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A Bulletin Want Advertisement Will Get It _ WANTED-—Male WANTED—Large shirt manufacturer xants agents to sell complete line of sirts direct to wearer; exelusive L terns; big values; free samples. Madison G Mills,” 505 Broadway, New, York. jylid WANTED—A good chef ; more particu- | Jar about getting a good man than the wages paid. Apply at”once to Attawsu- ‘I}fl ll’!:lel. Dlnlel‘son, Conn. Tel. 275-4. i3 T WANTED—Boy to work in store. Ap- ply 85 Broadway. Jviga TED — Married man for dairy farm; American with small family pre- ferred ; must have had experience in the business. Adaress, giving full references in first letter, Box 47, Bulletin. jy12d TWANTEDSteady man to wi farm. F. E. Blacker. Tel 1796-3. WANTED TWO FIRST-CLASS SAMPLE WEAVERS ork _on Iy12a JOS. HALL & SON, Inc. Trading Cove LOST AND FOUND LOST—Black tag No. 43894. Tibbals, R. and white hound deoj Finder notify . ¥.D. 2 ZUNERAL DIRECTORS GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Embalmer 82 PROVIDENCE ST, TAFTVILLE Cummings & Ring Faneral Directors and Embalmers 322 Main Street Chamber of Commerce Building Phone 235-z Lady Assistant Funeral Director and Zinbalimer Frompt Seorvice Day or Night HOURIGAN BROS. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Norwich and Jewett City oThe Henry Allen & Son Co. 88 MAIN STREET FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EMBALMERS vady Assistant Telephene 410-2 DAY 0® NIGHT Shea & Burke “uneral Directors 41 Main Street TRUCKING GEOBGE LAMBERT, Occum, teaming, moving and trucking. Tel. 617-12. jyld GUS LAMBERT, JB., No. 341 Main St Moving and trucking. Tel. 387-8. 3 West Main 5. We anywhere. Special at- teation given to moving boilers and ma- chinery. Phone move everyihing ong Distance Moving and Zimmerman, 17 Boswell Ave, TEAMING aud moving, long trucking a specialty. Jonn H. Ford, 233 Main St Phone 752 C. B, BROMLE Shetucgket St. Phone 385. ING DISTANCE MOVING, BROWN & HARTLEY, Shetucket St. Phone 807, PIANO AND FUKRNITURE MOVING. TEAMING AND TRUCKING done very prompily anc at reasonable prices, ARTHUR H. LATHROP Shetucket Street Phane 175 & SON, AUTOS FOE HIBE FRANKLIN 54 SL Phone 1994 “FOR R weddings, etc. je21d osed _car for funerals, 1171, John Wolfe. ARCHITECTS CUDWORTH & THOMPSON ARCHITECTS Thaver Building, Norwich, Conn. — e A Bulletin Want Advertisement Will Get It |4 Bulletin For Sale Advertisement Will Sell I A Bulletin For Sale Advertisement Will Sell it A Bulletin To Lat ‘WANTED—Miscellanoous WANTED — Secona sand *ousehold to g::::. antique furniture, china, rare i and pictures, glassware, etc. ; high- WANTED—Experienced waitress. Ap- pl};’ llzghnnn Restaurant, 352 Main St WANTED_Ten girls at the Fair Gar- D. Ward, 30-33 apriFMW ent and row- ’hone 1862-23, est cash prices. Louls Water St., Norwich. WANTED—Large_size boat. Ryshpan, R. D. 3. Iyitd T WANTED_Second hand furniture and antiques, Ring." d5-50" Water, St Y. ment Mfg. Co., 41 Thames St. jy12@ | Phone WANTED—A woman _for _general | — honsework. Ponemah Milis Boarding Houge, Taftville, Conn. iyizd WANTED—Books of all kinds. C. J. Kin& 48-50 Water St. Phone 33-2. j_yl}d WANTED—Motor FOR SALE—Horses ¥FOR SALE—Extra good driving horse, 9 years old, solid chestnut, gentle, sound and l‘?. D. C. Greene, Columbia. Tel. 577-3 Willimantic Div. jyisd perfectly FOR SALE — Bay mare, sound, in good —vondition. Bertha L. Avery, Tel. 1894-5. iy13d FOR SALE—One horse, weight 1230, 1 lumber wagon, 1 Concord buggy and 2 sets of hln?eue.m Apply to 38 Otrobando Ave.,, Norwieh Town, Conmn. iyizd FOR SALE—Brown mars, weight 1250, practically sound, good worker, 16w Drice or will exchange for stock, ~Call 1484 before 5.30 a. m. or after 5 p. m. jy8d “FOR SALE_Two or (hree very good horses. Jacob C. Hafner, Norwich Town. jelsd " FOR SALE 1 have 15 Horses that are broken in for all kinds of work. They are for sale or trade at right prices. Come and see them. ELMER R. PIERSON. Tel 536-3. Jedd DENTISTS DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN DENTAL SURGEON '’ M'Grory Bldg. Norwich, Conh. WANTED—Woman or girl for general | jong, with good engi) housewors in family of two. Apply 147 |condition. Address 48, South Coven- MecKinley Ave. Jy1#d " ltry, Conn. _Tel. 984-4. o Lt WANTED—A milliner, at 18§ Main| Y¥OU are wanted; U. S. government St., Putnani, Sonn. 3yid | jobs,” §15-3200 month: hundreds vosi. WANTED_Waiiress and chamber- | Lousi 1St e oo o ™ Roche maid. y by letter of in persan to | “ranElin institute, Dept. 3-T. Mrs. Edgar H. Cottrell, 151 West Broga %fe N L. . . W St., Westerly, R. L yid WANTED—SIX or eight room tene- ment, Inquire ut Chureh Jiros., rerry St e — | et WANTED—Second hand furniture of all kinds. lsaac Weinstein, Main St HOLIDAY special: Manila cigar 5¢ each, 13 for buc; Scholl’s broadleal cigar 7Tc, § for 20c; Moon Spols pony cigar be each; “Gato” eclear Havana cigar 1u¢ straight. Free, a 10¢ tin of Goid Bond and « package of Dipe cleaners with each Toc pipe, at ragan's Smoke Shop. Branch store, Lhayer sldg. entrance. iyzd WANTED—We pay highest prices for second hand furmiture. Nerwich Furni- ture Co., Breed Bldg. Tel. 1914-3. We buy, sell and exchange. Jelld WANTED—Farms ; all kinds, all sizes, anywhere in Connecticut. 1s your farm for sale? Call, write or telephone Hei- 's Farm Agency, 43 Reynolds St, Danielson, Conn. jeTd FOBR SALE FOR SALE, FOR SALE—Two-family house on ‘West Side, in fine conditaon, has gas and electricity, also a zood garden; price $3,900. Bargam, care Bulietin. iylsd FOR SALE_First class Jersey new | mileh cow, with calf. Frankiin Meeting House Hill. Michael Brassil. jylsd FOR SALE—A white wooden bedstead comblete with springs and mattress, price Feris For Sale (1) Property known as the Line,store, situated on the R. L-Conn. line, 75 acres, 1l-room house, fine buildings dandy lo- cation for auto inn. (2) 2Ib-gcre farm 1 1-2 miles trom Danielson, state road, large new barn and fine ‘house; this is an all around o] 598-3. | Place; crops, e R (3)" Fine 200-acre farm near four = 5 — .. |manufacturing villages, mam road, FOR, SALE—Ford commercial car, in |buildings A-T; crops; part mortgage, gocd condition, very reasonable. Apply | quick sale, low price. 152 West Main St. §¥13d (4) 130-acre farm, good house, barn, land and crops; this place must be sold at once; part cash, balance on mortgage. . (5) 100 acres, new house, stock, tools, cm(p.s; low price. 6)' 75 acress good farm, 2 miles to Danielson, nice milk route, crops, stoek, tools; part mortzage. (7} 40 acres, wood and lumber, 9 acres nice maple wood, near village. €. B. HUTCHINS, REAL ESTATE, Danielson, Comn. FOR SALE Eleven-room house, centrally located, for rooming house or light housekeeping, {in best conditin. Owner leaving town. wishes to sell property. Price right. FRANCIS D. DONOHUE. FOR SALE—Overland, model 83, five- passenger, starter, electric lights, cord tires, two extra with rim, air pump a tached on engine, price very reasonable; the car is in finé running order. Writé E. Deshefy, R. ¥. D. 6. Jyidd FOR SALE—Holton trumpet, silver plated, gold lined bell, special made case. Will sell cheap. Kd. Kelley, 52 Broad- wa FOR SALE—Pigs, §§ e money. R. W. Dearnley, Jewstt City. iylad . FOR SALE—New milch cow and calf. R. D. 1, Box 13y, H. L. Harris. jyl2d FOR SALE—Barber chairs, cash regis- ter, vibrator and all barber fixtures. 126 West Main St. iviad FOR SALE—Farm of 14 1-2 acres, with house and barn, horse, cow, heifer, crops, chicken' and yeese. Roosevelt Ave. Vinzentz Luchon, R. D. 3, Norwich. jylld FOR SALE—Household furniture, at{ 349 West Main St. Call fetween 9 and 11 a. m., 1 and 5 p. m. jylid FOR SALE—Seven pigs § weeks old, $8 each; also foxhound puppies, 325 each for males, females $15, blood ‘lines in back. W. F. Tyler, Raymond Hill road, Montville, R. JYLIMWE Tel. 61-2. ATCTION AUCTION WANTED—Second hand and antique furniture. Tiger & Kremen, suncegsors to A. Bruckner, o5 Franklin St Pnone 717-3 Norwich. 294 TheLiberal Loan Co wishes to anmounce that they are open tor business at 81 Framklin St, with a full line of Luggage, Toys and Musical In- struments. Opposite Providence Baery. FOR SALE-—Automobiles DR. D. J. COYLE DENTIST 203 Main St., Norwich, Conn. Offiee Hours: 3—12, 1:30—5, 6:30—8 siepnons PEBEONE & Christay’ Co., bullding euuiraclors, SLONEWOrk, LFICKWOTK, cob- crete und cement, plusier, and paint, and anythiug extra. 15 Platt Ave, Tel. No. 478-§. Cail between b and 63V a. m. and irom 0 10 9 ».om augld FUMIGNARO JAMES—Contractor of excayating and stonework —and house- raising, coacrete work; all guarauteed work. 1% Oakridge St.. Norwich, Cona. 'Felephone 6327-5. maricd WILLIAM C. YOUNG Successor to STETSON & YOUNG | CARPENTER and EUILDER Best work and materials, at right prices, by skilled labor. Telephone 60 West Main St. PLUMBING SUPPLIES PLUMBING AND GASFITTING. CONTEACTORS—JOBBEES, Plumbing and Heating. JOMN BLUM, Breed Buiding. PHONE 56! Phone. The very Dest plumbing by expert workmen at the fairest prices is guar- anteed; also heating and gasfitting, 3 JOHN ¥. TOMPKINS, West Main ENRIGHT & McMAHON Plumbing, Heating, Tinning and Stove Repairs SATISFACTORY SERVICE Phone 1567-4 32 6TH STREET THOMAS J. DONOVAN Plumbing and Heating Telephone 1527-2 56 ROATH STREET [ ¥OR SALE—1920 Chevrolet sedan in “pink ot condition;* will sacrifice at 0. Joseph Bndo, Danieison, Conn. 29-2 Wiz TFOR SALE_Ford touring car with de- mountable rims, car in perfect order. In- quire at 35 North Main St. Henry Allard. Jydd prlh FOR SALE—Dodge delivery, nearly new, perfect condition; price right for immediate sale. Norwich Buick Co. jy$d " FOR SALE—7-passenger Hudson tour- ing car, 1917 model, newly painted, and in fine condition. Must be sold al once at a sacrifice. Tel. 152-4. y2d “FOR SALE—1917 Cadillac, in excellent condition, new engine, will sell reasonable if sold at once. Inquire 52 Shetucket St may20d FOR SALE Late 1918 Small Four Buick, Will Sell Cheap. First Class Condition. Inquire, 81 Frank- lin Street. AUTOMOBILES 1921 Ford Delivery, electric starter and demountable rims, like new, $600, 1916 Dodge Touring Car, $450, 1920 Scripps Bogth Roadster, $750. 1920 Hupmobile Touring Car, $8500. C. V. PENDLETON, 45 BROADWAY, —_— TO RENT TO RENT—At “Fairview,” 77 Church St., one or two furnished rooms, us kitchenette, veranda and phone single room for gentleman. Cali 1M TO REN ton 8t. jylld TO RENT—Four room tenement. Franklin St. —Tenement at 45 Washing- Inguire at 34 Washington St. “In- iyed TO RENT—To a gentfeman, a very de- sirable furnished room with _American family in good neighborhood. Inquire i this offi ived TO RENT—Roo) ht house keeping. Phone 1937. Jysd ¥our rooms and bath ge, & party of g be accommodated for §1 a day; meals . reasonable price near by. Address L. L., Pleasant View Beach, Westerly, R. 1. _ iy1d “¥OR RENTGarage rear of 86 Fraul lin St. Inquire Alling Rubber Co. fy6d TO RENT—Furnished reoms, with or without board. 13 Boswell Ave. je6d WANT A PLUMBER? CALL 716-1% Ordering from us a sure cure £or| worry. DO IT NOW. We have built up our business on prompt and correct ser- vice and courteous treatment of our cus- | tomers. SULLIVAN, THE PLUMBER, 26 Sixth St, Greeneville. ————aae AdvicT Congerr.ii., .ate reductions by eliminating hazards—real service and real Companies. ISAAC S. JONES insurance Agent 91 Main Street ARE YOU COVERED BY | INSURANCE ? If not. communicate with HAROLD S. BURT, 120 Laurel Hill Ave., before it i 100 late.” He represents reliable com. ' panies in all kinds of insurance, Prompt service. Phone 598-3, CHIROPODIST BCOKBINDING G. THOMPSON, ¥ t Specialist (proteci you iy Allce Bidg., 321 Mawm Bt, -8, ce orwich, Conn. Pnone 1366-4. dan3ld - PIANO TUNERS GEER THE PIANO TUNER 122 Prospect St Phone 511 33 beiore the Dublic, thete s 80 medk re e, ='m than through the uinm salnmes of The Bullatip BOOKBINDER | JOSEPH BRADFORD ( 108 Broadway Blank Books Made and Ruled %o Ord-r{ | TO RENT—Furnished rooms for housekeeping. 17 Boswell Ave. ight mayz8d Farm For Rent FOR THE SUMMER 14-ROOM HOUSE, PARTLY FUR- NISHED, LOCATED ON STATE AND TROLLEY ROAD. INQUIRE OF JOHN A. MORAN REAL ESTATE BROKEPR FRANKLIN SQUARE NORWICH, CONN. CIGAES CIGARS Whitestone Cigar aare $70 per thousand J. F. CONANT, 11 Franklin 8t TOBACCO Wholesale and Retail We carry a complete line of Domestic and Imported Cigars. 4 JOHN R. BOWMAN 116-118 WEST MAIN STREET NORWICH, [ONN. (Established for Ha.f a Century) e G s e ———— f PRINTING . PRINTING of all kinds promptly and neatly done. Estimates promptly and cheerfully given. The Builetin Co., 66 Franklin St. mayl19d AMERICAN HOUSE, D. Morrissey, Prop. ~ First class garage service con- Dected. Phone. Shetucket St. BN BOTEL Bupwn plan 26-28 Broadway. COAL AND WOOD COAL, seagonea wood and kind.uwl n 107 APl SR, o PR oty Durkee Lane, " " declsd It will pay you to walk over. || Public Cattle Auction AT THE FARMS KNOWN AS THE MURRAY & MORGAN TFOR®SALE Gas_stove; price right. Call_ndt 14 Hickory St. J. C. Cormier. d FOR SALE—A dandy two-tenement house, § rooms each tenement, garage, oil and gasoline station on Main St, oneé minute’s_ walk to stores and postoffice; | also a_20-acre woodlot about 1-2. mile from Brookiyn, all far L. Mrs, FARMS Louisa_Ballard, Brookiyn, Conn., P. O. Box 85. y6d SALEM STREET, SALEM, CONN. FOR SALE_Sixty tons standing hay. 1. G. Ham: > 28 THURSDAY, JULY 14th AT 10:30 A. M. SHARP, Standard Time 61 HEAD OF CATTLE One Blooded Ayrshire Bull N |I—Sixteen of the Former MORTO . PLANT" Biooded Ayrshire Cows—Two Blooded Jersey Cows—Eleven Graded Cows — Sixteen Blooded Calves—Fifteen Shoats IF SAID DAY IS STORMY— SALE NEXT FAIR DAY AUCTION Public Auction of Household Furniture at 20 Lafayette St., SATURDAY, JULY. 16, at 10 o’clock a. m. JOSEPH BOHARA. FOR 51 $10 per cord. Phone 1099-2. house, William A. Mason, Lebanon, Phone 78. STOP in to see us; We Carry every- thing in the line of second-hand furamle ture, stoves, etc. New London Salesroom, 16 Water St, Norwich, Phone 1703-2. FOR SALE A two-apartment house on Jower part of Boswell Ave. Each apartment has five rooms, steam heat, bath, electric lights and gas. For full particulars, see A. V. COVELLO, Tel, 1527-3. 198 CLff St. FOR SALE AT A BARGAIN a fine large Gas Bange, Oak Book Case, Hallett & Davis Piano and a genuine Cabinet Vietrola. Call at 15 Spring St FOR SALE A cozy 6-room Cottage, with about one acre of fine garden land, located near city school, and only shart dis- tance from Franklin Square, will be sold very reasonable. For full par- ticulars, inquire of JOHN A. MORAN REAL ESTATE BROKER FRANKLIN SQUARE Conn. jeo 1921, 1z ACCOUNTANTS. CAPITAL STOCK TAX—1922 Returns mast be filed July 31, 1921, to avoid penalty. Let us assist you with your tax problems. X HUNT & WHITE, Public Aceountants and Auditors, Thayer Building, Norwich, Conn., Telephone 1764, also at Plant Building, New London, Conn. Telephone 2160. AUTOMOBILE ACCESSOEIES JONATHAN SMITH, dealer in oils and gasoline, 3¢ and 31 Town St, Norwiea i Town. Telephone 318. High test gasoline, Mobloils of all grades, and auto accesso- Ties. jelod HAVE your tires i.4readed, look liki new, wear like new, as good 25 Dew, Lanoie Tire Co. 93 W. Msin St. feb24d AUTO PAINT SHOP now completed and ready for business. Painting, varnishing, etc, reasomable prices. MURRAY¥'S, 17 Spruce St. PUNCTURE KaRq(E CURE Is guaranteed to seal any puncture up | to the size of a tenpenny nail—and it | does even to twenty-penny nails and | 1-4-inch spikes. Demonstration and salesroom, 143 Water Street, Norwich—Also sold by R. S. Atwood’s Auto Supply Store. P —————— = | FOR SALE ! Thoroughly Modern 8-Room Cottage At Norwich Town JOMPLETE IN EVERY PARTICU- AR, AND HAS LARGE DOUBLL ARAGE. VERY ATTRACT!V APPLY TO James L. Case . 876 40 SHETUCKE Franklin Garage 102 Franklin Street Is now open for business, ' FOR SALE A four-apartn ern improvemen minutes’ walk Good_investment.! For fuil particulars, see . COVELLO, 195 cug St. with all mod- within _five Franklin Square. Repairing a Specialty. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 90 acres, nice location, main state road, near good markeis, pleasing surround: ings, beautiful shade, fish and ice pond near house and on farm, river on one side, land well divided info fertile fields, springg and brook watered pastures and ! valuable woodland, lots fruit, two barns and farm buil RADIATORS BOILING OR DAMAGED REPAIRED ‘AND RECORDED Tested Under Air Pressure MUD GUARDS AND LAMPS STRAIGHTENED : AND REPAIRED je24d FOR SALE The Berry Block, in Norwich, No. 190 Franklin St., consisting of two stores, four tenements, with all modern im- 499 MAIN STREET, (East Side) ~ OVERHAULING AND REPAIR WORK OF ALL KINDS Automobiles, Carriages, Wagons, iar is cemented. There's a good Tkas and Cam Mechanical Repairs, Painting, Trim- g 8arden. Unusual value for $4500.§| ming, Upholstering and Wood Work. i Blacksmithing in all its branches ARCHA W. COIT provements, a first rate central business location ; excellent property for an invest- ment. The sale is made necessary by an order of the court to closé the settle- ment of an estate. Apply to WILLIAM H. SHIELDS. e A NEW HOUSE IT'S A BARGAIN Situated in the “Plains Section” of Norwich. The house has six rooms and all modern improvements. Cel- : - : “Tanlac _has brought me health strength and mfln: and 1 - mf the opportunity ive my. i i which I sincerely will be of benefit to others,” declared Victoria Gagnan of 15 South B St., lle; Con: For “fifteen years I i very severe case of dyspepsia, and every- thing 1 ate dis with .me. My stomach seemed as sour as vincgir amd I would bleat with gas until 1 was in terrible distress. My heart paipitated and fluttered so frightfully that I thought 1 had heart trouble and I wouid become awful faint and short of breath. I suf- fered chronically with constipation, too, and at times had sueh acute attacks of indigestion that it would almeost kill me. Why, for weeks at a time I would be un- able to do a bit of housework and would have to have someone Wait on me. nierves were simply shattered. and at night I eould scarcel wink. “I am thankful a thousand times over that I had faith enough in Tanlac te try it, for the medicine has ended all my suffering and made me just as ithy as I could ask t0 be. 1 gnined five pounds on my first two bottles and since taking five bottles 1 have gained twelve pounds and have so much strength and energy that I can do all my housework with per- fect ease. I am never bothered with constipation, indigestion or nervousness, I relish all my medls, and sieep like a child at night. I ean never ‘Tan- lac enough for what if has done for me, but if T could express im words what I really feel then everybody wouid know how grand it is.” Tanlac is spld in Norwich by National ‘orp. Drug Stores e —————— JUDGE WALLER WILL HEAR ¢ HUNT'S INJONCTION CASS Judge Gardiner Gre:ne of the superior ecurt has referred ty Judge Charles B. ! Waler the case which Charles A, Huat 0f New London, throvgh his coun<el, {Ceorge Curtis Morgan, brought asainst George A. E. Jones ani Robert Y. Men zie <f New Londen, operating under th jnane of The United States Produets Co.. to restrain them from manufactnr- ing a product similar to 2 eompound knowrn as Plug-A-Leuk, whien pizintiff has been manufacturing. Hearing on th2 case is to be set for an early date. M Hunt instituted an action against the plaintiffs on Junme 2, which action is returnable to the supacior court on the first Tuesday in Septembes. JHeging that in the months betveen now and the |time for the hearing of the superior coust tha: he will suffer maiarial damage Ly & contiruance of the manufactur: of the allegec “inferior” produt of the pisin. tiffs Mr. Hunt asked Judge Gardiner Greena to t him a temperary ine jurction restraining Joues and Menzie from any further prodaciam or ssle of compound. complain allegas that ‘on Peb. > B plaintiff was manufacturng 2 procuct used to prevent and stop anto- mebile radiators from leaking” amd “about said time the plaintiif originated and promulgated a product and used the name and trade mark of Plug-A-Leak for said product. “Plaingff subsequently fled with the commissioners of trade marks in Wash- ington, D. C. application as originator of said trade mark.” Plaintiff, under the name of the Unit- ed States Supply Co. has been manu- facturing and marketing Plug-A-Leak since Feb. 1, and is still it “On or about April 1, 1921, said de- fendants, under the name of The United States Prodr~ts Co., have been manu- facturing a0 | placing on the market a compound similar to plaintiff's and for a similar purpose” “The defendants are daily reeelving and apprepriating to their own use large sums of money by reason of plaintiff's advertising and publishing the trade name ‘of Plug-A-Leak, and the defend- ants by use of an inferior produet are greatly damaging the trade value of the business ‘of the plaintift” The plaintiff asks for an injunction re- sthaining Jones and Mengie from further operations using the trade mark Plug-A- Leak undersa penalty of $1,008, GREAT GROWING WEATHER FOR ALL KINDS OF CROPS The wet weather has been a great benefit to berries, which remuire mueh moisture to produee -the hest. Raspber- ries are prolific iust now, hoth the black and the red variety, and the blackherry bushes are loaded with green berries which started to ripen last week. Tha huckleberry bushes are also heavily loaded again this year and the probabilities are that there will be a big crop of these favorite berries this month. Last year oneof the bi gest huckleberry crops in many sea- sons was grown and picking them was a_ fayorite pastime for hundreds of peo- ple for several weeks. Residents of the outlylng distriets believe that the huckleberry crop this vear will be the biggest in more than a decade. Pickers appeared last Sun- day, but the berrles will not be ready really to pick before the 20th. Blackberries, especially the runner variety, will be unusually prolific this year and there will be at least as many high bush berries as ever. The rain rotted many of these berries, and if a weel” of raine came now there would be very few berries of any Kind on aec- count of the wet rot. The yvear of 1921 may go down as year In this new cenm- ne who has peaches has been thanking his aegricultural stars that the frosts kept away this spring. { Trees are already bendinz with green i fruit and the early varieties will ripen rapily as soon as there are sdveral days of warm, sunny weather. Tomatoes are growing better this year than for several vears. Farmers do mot know whether to blame the heat or the rain or both, but it is a faet that uniess all signs fail, there will be more tomatoes than wusual this year and that the e will return tq the old pre-war price of 50 cents a bushel this fall. Onions are doing weil this summer, and the prediction is made that they will sell for $1 a bushel this fall for the first time in five years. Potatoes are recovering from the heat drought and sweet potatoes that are planted more this vear than ever before in this state are unusually prolific and wp- standing. Native sweets will probably be put_on the market for the first time in Conneécticut's agricultural hstory. e EASTFORD SELECTMAN'S FAMILY , ROUGHLY TREATED BY BOLT Mr. and Mrs. Archa Walker of East- ford, with their young sons, Stowell and Kenneth, were week-end guests at the home of Rey. and Mrs. P. S. Collins in i Telephone 1334 63 BROADWAY - e ——— | 507 TO §15° 'NORTH MAIN STREET _ Danbury.—G. R. Walbridge, chief clerk in the Central New. England railroad headqubrters of this city, and Harry Platt, chief despatcher of the New Lon- don division of the New York, New Ha- ven and Hartford railroad, are in Los Angeles, Cal, attending the mational con- vention of Elks. Shea’s News Bureau MAGAZINE' SPECIALIST UNION SQUARE Leffingwell. Mr. Walker is the first l“I lectman of Eastford and a parishoner of Mr. Collins in a former pastorate. The Walker family arrived by auto in time for tea last Saturda: It was the first regular meal that they had taken that day. The reason was that at 8 o'clock that morming their house was struck b lightning, thres cooms were wrecked, an out of a household of six persons four were lain prostrate. The bolt struck a tree near the house, followed a root of the tree urder the house and came through the floey into the room where Advertisemvent Will Sell It w., What Is Going On Tonight No. 113, P. of K. '\:':"' Ao0uUW, merely g # U entertainmen offend the most hypercritieal. fast action all the way through Apari- ment house dwellers will appreciath the humor of many of the situations. i Mildred Harris Chapii e8t-L0- in Cheyenne, Wyo., reared there. career with Vitagraph. Her latest pie- ture is Od Dad, which is the second fea- :’IIN. This s & First National atise- ion. Nothing furny abowt x delayed trofley car? Oh, but wait until you see What delayed the Toonerville Toonerville Trolley that meets is one of the funnisst comsdies seen this seasen. kLE — Brocd Theatre and Majestie Beat All the mystic romance of the and the primitive passions of ke and women who battie the eiemenis their bread are f depucted Wolves of the North, the ssmsationally dramatic Universal story comisg to screen of the Breed theatre and Roof Garden %eday and Thureday. Eva Novek piaye The picture was by Norman Daws rEE! I | : il 51 i ] i 2 A ! il 5 i R HTHHT J i i% if a:{; f % F £ Efe i F Eti§ Y i E i ¢ § | it i i | i : i T ;r I i { £ 41 { i £ § F gifs covering. Mrs. Walker’s brother, Herbert of New Britain, was in an adjoiniag room where he was struck by a door and landed with his table and his feet upon a chair. clothes were torn and his bruised. The lock of the deer en cleanly from the wood. Barlew and Stowell Walker were other part of the house and escaped a slight shock from the lightning. The Walker family had been for some days te visit the new their former pastor, Rev. Mr. <his date, and In epite of shaking up they carried out Mr. Walker had some sligh and bruises, otherwise the party no marks of thelr rough usage, { SEES NO DISCOURAGEMENT IN NEW HAVEN'S DEPICIT The Wall Stree: Journal saws = ing the New Haven road’s o $333,772 for May, following izeome of $102,218 for April, that it is met e scrutinized discouraging when clamey . The loss was more than offset by pot- ting $700,000 more into tenance of way. and equipment than in while the moyvement costs were $218, lees than in April. It adds: “For the first time since Januamy gross revenue in May ed behind the total for the corresponding /menth 1920, a2 decrease of 5.5 per cent. suggested that freight traffic is abogt 45 pér cent. in volume. Passenger Pevemme taken alone increased 2.6 per eemt 1920, due probably to higher rates local “trip tickets recently put in against an increase of passenger revenue over “As compared with May, 1330, trams- portation expenses showed of 15.2 per cent.; main 1.4 per cent. while maintenance ment was slightly larger by 2 “Opinien of the railroad executives other companies & that the New Haven management has an ceptional grasp om operating Waste is being controlled so humanly possible, but, of management can control gross which after all have the fluence on earnings.” WAGE CUT IN FORCE ON NEW HAVEN Both sections of the werkers om New Haven read the officers and working force, will feel the 1% cut in wages which goes the svstem Thursday. at the general company that the uctions the officials have mow all out and that they wemt intp effect s it was felt that the organization should be willing a part of the burden entgiled By economy programme. rule 3ll over the epuntry. ‘While ‘figures as to these reductions are pot available it is to0d the elerks and shop m to remain at work are eut about $3 to 55 ver week. Of the cuts In the executive department; which are new in effect. it was stated that the out President E. J. Pearson’'s calary prohab;y hunmt to over $4i :fl: that of the vice president we amount to about $250 a month; that of the gen. eral mapager $150%a month: the eral superintendent £100 per meath, er officers of this category amount sama figure; division superintendents per month, A