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PAGE 4 ORLEANS COUNTY MONITOR, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1, 1914 IF THAT OLD PAIR OF BOOTS IS GETTING WORN AND LEAKY WHY NOT TRY A PAIR OF IF? L Ui WE HAVE THEM AND THE PRICE IS RIGHT. THEN WE HAVE THE HOOD and OLD COLONY FOR THE BOYS AND GIRLS. m mw J. G. MARTIN, The New Store" So. Albany, Vt. Bullseye Rubber Boots This warmer weather will make you think of those rubber boots. Now we have just a word to say to you on that subject. We can sell you a pair of Bullseye Rubber Boots with a warrant that they will not crack, for An Old Colony Boot for $3.25 Boys' and Youths' boots in proportion Low Rubbers for shoes of all kinds. It will pay you to visit us. CATARRH VICTIMS Use Hyomei You Breathe It It's the ight-to-the point remedy not only for catarrh, bat head colds, sniffles, bronchitis, .laryngitis or croup of children. You breathe It no1 stomach dosing. You will like Hyomei. It not only gives instant and lasting relief, but is entirely harmless, pleasant to use, and economical. Money refunded by F. D. Pierce if you are not benefited. Hyomei is a combination of anti septic oils that mixes with the air and quickly reaches the irritated in flamed membrane of the nose. IVa sure and safe healing begins immedi ately y u feel better at once. If suifering from watery eyes, husky voice," discharge from the nose, or that choked-up feeling, try Hyomei now today. All druggists J sell it. Ask for the complete outfit. -1.00 size. sold and guaranteed in Orleans by F. J. Kinney. THE THREE CRAFTSBURYS Q. L, "Your Clothier" Merriam, Barton Easter CRAFTSBURY MrsPercy Keir is entertaining her sister of Barre. Wagons made their first appearance on the streets Sunday. Leland Green has rented Herbert Corrow's sugar orchard. S. R. Lathe was a business visitor in St. Johnsbury last week. Rev. C. D. Pierce occupied his pulpit Sunday after an absence of five weeks. Most of the sugar orchards ' were tapped last week. .Very little sugar was made. . Mrs. Sadie Bobbins and Mrs. G. G. Gonant were business visitors' in Hardwick Friday. The Sunday school voted to observe Easter Sunday with special music both morning and evening. Mr. and Mrs. Bilton and children from Bridgeport, Conn., are guests of Mr. Bilton s sister, Mrs. Geo. Wheeler. The students. Hollis Lathe and Harry Buchanan of Randolph agricul tural college, are home for the Easter vacation. mi, TTJ , J I, I 0U " CJltVCI JJL by the Honorable Probate Oourt for the Dis- . tOOK possession Of their farm, known tnct of Orleans, COMMISSIONERS, to re-1 as the Fred Hoyt farm, on the Branch Commissioners' Notice Estate of John Kerwin THE GREEMSBOROS son is recover- PRETTY E ASTER. POST CARDS AND NOVELTIES. Easter is a most appropriate time to remember your friends with some gifif and Nelson's store is a good place to find so me article suitable for tha gift. It is also a good place to hava your old broken jewelry made to look like NEW. No Job too small or dif ficult for my watchmakers. Satis faction guaranteed. F. E. NELSON Jewelry, Books, Novelties Nelson Building, near Passenger Depot W us AFRIIL (Sth TO 11th . . .AND. . . (C&mafly .AT. Pharmacy eelve, examine and adjust the claims and demands of all persons against the estate of John Kerwin, late pf Westmore in said District deceased, and all claims exhibited in offset thereto, hereby give notice that we will meet for the purpose aforesaid, at the house of Geo. O. Myers in the town of Westmore, in said District, on the 25th day of April, and the 19th day of. September, next, from 10 o'clock, a. m., to 2 o'clock, p. m., on each of said days and that 6 months from the 19th day of March, A. D. 1914, is the time limited by said Oourt for said creditors to present their claims to us for examination and allowance. Dated at Westmore this 26th day of March, A. D. 1914 M. E. CATKINS, GEO. O. MYERS, 13-15 Commissioners. Trust Estate of Lewis Allbee STATE OP VERMONT District of Orleans, ss. The Honorable Probate Oourt for the Dis trict Aforesaid : To all persons interested in the Trust es tate of Lewis Allbee late of Barton in said District, deceased, GREETING: WHEREAS, said Oourt has assigned the 17th day of April next for examining and allowing the account of the Trustee of said trust estate, and ordered that public notice thereof be given to all persons inter ested in said estate by publishing this order three weeks successively previous to the day assigned in the OrleansOounty Monitor, a newspaper published at Barton in said district, THEREFORE, you are hereby notified to appear at thr ollice of Black & Stoddard in Orleans in said district at two o'clock p. m. on the dav assigned t hen and there to con test the allowance of said account if you see cause and to establish your right as heirs, legatees and law(ful cla mants to said resi due. Given undei my hand this 24th day of March, 1914. road the first of this week. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Brewster were called to Hardwick Sunday by the death of the infant daughter of her sister, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McArthar. Mr. and Mrs. Alden McCuen enter tained the Woodman's social gathering Saturday evening. In spite of the bad traveling there were fifty present and a very pleasant evening was enjoyed. EAST CRAFTSBURY Miss Mary McRoy is quite ill with grip. has moved into his 13-15 B. M. SPOONER, Register. "Meet meat the Gem" Films Change Daily. Matinee Wednesday and Sat urday at 2:30 p. m. UP-TO-DATE MUSIC We are in our new store next to the bank buildi ecial Sales argaisis THE FOLLOWING SPECIALS ARE GOOD Two Big lc SALE Buy one article at regular price and get another of same for ONLY ONE CENT. 50c Rexall Cherry Bark Cough Syrup 2 for 51c 25c Blue Bell Stationery 2 for 26c 5 c Envelopes 2 for 6c 25c Rexall Pearl Tooth Pow der 2 for 26c 25c Rexall Cold Tablets 2 for 26c "25c Hydrogen Peroxide (best grade) 2 for 26c 5c Rexall Pepsin Gum 2 for 6c 25c 2 oz. Harmony Perfume, any odor, 1 oz. 26c 20c one pound Horehound Candy 2 lbs. for 21c Specials Easier Candy ANY for 51.00 "Moire' FIRST SPECIAL With every package SIIa Ckoco&iie6 sold during Rexall Week we will give FREE a bunch of artificial VIOLETS, having a value of 25c. SEE THE DISPLAY SECOND SPECIAL With every 50c pound box Peerage Chocolates " sold during Rexall -Week we will give FREE Silver Indi vidual Sugar or Creamer, whichever you may choose. SEE THE DISPLAY Barr's Saturday Candy Every Saturday In 1 lb. boxes 2c DAY REXALL WEEK STATIONERY Symphony Lawn WEDNESDAY, APRIL 1 The Whimsical Threads of Destiny Two Reels Drama Vitagraph Path Wefikly . Her Sick Father Lubin Comedy The Lost Switch " " THURSDAY, APRIL 2 Our New Minister Threw Reels Kalem Drema Fanny's Conspiracy Vitagraph Ccme3y FRIDAY, APRIL 3 The Sea Eternal two Reels Luhin Drama The Li9t Laugh Essanay Comedy Thieves Vitagraph Drama SATURDAY, APRIL 4 A Good Sport 2 Reels Eiison Comedy Ad Actor's Romance Slig Comedy A Detective'd Strategy Biograph Drama is a bargain regular at the price, 50c. t or this sale we have an assortment of beau tiful Iridescent Glass Dishes and Vases from which you may choose one for every 50c box Symphony Lawn Station ery or Correspondence Cards you purchase. Rexall Remedies Rexall Week is being con ducted in nearly 7000 towns in America and is to make the name i better known. That you may become better acquainted with the line, we offer 10c worth of any goods you may select from our stock with each $1 worth of Rex all Remedies you buy at one time Rexall Week. 1 c A BOX OF 25 TEN CENT CIGARS FOR lc Here is a bargain for the man who smokes. By going in with about 5000 other Rexall Agents we have been able to get a special lot 'of "El jeromio" 10c cigars in boxes of 25. During Friday and Saturday, Rexall Week only, we will sell these cigars as follows: One box at the regular price $2.50; if at the same time you will take two boxes we will sell you the second one for lc making 50 ten cent cigars for $2.51. We will mail these cigars anywhere in Orleans County if you send cash with your order and 5c extra for postage. ; ' - This offer is good only while 2500 last The Mew Store on Main St. Store ORUEAWS, W. Price 5c and 10c Evening Show at 7:30. Continuous show J. A. Kendrick new house. Mrs. Elizabeth Brownlie remains quite ill with grip. Miss Margaret Morse is able to be up again after two weeks' illness. Rev. C. E. Garvin left Tuesday for a visit to his mother at Wheeling,- W. Va. Miss Myrtie Bailey is visiting rher Brother, Ray, in St. Johnsbury for a few days. Maurice Locke has gone to East Albany to work for Fred Hughes through sugaring. Charles Sweeney of West Albany is employed at James Anderson's during the sugaring season. Mrs. Henry Dewing has returned to Samuel Morse's to care for Mrs. Hoyt, who has a broken hip. Miss Mildred Dutton and Roy Ander son are home from the state university for the spring vacation. Mrs. Geo. Simpson and Miss Mary have returned from a few days' visit with relatives in Hardwick. Owen Miles has moved from his own place to the Laird place in Greensboro which he has leased for a year. The United Presbyterian church will be closed through April on account of bad roads and the absence of the pastor. Mrs. Helen Conant Wright of Minne apolis has returned to her home alter spending two weeks with her sister, Mrs. Geo. Simpson. NORTH CRAFTSBURY Miss Winifred Williams visited her parents over Sunday. i Miss Alma Marshall has been quite ill tne past week with grip. Mr. Bilton and family from Quebec are visiting at G. L. Wheeler's. Edmund Root is home from Burling ton for the Easter vacation. Mrs. Dust an royally entertained the Missionary society Wednesday afternoon. Miss Brown, who has been visiting at Rev. C. H. Rowley's has returned to her home in Sheldon. Rev. Gordon entertained quite a company at the church vestry last Thursday evening. Chas. Root was invited to give a sketch of his winter in the West, which was very interest ing. Mr. Gordon then served light refreshments after which a short prayer service was held. GREENSBORO F. II. Duf ur is orthe sick-list. v Mrs. C. P. Carter is gaining slowly. Tom Morse was sick last week with the grip. v Mrs J. D. Willey spent last week in Hardwick. - Jack Bedell began work for N. L. Drown Tuesday. A. E. Tolman was in Danville Friday on business. Hibbard Rutledge's mg from diphtheria. Mrs. Geo. Rogers has been on the sick list for a few days. E. E. Hartson has been moving his belongings to his lather s. Albert Smith's father of Morrisville visited him here last week. A few people went to the Bend Friday to attend the dance. Mrs. Helen Wright of Minneapolis visited friends in town last week. Joseph Debrune has returned from Cabot where he has been working. Ned Phillips is working for Eastman on the Baker farm during sugaring. F. A. Messer has recently received carload of butter boxes for his cream ery. F. A. Purdy of Hardwick has been in town a few days looking after his camp. Luther Smith of Providence is spend ing his Easter vacation with -his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. F. Smith. Mrs. E. E. Hartson was in town last week packing and moving her old home to Mrs. F. things from her B. Dow's. Mr. and Mrs. Kaiser and their helo. J. Burnham, T. Morse and G. Cobb, started for Bar Hill Monday to tap their sugar place. They are intending to tap about 2200 trees. The largest amount of errain ever drawn by the mill team in one day was drawn from the Bend Thursday. Fifteen tons was the amount drawn and it was handled by Geo. Marshall, the driver. GREENSBORO BEND ill with Mrs. Will Graham cular rheumatism. is mus- his Ben Demars has completed lumber 30b in Wheelock. A. C. Chase attended the listers meeting at Newport last week. L. J. Patch recently purchased anew piano of Mr. McLean of St. Johnsbury. The Stannard Ladies' Aid society will meet with Mrs. J. H. Pope Thurs day. Miss Iris Little has finished work for A. C. Chase and gone to stay at C. P. Carter's. Alfred Cushion move'd recently from the Collins tenement to the Cuthbert son tenement. Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Davis, who" have been here for a few weeks, have gone to West Burke. F. N. Michaud has the lumber on the ground to build a new barn this spring, 46 by 80 feet. " Miss Alice Clark intends to leave here this week for Manchester, N. H., where she plans to spend the summer with her sister. gleamemg; A BUSINESS REMEDY If a Business Man finds he is losing trade because of lack of clerks, he'll supply more clerks If a Business Man finds his store or office is too small to accommodate profitable callers, he'll gage additional accommodations en- If a Business Man finds his telephone frequently reported "bny" it may mean that customers trying, to n ach him will take their orders elsewhere unless he supplies the facilities for promptly doing busi ness - v In such an emergency, the advantages of a one party line, a receiving lino or extension set are worth knowing. May we not explain these ad vantages to you? assumpsic -. Telephone Company Byron L. French. The following is from the Somerville (Mass.) Journal of March 20. "Ex-Councilman Byron L. French, a thirty-second degree Mason and widely known among Somerville and Boston Masons, died Saturday evening at 111 Pearson road, where he had made his home since last October with his brother, Ex -Alderman Elmer L. French of Chelsea, and his sister, Miss Jennie E. French of Glover, Vt. His health began to fail twelve years ago and his condition became critical last April when lie was at the family's old farm homestead in Glover, Vt., where he was born on July 5, 1850. It was hi s desire to return to this city and pass the remainder of his days near friends. He was the son of Lindol and Elvira J. Morse French. He was reared and educated in his native town and finished his studies at the Orleans Liberal Institute. "At the age of twenty-one he came to Boston and after a few years' apprenticeship in the retail grocery business he and his brother, E. L. French, engaged in the wholesale and retail'grocery and provision business at 390-94 Hanover street, Boston, where they continued to do business from 1875 to 1895. The deceased was afterward a New England traveling salesman in the same business. Ow ing to ui neaitn ne retired irom business life in May, 1912. He was noted for his kindly disposition and cheerful demeanor. His friends were legion. "Mr. French was married in 1874 and the next year he established a home in East Somerville; later he resided in the Winterhill district; his wife died in 1896 and he continued to live in this city until he went to Glover about a year ago. "For a number of years Mr. French tuurv. an active nucicai in tue anana of Ward 1, which in 188S and 1889 he represented in the common council. nix-Mayor ueorge u. rroctor was president of the first council in which he served, and Albert W. Edmands of the second. The late Mark F. Burns was mayor m J 885 and the late Charles G. Pope the following year "Mr French has been a member of the East Somerville Baptist church for many years. He was a member of Soley lodge. Orient council, R. and S. M., De Molay commandery, K. T., Aleppo Temple of tbe Mystic Shrine, Massachusetts lodge, I. O. O. F., and Shawmut canton, I. Oi O. F. of Boston and Excelsior council, R. A., of this city. He leaves two children. Mrs. Ethel C. Osgood, wife ot Dr. Harry B. Osgood, of Lexington, and Byron P. French, also married, at Medford Hillside ; a grandson, Kenneth French; three brothers, E. L. French now of this city, Wallace E. and Robert E. French of St. Johnsbury; four sisters, Mrs. F. A. Scott, Mrs. G. A. Hamblet, of St. Johnsbury and Miss Jennie E. French and Mrs. Emily A. Taylor of Glover. "Rev. Winfield S. Holland, pastor of the East Somerville Baptist church, conducted a largely attended funeral service at the Pearson-road home Tuesday afternoon. The floral trib utes from relatives, friends and organizations were numerous. Sing ing was by the Bostonia quartette; the three brothers and son were pall bearers and burial was at Wood lawn." was in St. Carter of Rev. Glenn Douglass Johnsbury Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Springfield are in town. N. A. Norton of Lyndonville was in town the first of the week. R. S. Dwinell has broken camp and moved back to the village. - Walker Brothers carry on Bert Sher burne's sugar place again this spring. Mrs. Etta Dexter has been very ill with grip and quinsy for the past two weeks. The Woman's Union will hold a social and dinner at the vestry Friday, April 3. Mrs. Carrie Davis has been quite sick for several days. Mrs. Guy Aid rich is caring for her. Mrs. Frank Phillips and Mrs. Doug lass, both of whom are in Brightlook hospital, where they went for surgical work, are doing as well as could be hoped for. Geo. Alger, who has been in poor health for a long time, and who has been spending the winter with his daughter, Mrs. Harold Shedd, died on Saturday. The funeral was held at the church on Monday. Alice, only child of Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Kelton, who has been ill for several weeks, with nervous trouble, died yesterday. The funeral will be held at the church on Thursday at two o'clock. Much sympathy is felt for the bereaved parents. CHURCH NOTES A number of new members were received into the Community church Sunday, making the number over eighty. The baptismal service was given those desiring it. The Boy Scouts accompanied the pastor on a calling trip recently, going on snowshoes. The music Sunday was a mixed quartette, Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Parker and Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Drew. The Boy Scouts will hold a meeting at 7 o'clock Thursday evening. The usual midweek prayer meeting at 8. Subject, "Studies in the Life of Christ. The Time of Testing." WEST GLOVER G. A. Humphrey was in St. Johns bury one day last week. Russell Humphrey of Newport spent last week with his cousin, Harry Humphrey. Dr. Gile from Hanover, N. H., was in. town Friday gand performed an operation on David Jerome, who has been sick for several months. Walter King is helping Carroll Vance in sugaring. I Mr. Pollard has tnVon nnscaseinn nf the farm he bought of Mr. St. Marie. W. A. Magoon is helping O. G. Miles in sugaring. Mrs. Jane Foster has been visiting her sister. Mrs. Martha Prescott. Tichurst of visiting his Phil Davis of for a season. GLOVER. Burlington is in town Mr. and Mrs. .Vernon St. Johnsbury nave been father. Mary Lyman is and friends here. visiting relatives Bruce Buchanan of U. V. M., is home for the Easter vacatioon. Gladys Cameron is spending Easter H.ecev)e& a 9 members Vast Sunday maVrtxio, a oa cVvatUr members. Officers will be elected following the dinner served by the Woman's Union on Friday. l The Monitor Prints most County