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ITHE > TO FARMERS | i FARMER MUST WORK OUT HIS OWN SALVATION RSTALK) Specidily for The Bulletin) organizations are icult to keep track of them all or oceassionally faked. I de ‘the that ‘t know what Natlonal But its seretary, rles Ly- nan. states that it has two million mem- If that be true it is quite a bunch. ecially if they are all practical farm- ers, Huwevér, 1 am Just at this minute leas nterested jn this “pational board,” or n possible gize than 1 am in a fresh ustration which Secretary Lyman has t of Where the Money Goes. We kfow from sad experience that, hen'we want to buy something at the t ng made or produced else- tagPay an exorbitant nu!‘ ical price. We also know = have someéthing of our own > ean't =7t any better if as good | e as we got befors the war. Ev- thing we mast buy . ia dear; every- thing wé can sell is cheap, Strang to say, the eity workman whe relps make sgme of the goods we have @nd who has to buy gome of the we produce. makes an exactly r complaint. He is tremendously vercharged for producis originating on vet, at the same time, gets no rtion of the price wh f Seerstary Lyman his made a omputation, based on these the facts they litile assertions enabled him 1o bring ht. Paking” present prices for both zoods, he finds that. when a farmer pays $100 for some shop or factory made com- modity he pays on an averags $35 for . he buys and $65 to the and the profiteers that paes it ntra, when the ¢fty workman med make the commodities which bought purehases for his owhn mption $100 worth of food farmer produc he pays $62 raliroads and the in between prof- and only - $38 ever reaches ths savs Mr $100 hy-the o “out’a? the ¥ man and leaves . only goods them- of intin stem of arahle affiolent by offering took farmer ce daye, that it 4o | o 1 he wers céonducting 2 more diversi- hand. that it safd for it. 10 be sald against It farmer will look fairly at beth sides of the question. ingly. ied system Or | stock far whether they are always gen- |sort of salvage from the wreck of h 1 contess | hopes, ‘by. feeding out those unsalable tubers. They are quite as good food for animals as for human beings. Not a ¥oard of Farm Organizations is, for in- | perfect food for either, of course, but o filling and nourishing. 5 (:vq‘ cents what can Aroos- o th en, poor thing? a certain amount of live- .. he could get some For milk eows I have found raw pots- Shs has hen fad grain rations. ~ The last offer. had Mfor potatoes Was forty oents a bushel of -sixty pounds. Th lent pounds. tite grain foods- now attainable, two and a half times as much by the hundred, and my milk pail reports t6 me | 1sh't worth a teaspoofiful mere | as a mifk-producer, than raw potatoes. Speclalized farming has mu¢h to he There are, aldo, somethings to sixt Bran. Bhe s she ever did under w toes an admirable substitute for grain. I do not raise many potatoes. -But last winter I, like my néighbots, was caught by the market drop with some surplus on Rather than sell that small sur- plus at unprofitably. low prices and buy grain at extortionately high prices, 1 have been - feeding potatoes o my one cow. brought orth and nourished a fine calf, and is now glving & good mess of milk, though my pastures are so parcheéd by the drought that 1 have to give her Ray to eat nmights. déne well en them, doing as well as similar - conditions i équiva- vén cents 4 hundred which is the cheapest of costs pound for pound, The judiciqus Similarly, organization may be argued for with sincerity ahd much force. it ten't an automatic. self-acting panaces for all economic difficulties. combines existing one long and strong pull it helps amaz- When, however, it leads individ- uals to a relaxation through dependence upon it, then it dods as much harm as good. The faet still Bnt When it individual effort into of personal -effort remaing and 1s lkely to for a long time to come that the farmer must work out himself and, largely, by himself. his own Ivation for Just as a Mmatter of reasonable prudencs, . edge will encourage the farmer—other hukinosses | work o i f ving arouhd the | e et he shad better laarn to swim hefore he trusts himself to anybody's raft eon .no matter that pond or stream. The knowl- him to do better one of the crew, and may en- ash re if the raft should happen to collapse in deep water. THE FARMER WOODSTOCK VALLEY Mrs. and Miss Mareil of Woonsocket ars guests at Allen Kenvon's. Howard Starr and bride of New Haven are spending four weeks at Crystal Lake, Fred Drassard of Barre, Mass, visited | friends in this valley on Monday. Yivery invertor werthy of the name has produced at least one car coupler. | Co,, Ind, Buffaie, N. Y. NORWICH BULL R. B. S. Washburn has purchased 2 building lot in the grove adjoining the for the erection of a coitage. b arrived at the grove for the season. Mre. J. A. Glass and children of New London are at the Sherman cottage. Mrs. Frank Shemman will leave goon for her home in New London after a visit of several weeks at her Pine Grove éottage. Thomds Washburn and his assistant, Archie Sanders, are shingling tite Eager cottagé in the grove. Mr. and Mrs. Nathan A. Whi le and son Roland, who have been visiting Mrs, w Olivia M. Case in the grove for several weeks, left Tuesday- for their home i Bridgeport. Dr. and Mrs. A, Thomipson of New Britain are at their Pine Grove ecottage for a few days. The Niantic Sunshine soclety met on|Mildred and Blanche, of Mansfield spent Wednesday aftérnoon with mm Pine | Wednesddy with relatites here. Grove members of the soclety and were i dummer home of Mrs. | Yoke for the past two wesks, spent a SAPAtg st ts i s night at W. W. Palmer's this week on his % l-finm Menard of Bridgeport made a|Wa&Y for & trip in the southers states. George W. Steele. shoft visit to his summer home in the grove Monday. home in Yantic l‘,‘tter visiting ¥. N. Park at the grove. r. cateh ef"rl‘s‘lue crabs from the watérs of the Niantic river one day recently. Mrs. Amelia Belknap has gone to her home: in Bridgepott for a visit ; Several members of Nehantie troop of Girl Scouts went to Black Hall Tuesday and foined the troop there in charge of Liéut. H. C. Ju n. The Ladies’ Ald society of Pine Grove Spirituslist ,camp announces for the sea- son of 1921 thé following list of speak- ers: July 3, Wellman C. Whitney of Springfield, Mags.; July 10, Reéy. Millicent Wilson of Malden, Mass.; July 17 to 24, inclusive, Mrs. Isabel Bradley of. Boston. Mase.; Aug. 7, Miss Annie C. Chapman of Dorchester, Mase.; Aug. 14, Rev. Izét- ta B. Sears Hill of Boston; Aug. 21, Mrs. Nettio Holt Harding of Hast Somerville, Mass,; Aug. 28, Rev. Millicent Wilson of Malden, Mass. The Pine Grove eléctric street lights wére turhéd on Tuesday evening fer the remalhdar of the season. are an added attraction to the grove. Mrs. Fred Prothero of Broadway is entertaining Mrs. Harriet Holyoke, Mass., for several weeks. Henry Prothero of Springfield, Mass., has arrived at the grove for the season. He has taken up work at the pavilion. Mrs. Willlam H. Prothero has gonc to Capaan to .spend a week with her Peterson’s Ointment | Best For Eczema First Application Steps ltching of Eczema, Salt Rheum and Piles. Ends Chafiing Distress in Five Minutes “Live and let live is my motto,” says Peterson of Buffalo. “Druggists all over America sell PETERSON'S OINTMENT for 35 cents a large jbox and I to these druggists, if anyone buys my ointment for any of the dis- eases or ailments for which I recom- ! mend it and are not benefited, ;;i\'e! them their money back. ! “I've got a safe full of thankful let- ters testifying to the mighty healing power of Peterson’s Oiutment for old and running sores, eczema, salt rheum, ulcers, sore nipples, broken breast, itching scalp, chafing and blind, itch- ing and bleeding piles.” Joha Scott, 283 Virginia Street, Buf- fale, writes, “Peterson's Ointment is| simply wonderful. It cured me of eczema and also piles, and it did it so quickly that 1 was astonished.” Mail orders filled by Petersen Ointment But when you come to the next stags, at Alst sughtare. fon Office. I is the most Imposing example in all modern lfe of How Not to Do It It is not efficlent, for it does not bring ucer and consumer within arm's reach of each other. Instead, it holds them constantly farther and farther apart, and throws ever inereasing diffi- uities in the way of their mepting It % not eeonomiecal. for | charges you more for merely passing the cup Into our hands than the total value of cup and contents, both—more than eup and mtents both cost it to start with. It has fmally become se Intelerable “at revoit is epringing up in many 4if- Quarters. Almost all the farm zanizations to which I have referred are born in hoetility @o it and nurtured o fight agalnst it Here and therc dis- labor” erganizations are also Ing to desery their real ememy im their blows at it. 1l crusades of this character we "an cheerfully givo out best wishes. To ements seeking to reduce the real ost of llving by cutling out the wastes nd robberies of am iniquitous system of Istridbution we ean prop lend our s tn the futare of ide-soread Individual action that the | h lies. Organization s a pow- Bometimes, however, I fesr hat we are moderately inclined to put » much dependenceé upon {t. 1 agrea with you, of course, that a milllon men, «1 pulling together, will effect more than he same million can, pulling and hauing | a different directiofis and eometimes | igainst each other. But the Inevitable tendency of ergan- sation is, not only to bring men to fol- ‘ow thelr leaders but, what is quite dif- erent, to depend upon those' leaders and ® down on the job themselves. n Sneoks knows that he is one of a million rulling on a certaln rope, Mo is apt to elax when the sun gets ot and his alms begin to blister. “Just ons won't o missed,” he argues; so drops his hold | and Yes dowh by the roadside for smoozs. Nor will one be much missed. Jut when scores and hundreds and » same way and do the 00 often tappens that me {s disastrous. A faw devoted 1 keep on pulling but. behind slackened rops will trafl in ¥ dust between two ranks of sadside siscpers. It ts Home nust il n il true and always will be that o would be free blow.” Organization place of tndividua! rmination. All ft can 10 13 to cp-ordigts sueh individual qual- | tles into” active j nee and thus com- sine their aggrezate effectiveness, But it 3 no substftute for them. T have reeently read o dispatch from Houlton, Me... which quotas the price of potatses to farmers of solthern Afoos- took coanty at forty cents a barrel. Some of the surplus has been paken care of Oy starch factories, but 45,000 harrels of perfactly good potatoes ars sald to have been dumped on the fiplds by potato- mrowers of that one county to rot and be plowed in for fertilizer. Right there s Indicated to me ome of the disadvantages of speclalized farmin Aroostook county sesms to be naturally adapted to potatoes. Henes its farmers have largely devoted themsslves to that one form of production. It pays well, when prices are $3 a barrel or bettér. But w! the The National Summer Suit for Men THE UTMOST IN VALUE—COOL, CLEAN-FITTING SMART IN STYLE AND THOROUGHLY TAILORED. Shirts, Hosigry and Underwear. J.C.MACPHERSON QUALITY CORNER OPP. CHELSEA SAVINGS BANK ETIN, FRIDAY, JULY 1, 19 1 home in West Hartford after spending|er: two weeks in the grove. riverbank and has already broken ground|liam Appleby of St. Paul, Minn., are 5 Tuesday they . Hepsey Boden of Willimantic has Bigtiop of Ni Wal T, Lebanon, wil recent caller pn mmor school friend, m:(. Hel ha; wed:ngq afternoon, returning with her 0 ) e 1o his | aunt, Mrs. Y e | s Bow atiiing 47 Leather, Mile & Do Park made a good | voll &t and Mrs. Baward L. Moffitt of Hartford, formerly of from the Hartford High with is 16 yeafs of age and began his school work in the Village Hill school in Leba- non. sent tardy - nor dismissed in the public schools of the toWn of Plainfield for the spring term follows: Marguerite Miller, Olin Miller, Rena Mil- ler. Central Village sehool, room 3, Miss|er: Abbie L. The new lights | Davis, Ruth Loring, Harry Sternfield. Liloy Rathbun of | °thy Catpenter, Eunice Cook. Evelyn Brown. Everett Collins, Thom: Dixen, Mildred CGowan Neléon Bishop has returned to his Mrs. A. W. Trenholm and Mrs. Wil- & ghort visit to-Ocean Beach. On. ey entertained Mrs. Adam F. lantic at luncheon. _welcomed the plentiful shot- week, which have been ippell and John Calkins of visited the former's uncle, G. n Sunday. Mi lliam H. Peckham of Willi- Wednesday with her sis- s Mrs. A. 8. Peckham. Hoxsie of Babcock Hill, her two children, was a rs. Wilfred Davoll] and daughters, H. Reynolds, who has been in-Hol- . D. Davoll went to Andover on Willard Fuller. Mrs. Fuller Camere. i Leland E. Moffitt, youngest son of Mr. Lebanon, was graduated school June 234 | fol & clags that numbered over 400. He . PLAINFIELD An additional list of pupils neither ab- Green Mollow school, Miss Margaret Alfred Bennett, Dor- Clark, Anetia Curry, Medbery, teacher: Russell Room 2, Miss Freda Eyers, teache Babeock, Jennje Beauregard, Dor- | er Room 1A, Miss Alice E. Ray, teache: Henry Ricewns- ser, & Abbie Davis. Roob 1A, Miss Alics E. Ray, teacher: .| Mildred Gowan. Moosup school, Room 6, Migs Mattie E. Gibson, Anna, Mroz. Plainfield schoel, Room 8, Cecil L. But- ler, principal, Miss Margaret teacher: Room 7, Miss Florence M. Onderdonk, teacher: Irene Seney. Room 8, Edith Coli Room 5, Mi lleher, Troening; -Delia Vitagalan» Room' 3, Miss Lilla £. Millett, teache: Gerard Barnier, Rosarin Brouiflarl Hil- da Dorbinger, Flora Jallun, Johp Kcrab, Felix Lepack, ‘Wilson. Room 2, Miss A. Estelle Jones, teach- er: John Bajger, Rose Goodman, Sophia Jorosz, Matthew Mroz, Mary Koperka, Ida .Constantine. Room 1, Miss Celia M. Daley, teacher: Irene Abbood, Helen Jarose. Pupils neither apsent, tardy nor dis- missed for the school low : Central Village school, Room 3, Miss L. Medbery, 0 er: Willi Room Annette Coulombe. Room 1, Mi Alica Coulombe. eld portable s Mabel C. Plainfi Kenneth Street ‘Room 1. Miss Mae ‘A. Kennedy, teach- Irene Brown., Viola Dickey, Leslie Gauthier, May Ricewasser, ‘Wauregan school, Room 2, Joy. teacher: May Leary, James Bums, Walter Friese, Vliadymir Kopetz, Owen Fryling.. i w3 [ Room 1, Miss Fanny F. Brown, teach- - 529 er: Robert Burns, Frank Laureckis. CHEBTNUT HILL Black Hill school, Miss Elizabeth Col- : . i lins teacher: Bessie Babeock, Frank 9 Falt, Ida Falt, Catherine Glebas, Paul- ine Glebas, Frank Tules, Geo 5 Moosup school, Reown 6, Miss Matide E. Gibson, teacher. Harsll Allen, Iel- phis Coderre, Mrox, Rose Paranzino, Wilidara Richard- son. & Room ‘5, Miss Mar§ L. Tcs, téucher: Rosamond Danielson, Rose Gallow, Gallup, Viola Troening. Room 4, Miss Nellie Driscoll; tracher: Stella Bliznaik, Angelin~ Gaaliswe, Tio« Jarosy, Mary “avsla, Evelyn Warhurs! 3, Miss Mary ‘Wilcox. arle E. o Tulés. L Ross. Ida Constun‘ine, Aria luth Riymend Charlotte Ifich'a, Evelyn Mary Lachow eeh, 'Ruth Everett Still, year 1920-1931 teacher: Russell teacher: Delphis Coderre, Sullivan, | out. Malcolm Hutchinson. Dolmas = Jarvis, Donald Kee, Lena Gaudreau. Louise M. Elliott, teach. |it. AT English, teach- m Lees, Leo Vosper. Miss Helen L. Newtor; t¢ach- Ruthh H. Clark, teacher: &chool, teacher: Room 2, Frink, George | desperatel Coylombe, Edmond Davignon. Plainfield academy school, Room 1, Mrs, Alice B, Gallup, teacher: Charles | Green Hollow school, Miss Margaret L. Caffrey, teacher: Anetia Curry. —— LEFFINGWELL Charles Ross, Charles Ross, Jr., and East Deerfield, Mass., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Leslie Ross of Miss Frances Swan, of Connell street, Norwich, was a visitor Tuesday of Miss Started Working Too Soon After Wasting Illness PR, strength after influenza or other wast- . Dorchester, Mass., man had hard time getting on his feet again “Two years ago.” writes Mr. R S. Collett of 34 Lonsdale Street, Dorches- ter, Mass., “I had influenza and started 1 always felt tired I tried all kinds of tonics to try and get back my strength, but without the results I hoped for. Wincarnis, and in ‘my opinion it is the best health restorer and strength giver fiss Helen F. Doyle, teacher:|that can be gotten. ‘I feet again and I shall always swear by So will anyone elsé using it for will soon know they have found just what they need.” Wincarnis helped Mr. Collett, just it has helped thousands here and in other lands, many of whom have ex- pressed themselves thusiastically regardin nis had done for them 1y to work too. soon. At last 1 got It put me on my what Wincar- hen they were Katherine Goldberg. - of Mr. and Mrs, Harry L. Palmer. ents, Rev. and Mrs. P. 8. Collins. ing illnesses. » weak and run-down, back blood-maker and a nerve-bullder all 10,000 physicians. after a wasting illness.” Wincarnis put up in two sizes $1.10 and $1. class druggists. Write for free en- | Health, How to Obtain It” Edw Lassere, Inc., Adv. Dept., Street, York, U. their | Wincarnis THE LCWEST PRICES IN YEARS Not only are we offering you furni- ture of real character, at almost un- heard of low prices, but we also take pleasure in advising that our usual convenient terms can be ar- ranged on any purchase. -Below are just a few of the many specials we are offering. LAMPS There is a veritable forest of beau- tiful Floor Lamps and Table Lamps for your selection. ' COUCH HAMMOCKS Put a Couth Hammotk 3n your porch or lawn this summer, and you will get a great deal more en- (;){r;\sanl out of it. Some as low as PIANOS AND PLAYER PIANOS You should choose your Piano or Player Piano now. We have a fine selection of all the famous makes, such as Chickering, Hardman, Hallet & Davis, Wasser- mann, Crawford, Behr Brothers, Conway, etc., and easy terms are granted on all. - 3 REFRIGERATORS Fine selection to choose from. Many in all and upwards. 2 SEWING MACHINE is now being 3 offered at greatly reduced prices. Come in for a demonstration. "You will find_here all the ver the most desiral Our stock of Living Room Furniture is unusually large and some wonderfully fine Suites are being offered a% prices nothing short of re- markable, the white. Some-as low as $12.90 I the selection le woods and fil ishes, advantages of our low prices and easy terms. “ROYAL” EASY CHAIRS If you knew hew comfortable they were, you would not be surprised at reatly increasing popularity of oyal Easy Chair. of ‘entirely Overstuffed Easy Chairs. Many as low as $35.00. fine fatest designs in Bedroom Furniture, in all d you can profit greatly by the CALL AND SEE OUR FINE EXHIBIT Our store is filled with the fin- est selection possible of high quality furniture. Here you will find the very laiest crea- tions of the best furniture craftsmen of the day, all at ths lowest possible prices. It will pay you to call upon us to see the fine values offered. RUGS Our Rug Racks are crowded with the most complete selection possible eof every design and celor Rug. KITCHEN CABINETS Many different styles to select fram, including the famous “Sellers.” Many in all white; others in eak, with white lining, As low as $60.00 and up. BICYCLE TODAY. Only a few left, and they are offered at special prices and terms. SPECIAL USED TALKING MACHINES FOR YOUR SUMMER HOME OR CAMP We are offering, while they last, a fine sclection of slightly used Talking Mach- ines for the Summer Home or Camp, at prices as low as from $10.00 to $15.00. THE PLAUT-CADDEN CO. 135-143 MAIN STREET (ESTABLISHED 1872) SUCCHESSORS TO FORAN & SON C0., NEW LONDON, CONN. NCRWICH, CONN. NOTE ._Amngements Have: Been -Made For Trolle " on Saturday Nights, July 2nd, 9th, and 16 ys to Go Through To Central Village th, Leaving Norwich st 9:45 P. M. » C. Leland Palmer of Franklin street, ~ % Norwich, was & recent caller at the home : i : Stewart Colins of Mansfield is spend- i ing the summer vacation with his par — Sunday morning worship at 11 o'clock, Winearnis helps those are slekly vigorous health, vitality and strength because it exercises a four-fold influence on the system. Being a tonic, a restorative, a - one, Wincarnig enriches the bloed, in- vigorates the nerves, promotes nutri- tion and increases the forces of resist- - ance to disease of'the entire system. » Decause of these virtues, Wincarnit has been recommended by more thar As Dr. G. M. Lipin. -~ sky, formerly of the Health Department - of Philadelphia, has said, “It would be difficuit to find a Dbetter preparation than Wincarnis for those convalescing . It is sold in Norwich by National Drug Stores, Main and Shetucket Streets, and by other firste structive booklet “Hundred Per-Cent. in W h ] R4]