A WIIKLV MPUt OEVOTIO TO THE INTERESTS OF A LIVE AND GROWING TOWN MANY KATTEB8

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1 A WKLV MPUt OEVOTO TO THE NTERESTS OF A LVE AND GROWNG TOWN VOL. X. NO. 36. ' WATEBTOWN, CONNECTCUT FBDAV, JULY 4, 1U24. ttbffte Copy S Onto BATE AND SAME TOUKTH FOK WATEBTOWN Many Wll Motor Out of Town to Blls and Seashore Baft Kdde. Wll Celebrate No Hpecal celebraton has been planned by the Watertown towns people for today July 4th. An n the pant few yean, Watertown wll spend the 4th n ther otmal Hufp and sune way. Numerous famlal are plannng to spend the day at the" varous shore resorts and the Scott famly reunon whch wll be held n Woodbury, wll also attract a number of Watertown people. n the afternoon there wll be a baseball game at the local damond. The Oakvllc town team was scheduled, to play the ndes but at present t seems they have decded not to oppose "Abe Dehuker's". team. f the Oakvllc lads do fal to play, sorte other team wll be secured to take ther place an Watertown wll have o ave a baseball game on July 4th. GOULD B. CLARK FOUND AT WOBK ON FABM Gould B. Clark of Prospect, reported mssng snce Saturday, whch caused hs mother and fends much anxety, was located Wednesday workng on a farm n New Mlford. TAJT CAMP OPENS AT LONG MEADOW POND Taft camp has opened at Long Meadow pond, wth an enrollment of about 30 boys, made up mostly of Boy Scouts from New York cty. VARETY S SPCE, ETC.; HEBE'S WHERE TO GET T Good housekeepers are always glad f> surprse ther famles and frends wth new dshes prepared from sound recpes. The News s runnng a department devoted to foods and ther preparaton, known to women readers as "The Ktchen Cabnet" wrtten by Nelle Maxwell. Nelle Maxwell lkes to cook. She's been at t ever snce she helped n her mother's ktchen. For the last ten years she has gven lectures and demonstratons for the Unversty of Wsconsn at the many farmers' nsttutes held n that state. She has not only studed domestc scence, but she has taught t n the slate agrcultural colleges of owa and Nebraska. Any recpe appearng n the Ktchen Cabnet can be. reled upon to produce a- sueeessful and palatable dsh for - your table. Your task wll be free of experment; Mss Maxwell has done all that n her own ktchen. And n her column wll be found no freak concoctons of those callng for.ngredents not easly obtanable n the smallest communty. Ktchen Cabnet suggestons provde the varety demanded of the good housekeeper. Women readers who have followed the Ktchen Cabnet wll tell you that Mss Maxwell's advce s dependable and sound. Read what she offers today- and try out what appeals to you. And remember ths s only one of the nterestng features of your Home Town Paper The News. Autos and Street Can ' The operator of a motor vehcle, when overtakng a street ralway car that has stopped to -receve or -dscharge-passengers, s requred'by the state law to brng the.motor vehcle to a full stop not less than ten feet from the rear of the trolley car, and to hold 'the motor vehcle, staton- - ary untl all pedestrans' or passengers arc out- of danger, when n* s permtted to proceed at a reasonable rate of speed. Only n MSPS.where,-the motor vehcle ran pass the.trolley, car at'.a dstance of not- less -than tcn r feet does the;state law permt the motor \rhcle-opr'ator to 1 'proofed a* "a reasonable rale of speed" wthout stoppng. Don't overlook the nterestng readng on the nsde pages PLATGBOUND PBOVDO POPULAB Many Kddes Present to Enjoy Anmuunte Provded The Cvc Unon opened ther Chldren's Plyground n the rear of the Communty buldng on Man street Monday mornng and 47 youngsters answered the roll wall n the-mornng sesson. n the afternoon sesson every secton of the town was represented and when the roll call was taken, t was found to contan 1)7 'chldren. The swngs and sldes seemed to be the most popular sport among the youngsters, and durng the entre day these playthngs were n contnual use. Sand boxes and other amusements have been provded for the younger kddes and they also have enjoyed the past few days at the local playground... At the mornng sesson: durng the past week the number present numbers around the 50 mark whle n the afternoon the total has gone over the century mark. Present ndcatons pont to a very successful season and a number of pleasant outngs have been planned for the season by the nstructors n charge of the playground. ' NDES BEATEN BY BETHLEHEM PLOUGHB0TS "Abe DebunkerV.Tartars Go Down to Defeat Before the Up-Country Boys "Abe DebunkerV' Tndes suffered ther second defeat of the season at the hands of Paul Johnson's Bethlehem Ploughboys last Sunday by a 4-3 *uorc. The tethlehem team was composed of a number of rngers, as the motto of the Ploughboys was to wn at any prce, even though they' would have to hre nne new players. Thn game proved to hn one of the best ths season on the local damond. Houston, local hgh school ptcher, was on the mound f'»r Watertown and he ptched very good ball. Maurce Meaney of Watcrbnry dd the twrlng for the Bethlehem team and he wre dd turn n a very good exhbton of baseball. The success f the Bethlehem team was due to hs fne all-'round work. A week from Sunday a return game wl be played n Bethlehem, whch no doubt wll attract a urge crowd. 8TATE EDTORS TO GO TO NDAN NECK The mdsummer outng of the Connectcut Edtoral Assocaton wll be held Saturday July 19 at ndan Neck. An excellent dnner and all the attractons of the shore, and a dp n the surf at the md-summer season should prove attractve to a large number of the hard-workng newspaper men. Youngsters aad Freworks Durng the past week freworks have been sold at the varous stores u town and occasonally one hears the exploson of a torpedo, or the crack of a blank cartrdge, let off by some youngster who cannot wat for le glorous 4th to come. Each day many youngsters congregate n front of the store wndows contanng the July 4th explosves, glancng envously at the large supply on hand, and stll not wthn ther reach. The dfferent store keepers have made great efforts to please the youngsters and n some cases have dstrbuted.freworks to some of the kddes, who otherwse would be wthout any freworks to celebrate ndependence Day wth. ' '. Jont Pcnc July 12 The unon.pcnc of AH Sants rnd. Unon Congregatonal - Sunday schools of Oakvlle wll be held. Saturday. July. 12, at. Lake Jussapaug. '.,Specal.-ears, wll avc'at '» V ; elock jdst -Jcv//"""*"=' Were they^hutngvfor^bod," bured treasure ^orcwhatv'c-kead; "Tn- Kll Lne Tral", startng u the nest sftute of ths paper. WEDDNG N NEW 0HB8T OHUBOH Beautful Edfce Scene of Clark- Kellogg Nuptals Saturday Afternoon, Jmne 28 Chrst Church was the scene of a Very pretty weddng Saturday afternoon, June 28, when Mss Beatrce Kellogg became the brde of Everett & Clark 2nd, of Mlford. The Rev. Dr. John Lews of Waterbury purformed the ceremony. The brde, who was gven n marrage by her aunt, Mrs. Charles S. Mat toon, wore a gown of whte satn am lace wth a court tran of satn, and a tulle vel arranged wth lace and orange blossoms. Mss Vrgna Kellogg of Baraboo, Wsconsn, sster of the brde, was mad of honor and wore a gown of blue 'crepe wth hat to match and carred a bouquet of pnk roses.' The brdesmads were Mss 'Oertruue Klmpke of Watertown and Mss Lllan Clark of Mlford, sster of the groom. Walter E, Clark, Jr., of Mlford acted as best man and the ushers were Leon Warner, rvankln Proctor Clark, Alvh C. Smth, all of Mlford, and Lester \V. At wood of Watertown. A recepton was held at the brde's home after the ceremony and was attended by a large number of frends and- relatves of the young couple. Mr. and Mrs. Clark left on a motor trp ll rough the Whte Mountans and on ther return wll resde u Mlford. "The Red Lne Tral" bycrttende Marrott, s not a western story, but a lvely talc of mystery and ntrgue shftng southward from New York on the Atlantc to a deserted tropcal sland. t begns n the next ssue of the News. GOVEBNOB TEMPLETON CONDUCTS SERVCES Governor Charles A. Templeton couducted evenng servce n Chrst Church, Bethlehem, Sunday evenng.' The people of Bethlehem dd not do themselves credt n the 'matter of attendance; possbly they arc not accustomed ^to Sunday evenng servces. " Those who were absent should have heard hs remarks on the subject of churchgong, and the mportance of the churches n communty, state and natonal welfare at the present tme. A feature of the servce was a solo sung by Mrs. Charles Beardslcy, wth Axle Joluson. organst. What would you' do f you were aboard a shp among whow passengers there was a" "tratot and a spy? Read about ths nterestng, stuaton n "The Red, Lne Tral", a mystery story begnnng n the next ssue of The News. MANY KATTEB8 BBEFLT MENTONED Short tems of nterest About Your Frends and Neghbors Gleaned Here and There Mrs. Ezra Lawrence of Stratford s vstng u town. Mss Mnne Flzparck has recovered from her recent llness! Denns Me.Cleary of Cheshre was a vstor n town Wednesday The local stores wll close at noon today July 9 4th. Postmaster J. V. Abbott s enjoyng a :t() days vacaton from hs dutes n the local offce. Joseph lannng has accepted a poston wth the.amercan Express company n Waterbury. Harry Ashenden has returned to Mlwaukee after vstng at hj," home on Man street.. Mss Gertrude Klmpke s spendng the' summer months at Keesvlle, NY. A column of nterestng state news wll be found on page 2..Charles Harper has purchased a, Wllys-Knght tourng car. Under the head of."communty. Buldng" tmely topcs are dscussed u a column artcle on page :< of The News. The J. B. Woolso. factory e.losed on Thursday for a duraton of ten days. The Watertown Lbrary wll le closed all day today Julv 4. Mrs. lp'lml.ftzpatrck of Man street s vstng n Brdgeport. Mss Mary lallonn. teacher n the publc, schools n Brdgeport, s spendng the-summer vacaton al her home 'on Woodruff avenue Mss Afarjore Htebeoek and.mss 10. Whtcsdc, teachers n the local hjrh school, are plannng to spend the summer months n Europe. Mss Veronca Bohlan of Waterbury was a recent vstor at the home- of Mss Mary Farrell, of Cherry avenue. Mr. fnd Mrs. Wllam' Kerwu and sou Wllam, are on a motor trp to Kenwood, N. Y.. Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Lndsley of Watcrvlle, were Sunday vstors at the home ofgdeon Hoffman of Porter street. Mr.-and Mrs. Henry O'Nell and >Thomas O'Nell have left on a motor trp to Pennsylvana. An excellent pcture of George Washngton and some Good Readng for Good Amercans wll be found on page 3. tatph Pasho las re/turned after vstng n Boston. The. K., Slk Co. has suspended work for tn; next ten lays Mystery, ntvgue. -romance, the sea all n "The Red Lne Tral", uncorkng seral story startng u the next ssue of ths paper.'.. F. Mason of Kdgewood. N. J.. a former resdent of Watertown, passed through here Monday on hs way to Mane, where he and hs famly month's vaaton. wll spend a Automoble owners wll fnd Mrs. Percy Wnslow has returned to le. home._.n_deland, spne tmely and nterestng rcadan<~ady«n""o "page_"6./ Florda, after vstng, at tlw 'mne..of her sster, Mjrs..E. T» A secton of the panelng between two of tlw, lamps.that Thompson of Man street., - - lghted ;thc, cabn was -swngng -..Mss Carolne..Cox^ who ;las onward 011 warn, audaman.'s anna man's footvwasaj>- toot ap- teen-.vslnp ~Vl'h:rb{lV"k,he;:--nre.le,:-.Frank nfentjtwas followed by the est Thusdaj Tn- Washngton, j) C..ofghsshody. Rend "Tn- Red \\hee sl'e ml \st relatvek bp- 1 " Lne Tral" startng n the next!fore returnng to her home jn sbllc Of ths DBDer. ' Nrth Parnlnn ' DOUBLE WEDDNG AT ALL SANTS 0HUBCH A double weddng took place Saturday. mornng at 10 o'clock n All Sants Church, Okvlle, when Mss Cora J(..Marlu, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. George Martn became he lrdf of (eorge.1. Wagner, sou of Mr. and Mrs. Danel Wagner of Brstol, and Mss Mabel V.' Martn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs George Martn, lccanc the brde "f foscph.s. Lomay of Walcr lry.; the rector, Ke\v Charles C. Kelsey offcatng. The seral"-. "The Red Lock" whch has l/een mn<r* n The Xcws for some weeks s concluded oh page 2, ths week. t wll l>c followed next Week ly hent crest-grppng seral.'enttled "The ted..lne.tral." "Whatever the telephone''ha* done to encourage matrmony audo put the punch nto busness, t has not.hal an mprovng nfluence upon our -courtesy - or -'r.manners." Head the artcle, '-jmtre <*t enttled "'Along Lfe's Tral" by Thomas Clark. V Men. 'lvcrsty o V llnos. fnto the man's eyes snapped ; look of terror, and he snatched jt hs brcst. "My >aeket!'' Head about t n "The {el Lne Tral",. Starls'n the next s'sle of ths paper. LATE JUNE WEDDNG N ST. JOHNS OHUBOH A very quet weddng took* place u St. John's church Monday when Mss Margaret Slavn and George lyncs of Wa- 'TM-.V were unted n marragf by the tev. Wllam Judge. The trdc was attended by Mrs. Charles lanraha of Waterbury HH Klward >1. llynes of Water- nry acted as best man. Tn? brde was attred n a gown of Jnua and blue crepe wth hat of dark (blue and carred a bou- «uct of Ophela roses. The brdes mad wore a gown of tan and blue crepe wth hat of navy blue ;ml carred a bouquet of sweetheart roses. Followng the ceremony a weddng breakfast was served at the Hotel Taft, n New Haven, after, whch they left on :n Unannounced weddng trp. h ther return they wll resde on Wellm street, Waterbury. Art Some bllboard magnates seeng the hand-wrtng on the wall now assert thatjwstetladvergng s.-teachng'' people to apprecate tort. : When we see well known soap or cosmetc beautes dsplayed on ams n natonal art galleres, we wll be ready to agree. Untl then we assert that there s more art tnd beauty n a woods or mendow unuarred by hdeous, panted sgns. THE RED LNE TRAL Crttenden Marrott 1W TOT a western story, but a strange X\ and thrllng combnaton of nternatonal, ntrgue and adventures on -the sea. The author has n a sngular degree the dramatc sense and the grt of narraton. Although there are some latter-day prates, a supposedly unnhabted sland n the Atlantc and a mysterous chart, t s not a tale of bured treasure. That whch the adventurers found on the sland was more romantc and nterestng than gold or jewels., a Dscover the Fascnatng Secret by Readng Serally n The News M

2 Lock A Tle * tht Fktwoa» By DAW ANDOBON by twn MYCM Copfh* «W Tht BsUs-Msnfll C* CHAPTER XX Starch of the Langud Eye*. All through the long and terrble day followng that tragc nght, the anfell of lfe and death waged ther grm struggle n the parlor bedroom, where the hapless sufferer wrthed n the delrum that followed the shock of her wound. Toward evenng Aunt Elza, heller- ng wth the others that the end was near, beckoned the woodsman to the bedsde. t farly staggered hm to see the frghtful change the hours had wrought. Under an mpulse of pty that he could not resst he bent over the bed, caught up her hands and spoke her name. She nstantly grew more quet and turned her face toward bts voce. l ". The doctor was quck to notce ths, and at hs drecton Jack dropped on hs knees by the bedsde and began talkng to her, softly strokng her bands and wrsts and face the wmle; nd as he talked she grew calmer. Hour after hour the man knelt and crooned the story of ther playmate days, whle the doctor pled hs utmost art and the women lavshed ther care. Late that nght she seemed to quet way nto a lght sleep. A smle straggled out upon the doctor's grm features and he went out nto the yard for a moment of relaxaton. The woodsman lad the grl's hands down upon the covers, rose to hs feet, stumbled out to the'ktchen and dropped down on, a char by the cook stove. ' Barely a mnute after, Aunt Lza, sleepless and fathful, tapped hm on the shoulder. "She's frettln' ae/ln.". He sprang up and hurred to the sck-room. But before he reached the bedsde her tossng had ceased and she lay back aganst the pllow stll and whte. He caught up her hands; they were so cold t startled hm. - ' At that moment the doctor came back n. The nstant he entered the room the unusual stllness or the nstnct of hs professon must have' warned hm that somethng was amss, for he hurred to the bedsde and bent a keen look upon the patent. "Her han's are lke ce," the woodsman faltered. "She's snkng fast,", was the doctor's answer, as he made ready a powerful stmulant. "Huh her hands and wrsts and temples rub toward the heart and try to call her back wth some more of that Black rock and Whsperng sprng talk. And be quck wth tbobe hot cloths, you women. f we can only keep breath n her for the next hour " The woodsman, tollng wth gray and graven face, was the frst to notce the clammness leavng her hands and a fulnt tnge of color begnnng to drve the chll out of her fngers. The doctor bent low over her, noted the respraton; took her pulse agan. "She's got a chance." he muttered. "Keep on wth that talk, Warhope. and rub her.wrsts and temples and come on wth more hot cloths, the rest of you." Nearly on hour had gone when the -grl's lds fluttered apart and the brllant eyes strayed open weak, haggard, hut no longer wld and vacant wth delrum. Slowly the eyes traveled over the room, a langud questonng n them; searched the faces about her;.'dwelt at last upon the face of the woodsman. "Jack" t was only a whsper, flutterng out upon the labored breath, but t was the sweetest sound hs ears had ever heard "he ddn't kll y'u--" He dropped on one knee by the bedsde, but dared not trust hs voce wth a word. "Jack what what T' "You've be'n sck bad and we're all tryln' t' coax y'u back well. When y'u gtt strong, we'll have a long talk you> and me but now, won't y'u Jst try t' go t'-sleep?-won't y'u?" VVes." she whspered, lke a trustng chld "'m so tred " One hand stole across the covers and hunted hs; the long lashes drooped over the langud eyes and she slpped away to sleep. The others tptoed from the room. ' '. "What she needs above everythng," muttered the doctor, softly closng the tlonr "sleep t wll do her more good rght now than all the medcne n the world." And there, Jack crouched hmself brused - and worn afrad to move wth her hands n lls.' lest she-start awake and so' lose one moment of the rest j'.st then precous beyond calculaton." Only a man-of hs superb ph'y scl.'-'powers 1^^cqud^have^held V-the' un'mped,/uncomfortable pose sol png-j; SeveralXMmea^one'rP^-Lthe^wpmenV aw o'nvt* rh'p'tlnctor wrly" opened tlu* dmr.md peeped n, but they SB often closed t agan and left the man to hs THE WATDROWN MEWS n bar hand; tbe eater ef m * that'the aectsr declared her tag health tngled tale her ebeeka oat at danger tme alone beng all one you found that day.' Hamaas, 11 la ln'"t h "T f ffu f&vjtojm&jum n the serene evenng the sun peeped under the porch roof for one last look, let up to her bun eyes from stray under far her outlong! before reluctantly passng on to less bottoms toward Alpne Wand. "Pore- STATE BREFS nterestng scenes beyond the gates of Ken! Hopkns met me up the toad the wwt; fell n at the open parlor and told me he was sck a the boat wndow; crossed the floor and Just ddn't know Hopkns thm.» Bshop John J. Nllaa. of Hartford, mssed the bg old-fashoned sofa, soft " dd and kaewed Brckbat al» dedcates new 8t Bonface B. C. and cosy wth blankets, where the ley. That's why rode after y'u the Church buldng la Mew Haven. woodsman had carred the grl n hs mnute got y'ur note. Hopkns waa a ajltton B. Hunt, of the Wakanuw great anna, the wonderful landscape bad man, but we've already talked Memoral, a. leavng Falrneld (or of lawn and bottoms and wndng about hm, and what b'come of hm. Lesson for July 6 camp wth twenty boys on July 7. rver spreadng before her. All that money he stol'd tuck away Automoble dealers warned to wold The woodsman hmself sat on a low from 'n at the parsonage the evenng THE BRTH OF JESUS sales of automobles, the numbers of footstool at her ade. The room bad of the funeral, and drove 1m out o' whch have been tampered n effort TJC8S0N TEXT Lux* «:7-Mt settled stll. Flatwoods. That*s why he went, and QOLDBM TEXT "For unto yon a tt combat theves, and to report flnda From the ktchen fame the low all that stuff he told y'u about Ken born ths day n th«cty of Davd a to State Motor Vehcle Department drone of voces where Mrs. Curry and was Jst les. 've got all that money Bavlor whch s Chrst th* Lord." The Eagle Boat 17. wth the Luke 1:11. Aunt Lza aat by the cook stove. A hd, and well put t back n the safe PR1CART TOPC Tha Baby Jesus. tall old clock n a corner of the parlor JUNOR TOPC -What th» Shapherda taller than the woodsman hmself, Baw and fteard. - - wth a peasant man and mad on the NTERMEDATE AND SENOR TOP- C Tbe Gr*\Ust Evtot n tha World's face rakng hay punctuated the slence nto a sort of drowsy rhythm. YOUNO PEOPLE AND ADULT TOPC Hstory. The grt was so stll that be thought Great Bop«a Centered n the Brth of Chrst. she slept. Glancng around at her, he was amazed to see ber eyes full of tears. ' -W'y what's the matter r "Nothng r Her lps quvered; she turned her face away and cred slently. He pcked up her hand; attempted a comfortng word. The sprawled dead fgure n the old cabn crossed hs mnd the brother n whom she stll beleved ; whose death she stll mourned; of whose degradaton and deep dshonor she was haply spared from ever knowng and the attempt faled. She turned back to hm after a tme, brushed away the tears and a brave suggeston of the smle that made her eyes so wonderful brghtened them. "An't t Jlst terrble fr me f cry Uke ths, when y'u're all s" good to me!" He htched the footstool closer to the sofa. t surprsed hm to feel a queer weakness n hs breast and a tghtness n hs throat when he tred to speak., "Do y'u thnk y'u're strong enough t' talk some?" "W'y, could gt up a'most." A sudden thoughtfulness dsplaced the smle. '.. "Do y'u remember that letter y'u gve me from Pap Smons las' Snturd'yr The.grl rased her eyes. "T* be opened the day you're twenty-one 've wondered and- wondered what was n t.". He looked down at the floor; looked up agan. "Ths s the day." "Nol" "'m twenty-one t'day and" free, he was about to say, but ddn't. "s t possble t's only be'n sx days s e n c e "...';.. _; ; ; "Sx days," was hs slow comment t Waa the Bggest Word He Had Ever- Sad n Hs Lft. "Don't seem lke s' much could happen n sx days hardly * He fumbled n hs Mouse; took out the letter n ts formdable envelope; held t toward her. She took t and, glancng over t, handed t back. He tore t open and drew out ts contents. Wde-eyed, they read t through a ttle deed n fee smple to the Warhope homestead, together wth- all stock and betterments and growng crops thereon, duly conveyed and executed to Jack Warhope; and, folded nsde the deed, a bank draft n hs favor for ten thousand dollars. The man stared at the grl; the grl stared at the man. "'m b'l levn' Pap Smon meant t* do ths all along," he mused at last. " can see t now, as look back. That's why he was s* good to me. Mebbe" he hfstated, 1that]s_why he had me^-bound " " " "Pore_ fnther!" the grl's eyes strayed away to where the slver contour of the rver rmmed the bottoms "t was hs way." He let loose the deed, leavng t n her hand. She turned back from the slver-rmmed bottoms and glanced t over agan: "... ' - _..- _ "W'y, t was made out only last Frday he.never knowed t, but that was lady-slpper day and so he made t a bg day after al '.'.;'. \.~.. ;.' V Very: slowly, wth-the tghtness; stll at hs throat,' the ^woodsman took.'out hs pocketbook and lad aflattened yel- pq J^^HuJ _' 4l^ "^tmm\*ta ^««lm " '~ ' ~ "* *" low "orchd n tle lf found t there at the edge of Mud haul, where you got on the house-boat as soon aa you're able f open f The eyea came back from the dstant pont where Alpne sland splt the al* ver rm of the bottoms. " know now that what be sad waa all les, but ddn't then. As soon.as got on the boat saw Ken wasn't there, but Hopkns locked the door and wouldn't let me off. And such a cabn as that house-boat had tght as a JalL He made all the apologes a man could fr ralaln' false hopes about Ken, and told me he'd done t ah fr my own good. Then he told me there was two men ptannn' to rob the safe that nght and he d brang me on'the boat t' gt me out o'danger." She paused; looked at the man; went on. "He sad he was goln* f gt you f he'p 'lm and you'd both watch the house, and after the danger was over you'd come and brng me home. He sad one o' the robbers would be Slm Fnger Doolln, the-most dangerous Ttsto! fghter n the world. asked Mm how 'e found t all out not knowln' then that he Mraself was Slm Fnger Doolln but he sad he'd rather tell me all about t next day. From that mnute was afear'd of hm, though he was as polte and respectful to me as 'e could be, short of ettln' me go." She felt the eyes of the woodsman upon her. He looked away and she went on. "From that mnute mstrusted he was ene o' the robbers, though never let on, and as soon as he was gone tred all could V gt out was afear'd" she looked down at the blanket ; crumpled a corner, of t hard n her fngers "you mght, chance f hear'em, and knowed f y'n dd you'd fght, and was half wld fr fear they'd kll y'u. Oh, f 'd only knowed t was you that moved the boat Jack why ddn't y'u let me out!" The man stared at the.floorand twsted hs great hands tll the knuckles turned whte. G d!" he groaned "f only had! But thought you'd be safest there. t was the worst mstake ever made n my lfe that and ettln' ' HopVlns preach Pap Smon's funeral, but 1. By Whom? The frst Gospel ser- was preached by an angel of the ddn't have no good proof on Mmmon then." The grl glanced at hs bowed form. The tck of the tall old clock n the corner throbbed-loud on the slence; Lord. Thus we see that the exalted mnsters of God were nterested n mm and had part n the announcement of God's plan of salvaton. through the open.wndow came the call 2. To Whom? Hs brth was announced of crows flyng home. to the shepherds who were "t was away n the nght," the grl keepng watch over ther flocks by went on at last, thoughtful and slow, nght. The fact that the glorous Gospel message was frst sounded forth "b'fore fln'ly got out by beatln' a hole n the roof wth a stove leg,, swum to them shows that poverty s no barrer to ts recepton. God does not ashore, and run home as fast as could. 'd jst got n the yard when saw you reveal Hmself prmarly to the prnces a-stnndln' there by the wnder. Then and great men of the earth,, but oftentmes conceals from such and dscloses come that shot'and thought Slm Fnger Doolln had klled y'u. don't to, the poor. (James 2:5). know what happened after that " 3. The Nature of the Message; t "After that," the man echoed, hs was good tdngs of great Joy. t voce low and broken, "we've all be'n was good tdngs because the darkness tryln' to coax the bravest and moot of heathendom, whch had so long covered the earth, was begnnng to van- wonderful grl n the world back- to lfe." sh. The castng out of Satan, the Lfe!" she murmured, as f the prnce of ths world; was about to word came new and strange to her take place. Lberty was soon to be lfter beng so fearfully close to death. proclamed to those who were n bondage. The way of salvaton was to be "Oh, want so much t' have t all back agmn " open to all. No longer was the knowledge of God to be confned to the "And y'u shall have t back!" the man cred, catchng the appeal n her Jews, but offered to the whole world. Glorous news ths. So glorous that voce. "You've got t now. Every a multtude ;df the heavenly host accompaned ths announcement wth breath brngs.the.woods, and. hlls, the sunshne and flowers,' Jlst that much ther song of prase. Thus' we see that nearer w'y, you're as good as well the frst Gospel sermon was n the ths very mnute." open ar. The mnster was the angel The smle n her eyes came alve of God, the chor were the angels, the agan, stole out over her face and audence made up of humble shepherds. brought back a heartenng suggeston of tle dmples. V. The Shepherds nvestgatng (w. By some ntangble brdge all unseen ). of.human eyes, the smle found ta They dd not stop to argue or rase way across to the man's grave and serous face; kndled t lke the glut of no doubt passng strange to them. questons, though these thngs were mornng upon the front of Black rock. They went mmedately to Bethlehem, He pcked up ber hand; touched tha where they made an nvestgaton and faded orchd n her palm. found everythng Just as represented. " Mow y'u an't frgot the day we They had the prvlege of frst gazng found t " npon the world's Savor, the very Lord of glory. They returned wth He felt the twtch of her fngers. grattude n ther hearts, prasng God " tred t' ask y'u t' promse me for nl those wonderful thngs whch that day 'm askln' y'u t' promse He had revealed unto them'." me now ". t was the. bggest word he had ever V. The Shepherds'Wtnessng (w. sad n hs lfe. Much lke a man whe 17-20)7 had commtted a crme and awated They found thngs as announced. hs sentence, he rased hs head; ventured a glance at the grl. they could not reman slent. There- When they heheld the Lord of glory Somethng very wonderful had come fore, they went back prasng God. to'her face lke" the brth "of nornlngt -Those who really henr the Gospel and her eyes lke star trals a marvelous transfguraton ' that only one message cannot be slent. f they rvnlly hear they must tell t out to thng n the world can brng. others. '. He slpped from the footstool and knelt down by her sde: her arm came Our Needs up off the blanket and hunted ts way The needs for the present nre more across hs mnssve shoulders. mportant to. most people thnn the * The peasant man and. mad on the need, and preparaton for eternty. face of -the old.clock' a the corner The Lvng Word. '".".'". smled, rakng hay.. ','-": - END.] J.. : ''.>; s : Should; Elect'Talors. -.-<>- --., ^lore talors Rhould be elected to con-' grew?,;jtheyjtnow a lot about'me ure " al'npn"'"*'"'"""'"*"'"' ""*"' : " *"' A man would never dscover that hs The grl fumbled the flattened bos- j wfe'had a te_p«r f n* dldflk lose tt. Lesson T <By scv. F. n. rnnum, no. v m (A US4. WMUra M*. Jesus' Brth Foretold'(Mlcab 5:2). Ths predcton was made some 700 years before. God moved the emperor to enforce the decree of taxaton-just n tme to cause Mary to be at Bethlehem.. Jesus' Brth Announced to Mary and Joseph (Luke 1:2S-38). The mghty archangel Gabrel was sent by God to the lttle town of Nazareth to Mary, a Jewsh maden, who was betrothed to a carpenter of that vllage by the name of Joseph, solemnly announcng that she should gve brth to the Messah and that ths son should not be Joseph's son but should be the chld of the Holy Ghost (Matt 1:18-21). Later the angel of tht Lord appeared to Joseph, also, makng the snme announcement to hm, and added that the chld should be called Jesus, whch means that Jehovah wll save Hs people from ther sns (Matt 1: 21).. Tha Predcton Fulflled (v, 7). Ths took place at a most proptous tme. The Jews were under the power of the Romans. Not only dd the brth of Chrst occur when all systems of relgon and moralty were totterng upon ther foundatons but at a tme most sutable for the ntroducton of the Gospel. The whole world beng under one rule made t possble for Chrst's mnsters to go from cty to cty and country to country unmolested. The Almghty rules n the whole unverse ard s never behnd n Hs admnstraton. The surroundngs of Chrst at Hs brth were of a humble sort The Eternal God condescended to be ncorporated wth humanty to. be born n a manger, becomng the poorest of tbe poor that none mght be hndered n comng unto Hm. V. Chrst's Brth Announced (vv. 8-14). \ No Worth Wth God,,Works" of the flesh are of no^ worthwth" _G?d._ because-'-the 1.'.'flesh' - proft-' ;eth.nothng."-s-the,'lvng ;.Word." /; """""'"'Th* "Grace" of~ : GauV" The grnce of God " " > the backsldng knd. The Lvng Word. Brdgeport Naval Reserves aboard, left Saturday afternoon for a weekend cruse. Snce the boat arrved at Brdgeport the gobs have panted and cleaned the craft from mast head to stern. Wth a total more than $8,000 beyond the goal the Unted Church drve for fsoo.ooo to buld a new edfce at Park avenue and State street, Brdgeport, closed wth a Jublee servce whch also commemorated the 229th annversary of the foundng of the Church. Harry Gustatson. 36, New Brtan, was klled nstantly at Herden when thrown from the sde car of a motorcycle operated by Davd Johnson, also of New Brtan. Johnson clamed that hs vehcle was thrown out of control when t ht aratn the hghway. He was held n $1,000 ball on a charge of reckless drvng for Coroner Mx. The councl of admnstraton of the Veterans of Foregn Wars took the frst steps toward establshng the Veterans of Foregn Wars Hosptal relef fund, whch wll be used to assst dsabled veterans n the varous hosptals and asylums throughout the state. t s not expected that ths fund wll total more than $10,000 ths year. '. -' A part of Far. Acres, near Falrfleld Beach, has been rented by the Tooker and Holland Company, who ntend to operate passenger arplanes ' from that locaton. They had one plane, the "CS," there Sunday; and t made several trps. They ntend to have two more arplanes n a few days and work wll proceed on preparng the large feld for a.landng feld. George Cutler, of Danbury. was fned $500 and costs and sentenced to 40 days n Jal when arragned n Cty court charged on two counts of sellng lquor. He appealed and bonds were fxed at $1,000. The cases of Wllam Ftzslmmons and hs partner, Joseph Dyer, of Whte street, whch were postponed from last Saturday, were fnshed. Each pad a fne of $200 and costs. As a means to prevent attacks on ts payroll whle on the way from the bank to ta offce the H. L. Judd Company, of Walltngford, Conn., hereafter wll pay ts employes by checks, nstead of cash, t was announced. Ths company has Just receved from Rochester, New York, large shpments of a specal make of ant-forgery check paper whch wll be used hereafter n meetng ts payrolls. The decson by Judge Banks' rulng that the Brdgeport councl was wthn ts rghts n orderng the Mddle street wdenng, may prompt cty offcals to take defnte steps n the matter wthn the next few months. Although lackng funds for any, extensve mprovement the admnstraton could complete the ground work of the plan and be ready to proceed when the money was avalable. Connectcut prohbton party wll hold ts state conventon n September at whch the queston of puttng a state tcket n the feld for the fall electon wll be decded. Emll L. O. Hohenthal, charman of the prohbton, state commttee ndcated that the party would follow ts polcy of many years n nomnatng canddates where the canddates of the two major partes are unsatsfactory and endorsng; the canddates of ether of the Other partes who are satsfactory. Governor, busness man, afterdnner speaker, ' prospectve college student speoalzng n hstory and psychology, Charles A. fempleton wll next take up pulpt' substtutng. Connectcut's present chef executve has been granted a lcense as a lay reader n the Epscopal docese of the state by Bshop BreweBter. Vested wth full ecclesastcal authorty, the governor was assgned to conduct hs frst church servce n Chrst church n Bethlehem n the absence of the rector on a vacaton. - The councl of admnstraton of the state department of the Veterans of Foregn Wars, n sesson at Waterbury, went on record aa beng n favor of a drastc nvestgaton of all gov< emnent departments n whch exservcemen are not recevng the preference n employment as provded n the Jfederal laws. Major W. J. Shanahan of Waterbury, department commander, outlned the complants made by post offce employes n other ctes and after dscussng the merts of the varous cases, the councl drected.that an nvestgaton be Btarted at once, to be followed by such acton as the factb obtaned by the nvestgaton warrant Engneer Bennett des n Danbury Hosptal of njures receved n Corn* wall Brdge, wreck'; week's battle n van; death toll now three.. Notce has been ssued to the automoble dealers'and reparers throughout the Btate by the Department of Motor Vehcles warnng them aganst volaton of the law regardng the sale of unregstered second hand.cars and of changes n the- 'dentfcaton ^ numberscof motor %vehlcles."h These taws, t s' ponted out." were adopted to combat operatons of automoble theves and many falures to observe them have been reported. wrdto ths year n two more rng enmnke tbe for the ad the staffs, accordng to Bflly Gbson, hs manager. Wegottattans for a mateh between Leonard and Mckey Walker, world's welterweght THT* *! are pendng, after whch Leonard wll defend bs lghtweght crewn aganst hs former ehallengar, accordng to Gbson. Wn, lose or draw n ether beat. Leonard, be added, would bans «p hs glo**» tor sjood. ooooooooooeooooeoooooooood WHAT TO DO WHEN YOU ARE STYMED Frequent Changes Confuse. Many Golf Players. Whle most golfers are awace that under the present rules strarfes must be played, the changes made back and forth n the past few years have left confuson n the mnds of many as to Just what may be done where other player's ball les n one's lne, say a foot or less from tbe hole. Can you or can you not concede hm bs putt *nd knock hs ball away? Ths stuaton has varous solutons dependng on the form of match played. n a sngle match you must play the balls as they le. that s, supposng your ball does not le sx nches or less from the other one. n that case you can have the other player lft. lt the balls are more than sx nches apart, you are not allowed to concede the putt. n medal play you can always have the other player lft, regardless of how close the two are together. n a three-ball or four-ball match you can have other player ether lft or play at hs opton. f the ball s not lfted and you ht t. t must be replaced. Suppose two players n startng n a tournament match mutually agree not to play stymes, but nstead to lft the nearer ball wherever styme occurs, s there anythng n the rules to prevent ther dong so? Yes. Rules provde that n sngle match, ball farther from hole must be played frst f the two agree to msspend ths rule they dloquallfy themselves. s there any rule to prevent player' from concedng hs opponent a putt *fter he hmself has holed out? " M o.. "":: _;- ; :.- ; - ' ' : Rley Takes Tmbers van Rlley of'kansas s shown takng the tmbers n a 400-meter hurdle race, whch event he won wth ease. He was tmed n seconds for the dstance. : Ptcher Vance Rescued Berne Nes From Lake Arthur (Dazzy) Vance, ptcher for ' the Brooklyn Natonals, was almost a hero whle the Dodgers were tranng n Florda. - - n company wth Berne Nels, hs wfe, and Mrs. 'Vance, the four went nto camp near Cleurwater, Fla., one Saturday nght wth the ntent to launch a fshng expedton early Sunday mornng. A tropcal shower had rendered the lake turbulent before they set out. Undaunted, the fshermen kept fshng; and Nels was landng what he thought was the bggest fsh he had ever booked n hs long career as a nlmrod, when the boat capszed. Both landed n the water, Berne underneath- the-boat Vance-sworn to> the rescue of hs comrade and dragged hm to safety. Vance puffed and blowed under the exevclae. Nels started a profuse lne of thanks but Vance cut hm short. ~ "G'wan, forget t," sad Dazzy. aa bs feet ht mud. "The water s only up to your hps and Just over my ' knees. Let's get back to fshng." They dd. Olympc Scale of Prces The prces to see the Varous athletc games n Pars n connecton wth tle Olympc games are nterestng.. They follow;. Track and feld, box seats,. SO and 400 francs; reserved seats. 100 ~ to 800'franca; lawn\ tenns,-box, seats , v 75;> 225 'and".300 franca; "reserved, H seats) 75;!400 and 150 francs;[boxng., j ; 100. SO, aoo, 250, 800 and 4110 francs; swlmmlag. reserved seats, SO, 100, OC, *», 100 and 400 francs.

3 FATEST0W1BW5 Band Readng jar Hood Amercans By JOHN DCKN80N 8HERMAN HE ambtous Fourth of July orator n search of a theme worthy of the day other than the Declaraton of ndependence need go no- farther than the Consttuton of the Unted States of Amerca. But only the able and eloquent and mpassoned should attempt to do Justce to ths most remnrkable document n all tho world. There were. gants, n the days when t was wrtten. They accomplshed great works, but none greater than the Consttuton.. :,' ' But a dry-ns-dust document you say? Not so. The Consttuton s the very substance of our freedom. Between ts lnes are to be read all the ronunce and hstory and aspratons of the Republc. Hundreds of thousands of Amercans have fought nnd ded to mantan ts prncples. Tbe success of representatve government n the world depends upon ts mantenance n all ts ntegrty. 'rcedorn hnngs upon.t for ts great purpose la to safeguard the rghts of the ndvdual ctzen. The Consttuton s a human document that bean" drectly upon the "lfe, lberty and pursut of hap- llness" of every Amercan. Varous crcumstances mve combned of late to brng home ths truth to us. n consequence there s a naton-wde campagn to promote understandng of the Consttuton ty the comng generaton. Twenty-eght states mve now passed a law requrng defnte courses of nstructon n all the publc schools. More than 100,000 publc school teachers are now requred by n.v to tench the Consttuton to more than 8,000,- OHO publc school chldren. The campagn wll contnue untl all the states shall have passed ths law. The Englsh settlers n the Amercan colones brought wth them the Englsh prncples of selfgovernment and elaborated and practced them to» 11 n extent unknown n the mother country. Ths h fllown by the representatve chamber n Vrgna n 1019; the "Mayflower Pact" of 1620; the wrtten consttuton of the Connectcut towns n The frst offcal draft of a plan for the formaton of a central government was the Artcles of Confederaton adopted by the Second Contnental Congress of BJ 1781 t had been ratfed by all the states.' The government thus establshed conssted of a legslatve department only. To remedy ths und other defects congress recommended the. Consttutonal Conventon whch met May 29 to -September 17, 1787, at Phladelpha. Ffty-fve delegates attended, all the states except Rhode sland beng rcp?sented. Washngton presded. Among the leaden n the conventon were Hamlton, Morrs, Wlson, Kng, Jndlson, % Frnnkln, Sherman, Pnckney, Ellsworth, Randolph. Mason, Gerry, Lansng, Patterson, Dcknson and Yutes. Congress approved the Consttuton drawn by them.' Eleven of tbe states ratfed the Consttuton n North Carolna ratfed n 1780 and^rhode sland n The orgnal document, lke the Declaraton of ndependence, has been n many bands and many - places. At last t has found a permanent and approprate home, wth the Declaraton, n a specally desgned repostory, recently dedcated by Presdent Coolldge, n the Lbrary of Congress. The Consttuton of the Unted States conssts of a.preamble and seven Artcles, supplemented by nneteen amendments "Artcles n addton to, and amendment of, tbe Consttuton." t begns: PREAMBLE We, the people of the Unted States, n order to form a more- perfect unon, establsh-justce. nsure domestc tranqulllty. provde for the common defense, promote the general welfare and secure the blessng's of lberty to ourselves and-our posterty, do ordan and establsh ths. Consttuton for tbe Unted 8tates of Amerca., Ths Preamble, clearly shows' that the Consttuton s much more-than a compact of states lke the Artcles of * Confederaton.whch" t replaced. These snfd that :the. states "hereby severally enter nto a frm league of frendshp wth each other." Tle Consttuton" s plnlnljtvhe evtubllshment* by the people of a federal system of government U»» untng of the stutes "nto one nntlon under % O natonal government wthout extngushng t elr separate admnstratons, legslatures and lo- He chef ef de federal army and navy.,and of state mlta n ALONG LFE'S the servce of the Unted Bts~reprTevwf*or TEA E«Pt to mpeachwlth the advce consent of two-thrds of By THOMAS A. CLARK ** senate be. makes treates and apponts ambassadors and Oeaa a* Mas, VU mlsj ec HBMB, other publc mnsters, eon- *ols. Judges of the Supreme <CL 1M«, Wwtesa Kewepspar Dates.) court, and other offcers not otherwse provded for by the TELEPHONE COURTESY Consttuton, or. n tbe case of tttello, Central. Gve me two-omnor offcals, by act of congress; be has the veto power "s ths two-o-two-elghtr There " two-eght, please." already descrbed; "he gves was a sound of confuson at the other congress' nformaton of the end of the wre aa the telephone recever clcked a mxture of tortured state of the Unon" a method of ntatng legslaton by the pano and rot and rough bouse combned out of whch a harsh voce "Presdental message"; he may convene congress for extraordnary sessons; be re- -w-e-ur sounded. ceves foregn mnsters; and "Ths la Mr. Clark." he takes care that tbe laws be "Whor fathfully executed, besdes "Mr. dark. - commssonng all federal offcers. Shoot t out" : "Well, what n the h do yon want? Sect 4 provdes that the fnally succeeded n makng my Presdent vce presdent and dentty clear, and the voce softened all cvl offcers (not ncludng perceptbly. What really dd want members of congress, as the was to delver a very mportant telegram to an undergraduate student. Consttuton has been nterpreted) may be removed by There s lttle doubt that the telephone has helped to facltate bus- "mpeachment for and convcton of treason, brbery, or ness, and that t has brought the country people nearer to each other and other hgh crmes and msdemeanors.." nearer to town. When woa a boy ARTCLE s devoted to and wanted to ask a grl to go out the Judcal department whch. wth me to sngng school, had to t provdes, shall be vested n saddle a horse and rde three or four mles to see her; now all that s necessary for a young fellow s to call her one Supreme court and n nferor; courts ordaned und up on the telephone and ask f she tnbllshed by congress. Federal has a date for Frday nght Whatever the telephone* has done to encour- Judg«srapponted by_the_presld'ent wth the approval of the age matrmony and to put the punch senate, hold offce durng good nto buslneks, t has not bad an mprovng nfluence.upon our courtesy or behavor.. Se/rt. 2 stntes that n "all cases affectng puhll our manners. We employ language mnsters, and those n whch n state shall be and tones when usng the telephone party, the Supreme court shall have orgnal Jursdcton. n all other cases t shall have nppellut ng or dare to do f speakng face to whch we would never dream of,, do- ' Jursdcton, both as to law and fact wth such fare wltb an ndvdual. We nsult cal patrotsms." The Consttuton dvdes the exceptons as congress shall make. helpless telephone grls and grocer powers of government nto the legslatve, executve and Judcal departments. t may be thus sum- States shall consst only n levyng war, or n ad< offcals n a way that would not have Sect. 3 provdes that "treason aganst the Unted boys and engage n altercatons wth marzed: herng to ts enemes, gvng them.ad and com' been possble before the days of the ARTCLE deals wth the legslatve deportment or congress. Sect 1 dvdes congress nto son unless on the testmony of two wtnesses... sary and nsane and personal ques- fort"; that "no person shall be convcted of tren telephone. We ask the most unneces- the house and senate. Sect 2 provdes for the electon of representatves every second year; for the gress shall have power to declare punshment of babble and patter and retal gossp or on c«5ofesslon n open court'*; and that con tons at tmes most nopportune. We! qualfcatons of representatves; for ther apportonment among the states accordng to populaton; beyond the lfe of the person attanted. extent treason; but no attander of treason shall extend nnd carry on flrtatous to a shockng the rght of the house to choose ts own speaker ARTCLE V deals wth nterstate and terrl and have the sole power of mpeachment Sec. have been rung out of bed at mdnght to gve Bumeone the name of torlal relatons. Among ts provsons are: those 3 provdes for the electon of two senators from for the guarantee by the Unted States of a republcan form of government to every state, thus each state by the legslatures (by the Seventeenth the presdent' of the Menorah socety, amendment n effect May 31, 1013, drect vote by and have been called away from a gvng congress some check on the consttutons of the people s substtuted) and for ther qualfcatons. The vce presdent presdes and has no vote tween two women whose names. had dnner party to settle a dspute.be- would-be states; for repellng nvason of the states by federal power, and for ther protecton except n case of te. The senate tres all cases never beard before as to whether or aganst domestc volence upon applcaton by the of mpeachment " not a son of the kaser hod been klled state legslature, or, f t be not n sesson, pf the durng the recent Teutonc unpleasant state executve. ness. One s not lkely to nnd a man n ; ARTCLE V provdes for the adopton of amendments to the Consttuton. Amendments are to be properly, and though we would never bed or at meals f one tmes hs calls proposed ether by a two-thrds vote of both houses thnk of cullng at' a man's house at of congress, or by a conventon called on the applcaton. of the legslatures of two-thrds of the trflng busness, we do not hestate lunch tme or at nght, to settle our states. Proposed amendments must then be rat- to call hm on the telephone. ' Sect. 4 leaves tmes, places, and manner of hold- ng electons for both houses to the state legslatures, but gves congress power to alter such regulatons, except as to the places of choosng senators; makes mandatory at least one meetng of congress each year.. Sect 5 gves each house the power to decde on electons, returns, and qualfcatons of ts own members, to determne ts rules, to punsh members for dsorder, and, by a two-thrds vote, to-expel a member. Sect 6 has members of both houses pad by the Unted States, and prvleged from arrest except, for treason, felony, or breach of the peace; and for- ' bds any person holdng offce under the Unted..States to be a member of congress, or any member of congress to be apponted to federal offce created or wth salary ncreased durng hs term n congress. Sect. 7 provdes that revenue blls must orgnate n the lower house; the veto of the Presdent may be-overcome only by a vote of two-thrds or more of each house; and f the Presdent fal to return to congress any bll wthn ten days t shall be law, unless congress adjourn wthn the ten days, when t shall not be law. Sect 8 defnes the powers granted to congress: to tax, but unformly- throughout the country; to borrow money; to regulate commerce; to make unform laws on naturalzaton and on bankruptcy; to con money, and to fx standards of weghts and measures; to establsh post offces and post roads; to grant patents and copyrghts; to consttute the lower courts; to defne and to punsh praces and the lke; to declare war; to rase, mantan, and control army and navy; to call out, to organze, and to arm the state mltas; to govern a federal dstrct, the seat of government; and the "elastc clause," on the' nterpretaton of whch there has been constant dsagreement to make laws necessary and proper for executon of these powers, and of all other powers vested n the government or n any of ts departments or offcers. Sect 9 enumerates the powers dened to. the Unted States government: the prohbton of the slave trade before 1808; suspenson of the wrt of habeas corpus, except for publc safety n rebellon or nvason; the passage of any bll of attander, or ex post facto law; the levyng of a drect tax not based on populaton, or of any export tax; commercal preference for one port over another, or levy- ng dutes on vessels salng from one state to another; the draft of money except by legal appropraton ; and the grantng of any ttle of noblty, or permttng the recept, wthout consent of congress, of any present or ttle from a foregn state by persons holdng offce under the government Sect. 10 enumerates the powers dened to the states. Some of these, n the nature of a bll of rghts e.g. that there -be no bll of attander or ex post facto law are repeated from the lst of powers dened to the federal government; others-deny - to the states what has been granted, n the pre- - cedng selectons to the federal government ARTCLE deals wth tbe executve power, vested n a Presdent who. wth a vce presdent. s elected for four yean by electors chosen *f the states, the number of electors for each beng equal to the total number of senators and representatves from the states. -.. " -. :. (The Twelfth amendment ) to the Con-.. Btltutlon makes* the choce of Presdent and ves _ presdent separate; provdes that no elector vote for canddates for both offces from the same state;. and stlpnlates^thatltthere^lsnb'cholce^by.a. ma-~ Jorty';bf,thefelectors, the house of representatves, ; votng by 'states,*' shalrchocwe-by majorty."a'prea!--" dent from the three hghest canddates for the offce, and the senate choose by majorty a vce presdent from the two hghest canddates.) Sects. 2"and 3 detal the powers of the Prest- fed by the legslatures of three-fourths of tbe states, or by conventons n three-fourths. ARTCLE V provdes that the Consttuton, and the laws and treates made thereunder, shall be the supreme nw of the land. ARTCLE V provded that "the ratfcaton of the conventons of nne states shall be suffcent for the establshment of ths Consttuton.' AMENDMENTS ARTCLE declares that congress shall make no law respectng the establshment or the free exercse of relgon, abrdgng the freedom of speech or th«press, or the rght of petton. ARTCLE holds thnt, "a well-regulated mllltla beng necesmry to the securty of a free state, the rght ot the reople to keep and bear arms shall not be nfrlrged." ARTCLE V affrms the rght of the.people to be secure la telr person and property aganst un reasonable sezure and search, and that no warrants shall l«ae but upon probable cause aud under oath. ARTCLE V decrees thnt no person shnll be held to answer for a serous crme except on ndctment of a grand jury, nor be twce put n Jeopardy of lfe for the same offence, nor compelled to he a wtness ngnlntt hmself, nor be deprved of lfe, lberty, or happness wthout due process of law, and that prvate property-shall not be taken for publc use wthout Just compensaton. ARTCLE V provdes thnt n crmnal prosecutons the accused shall have a speedy publc tral n the dlstrlrt where the alleged crme was commtted, shall be nformed of the nature of the accusaton, and shall have the assstance of counsel and of wtnesses n hs favor. ARTCLE Tll says: "Excessve ball shall not be requred, nor excessve fnes mposed, nor cruel and unusunl punshment nflcted." ARTCLE X rends: "The powers not delegated to the Unte*? States by the Consttuton, nor prohbted by t to'the states, are reserved to the states respectvely, or to the people." From 1803 '.o the Cvl war no amendments were added. Thre* were then adopted as part of the federal government's reconstructon polcy. Ar> tde X prohbts slavery. Artcle XV denes to the stntes the power to abrdge the prvleges or mmuntes of'ctzens or to deprve any person of lfe, lberty or property wthout due process of law. Artcle XV denes to the states the power to abrdge "on account of race, color or prevous condton of servtude" the rght of ctzens to vote. n 1913 the' Sxteenth and Seventeenth amend- ~ments were adopted! They provrderfor"the"levy;' ng of an ncome tax and the drect electon of senators. '.The Eghteenth amendment, provdng for natonal prohbton, became effectve by ratfcaton Jan !.. The Nneteenth amendment, provdng for woman suffrage, became effectve by ratfcaton August 26, Many-movements lookng to the further amendment of the Consttuton are under way..for "ex-. ample,' one provdes for, the prohbton -' of chld labor; t tns Just been passed by congress and must now be ratfed by the states!; A second,{fostervl by-the Natonal \Vnmnn'n'<pnrtyr--wbuld 'put women on an equal footng wth men before the law A thrd would allow congress to overrde an opnon of unconsttutonally by the Supreme court by repasslng the act n queston. A frend of mne whose famly was serously H last year remarked that she could have managed everythng qute comfortably f t had not been for the telephone. t rang contlnu ously from daylght to dark untl t wore her out rod drove her half mad. Fnally she had t taken out and went to the neghbors when she needed to telephone. The wont of t s that most of us, though we complan of them at one tme or another, are ourselves anlty of these dscourteses.- Perhaps f we w.ould thnk we would not be. SGNNG CHECKS RANDFATHER was very punctlous as to the methods he used G n dong busness. He pnld hs debts as regularly and surely an sunrse, but he was dstrustful of banks. He was afrad that the money would hot be there when he drew on t. So he kept hs.monetary possessons n gold usually, n an od stockng concealed under a loose brck.at the sde of the freplace. When he bought anythng, from a plug of chewng tobacco to a farm, he pad for t n real money taken from the old sock. We thought hm very old-fashoned, but am begnnng latey to see the wsdom of hs procedure. There was no chargng accounts wth hm; no protested checks, none returned marked "N. S. F."; the transacton was closed when he pad the money, and that was the end of t. Young Morton, an acquantance of mne. s not so dstrustful of the banks as was my grandfather. He puts hs money n and keeps on drawng untl he checks gve out. He does not consder the bank as a depostary of hs 'unds, vvhloh he must account for carefully, never takng put more than he has put n. t- s an nexhaustble source of supply to hm whch the banks should consder themselves ucky.n beng allowed to handle. Be wrtes checks when he knows there s.no_money_to_hjs account; he wrtes hem n the hope that-there wll be money by the tme tbe check gets back; he wrtes them even on banks U whch he never had money because he happens to fnd a check of that bank. t s the. nexperenced youth who does ths, you.say; the boob from the country town who has never before had a bank account, who's hard up and" who has lttle money to manage. wsh t were so..carelessness s the general; cause. - thoughtlessness,' rreponslblty, dsregard of the law, the leslre to.put-aomethlng oyer.^'---' -'-.".-"' < A'chWklBp Hccount s convenence ut no young person should be alow ed to open one up untl he has been aught somethng of the responslbulea at busness. Buldm Urge* Smaller Ctem to Wden Through Strmeta "Wden and open op necessary a*> tertal tree's and avenues to hand]* present and future motor vehcle tnflle now," s the recommendaton ef Thomas P. Henry, presdent of tne Amercan Automoble assocaton. Mr. Henry feds that one of the most mportant felds of club actvtes s to co-operate fa every way possble wth the traffc authortes of the varous dtles n the soluton of problems rej«stve to handlng the constantly ncreasng traffc. The queston, ha ponts out, not only nvolves expedtng traffc but also the savng of lves. "Practcally all of our dtles and larger towns were planned before tbe. days of the motor vehcle," he sad n a recent bulletn. "Many ctes and towns were developed to ther present proportons wthout any plan. Wth narrow streets or wthout»n adequate number of connected thoroughfares from the suburbs to the heart of.the., cty, truffle authortes n the majorty of our ctes are stayng awake nghts wonderng how they are gong to handle the present day motor traffc. Temporary expedences such as more traffc offcers and one-way streets are adupted wth the realzaton that these measures are not gong to meet the stuaton a year or two.from now wth the correspondng ncrease of traffc whch has been noted durng the last few years. "The queston of solvng local traffc problems can be answered-by a scentfc study of the needs of a cty and how they may be met "The lesson whch the larger dtles are learnng from experence, should prompt smaller ctes and towns to begn ther ctty plannng to take care of future motor vehcle traffc now and not wat untl t becomes mperatve und the cost of wdenng and connectng streets becomes almost prohbtve." Clean Up Back Yard* A natonal movement for cleanng un the unsghtly "back yards" of ctes, whch they exhbt to travelers along ralroad rghts of way, has been naugurated by the ndustral dvson of the Natonal Assocaton of Real Estate Boards..... ndustral commssoners of all ralroads n the Unted States wll cooperate wth the ndustral realtors n the clean-up campagn. Commercal assocatons and cvc organzatons n the ctes wll be asked to take an actve part n lnkng the rght of way outlook reprffent ther dtles farly to the travelng publc. Appallng neglect that ndustres throughout the country, especally n the smaller communtes, gve to that part of ther propertes vsble from the rght of way, s emphaszed by the dvson n outlnng ts program. The. exposure of ples of nshes, rubbsh and Junk s no way to buld up nterest n the communty on the part of passers through the town who ' mght become permanent resdents, the dvson contends. Together wth the cleanup cam* palgn. the dvson calls attenton to the desrablty of enablng the traveler to dentfy easly the town through whch be s passng. *ntercjty exchange of busness n nuostral real estate s another matter whch the dvson s studyng. Joseph Kramer, Dayton, Oho, s charman of the commttee whch s de» veloplng the possbltes n such an nterchange. The dvson s also studyng tho best ways of developng the ndustral dstrcts of dtles. Tree* toduplaee Sgru Trees to beautfy the scenery, along motor routes n place of bllboards s the goal of the Colorado Sprngs Automoble club, wrtes a correspondent to the Chrstan Scence Montor. Threats of tne club to tear down all., sgns persstng n 1 volaton of law resulted n removal of many unsghtly sgns by owners, and the club members themselves removed many from Ute pass, one of the moat famed spots n the Rockes, whose dsfgurement has been much crtczed by dtusens and vstors.." The Pkes Peak Ocean-to-Oceaa hghway and the new motor hghway to the summt of Pkes peak both lead to the regon beyond the Rockes. The Ute ndan came from the other sde of the range through ths pass to the famous mneral sprngs of_ Mantou, n the olden days. - ' An order has been placed by the club for,10,000 trees, now seedlngs, to be planted n ts nurseres and later transplanted along the man roads.leadng nto.colorado Sprngs. Ths act alone has won many frends for the club and much co-operaton n ts actvtes... Lost n Home OwnerMp - Only twenty out of the forty-eght states of the Unon showed an ncrease n home ownershp durng the years from 1900 to 1920,' the leadng; states beng, m order,.north Dakota, Wsconsn. South Dakota, laho. Mnnesota, -Montana. Utah, lllne. New Mexco and {Mchgan. t s ntemt- ng to noteuhat out of the ten lendng; states, only'one, Mane, s located * the extrame eastern part of the cowh 1 *' tryt>and jwlconsn and Mchgan etav the only m^auuves et the mldol* western states*», '* - -H f-a-.

4 PACE 4 B WATBBTOWH HEWB MB a Yt*r tngle Copy So a S. Freeman Publsher & Propretor Francs P. Flynn - - Assocate Member Natonal Edtoral An'* Blend aa second-claa* matter at tke Post Offce at Watertown. Conn., ader te act of March 3, FRDAY, -JVLY 4, Vacaton Day What of Them. Wth schools closed, the boys and grls wll have full opportunty to enjoy themselves n the sports and recreaton assocated wth the summer neason. The vacaton wll not have been well spent, says the New-.Canaan Advertser, f the chldren do not return to ther books n the fall wth better health because of the opportuntes that are open to them n the great outdoors. n many, perhaps n most cases, the vacaton wll not be spent wholly n play. Some wll fnd that certan forms of work a»e Justus useful as play to keep them n pood sprts and to brnjr about phvsoal nprov'ment. Others wll'take-advantage of the opportunty to make up defcences n ther' studes, so that they may resume them n the full wthout a handcap. t may be true that "All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy," but we don't thnk Jack s gong to be much of a success unless he acqures a taste for an nterest n some sort of work. For t's workers thnt make the world go round, and the school s ntended to ft and tran boys and grls for useful labor.. The Advertsed Artcle M manufac- T"V" 1 n ad- ' c:-..lc > r the prce down." he sad. But a busness rjnn later showed hm that hs compettor who advertsed extensvely wa,s gradually pettnpr the busness and sellng a better artcle at a lower prce. ' ; \ M \ lo t? Here are my costs. He must pay as much lor labor and for everythng else that goes n to make up the f nn cost of the product as do," the manufacturer countered.' But the busness man was nor baffled. "Yes, but that s only part of the story. Your compe* tor by advertsng keeps busness gong along on an even keel. He keeps hs machnes busy all the tme. He doesn't have to layoff hs men at frequent ntervals. HP has added to hs busness wthout beng forced to enlarge hs buldng or buy now machnes, or n other words ncrease hs overhead expenses. Thus n ths lttle speech, t!:e busness man told how the consumer benefts by ntellgent advertsng. nfluence "Te who nflu'hm's the 'f hs t!( v! T l!h«n f s HM h? tmes to come." sad Elbert Hubbard. One need not be. famous.thnushout the njres to fll a very mportant -place-n the-scheme of creaton. The man who make; hs neghbors see the problems of lfe n a hotter lght the leader.'n a small cty who contrbutes sfstethu' to the upbuldng the communty s to be honored as well as the man who battle; for great prncples n a perplexed naton or dstressed world. The thng that counts n lf< s to nfluence the thought of your own tme for the better. Take an actve, part n the lfe around you. Do,-s much good and brng as much happness to others as your powers permt. Use the talent that has been gven to yon for some worthy end, ard yon.wrc nfluencng" the thought of your tme, and n a small way the thought of all the tmes to come. Wthout a sngle lght. shp. Captan. Bunker was m; the most strngent law KM. Why dd he do ths. happened to hm? Read n the new seral startng next ssue of The News. on hs volatof the What t all n the Sound of Hammer s Not Heard Tfstory-tels,us >that- n." the buldng of Solomon's temple^, the sovhrl^of^thethamm'er*,^was 'lpf hpard/?^:a7;mar^would?,need,':to tn 11." Pretty easy gomr m WAfMffftWK MMW gbftay. TOY DRAMA BY RADO Mr. Rchard Hughes ha* wrtten a play especally tor the rado. Faced wth the apparently nsuperable dffculty of necessary nvsblty of bs acton, ths ngenous dramatst ht upon the noton of placng bs scene n the ptch blackness of a caved-ln coal mne. Llstenem-ln receved nstructon to turn out the lghts n ther moms, n order to create the atmosphere of a coal mne one would thnk a lttle more mght be requred and were further warned that f they thought the tragedy would be ton dreadful for Uera. they had better not lsten n. The whole of the mnng accdent was sent through the' ar. wth crashng and cursng alas, there was no prayng the rush of cy waters, and the fnal sound of the pcks as the rescue party approached.' The whole cast conssted of one resourceful ndvdual plus the book of the play and a choce assortment of j lolse-maklng mplements, says the Lvng Age. Aa an Englsh paper observes: "t seems as though a new member had been found for the club nf _queer. trades, namely, the playwrght whose chef characters are 'noses of.'" :... Offcers of the French colonal servce have dscovered a trbe n the Sahara desert n whch the women have completely subjugated ther husbands and strut around the camps wth clubs n ther hands. The Amazons are known as Kenourl and are a husk] breed, who wear great buggy trousers. Accordng to the amazed Frenchmen, the women appled ther dubs very freely when the husbands showed the slghtest hestaton of carryng out ther orders. The ladles from tme to tme stage free-for-all fghts and refuse to eat wth ther husbands. The great queston s now: Are the Kenourl trbes leadng the way n th«development of the famly and must we ultmately face a smlar stuaton n other lands? Here s a mlchty weapon for the opponents of» " suffrage. There s so much gloom n ths world that New York undertakers huve decded to dsguse ther hearses so that n future they wll look lke ordnary lmousnes. Last year they dscarded black gloves at funerals. The undertakers apparently understand lu.-.nn, nature. Few people lke to be remnd-1 ed of death. Yet t s nevtable. Am j there are plenty of human bengs for! whom death holds no terrors. Such j people often combne wltb ther four-. age to de a Joy of lvng that s amzng. Others look at t phlosophcally and see n death only one event n a seres of occurrences whch must be experenced. To gnore thoughts ot death s lke the ostrch whch hdes ts head n the sand when danger threatens. What are your common errors n Englsh? Every speaker and wrter, except possbly the dyed-n-the-wool purst 'who spends hs tme makng lne dstnctons, bus a.""number «f mbltuul mstakes n grammar or the use of words to hs.credt. He goes on makng these mstakes, sometmes Conscously, more often unconscously. f he were to take tme to analyze hs uxe of language le would fnd. n all probablty, that the number of hs ' errors s surprsngly small. He would ' fnd, too, that they result from a vagueness n mental dstncton whch he. could easly grasp f he set hs ralnd.to. lt.._. _. The past, magnatvely re-erwtel belongs to urt today. magnatvely, nterpreted belongs to art. f one j magnatvely conceves tomorrow, that also shnll not art clam? Furthermore, an magnatve concepton of tomorrow may not be of tomorrow alone but of today dscerned already ascertalnable to the creatve artst, wrtes Zona Gale n the Yale Revew. What s realty but the dvnaton of the amoeba become the ascertalnnble by? the mollusk? And shall the amoeba of today deny to art hs own dvnaton of ether the amoeba of today or of the mollusk of tomorrow? The mportance of rado n the producton and marketng of agrcultural products s brought out n a specal survey of about 1,200 representatve farmers, just completed by the Unted State Department of Agrculture. More than 50 per cent of the 1,200 farmers replyng reported that they owned tube sets employng three or more tubes, whle approxmately 50 per cent of the farmers reported havng homemade Bets rangng from smple, crystal detectors to tube sets.. ' Farm products" are often shpped great dstances.when they mght; be sold wth greater' prolrclose, at. hand.; "says te" Unted-States Dep'artment',.f par^ofjthvmunnyjtp^fwerntae^th^ help farmers ranke readjustments n ther farmng and marketng to en bln "them to meet local, market demand*.,'. Wavtertown Churches m Read below what U. S. & ' Senator Cope/and, (N. Y.) oaya about Bond Bt d* \ New York chose "Bond" the same as. WATERTOWN ND Dr. Royal S. Copeland L when he was New York's Health Commssoner told why New York had elected Bond Bread as ts favorte loaf. He "Pure food means health. The Bond behnd Bond Bread s an epoch-makng guarantee of purty." These words sum up the judgment of New York's dscrmnatng women who show ther fath n ths Bond by buyng more loaves of Bond Bread than THS BOND, prnted on e»n wrapper, guarantee* nth welleot and dent\ftr*. hcl'.«fmthanror1uct ot le Uenrral Bkng CJT.P» jr. Fro tthbbund,! 11 th t t apllm.bond re~(l (: ' CHRSTFCHURCH Rev. F. B. Whtcome. rector WANTED- Pcncs, Outngs, aoo Celebraton of the Holy communon. Dances and the lke, to Book for the comng Season at Luna Park, Waterbury. ' Wonderful ooo Sunday School Dance Pavlon; pcnc grounds, Mornng worshp.and sermon. boatng, swmmng, all rdes FRST CONCL CHURCH and many, games and amukcment stands make up the park. Rev. C. E. Wels pastor.,0.45 Mornng servce. deal place for an outntf Sunday School. Wrte rvng Cohen, Pres., *. METHODST. EPSCOPAL 0. Box,144, Waterbury, Conn., Rev. George-EL-Farrar, pastor..., or call Waterbury 4790 or Sunday School. - : Specal rates., V 19juhU.oo Mornng servce and sermon. :; '' ST. JOHN'S CHURCH, -J '- WANTED-^Men s or. women Jto ~ fl-rev. -Pr. Judge.V- ;; ---., * s take orders;; fof^genune; guarv;.mmes WU be at ^8 ard:-o o'clock o on " ahteedmosery> for men;tjwonep Sunday mornng. ^ the local clurches arrnvfed "to' notfy x v n'' wrtng - of' desred m^orl-correctffla.),:' " " WANT 8 chldfen^ ElmnateL'dar- ^^l^^jwcekjful! Beautrful^pl natonal Stockng'; MHB,-.- Norratown, OBPOTST. P^^ClOMU all other large loaves combned. Many of these New York women were among the 43,040 housewves who showed us how they wanted Bond Bread made. Local mothers, top, have shown ther apprecaton of ths same Bond. They agree wth the housewves of New York. Lke them, they realze the value of pure ngredents. They apprecate the truth of Dr. Copeland's statement that "pure food means health." ' * ft ' as 4^040 jousewves showed us HARRY ^ SKXTON'S GARAGE AUTOMOBLES OVERHAULED AND REBULT Gould Rado and Auto Batter<es Battery Chargng andjjattery Storage Telephone 14-2 TO ALL L WHO WAB SHOBS- Pont throw aw.eyv your 5-wort: out shoes. Brng them to-me.; Wth my modern equpment oam repar thera and makf them lke sew, JOE PENT* />"'. WAT1ET0WN PATRONZE THE BAY OARNSET OARAGE, Oakvlle, Conn. Supples, Servce Oar, Aooessores "~ Open 7 Daya a Week Day Phone 254 Nght Phone 267 Bronson & Olson! GARAGE Man.St, Opp. Depot 8t, Wat art own HDD80N & ESSEX A0EN0Y -r-oonld Batteres Beparnff -r Aooauores OADLLAO 0X08ED OAS^FOS TAX Gasolne A Ol. Staton BepaJrntf Adjortr

5 ftt WAfWoWK MUM / FBOAY. JtJUT 4. ttft. Rev. L. E. Todd and famly are upendng the week at Walnut Beach. Mss Jance Farrar of New York has come to spend the summer wth Mrs Mary Sm^h. The H. K. H. Slk factory has closed down for two weeks. Yes- they removed ther mach- Mss Lotte Htchcock has anterday orange tree chock full of b'uds. nery from ther North Woodbury : an nterestng sght... buldng. ' Mrs. Emma C. Baker, of Cornwall, a recent guest of Mrs. A. E. Knox, left on Frday for Boston. T. U Shea and A. E. Knox have been apponted apprasers on the estate of the late Walter. T. Bell. August Orlch and famly mo- J. G. G^orham sold out hs effects at aucton, Saturday, but tored to Savn > Bock Sunday. realzed only about one-half value of the. Roods. Whle' the boys were n bathng Walter ventured out too far, and Arthur Freeman rescued hm from drownng. Mrs. Janet Horton left town Monday for her former home n Ralegh, N. C. She s ajuster of the late Carolne Rogers.' A. E. Knox, admnstrator, has sold the Carolne Rogers place to.1. G; Gorham, who wll put t n fne repar and resde there. ; ' 13. J. Atwood has moved from Hgh street to Dawson's school house tenement on West street. The gopd news comes from.george R. Ford that hs mother, Mrs. F. R. Ford, s constantly on the gan, followng ner serous llness. Two auto loads of people came over from Thomaston, last Sunday, to hear. Rev. E. J. Curtss preach, and were dsapponted, as le was out of town. The close season- s now on trout,- and but few decent catches have been reported. l appears that the more our brooks arc stocked the fewer trout. Ehvyn T. Bradley oceuped the pulpt of tbe Thomaston M. E. church last Sunday, and as usual, gave hs hearers somcthk worth whle to thnk about. About $170 was realzed last week at the- Chrst 'Church lawn party held at the home of Mrs. Lofmark. ". Mr. and Mrs. John Fox are on a motor trp to New Jersey ard * wll vst Mr. Fox's sster at Orange. Mr. Fox s.havng hs vacaton from hs dutes of servng customers n the Fray market Rev. E. J. Curtss was out of town over Sunday and A. E. Knox had Barge of the mornng servce n the Methodst church. "Arthc close "of the~scrvc~e~~an~effort was made to get subscrptons to balance a $200 defct for the quarter, and about $60 was, pledged., \. Mr. and Mrs, W. B. Jlotchkss, Joseph Sherwood and A. F. Sherwood of Waterbury were Sunday borg, Nebraska. Mr. Swanson has resumed hs work for the guests at the home of Mr. and Connectcut Lght & Power Co. Mrs. Albert Sherwood. Sunday evenng at the Frst Church the 7th n the YMe Unv. Press seres, "Chronoeles. of.amerca" wl.be gven. Ths s j a shrrng^ac.eount-of-the-fall-of Quebec. From testmonals concernng the' accuracy of ths pcture we may be sure of sustaned ", nterest throughout. Two great. generals Who were brave solders and courageous men are the ' central fgures of nterest/ Wllam Chatfeld has moved f r-on upper - West Sde road to SH-JC Shop -Jane 'n.kmberford Mrs / S.;Wcbb ard Mrs.:A S much of j,new. ^York} af&jak the Webb hoe8teadxor*a:kfr6a(l for the summer month*. r w:*^'^ M'xs B'lfy lpws Wllams, daughter of Mrs. Eva Grace Wl lams, was unted n marrage.to LeRoy Nathanel Bogers of Brdgeport at St. John's church, Waterbury, Thursday afternoon, June 26, by the Rev. Dr. Lews. Mr. and Mrs. fogers wll resde n Brdgeport. The many frends of Mrs. Palen O. Martn wll be sjlad to from a broken hp, the result of Alfred Johnson fa Sufferng learn that she ^s mprovng n a kck from a cow. health and was able to "attend church last Sunday. Mss Madelne Gruber has returned home after spendng a week n New York and expects soon to go to Camp Greylock, Bccket, Mast):, for the summer. MWOBTOWN Robert Wllams returned last week from a sojourn n New Jersey. He has a motor cycle. Guests n the neghborhood over the week-end:, Wllam Ballard of New York at hs father % Valentne Ballard, Homer Goodsell and famly; Mr..and Mrs. Charles Lynn, Peter Kroa and sster of Stratford, at Mrs. Goodsell's; Mr. and Mrs, John Fuller called Mss Edth Alton entertaned frends and relatves \at Allcndalc Saturday n honor of Mr. and Mrs. Sherwood Allen's weddng nnnversary, also Mrs. Allen's brthday. Other guests were Mss Klzabeth Allen, Sherwood Allen Jr., Mr. and Mm. Henry Allen and Henry Jr., of Waterbury; Mrs. Lucy Osborn, Mss Lllan Osborn, Mr. and Mrs. Lews Osborn of Ltchfeld and Frank Osborn of New York. Thursday June 26 about 25 frends of Ellot Lacey gathered at the Nonnewaug school house Tor a farewell party. Ellot has lved wth Mr. and Mrs. Charles lawley for the past four years, Mu under ther knd^nnd lovng (sre ho lms (.TOWH to be a good :nd manly boy. Ellot's mother marred agan, md wanted her poy home wth le\ s so he left for N'cw York Frday mornng. Mrs. Hnwljy served cake anl M'eam. Mrs. Buoll of the baby farm was attended wth several of her 1 t - Me charges. All reported a '.rood tme and wsh Ellot God speed n hs new home. Oscar F. Warner left for Lake "As to the alleged aeven bllons of Otsego, New York, where he has'water'- n the ralroads, a physcal accepted a poston as assstant (.'amp Drector, at a Boy Scout amp, for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rck of Waterbury have rented "The Corner Cupboard Tea Room", a nd-opened-t-1 ast week. They- "lan to serve lunches, creun and ;oft drnks. Fred Swanson has returned from a vst wth hs brother, a Congregatonal mnster n Swede. Found n Waterbury Mr. and Mrs. Bart Scanncll and daughter, Katherne of Waterbury have moved here. Mrs. «tolcn last, week from F. E. The Chevrolet tourng ear Scanncll s a daughter -of, Mr. Knox's was found n Waterbury. and Mrs. George Cooper. havng been abandoned l>y the hef.,. " What s the red lne tral? Mstakes 'Ths prevson bean no relaton whatever to ralroad captalsaton We do no care to have readrs of the Reporter brng n pa-nal ralroad*, seme of. whch ; mght and, moreover, no relatton to ledtracrs and pont out mstakes. We show earnngs under smsh a rat»maklag prevson la «xcess-ef sx par cent, know that all papers make them. and seme mueh leas. No emsmera. 'Jut f anyone fnds any paper tloa whatever la gves n the Act or nywhere wthout a mstake, we n the admlststmtloa et the nterstate want t. Wo. wll have t put oncommerce Commlaalom to ralroad lsplay n the natonal museum 11 Washngton "as tle only one >f ts knd n "exstence. 0H0BM1TT BROS. Hum OoBtneton General Job Work and Bhrertds ftreat TeL 1964 < _ Oakrflto; OouMettmt FNANCAL FAXES Poltcans Mslead PuWc Regardng Corporatons, Credt, and Ralroads, Says F. N. SnopnonL FALLACES MET WTH FACTS Deelarta P*oa «Wll Make tlwrt' thrft el These WHe Deceve Them Whan Arsssdl t» Troth of OWN ntaresta. Three mat msrepresentatons, ey whch certan poltcan. have advanced tkelr own nterests at the»- pea>«ot pnblle welfare, were reemtlr declared hy F. N. Shepbard, Kseeatlve Manager, Amercan Bankers Asaocfatton, n an address at Kansas.Cty* Mlaonr, to be the oft-repeated statements that "Wall- Street" own* the corporatons, that the Federal Reserv* Banks dscrmnated aganst agrlcultare and deflated the termers, aad that there are seven bllon dollar* ot "water" n ralroad captalsaton and rates should be reduced accordngly. What Facts Tell la regard to the alleged ownershp of the corporatons hy "Wall Street," Mr. Shepherd snowed that the securtes of Amercan corporatons are very wdely held* by tae people, fhe Unon Pacfc, he ponted out, haa over 50,000 stockholders and the Peuaaylranla Ralroad 147,000 stockholders, of whom are women, wth an average ownershp of 47 eharea each. Th«Amercan Telephone and Telegraph Company has atoeknolder* on Mrs. Mary Crane at Mrs. 130,000 of whom are employees, and Man Goodsell's Sunday. the Unted States Steel Corporaton has 174,000 stockholders. Accordng to a recent report of the nterstate Commerce Commsson, he sad. Class ralroads have a total of 777,132 stockholders, there beng, therefore, practcally as many owners of shares aa there are employee*. N "The real captalsts of Amerca," contnued fr. Shepherd,"are these and the bondholders whose lands are nvested la securtes through ther thrty mllon sayngs accounts, and through ther ownershp of over 1 71 mllon lfe and ndustral nsurance polces. Once aronae these people to the fact that t la ther nterests whch are beng attacked through these msrepresentatons and they wll make hort shrft of those who deceve them. Truth About the Federal Reserve "As to the Federal fteserre System, nstead of Ha dscrmnatng aganst the farmer, exactly the opposte s true. Durng the perod of greatest declne n the yalue of agrcultural products, about whch there has been so much loose talk, redscounts wtb Federal Reserve banks n non-agrcultural dstrcts actually decreased by 28 per cent, but n agrcultural dstrcts redscounts- were actually ncreased by 66 per cent.. The Federal Reserve Banks of the bg ctes of Boston, New York, Phladelpha and CleTelaad poured nto other Federal Reserve Banka n agrcultural dstrcts lterally hundreds of mluons of dollars. raluaton of the ralroad properttea has been under way for the past ten years, as a result of the La Folletta Act, conducted by a body of unprejudced, noa-polltlcar experts by whom the Taluatlon has been placed at $18,- 900,000,000. Although t has been ofncally stated, and reterated, that, n rrrlng at ths-fgure;-no consderaton whatever was g?en to captalsaton,.poltcally-mnded men are stll decevng the publc, and partcularly the farmers, about the 'water' n the ralroads. Ralroad stock today a not watered. Any possble far scheme of raluatlon today prores that our ralroads are worth from one to two bllon dollars mere than ther captalsaton. No' Ralroad ncome Quaranteo "Further, demagogues are tellng people that the ralroad ncome U guaranteed. The EscMasMnne Act does net guarantee any retartt to ralroad stockholder*, as the etemaejoauee constantly assert. By ts terms the Act smply provdes a yard stck for rate makng, whch s that a far Talroad rate s one whch womd show a return ef 6% per cent upon the actual Taloe ot the property used la transportaton n a gven'terrtory. captalsaton er any n*ara upem f MDDLEMAN'S PROftTO. -Words ef objecton ea the part ot farmer, aganst the mlddlamaa X \ b ; j ^ Una rewres, tke hmself a Ugalr Often tke Tral andadventuncc love today. A dramatc tale crowded wth acton. You cannot take t or leave t f you start t You wll wth that you mght read t all at once. We cannot spare space for that, but agree to prnt Gbenl WATCH PQR THE OPENNG N THE NEWS NEXT WEEK Aosent-Mlhdad Professor. The professor was a very absentmnded man, but he looked up as some of hs famly trooped nto hs stndy. "Well, chldren, what do you wantf he sad. "We've come to say good nght, daddy " they all shouted. "Well," sad the professor, absentmndedly, "wat tll tomorrow morn ng, 'm much too busy now." 8hs Knew Herself, ' Photographer would suggest that you relax the features a lttle and aastme a more pleasng expresson. Mss Vlek-Senn suppose can do t f you nsst, but can tell you rght now t won't look lke me. Unconvnced. Wlle Do they call 8unday a day of reatt Mother Yes, dear. Wlle Where T Llf* Personal Experence. Profesnor What are known as the Dark Ages, Egbert? Egbert From eghteen to twenty- Bve, sr. 8un Dal. Unquestonably there s a comnwrclal tnge to chldren's book week, and specal weeks and specal days and jpeclal drwea altogether are becomng a wearness to the flesh and a tax. oh patence. They are the phenomena of an dea pushed to staleness and shoved down the Amercan throat, to repleton. But n spte, of these consderaton!*, chldren's book week s a thng that deserves emphass because t furthers, a really necessary endeavor, the eudearor to nstll a taste for good lterature, good dea* and study nto youthful Amerca. t Pays to AdTatttTf -Bays the Elgn advertsers Bulletn "Ob, merchant, n thne hour of eeo, f on tl* paper you Rbould cue, Take ths advce and be you yyy, Go strajrltway out and advvrt, Be wxc at once, prolong your daaa, A slent buxx.-hh soon d-kkk." B PAY BY CHECK Every man, no matter what hs postou n lfe, has a certan number of blls to pay. Hmuess men, these who have become more than an average success, always pay ther blls by check. You can eojoy ths some prvlege by startng a Checkng Axoml wth ths Bank. Your canceled Check s an excellent recept of payment for any bll. The Watertown Trust Go.... ".. ;. ",. '. " ' '. Member Amercan Bankers' Assocaton sbvbwwnbuwh GAS RANGES Sutable For AH Requrements Good n Appearance. Call at the Offce. Moderate n Prce. DESGNS % Look Them Over. THE Waterbury Gas Lght Co. Corner Center and Leavenworth Streets THE UNVERSAL CAR Waterbury, Conn. Phones FARMERS' ATTENON! SPECAL OFFER FOR TWO WEEKS ON NEW T E R M 8- NEW PRCES NEW TRACTORS Thn * the Greatest Opportunty you have over had! DUTE WLCOX FUNT, nc. 47»-48» MEADOW ST., WATKRHJKY, CONN.,

6 ' a w Alton's) a EaftStO. tbe forthefaet tght or lnstut relef to Corns, Bunons j prevents Blsters and Son ano a^vse M n mw cnmgt asrahto feet At Mgn n your BBS* at) nrea ass on from excessve walkng or dsnclng. sprnkle some Allen's Foot-Ease a tfct foot-bath, and get rest and comfort. Sold evejwberg. For Frs* aampls «nd a FOOUEM. Walkng Doll, address Allan's Foot-E*ao, La Roy, N. Y. FOR OVER ZOO TEARS baarem os hat been a worldwde remedy for kdney, lver and ^ftrf^^r dsorders, rhft" << t* >m 1 hmbagoaml urc add condtooa. «rrect ntend troubles, thnulatevttl orgs^ Three sses.au druggst*. nsst ea the orgnal genune Oou> MKPAU r*>l«v* Heartburn Para, standard dlgestte medfclne n convenent capsules. Re- Here trouble where t orgnates. Ad dgeston, break up gas, ton* up stomach and bowels. 36 Capsules n a package. Tour drug* gst wll tell you ther mod* erate prce. Try them today JAQUES CAfSULB CO. FUTTSBUKG,B.X. Coot That Chrut Wore on Calvary? The cathedral tt Treves, n Khenlah Prussa, s sad to contan the coat Jesus wore ou the : day of Hs crucfxon. Tradton states that t was found bj the Empress Helena whle gressonal lbrary. Snuff and refned sugar came next, followed by sales at aucton. By 1813 retalers of lquor were made a source of governmental revenue, and retalers of foregn merchandse aa well. n 1815 manufactured ron, candles, bats, umbrellas, and shoes, were taxed along wth playng cards. Coal, pant, cement, marne engnes, and screws were among the artcles upon whch tbe government leved n the days.of the Cvl wur. n these tmes, too. archtects, cvl engneers and contractors had to settle wth the collector of nternal revenue. Before the war ended, lawyers, physcans and dentlstb had been added to on a vst to the Holy Land n the Fourth century and was deposted by the lst and about every one else, ncludng all. manufacturers. her fatter for safe keepng n the cathedral at Treves... n the Nnth century the coat was concealed from nvaders n the crypt of the church, Penalty of Neglgence but was brought to lght and solemnly "Mlzzus Tarpy Just told me that exhbted n t was not shown Lura Gawky fell dend a spell ago agan untl 1512, when, owng to the whle choppng stove wood," exctedly vast crowds that flocked to see t, Pope Leo X decreed that t should be exhbted nly once every seven years thereafter. t s sad that n 1844 the coat- was vewed by one mllon plgrms n the course of a sngle week. n the frst tme of ts exhbton ance 1844, t was seen by nearly two mllon plgrms. However, at least twenty "holy coats" are exhbted and sad to have been worn by Chrst that day on the "Ml called Calvary." Montreal Famly Herald. Stoppage Stranger Don't the fast trans ever atop here?. Natve Yep. Had a wreck here once. Lfe. hptflut JU WNM Bndf$ f Ths Pper Beee Darken Beacon Swarms of bees recently swept offshore by the wnd n a storm, made ther landng on the huge lamp of the South-West lghthouse off New Haven, Subject to Tax Leves Carrages were the frst subject of a tax levy by the federal government, accordng to^the researches of the con- cred Mrs. Johnson; upon her return 'from a neghborhood call. "Goodgoddlemghty 1" ejaculated Gap, Johnson of Rumpus Rdge. "That pore feller mght have been alve rght now f he had begun breakng hs wfe n to do her Work when they was frst marred." Kansas Cty Star. TRUE motor gentleman or an auto hog. Nothng wll make the careless pedestran a more sncere convert to "gve and take" than tbe exhbton of unform courtesy on the part of the drver. Somebody has to start ths movement toward better traffc condtons, as well as on the open roads. Let us, the motorsts, take the ntatve. There wll be no doubt about the outcome. \ Respect Rules'of Road. Consderate drvers do not wllfully block foot crossngs. They apparently recognse the rght of a pedestran to lfe, lberty and the pursut of busness. They slow up and stop, f necesj sary, to allow pedestrans to cross from Conn. So thck were tbe bees, says Ol drums n.garages are usually an eyewtness, that they covered the curb to curb. They wat always for placed on racks a few feet from the lens area of the beacon and obscured women and chldren, and even men. floor,, but consderable dffculty s the lght that gudes marners n Long snd do not.delberately keep them often experenced n lftng the ol sland sound. ' '. standng n the mddle of the street drums.up on the racks. A smple host between two streams of truffle. They for ths purpose, whch can easly be A etncte dooo of Dr. Peory'a "Pj"»«BlwPJ wll **pol Wonna or Tapeworm. No eecond \ respect the rules of the road. And as operated by one man. s shown n the. OOM requred.»t Pearl St.. N. T. Adv. a result, they contrbute much to the safety and comfort of the publc afoot. Many Thng* Have Been But the thoughtless. nconsderate, dsrespectful drver does none of these thngs. We see hm every day plungng along lke an unruly drunk, cuttng n front of other crre, sldng cor- Jers, nether lookng to the rght or left, watng for ho one. ntellectually, morally and physcally--ths sort, of drver deserves to be called an automoron or worse. ' Of course, the pedestrans are to blame, too..they are careless of the rghts and even the safety of motorsts and other pedestrans. Watch a crowd of men and women at the curb watng for traffc to pass. Every second-some msguded persons elbow others out nto the patch of streamng traffc. and danger so they themselves can hurry across the street. What can make a "get the h 1 out of my way" drver slow down to let someone cross the street? What can force an " dare you to strke me" pedestran to recognze the rghts of others? No matter how drastc, laws alone wll not turn the trck. Nothng but the Golden Rule can ever do t. We can pass laws untl the statute books ple hgher than the capltol at Washngton. We can blow traffc whstles untl we are blue n the face; but untl everybody drvers and pedestrans alke realze that the other fellow has as much rght on earth as they there wll be unsolved traffc problems. Satre on Novel Readng Grade to Conserve Fuel Such was the popularty of novelreadng n England about the md-of coastng when the opportunty of- f motorsts would take advantage Eghteenth century that t was vewed fers and when t may be done wth wth alarm by the ntellectuals and perfect safety, they could materally was satrzed n a fnrce called "Polly add to ther gabollne mleage when Honeycomb," attrbuted to Garrck. - tourng. Charty should begn at home, they say; so should reform. Wll blnd confdence lead you to physcal dsaster at age 31? Ths s the experence of the average Amercan, Unted States Lfe Tables, 1920, ndcate Tar the average person, health physcal freedom and full vgor extends only from age 18 to 81. Then the slump. After 40, earnngs fall off rapdly. What do these startlng facts (taken from the Unted States fe Tables, 1920) mean for you! t s tme to check up. t s tme to take stock of the present, and face the future wth open eyes. Blnd fath n the power of the human body to absorb punshment * < faled mserably. Unwse eatng, stmulated nerves, sleepl«nm^w; dsregard, of the smplest laws of health; the lashng of the overwrought body to new exertons by the use of drugs physcal decay begnnng at age 311 Ths s the tragc chroncle. Nature provdes a danger sgnal fatgue to warn when the body needs rest Certan drugs have the power to deaden the fatgue sgnal,. One of the most common of these drugs s caffen - *-drug-claaafed-aova poson. The average cup of coffee contans from 1% to 3 grans of caffen a dose eons! to that often admnstered l physcans n eases of heart falure. Caffen, by deadenng the danger sgnal of fatgue, appears to gve new strength. ' Actually, ths strength' s robbed from the body's own reserve, 4 f U f ^ d "Coffee- contans no nourshment. ts onty vrtues-as a beverage, sm ts warmth and flavor. A good, hot, U drnk a a beneft wth, every : Hmons enjoy sneh a drnk n Postum; A - ;dn c; made of whole wheat and; bran, roasted, wth a Httla aweetonlnff^notwngmbre. A drnk wth the rch, mellow, zull- n Hottest Weather ; ; A tmely warnng to antolata folmt.tnl*nmrg tn ar nmaswr Swamp-Root s Fne Medcne n ther tres durng the hot summer weather a sow partcularly Few Survve Tral Proclamng Hm Ether Motor Gen- not understand that radaton ^ opportune: Ths fallacy la common among motorsts who do have kdney or bladder trouble and aevsr upset t. Women's WMnpVt" tf «often prove to be tleman or Auto Hog. carres off any surplus beat that nothng dse but: kdney trouble, or the mght otherwse be dangeroua to result of kdney or bladder dsease. " Or BmWTrl OltBSB. VraaUaat One* Catlose of AatonoU*a nctnmrac. Cbleaca.) the lfe of a tre. f the kdneys ere not n a healthy eon* Even durng the terrfc grnd Nothng no psychologcal test or You pay no dton they may eauss the other organs of the race track, when Urea character analyss wll reveal our to become daraaed. You may suffer pan n the back, headache and low of ambton. greater certanty than tbe motor car. true nwardness more quckly and wth undergo the most gruellng punshment, ths prncple holds. t buy Mooard Caftee> wry HMSVWQ jw s underlnuatton even durng tbe Hnt act only UM FOOT health makes you nervous, rrtable What a dfference t makes And hottest days that runs more Roaster and your and may be despondent; t makes say how few of us really survve the one so. tres than any other cause. The tral whch may proclam us ether a R gl RdlC^ But hundreds of women elam that Dr. facts are that recommended ar Mtwaao nt plantaton and your table. Klmer's 8wamp-Root, by restorng health pressures are safe oven h the to the kdneys, proved to be just the summer., TUs economcal smlhod of remedy needed to overcome such condton*creased flexng of the tre mere- why Moaosch spdeedso By reducng pressure, the n- H L W Many send far a smple bottle to sse ly creates the condton whch low. Qualkyconskknd.lt what Swamp-Boot, the great kdney, lver the car owner wshes to guard kbyfarme and bladder medcne wll do for them. kal conee yeo csa buy. By enclosng ten cents to Dr. Klmer ek aganst Tbe motorst can well Otdsrasnpphr today ham Co., Bnghamton, N. Y n you may receve afford the tme needed, to gauge yaarregabrmsl Gsocwc sample sze bottle by parcel poet, You the ar pressure n hs Urea for can purchase medum and Urge sze bottles the aake of greatly ncreased at all drug stores. Advertsement. mleage. boded flavor of ths wholesome gran. Every member of the famly can drnk t every meal of the day, enjoy ts delcousness, crave t, knowng there sn't a sleepless hour, a headachn or a taut nerve n t. For the sake of your yean followng age 81, we want you to try Fostum for thrty days. You can't expect to overcome the effects of a habt of years n two or three days, or even a week. To make ths a sportng proposton, we wll gve you a week's supply of Postum free. Enough for a cup wth every meal for a week. But we want you to carry on for the full thrty days. Carre Blanehaxd, who has personally served Postum to over 500,000 people, wll sendyouhej own drectons for preparng t ndcate' whether, you want nstant Postum, the easest drnk n the world to prepare, or Postum Cerealj-theUnd -you-hovfor your week's free supply. Ether form costs less than most other hot drnks. Fll but the coupon, and get your frst week's free supply of Postum now/ TEAR THS OUT MAL T NOW wattomakeathrty-d.ytertofpo.tnn. d me. wthout coat orohlpton. l f ~ PaeKwCsaau. WTO Nmr Tor* AC' Take Advantage of Down f t s a waste of gasolne to per-, mlt your engne to dle, then t s also a waste of the precous fuel to have: t runnng on a down grade when t s perfectly safe for one to coast wth t cut off. f the grade s too long and wth curves, t s not advsable to coast, because wth:the engne shut off the motorst lacks that perfect control of hs car that he should have. Motorsts should also see to t that ther carbureters are adjusted for an -Mll Garage Host and Rack s Handled by One Man llustraton. t conssts of a wnch arrangement. attached to one end of the rack. A large gear s keyed on one end of the wnch and a snfall gear, meshng wth the larger one as shown. A 8mple Barrel Host and Rack for the Oarage That Can Be Operated by One Man. has a handle attached so that the. wnch can be turned. A skd s hooked to the rack for the drums to be rolled on, whch s accomplshed by means of two %-nch ropes, attached at one end to the wnch and at the other end to the rack. These ropes must be long mough to be passed around the drum when t les on the floor close to. the skd. Wndng the wnch then rolls the drums up over the skd and.onto the ruck. The top edges of the rack are notched for the drums to rest n, *o that there wll be no danger of them rollng off. Popular Mechancs Maguzlne. Bg Danger to Battery Durng Summer Weather Hot weather, just lke extremely cold weather. s a danger perod n the lfe' of any storage battery unless the proper care s gven t. Summer weather probably s the most dangerous tme the battery must pass through because the automoble s used more durng ths perod. Motorsts as a rule are prone to forget or neglect keepng the battery flled wth pure dstlled water n hot. weather. Evaporaton of the water n the.soluton n the battery durng hot Weather s rapd. f the level of the water s permtted to reach a average mxture not too lean nor too pont below the tops of the plates, the thck. Effcent carburetlon s a dstnct ad to better gasolne mleage less. The covered porton of the upper porton s left exposed and use- 'when~coupled ~wlth ntellgenttdrlvlngr ~plntes~are~then~obllged~tu~na88ume.~thr The gas shortage s causng many a extra burden of the useless porton. motorst to acqure what to hm areths causes rapd overheatng,and new wrnkles n drvng hs car. Anddamage not seen at the tme, but whch they all help. results n consderable expense later. NFORMATON FOR THE MOTORNG PUBLC The Wayfarer JV, offcal scout car of the A. A. A., consdered the moat completely equpped automoble n. the country, arrved n Washngton, D. G, the other day en'route to hghways of the West A few of the nstruments of ths automoble are: grade meter, alttude meter, thermometer, barometer, converted uddng machne, ol, gar and water gauges,'three buttons "that completely" ol thevrnr.-pnrtrols 'fnr.tw'entv:llrtta.'* memorandum' pads^and' many.other mll fcuurph. r>t<> rapl slums some of the features of the cnr. wth numerous njmrnenla used for accurute nfunuauou lor the motorng publc. COBS CASH AND CARRY GROCERY U M h ' END, PA Nf U yw an amataadhtve no audldos ttjt wn wlp yon, at tanjnm U a Hnn "There's Munyon PllFor Every U" 0fl XBERRrca,2973«Mlet.*veXh Removng Ruat Spots Rust spots' on uetul should be nbbed wth a cork that has been dpped n mratln. A cork, mostened wth paraffln s also splendd for removng marks from hearth tles. Why don't grls employed n match factores get marred sooner than )th»r glrlr? ^aaapass QUALTY for \O years RED, MURDOCH & CO. EtuMhktd 1833 Chcago Boston Pttsburgh New York --V-v- DOM not bllattr or t o o n tha har and bora* can ba worktd. Plaaaant to UM. SU0 bottle, dalvand. Dctcrlb* your eata for - an«elal ntrnctlom and. F. TM«, ht, 510 BM SUSpfctSsU, Wm. Ford Owners Look A raml money ver. Naw 8Ur «u vupnrlor poltlvely uvn J0% KM blllm. Uada of»! mlnum; nlt-r»(ulatl»b nevar lea out of ordar; ear tarta auler, qolcker, cooler motor, battor lnltlon. nstalled n hot-ar plp«n two mlnute; nothng to chanca. and only fl brlna t to you, potpald. Tour monoy baak n 30 dan f not aatlahad. Send for youra today. Htar Mf*. Co., Bos 139, Coc, Pat WOMEN. PANT LAMP HHADE8 for ua at home. All or apara tme. Expert, once unneoaaaary. Addreaa ARTSAN SHADn COMPANY. FORT WATMB, NDANA. Opportunty Offend to Jon la Promoton ol company to market new machne wth unlmted Held and ndlcatlonaof very large pronta, f (OS to S,000 requred. nveatlgatlon by yow own attorneye rvltel. OL.MORB COMPANT P. O. Bos TS. Trnty 8tatlon. NEW YORK NFLAMED L EYES U Uae Or. O Tbompaon'a T b ' rewatar, VV. N. f., NEW YORK, NO * Dervaton of "Fortnght* "The word "fortnght" s merely aaj old contracton of "fourteen nghts." Electrcty, though not a bad s often shockng. Every Home Needs a n RemngtonPwtable lttle machne s a revelaton to X the boy or grl, man or woman, who has any wrtng to do. t has the one and, only Standard Keyboard, wth four rows /?fj^yj?anjlnclf8hfrn for fgrps nrarrly lke the bg roarhnf*. Strong, sturdy y g g, y andcompact. Doesbeautfulwork.always. Can be carred and used anywhere. The recognzed leader n sales and popularty. Prce, complete wth case, $6d Wrteforllustrated "For You For Everybody" AdkrewDepcrtmat 132.", RemlngCdu. Typewrter Co." 374 Broadway, Naw York : > -.'-*, jtr, 4 X

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8 PAGE mmmwx&m 1 s Palm Beach Suts! $15.00 Why swelter n the heat when yon can get the coolest known sut for SlJ.OO. You get more than coolness you get a sut that wll not wear threadbare a sut that lts perfectly and holds ts shape. UPSON, SNGLETON WATERMRY, CONN. Howland - Hughes \ Waterbury's Largest Department Store 1 Whte Dresses Of "Frut of the Loom" Sutable for Nurses, Mads, Mnn'curdts, Har Dressers and Housewves. Very reasonably prced»t! $1.95 Four smart and practcal stylrh n stragltlne effects wth short,or long sh'ov-h, excellently taloml of genune Whle "Frut of the * Loom" MKln. On sale on our Second Flour. Under-Arm Bags of Real Leather Pop.lur style flat lngs n hlaclc, brown, grey am tan, strong frame, nor'e lned,.outsde pockcl, $1.39 We :re Agents for the Famous MOUME X REDUCN6 GRDLES All Wool Whte Flannel Sponged materal of a good weght. Popnlnr jht now for talored skutand sleeveless jackets, 51 nches «de, usual prce 88.25, Specal $2.75 Yard Howland - Hughes WATERBURY. CONN. TELEPHONE OK \ Rsng dme Wave and Attack* on Banks Caled Forth ncreased Measures of Defense. Crmnal actvtes aganst banks bare reached unprecedented proportons n recent months, accordng to a report made to the Amercan Bankera Assocaton by ts Protectve Commttee, whch drect* the work of the Assocaton amed to combat crmnal operatons aganst banks. "Sharp ncreases n crme perpetrated aganst banks defntely prove that nstead of beng broken the crme wave has rsen to heghts heretofore unknown to the bankng fraternty." the report sad. "Strangers contnue to trck or otherwse nvegle unsuspectng banks nto makng generous contrbutons to ther cause a terrfc toll whch denes the magnaton.; Bank burglars andholdup men have apparently redoubled ther actvtes durng the last sx months. The number of crmnals plyng ther trade n ths feld has growj to such proportons that there s now a far szed army comprsng ths more desperate type of crmnal, specalzng aganst banks." "Don't cash checks tor strangers,' s the warnng emphaszed by the Commttee n vew of the stuaton. t adds: "We are gratfed to report favorable results n a good proporton of cases nvestgated, whch are due to the naton-wde actvtes of onr detectve agents through ther staff or specalsts n bank crmes. n Mon-, Una two fearless, well organzed bands of professonal yeggmen attack/ ed more than a score of banks wth such reckless abandon that the stuaton seemed beyond control. Realsng that condtons demanded prompt and drastc treatment, a traned crew of operatves were delegated to conduct a specal nvestgaton throughout the state. Nneteen men and two women were arrested. Of these four already are servng sentences, three are on tral, four are awatng tral and the rest were freed tor lack.of evdence. "A smlar roundup was carred out n Oklahoma. Condtons n other states smlarly bad were ' nvestgated and wth the co-operaton of local, state and federal authortes and the co-ordnated actvtes of members the percentage of arrests and convctons has materally ncreased.' The report ponted ont that fgures coverng bank burglares over a perod of thrty years showed that 1,609 banks, members of the Assocaton and enttled to ts protectve servces, have been attacked, sufferng losses aggregatng! 11,196,000, whle nonmembers to the number of 2,367 were burglarzed and suffered $4,250,000 n losses. The pont was also brought out that there are only half as many non-members as members,'so that these losses among them represent an excessvely hgh rate as compared wth members. Ad Dversfed Farmng A state bank of Granvllle, North Dakota, that s encouragng dversfed farmng among ts farmer, pa trons, has purchased some purebred sres for the beneft of ts customers The bank realzes the necessty o good sres for the dary herd, and has set asde a certan amount of money to be used n havng a man look up anmals and shp them to Oranyllle.. Bankers of Lee County. Msssspp, are employng a dary traned expert to gve hs whole tme to the development of daryng. Hs salary and expenses are pad by the banks of th county n proporton to ther deposts Ths expert helps to arrange for loan to purchase cows, sees that the farm era have shelter and feed to care fo -the-cattle,-and-advlses-wlth-them-ln fgurng out ratons and n detennln ng what crops to grow. He makes specal engagements to attend scrub bull funerals. EARLY DAYS OF RALROADNG Vallandgham Wrtes of Some of the Prmtve Methods of New Means of Transportaton. Edward Noble Vallandlgham, n hs book, "Delaware and the Eastern Shore," gves an nterestng sdelght on ralroadng n n a chapter dealng wth transportaton between the Delaware rver and the Chesa peake bay, he says, accordng to the ndanapols News: "Steamboats soon replaced the salng packets, but t was not untl 1888, after years of legslaton h both states, that the New Castle ft Frenchtown ralroad, traces of whch stll show n green bts of embankment, mproved the land route. A prmtve locomotve engne, mported from England, was wth dffculty tnk ered nto gong order to draw tny coaches on the rals of strap ron, pegged to wooden sleepers, whch n turn were pegged to stones set deep n the ground. The speed of ten mles aa hour was held to be perlous. Baskets hosted on tall poles notfed the lne ahead that the tran was comng. From tme to tme tran hands, detectng a ral wth end tamed up where a spke had loosened, got down.and,secured the ~ threatenng. 'snake, head.' rate for pawengere was,3scents, mle, artat1ff-lbterlralsed;toxlo: cents because the cost of lulldlng'and mantanng the lne had been underestlnhttd Each pnsf-nppr cold carry 100 pounds of baggage free of charge" Haw* 8 an* 1O-C«tt «ans and Enjoy Rasla, Sajt OM* MsW Seattle. Wash. "No more bead* and brght calco for de wld and fusty Polynesan," dec-lures Cnpt. Vmars Drake, Sooth Seas traler. "Why, bless your heart, they've got 8 and 10-ctut stores all over the slands and the natves lsten to Calvn Conlldge on the rado every, tme he speaks nto 1L nstead of takng out a mat load of rlnket* to trade for curlu*, the modern trader n- the coconut sles takes only slver avd s»ld to buy the thngs for stay-nl-hnmea." Drake, who la sxty yean old and has been a- marner for more than forty-fve years, wll toon net sal from here n the Plgrm, a tllrty-flve-foot schooner-rgged boat, for another world trp. 'Loafng around the world n your own boat s the only lfe." says the wanderer. "You yotnff fellows n the ctes work and sn-eut and what do you get. go out on the sea and don't need money. No blls conng n. No traffc to dodge. Throw awuy the clock and look at the calendar once n month. And once outsde the regular steamer lanes never see a thng. You could stay out here twenty years und never meet a shp. Safest place n the world. -.'. "At nght the flyng, fsh flap nhourd anl fall "on deck. n the morn- \ag you pck them' up, clp off ther wngs and toss 'em nto the pan. They «>ven make ther own ol to fry themselves n.". And the cheerful face of the trouble heater, sank down the hatchway lke the sun settng over the horzon. X-Ray Drunk Meter to Reveal ntoxcaton ' San Francsco. Up to ths tme t hus been vrtually mpossble to prove ntoxcaton before a Jury. Albs, lo expert testmony of tbe arrestng offcers und the haphazard examnatons of emergency husptul uttendunts, wll now be supplanted n the very near future by bluck uud whte fgures showng the exact degree of ntoxcaton. Dr. O. W. Olnsburg, an X-ray expert, says the "metnbulur" wll do the work correctly and furthermore t wll not be guesswork, but the fndng of modern scence wll be recorded on paper. Doctor Olnsburg'B explanaton of hs dscovery follows: t s known to medcal men that a person under the nfluence of ntoxcatng lquors consumes for greater quanttes of oxygen than he does normally. Ths condton s natural, because alcohol s a greater heat producer and calls for larger quanttes of oxygen to offset the consumpton of heat All that s necessary to determne the degree of ntoxcaton s to tnd ont the heat producton gong on n the body by the ntake of oxygen. The "roetnbular" does ths postvely. The suspect s fed pure oxygen through a nozzle. The "metrtbulnr" regsters how much was taken nto the system. Chemsts Bare Secrets of Corn Ran Prophets Washngton. Reforms n college and lugh school chemstry courses, lent transfer and problems of dye, rubber, leather und gelatn producton occuped the delegates attendng sessons of the Amercan Chemcal socety. The dversty of length and content of hgh school courses and dfferng entrance requrements wth respect to chemstry on the part of colleges were lsted as the mujor faults dscovered n a purvey. Foot dscomforts wllch come wth changng weather were attrbuted by John Arthur Wlson and Albert F. GallumTJr.7 of MlwaukeeTcTshTrnklng "of leather n shoes. "The greatest dfference n ths respect," they sad, "s found between chrome-tanned and vegetable-tanned leathers." A study made by R. F. Kohr and L. Butler for the Unted States army ar servce, occasoned largely by the proposed use of helum n llghter-than-alr cnft, was consdered at a heat-transfer symposum. S LKE EATNG f you DON'T eat your STOMACH suffers. f you DON'T ADVERTSE your BUSNESS and P0CKETBO0K suffers; and your busness DES. The Store Wndow and tbe Adv. n the Newspaper The average person wll be lkely to nee an advertsement n a newspaper much more frequently than he or she sees a dsplay n a Ktore wndow.' The newspaper advertsement s seen at hours when people are at lesure and can read and thnk about t, whle the show wndow dsplay s apt to be seen when people are n a hurry ad can't stop to consder t. Trade Paper. HM»M PerCent. NVESTMENT One of the largest Manufacturng and Supply houses n Connectcut, located n Waterbury; organzed and ncorporated n 1887, offers to the publc $30, of T per cent. Preferred Stock, same to be sold n small parcelr not over $3, to a'person, prce $ per share. f nterested, representatve wll be pleased to call by adareshnjr NFORMATON, P. O. Box 482, Waterbury, Conn. MBMMWMMMlm 1 Norway Contnues Hunt for Great Cod Shoals Chrlstlanla. The nvestgaton commenced last year by the Norwegan fshery department to dscover -the whereabouts of the great cod shouts are to be contnued ths summer. Further areas about Sptsbergen wll be subjected to examnaton, and, lo addton to the offcal expedton, t s probablelhnt more than one expedton wll be undertaken as a result of mu- M" A"" ncpal or prvate ntatve. n the provnce of Sondmore plans are belns prepared for the dspatch of an expedton to western Greenland to search for cod. Sealers who have returned from that regon report the presence of large quanttes about the banks. - Musc Ads n Wrtng Lndsborg, kan.t^phnnogrnpl/muslf s beng used at Bethany college. to make better penmen'. n order that the students of the commercal department enrolled. ntwrltng /courses.may seem> rhythm and fmqre unform moton n Vjf;n*Hl^Mtt/tat fsybgpj^j rach lesson. Satsfactory results HV.. been obtaned by the use of tho plmm. graph n the classroom n ths manner HnBnwnnnwnnBHwnwnnnwnTE SPRAY MATERALS We are n a poston to m lke prompt delvery - from stock of any of the followng tems: Arsenate of Calcum Araenate of Lead Paste ArHcnate of Lead Powder Black Leaf Forty Bordeaux Mxture Bordo Lead Copper Sulphate (Blue Vtrol) Hellebore Kayso Lme (for L.&S. Soluton) Lme Sulphur Dry Lme and Sulphur Soluton Ncotne Sulphate 40 pr.ct. Para-DchlorobenzcH' Pars Green Pyrox Sulfoede Powdered Com Sulphur ( p. c. pure) Resublmcd Flowers of Sulphur Tobacco Dust Whale Ol Snap Spray Pumps Nagara Dustng Materals Nagara Dustng Machnery Mal us n your order Apothecares Hall Company Factory East Wndsor; Conn. ^MjWlllllllMMBllllllllMM^ ECONOMY OF GOOD Man OHce Waterbury, Conn. MATERALS TN the long run there s no concealment for low grade products^ Eventually t7e~lefcct8 of poor workmanshp or of mproper materals must come to lght, resultng n n rapd deprecaton, whch s n tself an tem of expense that mubt be consdered. QUALTY SERVCE PRCE The Watertown Lumber Co F" Unsurpsued. WATERTOWN, CONN. uwnnsbnnnmbnunbsjbjnsja 1 Reawnable astng Taste Keeps L very ; able \"upplled CHOCE VARETY OF L N Fresh ; «a Cured Meats FSH Vegetables & Fruts n Season Hla StTM. WATERTOWH. Man Slml, OAKVUE. ^m

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