Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 28, 1919, Page 9

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NORWICH, BULLETIN, FRIDAY, WARCH 2, 1919 (Written Specially For The Bulletin.) | the top of the tree, where there wasn't Another one of those wonderful stor- | "0 for anvone clse. fe% of what boys or girls can do with | 1S Maine paper from which | learn 4 g . {8 | the story of her exploit gives some de- tails. Not as many as the really in- Mains quiring agriculturist would like, but The tale is that of little Miss Waneta | quite a few. ot of little Miss Wanela | Thg) o hired her littie plot, plowed and Blake, a stuaent in the high 001 at | harrowed, then she did all the rest.” She made a “charge of fifteen cents an small garden contest” throughout | hour for her own labor.” We are not at state. instituted under the fed- | told whether she bought her manure ‘ service of the University | and fertilizer, or whether her seeds were given her or not. We must She had a plot containing just one | sume that she used some fertilizer and quare rod of land—16 feet on a | sowed some seeds, but we can't figure side—on -hundred-a 1 because of the lack of infor-. about them. But she “hired it nd harrowed” and the rest of | » work she did, herself, ai fifteer | cents an hour, the total ~expense forl plowing. harrowing and her own labor coming to $2.66. 1f she paid for plow- ing and harrowing the usual rate per acre charged about here, this work would have cost her exactly two and 1 wish you | two-fifths cents. As she would have found extreme difficulty in making the book-writing | correct change for that amount, we would remark | will assume that she threw in the part ality that “any- | cent and pald three full cents down i impliedly | This, then, would leave a charge of rheaded | §2.63 for her own labor which, at fif- do thel teen cents an hour, would seem to im- er put in” about seventeen might a half hours’ work on her rod gardens comes nose-diving down from Gardiner, Me. She was the winner in 1 est, or | won it. | ately, SHEt o ey il period of national stress with added triu crop-making, this wou constant daily work ¢ oy e @ it has been the proudly performed duty of harrowing. This wo! Itivation i = turers and the distributors to co-oper. - T R L Government in every manner. The “ S e o AL T o ke I . e mark means the continued Clea'x;,s'. A it - TR Z od service to the women of this BT B T A growing army of Americ for the Queen Quality trad footwear. They know th Reliability, Authentic S measure of value for every d | o BB A A W AR 0 The new “Queen Cua Spring, as always, are style I gl HHe | Y N4 priced fairly and made prices for 3 ek : ; i . You will select them wi S ‘ | wear them with dail ike h ) § g ould a be highty ? bargain if he could 2 bushel. I have e I couldn’t get half that | : not really a matte bit of garden. I should not take B b aG s B e | ) HE KIES CO., Norwich, C lEiS e i W | ‘ Lad LU, INOTWICH, LOmN. QUCH! CORNS! L wit tne implication that they are sim. | ; = jpS——— of =2 illustrations of what one can milar judgment and tak cliers into the belief that ©hey do as well on any bit of gri\.nd, any where And they can't do it. The pit is that too many find this out after aking the leap instead of fore. Mi: R I A== led by chromatic rair of ) 1 be the thoug 3 1 C ¥ s t < AMmon( € in Providence on|evening they jump into w hink ood many FREE TO other Garden of Eden o1 t| It is quite possible, too, tI riday ev s Sutton, who ha parent 4 bottom! gle contestant won ouf in 3 so| Ot ttle “he ting her sister, Mrs. C. D. Kenyon, ch stories get into i1 vsp one e contestant mizht 1 ) ed to Clinton Mor ey rer nome A T u se they c | similar record in Connectic | Davi ceived word Saturd e ppenings but somet vikingly | wher : one succeeded i ’ )f the death of hi A Ma Mrs. Avis Proctor of Ha unusual and o dinary. | many hundreds failed? W { Kennedy Hare A New Home Cure That Anyane Can| That's what news gs. IUs A to| told that side of the story 3 ) N | Fa % 3 Use Without Discomfort or SRR Al < There is no doubt that 2 ) ters, 2 s A r L. Kenyon of have a New Method that cures|common, everyday occurrences, impor- transcende Franklin a, and we want you to try it at|tant of cou staled by univer- | trn tonably such a hil re- | 2rd Bl t v: ction ited relatives our expense. No matter whether your [sal knowledge that t 20 news 1 a high'd 3 v i ase is of long-standing or recent de- |value. The doin icular Heiae i B com y and ma M Webster, Jr., a opment, whether it is present as|girl-gardener were legitima ¢ actical difficult ned r to ke 3 visited the v Fever or chronic Asthma, you|cause her accomplishment w : R e e nbt Al ¥ . i, 3 : “randall ould send for & ‘free tvial of ourfin the whole Di c { whether the motor, if ‘the hitch could | ter B ¥ he method. No matter in what climate |her many beaten competito. ® ) be effected, would prove manage IF | ¥ou live, no matter what your age or X!n?!ler]lur re n\”‘l in Aull a fear that the attempt to steer Aret | Doesn’t hutt a bit to lift any com | Sothon: aur Moty ououbled with | Sl e ve p B 1 to market with a wagonload of cab- | Tht 3 hope E FEL asthma, our method should relieve you |and not even the local pejer g e S deciton i a0 of Koo < s v, note of them 1 right off with fingers eI Mrs, We especially want to send it to | : over Sunday with her 2| ¥ d: , Edith, and M N o v = art chool 3 v bt e are tho: 1s doy i Ve those apparently hopeless cases, where | stojoy Seoase, %, Part hool | Jay and Mo ¥ s seems to have S 3 emse quite competent | Years an r with' t S T et all forms of inhalers, douches, oplum | s poad Barden. | Gne beme o e | 10 undertake it OF to undertake mak- | Loz raffic an > sale Of $200 and frier preparations, fumes, “patent smokes,” | given it an amount of care which labor | if ct profit of $2,500 off an o) ets @ s, is recovering. etc, have failed. We want to s conditions make it flatly im - n Connectic . el : | l,-.'\"erynue at &urd ownd :u_rp:n;e, that | the commercial farmer or t her r. and f6 new method is designed to end|emulate. She scems to there is r n 3 o 91, of| Vhite her dug | ye i all diffcult breathing, all wheezing, | whacking big prices for at 2 a boy who is in love, or led | t confined s ndelions ! H\!‘*I(H T]e' i and all those terrible paroxysms at|of her small output. (One v bumblebee whose nest you dis- | to her bed for the t & ¥ i once and for all time. see how kindly neight b r This {ree offer is too important to s Jin extra to such a girl, ju neglect a single day. Write now and |win the prize). And she i s Fum s Rockland was little more us i : : a and Luther Cole of The only way they'll ever r h, She - 1 of 2 & : | North st callers here Mon- ; the fire is hotier than the frying-pa Kneeland's of thi e 4 then begin the method at once. Send|had extraordinary luck is from jumping into it y Brown, a former r no money. Simply mail coupon be-|“three and a half pecks of peas A few Dblisters are 1 | tly died at b in \\m'k.ho.’m«cd L e Bl low. Do It Today. was that she fpicked. If she put the|effective teache n. T ] o thithe ) A s TR rows three feet apart—(the 1cporter|of philosophers. r cemetery S 5. Whitdle of Versailles spen FREE ASTHMA COUPON says the “vines reached a height of five i iends B feet”)—that would make for a full rod = Pupils attending the K. H. S. are FRONTIER ASTHMA CO., Room |fsquare five and a half rows of a rod g 3 e veek vacation. 1420T, Niagara and Hudson Sts, ||i~re cach. or an aggregate Nength of LEONARD BRIDGE USQUEPA P about ninety-one feet. Her yield would| john G. Kneeland and son Harold of en Miles - . LYME Drop a little Freezone on an aching || Send free trial of your method to: ||+ been it ihe rate of about a bu=\1| ynionville spent Monday at E. P.|ealler her ; | YM corn, instantly that corn stops hurting, of picked 1 om every Mundrei feet | Gricnville y | calle The best pea-ground T have Kenyon was in Providence Sa . Wood of Manchester was a then you lift it right out. It doesn't SEgrows Harold J. Cummings is spending sev- | urday. lier at the Anchorage Saturday pain one bit. Yes, magic! or can make hardly does as well eral days with his mother at Bridge-| The i I Why wait? Your druggist sells a .. J| that. Yet she couldn't have us: 3 = 1 i ind Mrs. E. B. Huntle . port. hurs fternoor E, f their bottle of Freezone for a few cents, the rod square for peas, since she a Miss Clara Gillett of Goshen substi- | Kenyon. . Cheste »nt to rid your feet of every hard . . grew on it carrots, cucumbers, toma- | fyted jn District No riday, in the| G Mot corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes and radishe: absence of Miss Ruby E. Williams. | eter were caller toes, and calluses, without soreness or | SEE=————ememm——— =| Oh, well; what's the use of talking, | Joseph Leikens of New York spent|noon. iFritation. Freezone is the much [, WHEN YOU WANE e put your bus- | ;qyway 2 “She did it, and [ guess that | Thursday and Friday with Otto A.| 1 talked of ether discovery of a Cin- | medium batter thin through the ad. |What a high school girl can do in Maine | Nettleton. \erie re ernoon F. L. whist was held with “innati geniue. verusing columns vl The Bullatin. 4 grown man can do in Connmecticut” Miss Ruby E. Willlams spent Friday irs. C, yon and Mrs. Mrs. C. M. Peck last weeck Wednesday

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