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g The universal popularity of Bevo made it necessary to erect this building— the largest of its character in the world. Covers two city blocks. Floor.space 26 acres. A basement 30 feet high containing 13 tracks each to accommodate ten freight cars. Will employ 2,500 people and have a bottling capacity of two million bottles daily, equal to 140 car loads,on an eight hour day basis ANHEUSER~BUSCH, ST.LOUIS. should of classifying German “kulture” | cure for cancer or hydrophobia or|local war bureau. They colleeted | time and studied everything in sight, | son. I % BOLTON as civilization! lockjaw. smounts varying from S1 to §5 and|and we flow right over my quariers| ‘lI]ewett City: Mrs. George N. Has- A e disappeared after having done a good [and the barracks looked like little | kell. H TESET And “loneliness”” That's another|,, TN beasts and the birds; don'tday's work. They were unauthorized | brown dominoes. : Mystic: Mrs. Christopher Morgan. 'A""u-‘_dMe;aw;_s :f :eld fw;-—S“‘ Th:: el e mtiod for hav. | they count for anything in the way of | to collect any money and their game| My next thought was, how will we| Norwich: Mrs. Nelson D. Robinson,| Provide 72-Foat Pole to Fly SINE We Ate sometimos B company? appears to be a swindle pure and sim- | ever get down from this awful height, | Miss Lucy Geer, Mrs. B. F. L Flags. I jous things|_ The other da planting winter | ple. The local war bureau warns all | which I afterwards found was less than | Miss Sarah McCall Spafford, Mrs. B. m‘lfi W{,“‘d“‘q‘nh eEe) ?555";?{.‘12‘1‘55 fmfn squashes, a little warbler—the editor |persons against giving money to two thousand feet, Then came my |P. Bishop, Miss Phoebe Brewster. At the annual meeting of the Bolton s sdiang Neropa e of The Bulletin told me its name a|strangers for any purpose, | first real scare. We had been making| Plainfield: Mrs. Waldo Tillinzhast,|Red Cross held in Bolton hall last T Trankly ncomnize the existence of|Y6AT asq, but I've forsotten it—fol- Y. B et Ot s the turns with little pitch and sudden- | Miss Annie Tillinghast week Thursday afternoon officers wers (u, Tankly recognize the existence of|loweq me around as confidently and oung Patriots OF SHama,: {1y he did a 180-degree turn with the| Groton: Mrs. Sanford Meech. elected as followp: Chairman, Mrs. e aclent and ool ordeT . | trustfully as if he really knew I had a| Twenty-one Stafford boys left town | yings perpendicular, and I thought it| New Haven: Mrs. Clarence B. Bol-|Henry J. Thompson; vice chairman, e s O e reair o7 |SOft POt in my heart for him. My |on the { o'clock car Wednesday after- | wag all over. Next and worse came |mer. Mrs. C. M. Pinney; secretary, Mrs. g ks hoe aceasionally brought up a grub, |noon for Camp Upton. They stayed|the nose dive. He headed her into| The next meeting of the club will|Charles F. Sum treasurer, Miss loosely-pivoted tongues. We'll™ grant | (iR pCue® Sri B OO BR 8 B in Rockville Wednesday night and Jeft | the wind and shut oft the power un. | take place at the summer home of Mrs. . Loomis; directors, Miss An- that members of that order might find} o, mutyal satisfaction. Almost every | for camp at 7 o'clock Thursday morn- | (il we began to pancake or just fall |Crandall and Mrs. Graves at Ocean | Aivord, Mrs. J. W. Phelps, Mrs. some d on the ordinary farm &lnight a whip-poor-wiil comes down|ing. All the bovs were given the cus-|out of control; then after falling a|Beach, New London. Frank K. Abbott; Mrs, Frank H. litle dull. But, fortunately, not &1|from her ground-nest up on the moun- | tomary outfits by the local Red Cross. | way, he pointed her straight for the s Sirons, Miss L. Reichard, 3irs. John epan popumtion 5 enrglled in that | t8iR to mY wood-yard and gives me a | judgment Against Willington Debtor, |Eround and let her fall without an Witman, Mrs, H. B. DeWolf. It was society. There are a great many who Serenade. As to thrushes—miscalled | ™ inch of wing resisting, and I certain- MISSIONARY MEETING,|voted to meet at Bolton hall the sec- 1 ‘“robins,"-—ane nches an SPArTOWS % Wilcox was given a judgment st i i e e ly thought the end had come. Every- s ond and fourth Thursdaye for work. still prefer to use their brains more T of $55.39 against Charles Wodhome of | ;3 i : e than their tongues. No danger exists :X“,gp};"',’fii}“&s'm:‘;" the bushes are | Wiinzton in the borough court Wed- [MNE Was coming up past us and the| Churches of New London Association Flying Three Flags. of any such finding farm life “lonely.” il Ty morning., Matthew Soukup se- [ S20th, Wad BRTNOE MO e T erace: Hold Their Arinual Meeting. Flag raising exercises were held at e There are the chickens, too, T have | Surcd judsment against same de- |y} curve and sweeped down in a ser-| o e S the Center Sunday morning. The T2- ( There are a whole lot of things on|just got a new coop-full of little | cndant for $300. Mr. Wilcox's claim joq ‘of "gives and finally landed. It e annual convention of the Wom- | foot pole which the Boy Scouts cut a farm to keep a thoughtful man's in- | peepers. No .ornithological garden in |} 25 [0F 8rain and flour and Mr. Sou- |\ jike going down in a fast eleva- American Baptist Home Mission- |and set, with the help of friends, now | i) kup's for money I ° i “ o % o asso. |has the U. S., the service and the 9 terest awake. - . |America holds a prettier sight than old tor, only a thousand times worse. The ociety of the New London a: 3 3 | LONELINESS NO PART OF THE FARMER'S LIFE In the inorganic kingdom, for in-|Biddy, clucking around with her brood landing was great and the bump Was |giation was held at the Humtington|DCORO flags. The service flag has 11 stance, my own little plare has at 16ast | of weeke : 'S FI very slight, and T climbed out and|° b held, &/ 2 stars. : i Atinco. Ty OWTLISHe Dlanh man §roohaL fM;; }g;‘l‘l;;'ég‘l(; Tt ARy ELYVELLS FIRST TRIP T Rt ground with real affection. |Street Baptist church in New London Tried to Enlist. ang stones, some native, some water- | comes dancing up to me every time I ABOVE MOTHER EARTH | ™00t worry. I lave part of it, but gn Thursday and was attended by| Michael Daly fett \\«edn%s‘:n?ltm;n% (Written Spacially fd The Bulletin) [understand that every farmer's bar | oot s tho Soonit. of e piatane | foy 100¢, 0 the pesture. elther o 8et|Former Norwich Boy Writes of His |1 2 Tot what vou would call erasy | B8 c o atlons In-_ this” ity New | to taiist but D A kindly-disposed fricnd, gne not in|burns every week and that he loses | botaciyems, which have tipped whole | e o o pich, [ might happen to First Flight at Ohio Field Ot o thip, However, and now it is | London, Niantic, ‘Waterford, East'a slight physical disability but was the least inclined to be carping or|his best cow by utterly unprecedented | mountain ~ranges topsy-turvy and |underneath. ‘wey dewn senr g ched, = 3 e TaC et passes: s6 T womt have|Lyme, Montville, = Salem, Coichester | taken on 4 draft. eritical, the other day remarked that]accident? R 2 Eay Hilutan, steati ke | S rosa it AN AoV nEar IRe SO ool ol anman 7 e T Fale arian | s Baq DAYES) and Quaker Hiil, : Mr. and Mrs. Harry Dildine of he semetimes wondered how 1 could| Not exactly, thank heaven! But if|gver on top of rocks laid down miliions |~ Asd P the faithful old o | of the class of 1911, & sraduate Of the | oo et e The morning session, whieh besan | Binghamton, N. Y., and F. J. Mathein sand The magbtoay of farm lifel pre- thing~ doesn't "happen, anotherlor yonrs Iater. On fthe: summits of |whbinover soars ol old horse. | N orwich Tites Academy, and & former KINNEY at 11 o'clock, was devoted largely to|of Johnstone Cit Y., are at the This was in very much the same ilne | does limestone “knolls,” exposed surfaces|is In stable of paddocr. wiiheat s |resident of this city, has the accom-|MISS SARA T. KINN the reports of the various dstegates. | Bolton home of Mr. Mathein for -& as those h(.k, who speak of “the lone- The other day T est cut to “harden® |OF Stone are decply channeled with | friendly whinny, which is either the|Panying letter in the current issue of MAYFLOWER GUEST.| Mrs, Charlotte French, state home|week. The trip was made in Mr. Dil- ~mfl:§g‘l§!fl:’u'“em the one.time|d number of Lr’gy“ o :‘;em‘i’ng ;l’a::'sy waterworn grooves which must have|indication of his ‘readiness to eat al|the Yale Alumni Weekly describing — missionary, gave a short address on|dine's a B 2 s run- 5 fi ig] an aeroplane at Wil- ing Held With Mrs. Nel- | the work of the society in the Italian| Mr rong and emall son explapation of cortain ot overifec]faken from the hot.bed.The SId cat, been made by strong sireams, run-|carrott if I brought one, or to be har- |his first flight in an aeroplane at Wil-| Annual Meeting Held W e il i g et gom A bed.The 0 ning for untold years when they were | nessed up for a cul bur Wright field at Fairfield, Ohio. Rk ¢ Norwich Town. | districts of New Haven, and then the |of Dani v mvests at Mr. and to:u :;hlyucmlns for the rather Jarge L‘:fi”‘;m“h;u:;"‘é“h‘gfiti'flls light and |in an utterly different position and not, | is on R R e Tl o heanchmmiastons | (oon,2: Hobinsonief g encouraging results from her work | Mrs. H. Strong’s. i rato of insanity among farmers, viz: I R, got dnto g as v, a hundred feet aboye any ex- L e cond lieutenant in the wen-fiy-| n = May- | among the poorer classes of people in . Pinn fine pair that it 1& due to their isolation and iack couple and scratched, clawed, wallow- as now, a hundred feet aboye any ex ed a cond lieutenant in the no The annual meeting of the lay g isting brook or any possibilit; " 5 ; . ; of outside Interests. ®d two hundred and Tty promising | Great lodges of thie rock are expossd | 1o or COUrsS, these animal frionds can't ol 4 young plants into shreds and razs.|in o £ g venty | (2lk—in my language, that is—but S o AN agi places, some of the strata twenty rats . > “Wa'sl, now,” as Uncle lke wauld |p1¢ Dever did such a thing before, and | feet thick—and how many of them | ey $an understand much that 1 say. ing branch of the ual corps. He writes as_follow. 1 have just landed tion sectlon, Sig- | 4o oe aub. w - a¢.|the same district and the gratifying the Hoiton float in_the flower club was held on Thursday af-| oo coiation shown for all that has |Red Cross parade in Manchester Sat ternoon at the home of Mrs. Nelson |peen done for thern. urday after my first | D. Robinson at Norwich Town. At 1| Reports were read, including that of | Elmer N Finley of New York has had been regarded as not only “house- : Nor do I have great difficulty in |n 5 . “Hicoragtansding % have said, “the longer you live the % nly ‘house- | there are hidden below no one knows,— Ml £ 1 | trip in an airplane and thought I would | o'slock the members all sat down td | Mrs. George Ellis of Bozrah, who is a few days at hie mere you learn, and the more people | progan p. NOrOUSHIY “cold-frame|qll made up originally of the infinitely | [Fan¥'ANE & Bood deal that s in their | \yrite you a letter about it. e e T ens table which was | senior director of the home missionary Jane Finley's. you talk with the more you hear.” - slow deposit, on some unimaginably Yy earnestly| “mhe first sensation is a cramped |artistically decorated with pink and |Work of the state association. \ Clark of Glastonbury is 1t is quite doubtful if many people|, “Cit da¥, coming back from a trip|ancient sea-bottom, of the shells of | (0 Make plain to me. . g ing, as oom is s all tha v k tulips, A report of the work done by the Mre. Jane Finley's this who = Beld this . fecktng | ‘ahput|io, the viliage with some early vege-|fimorsecroting molusks, Iater 10 ba | o Or, G20, L imagine any man. with | feciing: 45 e Yoo 8 s0, Sl DAL\ whito carnations and pinkk tulips, With |y it hcmbers of the society was g tables, 1 found a neighber’s cow wan g any sort of appreciation in his make- |}, covers laid for 27 y 4 . L “monoteny” and the “loneliness” of | g - OHC & RO B - | pressed and baked and’ hardened into | iV SHT 00 AP RN to nd & mea) ho. | the testing of the wires by your pilot, | “’During the luicheon Mrs. Graves,|Made by Mies Gustava Groene of New | Mrs. Charles M. Lee has retumed i1 farm life have over shared the changes | oo b $00% "‘»mn B tgf‘f kens in | rock and then heaved up in all sorts of | jale "ot times, in the almose eal S0-1and the engine with its awful racket. | on behalf of the jadies, presented Mrs. |London, junior director. home from her -daughter’s, Mrs, Wil- and chances of a year's work on a real ° ges of rank green | tjlted angles to make hills and moun- s - passion- Atkins', in -Hartford. ss Clara Post of Hartford recently ea at Miss Anna Post's. ss whi : 2 fov ; We had to run slowly along the ground | Robinson, who is affectionately known | luncheon wae served to the mem-|liam H n= fi::\:‘ily“r:x{mlzgéu;a;'}:sghb;sa!.ge SR wil 'Zgié“l'igv‘éfa“fii‘?'flf ollie Who |like an auto for about two hundred |, the “mother of th club,” a $5 gald [bers at 1230 in the church vestry "“'! For ane, I should cohsider those two | of" bav and rori aarcogehad roam- | Why, I can epend half my spare |aoq,oich leave & bone any i O roub | vards, so that we could turn avound |picce as a token of thelr love and |the Ladies' Aid soclety. 3 vis words about the last in the whole 400.- | heet and onfon. beds. pascrine thow | Lime—Which isn't so common with me, | 287000 (He’ feids, coming up at gn. [20d start into the wind. Then we turn- | estcem, AMCvemnlt.of the. auniial slsetion’ of —_ 900 of the dictionary to be applicable L DOREMInG either,—in trying to refashion in my 5 y|ed around and he let her have the N i fter luncheon speech |officers was as follows: L n: ble | geeply with her tracks and seeming to b Bills tervals to lick my hand and was his e = Aq interggting after L4 President — Mrs. Nathan Belcher ‘@ ! 1o farming, especially fo farming “as pick out-the rows with. speoial Carz 1o |mina the story of these hills and For a little way you feel the|g iden: Mrs. Nathan Belcher ‘g) LISBON i ;i |&2 2 patriotic lines was made by Mrs. | she is farmed” in New England. o knolls. ':’e“,fi’;{m‘e‘“‘go;{‘gng{;gg“ Bertectly in-| Turips of the ground, and then after | Sara . Kinney of Hartford, the hon- | New London. Hai ] v 1 - Only 4 little while later, my own cow great old pals?”’ iy one of the bumps, when you expect|ored guest of the occasion, and Mrs. R“rstd ‘l\‘_’o Yl'refl'lemem F. .| Five Stars on Service Flag Dedicated The other night a barn belonging to | failed to appear at milking time, and| And soils;—in my few acres there b iy 0 touch once more, _everything is | Robinson also- spoke in _felicitous | Rishards, New Tondon, - Nt Nowent! {Churoh—May:: Basked sne of my neighbars burned —down. |search for her developed the fact that |are sravels, which were left there by| Don’t talk ta me about the “monot. |Smooth and you are off. The line of | way on the origin-of the Red Cross|.Fecond Vice Wresident—Mrs. William| o Neither he nor any gk help Bad been | yhe nad entangiod her horms s ey | the awirling streams of nobody-knowe, | ony” or the “loneliness’ of the fapmi |hanars that you are running at and | fiag as dating from the time of St |Gilchrist Norwich. =~ = = in it for several howrk No one ever|wire fence so that she. couldn't free | how-many-million-years ago: and|If You want, I can rattle off to you|®XPect to hit are falling away from | Georse and the Dragon. ious | Pecicham. « ~ - Y, i Mus, Herbertl. | arvice ke bt o smoked in it. No b had been seen | them. there are sand deposits, of . similar|just about forty-seven bad things|YOU and vyou clear them by a hundre e fi?s,éflg:};i;fif ;{‘fep‘zgg““’gi Treasurer—Mrs. Simon L. Ewald,|Newen: church Sunday morning, the i the vicinity for afaftnight. He has| Nor could I, either, till ‘after a return | Origin: and there are beds of glacial |about farming, most of which the non- | fe¢t OF mor 80 enemies, %0 far &% he knows or any- | trip to the shop and the procurement |Clay: and there are areas _of loam,|farmer doesn't comprehend—or even| It W g e e e lace, | Naw, Lot five stars being for John _Kendall, s very windy and there were |y, one else. The fire remains an insolu- [of a pair of liers to.cut the wire, mostly fhe result of vegetable decom: |know that they exist, Any working|lots of so-called bumps, which cause|all present incumbents agreeing to| Caresnonding Secretary—Mrs. Ellis | Valler Comelt ) i Bl L ble mystery. Next thing I discovered was that the | position: and there are wet lowlands | farmer can do as much and some, per- | the machine suddenly to lose or gain | serve for the ensuing year. They are| g, (FAON | WOCE mEIHAn VIS, Je88¢ | 17 0000q ‘States flag was also placed in Next day, he discovered an outbreak | turnip flea-beetles had attacked my|Oof simple mud, underneath one of | haps, more. twenty feet in altitude. The saining | the following: President. Mrs. Chris- | fosers; Colehester, Mrs. B. b, Rem- o of disease among bls sheep. That, (0o, | cabbase plants, Whidh Were . peickiny | which, however. ltes & emall deposit of | But -monotony” and ‘“loneliness” |feels like sitting in a barber chair |topner Morgan of Mystie; eccretar: ille, Mrs. Phoebe Rob- | 5 theme was Stones of lize 2 : : inson; Lakes Pond, Mrs. Comstock was mysterious In its coming and €0/ the ground, and were chewi true peat:—with a score of variations |Wouldn't be included in the list. Not|@nd having him push vou up Wwith|Mias Phoebe Brewster; treasurer, Mrs, o : / blindly masked in its diagnosis that T|leaves of themn reckiesaly. rm,:gp,::i from ‘all these general classes. by-any real farmer, that {5 to'say;—a/ the foot lever, and the losing is worse; | Nelson D. Robinson. Mrs. Sara T fif"’:e" "}\'h;“rzi' C\“"’”Sevnfil‘?i fon't think he, even yet, knows just [can was empty, so I had to pestie-and.| ‘There are enough puzzles in the dirt|farmer with farm-bleod in his veins |t feels as if the thing were taken out|Kinney of Hartford was unanimously | furic o '8 coin, T o GVROIGSE NOm e come to make their home what was the matter. They were sick, | mortar up some soot and Sift over|of my gardens to keep me suessing|and farm-love in his heart and the true [ ffom under you and then put Back felected honorary- president —of - the| e, Mcs. Wliom Stsson: Ol Lyme, T o phrs: ek e oHe ; — was sure enough; and the con- keshift. N half the year! farm spirit informing his soul. again. ! R mas Church; Moodus, s P, J jequent care necessitated kept him ;“3’,“,,‘?:»,11 oud ‘uut wmhd?;t&;:l‘; s Whith sort of Thrmer 15 the only true| He was going to take me up as high| ~ Mrs, Maln, Miss Larrabee ang Miss g":f;‘“x _CF(,“ s IMoolflu , P J. Home from the West. lumping for some time sort. There are others, we'll admit, |35 the top of a water tower and then | Rachel Larrabee of Groton were voted 55 e, London T Jirs. Alice Knight and son of Plain- £ T i Paul Budeit, Who has been in the ; washed the soot off, but gullied some| Rigi i i ) : - : : Nettie J. Bishop: Huntington 'street J i i Only two days later one of his best ising beyond the inorganic, think| @yt they" around the field and down, and when|in to fill the vacancies caused by < v SN : SRR S »| west for several months, it at his fa- o I Bkt fon Lol B oy Sorgens, flaoded @ coule | of tne number of plants Which £50w an| © Theype uet e armers. fts, |1 TSt saw the Water Tower it looked | deaths of members. : Mrs. Joseph A. Elder; Montauk ave: |ther's, Charles Budeits vard tub in some unheard-of fashion |seds and so saturated the moil as fo | o, Bundred acres. I have alittle col- | square pegs in round holes. | like a little toy way down below. Well, | At the ciose of the meeting the la-|Tue. Miss Alida Fitch: Shiloh, Mrs.| ~Michael Connell of Bridgeport has 5 lection of over ninety distinct varie- oy . |he shut down the motor and said, “I|dies rose and stapd in silence to the|Howard: Niantic. Miss Grace Com-|peen a v !.?,‘.‘.’:'_fl%,‘fl:,““?”“;fl"‘t‘;’,;’;"“g:f b vorking or It Impracticable for| ties of wood which I have gathered in THE FARMER } | wiy" take you around the Field again | memory of Mrs. Waterman R. Burn- [$tock: Salem, Mrs. Loren Rathbun: | past weel fore the veterinary could arr her PR 1y twenty years, from my own place. and get some more altitude so that| ham, Miss Ada Smith, Miss Ellen s’“erfordfl"im. Mrs. ~Cruttenden Milton Souter of Hanover and Wal- * 2 struggies had resulted in such lacera-| | 4 o 3 In the way of grasses and weeds, the STAFFORD SPRINGS we can see Dayton.” I said. “Hell, I|Geer and Miss Lucy P. Butler( the ?Cg"db Mrs. I;?ndld Fletcher; Nor-|ter Wibberiey of Nerwich attended tion of the throat and neck that his|u, . Vasn't seriously troublediwith any |list is almost endless. Not a season —— can see Dayton fine from here” but I|latter one of the incerporators ef the :’&m b fi""fi"' rs. .{I?)l_"m Post: First, | church at Newent Sunday. Mr. Souter best advice was to kill her, right then monotony” during that week, though |passes that I do not discover at least|Two Swindlers Secure Money, Claim- |lost, and around we went climbing all | society), who had all died during the | ¥ Bi%, ohn T egpon ird, Mrs. Wil- | gave the bugle call' during the dedi- not one of my mishaps was to be class- | one new kind of vegetable life. Gen-| % R t Red ‘c the way until the machine that were | year. liam Turner; Mt. Calvary, Mrs. Drury. | cation service, Bald this neighbor to me, when T met | 0. 85 really serious nor even.as re-|erally it is a “weed" that is, a plant| MA@ to Represen ed Cross—Iying on the regular cadet route| Those present during this enjoyable (. The loving cup presented by the| Nearly ‘twenty of Miss Mabel Kana- him, that afternogn: “Why, yes, thinge n;‘arkable. They were just bothers of which, in my coliossal ignorance, 1| Twenty-one Young Patriots Leave|around the Field seemed to be crawl- [ luncheon were Mrs. Sara T, Kinney of Mpxgan, _American TBaptist Fome|pans' friends from Jewstt City gave have been happeming on the farm, | oot Which are all the time hap-|don't know the use of. But there is| to Join National Army. ing on the ground as I looked down |Hartford, the governor of the state|Missionary sociely was awarded to the | her a May basket party Friday even- ' | pening on every farm. They were the |always an interest attached to it, on them. The fields looked like little | society; Mrs. Herbert L. Crandall,|New London association society this|ing. things which eame to gvery farmer, in | nevertheless. Beyond the need of| Two strangers were in Stafford |squares of different color just as they | Mrs. Charles B. Tennings, Mrs. Nelson | Vear ““",‘é “ngl";"“;m}’“ in the after- | A public meeting and exhibition of el LW ) or Aanother, 8nd which he|pulling it np for the sake of the planted | Springs Monday and under pretense of | do when looking from a mountain. | M. Keeney, Mrs. Frank S.: Greene, | 1000 by Mrs, W. 1. Sly of Hartford. | school work was given by the sehools = haronot- |regularly takes ds. part of the day's|crop Iam raising, I can't help- won- | collecting money for the Red Cross|The roads looked like little streaks|Mrs. Charles B, Graves, Mrs. Tved - of the town ITiday afternoon at the { pa ot dering where it came from, how it got|succeeded in separating several per-|and a little silver stream was the|Smith, Mrs. L. R, Shipman, Mrs, Seth| Hartford.—An Italian flag to fiy over | church. There were songs and reci: (o 7 ., |here, what its properties are, and|gons from the coin of the realm. They | Miami River. We saw Dayton O, K.|Cemstock, and Miss Elizabeth Stark,{the capitol on Italy day, I'riday, May | tations and an eshibit of Rad . | should as soon think of describ. | whether some wiser man. by and by [made believe that they were author- |and every other town = anywhere |all of New London. 24, has been presented- the state by|work done in the schools and £ ing farm-life as “monotomous” as I)will discover that it is the long-soughtlized by the finance committee of the|around, I kept looking down all the| Gales Ferry: Miss Amelia Mathew- | Mrs. Arthur M. Dodge of Simsbury. made by the pupils. itor at Duncan McKay's the