Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 28, 1912, Page 12

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INTENSIVE. FARMING OR EXTENSIVE EFFORT | | n -mny for the Bulletin.) y good mnx that I'm a lmlc 00 en- sald t the other 0 me the of , you're not 4 veal farmer, any- u're ner. | ot course ¢ garden X he, Baby) righ "wm you’ tell me has 1o tregs o garden_dit-) yéu cdme n{n 55 tacks, “difference be! iun tlu work- en and the working of a ’::-u plnt xhau-une work the same, izer. a © -same i an acre of garden that you |duce acres of farm. In ‘money. back and fair fore, you put the and green peas vand c:umlawsr, etc., into corn and n you slam on your -ord ‘ot a6 iderably more than ten umes . ¥ou could get for the yield of an jore of corn or oats. T m of luck in’ your market. lh“n ive farm- | ! ,mlz ly iansive far ercpn Whlflh vl.ll ‘With eommon f: uld be little pront uld mug 1of agtual S e hec-ut;“uuesr o weadon and in do iple. A man dont "f-rm acres of land, if by "hfl‘l Bl he can tarm ul can m o ""fi‘m g0l it by r-mn. dmmqvexy tarm now; let's reason M lll llunt Wllh foes Isavecraf that five- B thovsors prlnmng : tnirty bushels, nt,nm e. iher e haq- e o notap ;iie in forty acros/at, say acre,—44,000 in all ,which, at He I8 also pay- whole, e is al for the whole, etc., per cent, la 4240, across the road, Smith, who al re. , has ing: his interest charge At the same time he split his taxes and has reduced le-half the cost of e. He keeps a te: the same monthly expense as Jones, #nd be, also, has about .fifty: loads of CERTAIN RESULTS Many a Nerwich Ci Sure They Are, | K'nowl How Nothing uncertain aboit the work of Doan's Kidney Pills Jin' . Norwich. (There is plenty of positiv this in the testimony of & evidence should skeptical doubler convince, the. moat _Read the following Mrs. Mary Neff, {86 M:.\ln Street, orwich, Conn. years a member of my family was subject to attacks of kidney coraplainisy He suftéred from pains across the loins and at times could scarcely get about, oh account of his back ‘being 56 ‘stiff | The kidney sectetions were srregular in passing anq often’ con- | Pills, procured at N, D, Sevin & Son's proved of benefit from the first and soon every symptom of kidney complaint disappeared.” firm all 1 said n y Pills in the test for publication in 1908 occurred to change of Doan's Kidney Pills.” 50 | tents. _ Foster-Milburn , Buff: New York, sole agents for the Uni| Remember the name Cheer Up! You won't be bothered by the blues if you keep your liver active, stomach|in good tone by timely use of the' time-tested, and always effective family 1c manure to use. 1es has each year, a little:less than séyen acres in potato the same in oats and tie same in clov- ere Instead of draw r\nz out his maure a the spring, when it is\ half-frozen nd mdstly unrotiad, upon his potato kround, at the rate of tive loads to the acre, hi¢ puts it, inlate summer or fall, on his clover, at’tHe rate of more than séven loads to the acre. @ turns his| clover aftermath under‘and grows his | Ba potatoes on it the following season. As a resuilt this management, he “{rets fully 300 Hushels of potatoes to the acre, he gets at least sixty bushels af oats, he gets o plump three tons of which is, ‘better for cows . an) kind of hay. As’ ll\yane can readlly see, he. is nctul getting more pro- nty ~ acres = than on and labor. At wasting only half as much on interest and taxes and mll:“ hfs igent, use of. & joreover, his ntl use er ‘bay - enablés m) o Cidpmnas % ‘order;| Jones, from, m‘g, at an eqfial ex- 0 pense - for me same fime, 4 | # .congiderable ‘sh inordin- | Ately” expensfve ;r n he woum _other- wige have to Buy for feed. That is to say, he sema‘ mere ‘money from i’ tw cros than Jones fropt m. forty, r\na l- speading” mch less In maintenance clnrpas Still nmm,—ml hare'd the portant point of il by "r:n of clover into cl a8 a olunlm Workl -for-nothing ally, he is win- nowing out of the air gvery year, and Tsyckling up from the sub-sofi more thee fertility' than & hund I stable, mlhrn ).bqum:le: :l‘:g:lod. | could give him. ‘orell " He s not only making more, each | 94Y Yo | $eason, but he ix aanually addipg. more | nan all his interest-and tax charges would amount v, (o te isherent value of his farm. He is making it bettér and Ticher and more’ produetive every yeat. He is saving half his interest and, Aat the same time, increasing his pr al.d 1f that ist't “ood business what would be? VIO | Nory, | dont Waft do. a0pa | 1y guyisi that| (hings wnW work ofit just according to Fule, Snm— times Smith might not & well Jones, mighto't, | efther! san# Smith might do even better. lhe years as they come afnd reelmnln y and Large from what I Have read P what 1 have eer, and from my own experiénee teaches, § am con- Produce off twenty acres, intensively farmed, than-the ‘same .two, can off forty actes, negligontly worked in the ‘usual forty-acre manner. If they only get a8 much',they are still ‘to mo £00d” by reason of what they have saved In the muintenance of the ex- tra a e, and by reason |of ' the dy en memen‘ in \p.l!ll- of "the half they work, i ance, you lu‘ shen d,.@":”"‘ id Tarm for “acro o or. ahout B0 an atte Ha procesds’ so farm wbout eighieen acrew ‘of i, ifi- unslwly, the rest helng left quite Louchu a8 pasturage. On those actes ‘he comes to raise whacking I ‘dfope, wo b ms to Sitract univer, lllnill.en{ lon. It gets so that other farmyits, bragging about their corn or | theif” grass, say that {t's “pritty dum nigh: as good as “So-and-So's” "In loss than, ten' vears, ‘he sells - fifteen acres of that cightepn for $90-an cre, and_is now rapidly proceeding to malke &nother ‘patch just as gdod and just as profitable, out of another comner of his old pasture. Wouldn't that sirike you ‘as fairly successful farming® It's just what has been done ngd can be doné dgain. Why, the Department of Agriéulture demonstrated, under whose guldance that man Bideauldt, .of whomF 1 wrote last week, has made such i success In Texas,—the demonstrator declares that there isn't.another farg iIn the vi- cinity which woul have done just as well it handled o3 wisely and as dilligently. X There's still another thing about this tel ve farming of small farms;—it ®Bpens the way for more farmers, At present the sud fact seems to be call for;~—dren't yielding enough to go ‘round. And yet, under present meth- pds, we farmers are producing about as 1 used to off forty, as coramonl managed, also permits me to sell thal by similarly prodiictive management, home for two farmers, Last call and by by no means, least fective 3 ourselves, about hi pri achievement, or triumph, of leadership. | Th | ing over wi { of telling how you did 1it, The farmer who raises a slam-bang- ing big crop of 'mo: . t least two inches »!mv\ ng it off than been ; pesky ('\7/ And, sinc sen ttedly old as THE FARMER, alent that T.-R. is th her At¢hisn Gloos, LETTERS FROM TWO STATES. Windham Gounty . SOUTH H WINDHAM Plumb Organize Study cl\n—-w- Thomas Fox Il Charles Lynch Dies.in Washington— whist was given by aftefnoon _and A number of guests A e Willimantic and ° A benefit and Mrg, Parks Tuesday were_present from Wiliam E. Backus has been in New York the past week. Rev. Maurice Raymond Reuns or- ganized a study class in the Christian TEnflenvm' efficiency campaign. T d Siate has been in Worces- ter and Providence the past week Set- ting up laundries hnm by the Smith- Winchester Mfs. .C The following al esda; ber]nln Miss Mary Maine, Miss ke P. Barstow, H. C. Card, ‘Pearl Chamberlain and Pl'elultl Chamberlain. George | H. Backus ands Willlam €. us were in_ Hartford Wednesday listened to Woodrow Wilson. nce Tubbs of Dorchester, guest of her | grandmother, Mrs. Nellie Tubbs. George Ennis was a visitor in t‘wn {tendea ‘the Brookiyn Mr. and Mrs. CI Mr. and Mrs, Matrice Golden were ¢ |at Thompson, attending association meeting T\Ieldny Michael Eh.l‘ldfln of Milwau- kee has been called home by the se- rious iliness’of her mother, Mrs. Thos, Miss Emma Babeock i in East {Hartford, the guest of her cousin, Mrs. Giles Putnam. Mrs. James Mal pe 18 visiting friends Barstow is spending few da)s ‘Mib her. sister, Mrs, Fiske of Upton, Mass. Mrs.' Thornton of Baltic' ll at flla home of Jumu Maine. TDAYVILLE Happenings of the Week--What Inter- este. Losal People. The. Ladies’ Ald soclety met with ot | Miss Bernice Cogswell Wednesday af- on. o-wnld Street was in Bol(on Tues- ' E. G. Bidwell is visiting her %F Bidwell. Downing is occupying a pll’! ol )(n’ Sarah 1. Geist's house on M)ldred Leavens, daughter of Fred Leavens, died Tuesday afternoon. The burial took place on Friday. She will bé greatly missed by her young Fred Jones spent the week end in' R. Mlfl Hazel Smith, who has been mv is_abla to be out. Mrs. Jacob Bruce 'has returned l!vln Jefferson, Mass., and is with her sis- lel‘, Miss Louise Riley. Willard Bennett spent the week end Mrs. Fanpie Ben- Hartford to wmt Albert. iting in Boston and Broskivle - il ' with “his mother, it Pl Mrs. ©. A. Russell is visiting in | Worcester. Vinced that. two shen ' cag get more| " i \yinifred Dougherty 18 in Dan- lelion for a few days. ‘tained) Mr. and . Miss Gladys White of H-.ruord spent Sunday with Miss Ed; George, Willlams was in’ Foster, R 1, for Sunday. Mr. and Mre. Frank Burnett spent Sunday in Pawtucket, B. I Miss Florence mmnsn is in North- Attending State College. Richard Wesy. has' entered Storrs M. T. Elmer of Providence has M 'is taking his vaca- Interests of the Ghurches—Funsral of Lynn Mass., spent Richards of S "Rev. T. A. Turper exchanged pul- plts Sunday with Rev. E. R. Kendall ot Woodstock Hill. Killam, Mr. and Mrs. E, B. ughter have been visit- lam in Thompsonville. They planned to have a photo of four generations taken while away. Mr. and Mrs, Wendall| Witter at- tended the Vermont state fair at Brat- ‘uesday, making the trip by that the farms of the Unit¥d States 3 aren’t produeing what the = markets oing to 'Fldrida. Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Witter and son making _preparations spend the winter in Florida, going for the benefit of Mr. Wittér's health Two Feet of Snow in Wygming. Mrs: H. C. Leavi oll We can. The problem before us is how tol get’ more stuff out of the ground and into'the markets. To do that there .must be | more” farmers, farming tore effectively, ere isn’t §0ing to be any more ground lo speak ing a trip of keveral weeks to O Neb,, and other western states. t of Casper, Wy who ‘has been visiting her sister, Mr: G. L. Upham, received home a few days ago stating that two. feet of snow had fallen, but was melt- This is. caply heavy a snowfall Mrs. Solomon Johnson, who is help- less from rhaumansm is boarding with Tntensive farming, whick will enable mo o get as much off twenty acres unused twenty to another farmer who, Hamr nn to California. rt Paine. wife , who have been spending the summer at J. M. Paine’s, for Pasadena, in Chicago en can make it do as well 28 my remain- half. Thereby those forty acres can be | made to produce twice as much as | ) one farmer' can make" them, at the | same time, prévide a living and a| Cal,, stopping ten d: _Ear! Bemis of Waterbury-is visiting rs. Anna Bemis. NORTH STERLING 1 Providence M.ln Bwu C. P.:Harvey's an argument is the reflex ef- | better farming will have on | 1 never knew a'farmer yet | who was fit for his job, who didn't { get moré solid comfort from: bragging | crops than he could from a | v with eranberry sauce. | s something ‘more.in‘a’ big crop of handsome' potatoes than the market or the premium at the county | see Trving T0alr, ‘oither,. There's” the.. seo ok several there made an automobile trip fo Deer- fleld, Mass. ople were much pleased to ink on the mail route last John Griffith is in Danlelson, Telle Blanchard. Mr. and Mrs. Leon A, Dexter were in attending the s the chancé ,not only of boast- | carlng for Mrs. 1t you'vel done, but also | Providence last |funeral of thelr aunt has sold hls fa farm in Coventr as ne thinks he!| | h"‘ ng o his new h rd spent Sunday | Especially when' he's beaten the town| and the 3 Whic much .more likely to. do by lntensive farming than he is by extensive dispersedness of effor A large number fr dea becomes tnove prev- | WHich Wax a Tecord brea found of his| \\u.m.m_ o School Book rrevising the read- | , Herald. | A Difference. eeds o new hat when here are no PLAlNl-m Sale of Timber. Miss Ellen B. Lynch received news Sept. 21st of the death of her brother, Charles Lynch, in Washi Mr. Lynch had been very ill for sev eral months. He was a’som of the late Thomas and Lucy (Greene) Lynch of Portland, Me. and “esves his wife and three daughters, also. three ters, Mrs. Lucy Noyes and Mre. riet Day of Portland and Miss Ellen B. Lynch of Plainfleld: - Attended Fair. > Among those from here who ntend. ed Brooklyn fair were' Mr. And Mrs. Edw. Palmer, George family, the Weeks family “and others. A number had exhibits. Miss Yyonne Gauther has been ill for'a few days. ‘Three dauntm of Albert * D“#.s’ were taken sick with day of 12 week. One of the children was at school that day. esda. o remain_seriously fiL. W School closed Monday pight for ten days. Buys Timber. Charles Tillinghast is reported to have bought the timber on the Wil- T o e oluntown Monday morning to ome of hu dat Gardiner, sore throat. Miss Margery N Mrs. John ‘Webster * and . daughter have Teturned from & Visit fu Worces. ! Subscription. Whi A number o! i pele st s B el BT Turder's In Bnu'.l Miss Dorof ot /her brntmr Mr. and llrs. John ¥. Wood: navn moved to the south part of Rev. W, M; Brown's ‘house, Mr. and . Page are to occupy the orth Mrs. B. K. Leffingwell has been vis. of ,/Willimantic w thaz guest of Miss Grace Bates und.uy i Mrs. Hathaway, nw-y and Miss Thompson of Bridge- port were week end guests of Rev. M. R. Plumbs. Miss Hath- . Attended the Fair. W. Al Lartabes attende Mr. . and YI.].'. MaGuire for their oklym, N. Y., home lo.y (Saturday}. 1y + Fred Shippee of | Alfred P. Ab\».d Brookiyn, N. Y. ending some time with his par- ents at their summer cottage 0w Dog Hill. i Mrs. HMM Many local peu;l attended I!ook~ lyn fair. Plainfield grange won prize $26 for its exhibit. | i Church Interests. . Rev. J. W. Payne of Jewett City, who occupled the puipit of the Bap- N'Lorne Gretg wers 1n | {5t chureh Sunday, wifl preach’ again New York for the week end. Sund‘y with hl . Gheai bad; it ‘Dt s r. and Mrs. Charles Richards Loulse and Bernard hbridge, Mass. EAST WOODSTOCK Wittar Family t Spand Winter. in Florida—News of Wyoming Snow- xt Sunday. Rev. R. L. Roberts expects:to occu- 1y his pulpit Sunday morning af absence of several weeks vx-mu nls \parents in Nova Seotia. : ‘The directresses of the Ladies’ Aid society of the Methodist church met with Mrs. ‘A, B. Sprague Tuesday evening to plan thelr work for the coming_ year. The Bpworth league held 1is month. ly business meeting and social with r. and Mrs, Orville ~Main Fri evening. Funeral-of Mrs. Graft. The funeral of rs. EI Cratt, Who_died at her home in Central Vil- lage Tuesday night, aged 91, was held from Al Hallows! church Friday morning at 9 o'cloek. Miss. Gladys Cushmian of valdeneo is visiting Miss Faith Batt Miss. Helen' Maxwell -wag faken to Day Kimball hospital Fridey and s very sick with appendieftis: Mr. and Mrs. John Wescott of Proy- idence were guests over Sunday of the |. latier's mother, Mrs. Thomas Mat- thews. Mrs. Alice Wilson is in Worcester. On Western Trip. Mr. and Mrs. W, W. Rood are tak- maha, WOODSTOCK VALLEY Local People Entertain Friends from Far and Near, - Elmer E. Goss recenily entertained his son and wife from Boston. Miss Jessie Butler has returnmed to her duties at Attleboro sanitarium, Mrs. Etta Smith is visiting her brother, Harold W. Bloom. Miss Florence Kenyon 'has returned to_Cornell infirmary at Ithaca, N. Y. Miss Cora A. Kenyon of Willimantic has been ‘spending several days with her uncle, Allen W: Kenvon. Mr. and Mrs. O. A. Hiscox 'spent days at Windsor and while Joseph Morrison of Willimantic was at Allen W, Kenyow's over Sunday, Sabin S. Carpenter, Anthony W. Kenyon, wife and daughter of Putnam and Rufu; spent Fri w g Cowan of Grosvenordale ay and Saturday at Allen Kenvon's, coming in Mr. Cowah's automobile. ral from here attended the dance at West Woodstock Friday evening of last week. Tall Corn at Barstow Farm—Dr. E. E. Bennett Injures His Hand. Deacon Charles Barstow has some ™n ome hill of five earx on a stalk and each stalk meas- ured 11 1-2 feet tall. In another field his corn is 10 feet and 8 inches tall, with six ears of corn on each stalk. This town was very quiet Wednes- 50 manv attended Brooklyn fair. bert Pellett lost a_valuable heifer Thursday, She was hooked in the throat by another cow and must have dled insisnily, The Rennett children pasture when they home from echool and t, who got a man 15 bridge Is not up ei. DUt Wi} Be pats e s mew s bridge put in lts place, which will be L great Improvement. Mr kell has returned from the liosp t & net well yet. Iennett starfed up Mg BROADW / WEDNESDAY, OCT. Z—Matinse and Evening BudgFisher’s Original Creation Direct from Record Rup st New York MUTT Imitations HORLICK'S MALTED MILK Hade in the largut. and sanitary Malted | plant in the world - . We do not make “milk products=— Skim Milk, Condensed M.llk. ete. Uubstitutes. GettheWell-Known Round Pukngev JEFF Il.dll Colfl.dy Sensation.| One Big Laugh Which Continuss fer ?—0 Orchestra Cirel Fi Rows 7I., Illlnu of lllu::;’“o""' sl o, SPECIAL MATINEE AT 3 Don't forget to bring the il cony Omo. N Original-Genuine HORLICK’S MALTED MILK Made from pure, full-cream milk drg‘ °'“&" i Manday, Sept. kd:r-:w.‘ly_ll.r M“.L..Mfim‘ n Jer- ine engine, which started before z from New ught it would, caught his right tertaining her s sey. Mr. and Mrs, F. W. Martin and sons attended Broo tair. Miss l!u.ry E. G. Kelly of New York of New Haven have he;n guests of Viola Jewett at ‘Mo hand was bndl)' injured, is swollen and painful. Eugene Safford was in Plainfield ‘Wednesday on business . Charles Oliver resumed his studies at l.he Connecticut Agricultural college Iimu N. Oliver left Tuesday to en- ter the University of Pennsylvania. Giles B, Keenay was in Seynmr & Laverne Old Time —in— Local Act closed on Wednesday 'and nearly all the children with their par- an{s apd friends attended Brook]yn fair, Mrs. Carrie Northup of So\xl\!hfldga visited Miss Cynthia Phillips Sunday. Everett Gallup of Auburn, R. L, was HAMP[ON Hammond has moved his family to the Governor Cleveland house whlch xn theria has brokem olit in the ylie schoal district and the school is d. A child of Albert Dawley died trom the disease Wednesday night. Miss Ruth Kellogg left Thursday for her home in Boston. ;hlt she is so much ; Mrs. Beatrice 'Frink and Mrs. ‘Lucy Crane visited at Edgar Wilcox’s Thurs- | ntly purchased. e attended Brool Al are pleased o s spending several e Here helping his (nner inj the hervesting. Miss M. Pearle is a guest at the home of Miss Gertrude Brennan' in Mra. Judy, Hazzard and Providence are visiting at the Gullup | At Caunwxu-. N. Y., Miss. Euphemia Apple bécame bride of Du Boise Crabh, PILES! pur.s_z»musi INDIAN PILE OINTMENT and Ttching Plles. hfilnfimm CLARK'S CORNERS s g va s tot i ) Students Return to College—Personal It Wsmu.mw-m MR. EARL P. COLBY, Barytone Mrs, Louisa Kéetch and son John of Wilimantie were recent visitors Mrs. Alice Murdock'has réturned to Boston after spending some| time with her sister, Mrs. Alien Jewett. Mrs. Robert Jennings has been en- tumors, uuu.muu.nmm wwwmmmnmu WILLIAMS MF6. C0., Props., Cleveland, For sale at Lee &' Osgood Co. ' When You're Fagged Out nerve-wrecking day, and come home com Pest 7o, imporative. Your body demands -lcop. it dr do you'tass about, throi gh a restless hight I 50, take a oup af. Six, leldmg aoston Symphony Artists Tuuhy. N«mlh:fl-—-HDN H(m B. HULBERT Lecture “The' Oriental Clmsboard” The”forermost mstfum Tuesday, January '—TH! Instrumehtal trig, hzrp, violin -and flute Male quartette and prima-donna soprano TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 18—DR. EDWARD A. STEINER fii2 he celebrated author and fecturer | N TH! SQUARE PACKAGE hot before you “turn in” Ywill soothh 9-—#--- nw':u, fm‘fdly ot{mul.&l your nmu ly and in pri Do b M,mu e Tq -tPrn'rrhl Puho-/ud Um--l Recipe Book Course Tickets—Reserved Seats $2:00, General Adm-un $1.50. .Single ‘Admission 50 cents. Tickets now on sale at ¥, M. C. A. and G. A. Daviy Stors. MIM Illk D.’l“ BORDEN’S CQNDM MILK CO Manufacturers of Geo, Wm, Bentley Co., State St, Boston, Mass. Y. b o o e S ANNOUNCEMENT FLORIDA THE CHURCH TICKET AGENCY OF PROVIDENCE, R. I. Special arrangements and low rates commencing Oct. 15, and every Tuesday. Send for Literatuse, UNDER PERSONAL DIRECTION OF FRANK:C. CHURCH 58 EXCHANGE STREET PROVIDENCE, R. I DAVIS T " Thursday — Friday — Saturday HE BEST WE © AND WE TRY OUR BEST | HANSONE, MAL‘-O::“A.NB ILLUSIONS One very remarkable fact in con- nection with Crawford 'Ranges is that nobody ever willingly changes from a Crawford to a range of ‘any othier make. TRIBUNE BUILDING There must be a reason — we believe there The Single Damper (patented,) the scientific Cup-Joint Oven Flues. that heat the oven in every part alike; the Ash Hod (patented,) instead of the clumsy ash pan; -these are some of the Crawford time and troublé savers. If you will carefully- examine and compare the Crawford with any” or all other 'cooking ranges you will see why Crawfords do better work, with more comfort foy the cook and less waste-of time and are several. Wauregan House s the kindly Indulgence of fis patrons and the public for una- inconvenience because HONEY JOHN! | Biack Man, Funnyman, Golden Shess. and the New and Screamingly Fumwy CIRCUS DAY” FOUR NEW PHOTO PLAYS Which We Know te be Geed. the Bohemian Girl witl - regular Friday changes ' and repal made for the b its guests and the public. Every effort will be made t3 m.ke the inconvenience as littls and the time as Short as may be found practi- The Parker-Davenport Co, ter service of Down §tsirs 10c. GET THE HABIT. for the illustra- ted pamphlet. NEWMARKET HOTEL, 715 Boswcll Ave. First-class Wines, Liquors and Cigars. | Bow, Meals and Welch Ravebit served to | attent order, John Tuckie. Prop. Tel. 43-6 Teli06-3 / order 5 mmmm FOR SALE BY M. HOURIGAN, Norwich Agent: Palms and Fems at Reuters (Assorted Table Ferns for ferneries 10¢c each Made by WALKER & PRATT MFG. C0., 31-35 Union Street, BOSTON )

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