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DMWOTMD TO «» WJTOL* OOMMUVin—MOmM* MUM OB LM8M VoL XV. No. M. WATSRTOWN, CONN, AUGUST 3, TWO DOLLAR* PER YIAM,

SPECIAL TOWN MEETINO I RETIREMENT OP PRESIDENT •TATE HIGHWAY NEWS ' LITCHFIELD WINS AT OOLP CALLED FOR AUOL 7th Road conditions and detours hi this Watsrtownt, However, tecures the The local selectmen have issued a I section of Connecticut made neces- Greatest Number of Points in the call for a special town meeting to be - Wisconsin, which has long excelled WHO'S WHO THIS WEEK sary by highway construction, repairs Two Matches and Gains the held in the Town HalL August 7, at in agricultural education, gave Dr. and oiling announced by tbe State Hariey P. Roberts Cup 8 p. in., for tbe purpose of distasting C. L. Beach to Connecticut, and the Highway Department as of July 25, The Litchfleld Country club golf are as follows: the advisability of installing traffic retirement for ill-health df President Hemlnway Klimpke is spending Mrs. John A. Buckingham of De- team won tbe second match between signal UghU in town. Acting on a Beach is a loss that will be con- a vacation with his parents at their Foust street is visiting at the bbme Route No. 3—Waterbury-Mlddle* Watertown and Litchfleld Saturday petition, contacting the names of fessed, not alone by the thousands summer home in Keesevllle, N.Y. of Dr. John H. Rose ln Brancbport. bury road and Sunnyslde avenue un- on their home course, 16 1-2 to 28 1-2 over 20 legal votersMn the town, the der construction, short detour. Wa- points, thus having a margin of IS of youiig men and women who have Rev. F. B. Whitcome and family N. Y. selectmen were compelled by law to terbury-Milldale, Soutblngton Moun- points, but this was not sufficient to studied under htm at the big school who have been spending tbe past Rodney Chase of tbe Thomaston tain is under construction, shoulders overcome the 26 point margin that issue the call. The signers of the month at Ashland, N. H., have re- road is visiting friends at Saratoga near Mansfield, but by the Intelligent not complete. Ridgefield-Danbury the Watertown club held by winning petition are desirous of having some turned to their home here in town. Springs, N. Y. sort of a traffic signal installed at farmer constituency, which follows road, concrete construction under the first match 43 to 17. Watertown the intersection of Cutler street and closely the things done there, -end Mrs. William McConway of Pitts- Mra. Mary Bush of East Shrouds- way, one-way traffic with telephone thereby won by 14 points the beauti- burg, Pa. is visiting her daughter, buri;. Pa. Is visiting her daughter. Main street. This year there have by all dtisens who know tbe man > silver loving cup presented by Mrs. S. McLean Buckingham. SI ins Carrie Bush of Woodruff aven- been a number of accidents at this and the work. Bboulder oiling. Mlddlebury-Water- Hariey F. Roberts to the winners. MUs Gertrude Welton and Miss ue. bury road, shoulder oiling. place and they feel that the town Dr. Beach has the first requirement Saturday's match was very even should adopt some method to elimin- Lucy Cowap have returned after a Joseph Angel who has been a pa- Route No. 4—Salisbury-Great Bar of a man hi that high executive po- motor trip to Hanover, N. H. and some very close foursomes re- ate further accidents. Cutler street sition—he is a gentleman; Just, mod- tient at tbe Waterbury Hospital for rington road is under construction, sulted. W. Sprague of Litchfleld is now part of the United States erate, conciliatory. Of course be is Miss Minnie Fltzpatrick of Wood- the past tfiree weeks has returned short detour around small bridge. turned in the btst card with a score Highway Route No. 6 and one re- a trained man in his department, ruff avenue Is spending a vacation to IIM home OJJ Hemmway Park Sharon-Lakbville road is under con- of 82 for the 18 holes. ceiving the petition of the voters the having studied under Professors ln Lynn' Koail. struction, short detours. . Boute No. U. S. 7—Danbury-New Tbe foursomes played were as fol- selectmen visited the office of Motor Henry, Bibcock, the "milk test" ex-' • Milford road, three steam shovels lows with the names of the Litchfleld Vehicle Commissioner R. B. Stoeckel pert. McKlnnon. Governor Hoard.! WATERTOWN REAL E8TATE NEW TELEPHONE 8Y8TEM players first The figures after the in Hartford. The selectmen put the grading in highway, and concrete whose "Hoard's Dairyman" was and I ___ construction with one-way traffic names are the points won. question of the Installation of a light is the standard publication of its' . • . , 1. F. Case (3) vs E. H. English; August 14 will mark another step In with telephone control at two places. at this intersection up to the com* kind, and the other great men who Watertown real estate s very M. Cunningham (2) vs W. A. Bart- J tbe rapid business progress that has. missioner and he referred the mat* Boute No. 8—Torrington-Thomas- let t (1). put the Badger state to the frontJn S£*S£gL2£LS bflen taking place in Watertown ter to one of bis deputes for investl* the opening years of the present large transactions have been ton. Castle Bridge is under construc- 2. J. Calder vs J. R. LaVigne (3); ' :gation. After a careful survey of the ed In the town clerk's office. Ar- during the past 10 years The South- tion; traffic should proceed with cau- century. Familiar with high stand- ern New England Telephone Com- R. Baldwin (2 1-2) vs E. Carmody atreefat this point and of - other ards of farm experimentation, soil thur G. Beach and Andrew W. Bar- tion on account Of grade crossing; (1-2). ton were successful in completing pany will open on that date for pub- short one-way traffic. : questionable intersections, the com* analysis, (arm management, animal 3. W. Sprague (2 1-2) vs R. W. tb© largest deal recorded in the lic inspection its new Watert6wn missioner reported that the intersec- husbandry and the other lines, when Route Mo. 118—Thomaston-Bristol Harvey (1-2); R. H. Boyd (3) vs J. records and William J. Munson was home in the Watertown Trust Com- tion was very well posted with state Dr. Beach came to Connecticut— road Is under construction, detour A. Reuter. he other party ln the transaction. pany's new building Tbe general signs and that traffic lights were which was backward and skeptical as east of Terryville posted. 4. F. Thorns (3) vs R. McKnight; not necessary. Messrs. Beach and Barton purchased public is invited to inspect tbe latest Route No. 121—Salisbury, Canaan- to scientific farming—be had prob- the sightly residence of James L. thing in switch board equipment. L. Ross (2) vs Charles Sherwood (1). The, recommendation of Commis- lems to meet. But the new man had Salisbury road is under construction, 5. J. Keith (1) VB A. Manning Woolson, situated next to the Sol- The new JOOO^llne board-is known one-way traffic In Salisbury. sioner Stoeckel should be given care- a quiet, reasonable way about him (2); V. Munroe. Jr. (2 1-2) vs P. J. O diers Monument, and within a short as type number 11 and operates on Route No. 122—Newtown-Bridge- ful consideration by the voters of that disarmed antagonism. He grad- ime resold it to Mr.Muhson. Mr. the dame plan as the Waterbury Hhabot (1-2). i/ . Watertown as he is considered the ually, made progress, introduced bet- port road, concrete construction un- 6 S. Cunningham vs A. I. Steere Munson's residence on the Litchfleld exchange. . The present board at der way, one-way traffic with tele- . foremost man in the country today terments as he was able and In a (3); Rev. Fr. McGuiriness (3) VB P. road was turned over to Water- the central office now has only 800 phone control. when the question of motor vehicles decade came to a position where all lines. • ; . • . Moore. • • town's live Real Estate men and a .Route No. 123—Foot of Bunker and highways is discussed and bis respect was paid to his wishes in the large tract of land adjoining the Besides ttte latest switch board 7. W. Thompson (1 1-2) vs H. L. opinions are highly considered. The legislature and even those dubious as Hill to Cornwall Bridge, resurfacing Marlnden (1 1-2);'J. P. Woodruff vs residence was also included. Their equipment the new* quarters will complete, shoulders and guard rail J town Is. not financially fixed at the to the place and scope of the insti- E. B. Gross (3). P • ' jflans are not yet complete as to contain a line rest room for the not finished, traffic open at all times. present time, with the erection of a tution had to acknowledge he spoke what disposition is to be made with operators on the second 'floor Just K. R. McKenzie (3) vs W. Walsh; with authority. They took their Canton-Collinsville, Nepaug road is S. Childs (3) vs W. M. Hodges. . new high school underway, to spend he.Munson property, but they.will off the operating room; and, on the under construction,, detour estab- places congenially in the programs a sum of money when the. need for proably develop the tract. .The con- gr'outld floor there will be' besides lished, traffic should- proceed with 9. W. W.tWalsh (1-) (1-2) vs W. the expenditure is not very pressing. to which he put his hand. He was cern of Beach and Barton have also the iif'iniiual room a kitchenette for caution. H. Allen (2 1-2); Dr. Wood (2) vs Since the notice of the meeting has especially a favorite with, the stu- purchased the two family house on Dr. Goodenough (I). the nirl.s and a shower bath. In '.he Route No. 127—Kent-Macedonia bee nisKued, the question of side- dents and young graduates as any- North street, owned by Dr. E. K. IU. R. Seeley (3) vs R.'C. Van basement will be the battery room, road, macadam construction under walks on Cutler street and Woodruff one could see who observed him ln Loveland. Some improvements will and cable entrance. Dover; j; W. Blackford (1-2) VB C. conference with local groups over way. . ,. Hollister (2 1-2). avenue has been brought to the fore be made ou this • property after The Western Electrtc Company again and on Tuesday evening^ the the state, met to consider how to which it will be offered for sale at Route No. 128—Litchfield-Bantam 11. Dr. Curry vs IB. Clark (3); which is now installing the new road Is under construction, one-way sidewalk question will be one of the further the interests of Storrs and an attractive figure. Another trans- !. Sangree (1-2) vs W. t. Bartlett telephone system will complete the traffic. main issues. There -is no doubt, of of Connecticut agriculture generally. act ionr recorded at the town, clerk's work next week. (2 1-2). the need of sidewalks 'on these two IKE state, being a corridor com- office, made by A. G. Beach the past Route No. 130—Woodbury•Water- 12. G. C. AMwo-4f{2) vs Robert At the present time the exchange town road, uptown bridge 1B under streets and the town should take monwealth, with the farm pressed week is the sale of the Mrs. George Chesson tl). * ••..-. employs 12 operators with Miss El- construction, one-way traffic across steps to protect pedestrians who by activities that many consider Barton property in Oakvllle to Harry izabeth Shields a chief operator.. After tbe match the Litchfleld club Burns. - Edward' Coon has also sold temporary bridge. Woodbury-Water- entertained the visitors at luncheon have to travel these highways and more Important, there has never been The other operators are Katherlne town road, shoulders being oiled. are not fortunate enough to travel by the unity of citizen sentiment back he Skinner property on Woodruff at the Club House. M. Gee, night operator. Miss Minnie Route No. 132—Cornwall Hollow motor vehicle. A short time ago a of the school that western states avenue to A. G> .Beach. Fitzpatrick, Miss ' Irene Fitzpatrick. road, Cornwall to South Canaan is man was Injured on Cutler street by know, whose farmers are homogen- Miss Elizabeth McNulty, MIBS Celfa under construction, traffic open at COUNCIL RELIGIOU8 EDUCATION a hit and run driver, and at present lous, socially potent and politically a FIELD DAY FOR PLAYGROUND Marcoux, Miss Etta Gallagher, Miss all times, short detour around one is a patient at the. Waterbury hos- unit when they want anything. The CHILDREN Monica Gallagher, Miss Emma Ken- bridge. With the opening day two weeks pital. This was the second serious grange in this state Is by nO means ny, Miss Flora Schillare, Miss Mar- Route No. 154—Washlngton-Wood- away, the'enrollment for the Con- accident to happen to foot travelers negligible but political party plans The amateur and costume show garet Burns and Miss Bertha Hab- bury road, macadam and bridge un- necticut Summer School of Religious . take precedence and often cut was not held Wednesday afternoon on this highway within a short space ilka. der construction. Woodbury-Hotch- Education, which is to be held at of time. Within a short time the athwart agricultural needs. at the Community playground, as lanned, due to the rainy weather, kissville road is being oiled for one Storrs from August 14 to 25, is al- schools will be reopening and these However, Dr. Beach, disregarding .ATTEMPTED BURGLARY mile. ready 44 per cent larger than last streets, to a large extent, wil lbe t will be hefd next Tuesday after- this factor, and not less the uncon- noon. - Route No. 310—Bantam-Morris ear. Indications are that the total Used by the school children and they cern of other educational Interests Wednesday morning about 3 a.m. road is under construction, no de- enrollment will be about 150, which should be protected from the heavy The children will bike to Smith's of the state which found little in onil Saturday, leaving the Com- an attempt w'as made to force an tours. would be double the enrollment at' traffic on both. Cutler street and agriculture to interest them, perse- entry into the Fulton Market on he last school. Woodruff avenue.' A large number munity building at 10:30 a. m. Mins vered and the result today is a large- Madeline. Flynn, who has resumed Main street, but trio would be bur- Wallace I. Wooqir., general secre- of voters should turn out fbr this ly expanded plant, an enthusiastic glars were frightened away beforo TO MAKE CAUCUS LISTS - meeting Tuesday evening and be in- her. duties after a week's vacation ary of the Connecticut Council of backing, not only of men and women l accompany. them. A "hot dog" they could accomplish their objec- strumental in passing a vote to build Tin' registrars of voters, Branson Religious Education, under whose of the- soil but of city residents and roast will be held at the pond. All tive. In their haste 16 make their auspices t lie school is conducted, at- • sidewalks on these streets at pneej getaway part of tlii'ir equipment Lockwood. and E. J. Canneld. will educated folk who have a keen in- children who are planning to. go be at the town ball Friday from 12 ributes tills increased enrollment to Commissioner Stoeckel, who has terest In advanced farming. The col- should notify Miss Flynn before Sat- was left behind them. Constable made a study of traffic hazards and o'clork noon until 9 p. m., for the a growing interest among young peo- lege population on the Storrs cam- urday • . Kogelatrom was called about 3:30 ple of the Protestant churches in re- their elimination, has reported that purpose of making any change in pus is impressive in action.. And Its Next Wednesday will be field day a. m. but when he^arrived no trace ligious education and to their desire no light is necessary at the inter- of the culprit or culprits was to b*» the caucus lists that (fie voters may work has but begun for the feeling for the playground children. Events de.-ire. The name of any voter who to secure thorough training^ for lead- sections of Celutsrtrajseg grows that it 1B not necessary that will be held for both boys and girls found. An, attempt was made to ership. street.. Let us take the word of an remove the hasp on the door while is not already listed on the Repub- bright young men and women must and pijizes awarded the winners. lican, or Democratic caucus list may expert in this line and take steps to the lock also showed that it had The school is conducted for pres- be unduly crippled in their future, For the boys there will be a 50 be added at that time to either list protect our school children and other ent and prospective teachers of re- because; perchance, a beginning of yard dash, running broad Jump, po- ligion. Some study to make religious pedestrians. study was made under the auspices tato race and three legged race; Sidewalks should be the main Is- teaching their life work and others of an institution dedicated to the for the girls, a 50 yary dash, a pea- as their avocation. The school pre- sue of this meeting and if the neces- soil.. The argument that thousands nut race and potato race. be added to either list. If he de- sary number of interested voters re- an arrest in the case is expected pares them not only for the teaching of homes in the state are entitled to si rea to change his party affilications or religion but for leadership in spond, it shall be. a good education at Storrs, reason' at any time. CATHERINE HANNON he may do that also at the same young people's work, mission classes ably tagged "agricultural" but with- hours. and the social and recreational life MRS. MARIA A. 8EPPLE8 out hampering conditions, appeals to Miss Catherine Hannon, 19, daugh- Connecticut thrift and prosperity In Oakville, Stephen Underbill and of the church. many and not less as the cost of ter of Mr. and Mrs. Michael Hannon. are well shown in the report of State Patrick Cavanaugh will make 4he "The time is gone when anyone, Mrs. Maria A. Sepples, 79, wife more formal college education for the died at her home on Watertown Bank Comsr. Shippee for the year same changes or additions for any who is merely a devout Christian of Michael Sepples died Saturday plain people rises and climbs. It is road Sunday morning after a linger- ended June 30. The savings deposits ot the voters who vote in tbe Oak- morning at her home on Main street ing illness. can teach in the church school," Mr. a wholesome place and the atmos- In mutual savings banks and savings ville district. They will be a Woodin says. "The need is. for bet- after an illness of several months. phere in doors and out is good. Miss Hannon, a young of departments of trust companies in- Byrnes drug store on Friday from She was born in Litchfleld. the very pleasing personality, was born ter trained teachers and the summer A er or later, some of them must Installed In her. yeaimM steers aad driving than to bold Into a high state of plain. Nyack, who sentenced Cowles to serve and confusion. emerge aa the great floes break with eight to sixteen years, recommended When the new ship Is added to the the railroad loading pens for shipment Captain Boekweirs ambition to te* the seasons. that the sentence be commuted. Dis- White Stsr fleet she will be called the to pastures la Oklahoma. Then they The enb la three and a half months ronnd out 88 yean of service aa a Whether the fleet Is legendary or trict Attorney Arthur Rowland ' of Oceanic. The six largest steamships will be fattened, and later la the sea- old and was captured In the Jungles of sailor on Lake 0*»*iwpH«, This he reully exists is one of the problems Wextcherter and Special District At- in service at the present time, all In son they will ha sent to the St. Ural* Nicaragua: William J. Slattery.. the will do. be vows, If he ttvas to be one haunting Arctic navigators for yeurs. torney Sydney A. Syme of Mount Ver- the AtlanUc trade, are: market mad ( from Nicaragua • •>- hundred. Vessels have disappeared Into the un- non, who prosecuted Cowles, have con- The Leviathan of the United States The shipping of these cattle from abort; time ago following the expira- "I do not spend toomuc h time te explored polar basin ever since the curred in the recommendation. lines. 59.857 gross tonnage, Wt feet stations on the railroad which borders tion of his enlistment In the navy and reviewing the past" he said, "but look beginning of the Arctic navigation. In "I feel that the ends of Justice have long and 100 feet 8 Incbea beam. the King ranch tor more than sixty brought the animal with him for a forward to the futon. Even with 08 one great swoop, the death funged Ice been served In the Cowles case," Jus- The Majestic of the White Star Una, miles will require nearly two weeka pet He says that It la very tame de- yean behind me, I am planning for pack In 1878 carried off 30 whaling tice Tompklns explained. claimed by some to be the largest of constant loading. The cattle will spite the fact that four men wen re- the future. Do you know what my boats from the waters of the Ameri- Plotted for Years. liner afloat, on the basis of the builder fill 400 stockcars. and the ahlpments quired to corner It and get It safely plans arer be inquired. can continent. All but 70 of the men For 25 years, according to the plea and designer's prewar measurements, are moving by solid tralnloads. Inclosed In a chicken coop. ; Receiving no for an answer, he escaped to Point Burrow but the ships for clemency made by Cowles* luwyer which are 50551 gross tons, 915 feet But for the fact that practically all Redmond said that he heard the said: "Well, It la to spend at least were frozen hard and high In'o the when his client was sentenced, the and 5 Inches long and 100 feet and 1 of the cattle upon the great ranch automobile crash and went ont to see two yean mon In the pilot house of pack. The Ice fields covering a mil- Yonkers architect plotted to steal the Inch beam. which belongs to the estate of the late if he could be of any assistance. As the Vermont" (the steamer be corn* lion square miles rotates around the fortune of bis uncle, Edwin A. Oliver, The Cunarder Berengaria, 52£26 Mrs. Henrietta M. King an now of he opened the front door of his home mands). . central pole slowly In the same direc- part owner of the Yonkers Statesman, gross tonnage, 833 feet 5 Inches long, blooded stock and an comparatively In popped the young jaguar. As the Although the captain was III with tion of the earth's movement and In and writer of a humorous column. OS feet 5 Inches beam. tame, the round-up operations would Is about the size of an ordi- tonsllltls last winter, be has fully cycles brings objects gradually back The birth of the Idea, the attorney The White Star Olympic, 46.439 equal In Interest those of the old nary cat although slightly longer, he recovered and la out every day for a to certain spots. suid, came when Cowles discovered gross tonnage. 883 feet 5 Inches long, ranch days In this section. The cattle thought It was the house cat When walk. In the winter be helps shovel Eskimos who have escaped from the that bis grandfather, John W. Oliver, 92 feet 5 Inches beam. wen scattered over a vast area of the he returned bis wife met him at the the snow from the walk In front of Ice pack after being carried far north Instead of willing him $250,000. named The Cunarder' Aqultania, 45,647 ranch. Mon than 500 cowboys wen door, greatly excited and with the In- his daughter's home. "I must keep Into the unexplored wastes have re- Edwin A. Oliver, his son, as chief gross tonnage, 868 feet 7 Inches long employed In rounding them up. Then formation tiat "that • waa a. funny in trim," he says. turned with tales of silent ships hard beneficiary. and 07 feet beam. came the work of cutting out the two kind of cat you Just let in/* ' First Century Hardest and fast In the white bergs. Some At that time Cowles was engaged to The new French liner, lie de France, and three-year-olds. Day after day The "kitty" was'found biding under He appears to be In splendid.health. „ tells of seeing a ship sitting alone In marry Nellie Drummond, daughter of 43,500 gross tonnage. 757 feet 8 Inches the expert cowboys, most of whom an the, bathtub, snarling and striking out "If I continue to (eel .as spry as I a vast solitude. Others report sev- a Yonkers business man. The wed- tong and 91 feet 8 Inches beam. ~ Mexicans, rodeThrougn the masse* Of with Its daws, Redmond finally got do today I will reach the first century eral boats close together but frozen ding was postponed while Cowles bellowing animals and dexterously hold of the chain attached to the mark, which Is the hardest" he •olid miles and miles in the Arctic brooded over devices to gain the Only 15 Grizzlies singled out those that wen Intended beasfs collar by reaching Into the chuckled. "Then 1 plan to take life Interior. - money he felt was rightfully his. Then for shipment These wen conceit-' room with a broom. He tied It on tlw bit easy the next hundred yean." In the hone that some day the Ice the younger Oliver died and Cowles Left in Washington trated and finally brought together In doorknob and went for help and a He paid high tribute to Lindbergh, pack will break up and release one discovered that only a small part of Olympta, Wash. — Fifteen grizzly one great bellowing herd. " chicken crate at the corner store. . He whom be considers the greatest navk or more of the phantoms Eskimos the fortune had been left to him. bears in the national forests of this Not Like Old Days. brought back three men with him and gator that ever, sailed uncharted seas. each spring eagerly scan tile returning Studied Long at Library. state represent the last stand of this In the old days then would have It took the efforts of all four to get "The Presidential campaign Inter- oiwn waters. Should one of the old Be studied days and nights at the vanishing species of Wild life There been much mon excitement and pos- the little "kitty" Inside, the crate. ests me deeply," .he continued. "I am boats escape In good condition and be New York public "library and finally remain there also ftOhea d of caribou sibly some casualties In the round-up The next morning "Kitty" was mon no prophet and Wot politically versed cast on shore near the native villages submitted a will which, he said, "was and possibly 80 mountain sheep. of the wild longhornt with which the docile and submitted to fondling and enough to make any forecast. The they might revel In the wealth of Oliver's last testament. The genuine But notwithstanding a population ranch was stocked. In the far reaches a meal of nw beef. radio, which I enjoy many hours a will also was Bled. wood, steel and Iron instruments and of nearly 2,000.000 in the state, with of the domain wen still to be found a Slattery was taking the Jaguar for day, Is something uncanny. I wonder various stores. Once solidly frozen In In preparing the fraudulent will, various cities of from 100.000 to 450.- few of these relics! Two old-time long- an airing at the time of the accident if Babe Ruth will break his home-run Cowles cut off the name of the printer the Arctic, food, clothing* rope, tools, 000 Inhabitants, Washington retains a horns were gathered in the round-up Slattery sustained a sprained ankle record another year." and weapons are preserved for allof the legal sheet, but Inadvertently generous supply of wild life of the- 'of one of the mon isolated parts of ".We should be a little mon spirit- left the tall of a comma. . Further In- cute and bruises and when be re- time and return to usefulness when primeval wilderness, contained largely the ranch a few days ago. They wen gained consciousness at the hospital, ually inclined," the captain believes, thawed. - vestigation showed that the blank on within prescribed boundaries. Accord- cut out and placed in a corral, when "and show appreciation for the won- which the fake will was drawn had the first thing he asked for was his The first breakup o< the polar seas Ing to a census completed by the fed- they will be held pending shipment to "wildcat" For a time It was thought derful opportunities offered us. We also brings Eskimos a 'great offering been printed In October, 1024, while eral forest service, deer are the most a zoo or museum. should have mon faith in the young the will was dated a month earlier. that the full extent of his injuries had of driftwood In which are found a common animals In the- forests, 22,- Many spectators sat upon the fences not been determined. After a few folks. They are living up to the spirit varied nnd more or less useful assort- Cowled accomplice. Miss Drumraond, 500 of them having. been seen and of the loading pens and watched the minutes he convinced the doctors that of the times, but underneath all this ment of articles. at whose home he had been living for counted, with 8,500 elk and 5,600 blnck milling cattle as they were driven into he was sane, however, but it was not. apparent nonchalance to our Ideals years, and William Weeks, Olivers* bears. The mountain goat is by no the loading chutes. Among these they really have their own standards, chauffeur, confessed they had wit- until the next day that bis pet was means in danger of extinction, for Idlers were a* number of veterans of found, i which are Indeed as high and mighty Harbor Waters Give Up nessed the fraudulent will and Cowles more than 200 of them were recorded the range. Some of these men had as their forefathers." Bodies of Many Failures pleaded guilty of forgery. Weeks and by the rangers. lived In this part of south Texas since Captain Rockwell left his home at Miss Drummond were freed. - All of these animals, from the lit- the early ranching days when Capt Famed German Castle North Hero, Vt, when twelve, and Boston.—For the mow part, nobody After he had been In.prison several tle company of grizzlies to the legion shipped on a two-masted schooner cares. You can tell that by the cloth- Richard King, who purchased the land months, the real Oliver will was pro- of deer, were noted by rangers while that' now comprises this vast estate, Is Slowly Decaying that plied the waters of Lake Cham- Ing. Even the profenslonal sobbers bated and revealed bequests of only In the line of regular duty, and there Hamburg. — Schloss Friedrichshof, plain between St Johns, Que.,-and who can find tragedy most anywhere was a veritable feudal lord, not only $46,000. Instend of the $250,000 Cowles may he large delegations running of his own domain but of practically the beautiful castle built by and for Whitehall. N. Y. One night during a and in almost anptMng don't pay had expected would he hi?. To Cowle* about In privately owne heart that beat with agony, but never Paris.—Factories worth millions of tion of the anti-duelling act life of Fred Perdue, a young farme; from the state at 5 cents' an acre. death. A memorial service for the with despair even In the darkest.mo- francs burned while the Paris fire in an operation here. Perdue com- He stocked It with'cattle from the dead policeman was staged. The ments when a gloomy shadow of de- department stood and watched .be- plained of severe pains In his back. surrounding ranches. It was not diffi- mayor of Nanking presided and of- feat hung over them." cause it had not been asked to help. Ulllllllll An X-ray photograph revealed the cult to stock a ranch In those days, fered sacrifices before the bier. This quotation from one of the Ro- A formality requires a signed request point of n broken needle was beneath from officials before one 'set of fire for cattle wen so cheap that they Crowd Gathers to See ! Hsueh Tu-pL Nationalist minister one shoulderbfade and working toward man papers Is extracted from a de wen killed as a regular business for of the Interior, eulogised the dead) scriptlon of a football match between fighters can cross city limits to help their hides and tallow. his heart. Surgeons used the magnet another. Girl Take Sun Bath j man's devotion to duty. The service Italy and Hungary, and It means that London.—Sun bathing has Its ! to withdraw the eteel. Such wen the events of the early waa concluded with the decapltationi Italy beat Hungary by four goals to comedy side. A girt Uving lu | of the condemned robber In sight of three after Hungary had led at half days ta Texas, when the King ranch Bayswater crawled out on the < i un in inn inn mi HI • was established. In spite of the un- the gathering. 4* III »H* I' i M11* 111 III III- time. ledge beneath her fourth-story | Fine of $1 Is Paid settled condition of the times,ho w window, 50 feet above the < ;; Ohio Duck Equipped ;; ever, or perhaps because of them, ground, and reclined In the hot | If You're Shy 96 Cents Another Metal Is Born by 100 Contributions ' j Captain King slowly began to add to rays, clad only In lingerie. ' :! With Two Spare Legs \: of Factory Waste Heaps Klnston, N. C—One hundred ! > his ranch. Show This to the Wif* All of the hud waa stocked with A cnwd gathered and some Washington.—Americans an 8R> Ken ton, Ohio.—A four-legged London.—Out of waste heaps where nslderiULOf Lenoir county have J ; one cried, "She fa going to fall." duck which is able to hold its raised a fund to pay Capt Frank • •' Texas longhora cattle- Then waa no cents poorer per capita this year than worthless ore bad been previously thoroughbred stock In the whole The police and the fire depart they wen last year, but they are own In activities of the other dumped a new metal, called beryllium, Rhem's $1 fine for floggingtw o J; ment wen called but with theli ducks. Is'a recent acquisition of I odnvlcts at the stockade here. • >_ ranching country. Captain King died $5.60 richer than they wen w 1014. =nas-been-eztracted.-T-XblsTnew-metal- -arrival—the-girt -looked-down— Mrs. Homer Latimer. The duck The contrlbutors-r-Judges, law- J' tari885T At that time he was the ~ Treasury records made public show le about a third lighter than alum- saw the commotion and. climbed that the per capita wealth of the has the regular set of legs and inum, much harder, and has about four yen, bankers, doctors, ministers • • largest cattle owner In Texas. . back Into her room. In nddltion, bos another leg United States, based on an estimate* times Its elasticity. Salt water doe* —gnve one cent' each to the !'. After the death of Captain King, She told the police that sh* | | growing out of each side of Its • [ ' fund. None was allowed to give ' > Mrs. King made Robert J. Kleberg, population of 118£M.UUU on June UU. not corrode It, nor will liquids or waa attempting to take full ad the end of the 1028 fiscal year, was fumes. Its light gray color takes a ] \ more. , her son-in-law, the manager of the vantage of the sunshine. property. He has remained in that $4052, compared with $41.48 for HOT polish like steel. and $34*2 for1914 , Hiiiiiiuuuninuui position ever since. • lislllimissMslllsssl

L*-- J. Property of the Watertown Historical Society Three Noted Track Athletes MOBESROOEE watertownhistoricalsociety.org IS COMING STAR ' 5 Morris, Has Fart Ball.

Whan you via twit* as many i SKIM BULK FOR as JOB loss witb the Boston. Bad 8 you save to be good. .And that HENS IS FAVORED what Bdward Morris, giant banded rookie with the Bed So* Skim milk to great pig feed., but the V must be, for be has accomplished that man who tee.ni the milk to his hens one thing with Bill Carrigaa's outfit and takes tils proBt In the form of in- this year. creased egg yields Is the one who Any pitcher who doubles his wins makes the most money from his milk, in ratio to his lotses to O. K* and according to Iowa State college pool- when It to done with the Bed Sox, the trymen. . feat to' all tbe mightier. Seven years of continuous experi- Ofttlmes an ordinary ball player In mentation ut the college has proved tbe minors develops Into a whirlwind that milk, when fed to poultry, will in the majors. Hurnsby. Bancroft and return from three to six times as others were just players in minor cir- much profit as when fed to pigs. It cuits, but once given a chance In big has also been found that, when eggs time blossomed out into greats. ure selling for not less than SO cents Whllo Morris lias not yet gone a dozen, skim milk Is worth around through an entire season to prove that $2 a hundredweight as feed for good be Is a star, it appears that be also pullets. There Is practically no differ- will be one of those ordinary minor ence between the value of skim milk players turning into a major star. and buttermilk for poultry, repeated 1/ Lust year with Mobile In the South- tests buve revealed. ern e«soclatiou, Morris won 15 games When bene fed tankage or meat UIMI lost 17—u record that would hard- Royal Pagoda at Pnompenh, Cambodia. meals as their main source of pro- ly attract mnjcir league scouts. But {Prepared *r th» National Oaotrsobla | form the Intricate movements of tein were compared with those that he had a fa« ball that wus really Society. Washington. D. C> dances handed down from the remote also hud milk. It was found that the fast, and the Red Sox grabbed him. AMBODIA,1 one of the impor- past. The present king has found It milk-fed birds outluyed the tankage- The photograph shows, left to right. Lee Burnes. holder of world's pole This fast bull today gives way to tant units among France's pos- Impossible economically to maintain fed birds by 25 to 40 per cent during vault record, Lawsqn Robertson, hend coach of the American Olympic team, none, excepting possibly the speeders sessions In southwest Asia, Is a feminine army of retainers up to cold weather. Milk should always be ami Charley Borah, track champion, as they appeared at Franklin field, of Grove and Pipgras. C•a hodge podge of the unexpect- the old standards. fed sour because birds will consume Philadelphia, during the Olympic trials. He won his first three out of four ed. It Is a laud, of forests, damp and RMtful to the Eyas. more of It In this condition, It has a games and allowed an average of one leech-Infested; of open savannahs, of Most travelers from the West who slightly laxative, effect and the lactic and a half runs a game. The most wide rice fields and plodding water visit Pnompenh are on their way to acid combate many disease, germs. Tris S^eakeriPlaysin effective pitcher In the league last buffalo; of Users and wild .elephants;' Angkor, venerable city of Khmer cul- . From October 1 to May 1 It Is profit- DIAMDNDV year, Wiley Moore, led the twisters cf humble cottagers, all literate, ture, which lies farther north, A brief able to give the. hens nothing but Many Different Spots with 2.28 runs per game. And lie had whose chief pleasure Is writing stop at the capital Is welcome, for the milk to drink and from Muy 1 to Oc- No outfielder ever played In as PICK-UPS A the Yankees behind him, so Morris' poetry; of gilded modern pugodus; and little Cambodian city among Its trees tober 1 they muy be ullowed to choose many widely different spots as Sn*uk record Is all the more Impressive. temples, 'hoary with age, swallowed Is restful to the eyes of the river-boat between milk and water. When birds er during a single game, writes H. G. Uncle Wllbert Robinson isn't down- Morris' first game with the Sox re- by the Jungle; of automobiles, trolley passengers after monotonous miles of are given all of the milk they will 8alslnger In the Detroit News. hearted. He has hopes that tf bis sulted In a defeat by a 3-2 margin. cars, and electric lights. rice fields, thick jungle-growths and drink, the amount of tankage or other He would play close behind second club bits the bottom it will bounce. He allowed the Athletics eight bits,

The forms of an oriental kingdom swamps that border th» river bank packing house .by-products may be base for one batter and near -the •'••.• and they won. 3-2. His next time out are faithfully followed; but behind nearly all the way "from Saigon. And reduced one-half, for milk furnishes fence In right-center for the next Ed Crowtey, former Georgia Tech .was also against the A's. This time the-king, his five ministers,'and bis It Is a relief to be out of the cruislnr one-half the protein necessary for lay- He has caught fly balls, at wider star, who was farmed to Pensacola he cut down their hit allowance to court formalities, stands the French radius of persistent Mekong mosqui- Ing bens. The Iowa poultry special- ranges and run less distance for them by Washington, has been recalled. four and won, 3-1. resident-superior, and at his elbow a ists advise the keeping of only as than any outfielder ever did. The White Sox were hU next vic- toes. •''•'. • • '•'.•' few French soldiers; for Cambodia It Stevedores literally swarming ovef many > birds as can b0 supplied with That/Is one reason Speaker Is still The doubtful honor of being the first tims. Four bits nrere all they could • part of French Indo-China and « cargo bouts at the quay indicate that milk. able to play. I.Ike the pitcher who big league pitcher to lose ten games get off his curve? and swifts. Tbe protectorate of France. The country the capital Is Important commercially. does his pitching above the shoulders goes to Ray Kremer of Pittsburgh. count bere was "fl-1; Then came a 3-2 is slightly smaller than the. state of rather than with his arm, Speaker dints victory over the Browns and a live- As the town Is situated at the junction Laying Hens Need Moist o• •" • • ..•• . ' '; Missouri and has a population of of a branch from the Great Lake of bis outfieldlng above the shoulders. Joe Wood, former major league hit game , • . about two and a half millions, t Cambodia and the main channel of the Mash in Warm Weather rnth*r than with his legs. He Is still pitcher and couch at Yule, expects He once had a trial with the Clncy The Mekong, one of the world's Mekong from the Tibetan bills, largt Summer feeding of farm poultry able to think and being able to.think Bruce Caldwell to be another Roger* Reds, but failed to get fur. Manager greatest rivers, Is the life artery of quantities of fish, rice. Indigo and cot- can be carried on economically and he will do a great deal of fielding al- Hornsby. Cnrrigan hus been noted tbf develop- ton from Upper Burma, portions of though his legs were pronounced ing young pit< tiers and turned Morris1-' Cambodia. Seagoing steamers ascend to good advantage, says Corn Cooke. .•'•••• the stream to Pnompenh, the capital, Slam, Laos, and northern Cambodia extension poultry specialist at the "dead." as far as baseball Is con- from a mediocre minor leaguer into a cerned,, three and four years ago. Eddie Schaack, relief pitcher for the 200 miles from the sea; and smaller are brought there for marketing. In university of Minnesota. The amount Kansas City Americun association club, winning major twlrler. steamers and Junks traverse the net- addition smaller cargoes from nearby of feed required on the average farm has been sold to Atlanta of the South- Morris Is hut another of a batch of work of streams and lakes hundreds farms and paddy fields arrive In the Is less than In winter, a higher pro- Holds Many Records ern association. Red 'Sox youngsters who has been of miles farther Inland. But It Is not hundreds of sampans and smaller duction can be counted upon, und • • • pitching such good ball as to show only as a wuterway that the stream Is craft that dart about the tiny harbor prices of eggs are usually ascending Sale of Tom I'udden, catcher, to the the success of Manager Carrigan In useful. On Its overflowed lands the like so many water beetles. •. • . after the low period cuused by. the New York Yunkees is announced by the handling of young moundsmen. country's chief crop, rice, Is raised In When a boat with tourists aboard spring surplus. The specialist points the Manchester club of the New Eng- The others. Ruffing,, Russell, Mac- abundance. docks there is a rush for the "Permis- ont that the cost of the ration can be land Baseball league. Fayden, Bradley rod Settlemlre. have been going, good enough, but tbe Most of the civilized people are con- sion Office" where "permissions" are reduced by cutting down the meat • • • • •.'. • centrated along the river and between granted to visit the king's palace. But tcrap one-half and omitting it alto- Brooklyn has sent Inflelder Jay brightest satellite of the outfit Is Its lower reaches and the Siamese those who expect to see a richly gether If plenty of milk I? available, Partridge to Its Atlanta farm in the young Mr. Edward Morris, a punk In border. The country .houses In ail adorned abode of an eastern potentate und also by reducing the amount of Southern league, In exchange for the Southern assanation and a big frog In the major

miles long, 18 miles wide, and more en at first sight for knickerbockers. A recent report said that 13 per cent •. .'•'.•• •. . . than 35 feet deep. When the floods This nether garment Is the "sampoL" fewer eggs and 30 per cent less Moe Solomon, Jewish outfielder, for recede, the waters flow from this In making It a width of cloth Is glrdeo dressed poultry are in storage than s whom the (Hunts once paid a fancy natural reservoir back Into the Me- about the waist, then the ends are year ago. figure, has been put on the retired list kong and keep' Its lower reaches well folded between the legs and .tucked Miss Murtliu Norellus ot the Wuiu- of the Albany Senators at his own re- filled. The great Importance of the In at the .waist line. Both men and en'* Swimming association and holder quest. river and Its floods Is recognized by women wear the sampot, and It is Marking Broody Hens to Of practically every free-style record ••• ' • . • • • . - ' an annuul festival on the stream con- often difficult for a Westerner to dis- Cull From Laying Flock from 100 yards to 880 yards, who Shortstop Louis Benson of Houston, necting the Great Lake and the Me- tinguish between them. The men, how- smashed her own world's record Tor who has been unable to play all sea- There Is a wide variation In the kong. A cord is stretched across the ever, wear a sort; of Jacket above the the 440-yard swim at the final Olympic son because of a sore arm, has re- amount of broodlness In hens In the stream and at the time of reversal of sampot, while the women for the most swimming tryouts. Her time wus ft turned to the team after having the same flock. Some luy a comparatively the flow this Is cut with great cere- part wear a doth or scarf draped minutes 41) 3-5 seconds as compared wing treated. few. eggs between spells of broodlness. mony by the kins trnm the royal over one shoulder and under the other to the old time 5 minutes 51 2-0 sec- • '• ' • • \ • • .'•' . . .. ' Others go broody rarely If at all. An houseboat arm.- " .•"•••. onds. • Freddy Spurgeon, the Cleveland In- excellent practice Is to mark through the West Introduced. fielder who broke an arm in an acci- The natives display genuine affec- some method or other the number of But though the capital Is soaked In dent last fall and has not been able tion for the Mekong. When floods times the hens become broody during come they put away their ox carts, eastern atomsphere, the west has been to return to duty, has been placed on travel the old roads in boats and wait Introduced by the handful of French e season. the voluntarily retired list A simple and yet effective method for the water to recede. They cele- officials and business men. Electric ' . ; ••' • ••"•'••• brate with boat races that attract street lights twinkle among the hang- Is to use celluloid rings to slip on Cy Young, pitching Immortal, hurled Ing flowers of tropical trees; tram their legs. A bunch of rings of one The ;Penn State college golf course every Cambodian In the- vicinity from has never been played In par. era over the plnte for' twenty-two Che king to the lowliest native. Con- can lumber by; and one may boot color can be used, thus leaving other years, and during that period bad dolallke racing boats, ranging from passage to outlying towns hi inoto colors for other marks If desired. three no-hit, no-run games to bis After 18 years on tbe pitching bill, busses that ply over well metalet Each time a hen Is placed In the Miss Helen. Wylie. expert swimmer Grover Cleveland Aiexunder, the fa- twenty-five to forty-five feet long, are of Australia, has been winning races credit and one perfect game. •owed by a score or more men, seated roads. broody coop or set, If the chicks are • • • mous veteran, is as effective as ever. hatched and raised with hens, a ring for the past 27 years. King of pitchers for a dozen years, lie two by two. If the throngs mussed on Evidence of the high culture and • • * St. Paul In tne American association can be placed on ber leg. Any lien Is a king still. Last year he won his the river bank are not thrilled by the power of the Cambodians at the height established a record for making the that accumulates more than two be- Texas university, has organized a greatest laurels. He Is more effec- competition, they are amused by a of their Khmer empire, from the most double plays In a single season fore midsummer could be culled from golf class for girls as part of the reg- tive this yeur than last. down who fcashis place In each craft. Eighth to the Fourteenth centuries is In organized baseball, when the club the flock. Frequently a hen will go ular physical training work. The highlands to the north are oc- seen In the remarkable ruined temples executed 215 two-ply killings In 1027. cupied by'wild tribes of hunters who and palaces of the old capital city of broody every two or three weeks, even must tight for existence against rank Lloyd Hahn, premier middle dis- Highbrow Caddy Amuses Angkor-Thorn, now deserted and sur- when she Is placed In the broody coop The Montgomery Lions have come vegetation, wild anlinnls, snukes and rounded by forest and jungle. The at the first sign of broodlness. Such tance runner, has so ninny medals IIP doesn't know what to do with them. to be known as the hitless wonders of English Golf Devotees insects. Slave raids .from neighbor- terraces and walls of the old struc- should be sold or eaten at the third One ol the most patronized golf ing countries have made them wary the Southeastern league. They fin- tures abound In excellent stone work, attack. ished next to Pensacola for the first courses near London has a highbrow and suspicious and they look upon all intricate carvings, and highly artistic Cornell, which ha? not won the iri g, Poughkeepsle rowing classic simp halt but had only one .300 man on caddie who sometimes astonishes vis- «utlanders as enemies. Some of them ffil itors with pointed comments on their protect their villages by poisoned sculpture. Despite the difficulty of ac- Proteins in Whey 1015. has the best record of all tic the roll. Pete Susko. cess, thousands of visitors go annu- play. darts stuck up In the ground. a Whey contains milk sugar, fat, min- contestants, haying won the event 1!! ally to see the wonders of this old times. Dale Gearr, president of the Western A nervous player who had revealed Practically all of the civilized Cam- capital city. erals, and proteins of very high qual- league and Western association, was his faults to the elderly spectacled ity. It Is therefore an excellent feed bodians are literate. The country The culture of the Cambodians dur- Race-track bettors In France neg- a One pitcher In his youth. In 1808. man who carried his clubs was star- abounds In old temples, built during ing their Golden age was owing in for poultry. However, 'it contains he helped Kansas City win the West- tled by the latter suddenly remark- only about 8.6 per cent of dry matter, lected to collect the cash due on $51. the Cambodian Golden age, some WO large part to their leadership by Hin- 850 worth of tickets last year. This ern lengue flag by winning three ing : "You have a fear complex, sir. years ago. In these the Buddhist du colonists and conquerors. therefore it hi difflcult-for a hen, with gamps In six days at tbe close of the Unless you surmount it yon will her limited capacity, to consume amount has been turned over to vari- priests conduct schools which are at- Near the-palace in Pnompenh Is the ous charitable organizations. season. never make a good golfer." tended by all children, from those of Khmer museum with a collection of enough to supply her wants. Keep The nervous one found that his bumble farmers to those of the royal sculptured stones. Implements of war the usual feeds before the hen. so Inflelder Doc Gautreau, mite Infleld- critical caddie was a graduate of one that she will be sure to get enough u A result of the transcontinental foot family. The princes, like all other and Jewelry; the weather-beaten royal race may be six-day walking contest? er of the Boston Braves, bus been sent of the big English universities. boys ot Cambodia, must live during a- eat. Since the whey contains so much pagoda, and an ancient temple ap- in various cities next fall, including to Providence of the Eastern league certain period as novitiates in a proached by a long flight of stein with water. It would be well to take away by Manager Rogers Hornshy. Pitcher temple, subsisting by means of the other sources of water. ^ New York. Chicago, Detroit and Ln« New $25,000 Stake for a stone railing representing Naga. the Angeles. Toronto, too, may enjoy the Art Mills has also gone the same route, begging bowl, as the Buddha did. and sacred seven-headed cobra. Tails of novelty. and the Braves have called In Sheriff Runners at Arlington as the priests do today. the sacred reptile adorning the roofs o Poultry5 Prospects Harris from the Grays. The American Thoroughbred Cham- of some of Pnompenh's buildings re- • • • Pnompenh Is a colorful capital set Says the Massachusetts Agricultural Barring a possible game for the pionship, a new $25,000 stake for two- upon hills on,the,banks of the Me- semble crooked lightning Manager Dan Howley of the Browns year-olds and upward, will be spon- American farm houses. college: -The outlook for egg, broiler Navy on December 1, Annapolis and kong, Its ornate temple > spires, and and poultry prices Is slightly better West Point have arranged their foot will be looking for a young outfielder sored by the American National magenta tiled roofs half bidden by The one thoroughfare In Pnompenh than In 1027. Feed costs on the other ball cnme* for next fall. Only oiii« by the name of Morris Badgro If this Jockey club, Chicago, as an added fea- slant palms and flowering tropical that has a right to be called an ave- hand are expected to continue high, common opponent to. on the lists, rookie keeps up the work he to doing ture for Arlington park's 17-day sum- trees. In a parkllke Inclosure on a nue leads from the palace to the pub- at least during the flnt halt of the namely Notre Dame. . for the Tulsa Oilers. Howley took mer racing season. hilltop Is the palace of the kings, sur- lic park. Two hotels bordering.it of- year." We've covered nine sheets of Badgro South In the spring and then The event,' which will be over a rounded by bouses for their multi- fer excellent accommodations for a paper trying to figure out whether sent him to the Muskogee farm. He mile and one-eighth, to expected to at- small eastern city save for their or- Jack Caywood. Fort Crook bravy- tudinous feminine retainers. The kings that's Intended as encouraging or dis- «elght boxer claims the longest reach was too good there, so he was graduat- tract the beat blue-ribbon winners ef «f Cambodia of the past mbibt be de- chestras that dispense Innxmlble couraging, says the Farm Life Our uf any fighter In 'bin rlns*. Ja'ik'i ed to Tulsa. And now the fans are America, including Relgh Count. Vita, scribed as monarchs entirely sur- nocturnal Jass. The rest of the street own opinion to that poultry looks tet- reach Is 81 Inches. Just an Inch short expectant .of Badgro's "dally hjme Victorian, Port Harlem, Torn and Mis- rounded by women. Some were wives, Is cluttered up with open-front native ter this year than last, and we're go- tf thai of the former heavyweight I run." as tbe Tulsa scribes are • rlfr step. Its Inaugural will be on Sep- some servants, and hundreds dancing shops, some of which make an at- la* right ahead lor a better flock. tember L, girls; trained from childhood to ptt> ts duplicate stanch pastry (thamplon, Jess WUIard. ] Ing It , Property of the Watertown Historical•air aft SocietyHew Tart W ka PCTMIAL UFE OF Count. Mth attMt • HOWARD ELLIOTT poiau wtU he tto Mapia- the New American ho- It ia fitting that a paper in tte tetelss . A tftgtblwHiiKtn l bos win tern town whleh has known Elliotts, so watertownhistoricalsociety.org New Mttford dally at 10 aja. and win matter now tliiyiBSino' ai/kU dwlr arrive in New Ton; at two in ca* Fraud* P. Fl***, Anodate Edttaj family name, aince the later 1600's afternoon. Another wUl leave New should aay a word for the Elliott who Milford at six o'clock and reach New Subscription—I* yaarlx. to has so recently been buried within York at ten in the evening. The it* borders. The writer aaw much •atored aa tad daw mattar as bus which leaves New York at 7: JO of the president of the New Haven a, m. ia scednied to arrive in New Watartowa pottofflca wider tct system for some years, after the sen- March & 1TO. Milford at 11:25 and the one leaving ior Morgan wished the wreck upon New York at 2:S0 p. m. wiU arrtTe FRIDAY, AUGUST 3, 1928. him. He wu filled with common there at 6:26. sense, a great deal of patience and The Itinerary includes the follow- he was perfectly honest, a fact which ing stopping points—White Plains. no one doubted who heard Urn talk. Rldgeneld. Danbury, New Milford, for their summer outing this year, He waa made to realise what be Kent. Canaan. Great Barrington, the Connecticut Editorial Associa- faced, for the worst of a long series Stockbrldge, Lee and Lenox. tion w',11 be the guests of the Con- of railroad wrecks, that at North necticut Light and Power Company, Haven, came in the very beginning at Lake Candlewood in New Milferd, of his administration. There came the latest power plant of the com- no others lik> it, for an order went pany, on Saturday 6l this week. forth that trainmen were not to make Members of the Association and. up lost time at the cost of sacrificing TRY A CLASSIFIED ADV. human life. other representatives of Connecticut 1. Herbert Heevar antoftd Stanford Unl, ft, Baseball wu his favorite college sport and newspapers are to. be the quests of varsity In 1M1. BngliMaring wu his goal* he proved an expert at the strategy of the game. - The stock went down and ceased the company for the day at it* power to pay dividends despite the needs of plant; they are to sv* an-unique the widows and orphans, whose pres- plant or water power application and ence was invoked at various Legisla- one of the largest constructions of tive sessions, but at least no more the sort In the country; they are to widows and orphans were created at be entertained at dinner and later his direction. The newspapers of taken out on Lake Candlewood, the Connecticut spoke well of Howard % MONEY largest body of water ia this state, Elliott when the news of his death 5 Is available to and In cars along its shore. The came, but few if any of them alluded, party will Include the ladles—wives as they might have done, to the fact and friends of the newspaper men that his accession emancipated the FARMERS or members of their staffs. General Assemlby of Connecticut, for he did for that body something new. The program will commence thru the For years before, the coveted Legis- promptly at eleven o*clock and it lative committee was that on rail- .-should be bor^e In mlad that just roads, but from Elliott's day on it FEDERAL LANDBAHK now the roads around New Mil ford became as unimportant as the com- are decidedly torn up so motorists mittee on sale of lands or federal of want to allow plenty of time to get, relations: there was absolutely no there. From 11:3M till 12:3ti there money in it, and no reporters were Springfield, Mass. will be inspection of the power house assigned to cover its hearings or sub- and dam. Dinner will be from 12: 3u mit their copy for revision by some till 2. From 2 to 4 there will be trips legal friend of the corporation. Advantages of Our Mortgage on the lake or along its shores. For A non-callable mortgage the former launches and for the lat- President Elliott seemed to feel Fixed easy semi-annual ter cars will be provided by the com- a. Hiiflrtt field work ai a an enolnttr apprentice was 4. Working hl» way through college he met MJaaLou that his time was sufficiently occu- In the Oiarfc Mountatinti ? during college vacation. Henry, n»w Mrs. Hoover. She prcmlaed to wait. repayments pany, so that guests will not have, pied in managing the railroad with A low interest rate—5% touse their own. Governor Tram- out taking a legislative body under c ened city Democrats" are extremely The privilege of repayment bull has Accepted an invitation to be by Democrats outside of Waterbury: Ernest Rogers or State Sen. P. C. his guidance, and it seems strange likely to betray his trust in them; present and officials of the C<- L. & P.•:*Waterbury is so strong a Demo- \Valcott. He may refuse and fight that the newspapers of the state did for in a country governed, as is the will be In the party. The time given cratic city anyway and is sure to be for it and if he does there is a pos- not comment upon the fact when United States even these gifted seers •Requirement! above is daylight? saving. stronger 'than usual because of Al sibility of trouble but he is probably they heard of Mr. Elliott's death. His cannot long .prevail without votes. First mortgage security Smith running, that it isn't necessary too good a machine man to do so. task was great enough as it was and And to get votes they must defer to on farm property . TIMELY WARNING o pick a candidate from that city. The other three are certainly too it is possible, shortened bis sane and the prejudices of the majority.—Wa- t wilLgive a big Democratic vote good machine men to do anything useful life. He deserved his place in Prompt payment obligations terbury American. Our state Insurance Commissioner anyway," This is the same reason- that would disrupt party harmony. the Eliot Circle and he well earned when due points out in a bulletin issued today Ing that has been heard from Repub- If they fight it out they will accept the rest which is now his.—"Norton1 the misunderstandings and disap- lican ranks in other years against the result without hard feeling but RAILROAD8 AND CANALS Aooept No Substitute in Shore Line Times. Fix your Farm Financing pointments that arise from failure the possibility of ever choosing a it Is more likely that they will hold a • The Providence Journal "reprints* of people to carefully read and un- candidate for President from ^Con- conference with J. Henry and aa a an extract from the Manufacturers I NEW BU8 SERVICE with a derstand their insurance policies. necticut. The state is classed as result of that will, agree upon one and Farmers' Journal for July 18,1 Federal Land Bank Loan They take for granted many tilings solidly Republican anyway so it has and the others will withdraw. The 1S2S, which sets one.. to thinking New England Co. To Run Between that are not so and when, settle- been considered good politics to pick same is true of the nomination lor New York and Plttsfleld that the progress of mankind has For further information, write or call ments are required find to their dis- presidential candidate from one of United States senator. Both Motor Indeed been hastened since that The New England Transportation may that they were not protected as the so-called doubtful states.. Vehicle Comsr. Robbins B. Stoeckel somewhat remote day. Yet it was Company on Friday,. July 27, began they supposed they were. This is and Tax Comsr. W. H. Blbdgett have the operation of a through-route trip George R. Sturges much like today in one respect- WOODBURY, CONN. conspicuously the case in accident If there is perplexity about the indicated that they are willing- candi- only superlatives could be used in daily from New York to Pittsfield policies and to an extent with auto- gubernatorial candidate there is still dates. A conference will certainly describing current achievements. The vehicles used are Super de Luxi mobile casualty. Insurance. The more with respect to the.^candidate be held in their case and it will be In fact, two epocn-making events parlor observation Rural New Yorker has for some for United States senator. ~T,he state decided which will run and which were going on at the same time. time been carrying on a campaign leaders are anxious to have ex-Mayor withdraw.—"The Bystander" in Wa- The laying of the cornerstone •warning people to use extreme cau- Thorns withdraw from the race for terbury Republican. the Baltimore & Ohio Raifroad and tion in buying the cheap accident governor In favor of-Mr. Morris and the breaking of ground for the Ches- policies as they do not give the pro- MR. MENCKEN DELUDED BY A apeake & Ohio Canal took place on take the nomination • for United MIRAGE tection that it is assumed they do. States senator. However, there are the same day and were duly des- Now our Commissioner supplements others who are active • or passive cribed in what is spoken of as "a this excellent advice with a sugges- candidates for this place. Ex-Cong. One of the most .momentous po- large portion of this day's paper." tion that every person who takes Augustine Lonergan of Hartford has litical campaigns in American his- It is added that, "If the newspaper out insurance of any kind, should announced that he is a candidate. tory, beyond the possibility of dis- account of the laying of the corner- Store .Hours 9 to thoroughly familiarize himself with pute, is the one now aborning. It stone of the Railroad is to be relied the nature of the policy he buys. Ex-Cong. P. B. O"Sullivan, formerly of this district, has admitted that he involves a threat, or a promise, of upon, we have never had anything In this he is giving good service. the recasting of party lines in all of the kind superior to it In this —Bristol Press, July 26. ' is considering It. National Commit- teeman Thomas J. Spellacy, while he parts of the country, including the country. There was everything ot Howland-Hughes South. And, which is the most spec- pageantry on the. occasion which STATE POLITICAL DOPE has declared he is not a candidate for any nomination, is believed by tacular single devei.paient thus far must hare been: truly Imposing." recorded, it has a.ready: brought It Looks Like Friction When Demo many to be debating in his mind How was the cornerstone of a whether to grab it or not. He Boesn't about the conversioa of Henry L. railroad laid? It is left to the im- crats Hold Their Convention. J. Mencken from his long-standing and Now In Progress Henry Holds Republicans in Line seem to be able to make up his mind, agination, which declines the bur- nationally familiar attitude of cyni- den. Regarding the breaking of the A suggestion made a week ago possibly considering that the chances cal pessimism to a new mood of ground for the canal, the account which seemed to have some sort of do not look so bright after all for him to be elected to this office as buoyant, idealistic optimism. The says that "the ceremony must have sanction in official Democratic cir- intellectual case of the United States been full of lively interest. The cles that both ex-Mayor William E. svhen he has run for office he has OUR GREAT honor of turning up the first spade never been a big vote getter. It is not hopeless, after all, Mr. Menck- Thorns of Waterbury and Charles G en now avers, darkly though he has full of earth devolved upon the Chief Morris of New Haven withdraw from would pi-obably be more lucrative to Magistrate of the greatest nation on take a federal appointment (in case regarded it in countless reams of the race for the'Democratic .nomina- earlier caustic objurgation on the earth. He performed It, not by dep- tion 'for governor in favor of a cony Al Smith is elected) or.be the official uty, as a regal sovereign would, but dispenser In the. state of federal pa-. low state of our national civilization. promise candidate apparently met In fact, Mr. Mencken hopes to wit- with bis own hands in a most ener- with no favor: in either camp. BothHronage the birth of a Golden Age in getic manner. Internal improve- appear to be ready to battle it out Ex-Conz. Lonergan is decidedly out -- - ° - «. ments are becoming the order of to the limit for neither ha, given any o:' favor w ;h tne power, that be as America this yer» or no, despite all the "yokels" may the day, and no man nas ever con- sign of withdrawing. represented by Any. Spellacy, Chair- tributed more to improve the inter- man Walsh, e.\-Mayor FitzGerald and do to forestall it, it is coming pres- It looks as though th- .-tate Demo- ently—presently. nal condition of this country than . , . • . ,.„„ Kl i.'ormer National Comnxltteeman John Quincy Adams. The speech At one time he and ex- "It may be," he writes, "that, in FURNITURE of Mr. Adams on this occasion is cratiwoni'-ic lleader aver s -hwere pros;»ee b-comint of? a bit Cum!1,inir= the first battle, the yokels will win. Mayor Thorns were considered the among the happiest efforts of his wirinn fizh: bK\ve-r. ihe.-e two ar.d 1 l-« '.' vs o: the insurgent croup. They They have many obvious advantages. commanding genius, and willl be a'.io bev.v,.--v. two or t':.!>•<.• others for joined 'forces in l!fl!2 when Mr. A good many men of money are in- read with admiration by all true ih" nomii.rtiio:. tor I'.nitt-d Stages Thorns- ran for the nomination :or clined to go with them iliis tim<- Americans." Was Jefferson -Brick s-enaior. Ti.e s'ate 1-aders quite t.".'\>-:'.".or -i! S'.i-.te.- senator against ex- the exercises? Morr:- ir. .V---.V Ha\>-:. it i, claimed gent men and women. Hut in the It was a great year. MK.VOI; Fi:zL'(.-:aHl for. irovt-rnor and Here were ;hii- •;••-> h.iv- ••prwm:-'-!" him tht- A"'y Sj^-lliity for L'nitt.-d State.s .->.-n- long run, it seems to me, they are nonr.iM'ion rnque-=ii'j:.ably the bound to lose, tor the city men. aretwo promisiR Infants and no one —Quality Furniture at Our Very Low a'or. .There-is beli^vi-ii to still b-.- knew whether both would thrive, Wan-ibury ca:.'!idate w.ll put up a' a:, accord between them altliuuirh tar sharper than they are, and will fiii.; tor it -w-n i: t!> -"a:* leaders be able to break down their advan- only one, or neither. • Great enthus- ir.ar.y i>: :h'.- inrUi'Et-nt.- art a l.t'.le iasm was shown for the "rail road," Sale Prices Now Procurable at art- aL-a::..-• h:n: ar.d will b- surie ot ioubtfdl of ex-Mayor Tiionis sir.cf- he tages, one by one. I believe the bat- t.jii.-i.'.fiabl- .--jj.p'ir :.v- only fiorc tle will so down iu history as one oi as the people of that time correctly lnil joir.iijs: with th»-m in th»-lr spelled it, but we suspect that the' \VuTi-.b'.:rv i.»-arhy 'owns but the first importance. Once the cities Howland-Hughes fiL'^t This V'-ar. Mr. Lon. vzan i:a3 a have liberated themselves Horn yokel conservative folk favored the canal, liom Uri If- and va. iou? section rt-j.u'HMor. a> a vote L'f-ii-.r. W.'IL-P. Lrc:.f>lJ cou:.:y. i: .-uch a fizht rule, civilization will be Iree to de- Off coursourse water would freeze In winwi-n o: he ran :or the Senate in VJi't-nenihii ter, but, to offset that, snow would tl-vt-lrij.-. t-i»-n if Mr. Morris wir.s the late Sen. Brandt-gee, he ran about velop in the United CLUB PAYMENT PLAN e,.'.s:iy, th-ie i.- apt :o b- hard feel-. However, with all due respect for stop the locomotive engines, which 11,000 ahead of his ticket although were almost as frail.as the tracks* ins 1-t't resulting i:i lo-s of votes he was beaten. -Ex-Cong. O'Sullivan the profound learning and transpar- t-ithvr throutrh inJiff-rence or upon which they ran. To invest a On purchases of $50 — Pay $5 Down is also considered a vote getter by ent sincerity of the Baltimore proph- considerable sum in these seemed throueh .positive antaco:;l=m to the reason of his having been elected in et, it may be hazarded that the par- candidate chosen. reckless. A New York man who On purchases of $51 to $100—Pay $10 Down 1!)22, the only Democratic congress- ticular triumph of the cities that Mr. had ridden on a train in England Consequently it can be seen why man to be elected from this state in Mencken is dreaming about will be wrote to his favorite paper that nev- th- l^ad-rs are anxiou= O'«5"I-H "moron."*!* amijorltjrof thc-eter 1 c P.doul. State Tr.a-ur.-r torate. then Mr M- ncken, enh.ht how we laugh at those who travel Property of the Watertown HistoricalVmdhf Society It Is nothing at wbtes to «• DmttTm H der. Tbe little Portland bey is «jsi Petroleum products iatte of character dettaee- nwnt are the tat dates on the Con- i One year James a at SB accident that had - the _ joong and has not yet talies known to the tion, be hwr* considered bit necticut Voter's Program for ran victim to the charm of es to the youngest SOB of LoM aae of his moving afternoon on July l«h ales at once Invited bin to "Look here. Leary," Elections as published by the Con- Blaise's retort to a tion. Furthermore, he has i LempUi, a Scottish laird. etieuwatertownhistoricalsociety.orgt Laagee at Wei—a Vetara ttoo When he was asked If he eoold tcU ctety in London, LemplU said. "We ins r These dates, denned by law as the the place: fee of the srlvlng my vac up the i tt was fairir first and'second Fridays In August, the then duke of Ifsncti—ter. as the number of feet In a rod be read In the Bible the account of miniature affair bat shook his head, bat declared a be- 'the building of the Tower of Babel a earshot eat of a side turning. I bursting with many sorts of diverse fall this year on August S and 10. •Id man and a gnat Tory. Whan influences and personalities. Per- lief that a rod was about as long 'and learn that 'Slime bad they for polled Dp dead, and a chap hi s Registrars of voters will be in ses- the duke grasped that BUtne was Mg car ran Into die back of my haps politics did not enter much, a leading American and had been as a short stove poker or a long mortar.' The slime was bitumen." sion on those dates, for taking the a candidate for die Presidency of lead pencil. ' He further mentioned that Pliny tss." but the matter of fixing one road not members of a party for enroll- .and other andent writers have re- seemed to involve town finance, rur- the United Sta.es all his eld Tory- It appears he had heard bis ment in a party. After those dates ism was aroused and he was back grandmother say that she Jumped s ferred to the use of "SldUar on" "Hie Jumped oat" continued the al taxation, underlying principles of names of persons already voters bat fa the days of George m. To the rod every time the doorbell rang, jfor illuminating purposes. The stber. "and shouted: 'Why didst farm relief, engineering problems the lius will be closed for the fall horror of the prince the duke said and had drawn his own eondostons, •Dead sea, originally named the La- fou pot your hand outT and especially to indicate the new caucuses for all bat new voters. Per- to Mr. Blalne: "The most oat- as a bright child would. Orandmt .cos AsphaUtes, provided bitumen, "•Put oat my hand,' I says, ft' alliance which may spring up uniting ngeous thing In all history was is, I think, considerable of a Jump- which was sold to the Egyptians you eouldnt see the van, how! sons may register with a party when jour rebellion and separation from er at that—D, ELTalmadge to Port- for embalming purposes, hi the city summer residents and back- they are made voters- could yon see my handf "—Oeve-i roads tanners 'against the selfish jtfae best government on earth." He land Oregoalan. East the petroleum Industry was a land News. and wasteful methods employed by Persons who wish to transfer from •aid much more before the prince growing concern before the Chris- one party to another may do so on could stop him. tian era. Earlier than this the some of the small town political Chinese and Japanese had sunk oil fraternity. The subject of the meet- these same dates. Such transfer Blalne, with the grace and t.ct Utt Immortal Work does not become effective for six jfor which he was so fa moos, smtt- wells and ventilated the shafts by ing was the repairing of four or *ve Peter Mark Boget who compiled means of bellows. In Japanese "One's desires and f«W"«Ha« go months, however. ••. Jngty said: "Well, your grace, If the thesaurus which bears his name, out toward the full streams. How mud holes in the White HoUow Ceorge m had bad die sense, tact history It Is related that "burning Road between Sharon and , Lime In "Party Machinery." the League's was an English physician and water" was found In the reign of many a parched place they reach and winning Qualities of bis gnat* scholar, born In London, 1779. died and lap In one's memory! How Rock, where it is claimed'three or handbook of nominating and election grandson, our host it is Just pos- TenJItenno, or about l£80 years In 1809. He studied medicine at ago. many a vision of naked pebbles and four hundred cars .were stuck but machinery la Connecticut, the pro- sible that we might now be a self- the University of Edinburgh and re- sun-baked banks they cover and winter and spring. Many of tbe gram for party members is outlined. tgovernlng colony in the British em- moved to Manchester where ' e be- About the year 1600 a Japanese blot out! They give eyes to the cars were hauled out by James Mac- Each of the fall caucuses and conven- 5lre." came physician to the lunatic asy- named Masara found oil which he fields; they give dimples and laugh- Donald, manager of the White Hol- tions is described, Chart* of these The answer relieved the situa- lum, the fever hospital and the In- 'subsequently distilled. The prod- ter; they give light and motion. low Farm with no charge to the are also available from the Head- Ition and greatly pleased the host— firmary. He settled In London In net was sold as an llluminant It Banning water I What a delightful quarters of the League in Hartford. From "My Memories of Eighty 1808, and was long secretary of the is thought this was- the first In- suggestion the words always con- car-owners. He hauled eight cars Royal Society. Among his works stance of an attempt to split up the as late as May 30 it is said. He Tears," by Cbauncey M. Depew. vey! One's thoughts and sympa- are "Animal and Vegetable Physi- crude oil into Its component ports. thies are set flowing by them; they was willing to furnish a tractor, a Died in Belief Drill ology" (1884) and "A Thesaurus of —Kansas City Star. unlock a fountain of pleasant fan- truck, a team and six men tor a Found Pleasure Only English Words and Phrases" (1832), cies and associations in one's mem- week to help raise and drain the Had Disturb*! Satan which passed through 28 editions ory; the Imagination Is touched and Imud-hole sections, where for 150 in the author's lifetime, was ed- Pigeon Cot Through Martin Beaty, who moved from in Business Triumph ited by his son .hi 1870 and became refreshed."'—John Burroughs. years rocks and stones hare been Indianapolis to the mouth of Bear a standard work of reference. - -' A homing pigeon was liberated taken out so lowering the road bed The American buslnes man, tak- with an important message at creek in Kentucky to make salt. ing bis vacation abroad, Is one of -Grand Pre, during the World war. that like hundreds of miles of coun- Is credited with bavins drilled the {the most depressing sights of the try road it .-lacks drainage. As be at 2:35 p. m. during Intense ma- first oU well in the United States. iRlvtero, according to Lloyd Morris, chine gun and artillery action. This is Scotch, perhaps he does not talk It was' In 1819 that, drilling for writing.In Harper's. * Mystery of Brain An "institute of brains" has been •bird delivered its message to the the language of the Sharon officials, salt by bond, Beaty struck oil and "I recall an American whom I loft at Rampont a distance of 24.S4 Try a Classified A dv. for at any rate his offer of assistance natural gas. His crew was drenched met on the terrace of a restaurant opened in Moscow for special re- with oil and, his fire being near, search Into the mysteries of the miles. In 25 minutes. One leg met with no town acceptance. in the bills back of Nice." be says. .human nervous system and the had l*een shot off and the' breast Deeming that patience was no long- the gas. took fire. Supposing he "His wife bad inveigled him Into had been injured by a machine gun had drilled Into the infernal regions, taking a winter holiday; It was so liraln, says Popular Mechanics Mag- er a virtue, he secured twenty-four (Beaty and his men took to the hU!s azine. . One of the olds In use there bullet, but even under these condi- signatures to a double-barrelled pet- much more smart she said, than tions the bird delivered the message. and left their camp to burn. |B summer vacation. They had , Is a remarkable Instrument that di- ition asTting that the road either About two years late'j he and a come to the Riviera for the win- vides the" brain Into five equal sec- be fixed or that a special town friend returned to the place, filled ter. I Inquired whether he was, tions, and makes a wax Impression E. A. BIERCB meting be called. a barrel with oil, loaded It on a of It at the same time. After this, enjoying It 'Enjoying' It? H-4, the organ Is cut Into 25,000 to 30.- As soon as the meeting was called raft, and started down the river to so!' He spat expressively. "But HI The Robbery . MOVWaAJfD Burnslde, hoping to find some one 000 thin slices for study under the to order, and a moderator chosen tell you,' his eyes lighting up, 'back microscope. The brain of Lenin, "What happened when the rob- aXNKRAL TBUGKDTO and the warning read, one of the there who could tell him what the jhome my factory has Just sold • bers broke into the Bight Place "devil's tor" really was. His 'raft thousand beds. New hotel In Cleve- the Mite Russian' -leader, has been stores?" asked an acquaintance. Selectmen opened a machine gun 1 studied hi this way and directors ran upon a rock at the Devil's land. Had a wire 'today. He "When they heered me Jump out When in need of tarries attack on the project. His words Jumps and was wrecked. stared off. Into the distance. He of the Institute propose to examine hit the mark, hit over the mark ; the brains of other great persons In o* bed upon' getting the alarm," in. my line, frt taj Several years later Beaty at- didn't see the vineyards in the val- Bussla after their death. replied Constable Slackputter, toe and under it and many more to tempted to float a,second barrel ley below, or the blue Mediterra- faithful guardian of the peace and •% prioe first _ spare. He admitted that the road flown the stream, and again his raft nean, framed by hills. And when dignity of Petunia, "they tumbled •was bad and ought to be fixed but twas smashed, the barrel broken, [be added wistfully, 1 wish I was through the door and fled like the Phone 864 said that White Hollow bad had all and the oil. wasted. This time ithere now.' I knew what be saw— Elephants, Were Lightest wind, as the feller sold. Went so , the attention that it deserved. Beaty left that part o: the country a thousand beds, in crates stamped The true dance brings the high- fast I gorry, that none of the • A • A A •!•( ' A motion was submitted, and se- .and never returned. It It salt' that [with bis name, on the shipping plat- est possible bodily perfection. dews they dropped have struck the until bis death be believed he bad (form of his busy factory." conded providing for the repair of Through It one can attain perfect ground till plumb yet"—Kansas jpenetrated Into the realm of the poise. It Is not a question of weight City Star. the mud.holes at an expense to the iprtnce of darkness.—Detroit New*. A few years ago, In the Hippo- towq, of $800 provided that Individ- Promoted Copyright lam drome, I saw a troupe of dancers. uate would subscribe as much as Noah Webster, the dictionary They were little girls, none over HisReason Hie $250. seven. Yet their little bodies were \Piano Playing Call* maker, was the first American to "What on earth made you get A new element then appeared, benefit by the copyright laws. la tense and rigid, and they came down WATERBURY bump! Then came some perform- such an enormous kennel for that for the next speaker recognized by ; for Punching Power 1788 Webster published "A Gram- tiny dog of yours?" asked the dean- the chair was an employee of the matical institute of the English ing elephants. The beasts weighed GASLIGHT Few rightly estimate the amount thousands of pounds, yet as they shaven man." State Highway Department He lot force expended upon the piano Language." He described It as "an elementary book for facilitating the danced from side to side, no one The other turned about and in- took altogether a different tone and iby a player in making a note sound. could hear the sound of their feet spected his dog's kennel. Then he CO. one calculated to make a wayward acquisition of oar vernacular It the pianist Is playing fortissi- tongue, and for correcting a vicious The animals had poise . . . they swung round and faced bis ques- child forget its foolish desires for mo, at times the force of six pounds were at ease, and they had natural tioner, an artful smile hove'lng Cor. Center A LawwivrerHi pronunciation which . prevailed round his mouth. todays pleasures by suggesting bet- Is thrown upon a single key to among the common people." The understanding of the laws of bal- ter toys for the morrow. It would produce a solitary effect With first part was known as "Web- ance and movement—Edwin Straw- "Well, between you and me and chords the force Is. generally spread bridge hi the Dance Magazine. the gatepost" he began, "It's be- WATBtBURY, COMB* be so foolish to try to fix the road ster's Spelling Book." It is still In PHONE6M4 for so little money. It would be over the various notes sounded s! print and bos sold over 60,000,000 cause I lometimes come home late 'multaneously, though a greater out- and my wife locks the door!" better to wait and have the state put of force 1B undoubtedly expend (copies. Shortly after the publica- take It over and make a state road ,ed> This Is what gives pianists the tion of this book Webster made a of it. He did not say so but he tour of the southern states In. the wonderful strength in their fingers. Interests of a copyright law. The would probably approve of having A story used to be told, of Pnde- •federal copyright law was passed foreign labor hauled in to cut the rewskl that he could crack a pone in 1700. It was especially appropri- trees and straighten the beautiful of Rrench plate glass half an Inch ate that the first author to take ad- winding curves of White Hollow thick, merely by placing ode hand vantage of this law should have Road. Because they have mud holes upon it as if upon a piano keyboard ibeen one who labored to promote which they can hardly afford to fix and striking it sharply with bis ml-1- it—Mentor Magazine. You arc invited to visit for single track traffic, he was very die finger. urgent that they postpone the whole One of Chopin's compositions has matter until they could build a road a passage which takes two minutes Police Woman in Society wide enough for double track. and five seconds to play. The total The police force in a New Toi

watertownhistoricalsociety.orgin IndividiMlity

oot-of-tbe-ordlaary styles at* shown la tbe away pretty' cottons awl linens, aad la plain colors, cheeks, polka dots, conventional figures and flower patterns la all colors, tormina Bines then art no awn grand- bright aad daUcat* uarmonlea. Oa* mothers la the fashion world, ob- unusual model bat a vary high waist- serves n fashion writer la the Mew lias, the abort, full-gathered skirt be- Americanus York Times, there are also no more ing attached with a stitched belt t» children, and the dresses for young- the -baby" waist This small frock, Jfefociel sters who have graduated from the far a miss of five. Is made of white one-piece garment stage today are nlnon printed In tiny pink roses, and miniature reproductions of those their both material and design are very mothers wear. The same chic and quaint A sunbonnet made of tbe femininity that are considered essen- tial In dress for women are emphl- NURSES .know, and doctors hava sized in the models for a small daugh- declared there's uotkmg quits fike Bayer Aspirin for all sorts of aches ter, excepting only such minor details and pains, but be sure it it gamins a* skirt length and treatment of col- Bayer; that name must be on the Uir, sleeves and belt. Package, and on every tablet Bayer In designs for very small girls noth- is gfiiuliif, and the word genuine—in ing has been offered to take the place red—is on every box. You can't go of the practical, pretty one-piece frock wrong if you will just look at the bat: which hangs from the shoulder and hus sufficient fullness of material to permit absolute freedom of movement. This model Is so universally popular that some prefer to use It for girie as they grow larger, varying only the fabric and trimming. In frocks made after this fashion almost every sort of material Is shown, lightweight woolens, crepes, linen and cotton, either figured. In which case no trimming is required, or plain, when a bit of needlework, lace or em- broidery la uted. Despite the general Bint MaaafMtate uniformity of design some of tbe •f Uoaoa«stleael«Mter «C models are delightfully clever, and DOMT THROW THAY YIRB AWAY surprisingly Individual types . are - KedafanltWlOia achieved with variations in the man- VILCAHSELF ner of ornamenting, and finishing. •vncMizim rusni For everyday frocks tbe new printed cottons are rtvlved in lovely patterns Zffbtrnatiotml. BJuto and colors. In such weaves as chains, Kansas City, Mo^-A vl«w of a section of th« assemblage of gingham and percale. For warm day* White Dotted Swiss;, a Dolly Varden • toon. No mMbanlcal skill aw- Percale for Little Girls. "•nary. W»e mlnutM does the hoboas of-the country aa they gathered In convention In this city nlnon Is shown In the tub-fast arti- trik Full lastrutloas with recently In- response to a call from hobo headquarters, This meat- ficial silk weave, as are also handker- trick. Full iBstmetloas with muslin and lined with pink, and pink Mo. WoV netf'SSies*. ...Iteea. ing was called In order to bring to bear affective co-operation and chief linen, cotton and silk crepes and la 1 for smaJI cute or break*...... Steee. organlzatlonfor millions of Industrial workers out of work. and white socles and white shoes go lo. I for 1M* to 1* eata or braaka «(esa. cotton tissues. (o. 4 for JV to «V cuU or breaks Meern. with It Or one of each also for f 1. -• Next Older-Frocks. The ensemble Idea 1* as much In Can bo purcbuad alntlr or In qnantltloa, By ELMO 8C0TT WAT30N — " In stamos or II. O. poataco prspaM. new era. For 30 years Leon Bay. Liv- which were always to be found there. The next older frocks are made also vogue in clothes for children as In J~- • — - E-to your ordsr. •Bark! .Hark! The dogs do bark: ingston carved or painted his "mo- Other tins were used for "cram ket- of washable taffeta, figured or plain; women's dress. Engaging outfits of The bega-ar'a are comlner to town— nicker? (name or distinctive sign) on tles," "peeorl" and "mulligan," and of voile, crepe, printed cottons and frock, hat or sunbonnet which Is con- Soros In rass, and lomt In tag*. - railroad watering tank%, railroad others for plates. The "Jungle" was linens, the choice of material depend- sidered very chic, shoes and socks are And some In velvet sown*. ;- bridges, freight sheds and other always located near a stream and tbe assembled In one color, scheme. ing on the type of dress and the age UmB OES • that old nursery places near rallroadi-not only, from unwritten'law of* the "Jungle" was of the wearer. One requisite appears Sports .dress, too, i* a happy solu- rhyme bring up In your the Canadian line to the Mexican bor- that tins should be washed after ate to be a wearable quality, and most of tion of tbe dress problem for chil- mind a picture of that der and from the Atlantic to the Pa- and left for the next *bps who-Should the materials are expected to, pass suc- dren, and the styles that serve mature class of vagrants, various- cific, but also from Alaska to Argen- wish to use them. Water for [cooking cessfully the test of sun and water. wearers for, any and every occasion ly called hoboes, tramps tina. For more than a third of a cen- was always taken from upstream and are adapted to the children's require- downstream the hobo "crammed" Sheer soft stuffs are prepared for or. bums, which were once tury he rode on brake beams and the the better grade of frocks for children ments. Sweaters are made to fit a- picturesque. If not ex- blind baggage, and by keeping a care- (cleaned up) and washed his clothes babies of three, and are shown in SHAMPOO gXr?- which he hung on the "gooseberry" of from three to six, as these are more actly ornamental, part of ful account of. nrat of all, It Is Interesting to note from yielding to the call of the road) colored threads. On some of thie sea- material, say Jersey or pique, or other he had traveled a total of 526,000 ithat no one can tell for sure just now That was the hobo of the old days. son's models a bit of the Russian and cotton tub goods. the word "hobo" originated. There Is miles for the total sum of $7,01! H James Bads How, the "Millionaire Czech needlework In intense blue and Tbe ideal suit hi all of Jersey, which -one theory that It came from hoo During the course of his travels, Hobo," Is typical of tbe new. He Is reds is Introduced in the style, of the I* to be had with blouses in plain •tooy." longused jacertain parts of this most-famous hobo knew another, a grandson of James B. Eads, builder soft one-piece frocks for misses and colors finished with fancy strips of •the country to designate all migratory who later became famous as a writer of the Eads bridge at St. Louis, and young women. other colors about the bottoms, necks farm workers.. Another says that It —Jack London—and the life they a son of the late James F. How, an of- In the plainest models for very small and sleeves, and with skirts of tbe 4M turn the call "Ho! Boy I" used l>y lived was typical of the old-time hobo. ficial' of the Wabasb railroad. Brought principal color. In models for larger the enrly mall runners. The hobo children the needlework is done In Told In terms of the picturesque lan- up In an atmosphere of luxury and figures of animals, amusingly lifelike girls these skirts also have fancy bor- •fclmseiC who has a picturesque vocab- guage of the hobo, they rode the refinement, a college man, he became ders. In this simple rait many color ulary all of his own, has contracted 1 ducklings, rabbits, dogs and birds. W1U TON Invest "bumpers, ' "tops," "blinds" of a hobo by choice, and for twenty years Frocks In the next larger sizes also combinations are shown. Some are the name to one syllable and simply "trucks" of railroad trains until some had devoted his time and money to very delicate, using, pastel shades, •calls himself a *b». Be It kaown afeo, are ornamented with animal motifs, a "shack" (brakeman) or "con" (con- the hoboes. He was the founder of dog, elephant or some other figure others are as vivid and sophisticated Chat-he has become class conscious ductor) became "hostllt" and threw the hobo college, which may be estab- as any among mature styles. The $10.00 and, according to his caste system, the usually on tbe front of the dress, the them off of the "sidedoor pultman" lished almost anywhere. Usually It Is blouse sleeve or pocket and It Is con* fancy for red, white and blue, which In a buslnass whan there ars no three words used.to describe him are (freight car). If they succeeded In a one-room' affair and here the men has heretofore been taboo In dress crtdit accounts and whtra cold not synonymous. According to his eluding the "snakes" (switchmen) or eat, sleep and are taught Teachers but was lately presented in sports cash is th« only moans of tmna- definition, the hobo Is a migratory "yard dicks" (railroad detectives), come from universities and colleges suits for women, Is suggested In tbe . acting bttsbitsV • worker; the tramp, a migratory non- they made for the nearest "Jungle" nearby to lecture on almost every sub- Jolly small frocks, suits and sweaters, Financial panics or Comtnarcta! worker; and the bum, a stations 17 (place where tramps and boboea con- ject under the sun. The "classes" are as well as in all of the accessories. doproMions hold small faar for it. oonworkcr. gregated/ where they were sure to conducted through the winter, for. find a varied collection of "fore-and- with the coming of good weather, the Gay Color Combinations. Mo mining or oil * propositioci. ; It Is doubtful If the public would In-the flannel and crepe frocks that afters" (hoboes who walked from "students" take to the road again, For funinftmrnH-t mrif to make that One distinction, but. would place to place), "blndle-stlffs" (a mi- repeat In up-to-date fashion tbe "eallor be inclined to lump them all together some of them carrying their "di- AMBUSCO, Room BBS, gratory worker In the true sense of plomas," mimeographed on paper, cer- suit" which so long served as a uni- as'ane class under the generic naine the' word who "glommed fruit," form for school girls, there are gay 11 West 42ad St., New York City. of hoboes, a class that was brought tifying that they have attended a cer- "skinned mules," glommed spuds, or tain number of "classes." . color combinations, such as blue and Into being by the first railroad and did any other menial labor whenever red on white, which are varied In a that until the lost few years was ever he had the chance), "gay cats" (ordi- The forerunner of the college and perfect merry-go-round of tints. These Increasing. But now the "Weary Wil- nary tramps and "stake men" (work- the new status of the hobo was the are made also In cotton and In light- lie" type, as depicted on the vaude- ers with some money). There, too, organization movement which began weight woolens, ville stage and In the comic strips, Is would be certain to be be some "stew lit 1907. . In the fall of that year there The belted Russian frock that rev- almost extinct lie was a strong In- hums" (the tenderfoot of the profes- was much unemployment and about dividual!.*, responsible to no one hot olutionized years ago tbe dress for sion) who listened eagerly as the elite five hundred men were stranded in girls of the awkward age 1* shown in t/scs for Wmstwn Ctdar to himself and his Inward urge to "go 6t the brotherhood, the "comets," Tacoma, Wash. Jeff Davis, Dun The range of tbe Western cedar la places and see things." The hobo, a smart practical dress made of cot- "perfesh" of "blowed-in-the-glass O'Brien and a few other prominent ton broadcloth printed In a gayly col- Canada Is confined to the province of 1028 model, la still pretty much an in- stiffs," told of their experiences In members of the' fraternity made an British Columbia.' More shingles ara dividualist but.he's alRo a member of ored design. It has no sleeves. The towns that were "Jake"' (not "hostile" offer to the mayor. If an unused collar Is narrow and made with pointed mude from the Western cedar than the International Brotherhood Welfare to a 'bo), where he could "batter" schoolbouse were given to them for from any other species. Over 2£0Ur association. He has organized and Is revers, and there Is a belt of pique. (beg) on the "main stem? (main shelter they would keep the hoboes This model is charmingly adapted to 000.000 were cut in Canada from this trying to standardize IIIH "profession." street) for "light pieces" and be sure from begging at back doors and out tree In 1020. In addition over 181V He It seeking a definite ."tutus In the the countless figured fabrics that are of Retting some "scoff" (feed) from a of mischief. The mayor agreed. Res- now In vogue, such as the crepes, taf- 000.000 board feet of lumber. 10.000.- modern order of things. He hold* "hay bag" (woman) when he battered taurants supplied left-over food and 000 laths, and an Immense number off conventions, such as the one pictured fetas, linen?, cottons In their various the back door." Then, too, there the hoboes spent a quiet winter there. weaves and patterns. This and other poles and posts were produced from above. lie goes to "college" and, like would be reminiscences of "decking" There was held the first hobo conven- It In the same year.' as not, carries a "diplomu." In addi- designs are shown by the French and (riding) a "peddler" (local freight) tion and the organization Idea came American dressmakers for the special tion to being organized and standard- on n "Jerk" (branch line); or an into being. ized, ht: Is also beromlni; motorized, benefit of young girls of the age when Echo of Defeat "orange special" (fruit car) In baby things have been outgrown and "What did you learn In school ta> for the advent of the cheap car has "crimpy", (bad) weather, of being So now they have the International taken him off the freight trains. There the next older styles seem yet to be day, son?" "pulled" (discovered) by a "shack" Brotherhood Welfare association, in too grown up. dias'developed a new type of hobo, di- which J. Eads How is a leading light, "Well, dad, I learned that your and forced to "hit the grit" (walk), definition of an Isthmus Is the ber- vided Into three classes: whole fam- dodging us he left the train, no doubt, which holds conventions from time to The Introduction of pique Into this ilies cyppyiriK about the country in time In various parts of the country Organdie Blouse and Pique Skirt, and season's mode Is like cutting a page ries." a "dewdrop" (stone) hurled by the a Cream Linen Dress. "Jin lizzies"; young hoboes who have '•shnck" or "con." Or there might be at which economic problems are dls from Godey's Lady's Book or any other their own enrs and truvel alone; and tales of adventures In the; big. cities cussed and the purpose of which, In fashion magazine of forty years ago. the "hitch-hiker" who haunts the sidered chic to have some such touch where they had to "carry the banner" the' words of How, are to "educate, on all. the simpler daytime frock*, Pique and marselltes, it appears, were ALLEN'S FOOT-EASE pnvpd roads and main highways. In- (walk the street)'all night or take In organize, abolish poverty and squalor once the favorite materials for the stead of the railroad*, and who coats and hats. At ten years of age Stops the pain of Corns the "Jesus screamers" (religious HOI- and unemployment everywhere." They or so girls begin to have an interest "summer tailored suit" as it was for- and Bunions and you can "bums" rides from passing motorists. have "advance agents" on the road merly known. The soft fabrics have walk all day in ease anb) vutionlsts who speak and sing In the In monograms, which ore embroidered comfort. Nothing gives Perhaps no better Illustration of the streets) In order to get, a "flop" (place who carry the gospel of.the organiza- for years quite superseded this starchy ' contrast between the hobo, old and new on some part of the frock or suit or )iucn relief to hot, fired, to sleep). tion throughout the country- and or- on tie ends. type of dress goods, and now pique acblnc Inflamed or swoV style, can be shown than a compari- ganize "locals." For the hobo. 1028 Is being, revived as a novelty especial- ten teat, blisters or esl- son between "A-No. 1." a famous hobo Many variants in material and de- lnses. A little alim All of this talk would pass around model. Is no longer the picturesque in- ly suitable for children's frocks and of the old days,'.and James Kads How, sign save the small stralght-from-the- coats. Entire suits, consisting of a I IWf.ua sprinkled la tin* cumpfires In the "Jungle" as the dividual. He Is fast becoming a sboulder frock from monotony. In one each shoe In the morning founder of the hobo college Idea and standardized member of an organiza- plaited skirt and over-blouse, umaily will makeyouforgetabout perhaps the best-known .hobo' of the "stiffs" sipped their steaming "Java" model made of Scotch gingham gauze UEbtshoM. It takes .the (coffee) made In one of the tin cans tion. having a tailored, belted effect, and, In a rose and blue check the material one-piece frocks, straight as to sil- friction from theaboB. Al- Is finely tucked across the top, draw- >ways use It tor Dancing houette and belted In the manner of a and to Break In New Shoes. Vbr rue Ing the pattern together to form a coat are very popular. •ample and aFooUKaw Walkiot: Don, addnsa court A door leads from the open Giant Turtle* yoke,' which Is all of one color, and the AUDI'S nOT-EMC LeBaar. N..Y. For very little children the popular Bazaars court Into the street There are numerous types of ocean sleeves are finished in the same fash Ion to form a narrow cuff. Another play frock Is a one-piece, sleeveless Each bazaar has a coffee shop, turtles. The largest type, which hus and abbreviated step-In. One of these which Is a large open place, covered no commercial value—the trunk tur- quite fascinating model Is a tiny sus- ! vii Biliou.i At i ,K k > Btiwts In the bazaar districts of pender frock made of black velveteen la an amusing affair with a polka dot partly by a roof, where are a number tle or leatherback—weighs several 1 Ol phi I.;\ i t AulatU cities are only 8 .t« 10 feet to be worn over a slip of sheer' white shirt of blue and white cotton. The wide. The larger simps an; 8 by 10 of wooden settees ranged' In rows. Any hundred pounds and attains a length muslin or voile .or georgette. very short "shorts" are of plain blue .Suk Hi ,n Lid u Hud the smaller onp» 5 by 0 feet, visitor who sits down le first given a of 6 or 7 feet - An official reran] nn and-are attached with suspender* file at the National Smithsonian InstI This Is the type of dress that forms wiib one Hide giving directly on the cupful of Turkish coffee and then- a a sort of link between the baby one- ROOTH-OVLRTON HI reel. In each hazuiir there Is H narghile or native pipe filled with tutlbn describes a specimen found at piece and the designs that begin to Crepolla Coats khan for every 10 or 12 shop". These Hhrlza tobneco. The charge for coffee the American Museum of Natura have a grown-up silhouette. Another Crepella Is advancing as quite the khans are two stories high with an und the use of the pipe Is 2 cents. History, which was caught off the thnt belongs to the same age Is a fem- modish material, for unllned Jackets open court In the center und rooms on Here merchants gather to dtacumi coast of Connecticut and was six feet inine version or the small boy's shirt- and coats to top (rocks In everything TAB I. FT the four sides, all opening Into the trade bills. long and weighed 715 pounds, waist and first trousers, which an from georgette to crepella.

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U'" -'-'rTh. . *•-. Property of the Watertown Historical•*".-. Society Miss Edith Beabam left yesterday ant at Camp Sepunkum on Soaday. fa fraught with gnat from VTn*aia an viattlag at the WOODBUBY NEWB with Mrs. E. N. Bailey to spend a Mrs. Annie 8omers and Mrs. PoJ-else could such villains as Bos* parsoaaca. short vacation at Meriden, N. H. loek of New Haven and Janes a Beery. William Powell-and Mitchell Prof. Frederick; Plane of Tale For thw he University, his wife and family, in- A. B. KNOX Bobert Sullivan has a new Victory The Woodbury Woman's Club has Curtiss and grandson, James Cnrtiss Lewis have such powerful roles? watertownhistoricalsociety.orgPicture the" attack on the French cluding the Misses Mary and Anna JPJterc&J*!teg,.a eji endjnf th£ rt Beardiley. proprietor of la .A-haMfnl I ? Tt-ihe^exTfibrrtotrof art at Ljme~*a- against a thousand—* handful of Tmer in the old family residence In the Beardaley garages la spending Saturday of this week. Visitors may Mrs. Frank Kinney and daughters, the week with Arthur Lyman on bis men wiped out and the hero escap- j Pierce Hollow, as everybody is glad not only view the paintings but meet Mildred and Yvonne, of Naugatuck. Let us take' It tor granted that cabin cruiser on the sound. Mrs. were Sunday guests at the home of ing with two girls to the desert, that to know. there are a treat many newspapers Beardtley and the children are with the artists themselves—a most un- his mission for France be fulfilled! usual opportunity. There will be the Mr. and Mrs. Fred Platt An uncommon crop of grass Is re- in the United States, and no matter Relatives In Madison. Picture the dramatic scene where find himself he can usual small entrance tee for the up- The directors of the Woodbury Wa- ported, with but little properly cured where one Ward Sands of East Orange. N. J.. ter company held a meeting yester- the Sheikh El Hamel demands that because of the rains. Many have buy a copy with little trouble. Then keep ot the gallery and the regular the women be turned over to him as if spending a month at the home of "tea" charge for the support of the day. had to enailo the oat crop at they are also many radio seta, functioning subsidy if France would have a horribly la the weather which we. |fr. and Mrs. George S. Smith, Beth- library. Word has been received from the were unable to cure it But com It have been forced to endun of late, lahem road. (our Woodbury young ladies who are treaty with him! a very -spotted" crop, wherever the Miss Fannie Isbam U visiting at but they worked after a fashion dur- Dr. and Mrs. B. &. Sbopp are touring to Canada, that they went Picture the charge on the Great tend permits water to gather. the home of her brother, Austin ing the two political conventions. la •pending the next two weeks at Mil- through Ausable chasm and visited Oasis, with five persons battling five Isbam. fact the "news that the RepubUcana ford Point, where relatives will join Fort Ticonderoga on the second day thousand. The dynamite mines Hotehkiss and Frederick ROXBURY bad nominated Hoover and Curtis, the shore party. II Rollin The distance covered on the first day planted in the sands! The slaying was known to pretty much every one - A. E. Knoz and Mrs. F. E. Knos]| Strong, was 175 miles—and it was not with- of the desert wolves with modern Mr. and Mrs. George Ward and save the delegates from this state •will attend the summer outing ot the of the out tire trouble, In spite ot the net warfare methods! ' daughter Mabel from Ansonia wan who were back in »S4 during the Connecticut Editorial Association at passed the college entrance examina- that C. H. Judson had his Chrysler at Brook farm Saturday afternoon. Never has a picture before been sessions. The Democrats picked Lake Candlewood. New Milford, on tions to Yale. car put in fine condition for the trip packed with so many melodramatic Mr. and Mrs. Clayton Squire have Saturday. Members ot the associa- Miss Virginia Barnes of Westfleld, been entertaining the latter'a broth- Smith and Robinson and that fact Rev. Mr. Vinie preached his last moments! was known by the public shortly tion, and other representatives of Mass., is visiting with her grand- er. Louis Carlson, and wife, from sermon In the North Congregational Southbury is becoming more and after it became a fact Connecticut newspapers will be the mother, Mrs. John Reed, at the Reed church at the regular Sunday morn- Fort Dodge, Iowa. guests ot the Connecticut Ltght & more a town of cottages and summer Mrs. Norman Hurlburt entertained home on North Main street. Ing service. He has accepted a po people. The town which originally But there are exceptions, not until Power company for the day at its Mrs. E. W. Van Vleck Is enjoying sltion as chaplain and professor of the Shepaug club Tuesday, about the time this is printed, will power plant, the Rocky River devel- rebelled at the "cut-up condition of Mrs. Eugene €. Peck ot New Lon- a visit from her nephew, Nelson religious education, history and lit- the land and the multiplying of small Mr. Hoover discover that the Re- opment. . Macy of Greenwich. erature at Lake Erie College in don, formerly Miss Katherine Hum- publicans have nominated him. At parcels that must be taxed," has Iphrey, has a son born July 21st Miss Augusta Nettleton returned The shoulders of the road along Painsville, Ohio, and will begin bis found that its exchequer is now the very moment when this is writ- home on Monday from the New Ha-Main street received a double appli- duties this fall. ten. Mr. Hoover may be turning to ven hospital where she had been a cation of oil and sand this week. his wife and Baying, "Lou. It's nearly patient for five weeks. Mrs. Harry The regular mot ;»?..£ service will of this worthy class ot immigrants. Booth place and Henry Bronson and month, now since the Republicans It gives the appearance of a wider be held in the North Congregational The flow of honey, negligible in Strickland is her attendant nurse.. street and makes it safer to turn off Albert Buckingham are making re- met at Kansas City, and there was church Sunday morning with Rev. the t-aily part of the season because pairs on it. some talk connected with me. Have Dr. Robert Clark is away on a the roadbed proper. The state is of excessive downpours that washed trip to Canada. Luther G. Coburn in charge. Mrs. Mary Barnes had as her guest rou ever heard whether it amounted making another improvement in the the nectar from the flowers, now W. E. Dawson of Glaatonbury is Church services will be resumed Sunday Dr. Spencer and family from o anything or did it end with Low- placing of new railing on both sides for next Sunday at the First Con- promises to be large, and fortunate here for the. month to have charge of the road from the West Side Ansonia. . len or Dawes?" To which Lou may ot the Dawson store during the ab- gregational church with Rev. Clin- will be the provident beekeeper who Mr. and Mrs. Watson and grand- .nswer, "Now, Herbert, you have re- bridge to the Fitzsimons place. The ton W. Wilson, pastor, occupying tho supplies plenty of "supers" full of sence of the owner, L. C. Dawson, in gang of workmen from Naugatuck, children and William A. Barnes, ot signed your post in the Cabinet and Maine. pulpit. boxes. Ansonia, spent Sunday afternoon we might do something else than talk who build the railing, were called Church of the Epiphany Leo Skelly'and wife enjoyed a ten Miss Dorothy Thomas is visiting in with Miss Frances Barnes. shop. Let's order the car and go for upon to replace several lengths at Bristol at the home ot her uncle, Rev. Leonard E. Todd, priest in a nice ride." And Governor Smith days' vacation in Everett, Mass., re- Rocky Glen, whl<|h were destroyed turning home on Saturday. Edward Tohmas. . ° charge . may be asking his secretary In Al- in an auto accident Monday night Herbert F. Edelberg. roofing con- -.Morning prayer and sermon at B WEST SIDE bany a like question and the secre- Bev. and Mrs. Earl Vinie of New The* funeral of Mrs. Harry Eyre tractor of Waterbury, has put ruber- i. m., D. S. T. V Mrs. Julia Norton of Thomaston tary will change the subject by tell- Haven were guests last week at the. was held at St. Paul's church on oid shingles on the Karrmann store, was a recent visitor at the home of ing Al that the Kookoo Klan has sent homes of Charles S. Curtiss and Fred Friday afternoon with Rev. L. E. occupied by L. C. Dawson and is now her daughter, Mrs. W. H. Munson. him two nice wreaths of poison Ivy Curtiss. . .' . Todd, rector, officiating. Included in roofing the house of Mrs. Katherine HOTCHKISSVILLE Miss Anna Rowe is spending a by express, one coming from Malone Miss Marjorie Morris of Water the tributes were. many beautiful Koch in North Woodbury. The men of the village have set part of her vacation with friends and the other from Jericho Center, bury is visiting with her aunt, Mrs. floral tributes. Acting as bearers Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Clapp have aside Saturday afternoon and Tues- here and at present is at the home of out on Long Island. J. A. Sullivan of the Curtis House. were her brother, W. J. Victory. Of returned from a motor trip to Cape day night, after working hours and Mr. and Mrs. jC. G. Swanson. Mrs. Edward M. Smith is having Hartford( Glover Smith. Arthur M. But shortly Mr. Hoover and the her housetpaintehupaintedd by her sonson, Charles j Th Cod where they visited their daugh- until dark, of each week for the E. N. Hallock and family are mov< Governor, each being about his law- and Stephen H. Brown. The ter, Miss Eleanor Clapp, who is at roofing of the HotcbissvlUe Com- J. Smith and helpers. burial was in the North cemetery. ing into the Noble Allen place. ful business and then and there in Camp Mayflower Eleanor will re- munity Building, tormerty the school Ray Dingwell and Ernie Racenet Mr. and Mrs. John Goodsell, Miss Arthur Cofrank has taken >a pos> the peace being, will Bee a delegation ' main in camp, until the last of the house of the 'ville. The shingling took a motor trip to New York and Marian. Goodsell and Mrs. Charles tlon as salesman for, the Hallock of well-dressed men advancing. The month. 0 began July 21st but on the next Coney Island Saturday afternoon, re- Nutting visited Charles Nutting in Novelty company and started work spokesman will remark first, that it Miss Katherine Lyall, granddaugh Saturday, rainy weather prevented turning Monday morning. Meriden on Sunday. in that capacity this week. is his pleasant duty to say that the ter of Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Lyall, is the men from working. None of The religious' services held on the Miss Jessie Mitchell returned home Fred Perro, his daughter, Mrs. Wil- entire crowd will stay to dinner. His - spending two weeks at Camp Mo- the men on the job have ever lawn at the Swanson home on Sun- Saturday from a week's visit with liam Brennan and children, Wilfred second pleasant duty will be to in- hawk. shingled before (unless it is Les day was attended by about 100 peo- her sister, Mrs. Harry E. Norton of and Rosemary, arrived from Youngs- form the victim that he has been Miss Hazel Swanson of the olass of Cable) but they are fast catching ple from Woodbury and surrounding nominated for the office of President Winsted. town, Ohio, on Sunday for their an- '2S of the Woodbury high school, will on. Mr. Bryant, who is chief of towns. ' of the United States. And, right off The North Congregational church nual visit here at the home of Mr. enter Boston University this fall, the fire department which has taken A number from here attended the the reel, the candidate will respond will be closed August 12, 19, 26 and and Mrs. Fred Perro and other rela- Repairs have been made to the over the responsibility of putting funeral on Tuesday of Mrs. Freda in a few well chosen words which .. September 2. tiyes. and keeping the old building in good Benham property next to the First Rowe, which was held from the Clark will fill the greater part of a news- Sunday visitors at the home, of Mr. It is expected that the committee repair, says there was only one way church chapel. undertaking parlors, Waterbury. The paper page: The campaign will then and Mrs. George S. Smith were Mr. of First church members who are to do it—go at It. When called Mrs. George Tilge returned to her burial was in Pine Grove cemetery, be officially opened. It is all very and Mrs. Harold Hoyt of Lltchfleld, working upon the fe-decoration of Tuesday evening Mr. Bryant was Frank Beardsley of Maplewood, N. home in Philadelphia today after Mill Plain. wonderful, but while it ought to be the edifice in the interior, will have spending several weeks here with her eating his' supper at the hour of a decent campaign it is not likely J.. and Mr. and Mrs. Willis Beards- something definite to report at the 9:40 and all this came after a day's ley of Bethlehem. . daughter, Mrs. LawTence Clapp. MAKING BOfH END8 MEET to be.—"Norton" in Shore Line meeting called for next Wednedsay Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Mooney of the work in Waterbury where he is em- Mail carrier Herbert Somerset re- ployed. ' • evening at the home of the chair- Bethlehem road recently entertained All Woodbury kids roll on the floor, Times. turned to his job on Tuesday morn- man, Mrs. E. W. Abrams. The work The roofing is asphalt shingles Kick up their tiny feet, ing but has reserved a week which Mr. and Mrs. Cappie and two children so far has been to get estimates and was purchased ot the C. L. And poke their toes into their he hopes to spend on a little vacation of Long Island and Mr. and Mrs. and to take preliminary measures Trlpp and four children of Brook- Adams company. North Woodbury. mouths— tour with his family later in the and incidentally get subscriptions. The men who have already re- Thus making both ends meet. month. , lyn, N. Y. - Miss Myra Coad, who is training Woodbury people to quite a num- ported on the job are E. L. Bryant, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Jones and for a nurse in West HaVen, arrived John Harrison, Arthur J. Parkin, Woodbury dogs, attached to small son Ronald of Waterbury were Sun- ber have accepted the Invitation of home this week for a vacation to the Connecticut Light & Power com- Howard Platt, Leslie Cable and Fred tin palls, day guests at the home of Mr. and be spent with her parents, Mr. and Platt. Go howling down Main street, Mrs. Clifford Terrlll. Geraldine pany and are attending the Food Mrs. S. J. Coad, Pleasant street. Preservation show being held at the Sunday guests at the home ot Mr. Then stop to madly bite their tails Jones of Waterbury spent last week Mrs. Arnold Sanders arrived home and Mrs. Louis Wenzel were Mr.!Thus making both ends meet TRY A CLA88IFIED ADV. with her aunt, Mrs. Clifford Terrlll. Waterbury district office all this from the Waterbury hospital the first week. Tis exhibit was the first of and Mrs. Louis Wenzel, Arnold and Miss Margaret McManus has re- Constable Atwood slays the frisk of the week.. its kind in Waterbury. Louis Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Frank turned from a two weeks' visit with Kalnze" and Henry Wenzel, all of P«K. Mr. and Mrs. James Hanlon of Wa- The Pinochle club will meet to- Thomas Kelly of Waterbury and nightat the home of Mrs. Olive Sco- Middlebury was a visitor in town on Waterbury, and Mr. and Mrs. Wil-Severs his ears and feet, terbury. .' . Then grinds them into a sausagi Mrs. Walier Long and children, ville. Tuesday. '-'"-. liam Hood of Danbury. Mr. and Mrs. Wing of Bristol, Mr. The annual reunion of the Hotch- David Hurlburt' passed his 89th big- Evelyn and Walter Long, and Mrs. He maketh both ends meat. Elmer Lewis of New York are spend- and Mrs! W. R. Smith of Thomas- kiss Association will take place at birthday on the 23rd of June. Mr. ton, Mrs, Barker of New Haven, El- Hurlburt lives alone but Mr. Har- ing ten weeks in vacation at the Lake- Quassapaug one week from to- Our farmers coop their aged hen home of Miss Alfhild Johnson. Mrs. liott Barker of Milford and Mrs. day. There are several Hotohkiss rison, a near neigbor, helped him Max Sink and (laughter Ethel of Green- and daughter, Miss Ruth descendants in town. to remember the day pleasantly. Naugatuck are also spending the Green, of Waterbury were Sunday Mrs. T. Fayle Butler entertained George W. McGregor of Waterbury summer at the Johnson home. visitors at the home of Mrs. Edward her sister, Miss Naomi Vaughn of has purchased, the Hotehkiss place M. Smith. . Stratford for an over Sunday visit. on Hotchklssville main street and Mr. and Mrs. B. M; Parker of West- took possession, Saturday. Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, George Brown re- Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Shea en- field, Mass., and friends from Tor- McGregor is with her daughter in turned Sunday from a two .nights' joyed an automobile trip to West rinirton were recent guests of Mrs. visit with their cousin, Mrs. Ger- v'ermont, but will join her husband Frances .Harber. Granby with Mr. and Mrs. Joseph lere, later in the month. trude McEwen of Huntington. Walker of Waterbury, on Monday. Frank H. Thomson, who is with Mrs. Alice Nelson, assistant treas- Virginia Cavagna is recovering his iluuL'ht'-r, Mrs. Charles Turner of There they visited Mrs. Fred Case, rom the effects of a bad fall.""" " urer of the Woodbury Savings bank, aunt of Mrs. Walker. New Haven,- has been having anoth- left yesterday for a fortnight's vaca- Mr. and Mrs. Malo returned Sun er oi his heart attacks, but is im- Linsley Coykendall of Hartford is lay night from a motor trip to New tion to be spent at Surf Hotel, Block visiting for a time at the home of prowd at the present time. Island. fork and returning with them were Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Thompson. two nieces who will visit'here for Mrs. Katherine Kosh of West Main Mr. and Mrs. John Ambler visited street has had a crushed-stone drive 'Mr. and Mrs. Robert Sylvester and a time. their son, Clarence Ambler on Sun- Mr. and Mrs. Louis Stotler of Tor built from the street into the rear day. Mr. Ambler, Jr., has charge or William Powers accidentally-backed of her lot. Doubtless a double gar- rington were Sunday guests of Rev. his car over a white lilac bush in the riding ponies at Belvedere, Ban- and Mrs. T. Fayle Butler. age will follow this great improve- tam Lake, for this 'summer. the yard of A. H. DeBrot one day ment. Karl Warner arrived home Mon- the first of the week. The car did Miss Marjorie Stuart of Sherman - Mrs. George Bacon, who is a guest day from Mt. Hermon school for boys not overturn but it was a narrow is assisting at the home of Mrs. for a few weeks' vacation. escape. Mr. Powers will make good of Miss. Etta Bacon, spent the day John Ambler. on Saturday in Watertown with Mrs. Mrs. J. M. Benedict, - Mrs. De he damage to the DeBrot property. Mrs. Frank Barnes had as her din- France Clarke and son spent Tues- Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hotehkiss John Minor, formerly of Woodbury. ner guests on Sunday Mrs. Fannie Mrs. Minor is much improved in day with friends in Guilford. of Waterville have been recent visit- IVowon Judson, Miss Louisa Clements and health. ors here. . • . Miss Lottie Hitchcock. SOUTHBURY Wesley Clark and family attended Important dates for the Pomperaug KrncstL. Bryant, Howard Platt he funeral of Mrs. Clark's mother, Valley Garden club this month are and Roller Bryant visited Camp Federated Church Mrs. Barbara Weiss in Waterbury, the JiJth, when an invitation has been Trunibuil. Niantic, on Sunday. Next Sunday morning the regular on Tuesday. acci-pted to visit the gladioli garden display Miss Millli- Anderson ha? murn»-d worship service at 11 a. m. Rev. Mr. and Mrs, William Lotz re- of Dr. H. W. S'f'vens, U'aterbury; to her duties as operator at the New George Johnson, pastor of the New turned home to New York after The news is out! The whole thrilling story of the the Hth, regular monthly meeting Haven telephone exchange. During Milford Congregational church, will ^rending the week with Mrs. Lotz's Silver Anniversary [Buick awaits yon at ear Buick at the homy of Mrs.- E. W. Van the two weeks Miss Anderson;was preach. At the same hour, 11 a. m., aunt, Mrs Louis Wenzel. Vleck, subjf-cr. "Tht- Midsummer Gar-; she went> with her parents, Junior church will be held in the Mrs. Wenzel is entertaining her * showroom! den, divided a= follows: Midsummer Mr. and. Mrs. Charles A. Anderson, Methodist church. Parents are urged sister, Mrs. Elizabeth Moeller of New Masterpiece Bodies by Fisher—a tremendous) bloom, Outdoor living rooms, Trees and Mrs. Fred Cap^wellon a Hire*- to send the children to this service Waterbury this week. Increase in power in what was already the most for the garden and Shrubs for the days' motor trip'to Lake.George; which is especially planned for the powerful automobile engine of Its slxe In the> garden: the 29th, the second annual W.'.J. Burton and family yisitid boys and girls. world—new elements of speed, plek-up and acceler* flowor show to be held at the town the wonderful gardens of Miss Jen- Although next Sunday is not SOUTH BRITAIN atlon far beyondjany previous standard ... these «re> hall in Woodbury. nings in Falrfleld on Sunday. Mother's Day, next Sunday night will Several persons from Woodbury high-light features of this most brilliant and beautt- Ross Newell returns home this The Registrars' notice of last week be Mother's Night. „ A surprise in IUIOI motof|soTS. week from a trip to the state of ^ In error as to dates. The cor- and also several from out of town store for mothers! The entire Serv- attended service in the Congrega- . |^P# Visit our Buick showroom. See the Suvet Anntve»» Vt-rmont, where he visited his form- rect dates for sessions are Friday, ice will be a fitting tribute to moth- er home in West Wardsboro. tional church last Sunday, so that August 3rd (tomorrow), and Friday, erhood. The pastor will have a spe- • ln£' sary Butek-todagr/ August 10th. the audience was an unusually large The Misses Kathryn Hotcbkiss, cial message for all mothers. In one. Pastor Lindsay did not omit a Jennette Hitchcock, Emily Tomlin- Several Woodbury friends were in- addition, the picture, "Little Yellow graceful word of welcome when he SILVER ANNIVERSARY son and Sylvia Hotehkiss spent the vited to Naugatuck last evening to' House," will show a story of a moth- rose in the pulpit.' His theme for the day on Monday piennicking at Ban- attend a shower- given for Miss Helen' er's sacrifice. It is hoped this serv- morning was the universal appeal tam Lake and developing a wonder- Platt of Woodbury at the home of ice may be a helpful and inspiring of Jesus to men of all condition, col- ful sunburn. . her sister, Mrs. Frank Kinney. one. ors and countries through all the Rev. and MTS. Clinton W. Wilson Mr. and Mrs. William J. Burton BUICK The Young People's meeting will ages. He has attracted men and arrived at the parsonage Tuesday and children, Ruth and William, left changed them and through them has yesterday-Tor an automobile trip to be held in the recreation rdom on IIUS ABB BUILT... BCICK YIU BUILD 1 afternoon after a month's vacation Thursday evening at 8 p. m. moulded the race as. no. other leader Jn Massachusetts and Maine. Cape , Cod. Their youngest child, in history. The sermon closed with Wednesday, August 8, is the dat THE WATERBURY BUICK 00. • Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Palmer of New Nancy, spent the time with her a citation of the .promises of JesuB, Bulck Distributors Haven were calling on, friends . in grandparents, Mr.' and Mrs. Robert set for the annual fair and food sal and of their fulfillment Mrs. Lind- 17-» Willow St. WATERBURY Phones 3 A 6 • town, Tuesday. Mrs. Palmer Is great- Clark of Waterbury. given by the ladies of the church. say and their two-month-old daughter ly improved in health and her Mrs.. E, L. Bryant, Miss Peggie If rainy it will be held on Thursday. attend all preaching services. Mrs. friPnds were congratulating her upon Bryant; Miss-Olive Bryant- and Earl "Beau * Sabreur," which will be Lindsay's sister "and her husband her r COVPTJ Parmelee visited Councilor Karl Bry- shown on Friday night of this week,