Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, May 26, 1922, Page 9

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g 4 is any one to hear her rave | hich surround G ~—is'to him just the dally signal for un- | very considerable and, I think, incr arnessing the team and starting the | who. : chores. His work is dirty, hard, often sordid | o0- ‘fand defiling. He is compelled to pse his part of the.earth mainly as & means of livelihood. It is to him lomelhlnl to get three times three hundred and sixty-five Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, ‘meals from every year, and a-little some- to try a remedy for freckl€s with the hing over o pay ek i Words i : Sl ot “sont you"s enny andses i 8 s worth sneered at thé to whom a removes the freckles; while if it does but a primrose, It is hardly as much as|tain gi¥e you a clear com exion the ex- that to some practical farmers ' To many e is trifling. R imply gét an qunce of om » : 2 3 1 a- back:beat . with +in, te dirt.. - o ne — ; l l CT odmmdx::sx-fi,!;:y:& comes a time double strength — from any drugsist ? m E ORS ' when we sither are able or much care 8 den |and & few applications should show them to life their eyes, occasionally, to| you how easy it is to rid elf of £0 dook up to the hills whence comoth | iy etories that heckon fn the distance, - T Hi e homely freckles and get a beauti- | [ P‘l A N Sel'\fl “Wo admit, perfunctorlly, that we have | I know one such farmer, right among | (UL COmPlexion. Rarely is more than We are dmin‘ our of ce to m sofetimes noticed a eloud with & silver n one ounce needed for the worst case. P lining, but, in the maln, we've been oo g Be sure to ask the druggist for the| b dm th’ g bt oo o i e it | a0 rtanath Othine as i soeneth | the growmg d of both, the Merchants md dirt into dimes and half-dollars to pay {s 20ld under guarantee of money | [T much attention to imitation silver in the back if it fails to remove freckles. i o flle a itt presenSaalle ammathe -l e ] We don't gush over the besutles of na- a 3 days ot the ubiquitous auto. The last i’%E.E Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to' Remove E: SF g8 M ;% primrose by the river's.brim was nothing EE 'y % 2 £ it £ g fit ——HEREAFTER— “Only Royal Blue (Written Specially for The Bulletin) which he spends his life. He sees in the | tire so effusively as some, because e ’ of those trces wers aciuaily ilea by the ork o _herbago of the flelds only forage to feed]can see quite as plainly the hideous de- | Norway ' spruces. . structive greed of passing auto parties o A i his animals or weeds Wasting the richness | foFrltics of that same uature. We can't tor trer:. - who'not only stole the fruit by baskets £ close up to the Heart of | of the soil. He 18 apt: to regard the for-| ELcaly enthuse over her sliewed ISR Ll full; but broke off hay rigging loads ot owing as few _others do . ness, when we are the too frequent vic- - boughs in blossom time and serenely bore The verdure which greens the fow- |perhaps once @ year and drivels about [ Where chance passers note. only . the [he gave us bits of their history. with a shot gun and bull dog. Jands and the forests which crowd the | for wedry weeks the pracitcal .farmer | glowing cheek of the apparently perfect |grandfather planted them. Some were But what about evergreens? The; Bills are both fo the farmer just out-[sees every morning. and observes with[apple we, unfortumately, can't help see- |set so close to the house that, when they | might be regarded as reasonably mai Erowths of the Qirt in the working of |an eye to its weather meanings. The|ing the worm-caten and cankered core |had grown, their drooping branches ov- | from passing depredators: they a{e -m: within. er swept the roof and injured the shin- | ally fast-growing trees; they tend to Well, I've nothing harsh to say about |gles. ‘But, said he, ‘Mother dldn't want|an unusually graceful type of growth: this too general farmerish attitude . of | them cut down while she lived, and T|and many of them wWhen maturs and mind and soul. Because, you see, unlike | don’t want to cut them, now.’ needing- replacement, furnish valuabl Poet Popinjay and Gladys Gushaby, I've 4 s ann tor. oo | ests with a tolerating but not over sym- | ims' of her malicious tantrums. Having off their pillage. 3 e s o e | Pathetio. eve, a# grotwths using land fit [had to dig and manure the bole and o, TE R hasag Ao 1ol de ok ®pon her with quite as much sentiment- | 1OF Jittle else and capable only of sup-{plant the rose bush in it, we are not to to that old custom and set fruit trees by ° alism as moves the spring poet plying fuel or timber for domestic need. | be too severely blamed if Wwe always [ merely to have a.close-up of his el the wayside, unless the owner were pre- ,, < The sunrise which Poot Popinjay sces | {hercafter smell the mold above the rose. | lshed trees, his face lightened wp and |pared to camp under them, day and night, aVlngS tamp s Will Be Issued and no more “Gold STAMPS” will be given And so, though nelther the grandfather | lumber. Y 1 e (hroughy the Tl Thostor. | Gan | =77 Serv Belther the prapdinher |WRST, | L e ok ou may your “Royal Gold Book” with protected them, nor he who had cherished | 2nd the firs and the spruces and the ced- Nevertheless it is & fact that not 8l |them for his fifty years knew thelr name | &TS to choose from, all growing natural- - ROYAL BLUE SAVING STAMPS and redeem Il the visitor told him, these trees had |1y in New Enmgland soil. Al have marriage, Frederick B. Gates of Bast Hampton, and a daughter and son by her ’ second marriage, Mrs. Thomas ~Carroll and Witbur Phelpe of East Haddam. The 2 was held at her home Tucsda: i "Il SATURDAY IS SUBURBAN DAY AND FOR THIS DAY, AND THIS DAY ONLY, ] The May meeting of Nathan Hale Me- We have reduced every regular price morial chapter, D. A. R, was heid witn |§ WE OFFER SOME SPECIAL VALUES. HERE ARE BARGAINS WHICH WILL the regent, Mrs. Charles Russell, in' Had- Frowis 10 per wenit 4 20 pe ceat.. Thisis o it rriday ana yroved ineresting | | NOT BE DUPLICATED AGAIN THIS SEASON. JUST THINK OF THE SAVING and_enjoyable in a high degree. the first time in the history of this busi- B e ot one: @ IN PRICE ON THESE ARTICLES WHICH ARE ADVERTISED. ALL THIS SEA- grown into the love of three generations. | Characteristics in common, but with t P ° 7 Not only that, but they had lighted up|enoush differences to fit varying condi: im y 3 A the cammon place New England land. |tons of soll or season. The white pine is . . ) scape with a gleam of beauty and mystery | Probably the noblest of them all in stat- — 0 R i F ] oF INTENSE AGONY visible from miles away and irresist-|Ure and sturdy majesty. It is also one 3 thly alluring. of the quickest growers. But it issa pitehy fellow, and its dry fallen needles Go d Bo d ed 3t 3 e e 3 somotimen ink thas (ke o fnemers | DU S0V, nd e ey fulen | needis You can bring in your Gold Book and redeem it if ;1 have suftered intense Sgony from |of preceding generatlons had s keener | spruces and AfE are close seconds in cezema on my leg and other parts-of |sense of rural beauty than many of us, ven nl; al'tl b d i for o ron ey S OHeE AT ELOY | S S mnte e hotm, Baa, Lit{ beauty and graca’of growth. “Tven the only p paying the difference for a temporary reliet from other prepara- |tho old farmsteads which have endured | 2o (témarack), (hough not an ever- R e ey ey U Half Book, or Orie Book P ed_to_use PETERSON'S OINTMBNT, of growth, if planted thickly enough to e remium. VALUE sl 50 :‘rvfi more or less stately rows of trees discourage branchiness. J efore them, set by hands long since - i tirned to Gust. T have heard abjection to| 1 #m {014 by those who profess to know THE ROYAL PREMIUM PARLORS WILL BE CLOSED AS SOON AS “I've roadside tree-planting by those who as- - EMpOnioR oonnty *has less ever- ONLY AT says Peterson of Bultalo, “Just as 8in- | serted tnat the shade Aelayed the deying | 676D, elther native or planted, than any THE GOLD BOOKS ARE REDEEMED Sere and ongst as il ane. Yeatt | uor' tha highways n the spring or aft | OUheF County n the state” And I should Roval Bl s. ), ] inclined to say, as a mere guess, that PETERSON'S OINTMBENT, I .made up |€r summer rains. But in some states— | 2¢ J ue vings tam; Bop are Y ° my mind to give & big box for 35 Gerity |Massachusetts noticeably—the road- | New London county has quite as much Reg abl S P ks and ROY.'I Blue Thrift FOIde"’ ana't ar& still doing Tt 'as every arug: | makers are now setting out trees by the (120 fit only for growing evergreens on leemable in CASH, or MERCHANDISE AT YOUR OPTION. i n e country . | @8 any county in le state! Not onl; € l1a achine OP |15 eain i oms ouey | ovesnt e e v bt et |8 527 25 1, 2, Come to the Royal Offce and learn by Explanation Healing pomse Lknow that lts mIEDLY | rard the possible damage they might, do | tractiveness of the county's highways by Thrift Message this is to you. 24 FRANKLIN SQUARE $ everyone who buys box fhat it s |as serlous. And certainly nothing adds |Planting these conifefs along thelr sides, G rigidly guaranteed for eczema, salt |0 greatly to the beauty of country roads jSNG. 18 _Upwortunlly. for Increasing the 4 . SIETSES ind, wiecting 324 |15 s seninaiing of them i Ioec.| emuty of the lndeeapo- 1y crowning It 1 ROLAL BJ.UE SAVINGS STAMP BOOKS and THRIFT FGLDERS viles, ulcers, skin diseases, non-tillable and scrubby hill-tops with to appl. Xmas . s 5 plise. Uicers, & Meit OUGAREK | 0. ans. big) tarm whik'I knew inianr ¥ can be used to apply to your Club, or Savings Account EVERYTHING IN MUSIC fFsing, 2ueng, sealts and sumburn, and | T New ok phe | Tereremm Eroves. 43 ~ . return your money” Mall orders flled |former owners set cherry trees along the | In addlion to which acguments, effec. Start The Ro al Savi itT 1 Peterson Ointment Co., Inc., Buffalo, road fences. But this was before thetive with ome class of farmers, thers ' ; ving Habi d N ¥ is the argument of profit, effective with %y | y s api Lo ’ay 3 all classes. While present high prices | ) of lumber may be dircctly due to profit- . DON'T DELAY! eering by dealers, they are indirectly due b to its increasing sarcity, which has giy- en the profiteers their opportunity. -If THE ROYAL STAMP COMPANY there wasn't a single profiteer between Quoddy Hill and Puget Sound, the price | of . lumber would still be high and with | a tendency (o rlsg. Therefore, the man | with: a sizeable and growing grove of | white pines, say, has an investment which | is increasing in value by leaps and bounds. My own observations of white nowN | “TheBig Store wfih the litile prices ottt Vel ks 9-‘1—15-% s{ t—N Co ::::;f Z:fi!;:];flfl:: 1‘;?::: ;\;ryo“t;n treasurer, Miss Elsie ?ur&l The :flnu‘re- from a splinter m her finger. NORWJCH G : | lumbermen, OWN- | tary’s report was read and accepted, as moved, the sp¥ater proved to be < | rotree Wid" nn. ers of peripatetic sawmills Who g0 abot | was that of the treasurer. The recelpts | three-lghths of an meh long. | R e R t:\e dci?l:ntailb!é:yz:fl;rr o"}:(:y zts r0§ for the past year amounted to $638.39 | Charles 8. Cross has the mumps. [ hundreds of Norwich familie stan f e n find | and the expenses were $475.68. The bal- 3 who donated thel Tothin X L. fo toll Mo f 0 e . THIN meden | encs o iked SERITESE, m{:'w:awfi!erciwggn‘ln”‘ s fost i I:u]r:fl:”d.:: in ),:n:qfl(f: 3 that a properly planted and managet P o - white. pinie grove is paying ten per cent B est t the coliection, per annum in development. That's pretty EAST KILLINGLY b g ; &4 in all to sbout 200 bags g i e e g Residents here feel like compi = - Y 7} Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Blanding and a|the president of the Barti 00 pounds. At the Near Bast When public spirlt and Tove of land- |fjond and Mrs. Florence Freeman and | assoclation on the looks of th s “in New York city, each scape beauty and ten per cent. per annum | jaugnter Marion of New London called |No one ever saw it look bet is credited 75 cents for every i 5 unite in urging iree-planting, ism't the | n Virs. Alice C. Greensiit and,Mrs. Eth- |dots. {hid Spring. 1 of clothing it sends in. Norwich, e ace n Sale 1s ee 0 t nd A l t argument & faily good one? eiyn Gove-Saturday. lingly, will have to her credit the {] ) ) a ar r ln on THE FARMER. | Miss Flora Gove of Springfield, Mass,| The man who didnt mean to & ome sum of $4,125 in the nation- . is visiting her brother, Quincy F. Gove. |your feelings ought o be fed his own | wide campalen to clothe the sufferers of EAST HADDAM Mrs. Laura Smith has been suffering | medicine. ‘Near East. $ Mrs. Harxiet D. Phelps, widow of Ed- " 3 pe : win H. Phelps, died at her home in East | Haddam Sunday afternoon after twa i 2 7 months of failing health. Had she lived Gnti] Tuesday she would have been S3. She is survived by & gon by her first \ Ve ONE DOLLAR DOWN And any Refrigerator on our floor will be: S delivered to your home. Think of it— ness that we cut prices on refrigerators e rfiu;::vir‘h:é Z'flf:tnngnm::{fng e?‘t’:{; SON’S NEWEST MERCHANDISE. 2 w . D P. Fowler, Mrs. B, E. Wil- : for one single dollar, you can obtain the during May. Our sale usually comes Tesi i, Guy Veoort, Ts, Charien . Smith, Miss Lucy. Parker, Mrs. Henry GINGHAM STREET DRESSES— | IMPORTED GINGHAM STREET| M SSEQ ENVELOPE cuzml . il 3 \ means of saving many dollars by properly ::"’“t ‘A““:t Lst. Tfhe‘;;“ b “;““ to 2 B A e AP made in the newest styles— DRESSES—values to $10.00— EI{J‘BL‘JM MYBTYH £ . . wlfl‘o“ - Mias May Country nd Mr. and Mrs. preserving your food this summer — and ut one of these high-grade Caetoton Parkce were tm Middlstown Wea- SUBURBAN DAY $2.95 SUBURBAN DAY $5.00 RBAN 50c ¢ ST lNGTON ‘G. ne;?;%lm Parke recently purchased a . S‘ILK CANTON CREPE DRESSES for many seasons to come. ERATORS while this sale is on. new tractor which he 1o trying out, LADIES' AND MISSES’ SUITS— | COATS AND WRAPS—OChoics of | = —Light and dark shades— o e choice of any of our best suits | = any of our best Coats and Wraps{ SUBURBAN DAY $14.45 : 1o echool Monday last. which sold up to $47.50— which sold up to $49.50— 3 GURLEYVILLE mf, 4 b e Branisa and nis tamiy ot storrs|§ SUBURBAN DAY $25.00 | SUBURBAN DAY $25.00| winTe wasH sKIRTS—G Gabar. i have moved fxto <o south part of Geores OTHERS AT $19.50 and $2250 OTHERS AT $10.00, $16.00 ) K Fuse’ house, and $10. TS Mr. and Mrs. Charles Dodge were in Willimantic Wednesday. : SUBURBAN DAY $1.50 TRIMMED HATS—that were §5.00 E. A, Walker is home aiter undergoing & 3 NAVY AND BLACK STRA W : an operation for eppendicitis in the and $6.00, in white end & large | o0, ToniM SAILOR HATS — WOMEN'S AND_MISSES, TRIM. E Hartford hosphtal, l variety_of colors— : : ATS—$750 and $1000 District . Superintendent - Rev. W. H. ‘with white underbrim— km.‘, ,M.,,, hand -G Bath of Norwich held the first quarterly SUBlJRBAN DAY ”-35 conference here May I7th. Partial ar- rangements were made to supply the church here with a thedlogical student |l§ FLOWER WREATHS —that sold SUBURBAN DAY $1.97 | SUBURBAN DAY $4.95 eyan iversity. 5 SILK SCARFS—in Roman stripe - gz O e S oo eeks vacation |[§ 8 hioh as §200 and §225—mads SPECIAL 'Ad fancy colors, with dees siiic [l EENEEAS with his sister, Mrs. B L. Tucker, of of fine M and grasses— fringe, good and wide— £ P A New Haven. Z Leed SUBURBAN DAY 95¢ - Two-quart Galvanized SUBURBAN DAY $2.98 ] ket parties, the latest one being at Mr. ICE CREAM FREEZERS— $1.00 WOMEN'S TAILORED MUSLIN ‘cocoa. naflvhhu and candy were served, after which GOWNS—in white, flesh, blue games wers played. 7 Sunday services will be, held as usual and orchid— WOMEN'S MUSLIN aowns o some lace trimmed, broidery trimmed, in r.gum - extra sizes— ¥ at 10.45 o'clock next Sunday. Preaching RBAN 50c - SUBURBAN DAY $1.00 Designed to_meet the needs of a small fam- . - Tflm "fnvnhr is one of our most populs by the pastor, Rev. Leonard Smish. SUBU DAY . | WHITE MUSLIN PETTICOATS— Iy who wish Il but hi > ¥ und % aflnot,vo i gol The choir and the children are, prac- with d e of fine M iy, who peaiis, aripl Bt piohigpads eercg- fnane. o pct 0 Hoing, for, Ctaldren's daz. : deep ruffle of fine Hamburg | SUNGALOW APRONS—with dust ' bilte i Tl ;’:{,“.”’" ,“,,,, 3 o yith ine e | "A ‘few from here attended the Main [ TIE BACK BUNGALOW APRONS [ embroidery— g g 7 2l gy ":".,:?"&:."“ fo f1st o fimsommge | | oo WRpEe R ) SUBURBAN DAY 78 | SUBURBAN DAY 50c | SUBURBAN DAY $1.00 at i u i ; w Finished in oak n-finu Ilnlnn = ol fills the d 4 S LEFFINGWELL inches i led lini i 5 ior i Miss Mildred A. Swan and Frances ‘“zm 'm R“mfi' o .m_.nu m-/, w&.n'e enameled lining w.fh pfbblo cork in 'P A S LA P sulation and golden ocak finish, patented This Leffingwell Sunday. SPECIAL SALE PRICE i . 508 inches. wide 36, Mr. and Mrs. Mason F. Coggeshall of s 3 drain and trap assures cleanliness at all SPECIAL SALE PRICE Tradiig Cove were in Lefingwell Sun- 13.45 times. An excepptional value. No. 12-E ; > o : ¢ Miss Bisle Beard spent Saturday. at 3 This box is 44 idches high, 24/% inches wide. 539.95 g’f,‘:’,‘:‘,";“’"‘ Solepe B ouin g\l;ar i o D n D Regular price $28.75— Fred V. Amburn attended a dance at ® 3 : : c 2 Many Other Specials For This Day, Not Advertised Gales Ferry Saturday night. SPECIAL SALE PRICE SEE OUR WINDOW DISPLAY ! T At 50 b pwe led by Oranis “THE STORE OF GOOD VALU! L Rathbone. The tooio will be Crusad- stian F.m Matt. 13:

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