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CT7F"TT,!T7 iF"57TF1 TV Y i' J ' Vol, XLI. No. -25. S 0 $2.00 a Year in Vermont; Elsewhere in U. S., $2.50 BUSINESS NOTICES Our Classified Advertisement Column THE EARLE STORE Rate: 2 cents a word each insertion I U MORRIS VILLE, VT.' WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1922 COOK WANTED immediately. References desired. Hyde Park Inn, i Hyde Park. CASH PAID Highest Cash Price Paid for Calves, Cheap Cows, Bulls and Hogs. Tel.124-31 JOHN MINER, Hyde Park i-v- M- ..... ; J WE PAY $36.00 weekly full time, 75c an haur spare time, selling hos- Jk iery guaranteed to wear four months samples to workers. Salary or 30 percent commission. Good hosiery is an absolute necessity; you can sell it easily. Experience unnecessary. EAGLE KNITTING MILLS, Darby, , Pa. FARM FOR SALE My home place; located 2 miles from Hyde Pari villlage, corsisting of 45 acres with 3 head of cittle, 1 calf, 1 hog,' 1 horse, tools, wagon, sleigh, harness; 8 tons of hay, 8 tons of oats etc.; transportation for children to Hvde Park village schools Price made low for immediate sale. Mrs Lilla Bohannon, R. F. D. 1, Hyde Park, Vt. pd.cow, 31 i. 1 t I - SHERIFF'S SALE J.aKen uy virtue ui an cmuuuu w I me directed, and will be sold at Pub lie Auction to satisfy said Execution as the law directs, on September 11, 1922. at 10 o clock in the forenoon in the hiehway in front of the resi dence of Joseph Madore in Hyde Park. Vt.. following described prop erty, to wit: All of the hay, grain, straw, rough fodder and potatoes in the barns on the farm now occupied by Joseph Madore in said Hyde Park and in the field growing or harvested belonging to said Joseph Madore. J. T. Stevens, Sheriff Dated at Hyde Park, Vt., this 18th day of August 1922. For Sale one One gasoline engine, Sampson thresher, two sets trucks, one circular saw, all in good working condition, sold together or separate. S. B. WAITE, ; ADMR.' GIHON VALLEY GRANGE The program Sept. 2 will be as follows: Conferring first and second de grees; song, choir; recitation, Eliza beth Noyes; song, Florence Huntley : and Mildred Foss; question, "What m3o you consider the best roof for qrrni buildings?" with H. F.' Hurlbut and Leon Newton as speakers; paper, W. C. Davis; recitation, Alta Fland ers; song, R. W. Crocker and Roy Stetson; question, to be announced in Grange, with general discussion; reading, Mrs. Clara Newton; song, choir. Mammoth Labor Day Celebration on Mt. Mansfield Find Yourself With Your Family Next ,Monday on Top of This Grand Old Mountain Take Part in the Celebration and Enjoy What Nature Has Given You in Wonderful Scenery The plans are fully completed and everything will be ready for the big gest celebration of Labor Day ever seen in- Vermont and the dedication of the Model Road to the Summit of Mt. Mansfield, built last year and this at . a cost of over $42,000. On page six of this issue will be found full particulars and the names of the public spirited Vermonters who have backed this great enter prise to so successful a conclusion. There is no finer built road in all the state than this mountain road. It did not cost over $30,000 a mile as some federal-state projects have cost, but this was built by private enter prise, and every man on the job was a loyal Vermonter and interested in building just as good a road as pos sible with the money raised. It is four miles long, so the cost was a little over $10,000 a mile. Some of the road had to be literally blasted out of solid rock. The material had to be made on the spot as the cost of getting the crushed stone up the mountain was prohibitive. a great undertaking and the work carried was It v right well through. It . is worth a trip to the summit just to see what loyal Vermonters can do under adverse circumstances, when they put their best efforts forth, and they work wholeheartedly for the success of the job. Do not let anything keep you from visiting Mt. Mansfield next Monday, Sept. 4. Take a Day Off. LOCAL NEWS MORRIS VILLE Former Johnson Citizen Dead James B. Newcomb, formerly of Johnson, and well known throughout the county, died recently at Seattle, Wash. His body was cremated and the ashes have been sent to Johnson for interment beside his wife, who died some months ago. The funeral services will be held next Sunday at 2:00 p. m. The services are in charge of the Tucker ' . . l i 1 i kaan r-i fro rrdf nlav Chapter are invitea ana urgea w De: Andrew Bros, are building a three car garage on Bridge street just this side of the iron bridge. The Woman's Club will hold a food sale at the Universalist vestry Sat urday afternoon, Sept. 9. Miss Ruth Libby of Lancaster, N. H.. is visiting at the home of- hot aunt, Mrs. H. L. Stevens. Raymond Briggs of Montpelier is spending several days at the home of his sister, Mrs. R. P. Briggs. Miss Gertrude Allison of Middle field, Conn., is spending two weeks at the home of Mr. and Mrs. T. C. Cheney. Ralph Drowne has returned to Boston after a several days' stay with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. P. IJrowne. Mrs. Bertha Briggs of Burlington is spending some time with her daughter, Mrs. R. P. Briggs, of Rich mond street. George Dustin will return today to his home in Boston after a several days' stay at the home of Mr. and Mrs; T. C. Cheney. G. W. Batchelder of Underhill and Charles Cooper, night watchman at the Mary Fletcher hospital, visited at M. A. Douglass' last week. T. B. Ellis is making extensive re pairs to his residence on Bridge street, including a bay window in the dining room and a large veranda. Raymond Ellis went Tuesday morn ing to St. Johnsbury, where he has with the ist. 15,000 at Morrisville Fair Bad Weather Tuesday Finest Racing and Exhibit in Years ine threatening weather Tuesday, Gay Dewey, b. m. (Johnson).. 3 4 8 with showers in the torenoon, Dorothy Wilson, Francis Bogash, cut aown me attenaance. ine same uingen w., Impata and Ila Moore was true in less degree Wednesday, also started. but the, crowd came and there was Time: 2:1914, 2:18, 2:1914. better than an average for the last j Running Races, (Two of Three Half New Ginghams We show this week a new. lot of ginghams in the half inch check colors, green and white, blue and white, red and white and brown and white, besides other fancies. In Percales " ' , We have some of the very neatest patterns we have seen this year in light shades; all strictly new. You ean see a few of them in our north window. GEORGE F. EARLE MORRISVILLE, VERMONT .HYDE P'ARK LOCALS Death of Miss Arabella Noyes Monday Gerald Kneeland and Miss Mildred Lanpher United in Matrimony oay to. see the hne races, in all a total of over 13,000 paid admissions. Never were there so may autos. By actual count,, made by Howard Beede, at Waite's corner, 507 cars passed the corneE of Bridge and Portland streets within an hour Wed nesday forenoon. Mr. Earle told us that he never saw so many autos as he did that afternoon after the fair, on Brooklyn street. It was just one mass of cars and, once in the stream there was no getting out till the cor ner of Bridge street was reached. It Mile Heats), Purse $200 Don Carlo, b. g., (King) 1 1 Virginian, ch. g., (Foote) .2 2 The Witch, bl. nC, (Fuller) 3 4 Barney Mulligan, ch. g., (Clough) 4 3 Time: 0:592, 1:01. THURSDAY Keen competition developed in the 2:35 trot or pace Thursday after noon, and it took six heats to settle. It was only after a game fight that .. r .. n nr 1 1 , ir is remarkable that with so many cars ' "c"c " "u, lo cariy 011 4.1 .i!.Li . i.the honors and the first money over Fred Ualtoon, the horse that won the first two heats. McShane, the driver out, there were so few slight acci- dents. None to speak of. THE RACES TUESDAY 2:26 Purse present. If you get no other notice, kindly take this as official. Johnsbury fair. band at the Caledonia SALBEBT'S STORE Young Mens Suits We are now showing the New Fall Styles in Plain and Sport - Models and varied materials and colors.. v The prices are very reasonable. COME IN AND SEE US A.J. SALEEBT, Johnson THE STORE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY." Class, (Trot and Pace) 5200. First Division Judge Clayton, b. g., (Holden) 1 Plowboy, b. g., (Dr. Brown) 4 Armonia, br. m., (Berry) 2 Fred Haltoon, ch. g., (Fulling ton) 3 Baby Direct, the Baron and Nellie Weeks, also started. Time 2:19. 2:19V4. 2:19. 2:26 Class (Trot and Pace), Purse! of Donna Belle W. also drove a win ner in the 2:13 class. 2:35 Class, (Trot or Pace), Purse $300 Donna Belle W., ch. m., (McShane) 2 3 3 1 1 1 1 I't red naitoon, ch. g, 2 2 4 3 3 6 $200, Second Division Prince Abbott, bl. s., (Slay ton) 1 12 1 Anna Belle W., ch. m., (Mac Shane) 3 2 1 2 Lady Walnut Isle, ch. m., (Mullin) 2 4 6 3 Babe Dewey, b. g., (Leach) 4 3 5 4 Forrest Axworthy, Lucy Black, Nel lie B. Whitcomb and Fred Mc Kinney also started.. Time 2:234, 2.22, 2:21i4, 2:25V4 Running Races, (One-Half Mile Heats), Purse $200 Virginia, ch. g., (Foote) 1 2 1 Barney Mulligan, ch. g., (Clough) 3 1 4 The Witch, bl. m., (Miller) ..4 3 2 Don Carlo, b. g., (King) 2 4 3 Time l:01Vi, 0:59 , 1:00. WEDNESDAY (Fullington) 112312 Chestnut Isle, -ch. g., (Fuller) 4 2 1 2 3ro John Forrest, b. g., (Hanna) 3 4 6 4ro Bodini, Grace G., Baroness Watson I and J- red McKmney also started, Time: 2:20Vt, 2:22V. 2:21V2, 2:.)'i, 'IWk, z:2(. l:Ti Class Trot, Purse $300 Happy Harvest Maid, (Mullen) 111 Lady Harvest (Slay ton) 2 2 2 Forrest Axworthy, (Gordon) .3 3 6 Big Smoke, blk. g. (McShane) 6 4 3 Russell C, Gay Harvest and Nell Sable also started. Time: 2:24, 2:25Vi, 2:24. 2:13 Class Trot or Pace, Purse $300 Pony Express, b. s., (McShane) 1 1 1 Dolly G., br. m., (Gordon) ....2 2 2 Bell Boy, b. g., (Mullen) 3 3 3 The Orphan, br. m., 4 4 4 Time: 2:13, 2:13, 2:14. Paramount Week 2:30 Class (Trot or Pace) Purse $300 ! Esperole, b. m., (Slayton) 3 3 111 i Junior Wilkes, b. (Full er) 113 2 2 i Clara Wilkes, b. m., (Hall) , 2 j Caruso, bl. g. (Mullin) ..4 Nell Sable, Miss Ladd, I Baron, Mary Frisco and j also started. I Time: 2:21, 2:22, j 2:19, 2:24. 2 2 3 ro 5 4 4 ro Arleene Rasware 2:21, 2:19 Class (Trot), Purse $300 Junior Dillard, b. g.t (Camp bell) 1121 Alcander Isle, ch. g., (Tur ned) 5 2 1 2 The Buick, ch. g., (Jaques) .2 3 5 3 Charley F., b. g., (Gordon) .3 4 3 4 Helen Deen, Payroll, The Talisman, Forette also started. Time: 2:19, 2:17, 2:16, 2:19. 2:22 Class, (Trot or Pace), Purse $300 Bingo, b. g., (Dawson) 1 1 1 Princess Nellie, b. m., (Mow ers) 2 2 2 Grand March, ch. g., (McLeod) 7 3 3 All Next Week Special Pictures at The Bijou The Famous Players-Lasky Corp., in conjunction with the theatres using their pictures, take big space on page four t' tell of the big specials for the fifth annual Paramount Week Sept. 4-9, inclusive. The Bijou program is given com plete in this big advertisement It is the Paramount way of demon strating "the better motion pictures" all over the country. Read the advertisement and take in the pictures. Advertisement. Sterling Poultry Club Gives Culling Demonstration The Sterling Poultry Club of John son with a team consisting of Maurice Washer, Stanley Perkins and Claude Lambert gave a culling demonstration last week Wednesday that was espe cially good. This is the fourth year of this club which has a very able leader in Miss Helen Collins. Miss Alice Fairbanks is home from Burlington. Miss Jennie Messer of Hartford, Conn., called on friends here Tues day. Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Twombly of Boston were guerts at the Inn this week. Burton and Ida Thorpe of Cam bridge were business visitors in town Friday. Prof. P. H. Martin and family re turned home Tuesday from a vaca tion spent in Maine. W. C. McGinnis, supervisor of schools at Revere, Mass., was a visi tor heie the past week. ' Mr. and Mrs. B. W. MacFarland and Mrs. Otis Hutchins have return ed home from camp at Lake Eden. An still one of those Memorial tablets is missing from the Library building. "How soon are the dead forgot." Mrs. Marcell Conway, and little daughter returned Tuesday night irom an extended stay in Sunapee, N. H. Mrs. Clinton Spaulding and grand daughter, Ethel, of Manchester, N. H., were guests of Mrs. Lizzie A. White last week. Miss Elizabeth Noyes is clerking in the Quality Store during the absence of Miss Helen Thorpe, who is on a vacation. Mrs. E. R. Lilley and children of Bristol, Conn., - arrived- Tuesday to spend several days with her mother, Mrs. Annie Rooney. Evidently Miss Mildred Lanpher don't intend to return to Connecticut. Mildred and Gerald are away for a honeymoon trip somewhere. Marcell Conway received word last Friday that he had successfully passed the Supreme Court bar exam ination in Washington, D. C. Mr. Conway's home is in that city. . Guests from here to the. Baker picnic at Johnson Tuesday were Mrs. Stella Goddard. Mrs. - Charles Hul- burd, Miss Alice Page, Mrs. G. P. Conger and Miss Helen Waterman. Now, "honest-to-goodness," do you think that old season-checked rough post, on which that guide board is fastened adds to the attrac tiveness of the younty buildings in front of which it is planted. The feminine golf enthusiast of Samoset and Hyde Park played a tournament of their own at the golf course Saturday afternoon. Miss Alice Page won the high honors. Refreshments were served by the Samoset ladies. There will be services in the Con gregational Church next Sunday at Miss Alice Fairbanks is home from Burlington for a while. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Muzzy are at tending the Sherbrooke fair. Miss Mildred Lanpher is homo from Connecticut for a short vaca tion. R. W. Hulburd was in Montpelier and Burlington on business the last of last week. , Miss Sarah Chapin spent a, few days recently with relatives in Chit tenden county. Professor Douglass of Burlington spent Sunday with his family in camp at Lake bden. R. S. Page and family, who have been at Camp Kinnikinick, Lake Eden, for the past seven weeks, returned to this village Monday. Frank 'Miner returned last week from an extensive hide business in Maane and is now doing a like work in Burlington and' vicinity. The Misses Gertrude' Lilley and Evelyn Miller have gone to Burling ton to take a nurse's training course at the Mary Fletcher hospital. A good time now to put a fresh coat of red paint on- those fire hydrants about the village; At present they present a very grimy appearance. If you want to see a most beauti ful sunset just go down to the west end of Main street and &?e the gilded sky with its mountain surroundings. Nothing more beautiful in all the universe. About 15 members of the Moun tain View Country Club of Greens boro were guests at the Inn Tues day. In the afternoon they enjoyed games of golf on the local grounds and on their return home called on the summer colony at Samoset. DEATH OF MISS ARABELLA NOYES Miss Arabella J. Noyes, eldest daughter of Edgar and Jane E. Cook Noyes, died at her home in Hyde Park Monday evening, Aug. 28, after an illr.ass of three weeks of pneu monia. - She was bcrn March 27, 1844. In 1872 she went to Boston, where she was a private tuur for 15 years. With this exjepticn, her entire life was spent at home. She is survived by her brother, Charles D. Noyes. The funeral was held this after noon at the house, with burial in the family lot in the village cemetery. Rev. Gaore-e P. Ci ntwr nf th ITni. the usual hour.. Rev. Mr. Hayward versity of Minnesota officiated. r.f SfjYVV will nrpnrVi ATr TTamrQTv1 Ti 4-Urt A e if:.. xJ" ttj. in uic ucam ui miss iuyes nyae of Stowe will preach. Mr. Hayward, who has preached here on one or two occasions before, is a pleasing and forceful speaker. It is hoped there will be a good attendance. Gerald G. Kneeland of North Hyde Park and Miss Mildred Adelaide Lan- I TlVlpr ef thitl villacro wars) marriati ! Monday evening. Miss Lanpher has recently lived in Connecticut, where she held a responsible position as stenographer. Mr. Kneeland is em ployed at the mines in Eden. They will reside in Eden for the present. Congratulations are extended by their many friends. Park loses one of its oldest and most loyal residents. She took a keen interest in the progress of the com munity and also in the larger politi cal and social questions of the time. For rnre than 50 years she was a devoted member of the Congrega tional Church, and for a long tim was a faithful teacher in the Sun day School. Through her extensive correspondence - she kept in touch with many relatives and former resi dents of Hyde Park, who will miss her cheery letters. The sympathy of all goes out to the bereaved home. Eden Lake Camps Lots Being Sold, Cottages to Be Built and Personal Notes P. T. Denio at Camp Com- The editor is elad to note an imme diate response to the appeal of this paper to all get together and boom this beautiful summer resort. The time is short this season, but a good start can be made for another year if we all work together to make the attractions of Lake Eden better known. Girls' Friendship Class The regular meeting of the Girls' Friendship Class will be held Wed nesday, Sept. 6, at 6:30 at the home of Miss Elizabeth Powers on Con gress street. The hostesses will be Miss Powers and Mae Truman. R. S. Page is having a fire-place put in his cottage on Pavilion point. Rev. and Mrs. A. B. Ross of John s(fn are camping at Maple Dell cot tage. Mr. and Mrs. Grant J. Gorton of Fairfield spent last week at Lincoln Lodge. i - Mrs. W. L. Adams and Miss Abbie Fisk of Providence, R. I., are guests of Mrs. Elizabeth Stone. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Ward and little son, Herbert, of Wilmington, Del., are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Ruggles at the Wayside. Mrs. Nora Scofield of Hyde Park and Miss Helen Waterman of Everett, Mass., were week-end guests of Mr. and Mrs. fort. Mrs. Hartley Souther i making quite extensive repairs on her camp. Camp Welikeit, putting in dorma win dows and. giving it a fresh coat of paint. Miss Grace Weisbrod and Miss Marie Hutchins, who have been spending the summer at Camp Amoi, have returned to their home in Bal timore, MJ. Mr. and Mrs. Harland Dyke and two children, who have been camping at Point Windemere for the past month, returned to their home in Derry, N. H., last week. Miss Bertha Weisbrod and Misa Marjorie Kerr of Burlington were week-end guests at Camp Amos. C. W. Sinclair of Hyde Park hai purchased a cottage lot of C. B. Whit temore and will build a cottage next season. Mr. and Mrs. S. J. Norrii and son, Paul, of Wallingord, Conn., were guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. Hind last week. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Tate and son, Albert, of tf.e Bailey Farms, Mont pelier, were at Cedar View cottage last week.