Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, June 20, 1919, Page 13

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NOWWICH FRIDAY, JUNE_ 20, 1919, HOW WEAK WOMEN ARE MADE STRONG Mrs. Westmoreland Tells in | the Following Letter. - . Harrison, N.Y.—“When my first thlld was born 1 did not, know about | inkham'’s the Vegetable Com- pound and when m; [ second child came | xk it and was well time, lnd childbirth wasa huadred times m | | i flwnewspl rabout | Written Spceially for The Bulletin. Nature is a queer old girl. 1 don't mean the “Nature” whom the write 2bout. g e Gor &l nature-fakers” Nor the { easier. E‘“;’é’?‘: “Nature” whom the poets idealize. Nor then I baveused it | . Nature” that the well-meaning weakness and would not be | hut not always thoroughly informed ’:Mt it for the world. 1 do all my schoolma’ams teach to their trusting work healthy. Iam | flocks. lnmn‘g“m‘m fi;nfind I still take the | I mean the .\'atur; that we far?ers g Ly buck up against about thrice three Y efetahle gatcleeepsancmn | 00 17 S0 Sixty five Uines: o yosk in ‘ood health. You may publish my testimonial furthzgoodof gthefwomen, | f you choose to do so.” —Mrs. C. WesT- ! MORELAND, Harrison, N.Y. Women who suffer from displace- | ments, irregularities, inflammation, | ulceration, backache, heedaches and | mervousnessshould lose no time in giving this famous root and herb remedy, ' LyduE_ Pxpkhn.ms Vegetable Com- pwnd, for special advice Lfili .Ed Pinkham Medicine Some days she's as delightful a com- panion as heatt could Qesire. She smiles on us—fairly beams with radi- ant good nature. There we'd like that she doesn't seem eager. She fairly goes out of her re especial need to keep our eyes lifting. They have a saying in my part of the country when s of apparently infinite depth when' the distant hills than usual and the air is a washed out vacuum, they v ving that such a day is a “weather breeder.” Three times out of four it will be followed by a storm, usually one of rather more than ordi- nary severity. Similarly, when Nature seems best tempered and most amenable to my . I've found that it is advisable PLUM!ING AND UASFITTING Phone & ModemPlambmzr teh out for the deviltry which I, is as essential I“h':!°d°'"w"°“’°’ as| [0 ve come o Tosl comMdent. she' Is lectricity is to WPL'G%BINCG‘W%HR"K planuing! “Well, old girl, what have - :*:;J:ra:&-’;e" NG Naiast| you got un vour sleeve, now?" That's y t ) the t rel like sayin prices. Ask us for pl:ni and prices. J. F. TOMPKIRS 67 West Main Streci she is deliberately and in- eacherous. But her v ter and her ac b her changes of front are about every tomorrow which one can base day's prospects is so0 customary the unregener on to- that gets all tangled up in trying to keep T F Bi FR\ S tab on Fer. ld It isn't only the weather which is | sneh & muddie. Every farmer know that the weather i ly daily if not hour- and bewilderment. mizale HEATIN . AND ruuinsiNG| 91 rnnklm Street | to. and must make the best of | ever comes, There are other lines, b= S ~~——— | however. along which I confess that I " can'i follow her route of march. ROBE[h J LO&-RAN]; Take, for illistration, weeds. Now,! a weed . is just'a’plant out of place. There used to be:a couple of pretty tiees growing on one side of one of my GAS FITTING, PLUMPING, STEAM FITTING . 2 gardens, | They were young things, one Washingior. 8g., Washington Builditg |2 maple and one a beech: hoth of Nozwich, Conn. graceful shave, and. in the summer. Agent for N. B. O. 8h affording ant_bit of shade at the end row. T hadn’t the heart | to cut them down, but T was, neverthe- less, secretly glad when thev both died. a _eouple of 0, and had to be (RON (,AS'i iN CS removed. | were, in their si wation, just big weeds. They drew | FURNISHED 'PROMPTLY BY costly fertility from the soil which ise would have fed my corn: | y shaded the surface so as to ay from the enfeebled c; which might have fresh heart. THE VAUGHN fGuRBRY (0. | Nos. 11 to 25 Ferry Strast This last week we've been weeding s and carrots and beets, ete. ong thie rows on our hands DENTIST and nd pulling out the youns weeds ch no tool or machine will DR. E 'J. JONES ireach. T have but one seed-ril| | w hl h is used indiscriminately for all Suite 46 Shannon - Building | e i e yenthy ] Take elevator Shetucket Street | of lettuce “be left in the enttaace. Phope opper when I fill it with onion seed. {Or a few onion seeds when I move on to the carrot bed. They go out with the others and start o’ grow. But| xmuw iants in an onfon” row are path may he rows of lettuce—in which any stray onion is, likewise, a weed. | Office of The Norwich Savings Socicty ce. hoth are useful and desirabl \ol Mopwieh, Cord lars 7. 1919, But they belong where they d g ’ * nut. When they come up where The Directors of this Socicty have they are not wanted they are weeds, 1s truly as pussley or chick: declared out of the ecarnings of t'«cw‘ current six months a . semi- anan dividend at the rate of FOUR PER Cent. per annum, payable to deposi- | tors entitled thereto on and after July 15, 1919, OSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer. JUNE The month of weddings is fast weed. Perhaps you'll say that isn't a fair statement. because onions and > food vegetables, while pussley and | are not. But don’t you hank v on that hasty )id you ever hear that p ione of the most delicious | tainablo? T know people who prefer it | to dandelions or even spinach. And |did you ever see a pair of finches | tearing away for dear life at a stray | i | | i | chickweed in some garden isu't common? Those birds { scem to be crazy for it. If any old- hioned reader still has a cage try him with some, if he knows a canary in just to see A But finches are not folks. you pro- approaching. Buy your En-jtest. Well, no. not in vour eves o i mine. Bat in the eves of Old Mother '.'ement and Weddmg Rings‘ Nature nerhaps they're of some con- id. to tion. lemember what the Mas- 1id about the sparrow which falls the ground? and Wedding Gifts at the ddé reliable store of The Wim. Friswell Co. ! 25-27 Franklin Street Norwich, Conn. vou and I are the only ture’s puddle.” She may at times be in tooth and claw with ravin'” there are other times when I vow she seems to me to show greater solicitude for her hirds and four-foot children than she does for us humans. Assuming as a working proposition 1t she has some object in view, and | that there is some “far off divine cvent i | | which the whole creation sumption the frank confession that we i |U | but " we must counle with that as- EVERYTHING GUARANTEED don’t know or have even a glimmer of n as to what that object is. YOU ARE [\' 0! P CITY WHE. we do, It is simply rea ‘"T;;r"‘l “:‘ for us not fo take JH ROOS, nted that everything tuned up ““"”mfz‘ THE 4 to tickle our ears. We may not NEOLIN FOR COMFORT AND ECONOMY Neolin will outwear anything ever made for sole leather. Our prices for Neolin means a double saving to you. Neolin Sewed Soles, $1.00—Neolin Full New Bottoms, with Rubber Heels, $1.75. We do nothing but first-class Shoe Repairing in all branches at very reasonable prices. GOLDBLATT’S SHOE SHOP 44 FRANKLIN STREET Telephone 7144 Sunlight Building MOTHER NATURE AS. SHE CONFRONTS THE FARMER n’'t anything | { . I don't for a minute be- | nd complete, and her success in‘j plan for| te rural mind sometimes | But we! et used to its vagaries, because | lettuce | Don’t allow your hu- | man conceit to lead you into any belief | toads in ! be such specially importanit eritters in Nature's eye as we are in our own. But to come back to our weeds. Last | year I had a small field in wheat. At the time the wheat was sown I seeded down with timothy and clover. No| rye was found in the wheat. The grass jseed was of the re-cleaned class and | contained practically no foul seeds. Yet this summer rye has come up all over that patch. There wasn’'t a kernel of rye-in the wheat or the grass seed sown; no rye has been grown on the field for forty years; no rye was raised on mile of it last season. Yet there it is. ‘Where did it come from? An old farmer- whem I ence knew used to aver with solemn emphasis hat the earth w chuck plum full of weed seeds to its very center! He told of digging a sixty-foot deep well, the earth from the bottom. of which was,| naturally, thrown on top of the ex: vated pile. “And in less'n two weeks that dirt, brought up from sixty feet . . ; down, was jest covered with ragweed |, In the large gathering at the Dodge- and pigweed and wild mustarq!” 1It|Brown wedding Wednesday. event was his belief that Satan was directly | OUt Of town guests included: jand personally responsible for this| Hobert Demming of Berlin, Mr. iMTusion of weed seods (o an waknown | Mrs. William Stoddard and Merton | that the arch-fiend put em | Stoddard, Miss Ellen Bursley, Mr. and | there just to make farmers trouble and | Mrs. Albert Saunders and Miss Ethel Ly nders and Mrs. Frances Butler, all of New London; Mr. . Walter | I can see how the winds or the birds t have brought the weed well dirt, but 1 cannot either winds or bire thinly but evenl, acre lot, when there w n a mile of it. weeds act so differently nt farmers. One time, lecturer of the grange, quack-grass evening. - an hour; to kill it, ete. in a all over a two- ! with when I worked We talked how to han- One slow- back seat differ dle it, peke! how n old farmer owed a little impatience as we com- tive youngsters told of our various devices for it got so he couldn’t stand.it any long- par fighting the pest. Finally er. He rose and said that he used toj have two lots overrun with quack, and that he got rid of it by simply letting it alone. He found that the more he! cultivated the ranker it grew, so he just gave the lots up to it. let it have its own way, an’ by gum, in less'n five years it had run itself out; didn't bother him no more. Now. that old chap was a perfectly honest man. When he reported what Ehs Ba nDstr Wl e il Jhew it { had happened, exactly as he told it. | But it won't wo with me. As I} | sit-writing this T can see a little cornér of the upper garden through the open | window. Twenty-five vears ago I tried j to make it into ¢ bed. 1(, plants the | first it was so rank and lusty. l rom that time to this, the little patel hoon left severely alone. And the on it, this minute, after pportunity to r itself out, should as any timothy I e promise of continuin twenty-fiv ve hundred, Nature was her own quack for the fit of my old neighb high, with stal er as saw, and to live and | more— big hena- any field within a | New London 9 p. m. s could have sown | s not a field of | Tl The |1 1 zood ennu-'h to BULLETIN, B A Servicaable Line _Ex,pre’is md Team - Harnl%u’ at Low Prices THE L. L. CHAPMAN C0. ‘14 Buth Street; Nerwich. Conn 'GEGRGE._ G. GRANT Undertaker and Embaimer 32 Providence St., Taftville | ‘Protgpt sitention to day or night cally Telephore €30 apri4MWEFawl flames'River Line| STEAMER CAPE COD Whitehall Transportation Co., Inc. Leaves New York, Pier 43, Neth River, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri- ,at 5.p. m; Norwich Tuesda Thursdays and Sundays at 6 p. m. | 1 Passenger rates between ina New York, §2.30. Staterocms, all outside, $1.10, cHfMirg war ta Norwich in- . B. KNOUSE. Agent NORWICH TOWN G5 eeds to | see how Dodge, Clarence r Colburn Mrs. Jacob Betts of Williman- tic. The graduating exercises held on Thursday afternoon, at Town street X Town street schools, were lll!’lld(u ] l(ht*, Lun('l | d. West Il Town Rose street of V school, Rev. sity, who with his family is s]:(ndin;, lh(* summer here, gavs the s_subject School, cipal of West I'u\\n \mn( wnccl presented a choice cut glass vas ed with roses, by the graduating| ; The mn"r.xmmf* follow | | Song, col: recitation, | The, ) anism. Hughes, Ellen JJ. Sweet; piano solo, Sunset inj Arcady, Mu Winifred Pounch; | recitation, Our Common H Balfour, Alfred E. Marchan, The Gondolier, grades 7 and 8; reci- tation. The Giver, Blanche L Woods Ethel s; Les- Roosevelt, sons of the War, sie G. Ames; violin solo, ethoven's \Hnu‘ll in G. Rdth Sterr rec tion, Amer-| |ies Wilson, Stanton | [ Our Clock, grades 7 | The Ameri Wilson, George 13 rris and 8; ion, The World Sigpificance of the houldu't| | she be as good to me She isn’t, that's all I know. Fifteen years ago | found a single clump of wild thyme growing in one of | my - pastures.” Not knowing much tabout its character, but Tecog nizing it | 1s a new weed, I carefully dug e | th i clump up and brought it home, where I threw it on a brus; burned soon after | been too late to forestall the spreading | {of the seed. Next year there were! | clumps secattered here and there all over the pasture, and now it has taken | possessign of twenty a run | out every other kind of vegetation, in- cludinz, of 15ses, nd is an utterly hopeless proposition. {BL ouins ot ioie, ot ioreent b And 0ld Mother law Nature she isn’t at the end pernicketines Next year she'll new to soring on us. she doesn't! ature—Mother-in- ought to be called— of her resources in vet. have something Wait and see if | THE FARMER. Alkali in Shampoos Bad For Washing Hair Most soaps and prepared shampoos contain too much,alkali, which is very mjurious, as dries the Ip and makes the hair brittle. The best thing to use is just plain mulsified cocoanut oil, for this is and entirely = greasele It's very cheap and beat sthe most expensive soaps or anything eise all to pieces. You can get this at any drug store, and a few ounces will last the whole family for months. ° Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in, about a teaspoonful is ail that is required. It makes an abundance of rich, creamy lather, ses thoroughly, and rinses out s The hair dries quickly and evenly, and is soft, fresh looking, bright, fluffy, wavy and easy to handle. Besides, it loosens and takes out every particle of dust, dirt and danarufe. William H. Taft, John F: song, Sailing Hom des 7 ) recitation, The Qu | Cleve, Pounch; |10, The n's Dream, Iloren i | | | Beautiful. g 5 | B Moonlight Sonata, Jence T Brown: presentation of diplo-| | m: Allen Latham: co The Star| f~mnp1cd Banner. The class of 1919 includes: | i | | Helen. Al | Florence i beth Mor 7inifred Pounch, | Ellen J Sweet, nche Lena; tanton Edgax rown Jones, Alfred I« rge Adams [ Henry Witschekoweki, West Town Street School ence Guests of Mrs. Edward A. Smith of Villiams street, at luncheon were Mrs. Richard Ma . Charles Gorton of Ne ey and Mrs, London, | William | chaubunagunggamaug. Cripples in the knees | Pendl Dy egatchie, \\lddm" trip i Dr. Gager's uncle Charles. A. Gage were callers Thu the home of Dr. Gager's Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. ger, Sr, of Wawecus street. Allison C. Rogers of B man at the Storms-Garr their guests of | Mr. and M of Broadway, at. parents, best n wedding ton, Saturday evening in Roselle, N. J., is spending this week at the home of his parer Mr. and Mrs. W 0. R of Upper street. , Before coming to Norwich Mr. Rogers, -'called on. friegds in- 'New York. Addison Dodge of Sprinzfleld, Mass., | whose marriage. with M Martha | Brown of Norwich Town took place Wednesday evening, is a son of the late Rev. and Mrs. J, O. Dodge, for many yea residents of West Town street, during which time Rev. Mr. Chlldren Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA extraordinary you see leaving the city and down in | your ¢ | will JUST ARRIVED idreds of DRESSES All On Sale At $9.75 Values to $19.50 These Dresses were delayedin transpo;'ta- tion, therefore the woman or miss who perhaps was not able to get just the dress she wanted in certam sizes at the begin- ning of this sale will be well repaid if she will come here now. Beautiful Dresses $9.75 Values to $19.50 Allsizes—14to 44. The styles are the last word in Dresses, the materials include very fine number of automobiles car for that wonderful trip to ke Charcogagogmanchaugagog- or All in the stomachs will st home. others not forget of ‘customers and ASK THOSE WHO COME TO Us No charge for consultation. Boynton & Boynton Doctors of Chiropractic Jewett Btdg., 283 Main St. BUNNFE 1271 about the cussedness| the note due and B GINGHAM DRESSES VOILE DRESSES ORGANDIE DRESSES .he very newest color combinations. Marhalian 121-125 MAIN STREET e S mmsvse xS S | rates, to eradicate it than the whole' M. Bennet, princi: e ge was or of the First Metho-|payable day-after-tomorrow at 10 a.|prodigies of the leisure classos: | farm is worth. 1 hope it-will run itself | Danihy, 1)Lu\]1 Order o l.lljxm «on:rq\hpas\t " while the Tobliab the chamber ball] - At \.\,\f""‘." ',‘w-“’c,. Dreniertme {out, as my neighbor's quack did. But | March, Hazel Cru s, grade| The subject of the Christian Bndea-|game and throw pop botiles at the|will sail around the lake and empty it 't showing any tendency in that prayer, Rev " f meeting Sunday evening at the umpire. }11“0 s W-l\‘l’\r‘ A;Y(‘_nm{ ]","(}.‘f“f“f:lfj c ion thus song, The Gondolier, drama- [ Fiirst - Congregational chapel is to bel [iyery day a goodly number of the {”’_“““n’"{m]‘f“‘ !"‘r»\_fl‘m‘; H D ~"d’1"°5 Sixty years ago. " when | used to weed | tized reading lesson, memorized, given| On_ the Fence, instead of the mis-!members take their pens in hand, sign|for the sur¢iva n.,»'.],cf test in ( B -lonions and sage and carrots and the | in five ac song, Sail-|sionary top their John Henry on a check for $2|Pic contcsts ranging from a tug o |like—a sorc fingered, blistered knced 'ing Home, s Rev. fran- |- ) . Irish of Hartford recent-|for two tickets—one for the member [ WA e B og Jxai A i youngster, who had much rather have !is H..Rose, Virginia Univer: song, | 1y and another for some enemy who is m|‘_‘|", .Pl" & }‘l. S ’”‘k.“:l', Bl oy Song, schcol; presentation &f*\] of Town|he hauled along as “-vuosv ksr;lemahlmd e e we had pussley and shepherd’s diplema Francis H.| st force of clerks is spilling ink all over |ana ragweed and pigwoed and £chool; James T.. Wells of Bozrah was|he Chamber buildmg trying to ac.| GUARD AGAINST ACCIDENTS | others of the old standbys to schook; la gu Tuesday at See Inn cotiage.|count for all the coin and to supply NEAR SAYBROOK BRIDGE | But cat-foot, which is now one of my ‘class motto, Strive and Succeed. 136 Town street, {the rush orders. Red-headed office i inst accidents at the worst pests, was absolutely unknown., . .ne ciass 151 L neodore Vi —— hoys rejoice to learn that the boss will ad ng near the Say- was the wild thyme of which I have | nelj, . B. Wz nxe]fl ! MUSTERING FORCES FOR be out on the 26th, and \h’('?m of bridge were taken Thursday by written. So was the Orange hawk- | Hill, : X John - J.| N TRAIL DAY |cursions to the circus without fir: > New laven railroad officials who | weed, which is now coming in thickly. | Mara, LeRoy 11, Miner, Lawrence T.| MOHEGA‘] 2de at|Dperjuring their immortal souls over men there to warn approaching Te Chickweed | Murray, “James H: 0'Connell, John V.| Arfangemenis have been ma the funeral of some maiden aunt or|automobiles. They will al<o keep the almost 1re as hen's teeth: now | Ro; . ki, Viola J.|Webster to handle one of the biggest . sudden demise of a srandmother. | Special guards on duty today (- it keeps me working nights and holi-, Tu; jerowds eter zathered at Lake Charco- p. m. on that memorable| : e et o o in the weca! Thoss who attcnded the commence-| gagogmanchaugagogchaubunagungga- | Thursday (vowll be there) Washine:| u (,‘}2"g‘:§5‘l‘,..,‘. ravel eastward | world which cause different gorts to|ment exerciscs, W at \un— | rieng whenghe rubber neck cart muns | o o0t G G o e T e e Sae | ebb- and flow, as the decades pass. | nectioul College, us guests of Misses| inrough® Main street, (pext, TRUTAY | Gicorderly mob of chamber me ! e seldtlen s s L : . b Avery, Mas togers and Su-|morning followed by o s p i os e erast 3 i Much the same as with bugs. When | sun Wilcox, ‘who were members of the ! gptimists from New 'Leondon, Nlantic,| Vil dig cach other in the wibs A adie ol sl potatt beetles nor of & codling moths | Sraduating included Mr. and| Wilimantic and Norwich. The BU-lf n efrort to congraiplate the di and slow. them ‘down, in- e e oth | Mrs. Dwight W."Avery, Misses llelen reau of Misinformation who chews| frantic cflort to conevafiace the fowil signal and slow the Dedn j nor of a corn horer; nor of an aspara- izabetir Reginald :m througlh the megaphone will pull} = SERE i R tatil o thne = Loy el . return | gus beetle. We have all these new| e B e e oh the’ wind-jammers will start a tune|from the boat races in New London ones now, and just as many.of the| A Q. Aver & Gennulmun: We call to and the parade will swing down mainiis big and the autois race wildly striped bugs and the stinkbugs and|j itier ot ABnEion. bel bels in Nor. | street looking like an aggregation of | homewards the cutworm we used to. Those S R SR D D o rous plufabers out for a picnic. —— e old pirates don't die out as new speci M .I‘“ L’_:hL‘ C. h[u‘nu‘ o“ :A(‘)x\tngun-‘ ich today is as dead as Pluladt'lrz“: Army of the Unemployed mll\ It takes Jot of salve to turn a inyade us. = e eyt RRoger: offon a bugtling Saturday afternoon. The |y ,ve” nothing on this procession ‘L!'um.m crank | What with new weeds and new | Upper ARIge o & allison|cguse of this phenomenal firov\smes%r { blights and new bugs, th e Rogers of Boston, Mrs. William B.|jis the Mohegan Trail Day outing of - a crop left which we can raise without | % 100X Miss Emily Wilcox. ofjthe chamber ofjcqmmerce. You -wil Bavhiesto, fent for Scotland road. now please give your attention to the The Place To Have Your Optical Werk Done Right Eyes Examined Lenses Ground C. A. SPEAR OPTOMETRIST 218 MAIN STREET FRANKLIN SQUARE UPSTAIRS

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