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TR (] I } il = st g t fandamental lavewoveninto Fopest Mills Babies”; Comfort:Underwear. Soft and ‘light as down.andéknicted:so finely - they ww-fl:fic&w;- as a mothgr’skiss. ; A variety.of -fabrics"for babies from three menths to three years 1009—Heavy merino. 1012—Heavy sikateen and merino. 1014—Silk and wool. ., button freat or pin-back shirts : LISBON The community was saddened Meon- day morning by the word that Wil- fam J. Reyno only grand- had died in Detroit, w-cat prom- he parsonage, moved to Detreit, f to who knew felt for the bereavement. 7. Reynolds, to attend the funeral of A. Mell on at the parsonage the week. J the first vote at morning. n the springtime a mammoth scij bean was discovered H. J. Kendall Vonda AUTOMOBILE ACCESSORIES LONL ALUTUMN NIGHTS DRAIN-THE BATTERY CHARGED so that i\] will giv 2ppy starts and plenty of light. OUR charging is the work of skilled specialists using t best of modern equipment—it's 2 cervice that PRO- LONGS your battery life. Repairing and charging of ALL MAKES. Moderate charges. THE B. B. STORAGE BAT-| TERY AND WELDING CO. Phone 143 42 Franklin Street Norwich, Conn. OUR AUTO REPAIR WORK will surely meet your approval as it has in the case of many car owners. Our complete equipment, our experi- ence and auto krowledge make us peculiarly well fitted for high class work. |f your machine does not run satisfactorily let us send for it to be put in condition so it will do full ser- vice. IMPERIAL GARAGE H. T. ROBINSON, Mgr. Phone 929 Norwich, Conn. B VGiETAOUR PR;CE ON e STORAGE BATTERIES BEFORE PURCHASING The Garlock & Haynes Co. Phone 781-3 NEY LONDON, CONN. Starters—Generators—Iignition Devices :i'imken Hyatt m;i New Departure Bearings SALES—SERVICE GARLOCK & HAYNES REET, Second Fieor Phone 781-3 NEW LONDON ‘Auto Radiators Repaired promptiv znd thoroughly tested under air pressire hefore feav. ing shop. W. E. SHANLEY TINNING Tel 710-3 PLUMBING g medium in ts The Bul- Jetin for business res in Provi- | Burnett of Prov-| 1 | are a strenous nujnj tattery—better have us| i i { | i i i 1 1 i | | | i | { | $500. growing in his hen yard. It was mq ing such thrifty growth he gave it a pole to climb on and a few days since the dry pods were picked and shelled. Opn counting the beans it was found there were 179 zood bright beans. all from a singie seed. Miss Doolittle has been secured by Supervisor Stone as teacher at New- ent and began her labors Tuesday, Oct. 7. It was announced Sunday last that Sunday, Oct. 12, Rev. Charles F. Car- ter of Hartford will be at Newent church te sent the plan and pur- pose of thqg Pilgrim Memorial Fund. The amount apportioned this chureh is COVENTRY Rev. John Lee Brooks of Hartford, assistant secretary of the Connecticut Temperance Union, gave an address on Stnday morning in_the church. The town meeting Monday was a complete republican victory. The vote state supervision of schools against ¢ Was losi. The town voted license by a small majority. William F. Schultz of Manchester was arrested by State Policeman Rob- ert Hurley, charged with breaking and! entering nine summer |cottages on Coventry Lake. When brought before Justice W. B. Hawkins the accused pleaded guilty and was bound over to the next term of the superior court. The Ladies' Society met Wednesday | in the chapel. Tea was served. The meeting of the Ready Helpers was held Thursday evening/ in the el. PR pivdn is visiting nis daugh- in Aponnaug, R. I o he Coventrs Game club has made a gift of $50 to the Deleo Light fund Hartford.—Troop 60 of St Peter's parish is being reorganized and it is possible that two troops may be or- ganized - here. Rev. J. J. Broderick, principal of St. Peter's school, has re-| turned-from overseas and is co-operat- | ing with John J. Hckies and Scoutmas- | ter William J. Collins in reorganizing | this troop. WHEN YOU WAKE | UP DRINK GLASS OF HOT WATER Wash poisons and toxins from system before putting food into stomach. Wash yourself on the inside before breakfast like you do on the outside. This is vastly more important because the skin pores do noti absorb impuri- ties into the blood, causing iliness, while the bowel pores do. For every ounce of food taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be carried out of the body. If this waste is not eliminated day by 4ay it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which are absorbed or sucked into the blood stream, through the lymph ducts which should suck only nourishment. | A splendid health measure is to drink, before breakfast each day, a glass of hot water with a teaspoonful of limestone phosphate in it, which is a barmless way to wash these poi- sons from the stomach, liver, kidney and bowels; thus cleansing, sweeten- ng and -freshening the alimentary canal befove eating more food. A gquarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs but very little at the drug store. but is sufficient to make anyone an enthusiast on inside bathing. Thames River Line; STEAMER CAPE COD | Whitehall Transportation Co. Inc. Leaves New York, Pier 43, North River, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fri- | days at 5 p. mn.; Norwich Tuesdays, | Thursdays snd Sundays at % p. m.; New London 8 p. m. Passenger rates between Norwich and New York, $2.00. Staterooms, all outside, $1.10, im- cluding war tax. F. V. KNOUSE, Agent. A. G. THOMPSON, F. S.. Chiropodist, Foot Specialist (PROTECY YOUR FEET) Mfr. Cimmings’ Spring Arch Support. Written Specialty for The Bulletin. “How much can 'l GET?” %‘ man whose belly is his biggest - 3 opment. “How much can I GIVE?" asks the man who thinks his heart'a neobler organ than hie duyedsnum. Between these two types we all gravitate; some downwards towards the first; some upwards towards the latter. ‘Which class are we in, or which are we tending towards—you and 1?7 The first includes hogs and hyenas and profiteers and professional “prole- tarians” and grafting comtractors and pilfering workmen and walking dele- gates and bargain hunters.and hoard- ers (whether of momey or’'marbles, of sugar or coal or eordwood) and most of the adherents and all thé admirers of “big business,” falsely so called. Also, it includes altogether toe many farmers, more’s the pity. I-came away from a little bumch ef my fellow farmers the other day., sad- dened to the heart. They had been talking about various farm matters and the conversation gradually wore around to the subject of prices. With- out a single exception, every one inm the group was -asking how much he could get for this, that or the other crop. Not one sought to find out what tde stuff was’ really worth. Not one had any information as to what a, crop had actually cost. Not one had at- tempted to figure out what would be a fair profit. Each one was frankly so. licitous to know how much he could get, rather than what he ought to have. Now I'm not going here into any dis- cussion of economiecs. The subject is| too big and too complicated. Nor am 1 going to set forth at lemgth any the- ories about markets. My own convic- tion is that. when the market price of any commodity fixes itself in acegrd- ance with the interacting workings of supply and demand, the market price is about right; while, when it is arbi- trarily and sometimes underhandedly tinkered with by price manipulators, it is generally all wrong. But let that g0 for the present. What saddened | me In that conversation was not its | economic side, but its human side. It was only a small group—half a dozen men. One was an American of Yorkshire ancestry: one an American ! of Scottish birth two Amerieans of | Irish parentage: one an American of Teutonic descent: and one an_Ameri- can with at least seven New England generations behind him. AIl _ were Americans, citizens and voters. Tt may be that some of them were. at heart. out of sympathy with the talk. T hope all outwardly agreed to i The keynote of it all was that a man must alwoys look out for Number One and let the devil take the hind- That a man was justified in| he could get, provided he i actually steal it. That, if aj buver didn't know the fair price, it | was perfectly proper to’ “stick” him; for ail he could be made to pay. Etc,| etc. And the justification was—“Every body’s doin’ it; why shouldn’t I7" 1 can’'t believe. I don’t believe, T won't believe that this chance group was really representative of the great mass of farmers. As English sparrows and potato bugs and stinking squash bugs gather in bunches, each und irable horde by itself, so I keep ar- guing to myself that these few birds of a feather had flocked together by some mutual attraction., and that th. really represented only themselves. a pitiful minerity. Just as the malodo- rous stink bugs om a squash Jeaf rep- resent only themselves and never the honey bees and lady bugs and hum- ming birds and other species of use or beauty. - k But, assuming that hopeful view, it vet remains a fact that even a half dozen farmers of this sort are just six too many. I know, no one better, how hard an@ unremunerative in point of money !s the farmer’s life. There are men working on a state contract within a mile of me who get more money for eight hours’ easy work than the aver- age farmer of my town mets for four- teen hours’ harder work. And | .‘“t }l‘mow farmers—men who were not in this store-piazza group to which 1 have referred but were hard at work on their farms doing things Wwhile the half dozen were just talking —farmers who would not swap their il-paid and day-long labor for any job at any price with any contractor's! taking didn’t | i { | Well, for one reason, beecause they prefer to be their own masters, inde- pendent of whistles and bosses. For another reason;, because they | have an Instinctive repugnance against | taking or having anything they haven’t | j. actually earned. They don’'t want te be given that which they haven't, In They retain an in some way, paid for. NAME “BAYER" ON GENUINE ASPIRIN GET RELIEF WITHOUT FEAR AS TOLD IN “BAYER PACKAGES” Suite 7-8 Alice Building, 321 Main St. Norwich, Conn. Phone 1366-4 DON'T LET : THAT TOOTHACHE keep you awake ail night! Stop in for some of our Toothache Drops that will stop the pain, quiet the nerves and give you a chance to sleep. The first you take will stop the ‘ache. Dunn’s Pharmacy 50 Main Street Q The “Bayer Cross” on Aspirin tab- lets has the same meaning as 14 Karat on goid. Both mean Genuine! “Bayer Tablets of Agpirin” should be taken aceording to the safe and proper directions in each “Bayer” package. Be sure the “Bayer Cross” is on pack- | age and on tahlets. Then you are get-! ting the genuine Aspirin prescribed by | physicians for over eighteen years for the: reljef of Colds, Pain, Headache, “Poothache, Farsehe, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Newritis. For a few cents you #n box econtaining twelve tablets. Druggists also seil lnhrger d"Bl.yer" packages. in _is the trade mark O Baver Mamufactire of Monosesti- cacidester of Salicylicacid. can 3o 2 nanay | In Use For Over 30 Years unspoken but ne less deeply hield con- viction that it is still more blessed to Bive tham to receive. “Sure; Tl take anything -anybody gives me, and say ‘Thank-we’” eaid a callow youth the other day.: us:v pu w m‘m‘:fiv e R ), ©X 2 O per- functory “Thank-ye.” Are we, thenm, no higher and beiter than swine? 1 don’t want to turn these Talks into a sort of Bulletin mutual admiration society, but I own up that 1 had te clap my hands and shout “Hurrah!™ for The Man Who Talks the other day when I read this in his opening para. graph: = “There is no good reason for all these disturbing labor contests. In old times there used to b& a cross erected the market place ‘to remind men to. Tule thejr actions and sanctily their gains by the remembrance of the cross. The new rule. every man for himself. and the devil take the hindermost. I teday recognized as an ntter failur: It is “an utter failure.” That is any true sense. It is turning world into-a moral junk heap. Tt is obscuring real values by a foz of market miasms. It is sacrificing man- hood for higger profits or swollen bank accounts or hizher wages. We farmers ought to be—and I hon- estly think most of us are—ashamed to get into that crowd. We hold a unique position in that the world’ very existence depends upon us. ut off for but one week the flow of food rom the farms and the cities would starve to death. With opportunity comes responsibility, which usually is and always ought to be a steadying agent. . Like all other men who have their own lives to protect and fosterj farm- ers must consider their own interests first. It would be sickly sentimentality for them to do anything else. But that doesn’t ‘mean that they are wholly to forget the dictates of humanity or the rules of fairness. It authorizes them to see. first. to the welfare of their own households, but it doesn’t require them to let the devil take the hindmost, without a helping hand being offered to that unfortunate. It certainly does not justify them in forcing him to the | rear and then telephoning com& and get him. It doesn't iu sort of action. B < responsible for ourselves more directly than for other folks. and it is up to us to keep our own skirts clean of de- filement, whether others do or not. It is no more an excuse fe s to engage in greedy® profiteering because others do. than for us to eat hog-wallow be- cause swine like it. If another man cheats or lies or pilfers or swindles I don't have to take him as a chum. PBut if I lic. then I've got to sleep with o liar all the rest of my life. Same with you. Do we either of, us want that kind a bed-fellow in our own ns? Eh? If a man is farming merely to make money: if that is the sole idea in his head: if that the only thing he thinks about or care about, he is a mistake on the farm. There are larzer opportunities for _meney-malking in other directions. The an uneaualled opportu e @ whelly clean and life, with manhood rather than meney as an aim. All his surre dings have a tendency towards real! uplift That any amon us, no matter how small 2 minority should deliberately decline to a lower level is matter for sorrow and self- cnastening. In the present era of unrest and dis- turbance and discontent and revolu- fionary threatenings. it is larzely upon us that will fall the business of keep- ing the old ship afloat. Never more than now was it essential for us to keep that craft on a true course. How can we counsel and enforce sobriety and honesty and justice, unless our own hands are clean and our own con- duct irreproachable? The man who always asks only “How much can 1 gzet?” may gain a big bank account, but he will never at- tain the heights of manhood or win the selid satisfactions of life. The man who asks. part of the time at least. “How much can I give in fair- nese to myself and those dependent on me? is much more likely to win his own self-approval, if not the love and respect of his neighbors. “T serve” was the motto of one of the greatest heroes of mediaeval times. 1t is in service rather than in gain that the true spirit of manhood grows and gleries. THE FARMER. NORTH LYME n 'he W. M. Sisson, Jr., and family and[ Mrs. Fanny Tillotson were —in New London Thursday. ! G. H. Strong, Mr. and Mrs. N. e avbey forgver wiih Sconira o Tapy oft. “Siood- that snip into the itwo to use fcommon-sense jfmoney-back corn-remover. firifle at any drug by B - Like Banana Peel “Getn-It” Leaves Toe Smooth as Your ' Palm—Never Fai Ever peel off a banana skin? _Well. that's the way “Gets-It” peels off any corn o callus. TIt's a pienic. ning | else in the world will do it but “Gets- “2 Drops of ‘Gets-lt.” Gendbye Coms!” 1¢” because of the new seoret principi in the “Gets-It" formuyla. “Gets-It tions. iasters, ointments that rub . etting knives. and, scissors | Vquick.” “Gets-it” ! It takes but a second or! “Gets-1t.” There’s mo fuss-| or trouble. It dries immediately. | - stocking Tight back on | . Your eorn will eome off pain- one complete piece. That It never faiis. the oniy sure suaramteed Soets hut e. Manufactured Lawrence & Co., Chi Norwich and recommended as | .eases pain ing Gets-It. Sold in fthe world’s best corn remedy by Chas. 1O0sgo00d. Ere you'lie down ta steep in- the night Sit still awhile, g And nurse again to-life: your gentler Self. Forget the restless, noisy spirit of the day, And encourage to speech The soft voices within you that whisper Of the peace of the Great: Stifl Night. And occasionally look: out at the quiet stars. The night will soothe you Like a tender mother, folding you Against her soft bosom, and hiding you From the harm of the world. After the day’s struggle There is no freedom: like unfettered thoughts, No sound like the Music of Silence. And though behind you Lies a road of dust and heat, And before you the fear of untried paths; In this brief hour ~You are Master of all highways, And the universe nestles in your Soul. Therefore, in the night, Sit-still'awhile and dream awake, Ere you lie down to sleep, ~—Max Ehrmann. NTS RESTAURA! WANTED ARE IN TCWN, TRY TORY LUNCH. Main St. CASTINGS IRON CASTINGS | FURNISHED PROMPTLY BY THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY CO., Noe. 11 to 25 Ferry Street WHEN YOU THE VI P 2 fis 4 FLOUR, GRAIN AND FEED. jea HUMORS OF THE DAY KALEIDOSCOPE “She can bake and she can brew.” The Jopaness silk coceon crop thi ‘Brew 7" said the colonel. “Brew,|VEAr i6 celimaled in exces: of 17,480 s worth icoking into.—Kan- | 000 bushels. Journal An electrieal novelly can be used as Kiagg—Did the docior ask to|# fan. pertabie hair washer, heater ol Ty hair dryer or deoderizer, a; T told himy about{ A-grape vine planted in Englls and he ordered me away for a|paiace vard in 1768 still bearinz n-eript. about 409 bunches a yeur She —And 1t the awful life of{ The Japinese governmen: iz fostar | destruction and war spoiled vou faor a ~efu He—Well, lawyer.—Sydney Bulletin, o ve a next COLLEGE DAIRY FEE PROTEIN 24 PER CENT, FAT 4 PER CENT. A CAR JUST ARRIVED# ATTRACTIVE PRICE : YANTIC GRAIN AND& PRODUCTS CO. HONE 999 . o A BIG = | ing the domestic preduction of cherai- eal fertilizers of all kinds The. top feids down over the back in 1. harm!es ou see stence. I happen to be 2 & mew siepladder intended to occupy l-ady Jane—Have. vou siven a gold- |littie room whea idie. h fresh or, Janet? M i i Mail is heimg. carried rogulariy b Jan 0. mum. They ain’t finish- |airplane !sc:wefn the a‘-x.-:“ufi‘e’; of the water 1 _give 'em t'other day|Berne, Zurich and Lausanne. t—Edinburg Scotsman. A et it S g 3 3 erkshire farmey et up a seaye- ¥ is your son making al that|crow in nis coenheld, near the rail ::kia'. with the monkey wrench road, amd tha trainmen peited it so Preparing his thesis, He graduates |hard with chunks of cosl ihal the far- week from an automobile eol-|mer got more thzm two tons. of eeal -ouisville Courier-Journal. out of it igner—It's the hunger riotz| Lewis F. Gates, of Shrewsbury, are afraid of in my country. And|digrovered tha: the reasom why ow is it with you? hasn't got any ripe berries from his The Kentuckian—It's the thirst riets’ ccrawberry patch thls year is that hi got to look out for.—Life { Scotch. terrier Gypsy has eaten all the “Ever dabble “Well, mans in the. market? the other dar I got a hot tip strawberries as fast as they have rip- ened. potatoes were due for a rise and| 4 company has recentiy been forms- er to buy three pecks and aled in Nottingham, Engiand, for tbe ore they jumped."—Buffalo|purpose of promoting a4 scheme for we have Tom Collins >—Judge. “Does you want?” s1't so much getting what you wamt|to 3685,286.133 for the year ending Jul 1919. During the same thne cxports e the “mcinnati Patie {the utilization of waste or refu «“rem Howard—Are vou absolutely op-|coal mines. The project is nove posed to soft drink {one. and it is believed thar waen fully Coward—Oh, no. they -have their!estaplished wiil attract other im- Without soft drinks how could dustries t¢ ty and district. asked for a high ball or a Trade stil o..ca as issued Dy the Cs- nadian government show that the im success rfean getting what | ports into the ceuntry from the Un{ asked the Young man. ed States decreascd frem $752,810,2 " replied the Old Man. “Success | for the 12 months ending July. 1819 ing what other people want.— auirer. United Btates increased trom nce—He's some Romeo 13411,860,008 to $431,705,058. Patrice—What do you mean? A lat one time. i O Taant know ne was as rien| Hags He Found a s ‘GO'NG ON TODAY ias that!”"—Yonkers Statesman. 7 \ AND SATURDAY ! “Are you an optimist?” C f A 'hm All kinds of Oatmeal Pape Aamo Arem't yow? . ure ior Asinma’ roll; Embossed Paper, 10c | o¥es. ‘But fust the sa e sot- 28k tcn over my cheerful confidence that = Leather Paper, 30-inch wids, 255 | .igciu are going 1o prosper and go|“imple Preacription Gives tnstant Re- roll; Grass Cloth Papers in all kinds up ovory time 1 play tnem.’—Wash- | Hef—Makes Breathing B F designs. 25c a roll; All Papers ofj ing Star y e atect Oy think it is vulgar to he| In New Engiand, where brenchial pes I ed the seeker after usefyl asthma, bronc... and other disea 15 MAIN STREET _agke S T urons And lings ATe zn Breva: Across From Breed Theatre ND pepiied Sr. Dubwaité, “Buf 1{!ent: remarkahly succeRsfy) reauits ——— ! think it is rather inconsiderate for a B S0lOmIng te yae of ; | millionaire friend to 100k bored When | Guze & phyatc an's prescriptisn ; - MERROW T deseant on tne hizh price of butter.” | (x)d.ss u A HAFmiess byt rowerfa . —Bir am Age- Herald. [con Siukilen” ot CHERCVE caneriial "olls Clifford Bothem of Mansfield Depot , sl Lam i irare and roompr iate n called on Miss Rose Dimock Monday | g | #mall tablet. One of thes ’ubuu Botham returned from | Dog in the Manger. |8, 0wty $zgoived pefore going L be M afternoon. ‘There are indications that A £ood Seems (o have the effeet of rejesnim France g short time Bgo andthis MERy h % the muscular constrictisn of the bren triends are glad to have him at home | many of the protests against the opar- | p? M ARLE0, CoNTT 0 e Bir pasen zain after his long absence [ ations of the big profiteers have DOAN . and reguinting ApAsmodir lung action Mr. Shales. who hag been foreman|the result of envy of opportunity,|’his enahles the patient to breathe at Tetrace since last spring, has re- rather than the outgrowth r; righteous m\.‘\.¥ .::( n“‘;:.'zz‘-tu“n'v‘”',..';::': 4«-‘: red and has move is family | indigna Detroit Free Press. any i comfortabla ales: "’,‘l‘.;"}:,“’\- Fhoyed with his famlip Lmolsaon So much interesi has becn shown 2 - & Martin ofRockyillc. Mas | Now Voters Arouged. [ Bt wonc Co., hACS aasused A small sup John Rhodex of Tolland and Mrs. h folk at our house hadp't|Ply 8nd vuiie that they are anthorize Benjamin Phillins Willimantie | The women folk Ao Treate]to refund the mone: paid for the fir spent Friday ai Edgewood. [ taken much interest in the president's) L LSS0 "TT Nay Cane this mew trea Mrs. Phebe Wilcox is spending a few | tour until today but they just crowd-|mumt fails te give relief. Oxidaze 4a daughter In Rockvllle. ed around the paper when it sald theipieasant to take econtains no harmfuf, dave with h Dwight Newcomb Fred Brown, in v limfantic I R Mon day. Mr. and Mrs. I. F. Wilcox of Center street called on Mr. and y Clough in To d Sundav. AMiss H. I.. Merrow of Kinaston. R. L. was at Terrace farm over Sunday. Weel and zuests at Edeewood were | Miss Helen Reynolds of Wacleville and | Strong, Mrs. Fred Miner. Mr. and Mrs. | L. Raymond. Mr. and Mrs. L Jewett, M. J. Stark and Miss Emily Siark attended Durham fair last week ! W ednesday. W. M. Sieson, Jr. and -Mrs. W. M. Sisson were callers in Deep River Fri- day. W. M. Sisson and sen have pur- chased a '-wurlni car. Frank ¥Fox of Centerbrook was a visitor at G. H Strong’s Sunday. Mrs. Auggusta Fox returned heme with him after two weeks' visit with Mrs. | Strong. - Leslie Rogers and family of New London spent the week end at Erwin Rogers’. ' Mr. and Mrs. William Stark of Hart- lord were week end visitors at J. W. Siark's. Merrill Babcock ‘of Meriden spent Fridgay and Saturday at George Bab- cock's. Mr. and Mys. Edward Ryan and son Cisfiord of Winthron were callers at Geerge Babeock’s Friday. Artist Oscar Ferher has been enter- taining a friend from New York. Mrs. Terher and Miss Elizabeth have been here the past week. returning Sunday. Mise Bmims Miner and Benjamin Putnam. both of .thie place, were mar- ried by Rev. Franeis Purvis Friday evening. Oct. 3. They have gone keeping house in their newly furnished home, the Lueinda Sissen house. CASTORIA Por Injfants and Children EL i | Rird Standish. a student at the Con- | necticut college. Tuesday itors with Mrs. 1. V.| Wileox were Mrs. John Clough and | NMre. Clayton Glough and children of Tollana: 7= Mvs. Peter Garvev and Mrs. A. T Rowers of Manafield Tepot spent Wednesday with Mrs. & T. Burdiek. BOLTON | Mrs. Henry Fryer of Willimantic s visiting her mother, Mrs, E. Jane Fin- 1e: | disg, Minnie O. Engle of Hartford was a recent-guest of Miss Annabel Post. ! Miss Mabel Casazza Louis Casazza have returned te New York after visiting their sister, Mrs. Andrew E. Maneggia. Mr. and Mrs. Andrew E. Maneggia's son. Joseph Maneggia. of Hartford, spent the week end with his parents in town. The . fellowinz candidates were elected at the annual town meeting| Monday: -Town clerk, J. White Sum- ner, d; treasurer, J. Wasson Phelps, r; selectmen,” Frank H. Strong. 4, C. M. Pinney, ». M. W. Howarfi. d: assessor, . ©. Sanford. r; constables. Anthony Maneggia. Charles R. Warner, Max- well Hutchinson, Charles A. Lee, Otte Manell, Theodere Reichard; gra jurers, Frank H. Eaton, W. O. Sanford, N. C. Maine, Marvin Howard, James Connors; board of relief. W. R. French; auditors, Roy Sanferd, Ernest Streng: tax eolieetor. A. E. Manergia; registray of voters, James Moynihan, Frnest Howard: school committee, H. B. De- Wolf and Mrs. C. F. Sumner. It was voted to erect a soldiers’ tablet, to ap- propriate $150 for the §300th celebra- tion of the town for next vear and te appsint 8. M. Alverd ehairman of the committee. Cromwell.—The Welcome Home cel- ebration. to-thie town's war heroes will be_ hold-. Oet. 13, ted his sister, | Wilsons apids Deesr e Ay had gone to Reno. — Grand |': it ferming Aruge And Is neg sxpen Press. i:]-.; s makes their test mn camy Tatter as a staunch building food of finest flavor. ' is.supported by its economy uarg@fc fast or lunch- Not a bit of Waste