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Get rid of every corn and callus for few cents . Drop a little Freezone 01 an aching corn, instantly that cora steps hurting, then you lift it right cut. It doesn’t pain one bit. Yes, magic' Why wait? Your druggist sells a tiny bottje of Fréezone fo- a few cents. sufficient to 1id your feet-¢f cvery hard corn, soft corn, or corr between. the toes, and calluses, withou" soreness or irritation. rreezone is the much talked of ether discovery of a Oin- cinnati genios. and it is strictly the truth, that we can give you the best value obtainable in FLOUR and FEED. That we have the facilities for giving you the best of service. chance. Chas. Slosberg & Son 3 COVE STREET BRING YOUR HATS TO BE CLEANED AND BLOCKED TO THE CITY SHOE AND HAT CLEANING PARLORS. 33 BROADWAY. 190th Dividend Office of The Norwich Savings Society Norwich, Conn., June 7, 1919. The Rirectors of this Society have declarea out of the earnings of the current six months a semi-annual dividend at the rate of FOUR PER Cent. per annum, payable to deposi- tors entitled thereto on and after July 15, 1919, COSTELLO LIPPITT, Treasurer. That our standard of excellency is high; but THAT is the only thing that is high; our prices are low indeed for high class FEED. We can prove this to your satisfaction, if you give us a Written Speelally for The Bulletin “Jumping at conclusions”" phrase deseribing it . Lt “Going off at'half-cock” is anothi Both mean about the same thing and refer to the same unfortunate habit of forming and, pcrhn‘yy expressing opin- {ons without any addequate foundation. The Master, was somewhat. in his refergnce tc'the man. his house upon. the:sand. . He it perfectly clear that such faulty con- struetion of ‘the material edifice was- certain to result in its failure when the rains and the floods put it to_test. But building a house on sand is no"whlt "‘°“°i~fi3"n9*"‘° c;r silly than bu: an opi n ignorance. x‘:’v'?{mxe..,‘-‘mn"?fu is - exactly what thousands and millions of. peaple do, every day and all their lives—form and hold and utter and act upon opin- If a man builds a house upon-noth- ing and the rains descend and the floods come and wash away that house, then he is the chief sufferer from his and can repair damages in his own time and at his own' cost. But when that samé man builds an opifiion about his neighbor’s conduct which is founded on guess-work, hypo-. thesls, misunderstanding, ignorance, any. one of them or a compound of all | four; and when'he makes'that unsta- | ble opinion the basis for judgment of the neighbor, perhaps for outspoken criticism, why. then he's not only do- ing as foolish' a thing as building a | house on nothing, but he is also doing that' neighbor' an utterly inexcusable injury. & So long as he involves only himself by his folly the' results of it are not specially jmportant to anyone but him- Community Cash Grocery Co. Mad River Creamery Butter, (nohe better); 60c Ib. 12 Ibs. Milk Crackers for 35c. Brookfield Creamery Butter, (prints), 66cTh. Pitted Priines, 25¢ package. Evaporated Apples (New York'’s finest), 26¢c package. Evaporated Peaches (Califor- nia), 30¢tb. © ° Evaporated Apricots .(Califor- nia), 35¢1b. . Gt Gorton’s Cod Fish, in pack- ages, 30c a package. . | Octagon Soap Powder, 2 pkgs. for 15¢c. lifeg::oy Soap, 2 packages for 1 Bon Ami (Powder or Cake), 10c. ; Hermitage Seeded Raisins, 15¢ Red Salmon Paste for Sand- wiches, 10c can. Large Cans.of Peaches 35¢. Large Cans of Sauerkraut, 1 Tryphosa Mity Fine, 10c package. Head Rice, 2 Ibs for 25c. 12¢ package. Pure Vanilh, 15¢ a bottle. g ; Sunbeam Cornflakes( large), ————— | Pure Lemon, 15¢ a i CUMMINGS & RING Faneral Directors and Embalmers " 322 Main Street Ghamber of Commerce -Building Phone 238-2 Lady Assistant JUNE The month of weddings is fast approaching. Buy your En- gagement and' Wedding Rings and Wedding Gifts at the old reliable store of The Wm. Friswell Co. 25-27 Franklin Street Norwich, Conn. EVERYTHING GUARANTEED WHEN YOU WANT to put your bus- iness before the public, there 1s: no medium better than through the ad- ver(‘l:n: sclumns of The Bulletin, . Lux, Zipldnges for 25¢c. IN 'OUR MEAT DEPARTMENT Fancy Sugar Cured Brisket, no bone or fat, 30c Ib. Pineapples, Oranges, New Potatoes, Cabbage, Beets, Car- ’ | rots, Tomatoes. Orange, Lemon and Sarsa- parilla Tonic, by the bottle or 81-85 Franklin Street. AUTO DELIVERY TELEPHONE 750 THERE 15 55 advertising medium. Eastern Connecticuf equal (o The B letin for tusizess results, ions made,up without knowledge. l-*t targets 1 can possibly hit; ‘ot at own folly—which is as it ought to be— | 7| word. broke-in kes - it nybody else if hi K abou er pegple ‘on - ignor- \ ha t,k&owl e, of mm‘f" mo- ‘tives and: canditions s, t] an in- Ju 11 as himseif, especially if he niakes bkprivst;! ned opinion the s for public! essed judgment. farmers ard them as. any worse sinners. in this respect sthan.other:men ‘and women. but becausé théy're prob- ably just’abput as.] ly tarred as the average'and because tHey ought not to ‘be tarred ‘at all! es, I can per- haps set a few :farmers .to thinking, While 1 don't suppose any considerable numiber.of lawpers.or bankers or store- keepers or railroad men,'who may be 28 bad, read these talks. T'm aiming those out of my range _You kriow where ybur own shoe pinches; who elSe‘dgés? Do you sup- pose, you also. know _ hetter than your neighbors ‘whers thejr corns are sit- vate? By what process of .vanity can | you . convince Vourself.that to you has 1 been given'a visiom:inty the neighbors’ jmotives whick you"kdow. they have not been' giveninto-yours? Anyway, “Who ‘art thou that judgest {'thy neighbor? It's the ‘Apostle James Jwho ‘asks that pointed’ question, not John Farmer. You may settle the ethics of’ it wn}‘ im; after vour own fashion. The Apostis Paul asked a very.similar question, as some of yvou may recall: And 3 greater than either solemnly forbade vou and me to judge ‘cthern lest we .ourselves have meted {out to us the judgment. wherewith we | have judged. S 1 Tt' isn’t, however, the ethical or spiritual side of .the.question which 1 am thinking ahout this morning, so much as the social. .+ ‘ We've all.of us got:to live together; after some. fashipn “or apother. The| other fellow is here just as.certainly and with .4s goad right as we. We didn't place him, any. meore- than he placed -us. “But there he is in the next house, with only -a liné fende.and an area of, soil between:@s:and:him. He can't order us tomowé to central Sa: hara if by some change we displease i more Ean we: banish him, similar chanceé ' he displeases us, Isn't it, then, the most sensible and satisfactory way £o rub along smooth- ly. with-him, rather than stand off at arms’.length'or at swords’ points? And-how ‘on earth are.wa ever going 1o do that {f,we're all the time measur- ing him, % .our own. ypcerfain . vard- weighing him, ony our own sealés. or measuring him in *hornesmade and > ‘unsealed believe in: ‘our. own' Seates arit Verily; :may - not he have scales and a yardstigk and & measyre which he be- | ieves' *in.< too? ° Paifistaking science | Bag developed the fact that' no two | meagures, whether of length or bulk or | area,are ever abgolutelv alike, to the last! ten millionth decimal of accuraey. How. much varfation may we not.e pect in the crude measures which we have to-use; if the utmost skill: applied vith.'the "highest art to'the. most per- fect jmaterials. capnot ipsure absolute | acy” e . 1l you, brother or sister; it's going 18 resfilt in‘a wholelot.of* neighborly ructions whenever.you and your neigh- bor insist ‘each upon measuring the dther “with- - your' own vardsticks. | Worst af all, your don’t eitier one.of | you_ever know exactly what. it is vou are measyring, or -trying to. Nine times out of ten. you're guessing at one | thing and imagining another. Then You expect to zet at the truth di- viding ‘what veu've guessed by what you've imagined! - 3 A, very . famous surgeon was .once asked his opinion upen a somewhat complicated eye - derapgement. He looked the eye over. Then he used an opthalmiscope: Then he tried some other ‘sort of °scope. Then he. tested a tear-drop in a tybe. Then he bezan a set up and .prepare ‘Some other instru- ment. The " impatient p atient, .after nearly half’an MWout® of - this, during | which the surgéoh had said never a “Well, what's the mat- m't krow, yet” was ‘Havén's got enough facts | yet to base an opijiion on.” ! Another.eye doctor hdd stared at the eye for, a minuté, pried up an evelid. looked into jt with: r of exaggerat- ed goggles and, annouticed, after three | mirnutes: “You've got grxcnma: better have an operation,” e secorid sur- geon, a man with . an - international reputation; to,% #full hour: during which-he 'did othlnv%‘hnt hurit for all the facts he could pBasibly gather by | observation.and test. -When he'd got them all togethe t last, he gaye his opinjon in just about\ ten ~seconds. Which opinion was uttérly unlike the first doctor’s and, being based on | knowledge, proved the right one, later. Now ' one’s environment and on motives -are both a good deal ~more complicated than inybody’s eyeball. Tt is a good.deal more risky to make up opinions about them without - full knowledge than it is:to diagnose an optical “ailment 'without first finding| out what it really is.." I maintain that, | as ‘a ‘mattef of mioral right and of neighborly comity, I have'na right whatever ‘to. criticize my- neighbors for | their -managerhent of their ‘farms. or their héuseholds "till T Rnow: fully all the" conditions ‘and “all: the i which_govern their action. Nor Have they: the Fght our owiLvardstick and our. osvn basket. |- S | he's got up his sleeve.. | Situation I wam ‘a job washdays and cleaning davs to cut down your work. Icandoa bigrlot of it with water—cool, lukewarm or hot—don't need the hot water _if you would like to get away from the . trouble and cost of a fire. I will do the work in about one-haif the, usual time. I will sé.ve ‘you a lot of rubbing with the washboard—make your clothes last longer for that reason. . I will clean linoleums bright; make paints look like new; quickly take the film off porcelain tubs and sinks. | mfl also ‘clean your dishss free of grease—make them white and sweet. I'll work for you for a few pennies. Appiy for me at your':?g'rocer’s. Signed— Wanted : me except on’equal terms. There's Neighbor Hamilton, for .in- stance. He's buying up a lot of land and paying good money for it, which I wouldn't take as a gift and pay taxes on. Said another néighbor to me, the other .day, .“What on earth’s that dum fool of a Hamilton buyin’ that swamp fer?” There you have it. Hamilton is to! be judged-a “dum fool” because he does what my -other neighbor ‘ and I ‘wouldn’t do. - What we should properly consider ourselves “dum fools” for do- ing. But- neither one of us -knows Hamilton's conditions or his plans or his motives. We haven't any idea what He may have & perfectly sane -plan for draining and reclaiming -.that swamp. . He may have a foresighted vision of its future value to him... He.may have any ope of a dozen wholly sensible - ideas that we know nothing ‘of, and be actuated by any one of.a._dozen laudable motives of which we are just as ignorant. He's a sensible fellow about most things. If my critical neighbor and.I knew all he himself knows about his own farm" needs, and his.own capacities, and his own domestic’ relations, and his own bank account, .and a few dozen other hings,. we.might be justified in form- ing an opinion as to the wisdom or un- wisdom ,of his swamp purchase. But, | as we ‘do not know those things, it would better beseem us to go very slow: W'mg.,fngc‘mepn;hk with <cane sugar to & semi-lignid form. 1n 1883 Hotlick & Raciné, Wis., dis e.évé‘,', haw to reduce milk to.a dry. of y Simply stifting in water) and the fact: that it keeps: in -any climate, . 1 proved of mush value ta wankind 28" an ‘ideal food-drink ‘from iafincy., ASK 16 HORLICH'S~Avold Imitationa | in classing:-him-.as a “dum feol.” Any- way, it would, show good judgment for us to keep—our—mouths—shut! “Why. don't ‘'you - mow your frent yard? It looks awful ragged and shiftless/'#said@ one- critic to me, 'the other day. Now, I had three perfettly 200d and ‘satisfactory reasons for not having ‘mown :that ‘yard, She:didn’t know one of them. Furthermore. they were none of her business., Of course; T didn't; téll"her so. "What would' have been the use?- Nor did I retort to her criticism- of the ‘mote ih’ my eve with {any allusion ta possible beams in her own optics. been the use? i It isn't morally defensible for us to judge others- without full knowledge. But it's also unne. ‘Sgarily uncomfort- able all 'round. It does them -no good, makes them a'little: more fidgety and cranky, perhaps. And it tends to sour the milk of our own human kindness. When 2 man is accused’of a ctime; he is put on trial. Al the facts about it are looked ‘up, everyvthing' sifted, for evidence;” one way or the other, and then the jury is required.10 pass judgs ment on the facts and the evidence Again, what would have presented—not - on .its preconceived opinions nor on any guess-work. Nobody, has authorized us yet to set as jury on our neighbors. Even if we had been, we should, at least, show them the same justice which the law shows. accused criminals, hold them innocent till proved guilty, and pass ro. verdict except on convincing evi- dence of all the main facts involved. in otner- words, unless we actually know where the other fellow’s shoe pincnes, let's be a little chary in our advice to him regarding his footwear! THE FARMER. NORWICH TOWN H. H. Spooner of Kensington, secre- tary of the Connecticut Temperance Union, is to speak at the First Con- gregational chrch Sunday morning. Joseph Rollinger of Housatonic Mass,. is' spending a few days at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Weav- er, of. West Town street. Mr. Rolling- er. who was & resident of Norwich Town over twenty years ago, visited Boston and Springfield, Mass., before coming here. “From' Norwich he will go to Bridzeport before returning tc his home, - Private John Turnbull of Ashaway R. I, is spending several days at the home of his brother, -James Turnbull of Waweécéus 'Hill." Receiving his hon- orable discharge at Camp Upton, L. 1. after a’ year.and nine months’ servicr in the United . States army,. Private Turnbull arrived at his' home a week ago ‘today . (Friday). . He enlisted Sep- ‘tember 18,. 1817, in .Co. F, 326th In-. fantry -$2nd .Division. and -sailed - for overseas from. New:York, April 28th 1918."Out of his fourteen months’ ser- vice .in .the world war; four was spen’ i .actual .fightfng at the . front ..lim Pranes. . He went into battle for th first-tipie July 18th, 1918°on the To, front.. He was also through the terri- blel struggle ‘in the Argonne Farest 3nd was a participant in the fighting 4t Verdun and took part in the conflic in the: Sti Mihiel sector. Private ‘Turnbull seemed -to have a charmed life :and escgped - without. serious ‘wounds. . With-hjs division he was re-’ tired hack of the-lines for rest Oct 31st, 1918, Béing' taken seriously i the early part of November, he wa- in: Base Hospital 27 when the armis- tice"was signed.-December 24th. he able "to retiarn -to his. company nee which, time he has been travelin: on se through: France for il ‘benefit “of his “health, on pay by ihe government. - Private ‘Turnbull . sailed trom Bordeaus, France, with other | WILSONVILLE troops May 24th of the present yvear,| wne Red Cross members gave the on the freighter Eurania, and after a|joca] boys who had been in service a vovage of fourteen ‘days arrived in |chicken supper at the Red Cross New York harbor Juhe 6th, landing at | rooms Saturday night. Only five wére Hoboken, N. J. \presen!. as, the others were unable to Dr. Charles . Lamb of Town street get here. will- be in charge of a musical service|~ Mr, and Mrs. Eugene Murdock ;of at the Sheltering Arms Sunday after-) Boston called on a local relative Sat- noon. Dr. Lamb will be assisted by | yrgus 3 Miss Ruth Potter of East Town street.| Mrs. Della Gay of Webster called on l\”cldll\e‘ nere ‘Luesday. Mrs. Boulet entertained for the week [end her brother and his two daugh- Tt takes a strenvous man to win a vietory over himself. The reliance that womenkind has|sugar-tidled wafers which tacy sup- - learned to put in crackers is beinjgported. well illustrated at the teas bein There was no questica about the given for returning soldiers andfcomplete success of Nettie's discov- sailors. ry, a8 the fragrance of the fresh’ Every womsn in which she served added has in her pantry a nviting repast. Another favorite at the tea hour— nd one sees them: almost as much neon—is the + DG AL Der. It ccems ndispensable in modern housekeep- ng. People have been so thoroughly gep2bout the thousands “of BBl Graham flour that o yeoman of the Navy, still in form, found herself unexp For the active appetite of a school child, or to whet an ‘ appetite that is lagging, the nut-like flavor of N. B. C. Graham Crackers is' unrivalled. And they are cs good as § they taste —regulating digestion and building " bodily strength. “NATIONAL BISCUIT COMPANY On'a thick bed of pis edged with sassafras mons and Totus hiscuit Some ‘bruised leaves lay af - tom.of the basket, and emitted a delicate fragrance. eharm to the delightfully flave