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                    <text>^ M i s ^ N b « i . R d b M t s * W recovering
—Sleighing o n the country roads i s
from&gt;the mumps;
J.
\*- only fairly, g o o d .
^ • W i s l e y ' I ? N u t t e ^ 6 f Osoipee, was, , — M i s s I d a Colomy spent the Sabbath
THE B A M ROAD HAS THREE IN
l n t o w a : K e d n &gt; s d / y \ ^ » . -.&lt;,
with friends in,Cnmbef land Mills, Me.
TWO DAYS.
—:Mrs^JpKn. D. Lyman'of;'Exeter js
— T h e L a d i e s ' Aid Society will meet
\ M t i n g friendf.in New~3Tork oity.
ivitb M r s . 8 . H Buziell next. Tuesday Btlsbap* a t Dover nod &lt;3onle.—Ho Lives
host.
A
L
M
O
S
T
—
.—RoV'rls &amp; Pea'vey as usual were nfternoon.
up t o daso whlvthblr jblg stock of val
—Installation of of&amp;jora, a a d enter,
The Boston &amp; Maine road bas been
entines.
tainment "at t h e Good Templars t h i s ,
—Mra^ E d w i n ' R o l l i n s of 8omerville
unfortunate
this week.
Tuesday,
— T h e subject j)f consideration next T h u r s d a y , evening.
U viaitirig friends.in toiyn.
Farmington and other passengers, who
Sunday a t the chapel will b e . W h e r e
— W a l t e r C o b b , telegraph operator a t left here a t 9.22 were delayed an hoot
— M r e . - J o h n P . Elklos is confined to are t h e dead.
t h e depot, w a s a t his home in Camber- and a half a t Rivorside by a broken rail.
h e r . h o m e J f o m ^ . severe .cold.
.^-j£ran'k Copp and Will Peavey pro, land M i l l s , M e . , Sunday.
Men who were breaking out the high­
' r ^ A ^ , p a ^ " o j * ^ e o &amp; c l e B ' ' / h a s been pose t o build cottages a t L o o n Cove
— T h e Y i M . B . A.- will hold meet- way near t h e railroad discovered a rail
found?" M a y bVjiai'ai'pdstofflce;,
next spring.
ings at* t h e ' d e p o t school house every broken in several places. A man with
j^—Bl S J -Parker, 'Est}., has been in
— C . E . Peabody is -to tender his Friday e v e n i n g , until farther notice.
a shovel ran o p the track and signaled an
Kr. B. If. Parlchurt*
attendance a t supremBvCourt this week, resignation as second lieutenant of t h e
S a m , Vermont
— M r s . E m m a C . Leighton, whose engine with snowplow that was clearing
— M r . H e r v e y P e a r l h a s had a n in Wilson Guards.
death is recorded in H e r e a n d There, the track for the passenger trains. H a d
genious brake p a t upon bis great sled,
it struck t h e broken n i l a serious acci­
—Sheriff.elect Hayes is in attendance was 4 7 y e a r s , 11 months a n d 2 7 days
d e n t must have resulted. A section
— M a x M a y e r h a s a new ad i n thY at t b e February session of the supreme of age.
crew from Dover p n t in a new rail.
istue.'^iHe xs still offering remarkable court a t Dover.
— M r . A l l i e Cates injured band is
Inflammation In t h a Kyaa
I n the morning of the same day an
bargains.
— M r . E . T . Avery has been in Alton improving b u t i t will doubtless be well
accident occurred in tbe freight yard at A B u s i n e s s M a n C u r e d b y H o o d ' s —
for a lew days this week, looking after along in t h e Spring^ before h e wilt be
— M r . F r e d Allen a n d Charlie JenDover. T h e 8.40 tnain from North
Perfect Eyesight Restored
Kotirr Stork &lt;&gt;f heat [ » r i f n I'nnf"
able t o r e s u m e work again.
ness of Bochester, were in town business affairs.
Berwick ran into an open switch, which
4 ct* per )ard
Bead u u letter of Mr. n. N. Pukhunt. a
Wednesday.
— T h e PaBcataqha -Congregational h a d been left open through carelessness, tfsaler In graalU and nunnfirturer at cranlu
•F. O . Papenoe, president of the
Best Apron &lt;Jin«tittin«, 1 { &lt;tn &amp; \d
— T h e groceries t h a t are sold a t the T o p e k a Investment company of Kansas Club will hold its'annual meeting with and piled u p a freight train standing on monument* at Barre, Vt. &gt;
O n e of \'lh&lt; l)re»4i U i n ^ f . n m * * , &lt; &lt;
'A
the First C h u r c h , E x e t e r , F e b . 2 2 n d . t h e track. T h e passengers got a bad "O. L Hood A Co., Lowell, Mass.
store o £ J ; E . F e m a l d a r e warranted City, w a s in town, Tuesday.
per yd.
"Last winter I was taken with ecroruloul
the ;vfc»yi .best.
—•
-Business a t Flanders' last factory Rev. T . E a t o n Clapp, D . D . , and R e v . shaking u p , and were badly frightened. sore eye*. I was totally Mind In ooo
Whole Block ofM &lt; bird * b\r &lt; -t
&gt;
and
— T b e ; senior and -fourth classes will is rushing. N i g h t work is necessary t o B. M . L o o k h a r t , will speak on W a s h ­ The train consisted of a baggage car, tho other was to badly affected that
ton, 30 cU. a piece
ington. A l l orders for guests tickets smoker and two passenger cars, which
fill t h e orders received.
I Could Not « e e
hare rn'etdricala a t t b e high school Ffi&lt;
Balance o f entire M&gt;* k ul 1
Ur
m u s t be sent t o Henry M . Plummer, were badly damaged. The shifter was to read or write. My eyes pained me tery
day afternpph.
Good*. 1 lc per &gt;ard
— C . E . H u t c h i n s of Alton, h a s
Rochester.
much for three or four months, mod for about
standing on a side tract and J a m e s A .
, — E v e r y : m e m b e r of t h e Legislature moved his tonsorial rooms from over the
Balance o f entire s i n k of '
DP
three weeks before I went to Burlington tor
•At t h e a n n u a l meeting of tbe Free.|*Piper, who was standing on the pilot, treatment, the palo was hardly endurable. On
Goods, 22c per j d
b i s been, assessedVa dollar t o make tbe Welch drug store t o t h e Savage block.
Baptist society officers were chosen a s was caught by tbe car which was my return from Burlington In April last, I could
Balance of entire ntr»ck of
carnival a t Concord n e x t week a s u e
— F r a n k G. T i b b e t t s , who is em
and 8 1 0 0 Dreti U«.od», 4 V 1"
cess.
1
ployed in a dry goods bouse a t Portland follows: Moderator, W . H . Oilman ; jammed into the shifter. It was neces­ not see any beuer than before 1 left borne. At
clerk, J . A . R o b e r t s ; treasurer, C. W . sary to jack up the car to release him. this rime 1 commenced to take Hood's SarupaFruit of the loom Ble&amp;thcd
—Mr; D u d l e y B . Waldron, one of Me., h a s been in town a few days this T a l p e y ; w a r d e n s , Fred A . Giles, Chas.
rUla and hare now taken two botUe*.
I t is not believed his injuries will prove
3CID wide, 6rjr per )ard
tbe most substantial citizen!) of Roches week.
B . H a n s o n ; u s h e r s , Walter D a m e , fatal. T h e smasb-np will bs a costly
I C a n Now See
Lock wood unbleached ( ott'&gt;n 'J*..i,
*ter, made a call a t t h e N E W S office,
— T h e Pope Manufacturing Co. have Harry R i c k e r . T h e financial condition one, as several freight curs were smashed as well as before the affllcuont can see to read
wide, 5c per j d
Wednesday.
appointed 0 . W . Roberts agent for of tbe society i s very satisfactory.
to kindling and two engines badly and carry on my business, that of a manufac­
Lock wood unblearhad C o t U m *".r,
turer of granite monuments, without the aid of
— I t is Rockland, M e . , tha,i Key. W their entire line of Columbia a n d H a r t
wide, b^c per yd
— C h a r l e s H o w a r d , while working wrecked.
glasses. When I left the doctor's care 1 could
I . 8weet is to remove/from Passaic, N ford bicycles.
Accident number three was caused by hardly bear the tight on my eyes, and had to be
Best Turkey Red &gt; &gt;
' &lt; &lt; 'iaM.rl-.'tfor Charles E N u t t e r , Monday, had tbe
J . , instead of R u t l a n d , a s . stated last
— A party of t e n persons drove u p misfortune to d r o p a heavy barrel upon the tender of the morning freight lesv
marked down to 3 0 c p*r jd
week.
to Alton, Wednesday night, t o attend his left foot.injuring the toes badly. D r . ing t h e rails a t Gonlc, Wednesday
Kntire slock of OuimgR f&gt;{ \x.r \&lt;\
— T h e Y . P . 8 . 0 . w i l l ' g i r e an en. the meetings conducted by the Christian J . C . P a r k e r , w h o attended him found morning.
I t blocked tbe road for a
Kntire stock of ladies, misses an.I
tertainment a week from Tuesday even, Crusaders.
it necessary t o amputate t h e two middle long time. T b e passenger train which
g e n u woolen 25&lt; hone marked down t i
ing a t t b e vestry of t h e Congregational
— M r ; . C. E . H a c k e t t who h a s been toea, t h e p a t i e n t refusing ether or any leave* here a t 7 o'clock was delayed
12rj a pair
church.
quite ill from the m u m p s has been able other anaesthetic for t b e operation, almost two hours.
Entire stock of men * *»nc O u t i n g
also unlaundred fthirts, 36c each
—Today T h u r s d a y , a t Miss Card's to resume work in th.6 stitch-room a t which be withstood bravely.
IN M E M O R I A M .
school, on School street, exercises a p - Wallace, Elliott &amp; Co's.
Kntire st'»ck of 6 \ ( tirsets, fi *« t*
—Seven members of M a d River E n ­
piopiate t o S t . Valentine's day were
a pair
*
A t the board of trade meeting c a m p m e n t , drove to Dover, Tuesday
On Sunday, J a n . 13th, memorial ser­ very careful when out on tbe Itreat alone.
held, to t h e delight of t b e children.
Entire stork «»f » 0 r &lt; &lt;&gt;rset»
• a
Tuesday evening, oo definite action was afternoon, a n d were present in tbe vices were held in tmr mission in Brook Hood's Banaparllla has purtned my blood and
been the means of restoring my eyesight It
pair
— M r s . George I . H a y e s , who hastaken in regard t o t h e new industry evening to witness the work of the lyn in memory of Orlando Jenness, who has also helped me In other ways. I am not
Kntm stock of 7 &gt; and * 7 i Kid- . " i
been a t a Boston, hospital for a fe offered our town.
now troubled with constipation, my dlgesttoo u
degree team a t t h e Dover camp. I t died Dec. 30, 1894, aged 51 years.
leel like a new
Kntne stock of 81
Kid (il.-v,...
weeks, r e t u r n e d home Saturday. There
As a faithful, practical, christian betterB andT1 Barre, Vermont. man." H. N.
PAKK UBS ,
•Alexander
Hollingsworth, em­ was splendidly done. After a fine s a p ­
69c a pair
is a gratifying improvement in her ployed a t Foss' blaoksmith shop, is vis­ per they drove t o Farmington, and a t gentleman, he had won the respect of • H o o d ' e Pills are purely regetable, and do
Entire stock &lt;f 8 .
Kid t i l M «
health.
iting friends in Portland, Me., a n d in half-past t h r e e , when they drove into those who were fortunate enough to be not purge, pain or gripe. Bold by aD druggists.
81 I *2 a pa ir
Iza H o m e ' s s ta ble , the mercory was associated with him in the work that
—Mr. J . H . Perkins of T a p p a n Nova Scotia.
One lot of Light ( olored \\ rapj-» r»
THE COLDSIBIAH OSOQESTBA.
four degrees above zero, but they ex­ was so much a part of his daily life
street, h a s given u p bis position a l ,
39c each
Seven new members were voted perienced n o discomfiture from the J H i s helpfulness was many times de­ What P«o*l« and Paper* Are P l e a s e d t e
Soraersworth a n d bas accepted one in
Beat Lining ( ambries, 3ic \#x &gt;d
I monstrated in the bible class of the
the cutting-room of tbe Wallace, Elliott into t b e Wilson G u a r d s last week, and cold.
Bay of It.
more new members a r e to be added this
Beat English Si lest as, *Jr}r per )
shop.
— T h e winter term of t h e town Sunday school, where he was always a
week
Best Linen ( anvass, M&lt; \* r \&lt;1
M r ? Lord of Portsmouth, J a n 3.
By his practical
schools closed J a n u a r y 25th, there hav­ welcome addition.
—Mr. E . B . H a y e s , who visited
Entire stock of (iermant*»wn ^ am
" T h e people here are fairly
•The following are the advertised ing been three terms of each school, expositions and remarks he contributed 1895
Lynn, Boston and Worcester last week,
Tc a skem
crazy over your music
We b a r e had
says that in all of those cities he heard letters u p to Feb. 9 : Julia H . Demers, during t b e y e a r . T b e entire enrollment in no small degree to the interest of all the crack bands, and they ain't in it
Whole Btock o f SJK&gt;UI &lt; " t l " P
l rt»
interested inquiries a b o u t our great sled Joseph O . Hoitt, Master Fred M Var- for the year 1 8 9 4 -of t h e nine schools tbat body.
a ipool
ney, A J . Gould
In tbe hurry and bustle of business along with the Columbian."
was 1'37. T h e number of pupils whose
"Uncle 8 a m . "
Guard's Ball, Rochester, Sept. 1894
Whole stock of Sewing ^ilk (» ft- *
— F r i d a y night of next week occurs ambition a n d steadfast perseverance did affairs, where our energy is ever taken
— M r s . H e n r y Miller received a dis­
spool
the mapquerado of t h e Pythian Sister­ not allow them t o miss a half day for up by the strain of close competitors 'The concert by QuimbyV Columbian
patch from Marlboro, Mass., 8sturday
the duties we owe tc the community Orchestra was of a most artistic charac­
the entire school year, were as follows
t h a t her h u s b a n d . Who has been a t work hood. I t will be one of the social
Carl N . R o b e r t s , of the RoberU school, and the individual are given, often ter and the applause rendered was very
events of the season.
there, is very ill d f l a g r i p p e and fever.
enthusiastic."
.There is to be a rehearsal of t h e Charlie L . Glidden and Harrison G . times, an inferior place in our consider­
She went t o his bedside a t once.
Stoneham Independent, March 10,
ation. Not so, however, was it with
Rebekah Degree staff tbis Friday Waldron of t h e Waldron school, Joel
— F e b r u a r y weather has brought
our brother Jenness.
I t is said of him 1894 " T b e stage was handsomely
evening. I t is desired that all m e m ­ 8 m a r t of t h e P e a r l school, a n d George
some pretty tough experiences h u t t h e
E. Goodrich of t h e Horn T o w n school that bo would, if duty impelled h i m , decorated with flowers and potted Flat and Bound Belling
— A fine qualit) Mearbed larridftk
experiences of- Farmington Tuetday bers be present.
— N e x t w e e k will be Ladies' Week p u t aside business transactions, where plants and upon it was seated tbe beet
— F . H . Carpenfer of Alton w a s in at Concord, md t h e Legislature and evangelical calls commanded him to orchestra that ever came to town, viz Belt Hooks, Lficlnp; and Dressing. incK«'^ « ul-' retfirar price 7 '&gt; for tins
evening, wero of a pleasant and novel
•*a!e 3yc )x*r ) J
at I UK M i l t
Colombian Orchestra of Lawrence Light and Heavy Cylinder Oil.
character.
They
netted
a
tidy town Monday, with one of the hand­ citizops of Concord Avill m a k e extra- attend to tbe religipus.work.at hand
Rochester
We've said this before and we now re­
little sum, t o o . for t h e treasury of tbe somest matched pair of black horses efforts to have t b e grand sleighing car­
This brother was endued with that
— A large a^-*'»rtment
i • n.ll
*
For time, nov­ Machine and Engine Oil,
Ladies' A i d Society. Long may its tbat we have seen in a long time.
nival and other features successfully practical, christian spirit which is capa­ iterate t h e statement
he Mi. sale at Hubert- \
elty a n d popular and pleasing music Square Flax, American and
good work continue.
— M a n i l a M Ricker is to bring suit carried out. T h e Concord &amp; Montreal ble of interpreting the "Golden Rule"
uriia) m u r n i n t f
they are unsurpassed
The concert Diamond Packing,
—Mr. Floyd O. Coon, traveling against t h e directors of the looted R. R. will offer from all principal sta­ in its broadest sense.
— I&gt;-» v o u n^ed an . i
they gave was alone worth the price of
H e died as be lived, in the full con­
salesman for Samuel Kidder, belting, Dover bank to recover tbe value of the tions specially low rates to Concord and
Asbestos Wlcklng, Cotton Masle. t-uj o n e at I 111- I- M l . t
admission "
return, F e b . 2 0 , 2 1 , 2 2 , tickets good sciousness of a risen Savior, who saveth
packing a n d mill supplies, 60 Federal ("stock s h e held in tbat institution.
8 i I •&gt;
The Columbian Orchestra will furnish American and Champion (.lav. ular [
for return passage up to F e b . 23td.
street, Boston, is a t t h e Eiiott Hospital,
— T h e Rebekahs will hold another of Keep watch for further announcements t o the uttermost and keepeth tbe feet of the music for Hercules Firemen's Ball,
-I'll
i ul, r \ ne^ar i t J
the righteous from destruction.
8 8 Commonwealth,Ave., where he h a s their popular five cent socials Wednes­
^
Cutters, at
nalii *
March 8th
been operated on. for appendicitis. T h e day evening, Feb. 2 0 . Each member of the numerous attractions t h a t are to
W i i . CuMMinon
operation w a s quite' successful and he is has the privilege of inviting a friend. be offered, and d o n ' t forget to pay the
• ai In
LOWEST P l l l C K S ,
Ac the services held in memory of
— You can save money
dress
doing as well a s can b e expected, and An entertaining program will be pre­ capital city a visit during this week.
»r,..r I : i ^ t t i - ' n . 1)
1 Hi­
Concord is n o t a dead town by any Mr. Orlando Jenness, I *was assigned goods, ' k s snd trimmings
THE
will bVout in about a month.
lit
sented.
means, as t h e people of New Hampshire the sad, yet in a sense, pleasant duly of PAIR
- r • ••ritl.i
—Mrs. C . 'F» D a v i s of Brockton, was
— M r . J . E . Berry of North Barnstead will find when they come to pay it a speaking of bis good qualities. My
hl».| recently presented with a handsome with three Cows m a d e , from J a n . 1st, visit during tho carnival week
THE
D I U PIKK.
One of text was Acts 10 8 8 , " W h o went
A IV..
gold ring a t a fair in t h a t city, as being 1894, t o J a n . 1st, 1 8 9 5 , 961 pounds of the attractions will be Hervey Pearl and about doing good." Brother Jenness,
- n
Twenty years ago last Sunday morn­
the most popular Sabbath school teacher butter. Kor the same period a flock of his great q u a d r u p l e runner
T h e man­ like Him of whom these words were ing, F e b 10, 1875, occurred the " O r e a t serte ttic 4(&gt;lh anniversary o f th&lt; IT m . i r It « r.e-t
&lt; a I'd I H I
rA IK
ll, r e
i n t b o F i e e Baptist church in that place fifty hens laid 8,908 eggs. Good r e ­ agement have engaged him for the en­ spoken, was never tired of doing good and
nage
Kelntli es anil fnciuls nutn N r
I'
neer
forj whose benefit t h e fair was held. sults, truly.
wherever he went he always found Fire" which burned the Elm House ing about sevent), including -i | w n i ii »lit n
\
tire week.
nt?&lt; r
I li, lr. tf'i " I - n u n M r 1-..1
Mrs. Davis w a s formerly Miss Clara
time to help some poor, fallen brother and stable, two dwelling houses and a from Farmington uert pn-si-nt
T h e annual concert of tbe D a r t ­
mm
large shoe factory, between the hotel evening wan most agreeably pan.**-,! « t d l.adit-p utii . : H. &gt;
. i| n .1
Belle Leighton o f this place.
—The' friendstof James M York of to rise from tbe depths to which he had and J E Pernald's store, except wbat
mouth glee, bai.jo and mandolin clubs
games, mupir and sinking aft&lt; r « h n i&gt; fail fi i . *' ' r i c tt re a t Ir
— A p a r t y o f twenty.five more or less, was given in the Gymnasium at H a n ­ Lowell, a n a t i v e of tbis town and a s u n k .
prme '1 11 r K M It a,
In travelling through the country, he is called tbe California building, where the host and hostcm inwt#d tin tr. ' t i n
drove up from Rochester, Tuesdsy night over, Friday night before the largest former resident, w e r e shocked to learn
by almost superhuman efforts the fire dining room where a «nnni&gt;tuoui p pit.', *»( I . i - t i n . , mm t
t o assist i n raising u p t h e chiefs in audience a college glee club h a s ever of his sodden death a t his home, 176 found his way to a mission in almost
was checked.
u a s served
T b e gu&lt;-*ta departed -it a by tradir.tf at t l | - p u l
Mineola Council, Degree of Pocahontas, sung to there. T h e club will give a School street ~in t h a t city, Monday everytown be entered a n d was ever
A burning brand flew over the houses late hour leaving a s a token of thi ir
- - 1 rnem, nti. !i n r r
t h e work w a s admirably performed, dozen more concerts before dUbanding. morning. H e retired in bis usual good ready to give a word of testimony to the
on the south side of Central street and friendship and esteem man) \ u i u a M , A June* at J h Hi nial.l
a n d a find, s u p p e r served. Wednesday
spirits Sunday evening, and failing to saving power of our Jesus, or in prayer
— T h e stitchers were o u t of tho W a l ­
worked its war into the new Congrega­ and ureful present*, and a!) atrrf* im
- i'lo pi,-re« i&gt;{ wa-.'ia
night a p a r t y from this town reverted
put in appearance Monday morning his by the side of some poor sinner pleading
lace, Elliott shop, S a t u r d a y , because of
H e tional church, which stood where the that a very pleasant evening h « d n alt n , - p i : ti - t \ I . » I u l
relatives went t o h i s room to learn the with God" for His forgiveness.
t h e order'of. t h i n g s a n d visited Roches­
the discbarge of M r s . Pbebe Palmer.
brick church now stands and in a very spent and that Mr anil Mr* ( at, r \,. r» and i.p ot [ H I h i l l
t e r for a'*'similar-purpose. T b e visit Upon S u p t . Ivory's return matters were cause and found biro lying dead in bed. loved God and His Word and work and short time it was in asbes. When the delightful entertainera.
H e is survived b y his-sons D r . A . J ) . never tired of "going about doing good."
w a s mado very^rjleasant for them,
satisfactorily arrangrd, and all went to
bell commenced to strike the hour of
Mjlt.
f I l.-l
i it.
• I 11
E D W A S D KIBKWOOD
Y o r i o f Lowell, a n d R. 8 . York of
•* —Comrade Avery, of Farmington work
again
Monday
morning,
Oil t
3 it rang out its own death knell in one
I Ul
WEST MILTON
w h o was elected a delegate to the N a ­ including M r s . P a l m e r , w h o bad been Boston,who is also a physician. H e was
lit \ l .
F l.K
fierce peal, then fell to the ground
The suolight of our life has gone and
\» t b e . f i l l . I I'ftr tii-r
tional convention by t h e 8tate depart- told to leave her work for no satisfactory a veteran- of t h e civil war, and a mem­
It was one of the bitterest cold nights
ber of t h e K n i g h t s of Pythias.
Funeral we are left in darkness and gloom but
I .It
T h e Messrs Downs have one "( tl.i i n u n ^ i i
- m e n t of N e w H a m p s h i r e , last week, reason.
ever experienced
Water froze where best broken road districts to be f o u n d
i i t . i f I l.-,!
services were held in Lowell at the such words of appreciation from those
baa a ratber*"rjniqu&gt;-record and which
- n u t at I i ,r
ever it struck and tbe firemen were
— T h e following i s t b e program of home of his s o n , a n d bis remains will who knew and loved him, can not fail to
their breaker too is unexcelled
_ cannot possibly beTeclipaed by any deleI i &gt;S I
III
•I I
literally tall icebergs, their clothing
g a t e of even! a n y Comrade;of t h e O . A . R . the Independent Orchestra, to be ''given be brought t o Farmington for burial bring some comfort to an aching heart being saturated with waier and frozen
Ml«s Sadie Shortridge haa r e t u r t . i I . 'i • I
at .the masquerade of t h e P y t h i a n , 8 i s - Friday. H i s wife's death preceded bis
H o w incapable am I of paying fitting
ann t I
I..
I CAM -The, AVeryiJ &amp;n^iiffij*$mp\»ii\f
be
I t was a morning long to be re­ from Rochester, and the Mesarr* M i n r t
lethodd, F e b . 2 2 :
by somo years. H e was t a x collector tribute to the memory of a father, stiff
Kl.ll •
ridge are home for a short time
"«al|ed.the lighting ffamily^of the Granite
membered,
v
V I. \ S K
I I K S V -i
1." Jfarch, Blandartentrager,
Fahrback of F a n n i n g t o n i n 1 8 8 2 . H e made whose loving care, tender and sweet as
3 . Overton. UcculonaU
Grncn-wald many a n d pleasant friendships, and a mother's has been over me every day
• if! 1.
Andrew and Htley Swinerton w i n
in a n d
• -• r i l n i l i n
Levy
S s o n s p^ tbe^^mefftt^er,and'tbother who S. Solo lor Cornet, rottntf" America,
' 11, .1 , i .
•
.lllU-r
The latter will prcbabl. "IV 1 It -• tl
—A few Chins seal muffs at 3,*&gt; cents borne Sunday
* . Mr. JoanEood.
everybody w h o k n e w him liked him of my life.
\ I'
j i w i e r e i h ^ i | w &gt; ' ^ a m p 8 h i f e o l ^ ^ a s s a c b n - i. Concert BcholtlKho/Naocy Jlank*.0, Sole lor Violin; Bonamfenlsl *
Verdi because of h i s genial and hearty m a n Patient and foregiving, faithful and each, as long as tbey last, at T H E come home in t i e spnng to r r m a i t
I j e e t t i regtm"eriS'%durag.the^ari"f F o u r
through the summer
Mr, JTV A. Coebran.
I I- W i s
ner. H i s age w a s 7 6 years.
t r u e , the memory of him, which will be F A I R .
&lt;L, Diversion Galop.
-refMs'-brotbersSwerVeW
t i n I iiMn
Mr Will Harriman has been confined
—Always send your rebate card when
with me while life lasts, is sweet and
) — F r e d Varney undertook to t a k e a
ordering goods by mail from T H E to the house by a cold
Mrs II left II i l l •
precious.
CniPSV CONTniBDTION.
at a f i
tl
n l i ' ti I v
rideivyith^Andrew Robinson's* speedy
the infant son in bia care and hravel. a t i ' l a - • b o ­
During his illness, h i t resignation to F A I R , Rochester.
-••I - m i l in
horse,^Saturday. Coming down' Peavey
W h a t t h y h a n d flndetb to d o , that d o the will of God was complete and we
drove to town for grain one of thi cold
il rf,„ ,..
•f I I . .
n
-~TM f '
office's cbpy}'of.the .New. Yorkr.Herald HUlJtheihorse.ran away, a n d though with t h y might* T h i s may b e good ad­ know t h e language of his heart was—
Ir—
days.
8TRAFFORD CORNER.
"&lt;)fApril'lS, 486J, -Vfhfcb has. pepoiiar [Mr, yarrieyj'escape'd -without accident, vice i n many cases,bat4Khen sawing wood " T h y will, not mine, be done."
F .1 ' IIKNr 1
Mrs. M D Goodell has been .iMtintt
"
W P . Stanton is confined to the
&gt; v1ntef«^m*,view/"ofi the_ general' interest t h f whippleViree^roas har and dasher, we aro n o t In Jt.
VJT"" lil . I ' r u g g i . i
Jesus I m y cross have taken,
her daughter tbis week
Harmony l o d g e . K of P . , held an en.•^exercised'AS L i n c o l n ' s ' birthdayH'flt were kicked Tnto;&lt;¥indling 'woo'dj and" thnsinstlo meeting Tuesday evening.. The
house with rheumatism.
All to leave and follow thee ;
Mrs Minnie Johnson F.llia of Knchet
the
^ i n t a b t s t h e announcement of the' as'-, a'ntm'al^r^hlberanningyet^ut from two Freds w e r e Instructed In t h e mys­
Jacob Berry of Lewis ton, Me , has
Naked, poor, despised, forsaken.
ter, was in town to attend the funeral
sassin\tlon?J"of• ^President Lincoln a n a thefactytbat'itgot a i h i h d j - j c g , o y e r a teries of the rank of- esquire t o their en­
T h o u from hence my all shall be.
been visiting relatives i n this place for
of Mrs. Lizzie Ntite
shift." /The''horsejva»'n'b£ injure^.* r v , t i r e satisfaction.
Perish every fond ambition,
the past t w o weeks.
^ Tha meeting of t h o U . 0 . P . F . last
All I've sought or hoped t o know,
Charles Downing's little g i r l , t'lnra
—ATjAttjrjfK gentlemen-|have? passed, Monday evening w a s well, attended. One
Yet how n o b i s my condition,
Crown Point Grange conferred the
has been quite ill
a few dayi'at^Url; Garlsnd's cottsge'.^t application yns received and m u c h Inter­
God and Heaven are stUl my own.
first and second degrees o n five candi­
Lobn Corej'the^pw-'weflkV TheyJw.ere est w a s manifest l o r t h e good ol t h e - o r ­
v.
dates a t its regular meeting Tuesday
T R A D E MOTES.
beside p r . - r ^ a j r j i h d ; .thejhoM,~'Ffliolt derj" and a determined effort will be made
evening.
'Cppp/rF;; C, .Hajr.eVi'rDen'ni^ Rmg,,*-!)^ to.lncrcase its -.membership.
jrfthents' -;6f~ G r a n t
• Honooriy L o d g e ; JKV of p . , ore to_glvo
The cold snap of last week was t h e — B u y your spring dress good* at
^altbgeth'ea;SKe-;^rsUe i«.*one of' thrtiling Keay'.-and Jo^:.;Sh'aw;.''the;- iatter'i Jtwo an'enteTtalhmenc/andifsupper n e x t Tues­
first of t h e season, a n d the severest T H E F A I R , Much lower prices than
frbro'-EMt Roches tor,, stoppipg :biit one day evening; t o "which tho Sisterhood are
known in tbis section for several years at any other store.
, - &gt; — E d w a r d - O ' C o n n o r cajne ^ t o . t h ' e a a y ^ T B e ^ a t r i n g ^ o t - flsht.nnmbered cordially Invited.^'•A good time is sure to
M a t ' - o m l m a n * | e | | r » i r m « " ftn-l w&lt;&gt;inrn U&gt;M
Ihe Barnstead^and Rochester stage was
hair which
about.755ia^waiters. Mr.^FredAiken follOW. &gt;.«,'ii." — T h e F A B M I R O T O N N E W S and Re­ lui»u flufler*v] PITIH uum*f (rminp tr.»m r h r n m a
'Jti^^
&gt;t-Str«ffor^HoaWyrom^
fi*m
If T T J « r r • &gt; * t i w . t i i ' d ao«I &lt;!Muiital&gt;-1,
TT
unable to mako its daily trips Tuesday view of Reviews 93, for one year
've^fcpurtebnsly^;off«ed them the "nae ot, i-1We bear m a n y , complaints from t h e
has become thin,
hn»r ••-boa An l p a i n * , it r « * a r v 1 r-urvn t&gt;* -n
and Wednesday, hence the non-appear­
vtgnratinjr UM&gt; w h o l e Mmtcro (iurift.ii (tto l&gt;l.n&gt;l
;his''fis|i hoase^antfihei/ sport' on"\tl5" cold .weather:of l a s t week.'^Frozen feet,
—SO pieces new jet trimmings just i m p r o T o * •!lfe*ung r«*u&gt;rra »raich *ui&lt;l mrrng".'
and Jceep the scalp
&lt;^biMre^noon4w
ance of o u r communication.
icfliWas rend^ired^all the .more 'pleasant. frozen ears o r nosesVSwhlle w a t e r pipes
received at T H E F A I R .
and s i n
ui
ot
clean and healthy,-UBO
j j ' ^ ^ ^ n j i p ^ r ' U n d e j r ^ j h o s e l o n v i t h e general k ; s p ob u s ;tsh^en d exception,t tn p b e
Olive Branch Lodge, I. 0 . 0 . T b a s
rule,
t
man "who g o
In
D r . Glidden's Rheumatic Pure ..ill S. A. HOWARD, Solo Proprietor,
jjfg .slea^tWit.C^ent'pm t the bridge; trie "morning and', h a d ; tt&gt;- heat ..water to
elected for the ensuing quarter tbe fol­
&amp; r , f 6 \ w a ^ e d W a &gt; l a t e r y : tram: and ino,
36y 1
New H a m p t o n N. H
.and tf"Jtew"iimted g u e s t s , by Mr. C - "El t h a v r o u t . t h e e t o v e p l p e , before h e could
lowing officers: C . T . , Annio Fclkcr , cure yon.
• r c H i ^ - b f f i ^ ' &amp; o r g t t ^ i i u e b t C They.
—Absolutely free—Elegant solid oak
buUd theffrft t a k e s t h e biscuit. Whew,
T . , Nellie F.\£teruton , Secretary,
t ^ * K o t Rile a.i K. m BT* 6I i'»
\«
^bbth,'w,ent;fo-Doye'r; a n d found ^O'Connor
ginger! wasn't It cold, though.
Myron Varney; financial secretary, A b - . furniture given away as a premium at I&gt;rug Store
•*&gt; 1)
informsl
^'OTjthejBostorr t'rairi &lt;ibVnnd^dr::HaveY4 W M , a ^ ' e ^ v p l e " a s a n t ' , y ^ o ^
bie E . Scxulon; Treas., John M . F e l - T H E F A I R .
5000 'yds-, a p r o n vcheck ginghams
afi'airS-l).andngTfwas*|en^
"the
k e r : C h a p . , Millie B . Scruton; M . .
for; this, sale only 4 c p e r yard, a t T H K
L o t of excellent snapping corn at J. E
BUCHXKK*S
A«IMCA RAI VB.
It^.prevent8|the hair
George H a r s h ; Guard, Harry H o w ­ F e m a l d ' s .
^enJarnisEirjg,''^
The best Salve in\Ur ui»rM f'»r nil*.
- from faffing out''
a r d ; Sen.; Hervey A . Scruton; 8 . J r
— O n e lot white bed spreads, large
Mtinglis;promp£ef;^Befonr^
^ T 3 e . D a r t m o u t h j ? c a ' t a l p g u e shows ihe'
.
. . . IBMJjttltilUjvjL,
.
T., Mary B . Berry; P. C. T . H e n r y size a n d handsome patterns, sold else. ' bruUes, Bores, utrrn" anil rheum fever
or^turnin^groy.
sores, tetter, chapped hands, chilblains,
y h o l e n u m b ^ o f s t u ^ n t s tq\bo 5 0 9 , a n
FeQcer; L . D „ F r a n k , E . Scruton.
where for 75c. 8pecial price a t T H E coraa and nil »kin prupvlons ami poaiUvr.ih£feise^6£ffc^ver l M t £ e a r &amp; J T h e y a r e L ^ T h e b e s t /
' TJ-^Being'unable,/Jo^pajf'^flnCl "•^•erirX
F A I R only 49 cents each.
ly cures pile- or no pay required
It 1«
A T e r y pleasant social ovent occurred
divided 'as follows: Dartm'outh''college, &lt;
1
Is guarnntrM to c^vo perfect flatI«farU«&gt;n
at the home of Mr. a n d Mrs. Alonzo
8 5 9 ; l M e r i i c a l callege, iS6;
Thayer
D r . Glidden's Rheumatic Core will or mnne\ refunnVU Price *2. c*»nts per
g^when-hVleft^P'anrun^^
&gt;
Cater Monday evening, Feb. 4, " t o o b - cure you.
box For «ale bv Hubert* A I'cftwj,
36j 1
T'-iiiir^—it-'f^tw-rt-; -l.Vt.r- C - i L j
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In order to convert the whole stock into
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served, everything must be clos­
ed out. Cost of goods not
Could Not See to Read
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                    <text>II

I/'

WHERE THERE IS HO KNOWLEDGE Of GOV THE PEOPLE RUH WILD
Living Proverbs trans

to

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be

75 L
ft; r

Car demolishes
diner in crash;
Driver is injured

2 ^ 1H

OneoHhe

I

ft

In a spectacular one c a r a c ­
c i d e n t , the Star Diner in F a r m ­
lngton w a s put out o f b u s i n e s s
In one f e l l swoop. At 1 30 In
the m o r n i n g , Thursday, May 2 2 ,
a car
driven by Michael f.
KeUev o f Bridge S t , Union,
failed to negotiate a c u r v e on
South Main S t . and went through
the d i n e r , taking out the w a l l s ,
so that the roof fell b a c k to
c o v e r the d e b r i s . It took with
it r e s t a u r a n t equipment, f o o d ,
vending machines, and e v e r y ­
thing e l s e that was in the way.

WON'
FARMINGTON, NEW HAMPSHIRE

V O L . 10, N O . 3 4

speaks for ROTC

a

W A K E F I E L D ~ At M e m o r i a l
s e r v i c e s held In Union
g e , State Senator George
GUman o f Farmlngton pledged
his a l l - o u t support tor contin­
uing r e s e r v e o f f i c e r s training
at the State University. He salt!
" A s y o u r state senator and as a
trustee o f U N H I shall d o e v e r y ­
thing l o a n to be s u r e this vital
p r o g r a m Is p r o p e r l y supported
and fully maintained."
" I can
do n o l e s s f o r those we honor
t o d a y . " he said.
He r e f e r r e d to training he r e ­
c e i v e d at UNH as Infantry Of­
f i c e r In the ROTC p r o g r a m af­
ter submarine s e v i c e In the
P a c i f i c during World Warr U,
and said ROTC Officer grad­
uates with whom he s e r v e d In
both b r a n c h e s w e r e a m o n g the
m o s t able and dedicated In the
armed
forces.
" W e could
never have, and c o u l d not now
maintain our A r m y , Navy and
Air
Force
at
necessary

It w a s a fantastic sight b e f o r e
it w a s cleaned up. S p e c t a t o r s
said It looked like a gas e x ­
p l o s i o n , the wav things w e r e
s c a t t e r e d . A r e f r i g e r a t o r was
thrown with such force that It
struck the bouse on the other
side o f the lot next to the d i n e r .
One s e c t i o n of wall was c a r r i e d
by the c a r , and remained stand­
ing in front of it as It c a m e
to r e s t In the bushes.

strength If the ROTC program
was cut back or discontinued
and I don't Intend to s e e this
h a p p e n . " Gilman said.
Senator
Glltnan
had high
p r a i s e f o r Maj. Gen. M e m n
Z a l s , a UNH ROTC graduate
now s e r v i n g In Vietnam who
c o m m e n d e d troops Involved In
the r e c e n t battle o f " H a m ­
b u r g e r H i l l " and who has been
c r i t i c i z e d by Sen. Kennedy and
o t h e r s f o r his part In this a c ­
tion. " I share the g r i e f of all
New Hampshire for the more
than 150 men of our state who
have l o s t their lives In this t e r ­
r i b l e war In Vietnam" he said.
" B u t I know for s u r e that we
c o u l d not have held our p o s i ­
tion In Southeast Asia and that
o u r casualties would have been
far g r e a t e r if It w e r e not tor
the c o u r a g e , ability and dedi­
c a t i o n o f ROTC men like Gen.

The c a r went off the left side
of
the
s t r e e t and
passed
b e t w e e n a utility p o l e and the
guy w i r e s holding It. s t r i k i n g
file c o r n e r of the building, and
leaving a much b i g g e r hole

Cadettes go to Nubble

(Continued on paQe 81

Arnold receives
Purple Heart

PFC Gaorfia Arnold

YMCA
campers will
visit Germany
Recognizing
that Interna­
tional understanding can only
o c c u r through f a c e to f a c e r e ­
lationships with Individuals in
other c o u n t r i e s the State YMCA
of New Hampshire Is s p o n s o r ­
ing an International camping
p r o g r a m f o r b o y s this s u m m e r
in G e r m a n y .
The purpose of the p r o g r a m
Is to g i v e the b o y s an oppor-i
tunlty to attend c a m p with G e r ­
man c a m p e r s at Camp Koghelsmar
on the
Baltic Sea.
Following their camping e x ­
p e r i e n c e they will stay In pri­
vate h o m e s for s i x days and
will c o m p l e t e their forty day
trip b y visiting Berlin, Cologne
and A m s t e r d a m .
The group of ten b o y s , ages
13 to 16. will t r a v e l under the
l e a d e r s h i p o f Mr. Cliff Cutler
of Trinity College, an e x p e r ­
i e n c e d c o u n s e l o r at State YMCA
Camp Conlston. The c o s t of the
(Continued on page 8)

P F C George Arnold, son of
M r . and M r s . George Arnold, of
Tapan St., was wounded i n a c ­
tion In v l e t Nam on May 12,
1969.
He Is serving with an
A r t i l l e r y outfit In support of the
Infantry. While surrounded by
e n e m y t r o o p s , Ms group took a
hit, which killed one man and
wounded ten others. George
suffered shrapnel wounds lnihe
left a r m and shoulder, and has
b e e n treated for n e r v e Injury
In U s left hand. He Is being
t r a n s f e r r e d to a Hospital which
Is equipped for m o r e extended
t r e a t m e n t s U s Injuries.
" " A r n o l d " * * * * presented with
the P u r p l e Heart o n May 14,
and h a s mailed It h o m e to his
p a r e n t s f o r safe keeping. Mall
would b e welcome to him, and
anyone wishing to write Is urged
to d o s o . Address follows

T h i s c a r ran through the Star Diner last w e e k , carrying with it a s e c t i o n ol w a i l , and equipment from the building.
(Photo b&gt; Perkins)

Memorial

Day exercises-1969

101st A n n i v e r s a r y
co".

CLARENCE

L.

'

Meronal

e'eci

D&lt;i&gt;

by

PERKINS P O S T N o .

60,

AMERICAN

Eight
The 15th annual F.FLS. Alum­
ni
Association banquet and
m e e t i n g will be held Saturday,
June 14, at 6 p.m. at the Burt,
man-Rondeau auditorium.
The menu will be pot roast
dinner, catered by Simpson's
o f D o v e r . Reservations must
be made before June 11, and the
A s s o c i a t i o n would like them to
be in as s o o n as p o s s i b l e . R e s ­
e r v a t i o n s phoned or mailed In
can be picked up at the door.
You do not have to be a grad­
uate of F . H ^ . to be w e l c o m e
to the party, but since the price
of printing and postage Is p r o ­
hibitive, everyone will not r e ­
c e i v e an Invitation, so anyone
Interested should pass the word
(Continued on page 8'

O ' c u o

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WE N E E D
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IS G O I N G
IN T H E H O L E
Northwood, New H a m p i n i r t

942-5581
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Fire call

0 1 8

LEGION

F A R M I N G T O N , NT. &lt; H A M P S H I R E
V

Alumni Banquet

g

Slow down
and live!

1969

tlxcrnses

P F C George Arnold Jr., US
51968377 - 1st tot M v . , Btry
A - 8/6 Arty - Hospital Mall
S e c t i o n , A.P.O. San F r a n c i s c o ,
Calif. 96381.

Boston &amp; Maine Engine No. 1220 was delayed . , „ . .
by flreflghdng equipment, after a fire started

where It c a m e out than It did
where It went in.
P o l i c e and
firemen
were
c a l l e d to the s c e n e , and Kelly
was taken to F r i s b i e M e m o r i a l
Hospital In R o c h e s t e r , where
be was treated tor c u t s and
b r u i s e s and profuse b l e e d i n g .
He remained t h e r e for s e v e r a l
d a y s . T h e r e w e r e no o t h e r o c ­
cupants In the c a r , and l u c k i l y ,
due to the late hour, the diner
was vacant at the time.
Klld and Nick M o r r i s , o w n ­
e r s of the d i n e r , were stunned
b y the o c c u r r e n c e , and d o not
know yet whether they will try
to rebuild, o r start another
b u s i n e s s at another l o c a t i o n .
Local police are contemplat­
ing
action
against
Kelly,
probably on a c h a r g e of w r e c k l e s s driving.
P r i o r to the a c c i d e n t , Kelly
was stopped b y Officer Fitch
near Len &amp; F r a n ' s on South
Main S t , and Fitch gave him a
ticket for speeding. At that
t i m e , a c c o r d i n g to Fitch, Kelly
was polite and pleasant, and
did not s e e m to be upset at
being stopped. He even o f f e r e d
• Continued on page 81

(Photo by Perkins)

*'

THANK YOU
We with to thank the Police Department Mrc
Department, T e d Perron, and othcra w h o h H p r d ut
t o salvage merchandise «fter tho accident at our
diner A l i o , t h a n k , to the 9 00 o ' c l o c k muffin prli
lor their thoughtfulneu.

On Monday, May 26, Box No
24, l o c a t e d at the c o r n e r of
High and Maple Streets snundeT
at 10 55. B turned n u t f - be a
false a l a r m , apparently rung In
by children In the neighborhood.
At 1 -45 the same l a y , B r i *
&gt;
was rung In from the station
and this t i m e It was the real
thing. A A r e had started along
the r a i l r o a d track, where It
c r o s s e s the Meeting House Hill
Road, near the gas plant. The
train had Just passed by b e ­
f o r e the A r e was d i s c o v e r e d
by an e m p l o y e e ot the Rural
Gas C o . Only a s m a l l a r e a
was burned o v e r and two f i r e ­
men, a s s i s t e d by a passing
m o t o r i s t , soon got It under
controL
At
nearly
the s a m e time
Tuesday, Box 5 was rung In
iContinueO o " Dage 8i

DiPrizio takes
part in Army
title matches
Army
Reserve
Second
IJeutenant P r l s c o C. n P r l i l o ,
27, son of M r . and Mrs. C o n standlno r U P r l i i o
of I W O I L
N. H. participated In the 1969
First I . S. A r m y C o m m a n d e r ' s
Rifle and P i s t o l Championship
Matches at Fort G e o r g e C.
M e a d e . Md., April 1 2 - 1 9 .
Contestants f r o m all of the
Armed
Forces
and s e v e r a l
civilian marksmanship
groups
In the F i r s t A r m y a r e a fired
In the w e e k - l o n g c o m p e t i t i o n
that Included matches with the
.22 and .45 c a l i b e r pistol, the
M-14 and M - l r i f l e s .
T e a m c h a m p i o n s h i p s went to
the L . S . Military A c a d e m y c a d e t
'Continued on page 8

SI NSKT MVTTRKSS
FACTORY
OSSIPEE

N H

-FVaKinq Them Since 1 9 2 9 "

539-62&amp;6

AT F A C T O R Y PRICES
O O D &amp; REG. SIZES
• Crib M a t t r e n e t

* Mattreiiai

* Feather Pillowi

• Box Sprlngi
* Hollywood Framei
• Bed Spread*
Ooied * n v l 6 v " \- -fitooi ^ • i c o ^ o Si.**
Direction
v e ' d i oeti ict 78 &amp; ' 1 t o ^ n ' o A o tr&gt;o'0

by IRENE PERKINS
At 4 P . m . . a bus left the
home
of
Merton
Tufts and
r u m b l e d Its way toward the
M e a d e r b o r o Road. S contained
15 Cadette Girl Scouts and a
huge l o a d of sleeping b a g s and
c l o t h i n g . B was Friday, the 23rd
of May. They sang their way
c l e a r up to Nubble Pond Camp.
T h e r e , they had to wait until
about 9 p . m . to get tents and a
good f i r e going.
Also
with the Farmlngton
g i r l s w e r e T r o o p 406 f r o m East
R o c h e s t e r , and T r o o p s 557 and
651 f r o m Rochester.
The highlights of this t h r e e -

Another M e m o r i a l Day t h r e e day h o l i d a y weekend ts h e r e !
Fred U Johnson, Director o f
Motor V e h i c l e s s u g g e s t s e v e r y
driver plan ahead. Good plan­
ning r e d u c e s temptation
to
hurry and this means less h a z ­
a r d s and f e w e r a c c i d e n t s .
M o t o r i s t s should r e m e m b e r
the p u r p o s e o f M e m o r i a l Day
and m a k e It their business to
Slow Down and L i v e . He noted
that m a n y p e o p l e will b e t r a v e l ­
ling to and f r o m c e m e t e r i e s
and t h e i r t r i p s o f r e v e r e n c e
should not b e m a r r e d by a traf­
fic a c c i d e n t .
Take t i m e to check over your
c a r b e f o r e your holiday t r i p .
R e p a i r , r e p l a c e o r discard that
faulty
equipment.
Now Is the
time to r e c o g n i z e dangerous
equipment and hurried habits.
Plan ahead - take time today
and l i v e
t o m o r r o w Correct
c o n d i t i o n s that cause a c c i d e n t s .
D i r e c t o r Johnson alsr a s k s
p r o t e c t i o n and pity for the p o o r
pedestrian.
Holidays Increase
p e d e s t r i a n traffic a s well as v e ­
hicular t r a f f i c . Our Pedestrian
fatality r a t e Is an Indictment of
the s e l f i s h attitude displayed b-v
many
d r i v e r s . We are aware
that p e d e s t r i a n s often Invite
d i s a s t e r by their n w n c a r e l e s s
behavior.
Holiday traffic l o e s nM e x ­
cuse d r i v e r s f r o m blame Driv­
e r s c o n t e s t i n g the right of wav
w i t h p e d e s t r i a n s Is hardlv fair
play.
P l e a s e pity the poor p e ­
d e s t r i a n . Stop at c r o s s w a l k s .
Stav behind the line until ttie
s i g n a l s c h a n g e - Don't Jump the
light - g i v e the walker a break.

&amp;

NICK

Sixteen
House
members,
most f r o m New England, a r e
stepping
up efforts
to c u r b
f o r e i g n s h o e Imports they say
a r e r e s p o n s i b l e tor p r o d u c t i o n
cutbacks
In their
reelons.
Signatures
of fellow
House
m e m b e r s a r e being sought on
a petition to be p r e s e n t e d
to
P r e s i d e n t Nixon urging Urn to
negotiate voluntary quota a r ­
r a n g e m e n t s with the principal
nations exporting footwear to
the I'.S. Rep. James A. Burke,
T V M a s s . , chaired a s t r a t e g y
s e s s i o n recently.

R E A C T notes
May 21 " p.m. Injured b o v
taken to Rochester Hospital for
x - r a y s and returned h o m e .
May 23 6 35 a.m_ Jack L a u denbach (KBY 0984) a s s i s t e d a
M a s s . motorist out of gas on
Route 1 1 .
May 23 11 p.m. Three m e m ­
b e r s a s s i s t e d at the s c e n e of an
accident at the c o r n e r of Silver
St. and Waldron Rd. A track
had left the road and c a m e tr
rest on top of a stone wall.
r

( o"*» »„er'

i

"o*t

n

0

o " ' O u t * 28

30C . e ' O i p
u

(

d."

-oaa

Police Chief
Nicola named
chairman
MTDDLETON
P o l i c e Chief
Harold N i c o l a has b e e n named
chairman of the Middle ton High­
way
Safety
C o m m i t t e e which
was o r g a n i z e d Thursday n i g h t
Meeting at N i c o l a ' s h o m e ,
the group beard John S. G r o v e s ,
field r e p r e s e n t a t i v e for the N. H.
Highway Safety Agency, outlined
the Federal standards which
have been established f o r the
guidance of states and l o c a l
communities.
The c o m m i t t e e was e s p e c i ­
ally Interested In the standards
on driver education, c o d e s and
l a w s , traffic c o u r t s , high a c ­
cident
locations,
and p o l i c e
traffic s e r v i c e s . The town Is
already
participating
In the
State Police c o m m u n i t y radio
program.
Besides Nicola and G r o v e s ,
those attending the meeting In­
cluded Selectman H y d e Tufts,
N P Ferine a member i f the
police iepartment, and John
11 P r l i l r

ciage 8

Operation
Target faces
4th summer
fjperatlon T a r g e t , a p r o g r a m
through which p e r s o n s In New
Hampshire
Invite Individual
children of all r a c e s and d e ­
n o m i n a t i o n s from the RrxburyD o r c h e s t e r a r e a of Massachu­
setts
Intr their
h o m e s , will
agalr b e held this s u m m e r a c cording
to announcement r e ­
c e i v e d today from Frank R.
G r o s s , Executive Secretary of
the New Hampshire Council of
C h u r c h e s . This visitation p r o ­
g r a m I s s p o n s o r e d Jointly b y
the New Hampshire
Council
Continued on peyeJJ

^ f a m i l i a r sight arounr rrw~ these da s Is 'r--,ie n u m e r ,
selling Pudrv P o p p l e s . P e l ' o g i n g t. M l i h n M * A X „ a-V frr
S e n e a r 1 eglor Aux., she 8 ' I d f r &gt; it &gt;rga Uat
&gt;
s a - s
s h t w r h e r e passing a popp\ tr .itt,? I 111 L X r", s^- t 1 I.
1 crri, of (. entral Street.
I'r t
• erk.L-3

PUBLIC AUCTION
S A T U R D A Y . JUNE 7 . 1 9 6 9

10 0 0 A M

The T o w n of Farmlngton w i l l tell the f o l l o w i n g property acquired bv tax p r o c e e d
ings at public auction to t h e highest bidder on each separate parcel on Saturday June 7
1 9 6 9 at 1 0 - 0 0 A M at t h e Selectmen t Office in the Farmlngton Town Hall A l l this
p r o p e r t y it in Farmington and it listed at f o l l o w r
a 1 6 0 x 7 5 f o o t house lot Chestnut Hill Road
b 17 square rods land and building off Central Street
c House lot south tide Watson Corner Roar
d L a n d , M t Pleasant Street
a Building o n l y . Spring Street
f One-half Interest in one acre land off N o r t h Warn Street
Terms: 1 0 % d o w n balance In thirty days
All sales final
All tales by q u i t c l a i m deed
O ' 'j^thar loformatior' " a u "t er
Se&lt;er'~«- • '«
1

C

Bv

u

1

The g i r l s f r o m R o c h e s t e r left
early Sunday morning, the g i r l s
f r o m East R o c h e s t e r left in the
afternoon.
And last, and a l s o
greatest.
T r o o p 787
from
Farmlngton left at 5 p . m . to at­
tend a Mass at the Church o f St.
M a r y ' s In R o c h e s t e r .
And the bus rumbled b a c k to
the home of Merton Tufts at
7 30 p . m . on Sunday e v e n i n g .

Seek to curb
shoe imports

T

KIKI

day camping t r i p were a Satur­
day morning t r i p up to the s u m ­
mit o f Nubble Mountain, and a
Sunday m o r n i n g bike up to the
summit
of Mount H u s s e y . A
s m a l l s e r v i c e was held on Mount
Hussey.

P

« . D ' d e ' * o v v o " cwrurygtof

PMI.O
r

"•'-&gt;••.

C e&gt;gEeto"
john Pearson

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                    <text>The

Farmlngtofa^'aws, May 28. 1059

REACT

CAR CRASHES
IN DINER

(Contlnutd from pagi 11
There were'no Injuries.
(Contlnutd from pagt 1)
May SSi t a m , Jim K i n g s ­
Fitch a cigarette when ha found bury ( K O A 2410) assisted
a
ha was out. Whan Kelly started Maine motorist who had an
up, ha took off at such a speed overheated motor. Jim called
that Officer Fitch decided to Rochester R E A C T and water
take after M m again, but when was brought to the scene. This
tha cruiser got up to a speed took
place
lust
outside
of 70 miles an hour, Fitch Rochester on the Spauldlng
decided that it was not worth
the risk of chasing him, and
May 25:7:30 p.m. Our r e g u ­
slowed to a reasonable speed. lar
monthly meeting with 16
As tha Kelly car came Into members present. We w e r e I n ­
town at U g h spaed, he barely formed our new uniforms w e r e
missed hitting a truck driven ready to be picked up. The signs
by Frank TwltohaU of Mew D u r ­ we ordered to be placed on Route
ham,
and seconds
later, 11 were delivered. We voted
slammed into the diner.
to buy a filing cabinet. We voted
to buy a box of flares to b e
used in case of highway b r e a k ­
downs, accidents, e t c We voted
In a new member. (Wlnfred
Sargent) K B Z 8394. We set up
itrola for the busy highways
U.S. AIR FORCES, Thailandr Memorial Day. We w e r e
Airman First Class Donald P . out Monday, May 26, M a y 29,
Stinson, son of M r . and M r s . afternoon
and evening. Also
A . D . Stinson of Alton, N . H . , June 1, afternoon and evening.
Is on duty at Udorn Royal Thai Next meeting June 29, 8 p.nu
At the Town Ball.
A F B , Thailand.
May 25: 6:30 p.nu Walt P a t ­
Airman Stinson, a security
ten (KMA 1988)asslsted a M a s s .
policeman, Is assigned to a
motorist with an overheated
unit of the Pacific A i r F o r c e s . motor in Sanbornton, N . H , , Rt.
Before his arrival In Thailand, 93.
he served at Beale A F B , Calif.
May 26: 5 p.m, Farmington
The airman is a 1968 graduate R E A C T rushed a teenage m y
who had cut U s finger almost
(Photo by Perkins) of Alton High School.
off on an outboard motor, f r o m

AFC Stinson
in Thailand

The

Kelly car went between the utility pole and the guy wire.

ertha Pellefier
is honored
by Governor
Walter Peterson, Governor
of New Hampshire, recently awarded Presidential Certifi­
cates of Appreciation to un­
compensated personnel of the
Selective Service System, for
their years of public service.
Among those recognized was
Bertha Y . Felletier, who has
served on Local Board No. 9,
Strafford County, for 10 years.
Miss Pelletier m s been Town
Clerk for 10 years also.

before striking; the diner.

S

categories: dry woodlands, wet
woodlands and marshes, and
open roadsides.
Some of the flowers are ex­
tra-specialized. The early sax­
ifrage, for instance, Is a tiny
quarter-Inch white flower that
Is grouped with the dry wood­
lands flowers. It grows, how­
e v e r , In one place; the crevices
of large stones. Polk tales c r e d ­
it the saxifrage with splitting
stones.
That's where It got
Its Latin name meaning "stone
breaker."

The April list)
Dry
woodlands - hepatlca;
common violet; downy yellow
violet; bellwort; wood anemone;
Dutchman's breeches; bloodroot and red trllHiim.
Wet woodlands, marshes skunk cabbage; marsh m a r i ­
gold; white violet and spring
by Wayne Hanley
beauty.
Open roadsides (meadows) This tiny pale blue
If spring marched steadily bluets.
grass
northward through New Eng­ flower grows In die
be
land like a giant unrolling a along roadsides and can
green carpet, you could throw picked without harm.
away your calendar and mark
the days by the unfolding of wildflowers.
by Polly Bradley
but spring oozes northward

and spreads Inland, trickling
around hill bases and sliding
up valleys. It slithers around
obstructions
like the runoff
from melting snow on a brick
sidewalk.
That's why any list of wildflowers that will bloom in April
In New England must be vague
In naming the week In which to
expect blossoms. It would r e ­
quire an individual forecast for
every pocket and valley - and
each hill top. Because spring
travels uphill even more slowly
than It rolls northward.
The
coast line complicates
the timing of New England's
spring.
Spring creeps early
down the coast. Later It surges
Inland
much faster than It
speeds northward and overtakes
the coast line's ocean-temper­
ed season.
To me It's spring when the
trailing arbutus, ormayflower,
blooms.
But the mayflower
blooms tardily In the spring
floral procession. In much of
New England, it will be May b e ­
fore the sweet scent of arbutus
seeps up from the leaf-matted
woods floor. But It's something
to look for In late A p r i l .
Any hunt for early wildflowers will prove more profit­
able In a woods In A p r i l . The
woodland flowers bloom early,
reaching for the sun before tree
leaves plunge them Into a sum­
mer of shade. When you And
them, leave them alone. A l ­
most every well-known Aprilblooming flower needs protec­
tion.
To help guide you to possible
locations for April flowers, the
list has been divided into three

The American public has been
shocked at the news mat the
coho salmon with which Lake
Michigan has been stocked are
so full of D D T that they are
unfit for human consumption.
Will this shock us Into an
all-out
effort to solve the
dilemma of the need of a g r i ­
culture for Insect control and
the need of humanity for an unpolsoned world?
Lake Michigan was stocked
with coho salmon from the West
Coast starting three years ago,
because the native lake trout had
been almost destroyed by sea
lampreys which Invaded after
the St. Lawrence Seaway was
opened.
in April, the Food and Drug
Administration seized the first
shipment
of
commercially
caught coho salmon because It
contained 13 to 19 parts per
million of D D T .
(The tolerance
level officially set for meat Is
7 parts of DDT permllllon. The
tolerance for milk Is 0.05 parts
per million.) No official level
existed for fish, but Robert H .
Finch, Secretary of Health,
Education, and Welfare, quickly
set a level of 5 parts per million
DDT for fish, and ordered a sixmonth study of the problem.
Why so much DDT In the coho
salmort? T h e states around
Lake
Michigan have
used
millions of tons of DDT
in
agriculture for the past twenty
y e a r s , and it has washed down
into the lake In great quantities.
Every creature living in Lake
M ichlgan has DDT In Its tissues.
The coho salmon, a large sport
fish growing up to 25 to 30

K

K o u m M Mem. thru Trl.
I-4J30 Sat.

V
- *

pounds, eats quantities of other
fish.
The salmon accmulates
in its tissues D D T from all the
fish lt eats.
Clearly If a lake as large as
L a k e Michigan can be con­
taminated by pesticides,
the
ocean Is not safe from danger.
Millions of tons of poisons a r e
being washed into the ocean
continually. The plankton of the
ocean. , .the basis of the food
chain of ocean creatures, and
producers of oxygen for our
a t m o s p h e r e — are extremely
sensitive to DDT In small con­
centrations.
Shrimp can be
killed by a concentration of
0.6
to 6 parts per B I L L I O N
of D D T In the water.
But what about agriculture If
you ban the use of pesticides?
We have to feed the nation, and
we
can't
sit
by
without
conscience while Btafra Is r e ­
peated a hundred times. What
will w e do?
T h i s is no time for the f a r m e r
and
conservationist to battle
about non-essentials. It's time
for everyone to support a w h o l e ­
hearted attack on the total en­
vironmental problem, so that
the human race can survive.
Since World W a r II the United
States has been able to spend
massive
amounts of money,
time,
and effort
on three
projects: highways, defense,
and going to the moon. N o w Is
the time for a similar effort to
solve thepesticlde-verus-agriculture pollutlon-versus-proAuction dilemma.
T h i s Is not a problem which
will be solved by one-sided
thinking, but only by an attack

time, steel exports a r e seen
p r o b a b l y h i t t i n g the f a s t e s t
pace In any y e a r since 1964.
w h e n 3 7 million net
tons
moved out of the country, the
m a g a z i n e noted
Steel imports could d r o p to
16 million net tons this y e a r
s a y s one m a j o r steelmaker
Some producers are even talk
The United States Is the most
ing about imports this y e a r
serious polluter on earth. It
is our responsibility to protect
Steel imports are expected reaching only 14 million tons
mis small, wonderful, beautiful,
to rise steadily in the wake of
fragile earth at which
our
the longshoremen's strike set­
astronauts are gazing.
tlement, but U S steelmakers
think the 1969 intake will fall
short of the 1968 record 18
million net tons by possibly
20%. due to heavier use of
steel a b r o a d and v o l u n t a r y
curbs on exports to the U . S
European and Japanese
Prospects for decreased im­ by
ports and increased exportB of steel producers. A t the same
In depth.
I hope^Mr. Finch's study will
recommend a full-scale attack
on the Interrelated problems of
environmental
pollution—air,
water, and
land—and
that
America will turn her t r e ­
mendous scientific abilities to­
wards solving thege problems.

finished steel brighten the U . S .
steel industry's outlook f o r the
remainder of 1969. Steel mag­
azine reports
Steel i m p o r t s a r e d o w n
about 4 3 % from volume in
early 1968. largely because of
the dockworkers' strike Steel
exports have been r u n n i n g al­
most 26 7r above those early
last year

NORTHWOOD NARROWS. N.H.

ALUMNI
(Continued from page 11

to others.
The program will be provided
by Ace Gorham, a magician,
who will performfeatstoamaxe
and amuse.

YMCA CAMPERS
(Continued from page 1)

trip wni be comparable to a
resident camp s a y In New
Hampshire with plans calling
for ten boys to take part in the
international experience.
Additional Information may
be
obtained from the State
Y M C A office, Box 476, Con­
cord, N . H ,

GILMAN SPEAKS
(Continued from page 11

Zals."
Senator GUmari said he was
concerned at the gradual dis­
continuance of Memorial o b ­
servances in some communi­
ties and urged local officials
to support the activities of vet­
erans* groups to make sure
some proper service was held.
The Memorial Day services
were sponsored Jointly with the
town of Milton and V F W Posts
in both towns participated.
Morning Memorial Day s e r ­
vices were held
at the Union
Church
and the parade and
speaking program took place In
the afternoon ending with c e r e ­
monies of decorating Veterans'
graves.

BEGINNING

MAY 30TH
Fri., Sat., Sun. May 30th

®iyi]iL®=inr=if@iyiiBSiiLiF

OOQ

WITH SWB®P®aiJifl

and self cleaning oven, too!

m

DOVER, N.H.

JOHNSON'S
DAIRY BAR

This Is the same place the
well-known forest fire of 1047
started, which destroyed many
square miles of woodland, a s
well a s several homes in the
Chestnut BUI area. Older r e s i ­
dents win remember well the
days spent fighting this f i r e ,
and the expense to the tojra.
That fire was believed to have
been started by a passing train,

Steel Exports
On Uptrend as
Imports Decline

450 C E N T R A L A V E .

B U T T E R CRUNCH 1/2 G A L L O N
&amp;
.CARAMEL F U D G E
$1.00

jaw­

OPENING WEEKENDS

P-7 30" AUTOMATIC
HI-SPEED
FLAMELESS
ELECTRIC RANGE

IRENE
YORK
AGENCY

Holiday Magic Distributor

MAY
SPECIALS

FIRE C A L L
(Continued from page 1)
and it w a the s a m *
a
The train had Ju«t
ed,
when gas company e m ­
ployee*- notlced-imoktr a little
further down the track, T i n
fire department was called, and
due to the distance away from
the road, lt took a little longer
to get It under control. Fire-'
fighting equipment w s block­
a
ing the track when the train
returned
from its
trip to,
Davidson Rubber C o . , which
is at the end of the line. F i r e
Chief Robert Ridker requested
that the engine be checked for
possible fire hazard.

T h i s Is the shambles left by the Kelly c a r after going through the diner last Thursday.

107 SIGN SHOP

M No. Main S t , . . l
Concord. M. H. 03M1

Last
summer we bad the
happy situation of having more
host families in New R a m p ,
shire who desired children than
there w e r e children available.
There Is reasonable assurance
that a l l who apply may receive
a guest this summer.
Information and application
blanks for participation in O p ­
eration Target are available
from the New Hampshire Coun­
cil of Churches, P . O, Box 63,
Concord, N.H. 03301.

team in the rifle competition:
the New Jersey National Guard
shooters in .22 caliber pistol
matches, the team from the
host installation in .45 caliber
pistol bracket; and the 83rd
Army Reserve Command, Ft,
Hayes, Ohio, in the center-fire
pistol category.
The
cadet
sharpshooters
from West Point and the m a r k s ­
men from Fort Meade will a d ­
vance to the A , - A r m y matches
at F t Be ruling. G a . . in June,
as the First Army r e p r e s e n ­
tatives.
Lt, D l P r t i l o is regularly a s ­
signed with any Army Reserve
unit in Rochester, N . H,
He and his wife, Phyllis,
live
at
13
Hale
Street,
Rochester.

Truck Lettering — Show Card*
Signs Designed,
Built &amp; Erected
R T E . 107, G I L M A N T O N
TEL. 435-8027

HAIR FASHIONS

(Continued f r o m page 1)

of Churches Department of R a ­
cial and Cultural Relations and
Operation Exodus of Roxbury.
As Operation Target enters
its fourth year. It Is with the
anticipation thai more than 100
children can be placed In New
Hampshire homes for a period
of one or two weeks this s u m ­
mer. One of the distinctive f e a ­
tures of this program is that
the host family goes to Roxbury
to meet the family of the child
who w i l l be their guest. After
the week is over, they return
the child to his or her home.
Sponsors of the program feel
that this provides a significant
point of understanding and c o m ­
munication
between the two
communities.

DiPRIZIO

P h o n . ! 2244001

^yyjt. oCeide

OPERATION TARGET

(Continued from page 1)

Nature's ways

B a c k - Y a r d Frontier

Sunrise Lake to the Rochester
Hospital. Dave Smart provided
police escort. The finger was
sewed back on and saved b y
the good work of a doctor at
the bospitaL The boy was r e ­
turned to his home and his
father taken to the tales s o he
could take the family boat home
also.
May 30: 8 a.m. We plan to
take part In the Memorial Day
parade.

IN

FARMINGTON CALL

LEE

S U L L I V A N 755-2622

OR

D O V E R 742-6833,
OR
742-4648
MILTON . C o z y and
chirmlns 4 room houta
w/garsgt, nlct lot.
$11,400.

FARMINGTON -Lowly rtnovittwf oldar home, lirgt barn,
nlct plje* of land, naar ntw
..school......
$18,900.

Charles DiPrizio and Sons, Inc.
John DiPrizio, Manager

Lumber &amp; Bufldinf Materials
Wholesalers and ReUflon of
Softwood and Hardwood
Special Millwoik • Hardwire • Dupont Paints

T E L . 473-2314 O R 473-2206 A R E A CODE 603
K.F;D. 1
U N I O N , N.H.

Say "Goodbye forever" to oven cleaning drudgery
Your GE P - 7 electrically cleans every corner and
ridge at the turn of a switch. Your oven will always
be clean as the day you bought It with no effort on
your parti
In H ttxtir 1 r w laul futlh
fur bvtitt tarwu.

turiet

ten.

PUBLIC SERVICE
Gompan

N s w Hampshire

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&#13;
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FHS-Kyle Leach&#13;
&#13;
PLEASE NOTE: This resource was created during the 19th or 20th century. It has biases stemming from those periods.</text>
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