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showing {us $he had killed two rattlesnakes during |for the possession of the medical hot o ¢ " the remains of hippopotamus, rhinoceros |the season. \We failéd to see or hear |springs. ~Stome arrow heads are still WANTING or such animals which have mot for |one. Later on members of cur party |found on the mountain siope. The many : . lages inhabited the North American con- |killed two. A i Sy atieast ! if g : : ; o ; many sick, semi-sick and those that think apls . Rev. W. 8. Maclntire, formerly of Wil- | within restricted areas. We did mot [[RmE e BT S0 (WSS s of | om our way back to our machines we SO 80 %ty the meaicimal auar: |§ If it is something you want, never let wanting it die. limantic and Rockvills, who has writ- |pitch our tent but occupied the Dulldings | o5 of the Bad Lands. Crossing the | tpe tho sircam for trout, He had been |ities of the spring. ‘Enterprising men and {} The strife and the strain’ of the getting are sometimes as en the Bulietin a letter describing a |\N-(1 during the fair, some sleeping in the { Cheyenne River we reach Wasta, passing ‘hu_e‘ Yt and had caught many. firms have provided cvery comfort that o of 1,000 miles through South Da- |eshibition building, sorhe in the barn and |through Underwood and Box Klder w S S e e south Loy carpnshiese. LAl Qasstes Ghf much as the sky. & h Rapid C hund From Rapid City we traveled south|ip,"hepjing waters, from the rich to kota by automebile, part of which was |others in the open air. Wo found good |Tech Rapid City, one hundred and eighty |, miof Tbie B NE J6 ity of |the healing waters, from the rich to published Thursday concludes his nd free fuel. One of our cars|fniles from Pierre. hundred population. It is named for | 2085 07 e A vided for those as follows broken down and we had to send | Ravill City is the gateway to the |Gencral Custer who conducted an ex- | SAmPIng erounds are proviced for those |§ The sweetness and sadness of wanting, the wanting a Prom the buffalo ranch at P for parts. Leaying our crippled | Black Hills, the commercial and railroad | pegition to the Hills in 1574 On the | W10 Wt 10 Hve n FLOT own fents mouth to kiss rode man: threugh™a count nd two men to bring it on later.[center of one of the -ichest and most|ihira day of July of that year Rose|2"C P B 3 - THe Grass. lot oke camp and moved on passing |productive sections of the United States. i ] o B A et ot p After spending two nights and days o G oriotohis AR GUin. e S e we Bes i hy e e S A SIEGEUl S Sl R [} The wanting the touch of an arm round your neck — t Fold of this region. The city i3I this heaith resort we retraced our 1 i first view of the Bac | depart; and four national highways from |3 15 fo ¢ ind horses sea level, and is close [ToUte to Custer, stopping over night at who would such wanting miss ? med up a great s | e in 2ood condition notw east and south to Yellowstone and Ga- | < and boldest | Wind Cave. All our party but one vis- ng the dry season. No cr cier Parks and the Pacific ceast. It is lo season is so |ited the cave. It is a great experience. vated and there were ver outline and we on Rapid River, the greatest trout Sre out of the ques- |The cave is very large, consisting of a of them. Tlhey |stream cf the w Here is located the heavy frosts in July | series cf long narrow passageways, bav ng we ever nous School of Mines that draw stu- : < |ing many variations of height and width much of fossil remains. Museums in |wild heasts in the iong ago. A summer |from the main strcet. - On the slopes of all the civilized world have formations |camper at the thouth of the canyon told | this mountain the Indian tribes fought ’ from the Bad, Lands, usually ‘i i and to the {short that g tion. They : 1 August. The principal crop in W nd no ‘ire wng plac The wanting the glory of triumph, the winning and claim- ing the goal, rouses or named. dents from. as far away »s China. One | e o heat and oats, |and opening into irregular chambers | 7 of the most important industries is Tum- | Per Sici ine Michost alticude that are gorzeously ascorated witn na- || The wanting the sun and the stars and moon—why, that hmn« The Warren-Lamb Lumbering | t is only a ture’s handiwork. It derives its name of the R Mountains, is only a t T Co. ownes thousands of acres and millions | gictance from Custer. e fcund a tree, | {rom the current of air, oiten very swift, | is the Wantcr s soul. jof efet o fstanding timber= a hundreds of men. Tt prize with commodiou school and chureh large and fort o sHoxt ! he edge | Dlowing intermittently Zn and out of ks : o camping roun o e e |its mouth. ‘One of the current stories Oh, t I e et We intended to Spend a day |Cf its discovery tells that a ranger named most of our life is wanting, and wanting is most i > but when we awoke |Johh Welsh, while stalking deer in 1851, we know i e T et e o s e (R e e s o N OF the A Rre and f the 1 d i many | streets is the c t ack Hills } GO he t vas 1] C Gt a S | alfalfa field rew 8 s e most am: | i e et 0 R e Mnd |the rock not more than eight inches | §. dp . and pain, of the loss an gain, as struggling portant alfalfa seed markct in the United | siarteq. for Hleitter T ‘the | in_diameter. and striving we go. States We passed through the city to R i roads. 1t| We entered the cave by descending stor no area the public tourist camping grounds four Loy have never South Dakota | flight of more than two hundred wood- e there have miles bevond, passing fie Indian schoo! |1oad in in storm or soon after you |Cn Steps to a path leading to the various |f It is Somethmg you ‘want, follow, lad, follow the gleam, on the way. thine about mud. The roads |chambers. The roof is very ragged, in About one and one half miles from SRR . n dry but a the city we saw Hangman's R {is on the top ¢f a high hill hat of a young man caring 3 heep on the hillside. Two men him with two horses and them wh e o | some places very high, in other pluces |§ Iill you make it come truc, as the fairies do the fact and so low that it is with great difficulty we could pass. The chambers are won- the fancy of dream. derful. The one called the Fair Grounds — = S oriae is said to be the largest underground —B. B. in the Baltimore Sun. et e ey am. |chamber in the world. It is T shaped S ime of monew i |and cover more shan four acres, and e ranges in height from tem to forty feet | Nom———— Better. We {The walls and ceilings of the pas e | ways and chambers are elaborately it S| ns common 1o e vk | result in tracery and | | | The Woodstock Dairy SHANNON BUILDING NORWICH, CONN. went on an errand. left an other group of Good fishing abounds in the vicinity and “ tarriod two nighis. On o eona |- HUMOR OF ;THE; DAY e v c meeting of ded- | “T suppose the mosquiloes ar with music and addresses by oot where you li X e vernor McMasters, two highway com-| “No; long and ioners and two eachers of our |crip Hereafter it will bear the name “Do share your hust mp McMaster. Many of our party |rowspr . o Jou Busband's s T IonESoR RS the most elaborate and sur- blow- g descripticn. frost work is c are dry again, | the ohief beauty of cave. Through |G ~ the road re.|some of the pas we were more | mi: \Wind | than three hundred feet below the en. S late in |trance. There were zreat caverns reac into | InZ out to the right and left cf the path. | tried the brooks with rod and line, bring- | “ye: { some of which have never been explo ing back a fine lot of trout and other several places the path was a bridge |fish. We had fish almost every meal siped car and brook ece firewood spring ts and a s hine wind Exceptional Sale, Friday and Saturday | e 't & e on' MOCHA AND JAVA BOILED HAM COFFEE, pound. .... 45c| Pound ..... CORNED BEEF ROAST PORK m."—Eoston Trans« he $lames me for ererything."— £ the river |camp we quarter: Louisville Courier-Journal. Inn, where nve T Sos {over deep caverns meny fect belo and took some away with us. Of allj . WUKin% Ias 2 lot of trouble with hiy Pound . . 65¢c | Pound . . 65¢ Cavyon Hilis© Ttl abouncs The question naturally How |0Ur camping srounds our pary voted | ™ iy it he ‘anyon 4 the bes! T should say so. Wy, it was ow nd wonderful | ba A stream of vere these caverns formed? are told | this one the best. On our return to Rap- SMOKED BONH‘ESS SMOKED BONELESS SHOULDERS, pound. 38c | BUTTS, pound ..... 46¢c FRANKFURTERS MEAT LOAF : 1' o R caBelTomd . . 2. e 40c NATIVE EGGS, dozen . .......... 60c Special Combination for Saturday Only |/, S o fainid "o o had fo climb over huge broken rocks | he : 2 Ibs. Bacon. . 90c For Saturday {fhat haq fallen frem the heishis above. |¥ 3 2 Ibs. Lard 4 The passage srew more marrow until |lished a larze sar s. Lard. . - 34c 1 the walls were only a few feet apart. |all w Total : $1.24’ o On y There were great caverns in the walls |on The nat that had dcoubtless been the homes of jcar g Dark Canyon we too of the rock e bottom. the cave once served as chanels |1 City we finished the southern séction | o 2500unt that he batdasachariia subterranean waters which now fol- | of the Hills. We hope sometime to vis- | .1 grapher.”—Boston Tram« a swimming pool, |low other courses. The water has dis- |t the northerns section including Dead- | "o = z ¥ ep would 1 to be the finest natural bath in the | solved out the long channels. The wood, Lead and the Sbearfish canyon. h'n:;': had just returned from the climbed un- {world. We- tried i The water was |corations of crystals and mdr.r forms s ."Au.a‘d«?;?;.} et ta all tops nmrlv five degrees temperature. T are the rLSu!ts of redencsited calc = i s s o~ o i Sanvon, | sorings. flows 5o < ater is| carbonate, of which lim EAST HADDAM gl P perpensdicular T and so clear After m\mg our picture 1 ther. m : Tead ‘at its i S5 d frve Wents w;\boux members of the Hartford| “Yés and I wished her many happy adually |that < be at i r s 3 winter and summer ! leadt Maisia asked many feet above our scending we Tea gl B il 7 b enjoved a ‘dinner and social |Teturns of the cake, t00." replied iha hrough the rift rock <The | swinzing | hours under ground and having :‘\F:l .: the Nathan Hale inn Saturday | YOung h"i'etnx-—hxcn{n:e‘ e e e G s more than four miles nz. Congratnlate me, Ji + & n, 1 am engaged ings were rem La ndlord W f the irg, of the Hote! River.|to Betty Flyrt 3 sheep bake in Swan's greve, 8 'nday a'(ernonn All who attended re- able time. e has returned from ends and relatives in New ‘Wind Cave was made a naticnal park % in 1903 and contains 10,000 acres. A llome { game preserve cccupics the mnorthwest ce the world lcorner of the park and was established ernment has estab-{to provide a suitable lccation for a herd arium for soldiers of | of puffalo, offered to the government. nal home is located | 1t contains about 4,000 a The pre- and 1s reached BY iserve is enclosed with a woven -wire steps leading UP | fence eight miles long and cighty in and has been stocked with buffalo. elk and deer. Just before we left, a herd of bufalo came around the foot of the hill and we could see them at short range. Our next point of interest was beauti- ful Sylvan Lake. It - |} 3 g is like a jewel in | por its frame of gray rock and forest ver- dure. It is ‘a small body of clear i jsparkling water, feet above sea | to drive or by d{.lr I will to feel the same to you “Heavens, George, dear. I am just geidg out th nest . Emen mustache logsed off, though#®* returned te his F. Williams and 'obile trip to Boston. level, cne of the Mr. and \Y~—= Charles TTa ave r { Hills and is a de Liome i1 Cleveland, af: s’ stay with Mrs. Han- . and Mrs. G. A. Al- And drawing $20 & but think —Svrmn ks tion days. Ma - ney Peak, while the r joyed the walks about the lake. a part of the t € P>l t | which comprises 61,460 acres of land, intersected that are b One year ago this concern was founded with the purpose of reducing costs to i‘ém;:;‘;hm'mhd i consumer on Shoes, by eliminating the expensive overhead called service. A : saving ranging from $1.00 to $3.00 on every pair. EYES SOR E [ Charles A. Russell have vitations to the marriage of their r Sweet and Frand “Dav son, both 0’ Hood)s _Thur woman to hate the prettiest foct. Miss Katherine ( the detention house at day matrom at he Gioucester (N. J.) immigrant station in two weecks acted as maid of honor and witness at Sfiy weddings. e During his thi ears’ pastcrate at If your eyes or ! a ati church, a minister kept . . th teh, -burn or feel ight colon of Our first store was opened in Putnam, September 17, 1921, and since then we have grown by leaps and bounds Ul e was o fofl‘,r. et L <] . . . . . |3t we bliged t iles . though satisfied patronage, quantity buying, and close selling, with low operating expense, so that we now operate o it anaiact ! entertatned s e el G s, o : : 2 f Bon-Opto tablets. Dissol ) s grand- seven stores—Putnam, Norwich, Danielson, Conn.; Southbridge, Worcester and Gardner, Mass., and Pascoag, R. I. W5 Fop-Opie tablels, lssome o0 | Gaughter and busband and Miss Gib- |3 Tesident of Bruporia, Kas. , ) H ge, ) in a fourth of a glass of water and : : : . : . 3 - : = bathe the eves from two to four times|bons and friends, all of Boston. eor: by deinking ‘twenty Every store in our family circle must undersell their competitors. This can only be done throug!: buying quantities L et Camtotabte ran maa |, Misses Mty -and? Anna {Haboplic: are |21 39f. Stiakiin (67 mm F: . . improved eyesizht will make the world |t work at Corbin's shoe shop in Web- xty wagered. or all stores jointly. it ster. Miss Merrie Feldman, of Atlinta, Ga., Poctord Bon-Opto| Mrs. Charles Howard ig in a critiea\ |las Leen admitted to Atlanta bar at 1s1 1cki 1 strengthens eyesight 50% in a week’s | condition. S in the care of a nurse |the age of seventeen. S Throxtih oghmkfine system of mclelrzhandlismg, where you do your own picking and fitting and save yourself, what we S S [fom Tainan oo gl save, though kepping our payroll down low. bar examinaticn in Georgia A shopkeeper in Orient, L. I, has ad« vertised his piace by placinz buffale nickels in the concrete sidewalks in front The Indjan bead is up and each head faces in the same dircction. The coins are placed close together and spell out “Wigwam” the mame of his place ef business. The sheep was 2 domestic anfmal and Eurcpe before the dawn of his- Sheen have Dbeen taken 1o al living even at an aitimude of 10,- 000 feet central Asia, where they have enormous horns now as when found by Marcus Polo § thirteenth century, The finest sapphires are obta: \ Every assistance possible will be rendered to see that you find the location of your requirements, but clerks are instructed never to urge you to buy. i€ i | | i | 1 | i i MEN’S SHOES | WORK SHOES ARMY OFFICER’S BOYS' SHOES Goodyear welts, fine dress,| U. S. Army last, heavy dur- DRESS SHOE‘S Sturdy and lasting— blacks and browns, English| able shoes— $3.90 At §1.95 or Blucher— $2 95 $2.95 Pair : MISSES’ SHOES Boys’ Genuine Goodyear of the better grade, rubber | welts— Very high-grade makes for SCOUT SHOES heels— 105 : At $2.95 $3.90 and $4.90 Another lot in— : 31 gemstones as pebbles the rivers. Scme sapphires from Py the ladivari star of six rays an sapphir | The aghesion of cement {0 iron that - gives strength to reinforced con { found by an expert to be ualike when cut opalescent are called mar Name “Bayer” on Genuine W 2] ~n-;-psn— a portion of inclosed iron a3 . g - ¥ ; a Eel 0 . v E M S FELT Ladies’ Oskords thrown out at At 69¢ Pair Unlimited assortments — limited prices ! Our veafs of age in active sertice in the At 50 c Pair - mppy Stk 3 Some pretty nice ones — s E L F Opposite Chelsea Savings Bank -SERVICE SHOE STORES $1.00 Pair S Saorty Lo e idcnt Tt e SLIPPERS and Pumps T e R “:‘";‘,fi e They are going rapidly. i | ized” shapes that were bought in “the open mar- ASPIR'N ket”—and look it. See our windows ! A COMPLETE SHOWING OF MEN'S, WOMEN'S AND CHILDREN'S 18 FRANKLIN SQUARE » g norwich, conv. il MALLOR Y “WHERE DOLI’ARS DO DOUBLE DUTY” = 4 {ing effect of mortar on- bricks. Bates, Rice and Hutchins Atdli9- » ‘Ladies’ ngh Shoes Infants Shoes i N "' = one o s and Emerson. Several hundred pairs Fine lot to go— . g i£ at ail bot ¥ for the s:a!c‘mcn: that ghere . o e les. Every Hat made expressly for us to who is ni fle -anctner Felt and leather soles A raft of 'em— 3, S L IPPE R S LOADD gDLng;:B:E gy it o nearly ninety tapee arc ninety To mak i : - 3 GAIN. private specifications — not stodgy, “standard- N At §1.95 At $1.00 Pair : MOCCASINS, AT 1; REGULAR PRICES, J MACPHERSON l THE STORE THAT IS NEVER UNDERSOLD. \ b 7 Take Aspirin only as tcld In eacl package of genuine Bayer Tablets of Asplrin. Then you will be following proved gafe by millions. lel ne : chances with substitutes. If you see OTHER STORES IN PUTNAM, DAMIELSON AND NORWICH, CONNECTICUT - H A I S gfi;:; Cithout” dear o *Cotde, SOUTHBRIDGE, GARDNER AND WORCESTER, MASSACHUSETTS : ‘s.m;*m;:z‘"‘fl, Limbaso and To: Pain. Handy tin boxes of twelve tab- lets cost few cents. Druggists also sell