Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 7, 1917, Page 8

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ATTENTION LANDSLIDE PRIGES BEGINNING SATURDAY MORNING, DEC. 8fi|, WE WILL PLACE ON SALE 150 Men's Overcoats AT A PRICE THAT WILL CLEAR OUT THE ENTIRE LOT. EVERY ONE MUST BE SOLD, and therefore we have marked them at such a figure that you cannot hesi- tate to buy an overcoat, whether or not you WATCH OUR WINDOW. DISPLAY OF THESE GREAT VALUES One lot of 100 MEN’S ovr-:kc‘oxrs in grey and brown LANDSLIDE PRICE - $5.98 One lot of 50 MEN’S OVERCOATS in black Kerseys “LANDSLIDE PRICE If you care to get one $7.98 of these Overcoats at these SMASHING REDUCTIONS then you wfll come early and get your pick of these lots. Wec-rrylfinelmeofMENSSUn'S and it will be money in your pod(et to purchase one here. A big | selection to pick from, in the very latest models and differ- ent shades. Our Boys’ Deputment variety of colors and styles, consists of Mackinaws in a also a full line of Boys’ Suits in corduroys, blue serges and mixtures, made up in the very latest REMéMBER OUR SPECIAL MEN'S OVERCOATS, 100 to select from. . ... ... $5.98 MEN’S OVERCOATS, 50 to select from........ $7.98 To Save Money Trade Here—To Waste Money Do It Elsewhere. WATCH OUR Wl'NDOW DISPLAY COME EARLY Norwich Bar “MORE FOR LESS” rgain House 3-5-7 WATER STREET . WASHINGTON SQUARE, * NORWICH, CONN. GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer 3Z Providence St., Taftvilie Prompt attention to day or night calls Telephone 630 l.prlfl\vl“‘Fawl PRGF. B ROSS Musical Instructor Instructions on all Band Instruments, also Pianoforte Cornet Instructions to Amateurs and Professionals NORWICH SCHOOL OF MUSIC Somers’ Building, 218 Main Street NORWICH FUR CO. Are open for business with new line of Furs, Coats, Skins and all kinds of Trimmings for fall and winter. : M. BRUCKNER, Prop. Phone 708-12 47 Main Street Qverhauling and Repair Work OF ALL KINDS ON AUTOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, WAGONS, ' ' TRUCKS and CARTS, Mechanical Repairs, Paintirg, Trim- Wood Work. ming, Upholstering and its hrancfin. !l-ehmithim; Scott & Clark Carp. ‘507 to 515 North Main St. CREAM that will always WHIP - Fresh Daily . —at the— 5 People’s Market 6 Franklin Street JUITIN HOLDEN. Proprietor WILLIAM YOUNG,R.N Massage and General Nursing. Night cf @ay caffs. 38 Hickory calfs. 38 Hickory St, Norwich. " FREDERICK T. BUNCE' * Piano Tuner Phone 838-2 . 22 Clairmoant Ave. WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus- iness before the public, there is no taro: the - wt& than ugh aa- NORWICH TOWN - Boss Carder From New Bedford For Saxton Mill—Catholic Parish Inter- ests—Price Property Sold—Mr. and Mrs. 0. S..Smith Reach Florida. Miss. May Peck of Greenwich and Edward Peck of Westchester, were the guests this week of Mr. A Peck of Gtrobarndo a: ity Sacx-ty f the Tirst Methodist met with the missionary so- Trinity Methodist church on church ciety of and Mrs. Charles Arnold left i this week for .their hoine in Plainville after spending Thanksgiving and a few days with Mrs. Arnold's’ parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Frinkk of Otrobando avenue. Catholic: Church Servic Devotions for the first Friday of the month will be held this evening at Sa- cred Heart church. Saturday, a holy day of oblization, the feast of the im- maculate conception, will observ- ed by masses at 5 and 7 o'clock. New Boss Carder Arrives. Mr. and Mrzs. Frazier and three sons are moving from New Bedford, Mass., to the:house on East Town street re- cently ‘occupied by My. and Mrs. Chas. Learfied. Mr. Frazier boss carder. at Saxtom.\! oolen Mill: @ Buy “Price . Place. Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Ayery. of Bozrah this’ week purchased Mr. and Mrs. Orrin. M. Price’s nlace on - Wight- man avenue. Reach Florida. : Word has_been recéived from Mr. and Mrs, Owen S. Smith of their safe arrival at their inter home in Eus- tic, Floriday. Pt ': % + “Réad Repairs} Four menare at -work with two | teams repairing the road on Rlain Hill near “A. . Gardner's place. ning, ‘of West Town eral days with nds in New York J'rcme Wauwecus imh a few days with her E daughter on Ciiff street. There will be a session of the Sun- day school 2nd a Christian Endeavor sei ¢ at Scotland Road bhall Sunday afternoon. Herman Karkutt. and Ralph _ Stott were. at their homes on Otrobando av- enve the first of th week from Wright, Fishers Island. into Ttaly.—Detroit Free. Press. More than $52,000,000 worth of elec- trical goods were exported during the ending June 30, the amount in the aistory of the industry. |’ noon TO HAVE IN THE HOUSE z coldsScroup and lagrippe are mevalan Colds promptly checked mean saving of time, money-andhealth Pneumonia and other serious illness may follow a neglécted- cold. T. Lynch, 100 Spring Ave, DuBois, writ “For many years*we have képt Foley’s Honey ind Tar in the house has ed many dollars in doc- ‘tors’ biils: It is fine for colds. ©child's health is. too precious to risk{ (Written Specially For The Bulletin.) The government’s Fuel Administra- tion, according to a Washington dis- patch, “has inaugurated an intensive campaign for the substitution of wood for coal.” This in order to meet, if possible, an estimated or alleged short- age of 50,000,000 tons in the conntrys coal supply. ‘Well, why not? Why not us at least 50,000,000 more cords ef wood for fuel and save that number of tons of coal? For it is stated that one cord of hard wood is equal to a ton-of coal in fuel value. I suppose that, while it may be worth a bit less in others, $5 is about the average price of a cord of good ‘wood, delivered. This makes it more than fifty per cent. cheaper than coal. The cost to the average. farmer, with a wood-lot of his own snd a whole winter with nothing else to do but cut it, is just nix, naught, nuthin’ And vet there are numerous farmers in this home town of mine—probably in yours, also,—who buy and burn coal. We won't talk at all about city folks. Whether any of them could —change economicaliy to wood as a fuel I won't profess to know. It is bulkier than coal, and many a city tenement hasn’t storage room even for a whole ton of coal at a time. In furnaces, unless specially devised and built for wood, its use is hardly feasible. Where stoves are used, the change to wood- burners misht be more costly than any rrobable saving. No, we'll leave city folk out of the talk, entirely, because their™ problems are so different from ours in the coun- try that we can hardly be expected to understand them - fully or appreciate all_thelr handicaps. But why should we farmers continue o burn coal? Here, also, it won't do-to be too sweeping in any arraignment of those who do. ~ Conditions, -even on neighboring farms, are far from iden- tical. That which is one farmer’s con- venience or economy may be.an ex- travagance aund a discomfort to his next-door neighbor. Also, the per- sonal equation, i. e. the habits and training, even the whims of any fam- ily must be considered. For instance, | know one old farm- er, so crippled by rheumatism that he can no longer get out of the- house, and whose tolerable comfort depends on his having a steady heat, who Lurns coal in His one froom. As Gnd brousht to. his room, the extra cost of coal is not much, however, be can, himself, care for the coal fire, almost entirely, without having to call on others for much. assistance. Which treedom from dependence is not to be ignored. Another neighbor, who.. could get zood wood delivered at his door in cordwood lengths for $5 a cord, and pays about $9 a ton for coal, admits that it's bad economy, but pleads that Lie can't well help himself, as his wo- men folks are afraid to burn wood. It seems one of them once saw a chimney fire in a house where wood was the fuel. * In the course of myv.inglorious ca- reer, I've personally assisted at three chimney fires. One of them was in a house where wood was burned; the other two were both in 'the city where nothing but coal was ever L, But what's the use of arguing agiinst a firmly .held whim? Onc might as profitably expostulate with the wood- en Indian before a-cigar store! 1 I know anothéer who burns coal, sim- | Plv -because he's ‘too durn lazy to cut and. buck up woodA In thjs plrt ul farm-house of ours, we always, used to keep. one coal fire ‘goimg_till the time of, the coal strike in Pennsylvania during Roose- vent's_administration. That cat off cur coal supply almost without notice, 2 I bad a peculiarly nasty and un- aappy time ‘in ‘changing stoves and zetting down extra, wood from the snow-huriea forests® of mid-winter. Having been’ enforced to tlie change, | however, and having made it success- fuily, I looked up' the mountain Mde at .my sixty"or. more agres of wood: asked myself why, in the name af common senge, I should ever again pat ]} Tself in the power.of -any combina- tion' of * Pennsylvanid ' greed ' and ig- norarice? Why should ‘T get-my own fuel.” all’ of ‘it, out ,of my cwn. forests, and issue a pengondl declaration of in- dependence from outside -~ fuel tyrannies ?. n,shnner thought -of than done. From. that to.'this -we've burned wood and wood ‘only. By using lurge kmots®‘in properly constructed “chunk” stoves we °haves no . more trouble in keeping fires, zll night than Scotland | W€ used to have with coal—and much | given. and the less trouble in quickening them to ade- quate warmth of a cold morn!nx At the same tifne, ‘as “tve’ task of cutting and. drawing ‘and working up the wood is all done 2t a seasenwhen farm work is forbidden by the: cold, / the cost is practically - nothing. Indeed I am not sure that, tlere ought.to be any. costr at all'made against-it. . For it "keeps. us h«\lthfulw occupied at the very time we might be wiwhalelomely “dle, Ylosing ermore, the -ashes..made—and- carefully saved—from .the - annual 'y cords of wood are v certain small crops:in _my ~I'@®rath- er have fifty pounds.of unieached hardwood ‘ashes on my little strawber- ry plat. than fifty pounds of any com- mercial fertilizer evey compounded, .1 But h um why we. farmers mlkot the. cha: it of us can, if’ g to take the treuble.. ‘e not only. can do it, but, Whenever ‘practicabl xtmmmrn-—nwandnJL w’ilv:!nl i;n coun mmmm ":‘-h-r | of "a soldie: mterests change. would \be subserved by It would .be another step towards our’ complete independence of busi- ness “rings” and outside grafting. It's better to stand on cur own sood legs thgn to lean on an always doubtful Pennsylvania crutch, It would help to conserve waste, -for there’s hardly a patch of woods in zll woodsy New Tngland which isn't cumbered with waste stuff. Trees blown over by high : ttees *dying of old age; trees ing up in clumps to their own in- y; trees bravely struggling against Some youthful injury, but hopelessly toredoomed to a warped and worthiess failure—all these are simpie wastes; unless taken for fuel. And the time to take them is Now— Now when so doing means saving of meney for your cwn pocket: saving it for your heirs Ly actually improving the condition of your woods: helping out scores of essentiafl industries which niwust use eoal or shut down: helping in the munitioning and provisioning of the armies or freedom which are fight- ing just as much for vou and for me as they are for anyone Personally, | haven’t much confi- dence in the government getting any- tody but farmers to use wood fuel. City condiiions will. 1 fear, preclude any very e: !ensl\e hange !here. Al- so”in_ the mong non-farm- the task is not promising. There is a dead weight of something — I don’t know whether to call it apathy or lethargy or simply laziness—which has -to be okned with, especiall among the vei people whose strait- ened circumstances needs might be ex pected to make there eager for every cpportunity of ‘saving. While T cee and burn from my own for all the fuel we need, there is still very much left which might help out others—it they would only use it.. But they won’ “or years I've had the -offer. standing that any ome who was. short of fuel could have all he needed rrom my woods, without cost—if he'd omly. tuke dead or fallen trees, and come and- get them. Not a one tiny twig has ever gone as a result of this offe This very reason I've offered zood wood at fifty cents a cord, standing, to any one who needed it in ten cord lots or less, if he would come and get it. _One man hemmed and hawed and finally pined that was afraid he :ouldn’t make wagzes” that way: an- other flatly answered.that it was “too much trouble”: and a third unblush- ingly said that he'd surely be glad to get some—if I'd haul it for hmm for nothing after he'd cut it! It reminds me of what happened in 2 New England city, several years ago, when a panic had made_the condition of ‘many poor families truly deplora- ble. A biz ‘creamery in that city, which had been in the daily habit of | Then the calls -stopped. Girls That Were ‘Plain, Now Beauties Waonderful Effect of Stuart's Calcium Wafers That Rid the Face of | Skin Eruptions and Bring ! Matchless Beauty. SEND FOR FREE TRIAL PA(’KAGEl ples ‘Are Gone” Maybe cheer up. skin may fers will with it ‘blackheads, rash, eccema and are discouraged, but No matter how bad your be, Stuart’s Calcilum Wa- quickly work wonders And thez good-bye to pimples, acne, boils, a mudd, sallow you prinecipal blood- their atest ingredient. cleanser Known to science. So .don’t be blue, don't despair, get a 50-cent box of Stuart's Calcium Wafers .today at any drug store.in the United -States, and soon You will have as. beautiful a complexion 3 v wished for. Till out the coupon for a free trial package. Free Trial Coupon F. A. Stuart Co., 435 Stuart Bidg., Marshail, Mich. Send me at once, by return mail, a free trial packaze of Stuart’s Caiclum Wafers. Name pouring hundreds of szalions of ‘skim- milk_down the sewers, after separat- ing the cream, thinking 10 alleviate the situation somewhat, .offered, free to any one who would come and get it, all the sweet skim-mill e or she cauld carry away. For a few cents’ six ‘or eight gallons were thus alotted. Inquiry de- véloped ihe fact that some didn't want it _because it wasn’t \\holo milk:” cthers becanse it was 100 much trouble™ to go after it: others because the creamery people wouldn't deliver it to. them at their own doors, free— ard furnish the cans to deliver it in! Any well-meant but fruitless wood suggestion to have run .up against very much the $ame sort of people. ergy enough to make a living. off New “England farm. however, = have seme sort of gumption, also. Tt real- Iy seems as if amons such men the 2ppeal of the government to help save ccal for emergency use by substitut- inz wood for their own fuel might find response. THE FARMER. WAR NEWS DIGEST Stories of Activities and Conditions ‘Throughaut the United States and on the Battle Fronts, No News From the Soldier Means That He.ls All Right. Although the failure to receive. let- ters from men in the. service is not pleasant to relatives and friends at hemes the adage mo news is good news” never was more true than at present. The report of every casualty at home or abroad is immediately wired or cabled to officiais at Wash- ington, being relayed from there with- out loss of time to the emergency ad- dress of, the soldjer or sailor affected. It is aljo af once released for publi- cation in the newspapers. No news of Casualties has or will be held up. . No man in the service has received orders not .to write home: he has been urged. on the contrary, to Keep in touch with felatives and friends. The forces in France have at their disposal post cards siving general .Informition’ m regard to health and the receipt letters and parcels, which may °be dispatched withoUt ‘payment of post- age; Care is also taken to see that mail tended for soldiers and . sailors]| reaches ‘them promptly. - Where the regimental and company designation not Known it ‘may. be secured by application’ to The' Adju- tant- Geperal's Office. .Washingtan,. D. C. .In one week 1,647 letters with. in sufficient ‘addresses were received at this office. On 1,232 the addresses were completed and they were for- warded, 123 weve returned fo senders, 58 went to the dead-letter office be- cause senders’ addresses were not balance were held with the view that the addresses might be compeleted later. The Village. Tailor Ca an}z- Ser- 7 vice With Overseas s. Men from 45 trades havé_ OPpOL- tunity to enlist in the army of skilled workmen being formed to go into France with the American fliers, and are ‘promised experience as near the fighting lines as airdromes can be built. Cobblers ‘and_tailors can leave their benches to make, stretch, and repair wings; barbers are wanted to. DIy their trade near no man’s land: cah-. inetmakers. and . boat. makers are reeded for woodwark: coppersmiths will .see that there.are no leaky. s line ,tanks. Instrument. .repairmen vuleanizers, gas-works - employees, rope riggers, cordage workers, auto- mobile mechanicians, and men from Of | use of which the-seas may at once be ldeas of ‘Inventors Cofrectly Applied Aid Navy Department. Since ‘war was declaréd the naval consulting’ board has received more than 40,000 suggestions, plans or mod- els of ingenlous devices for use by the Navy - Depariment—more than two- thirds of them-concerning the problem of combating the menace of the ene- my submarines. All suzgestions :re- ceive careful attention. those of marit being brought to the,attention of the Secretary of the Ndvy. While many proposals. have been found to be impractical. much valu- able aid has been given to various branches of the war service. Th Naval .Consulting Board and the Nav Depajtment have prepared for - free distribution pamphlets giving general Information to. - inventorsthatt _they. v~ avoid misconceptions—one of the mcst g>neral ‘being that some miracu- ine may be gonceived by, ‘the cleared, of -submarines. 5 Compresscd, Air Sends Misssls Into German Trenches. * Mary of the. mortars emploved to- day’on the - allied fronts.are of, - the Compressed_air, type,: using -a puff, of ait ‘or gas instead of powder to throw the shell into German “trenches. [Present-day trench warfare has caused the pneumatic. canndn ‘idea to' be de- veloped . after ¢#it. had been laid aside for.many- years as impractical. Aside from . being silent and-inexpensive, the rneumatic mortar. is. readily’ manipu- lated.. TE is-used at-raiges. of : from 50 to 1,000 feet, and is said.to be ex-l oeedlnsly ‘accurate. Red Cross Work Grows in Europs’ and 7 the United States. The Red Cross has arranged. to buy all'garments, and knitted articles = to be sold atsubstantially coet prices to the chapters, throughout the country. to be ‘made up DY the Joten.of /Amelcn The: cost: e $3:457.20 To meet condltlnnx arlmng from Ttaliap revérses the Red Cross dis- patched immediately from' Paris sun- plies including 2.000 “mattresses. $.000 blankets and 10000.pairs of socks. The: children of Belsiurn thousands of ‘whom -ate orphans..are objects of svecin.l care. Food and. clothing alone " e Red Cross ot $173,000. [any~-of” the:children in‘ free - Belgium are-expe to shell.fire. and in order tq save them: asylums are being ‘or- in . France ‘and Sw-imrlan& where hzy can-be.taken to safety. | Demands ‘of: War Add ‘Many Emil Department such - vehicles as . four -| wheel-drive _trucks, caterpillar. trac-. tars, armored cars and tanks, and for, m‘flntemnce and- repair of this as as’ artiliery equipment.” ees to Guv-mmont anl’l ‘Approximately. - 20,000 -employees have. been.added to.the government's 1 in thlngton since t.hfi war msumqh- Dplace ' tho increase xi'auomn Capital An Trelleys The Cusinces Center ot worwien The Gift Handbags It is said that you shouldn’t lock a gift horse in the mouth, that too close inspection discloses the undesirability of the animal. These Hand Bags, however, will stand the clos: est scruting without. . Their undesirable points are not in evidence, nor do they exist, and as gifts these Boston Store Hand Bags will be sure to please. THESE WERE PURCHASED MONTHS AGO— THE PRICES ARE RIGHT NOVEL VELVET BAGS ARE THE LATEST In shapes different from those ordinarily seen, and in the colors wh are proving to be the most desirable. the costume, as well as being articles of actual usefulness. ich They give a delightful finish to Some have & double purse, and mirror concealed within. - Specially Priced at $4.98 BIG VELVET BAGS MADE WITH 10-INCH FRAME Generous size and pretty appear- ance commend theshe bags. Many uses will be found for them—shop- ping, knitting, etc. They will be specially appropriats for the busy woman. *"$1.98 to $5.00 LEATHER BAGS IN ALL THE NEWER SHADES All the newer colors have been secured, and many attractive leath- ers have been used to make these bags the finest of their kind. One of these as a aift will be a lasting pleasuce to the recipient. $1.50 to $9.50 STRAP POCKETBOOKS UNUSUALLY LARGE VARIETY Compact, yet roomy, these pocket- books have long held sway, and are used by almost ali women. We have them in tan. brown, -green, purple, grey and black. 25¢ to $5.50 CHILDREN’S SHOPPING BAGS JUST LIKE MOTHER'S Miniatures of those their mothers carry, these bags will make the little lady feel that she is ar ac® tual personage. They pretty and of good quality. 50c to $1.00 are Our Dollar Hand Bags Give the Greatest Value - If you want to invest a gift one of actual and lasting value, buy one of these bags. full color line, the styles are varied has a single look of cheapness. single dellar in a gift, and want to make that There is a and, good, and not a bag in the lot Among them we have included a large assortment of the famous “Shur Lok” Bags which are regularly sold for $1.50. These have the lock which will not spring open, are lined with silk and have both purse and mirror. blue and brown. The colors are black, tan, grey, red; Our Price $1.00 VELVET BAGS .................... $1.00 to $5.50 reau employs mdre than 700 the Fuei Administration employs about 100 clerks; and the Council of National Defense apd. the Red Cross have en- gaged approvimately 1400 person War-time printing has adgsd mater- ially to the large. force of the Govern- ment ‘Printing Omce A body of 100_surzeons has been or- ganized for service in the hospitals of Roumania. The food administration has seized 16,000 tops of .sugar which ‘was held in New York. . ‘A force:of to France by' Taent. to audit the Army -there. According persons_ has béen sent the Treasury = Depart- ‘accounts of the the - Department of Agncuuure, rals and mice destroy cach year property. worth. more than $200,000,000, equaling the gross earn- ings of an army of 200.000, men. Government loans to farmers in Octeber: amounted to+$7.374,044. prac- tically double the amount = paid out during the previous month. Applica- tions_for loans in the hands of the Federal land banks. total $193,250,945. In’ -many. “cases throughout the country automobile .owners have learned “to .drive - their own cars or have given them up entirely that their chauffenrs might be released to give the valuable specialized service to the Army. A woman: 96> years old has written the woman’s committee of the Counc of National. Defense -asking for 3 ork because, she says. "My son is (6> old to be .a soldier.” A girl 9 years old wants to £o to France as a Die senger in the Red Cross service. { Between ‘August 1 and December 1 ((\e raiiroads transported 1,500,000 men to training camps and embarkation nts. To imsure the safety of the men in transit.the railroads- have afiopted an a ge speed of 25 miles >n hour except when freight cars needed for the tramsportation of equipment. are. includd in’ the. trains: The speed is’ then reduced to 20 miles. The fuel.administragion is authority for the statement that, while the an- rual output of coal has been increased approximately 50,000,000 _tons, the in- crease in consumption caused by the war is 100,000,000 tons. An instance cited ‘s that of the Bethlehem Steel —ufimy Dlants, partic- & industrial sections, have ’u‘%f:p note: otherwise known as s the only known SOUTH KILLINGLY Barlow-Smith , Marriage at Danilson— Letter From Boy in France. Merrill Jacques of Ayer, was home for Thanksgiving. Mr. and Mrs. ‘A. Fall. and s Ger- trude Hall spent Thanisgiviag in Put- , nam. Barlow—Smith. Barlow and Anna ' Smith d-at .the Congregational Daniélson . Thursday The ceremony was performed by Rev. Walter - Wiiliams. Arthur Tewilliger and- Helen Link were . the attendant couple. Mr. and Mry. Bar- low w livé with . Mr. Barlow’s par- ents for the present. There will e a mesting of the Witl- ing Workers in Granzc hall, Wedfe: ay afterncon. Some of the young people in_this vi- cinity attended” a dance ‘at Hopkins | Mills, Wodnesday night On the Other Side. Mrs. G. W. Barlow has received a letter from her son, Winsor, who is.ope of the boys who has zone across. The letter reports an _ uneventful passage and that he is in good health, Mr. and’Mrs. Paul Stone ‘gnd Padl Jr.. bhave been visiting Mrs. Stone” parents, Mi. and Mrs. Henry Spaul- ing. Miss Violet: McKensie has been spending ‘a few days at her,home in Townsend. Irs. Packard and visitors at the home in_Danielson, Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Phillips and Mrs Dexter have: been in Providence. School was closed for the Thankss Herman were ma: parsonas night. =pn have been of John Smith Mrs., Bertha Doris, spent. the Thanksgiving iscess with_ relativi Pawtucket, returning Sunday_even Miss Lulu A wich Academy spent fie Thanksgiving. holidays with her parer Mr. apd. Mrs. H. C. Anderson. - B, G. Douslass_and, family . - and Elisha Bitzood of Hope Vailey were suests ‘of Mr and Misi George Ke- yon of Sterling Hill, Thanksgiving day. e Howard Kenyon of Bro: at his heme for the Misses Helen and Lhza.beth Daley; spent.the Thanksgiving recess at their home in Uxbridge. ' Children Cry _ < FOR FLETGHER'S * CASTOR!A

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