Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 15, 1918, Page 11

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

LARGEST SALE EVER HELD IN DANIELSON—" We Have Bought the Entire Stock of Welsberg Clothing Go. Men s and Boys' Clothing, Shoes and Furnishings And we have decided to dispose of this stock at once at Main Street time to buy your Overcoat, Suit, Shoes and Furnishings at far below wholesale prices. We have paid SPOT CASH which enables us to give you the LOW PRICES mentioned helow. Sale Starts Saturday, November 16th, 65 Main Street MEN'S SUITS | Men's, Ladies’ and Children’s Shoes ALL NEW AND UP-TO-DATE STYLES - “PACKARD” AND “JUST RIGHT” BRANDS $12.00 AND $15.00 SUITS. SALE PRICE §'7.95 §7.50 AND $8.50 SHOES SA:.E PRICE $5.95 $16.00 AND $17.50 SUITS SALE PRICE $ 9.95 $5.00 AND $6.00 SHOES SALE PRICE $3.95 R cenn S R o $2.95 $20.00 AND $22.60 SUITS SALE PRICE $14.95 || 0 pAlRS RUBBERS, VALUE $1.25 SALE PRICE 80 $25.00 AND $30.00 SUITS SALE PRICE $19.95 BOYS’ AND GIRLS’ “WALTON” SHOES YOUR CHOICE $1.79 Blue and Black Serges Included 100 pairs, values as hlgh as $3 50 116 PAIRS LADIES’ SHOES YOUR CHOICE $1.95 , A . MEN S OVERCO ATS Values as high as $5.00 $12.00 AND $15.00 OVERCOATS SALE PRICE $ 9.95 FURNISHINGS $16.00 AND $17.50 OVERCOATS SALE PRICE $12.95 , $20.00 AND $22.50 OVERCOATS SALE PRICE $14.95 OVERALLS, ALL COLORS, value = high S50 $25.00 AND $30.00 OVERCOATS\ ' .. SALE PRICE $19.95 FLEECE LINED AND RIBBED. UNDERWEAR, Extra Heavy ___ - Black Kerseys Included . = — HATS AND CAPS Men’s Mackmaws and Reefers $3.50 AND $4.00 HATS IN THE LATEST STYLES .__: E PRICE $2.79 ALL THESE MACKINAWS WERE BOUGHT FOR THIS SEASON || $250 AND $3.00 HATS IN THE LATEST STYLES : - PRICE §1.49 $1.25 AND $1.50 CAPS IN ALL THE LATEST STYLES SALE PRICE 79c s, 5 it S i 66c AND 75c CAPS IN ALL THE LATEST STYLES SALE PRICE 39 MEN’S PANTS ‘ SHIRTS : AT BEFORE THE WAR PRICES . $1.95, $2.95 AND $395 || DRESS ‘SHIRTS, $1.25 and $1.50 values. ... SALE PRICE 89c Including Blue Serge TIES, 35¢c and 75c values SALE PRICE 19¢ and 39¢ REMEMBER THE DATE AND PLACE, 65 MAIN STREET, NOVEMBER 16, 1918 APEX STORE wvor co. prop. lnclmefl to pat it on the radiator hood |a potato on. t 3 many different f: 5.8 linched W3 rbury relatives. THE FARMER'S TALK TO FARMERS £ el g i Several times later we drove by |und rivetted that belet, VOLUNTOWN nce given.in Union Tiat'e snough’ about. “Tin Lisis "] Tty plowed Sar. Bae, s sy ivan.in.t the T A £ cheese, ented a ! Diction- Of course, there are some’ general| Voluntown, after a 4 and universal rules which hold g0od | Thursday fl‘:m Saskatchew JY\I to Timbuctoo. But when the re We went through all sort - | red sandstone rocks. My soil is | Ben 26 comen o the frie aally dsiaiis R (Weitten Specially For The Bulletin) little vacation trip, your chance has |ry: through ihe Berkehirs Moantaine; | Mads up from old Timestone roc ] i L “v’u"]rd: e e i Ive just returned from an auts)come; across the Litchfield Hilis; down the !l puzzled myself much to think what|hich fit my conditions might if |were in operation and schools were 330 miles through| And I took it. Connecticut vall cattér-cornered | I could possibly do with a field of that | Mdopted on a° North- Stomingion o R s e On less than wenty-four hours’ about Eastern Connecticut and then | brick dust'if I should be turned loose | wenq ht to the poor- rade was formed at 9 t.lSBON tice, we polished up the old “Tin Li somewhat different | on one. The same methods which the | ) 1 s i cher) y zie,” gathergd and loaded the nec oute. And I think I saw enough of | Tater still I walked over the farm of |, ats of ghe Connecticut val- (¢ = h Ernest Blake was ¥er Before” possible impedimenta, and started off. & haspitable friend. We went thr oy demand would be woefully out of rment. Most of the way that first it rain- fleld atter fleld ard I tell you th place in my gardens. ; As we are moslly (atmefs who kngw ed, but our roof was ight and our sido 1 truth when I say that there was s B 1 the farm ropesy unt fiecegsary. for | curtains kept the rain from blowing in, | Was concerned, of co whick I, accustomed to one sort of it me to explain our ghance-y|Also, we, hal 6n four new non=skid|mere than that in re; N rehearsal | ¢ in trim and |G What T started to chat about was the | turned soil of which w - sidelight the trip gave me on some |Powdered brick dust—probably t EVERY TFARMER MUST KNOW HIS OWN FARM. farm questions. sult of decomposition of the preva red as vening, wa fen Baldwin, of New York, er brother’s, Henry Baldwin's, ; Lottie Rozycki of Creenevilley © mt the weck end with Miss Mabel jornberg who tea her home in Wo s at New- surprise ¥ stock over friends comi tired, of those L Eeing ed with| Mrs. F. L. Kanahan spent a_few £d to differing | tools and one general sort of soil, | KNOW-it-alls who, from some city edi- n from Glasgo who helped mare i story | 7avs this weex with relatives i - - o Bogiand it tha Tarmor Who|tires, so thas 1 t havs to bother | neighborhood should have known ‘how to till. One|torial room, undertake to tell us farm- 2 little to, furnish the main ele- | telling. . Mre. Blake. servéd e R Rt S like myself, must get his living off [ with tire ch or pay much heed to| 1 have aps half-a-dozen vary-|field I recall in particular. It §o ok how ot T R A e i it p,,;g(?%n;l‘}‘;m el ! s farm, has to 'tend to business be- [ wet roads. Ran slowly and cargfully, | ing soils on my land, and have long |Strewn and paved with houlders, big | {if¢d of those bumptious farmers who, e left for G o e fors he can think of pleasure. o t we should have®done|Sinced learned that each une must be|2nd little, that I should not have been [ NAVINE SHO: SE Bame gancy. ‘g r some alluvial inter- | read st oty Stomach on Strike? Here's Relief! nose is kept mmm ty gressed on the [ that | y. For T didn't want to|treated according to its own particular | 2ble to drive a plow ten feet at one "'l*'?‘;' Jers: t 1 couldn’t 3ee anything. | humor. But v a sccre of other|time in one direction, Yet—and this|Yale along the “onnecticut, undertake L h 1l us fellows that, if-we'll do as the mu acres are workable v . kinds on my on one of which |is What knocked me deepest into the| (o tell us f 2 ! 1 1% rockis] s B late Tail sacws put o pod B R should T know what o do with, off-|Valley of Humility—that very field | they did, we, too; can wear diamonds. | raders not oaly ’Zfi.‘ii“}‘l‘i?ofée‘iffi‘, w;‘l‘; age operations. This year, by hard. had been plowed; well plowed, too, and | | don't believe there's a single farmer |; it some n..%mn, I manuged to get{of my destination would v through all abs er T reached it Monday ni fall work litle over 1 week ago. I|day atternoon to m T , you ol ay - less 1 "!‘" expect 1o make that | 4 ADd Darenthetically speaging, « 1|Worthless co far as crop . i de.hil | there still stood on it rows of corn a e vhos s n lowir . < ™ of all the hundreds whose places 1 ,,,fl":u;:‘,:,,g fesrd il :ir:'d:h'i'éfl shocks, mot. yet siloed, which showed | passed in my trii who can come on we, here, call subsoil and consider| DAt Was to me an astonishing|my placef now, and run it for the next is con- | BTOWth. welve, months as successfully as 1 want to say that the littis _|cerned. I com’t know w he was| But what's the use of multiplying |20 For the simple reason that 1 ed me to a hair. I met ’m‘,’i"o’?“its going to do with it. But his house|mstances? 1 saw hill farme ang |bave learned its whims—a thing which sisters and brothers than of all other |and barns were those of a comfortably [ mountain farms and sidehill farms and | ¢30't be done in any one seasor. 1 cars combjncd. It made no sensa- 1f-evident | valley farms and intervale farms. 1| am just as sure that I couldn’t substi- tlon and didn't try to—just purred c about. He[saw a few tumbledown places but|tute for ngle one of them, in a tentedly alons, with a rising and fall- to. get|more, many times more, that showed | Similar w nd better their work. ing hum of businesslike satisfaction as 1 said to|every outward sign of reasonable| We can ail give each other advice. we spurted « little on an up-grade or kaew how to | prosperity. All on land that I, if sud- [ We can all offer suggestions. - We can eased off on the lovel. It started when | Set a living off land 1 couldn't raise | denfy transferred to and bidden work, |41l drop’hints about what seems to us I wanted it to, and stopped when I|beans on, and I figuratively tipped my | would be an utter and pitiful failure | promising changes of method. ‘wanted it to und required only an oe-|hat to him. = upon. . Just as, perhaps, some of the Seems to me it’s the part of wisdom casfonal drinic of whter and a month. Not long after we drifted through a | farmers who were making homes on| for us to do the advising and the- hint- ful of gasoline, It didn't seem any|few miles where everything in sight | them would be puzzled what to do With | ing to. others in. o very modest way, more tired p(te les of almost|was ledge or cliff or bank or swale | MY ranch. and to take their adyice and .their it swung|And yet, nestled here and there in| I have insisted, time after time, in|hints in a somewhat gingerly fashion. o gate. Considering that | sheltered nooks, were farmhouses and [ past Talks in this column, that the | No ome of us is all-wise. No one of| A lary mber of local residents at- it bas been ured all summer and fall, | barns which showed that their owners{only way to farm it successfully was|us but has much to learn, even about in a slightl; different dress, for a|were able to keep the woif from the|for each farmer to learn his own farm | his own farm. No one of us can afford delivery of vyegetables, | door and even outside the uswally well |afid work it the way it ought to be|to.igngre or reject help of any sort. lies, etc., had never be- | kept front yard fence. They were | worked, regardless of how some other | But.let’s be sure it is. real help, be- t Woonsocket, R. 1. ven for €0 much as an mnifesny “gettidg - along™ it -mot | farmes on some’ other farm of wholly | fore we lay our. whole dependence upon E. lewis is visiting stopping, or for more | “getting ahead,” on farms that I]unlike makeup works his. My little it friends at Willimantic. ; E D - than 2 milcs at & single trip, T am | should not have known how to raise' trin. with its flecting glimpses of so THE FARMBR, | Mis, Everett Brown has returned UESE'L? anes ‘amln yong g e o R R, Y R st 4o : e 0 ) . et % Lo *No Indigestion, Gas or Sourness all to participate in the parade and celebrate in Jowett City at 7 o'clock in the evening which was promptly accepted and resulted. in a large delegation making merry with them. The factory whistics were blown here and the church and school bells Upset stomachs feel finé. All indigestion, gases, sourness, | heartburn, brash or acidity goes instantly. No waiting! Quickest stomach relief known. Just as soon as Pape’s Diapepsia reaches your sick, unsettled stomach convention $ all stomach misery stops. at Costs little—All druggists. hote spent the week end Stomach suffering is needless. WILL FUT

Other pages from this issue: