wells of East Green- . C for the Bulletin’ Arthur Yaoobe of Tlartford was 'the | 7ICh Was & cailer Mace Batardey. POLPS THEATER—JAMES CLANCY, Lessee oupon i0r the bulletin’s from the ! A @ @ as the | Mrg N. B. Kenyon i8 visiting & few gueat of Mp. and MMrs | over Sunday. L e | Thurston Peck, aays at WWest Kingsion. TODAY — SPECIAL Kenyon and a friend from P “H " & cit Narragansett Pier spent Sunday with | . 2 = 2 e, H Mdher S bl Kenyon's grandparents, Mr. and Grfi‘t lml’)-Al'nEl’m ictur ’ 18 Mrs. T. T. Locke. Gillett sang | Benjamin Bray of Lafayette visited 3 t T. T. Locke's Saturday night and Corn-Growing Prize Competition for 1912 | friends »| Mrs Scenes taken in Ireland and America. hoone of Wakefield was at o Warrenville last week|the funeral in Pendleton Hill church e Subdiy. e PO | Monday of Herbert 0. Miner, who was Elisha Webster of Providence | Migs Deborah Wells was recently | 0 unfortunately shot by his brother, unday with her mother, MrS.|confined to the hayse with a cold for | Dwiglt, last week. _He was highly es- Sarah nklin two weeks, teemed by hie neighbors, who wert Fred K. Crandall and family of West-| 1 4 “gprague hant entered the grad- | deeply grieved at his untimely death erly spent Saturday and Sunday With | g school at Ashawiay. - Mrs. Crandall's parents, Dr. and Mrs.| “Georce B, Carpenter has returned ROCKVILLE Kenyon. E from a trip to Alfred Center, N. Y. Hattie Potter of Escoheag was AT,y TR R mme for Storrs the competition to grow an acre of corn according to the plans f in The Bulletin’s announcement on Jan, 1st, 1912, the prizes 7 $100 to first; $50 to second; $25 each to third and fourth; and $10 each to three others; and suject to all the rules and- requirements ontest | pointed pre 13 Prof. Wayland D. Wileox of Aifr | on mdzer R e > guest of relatives here last week. Close of Succemiful Course. university, Alfbed, . Ty SING'S m,: Fmelin Evening of Whist. e also visited the school here Friday. | mhe closing number of the excellent | to a smail ut well pieased audiency il xiliary wi N Mrs. Potter was a teacher here several courge of five entertaiaments was giv-|in the 8, D. B, church here Sunday W ppen if | of it, but felt themselv s M | years ago. Y ok i en Saturday evening in' Ashaway hall | evening, st fc meet an | anything different ng the storm 2 g Arthur Cooke and family have moved | v Wayland D, Wiicox, a profe: rin| Charles Stons of Clarks Falls was @ promptly | between the dev A pass an enj mi\k\‘, “—‘Ei'f"‘r“ Sl 'e’i);‘o"\"‘l s o Alfred university. Rew. M. Van | caller at Wooderest and Pleasant Orch- ing to scratch | and had to swim s TS and was in ( Ji N e SRR e -~ Horn expressed acknowledgment toall | ards Jast Saturday. £0 keep their neada above wate [ SorivtensHouss Fimad wivh Mbet; of Saturday and Sunday with friends | who in any way had heipad mako them | Klisha C. Burdick of Westerly way When Its Contents—No Insurance. was a caller in |here. H " & success. The Christian Bndeavor so- | the guest of his sisters here Saturdsf s life Wi That's about the real state of the| At Providence Hospital. clety will endeavor to give another| Mrs. A. G. Crofoot and Mrs Emos i guest a M. Philli to Providence | course next season. C. Kenyon attended the stats C, ¥ w nself > his son John, who 18| Rev, E. P. Mathewson officiated at| convention in Providence, SO f ut for turned home o hospital. He found him as arl 1ced that t , too, are |the first piece of driftwood we can s could be under the cir- not risis s but immov- | h to help keep afloat | spent Sunday in Hart- | cumstances. He was operated on for ble result “suthin’ | )W, one round stick isn't a very | appendicitis Friday. us oung | comfortable thing to cling to for long pan makes up his mind tha r|in a tide-way, even when there's only Lamond was in Providence on day 4 ' day at| J r home in ( whole lot of people |one man on it. It's giving to Lobhing | I hraim Wi with pmeumo- Mrs. William Robinson is iil. 5 < s he, and some a little [ about shamefully and =ometimes to 1 C. D. Kenyon visited 2 port Tues- . \ \ wis . t as strong as | rolling over unexpectedly. William Johnson, who has been very | day. Mg e e stronger But a dozen such sticks, Lrough 1 with pneumonia, is t - ™ by side Gift to Church. lashed HOPKINTON Frost Working Out of the Rosds—En- tertainment Course a Success. f that same young man sticks fa n't likely to| X knocks on his s f. Indeed, that | len't it possible fo: farmers to unite | th the years, |in building a ra Or, 1o retura to | our first fig Sir Ora l;-»‘v:m'z“‘;‘,\\ 1:’““"“1] to ms t ! W i ——— (]N TON sldfs \-m‘:’ng havfmi g ark 1 18 | got to thrash all AQ lam road. Careful | ~ # i‘\rnu.m ineffective and self-s -AbT W'Li G autos is reces- S 3 T he 2 ent accidents, hel M. Durkee and Milton L. », who have been visiting at the me of Rev. E. P. Mathewson, re- Al b when farm g g i et Bl e | and practica r il ry general spi ODE | the ethical value of standing rmer ne of the fundamental re “ i | " WILLINGTON 3 1. |in one jnvincible battle-line, ra e la niversal agricul- | than buwhacking around the «¢ ¢ behind I | County Surveyor on Official Visit— | Effects of the Gale. 8 © of the fight, every m his own indiv You've heard of “team-play”? 1t's|,n pory padividual R yurch services a r ed ir air K& ot-ball. | Mrs. Darrow are wyers | All over the world, instances might | g 1o | be gathered to prove the soundness |’ o his | of this belief. It would take a book 4 : ] as ibg as Webste Unabridged to | 1T t ot} + I su T ¢ 1 togetl be- | contain jus s stic A 1 knows any other | ©f the farmers which E | 8 Hisatle A5 & eai Perfectly Safe To Wash Fine st ppising | there are mor “than” Dress Goods. ayers, but they've England are along they understand |the very tail of a world moven Saleswoman to Custommer— * Yes ma’am, this batiste is jties: every one|We ought to be ashamed of ourselve much the prettier and finer of the two. 'BUt g i e s o | Some O us are. In any communit Ahsolutely Pure you, T would take the pereale—it's heavier and will e R B TR X'u\‘ for- ‘sometning soid jn the | brees Used and praised by the most Anty Drudge—"Look here, young ;g:iy&uv;xen :1;:: you P! ) is that hey ure, 2 5 A e : L Lt competent and careful pas- s ol shiar R e ts. They can unite their You believe in competition, you xay-:fi':!:}-” ld Fels-Na.ptln. s g - g i s 14 lhan one sineis opbonent, o' do. L o dore” evern” Josctied | PUdin L try cooks the world over rubbing of the wash'—to wear fine fabries to shreds? s v Tl | S bt S s Vo | e e s B N 1y, a better player and sm. wi 0 see ever rmer in | T P e i L he, e i ey st | GURLEYVILLE . 4 i . -t P g L - - every other farmer there In raisi 5 S The only Baking Powder made P oy ooz, s 9 hat's team play ‘ \'H.ul:“ \‘ '.”“A.nf}“lit;'\,,lr“{:f and better }‘vi-lfllu, Ladies :nloysf::wl:\lm;:;'suaner—i’er- from Royal Grape Cream of ikve tsamisplay -if PRl 10 mee, ik Sl Lo aios Tartar—made from grapes You've heard 2 woman say: a second-rate crop, or willing t bR ¢ to, ““This waist has worn terribly. I've ToGet . Competiti only washed it a couple of times and it’s falling to pieces.”’ Clothes cost too much nowadays to be worn out in the wash,—to be boiled and scalded until the life is gone out of the fabric—and then rubbed to shreds on the washboard. You must use the soap that preserves the fabrics—Fels-Naptha. Use it the Fels-Naptha way—in cool or lukewarm water, with no hard rubbing. You'll get through the day’s wash in one- half the time and with much less effort. And your clothes will look whiter and fresher than you ever saw them. before. Follow the directions on the red and green wrapper. Use any time of year. leads to general bett Fy Don’t worry if some crank goes to| Satl ning Miss Eunice Wood Always &,y fl‘e Genlnne fabout “sociaiistic tendencies.” Mere | ent : . n e words don’t count very much in the |ho! g big game Calling names isn't ar- scared by New York City 5th Ave. and 30th St. A Smart Hotel for Smart People 1 Located near all railway terminals, underground and elevated stations, e o B theatres, shopping centres and commercial districts. Comfortably asd Luxuriously Appointed gument. More people ar | bug-bears than are ever ea ¥ | bears. The main questior ha | to call anything, but how | right thing. > e it “organization, o oprporati « he common good, " Miss Mildred W or just “team-pla what you will: the words you use matter little | home in Abington. compared with the work you do. - MANSFIELD DEPOT Superb Cuisine and Service. AR B et T hate s it el Splendid Orchestra and Choralcelo. Of | work, pulling and hauling in uwr.xy!NeWs of Cold Weather in Nortn Car- CONCERTS DAILY IN LOUNGING ROOM difterent directions ,as you will when olina. Matinee Luncheons and Afternoon you bunch up along the rope and, all - Teas. together, yauk the thing one wa The ladies of the Baptist church TH FARMER held a social Wedn v evening with manuvfactured b‘yi ———— la zood Attgndance and a Peas Covers Multitude of Sins. It was all right for Lorimer to wrap | , Mr® Fred Snvder is . himself in the flag. The American | PREUMOrIA. = Mrs. flag, like charity, is broad enough to |3fmE forLer | oo cover a multitude of si ChICRE0 | 1y RIS e g b he or in Se n Pines Pribune. the winter in Southern Pine: Sold by all leading it W e ists | hlladmh MeCormick's statement | c%%édfi&?aflgry Onesizeml wé aMl. Y!"":V\'(! that the motto of the insur g ! PR G e CASTORIA | Rooms single and en suite at consisteat still “Anything to beat Taft.”

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