Mow is the Time to Plan That Hunting Trip Come to Aroostook You Can Get Supplies at Houlton

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1 Mow s the Tme to Plan That Huntng Trp Come to Aroostook You Can Get Supples at Houlton SHIRE TOWN OF AROOSTOOK COUNTY HOULTON TIMES AROOSTOOK VOL. LXI HOULTON, MAINE, W E D N E SD A Y, OCTOBER 5, 1921 HOULTON HIGH MAULS ST. MARYS 1 5-0! Gov. Baxter has nomnated Dr. Jane I W. B. Hall of Carbou as a member! of the Board of Osteopathc examna ton and regstraton, and Dr. Mary I Fleushman of Farmngton as a mem- her of the board of regstraton of I medcne. Ths s the frst tme that women physcans have been placed on these mportant boards. I The many Houlton frends of Mr. Peabody and McCluskey Star ; and Mrs. John B. McMann wll learn os lorak Locals Pt Pry Off ld wlth regret of,he passneof,th"r 0 v w u ff J n0 p!ew ack McMann at ther home Wth a Vctory Houlton Hgh pred off the ld n the local grd season Frday afternoon by admnsterng a decsve 15-0 defeat to the St. Mary s eleven from Van Buren. McCluskey and Peabody were the warrors carryng the oval across for the counters, the latter also kckng the second goal successfully. Throughout the sesson the Houlton lads showed superor speed n the backfleld and the lne held strong on the defense and opened up good ssed holes on the offensve end. The vstors played a good game of football but were outclassed by a faster and smoother workng machne. Houlton essayed to kck and Me- Carron for the vstors carred the hall hack a full twenty yards before he was downed by Bagnall, and the play began wth the ball n the possesson of St. Mary s n the center n Bangor recently. Jack, who lved ; wth hs aunt and uncle when they resded n Houlton, had been ll for several months prevous to hs death : but through all ths perod of llness he mantaned an optmstc atttude. ; never complanng and always look- ng ahead to brghter days. Durng! the tme that he lved n Houlton he was loved and esteemed by a host Of frends who wll on wth Mr. and Mrs. McMann n mournng ther loss. The lad was fourteen years of age. BOWLING SEASON OPENED H O U L T O N IS THE T A L K OF BOSTON Last Saturday we spoke of Charles H. Fogg of Houlton, Me., who loves Aroostook potatoes wth a Mane patrotc devoton, who s presdent of the Mane Press Assocaton, and who s off on a long-delayed vacaton. Ths has strred A. B. Crocker of Somervlle to recall an Aroostook whch was then buddng nto fame, but had not yet challenged and lcked the world. Mr. Crocker tells us that he had a speakng acquantance wth Houlton and Aroostook county, 15 years ago. That was before the Bangor & Aroostook ralroad was bult ; Houlton was then a termnus nstead of a way staton. Aroostook was even then a potato country, but not the potato country t s today. In the season the man street of Houlton was a sght to see; double teams haulng potatoes else. ths. to the staton, where the potato buyers had ther houses and stored the potatoes for shpment. Seventy fve cents per barrel, hauled from the feld, was consdered a far prce. Happy days E. L. Cleveland, now the potato kng, was ust startng hs career n the days whch Mr Crocker recalls. He was a potato buyer. He s a Camden boy, and came early to Houlton. The Aroostook has made great strdes n the years snce Cleveland started buyng potatoes. Many a fortune has been made there on the nourshng even though unpoetc potato. Not many poems have been wrtten on potatoes; but many checks have. In 86, Mr. Crocker sad to us. Charle Fogg was a school boy, so f he hasn t had a vacaton for 30 years t s hgh tme he took one. The trouble about Mane folks takng vacatons s that they are so mghty proud of ther old state that they never want to go anywhere Mr. Crocker bears us out n The Aroostook, he says, ^ It s understood on farly accurate authorty that out of a large number of toursts who frequented the Aroos took road Sunday n quest of a er - J pcncng ground, nne or seven got mxed up wth the long arm of the law for carryng contraband cargos on the return ourney n the shape and plumage of patrdge. Of course, t was the fault of the guns whch they carred. Guns do have a dsgustng habt of gong off and httng game at the most nopportune tmes. Frends of Mrs. Seth Thornton regret to learn that she s to move from Houlton. Mrs. Thornton sold her home on Charles street to Fred Bther and she plans to leave n a few days for Southwest Harbor, where, she s to buld a new home t s understood n the near future and where she wll resde. Her many frends wll be nterested n her even though she may move from Houlton and often hope to have her vst Houlton. THE POTATO MARKET TIMES Aprl 13,v 1860 To December 27, 1816 BRILLIANT AUTUMN WEDDING OF HOULTON GIRL Mss Helen Buzzell Wedded to Wlfred Schaffner of Oho The church of the Good Shepherd was the scene of a charmng autumn weddng Saturday, Oct. 1st, at hgh noon, when Helen Thomas, daughter of Mrs. Wllam Frederck Buzzell was unted n marrage to Wlfred Schaffner of Maron, Oho Rev. H. Scott Smth, rector of the church, offcatng. The church was attractvely decorated for the occason, brllant autumn folage and cut flowers were used to good advantage makng a pcture beyond descrpton. The weddng party entered the church as the clock was strkng the noon hour to the strans of a weddng The bowlng season s opened and rases the best men, women and The local buyers started the week the sound of the maples beng pounded can be heard on Court street, ng Charle a pleasant voyage and $1.75 for Green Mountans. The offer pertaters n the world. Here s wsh wth a prce of $1.50 for Cobblers and Market Square and Man street. a safekreturn to hs natve Houlton. Amen. Talk of the Town anxous to haul n, and buyers less ngs are lght, farmers not beng Houlton now has two publc bowlng anxous to buy. march played by Mr. Bernard Archbald, who also before the weddng alleys. There sn t much enthusasm column n the Boston Herald. The Aroostook crop wll be one of beng shown on the Court street the largest the county has ever produced, and as the dggng proceeds wth several choce selectons. party had arrved delghted the guests alleys snce Captan Farmer left, but Bll Goldng s new alleys on Man some record outputs are beng recorded. brde who acted as mad of honor, Mss Louse Buzzell, sster of the of the feld. The frst play was a street are hummng all the tme. He fumble hut was recovered for a fve has two alleys and they are both fast HOULTON ROTARIANS PUT Those who need money are haulng was beautfully gowned n a paprka yard gan and then Mchaud ht the as attested by the fne scores hung n a few at present prces, but the georgette creaton and wore a hat of Houlton lne lke a wldman and up each week. Wllam gves a dollar! covered seven yards before he was each week for hgh sngle. POTATO LAND ON THE MAP great maorty of growers wll hold bronze lace. She carred a bouquet for better prces. of Ophela roses. Followng her came dropped. The thrd down was no gan The frst week W. Nghtngale s 128 The Produce News says: the brde on the arm of her mother but on the fourth Hale made St. Mary s! won- The second week Jm NaBon Wth Novel Stunts and Clever Songs Feature of New England There was a materal Increase n who gave her away. Mrs. Buzzell frst down through the Houlton rght hun* up 132 on Monday and t stood ; recepts ths week, especally from wore a beautful slver gray crepe guard. Two '-he bucks netted the, un*r Saturday evenng when Pa Conclave Houlton Gets a Boost Mane, whle New York State and gown wth a corsage bouquet of Van Buren ag4gaton fve yards but kunt trmmed t by two pns chalkng ^ Mchgan also shpped more freely. orchards. on the thrd Zeke, leader of the local up 13*- The Houlton Rotarans from Potato1 Of the 44 Rotary Clubs n New Eng- Weather was extremely warm and brde was a vson of lovelness, eleven recovered a fumbled, slpped,, The thrd week Earl Rtches 123 land carved ther own prvate nche, land all had representatves at the close from start to fnsh and con- Her dress was lace over whte satn found hs feet agan, and carred the 8tood the te8t and the next week n the Rotary Hall of Fame at the bg, conventon, a crowd of between 700 sderable of the potatoes that were wth court tran. On her head she pgskn back twenty yards around the brother Wallace Rtche won at 128. wore a cap trmmed wth lace surmounted by a wreath of orange The two Rtche brothers are a hard a n m, a l New Engknd conclave held at and 750, and the conventon was voted packed fresh arrved here more or rght end. Poland Sprngs Thursday, Frday and by all who attended as the best ever, loss heated and a few cars that were It was Houlton s ball for the frst Par t0 beattme of the quarter. Mckey Me- *r r tbe week endng Oct. 1st Pete Saturday ot last week. At the break- They took complete possesson of the delayed showed deteroraton and had blossoms wth a long vel of tulle fast on Frday mornng whch was Poland Sprngs Hotel and the Rckers to he moved promptly at best prces reachng to the floor, carryng a Cluskey carred the ball frst but was,, to cdnducted ntly the delegatons as deal hosts lterally turned over obtanable. Ths caused weakness and shower bouquet of orchds and llles held for no gan on the frst down, money. Ths s the hgh sngle to frnm from Houlton, VTmlfnrt Bddeford R/1 rofnrl and o n r Saco. Q'.w/ the +1-. keys. Golf, n.. lr dancng,, sngng, eat- _. ^ sales on some of * the V*^ Mane r. and n /4 State d tbe val,e>r and on the second Peabody got three date on these alleys, the splurge that brought potato land ng, speeches, movng pctures both stock were as low as $1.50@2 bag, but At the steps of the chancel the through Sargent. Then Fowler, play- The Dux are poundng the pns nto the lmelght, took place and seen by them and taken of them, sound stock n good condton brought party was met by the groom, who was ng full went through a hole that Ira very evenng now, the season open me wv.1. ts lullll6 o Hke every other actvty that charac-. all sorts of surprses and unque $3.50@3.75 per 150-lb. bag. Long Islunattended. Bagnall opened up for a seven yard O c t. 1st v Young a, Sm W hte s The mpressve Epscopal marrage 124 s'hgh to date. &Ths boy s dope l terzed the gatherng t was pronoune- stunts were pulled off and t was ust and potatoes worked out at $4.85@4.90 gan aad Houlton s frst down 1ed as successful and won the com-! lke a bunch of young boys ust out rarely $5 per 165-lb. hag, whle those ceremony was clearly spoken by both Peghody wa» forced to punt on the! hall surely s a murderer, mendaton of all Rotarans. of school. shpped n 150-lb. bags rarely exceed- the brde and groom and was lstenfourth down after Mckey ganed but Tbe Blks Pln artsts are all en- On each table n the dnng room ' The Houlton delegaton was com- ed $4.50. Jersey long knds cleared I ed to attentvely by those present. ttatm y w a. m e test tme. HoT«y ^ n e w ^ e l l e v ^ a n d ' the flrst thnk that sreetel1 the ^ 0,1! nosed of Mr and Mrs Frank Peal,odv at $3@3.25, rarely *3.50. but some lots! The u8hers tor the <** « *. «e r r t V L l Hne L wee du they now have the beet equpped; the <*nter. 25 tubers weghng 165 Mrs G R ErTn, Mr an(, Mn< K ceed $ per bag. bnde' H " lman Sm,th Calals! a frend of the famly. t o ^ e y on S L T y e r d Hue T Bag pleee In the. county tor tournament P n<l»-a lull barrel-w ere taken to,.,ummer. Mr. and Mrg. Percy n Play on the ZO yard lne. Ira Bag» the conventon by the local delegates.; t,,, v Harrv, n hm V r Fort Farfeld s s proud of the fact The P^ents of the groom. Mr. and S E <m n then see some ot the Th««* «> * * the eye aikl Mr, Fre(1 E ai1. V r. and M,,: '" a t the Longfellow school n that»«rs. Frank Schaffner of Maron, Oho S T Sne and L o w T n g two f m - of bowlers when, the Houlton! 125 ^ ^ 'o o n s rlslng from Bernard Archbald. Wlford Fullerton, town won the only pennant presented were present besdes Mr and Mrseach potato wth the word Houlton to a New England school n the recent RuzzeH Portland, these beng successve runners for losses a fte r! hoys have met In contests n other a<; Charles P. Barnes and Robert Palmer. At every table was natonwde health crusade. Houlton I tbe on^y out town guests- Mchaud had recovered a fumble fo r! towns. Judge Wood of Presque Isle p Followng the Potato Song Bll I 1a hook of songs wrtten especally for has a good share of the glory that Followng the ceremony a large no gan. Mchaud was forced to kck was n town Monday evenng and,.... Fullerton and Bernard Archbald sang the breakfast, dealng wth Aroostook goes wth the accomplshment as t number of ntmate frends went to on the fourth a down uuwu and *uu Herschel r K u «- «ave some. of the,, _ local M boys n)' a trmq, 1County, potatoes etc. On the outsde a very cleverly arranged. duet to the was due to the efforts of a Houlton the home of Mrs. Buzzell on Court Peabody ran It back fve yards and, mn8- He bowled fve games wth 95 ^ ^ nformed that thft tune of Au Rev01r ntroducng the grl. Mss Alta Hutchson, who s n street where an nformal recepton outsde as the quarter ended wth the ; aa low and 108 as hgh. nassed hv the Natonal members of the Houlton Club. The score nothng all.! Rock P n t e r of the speed ball, the onb na Peen passed b> the Natonal charge of the Longfellow school, that was held and a luncheon was served words of the pece are as follows, Board of Indulgence and that all the good results were obtaned. Mss under the drecton of Mrs. Legh The second quarter opened wth the, ^ead man of Fredercton s great Fullerton sngng the column on the rghts and some lefts were copyrghted by the Doc (Mtchell) who Hutchson of ths town and for h e r1harry French- Ms9 Loretta Henze, Hutchson s the daughter of A. A. Cleveland, Mrs. James Jackns, Mrs. hall n Houlton s possesson. Fowler t am, has been callng on the Gold- left and Archbald the1 one on the faled to gan around the end and on ng alley8 He s a great pn pcker, rght alternately: was the mpresaro. efforts she wll receve a tw enty! Mss Maron Cleveland, Mss Florence the second down Peabody fumbled and There ought to be some good Half way down the (lnng room Fullerton Van Buren recovered but could n o t, matches rolled soon between teams Archbald- dollar gold nece. State superfne,,.: Wheaton, all close frends of the brde, do any busness, and Houlton took, representng the dfferent alleys. there stood mounted on a draped desta] on one Qf thy t.ll)h s h the ball on downs. McCluskey, Fowler ( Let8 start the exctement gong. Who Thtt tuber was (.()rr 1(.t n and Peabody, the Houlton backfleld d we hear wth a challenge. then ganed fve, four and two yard8! DTm CD AHITATIflN respectvely for a flrst down. Fowler F IR ST PU B LIC G R A U U A 1IUN agan carred the ball on the frst;, MADIGAN HOSPITAL down for two yards and then Kovey The flrst publc graduaton of nurses came nto promnence by wormng every detal of color, shape etc. Standng besde the potato was Frank Peabody, presdent of the Moul'on club, presdent of the Chamber of Commerce, and a member of the State from the Madgan Hosptal was held Hghway Commsson, who had charge hs way through the St. Mary adefense Week wth approprate ceremones ()1 Houlton s part, n the program. He lor a - seven yard gan and r<*body, recepuon rooms of th(. hos,tal I nvt.-d all... snana agan made It a frst down. F o w l e r, ^ ^ tge;f was vory I, ha frst m nk.. As,! frs, wards for the thrd tme started the new decorated wth autumn leaves and cut He chorus was reached a trap door page but used nvsble nk as nothng flowers. I the top ol the potato snapped open regstered. Hovey lost ground and The frst class to graduate consst- <n,l Hll Fullerton, secretary of th** then Peabody essayed a forward pass ed of four young lades, Mss Helen Houlton Club popped out, announcng whch was ntercepted and ncomplete. C. Somervlle, daughter of W. G. >n a h'ge voce that ths was sonc Just to show them that he meant Somervlle of Houlton. Mss Anna dnng room. From ths poston. Bll. busness the Houlton halfback tore Dalton, daughter of Lous I)a,ton of who s some snger, startl'd tn through for a four yard gan through Houlton, Mss Kathleen M. Coffey of, Pot;to Song" wth the entre gather the center of the lne. Bellvlle, N. B., and Mss Maron nk onng n. Durng breakfast tn A t ths pont the locals drew frst _ ^»,, blood. The down was number four, ly e^. _ e.ne c tl' Musc for the exercses was furnshand Hovey called for a kck from t,..,, placement. Donnell passed hgh but the, y * -V* a* peces. Rev. Father Slke was the quarter caught It and wth the St., k _ Mary s end bearng down on hm snapped back to Peabody who sde stepped and by a brllant bt of broken feld runnng planted the oval between the uprghts for the flrst counter. Ths pl»y was by far the most spectacular that occurred durng the game. Fowler faled to kck. On the kckoff Van Buren receved and Hale caught t far and ran back thrty yards before he was downed. A scant yard gan was regstered as the whstle blew endng the half and also Peabody s quarter wth the score -0 In favor of Houlton. Bagnall, Ira, receved the kckoff and carred t back ten and then the Houlton backfleld started an onslaught on the opposng lne. McCluskey, Peabody, Hovey and Fowler fgured n the drve and t was straght down the feld. At the crtcal perod Fowler got a wrench In an old wound and was carred off the feld by the St. Mary s (OonllBved on page 5) frst speaker who gave thanks and apprecaton for the large number of frends present, and told of the lessons learned whle the graduates had been students and the value that those lessons wll be n ther future work. Mss Anna Dalton sang a very pleasng solo whch was followed by a readng by Mss Helen Somervlle, both of whch were well applauded. Hon. Charles Barnes was the next speaker who elaborated upon the value of the knowledge that the graduates have acqured. The exercses closed wth the awardng of dplomas and class pns by Father Slke. NEW U. S. MARSHALL FOR MAINE NAMES DEPUTIES Aroostook people who do busness before the U. S. court wll he glad to learn that Marshal Woodman of Machlas who was sworn nto offce Oct. 1st, has re-apponted as deputes: Burton Smth, G. A. Powers and Eugene W. McNeally of Portland and players. Bagnall went In at rght half and McCluskey was shfted to full wth Morehouse takng left end. The captan took the ball on the flrst play and showed hs versatlty by carryng the ovod by a brllant bt of Frank L. Knapp of Lewston. The only new deputy apponted Is Smeon Harrman of Norway. Houlton hoys and th(> gatherng at large sang the rest of the songs, and the ar was full of balloons wlcl wore kept n the ar all through the meal. The Houlton club put ther stunt across wth true Aroostook thoroughness, far eclpsng all other attempts and the company admtted t. A bg boost for Aroostook and a bgger boost for Houlton. the wagon thlls broke, droppng down on hs horses gamble whch frghtened hm and he started to run, swngng the wagon from one sde of the road to the other. Soon he became unmanagable and Mr. Bradford was thrown heavly to the road and was dragged several rods before he let go of the rens. The horse freed from the wagon dd a marathon through the streets and was fnally captured on Pleasant Street unnured. My name s Bll I run a hank I ll ntroduce Potato kngs. The frst s Frank He rules our club. And ths Fred He's our Vce P. And mne Ber-nard Out n the yard The Houlton Squad So help me God Insurance crank An t he some dub Sells Tmothy hay Some vce I'll sav Now stand up, Rupe The floor old soup He sells gent's clothes As hs nose shows th Arse,1. Kdd The apples three And ths s Perct Sells lades hose And ths s Bob I le's stll a bach Do as your bd Your sgn shall be Oh. an t he grand I understand Walk-over shoes I lke hs choose Just meet our Charles Wth brawn and bran And governor sure, The next n Alune And ths s Harry Fruts and ams He werks for Swft The premum hams And Fed the goat. Eve, nose and throat He wrtes our verse Send for the hearse. dent of schools Dr. Augustas O. I The <, lttne of the brde's cake Thomas has consented to make the <-au8ed consderable amusement. To pennant presentaton. Mss Henze fell the coveted capture! of the brdes bouquet as t was thrown. MISS ALENE BERRIE IN A BENEFIT CONCERT About 2.30 p. m. the young couple departed by auto for Montreal where ther honeymoon wll be spent. Ther Mss Alone Berre acheved more car ^a(i been decorated for the than a hgh pnnacle of success n her muscale gven n Presque Isle last The members mentoned stood up and were cheered as ther names were ssted of two tro numbers, called. cello and pano, a group of cello 1solos by Mrs. Parsons and several ppe occason by experts and was certanly a work of art. Nobody between Houlton and Quebec could mstake Thursday evenng for the beneft of the msson of the car. free Lbrarv of that town..ars. Schaffner. who s hghly esteem- Better than anythng that Chapman ed and most popular among her set, s a graduate of Houlton Hgh School ever brought bore" was the verdct also the Sargent school of physcal of one crtc n the audence of two tranng of Norton, Alass. Snce her h u n d r e d and ffty people who enoyed graduaton she las taught n a school tn* entertanment. for grls n Chcago and at Lowell. Mss Berre was a pupl of Mss Alass. Ar. Schaffner s a graduate ot.mnne Hayden of Boston under whom Wooster Oho Unversty. He s a she studed for nearly two years. Her member of several clubs ncludng part n the program conssted of Ph Kappa Ps of hs unversty, the ffteen vocal numbers and fve readngs. Alaron County Club besdes several She was asssted by Mss Edna of the Alasonc orders. He s connect ed n busness wth the H. Schaffner Knowles of Fort Farfeld, voln. Ars. Co. of Maron, Oho, of whch he s Parsons of Boston, cellst and Alss secretary and treasurer. Alberta Ktox of Houlton, panst. Mr. and Ars. Schaffner wll occupy The remander of the program cona new home n hs natve cty prepared especally for ths occason, voln, and wll he at home after Nov. 15. The TIMES wth hosts of other NARROW ESCAPE ovmn selectons by Mss Knox. trlends extends congratulatons and SERIOUS ACCIDENT It was consdered by all whe heard begt wlgheg for a happv weddwl,fe. FROM INJURY NARROWLY AVERTED t as a rare treat and much c r e d t Mr. A. K. Bradford whle drvng What mght have been a dangerous was gven to Ars. H. B. Forbes of Ar. and Ars. George Thorne of Presque Isle for her success n arrang- sland Falls are recevng congratuato town early Monday mornng was accdent on the crossng from French s ng the affar. tons on a son, John Edward, born the vctm of what mght have proven corner to Anderson s shoe store, Alon- Alss Berre plans to repeat the Thursday evenng at the Aroostook a serous accdent, hut most fortunately nothng more than a volent shak by the quck acton of the drver of probable that Houlton musc lovers Kals and Houlton wll he nterested day mornng, was narrowly averted ; rectal n the near future and t s hosptal. A host of frends n Island (he car. have the opportunty to hear and to learn that both the mother, who ng up resulted. The car was behnd another car appredate was formerly Alss Eolne Porter of Soon after leavng hs home one of parked by the curb and n startng Houlton, and chld are dong well. the drver had to turn out quckly nto the wrong sde of the road and he was unable to see the crossng. County Commssoner S. P. Archbald was ust crossng the street and he stepped from n front of the parked car nto the path of the movng car. He was struck wth consderable force and turned a complete somersault landng on hs back. He sustaned a few mnor bruses, a bad cut over the eye and a par of broken glasses. HIGHER EXPRESS TTTand Mrs. G. B. Churchll, who have been on an extended tour, re- RATES KILLED turned home Wedneslay. Durng ther An Assocated Press despatch from stay they vsted Exeter, N. H.. where Washngton. Tuesday, says: ther sod Newton s enterng Phllpsncreased express rates on the Exeter Academy and also Brewster, Bangor & Aroostook ralroad n Mane Mass, where ther oldest daughter fled by the Amercan Express Com- Elzabeth s enterng the Sea Pnes pany last June and ordered suspended,; school, and also went to Berln, N. H. were declared today by the nter-state where Mr. Churchll was called by the commerce commsson to be unustf- death of a relatve and subsequent ed, and were formally set asde. busness. \

2 PAGE TWO HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 sure that t s game and not a human Therefore t would seem that whle authortes to make a prompt correcton of condtons you report, as there HOULTON TIMES beng. a lttle less football s to be keenly Establshed Aprl 13, Never pont a gun at anybody as regretted, the advent of a greater s a lmt to ther possbltes. But A LL T H E HOME NEW S t s always the empty gun that klls. nterest n track athletcs should be your report wll mpress them upon Publshed every Wednesday mornng 3 Before cleanng or olng a gun the sgnal for much more cheerng. ther mnds and n tme they may be by the Tmes Publshng Co. be sure that t s empty both n the There s every year many opportuntes at the four Mane colleges for Ths communty has reached ts able to afford the desred relef. barrel and chambers. CHA8. H. FOGG, Pres. A Mgr, the local hgh school to enter teams present state of desrablty through FO O TB A LL V ER S U S TR A C K and wn more fame than playng Jthe ecorts of all of our people. It wll Subscrpton n U. S. $1.50 per year m It s wth an audble sgh of gladgames up here whch seldom get very become even more desrable as we advance; n Canada $2.00 n ness that football fans hear the good much recognton from the press n bend addtonal efforts to that end. advance 1news that despte rumours to the lower New England. We have turn- Speak up and be heard. Your Sngle copes fve cents! contrary there may be at least a lttle ed out champonshp baseball teams, crtcsms are of no value untl you football teams and basketball teams, make a nose. Advertsng rates based upon guaran*! football n Aroostook County ths and why s t not ust as possble to teed pad n advance crculaton. Fall. Both Rcker and Hgh School It s for your good and ours. are practcng and have already, play turn out a track team that wll brng Entered at the Post Offce at Houlton e( ther frst game to develop teams,' a even greater amount of glory to E F F IC IE N T P E R F O R M A N C E... * * 1... the town and at the same tme Every offce, every store, every for clculaton at second-class +>* postal rates All Subscrpton are DISC O N TIN UED at expraton and there s a growng possblty of I seeng some good grdron battles! before the snow comes, At the same tme that the announce- I ment came out that there would be no football ths Fall there was also H U N TIN G 8EASON AGAIN ; an ntmaton that n the future the Agan, after the passng of three local Hgh School would devote more bundred and four days snce Novem- than tbe usua amount of tme to ber thrteth last, we fnd ourselves n track. The people of the town who the mdst of another huntng season. are nterested IML» n the school and At Saturday mornng the new always lookng for ts best nterests season was ushered n and the forests gboud receve ths bt of nformaton of Aroostook County are once more wth a great deal of satsfacton and open to the sportsman who for sxty get behnd the boys. Football s one days can dsport hmself at w ll. baled as the great Amercan game down the soft leaf-padded lanes stalk- and t s fact that n any college the ng the shy partrdge and the elusve entre student body takes a great deal deer. I more nterest n the football games Nature seems to prepare herself of tbe varsty that t does n ts lmseespecally for ths season of the year ball actvtes. The college man wll as wth colorful costume she arrays (0n0w the football a hundred mles herself for the nvason of the hunter to watch and ro.ot for the eleven n her doman. A myrad of color n where he wll not go ten mles to see fantastc arrangement of costume the nne play baseball. But even greets the sportsman who s now free greater than ther nterest n the to follow the whms of hs huntng varsty football team s the nterest fancy unmolested. For two whole dsplayed n track meets. Many more --- months he w gratfy ^ the ~ pent-up UIGU men twu can be wv recruted out --- of the desres held n check for the other dormtores and frat houses to rde a ten. Hs way s hs own wthout fear freght t0 watch a track meet than of molestaton from watchful gam et0 watch a football game, wardens. No longer s t necessary J Tbs {act s sgnfcant. It s ndto surrepttously break down and cahve of a rapdly growng convcton hde under the seat of the car the old of tbe greater and more lastng gun when vstng the camp for a beneflts to the athlete of track and few days rest made more desrable feld prowess than to the grd star. create a greater nterest both n the Hgh School lad for college and n the factory and farm, s a place where college man for the prospectve dfferent workers are beng tred out. college freshman There s always The employee may not always realze the chance for the boys to get nto f.bat be g takng part n a compettve faster company and brng out any race or that hs performance s beng! more careful nspecton than he real latent ablty that they may possess, and a track vctory wll brng the town much more nto the athletc lmelght. zes. Track s becomng more and more promnent on the college athletc stage and to show7 an nterest n and 0fbers by the prospect of some fresh meat * ' Football s a game that requres Not a qualm of conscence attends strength and stayng powers, and munty that shelters and sustans the shot that klls. Now the game there s no doubt but that the men hm. That duty s to ad n the advancement of the welfare' of the can be proudly brought forth and dsplayed. of beneft from.ther work, but the communty as a whole. who are out for the teams get a lot There are, however, some attendant football season only lasts for three 1 Callng attenton undesrable condtons s not necessarly a reflecton restrctons on ths round of pleasure months n the Fall of the year. It that s wth us. There are some s thrllng to st on the sdelnes and upon tn1 consttuted authortes. One changes n the game laws that every watch the splegdd specmens of par of ('V*s can not see everythng, hunter should be famlar wth to Amercan manhood n battle that s nether can one bran master everythng- and the Lord does not provde avod legal entanglments. the survval of the fttest. Wthout The rules that wl affect the hunter speakng dsparagngly of football any man wth more' of ether. n ths secton are gven as follows: whch s a man s game n every sense t may not be possble for the 1 One female deer only may be of the word, there s always the chance klled n one season by one person. of an accdent and there s never a 2 Deer cannot be sold or gven season that passes wthout some away to be taken out of the state. fatalty and n some eases lfelong 3 Deer cannot be used or had n nures. possesson n a lumber camp. On the other hand track s a year 4 Resdents cannot carry deer out around sport. It s one that can he of the state. and s ndulged n durng all the four 5 The state lmt for deer n the seasons. The Fall begns wth the eght northern countres s two, but of these two at least one must be an cross country teams that get out n the chll frosty ar and pound cross antlered buck. All moose are protected untl July 9, 1925., through swamps, over brooks and country up hll and down dale, 6 Bag lmts on game brds are as down country roads. A fve mle run follows: patrdge* fve n one day and s nvgoratng and a man must be n not more than twenty-fve n the the prme of physcal condton to season; ducks lmted to ten n one stand the stran. Mane colleges lay. I stage nterscholastc cross country 7 Resdent huntng lcense fee s meets n the Fall. In the Wnter :wenty-flve cents. Non-resdent hunt-! tbere are the r e l a y games held all ng lcense fee for deer s $15 from over the country. The canddates get Dctober frst to December frst. I nto condton on outdoor tracks and 8 It s unlawful to carry a rfle. ndoor gymnasums and the weather un or shot gun, ether loaded or wth s no obect strongvgorous work- atrldges n the magazne n or on Qats under competent traners make ny motor vehcle when upon the them ft The Mane colleges have ublc hghway s or n the felds or mdoor nterscholastc meets wth relay nrests., games n the Wnter. In the Sprng Besdes the above statutory regu- g the clmax n the great outdoor tons there are several unwrtten! track and fleld meets wth men showws that should be observed to re- ag ther prowess n every branch of uce the fataltes that always occur f rack and feld sport. Ths s an outrery huntng season. There s never door sport strctly and every year season that passes but what there the Mane colleges have bg nterre hunters klled by beng mstaken scholastc outdoor track and feld >r deer, or playng wth a gun that meets to whch hgh and preparatory»s not been nspected for loads, or school teams come from all over New playfully amng a loaded gun. England. It can thus be seen that Three that could be fathfully ln order to excell n track and always served wth perhaps the season s be readv t0 put forth hs best efforts cord of fewer accdents are as arman must keep always n condton llows: because he can be called on the year 1 Before you shoot at game be around for competton. Whose fault s t when your husband s cross at,, breakfast? I f you ht your thumb ^ t h a ham m er you w o u ld n 't blam e y our thumb for hurtng. Then w hy blame your husband whose nerves m ay have been pounded by coffee, and whose rest probably has been broken by the rrtaton of the caffene t contans? If you stay awake half the nght you don t feel any too cheerful. The caffene of coffee and the then of tea are known drugs. If ther use s perssted n, sooner or later the nervous system may gve way. Then you may have nsomna, or dsturbed sleep. Your nerves and tssues wll be robbed of that stablty essental for normal and happy lvng. Y ou can avod th9 possblty f you ll stop drnkng tea and coffee and drnk nstead, rch, pleasng Poqtum. Postum s the delcous cereal beverage wth a coffee-lke flavor. It affords the advantages of a hot drnk, wthout the ll effects of tea or coffee. Order Postum from your grocer today. Try t wth the famly for a few days, and see what a dfference there ll be how t wll permt Nature to brng sound sleep and strong, sturdy, quet nerves. Sold by grocers. Postum comes n two forms: Instant Postum (n tns) made nstantly n the cup by the addton of bolng water. Postum Cereal (n packages of larger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drnk whle the meal s beng prepared) made by bolng for 20 mnutes. closely observed. But he s under a Some people succeed n dong thngs more speedly and effectvely than Two men n a factorv wll a leanng towards t wll mean that be gven a chance to operate a certan Houlton s not by any means behnd tool or machne. Ther performance the rest of the country n the matter wll be carefully watched, and the one of gvng the youths all the possble advantages tp develop nto strong vgorous manhood, and at the same BANGOR & AROOSTOOK R. R tme brng greater notce to the town. T IM E T A B L E YO UR GOOD AND OURS As you wander along the hghways and byways of ths town t s possble that you see many thngs whch you thnk should not he. Do you ever speak of these thngs to people who have the power of correcton? Does t occur to you that ther absorpton n other dutes may have caused them to overlook some of the thngs that are so plan to you. Do you realze that ther brans plus yours are more potent than ther brans alone? Every man owes a duty to the com Corrected to Septem ber 26, 1921 T ra n s D aly Except Sunday From H O U L T O N 8.51 a. rn. For Fort Farfeld, Carbou. Lmestone and Van Buren. 8. lt a. n. For Bangor, Portland and Boston. 11.2a a. m. For Ashland, Fort Kent, St. Francs, also Washburn, Presque Isle, Van Buren va Squa Pan and Mapleton p. m. For Greenvlle, Bangor, Portland and Boston p. m. For Bangor, Portland and Boston Buffet Sleepng ear Carbou to Boston ). m.- For Ft. Farfeld. Van Buren Due H O U L T O N 8.38 a. m. From Boston, Portland. Bangor. Buffet Sleepng Boston to Carbou. 8.(13 a. tn. From Van Buren. Carbou, and Fort Farfeld p. m. From Boston, Portland. Bangor and Greenvlle. 3.(((» p. m. - From St. Frances, Ft. Kent, also Van Buren. Washburn Presque Isle, va Squa Pan n. Fr un V;m Bun-. Lm*,st"n<, 1Vnbou. Fort Fnrfeld. (',.55 p. m.- From Boston. Portland and Bangor. Tme tables gvng complete nformaton may be obtaned at tcket offces. GKO. M. HOI'GUTO.V, General Passenger Agent. Bangor, Idan** that seems to take hold easest wll be the one who gets the ob. The one who loses the chance may thnk the other has luck or favortsm. Ths s not the usual thng. The other s success commonly happens because he had by long effort and practce acqured skll n workng wth hs hands, so that he takes up any new proposton wth readness. So all through the busness world, the przes are gong to those who by patent effort have developed ther powe and can take advantage of new opportuntes. That college professor w ho remarked that nnety per cent of the women are ugly s a dsapponted old brd. Most of the edtors forgot to menton hs name. Busness Methods When the agent brought Mrs. Tarlev her fre-nsurance polcy he remarked that t would be well for her to make her frst payment at once. How* much wll t be? she asked. About one hundred dollars. Wat a mnute and I'll fnd the exact amount. Oh, how tresome! she exclamed. Tell the company to let t stand and deduct t from what they wll owe me when the house burns down. PROFESSIONAL CARDS MISS MARY BURPEE SOPRANO Teacher of Sngng Studo: Socety Hall, Frsbe Block Telephone 345-M HOULTON FURNITURE CO. B U Z Z E L L S LICEN8ED EM BALM ER AND FU NERAL DIRECTOR Phone 161-W Day or Nght DR. F. 0. O R C U n D E N T IS T Fogg Block GOOD! Because Its Fne Qualtes Are Protected by the Sealed Package D r n k M a p l e S p r n g The purest w ater n the State of Mane. Delvered at short notce by callng W John K. Palmer, Dstrbutor Houlton, M ane L I G H T -S I X T O U R I N G C A R N O W $ Ths s a Studebaker Year The car that s convertng thousands to the SIX The popularty of the sx-cylnder automoble s unversal. Everyone admts that there s great pleasure n drvng a Sx, and the sx-cylnder motor s now recognzed as the most satsfactory unt of power. The Studebaker LIGHT-SIX motor embodes the most advanced engneerng developments t s powerful. Its 40-horsepower motor supples much more than the usual power per pound of car weght. From the frst moment you st behnd the wheel you get that velvety feelng of a strong, contnuous flow of overlappng power mpulses. t pcks up quckly and smoothly, affordng a quck getaway n traffc; t throttles down to a snal's pace n hgh gear. t s freer from vbraton, up to 55 mles per hour, than any car of ts sze and weght yet produced n Europe or Amerca. The LlGHT-SlX s the most evenly balanced car you can buy. Its lght weght (only 2500 pounds) s so equally dstrbuted that f the chasss were halved or quartered each secton would wegh practcally the same. Ths means tre economy, and steady roadholdng at hgh speeds See ths car drve t test t. You wll be won by t. You wll understand why t s the Studebaker deal o f what a lght, sx-cylnder car should be. Hand & Harrngton 69 M an Street NEW PRICES OF STUDEBAKER CARS, EFFECTIVE SEPTEMBER 8th, 1921 Tourng Cara and Roadatera LIGHT-SIX 3-PASS. ROADSTER... LIGHT-SIX TOURING CAR... SPECIAL-SIX 2-PASS. ROADSTER... SPECIAL-SIX TOURING CAR... SPECIAL-SIX 4-PASS. ROADSTER... BIG-SIX TOURING CAR... /. o. b. Factorea Coupea and Sedana $1125 LIGHT-SIX 2-PASS. COUPE-ROADSTER 1150 LIGHT-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN SPECIAL-SIX 4-PASS. COUPE SPECIAL-SIX 5-PASS. SEDAN BIG-SIX 4-PASS. COUPE BIG-SIX 7-PASS. SEDAN...'... $ Postum fo r Health "T h e re 's a R e a s o n " 5:

3 HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 PAGE THREE mnrnmmwnn *»'<...mmm.n.mmmmm some defnte plan of Campagn, the 1 accdents at grand crossngs n ths Amercan Red Cross country can be cut to less than one per cent of the machnes usng the + H ealth Informaton +! crossngs. No. 10. Proper Food 1 Were I to ask the average ral-! road man what day n the week g beleved the greater number of tssue bulders, ncludng lean meats, accdents happen, be would say Sun- Are you too tat? poultry, fsh, oysters, mlk, cheese, day. One hundred thrty-eght ac- Are you too thn? dred vegetables, cocoa, nuts, custard, cdents happened on the followng Do you get up tred and lack that ce creams. days of the week: Sunday, 15, Monday 25, Tuesday 15, Wednesday 27, ndespensble commodty known as Group 3: The starchy class, that pep? gve heat and energy, ncludng flour, Thursday 17, Frday 19 and Saturday If you do the chances are that you meal mxtures, bread and crackers, 20. It would seem to ndcate that are not eatng the rght knd of food. macaron, rce, tapoca, cereal, breakfast foods, potatoes. to accdent at crossngs than the the automoble truck s more lkely No engne develops ts maxmum power wth the wrong knd of fuel Group 4: The sugar class, that pleasure car, for there are more of and the human engne s no excepton to the rule. gve heat and energy, ncludng syrup,! them n use on week-days than honey, preserves, elles, dred fruts, Sundays. on Proper food s not a matter of quantty or even prce as many of the most valuable foods are not hgh prced nor n the luxury class. Pep gvng foods are those that contan what s known as vtamnes and should be ncluded n every det. They produce health and growth. They are mlk, butter, yolk of eggs, and the leafy vegetables, such as spnach, cabbage and lettuce, fruts and whole grans. fresh There are fve man groups of foods and one of each should be ncluded n the det of each normal persons every 1 the regulator. Take the same care wth your food as you do n selectng your clothes and you ll be surffrsed at the dffer day. They arc: Group 1: The mneral and acd class, the body regulators ncludng spnach, lettuce, peas, strng beans ence. tomatoes, turnps, carrots, cabbage onons, frut. Group 2: The proten class, the Dean Wallace J. Donham of the ther busness on what mght be Harvard graduate school of busness termed a hand-to-mouth bass, each work that the Tech ndustral research bureau s dong to assst n admnstraton, speakng at a meetng carryng the lowest possble stock of candy, sugar, frozen ces. Another suprsng fact was that goods. The drect result has been to of the Boston Executves Club characterzed modern busness as neff busness and ndustry. solvng problems connected wth Group 5: The fats class, that g v e nearly all the accdents happen whle throw back upon the producers and heat and energy, more heatng p e r; the weather than when t s ranng the country banks that fnance them cent and unsatsfactory compared to The college s comng closer and quantty than sugar or starch, nclud- ;or snowng. { the raw materals whch normally are what t ought to be, and sad that t closer to the problems of busness, ng butter, cream, lard, salt pork, The queston of automoble ac -! carred by mlls, wholesalers, obbers he sad, and you n turn can do a bacon, vegetable ols. cdents at grade crossngs s, I demanded college graduates wth a and retalers. Growers of wheat, cot- great deal by makng known what If you have a tendency to be too fat. consder, the most mportant one the ton and other products, unable to dfferent type of tranng than they your problems are so that the colleges go lghtly on groups 3, 4 and 5 and ralroads have to deal wth, and I cansubsttute largely from Groups 1 and not mpress upon ths body of safety formerly have been compelled to hold He sad that Amercan educaton they may take up for nvestgaton.*! market ther products as rapdly as had receved n the past. may have concrete problems whch 2, the repar and regulator foods. men. too strongly the necessty of them for a longer perod than usual. had been revolutonzed durng the Smlarly f you are thn and w th-1nauguratng a vgorous educatonal To meet the stuaton, and also the out energy, specalze on the starch, campagn aganst accdents of ths last three years by the tremendous sugar and fat formng foods, and character, both for human and econoproten foods never forgettng Group mc: reasons. Your natural nclnatons may not always be an ndcaton of what s best for your system. Southern Aroostook Chapter, Houlton, Mane. J CHEER LEADER HELPS THIS MACHINE PROVES If you re one of those persons who, clam that cheerng at a football or baseball game s wasted breath and energy, prepare yourself to be eon verted to the great throng who do the cheerng. rd A C C fn r 1 I number of the machne was placed There s a machne out at the Un- Amrr on the card. These cars were for- versty of Pennsylvana that proves, ACCIDENTS IM IvRTANT I warded to automoble commssoners accordng to psychologsts, that chee- R. R. PROBLEM! accordng the state whch ssued the does a "'hole lot and n many lcenses. The commssoners forward- cases may be the means of wnnng Automoble accdents at grade ed the cards to the owners of the ^ e game. Cheerng brngs out a crossngs s the most mportant of all machnes. last, almost superhuman effort on the accdent questons that confront the _., part of the cheered, accordng to ralroads of the country at the present J These cards, after rectng the ; holoksts tme, C. W. Galloway, vce presdent facts of the observaton, warned the, ^ machne c, mssts of a lttie Of the Baltmore and Oho Ralroad. f v e r s or owners of automobles whch a marker s attached, told the Steam Ralroad secton of 1that ther lves and property had been To the marker s ted a strng, the the Tenth annual Congress of the rsked unnecessarly and that a other end of whch s ted to the Natonal Safety Councl at Boston. 1repetton mght brng dsaster n the fnger of the subect. Then an 1,800 It s now necessary for engneers great maorty of cases, the recpent gram weght s also ted to the subect s fnger, and he s nstructed to to consder all constructon from th e ' f the card realzed that he had been standpont of safe operaton, M r.! careless and a great many even wrote lft tne weght up and down untl the Galloway sad. Even before the ther apprecaton of our efforts to fnger can lft no longer. No urgng human element enters a plant, scence save them from nury. There was a or cheerng s done the frst tme. has done ts part to make condtons gradually declnng percentage of Then, durng a second experment, safe and santary. Ths came about, falures to take precautons, when the fnger shows sgns of fatgue prmarly, bcause of economc necess- When we naugurated the obserty boy, and show some pep! and ust the subect s urged to buck up, old vaton plan, we found that 84 per I have watched the progress of cent of automobles faled to take hold out for a whle longer The the safety work on the Baltmore proper precautons when crossng markngs on the drum show that the and Oho partcularly, for many years our tracks. In the three months of subect has been able to lft the weght and t s wth no lttle prde that I November, December, 1919, January _ ^ noo many tmes more n the second tral poflt to some of the accomplshments 1920, we made t? 1,933 fvoo observatons uubervaus and ctnu. for safety. In 1915 the casualtes there was a total o of 484 falures t o ' <ha", n,he frst " h " che.mnb among employees totaled 9,659; n takf safety precautons or 25 per 1920 the casualtes among employes cent. totaled 6,941, or a decrease n casual- Durng the year of 1920, we extes of 28 per cent. In 1915 the gross tended our observatons. In the 12 ton mleage was 32,335,710,000; n 1920 months of that year there were 49,- n 1920 the gross ton mleage was 665 observatons wth 8,236 falures, 40,876,502,000, or an ncrease of 26 per or 16 Per cent. cent. That means that n 1920, com- In 1921, our observers became even pared wth 1915, the ncrease n tran more actve and n the frst sx mleage,' both freght and passenger months of ths year, there were 248,- was 13 per cent, and at the same 988 observatons made, and the tme our casualtes decreased 28 per! falures reached only 8,775 or 3% per cent. cent. Wth each recurrng year the! The results of our observaton ncrease n the number of automobles tests, caused us to have prnted more and the growng carelessness of the than 4,000,000 warnng leaflets, showdrvers make t very mportant that! In8 on one sde a boy warnng an we devote some extraordnary effort automoblst to stop before he crossed to lessen accdents at grade crossngs. a track. On the reverse sde s a W e are confronted wth the photograph of a machne reduced to fact that there are ten mllon motor splnters when struck by a tran at vehcles now n use n the Unted the crossng. We arranged to send States. out the leaflets n mal that would It was wth alarm that I notced reach the autost. It was found that the reports of grade crossngs accdents every busness house appealed to showng ncreases month by gladly consented to cooperate n the month n 1919, and I determned to campagn. The automoble commssoners apply a remedy. I felt that f the of the dfferent states also drvers of cars could be reached cooperated. ntmately they would heed warnngs. There was one other means to W e started the campagn by placng reach the owner and drver of the observers at a few crossngs where automoble. That was thru newspaper travel was heavy. When the observer publcty. One story tellng of notced the drver of an automoble the dangers careless automoblst s approach the crossng and dash over expose themselves to was sent out t wthout takng any precautonary and reached 2,600,000 readers. measures to assure hmself that there Wth genune and sympathetc was no tran comng, the lcense cooperaton by all the ralroads n J Vctors n many a sharp struggle aganst serous developments. Doctor's Prescrpton Internal and External 100 years o f Success Many n volunteer nurse n remote sectons has gven heartfelt prase to ths grand old anodyne'. Its t nelv use nsures speed v relef and smet y aganst complcatons. G en eraton after generaton o" happy users have proved t to he the greatest of all famly remedes for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Grppe, Cramps, Cole, Chlls, Strans, Cuts, Burns, Etc. All dealers. 25 and 50 cents. TURN OF ROAD IN SIGHT IN AMERICAN BUSINESS The turn of the road n Amercan busness n n sght, says Eugene Meyer, Jr., managng drector of the War Fnance Corporaton the organzaton that has been authorzed by Congress to make loans, not only to promote our export trade but also to facltate the orderly marketng of our staple agrcultural-products n ths country. "One of the dffcultes n the present stuaton, says Mr. Myer, s the fact that retalers, wholesalers and manufacturers are now conductng stuaton brought about by the falure of foregn merchants and manufacturers to purchase ther requrements lor the year, as n normal tmes they were accustomed to do n the perod mmedately followng the harvestng of our crops, t became necessary to provde addtonal fnancng for carryng the products untl they could be marketed n an orderly way. The War Fnance Corporaton has been able to gve substantal ad by makng advances to varous assocatons of producers of cotton, wheat and other commodtes, as well as to and t wll be n poston, under the hankng nsttutons and exporters, Agrcultural Relef Bll ust enacted by Congress, to render even more effectve assstance. If the busness men of Amerca would resume the carryng of normal stocks, the load forced back upon the producers would be more generally dstrbuted, resultng n a freer crculaton of busness and a greater buyng power on the part of our agrcultural populaton. Undue lack of confdence s ust as Convalescence after pneumona, typhod fever and the grp, s sometmes merely apparant, not real. To make t real and rapd, there s no other tonc so''hghly to be recommended as Hood s Sarsaparlla. Thousands so testfy. Take Hood s. detrmental as reckless over-confdence, and the present prce levels warrant greater confdence than exsts today. At the present tme, no other sngle thng would contrbute n a sound and conservatve manner more to the restoraton of busness than the carryng of normal stocks n proporton to probable demand. The worst stage of agrcultural and busness depresson has been reached. The turn n the road s n sght. BELIEVES THAT BUSINESS NEEDS THE COLLEGE MAN growth of busness schools through- cut the country, and attrbuted the extraordnary ncrease n the sze of these nsttutons to the fact that bus- I ness men realze that such schools of- fer somethng that they need. Harvard school, he sad, was tranng men to meet executve problems besdes tryng to mprove the qualty of busness nstructon and make traned materal avalable for wder use. The general subect of the meetng was What the college s dong to help the busness organzaton, and how t s co-operatng wth the busness executve. Dr. Davs R. Dewey of the Massachusetts Insttute of Technology told how the development of busness had resulted n the establshment of a course at the nsttute whch ncluded the study of busness economcs, a countng, management, statstcs and busness law, n addton to scences. He reported that the course, whch had 37 students n ts frst graduatng class, was now the second largest n the nsttute. He also outlned the J. P. STRONG P rom nent Real Estate B roker of Massachusetts Boston, A uk. -AtI sys. "I have been n the real estate brokerage busness for many years. I have suffered wth loss of sleep, ndgeston and nervousness, hut snce takng Argo-Phosphate, I sleep better and eat wthout fear of dstress, The and can feel a great change n my system. There s nothng n medcal scence that equals Argo-Phosphate n the treatment of ndgeston, rheumatsm, nervousness, kdney and lver lls. Sold by al relable druggsts. VSVW V V V W W S W S ^ W V V V V W V W W W t fw W W ^ V W W V W t fw W. Vulcanzng Fabrc and Cord Tres and Tubes V u l canzed n a satsfactory manner: The only place east of Portland where a C ord Tre vulcanzed o b s guaranteed L. W. J enney Phone 6 4 -W Cates Garage M echanc Street Houlton > ^^^WWWV^^W,U W W ^yw W W V W W U ryw ^^W V W U,VW%PU^rt^^^^^,^ ^ ^,* H ave It D one Rght the Frst Tme L earn D o n t let guess w o rk an d verbal promses decde your choce of Lghtnng Rods Investgate W h y the C. B. F. R. C op p er C overed Rod, wth ts fam ous, patented, D ove T al Couplng, and ts m any exclusve features should be the Artcle No. 2 Reasons for the C. B. F. R. Lghtnng Rod S uprem acy: Lghtnng Rod of your ch oce t h e COPPER COVERING OX THE C. U. F. R. LIGHTNING ROD s put on n our own factory by especally desgned machnes whch makes the famous C. B. F. R. Double Lock Seam. Ths s done n such a scentfc manner that the copper sheetng becomes an absolutely water-tght coverng. Ths rod may he bent to any desred poston wthout danger of the seams Consequently there s no possbl partng, an exclusve and desrable feature. ty <>f water soapng nto the rod. The ar space n the four corners of the C. B. F. R. Rod s to prevent sweatng. Ths elmnates any possblty of accumulatng mosture, also an exclusve ( at lre. Taste s a matter of tobacco qualty The patented Dove Tal Couplngs are another of the exclusve features of the C. R. F. R. Rod. These Couplngs are forced on to the Dove Tal end of the rod by heavy machnery so that they actually become part of the rod. In a r e cent test conducted by the Washngton Unversty of St. Lous, these G<>uplrg< stood an average pull test of USOO lbs. before partng from the rod. Ffty-fve years of engneerng and manufacturng experence has made the C. It. F. R. Rod all that s desrable n lghtnng protecton. For your protecton you wll fnd our trade mark \ H. F. R. out nto every male couplng of each secton of rod. W e state t as our honest belef that the tobaccos used n Chesterfeld are of fner qualty (and hence of better taste) than n any other cgarette at the prce. Lggett & Myers Tobacco Co. Chesterfeld CIGARETTES o f Turksh and Domestc tobaccos blended The C. B. F. R., C opper Covered R od not only offers you the greatest p rotecton, but the endurance and resstance of the C. B. F. R. Rod to the ravages of tme and the elements, has set a standard of qualty and servce not yet surpassed or obtaned by any compettve Lghtnng Rod Estmate of the [cost of roddng your buldng wth the orgnal Cole Brothers Frankln Rod cheerfully gven wthout oblgaton S. C. S h e a 31 Sprng Street Houlton, M ane Lcensed Representatve for the Mller Lghtnng Rod Company St. Lous Establshed 1866 Mssour t

4 PAGE FOUR HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 FOOTBALL (Contnued from page 1) broken feld runnng to a fve yards gan through Sargent who was rendered useless by Manuel. Don McCluskey then decded that he had been n the background long enough so he proceeded to tear straght through the center of the lne wormng hs way along by twsts and turns and stff armng across the lne for another touchdown whch Peabody kcked. Peabody kcked off but the runner was downed n hs tracks by O'Donnell and a small gan and two larger losses gave Houlton the ball on the 35 yard lne. Hovey and Peabody then ganed thrteen yards through a hole opened up by Manuel but the frst penalty of the game, fve yards for Houlton offsde, closed the quarter. The fourth was uneventful save for a safety whch rased Houlton s fnal count to ffteen. In the last few moments the boys from up-country made a great stand on ther one-yard lne whch the locals could not get through. For Houlton Peabody was the ndvdual star whle McCluskey at full and rght half came n for a good share of the glory. Hovey played a snappy game at quarter and used hs head every mnute. Captan Bagnal on the end n and the backfleld was on deck all the tme. For Van Buren H ale, Captan Tardf and Mchaud shared the honors. The lne-up: Houlton (15) St. Mary's (0) Bagnal (Capt.) Morehouse LE Cyr Manuel, Green LT Tardf Capt. J. Peabody, Harrlgan LG Rgo C. O Donnell C Donne Dobbns RG Pcard Ira Bagnal, Green RT Sargent W. O Donnell RE Salndon Hovey Q McCarron H. Peabody LHB Hale McCluskey Bagnal, Zeke RHB Mchaud The mystery surroundng the shootng of Wendall Slpp, the young druggst and leadng busness man of Woodstock at 10 o clock last Tuesday nght, has been solved by the arrest of Olle Davenport of Houlton and Rchard Brtton and John Burpee of Woodstock, and they are now n the Woodstock al awatng prelmnary examnaton. Much credt should be gven to Sherff Foster, Deputy Mooers and Chef Kelley for ther prompt runnng down of the mscreants. Davenport has confessed that they were the men n the Mane car from whch the rfle shot came, that Brtton dd the shootng, but that the shot was fred mstakng the Slpp auto for a moose. Although frghtfully nured n the face, t s hoped, that unless blood posng or pneumona sets n, that Mr. Slpp wll recover. When nformed by Mss Smth, who was wth Mr. Slpp when the shot was fred, that the number of the Mane car started wth a 4 Sherff Foster and Chef Kelly as a result of nqures, took possesson of Davenport s auto, whch was numbered Mane lcense. In searchng the woods near where the shot was fred, also near the border between Mane and New Brunswck, evdence was found of the Operaton of lquor stlls, and the outft of one was handed over to customs offcer McCaffrey. From nformaton secured Sherff Foster and Chef Kelly came home last nght and arrested Brtton and Burpee In the M m n H m (n rth u M ;n m tm m m m m m n > _. Items of More than Passng Interest taken from Our E xchanges fmmhmmmmmnmmr About the only work some people ever do s to collect the lvng they clam the world owes them. Sanford Trbune. Henry Ford knows how to make motor cars and has shown that he can run a ralroad. Where he faled n the transportaton lne was n navgatng a peace shp. Portland Express. The Government s talkng now of reducng the sze of blls. All rght. Uncle Sam, f you mean the tax blls. If you are talkng about -5 blls we could stand them an nch longer and a half-nch wder. Boston Transcrpt. Harrs B. Moulton of Westfeld. Mass, has by careful expermentng succeeded n rasng Samese Twn potatoes. It s doubtful f they wll supplant the Aroostook spuds for general use. Kennebec Journal. A north Penobscot man clams to have developed a new seed potato that has fne qualtes, s more productve and develops earler than the ordnary knd. It took hm sx years to perfect the seed whch he developed from potato falls of the Green Mountan varety. One wealthy Aroostook potato grower s sad to have ordered 20 barrels of the seed. Lewston Journal. If you ve got to sell goods from house to house ths Autumn try Aroostook County. There s one corner of New England where the gentleman or the farm and the lady of the house ought to be n pocket money. The Naton s potato crop s short some say nearly 100 mllon bushels. In northern Mafhe, however, the tubers have done pretty well. Hence t s expected that after the felds have been dug up the farmers wll nearly all he n poston to dg down for whatever they may reasonably desre Fowler, McCluskey FB Thbodeau Touchdowns made by Peabody, McCluskey. Goals made by Peabody. to possess. They planted lke sports. Referee, O. Good, Montcello. Umpre, Wtham, Rcker. Head lnesman Ignorng the losses they sustaned last year they ncreased ther acreage Parks. Tme, four ten mnute perods. and bought fertlzers regardless of prce. Now they have won out. and THREE ARESTED CHARGED they wll he buyers of many commodtes for whch n the manufactur WITH SHOOTING SLIPP ng centres an outlet s greatly desred. Lowell Courer-Ctzen. Reports from other ctes ndcate that t s one of the most nterestng and educatonal lectures ever brought out. Admsson wll he free. The great value of newspaper advertsng to the retal merchant wll he told by Mr. G. W. Sulley. He wll tell the proper way to prepare newspaper advertsements, how to get the best results, and why the retal merchant should adopt a contnuous advertsng polcy. The matter of wndow dsplays, store organzaton, store system, arrangement of goods, etc., wll he taken up. The lecture, whch wll foe llustrated wth 6,000 feet of movng pctures, contans the best facts erf retal merchandsng ganed n thrty-fve years experence of a large company n dealng wth merchants n a IT parts of the world. It s a comprehensve lecture and from ndcatons every merchant and sales person n the cty wll attend and gan a better knowledge of busness methods. n H I I l l H m l l l H t H l l l l l t t t t M : g I freelv recommend 1RE-NU-YU I to anyone bufferng from I asthma or a had cough" says Haverhll man 1 RE-NU-YU s sold by home of the former. The rfle- was found hd between the celng of the ( w e s t e n d room and the roof. At the same tme, nght watchman Schrven went by { d r u g sto re auto to Bellevlle and arrested Davenport where he had been snce the shootng and not far from the place where the shootng occurred. Up to fve years ago Davenport had lved n 'Grafton, near Woodstock, thence he Horses for Sale moved to Houlton. Brtton and Burpee belong there. The Houlton road Is the road on whch the rum runners have done a flourshng busness snce the Unted States went dry, and the offcers wll summon as wtnesses several men who, t s alleged, have been carryng on that busness. GETTING THE MOST OUT OF RETAILING" Gettng the Most Out of Retalng, a busness lecture wll be gven by Mr. G. W. Sulley, expert lecturer of The Natonal Cash Regster Company of Dayton, Oho, at the H. H. School Assembly Hall, Tuesday evenng, 18th. The lecture was to ths cty through the of the Chamber of Commerce... tut.mtm... Am overstocked and wsh to sell Bay mare, eght years old, weght 14'»0 lbs., knd and good worker, pre * $ Black drvng mare weght 1000 lbs., free roader. safe for any one to drve and can pace quarters on the ce n 33 seconds, prce $15).o). Would also make a low prce on ether of the followng teams: Par grey geldngs 5 and 6 years old, weght 3400 lbs., an extra goo ' work team, or par close match" chestnut colts, comng three yen:.-, old that wll make a weght of 30- ' lbs. at maturty. C. H. McGnley Phone Houlton, M e. ltmmhmm MUnHM HNNfttNHM «M m«um HmMmUHM mmmmmmmmmmmmmmm MMtm!^ The town s gettng and has a perfect rght to get a bt chesty about the newly surfaced Man street from Fox s corner to Hallet and McKeen s. The last coat of tar has been appled and covered wth sand and rolled down and s ust as smooth as any boulevard. It s qute a bump however, when the car strkes the old road on ether end. The road crew s now engaged n tarrng a part of Mechanc street wth a top coat ot sand wthout the stone foundaton, street. LILLIAN B. HOUSTON POOLER The passng of Lllan B., wfe of Charles Pooler, at the age of 57 years and nne months occurred at the Madgan Hosptal, Frday mornng. For several months the deceased has been a vctm of brghts dsease, hut t was not untl two weeks ago that any danger was seen. At that tme the dsease became acute and she was confned to her bed. Mrs. Pooler was a natve of Foxcroft where she spent her grlhood up to her marrage to George Pooler twenty fve years ago when she moved wth hm to Old Town. There they made ther home up to about four years ago when they came to Houlton to lve Mrs. Pooler was a woman whose pleasng personalty and knd lovng nature endeared her to all wth whom she came n contact. She leaves a genune vod n her crcle of frends, and wll he keenly mssed by all who were fortunate enough to clam her acquantance. The survvors are her husband and three daughters, Mrs. L. W. Mayhew and Mrs. H. L. Severance of Old Town and Mrs. Maurce Peabody of ths town, a brother n Washngton, a sster n Calforna and her step mother also n Calforna. Prayers were sad at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Maurce Peabody, Saturday, and the body was taken to Old Town for bural. HODGDON TO HAVE CHAUTAUQUA Begnnng Thursday, Oct. 13, Hodgdon wll for three days enoy a seres of the Swarthmore Chautauqua programs, and durng that tme many Houlton people wll aval themselves of the opportunty of agan hearng these most excellent programs. Judge Ben Lndsay says: The Chautauqua s Amerca s fourth great nsttuton. The other three* are the Home*, tlu* Church, am the School." Followng s the program: PROSPEROUS FARMER'S WIFE NEARLY STARVED Declarng she was actually starvng to keep from sufferng awful msery. Mrs. Amy Peterson, wfe of a prosperous farmer of Lakevlle, Mass, gave out a remarkable statement, recently, n connecton wth her relef through the use of Tanlac. Sometmes I wonder how I Lved through t all. she sad. "I would have attacks of acute ndgeston nearly every tme I ate anythng. Those terrble crampng pans and the dstress from gas and bloatng were almost unbearable and I ust thought there was no hope for me. But now I m eatng anythng and I feel as strong and well as I ever felt n my lfe. I ve ganed oaek all the weght I lost and sx pounds besdes and I know from my experence what Tanlac wll do. It's the best medcne n the world. Tanlac s sold n Houlton at Munro s West End Drag Store; Brdgewater, Brdgewater Drug Co.; Oakfleld, L. A. Barker Co.; Ludlow, O. A. Stevens; Ashland, W. C. Bowley; New Lmertek, Hoar & Sutherland. F IR S T DAY Afternoon Seres Lectures Chautauqua Superntendent Concert Russan Cathedral Quartet Junor Chautauqua Evenng Lecture Edna Eugena Lowe Danger Sgnals on the Road to Health" SECOND DAY Afternoon Seres Lecture CLASSIFIED ADS Osgood's Hand Made Weddng Rngs are 14 Kt. Sold Gold and Seamless. CLASSIFIED ADS Buy Alarm Clocks at Osgood s and save monev. To Let Two furnshed rooms n a Coupons for typ ew rter rbbons may desrable locaton. Apply to Mrs. be exchanged at the TIMES offce J. A. Anderson, Park street. 139p 1' or an? machne. Lost On Frday, September 30:h, a pay ^g prces for Damonds platnum and gold bar pn n cut whle Osgood s n busness. See desgn, wth small ameythst stone. Fnder please leave at the TIMES offce and receve reward. tf Chautauqua Superntendent Concert College Sngng Crls Junor Chautauqua Evenng Junor Chautauqua Stunt Party By Junor Chautauquans Full Concert College Sngng Grls All sngle admssons 75 cents. Total $4.50. Buy a Season Tcket. Tme of openng Afternoons, 3 o'clock; evenngs, 8.00, unless changed by announcement from the platform. N O T IC E All persons are warned not to trust my wfe Beatrce L. Stevens on my account, as I shall not pay any hlls of her contractng after ths date. Irvn G. Stevens Dated at Oakfleld, Mane, ths 15th day of Sept CHICHESTER SPILLS D IA M O N D PIAllOMt BlAM PIM.H, for twenty-lve ye r? - - x 1: a ]v t, Safest, A l w a y s R e l a b l e. SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS tm H TRKI- EVERYWHERE N O T IC E OF FO R EC LO S U R E Whereas Lev J. Gardner of Chapman, n the County of Aroostook, State of Mane, hv hs mortgage deed dated the twenty-sxth day of November and recorded n the Southern Dstrct of the Aroostook Regstry of Deeds n Vol. 314, Page 49f> conveyed to J. Orn Smth, then of Presque Isle, n sad County a certan pece or parcel of land stuated n Chapman n sad County and descrbed and hounded as follows: The North half of lot numbered thrty-four (34) n sad Chapman, hounded on the North by the North lne of sad lot Numbered thrty-four (3.4): on the East by the f East Lne of sad lot numbered thrtyfour (34); on the South by the North lne of a one hundred (100) acre lot sold from the Southerly part of sad lot numbered thrty-four (34): on the West by the West Chapman Road (so called) leadng from Balls Mlls (so called) the parcel hereby conveyed contanng sxty-one (61) acres, more or less and s known locally as the Brggs Farm. The wthn real estate s the same deeded to Lev J. Gardner by Charles A. Lane by hs deed of warranty dated the twenty-second day of Aprl and recorder! n the Southern Dstrct of the Aroostook Regstry of Deeds n Vol. 285, Page 573. And whereas the sad J. Orn Smth on the twenty-seventh day of August 1921 by hs wrtten assgnment of that date, by hm duly acknowledged and delvered conveyed sad mortgage and th* debt thereby secured to the undersgned, Grace M. Smth now, therefore, the condton of sad mortgage s broken by reason whereof the sad undersgned clams a foreclosure of sad mortgage and gves ths notce for that purpose. Dated September 26, Grace M. Smth By her attorney 340 J. Orn Smth Attenton of Farmers wth T ractors DO you realze that the cost of ownng a Keystone gran thresher, when you have the pow er, s much cheaper than gvng tne requred toll of the regular threshers You can also thresh when you need the gran and have the other condtons rght, and not have to wat reveral days for your turn wth some other machne. Call up and let us fgure ths wth you For Sale My Resdence on North St. for partculars nqure of Mary Conlogue, Tel tf W anted Grl to do general housework n famly of two. Washngs sent out. Apply at TIMES offce. 240 Gentlemen lookng fo r a nce room, handy to town can be aecomodated. Lghts and bath. Apply to C. G. Lunt, TIMES offce. Chautauqua Superntendent Clerk W anted For a general Dry Concert The Rectal Artsts Goods Store, steady work. Apply n Junor Chautauqua person or by mal, statng experence and wages expected n frst letter. Evenng Also gve reference. Geo. H. Ochs, Concert The Rectal Artsts I Presque Isle, Me. Lecture Ellott A. Boyl The Advantage of a Handcap to handle cty trade n Houlton and W e want a lady or gentleman agent T H IR D DAY other vacant ctes. Ths s a wonder Afternoon Seres Lecture ful opportunty as you wll be retalng the genune J. R. Watkns Pro! a V a lu e d S u h. r r h» r ducts ncludng Watkns Cocoanut Ol that t h«v0 ^,very * Shampoo. Garda Face Powder, FruU ^ h e y have t S S ' J Z Drnks and over 137 other products, cessful. Wrte today for free sample and I 1 Trv them UC* partculars. The J. R. Watkns Co.,! Farmers should keep th er accounts Dept. 69, New York, N. Y. from day to day and use the account 440p books sold at the TIMES offce. Farm No acres, 2 mles from T ypew rter Rbbons for all Machnes Togus at four corners. Sght of as well as Carbon Paper made by school, church, grange hall. 2% mles Webster There s none better. Call from Gardner, two houses, hard wood or send to TIMES Offce, floors, barn and out buldngs, wood for home use, 60 thousand Pne lumber Prce to settle affars $1600. Farm No acres, 2 mles from Gardner. Lots of wood about 90 thousand of heavy oak lumber. 50 acres good tllage land for potatoes, For Sale A second hand Chckerng pano and a Columba phonograph. Mrs. O. L. Davenport, 10 Kelleran St. 37 For Sale 5 passenger Overland, newly panted and has new top. For no rocks. Owner gong away wll gve further nformaton nqure at the 15 tons of hay $100., cow $700., sulky TIMES offce. 38tf plow, new D. wagon, cart, logng sleads, harnesses, harrow, rdng 'r'* W anted for Clothes Pn Factory wagon, pgs, harnesses, cream separa- a* Davdson. Good wages and steady tor, cook stove, some furnture, 10 Inqure at offce of Summt cords wood sawed and splt and lots Lumber Company, Houlton or wrt? of goods too numerous to menton. 2 * a^ove Company at Davdson. tf O. I. C. hogs, weght 800, all for $2850 ~ ; to be sold by Oct. 15. I have 71 other, * * Y WaTnted. *ye,t farms to sell. W. E. Weed, Agt., 53,,t0^ n? m! oduc? Launderne Crys- Elm St., Gardner, Me. *ai Washng Marvel. Needed m every household. Good pay for workers. Agents Wanted VICTORY J a r O p e n e r GOOD P artcu lars P R O F IT Samples 15c Free H. & E. Sanburn 39 Casco St. For sample and partculars wrte Sales Manager, Box 145, Carbou, Me. 339 Bank Book No ssued by the Houlton Savngs Bank s reported lost, and ths notce s gven, as requred by law. that a duplcate book may be ssued. L. O. Ludwg, Treas. 340 Portland, M ane 140 Acres W th Automoble, Horses, Furnture, 3 cows, hefers, poultry, r. Bn nf t u a m re pg machnery* vehcles, tools nclud-..a.hu THANKS ed; ncome starts day you move n; We wsh to extend our most sncere bg possbltes, brght future; easy thanks to our knd neghbors, frends drve RR town; 60 acres productve and relatves for ther sympathy and loamy tllage; 30-cow sprng-watered many beautful floral trbutes to us pasture; estmated cords wood, n our dear mother. Mr. A. A. Atherton Mrs. Elzabeth Parks Mrs. B. J. Bell Mrs. F. A. Barton Mrs. Georga Lncoln Catherne Atherton frut, sugar grove; good 7-room house, telephone, fne vew; 60-ft. barn, poultry house, etc. For mmedate sale, only $3650, part cash, easy terms. Prosperty ths secton the rule. Enoy your share. Come now. Catalog free. Clyde II. Smth. Skowhegan, Me M1n m11m 11! 1111> 1:11 mm111 mmmm m>mm m m1111 m111 m >111 mmm111 m m m 11 n 111 m ( m n11111 t 11 mntmn W a n ted Conductors, Tranm en and Telegraph Operators for servce on the B angor & Aroostook Ralroad n case of strke, the V ce Presdent of the Tranm en s Organzaton havng been quoted n the press as statng that there would be an mmedate strke f the m embers so wshed, whch seemed partcularly certan. A p p ly to Seperntendent B. & A. R. R., Bangor or Houlton. 240 RmmmMfmfrfmsnrttASffTfMfmnJJmtmtJfnmMftmmfmtMmmmmfmmJttmmtmttHur Cameras, Kodaks, Supples M u u f J m! t < M u u K H ( m H H m m t t H m H!! f n u t t H H m! H ( ( m M U J t f m f A ll carred n stock W e also take orders fo r Developng and Prntng of Flms and Plates Brdgewater D rug Company Flour <? nm u tnh nn /n n '''w 'H M 'm.' W e are pleased to announce a reducton n the prce of our flour. IJ W e are now farly w ell stocked wth flour and feeds W e wll sell W llam Tell Flour n wood fo r $10.00 per bbl. W llam Tell n 98s cotton for $9.25 bbl. W lla m T ell 1-8 bbl. bags $1.18 H m H m M H H... >d Whte was In Carbou Smla. F u lt^ of ftouuo^aarttayn tly. * Y a a. Hazel Taylor of' Weatfelu. was urn last week. bert Jamson went Thursday to ll, Mass, to work ths wnter, a lttle chld of Mr. and Mrs. Guy l ded very suddenly Frday, and Mrs. A. M. Stackpole expect > ths week to Bangor on bus- Mr. and Mrs. Wlbur Dyer of Falmouth, Mass, are n town on a 1 vst. Mrs. Orra Heath of Brockton. Mass. I has been vstng her father. Geo., Nelson. The Baptst church realzed about, $40 from the supper and sale Saturday evenng. There wll be a Grange meetng Oct. 13th. The 1st and 2nd degrees 1 wt!**-worked. A. M. Stackpole, Jr, B rdgew ater, M ane A. H. Bradstreet & Son Brdgew ater, M ane J

5 ...mmmmmmmm IIIHIIItltHIIIIIIMIItlHIlHIHIIHHIlHHIHIHHIIIHy......M l Subscrbers should bear n <«nnd that all subscrptons are.payable n advance and the paper wll be dscontnued at expraton. Notce of such expraton wll be sent out the Frst of each month. Mss Dors Hassell has entered ;Smlth College. Benamn Frankln of Presque Isle was n Houlton on busness last week. George Pennngton has entered Columba Unversty n New York Cty. Frank P. Clark was a busness vstor n Greenvlle and Bangor last 'week Mss Mary Conlogue was the guest of Mrs. Murray S. Brggs of Carbou last week. A. E. Aatle of the Astle Musc Company was a busness caller n Carbou last week. Mss Adelade York has been the guest of frends n Presque Isle for the past two weeks. Chef of Polce Frank Hogan was the guest of Chef of Polce Ernest Lyons of Presque Isle last week Mss Louse Kearn, one of the new propretors of Charlotte s shop, s n New York dong her Fall buyng Fred Shean of the Shean Accountng Company, was a busness vstor n Carbou for a few days last week. George Dunn, James C. Madgan and James M. Perce attended a meetng of wld land owners n Bangor last week. Mrrf. Edward Gordon, for years a resdent of Houlton, left last week for Augusta where she wll lve wth her son Roy. Clar Cassdy, who has been spend Ing the summer months n town, left Saturday to resume hs studes at the Harvard Medcal School. Mdshpman Fred Vose, who has heen spendng the summer wth hs parents n town, has returned to Annapols to contnue hs work. Mrs. Ransford W. Shaw, who s vstng her chldren, s expected to return home about November frst accordng to news receved here. Mr. and Mrs. L. O. Ludwg and Leland Ludwg accompaned by Mrs. F. M. Hume and Mrs. Jenne Dunn motored to Fredercton last week. Mss Fay Brooks of South Hampton, New Brunswck, returned to her home last week after spendng a week wth Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Smart of Charles Mr. Charles Dunn, Supt. of the State School for Boys at Portland, accompaned by hs wfe are the guests of Mr. and M%. L. O. Ludwg. Court street, for a few days. Wlle Paul has returned to Houlton from Watervlle where he has been employed durng the summer. Hs present pland are a.s yet ndefnte and he wll stay here for some tme. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Harvender o Mddford, Mass., who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Black, Hgh street, left Thursday for a few days vst n New Brunswck before returnng to ther home. Wendell Grant returned to Watervlle Monday to resume hs studes at Colby College n the Junor class. Wendell was forced to stay out of college last year on account of poor health. He wll now graduate wth the class of Mss Faye Mackay, who has for sone tme has been employed as bookkeeper n the dentst offces of Brldgham and Barton, left Saturday lor Portland where she s to enter the St. Barnabas Hosptal to tran for a nurse. Manager Churchll of the Temple s gettng together some fne materal for a seven pece orchestra whch wll render musc for hs patrons, and all wll be pleased to know that Mr. Gllman, the Clarnet and Sarophone artst wll be among them. There s one nfallble method of tellng that Fall s here f you have Mr. L. S. Bean of Presque Isle was n town last week on busness. Mrs. Ira E. Ruth has gone to Portland to vst relatves for a few weeks. Mr. Greenwood of the Marmon automoble factory n Detrot s a busness vstor n town. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh F. Spratt of Bar Harbor are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Carter for a few days. W. H. Martn of Bangor who s famous as a potato dealer, was n Houlton Saturday, called here by busness. Sherff Foster, Deputy Sherff Mooer and Chef of Polce Kelley of Woodstock were n town Frday on busness. Mr. Carleton Hutchns, propretor of the Brdgewater Drug Store, wth hs wfe, were n town Sunday callng on frends. Mss Mldred Huggard left Tuesday nght for Presque Isle Normal School where she wll be a student for the comng year. Odd Fellows are requested to meet at ther hall Wednesday at 1 o clock p. m. to attend the funeral of the late brother Lester J. Lancaster. Mr. and Mrs. H. P. Goodng representng Lorng, Short and Hannon of Portland are n town wth ther dsplay of Chrstmas goods. Mss Madelne Logan, who s teachng school at Slver Rdge, spent the week-end wth her parents Mr. and Mrs. Ells Logan of Mltary street. H. C. Frtch of Atlanta, Georga and C. M. Welch of Boston are n town on busness connected wth the Lberty Automoble Manufacturng Company. Mr. and Mrs. Berman and Sol. Berman motored to Bangor Sunday accompaned by Mrs. Goldsten of Presque Isle. They wll return today. Sam Wlson and Rchard Ludwg spent a few days huntng at the former s camp at Braeley Lake. They were accompaned by frends n Sherman. Mss Kathleen Snow, lbraran from Mllnocket, s vstng Mss Dorothy Stetson on Hgh street durng the conference of lbrarans that s beng held n town. Leland Ludwg left last week for Boston to resume hs studes at the Massachusetts Insttute of Technology after spendng the summer wth hs parents n town. At Colby College Leon Nles and Ells McLeod are pledged to the Ph Delta Theta fraternty, and Joe Gorham s pledged to the Delta Kappa Epslon fraternty. Frank Pear' vn has removed to the Wlder Inns huuse on Court street whch he wll occupy durng Mr. Inns absence, who plans to spend the wnter n New York. Al. Melanson and hs orchestra whch has been playng to capacty crowds n the up-country towns, wll perform agan n Houlton Saturday nght at the Heywood. PRESIDENT TODD OPPOSES RAILROAD CONSOLIDATION In a statement recently gven to the press n regard to the proposed consoldaton of ralroads, Presdent Percy R. Todd of the Bangor & Aroostook ralroad sad: My own vew s on the whole opposed to these wholesale consoldatons for the reason that f such large ralroad systems are formulated, the executve management of each system must necessarly be remote from the publc that t serves, and one of the most mportant phases of successful ralroad management s close cooperaton and ntmate touch on the part of the management of the ralroad wth the local publc that t serves, and ths s equally obectonable from the standpont of the relatons between the management of a ralroad and ts employees, whch necessarly cannot be as close on a system of many thousands of mles of ralroad as t s on one of a few hundred or one or two thousand mles. I am n favor of ndvdual ralroad HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 PAon r :v 3 C. B. Esters and B. E. Anderson spent the week-end at ther camp at St. Crox, returnng Wednesday. They were accompaned by George Cressy and Walter A. Cowan. JURY FINDS CLARK INSANE NOT FIT FOR TRIAL The case of Newman Clark, who shot and klled Phoebe Bell at Grand Falls, N. B. about a year ago and was found gulty and sentenced to death was reopened at Andover last week to ascertan, f possble, as to the condton of the accused. The ury went to ther room at fve o clock and after beng out half an hour brought n a verdct affrmng the plea that the accused, on account of nsanty, s unft to take hs tral. The udge then ordered that the prsoner be remanded to al, there to awat the pleasure of the leutenantgovernor. RALPH WHITNEY GOES TO HARTFORD When there there s leavng our mdst a man who has been connected very ntmately wth the town n both a busness and an offcal way for over thrty years, t s wth more than regret that the departure s chroncled. Ralph H. Whtney has been a resdent of Houlton for thrty-three years durng whch tme he has been actvely engaged n the blacksmth trade on Mechanc street. He was a member of the polce force for many years and also served that organzaton as chef. Durng the term of offce of Charles Dunn as Sherff, Mr. Whtney served as deputy sherff and has contnued up to the present tme. Hs new busness connecton wll be wth the Capewell Horse Nal Company of Hartford, Connectcut, as salesman on the road. Hs terrtory wll be the entre state of New Hampshre and through eastern Massachusetts. Wth hs famly he plans to move to Hartford, Connectcut, where he wll be located ndefntely. All hs frends n town on n wshng hm the best of luck n hs new feld. MUSIC LOVERS ENJOY The gven evenng EDISON TONE-TEST musc lovers of Houlton were an opportunty on Monday of enoyng another concert by the Edson artsts through the courtesy of the Astle Musc Co., and fully,r>l)0 people were present. One thng that the pubc may not lost your calendar. That method s clearly understand, and t s ths, smply to keep smellng untl the the nstruments used n these tone pungent odor of burnng leaves assals management as at present. If ths tests are not made for the tests your nostrls, and when t does you cannot be contnued, then I am n fa- especally, but are regular laboratory may 9hout at the top or your lungs, vor of a New England consoldated models for sale at ther regular "Fall s here. The Harvest supper gven by the management and not a management of agences, sutable for home use, and New England ralroads by ralroads' several are always kept n stock lowest Lades Ad of the M. E. church n the vestry last Thursday was well attended and was sad to be by all who attended, as one of the best n of the Hudson rver. the Astle Musc Co. years. A goodly sum Tfras realzed by h ere s a sale on the organzaton who had charge. Mss Verne Johnson has returned to New York after spendng the summer months n Aroostook County. She vsted frends n Houlton for some tme and from there went to Fort Farfeld where she spent the r remander of her vacaton wth her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Johnson formerly resdents of Houlton for many years. We want to start the rubber sellng season fast and free ths year, so we Mss Effle Hannan of Houlton s to offer for the frst sale ths Fall unusual bargans for practcally every become tqacher of Englsh n the Fort rubber tem that s usable n homes, sck rooms, nurseres, for the bath Farfeld Hgh School to fll the and tolet. Note the two bargans lsted below. Take advantage of them. vacancy left by the marrage of Mss Come to the store and see the other rubber goods on dsplay specally Bthel Chamberlan. Mss Hannan s prced. a graduate of Rcker Classcal Insttute, beng valedctoran, and a grad A two year guaranteed Hot Water Bottle n the most wonderful qualty. uate of Colby College n the class of O T H E R SPE C IA LS IN It could easly sell for practcally She goes to her new poston twce our prce g g Npples, Tubes, Rubber Gloves well recommended. Rubber Sponges, Rubber Governor Baxter has Issued a warnng to hunters at the openng of the represented by extreme qualty and Brushes and all other rubber A Fountan Syrnge of unusual value, 1921 season to the effect that due to guaranteed for two years. A r eal tems greatly reduced the dryness of the weather al^ pqe- bargan at Mun $ 1.98 ro s cauton* to <eaoper»fe * * 0 forestry department and protect the tlmberlands of the state. It cannot he lmpreesed frm enough upon hunt- V e t f to observe every necessary pre- Store a* advsed by the Governor. Wert E n d Mss CHURCH NOTICE Chrstan Scence church, corner Mltary and Hgh streets. Sunday mornng servce at 11 a. m. Subect for Oct. 9th: Are Sn, Dsease and Death Real? Sunday school at 11 a. m. Wednesday evenng Testmonal meetng at 7.30 p. m. I.eola Lueey, soprano, Mr. Adren J. B. Freche, volnst, and Mr. Raymond Barry were the artsts. Hs passng n the prme of hs manhood wll be keenly felt n ths com These concerts are provded by the Edson Co. for the purpose of gvng ; munty. musc lovers an opportunty to udge ' Mr. Lancaster was marred about the merts of the Edson phonograph! 15 years ago to Mss Lena Dunlap as a preserver of fne musc and at and to ths unon there were the same tme to show the absolutely correctness of the orgnal selectons, Each of the artsts rendered selec- s one brother Shrley E. of Hodgdon tons wth the phonograph n a tone ; and a sster, Mrs. Charles Wllams test that amazed the audence, for of Cary, Me t was almost mpossble to dstngush ( the orgnal from the musc as record- ed by the nstrument. The program conssted of 10 select-' ons and the audence was further en-1 tertaned by a goodly number ot I Funeral servce wll be held ths Wednesday from hs late home, Rev. encore selectons so gracously gven. F. Clarke Hartley offcatng. Servce The varous artsts sent out by the Edson Co. are leaders n ther lne at the grave wll be conducted members of Rockabema Lodge. by To and the publc should feel hghly hs sorrowng famly the deepest honored that Houlton s selected by the company for these tone tests that sympathy of many frends s extended. brng to us the best of musc n the varous forms, also they should feel proud that we have such a progressve and up-to-date musc store as the Astle Musc Co. that does co-operate to provde entertanment for musc lovers. Mss Lucey possesses a beautful vore, hghly traned, and a personalty to go wth her voce that easly makes her a favorte wth her hearers. The other artsts too were well receved and ther selectons were loudly encored. R u b b e the frst ths Fall NEWT CHURCHILL IN THE FRONT ROW AGAIN Newton Churchll, who was the manstay of Houlton Hgh School football, baseball and basketball teams for two years s fulfllng all expectatons at Phllps-Exeter Academy where he s a Freshman ths year. Newt went out for football and out of a group of between sxty and seventy canddates he made the squad playng rght half back on a team that has an average weght of 198 pounds, whch s a rare weght even for a college team. Exeter played the Harvard second team Frday wnnng by a score of 12-0 and ther further schedule for the season ncludes games wth Dartmouth freshmen, Yale freshmen and the Harvard freshmen not to menton the great game wth Phllps Andover whch s the game of the year for Exeter. There s no doubt but that Newt s n ust as fast company as he would be n college for the teams turned out by ths school are always among the fastest and best prep school teams n the country. LESTER J. LANCASTER Ths communty was deeply shocked Monday afternoon when the startlng announcement of the death of Lester J. Lancaster was made, although many were n a measure prepared as hs.iness was of a serous nature. Taken ll Sept 19 whle n Wood- stock enoyng a fraternal vst to Carleton Lodge I. O. O. F., he returned home and called a physcan who pronounced t typhod. He grew rapdly worse. Sunday pneumona develop- ed and the end came suddenly, hs weakened condton not beng able to stand the added burden of pan. Mr. Lanc aster was born n Hodgdon 39 years ago, the son of Mr. and Mrs. ; John Lancaster. When stll a young man he entered the employ of the B.; A. R. R. rapdly ganng recognton of hs abltes untl he was promoted to an engne drver and was consder- ed one of the best on the road. He remaned wth the R. R. Co. untl 1912 when the strke occurred, snce whch ' tme le has conducted a publc carrage busness. Mr. Lancaster was always courteous, cheerful and popular and possessed many frends throughout Aroostook. born! three1 sons, the eldest 14 years of a ge,; the younger about 1 year old, all of whom survve hm, also survvng hm Mr. Lancaster was a member of. Brotherhood of Locomotve Engneer, Rockabema Lodge No. 78 and Aroostook Encampment No. 41 I. O. O. F. MRS. SALLY ATHERTON Mrs. Sally Atherton passed away Sept. 25, 1921 at the home of her daughter Mrs. B. J. Bell. She ded at the age of nnety-one years and ten months. The deceased was born n Hodgdon Nov. 19, 1829, the daughter of Jacob and Emelne Whte. Aprl 30, 1847 the deceased was unted n marrage to the late Ben. Atherton of Houlton. Sx chldren were born to the unon of whch fve chldren survve besde a nece, Mss Catherne Atherton, who has always lved wth them. Mrs. Atherton became a Chrstan at the age of twenty and oned the Free Baptst church of Whte Settlement where she was a great worker. She was ever ready when the call for help was needed among her neghbors and frends no matter what hour the word came to go. Durng her long llness she was ever cheerful and uncomplanng and bravely and patently awated the call of the Royal Messenger. The text of whch she selected was She hath done what she could, her hymns, Gatherng Home, Delverance Has Come. The servces were held Tuesday afternoon, Sept. 27, at the home of Mrs. B. J. Bell. Rev. Hartley spoke words of comfort to the mournng relatves, payng a very eloquent trbute to the character and lfe of the departed one. One brother, Mr. Albert Whte of Mars Hll s the only one left of a famly of fourteen chldren. Interment was n the famly lot at Whte Settlement. RYAN HAS ENVIABLE RECORD Wllam J. Ryan, Portland s most famous blnd man, soon starts on hs annual tour throughout Mane sellng the old Mane Farmers Almanac for the comng year. For the past 40 years Mr. Ryan has conducted ths busness enterprse for hmself. Now, he announces, the proceeds of hs sales wll be turned n to the treasury o the Mane Insttuton for the Blnd. And f hs health permts he ntends to make the same trp and for the same cause untl 1928 by whch tme he feels that he wll have earned the rght to take lfe easer. Mr. Ryan started sellng almanacs n 1882 wth a stock of 200. Hs hghest fgure was 20,000 n a sngle season. He has always been greatly nterested n work for the blnd, and was largely nstrumental n promotng the legslaton whch resulted n the Mane Insttuton for the Blnd. Now Open and Ready fo r You Practcal courses n Bookkeepng and Accountancy, Shorthand and Typewrtng, Penmanshp, etc., equp you for work wthout loss of tme. Rght now s the tme to get started. Houlton Busness College, Houlton, M e John P. Costello Undertaker M an e and Massachusetts Lcensed E m balm er Phone 574-W Res. 59 Court St., Phone 574-W Cor. Man and Mechanc Strs., Over Hallett-McKeen Co. s dhtffhmtmuttmt' C ^nftftnt ntff tmrtjmnnhnumtm^ m I That I Elusve! I Th ought nnm m m M N m m nm n^ Hn u m'mnuu MHMuHnnt Mrm J. D. P e r r y Jeweler an a Optometrst I Houlton You wll remember from past experences how dffcult t s to thnk of a sutable weddng gft. A good dea would be to spend a short tme n our store where suggestons wll occur to you on every hand, as we have hundreds of dstnctve gfts sutable for every occasson, all prced n accordance wth the market. Our many years of experence s at vour servce., 5 3 :tttttm M m m m M U H tm JV J!H m m u :tjl«m H J» ; KIRSCHBAUM CLOTHES FALL AND WINTER 1921 ust unpacked! New Fall suts from those famous makers the Krschbaum shops. T h e y ll ft. T h e y ll wear. They ll gve you a full money s That s our guarantee! $50 to 45 ERVIN 8c ERVIN P1

6 PAGE SIX HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 INTERPRETS LAW FOR HIGHWAY COATN Deputy Attorney General Fred F. Lawrence of Skowhegan, In an opnon rendered, declares that the state hghway commsson may apporton state ad before the result of the referendum s' known, and should so apporton t, and that there s avalable for the purpose of apportonng etate ad at the present tme the sum of $650,000 provded no porton of ths amount wll be needed for 1922 work pror to} July frst of that year. You state that the hghway com msson are of the opnon that they have avalable only $150,000 to meet all allotments to be made ths year, says Deputy Attorney General Law rence n hs opnon, n reply to * communcaton from Paul D. Sargent chef engneer of the state hghway commsson. It must, we thnk, be apparent that the legslatve ntenton was much broader than that, and whle that ntenton has not been expressed wth all the clearness desrable, the stuaton n substance, as we vew t, s as follows: It seems apparent to us that between ths date and July 1, 1922, you have avalable for state ad purposes the followng, vz: Specal emergency appropraton for the frst fscal perod $150,000; regular annual appropra ton, $300,000; from mll tax hghway fund, $$00,000; total, $650,000. In makng apportonments upon ths bass you must bear n mnd that f ths whole amount s used ths year, there wll be nothng avalable for the frst sx months of the calendar year W e understand from you, however, that as a practcal matter, the money s actually expended durng the last sx months of the calendar year, and the essental fact to be borne n mnd In your comparson s not the date upon wlch the allotment s made, but the tme when the money wll actually be expended. The $300,000 n the appropraton bll s an tem whch exstng law requred to be approprated. (See Revsed Statutes, Chapter 25, Secton 34.) Ths provson s repealed by chapter 127 of the laws of the last legslature, but ths repeal s condtonal and does not take effect untl after the adopton of the proposed consttutonal amendment. It does not, therefore, affect the appropraton already made for 1921, or prevent ts use for the purposes for whch t was approprated. The same concluson apples to the $200,000 derved from the mll tax. e The mll tax s assessed as a part of the regular state tax n Aprl. The mll tax law was amended by the last legslature and the tax ncreased to thnk partcularly n Mane. completed, the busness of the State one and one-half mlls, by chapter 142! I don t thnk so; not so very easly. wll be serously mpeded and nter-1 of the publc laws aof 1921, but that 1 Have you been away from home? rupted. act s to take effect only upon the patronzngly. Now that the money has been saved adopton of the consttutonal amendment, and t does not affect the tax, a conventon. : 1 have been down to Sprngfeld to for these trunk lnes, let work on them 1 be pushed forward wth all speed, that assessed for Consequently, t Any rum there? the day of ther completon may be an cannot prevent the use of the $200,000 I ddn t see any. early one. whch under exstng laws s avalable out of the 1921 mll tax. The conventon. That s all conventons are1 Then t must have been a bum $200,000 Is avalable by vrtue of the THE MODEL WILL for, anyway for a man to get away provsons of secton 36 of chapter 25 The late Chef Justce Whte certanly ought to have known how to make from hs own select gang and go off ol the revsed statutes, as amended on a toot. by chapter 220 of the laws of "It was a good conventon. a wll, f anybody n Amerca dd. It Ths provson s repealed by secton It couldn t have been good wthout may be of general nterest, therefore, 10 of the new mll tax law, but that booze. Now, you know as well as I repeal, together wth the rest of the to learn what knd of wll he made. do that there s no fun n the world law, does not go nto effect at the The document has ust been made wthout booze. present tme. publc. I don t drnk. "The sum of $18,876, n our udgment, should not have been ncluded t s pretty stupd f seven or eght But you know, ust the same, that The most notable thng about t s ts brevty. It contans only 51 words, n the appropraton bll for the fscal fellows get together n a room and perod endng June 30, It does not correspond wth any requrement of exstng law. That tax, as wll be seen, cannot be assessed untl next sprng. In any event, that s not avalable for state ad purposes, so t need not trouble you at the present tme. When t comes to the 1922 allotment, you have an entrely dfferent proposton to deal wth beng lmted, n case of the adopton of the consttutonal amendment, not by specfc appropratons but by the amount of the bond ssue, because n the law authorzng the bond ssue, chapter 131 of the publc laws of 1921, so much as may be found necessary for the purpose s approprated for the buldng of state ad hghway under any provson of law oblgatng the state to contrbute to such purpose. DEFEAT OF THE HIGHWAY BOND ISSUE AMENDMENT The Mane Automoble Assocaton won out, and defeated by a very notable maorty the proposton advanced by the Legslature to transfer State hghway bond money to a State- ad hghway fund. The fact that the Assocaton dd not get nto the campagn untl practcally ten days before electon, and then won, shows the confdence whch the people have n ths organzaton of automoblsts and good roads enthusasts. When the word was sent out by the drectors of the M. A. A., the people had so much fath n ther request that they voted aganst the amendment almost wthout askng any questons. The Mane Automoble Assocaton has never allowed poltcs to enter nto ts proceedngs of management, and t has never taken a stand for or aganst a measure untl ts offcers have thoroughly nvestgated t and have adopted by an overwhelmng maorty the course whch they were to pursue. In the opnon of the drectors the adopton of Amendment No. 2 on September 12 would have meant usng bond money on secondary roads of a low type of constructon. In other words, bonds whch would not mature for approxmately 40 years, would be used In the constructon of hghways whch mght wear out and have to be almost wholly reconstructed several tmes durng that perod. It would be the same as a man buyng an automoble and payng for t on the nstallment plan, who would fnd hmself, at the end of a few years, wth a completely worn out and useless vehcle!, not pad for by one-half of ts orgnal cost. Ths s ndeed poor fnancng and a method whch the State should avod or t wll dscover tself hank rupt after a term of years. The proponents of the measure may declare that the money was to be used for only the permanent features of the roads to he constructed, but surely the amendment tself dd not say ths, and the result would be that the funds rased by the sale of bonds would be expended vrtually as mantenance. The defeat of the amendment s a vctory for the present trunk lne systempl an n Mane as lad down by the State Hghway Commsson; t means! that the people wsh to have these I through arteres of traffc completed at the earlest possble date, for I Well, I'm advance man for s show. We had a bum house n Boston wthout them the secondary or State- and we thought we d slde down to ad roads, have only a purely local! Portland for three days. Have you and very lmted value. any dea of the seatng capacty of It must not be understood that ths ; tn theater?" recent vctory of the Mane Automo- I I should say about 1,200, answered ble Assocaton s ntended to nd-! the other. But that s ust a guess. cate that ths organzaton s for State Small house, sn t t? offered the hghways and aganst State-ad roads.! advance man. "But I suppose t s bg Ths s not the case. On the contrary, enough for a small town. Do you the organzaton has always stood for! suppose those yaps down there would the constructon of both systems n stand for $3 seats? the shortest possble tme consstent wth good busness udgment, and a It s a lttle hgh, I'm afrad. prope^ regard for the fnances of the Yes, I suppose they woujdn s supmy State.' It s emphatcally the frend of the State-ad hghway, and ts next port a real show there. orders are to charge $3. Well, About the move wll be, undoubtedly, to see that the funds whch have been dverted from legtmate State-ad hghway buldng durng the past few years, be restored n order that these mportant secondary roads may be pushed forward wth all speed. Mane must not hold up the constructon of ts State hghways, for they are absolutely vtal to ts development. Untl such thorough arteres of travel as the Roosevelt Hghway between Portland and Fryeburg; the Longfellow Hghway, between Portland and Bethel, va Gray, Poland Sprng, Norway and South Pars; the I kept rght on readng. Never a Captol Way, befween Gray and word I uttered. I felt our frend was Augusta, va Auburn and Lewston; ; rdng for a bg fall, but I ddn t realze how bg a fall t was to be. the Aroostook Tral, reachng all the way from Watervlle to the northern ; Where do you lve? was hs nex1: tp of Aroostook County, va Bangor, \ questons, drected, of course, at our Lncoln and Houlton; the Rangeley soft voced frend. Tral, startng at Lewston and Au- I lve n Mane. burn and tappng Farmngton, and the Can a fellow get any booze n Portland? great Rangeley Lake Regon; the Internatonal Tral, startng at Bruns- He mght but I doubt t. It would wck and extendng to the Canadan! Border va Augusta, Watervlle and l Skowhegan and the many other through routes of ths character, are and reads as follows: "Ths s my last wll. I gve, bequeath and devse to my wfe, Leta AI. Whte, n complete and perfect ownershp, all my rghts and property of any knd and nature, whether real, personal or mxed, wherever stuated, appontng her executrx of my estate wthout bond and gvng her sezn thereof. f Contrast ths straghtforward statement wth the elaborate legal flubdub that messes up the average wll. T e form used by Justce Whte, n spte of ts smplcty, s presumably proof aganst all attack. It may serve as a convenent mode! for any man who wants to make hs wfe hs sob; her, as most men do, and may also serve as a stmulus for more men to perform the sensble duty of makng ther wlls whle they have tme, thereby avodng the danger of confuson and «1f - eulty after death. It s necessary, of course, to haw the document sgned by wtnesses, a d s no doubt better, whether state law requres t or not, to have t wtnessed by a notary publc. Pat Mke was drowned last naht. Jake Couldn t he swm? Pat Yes, but he was a unon man he swam for eght hours and then h qut. In Packages of 10 Cgars each I RIDING WITH THE GOVERNOR there's booze I( lhey taten t ** booze to make them talk have nothng to talk about. You know, now, On my way down to Mane Wednesday to call upon Booth Tarkngton and Ken Roberts, I spent most of my tme n the smokng comfartment of the Pullman readng a magazne. Whle I was readng a gentleman entered and sat besde me. I pad no attenton to hm ddn t even look at hm, but kept rght on readng. I am somewhat leery of shpboard and Pullman car acquantances. After a whle a stockly-bult person entered, one of the sort ust bubblng over to tell all he knows and who he s. You recognze the type. The newcomer stuck t out as ong as he could and after the mnute and a half had elapsed addressed my neghbor n ths fashon: Say, do you know anythng about Portland? Yes, qute a bt. only thng I know about Portland s that I was there once n vaude vlle and met a doctor who was supposed to be a great specalst, on the throat, but who turned out to be a fake. What was hs name? I ve forgotten, but I ll descrbe hm. So he dd. The quet gentleman smled. I recognze the man, he sad. He 1 s rather well thought of there. "Well, 1 suppose he's good enough for those fellows down there, but he d never do n my home town New York, you know. be hard work." What are you talkng about? You can get booze1 anywhere and 1 should don t you, that, after all, the real lfe s to do your day s work, go out and get a snootful of booze; get good and drunk; go home and sleep t off, and then go to work the next day? Our frend faled to agree, so the orator changed the subect, ust a mte. He talked about Mane and boozerunnng through that state and ts crooked sherffs and poltcans. What he ddn't do to Mane, that he vsted once, wasn t worth botherng about. Fnally, becomng more chummy, he leaned over and sad: Say, what do you do for a lvn? The quet young man answered, qute modestly: IlKHlJ!! x m s Ths trademark, stamped In red on the case, dentfes the W llard Threaded R ubber Battery. Come In! v We want you to come n as soon as you can because we beleve we can tell you as we have told a good many other car owners how to make your battery last longer and serve better. When you do come n, why not stay untl you have pumped us dry of every bt of battery nformaton that may help you to get MORE, MILES of unnterrupted servce PER DOLLAR. We ll tell you why rubber had to be made porous before t could be used for battery nsulaton and how the threads turn the trck. 1 H. M. Cates & Son, Inc. Wllard Mechanc Street Batteres CLARION HEATING STOVES F O R W O O D O R C O A L M ade especally to meet every need of our Mane patrons T hey are always Quck n Acton Economcal Durable WOOD & BISHOP CO. BANGOR, MAINE Establshed 1839 o HAMILTON-GRANT COMPANY, HOULTON, MAINE for Im m ed a te D elv ery G. Phone 259 The best qualty and at prces lower than you can secure elsewhere. You have everythng to gan and nothng to lose by placng your order at once for your w nter needs. For further partculars call W. Rchards Co. Houlton, M an e I am Governor o! the State. It was Percval P. Baxter, Chef Executve of the Soveregn State of Mane, who has had about everythng fne n the world, wth the excepton of a snootful. Herald. possble Boston CHURCH SERVICES Free Baptst Rev. F. Clark Hartley, Pastor Mornng servce at A. M Sunday school at M. Young People s meetng 6.00 P. M. Evenng servce at 7.00 P. M. Specal musc by chor. Chor practce Monday nghts. Tuesday nght church prayer and prase Servce. Church of the Good Shepherd. Rev. H. Scott Smth, Rector ; Sunday Servces Holy Communon at 8 a. m. Also on the frst Sunday n the month at Mornng Prayer and Sermon at Sunday School at noon. Evenng prayer and sermon at 7 o clock. F rst Congregatonal Church Rev. A. M. Thompson, pastor. I Mornng Worshp at Sunday School at 12 o clock wth classes for men and women. Young People s Meetng at 6 p. m. Prayermeetng Tuesday evenngs at ; The Lades Guld meets Monday evenngs weekly. I The Lades Crcle meets Wednesday afternoons weekly. The Lades Mssonary Socety meets the second Wednnesday of month. Court St. Frst Baptst each Rev. Henry C. Speed, pastor mornng worshp wth sermon Bble School wth classes for men and women. 6:00 Senor C. E. Servce... "' ' ',nrn,, lmm, 7:00 Song Servce followed by sermon. Church prayer meetng, Chor rehearsal Frday evenn 7:30. All Seats free. Methodst Epscopal Tuesday at Corner School and Mltary Streets, Rev. A. E. Luce, Pastor a. m Publc Worshp wth sermon m. Sunday School wth Organzed and Graded Classes for all p. m. Junor League Meetng and Preparatory Members Class p. m. Young Peoples meetng under the auspces of the Epwortb I League. :7.00 p. m. Prase and Preachng servce wth vested chorus chor 1General prayer meetng at 7.30 every Tuesday evenng. F IR S T C H U R C H OF H O U L T O N Untaran * Mltary Street at Kelleran ( ^rp^rhng Servce regularly every Sunday at a. m. Sunday School every Sunday at 12:00 Dwght F. Mowery, M nster 114 Court Street Tel. 186-W W A T C H T H E B IG 4 tomach - Kdneys-Hearts Lver Keep the vtal organs healthy by regularly takng the world s standard remedy for kdney, lver, bladder and urc acd troubles COLD MEDAL. CAPSUI IS The Natonal Remedy of Holland fol centures and endorsad by Queen Wlhel* mne. At all druggsts, three szes. Look lor the nemo Cold Model «r ««box ead eccept bo mltetoo A Popular Dem and Everywhere Ballard s Tablets Brng refreshng sleep, releve aches and pans, dzzness and nervousness. Taken lke a confecton. No Opates, Chloral or Cocane. No bad after-effects. All druggsts. Free sample sent by Ballard Golden Ol Co., Old Town, Me. mnmntffmmfffmmmmm 1( 1mmum'HtnnmmunM...I,"""""""'""*'"..,.m,llllllllmml(ll ffftttftfthtft MhMumMmummHmmmmMmmmmm4 Be up to date. Subscrbe for the Bangor Daly News M ane s Favorte D aly Just fll n the attached coupon, and send t along to us wth $1.00 To BANGOR DAILY NEWS l Bangor, Mane Please send the Bangor Daly News to 1 Name Post Offce Address... Contnue the paper to me at the end of three months at the regular rates unless I order the paper dscontnued. Paper wll be stopped promptly when ordered The only safe way to rem t s Check, Post Offce Money Order Express Order... nmuummnuhummruum H o u l t o n S a v n g s ^ B ^ n k ^ H b U L T O N, M A R I E by or

7 HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 PAGE SfVEN self wth assurance. Se sees wth ed a Fool and hs royaltes made accomplsh results. It seems an almost super-human achevement, but f t were sand by means of steam after mle, and to mne t n places as H I E FLOW OF clear eyes. He has arrved.' He hm rch. WEALTH TO AROOSTOOK knows where he s. He can talk on Lous Jay Horowtz, a large buldng contractor, puts t ths way, Every the result of a new knd of town buld cars. n the end another cty wll rse as shovels, locomotves and trans of It s announced that the shpments hs feet or anywhere else. He has of potatoes from the felds of Aroostook to the great markets of the somethng to say. He s at hs best. man and woman n busness s more ng and the exercse of a communty An nterestng feature n connecton He deserves to be well clad and n or less handcapped by deas of presumable to hs conceved lmtatons as to what he of all. In a short tme there wll be that mafy of them are owned by the sprt whch s workng for the good wth the ore mnes of Mnnesota s Naton have begun, and t follows that fashonable attre or she can do and what he or she cue contnuous! Hbbng entrely State; n fact, every year the permanent school, unversty and trust a returnng tde of dollars s already years. Stand up straght. Throw off the cannot do. Dscard all your deas as dfferent from the orgnal vllage, settng toward Mane s garden county. years. Brthdays ought to be abolsh- to your lmtatons. Make yourself but a wtness of the heroc work done funds receve from ths source by way Last year was a lean one for the ed anyway. They have done more ndspensable to your employer whether von hate hm or not. It s up to As a matter of.fact, the ranges lars. n the ron ranges. of royaltes about seven mllon dol potato rasers of Aroostook. There harm to people than they have done were plenty of potatoes, but prces, good to ther hers. There s one man you. on one of whch Hbbng s located, unsatsfactory at the outset, dropped of seventy-fve years of age n Mane The mplcaton n all these ex- furnsh three-ffths of the mllons of INSTEAD OF CIDER lower and lower as the season adtoday who travels more mles a year amples s that the necessary energes tons of ore whch the Unted States (From Popular Mechancs) anced, untl the rasers were ready than any other man n ths communty, who handles as large a busness; and confned by nhbtons due to a part of the development of the past are n each one, but they are fettered contrbutes to the world. All ths s to gve ther crops avay, wth no A new extracton process converts takers. who s as resolute and as determned preconceved notons or suggestons the uce of even the most ntensely ffty years, and the army of employees But the Aroostook farmers, besdes as he was at forty. He has never as to what s possble or mpossble. necessary to work ths ore s a vust acd varetes of apples nto a sweet, beng the most sklled cultvators of gotten old. He has had the years The way of success s n the way of one. rch srup, whch s entrely sutable potatoes n the world, are also among come but he has lved n the present releasng, by the wll, these nhbted The number and natonaltes of as a base for flavorng extracts and the greatest gamblers. Dsregardng and seen the day added to the day, energes and gettng thm to work. foregners employed s a revelaton for many other purposes. A valuable the losses sustaned durng , each lke the predecessor n ts demands on hs tme and hs work. Wendell Holmes how he could, month An admrer once asked Olver : to one who vsts the ranges for the they ncreased ther acreage of the by-product of the process s a compound, known as calcum malate. I frst tne. Perhaps no actvty n ths tubers ths year, nstead of plantng I have gout, asthma and seven after month, wrte the sparklng country can furnsh such a dversty less and now they are n a way to recoup ther dmnshed fortunes. other fatal malades, but I am otherwse very well, laughed Sydney we now know as "The Autocrat of Scotch, Hollanders, Bulgarans, Mon sugar sand htherto derved from papers for the Atlantc Monthly that ot natonaltes. Canadans, Englsh, whch s dentcal wth the so-called Whle the potato acreage of the..sm th, the phlosopher and wt. Bv ; the Breakfast Table. tenegrns, French, Norwegans, Belgans, Germans, Swss, Fnns, Rus maple srup exclusvely. Ths compound forms the bass of malc acd, whole country was greater by one and the gracq Qf Qod l fpet at nothng," Why, repled I)r. Holmes carelessly, there s always a stream runnng. lx tenths per cent than n 1920 thg gaid oln Wesley. Take your oys sans, Sweedes, Danes, and others, are unfavorable weather has been causng aong y0- Che' fulness robs If you can get your dpper nto t, that found n varous occupatons. Many anel was valued at $1.50 per pound, a drop n the estmated yeld frem ) a s years. You can t help s all. have gone drectly to the mnes on and more before the war. At present, month to month, untl a shortage of growlng old_! * say agan. You need That s the secret of success n a landng n ths country. Others have the only plants employng the process somethng lke a hundred mllon bush-, nqt g0t fussed up over t. You can ; nutshell. In the language of the lved n the Unted States for a are located n Nova Scota, but, as t Is Is now predcted. But there has <bq yqung upto Methuselah and hs street, the stuff s there." The problem s to get t out ; ed, they are mportant factors n the allowed to go to waste to the extent number of years. Sklled and unskll- utlzes a frut whch s now beng been a correspondng advance n : dem8e Nothng supples the want prces, and as the Aroostook yeld has sunsne to peaches. Lncoln Every man who s not a success, ; development of the range. Frst of hundreds of thousands of tons a been a bountful one, the farmers carred hlmsef thru the Cvl War by should gve these examples of success came the Scandnavans, Fnns and year, t s to be expected and hoped, there are wearng smles where there ceerfu stores and unfalng humor.1acheved a ffteen mnutes prayerful Austrans to help dg Lake Superor that the method wll come nto wde was a gloom a year ago., Nothng s so sure to make you old consderaton before retrng tonght, ore, and followng some tme later general use wthn the near future. A good potato year n Aroostook a8 grumblng. Charles Lamb tel.s of and he may awake n the mornng a were the races of Southern Europe means much to all the rest of the tle whst payer who complaned of successful man f he wll! There s from Serba, Montenegro, Bulgara State. The farmers there do not tuck never havng anv trumps. Once they where the secret sprng that must be and Croata. ther profts away n ther stockngs dealt hm the whole thrteen. He touched s hdden. These workers are young or mddleor other tradtonal household recep 00ted as gloomy as before. Well, tacles of the mser. They spend them for better houses and new clothes stud automobles, and the markets of Bangor and Portland and other ctes reap the beneft. Ths year, as we have sad, t looks as f they would have qute a surplus to spend. Portland Exenng Express. JUST TALKS On Gettnfl Old" You can t help growng old; but you can help gettng old. Years wll add themselves to years lke a chld buldng bldcks on the lbrary floor but wth steady hold they may grow very tall and secure to the end. The way to keep from gettng old Is to keep young n the human nterest. The way to keep young n human nterest s not to let a day get, away n whch you are not up on the, day s dongs, concern&d n the day s happenngs and Just as concerned sad they, you can t complan of havng no trumps ths tme. No, sad he, but I have nothng to go wth them. Ths s a very smple preachment, then one that should be read by all. Don t get old. Some persons by natural dsposton are older and glummer than men and women of thrce ther years. Don t do t. Pck up the thread of daly lfe. Be nterested n current thngs. Feel the pulse of the tmes daly and hourly. Have an avocaton. Be nterested n some one thng. Have a hold on. fe. Forget brthdays. Cut out dronng over the few years remanng. Count tme by heart beats and make ech one of them helpful, cheerful and useful. Arthur G. Staples n Lewston Journal. JUST GO AND DO IT! It has been ponted out numberless about your fellow man as you were tmes by wse observers, that the wav years and years ago. to do a thng s smply to get about There comes a tme n everyone's \lfe as years come when he talks t and do t. Forget yourself and get about the good old tmes as tho they to work. All the rest s wasted tne were better than now. He s n error. It remaned for a Cleveland pa pc- to They are no better. They were nfntely collect the documents provng t In more drab and unnterestng, case. Brefly summed up they arc nfntely more slow and unweldly; as follows: far more dull and common pace. Fay Banter, a theatrcal star, These are the lvelest and the best faled contnually untl she met Mrs. tmes we ever had and f we azz a[ Fske, the noted actress, who dagnosbt we come Jo a pause and thnk t ed her trouble and gave her ths over after the shouter has put down self every day that you already arc the megaphone and the band has recpe. You must pcture to yourself ceased ts harmones on the soprano saxophone. every day that you already are what you wsh to he, and key yourself The way to keep young s to go up accordngly. Fay dd t and about wth young people all that they won. wll permt you. Keep hangng on Percy H. Johnson, presdent of wth the boys. Keep hangng on wth the Chemcal Natonal Bank of New the gayer crowd that s bent on see- ( York, sad to a tearful old gentleman ng what s gong on today. A man w'ho asked for a ob, Your trouble s as young as he feels and f he feels s self-pty. You are only as old as young, he s young. Keep up readng you feel. Self-pty s fatal to success. the newspapers. Nothng Is such The old man s gettng $20,000 a year a youth-compeller as the daly newspaper. now and worth t. Nobody can get old when he Phlp Curtss, now wealthy as an author, tred twenty dfferent obs and faled n all. Then he wrote Want- sees before hm every day, the lappenngs of the tmes, full of burn- Jpg ssues, alve wth topcs that demand attenton of the udcal mnd. That capacty to analyze modern problems In the lght of experence s the pecular provnce of the person of mature mnd. He should never gve up study. He should never qut hs readng. He should never gve over the contemplaton of the subects that affect the present and the future of man. Forget your aches and pans. Never admt that you are over forty. Ths s good advce that I don t follow always, but whch I am gong to follow n the future. I knew a man who cqncbaled hs years. He ded a few years ago when over seventy and people who played wth hm and followed hm about thought that he was about ffty. Keep well dressed. Have good clothes and plenty of them f you can afford them. The well dressed man of maturty s the fnest lookng person on the street. He carres hm- WOMEN GIVE OUT Housework Is hard enough when healthy. Every Houlton woman who s havng backache, blue and nervous pells, dzzy headaches and kdney or bladder troubles, should be glad to heed ths Houlton woman s experence: Mrs. Henry Hawkes, 21 North St., says: I have used Doan s Kdney Plls on dfferent occasons when my kdneys were weak and out of order and they have never faled to do me good. My back at tmes, has ached pretty bad and everythng seemed a drag to me. I felt nervous and tred all the tme and my kdneys ddn t act regularly and n other ways showed sgns of dsorder. I would be dzzy by spells, too. Seeng Doan s Kdney Plls hghly advertsed led me to try them and t ddn t take them long to releve me. I recommend Doan s wllngng for I have never used them but what they have helped me. 60c, at all dealers. Foster-Mlburn Co., Mfrs., Buffalo, N. Y. 59 MOVING A MINING TOWN TO GET THE ORE Hbbng, Mnnesota, a prosperous town n the ron range sometmes called the rchest vllage n the wrorld, s gong through a novo" experence. Hbbng s one of the new towns whch have sprung up snce ore was dscovered, and t s n the way of further mnng operatons, we are told by a wrter n the Scentfc Amercan. It s not lterally a fact, says, that the whole of Hbbng s beng moved, but people talk that way. Sxteen blocks of the orgnal part overlay a valuable tract of land whch t s desred to explot; and ths one-thrd of the vllage s beng chared of buldngs to gve access to tn1 valuable deposts. In place of ths deared-away secton, a new part of the vllage wll he reared on outskrt s. the Because of the number and the sz» of some of the buldngs to be moved, ths actvty has called for the hghest skll on the part of the home movers. Steam locomotve tractors, equpped wth tracton belts, have been largely used, together wth t he usual acks and heavy trucks, logs. etc. It s almost mpossble to estmate the many mllons whch wll be needm to tear down and rebuld such a large area, but Hbbng feels t s makng hstory; and so all (lasses o' labor, the mnng companes and ctzens, are workng sde by sde, to AT THIS SEASON LOSS OF a p p e t t e: Is v e ry common. In many cases t s due to mpure blood, whch cannot, gve the dgestve organs the stunt lus necessary for the proper pe. fornance of ther unctons. Thousands know by experence that Hood s Sarsaparlla restore; appette and would advse you to gve t a tral ths season. It orgnated n the successful prescrpton of a famous physcan. flct t today. Take Hood s Hlls f you happen to need a laxatve they don t grpe. It s No Job St eer a Bue PRICES Buck cars steer ust lke te-y drve easly and comfortably. And lke every other Buck part, the Buck steerng; gear can be trusted $ E.00 Hde n a lb-l. Buck and see for vourself PRICES $ ^ F. O. E), Flnt, Mch. Fred E. Hall Company Houlton, M an e W HEN BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE BUILT BUICK W ILL BUILD THEM < aged, and ther chldren attend schools whch are up-to-date and of a standng far ahead of those of the countres from whence these people came. Hbbng recently erected a grade buldng at an expense of one hundred and twenty-fve thousand dollars. The range towns are nterested n all outsde' matters. They have a free, generous sprt -a sort of sprt of the range1, whe h comes from famlarty wth colossal movements that are1 takng plae-e daly. Great ore1 pts, heavy ears loaeed wth rapdty and spnal, the late'st mprovements n machnery these1 are feature's of ths stupendous busness. Nowhere' edse n the1 world s t possble1 to uneeve-r a he'd of ore1 whch strede-hes fe>r mle ONCE U SED A LW A Y S USED S T A R C H nmauasuccfrs swfamnce r!.1 *!»»«>?!»ST«UTNl<», IMuumur OIII.OaMLTra Unt Uly Pound M.lfUMMOIfUI* of tkl SUrthwSod cl *ny<5j x S u ren... '.!. C. HUBDEER BR0S 0.> NEWHAYIU.MKN. KlOKUK.eWAg- =?! Makes Ironng Easy Used as cold water or cooked starch wth equally good results ELASTIC STARCH F.* FREE - TRIAL- SIZE Yours for - the askng Send for It TODAY! If you suffer from Ples R EM -O LA for PILES wll prove a blessng ndeed. It cuckly soothes and releves Ples, Hemorrhods and other ano-rectal troubles. Easly appled; panless; no unpleasantness. Won t sol clothng. Has helped thousands wll help YOU. Send for sample today or better stll, mal us ONE DOLLAR for COMPLETE ONE MONTH S TREATMENT, as shown below. Includng full sze tube of REM-OLA, hard rubber rectal tp, full sze box (25) Rem-Rex Laxatve Tablets and helpful booklet on PILES Ther Causes and Treatment. Sent postpad n plan sealed *> package and your MONEY BACK f you want t. Remember, REM- OLA s the tme-tested preparaton of an old-establshed house wth more than 74 years of experence behnd t. You can depend upon tt H en ry T h a y er & Co., Inc. Establshed 1847 CAMBRIDGE 39 BOSTON. MASS. v'omplete ONE MONTH'S 3EM-0LA t«* t»«t/ $? 0 0 p o s t 7.p,L S/ 1. PAID When Mr, Jones was saved from the fryng pan They talk yet of the change that came over Jones. Some sad t was psychology. Some sad t was a mracle. All sad t was a mystery. W h en they asked Jones, he sad t was lberaton from slavery slavery to the fryng pan, and to grease and stanch. Jones used to take hs breakfast fred, and followed ths wth a heavy lunch. In those days they sad at the offce: Old Jones has a secret sorrow and he s sore on the world. One day Jones started late no tme for the usual breakfast to be cooked. Jones had a breakfast on Grape-Nuts wth good cream. He was delghted wth the crspness and rch flavor. Felt satsfed and fed. * Tred t agan at lunch. Kept on breakfastng that w ay often lunchng, too. Jones began to perk up, talk up, step up G E T up. Let Jones show you how to do ths, they began to say at the offce. As to Jones he sad: That s a great food G R A P E -N U T S. There are thousands of Joneses, both knds reckless feeders and wse feeders. There s a Reason for Grape-Nuts the perfected goodness of whole wheat and malted barley delcous, nourshng, ready to eat. All grocers. ONE AND ONE QUALITy- One Sze Package All our skll, facltes, and lfelong knowledge of the fnest tobaccos are concentrated on ths one cgarette CAMEL. Into ths ONE BRAND, we put the utmost qualty. Nothng s too good for Camels. They are as good as t's possble to make a cgarette. Camel QUALITY s always mantaned at the same hgh, exclusve standard. You can always depend on the same mellow-mld refreshng smoothness the taste and rch flavor of chocest tobaccos and entre freedom from cgaretty aftertaste. And remember ths! Camels come n one sze package only 20 cgarettes ust the rght sze to make the greatest savng n producton and packng. Ths savng goes straght nto Camel Qualty. Thatls one reason why you can get Camel Qualty at so moderate a prce. Here s another. We put no useless frlls on the Camel package. No extra wrappersv* Nothng ust for show! Such thngs do not mprove the smoke any more than premums or coupons. And ther added cost must go onto the prce or come out of the qualty. One thng, and only one, s responsble for Camels great and growng popularty that s CAMEL QUALITY. R. J. REYNOLDS TOBACCO CO., Wnston-Salem, N. C. w m r

8 PAGE BIGHT HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1921 IMNIIIUIIIMlMMIllHHUHHIHHIIINIIIIMlHIIIIIIIIIIIlIBBIHIMIIMIMIMMBMMIItltUlWHIIIHIIIIHnllllltlllllllHIIIIHIIIIIIItHHIIHIIIIIIHIIIty I Mr. and Mrs. George Hoar and son Percy motored to Kngman Sunday. I Mrs. Nette Span vsted frends n Dyer Brook and Oakfeld several days I last week.! Mrs. Wllam Mullen of Fort Kent s vstng her parents, Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Eatof. ed to Bar Harbor Saturday where they Mr. Harry Hatfeld was called to expect to vst for a few days. Gordonvlle, N. B. Sunday by the llness of her brother. Mr. and Mrs. Frank E. Baker left Monday for ther camp at Rockahema Mss Jance Bther, a student of R. for a two weeks huntng trp. C. I. spent the week-end wth her Mrs. Frank Berry and Mrs. John frend, Mss Rena Astle. Roach of Island Falls were week-end Mss Dorothy Hatfeld has resgned guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Crandall. her poston wth Rush Brothers n Mrs. Estelle G. Martn of Albany, Mllnocket and wll spend a few N. Y., who has been vstng n Aroostook County snce June, was a weeks wth her mother, Mrs. Hatte Hatfeld. passenger on Wednesday nght s Pullman for Natck, Mass, where she expects to vst for two weeks before... I..... Subscrbers should bear n mnd that all subscrptons are payable n advance and the paper wll be dscontnued at expraton. Notce of such expraton wll be sent out the Frst of each month. Mr. and Mrs. Alton Ttcomb, Sade and Ralph Crosby of Houlton. The OX BOW other one was Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Eaton Smth On Frday 61 last week a pen«was Adams of Houlton, Mr. and Mrs. Basl returnng home. held n honor of Mss Faye Stevens The followng pctures wll be The home of Mr. and Mrs. S. H. Adams and D. F. Adams and famly. of Houlton who Is vstng her mother screened at the Martn Theatre ths Smth was the scene of a pretty wed- Kenneth M. McIntosh Mrs. Ells, on the cottage grounds of. week, as follows: Conway Tearle n JI dng on Wednesday evenng, Sopt. 28. Many hearts were saddened by the Mr. and Mrs. Hram J. Smth. There! Socety Snobs Tuesday nght; Babe when ther daughter Josephne Ethel death of Kenneth M. McIntosh, one was a large attendance of the frends ; Ruth, who has made 58 home runs n became the brde of Lester G. Eaton, of Lttleton s most respected and and neghbors and everybody reported a most enoyable tme. pcture, Headng Home Wednesday ths town. The ceremony was per mornng, Sept. 30th, after a lngerng! base ball and one bg ht n the son of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Eaton of prosperous farmers, early Frday nght; George Walsh n a mle a formed by Rev. H. H. Cosman, the llness of many months. For the past LUDLOW! mnute drama The Plunger Frday sngle rng servce beng used. The few weeks he was thought to be ganng, but pneumona developed and he Schools began Monday, Oct. 3.! nght; Forbdden Frut, Saturday weddng march was played by Mss Mr. Wllam Hand spent last week I nght. Marred women, sngle men, Dolly Hogan, a nece of the groom. was too weak to resst the dsease. wth hs sster Mrs. Anne McGown. sngle women, marred men all have The couple were attended by Mss He was born n Rchmond, N. B. 38 Mss Mary Hand has accepted a ; ther problems. But the problem of Leota Smth, a sster of the brde, years ago, son of the late George L. poston as teacher n the Brtten the marred woman whose heart has as brdesmad, and Mr. Forest Smth and Lousa McIntosh. answered the call of another not her of Patten, a cousn of the brde, as On Aprl 9, 1908, he was unted n school n Montcello. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Thompson and! husband, has the greatest problem of best man.! marrage to Vola M. Porter of Houlton. To ths unon 6 chldren were Mr. and Mrs. John Mddleton motored all lfe s complex condtons to solve. The brde was becomngly attred n to Patten and Sherman Sunday. See how t was solved for Mary whte georgette and carred a bouquet} born, 5 of whom are lvng. Mrs. F. L. Atherton and Mrs. W. T. Maddock n Cecl B. DeMlle s latest of whte roses and ferns. The brdes Besdes the wdow and chldren he Montgomery of Woodstock, N. B.' and greatest drama of marred lfe, mad wore a gown of pnk georgette leaves to mourn ther loss, an aged spent last week wth ther cousn, Forbdden Frut. and carred a bouquet of pnk roses. mother, on brother Edward, and one A weddng recepton was held after sster, Mrs. Benamn Carson of Houlton to whom the sympathy of the Mrs. Wllam Bagley. 1 the ceremony. The present were useful and many, expressng the hgh re communty s extended. Mr. and Mrs. James Longstaff and 1 UNNEUS chldren Leland and Irene were dn-i ner guests of Mr. and Mrs. Fr?d! Mr. Carl Loge left last Wednesday gard and best wshes of ther many Realzng that he could not lve long, Moores of New Lmerck, Sunday. to attend Colby College. frends. he had hs busness affars attended Mss Faye Thompson and Mrs. John Mr. and Mrs. Ots Bther and son Among the out of town guests to and made all arrangements for hs A. Crawford and chldren John and Mlean were n Danforth Sunday. present were: Mr. and Mrs. Reed funeral servces, and trustng n the Marore of Houlton were week-end Mr. Allen McQuarre of Hodgdon McIntyre, Mr. and Mrs. Baley, Mrs. Savor, Who loved us and gave Hmself for us he passed peacefully Earl Cates, Mss Geneva Cates, Mss guests of Mrs. R. Morley Flemng of Jose Grant, Mss Eva Brawn, Mss away. Debec, N. B. He was a member of Houlton lodge of Odd Fellows and also a member of EAST HODGDON Mrs. Herbert Crane was the guest of her three daughters n Houlton last week. Mrs. Susan Varney of Houlton was the week-end guest of Mrs. Mles Smth. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Cox were the gueate of Mr. and Mrs. Blan Lncoln Sunday. Mss Nelle Boardman of Canterbury, N. B. was the guest of her sster, Mrs. Jasper Crane. Mr. Perry Brown, son Wllam and daughter Lllan were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Wnfleld Scott, Hodgdon, Sunday. The schools n ths place commenced Mss Nancy Stewart s buldng a Monday, Oct. 2. The teachers are new home at Lnneus Corner near Roy Barton, Mss Clara Ingraham Byron Bther s home. and Mss Maud Anderson. Mrs. H. J. Ruth, son Shrley, daughter Mss Helen and Mrs. Fay Hatfeld Dr. Nelson Grant, Mrs. Grant and two daughters of Woodstock and Mr., autoed to Patten last Sunday. and Mrs. Brown of Oakfeld were the Mr. Henry Adams, son Jewett and guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Grant, H. E. Kmball were n Kngman last Sunday. Sunday to see Harry F. Kmball. The frends of Mr. Ben. Barton are Mss Maron French of Houlton sorry to have hm leave them. He spent several days here last week s gong to New York to study n a relgous school there. We wsh hm success. P HODGDON Mrs. W. A. Gerow s spendng a few weeks n town. Mr. Walter Cone of Portland s spendng a few days n town. Mr. 8. E. Taylor nas returned from vstng n Northern Aroostook. Mrs. Moody Gerow and daughter of Houlton were n town last week. Mrs. Lynwood Rhoda has returned from vstng n Provdence, R. I. The 8wathmore Chautauqua wll open at Hodgdon Mlls, Oct. 13th. Mrs. Frank Howard and Mrs. Beecher Howard were n Carbou Frday. A young her arrved at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Chester Nckerson Saturday evenng. Mr. and Mrs. E. M. Crosby of Camden, Me. are the guests of Rev. and Mrs. G. L. Pressey. Mr. and Mrs. T. W. McDonald and Mr. and Mrs. Bben Hunter spent the week-end n East Cornth. Mr. Hudson Green and hs mother Mrs. Charles Green were on an auto.trp to Fredercton last week. A recepton was gven Rev. D. A. MacKnnon and famly at the M. M. hall on Monday evenng and was largely attended. Ther many frends regret that they are to leave here. r LETTER B Mr. and Mrs. George Brown of Dan-»rth were callers n ths twn one day kst week. Mrs. Sarah Wnshp of Houlton pent a few days last week wth Mrs.. F. Rugan. Mss Frances Gardner of Houlton pent Sunday wth her mother, Mrs. I eorga Gardner. Mr. and Mrs. George Carpenter pent Sunday wth Mr. and M rs.; [oward Webb of Foxcroft. Ambrose Hagerman of Bear Island.. B. was the guest of hs sster Mrs. Ifred Mtchell on Sunday., Mr. and Mrs. Kngman Snell an d, unfy of Westfeld spent Sunday wth Is mother, Mrs. H. C. Snell.! Frank Carpenter of Houlton was le guest of hs brother T. J. Carpen- >r for several days last week. Mr. and Mrs. James Murche of, odgdon were week-end guests of her Brents, Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Carpenter. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Ftzpatrck ere the guests of Mr. and Mrs. eorge Scott of Woodstock on Sun-»y. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carpenter, T. J. arpenter and Mr. and Mrs. James urchle spent Sunday wth relatves Oakfeld. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams, Mr. and rs. Elmer Bragan and Mss Wlde Sevens were In New Lmerck Wed-»aday evenng to attend the weddng tmiss Josephne Smth and Lester a ton. OAKFIELD s. H. T. Astle spent the week frends In Bangor. a. Guy M. Connors was a busness r n Houlton Saturday. J. S. Lougee s buldng a new ge for hs motor trucks. A1 Gould of Presque Isle was sness caller n town Saturday. Bert PettenglU of Island Falls a busness caller n town Saturss Mary Callaghan, Prncpal of taton school, spent Sunday wth parents n Houlton.. and Mrs. Irvng McFarJan motor- \ ITCH? Ik* U M tb M t tu tob, l*«na Rtagwona,T«M«r or oth*r l* h- - - gkta Rm w. Try ths losrtm. It. A. Barker A Co.. Oskflsld, Mane spent Sunday n town wth frends. Mrs. Jewett Adams and son spent last Frday n Houlton wth relatves. Mss Emma Bther spent last Frday wth Mrs. H. E. Kmball of Houlton. Mr. W alter Tyrell sold hs home place to Mr. Colby Gberson on Monday. Marred n Woodstock one day last week, Mr. Slas Hardy and Mss Alce Alexander. Mrs. James Shannan of Mattawankeag s vstng her brother, Mr. Henry McFadden. Mr. and Mrs. Byron McQuarre and baby of Hodgdon spent Sunday here wth relatves. Mrs. Blanche Black went to Houlton Monday where she wll sew wth Mss Anne Hawkes. wth Mr. and Mrs. Wlbur Bther. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stmson and Mss Maron French of Houlton were n town Monday callng on frends. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stephenson of Crescent Park were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Garfeld Burton one day last week. Mrs. Eunce Lyons and daughter Mss Dorothy of Houlton spent Sunday wth Mrs. Lyons father, Mr. L. O. Sawyer. Mrs. Byron Stewart and three chldren and Mrs. H. E. Kmball of Houlton were Sunday guests of Mrs. Henry Adams. Mr. and Mrs. John K. Henderson, son Leon and baby and Mrs. Elza Stewart of Foxcroft Road were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Claud Ruth. NEW LIMERICK Mr. Lee Bshop lost a valuable horse last week. Mrs. W. C. Hand spent Thursday n Houlton wth Mrs. Agnes Pond. ^ Beatrce Pond, Houlton; Mr. and Mrs. Robert O. Lovely, Lncoln; Mr. and Mrs. John Webb, Mrs. Sdney Webb, Mrs. Ray Colson, Mrs. Harold Hoar. Island Falls; Mss Vvan Mullen, Mr. George Mullen, Mr. Albert Mlls, Fort Kent; Mss Dorothy Hatfeld, Mr. Harry Hope, Mr. and Mrs. Harley Eaton, Mllnocket; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Bragan, Mss Wlda Stevens, Ludlow. LITTLETON Mr. C. B. Porter s havng green peas out of hs garden n October. Mrs. Amanda Bubar. who has been ll, s now able to be out of doors. Mrs. Allson Wolverton, who was very ll wth the prevalng epdemc, s better. Mrs. Wm. Carson s enoyng a vacaton wth frends n Campbello and Fredercton, N. B. Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Robnson and Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Crane motored to Wndsor. N. B. on Sunday to vst relatves. Mr. and Mrs. E. B. Llley returned Saturday from Dyer Brook where they were the guests of relatves for the past week. Roland, four year old son of Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Shaw, fell whle play- ng, breakng hs leg. He s reported ( to be ganng. There wll be servces at the U. B. church next Sunday conducted by Rev. H. R. Bell of Centervlle, N. B. Everybody welcome to these servces. Mss Alta Tracy left ths week to teach n the graded schools of Oakfeld. Mss Shrley Hare and Mss Money hack wthout queston f H UNT'S G U A R A N T E E D SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES (Hunt's Salve and Soap),fal n ( the treatment of Itch, Bcsema, Rnsworm,Tetterorotherltcbn skn dseases. Try the treatment at our rsk. L. A. Barker A Co., Oakfeld, Mane sell Furnture, Stoves and Panos cheaper than any store n Eastern M ane because w e pay no rent and our costs of dong busness are much lower J. E. Tarbell & Sons So well shaped for Parng Sm yrna Mlls, M ane Your hands don't tre usng a parng knfe that s correctly shaped. Keen, lastng edges make work faster and easer. For parng and cuttng up frut and vegetables for cannng get a Wnchester knfe. It wll save tme and labor. Other W nchester Knves for Every Use L. A. Barker Company t h f Oakfeld, M ane (MCff 5T R s t o r e MtnmnlluMHmnmnummmmmmMmmHmmmum Paulne Campbell to teach n Montcello. Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Ttcomb and daughter Mabel recently returned from vstng frends n Bear Island, N. B. Whle away they attended the Fredercton Far. Newell Ttcomb moved ths week to hs farm home known as the Cornelus Crosby place. The house has been thoroughly renovated and makes a very cozy home. Two partes who recently enoyed a chcken stew near Dunbar Hll were: Mr. and Mrs. A. Z. McBrde. Mr. and Mrs. I. S. Atherton, Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Ttcomb, Gladys and Mabel Ttcomb, Mr. and Mrs. Newell Ttcomb Week of Oct. 3,1921 Tem ple Theatre WEDNESDAY M AE MURRAY n her latest Paramount The Glded L lly A pcture that does not depend wholly on the Star. The pcture s elaborate and spectacular. Also Harold Lloyd n "T h e T p and H earst News. THURSDAY SESSUE HAYAKAWA n W here Lghts are Low Taken from Fast s Fast, a thrllng melodrama of Chnatown; f you need a thrll here you are. Also two reel comedy "T h e B lzza rd and Burton Holmes Travelogue. FRID A Y W IL L IA M F A R N U M n hs newest.. release Hs Greatest Sacrfce A strong human nterest drama where sn brngs ts own punshment, also comedy "T h e Tw o Fsted Judge and " W a te r Babes SATURDAY E. K. L IN C O LN n Under Crmson Skes A pcture that wll please, wth a popular star, also Fox two reel Sunshne Comedy and M u tt & Jeff n ther funny cartoons Houlton Grange. Carmchael sang sweetly Abde Wth Funeral servces n charge of Frank Me and Asleep n Jesus. The floral Dunn were held Sunday afternoon at offerngs were many and beautful. 2 o clock. Prayer was offered and There was a large attendance of words of comfort spoken to the mournng ones by Rev. A. M. Thompson, neghbors and frends besdes many members of the Houlton lodge of Odd pastor of the Congregatonal church at Houlton. Fellows who conducted bural servces at the grave n the North road Mrs. J. D. Ross and Mrs. Waldo r cemetery r n Lttleton. o Alumnum Week October 3 to 8 W onderful sample A $1.10 Pan for Ths s the fnest and most mod- f. ern pece of Alumnum made.!* ' We have three hundred for Mrro Week. New heat resstng hollow handle lfe long qualty, and so handy that every home should possess several. Don t fal to call and get yours durng Mrro Week. m m n o A L U M I N U M Reflects Good Housekeepng See our assortment of ths lead- J * ng hgh grade lne. There s"* nothng better than Mrro made, and our lne s complete from the smallest cup to the largest roaster. We are Headquarters for Alumnum goods, and especally nvte you to vst us durng Mrro Week. A ll Mrro W a re now at new lower p rc e s Putnam Hardware Co. M ark et Square Houlton, M an e ntfffrftfmfnfdrttn MmmMnmmnHmMnmmnHMHmHH'numMmmmMmtmmmmmmm mmmmmm Fall Suts IllllllllllllllllllllltlJIIIU IIfc On W e are the Frst to A n n o u n ce a Great Reducton Mt m m m 11n tfm ff f n l fn tn n Mn f m ttm n m m ttttn n f tttn tt n t m m m tuf l Always havng the nterest of our customers at heart, we take pleasure n announcng a radcal reducton on our Kal Suts. If you have not already purchased, ths s a great opportunty for you to save money. M11M11MII n IMI n 1111» M H111H1111 f: 1111M1111 * IMI r * 11 [ 111M1111IIIH11 III IMII M MIMIM Lt Suts R edu ced as Follows $55.00 Suts made n Trcotnes or Velours- reduced $ 4 ft.50 to $45.00 Suts, made n Trcotnes or Velours, reduced to w w $40.00 Suts, made n Trcotnes or Velours, reduced to $ftft $35.00 Suts n Trcotne, Velour- Oxfords, reduced t o $ ft T > $30.00 Suts n Trcotne, Velour Oxfords, reduced to $ ftft n hm n 111; m n n m MUM n h 111 m m m m 11 m m u m 11 h h n h m um ua.m l Varety Value Servce Style $25.00 Suts n Serges, Velours, Oxfords, reduced to $4 ft We earnestly advse you to do J shoppng at the store where you can save money. Not wsh- f ng to brag too much about our merchandse, whch mght gve 1 you the mpresson that all we f say s paper talk, we would knd- ly request that you pay us a vst and see for yourself some of 1 these money savng values. J o e Bernsten Everythng for Women and Chldren M arket Square lllllllllllllllltlllllluiiiim.tm tm m M m m u t m M tf t t t m m n x n f n H t m t f u ^ Houlton, M ane

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