Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 6, 1917, Page 12

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T S T S S B A I am told that half the big [er's t 3 poultry raisers in my home county| No iving m g have gone out of the business, simply |.city. He | Dbecause they can't afford to pay wages |+ moni ) 3 asked for labor and prices | rent for_an for feed, even with eggs at fifty cents [a foot of garden; he 3 a dozen or more. | heara—$10 a ton for coal: he pays Practically every farmer in my cents a quart for | heighborhood with whom 1 talk says|without eggs. (Oh, I { . At Trinity Episcopal church he isn’t going to try to do anything |tion that his country pr :| will be holy communion and sermon more, the than he can |cluded a hen-house from °h _he, | a¢ 10.30 a. m. and evening prayer and individually take . “There isn't | one vear, after. all the 1y [ Gddress af 7.30 p. m. - margin enough between the prices he | reeded, sold over "worth of eggs): = is compelled to pay for labor, fertilizer, | h: has ‘to pay miore than doubie for ground feeds, eto, and the prices ho | clothes what rural requirements. de- can get for his crops to leave any-|manded; and now I am informed he thing for himself* So he's going to| 1S ‘on strike” with some hundreds make his own stable manure o Wa|Others, because, as he and they assert, far as 1s will, take care of as much as | they “can't live on” their present his own unaided labor can, keep as|wases! i Tauch stock as he can ralse fodder for, . jonal: | chserved at the morning service. - At Znd let it g0 at tnat. e A B e Bt SRl | e Ccloe the, ropuisr meap s sicn If this condition of things is general [1y better off, in health and in pocket, will' be held. throughout the country—and all re- |in his country A g i e AP the First back-stairs, up-stairs cCity tenement, ports seem to indicate that it is, do 3 Rev. G. Dok friends of the elty, who are’ in. | though his money wages were only & |Rev, G. H. Bwing, pastor, At the Sheltering ; Harris and choir of Grace M k‘lpdtt church will conduct viee.” SR : 14_PEOPLE—14 EswescTe .. GUS RAPIER and CHARLES CLARKE BETTY NANSEN in THE DOCTOR'S SECRET friit § Today--THE STRAND. MUSICAL COMEDY CO. i MARTIN SHOWS 2.30, 7, 840 At the - Broadwa: Congregational church the commuil:n' ‘wiil be held in the morning, and the after- tioon ‘service at 5 o'ciock. Congregational church the ‘sacrament of tlierl‘;ord' supper will be THE LABOR OUTLOOCK FOR AMERICAN FARMERS IN 1917 . | CHILDREN'S MATINEE TODAY b5c Congregational church, o H ~ £ ing, pastor, will preach iving { — = Clined to blame the farmer for high |third those he pockets in the city. by the Word. TThe ¥. . S & B wh v — = - e Rt Soscey or e B e e o itk | prioes md wbremeppiias, seeliin whie | 300 1, A e Hinta o Sinpe Teet at 6,50 oclock: 7 I ERFEC 2§ ) Concert = > o ze : n ? 2 : 3 0 b ‘ B e LTIl Soak purvevor, | & team and mower fo g0 t It nOF &| ' I means still shorter supplies. Bt e T o omo¢ | _ At the Norwich Town Methodist ®HOTO-PLAY ] Orchestra S T had noticed that of late he had been |Man with a scythe to attack it that| It meane still higher prices, O e N e e oliar o day and | Episcopal church there will be morn- 3 RODUCTIONS way. It means that the short-sighted lab- orers who are now flocking to town, lured by the promise of fifty cents or a dollar’ a day more in money-wages, are going to be compelled to pay fifty cents or a dollar a day more for their living and, with them, all the rest of the civic population delivering alone, instead of accom- panied by a helper, as formerly, and asked Him the reason. “Can’t get a man” was his reply: “3¢ 1 do find one, he isn't willing to €o & full day’s work or to work every day; won’t come on till eight o'cloc no Toatter how pressing the calls ma: De, and won't work a minute after five, even If he leaves a load half un- loaded. Last one -1 had didn’t do as Yauch work in a day as a twelve year > ©old boy would, and left without warn- % ing between two suns because he had Eeard of a place where he could get ten cents a day more wages.” - “You're a little short of coal, too, Tve heard,” said L “Yes” he an- swered, “I'm delivering half a ton to * yeople who call for two or three tons, ot | izg worship with sermon on For Our TR A T e But do you suppose you can make this| At . the Taftville rarticular wage-earner look at it that gfifito;’ms;fiey?""fi viay? Mountaintop Visions. In the evening No much. He stmply sees the three! 7 3 dollars and he can’t see through them |the toplc will be The New Year’s Resolutions. . nor ower them nor ar6und ‘them rnor At the Spiritual Academy, Park Dbehind them. 7 - He won't come back to work-on any | - farm, unless he can get his three dol- | Sireet, Wellman C. Whitney of Spring- g : o . = lars a-day there. And we farmers |field, New England's foremost psychic, ~ can’t make him if he doesn’t want to.(-Will sive brief addresses and follos Y7o has the admitted right of every | With psychic messages in the motningsls 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 free-born American citizen to chehw #na evening- idge of his own nose, if he : 5 ny enh At Grace Memorial Baptist church [~ THE SECRET 7 has to spend but seventy five cents TODAY AND TONIGHT ANN PENNINGTON N “SUSIE SNOW FLAKE” A PHOTO-PLAY OF STAGE AND VILLAGE LIFE PATHE WEEKLY FISHER FUNNY FILMS 'PARAMOUNT comiNng MONDAY AND Tuespay PICTUES WALLACE REID and CLEO RIDGELY THE HOUSE OF fi'l'ia_comg’n WINDOWS A neighbor, | am informed, has just sold off ten of his twelve cows, be- cause he can’t get help to care for them, nor enough for the milk they produce merely to pay the wages ask- ed, if he could get the man. Another has plowed under half his Tig strawperry bed, leaying only as much as he himself, with the help of a son and his_daughter-in-law, can take care of. Can't get outside help, tnless he offers as wages more than the berries will sell f “Congregational there will ‘be Sermon _on call such people ‘“short- | deliberately and intentionaliy. Six or_eight vears ago a local car- penter, dissatisfied with local wages, rigved to a neizhboring - city whe:e‘ ighted” CHRISTIE COMEDIES 1ates of pay were almost double. He had plenty of work. here, and earned what seemed to most of us big wages. But those offered in town were big- ger, so he fell for them. Now .that same man is back here Fri, Jan. 12 Seat Sale Another dairyman who I've heard of but do not personally know, has some capital and is slowly sinking it in the hope that the tide will turn, some- abl v % . ‘cally likes that sort of diet. B = fon to poople who want flve |time. and enable him to recover it | UOW-that Stme man is back here | rea there wilt be preaching morning and b4 | el S e a0 S0 LS I, Wl he TRt | 2 e, S R onid 5 e v | whet, the, are e farmers geing to| SERIRE Sy pgntor ao Biadly |y Ta After You | Wed., Jan. 10 ived vet, el " and worl ain = ; ¢ Z - get any track of i Orders put in et gne man, DY Paving him I8 |'twas. “But”. with a humorous twin-|° Well, a good many of us are going | the Lord's supper will be observed at| Its Leader Holds et Cott Presentl Bow won't arrive before next spring if | Wases, The rest of the work he's do: |yjo’or the eve, “I don't have to g0 in- | to get along without help, as far as | the close of the evening service. The GREAT SECRET i Hg ok sl 7 they do, then. P e melt, A0 Piiting In about|to my pocket for money but three|we can; raise enough for our- own s o B Soon's Musical Tl s 1 T et the jobber who |at that, he finds that his milk Is cost- | mes a day, here, and over in Pitis- | vse and leave it to chance and luck| At the First Baptist church, George |~ Watch Character Songs and Dances 2 S g In the village 1 met the jobber who |51 el PG B e Rt two, cente a | DOTO T had to keep reachin’ for a dime | Whether we have angihing to sell or |F. Strouse minister, the - morning a 5. Poogl (it Fommsadinl : O L o, e Joi® i | Quart more than. he can get for it.|© A dollar all the time’ % Not. Some. of wa. will probably pay | theme will be A New Year's Message. | n this Space —6 ; e i et the Catl past six or eight yeers. “No,” he said | {liart more than he can get for |~ “Then you thimk,” asked T “that|the increased wage demanded.—if we | There will be Sunday school at noon ——‘"—‘——""EDMUNDS & LFADO_N when I asked him about it: “I_a'mt|Ilis man who has been asked to milk | y;oner wages per day don't ‘always|can find anybody energecic enough to|and a meeting of the B. Y. P. U. at|7 77 7 1 1 7 ¥ 5 2 goin® to cut any ice this winter. Can’t e ®et_any help at any price.” “Where are So-and-So and Such- end-Such?” I asked, naming two men who helped him last winter. “Oh, So- and-So’s got a job at $3 a day in the elestric works at Pittsboro' and ‘tother 6.30 o'clock. The evening subject will be Has the Church Seen Its Day? mean bigger net ncome per year'? = His response was very vigorou: aidn’t merely “think” so, he “kne: it, because he had learned it by un- comfortable experience. vse a hoe at any price—and trust to our ability to screw out of the already e e et eakes with =" ™| At the Second Cangregational church Tn either case, whether crops be still | there will be morning worship, with ! further shortened, or farm prices still |Sermon for the children, and com- | further advanced, all prospects indi- | munion. Sunday scheol at mnoon, a In the Comedy Skit “GOING TO THE WEDDING” ' MARDO & HUNTER In the Hilarious Novelty mandins_a fourth increase of wages and the feed which he buys to supple- ment his home-grown fodders, has just taken its ecleventy-eleventh step ~up- ting a cent a quart more for milk_than it used to sell for, and he colonial time or of the early days of the Commonwealth have become the great manufacturing and commercial centers, of today. The factories of Lawrence, Lowell, Holyoke, and many | krow a ‘'man who used to get $30 a one’s firin’ on the railroad and thinks | it's costi 1 ahout” fous coenta. & [ v | yous le' i 6.3 a Iler cities still utilize water power w " j mart mo S th on a fi He had cate that Mr. and Mirs. Consumer|young people’s meeting. at 6.30, and |si aller cl PO THE CRAZY RECRUIT | Be's goin’ o get ten hours pay for|UArt more than it used to cost to|menth on & fArw e had o cotage| cate IMAt M M0 i worse time |an evening service with sermon. The|as thelr principal source of encrzy, | ——_tH= CRAZY RECRUITY B BN BSEs work,” was the answer. His customers. meantime, are unan- | rent. The house carried with it a|in 1917 than they had in 1916. And |minister, Rev. H. J. Wyckoff, wlll|although in some mills the power ob- LILLIAN CISH = The fish g foch _ | imousty and vociferausiy of the opin- | garden biz enough so that he was able | v ¢ farmers are going to be still more | preach morning and evening. toined from the rivers is supplemented B plied us with seafood aufing winter[{on that he's “robbing” them of alt Erow in it ail the vegetables. ex-!|vigorously discussed, s e Gl | Aok Bk o e Bt St | T St i 18 e 1o Merier- edosuig fn€heiFive Bart Friadgls Fasture B i hasr't noveaved thus far this|cent a quart. copt a few bushels of potatoes, which r shall we leave the prefix “dis’ | gt o nonger nedecman st b A i) winter. I understand that the whole- sale cost of fish is so high that he And so it goes, and so it is. x * hasn’t the courage to try to sell any | Cleveland once remarked, it i = St such prices as he would have to[theory but a condition which ask in order to make any profit for|fromts us farmers. Last yea ~ himserr. or w a for farming, as borhood but throughout fairly average, as seasons o. blame the weathe; % The feed and flour dealer has at last got a small boy to drive his de- livery team and hopes once more to fr. a con- s weath- rule. only in our neigh- the country Lis family needed for the vear. pay included. besides money. of milk a day and all the His a quart firewood tiat -last verb, cirately state to make it more ac- the’ case? 2 THE FARMER. day. and the da: LETTERS FBBM TWO STATES following with his | Universalist, Rev. Joseph F. Cobb will preach on the subject Looking Fer- Holy communion will be ob- served, and there will be ' Sunday school at noon. At the Y. P. C. U. service the topic will_be The Exten- sion of the Kingdom of Christ. At the Greeneville Congregational church Sunday ‘morning the _pastor %ill preach a communion sermon on 1 is generated. By electric trans- raission the power developed on Con- necticut River near Brattieboro, Vi., and on Deerfield River in Massachu- setts and Vermont is now utilized to supplement the steam and water Pow- er in many cities and towns of Mas- | sachusctts, and many small hydro- and towns with power. Another im- clectric piants supply near-by cities | NMACK SWAIN In the Two Reel Keystone “HIS BITTER PILL" FOUR SHOWS TODAY | erices AT 130, 3.15, 6 and 8.15 Mail erc CONCERT ORCHESTRA zcompanied by check or accepted now orders to his customers. The re Last winter, a full year ago, I drew |not in any reason_ for short failure of soil Perpetual Newness of Great| ) rortant change in the use of power js | Things, to be followed by the recep- seen in the electric light and the.elec- uncie, Clarence Alexander G. Stark, in New London. of New Haven P R Be able to get at least a part of hig?hcrw.\t Washington Gounty, R. L climate, & small load of quartered oak floor- | but in the lack of labor for adequate S P = = ition of new members. The Sunday | tr: railroad, which have revolution- ing strips to the planing-mill to have | preparation and proper care of the ROCKVILLE seent, Sunday with his parents here. | {iool maets at 13 0clock. The Youns | 1sed Iighting and (ransportation in the them finished up. They're there, yet, |crops. 7 = uying Up Tobacco Crops. Feacgies: evice wlil ho Sein ot Bl sities and towne: untouched, because a man can’t be The r: on for the shortage of labor Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Manning of o'clock. The interest of the people in the{ ot to run the planer. was that almost every avajlable man | Funeral of Wayland W. Boss—Mrs. [ Manchester were in town a few dass ! Saowidr redOETew OF Lhb Btath mnd’ farne | - - Late in the fall, just before the first | of working capacity had gone to the| Abbie Tillinghast Leaves for Provi-!sirce, the former buying up the few| The Associated Bible Students hold | munity, great and intimate as it was SS C On 1 3 snow came, I burned off an acre or |city, where he could get higher Wages.| gence. remaining crops of tobacco. He re- | services in W. C. T. U. hall, 35 She- | colonial times, Is still greater and Dbe- more of what had been heavy hay. It's ‘apparently going to be not oniy | - | celved tvo crops yesterday and others . vucket street. There will ‘be Bible The funeral of Wayland W. Boss,! Will soon follow. Prices are betterstudy Sunday morning. The topic 56, who died suddenly Friday night,|than in previous vears. | %11l be The Gathering Together of All was held at hie home. Monday after- | Mr. and Mrs. Dunham of Middle- | Things i There will maon “Ret oLl Cottrell, pastor of 'tcwn and S, E.Whliams of North |jhotodrama of The Creation at the Rockville Seventh Day Baptist fleld were siiests Wednesday at J. B.| Davis theatre at 3 and 7.30, open to church of which Mr. Boss had long Gilston's. = ¥ wmore intimate today, recognized in the iarge measure control of the public utilities cxes cised by the ‘Commonwealth and by menicipalities. As Director George | Otis Smith, of the United States logical Survey, Department of tho I e ;‘;! Friday, January 26th—Friday, May 25th Slater Hall { CHARLES H/ RRISON, Tenor— i MYRNA SHARLOW, Soprano— iq“eif S — Scloists 0 FO S REAT been a member, officiated at the fu- i Grange In@allation. S tcrior, has stated. “The most notab; § Acre lthod‘t potash nera* with Siniging by members of | The oficers of Bast Haddam srange| AL Mt Calvary Baptist church the |sign of ihe’(mes ie (he concral ac- | | . the church choir. Mr, Boss was buried ' vere installed Wednesday evening by ' lastor will preach in the morning on |ceptance of the principle of public o4 hers subscribe for tickets special rate, and re-' [ , Sobebnb 58 o BB | on the farm, beside his parents. He Mr. Dunham of Mattabasset grange, | What the Peaple Sheuld Do. In the|ccntrol” e R Eeper sulscHR L fon itinkets etiarron] Tos | is survived by threc brother besides other relat! Guest From Stamford. Miss Maida Burdick of Stamford, Conn., has been a recent guest of Mich Marion Pendleton, at Pleasant Or- and two assisted by Mrs. j ual banquet followed. | <Mrs. Emeline Stark is azain il | Eier grandson, H. Ward Hotehkiss. from New Haven was here to see her, | be a meeting of the B. Y. P. New Years day. [0 S nci Dunham. The us- |evening the subject will be The Great- ! sst Meeting is to Be Held. The Lord’s | supper will be observed. There will be | Sunday school at noon, and there will - atf iill another phase of the public eraberant utilization of water resources that is(f§ embership of immediate intercst to all the.peopie = H s the use of rivers as sources of pub- ic water supplies for cities and towns = and the necessity for conserving { | oia nas ale . R supdly and protecting the aquality O e iacu randonsd by aey cards at Cranston's or from active mc Produced by treating the soil with New England Ani- mal Fertilizers made of BONE, BLOOD and MEAT— nature’s own prescription for growing plants. New England Animal Fertilizers give all-around satisfaction year after year, because they enrich the sister: | in-| Gigantic Butterflies chard: { Read Booze Sermon. & ini [ e 3 indiy} ! uttert = 3 goe 2 Tic F e % i < ” | _At Trinity M. E. church, Rev. F. W.|order that the individual may at alj ol ity been stadied ' The largest butterflies : soil for growing crops and put it in prime condition for Mrs. Marry Sunderland of Wickford! A meeting of the W. C. T. U. was | Coleman, pastor, there will ‘e holy |iimes have sufficient potable water. | o (he Tocords have heen studiod In | S0 Crart e of which ha. the next is the guest of Mrs. Benjamin Ken- | held avith Mrs. A. W. Chaffee Thurs- ' communion and reception _of. new |The construction of a water suppiy | o 800 @ i\ Yl E season. yon. day aft The ~ af - < i 2 ter 8UPDIY | mation and revised where revision was | 3 wing measurement of 11 inc Lfl k of tash should . " ¥ B ol ernoon. e afternoon was members at the morning service. The|system for the metropolitan district ! ‘(o o and ypossible, a they & ick of po hould not discourage planting, as we ,Mrs. Abbie Tillinghast has gone to siven up to reading the Rev. Billy Sunday school and men's class will lincluding Postor and the nearb-by ci- e (ESTiy AR TOSSUS GEC HIE 87 TR o o supply the best fertilizers, tested and proven good withe Providence for the remainder of the Sunday’s “bodze” ‘sermon, a powerful ‘meet at noon for the study of rellglous | ties is reckoned amons the engineer- | now Jp “hint(d In this 1oport tor e Revised. € potach. - Our desl 4 i winter. . jargument of ‘the' liquor traffic. {subjects. The Epworth league meets|ing triumphs of modern times, and the | a5 on he, pepple of = 't of ¢ i 2 out ur er can make this a profitable season J. Palmer Greene. who has been ill | Mrs. Armold R. Dot and Httle son, at 6.30 o'clock, and in the evening.the | protection afforded to the munieipal| 7 CSPECiativ Foreresiing bavt Of (10 The pension is mightier t th report s a chapter { Arthur Keith, which outiines - |Jogic formations of Massach I'special reference to the drainage {ins ana gives a nontechnical die i for two weeks past, does not seem to improve very fast. have retur] ed from a visit with the |former's parents in Swansea, Mass. for you. Take the fertilizer problem up with him and ‘write for booklet, “Forceful Facts for Farmers.” NEW ENGLAND FERTILIZER CO., Boston, Mass. Brasch of Gonestidated Ronceri subject of the sermon will be Three Old Testament Heroes. veater supply by the Massachusetts Eoard of Health has served as a el for other states. Baptist church the | - In accordance with the tendency of the #co. | SWord.—Life. ith EAST HADDAM Chance for Revenge. At the_ Central New Usc fur Seaweed o 8 e (Chicego is warried because one of | pastor, Rev. Joel B Slocum, D. D.|the timos many uses of water are now | on ‘f the seolozis tHat have | o Heniiee ik HbkAs: vt sicomodsmm b : | lits skvscrapers 15 16 Inches owt of | Will preach in the morning on Jesus | declared to be public uses and placed |Sion OF the seo S rort e A re = T. H. Eldredge, Norwich. Manchester Man Buys Up Tobacco | i ¥y not sell tickets to see it, | Finds Philip; in.the evening on Jeseph|imder public centrol. Tn Januars: 1916, | e outcd ¢ el to ta - ihe place of bone for handies Crops—W. C. T. U. Members Hear —the Triumph of Clean Living, the Bill Sunday’s Booze Sermon. first of four new Sunday evening ser- mons on Men Who Made Good. The ! Sunday school and the City Eible class | for men will meet at noon. The latter will be addressed by Rev. C. H. Rick- the United States Supreme Court ren- dered a decision which defined “pub- tic_use” in the follo) “But to gather the waste ‘and to draw from them energy. | Jsbor without brains, and so i0 save Dark Outlook Tor D. F. Coionel Roosevelt refuses to discuss coming trip to the Caribbean to catch devil fish on the ground that i when visitors desired to see the Ma- _~lsonic Temple ‘turn completely arouna visiting at the noon hour?—St. tuke the promoters did in the old days Mrs. Martha _Smith friends in New Yorl Mr. and Mrs. E. 1s nactivity Causes Const Tack of cxercises ir freque e of Paul Dispatch. Godfrey Bridgeport.—Jonathan the NEW ENGLAND Smith are il of constipatio - with grip. Dridgeport has sent in his resignation | etts on Billy Sunday. The young peo- | mankind from toil that it can be [ 7 " Sl 001 matter, When T. I | fee) heavy “ AI q]'iA[ 4 F E: T_ILIZER 2 t Gov. Marcus H. Holoomb as & mem- | p.c will mget at 6.30 p. m. spared.. in'to"supply what. next to in- |13 & parsonal matter When 6 T | feel heavy ; = Schools about the town opened ber of the state tuberculosis commis- e tellect. is ‘the very foundation of all |pRRRep 1T & POrvam, Tt o oras | Dlexton ’ £ : B Tuesday, after the holiday recess. | sion. The resignation is to take effect | At the Federated church, Rev. Ar-|our achievements and all our welfare. , ghte fO be & Gevil.fs Gra 1apids |ersy, at low ebb. Clan Op.this Walter M. Gillette spent New Year's | immediately. thur- W. Burdon, pastor, there will be | If that purpose is not public we should | 77 : Piils, & il Ingntive ‘that rei morning service with sermon by the |bhc at a loss to say what is. s A T haa | cangerea it Withont z pastor. The subject will be The Mo- | ~The public intercst in this great na-{ Niantic.alr. ana Mrs. James Dond |congested In I - tive of Sacrifice, followed by reception | tural resource is therefore increasing. [Of - .ack Toint hiave came up into the | A gose bt e of new members and the sacrament of {and as these changes take place a|vilase to spend ihe winter with Atrs.|a full abd John F. Luce of Main ing. 25 mt your Druggist the Lord's kuowledge of the quantity of water in the streams and of the variations in ficw from season to season and’ vear to vear becomes necessary. To meet » this heed and to provide a basis for TH E LY OI\IS CO“ supper. Sabbath school | meets at noon, the Junfor Christian Lndeavor at 3 p. m. Christian En- deavor at 6.30 p. m., and there will be | evening service with a service of | song, special music, and a short evan- | gelistic sermon. i At the Mel Zien church, - HARDWARE - Prices ‘the Lowest, Quaiity Considered future studies of the water resources of the state, the United States Geéz logical Survey has issued as Wat: Supp!'y Paper 415 a_ report that in- cludes all ayailable records of flow ley avenue A. M. E. Rev. E. George Biddle, pastor, there will be preaching in the|of streams in Massachusetts. . The 0 Bl k 1 N .\h C Frornins on Law ‘or” Grace, Which? report intiudes the ciassic tong-ume | Wauregan Block Teicphone 1250 Nerwich, Conn. 7 Berk Suws and Frame - .. ... ... ... ...... 3% e Sunday echool meets at noon, the | records Collected on the Mersimack at g y z nion Lyceum at 4 p. m., and there | Lowell and Lawrence, -on -the Con- Best, fully warranted .....................$1.00 will be a prayer and praise service in | necticut at Holyoke, and on Lack Co- the evening with Mi: Cassie Ro6bin- son as leader. “The subiect will be The Boyhood of Jesus. In the even- irg there will be preaching and holy communion. The subject of the ser- mon will be Sons of God. GREAT WEALTH IN WATER RESOURCES. Report lssued on Surface Waters of Massachusetts by United States Geo- logical Survey, Department of the Interior. 2 ituate and Sudbury River by the Metropolitan Water and Sew Toard, as well as records covering shorter periods. In general the re- yort represents the results of studies made under cooperative agreements Letween the Director of the TUnited States Geological Survey and the Goy- ernor of the Commonwealth of Massa- chusetts—agreements authorized by Fedcral and State legislation. As- sistance in obtaining stream-flow Tec- Keen-Kutter, fully warranted. ... .....$1.75, $2.50 - Compass Saws .....................10¢c, 25¢, 35¢c, 40c - Axes, Good Steel Laid Axes. .................75c, $1.00 Keen-Kutter, warranted ...................$1.25 Keen-Kutter, handled, warranted .......".....$1.50 Goodones.................$1.00, $1.25 to $2.50 WARRANTED GOODS AT HIGHER PRICES ‘Hammers. . .28c, 35c, 50c, 65c and 75¢ ehold 74 FRANKLIN ST. Muslin Underwear AT BARGAIN PRICES i Slightly mussed, but otherwise in perfect condition, at prices_that will move them quickly. Gowns, Combinations, Envelope Chemise, Corset Covers, Drawers and White Skirts. Children’s Coats and Hats AT BARGAIN PRICES 'H:uem greatly reduced to make room for new Spring 2 A COAT or a HAT bought here has the The 1ot comprises The water resources of Massachu- sctts have at all times played an im- portant part in the industrial and com- mercial development of the Common- wealth. In the settiement and growth of the American colonies the rivers were the principal avenues of com- MISS GLADYSC.C.FRIES ation and by amateurs for philan- thropic obfects. Miss Fries is with her parents at their shooting lodge in The engagement of Miss™ Gladys C. C. Fries, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Harold H. Fries of 40 West Fifty- ninth street, New York, to E. Roland N. Harriman; son of the late Bdward H. Harriman, has been announced. Miss Fries was introduced to soci- ety two years ago. She has been much identified with the activities of the younger contingent of society, is member of the Junior ue of N

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