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WESTERLY - 7 Mre. George Woods of Westerly, who of A.. on Tuesday evening had a roll call ‘was driving a Chevrolet touring car onl |and about 70 responded. At the close of the White Rock road Wednesday morn- | the business meeting 3 ‘social time fol- igg 4t about 0, was unfortunate | lowed. - There were piano numbers by enough to have a thres year old child of | Edwaed J. Haggerty and Stanton Bur- Mr. and Mrs. John Sisson dart directly | dick; Dr. John Ruisi gave several vocal %orpes her path. The child did not look | solos; Clerk W: E, Martin read a short byt darted in frent of the machine and mnoq of the organization from 1901 to Whs kmocked down. The car was Im-11922 ° Brief talks wers made by Dr.| Just because you have mediasely brought to a standstill and|Samudl Webster, Charles Austen, Charles | for Yeats and. have “l"‘ the child was carried to the office of DI. | Davey, L. K. Burdick, Charles Orandall, ?l:fl:&'mmnh::‘ M H. Scanlon, by Mrs Woods where anl | W. p, 'Hall, Leo C. Nye; Edward W. Tay- | yore wu‘ dfo net thi examination was made, . No bones were | 1ox and James R~ Leahy. Frank Leete, |stay in this d: beoken. A brulsed lég st the knee WAS|Willlam Whitaker and Albert Marth You may have imetant = the only T on the child. The child | mads & hit with a sketoh emtitled You |and, as sgores of was more scared than huuruts. Wil oB Surprised, Refreshments wers |Tecovery by the use of this dn)u Qs Choais Y8 Soirs. Slowly AIonE | served by the social committee. y & v her I o B road and blew her horn e ¢ Wik gt i W2 home. radio station which Is in charge of Al- What might have poved » tatal aeel- [hore T Champitn, ong of Wesriris Lakt dant bocurted Tuesday 4.30 p. m. when |t - . operators, who saw serviee during James Maxaon, who is employed by the | ™ TPETEIOTE WO, AN e § Waesterly Light and Power company's|son 70 S0C > Sy plant as repair man was at Avondale re- ey & Dalring seme clectric light wire at the| A number of Westerly Bave re- | ¢ top of a pole. He noticed a wire which | ceived invitations to the wedding of Miss address t H. Scott, Hi Bad become loosened by the storm of | Thercsa Cooper of Washington, D. C.. ta |nad *ey? Seott meg Akron, Wonday night and was dangling in the [ Douglas Cleveland of = Detrott, Mieh., | you wm quiddy receive a sample r" wlr. He reached ovt and took hold of the | Which will take place at Washington [ Rubber Pad with il ¥ full dlrectlonl. wire and caused a short circuit as coming | Nov. 9th. Mr, Cleveland is the son of |obligation to purchase. Don't let rupture M contact with the ma wire, He re-[Mr. and Mrs, George Cleveland of De-|handicap you in the battle of life, but eived 2300 volts. John Burdick went|trolt, an@ his mother was formerly Miss | make this test today. ap the pole grabbed Maxson by the | Sadle Stillman of Westerly. elothes and Look him down the pole. But| Miss Jessie Bryson s attending Dean = the prompt work of Mr. Burdick he | academy at Franklin, Mase. might have been HFALTH DEPARTMENT HINTS tally injured. He Mrs. Orville Stillman, who underwent ON FOOD AND DISEASE was hurried to the r's office where |at operation at New London, is improv-| It is noea—ry to eat proper toodl to 92 received treatme His hands were | ing, live a normal life. Proper food consists badly burned and they were dressed by C. W, Grace of Baltimore, Md., is Vis-[of all the essentials necessary for a the physician who attended him. iting his sister on Granite street. normal physical Oecasionally Jerome Shea of Smith street on Wed- Mrs. Willams of Amiston, Ala., is vis- | however, the lack of proper substances the noon hour at the C.|iting friends here this week. -Mrs. Wil- |in the food consumed by an individual Cottrell Sons Co. machine plant on|llams was & former resident of Westerly, |may cause & physical defect or the Mechanic street, was pitening quoits with S presence of contamination may cause wome of the fellow workmen, He was ~ disease, says a bulletin from the bu- sruck in the forshead accidentally by 1ONINGTON reau of preventable diseases of the atate % quoit and & two inch gash was cut . department of health. over his right eye. The cut was & deep W‘I‘ha funeral services for Chandler N. Contaminated foods are usually caused one. Shea was taken into the oftice | Wayland wero held Wednesday after-|pby the neglect of cleanliness in prepas- where treatment was given by a physl-|noon at 2 o'clock in Calvary Episcopal|ing food for market or at home. Typhoid, vian, Both men are apprentices at the | shurch in Stonington. Rey. W. ¥. Wil-| diphtheria, septic sore throat, and other Twotrell machine shop. x? 3 it diseases, can be caused by milk contam- Hame, rector of Calvary -church, off-|i0lg™uin™ b Trne oF these diseas Wednesday evening Mr. and Mres. T, [clated. Rev, Frederick Sanford, Ston- s 3iddl ¢ Pott s Y 1 S es by persons handling the milk; usual- W. Biddies of Fotter Hill entertained & [ington; Rev. Charles Mason, of Scara- [ "3 SEReEi RV eiotly S MER: WAL tew friends und neighbors at his home dale, N. Y. former rectors here, and |17, FVirc®aied shows the persohl who of Mr 81st birthday. {Rev. D. C. Stome, pastor of the Second was enjoyed at wis o large birthday cako with candles. lof the deccased, Music was enjoyed. Mr. Biddles was|present. well remembered by his many friends. The 7 o'clock. There | Congregational church and close friends |5ick aRd that he was respansible for the outbreak of disease in families comsum- ing the milk. Occasionally the person 5 causing the infection was found to be 1 1hl"x'lr"r‘ei were Willlam P. Bind- well, but a carrier of disease germs, 0ss, Nobert L. Burtch, Frank Dod : U-mvhtn,'uhout ui f"l mrfn adofu -u.:‘n and’ James Stivers. The honacery m‘; ":(r:luuli of typhold fever or diph: A1 0¢ Westerly, motored to Mops Valley | &7 Were D. B. Spalding. K, B. Bradley, Celery, lettuce, radishes, and other veg- O i femer oounl! | thers | Thomas Wilkinson - and ~ Cornéllh Bl etabios e emey st e 404 ol thotigh W odnestay sventhg. State oftioers of ail | Crandail. all ‘of Stoninkton. Tntermemt|is canse considurably typhold fover snd the lodges of Rhode Isiand made the|Was In Stonington cometery. 'The bus-|nerhape did, tn the case of farms uAlE PR %% A supper was served | N°S8 places in the borough were closed {human excreta for fertilizing purposes. acies to about 200, This was | Wednesday afternoon from 140 to 3 b |Fertilaing in that manier should not -~ m., as a mar of respect o 6 late ¢ the meeting. Mr. Wayland. o be done, when the products are eaten The Sens of 8t George emtertained raw. No case of typhoid in Connecticut Wednenday eveming the clubhemse at|in recent years has been found to be Wednesdsy ovening in Stillman hall | Wequetequock and known as the We-|caused by celery or other vegetables About 50 members were present. Re-|quetequock Community elub, was ablaze|eaten raw. freshments of sandwiches and coffee Were | with lights and decorations for @ Hal-| The cause of physical defects by food erved, followed byea smoker, were among those Feneral services for Charles Anson | Ghosts and pumipkin moonshines, and lark wers hold Wednesday afternoon at |red ears of corn were hidden among the ? o'olock at his home, 23 Lester avenue. |decorations. The masqueraders appear-|tamin question, is, however, by no means Wembers of the G. A. R. and Budlong (¢4 With costumes both comical and|settled at the present time. There are otiet corps attended {n a body, Rey, B, |Pretty. At the end of the last dance|apparently three definite vitamins judged Hatfisld, pastor of the First Baptist |#l unmasked. Refreshments were|by conditions produced in animals by shurch, offielated. Burial was in River | Served. ladk of ceftgin f00ds in the Mt O :the BUNE cometety. A Wallewe'sn porty was gven by|S0imals. These: vitamins are designated . Nina Cirele No.'148, D. of 1. Wednes- |4 By and C An interesting paper ‘hag been dlseev- .. "o o ot W K. of/ C. Nome. on) M Vitsmin 'A. is absent from a food, ared by Thomas Glyon, an Erie engineer, Mot mm‘" ookt dasbihos ware “w'“ the person will stop growing and de- ,f,.,“,, N“\nl’\['"l.:t:‘!::d\‘h-?-ll.':foz)\?ulrl::lkl:: and whist and dancing were features of | CIOPS Tickets. Vitamin A. apparently is sumed by an individual of certain sub- stances known as ‘vitamins.” The vi- the _evening. absent from the diet, the body becomes 1.::":""“‘“ i‘:’d‘Mg“"{d{fi‘;"“d"‘.f“cz?:; : P'rh!lly the town schools will be closed gmflnq‘l—)\lgr;:m:;?\h:‘x;s?lio\u - fan wPle between the members of the broth- | L0, AW the teachers to attend the thood and the officers of the road; a te. convemtion: i Naw TR The function of Vitamin B. 18 to pro- v omn mote the growth of the body. Its ab- lam F. “f":fl“fl"v v, of Bridge-| nce will result in peuritic conditions v‘vn‘n‘mmfi u’ t;an.rerms. Mr. and|.ng o disease called beri-beri. This vi- Wiy Pilins ety in Boston |1amin deficiency at one time was quite the difficulty satisfactory to both parties a few days, b :\!;ldelop:e:{dm x?“:&;;an':ifiggmpmm'he: iiZe strike must never bo resorted 0 If] Funeral services for Mrs. Ellen . digt cxclusively. Beri-beri was preval- pomsible to avold i [Ledwith were held Tuesday at St.lony i the Japiness navy wntil about | This constitution was written by J. B.| Mary’s church. Rey. Purtill of Wese- 1885 due to the diet of polished rice. In Samtec when about 17 years oid. Mr. 1 Interment was in St.|yggp barley was substituted for a part Saftec is making his home with Dr. and emetery, The bearers of the polfshed rice end beri-beri practi- \tord of Greenman s Caffey, Thomas W. +|cally disappeared from the navy. The Jodge mentioned [ John Curtin and James Gilmore, Vitamin C. has been found necessary was the parent lodge of all the brake-| Mrs. Charles Cushman, who has beea in foods to prevent scurvy. Incidental- men's organizations. Mr. Santee was a at her home on Diving street, is lm~'ly. the growth of the body is diminished harter member and is the only surviv- | proving. [if food lacks this third vitamin. mg member. Mrs. Gilbert McClurg has returned| Above all the above diseases may be Granite City eamp, Neo, 9159, M. W.|ITom a trip to Hartford where she at-|termed food defiiciency, except xerop! !‘en‘d@d & meeting of the Mayflower so-|thalmia, which involves a bacterial in- clety. féction, but the food fnust be deficient in Vitamin A. for the condition to oecur. MYSTIC Fortunately, most foods contain one or more of the vitamins, Sherman and The funeral services of Mrs. Laura|Smith in their recenxt! \'o!umewog “The Greenman Allyn were held at her late|Vitamins” say that It we conkider the i itive uirements “we ma; "ou; home on Library street, Wednesday at|ine eaist tusce of food aneordig. to tho 230 p. m. Rev. J. G. Osborne, pastor|nutritional significance of each, some- of ‘the Union Baptist church, officiated. w!;aicas xfouo‘::: b 2 = rain products—econom sources Interment was in Elm Grove cemetery. of ‘energy snd proteit, dut not satistac- The funersl services of Miss Cassle [tory in their mineral and vitamin con- Winifred Hewitt were held Wednesday | tent. $ afternoon at the home of her parétits,| 2—Sugars and fats—chiefly signtf- Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin P. Hewitt. Rev. |cant from the nutritional standpoints as B. U. Hatfleld, of Westerly, and a for- |supplcmentary sources of energy, al- mer pastor of the Union Baptist church though some animal fats are important here, officiated. Interment was in Elm |sources of Vitamin A. Grove cemetery, 3—MMeats, including fish and poultry | The Thames Past Grand assoclation|—Fich in protein or fat, or both, but of the Rebekahs will meet today [In general, showing the same wmineral | (Thursday), with the Mystic lodge. This|2nd vitamin deficiencies as do the grains. will be an all day’s session. Delegates| 4—Fruits and vegetsbles—varying will be present from Home lodge, Gro- |ETeatly in their protein and energy val- ton, Osprey and Orlent fodges of P& |ues but véery important as sources of London, Hope lodge, Norwich, Wijli- | mineral elements and vitamins. all be appointed to walt| .. spon rs, and overy available | yirg sooession made and endeavor to settle dies on the social committee have plan- |6¥8Y, protein, mineral elements and vi- ned a dinner and about 200 are expect-|t2mins and possessing unique efficiency’ ed to be present. &8s 2 growth-promotion food.” Mr. and Mrs. Henry Haven will cele-| 1N brief, most grains have Vitamin brate the 25th anniversary of their,A- 82d B. present. ¥ marriage at thel h Most fats and oils, with the exception Dies 8 Wi hame Con Wllow | M e i peanut, Mrs. Walter Cunes of Plottsville, X, |33 cocoanut oils, have Vitamin A. pres-| » N-lent. Vitamins B. and C. ave absent. | ) | is the guest of relatives here. i et Tiiiotes: are Mawt, | is to be found in a museum in Fra Fish usually has H!Amln B. present, although it is of American origin. Itmea. a0 4 B ViR 4. Tesy slo i WOODMANSEE o s% by ¢ o Srratta"as & whole contain Vitamin €, range jul range peel GIFT SHOP SERINUS BLADDER TBOUBLE | ovatom oii thuee vhaming o o0 2Pples A "Could not stand nor sit and was tum. Vegetables in general contain ome or dandelions, caulifiower, carrots, cab- {bm:: mid 1had mflamu\m of the | bage, fresh string beans, contatm all Tried Foley xuney mx. .m, Tmbroved ai | three vitamina. ;y Pnu as fl wm u". many 1) thlfllk contains atl:3 three vitamins, even e an as in m; 01 it ma; skimmed, dried dan;u'ofm operation.” Eladder ’.mm- e o o ine ) d crea: e THE OPIE BUILDING | Eoiey Riner Piha Sivd ik refle. s | mume o Jutiermile snd crsam. now apparently contain 2l three wi- however, lacks Vitamin A. and C., be. B e — . ¥t VAN B \ The largest mewspaper In the world |PTSERt to @ slight degree. e | DUt tomatoes canneéd, raw, or dried, and out from intense pain” wti itaming, and of the ¥ IN WESTERLY Hentr Willams, Tarkio Mintana. " Ths | dandelis . vl a8 about Fole, Practically all nuts contain Vitamin B. NOW LOCATED IN. condensed. | Butter contains only Vita: ney troublé demand prompt treatment. 8 Eggs e ——————————cgy | tamins, but the much exploited_yeast, Incorporated 1869 AUTOMOBILE VA!;‘TI BHEINEAGE WILL HUBT GRAND LIST Material shrinkage in (s » ation of automobiles that v red on machines the last year. The 106th consecutive dividend of this bank will be pay- ]| icedye, sirinkace may be oo large able on and after November 15th, at the rate of four per ||licve that it wil amount to s much that it will be for the grand cent. & year. list to show a this year. In the Jast m.ud list there was a total of over l:fl.l‘;o” value in mo- r vehicles, but 6 past year auto- | mobile list prices have droppéd off 25 Deposits made on or before November 1st will draw inter- est from that date. CllechuldLibertyLotnBodsu— cepted as cash. . We welcome new accounts; and our customers are urged baflmmforuhfommwm&y “’M ASK FOR ONE OF OUR mwsmzmnm:s The Yakima Indians still thrash their wheést with & band n! voniee. lowe'en plrt) There were hlack cats,|is due to the abuefice in the food con- | PRI mantic and Jewett City lodges. The la-| S—Milk—important as a source of en- " IN THREE SHADES: White- Perfumed with Orange Blossom Odor “From the Flowers to Yeu” Try this Box for 24¢—Note the Results o e e —— e S—— t———— Why pay 75¢ for your first box? - Let us prove its merits now. After you have used this one box you'll never be without Orange Blossom Face Powder. That’s why we can afford this costly metbad of proving its value to you. Look For the Only OneBox to Each Customer THIS INTRODUCTORY, SALE OFFER EXPIRES SATURDAY EVENING, OCT. 28, 1922. No Coupons Accepted After This Date Which ENTITLIS YDU to a FULL SIZE 75c BOX OF ORANGE BLOSSOM FACE POWDER UPON PRESENTATION OF THE COUPON AND 24c ONLY AT E. B. PATTERSON New London, Conn. e ] e Coumn Tomorrow Introductory Sale Limited to 3200 Boxes Only o Thé wealth of its experience and manufac- turing resources enables Packard to endow the Single-Six with striking superiority. More than that, it establishes a basis of production that now places the Single-Six within reach of the greater group which asplres © Packatd owna'shxp It remamed for Packard—-wuh its mastery of costs and production—thus to dem- onstrate the tevoluncmary value that can y » o3 T gl T T