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PRICE. - PUTNAM, - - NEW FALL AND WINTER CLOTHES ANY LONGER? YOU WON'T IF YOU COME TO OUR STORE AND SEE THE LOVELY.GARMENTS WE HAVE FOR YOU. WE ARE THE “STYLE CENTER.” WE PUT “UP” QUALITY MATERIALS INTO OUR GARMENTS, AND WE SELL YOU FOR THE “DOWN” Bugbee’s Department Store Two Weeks—Rosario Pratte Found Driving Autotruck Without License —Goodyear Employe Dragged Inte Machine—Corne Church to Be Lai Mr. and Mrs. A. V. Weodworth will be in Taftville today attending the Tunera] of Mrs. Woodworth's father, John Livingstone, 85, who died in ‘Willlmantic. Additional postage now required on letters have boosted the Daniel post ‘office receipts by about $200 du thy ‘first two weeks of November, as com- pared with the same peridd last year. British subjects who are resident here were jubilant Thursday over the smashing victory attained by Lieut. General Byng’s forces before Cambria. To Be Guest of Col. and Mrs. Gale. Mrs. Riensi Robinson will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Gale, at Norwich, at the inauguration of Pges- ident Marshall as head of Connecti- cut college. . b Chris Kaylor of New York and Mrs. Cora Howard of 'Webster haye been guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Child. _Thanksgiving day leaces of absence are prizes that members of the 3Sth Company, Fort Terry, are wishing for. Holiday Post Office Hours. Thanksgiving day the Dantelson post office will be open from 6.30 a. m. to 11 a. m. There will be one complete de- livery by the city carriers. Rural service will be suspended, but those seryed by the rural route may get their mail by calling at the post office between the hours of 9 and. 10 a. m. In the evening the outgoing mail and the | lobby will be closed at 7 a. m., a half hour earlier than heretofore: Best Willimantic thread, 7 spools for 25 cents at the Keystone store.—adv. HAD NO ISCENSE. Yet Rosario Pratte Has Been Oper- ating _Autotruck. Rosario Pratte, who has been driv- ing an automobile truck for F. A. Da- vis, will ‘be in the town court this morning to answer to a charge of hav- ing ‘driven the truck without having - - - CONN. - TO FARMERS an operator’s license. This is the first court case growing out of the estab- lishment of automobile inspection here uncer the Wirection of the state motor, vehicle department. Mr. Pratte ad- mitted having no license t6 drive. Inspection work shows that many motor vehicles are not onerated in ac- cordance with the state law relative to lights, and manv warnings relative to this negligence have been given. DRAGGED INTO MACHINE. Employe at Goodyear Has Leg Frac- tured and is Badly Cut. An Albanian emplovgd in the Good- ear Cotton Mills in Goodyear had hi arm caught in a beamer Thursday and was dragged into the machine and 5o wound up in the yarn that it was nec- essary to cut it away to release him. His leg was fractured and he received €Written Specially- for The ‘Parmer.) At one of the innumerable - dairy mventions continually being held at ‘ashi; or elsewhere, Dr. Pear- son, tant secretary of agriculture, a week or so ago made a speech in Which he divided up the milk produc- ere of the country into four groups: 1. Those who know how to produce clean” milk and do it; 2. Those who would produce clean ik’ if they knew how: 3. “Those who know how to produce eleah milk but don't do it: 4. Those who don’t know how to produce clean milk and don't want to Probably this grouping is all right for the dairy business. The more I think about it, the more it -seems to me as if it was a pretty good way to_divide up farmers of all sorts. There are those who know how (o farm and do it: those who would be lad to farm right if they only knew £ow: ‘tices who know enough put are 00 durn shiftless to use their knowl- edge: and those who not only dom’t know how to farm but don't want to be _taught or shown ' how. - And, by gravy, that last division is about as big a5 all the other three combined, in my part of the country! Of course, when we come to talk about such things we need to be fair- Iy_reasonable and tolerably tolerant. It won't for those of us whose noses maturally point_exactly north- northwest by north to condemn, off- hand and unheard, all _those whose noses tilt in another direction or at “clean definition of “good sre mefther of them neces- ptions of our practice, — There is, for example. a wide dif- between the definition of _milk™ as_given by the New city board of health and that would be given by more sensi- Sle men. . there might be a consider- able mmm:_‘ between the idea of el y a New Eng- struggling _ with _the ridges of some Hardscrabble Hill, and ‘wheat-grower whose whole 't contain a pebble big as a and who can't see a hill ten on any jocal horizon. 's idea of geod farming is Jots of corn and oats; anoth. grow only hay; another be- five-year rotation and still one of three years. One fruit while another wants cows and still more cows —milk. T. B. Terry, raises noth- potatoes and sells them all place; another, like David Ran- and clover and feeds the nothing but stable manure. one MAn's meat is another mar’'s poison,” says the old adage. Good medicine for ease of sciatica might not avail much -dgainst typhoid fever or pneu- A siedge is a fine tool to crack _with but a poor one to kill flies pane. * to make de- "z.rmlns? One * that THERE ARE FOUR DIVISIONS OF FARMERS a_bad sealp wound and severe bruises about_the bod: He was taken in an ambulance to the Day Kimball hospital in Putnam. LUKEWARM PATRIOTISM. Only 582 Signed Pledge Cards, Out of Allotment of 1,100, Windham county,*as a whole, made! the poorest showing of any county in the state, in pledging support to the food conservation plan that Has been put In force in Connecticut. This county attained only 70 per cent. of the quota of signatures alloted to it as against a high record of 100 plus in Hartford county. In the town of Good farming is the sort which vields the farmer an adequate living: enables him to lay up some profif each year; and leaves his farm just a little ‘better each fall than it was the spring before. v That, at least, is the idea. I'm not set upon the form of words in -which it is clothed. The mere raising of a hundred-bushel corn or five-hundred-bushel potatoes or forty-eight-pounds-to-the-bushel oats or the biggest pumpkins in ths Imumy or the highest percentage of butter-fat at the creamery,—none of these are, nmecessarily, good farming. It is quite possible to-do any one or all of these things at an expense which shall leave no balance for profit an. shall tend to “skin” the farm and leave it poorer, each season, than it was the pr-ecdlnf. £ or is it ge farming to try -fo 5 ¢ the poor farm do what it isn't ol e Pasanis: of dolng. You|to learn. One such in a town, a coun- oranges in the Thames v m"““ey n | tv. a state would be quite enough. But. try to raise potatoes or onlons o can. | SoMetimes a fellow comes despondent- bao on &nd which ‘God. ang Naciwe Iy to feel pa if they outvoted all the led for rye or buckwheat or “for black ¢4 No farmer is to be blamed for mot e it e o1t might be possi-| ganting - advice from non-farmers SRBGAE Sl 4 hot-houses and | pout how to work his farm. To no a8 Gales Fosry Dt to ripen orang®s | ;an “on’ carth are the theorizings of what Snoiey st o Saying | soft-handed amateurs or the criticisms can't do. But sven It saop JPatience of suburban lawn-trimmers or the Sitvyiioation ok the s oy | divagations of city-bred.but country . e piehamatic conditions | ignorant New Yok editors more irri- s ould!be accomplished, 4t wouldn’t be'| {Z o 0 *T Te go0d farming. It wouid . be simply | ‘*BNE {2 o LS freak work:—a curiosity. and. nothing | yoi] & hawk from a handasw when the ; wind’s southerly and the eun shines 1t not, gmll:'. gn‘;(hin"h"vn“ with endeavor In’ which " skill ‘and 5004 | sbout oatsidc: direction, anyway . Tag workmanship may be judsed in other | source and spring of ail good farming Nays but, in farming, the test of ef-|is within, inside the farmer himself lency is in its, success. Now don't and “not in any outside urgings or ote something I eaid,- months Aago, | drivings. 3 ut farming being ail “a gambl and ask me how I make that and this agree. Heaven bless you, it isn't any of my business to make things agree Consistency is the prime virtue bigots, and you and I are not in that stock of methods and see if some im- provement jen't called for and isn't practicable. One great trouble with farming and farmers, don’t say the only trou- ble of even the greatest, but one very serious .one—is the number who fail intoDr. Pearson’s fourth class: those who don't know how and don't wamt There may be other fisids of human 1t -makes a good many of us mad clear through to be told patronizingly 0w to get rich from winter eggs by mh: °§“ t'hlol! dmh't know wgfllh-' a henhas teeth on her upper faw or sy, We farmers have to deal with{hér lower, or both or melther. It na yealTdisguised Nature, year in|makes a g00d many of us ugly to have = lw If there is anything or{some kid-gloved visitor tell us that anvbody In the widest universe moregwe'd make money by adopting more Uiferly and inconsequentially incon-| “business-like” methods. It especially havemt haan that same Nature, I|rasps the raw spot when some other aeht heard the name. Its & good |farmer who's happened to have a leg- . tter to be right thap - to be |acy left him enough .to reshingle his merely consistent. There are at leass|oid = barn. begins: four sides to every stump and. itsmay | “lacts: ahere. o made yer misimke look Very differently - from each - ome|wuz". ete., et p of them. But itll be the same peaky R imp, Whichever side you| It:isn’t from them ner frox view it. Let it go at that! like them that good farming Te to be It is more than possible that -th b Just_ becapss tReyR By same exercise of judgment and skill | esds, e condemh the entine Lalsnne of the universe to perdition and bar it from the farm gateways. and industry which was followed bumper crop, this year, °m-y xivb: 5. poorer one, next year,. . 'wing - to the freakishness of weather, ete. . But good farming takes into account- that chance and insures against it, so fa: as may be, by refusinz ‘o stake its all on one throw of the Mice. It does not pack all its eggs in on> basket. It puts out anchors to windward, and casts its nets on both s'des the boat. R“::;:llfl? the ut';{lly ruthless and f (there's a_differerce -between |a -little streas m and “immoral‘) -character | twists and turns among the rocks an e gy O g e n pties into - - few spare dice in its right hand: pock-, . New York city. n% B n::: et. By which characteristically gam-. X broad bling methods it is much nnlz likely et s to pull in the stakes. wants to find out is.a fairly hopeful proposition. The farmer whé not only doesn’t know, but is 80 coeksure that he does knoW that he won't even try to_learn,—there is more hope: of a fool "Way -in’ the Adirondack hill - "l‘bc ills is never have developed ‘into the mighty Hugson 4f it hadwt taken and _ab- into ‘its steadily swelling flood | all- the tributary waters of the Mo- | bhawk and and the Eso; d the Croton and the four- score other streams which unife with it. It doesn’t even despise the contri- bution of fi'um‘ trout-brooks a e t the _cob. and prizes awarded In with the greatest met weight shown. Four contestants tled for first place gh z:.u pounds from 35 pounds on <ob. Killingly the quota was 1,100, let o 532 signed the pledges, according a statement issued at Hartford. FUNERAL. Albert Garrippe. The funeral of Albert Garripe, who died of pneumonia, was held Thur: day morning from the home of father, Amadee Garrippe. who is resident on the West Side. Burial weo in St. Joseph's vemetery, Day- ville. L. E. Kennedy was the funeral director. LABOR SHORTAGE. Mills Rushed With Orders Are Unable To Get Help. Killingiy's maximum production of] textfles is not being attained on ac- corunt of jabor shortage. With the managements of the different concerns straining every nerve to:make a war- time recerd of production and attain- ing splendid results, the possible max- imum has not been reached because there is not a sufficient number of em- ployes to be had to keep all the ma- chinery running. ~_And this in the face of the fact that the highest wages in the history of the industry is _being paid and with another wage advance effective a week from next Monday. Killingly's production of textiles this year will be the greatest ever in this town, but much higher figures would have been written down if a sufficient supply of labor were available. CORNER STONE LAYING. Ceremony at Greek Church Sunday Next at 2 o'Clock. Invitations are to be sent out to- day to the local clergy and promin- ent citizens to be present Sunday aft- ernoon at 2 o'clock at the laying of the corner stone of _Holy ‘Trinity Orthodox Greek church, Water street. Following the ceremony, the building committee hopes so to' arrange its plans as to make possible considerable construction work before winter real- Iy sets in. . Threatened Blow Up. “I have enough nitro-glycerine in my pockets to blow this train to h—" way the comforting remark that a lo- can man overheard in the smoker of a passenger train running south from Putnam to New London. That statement was induced by the fact that the mian who gave the warn- ing had been jostled by his com- panion, to whom the .2mark was ad- dressed. 5 _The Danielson man who was within earshot had recalled to his mind by the ineident recent safe-blowing epi- sodes in towns to the south of this place. e INSTANTANEOUS SUCCESS. Won by Strand Musical Company at Orpheum Theatre. A smappy little musical show, filled with good music and dances and the various other details that go to malte this form of entertainment so popu- lar won a quick success for the Strand Musical company at the Orpheum theatre Thursday evening. The com- pany presented some excellent come. dians, a chorus 6f twelve and the in- imitable Felix Martin, Canadian dia- lectician,. who made a great hit for those who like for see him that kind of Eenglesh. The Strand company proved one of the best of this class of ontertainments that has been seen hete recently. PUTNAM First County Corn Show a Big Suc- rn Connecticut Chamber Representatives ~Ap- point Committee of Five to Inves- tigate Trolley Fare Increase—Dog Quarantins for All Windham Coun- ty—Death of James Alfred Shepard —Accident. The Windham county corn show, first in a series of such to be heold in the counties of Connecticut, was pro- Nounced a success here Thursday. More than 300 persons, from many towns of the county, camé to Oda Fel- lows’ hall to view the exhibits, which were splendid and made it clear to the most casual observer that Con- necticut must stand in the very first rank of the corn-producing states of the Union. ' The object of the corn show was to promote interest in growing the sta- ple in Connecticut, toflocate good seed corn and °to - permit persons having ‘such good seed to find a market for it. The show was arranged under the auspices of the Windham County Farmers’ Association_and for weeks past County Agent B. W. Ellis has been busy with preparatory work. Exhibit of Foodstuffs. In comnection with the corn show there was a domestic science demon- stration and exhibition of foodstuffs, | Miss Charlotte Embleton, demonstra tor for the county charge. Scores of women who visitéd the show dis- blayed special interest in the demon- sttations of the uses of cornmeal and corn products in making dainty and appetizing dishes and there were many expremsions of a wish that' the re- %fi used in making foods that were ibited might be printed for the general information of the public. German War Bread. Among the foodstuffs shown was seme German war bread, and while this coyld not be compared with bread made from wheat it was sampled so geperously that the supply of it was soon exhausted. Professor B. R. Southwick, agrono- mist at the Connecticut Agricultural was one of the moving spir- college, its in making the show a success and he delivered an address during the af- ternoon, as did Miss Embleton. . Cern Shelling Contest. The corn shelling contest for net : - - weight of corn was one of the - The farmer who doesn’t know but | c: © e ng features of the show. Each h 35 pounds of corn on . corn was shelled off accordance ‘They were H. A. Amidon, Botham, C. S, Hyde, H. F. Dore d went to G. S. prize, Nathan Exley ‘were tied; fourth Willlams. Germination Toest. 1. H. Healey of North Woodstock - in the i second S, Botham, tive to keeping dogs confineq is being ‘worked out. 3 Mr. Elliott said that. “all had been at Plainfield, wi have known to e ade o Dani aate, To get out of your motor all the power that was built into it requires a gasoline that is not only pure but uniform. It is because every gallon of SOCONY Motor Gasoline is like every other gallon, no matter where you buy it, that SOCONY runs a motor g0 much more efficiently than the best of un- identified gasolines: A carbure- tor once adjusted to SOCONY is adjusted for keeps. You will find that SOCONY gives more miles to the gallon and more power to- the mile. Say So-CO-ny and look for the = Red, White and Blue sign. Standard Oil Co. of New York which had been donated tc the show for an award. Flint Corn Winners. For an exhibit of flint corn Merrill the national winner this year on per acre production of corn, was given first prize, J. M. Woodward of Hampton second prize and George S. Bowen, Eastford, third prize. Scotland Man Led. For dent ¢orn Gérald Waldo of Scot- land was awarded first prize, was a pig, and Charlés Williams, of was given second prize. In the flint eorn, not white or yel- H. Healey, Danielson, the rules must be with. Gilbert Dean, with a circular saw while which the Tatem Handle factory He was taken to the hospital. low class, first prize to H. M. Amidon, second prize to John Rice, third prize, H. M. Amidon. For white flint corn A. C. Botham, Pomfret, was given first prize, N. G. Brooklyn, second . prize: ' S. ikoloff, Putnam, third prize. Baltic Buckwheat Scores. For buckwheat John Wilson, Baltic, is in Windham county was awarded first prize. For rye W. C. Child, Woodstock, S. Hyde, Canterbury, second. flyde won first prize for oats. Brooklyn, had a ‘wheat, Ashford, Putnam: Williams, whose farm Clark G. good exhibit meal, middlings, rve and other graine. The next of the series of corn shows be at Raockville, The Norwich show is to be Decem- 13 and to be he, “of the. state is to ber 11, TO merce. noon, ed. ganization. that will the neyt meeting. This committee is made up of E. C. Morse, Putnam, F. E. son; § o S e Wulf, N The gathering heard a report from the Moh$2an Trail committee. > ‘Webster has done the best in erecting trail signs, but this detail is Retting attention all along the line wnd more sigui’ Will be up at an early ate . : DOG QUARANTINE Announced by ‘Deputy. Commissloner Elliott for Allof Windham County. Howard A. Hiliott, special deputy commissioner ‘on_dcmestic | this 12, nection ‘with board of asriculture and the Connec- ticut Sheep Breeders' association. TROLLEY FARES COMMITTEE . INVESTIGATE ‘AND REPORT Five Appointed at Maeting of East- ern Connecticut Chamber of Com-] Lawton, of corn, A meeting of representatives of the Eastern Connecticut Chamber of Com- merce was held here Thursday after- n, with members. present repre- senting the organizations in Norwich, Willimantic and Putna; and New London were not represent- The party” lunched -at the Putnam Inn and afterwards discussed a num- ber of matters of interest to the or- A special feature was an address by Major Howard A. Gidding, Hartford, representing the state coun- cil of defence. Major Gidding urged the people” to corcentrate on means of winning the war and to dispense with many of the things now claim- ing money and attention, but unnec- essary. ¥ During the meetiriz there was a ais-| G. cussion of the recent increase in tral- ley fares and the outdome of the talk was the appointment of a committee investizate and repart to got first prize, December 5. nbt ¥ orw! Probable Call ably will be ordered into vice early in January tonments. MF. {stationed at Norfolk, Va, van rapidly and writes that he i up machinés alone. Donat At L. E. Smith corn- in con- nual Thanksgiving call. in January. From the surgeon general at Wash- ington, Dr. Fe E. Perry, who is a med- ical reserve corps officer, raceived no- tice Thursday afternoon that he prob- when more troops will have arfivea at can+ Now at Norfelk. Herbert Smith, who is in the naval aviation corps of the service, out orders 1o keep dogs confined and rigidly complied THREE FINGERS MANGLED Gilbert Dean Injured While at Work With Cireular Saw. 37, of Bastford, had three fingers of nis left hand mangied at work on Thursday afternoon at the plant of in this city. Day-Kimbali active ser- many s now He' has ad- in his flying training allowed to thke ns for Heapi Thursday, offerings for the Day Kimbail hospi- tal were received in answer to the an- many Végeétables and preserves and many other things that will find & place in the hospital Supply rooms weré received from per- the institution. . OBITUARY Danielson Harvest Supper Followsd tainment—Secial and Home. Mr. three children were guests Mass, over Sunday. - Geo: the winter with his W. Miller ana H. accompanied as Hartford Saturday on bome to Seymour. Mr. and Mrs. Ars. John' Lyon, over Sunday. Mrs. A, Arthur West of The all. Sunday in the Methodist the - gubject. The Diviné tion, Its Individuality and ness. of Wind- « | Hughes and family in N'll.' Arthur Hoberts ROAD SGUETY ott saia in Quilting Bes in Club Parlere—Guests ham “county wi Included i X by ty Included by nex at Mystic Tea the order to_keep dogs- #ons who are always generous toward James Alfred Shepard. James Alfred Shepard, 66, died on Thureday at his home in Woodstock. He was a native of Fall River. Shepard leavea his wifé and a son. STAFFORDVILLE My, ‘ by Enter- Personal and Mrs., Willis Belcher and of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown in North Billeriea, Leaves for New Yaork. Moore left Tueadav to spend Zrandeod, oA = Bosworth, as far his return . M. Lyon visited his brother and aister-in-law, Mr. and in Westford, over Miss Anna Dilible of Hartford s the guest of Rev. and Mrs. G. L. Springfield was the guest of local friends this week. Marvest Supper. annual harvest supper held in the M. E. vestry Jast Thurs- day evening and was largely attended. ‘An entertainment. given by the or- chestrs . was very much. cnjoyed by Rev. G. H. Wtight will preach next was ¢huréh on Investiga. Complete- ‘William Paimer of Hingham, Mass.,’ waas the week-end guest of -for several l‘-! Mr, and " days tn his par- Pal rew ok rork W o x:r'Jl\u \\ri3 \ ErTen RIS oo, The Sign of a Reliable Dealer and the World's Best Gasoline DEALERS WHO SELL SO°~™V _MOTOR GASOLINE . R. BATRD, Norwich THAMES SQUARE -GARAGE, F. C. Sterry, Prop., Norwich > GARAGE, S. J. Bottor Norwich , Norwich LEE & OSGOOD CO., Norwich RZYCKI, Norwich G AUTO CO., Norwich L. W. CARROLL & SO! orwich. JONATHAN SMITH, Norwich Town W. E. BALDWIN, Taftville DRESCHER, Baltic PEOPLES' STORE, Taftville H. A. RICHARDS, Versailles ROBERT R. SOUTER, Hanover “~ z MAX RICHLAND, Norwich Town A. R. MANNING, Yantic W. E. MANNING, Yantic JOHN F. RICHARDSON, Preston City GEORGE W. MANSFIELD, Poque- tannuc) CHARLES D. WOLF, Jewett City F. H. GILBERT, Jewett City ~ JOHN H. TRACY, Jewett City BLAKE & MORGAN, Jewett City J. L. HERBERT & SONS, Voluntown HBZRA DAYON, Glasgo FALLS GAR Norwich. N 3 FRANK HEALBY, Jewett City. Mass., were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.|and Sunday at Aver e aptain/ H Charles S. Noves, Jr. of her brother, Mrs. Alex A. Lincoln with her |Eyles. daughter, who has been spendiny sev- eral days with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Noyes, returned on Tuesday to her home in Leconia, X. 7. Guilting Bee. The ladies held’an all in the church parlors Monday. dinner was served at noomn. Mrs. Clarence H. Williams and Mrs. Seth N, Williams attended noon tea given by Mathews and Mrs. Fannic the latter's home in Mystic Tuesday | . afternoon for the benefit of the Red : Cross. D. A. R. Entertained. The members of the D. pleasantly _entertained at the home of Green Hollow r W the Weaver Pepin Seguin, who atter and Conse Boston, spent Sa at her home. Leaving for Florida. nd Mrs. Willis Rouse leave th weeék for their winter home in quiltins A fine Mr. and Mrs. Robert Allen of Tol- | O30, orida yoke, Mass. aro visiting the former's mother, Mrs. Emeline Alilen of : Quiambaug. home. i PR e onT s | nk_Tillinghast was a Norwic CENTRAL VILLAGE v urday 5 s Peatrice Seguin was In Nor Ladies® Aid Society Entertained— Three and One-half Pourd Infant| Wejcomed Eormee Pasen - o i ev. Orlando M. Lord, pastor of 2 it sl Visit Lyoy church in Greenfield, N. H., pri d ehl Circle—Mr. and Mrs.|yere Sunday. He was pastor Willis Reuse Leaving for Florida. | twenty-two years ago and received warm welcome. The Ladies’ Aid Society was enter-| Mrs. Stuart Ellsworth was a Nor tained at the home of the president, |wich visitor Saturday. Mrs. Charles Byles, Wednesday after-| Mrs. John Vaughn of Norwic! Mrs. Arnold B. Mathewson, Misses|day with her parents, Ruth and Pauline Matheweon were in| Willlam Simmons. ‘Wauregan, Thursday afternoon, to at-| At the attended church Sunday and spent t Mr. and Mrs. morning, church, Miss Rose E. ton, sang, accompanied by Mrs. Geor Loring at the organ. and Napol Beaudry, violinist. The number was much enjoyed. Mrs. Charles Byles spent Sunday a Ayer, Mass, with her som, Captatn tend the funeral of Mrs. Mathewso: sister-in-law, Mrs. J.- Arthur -Atwood. Mrs. James Gardner has been & Providence visitor. Miss Lucy Broadhead has beem in| Providence. ‘Willis Lambert has entered the em- ploy of the C. E. Barber Co. Howard Torrey Byles. A Three and One-half Pound Infant. 2 Birthday Party. A daughter has been born to Mr.| Miss Mary Gallager entertal party of children at the home of parents, Mr. and Mrs, Edward Ga ger on River street, Saturday aft noon, in honor of her tenth Mrs. Herbert House and of Danielson, visited at Ever Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. L. Howard C: visitors at Cosmer Young's i son, Sunday. The Young’s family Monday to spend the winter in Nt¥ Smyrna, Florida. and Mrs, John Hirst. It weighed only three and one-half pounds. Howard Clarke answered his_coun- try's call and left Friday for Quincy, Mass., where he is to be an electrician at the Fore River shipyard. He was formerly employed as an electrician at the Central Worsted mil. He spent Sunday at his home and reports that he hag ‘a fine position and likes the Place. Mrs. Avery Metcalf and Mrs. Ulysus Cooper and daughter, Eleanor, have Been guests of relatives in Versailles, State Officers. Entertained. Lucy Webb Hayes Circle of the ladies of the G. A. R. held the No- vember mmeeting at the church vestry e te I T FROM CONSTIPATION Bdaward Bouraue of Fort Terry has Get Dr., Edwards’ Olive Tablets been spending a few days with his nts, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Bour- ie. He also visited his sister, Mrs. joyful cry of thousands Oive Tablets, ‘ank Bence in Rochdale, Mase.. while i physician for on a few days' fu rlough. He has . a practicing 17 years and calomes old-time enemy, charge of the searchlight four hours each night, when on duty at the is- land. discovered the formula for Olive Tablets while treating patients far chronic. oo sti] and torpid livers. € ‘&nfl Edwards Olive Tablets do not | contain calomel, but a bealing, soothing vefien%eluan;e.h e o » o iping “keynote” of these -coated, | Aoraly action. iford—The old mill is slowly ceiving equipment for the accommo: tion of the Home Guard that is 00 to be guartered there. _ Mrs. Erneat French has been a vis+ iter with friends in Danielson. Miss Mary Byles spent Saturday Dwight H. Armstrong Phaenix Block, Danieison, Conn. Fire Insurance, Automobile, Liabil ty, Property Damage, and Fire In- surance. Re| nting some of the oldest, d:?‘rt and" best companies in Amerisa. YOUR PATRONAGE SOLICITED REAL ESTATE OF ALL KINDS FARMS A SPECIALTY LOUIS E. KENNEDY DANIELSON