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== STOMACH TROUBLES AREDUETOACIDITY Tells Safe, Gufiln. Speedy Relief For Indigestion 1iéa sts So-8a siém. & indieadiiss, ach trouBlés, sush nd Ang hr.ohnbly aci causin anfh 218 o LEGAL NOTICES. THE SOARD OF COUNTY cou. mers tor New Lasdon nty apply for a license to sell ana e spiritudus and cating i.quors, ale, 1=:e. bnr Ehine ni r in the buil n wtreé:, Town or X”W ch, eXce] ‘ ll\ Yooms and apertmente in said puilding hieh are cut of. .P partitioned in such manner as t6 form bogtns, sids raoms, or retiFifg My place of bust ! ed ‘within two Rundres Eivent iine Trom apy ehuren edinico or | &e k ochial -ehoo\, or tha u ce in the uomun, uu £ r-ailbn of gas and & nnd- the llbm‘h and causes P ) 1 n an: tery. i M & un:"l\rlsfl‘ 1 &8 Etors and taxpayers, o t-u of the Town -’I K"rvle Aan” ré- and endérse foregoing ap- on of Charles T Morrissey fof a ana néreby ceruty fhut sase l&{és and inflamas ih. ae! ieate lining 6¢ the stomach. The tréu- ble l1&s entirely in the excess develop- Ment of focotion of ac ig 5 tg. n':lll”rt?l:é Ktz ‘f I'h. ntnmu)‘\‘ o i Bllnl al\& i &c Shepean: licant is a suitable on msed pursuant u Mld A”l .4 a.t Mrw s 3th uy or al‘ xd ) n A, 1919, D. o. . Whe 0{ tam iscs. by cariity tha the abéve mamed signers and endorsers are nla:llfl u* laxpayets ovnmsrul satate, swn ated orwic: tis beh Am“f eeten: the stomath l'na 3 (g s«?o:{lr 'L.mma ana A i sted mag- pesia "PRIRR Cant he obzlinx 3 ggist. In elther powder !orm thables the Stomsen its 35 do operiy without the a.fl of artl. nefu ,lrun nts. ° hll gsla Eomés in Y't!.lfl !0 ask . fdt onl Rllnru olall? punud .g: nn Yy ar Ociober, A. S. Hélbrésk, Town Clerk. m THE BOARD OF 5 ISR O SO R Mmissionefs 167 New adén Ceupty: I ¥ appiy for a license to sell zad #3change plrnuo\u ang Inl.-lcnlls e wine lguors, ale, eider in the buuamg at 20 [Ferts & ‘rnn at Nerwica, except i Tn sald nn nl. imen! :_rt parts of w!\uh are iicionsd in o mann Shochs. siee romx, oF tetiring e My pise business 1s not tod thin :wa Yinared rest In o dirsct > edifice or public or the premises per- taining thereto, or any postoffice, pu lie librar. Cometery. Dated &t Nerwich, this 5th day of October, A, D. Dennis Morrissey. Applicadt. iwe the —nderslfntd are el i~ g resl esta and heréby sign and e |- Lication afi Den- Taxe which is_es *poss. Any absve pa. Common-Sense for Corns, “Gets-It” The Great Painléess .Corn Leosener. Simple az A, B. C.. Never Fails. of October, A, D. 1919 CRas S, HolBrook. Town Clerk. octifF ers for New Lenden Coun sxéRange spiritucus an . ale, la cide: pareshia su have év rertaining thérets, or any _Dublic 1ibrary. or cem r tried to get vis 87 m by bundling up ¥our toe wi bthéxse! by usin, your toe red and al ed fo drag your corn o9t with & xhife there wiil be a surpri 18§ Fybu when you use £ il . T pealing your corn off gioriouslyr, easily and painlessiy, just ll e peellnz ot a Banana ‘sltin. ell, that is what hep- pens when you ure 'oats.n 3 nething elie that will give same result. orwic 1 endorss the raruon l;p"- P T Mahoner for a licsnse, eartiry that said annlicant blo licensed o Thére is You this a. your peace 62 ming ving to attend to Dbusiness [Geis-1e” the simple common Ge. ' the 8Aly sura, zuarantedd, :r.enay baclk corn ~remover. costs bBut trifie at any drug tors. Manufacture by B Lawrence & Co, Cnieago. 1. S h and récomme bedt corn rem sernse & at No-w toher. A. D. 1 sk, Town Clarie ze mpirituous and -lnuxieaflnt o Ehalioczosd e | CENTRE GROTON f ,‘[ The service at thé Bapiist chapel s of whleh are oub 6% or |in thls village was well attended Fri in_such manner as to form |day evening about forty being pres- Kd.&r"::'" e:: ‘,’“‘;‘gg e ént to M‘;‘r Rev. bt‘refi tR-;.an o <in s = City, members of this chapel L XTINAE |and O1d Sroetic EAbk pact 1 ine Sers 'n: Praratess . __The next meetifg will be held phatorfas, | this (Friday) dvening the severntesnth. b? There is talk alsé of opéning up for % eun.— sértice in the chapel Sunday, the 19th. Jn«-e—\h . Bedark Asplicent. W¢. The Mothers’ Social club meeting ta was held Saturday at the home of Mrs. John Haley. This is the third meeting of the club and seven- téen weré present besides, several children. The club mects every two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. Alfréd Whinple left here this week to g4 to Jordan where they have leased one 6f the Gardnér or - Sign <o $he ferazeing anplication 6 Ja- =ép> G. BeAard nse, and that =213 assiisant I& a mait- P af Octhde omnkina F. B < & Gratman visited relitives here, having come from Wisconsin several weeks azeo. ' Mrs. Sydney Holmes of Groton Borough a- Mrs. Joseph Gray &f | New Léndon. were guests 6f Mrs. Wil- liam A. Gray Saturdey. Hunters are out in force but game reported scarce in this viefmlty. pra Atanty Aetata i ® Dattd a‘ Norwieh, et (3 6:t16r TO THC BOARD OF counTY ceg. pllr‘!uog s hlfiltax,lcl“n e S et of rame and style Zerlien & Ca. in the bullding and Hunter's avenuss, Town h. except n the reems and in said bullding, any part are cut aff or parti- Rev. James Smith of Raciville, fors merly of this place, calléd on lecal mends and relatives one day the past Mrm Kate Haggerty - entertained menas from Boston over the week- Ja.me: P. Ryan has lately moved Nhs family to Webster. 3 in 3 ehurch lllfic‘ or publ sches!l, o =0 1we: b 2 thiTeto, ‘or an: phetetfts | The mill is running full time and or cemetery. Dated quite a numbBér of new families have moved into the village. Mrs. Agnes Durfes is off on a shert vacation for a rest. Mrs. Ed. Keigan was in Woreester with reiatives Mon Irving Adams is soon to meve to Quinebaug. There is neither jealousy nor self- ishness back of 'a friendship werth th day of o:t-hr‘ B Léuls Applicants. S e ane Marsirned. ars eiécters and .faxpavers. eal estate. of the Town of 2nd hereb¥ sign and endoree o Laula s, and “apnilcants are licensed Buren- Dates at Nor- e torezn oing S a ‘llca!'e Wuna o for & Pl n aas of ODstoher, A. T Rabinaviteh. Timothw . | WAEE. 3 < n o reh" certify én- hove named sigmers and actate, Potad at Astober A “SYRUP OF FIGS” CHILD'S LAXATIVE ’I.DOK AT TONGUE! REMOVE POI- SONS FROM STOMACH, LIVER AND BOWELS h. 1818 Aav or Talbreok. Town Clerk. - na Bauess, o' lager beer: Rh r under the pame and sty Chéster . Wright & Ce. ln the lmfllf ing at ¢ Cove strest, Town of Norwich, exéept in the rosms and apartments in e2!d building, an~ part eor of i which are cut Gff.or p.rmnned in eueh maazner as té form bofilh slde redms, or retiring roomwis o of busi- Pées is not idcated ithin m aunaui fest in a direct lime from edifice or pubdlic or parsehial c"l %he promises pesining thereto, or zny pubiie 1ibrary. or come: Tea at X -flr\ s Tth day ot Octo- Criastar right & * Ae Chester T Wright, Appliesnts. We, the undersizmed, are electsrs and 13xpevers, owning réal catate, of the ¥owr of rw.eh and herehv sizn and madirse the foregzeinz applicatisn eof Cog=tar £ Wrisht & Co. 7or a llcense. LerebT cartify that aid ai -,-e ;1 table nersoms to he lce applicatian. ted ?l Tth day of Octaber, A. D. Slosberz, f‘harles D. Arman._Joln F. Meors. s Mo Mahen, Frank . Denison. 1 hereby eertify that ths abovs ramed sizmeer dorsers are electsrs and taxe o cwning real en;tu in the Toswn Korwrich. Datea t D. ... GF 124 licants pur- -satd Q«micb. this 319. Samue]l Aceep WLI." only—look for thée name S; of yrup M Tth_dey o O+toBer. @ Hglbreok, Town Clerk: ol _l-n-.. f | ter, this vear, than T expected. farms. Mr. Whipple and family have| ITHE FARMERS TALK THE RESULTS OF (Writtén Speecially Tor Thé Bulletin.) “There's né longer any dsubt:—the “melancholy days have. come.” After a light white frést as a_ warning, last week gave us iwo |lLilling fréezes. “Blaci frosts” we call them in this t0 distinguished them te hear frosts which nip ténder- foliage, but do not make ice. Thess two made ice, good, substantial 1ee, half an in¢h thick and just as cold as any that'll be made next win- tef. 1 kndw, for I had to wash some celery in zhe tud. after breaking off thé ice-erusf All the mmma créps are dead, now; Idaaa forf keeps. Tomatoes, squashes, melons, cucumbers, egg plants, etc., are gone where no woodbine twineth. Even cauliflower léaves are badly injured and exposed heéads aré sadly vellowed. May do for an ingredient in mustard pickles, but its value as 2 vegetable is ssfidusiy iffipaired. Cabbage, of course, resisted the freezes and celery séems to have taken né harm. Turnips and ruta fbag)as apparently find the cold quite lto their tastes, for theéy have grown more, since the freeze, than they did in twice thé same timé before it. Some of the weed: to0, were |scotcheéd. Pigweed and wild ama- iranth, for instance. Both arc dead, though 1 gravely fear the sérminat- ing quality of their seeds haen't been lessened. Some of the wild grasses too, which infest gardens are killed. Timothy and quiteh and clover show small sign of injury, but the sedges fand waat we call “‘pieeon grass’” a sort of wild millet, are dead. So is |another grass which is quite a sum- |mer nuisance to me but whosé name I Go not know. It is a slender-stem- imed variety, with long and even slan- {derer branches szrowing almost hor zontally out of the stem. much after the branches ing sparse seeds at L twig-like divis: hea frozen whole top'breaks off and forms of rounded, springy, fluffy bail, lighter than the preverbial weather, résemb ling etherialized “tumble i which theé siiahtest bresze blow long the areund, scattering seeds as it roli till it brisws yp against some fenc where the accumulation mme&f comes to resémblé a windrow. % 166, the treezé killed. But chickweed and mallew and dock and sorrel and “" catnip and gzéldén-rod 16ok about as thank yeu. It is e\mmt = ter weeds Belong to ti iatitude, while the others muy parhaps B€ importations from some warmer Jand which have nét yet becéme toughened to Néw FEngiand condi- tions. It seems a pity that we sh compelied to accept such who desirable plant immigrants. they stay where they got all the wceds we withcut importing any jor Mexico or South Ama: On the whole, the frost held off bet- Three a can't We've weeks before it struck us, I over my meion and Lima béan p: with no réal hope that either onc Woéuld produce any crop. I atdn't sec, how they could mature endugzh in the! short space thém. Yét they dld. Our first wae, as T havé said, a light 6ne which | did them small damage. Indeed, seéms {0 act ag-a spur t6 their be- lated activities. e gathered and I'soid fully a normal crop of melons and {two-thirds a mormal cron_ of Limas. Watermelons | {and citroms were both an utter fall- lure. But that ¥was neét unusual. We're téd far north to have muéh chance with watérmeléns. Twice in twenty five years T've had a bouncing crop of huge, luscious watermelons. Setme ether Yeasa T've saved a few =ma_msn ones. it's about ten-to-one any mmculnr year. that they u améunt t6 néthing. onsidering how fuicy they are, it seems to mé quite 64d that the very Bést crop of watérmelons we ever gréw was préduced on a grave! ridee. $6 ary that nét even June-grass would live oen it, and during the worst @Grouth we've known. It was an op- pressively hét and 4ry summer, when springs and wells and brooks that had neéver falled beférs went cut of com rnission, and when even corn_yellowed and shrivelled betore earing. Yet those watermelons, in that parching sumn- mér, grew_on that sun-baked gravel ridye like Jonan's gourd at Nineveh, and produced wagen-loads of the swesiest and juiciest fruit I ever sank teath im. I thought | had, at last, found the orie cerner o6f the farm which would ,a-ow watermelons. So. next spring. I planted the whole ridge to them. Tt turned out a fairly normal season in point of rainfall—and elghty hills never yielded a single melon! Nor have I ever got ome, since, oOoff that ridge. But to eome back to this present seasén. As usual, I've scored abeut as many failures as successes. Pota- toes never 46 really well with ms. My {561l is net suited to them. They must be féd and fussed With and coddled béyond resson to gét them to dd any- thing. And last spring I planted them on 4 Bit of clay leam, land unusually retentive of moisturs; the very worst fisld on the farm for a wet season. We couldn’t_ cultivate them properly because of the iméessént:yains. Those rains alse made the w like trees. Of course. all thig-deterred thém. Then the rot set in.. . Result, about two-thirds"of a crop;. _ fully a third of these dug “specked” with irot.. The rest are spréad oul umun Bart floor, whepe we can Wi ang sort out thé bad ones ag they de- | v&18p, 'They'll- stay there. il it- gets &6 cold thére's’ danger of tl ez~ ‘tng. | . Seme years ago, whe‘n ufinnarry develaped at digging time, Ty old far- mer neighbors unanimously = advised me to lézve them und\:‘“{m the last moment. “Let:’ém. ré hat they're 3oin’ to in the” grem\d s wu the ad- vice; “then you won't have to ook ‘em over in thé bin.” So I waited till.the first week in November. We dug out then about 235 bushels of potatoes, of which only $0 bushels were apparent- We put those £0 bushels in- er. ell, potatoes, as you can imagine, have nét been a paying crop this year flf-hurueh_ Asparagus, a.lm pro-. TO FARMERS peppers, | dowant over-rich soil—I'm be: doubt quite a numbér of things which|home of Georgé of warm weather lenl it | brem.ha easily A l‘ht THE SEASON 1919 en-g;\ 16 pay é6st of seed ! ing. ileld eofn, the yollow-fint. va- riety, of which but 6ne failure has béen recorded in 137 years on this |farm, (and that duc to a July frost 'son\e timé in the 1830's), is pretty clote t0 = flazle. We shall get some #rindable ears—perhaps a very few that will do for seed. But the bulk Iwm be “pig corn.” It glad I took Jolini's ddvice, and saved several| |traces of last year's seed-cofn. Two. year-0ld séed isn't always very. good, but I fancy it will zrow about as well as any we shall save this year. On the other hand swest-corn aid eyén bettér than usual. - And all the root crops have busheled out gener- jously. He is another queer siart in "that fami however. For more than |a hundred years, it has been a family ! custém to sow tarnips Dbroadeast in {the poiatoes and corn. at the last cul- jfivation. After the potatoes are dug and he corn cut, the turnips will grow finely il the ground freez Last year, for. thé firgt time in a century. no turnips grew. This summer, mind ful of that experiénce, after as usual in the: corn fleld, I sc..v.uud‘ perhaps a spoonful of seed out of the same baz on two small garden patches! from wwhich early crops had been re-| moved. . Again, there is not a turnip In the corn or potatoés. But those in the gardens are growing like weeds In 2 manure-héap, and are the finest in shape and color I've ever raised. There won't be many of them, to be sure, {enough for our own use. Perhaps we| imay get ten or fifteén bushals. |séed sown in ‘the corn, etc. had done | {as well, we should have had 500 bush- | els. Now, why should the saime seed. | sown the same dav out of the samé ba el on a gravelly garden patch, and |absolutely refused to germinate a sin- jcle piant on a gravelly corn Jot?ino Théy used to say that furn: dld‘tt‘ ning to " T.ewsell ance wrote I “ther used 6 &2 teach new du- jthat “new occa tie FHe was: But it 100ks as if new cond: réeguire néw treaiment of cven so ple-| beian a thing as = turnin. ity lof ¥ owh tOWn at least twl‘nl\ ave told me that théir crops’| Only one has re- and hé had only a five-bushel plot his “back garden. |The New York cron information se jcé reports Long Jsland potatoes as rotting so badly a< té bé hardly wur‘h[ jQigzing. A cammissien man in | neigimoring city reced carload | jast “a3 fine wiien Té- Th fass than tws | actically all rot- | shbor has just had | ter from a relative in Central T who remarks, incidentall™, that n digring potatoes. | are t60 rotten to be orthi !hon.cm ont. The trouble seéms to be! { widesnread. T.ooks véry much as if the lonx- sufiéring coneumer will have to mort- age his autémonile this wintér, if hé| | dnts to eat spuds. age. In { growers |srere rottine badl { ported immun? w@eks ted. THE FARMER. EAST KILLINGLY A funeral Service. for Mrs. Saunders was heid at the Upper | church Tuesday afternoon, Oect. 13. A‘ [large number of reiatives and friends was vresent. Rev. C. B. Ficher con- {ductéd the services. Mr. and Mrs. valter Wood sang. The. b | Feepert Smith, Tugéne Pen | Greenslitt, Louis Barstow. Burial| |was in the Bartlctt csmeétery on the| hill. Miss Nellie M. Chase was the guest . Sunday snd Menday of Mr. and Mra. |- L. G. Andrews in Occum, Clarencé Burgess of Chepachet. R. I. called on Mr. and Mrs. I. P. Chase ! Sunday. | " Sirs. Flannah Smith, who has been i_for several weeks, is recovering. Miss Lulu Soule entertained a| large number of young friends at the | home of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Soule Saturday eveming on her egihteenth |hiflhdly. Delia 1y Day was obsérved. Rev. Mr. Frey- ling, superintendent, conducted the opening exercises, roll call of the classes, after which there was a song By members of Mrs. E. C. Tillinghast's ciiss of girls, Brighten the ~ Corner Where You Are. Rev. Mr. Barwick of Plainfield Congregatiomal church gave an_intefesting talk to the school. R lansi at church mesting or Get- Togethér Party of the church was haxa Oct. 15. Rev. Boynton Merrill of. the C tional church in Put- nam gave an interestinz tdlk of lifé on a battleship. Mr. Merrill was chapiain on the U. S. S. Philadelphia for several months during the recert war. There was a g00d atténdance and the social Bour Was Mmuch ehjoy+ ed. A fine progfam by thé commiitée ine- charge was carried out, including a piano duet by Mrs. Ben Livesley and Mrs. Harold Wignoll, piano soio by Miss Doro oed, vielin and pia- no duet. ldred and Floremée Leach; j‘Agony of Asthma New Preseription Gives Imstamt Reltef, | Makes Breathiag Easy. ‘Thousands of psople =uffer ¥rom bronchitis or bronchial astima who, heving tried advertised remedies. im halers, “patent smokes,” douches, doc- tors changes in climates ote. witnout permanent beneit, belleve nothing cam ever make them iwe! xteneive experiments finally cnayled a Weorcester, Mass., paysiclan to find simple, harmless treat ‘enz that nv. almeést immediate reiief in even. tne most stubborn advanced cases and fat sumpers of former ssthinatics his _ treatment with | darXul BuCess. e doetor's preseription is called Oxidaze and can be obtained from Ths Lee & Osgood Co. and leading druzgists sverywhere, who sell it on a guarantes now used 1y séund. to the cellar—and I had to carry out or,’.,money ack b"l first plck-.e 18 all but 20 bushels of them befors | IR 20y 1 fails To zive prompt re- Christmas! No more of that for John fany skt wio Tor yeats Nave baeh g to bed and can then lie down and | 1y and naturally and get a Testzul siées. t-; | vocal duet, Nirs. Gertrudeé Tracy. Freyiing, Mrs. Genevieve lcach and| Miss Dorothy Atwood werc in_charge of the refreshménts, sandwiches, cake, fee. the musical The family » turned home from Neptune lark, tertained from N Frionds of Henry White werc sur- SOWing. prised to heéar of his death Tuesda*' ti his home ih Dan!élson. been in the machine Waurezan company. for several Years, Mrs. Phiilip Mathewson of Village has returned there, Atwood’s for severa! attended ut | pesday évening. Mis. If the her sister, Mrs Mrs. Hector McConne!l have germinated to the last ker- |recently froim her mother, Mrs, James | Service of Norwich. On acesunt woek and next ’I'hurndfi! i t thinking of turnips.|the tions might trict Ministarial Associatien at Trin- $9.97. Artaur 2Mott arnd Mrs. Mrs. Willlam consisting of ce/ eréam and cof- Curlrud. Tmcs’ »ro, W Ahv..d kas ro- New whers they have spent the Mrs. nd Irs. a_party. ,of w . Bedford over young people e week Mr. White h shep of this Central t6 lier home bavipg. beéen a guest at J. Al ek Charies leavens o the . church meetlng t) Brookiyn Wead- | Fred Leavens is ent Lew! a ielzon. BALLOUVILLE had a visit of the rain cotlage meeting last Week. it is at Postmaster J. L. Pray fall meeting of the Norwich J. B, Wagner M. E. caurch. Re . &ave helptul ‘<ewmn Centre, Mas arranged ; i Harold Wignoll en- -end. | Rt x, LOW NECK, LONG AND SHORT-SLEEVES. Ribbed Underwear, heavy fleece, white or ecru, -47c and 59¢—None higher. Can you imagine this—A ladies’ up-to-date Coat, neatly trimmed on the collar and pockets, in brown, black and navy We have loads of good Winter Coats at $15.00 to $20.00. 'HE PASNIK CO. Sell For Less 3 GOOD STORES—NORWICH, DANIELSON AND WILLIMANTIC addresses on Peastoral and pegnnax] Evangelism. The two tenemer ouse rec-ntly' [sold by Mrs. Helen Tucker to Adal- phus Thibeault is now occupled by the Japaii for peace with plece of China—C Japan and China, declares Jtm carnest China r icago desira than = ews. latter's fam re- Tal- of Webster, Mac Freq Mason has gone to Manuville, . 1. where he is emploged b the iie - Manufacturing Compas Sunday noxt is to bs observed as | tally Sunday at the Methodist chure 5 @, m.| gérvics Horatio A, Brown of Putnam, I3 was. the founder of the Sunday {school here which 21t | church being erected, w ing reminiscences of ago. There js to be #pecial of!orhg‘ {for the Board of Sun@ay Scheols, In | the evening there will be carried out| {7 Sunday School Ra! Youth and the New Da torinm 30 p. m. The offering s fo the ecizl cone 6f the ¢ urah' c et Thurs- | e Methadist pare| is president, Mrs. | An inrerésting | bt lwe | ‘full dinner of the laboring man| 2 demand for him to Boston Tran« {lunchiecn every FOR COLDS, {rec which was} the grade ture of Monoacetica { tteacid. INAME “BAYER” ON GENUINE ASPIRIN HEADACHE, PAIN NEURALGIA, TOOTHACH® LUMBAGO, RHEUMATIS™ mark of Bayer 3 « How Much Profit Do You Pay Us? : The United States Department of g - Agriculture informs us that you as an : average American Citizen, eat about one i hundred and eighty-two pounds of meat (181.83 lbs. ) in a year. Based on these figures, if you‘ had purchased all : of your meat foods from us, Swift & Company would ~ ‘have profited to the extent of 482 cents during the first eight months of our present fiscal year. In that eight months we averaged to make t'wo- : fifths of 2 cent on each pound of meat and all other products sold. This profit ybu paid us equals 6 cents a month— or just about one street car fare. More than 30,000 shareholders looking to us as trustees of their invested money, had to be paid a reasonable return out of your 6 cents a month. Volume alone made this pos'liblo. : Now figure for youn-lf how: Government inter= ference in the operations of the packing business is going - to reduce your meat bilfl