Property•*• ' J of the Watertown Historical Society ! • -' watertownhistoricalsociety.org

A WEEKLY PAPER DEVOTED TO THE INTERESTS OF A LIVE AND GROWING TOWN

VOL. IX. NO. 17. WATERTOWN, CONNECTICUT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1934 Single Oofjr 5 Omti

IAFT SCHOOL ATHLETES CONSTABLE ALLEH VI0TOB8 IN TWO LINES AT WATEBBUBY HOSPITAL MSWBx NOTES Local News from Hie Law Enforcement Column j Pawlfng SehoofBeatni at Basket Constables Wm. E. Allen was WATERTOWJT SCHOOLS Ball and Yale freshmen at £. W. Wheeler is in New York removed to the Waterbury Hos- on a business trip. In the present erieia the call of puiriotliun that comes to eaeh Wrestling. pital Wednesday morning by Dr. •Jails of two Intelligible iniwen i . _ . "~ ' Firal. "I will obey toe law and aar all njr inilaenee to hare the E. G. Reade, suffering from an On Friday evening the W. H. 8. The Taft School Athletic re- injury he recieved while attend- Owing to the storm on Wednes- law ••foned and obeyed." presentatives were victors in two hi. d, i . j. i . h, boys basket ball team met the day the Public schools closed at Second i "Tbe ••orifice ia too great. Let the country go to the lines of sports Saturday after- ing his duties as janitor at the!stJ.01Ig Thomaston H. S. team on noon. ,' I an fring* to have my liquor," noon, the basketball team defeat- Polk School. About a week ago;tho local.court Although the., - All other anawera come from the Iwlaied logic of hoaeat people ing'the Pawling school of Pawl- a transomlat the school fell, strik- ; Watertown boys played a hard J. D. McGowan of MahvStreet o Tnr «elf«aaeeption or intentional •nb.terluge. ing Mr. Allen on the side of the: the Thomaston quintet is still confined to his home by. «•"•» System for the Enforcement Service Our Host Import. ing, N.~ Y. five by,,a 44-^9 score game, and the Taft wrestling team de- ineck causujg much pain. When jhri fa ti,roUgh the ice and scored>illness. j ant Reform. feating the_ Yale Freshmen team .the sprain refused to respond several baskets .in the last few —.. . HYPOCRISY going'to destroy the fabric of, by a ll-'J score. to treatment it was deemed ad-:mjnute8 to piay.f gaining a lead) Harold Bassford of Wheeler What queer excuses we find American liberty. Somehow th» The Taft basket ball five dis- visable to have him removed * to jto o Rreat to j,e overcome. The street is confined to his home by the Waterbury Hospital where !8core %vas \y. H. S. 12, T. H. S. illness. for hot doing the right people were not fooled. They had played wonderful form and com- not the slightest fear that pletely outclassed their rivals, X ray pictures of the injury will, 14 tlie right thing involves the sac- who came here with a groat rep- be taken. At this time results of ' Arrangemens are being made rifice ot our pleasures and iintli- j_Aliniliain Lincoln.was aiming t.: the pictures were not obtainable, In the preliminary game W. H. by the Civic Union to conduct a nations. We met a man th«M,ther , |>...-I,!HI' a tyrant and they saw utation, as a basket ball team. lIllv w said tliat he coul(| tli: t!lt; onl me n who were The Pawling team had in but Mr. Allen was resting quite S. girls met and defeated the Smoker in the near future »° ""' " y . their lineup as center, the comfortably at the hospital. T. H. S. girls. The game was . — stand hypocrites. He had deiVml-: .tremendously excited over this center who played on = the | hotly contested throughout. It "Walter Hodges has acccpted^a— e^l-himself-to his wife and daiv_'h- i t.rrrible attack on our liberties Passaic, N. J. High School THE WORST STORM. ~ was any oTfe's game until the last position as substitute at the local tfrs for not signing the law en-j. were the men who were willing team of last year. This Passaic BUT ROADS KEPT OPEN I few minutes of play, when the W. postoffice, f'U-oement card on the ground i that the entire government team which is known as the won- ' li. S. maidens came to the front that some of those who hnd sign- should go to pieces rather than der team, winning 134 straight The snow storm of Tuesday with several foul shots and a Mr. and Mrs. Frank Larkin of el were hypocrites. He knew in that one of our precious privil- games would have to have'better evening proved to be the worst so f^ goal which puput;t themsafelthem safelyy Derby were recent visitors in the ease of these men that they eges should be relinquished for had not obeyed the law or cared 1111 interval.; players on their team, than the far this season and traveling, on on the victorious side by a sco*5 town. layout its enforcement. Whether So now, the American people form the Pawlins.' oenter display- roads "off of the state roads is io f 12 to 9. s' ed, if they were to oppose any wry difficult. The state roads! ' —— Theadore Lilley has returned !»'-' had taken the pains'to find over a good part of the country after being in New York on a out that they still were of the have made up their minds that first class high school team. 1 a!)out town are in very good The Freshmen, Sophomore and B»& .A > " . " *4_ ^.1 __^1_ -3 I— ^^ » u. > X * _i i^ ilka dl....' 4 '- - . ^. ^^ _f • - - j— ... 4 —h *^ ^3 I Ah ^^.^ ^B m^^± .AAdk Blake, center on the Taft team shape the state highway gang Junior Classes gave a party to business trip. siime mind and had hypocritically ; this Amendment and law are go- played an excellent game, play- having been kept on the job the the seniors, in the Community joined the movement, we do not j ing.to be put through. ( It will ing rings around hi-t highly tout- Paul F. Rahn, who is still con- i ^ But what a qqueer reason l>e a slow business in the wet sec- entire night. The snow plough Building Saturday evening, Feb-. i d ii i d dd it ed Passaic wonder, caging 7 Ims been on the go for the past rtiary 16 in honor of the Senior fined to the Waterbury Hospital, fur refusing to do a patriotic • timis and must depend, we quite field ;ioals and holding his oppo- *>4 hours and succeeded in keep- Class. The hall was effectively is greatly improved and a speedy duty. On that theory no man freely admit, on the growth of nent, scoreless. ing the state roads free of snow, decorated by the under-class com- recovery is looked forward to. would have joined the. anti-slav- j .-in intelligent public opinion The Yale Freshmen "Wrestling This year is the first time that mittce under the leadership of _ . ery movement ho man could {based on a realization of thc also received a big surprise when >he state department have kept M>'- Beers. Orange and white Miss Mary Farrell who has j"'i» the church. There would .dreadful demoradization of the "('hick*' Lawson's pupils pulled 1 :-rang of men quartered in town were the leading colors. Dancing been spending the past twoweeks be difficulty even about join- jnvsent situation and the equally the unexpected and won out over •>'ad the results of having a state was enjoyed through out the visiting relatives in Bridgeport ing a political party. Chris- < lear realization that the only has returned to her home on tiahity never could have begun, way out is through law enforce- their college rivals by a 11-9 score •ruck here have been very good, evening. Refreshments were serv- for Judas was there at the be-ment. The friends of law and Castle of Taft received the only Otlier years Watertown has had "I and greatly enjoyed by all. 'herry Avenue. 1 — • t ginning, and the hypocrites order are not a whit, behind the fall (if tin match, throwing his to wait for men from the sur- Mrs. Swift. Mrs. Cook, Miss Hit- rest of their fellow citizens in he practically assured bis tenm a miinrling towns where a state '"hcock, Miss Whiteside and Miss Mrs. Mary Moore of Cheshire /mast have multiplied enormous- was a recent visitor at the homV'y lit number through the ages their love for Anglo-Saxon in- man/after 4 minutes of hard •nick is kept, to clean off the Turner were" patronesses, stitutions and the safeguards of work. By securing this fail flate roads but this venr sh» has her sister Mrs. John Virtue of «s Christianity began to grow been able to do for herself. The Remington,-' Underwood Warrenway. j powerful. liberty, but they cannot get ex- victory. Both games were at- Koyal Typewriter Compan- i-iied, as perhaps they should, tended by o^ large number of s e1 j We mention it only as a pecu- PLEA8ING MUSICAL ''" °f' ' i>w"" ? & minutes with •.es will not observe the holiday man fooling himself and to that whole membership of the school. that we are all to be enslaved five or less errors, first award 'mt will continue on their regu- extent playing the hypocrite in , pretending to himself that there wli<>n some official three thou- FIBE DISTRICT There was a very pleasing mus- initial certificates 25 and 30 '>ir schedule. .•ial given in the Methodist church words a minute. Second award ' is any reason why he as an hon- and miles away oversteps the ELECTS OFFI0EB8 on Wednesday evening under the <•»«! case 40 and certificate 40. Postmaster, J. V. Abbott will c?t man should not do his duty as limits Here we have a fright- direction of the Home Missionary Third award Gold Medal and cer-•ittend the convention of Post- he sees it, letting the hypocrites f»* situatio«• n stretching over the The Annual election of officers Society. The members of the tificate with 55 words a minute, -nasers of Connecticut, which will shift for themselves? | entire seaboard and over a good of the Watertown Fire District part of the Canadian border. The was held in the Town Hall Mon- •liurch choir, dressed in colon- .The following seniors have«re- held at the Hotel Taft in New As amatter of fact every move- ial costumes assisted in the ceived awards, Tfaven on Washington's Birth- ment takes to itself some hypo- sae.red duty of every man is to_ day, even ing and all officers were , erites, but the number is not uphold the authorities in tEeir re-elected for another terra. singing of the old time favorites. December Remington Errors lay. Dr. ('. W. Jackson, chairman, Ira At the close of the program Margaret Farrell 42.3 words 0 I large as long as fashion turns up grent task. At such a time comes 11 silver collection was taken up. Gertrude Ransom 36.» words 3 The regular meeting of Court its nose and the darts of ridicule thc head of one of our great uni- C. Ilotehkiss, B. P. Hudson, P. J The evening's program con- Marion Dews 32.0 words 5 Merritt Heminway 48 F of A;are flying. ' versitie•-• s t-o •-•-uphold" la' w and 'order J. Skilton, E N. Decker and J. l>y going across the continent to. D. McGowan. Water Commis- sisted of: Part One, Piano | — scheduled for Tuesday evening luetlut.. Enid andd Lois Doolittle, December Underwood Errors Feb. 26 has been1 _ postponed until The Fifteenth Amendment again, find an example of an official sion'.>r for three years John L. 31.2 words 5 ing February 27. Sneaking of hypocrisy, Nicho- who is putting us in danger Scott. Auditors, A. G. Evans reading, MrM s OscaO r NoblNbl e of WaW - , MargareMt Farrell Wednesdaednesday evening . _...... and Arthur Hickcox. An advisory terbury, Vocal duet, Mrs. Kinnear ' This was made necessary by the las Murray Bulter has come out by trampling too hard on the mil Miss Harmon, reading, Mrs. December Royal Errors committee consisting of Wm. B. d Mi H i M inability to secure the hall for under the guise of a friend of . toos of the rum sellers. It Oscar Noble. Part Two: Play- I-ydia Cake, 30.6 words the. 26th. _. full attendance law and the Constitution in order will give a splendid moral Smith, J; li. Coe and Prank W. 33.6 words Brodie were appointed to advise let, "Ellen an* the Old Songs." Marion Dews requested as a large class will to hit the friends "of law enforce-1 uplift to the thousands of stu- the fire district _committee with composed by John H. Geddes of >. ~~ be initiated by the Court Welch ment. He is moved to intense ,'dents who are under his care. January Remington Errors- Decree—Team of Waterville iditiiindignatioifbb y a speccli~ot~thlt~th e | —But—w£._werBt£ c frttiforgettingg tthh e . regard toThd question of sewers. Lydia Cake 33.6 words 3 $2000 was appropriated for the Governor of Orepon who declares Fifteenth Amendment. The poor use of a special meeting to be THOMASTON TRIMS Evelyn Besancon 48!7 words 2 We forgot to mention last that a man's home is no longer old amendment is brought in to called for that purpose. WATERTOWN /' HIGH, week in referring to the globe- his castle and the government of buck up every man who is against trotting vacation of thc editor of Oregon proposes to go into any obeying the law. We do not en- The most interesting topic at , ^ i January Royal Errors The Thomaston High School j Kvelyn Besancon 44.4 words 4 the Litchfield Enquirer and the i place at any time in that state force that ameamendmenn * t and can- tlie meeting proved to be the irsion o£ Editor Prann of'to discover law violations. Dr.! not. Therefore a man is justi- sewer question. Dr. Jackson basket ball team knocked all thc I • "^ excursion Deep River New Era, that,Butler says that from thc stand- Jh'd in defying and disobeying presented a rough estimate* which -liampionship aspirations that H'bniary Remington Errors the placed the total cost at about the Watertown High School had Dorothy Blanner 2B.5 words 2 K litor Jones and wife of the point of the citizen our law is a imy other amendment or law. The $200,000 or $250,000 (as made by fo the four winds oh last Friday Caroline Northrop 31.9 words 4 Westport Herald have left dull unit. He urges obedience to the loirie. is perfect. We only want are behind them and are enjoy- j whole body of American law and to savv that we iwill go just as the state board of health) or evening when the clock town •*"«! Johnson 57.8 words 5 in obeying and about from $1.00 to $1.50 a front "layers romped, away with a 14 Ada Hunt 25.2 words 1 >ng life in Florida with Brother adds: "I mean the First, the far as Dr. Bulter foot. 1 to 12 victory. The town hall was ' — Hale and wife of East Hartford. Fourth, thc Fifth, thc Sixth, thc enforcing thc Fifteenth Amend- frllcd to overflowing and the February - Royal Errors —Seymour Record., 1 Tenth, the Fourteenth and thement—which is to say that we i Fifteenth.Amendments, as well as will not go one step. Neither- CIVIC UNION TO OBSERVE high school students were out in Intrude Ransom 47.5 words 3 We rather like the old school of the Eighteenth.". He condemns will he. He knows, and every WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY force to encourage their team on ~ doctors for they call diseases by the selecting of one provision of, man knows who^ uses the argu- tnlayeo victoryd a .listles Thse Waterowand unjuteresln bovs- NovembeMargaretr FarrclRoyal l Errors fheir regular names instead of law for emphatic enforcement at,'ment, that the Fifteenth Amend- Thc Civic Union have made " " - - •• 29.4 words 4 'lift game and were outpointed ' "School* s Close. io«* Latin. huge cost in derogation of all: ment is not a live question, that,' plans to celebrate Washington's in every department-of the game . : : other provisions of law. J except as used on Jthe stump by Birthday and have called a mass »iy their less experienced' opp.,n- ; Amos Allen has sold his farm on It is the old story. .We do not' certain demagogues and politic- meeting to be held in the Com- The local schooIs win close on nts. Earlier in the season the ] the week, Friday. •'•e Southford road to Anthony i ajiree with the Governor of Ore- ians in negro sections, the Pif- munity Theater at 8 p. m. Dr. T mrs(lav for Tliomaston five were defeated hoinp observed as a Holiday, Fanotto of Oxford. Mr. Allen !?<>n and think that probably he teenth Amendment has been a Jefferson, who is considered by a has purchased^a_hoiise__in_ Seyii g'l?^_tpo_far __but__we__are_.quite dead issue since 1877. When Dr. great many „to : ! Briar Cliff, on the Hudson, New If yon, are on the side of the I that he himself in all-sincerity Perhaps the soberness, on our • The Watertown Girl^s . Club Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Reynolds York. li |iior men and opposed to the ought iM come out flat-footed faces will be caused by our fear have moved into their new home I e.iforcemeht of ttfe Eighteenth A- afrainsir the enforcement of the for his sanity, but at any rate held their weekly - meeting in n ' their club roonis in the Communi- Highland, avenue. P. O. asd Bank to Close . m ndment—and by. that we mean Eighteenth Amendment, for that we shall not be accusing him ol! ty Building on Tuesday evening. The local ppost office will ob- enforcement with; all our is where he belongs. No ' man hypocrisy and insincerity. -. /The club had as, their guests, the In the hands of Brother Baker s?rve regulal r holidahlid y hourh s and idon't talk . about thc who talks in that way belongs The situation caused by the members of the Industrial Girls 'lie Seymour Record is showing - will be closed to the public from Fifteenth Amendment or.-about!anywhere else< When the \iit of public difference of opinion in, re- Club, Mrs. Phillips of Water- marked improvement. !>.3O a. m. until.7 p.. m.' The thn e excesses, oriews";.e>rif f y tf e wete._ -I, ^ j.y \* \ i \ 4i. theT enemies*jof"jthe"\ government,- }hat " there, is vpnly one-way, t ^ all the friends of disunion, skriek- 8iippef^lie":girls^^^ nn h^ih^ lodge^qr-?society "is' , ,'JChoose you this day whom ye If/it takes:a^tVouix'""" '' '' "bowlmg""^^^?^ not found iiniiteXcolumns.L itr::; juilULseEvei:. *. '.f." ^ but *^as.for. > me ed intone voice -that the libertieb weiiiusttfqllpw^ r yp ot/it11 ^~ '-~'J±Xi^---s-- -<•'•-»-^~- jojed the remainder of the everi- witiftlW o'tjier wiirn'e7ver'8et"*the 1 is 3 o'ur' own fault Appoirit'-" i bowling. 1 Pomperaog on fire. I your press reporteT. fga-s fiad? Property of the Watertown Historical Society

watertownhistoricalsociety.orgUNCLE SAM NOW TESTING TIRES Palm Beach Visited by Old Nephme FOR INDIGESTION

BEUIANS RAW LINSEED OIL IS Hot water BEST TO KILL LICE Sure Relief The little red lice or biting lice at cattle are conunon to young and ma- ture animals alike They do not sack ELL-ANS the blood of the hwu but feed upon 25* AND 75tMCXKES EVERYWHERE loose scale* of the akin and portions of the hair. Their multiplication la DONTj rRY THE favored more by the dry. scaly skin OO IATCH of the cow than by any other condi- THK tion. They are smaller than either of Meet the "destruction s»ngl* of the United States bureau of standard*, the other kinds und are red In color, who wear out more tlrvs with the two automobiles tliun the avenge, ninn uses but can be seen with the naked eye. In n life time. It is not a needless \vnnte. however, for It is done with the view The egg* of the red louse hatch to defcriulne what'type* of 11 res :iml treads (rive the be»t result*; particularly In five to seven days und it takes about In stopping. Tlie tests are made by locking Hie wheels of a car and dragging fourteen days for the young lice to Can Yon Hear? It with M chain und enormous spring balance. The comparison!)' HIIOW that mature und begin laying eggs. The f mnr. Y^SJ rhe better a tire xtlcka to the street, the quicker a car so equipped will stop red lice are more active und move r 16 iachn. Doe* • r ••» prcT«at your propat I when the brake* are applied und by noting the amount of jxiwer needed to about from place to place on the host^ driiK (he cur after the wheels are locked, it CUD easily bo determined which None of tlie lice can live any lengtfi r LEONARD EAR OIL tire oilers the most resistance. [ nS»« both Hod Now— «nd IW-I of time away from the host. But M*. Jim nib n back of am aid / their eggs are carried by means of iBMrtiniuMtriU For Sal* Entymlum. loose hnlrs from animal to animal. btmntting dncriptiv AMu Molaoon raqimt This Is the most probnble manner of A. O.IEONARD. IM. AUTOMOBILE IS To Kill Tire Mileage 70 51b A**. NawYotfc Any man who caught himself cutting his tire tread with a Hie HANDY ON FARM would voluntarily apply for ad- MADAME ZQDAC PORTER mission to the nearest retreat for the feeble-minded. Yet the Employed Mainly for Busi- same man will lock his brakeJ ness With Very Little and slide ten feet and think Father Neptune and two lovely mermaids came out of the sea at Palm nothing about It. Beach the other day. On closer examination he turned out to he Commodore Use tor Pleasure. Too many motorists confuse W. K. Longfellow of Washington, director of life saving of the Red Cross and it a welcom*. ralltbl.i nowd L_—r .forhoam- their tires with skates. Instead national coinmitteeman of the Boy Scouts of America. MM. coldi.^ccaiih. «nd other 1 (Prepared »y th« United State* Department SSuT It ioolhi. Irrttattaa'nd pal* .ritlw ot Acriculture.) of looking ahead for obstacles Illustrating the Parts, of a Cow Most from vtol..nl Martini. In DM for mt » and checking, tlie cur slowly by jrtart. Plntant tatting. Sal• far ehlldram. Automobiles on farms are used Liabl* to InfesUtions With Lie*. 5a» £i» mainly for business purpose, with closing the throttle with th« Airplanes in Colombia Hello, There! HALL * RUCKEL. N. Y.. MFBS. comparatively little use made of the clutch engaged, they wait until spreading Infestation and the hardest "Money talkx." * ^•^a^aa^B^BB^BBl muchlnes for pleasure, the United they are right in the middle of to control. It Is practically impos- Haul Mail and Freight "What language?" States Department of Agriculture has an emergency and then Jam on sible to disinfect all objects that are A Colombian aerial transportation "Chink." Playing Safe learned in recent fann management the brakes. They never stop to capable of transmit ting Ihe loose hairs. company generally known as "Scudta" Sensitive (Jolt'er (who has foozled)— surveys. On 1,371 farms surveyed, 0£S consider these little slides with Especially Is this true where the ent- Is planning additional transport facili- Others Find Relief Did you laugh at me, boy? fariuere reported the ownership of the brakes locked until they no- ile liuve the of pui-ture and yard. ties for the tiimdot-Ituranquilln por- In Alleock's Plns*ers from local ache* Caddie—No, sir; 1 was laughin' at 1.000 automobiles or trucks'. The own- tice spots where the tire tread Whitewash can' be used effectively tion of Its syBtem, Trade Commission- and pains. So can you. One trial win anlther man. ers of the cars stated that from two- is worn through to the fabric. around buildings. er Carlton Jackson reports to the De- convince yon of their merits.—Adr. partment of Commerce. New planes, "And what's funny about him?" thirds to nine-tenths of the use of the Even where the tread Is not Effective control mpfisures must be "He play-s gowf awfu' like you, sir!" machines wus for. farm business. scraped through to the fabric, the carrying capacity of those directed against the lice during the now In service, will be employed nnd Temple of Diana One of In the Atlantic coast urea covering tire men point out that there are period after they .uro hatched, from flat places left In the tread. Then the rates for passengers,, mall and ex- World's Seven Wonders Exposure Chester., county. Pennsylvania, 58 per the egus and before they mature und jiress will be "reduced. One of the. seven wonders of the an- cent of the 423 farmers Interviewed us the car proceeds, these flat start the egg-hiylng process. Any "KU!S~ Doctor— Ilow-iJId your liuslmnd take places, they explain, pound away. The trip up the Magdalenfi~rlver~by cient world wux the Temple of I Mann had machines. In the Middle Western stnncc that will dpsimy Ihe eggs will airplane has been more In fnvor thiin lit Kphesun, built in the Fourth centnry Dovey I)iiwsiin—Dncfnh, he bought areas 'covering portions of Kansas, .-M be Injurious to tlif slcln of the.animal. Unit to the coast, chiefly because the before Christ,' and burned by the hlwelf n diamond shirt stud!—Mon- South Dukotu, and Colorado, 70 to 85 Any substance that Is. poisonous to time tnken by boats ascending the was doomed to early destruction at th» tresit <5nzetfe. per cent, of 383 dinners reported'mil- the cow should not be used. river has been so much longer than hands of a half-crazed Creek named clilnus. In Wushlnuton and Idaho in Resiliency in Wheel The most lasting control depends tlie return trip. For this reason, ac- Herostrutus. Iirft'td It. C, on tlie. night the 1'alouse area 80 per cent of 250 Produced by Springs upon killing the lice and, putting the cording to Mr. Jackson,' the airplane when Alexander the Civ;it was h/ira. fimncra reported ownership of cars. hide of the animal In the condition fare for the up trip has been $175, he burned the temple to the ground. The only region where less than 50 per The Scientific American in illustrat- that will be unfavorable for the compared with $1.10 for the trip to the When he was arraigned for bis wires Although more powerful In' the ores* cont of the fanners owned automobiles ing and describing" a resilient wheel, coast. It Is now proposed to reduce he said he had done it to make nn lin- growth and development of the lice. r ence of saliva than pure Carbolic Acid, was in the dry farming wheat area the Invention of J. Schmidt of New For tills purpose raw Unseed oil hns these fares to .$70 and $. >0, respective- mortul name for himself, anil he had Zonite can be freely used as a gargle where 313 farmers reported only 152 .York, says: given most satisfactory results in the ly. The weight limit per passage will chosen tlie night Alexander-wiisnora- or throat spray at sufficient strength machines. One of the primary objects of the i experiment* made at the Connecticut be readjusted to penult a small trunk hecuuse Diana was the goddess of to destroy all disease germs with which Touring Car Popular. Invention Is to prdvide a wheel of the | experiment station. Unseed oil hns being curried nt a moderate cost. It childbirth, and he believed that she It conies in contact. Is genernlly believed that the company would be in Macedonia to bless the lit- The touting car Is the most popular been used for years by many dairy- The promptness with which Zonite re* I men," but Its use was not general. has done well during Its three years tle prince's arrival. type of automobile with these fanners of operation, and If Its plans mature lievesmost throat affections has been us it can be used for all purposes, The raw oil Is not poisonous. Only A new temple, started In ,'Ui0. heenmn a revelation to tens of thousands of It will soon establish lines to all Im- a storehouse for great gifts. In 2U2 from hauling milk or feed to taking the n small amount Is required for each portant points in the country. users of this new form of antiseptic children on picnics. Two-thirds or cow, one pint being sufficient to treat A. I>. Invading Cloths destroyed the city more of till muchlnes reported were four or five cows. It is not Injurious and burned the temple. Only a few of touring cars., Trucks come nest in to the hide of the animal but will kill Hard Pressed the columns escaped, nnd they were popularity,- about-20_ per J-cent-jof _alL the lice. used In the mosque of St. Sophia at Mrst_Newlywed—JjVhy_illd. Constantinople.—Detroit News. mncliines reported being trucks. Itoad- The raw Unseed oil may be supplied the neighbors that you' innnied me bnik sters, sedans and coupes were less fre- &H0N-P01SQH0VS with a stiff brush when the cows are because I was such u good cook, when 2 quently reported, totaling less than being cleaned or groomed. Treat- you knew I couldn't even boil a po- Up Against It &SSSSSSSSSSSSSSSBS one-tenth of all machines used. ment should begin In the fall and tato? Customer—Oh, dear! . There's three The 'low-priced car is also the most enrly winter before tlie Hire become i Mr. Newlywed—I 'hud to make some things I always forget when ordering, popular among furiuers, over two-thirds numerous. The second application of excuse, my dear. nnd I forget what the third one Is. of the machines reported being makes the oil should be made In 12 to 13 that now cost less than $">00 for tour- days. All of the three kinds of HCP iBaaoty to Crmy and Faded Hah ins: tins f. o. b. factory. The average Resilient Wheel. will have bad time to hatch from the 1 fan. and {1.00 at nrnirelita. Chrra. W HI. P»ttlio«'ns W.T. purchase, price of the touring cars was resilient type, in . which the resiliency *ggs during the Interval but will not about $700. with an estimated length Is produced, by a plurality of springs. have had time to mature, und In turn HINDERCORNS Rn.m c™. cu- lotuc*. etc.. ttitfil all I'Hto* rttitirui ctimfurl Co 111* of life of from seven to el^lit years. In A further object Is to provide a wheel lay eggs. The second treatment should f«t. mal-r* wilklni: rmti. llSu. bf mail or at Vtvf '.lie different, ureas the average price Ctita. UlMOZCbsuieaJWorki,FaCeboKua,li.Z. in which a. cushion tire may be em- he followed by ah application, of the An Amazing Fact paid for smiill machines was $500 to ployed with the result that resiliency oil every 30 days during the. winter $000, and for luedluinsize machines equivalent to that obtained In u pneu- nnd early spring in order to keep the from SSfiO to SI.'-TJO, Most of the ma- matic tire is attained. The device may Hce under control. It Is practically many people it may seem in- IF YOU chines wore purchased 'luring the past lie readily disassembled for the pur- Impossible to permanently rid an en- eiaht or-nine'years; whort prices were pose of repair or the like. tire herd .rtf cattle of lice. credible that a habit so common GET YOUR relatively ''higher than they are now. The boiled linseed oil Is not recom- as cofiee-drinking can be harmf uL Yet Operating Expenses. How to Stop a Car. mended because there is more dunger Cost of operating tnui ing cars, in- fEET WET When making a stop, close the throt- of Its .'blistering the hide. When using if your doctor were to enumerate the don't have a cold afterwards-take. cluding "depreciation',, was between $i'00 tle and withdraw the clutch at a dis- the raw oil, precaution should be used :iml !?:;iW per yenr. U;is and oil made common causes of indigestion, head- tance from the stop, allowing the mo- not to nib the hide too strenuously up abutit ~>0 per cent of the cash costs, ; KALE'S HONEY mentum to carry the car forward un- when applying as burns may result. with I'ost of tires, repairs and license ache, and run-down condition, he of Horohound and Tar - til a very slight pressure on the brake Strong sunlight will sometimes cause fei-s mukiniTup the bulnm-e. Relative- brings it to a standstill. Constantly bums also. would be likely to mention coffee. ble home remrdy for healing and sooth- ly few owners .'Carried''Insurance.'; on ing throat troubles and clearing up colds. practiced, this little saving will sub- tliuircsirs. (ias and^oll consumption 30c at allJruggUtm tract a nice uiargin from the run- If you are troubled with insomnia, wus found to be aboiit the same for Ul» Pike's Toothucha.Dropa' ning expenses. Improper Feeding Cause <oinewhat more economical of Trouble With Calves on pus In smne cases, but using more Scours In calves may be due to over- high-strung, try Postum in place of CROUP KKMKDV. KzLVllvnt , . Tor coughs nnd colds. No opium. So nmiMM. Sold I oil on the average in all areas. Tire feeding, Irregular feeding, feeding cold bjr draiutis-A MILLS co. KinmiuiH, sun nous, aura, i nnrl repair expenses wore somewhat AUTOMOBILE HINTS mllk.-fiour milk, dirty milk, use. of un- « coffee for thirty days, and note the dif- sanitary feeding palls, etc., says J. P. Rheumatum—Relief Guaranteed I hiu'lier lor the larger cars. All cash ference in the way you feel, and how AOUS In Ui.- ln.i'i I : t ui-.v, .1 I,/ UH-raal opiM-aiing costs totaled slightly more LnMnster, chief of the dairy division irfuLiin'iil w'uliuut uiin^t'rtiun hi >-r tl*-PT*»!i- When a short circuit occurs, heat »t Clemson college, who makes the fol- i|i.n rtlls l» tin- >nly way. IlllIU.'MATIdJ* for the hirger cars, exceeding cash much better you sleep. ranntit b«» driven nul of ihe py-lt in by tiuc- expenses nn the small curs'by about will always generate at the point of ,owing suggestions for treatment: vt'tv applic-btiuli \V»» ha\*» un»*ohcll»'i.l tftnll- iKinlalH from :h> of dr:il••!>il p-ii|.l» one-fifth on the overage. trouble. 1. For ordlnury scours, as soon as who have foiritl i'.Miplfte rvHff ihrr>ut;li Ares Postum is a pure cereal beverage, •;tM»*tx" S"tnl *:a il.'Ki fur our lr»'atm»nt of IJeinvHiiiion was found to amount to •tymptoms are observed." omit one ii taliMii .it»l It yn'i tin not u-i n-Hi-f return nearly as much ns all-nMi costs of op- When sipnallng your Intentions to reeding and reduce next feeding to absolutely free from caffeine, or any Hie einuiv l»>\ anil we will roruml ynur ».ioii»v w-fhout .,ii.-l'.in AKKX I'KOIUCTS erntinn, estlniiite«l annual depreciation the driver behind, make each motion snlf. nnd then gradually bring up to I rtRI".. .ISO HHIIMI-II Avf.. Hronklyn. X. V. nn the lareer c-nrs. liein<. nearly twice so It can be clen'rly understood. >rlginal quantity. . harmful drug. UUNMI, <:.\l»Sln.KS—KKST KK.MKDY fX)R JIS iniicli ns on the smaller cars, due. In case the disease becomes obstl- iiiftucnx-i. crl|.pi- iiinl ciMs. Kell<-f ivllhin 2* I'o-timlJ S«r mul l!.'"0- WAI.DMANN, to higher flr! prevent leg strain, 'hut It Inspection of tires nnd rims fre-" Calf Will Learn to Eat ; ncMKilly m:il;cs for more delicately W»- qiienily will prevent unnecessary VpimWe coutrol of the ucccJerutiug trouble and annoyance. Ithh cuts nnd Hay Very Early in Life functiun. - ' breaking of wire cables at,the. base" A. calf, will learn to eat hay very Your grocer teUt Pottum In nr"the> tire" may he .avoided, if .proper early in life, and It should be clean two nuns* "ia*^ny Posmni inspection Is made regula/iy.! ' -. .and leafy and replaced .often with On OnsJ pnprod nnnntly m Machine, Strapes Off Paint the cup by the addition of T fresh hay." Jn'.ten days' or two'weeks It In" tiie~ ri.'noviitioh-of. nn" automobile •-.' -• •-.. t1- --"••*- --?" -• • „•'"'•. '7/ *. >• ~y~ -r imny be:ta'ngbt.to eat.grain. rlt^ls often boilfag witer. PoKum Cereal the" greatest-,Jailor'isijri 'rj!iiiWvIng\tliej '• _',Ele<:i rlc\cnblesj that.. rtrtY. on,-1 sharp' [in p«ckig««] far those who .easily ^started-:by ;plncing.J«»n>e""onts dhfli' biht out Void /paint. .\/hich--,was forme.rj'y'jdone y3rIp.,.»,. ;or" ground lbnrley?on^lts ,;we.l .rriiMe"an< byXharidVatfa*; corisiderablelfifxpenw^of- ^ through'the\insjilatlon~: ?,will I Soo1ir_be Renting . from^s|-box''pr r^Thls'i».-now. pcrforiiied,- cost of either fonn to I J ;llsii:^lftisSagrea%mlHtakeSto^alIo(llsii:^lftisSg%^ w about ons-half cent a cup. by a iiiac'"'wlilch 'doen tlie'work-In' 1 "cifriilr wlfrorrjfr 'thnVmny'lK' Ifn'rd 'to' grain or fecil to »t ind before It. a - a very «0>itl\e manner and KTJ locate. These parts should be well ths feed toon beconn-H v>iW and sour BALSAM QUlCtl/. | proutucd and fitiuuently Inspected. Property of the Watertownt Historical Society THE. WATEKTOWN MEWS watertownhistoricalsociety.orgBOLLES RESIGNS AS WOMB. CAI DYE ANY DANGER RATIONAL ADJUTANT GARMENT, DRAPERY

Lemuel Bolles, perhaps more closely Dy« mr Tint Worn, Faded Things associated with the American'Legion for • greater length of time than any other World war veteran, haa resigned How Yo^Co Ayoid Ik his position as national adjutant. Bolles waa a delegate to the Paris Wiim you have a eold and conference at which the actual work neglect it you are m great of- organization was completed. He danger of pneumonia. hsd s part In drafting the national Don't wonder wfiether you can dye constitution of the organisation and or tint successfully, because perfect The pure REHABILITATED MEN was named a member of the executive home dyeing Is guaranteed with "Dia- food ele- committee when a permanent organisa- mond Dyes" even If yon have never ments in MAKE GOOD SHOWING tion was formed at that caucus. Frank- dyed before. Druggists have all colon. lln D'Olier, as national commander in Directions la each package.—Adver- Father i Vocational training of World war lttlO, named Bolles to the position of tisement. ' John's veterans haa proved the most aetfous national adjutant which Mm has since mistake* in the care of the disabled held by appointment from every suc- • To the Last Word Medicine ceeding commander. SAY "BAYER" when you by the government, according to (Jen. "Isn't it awful how mucli scandal builds en- John V. O'Ryan. Many of the vet- He .was born In Minneapolis, MJnn., there Is In the papers these days?" erans would have been better off if ergy to re- Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians fof In 18*5, Just when the 'pioneers were "Yes. It makes me two or three they had not been trained, be de- renting after opening up the West. sist cold and grip germs. clared in an Interview with a repre- hours late wltli my housework every ' Colds Headache Neuralgia Lumbago His'grandfather built the first grist day." • The gentle laxathre effect sentative of the American Legion, mill ever erected In that state. of Father John's Medicine Pain Toothache Neuritis Rheumatism upon his departure from Washington . As a youth he tended furnaces, cows at the conclusion of a ten^-month*' and homes during Ids boyhood, and GIRLS! AGLEAMYMASS ,helps to drive out impurities. Investigation of the veterans' bureau. only "Bayer" package by these earnings educated himself at . OF BEAUTIFUL HAIR | -father John's Mrdirlne annthra and contains proven directions. The general said that this statement McAllister academy In St. I'nul. In hi-alu the lining of the brealhln*; pa«- dia not take into consideration any spare times lie assisted In opening up raKi-n. Handy "Bayer" boxes of 12 tablets charges of negligence, extravagance S5-Cent "Danderine" So Improves Life- j You aro rafr wlifn you take Fattier Abo bottle* of 24 and 100—DmggUU. Northern I'aelHc hind grunts for set- less, Neglected Hair. j John's M«'dlrln<- hi-cuilo- II ix Riinrsin- or mismanagement, but considered tlement, as a member of and apprais- .te**il fr»»e from alcohol or ilnnff«*rnu* Is Ik* tost* nit of Bam Mmtmctm tt Moananttlc—Matt »t SaUcfUcadf only the system of rehabilitation used •ilriiirH In any form. Sixly-plKht years ing and surveying party-In.the West- In um\ in caring for the men. An abundance ern Dakota*. of luxuriant hair Masterpiece Giving It Emphasis "I am fjrmly of the opinion," he Customer—Is it really it Tudor ta- _ She—Papa says you liuve mow v Ity the time he was fifteen he was full of gloss, said, '"t hut there ure a great many— rldingalong the Buffalo divide in the gleams and life ble? Shouldn't liuve thought BO ; don't money thnn brain*. - the manher may run Into Hie thou- see nny wohuboles. Itecgle—Ha! Shown what an ass he (irnnde river country—into -the I»a- shortly follows u sand*—of men In vocational training genuine toning up Denier—Ah, sir, even the Inwrts Is. I'm broke. who would he better off If the govern- kola "Had Lands." Before long he didn't Imve the henrt to deface Its She—Yes, papa, r of his life, he became an assistant In youthful beauty. "Danderine" is de- CtMistipMiea OifstflsMst getting the right men into the right lightful on the hair; a refreshing, course in 1020 and 11KI. The whole i he offlee of the adjutant general In M^w. £:rY"uLih. r*_^ the state of Wnshlncton where he re- stimulating tonic—not sticky or greasy I thing was a travesty on the name of Any drug store.—Advertisement. . " There's a rehabilitation: Instead of teaching Munyon Pill men to strike out and puddle their For Every III*' own canoes again, the tendency was New Traffic Light to cultivate habitual pensioner"." Doctor's Lights to direct truffle have been Advie* FREE "In 1 \ and Children all ages. n- If Soap, Ointment and Talcum are used believe others will have to go. I <'" for all toilet purposes.—Advertisement. not see how the bureau cun.'t.urn out To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of (^aMfTGlcffto men as rehabilitated who obviously Proven directions on each package. Physicians everywh:re recommend it. cannot make good." True Love —' Of—the—W.000-men- now- -receiving He—Oh, FegK.v, I shall be so mis- Source of Sul?* Heat 7 According to Law vocational training, admit 11.000 a all "tlie'"while~riinnvay"-from The source of the vast amount of. --"Music, for obvioiiH reasons, Is pro- month are leaving the Institutions us you. heut which the sun trives off riiimof'be hibited during certain hours wltliln rehabilitated. Recent experience She—Oh, darling. If I <:0 feet a year would be enough.to your piano playing as music." ' — ,. for Each Child's Care :md wus sent to France, where he was assigned to Headquarters First Army are not getting the genuine Bayer swallow of water quickly relieve Indi- account for the lieut developed. A contribution of approximately gestion, biliousness, constipation, head- $-tt!0 annually for the cure of each corps as assistant general In charge of Aspirin proved'safe by millions and prescribed by physlcianR for £t years. ache, heartburn, lour stomach. The Keep Well! Avoid 8lcknes*. "CASCARETS" FOR LIVER child at the American Legion Billett supply transportation and evacuation pure gelatin capsules contain standard at Otter Luke, Mich., is necessary for for the whole corps. He held the rank Say "Bayer" when you buy. Aspirin. medicines hi granulated form. Far more Take Brrfndreth Pills. One or two at AND BOWELS-IOc A BOX Imitations may prove dangerous.—Adv. *ed time will clerinws the system, purify the war veteruns to carry on this im- of 'lieutenant colonel and served effective than pills. Only 00 cents for portant phase of the work, according through I hi; Chumpugne, the Marne, 12 days supply. At all druggists or by the blood and keep you well.—Adv. Cures Biliousness, Constipation, Sick In a war, both' nations suffer; mail from JAQUES CAPSULE CO, Hendache.Indigestlon. Drugstores. Adv. to I>r. C. V. Spawr, department com- the Alsne-Mnrne, Ton I and Meuse-Ar- PLATTSBURG, If. T. munder of the Legion in that state. gonne drives. For meritorious serv- though the winner pays for the loss It's a great life If you .don't weaken. more cheerfully than the loser. Most of the people. who have things, Family broils are best when confined Cottages are soon to he built and ices he received the rank of Chevalier don't. to the kitchen. the whole plant extended us rapidly of the Legion d'llonneur Ironi'France. w N NE W VORK N a7 1924 as funds penult, according to depart- Still holding a commission in the "DANDELION BUTTER COLOR" i - - "•• ' - - 'If you work hurd for your money, A baby's first attempt to walk Is ment officials. It is not unlikely that organized reserve, he Is a lieutenant why fool It away? trial balance. this project will be adopted by the na- colonel commnnding the Three liundred A harmless vegetable butter color tional organization as one of the re- used by millions for 50 years. Drug i A Prairie and Thirty-fourth infantry of thestores and general stores sell bottles i Young Lady ahle climate is nil right as INlhnalc carefully bow little happl- (, overcome tional adjutant, which he bus since long as It can be changed for a better ! ness you can get along on and you arc Recreational Program held. one. -. j likely to have more. Perhaps no one person In Legion constipation for City of Rome, Ga. circles bus a wider acquaintance. Mr. "M«n /mforfcnf h tmtmal A recreational program for theHolies' mail reached 1.IMNI letters a whole city, sponsored and paid for by day. his duties have taken him Into AXATIVES and cathartics provide temporary re- the Shanklin-Attaway |»>»t of theevery section of the country, and he Thousands Suffer Daily L_i lief only, at the expense of permanent injury. American Legion in Uomc, order to make the doughboys Is a loss to the American Legion. His thlcknrsa to meet the condition of all caara. One woman gained 14 pounds In fevl at home, a replica of the famous thrre werka. Aluo rrt-omnii-nilcd In all caaei of Float Ing Kidney and Raptor*. tract gained by X-ray observation, has found at place will not easily be tilled. If It It in quickly and eaally applied or removed: ha - your taste. S-B—or Menthol as regularly'as you brush your teeth or wash your Dignity . . • "He goes from'this organization with, ' flavor/ A sure relief; for coughs, face.. For sale by all druggists. hundreds of ~llinu«- imN of frli niN HI* ' colds and hoanieaen. .Put one' "Hey!" yelled the excited.deckhand unremitting toll for the ni). miration from" the-deck ..of the great liner Im- in your mouth at bedtime. : hls\jsfBl,,ln''<.irnlng out the nhnlnlp j -'. Atwaymkmmpmbo*.en,luutrf. berlllc..''i'Man overboardr; ;:_-':•''" ° V tratloiij" off the iHRiinirntlon In- labor I ;''}\Vot.doVyou"mean;-jrbtf Impertlnpiit In-building up the orgini7 tion-nil u'eggnr^nian>'overboard?*'/! «iera'»"ndcd 1 these ^things hnM> heionie ln> 11 liable i nn-^Indignant: bu^lVl^ryI ii^l.'cnncwlsh Mm no greater «uiepmj SMITH BROTHERS stss.us.fMT.ovr. thnnrthat^wblch has alwaj*. jiinmpa- snip Pcrclval' McStubben^ 'Awklns~- Is" nledfhlsfefrort* as national ailjutant For Internal Cleanliness , - overboard, I'd 'ave jrou know."— COUCHJ>ROPS American Legion weekly. &iL &'-:'&& fosf-?. .*&*"!* Property of the Watertown Historical Society PAGE * , THE VATBBTOVTK WBW9 FRIDAY. PBBBOABY 3S. RIM. STOKY OF THI FARM** We could produce statistics shown* floaniMitinit watertownhistoricalsociety.orgWITH Mtands relatively to that of the O. S. Freeman Publisher & Proprietor way worker, the artisan, the Indus- / Francis P. Fljma - - AsiocUte trial worker. Statistics, however, tell «£» a Vw SJnfl* Cipyh only an Infinitesimal part of the story, and too often tempt the student Into drawing bold comparisons between FINN conditions that are really incompar- Protect Your able/observes the New Republic. The a industrial worker has his own world, HEN a world of Jobs, agreeable or dis- agreeable, under an employer to be Valuable Papers cajoled or fought; a world of employ TACTFUL QUMTIONM llrmiter National Bdltorlal Aaa'n ment. of rising rents and exorbitant > BnUred aa seeond-olaas matter at food prices. The farmer's world com- A beautiful young widow sat in her the Peat OAloa at Wattrtown. Conn., bines the cares of the property owner deck chair In the xtern and near her tinder the act of Mareh I, U7t. and the with those of the sat a very handsome man. The We now have 48 new Safe laborer. Mo man farina successfully widow's daughter, a cute little girt of untcw be can carry his farm around four or five years, crosaed over to the FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 1924with him. walking or sleeping, like a man and said: •^Vhat's your name?" i Deposit Boxes for rent snail In Its shell. Care Is his portion. "Herktmer Wlulnson," waa the . A MUHCAL ARMirriCI It Is worth noting that the good old reply. A Part* dispatch announces that ai> won! "carework," which nobody ap- , amicable agreement has been reached "Is you marrledf at $3 per year plies nowadays to any urban dweller, "No; I'm a bachelor." between Fraace and Germany on the naturally presses Into one's mind The child turned to her mother and question of music and they have whenever one meets a groqp of middle- said: nlgned a musical armistice, says the aged farmer*. They do not say care, "What else did you tell me to ask St.' Joseph News-Press. When the themselves; they say "worry." And him mamma y French entered the Bute, the Ger- .an astounding proportion of them say t mans, as a sign of their displeasure, that they do not want their chlldreu i Job for a Referee. boycotted French music. The French A Ctrl secretary discovered that her to succeed to the work and worry of employer and her husband did not syndicate of musical dealers retaliated the farmer's life A still larger pro- live happily together, their quarrels by placing a boycott on Ihe Germans portion of the children have It fixed being embarrassingly, frequent She who had printed much of the music In their minds that they will escape therefore gave notice to leave. wold in France. It was not long before "Why7" Inquired the woman In sur- The Watertown Trust Company from .the farm as soon as possible. : these outward manifestations of pa- That Is the really significant fact prise. MEMBER OF triotism by both countries • had Its "Ol^ you don't want a secretary In reaction In a business way and the this family." replied the glrL "What AMERICAN BANKERS ASSOCIATION ' There Is art In literature, In prose. you need Is a referee I" musical blockade waa called off by mu- In poetry. The Japanese poet Basho. tual consent Music la a world heri- produced a masterpiece, "Old pond- He Waa Helpless. tage and It Is rather difficult to com- fro* Jump In—water sound." That "My daughter runs up tremendous prehend why a ban should be placed means nothing If you are not familiar bills with her dressmaker." upon the musical compositions of with It But the translation of his "Well, why do you let her order so BROS. Rump Roast ^. - countries that may be at war. or at In- many dresses?" , thought Into the picture: A little cot- Mr.ion Oantraetdra Shoulder Roast dustrial loggerheads. It Is easily un- tage near the old pond, where.the ', "If I don't .shell come out la knlck- Lamb Stew derstood why the courtesy of playing palms grow in the garden of green prbockers." •lateral Job Work and Trucking Fresh Shoulders 13* the national anthem of as enemy na- moss—the stone lantern and the sim- 17* 25* tion may be dispensed with under the Rivenide Start Roast Pork-Ribend Shoulder Ro. Veal ple gate. One rainy day In spring, TeL 1964 Smoked Hams conditions named, but that the people Basho seated himself In front of his Smoked Shoulder 6 *o 8 lbs. 13* R»mP Roaat Veal 25* should be deprived of rich musical OmkviUt, Connecticut desk looking through a round window treasures Is foolish and the French Sugar Cured Bacon - - 19* Veal Stew 14* toward the pond and meditated. Sud- and German authorities seem to have Choice Cuts of Corned Beef . denly, be heard a sound of splash- awakened to that fact by lifting the ing water, then he saw a frog swim- ban. Music of the liner sort should ming, and Basho Jumped and In ec- G. A. ANDERSON nsurpsssed I aiting Tat* be exempt from any such restriction!. stasy be called out, for there was In- Had either Germany n France barred Painting Decorating 0 N spiration and he started his poem. F- U the output of American Jan factories "Old pond — frog Jump In—water their action would have been upon uppllad sound."1 He'composed his poem, un- Paper-Hanging eawnable tenable grounds, but with both coun- conRciously, dreamlike; what a won- J.M. j tries rich In legacies from the old An Opportunity to Eitim*te OD Vr E derful Inspiration that was, writes Mr. Bug—But 200 apple seeds a II" A"" R masters of music, the rescinding ,of Mutalcbl Mlya In the North American Tow Requirements 1 their former action Is good sense from month Is too much rent. ' A Fnltou 8tore Will You More" Review. The poem contains seven- Mrs. Bug—I know, my dear, but we is Solicited spy angle from which It la viewed. teen "HIrakena" syllables, according cnu oat the house when we leave. to the Japanese rule of flve-seven-flve. j Westbnrjr Park, Waterto-vra Cor Mali Street. WMtaTOWH. Main Slrwl, OttVILE No artist can illumine a picture so It Would, Indeed. Gratifying progress In dealing with If we could only wash our minds Telephone 313 vividly in so few words. " I And hang them on tr.« line, the problem 'of Justice for the poor Then put them on all aweet and ol 1M shown In the annual report of the An authority on land values gives Now. wouldn't that be nn«T< committee on legal aid work of the some remarkable examples of In- American Bar association, says the A Few Only. creased value due to zoning In Illinois Springfield Republican. Particularly Stranger—Uustus. do the people who cities. In Evanston, he says, values, Impressive Is the growth of legal aid live across the road from you keep rose 15 to 100 per cent In a single organizations. From over thirty in chickens? year. In Oak Park, another suburb number a year ago they have Increased Rustus—Dey keepa some of 'em. of Chicago, there was a Jump-during—salt to more than forty. More than one the year of 10 to 25 per cent In the j hundred and twenty-five thousand per- value of residential districts. 25 to 50 ' Allaying Suspicion. Hey—Why do you Insist on buying sons were given advice and assist- per cent in apartment districts and ance in 1922. A marked advance wa» that specific brand of perfume for 25 to 75 per cent In buslness,dlstrlctB. your wife? Does she prefer It?" made at the convention at Cleveland These figures ought to convince any- in June when delegates from twenty- Dey—No. but It's the kind my T YP & -B 5 ED AN one that there Is practical/Yalue as stenographer uses." nve cities established a national or- well as beauty and healthfulness In ganization embracing most of the local -Yes.~andJrfie drawbacks.of the measures J20. feet between wing tips, —keep s .al» *l ofA *'the - * ._.m H^ ^*running* _ ••Ml •• art . J. ~" ^ literacy profcwlon are the comebacku. ,lV"carrle»2,000 gallons of gasoline and' -"-,'.' _<~J~.~ - ' "'' -iis« "deslpieuoitncxd for'aj— ».-; speet~—d o—jf r9—0 mile— -•----s -™" • ' - The annunr^woll} comes- from'Paris liojir.SfHir'future^roads willfbejn the^to^h^eirecr^thnt•'Amerlcnn ^iiSl|^^§g^^cflyJn^^b^Sbb^ mm " K 1/ T^ .^ jj_ "v^-jrt r" Property_--», of the WatertownV?" Historical Society*- '-t fBB WAWWoWH KIWfi PBTDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 10,060SYNTHETIC watertownhistoricalsociety.orgBtU. BOOSTER SAYS

Trip Down Mountain Causes Aviator* Six Weeks Placed in Old Beds by' New Ydric Delay in Czechoslovakia, . Commission. AlaMMt all Americans know It Is a good thing to be provided with a pass- AflKVIB* M.SMVBMB! port Jsi Europe, und curry the neces- urtfcoot HMB saanric TRUMPR sary document* always, but occasion- H ally some adventurous soul takes a The planting of the flnt 10,000 sym> chance on going without and runs Into j thetic" oystera waa completed recent- ^bushels of trouble as a result. Trouble '' ly by the New Yorkf State Conserratlon traveled band In bind with two AnerW The Universal Car. Commission at Cold Spring Harbor. • con aviators who without passports Three hundred and thirty million slipped over the boundary line of! baby Incubator oyster* were liberated Czechoslovakia recently and was their ' at Oyater Bay and Nortnport, walls clow companion for six weeks. • ^ ' experiments are proceeding to cross* ' Merlon C Cooper of Jacksonville, breed Blue Points and Lyaahavens, FIs- and George M. Crawford of Wil- Cape Coda and Jamaica oysters, Green- mington. Del., new through the war In THERE'S A REASON portrand Delaware Bays with the ob- France under the American flag and ject of creating new typea of oyaten Inter Joined the Kosclusko air squad- with more meat, Improved flavor aad ron In Poland. Together with some prettier shells. , I'ollsb friends they went on a moun- The 10.000 "synthetic" oysters wersi tain climbing expedition among the na<*» ready (or planting by a proceas Carpathian peaks In southern Poland. FOR BUYING YOUR developed since 1920 by tlie iUte con- On one of the excursions Cooper aervatlun commission. This proceia !• and Crawford and a Polish count, many million times as efficient as roped together Alpine fashion, lost suture's method of breeding oysters. . their balance, began to slide down the A female oysterTthe most prolific of snowclad mountain aide and were un- all living things, lays from ten to s uble to stop. Before they realized It hundred million eggs In a season. Only the three had crossed "the Polish* about one in a million of these Is fer- Czechoslovakia^ boundary line at the tilized and only about one In a hun- rate of about a mile a minute and MilVM III..-. . ', .rli't I hint dred million grows up to be an oyster. landed In a heap In a snowbank at the look }»• Kinpiil III'-IIM- \imn It tunic The artificial method fertlllsea nearly mountain's base. You iimi'i supposed in in- in love any 90 per cent of the eggs and promises to Resauers, among them Czechoslo^ more.—Washington Star. enable a large proportion of them to raklan customs officials, soon reached grow to maturity^ the party. Not even the Polish count IN FEBRUARY Many Oyater feds Ian-en. had a passport, let alone the two WATZRTOWN 0HUK01U8 The system of making a million eggs Americans, and It took the party ex- grow where only one grew before was actly six weeks to establish their Iden- CHRIST CHURCH developed by the state conservation tity and secure permission to return RcvfF.. B. Whitcome, rector commission to meet a desperate situa- to Poland. • • 8.00 Celebration of the Holy commu- tion In the oyster industry. Since 1010 nion. the production of cultivated oyster to.oo Sunday School ASK US WHY! beds baa been cut in half. Oysters li.oo Morning worship and sermon. have been harvested faster than they WOMAN DECORATED FOR could breed naturally. Thousands of FIRST CONG'L CrftJRCH acres of oyster beds have been ren- CHILD-WELFARE WORK dered barren. For example, the rev- Rev. C E. Wells pastor. enue of Rhode Island from taxing oys- 10.45 Morning service. ta.00 • Sunday School DUTEE WILCOX FLINT, Inc. ter beds has been cut from 1135,000 to 912,000 a year. 479-483 Meadow Street, Waterbury, Conn The now fully developed process of METHODIST EPISCOPAL growing them artlfldally promises to Rev. George E. Farrar, pastor correct all this, to restock.the barren 10.00 Sunday School, acreage, to produce all the seed oys- u.oo Morning service and sermon. ters that are needed and to- grow hardier and better strains of oysters. ST. JOHN'S CHURCH "la 1U9 when the commission first considered the plan of growing oysters Rev. Fr. Judd. artlfldally from the egg the Idea was Masses will be at 8 and 10 o'clock on ridiculed,", said William Firth Wells, Sunday morning. biologist of the state conservation com- mission, who has been rearing the "synthetic" oysters In a small room la Reprisal. ^^ one of the towers of the bridge at "Mamma," said four-year-old How- Bayvllle. ard, "that mean little Smith girl called Vegetable Growers! Fruit Growers!. "It was something like proponing mo a monkey today." "Then what perpetual motion machines to luippenedr asked his mother. "Well," •lcists. Every kind of effort had refilled Howard, "you see, I couldn't KAYSO will help you grow better and slap a girl, so I Ruve unnther little more profitable crops — at low cost. made to raise Aysters from the egg and 1 they all failed. It was proved by Pro- Kir I half of my mriily to scratch her. * Makes the spray mixture or solution fessor Brooks of Johns Hopkins In —Clilnign Dully News apply easily and cover quickly—causes ' 1879 that the oyster eggs could be im- the spray to set instantly — dry rapidly pregnated or fertilised artificially and without excessive run-off waste — gives made to go through the first stage of PATBONIZt THE increased- coverage. -The—surface—wets- their development. But the oyster egg BAT 0ABNBET OARAGE inRtantly — the filfh becomes fixed the Is a tiling only one four-hundredth Mrs. Lon O. Hocker, national com- moment it forms — it does not drain or part of an inch In diameter and It is mltteewomnn from Missouri. Is the vOakville, Coon. continue to spread, or get thinner. not much larger In Its embryonic stage. only woman to receive the Civic deco- Water Cleansed In Separator. ration for child-welfare work. Photo- Supplies, Service Oar, Aoeeuories Men's Open 7 Days a Week TRY A SMALL AMOUNT IN SOME -It Is so small that the physical graphed In Washington. problem of changing the wafer so as to Day Phone 254 . OF YOUR SPRAY WORK AND give the growing oysters clean water Night Phone 267 PUOVK ITS WORTH IN AN and a fresh food supply proved Insu- THIEF TAKEN BY PASTOR perable. The use of filters proved Im- ACTUAL TEST possible. Anything coarse enough to Preacher Captures Robber With HARRY A. SKILTON'S filter out the Impurities filtered out the Nlekel.Platsd Pliers. » WRITE US FOK INFORMATION AND PRICES oysters as well. Anything fine enough Rev. Charles Stephenson, pastor ol to filter out the Impurities clogged the' Eminence. Ky., Christian church, GARAGE every time. by use of in nickel-plated pair of pliers "This deadlock continued until 1920. which looked a "pistol in the darkness, - AUTOMOBILES Apothecaries Hall Company The thing that broke It was the use of has uncovered clues to a band ot WATERBURY, CONN., a centrifugallslng machine like a cream freight' train robbers. Trousers OVERHAULED AND REBUILT separator. When the' water was be- Stephenson, with his family, was ginning to become stale, It was put la motoring In the country when a truck the separator. It was feared that the ran Into his car. The preacher speeded Gould Radio and Auto Batterfes machine whirling at 7.000 revolutions a up, passed the truck and leveled his Battery Charging and Battery minute would crush the minute or- pliers, whereupon the driver climbed sow ganisms. This waa not the case. They out, while another man ran. escaping Storage stuck to the walls of the separator. In the darkness. Telephone 144 When the stale water was completely In the truck were 70 cases., each Match up that old coat at U. S. eliminated the future oysters were containing 10,000 cigarettes. Recently & Co.'s trouser department where TO ALL rinsed out Into clean water. Every while n Southern1 railway freight train WHO WEAK SHOES— For Cool Weather two days tills centrifugallsing process was. standing over a trestle robbero you'll find everything in trousers Dont throw awey your worn was repeated for two weeks. By that unloaded 80 cartons of cigarettes. for work or dress. out shoes. Bring them to me. WE SUGGEST time the larvae had grown thin, trans- Thieves for months have been loot- With my modern equipment I parent silvery shells and were large ing freight cars in this vicinity. can repair them and make, enough so that fresh water could be them like new, Introduced and the impurities filtered out without their escaping. ' YANKS HONORED BY FRANCE JOE PENTA "This process has been developing French Dedicate Monument to Men DEPOT ST. WATERTOWN and Improving up to the present and Stationed at St Algnan-Noyers. ' Telephone 343 Gas Room Heaters the hatch of young oysters we have A monument dedicated to the 500,- Just planted Is the first large setting we 000 American troops stationed In the Evening dress and tuxedo have reared artificially. Next, year region of St. Algnan-Noyers. France, In suits for sale and to rent they will be served on the halfshell 1018 and 1919, more particularly the FIRST CLASS SHOE to oyster planters la different parts S50 who died at the cantonments and Gas for Cooking, Convenient, Economical of the coast. They will be small oys- are buried In the cemeteries there, ters, for It takes four or'five years for was unveiled recently. REPAIRING them to attain maturity, hut they will Myron T. Berrick, American ambas- MAIN STREET sliow what can he done artificially*" sador. In an-address expressed the, , We have New Models of Ranges, all sizes and kinds The discovery of artificial breeding thanks of America to the French for Satisfaction and Courteous treat- methods may be a greater benefit to this tribute to the men who "suffered ment to all, coupled with work We will repair and clean your old range at a Europe than It Is to this country. more, merited as much find yet have guaranteed to please. Oysters have been caught faster thaa been honored less perhaps1 than their moderate cost if you wish. they bred practically everywhere in Eu- more favored comrades who fell In the MY MOTTO: Give me a trail. rope, and have become n luxury. Oys- fntl tide of battle." k ters are the - greatest American sea WATERBURY. CONN. Call at the Office and let us advise you or crop, and the annual harvest here Is F. Di MARTINO, Proprietor ;, .Butterflies Block Highway. '; • • • more thnn four-fifths of the world's .^Millions of big brown butterflies mi- Wattrbnry Conn. TELEPHONE«'900-901 annual "harvest.- ' , grating southward, obscured the high- ! Branson & Olson way south.of Santa Barbara, Cal., re- Practice of Law Qambllnq Gamef cently, and made motoring difficult. GARAGE .Practice nflnw In the Unlfed. State* County Horticultural Commissioner Main (t. Ops. Oesot at, Watertown Is a gambling game, plnyed between Kollogg went to the scene to secure THE -two sets of lawyers, with ajudfre.as some, specimens^ for exnminntion. HUDSON * ESSEX AGENCY the umpire. James Hnnnlhal Clancey, ... Gould Batteriea — Repairing Detroit Inuyer. rtpolnrert during" a re- Clock Loses 8eeond In Three Years. Wil "Aiibl cent speech at Chicago. A clock In the phvulrs building at Cnse Srhool of Applied .Science st Waterbury Gas Light Co. Givsn Unusual Honor. C'evcland O. hns lost but one sec PRINTING CUMLLAC 0L01KD OARB FOR Seventy-one, and a painter of sis ond in three years, In a series of In • TAxir " weeks' standing only. Mrs. S. A. Bar ternstionil tents. An attempt will • The News is prepared to furnish all CuoliwA Oil. S^£f ^Corner Center and Leavenworth" Streets. nett widow of .in Er.sllnh (lencymaa, he niitrie t<> nirrvrt this error b.v on ass had her first picture In oils ac- of the professor* of the nulvir«lt.v kind of printed matter for commencal, •tattoo — i cepted by the Boys! Academy. durch, Property of the Watertown Historical Society THE WATEKIOWN NEWS

its witchery of kipping water. Its bor- warped and wild, 1 deriug 'fringwatertownhistoricalsociety.orge of pebbles and whit* of the upper Wabasb. Umw *iowly by. The fishermen landed. The live box thaxt things wer* not likely to drag, was hitched to a stake as before, th* for be was the wUeat. wittiest, and. The Red half-reluctant preacher left to bold as he himself said, "the no-acconntesf* the brail stick, walls the others rowed man in the Flatwoods—a free-and- STATE BRIEFS out and aroonii the fifty yards or easy, happy-go-lucky, catcb-as-catcn- more of murky water that Isy between can sort; of man. UMUaar kjr **. Ifemslu WarOms. KOIMr at KaMw H—•.••«»•*.> Lock the point and the shore. He bad been a great hunter and bor- Dotha Stone Plane©. Norwalk librar- Hardly had the circuit been com* der ranger in his time, having come to pitted when It began to be apparent the Wabttsh country when it was stfU Wilton post offlc* may be lodged la A Tale of tfe Flarmofc that Counterman's Judgment would be the frontier and the Indians made It larger building. amply Justified. dangerous. Nearly forty years before, 8helton organises Klwania Club; George WIUIs. president By DAVH> ANDUSON The final haul proved to be much a man In his pride and prime, be bad the best of the day. The good fish been one of Harrison's most trusted Keane of Danbury announces h« were dropped Into the live box, the scout*, and had. borne an honorable wUl seek 4th ward nomination. others tossed back into the river, andpart in the grim and deadly struggle Scott family In Ridgefleld to observe the fishermen set about preparing to that took place In the early dawn upon *Ufi..,fMTu'~ membership In Masonic return to the village. The brail sticks that swamp-bound point of woodland lodge, r were united, the seine rolled up, and on the Tippecanoe. Three tokens for SB cenU Is fare the woodsman walked up the bar for aa> over sute with exception of Aunt Liza, the "other hair of Unde Bridgeport district. the boat. Nick, was there too. . But If he had He stooped over the craft, possibly an oversupply of Jollity In his disposi- The United Commercial Travelers' CopfrigtttbrTiMBobbs-tlarrmCa. recalling the circumstance of the six- tion, she bad a far greater over- Club Is to take the Initiative In seek- gun concealed In the frock coat; laid supply of grlroness. Aunt Liza was ing to bring a-high powered *tdlo ; his hand to the bow to push It off; the one person in the world on whom broadcasting station to Bridgeport. THE FOOTPRINT I straightened after a moment, walked Uncle Nick's wit fell flat. By MERRILL C. 0R8WELL Inductance, starting at the antenna That the streets of New Haven are In a deplorable condition, and that to • some distance farther up the bar and In all matters pertaining to their few The following simple change in your end of the coll. and taking care that SYNOPSIS.—On th* bank* of stood gazing Intently toward the nar- acres of bottom land, and In their the turns are wound In the same direc- put them into proper condition would tha Wabash stand Texto Colin •ingle circuit receiver will: cost almost 1750,000 is indicated to a and' Jack Warhope, young and row upper end of the arm of water cabin home a little wa. up Eagle Hol- 1. Increase the selectivity. tion as this coll. Connect one end to where it disappeared under the over- Uie binding poet" on the ground survey of paving conditions which nan very much In love. TexU la t>>« low road, her- word was law. 2. Widen the wave length-rang*. only daughter of old Pap Simon, lapping brandies of trees and tangled Uncle Nick was perched upon one wire and the- other end to therecently been completed by the de- rich man and money-lender. Jack vines. Snugged nwny under the tangle. of the desks,.his ba<-k to the wall, his 3. Prevent interference from radia- antenna binding post. Now discon- partment of' public works. ' la th« orphan bound boy of Pup tion. Opening of the Hopkins Grammar Simon who had foreclosed a In a manner that must have made It eyes twinkling merrily, already an In- nect the antenna side of the variable mortgage on the Warhope estate, practically Invisible, except from that terested audience around htm roaring 4. Increase the receiving distance. condenser from Its present position school $400,000 endowment and main- At flrat Texle and Jack talk aadly one point, lay a small houseboat 0. Make clearer reception possible. tenance campaign was signalized in of Kvn Colin, the girl's missing; ut his drollery, when Jack Warhope and connect to the main switch arm, A trifling circumstance enough- pushed his way through the Jam of With only a few changes In the con- which heretofore has heen used to tune New Haven, Wednesday evening by a brother. Then Juck says tbat in dinner at the Lawn Club attended by ten days his servitude will be houseboats were common on the Wa- men and boys at the door and Joined nections of >our present set you cau the antenna circuit In course steps, over, thut he will rifle out Into, bash—but why there? The place was the aimlessly sauntering crowd, In the receive through ' Interference .from alumni of the school and citizens. the bit; world to seek hla fortune. the variable condenser doing the fine About 1.000 invitations were sent out. Both know what that will mean dark and dank, the bank boggy, and schoolliouse. ' • nearby stations, and can reach wave tuning. Thin is all there is to be done. to them. Texle and Jack talk ot there was no spring short of Alpine The Reverend Caleb Hopkins ar- lengths even us high as 800 meters. The rest nf the circuit Is left as"It is. Inventory of the estate of Rev. Dr. the red lock of "Red Colin," Iri- island. The woodsman turned and rived, as he had promised—lie and .Your neighbor will not he annoyed by As tl'.e drcult la now, the main wind- Francis Goodwin, the largest esti.te iiuritu-4 by Ken. And Jack saya motioned to tyscompanions . Texle and Mrs. Mason. He had been the radiation which your present re- ever tiled in the Hartford probate he's coming back as soon as he Ing Is now the secondary, and the 15 court, has been completed and.shovs finds gold In California. Then They had been watching him ami at anxiously awaited, since it had long ceiver now causes, a slight increase In turns is a fixed primary, acting as an arrives the new preacher. Rev. been the custom to have the minister a total valuation of 16,610,922.58. The his sign came' trooping \ip the bar— receiving distance will be noted and, untuned antenna circuit, and in close appraisers were Joseph Buths, Joseph Caleb Hopkins. Pap Simon In- the preacher fagged and lagging be- sit at the first table and launch the what is better, the programs will come Inductive relation with Uie secondary. troduces the villagers to the new '•festival" with a blessing. P. Kennedy and James Spencer preacher, who was a college mat* hind—and gathered around him. Fol- In much clearer than before. • The switch and condenser are used ex- Talnter. of Ken. At supper at the Colin lowing the direction of his finger, they Zeke Pollek—likewise by ancient actly as before In tuning.—New York home the preacher tells how the Wind 15 turns of No. 22 D..S. C. wire Everltt S. Whlttaker. owner, of a peered In under the overlapping trees. custom, a sort of self-uppotnted master directly over the winding of the main Globe. ' boy killed a gambler: and disap- of ceremonies—his sharp hatchet face restaurant at 571 Grand avenue, ami peared. His father attributes Counterman grinned around at the Raffaele Passarlello, who owns a store -Ken's tall from grace to his red, others after a moment and Jerked* his scrubbed' shiny with home-made soap lock ot hair. Then Pap Simon perfumed with' sassafras, pounced on II m 1111111II11 Ml 111 ii; at 426 Bast street,' were placed under has a sort ot atroke. brought on thumb back toward the skiff. Easy to Make Universal arrest ln~New Haven by Officer B. by reading a letter from Ken, "S'posln* we row up an' pay 'Ira a the preacher-and hurried him. to'the bead of the table, with Widow Mason Joint Crystal Detector Rice of the Grand avenue station and "somewhere in Net? York." who visit? I'd like f see a man with slch \ The Fan's Lament charged with having gaming devices curses his father on his death an eye f*r a vnmpln' place." on his right. Miss Martin, the teacher. This Idea for* a good detector Is one bed. A postscript by another 011 his left, and as many pupils as pos- in their possession. hand saya he la dead. At the vil- Uncle Nick tossed up his chin, grunt- with which a fine adjustment may be By Robert 8. Sutllffe. Twenty-two miles of roadway and lage atore and post office Log* ed, and led the way down the bar tosible Ihied up along the sides of the made on any point of the crystal. •J- "This Is terrible! Ru.a looking forward to at least a partial far?" . ested In what went on nbout him. well copy. lie turned "back to the To make the universal Joint flrat tured the poor old fan, but the ) | get a 2H-lnch'strip, three small angle harvest. The claim, with the good "Mile 'r so," grunted Uncle Nick, as There Is little formality among men table and raised his hand. The two end ain't yet. for we've got. to • he _ stooped over the seine, helping long rows of youngsters, stood In awk pieces, and several' nuts and bolts from start ice making has secured, another of—the river and the woods—a fine _geti the gab of the congressman. -[ \ hard freeze__ will render the blocks ' spread the meshes straight. wrirdiy decorous'expectancy. The low the toy sel7~ These are assetnbled-as- enough delicacy, though, when big mo- Hhown In the diagram with lock Fer yea,™ galore on that there • • thick enough to house. "I really should not remain away ments come. They brought the bow tones of the solemn grace fell softly washers under the nut* ut the points floor where hot air flows alt * Fire which broke out In the garage from the study so icing," the preacher of the skiff'up under the stern of the impressive; the minister resumed his • day; the'ones there sent, have j| pursued. "I must have time to collect B and Or A round-head wood. screw of Thomas W. Donovan in Seymour - secluded little craft and climbed seat; a deep breath swept down the been bell-bent to talk the time avenue, Derby, did damage estimated my thoughts somewhat, as I under- aboard. . . . two rows of hungry urchins: and—the with a lock wnsher under the head Is stand I. shall be- expected to make a used to hold the joint to the base at away. But though they roared, at 910,000. The building contained a There Was both a fore and ah aft "festival" was on. •.•-.. there, WHS none-there bored, and number of cars stored there by vari- few remarks at the—festival tonight." A good length of the candles In the A. A plain wiudier Is placed between 'door to the tiny cabin that occupied the wood and the angle piece to make no guy seemed to care,, cause ous people, and eight of the machines Uncle Nick leered around at him. the whole mid-section of the deck, but windows had burned nwny when Jack, "An* them remarks will be few, par- It turn easily. The knob is put on one each wise. ••Imp would haie a* were damaged. - Mr. Donovan, who no windows on either side. Both doors sauntering aimlessly In the crowd, nap while lie drank in the gub- only recently purchased the garuge son. I 'low y'u nee'n' t' worry y'ur were heavily padlocked—n further found himself, for the first time that end of the horizontal arm and the cat- head about them remarks none. Ther'U Hlled air. as an agency and repair shop for the proof ~~bf ~ the owner's -exelusivenessT -evenmgrf:ice-tw~fnce-\vlth-T«xle,-when But the poor old fan that-con-- Durant and Star—motor—cars, staled be 'another scent in the air t'nlght" On the. dusty hoards there were a Lum- she leaned over-Mrs. Mason's chair. The old man winked at Counterman, gressnuin has cornered now. fer that, his own loss exceeded $2,000. ber of footprints, some of them—curi- The girl looked up and smiled. He sure, when the guys. orate he The Inventory divides the estate in- trudged off down the sundbA to the ously enough—made by a boot that was raking over his scant stock of live bos. dragged it up along the edge must take his fate, he has got to'seven parts:. Bonds, stocks, real must have been stylish, even dainty. words for one that would fit the occa- l.o just endure. Me must take estate, mortgages, personal effects, of the stream and hitched It to the sion—words being about the hardest stern of the skiff. He hud hardly fin- Uncle Nick leaned upon the railing the clack, fer he can't talk back, cash on hand and cash In banks. Of of the forward deck and prodded his things he had to reckon with—when and his good old time Is pust, these items the largest is stocks, di- ished when Jack and Counterman the yo'ung preacher, suave and affable, came with the. seine. pipe, while the one-eyed ' fisherman but at his set he'll swear you vided Into mlsceHaneouB stocks und gnawed himself a fresh .chew from a 4>y odds the most popular man In the Universal. Joint Crystal Ottector bet, "when speeches Is broadcast. bank and insurance stocks, the to-.al The preacher came last, his eyes sweaty plug that he clawed up out of house, joined the group. Which Is Simple to Construct. (© Science and Invention.) value ot all being J3.198.021.56 Real still drawn irresistibly up the river. his overalls pocket, the two of them estate ranks second, the total value of Through the mind of Jack Warhope whisker on the other. A wire is •H II Mill II IllMlllHH-1- "Is there not some—other place?" all holdings being $1,747,744. while the generalizing on the circumstance of flashed a comparison between the soldered near the middle of the arm he asked, reluctantly tnking his seat stylish hoot tracks, .no windows and third item in point of value is bonds, preacher and himself. The compari- and Ht>!g-tnil lend Is made over, to one In the bow, "some—nearer place?" padlocked doors. son showed dead against him. For the Attachment for Vernier the total value of all bond holdings be- Uncle Nick studied him out of his The preacher had Joined In the dis- first time in his life he was half binding post. . Can Be Had for Nickel ing $1,496,809. deep-set eyes. He was a guest. In a cussion and was Just telling them. In aslimned of his ungainly clothes, of The screws nt points * A, B and O John Kehoe was placed tinder ar- sense, and he was—the preacher. The should he adjusted to give tjie< desired Any number of vernier attachments his half-bored drawl, that it might be jhe grennirohs. the massive chest and have been described in various radio rest in New Haven after Policeman T. old man's' face became thoughtful; he shoulders — the "six-foot-three" of stiffness of operation. • some naturalist tnklng unusual pains periodicals, hut most of them are Flynn and Sergeant J. Carton, of glanced at Counterman. to preserve his specimens, when Jack bone and brawn upon which the Flat- The crystal holder Is shaped from headquarters, visited room. 46 In the % woods had exhausted its utmost Imag- the strip of spring brass. This' Is either too complicated- in construction Poll, building and found one quarl of '•Thnr's tirassy bar," he muttered; Warhope, still standing in I lie s ;lft or have a mechanical drawback. The half auctioned, 'an' tliar's laller j and holding It to the stern of the house- ination, its ultimate romance, when it bent hair-pin shaped as shown and an whisky. Kehoe, with some other men, bestowed the title: Big Jack. angle piece Is soldered on one side. vernier attachment described costs five was In the room at the time, the pollre branch—" I boat, picked up on« of the shiny cents and. as can he seen from the Counterman spit out Into the river j hoots from the preacher's, stack of A wood screw Is used'to fasten it sol- entered. Kehoe stated that he was —a preliminary that usually had to I clothes in the how, and, hidden from idly to the bns<«. This holder Is con- the owner of the whisky and the office bo attended to before he spoke. the others by the cabin, pressed the "The' preacher slowly raised nected to 1 lie other binding post. The was under his charge. He was placed "Orassy liar." he repeated thought- heel of it down hard beside one of the an arm and pointed toward the holder should be made so that it under arrest and charged with viola- fully, peering over his shoulder at the heel-prints on the dusty, after-deck. •pen door. closes all the way when the crystnl Is tion of the liquor law. He was re- preacher in the limv, as If he too had The two prints coincided perfectly. nor In it. leased on bonds of $500. caught something of Uncle Nick's con- IMock washers are not to he hail, The good work being done by the siderations. "Hit's better fr spearln'. CAPTER VI (TO BE CONTINUED.) \ small stiff sprint's may be used in West Haven Mothers' Club is well rec- An' Ynllw branch"—be. glanced up nt tlielr place. ognized In the community. One most the sun; swept sky and river with his Mettle of the Minister. ' Milo, King of Athletes. Ily careful workmanship this may commendable object is the free sew- pucken'il one eye—"t'day's too clary. The buckeye schoolhouse stood on Milo was an ancient Creek athlete . he liiade a very neat and efficient In- ing school which It conducts every Hit ain't deep enough. No, I'm fr the extreme west side of the village. of whom it is related thut he once ! st rument. Saturday morning In the Union school Mud haul. They'll -be scronched In A plain one-room building of the gen- carried a heifer of four years to the building, open to all children of the thai* thick as bees around a haw tree." eral type of Jlie period—paint gone; sacritlce on his shoulders, killed It t,own who care to attend. Three com- The decision seemed final. The weather-beaten; no belfry; no orna- with a blow of his fist, nnd afterward, Verner Can Be Added Sidewise Movement of the Thumb on petent teachers are doing wonderful preacher glanced again up the river, mentation: three windows on each it- is added, ate the whole of it In to Variable Condenser tne Eraser Affords a Very Fine Ad- work with these little people. In or- and pulled the faded straw hat farther side: a chimney at the buck; a oat- one day. His death is characteris- justment of the Position of the Dial. der to replenish the club's treasury a Here Is a vernier that, can lie added pinochle and whist is to take place In down over his head as' if afraid of tered door in front. tically related, says the Detroit News Illustration, in simplicity Itself so far . sunburn. The "festival" in celebration of the When enfeebled by ace lie attempted ti- the variable condenser of your set the town hall on Wednesday evening. very easily. Hrill a bole in the panel its operation in concerned. The follow* "Is It drondfully—muddy?" he mum- close of school was a distinct event at to rend open the trunk of a tree par- West Haven now has two young I near the condenser and mount an old ing parts are necessary for Its con- women who are licensed Methodist bled. Buckeye. tially split by wood cutters, but tin; struction: Two small brass bolts taken The pupils' desks had neon removed wood, closing on his Itnnds. held him { switch lever after' breaking off the preachers. They are Miss Ruth Can-" , Guest and preacher though he was. from dry cells, two nuts to fit these Held and. Miss Blvira Lewis, both stu- he was still a tenderfoot. Counter- nnd placed around tin* walls. A-long fiist. and he was attacked and de- holts, n scrap of sheet brass nnd one table extended across the rear. The voured by wolves. Milo bore off the dents at the- Poult's Institute, Herki- man's raucous laugh exposed the huge five cent round .eraser. The drawings mer, N. Y. The practice of granting wad of tobacco betw'een his JUWJ. rest of the room was clour, except for prize six' timer,, in the Olympic games are self explanatory. Fine adjust- the groat box stove that stood in theand; mi an equal number of times ut > licenses to women Is comparatively Nick took The unllghted pipe from' be- ment is made by rolling the eraser new in the Methodist Church and tween his .lips, and his roar wheeled center of the floor, -rusty red. and huge the I'ythian. He was appointed to with the thumb. This vernier does enough and deep .enough to swallow a command an army against the Sybar- these two young women are among a wisp of sand suipe that happened at not require any hole in the panel and the first to be so honored in the New Stick of cord-wood whole. ites, mid at the battle of the Crathis. ^^^^^^^^••SBBBaB^BBaajJBjjaBBak. the moment to he glancing up the bar. the knob and( dial may be moved to England states. This action was ta- "Not as muddy as it—sounds." he Everything was - free, each family .Til- It. «'., his great strength is said by • another set without removing the at- that sent children to school bringing a Diodorus to have given the victory ken at the. fourth quarterly confer- chuckled, grabbing a match out of his tachment.—Radio News. * ence at the local church following the trousers pocket. well-filled basket. And such a feast to the ("retonlans. r i^ayj>Jj)Va ^H fourth of the series of Fellowship sup- That settled it. The preacher, ap- as the housewives of the neighborhood furnished forth could have heen found . Don't think hecansp a man misses Should Know Plan of pers. The conference was conductrd parently resigned to whatever further by Dr. E. A. Dent, the district superin- hardships" fate might have In store for nowhere else In the land, except :!iere the mark occasionally that he i>u't a good shut. , ' ' ' " Balancing Neutrodyne tendent. . , ' £•"- 11111. wit 'u-utchin:: the shore line, with I In the grout Klatwoods that lay. The practice of balancing out of a Booming of state rade for exporting neutrodyne receiver consists of excit- to foreign countries started at ses- told us about the 'blue parka-man,' i ing the coupled receiver circuits with sions ot University Club. Bridgeport, comparatively strong signal neutral. under auspices of manufacturers. '•PARKA MAN" HAD ONE REGRET but It' was necessary to. take the iiing capacities or neutrodons, as they chance.' .The 'blue parka man' did get . Main street, Ansonia. Is to be paved are called, to a point where that slgr with brick. This material to be used Highwayman Did, Not .Recognize. His A parka is a sort of shirt, that. (Its us, making.us lay all our money on Vernier, Attachment Made of an Extra ; nal becomes Inaudible. The fact that In paying the main:thoroughfare has ..*' Own Pastor—Bishop Was tight at the wrists., WhlTY hood at- the ground, at the muzzle, of his'rifle.' Condenser plate Controlled'by Sep. tachment.! 'Tbe front p^rtiof,the hood this .adjustment of the neutralising: been agreed upon by the board of pulv . -i' '•-.-'.'. "Jtiot ."Do you rob ministers^: too? Iasked capacities' Is made toward a: minimum -'networks.,,-Tbe MapleVstreetlbrldge.ls closes .with 'a'- puckering string, leaving! 'html ./Depends" 6n'^ whd-thay;are :^r»' ; ;5y .:\ V _;A J |nnb > or*Inaudible -signal'}andgcan":=be rae-- : in bad condition bit the board- mem- only-:_a'i"place xfor.j thejjfearer itr»~ lblade.':^.Cuf >nd Idrljl a plfcer of .".slum- ; Bishop Rnwe.recently t on rejc-. plieji: tlie.^bluei parka; man.!iro"ilip" |irat"e will EiiRlnrer "'Clarke'- h«a' con'fa—ed 'with : "A frllnw known as the "blue •\Miiit ' the 'blue parka min ex- tion Is a true* process of actual circuit Engineer J. E. Buddlngton of New in.in hud been si.itlonlng him-, terrorlzwl tbo«e who lind to travel be- claimed 'I'm nshasned of myself for I allde between the panel nnd tlM sta- UOBarr P1*1' of t1"' condenser, r asten rapacity neutralization and not • Haven, designer and builder of the -elf between Falrbiinka and the mine tween Fairbanks and the mini's. ,1 not recognising you, bishop, and I'll method of pre\en(lng or reducing if> was one of a quartette that hud to I a laad from the switch to the rotary structure, before any action upon the Mime lupiitv mill* ann\ and robbing not rob \ou Hell I I'm a member of generation. work of reconstruction la taken. .putpie at the tnuzxle of a Winchester. maUe a trip one afternoon. People jour chunh! ** plats* •( tin condenser. Property of the Watertown Historical Society

relic tBttaatelr associated watertownhistoricalsociety.orgWith Washington's Masonic career is tfce Cornell Team Coming worshipful master of Alexandria It was In continuous use for 117 yeara. Because of the Importance of bat today It la preserved In a glass case opening the Tost Field house to Several notable visitors, among then Gen- track competition with an Im- eral Lafayette. In 1825, have occupied portant event the athletic au- this chair-alnce Washington'* day. thorities of the University of The trowel used by him at the laying Michigan have secured the con- of the capltol corner atone wUl form a sent of Cornell university to part or tbe collection. hold the 1824 Indoor meet at One of the moat prised of all the relics Ann Arbor Instead of at Ithaca. is the Williams portrait of Washington, The Indoor meet with Cornell palntfd In 1704. which by many U wn- has been the longest continued atdered the truest likeness extant of the of any of the competitions at MXSONIC first president. Tbls portrait shows Wash- Waterman gymnasium and la ington In Masonic regalia. considered a fitting event for High In Importance among the relics the opening of the new struc- la the "Washington Clock." It was but a ture to .track competition. MEMOMM, few seconds after his death on the night 11111111111111111111111 DETROIT MANAGEMENT FINALLY SOLD VEACH

Veteran Outfielder Was on Market for Three Years. The sale of Bob Veach to Boston *>• Your Men Folks macks the culmination of three yeurv* save half the cost and are better effort on the part of the Tiger manage- pleased when, by our new method, ment to peddle the veteran gardener. you make at home all their A hitter of no mean ability and a £*&• fielder as good as the average, Veach, SHIRTS nevertheless, has never fitted In. tbe Latest New York styles, S»l varieties, two grade*. Complete sblrt-maklns outfit, choice scheme of things according to Oobb's materials, specially ilenlcned pattern, tnelnd- Inc separate or attached collar, pearl but- Ideas, a tendency to slow thinking tons, neckband. Interlining and simple In- faOOQOOOdhrine probably having something to do with struction* for making at home. All color* and combinations. Complete, plus postage: It. Orade value 13 each. 11.60 In going to the Red Sox under Lee Grade value 14 each, $2.00 for American freemasonry Satisfaction guaranteed or money- refunded. Kohl and Bob Qulnn, Veach will be Send for frre ramplea and full direct tons. working for a pair to whose downfall HOME TEXTILE COMPANY Afilk • he contributed In no small degree two Sk NewYetfc years ago. when they had the Browns battling the Yankees for the pennant. Toward the end of September that year the Browne, Just a lap behind New York, stopped over In Detroit on By JOHN DICKIN80N SHERMAN their way home, winding, up their last ASHINGTON, the Capital City of Invasion.- the United States of America and The clubs went Into the eleventh probably destined to be the most Inning tied, and then, with two out Impressive capital city of the and two on, Dausa passed Tobln to get world, la to have still another me- at Eddie Foster. morial of the Greut. American Foster took a toe' hold and swung, whose name It beurs—the Georga and three runners started homeward Washington National Musonlc as the ball winged down the left-field Meuiorlul. To be sure Its wulls foul Une about two feet off the ground. Not Guilty are rising In Alexandria, Just over It looked like a certain , but An old negro went to the office of the Virginia line from the District Veach, Playing deep, raced over, dived the .commissioner of registration In a Missouri town and applied for regis- of Columbia, but they will be clear of terraflrma and speared the v plainly visible from Washington: ball with his bare hand, sprawling out tration papers. -•^.•••~^ **-. Moreover, Alexandria, like Mount Vernon. Is so after he made the catch, which was "What is your name?" asked the closely associated with George Washington that of the "impossible" variety. official. the several memorials of the'I'otomac Vulley seem Pruett blew In the thirteenth and "George Washington," was the reply. parts of a harmonious whole. , the Tigers romped In. Incidentally, "Well, George, are you the man who In the near future there will he. six of these as Is well known, St. Louis finished cut down the cherry tree?" memorials—Washington City Itself; the Wushlng- Jut one game behind New York. "No. suh. I ain't de man. I ain't ton Monument; Mount Vernon, with Its sacred done ho work for nigh onto a year." More than fourteen years ago the sentiment sur- tomb; the National Cathedral on Mount St. Albna. New Baseball Beauty A simple. olrt-fsshtonH! m'ticlne, aa seed which George Washington specifically provided for rounding the preservation of these memorabilia tortar as in JH3T, In compounded In Wright'* IndTIn Vegetable PHI.. They regulate the in his directions to Major L'Knfant when he and was crystallized In the desire for a permanent stomach, l.lver and bowels. Adv. the young French engineer luid out Washington memorial. The movement was started by Alex- of December 14. 1790, that Dr. Ellsha Cullen Dick. In 1700; the George Washington National Audi- andria-Washington Lodge. It was taken up by the Washington's lifelong friend, physician, and master torium, of which the foundations are completed, Musonlc fraternity of the country and a national of Alexnndrla Lodge, cut the pendulum of tbe old He Wanted to Know G). Wat- rise 200 feet high from Shooters' Hill on the Ar- The edifice" will be 180 feet in width by 260 feet son was a New Englander who traveled abroad lington Ridge. From u distance it will appear as during the Revolution In connection, with the pre- it massive and lofty tower rising from a terraced, In depth and of granite. liminary negotiations for peace. Here Is the pas- verduru-clud base. From Its topmost" colonnade The very heart ana center of the memorial will ' sage: the visitor may view the I'otoninc Valley from he a great atrium, 70 feet wide and 100 feet deep, Washington to Mount Vernon. in which Washington In the arched recess of which will be set the me- imtifted must of his life. Indeed, the thirty-two morial Itself, an imposing statue of George Wash- A sa& and toothing " Here Is Wayland Dean; twenty-one, HITCS of Its grounds were oncu owned by Wash- - ington. remedy for cuts, right-hand of the Louisville Incton himself. This spacious hall will rise to a height of 64 bums, or skin trou- feet, ascending by a clerestory above the surround- Colonels, wao hat been sold to tbe bles. Protects, re- The corner-stone of this Masonic Memorial and New York Giants for $50,000. shrine for American Freemasonry was laid lust ing portion of the building. It will be flanked by Ii.vesaodbeals.Taka full. President C'oolidgc, though not a Mason, great Ionic columns 40 feet high and surrounded internally for coughs by a number of rooms devoted to Masonic Inter- beautiful and appropriate acknowledgment. The i-prpod the first mortar with the trowel used by fllSwlSgollSg- are copies of our letter and the reply. Joe Choynski Now House tteorge Washington September 18. 1793, in laying ests. On the walls, mural paintings, executed by some of the most famous artists of the present Is this the apron so highly prized by Alexandria Mover in Chicago City the corner stone of the capitol building at Wash- Lodge? Evidently It was "expensive" and certain- ington. Members of the cabinet, official person- day, will be representative of the life of Washing- ' Joe Choynski, old-time fighter of the ton. ly it bore the flags of America nnd France. In days of Corbett, Peter Jackson, Jim Vaseline ages, Masonic dignitaries and an army of repre- yentutives of Masonic organizations throughout The entrance of the building will be a stately any event, the letters are Interesting. The first Is Hall and Bob Fltzslmmoni, has come the country participated In elaborate ceremonies, six-column portico of pure Doric design, contrast- addressed, "Most Illustrious and Respected Broth- to Chicago and plunged into the work lit. Itev. James Edwurd Freeman. Episcopal bishop Ing interestingly with tire plain, unbroken side er," and reads, In purt: of beautifying the big city in its of Washington, delivered an eulogy to the nation's walls of the Musonlc rooms. The memorial hall Your glorious career will not be confined to the changes now. going on. He joined a first president. will be reached through the portico by gradual construction firm with George Schros- George Washington became a charter member steQB bree. brother of Al, another former of Alexandria Lodge In 1778, shortly after the ap- losing above the memorial hall and forming a fighter,, now dead, and Is engaged In plication for a charter had been made to the grand second story of the tower will be the George wmmmmm moving houses to make several streets lodge In Vlrglnlu. Upon the walls of the lodge Washington Masonic Memorial Museum, 60 by 75 wider.' The houses are moved scien- still hangs the document containing his name, feet, with lofty celling und fine light. It will be tifically. The families are not asked signed by Edmund Randolph, governor of Virginia. reached by both stairs and elevators. The third to move and in five hours the water, He served as master for twenty months, being level, which Is above the museum, will b» devoted gas and electric lights are again re-elected to succeed himself. But for years prior to a great Masonic library. Above this will be a hooked up and life goes on under the to tlmt tltn'e he bad-been associated with the lodge- covered observation platform. The three levels new conditions. Some brick houses Green's August Fkmer General Washington's reply Is dated. "State of have the front cut off as If with a big •nd had been elected as honorary, member shortly will, be screened by stately colonnades, and rising New-York, August 10, 1782." and xflys, In part, The remedy with s record of fifty-eevea above the main hall each will be smaller than 'the cheese knife. Joe la superintendent yesfsofsafpatsiiigexceneiice. All whs efter his return from the Revolution, when the after stating the ornaments to be "Elegant": , lodge was within the Jurisdiction of the provincial level beneath. It. of tbe construction gang doing this •offer with nervous dyipepiis,soar sw«a- endeavors to avert the evil with which work and enjoys it. It is out of doors Kfa.coa*tipatioB, iadigettioa,toipidH«er. grand lodge of Pennsylvania^ . • There win be Incorporated In the building an ex- hrCBten IT s •!••••• li*snlss*rss*M' V S5 ^"^^ and he occasionally swings a pick- After Washington's death numerous relics, many act replica of the original room In which George wind en stonaek Washington occupied the chair as master. It will ^o^ld nV5e%« ax to get through some tough cement indicationiadfcstioes of didTusthrf e disorder,wllfM of which have been uRsocluted with his Masonic of Justice, to be subjected and finds It exhilarating. GREEN? AUGUST FLOWKK aa effective life, passed Into possession of the lodge. - be located In the southeast comer of the new me- dFfif^ain II has been the great pride of the Alexnndna- morial building on the ground floor. Even the Wushlngton Lodge to have assembled so many me- wall paper used In the old lodge room .where Managers Mack and Dunn lotSSTho^^. sHo George Washington sat aB worshipful master, .be- mentoes of the public nnd private life of the first of the world, and to aaaure" you of th« sln- Lose Out on Ball Stars iMd.world. Becsase of ils amit eat pop- ins re-elected to the office on St. John's day. De- With which I an,. Tour^ ularity GtlWS AUOTST FWWOl esjfa president, and iiy Inheritance, tnnlltlon and affilia- Connie Mock of the Athletics and foaadTtodsy wherever aedkiMt in M tion It Is'peculiarly equipped to have Inaugurated cember 27t 1788.. will be faithfully reproduced. foaadTtodsy w • ; Jack Dunn of" the Orioles should weep aOaadWceatbotdsiaOdW . the movement for-the memorial.' - There will be a states* memorial room, where every state In the Union, through its lodge, may Alexandria Is especially fitting as the site for In the same handkerchief. Mack lost A disastrous fire, however, occurred In Muy. have an exhibit, a tablet or some display charac- this memorial. Washington surveyed some of Its- H00.000 In one shot last summer and 1*«71, In'which'were lost many valuable relics as- teristic of the Masonry of. the stnte and also of present streets. It was from Oadshy's tavern In never said a word. He could have RUB YOUR EYES? •oefnttid with the general's public career, with his ' Washington. •;,"." .. " ' 1754- that he recruited his first command and. jotd Wld Matthews for,that sum and contacts'* with-notable men. of,the duy and with niurched -from- there to "the .Buttle of Great .didn't After the season every.club : The building will contain many memorabilia in- his"family life. .-. " \..-- :. ' - . ., ' ' .-] tlmately associated with .Washington., _One of. the Meadows. A year later he received his.commis- In both major leagues passed up Mat-; Although Alexandria; came Into possession of the sion *ns major- under the Ill-starred Bruddock Jn priceless-relic*a letter .in. his,own hand, u9der thews" at .the .--waiver-price and Mack; Confederate'forces during, the~ Civil war; no article 'date of-:December;28y 1788. from::Mr. -Vernon• re- th me place*ronleavliig;fo'r his first iniugura- pa»sedHhlm:.nlong'to;: Mllwaukeejln .the wast.touched.^For: farty.years tlir-—"»--M-r-i. :rteai for XI Simmons. -Jack ;punn,'ra-j N friendsg steps Yilsi-d"~Vl2»7oOO "for "Joe1" Boley 'last UP founded and endowed Its llrst free school, spring. Four clubs were after the the Alexandria academy. Soon after Christ shortstop at that time. Now Dunn church wits completed. In 1773, Washington bought seems unable to dispose of Joe at a a jtew there and became a regular attendant jraatly reduced price. vi the AJasaidria-Waahlngton Lodge Museum. Property of the WatertownV . Historical Society PAGE 8 . THE WATpTCW» MEWS FRIDAY! FBBRttAttV 22. JJODMOUiBEBXwatertownhistoricalsociety.org. WATEBTOWN, CONNECTICUT Newiy Notet Abort Onr Heifhbon Over the Good

Botd Wcrt ©f Vi. : Watortown 1> No. 79 In the Itat of incorporated towns -1__ ' Situated in th« beautiful LUchfleld Hilla region, on Watertown brwcb. 8 P&OFITABLE JAMESTOWN" «HOWH IN . y ^ a * a a R.. dx mil*, from Watering. . TO LARGE AUDIENCE j Population 6.785. Grand list 1922. $6,869,182.06. Visit Our New or MMMON CIRCLE ! Excellent trolley service every 20 minute* to ------nth beyomL Jitney twice a day between Walertown and Iitchneld. Bare China of BgydHomtitotd Power Was Disftpp ! ' The home of Taft School. . And Admired Picture Could Not be Shown j High School and 10 ended and district schools. Twenty-three members of the At Iti Best ! Public Library and branch. Seven churches. Mission Circle met with Mrs. : Fjif Department, modernly equipped. PAINT , The largo »iudi««in'i» at the First' Civic Union Society. 3U:.1?H-HS M.n/s Association. Harmon Boyd on Monday after- Savings Eaak and Trust Compt-.ny. 11 .on. An unusually pleasant Church last Sunday evening: Good nlnres—over 35 places of business. and profitable session was held thoroughly enjoyed the excellent j A iocai newspaper—The New». with' much needlework accom- picture, "Jataestown" second of Community House,, and PIaygrour.il. ( DEPARTMENT the Yale "Chronicles of Ameri Telephone Exchange. plished An interesting mmission- Firsi class hostelry—"The McFingal Inn. ary sketckhh was read givin iig detaidtil ca" which the church has been Two troops Boy Scouts. 1/ "Wi ITiit" fortunate in securing. Much of \ Town Hall and historic Village Oreen. Fraternal. Social and Benevolent Organizations. Tell us your Faint Troubles Gas. Electricity and Water Supply. -.•.•• Industries: Manufacture of Sillt Thread, Silk Hosiery. Umbrella pjiiings.' Mouio Traps, Rubber Insulation, /General Hardware and Plna. Splendid home sites, convenient to trolley. Surrounded By beautiful country with excellent roads. A TRIBUTE TO MOTHER tIM mast bc r true l0 SALES RECORDS EVERY j Boyd1 . Before going-home the ! * " ™ > . .. i One of the most beautiful - ._ _°L.L. .u:_" tortorvv_ Our more inti WHERE. Seniors wore shown the rare china i . i ---.- - - . . _F| ! glimpses into the many-sided and beautiful dinin* room fur-ifJJ^a^J^ JTU Chevrolet Motor Company beI character of our late ex-Presi- TEMPLETON'S nmbniK. ofjhj^Boy^homestead.j^ ^lY^^^SySe^n-, Ueves that quality production dent, Woodrow "Wilson, is shown 13-17 East Main Street Waterbury, Conn. * IMPROVEMENTS MADE . j»iif'-'i-n-ntlv of the part which' is\reason for achievement in the volume of Dr William J. IN M. E. OHUBCH. jjumestown had in the early life j of one million record. Hampton on "Our Presidents and Their Mothers." President. "olofi our-nationour- naiion. uuOurr cumuiuiiu,community-v • ^ , •——---- \~ , During the latter days-of the-my consider itself fortunate to , There is one factory, at least. • \\ dson. though heavily burden- oociooen .,M furnace, which was removed j |uok forward from month to in which there is no dispute be-'-wl in Septemberworl, 19d1 ii with the (ll>n lfiMev from the church and a new one j mouth to such truthful drama-; twsen sales aM production cx-;.>rohlcni» •>droppe' » ««»d Mmomentaril" y Iff • *& 4 B»%* w *4 v«* » WBVM — — — ^^ ^------. substituted by P. P. HUchcoek I tizarionisn ouorf nation' thes outstandinhistory angd cutivesas.tance of theio r thdepartmentse relative import. - athest ewar burden, s to draw aside the iurtains of the past and with the r<>ou;lust falls ha, thd ebecom interioe r verof yth edingy lower, life •.•'•".'•':'! Ask any one of. authority in owing to thehuge volumes of • the sales department of the Chev- ouch of an artist presented to Howland - Hughes j smoke that persisted in pouring ' Mr.. Aokerman Jud^ >t*^ZEtiZ%^to he world a lovely pen picturg^of cut from the numerous cracks he mother who went to her re-r Waterbiry's Largest Department Store in the furnace pipe. After the new Mrs. Ackerman (ferrill) Jud-'•**>.<* sejling-and you will get ard years before national hon- up-to-date heating apparatus was son. aged 83, died Monday morn- an immediate answer: >rs came to her distinguished installed the ladies decided that ing at her home on the Bethlehem; . "^ ™ busine*s' manufact- son. In this beautiful tribute it was time to brighten up an«il... . The funeral was privatet urm^_byjd means , VIr, Wilson said, in part. , i little, and Prank Tuttle was giv-and was held from the home of Ever since Chevrolet turned If is very hard for «ne to ! en the- contract for doing the her son, Vincent A. Judson. Mr. their first car baek in 1914. speak of what my mother work. And a good job he hasand Mrs. Judson. wereboth tak- the demand in the sprinsg of the was without coloring the and .Mrs. Judson. were both tak- whole estimate with the deep 'made of it. The class room, en with severe grgrip colds about year could not be suppliedsuppd. an:l SHORE' love that fills my heart and hallway as well as the fur- a w,ek ago. TTheh y were tthhe olldd people waited from one to three nace room all show the touch oi' est tMinpll e in town andd tthh e years m™1M.ns ..tt.°o . Jget their car. 'whenever I think of her. H master-hand at the game of re- of their married life together . ' ,J;U» 4 lt.. .},.iran —d \*^ »t <•]„„„„ But ''.while others cannot novating, and now it is hoped numbered 61.AU these years have ^h," w the Chevrolet • Slogan, have seen her as I did, I am that there wijll-be no. further need bn-n sbent in the Flanders dis-. . Chevrolet believes that produc- sure that •••' every one who of vutliiy in the lower rooms for knew her at all must have DRESSES trit ^hieh is the home of the tion could not survive unless . many years to come. We under- Jud-on family was conscientiously built an:l felt also the charm of her s'rfiiJ that the entire" work in- ' Surviving besides her husband Viat }^f^ would always pre- unusual grace and • refine- . vulved- an outlay of about $135, son arVthree. grandchildren, ter tundamental merit with a in 'nt. and have been aware all paid for by the L. A. Society. of the clear-eyed, perceiv- The Standard of Excellence in a Special Selling at and four i would "always find a healthy ing mind that lay behind ai'd two' brothers. Miss Murion Allen was in Hart- I market, regardless of the whims her frnnk, gray eyes. . . . fort! on business JIflnday. MIN0RT0WN jot" fashion, j •''-".. She was one -6f-the-most re- !• .The. fact that Cherovlet has mni-knble persons I have A tlaui-fliU-r was born to Mr"OJ. d CHina'.'a,t Woman's Club 'now built and sold more than onr ever known., She was so $2.95 $3.95 omi Mrs. William Fleming'on. th'« 'nworved that only those of. The Woman's, her own household can have, ary 25th will ^be_in—charge The million mark lias" been known "how lovable she was, The farmers of the East Sido Mrs. F. E. Warner and Mrs. reached and how going on two though every friend knew district have . finished fillinp H. Thompson. : Instead of themillion. how loyal and steadfast she ; $4.95 their icw-liouses, ""-" was. I seem to feel still the ..the lilub!VS&-Z3L£?& will be addressed by ToBw,"-** -»«*» 1 markable record is duo to the touch of her hand and the Djllar DtayUay ' in'.Waterbury'Mrsj . Alexander, Lyall. of Water- fact that there never has been a sweet, steadying influence stoics attracted a large number i •• and . 'S, the Such a tribute stands besides T alone. They represent the crest of quality, was a recent i « rppngmzing p f sough 1 it those of John Quincy Adams and the perfected result of years of study combined with liia -onsin Ernest Buckingham ot "^» expcrienei- with birds on her •t tl that th W Mtlrnti hitil' » _. _*. JJi'.-h Street. ran., at \\.K.biiry «.m«lW h«'^ .,, V, es ablish a worl.Vs ntorri the necessities of fashion's decrees. They can be ;UI:I..V have visited her beantiEn . . production, building PRINTING worn every month in the year. It is only by pro- .\ .!HU}»liler, Virginia Eva, was ho.ro and sern the '""auttlul |f .. •„ ' thp wor,d t(J ducing these dresses in enormous quantities in great, lorn l.i Mr. and Mrs. Charles grounds, the great profusion oti . .... demand_ -Vdvertiscl on the 19th at their home Hov.-rer*s both foreign and domesd - j™Pp-v thls aemRna- The News is prepared to furnish all kinds of printed matter for commerical, scientifically-equipped factories, that garments of j.i >ort'i Woodbury. -the lovely nooks and po.Is \ lien and there. The views both j church, school or society purposes. such manifest quality can be sold at such low prices. Jlrs. Herbert Dilman of From the house and the summer j WOODBURY Sizes 36 to 46. Fine quality importc d and domestic Hnvt-n was an over Sunday gues; house on the hill, the arches of jj — Ginghams. New Checks and other patterns. Ex- «.l" LIT aunt Mrs. Arthur Bucking- rosps'owr the rustic arbors and j Mrs. Ann Ilotehkiss is spend COLD COMING ceptional values at §2.95, $3.95, $4.95. "f High Street. various other things of interest. ' inf what is.Known as the ihl visit the place. ] — beating expense is only 37 per lather and S'-n • banquet wilt , | R'v. and Mrs. David P. Hatcl cent over in January. If you i:ikr. place at .the Fir>Jt e.hurch Briefs 'are in Hartford for a few dayi had installed Chamberlin Metal cfifijiel mi the evening of the 25th. F. E. Warner has been assist-1 this week, on a visit to their soi Weather Strip last fall you would ing the Clark Bros, •filling their j i)avid P. Hatch, Jr. have saved a big part of your Vi-. and Mrs. CJeorjre W. Pic*. housts ~" r>al bill. Howland - Hughes li-;tvenworth attended the wwl- — Mrs. John P. Linden, of Water Better learn about it now. 11 Iji'.' "f iheir son, Dana T. Ler- The burial of the little daugh-1 bury who has been spending tin Many buildings in your state are WATERBURY, CONN. TELEPHONE 1175 ••-ii\.ortli »f Hartford to Mi,tp>s - of the late Arthur_Warner nast six weeks at the home oi fiuipped. Askk youyu r neighborg s Si-limits at the home of her ';in.j niec.e of Mrs. F. E. -Warner Mr.^and(Mrs. H. C. Cartwright who have it or write for catalog. Ot3tX3t3CXX3««^%1CWt«tataOOO«X :s in Cheshire at noon onw .,"s j,, "ththe NortNorthh CemeteryCemetery.. !ius rt'turnedTinme. : Wundhurv, , Tuesday afternoon CHAMBEBLIN 12th. Mr. and Mrs. H. II. Willes o METAL WEATHER BTBIP CO. Thi high school class of Sun-, New Haven will speiid tlie-.lioli 124 Congress Street, Boston, Mass. ,li:y and over Sunday with added element of insulation i iiay night for the card party Mrs. S. A. Kimble returned to i which will ^ean a big saving in your fuel.bill.^ i •.'jveu by thrf grangeH Mrs. H.hi'f home Wednesday aft« r S. Allei* and Howard Beardsley s|)cnding three weeks with rela- I . FOB PLASTER BASE,'it replaces wood lath and i •roucht home first prizes for tives in Marjiand. I . means a big.saving in the cost of applying and in the in! lire ploying and Robert Fray IS LIKE EATING . amount of plaster used...... ". I 1> i'i the highest spore in pinochle Mrs. Valentine Ballard aft'-r P0B INSIDE FINISH, it may be used as a wall- i 'I'lllist* attending from here were spending sometinip -'with her' 1 If yru DON'T eat your STOMACH suffers. I ,\1.- and Mrs. R. S. Burnap, Mr. ii board and panelled to give an attractive appearance to daughter in New Jersey, return- your rooms. i a:i i Mrs. Roy Ujee, Mr. and Mrs.ed, to her home Sunday. , I' If you DON'T ADVERTISE your.BUSINESS and |!| R. <>. Jiidson, Ur. and Mrs. H. S. , Before you plan your construction work drop in our i Mien, .Mr.jinil,-Mrs. M. L, Mar- I POOKETB00K suffers; and1 y( ur business ; office and leffrn^more about CELOTEX. _* ; A. S. Lyall of Waterbury, was I 'ux, Ali .."and Mi's.'•Ta.mes^Cannon,- '8- • • ~ " '" M .'iiid Mrs.1 W.-H^Munson, Mr. at his place in ' Minorto'wn "'Siin- i mi Mi- lt H Fi i.v Mi-. Alula •bi\'r" arid ,l«'ft n orrioil. supply-of • I The Watertowh Lumber Go, Ln'itidik, Miss L»IS Harvey, L'i im and suet for HIP bird- t ii ADVKKTISK and your POCKET- • •i iimiwiiniiwi.nl > I Ho i nl Bi-ardslej, Miss Sara It sVonis as it c\iiy famil> in Moial WIIM-MI •imiimiiBiiiaii m\ m ••mn n: • •iLiiton and Miss Katp Smith. EATThX ai.d you *Hl LIVE longer. ;. ... -_.— — |I Wfi ififiii;iiooflburi s>\ Jihams milon-e HoiI iii"moii pi- fuii'i,uito-- = BOOK are just as good ds , ™|"T«"' J'robablj by thi- end of » th l •i i i-usidHHTrSs and wwee RU.-SS , ^'^ « ^ »'"'•»"'}• Sales C n w ill'| J Advertise thai isn't saying much. liucecd in tooting a car into I every hone in town. 1

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