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) . -5 OU can get true knowledge of Bird’s Roofs, their durability and economy by asking any Bird dealer to point out a house, barn, garage, or factory roofed with Bird’s Parbid. There are perhaps half a dozen roofs covered with Paroid near you that have stood the test of New England winters and summers : for 20 years and more without need of repair. Talk to the owners of buildings roofed with Bird’s Paroid. In buying roofing, explain to your Bird dealer the kind of a build- ing it is for, because he wants to give you sound advice. to inspect. You needn’t buy from a small sample. Your Bird dealer will unroll a good sized stretch of Paroid for you ROOFS < Made in New England Now is”the” time to make your: roofs weather-tight for winter. The highways and byways of New England are dotted with Bird’s Roofs that haye proved stronger than.the weather_for 20_years and more.! ow to buy your Roofs “right” You“can see Paroid’s bright gray surthce ‘and feel its"firi:mess; s thickness and pliability. There’s no guesswork in buying Bird’s Rodfs, Their quality is demonstrated on roofs all over New England. Paroid is an all-round quality roofing, especially adapted for low- pitch roofs but good for steep roofs or siding. It is cheapest in the long run, because it is extraordinarily durable. _ Costs little or next to nothing for repairs. Whether it is Bird’s Paroid, mird’s Plain Slate-Surfaced Roll Roofings, Bird's Slate-Surfaced Designed Roofing (Art-Craft Tile Design or Shingle Design), or* Bird’s Shingles you need, the Bird dealer will want you to buy as indicated above. Bird’s Roofs will not catch fire from falling sparks, BIRD & SON, inC. (Estabtishea 1705) East Walpole, Mass. e s —————————————— Here are just a few of the Bird dealers nearest you PRESTON BROS., Ine. Notwich CHAS. H. PHILLIPS Plainfield H. C. THOMPSON Plainfield PUTNAM HDWE & MILL SUPPLY CO. Putnam R. F. PORTER Amston W. E. WHEELOCK Quinebaug JOHN QUINN Versailles F. F. HITCHCOCK Woodbury THE THOMPSON GRAIN CO, Ine. No. Grosvenordale THE PECK-McWILLIAMS CO. Norwich JOHN 0. FOX CO., Putnam HILLHOUSE & TAYLOR Willimantic WILLIS COVELL Abington DAMASE BQULAIS Danielson A. R. RACE No. Franklin 4. M. KEATH Eastford CHAPMAN & TRIPP Jewett City THE T. E. MAIN & SONS CO. | Moosup A. M. PAINE East Killingly YANTIC GRAIN AND PRODUCTS CO, Yantic s Bird’s Koofs are made in New England and are sold by leading lumber, hardware, and building supply dealers. Write us for help on your roof- ing needs. move the salt. They afe then ready te prepare for table use. Dandelions, beet tops, turnip tops, spinach, chard, kale, cabbage, string beans, green peas and ™ ay be satis t y ey three feet in the ground. Much lighter e Iy Ry sreal Py AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS, FTENCES IN POULTRY YARD Gladys Alexander Tuesday evening by 16 YANTIC A miscelianeous shower was given Miss i .closed with the bishop's blessing ) FoReties Tha seryich the) chaic, ‘uhfes. NORTH LYME Cjrection of Mrs. M. A. DBolande, rerdeged The Credo, Benedictus, Sanctus. Mr. and Hrl Erwin Rogers visited | expected next church Sunday. Bridgewater, M ed at the Ba W. B. Crow 1 at Ernest Rogers and Leslic Rogers, in| Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Raymond with Mr o girl friends at the home of her cou cHletfory, J. B. Roberts Seek Ys the| Lyme, Sundey. |ana Mes. . L. Resmoida. of Hamburg as this method. Miss Ethel Whitmarsh, in anticipation of | Lord Wa#-beautifully rendered by a well| pice” mmily ‘Stark visited friends in|gue are spending the week on a metor SAS : . posts driven into the greund may be used t , in 1 ) Y iss Emily ‘Stark visit riends in g a g s e ATt DirCioF e 2 her marriage with Paul Greiner of Nor- | knowi fenor_sSoloist from . obe of the|wroodbridge 2 couple of days last week |tp to Canada. ling the land useu sue pvue- | post set in the ground may be charred or | APPLE GRADING NECESSARY wich. Miss Alexander _received many | large New York churthes, being ably| "yre G, H. ‘Strong!visi rs. Erwin | ncrease the cost of equip- | treated with some wood preservative to FOR CROI' DISTRIBUTION | beautiful gifts, including cut glass, linen | suported by* the choir. Rogers several days last weel | maintenance. There | advantage, while corner posts should bd] m g and chis Gamés were plaved and a | The .decorations of the church were| e I. B Leete of Maeon, . ST o ) e corner posts shou The cornerstone npen which rests the | aiavited d- | beautiful in their simplicity. being in|, cLiop few fences as possible, firmly braced or set ceme! 5 Victrola concert was arranged Sand '3 ing the week with Mrs. G. H. cultivated and kept S EER0CC [0r Setiin coment. successful distribution of the apple Crob, | wicnes; cake, ice cream and fruit punch | harmony with tne soiemp service. = PR s not feneed. Dot s Eadieahe N coome 15,000:990 | were served by Mrs. Fred Whitmarsh, as- | In the course of his address Bishop| Mr. and Mrs . . S t Tk, o ot BRINE SURPLUS VEGETABLES. bushels, is grading.. Were it not for algiteq by Mrs. Edward Smith. A most | Acheson referred _to different - national f""‘fii‘“sfi::; ;":s, ; el o mated A g One of the oldest methods of preserving | MOT® O less uniform system of grading, | .njoyaple evening was passed. Those | changes in _a period of 300 years, in |to ro g = d on good soil by allowing | food is by salting it. When the rush of | VRICR even now in many instances js de- | ;oo it were Misses E R O i Tealy, | e MOhawk Toal Doro- | auare feet'of land per bird |late summer Wdrk finds the housekeeper | fed only by the Eoneral Sem ‘“““! Edna Judson, Lila Sm! France, the British Empire and said that |2nd w il he acre), while more | with more garden products on hand than | PTactice, 8 naiefing Y G or light land. | she can can or dry, brining is the solution | S0P Would be such a.complicated prob- mby cre wherg doub! and the land is frequently rds are 1 that is nec lon of water, a yards require fences five to | cloth and plate or board, and a he But even more efficient grading prae- tices are necessary to create Confidence fence six to seven | weight, all of which should be well scald- ary for Legherns. The | ed. For best results vegetables should | peate we y inate waste. According to these experts et of the fence for the latter | be blanchéd in hot water or live steam b e d inward a an engie of 30 | fore brining. some vegetable! str d or two of barbed | weaker brine With used on top of the regular | and a table ring be weaker disregard of market practic Three 0 Wash the product, blanch five minutes { (1) There must be decided public sen- n getting o It is not advisable | jn boiling water or ten in live steam and > top of | put in the scalded crock ;-add the brine s hens il often fly over one | put tne cloth over the top and cover w ed. plate or board. Place on this a s ¢ driven 1910 law | weight which is heavy enough to hold the > sct eight to ten | vegetables below the surface common poultry netting, | Hquid. feet for woven wire. Corner (2) The la | com: 03 should conform with good ercial practice. There should be proper inspection of the | destination. Brine of the strength given will act as a preservative without causing an v s ald be about eight inches in | change in the vegetable. * [eunmx ilameter and be set four feet in the rround, while intervening posts may be ‘our or five inches in dizmeter and set ED COSTS COMPEL When the vegetables preserved in this I kRS 0 AvOI Y AE way are desired for use they may be| With the increasing price of land, feed soaked a few hours in fresh water to re- | and the T cost’ of labor, it is becom- ing necessary that the farmer eliminate, as far as possible, any waste. He must make use of all the by-products of his Doctors Stand Amazed at Power | business much the same s the manufac- | turer does. Corn is produced in practi- Of Bon to & M w E cally every section of the country, o -‘ )l' ah ak . marily 'or the grain, an requently e o o e e yes stover is disregarded. Strong — According to Dr. Lewis | oo 5 et i i e o 3 during disagreeable weather is far from . o being palatable or nourishing. Stover Guarantee to Strengthen Eyesight 50% protected from the time it is cut in the ) . . feld is a valuible feed for young stock, In One Week’s Time in Many Instances | 55,2 and cattle that are being ear- 4 ried over the winter on a cheap ration. T T 5 The best way to handle corn stover is glasses can mow discard them in | by means of the shredder. This method a reasonable time and multitudes more | pnales. ; ibl it i will be able to strengihen theiy ore | makes it possible to.get it in the barn 80 as to be spared the trouble and s | Pefore the feeding qualities have been in- E fetims of eyve| pense of ever getting glasses. jured by the weather. Enough room f\,':!,n :;{' lv:leh.' ;%e“:'.eu)‘::fiss;l, a‘ng troubles of many descriptions ma should always be reserved in the barn to these who wear glas e glad | wonderfully benefited by accommodate a good supply of stover. .knm\ _that according to Dr. Lewis| this prescription. Go to any -gotive Hay may be safely stacked out, but it is Ny LEnreal hope aad. halp for tham: {'druxature &nd-Fetia bottle ‘of Bon- | uhste b o e i o oul, buL 1t 1 y whose eyes were failing Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tab- | care wuck Lo tomer ive i = 5 had their eyes restored by let In a fourth of & giass of water apd | Care must be taken to give the corn am- remarkable prescription and many who | let it digedlve. With (his iquid hat ple time to cure before it is shredded, - 4 + e t quid bathe 4 % once wore glasses the eres two or four times daily. You | for it may heat in the mow and become ;r(x‘»c:rwn them "n hould notice your eves clear up per- J er using 'It: Philadelphia, Pa.— ha they ~have y. One man says, d! 4 worthless through subsequent molding. t T was almost ceptibly right from the start and in- e ould not see to read at all flamm on and redness will san read everything without m quickl 4 disappear. if your eyes bother yoy | HOW TO CONTROL late. Many hopelessly blind = misn: | To keep swine healthy and thrifty, pre- have saved their sight if they vide them with sanitary quarters and s cared for their eyes in time. clean wallow, in addition to proper feed. But when external parasites affect hogs NOTE: Another prominent Physici: to " A the above articie. was Submitied, wid: < yes o | a0 effective rcmedy must be used if losses Bon-Opto prescription 18 truly & wonderful eys rem. | Te 10 be aovided. eyes do not hurt an night they would pain dr adfully. Now they feel fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me.” A lady who ased it ys: “The atmosphere seemed r withont glasses, but af- s prescription for 15 days sveryt seems clear. sven fine print without glasse Lice and mange mites Sher Who ody, Jia eonitnent ingredients are well known | are the two principal kinds of external B wit b ¢ over- |t emincut ‘eve speciallsis an iy prescribed by | paras 5 P T i P ndnerg | them 1 have used it very successiully in my ovy | PATASIteS occurring amons swine. The Sevee Madeches. L hiie Worn glasses | Pricice on patlents whose eyes were siraincd throuzh |Mites are particularly injurious. to. pigs r several years both for distance and | mend it i cor it ar waton Segy o eral years both fc c mend it i case of wesk, Waters. aching. o 5 work, and without them I could not | iwnine, burning even. red lide,” Dhurres. visen 5 | 2nd Hog Mange” is the title 22 new read My own name on an envelope or | for eyes iuflamed from exposure to , sun. dust, | farmers’ bulletin recently issued by the he typewriting on the machine before|or wind. It it one of the very few prepuations | United States department of agricuiture, ¥p g o - o e R R fln;fi have "it‘g' e g R Tegdlar e | telling specifically how to identify the ot - i B et M Ly Auttering | abore. is mot s patent r 4 hecret omeds. | PATasites and describing effective and eco- Baves ofi inb trems acrost e atreck il is cti preparatien. (he formuls heing | Nomical remedies. Plans of hog wallows e e o avena] "5 enne #treel | ornted on the paciaze. e Manutactunny guar | and dipping vats, together with directions sow, which for severa far ie e T|fntee 1t to strenctl eyesight 30 per cent. in one| for hyjlding them, are given. woked like a dim green blur to me. week’s time In mauy instances or tefund tle meney & ; unno; express my joy at what it has| i can le oalued from sny good drugslat and I SRR B lone for me." 3 wid n by the leading druggists, includ- The wife governs best who doesh’t It is belloved that thousands who | ag The Lee & Osgosd Co. lat her husband know_she's.trying. recom- | and poorly nourished hogs. “Hog Lice marsh, Stella Whitmarsh, § : marsh, Loretta Richards, Blanc o fher difficulties lem that it unquestionably would be ac- | ;rqe Milared Sullivan, Alice Brennan, | ¢ companied by uncertainty and losses that AEOR, Acheson. £ e Yantic with her mother. Mrs. M. J. Bogue. grading laws are their dissimilarity and S. tattor - get away from their actions. = e . a recent visitor at his home here. get away acti - - essentials to the successful standardiza- 5, o {a was a recent | . PeoDle who worship God should go in- ) them confined, wane 1t | brine with a little vine: dded will give | tion of apples and other farm products | William Kelley of Ansonia was a recent | "\ 1 i and worship and et in touch °s necessary to clip the flight | satisfactory results. Bt guest at Pine Tree cottage. wing of those birds that E h timent in favor of grading regulations, | Hartford and entered Charter Oa ; power Is given. operation. of shipments at both shipping point ang |nd With friends at Saybrook Curisian church in genera! t these chances showed how God ruled|!hy and Gerald the, world and the people Who believe in|Stark and Mrs. od and worship Him—rule the world. | absence. 3 2 ‘. 1 Mrs. Eva Tucker Is visiti i Pauline_Stanley, Geraldine Kane d | “Only a fool goes to church because of [ Mrs. Eva = Mrs v for brining is a | woulc sines: keti TG ¢ At is beock and Miss Emily Stark this week. | cultivated. | crock or bucket, 2 PrEs e ;‘p‘z‘i'“ih;“ the business, say marketing | gmma Spaulding, also Mrs. M. J. Rich- | the pre aching of hell fire,” said Bishop | Babco ymou Hocks and the heavy meat | pounds of e only people who continu-{ M Harrison Conwa¥ of New Mre. John Thomas of New TYork is |ally hear hell's fire preached are the Ro-|don v ted at Erwin Rogers’ several d atholics e = last week. - spending the month with local friends. man Catholics and " they still go to|last 3 2 st between sellers and buyers and to elim- DMH_ %eorge Smith has returned to her | church, notbecause they believe it, many| Frank Fox of Ivoryton was a caller a it home in Meriden after a week’s stay in |know it is the chief difficulties with present state 3 ® fd as do Episcopalians, [ G. H. Strong’s Sunday. t man knows he as with nat Ernest Sherman of Fisher's Island was men cannot 55 : 3 with the human soul and the one who Cleveland B e e e Ty, | takes upon himself -the burden of the 05p 1 feels himself closer to God—and | tal, where he is to undergo a surgical Just so the league of mations is going s Mildred Pendleton spent the week | ("o 5 power. The history of this coun- Pomt try will be faced with apprehension un- returned | oo the ruers of the people work in the ® she | nation-wide campa’ Bishop Acheson's words to the twén RING'S Miss Mazie Pendleton h from a week end stay at Kent, whe was the guest of Miss Rose W ; candidates of the A large comgregation par R i A an impr\ ‘te service con luc Gra raan e iR RCERL GO | church, Yantic, on Sunds g, Dok | oy O e el tober thé 10th, with Bis . CAmDlotk | o b s Vo Pocket—Honey Comb Acheson presiding, assisted dic rec- have been given the blessing of ir, Rev. M. McLean Coll.~ 'The t:1- The sreatest things in the world the things we cannot see, so with God's blessing, and as-you go out into the world be somebody, don't talk reli- gion act it: don’t parade it, just act it, and don’t let anything else take the place of it. Support the church at home and abroad and your mission “to bring peace into the world will be fulfilled.” wvice opened with the con vic: when a class of twer closs in the history. of the.church, presenied by the rector for the iavirg on of hands. Thereafter Bisho) Acheson delivered an _interesting disc) s 10 the vital influences put forth by the oughont the Urited States, calling particaiar atten- tion to the fact that a conntry without religion was the ship Withowt a rudder,| Manch % doomed to destruction. A the bish- [ association executive committee has rec- op's discourse the service o u2c with| ommended that the association hold a the administering of the holy cou pouitry show in the town in December. 5 STEAKS 1b. 30c Well Trimmed Lean Salt Pork Pound 22¢ ster.—The Manchester Poultry Pa’s a Democrat, a's ndent-~ 1 but when it comes tothe \&= Food Administration, we allvote for PosT TOASTIE Pound 22¢ Yellow Onions 4 Pounds 15¢ responsible for his| Rev. O. H. Eidredge, of Niantic, preach- | THAYER BLDG.- TRIPE, 3 lbs. . 25¢ Prime Rib Roast Coffee Is Lower Evaporated Milk Large cans, 2. . 29c AftertheDance take a bath with LACO CASTILE SOAP and see how it gently cleanses | and refreshes your skin. MARKET FRANKLIN:SQUARE GOLD MEDAL BUTTER, Ib.. 6lc SELECTED EGGS, Dozen. . 59¢ BULK COCOA Pound 15¢ Peanut Buttey Pound Z5¢ MAINE CORN Can 15¢ BAKED BEANS Can 10c Sweet Potatoes 5 Pounds 25¢ CATSUP Large Bottle 25¢ Soap Powder Large Size 25¢