Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 14, 1918, Page 8

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Can You Beat The Best and Largest Talking Machine for the As large as any $150 Talking Plays all needle reccrds. BE SURE AND HEAR IT AT money. Machine. NORWICH TOWN Lathrop Missionary Socmly Conclud- es Season—David Shahan, of Aero Squadron, English Field. A nary society met -\Pum«(n rnoon at the che e Pirst Congregationa] churc his being the last meeting until S mber, plans for i s sed. A part of a letter, dated 18 The lathrop v and one of the Li- from whom the local so- name. The early writer for missi tated were full of in- he changes effected in Afri- villages by converted chiefs and is of families were noted during hour. First Flight in England. Miss 2 of West Town Squadron and recently made fligh, staying in the air for an and one-half. Sacred Heart Devotions. will be ne devotions at $a- Heart this (Friday) Social and Personal. ton, Mr. nton and pent the DOCTOR COULD NOT HELP HER But Lydia E.Pinkham’s Vege- table Compound Saved Her from a Serious Operation. Brooklyn, N. Y.—““1 suffered some- thing dreadful from a displacement and two very bad at- tacks of inflamma- tion. Mydoctor said he could do nothing more for me and I would have to to the hospital for an operation, but Lydia E. Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound_and E.ananye Wu}; ve entirely cure me. of my troubles and] am now in good health. Iam willing you should use my testimonial and hope to benefit other suffering women by so doing.”—Mrs. F. PLATT, 9 Woodbine St., Brooklyn, N. Y. Gperations upon women in our hos- xur are constantly on the increase, ut before submitting to an operation for ailments peculiar to their sex every woman owes it to herself to give that famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound, a trial. 1f complications exist write Lydia E. Medicine Co., Lynn, Mass., for advice. FOR SKIN ERUPTIONS Nothing heals and clears the skin of infants and children like Powder Sykes &c healing. which contains harmless ant ingredients not found in any powder. . | 25c at the Vinol and other drug storeg The Comfort Powder Co., an, Mass, G.‘ORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Providence St., Taftville Prompt attention to day or night calls Telephors £39 el WFawl Makes First Flight at an| [t? Ouly $75 Norwich 324 Main St. Weste;l-y Opp. Post Office. with Rey. William Crawford of West {Town street. Pratt Allen of Hanover cent guest at Town street. was a re- the parsonage on West Charles Ryan of New London was a recent guest of his mother, Mrs. Mac- gzaret Ryan, of West Town street. . Mrs. Margaret Sullivan and som, Richard, of Hartford, have returned after a visit with relatives in town. Mrs. John O’Connor has returned to New London, after a few days spent at her former home on West Town street. . Mrs. Mary Webb of Town street is returning from a three weeks' visit with relatives in Webster and Worces- ter, Mass. Mr. and Mrs. James Kiviin and chil- ren have returned, to their home in jartford, after passing a few days at Kivlin's former home. ! Trank. E»-Smith of the U. S. Naval Reserves, New London, was the guest recently of his - sister, Mrs. Thomas Dovle, of Huntington avenue. Dwight C. Stone and Master 7 of Stonington, are the . Stone'’s sister, Mrs, 1. of West Town street. BRIEF STATE NEWS Harry Brooks, who is 924 has planted a garden this iden.— old Danbury. dio work sta rade scho Wallingford. | veteran of" th { week at his home @ in buzzer and ra- ed this week at the state eorge E. Hull, 82, a war, died this in Wallingford. Middletown.—Iloustin Billing, a for- mer Middletown «boy, had nis service stripe for sir month¥' active service, and that a little before his 19th birth- | day Deep River.—A battalion drili of the | State guard consisting of the Deep River, Chester and [ssex companies will be held on the local ball grounds next Sunday morning. Danbury.—Arrangements are: being made to hold a big war savings stamp | rally in ‘this city on June +19, when | prominent speakers from out of town | will. make- address on war matters. Thompsonville.— crease in_wage: A 10 per cent. in- to its emploves was announced this week hy the Bigelow- Hartford Carpet company in its Thompsonville plant. This is the fifth increase made by the company since 1916. | Hartford—-According to the records at the water department office in the municipal b#ilding. 12,340,000 gallons of water were used in this city Monday. The table shows that 1,654,800,000 gal- 'lons of water were in storage in the j city reservoirs at 7 o'clock yesterday morning. HOW TO GROW FAT A Lazy Stomach the Cause of Thinness, Nine Times in Ten. If you are thin or lean, have scraw- ny arms apd neck. vou can't grow fat unless your food properly digests. People take on flesh in proportion to the nutritious matter which the organs [ of digestion absorb and pass into the 00d. Just'as long as the nutritious matter passes along without being absorbed, t so long will you remain thin. Perhaps your stomach, bowels and liver need a tonic. If your digestion is not perfect, Mi-0-ha tablets will put it right at once. Mi-o-na will relieve indigestion and | every conceivabie ailment of the stom- ach promptly. It strengthens digestion by building and toning up and mot by ncoura; a tired stomach to com- cmue its shiftless and health-destroy- ing habits, It prumptly drives away sour stomach, beiching of gas, heavi- ness after eating. Lee & Osgo Dd "Co. sell H‘J—o-na, and guarantee i' to relieve indigestion, sea and car sickness, vomiting of preg- nancy and all stemach diseases and distress. or. mone: | never an agreeahle ohject fo (Written "Specially for The Bulletin.) Many-a true worg is spoken in jest, according .to 'an. .0ld saying. For in- stance, .the . bright ' paragrapher who has made The Toledo Blade famous remarked, the ' other day, that “a wrinkle !s a dxmple which has quit smiling.”" Enh? F Scarcely ‘ aything can be more pro- ocative of the .answering smile than to ‘'see a sudden dimple:begin to ap- pear on the pretty. face at which you are looking, and whose owner you are trying to interest. It is, in itself, the proef that you have touched some pleasant chord and ws.k.ened some happy thought or feel- ing. It is the silent, twinkling witness that its wearer is, for the moment, at least, not only cheerful but inclined to_he becomingly hilarious. Tt is the herald of coming laughter, as the swelling rose-bud is the har- binger of the floral glory about to burst open. It means, whatever the out-doors weather, that the mental rainguage of the wearer is “‘set fair,” and that the spiritual skies‘are radiant with sun- shine and joy. A wrinkle, on the other hand, is gaze upon. Only a tucked-up fold of the skin and so far not unlike the dimple, it, nevertheless, means exaétly the| opposite, It is the fixed and stereotyped im- pression stamped by over-work, or undue worry, or chronic captiousness, or a peppery temper, or a vinegarish disposition—or some other internal malady. Tnstead of tending toward cheerful- ness, it points a crowsfoot towards unhappiness, like a guide-post point- ing the way to some local Slough of Despond. Only in very old people, on whose faces time traces wrinkles in its slow annual passing even eventually wear wyinkling gullies down the cheeks of once smooth hi sides, are wrinkies either admirable or befitting. —Perhaps there may be one ex- ception; in the case of those tiny folds radiating from the outer side of each eye which, in men of the type of old Uncle Ike, come, not from cor- rugating ill-temper, but from the invariable habit of ‘smiling with their eyes, rather than boisterously guffaw- | ing with their mouths.—But these/| are not true wrinkles. They are of a! different parentage: really a sort of adult, grown-up dimple. They don't] count in our discussion. There are a good many men and women of th type, too. The real wrinkje bas in it nothing of good fellowship. It is a signal-flag set for foul weather,—all the time, or pretty nearly so. When the sea lies smiling* summer sun and its little wavelets,| pitter-patter o6n the ' sandy = beach making here a tiny ridge of sand, or scooping there an equally tiny finger- | mark, the summer hoarder smiles back | and has a hugeiy good time. But when raging storms tear the surface of the roaring ocean into ragged con- fusions ' of swirling water and hurl drift-burdened waves furiously against the shore, tearing it into gul untidy wrinkles,—then the boarder isn’t there to see. If she. were she would know for- ever afterwards what is the difference between a natural dimple in the sand and a natural wrinkle in the face of | the pluffs. She would also know the difference hetween the two phenomena. in the [ ies and | summer | causes of the And. she ‘might, putting two and two together judi- ciously, discover an analogy. between | one set of seashore happenings and| another set of mental conditions. For the dimple is caused by smiling, while the wrinkle .is caused by scow ing, then by worry over the inevitable: or by persistent fault-finding with the universe; or by a diuturnal dissatis faction ‘with everything that is; or by the habit of nagging (which is not al- ways confined to wives, but has been noticed by scientific observers insome husbands and a good many up sirls and boys). The dimple may or may not be re- | it growing- sarded as a facial attraction. but will never be classed as a deform The wrinkle, on the other ha popular. Witness the advertisements of face-lotions and face-masks and other devices manufactured and sdld as wrinkle-eradicators. Yet the truth' is that both the dimple and the wrinkie are simply symptoms. Each one is the visible token of the mind. Did you ever see a dimple on a sour visage? Or an ugly wrinkle on the face of a happy voungster isn't every 1t one who is blessed toward dimpling. the gradual trans- formation of the dimple into a wrinkle, under the influence of worry or nag- ging or ill-temper is a sorry change. What on earth has all this_talkee- talkee about dimples and wrinkles. got to do with farmers and farming I fancy I hear you asking that question. Well, while | do not assert that a dimple-cheeked farmer must, neces- sarliy, be a better farmer and a pleasanter neighbor and a manlier man than one who hasn’t a dimple, T do ‘say, unhesitatingly, that the state of mind and the habit of thoughtand action which produce wrinkles is a state of mind inconsistent with the best farming or the nicest neighborli- ness or the truesi manhood. For it means that the wrinkler isn't working in harmony with his surround- ings, but at cross-purposes with them. He isn't sweeping up-stream on the TheDmplemd the Wrinkle in Life’s Afairs spring freshets | I along ‘a’city street in mid-July with a-heavy wheelbarrow load of bricks, turned towards the “blazing sun and enculated “Fo’ de Lawd’s sake )har wuz yo', last January?” ‘But, say, how my potatoes and corn and cabbage and peas and beans, etc., ‘were growing that day! I didn* trea.lw enjoy it, but they - manifestly did. They simply humped themseives. Rain had made the preceding day gloomy—to me. Heat made this day burdensome—to me. But: the gardens had soaked in the rain with simply ecstatic delight and were now revelling in the hot sunshine. I had to cut as- paragus twice that day, to keep some of the stalks from getting wastefully long. One particularly fat and juicy spear, which I noticed in the morning as being about four inches high, cut a pole over nine inches long at six p. m. That rain, which 1 didn't enjoy and that tropical heat which kept me un- comfortable meant a double yield of asparagus, as I could plainly see and cut into my basket. How many more bunches of beets and onions and car- rots, how many more pecks of spinach and cress and peas and beans, how many more bushels of corn and pota- toes and wheat and oats, how many more tons of hay they meant I could not measure or estimate. But a good many. i ‘Well, now, as a practiecal, working farmer-gardener, dependent upon my crops not only for comfort but for life itself. which was the more important weather to me, that which suited my physical feelings, or that which suit- ed those crops? Answer me that. | have a near neighbor to whom nothing is ever just right. ' It’s always either too hot or too cold, too snowy or too sunpy, too wet or too dry. All last winter he spent hugging the stove and snivelling about the intense cold. Already, this summer, he's begun whimpering about the intolerable heat. don’t know that he ever had a di ple or the mak developea 2 s of one. But he’s crop of wrinkies that would make grim-visaged war smooth its Shakespeareanly wrinkled front in envy.—And, in the meantime, he's Keeping everybody around him un- comfortable,—~which is really not a farmer’s job, nor anybody else’s. You and | didn't make the weather and we can'’t You and T did- ) s of nature and them. We didn't ‘We weren't even ng. It has been ad- ars by realiy shrewd that we've got to take things as This being so, it’s just to greet them with a e happen to have such a as to let them breed wrinkles. It won't mdkr- any change in the re- 2 it ¢ will tend to keep ourselve: I don’t suppose it will make any measurable difference .with our. crops whether. we spend our lives smiling and dimpling or scowling and wrmk~ ling. I don't even intimate that it will increase the hilarity of nations. But it would conduce somewhat to the comfort and peace of mind of those compelled to associate with us and listen to us. Pll leave it to vou if it wouldn’t! THE NAME WAS TAKEN FOR BRAVERY UNDER FIRE FARMER. Corporal Irving McGowan, of West- erly, Former Norwich- Employe, Writes to Ma’(her Of a_ former emplo,\e of the Mar- lin-Rockwell company, a young man of 24 who went across last August and who has a number of friends in Norwich, the Westerly Sun says: A létter from Corp. Irving McGo- wan, Battery A, 103d regiment, Amer- breast of a flooding tide, but is trying to "pole his raft cross-lots where the | swamp isn’t calculateg for navigation. There are a whole lot of. things in nature which vou and T don’t under- stand about. I cant imagine, for in- stance, why the anopheles mosquits was constructed to bite me and infest me with malaria. Nor why the house- | flv ‘was made with a speeial passion for crawling over the bfld spot on my head whenever I try to take a nap. Nor why it should have to be so in- folerably cold in winter and so in- sufferably hot:in summer.—Sweating over a garden.patch, the other day, with the thermometer up in’the nine- ties in the shade, T couldn’t help think- Lriea Mi-o-na is sold by leadine drnsg!!f& ing .of the old darkev who, teiling CORP. IRVING McGOWAN ican Hxpeditionary forces, has been received by his mother, Mrs. Thomas McGowan, of 7- Mechanic street, in which he writes: “I am safe. I came through all right, o please don’t wor- Ty _about me.” . Referring to meeting Westerly boys in France, Corp.-McGowan says, “Tell all my friends that I haye at last met | couldn’t say a word the madame could world. . The.woman .in the. home, the shopper, the darcer, the foot. traveler, the man in theoffice,. the,clerk.in the store, -the” worker in- "_he ;shop, - _nave today, in this .great discovery,-“Gets- 1t”; the one-sure, quick relief from all corn -and: callus. pain—the ‘one- sure, painless. sremover that .mmkes ~corns come off:as easily as.you would“peel a banana. -It .takes 2. seconds‘to apply “Gets=It”; . it dries at ‘once. Then walk with painless joy, even'with tight shoes, Yoy know your-corn will loosen from your toe—peel it off with your fingers. Try “it, corn sufferers, and youwll smile ! “Gets-It,” the guaranteed, money- | back corn-remover, the only sure way, costs ‘but a trifle at any drug . store. M'f'd by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago, m. all the Westerly bo; including Bob and Jim Meikle, and they used me great. I was very glad to see them nd they were glad to see me as were | ; the boys. " T sure am a lucky fel- ow.” Corp. McGowan modestly speaks of bis daction’ under fre in which hel “My name was taken and sent for bravery under fire. Gee! It as great. If I only could tell you; about it T sure would do so. I am so happy tenight.. I have done my bit but will do more if I am called for, believe me.™ The brave young soidier is the old- est of seven children and has a broth- er already in ‘the.service. SOLDIERS AND SAILORS What Eastern Connecticut Boys Are Doing In Various Branches of the Service. From - Near the Front. Capt. John S. Blacksmar of this city, surgeon with a regiment "over there” "‘rn‘nm $5.00 TO $12.00 ON A~SILK: DRESS 'SEE THE SAmsf'lmgfsesf:* Just neeewm- Loads of New Merclnnd‘u at’ prices that. will astonish you and stores MM&y can compete with us. st $7.97, $9.97 and $12.97—worth up to S 'LADIES’ SILK POPLIN AND WOOL SERGE $5.97 and $7.97—worth up to 512,00 + LADIES’ SILK TOP SKIR’ $3.97 and $4.97—worth up t0'87.'50’ e $1.47 md $1.97—worth up‘te 53 .0C - LADIES’ WOOL- SWEATES : $2.97 and $4.97—worth up to $7.30, LADIES’ SILK HOSE. 39c and 47c—worth.up to 75¢: LADIFS’ MUSLIN GOWNS AND PETl'lCOATS 97c, $1.24 and $1.47—worth up to $2.00 LADIES' RUBBER TOP CORSETS. 97c—worth $1.50 . LADIES’ REAL PANAMA HATS . . 97c, $1.47 and $1.97—worth up £0,§5.002 LADIES’ COTTON WAISTS. . ... 97c and $1.24—worth up to $2.00 . LADIES’ SILK WAIST3 ** $1.97 and $2.97—worth up to $5.00 LADIES® SILK CORSET COVF.RS’ 59¢ and 97c—worth up to $2.0 Bring Your Children—We Dress Them from' Head to Foot WHY PAY MORE? | THE PASNIK CO. sell NORWICH STORE OPPOSITE WOOLWORTH'S 5c and 10c STORE e ells for less wuuMANflc:'!é)'oa; NEXT TO WOOLWORTH’S 5c and 10c STORE lantern in a room in a house in a French village, waiting to retire in a real bed between clean, white sheets, {but first T must tell you of the comic opera doings of last night. Then they were serious; now, they are laugh- able. My letter, of course, will have'to be after a few days and nights’ ride on a train through France we arrived at dark, in a pouring rain, at a station; it were dumped out in the dark and rain, and proceeded to unload.. While waiting I ‘could hear a distant muffied “Pung! Pung!” every few minutes; a peculiar sound, like a distant blast, or single clap of thunder. They were the real thing, and made me think of | Empey’s book (or ‘was it Tan Hay though it did not have the same ef- fect on me. As soon as the trucks were loaded with ‘the rations, we started for the three villages where we were' to be billeted. "I got on a truck, and it was a wild ride, believe me, with only one ! small light going, skidding from side | to side, the three-ton truck sliding, | grunting and groaning along, but we kept the road. One American driver who loaded us, said there must be a million trucks in | France, and I am sure I never saw so | {many in any one place as were in| | some of the railroad vards and camps lon our route. The men came siopping on, and we slipped up hill and down through vil- lages that were partly ruined by shell- | fire, apparently deserted, until about | 1.30 a. m. we pulled into a village, and cur French driver gave a grunt and a nod. Down I got in the rainm, and started a detail unloading into a barn_ Then we reported to two very suave French officers at the town hall. After much talk, with the aid of an official inter- preter, an officer started down the street with half a dozen of us'to look ies. Under the Red Robe,.etc. More banging and finally a candle and head appear at an upper window. Volleys of French conversation are exchanged, and presently the head disappears. the door is at’'last opened and “Mr, Durbee-sheer” is called. and disappears down the long covered courtyard, following the figure with the Jamp. “Night, Derby!” we call, and pass to a nice large room with high bed, which she immediately proceeded to! adorn with clean sheets, blankets and the feather bed which goes on. top in- and turned in. Waked at mine. and I went downstairs to invéstigate: | understand except ‘“tay”"—so she in-! ‘quired “la sucre?” and I nodded and | said, “Oui, Madame.” salt, sugar, canned beef, jam and hard fast. I saw a Teddy bear in the next room and asked her if she had a child. { b, w She nodded, and soon In came a wo- man about twenty-five, and a beau ful little girl about three, whom S;?]‘;ed to be the daughter and grand- c and all T could get was that the child’s father was “mort” 1 don’'t believe| there is a<family in France that has | not suffered loss. Friday. ° Heard quite a2 bombardment, tonight at suppertime, in- the air. Must have been about twenty expiosions; but wé could see nothing, oniy wonder. Saw some French troops come in.-this morning and they stopped near me. One” m asked it I b.d “a mntch 3 1 They .volleyed French at’ me, l a ~ At the beginning of the war, he came over as an interpreter. training: zation and getting settled. our men with their books in hand the windows of the little shops a 411 general as fo places and distances, but | tion of the words. hink we are getting on very well. am anxiously has yet arrived. Capt. John Surgeon 372nd R. graduating exercises for | bury schools, under direction of School Supervisor Bliss Bennett of the Model school. pils expecting to the High school are: graduate, Marion Cleland, Vi land, Charles Hart, liam Perry. field, house. Philip Lawson, Richard Davis. Pearl Christian. Beatrice Moore. The,water Settin, was represented by The littie daughter of ;. George Potvin was brought forward, Corp. vs. Woife et al, Bbling Brewinz for baptism. by part of the service. custom to present on Children’s Sun day a Bible to each the church, when carried implements cupations. Wainwright, Earl an ter, Lewis Safford; 1 had brought! m"ct N, tack, so we made out quite a break: | We nesds: I spent the week end in Worcester with her brother were in Hartford Sunday. Pharmacy, Danielsop: J. F. Mrs, 'Tda Baker and Miss Ruth Col- Putnam; and firugmu Everyvbm. has written .the following letter to his - home here: April 24, » My dear Ones:—Here I am about |please.” 1 was surprised and asked|lins of New Boston, called- on twenty miles from the _front line,|him where he learned his English. He Jennings, Tuesday. ! writing to you by aid of my candle|replied “In New York, at the Ritz.” Mrs. Brightman of Manchaug, -R. " 3 pa. T —rrrvrr - ONE YEOMANETTE AND FIVE NAVAL RESERVISTE d on local Irlends one day the week. We have not yet begun our final just ‘perfecting our houses irving to zet the pronuncia-|Fassed Examinations Thursday®: at We are the first| Recruiting Station in This City. American troops to come here, though T ” others have passed through and 1| Ensign Litchard and Dr. Thomas 1,Soltz from the.navalureserve station at New London were, here on Thurs- day morning to examine and enroll those who had enlisted. for the naval reserve. They made the exunma.tmns at’the recruiting office established by Ye man Joseph MacDonald 1{,1 office at the town hal awaiting mail; nothing | My new address is‘ Blackmar, M. R. C., 1401858 5 No. 229, "Am. Ex. Forces, France. CANTERBURY GREEN S, | | — {younz ‘men passed the examimations Public School Pupils Whe Will Bejand one voung woman was accepted Graduated Friday—Children’s Day &5 2 yeomaneitee. She .is Miss Sarah T. Hinchey of ;104.- Oalkr H Exercises—Tractor Kenyon Farm. in, Use on thej ge street. Thé men ac- vepted werc Waiter Kozywicky, Phil- lipe L. gas, Bronislaw, Shalkowsky, Friday of this week, Flag Day, at|Thomas A. Linton amd Fred:Kempen 2.30, at the church wiil be held the|They may all expect a call to actly. | service wtihin a week or, two longer. Yeoman MacDonald, who is to keep the recruiting station here ‘open for two weeks or more longer, had-notice on Thursday from -General Crowder that enlistments in the: naval reserve may still be received from men whu have become 21- since 'June 35, 1917, as they have not.been classificdsyet. the Canter- and Miss Dorothy The pu- be graduated into Green School—Perle Bur Ruth Davis, = COURT CASES GIVEN- nnss' FOR TRIALS. i Assignments of Buumu. for Trials-in ¢ the Superior Céurt. R Westminster School—Richard Merri-’ Packer School—Christian Wheeling- Raymond School—Albert Boulais, Assiznments of court cases in Nor- wich were made as follows in the su- perior court short. calendar session | here on Thursday before Judge J. H. pro- | Keeler: North Society — Rosena Del Pesco, | Events of Children’s Day. The Patriots of the I\m;dom ild: for ) Pr N gramme of C Tuesday, June 18—General Supply if'g'h{33“2€ea3§?‘a‘g;‘33u3a—.’?5';.,s‘}‘;f,h"f ried out very Co. vs. Fournier, Yurman vs. Socha. light he came’ to a number on the |MOrning. The Biblical drama of the!alias < Flovence=L: Leeds Y= wooden door.. What a .racket! Tt Finding of Baby Moses was W giv en; George. W.. Leeds, .Strange-vs. Haubt made me think of A Taleof Two Cit- |y Misses Miriam and Julia Cornell | et al. Hart and Alice ard Ruith| Wednesday. June 13—Morgan et a! g of bullrushes | vs. Savings, Bagk . of “New London, iris and daisies. | Swerkowski vs. knowski et al, Mr.. and Charity and ‘Religf Iedze Masonic A song of consecration i Co. vs. Squadrito.” the infant's two little sisters was| Thursday, June 20—Weisler vs. New- | ton, Raymond vs; (Baker et al. - it has been the| TFriday, Juje"21—Short calendar, bar meeting and assignment of cases. Mo- tions for restoration to docket of dis- For several years baptized child*o : vears old. Those | cont'nued cases. i Diow aed Tave p 7 ot ©e | eceiving books this vear were Mar-| Tuesday, JunciZi{spcoal)—Gedr ve. ting tired of waiting, (though I found |ion Safford and Webster Wainwright. Comstock. out later that T was reserved,for the |Little Lewis and Msrion Safford fol-} ettt 310000 Suie best room, ‘being highest in rank) so |l0Wed the presentation a _Bible; ettles $10.¢ uit. Tsaid T would go with Dixon, if -he did | SOP8. Jesus Loves Me, This I Know,, The suit of Jodeg T Moosts, of not mind. The officer proceeded to ex- |{OF, the Bible Tells Me So. Red White | Nex London against Edward A. Patch. postulate, and say “Parjour, Parlour, |2nd blue flowers were carried by three fet. al, of the. same,city. was_seftled mon_capitaine.” but I said in plain |SIFIS as they came forward without trial in the 'superiod —court English I would go no farther, and | _Cladvs Davis M in this city Wedgesgay. = The plain- here T am. Helen Hart. tiff was suing for $19,000 for the déath TWe followed our zuide upstairs in- | S€rvice in carpent f his littie daughter as the result of Kosen oc- | re: Webster | Ison Carpen- ngton Sn nh' being titten by defendants. s a dog owned by the he Doy W public utilities Centerville. — Th stead of a’quilt, - We = Said many|2nd Lawrence Utz | commission has granted the petition “merci's’” got ont of our wet boots am’i jgave a b |of the Connecticut, cémpany for the clothes, took a rub with our mwe‘gigmbfl of indefinite extension :ef itime in which s song in er recited Consecrati to build the troiley line from Dixwell avenue, New Havem, to Centerville. BRONCHIAL- ASTHMA Th Mrs. Graf Says Vinol Cured Hep foD ngion,”, Pa.—"1 suffered from: bronchial Asthma so badly I would' often have to sit up balf of the nig] or lean over the back of a chair, an !so weak I could hardly walk acro: mnhe floor. I had spent lots of mone; |for dliferent Asiiima medicines wit] {out heip—but Vinol heiped me so sleep well, and am so well and stronj T am doing all my work on the fa rs. Bmma Graf. Vinol is; @ ! conStitutional reme which contains .beef and cod I peptones, iron and manganese pe; tonates and gl»cerophoaphates. - strongly recomsnpd Vinol . = ¢ Broadway Pharmacy; Wilson Dru Co.. Willimantic; A. . Willi usht a large tractor eng h they have been work: \[x Mrs. Nora Walker of Providence, Ri is visiting- Mrs. Kate Hagerty for few days. Mrs. Bouet, with her son, Wilfred, and his fam Miss M. Reed and Lawrence Keegan acy.

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