COURT ST. BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday was Rally Day at the First

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1 N ow s the Tme to Plan That Huntng Trp Come to Aroostook You Can Get Supples at Houlton HOULTON TIMES SHIRE TOWN OF AROOSTOOK AROOSTOOK COUNT) VOL. L X I HOULTON, MAINE, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 THE POTATO,n p I prmn SITUATION TO DATE A* t. I. \L lo The government crop forecast ssued Oct. 1st, shows that the potato crop In the Unted States s 345,844,000! bushels, last year the estmate was bu., an average for 5 years 1916*1919 was 371,283,000 bu.! The October forecast for Mane s bu. Last year t w a s1 THE SHORT END OF 58-0 SCORE COURT ST. BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday was Rally Day at the Frst WE HAVE WITH US Under hs pcture on the edtoral page and under the capton We Have Baptst church and large audences were present at all of the servces.! Wth Us", the Portland Express has At the Sunday school hour 377 gather- the followng to say about Hon. Frank ed n the varous classes and depart-, Peabody: ments and later at the call of Super- It s only far to say that the man ntemlent John B. Maxell all of them wth us today s one of the bg men of assembled n the audtorum for, be he State, even though le Is a Demo-.' crat. He s a member of the State Mlnocket Runs Away wth promoton exercses as the classes of Hghway Commsson, havng been apgradnates were promoted from on e! ponted by former Clovernor Curts. The total shpments n the U. S. Locals Dufour Stars grade to the next hgher Mr. Peabody was born n New Bruns bu. ; for Saturday, Oct. 8, was 1632 cars, The scholars showed that wse and wck but moved to Houlton, Mane. of whch Mane shpped 139 cars. for Rcker ' when he was 14 years old. He refathful work had been done by ther ceved hs educaton n the publc Durng the past week the bulk of teachers as they rected ther parts, schools there and at Rcker Classcal the potato movement was prncpally Don Cody brought hs football The youngest scholars present w ere! Insttute. He took up the nsurance tor storage and seed contracts. Tradng for table use s practcally a t'a last Frday for a lttle argument on Chauncy Benn and Alton V ernon, a Democrat he has always taken a warrors from Mlnocket to Houlton 1. stress - ; Madelne Marenp ROKers Rogers, Wllam u ua! of busnes Donne]1 aild and ^ a Peabody member n of Houlton. the frm 1the grdron wth the Rcker eleven Ttcomb. who were wheeled to the lvely nterest n State and natonal standstll, th maorty of growers * had <>Jear- front bv ther mothers where they poltcs and he was a member of Govholdng buyors for are a payng ^ per J Ilred up e W M onto.he platform and! ornor_plasted'a Councl. He has Local also bbl a total o f,58 talles aganst R c k e r ' s «aoe<l the audence whle Mrs. Henry I^ u f o r a numbetof yetrs. He'ls a The N, Y. Produce News says: clean slate n a game that was some- Nelson rected some verses ap- Mason and Odd Fellow and we mght Tradng for the week was qute unsatsfactory. The absence of the Although outplayed durng the four ever tla8s of lades taught by Leonard! Ikes hn n Houlton and he has many what of a rout for the locals. Proprate to babyhood. The What-so- add a good fellow, too, for everybody Jewsh element was much felt. Arrvals frst of the week were not ther hardest and durng the last class of men taught by the pastor, perods, the boys from the hll fought Berry had 66 present, and the Ford Jfnen s roug ou the state- ' LeuL Edmund Kdder and hs heavy, accumulated from day to day perod held twce for downs. numbered 56. mother Mrs. Geneva Kdder left Monday, (lav) Mrs. ^lra Kdder Kdder for for h&r h^r home n In the absence of demand and prces In the frst quarter the mll town. Rev. Melvlle A. Shafer of Wrentham, favored the buyers. Most of the lads ran up 20 ponts wthout an! Mass., who s vstng Mr. and Mrs Annapols and Leut. Kdder to resume.. l T, Aurne <he argument. They seemed able to gan S. R- Parks for a few days, preached. bs nava dutes. He expects to be grecent ^ waa dug and shpped more Iground at wll through the Rcker a strong sermon n the: evenng whch ; statoned at Charleston. S. C. durng or leas hot off weather n condton, and b recevers g 1,, lne and around the end. - The frst was ~ much " enoyed by the large the wntet. Mrs. Edmund Kdder wll tou^down came n the frst few audence present. on her husband later. mnutes of play. After Smon fal were compelled to keep stock movng wthout regard to prces. Mane potatoes were nvarably large and many hollow n the center, whch had a depressng effect on the value and prces ranged per 165 lb. bag whle small peddlng sales of closely graded stock went up to Hate* stock n 150 lb. bags sold , a few lots as hgh as $ State potatoes n moderate supply and workng out at , rarely $3.50 ed to gan around rght end two frst downs n a row were made through the Rcker lne and one around left end, and then Ellot traveled rght through the center for the frst touchdown whch Therrault kcked. Rcker receved the kckoff and Berry uggled and then carred t back ten yards. After beng held for downs Berry was forced to kck to Ellott per 165 lb. bag. Jersey long potatoes who duplcated hs performance and not so plentful, but movng slowly n sympathy wth the general market at punctured the Rcker defense for a touchdown, Terrault falng to kck, per 160 lb. bag. Long Island A fumble under the shadow of the potatoes arrvng sparngly as yet as farmers are demandng $1.40 bu. f. o. b. cars and most of those comng now the ball and Therrault carred t are gong Into specal trade channels through for the thrd counter and o r ) then kcked the goal. The quarter GOVERNOR BAXTER TO VISIT AROOSTOOK Governor Percval Baxter s to vst Aroostook County next week. The Governor had planned to make a trp nto Aroostook n connecton wth hs vst to the Presque Isle Far, but was forced to postpone hs trp on account of the death of hs sster. The ntnerary n Aroostook s gven as follows. Tuesday, October 18 Slver Rdge 3.40 Island Falls 4.25 Smyrna Mlls 5.30 lad low Houlton 6.50 ATTRACTION OF AROOSTOOK SPUDS Some years ago a Presque Isle lady who was passng through Phladelpha. went nto a ralroad restaurant! between trans to get a meal. At the next table to the one she sat down at were vwo men, apparently of the Istrrng busness type one meets n travellng Ther order had ust been brought n and placed on the table, the order ncludng two bg, soggy, sad-eyed and dyspeptc lookng potatoes, such as Aroostook folks know nothng of. but whch are only too numerous n most other sectons. Sad one of the Phladelpha bus- ness men to the other, That s what they call potatoes down here n Penn AROOSTOOK T. & T. T. CO. TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE Employees to Demonstrate Workng of System- Publc Invted TIMES Aprl 13, 1860 To December 27, HD6 No. 41 HORSE NOTES OF INTEREST ; TO HOULTON READERS Aroostook frends of the former Ft. Farfeld traner G. W. Mont Gerow wll be pleased to learn that he has had a very successful season wth the horses of the Newport Stock Farm, Newport, Vt. wrhere he s now located. Wth a stable of young horses all elgble to the slow classes, exceptng one, he won four out of seven races contested at Lancaster, N. H. and three out of seven on the card at Barton. Vt. That the publc may become more 1 Hs star performer s the green famlar wth the work and condtons Pacer Amercan Harvester wth whch of the telephone, the week begnnng: ke lowered the track record of the Oct. 17 from 2 to 5 p. m. each day mle track at Barton, Vt. to has been assgned as Vstng Week 2.08%. n the Houlton dstrct. Other good wnners n hs strng Durng ths week all telephone are Peter Bnaron 2.13%, Maor users are most cordally nvted to Frsco 2.16%, Red Moko 2.17)4, Ruby vst and nspect the Houlton Ex- Frsco, Peter Isle and Lockwood. At change.! Woodstock, Vt. races Sept. 29, drv* Employees wll demonstrate to ther ng Peter Bnaron to frst money In guests many of the detals of ap- straght heats n the 2.12 pace, Maor paratus and methods n operatng Frsco to frst money n straght heats whch wll be of nterest and materal n the 2.20 pace, Dan Sper second assstance to both subscrbers and place n the 2.24 trot and Red Moko employees of the company n creatng! thrd place n the 2.17 pace. In th«hgher effcency n servce event he broke the track record Whle certan days have been, steppng n 2.12%, but later n the day assgned to sut the convenence of another drver n an exhbton mle varous organzatons, the general aganst tme went the twce around publc ndvdually wll be welcomed n at any tme whch may be most convenent. The program arranged s as follows: Explan the swtchboard by usng two telephones. Supervsory lghts. Proper way to recall operator. Busy test. Dvded rngng. Use of ack markers and number change cards. Emergency calls. Harry Nevers par of trotters Alfred Kng and the three year old Mss Talbot struck hot company n ther races at Brockton. The bg purses had attracted some of the very best speed n the country. The wnner of the three year old class takng a mark of 2.11ty.! In Alfred Kng s race whch was won by the Grand Crcut w nner «; Grace Dawn. two heats were trotted n 2.10% and 2.10%. Red Hanfn Fre alarm. was at Brockton wth the Acker Out of order cords. horses Bngen Worthy and Peter How the operator releves another., Verde that were both wnners at Houl Toll ton durng the past summer. Each at $ per 166 lb. barrel Tmng tckets Wednesday, October 19 horse trotted a credtable race but sack. closed wth Mlnocket leadng Routng calls. Lttleton was outsde the money n fast tme p. m. After Dufour and Berry ganed all Method of handlng nward calls. Dr. J. A. Donovan whle gong up Montcello 1.50* sylvana. They are not real potatoes. at all. The only real and genu star money wnner of the Nevers Peter Setzer. 2.12%, that. was the the ground they were physcally able Peg count showng howr many calls Man street n hs car Frday was Brdgewater 2.30 to Rcker lost the ball on downs are handled per hour. ran nto by a car comng out»of Mars Hll 3.10 ne potatoes you get are grown up n stable n 1920 but faled to race up and Smon for Mlnocket reeled off Schedule of operators hours showng how tme s covered. W nter street and hs car was somewhat damaged. The party n the Easton 4.05 Aroostook County, Mane. Why (and to expectatons n 1921, has been sold a pretty forty yard run to a touchdown around rght end. Therrault Presque Isle 4.40 here the remnscence caused the potato-hungry man to smack hs lps) to Coln McKense. Turo, Nova Scota. other car speeded up and soon dsappeared, but the doctor got hs Dufour kcked off to Ellot who Thursday, October 20 Cups, rredene cabnets, lockers. Fort Farfeld kcked Servce crtcsms. Whle at Brockton. Traner Nevers Rest room. why. those Aroostook spuds crack purchased of the Oakhurst Farm open ther ackets when they are Mass, the two year old chestnut flly number and he s known so wll sarrled back ten yards to a fumble, Lmestone 8.30 Operators benefts. cooked, and ther whte, mealy nsdes have a fner flavor than any thrd n 2.18 n the two year old trot Bonne Grl, record 2.26, that fnshed probably be called upon to settle. 'on <tbe tackle. Smon recovered and ICarbou S 9.20 Vatng schedule for the week: wth Wtham tore off ffteen yards New Sweden Monday. General. frut you ever tasted. I m gong up. tng class. SEMIANNUAL MEETING apece on the next two plays. Wth Stockholm Tuesday, Rotary Club 2 p. m. to 4 of Aroostook county ball In the center of the feld Therrault carred t down by four straght Van Buren to Northern Mane huntng ths fall,' p. m. R. C. I. Senors 4 p. m. to 5.30 and you'd better come along and f! AROOSTOOK ANTI Grand Isle 3.20 p. m. p. m. ; you don't get a moose or deer you ll MEDICAL ASSOCIATION rushes to and across the goal lne Madwaska 4.10 Wednesday. Merchants Assn. 2 p. ' TUBERCULOSIS ASSOCIA- ' The sem-annual meetng of the kckng the goal. French vlle get the next best thng to t, some of! 5.10 m. to 4 p. m. H. H. S. Senors 4 p. m. ->Arooetook County Medcal Assocaton 1 Wtham carred Dufour s kck back Fort Kent those blue-blooded Aroostook pota- TION MEETS HERE 6.30 to 5.30 p. m.! toes rght out of the hll. was held n Houlton yesterday afternoon at whch there were present regstered ffteen around the end. Solder Pond S.oo to the thrty yard lne and then Ellot Frday, October 21 ' Thursday, Women's Club, 2 A specal meetng of the Aroostook More conversaton followed p. m. anent! t0 4 p. m. Ant-Tuberculoss Assocaton affltle nducements of a trp to Aroostook n quest of moose, deer and po- ffteen practcng physcans from all Smon took the ball on the next play Ragle Lake S.45 Frday. Mnsteral Assocaton. of the annual meetng, was held at over the county. The meetng was around rght end for a touchdown Wntervlle 9.30 Saturday, Grange Day. the offce of Hon. E. L. Cleveland, tatoes, and tht concluson of t wras Houlton, presdent of the assocaton, held n the lbrary of the Court House ; after a ffty-fve yard run. Therrault Portage The other exchanges n the county that both men agreed to make the Frday forenoon, September 30, wth and was followed by an nform al! kcked and the -half closed wth the Ashland wll also entertan vstors wth a Northern Mane trp. -Star-Herald. Presdent Cleveland n the char. banquet at the Snell House, at whch ; score, Mlnocket 40 Rcker 0. program of a smlar nature. It was voted to have the Aroostook the members read papers and there ( In the thrd quarter the Mlnocket RIDER OF THE KING LOG was a general dscusson. team was able to gan ground around Fre n Woodstock early Frday Ant-Tuberculoss Assocaton afflate wth the Mane Publc Health As- There s comng to the Dream Those present were: Doctors F. EJ *be end and through the lne, hut mornng destroyed the roof and badly theater on Tuesday, October IS. Bennett, Presque Isle; P. E. Glbert,1when they reached the goal lne Rc a damaged...socaton, for a perod of one vear, all pcture that wll nterest all Man* amagefl the lvery stable of Gallagher! money,.asej by or for the Aroostook Br >ros. Fortunately there was no wnd. \ - - people. The Rder of the Kng Log" and by rapd work the fremen were s the name of the producton. able to keep the blaze confned to under rontrol. Ashland; H. E. Small, Fort Farfeld; F. W. Tarbell, Smyrna Mlls; H. F. Kallock, Fort Farfeld; P. F. Thompson, Portland; W. E. Sncock, Carbou; G. A. Schneder, Island Falls and F. W. Mann, J. G. Potter, P. M. to kck ker stffened and held for downs. Falng to gan Dufour kcked ffteen yards to Therrault who carred back to the fve yard lne and on the next play went over the goal lne falng Ward, J. A. Donovan, T. S. Dckson Dufour saved another touchdown as and F. W. Mtchell, all of Houlton. the quarter ended by nalng Ellot! after a thrty yard gan headed for Mrs. Forest Randall of West Buxton' the S al Posts, s spendng ths mopths wth her Mlnocket tred an aeral game at parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Trefry the openng of the last quarter, but on Frankln Avenue. two attempts were ncomplete and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Schaffner of Maron, Oho, who have been n town for the past two weeks to attend the Schaffner-Buzzell weddng, have returned to ther home by tran. They wll be oned n New York by Mr. and Mrs. Wlfred Schaffner, who are on ther weddng trp to Quebec and from the metropols they wll return home by car. 'then Rcker held for downs. Dufour ganed thrty yards on two plays but fumbled on the last one and Terrault Irecovered and then ganed fve through : center on the next play. Ellot! carred the ovod thrty-fve yards around rght end for another touchdown wch Terrault faled to kck, Rcker receved and Dufour carred hack twenty. On the next two plays he ganed eght more hut the follow An old famly Bble known to be ng two were losses and Mlnocket over one hundred and ffty years orp took the ball. An ncomplete puss was brought nto the TIMES offce and a loss accounted for two downs ths week. The book s the property and then Terrault ganed fve through of Norrs Estabrookes and was gven center. Wtham made several attempts and fnally succeeded n get to hm by hs relatves and has been, handed down from generaton t o 1 tng hs only touchdown of the game generaton n the Estabrookes famly. on a thrty yard aunt, Therrault fal- It was orgnally the property of hs ng to kck as the whstle blew. f great-great-grandparents. For Rcker Dufour was the works, J Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Tracey and Mr. playng a star game of good football, and Mrs. Albert Spnney motored to ganng ground and repeatedly savng Houlton Sunday from Bangor. They Rcker's goal lne. Berry dd a good were accompaned by Mrs. Geo. ob n the backfeld untl hs nurv put Cressey who has been spendng the 1hm on the s(le,n(ls month there. 4Wrs. Tracy (Florence lott) had planned to reman n town for a week, but an accdent on the road In whch%she was cut about the face by broken glasses made t necessary for her to return home The Carleton Sentnel has the followng tem n last week s Issue: Thanksgvng day wll fall on Nov. 7 ths year. By a recent act of For Mlnocket Terrault. was the bg fgure nsofar as scorng was concerned. He ganed most of the ground for the vstors wth Smon showng good form on broken feld runnng. Ellott was' also among those present wth Wtham. The summary: Rcker (0) Mlnocket (58) Bther LE Rush Loge LT Russel! Collns LG Mchaud Henderson C Wallace Qunt * RG Wyman Parlament t has been decded to commemorate Armstce Day and Thanksgvng at the same tme n the futurlo, and commencng ths year the change wll come about. Thanksgvng Day wll be celebrated for the Smth RE Bouchard Grant RT Bartlett future on the Monday of the week n Barnes Q Wtham arhleh Armstce Day, Nov. 11, falls. Tracy LHB J. Smon CHURCH NOTICE Chrstan Scence church, comer Mltary and Hgh streets. Sunday mornng servce at 11 a. m. Subect for Oct. 16th: Doctrne of Atonement. Sunday school at 11 a. m. Wednesday evenng Testmonal meetng at 7.3,0 p. n. Dufour RUB Derry FB Touchdowns - Ellot Smon 2, Wt.ham 1. touchdown Therrault Deasy. Umpre Ellot, man Cotton. Tmers Keyes. Ellott Terrault. Terrault 3. Goals f rorn 4. Referee. Head lne'-- Chapman and NEWSPAPER G. W. SULLEY One of the best thngs along educa tonal lnes and whch has secured a great deal of commendable publcty from newspapers and letters of endorsement from Busness Organzatons n the largest ctes, s the lecture and movng pctures on Retal Merchandsng that s beng sent out by The Natonal Cash Regster Company of Dayton, Oho. The Chamber of Commerce has been able to secure ths entertanment for the beneft of t was wrtten by a Mane author. Holman Day. staged n Mane, concerns a Mane1 ndustry and there are several promnent Mane people n the east. There1 are several scent's of the Colby College- campus n tl-* pcture* whch s a vrh* and pcturesque drama of the* outdoors from the* pen of a master wrtf*r. Te' wrter s calleel one of the most powerful fgures n contemporary ; fcton and well In* deserves the* ttle*. ADVER ' I h merchant - and.-le k! a nd wll he present«*d at l.'al School Tuesday s. nt s o'clock. I bullon 1on It up )g. ()< :. Tn* ttle of tn* pctures s 'Gettng the Most Out of Retalng. ' Tn* flm story s one of tho cleverest peces of work ever produced coverng retal merchandsng. The wde-awake busness man of to Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Parks, Green street, are entertanng ths week a party of frends and relatves from Worcester, Mass.. whch ncludes Mrs. J. J. Carpenter, Mrs. Frances Adams. Mrs. Elzabeth Holden and Mr. Leroy Holden. Assocaton outsde of the sale of Red Cross seals to be spent by the Assocaton n Aroostook, and the Assocaton to have the rght to wthdraw from the State Assocaton at any tme. Park at an Old Home Week celebraton. The aeronaut had been badly sel, Stockholm; Dr. George W. Upton, day s eager to keep pare wth the hnt n the flght the day prevous,., Smyrna; Mrs. Howard Perce. Mars latest deas of storekeepng and better deas n merrhandsng, and these landng n the mddle of Pleasant, Hll: Davd Getchell. Lmestone; street n front of tn* house now George Fogeln. New Sweden: Mrs. pctures and lecture come to our owned by Frank Clark. Van was W. S. Davdson, Fort Farfeld; Mrs. town at an opportune tme, The always lookng for thrlls anyway R. R. Ryder, Carbou; Charles P. lecture covers: Retal Falures and ; as hs stunt of walkng a tght rope Barnes, Houlton; Dr. F. F. Larrather causes; stor organzaton ;! across Grand Falls testfed, and when bee. Washburn; A. F. Kellehor. Fort newspaper advertsng, wndow dsplay; salesmanshp; system n retal made applcaton to take the flght. Mss Edth F. Knght was re-eect- le learned the* news In* mmedately Kent. busness, and busness Vontrol. The aeronaut demurred for sonu ed dstrct nurse, and also as a rep- Any ok* of these subects would be of great nterest to merchants and clerks. The one n partcular whch should receve favorable consderaton from the busness man today s the value of newspaper advertsng - udcously and constantly used." The lecturer wll gve some useful hnts along these lnes, as well as other phases of effcency methods that wll le helpful to the merchants and clerk. The Natonal Gash Regster Company has long been recognzed as a leader n Communty and Welfare work. A flm showng some of the man features of ths work wll precede the busness lecture. An tem appearng n the Presque! Isle Star-Herald to the effect that Prof. Van Morrll of Grand Falls s, lookng for a locaton to establsh a pant shop n that town wll be of nterest to the many Houlton frends of ths former resdent of ths town. When.Mr. Morrll lved n Houlton Htr years ago he was known as a tght rope walker and an acrobat, of m mean ablty and put on several vaudevlle performances at the old Don theatre. Hs greatest clam to fame came, however, when h* substtuted for the regular aeronaut at a balloon ascenson held n Monument The same offcers ^s those of last year were re-elected, wth a few exceptons. the offcers now beng the followng: Hon. Edward L. Cleveland, Houlton, presdent; C. C, Harvey, Fort Farfeld, secretary; Mrs. Arthur Reynolds, Presque Isle, treasurer; Hon. E. L. Cleveland. Houlton. Dr. F. E. Bennett and Dr. S. W. Boone. Presque Isle. C. C. Harvey. Fort Farfeld, Fol. Delmont E. Emerson. Island Falls. Ma. A. W. Spauldng, Carbou, Dr. F. W..Mann. Houlton. and John B. Roberts, Esq.. Carbou, drectors. The vce presdents are: Mrs. Lala Graves. Presqque Isle; Dr. H. H. Hammond, Van Bnren; Dr. I. E. Glbert, Ashland: Mrs. Wnfred P. Bgelow, Island Falls; Frtz Soule. Smyrna; Mrs. N. C. Martn, Oakfeld; Dr. B. H. Jackson. Brdgewater; N. A. Wes- tme but fnally gave n and nstruct- re-sentat\e of the assocaton to tl ed the amateur as to what be should -'fane Publc Health Assocaton, do. He was to cut loose from tle bag The matter of choosng a person to when tn* gun was fred from' below, superntend th# sale of Red Cross Assurng them that he surely would seals n the county ths fall was nact accordng to nstructons he start- formally left to a commttee conssted up and when the proper heght bg of Mrs. Lala Graves, Mss Knght was reached the gun was fred. But and Mrs. Ivah Waddell, Presque Isle. there was no response from th e balloonst who kept gong hgher and The old tme rvals Rcker and hgher. The man on the ground Houlton Hgh wll meet on the grdron empted hs revolver before the ths afternoon at the Park. The game parachute was seen to leave the s scheduled to start at 3 p. m. The balloon. He alghted safely and stated Hgh School eleven has the edge as that he had seen the St. John rver far as performance goes, but t s valley, but t took more than a usual lkely that the Rcker boys wll take amount of explanng to pay for the a brace after ther overwhelmng thrll he gave the crowd. defeat l# Mlnocket last week.

2 PAOB TWO HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 No one dsputes the rght of the states HOULTON TIMES to legslate for the protecton of Establshed Aprl 13, 1860 women and chldren. The lmtng of A L L T H E HOME NEW S hours of work n hazardous occupatons has been ustfed. But the rght Publshed every Wednesday mornng by the Tmes Publshng Co. of the state to nterfere wth freedom of contract by the adult male ctzen CHA3. H. FOGG, Pres. A Mgr. has always been dsputed. Only n the last few years, when the nter- 8ubscrpton n U. S per year n: pretaton of the consttuton has been advance; n Canada $2.00 n advance Sngle copes fve cents less rgdly observed, has ths been Iconsdered permssble. In the opnon ' of these students of ndustral cond- Advertsng rates based upon guaranteed pad n advance crculaton. Entered at the Post'Offlce at Houlton for cculaton at second-class postal rates A ll Subscrpton are DISCO NTIN U ED at expraton T H E 44-HOUR W EEK The organzed workers of the Unted States havng secured the 48- hour week are now seekng to reduce It stll further by havng Saturday a unversal half-holday, makng a week of fve days of eght hours and one of four. The movement opens for dscusson several ssues of fundamental mportance to all Amercan ndustres and to the entre ctzenshp of the naton. The ndustral nformaton servce traces the story of the work week through the last century, showng how step by step t has been shortened. Our frst mlls, lke those n England, worked for the most part 12 hours a day. Machne producton dd not develop so rapdly here as there, so that the problem of hours of labor dd not attract much attenton untl In the decade that followed there were numerous strkes, especally of carpenters and shpwrghts, for a 10-hour day. The movement for that lmtaton receved mportant mpetus from the decree ssued on the last day of March, 1840, by Presdent Van Buren, provdng that all persons employed on publc works under the mmedate authorty of government departments should be requred to work "only the number of hours prescrbed by the 10-hour system. The Presdent also stated that te shortenng of the work day n ths case dd not "present a ust and proper bass for reducton of wages. There followed a long seres of legslatve acts by the varous states dealng wth hours of labor, healthful condtons of work, and the employment of women and chldren. Through the entre perod the prevalng Industral week has been dmnshed from more than 60 hours! lons also the Amercan worker s more concerned wth wage ncreases than wth the shorter.ng of the work day. However, ths 44-hour movement, dscernble today n many trades and many ctes, nvolves several Questons that must be answered f ndustry s to produce abundantly and effcently. A work day may be too short as well as too long. If the worker goes too long hs effcency lessens; f he does not keep gong long enough hs output lessens. Over fatgue wth the consequent effect upon character and temperament s a recognzed perl. But where does the lne le between the week that s too long and the week that s not long enough? Labor must learn, too, that work s not a knd of unnecessary penalty mposed by the so-called captalstc organzaton of socety on the workers; t s the foundaton of human progress ard that foundaton cannot be overturned or shunted nto acetc and lactc acds. Swamp detrtus s metamorphosed nto horse blankets. Sawdust s made nto syrup and slk fabrc; and the proverbal slk purse has been made from a sow s ear. Wthn twenty-fve years modern santaton has reduced the death rate from more than 17 to less than 12 a thousand n the Unted States; for ths chemcal scence s largely responsble. Let us therefore take off our hat to the chemst. Hs ways may be as nscrutable as hs polytechnc smells are vle. But he gets us somewhere. HAYS, T H E CHEER -UP MAN Postmaster General Wll H. Hays s a very human and therefore a very lkeable man. He radates optmsm and good nature and n sheddng these rays upon the post offce department, the great government busness nsttuton over whch he has supervson, he has popularzed t and at the same tme ncreased ts effcency to a degree that amounts almost to a revoluton. Mr. Burleson was a complete example of what a postmaster general, or any busness executve for that matter, should not be. He regarded labor as a commodty and looked upon the men employed by the department n about the sanft lght that he regarded a cancellaton machne. Red tape and mechancal methods prevaled, and under hm the department was asde. wholly lackng n soul. He gave t ~ to be understood that he was amng H A TS O FF TO T H E C H EM IS T a. efflcencv >ut he dd not get t, The meetng whch brough together for the very good reason that the the leadng chemsts of Europe and methods to be employed n obtanng the Amercas was a notable gatherng effcency from a mechancal contr of men representng a scence vance are precsely the methods not. whch has accounted great achevements to be employed to get t from a body for humanty n every part of of employees. the world from the poles to the The department was n a very bad equator. way as a result of Mr. Burleson s malmanagement. The applcaton of chemstry to agrculture when Mr. Hays took hs has practcally doubled the seat at the postmaster general s desk. food producng power of crop lands, The employees were dsgruntled and and t has brought nto productvty were merely gong through the areas that htherto have borne nothng but tares. Even those same tares n many nstances have been made to yeld gums, fbres and extractves of value to the world. Chemstry has bared many of the secrets of nutrton. Not only has lfe been salvaged thereby, but the span of lfe tself has been lengthened; and the dscovery of the vtamnes has resulted n makng detetcs as much of a scence as s curatve medcne. Chemstry has lfted the practce of medcne from the plane ot emprcsm to that of a scence. The toxns and anttoxns that have re typhod and dphthera from to less than 50. Wthn the decade Jduced ust closed the efforts of organzed scourges to lurkng skulkers are labor would seem to have been h-1 products of the chemcal laboratory, rected chefly towards the establsh-! The employment of arsphenamne as ment of a basc day wth puntve a chemcal reagent rather than as a charges for overtme. The federal medcne has revolutonzed the treatgovernment made no further lmta-! nent of the most horrble dsease ;Won untl 1861 when Congress re-! that for more than four thousand etrlcted the hours n navy yards to years has been the bane of humanty those prevalng n smlar prvate x «etablshments. Then n 1912 the law whd Unacted that every contract to VfetCh the Unted States s a party ofl&all contan a provson that no laborer or mechanc shall be permtted to work more than eght hours everywhere under the sun. It s a trumph of chemstry. For fve centures or more the beautful blue colorng matter derved from a plant, Indgofera anl, has been employed as a textle dye. Half a century ago t was found that anl, or anlne, could be prepared M day. That law has been modfed snce, especally as regards natonal commercally from coal tar. By an emergences. The war labor legslaton s famlar, especally the pass made proftable, and the gates were mproved process the ndustry was age n 916 of the Adamson act. thrown wde open. Today a thousand or more substances necessary lmtng the day of ralway employees l o eght hours. to modern cvlzaton are coal Car. In the man organzed labor has products. They embrace about everyopposed the shortenng of the w ork thng from street pavng to a sugar day by legslaton. It holds that substtute, from medcne to stove protecton by law tends to sap the polsh and from dyestufts to the vtalty of the labor movement and; most destructve of explosves, that a oo consderable transference Next to brans, chemstry won th Of power to State legslaton mght world war. It furnshed the arms, In tme Impose unwelcome lmtatons the ammunton, the dpadly gases. Upon the employee as well as the em-1 the smoke screens and the flammen ployer. Labor, however, always sup-lverfer. Stll more, chemstry has ports a legal short day for employees of the government as a good precedent for prvate establshments. There enters Into the stuaton also the problems havng to do wth the lmtng barrer of the consttuton." promoted the arts of peace. Steel n ts varous alloys of sottness am extreme hardness, _ alumnum, nvar type metal, radum, cellulod and bakelte are born of the t hemc! laboratory. Corncobs are converted motons of dong ther work. The servce was unpopular, because ts patrons found that they were dealng wth a machne, and a machne that was not delverng the goods. The new postmaster general announced that he was gong to humanze the department, and beng, as we have sad a very human man hmself, he knew ust how to go to work to do t. Labor s not a commodty." he sad n hs ntal proclamaton. That dea was abandoned 1921 years ago next Easter. There are 300,000 employees. They have the bran and they have the hand to do the ob well; and they shall have the heart to do t well. We purpose to approach ths matter so that they shall be partners wth us n ths busness. Makng good ths statement, one of the frst thngs done under the new admnstraton was to permt the ralway mal clerks to present certan grevances upon whch a hearng had been refused by the prevous admnstraton. It was found that the requests made could be granted; and complance wth them was met by almost nstant response n the mproved handlng of mals on the trans. above whch occurred n Woodstock Another humanzng nnovaton twelve mles from here, we draw the was the establshment of a welfare de-! lne. There are two knds of publcty partment, such as all well managed and the one accorded us here s not large busness nsttutons have. Stll by any means desrable, least of all another was a suggeston that resulted snce t s not true. n the malng early n the day of a * * * large quantty of matter that had; been dumped late n the evenng to confuse the clerks and render ther work the harder. All these expedents have worked well, but the most powerful agency of all n ths humanzng process has been the personalty of the postwe can stand a good deal of cheer- BANGOR & AROOSTOOK R. R. TIM E TA B LE Corrected to September 26, 1921 Trans Dally Except Sunday From HOULTON 8.51 a. m. For Fort Farfeld, Carbou, Lmestone and Van Buren a. m. For Bangor, Portland and Boston 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 Car Carbou to Boston p. n. -For Ft. Farfeld, Van Buren Due HOULTON 8.38 a. m. From Boston, Portland. Bangor. Buffet Sleepng Boston to Carbou a. m. From Van Buren, Carbou, asd Fort Farfeld p. m. From Boston. Portland, Bangor and Greenvlle p. rn. From St. Frances, Ft. Kent, also Van Buren, Washburn. Presque Isle, va Squa Par p. n. ---From Van Huron, Lmestone, Carbou. Fort Farfeld p. m.--from Boston, Portland and Bangor. Tme tables gvng complete nformaton may te abtaned at teket offces. GEO. M. HOUGHTON, General Passenger Agent. Bangor, Mane master general hmself. Hs cheerness, hs sympathy, and hs optmsm students to make a respectable cheerng secton. For example see the St. ha\e warmed and gven lfe and soul Mary s-hgh School game a week ago, to the postal busness. The cheer up * * * man one New York edtor has called Today s the last of the four Natonal fre preventon days, but that s hm. He s that, and n these tmes, ng up. no reason why there should be a relaxaton of vglance. What n the world do you suppose they re drnkng now up n Aroostook when a man n an automoble s mstaken for a moose and shot? Watervlle Sentnel. Aroostook County takes credt for a good many thngs and the world at large cannot help gvng t credt for a good many thngs, but when t comes to handng us credt for the Eleven men may make a football team but t takes more than ffty PROFESSIONAL CARDS MISS MARY BURPEE SOPRANO Teacher of Sngng Studo: Socety Hall, Frsbe Block Telephone 345-M HOULTON FURNITURE CO. B U ZZELL S LICENSED EM BALM ER AND FU N ER A L DIRECTOR Phone 161-W Day or Nght DR. F. 0. ORCUTl D E N TIS T Fogg Block Always Pure and Clean and Kept Good n the Sealed Package D r n k M a p l e S p r n g W ater The purest water n the State of Mane. Delvered at short notce by callng 141-W John K. Palmer, Dstrbutor Houlton, Mane Ths s a Studebaker Year W e have b e e n a s k e d th e q u eston h ow w e account for the tde o f Studebaker popularty whch has swept the country. Am ong others, two fundamental causes explan t: 1. The outstandng cause s the value o f Studebaker Cars, n qualty, style, performance, durablty, and prce, demonstrated by the complete satsfacton and enthusasm of nearly one-half mllon owners w h o know values. 2. The unversal respect for and confdence n the ntegrty of the name STU DEBAKER whch for seventy years has been the symbol of qualty and far dealng. D o You Look Forward To >a! Good N gh fs R est? D o you regularly antcpate a refreshng sleep? O r do you dread gong to bed, only to stare, sleepless, at th e w alls? T h e dfference betw een sleepng and starng s sm ply a m atter o f nerves. W h e n you r nervous system s n a sound condton, you are certan to sleep w ell. B u t w hen your nerves are w orn out and beyond your control, your rest s broken and your awakenng leaves you langud and rrtable. D o c t o r s k n o w th a t m uch o f the nerve dsorders r e su lt- from tea and coffee drnkng. T h e d ru g s n th e se drnks over-stm ulate,often causng the serous Uls w hch result from dsturbng the regular bodly functons. It la for your health's sake that m any doctors now sa y y o u should qut tea and coffee. Drnk Postum, the delcous meal-tme beverage nstead) In flavor t s much lke coffee. Postum s fundamentally a nerve strengthener because t lets you get sou n d, r e stfu l s le e p. Postum s a sklf ully-made cereal beverage, and the Secret of ts popularty s ts protecton to health and ts delcous flavor. Ask your grocer for Postum. Drnk ths hot, refreshng beverage n place of tea or coffee for 10 days and see what a wonderful dfference t wll make n the way you feel. Postum com es In two forms: Instant Postum (n tns) made nstantly n the cup by the addton o f 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 mnutec. Postum for H ealth T h e r e s a R e a s o n Crownng proof of the dependablty of Studebaker cars s reflected n our dmnshng busness n servce parts. Wth approxmately 116,000 more Studebaker cars n operaton on September 1st, 1921, our parts busness the frst eght months of ths year was 3% less than n the same perod two years ago. Whle our car manufacturng plants operated ths year 41% ahead of last year, our servce parts manufacturng plant has operated at from one-half to two-thrds of last year. Studebaker Cars are standng up n servce and stayng out of repar shops, to a degree unexcelled, we beleve, by any cars of whatever prce* The Studebaker Corporaton of Am erca. A. R. E R S K IN E, Presdent Tourng Cars and Roadsters: Lght-Sx 3-Pass. Roadster...$1125 Lght-Sx Tourng Car Specal-Sx 2-Pass. Roadster Specal-Sx Tourng Car Specal-Sx 4-Pass. Roadster Bg-Sx Tourng Car N E W P R IC E S O F S T U D E B A K E R C A R S /. o. b, factores, effectve Septem ber 8th, f92j A L L STUDEBAKER CARS ARE Coupes and Sedans: Lght-Sx 2-pass. Coupe-Roadster $1550 Lght-Sx 5-pass. Sedan Specal-Sx 4-pass. Coupe Specal-Sx 5-pass. Sedan Bg-Sx 4-pass. Coupe Bg-Sx 7-pass. Sedan EQUIPPED WITH CORD TIRES Hand & Harrngton 69 Man Street

3 HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 PAGE THREE A m e rcan R e d C ro w J L Health Informaton ^ No. 11. mmmm Clean homes often Insure health of the members of the famly lvng theren, and too much attenton cannot be pad by homemakers and housekeepers to keepng the home spotless, from the standpont of health as well as personal comfort. Wth the openng of summer every home should be thoroughly gone over, all dark corners, all depostores for unused artcles should be looked nto. Get rd of the superfluous. There s a real trat n human nature to hoard and closets, attcs and store places often contan heaps of thngs that should have gone nto the trash ple long ago. They are prolfc breedng places for dust and drt. Here are a few smple suggestons tor every housewfe: If there Is a vacant lot adonng your home see that t s clear of GROW TIMBER AS,FAST AS IT IS CUT Clean Homes... rubbsh and that no hrh weed are allowed to grow thereon. Be sure that plenty of lght and ar s brought nto damp cellars. Keep the wndows clean and keep them open as much as possble. Fresh ar and sunlght are alles of good health. See that all rubbsh s removed from your back yard, your cellar, or other store rooms. Clean all carpets and draperes for the summer season. Scrub the floors and all unvarnshed woodwork, usng plenty of soap and water. Cooperate wth your neghbors to remove neghborhood nusances, such as stagnant pools, trash heaps and dumpng grounds. Keep the plumbng n good repar and have leaky roofs mended. Southern Aroostook Chapter, Houlton, Mane. merely for the askng. There must be, frst, a proper natonal forestry law wth adequate provsons for fre NmnI Of elmnatng waste n the Jprotecton and government of refores- prntng busness, as shown n the report ust ssued by the commttee on Elmnaton of Waste n Industry of the Amercan Engneerng Councl, s ono of the most powerful arguments ever put forth for a natonal forest, says a statement by the Amercan Forestry assocaton, whch has made t the occason to call on the World Press Congress whch meets n Honolulu n October to take same acton on the forestry queston. Upon what does the newspaper depend for exstence* says the state requre the unted efforts of every man ment. It depends upon paper made and woman. We should not leave to from wood pulp. There are about any group of foresters and legslators 2500 daly newspapers n the country. the sole ntatve n solvng such Our annual consumpton of two an mportant economc problem; but mllon tons of newsprnt a year by the contnued expresson of*, our means a strp of paper as wde as the regulaton,daly paper and about thought and convcton, we can urge those groups to supply our mmnent forty mllon mles long. Just as a needs. measure of dstance,.remember that Here s waste that staggers the the eun Is nnety-two mllon mles magnaton. Forest fres annually away. It would also make a two-foot destroy two mllon feet of tmber, wde rbbon of newspaper around the world 1600 tmes. or materal enough to buld a room frame house every one fvehun- The tme s comng when the! dred feet *on both sdes of a road ex economc law of necessty wll brng our own publcatons to some sort of retrenchment. The edtors of the Unted States and of the world must take up ths queston. Already more than one-thrd of our pulpwood comes from across the Canadan border, and Canada* proftng by our mstakes, s now takng steps to forbd the buttng of tmber at a rate more rapd than ts growth. That means prmarly that our annual mportatons of Canadan pulpwood has practcally reached the maxmum, afmt for the other twothrds at least we wll have to look after ourselves. If we once squarely face- the facts, the soluton of the problem wll not he dffcult. It s estmated that shout three mllon cords of wood per year are manufactured nto paper for magasnes and newspapers. At ten cords per acre ths would mean three hundred thousand acres. Suppoeag that It takes about 40 to 60 years to grow good pulp-wood spruce, and allowng for possble loss by fre, wnd, blght or falure of seedng, a tract of thrty thousand square mles planted wth forty successve crops of tmber, each crop comng to maturty at one year ntervals, would under proper care and management, furnsh a perpetual supply of pulpwood 'for newsprnt. Ths means an area a lttle smaller than the state of Oho, hut represents less than one-tenth of the area of our cut-over lands, most of whch are now almost entrely unproductve. There s no queston but tbat a perpetual supply of pulpwood for all needs s a possble and practcal scheme. It wll not, however, come taton on a scale large enough to demonstrate the economc soundness of the dea, second, every state must adopt thoro-gong forestry prncples wth provsons to protect growng tmber from exhorbtant taxaton; and, fnally, wth these laws as a bass, the pulp and paper ndustry, together wth all other wood usng ndustres, must be made to see that n practcal reforestaton and conservaton les ther only salvaton. To accomplsh these three thngs wll tendng from New York to Chcago. Wth four people to a house, these or more buldngs would provde a home for nearly one-fourth of our yearly ncreas'e n populaton- a number, suffcent to populate a new cty each year the sze of Cncnnat, New Orleans, Mnneapols, Kansas Cty, Mssour or Seattle. More than 160,000 forest fres have occurred n the Unted States durng the past fve years, 80 per cent of whch were due to human agences and therefore preventable. These conflagratons burned over acres an area greater than that ncluded wthn the States of Oho and Pennsylvana and destroyed 685,700,000 worth of tmber and property. If ths needless waste were stopped and the materal thus saved put nto houses, the varous busness nterests concerned n buldng constructon, such as lumber dealers, carpenters, masons and supply houses, would, t s estmated, beneft to the extent of more than $400,000,000 annually, the Amercan Forestry Assocaton ponts out. Bankers and real estate dealers would also proft thru the sale of lands and by loans on homes to the extent of an addtonal $300,000,000. There are 81,000,000 acres of dle land n ths country that should be put to work growng trees at once," the assocaton s statement concludes. Ths Is a proposton drectly ted up wth natonal prosperty now and n the future. All the money n the world wll not buy food f there s no food. All the money n the world wll not produce trees to order. We must begn rght now to protect what forests we have and have forest crops every year ust as we have corn and wheat crops. The Commttee on the Elmnaton of Waste n Industry has performed a valuable servce but the great waste s dle land and a great part of t s n the East and Mddle West close to the great newspapers, the greatest consumers who are new payng thousands of dollars on freght rates to say nothng of a hgh market prce. NAVAL ACADEMY HAS FEW ENLISTED MEN It s the general opnon at the Naval Academy at Annapols that the law provdng for the appontment of a hundred members of the enlsted force ot the navy and marne crops as mdh..rment each year has faled to accomplsh ts purpose, whch was to attract ambtous youths to enter the academy from these branches and to rse to the hghest rank. Not only s t true that the Naval Academy has never receved the maxmum number n ths way, hut t s evdent that few are of the knd expected; that s, young men who have served n the enlsted ranks and who form a desre to become commssoned offcers. The fact s that nearly all of those who enter ths way are youths who are unable to obtan appontments n the usual way, and who enter the servce only wth the desre of gettng over t as soon as possble and becomng mdshpmen. Ths year s class of mdshpmen contans 63 nstead of a hundred who formerly served as enlsted men. It s very plan, and t s so stated by those n a poston to know, the very few of these have had any real experence n the navy or marue corps or have been n a poston to absorb much along the lne of dscplne and the sprt of the servce. At no tme durng the fve years the law has been n operaton n ts present form, has the maxmum number been reached. One year t was 80, but n the other years t has been consderably below that fgure. Under the crcumstances, t s lkely that some amendment to the law wll be proposed soon. It s known that most of those who enter the navy or marne corps wth the dea of becomng mdshpmen, announce that fact promptly to ther commandng offcers and they are gven so much tme for study that they have lttle to do wth the drlls and ordnary routne of the servce. A plan to change ths s beng consdered. In spte of the fact that the results from the law are by no means what were expected, t has not worked badly n every partcular. It has been shown that the youths who have the spunk to work for ther admsson to tn WATCHFUL EYES arc safeguardng the health of son and daughter and grandchldren. Grandma knows Lnment t o m HNUUYNL ANODYNE M^ S Doctor's Prescrpton Internal and External 100 years of Success Ths famous old anodyne has no equal for Coughs, Colds, Sore Throat, Grppe, Cramps, Colc, Chlls, Strans, Cuts, Burns and many other common troubles. For more than a century generaton after generaton has prased a worth. All dealers. 25 and 50c. naval academy n ths way are generally of a good type, and a number of them have done exceptonal work n studes and along other lnes of actvty at the nsttuton. The class whch graduated n June of 1919 contaned a remarkable number of ts leadng scholars who h d been former enlsted men. We.-l y McL. Hague of Calforna, who had been of that status, led the class by a fne margn, and two others, Raymond C. Ferrs of Delaware and Lsle J. Maxson of Mchgan, had also been members of the enlsted forces of the navy. c The class whch wll graduate n June, 1923, wll almost to a certanty, le led by Jerauld L. Olmstead, a former naval seaman. He has led hs class by a bg margn every year so far, and t s stated that f he mantans the average of hs frst two years, he wll have the hghest aggregate upon graduaton of any one who has ever completed the Naval Academy course. In athletcs, the showng of the former enlsted men has been most remarkable, and other qualtes of leadershp are ndcated by the fact that so many have been named as captans of the Naval Academy teams. Larson, captan of the football eleven, was formerly a marne. Ault, captan of the basketball team, was a seaman and Mller, captan of the boxers, was also of the naval servce. MAINE WILL HAVE LARGE APPLE CROP Prospects for a bumper apple crop n Mane wth more than double the producton of last year, are noted n a report ssued by V. A. Sanders, crop Notce ot Frst Meetng of Credtor* In the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for the Northern Dvson of the Dstrct of Mane. In Bankruptcy In matter or Itoss L. Churchll In Bankruptcy Bankrupt To the credtors of sad Ross I,. Churchll of Masards n the county of A ro o sto o k en d D strct a foresad, b a n k rupt. N otce s hereby gven that on the 5th day o f October, A. I). 1021, the sad Itoss L. Churchll was duly adudcated bankrupt; and that the frst meetng of credtors wll be held at the offce of Edwn L. Val n Houlton on the 25th day o f Oct., A. D. 11*21, at 10 o'clock In the forenoon at whch tme the sad credtors may attend, prove ther clams, appont a trustee, examne the bankrupt, and transact such busness as may properly come sad meetng. Dated at Houlton, Oct. 5th, other before EDWIN L. VAIL. Referee n Bankruptcy. statstcan of the Unted States department of agrculture. Ths compares wth a predcton for the Unted States as a whole of hardly more than half of the 1920 crop. Mr. Sanders estmates Manes crop at 550,000 barrels. It was 265,000 barrels a year ago. The frut ths year s somewhat underszed but s of good qualty and color. The New Hampshre crop Mr. Sanders fnds to be about 85 per cent of last year, Vermont 75 to 80 per cent; Massachusetts 45 per cent and Connectcut 35. Prospects n Rhode Island are for a yeld of about 10,000 barrels as aganst 80,000 a year ago. Notce of Frst Meetng of Credtors In the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for the Northern Dvson of the Dstrct of Mane. In Bankruptcy. Tn the matter of <Juy A. La vne In Bankruptcy Bankrupt To the credtors of sad Guy A. Lavne of Washburn n the county of Aroostook, and Dstrct aforesad, bankrupt. Notce s hereby gven that on the 6th day of Oetober, A. I>. 11*21, the sad Guv A. Lavne was duly adudcated bankrupt, and that the frst meetng of hs credtors wll be held at the offce of Edwn L. Val, n Houlton, on the 25th day of Oct., A. I). 11*21, at 10 o clock n the forenoon at whch tme the sad credtors may attend, prove ther clams appont a trustee, examne the bankrupt and transact such other busness as may properly come before sad meetng. Dated at Houlton, Oct. 6th, EDW IN L. VAIL, Referee n Bankruptcy. Several Brds wth One Stone A Vrgna edtor threatened to publsh the name of a certan young man who was seen huggng and kssng a grl n the park unless hs subscrpton to the paper was pad up n a week. Ffty-nne young men called and pad up the next day, whle two even pad a year n advance. CUT THIS OUT Specal Notce: Or. Frederck J;u ulson says that phosphates are ust as essental to any woman who tres easly, s nervous or rrtable, worn out or looks haggard and pale, to make a strong, robust, vgorous, healthy body, as they are to make corn, wheat or any vegetable plant grow strong and healthy. The lack of phosphates s the cause of all eneme condtons and the admnstraton of 5- gran Argo-Phosphate Tablets wll ncrease the strength and endurance 50<*% n a few weeks tme n many nstances. Notce of Frst Meetng of Credtors In the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for the Northern Dvson of the Dstrct ef Mane. In Bankruptcy. In Matter of Carey IV. Taylor In Bankruptcy Bankrupt. To the credtors of sad Carey W. Taylor of Houlton n the eounty of Aroostook, and Dstrct aforesad, bankrupt. Notce s hereby gven that on the 4th day of Oetober, A. D. l:*21, the sad Carey W. Taylor was duly adudcated bankrupt; and that the frst meetng of credtors wll be held at the offce of Edwn L. Val n Houlton on the 25th day of Oct. A. D., 1921, at 10 o clock n the forenoon at whch tme the sad credtors may attend, prove ther clams, appont a trustee, examne the bankrupt and transact such other busness as may properly com* before sad meetng. Dated at Houlton, October 4th, EDWIN L. VAIL, Referee n Bankruptcy. ^ W W V ^ W t fw V W W t fv W W W W W W W W W W W W W W V W V W l Vulcanzng Fabrc and Cord Tres and Tubes Vulcanzed n a satsfactory manner: The only place east of Portland where a Cord Tre vulcanzed ob s guaranteed L. W. J e n n e y Phone 64-W Cates Garage J Mechanc Street Houlton ^ H ave It D on e Rght the Frst Tme Don t let guess work and verbal promses decde your choce of Learn Lghtnng Rods Investgate Why the C. B. F. R. Copper Covered Rod, wth ts famous, patented, Dove Tal Couplng, and ts many exclusve features should be the Lghtnng Rod of your ch oce Artcle No. 2 Reasons for the C. B. F. R. Lghtnng Rod Supremacy: t h e <v >p p e k * <*v e r n g <>n t h e c. b. f. r. l g h t n n g rod s put on m our own factory by especally desgned machnes whch makes the famous ('. B. F. R. Double Lock Seam. 'Phs s done n such a scentfc manner that the copper sheetng herones an absolutely water-tght coverng. Ths rod may be bent to any desred poston wthout, danger of the seams Consequently there s no possbl partng, an e\.-lus\o and desrable feature. ty of water seapng nto the rod. The ar space n the four corners of the c. B. V. U Rod s to prevent sweatng. teat lre. Ths elmnates any possblty of accumulatng mosture, also an exclusve Taste s a matter of tobacco qualty The patented Dove 'Pal Couplngs are another of the exclusve features of the C. B. 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 recent test conducted by the Washngton Unversty of St. Lous, these Couplngs stood an average pull test of L sun lbs. before partng from the rod. Ffty-lve years of engneerng and manufacturng experence has ma.de the c B. F. R. Rod all that s desrable n lghtnng protecton. For your protecton you wll fnd our trade mark C. R. F. R. cut nto every male couplng of each sect nn of -od. 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 7H S t & W The C. B. F. R., Copper Covered Rod not only offers you the greatest protecton, 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, Mane Lcensed Representatve for the Mller Lghtnng Rod Company St. Lous # Establshed 1866 Mssour

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5 mm.... 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 sert out the Frst of each month. Mss Fern Smth spent a few days wth frends n Carbou last week. George Wggn, drver of the Fre Truck, who has been enoyng a two Mr. and Mrs. George E. Dunn re- weeks lay off. turned Frday from a stay n Boston, work. has returned to hs Guy Bros. Mnstrels, the old relable Dana. State Forest Comms- entertaners, gave one of ther pro- grams at the Temple Theatre on Monday evenng and despte the very unpleasant weather, flled the house. Ths company always pleases when t vsts Houlton and ths year s program was chockfull of fun, good musc dancng and specaltes, whle the band and orchestra was one of the best heard here n years. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Kdder spent a Paul Burns left Tuesday mornng. few days at North Lake last week. Ifor Bangor. Bar Harbor and the Mr. Arthur Luce of Massachusetts southern part of the state on bus- Is vstng hs brother, Rev. Albert ness. E. Luce. M. B. Berman and wfe, who have been the guests of frends for a few Frank Clark, who s playng tho days n Bangor, returned home Thursday. voln wth Welchs orchestra n St. John, spent a few days n town last Walter WJJte and wfe have returned home from a trp to Grswold week. Harrs B. McIntyre has returned to where they enoyed a few days huntng. tthe Massachusetts Insttute of Technology n Boston 4to resume hs John Crawford of the Post Offce studes. Mr. Horace Holmes of Houlton has staff s enoyng a 10 day vacaton and s takng n the World s Seres purchased a dwellng hopse In Presque games. Isle where he expects to make hs home. Mss Amy Bull, who s tranng for a nurse at the Augusta General hosptal, s spendng her vacaton n town wth her famly. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Antworth of Stockholm were n town last week wt,h ther son Ward who s to attend school In town ths year. George Russell and famly have moved n town from Crescent Park and wll occupy the Brown house on Court street for the wnter. Mss Harret Putnam, who recently graduated from the Deaconess Hosp- t&l n Boston, returned last week t o ; HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 Monument Lodge, F. & A. M., wll Houlton Camp, No. 8956, M. W. of A. C T U CALLS FOR hold a stated communcaton on Wed- have recently pad a death clam of rna D C D A T IA M IM d d /\u nesday evenng, Oct. 12. Work M. M. $1000 to the hers of the late Judson UUUr fcka 11 l/n IN PR.OHI degree. Brewer. BITION ENFORCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Walter Collns or, - Forest Colby, former Forest Com- At the recent conventon of the Carbou were week end guests of M. msstoner. now wth the S. D. Warren Wome.s Chrstan Temperance Unon Wll McGary and John G. Chadwck Collns sster, Mrs. G. Beecher Company of n Bngham, '~ passed through of Mane held at Greenvlle, the keynote sounded by Mrs. Althea G. went to Bangor on busness the frst Churchll.! Houlton on hs way from Quebec Monday. He was accompaned by C. S. of the week., Charles Forter employed at the Qumby of North Turner was that Mr. Geo. B. Hunter was called to Fre house, s enoyng a short Morgan of Boston, S. J. Rogers of neffcent enforcement of the prohbton laws wll be elmnated by means Augusta last week on account of vacaton durng whch tme he wll the death of a relatve. Mr. H. E. Tngley motored to Lewsdo some game huntng. Mss Mary Conlogue of North street, of the ballots of the daughters. mothers and ton to spend a few days wth hs son who has been vstng n Carbou and Phllp who s attendng Bates college. Mss Nancy Mason of Dover and Foxcroft has returned to her home after spendng a few days wth Mrs. C. L. Dll. Mss Geneva Astle very pleasantly entertaned the members of the Grls Frendly class of the M. E. church Thursday evenng at her home. Walter D. Berry of ths town, who Is a senor at Colby College, was elected busness manager of the Colby Oracle, the year book of the college. Mrs. James Cogan. Pleasant street, went to Carbou last Frday accompanng her nece. Mrs. Lev Soucy, who has been her guest for some weeks. Rally Day at the Frst Baptst take up her dutes dong specal work, Sunday resulted n a record Dr. Donald Cassdy, who formerly breakng attendance. 277 n all takng practced n Houlton but s now n part n the Sunday school followng.charge of a large offce n Lewston, the mornng servce, spent a few days n town last week on a vst. Mss Elva Rogers, who holds a poston as head nurse n the Clfton Sprngs Sanatorum n New York State, s vstng her parents on Frankln street. Fred Blethen has been pledged to the Ph Gamma Delta fraternty at the Unversty of Mane, and Ralph Blake and Lloyd Berre have been pledged Sgma Ch. Mrs. George B. Dunn of Mltary street s n Bangor as the guest of her daughter Mrs. Henry B. Chapman. She plans to attend the Mane Muscal Festval whle there. Charle Lee. who has been the propretor of a Chnese laundry on Bangor street for the past 6 years, has closed up hs busness and left Frday for Calforna. Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Holdaway and Mr. and Mrs. George Avery attended the Brockton Far last week where Mr. Holdaway s two horses Alfred Kng and Mss Talbot were entered. H. B. Person, state entomologst, s n town n the nterests of hs offce. He s startng a war aganst the spruce bud worm that s becomng a great menace to the lmberland of Mane. Another crash of autos n Unon Sq. Sunday put a runabout out of b u s The muscal comedy Town Gossp ness. The uncton of Bangor. Kendall whch was playng at the Colonal and Brdge streets has been the wth Mss Eva Hackett of ths town scene of more than a dozen smash as a member of the cast, was forced, ups ths summer, due to carelos> to termnate ts engagement recently; drvng due to a death n the cast. Mrs. Osgood Smth left last week lor the Whte Mofntans where she me t Mr. * Smth. From there they vsted frends n Nashua, N. H. where they wll stay for a ten days vst and wll return to Houlton by auto. Mrs. George B. Dunn, Mrs. John G. Chadwck, Mrs. Thaddeus Grant, Mrs. Jason Hassell, Mrs. Harry Mshou, lkflss Helen McKay, Mss Marlon Cleveland and E. L. Cleveland attended the Mane Muscal Festval n Bangor Jast week. Mrs. George McIntyre and daughter Dawn left Saturday for New York where they wll make ther home In the future wth Phl McIntyre who has been employed there for the past year. Mr. McIntyre wll reman n Houlton for an ndefnte tme. Mrs. Marlon Eastman of Portland Tm accepted a poston wth the Maynard S. Brd Company of Portland and Rockland as a bond saleswoman for whch work she has taken a specal course- of nstructon. She wll make her headquarters n Houlton. Mrs. Mary Stuart recently returned from Prouts Neck where she has been the guest of her sster Mrs. Davd J Johnson for several weeks. Mrs. Stuart s to return to^orono n a few days to take up her dutes as matron! at the Ph Kappa Sgma fraternty house. Mrs. Maud Cummng, Junor Past Noble Grand of the Porta Rebekah Lodge wll represent the Houlton chapter at the meetng to be held n Portland next Tuesday, October 18. Mr. Alex Cummng and Mr. Guv Porter wll represent the Rockabema Lodge I. O. O. F. at the same meetng. ^ Mr. Fred Moore, formerly of ths town, now resdng n Somervlle, Mass., vsted frends n town durng hs recent trp brngng the body of ls wfe who was bured n the Evergreen Cemetery. He was accompaned by hs sons, Arthur and Clfford, and daughters Nna, Alce and Dors, and daughter Nna., Dr. and Mra. Fred Mtchell entertaned a few members of the senor class o f Houlton Hgh School at ther home on Man street last Thursday evenng, the occason beng the brthday of ther daughter Helen. The guests enoyed an evenng of excellent entertanment of games and musc and Mss Mtchell was presented wth a huge box of chocolates. Ice cream and cake were served^ The followng were present: Marf Ocrutt, Mare, Chamberlan. Margaret Chamberlan, Lue Brown, Ruth Yerxa, Leland Hovey. Donald McCluskey, Lews Bltbar* Lafayette Ervn,.and Carl Rev. M. A. Shaffer, pastor of the Congregatonalst church at Wrent ham Mass., who s the guest of Mr. and Mr. S. R. Parks, Green street, occuped the pulpt at the E"rst Baptst church Sunday evenng and delvered a splendd sermon. Fort Farfeld for the past 5 weeks, returned to her home Saturday nght. Mss Louse Kearn, one of the propretors of ^Charlotte s, returned Monday mornng from New York where she has been purchasng Fall goods. S. T soner. Nal Volet, Deputy Forest Commssoner, are n town on busness and are regstered at the Snell House. Mr. and Mrs. Guy Carroll arrved home Monday mornng from Tampco, Mexco, where Mr. Carroll has been located n the Wllam C. Gorga.s hosptal. Nght offcer Mooers, who has been on the sck lst for several days, was able to resume hs dutes Monday. Durng hs absence J. A. Anderson substtuted for hm. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Lakn and young chld Ardth of Portland arrved n town Tuesday mornng for a two weeks vst wth Hon. Herschel Shaw on Summer street. Marred n Houlton, October 9, by Rev. Albert E. Luce, pastor Frst Methodst Epscopal church. Harold E. Stanhope and Mss Olve M. Wade, both of Calas, Mane. Walter Berry of Houlton s a member of the football squad at Colby college and s makng an excellent showng wth the team. He made the trp wth the team to Sprngfeld Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Pond left Mon- (lav mornng by auto for Portland where Mr. Pond s a delegate to the conventon of Red Men to be held n that cty. Followng the conventon th^y plan to go on to Massachusetts to vst frends. Rev. Albert. El. Luce and wfe left Monday mornng by auto for the southern part of the state. Mr. Luce wll be n Auburn on busness and Mrs. Luce wll attend the Women s Foregn Mssonary meetng whch s to be held n Rockland. Regular meetng N. E. O. P. on Frday evenng, Oct. 14, at Woodman hall. A sx o clock supper wll he served to members and nvted frends. N. J. Peters, Grand Vce Warden of Bangor, wll he present and wshes to meet all members of Houton lodge. Portland and W. G. Pooler of Bngham Aroostook and Penobscot Pomona Grange wll meet n Amty, Wednesday, Oct. 19th, at 10 o clock a. m. Amty Grange wll furnsh beans and coffee for dnner. Vstng patrons please brng baskets for pcnc dnner and supper. GOOD MINSTREL SHOW MRS. JUSTIN E. PACKARD FORMER LINNEUS GIRL DIES AT AUGUSTA Word was receved boro FYday by datves of the death of Mrs. Justn F. Packard of Augusta, Me..Mrs. Packard wll be remembered by many frends n Houlton and Lnneus as ( ora Bther, daughter of the late Isaac and Elvelyn Bther of Lnneus. Mrs. Packard has been n poor health for some tme of an ncurable dsease and her death was not unexpected. MASONIC SCHOOL OF INSTRUCTION Monument Lodge F. & A. M. wll hold a school of nstructon n ther hall Frday, October 14, under the drecton of Worshpful Grand Lecturer Frank EL Sleeper of Sabattus, Me. The forenoon sesson begns at 10 o clock, afternoon sesson at 2 o'clock, evenng sesson at 7.20 o clock. The annual nspecton wll take place n the evenng, D. D. Grand Master A. J. Beck of Washburn, Me. offcatng. E'ollowng the work refreshments wll bo served. MRS. SARAH GRIFFON MOORE A commendaton for Governor Baxter for hs staunch stand for law enforcement and hs ever ready defense of the long establshed record of Mane as a poneer state. prohbton In her address Mrs. Qumby sad The women of Mane are desperately n earnest determned that not only for the honor of the State, but for the sake of the chldren of today, Mane shall be a leader n the enforcement of the prohbton law. The news of the passng of Mrs. The grattude of the people of Mane Sarah Grffon Moore, October frst has been rchly earned. As temper-, at the age of 56 years, comes as a anee workers let our apprecaton be severe shock to her many frends n expressed by our hearty and earnest, town made durng her resdence here. cooperaton. The law s. It s beng; Her death occurred at Somervlle enforced to a commendable degree t It wll be of nterest to Houlton people to know that two local boys have been sngularly honored at the ary and of the Red Cross, and durm: Unversty of Mane. Ralph N. Hutchson, son of A. A. Hutchson, and Van She s survved by her husband and frends. A devoted wfe, a lovng! her lfe she has made many lastng! Tngley, son of F. L Tngley, have three daughters, Mrs. EL P. Crag of mother, she leaves a place n many J been chosen for the Sophomore Owls, )unton, Texas, Mrs. Else Sutherland hearts that wll never be flled. honorary socety of the Unversty of of Augusta, and Mss Emma Packard E'uneral servces were* held Tuesday.! Mane. The members of ths socety R. N. of Lowell, Mass., all of whom October fourth, n Somervlle, af e" who are chosen by the members of have vsted here and are known to whch the remans were brought to the prevous year, are selected on the many frends. Houlton for bural n Elvergreen bass of ther popularty and actvty Funeral servces and bural took cemetery besde the lots of her three n college lfe. place Saturday. chldren.! PAGE FxVE The prevalence of drnkng and rum runnng n some parts of Mane s not due to any law but rather to lax enforcement. Ths, n turn, s not altogether due to ndfferent or nfcompetent offcals, t s n a measure due to the ndfference on the part of ctzens. When every ctzen awakes to hs or her prvlege and demands strct enforcement of the law, mpartal applcaton of ustce and nterpretaton of the law by our udcary, when the pulpt and the press unte n soundng a strong clear bugle call urgng all ctzens to promote advance n unversal respect for all law, reverence for lawfully consttuted authorty, the un-amercan atttude of volators of the Federal Prohbton Amendment, wth the resultant perl to patrotsm, wll cease. The women of Mane wll not be slenced by any cry of poltcal, expedency. They must see results, U through any chance or crcumstance the offcals have faled n the past The Frday nearest March frst has they must not fal n the future. been desgnated by the Mane legsla-; The new program of our beloved ture as Temperance Day n the schools organzaton wth ts call for a mllon of Mane. A unform program s to members and a mllon dollars makes be sent out from the offce of the possble wder avenues of servce and State Supt. of Schools. Ths wll calls for greater local, state and nsure observance of the day and! natonal cooperaton. Nobly has Mane greatly ntensfy our good scentfc measured up to ts part n the great temperance law n the publc schools forward movement. of Mane. Through ths day s program We must have a comprehensve the lves of our great temperance program among our young people for leaders wll be kept fresh n the mnds eternal vglance regardng the enforcement of the eghteenth amend of men and women of tomorrow, the wsdom of our prohbton laws ment. Ths can be most successfully emphaszed and a respect for the} carred on through our educatonal dgnty of law enforcement wll be departments. nstlled nto the mnds of our young people. In the prayerful and courageous sprt of the Crusaders let us take up We reoce n the magnfcent I the dutes of each day earnestly progress n spte of many dffcultes! seekng to follow the Lord of hosts n the effectve enforcement of ou r; who s the Prnce of Peace. prohbtory law. May we rght here pay to the fathful enforcement; offcals of the state of Mane our heartfelt thanks and earnest trbute.. where wth her famly she has made wll be enforced better and better as ^ ow Open and Ready for You her home for seven years snce leav-' the years go bv. But, beloved com- Practcal courses n Bookkeepng and ng Houlton. For a long tme she! rades. n the words of our natonal! Accouutancy Shorthand and.typehad been a vctm of Brghts dsease, leader. Our chef danger les n the wrtng Penmanshp, etc., equp you but her death came very suddenly1apathy and ndfference of many good for work wthout loss of tme. and as a complete surprse to her people who aded n securng the Rght now s the tme to get started. frends, for up to the day before she law. ^Houlton Busness College, Houlton, Me. had been about the house as usual. 1 However, she was taken wth a mop-; severe attack than usual whch was followed by h<-r death.! Mrs. Moore was horn n Nova! Scota later comng to Houlton where 1 John P. Costello she was marred about twenty-fve! years ago to Fred H. Moore. Nne chldren were horn to ths unon, sx of whom survve ther mother. They, are Mrs. Opal Baker, Somervlle: Clfford R. Moore of St. Oglethorpe,: Georga: Nna, Alce. Dors and Arthur all of Somervlle. : Besdes the sx chldren she s also survved by her husband, two ssters, Mrs. Rose Monroe of Hudson Mass., Mss Nna Grffon of Elvereft. Mass.,' and three brothers, Oscar and Ekgar of Kngston, N. S.. and Charles of: Hudson, Mass. ' She was a member of the St., Thomas Epscopal church of Somervlle, of the Amercan Legon Auxl-1 W e are Satsfed Fully w th Penny-Proft Customers If W e Can Get Enough of Them Even a penny proft of cash n hand gves the dealer a better chance for success n hs work than a dollar proft charged on a book. We sell for cash, and n the sellng for cash w,> lmt the prolt that you may have the beneft and may be nfluenced to buy and to spend, that we may have the smaller profts but tn* more customers. The secret of Amercan busness methods s turnover. The more goods sold the greater tn* bulk of profts, therefore the store dong the largest busness servng the largest number of people -can cut ts profts to the people and yet buld up a successful busness. Wert1tellng you the story n plan facts, untrmmed, ungarnshed -t's all a queston of sellng for cash, sellng to a larger number of people and makng t proftable, to you all by makng t proftable to the hst lmt. Qualty wll never be sacrfced for proft. We ll sell you the fnest of drug store goods, gve you tnt best of medcnes, gve you deal servce, work, and sell everythng a modern drug store should sell, but sell t for less. Never Undersold Our Slogan Your Protecton We ll never permt ourselves to be undersold undersold n prce perhaps by our refusal to lower qualty for the sake of lowerng prce. Never undersold n qualty, because that wll mantan wthout regard to anythng else. The best servce wll be added to every purchase, but never any extra cost for ths. Depend on us and thnk of us frst for every sngle thng that a drug store could supply. Gve us your confdence and get more of our fne qualty and our better protecton on qualty and prce. Tell your frends and ther frends the message we are presentng to you t s more sales, more customers we want, but wth equtable proft to all. Munro s W est End Drug Store Undertaker Mane and Massachusetts Lcensed Embalmer Phone 574-W Res. 59 Court St., Phone 574-W Cor. Man and Mechanc Strs., Over Hallett-McKeen Co S =.(111 HIIMtlllltll I mflllllll lllllltlflllmilllllf llllllllllll^ ^Mmmmmttmmtt 11 T h a t { E l u s v e J T h o u g h t 11 s nmmmnmmmumnn rtmrm H Jlllllfllllltllf ::.tllltffljumf, If P t't r y Jeweler ana m Optometrst g I Houlton You wll remember from past exper- ences how dffcult t s to thnk of a 1 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 your servce., == rnnmmmumtnmj! tmtmmmm:.mmmtmnnnhhmmmmmummmmmmmmmmhhmmhth? s 2 ^trtunnmmmtmmm nnnmtnunmntttfmttnmfmtutmtufmfmtfmtuk n n o u n HI -m tt n n n 11 mh 11 r 1111 m m 11 n I c e m e n t yn ff mu nhmtthhmmhmhmnhutmmfhmhfmr^ The Frst Natonal Bank s dstrbutng Mane Centennal Half Dollars at 50c each 1 Coupons on th e Fourth Lberty Loan are due and payable October 15 th, 1921

6 PAGE SIX HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 modern hghway EDUCATION WORK By James F. Brooks, Drector, Amercan Hghway Educatonal Bureau The problems of the old road overaeer of twenty-fve or thrty years ago were very dfferent from the problems whch confront road offcals today. There was no need n hs day for an extensve educatonal campagn, for the reason that the roads under hs supervson were not extensvely used. Traffc orgnated and termnated manly wthn the narrow confnes of hs neghborhood, so that whatever hs road problems may have been they were n plan vew of everybody The propaganda end of hs ob was. therefore, a very smple matter. A few hours on horseback to notfy the neghbors when and where to brng ther axes and. pcks, and the thng was done. But as populaton ncreased, traffc grew and mleage lengthened. Our processes of development have gone on untl today our hghways extend n ther dally use mles beyond the mere range of neghborhood vson Wth ths new traffc extendng under the pressure of modern needs aganst an all-too-slow extenson of modern roads to meet those needs, complex problems have been created wth the result that an educatonal campagn for, hghway mprovement n o w amounts to more than a rde around the neghborhood to collect a group of fanners wth prmtve tools. It mesons an exhaustve research nto the true relatonshp of the road to the entre publc cty and country and the presentaton of facts so obtaned honestly and clearly before the people. The truth s, much as we dscuss good roads, we very often go nto a campagn wth a woeful lack of actual bedrock, vote-compellng nformaton. Few of us realze that thousands upon thousands of acres of land have been set asde as routes over whch to haul produce and supples from one pont to another, and yet these routes are permtted to reman n such condton as to prevent the full use for whch they were ntended. Such land s worse than dle. It becomes an nexcusable and enormous dran on the publc,*a dran whch wll ncrease annually untl we shall have completed the constructon of comprehensve systems of well connected hghways n every state. The pubc must be brought to a realsaton of the fact that nventve genus, n the applcaton of motvepower to the wheel, has mproved both the wheel and the vehcle whch t conveys. It must also realze that man by hs ndustry has ncreased the load, whle the road remans practcally n ts prmtve state. As a result of ths uneven development, the modernsed wheel wth ts ncreased load has stalled on the unmproved hghway, makng the delvery of food products n suffcent quantty rregular, dffcult and expensve. Hare the road problem begns to fork n every known drecton, plng Jrooble upon trouble for all concern the men klled n the conflct between those lmts. Englsh socologsts are of the opnon that the great dfference n Great Brtan s not due to the ' war alone. In 1831 there were 1040 women for every 1000 men; n 1871, 1054; n 1911, 10'18; whle n 1921 the excess had mounted so that there are today somethng more than 1090 women to every 1000 men n the Brtsh Isles. The tendency exsted before the war; the war has quckened t. Ths dsturbs the Enlsh publcsts and students of socal scence. Nature may n the course of years restore the normal equlbrum, but the ntervenng perod cannot be short. When the overseas Domnons were settlng and startng on ther prosperous ndustral careers, the de- The condtons named by the donors were that ther names should not be made publc and that the cost of the n the country wll be better equpped for physcal tranng than the Watervlle nsttuton. stand should also be wthheld. Ths Fne Staff of Coaches promse the trustees are bound to respect. The fund donated by Charles Sea verns of Hartford, Conn., provded for The stand, wll be dedcated to th e. the U1C creaton of an athletc char and men of Colby,, who, served a n the war, lrqi. C. Harry Edwards who has recently. and a tablet.,. settng forth 4.u tucr ths nr,m fact 1been wll elected athletc drector, arrved be placed,, upon one sde a~ of tha the otana stand. recently ; and, has begun hs work. Mr. The stand s to be bult, m stadum 1Edwards,, whose. home s. m _ Waterbury,. m e sta.nu ) s a graduate of the Sprngfeld, Mass, style wthout coverng, but t s so de-1 sgned that f at any tme t should be Tranng School, where he took a sx thought best to put a top on t, ths years course and where he had much can be done. experence as a teacher as well as Other addtons to Colby s athletc equpment are the new cnder track whch has already been completed and the proposed ron fence whch s to enclose the grounds. The cnder track fceney of women n those great was constructed at uost of $7,000 and domans worked decdedly to the experts have pronounced as good as advantage of the women on the there s anywhere n the country. It ground. Is excess of women lkely to conssts of a quarter of a mle crcular work contrarwse, And how wll the track and a 100 and 220 yards straghtaway. The 100 yards straghtaway s femnne preponderance affect publc sentment on the general problem of located drectly n front of the new the enfranchsement of women? If stand and ust outsde the grdron. the destny women usually expect to The 220 yards stretch s on the other fulfl s dened them, t seems nevtable that many more wll enter o n, The track wll be used for sde of the feld. practce the professons opened to them n ths Kal and Sprng, and wll be dedlate years than would do so were the cate(* next Sprng, when the Mane nbalance not so dsturbed, a probabl-1 terc Hegate meet wll be held at ty that may mean an ntensty of Colby. competton heretofore unknown. It The proposed new fence wll extend may be that many wll emgrate to from the present gymnasum to Coburn Hall, takng n that buldng and New Zealand and Australa, Canada and South Afrca, where opportuntes thence to College avenue to the new pupl. He s a regular member of the, faculty and wll teach some branches as well as drectng the athletc actv-! would ental heavy expense. In a canvass of 31 large concerns n eght states t was found by the Amercan Insttute of Weghts and Measures that the cost of these establshments BANKRUPT S PETITION FOR DISCHARGE, In the matter of ] tes Of the college. He s a Sturdy ap- IAlbert B. Anderson ; In Bankruptcy pearng young man of athletc buld, Bankrupt and already has made a fne xnpres- ; r<> tue Ha,h (,0rence Male, Judge of the Son upon the members of the faculty Dstrct Court of the Unted.States for the Dstrct of Mane. and the students who have met hm. ALBERT B. ANDERSON, of Stockholm The track actvtes of the college n the County of Aroostook, and State wll contnue to he drected by Mke Ryan, who has produced splendd results n the few years he has been wth the college, and the football coach s Jack McAulffe, who s now engaged wth a squad of 30 huskes on Seaverns feld. The college s now wthout a baseball coach but one wll he elected before Sprng. METRIC SYSTEM COMES HIGH Announcement s made that a Senate sub-commttee wll soon conduct hearngs on the bll ntroduced for employment are as numerous and s^an(l- whch wll be made a part of for marrage much greater than n enclosng structure. The desgn by Senator Ladd of North Dakota Great Brtan. Fortunately Brtsh has not yet been accepted, but one [ provdng for the compulsory adopton parents began before the war to provde ther daughters wth better measures after 10 years. The use of of the metrc system of weghts and equpment for earnng ther own lvng. the metrc system has been per NEW COLBY GRANDSTAND Work began last week on Colby s new grandstand, the latest and most mposng addton to the athletc equpment of the college, and wth favorable weather t s hoped to have It completed before wnter sets n. The new stand s to be by far the largest and most expensve structure of the knd n Mane and there wll be few f any small colleges n the country whch wll have so large or so good 4<]. Tla farmer s forced to devote nto sx dvsons. On both ends wll loo largo a part of hs tme to un- *> panels of ornamental brck, whch productve work, thereby lessenng add greatly to the appearance of Ma chances of proft, and upon the fhe structure. Horace Purnton and wholo dscouragng rather than stmu- S ns of Watervlle are the bulders, lattng the extenson of farm opera- The matter of a new stand for the tlona. The average loss of farm tme athletc feld of the college was taken due to unmproved roads has been UP by the trustees at the commence- SOtUnted as equvalent to the loss naent week meetng, and Presdent A. o f more than a quarter of a mllon J* Roberts wth Herbert E. Wadsworth ntm engaged n farm labor. On the Wnthrop, one of the loyal alumn otter hand as a result of ths same of the college, were apponted a com Uteven development the consumer, mttee to secure funds for the same. Thp s engaged n necessary com- *t was largely through Mr. Wadsterdal and ndustral enterprse, s worth s efforts that partes were burdened wth ever ncreasng prces found who promsed to bear the en for food, due prmarly to traffc cond- tre expense of the proposed new tons whch dscourage maxmum structure producton and drect delvery from the farm. Both producer and con umer are therefore payng toll to the unmproved road and the amount IIn the matter of they pay benefts no one not even John c" Houghton the road tself for the money and energy thus expended ultmately dsappears n mud. So that the educatonal sde of hghway work has become a very JStato of Mane, n sad Dstrct respect - mportant matter. Loosely drawn fully represents that on th 11th day of arguments n favor of road mprove-1 January> January, last past,,ast- h ht 'July The only thng that now remans to sdes. ; complete the athletc equpment of The new stand was desgned by the college s a modern gymnasum Bunker and Savage, Augusta archtects, who wll also supervse ts con- to replace the present structure, whch has done servce almost as long as structon. Prevous to askng tor a , the oldest grad can remember. A desgn from the Augusta concern, the; ,.. commttee s at work upon ths and commttee had secured plans from,,. 1 New York and Phladelpha frm of the members have made such progress archtects and they found that t h e 'trat,he-v are c0,1,,lent l wl1 be " lv home talent had gven them a better a year or two before the much needed desgn than had the New Yorkers. I buldng wll become a realty. When I As stated, the stand s 329 feet n ' that hope s realzed, no small college! 1 front. It s 40 feet on the sdes and the dstance from the base to the top BANKRUPT S PETITION FOR 1 DISCHARGE seat s 17 feet. Above ths there s a In the matter of 1 ral about two feet hgh. There wll Fred W. Durepo I In Bankruptcy ' be 14 ters of seats, set apart by asles Bankrupt I To the Hon. Clarence Hale, Judge of the - Dstrct Court of the Unted States for, the Dstrct of Mane. FRED W. DUREPO, of Lmestone n the county of Aroostook, and State of Mane, n sad Dstrct, respect- ; fully represents that on the 5th day of May, 1921, hst past, he was duly adudged bankrupt under the acts of Congress relatng to bankruptcy; that he has duly surrendered all hs property and rghts of property, and has fully compled wth all the requrements of sad acts and of the orders of the court touehng hs bankruptcy. Wherefore, He prays that he may he1 decreed by the court to have a full ds-, was submtted to A. F. Drummond, charman of the athletc councl, whch wll probably he adopted. It s to be wholly of ron of orna mental desgn wth posts of stone ma sonrv, between the sectons. The fence! wll be eght feet n heght, wth a gate 12 feet n wdth on College avenue. The gates wll be hung on two sold columns of stone masonry surmounted by grante caps. On the gate, ether n the form of a tablet or n large ron letters, wll be placed the name of the new feld, Seaverns Feld. The two wngs to the gate wll be so bult that they can be turned asde and three temporary stles put n, when any games are gong on. a one. It s to be bult of sold renforced concrete and wll seat 2,500 The funds for the fence have people. It s beng erected on the College avenue sde of the feld, parallel already been secured and t wll he completed before the ntercollegate wth the football grdron and beng track meet n the Sprng. On the 329 feet n length wll extend a few! rver sde and hack a wooden en-! closure wll be erected, feet beyond the goal posts on both B A N K R U P T S P E TITIO N FOR DISCHARGE charge from all debts provable aganst hs estate under sad bankrupt acts, except such debts as are excepted by law from such dscharge. 1kted ths 21st day of.september, A. I» FRED W. DCREI O Bankrupt. ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON Dstrct of Mane, Northern Dvson, ss *m ths 1st day of October, A. I> on readng the foregong Petton, t s [ In Bankruptcy Bankrupt. To the Hon. Clarence Hale, Judge of the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for OrQere{1 bv tbe Court, I hut a boa rm.- the Dstrct of Mane. ad u)on the samla on the day of JOHN C. HOIT.HTON, of Fort Far- ( ntc', A. D. :21, Im fore tlft sad feld n the County of Aroostook and t, at Bangor n S, ld dst ret, N. >rt hern son. at ton o'(-ln ek n tn fol cmhm : t hat notce tl«rc f lo : uhlscd n tn Hoult on Tmes I newsp.'uaer rntfd! ndlulral adudged bankrupt as aforesad under ad dstret, Nr(lcrn 1> rson, and ' all Imown er< Pus aun nth. r pern titercst n; *y appe r ;It 11) sad Both defeat ther own obect. ruptcy; that he has duly surrendered solo all hs property and rghts of property, Inn and pla.ee a nrl.-'ll' IW e;iso. f any and has fully compled wth all the requrements of sad Acts and of the ( >ner should n he K'ranted. IIn \ ha \a, why tl * pray r of tle sad WOMEN EXCEED MEN Both n France and n England Iorders of Court touchng hs bankruptcy. the ḋork.dal 1 nd 1y 'nal to all d t s further ordered by the court, the dsparty between the number Wherefore he pray*, That he may be rn credtors e. pes,,f sa d pet t,.1) of women and the number of men I decre*d by the Court to have a full dsths order. a<dll CSSed to then at 1charge from all debts provable aganst planns of resdenee a tater1. JS very great. Full returns are not I hs estate under sad bankruptcy " a 'cis tn e s s The Hon<>rade (Marellee Hale, ft of the sad e,urt, yet avalable, but a sngle resden-1 x ' 8Uch debts as are excepted by a rd tle seal.. - n!aw from such dscharge. thereof, at Bangor, n the Northern Dvsnows 47,0001 Dated, ths v, u 24th oav, ao,, day of September, > A.. D. 1son of sad dstrct, on the 1st d a y n! tal dstrct In Pars men and 66,000 women. Tbe census October, A. D v shows that the surplus of women s (L. S.) ISABEL SUFF.HAN, greatest between the ages of 20 and A true copy of petton and order thereon. 30. Justfyng the common Impresson Attest: ISABEL SHEEHAN, that t s due chefly to the war, snce In Packages of 10 Cgars each JOHN HOUGHTON Btnkrupt. ORDER OF NOTICE THER EO N Dstrct of Mane, Northern Dvson, ss On ths 1st day of October, A. D. 1921, on readng the foregong petton, It s - Ordered by the Court, That a hearng be had upon the same on the 25th day of November, A. D. 1921, before sad < ourt at Bangor In sad Dstrct, Northern Dvson at 10 o clock n the forenoon; and that notce thereof be publshed In the Houlton Tmes, a newspaper prnted n sad Dstrct, Northern Dvson, and that all known credtors and ether persons n Interest, may appear at the sad tme and place, and show cause, If any they have, why the prayer of sad pettoner should not be granted. And It Is Further Ordered by the Court. That the Clerk shall send by mal to all known credtors copes of sad petton and ths order, addressed to them at ther places of resdence as stated. Wtness the Honorable Clarence Hale. Judge of the sad Court, and the seal thereof, at Bangor n the Northern Dvson of sad Dstrct on the 1st (lay of October, A. I) (L. S.) ISABEL SHEEHAN. Deputy Clerk A true copy of petton and order thereon Attest: ISABEL SHEEHAN. Deputy Clerk mssble snce 1866, but ts adopton has been on a very lmted scale. Busness men have preferred the old system, largely because the change W hen s a Battery O ld? Some men are young at eghty others are old at forty. It s about the same way wth batteres. Ther usefulness depends on the care they have had, the amount o f work they have had to do, how they have been used, and most mportant of all on the orgnal qualty o f the battery. There are many good reasons back of the decsons of the manufacturers of 173 cars and trucks to use Wllard Threaded Rubber Batteres. Come n and we ll tell you mere about them. H. M. Cates & Son, Inc. Mechanc Street Batteres I E 2H D Ths trademark, stamped n red on the case, dentfes the Wllard Threaded Rubber Battery. CLARIONS MEET THE NEWSTANDARDS OF EFFICIENCY Beng s& thoroughly made they conserve LABOR, TIME and FUEL WOOD & BISHOP CO. BANGOR, MAINE Establshed 1839 HAMILTON-GRANT COMPANY, HOULTON, MAINE Holy Communon at 8 a. m. Also on the frst Sunday In the month at Mornng Prayer and Sermon at Sunday School at noon. Evenng prayer and sermon at 7 alone would amount to more than! 0 c^oc^-,. Frst Congregatonal Church $20,000,000 n the aggregate, necess-, Rey A M Th0mps0D pastor. tated n adustments and replace- Mornng Worshp at ments. There appears to be no g ood; Sunday School at 12 o clock wth, reason to pay such a hgh prce for classes for men and women. abandonng a system that the publc r ung People s Meetng at 6 P m-! Pravermeetng Tuesday evenngs at. s famlar wth from long usage.! ^ - - of Mane, n sad Dstrct, respectfully represents that on the 23rd day of July, 1921, last p «\st, he was duly adudged bankrupt under the acts of < (ngress relatng to bankruptcy; that le has duly surrendered all hs property and rghts of property, ants has fully compled wth all the requrements of sad acts and of the orders of the court touchng hs bankruptcy. Wherefore, He prays that he may be decreed by the court to have a full dscharge from all debts provable aganst hs estate under sad bankrupt acts, except such debts as are excepted by law from such dscharge. Dated ths 21st day of September, A. D I ALBERT B. ANDERSON Bankrupt. ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON Dstrct of Mane, Northern Dvson, ss On ths 1st day of October, A. D. 1921, on readng the foregong Petton, t s Ordered by the Court, That a hearng be had upon the same on the 25th day of November, A. D. 1921, before the sad court, at Bangor n sad dstrct. Northern Dvson, at ten o clock n the forenoon; and that notce thereof be publshed n the Houlton Tmes, a newspaper prnted n sad dstrct, Northern Dvson, and that.all known credtors and other persons n nterest may appear at the sad tme and place and show cause, f any they have, why the prayer of the sad The Lades Guld meets Monday even? ngs weekly. The Lades Crcle meets Wednesday afternoons weekly. The Lades Mssonary Socety meets the second Wednnesday of each month. Court St Frst Baptst Rev. Henry C Speed, pastorl" 30 mornng worshp wth sermon Bble School wth classes foraen and women. 6:00 Senor C. E. Servce 7:00 Song Servce followed by sermon. Church prayer meetng, Tuesday evenng at 7:30. Chor rehearsal Frday evenng at. 7:30. All Seats free. Methodst Epscopal Corner School and Mltary Streets. Rev. A. E. Luce, Pastor a. m Publc Worshp wth sermon m. Sunday School wth Organzed and Graded Classes (or all p. m. Junor League Meetng and Preparatory Members Class p. m. Young Peoples meetng? under the auspces of the Epwortb League p. m. Prase and Preachng servce^ wth vested chorus chor General prayer meetng at 7.30 every Tuesday evenng. FIR S T CHURCH OF H O U LTO N Untaran pettoner should not be granted. I Mltary Street at Kelleran And t s further ordered by the court, > Preachng Sendee regularly every' that the clerk shall send by mal to all Sunday at a. m. known credtors copes of sad petton Sunday School every Sundhy at 12:00 and ths order, addressed to them at Dwght F. Mowery, Mnster a,er places of resdence as stated., M Coort Street T«L l t t - W \\ ltness The Honorable Clarence Hale, Judge of the sad court, and the sea 1 «* '1 " thereof, at Bangor, n the Northern Dvson of sad dstrct, on the 1st day of October, A. D (L. S.) ISABEL SHEEHAN A true Deputy Clerk, py of petton and order thereon. Attest: ISABEL SHEEHAN 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 Evenng servce at 7.00 P. M. Specal musc by chor. Chor practce Monday nghts Tuesday nght church prayer, rase Servce. Church of the Good Shepherd Rev. H. Scott Smth, Rector Sunday Servces M. and BETTER D EAD Lfe s a burden when the body s racked wth pan. Everythng worres and the vctm becom es despondent and downhearted. T o brng back the sunshne take GO LD M ED A L The natonal remedy o f Holland for over 200 years; t s an enemy o f all pans resultng from kdney, lver and urc acd troubles. All druggsts, three szes. Look for the name Gold Modal oa ovor? M s and accapt no mtaton TmwnmmnnMnMrTTTmTTnmnmTmMmmTnmmTnnnnfTnrrmHnCTrrrfHnTfmn'mM'rrmTr. Trmr Favored by Physcans An Old Famly Doctor's Favorte Prescrpton Doctors everywhere look wth favor on BALLARD S GOLDEN OIL They know ts value as a frst ad, before they reach ther patents. Ths s partcularly true n remote places where there s sure to he a delay. Nothng better for Croup, Chlls, Coughs, Colds, Colc, Inflamaton of the Bowels, etc. Should be n every medcne closet for emergences. Lberal bottles sold everywhere. NmuNMNHtNmwmHmnMmuHmHUHuummnnMMmhmuMutM A true nvestment s one that.gves you safety freedom from all care, no anxety, and no need of constant watchfulness. Such an nvestment s an account wth the Houlton Savnas Hank. \Yhv not open one now? Dvdends at the rate of 4% per annum have been pad for the past 11 years Hou' l t o n Sa v n g s B ^ n k H O U L T O N, M A I N, E CONSERVES TIME AND MONEY A Checkng Account s the most useful medum of payment assurng safety and conservng tme and money. You are nvted to open a Checkng Account wth the Houlton Trust Company. 4% Interest Pad on Savngs Accounts?0 ULT0^ l

7 THE OLD FASHIONED COUNTY FAIR One of the old fashoned nsttutons whch has not lost ts charm s the County Far. If one doubts ths statement one should have been at South Pars recently on the bg day of the Oxford County exhbt. A lowery mornng had no vsble effect upon the nhabtants f the steady rush of cars whch fled through the entrance gates had any evdence to gve. By noon tme there was standng room only anywhere about, and as for tryng to see anythng of the ndoor exhbts only the tall men and women damage Germany had caused. Producton beng her chef need, France set about reparng her machnery of 1producton frst and foremost, The prmary need of the devastated regons was transportaton. Therefore France set about rebuldng ralroads, hghways and canals. What has France done alone and unaded to repar the ralroads of the devastated regons? Today s fgures show that of 2404 klometers of man ralroad destroyed, 2385 are n operaton. Of 2325 klometres of lacal lnes, 775 are n operaton. Of 52,000 klometres of hghway destroyed, 54,- 000 have been restored. Of 1036 klometres of canals put out of use, 964 are workng today. Of the brdges and tunnels the Germans runed, 2200 o f 3600 have been rebult or repared. Ih other words, of the man ralroad lnas, 99.6 per cent, have been restored. Of the canals 93 per cent., of the brdges and tunnels 75 per cent of the hghway 64 per cent., of the local ralroads 28.3 per cent. After restoraton of means of communcaton, France turned to the land. There were 277,000,000 cubc meters HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 Of the arable land, 1,757,000 hectares were runed. Of these 1,669,000 hectares have been levelled, 1,495,000 cultvated and n 1920 the crops of the devastated regons were 50 per cent of the before war total as aganst 24 per cent, n Next, France turned her attenton to the factores. At the end of 1918, 24,500 factores were unworkable because of war ravages. Four thousand fve hundred were destroyed and wthout machnery; 6300 were standng, but wthout machnery, and 9500 partally damaged by shells. Of thes establshments, 3800 are today n f.1 actvty and 5500 n partal actvty. Eleven thousand are not yet repared. However, the more mportant establshments have receved the greater attenton, and of 4500 damaged establshments, employng more than 20 persons, 79 per cent are n operaton. So far n the program France has done well. She has done what has been done by her sole effort, and a heavy effort t has been, for the country, bled whte by her war efforts. But, great as her effort has been, France s reconstructon s far from the war. At the end of 1918 less than 2,000,000 nhabtants were there. To day these regons number 4,666,000 nhabtants, 610,000 less than n But how are they lvng n wrecks of homes, n dugouts of the Germans and of the alles, n cellars wherever shelter can be had. Glance over the few fgures and you can see what reman to be done. Fve hundred and nnety thousand houses were damaged n the war, 293,000 were razed to the ground and 296,000 were partally destroyed. Forty-four thousand have been rebult nad 280,000 repared. In addton 40,000 barracks, 60,000 wooden house sand 29,000 nondescrpt houses havebeen erected. Of the normal habtatons before the war 92.5 per cent, are lackng. That represents the bg reconstructon task remanng. Turnng fnally to poltcal rehabltaton, one may remark that the muncpaltes ceased to functon n 3256 communtes and they have been re-establshed n Of 6690 schools closed by the war 6613 are reopened. Three hundred and seventy thousand chldren are n school today, as compared wth $580,000 n In presentng these fgures of the government reconstructon servce n an artcle L lllustraton wll publsh tomorrow, Andre Tardeu observes: There s no need of conclusons. The fgures speak for themselves. The Frenchman, ndvdualst as he s, has has repared the roads, the land and the factores before reparng hs own room. He restored our producton and beleved hs roof would come. He has not got hs roof. Hs house has not followed because money s lackng. We are told that even f we had money we would lack materals and labor. That s not true. It s lack of payments, and that alone, whch for sx months has paralyzed our efforts. That should be repeated and repeated, not only because t s the truth, but t s the only means of preventng the government from gvng up our rghts solemnly wrtten n the treaty of Versalles. Let the money come and the houses wll follow. (Copyrght 1921, by New York Tmes Company.) THE COST OF SPEED That speed ncreases the cost of ralroad haulng n a very strkng manner, we are told by George R. Henderson n the Ralway Age. In the frst place, he says, the tran-load must be greatly reduced f we wsh to haul at hgh speeds. As a locomo sdered) the costs per ton-mle mount rapdly, beng roughly from 1% to 2 tmes as much at 30 mles per hour as at 15 mles. The exact amounts depend on the grade, cost of coal and supples, car repars, wages, etc., bat they can be defntely determned n any case. Ths demonstrates the expensve nature of handlng lve stock, and when to ths s added the possble deprecaton of the load f the cattle are not delvered n tme for the market, we can easly understand the suggeston of an operatng offcer that hs compettors should be allowed to take the stock busness. Passenger traffc s even more expensve. The eghteen-hour trans between New York and Chcago were so notorously costly to operate that for several years they have been abandoned. It has been demonstrated that a speed of about 15 mles per hour s the most economcal for ordnary freght-trans, and such comcodtes as coal, ore, lumber, etc., cost less to haul per ton on account of speed alone than fast freghts, such as pershable fruts and lve stock. If the speed s arranged to sut the goods, the most economcal transportaton results n any case the cost of the speed factor may be determned by careful study, but t requres tme and patence. Hgh-speed trans,, ether passenger or freght*, cause had any chance. Ths person was carred along n the crowded slowmovng tde that was ust short of a suffocatng am and the wse person turned attenton to studyng the types vwther than the laces or the vegetables. The general expresson of opnon was thar-hese exhbts were ter superor to the State far and the sprt and temper of the people was flue. Early n the mornng of the frst day two men one of them sellng some of the catch penny stuff that always lnes along the mdway were talkng. "Last week I was away down country, among the Rubes f say, dd you ever go way down the coast to Bar Har of trenches to be flled. Of these tve has a horse-power lmt, dependng 219,000,000 cubc meters have been complete. But here the accountng of upon ts boler capacty, t follows flled. There were 310,000,000 square condtons shows how false s the that at twce the speed, only one-half meters of barbed wre entanglements German clam that France s makng the tractve effort wll be avalable; to clean up, and 249,000,000 have been no serous effort to rebuld the at three tmes the speed, only onebor? asked one. Never went down cleaned up. There were 3,800,000 wrecked regons and that French thrd the tractve effort, approxmately. below Augusta, that s Rube enough hectares messed up by the war. Of folks who lved there have moved for me, sad the other. Thought ths 3,415,000 have been purged of away and do not wsh to come back. The coal burned per ton-mle may delays and therefore expense to other your terrtory covered all Mane, proectles and 3,126,000 rectares Before the war 4,676,000 people sacrfced n the work of reconstructon ndvdualty to collectvty. He pad by the mle (overtme not con clearance. not vary greatly, but as the crew s trans whch must gve them safe observed the frst. It dees but I leveled once agan. lved n the provnces damaged by don t go to ay places lke Bar Harbor. I only go where there s a chance to d o some busness, sad the second man. There are yet people who love good horse trot, n spte of the ascend ncy of the autobubble. As evdenced by the nablty to get a seat of any sort on the fve thousand capacty grandstand early n the afternoon of the second day. In spte also of the tect that a racng horse today s such a complete affar of straps and bnders, poles fastened to noses and blndfolded eyes that one loses sght of the horse n the anxous watch as to whch part of the rggng wll frst Ask Some One part company wth ts supports. A real handsome, smooth-playng mus cled, fearless anmal s an anamoly today on the track. Ths partcular day attentos was dvded between the W ho W as There golden-throated New York Cabaret snger who haled from Lewston, Me. and a tro of people n the front row under the wre seats of the grand stand. Two men and a woman bearng all the earmarks of prosperty and nterest n the sport took ther seats very early. The woman was a handsome mature well-dressed person and her men carred steamer rugs, cushons and what not for her comfort. Man fashon they chewed ther cgars and tpped ther hats at mpossble angles when the race n whch they were specally nterested came off, but the women kept the grandstand amused and nterested by her enthusasm. Every tme the horses came before the party she would sprng to her feet and scream drectons to the drver, or encouragng cres of Come on Josephne. Get ahead Josephne tll Josephne, the roan mare, was out of sght. Later In the day I heard a couple of swpers yellng, Get there Josephne, to some grls as they trotted past. The dsagreeable feature of the week was the prevalence of the pckpocket. More empty pocketbooks w ere brought nto the offce than ever before by far. There was one booth where mllnery was sold that was the seek on whch many a woman struck bard. She would lfe both arms to put October thrd at the H. H. S. Audtorum, the New stood on the platform, besde the New Edson. She a hat on her head for tral and somebody would lft her pocketbook from Edson proved that there s no dfference between ts sang. In the mdst of her song, she stopped sngng. her coat pocket at the same tme. RE-CREATION of musc and the orgnal musc. It The New Edson took up the song, and contnued t Pretty soon the empty book would be was p roof that would be good n any court o f law. alone. Thus, they alternated, snger and p h on o pcked up by some one, tossed over graph. Into the exhbt shelves or somewhere else and returned to the offce If you dd not attend' take the trouble to fnd out Almost every loss reported occurred exactly what happened. Investgate all the detals of The audence had to watch Mes Lucey s lps- n In some such way as ths. ths drastc test. It was gven partcularly for the order to be certan whch was sngng. The New Edson s trumph was com plete and spectacular. Next to the hot dog, the baby doll (m usc-lovers of Houlton, so that they mght know, 1s the sure wnner at a place of ths through ther own personal experence, that there s a wort. We thought we had seen happy phonograph w hch can gve them tn* exact perform an ce o f the lvng artst. ths test! Remember that you want a phonograph Remember that no other phonograph can sustan crowds wth baby dolls before but nothng lke ths specal party. Down the mdway every second booth was whch does! And remember that the New Edson dd a doll shop and n the afternoon when busness got lvely three dolls for a Leola Lucey, fam ous soprano, made the test. She t, rght here n Houlton. 35 cent chance was the rule. The person who dd not carry one of these flrtatous, wcked-eyed dolles by 4 o'clock was not notced n the crowd. And the funny part of t was whether a man got three or sx he was not wllng to sell a sngle member of hs newly acqured famly. Trplets were th e thng. Grace Wynne n the Portland The Phonograph wth a Soul Express. FRANCE IS OUT $3,000, The French treasury s almost "broke. Why s the French treasury almost broke? Because It has pad out 40,000,000 francs to reconstruct the regons devastated through the Qerman nvason. For ths work, for whch Germany s pledged to pay. Prance, the vctm, has expended a sum equal to $3,000,000,000 gold. Germany, the aggressor, has pad practcally nothng. Ths s the fnancal program of Prance s now determned that there lhall be a change n the program. After the Armstce France faced ths stuaton: Nne of her most protectve provnces had been put n condton where they could not proluce. Her labor supply was curtaled fry the loss through death and mutlaton of more than 2,000,000 of her sons. He r economc condton s perlous because of the sacrfces she made to the common alled cause. Prance saw that her exstence depended upon the reparaton of the You can have, n your own home, the exact knd of nstrument used n the test. Ths was an Offcal Laboratory M odel,- out of our own stock. Select any Offcal Laboratory Model n our store, and we wll guarantee t to sustan the test of drect comparson, and to do everythng that was done n (he test at the Audtorum. Ask us about our Budget Plan. It brngs you ths New Edson for a small payment. Any man or woman, who loves musc, can make a gentlem an s agreement wth us. Astle Musc Company 73 Man Street

8 HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 to accept reductons n wages, and the pay ncreases granted last year by the Unted States Labor Board were based on the ncrease cost of lvng and government exports show a reducton of more than 16% n such lvng expenses. Hawa Amercan terrtory. proportons and wll contnue to do further. You have 100 tons of hay, Wanted, conductors and tranmen HAWAII: PARADISE 60 Per Cent of Populaton Asatcs so untl stopped. whch you could sell at $14 a ton for servce on the Bangor and Aroos- MID GIBRALTAR OF Though the Hawaan Islands are n general the publc accepts the f the roads were passable. Snce took ralroad n case of strke, Vce- THE PACIFIC known as the half-way house of the need for modernzed roads. But when they are not you say you wll have presdent of Tranmens organzaton to take about $7 a ton. That s a havng been quoted n the press as -Hawa, Terrtory of "the Unted Pa» C n renlu-v the dstance (rom specfc pont-state or county-am Statea, and meet mportant etrategl- Sa" Franclsc to Honolulu s o n y B specfc proposton comes up at a dfference of $700. You have 2000 statng there would be an mmedate oally of the lands of the Pacfc, la ; about half that Iron, Honoluu to that proposton nvolves a slght» bushels of potatoes. The dfference strke f the members so wshed, not alone nterestng because of ts Austraa. the Phlppnes or Japan. crease n taxes to put an end to n- on that' wll be, accordng to your whch seemed practcally certan fgures, about 25 cents a bushel. That The Btrke whch -s at th A very clear exemplfcaton of the mltary and naval value to Uncle >e»' «>* «dlreet tax T St that ar, wll amount to $500. Wheat, you say _, present ; condton of the laborng class and Sam, says a bulletn from the Wash-: bat coral ha3 he 8 d oe,s o t tax ncrease' that m ent the P01? ".. L... many of them. The dsntegrated lava cal scrubs begn nullng around the wll be about the same. So the lack not f h 'p. r0*ie,,lat,t'al s the scarcll>'»l employment s gven ngton, D. C. headquarters ot n ' ^ has formed a rch sol whch responds, pasture of publc opnon and dsona eogr p c. I lberally to rrgaton. Only Cuba concertng even those who are honestof passable roads has cost you J I f, h st T n* ' b>' U' e ^ *hat ther<s have already ths vear Tranmen s Brotherhood who tavors been several applcants at the ral- It s n many ways lterally an and Java produce greater total crops y strvng to get somewhere. It reof sugar, and the per acre yeld of Iqures a great deal of patence to be back n hs char, the vstor looked ) tlere Droppng hs pencl and leanng. p " *! Ce,,ta" ce of * w**e <= «!» < * tor Jobs on the road. The Island paradse. Scarcely anywhere nment reports ndcate that men were attracted here by the Bossteadly at the farmer for a moment '. " " T I? " men out : ton ads. whch «oes t0 sho «how far else n the world may one roam Hawa s the greatest n the world- chartable wth these ndvduals, through tropcal ungles wth never four tons wthout rrgaton and sx Whether they are sncere n ther and then sad: "Brother, t seems t o!,.... ' 1. a 111 e< lates - Near- men wll travel to secure employ Here s a case n pont. A farmer a thought of posonous nsects or tons wth. The sugar crop for the J belefs or not makes no partcular me that you are payng an awful road y Ul CU, SL', labor have l,een (0TOd ment- snakes. Such creatures do not exst year ended June 30, 1920 was worth dfference. The cold truth s they are tax. If the rest of the farmers n ths In these far slands. Even poson vy $78,500,000. The pneapple crop, costng the publc too much for ther dstrct look at ths matter as you do, and smlar plants are unknown. And second n mportance, was valued at poltcal feed. then I don t want to buy n the neghborhood. though n the edge of the tropcs, $18,500,000. Hawa has a cooler temperature by And yet, when a poltcan wants ten degrees than any other land n One of the most nterestng who was naturally opposed to a hghthe same lattudes. Moreover, one features n regard to Hawa s the er tax rate had been nduced to to break nto offce or reman there may change hs clmate at wll by a racal make-up of ts populaton. The beleve that he was savng money n on publc favor, he contrves to get ourney of a few mles; for the northeastern half of each sland, swept by beleved to number several hundred personal reason he offered hs farm country had an a-hawaan populaton opposng modern roads. For some n or stay n by wdenng the gap of ; msnformaton n the publc mnd concernng ths matter of roads, the trade wnds, s rany and heavly thousands when t frst became well tor sale. In showng the productve wooded, whle ust over the mountan known to Amercans. The dseases power of the sol, a prospectve buyer Whch moves all patent ctzens rdge s a drer, warmer regon. of cvlzaton, ncludng measles, was taken to a bn contanng 2000! who really know what bad roads cost Islands Proteges of Boston klled off a large part of them n the bushels of potatoes, granares flled to exclam, How long, O Lord, how In a way, the Unted States may years followng and n 1920 there were wth wheat, and a surplus of hay long! -well thank Boston and ts darng only 22,000 full blooded Hawaans n amountng to 100 tons. At dnner the 1 traders and mssonares of the early the slands and about 16,000 of mxed prospectve buyer wanted to know B. & A. TAKES NO days for the fact that Hawa now fles blood. The two groups consttute! about taxes. He was gven the desr-! CHANCHES ON STRIKE the Stars and Strpes rather than the less than 15 per cent of the 255,912! ed nformaton, and the farmer volun- Tr-color or the Brtsh Unon Jack. people lvng n the slands n teered the followng: That the Bangor and Aroostook ralroad s takng actve measures to be A Spansh navgator frst dscovered The Amercans and northern Europeans made up about 10 per cent, the prepared for any emergency that may And another good thng, he sad, the nlands n 1655 but hs country s that we have no road tax to pay lad no clam to them and they were Portuguese approxmately 9y2 and the arse n connecton wth the proposed n ths dstrct, that s no tax to practcally forgotten. The Brtsh Porto Rcans and Spanards about speak 0f strke of conductors and brakemen Captan Cook vsted the Hawaan 2%. The total Caucasan populaton was evdenced by advertsements group n 1778 and named them the was thus lttle more than 20 per cent That s good, repled the vstor.; whch are beng prnted n daly and Now ust to fgure a lttle on how weekly new'spapers. or only about one-ffth of the entre populaton. The Japanese populaton was 44 per cent and the Japanese, Chnese and Flpno populaton to- Sandwch Islands. Stll the slands wfere practcally unknown., Then, folowng the close of the Amercan Revoluton, Amercan shps began to sal the seven seas n growng 8 ther, over 60 per cent, numbers, and n 1789 the frst shp flyng the Stars and Strpes from POLITICAL SCRUBS Boston vsted the Hawaans. It IN THE ROAD PASTURE was the frst of many from the same port, carryng traders, whalers and. By James W. Brooks, Drector, Amer- adventurers; and soon the natves lean Hghway Educatonal Bureau had learned of the republc on the ^ fllalca oss an(] dscredt much I could count on makng off ths farm how much hay dd you say you had out there? contnent to the east, and came to 0> Amercan publc, too many consder Unted States and Boston poltcal scrubs are runnng loose could \on get tor them. synonymous. ; n the doman of publc dscusson on The Boston traders found each of hghways Thov arg sprp0(lnf, (,lis the Islands under a separate kng., theor e5 ot ec,10mv fast(,r, t lv(, w wth two rval rulers on Hawa, the seom tha th(1b(, tlleore,s ])(, largest of the slands. One of the klled off. And the all too patent latter obtaned fre-arms and ammunassstance publc n not a few states s pavng ton from the traders and got ther the l0. perml, tllk ls lf l)(, n buldng a navy. Wth gulled" nto a sense of false securty ths Amercan help he became the from m.reasert taxaton, wholly obl- Napoleon of the Pacfc. conquered vous to the fact that old tvpes of that " t*16?t^er Islkfds. and as Kamehameha roaf umer m0(ern comlitons aw "All rant." sad I. ruled over the consoldated kngdom, creatng an ndrect tax of enormous' buyer. ".Now l d l e n... When Honolulu Was Gayer Than Barbary Coast The Amercans found the Hawaan ^HmMnmnmNttmMUHMmtMfMmttmtMMMtHMmMmmnnHmtHHmnmummmH mmmnmm trade a good thng. They sold the 1 1 kng and hs nobles everythng from 1 1 clothes and ewelry to bllard tables 8 1 Fall Sale of Lad e s and steam yachts, and n return cart- g ed away shploads of valuable sandal- 1 wood. Strong lquor was not forgotten =~ among the mports, and n Honolulu among the naturally lght-hearted W earn g natves the Amercan salors contrbuted to the creaton of a gay Pacfc resort, a sort of forerunner of San Francsco s Barbary Coast of later decades. Deserters from Amercan Apparel shps, n the delghtful haven of a barbarous paradse, helped to heghten the fame or the nfamy of the Hanaand a Demonstraton of Julu of those days. The stuaton be- 'came such that n 1820 Presdent Monroe sent an agent to resde n Honolulu and look after Amercan nterests n regard to commerce and seamen. A shpload of mssonares, also from Boston, arrved n the sands n 1820 much to the dsgust of the traders as well as those who had deserted the sea to tyead Hawa s prmrose path. The complant of the traders was that the mssonares taught the natves the value of thngs and so made tradng unproftable. Amercan ways and teachngs at ther best made a great mpresson on the more thoughtful Hawaans and when they reshaped ther government they made the Ten Commandments the bass of ther laws. ; Once 8ezed by Brtsh * and more Amercans vsted «Dd settled n the Islands and the Hawaans looked upon Amerca as ther best frend among the natons. When poneers from the Unted States ( were pushng west toward Calforna Just before the Mexcan War whch added that State to the Unon, a Brtsh naval commander n the Pacfc, realzng the strategc mpor-1 trace of the Hawaan group, sezed the Islands, but hs country promptly dsavowed hs act. After some dffcultes wth France over the slands n the fortes the Unted States declared n sort of Monroe Doctrne toward them. As early as 1851 the sland government, fearng trouble wth other natons, provsonally ceded t h e Islands to the Unted States. But the cesson was not accepted and numerous efforts to become a part of the Unted States were made n the followng half century. In 1887 the Unted States obtaned a concesson for the use of Pearl Harbor for a coalng staton. When Queen Lllluokalan attempted to abolsh the consttuton n 1893, the consttutonal party, led by Amercan settlers, brought about a revoluton and dethroned her. One of the frst acts of the provsonal government was to apply for annexaton to the Unted States. Germany was sezng Islands rght and left In the Pacfc, and the Hawaans wshed to get under a shelterng wng. Poltcs In the Unted States delayed acton and In the meantme the Republc of Hawa was organzed. Then n 1898, durng the Spansh-Amercan War, Congress suddenly voted to make No. 225 $ ^ The advertsement read as follows: SCROFULA MOST About a hundred tons." PROGRESSIVE NOW What could you get for t? Sudden changes of weather are Well, f the roads were so I could especally tryng, and probably to get to market now, T could probably none more so than to the scrofulous get $14 a ton, but when they dry up.1and consumptve. new pasture wll he comng on and I progress of scrofula, durng a,,,,, normal autumn s commonly great, don suppose could get more than g pro,able that few people ever $7 a ton. thnk of scrofula- ts hunches, erup- "Alrght: now about potatoes, you tons, and wastng of the body wthsav vou have 20h) bushels What ou* thnkng of the beneft man, sufferers from t have derved lrom Hoods Sarsaparlla, whose success n Well, t 1 could haul now I could the treatment of ths one dsease alone get probable 5n cents a bushel (ths would be enough to make t what t was n the pre-war perod, but I don t s- on( (,f VV' an,,,us suppose 1 can get more than 2a or Tll(,n. s (I-(>],;tpv not a cty or emts wlmn tle mads are so I can haul town where Hood's Sarsaparlla has n the sprng. We'll soon be near not. proved ts mert n more homes t*w pofalo tm lmn. you know." than one, n arrestng and completely eradcatng scrofula, whch s almost "And how abol! your wheat?" ns serous and as much to be feared The market won t change much on as ts near relatve, consumpton. Lower Prces.... Lades of Moulton and all towns n the county are nvted to nspect our splendd New York dsplay of Lades', Msses' and Chldren's Outer W earng Apparel, at a savng to you of 33 percent less than former prces on Fall and Wnter Coats, Suts, Dresses, Blouses, Skrts, etc. Style No. 208 Heavy all wool Polo Cloth, n new Fall colors Only *19.75 Style No Ths very stylsh all wool Bolva Coat heavy Satn Innng. Astrakhan, Opposum, Coon or fnest Sealne Collar, 50 garment at $37 50 No. 222 Coat s only $29.75 Over 100 New York s latest style Coats to choose from at $17.50 to?49.5(). OTs and Junor Coats, $7.9k, $10.(10, $12.50, $15.00 and $17.5o Lades, M sses and Chldren s Dresses, a bg assortment to select from of te- Seascm's latest styles, n Trcotnes, Serges, Velours' Slks and Satns. Don t send away, don t buy elsewhere untl you have seen the. values vve offer n Lades' Dresses at $ $15.98, $17.50, $19.75 and $ Chldren s all wool Dresses, age 8 to 17 at $4.98, $7.50, $ Chldren's Cnghan Dresses, new Fall Styles and colors at $1.59 to $2.98. Over 100 new Fall Skrts, prces cut to the lowest margn. All $12.5o and $15.98 Satn Pannlla Skrts $10.00 All $lo.no Skrts now $7.98. all $7.00 and $7.50 Skrts$5.75 Chev. y Chase Oumpe Dresses n all wool Serge $3.98 and$5.0j. In Velvet and Jersey $4.98 and $6.75 Specal Cut Prce Sale of Slk Pettcoats $7.50 Slk Pettcoats now $ Slk Pettcoats now Slk Pettcoats now 3.98 Cotton Taffeta Pettcoats «1 qq Grl s Outng Gowns Hood's Flls, the cathartc to take wth Hood's Sarsaparlla, n eases where one s necessary, are gentle n acton am thorough n effect. Specal at 79c 208 r; 213 $ McLeodNo. 213 Lades Velour Coats, all Satn lned wth Sealne Fur Collar Houlton, Mane Only$27.50 Second Floor at 72 Man Street Over 20 years n the Garment Busness nlllnmimiimimihflllllllllllltlllllllmiiiiiiiiiiiiiimliiiiiiiimiiiihmiilhimiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiihitmmiitllllllllllmnllllmiiiiiimitllmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiuiiiiihimiilhil llll'ihimlnmtltlltlmmlmhimuiimimiiuiiiiiiiiiimimiimiiimmiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii.-... t A New Dscovery by G. O. Curre For Indgeston, Colc, Headache, Heartburn, Sour Stomach Constpaton, Bladder and Kdney Alments = p Spnwl'^an. Mane, May M. IHL'l. = g I w 1 T. -: I \,,u I...V. t.am.- ( III.- ut : w.-v.- \va rs aa- ] was a Iff vr.--k.. >>. (! a!»>;t -n 11 > t url:!.-: r s- a n.-a-rv. hauntt-d by th- uho.-t <.f de-m; nr, t e a! n. 1 VV1111! d not tna 1 a gat; such that 1 ha<7 m,d roa Son. ;l tt f.r ho man, vv c a l. sp» :!>. -: t he heart a 1<: thou kndr ed and f e I ( 1 was st rt to H true gle f H' l t ' e. A - 1 h a 1 ' d nan y paten m dvnes and 1 warn s'tll > : Offl l'er of S arl tro OWN. Bv M)> *rva t on an d ex] a-renee I Then 1 U-umI t wt h o'! her's wn > \Yere af.l l'y 1». "' 111 ))<-;. It!. The condton was ' l.-sm'-ss I was a nervous, broken down t that I v. a> a..on to bd adeu to m> ut.-.attacks Ka>. eausng- me a hard 'Old doctors for the past forty year.- fle. I fegan to try -enne mxture ef mv am-d knowledge of my present remedy, ted as myself. It worked lke magc 11! HUl them ;n*1 tl l e all came t Yom the to get t patented and place t before tlt* pul)f ac the lnnn o f llcl; t< all s:' ufferers of dyspepsa. Alt er tryt m t Ht nur n g 11lu ] ast sx \ months. I have deded to gve ths wond erful re dv to the wa ml(1. Let not anyone persuade you to fal to try out ths rened v results by usng as ter drectons found. -n... as V lu vvll sut el v * t good 11! («. V., M. - IV «1pvspepsa s H tl e ra 1st da nger ms end y of humanty. Ths dstressng malady s tn; most I»r<'V.alent of all (( m day dseases. Thousands who have ded of dyspt psa n tle hst t VVcut y years would won fe lvng today f my remedy had been kmw n and lst d. 1 bav e ma ny a vvtm ss who have gven ther sworn testmany as re stor ng tll n to healt h They are now reocng n the prospect of man v years of l vng n l eevved streng; and vgor of former days, Th S lll's U]nv. rsal1 maladv has ha f t< the most skl led S P ' eca lsts ha ve heel As and!mngle wth m y frend; hoed. 1 have t:tlk(*d wth the m e ntal am d the medcal professon for years and unable to eope wth t successfuly.. whom all manknd are kn n brotherphyscal sufferers of chronc dyspepsa and 1st ened to th er stor v of no relef.. Agan let me say I feel oblgated to place ths on the market. Ths remedy s dong more than was expected. Some people have been helped of rheumatsm n a few hours, and other alments not generally recognzed as havng ther orgn n stomach trouble There s nrobably not a sngle wrton of tle body that s not benefted by the use of the Curre Plls, whch begns ts work by stmulatng the* dgestve organs, thereby enrchng the blood and nvgoratng the whole system. Those who have tred the Curre Plls say that they beat all other remedes whch are on sale. They clam that they are cured of stomach trouble n ust a few days, ganng n flesh and strength, and bubblng over wth oy that comes wth good health. These plls contan no poson or narcotcs, are not nurous to the system, wll fortfy your blood aganst many lls of the body, and gve vgor and strength, good health and many years of lfe worth lvng, as many a wtness has gven testmonals to ths effect, and we trust to receve many more. sale at all drug stores. One dollar per box. Truthfully yours, GEO. O CURRIE. Testmonals Skovvlegan. Mane. I had ndgeston so bad durng the Pall May U*. 1X-1 of lx o that I could not eat much of anythng wthout dstress of some knd and Mr. G.». Curre. m Skowhegan, Mane at tmes acute attacks. Now I feel well Dear Sr: and do not have ndgeston. I have used your remedy for ndgeston, heartburn, and sour stomach. It weak hack. I took one of these plls and For several days I had a very lame and =3 heats all that I have ever tred. You wthnn twenty-four hours I was releved surely have got t over them all. 1 was ; of ths lameness. = s troubled wth burnng and rasng of food I recommend these plls to all sufferers 11 hut your plls gave me the desred relef of ndgeston I am wllng to gve my and hef). 1got help by the frst one used. affdavt to ths letter. g Sx n all. I have not used any snce. If Yours verv trulv, = n my trouble should return 1 wll take the ALMA BISHOP. =1 'urre I lls. Water Street I recommend these pls to all sufferers 3 of stomach alments. You surely get re- = lef. I wll gve oath to ths letter f re- Skowhegan. Mane. = H <pested. June = 1 Yours respoetfullv,.\ir. Geo. (). Curre. I EPHRAIM cowett Skowhegan. Mane. Road Commssoner ] > ar <qr: ~ It s wth pleasure that I gve my M r. ('u l e. Skowhegan I'ear Sr: _ m_ wsh t g publc for l = Indgest on Man. Skowhegan. Mane Aprl L 2. I'.fJl gve my t stmony to the Iellledy aled Curre's I llls." I 1 unnend to all \1 3 sufferng ndv duals who have ndg ton to haste H n Pll* I hav e he, n a sufferer for forty-lve = yea ts. 1'octl us could not do much for as me. I would have acute spells, thought s 1 VVUll< de before I could get relef, Snee I have taken ths remedy, about s four tn>nt hs ago. 1 have not had any n aeut e a tacks, I would have severe headaches, hut have had none snce usng ths remedy. The doctors sad I had lver trouble hut I ant not troubled wtu that at the present tme. _ 3 I feel thrty years younger. Although = = I am sxty-fve years of age. I have courage to look for a number of years ahead wthout sufferng n msery as 1 have for the past forty years. 1>o not fal to try ths remedy. Ths s gven of my own free wll and accord. I am ready to gve my affdavt to the above letter f called upon. Yours for health and happness. MRS. FRED COTTA. Skowhegan. Mane. May To Whom It May Concern: T wsh to say that I have tred the Curre Plls for ndgeston and found relef wthn three or four mnutes. Have only had to take three plls durng the past fve months. On testmony n behalf of the remedy called The Curre Indgeston Tablet." 1 was down and out. unft for work the past four years. My stomach was n such a condton that I could not eat anythng wthout sufferng day and nght. I had tred many remedes that were on sale for stomach trouble, but all faled me. also many physcans looked me over and prescrbed for me. stll I was talng fast. They sad the only hope for me was an operaton. Ths was a last and hopeless prospect for health. The day was apponted and arrangements made to go to the hosptal. In the meantme a frend of mne came along and gave me three of Curre s 'Tablets. The frst one gave me relef. By the tme I had taken the three I felt so much mproved that I gave up the plan I expected to go through. It s about sx weeks ago that I commenced usng Curre's remedy. I am now eatng hearty food and ganng n tlesh and dong my wot k, and attendng to busness all ' >. K., can recommend the Curre's Indgeston Tablets to any sufferers of dyspepsa. You wll surely get the relef you wsh to fnd. In my ease, all dstress would dsappear n a few mnutes after takng a tabet. I took two a day a few days, then one for a whle, then mssed a few days, then f feelng any symptoms of the old trouble I took one. I wll surely keep them by me n case of need, to keep me n good health. To those who are n need of such a remedy for ndgeston, fal not to gve ths a tral. Yours respectfully, (Sgned) H. E. SPEAR. Curre & Smth Co., Skowhegan, Mane Sole Dstrbutors O. F French & Son, Local DL-trbucrs

9 HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 PAG3 SEVEN ORIGIN OF THE CREAM SEPARATOR Thomas & Houston were ahead. Ths resulted n hs concedng prorty to these nventors, and a combnaton of nterests soon followed whch led to the producton and explotaton on a large scale of the earlest types ot centrfugal separators used n creameres. The centrfugal type of creamer s now consdered an essental n every dary and creamery. JUST TALKS Wth Apologes to Mr. Dooley The followng was gven me by a Amercan creameres are ndebted to the laboratory work of a unversty professor for the machne whch las enabled them to save mllons of dollars yearly n separatng cream from mlk, accordng to a press bulletn of the Engneerng Foundaton (New York) whch wth the Natonal Research Councl and other agences, s organzng ndustral research on a naton-wde scale. The Inventon of ths machne, we are gentleman who s a past master n told, was a strkng llustraton of the art of makng poltcs amusng, bow laboratory researches, carred on We have collaborated t nto the form wth no mmedate motve other than of a conversaton that goes rght on, the dscovery of the laws of nature, lke ths: It s to be relshed solely may result n nventons of prceless for ts humor. value. The mmedate suggeston of I see that the Commttee on Exploraton, the centrfugal creamer came from for the purpose of beatng teachng and laboratory research the Baxter boy n the next prmares, whch had been undertaken to extend are about to report, sad Hennessey; the knowledge of centrfugal acton. "t must be exctng to dg nto the Accordng to the Foundaton s statement, wlds of poltcs wd nothn to gude ye but a small compass." "In 1876, whle teachng n the "The compass, sad Mr. Dooley, Central Hgh School of Phladelpha, "was not ncluded n the prsnt proceedngs.. Professor Elhu Thomson had been They have none. They usng before hs classes the whrlng have a dvnng rod! Do you know machnes and models common n what s a dvnng rod, Hnnssey? cabnets of phlosophcal apparatus "Is t the bg stck? asked Hennessey. "It s not, sad Dooley. "It for llustratng the central forces. He had been tellng hs classes of the s a small rod that s gnerally belt applcatons n the steam engne governor, the centrfugal dryng-machnes for watther. He takes the stck n the hands of the man who s huntn used n laundres, and the centrfugal bechune hs thumbs and follows t dranng-machnes n refneres. where It lades. I thnk, says he, t "Whle whrlng a vessel contan the lad who has been tryn to destroy all property an hm wd only a mllon or two of hs own, and not n need of any more at prsnt? It wll he a great campagn, says Hennessey. "It wll he that, says Mr. Dooley. "Every man who can fold a pece of paper and every lady who has arrved at the age of twntywan, f there he one of them darlnts n the State of Mane, wll have a. chance to vote, early and often. There wll be oshns of albs and recomnda- shuns. There wll he letters, O, so fne and dandy. The promnent busness man from an Eastern county of the State of Mane wll furnsh a short bography wth every ssue of the daly papers. The promnent lobbyst from the same secton wrtes me daly already, that me salary s safe for the state wll he developed under conservatve cok.tons. There wll he testmonals from the very promnent gentleman representn 67 varetes of watther, who wants a sutable succssor to he apponted by hm before annywan resgns or relnqushes anny offce n the gft of the people or the organzaton." "That wll he fne, sad Hennessey. "God bless the candydate. God save the grand old parthy. It s the parthy of me granddads when Woodrow Wlson was a small bye. Do ye thnk that he wll run well - ths watther canddate, n the prmares? "Why not? sad Mr. Dooley. "Why not? Whn even the Congrssman who lves up north can spare tme from Bndng out hs garden seeds to make such glorous and convncn speeches agn the Executve and tell hm what s a Bolshevk. I am s pntng to Bangor. The town gts ng a lqud n whch there was a excted and holds a straw vote on sedment, he was struck wth the what s watther and the man wd the promptness wth whch the sedment dvn rod says we want no sthraw BANKRUPT S PETITION FOR settled to the outsde of the vessel, votes fo~ watther. And so he says, DISCHARGE and t occurred to hm that the applcatons of the phenomena of centr a mllonare n blue overhalls run ashamed of ye Hnnssey. Why should hold on, man dear, the rod s pontn In the matter of to Aroostook. Years t has been snce Hury <;. Bclan In Bankruptcy I fugal force mght be consderably extended, as n the clearng of clayey arstocracy r the Court Dstrct? agn the feeln s of the proud scon of there was watther n Bangor, more Bankrupt. power to It. To the Hon. Clarence Hale, Judge of the 1 or muddy lquds, or lquds havng Let me ask ye that. Hnnssey. Why! Dstrct Court of the Unted States for What talk have you," says Hennessey. But Mr. Dooley contnued. materals n suspenson; the separaton of flud of dfferent denstes, the way Percy has been don by HEMIY C. BELAIN. of Fort Kent; should a man array class agn mass the Dstrct of Mane. t wth a sly wnk as tho he was knowng of t all and sad, Ys. It pont- State of Mane, n sad Dstrct respect In th e county o r Aroostook and especally the removal of cream from reucn taxes and talkng Bullshevee? mlk, whch, of course, was carred I ll say t wll he a great an' glorous, fully represents that on the ltth lay of ed to Aroostook, but there was no out on a large scale by other methods. campagn. Nothn can heat watther, Aprl, 19JI, last past, he was duly: watther there, bad luck ndade. The Wth Professor E. J. Houston, who Hnnssey, as a thng to run t on. It adudged bankrupt under the Acts of man who looked wet enough to beat I Congress relatng to Bankruptcy; that asssted, t wgs beleved that f a used to he somethn else, Hnnssey, the Baxter boy sad. "I hafe to dg he has duly surrendered all hs property contnuously operatng machne could sad s the day! But today, Hnnssey, me pertates. I have no tme to be and rghts of property, and has fully he devsed for separatng, especally watther s the stuff!" A. G. S. n compled wth all the requrements of 1 fooln wd the lkes of ye! It s a of cream from mlk, a notable step Lewston Journal. sad Acts and of the orders of Court dry tme. I thnk t wll not ran up touchng hs bankruptcy. -n advance would be made. Such a our way n Wherefore he prays, That he may be machne would nvolve the feedng n "I see, says Hennessey. Well, I decreed by the Court to have a full dls- ; NEW POTATO DISTRICT of the mlk whle the machne was charge from all debts provable aganst what do ye see? says Mr. Dooley.! kept at hgh speed, and the delvery A new potato-growng dstrct has hs estate under.sad bankruptcy Acts, "Do ye see the proud sntor from J o f cream and the skmmed mlk from been developed at Kearney,. Neb. except such debts ns are excepted bylaw from such dscharge. Augusty, as he says Wat for nn>! whch, accordng to feld representatves of tn*. Bureau of Prop Estmate's, 11)21.! separate outlets. Dated two years, darlnt! Do ye see the ths 20th day of September. A. I>. "Experments were carred on energetcally wth specal apparatus. commttee as t feels the stck, pont promse's to become a formdable compettor to the Kaw Valley of Kansas. Bankrupt HENRY <;. BELAIN to the cnter of the glorous state of Durng these experments the form Mane and at a lttle place near I olant Ths new dstrct, wth a shppng season from July lf> to Sept. 1, s now Dstrct of Mane, Northern Dvson, ss ORDER OF NOTICE THEREON of centrfuge now so common n Sprng and whsk around to a lorner! physologcal laboratores, for the nne mles therefrom and locate on harvestng an acreage' more than don-, <M t h 1-t day of <>otob.u\ A. >., separaton of bactera from cultures a brck block and a barber-pole and for other concentratons, was nvented. Ths type of apparatus found cty of cotton mlls? Dd ye see that, Ordered by the Court, That a hearng bb> that of 11)20. ;md shpments may 1921, on readng the foregong petton, completely surrounded by a great It Inreach Ten cars, comparer! wth aon hst, year. applcaton through a frend of the he had men the sam e <u the 2."uh day " Hnnessey? nventor to the concentraton of Potatoes were frst shpped from the X"\ember. A. I, I'.Nl. before sad Hour. I "I dd not, sad Hennessey. Folly, photographc emulsons, ths frend Kearney dstrct sx years ago. Tho at Bangor n sad Dstrct. Northern 1 me, sad Dooley, "even to the halls beng a manufacturer of photographc enterprse has passed ts expermental Dvson at 10 o clock n the forenoon; of Congress. Ye ll not go far wrong. and that notce thereof be publshed n stage, and ths year the plant ngs were materals. Mebbe we can stay over nght wd one the Houlton Tmes, a newspaper prnted around L.ooo acres, whch s more than "The development of ths type of In sad Dstrlet, Northern Dvson, and ' of the proud commttee-men, n the twce as much as ever before. The that all known credtors and other per- centrfuge, was, however, ncdental cty of sntors and congressmn. sol s descrbed as black sandy loam sons n Interest, may appear at the s&ld only to the further and greater applcaton for cream separaton. In the ed, Hnnessey." they have, why the prayer of sad petl- l There s watther there, God le pras tme and place, and show cause, f any smlar to that n the Red Valley of Mnnesota, and petttoes follow a crop meantme nventons whch had before t loner should not be granted, Do the commttee have to have a of alfalfa. Praeteallv tho entre to re- knd It s Further Ordered by tho Court, then been made n ths partcular feld Repooblcan?" asked H e n n e s s e y. That the Clerk shall send by were looked up carefully; but no "They do not, sad Dooley. "Any mal to all known credtors copes of sad example was found ot any such petton and ths order, addressed to good Dmmycrat who has a flowng machne havng been produced, whch them at ther places of resdence a* well-sprng n hs soul wll do. They're stated. «ould he kept runnng at steady speed, SICK KIDNEYS MAKE LAME BACKS Cause broken, unrefreskng sleep, and n many cases that tred feelng Take t. And f you need a laxatve take TTood s Plls, they work rght. age s under rrgaton, whch comes ether from the Platte Rver or from pump wells. Yelds from the dstrct are from 50 to 300 bushels per acre, averagng ths year about 150 bushels. Seed was shpped n from the dry land dstrct of Western Nebraska and from the that makes t so hard to pet up n the mornng. They also cause loss of appette, lack of ambton, and other troubles. Hood s Sarsaparlla contans the medcnal herbs, barks, roots, etc., that strengthen and tone these organs, and releve ther ordnary al mulln over t. All be, he must have receve a stream of lqud, such as the wlfare of the State and of hmself at heart. 'Wll ye take t? says mlk, and delver the streams of separated materals, such as cream and they. Wll ye agree to down the skmmed mlk. mscreant who has been reucn of "When the nventor s deas were the taxes and monkeyn wd the suffcently crystallzed they were mmortal document of the Declaraton made the subect of an applcaton of Independence. Wll ye help to tor patent, whch was fnally ssued, ncarcerate the dvl who has been after a contest n the Patent Offce, speakn' dsrespctfully to the Charman of the Publc Utltes? Wll ye ments. under the ttle Centrfugal Creamer, dated Aprl 5, One of the contestants n the Patent Offce was the ne In wd the organzaton and beef famous engneer, De Laval, who had before ths perod developed and patented an Intermttent type of centrfugal creamer, n whch the machne was stopped between charges -and the charge removed before the recepton of another. "De Laval apparently made the same Inventon ndependently later, and n applyng tor patent found that Red Rver Valley of Mnnesota. Approxmately 80 per cent, of the crop s Early Chos and the rest s Irsh Cobblers and Blss Trumphs. The potatoes are pcked from the feld nto new two-bushel sacks whch are ether branded or tagged, carryng the grower s name and the trade mark of the dstrct. Shpments are loaded nto stock cars, 450 to 500 bushels to a car. The frst car ths year was shpped on July 11, whch s about thre fe weeks earler than usual. A consderable amount of the stock shpped the frst two weeks was too mmature to carry well and some was badly featured. Some scab and second growth was apparent, hut the qualty of the stock was generally good and most of t made the No. 1 grade. A State law requres that all carload shpments of potatoes from Nebraska be nspected at shppng I ont by State nspectors. Through the nfluence of the Kearney growers a new grade was added to the state specfcatons. Ths grade, named "Nebraska Early, became effectve July 28 and has the same requre-, ments as U. S. Grade No. 1 except as to sze, the new grade allowng tubers as small as 1% nches n dameter.! Wtness the Honorable Clarence Hale, Judge of the sad Court, and the seal thereof, at Bangor In the Northern Dlvl- S of -ad Dstrct, ( Irtobcr, A. I> (L. 8.) 11 ttc 1st day of ISABEL SHEEHAN. A true aopy of petton and order thereon (Attest): ISABEL SHEEHAN, The new grade wll be n effect only durng July and August of each year. Holes Upsde Down Two men were watng for a tran and one sad; I wll ask you a queston, and f I can not answer my own queston, 1 wll buy the tckets. Then you ask a queston, and f you can not answer your own, you buy the tckets. The other agreed to ths. Well, the frst man sad, "you see those rabbt-holes? How do they dg those holes wthout leavng any drt around them? The other confessed: "I don t know. That s your queston, so answer t yourself. The frst man wnked and repled: They begn at the bottom and dg up! "But, sad the second man, how do they get at the bottom to begn? "That s your queston, was the frst mans reonder. "Answer t yourself. The other man bought the tckets. Even a P arrot can say "ust as good, ' but he won t know what he s talkng about. For PILES, there s nothng "ust as good" ns REM-OLA. That s our belef. Wrte for FREE SAMPLE prove t to your own satsfacton. HENRY THAYER & CO., Inc. Establshed 1847 Ca m b r d g e 39 b o s t o n, m a s s. Hard Colds--People whose blood s pure are not nearly so lkely to take hard colds as are others. Hood's Sarsaparlla makes the blood pure; and ths great medcne recovers the system alter a cold as no other medcne does. Take Hood's. ONCE USED ALW AYS USED Makes Ironng Easy Used as cold water or cooked starch wth equally good results ELASTIC STARCH fscktake The rght medcne and save a lot o f tme and money. Get the SURE knd that has been used and endorsed by famles that are well known n every vllage, town and cty n Mane these ffty years and more. And we could show you thousands of testmonals wrtten voluntarly n grattude for the wonderful benefts derved from followng the common sense drectons that are on the label of ths old-tme remedy, **L. F. 7 Atwood s Medcne. It quckly releves every form of ndgeston, blousness, constpaton, helps the kdneys, breaks up colds. Buy t NOW of your dealer. Satsfacton assured by the L. F. Medcne Co., Portland, Mane. The Man Who Sad: The proof of the puddng s n the eatng was only half through f^ * ~ He started a good puddngproof, but he ddn't fnsh t. There s a lot of trouble n the world from puddngs that taste good but don t do good. They eat well, but ends the recommendaton. that Santarums are full of puddng-eaters who stopped the testat taste and forgot to nqure whether ther food gave the body what t needed untl the body rebelled. Grape-Nuts s a food that tastes good and does good. The proof of Grape-Nuts begns n the eatng and goes on through the splendd servce whch Grape- Nuts renders as a real food. Grape-Nuts s the perfected goodness of wheat and malted barley delcous to taste, easy to dgest, and exceptonally rch n nourshment for body and bran. There s a Reason for Grape-Nuts BANKRUPT'S PETITION FOR DISCHARGE To the Hon Clarence Hale. Judge of the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for, the Dstrct of Mane. In the matter of Joseph E. Levne In Bankruptcy Bankrupt JOSEPH E. LEVINE of Fort Farfeld 1n the county of Aroostook and State of Mane, n sad Dstrct respectfully represents that on the 2nd day.of November, 1920, last past, he was duly adudged bankrupt under the Acts of -Congress relatng to Bankruptcy; that 'he has duly surrendered all hs property -and rghts of property, and has fully -oomplled wth all the requrements of -nald Acts and of the orders of Court touchng hs bankruptcy. Wherefore he prays, That he may be decreed by the Court to have a full dlsoharle from all debts provable aganst fls estate under sad bankruptcy Acts, except such debts as are excepted by daw from such dscharge. Dated ths 24th day of September. A. D. 49*1. JOSEPH E. LEVINE Bankrupt ORDER OF NOTICE THETREON Dstrct of Mane. Northern Dvson, m On ths 1st day of October. A. I) on readng the foregong petton Ordered by the Court, That a hearng be had upon the same on the 25th day of November. A. D. 1921, before the sad cdurt at Bangor In sad Dstrct, Northern Dvson at 10 o'clock In the forenoon; and that notce thereof be publshed In the Houlton Tmes, a newspaper prnted In sad Dstrct, Northern Dvson, and that all known credtors and other per-,sons. In Interest, may appear at the sad tme and place, and show cause, If any they have, why the prayer of sad pettoner should not be granted. And It! Further Ordered by the Court. That the Deputy Clerk shall send by mall to all known credtors ooples of sad tltlon and ths order, addrepsed to em at ther places of resdence as S *wtfness the Honorable Clarence Hale, Judge of the sad Court, a and the seal thereof, at Bangor. In the Northern Dvson of sad Dstrct, on the 1st day of October, A. D ) ISABEL SHEEHAN, ' A tvue cony of petton and order thereon true s a BBL SHEEHAN. Deputy Clerk You See Buck Knows how to Buld a Rear A xle I t s a rugged powerful axle bult to stand up under all road / condtons ad every unt of the But($ car s lke the axle strong and servceable. Buck 1922 models have ths tradtonal sturdness. Step n and see them today. PRICES PRICES $ $ F. O. B. Flnt, Mch. Fred E. Hall Company Houlton, Mane W HEN B E T T E R AUTOM OBILES ARE BUILT BU ICK W ILL BUILD TH E M (Cl.56) Me-o-my, how you ll take to a ppe and P. A.! Before you re a day older from bte and parch (cut you want to let the dea slp out by our exclusve patented process) are a reve under your hat that ths s the open season to start laton to the man who never somethng wth a oy us could get acquanted wth mmy ppe and some ppe! P. A. has made a Prnce Albert! ppe a thng of oy to four men where one was smoked Because, a ppe packed before! wth Prnce Albert satsfes a man as he was never satsfed before and keeps hm m an.but you ve got a Ever roll up a cgarette wth Prnce Albert? Man, satsfed! And, you can party comng your way! prove t! Why P. A. s Talk about a cgarette flavor and fragrance and smoke; we tell you t: s a Frnge coolness and ts freedom Albert peach! the natonal o y sm oke Prnts Albert 19 sold n toppy red bags, tdy red tns, handsome pound and half pound fn humdors and n the pound crystal glass humdor wth Sponge mostanar top. Copyrght 1921 by R. J- Reynold* Tobacco Co. Wnston-Salem. N. C.

10 PAGE BIGHT HOULTON TIMES, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1921 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. noeket was callng on frends here last Sunday. Mss Carre Sawyer spent several days n Houlton last week wth relatves and frends. Mr. and Mrs. Jewett Adams and son Claud Henry spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. Mllard Moore, Foxcroft road. Mr. Lews Bubar and Mss Natale Myers of Houlton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Newell Ttcomb n Lttleton over Sunday. Mrs. Mary Skllnger and two daugh UTTLETON Henderson (Model) School ters Nette and Abbe of Danforth The Henderson school, the second vsted wth Mr. and Mrs. Maurce model school establshed n Lttleton, Stewart last week. was the scene of an nterestng Mr. and Mrs. Robert Blss of Island gatherng one evenng last week when Falls and Mrs. Harry Sawyer and th e p a r e n ts a n d fr le n d 3 of the scholars Donald ^ 4 of Houlton aspent last Frday w e r e In v te d by th e teacher, Mss Ida W ^ an( Mrs. James H. Ruth. W. Shean, to come and nspect the Mr. and Mrs. Mllard Moore and buldng whch has been completely gon Eugene of the Foxcroft road spent remodeled and repared. last Thursday wth Mrs. Moore s A large number avaled themselves parents> Mr. and Mrs. L. J. Bubar. of ths opportunty and a very Mss Nna Bther spent several days pleasant evenng resulted. Musc by* ag weet wth her grandmother, Mrs. the new school vctrola, refreshments Sarah E. Bther, at the home of Mr. of cake and coffee whch was ppng Fred Bther, Hghland Avenue, Houlton. hot made on an ol stove, all helped to make the occason one long to be Mrs. Herbert Hllman was operated remembered. on at the Madgan Memoral Hosptal Frday mornng for appendcts. Young scholars cannot help but beneft by occasons of ths knd Her many frends are glad to know when they see that the parents are she s dong well. takng an nterest n ther school Mr. and Mrs. Garfeld Burton, Mr. actvtes. and Mrs. B. K. Burlegh wth Mrs. Harrett Rhoda of Houlton autoed to EAST HODGDON Westfeld Sunday where they spent Mrs. Trulla Gardener was the guest I the day wth Mrs. Elzabeth Rhoda. of Mrs. Fred Barton last Thursday, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Stephenson, Mrs. Mrs. Robert Hawkes of Houlton Eunce Lyons and Mss Dorothy of was the guest of her mother, M rs.' Houlton spent last Thursday afternoon and evenng wth Mr. and Mrs. Herbert, the week-end. Mr. Charles London has been the Garfeld Burton. An oyster stew supper was enoyed^ guest of hs brother Clarence London for the past two weeks. Mrs. Florence Dcknson and son! LUDLOW were the guests of her mother, Mrs. Mr. Earle Hand of Brdgewater John Grant last Wednesday. 1spent Sunday wth hs mother, Mrs. The Rev. Henry Speed preached n Edth Hand. the Unon church last Sunday and gave a fne sermon on servce. Mss Mary Hand, who s teachng Mrs. Weldon Gldred of Portland, n Montcello, spent the week-end who has been vstng her daughter wth her mother, Mrs. Edth Hand. Mrs. Mlet Smth, has returned home. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Smth, Mss Mrs. Calvn London. Mrs. Almeda Emly Smth and Mrs. Marore Smth London, Mss Cora Martn and Mr. Orn Howard, all of Houlton, were tho guests of Mrs. John London. Mr. Everett London and daughter Gladys, Mrs. Maud Thompkns and Mas Madelne London of Sherman were guests of relatves here Frday and Saturday. LETTER B Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Mtchell were callers n Woodlawn, N. B. Sunday afternoon. Mrs. Mary Rdeout of Ludlow spent several days last week wth her sster Mrs. George Carpenter. Thomas P. Packard of Houlton was a busness caller n ths town on Thursday of last week. Mrs. James Brown and Walter Brown of the County road spent Sunday wth Mrs. George Mtchell. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Smth and famly of New Lmerck were callng on relatves here on Sunday. Mss Kathleen Hovey of Houlton has accepted a poston as teacher n the B school whch opened Monday, Oct. 10th. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Chambers and Mrs. Bdde Sharp of Maple Rdge, N. B. spent Sunday and Monday wth Mrs. Alfred Mtchell. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Crawford of Lttleton and Mss Mary Kng of Houlton were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ftank Ftzpatrck on Sunday. MONTICELLO Dr. F. O. Hll s stll confned to hs home by llness. P. B. Bubar and wfe are n Bangor tha week vstng relatves. Mrs. M. C. Brd of Ashland s n town ths week vstng frends. Mrs. Geo. W. Bull left by the evenng tran Saturday for Boston for a vst wth frends. Mr. and Mrs. Mooney of the G. N. I P. Co., who have lved here the past year, moved to ther home n Bangor Saturday. Mss Opal Fletcher has accepted a poston as stenographer n Alumn ball, U. of M. and left Monday mom-1 lug for Orono. ; There wll be a chcken supper at the vestry of the Methodst church on next Saturday evenng, 5 to 7 o clock. Everybody nvted to come. I A party consstng of Mr. and M rs.; Clnton McLeod, Mr. and Mrs. Howard : Good, Mrs. Robt. McLeod, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sharp and Guy C. Fletcher are enoyng ths week n the woods, huntng. HODGDON Mrs. Bartlett of Orent was the! guest of frends here last week. The Msses Maron Ingraham and, Besse Wggn ase teachng school at Moro. Mrs. Hanscombe of Boston was tho guest of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Sterrtt last week. Mr. Parker McQuarre had the msfortune to break hs arm last week whle crankng a Ford truck. Rev. and Mrs. D. A. MacKnnon son Hector and Mrs. MacKnnon s sster left on Wednesday for Halfax, N. S. Mrs. Melbourne McDonald and chldren of Dyer Brook who have been vstng here, returned home last The Hodgdon Chautauqua wll open at Hodgdon Mlls, Oct. 13. There wll be a concert by the Russan Quartette durng the afternoon and also n the evenng. The three days Chautauqua at Hodgdon Mlls consstng of lectures and concerts each afternoon and evenng, wll be followed by a free program Sunday evenng. A great many from ths town at tended the funeral servce of Mr. Lester J. Lancaster at Houlton last week. The sympathy of many frends s extended to the famly and relatves n ther great bereavement. LINNEUS Chas. Eastman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Faud Eastman, has been real sck the past week. Mrs. Claud Ruth was the week-end guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Sawyer n Houlton. Mrs. Therodore Sterrtt of Mll- A ITCH? M o n e y d m wthout If HUNTS GUARANTEED PON DISBASS RBMBDIBS (Huttf Sahro nndsoop), fcll n tbtrmtnnt of Itch, Rtagwonn,T«ttor or other Itchng Skn dooom*. Try ths tnstmoat at our rttk A Co.. Oakfleld, Mane enoyed a motor trp to Patten Sun day. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. McCan and chldren George and Marore spent Sunday wth Mr. and Mrs. James Longstaff. Mr. and Mrs George Raymond, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hatfeld and Mr. Stanley Hatfeld, all of Hartland, N. B. were week-end guests of ther relatves, Mr. and Mrs. Hadley Tdd and Mrs. Jose Inghram. An automoble accdent occurred near Owen Thompson s, Sunday, when the Ford sedan awned and drven by Rev. H. H. Cosman collded wth the Ford owned and drven by Audber Thompson. Thompson s car ran nto the dtch but dd not upset. The other car turned over breakng the wnd- sheld and the glass n two doors. Fortunately no one was serously hurt. Rev. Mr. Cosman was shaken up and lamed consderably. Hemore Smth / Mr. Wnn G. Hemore of ths town and Mss Dors Smth of Eagle Lake were marred by Rev. Henry C. Speed at the Baptst parsonage, Houlton, Wednesday, Oct. 5. They were attended by Mr. Phlp Webb and Mss Lllan Brooks. After the ceremony they drove to the home of the groom s aunt, Mrs. C. P. Small, where a delcous weddng supper was served. In the evenng a host of frends gathered and gave them a seranade and ther best wshes for a long and happy wedded lfe. Mr. and Mrs. Hemore are spendng ther honeymoon at ther camp at B lake. Later they are gong to Mllnocket where the groom has a poston. OAKFIELD Mrs. Ira Ruth spent Monday and Tuesday wth frends n town, Mr. G. M. Connors s enoyng a! short huntng trp up the Ashland branch. The Ethel May Shorey Co. s boohed at the Martn theatre, Oct. ISt' and 20th. Mr. Frank Gerrsh and famly of Unty were vstng frends n town, Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Shelds of Lnneus was callng on frends n town Sunday. Mr. Davd Perce of Bangor s loadng a few cars of lve stock at Oakfeld ths week. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Stles spent a few days at ther huntng camp at Htman last week. Mss Mary Callaghan, Prncpal of the Staton school, spent Sunday wth her parents n Houlton. Mrs. J. H. Vantassel was operated on for gotre at the Everette hosptal Boston last week, and s dong fne. 1 Mr, Ben. Morrson, who has been vstng hs brother n New Lmerck for a few days, returned home Saturday. Mr. Elmer Byron and I. C. Allen returned recently from a successful huntng trp from Mattawamkeag Lake. Mr. and Mrs. L. F. Bshop of New Lmerck attended the chcken supper at the Unversalst vestry Saturday nght. Mr. and Mrs. Leon Tdd are havng new bath room fxtures nstalled n ther home, together wth an electrc drven pressure tank. Mr. M. W. Allen returned home Wednesday from a short huntng trp up the Ashland branch, wth a nce deer and several partrdge. Many of the ctzens from Smyrna Mlls, Merrl and Dyer Brook saw the specal producton by Ceclle DeMlle Forbdden Frut at the Martn theatre Saturday nght. Eleen Percy a Ht n New Screen Farce Skeptcal wves who have been worred by an ever hauntng queston should surely fnd a most satsfactory answer n Why Trust Your Husband? the latest Wllam Fox photoplay, starrng Eleen Percy wll be shown for the frst tme here at the Martn theatre Frday nght. Why Trust Your Husband? s a rproarng farce comedy and a most delghtful entertanment. One can always count on Mss Percy to gve a captal performance whch she I DOUGLAS more than does n ths unusual farce.. George E. Marshall, co-author of the story, and also the drector, has gven the flm many clever twsts n unfoldng the exceedngly funny stuatons; and the supportng cast, headed by Harry Myers. Lovers of good ment crammed wth fun wll fnd a treat n Why Trust Your Husband? No pcture Saturday nght. ; LITTLETON Mr. D. F. Adams, who has been ll wth a bllons attack, s much better. Mrs. Frank Grffth, who has been very ll the past week, s recoverng. Mrs. A. A. Wolverton, who was ll for several days, s able to be out of doors. Frends of Mrs. James Hulburt wll regret to learn that she s very ll wth dabetes. W. O. Brggs attended the meetng of the Federaton of Farmers held,\ Carbou last week. Many from ths place attended church servces at Montcello Sundae p. m. to hear Rev. H. R. Bell. Rev. H. R. Bell of Centervlle, N. B. ECZEMA! Money beck wthout queston f H U N T S G U A R A N T E E D SKIN DISEASE REMEDIES (Hunt'e Salve and Soap),fal n the treatment of Itch, Eczema, Rngworm,Tetter or other tchng akn deeaeee. Try the treatment at our rek. L. A. Barker & Co., Oakfleld, Mane w E sell Furnture, Stoves and Panos cheaper than any store n Eastern Mane because we pay no rent and our costs of dong busness are much lower J. E. Tarbell & Sons Smyrna Mlls, Mane So well shaped for Parng / v t ' /v N preached an nterestng sermon Sunday mornng at the U. B. church. Mss Natale Myers of Houlton and Mr. Lous Bubar of Lnneus were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Newell Ttcomb. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stmpson and Mss Maron French of Houlton were callng on ther nece, Mrs. Newell Ttcomb, Saturday evenng. Mr. and Mrs. Duncan Woodworth and famly were called to Bangor last Thursday by the llness of a relatve. Before they return they wll vst Mrs. Woodworth s parents n Mlo. Frday evenng about 40 frends best wshes for a long and happy wedded lfe. Nathanel Hulburt Early Saturday mornng, Oct. 8th, Nathanel Hulburt, an aged resdent of Lttleton passed away at the advanced age of 89 yrs. 9 mos. and 20 days. Funeral servces were held at the home on Sunday p. m. at 2 o clock. Harry Hartt of Montcello had charge of the arrangements. Rev. H. H. Cosman of Ludlow spoke words of comfort to the mournng ones. Mrs. J. D. Ross and Mss Ada Ross sang several selectons. go, but thngs look real brght for.a trp provdng as I sad before t s satsfactory to you boys. We wll brng a strong team and some strong supporters as well, ncludng Mr. W. E. Parrel, who s a great bowlng fan. The boys all want to be remembered to you and ther frends and hope >ou are all well. Wth best regards to yourself, 1 reman, Yours very truly, Sandy Staples. Sandy and hs team are very gave them a house warmng, whch Herbert Gentle. Interment was made We especally w;,h remember Hou,tT,>ow,,ng Cecl Brewer ta,,sproved to be a very enoyable evenng. n the North road cemetery. who took all the przes durng hs Games were played after whch vst here last Sprng. sandwches, cake and coffee were served. The hostess was presented BOWLING ACTIVITIES If the Fredercton boys do come wth a cut glass water ptcher and The old war horse Sandy Staples, th, t wll be a fttng way tumblers. the Fredercton Scotchman, and hs to usher n the k 1*118 season of Ewngs Shea A pretty weddng took place n team,, of maple. splnterers... wll probabmarrage by Rev. Marcus Turner of Fredercton. N. B. Lttleton on Wednesday p. m. at 4 ly,e seen n our mdst agan. S!=!SS!=B 9:* aahhabbb* =!=9!B * o'clock at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Prnted below s a letter receved STATEMENT OF <Fred Ewngs when hs brother Glbert from hm today by one of the members ' ershl)- Mana*ement. Crculaton, etc. Ewngs and Mss Nelle Shea, both Edtor,. CHAS. H. FoGG 1of Grswold, Me. were unted n of the Dux bowlng commttee. Managng Edtor CHAS. H. FOGG Busness Manager CHAS. H. FOGG Blane, usng the double rng servce. Houlton, Mane October 10, The brde looked charmng n a Publsher, Tmes Publshng Co., Dear Frend L. dress of whte georgette. The brdal OWNERS vel was fastened by a wreath of Bowlng tme s here agan and we Chas. H. Fogg Houlton, Mane lles of the valley. were ust thnkng that perhaps you g'ha''' IU.nt They were attended by Mss Natale would lke to have us make a-trp to o S' ^ Ewngs as mad of honor, who wore tn..rn...., mu your town and play a couple of match w. Fu erton ««a whte lace dress. The groom was A / attended by Ransford Shea, brother games on 1 hanpsgvng Day, Oct. R0, of the brde. 24th. Qute a bunch of the boys are 3 That the known bondholders, mort- The house was tastefully decorated anxous to go, and I also thnk that holders own" for the occason wth flowers, vnes a nuarfpftp w.m _ n n h ldn* 1 per cent or more of total and crepe paper d k, m fact I am qute amount of bonds, mortgages, or other The out of town guests were Mr. Sur* of L If t wouid satsfactory -securtes are, and Mrs. John Shea, parents of the f r y u to have us kndly drop me a * ^. brde, and Mrs. W. H. Tyrell, sster lne so I can make arrangements 1 (, c g. l e n t. Actng Mgr. nf the* groom and Mrs M H Turner 1 *. Sworn to and subscrbed before me, ths of Blane * * * 1 cannot promse defntely that we wll 5th day of October, A delcous weddng supper was served to the guests. After a short weddng trp they are to resde n Portland, Me. Frends extend congratulatons and Week of Oct. 3,1921 Tem ple T heatre WEDNESDAY BANKRUF>T S P E T IT ION FOR D ISCHARGE In the matter of 1 John Murchson [ n Bankruptcy Bankruptl f w (L. S.) WILFORD FULLERTON. Notary Publc B A N K R U P T S P E T IT IO N FOR D ISCHARGE fn the matter of Frank Percy James In Bankruptcy Bank! rupt To the Hon Clarence Hale, Judge of the Dstrct Court of the Unted States for the Dstrct of Mane. ()v M r u n n ^ n Y #-f *5, ^ th Hon Clnronco HaIo, Judco or tn# JOH.N MURCHISON, of Fort Farfeld Dstrct Court of the Unted States for n the county of Aroostook, and thedstrct of Mane State of Mane, n sad Dstrct respect-,----- FRANK PERCY JAMES of Perham! fully represents that on the 7th day o f' n the County of Aroostook and.! J last pakt he was rt u 1 State of Mane, n sad Dstrct respect- : adudged bankrupt under the Acts of fully represents that on the 21st day «J 1** h ^ ^ a he * * * M clean n comnh'ed1 wth ^!d PlAJtaW!d allf r«t ^rnents of dulytutrtnderel 'hs'sfcpxtj Passng Through touchng ouenng ns hs blnkrudtcv bankruptcy. raers f Court compled and eghts wth of all property, the requrements and has Pfully of A bank and love and burglar story Wherefore he prays, That he may be»*d Acts and of the orders of Court captalzed on fun. A small-town ; decreed by the Court to have a fultds- touchng uchlng hs bankruptcy? bankruptcy. romance flled wth thrlls am payng ' charge from all debts provable aganst Wherefore he prays, That he may bn one hundred laughs cm the do la *. Two s estate under sad bankruptcy Acts decreed by the Court to have a full ds reel Scnnett comedv, xcept such debts as are excepted by * char* V rom all debts provable aganst It s a Boy. News. : fx,.... ; - law from such dscharge. hs estate under sad bankruptcy Acts, screen entertan- Hated ths 24th day of September, A. T) such. as are *cepted by x *> '>gp?r r f %»» «Your hands don t tro 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 labor. knfe. It wll save tme and Other Wnchester Knves for Every Use L. A. Barker Company O akfeld, M a n e y//m Cff ST R s t o r e IMlMmunMwlllMMNwmHmmWtnmMMrmHMmtMmmmmmmmmmmmmHmmumumummmmHmmm A PAULINE THURSDAY FREDERICK n Stng of the Lash JOHN MURCHISON Bankrupt law from such dscharge. Dated ths 27th day of September. A. D FRANK PERCY JAMES Bankrupt. O RDER OF N O TIC E TH E R E O N Dstrct of Mane, Northern Dvson, sa <>n ths 1st day of October, A. D. That a hearng,1 I> on r*dln* th' * > «*» "«Petton. ORDER OF N O TIC E TH E R E O N It s a bad thng when a man loses Dfs1t,2cft, Northern Dvson, ss Its grp and he would stll no doubt have n * 1s da> of October, A. D. been the degraded creature that msfortune had created had not hs wfe stll 1921, m readng the foregong petton, had fath n regenerated manhood. See Ordrea by the Court, Paulne Frederck n ths unusual producton. Burton Holmes one reel Seaman November, l'" " " A. D. ",r.,,v h,e 25l,h d y?! Ordered by th. Court. That a hoarn, comedy, The Bakery." l.ol, before the sad )e ha( Upon the same on the 25th da * of ( ourt, at Bangor, n sad Dstrct, North- November, A. D. 1921, before the sad UDITIAV *',)IvlsI n at 10 o'clock n the forenoon; court at Bangor n sad Dstrct, Northern rtx U A I and that notce thereof be publshed n Dvson at 10 o clock n th* DUSTIN FARNUM n Prmal Law m ess d UD? t H c ^ th"4 Hhat nott.e thereof be Publshed n Thrllng s,m v of danger and durng f.ons m nterest, may appear at the sad that all known credtors and other pern the great west. Should the rghts of [I1716 7nd Place, and show cause, f any sons, n nterest, may appear at the sad.,.,,, f har - hy lhz praye? sad petl* tme and place, and show cause f any... ',' s,," v * th* 5?JE 22*S!;,, they have, why th. prayer of ead pe-.f chld? Two re* medy Caught n the- That ** ^h e^^lerk ^^sh afl Papds" also Magazne. e - n-el- sbo-*d not be granted. SATURDAY ALL STAR CAST n mal to all knov/n credtors copes of sad That ^ the^^clerk^^shall **s 1 r^d^^tv petton and ths order, addressed to mal to all known credtors copes of sad them at ther places of resdence as petton and ths order, addressed to s hrf*, y-., ^, them at ther places of resdence as Wtness the Honorable Clarence Hale, stated X f 0l tthd' <Co^ the Wtness the Honorable Clarence He la. Tale of Two W orlds 1 a*.-?at *hne fh?,rtpffr"a P.Vn'f of the 8411(1 Court, and the seal son of sad Dstrct on the 1st day of thereof, at Bangor n the Northern Dvson of sad dstrct, on the 1st day of -tmy n whch the queston of racal October, A. D barrers almost wrecks the romance of a (L. S.) ISABEL SHEEHAN, October, A. D wealthy curo collector and a whte grl (L. S.) ISABEL SHEEHAN, retred n the home of a Chnaman. A true copy of petton and order thereon. Two reel Sunshne comedy also Mutt Attest: ISABEL SHEEHAN, A true copy of petton and order thereon Attest: ISABEL SHEEHAN, and Jeff. Deputy Clerk 2 O < & >» O u > U J B ram ley Tho new dress style whch promses to be as much of a success as the GUIMPE dresses are Just the thng for Wnter wear for Msses and Women up to sze s. ths new Bramley Dress s made of an all wool Velour Cloth. Two peces. The Skrt s knfe pleated, and tn blouse s a sort of a Mddy style wth <entrustuu eolor collars and cuffs..\s Mal ths store has taken tn lead n brngng ths new st\ie to town, and for a short tnm only we wll offer t h> ext -aordnarv garment for onlv *2 ** X 9 e::c!l Colors Nav>. Copen. Rendeer, Brown '<>our wndow dsplay of these dresses now Varety Value Servce Style Joe Bernsten Everythng for Lades and Chldren rd cr o CL H s- a

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