Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
well as séts of onlons, well hardened let- tuce and cabbage. These are all hardy o frost-and even if a Snow comes after planting there will be little if any harm dofie. i GeET moae €ces i : | - e e | DieTon08e CooLTay Feeos Wirthmore Buttermilk Mash Will Produce More Eggs adopted by one county - honticultural agent. A sugply of plant food eamly this The high grade fish and meat scraps get those extra eggs. It’s free from AGRICULTURAL INTERESTS ground bone the amount required is about five pounds.” The man who has & home garden may well start his work this weel. If he had his land ploughed last fall he is a step ahead of his nelghbor who otheryise mus: give a thorough plowing or spading now. The next step is to' put 15 to 20 pounds of lime on each sguare rod and to harrow it thoroughly in three or four times over. Then apply an equal amount of fertilizer. Use 1-S-4 fertilizer of the land has been manured ; other wise 4-8-7 fer- tilizer, Broudcast and harrow in about IME TO ®IX LAWNS AND GARDENS NOW 4% is the tme to put fertillzer on 58 a1 ex Those who spread 5ls mafure over their lawns during © winter have alresdy noticed that their er and is of o Good results, ecured on land that was Iying small quantities - Dver ; i / ' 2p0.000 . owners dpring will produce larger apples this fall and will also lay down a bigger et of flower buds to insure next year's crop. The treatment of an orchard one year oft- en has its greatest productton. He advocates cultivation as one of the best and most ' economical ways of handling the bearing acple orchard, when = careful experiments experiment station wn that In a decided |half of the fertilizer ;olthenhputmfila O(h;r loos ned with fertilizer or furs: GHs Alfalfa, or any fif..hel‘ fille . vo ‘of the plants which | half st the bottom of each farrow In|geromeq Tith feriilcer or momure on the lawn of fertilizer used. Ni- | which seed 1s to be planted, covering the plowing of the strips between the rows should be begun now and the strips should be harrowed every ten doys un- til midsummer at which time they should be sown to a clover cover crop, Ome Pm-@ua University in a two year test received 25 eggs per bird more on Dried Buttermilk than on Liquid But- termilk (Bulletin No. 258, Nov. 1921), over the fertilizer with enough soil so that the seed will not be burned by com- ing in direot contact with #t. “VarjefTes of vegetables which may be of the country of soda with ground bore have a in white clover with um suiphate tends to give fine grasses. Nitrate of I 22T s aod M Iohate should ba | planted in this section d ¥ : 2 - 4 ™ = Tate of two o three pounds |about April 15 are peas. carrots, bests ;’;fi"fio’fi L getige IR R ) § Dried Buttermilk contains all- the Don-e BROTHERS while in the case of |onions radishes, lettuce, spinac] the tree. leaving the trecs standing in J natural Lactic Acid and Vitamines of MOTOR CAR strips of grass 8 to 10 feet wide. \ Liquid Buttermilk and does not be- I Under the trees fertilizer or manure Y should be applied. If nitrate of soda or ammonium sulphate is used it should be broadcasted evenly in mbout a week from the present time which will be ap- come raneid or moldy, eep Wirthmore Buttermilk Mash be- Fifth Avenue Millinery proximately & fortnight befora the blos- soms open, over a circle covering the cn- tire surface under the trees and extending out two or three feet beyond the spread of the branches. Rain will wash this r your hens in self-feeding non- waste hoppers, and in addition feed one qu.ct of Wirthmore Scatch Feed to each 25 hens in the morning, and into the soil. If manure is avaliable us about 400 pounds of stable manure or 50 pounds of hen manure to each larze tree. In either case, two or three times during the season the grass growing in the strips should be mowed and left on the ground. . In the plowed area cultiva- tlon 1s all that is necessary, as the roots there are not large enough to take up much nourishment “This method of bined with fertilize theroughly tried o stration orcl in the afternoon all they will clean up. Valuable Feeding Instructions—Free Write to St. Albans Grain Co. CHAS. M. COX CO. Wholesale Distributors Boston, Mass, At Pasnik’s Low Prices We buy sample Millinery and sell them at one-half of the price. We don’t wait until the end of the season to reduce the prices, NOW, RIGHT NOW, WHEN YOU NEED THE GOODS, WE SELL AT LOW PRICES. LADIES’ SILK | PIPING ROCK | Heavy Taffeta LINED THE LATEST | LADIES’ SILK POLO COATS | LADIES’ HATS DRESSES $10.50 $1.50 $10.50 e e e R 2z ST. ALBANS GRAD¥ CO. Manufacturers (M-1) St. Albans, Vermont lml\»u i e more generally chardists who year. The early & er will help on the tres. Don't apple trees! They as do human beings and the -suceesst orchardist is one who supolies them w they need when they need it. Association of America, according to an officlal annduncement recently. made by retary F. L. Houshton of Brattleboro, thoroughly rub In some oxide of zinc or carbolized vaseline, but mever put this on just before the horse is to g0 to work as it may only gkaravie the scratches if mud clings to the less. vt All registered animals carry besides a registered number a family name usualiy indiceting the ancestral bloodlines. As 3 LOCAY, HOLSTEIN BREEDER SELECTS A FARM NAMS TIME TO PRESERVE EGGS E N Five Stores—Nor- “Ledyard” is the trade m: tifying the various breed- IN WATERGLASS - THE FASN"( C s wich, Willimanti has been reserved excl ts of the country trade | ap, pest ttme to put down 6ges iw wat- is 2 e B o Ketlong Fial of names are reserved by the Associ- = 54 Riive basa 4put e WONDERFUL SELL FOR LESS D'"'“g{,“ ”‘;‘ % ation for the exclusive use of breeders, | érglass is now here. Bggs have been “puc nam, Westerly. Thus, an animal can always be identit inal birthplace. down” by home: but there is no method yet discover better than W Bvery Hol- named Pabst Clover Bloss must come from the Pabst Stock Farm of Oc- owoe, Wis. In a like manner an- ul and cheap. eggs are plent imals carrying the prefix “Ledyard” will | Waarglp § ps silijils of soda and | jin future be recognized as coming |its effect is to coat over the egg shell and {from the Hail’herd of Norwich, Conn. ! fill the pores 5o t | . The farm name is a good advertisement, ally sealcd and right qual It marks the farm home and the [lace of ess. It dignifies the business and 1§ conn eases the value of the property. It 4 B | shows o pride In the management and direot ding to ns Reid as good as fresh ezgs removed a year later. It is not w fosters love of trdftion. A good. farm |keep. them in waterglass more than a name can be sold with the business. | year, but they can be used for most pur- Certaln localities in the east have become re during the year and DELIVEREDR THE JORDAN AUTO COMPANY 1029 MAIN STREET, WILLIMANTIC, CONN. _—___O_—_______ will hold 15 dozen eggs; this quantity|about two weeks after being removed will require the amount of solution sbove | from the waterglass, provided they are described. The eggs should be placed in | kept In & cool place : the waterglass so that those at the top are covered by at least two {nches of the | vquia. The fars should be covered to prevent evaporation and they should be stored in 2 cool place. They must not be allowed to freeze, however, as freezing will crack open the eggs and make them unft for use. Bzgs will remain in good condition E ° ; us”bectu\se ‘:zrcnme{r “X’n’?"d the g in the hou: Sedan, $1555 Coupe, $1395 = Touring Car, $965 Roadster, $330 stinctiveness wi goes w e nam- Panel Business Car, $1060 Screen Business Car, $965 aster Costume Accessories |- : WARNS AGAINST SCRATCHES ON HORSES’' LEGS The following advice is given on con- Z. and preventing ecratches oa rses’ legs, & trouble which is more prev- alent in because of the mud’ that clings (o the legs, making the skin cracked and sore and sometimes causing bleeding to develop without being producer -and should n fiye daye oid. It is Tess than 24 hours old, & times impracticable. O hould be used. Washing placing them in waters pragtice, because the wa hat, and the gloves beyond reproach. There is no place better fitted to supply all these dress essentials than The Boston Store, a film from the outside of makes it more rioration. orus and. llable to dete- Infertile eggs are better than If one VEILS AND VELLINGS AMONG THEMORE STAPLE oration has become insolvent or ls &l solved so that a procceding sgainst i would bé' fr it is not necessary for - & creditor to ¢ & judgment agalust it, and issue an exceution thereon befors proceeding to enforcs ths lability of the stockholders. Judge Avery cites numercus suthorities is aiso seemg to be the position supreme court in Lewisshn $ Conn. 575.592. nes so_irril makes the horse an ters of a quart mixed Wwith Water that e cooled is preferable. be stirred unt habitual kicker. The way to prevent scratches from rting, is to keep the legs dry and clean d' to keep the horse well shod 1f scratches develap they may be cured b bandages on the lezs at t covered with dry bandages. In the rning remove the bandages and rub with sulphur. When the horse is nding in the stable during the da: DENIES KING'S DEMURRER AND MOTION TO EXPUNGH Defendent's demurrer and motion to ex punge in the sult of Charles R. Buv share hoiders agent, et al, vs John T. King. et al of Bridge:ort has been overruled Judge C. L. Avery of the superior c and the motion to expunge denied. The suit has been brought to comy the defendants to pay over to Bridgep: and Danbury Electric Co. $189,600 unpald subscriptions to the capital st of the company. In his memorandum, Judge Avery says: The principal coint urged in support of the domurrer is that there is no allegation the complaint that the plaintiffs have covered a judgment against the defendant corporation or that exedution of suc: judgment has been returned unsatisfied In paragraph 8 of the compldint, ho ever. it is allesed that the Bridgeport a Danblury Electric Co. has abandoned business and neglected to wind up its af- fairs, to keep up its organization 2nd For those who prefer effects these will be found very at- tractiv e 25¢c TO 75¢ A YARD READY-TO-WEAR AND DRAPE VEILS Stunping noveities wil he most in years. A clean earthenware j: suitable containgr, Af @ s the most be found beautiful we have The desis: OVERRULES MOTION TO CITE IN ANOTHER CO-DEFENDANE Motion to cite in Loomis & Nettietos Co. as co-defencants in the . suit of James W. Hillhouss et &l of Willl~ mantic vs Glosue Duca. et 2l of New Lon<, s have cl charming sult— $1.00 TO $3.50 EACH TWO-TONE SPORT HOSE ONLY 61.00 All the mewer ehades will be found in thess pretty silk and cotton Stockings. They are worthy rivals of the high says in hs memorandum Judge : that i sppears from the application that: the Loomis & Nettieton Co. a8 trustes, holds first mortzage upon the PrOperty: er: CUT FROM STEER BEEF | BEST TENDER | ROUND STEAK ‘described in FRESH, LARGE BROWN iced silk bosiery. TWO-TONE SILK HOSE NATIVE GATHERED gleoted to call in or demand the said un- | gage was §50,000, of which $48.000 wasi » mpany | paid when the mortgags was sxecuted ONLY $125 Pound Zsc baid stock subdription, that the company | puia, shen the mortsage was sxec : the balance stages of const ing.erected. and that each and was to be made u waivers of 1 bullding and p turnished to sa for a long thme has been and still Is insolv- ent and is wholly without property other than said subscriptions. ‘While the recovery of judgment o the return of execution unsatisfied s, ! general, an essential prerequisite before creditor can maintain a bill n equ agaist a stockholder to enforce a itch Stockings which demand for Spring extraordinarily low price should commend them to you. on_of the bullding be- Dozen 31c FRESHEST MEADOW- BROOK CREAMERY STRAIGHT SLICED FINE CUTS CHUCK Roast Beef, 1b. 16¢ Your costume, formal or informal, depends not alone on itself for its effect, but de- mands that the hosiery shall be correct, the veil of a style harmonious with suit and EASTER GLOVES HERE’S A SPECIAL EASTER FASHIONED SILK MOSE ONLY $225 - SHAD ¢ NOVELTY NECKWEAR ders Uability, yet he great weight of | was not o benef which fit a:;m?::gs —wt.'?i For your chu*(\{nALUE B lb 39c x‘mmty uamy ti ‘e that when a corn- | and woul s—x,xammarnrmh-:mflg.-.. this price ws have both black | Vestees, with cufts to match, will | will need 3 FINE LEAN POT The Shad season is in full |* UmR’ s n priority over payments and colors be the thing this Spring, and they B, MW have sccurca R Beef. Ib. 10 Piles ? P L O _ of these kids . 2 : SOME VERY SPECIAL VALUES | Tin ronms. omed closely by the 1t~ | regular $2.00 valuo—ail color oast Deef, Ib. 10c | swing. During the past Have You es ? e SWIFT’S SILVERLEAF E two-tone embroidery, and will sell AT 8250 Fashion does not confine herself to in all the rainbow ng, and with them 1 glove hose with fine hose much satis- effectively. best number: e you white, either, but indulges in a riot of color, gingham being used very Here are some of the them for this little price— SPECIAL $1.59 STRAP WRIST AND GAUNTLET GLOVES Best, Tender Shoulder STEAK,Ib.... 17c week, the Mohican Com- pany bought 13,219 pounds BRAND, PURE LARD, 2 Ibs. ... 25¢ Dr. Leonhardt’s HEM-ROID will re- lleve any form of Piles—quick action in even old stubborn cases. No ting—no greasy salves—a harm tablet that: removes the cause. Money bundred doTars in sed to purchase ad-+ a fire which g destroyed a small He owned by Mr. y Sunday dweiling on L of Shad from Crisfield, Md., and Mrs. George LACE COLLARS baek If not satisfled. Lee & Osgood. These styles have mads a place for FRESH For Suits and Dresses, In 2 larg > o8 io . e GENUINE PHOENIX s1LK HosE | vaner o Fie 2ot St Selgns | ez et e v B EOWT L e POTATO $1.20 TO $285 $150 TO $3.50 both Suede and 4 Tk LARGE, ROE B By woman knows that j o e 2 vems | pumiTaN coLLaR AnD cure Ty FOR FRICASSEE 3 I 25 Chips, package 15¢ E ASTER SHOES Dainty little round Collars, with ;l;rstgeswssr EVENING GLOVES FINE LEAN CUTS ’ cuffs to match. Just right for the round neck dresses and sweaters. We have them in many colors as well as in lace and white linen— 50c TO $3.50 NOVELTY VESTEES ‘The variety ls very great in both colors and In white, Lawn, Ging- ham, Linen, and Laces belng the chosen materfals. For sport suits, and dresses they are a negeasity. $1.00 TO $350 SILK AND ALPACA SCARFS Stunning and novel effects have been obtained, the Roman Stripe designs being remarkably beautiful. Plain colors, too, will be found. For sports wear the Alpaca Searfs are in great demand just now— $350 TO $5.00 p—— VEILS AND VEILINGS Veils must follow the trend of the millinery. In consequence there are many novelties this season. Among the newer ones will be found many novelty meshes, fvith chenille dots and figures in contrasting col- ors, among them belng Rust on Black, Henna on Copénhagen, Jade on Black, Periwinkle, Flame, Sand and Taupe— §0c TO $100 A YARD will need soms I will wish the lat Blue Ribbon Brand JELLO, pkge. . 10c All Flavors CORNED BEEF,Ib....... 7c HAMS Best Sugar Cured Armour’s Star, Swift’s Premium, F. A. Ferris, Adolph Gopels 8 to 10 Ib. average Pound.35¢ ENJOY Hot Cross Buns Hot Every Afternoon PLENTY ON HAND THURSDAY AFTER- NOGON FOR EARLY FRI- DAY MORNING BREAK- FAST. 15¢ Dozen Large, Fresh, Sugar Coated HIGH IN QUALITY — LOW IN PRICE BEAUTIFUL BUCK SHAD, bb. .... 15¢ FRESH EASTERN SLICED Halibut, Ib. ... 35¢ purchased thesé gloves, in whi h beaded decorati, EVAPORATED MILK, can.... 19¢ CONFECTIONERS’ SUGAR, 3 Ibs. 25¢ . CAULIFLOWER 25c and 30c Each FINE GREEN MOUNTAIN POTATOES 15 Lbs. Peck 39¢ FRESH | Steak Cod, 1b. . 16¢ FRESH CAUGHT Croakers or Red Bass, Ib....... 10c SMALL CLAMS, 2 qgts. 25¢ 'WE HAVE MANY SNAPPY AND ATTRACTIVE. STYLES, IN ALL LEATHERS, IN EITHER OX- FORDS OR PUMPS. ALSO A COMPLETE LINE OF MEN'S PLAIN AND SPORT’ OXFORDS, IN THE LATEST SPRING STYLES. ABLEMAN'S SHOE STORE 310 MAIN STREET Ni s | LAEAR THE NEW UMERELLA Why not get a good one? And when getting a good one, why not get one which is pretty and stylish. ‘We have just received a large shipment of women's colored silk umbrellas of highest grade. The Amber Ring handles as well as the leather loop styles are again in demand, and many rich and artistic designs have been produced— $6.75 TO $14.00 SUITS—ONLY $4.95 y are ail Step-in Chemise style, i we have them in white only. dainty ment and comfortable aifferanrt Braties FANCY SILK HOSIERY $3.50 TO $450 P e—ciocked hose—iace . teh hose—a tremend- ous varte some of the prettiest MISSES' MERCERIZED STOCK- INGS—43c TO 63¢ 1 ed, and in the English 3 & one style ack, white, cordovar, grey and sand color. WOMEN'S GLOVE SILK VESTS $2.00 AND $3.39 pink. white and azchid . bodice or band top styles. ones at $3.00 and embroid- ered ones at $3.39 IN BLOOMERS TO MATCH $3.39 NOVELTY GLOVE SILK UNION PN OB