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Miss Norma Smith is visiting st the horn* of her uncle, Dr. K \V, Smith in Freeport. A. C. Heald, a prominent farmer and business man of Solon was In town Monday on business. Evelyn and Laura Chose are vl» * their aunt, Mrs. James L. Keith >t> Norridgewock this week Mrs. Mary I.anouette of Putnam Conn Is visiting her daughter M A. B. Borden for some time Miss Barbara M. Chase In • • ; ed a position as stenographer at the Maine Pulp & Paper Compare -ffi-■ Miss Dorothy M Elliot left V ndav afternoon to visit with In s t< rs Mrs It W Stafford -I "r* 1 !'! Hot in Harliatid. Mrs. John Prescott Mis John V gue Mrs. Rose Murray, Miss Kmtna Roul lard and Miss Mary Roderick left Monday for a two weeks vacation at Old Orchard. Miss Christine Wyman of Cortland *a former friend at Westbrook Henil inary Of Miss Kdna Cushing, has been visiting Miss Cushing and left Hundpt for Ltvermorp Falls, friends driving over for her. Mist Hazel Burkhardt and brother Carl Burkhardt arrived home Friday night from Providence, R 1 having Spent several weeks visiting there Mr. and Mrs H S Hopkins re turned home last week from a visit with Mr. Hopkins' Blstef In Gorham and with their daughters in Portland. Mr. Hopkins was attending to Maine Central Railroad business in the Port land office and now is enjoying a va cation He has lately returned from a business trip to Iowa. Mrs. Mary B Stlnehfleld, acdom i panted by her daughter Virginia B. Btlnchfleld, Miss Luclle Savage of Massachusetts, and Miss Alice Z. Goodrich motored to Lewiston Sunday where Miss Savage continued on by tfflln to her home following an ex tended visit with Miss Stlnehfleld. Mrs Stlnehfleld and daughter and Miss Goodrich were guests of Mrs. Stlnch fleld's brother. Charles Barnard and family while In Lewiston. The parly ^returned home Monday night. I Frank L Norton who has b#en * patient h- S«»m**rwf t Hoipitil hi* re I covered' snArtently I® return to hll I home on Hummer ifreet Mr and Mr* Fred C Moor* re j turned to their home bom* In GardD 1 ner Mondsv after being here to vlalt at the horn* of their ion, George A Moore for several day* Frlr Peterson of West Hoboken, N I arrived In town Saturday to Join I hi* family who are enjoying the ijutet of lj»ke We**ernnMli with other friend a at the H<*o!t rot tag** Mr and Mr* Haile* A Spaulding | are Ike happy parent* of a tittle daughter bor® July list The little , stranger l.a* been named Ruth Kmlly. They bav„ another daughter Helen. Tlhe bus,ness hltH k un Mater street owned by A K Butler l* being reno vated. large plate glass windows and a modern lighting si s ■ in being among he impi r« at i t n . firm Hoot occupletl by (he laiKund Dry tioods Company. Mr* George Jones and sons George Jr and Kdward Jone* of Waterville and Mias Maud Iloullard are passing a three weeks' vacation In Montreal and Quehei Mr Stevens of Portland .* having charge of the Green Bros, store while the manager, .Miss Koul lard Is away. Miss Armanda Carriveau accompan ied by her brother Charles Carriveau departed Monday morning for a sev eral days visit In Boston and vicinity with relatives and friends. Miss Carriveau Is enjoying a two weeks' vacation from her duties as saleslady at the Kmery-Brown store. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Thomas of Mel rose, Mass, are guests at the home of their nefce Mrs. 0. R. Wldder. Mrs. Wldder and her son Jack and his friend, Master Clarence Whiting ar rived home Saturday from a feyv weeks at Cliff Island in Portland Har bor. Mr. Wldder went down earlier in the week and drove home with them. Mrs. Mills, wife of Superintendent James Mills of the City Farm, sustain ed Injuries Sunday In atj automobile accident which resulted lit a broken right arm above the elbow. She was removed tc Somerset Hospital for at tention. The accident happened in an attempt to make a short turn with the car, Mrs. MUIb being thrown out of the vehicle. Mr. and Mrs. .1. W. Mersey of Port-j land are visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. George Tilton. The remains of Richard si two weeks old son of Ahali ml Vina 1 (Pane) Stafford of ltipley v.-ere t. 1 ■ a ' to that place yesterday for tun. 1. The, child died at Somerset Hosp.Ui Thci father Is u native of Marti a ml. tin mother of Ripley. A J, McCrlll's of Holyoke M. j w ho has been visiting hi old home j in Cornvllle with his sister. Mr A it. Moody and Mrs. s. Htiiilh o; Skowhegan is to return home Friday by auto, aceompan ed by Mr; .MeCrtl Its an brother, John Fei in *i , rid sister. Flla Henderson, all of I invoke Mass. Mrs. Anna F Merrill (tail ,-s guests yesterday Miss Florence Iviton and Foster Failon. the dii’igiifer and son of Harvey D. ICaton of Wat> rvill,-. Mr Katon wit* w —1 opi t ie Men hen! •• from a trip to Kngi.ind later to <ial-[ vest on, Texas and then to {Mexico, re-, turning to Boston and then to bis home in Watcrv.lle. A lively blaze was discovered yes- i terda.v between ten and eleven o'clock In Ihe forenoon in the hiri it woods back of tlie Catholii I • i. ei rv on North avenue. The Maine c-iined rap idly in proportions and lie lire de partment was called out I. overcome the difficulty, i.ai' r an oiitla sk oc curred and shortly before <. o'eb k the fire department wa •- > u i illed out to subdue ttie confl . i■ thei Richard Hammel of Ni *- York City is in town tills week the gui•; t of Mrs. Blanche Friend, at lo r home oi N tli Ave. Mr. Hammel is a graduate of' Good Will, Class of Id and will he) remembered by many a. ihe i■ ,> who suffered a fractured leg at Good Will, j and was a surgical patient ..i Homer* set Hospital for several weeks three years ago. “Dick." as lie i- known to his intimate friends, li d a eompb to recoverev from li s accident, and after graduating from C iod Will returned to New York City where he lives with his sister and is employed by the Banking House of Brandon Gordon A Waddell. S'J Liberty St . where he is making good. II s many friends are glad to greet him and learn of his‘ success in business. lie utliiod Ids class reunion and v.stied in Hinckley and Fairfield before coming to skow hegan. Miss Edith and Miss Alice Wilkins 1 i Wilton are visiting their grand parents. Attorney and Mrs. Daniel Lewis of Spring street. Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Norton and Air Etta Heald of Medford, Mass., ro ailing the summer vacationists ; at Fuirgrieve Bay, Lake Wesserun | sett. I’. O. Rockefeller and son with i t families are visiting his sister, VIi Folsotn-Jones on Locust Ave. 1 Tin ' are touring from New York .state by auto. MS') r;Lulya Rowell returned home 5 iiiirdav night from Mystic, Conn., ; ini Boston, Mass., having visited in iliu ,, cities with friends and relatives fur several weeks. Mr and Mrs. Edward Sayers, Mr. i . ml Mrs. Frank S. Lessor and Mrs. I a 'is '"ei:t to I.ewlston Sunday in ' r-- to v lit Mr*. Lessor's tin Trial. In our Iasi issue the date of Wes-; serunselt Valley Fair at Athens was given as October 6th. This is an er ror, the date of the Fair is October 5th. Roscoe Bigelow with his mother Mrs. Esther Bigelow and his aunt Mrs. lretta Bell of Oakland, Cal., w ent to Hart land yesterday to visit with relatives and friends. Mrs. Delmont Tozier and Dorothy and Price Toiler of Jersey City, N. J. who have been guests at the home of .Mrs. Vina Harvillle and Miss Ratie Tozier have gone to Princeton for a visit. fiver 100 people have signified their intentions of attending the clam bake on Frenchman's Bay next Wednes day, the affair being arranged by the Knights of De Molav Commandery in i compliment to their ladies. Edwin Wilder Sturtevant, following ii visit with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Sturtevant. has returned to Boston \vhere he has had a position aR mailing order clerk for several years with l lie wholesale firm of Farnsworth 6 Hoyt. Mr. and Mrs. Ansel Newton enter laincd a number of their friends at li ' r home, Cold Brook farm last Sat urdav night. ^The affair was a very pleasant event socially, the guests be ing entertained with games and served n fi eshments. A large number of the employees of the SKowhegan Jersey Creamery In cluding Manager Harris ami his fam ily and their guests Miss Benjamin of Pennaylvania and several inyited friends, enjoyed a picnic Monday at the Violstt Farm on Bigelow Hill, for merly the home of L. H. Packard. | President of the Company. Miss Pauline Taylor of Springfield, Mass., who hus been visit i11k her grandmother Mrs. Pauline Hill, lias gone to Plymouth, Mass., to attend 1 the Tercentenary Observance. Miss] Tayor is a pianist of ability and at the ^ Sorosls Field Day at Jamaica Point; last week furnished excellent music during the evening. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Weller and two children Oscar, Jr., and Lena of Meth uen, Mass, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Weiller. Mr. and Mrs. Adolph (ira;i:ian and daughters ar<> arriving Saturday and wvU go to Lakewhod for the balance of thv month ( r;f' ■ tilling Mr. and Mrs. It. H. Weiller quite a portion of the time at a cottage there. Quite a colony pf summer visitors are sojourning at Fairgrieve Bay, Lake Wesserunsett, in the different Fairgrieve cottages.. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Knapp of New Haven, Conn., are stopping at Camp No. 1, Mrs. (i. Look and daughter at Camp No. 2, Mrs. Bradford. Miss Helen Bradford and George Doan, of Dorchester, Mass., are at Camp No. 5 and Mth. Elizabeth Gordon of Brooklyn, N. Y., Is at Camp No. 7. Mr. and Mrs. .1. D. Symons from town are at. Camp No. 6. I The work on the highway between here and Athens is progressing very favorably. One of the noticeable im provements thus far is the setting ovdf ! of the road the other side of the Wes j serunsett Bridge, lessening the curve there. Mrs. Alice L. Wadsworth, who re cently sold her residence on Madison avenue to Dr. C. E. Richardson, has taken the house on Bush street which has for some time been the home of id. E. Emigh and family. Her daugh ter. Mrs. Carl Tobey, has completed her duties at the Arcadia Tea Room, [Lakewood. - ---'-' B. L. Nightingale Is tTlulTTlI route in town. He purchaJl®4 Bloomfield- ^“roi coming hereof1* Norridgewock about two yeans ago Byron Flewellyn of the Middle R°„, cut the cord of hlg heel Mnna ^ seriously that Dr. Stlnchfl ^ * called and the Injured man ,,, w sequently removed to Kennebe, vl |ler Hospital. Mr. Flawed* !?' mowing bushes with a hand' and laid the implement down t^l* up a stub. During the operatic lost his balance and struck hi, t,* against the scythe causing the' ino lies already mentioned. J“N I U. S. NOBBY TREAD £ I Where the going is specially heavy j S with snow, mud or sand, in hilly I country where maximum traction on I the road is a factor, no other tire tread ; I yet devised is quite so effective, or so ■ * I wholly approved by motoring opin ’ jl ion, as the U. S. Nobby Tread. H Its very simplicity—three rows of , I diagonal knobs, gripping the road — ; I is the result of all the years of U. S. : 1 Rubber experience with every type 11 of road the world over. r every e listened Id experience' how much theyd save ^*TOP and talk to the next man you see with U. S. Tires on - his car. Ask him why. Most likely you’ll hear an inter esting story about his tire experi ments— before the answer was found. Money wasted. Promises i unkept. Trouble on the road—hu morous to every one except the man who went through it. Finally U. S. Tires. And U. S. Tires ever since. * • • < ( Perhaps it's the experience of U. S. \\ | Tire buyers that makes them more em j i phatic in their preference than ever this year. * j When these men have tried most everything by the way cf "staggering bargains", "hurrah discounts", "discon tinued lines at less” arid so forth they know what not to get. They want a fresh, live tire. With a good reputation. That’s everything it s ivs it is. With the people behind it who back it up. * * * There are 92 U. S. Factory Branches. Your local U. S. Dealer is dec it upon them continually to keep 1 is shocks sized up, complete—to give you t rvir.e. Whenever he gets one or a hur ired tires from a U. S. Factory' Bran h, they are newly made this season ', us Sold to you at ancf price. Full . Square-dealing. A reputable nicker. A reputable dealer. The whole t1 i iction as befits the leadership of the o’dt t md largest rubber organization in the world. ‘Stop and talk to the next man you act with V. S. Tires on his car." United States Tires are Good Tires U. S. USCO TREAD U. S. CHAIN TREAD U. S. NOBBY TREAD U. S. ROYAL CORD U. 5. RED & GREY TUBES | United States Tires United States © Rubber Company Holt & Hight, - Skowhcgan and Madison A Attention ! Public! Currie’s Indigestion Tablets are every bit what they are claimed to be. They straight en out the stomach. Ailments of the liver, kidneys and blad der soon dissapear. Testimonials are coming in from all over the county tell ing of remarkable cures being made. A word from Mark 0. Clark. I - Skowhegan, Maine, I May 3, 1 'J21. j 1 Mr. G. O. Currie, Skowhegan, Maine. I Dear Sir: I wish to say to my friends and the; I public as to the good I have found in the remedy called "Currie's Indigestion Pilla" I have suffered for the past eight or ten years with severe attacks of acute indigestion. The time I tried this remedy 1 was j having one of my sick times. I re- ' calved Immediate relief. None such attack since I have taken these pills, j It has been about three weeks since T began. I have taken nine and am feel ing fine and all right at the present time. It has been five days . inre I j have taken any. I have tried other preparations, only temporary relief was found. The Cur i rie Pills have got it over them all. I recommend this remedy to all sufferers of Indigestion, and If they help you as they have me, you will surely keep them by you, as I will not be without them. They give me relief in five min utes. I will give my affidavit to this let- j ter If called upon. Yours respectfully. MARK O. CLARK. $1.00 Per Box at All Drug Stores Persistence Wins 5 IN the fable the tortoise beet the hare * 4 because he kept up his pace patiently and persistently, while his fleet-footed rival dozed and dallied by the way. f • \ 5 Here is a pleasant lesson for the system- ■ atic saver. . 4* | Ticonic National ^ Waterville, Maine *-—.---- ------ - mi :::::::::::::::wav/znock campsttttttttttttnt Wawnock Camps I 2 A select summer camp for girls on the ; 5 shores of Sebago Lake. * ] Mrs. Marion Steward Lacasce, A. B., 5 y f 2 Director. “ O | 2 Offers perfect conditions for a summer f ;£ outing, with desirable training for your ) <£ daughter from the present date to ! ^ September first. For further particulars < ♦ X write or telephone. Postoffice address, X XX South Casco, Maine. ♦ ♦ ♦ T ♦ ♦ t XX If interested in a camp for Boys, address -i XX Elroy 0. Lacasce, South Casco. tm t :n \xx , ♦♦ i ♦i waw£nock campstttttittxtttz 1 ~ ▼ ▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼▼TTTTTTT TTTTTTTTT TT ▼ T ? ? ? f f ^ f f f ^ f • f ^ y f • f f f f f rTT T * » " p Oldsmobilcs Set The Pace 23rd Year jj 1921 Oklsmobiles II 4 41 are unquestionably the Finest jj Motor Car Buy in America i! I *'' Their wonderful POWER. FINISH, PERFORMANCE. COMFORT, DURABILITY and ECONOMY are | ♦,, "j ’’<► absolutely utiapproached by an> cat an.' where near their price; they are backed by one of the oldest 'j i" • ' J I”;; finest motor car companies in the United States, under the longest guarantee; ONE YEAR. t It is difficult to overestimate OLDSMOBILK \BILITY. The famous climb orer the Height of Land !:;•> to Dead River and Warren Hill in Cornville are all taken in High Gear. We can show you finer con- i,I I < ► ' l » ‘ j ,**,► structioD than you ever looked at, tremendously oversized parts which mean greater durability than *‘T i4* *> I;;- you have previously known; more scientific engineering from front sprljig bolts to tail light and OLDS «►'" ■ 't , •>;; MOBILES are one of the very few cars which it is difficult to criticise intelligently. If you pass the 4 4,„ TI ► OLDSMOBILE by you are deceiving yoursel! and missing the real superior product of 1921 motordom. 4,I |m *■4 > • -4 We are too busy to talk hot air we have the goods and are ready to show you. Order early. ‘T 44 ♦ l --— ——— .■'——— ; | 1 K,ysr CLOUGH MOTOR CO • OMmobil' tin jl | PT4rs’ Lakewood Road, Madison, Maine * j it J?