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. WEDNESOAY, APRIL 21, 1920 - the M. E. church, spoke at & service in the church Sun- day -morning, taking his text from II| 4 4 - [ s 8 10: 15, Is thine heart right, as my e E . hedrt, is with thy heart? At the elose of s J the well attended Sunday school session a meéting of the music committee of the church was held to organize. Courtland E. Colver was made Post- master R. D. Povey was appolnted secre- tary and treasurer of this board. It hasi been arranged by tlze committee to have Alban W, Cooper, “organist and choir- master of the Second Congregational church of New Londom, conduet a sing- ing class in the vestry one eyening each week for 10 weeks. A class of about 40 adults and’ children will attend. At the Epworth league evening service Richard Chase was leader, with the topic When is Courage Needed? Rev. G. H. Wright and Rev. J. W. Carter “of the welfare service at “the submarine base also spoke on the topic. Special s music included a piano duet by Miss Jennie G- AV Al TH ALL CUTS TO ROAST, bb. ..... 30c CUTLETS : : TRIBReERRE . CHOPS TE s MILD CREAM CHEESE NATIVE EGGS F lb. .. 10c LEAN POT ROAS PRIME RIB ROAST PORK AND 'BEANE SERV-US MACARONI _ By Taking Vinol i It creates a hearty appetite, aids digestion, creates thousands of new red blood corpuscles, the glow of health replaces pallid cheeks, anaemia disappedrs and strength and vigor returns.. Cheste | Eamion Del.— 1 mifored e 8 ot 00 T el.— ‘1 suffer o e i ko, | s, i and could not | appetite. e ve o oi;‘ll:;fnka&‘:m:dmewm farm 56 had to keep abont my work SALT PORK JUICY LEMONS : Doderi: . oot o Bl P e e e : Vinol. It purified and enriched my . | as I have five in the family. My 1 to Fred E. Richards of | pim thie ,,,,,,,,,,,, Package ............10c | Dozen ...... A (A teligram to Fred B Richards of| blood, gave me & druggist recominended Vinol a8 appetite, m{ nervousness has gone, ;mfizhnb_ui; up my whole system. I can surely recommend it to others who need a s T S e SECCO STRAWBERRIES best medicine for my condition. It has given me a , and 1 sleep . better an in every way.”’--MRS. J, HERMAN RASPBERRY JELLY et o week stated that his brother, Charles Richards, had died there suddenly from . 25c 8| acute indigestion. Mr. Richards was the youngest of the childrén of the late Ly- YELLOW ONIONS feel s blood tonic.”’— MRS. EDWIN S. 8c 2 2 ; WILDS. 2 i ° i it e et R B Rast . man A. and Julia Bolles Richards of| GUTHRIE. fion E S S b s pmmmron s et 148 sack SSRGS G’ b vl i em B e gy s sz et e ey e v another shipment of u a u empty sack to us snd we shall ‘refund 1_16 SRCk 51.00 by his wife and six children in Florida,| Your money will be returned if Uinol fails— 2 you your momey. his brother here and a sister, Miss Julia C, Richards, who reside at the old home at Long Cove. S AD open meeting and smoker for the be found in this ‘state but the evidence LFahnnheiL The bottle and nipple should { men of the Village Improvement associa- is strong that there is mo present infes- | be kept scrupulously clean at all times.|tion was held in the clubhouse Friday tation. Illinois, Missouri; Michigan and| Wash with hot water after every feed.|evening. Seven new members were add- South Dakota are the states that have | Over-feeding, the tuse of dirty bottle and | ed. included Connecticut in a quarantine. nipple and feeding milk. at irregular| Mrs. Walter M. Buckingham was a Dr. Britton points out that the quar- | temperatures, is the cause of much of | member of an automobile party to New | smw——sm———e —— > OURCOD¥LIER “AND- IRON ® NS STRENGTH "CREATOR KN( Engler's’ Broadway Ph Norwich. Vinol is sold in Daniefson by Sur- T iaume's Pharmacy and Druggists Everywhere AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS THE “DAILY CACKLERS” ord establishied last year by the boys of A group of Torrington, Conn, boys|Goshen, Conn., who made an average|antines do not prohibit the entry of | the difficulty met with in hand raising | Haven and return last Friday. renched” at’ the Baptist chunch o have organized a poultry club that they a’:”"“ during twelve months of $3.98 per | gnelled corn. lambs. Mr. and Mrs. Willlam S. Elliott of Naor- fl«'fi‘ifl-mmhm S Ecektn N oot g oy o=y “‘“G“. -4 have named the “Torrington Dally [hen. — e wicn, with friends, were visitors Sunday N . s | Bunday, rain Cacklers.” Their purpose is to make ' et THE ORPHAN LAMB. 4 HEN'S TIME. the guest of Mrs. Damon at Brown's L1 NO CORN BORER HERE. Despite the fact that' vigorous search by entomologists has failed to discover any signs of the. European corn borer in Connecticut, four westérn states have in- cluded us in- & quarantine intended to safeguard their farms against this pest. The quarantine covers corn in ear, corn stalks, celery, green beans in ped, beets with tops, spinach, rhubarb, oat and rye straw as such or when used in packing, cut flowers or entire plants of chrysan- themum, aster, cosmos zinnia, hollyhock, and cut flowers or entire plants of glodi- olus and dahlia, except the bulbs wil out stems. Connecticut is not included in the gen- eral quarantine imposed by the federal hortieuitural board and which includes parts of New York, New. Hampshire, Massachusetts and Peonsylvania, As this quarantine was imposed after eareful in- vestigation it is evident that government authoritles ’ ¢onsidér” Connecticut free from the corn borer. their poultry flocks return a total of $1,000 in profits during the year. v buying feed cooperatively the boys have found they can save quite'a bit of money. . They investigated the ration used at the international egg laying con- nd determined to feed They found that by at the Wulf Den on the Bluff. Mes. Baith, Talbot and son Levi of | gocang In the sbsence Norwich were visitors with Mra. Emma Mrs. Carl W. Lirown has returned from Bt SumrdaY. a visit to Rockland, Me. Frank Sisson returned recently to hiS| Mr. and Mrs. George Ballou of Nor- home near Red Top from Ploneer hospi-|wich were visitors in this place Sunday. tal. Brooklyn, N. Y., where he underwent | yiss Kate: B. Colver returned to her an opetation on the eye. Mr. Sisson 1S|pome at the submarine base last week much relieved and the sight of the e¥e i8 [ after an absence of several,weeks at zhe HAproTing. home of her cousin, Mrs. Jesse G. Fox, in ot B A e tDS‘be:“e flg Middictown, where she was called by the i - | Greeneville were visitors at the home of | gerjous iliness of Mrs. Fox, who is now Jwhen suceulent green feed i3 not avail- | §7"CY St Tatham . Smich Sun d“d' seriauy el i as were also Miss Elizabeth Lane an ! week, It is worth all your have to pay | James Steadman of-Wood River, R. I, NORTH LYME for it because a little goes a long way. | Was the week end guest of Station Agent William Brown of New London is spending a fe days at Warren Rogers'. |= Mr. Brown has been very -unfortunate and Mrs. Arthur O. Faford. - T EAGLEVILLE late this winter; a heavy timber fell on Mrs. Oliver, wife of Captain Oliver of the submarine base, and young son, Friends of Mrs. Alexander La Rocque { K¢empstone Oliver, with Mrs. Alexander, surprised her Wednesday evening, April his head, causing a very painful injury, 7, at her home, in honor of her birthday, and lately he has been suffering from a ; crushed foot. wife of Commander Alexander, were callers on Lieut. and Mrs. Daniels_ Fri- bringing many beautiful giffs. A very Dleasant social time was enjoyed by all. Rev. John G. Stanton of New London Mis Charles Anderson and children .of Deep River spent several days last week at Chauncey Leffingwell's. Reginald Stark is home from Hartford for the summer. Miss Lois Rogers of Néw London was Lsme over the week end. Miss Emily Stark is able to be around the house after two. weeks' illness with infiuenza. Mrs. George Babcock spent several davs the pagt week at Merrill Babeock's n Meriden and with Mrs. Bertram Elton in New Britain. A hen’s time is Worth two cents a day At Lierent for egg production. The tvalue of her! time is equal to 20 per cent. interest on the cost of artificial hatching equipment, says Roy E. Jones poultryman for the extension service of Connecticut Agricul- tural College at Storrs. If the fertility of your hatching eggs is low, green food and exercise may help. A small amount of clover hay or rowen thrown into the pen each day is good | Sometimes it is necessary to resort to hand feeding in_order to save the life of a lamb. Theré are a few. essential things to be remembered in successfully raising a lamb on cow’s milk. Ewe's milk is comparatively high in butter-fat, usually averaging 8 and 9 per cent. as compared with 3 to 5 per cent. in the case of cow’s milk, This be- ing true,/the milk used for, rearing young lambs should be from a cow test- ing high in fat. The same cow's milk €hould be used for the first two or three weeks as milk varying in butter-fat con- tent used at different feeds will usually result in stomach trouble. Regular feeding every three or four hours, both day and night for the first couple of weeks is essential. \ fhe lamb, while nursing the ewe, takes very little food at a time but of- teni. . From two to three tablespoonsful is plenty to feed at a time. A little brown sugar added to the mill has a beneficial laxative effect. After a few weeks, when they could save §9.45 on each one pounds of feed, eompared to y would have had to pay for lly mixed feeds. boys have made a profit above ed cost of §1.25 on each hen since No- mber. They are out to beat the rec- A woman is really in a hurry Iif she says good-by that way. Children Cry - fOR FLETCHER'S CASTORIA DEEP-SEATED FRECKLES Need attention NOW or may remain all summer. Use the old and ti day previous to their leaving for Lieu- tenant Daniels’ new assignment in Phila- tried trcatment that has given satis- faction for over 15 years, and rid your- sclf of these homely spots. Kintho Beauty Cream Dr. W. E. Britton of the Connecticut Agricultural Experiment Station at New Haven made a thorough investigation of the matter. lastsummer and fail -and failed to discover any evidencés of the the lamb's digestive system has become used to ‘the milk the number of feeds may be decreased to three or four times a day. The temperature of the milk is impor- Several residents of this village at. tended the preaching service at Dunham Memorial church, Mansfield Depot, Sun- day morning. _ After burying the hatchet a politic- |} ian is reasonably sure to dig up an ax. corn borer in-Connecticut. This does not At All Druggists and Departmen b partment | ean, he says, that the pest may, not tant and for the first few weeks should Stores. not vary above or below 92 deégrees e —————— | Tires for the Smaller Cars— | Built With “Giodyear ‘Methods In using its immense resources and inventive skill to build the highest relative value pos- sible into tires, this company has never made its ‘work more effective than in Goodyear | : Tires for the smaller cars. These have the full advantages of Goodyear - *competence and care, plus the modern facili- Z ties of the factory we are devoting to the world’s largest production of 30x3-, 30x3%-, . and 31x4-inch sizes. : \ s The sum of this extraordinary effort is avail- S ik. ! F : Pl .d w d : -able to you, as the owner of a Ford, Chevro- ? tr lng’ ancy : dl or8te $ & let, Dort, Maxwell, or other car using these They are something to see—and something to remember—and they’re something which ! sizes, at the nearest Goodyear Service Station you, madam, will surely appreciate. - They are strikingly handsome. Some expert in de- i Dealer’s place of business. sign and color had an inspiration, and translated his inspiration into mrvell:u plaids, - S 5 which, when used in the pleated, or the plain Sport Skirt of 1920 model have taken Go to this Service Station Dealer for these everyone by storm. 3 t“'e%’ and for Goodyear Heavy Tourist Tubes. 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