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R er Sleter S Alies o ,ng. Fitte, who 14 residing in mn‘ new home, formerly known as the g %;mce.huumhufnmw (e e, 0l Tire: Asbere Motemas, 0 ' The Bulletin's report of last week | 1d Mrs, n, for- Saturday’s weather was rain and fog, y of Hampton, have been 1iv- whe = R | tri colder at night, with snow. West- :&“me«? &? hm’:fi ths“ :ym‘ffj. ] make/ m h. ney: mi used Some ahxiéty but | i : R it:'is hoped supplies will atrive fast|minstér had all that, and high wind. | MeMahon and ‘etpéct to enough to_ki the . niill = running | mhis produced tohe condition of nearly | lome hére soon. ‘g“grfl e r"’&‘i- i;;m- Py vty :‘ “": ‘unusable ronds and very few able to vixtll‘n" myfi.&"‘}y:hm’m largo swamp, known ad O swamp|atiena Sundsy morning worship,| mons, ‘ot Wilimantie, has Feturned for many years, is m&ngicl%r of its | which was held at the parsohage.’ - l:'en'h s M s trées and h of the wood salm 5 ’, urchn; a < Drotent 16 the nd e e r ohe Pastar'e L neiret one day’ et wesk, ihe. Saimel CHEW A FEW—END STOMACH DISTRESS! oy mm::mnh is relieved. -Buy a box! - Eat meals- without . i1 d enlistment in the army of ", ding Stomach’” in package. o mogmuctor Ruste: of Norjen tor- ity ;,,’;;,;;’;":;fl, “gier fear! Read ”’Common Sense Rules Regarding Stomach'” pack FARMERS HAVE RIGHTS WHICH with Tocal friends.. 0 of homo aitare for. W ednobay even at home altars for Wednesday even- ing, March 24, is Quibbling. Thé Bible|" passage Matt. 22, especially v. 29, “Ye iy eriticall leased the. Copp farm and until the r8. Bstel present _occupants, Everett -Crandall and famiily, move, have moved into the CANNOT BE: S : 4 : f?}m. At ; 8 o’clock the candidates for althission IGNORED. il with pneumonia. was & Hartford s | o, e memberahip of the hifeh on | {0, o' of Gon’ Oharuciar consints | cosgracieices have bemm hetd st the | o iutnt 1o seats s hote tarmor | T Moe heer b : @Writtan Specially for The Dulletin) | “Larger profts, commensirate with | Easter Shnday, Apel 4th. il meet | ot 56 Tich Jn what we are s i What,| Gonte Eaqonts SRURCH e S| WOODSTOCK VALLEY the profits of city tradesmen and pro- | the standing committee of the church f o the condition of | t1owara his place on the Atkins W drt oftan that a newspapdr ML |plL B cople’ whoss brains and en- |0 be accepted. ; 7 W¢ ate beceniity. & p! large city publishes anything sensible, mauch less anything sympathetic about farmers and farming. Take the New ' York city papers, for illustration. Al- | with the wages of industrial workers; though lots of the men Who work on|jyst as good living, just as good food, them and write for them were born on |.just as good a place for fatm laber to and owe their stamina t6 their | jjve in as oity workers have. o mforts, good g, farming conditions and contempt for ;’j:,b'}x;d°;’,}d‘°hemn s e farmere every time they deign to ad- | i;5js and equipment; as good schools mit their existence. and as good religious and soctal ad- 1t wae, therefors, with much surprise | vantages as city people enjoy. and no_little admiration that I noted “Good roads; good mail service; bet- in The Knickerbocker-Press of Albany, |ter marketing facilities; better trans- N. Y., the other day a really pointed.| portation, and especially the apprecia- and timely editorial, flatly' demanding | tion.and sympathy of those whom they that the country wake up to the“tact are servir:g—in shoxi:, ;s ::ir;ail;artxg: that farmeérs have rights as well as|as any other man ha 1aber unionists. . "most zz his, opportunities and to make don't agree with all of the paper’s | his“life count to the extent of his wlom or-conclusions. You prob- | gbility. ¥ won't,either. But I want you to |\, : i ng to ask The Bulletin to print 1t 1.t of their lot, and while they have 8% as it appeared, this morning. You'| 5,50 some money In the. last' few o, can talk about it, If we want 10, years they have made less and worked - At A _ |'more than most other interests, ana Here n the atticle: wte labor fhas| WhAL they have made has fallen a long forcetully updn the public attention | TS APl HIREAPE & nothing +of. that it has come to be admitted with- | the labor utfilued, to sy Botiing of put argument that Jabor must always | SCOrI8 & 3 hE 05: SEpBET taken care of; that it must be nar- | (e farmers have o right to ‘expect tured and proiected and assured a tonstant betterment. This. is ‘quite right; labor ought to have evéry alle- ¥iation which an incregsing degree of efvilization ean provide for.it. It ought to have frée and untrammeled epportunity to_rise. and it ought to be guaranteed, of course, against in- | Justice. “But labor is not the oniy element in The community at large and . her | NS Foads. pupils and their families at Gayhead district are saddened by the serious illness- of ‘Miss Esther Kimball. About two weeks 4g0 Miss Kimball was call- ed to her home in Pomfret by the ill. ness of her mother. She returned and’ taught har &chool last Wednesday but 2§ since been i1l in the home of Mrs. ergy match his. “Wages for farm help commensirate Miss Miriam Chapman has retutned to her dutles as organist at the church, having recsvered from illness. Mrs. Arthur Eyers and, Mrs. Homer Dean spent Thursday in Norwich Albert Brown, Jr., remaifis at the. Backug hospital, Norwich, where he underwent a successtuil %;;e,raitd{on !or‘ Temoval of dn abscess in his s! P. Lachapelle, where she 1s boarding. William Simmons, who is $pending | eanwhile her school is ot in session; the winter In Norwlieh, and his grand- | “wegtmingter ana some of the other daughter, Mlssv Miriam Vaughn, ot | gpa0ls are working hard on their pro- N, e ey e mutnam | STAMS for the close of the term. Judge Bdgar M. Warner of Butham | ™ A tne republcan caueus held. at was a-visitor here Thursday. He Wa&| conierbury town hall last week Bd- a former resident here for several ward Baker, Lem Carpenter, Herbert ygars. Williams and E. IMitch Johnson were Mrs. Allan Moffelt of Wauregan, for- | glecteq to attend the state convention merly of this village, has been thel i"\roo Haven March 23 and 24 to gdest of Mrs, George Potvin. - 5 Harold Frances is at Jamestown, R. | flcct delegates to the national conven L, where his-bjother Clarence retains | "M “Hthel Dusenberri, daughter of critically ill a€ his home. Mr..and Mrs. William Johnson, was Miss -Irene Wilde, a nurse at the | yriv 35 disiage Monday of Iast Badkus hospital, Norwich, has.been & yeek in NeWw York city With Lewls Suest at the home of her brothér, Br- | Hinno of that city. * Her slster, Mrs. . Baylis, we! t 2 No Christian Endeavor service. was S&“gf‘d §¥!{‘H‘;‘n:€, T:e r:;'m? fwh:&?;t held Friday evening on account of the | ", “tp to Europe, to be gone soms storm. time. Miss Odna Seguin of ~ Providénce Mrs. Simon Rosengwelz is expecting | spent Sunday at her home. her daughters from New York to vis} Mrs. Charles Barber, who\has been | et Guring the Easter holidays. i passing the winter In Norwich, spent | “Benjamin Davies, who recently lost Monday- here. his house by fire, has been. selllng his The'teachers' training class ~ wiil.| G TOUIT B8 S Bas heed e % o 4 gaging in meet thls (Thursday) evening with | o7y bcr o™ Misg Ruth Mathewson, e Nl g Miss Harriett Stark, who has been | o MI% Allen Moody js entertaining ‘& verv ill, is.slowly improving. Two bluebirds were seen in West- The Girls’ club held -a Sairt el ful food sale af Thompson's store Fri- day évening. Thé éommittee was Miss Seman Lepdrle. chairman, Miss Fmma Raymond ® Estérbrooks, a_petty offi- cer in the U. 8. navy, hias Yeturned to the valley, having been discharged af- ter four years' service. Ferdinand- Kenyon,” who enlisted at the same time, is aiso ‘at his home Tere. 5 Mrs. Emma. Blackmar's litfle boy Roland {s at the Day Kimball Rospital, Putnam, recovering from blood pois- oning. Miss Edith Carpenter ha srecovered from hef fecent fliness. CASTORIA -For Infants and Children Vincent Taylor, who has been work- with his horses in Hartford for the one cdompany, has. céme home. He is o werk for the eompany here. s CENTRE GROTON Recent rains ' have flooded the swamps and brooks are overflowin ‘he roads in many places. ‘Wells are flooded with surface Witer and cellars in several placés have over & foot of water in them. £ Mrs. Moses Colveér, who has been ill for several months at her home, is not 80 well, Ravifig spent several restless nights. . e Miss €. F. Bailey has beeh fli for the | past few days. I The pinohle club met at G. W. Bailey’s Friday evening. inUse For Over 30 Years G. P. Colvet's family has moved into the home of Mr. Colver's- mother, Mrs. Aiways brars the Pl 7‘ Moses Colver, temporarily. Signature of > Mr. and Mrs. Frank King have * ATTAWAUGAN - - Mrs, Delia 1/Homme 6f Attawaugan has récélved a lettsr from the wa:.l.c- partment informing her t her son, Private Lo interred an 0. section rican - dmme, d ad ih 93, piot 4, Af- Neo. 1231, )Ktn:;nneon (Meuae). letter also stated that a phote- graph. of his e has been taken by a seotion of the Amerioan Med Cross assigned o the staft of th? g:nvu foR- mr‘lmtm sérvice and will sent to ef later. BOLTON NOTCH M. W, Howard was ih New London Tuesday. Mrs. Ida Fuller was in Manchester ¥ . H. B. B:wm was a Hartford 2y. visitor Wedne: Emory Strong Went to Waterblry ‘Wednesday to sée his brother William, MOTOR FREIGHT SERVICE (All Géods Covered by Ifsurance During Transit) NORWICH-—PROVIDENCE—~NEW LONDON—PUTNAM : FALL RIVER—NEW BEDFORD and Connecting Points EQUIPMENT—NINTEEN PIERCE-ARROW TRUC“S E. P. WINWARD & SON 4 Phone 1250 4 v M WILLIAM STREE? STREET tradtive and profitable as city .life, and when “thHe country recognizes that farming is the nation’s biggest indiis- »try, its basic industry, a long step will have been taken toward making ‘It what it ought to be.” THE FARMEK! Cheshire—George C. Erskine, super~ Intendent of the Connecticut reform- Bradley and' Mis Cassie ' Medbufy. 135 WATER NEV/ BEDFORD i3 5 s " - . v at Cheshire, started Wednesday NORWICH FPhone 3337 i in~Dr, Henry T.' Bray | who workeéd faithfullv.and sueceeded | ntory at e 3 : society which should Rufve ~constant | Néw, Bristip. Dy acting surgeon of |in adding -$ to the ‘club treasury. | from New York for a short stay. at 492 SOUTH MAIN STREET 138-142 DUBFEL STRIET der: this having r B da, expecting to be batk the gonglderation of this gért. The farm- |'FFNE 8080 public health ser- | The prize cake made by a member of | Befmuda, expecting 5 PROVIDENCE ZLL RIVER ors, for instance, aremot less impor- | o VR "Goorge H. Dalton has been |the club was given to Alfred Faucher. | latter part of the month.. He has been Phone Union 3842 Phone 3619 iant than union labof to the existence | 1O (% 5 cucceed him. Dr. Dalton | ATl the food was auicklv sold as soon | considerably. run down in health and e country- impertant, but thi erved overseds. as the sale opened. The. club - hag tien to argue N fid yet there is o disposition to e allowances for the farmer, to re~ard his progress kindly, or to'imsist ubon his being seated at the frst fable, whenever he gees on the.advice of his physiclan. Period FurnitureAdds Touch of Genuine there are good things to bie divided. here | L tonde a fixture about Where he inuing to n) nd-sowy rean egardiess of changes in the body polftic. Theré i3 even a tendency to #ay of him that he is always prote Ing anyway, complaining of the hea » in ary spells and of the chillin ’ L) molsture when it rains: never satis- & : 4 fied. yct ever secure in his living. and, 3 while having fittle ready eash, really 3 = : : : needing liftle because hp has no.on- | it The. farmer's elassic matter also: the | rm accents it as a mat- course and wasteg no thought t it “But the farmer is not a fixture. He I8 leaving the firm by thot tens of thousands, a portunity o spend havd work 's Those who kniow us and have bought their furniture at this store do-not need to be told i of the splendid merchandise on display here. They know that our standards of quality § are the highest, the range of different period styles on views here is the largest, and that How attractive is a simply and tastefully furnished home ! Just a few pieces of pe.riod S\:miture, chosen for their natural dignity and beauty, a background of harmonious aperies and soft-toned rugs—and every detail of the room extends a warm welcome as you open the door. Period furniture always means a better home. our prices are as low as is consistent with merchandise of the highest quality. : The Newest Period Styles In Bed Room Furniture ; d his being filled. ity éreasing th as rapid- | 1 &s country popiilation, thére ig little | — A Store'With An Ideal We believe it our function not only to provide furniture of fact left in the on that the farmer may always be depended upon to stand toil BEAUTIFUL DINING ROOM FURNITURE by hie tasks regzardless ‘of es for a single season the principles of the shortened work day and the restrictéd output whicn are so f; ionable ' in labor circles. . Ther e n Bisaster that would good quality, at a moderate mal ings of i . B = Bundey scieli St e lock price, but also to do our share, tion would go by advice and suggestions, in bettering the homes of this wonid set In, and the government it- self might collapse. "o_l course, thé farmers are not go- ing %o do ine of the sort, thouzh city. - Better homes mean bet- it m tted that they have as . ah3 my luce their efficiéncy . ter citizens, and better citizens and i any other men fi it t posses fe not even e ner city and a greater Ing that this thihg or that be accom- | plished for their benefit. Instead, if the people 8o not awaken presently {0 the fact that it is a national duty fo make farm life more pleasant and Nation. Every ene is interested in period There are charming designs in the profitabile, they are likely. one by. one, and without any coficerted action, to | restrict the scone their agricalture | %0 as to provide for the immedi- ate needs of their families, or else to drop quietly out of the struggle which has become too one sided for the times. R “This is all wrong, for farming of itself is—or rather ought to be—a [ theroughly delightful eccupation for | men and women who understand it. If it -has been allowed: to -lag behind other occupations in its pleesantness, and. especially in its profits, it ought not to be difficult for the public to set remedies in action. The point is to | make the people-realize the.necessity WHY NOT TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR EASY TERMS “NOW” , The Luxury of This Overstuffed Suite Is Unexcelled $300.00 -The Suite above is but one of the many beautiful designs that are being shown, at very moderate prices, in our store. All finishes and woods are here, such as Mahogany, Ameri« can Walnut, Fumed Oak, Golden Oak, Jacobean Ouk, in the style and period which will best suit the surroundings furniture, and especially in period furniture for the bedroom. You will find the very newest and most distinctive period styles represented in great abundance orn our display floors at this Spring Opening. beautiful Queen Anne period, many dignified Chippendale suites, and also adaptations of ‘the beautiful Louis XV period in mahogany and walnut. Our convenient plan makes it very easy to own furniture like this Special Offerings SELECT NOW p { of such action and _the @angers of D 2 vogtponing fe T T in which they are placed may be chosen from our stack. THE IDEAL HOME “Some of the things the farmer is entitled to as 2 matter of right under 2. S5 g the circumstanceg of present day so- ly are: ing example ry of the value. A fine gentuine Diamond of beautiful quality in $39.90 and up, gold filled case— 1$29.50 Famous “Royal” Easy Chairs - JEWELRY SPECIALS FOR MARCH Men’s Watches Bracelet Watches ‘Pu‘lifiv?l ‘th'olb::‘t' W-t:lh v’.‘lu; in ‘Amcriel A bgrnt I'nmrln for Lu(g- and mld-“-fil IA * . oday, ewe in model, high-gra open. | substantial uaranteed <year a selid - waly maunting, that is sure ty | 0S¥ i Watch, aaiubed e B ] e DUl T a2 15« jowel give absélute satisfaction— 3 movament that has proven a fine time-keepe: ) B DO N e B VICTROLA restful depthe The medel illustrated is the WAl Yo S . S . $150 Victrola. Soid by us, to- * > of this substantial, wonderfully well- gothes with $11 in Victor 4 Records, your ohoice (total made “Royal” easy chair, press the $161), on terms of only $10 a bitten on the arm and the back re- clines at just the right angle—then only $24.00 up. ry At $22.50 - month, COLUMBIA hind Your Silken Veil,” “Apple preme—— The Plaut-Cadden Co. (Established 1872) 135-143 Main Streét ALL STYLES OF VICTROLAS AND GRAFONOLAS FROM $25.00 UP. IT DOES MAKE A DIFFERENCE WHERE YOU BUY YOUR VICTROLA. you will understand what real comfort GRAFONOLA / 3 GRAFONOLA Thie Grafencla of dinat VICTOR Real comfort will be yours when Eph I:tar.d in a very flr‘:: %r-:l': cz there is in a chair like: this. The ""i:“. ."'° :."c:"cr:‘”‘"flbz VICTROLA : ink di into the soft depth: eautiful tapestry over the finest of e foot had at 20, with a dozen 3 76" sither thia " overstuffed shain, S0l $9ring construction, every pisce i e R A Records for $10.20; total : : Ok Havinert S s -poe-' ::“th‘;";‘n:x i td::?:"lu?'il:::lg:ll rest as shown, uphoistered in brown Come In and Hear ggszz';)fl:’? terma of only l;:z ‘\‘Jé.f'd‘:i."r:: 3 ial low price compltte suite is certai | to your geod taste i is pri at “Mystery,” ‘“Be- s an extraordl value! A strik- and ':gcfiealnjudq-,n.ent = $30000 imitation Spanish_leather is med. There Ever a Pal P o O Like You.” Norwich, Conn. |