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                    <text>~ ~1 -e, IJ I - l '€ b I
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No consistent identification of the source is made. There are occasional
references to the Springfield Republican which is presumed to be the
source of all of these clippings.

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who has been mana ger of th e hotel for th e past three. years.
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Rogers
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Jud

tla.11g hte r, Ba rhara, are guests at
" Alderbe1;;t" for a J'ortni _
Pht. Mr.
Lnmkin'R fi ne tenor voice was
h eard In the solo, "JtJSt for Today," at th e morning service- on
Sunday and h e al so was one of
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Misses· Elizabeth HP.Witt, Bart.Je tt
an'd Flt7.roy, wh o rendered ."There
Ic No N ·, · t ThPre," favori te song
of Dr. Ru ssell H . Conwell, in
whose m emory it was chosen.

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vice-Pres.

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THE BERGER BROTHERS CO., NEW HAVEN, CONN.
S.G.ADAMS

,.

DIVI.ION SAL•a MANAGl:,t

COLUMBUS CIRCLE:, 111111 BROADWAY
ROOM 18111
TELEPHONE COLUMBUS 3877
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WORTHINGT~~
Smum~ l' \Ttsftl'n's' IA"a,·tn g -

w:m

see' 4n
·: ;s~pt. 6-Tlli s·· we.e k
almost comple te exodus of summer guests from Worthi ngton.
Ani'ong those. returnh 1i; . t.o . ~h.e:f 1
hom·e~ are Mr. and .Mrs. Rlcliar d
s. Te11'ry · arid aont 11...e-Jand·, ·_qf •!\Wtord. Ct.; J\:Uss Charlo tte Coft'ey,
Dr and Mrs. Clarenc e ;_ Kilbou rn
and Miss Doroth y Kilbou rn .~r
New Haven, Ct.; Mr. and Mrs.
Wl111a.m G. Rice of Albany_, N. Y.,
and three g-randc hlldren , Andre,v ,
P~ter. and Pamela Hice, of Madi~on, Wis.; Wllltam Neil and
William Neil. Jr., or Columb us,
Ohio : Mrs. Gertru de J . Thoma s,
'i.irs. pa'ntel Klng1na n. and • ' grandDaplel 1~.'.ingman,. · of 'Washington, D. C_,; · Mr• . ap·d Mrs. Har~
rla E. Colltnli ~!nd fam;il) \ ¥)'. ~nd
Mrs. WUUam -..Klrli:ham &amp;n.d· daughter, · Margue rite; . Mr . . a:nd Mrs.
ialJlP.8' Huliba.rd and :Mts's Marlon
Ba·r tlett of ··$pri'l:fg'ft·eld; Miss.
Florenc e Chapin. a11d l\Uss Dorothy Hewf.H • of -Cambr idge, •M ass.; .
Mli,. and Mrs., S1dne:r . J , smart/I
Mfp ,Virgi:nia,
1tnd . .14augh·ter,
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Smar·t :or Longnie :ld0w-.. · •.

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'l'he Misses Marj&lt;Jr le. a-nd Doro- t
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· ·t.hY Baftl.e:U, ·i;~~ss Ev-el_yn·. Welch.. _J
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Jett today Jo_
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ot.
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C.
Mr.-. and Mrs, -A!fr~d
ol;'.
e-•cho
.and ,sori,. Alfr~d. axid._:~frs. Drury, . 1\faa; ~rlltd.;·
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who have- been spendbl &amp;' 'tlie su~- Jtcent Salmon of--·Ens tha-m .pton; . '.
ather-'
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wotU)
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to __ North~1µ1&gt;JoJ!.
the: S011t.lt Worth'1 ilgt6n·; MlSs Pauline:
.w_ith
today,
opened
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·follow ing .c orps _o't't:ea-c her,:· At .tht:, ·'·Drock. · . ··· ' : :· , : · · .. :,:·l, ··'.:,, ,.~ ·
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WO·R1' H.IN liTON ,
, A commu nity ,fairW'
Sept. 16.will be held at the Lyceum hall,
under the auspice s of the Grange ,
on Tuesda y evening -, Sept. 20, at
8 o 'clock. There wil:- be an exh i_:
bition of all kipds of produc e and
handw ork from both adults and
childre'n and prizes wili be awarded. Some of the things exhibit ed
will be for sale. The meetin g !s
open ,t o all whethe r membe rs or
not and everyo ne fs asked to com e
and bring someth ing to exhibit . A
s ma ll il,dmiss ion will be charge d.

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WORTHINlliTON
Oct. 3.-Thc wom E'n 's Denevo· j f
lent socie ty will me.et. t ,n ,vednesday at 1 o'clock with tb e Miss.-" ·
/·
Ilice at "The Maples.· ·
Miss Mariou L. llartlett an -1 ,
he r sister, Mrs. Alice Bartlett Le• / /
Due, have sold th e place known ,
for many years as "Tbc Frank
Scott place" to Mrs. B elden .l'\'.
; J
Green of Yonkers, N. Y.
Mr, and Mrs. Irvlu g C.:hapmau,
who have been sperid;og th e
m e r in town, return ,.:d lo BrookI lyn on Friday.

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\VORTP. lNl.,;TON

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1 Dec. 26- Mls s Elsi e V. Bart let "
and Miss Mar ion ·L. Bart lett spen
Jliig- ht
Chri stma s with ,t heir brot her, Irvl
Oct. 10 .·--:-"Neig hbor s' Ni ght"
ing L. Bart lett, of Greenfield.
I
will be obse rHd b:,- th e Gra nge on
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Pack ard ~
Tues day eYel)ing at the Lyce um
and chil dren pass ed Chrl stmad,.
hall with P la infie ld , H111s dale ,
with rela tive s In Con way and
East ham pton and Nort h a mpto n
Mon day wlth rela tive s in Wes t
Gran ges atte ndin g. Tho Yisiti n g
.. field.
1
Gran ges ,vill furn ish the prog-ram .
Mr.
and
Mrs.
W.
E.
Drak
e
en1
Refr eshm ents are in cha rge of
. terta lned Mlss Flor ence MacDonthe feas t com mittee, "Mrs.. He nry
l ald and Dr. F. A. Rob inso n
on
Chri stma s.
. Snyd er, Miss :\1.ildred Hi g.;in s aud
,
J erem iah Rob inso n.
Mr. and Mrs. Cha rles A. Kil- 1
·
bour n had as thei r,,.. guestB Mr.
and Mrs: Har ry L. Bfit.es and Mr
_1
ReY. Ellery Clapp of Nort hs ·, -&gt;·•1 Cha
rles w. 'rpw er. '" W
·.
\ amp ton prea ched in the Con gre1
Mr.
and Mrs..·· Wal ter M . Shaw
, gatio nal chur ch Sund ay.
d Mr. and ~fr~. Lela nd P. Cole
. Miss Ethel Dew ees of_ New '' , ...;·i·an
ente rtain ed "tlrr: and Mrs. · PhiUp
, 1 orl,, who has been spen drn g the....
Gur ney and &lt;daug hter , Barb ara,
!&gt;um mer in Wor thin gton at Ed- ;'.
,
l\Hss Do,rothy Shaw · of Ash- :
1
ward Jone s' and has lately been ~- -l and
field, and Mr. · and Mt:8'. · Ebe n ·;
the gues t of Miss N. S. Heacock , ~- iSha
w l).nd· · ~a\l ~hte r, Doris, of
has r etur ned to het: hom e.
,\ -1We st Wor th1q gion tor Chri stma s. i: )
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Guy F. Bart lett of Gree nfieJ.c.1 ... \ The
Sun day · .scho ol held its ·•Z
is at his hom e for two weeks.
t ., • Chri
Miss N. S. Hea cock, Mrs. Hor- \,. -:,j Sun stma s tree and ente rtain men t
ace S. Cole. l\irs. Cha rles A. Kil- ··&lt;'.'[T day mor ning at tl;le chur ch. 1 :-,;
here wexe a. duet , '.'There W:er~ (\'~
bour n and tHss Josephin ~ Hewit:t ·1~-·· Shep
atten ded the Cooley Dickinson ; · Cole herd s," ' by Mrs. · Lela nd · P. _• • ~,:_;,
; · spea kiu~ · . by Mary .~Ile ~ . ,. .i,
hosp ital ca.mi-1aig n su pper at Hay1
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(,1·an ~e to

Obs ene

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Dec:· 5.-A t tM chur ch serv ice
at the libra ry Sun day· evell.ing, · bee.
30.- Mr. and MTs.
or \&gt; ."
Miss Kath erin e McD.
read a 1 Ber.n ier .of tbia to:w.n were Vict
gues
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i Biblical play , enti tledRice"Da
vid, "
a surp rise ··par ty Dec. 26th
:.
i whic h she .h13:s writ ten. }~ was tol~ at
hom e of Mr. and Mrs. E~e st .'·J~
. lowe d by anti phon al. sing ing by 10 the
, j.
ier of Nor tham pton in hono_r r;
· "'\Vomen acco mpa nied by firs_t and Befo
of
.
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.sec ond vfol ins .play ed by Har ry L.. An!) : 25th wed ding anni vers ary. · ,
;:\
ther hono r gue!3t w~s_a-sist! r, J ,
,: :aate s if Pd . Grosvenc;&gt;r _-Hew itt.
Mrs.
Ray mon d Ellio tt of Ham hn,
l:i
1 ;;:_¥is~ ,ijel en B. Fog g ang.
W_a lter
.1 i., who hasn 't been wltl_l . t~e /::,.'.~
Buxto1:t).\ii.."-re clos ed thei r · hous e N
raiib!Iy
! ~n~ ~-~~r a~ ~uto trip ~o F'lor-. Bi ;,~1e for six year s. Mr. and M1s. ·i .'{
r were ' pre_s~nte d a
' 1da, -~ he~ ·:the y wm spen d the
~tn~ -1;.,i··
ca·l tf and a chest: &lt;)°f,..s,l lyl;~·w.ed
~Dtp ,•er f::
wint e~
· ·
lunc h were serv ed
the fifty 1,
~1
The Gran ge whis t club . will an'.fJ:· t!l
who were pre t _from N~w "\t1'j ,,
mee t with Mrs. Erne st Tha yer of gq!~
Y&lt;h''k. City , Hatf i~f , Northampt&lt;1n ,.. •)_·.
Wes t Wor thin gton on Frid ay eve.. andii
wo.r.t hlnt tou."-,,A mpc ~ m~t - • ,;-.
ning .
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\ The Wom en's Ben evol ent socl- l waR was "'~Ie oii~ea~ ~ ' l l c 1•
enjo yed. ,. ., \.
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. ety will mee t on Wed nesd ay with
.
I
.'rhe
re will 'b e ll.' $!ne e toni ght at I i._.::i
Mrs. Wa\ ter Shaw .
1 Lyce
um hall.
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·1,". . :.· ·•.__· ,,. Mrs. -eha rles A. Kllb ourn e, who
. , :~;,. ,. , bas b~en visit ing Mr. and Mrs. ,.....,......--.- ::--- --......,....... . . ·-: 1 ~ \ . .. ,_.,, ·:
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rt of Lon gme adow ,
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ay.
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...
' j shep herd , ,.,-1th an Indecipherab
le
1nam e on its _c ollar , is at the hom e
.I
4of Guy F. Bart lett awa iting an
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. owner.
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~!..t
summer the Worthington Congre:'
gatlonal c~urch gave up its own
morning worship to help the
smaller ~dy by a apecial service, ,
Church Has Annual 1\-leeUnr;
On Sunday, Jan. 8, the Wor- .raise money for preservtng the
thlngton Congregational church chm·ch ofl' its fathers. So much inheld its annual business meeting. splratfon came. from this meeting
The following officers were elect- ovP-r which there seemed to pre~ 1·•
ed: Clerk, l\Irs. James H. Burckes ; side the sptrft of /he great preach- I
treasur~r, Mrs. Eugene Stevens; er, that there came a desire for
assistant treasurer Miss Bessie A. annual pilgrimage to this little 1
F. Am~s; cburcli' school supP-rin- shrine among, .the hills of Wortendent, Rev. Jamee H, Burcltes; tblngton. 'l'his will probably be
assistant church 8chool Huperin- held on the last Sunda7 in August, 1·
tendeut for West Worthington, as that was the day on wh'iclr Dr. 1
ot · Conwetl, in hie later years, ·held f
q Mrs, Ernest Thayer; member
chq,rch committee, Miss Susan T. his service there, a service which ,·.
Rie'e.; deacon , Clyde Jones; audi- drew hundreds of enthusiastic ad- '
tor,.' Mrs. Franklin Burr; member mfr.e ra from miles around.
or the missionary committee, Miss ,
Kathedne .McD. Rice; organist, I
Arthur. G. Capen; music commit- 1
Mrs. Leland Cole, Miss N. S.
tee,
1
Heacock, l\frs. Nima Conwell Tut-.j ,£, '
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tle, Arthur G. Capen; flower com' mittee, Miss Josephine Hewitt;: relief comruittee, Mrs. Horace Cole,
I Miss Elsie V. Bartlett, Mrs. Jas .
. I H.Burckes; soc; l committee, Mrs .
.,, Chat·les Kilbourn, Mrs. ·Horace
· Cole, 1\-lrs. Eben Shaw. . Revised I
constittition and by-laws were ,.
adopted. A vote was taken in favor of making tlie special service!:
· ; at tile little church of Russell
1
, .
1 Conwell's boyhood, in So.uth Wor1
J thi':1,gton, an annual event. Last · •
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. Town Offlc('rs. Nominate&lt;I ·.
·l Jan. 2.3.-At a •·crtizens' caucus
·. ,:j held Saturday ~f'~...i:noon at the
· town hall the following town om' 1cers were nomfriated: Moderator,
·, Lou C. Sweet; clerk., Franklin H.
j Burr; treasurer:,· Franklin H.
J Burr; assessor- for three years1,
.:! Henry Snyder; seleet'men, Charles ·
'·JM. Cudworth, Alden Cady, For- i ·
:·dyce · K.nap.p ;.. school committee,~
·; Anna A. Cole; auditor, Imogene
. l Shaw Cole;-&gt;· tree warden for one I!
• j year, John Frissel1; tax collector)
l Harry w. Mollis'o n; . c·o nstable,
! Wells Magn.rgal; cemetery com-·
mfttce,. Clement F. Burr.

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Mrs. Wlnfieid brake will enter- '
tain "The H\~niry D6zen" 1!,t her
.1
:~_-_~home on ·Thursd11 afternoon.
.J The Grange Wst club will ,
I meet Thursday vening w!th Mrs.
r
·: John Frissell at the Center.
j The. Women'a B.e nevolent sociely l '
-~, met with Mrs. 'If.., C. Martin this I',
. 1afternoon tor thefr annual busi- · .,
·j· ness meeting and electi?n of offl-·1 •
. . 1.
cers.
Owing_to the extreme CQld ,J\O
'i
, ·i services were· held in the Con.gre- •
'
, gatlonal church on Sunday,
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J an. 24.-The annual boslness
I m-cclih G and ele'c tlon of o~cers of
the L. n. s . was h cfif"at Che home
of ?\Ir~. T. c. Martin this afternoon.
at t,;·o o'clock and the following
omccr:; f'lected: President, Miss
Sns:rn T.' Rice; . yfce president;
l\lrs. Ji.1:1. Smith; secreta·ry· and
treasurer, Mrs. Helen G. Burr;
di rectorii, l\frs.' Anna A. Cole, Mrs.
F lori Jl1rnsell, Mrs. May KillJourn,
. Mrs. r.race Sha"', . M1:s. ~elen
John son and Mrs. Bffle· Pease. The

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t1:;a;ute r~ i ~ ; r t e d t h ~ I
rece_ipts for the year $767.77, exPr~s~ $5_6~.76, ;eaving a· balance
In · th'e · treasury or · $202.02.
Amo,unt spent on the p_a rsonage,
$208.47. Receipts from the fair
held in t he summer, above ex·penses, was $~? 5.0 3. lncorporat-11
ors' fun&lt;l, $620.83; J. li'. Downing :
fund, $597.91. It was Yoted · to·
add' $50.00 to · the - fn cori&gt;orato 1•8 •
fund. 'l'he sociel~• wlll ·1neet ·with
_M rs. Ma_rtiq _on Feb. 8tit roran ~II
day sewmg meeting,·

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Grairge Confers ~rees .. ... · .
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Jan.,~;~rr-~-t a meeting or tbe-.
Grange· ·field last evening at the,1
·Lyceum ·-h all, the · first and second
d&amp;grees were conferred by the'
men's degree staff upon two can• \
didate!i, 'the M!ss~s ·Elea:nor and ,_
· Mildred P1tr$~ns. _The ·me-rary .PrQ-1
' gram consisted o•·- a fasMon show
Iin which an album ot llvin~ pie- \
j.turea showed -the costu·m es .of
ferent .J)eri~ds ranging trom on~
•·hundred 1-ears' ago to the :tnod~rn · ,

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,,: • 1928 flapper. Those taking part
were Mrs. Leland Perry Cole, Mrs. ·
Edward P. Clark, Miss Millicent
,11S~lmon, Mi8S Floreri.c e MacDonald, , .
Miss Katherine Bossen, Miss Ber,, nice E. ·Kilbourn, Miss Mildred
Parsons.- A song, Silver Threads
~oni the Gold, by Mrs. Leland
P: Cole, was pictured in tableau by
, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest G. Thayer,
and there was .a reading by Miss
' Eleanor Parsons. Refreshments
,~ 1were served.
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Feb. 23·-Mrs. · Walter.· Tower
entertained twelve children at her
home this afternoon in ce. lebratlon
ot her daughter Dorothy's sixth ,
birthday.
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ty will meet on · Tuesday with ;
Mrs. T. C. Martin at the center for (
March 11.-A St. Patrick's day an all day sewing meeting. - She :
social and supper will be held by wlll haYe as her guest, Mrs. Nenra I
[
the church at .the· Lyceum hall on Conwell Tuttle of Springfield.
The Grange whist club will I,
The supper,
Friday evening.
which will be in charge of Mrs. meet at the Lyceum hall on WedWalter M. Shaw, Mrs. Leland P. nesday evening. Hostesses, Miss 1
Cole and Mrs. Winfield Drake, Florence MacDonald and .Miss r:
will be served from 6.3:Q until 8, Elia1.be th Cole.
Mrs. Howard C. BrewstPr or
after which there will be a literary program in charge of Mrs. Springfield has been spending a
Horace S. Cole, Mrs, Charles A. few days with h er sister, Mrs. H. I
I{ilbourn and Mrs. Eben Shaw, G. Porter . Mrs. Porter is also I
entertaining hei; mother, Mrs. r
social committee.
"The Hungry Dozen" will meet Alice Gurney of 'Greenfield, :tnd
with Miss Florence MacDonald on her nephew, Irving Gurn ey of 1·
!
Turners Falls.
Thursday afternoon.
Harry W. Mollison has been ap- Special Town Meeting Wed11esd1ly
A special town meeting will be ,
pointed constable in place of
Wells Magargal, who has re- held at the town hall on Wed~_esday a t 10 o'clock to act on the f
.
signed.
[
Schools close Friday to ~ e9pen following articles:
Art. 1. To choose. a moderator. ·
on April 2d.
Art. 2. To see if tl1e town will /
Miss Dorothy F. Bartlett of
the Springfle1d high scho9l of Yote to allow the school commit- ,.
commerce, who has been home the tee, with the approval of the sepast week b,ecause of illness, has lectmen , to make certain chang-es
in the Lyceum hall building for i: ,
returned to her school.
The .Gra·nge will meet at the the improvement of ·the schoQl
j; _ '"· ·
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Lyceum ball Tuesday evenin~. rooms in said building.
:
Art. 3. T&lt;' see if the town Will
Program: Current · events~· Mrs..
Charles A, Kilbourn; . favorite ivqte .to sell the abandoned sct.c&gt;gl
weather sigris, by all members; houses in -said·. tQWn or take any : '
, ·
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ten minutes' chorus.· singing in ·a ction regarding the same,
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town
the
if
see
To
Art. 4.
charge of Mrs. Carl A. Loveland;
That the vote to appropriate the proceeds ·
debate, "Resolved,
· criminals of today are not •justly from . the sale of the abandop~d
punished/ ' leaders, Rev. •James school houses for the use · of th,e :
. H . .Burckes and_·Edward J. Clai:~: _s chool commit.tee .with . the ""a~ r · ··
' reading, Mrs. - Walter M. Shaw; _proval of the selectmen to make r
be served. '. repairs and improvements, in , the i
.. home· made candy
f
Henry L. Tower and his son, Lyceum hall building.
Walter, we.nt to Hartford Thurs-I Art. 5,· To see if the town
day to attend the funeral of their take any action in rega-rd to ·
l)ppropriate /•
. cousin, Lucius Warren Bartlett. !Jitreet lights and
.
The Woman's Benev9lent .so_efe.:. money Jor same.

WORTHINGTON

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WORTHINGTON
l'tlt•S,

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crnthll\ L. Tower

rlarch 21.-Mrs. Cynlhla L.
Towel' aged 71 died at her home
this morning after a. week's illness
wllh bronchitis, No alarm w:as
felt about her until about mid·
night and death came at about two
o'clock this morning. Mrs. Towe.
was born in Worthington Sept. 7,
1856, the daughter ot Walter S.
and Henrietta Harrington Allen, in
the house now owned by James
Corbett. On Jan. 19, 1876, she
married Henry L. Tower. Besides
her husband. she leaves three children, Walter H., at home, Herbert
L. of Springfield, and Cullen B. of
and five
Thompsonville, Ct.,
'grandchildren,

Dorothy,

I

Edith,

:Madison and Elizabeth .and Mrs.

Ralph gurley

or Springfield.

Mrs.
1

Tower was a woman of frail 1
bealtb, but mentally alert, with a
keen memory of olden- times, of
. which she .loved to tell. Although
\ a shut in most of the time, she 1
I kept in touch with all her friends

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and will _be greatly missed. The
funeral will be held ;:.t the home
Friday afternoon at 1 o'clock, the
,Rev: James H. Burckes officiating.
Bunal :will be in the North ceme-

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· GTON
WOR;mHJN
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reading, l '.
Mrs. Walter M, Shaw; discussion, .
Al)ril 8.-'-Ei ster services· were "Sliall Grange Put on an Exhibit ·'
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· iconducted in the Congregational at Cummington Fair?" leader, c. _
·I church this morning by the pas- A. Loveland; old fashioned mu~
I1tor-, the· Rev. James H, Burckes. sic, Mrs. Walter Shaw, Mr~._I,.e-.r· ··
. t·
·
The church was decorated with land P. Cole.
The Women's Beneyolent aociei• Easter 1Uies 9:nd daffodils and
there was special music by the ty will meet on Wednesday. with · 1'Mrs. Charles A. Kilbourn for au
: choir.
rs. xn:: ',
1 The Grange will meet at the all day Bf.wing meeting. M_
I Lyceum hall on Tuesday evening bourn will also entertain "The •
tor Its regular meeting. Program ~ Hungry Dozen" on Thursday, · 1,
Miss Susan T. Rice ts spending ,
Current Events, Miss Salmon;
\~
ss__Elj~_abet}l &lt;;ole a!_!!l a few days In Amherst and $Pring- ,;,
··,field. _

°Mis~- Josephine Hewitt;

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·woRTiiI.NGTON

April 3.- i\·; ;;,-Winfkltl Brak e
will e nt&lt;'rtafn "The Hungry Doz,, n ·• on Thursday afternoon at

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f\.Pll1:1111Pr P

l'arru .

Whist cluu will
/ meet on Friday P. Vc niug wlth Mr.
/ and Mrs. John Fri5sf'II.
Owing to poor trarelling th e
gchools will not open untll April
1
·
9th
i\fr. and ?llrs. A . G. Caldw ell df
I Pittsf'lPld , who have a summer
/ home h e r e , werP in town Sunday.
Mri::. WaltPr ::\f. Shav.r is visltln,;
1 C' r aunt , Mrs. Hannah Whitner,
• lt

Th e Grange

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or Dalton .
Mr. and i\Irs. Stanley Mason and
: family moved Saturday to Earl . ,·m e , K. Y., wh&lt;:&gt;re Mr. ~lfason has
taken a position with th e Dordeu
I
Eraporated 'M ilk company.
Easter sen·lces will be held In / '
th e main nud ie nce room of th e I·
church on Sunday morning.

1

Ernest A. Hus'.; ar 'or'
.
Yille.
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Wesfs"ower-J.

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ToN\11
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.. April 16.-Mr. and. Mrs~ -Walter / '
Frank · Powers.. I
and Kenneth .a nd Lawrence Hub-· f
bard of Spring fi eld were In town
.
for the week-end.
The Miss~s Mildred and Eleanor
.
Parsons will entertain the · Grange
wllist club· on Friday evening at
I\~Cole. .
' the 1, o;'Jle_or -M.tss LeJand.
1
"Tlf~ .J-Itwi~).:'J: ·D ozeD: ', ;:wJJl m e~t I.
on Friday afternoon witn Miss
;~Hzabeth Cole. - · - '· -1·1'.i .:, ,: · ": ,·? , ·•. l\frs.. Raymond Call opened her I
hoi:ue f&lt;?"! •the week'-e§.d. ,. ·., _. __
Fifteen Ca1•s StuclcJn 1\(u(I ~-'·
, - · We are told that a. ·ch-ain iB no
stro.nger than . its ( '\yeakest - link.
Is a road no ~etter than its, poo1'est spot? Ji'Jrteen OJll's ·stuck fast
short
in the mud yesterday ·1n
stretch or road -near the Bartlett
~omestead at ·the Corners. The
need of a few rods of state ro:id
to connect two state roads, t&lt;W:ids
, no further emphasis•
C. Powers, Mrs.

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�·/ . \Vord bas b een receivc J by
friends here that Miss L esley
Frost, daughter of Robert Frost,
the poet, bas become a tnember ot 11
the editorial staff ot Doubleday, '
Doran &amp; company, New York pub... lishers. Miss Frost was employed
by the Hampshire Bociksho·p in
1922, where she took a year's
/I train'ing as an apprentice at her
father's suggestion.
She t~en
started "The Open Book," a book- J
sl10p "in: Pittsfield, and ·1ater ·""The
Book and Print Shop" at Ann Ar- ,.
bor, Mich.
She will continue· to
operate these:· two sho.ps, in addltion to her editorial worlc in New ~
York.
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WORTHINGTO'N-j·,;-i

Worthington, May 4-The grange i1
Whist club met last evening with Mr
and Mrs James H. Bnrckes. Eleventables were forriled. The first prizes
were won by Mrs Ernest Thayer anrl
Daniel Pol'ter and the consolation
ize by George T orrey of p hester! ld.
The club w ill meet n ext wee!{
1
W ednesday with Mr and Mrs:
'harles Care.
Mrs ¥erwin F. Packard enterta ined
The Hungry Dozen" at her home
his ' afte rnoon.
Sewing and ci;trds
vere enjoyed and refreshments were
,crved.
Mr and Mrs Clinton F. Reed are
:pending a few da ys in Boston and
Jew York.
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1f lg hlantl Cluh to Meet tbe 10th
, v orthin gton , l\Ja y 7- I ntci·c;; ti ni;
e ve n ts ln t11 e n ea r fu lu r c inc lud e the
111 ee tin g of' th e H ig h l~ n cJ club In
W orl h i11 g,t1 •n at t he Con gTegat io11 a l
The
1:hureh W edn estlay. til e 16 th.
sr.ss ion
the m o rnin g
at
s pea l&lt;er
L.
Geo rge
Rev
t1h c
he
will
On
B a sth a m pton.
of.
Tllu1fo w
Sun day, tl1 c 20th , the C umm in g ton distrir .t Sunda y school conve ntion )
w hich includ es the Sunda y school B of 1

/ five

to wns,

C hrcst e rfleld,

Gos hen ,

g ton, P la infield a nd Worth
ICumm in, will
be h eld h ere at the Con -

ington
g r egatio nal ch u r cl1 at 11 a. m. R e v ,
l van S. Nowla n, s ec retal'y o r the Ma s - 1
sa c huse tts Co un c il of R eligiou s Edu - /
ca tion of B oston will preach the morn ·
ing s e rmon. A bask e t lunch at n oun /
will be ~ollow ed by a bus iness meetin g
·
a nd a progra m in the aftern oon .
and
Glaser
'-IV.
J.
Mrs
Mr a nd
1
daugh ter. Miss Mildre d G laser , of '
S prin g fi e ld, were g uests "today at Guy
F. Bartle tt·s .
Young people 's night will be observ ed at the grang e Tuesd ay evenin g at
L yceum h a ll. The comm ittee 1n charge
is Miss Millic ent Salmo n, Miss Ka therine B ossen, a n d the Misses Mildre d
and Elean or Parso ns.
Mr and Mrs Cyrus B ower s a nd
family have moved t o the Charle ,;
·
All en place.
Dr and Mrs Claren ce Kilbou rn and
daugh ter, Miss Dorot hy Kilbou rn of
New Haven , and Mr and Mrs Geo rge j'
ii Jaspe r and party from S pringfi eld ,
w e re j n town today and visited Mr and
Mrs Charl es A. Kilbou rn.
Mrs Sidney J. Sma rt who has been
spe nding a week at h e'r i-umm er home
has r eturne d to Long m eadow .
Miss Pearl Fitzra y is confin ed to her
1
h ome by a badly injure d foot.
The W omen 's Benev ole n t: society
j will m eet with th e Misses Rice at "The
Maple s,·· on W ednesd ay, for an all day
,
sewin g meetin g.

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WOilTHIXGTO.Y
W orthi n g-t on .

l\fny

10-Tw o

n ew

famili es lrn.vf. m overt t o town recen tly , l\fr and l\Irs W illia m Wnzn iak ana
family of West Spring field on the

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J ohn Yale place, ancl Mr and M rs
Frank lin HilJ anrt family of Willia msburg on t he. H . Maye r farm .
Healt h day wa s observ ed in the
Corne r schoo ls this aftern oon with a
health -day play, a May-p ole dance
and the presen tation of weig ht, posture and teet11 cards by th e schoo l 1
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nurse . Miss Bla nche E . Lincoln.
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bee11
has
who
,
Buck
.
, Mrs Otis H
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her daugl l' spend ing th e winte r with
Hamd es,
of
Clapp
ter, l\fr~ Raym ond
home.
er
h
to
ed
return
has
Ct ..
R e v John C. Wigh tman, Hamp shire
count y thissio nary, and Mrs ~igh, man and Rev and Mrs Charl es U. H ill
of Goshe n were guests yester day of
Rev and Mrs James H. Burck es at
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th e parson age.
·
eld
Pittsfi
of
itt
ew
H
Mrs Abby 0 .
r.
in!"
Cather
MisS'
ter,
da_u~h
er
h
and
Hewit t of W11l1a mstow n were in town
yester da y and visited Miss Helen t
,
: Fo_g-g.
attend
will
Cole
erry
P
l\frs Leland
the Ma y festiv al in Sprin_g-~eld
u r rl a y as th e g u es t of Mrs NEfV'a Conanri
of · Spring-field
Tuttle
' well

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,vnr thing-_ton.

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be enter- I
" Th e Hung ry Dozen·•
, t :i.in erl tomor row at th e home of M rs r
Leland P. Cole.
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- WO RT HC \GT-ON

lfJV'

:Form(•r RcRl:lcnt; Drntl
W ort hin, ;tnn , :\fa y

14- Ncw s

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She ltf' r
h&lt;'&lt;'11 r c c·ri, ·NI or the '1N1.ti1 at
l\lfn ;
of
th
!I
thf:
on
.,
Y
:-;.
Jsla nd,
1
1 h i:;
nf
ly
mer
for
G C'org-e .r-\ . (,ril11n;; ,
.
l)e;1 lh I \ HS rl11 ~ tr, p111?umo11!/l
/ ! 0 \\ 11 ,
wPr r
.
bnnd
h11s
,•
ltp
wlrl1
s-.
imn
Or
, .1J n;
r, for
/ t hr nm nag rrf: nr La fn,v c•t t e lnc'lg
l.
l!Jl!
In
h&lt;'l'P
.L!'
i11
1·~1m
f'
flv r .1·r;.1r
t nn
'' Th P H un i:r .v 11nr.r-n" will mrP
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of
e
hnm
the
.'-IL
oon
rn
aftt&gt;

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Fri da ., ·
\V i lll;:im rvw .
, wh i&gt; :
\\ ' fllin m r-i'11nt nf Slr1 mf., rrl. C't.
, ::=:. Hi&gt;;:i N
S
Mif:
fnr
inrr
l
,:,arr
n
hP&lt;&gt;
h;:i::1
et urn l'd
C'ncl, fn r sf'v en1I yr.a r i;:, ha s r
.
ork
w
·.~
n
o
i'&lt;~as
f.rw h ir.
a re
M t· ;:ind :\Jr i:; \Vin fielrl Dral&lt;P.
;wr
,
ent.E
par
ke's
Dra
,
;\[r1
g
ente rta inin
S 1
:\11/J
and
tt,
Sco
&lt;1 lld ;\fl•.ci Wil bu r F .
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Kat e Stev en,; nf Ora nge . Vt. m eet
'l'he Cra n;;-e Wh ist club will hall . 1'
Sat urd ay eve ning at ~li e Lyc eum &lt;;arl .
Th ose in cha rge are Mr and Mrs
lter / '
L?1·e !a nrl and Mr and Mrs Wa
H1g-g-ms.
en- 1
ThP, Con greg ati ona l chu rch will the
at
tert a in the Hig hla nd club
will be
e
er
'fh
.
ay
esd
edn
W
on
rch
c hu
of t hP.
e
Lur
The
"
er
an ont.look po p
ning
mor
the
in
te,"
tora
Pas
Cou ntry
0f
rd
Wa
.T.
ick
by t he R ev Fre der
u ss i nn.
~ou tham pton follo wed hv dlsc

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n. Jn
A dinn Pr w ill be se1·v ed a t noo talk ,
a,
be
will
e
thn
oon
the afte rn
Cam p"Ex per ienc es of An Aut om obil eth,"
by
Sou
the
h
oug
Thr
ing- T r ip
anti
ld,
nfie
ly of Plai
1 :\1rs Edw ard I&lt;iel
rld
at 3 an add ress "Pa thw ays to Wo
rPea ce," by t he R ev Geo rge L. Thu
ton.
amp
lo w of E asth

{

- Mrs . Elle n · M. Bill ings , Miss~,
ora E. Me nto r, Mrs. Joh n Ric h- 1
ds and Mrs . My ron D. Hag er at- 1
nde d the ·we ster n Ma ssac hu- /r
~sett s Lib rary club mee ting h eld in
Bm ~ /·
Wo rthi ngt on Thu rsd ay. Mrs. pre
svice
nd
seco
cted
el(!
was
s
ing
I'
( ide nt of the ebb.

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Jf;i &lt;i
WOJlTHIXGTO~
W or th i ng-t on. i\TaY 28-The ;-r an~e
. t club met nt th_e L yceu m h a ll
1
w is
.
t ' 1 lr .
F rhiday
cvcn inl!· an d P1aye d n ine
,L J s.
Th e fi rst µri r.rs w ere wo n . by
l\l r~
Sitln ey J . sma r t nn rl Alde n Ca dy an
d 1
th e consolati on prize s by Mrn F ordy
ce

Kna pp a nd Lela nd Smi th. T he w l!ir,;t
cl11h \\'Ill mee t on Th ursd ay e vc mngw il h l\[1· nn cl J\lrs E dwa rcl .T. CI.Lrk
.
Mr a nd Mrs L elan tl P . Cole s pen t
1 t h e \,·eel&lt; end with
Mr Cole 's b r othe r ,
W a ldo Cole in Sta mfo rd, Ct.
l\l iss F a.Y N ell 0f Col um h us. 0 ., has
a r r ived at her cott ag e f or t he s um
mer.
The a lumn i of th e W ill ia msbu rg
H ig-h school h eld a ba nque t
;it
La fayc tte lodg e last eve ning-.
A se rmon a ppr opria te t o l\fom oria
l
d_n y \\'as prea ched in t he Con g r
c:~.1.t 10na l ch urch yest e rday m orn ing·
by
the pas tor, R ev .Ja me:s H . B11 r k
es. ,
!lhss El izabe l h Cole an cl t he ivi is
:.\lar jmle and Doro th y Bart lett sasPs I
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''Set t he Fla" On T h eir Grav es."
'"'
J\fr anrl J\Irs Georg-e .Ja s per. 1\C 1
rs
~ m y Stu rtev an t . and l\fr and
M rs I
}_ rank B a tes of Spri ng flelrl
1
I g uests Sunday at c. A.. Kilb ourn ·s,w er e

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! STATE LIBRARIANS WILL

MEET AT WORTHINGTON I

i Yorl hing ton , Jun e 4- T he s umm
er \

meet ing o( the W es tern Mas sach uset
ts f

Lihr ary club w ill be h eld a t th e F1·ec
l- 1
e1·iclc Sa rge n t Hun ting ton libra ry
on

T hurs day, t he Hlh .

Th e f ollow i ng p rogr am h a s
been
pla n n ecl :i\'lor ning s es.~io n at lhe lihrn.r y, l fl .30
,,
wPlc ome, hy R ev J ame s H . Burc
kes,
di rPcto r L ihr ary corr ora ti'on ; 10.4:
'i,
bu s in ess n1Pf' ting a nd elec tion o(
c Prs ; 11 , a rlrl ress, Ch a r lr s F . D . offi r!Pn, rl irec tor R osto n ruhl ic librB PJ- 1
S11 bjec t, Adeq unte book serv ice a r y. •
smn.11 libra r i'es ; 1!).~0 , lunc h eon , sen for
·ed
b y t h e gTa n ge. Arth ur Ca pen , libra
rian , W ort hing ton , will r eceiy e
n oli- •·
fica.t i o ns f or rese rvati ons.
A fte rnoo n sess ion a.t t Im Cong r eg
ti'o nn,J churr·h- 2, or~ an r ecital, Mrs a C. '1'11ttle ; 2.!l0, a cltlrc ss, Miss Lou N .
Seam a n of the Child r en's book depa ise
rt m ent, ?v.raemill::m comp a n y.
Sub jPct,
P la n n ing and m a k ing of child t·en
's
book s.
A t&gt;u s w ilJ lea,· e Spri ng-fi eld a t R. All
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:wis h i ng-qn. srnt w i.11 nd Yi se H . n. J
mg-to n , .n \ Vo rlh 1ng-to n s t reet, Sprl11n t-1,
ing- fi eld.

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WORTHI.l"~GTON

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"- - Th e Rev. James H . Burckes,
lead er of the boys' club, took the
boys on a hike toda y · to the woods
on th e Scott farm .
_,
Mrs . Ch a rle s A. R ilbuurn and r
Mrs. W inj,fr ed Dra k e e nter ta~ined.
" Tl1 e H un g r y Doze n " at the,
~~:~t o f t h e former thi s a
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July 13-Mrs. J . E . Lambie or
W ashin g ton , D. C., is spending
t he month a t Mis s Bessie Am es a t
th e ce nte r .
P arson s
nf
Mi s:1 E lea no r
S ou t hampton is visitin g Mr. a nd
Mrs . Lel a nd P . Co le .
T h e youn g people 's club m e t
A union eYe nin g church m ee tin g , includin g the churches of W ed n esday e ve nin g at th e parsonGos he n , Plainfie ld , Ch este rfi eld, a ge. Th e n ext meetin g will be a
C ummin g ton a nd
Worthin g t o n , pi cnic a t th e Gorge a t W est Che s- ,
will he held a t Ch este rfi e ld o n t erfi e ld on W edn esd a y afte rnoon,
S unda y evening , July 15th. The Jul y 1 8,
sp ea ker will be Dr. Eu grn e L y- L-- -==..-- - -- -- - - m a u of Union coll ege, N , Y. On
July 22d the m eetin g will IJP in
Pl a infi e ld , an&lt;l o n July 2!lth in
Worthin g to n .

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W OHTHI:N"U'f ON
ing t on , Jul y Hi- Th e WomI e n's\Vorth
Benevolent society will meet on

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Vvednesday wi t h l\ 1·s Howard c.
Brewster at _th e Cent¼i· for a l1 a ll-da y
SC \\'111 " meet IIH!',
Miss Ma rion F01·syth of W est ,,
S pring-fi elcJ is the g uest of Mrs l\'1er~' 11·in F . Packa rd.
· ;• - · ,\ c h urch socia l a nd :m pp~T wili' b&lt;t..
1 h el&lt;l a t t h e c hurch Thu rsday e ven ing.
; S u ppe r w ill be servecJ from 6 to 8. An
i e n t e r tainmen t wil l foll ow.
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' ..\ t th e baseba ll ga me h er e yest er' da y· a ft ernoon, th e scor e \\'as: W ar- ,
·
i
· t hington 6. ..\s hti'eld 5.
M r a nd Mrs Frank 0 . W ells of G rj:n- 1
nell s t reet. Gr eenfield . were ·. in town •

I

Sundr..y .

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··

~un!':?~r1!!.!:.~!2~-,I

olent society met today
with Mrs. 'I
.
Merrick Smith for an ·all day sew- I
ing meeting for the annual August- I
. fair. There were fifteen present.
· The next meeting will be held
with Mrs. N. C. Tuttle at her
home in South Worthington · on
w ·e dnesday, June 27th.
Mr. and Mrs. David F . .Vaughan
and family of RiYerton, N . J., will
arrive tomorrow at their summer
home. '
Miss N. S. Heacock, who has
been visiting her . cousin, Miss
Caroline Shaw of Akron, 0 ., has
returned to her home.
Miss Dorothy Stone of Bala
Cynwyd, Pa. , is spending a short
time at South · Worthington .
The Misses Olive and Fay Neil ·
'of Columbu1,, O., ar.e at their cot•
tage for the summer.
J . ' ·Mrs. Horace ·s. Cole and .._ Mrs.
Ernest I. Thayer are ·attendin g as
delegates the Hampshire county
·-iextensfon service summer camp in
Gr eenwich:
j
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· WORTI-IINGTON
At a mee ti ng of the Grang e toni gh t M th e Lyce um hall lhe
third degree w ill be con ferrecl
upon th e fo ll owin g ca ndidat e~:
.!\lr. and 1\1 rs. A. La ro, Cb eH l (-'r
Dodge, Herbe rt Porter , J r ., Joi;eph
J oll y and J o hn Jarvis, Th e ladi es ' degr ee team will ,.,, or k t he
· 'thlrd degree a ud the fourth 'Fill
be confer red. IJy the r egular office n;. De puty Donovan Tiffan y or
Easth ampto u will im:pec t the
Gra n ge. R efresh ments will be
se rved.
The school s will cloi:;e this week
. fo r the s umme r vacati on.
! Mr. and Mrs. J . W. Glaser and
1 daugh ter, Miss Mildre d Glaser , of
Spring field wele guests Sunda y at
Guy F . Bartle tt' s,
Mr. and Mrs. Shepa rd Cook of
Ba la, Pa., are spend ing a short
time at Twin Brook farm.
Childr en's Su11.day will be obCongr egatio nal
served in the
17th.
June
y,
Sunda
h
churc
The state librari ans will meet
at the Frede rick Sarge nt Huntin gton librar y on Thurs day at 10.30
a. m., with an addres s of welcom e
by the Rev. James H. Burck es;
10. 45, ~ usines s meetin g; 11, address, Charle s F. D. Belden , dlrec·
tor Bosto n Public library , sub•
ject, Adequ ate Book Servic e tor
Small Librar ies. The meetin g will
then adjou rn to the church , where
dinne r wm be served . The afternoon sessio n at the church will
open at 2 o'cloc k with an organ
recita l by Mrs. Nema Conwe ll Tuttle; 2. 3 0, addres s, Miss Louise
, Seaoe n of the rhildr en's book departm ent, MacM illan compa ny,
r suhjez t, Plann ing and Makin g or
Cblldr en's Books . The meetin g ts
oprn to the public , and 1t ie hoped
ma 'lY v:iH attend .

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I 1vZ rWorth ington
WOH'J'HI KG TON, ,July :?'i-- A g-rour,"

1

nf 'vVo r l hin gton p eople· went to West 1
l 'clho111 y 1)~l.c n l:1.v uit('r n oon , at t he ·
ln v ll :JtiOII of ,\ l is s BC'SSiC E. Trt: w of

1

Beclfo1•c1 r ,odg c, Nnrp1:1mpt on , fo r . a
pl cni&lt;: s u p p er n t li er country place! ·\
" vVl sh K u m tru."
Miss Trow I s a 1,
for m e r r esld&lt;'n t of \Vo r t hington . The ,

l11vitatl on wiis ;::;u1ern l to a ll the peo- . ,
. p ie of tl') e to wn but R perfect &lt;lay for
a picnic . \\'a s a lso n. p erfe ct &lt;lay tor :I1
hayln;r ll"h leh k &lt;:! pt rn un y a t horn!'. A 1
J f e"' yeH r !-' a g o Mis!; Trow and !\llss I
, L aurn S. C lar~ hough t the place-an
J abandon e d home. a n d transform eel it
into a n ideal p lace. r &lt;?.sforing th e old ..
f l'.lshlon ert )1ow=e :rn'cl developing· the
, t ht·et- 11cres of land into a plac~ or I .
• beauty. Aft er \\'ander ing throu g h th~ I
h ouse a nd ;;rounds, groups g·at hered i .
, to chit t and I h e re \\"ere ca rets for I
those who wbhed.
~ buffet picnic
lunch 11·as serv&lt;?d , q n .the Ja,,'n to 48 ,
people.
"
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:. t.;,.',,_ __;,.~~

:_ f

\ ::;,;;;;is Robinson of Worthing...tc.n, a - -ociate . medical examiner
of the 2d Hampshire district, ,
1
vice, N &lt;:_il C. Matzek, r esign~

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�'II

lt otY

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WoRTI-IINGTON
. ""

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o0nt'
.Tu1} ,., .i. -Dr • J . Ross• Slenns
•
Princeto n, N. J ., pi e 5id e_nt
Prin ce ton Th eolog ica l semin ary ,
an cl l\l rs . SteYens on we re In to wn
:,;.;at unlay and call ed on
old

0f

fr i enrl R.
News h as her n r ccr iYcd o( Lh P

death in Spring field on th e lGth
of Mrs. E . V. Chapma n of that
city. Mrs. Chapma n and her s ister,
Mi ss Chapi n, spent las t August in
Worthin g ton at the Chapin homes tead a nd have spent a previou s I
s umme r he re. The n e ws of h e r
death was learn ed with sorrow.
I
i\lrs. Arthur Gran ge r is k eepin g
hou se · for Fred Fairma n. Mrs.

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I

!Grange r

has sold h er farm to J,
Frank Smith of New York, a
1
nephew of H e rbert Smith , owne r"
of the Buffing ton place. It will be
used for a summe r home.
The Grange will observe Chi ldr en 's night at th e Lyce um hall l
to morrow eve nin g with a n open
meeting and 12rize speakin g b)'. the
children . Class 1, grades 1 and 2,
50 , 35, 25, 10 cents ; class 2 ,
grades 3 and 4, 50, 35, 25 and 10 ,
ce nts ; class 3, grades 5 and 6 50
35, 25 and 10 · cents · cla~s 4 '
grades 7, 8 and 9, 50, 35, 25 and
10 cents ; all other s compet ing, 1~
cents. R efreshm ents will
be
served.

WORTHINGTO~
Worthin gton,
Aug.
6 - William
Thronto n Simps on of Springfi eld will
read a program or plays for bencfi : of
the library Monday afternoo n , thrl3 th . :r-11· ::iimpf1 011 is givin~ the Jihrnn•
·,11 tile prr,cced i: of lhf' e ntc,&gt;rtaln ment .
T ir-lcets will h e &lt;iO t:C•L ~~.
I~e v John f' . :\lan ,1·c11 o f Will ia m s
hurr: 11 ill preac h at the Con;;re.::·atinn al el1u rl'l1 ~unrlay in e ~chan ge with
Rev J a mes 1-1 . Cu rckc~.

"

�1,~r-·
WO RT l:l lN GT v.S

l'ln ns for An nu al Fn
lr
W or thi n g ton , Au g. 9Th e W om en 's
Be nev ole nt soc iet y w
fai r on the ch urc ill h old its an nu aJ.
clay aft ern oo n at 3.h co mm on W ed n es - 1
Th ere wll J be the
u su al att rac tio ns
old a ntl yo un g, 1
ho me -m ad e ap ron sfor
an d rag ru gs, fan cy
wo rk, a tab le of h om
ke cre am , n. rum ma e foo d, can dy and i
an d ba lloon s for th ege t a ble , a lso toy s
cit y for 1h is ye ar' ch ild re n . A n ov - '
s sal e wi ll be a I
/
pit ch er t able. Th e
pit ch ers r ep r esent
· a col lec tio n giv en
ma ny sta tes . At 4by m a ny fri e nd s In
o'cloc k tw o qu ilts
ma de du rin g the wi
me mbers wi ll be au cti nte r by soc iet y 1.
(
on
do ll dre sse d by Sp rin ed off. A lar ge I
gfi eld fri en d
, be s old du rin g a the
ll
aft ern oo n. If wl
the
1 we ath er ls su ch tha
to ho ld the fai r on Wt it is Im po ssi ble
ed ne ay it wi ll
\ be he ld tw o da ys lat er, sd
on Fr ida y, I
Th urs da y be ing the
lan d Co ng -re gat ion alda t e for the Hi gh - I
clu b me eti ng at I
Cu mml ng ton .

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,_,.Al,J-,/Y J. /v (&lt;..-, r//l}-4.,;f, 'i
/A;t~&lt;...

&lt; OLD-'l'IME

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LOCAL INDUSTRY

To the Ed ito r of Th~ Re
pu bt ic an :-

In the co urs e of res ea
rch am on g o1d
flies of tho co un ty ne
ws pa pe rs I ca me
ac ross the 1'ollowing,
wh ich ma y be
of int ere st to yo ur r ead
ers .

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WORTHINGTON

Aug. 10.- The annual fair of '
the women's Benevolent soci ety
·• will be held Wednesday afte rnoon at 3 o'clock on the church
common.
Mrs. L. A. :Mosher, who has
'.
been visiting her daughter, Mrs.
Guy F. Bartlett, has returned to '/
I
( , Turners Falls.
:
hdaug
and
e
· Mrs. Frank Ston
:
jorie
Mar
Miss
ter, Joan, and
.
the
ding
spen
are
who
Bartlett,
summer in Ogunquit, Me., were in
town recently tor two days ,
Miss Bernice Kilbourn bas returned home after spending ten ,
days with her uncle, Fran k Bates,
or West Springfield.
Mrs. A. O. Hewitt and daughter, Catherine, or Pittsfield , have
arrived tor the remainder or the
season.
. Mrs. Harry Eddy of Florence Is '
;~~!~~ her daughter, Mrs. Walter/
The Hay_de~vill~ base ball team
defe ated the· Worthington team
. ~ .~
today. 4 to s.

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�11,&lt;.r
WORTI-IINGTON
A111;. 20.- Th e annual meeting
of th e Worthington Golf club will
he h eld at th e clubhou se , Satur- ·
day, Au g. 25 th , at 4 o 'clock in th e 1
afternoon , for the election of or- ,I
flc er s and transaction of such
business a s may legally come be- ; .
fore said meeting.
Miss Marion L. r rtlett left
Friday with Mr. and Mrs. Irving
L . Bartlett a nd their son , David , ·r
of Greenfield, for an auto trip to
Lake George.
Mrs. Howard Mason and three
sons, Lawrence, Dooald and Murray, and Mr. and· Mrs. Frank I:'
Braman of Cummington left yesterday to visit Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Mason and family of Earlville,

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N. Y.

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The Sunday school of the Con · 1:
gregational church will hold a I
picnic Tuesday at 11 a. m. at I
1
Tower's Ledges.
The usual bridge party at the '
Country club Tuesday afternoon
will be given. for the benefit of
the Frederick Sargent Huntington I
library.
The Young People's club will
hold their last picnic of the season
at· Windsor Jams on Wednesday. '
"Conwell Sunday" will be observed in the Methodist Epi~copal I
church at South Worthington .two
weeks from today, Sept. 2nd. Once
a year this church, which is closed, 1'.' is opened and a service held in it
in memory of the Rev. Dr. Rus·
·
sell H. Conwell.
- Miss Elizabeth Cole. Mrs. Eben ·
Shaw and Mrs. Leland P. Cole en- 1
tertained two tables of bridge ·at It
Mrs. Cole's home Friday after-• '·
noon. The first prizes were won by
Mrs. H . L. Crafts and Mrs. Philip
C. Gurney o: Ashfield and the ,,
consolation prizes by Mrs. Walter
M. Shaw of Huntington and Mrs.
Whitney of Ashfield. .
11
Miss Charlotte Coffey of New
Haven, Conn., is spending a week 1;
j
at Lafayette Lodge.

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11c,2. 'I~

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WO RTHJSf. TO X

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n ·nrthin •~·t on . Aug-. :!Ii-There will
at th e
be :i hc n cnt hriclg-0 pa rt y
cn11n t1·.,· c-!1111 t nn :n1-r11 11· nfternonn :-it
'.!.:io rnr t il t' Cl1Jl rlr011 ·s ,\ irl :1,s o cia l io 11
qj' :-,; nr t h :1111p t nn .

T hr Youn :.:- PropJr, ,-.: c l11 b " i ll iln lrl
plt;nir n t \ \ ' intlsor :':1 r n1 s n n \.\' L' rlnrs .
d :l \", T hiR pi c ni c. \\"h l c h 11':t.S to ha vc
Ilee n h elrl J;:ist· wer l&lt;, ,n1s postpon e d

I

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lJcra use o f bact 1,·ect the r .
Th e •IH Ca nn mi: C'iub \\' i ll mrpt n r.
Th u,rsday ,,,it h i\lrs Ja mes H . Bu r cr. 2s
at the parso n age .

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Mrs Judson Roge rs of "\Ves t Rox: h u r y , Maas., ifl ·1isitrn g h e r mot her , ;
.M:rs M y r a R. S teve ns of Stevens ville.
M i ss Carrie Wood P orter w ill l eave

t his wee k to ta ke charge
S pringfield Y, W , C. A,

at

·-wiTHIN GTON

the

!

James ·
29.- Mrs.
. gave
Jifug
r " at
showe
"
a
., Burckes

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f

H .']_
the i
parsonage yeste rday afternoon at 1
Miss Anna Jacob3 o 'clock for
son , whose marriage to John
Ames of this town will take place ·
next month. About 50 guests were ·
present. An old-fas hioned w e ll.
'. held the gifts, which came to vi e w .
as the windlass was wound. There ,
was a musical program by Miss .
Zogbaum of Philadelphia, Miss
Marguerite Johnson, Miss Doro.:..
·thy Bartlett and · Miss Pearl Fitzroy. Refreshments were served.
1
There will be a service on Sun- 1
day at the church at South Worthington, it being , " Conwell Sunday." No services will be h e ld
here , so that the people may attend. Mayor Leon Conwell of
Somerville will be one of the
speakers.
A Sunday eve ning service willi
be held at the F'rederick Sarge nt,
1
Huntington library Sept. 2nd.
Mrs. H . S. Cole and Mrs. Ernest
Thayer attende d a meeting of the
Home-makers' club of the Hampshire County Extension school at
Ware yeste rday.
Miss Fay Neil of Columbus,
Ohio, left yesterday to return to
he r home.
Dr. and l\frs. Harlan Creelruan
have bee n th e gue sts for a w e ek or'
Dr. Frank K. SandeJ..'s, of Rock11port.

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�WORTHINGTON
Sep t. 12.- A rec ept ion of
sch ool 11
ofl lcia ls wa s h e ld las
t eve nin g at (
an ope n m eet ing of the
Gr ang e at
Ly ceu m hal l . Sev en tab les
of wh ist ,
we re for me d. Th e firs t
pri zes we re
wo n by Mr s. Ern est Th
aye r and
Ar lin Co le and the
con sol ati on
riri aes by Mr s. Wa lte r
Sm
Joh n .Ja rvi s. Re fre shm ith and
ent s we re
ser ved.

I

Mi ss Flo ren ce Ma cD ona
go ne to Ha sti ng s, No va ld baa
Sco tia, to
vis it he r par ent s.
·
Ho rac e S. Co le has had
the mis for tun e tu los e -a plu m
tre
ha s bro ken ove r wit h e wbi «!h
a hea vy
yie ld or fru it.

La fay

ett e Lo dce wl ll'
M- ond ay, Sep t. 17t 'h, for clo se on
son . Pro i,rl eto r Cli nto n the sea F . Re ed
and . hia fam ily wil l spe
nd the win -•
ter fn, Pit tsf iel d.

W0 R.1 'RI NO 'f0 N
Wo rth ing ton , Sep t.. 13 -A
rec ept ion 1
ef sch ool off icia ls wa s
n.t an ope n me eti ng of hel d las t nig ht
the gra ng e at
Ly ceu m l,al l. Sev en tab
les o! wh ist
wa s for m ed. Th e pri zes
Mr s Er ne st Th aye r andwen~ wo n -b y
and the con sol atio n pri Ar lin Co le
zes by Mr s
Wa lte r Sm ith· and Joh
fre shm ent s we re ser vedn Jar vis . Re - I
.
l\H ss Flo ren ce Ma ona
ld has gon e 1
to Ha sti ng s, N. S., cD
to vis it her par - i
ent s.
~.. L1~I1-y~tte lod ge wil
sea son on Mo nda y, thel clo se for tne
17t h. pro pri etor Cli nto n F. Re ed and
spe nd the win te1· in Pit fam ily wil l
Mi s~ Oli ve Efl Co le tsft eld .
at her hom e fo1· I\. day o! Pit tsf iel d is
or two bef ore
lea vin g- for n. for 1,n
t's Ya cat lon at
J\fartha.11 Vin eya rd. ighMi
H e nry · of I'it tsf lcl d wil ss Ch ris tin e
l acc om pan y
1 h&lt;&gt;r.
•
Mr and Mr'!~ Sid ney J.
Sm art a.n, l 1
da; ;g·h ter , Vir gin ia, 0f
Lo ngm ead ow .
and Ml ' and Mn ; 'Fr
an k Sex ton of
Rp t1n gfle lrl sp~ nt the
we ek end in
Wo rth ing ton .

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WORTHINGTON

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Se,pt. 19.-Mr. and Mrs. Merwin I
Packard will leave t omonow
to visit Miss Es.telle Stev.ens or
Canaan, N. H.
After a trip
thro ugh tbe White Mo-un taills t11ey
· will go to Portl and, Me. , and from
there fo llow t he ooast route home.
Capt. and Mrs. Phil-lips and 1
party of Sa'.g Harbo r, L . I. , were in 1
town recently call ing upon old
fri ends. Cap t. PhH!i ps forme rly ·
Iowne d the ."Eager Fa1·m" in th is \
town.
Marie Gran ger, Lawre nce Man• I.
or, David McEwen, Vincent and \
Valere Bernier, all 4-H club mem- [
·bers , are exh ibitin g .s tock at the
Eastern States Expositi on .
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WORTHINGTON

IMiss Amand-C\,,,Pease 90 Years Old
! Sept. 23.-Miss Amand,\ Pease. 1
\ who has the distinction of being 1
1 the oldest person -in
town , was I
given a birthday card . " shower" 1
,today by neighbors and friends in I
celebration or h~r 90th bir-thda,y. I'
1
Over seventy cards were received
I1 and several gifts. Her · brother, ,
Charles Pease of ~3:r(f~ir_d, and
his wife spent the day with - her ..
J ~iss . P!laSe is very 'actiye for_' her_
years, doing her own bousewprk'''
fo r herself and her brother,
George, ~ho ~i\ es Wit~ h_er •_
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Mr. and Mrs. John W: .Burc}le_s
'of , Waltham , who have been I'
'· spending tbe s~mm~r .at . tlie par- ',
_sonag.e, hay~ · re91rne_d , to - their,
!home
·•
_·. --_. -_._ ·
_ ' '' Re~., .a,nd ' :
i~we$ ·,_ It
B~rcl_tes a.re bi::J:dng
.,,tri~:\t~ 1:·
Middlebury, Vt. ,,, . . . . . . . .
J udge E lisha H. Brewster :~nd
who - have.- been .'
, the suinni.e~ "ai t he Brewster I..
homestead at the Center • village
. will leave tomorrow to return t~
Boston .
Miss Olive Neil . .and her sister,
Mrs. Florence Neil Barger, wlll
• leave early this. week to return to
their home at Col um bus, O.
The Rev. J . C. Wightman of
N~rt_hampton, Hampsh ire county
m1ss1onary, preached here today.
Miss Marion L. Bartlett of
, Sprin gfi eld was at her home for
the week-end.

Mrs. .

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.,famtly.

s,pe,tiding

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[ - {,; WOR'flTT NGTON ' , ' / /'

(i ington, 0 ,ct. 16- Mrs L ela nd
,\forth and th e Misses E lea n or a nd

I

\ 1fldrod Whist club a t th e L y ce um ,
gr~ni: 01daY evenin g.
b~il F~, on ,the n ew piece of s tate r oa d
,wor corners h;cis comm en ced an d
al thg 6 complet ed befor e t he cold

«eath0 toyal Arca num w ill h olrl th eir
'l'h 1 coon and bea r s u pper a t th e
avnuarn hall, Sa tu r da y even in g th e
LrceuThis is an even t wh ich is look ed
27th, rd to every year , people coming
torwa miles around t o a t t end it.
frorn -~
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wo,r th.lngton

WORTHINGTON,

Nov.

tas

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~d.

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19-The ,

body of George H. Russell who ~ied
at the age of 73 yea rn m West Spring-

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Ueorge- ff RNov 1 8 T
· usseH
·
he
Russel) Whosboddy of George
•I ag, of 7~'
e ea tb at the
Sp1fogfi.eld ,1,,:~ars, occurred in
home of ,h i
ay morning at the
,
s son Gu R
. West Spr ingfield
Y nssell, of
here Yester da y f '
brought
. Center cemeter or I rial in the
.I there at 2
Y, With a service
P. m. 'fhe p•
H. Burcke 8 omc· t - ,ev. James ,

'IlI.

p, cale parsou s w ill en ter ta in th e

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Wo«11ifNGroN

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.Textile Exhibit

A texhle exbiblt

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from
,
11andti, consisting of ._,
many '
, ,yhich has been loa ned "b2y tphieces,
lllll
e a r-t
seum of' Sprin. gfi eld .
se
t h·
, can , be
, en a t e library until .aft'er
·t te?nesday. InclttJ ed in th e, cot-j
I J thon - Is antique embroidery
- 1fron1, Di~lu'a, Africa; red ' scartj
I (wltlt m11-rors) from Tunis Afrl,1- ?a~- B.KYl)tian appJiq11e wan' han-g111
1•
" : 10 m ~ ous~a ntJ_!l oI&gt;_le ; re~ro- l
, I d uc~ion of Oriental damask in the ,.
/ • Vatican; reproduction ot needleP.o!nt tapestry and types of Si, c1han hand.work made by girls in
Taovmiua, Sicily. Eleven lece ·
loaned by the Mi
RI
pd s
1\1'
..
• sses
ce au by ,.
·• iss S~phie RoJi,include two coats
· made _m Soudan, Africa, a bag i
, made m . Smyrna, an apron and a
?edspread and other pieces made
rn , Poland.

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flel1 Friday mor.ning, at the home .or ii
his son, .Guy Ru ssell, was br&lt;;mght
here Saturday aft ernoo~ _for burial. m
the Center Cemetery, with a service
at 2 o·ciock. Rev. James H. Burckes officiated.
t
The· 4-H cooking club met recently f
at the parsonage and ele_c tea me fo)- I.
101,ing offi cers:
President, Doris f
Shaw·; secretary, B~rnice Wozniak ; l
·· ,_ ..,....... _
.,
treasurer, Mari e Granger. '
F ., l W
.
•
11
A texti le exhibit from many lands,
rienc
P Gu1Id_Formed
I
consisti ng- of 32 pieces loaned b_y the 1At a recent meetmg at the I
Art Museum of . Springfield, may be
, parsonage a ~oung Women's ,
seen a t the lib rary until after · Wedf Friendship Guild was organized ~
nesday. Eleven piec:es loane1 by fhe , l with Mrs. James H. Burckes
Misses Rice· an d 'by ,Mi~s Sophie Roje, ·.
presi.d e-nt; Miss Mildred Parsons:
mcl_ud e coats ma de
the Sudan,
· vice-president· Mrs. Arlan Cole
Afnca ; a bag made m Sm5&gt; rn a, an •
.
• :
apron, bed spread and other pieces
' ' secret_a ry; . and Mi~s ~hz~~eth I
made in Poland.
,, . .
°7""-'Cole, treasurer. About _ 20 : were ,
At a recent meeting a_t th e parso:~-· , pr ~sent. ~Irs. J. C/' Wfghtman -. of \
age a youn_g wome·n •s fri ends hip gu n-rl
· Northanrpton •. '\\.'as present and !
ll'a.s organized ,~ith Mrs. _ Jam~s H.
· ' he lped to or,:anize ·the guild,
Burckes _as _rres ide1:1t ; Miss l'dil d:e:1 . ,
which will nieet once a monti:..
Parsons 1s vice-president; Mrs . Ar.a n \ , • ....-..,,.,.,; _, ..
~ : .. _.," -: ,
· ..
II
~ole, secretar y, a n•d Mi~ E lizab '.! th
l
T.he 4-H ·Cookino-__ club met yes- [:,
Cole, trcus~rer. Mrs . .J. C. W ig ht ma n
" h
.
· o- · ,
of Northa mpton helpe,1 to o rga nize
t erday af~ernoo_:1 at .J
p_a1 ,sona,,e •
the guil_ri, wh ich _\\•ii \ m c~ t mont q}Y. aud ,.~lecte_~ th~ ,foll~wi_ng ~~cer_~.:
Colon1a1 electric light" ca ndl~ fi x President, Dons Shaw, sec1eta1y,
l ures, the gene ro us gift of Miss Olive
Be111ice Wozniak; ·tr ~asurer, MnNe~l of Col umb us, 0 .. in mem ~ry • of
r~c--. Gra.nger • .. ,
: ,·
·
·
het _a unt, M i ss Fa y Sto ne, a . f.;mn&lt;,J t'
, Colonial electric
light candle I
!)resident of the li brar y and 'ldentlt\ cd
, .
.• •. f M''
Olive l
with iis in terests from th&lt;~ Q~f inn• n _,r.
fl xt ures, th_e gift o . l 1~s
!
ha:,e bee n placed in ,t h e Fr;e•ie t" ck-,
NP . of Columbu s,_0h1?, ,m memo- i
Sarge1:11 t H:u ntingto n L ibra ry a nd :i re j
, ry of her aunt,, M1s_tia_;, Stone_, :.. \
11 us2.
T hey co ns is t of fou r I
f ·mer__president of the library 1
rought iron fiv e candl e fi xt ures. a i
· OI -·
fl d' ith its interests
cloor la nte rn, t\\' o candle brack et s and ,
and identi e w__
b
n °Jesk la mp
J
from the beglnnmg, have
een
·
_ _ _ _
placed in t~e Frederick Sargent
Huntington library and are now
in use. They consist of four
wrought il'on 5-~andle !h :tur es, a
door lantern and two candl e
ets and a desk la mp.

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1YORTH I;KGTOX

S11eclal To\rn .Mee tin g Called .
, V.'oi-th lngto n , D ec. 3-A s pecia l
! tow n m eeting ·will l.&gt;e held at t h e tO )Y n
ha U on Sa t urday at 2 p . m. to a.ct
on · th e fo llo-1&gt;,•in g ar ti cles: "To see
w ha t action the town will take in re' gard to repairing old trac tor, buyf11g
a n ew one · or ren ting on e for , s now
, work , a 11d t o appropriate mon,e y fo r
J sam e · " "t o · see i t' t ire t ow n will vote
, to a~propr !ate $6.25 fro m fund s } n
I _tl1,e ti:easu t-y to meet the expenses _or
1
th e con ti ngent acco unc. "
1
4 _
I. Mr s J oh n ,Hart and ·;-.1isst,rasco:v.
11e
left yest"~r day to spend a few ,ree k s ,
.: the fo r mer i n , vaterbu ry, Ct., a1'ld
t he latter in North amptou.
He n ry_ L. Tow r r . wh o h a s bee n
v isi ting 'h is · son. Cullen 1;. Towe r ~
of·
· ·: r honi,p t o frh lle, Ct., returned tod,iy.
1 H is gi'a:nddau ghteL·. ' D oroth y 'l'ow er,
! ·w 110 ' 'h as 'bee n spe nding th e weel,
end the1:e i;eturn ed " ·ith him. ·
·,
1 Mrs ,J a 1h ~s H. Bu rck es ,yill entc"rtain .the ·1.~oi.HJg ·•:IYom e n's g uild a t the
' parso1rnge ·) V1ea:iie sda y eYe ning at · 8.
I On TJ;1Ursday tlte::'.\&gt;Vo m en 's B ene rnlen t
· ' society will ri1 ee t . t he re fo1· an all-day
sewing m eeti1,1g 'a nd o.n Friday e,•eni ng ]\,fr a n i:i" l\Irs B urck es wi ll entei·( . t a in th e Grnnge Whi st clu b.
Miss ili-u·y .Pozzi, ·h ome demon st ra t ion ag-e~i t of -t he H a mpshire . Co unt:v
Exten sio 1i serv]c·e ;. w ill h ol d th e secon d
nf a ·s e ries of s n\ring- 'classes- ."nt tl\ e
L yc-euri1 h a ll on ,v ed nesday at 10 a. 111.
M1· and M11,s l'~o~• C. Burr of ~iet_uche n. N'. '.T., 1\fr a nd Mrs Jos eph ' B u'1T
of Hunti n gton . Mr and J)frs F rederi/;k
H. B urr of E i1stha m pto11 and Dr a nd
; Mrs ·w aite r l~. Bu n· of, Springfi eld ·
spent yesterday with th eir parents,
:'.\fr a nd i'ilrs Cle m ent F. Burr.
· .

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_,.
,. OBITUARY
..,.&gt;c..,~,~
.

FRED A, AND RE WS

Fred A. Andrews, ar,&lt;&gt;d 54 , of .
Chestnut street, Florence,
died earl y this morning at th e I
· Pondvllle ho:,p;~i l in W1 entha111 ,
where he ha -J. bEen nr,dergoin g
treatm ent for som,e tim e. Mr. An- .
drews was born in Worthin gton ,
son
of William and Martha
(Adams) And rews. He leaves, besides his wife, Mrs. Helen Andrews, one brother, Irving, ·or 1 6 5
Chestnut street, Florence. The
funeral will be held Saturday
afternoon a t 1. 3 O at Newell's f uneral home, 74 King street, Northampton, Rev. Ellery C. Clapp of
' Bay State officiating. Burial will
·be in the family Jot In North
'cem etery, Worthin gton .
1!&gt;5

Among t he yo ung p eople iri town
for t h e holidays from the Springfield
high schools are Miss E velyn H.
Welch , the Misses Harriet and Claire
Maga rga l, the Misees Ma r jorie a ml
D orothy
Bartlett,
Da niel W elch
Fra nklin Burr, Commerford Martin:
Gordon a nd Normand Gardner and
' Willia m Gagnon. Those coming from
Northa mpton a re, . J\1iRA Anita E.
B ernier, L a wren ce a n d Donald Mason
and Gerald Bates- from Greenfield. .

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SOCIAL AND PERSONAL
Mr and Mrs Roy McCann of 113
Mill street will · soon- give up their
residence in this city to make their
home
New York, ·where Mr Mc.Cann's business intereBts are located.

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·- LOCAL CiRLS RANK l.
HIGH AT SKIDMORE
.Mi,,s Gcl'tru&lt;le Lnpham, ·daughter

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:&lt;1,· ::: ncl Mri; l:Jarry C. Lapham . c;,r ,l'.!
Con vei·se st,·eet, ranked a1:1 one or the
hlg:1est in the "'jun.ior class
Skidmo re college for -the first s emes t er, recenlly completed, according .
an- J
n ouncement made· ye5te1·day.
Miss ,
Caroline AccorsJ, ·ctaughter of · Mr .
and Mrs- Giuseppe Acciorsi of- 18 _Fair- ;
banks street, a, member . o"Lthe. senior
class,, obt~irted -a .high: B average, the f
dispat~J1 said, Miss .Lapli:im. _ Is '. a f
student in ,the department of fine · and Iapplied art:,;: Miss ·Accorsl ls enroled •.
in t he .liberal ·-arts ' department. · · 1
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This page appears at the end
of the scrapbook E.L. 12/7/2021

f

April 20·.-one of the prettiest ch id; brldes maids-;-orue a n(f pink~
of spring weddings and one of .each wearing horse-hair picture
much local · interest toolc place hats and shoes to match each
this morning at 10· o'cloclc at St. gown. Their flow ers were arm
• James'. church in : Sout11 Deerfield, bouquets of s prin g flowers. T·he
. when Miss Catherine -Margaret mother of the bride wore middy
Ryan of this town. and Springfield, blue crepe with hat to match and
'eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. : the bridegroom 's mother, . blue
Willia.m J. Ryan, became the bride I lace with harmonizing hat , both
· of Lawrence Henry Shoughrue of wearing bouquets of sweet peas
14 Rencelau street, Springfield, : an roses. The ch!Jrch decorations
son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank I consisted of pa!"ms and lilies .
. Shoughrue. Rev. P. Joseph :Martin There were 150 guests at the wed.· performed ·the ceremony, usin g I ding and 55 including the imm edithe · sin•gle ring service. John ate families and intimate friend s
, Dwyer, the church
oi·ganist, attended the wedding · b r eak fa~ t
played the wedding
marches immediately following the clrnrch
from Lohengrin and Mendelsso'.,n service given at Ho~el }Varren,
1: and Miss Lena Laconti of Spring- which was also prettily decorated
field, soloist, sang Gounod 's "Ave 1 with palnis and spring fl owers. A
:. Maria," and r •Q Salutaris," by reception was held this aftern oon
, Wiegand. Mrs. La,'lrrence Robinson at the home of the bride's parents
of Greenfield, the bride's sister, ·1 in this town, after which the ·
was matron Qf ·honor, a nd the' bridal couple left for a wedding 1
. bridegroom's sister, Miss Elean or · trip, Mrs. Shough r u e wearin g a '
I J. Shoughrue, -of Sprin gfi eld, mai d- green print dress, gray brushed
of-honor, the brid esi11 aids bein " , wool coat with natu ral wolf fur,
1-I,rs. Fo1:est D. W eatherholt of \ green Balsus ·•h at, gr een sn akeN:ew York, and Mr s. Samuel c. skin shoes and bag to harmonize.
Bulser of Philadelphia. Wilson F. After June 1st, Mr. a nd Mrs.
, S~oughrue of Sprin gfi eld sen ed . Shou ghrue wil b- be a t h ome at 70
lus brother as best m an, a nd the Belm ont ave nue, Sprin gfi eld . .The
j ush ers were Lawrence Robinson 1 hride was bor n in th is t own , is a
of Greenfield, Joseph H. Ryan of gra du a t e of Deerfield ' academy,
Winchester, Donald F er guson a nd 110useh ol~ arts : departmen t of
Norman L. Snow of Spr ingfi eld. Smith' s sch ool , at Northam pton,
The bride was cha rmi ng in a :w l h as been with the Massachubeautiful gown of ivory sa ti n
setts Mut u al Life Insuran ce comfa ~hion ed in peri pd style, and he1'. pany of Sprin gfield several yea rs.
veil . of tulle in lVIadpnna a rra nge- Tlie bridegroom was •. bor n in ·
ment was most becomin g. She Spt ingfi eld·, ·educated there and at I
carried a very hanqsome bride's Syracuse u niversity, P!1i Kappa 1
p~ayer book of white calfsk in, Ps' . fr ate rn ity and · member of Uni- 1
with markers or n-arrow satin rib- ve rsity club, and · is employed_ at
bon cascading from it, clustered Massachusetts Mutual Life Insur~ 1
at intervals with lilies-of-the-va l- ai .cc comriariy at Springfie ld·. Wed- ,
ley. A;ll the attendan ts wore fro cks cling· guest11· pr esent wer e
froµi
of chiffon, cut with circular s ltirts
York;' P h il ade lphia, H asti ngsand irregular he.m-li nes, in sha des o1.-tlH)--H udson, Brq9ldi11e, ·: Wl'n?f pastel colors, ~he matron-of- cllester, · Plymouth, , Springfielg,
nonor, yellow ; maid or hon or, or- Greenth:ld, Westfield, · Northamp1
· · · ' ton, ii:nJ !lurrou nding to1vris. The
cou ple · received ma~y vah;1able
anc' beautifu1 gifts.

:1

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�</text>
                  </elementText>
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    </fileContainer>
    <collection collectionId="27">
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85145">
                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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            </element>
            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85146">
                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85147">
                  <text>History of residents of the Town of Worthington and of town affairs.</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85148">
                  <text>These scrapbooks consist of newspaper clippings largely from the Hampshire Gazette and Springfield Republican newspapers taken by Ms. Bartlett over the approximate period 1927 - 1960.  As the scrapbooks are scanned and optically character recognized, additional scrapbooks will be added to the collection. There are several scrapbooks in the archive that have not been digitized; those are not members of this collection.&#13;
Some of these items are bound books and others loose-leaf binders. Loose-leaf binders are scanned with a professional flat bed scanner with the result that optical character recognition is of reasonable accuracy. Books are scanned photographically with the result that optical character recognition is less accurate.</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="42">
              <name>Format</name>
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              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85149">
                  <text>Paper</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85150">
                  <text>Elsie V. Bartlett</text>
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              <name>Date</name>
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                  <text>1927/1960</text>
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              <name>Publisher</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85152">
                  <text>Worthington Historical Society</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="93">
              <name>Date Available</name>
              <description>Date (often a range) that the resource became or will become available.</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85153">
                  <text>2021-12-09</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="14">
      <name>Physical Object</name>
      <description>Physical objects other than books, documents, photographs &amp;c.&#13;
</description>
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    <elementSetContainer>
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67605">
                <text>1927-08/1928-12</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="94">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67606">
                <text>1927-1928</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67607">
                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook, 1927-1928 No. 1. Dark grey scrapbook with flexible report covers. 'Clippings' in gold.  Contains newspaper clippings from August 1927 through the end of 1928 providing a historical record of events in Worthington with numerous references to town residents and organizations. The material has been processed through optical character recognition so it is text-searchable and has an interactive table of contents.</text>
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          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67608">
                <text>15.2 x 22.9 x 0.6 cm (6 x 9 x 0.2 in)</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67609">
                <text>SCR01</text>
              </elementText>
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          </element>
          <element elementId="108">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67610">
                <text>Box 13</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67612">
                <text>Scrapbook - Elsie Bartlett, 1927-1928, No. 1</text>
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          <element elementId="51">
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              <elementText elementTextId="67613">
                <text>Book</text>
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          <element elementId="49">
            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <text>Scrapbook</text>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>Elsie Bartlett</text>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="76883">
                <text>Bartlett family</text>
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          <element elementId="93">
            <name>Date Available</name>
            <description>Date (often a range) that the resource became or will become available.</description>
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                <text>2007-03-27</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
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            <name>Medium</name>
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                <text>Paper</text>
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          <element elementId="38">
            <name>Coverage</name>
            <description>The spatial or temporal topic of the resource, the spatial applicability of the resource, or the jurisdiction under which the resource is relevant</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="76886">
                <text>Worthington - other unspecified</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="126">
            <name>Mediator</name>
            <description>An entity that mediates access to the resource and for whom the resource is intended or useful. In an educational context, a mediator might be a parent, teacher, teaching assistant, or care-giver.</description>
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                <text>db edited item 01/06/2019</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date Modified</name>
            <description>Date on which the resource was changed.</description>
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                <text>2021-12-07</text>
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                    <text>No reference is generally made to the source of the clippings. There is
at least one reference to the Hampshire Gazette and one to the Springfield Republican. It is presumed that all of the clippings were thus from
both publications. E.L. 12/7/21
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Church Has Annual 1i/eJ1;;~'/ ,
( Jan. 6.-The annual business
meeting of the Congregational 1
church was helcl at the church to• 1
;day, The Rev. J. C. Wightman of
Northampton conducted the mornIng church• service and a lunch
served at nMn was followed by
the business meeting In the arternoon. The following officers were
elected: Clerk, Mrs. James n.·
Burckes; treasurer, Mrs. Eben
tShaw; church school superintendJent, Mrs; Ernest Thayer; 'deacon,
Raymond P. Buck; auditor, Mrs. ,
Franklin H. Burr; member of
church committee, ·Miss Susan T.
:Rice; member. of missionary com1mit~ee, Miss K. McD. Rice; music,.
!committee, Mrs; Leland Cole, ;Mrs.
IN; C. Tuttle, A. G.. Capen, Miss N.
,s. Heacock~ soci11.l committee, Mrs.
Charles A. K1lbourn, Mrs. Horace
S. c'ole, Mrii. J. H. Blirckes; Mrs .
. Eberi Shaw; ' flower committee;
•-:J M!ss Elsie V. Bartlett; . relief com' m1ttee, . Mrs. Ho.race. S. Cole, Mrs.
J. H: Burckes, . Mrs. •Arthur Wlth; erell, Mrs. Willard. Jones; - organ. ; 1st, 'Arthur .G. Capen; interchtircb
· 1 union
committee; Raymond · P.
Buck, .Mrs. F. · H : Burr; nomiiui.t: Ing committee, Mrs. H." G. Po:ter, I;
. Mrs. Leland Cole, · Mrs, ChaTles :
\ Kilboum. It was voted asJ n the
I past two' years to .hold a special
: service at ·s outh Worthington ·tbe
] flrs·t Sunday ·ln September In the
, home church of Rusself Conwell.
·, Voted, that the pasto.r · ha.Ve the
! month of February for his .vaca: tion, There were 3 3 r-esponses to
j the roll ·call in person and by let. ter.
,
· ·
, The Grange will meet Tuesday ,
. evening at the Lyceum ball and ,
· Install ·its officers. Past Master · 1
Mrs. ·earl Loveland and her suite· 1
Jwill induct theµi _. into office. A I
l supper will be served.
The Women's _Benevolent .socie- / ty w111 hold its anIJual business r
meeting at the .home of Mrs. T. C.
.Martin OJl' Wednesday afternoon
at 2 o'clock.
. .
1
\ The F-rlenaship_Guild
meet I ·,J
'at-tlfe parsonage WednJ Sdl!,Y even- r /\
1Ing,
r
, ·M1:, .and Mrs. Charles A. :rm- /
bourn will entertain the Grange [
1whlst club Thursday evening.
[
The Hungry Dozen will meet ;
,Friday afternoon with ¥rs. Fran- · ·
1•
·J cls A. Robinson .
.

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et y
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So ci

' B en ev ol en t
El ec ts
ss
an nu al busine
Ja n. 9;-T h eW om en 's ,:Benevom ee tin g -ot th eas ·he ld -t hi s af te r- ,.
le nt so ci et y wock at th e 'he m e of ·
noon at 2 o'cl M ar tia ,_w ith "Miss
Mrs. C ar m el ita, th e · pr ea ld en t, _pr e- ·
Su sa n T. Rice llo w in g officers and
si di ng . Th e fo e · el ec te d: Pr es t- ·
co m m itt ee s w er
T. Rice.; vice
/, de nt ; Miss Su sa n Smibh; -aecre-:
. In a
pr es id en t, Mrs re r, ·Mrs. -.Helen ·G. ·
ta ry an d tr ea su Mrs. An na .Cole, :.
s,
M ay:
/B.urr; dl re ct or
B ar tle tt, Mrs. M rs .
V.
e
rii
Ef
s
is
M
w.,
ha
.S
ce
ra
G
/ K ilb ou rn , M rs .
e:; .,.
Mrs. Effie -Peasan-·•;
e
H elen Jo hn so n,
-th
or
.J
/ co m m itt ees fo r ta bl es fss F . C ol -f
ndy:, ·M
•n ua l fa ir : Cari et B re-ws te r; .food, . ·
ar
H
s
is
M
.Burr,
s,
·jl in
le, Mrs. ·H el en
. Mrs. A nn a. CoPo rt er , Mrs. G ra ce
'Mrs . May G.
.ck~a;.. .ice /f
. Effie S. B ur
.!Sha w , Mr.s Im og en e Cole, M rs;
cr ea m , Mrs. Mrs . .l\.faj)el "T . Shaw:; , ' ·
Anna Ames, si e :V. 'ff ar tle!t . .Miss
El
'- /: bowls, llfi ss Jo hn so n; -fancy .w.ork, ~· ?.farguerJte A m es, -M rs; &gt;M'ay · ".Irtl-·
.• Miss Be ss iers. In a Sm ith , ltfrs.
- - bourn, - M so n; toys, .Misses M ar s ·
tt; ru m '. j H elen Jodhn
D or ot hy B ar tle
1jo ri e an
ic e; ru gs ,
·R
.
cD
·M
IC
,May :
--/-ma,ge, Miss
Rice, Mrs.
Miss Su sa n T. s co m m ittee, .-Mrs-.
lcit'I"
Fr is se ll; gr nu nd
1\ fa rti n: publ
- C ar m el ita B.V. B ar tle tt; post~rs,'
. 11tfiss El si e
h Cole Torrey;
M rs: El lz a_b et ar y committee of I
on
ber of m is si
Ames .
Mrs. An na H. :is
th e cb u.r.ch ,
as
w
t·
or
r's reP.
· The tr ea sularenc e Jn th e tr ea su ry .
.lows: B.a
$5 9 7. 29 ;'/ '
ta l ex.pena~s. expe
nse I.I
· $1 25 .4 5_; to
$7 22 .7 4;
to ta l re ce ip ts ,
ec-1 1
ei
r
fo
ge
na
the .Parso
fu nd
'
i·s
to
ou
' of w iri ng
rp
co
in
tr lc lty, $211; ni ng fu nd , $ 505 _59 :• '
1 r,· ' ,
! 761 ._29 : D ow th e an nu al ,1a
1,
s {rom
ptS·
' i ec ei-"
ic , ,
fa
$3 98
ns es of an nu al
.I ~ ·" • expe
1 ··
rs -h av
t
~; ~ e~ ri ngbeth e· /·, 0 5,86 .'thFo
du
ciety
Jo in ed e so Lu ci a G ...-0'1··1·1Pas
n•
·rs '"Effi soS
irear: . M rs .
Mrs . A nn a H. . A m es . MF / lie ·
rs . M~y
JS Se .
B ur ckes au d M
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,.&lt;.n II Cl'Olent Soclely JUeeUng

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W.onhlngto n, Jan . JO - Th e ann ua l •
IJusln csR rn ee llng of t he W ome n 's .Be - /
n c vulent society was lwltl this afte rnoo n a,t 2 o'clock a t t h e l1om e uf Mn;
Ca rmelita Mar tin , wlt.h Miss Susrt11 T.
The /
!lice, the preslde 1Jt, 1,residiug-.
fo llowi n g o ffi ce r:, a nd c-u rnmlttees were
elec ted: Pres id ent, Miss Susa n T .
Rlc11; vlce-presJdellt, Mrs I11 a S mit ll; I
secretary n nd trea Hurer, Mrs H e len G. •
Burr; dlrc&gt;c torn, Mr-s ."-nna Co lp, Miss i
E ls ie V, B :u·t lelt, ~Im Mny Kilbourn ,
Mrs Grace Shaw, Mni Hel e n J oh n son. '
Mr:, Eflle Pe:.rne. The t r e,.,sure ,·'s report [
wns as fo llows: Ba la n ce In treM:ury.
$1 2G,45; total e xp en ses, $ii9T.2 9 ; t ota l/
' receipts; $722.74; expense~ of wirin g
' the pars on nge for electr icity, $271; in co rp ur ato r 's f und, $761.29; ·Dow ning
f u nd, $505. 59; rece ipts from . a nnu a l
$328.38; , expense o f a nn ual /
ralr
·fair, $85 .8 6. · F o ur n e w m e mbers j oi n - .
cd •tlle society during tii e pas t yea r :
Mrs Luci c G, l\fol lison, Mrs A nna H.
A m es . Mrs Effie S. B u rcl&lt; es u nd Mrs
/
May Fi-issell .

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Ilashan · Hill Council of Royal :
rcanum held an installation ot j
s officers at an open meeting at r
e Lyce um hall last evening.
upervlsing Grand Deputy Harold ·
illiani.s of Stockbridge was as~isted by the grand guide, George
/french of Stockbridge; supervis- ;
v lings; -Grand ,
i?g Deputy, Mi'. 1Jtn_
,t-tegen t . ·wmiam C. Root and Past /
,Regent Felix Scharmen, all ot/
installation.·,
]Pittsfield, · in -,~he
Owing to illness, not all the offibers-elect were' 'p;.esent. 'Those iillltalled were: Regent, Walter Hig- ·
'.gins; ' secretary, Wens- Magargal; 1
;coilector, Fred ';Fairman; freashri e'r, Harry' L. Ir~tes; sffti_ng past .
~ regent, Harold .. Parish; tru~te·e , \
'Charles A. Kilbou,rn; . guide, - Jo·seph Jolly. . Brier reiual'lfs ·were
• made · bY ·P.a:st ·, Regeri't Harold
. · Brown and Mr. Wilc9x of .Onota 1
)council, Pittsfield, and by tlrn in- 1
en- I
;sta1Iin'g -officets: · ' Dancing
refreshments were \
Jjoyed and
_ 1
.
..
•served.
I Jan. 13.-A . qitizens' · caucu~
1will be held at the town l1all 'on
· 1Tuesday afternoon at ~-o''?loclc.
, Th~ Worn.en's Benevolent socie- , ·
-1 ty' wm meet Wednesday .witi1. Mrs. [
, · Charles A. Kilbourn for an all day
j-sewlng meeting.
Mr.- and Mrs. Ernest Thayer of
i West Woi·thington· will entertain
the Grange :whist club on Thu l'sI
l
: .
' day evening.
The Hungry Dozen ,vm meet
Friday afternoon with Ml's. Win. fred Drake. .
Miss Josephine ·Hewitt, who
recently underwent an opel'ation
··at the Wesson Memol'ial bospltal
in Springfield for ti1e removal or
an enlarged gland on her ·neck, is 1
slowly improving. ·
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Worthin g-ton, Jan. 22-The grange ;
met at Lyceum Jlllll tonight, with thi s •
progrnm: Paper by the Worthy;
mus'te1•; Mrs VI/alter H l1;glns; current •
event s, Mrs J,ames H. Burcses; slng-~1
Ing by the Grange; a eurprlze f,e ature ~•
'by Mrs F ra ncie A. R obinson; refre!3h ~~
mente In charge of a vol unteer com•,.
mlt~ee, Mrs H arold Parish, ..Mrs•
Ernest Thayer, r•rs Wnlter Hl,r&lt;t·n1l:"'"
The Friendship guild will meet oif':•
1
Wednesday evenfng at th e pa1·sonugo';
to sew.
"'
Mr and Mrs H a rry W. Mollison wlll•!
entertain the Grange . w hist cl\lb at''
their home Frida y evening.
. ;;.
Mrs T. C. Martin has closed h e,1,",
home fo r t he winter and will leave ,
tomorrow for B oston.
.
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The Riverside school closed Thurs '-' "
day, the t each er ,. Miss. Ruth L c&gt;0m!s".
a nd all but two of the p1ipils being 1'!J'.:
with the preva iling colds.
··

WORTHINGTON
.Harry s. Witt
Harry S. Witt," 72 years, died at
I his home Sunday afternoon_of ~r1 terioscleros is. · He
was born· in
Worthingto n March 18, 1857, _the
son of Abner.· and Eun_lce Marble
Witt, in the house wliere· he died.
He was a farmer, On July 3_, 1883,
he married Elizabeth · Damon of
· Chesterfield. Beside~ his widow he
is survived by three children, I.
Edna, at home, William H. Witt
cf,. Dalton and Mrs. Wendell Fisk I
1of Westfield; two sisters, Mrs. (-.
Emma E. San·derson of North Wilbraham and Mrs. George Geer of
Mlttineague ; one grandchild and
1two great-grand cpildren.
The funeral will be held at the home Wed'nesday afternoon at 2 o'clock, the
.Rev. William Ganley of North
. Wilbraham officiating. Burial
be in the Center cemetery,

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Schools to Hea1• Radio Program
Jan. 28-Throu gh the courtesy
of Merwin F, Packard • and the
,Frederick Sargent Huntington Ubrary, the . primary and. highgramm!'r schools will be given the
opportunity in the Itbrary to listen
ln to. one of the R. C. A. educational hours at 11 o'clock _.Friday
mo rning when a concert with ex. plana,tory comments. wiH be presented ~Y the NaUo,n al Symphony
, Orchestra, under the directio · nof
~ ter Damrosch .

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Jan. 29. -Th e oran ge Whi st\'I
club met with Mr, and Mrs.
Har n'
· W. Moll lson Frld aY even ing
and
play ed thre e table s. The first
prize s were won by Mill icen t Salmon and Gera ld Clar k and the con1.1olatlon prize by Mrs. J. C. Con
-\
nell.
It has bee'll deci ded by the
chur ch com mitt ee that no more
se rvice s wlll be held ln the Congrcg aUon al chur ch until East
er
S unlhl.y, Marc h 3lst.
A meet ing of the lead ers of the
food club s of Gosh en and Cum
mlng ton met with the loca l lead er,
Jame e H. Burc kes, at
1 Mrs.
pars onag e Frid ay after noon .the
bask et lunc h was supp leme nted A
, ·a bot dish cook ed by the club by
In
the even ing the Calf club met .also
· at the pars onag e with the loca
,lead er, Rev. Jam es H. Burc kes,l
and Haro ld M. East man , coun
ty
club agen t.
Frie nds of
Mrs. John W.
\ Burc kes of Wal tham
, moth er . of 1•
· the Rev. Jam es H. Burc
kes of this !
town , will be i.;lad · to know that
1
she ls slow ly impr ovin g from her 1
.rece nt seve re illne ss with grip pe.
. The prim ary sc:_n ol at the Corn ers has b een close d for a week
: owin g to the illne ss of the teach ·
~
' er, Miss Elea nor Pars ons.
I The Gran ge Whi st club will
111eet on Frid ay even ing at the Lyceum hall.
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WORTHINGTON

Mrs Mln ena Zarr ,Dea d
. \
Wor thing ton, Jan. 31-M rs Mine rva
Zarr, 61, died at her hom e this morn 1
•\
-Ing, after a shor t illne ss. She
was
born In Boun drldg e, ·N, Y., and came
to Wor thing ton In 1910. Mrs Zarf.
twice marr ied, her first husb was
a.nd,
whom she marr ied Marc h
1889 , beIng Nels on P. Wate rbur y. 7,Octo
ber
6,
1902, she marr ied Edw in S. Zarr
died a num ber of yea.r s ago. , who
Mrs·
Zarr leave s five child ren, Mrs Grac
6
N. Sterl ing of Cann onda le, Ct.,
Mrs
Carr ie I. Barl ow of MUl Rive r; Edw
in
s. Zazz of Pitts field and
s E.
Z-arr and Mrs Ethe l C. Peas eLoui
of Wor tplng ton, five. gran dchl ldre~
.
broth ers, Fran cis E. Gree ne of two
New
Cana an, Ct., and Philo
ne ot
Sprin gdale , Vt., a siste r, MrsGree
h C. l
Gran ger of New Cana an, and aSa,ra
.cous in,
Beld en R . Gree ne of Wor thing
Th e1:.i:. J'illl be a pray 11erJ1~ at ton. \
the
· MJ4 aJ,~ turd ay ,....er
:tna, 'aqW. .•Rev
.J. H. Burc ;kes 'offlclatlllg, anc:r
the
funeral will be held at the
e of her
daug hter, Mrs Grac e Sterlhom
ing,
at
Ctnnond ale, Ct., Sund ay. Buri
wlll be
lri Bedf ord Unio n ceme tery,al Bedf
ord,
N.Y .

OPEN SA. TUR Dct ! ~

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COOLIDGE ON
Ni
THIS AFTERNOO
pa ny, I,

cas tin g com
Th e J\"a tlo nal Br oad
UF , tra nsm it- ,1
WR
h
wit
tloµ
ra
ope
In coFlo rid a at j
ot
ty
rsi
ive
Un
, ter at the
a dca s t tbe ·
bro
l
wil
.,
Fla
Ga inesvi lle,
Co oli dge ln con.adclreSB of Pre sid ent
ica tio n ot the Bo k
nec tlo n wit h the ded
tai n La ke, Fla .,
un
Mo
at
n
bir d car fllo
gra m wll l be
pro
e
Th
thi s aft ern oo n.
ilia ted wlt !l
aff
ns
otr ere d to 60 statio
the Un ite d
ot
ns
tio
sec
all
Jn
C
. -th e NB
Z.
WB
Jng
lud
~Hates, tnc
air
dge will be on the
· Pre shf ent Co oli
tlv e mi ning
inn
beg
r,
hou
at
tor ha! ! an
io pro gra m ope na.peute s aft er the radrem
ain der ot the
e
Th
m.
p.
lly
8. 45
ed by a spe cla
the
rio d will be occ upi
500 voi ces and
/ tra ine d cho ir otls. Th e bel ls, Im po rte d
bel
62
ot
I car lllo n
the hea vie st we igh
fro m Eu rop e andly 11 ton s, are hou sed
ate
xim
pro
ap
d
an
Ing
.
t abo ve gro un d en
In a tow er 200 fee
m thr ee to sev
ma y be hea rd fro
11.
mlle

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WORTHINGTON
Da.y" at Library

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Day" at ·
Fri°day was "R ad io- co~rtesy ·
the
gh
o~
thr
y
rar
lib
✓ 1 tl1e
f, · ; -,YhR .lp1!,n11,ct:'
by _M. F. P.11~~ar/
lib rar y foi.- the
.
the
to
his ,ra dio
ng a g-rou p ot I
rni
'mo
•
the
da y. In
ed in to an 1
ten
lfs
i
, school,. ch fld rei de.r th~ dir ect ion .
.; ho ur of mu sic unosc h an d in the
· of Wal ter Da mrbra ry
op en ed ,
' •ftem oo n the Il ca red · , to
o
wh
y
; tha t an
to the brQad· ~on1e in an d lis ten
of Presi-1
on
ati
dic
de
1 ca s t of the
k bir d
Bo
the
of
e
dg
dent Cooli
.Mounl!,t
n
illo
car
d
sa nc tua ry an
ng to
sti
ere
Int
is
rt
tai n La ke; Fl a.
Ri ce
m.
rha
Go
m
kn ow tha t . Wi llia hin gto n .· wa s /
ort
W
d
an
ny'ba
Al
of
to ·.. sel ect the
on e or a · co mm itte e· g· tow er. " Mr.
gin
ii;i
"S
the
for
sit e
rit y on car illo ns
Ri ce is a n au thotho
r of ,, sev era l
au
the
an d ls
,_
.
·
.
ect
i
b.
su
the
bo olcs on
- - - W. . _1\-!-olli-f _,.,
r
F eb . 3.- M rs . H.arr
tile W om en 's 1 . :
son will en ter tai n
at her. ho me
B en ev ole nt sqc iet y for an all da y ,.
ay
sd
ne
ed
vV
on on
sew ing me eti ng .
an d · Dor- .'·
Th e Mi sse s Ma rjo riel!_i_gh sch oo l
the
oth y Ba rtl e tt of rin gfield , . wh o
of co mm erc e, Sp ho me for a
!/
l1a ve been at the ir to Spr!ngfield
1
mo nth , ret urn ed'
.
ye ste rda y.
ett an d fou r
Mr s. Guy F. · Ba l'tl kli n, El ois e
an
Fr
,
len
He
n,
dre
,c hil
ve be en ill I · I.
an d Ch arl es, wh o haw im pro vin g.
no
e
ai;
,
flu
wi th the
-· is vis itin g
llfr s . Ed wa rd J-0nes
rt ·-B art let t, ,,
rbe
He
li er sis ter , Mrs.
·
of Pi tts field .
A. Robin- , .
cls
an
Fr
s.
Mr
d
an
Dr .
the Gr an ge !
so n wi ll en ter tai n Ly ceu m ha ll i
the
wh is t clu b at
Fr id ay eyer.Ing.
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WO RTH ING TO N
rs Har ry
Wo rthi ng ton, F eb. e5-M
the
nter tain
will
Mol llso n
W.
e ty :i t h e r
soci
nt
le
evo
Ben
's
men
Wo
nil- da y s ewi ng
hom o tom orro w t or an
.
h er
m ee tingEdw
nrd .Jon es ls visi totingPitt s- ,
Mrs
rtl e tt
s is ter, Mrs H e rb ert Bn
fi eld. and Mrs Fra n c is .A. R obin son
Dr
nge whi st club
wlll ente rtai n th e gra
a y e ven ing ,
at the Lyc e um h a lltlFrid
n d fou r chil Mrs G uy F . Bar e tt u Elo ise a nd
ln,
dren, H ele n, Fra n':&lt;l
n Ill wit h the
Cha rles who h a ve bee
.
ing
rov
flu are Imp

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WORTHING'l'Ul~

wil l me et
F e b. 7,_: :.T! fe gra nge
on Tue sda y
at th e Lyc eum bal l gra m: Mu e ven ing , Feb . 12. Pro
dia log ue · by /
sica l con te st; sho rt and E :r;ne st .
Mrs , Ha rol d Par ish
l, in cha rge
Tb ay e r; Vir gin ia ree e lun ch, in
ol Wll li a m Bro wn ; caf com mit tee .
y
cha rge of the lite rar
to com e 1n ·
Lad i e s are req ues ted A fine wil t
e.
old -fa s hio n e d cos tum
wh o tail to
be imp ose d upo n any
com ply .
Mr s. Ebe n
11
Mrs . Lel and P. Col e,
ent Sal mc;-n
.'?h aw and Mis s Mi lllc t eve nin g,
las
er
est
to Ch
we nt
tiat e d int o the
wh e re the y we re Ini
r.
er of th e Eas t e rn Sta
1 Ord

WO RT HIN GT ON
I
he gra nge
Wo rth ing t on, Feb .- 8-T

MRS EDWARD C. CAMP
OF WATERTOWN DFAD
•
FaUs WornFormer Chico. pee
.
•
, an, Wife of Pastor, . Suecumbs at Boston Hosp1~al
Re~ u~l lcan
Spe cial Dls patc ~ to The
rs Eliz abe th
Wa tert own , .F eb. 6-M
C. Cam p,
ar;d
Edw
o!
W. Cam p, wife
Con gre ga tion al ,.
pa stor of Phl llip s

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hal l on Tue s:
, will m e et a t the Lyc eum
Pro gra ms .
h.
day e:ve nln g, the ],2t
Mr~
test ; s hor t dia log . ·by yer •
· I mu sica l conish
G. Tha
es~
Ern
nd
a
Par
/ Ha rold
rge of Wi llia ~
Vir gin ia reel ; . In cha cha rge of th~
Bro wn; . ca fe . lun ch, in
Wo me n -are re..
Jlte rary com mit tee.
-~a shlo ne'd co,. old
in
e
com
qu este d to
imp ose d UPP II
be
l
wil
fine
A
tum e.
a n y who ',"n &lt;n

="'•"· ". ,
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" ·o Nr
T
I-_NTG~•·=
... .H-~~
·. ...T
.· :·•· w:oR
.
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own Mrs ·c8.111p ·
:-s in ce lfvl ng at ·w a tert nd In the civi c
1s har ed wit h h er hus ba
~
s life of the. com
,
.
so cial ana reli· giou
,.
·
• '
mun !ty.
.
Mrs , t amp Is '
d,
ban
hus
er
h
es
e_sid
B
' ··1 •
Mrs Har riet
;,ur vive d by a . da ugh ter,Dr Ca rrol l H
K oote K een e, wif e of
era l ,;erv ice~
wi~f n e of Ch a tha m. . Fun
gati ona l
s _Con gre
att . Phi llip
chu rc l~es
n a t 2.30.
_ :, Ul clay a fter noo
__

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ang e .wh ist '
... Feb . 10 ,-T he Gr.
day ~v eni ~ /.
clu b wil l .-me et on Fri
Frii;ise!J.
wit h Mr. and -Mr s. Joh nWil l ent er- ;
le
-Co
P.
and
Lel
I Mrs ..
er
ngr y Do zen at h
/tain the Hu
on.
rno
afte
dav
urs
·T.b
e
1hom
s. Geo rge Jas. pe r 1
j Mr.fa and, .M~
d M
TS. Fra n~ Sex ton
mil ). an
1 and
rmg fiel d. ;
i o_r Vir gin ia .str eet , '8p

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y a t Phi llip s
c hur &lt;;h )!er e; di ed . toda
era n 1O ~ r
Gen
s
seH
hµ
c
sa
Mas
se,
h ou
ess of S\!.v era l ·
a t Bos ton, a ft er,. a n illn
•
.
.
mon ths. mp was a na tive
of Cl11 c ope e 1.,
•
nd
Mr~ Ca
a
J.
rles
Cha
t.
0
ter
F a lls,, the dau gh
wa s t.• .
'She
.'
s
la:'in
iil
W
·
)
in
·un cle. ·Ch arl es A .
Sa ra h· (Go odw
rv1 slte d ·th.e lr a,_
.
·
st f!e ld N o rma l I
·tod
rn.,
lbou
;J{i
·.
. g r a dua t ed from nV,'e
·•
a
e.
as
w
in e yea r s
.I(a the rin e l\fc Do wel l Ric
ss
'Mi
. sch ool, a.nd for
·
-;
.
,
ools
sch
eld
rk
fi
g
Yo
in
w
Spr
Ne
he
t
m
in
.fro
' t e.3: c~~
.wU Lsa tl Th urs day
.
·to

,B~r r~w s s ch~ oJ; 0,
: eigh t of the~ . in ,: he Sp1 m.,f l eld, J a n- .
8:t
led
n
a
m
was
She
Ca mp ~va s l
ua ry 2?, 1895 , .wh tle Mr·
l c hut· c h
na
it.tio
greg
Con
e
th
pas tor of
h e r em a in ed :
re
whe
on,
ngt
rthi
Wo
t·
a
wa s the n call ed
unti l 1898 . Mr Ca mp
Co ngr ega tion a l
to the pas tora te of the H e a nd Mrs
: ch urc h at Wh it m a n.
e th e r e unt i l
~ Cam p m a de t h eir hom
to VVatert own.'. Llfil!.§_..._~vh e)i_th ~ _ ':!!.!_I]e

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e -s he exp ect s
_f(J[' Fra nce , \\"hernth
s ·t -P~" r·15 •
spe nd sev era l mo
n

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woRTHINGTON

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I II F WORTH
rNnToN ,
.
eb, 20 .- K ei,net h B. Pe .
Wedn esday eH nserving as t ranirse juro

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Feb. 11-0n
ase l:s
Ing at g o'c'l ocl&lt; , iihor. t lec tures 1Isil ti ng of t he }'ebru a r y rt a t the .
Justrnted with col ored Jan t ern
th e su pe rior cou r t w hi ch O : rm ?f '1
slides, will be gly en In tl1e library
No rtliam!)t1Jn l\Ton day .
P ned 10
on the following subj ec ts : Dani e l
. J am &lt;&gt;s OIPksak , th e llltle s
Boone
Wolfe ancl ?\Iontcalm .
11Tr. a nd Mrs. Ste phen Ole! 0 of
Grand' Can yon, Sunn y_So uth , a11 •!
ill with mea sles.
&lt;Sa &lt;, ls
scenic ~ ontlers or' th r. West.
I
'.'\li ss Ma r ion L . lla rll e tt of
.
The Wom en's DeneYolent soc!e- 1
Low n. a t eacher in t he B . tins
0
ty will mee t on Wedn esday with
~c h?ol. Sv ri ng f-i eld , will
Mrs. John .Fri ssell at lh.e ce nte r I
s pnn g- vaca ti on , comm encin n }' th e
for an all~clay s,iw:a g mee l!n g.
I
~2 nd , fn P hil ad e lphia a nd ;,, eb.
Mr. and Mrs. l\lerwfn F . Pack- I
m gto11 , D. C., a nd will 'Ltlcnd ashard will entertain (h e Gran ge
in 1tu gu ra t!on of J'r esiuent-E /h e
Whi st club on Friday evenin g.
H oover .
ect
The Hun gr:· Dozen ,~·ill mee t on
. A tra m P who l1 a:i ber n wa nd
.. T!_i_nr~~y_:1! lernoon with i\lrn . . l\l.
111 g ar ound W ort hin g ton for s:~:
r . n ckard .
,
e ra l d a ys , was arr ested by ConMrs. Arthur Granger, wl10 has
sta bl 0 H arry W Molli son , 8a turbeen quite !II with the grip , a nd I
day , and lalrn n lo No r t ha mpto
had a relapge, Is now slowly imwhe re he was br ou gllt befo re ti~ ·
1novlng.
·
cou r t Monda y mornin g-. Ye$lerda~
Mrs. Leland P . Cole, the l\lisses
I Co ns t~hl e :lfollison re moved
him J
Mildred and Eleanor Parson s,
t o Bnd ge wa ler .
Jf
Mrs. ,-Taucis A. Robinson , Mrs. ·
, Ge_orge E . Torrey, Jr., and l\Ti ss \
IOlive E. C_ole went to Huntin gton
Ilast evenrng where th ey wers
I ;,;uesls at a bridge party given by
Mrs. Walter M . Shaw in honor ·oe
her cousin , Mrs. Armanella Cl.i°rk
or Bennhigton , Vt. '1he first prize ~
woR'rHING'roN
were wou. by Mrs. Leland l'. Cole ,
an d Miss . Elean'lr Parsons /· and
Woi-thington , Feb. 27-Mrs Winfred
the con solation prizes by !lliss I
E . n 'r ake was called ,;,o Orleans, Vt.,
Oli ve Cole an1l Mrs. Clark .
yeste rday by the d ea th of h er grandfather , L. M. Scott, 82 .

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Wo rth ington, J:&lt;'eb. 18- Short l&lt;::ct ur es illustrated with co!Qred lantern
slides w ill be given in t h e library
·w ea nesduy ni ght on the follow ing
s ubjects : Daniel Boon e, , volf and
·· Mon tca.l rn , Grand Ca n yon , S unny
South a nd Sceni c , v onders oE the

Wes t.

T he ·women 's Ben evolent soc iet y
w ill mc1, t on , vedn esda y wi lh i .1rs
J ohn l&lt;'rissell at t he Center for a n allday sew ing mec,llng .
~1r and Mrs Merw in JJ'. PCJc h ard
w ill enter ta in t he grango wl1ist club
on F i'ida y eveni ng.
T he Hun gry Dozen w ill 111 cct on
T h ursda y afternoo n wit h .\ Ir~ :.\1. t•'.
Packard.

, Mm Arthu1· Gran ger, who has been
wit h the g rip, nm! hud a relnpse, i:3
~111
now 8lowly improy in g.
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Miss J osephine Hewitt who has been
s pe nding- severa l weeks with her slstei·, Mrs Harry C. L a pham of Longm eadow, has returned,
·
Miss Millice nt Salmon and l\Iiss
K a therin e Bossen of Hartford will en-1 •
t ertain the grange whist club Thurs- '
da y evening at Lyceum hall.
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}f 2 f ,voRTHl:N"G'l'Ol'f"

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Worthington, March 5-Mr and
Mrs Joseph Elmer Wr)gh P. and tnmilY 11
have moved to Westfield !or the re- 1
: ma"tnder o! the w!n.•,er.
The Women's Benevolent 8oclety
will meet today with Mrs Leland P.
Cole !or an all da y sewing meeting.
Mrs Stephen Olesak will entertain
" The Hungry Dozen" at her home
1,
Thursday afternoon.
Miss Elsie V. Bartlett spent the
week end wlth her aunt Mrs Myra R.
&amp;•evens o! Stevensville.
Franklin G. Burr a student at - the
Springfield Technical High school ls
a t hls-hdine sick with m easles.
The Friendship guild .,111 meet
tomorrow ev ening with Mrs James 1
H. Burckea a t the p a rsonage.
Miss K atherine Bossen o! Hartrord
a nd Miss Millicent Sa lmon of West
Wort11ington entertai nell. the Grange
Whist clu b nt th e L yceu m h,tll Fri~
rlay evening: 'E·lg)lt ta bles wer~
fori~f d, _The _firs! ,,P!'lzes were :won b$ ,

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I Mrs ~eland P. Col~ -and H . Stan fey /1
/ cole and the consolatloµ prlzl! by ·wuliam Brown.
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\\14 Hfl'l-11.N(;TON

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March G-The board of health
wishes to Inform the public that ~
Jthe local inspector ot . slaught ering
will stamp no more carcasses · un- /
·less be : is notified in . time so thal r,·
b e ma:y . be · present at ·th e, time of ,'

s, lii.ul;h tc d.11;:; , _ ,.

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~- woRTHIN&lt;i'Toi ·- - ·7
Worthington, March 7-Michael Pi- I
sarski, brother-in-law of Stephen
Oleksak of this town, . rescued · a deer ,
near the Olelisak lumber· cainp in ,
:W:est Chesterfield -this week fr Om two I
.dogs which had chased 'it until it \
wa s exhaus ted. The dogs had just
commenced to eat it. After the rescue
the deer went away into the woods.
Mrs Frank B ates and Mrs Harold
Parish of West Worthington will - en- 1
tertaln the Grange Whist club at the
' Lyceum hall tomorrow evening.
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WO RTHIN GTOX

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Worthington, March 8-The board 1 '
of h ealth wish to Inform the public
that the local inspector of slaug hter ing wlli stamp .no more carcasses un - 1 ,
less he Is notlfled In tlme so that h e
may be present at the time of slaugh tering.
Th e Fri endship guild w ll! hold a
Aupper at Ly ceum h all on Friday
evenin g, the 15th, from 6 until 8. _
Mr R s 'te ph en Ol eksak e ntertarned
th e H ungry Dozen at her hom e ye~~t orday afternoon. Two tables of wl11st
w er e forme&lt;l. •rhe fl l's t prize was won
by Mrs Guy F. Bartle t t a nd the c~'lHolatlon prize by Mrs Fran cis A. R obinsou . R efr es hm e nts were served , a
feature of. whic h was a birthday ca irn
for one of the members, Mrs Winfree!
E. Drake.
I The ~,riendshlp gulld m et W ed nes day evening at the parsonage for Its
WORTHINGT ON
regular monthly mee tin g. Th ere were
.
12 prese nt. Aft.er st' win g for h ome
Wol'thington, March 11-The grange
m issions there were devot iona l e~erclses l,:t charge of. Mrs I~ . A. R ob- · will meet tomorrow e vening at the
inson. Maglc lan tern slides da ting J Lyceum hall for its regu lar meetlnjl'.
back to th e days wh e_n Dr Wf11iam l As the gra nge meeting sc heduled fo:
~' - Markwick was pastor of the Con- j two weeks ago was not h eld, the proth
g regati onal ch urch and which were ~ gram planned for tha t m eeting,as wi
fola few additions will be given, .
ma de by hlm , were shown. These in lows: Debate, ' 'Resolved that modern
( eluded pictures of th e town and its
improvements should · be put in t he
people tak en m a n y years ago. Guesshouse before they are ·put in th e barn : ·•
ing advert isements was in ch arge of
affirmative, Mrs Ern est G. Thayer,
Mrs H omer Gra nger and the co..'ltest
Mrs Carl Lo veland and Mrs James H .
won by Mrs Leland P . Cole.
Bm·ckes; n egative, by th eir hus ba nds;
short play, Mrs Harold Parish a nd
j Ernest
G. Thayer: kitchen cabinet or. ches~ra in c harge of Ralph Smith,
I current eve nts, Mrs L eland P. Cole.
Each woman is requested to bring a
/
bo;,c: lun ch for two. The proceeds from
WORTHINGTON
i the sale of these wlll be given to the
·w or tliing ton, March 25- ~er eopti, I g ra hge ed ucational aid fund.
con views of southern scen es ··-,vlll il- j The Friendship .guild will hold a ' .,..
s upper at the Lyceum hall Friday
lustra te a lec t ure and song service
evening from 6 untll 8 in charge of
which will be held by tpe Cong rega c hu rch In the llbra ry on - Mrs L eland P . Cole, Mrs Eben L.
' tional
Sha w _a nd Mrs K enneth Pease. The en; Wedn esday evening a t ~. A collection
t ertainment which will follow is in
w ill be ta ken to defray th e expense,,
charge of Mrs Fra n cis A. · Robinson • ~
/ of procu rin g th e s lides.
a nd Miss Mildred P a rsons. Admiss\on
; Th e g-ra ng·e w ill h old th eir regula r
25 ce nts for adults and J 5 cents for
me etin g a t th e Lyce um ha ll, Tuesday
children.
evening. P r ogra m: R ea ding . "Rambles
Th e Grange whist club met at the
Around t h e F arm ," by W illla m E .
Lyceum hall Friday evening anrl
Bro wn ; open disc ussi on on th e gran ge
eight tables. The first prizes ·
played
exhibit for this year at t he Cummingwere won by Miss Millicent Solman
ton fa ir, by the a gric ultm·a l committee, lea der Em erson D a vis ; s urprise ., a nd _Da niel R. Porter and the con
solat10n prize by Ste phen Oleksak
feature , Mrs Ch~rles A. Kilbo urn, fo llo wed by a maple s ugar ea t in ch a r ge , Miss Susan T. Rice ha., receh;eil
word of the safe arrival of· her sister
I
of 1Villi a m Bro wn a nd D r Francis A.
,
Miss Katherine McD. Rice in Par!~
Robi nson.
Cha rl es W. T ower h as qpened his , a fter a very rough voyage.
Friends of Miss Eleanor J.'4cCllntoc'k
house f or th e summ er.
who lived in Worthington for sever11l
l\Iiss Ma rion L . Ba r tlett of. Springyears as a student in the home of
fi eld s p'ent Sunda y at h er h om e.
the Misses' Rosa and Bessie Dickinson.
Mr and Mrs Cull en Brya nt Towet
fomer residents of this town, wlll be
a nd two childre n a nd Mr a nd Mr,
interes ted to learn of her marriage t1,
Merrlll ot Thompsonville, Ct., w e re th t:
Walter Heacock of Wyoming which
gues ts Sunday of Mr an.ct Mrs Walter
H. Tower.
took pla ce in New York city on Novembe r 10. The couple went to Chile
'. rh e Congraga tio na l c hui·ch w hich
S . 4,, on their honeymoon an·d on their
has bee n c losed for t wo m an lhs will
return expect to m ake their home on
be opened Easter S unday.
a ran_ch in t h e West,
............
Owmg to the illness of M rs J. H .
Burckes the S unday evening son!? ' ·
se rvice will b e h eld n e:xt ·sun day
e ve nin g, the 17th, instend. Th er e will
a lso be at e r eopti co n views of western
scenes.

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WORTHINGTON

The Friendship Guild met last I
,
GnJld Supper Well Attended
evening at the parsonage for Its
About 75 attend ed the Guild ,
. regular monthly meeting. There
supper at th e Lyceum hall Fri- '
were twelve present. After sewing
day evening, In charge or Mrs.
for hoille missions th€'t'e were deI K enn eth P ease, Mrs. Eben L.
votional exercises . in charge ot
· Shaw and Mrs. L eland P. Cole.
Mrs. F. A. Robinson. Magic lanI Th e tables were attractively dectern slides datiu~ back to the days
orated in gr een and white with
when Dr. W.1:n. F. M'arkwlck w.as
centerpieces of daffodils. After
Congregational Ii
pastor of . the
the supp er th ere were gam es, a
church a1id which were made by
, r eading by Mrs. Walter Higgins;
\ him, were sl1ow1.1'.· ·These tncluded
' reading by Mrs. J a mes H. Burckes
· pictu.res of the town and Hs p eo- 1 '
j and th e program ended with an
ple taken many years ag'1; .. Pic- l
concert given by
1 old fa shion ed
ancl others in-!
1 Mrs. Guy F. Bartl ett,
Bermuda,
of
tures
Mrs. Win\
terspersed with singing, were also
, fr ed E. Drake, Mrs. Leland P.
shown. Guessing advertisem ents 1
' Cole, Mrs. George E. Torrey, Jr.,
1
was in charge of Mrs. Horner •
land Mrs. Charles A. Kilbourn, ac- ·
Granger and the ;contest won by i
' companied by Harry L. Bates, vioCapen at
&lt; Jinist, and Arthur G.
Mrs. Leland P. Cole. Refresh-1
\ men t s, in charge of Mrs. · l{enneth ,
, the piano. Many old time songs .
were sung, which Included, "Rus' Pease and Mrs. John Ames, were
"Invitation," '
"China,"
! sia,"
served. The next meeting will be '
\ held the first Wednesday in April 1, ·
"Yankee
J eddidiah ,"
" Cousin
Doodle" and " Jeri1salem My Gloat the parsonage:
Solo parts were
rious Home."
'rhe Friendship Guild will hole! •·
1taken by Mrs. Leland P. Cole, who '
a supper at the Lyceum. hall -or.
,
'sa ng "The Revolutionary Tea"
Frlclay evening, 11,farch 15th, frmr_
6 until s· o'clock. The supper wm·,,_
_, and Mr,s. George E. Torrey, Jr.,
who l\ang "My Grandmother's Ad~ be in charge · of Mrs: LJiland .P.
•\ Cole, • 1frs. Eben ·L. ·shaw, ·a nd
All were in old fashioned .
1
. Mr2. · Kenneth Pease; . the :: enter. co~:tume.
'· tainment · which will follow, .is in
'
- -charge or Mrs . . Ffancis, A,· Robin· March 17,-Schools dosed Fri!.
day for the spring vacation and •
\ son and Miss Mildred .Parsons:
Admision · 25 cents for ad°i!lts a·nd
, will reopen again on April · 8th. : I
· Tile Won\'an's Benevolept_"so~ie~. ~ 15 cents for children.
Mrs. Stephen Qlekµ,k ,.. e~fEfr- 1.
-ty .vlll nieet on ·W ed!t'esday_:- ·witK.11
\ tained . the Hungry Dozen : at her .
Mrs. Herbert G. P61tel at the cen- ·
fer for an.. all day ,.sewing meeting.
home,: this afterno~~- T-wo tables
_Mrs. HarrY. .L . Bates ·:will ·enter- I'
~ - whist _w.ere fo-rnred . . _The first 11
tilin · the .II.un~1:y Doz.en. at .. her ·
hoine· T·h µrs (fay :aft_e1;no_qt!;
. prize was won by Mrs. Guy F. \
Bartlett and , the consolation prize
\ by Mrs. Francis A. Robinson. '
Refreshments · · were served, a ,
feature of which was a- birthday
cake for one of the meml&gt;ers..Mrs. Winifred E. Drake, who \
,,
W01t'l'HING1'0~
--w as also the recipient of a nuni.- 1
Hie~
l'tiu~on
W.
1111rr•"·
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ber of gifts.
1
Worthingt,On, l\farch ~O-l\1urray
W :Llt':lr Masu n. 19, son or 'l\lt' and M l'S 1
' Howal'cl N . Mason of thi s town, died&gt;
:WORTHINGTON
at Dickinson l1ospltlll, Nort,Iu1mpton,
this mori1lng or plural pneumonia, Ue/
Worthington, April 4-A regional
':~
l_~ -~-~ _!:he way ty 1_
meeting of granges for the exemplifi1 was a11pn~en! _
cation o! unwritten work and the lecsuffered
he
until
home
his
at
'covery
turer's hour wlll be held Saturday · at
a relapse la.st night. , He was taken
,;,... Drlll hall, Massachusetts Agricultural
to' the hofiPltal early this- rnor;?lng.
• college, Amherst.
Besides his. parents, Mr Mason leaves
The public schools will reopen Monthree sisters, Marlon and Doris, of
'
day.
Northampton, and M1'11 .l&lt;'rank BraA supper will be served by the
man, of Blo.ndford, and three brothgrange from 6 until 8 at the Lyceum
ers, Lawrence and DonaJd, stl1dent.s
hall on Tuesday evening. This will be I
at Smith's Agricultural ~chool, Northampton, and Sto.nley, of Earlville,
\ followed by a lecture, !llu$trated with ,
stereopticon views, on the corn borer
N. Y. Murt'ay was a student at th e ,
by Allen S. Leland, county agent to
same school In ln27. Tile funeral will
the llampshire county extension
be held at th e home Frldny afternoon I
service,
at 3, Rev James H. Burckes ·ofllciatlng
bu.rial .wlll be In North cen1etery. '
and
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N
HINGMeTO
WORT.-M
rwi n
rs.

WORTHINGTON

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R ice ls
Ap ril 9.- Mi ss Su san r il 20t h
Ap
Ma rch 28
tic
jes
Ma
sai li tl g on the
en , Phy lUs
a few we eks
Pac kar d a nd two chi ldr
to
at 1 a. m ., to spe nd
day
ter
yes
t
le!
Kil 'kh am
y,
lph
Ra
s.
Mr
·: and Shi rle
nd.
gla
in En
h Mr. and
joi n ' her
l
wil
C.,
D.
~pe nd sev era l day s wit W! llia ms ,
on
ngt
of Wa shi
of
nds at
frie
sh
gli
Mrs. Mu rra y Gra ves
En
.
in Ne w Yo rk
tor the m
urn e mo uth wil l mo
bur g. Ed wa rd Jon es , wh o has
Bo
for est , the
Mr s.
a bou t to see th e new est er cat hewe eks wit h
nch
!&gt;ee n spe n din g sev era l
Wi
d
J.ri
Salisb ury
ert Ba rtle tt,
fur the r and
her sis ter , Mrs. H erb
jd ra! . Th ey wil l tou r
esTu
e
hOm
ed
in Lo ndo n
urn
e
ret
tim
,
e
of Pit tsfi eld
als o spe nd som
.
ord
Oxf
arid
day .
ent erof .fap an
Mrs. Ch arl es A. Kil bou rn at her
Ste r eop tico n vie ws
zen
ry We d- , r
bra
li
e
th
in
wn
tai ned the ·Hu ngr y Do
·wi ll be sho
k, unloc
o'c
.
8
oon
t
a
ern
g
aft
hom e thi s
nes day eve nin
via n an c:
A
Th e Mis ses Re ine tte, Vi a mp ton
p ice s of the chu rch .
aus
the
der
rth
es
om pan ies th e pic tur
An ita Be rni er of No e E ast er
acc
e
tur
lec
th
by a so ng
are at the ir hom e for
, and wil l be fol low ed
.
ek
we
.
one
of
n
atio
vac
ce wa s a /I ser vice.
Ly Phi lip Ed dy of Flo ren
wil l be a dq,nce at th e tes ·
ere
Th
Ii
s.
Mr
er,
sist
Da
his
g.
of
nin
st
eve
gue
day
ent
' rec
, ceu m ha ll Fri
Wa lter H. To we r.
orc hes tra wll l pla y.
wil l me et
" 'Th e H un gry Dozen "
a t . hei
ke
Dra
ed
nfr
Wi
s.
Mr
wHh
.:
oon
ern
aft
day
rs
hu
T
·
hom e on
has t,
a
ve
ser
i
Th e Gra nge ,vii
11
Ly ceu m
WORTHINGTON
I and sa! ad s u~p er at t-he~ t o B:, fols eve nm g
Eas ter Sun- 1I hal ledthiby ste reo ptic on Y1ews, 1llu sWorthing ton, j\pr ll t~
low
the
in
ay
the cor n bor day was observed yes.terdRev Jam es
tra tin g a Je(' tur e &lt;'n lan
d of the
rcl1
Le
chy
S.
1
ona
en
gatl
All
s-re
Con
tl}em'e the I er , by shi re Co unt y E xte n sion sel'vhis
as
k
too
s
cke
Bur
' H.
in ! Ha mp
,
ection as f 9llll&lt;lcial
story of the resurr
·
.
of Luk e. Spe e . ice · "
the 24 th cha pte r wer
_
: has -b een
e given. EasTh
s·
L~l:i,nd P. Cole sJr.
1
n t,
ter
au
1 musica l number
his
h
h
wit
ted
~pe ndr ng a few dayy wit
church wll-S decorap,s
for syt hia.
of A,shfie ld . .
rne
Gu
lip
Phi
.
lilies, daffodils, t1Jli rchand
Mrs
a re asked ·to
day' inc lut led
Members of the chu coming fe ek the :
·Gu est s in tow n SunGu
y F. Ba.-r t-., ·,
nk, O. V'/ ell s- and
co nsid e1· durLng the ng th e hou r of
f.'ra
. and i.M r f&gt; • .
-, adv isabill_ty of changito 10.30 wi th the - · lett of · GTe enfi eld , Mror Sp! 'ing Brew·s ter•
th.e m&lt;\l'lllng service
1 Ho wa rd C.
• ,1 · .
..
0..
?ol at H.3gui
Sunday sch
hold Its . 1· ~el d, . Mi·: and · M1 s. ~1d u,y , J.
w11)
ld
p
sh1
end
Fr1
The
the parsonage
Lon g1:nead?w, Mr s. ~ -~by
monthly meeting at· T)Je
ent erta in- .:: / ,,man o_fitt ;;.nc. Mrn s Cat he. rin e
w
Wednesday eveping.
He
0.
t
·
·
~1r. an&lt;l :Mr,s.
each member to
ment committee ask stur
-f~.e ,,i~~ .Qt Pit tsfie l~.Les
tor a gue ss,
li.e ·.~ac_lrnrd .
, ...
~1·ing the ir J:&gt;aby pic e
.Siflney:·-..P.xck:trd:Nit
W ill~ams ·
of
sh
ce
Ali
t,
j
and ~:Hs s
Wlg CPJltei;
,
wprkn
bee
· ..
)
has
1
.
wbo
any
·'
Tre
tr,t•
. Edward
!' ' '
his sto re at the ~!!~
Bi •:7,1
'
c:
,;,;,
,
~
st11
mg for A. J. Laro !n
ctt, a;
ter will rehout the winas
ss n 1 ~ 011_e ,. art of ~oJ n?.
Center througcle rt at
&lt;;&gt;rrpw
t. at_ t~1.e I-h g h Sch ool
ue?
sum~ )}is dutiei;s tQm
been .
.s
a
1·
1
·
"·
M, F. P 4 ckan;l', store. s A. Robinson
me rce, - Spri'Ji gfi el'il, sch
ool lrec::w sa ·
up
e
giv
to
d
Dr and Mrs Fra nce
lige
ob
1
-;;·- - - into tbe Samuel
•·
wil l moy,i this week I)ers.
!, ·"·--· •&lt;. • ; ,~·:--.: c ._ 1s
a~ her hom e, j
Cor
and
_
)th
1i~~
11!
01
Cple house at the aen
.
I
!'lw
f
,
!j'pend a
evolent society
E,he lef.'t'·y-este rda y to
_T)le . Women's
allr C.
a.n
ste
for
!Je
y
s.
sda
M.I'c
..
dne
Il.t,
We
.a,ll,
.
_
011
h~
..
wlll meet
, dlay~ }~·H h
.
h Miss Susan
:'. ,. .
day ~ewin_g ?1aetlng wit
LeDt\~, :o;I' Ch est erfeld
ield
enf
."
Gre
,p)es
of
y
M11
e
rne
'Th
Gu
at
ice
e
T. Ric
. Mils. ·Al
·
worth who has . It
·vJ 51· i ·
s. He r- i
l\-frs Charles M.essCud
ks
several wee
5
mg her da_.u-gh-ter, Mr
ere lllnl wl)lof go
th~
to
had a sev
n
r.
soo
rte
Po
G.
t
a»&lt;
ber
ed
rov
is Jrnp
n Cle ksa k
•
Mr . mid Mrs. Ste phethe day in
ghter, Mrs Fra nk
:.e's , spe nt
Jan
,
so11
home of her dau
nd
a
ing.
Steele while convalesc1t
' Bo11dsville;
ter wit h
Ini ng Gurney spe1, MrsEasOrson ,v.
'&lt;Ind
~Ir
s,
ent
his par
Gurney of Groonflelr. who ha.5 been
Mrs T. C. Martin Boston, Sprln;;In
9re ndlng th e winter la
retu rne u to I
fleld and Ph!iad elph has
her home.

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W ORTBI"!JG-1'0~
arthiDg't.OII. Aprll 11-&gt;f ni G llY F .
n t h e grange
Bartlett will e-n ~
~•- C."ob at ~ iJOIDe Tbunda.Y
, ..-uut
)(rs Clinton F . P.--d and
ev=l:ng.
y oa]cen. s. y .. a.-rl,td ,,__
W

Ik!rtya:t
terd.S'

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gave a

-e party ;.i b e-r home Y~
~
0
~ eni%Y aftffDOOD In r e ~ ~
l:B' daughttt ' Pbynts'I!! ftftn ~ 1

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WORTHINGTO
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,, 1,o ke : acramff lt 1'7
J. ~
.BeY.LM

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~ ;,;;+.:- a.dmln!U ~ed
r; ~ lebol~

1

Mr an d Kn. Cul1en Bryan t
a.n 1 !2. r::JJ1 or Th '&gt;m pg,aTaw&lt;ir
I
,
Ame£
A.
Ap:il 6 (1-lliu Basit!
over t~
. :i.I5II Josepb.ine HP.wiU, lln- C bu. 1 , ,: le. C i ., .vere guests
a t Hefiry L. Tow-er a
A. Kilbou.m and Arthur G. CaP'!'Il ,, ..-ee~-er d
.
1oho haTe been eh01611 as deJe- laod )Ir. a nd Mn. James Ktlal&gt;JJ'a
a linna l J.un. Kr.z~p will r ewrn with th.en:
Congreg.
the
trom
gates
1
. ma-'tioz o f / 2nd rli l take her ,:nnh.o a. l a.m~.
ebllTcb, .-m a.uend the
bn, ba.e'k .J,r.
t~ l."rri ted B.2.m~hfre Auocla tl,m I who has ~ riJJill11-;
re. Claade i
¥,
aa,d
Jl•.
pzrrrts.
ill
r
.
an.d
Cbureba
ti-mal
a
cf Cong:reg
L.
~ at the North A!D hunt JKr.a!&gt;P, at Wood bury, Lwl11 ~
CO!!. ~ o o a l e1J1rreb tbf5 a ~t e r I Tr i:; F ri"?J!khi p l;llfldwftll lln
In oon and eTen.ing. Tne ,Pl'0%1'Zm • W edn~ ay (o'Va;ID_g
fo&amp;,r. : %, ~-voUonal semee; 1?•· es H. Bor-et-..ea at the panoaZ.H, bui!les.s , eouf.ltfn g of eom- age.
J.6rs. Horace S. Cf;fe .-ill nterr::dUee rl?J)OTU. e'--eetion of offl .
D-t so- ,
eeh .ud otiltt mz.tten that ma1 ,,Wn the T.Cimffl ·• PPnttO'P
Tbcnda J at aa •
~ come bewn tbe 2SOdz- ri.,.t,, a t her iwme
!
,
tima : t .~s. a12r.ey ot the eonnt, , a u di,- :-. ewing !W't1fng
'Ibe Grange W t..f~ clttb will
• by !htlstiea l aeerEt.ary , .ReT. I . C.
aad
Wlrll t man; :. ~lallatJ on of th.e 1rr..ea Frida; erer.log 7i t?J lfr.
. " P"an or A.dTzl!.ee:" ay EeT. Fred- . J.f r!!. Walter Ji. Shaw at r - -::t h1,g•
I e ri~ Page, D. D.• prefdent Ma. ton.
Mn!. A.Jfn!f) C. ~ u:d her
=boetu CO!lg r ~ I Ccnsfe"r
ar .Nartbam ptne
! ~eie %.Dd ~ 80d£tr; 3.H, ~.hTI , Alfn,d. Jr_
eafareem .eot. a re IJ)e!liim~ a :w~k a t their ......
; ~ Jay
, R.eT•• Arthur T. : Dim.od or Lo-llg- mer hmr.e hi ae.eJaYflle.
Leland P . Cole, Ir., noae nhlti?
~ ; t . A4.dn!D lr7 Rev. WJIgt,.ea
!:lam c. Bell m w '!t CeDtraJ' Ah1 Mrtilay wu S:wrr.Jz 1. 1rU
t!M(~.
ean c:1.!:aori; 4. 0, DQ We K-.d a a. o!rt:.rlay partJ i,y Ids
s- CoHept o: God. aer. G€my lln. u-waa P . c,,s.e, aa erFr~:1
L.. T&amp;vtow- ot Eatlza.m ptos; . . ,.. er-€1Ih1.g m ~
_
I' Jier: 7.U, deYaUo al aemee, Rer. eff'Dt. wu
st tN ~'ftere
1'khob of Se!tfh ~ ;
G.
H91!
I 7.lf. Tbe Kmg4om a.a the Pow- ~
l:all Frida.r neaJq:. Jlatd
er:. JuT. Clareaee B efleebad t of Ol""..WD ~,-e,,1.

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11ffil Attelld CbtJ'reh Meeting

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pry 1)-;-u:o ~, Jlr.a ., ::~ Cr~ ;, ~ ~ T ' ~ U1la o!
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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON
May 7 .-Mrs . Otis H. Buck ar- \
.
rived yester day at her home here
W orlbmg ton, Apri l 10 - . Cha rl es 1
for the summ er.
Gr~ nge r: of West W orthing ton frac- \
, .
.
.
.
tm ed his rig ht wris t yes terclov Wh
The F n end sh1p Guild will me et. cranki
ng a trac tor. He was a·tten li e /
at the parson age on Thursd ay eve- by Dr F rn
ncis IA . Robi nson who t dei
n_ing, :May 9Lh. H er eafter tlll' him to the
_coolcy -Dickin son hospf~al ,/
meetin gs will be h eld the first at Northa mpton
.
/\
Thursd ay evenin g of each month .
J\lr ancl
Horace S. Cole and
Th e re will be a dance at the :, t.h elr . s0-,, Mrs
Wa_ldo wh o have been
Lyceum hall Friday
evenin g . s pend111 g th e wmter at New Smyrn a
na t es , ore 11es t raw Ill Pa
Fla., re turn ed home yesterd ay
I y
'
• .
Sidney
Smart J
r'
Mr. and Mrs. W1llia m Westq n meado w is J.spendi
ng
'
a
!~~tn\
hfo~g
and family of St. Albans , Vt., have his uncle,
c. A. Kilbow n. 1
wittt
rented ' 'VVells mern Farm" and
will a rrive this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Simpso n and
family of Worce ster are _spendi ng
1
1the weelc-e ud with Mrs. Simps on' ,;
parent s, Mr. and· Mrs. John Fris
sell.
WORTHING'l'O~
· l\liss Emily Mosely·, who haR
t:h lltlren's Night at GraJ1g·e
b een
spendi ng t he win·ter In
Spring lield, has ·arrive d at Mi si;
Worthi ngton, April 25- Childre n·s
night was observ ed last evenin g a t an
Bessie Ames' for the su mm er .
Ther e was a dance at Sout11 open meetin g of,the grange at Lyce um
hall. Over 100 were presen t, 45 of
Worlh fngton last evenin g. Th e
whom were childre n. The enterta in Pyram id Qrches lra of Sprin gfi eld
ment consist ed of games in charge of
played.
Rev James II. Burcke
Raymo nd .Knigh t of Chestc rfiel ~. Telepl1Qne," by Mary s ; song "The
Ellen Reed. , /
is dr_lvin g the milk truck for H Pn Helen M. Bartlet t, Philip Dra ke a nd
11
' Leland P . Cole, Jr. , follow ed by prize · ,
ry Sy nd er.
Mrs. Ho ward C. Brews ter of , speakin g by the 'a1i.ildren. Prizes we re
Sprin gfhild has b een spendi ng a , awarde d as follows: Special first prize,
fe w days at h er summ er hom e I to Leland P. Cole, Jr.; first a nd sec~
ond grades , 'M ary Ellen R eed fir st,
here. ,
Donald Mollison second , Walter MolHarry W. Molliso n · h ad t hPlisc;m
thlrd and fourth grades,
mi sfortun e to injiue his foot re- , H elen thM.it'd;Bartle
tt first, P hilip Drake
ce ntly while workin g on th€ road
second, Nellie Parish third; fifth, sixth
Hi s {oot got caugh t betwee n th i&gt;
and seven th grades , Raymo nd Magar .j drag and a stone, bruisin g it bad - gal first, Bernic e W azniac k second and ,.
Irene Parish third. A .P.rize of 1.0 cents
ly.
was awarde d to all others compet ing.
Grosve nor H,,w itt wffere d ,· au
'l'he judges were Superi ntendent of
atta ck of acute indige stion last
rii g bt and is q uite siclc at hi.s Schools L . A. l\ferritt , Mrs Raymo nd
W a rner and Mrs Sophie ·E aton of
home.
Will iamsbu rg,
Refres::tments were
Dr. and Mrs. Claren ce Kil bourn served.
t
a nd th eir da ughter , · Miss Do rol h \·
:\1iss Elsie V. Bartle tt r~tume d yesKilbou rn, of New Haven were ill
terday after spendi ng lQ days with
her cousin, Miss Bessie E. Trow of
town Sunda y. They will leave in
. about two weeks for a t rip to Tu- Bedfor d 1':idge, Northa mpton.
'
Mrs George T. Dodge return ed tojunga, . Cal. , whe r e they will visi'
day .from visitin g he1· son, Homer
Dr. Kilbou rn ·s co usins; Miss Lu c ,
Dodge of xo:,:11a mptoE_: _ __ _ -· _
P. Kilb ourn, Joseph and Ja1m;,
Kilbou rn, all former ly of. lhi J
to wn,, r etur_11 i_ng ib~ last of .Ju 1H•

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~ ~r
OLD·CANNON BALL.USED

,

· .,,y.t)tffEtP'M
OV.E
I. HOUS£7.
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Revolutionary Relic Serves as
Swjvel in Turning Cottage
in Worthington

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May 9-Yankee
ingenuity mad~ use yesterday of ll
cannon balf from the · Re"vrilution ~·
ary war when Charl':la 4.: Kilbourn, a contractor, engag~d In
:moving a:. cottage recently ·, }tn:, -:
tinased by a frank A. Se_x ton · of
Virginia street, Springfield , used j:
the ball as a swivel- on which to ,
turn the building . preparator y to I
moving lt up the liilf Jieyond th·e
_ Kilbourn homef!tead. . ·
· ,
. -j· The can"n"o!J ball ·1s the · property_
· of Charles w,;,;..,,,.- Tower of .thls·1•
town. It was handed -down to }llm
i by ·his great-great -uncle·, NathS:ir-·
, iel Tow.er of the - 5th generatio!l,
. i who, engaged fa guarding t)1e
"itary_ stores at the battle of Blin-·1
kerMlll , picked It up on' the bat"tle
field . after the battle. · It -has a1- ·•
. ways been kept in :tli"e Tower family and yesterday, in conformity
, with the Biblical prophecy "and
. they shall beat their swords iii'to
· plowshares and their spears into·
,Pr~Illl'ing hooks, " was used ·for a
' constructiv e , peacetime purpose.

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ANCIENT CANNON BALL
,·_, ·USED TO TURN COIT.AGE
Worthington , May 10-Uslng· his 11
Yankee higenulty, Charles · A. Kil~Ibourn, a contractor ot this town engaged In ·moving a coftage· recently
purchased by Frank A. Sexton ot V!r, glnla street, Springfield, used a cannon
ball handed down for five generations
from the revolutionar y period as a
swivel on which he turned the buildIng before moving it up a hill to Its
new location. The cannon ball belongs to Cllarles Warren Tower of this ·
town and has· been In the Tower· famHy for five generations.
I
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�WORTHINGTON · !
.paris h ·]:

16.- rhe annua l
I,me·.April
e dng wiil be held .OD; .Safim lay, /

,Apr,il ~Otb, at 2. o'cl_o ck at the_
.
1
Co~g regatl onal churc li. ·
· ' Begin ning. next Sunda y, •. April
121st, ,ft has I been ·· decid ed :to ,
:ChanJe _th~ - hour. of ,the ~or.n lng
y
Iservice fo 1 O. 3 O ··and Sunda
m.,
a.
.11.3'0
at
start
·schoo i · wlll
..
May.
until 'the end
i
socieolent
Ben~v
en's
W-0m
-! The
· ty wm·hold ari all day. meeti ng at .
: the parso nage with Mrs. James
o stess on Wedn esday ,
. ' Burck es as h_
1
Miss Elsie V. B·a rtlett ls spend I in&amp;" a w-eek with her cousin,.; Miss
rBessie Trow of · Bedfo rd terrac e,
/
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· North ampto n.
j'"' -,T.oseph E; Wrigh t holds the-_rec- ,
· 1ord for shoot ing crow·s in this vig shot ten crows with
·1
/ cinity ; havin
ay. The crows .were
Saturd
shot
one
feedin g on a dead ·hen:
, Th_e Grange Whist club will
/ meet on Frida y nigh at the home I
i
I of Mrs. G. F. Bartle tt.
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Worth ingtdn , 1'4ay J&amp;.A. l\fay ni g ht '
cele bratio n took place last eve ning at
'the parso nage wh e n the Friend i;hip
guild of th e Congr ega tional church
gave a showe r for Miss Elean or Parsons 'or So utham pto n, a t ea ch e1· in
the Co rn er prima ry school, · "·hose
marria ge to Danie l R. Porter , so n of
Mr and Mrs H erbe rt G. Porter of tl1is
town, is to be a n evei1t of, tb.e n ea r
/ future . 'Lhe showe r · was a '-compl ete ·.
surpri se. Miss Parso_n s a 1:r ived to -mrtTi .
J,.,• the guild \'.l sse1µbl ed appb.rently for a ·
regula r m eet[ ng . A May ba.sket fill ed
wi tlJ gifts and h un g fo r h e.;- by Mary f.
Bun·, ca lled Miss Parson s to the &lt;.luur.
Durin g h e r absenc e th e double doo rs
in to the front r oo m wer e thr o wn ope n,
' the li g hts turned on, and s he q iturn ed
th e h ous e mirac ul ously fi lled
I to flnuover
100 g uests, both m en and
with
I women . In the ·cen ter or. the r oo1n /
thus disclos ed, w-hich was decora ted
wi th pink a nd white fes toon s of c re pe 1
, paper, hung a mu c h large1· Ma y bask et ove 1·flowlng with m a ny us c; t' ul and I
be:1u t.if ul gifts. Two s olos ,,·Lll'e s un g
by l\frs L~land P . Col e and r efr e.~l1n1cnts wer e Rerved. An interes ting
fea tur e of th e evenin g \\' :Ill a villlt t u
th e n ew hom e nea rbv \\·hi c h h a.~ ju s t
co lonial ln st y le.
bee n co mpl et ed and
Am on~ th e out- o r-town ;; uests were
Miss Car r ie \ V. l:'orte1·. or th e Y. W.
C. ,\., a n d l1e1· :i unt Mi ss Carri e \ V.
JJo rt er. bot J: ,,r ::Spri11°g- fielcl; Miss on,·e
E . Cole an&lt;l l\-liss c_: !a r issa ll en ry o1
Pittsfi eld ; ?&gt;fr an d :\l 1·s Ho w11 rd JohnI son a nd farn il y of Dalt o n; Mrs H ow/ arc! C. B 1·ews t e 1· n nd .:11iss Ma rion L ,
· l Bartle tt cf S1, l'i ngfi elcl.
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.WOR THIN GTON

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Worti l(nlfto n, Mny 6-Th e Frlen d,
11hlp Gulld wlll m&lt;'ct at th•J porso nngc
on 'rhurs dny evenin g-. J-Urr afler the
nt!'r.tl ngs ,1111 l&gt;e IH'ld lh l' llrs l 'l'hura
,lny c ,·cnlng- of rnch m, •ntli .
Lytho
'!'h ere "'Ill he a d:i ncr 11t
o r•
&lt;'Pt1 111 hnll , Vrltla y ev ening . Hntcs 's
c lH'stra wlll pl:1y .
;\Ir a nd ;\frs Wlllln m Vv'c11ton tint!
ed
fa mily ()f ~t .\lhan .s, Vt ., hav e r e nt
"Wt'll 11mer e'L farm and wlll arrive

i.

thl11 Wt!C' k.

Mr and Mrs Cec il Slm11son a nd fam -

tho /
llv of Worc es ter nrc spend in g
.
w cc1&lt; end with he r pare nts, .Mr aucl
•\,Jr11 J'ohn Frlss( 'll .
Miss f;mlly i\fos&lt;'IY, wl10 hM been
spend ing the wint er in Sprin gfie ld has
:,.rrh·c(j at l\Ilss Dessi e Am es's for th&lt;'
0

summ er.

rri C. nrcw stcr of S11rlng•

;\frs Howa
,
fl ci,I has hN• n ~pt&gt; n,llng- a few days 1

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ht' r surnnH' r hom e h r r t'.
H~rry ,v. ;\Jo lll11on h.111 th C' mJ.5fo r•
c
t un c to Injure hi s foot. r &lt;', ·••nt ly whll c
worki n g- 1111 th e ron d. Hl11 foot her.am r
e,
ston
l'nu,: ht lwtw c_., -~u th &lt;' drag- c,,nrJ a
i
a n ,! \\'as l&lt;adly bruis ed.
n
Dr anrl M.r,s Clnn•ru:e Ki ?hour n_nd /
their daugh ter, Mi ss Dorot hy l&lt;il•
rt t

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~e,~-·-;:ve n were in town 11
bou;~
I
today , They will leave in about two ,
week s for a trip to TuJun ga, Cal.,
,
where they will visit Dr Kilbo urn's
· cousi ns, Miss Lucy P. Kilbo urn, Jo. seph and J'ame s Kilbo urn, all !orme r- ,,
: ly of this town, return ing the last ot
1 June.

'WORTHINGTON

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Worth ington ,. May 10-M rs Clinto n
ry
F . Read entert ained "The Hunging
Dozen " at a very pleas ant m eet
After
at her home this a fterno on.
sewin g for a while three tables of /
nts
shme
Refre
;(./ whist were in play.
/
were served .
Mr and . Mrs John Ames moved to
have
Westf leld this wee!,, wh e re they
recen tly purch ased a home.
Th e W omen 's Benev olent societ y
will meet on Wedn esday with Mrs T.
C. Marti n for an a ll-day sewin g m eet'
Inf
1
•~ Iden B. Cady who has been Ill at
irvslowly
is
time
ome
s
for
his home
,
provin g. H(s daugh ter, Miss Helen
Cady, who Is a ttendinp" high schoo l ins
'Dalto n, is at h er home •:tor , a week' '
'
,·a cation .
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)"fiss7{s".

Heacoc-k\,

wh o

has

\b® I\' spe mU ng . som e ' we
e~ in
1m() J\,N: Y.,
is.I n tow n for a.f e~
la:a

f,s loo kin g afte r
Mo the r's Da,y ?J&gt;se:rved 1
sum me
.l pla ce, . Sh&amp; is stol )pi_nher
Ma y 12. .-M Mh er s day ·w
~· at Edwa.:r d
as o~,. i.J,on~s•.
·
·,
ser.v'ed
in: the· Co ngr ega
Th~ Gra nge wi1:J:,m eet at the
,chu rch tod ay wit h an a:pp ropti~ n":
LY·~
nat ~ \cenm ·l !all Tu es~ r~e.ve
,sermqn PY, the paat~r, Rev. Ja:in
n!n g , wit b 1
e'S
rth.e ' pro·~
in , cha rge of tbe ! .
!H. Bul'ckes. The Fne mJs hi.o _Gui ld \"G
races.••
! o~ the. chu rch ' gav e
a . pink.
w1'U.e cam atio n to eac:h moor a.. \· Mr. a-n&lt;f Mrs. :Leland P. Cole
the r an.d s on. Lelan.~ P.
Cole, Jr., .
p.re sen t.
·
_s.pent_ $un dal w.~tfi, 1~ • . !'11.d
::
· .. . · ·
~Bf:a!ter M', Sbaw&lt; of . Hu nbn
·j Good A
__ d:d ce $av ~ Fi~ DlsWctlw
lii:i··.a~e· -.· l~'Vlilig-: -tomorl't),Wgto n;
Some ~on ey , .
i, 'I:he-, Wo-r thln gto n fil'.,&amp; dis tric•. t '.f i~~ d!;- the :~~ er hr Gre at Bartor~-ngt-on. , : . , ., . .
. w..
I
\ a s·:~av ed· a. ron.ntl s.u~ of money ·,.,..,,.. ·.t~, .
. . ,
:rec ent \y b-y foll owi ng wh at
proved
·
';- to .lre,:. g,9:od advice. A farm
er car-

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- ' ryin g -mi llt .to .ielive1· to Slly
der'.s.
mil k tE:1~lc at Ring-ville acc ide
:'1,.- ,l'a;-n.·.i~t.o a11d hl'Ok.e _off nta l•
· a hyi . dra at. ,The re .seemed
to be, not hin g
, to do•.:n,n:t to ins tall a. new
by~ra:n.t,
: wb ic~ ~wQul:d be a big exp
ens e and
: . wdtilil allso nee essi ta.t e shu
the w.a,,te,:r and \ea:ving thettin g off
, l or ·sev era l d!ays · wit ho~ , vill age
t .W!tter
•, sup:pJ'y' (l_r- . nre ;p.r otec
tiol ,l.
\ for . aw.v i.ng: the Pro ble m -- ,C.re4(,t
: b y the; wa ter .c.omin.issi i~ ·g\,ven
qn~rs . to

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:WORTHINGTON

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Wo rthl .ngt on, • Ma
Fre d L. :
Gra ves of Che ster fielyd ls15spe:idl_ng a 1
few day s at hhi s cott age here
.
Mrs How ard Ma son is slow
ly Im- .
pro ving from her rec ent illn
dau ght er, Miss Dor is Mason,ess. H er
a gra d- .,.
_µate nur se of the Co ley
D :.:.inso n
hos pita l at Nor tham pto n, is
cari ng for
her .
: · GeoFgQ~'l;.. .~d ge ,o('Ring;v;ill
,~
who
Mrs
Geo
rge
H.
- I ~IU -tl!e ·'lr~;d'li:a:nl_ cou ld
.be -we ld~. . and ope ned her Rus sell has retu rned
hom se for the sum\ His . :m~ ce :was. .t~ken.. .A
µi~ r m~ .rs Wil liam Roy
J too.k the h!lira..nt. -a._part a~dptu
\Yho has bee n il.l ·
: tbe-n poor hea lth for so~
• 1 too k
etim e has gone t o
·tb:e: bro ken
1ne
ees.
to
the
Hou
se of Pro vide nce at Hol yok
· ··Hu nti: n,gt on, . wh ere . t~e
e
wel ded itnd rn a s.bort tbily . were : \ for trea tme nt.
_ __
_
e U .wa$ 1
-·
bac k
goo d
new
at
s·
sub
:
sta ntia l sav fng

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as·

· Oth er: tew ns m.a.y
_c.:q&gt;enmen.t.

asin

every. W&amp;T, i
pro fit by this i

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Th e Wo me n's ~ue vol ~n.
t .ao-.' ·
-/ det:r wm me et on We«}nes
.da.y

: wit h M.rs. F. C. Ma rtin at
the
ter for an all day sew ing mee cen ting:.
The chu rch wil l be clos.ed
rn , m:n ,~
on
:·
Sun day , Ma y 19t h, ·tha t all
Ann oun cem ent has bee n
who
re- ,
, wis h to may atte nd the
ceiv
ed
of
the rec ent mar ri~g e of ·
ann ual
me etin g of the Cum min gto
n dis- . 11r: Wil liam J . Par in~ lee of _10~
tric t Sun day sch ool asso
I Cal hou n stre et, S11nngfield
ciat
, t
whi ch wil l be hel d in Che ster ion I Mrs. Em ily S. Pet ting
ill of
fiel
d.
1Th e
Rev . Cha rles Hil l of Gos hen -' n11·ngtoR The -cer emo ny wasCu~ per· ,
l ·
·
wil l h ave cha rge of the
.ei form at
mo
the ~0~ 10 o f D;·arParm
melee, i
serv ice at this mee ting and rnin g I lee' s eds0n
, Wil ham J.
in
the
!o ft ern oon eac h Sun day s.choo 1 is . ·1Jr ., at Clrnp paq na N. Y.. Dr. E. '
•
theological :
ask ed to hav e som e par t
Vi' 1 ·ma n of Union
in thP.
,. .
. -~
pro gra m.
COll $ID
sem ina ry , New Yo~.k city ' aAfte
r a
An eve uc of inte re st to
"
th
e brid•e olficiating.
O
W0t ·L
•
•
Dr au d Mrs
thin gto n peo ple is the mar
sho rt wed din g tnP
riag e or
11001~ u
Dr. Wil liam J. Par me lee
Par melee wili mak,e th"~;r ___
of Cal _
hou n stre et, Spr ing fiel d, rorm
~,pr
ingf ield .
erl r
-o f. this tow n , to Mrs . Em
il y Pet : tin g ill of Cum min gto
n, whi ch 1
to9 k pl ace yes terd ay
Ne,v Yor k. ·
Mrs. Abb y Ott o Hew itt a nd
Mis s
\Ca the rin e Hew itt of Pitt
· Miss Dor oth y Hew itt and sfield, :
Miss
Flo ren ce Cha pin of Cam
· wer e at Clo ,;er ley cot tag e bridge ·
fol' the ·
wee k-e nd .
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The clippings up to this page appear to be in date order. For this page
and several that follow, there is inconsistent date order.

Women Usurp Rights of
'Cracker Barrel Congress'
In Worthington Store
vVor t hln g lo11 , Ma rch 25 - An
nm11 s ing' cvc•n t of th e pas t wP.elc
was t he ousting of t he m en of t h e
"cra c ker har rcl congr ess,'' fro i:n
t h eir fa vorite s eats ln th e v illage
store , by t he women. '.I'he s tor ek eeper bei ng away on e even ing
his wi fe ,v ho was "t endin g s tor e"
The
soun ded t he clario.., call.
women r espon ded a nd soon th e
lotrg bench and chairs w ere all
tilled a n d th ey ser enely a waited .
the arr irn! of t he m et), enjoying, ·
as t hey arrived, the ir manifest
sur prise a nd indecision as . how
best to me(lt s uch an unusual sltuatioo . One of th eir number,. more
diplomatic t han the r est, bought
some . can dy · a n d treated : the
usurpers whereupon t heir hearts
m~lted and th ey a ll went hotn e, · r
leaving a live;iy. debat e on all Im- . ·
port.ant question s of th e day in · '
I
prog:re!!S .. _ ·

o(

,Bunker Hill Reiic Us~fol i
Yankee ingenuity ma d·e use at I
W orthington the oth~r day or'a cann on ba ll from the R evolutiQI.1ary war.
Cha rl~s A. Kilbourn, contractor, en- /
gaged in moving a cotta.ge recen ijy
bought by Frank A. Sexton of Virg inia street, Springfield, used the ball
as a s wivel on whi ch to turn th e
b uildin g preparatory to rn ovJng it u p ·
t he hill . beyond t he Kil bourn homc-

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l!t:ea d.

T he CaJ!Jlon ball is the property of /
Charles i.v, - 'fower of vVor thh1g- I
, ton. It 1ras hanlled down to him by
uncle, Nuthtt-11 jel 1
grea t-great
' Jtis
':1
1' Towc1·, who, 'engaged In gu\l rding t ho
1
stores a t th o battle of
I military
1
' Bunkel· H ill, picked It u p on the ba ttlefleld a(ter th e fi ght, It has a lways
bee n l&lt;ep t in the Tower fa mi ly an d '
0 11 t his day in conformity with thc l
biblical prophecy, "A n d they shal l 1 beat their swords in to pl owsha res and
their s pea rs into prunin g hooks," was l
user! fo r a constructive pea cetime
, purpose.
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WOB,T HIN~T O:ri
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:wonTJIING
. TON .
-Fran ldin G.
.
.
:MaY 16-TM Hlg~Worthi ngton, MllY .21 artln pt thl.S
i 1 ~o~i~ f~me et, at t~e :YC~~ f:'~
Burr and Comm erlt 4 '° !chnic al High
t~nal churqt on, ':~:_l ~h• Mel{oi.·o{ 1 tov1m, senlbr~ ~\dt
:ai parts in the
~rotram 1~ ch~er e will~ m,usic .~l I :.chool, $pr~i;i.gfle
1'
night exercise11
' cummln.gton.
.
,
f
Chester
fteld a f
i:am at the c ass
.
~ Mrs .JQtl8'1 , gea.ly o , Uowed
by. a. , pr~g
.
The
class prophe cy
J the ' ~orblnir. rnee~f• Y_1.p c ClaPP · ,of· Fi.·lday
ty Comm erford :Marti n
pa~r l . b,Y" Rev , :~1noio 1Y . ,;'bit. . will be geye~;n
v:s ballot by Frank lin Burr.
No~p tob . 0
socletY will.serve. l!,119, t~e c~ beeh '. honor pupils
, w 0:-:,e~.» ~Jivot h~ atter~ ~n ,'~ 1. -~ lie~ ;:~rse. Frauk lln Burr during
is sec~ Geo •• · :n.r. ·Bowe .of Wll!¥ f colle,g • retarY ol! the - Scienc
e club, for
) ,w:1111:'n.ea.1c' on "The Pr,_oblem of .Und~r. bershlp . in which a"111gh grade inmemphyl ' radu&amp;te- Life." 0 ' ,
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He
g The wom~!.!f· Benev0Ie11t a~cletY\ ~ csa and chemi stry 18 requir ed.
membe r of Le Salon, Forum
,
~et yesterday- w,lth ¥1'8'
Cof°!. !~:- traffic squad and news start, Comm er1
fotd .M.artin, with 16
.::imer
ford Martin is a memb er ot senior
-:-1 for a ··falr to. b't held !Ii
e su . tll~ . Pro-M eri to and Forum and has won
A b~~et 1Un£)leo,: was ser;ed. 1iusi• · his "T"
on ,.the track team.
1
In the
1ternooµtintMrt~ .,; las a~ -~innore~'!-or the: last school ·,repor
t he was the only
·1
nes11
mee
g
Op
an
... y
~
,I,
b
f
,...
. meeting ot' th_e ~Highl
in~
12A
to
a'nd_ c1ub h·e te . mem
.
o uJS c a.nB,
,
wm
.
t ·
dnesda y- and the followi ng maximer
um honors . Both boys belong
- ; ~~~mitteee .appoin ted: ' Miss Bessie to t~e HI-Y
·club.
·: ·Ames,' Mrs: Horace s. Cole, Mrs George '.
Miss Gertru de l:3-Dham, daugh ter of
~ E, 'Torrey1 Jt.; Mrs Arlin, dole, Md T. Mr and_
Mrs HM ry C. Lapha m of
Ac. ··Martin Mrs Mauric e Clark· Mrs Longm eadow,
who spends h er sumj gharles
~llbou tn, M_rs Leland Qolc, . mers ip Wort~1 ington,
has r e ceived a
~Mrs Mer.rick,. Smith, ,Mrs Herber t G, very fine appoin
tment to teach art for
~Portef , :t4ra. George -H. Russel l and ·, two month s
the P erry Mansfi eld
"1.M:rs John Fr18$ell. · These commi ttees· girls' camp in
~t Steam boat Sprhtg s,
] were assltne d to special .duties •and· Col., c.omme ncmg
July 1.
Miss Lap·1 sol!le who' 'Yere heads of comm.ittees' \ ham will
be a senior at Skiclm ore colrte choose their own assista nts.
. · lege next year and ranks high as a
.-·-~;---_, ·,_,.-,_ .:.:._·,~:P..,CJ :·: ·---' ~ ,f'.,_ ,...-- • -;_\sch olar.
She is a grancl daught f'r of
_ ::, . • __• -~:,7::,~
~,.&gt;,
.. · -- . ::1... , the late Mr and Mrs
Cypria n P. Hmv·
·
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W
QR,TH
iN~tOI
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=th=i=s=t=o
=w=n=.
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Wor.th ington, May 2~Th e Grange , ,' Whist clul&gt; will meet Wedne s(\ay
' evenin g · at the Lyceum hall, The
' ho1:1tel;!&amp;ea will be Mrs Homer Grange r
and Mrs Mauric e Clarie.
Word has been receive d 01' the
death it( Cumm ington on Friday af. ternoo n of· Mrs George Snow. _ Mts I
; Snow wae twice marrie d, her tirst
husban d being -Charle s E. Clark of
this town, V&lt;;ho died in 1923.
Many from here · attende d the fire
in Cheste rfield Saturd ay . night whei1
the house and shed of Charle s Kehr
of . Highla nd street burped to the
ground about 6.46 p. tn. The fa,mily
,~as_away at the time; having gone, to
Spring field, leaving only _an old n\an
wh? wa.s· workin g there. He
eatmg isupp~r when he . s1nelled
smoke and discove red the abed w
on fire beyond cr.&gt;ntro\. Some · fun~~
ture was aaved · b t a\
cl~thln g. There "Na.au lnsumost l'10 .
the hoU11ie but none O
. ranee Q\1
'fhe bom;o wllicti n the furnitu re.
yea.rs as the Castl . was known for
the oldest in the
Plac-, was one of
owned by Horaceown. I~ was once
father of Horace 8 _- 1 Cole .. grandwho was lar ·81
. 0 e ot this town
wool anli leaufer ~ Jnteres ted In th~
one tim e a.,
n ustry and kept at
that farm.
ny as 1000 sheeil on

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OLD SCRAP BOOKS
OF WORTHINGTON

-An• account of the la ying of the 1
corners tone and or the dedicatio n of
tho present Con grelJ'Ution a l c hurch
con ta ins ~ sketch by th e Rev Frederick Sargent Huntingt on telling · of
t he wor k conne cted with its building
a nd of how Its furn ish ings were acquired. Many other Items of In fo r m a tion, obituarie s. wed ,Hngs , golden wed din gs, pu blic gathering s and pict ures
make a fairly co mplete history of its
p eople and t own a ffai rs .

Clippings From 185 7 to
Date- Stories of Town's
Centennial and Cattle - ---Show of 185 7 Preserved

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Worthin g ton , Fe b. 23- A r eliable
and interestin g additi on t o th e Fred eri ck· Sa rgm t Huntingt on Itbran- has
been mad e r ecently iJJ th e compilation of three. scrapbook s of the town
of Worth ington com posed main ly
from clippings fr om news papers datin g fro m 1857 up to t h e present time.
Volume I conta ins as its first article
clipping from the Hampshi re
:1
Gazette and Northam pton Courier ,.
und er date of August 25, 1868 and tells
of the centen nial celebratio n on
Aug us,~ 20 of th e founJing of the
' t own. Between 5000 a nd 6000 people
attended this celebratio n. The. first
exercise of the day was a proces8lo n
hea ded by the Florence Braes band followed by Brya nt's old Martial band all
und er the direction of Maj William
Starkwea ther, mars ha l of th e day. A
fre e dinner wrui served on t-he common so.nth of ·the church._ Among theJ·
after-dm ner speakers was William
Cullen B~yan't: th'e poet. who -for two /
years studied illw under Judge Howe /
in W orthington.
"Mr Bryant s pok e of the appearance of the_ town when be was tlle;e·
a student, m or e tha n 50 years a go, of
the changes that ha d been wr ought in
the people, of · the great amoun t of
travel that wa s dally s een passing
through the town, that being on e of
.
the great thorough fares from Boston 1
to Albany, of the great change tha t
e
had been wrough t In the t emperanc 1
habits and character of th e people, I
and the greatly improved faciliti es for
education. "
A clipping trom the Northamp ton
Courier,. October 6, 1867, gives a complete descriptio n of a oottle show held
at Worthing ton on Septembe r 30 of
that year. To quote briefly: "The ,.
show of cattle and stock was, held on
the spacio us common, north of the
church. Tltere were nearly 350 h ead ,,
of cattle on the grounds;, the -W:orth- ,
lngton farmers were out with their
splendid Ji~ ds a nd · their beautiful,
working oxen, the latter numberin g ,
46 yok e ; :out Chesterfield carried•, ot'f 1
1

f

were f

th~ cre"am of p1,aise. ~er farmers
there with 67 yoke of cattle, drawing ,
a colossal car 36 feet .l ong, made ~x- 1
pressly for th e occas10n by Patrick ,
Brya.nt. The s tring reached a full t
quo.rt er of a ml!e in length and when
it came upon the exl;llbit!on grounds,
the car containin g Bryant's Band of
Mus ic a nd 100 persons, with a flag
waving high over their hea,?s, it crel-~ t 1:_d au imI!lense se1;_9!ltlop__,__

,111

�WORTHINGTON
HlGH LAX ll CLUB MEE TS

c. Cln1111 and
Addresses By Rer E,
nean Ho·wes or Williams .
. t on, ,,~ray ' ?3-T he Htgh Wort,hlng
-

land club ' sprin g meet ing was . held
here yeste rday at the Cong reg,a t1on~
l
c-hur ch with a good atten danc e. _Pres
1·I d
t Ralp h Mello r or Cum m ingto ~
~n "d d ,\ pape r on "Cl"l mino logy
~)::\. !act
the Rev Eller y C. ~lap
of No rtham pton follow ed by discu p
ssion.
Mr . Clapp was assis tant ,
chap lain or the Mass achu setts
fonn atory at Conc ord from 1903Re- 1
. to
1906, and chap lain of the Ham pshir
coun ty jail and hous e of c-on-ect1on e
Nort hamp ton since 1912. 'fhe tende at
towa rd crime he thou ght gath eredn_cy
great est mom entum befor e the age its
ot
20 and the m9st form ative and
vears were befor e the age· of 10,vital
the
three
fund amen tal
cause s
being ,
hered ity, envir onme nt and will.
He j
, saw many impr ovem ents in pris,o
condi tion.; in the doing away withn I
the ball and chain gang s; renti ng
out
of priso ners; strip ed suits , lock step;
and more uplif t along the line
of
lectu res,
preac hing·.
educ
movi es and schoo ls of ethic s. ation al ,
whol e attitu de towa rd the p1·iso The
had
chan ged for the bette r. Mr Clap pn gave
brief'ly statis tics to prnv e his poin
ts
and told many inter estin g· anec
, of his perso nal expe rienc es indotes
divid ual work with men In priso ns. inDinne1· was serve d by the ,vom
Bene \'Ole nt socit y. At ~ an orga n en 's
rectla l was given by Mrs Jame s Heal
and at 2.30 an addi· ess by Dean Geor y
ge
111. Ho~· es of Willi ams colle ge,
spok e on •·som e Co llege Prob lemswho
the Day.' ' Dean How es said that or
colle ge there was a ce rtain amo unt in
hard wo1·k each boy has to go throu of
gh
and comp ared it to a hurd le sayin
it was R mista ke to hel11 s tuden g
aroun d G t' unde1· when th ey wish ed ts
to
drop studi es hard for th em . He spok
of the Rcho last]c a ptitu de test and e
of
their effor ts to help the stude nts
find
th emse lves, and th e n of th e vario
us
Probl ems givin g mu n y perso nal incidents from the
fresh man
yea r,
throu gh the lloph omor e year whe
n
they h ave to u se thPir r;·r eates t
influen ce to keep t.he hoys in co llege,
to the Junio t· yca 1• w lH'n they
un m,l.Jor work . Tt1e n&lt;'xt mec&gt; tin :::·ta ke
th e l-lig·hl a nct &lt;·luh wtll ue held nr
ln
Au g ust in ChPs le1·fl&lt;'lll .

by

I

I

�rel

s or ga 11 iza tio n aon
'flrn ofll cer s of thi
den t, A. D. R ob ins
a lph '
a ~ follows : Pr e8i
vic e - pre s id e nt , R
of ,vestf l cld :
; g e ner n l s ec- '
ton
ing
mm
Cu
of
r
Me llo
son of Wo r ono coof;
re ta r y. \ 'V. O. J ohn
J . G uin ass o
v,
ar,
pu bll cft y sec ret rer, S. J . Do nn elle y ,
asu
tre
W es tfi eld ;
ect. or fro m eac h
of Ch es te r. A dir
f oll ow s :
as
d
tn\ \·11 wa s ele cte Ch est e r, Fra nk P ev fi eld, P. N . H a ll ; , S. A. An der son ·
erl ,iy; Bla ncY.ord Gille tt ; Mi ddl efie ld,
So uth wic k, K. E. ; W orn noc o, J . C.
ntDr A. A. Sta rbu ck
E. D. P a rks ; Mo
Bu ffa m ; Ru sse l!, y ri ; Hu nti ng ton , J&lt;'.
gom er y, W . D . AJl
st
M. D. Ba llo u; ~e
J. He in e ; Be cke t,
e,.
lll
lke r ; ;ra nv
, H . C. Wa
Sp rin gfi eld
mfngt o . Ralph
m
Cu
:
on
ers
nd
Sa
w. H.
Bis bee ;
e rll~ld, c. A. ·op
.
Me llo r: Ch estDr
F. A. Ro bin
Wo r t hin g ton,
for a
s ugg es t
W ort hin gto n wa s wh ich w ' l pro bg
big gen e ral me e tin
s T. ~. 'M ar- !
In .Ju ne. Mr
/ ";1ly bi:? ll e/d
rn ho1V ma y co uld
lea
to
ed
ask
s
wa
tin
.
cll eon wa s p);a nn ed
be car ed for ff lun
pri ze o~• $5 for
a
ed
er
off
m
a
n.
utn
/ H. B. P u p of s nap sho ts of loca,. see
bes t grn
at J un e nfe eting
ery , to be jud ged
pro per ty ~! asbe
to
ed
er
off
Pic tur es
lted ln \St ore
hlb
ex
ter
la
nd
a
's~ cia tio n
of g eFaI
it
nef
be
or
f
.,
\\'J n~o ws, etc
·
eti ng of the offlce1·s'
p u bli c.
' An _imp ort ant me -0rganlzatlon will
s
and d ire cto rs of thi
bui ldi ng,
co m~ un lty
be hel d o,a t Sathe
at 7 p. m.
day
tur
7
noc
oro
-1'
- - - - -- - , - - -~ - -·- -

WESTFIELD RIVER I
PARKWAY BODY'S
PLANS ANNOUNCED

We st-I'

. Ve•
Impor tan t PU61 IC. JmplO
By
ments Are Planned •
A
d
1 0 am·ze ssoc1a- )

New y rg T
Many OWl15 Jnter• /
·
fl
fl O
ested
.

.
24 -A n org azrn::a ,v ort llm gto n , !lfa y
W est fie ld Riv er
the
as
n
tio n kn ow
s r ece ntl y bee n
ha
n
tio
a
oci
.
.Pa rkw ay ass .
)es a ll cit ies and
fo rm ed. It m clm
th e ter rit ory em
tow ns .Joc:i, ted in i eld r i ve r and its
stf
·we
b ra ced by the
ing ton
inc lud lng Wo rth
t r ib uta ri es
,'
•.
e rfi eld, Middlefi eld
C um mi ng ton , Ch est
nt
Hu tin g ton , Mo
B ec ket , Ch est e r,
ron oco
d Ru sse ll ' Wo
'
.
g om ery Bl an dfo r '
•
Ag ak,
wic
uth
So
,
lle
nvi
a
Gr
ld,
fie
est
ies
W
g fi eld and a ll cit
w a rn, W est Sp rin
t the ret o.
en
jac
ad
ns
an d tow
pro mo t e wa ys and
to
is
t
Its ob jec
g _th e na tur al scen-t
in
lop
eve
d
r
!o
s
m ean
sid es: to p oin t ouioad
r
the
g
lon
a
e ry
li c and loc a l res
as
t o the tra vel ing pub
spo ts a nd so far
de nts a ttr act i vet hem a va il abl e to th e
e
k
ma
.,;
p oss ibl e
in te res t in kee ~m
I ubpul&gt;l ic: to pro mdo te
roa ds fre e fro m ope
ele
rav
t
in
r1
ma
of
y wa st e ; to cobis h an d un sig cJ1tlo fll cla ls, . loca l org-: n - ,
i
ubl
;; I
ate w ith p
v idu als i)l im pro vm
iz:i ti on s or j ndi ng ·a g en e ral pla n to I
alo
s
oad
r
y
tr
g ,
c o un
the dir ect or~. l1a vln
be de ve lop ed by of lat era l roa ds t h_a t
tem
le 1
in m ind a s:rs
ibl e to a u tom obihe /
wi ll m a k e acc ess
em bra ced ln t st ,
ory
rit
ter
the
tra ,·el
is als o to Int ere
pro po sed area. Ita n d adv e rtis e to t J:e ,
,
loc al res iden ts Jn
adv ant age s. of thn~
g e ner al p u bli c the
rea tio n a
rec
of
'ce
Pl1
a
ge
,sec tio n as
m o te an~ e nco urareres ide nce ; to pro
ta ry J oad sld e
sam
d
an
ve
cti
~
ra
wit
att
to co- ope ra te
r es hm e nt sta nd s; e r est ed fnl s f~~ ! ~
int
s
org ani zat ion
J o
nd to do s uedee
m to
nd erta kin gs adir
ors m11y
ect
the
as
s
l111ng
.
t
s
ere
int
bllc
to
pu,
th e
se _cities or w~ s.An y res ide nt of the
c h pe~
1p. .EJadu
rsl1
e
mb
me
to
es, o
le
y as
l eli gib
$l an nu all
nd any
.
a
s
ses
en
ex
y
pa
to
IS
l
30l
ltlo ria l /
era ~~ tut c ~ ucll Tadd
be la tte r
m eet the opcon
a esl re
p e rs on ma y
d as
ate
ign
11 0 _1:1,1,!1~ha11 be· des

I

!11

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·.WORTHINGTON

Worthing ton, May 27-The Women's
Ben~volen t socJety will meet on Wednesday with Mrs Raymond Call !or an
1
all day sewing meeting.
The Friendshi p guild of the Congregation al church will hold a s unn er
, '/\ at the Lyceum hall on Wednesda y
I . evening from 6 to 8.
The boys and girls of the 4-H club
wlll b,old an exhibit of their work a t
hall Friday evening a t 8.
1the Lyceum
The girls of the cooking club will give
la one-act play entitled "The Spirit or'
Club Work." Harold W. E astma n,
county club agent, and H. A. L elan d,
a state .clul;&gt; leader, will be present
and will show stereopticon views of
plub work. They will bring with them
C. Hilton Boynton, a ·4-H clu!:l champion, who will speak on club wo rk.
Candy will be for sale.
Miss Susan T. Rice, who has been
spending the mon t h of May i n Eng- 'j .
lanp, will sail on '1Vednesda y the 29th
for home.
Mrs George ·E . Torrey, Jr., a n d Miss .
'. Mi1licent Salmon left yesterday to
: spend the week-end wit h Miss K atlt- .
:
J erine Bossen ,of Windsor, Ct.
Miss Ma rjor ie G. Ba r t lett, who h as ,
i
·] been visiting her aunt, Mrs Lester C.
1Le Due of Chesterfi eld, for several
1 wee ks, has returned to her h ome.
N ews has been received of the death I
!
/ Jn Mittineag ue of George Geer, 66,
f who has a summer home here. Mr
. Geer . h a d been in poor health for the
1 past fi ve weeks and in bed only abo~t
1 two w eelrn. He is survived by his
wife, Mrs Mary W itt Geer, ,a native of
Worthing ton , _a nd sister of the late
·Harry S. Witt of this town; one son,
c. DeWit t Geer of Mittineag ue, one
grandchil d Ruby Geer , and a slster, ]
Mrs Emm~ Johnson, who made her
,
_
home: with him.

I .,

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WORTHI NGTON
. . in "'t on May 28-Miss Doris
, I\Torth '." ~ N or th Ada ms N orm a l
' Bu rn et t of t h n in town t h e pas t wee!,
, sc hool h a s b,ee of tw o-days' obse rv a - ,
for the purposeda .5 , pract ice teachi ng
t io n a nd t hree - y. 1 a t th e Cor ner. ·s · 11
.
1 P ·imary s choo
111 ~ i ~ . ~ ·1ccor da nce w ith t he poli cy
Th lS l S ~ ;·th .Adams sc hool, w l~ ich
of the ti . . -eniu1· stud en ts ou t rnto
~c hools f m· prac tical ex - ,
sends 1
t h e _co uen i~ r~ra l teac hing. Th e loca l
pcri~nc_; t llu s r eleased, are able t o a tt ea~11 ~ · 'u, r e~-clays' t eac h ers' co nfer t en e at th e norma l s chool. _
. en~ r and Mrs Francis A. Hob!t~son arc
a week in R om e, N . '1 . D ur n d in!!'_~=----::~~- - ___ _
. spe:.:.,__
tlH·il· a hse. nee Dr Robinson 's pr~~v
Will he ta ken C,UC of IJY Dr l lu tt ~1
mir c of 1I11n tin g tr,n. or D l' H ealy or
. d \
. ,
.
' Cu mm in g-ton .
M r and Mrs ll'V111 K L. Bai ll ett a n
s on, David, Ors on W . Gu r nC'Y, .J_r., Ir v Jng L , Bartle tt, Jr., an d, . JVft ~s 11,8
I ) l on rl e, G uy F'. Bartl et, h wln rcl C,.
Ba r tlett and f21mil y, a ll of Gr een fi eld ,

t~

I~:~e

�1/' Westfield's

,

Parkway ,
Association

I

The form uti un of the Wes tfield /
River Park way associat ion is we lcome evidence of an incr easing ap- I
preciation in this part of the s tate
of t he va lue of scenic beau ty. The
ai ms of !he o rgani zation a re worth y
of em ul ation by every section which
ha s been blessed by N ature as the
West fi eld ri\·er yt\ lley has been .
Jt is a beau€fru l coun try wh ich
embra ces that part of Western- Massachu seit s between the t own s oi
Becket and Midd lefi eld and th e Connecticut r iver. T he principal hi gh wa ys reveal much of it s charm to
t he trav eler, but by no means all.
Some of the fi nes t mountain rides ,
with unsurpassed views , are to be
made over country r ~ads, and the
improvement of these li ttle-traveled 1'
high wa ys wuul r_l rlouble the po pul~rity of the section fo r the motori ~t ,
while undo ubted ly it \YOuld increase
the demands for coun try ·homes and
••
I
,
·
camp§.
The new :i.ssociat ion has a g ood !
· ma n y 1·elated objects. It proposes
to de velop t he scener y a long the
r oadsid es a nd to tell the public
wher e t he a ttr a r. · :ve spots are t~ be 1
fo u nd. It wa nts to keep the l11g h- I
wa ys ..:r~e fr om rubbish, incl uding
uns ani ta r y and uns ightly refreshment stand s. lt wants to improve ,
the hi g hwa ys t hemselves according
to a general plan, a syst em of lateral road s t ha t will open up the territory to a utomobile. travel being
1
particul a rl y desired.
And finally the association pro- I
poses to engage in enlightem1d publicity, s o that the advantages of th e
section as a place for recreation and
residence may be widely known.,. "'In
other words, the i-esidents --0f' this
idyllic region are engaging in a program of improvement plus publicity
that will be much more effective
than a campaign of publicity alone.

i

I

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r
I

7

-

PARKWAY DIRECTORS'\'
-;;; MEET AT WORONOCO

Committees Named for West-

field River Valley Improvement Organization

.

W oronoco, May 25- Rcp resentat!v cs
from W es tfi eld, Ru ssell, Chester,
C:ritnville, W or th in gton, Cu mm ington
a nd W oronoco a ttend ed th e meeti ng of
directors of t he W es tfl cld R iver P arkThe
wa y assoclatlon her e ton ig h t .
cons titu tion and by-laws were pr es ented a nd ' ad op ted a t the m ee t ing,
a nd th e foll owing comm it tees we re
elec ted : Ad ver tis ing a nd printing, i:l.
A. Melg h re of W estfield; r oadside
beaut ifica ti on committee, W. 0. Johnson of Woron oco, cha irma n, assisted /
by Mrs H a rry Wilcox or Wes tfield and
Mrs H erman Ta lboy o! Cumming ton;
pla nnin g committee, W. J. Ellison of
North Ches ter ; legis la tive co mmittee,
L eonard Ha rding of Hunting ton; highwa y lmp rovemeht committee, William
H. Ensign of W estfield; membership
a nd m eetihgs , A. D. Robinson of Westfield; r ecreatio n a rea committee, J. C.
Each chairBul'l'.a m of W oronoco.
ma n will selec t on.e or two others to
·
serve with him.
There was a general discussion· or
the whole project and it was decided
to hold local m eetin gs in each com munity u,nder · the direction of th e focal director. It was reported that en thusiasm wa s running high and P. N. ,
H all, secretary of the Westfield
Chamber or Comm erce; stated that
many m embership ticlcets In the associa tion are being sold In Westfield.

I I,
/.

ij

,J

f~
·

';

)1

.,
I

l
,,

A,.,' ..., ....... .) '- •

J1:.'._,~

j

·~

~- 1-

I

�~

II
f-

I

/.

WORTHINGTON
-M rs My ra R. I
Wo l'th in g ton , M ay 30orr ow to spe nd ·1
tom
ve
Jea
Ste ven s wil l
· rla ugh ter, Mr s J
a f ort nig ht w ith h e1
st Ro xbu rJ·, and 1
Jud s on Ro ger s of ,ve d.
,
rela tive s at Spr ing fiel um bus , O. , ar- I
Col
of
I
Mis s .F a y NeJ
e.I
J1er sum me r cot tag
riYed .Mo nda y atme
t at •the Lyc eum
The gra nge
l'
ula
reg
· for Its
hal l Mo nda y eve nin g m inc lud ed a
gra
pro
e
TJJ
me etin g.
s C. A._ Kil bou rn, 1
m em oria l ,son g by Mi' to Flo rid a, Jl- 1
trip
.
,hi.s
on
,
tall
1
and a
slid es, by Ro s- 1
lus tra ted wit h lan ter n i,el d.
ster
Che
of
t
rrit
Me
l
1
wel
vin g the sta ge
Wa lter Hig gin s ls. dri P. Col e for a. 1
to Hin sda fe for Lel and s to wo rk on 1
rno nfh . J\!r Col e exp ect
Co1 me ctlc ut .
roa d con stru ctio n in
r and . Mr s l. ·
Mr s Ern est G. Th aye
loc al lea der s, con - , ·
/ Fra nkl ln A. Bu rr, ion
sch ool sewing
. duc ted ari ext ens
at ·Lyc eum '
oon
1;n
afte
y
cla ss Tue sda
stru ctio n /
con
1g
hl1
clot
hal l, tak ing up !! and bin din gs. An - ing
pip
· pro ble ms,
be hel d Jun p, 7 ·
oth er me et'l ng wil l
hom e dem on- .
zi,
Poz
ry
Ma
s
,..
wit h Mis
t.
sen
pre
nt,
age
n
tlo
stra

I

I- .

. .
·,, '1'0-RTHING'.JlO f , . •

(

- Alt ho'u gh {
Wo rth ing ton , .May 31 ' van ce o(
1•.
obse
l
1the re w:i s rjo for ma
,flt- :
ere yes terd ay it wa s of /.
. 1 mo rial day- h
ting
ora
dec
tl:\e
.
by
erv ed
! tin gly· obs
by . Mr s Ern est .
the sol die rs' gra ves gen era l pilg rim - /&gt;.
y
ver
a
by
Tha y.e r and
s to dee - f
peo ple to the .ce.r riet erie ily
• age
fam
ir
the
for.
e
car
ora te· and
of tow n to vis it
Ma ny cam e -fr.o m put r cal led upo n old
late
and
re''
Ac
d's
"Go
.
vill age_ ,un til .the _ day
·! frie nds inethtl~e
the I asp ect of, an of
mg
som
re
wo
.::
.Th e l10t wea tl1e r
··,·:, old l10me . day . .open sum me r 'hom es . I
. bro ugh t ma ny to
Ma.y'or· laii/ t, .111rs
amo 1lg wh om . we re _;ervi112, Mr s Irv Som
of
l
j Leoµ Con wel
s Ro y
an·~- ~d - Mr ,lj-1:ld/ Mr
·1 i.ng . Ch apm
Dr' and . Mr s 1•
·
rk;
Yo
w
Ne
of
n
j Mc Can
dow, J'ud gc ··an d
.' Ch apm an of Longme1;1.
ter of Bos ton , 1;
ws
Bre
..
H
sha
~ll
s
Mr
Yo nke rs, ·•N. Y.,
•l\lr s B, , R. Gre en of. C. Br~ wst er; Mr /
1\fr and Mr s Ho wa rd Col lins and, Mr ,~
an.d.· ,Mrs Ha rrls i E.Ppw ers of Spr ing - f
. and Mr s W,alter, C.
.
.
d. ank·lln· ·H. 'Bu rr l1as hat che d a,
fielF1•
tm·
uba
fnc
-.ii:t h'Js
- fldo k of 20,, phe11sants of thin tow n• and
lins
Col
E.
rris
Ha
for
pia ns to hav e /
Sp rln ~el d. M,r Col lins
his far m unt il
the m car ed for onwill be rela sed'• in / .
spi in'g, wh en -t hey
. ·"· · . ' .
the woo ds. .·.. . -, .. ~-

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of

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s, 1iaze
Uis ses l\fargu,1rite Ha wke a din-1
gav
lls
We
lly
flo !:-: s and Mo
evening at
ner par ty on Monday in honor
te"
eri
rgu
Ma
al'y
"M
the
Phinney,
of the Misses Georgi;t Stevens,
!,ra
Lal
and
Na n Pie rce
of ·J une
~·ho sai l the lat ter par t
pc,
o
i
~
w
t
a
for

I

�,. ·
h· ear--t tro ubl e at \
m or nin g--·o f·· va.\ vu
lar
M' ss :M az, e
of
h
er aun t,
the hom e
l
t Sp rin g Ma gar gal of Ro wla
rnl str ee '
ud en t
fi
eld Mi ss Ma gar gal
l CL UB EX HlB lTI ON
wa 3 a. st , st
°
at
'l;e
clm
ica
l
Hi
l .-l
gh sc-J-,ool and had
'l
Mn nY Arl lclm 1
JU k
ret urn ed to Spr ing fie
]loy s unt l Gir ls S t£y ccn
ld art er a_
m J{a H
e n&lt;l at hom e. - Sh e ret
Int ere st a
ire
3
.
b
sual hea lth bu t aw d las t ni_g the .
e - A 4 -H clu
·wo rth mg lon . Jun
,
u
ake ned in
·tai nm ent wa s giv
en nig ht in gre'at
exh ibit and en t~1 1
pai n an&lt; l liv ed , abo ut
e Ly ceu m hal l bY
be
an hou r. Be sid es
Fri day eve nin g i~ t 'c
her P!1 ren ts nds a
·
s· 11a ud1 cra t clu b ::,.nd ' the lea v es on e sis ter ,
~ar
the ,boY -·
~
rife t,
t - bro the r. Ra ym ond
clu b. Ha rol d w . Ea
. Tn e un e r~l wil l
s
gir ls coo kin g clu b lea
be hel d W e dne s&lt;l
ay
der
;
C.
Hil
ton
2.30
ma n , a sta te
at the hom e and buaft ern ?on ~t
ria l wil l be in
Bo ynt on, a Han :ips l I e cou nlY clu b the No rth cem ete
kia nch e Sp urr of
ry,
cha mp ion a nd 1\;; ~~i
Th ere wil l be a dan ceWo rth ing ton .
ce
we re pre sen t. hal
at the Ly ceu m
the P.x ten s 1?n
l Fri day
'rh e ent erta mm e~1 t_· o_~e ned wit h ,:i. one - wil l pla y. eve nin g, Ba tes 's orc he str a
of
Clu
b
Wo
rk"
act pla y "T~e .:P ;;\
Mi ss Be ssi e E . Tro
he gir ls' coo kin g
w of Be dfo rd
by the m em nt
lod ge, No rth a mp ton
Bo ynt on, 4-H clu b
clu b. &lt;?· H ~~ an
den t of thi s tow n, , a f~r m_e r 1·es iint ere stin g tal k
has mv 1te d the
cha mp ion , ga
ple of Wo rth ing ton
n his suc ces s I·1, ll1e dai ry pro jec t peo
to a pic nic at
"W ish ku mt ru" in
~ •
ear ned e nou gh mo ney
t
We st P elh am on
to •pu
·
hf~ mg thr oug h colleg
Sat
urd
ay,
the
15t
e, als o man_Y : co
h, at 3 J?· m. Th
d ls and h ono
e
itte e in cha.rge , con
a trip to Ch i- I Homm
sis ts .o f · M_rs
~~: to att end a rsn aand
rac e S Co le,
4-H clu b m em ber s. tio nal me eti n-g of bou rn an d Mi ss Mr s C har les A. Ki lH. A. Le lan d, a
Els ie V. Ba rtl ett ..
sla t clu b l ead er , g ave
Th e Wo me n's Be
a tal k on clu b wil
n evo len t. s oci ety 1.
wo rk illu str ate d wit
l
m
eet
on ·we dn esd ay wi
h
som
e
exc
elle
th Mr s
nt Ra ym ond Ca ll
ste reo pti con vie ws .
for an a ll-d ay
1 Th is m eet
Pri zes ' we re aw ard
in g wa s pos tpo ned me eti ng.
fro m las t
Silv er pin s for firs ed as fol low s: 1 we ek.
t-y ear wo rk to .
.
1\la rle Gr ang er,
. ,,_
Mr s Le
By rne , I the m·o nthlan d P. Col e wm ent ert ain
Ma ry P. Be rr, Fre daM a rga r e t
ly
m
eet
Gr
ing
a
nge
of
1·_.
Rob ei:: ta I shi p gui
the Fri end ]!'a rnh am and B ern ice
ld . of the
Gold"'J}ins for thi rd Wa zm ac.
urc h at her hom e Co ng reg ati on al
y ear wo rlc we re ·ch
We
dn
esd ay eve nin g.
aw ard ed to the fol low
··
ing boy s in the \
han dic raf t clu b : Gu
Inv
ita
tio
ns
in . the ma il for the
Dr ake , Ge org e H. Bay Dr ake , Wi lbu r ' wed d-in·g •o f a1·e
Mi ss Ele ano r Ca
rol yn
Ba rtle tt and P e ter Mcrtle tt, Ro ber t T. Pa rso ns of. So uth
Ew
en. A C!!~ tifi cat e for fou rth yea
R eed Po r ter ·, son am pto n to Da nie l
r wo rk wa s g1v en
of
Mr and Mr s ·
t o Th om as M cEw e~.
He rbe rt G. Po rte
Gu y Dr a k e, pre &lt;11den
. . wil l tak e pla ce r of t hi s tow n, wh ich
t
at
of
the
the
hom e of
b
oys
c lub and D ori Sha
bri de' s bro the r Mr
!
w, pre sid ent of
and Mr s Th eodthe
' 1he gir ls' clu lJ s eac
Ed
wa
rds
Pa
rs~
h
ns of So uth am pto n ore b
ban ner sea l to pla ce rec eiv ed a gol d
Sat urd ay, the 22d , at
on .
Th e pri zes for mu ffinon the cha rte l'.
I
Th e Gr an~ e Wh ist3.
s m ade by the
clu
b
-wi
ll
coo l,in g clu b we re
me
et' i
on
Th urs da ; eve nin g •
wi th Mr and i
. lo,y s: Fir s t pri ze, Do aw at·d ed as fol Mr
s
Ed
wa rd J. Cla ,rk.
1n·1ze, Ma ry P . Buris Sha :"'; sec&lt;?nd
An ext ens ion sch ool.
rr; thi rd pri ze, ·.\
sew ing cla ss
1:&lt;'reda Gr ang er.
wil l be hel d at the
hom e of Mr s
Aw ard s for the boy
Ch
arl
es
·
A.
Kil
s' han dic raf t
wo rk : 'rh ird yea r
noo µ at 1.SO. bou rn on Fri day aft er- -•
.
Gu y Dr ake ; ,se conwo rk, firs t \ pri ze,
·
d
22,...!:
pri
ze,
Wi lbu r 1
- -Dr ake ; thi rd pri ze,
·
Pe
ter
Mc
-Ew
en;
fou rth yea r wo rk,
blu
e
rib
bon
to
'rh om as Mc Ew en.
giv en t,o Mr s J a m A silv er · pin wa s
t wo yea rs' wo rk ases H. B,u r q!.ws f or
gir ls' clt1b ' lea der ,
;,,nd a g old p in
Bu rck es for thr eeto Re v Jam es .H.
years' wo rk as 1
l ead er of the boy s'
clu b. Th e me eti ngs • '
&lt;'lo sed wit h the sin gin
"A me ric a the Be autg of fou r son gs: ~~
ing "; "Pl ow ing " and ifu l"; "D rea m"H om e Sw eet ,
Ho me ."
·
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woRTlUNGTON

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Olive Cla ire Ma

Wo rth ing ton , Jun rar gal Die s
~
Ma gar gal , 14- yea r-o e 3-0 liv e Cla ire
ld dau ght er ot Mr
~ and Mr s We lls
Ma gar gal of We st
/ \ W orthin ;;to n,
die d sud den ly ear~)'.:
thi s

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WO RTl llNG TON
Guild's Annual Meeting
Worthington, Jun e 7-A mee
ting ot I
the Friendship guild wfasM
~ei e1~ J \
In at the home o
. even ~ole with 17 present. r
Thi s being
Per ~nn ual business meeting
the fol·ibe Ing officers wer e elec
ted:
.
Pres iden t,
o;s Jam es H. Bur cke s; vlce
-pre slM t Miss Elea nor Par son s;
secr etar y, .,
~;s ' Har ry w. Mollison
; trea sure r,
Mrs George E . Torrey, Jr.;
advisory r
,committee, . Miss Mil
lice
nt Salmon, ,
Mies Elsie v. Bar tlet t; ente
rtai nme nt
committee, Mrs Arlin Cole, Mrs
Hom er
Granger, Mrs Ken neth
Pea
treasurer, Mrs George E . Torse. , The
reported a profit of $19.93 rey, Jr., ·
on han d
from the guild sup per
with a littl e
more to be added to It whe
counts are settled. It was n all acvote d to
. give to Mrs Charles Keh
se home_
was rece ntly destroyedr, who
by fire, $6
worth of dishes. · A committ
nex t ~ocial was appointed.ee for the
It was
-~ suggested tha t this be
' festival. The ·rea ture of a stra wbe rry
the
was a surp rise kitc hen sho evening
wer given
by the hostess, Mrs Lela
nd. P. Cole,
for one of the mem bers of
the gillld,
Miss Ele ano r Par son
'wbose mar riage to Dan iel .R. Pors,,,ter of this town
will take place the 22d.
The gue sts
were all ask ed to' go to a.n
ups tair s '
room. Aft er a sho rt wai t
. called down, one by one, to they wei:e
be
rece
ived .
: with a bur st of laug
as _If some 1·
· joke had been playedhter
last to be • called was on them . The
' who found the guild allMis s Par son s
circle on ·the floor, arou ndseat ed in a
,a circle of
Iligh ted candles in the cen
ter bf wh·lch
· was an open umb rell a pret
.. ated with ligh t bluEl and tily decor- · :
te crep e 1pap er set into a ped estawhi
l dec orat ed •
with the same. Fro m the
edg
e of the · ·
umb rell a sho wer ed
er rain , and ·.
· han ging from it andsilv
ped arou nd I·.
the bas e wer e man y. hea
gift s for her · 1•
kitc hen with the good wis
guild. Pun ch and cak e was hes of the
served. The
1m t meetln&lt; ot th, guild will be held I\
on July 11. ·
·.

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f .Jun
SOUTHAMP'fON \
e 5-I nvl tati ons hav e bee
n

11issu
ed to the wed din g . of
Ml~s .
-,~e ano r Car oly n Par son
s ·of
tow n and -Da niel Ree d Por tbls
Wo rthi ngt on, whi ch wil ter flf .
l tak e
plac e at the hom e of Mr.
and Mrs .
The odo re E). Par son s
ot Eas t
stre et, Sat urd ay, · Jun e
22n d, at
thre e o'cl ock .
· Mis s Par son s ls a dau ght
er of
the late Mr. and Mrs . E.
, , son s of this tow n. She K. Pa.r atte nde d
the sch ools her e and the
Eaa tham pto n hig h sch ool , also
. the
Nor th Ada m~ nor mal sch ool
. Sin ce,
gra dua t\ng the re . she
has . bee n
teac hin g in· Wo rthi ngt on.
Mr. Por - ,
1
ter is .a son of Mr. and Mrs
ber t G. Por ter of Wo rthi .
ngt on.
·-· --,.,..,.~ .
.

Her-\

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:WO RTH ING TON

Wo rthi ngto n, Jun e 10- The
grange
will mee t on Tue sday evening
at the
Lyc eum hall for Its regu lar
meeting.
-Wo rthy Sta te Mas ter W. N.
of Nor th Eas ton will add Howard
ress the 11•
meellng. Ref resh men ts will
served.
Mr and Mrs Arlin Cole of be
Hig
hland
stre et will ente rtai n the Gra
nge
club at thei r hom e Frid ay even Whlat
ing.
The Joll y Fiv e
mee t on··
We dne sday afte rno on wlll
with
Lov elan d of We st ·Wo rthl ngtoMrs ' ·ear l
Mr and Mrs A. (}. Caldwell n.
of Pitt.afield spe nt the wee k end
at thei r
sum mer home.
Miss N. S. Hea coc
retu rned
from Ilion, N. Y., andk ishas
opening her: sum mer home.
Mr and Mrs zra nk Bat es
of Weat
\ Sprlngl\eld are visi ting
Mr Bates's
, sist er, Mrs Cha rles A. Kilb
ourn
.
Chi ldre n's Sun day will be
observed
~- - . In the Con greg atio nal chu -rch
- - -- ---uu-:;;uu~
· , day the 16th.
•, a
•
, Mrs Wil liam ' Rciy ls ·aer:
iouslY 111, at
- 'i the Hou se of Pro vide nce 1n
' At t'he lnvl tatl on ot Mis Holyoke, \'•
Tro w of Nor tham pto n thes Bessie E. ·
people of
Wo rthi ngt on ,will ·att end
· a picnic at
her cou ntry _plac e "W ishk
· We st Pelha!Il on. .Sat urd ay umt er" ill
afte rnoo n
at 3.

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- - , ·· ,vo RT HI~ ~TO N' __,_
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. Wo rthi ngto n, Jun e 13wed ding of · "inte rest • her e A. · double _-:,
plac e Jun e 26 -.i.~ ,9 ·. ,!I:• m), .will ·tak e .,.
Hea rt chur-oli, ·No rtha ~pt at Sa\:red •
on, · whe n i:- l
Miss Rei nett e . Ber nier wii\
' be -n:tarrled f:
to Jac k Dev ine of ,Spr ingf ield
sist er, Mis s Viv ian The lma , an,:l her •i'/· ·
Vic tor •·Alex11,!1der Lap rad e. Ber nier , to 1,'
.oi North.- f ,
amp ton. A rece ptio n to
ut 75 rela - . t~
tlve s will follow at · the a.bo
brides~ par ents , Mr andhom e of the i .
Mrs Vic tor ~Ber nier of thl11 . tow n.
, •
, Sch ools will clos e tom orro
w for tl'\e ~
· sum mer wit h exerc!Bea of
the two ·c or- 1
1 ner ·sch ools at 2 p.
·m. at Lyc eum ba~l. '."
Miss. Sus an T. Ric e who ~as
bee
.! spe ndin g a mo
it). Eng lan f has .re~n ''·,
. j turn ed to her nth
hom e.
·
· Mrs ·He len .-B artl elt
dau ght er, Lou ise, of Ea.a Cov er and 1
are. spe ndi ng a fort nig ht t Nor thfi eld ,
at ·the sum - \
mer hom e ot: Mrs Sid ney J.
fore leav ing for Bro oks ideSm art belodg e at I
Che ster whe re she -will be
diet itia n . . \

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WORTH INGTO K

WORTH INGTO N -

-Worthi ngton, June 13-The West . r pai·lcwa·y associa tion will
field n 1ve
hold a public meeting at Lafayet ~e
lodge on Saturda y evening at 8. The1 e
will be a speaker, to be announ ced.
Worthy scate Master ,v. N . Howard of North E a ston and Deputy
Fred Allen ot Auburn , who address ed
the meeting of the g1·ang~ la.st _evening •were guests over mght of Dr
and Mrs Franc is A . Robinso n .
Miss Fay Nell has returne d from attending the gradu a tion of her nephew ,
William Neil, Jr., at the Berksh ire
s c hool at Great Ba rrington .
William Hunt of Stamfo rd, Ct., who
ha s been gardene r for Miss N. S . Heacock for a number of years, has returned for his season' s work.
'
Miss Gladys W1·ight , daught er of
Mr and Mrs Joseph Elma Wrlg11t of
this town, was married yesterd ay
mornin g to Harold Lshwel i of Westfield. The ceremo ny took place at 9
a. m. at St Mary 's Catholi c ch,urch a t
Westfie ld, followe d by a small recep tion here at the home of the bride's
P,a rents. After 1 a weddin g trip spent
m Hartfor d, Ct., the couple will m 'a ke
their hom·e at 14 Arnold street, Westfield.

Were Guests or Miss Trow
W orthing ton, June !}-Wo rthingt on
people w e nt t o • "Wis1"' umtru" in West
Pelha m S a turday afterno on · at the in'(itation Of Miss Bessie E. T,ow of
B edford lodg e, Northam pton, a former
resi_den t , of Worthi ngton; . and. held
their second ann·ual picnic. About 70
were present to enjoy the beauty of
the old-fash ioned house, the· picnic
grounds , the deep ravine with {ts wild
tlowers, ferns and brook and the lawn
wh ere bowling , croquet and cards were
.e n joyed. Many w e re content to gather
11). groups to chat. A buffet lunch, to
:Which each h a d contrl bu.ted , was served on the lawn under the b ig maples,
Miss Trow serving coffee a n d strawberry shortca ke to the en tire crowd.
A pu rse of m oney was gi ven to Miss
T row with which to pu rchase a tree,
if s he s o desired, to be known as t h e
"Wort hing t on· tree," in m em or.Y.' o:t;.t,wo
happy picnics, .Atty Walter L. -Steven s,,
of N orthamp ton making the presenta.tioon speech. Among . guests present
who wer·e former residen ts of Worthington: Mr and Mrs H. ·G. Ely ; of
H a mpden, Mr and ·Mrs . Vetnon Doty
a nd family of ·West Springf ield; Mr
and Mrs ,Arthur Broo~s and· family cit, .. ,_
Lorigme a·dow, Atty w., L. ·steven s and
Alfred C. Stevens of Nortlili mpton( Mr
and Mrs Howard Johnson , Miss Marg uerite ,Johnso n and Arthur ·· Johnson :lj
of Dalton, Mrs Lewis w,. Pe,t tlnglll of
Cummin gton, Mrs ArUn Cole an4 Mrs 11
L ester C. Leduc of Chesterf ield, Mrs
Cecil Simpso n of l Worces ter and -'.Mrs
· Maude Knapp of Southam pton.

Parkiva y · .A.ssoclatlon Meets

'I

The Westfie ld River Parkwa y asso-;
~ii
ciat!on held a meeting ~ ~
'
$~6 tt evening at 8.~0
.at Lafayet te lodge.
·
/ Cl!nton If. Read; propriet or, kindly _ofe_
fering the use of the large dining room ,
for the meeting . Dr Francis A. ·Rob- ,
-, lnson, · town director presided and in- r
. troduce d Preside nt 'A, D. Robinso n ot r
Westfie ld, who told ·-0t the organlza ,- I1
t!on and Its aims to· aid the community, W . o. Johnson of 'Worcino co,
g eneral secretar y, spoke on the activities of the associat ion to-' date and
L. C. Sweet of this town, told what ths
associat ion would do · to induce people
to buy and build up abandon ed farms.
Other speaker s were - Mr ·Hines of
Cummj. ngton and Dr Starbuc k of
\ Mlddlefl eld. Delegat ions were 1&gt;resent
I from Worono co, . Chester, Nrth . .Ches.
t~r. -Middlefield, Chestert ieJd/ · :Cum- f
, m!ngtn and Hunting ton_; ., ·
I
The last grange ' whist party- of ,-.t he /
season was held Friday evening at the ,
home· of Mr and Mrs Arlin Col&amp;: with ,
seven ·tables. in play. •,. The ftrst ·p~rlzes
were won by Mrs FrS:ncls A. Robinso n.
and Leland Smith and the consolat ion )
' prizes · by Mrs Waltex, Higgins and 1
Ralph Smith. •A shower of gifts both f
old and new was given to Mrs Charles
Kehr whose home was recently destroyed by fire.
.

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WOll'fHJN(; 'l'O:'&gt;

, ~101·t. hi 11gto11, .J unc 1S-Childr en ·s
,fay was ubse 1·ved n.t t.11 e Cong re ga·
u on a l chu1·c h Su nd ay w ith r ec ita ti o n s
a nd mu sic by th e c hildre n, eac h sc h ool
in t ow n furni shing so rn e p a rt in th e

program und er th e direction of Mrs
• , Ern est I. T h ayer, Su nd ay - sch oo l s up~rintende nt. Th e c hurc h was d ee e mlock boughs, bridal
0 :·at ed with h
wl'eat h a n d iri s in ch al'ge of Miss N.
H ea cock, Mrs Fran ces A. Robinson
a nd M iss Elsie V . Bartlett. Two children were baptized, Go1·don Shadroch
Dodge, so n of Ric h a rd Carvel and
Edith H athaway' Dodge, and Ernest
'\V. Cu rt!,s, s on of A1· thur a nd Fannie
Cu 1·t1 s . J• ollowin g a custom of the
ch urch the , foll owi ng c hildren who
hav e b ecome 12 :r.ea r s of age received
a Bibi~: Geo rge H. Ba rtl et t. Marshal
Goodwm an d R oberta Farnh a m . , .
R ev and Mrs James H . Burc k es a re
caring for · two childre n , Meredith
Harriso n
an rl
'\~1 agn er
Brewster
Lathrop '\Vagner of Deerfl eltl , for four
or five weeks whil e their p a r e nts l\1r
a nd _Mrs Harrison G. Wagner a;e in
F lorida. Mr Vlagne r is Franklin
cou nt~, !'gent for th e society for) he
,
Prevent10n of Cru elty t o Children

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WOlt'flllNGTO.ri
.
June 18-At th e inv i'Y lllmgton,
tution o f Mr a nd Mrs Howard Johnson, f o rmer r es id ents of this town, the
Grange Whist club will meet wit!,
the m at their h om e, 438 N orth street
'
Dalton, Thursd ay ·night .
Mr and Mrs Ra y m o nd Porter Buck
a pd dau g hter, Nanc y, are spend ing a .
few weeks at Mrs Buck's home at
Mo unt Clemens, Mich·.
Mrs Raymond Clapp and ~au~hter
Myrtis, of Hamden. Ct., are ..,.{;itin,,'.
. "
h e r m_other, Mi-s Julia P . Buck.
.
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WORTHINGTON
W o rthington, June 25-Mrs Thomas
Commerford Martin · left -today to a t- ·
t end the wedding of her son, John
Martin, to - Miss Jewel Growe, which 1.
will take place at New Britain, -Ct., ·
on Wednesday.
Mrs Irving Granville and two children of Yonkers, N. Y ., are spending .
the month of July a t " Green Haven,"
the summer hom e of Mrs B . R . Green.
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'\PARSONS-P
0RlER
..
At SO\lt\\AM
P10N \\
\Vortbing
to
1

nT
Man From e~cher Weds
Home Ce That Town at \1
remony
S o u th a m
r \a g e o f p to n , J u n e 2 2
\
M is s E le
-The m
a
a
D

.rn o r C. _P
a n ie l R .
a
n oo n a t P o r te r o c c u r r e r s o n s a n d \
d th is a
3 a t th
e home
tt e r b r o th e r ,
. o f th e
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b r id e s ·
arsons
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o
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se was p
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re tt i} y d
la u r e l a
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n d rosei:
· w it h
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p la ~e in
c e re m
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o
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b o u q u e t e'il , a n d . c a r r ie
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w h o ·w o a r s o ~ ~• · s is te r
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th e . b ri d
own of
c h if fo n
~,
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and · car
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best ma
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.\ g o w n s .e r b o u q u e ts , l tos h a d e s a n d w.who · ,
or
T~e wed
.
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d in g a m ~ tc h . th e f er · ~
.+ch _w a a
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n
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e
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a l tr ip .
m a tc h . repe e n s e m b le'orlde w e a r in
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at· to .. ,
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· ia'· \-n' '\.
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r
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11 a g r a n d n a ti v e a n d. M r s' Ea..
. o t tl1\s
d u a te o f
H ig h 1 sc
wn.
N o rm a l h&lt;10\ a n d thth e E a a th a mto
p to :n ·
e N o r th
school,
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A
S
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G u e s ts •wg to n to r th
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to n , C o e re 'preiienet 1&gt;a.st tw o yh t in 1
e
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fr
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om W
rs . \
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�WOR THIN GT ON
.
.
.
- I
\ Vol't hi ngton , Jun e 27-A t a m eet:
\
in g .of the gra n ge h eld Tu esday
·1
June 25.- Mis s Mari
nin g at the L yceu m h a ll, th e eve L. Bart fll's t , lctt, teach er of grad e on
six
degre e. was confe rr,e d b y th e r egul
at
the
offi ce rs, and the seco n d degre e by ar ' Barr ows scho ol, Sprin gfield , tor•
th e 1 \ th~ past fiftee n year s, has
1
youn g m e n·s. 'degr ee t eam of \Villi:i.msbeen
bu'.·g upon . the . fo ll o:v t'.1 g cn11&lt;h clatcs \ prom oted to head teach er at Six- •
:
·
teen
Acre s. Miss Bart lett spen t tbe J
Mis Wm1(1 ed E. D1al ,e, Mis.~ Eliza
- ,
week -end at her hom
beth T orrey , th e .Mi
e b
sses Ma rjori
d
i l l
S
Doro thy Bart lett , Fran k lin G. e :inrl ,
ere
1
w I eave pring fleld Thur11day 11.n
a nd Ca l'! \\' ell s . Th e h a ll wa Btu·;·
tor
a t8
Camp Frisk y HUI, a Massachu - \
tract i'vely deco rated .wlth r oses
in
se tts Girl Scou t camp at Gllmanvarie ty and . m o unta in laure l , by
Emton, N. H., wher e she/ bas accep ted
erso n Davi s.
R efres hm ents were
a posit ion as busin ess mana ger
s el'v ed.
·
.
Mrs li'i·an cis A. Robi nson and Mrs \ [rom-· June 29 to Aug. 24 .
.
Wilb ur .Drake, Thom as McEwen,
Geor ge E . T orrey , J r ., have left
B e rnice Waz niac and Mari e Gran
N~ed h a m to a tt end the wedd i ng foi·
o
f
\
er 4-H club mem b.e rs , left M g-Miss F lor ence Cam eron of· that t
ow n, 11
•
to Brad ford Sk &lt;?lton . of B urlin gton.
I
on
I
I day to spen d a
week _at Camp
·Mrs H elen Bartl et t Cov er, fo i·
urn
How
e at Gree nwic h Lake .
past fou r yea r s a teach er of food
I Mr. and Mrs. Arth ur Bart lett of
1111tl'itio11 and ]la m e nu r s in g at an d
t !1c
. Spri ngfie ld were in town Sund
North fi~ld se mina ry, wh o has
ay
and calle d upon Mr. Bart lett's ·siss p en d in g two w eek s \'aca ti on h ere,bei&gt;n
h a~
;
ter,
Mrs.
Hele
n Bart lett Cove.r.
left to b ~ dieti tian for th e s umm
er
\
The Gran ge will conf er the .first
at Brno k~ide lodge , Che st e r.
and secon d degreed'· this iev'enlng
Mrs Wilh am Roy , who h as been .
• •
1
for seve n week s a t t h e Hou se 111
,
•
•
of , I upon nine candHl.at
es...
Prov ide n ce, H olyok e, r eturn ed
-.'•,r ✓
hom
e
\
\
Mrs.
•
C_
h
arles
· A. ;Kilbourn -and
yeste rday .
. Mrs. Erne st. G. Thay er, WQ.O .have

WORTffiNGTON

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1

:AIRPLANE LANDS
·11 ,i,f AT _WORTHINGTON:
Pilot Warren J. White, .
I

Bound For Albany Comes
Q.9wn Because of Bad\\
Weather
,.. ·

·w orth. in g ton, June 30-T he· s~'
o iid
'a irpla ne~Jever to ·1a11d· in W:ort )1.fug
.c ame dow n here at - 8 tonig ht beca ton
use
1 or
adve rs e weat be't,' ~ond ition s, and
· }mad e a succ essfu l land) ng in
the large
' \mea dow· back of the B'uff lngto n
now _0V1o-ned by Herb el'.t' Smit !\, hous e,
The
, plane ·was a Trav el-A ir blpla ne;
Wrig ht J5 moto r, mark ed · C64tl with
· route froni Bost on to Alba ny. 4, · en
War ren J. , Whi te was pilot aild carri
ed
anot her man as passe nger . The
men will spen d the nigh t at Lafa two
yette
lodge and take off for, Alba ny
earl:,,
tomo rrow .
A Ia1' ge num ber of peop le who
had
• been watc hing the plan e circl
ing
land arriv ed at Buff ingto n hill by to
tomo bile and on toot, until quiteaua
c rowd had assem bled there . The
decid e tq , come down beca11ise of pilot
. the
indic ation s of seve re thun derst orms
.
' Tpe ,first plan e that came ' down
in
1wort hlng ton lande d on the golf links·
abou t eigh t year s ago , havi ng brou
ght
J. Tenn yson Selle r, man ager of
the
_~!~~ don h~t~~ G~~c ~fleld , ~s - ~-ass
en- 1

b.e en .a ttend ing· the home make rs'
camp at, Gree nwic h Lake ; return~d
home...Sunday . . ,
.·
.
' Mrs;. Lest er Stev ens · l:l.rid ' son,
Lest er Stev ens, J·r.;'· of · B,ropkllne
are · spen ding the summe1f 1n Stev.ensv ille in the hous e owne d · by
. Cull en L. Stev ens:
.,·,. :.. ' . ,,
The :Misses · Rosai-,, .. •lill.d·: B·e ssie 1
~ Iliiin son ;
-A~b .erst :C- form er·\
1 resid ents
were m town Frid ay
~alli ng upon frien ds. -

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s
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B er ni er
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tv ta n
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w
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, a receI&gt;tlon gi
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of th e br id es ve
ble wedding, in
s
at
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th
ch
ei
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r ho m e n
sis- W or th
tei 5 w_ Sacredbr id es, was solem- dr ed . in gt on to ab ou t on e hu nGu es ts w e pr
H ea rt ch
ni 1: .~ 1
esen t
th is .morning, .e ur ch at H ol yoke Sp rin gfer
ield , W or cetrston_\
_ach cou- H ar tfo
\
t' g as at tend
er
rd
,
Ne
w
~t~e~~ :i s; , Re in et tean ts - to th e Ashfield , H at H av en , Greenfield,.
field , Ea st ha m
Or alie Be r_n- Br
i · da ug ht er. of
l)t on ,
ockt
an d :i,e om~nste
t~~· Be rn ie r of Mr. an d Mrs. Vic- beau tifon
r . Man y
ul
W
w
or
ed
th
dm
in
g
_g
to
gi fts wer e r en, w as ceiv ed ,
in ar ried to J oh
Mr. and Mrs . nJ M. Devm e, ~on of gl assw arin cl ud in g linen , si lv er w ar e ,,
oh
e,
n
H . De vm e_ of
As hfi eld , an d M
an d m on ey . el ec tri ca l a1&gt;1&gt;liances
da uo-h ter of Mr.iss Vivia n Be rm ef ,
Mr. an
Ber~ier, was m ar an d Mrs. Vi ct or weddino- d Mrs. Dev in e le ft on a
tri ll by au to m ob
ri
ed
to
Vi ct or La - W hi
pn.o. e .of No rth
ile to th e'
te M
am
la te i ir . and M pt on , son of th e tu rn w illou nt ai ns ·a nd on th ei r ~esp
en d th e su m m
prnde · ~ E as th .rs. Pr ospe re La - th e
er w ith
br
am pt on. R ev .
.Fr . to n. id e' s pa rent s in V {o rth in gSt an isl :i.w Guill
et
,
1&gt;a st or of th e
churcl1 , of fic ia te
Mr an d M rs . La
l)r ad e le ft on a
m ar ch was pl ay d. Th e w ed di ng w ed di.ng
ed
l an cq ur t, ch ur ch by Jo se ph Vail- an d H awtri ll to Bra.,oklyn , N . Y., \
Ce nl!,_ti , :v io lin is or ga ni st , an d G~y re tu rn th th or ne , N. ;J. U po n t_heii:__
sang .-~•o S' al ut art. A rth ur M on n at 54 W ey w ill m ak e .th ei r h'ome ·'
is." Th e ilo w~
oo
gi rls wer e Th
r am vt on . dbi;ne ·avenue_, •N_-orth- ,
. ..., · ,
. of th e br id es,,el m a ne rn ie r, cousrn
Mrs. D
·
an
ni ece of Vict&lt;ii: d Alice La pr ad e, tu m·e- w asev in e' s·. go in g· aw ay co~ot
La
ra
pr
ad e. Th e us hsp be uy sh ad e ge
er s w er e Adela.rd
ge tte w ith
chiffon br oa dc loor -' ,,
er of th e br id es Be rn i.e r, a br ot h- co at an d
ha
,
t
.a
an
nd
d
Cl
sh oe s to m at chth
au de La
Fl ~u r , a ti::iend
M
rs
.
La
of
t&gt;
V
ra
ic
de
t_or La1&gt;
's go in g .lf ~a y .
, Th e ch ur ch w
cos- • ·
as de co ra te d r-ade. tu m e w as of gr ay geor
w
gette- w ith.
ith gr ay ha t an
pa,.lms. . ' ' '
d
.
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.sh
I
oe
'
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s
,
.
to
Miss Rehi.ette
'
Be rr ue r w or e ' ~ m ed iu m- \ Iu~ c~ if! ) na tc h an d
a co at
qn"b ro ad ~l ot h .
~o.w n of w hi te
·
sa
w. ttl). la ce be rth tin , pe rio d sty le ,'
M
ri!
.
D ev in e. ha s . 'Qee
lq_µ g in ba ck a. _Th e gown .. w as by ;;;mith
an
~ Ql\ege;' '~».d nMemploye&lt;! \
:1-~ e. Sh e w or e d trt m m ed w ith is em pl oy
ed .' by ··, th e r. D ev in e : ·-.._
a
tu
ll~ -.e n
l~ ce cap- an d ,ca
rr ie d ga rd en ia sw lth . Cr an e c"om1&gt;any of S~ rin U ~i ve rs al ,_..
a_nd
gf ie ld .
~! ee tp ea s. .
Mrs. La pr ad e
h!I-S be en em
L(Miss Viv~an
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pl
oy
ed
Be
at
rn
Sm
ie r wo_re a
*q w n of w h_1
La pr ad e \s emi\h co lle ge, an d Mr. ·\
,ffeta, pe rio d st
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yl e, di ng
,
~ ape w-ith o-rM ld· a, la ce -veil, ca p L' - ---H em en w ay Si lk, «t~mpany. l- \
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�</text>
                  </elementText>
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          <elementContainer>
            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
              <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
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                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
              <name>Title</name>
              <description>A name given to the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85146">
                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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            <element elementId="49">
              <name>Subject</name>
              <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85147">
                  <text>History of residents of the Town of Worthington and of town affairs.</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
              <elementTextContainer>
                <elementText elementTextId="85148">
                  <text>These scrapbooks consist of newspaper clippings largely from the Hampshire Gazette and Springfield Republican newspapers taken by Ms. Bartlett over the approximate period 1927 - 1960.  As the scrapbooks are scanned and optically character recognized, additional scrapbooks will be added to the collection. There are several scrapbooks in the archive that have not been digitized; those are not members of this collection.&#13;
Some of these items are bound books and others loose-leaf binders. Loose-leaf binders are scanned with a professional flat bed scanner with the result that optical character recognition is of reasonable accuracy. Books are scanned photographically with the result that optical character recognition is less accurate.</text>
                </elementText>
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              <name>Format</name>
              <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85149">
                  <text>Paper</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
              <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                  <text>Elsie V. Bartlett</text>
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              <name>Date</name>
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                  <text>1927/1960</text>
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              <name>Publisher</name>
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                  <text>Worthington Historical Society</text>
                </elementText>
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            <element elementId="93">
              <name>Date Available</name>
              <description>Date (often a range) that the resource became or will become available.</description>
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                  <text>2021-12-09</text>
                </elementText>
              </elementTextContainer>
            </element>
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      <name>Physical Object</name>
      <description>Physical objects other than books, documents, photographs &amp;c.&#13;
</description>
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        <description>The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.</description>
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            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
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                <text>1929-01/1929-06</text>
              </elementText>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
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                <text>1929</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook, 1929 No. 2 Light grey scrapbook with flexible report covers. 'Clippings' in gold.  Contains newspaper clippings from January through June 1929 providing a historical record of events in Worthington with numerous references to town residents and organizations. The material has been processed through optical character recognition so it is text-searchable and has an interactive table of contents.</text>
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r

I

WORTHINGTON

Garden Club's Vi sit
Wprthlngton, July 1-The Spr;ng- 1/
, field G· , rden club which visited Sat- 1
urday . ·Greenbriar" tl\e estate or Mr
1a.id
Mrs Emmett Hay Naylor of
1cummlngton, pa~ed through . ,voi-th- ''
1ngton on the route home and visited
the bea utltul garden at "Hillside"
the aummel" !Jome of Miss N. S.
' Heacock.
About 65 me mber~ enjoyed thll order~cl beauty . of the long
borders, -the rose garden, the circular
sweep of the lawn flanked by
peony beds against a trimmed hedge, ·
the rock garden and perhaps most or I
all the grass-mown path leading on '.
and on beside a brook Where flag Iris
gt'eW and unexpected seats •invited
on·e to rest.
Arter partaking of
lemonade. Dutch· oleokoks and cakes
upon the wide veranda the cli)b went
on t o visit the garden and tea house
of Walter Buxton, on the Lafayette
trail, an&lt;l the lovely gardens of Mrs
Harris . E. Collins, ,Miss Josephine!
Hewitt, Mrs . Leon Conwell and Mre
Nem·a Conwell Tuttle, returning to~
•Springfield via Huntington and West. •
• field.
•1 The v:omen's Benevolent society 1
will · meet on Wed.,esc)ay with Mrs · 1
Merrick Smith for an all-day sewing
meeting. ,
·
·
Hillside Pomo11a g ran;;e will meet'
at the · Ly-c eum hall bn Saturday. '
Progra1n: Song,, business, current
I events by Ed ward , J. Clark, dinner;
l address by S. R. Morrisc..'l o! Brook- i
i vale fa1'm, ·Windsor.
.
,•
Miss. N. S. Heacock is entertaining I
I l.1er cousin, Miss .Hester Adams of'
New York. one ·of the s taff or the:
New York Charity society organlza.
tlon and her friend, Miss Norma Wolf,~
also of New ·York, ,vho is connected I,
with the Metropolitan museum La .the
Japanese armor department .
. Louise Bartlett C..,over. daughter of
Mrs }lelert _ Cover. who has been
spend\ng a fortnight in ·worthlngton 1'
will leave this wee!&lt;; for C:imp Jordan
:it Waterford, Ct., for the camp season of five weeks. She wLJJ the.-:i go
to Ragged Mountain farm at Barkl1ampstead, Ct., In the Litchfield
county hills for the remaining three
weeks of her vacation.
·
Miss Mar)on L. Bartlett of this
town Is spending the summer at
1Gilmantc:1, N. H., where she Is busi1 ness manager or Camp Frisky hill, a
r:t,,Iassachusetts G\rl Scout camp.

I'

WORTHINGTON
Worthington, July . 6-Mrs Thomas l:
C. Martin a nd son. Commertorci w ill
' leave Monday to spend a week' with 1
: h e r sister, Mrs J. S. Cooke o! Phll.' ad_e lphia, who Is sailing soon for Eu• 1i
1 rope.
I Mr a nd Mrs Charles A. A . R ice of · ""
, Springfield ha ve r ;;n tcd "T win Brook
fa rm, " belonging to Mrs 'l:'. •C. Martin,
for the summer.
Mr a nd Mrs Herbert W. Oviatt· of
Milford, Ct., are s pending a week ~ t
Lafayette lodge.
Mrs R !chard S.
T erry a nd son, Rich ard, a lso o! Milford, will be a.t the lodge for · over
Sunday.
Miss Marguerite Johnson of .Dalton
11
is working for Miss Bessie Ames.
Mr and Mrs Herbert Adams and
'1..famll'y 'of Florence w'ere In town to.day and called at Guy F. Bartletts.
The Women's Benevolent society
,1 had a pleasant' meeting yesterday at
the home of Mrs Merrick Smith with
14 present. The ,next meeting wl\l be ·
h eid with Mrs Howard C. Brewster on
the 17th,: when a quilt will be tied.
.. Mr and Mrs Frank o: Wells of
Greenfield are spending the week end
' at their cottage.
Mr and Mrs Tilson Bartlett and
: son, George. and Mr and Mrs Riehard Bartlett . of Lee were _guests yes.
terday at C. A, Kill:!ourns. . _. .

l.

1

- -- --_W ORTHINGTON
Worthington, J.uly 4-Mr and Mrs \
Ge ~ J a s p.er
Sprlngfleld :h ave
bo 1
building site from Herbert
Sm h on Bu'fflngton hijl and will soon
erect a cottage.
Mrs Kenneth Pease Is visiting her
slater, Mrs Grace Sterling of New
Canaan, Ct.
He.rry W. Mollison Ls erecting a
wayijide iSt;l.nd near his house.
Albert, J :;: Welch and two chl!dren,
1 EveI:1:n.an.d .Daniel, are at their home
at ihe Genter for the summer.

o!

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.WORTHINGTON
Plnne Lands at Historic Spot
July 5.-The biplane, which
landed in the big mowing back of
the "Buffington place" Sunda..y
evening, .coming down because ot
weathe;.,-conditions, was a shaug,.,
visitor :-in ·1£s histdi'y. ·-' -The "Buffington~' place" dates back to th!c
se'tt:T(}me,iit ot, the. tow.n \...,when thP.·
fi'rsr fo'li:t in town',-"tlie 1.J.fi/ii., of \Alexarlilet '1iilller ,-_was· loc'ated on. it on
the old-Post road. And as the post
lroad was -the first road and the
1
taverns along its way the first
houses, post riders, stage coaches,
private coaches,- vehicles of all
kinds have stopl)ed at its _door.
Soldiers have encamped there. Today as a: -private residence the au•
tomobile enters' lts rtes. The bi-

!'if'NJ{ Pitt'.&amp;:

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:Jte VJ""L~;nglolf .
11
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.J•li~lo!':rn 1 .. )m:11'::J, ~,it.

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'II I

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,.

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.

0ffJ98.

�WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Wo1·thington, July 8-Hiilside Po•
mona grange met Satu r day at thb 1
L yceum hall with Mrs Carl Lo veland,
ma ster of the grange, preRiding. There
' was a good attenda1foe although the
farmers are now all busy haying. A
busin ess meeting and a ta1k on curr ent events by Edward J. Clar½ was
followed by a bountiful dinner at
wh ich over 30 sat down. . - At the
afternoon meeting, which was open t&lt;,
th e public, Mrs C1ifton ,Johnson of
Hadley spoke most inter,estingly on
"Foods of Man y Nations," telling of /
a visit to ,the Italian section of · New
' York and of what she learneel · of
m a ny foods, new
us, whicl}·'' they '
buy and seli in their markets. S11,c 1
,touched briefly on the foods of each 1
·coun try, leavin g her audience to de- i
cirte whether they cared to add them
to t heir m enus or not.
R ev Ral11h E. Danforth of Chest erfi eld will pr each in the Congrega- '
tional chur ch n ext Sunday., in exchange with R ev M r Burckes.
Th e women's degree team will confe1· the third degr ee and the regular 1
officers th e fo urth de;;ree u pon ntn e
c1rndidates at a m eeting of t he gra~
t omorrow ---evening : at - the- ~Lyceum i
hall. Deputy R ober t C. Sherman ot
Brimfield, ·re presen ting ,the state maste r, . will be. pre~ent .and _inspect t11e
, g ra n ge in the workings of the degrees.
.
The F riendship guild will ·meet on
Th ursday even ing a t the parsonage.
a:'hcrc will be m oving pictures at
L afayette lodge. Saturdll,y ~vening.

I

to

4\
f\

I

MAXUFACTU RER' S B 1t n k r u Pt •
Stock sale at Colodny Clothing Co.,
Main St .. :Northampton. Sale begins

I Thursday,

July 11.

3t-10

G1·ango Confers Degrees

July 10....:..neputy
Robert C.
Sherman of Brimfield and Walter
'I Crosier of Pittsfield, a member •.&gt;f
i his staff, insp·ect~d the Grang~
i last evening at the Lyceum hall in
I
; the working of the third and
1 fourth degrees. Th.e third degree
I was conf1:rr ed by ...the ladies' de) gree team a nd the / fourth degrcci
I by the regul ar officers upon eigllt
·candldates....:..t ll e Misses Marjol·:o .
and D,orotlly J:la rtlett, l\Irs. W._ K
. Drake, .J\'Jr. an d Mrs. Berme r, .,
Frankli n G. Burr, Wilbur Dralrn
a nd Cal'l1 Wfll s. There were four '.
re-instatements '· and two othe r~.
Miss E li za beth Torrey and F'oril
Martin, will· join later. Especially
worth y of me;1tlo n werq the deco•
r a tions ··of. t he.-ha ll by Emerson
Dav is. ·. T wenty-two
kinds of
gi·asses , man y·. varieties of wild ··
flow ers, eve rgreen and foliage, :ic, cented with th e richer · colors or
cultivated flo wei·s, were µsed. Tall
grasses silhouetted against a ligh_t •
I backgro un d wel'e used with beautiful effect. A -sheaf of wheat and
two horns of. plenty, one holding
fruit and one flowers, formed the
central design of the background
of th e ''Court,'.' symbolizinr, Ceres, ;
Flora and Pomoria. Blue larksp·. tr
gave to t he elaborately. trimme1l .
altar · a touch .of the national :1
Grange color. 'Hemlock, with its
new growth; the red leaves of .,..
young maples; all the wealth that
\Inature offers now so bountifully ·
I were utilized . Mr. Sherman gav~
most h e\r,ful suggestions in re·g ard
to the ritualistic work and the developn~ent of the Grange activities
in the community in a social; spiritual an,d practical way, ar.d said
the ladies' degree team woulcl
rank; 100 per cent in -his . scorin·, ,
, Deputy . Crosi¢r ;ilso spoke ,&lt;_&gt;n th~
work of the Gq1nge. There was ~ large attendance. Visitors wero
present from five out-of-to
., granges:_ Cµmmington, Chest:1~
field, Brunfield, Huntington a .,·
Pittsfield.
Uu,.

I

t

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---...

-..._:_

___

�Mr, and Mrs. Merwin F. Pack.
ard are receiving cougratulationq
on the birth cif a son , Cullen Syd.
1neY, yesterday.
_
·
Miss Carrie W. Porter, director·
· t Brookside Lodge, . Chester, and·
0
1
Mrs. Helen B. Cover, dietitian,
were in town yesterday.
Nntlve of 'l'own, 80, \'islts Birth.
place
,
Harry W. Mollison received a 'l
call recently !rpm Frankin Bens·
Jamin Ma ngle o( Rockville, Ct., 80
·
years old, whose grandfather, j,
,Franklin Benjamin, . b_ullt the I:
house where Mr. Mollison lives. • I!
Mr. Mangle left the place when a !
young boy, but could remember
the house ao It was then. Most of R
the original furniture of the house · 1i' he has in his Rockville home. The
·• Mollison house is one of the old
houses of the town. When it was
'1 found necessary
in more recent
years to lay a new floor in one ct
Its rooms, underneath the ollt
floor were fonnd the stumps of
·the trees of th.e "primeval forest''
,1 that were felled when the Ian¾
l was cleared to build the house.
1Mr. Mangle was accompanied by ri ,
,., his wife· and a son, Benjamin, who 1(
Ills_ a professor at Yale, and his \•.
wife.
.
The A. H. Phillips store at the
nter was opened for business
esterday for the first time. ·
'
Grosvenor Hewitt has been Ill ,
or several days with stomach :
ouble.
~

1

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- - --

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--

WORTHIXGTON

-

Worthin gton , Ju ly 14-The Friend.
ship gulld of the Con gregational
church met Thursday even ing with
Mrs James H. B urckes at t l1e parson- 1
. age for Its mon t hly meeting. After
sewing for a while th e meeting was 1
called to order and the devotional ex.
erclses were led by Miss Elsie V. Ba rtlett. Kodak pictur es', "Scenes from
Africa," were shown and a s hort de. 1
scrlptlon of each was r ead by birs !
Daniel R. Porter. It was decided to
hold two food saleB, one Jn July and
one in August. It was voted tha t th e
guild have cliarge of decorating th e
church during August as follows : AU•
gust 4 , members from Highlan d .
s treet, Mrs Arlin Cole, chairman; 11, ,
Center, Miss .E vely ll' Welch, chairma.n ;
18, Corners, Miss Dorothy F . Bartlett,
chairman ; 25, West Worthington, Mrs r
Eben Shaw, chairman. The fallowing '
committee was appointed for the next I social : Mrs James H. Burckes, Mrs :
George E. Torrey, Jr,, and Mrs Francis A. · Robinson. In a. contest of
gue53ing .advertisements, . In charge of •
Mrs Harry l\Iollinson, the first prize i
was won by Miss Marjorie G. Bartlett ,
and flw consolation prize by Miss Elsie V. Bartlett. The next meeting will,'
be held August 1 with Mts Daniel R ;
Porter. The leader wiU be Mrs Porter•
and the hostesses Mrs George E. Tor- '.
,. rey, Jr:, · and Mrs F. A. Robinso n.
··
· An important meeting of the ·'parish r ,
will be held at the church Saturday i ·- ·- afternoon at 3 to see if the parish .
r will vote to wire th e church for elec- 1 ·
I tricity.
- -- - · _

I

I

�WORTHINGTON
Ro711.J
Arcanum Field.
W
hi '

nu

ort

WOR"rHING TON

Da,- l

ngton, _July 1G~Ro;Va.1 .A.rcadll.f, llponsorl!d bf the 1odg1!_8
ams,
Pittsfield, . Stockbridge,
Springfie ld, Westfield, Florence; Ee.st~
hll.mpton, Chicopee :FIi.Jiil - a.t!.tl thl!I
towh, drew a. large gathering of lts
m embers _ here Saturday a.tterno1m,
probably from 260 to 300 people being
pre!!ent. In accordance with •A be!l.Utlful custom , It pllgrrmage was first
made to the North cemetery, 'fihere ·
· flowers wer e placed u pon the gtl!.ve
o! P tlst Regent _ Charl!!s :I!'. Bateli,whose Joya.I devotion to the Royal Atcamim ewer a. period Of ma.ny ;\rea.tij
' has -Wofi tor ' him th!!! well-deserved
1 tribute.
A: spray of flowe r s was !1.186
' placed there by the Easthamptbrt
Loyal Ladles, 'l'he field-day exercises
, Were held on _whtlt has Jong_ been
known aii the " Lincoln Stewart
place," where a l:l!U!eball game, a t ugot-war and other sports were enjoyed.
Iii the orchard a.cross the way a. boxlunch picnic supper _wail _served, With
soda a.nd Ice cream tree to al. , MatiY
11 stayed during the evening for in llnpromptU enterttllntnen~ at the l,yceuin lib.II, with a. brief ad&lt;iress by
Pa.i!!t Grand itegent Wl!llam Root of
Pittsfield f oJiowed by dancing, !or
which Btttes's orohest r,a played.
The Women's_ Benevolent 11oc!ety
I "\\Till meet on Wednesday with_ :Mrs
itoward C. Brewster at the Center !or
an all-day meeting.
, . .
.
Miiili Bernice E . R'.llboum
vl81,t,l,n ~
her uncle, Frank Batl!s, of Welit
•Spri ngfield.
_
-. ,
.
. Prof William d. Rlc~i',·'Jr., and th_ree
children, .Andrew, PetE!t'aftd Pll.rttela,
o! Madison, Wis., motored from Al;
I banY yesterday and called upoD; ; his
f aunt Miss Susan T. Rice, at The
Ma.pies."
_
. _,
_ _..
,
Mtil Willlatti !toy, who has been ill
tor liOft'le t_l_m e has . retur::n~d _,_tq_ t_h e

ot In f3'd

I

I

I~
-

gton • July
1"o - -S ummer
b ,vorthin
.
·w"'"t_ 1s bringing visitors to the hill s
f he, e c ool breezes can always be
o_u nd.
Many com e year afte r
&gt;cat· and also tou rists who stop to
I spc,nd a few days oC an a u to mobi le
tnp. At Lafayette lodge for the seas o n a re : Mr and Mrs Lum an Brown
n f_ Daytona B each , Fla.; Mrs C. v .
J\!iller o f Sta mford, Ct.; Mr a nrJ Mrs
Alfred Fish of B rooklin e; Miss Marion
S terns of Staten Island, a,nd Mr and 1
1\frs Loeb of Scarsda le, N . Y. Recent- ,
ly registered are : John P . Elton of
·w aterbury, Ct.; :Mr a nd Mrs Charl es
I Bridge of Hazardville. 'Ct. ; Mr and
11\1.rs Bulloclc of Hartsdale , N . Y .; Mrs
H erriclc of Louisville, Ky. ; Mr an&lt;.!
. :i\frs Carter o f Chicopee ·Falls ; Mr and
1\lrs Walter Mitchell artrl Miss Edith
Sterns of Spri ngfield; Edward Ryan
of Amherst. and Mrs Hutchinson of
"\Vestfleld. Moving pictures for guests ,.
and public \lire ,. held at th e lddge on
Wednesday ·a n d Saturday , even ings,
and br idge l?arties with prizes award- f;
ed on Friday afternoo n s at 2.30.
nd I
, Mr and Mrs Frederick H . Bu_rr a
,
fa m ily a re spending a . short time at 1
JM'r.'Araratlf as th eY h a v e aptly named
1--thei r m ou ntain h om e which they have
recentl,y purcha sed of Samuel_ F. Hill.
The -'l'la te for the annual fan· of t_h e
I
w o~e n's Bepevolent societ y has been
nd
' se t ·r or W ednesday, August , H, a
will be h eld ·on the gro unds .n ear the
c ongregat ional church .
..
. Mrs L eland P. Cole . . Mrs Ho.ace ~Cole Mrs George E. '.lorreY, J r ., Mis
F ra ,;cls A. R obin son, went to Great
I B arrin gton t oday to _vi sit Mrs Walter
M Sbaw in celebrat10n. of her birthd;Y
\ 1&lt;...;.tlier McCarthy of St Thomas's
hurch at Hun tington. h eld a school
~t the L yceum hall, Monday, f or the
C'atholic childr~n of the town. Th ese
· :will be h eld every Monda y m ormng.

I

I

If

ttouse -of Providence In Hol~oke for -~
turtber treatment.
. , ',· ,
_1
.
I

•

WORTHINGT ON
Worthington, July 19-Mr and Mrs
Alpha Thay er of Visalia, Cal., former
r esidents of t his town, who have made
their h ome in California for about 25
years, a r e being ent ertained by fri ends
and r elatives in Northampton, Springfi eld and W est Springfield. On Monday at 6 p. m. ·,there will be a picnic

·ij·Ste
n: their
h onor at t h e summer h ome ·in '"
vensvi ll e of Fred Stevens of North ampton. It ls h oped that all the
er res Id en ts will attend to greet
and Mrs Thayer. Basket lunch
1 be carried.
Mary Ellen Rea_d who h as b een

oldMr
will

·~-- ------ vis-

-!ting h er grandm other, Mrs W. :Read
Jn Pittsfield, for two weks, has ret urned h ome.
,· +l'~r·s Hcrbe3·t G. P orter and Miss Els ie '.!3urt1ett enjoyed ::, m otor trip to
. Sa ra t oga Springs t oday with Mr and
' M rs Irvin g L. Bartlett of Greenfield.

�---- cc WORTHING'fON
Meetltl g Of :rarlsh

• Worthington, July ·l!E-An _ important meeting of the : );l~rish was hel d
Satur day afternoon a t 3. at the Congregat ional church, G~o,ge W. Pease
acting as moder ator.• It was voted
that the pa rish raise · a f und to install electr icity in the church and that
the chair appoint a commit tee of three
to ra ise this fund. T he committee as
announced yesterqay are: Mr s Irving
Cha pma n, Mrs Harris E . Collins and
Mrs Arlin Cole. It was voted that a
committee of three lie n ominated to
have cha rge of instalatlon of electricity a nd also of electrifying the or- I
gan : Rev James H. Burkes, Miss N.
s. Heacock and Miss El~le V. Bartlett
were named. •rwo n ew member s were
taken into the par ish, ·M rs Arlin Cole
and Mr s Homer Granger. T-h e meeting adj ourned to m eet aga in in t wo
weeks a t the chu~ chJ
Satu rday,
August 3. _,!• j I '
. ,
The Women's Benevo ent society
' wlll meet on W ednesday with Miss N.
S. H eacock for a n all-day meeting.
The J,,riendship guild will .hold a
food, sale on the Library lawn Sa turdaY afternoon at 3.
Thirty members of Laurel court,
Order of the Amaran th of Springfield,
held a picnic yesterday a t Towers:s
lodges. Royal Mat~qµ Mrs Caroline
,Ma nsfield, who a rraru;ed for the picnic and P ast Roya l Matron Mr s Her'
bert L. TowC/J'were '!)resent.
· _...i
· -- ' -

WORTHINGTON

9.. Lf

-z.2- - ·
/ - / Old Home Gathel'ing

Lo~gmeadow, Mr!&gt;, Ca r l Me rd r.k
l'IIrs. Ifatblee"n . Bnrtlett Clarke'
I F!1frberf L. T ower, Born er- Thrash'.
.er arid Isaac Th ra sh er of .Spring- ·
field; Mrs: E ll a H ewit t McBrid'e ut
Bosto n ,..Alfred Vy. Trow, i\ll~s·
' Bessie E. Trow , Mrs. Nina · 'r
1 • Br oo ks; Ernest L. Th rash er , Atty:
W a lt er L. Steven s and· Mrss Clara:
Steven s. of Nort h a m pton , Earle A.
R a nd a ll· of Hadley, W infr ed- w. '
Crosier · of Hoiyok e; Watson Crosier and · Mrs. "Alice W ood'a.id
Bridges o°f Mitti n·e ague, Mrs. Lulu
Cros~er Ba•h a nd ~fr. a nd · Mrs.
Milo Bates of West S pringli elu .
These and their families and a
large ,numbe r o't townspeople cQm - ,
prised the gathering. ·
·

'I

_ Miss Sabt)On Give,, Showet,·

A very pretty shower was given 1
Tuesday afternoon by Mrs .. E ~'l) esd
G. Thayer _ci' West Worthington iu
honor of Miss Millicent Salmon of ·
Easth a m ~to n, 1vh ose m a rria.ge _to
Cllffo:r rl •T ihller . C'f- t his · town ·, will
so on ·take pl ace. . l\!iss Sa imilfr ~r-.r.ived supposedly to a brioge 'J)a.rty to find th e h cj_u s e_ fi lled. with ! ,
,. gues ts . A c_hild:s ·e:-turess cart, dtlCorn.ted ' wit h· white . a'w 1 bluP. . ~r e)Je
paper ove1'fl owe d with gi fts. Sa~-d- ;
-wiCQE'S , !1~ke ·and ,{ice.. C)'~:M11 ..w~i:~ ,,-yQ'
ser ved' on th e lawn . ,Mis$ Sahl\(# '
has been a t ea ch e r in the .town for
seve r a l · yP.ar s: Gu es ts from out .of
town in clud ecl h ~r m oth er , :Mrs ..
AUce. Salmon, Mrs. William C hipman an d lfttle d a ug bJ er. J\'I r~~ ,

'X

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Jul y 24.- One of the mo st · enFrank Chipm:a'n apd · Mrs. James
joyable events of the seas on was
,: M.d,Ia:hon, i ll of· Eastha mpton , ,.
the lar ge . gath erin g Monday afte r- \
~
-. .
.
noon and evenin g at the home of
Mrs. Lanibie tb Give 'l'alks -'
Mr. and Mrs. Alf red C. Stevens at ·
A pleasant event to which every
Stevensville to · meet Mr. and Mrs.
, one is ) nv itect' will · be the, lit,tle
Alpha Thayer of Visa.Ila, Cal.,. for1
t alk Mrs._ J. E. Lambie of Was·h-\
mer residents of this. town, ·who 1
ington·, D. ;C., .has consented· : to·
are East.-:v,siting relatives . a nd l
give on' her : . I;ec·en't" .. travels_ in
fri ends after an absence of about
Sr a in · T:hts'· e n.fertainment-. will · be
25 years. A picu,c supper wasl
held ~t th'e libra r y, ·pn Thurs&lt;fay,
11 served on the lawp. .to _apout 1 _00 1
guests, many . of-, whom .:were for- \
\1·July '25th; at ,t ·o'cfock . Mrs. ' W,- :L
me_n resiqents , fro~ il!,llghborl•ng
\. Granvillt:. or Yo.nker s . N. Y., w:111
lend the char-qr of her v.o.i ce to the I
cities. It ·was. a real old home \
' 1 gathering and a(ter the lapse·· , or
' , pro gram with a .fe°o/ : songs._A col- .
lect!on will be taken for missions.
years lntrodu11t~9.ns wei::e. neces·~ary l
after whic1i thl!re was no.• mor-e
Frank · Parsons · of Northampton
fotm-a l!'t( . ~nd : enj~yment 'tit _;-,te~i
;entertain ed about :io members of
11ewing old ,a11quitlntan.c1J~h!p,J a b 1
,the Rotary club at his bungalow
k t. back· 111 many ca11es to .s et(ool .
days, was • evl~~nJ
~rO,UPI! i~th-.'1
Monday ev enin g. ·
Dr. and Mrs. Harlan . creelman
ered, to ·chat, and,_· _d lepersed:. toof
Auburn , N. Y., arrived today •·a t
Iorl)l . othg r·' grQup..s 1 ~A-'.-:ilP·eJf.ing
,m,ll,~h•.JW;ll.~ . }~~~&lt;!- UP, ' p~ $lff ··1.~.'1~
their summ er home.
):lorcb. il.1111 it"' Yl'aii :eaily to . rocat'e
th.~ 'ifoor· ·spellers se.e.k.ing . c.onie.n-tent' ~helter ··not"ib'·hi
'.irit~
lne· gani~ ·and ~:l\a,vlng_ µiueh , f-u11,
,I ~ ;Plll_,_w-!&gt;cess: '.AJ?0ll~ -. t~efor~ er. 1
,t esid:ent&amp;. :w-h o : w:ere present wer.e ,
'and Mrs·. Siditet J . Smart ,arid·!
,. Mr. a-rid . Mrs . . Arthur Brooks -• · of 1

d'r awn

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�.W ORTHINGTON

WOlt'rtll N GT ON

4

R
· r ed
Woy a. l Ar
. ca num Degrees Con fer
o , t h,n g t on
J 1
.·
rn e mbe rn o r E • u Y 28- About 2q,
A r·eanu m
, q~lty . cou nc 1l, R oy;,,l
I h e r s of
o f S pr111 s- held; eight m emand ot·h i !.'; 1.rand ~o un cll , PittRfi eld.
,,r esen t S l : rom , Sto~kbrldge we re

w Worthington, July 20-A., G. Cald-

vill

o f Pi_ttsfleld h as sold . to Irving
;
• Gra nville of Y onke rs, · N . y . bis
_ sumn1er _h o me in this town, formerly
, the Ambia H a rds place.
M!,'1rs · T . C. -Martin h as as h er guest
1ss Gertrude· F. Lynch of New
York.
.
. Th e .F):Jend shlp_ Guild of; the Congregational chm :ch w!ll h old a supper
_a nd e n .ter'ta.i nirig • at the chm'ch on
Tues d ay evenin g·, ' the proceeds to b e
u se,d towa 1'd instai¼ing e le ctricity in
the churc h.
S up pei· w !ll be serv ed
fro m 6 to 8. The prog1·am for the entertainment which will follow w !ll inc lude
r ecit.i,1 by Lucius Har•
r is, organist of the Episcopal cat]J.e dral in Springfield ; solos by Miss J a ne
Tuttle of N ew York ancl Spr ingfield;
a fas h ion show of the costum es of
different p eriods, with singing by Mi-s \.,
N 6 rma,n Brainerd of Longmeadow,
and a ·comedy number bY the Misses
Marjorie and Dorothy B11.rtlett and
I
l\'Uss Harriet Brewster.
Senator and Mrs Freder ick H . Gil- II
lett" 'of Washington, D. C., were dinner ·g:ues~ tonight a t L afayette Ioc1ge.
The B esse system of Pittsfield held
an o uting a n d ban q u et y este'iday afternon and e vening at Lafay ette lodg e.

in i •
A ~-

f

a, uiday eve.n 1n 3' at a m eet- \

0
B ashan H ill council Roya l
1. ca nurn at the Lyce um hall when
he
_
deg-ree
t eam o,f E quit y cou ncil
1
c,onfe r red de grees u pon fo u r ca ndidate.a. Brief , addre ~ wer e made by
Grand Sentry P a ui M~ ~ ~ity
council, Springfie ld; Henry Rathburn ,
· grand w a rden of Mackanac councii,
Stockbridge; Felix Scharm en, a ft ers
n ate r e presentative to · the suprem e
council at . New York city and Grand
D eputy ftobert Rawlings of Pittsfield .
The Women•s . Benevolent society
will m eet on Friday with Mrs Arlin
Cole of Highland street fpr an all day
m eeting. ·
·
The · Frie nds hiµ ,guild will h old a
supper and e ntertainment at the
church to.m orrow evenin g to help
raise money to i.nsta ll electricity in
t-he chm:ch. 'l'he supper will be held
-from 6 to 8. Mrs N e ma Conwell 'l'u ttle
· is
assisting
the
entertainment '
committee of the guild in arr anging the prog ram which w il! include an organ recital by Lucius Harris, orga nist of the Episcopal cathedral, Springfield. Miss Jane Tuttle of
New Yori&lt; and Springfield will sing
three numbers. ·A fashion show.
with singing of. old song_s , bY Mrs
Nonnan Brainerd of Lorfgmeadow
will b e a part of th e program.
Dr J. Ross Steven son, president of
P rinceton Th eological semina r y, a
former r esiden t of this town, preached
in the Firs t Congregational ch urch in 1
D a lton y e sterday. Several from here
attended the service.
The date of the annual fair of the
women 's Benevolent soci ety has been
changed to Thursda y,_ August 15, , so
as n ot to interfere with the m ee tmg
of the Highland club in Cheste :field .
T h ere will be a parish meetmg at
the Congregational ·c hµrch on Satur.
d ay at ·3 when the r e ports of the com mittees on electricity for the church
will b e h eard .

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.GREENFIELD BOY
DIES SUDDENLY
Orson W. Gu~ney Passes
Away at Worthington Was Hurt by 1ruck Saturday
.
Green field,
.July 28--0rson W .
Guw:neY, 9, son of Mr and Mrs Orso n W . Gu,trney of thi_s town, died
tonight In the home of his grandparents, Mr and Mrs James Knapp
of Worthington. He was Injured yesterday by a fall from a truck. This
was not regarded as serious a nd his
pa rents t ook him to W odhlngton.
Besides bis parents he ]eaves two
brothers, Irving a nd D onald , and two
sisters, Edith and Sht?tley. Th e f un er al will be held at the home of his
grandparents at 2 Tu esday afternoon.

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

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Worth in gton . Aug. 5-'rlie Friend - '
ship guild will hold a food sa le '
Wednesday, the 21st. On the committee in charge a re ll!L&lt;ls Els ie V. Bartlett, :Mrs H a rry W. Mollison, Mrs
Jeremiah Robinson,
Mrs Homer
Gra nger ·and Miss Evelyn Welch. The
rood sale July 27 cleared $20 .74 and
the c!rnrch enterta inm ent July 30
cleared $60. The la tter !und will be
given the church toward Its elec t r ic
l! ght fLind . 'l'he next meetin g will be
held at the parsonage September 6
with l\l rs K (}nnetll P.ease as leader.
Hostesses will be M1·s Maurice Clark
;wd Miss' Bern ice Kilbourn ·and ent er tainment w !l! be In charge of l\Irs
•Arlin Cole.
'l.'lie ·women's B enevolent society
wlll co -operate with th e Friendship
' guild in a n entertainm ent anci sup- ,,
per in connectiori with the annual
fai r which comes Thursday, the 15th.
The committee includes: Mrs Horace \
S. Cole, Mrs Frankline H. Burr, l\Irs
George H. Russell, l\Irs Arlin Cole, '
Mrs )Ia uri ce Clark, Mrs Homer
Gran ger, Mrs :Marshall Goodwin, Mrs
Kenneth Pease and l\Iiss Doi;othy F .
Bartlett.
About ' 75 _members of the Hampshire - Franklin - Holstein - Fr!esian
Breeders' club. and their fa1pilies visit - .
ad Saturday morning the farm of
Clement F'. Burf and son. Among those
present were Enos J . Montague of
Amherst, president of the club; Mr
Clark, president of the Haydenville
Saving,s bai1k; R oger ·w arner of
Sunderland, Fre·d L.- :wrest of Easthampton, Allen S. L eland; county_
agent, a nd Harold W , Eastman, coun•
ty club agent of .the Farm bureau.
'.l'lle club went next to the farm of
Frank Steele of Cummington, where
a picnic dinner was held, a nd then
visited the farms of M. S. Howes and
son of Cummington and H. H, Bishop
of Goshen.
l\Irs Belden R. Green, vice-p resident
of Berger Brothers company of New
H aven , Ct., a rrived Sat urday at her
summer home, Green Haven, for the
month. ·
·
Mr and Mi's Frank A. Sexton of
Virginia street, Springfield, are spend,, Ing two weeks at their summer cottage . .
Among the g u ests registered at
Lafayette lodge are : Mt· and Mrs
Thomas of Glen Ridge, N. J . ; Mrs C.
H. Buck of Yonkers, N. Y.; Mr . and
Mrs_ S. W. H;enkel o f Winnetka, Ill.;
, W!lliam Nell of Columbus, 0.; Mrs
' Ca rl Hoar of Williamstown, Mrs
· Ga rdner Green of Norwlch 1 Ct.; Mr
an.d .Mrs Frederick J ol!les of Agawam,
Mrs l.Ienry Murray of Worcester, and
Mr and Mrs Straw of Brooltlyn, N. Y.
Miss F lorence Chapin and Miss 11
', Dorotj1y Hewitt of Cambridge and
Miss ,Cath erine Hewitt , of Pittsfield
I a r e at Cloverly cottage for the month,

Au g. ~.- Tl1e Fr:e ndshi p Cuild.
of tlie cht1rc l1 met last evening at
1
til e hom e or Mr s. Da niel H. J'or.
ter. The sew in g hour ,:as followe&lt;f.
by d ev otional e:, e rcj scs led by th•
1
host(.ss. 1;b e secre tary, ;'.fr s. Ha r-ri
W . l\lolhson,
r e ~or tcd t11at ~·
rott ed plant fro1a t he Guild liad,
bee n se nt to i\lrs . William F:or
who is ii! at th e Hou £e o[ Pro, i~
deuce , i!1 Hol yo ke . It was voted
tha t a ,ood sad e be held on Wc-dnes day, Aug. 21 s t. C:i mmi tl ce:
l\liss Elsie V. Bartlett, .M m. Ifarr y W . Mollison, M i's. J. Robii1son
Mrs. Hom er Gran t:e·,·, Miss J~Yt !~~
Welch. The amount clea red frou1
the food sale of July 27th · wa,
$2 0. 7-1 , and fron1 lite supper &lt;'-nd.
,1 entertainment of July 30th at th&lt;i
church. $60.00. The latter a1uo uu11
will be given toward the elt,ctriq
·light fund for the churcli : The entertain1iien t for the meeting co11sist.ed of a "shower '' arrauge·d by-'
the hostess for Miss Mil licent Su.1mon. Th., guests were asked. to go
to a room where was fou nd il basket prettily d ecora te d ~v i't l! crep~
paper and filled with gift s frolll:
the Guild for the. br; lle-to-be. 'l'ile
next meetin:; of the Guild will bf.I
held at the parsonage Septemt2r,
5th, leader, l\lrs. K enn eth P eas~ ;
hos tesses , Mrs. - Maurice ClaTk,
Miss Bernice Kilbourn, en ter tainment, · Mrs. Arlin Cc4:.
Miss Caroline C. Shaw o f A1, ron,
Ohio, is. th e guest of i\Iiss !\' . .:r• .
1.Heacock.
· ,·
- - ·
Tile Women's Benevol en t society met today at the home of.
Mrs. A·rlin Cole o r Hig hland stree t
for their final sewing n1 eeting
before the annual fair, which will
be held on Thursda y, Aug. 15, Ot~
the common near the ci.:i.;rcll.
There were 13. present. It was decided io hold · an 6ntertainme n.t
and supper in connection with th e
fair with the assistance
' the
Guild. Co mmittee, Mr s. Horace '3.
Cole,. Mrs. Franklin H. Buu, i\Jr•.
George Russell, Mrs. Arl\n Co_le,
Mrs. Homer Gran ger, Mrs. M2u t 1.ce
Clark, Mrs. l\Iarsha ll Goouv,~u,
Mrs. Kenneth Pease and l\Ttss
Dorothv Bartlett. It is uud ersl ooct
that th·e profits fr,1m th e s_u~per
arid e ntertainment will be d·r n tlcdi
bet,reen th e t0w-0 societies.

.J
7\

whe1·1 'they·wm be joined soon by Mrs
A. V. . Hewitt of Pittsfield and Mi6S
Janette. Otto of Buffalo, N. 1;.

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W ORTHI NGTON

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1 Worthington, Aug. 6-Arthu r Ames

of Sa nta Ba rbara, Cal,, arrived here /
to spend a 'week with his sister,
Miss Bessie A. Ames,
Mrs Ella McBride, who h as been ,
visiting h er sister, Miss J osephine
H ewitt, w ill return. tomorrow to her
hom e a t Boston.
.
H a rry Arden of New York city is
s topping for a week a t Miss Bessie
Am es's home.
,
Mis s J osephine H ewitt enter tained ,
t wo t a bles a t. bridge this a fternoon at
•her home. The .p rizes were won by
Miss Olive N eil" and Mrs F r a11k A .
Se"xton.
·
A clinic for chil dren of preschool
a ge will be held tom orrow at L yceum ,
ha ll.
.

I to~a y

WORTHINGTON

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WORTHINGTON-~-FIRED'UG I S SUSPECTED

-

I

Soco'nd lllnze In 20 Hours Levels
SJJrlngflold l\Inn's Cottage
W or thington, Aug, 8-Worth ington I
was visited by '8. second fi re within 20
h ours last night about 10.3 0 when a
va can t cottage a t 'rower's ledges
' owned by J ohn Tehan of Springfi eld,
I was bur ned. 'fhe 'l'ower family who Jive
opposite were out doors a t 10.15 and
everythin g W R $ all rig ht then.
Neig hbors coming home a bout 10.30
found the cottage in flames. H elp was
called but nothin g- coul d be sa ved. It
is r!'elt by many the work of a firebu g.
Many maple trees wer e burned. ma kin g a spectacular fi re for · m iles
a round,

Worthington, Aug, 8-Many from
here Will attend t h e fi eld meeting of
F ire Des troys Barns·
Hillside
Pomoria gra nge at the ChesAu g . 7- F ire of \!Uknown or i-.;
g in d es troye d the barns at · the · •terfield Gran ge· hall Saturclay at 5.30.
Supper w ill be ser ved at 6. The speak s um1i1e r h ome of Alfred -'S tevens j
er w ill be David H , Agans, m ast er of
of Northam p t on in Steven svill e
,th e New York state grange and overear ly t h is
m orning. Neig hb ors i1
seer of t he na tional g ran ge, a nd t he
choru s leader will be E . E . Chapman,
who
w e re awake ned by t he I
past -master _ of Massachuset ts state
flam es aiou sec' m 5 w Mrs. Stcgrange, Frank Tha yer of W est field
i ve n s a nd · s on, ./ \1.fred, who wer e j,
will be the humorist.
th e on ly occupants of . th e house .
Miss Dougla s of U tica, N . Y., is
A id wa s s umm oned from Vv'or th- '
g the month as t h e g uest of
Iin g ton Cor n ers :and Center , and by , 'spendin
Miss N. S. H ea cock a t H illside.
1h e lp of buclrn t s of wa te r f r om the \
; Miss Grace Hubbard of New York
I nea r by brook th e hou se was saved
1is s topping at Lafayet te lodge.
I
About 40 children of preschool age
with only a scorching. T h er e was
a ttended the clinic at L yceum hall
no livestock in th e barn bu t som e
'yester day conducted by Miss Ayer of
h ay, too! f:l and lumber and wo od
'Nor tha mpton , public h ealth consultant
w hich wer e a to tal loss. 'I'he barns
'Dr Coffin of Boston a nd Miss Smith'
were i n s u r ed.
dietitia n from the state department of
health, assisted by Miss W allace, th e
Aug. 6- Ma n y from h ere will
Red
Cross district nurse and Miss
attend the fi eld m eeeting of HillEmery,
, side Pomo n a Gr a n ge, w hich will
b e h eld a t
the Ch ester;fi eld
Gr a nge hall on Saturday a t 5.. 30
p. m . S upper will be se rved at 6
WO R'.l'HINGTON
o'cl ock . P ro gram : S peaker, David 1
H. Agani:;, master of New York 1
W orthington, Aug. 11-At th e reg uSta te Gr a n ge and ove rseer of ti-e
la r meet ing of the grange a t Lyceum
,,
hall Tuesday night the t h ird a nd·
Na ti ona l Gran ge; chorus l ea der
fourth degr ee will be work ed on two
E d . E. C hapman , past m a st er
candidates, Mlss Evelyn Welch a nd
Mas~achueetts State Grange ; hu~
Co mm er fo rd Martin . The enter tain- \
morist, F r ank 'I'hayer of WestfleJ 1,
m ent will Inclu de a roll call of m em Mis:i Dougla s of Utica N y
hers (those not r espondin g w ith s ong
is spending th e m onth o! A~gu~t
or verse w ill be fin ed 10 cents w h ich
a s th e g uest of Miss ' N. S. HeacocJ· ,
w ill go toward r efresh m ents) , r eading
at " Hlllside."
' ,
by Mrs Ethel Parish, vocal duet by
M'1 G
Misses Marjorie and Dorothy Bartlett
_ _ s1:__ race R ~bbard ~
ew ·
harmonica solos by Mr Bernier, cur~ ,
y 01 k 15
r ent events by Frankl!n G. Burr. T h e
stopping at I ar·a,.e t te !
com m it tee on refreshments com prises
lodge.
, Chester Dodge, J oe J olly a nd Miss
~rs: T . C. l\fartin an d son, C
I Ani t_a Bernier .
,, ,
11
1
meifoid, !&lt;:? ft today tor a trln° ; •
Miss Mary fi\ cha pm of Springfield
B t
,.Q,
, s pent the wee~-end w ith her niece
; os on a n d t he Cape .
Miss Flo r ence Chapin.
'
i\Ir: a~d Mrs. William '\\' 1&gt;ston ~ I Th e tim e for th e guild food sale
a nd fam ily have been spcndin ,
h as been ch an ged to 4.30 p. m. th e
f e w d ays at St. Albans, Vt.
g a
21st on the lib ra ry law n .

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�won·.rHING'.rON

\

W o1·tl1ington, ~u g. 12-Th e a nn ua l .
(a ir or the W om en 's Ben evolent so
ciety will be held on the comm on n ear
th e church Thu.rsday a fternoon at ~Dr H a rlan Creelman of. Auburn
Theologica l seminary at Auburn, N .
Y.. who has a summer home here,
wlll preach at th e Congregational
church on Sunday,
Miss J;'orence Ch a pin gave a t ea
yesterday afternoon for he r aunt, Mis 8
•Ma ry De Ette Cha pin of .Randolph
street, Springfield, who was th e gu esl
of Mi ss Cha pin a nd Miss Dorothy
Hewitt fo r the wee k• end .
The a nnu a l m ee ting of. W orthin ~
ton Libra ry co rpora t ion will be h elcl
at th e li brar y Tu es day at 7.45 p. m.
The Highlan d 4'lub summ er meeting
will be helcl !H Chest erfield on
W ednesday.
Program : 11 , social
hour ; 11..1 5, music by Mrs ,James
H ealy a nd Miss Ollve Healy ; 11.30;
routin e busine.ss ; 11.45, a ddress by Dr
E lliott Field or Springfield Gardens ,
N. Y., followed by discussion; ffll ,
dinn er ; 2.15, music; 2.301 address b&gt;
Dr I r ving Mau.rer, president of .Beloit
icollege, _C olumbus, 0. Members from
h ere will attend the meeting.
,
Mr and Mrs Philander Moore ot
Springfi eld spent the week end with
Mr and Mrs Howard C. Brewster.

I

WORTHINGTON
,Library Corpo1·ation Ras A1u1un1
. 1\-1,eeting
. Aug. 16.-The annual meeting
lof t he Wort,h1ngton Library corpo:rati on was held Tuesday evening
lat 7.-45 o'e_lock in. ti}~ Frederick
Sargent Huntington "library and
,the following officexs el~ted:
1Pr_esident, Franklin H. Burr;
,~rk, Miss N. S. Heacock; treasI urer,. Arthur G. Capen; auditor
Clemen t F. Burr; director for flv~
1
years, Miss N. S. lij\acock. The librarian, Arthur u , CiPR.n, reported the out.s btndin-g event of ·t he
/ YE:ar as the insta)latlon of electric
lights in the building, which were
,in use for t he first tlma on No.v.
1 7. Work With tile schools h ad ·be '
carried on, books having been
sen t to the three schools a t a dis- .
tance from t he library, Chi!d,f1!n
from the Corner schools came to 1'
!the library on Wednesday after/i:oons, the average number being
;17.5 for 35 w..eeks -of the school 1
Iyear. The teachers of th e Cornn
ischools also drew bool~s and pie- \'
tures for school use. Deposits ol
book s were made once dur-ing the
!year with Mrs. With erell in South I
IWo rthiugton, Mrs. Mau rice Smitu \
irr Rin gvill e and Mrs. Loveland' in ,
1
Wes t Worthin gton. An Qffer of 100 I
used books fiom the city library at ·,
.,Springfield ·wa s accepted-an ~. mu ch' ~
1app recia ted. Periodicals Jo tte
!n umb er of 3 6 are reg ularly received. Books· ._in the library,
5,081; pictures, 3,938 ; music,
is Q; total circulation; 4,697; to_tal attendance, 1,652'; number of
times open, 104. A vote· of thanks 1
,vas given to Miss Olive Neil for 1her very generous gift of -all
'bea utiful electric light fixtures ·
:wh ich were placed -in toe lib rary.
!This bea utiful girt was ma de as a
1memorial to her aunt, Miss M. -Fay
,stone, who was connected with the
;01:ganization of the library fr0m
~ts beginning, as treasurer,- seci·e,tar y, director and president. A
,vot~ of thanks was ?-lso given ·Mrs.
M. F. Metcalf of Holyoke for t t..e ,
\n nny handpo.me ·an.d new , book s I
:he has givP.n durin g i'he ye~ r.:_ _ l

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WORTHINGTON
Worthington, Aug. 13-The Women 's Benevolent society and the Friend ship guild of the church wlll hold a sup -r r··
per and en tertainmen t at the church i'
fo llo wing t h e Benevolent society fair 1
T hu rsday. The suppe1· will be served ·
from 6 until 8. The progr a m fo r ,t he
enterta inm ent will incl ude Mrs Ntina
Con well Tu t tle in an organ recital; 'the
Misses Marjorie a nd Doro t hy Bartlett
I in a gro up of N egro songs and Georg·e
i Bea n of Floren ce,· entertainer.
1 ~lrs Har ry W itt gave a birthday Ii
party · recently In celebra tion of the
80th birthday of h er sister-i n -Jaw, 11-Irs
'Emm a Wit t Sa nderson of N orth Wilbra ha m, who is visiting h er .
.
,
Mrs Herbert W. Ovia t t of Milford, 1·
Ct. , is s t opp in g· at L afayet te lodge.
Mr s Alma Sturteva nt of Brooklyn
is s pending a wee!, with her sister-inlaw, Mrs Fra nk :,. Sexton .
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1voiifi.11NGT.'ON___;L.:..--

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Worth!ngtc..'l , Aug. 1 ~ Benevolent
fair or the Women 5
t he conisoclet y1 wh ich was lield on day after111on' n ear t he chu.rch 'l'hu rs e ' receipt s
1 n oon was well a ttended. Th
$ 5.89:
were a s follows : Ap r~ns, $l4 7,35;
fancy work, .$72 .20: Ice ci$e•aJl
food,
lem ona de, $2.73 ; bowls, ~$ , . flij h'
$22.35; 1 4-H cl ub ta ble, 9·00 'ames j
POnd, $5. 30 ; candy, $41 .4 0 ; · g ts of
$3.11; one-hair from th e r ecelp . • 1
suppe'r , and enter ta ih me,.1t, $1 3:88 ;
· tot11,I a mount $261. 66. Supper : ~.
se r ved in t he , dln!ng room and 5 \n
da y. school ro om of the church. ( ..,. \
enjoyable feature wa11 t h9 even 11
ente rtainment in the a udience r o_o
of the chur ch where a l l org~n r ec1ta~
was' g iven by Mrs N .. C. Tuttle O
Sout h
Misses Mar - 1
jorie and Dor othy Ba rtlett sang _a
g roup of · Negro son gs and Geor ge
Beari of Flo rence, a popula r entertainer, gave a varied prog ra m of .,
humorous selections which was well '
received.
1
Hrs Francis A. R obinson has been ,
e n ; ertaini,:ig her aunt, Mrs C. B. Hall
of Bos ton and St P ete rsburg, Fla:
Miss Dorot hy ·Fuller Bar tlett has I
been chosen bv the . local direc tors of l
t he W es t fi eld Ri ver P a r kwa y a ssocia - \
tion to re presen t the tow n in a fl oa t
Wh ich tha t assoc ia t ion will put on in ,
the pa rade at Westfield when the l ·
American L egion meets there in con - I
vent!on on Sat urday August 24.
On July 20 the W orthington parish
opened a ca mpa ign to rais e funds for
the ins ta la t ion of electricity in the
Co ng r egational cl\urch.
Tomorrow
the work of ln stalation will begin so
n ear ly raised are the funds.
The
major par t of the m oney was 1•aised
! by two summer r esidents, Mrs I rv~'1g
Cha pman of New York and Mrs
H a r r is E . Collins of Spring fi eld, a nd
Mrs Arlin Cole representing the
c hurch , Who can vassed the town .
Cre dit is due t o all who ha ve used
thei~
t in en ter ta i11 ments or h elp ~
ed with s uppers to s well the fund ;
for
bor has been unsti.'ltea and zeal
un flalagging.

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�i; rcgationa l chu r~h.
.
Rev Mr H amlin 's long pastora te at 1
: the Payson c hurch left a perma nent J
impress upon the commun it y, as
well as th e church. He was a Pr&lt;&gt;ach- ;
er a nd . w ol'l&lt;er of excep tional power ·
'1.ncl influence, a nd h e vrn.s held in
hardly Jess estee m a nd a ff ection by
the community at la r ge t h an by h is
o wn pa rish . Ho w as a tireless pro mo ter of good Will., a nd un ity am ong ·
the peopl e o r th e town, and w as ac . I'
ti ve lh all affa irs u nd ertak en f or com- ·'
munitY w elfar e. or even ts a nd po\.
icioa of sta t e a nd n a tiona l scope he
was ·a deep stud en t, a nd w as a leader
1o! "thought of more tha n loca l influen~ -. ·Frequently his searching com.
m~pts ,on n a tional a ffa irs appeared in
the ,form of letters to The R epublica n.
·B nllds Up Easthampton Church
Mr H a mlin , by his w ork a s pastor,
built-·up a stron g churc h at E asthampton, 'both as a kind ard understanding
shepherd of his flo clc, and as a preacher oi:' moral po,ver and stimulating Intellectual force. Among tqe wider affairs In which he took part were the
successful campa,igns against racetrack gambling and _ in favpr of the\ '
"safe and sane" t&gt;bse rvance of the
, Fourth. He also became widely known
for - his advocacy of state or national
control of the liquor traffic. The loyaltt of the P,ayson parish for Mr Hamlin knew no bounds, and found its fullest expression In the celebration of
his 25th . anniversary as pastor Jan- 1:
uary 6. 7 and 9, 1910. The community ·
,.cofa ially joined with the church iI\ this
ev eµt_:
·
, - -~ . Born In Connecticut .
1 C harles H. Ham lin was born in
F arniing ton . · now P la inv ille, Ct., January 11, 1850, the son of H . W. and
Cath erine Cowes H a mlin . He studied
in·· t he Hartf ord High sch ool, at Yale,
cla:s f'of '71, and after a year's teachini;'.'in Unionville, Ct., continued at
Ya la , Theological seminary f rom 1872
to •1874. In 1874 he went to Germany,
studying at t)le universities of Leipsic
,and B onn. He returned in the fall of
18_75, a n d from 1876 t o 1879 was pastor
of ,t-he Second Congregationa l church
in·Ohester. He then went to the Sou t h
cl1urch in Pittsfield, r em a ining there
u iitii !1e came to the P ayson church in
E ast liam r.,o;on In 1885. H e w a s p astor
ther e until. 1913, after w hich he w ent
t o ·Euro p e • tor a year w it h his wife,
1: the ir _\laughter , Ma r garet, joining them I
:, fQi: -iji~ last f ew months. On the re- ,
t ur.n .J'.rom Eu r op e, they \yen t dir ~ctly
to·-:Amherst a nd Mr H a mlin boug ht the
h·o use · on Nor th East street, where
tli~ Jlil,ve sln«;e lived. Mr Hamlin: has
suppllJld the pulpits of various
church es the past few years and has'
sptffl't: -his spare time in writing and
r ea d'lhg.
·,:g.' January, 1877, be was married -to
Uiss ,F a nny R odmon of New Haven,
Ct,,,, who died in October, 1920. He
l'e a:ves three children, Rev William
Hainlin, n ow in Amherst; Miss Margare t, or the f aculty of Ma ssachusetts
,il Agr icultural college, and Roy, who is

REV C. H. HAMLIN,
LONG
. PASTOR AT l
EASTHAMPTON, DIES
Retired in .-1913 and Moved
to Amherst-Active m
Many Movements for the
Public Welfare
Amherst, Aug. 16-Rev Char!L H.
Hamlin, 79 , who had been the beloved pastor of the Payson church of
Easthampton 28 years, when he retired and moved to this town, died
this -morning at a hospital in Farmington; Me. He went with hi sdaughter,
Miss Margaret Hamlin, early In this
month to Farmington, where h e became ill. He had been at th e h os pital
but a short time when he died in his
s leep. Mr. Hamlin, upon his retiremen t, w a s made pastor-emeritus of
th e _ Payson church, which is now
u nited with the ftlrmer First church,
under the name of Easthampton Con-

.REV CHARLES H. HHfLIN

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�Sllperjntendent ~r s~ hooi/ ;t ·st Albans,
Vt. There are also fou'r grandchildren.
At the time of Mr Hamlin's 26th
anniversary in 1910, the principal
speaker was former Gov Curtis Guild,
who paid high tribute to Mr Ham,l l~'s
service. "For 25 years," he said,
"Charles H. Hamlin has been a minis•
, ter to the spiritual needs of this con- .
gregation and in the truest sense qf
the word, the pastor of his church- 1
- For as a shepherd Is the leader of his ·
. flock, so· has this clergyman, In this I
b eautiful valley, beloved and beautiful '
1
eve n in colonial days, been a pastor,
a shepherd of men, as were his predecessors, when this wai; no tranquil
hamlet, but the very fronter of civil•
I ization."
1
Rev Dr P. s. Moxom, then a prom!- .
, nent pastor In Springfield, said that Mr ·
j Hamlin was a man who "profoundly ,
b e li eves in the comprehensive mission
of the church. Mr Hamlin's name is
. known (and in some quarters whole- I
somely feared) all over the commonjwea lth. His successful -efforts to abol,ish a great evil (referring to race
track pool sell!ng) make part of its
recent history. His d evotion to a high I
, c ivic ideal has been inspiration to followers and fello\y workers and has
, exerted an influence wider than .he 1 s uspects. His practical belief that 1
'clcanliness is next to godliness' and
his broad Interpretation of cleanliness
have worked str ongly for a cleaner
and sounder s ocia l life. He has ear ned
the confidence and esteem of the best /
elemen ts in the . community and com- I
pelled the respect of all ; it haii earned
, for him the love and loyal support of
the church for which he has so long
been a leader."
[ It was said of Mr Hamlin, when a
I student, that he was wa.rned not to
1 go to Germany to study unless he
wanted to become an infide l, 'but he
promptly went to Germany, where exp os nre s imply toughened the fiber of
hi., c onvic tions.
.
1
H.ev Mr Hamlin served for years as I
a valued member of the board -of trus- /
1 tee,i
of Williston seminary at Easth ;,. mpt.on, and Prc;,f C. A. Buffum paid i
· h igh trib ute to Mr Hamlin as pastor'
a nd trus tee, and the c).oee relation- \
s h lP_ be t ween Payson ctfurch and the
' seminary, t he young men going away
fro m thfJ sc hool with th e best of ideals \
w oven into th elr lives.
·
The funera l wlli b e held Sunda y alte: rn oo n at 3 at the J;,astl'iampton Con
•gregatlonal church, Rev Sumne r c·
·wood, former pastor of the
h a mpton Fi rs t church and Rev ·c-~~urlow, pastor of th e Eas tha,,1'·t .
c -- ngrc. tl
• P on
I ga a nal ch urch ,_~ ffl c,lating,

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AMHERST
H ey C. ll. llamlln'H Funeral

'roday

.\ mh erst. Au g. 18--'rhe fun eral r
r:cv Char les H. H a mlin w ill be h efa
nt lh e E afi tha mpt on Con grega tio n 1
c hu rch. _ton1orrow after noon a t 3 bil

t he r e wi ll be a hr lef prayer service at
1 Z.3 0 at t h e ho me a t 12 N or th E
s treet , which w ill be for a n y f I aJt
w h o m ay care to c...9 ~c.

r en s

1

WO.R'l'HINGTON
Pays Trlliute to ltcv C. H. Hamlin
Worthington, Aug. 19- Dr Creelrnan
who preached in thP. Congregational
church Sunday morning In th e ab~e n ce of the pastor, Hev J a m es
B urckes, paid the followin g tribute to
Rev C. H. Hamlin o f Amherst for
m any years pastor of the Payson Congregatlonal
church,
Easthampton,
whose death occurred F r iday:"Mr Hamlin was a gifted and ef- ,
flc!ent minister of Christ and was .
greatly be loved by the ch urches h e
s e rved. He was ever r eady to give of l
his services to the c hurches of the
hlll towns and to every w orthy cause.
He was a Joyal fr iend and h elpful
counselor In particular of the Wor thlngton church and its ministers and a ·
I man held In high esteem and affec tion
in this community where h e a n d his
family frequently spent the ir vacatlons.
He often preached here a nd
'participated in ordinations and other
ecclesiastical gatherin g s m ost acce ptably. His last public service here was
at the time of the 150th anniversary
of the church when he wa:s chosen by
the committee to offer praye r on that
occasion. It is m ost fi tt.in,:- therefor e
that this word of affec tionate tribt!te
, to tlie m e mory of t his b el overl mlni~ 1
t.cr sh oul d be spok en from this_ pul pit I
at this time and that the heartfelt
sympathy of the ·church and commu nlty should be extended ·to· his daughter and his sons ."
1
William T. Simpson, directo1· of
I
the Little Thea t er guild of Springfie ld
will
g ive
a
dramatic recital at the
Frederick
Sargent
Huntington librjlrY on Wednesday
afternoon at 3 for the benefit of
i the libra ry.
At the Congregational
i chu rch Thursday evening there will
be a ·musical r ec ital by the following
artists : Mrs N ema Conwell 'l'uttle, organlst ; Mrs Irving Granville of
Yonkers, N. Y., soprano; Bl.a ine Nicholas, of New York, . tenor and his wife
Mrs Lyra Nicholas, composer, in '
original songs. They will be assisted
by Mrs Lou C. Sweet, reader. This
entertainment has . been
provided
through the courtesy of these well known artists.
The food sale which was to have
been held by the Friendship guild on
the library lawn on.. Wednesday aft.
_' ernoon has been postponed until a-J
1
1
date to be determlned.
1 Mr and Mrs Sidney J . Smart and i
Mrs Frank
Sexton will lea\'e tot
t ! t
L k
G
m orrow or a r P o
a e
eorge
n nd th ~ Adirondacks .
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" spect .until t)ie beautiful st rains of
the Largo_ !lied a,~ay. Rev. Suni-1
ner G. Wood • of West Medwa
pastor of the First Congregation\
church here d·uring 13 years a
•
l\Ir. Hamlin 's pastorate at _the' Pa~~-"
1
'Rev .Sumner G. Wood Gives son
church , read portions . of
scripture and t hen some ex tracts ·
T nbute to Dead Pastor at Hamlin.
from an address gh ·en by Mr
some four years ago O • ·
funeral
the celebrati on of hi~ 50th Year
,.
·
the ministry a nd th e 40th
· r.
Easthampton, Aug. 19 - Ihere was a his coming to the church · in ~incc
st
large attendance at the funeral of Rev }Jampton . Mr. Wood spoke Ea·1 · :
Charles H. Hamlin at th e Congrega- deep feeling of his in te rcours:
i
tlon al church this afternoon. Fred L. th e association of the years of his ·
Clark played on the church organ as ministry here, of tbe many acts of I
the mourners entered th e church and kindly helpfulness, and of his
ai;ai n at the close of the servlce. The , working !or tbe celebration of the
script ure selection was read by. Rev j , "_Safe and Sane Fourth," the abolisumner G. Wood, a former pastor or twn of race track gambling In
the old First ch urch, and he ~ol!owed Massachusetts, both (!f whi ch were
it with a tribut e to M~- Harnlm as a . due in the first place to Mr. Harnfait hful .and helpful f riend. He read Jin 's efforts and to prohi bition for
some extracts from an address given , enforcing w.hich according to th
by Mr Hamlin some four years ago on ·
·
e
th e celebration of his 50th- year in the laws when he was here, the Pay.
ministry and the 40th since his coming 1, son church under. Mr. Hamlin's
to the chu ~ch in Easthampton. Mr ) leadership accomphshed so ,much.
w ood spoke with deep feeling of his He gave all that was in him, and
intercourse In the association of the ! that was much, of loyalty to God
years of his ministry here of the many / an d loyalty to friendship, said Mr.
acts of kindly helpfume~s. He gave W ood. R ev, George L. Thurlow
all th ere was In him, said Mr Wood, followed giving first a tribute to
and t hat was much.
' .
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.
The closing prayer was ot'fered by .M:·· Hamhn, written by one of hu
Rev Geor ue L. Thurlow, who also con- 11 (friends recently, saying, among
ducted the committal service ,at the . other things; that hjs people loved
grave in Brookside cemetery. T_here him for his great heart and
were many beautifuf floral o!fermgs. revered him for his great brain.
A delegation, incl udmg the ml 111st8r• 1 He then offered the closing prayRev Roy Armstrong, from the church
,
.
in Pittsfield over which Mr Hamlin er of, thanks for this· great soul
was pas'l:or before· coming to East- 1 who bad been among us so long,
hampton was in attendance ia.t the , ' Mr. Thurlow also conducted the
fun eral.
.
committal service at Brookside
-cemetery, where Mr. H am lin lies
. beside his wife. The honorary
.
bearers were C. H. John son , M. F'.
Funer11I of Rfi, C. H. Hamlm
, Taintor, James McKeraghan, C. A.
'fbe fun eral of Rev. C. H. fla m· ' Richmond, a nd the active bearers,
11
Jin was held in the Eastham~ton_ \ Principal Galbraith , W. M. GayCongregational church yestei;day lord , H. W . Ru st, David and Walat three o'clock, with a large at- 1 lace R eidel, and Traugott VeHertendance of friends , many _or ling of Holyoke. R ev. Roy Arm·
whom had come from . i,ome dis" . strong and three men came from
tance to pay th eir tribute of love ; Pittsfiel!l to rep1:esent the church
and r espect. The casket wa_s sur- f' in which was Mr. Hamlin's second ,
.rounded and covered with a , pastorate, and many were present
wealth of flo\' 1 ers , among them froni Alllherst, Northamp ton, and
some from tlle Reality club, ?f other ·pJaC.e~. ' ,
• '
Springfield, of which Mr. Hamlm , 1_
-·~
•
"was a member from the ch urches .
' 1 in Amh erst , ,;here·· he attended,
and Pittsfield where he was pas-•·
· tor, and the ~hurch in East\}ampton, whose pastor he w~s for 28
, years.
While the audience was
1
;.gathering, Organist Fred L, Clark
played, Oh Rest Iir the Lord, from
.l Elijah, an'd the Largo, while as
they were going out. he played the
I hymns, Abide With l\Ie, and Near.e r My God to Thee. As the family
and relatives ' ca·nie in the .audience ro se and sto'od in silent .re.:
.

MANY ATTEND SERVICE
FOR REV C. ff. HAMLIN

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�W ORTRING-'.Jl ON ,

0.r tl_lin;ton,, A u g:, ,2_2_:A deleg·ation
tr:'
ect /in the · worthi ngton ·c h u rc h attend-

./SOUTQWORTHINGTON'S
,

I. h

Et th e fun.era] Monday 'o( p.ev Charle!!'
Hamhi n . at . t h e Con gregational
c ,Ut-ch at • Ea11thampton. .Mariy a lso

\

Serv1CeS
• to Be Held Sep tem~

\

tfttended.' the 1'.ti'ner a l of Byr.017- H . Hol - '
0(. W-fndsor,
t h e.• . ·i,astor
ot th
, ~vorthmgtob
c h ur.ch
Rev Jafnes
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OLD-HOMESUNDAY

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her 1 W1'll Be1·n Memory of

Dr RUSSe11 H• CQOWe11

';Elttrck e.s, assistin g--in.Ahe ·_.s ervicei!.
',
1
·su:?o'rothy
F. ·Bartlett was : given a { I
1
ill:ig-/~~ ~e
.-·P,
{
l-rty
!!;l
her
·h
ome
Monday
_
.
W ort h in gton , A u g. 23-For many
1
;,. ,..
~. , cielebrM,_
o~ of ·her l6th .,J:n.~n1h
years ,oeo
n
f the annual events of.
¥ ;,,_. Y •
1
'f:'h e -boy,s _.or. : tlie 4-.H
· . b'i°µb ,;,ith ·t11e ir _ ' j .,the Hampshire hlll town s w_a s the
1ader, Rev Jam es H. Bu,rckes; Hat'Conwell S u nday at South W orthlngw·,..-S.~aston;
county.
club
agen
t, and \j
ton. ,From miles around whole fa m, · en
:):,eland,
state
club
· leader,
\ made a tour .of 5001 e of the :,; Iub g·ai·\ Illes cam e t o hear the great preacher, ,
dens -M onday m orning and ,Jn t he a.ft/bringing their dinn ers for a picnic In !
e rnoon ·.had a lesoon in fprestry In t he
tho g rove after the service.
The '\
'. B ern_ier __" ' Oods. ·
.·. • ,... · ·
·
home-coming of old n eighbors and
r elatives and the f east of fell owship
W O'RT.H IN«jT ON
for frien ds, together with Russe ll Con.,
· ----.w ell's stirring sermons g a ve these
· . W,p r t hh1g~Qn, ~ug, i2,--William - T .
gathering,s wide popularity.
S tn,1ps9 n., ~jredor of t he-Little T heater
Unde r the name of South W orthg uiJ&lt;i i P(,Spri_ngt'l,e\a ; g,i.ye:.,( reading of I ington Old Home Sunday, these anth1 ·ee ,.plaY.f; '.'.T\l ~ ·i.,itt!e', F a tl)er of t h e \ nua l services are being carried o n ,
W1ld,et·ness"; '.'A .Coine:py.:' :, \lnd "T he ,
p a rtly In memory of th e b el oved
Drums. ,pf Ottd e" at ._t.h.,e,5).·.\lderick Sarpreacher and partly f or th e h ome;;:ent HuJiltington. li,bl:JH,Y :y,e.st!)r_d ay ' aftcoming and its association s .
Th;s
.efn/JOB . , ,_A,b o.u,t .8'0..,_wt}+;e . P r.esent. Mr
year It Is to be held the firs t S unday
, Si mpson, a·e:,d with .;rare' :Slfll).
t
h
e
seiec,
{
in
S
eptember.
Dr
J.
Ross
Stevenson,
tions c hosen until s ce11,es1 _portrayed
'I presid ent
or Princeton Th eological
with wo1·ds on.Ij s e.em e(j. .fo -t ake actual I
seminary, is expected to preach t h e
!·form · befm-e - t he -a udi-ertce. - :Following I
! sermon. The service b egins at 10.45.
l h e t·eadings Mi,;,; -N. _s. H eacock. gave I --...::_
, a. tea roi: , J\1:r ·and . Mrs Sim pson at her
·
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ho01e to al;&gt;,g4~ 30 ;:·uests at w hi ch Mrs. \
, L y r a ', :-:i c h olas of. N ew Ym:k _,!lan g ~-nd
played songs or h er · own ·•co m pos in g. I
WORTHINGTON
' '.[h e,re . wet·e,, also so los 'b)•: Mrs £. A .
' Rice or Spl'ing·field .
Wo rthington, Aug. llG--Old Home
Sui:iday at South Worthington , w hich
ls intended to carry on the widelyattended
servic es h eld by D r Russell
WOI\THINGTON
. H . Conwe ll in his home church, i s t o
W ort hingtol'l, Aug. 23-Among the
be n ext Su nd ay, the h our b e ing 10.45.
gues ts regist ered a t L a,fa yette lodge
D1·. J. R oss Stevenson, presiden t of
Prmce t on Theol ogical s e minary , and
are Miss H . M. R u ssell of New York
ou t· fo rmer s umm er n e igh b or, is to
city , Mr a nd Mrs R oscoe Moody _a nd
pr each th e sermon.
Is o n or Spri ngfi e ld, Mr anct Mrs R. B.
S killings and d a ughter of New York
A mus ical arid t ea will b e held a t
c ity , Mr and Mrs Cla rence Russell ot
t h ~ h om e of M rs Charles A . Rice on
New H av en, M rs Mortimer K elly a nd
Fr1d:3-y, at 3. 30 .P· m . M u sic will be
son of G a rden City, N . Y.. Rich a rd
r~_rn1s h ed ~Y Mrs Rice ;i. nd Mrs Lyr a
;"1cholas. The F rien dsh ip g u ild w ill b e
Sch e rm e rhorn or Br oo klyn , N . Y ., and
m charge ..
M r a n d Mrs Jam es H urley and son
M r a n d W a lte r H . Towe r of this
\ o f Ric hmond Hlll, L. I.
tow n a n d Mr a nd Mrs Harry Eddy of
Floren ce s p en t the week end at L ake
George.

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W OR 'l' H ING T O.N

, Vorthingt on, A ug. 27- Mr and Mrs
H owa rd N. M a.so n a nno u n ce th e mar .
i-iage of th e it· dau g hter , Dot·is, l o Ell is
B at on of B urlin g t o n, Vt., w hi ch t o0k
pla ce at S h elb urn e, Vt. , on Friday, th e
23 rd. Mi ss M aso n is a grad u a t e of
the Di ckin son h osp ita l- a t Northamp .
ton . Mr E a t on is a grn clu a te of t1 1 ,2
Massachuse tts Ag i-icu ltural
coll ege
and Is a n em ploye of th e R e min g t on
Typ e writer company in_ Burlington .
Vt. , wh e,e the coup le will make the ir
h orn&lt;':.

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W OR THING'l'O i' i

WO RT H fN vTO:V

To Use r:icctric L ights for l-'lrst Tim e ·
Worth ingto n, Aug . 30- l'iH• 1·,, 11 Ill UL)
a 5 pecinl sc rvi re nt _th e Congr·ega- .'
tt onal ch~ rc h !:lu nda y n_1;;·ht nt S. ,lvhn1
the elec tn c l ights jus t m s t a ll ed will be
used for tl1e ll rst time. 'ril e work of
ra is in " the larg-e s um of 111 01\ey n eces sa r y fu1· tile in sta lat io1\ or e lect rto
equ ipm e n t was accomPliRJ, ed ln a few
wec l,s by th e uni ted effor ts o f th e
s11 mm er resid en ts a nd th e t ow nspeop le. The commi ttee in char ge com prised i\Irs Irvin g Cha pma n or Ne w
1 orl&lt;, Mrs Ha r l'l s E. Collin s u(
Sp rin g!le ld a nd l\l rs A rlin Cule. who
I re present ed t h e cl rn rc h. Th e COllllllittee on flxtur es comprised th e µH.s r,1r,
Rev James H . B u rck es, i\l1 ss N . s.
Heacocl, a nd Miss E ls ie \I'. B ar tlet t.

Mary llfcE wan Dead
W orthington, Se pt. 3-i\Iar y J nne
McEwan , 40, di ed yeste rday at the
Noble h ospital In Westfield after a '
~ho r t llln ess. She leaves h er h usband
P eter , fi ve son s , D a vid 16 T homas 15'
P eter 13, Fran cis 8. Vincent 6,
on e daughter. Ma r ga r et 2. Sh e nLso I
Is s urv ived b y h er pa rents, Mr and /
Mr s 'l'homa s W al s h of I re~an J 1 ·
bro t h er, Th o m as W a ls h or W,
ton, and four s isters, Mrs Patr!c- k
F ay of New Yo rk ci ty, Sister. Ol rade I
nf 0Hs inin g-, N . Y., Ann a ·wais h a nrl
Mrs Hel en K P. lty of Ireland. The f u 1 n era l wll l be h eld at H anso n's fu nera l
na rl ors a l
Huntin g ton, Thursday .
mo rn in ;; r,l 8 .30 fol lowed by m as8 nt ,
S t Th omas 'R ch urch at 9. Th e burial
· will be in St Th o ma s·s cemete r y.

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CONWELL SERVICE
, ATWORTHINGTON
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'Church Where Not~d
Preacher Conducted Serv~
ices Opened for Annual
Memorial Gathering

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EAS.THAJ\[P'.l'ON

Miss Mill icent Mary Salmon of
Cen t er street a n d Cliffor d C. Tinker of '
Worthington were m a rried Saturday
at tl1 e Met hodis t parson age by Rev
William Osborn. The bridemaid was
Miss Catherine Bossen of South Windsor, -Ct., and the best m a n was H arry
Chipman, cousi n of the bride. After
the cerCfllOllY a dinner was served at 1
the h ome of the brid e's rriotber. Mrs
Alice Sa lmon, on Center street. After
the weddin g trip, Mr a nd Mrs Tinker
will Jive. at .-Worthington.

W orthi n g ton, Sep~. 1-The Method ist church at South Worthing ton was
well fi lled t oday for ' the annual Con well Sunday, w hen th e church, which
is closed t h ro u ghout · the year, was
opened, as is n ow the custom , for a
WORTHINGTON
memorial service for Rev D r Russell
1
H . Con well. T he meeting became alWorthington,
Sept.
4---'-Schools
m ost international in character from
open ed yesterday with the toJlowing·
th e presence of a large a eiegation of
teachers: High grammar schcol, Miss•
,missi onaries w h o are n ow on fur loug h
Madelin e Townsend of Sp ringfield;
a t l\foun ta in · R es t , Gosnen: Many
I Corner primary school, Miss · Irene
countries were repr esented. -: The I'1
· Mou lton of Northampton ; Riverside,
ch urch was beau t ifu lly decorated wi th ,
Miss Doris Stedman of Eastham pton;
a u t umn flowers a nd fo liage.
South ,:vorthington, M iss :Pauline
R ev J a m es H . Burckes, pastor of th e
Brock o.f Athol ; W est ·worthington,
Con gr egation a l church, extended a
Mrs Cli~ord Ti n ker o{ this tow n.
welcome to those who had gatlrnred
for the se 1·vice. Then, h oldin g in his
hand a Bi ble which Dr Conwell had
canied with him on his trip thrp ugh
. H 'Doha'id Mason,
Clyde Byrnes I'
Egy pt , he gave f or the scrip t u r e read :ind Thomas McE van, left last
ing one of th e many selections Dr
night
for
Northampton,
whete
Conwell h ad n ot ed-the 81st ps a lm.
they will attend high school and
D r H arla n Creelman of Auburn TheSmith's school. These boys will
ologica l s emi n a r y and , :vorth ington
rnad the third cha pter of 1st Corinboard with Mr. a nd Mrs. Alfred
thia ns. Miss Ag-nes Conwell of Som Stevens .of Monroe street, _Njrth·
ervill e, a g ra ri dda u g-hter of D r Con,.ampton.. Harrie.t..- Marg3fll'II
we ll sang " Grant u s Thy P eace, 0
D9r ot11y Bartlett, William a n ~
L ord ," a nd Mrs I rving Granvill e of
·Gagnon, Evelyn Welch and Dan
Yon kers , N . Y., s a n g "How Beautiful
Welch ' have left · to attend high
Upon t he H ills ." Pray er was offere d 1,
1,school
by Dr J . RO# Steven son, pres ident
in SprlngfieM . ·GeraM ·
of Pri nce ton Theologica l s emina ry, a
·Ba'fes ·1s goin'g to attend high
rormcr summ er res ident of Worthing.
·sel'1ool in Gree'nfi eld .
ton , who p rea ch ed th e s e1·mon. His
text was II P et er Iii, 18, a nd the
prea cher d welt pa rtl cula t·ly in the t wo
word s, "but grow." H e s polrn of growth
a s exem plified by the con stant. development in the l ife of Dr Conwell.
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WORTHINGTON

Grange To Hold Exhibit
Worthington . Sept. 10 -:•rhendgrange
fl ow Friendship Guild Meets
, will hold a vegetable, fr uit a Ith th e
Sept. 7.-The Friendship Guil d
er exhibit, In co-o peratio n wa r lcul j met ThurJ;day night at ,the parsonMassachu setts depa rtmen,~ o;sdfy t h e
ture at the town hall onh ut -- vn 'm ay
age; leader, Mrs. Qlltford Tinker;
17 t h. Any per son In t e o, orth •
hostesses, Mrs., Maui;lce· Clark a nd
. exhibit. Any member of the ·W ei th er
Mi ss Bernice Kilbourn: refreshing ton g range !lvi~g In an[ ms a re
ment committee, Mrs. Cllffor&lt;\
to wn may r.lso exhib it . Prem u
a
Tinker, Mrs. Eben Shaw:; Mrs.
1 offered in the va rious ,clas~~s a.7i be \
!;ltaniey Cole. The sewing hour and
priz" r ibbon a nd $10 in go . WI th
a warded for t he best exhibit In
e
.the devotional exertlses 'Yere folha ll. T he h alJ will be open a t .8 a. m .
lowed by a _business meeting. . It
th e day of the fa ir t o r eceive exwas voted to give five dollars
hibits.
from the money raised at the reMiss Mil dred P arsons of Sou t ha m p cent tea ana muslca'l, held at Mrs. . to n, is visiting h er sister, Mrs Da me 1
Charles Ji.. Rice's, to the library!
' H. Port er.
for new books. Voted to give ·al
D r Al fred Ray Atwood of the. In-.
the proceeds from •the supper and
I !e r-Moun tain In stitute of W ei_ser,
entertainment held the day of the
Idaho. wl11 speak in th e Cong regat101;1a: chu rch Sµ ntlay evening, a nd . w1Jl
fair to the Women 's Benevolent ·
society. Voted to pay for two ~x- , 1 illustrate his ta lk with lan te rn s li des,
' Rev Dr a nd M rs J ohn Mack int osh
, tra electric lights in the church
1 Sllaw of Queens university. Kingston,
kitchen. Flowers for a shut-In
·'
, Ontario, Can., are' the I gu est s wit h
were given in· August to Mrs: Wiltheir son and tw o da u gQ,ters for se v-·
liam Roy. The entertainment, in
e ral days, of Dr a nd Mrs Creelm a.n .
, charge of Mrs. Arlin Cole, consistMr s C. Overt on -J ones of L on don,
, ed of two guessing contests. The
E ng ., is the g ues t of Miss S u sa n T .
,, prizes were won by · Mrs. Leland ,
Rice,

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Cole and Miss Marjorie Bartlett. It
' was decided to hold the meetings
hereafter at different houses. The
, next meeting will be held on Oct.
· 3 with Mrs. Clifford Tin.ker; leader, Mrs. Arlin Cole; hostesses·
Mrs. Kenneth Pease, Miss Elsi~
, Ba rtl ~tt;
entertainment,
Mrs.
1 Maunce Clark; r efr eshments in I
I ch~rge of four peop le to be appom ted.
Miss Gra~e Hubbard, who has
been spendmg . several weeks at
Lafayette Lodge, left yesterd a
and after spending a few da
.Y
8 rmn
·· g fi eId , will
·
return to YS,
N 1n
York.
ew

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WORTIUNG'l.' OR
_W•or' t h'm g ton •. Sept. 12,-The g ran g e
lL ld a r eception las t evening for
teachers a n d school&lt;bfllcials a fter tl ...
1 cg ular meeting a t L yceum hall
Program was : Duet, "Sleepy Time1 ~
?Y __ Mrs Leland P. Cole and Miss M ' .
Jo11e G. Ba1·t1~tt ; recita tion "Th e
O •
ern , Paul Revere " b
F
Bt:rr , and a g-rou p 'of sZ:n ranklin G
let composed of 'J\fr s Le1~n~ a qua r.
' Mrs Guy F. Ba ri.ret t l\'
C P . Cole11.
K1lbo ·
.
' 1 ,rs harJes A"'
urn and Miss 1\fax jorie G B -., '
l&lt;': tt. After this 10 tab\
· art.
in play T he 1.
es of Whist wer r
-~cl/&lt; J~1~s were won by l\lls~
rene Mo ulton, Dr l&lt;'ran~ A
on and Arlhu i· G C
· .Robln~men'R prize. T he . , a pen ~Ytng [or
was won by ' 11 D c_onsola t1on p1·ize
f
"' ss ons Stea
reshm ents wer e served
lllan. Re. Mrs Hattie Ca pen wili I
.
l~W to. spend two
ea": tomo1· b1othEW, Juds on BI k jS ,,Ith he1·
Hills. ..
a,c man of F'eedin oMiss Jan ette Otto .
" \
~nss Catb er! ne Hewitt
h 1;r ni ece

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fi;w days oC Mis . re .~he guests I
8 N. S. Heacock I
L.. _ _
l-Ii!JsiLle."

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1\"0H'l'HINO'.l' 0N

GRANGE FAIR IS
CENTER OF INTEREST

\ Vo r t hing to n , Sert. 22- 1\lr and Mrs
Eu ge n e Suret t e o f Vv' a k efiekJ, hav~
bee n sp end ing t wo cla ys With Mr a na
Mrs G u y F . Ba rtl e t t.
A specia l gn:u1g e m eeti ng was h eld
at th e L yceum hall Friday to Pro po
names for m em bet'sh ip.
se
Th.e re w il_l _be a VV o t' thin gto n communi ty ex hi bit at t h e Cummington
rail' n ext w eek_ u nd e r the clireetion of
Mrs w ,u~~er H1 gg 111s ana Emerso n

Will be Held Tomorrow at
Town Hall-Baby Show to
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be Feature
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Mr and 1\I rn Cli nton I~. R ear] and
Worthington, Sept. 15-In terest Is
fa mil y a,.e occu flYlll g th e h ot el cot now centered on the Grange fair , bahy
t:ige lia v i,1g closed Lafayette loclge for
show, supper and dance w.hich Is to
Lh e seaso n.
·be held on Tuesday. The supper will
J\.l rs S t eph en Olek s ak gave a chilbe served at 6 p. m. a t the Congre dren 's party this aftern oon in cel egational church. Exhibits of the fair
bration of her son , J ames 's, fifth
at the town hall across the w ay
b ir thday .
be o pen tn th e publ ic from 6 to 9 ~J . 111 ..
Miss D orothy F ·. B a rtlett nnu Mi ss
during which the baby show w ill be
Ali ce Edwar ds, st uden ts at th e H igh ;
held.
The judges are Mrs Clifton
S c h ool of Commerce in Sp rin g ti elcl. j
Johnson o! South Hadley and Allen S.
arc spending t he wee k- end at their ·
Leland of the Hampshire County Aid
. h om es .
to Agriculture. Special judges will be
· chosen for the baby S-ho,v. Ove r $100
will be divided in prizes for the var!- 11
ous en tries.
It is hoped that the
grange will h ave :..s gu ests State
Master Vl' illiam M. Howard and Mrs.
Howard of North Easton and High
P r iest o! Demeter Charles ):\1. Gardner
and Mrs Gardner of Westfield.
At 1,
the close of the fai1·, at 9 p. m .. a
dance will be ·11elcl at L yceum hall.
Bates's 01;chestra will play.

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Helen Parish, d a ~ghter of Mr and
Mrs Harold · P arish
u n derwen t a
se vere o peration a t the N oble hospita l a t ,W estfield last week for
(luinsy sore throat. 1\Iiss P a1·ish has
been attending High school at H untington where she is a second-year
pupi l.
The Royal Arcanum held a benefit
dance Friday evening at th e Lyceun:l
hall f or one of their members, Alfred
1 Churchill of Huntington, who is ill at
\ the Noble hospiti.l, in W estfield, following an ope ra tion .
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\Vorthington, Sept. lG-A special
meeting of the Frierldsh ip g uild will be
I held with M rs Jam es H . Burckes
: at .t !ie 0 parsonage on ~'.hurs day e ven - \
\ fog a t 8. M iss Wi nnifred , C. Parkj lrnrst of Northampton, g e n er a l s ecret ary · nf· the dish'ict Y: W. C. A. o!
\ We,;t ern M assac huse tts w!H b e p res &lt;' n t to form a class m handicraft and I
wili ·brJng sam ple~ of work wit h her.
, Miss B erni ce E . Kilbourn left t oda.v to spend the week with h er u n cle ,
, F'ra nk · Ba t es of West Sprin gfield..
\V h il e t h e r e s h e w il l attend t ile East,;r n S ta t &lt;:'S ·e x pos ition.
:\fr a nd Mrs Cu ll en 'l'owet· ol'
T hom psonv ill e, C t., . who h ave been
sp end ing a w eek In Worthingt on , rcty.rnecl llo m c to day, T h ey wen i accom - 1
pa nt ed by th efr fat he r , H en r y L .
, T ow er , w ho wi ll a tte n d t h e cele brati on I
1of th e 25th w edd in g a nni ver s a.ry o f h is
s on and w ife , :Mr a nd M r s H erber t L.
Tower of Springfie ld on Wednesday
before returning home. ·
Commerford ·Martin
w\11 leave
Thursday to enter Cornel l university.

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WORTHINGTON
GR 4.NGE }'AJJt A SUCCESS

Domestic a rts-1st, ~Irs MerrlCK
Smith.
Special pl'ize-P.rize ribbon and $10
In gold to the exh ibitor h a vin g the
g-r eat cst variety of quality exhibited in
th e h all. .\ Von by Rev and Mrs J ames \
H. B urckcs.

l'lno Display of Exh lhlts- Nearly 200
People Attend Affair
W orthington, Sept. 19- Over 180 peo' pie attended the Gra n ge fa ir, Tuesday
even ing, ' which .wa s h eld a t the t own
h all from 6 u n til 9. Th e exhibits were
of exception al m er it a ncl won t he com m enda tion of a ll . 'l.'he decora tions of
t h e· ha ll were in charge of E m erson
Davis. Grain s in variety, asparagus, I
s unflowers and tall stalks of corn were
H olyok e, S~
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used, t o wh ich the flower exhibit added
its n ote of color. T he fair wa s in
Mrs E lizabeth Ro y
ch arge of t h e_., ag-ricul tural commi ttee
.Mrs Elizabeth Roy, 51, wife of "\,V il o( the g~ange, E merson Davis, Mrs
' lia m Roy of Worth ington, died this
F'ra nk Bates, Mr and Mrs C. A. L oveI afternoon at the Providence hospital
' la nd, Arthur L aro, Mr a nd Mrs E rnest
Thayer a n d Charl~s W illiarrls who, "' ;tfter a Jon g il ln ess. B esides her hus band, she \eaves h er mother , Mrs
with the active co-operation of the
Alexis Robillar d or South H adley ; one
master, Mrs ·w aiter H iggins, and yolbrother, L igorie 11.obillard of New
unteer workers: staged a n exh ibit
Jersey, and four sist ers, S ister Mar)
which wou ld compare favorably, on a
smaller s cale, with many a county fa ir.
Annonciade of th e order of the S isThe judges were Mrs Clifton Johnters of St Anne, Mrs Cor c!eiia Charon
' son of South Hadley and Allen S. L eand Mrs Isra el P rovost of E as t'ha mp la nd of Northampton, both members of
ton and Mrs H ector B a il of South
the Hampshire' county aid to a gricnl- · \ Hadley. The fun eral w ill be 1'.eld a ,
ture and well -known state workers.
I th e Fleury fun eral par lors Mon da .,
J There w ere nine entries for the baby 1•
'rmorning
at 8, followed by high m as~ '1
' s how. The judges were Miss Florence
1?f requiem at Precio us B lood church
Rerry, a nurse at the Prophlactic Brush .
at
8.3
0.
Buria
l will be in Notre Dam ,
shop in Florence, and J\Iiss J ean Maccem etery.
Donald, the district n urse f rom Northam pton.
P rizes were a warded at the baby
W ORTlIINGTON
, s how as follows: Babies under 1½
1 years,. 1st, Ri ch a rd Paul Oleksak, parWor
thi~gton,
Sept. 24-News has
' ents, Mr a nd Mrs Stephen Olek sak ; 2d,
·j b_een r eceived of the sudden d eath in
1 Gordon Shadrach Dodge, parents Mr
New York city, the 21st of Miss
and Mrs R. Carvel Dodge ; 3d, Cullen
Chace A. Hubba rd, 60 , wh; w as for, Sidney Packard, parents, Mr and Mrs
~
erly associated professor of English
i Merwin F. Packard. Babies from 1½
m Ba rnard college for 22 years. She.
y ears to 3 year~: 1st, prize, V irginia,
h a~ spent fiv e w eeks this summer at
Read, parents, Mr and Mrs Clii'ton F.
Lafayette lodge and w as well known
R ead: 2d, K enneth Bartlett P ea se, J r.,
parents, Mr and Mrs Kenneth Pease·
~re, h_a vlng spent form er summ ers ·in
3d. E ver ett Simpson, parents, Mr a n d
orthmg ton; . She b elonged to on e of
·Mrs Cecil Simpson.
t h e old fa m1lles of Springfield
SJ
Fiv e s tands or fru its and vegetabl es,
lea; es three sisters, t h e Misse~
two of fa n.cy work, one representing,
a~ Ma y Hubbard of N ew York and
th e dom estic arts and a fin e collection
' Miss Elizabeth Hubba rd of San ta
of quil ts on ti:e main floor were aug, Ba rba ra, Cal. p eath was due to
m ente_d bf a display of wild fl owers in
1s h ock.
a
great variet y. Garden flow ~rs, potted
plants a n d a very fine exhibit r
can n ed goods were effectively arrangid
o_n th e platform, A fine exhibit from
Hillcrest farm, owned by Edward J
Clark, which although n ot enter ed f ·
a prize added to the display,
or
The supper a t the church at 8
was well patronized. From this $~·7 Ill.
wa.s cleared. The dance at L
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hall at 9 p . m. was well
Ycemn
,!!_at.cs' or ch es t ra played,
a ttend ed.
A wn.rds included: J3es t collection of garden
- 1st, Victor Bemier B
'l'.lege tables
' of fruits- 1st, Mr ai{d MeS t }ollection
Bu 1·ckes. Bes t coll ecti rs a m es n .
g ra ins-1st, Mr and
on or fa.rm
B ur clrns Best colie, Mrs James IT.
veg,•tables, fru its, ~tion or ca un eu.
conserves, jelli es et&lt;' ef ts, preserves
11 icr. Bent exh ibit ,;{a}~· Victo r Ber~
1s t, ::l'lr and Mrs ,J ame~! Y_Pro_d uc tsB_e,; I dozen brow n eggs-I ll. D urckes .
1·1s. B e8t hair- peck r st • J ohn Jai·V_icJ01: Berni e1· and W~lt I&gt;o~a t?es--lst,
Pll~ Jar or map1e.- s i ~r Smith. BeRt
Charles A. ,Utbonrn kUP- l s t, Mrs
of g-arden ~an !_!~-l'.~t /s
t col!ectio;1 1
• 0 1-J.n J a,· vi&lt;•

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• l'lhino-ton Has Exhibit at Fair
0
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Vlorthington
25
Sept. ·tv ·exhibit at · the Cumcomnium
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ra · • ,·esterda,· and toda::

Finds Picture of Colonial Church
Sept. 27 .-Among some
R'ice h as recentpapers M'iss· S usan
11 .J •
n11ng 01 1
.,
c
,
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which occupied two alco ves on tile
ly_ found_ ~n am?rotype of WorJeft of the entrance on th e lowe r
thmgton s Coloma! church. She _
floor, wa s put on und er the direchas had postcar~s made from it
lion of Emerson DaYis , with tht,
for church benefit. Th~ p!cture is
afsistanc e of his siste r , Mrs . Via l- , quite charming and in ,Its .'qisI
t ~r Hi ggins , worthy ma ster of the
tinctness br~ngs out in fine relief
Worthington Grange , and of.h er
the attractive features of the
helpers. Th e di splay combi1wd
_building _which was· one of ~ he
quality , quantity and artistic arfinest examples ot Colonial aTchirangements to a Yery m:uked de tecture Oil the Western Massachugree and -,, on th e tw ee pl: take bltF ! , setts hills. The view is taken from
ribbon from no Jess c:rn1pet e1,t I some distance so that th ere is a
judges than Mrs. Clifton Johnson J ,\letting of_ ~elds ~nd tr~es which
of Hadley, one of th e trust eefl _" of j, are surprisrngly little different in
the Hampshire County Aid to I I appearance now from say 50 or
! /\gri cnlture, and a well kno wn '. 75 years ago. The postcard copies
state worker, and Ernest w.
are perfect .reproductions of the
Payne of Charlemont. 1'his ic the · original. Tvro churches had • preseco_nd ~gricnltural display ot
ceded it._ The :fj.rst, Jfoilt of logs,
rnent_ w!nch Worthing:011 has ,rut ', was situa,ted.- on the ·site,. of ·-. the
on w1thm t ;_,n days.
"Lincoln ·l'3tewart place." When ·. ,,
Mrs . Judson Itogers of West
this was given up a - church was
n?xbl! r y is • spendin~ a few days : _buj!t back. of wh_ere '-is ·now~ the
with her mother, ,\Irs. Myra Ste.- I, Cente.r, stor~. In 1825 the town ' ens.
- voted to bmld the Colonial chur ch
sho_wri' in : the ambrotype ptilfi'i're,
w/rn:~ stood on the site -of.;..tlie
P_r~~~nt ~hur~!1_- Painted ,v.frite- a nd
s1tuate_d on 'k1-s-h land it •'wiur i
la~d lll1!;l'IC 'fov miles around . -· Not
'A
,: many, 11re left ,w ho can r erirent biifr
the int$t&gt;ior before i t,v_was re.mod,eled.' ~he· h-igh pulpi-(=al"-ihe_· -f ront/ I
end with draperies and tassels.
HigI;t_ I&gt;e.~lj :v1/tl} do.oi:s ,anii nm~ber and m ,each back corner an · encl?sure1' so niethi n0g' !ik~· a box seat, _ \
with seats on three sides. · ·Jona•
)
,th an .¼· Pomeroy was its first pas- "
tor. Succeeding him were lienry
Adams, John H . Bisbee, David s.
Morgan, Joseph F. Gaylord, Sam~·
'?el Hopley and Frederick S. Hunt- 1 '
mgt?n· - On April _2, _18.8.L _the
chu~ch was destroyed by.,f!r~· or.4,t:,
lli~-1\l~~µJx _,the .Bffilei •,mu 11;1~
~i
"' -· , ·~ ,1c:lt:tw~Z4y~.(t. t,y/t'fl'.e 1{if:e:· ,

family!'

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~~ ,,m;~~~ -•tt~flpo~gii1,H1Ait
,a·-r~9~&amp;
e sev ~r.a)' slcetche!J _or th,hi;-i;:l)~i;&lt;;ll
.tlie old {l.~bi:q,ty,pe t~: the~'oni)_".)_i~
iure ~nown to be in exist~nce&gt; It
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considered to be a real "find."

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�en- am ag azme. T he next meetini; .
WORTHINGTON
Will be h eld on T hu r s day, No v. 7 . 1
Worthington, Sept. 30-Rev John. C. Wit h Mrs. J ames H . Burcl&lt;es at '
· Wightm a n of Florence, Hampshire
county missionary, preached at the th e parso n a ge, when a missionary
Ch r istm as b ox for a boys and girl5'
Congregational church yesterday.
The Friendship guild will m eet sch ool will be given an d pack-3.i
Thursda y evening with Mrs Clifford by the Guil d . Member s a re r~Tinker. ,
/
qu est e d not to ·w r ap the gifts. T hiR
Miss M+ldred Parsons and Miss Olive proj ect is un der t he a uspices of i
Clark of Southa mpton spent the week th e Mas sachuset ts Con gr egation nl
end with Miss Parsons·s sis ter, Mrs conference and Mi ssio nary society '
Da niel R . Porter.
·
Mr and Mrs Me rwin }&lt;'. Packa rd en- of. Bosto!1·
terta in ed at dinner y es terd ay Mr a nd
M 1,s. Mer w in F. P a ckard gave a
Mrs H aro~d Pack a rd a nd son, Ar th ur. children's party y esterday in celeof
sburg
a nd Mrs E arl bration of h er dau'echter
Shirley'e
Pa '\Villia
ck a rd mand
sonand
of Mr
W estfield.
~
Arra n g·em ents a re bein g made for third birthday,
a g roup to attend the youn g peoples'
The
Gran ge
will cele bra '. e
confer en ce at Florence on Friday, the n eighbors' night Tuesday evenin g,
11th.
\
Oct. 8, at the Lyceum hall with
Mrfam
a nd
oseph
er Wright
and
ily Mrs
will Jmo
ve thiElm
s week
to the · Huntington, Ches terfi eld and Cum •·
E age r fa rm for th e winter. Mr and min g ton Gran ges invite d.
Mrs Le vine and family will spend the
Grosve nor Hewitt is s pending
winter in Spring field.
.
' sev e ral days in Nortli ampton.
, Mrs I r ving F. Cha pman has closed
Mrs. Cecil Simpson of Worcesh e r @ummer pla ce and left today to t er has r e turne d to h er hom e a fto ir
1 s pen d the win ter at Sca rsdale, N. Y.
vi sitin g h e r parents , Mr. a nd Mr ~.
, Mrs Judson Rogers of West Rox- John Frissell. H e r dau g hter , J a n ' with
bury hher
as mother,
been s pendi11
g
several
days
et, will r emain t hr·ou ghout t hl'
Mrs Myra Steven s.
Mr a nd Mrs W illiam Doyle a nd two winter.
children, Alic'e a nd Margaret, a nd Mrs
Miss Elizabeth Porter of ,Stoi•r5 ,
John Doyle an d da ughter, Mary, of Ct., i s spending the week at h"r
I Palmer wer.e in t own yesterday a nd home.
·
I called on Mr and Mrs Guy F . Bart- ~'--c..--.c,·,;.;-,:.·- ,....,._ ,~-.-- --;.-;;:--- --,
Jett.
Mrs . Cha rles Mo sher of Turn er sF a ll s and Mr. and Mrs . Gottliei, .
Bitzer and Mrs. H atch of Gree n- V
field were in town today and ca ll ed f'
upon · Mrs. · Mosher 's s is t e r -i n-la\".,
F riendship Guild llleets
Mrs. G uy F . Bartle tt .
Oct. 4 -T h e Frien dshi p Guild Rev. Edward C. Ca mp of W a t e rme t l a st evening at the hom e of 1 town, accompanie d by his dau g hMr s. Cli ffor d Tinker, with sixt een 1· ter and he r h usband, Dr. and Mrii. ·
p resent. T he s ewing hour on toys : Carroll H . K eene of Chatham, and
for Chi n ese chil dren wa s follo we d [ Mr. and Mrs. William G. Rice of
b y devo tional exer cis es le d by Mr s. I Albany, were in town today and
Daniel R l Por t er and. by a b u si- l called upon Miss Susan T. Rice at .
11- ss m eeti n g. It was vote d t hat
The Maples.
I
t he Guild send one doll a r a year 1
-------·
l
for five years to t h e Intermou n t a in ,
·
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Inst.itute a t W eis e r , I daho. Vo ted ·
t hat the Guild ho ld a H a llowe'en
) party at L yce u m hall o n T h urs day evenh_
1g , Oct. 31s t. The fol low in g committees w ere app oint..
:ed: Deco ration s , ch a irma n , Mr s.
,Eben L. Shaw, Mrs. D aniel R .
; Po r ter, Miss Elsi e Bartlett, Mrs .
,C lifford Tink er , Mrs. L eland P .
Col e , Mi ss Be rnice Kilbourn; r ef r es}lments , chai rman , Mrs . Maur- i
, icfc) Clark , Mrs. Hom er Gran g ';lr .
Mrs. l{ enne th P ease, l\frs. Jam es
!H. Burckes ; e ntertainment, chairman , Mrs . Harold . Paris h, Mrti.
George E . Torrer, Jr., Mis s Mar' jorl e G. Bar~le tt, Mrs. Prancls A .
Robin s on , Miss Ir e n e Moulton and
1 Miss Ma d eline T own send . Admi s- 1
s ion, adult s, 25 cents ; children, 1 o .
cents . The sh ut-in r e m e mb er e d j'
last month " :as Martin Collier, f\f
south Worthin gt on , who was giv-

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Worthington. Oct. 8-Mr and Mrs
Walter H. Tower entertained Mr and
Oct. 7-Mr. and Mrs. Walter H
:Mrs George E. Torrey, J r. , and Mr and
Tower enterta,,ed Mr. and Mr~ .
Mrs Lester C- Lenuc of Chesterfield
George E. 'I rrey , Jr. , and Mr.
· las t night at a raccoon dinner.
and Mrs. Lester C. Le Due nf ,,
Dr a nd Mrs Francis A. Robinson
Chesterfield last evening, at a r~care entertain ing his cousins, Mrs An1
na
Sinclair and daughter, Florence, or
l/ coon dinner.
Dr. and Mrs. Francis A . Robin- , Rome, N,_ Y.
Th e degree staff o! Worthington
son are entertaining Dr. Robin- I)
grange will confer the t hird degree a.t
son's cousins, Mrs. Anna Sinclair
c ummlngton Ylednesday· night.
and daughter, Florence, of Rom &lt;;;, 1, 1
N. Y.
Miss Winfred C. Parkhn_rst, thP.
ge neral secretary of the district
Y. w. C. A.,' of Western Massachusetts, will give a lesson In handicraft to a group at the home of Ir
Miss Elsie Bartlett and Miss Marjorie Bartlett on Monday evenin g,
SPRJNGIELD , T UESD-(\Y, OCT, 16, Ill~.
Oct. 14 at 7 o'clock .
The Ladies' Degree staff of
WORO NOC O
· Northampton Grange, No. 90 , wi ll
confer the tliird degree at Cum• II
l'lre .P reH nt!on Circular Sent Out
\ min gton , Wednesd ay evening , Oct. ,
Wcrronoco, Oct. 1-t-W. o. ~ohnson,
• .
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chief of the village fi re :':l rigade, has
iss ued a circular -to all the residents
I
I stressing particularly th e id ea of InI , dividual respoo1sibilitr !ot" fir e preOct. 7-Thc Women's Benevo- 1
\ vention and giv e~ the fire josses in this
, lent society· wlll hold their !ir~t
state alone in l n28 as $17,859,327. Ten!ill-day, sewing meeting of the· sea;
1
! ants are r~qu ested to clean up cellars
\ son at the home: of Nlrir. T: Comand not burn r ubbish outside. Tenant.q
. merford Martin on Wednesrlay.
also are requested to fa mlliari ze them, A benefit whist for the Ha1npselves with the location of the nearest
l shire County Children's Aid asso1elation will be held ct the Lyceum
extinguisher, so that in ca_se of neceshall Thursday evening at 8 o'clock
si.\Y it may be put into imm edia te use.
under the auspices of t he Gr ani;e.
· .Parkw ay Assoclatlou Awards
Admission, 25· cents. Ladies are
The West fi eld River Parkway, assor equested to bring cake or sand- .
ciation_has a warded the prizes for the
wiches.
1,
best snaps ho ts taken in the recent
Miss Susan T. Rice is spending :
contes t as follows: Fi rst- prize, James 1
the week-end in Albany.
C. Buffam of Woronoco, "The Mill
· Miss Mar jorie I. Bartlett and
Pond" ; sec.ond, Dr A, .\. Starbuck of
: Miss Mad eline Town send spent
Middlefield, view oi Westfi eld river,
; t he week-end In Spring field. ,
Springfi eld ; ~7i;i:t;~ttetiou, !'l!llil'
1
A group from h ere
attend
i]wita of
lil1- ; fo r reproducthe get-together n1e1, tlng of the!
tion, Philip :M. Smith, of Middle fi eld,
young people of the Jfamp shh e
"Gobble moun t ain, Chester"; second·, ·
county Congr egation al churches In
:virs F. P everley of Chester, "Betw~en ,"
! Huntington a nd Russell" ; ·honorable ,._
F lorence. F riday at 4 p. m ., Matme~
Ph il ip 1',L Smith, "Resevoir
ias Cuadra of the Philippines will
··Meadow,t Mi&lt;\dlefield; Dr Star':mck,
be th1 speaker.
road ;,-pe~i\·eeh Westfield a nd WoroThere will be a dance at the
noco,1 a_lso a '.'Ro:1d Soene," Hinsdale;
Lyceum
hall Friday evening.
J a mes C. Buf~n.m, "Entering Woro L
Ba tes' ·orchestra will play.
noco"; Mrs P ever!y Chestei·, "Chester ,
, to Huntington fr'bni State Road"; · W. '
Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Packard and
o. Joh( S0\1, Westfield river, Worofam ily and Miss B ernice Kilbourn
noco; Mtsf Elsie Barttel t, · "Middle
toolc a11 auto trip oYer the MoBranc ,"· W estfield river;l,.Mus Whit-,
haw k Trail Sun day.
aker, "Chesterfield Gorge.' A•. map ot
the park way is being printed 'and anot•her imp ortant e1ent in, 'l"l'.\1i~h the
as~oclatlon is interested is· the pnited
, States Navy band concerts at Westfield Friday.
'
\ '£he St rathmore • Community -Paperl)lakers' club and gyIUnastic class will
bol~ its first meetin g at the commu•
'1ltY building t omorrow
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WORTHINGTON

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Mrs.ftaymoiid Clapp of - Hamden, Ct., has been visiting her
µi.other, Mrs. Otis H. Buck.
·
Mrs. Lester Stevens of Brook ·
Dwight Thcodoi·e Clark
llne has pur chased the Mrs. KingsOct:
15.-Dwight .TModo~·e
ley Martin place and with her son,
Clark, ag_ed. 66, was found· dead
Lester, will occupy it as a summer
in the barn at his home about
home. This was for many· yelJirs
, nine o'clock last evening. Deacn I know.n as the Osmond Watt place
was due to heart tr.ouble, from
and ls .one or the old houses of the I
which he had suffered for ab&lt;lUl
town.
three years. He was born In Cum·
On Friday ·afternoon the Rain- ,
niiuglon in 1864, the son of Ethan
bow club of the Riverside school
' and Eunice Read Clark. 'He was a
presented the following program 1
butter maker by trade, and had
In observance of Five Prevention ,
mana ged a creamery in Hampden,
week : "Safety," by Dorothy Tow-' and in Williamsburg, before -CQID- , er and Mabel Edwards; "Fort·st
ing to W_ortliington 19 y~ars ago,
Preservation," by Albert Edwards;
where he had since engaged in
play, "Carelessness," cast or char- .
, fanning. He leaves a da ughte_r,
acters; Carelessness, Donald Porn- '
Miss E leanor Clark, a teacher tn
eroy; Carefuln ess, Evelyn CorDalton; two sisters, Mrs. Rosa •i bet; Careless children, James
Chamber],. of ~Jttsii_eld, _apd l'vHss
Murphy, J ean Joyal, Hel en P ome- ,
·Emma Clark of this town, a,nd . roy, Dorothy Corbett, Marvis Snytwo brothers; . Herbert of East \ d_er and Doris Pomeroy ; song, by
.O range, N. J ., and Eq.wai'd J., of
six careless children; "Bonfires,''
this town. Mr. Clark was a man of , by Dorothy Joyal; "Fire Prevengreat uprightness and integri 1v, 1 I lion through Cleanliness," by Alone of the old school whose word ' fred· Joyal. The chairman ill- charge
was as good· as hi-s bond. He _was \ of the program was Evelyn Corheld in higl) esteem in the· c9mbet, assisted- by Marvis Snyder and
mu_nity. T.he funeral wiU be held \ Doris Pomeroy.
.,
at the house Thursday afternoon
Water from the spring at 1Ienry
at two o'clock, Rev. James H. , ~· Tower's has failed for the tfrst
Burck.es ofilciatin". Burial will be .1 . tnne in 5·4 years. Others .with out
in the Center cem~tery,
\ '_ running water in t,~efr hcitise ~ because of the drouth: ·are J ames
Oct. 15.- A benefit whist , party Knapp, Victor Ber1:1ier·, M. Levine,
for the Hampshire . County Chil- i Mrs . .J~hn ·Hart, Mrs;. ,.o : E . B\Jck;
dren's Aid association was held 1, F: ."fl. Bement, Ge9rge_- J asp er,
Thursday night by the· Grange a t V(alter Higgins andi W.llliam Waz- •
the Lyceum ht.JI. Nine tables were 1_:rnc. Water lll the t9wn reservoir,
in play. The first prizes were won
although .low, was ,. raised six
b:'r'. Miss Madeline Townsend -and inch!;S by the rains· the fi rst of
Walter M. Shaw, and the consola- the month and no ·. immedia te
' tlon prizes by Miss Hazel Kniettell ·shortage is feare d.
! of West Chesterfield and Lester
•;,,'=--'-'---- - 1 ----===~~
Stevens.
Refreshments
were
WORTHING'l'OK
served.
Nineteen members
of
the
Worthington, Oct. 17 - Mrs Nima
Grange went to Cummington WedConwell
Tuttle entertained
lJe Wum
~n 's Benevolent
society at t·her
homenesday evening when the ladl es'
in So uth Worthington today a t a n
degree t eam of the Worth ing ton
all -day sewing meetin g. Th ere were
Grange conferred the third de- 1~o present. Mrs Tuttle had with her
gree. •
aH her gues t:, her co usin, Mrs Flora
There was a large meellng of I HinG· Cooney of Chester.
the Women's Benevolent society
Arthu1· U. Capen, librarian or th e
Wednesday at Miss Josep hine HeJ!'redcrick
Huntern
tington
libnuy,
will in tendi:iarge11t
th e Wes
Massachu\ witt's, 21 being present. The vice . se tts Library club and Massac husetts
presidrnt, Mrs. Merrick Smith ' Library . club joint mee tin g at Lenox
was in charge ot the work and
this week, as t'he guest or the division
plans were made for the coming
or publlc li braries.
season. The next meeting will be
Mrs l&lt;'r a nl&lt; Robert s, i\lrs noy Gibh ld [th M T
son. Mrs Geot·gc l•'ish and Mrs John
e. w
rs, · C. Martin on
,\ lexander of No rt h Adams were in
Oct. 23 .
to wn 1och1 y and ca lled upon Mrs Guy
Mr. and Mrs. Walter M Shaw
10. Bartlett. ·
. o! G_reat B~rrlngton hav.e· been
There will be a benefit dunce tovrsltlng then· daughter Mrs Lemort ow e, en,n g ,at the Lyceum hail
land P. Cole,
'
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\ r tor th e g1·,u1 ge commu nity , ervlce.
Mr and ~l rs Walter M. Shaw will
spend the res t of the year wit h their
daughter, Mrs Leland P. Cole.

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'Worthin gton, Oct. 21-Mt· and Mrs;
I eland P . Cole has as week-end gues,s
J\1" s K R i
f S bis _daughter ,
i\liss Kath erin e Bofs en and Miss H ci cn
!~h M. ; e, 0 t. P a ul, Minn ' r
1Ta.chas!1 of South Winds or, Ct. .
WI rs . - r-:tnk Lo ok now of Lo·~ ,'
. Dr a nd Mrs J."ra nc1s A. Hobmsr,11 . An ge les, Cali f. , a nd Miss L . spent the week encl at Springfield w itl1 , . R e uth of_ S t. Paul , spent Mon d~Uloef
rc_l ati\'!.,S.
. .
. I ; town wi t h r ela ti ves. Th
Y 111
Mis~ sie V. Bar tl ett v1s1t ed ~er si sbee n t o th e Ri sin -H
ey !!ad ,.
ter , Mrs L est er C. L eD uc of Ch esterin Stockbrid ge
gs ul! Weddtn g,
fi eld t his week encl.
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:
The reg ular grange m eeting will be '
Mi s. J . ~l a lcol m Forbes of n _
held T uesday night. T he first a nd sec- : t on a n d Miss C. :Wilder of Smi0 ·8
oncl degrees ai-e to be co nferred on ::i, \ , college fac u lt y were enj oy!n
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lar~e class of new members. The \,Vil Lafa ye tt E&gt; and Mo haw k t · / t he
lia1;:,sburg grange will confer th e sec- r . wee k a nd ca lled
f ~ai 8 la;'t
On
on d cleg-rees.
; town .
r end s in
Mrs Stephen Olek sak aand sons,,
M'
,
j a m es anc1 Ric hard Paul, arc vlsi tin;;·
{ ~8 I• ogg_ h as r et urn e,1 fro m a ·
, Mrs Oleksa.k 's sister, Mrs Stanl ey w ee s sta y 1n Connec ti cut
! Scyze paniack oJ' P ittstlelcl .
Ther e w ill be on e more ~veni !
I Mr and Mrs R ichard Ba rtleft an rl i ' servi ce at th e church this a t ng .
fa mil y of Green fi eld spent t11,ci,. wc!'l, , That will be n ex t Sund
th u umn .,
encl with Mr a nd M1·s l&lt;'rank ll,ttes ort 1 at 7 3 0
Tl . ·
a y e 27th,1
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· W es t Worth ington.
· ·
'. S ser 1~s. of ae1·vlces Mrs W in i&gt;fred Drak e is entertain ing 1 1ias bee n vei Y ln sp1nng llnd all
h er pa r ents, Mr a nd Mrs W . Sco tt, an dl i' h3:ve . bee~ })}eased With th e el'3c- '
Miss K ate Stevens of Orleans, Vt.
\ tn c hg~tm g of th e church .
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__
,_ en tertam . th e W. B. s. at an all ·.
1 ~fh'.11 ee tiilg n ext W edn esday the '

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Oct. 2 2.-Mr. and Mrs. L. P.
Mis~ Elizabeth Rice of Nort h:\ Cole had as their week -end gu es ts , · 1 a mpto n wa~ a r ecent -g ucr,ts of Miss
1Miss Katherine Bossen a n d Miss . Su san T. Rice.
1Helen Tachash of South W indsor, \ t
Miss _Ma~ jor ie P a ul of New York ·)•; Ct.
1 \ and _wort hm gt on has r esumed h er •
Dr. and Mrs. Fra ncis A / Robin- \ •~!ud1es at Miss Spence's school In
. son sp~nt t he week-end in Spring- l l ,-.. ew · · -r:ork after some month s' '
: field with relatives. . _
i travel In Eu r ope . _Sl,l e returned
Miss Elflie V. Bartlett visited : · ,r ecen tl y on tbe Brem en .
_
i her sister, Mrs. Lester C. LeDuc :
Mr~·- Ralph B r etzn er and Mr.i.
;'of Che sterfield, this week-end.
' !-f cGmr e a r e see n these fine morn: There was a specia l mee ti11g of I 1 i~gs on the golf links.
. the Grange last Monday to _ re- _ - : l\H ~s Ca roline Shaw, tl).e guest
ceive a pplica tion s fo r membership ; _ of -Miss Heacock, has -left for het
an d to h ear reports of t he com mit- ; · ~oiµ e in Aki'on, Ohio. She will
tee on co mmunity ser vice .
, .Stend :}-_ fe_w d-:tys with Mrs. A. c 'l
The r egul ar Gr ange meeting w ill
-o_. 1Ie1y1tt In P ittsfield .
be hel d t h1s evening. The first and 1 1 •
",. j
second d egrees are to be conferred ,
j'l1
on a l arge class of n ew members. !
The W illiamsburg Grange wj.ll \'
:,
confer the second de gree.
,
Mrs. Step,h en Oleksa k and sons,
J am es and Richard Paul, are visiting Mr s . Oleksak's sister, 'Mrs.
Sta n l ey S cyzepaniack of Pittsfi eld.
Mr. and Mrs . Henry Snyder and
Mr. a n d Mrs. Charles A. Kilbourn
and d a u g hter, B ernice , enjoyed an
a uto t r ip to Brattleboro and Benn in gton , Vt., recently.
·,
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Mr. an d Mrs. Rich_ard Bartlett I
and t wo children of Greenfield _
spent the w eek -end with Mr . and
Mrs. Frank Bates of West Wort hin gt on.
Miss ·carolyn Sha w , who has
b een the g u est of Miss N. S. H ea- ,,
cock , w ent to Pitts fi eld r ecently to i
Visit Mrs. A . C. 0. H ewitt.
Mrs. Winfre d Dr11,ke ls entertaining her parents, Mr. a nd Mrs.
W. Scott , a nd Miss K ate S t even s of
-._ Orl ean s , Vt.

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�~Parkway Group
Inspects Trail
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WORTHINGTON

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&lt;Joon 1ind B_e111· S11p11c r Satnl'tlaY_ ,
Night \
,.
Oct. 25 .-Bas han H!ll counc .,
or RcyaJ Arcdn~1m will !.old its an
. 1 nuaJ rac~oon and bear supper
OI! '
Sr,t11rday ey-in in t{ , Oct. 26 , .1~ li
o 'clock at Lafaye t te Lodge , which
will be oper. ed for u,e Ol'C.t·•lvn I•
throu gh the courtesy o~ the pro
pr:eto r, Clinton F. R eaci . Ti~kct--,
$1.50 . 'rhese suppEc rs have b cor.1.so popular, people comin g from
mil es a~ounc1 to at.tend them, that
the Lyceum hall is 110 longer larg~
enough for the&gt; purp.ose.
Grange Adds 20 !llembe!'s
,
Twe nty membcr3 ·,vere taken f
into . th e Gran ge Tu es da y nig ht,
this bein g one ot the larges·.
cl2.sses in the '•istory o f
,;,:, ·
i Grange. Tnere were frn\ r ein s ta h - .
; m en ts , Mr. and Mrs. F ra nk lin H . ,
\nurr, Mr. an d Mrs Ar lin Cole_ancl.
iMrs. Homer Gra n3e_r. Then, were
/ftfteen can die.ates for initiation ,
1
11-trs . • Ste phen Oleksa k , Miss l\I.
'11Townsend , Mis, ¥1! ne Moulton .
Mrs. N. C. Tuttle, Mi ss E lsie V .
1
Dartl e tt , Lawren ce Mason , George
iDodge, Jr., Miss S. T . Rice , Miss
Doris Stedman, l\.liscl Connors .
Ra ymond -Call; .Miss Pea r: 1.
J'Mrs.
Fitzroy , Mr~. J. C. Connell, Mrs. !
,Sheridan Dodge. Mrs. Maurie" '
IClark . Th e fi rst d eg r ee was workP.d /
· by the reg ula r office rs anc: tnc ,
[second by th t:: m en 's degree statf pf 1
· Williamsburg, \vi10 did · excellent
' work . Two charter m ,~mb? r~ came
, back into the Gr::nge . Miss Elsi.e
1V . Br.rtlett and 1•'ran k:in H. Burr,
ve ry n early ou th e 26th a nur,. e rs
ary of its organ ization, Oct. 2 3
1903. Oth e r ~h a rtc r nl e mb e r s w l,o
still arP mc1nb&lt;H"s are Mrs . A11n,1 A .
Cole , Mrs. C. A. Kilb ourn, Arthur
G. Capen, and Mrs. E d J . ,Clark
~n imp rnsrlve cer,}111011y of drapmg ,h e , c\ar te r _in m e mo ry of
.Dwig ht r. Cl,11·1, , Whose dea th OC·
c urre d ~- e-~en ti}'. , was a Part of tho
eve nin gs m ee tin g. A s pecia l m ee•
ing will be h eld n ex t Tu e ,,d a;
Oct. 29, wh en t he third a nd fo nrt i:
d,:;gre es will be conre rr()d
T:1 es,~ay•~ rr1i r;fal1, Whic h mea s- I \
u re,. 2 . ., 2 11:ch es , ha s started ti
I
wa t e r runnin g fron1 som" s vr in ~~ • .
wh ich w ere d r y and h as r ai sed t h ~
6
wat e r three feet in th o town r
voir. Thi s , b efo re th'l ra i n' e~e r.
down to fo u r in chefi above ti'
.va s
Jet.
1e ou1 .

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.·:sky Line" Route Will Be
Developed Under Association's Plans.
WESTFIELD, Oct. 21-President
ArcJ- ie D. Robinson -of the Westfield
River Parkway Association accompanied by about 25 members of the as. sociatlon made an official Inspection
I yesterday of the automobile route that
t he association has officially desi gna t ed
as "Sky Line Trail No. 1." The start
was made from this city and the first
stop wa s at Granville where the m e mbers of th e p~y m et t he Granville
1and Russell r e"'!l'resen tatives.
An in1spection was made of the highway
from that place to Blandford, taking
In the 0 obble Mountain reservation.
This is the h igh way tha t the aasocia. ti. , 1 proposes to r equ est the city or
Spriniifle!d to modern ize and include
In Its list or official water reservation ,
drives.
The journey continued to Blandford
where members from that town were
• PL.:ed up and th en an Ins pection of
; the a ban doned piece of highwa y a bo ut ,
two miles In length was made. This I
; a ban d_oned r oa d leads t o the g ra nite
quarriea and · is loca ted partly in
, Blandford and Otis a n d if opened would
m 7an a sav_lng of more than three
miles In a Journey to Bonny R ig =
tour corners. This is another Pi ec: 1
of road that th e association intends
to m a ke use of in its mode rnization I
of high\\•ays. The party con.tinned to
1 Becket, and to .Hinsdale, over the propo_sed ne w high wny f ro m Hin sdale to
Mtddl efl eld to Ch eater Bill where D
Witt ~- D eW o!f a cted as host for
short ti me. F rom Chester hill th e tra·1
led ove r th e river roact to \Vest fl eld 1
'l'hls rout_e more than 1500 fee t ab~ve
sea lev_el m every section, Is about ·
miles lo~g and Is o,n e of a group
j o sceni c trails that ia no·w bein g de I v eloped by the association . The State
co·inty an~ cities a nd towns WII! b '
ask&lt;' d to a 1c] in putting th e highway:
1~ shape. Includ ed lnca,th e Party were :
~ssociate Co un ty Comfolssioner Wilham an cl _M rs. En.sign. Mr. and Mrs
A. D. Rc-b,n_son, Mr. a n d Mrs. John J.
Guinasso, Mr. a nd Mrs. w C G"b
·
of Granville, Mr. anct Mr·s · II
boos
erty, Mr. and Mrs . \V. 0 . John ough.
" 'o ronoco, Mr. and Mr's J sWon of
L~ · m1 s C R R
·
·
ells
I Caeau : ' ·
·
ipl ey and Ed m oncI

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�WORTHINGTON
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Coon and near Supper Attended
by 400
Oct. 29.-The raccoon and bear
supper, given by the members 01·
the Royal Arcanum at Lafayette
Lodge Saturdar evening, had a
record attendance of 400 guests. A
bear from Maiue, weighing 183
pounds, and 21 raccoon~ killed lo,, cally were only a v:ut of a bouna
ful menu. One raccoon , shot '.)y
Walter H . Tower, was unusua lly
large, weighing a trifle less than
21 pounds. The bea:· skin waJ
sold at auction at the supper by
Harry W . Mollison for '$20 to Wil liam Root of Pittsfield . Guests
were pres&lt;'nt from North Adams
Adams
Pittsfield, Stockbrido-e'
Dalton , Hinsdale,
Sprin '.5field:
" Northampton and all the surrounding towns and cities. After dinner
speakers were Frank McGwan ot
Springfield , past regent of Eq11ity
council; • Henry
Rath bone of
Stockbridge, grand guide of Mack~
anac council , and William Root of
Pittsfield, grand regent. I?ollowinJ
this there was dancing. Bates' orchestra playeq. The receipts at the
door were $4 91.
Rainbow Club to Hold Party
On Wednesday evening, Oct. 30,
the Rainbow cl ub of the Riverside
school ,viii hold a Hallowe'en
party from 7 to 9 o'clock. Dorothy
Corbett is in char ge• as chairman
of th e committee. H er helpers are
Jean Joyal , Marion Snyder, Evelyn
Corbett a nd Dorothy Joyal.
Program, Hallowe'en song, by the
-school; Welcome Hallowe'en, Evelyn Corbett ; Who 's Afraid? Doris
Pomeroy; At Hallowe'en, Dorothy
Corbett ; play, Watc)l. Your Step,
Mabel Edwards, Dorothy Tower,
Dorothy Joyal, Donald Pomeroy,
Albert Ed wards and Alfred Joyal ;
song Hallowe'en , Oh , Hallowe·en ,
scho~l; Hallowe'en, Marvis Snyder· My Jack-o-Lantep, Jean Jo.Y·
al· 'A Perfect Hallowe'en, James
M~ r;ib'y; The Pumpkin's. Laugh ,
Hel~h Pomeroy. Followmg the
propram games will be played and
:refr\: pj)_ine nts will be sGrved.

The 4-H club m em bPrs met Satafternoon at the paJ'sonac-e
Iwit.I, Rev. and Mrs. Jam P.s Ii:,
1 Durckes , local leade rs, and electec:
, the following office,s :
Gtrls'
; cooking club : President, Mary P.
· Burr ; secretary, Harriet Higgins ;
treasurer, Freda Gran ge r. The
boys' 'handicraft club elected Marshall Goodwin , president. The bus
'I iness meeting was followed by a
Hallowee' n party and refreshI ments. The next meeting will te
beld at the parsonage on Saturday
Nov. 9, at 1.30 o'clock .
'
The Gran ge will confer the third
:] and fourtl1 deg r ees upon a large
Ii cl_ass at the Lyceum hall this eve-''

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T he Women 's Benevolent society
will me et Wedn esday with Mrs. T.
1
1 c. Martin for an all day meeting._
I( The Friendship GuHd will hold
if."
Hallowe'en social at the Lyceum
1
,hall Thursday evening. Gam es, 11
frolics, stunts, eats , 15 cents; fis:
pone;, 10 cents, for young and old.
' }\frs. Step hen Oleksak will enltc rt;; in "The Hungry Dozen'' at, .
)her home on Thursday r,fternoc,n·.
The children of the two Corner
1
:sc hools will each hold a Hallow - i:
\: e·en party on Thur3&lt;lay i&gt;Jternoo~,
jin th eir schoolrooms.
' There will be a dance at the J..,y ..
·; ceum hall Friday evening, an'1
Bates' orchestra will play.
Walter Buxton left Sunday for I!
Sa ybrook , Ct., where he has taken
a position for the winter.
Wa lter C. Powers of Springfield, ,,
who ha s a sum mer hom Er here, ·:1as
. purchasE d of H erber t Smith all Qi
1the land between the Country ~lut
and Buffin gton Hill - below the
Rid ge road .
Miss H eleu F ogg is spending a I,
week with Mrs. Theodore Parsens
in Southampton before going to
·Greenwich" Ct., where sh e wil!
spend the winter.
The Gran ge Whist club, which
was to have -been held on Wednesday evening wit h Mr. and Mrs.
Walt.er H, Tower, h:,ts . been post- :
poned uu ti! furthe r notice.
E leven hundred dollars was tak-1 1
en iu by the Country club in fees
this past ,;ea son from non-mem .. f
,_, hers, proving the po.ptllarity of the
golf course.
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�~ORT~f;GTONj

\ - WORTHINGTON

li-1.)

'Tuinge ~ s Dcg;;;tlr/~
, Worthington
Grange No. UO
confe rred the third and fourth deg rc- : s 11 pon a class of 15 can dida te s· last e•; e nin g at th e Lyce t1 !l,
hall. Th e re we r e five r ein s lat ,J- 1
m e n t s. The thi rd degr ee WJ-~ r
worlced by th e ladies' d egre e st a_:•
and th e fourth by th e reg ular oflt- I
ce rs both of whom did excel_l e nt I·
wot'k. "Th e "court" wa s beaut1'.u l·1 l y d ecfo·at ed with g ra sses , g rams,
·I f ru i ts ' and flow e r s and a utum_ 11
foli a g e and ev e r g r eens, sy mbol -c
, o r N ature a nd th e sea son s. \Vor- '
I th y Mas t e r Mr s. W a lte r Hi ggi 11°
J u se d tho b ea u tiful ritual or th e·
; n ew maI'_.n a l a nd th e ce r e mon y
confe rrin ;;; th e degr ees wa s car. ried &lt;'Ut wi t h di gnity and impn~;- i;
siven ess,
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:11rs. F ra nl-,- Da ~es is visit! 'l 's
r clat.ives in Bost on an d Ga r?n e r .__ ·
'I h e h ou se fo rm erly occup ied !,,.
Gu y Fitzroy at th e foo t of To w_~ 1
e r·s hill
a nd late r own ed -~.., ,
Charl es 'ward of De troit, Mic'1 ., )
h :::.s been sold to L a wre nc e _Ra:1; j
da ll of Hadl ey, a _form e r r es1dcn ,
of this town .
•
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T we nty m e mb e r s of Bash:~r. i
Hill co,mciL of Ro yal Arca n 1rn1
will accc:np a n y three ca ndid a t e\ I
Ch a r les Granger, J esse .Porte r o~ ,
Cummi11 g t.on
a nd .
·· Raym_o no
Kni g ht of C hest e r fiel d , to , Spnn g-fi eld tonjgh t, wh e r e t h ey will lk 11
1 initiated by E q uity Coun cil of th n.t l•
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J\ vety pl ea san t .m eoH1:g. of. t -1:e..

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H. Burr, Charles .A. Kilbourn, Wal-

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B . .S. wa s h eld tod ay •, at the 1
home o.r l\Irs. 'f. C. Marti n with I
l 8 present and consid erab!IJ worlt j
was accomp lished. The r.€::t m e;,·
, in g will be held one wee!, from ,o•
day, Nov. 6 , with J1~1·s . . Il aymo11d ,
, Call, wh e n a qu il t will be ti ed.
l\fr. aud Jl lrs Jo sep h E,lnkr I
•w ri "h t, who moved to ihe Lag., ,·
fa r n~ a f e w wee k a go, h a ve mov, .d
b.ick to th e ir 1· o me.
. .
.
'l'each e r s from h e re will att-e:1•1
' ui e Hampd e n co_un t ~ t each e r ; '
. conv e ntion in Sprrn g held F nd a ;. 1
:-Ii Rs J ean ette Otto or B uff 1lo I
and l\'1i ss Cat h e r in e H c r: itt _ f) f
I' i tlr; fi e l d , w h o ha ve h er- n SJ1 ::,JHl111 .:; I
seni ra l mon t h s at_ Clovrrly cn1- 1
, t :.ig&lt;' . w i' l l &lt;'a Ye Fn d a y t o rnt11n , ;
to t hei r 110mes.
0

Nov; 5.-The Women's Benevo-l
lent society will meet on Wednes- ,
day with ,Mrs.\ RaY,IDon:d Call for .
an all d a-y ·sewing meeting.
The Grange will hold a benefit
ldan·c e.fon:cs~munity eervi~ at the l
,Lyceum ball Friday
evening.
Bates' ·orchestrq. will ·play.
,
i The Frlendsli•i J Guild of the ·
Congregational church -wlll 1;11~.t
with Mrs. James. H. Burckes at
t ·h e pars onage op Thursd:Q' even1tng - when a missionary Christmas .
' · bo:x: will be packea.
There ·will be .an auction at M~r- '
rlck Smith's at 1"2 no.on on Friday,
Nov. 8, when he will dispose of
his stock a11d farming tools and
some househ.old. goods.
·
A correction should be made to
a recent item that . Herbert Smith
·bad sold to Walte r C. Powers all
· the land south of the ridge road
between the golf links and Buf\ fington hill. :Mr. Smith did not sell :
lan the mowing land, reservin.g a
portion in fron t -of his house from
which the r e i s one of the most
~autiful views in the town.

Worthington,

No v.

T~Franklln

ter H ; Tower and George E. Torrey,•

I Jr., atte~ ed the fox hun t in Blandford and the banquet in the evening.
I The Women's B enevolent s ociety

met t oda y wit h Mrs Raymond Call
fo r a n all -day sewing m eeting. 'rhere
was a fine attendance of 21 and a
pleasant time was enjoyed. The next
meeting will be h eld with Miss Bessie Ames- on Wednesday of nex t
week, November 13.
Mrs Otis H. Buck and Mr and Mre
Raymond Buck and daugh ter J anet
who' have been spending ! the ' summer at the Bue';{ homestead will close
their house and leave Saturday to
spend the winter in vVllliamsburg.
Mr and Mrs Sidney Packard of
Williamsburg have been visiting their
son Merwin F . P aclmrd and family.
The former left this morning but
Mrs Packard :will stay for a. longer
visit.
The grange w!ll meet at th a Lyceu m h all on Tuesday evening, the
12th, for election of officers. There
will be a min strel show in connection
with th e m eeting-.
Mrs N . C. T uttle of South Worthington ls the g u est of Mrs T . C.
Martin.
Mrs Leland P . Cole entertained
' two tablP..s oE bridge at h er home this
ev enin g. Prizes w er e w on by :Mrs
Francis A. Robinson and Mr s Horace
s. Cole. R efres hm ents w ere se rved.

�Worthington

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WORT HING'l'ON, Nov. 11. - The
Grange Elects Officer~
, F'rlends hl p O ulld met recently at the\&lt;..
W orthin g t on , N ov. 14--W orthin gton
parsonage , t or lt11 regular monthly J
g ran ?·e m e t a t _t h e Lyceum ha ll la.st
meeting. T h e re were 18 present. Post-1
ev ening 0&gt; nd e lec t(ld. th e fo ll owin g offica.rtlll were prepared to 11end _to · m111.
c e r s: :Ma.s t e 1·, Mrs W :i.It,er Hi ggins ·
slons a.nd bOOklet!I ma.de . A Christove rseer . W a lte r Higg in s : lecture'
mas bole for the boys and girls In Rio I\ . ,vl rs G 11 Y F . 13a rU c,tt; . ,;t ewa rd , F ran ; :
Grande InlitltUte at Albuquerque, N .
) l_m H . Bu r r ; a.smstant :.t c ward , Fra uk .
M., WM packed. The d,evotlonal ex Im G. Bu r r ; c ha plain , M r s f&lt;'ran •'
ercis.e.9 were In chll.ts·e of Mrs. ClltBates ; treasurer . Ernes t G. Thaye/
ford Tinker- a.nd Miss Irene. Mou,lttm.
ooc r e t a r y , . Ar thur G. Capen: gate '.
A conatltutlon which had been .drawn
I keepe r . V1cto1· Bernier ; Ceres Miss
up. by'' the pf:ee_ldent, . Mr11. Jamill! H;
Ir_e n e Moul ton; Pomona , Mi ss ' Mad13urcke11, WRI! 'read ·and adopted, .Plan;,
e l_m e 1; 0 wnsend ; . Flora, Miss P earl I
,vere made tor a Chrlatm11.11 entertainFi t zroy, lady ass_1stant s tewa rd, Mrs
ment and _trlle . to be held at the ChurchJ ames Knapps. Miss Josephine Hewitt
·on S\lnday !!Vt&gt;nlng, Dec. 22, with the
was elected as alterna te del~gate to I
ro1Iowln3· . COn\tnlttee11 In charge: to · , attend th_e sta te g'r an g e meeting in I
buy th. e A'ltts, oandy a nd ota_nge.11 and , ' W or ces t ei • It was voted to send al so 1
th e lectu re r- elect , Mrs Guy F . Bart- i
! raise money t-ot liame, chairm a n , Mrll, · 1
1
Leland P. C1&gt;le, Mrs. Homer ·oranger,
Iet t.
F oll ow in g t h e bu sin ess meet'! Mrs . :llben Sha w ; to p r oc ure a tree, , , mg _-a minstrel s h ow was givsn. Those I
1
set it up 11.fld trim It, c hairman, Mrs. ~ ta km g pai:t were Mrs F. A . Robinson
MollMn, Mts. lC11nrieth
~i iss MarJo r_,e ?3art1et_t, Miss fren e
1 H:a.rry · W"l
Pease; prog ram_. cornm.l ttee, chalrma.n, :Mou lton, Miss M~delme _T ow.nsend,
.Mist! Mar j orie B a rtlet t, Mrs. Danilll tt.
Mrs George E- T &lt;?rrey, J.r ., Mrs L eland
.P otter , .Mrs. Clittord Tinke r and Mrs, 1P . Cole, Mrs D a m e! R. Por ter, H erbert '
Arlin C'o ie. The n ex t m eeting will bf!
Porter,_ J ~. , J er em iah !'tobin~o_n, Daniel '
h!!ld at the pa.r11onage Dec '- 5 whi!ln
R. Poi t et ; Ralp h Smit h, ·F ran klm G.-1
otticer11 ~m ht elected . 'l'he' hO!!t~ss ei&lt; , I B u rr, _Law ren ce Mason a nd l\_f rs Guy
will be ·M:rll , L ela.]id P. Cole and Mrs, , F. Ba 1tlett, mter locu tor. ,, .
Daniel lt. P orte r. Leader Mrs . StanTwenty m em_bers ~f the W omen's
ley ·CoJe. , _
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,. B en e v ole nt s ociet y m_e t yes t&lt;:rday to
Tli·. G
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; I sew at the h om e of Miss B essie Am es
• _e
range Will meet on Tue1iday I 1 The · nex t m eeti ng will be lield w ith ·
eve~.1 hg In L yce~m Hall_ fOr election ,,- Mrs· H erber t G. P orte r on W edn esday,
,;of ofttcers, f9l low m g w hich there will 1· N ov ember 20.
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he a. '!11)nst_rel ~how . . .
.
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Miss W innifred c. P a rkhu rst. g en - 1
_T h e Womens r _Benevolent Soclej:y I ez,ai s ecretary of th e dist,r ict Y. w.
will _meet on ¥. edneMay ,1Ylth Ml~s i c. A. of W es t ern Massachusetts win
_B ess,,e Ames for an 11.ll•~ay 11ewlng I meet the wom en in te rested in handi- I
meet1_n _g .
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craft at M rs H a rry w. Mollison's on
The . Orange whll!lt club WIii meet . Monday e-vening at- 7.
Thursday e v enlh!I' with Mr. arid Mrs. ~ - - -- · _ _ _ _ __ _ _
'Walter H . To'w er.
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There :will be .a. dance at Lyecum
Hall Frida y evening. Batei!'. Orche11tra . ,
W ORTHINGTON
Will
plil.y.
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· Marion L. Bartlett rot. . Spring. Wort hmg ton, N ov. 15-Merrtck A•

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.·field spent the w.eek •.en.d at her home, 1 Smith has sold .his h erd ot 14 cQ_ws to
• Mr. and Ml'II, HRtd
Pease hti.V!!&gt;
• '
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closed th1lr aummer hotn~ and re-, a man in ,G reat B a run g on, a so s
turnM to New York .
\ ca1ves to ot h er out-of-town parties.
J\.
Mr and Mrs W a lter H . Tow er en•
1
t er t a !J;1ed th e G r a nge Whist club. at 1,
their h om e last ev enin g. Elev en tables
we re in pl ay: Th e fi rst prizes w ere won
by Mrs Charles A. K ilbourn a nd ~o- i
mer Granger and the consolat10-;i
prize by Beatrice Bea~~r.!'.~ - - -

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�WORT'Hl'NGTON

WO ltTHIN GTON
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Wo1·thin gto11, · · Nov.
18- A
clay
pigeo n s h oot was h e ld Satu rday aft er- I
1n oon a t t h e' h om e
of Ch a r le·s W.
1
T ower. S ides were c h osen with seven
on . a side firin g 20 rou n ds each.
Lea de r s, · E ben L. Sh1iw and / Walt er
· Smith , the former s ide winning 72 to
70. Charles A. K ilbourn of th is t own '
-and Eniest Dodge, of Chesterfie ld h eld
th e hi g·hest ind ividual score each
s hooting 14. Guests w ere presen t fro m
Pittsfield, Greenfi eld Etnd Ches te rfield.
Fourteen m e mbe rs of the W orthin gton grnng-e and une n on -me mbe r, Le- .
la nd P. Cole, J r ., went to Southamp- '
ton },~J'iday to a c l1urch socia l and
su pper a nd r ep eat ed the mins t r e l
shu w wh ich w as given h e r e T ue8d a y
1 eve ning.
1
Th e W om e n·s B ene\"o]e nt society
will m eet un W ed n esday with Mrs
Het·bert I. Portet· for a n a ll dn y se wing meeting, it b &lt;;ing thought ad visable
to h o ld weekl y instead of fort nig htly
m eeti n gs while th e fi ne w eath er lasts.
Mr and Mrs Stephen Olesak won
t h e $5 gold pi ece given to th e b es t
dan cers in the prize w a lt z at the L y - I
ceum h a ll Frid ay even ing. These
tlances a re c ond ucted by Hal'ry W.
. Mo lli s?n e very other week alterpat1n g with th e Grange dance .
,
V irg inia R ea d; the little 19 months '
olcl da ugh ter of Mr and Mrs Clinton F.
R ead ~f this to \\fn, won the first prize 1
of a s ilver spoon at a b a by s how at
t h e G irls' leag ue in Pittsfield y ester!ia.Y afte rn oon. --. There were 60 cont esta nts.
'
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WORT.HINGTON

I

W orthi'ngton , Nov, 19-Mrs T . Comm erfor d Ma rtin gave a l uncheon a t 1•
h er h om e yesterday in honor of Mrs
F rederic k E_. Judd . of Southam p ton
an d Mrs Bailey of N orth a mpton who
a r.e in_terested in forming a Worthi ngon district Rep ublican club.
.
T he Grarige will hold an old-fash- .
01: ed dance at- the. Lyceum hall on
. rtday when all of the favorite old- ,1
time da nces wlll b'e included in 'the
progra m.
.
The m ee ting o_f the Y. w . c. A.
, h a nd,i cr aft club at · Mrs R. w . Mo! ' !Ison s h as bee n pos tpo ned until S turday at l .30.
a

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Nov. 19 ,, -Those ot the older
generation ot dancers wm enjoy
renewing old acquaintance , w1 th
,the dances ot their day, at the
I 'Gr&amp;nge dance at .t he Lyceum hall
,, Friday: evening. To the youn-g er
.' .set the rouowing program wm
·have all the charm ot novelty:
'! Waltzes, Just One Girl, On the
Sldewa1ks ot New York, My Wild ·
1ris-h Rose, Medley ot Old Waltzes,
Where the River Shannon Flows·,
Good Old Summer Time, Merry
Widow Waltz, Waltz Me Around
Again Willie. Among the fox
, trots will be : Camp Meeting
Time, Whistling Rufus, Red Wing
!and Snow, Dear, Sweet Cider
Time, In the Good Old Belchertown, Sweet Sixteen and Jovial
I
\Joe,

WORTHINGTON .
Worthington, Nov. 21-Mr 1and Mrs
Webb Stevens of Rockford, UI., will
arrive tomorrow to visit his uncle,
1 Cullen L. Steven s at Stevens ville.
There was a large gatheri n g of the
Wom en's Benevolen t society yesterday
at th e home of Mrs Herbert G. Porter,
26 bein g present. So m uch work has
been a ccomplished that it h a s been
decided to hold ·a sale of some of the
articles for Ch~istmas
g ifts at the
next meeting which will be hell) at
the home of the president, M iss Susan Hice D e c e mber 4.
Peter Kent left today to spend the
winter with relatives in Stratford, Ct.
There will be a service at the library on Sunday
evening at 7.30
whe n ste reo ptico n views of "The
Pilgrims in the Wilderness" Will be
shown.

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The Rainbow cl b [ · h R '.
will hold ~hei~ ih~n~: :rvside
e":e:_cis~s tomorrow afternoon~ ng
o,,r~m i n c na rge of Dor is P ome~ohe
, f-1arvisf ftYder a nd Evelyn Corbeit
' t~ as 11001ows: Song, "America " by
1e sc
. ;
r ea ding of• gove ;·n ,
I P.ro cl a m a.t1on,
Dorothy
Corb or ~
Hello, Mr Turkey," Mabel Edw ett,
T ower;
'"T ha nksglv~:~:
1 ~oro~hys
a rv1s nyd er;
Thanksgivin
'
by t h e sch,ool; " Th e Pilgrims' tt~"n!
I Jean Joyal ; "We Tha uk Thee,'' Dry,_
0
, 1 ~d dPorr:e~oy;
"Thanksgivin g ~ t
"1.;an m as,
Evelyn Corbett; pla y
I
om my and Ann e Are 1.'h a nkful ,;
: ~harac:;rs, " T ommy," Marvis Snyde;;
Anne,
Doro.~hy Joyal; " S pi rit of
! .':J1~~~g 1';',11
Ev elyn
Corbett,
.
.
Y,
re,': J o:i;al ;_ "Prudence,"
D o;,sE~otneroy. A Pilgrim Boy," Al, oer · ,, wards; "Thanksgiving a t the
,, riar~: · ~ames Murphy; "Landing of
/e 11gnms, " _D_oro::' Y Corbett; "Th e
Fir st ?;'han k sg1vmg, Hele n Pom eroy ;
;ong, Why Mr G obbler Changed H is
• une." Follow ing the program games
wlll be p layed and refres hm e nts served. -. rhe paren ts are invited.
1
'
• ~here :,vm lie a.,,dance on Thanksgivm~ ni g ht a t th e L yceum hall.
Bates orches tra w 1!1 pla y.
The . gran ge whhi st club wlll meet
on Frida y evenir,g at Guy F. Bartlett's.
News has b een received of the
death on Frida y of Eliza b eth L y m a n
d a u g h ter of D ( and M r s Willia m R.
1;1 L y m 3:n of D owagiac, Mich., form erly
1 of this town . D eath ·was d ue to lnI fec tion ..
- - - . -- - - - - - - - - - - - - --,-,
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•

W ORTJIINGT ON

~
-Among the
V'jorthingt~n, -;ing gatherings on
m any Than~fg~e t he fo llowin g : Mr.
Thursday wi cer parrish and fa mily,
and Mrs. Sp en
er and Fred FairMrs Arthur nd
Gr~fs Harry L . Bates's ;
man at Mr a
ens a nd Culle n L.

! ~choo_l

Ir,

°

Mrs Myr\ RM/3~;d Mrs Ed. Coles's
Stevens a
t · Mr and Mrs
on Highl a nd s tt~; a nd Mrs Will Ernest Th,a~erwss Marion L. Bartard J o~ e~~Jis Dorothy F. Bartfett of
Jett_ anfi Id Guy F Bartlett of GreenSprmg e 'nd Mrs· Lester C. LeDuc
field,h M~-e~eld a t "The Spru ces" ; Mr
of1 C .:Frs Harry
Ed&lt;lY, Henry and
~1lip Eddy and Mi$s Sarah Lane of
Florence and Mr and Mrs John Mccart,y a nd two c hildren of 'North amJton at Mr and Mrs Walte r H.
T ower 's ·
Mi~s Josephine
Hewitt,
Grosnov'er H ewi t t, Mrs T. C . Marti n
and son Commerford Martin of Cornell university at Miss N . S. Heacock's ; Miss D. M. Van Wye and·
·Ernest H errick of Springfield at Dr
a nd Mrs Francis A. Robinson's • Miss
Carrie W. P orter of Springflei'd and
Miss Elizabeth Porter of Storrs, Ct.,
and Mr and Mrs D a niel R. Porter at
Mr and Mrs Herbert I. Porter's; Mr
a nd Mrs Stanley Scyzepaniack and
family of Pittsfield at Mr and Mrs
Ste.phen Oleksaks.
Among those spending Thanksgiving out of town will be Mrs George
Russell · at her son's Joseph Russell's
in East Loongmeadow; Miss Susan
'.l ". Rice wh'o will spe nd . the hoiiday.
with Mt and Mrs William G. Rice
of Albany, N .. Y. ; Miss B essie Ames
at Mr and Mrs John Ames of West- ·1•'
WORTH~N GTON
fi eld ; Mr and Mrs Leland P . Cole and
son Leland, a.nd Mr and M rs w. M.
? ha~ks?lvlng Exetclses In Schools
Shaw at Mr-. and Mrs. P h ilip G u r ,: W orthmgton , N ov. 28-The gramn ey's_ in _Ashn e ld ; Mls:;i Mo~ely wit h ' m a r ,a nd t h e prim a ry schools at the
re_latives m Newto·n ; Mrs NJl'C. Tut tle
Oorn e r s h eld Tha nk sgiving exercises
with her dau ghter, Mrs R,.uth Tuttle, 1j at the L yceum h a ll y esterday afterand her grand children
Windsor
n oon at 2.30, unde r the direct ion of
Ct.
.
' ' th e ir t ea che rs, Miss Irene Moulton
Mr and Mrs J ohn Ames of West- . a nd Miss M a d eline Town send with the
fi eld spent the w ee k-e nd in town.
r assista n ce of Mrs Ge orge E. Torrey,
1
The grange
w ill meet
at the • Jr., supervisor of music. There
Lyce um hall t om or row evening with .a g.:&gt;od a ttenda n ce and the entertain- --~
-·..
the program in c h arge of the com- ·;ment w as cred itable to bo th pupils 1•,
mu mty service committee.
land t eachers. The program: Thanks- ,vi
:A lesson o n t he m a k ln}s of Christ- g i ~ so n g , p r im a ry s chool; r ecita- ,1
mas cards and bo okpla t es was given lt ici n, "Tha nl, ful Gld," Irene Hath- ·
to a gro u p of 14 w om e n a t the home away; ·s on g. "Jam Pots," Janet Siinpof Mrs. Harry W . W oll1son .on S a t- 1s on , -Helen M. B a rtlett, Ruth Wright,
urda y afternoon b y Miss Wi n nifred 1Ma ry Elllen Rea d, J eane tte Wr\gh t
C, Parkhurst of Nort h a mpton g e n- ,a nd
Iren e
Hathawa y ;_
recitation
era! secretary of the dis tric t y_' w. c . !"Thanksgivin g D ay," Ma r shall G0odA. Many clev er designs were sh own 1,win; s o n g , Eugen e B ernie r; recita~d t h e demonstrft.tio n was followed ,lti on "Tomorrow," H enry Hathaway;
with k een interest. On exhibi tion and . j1r e cita t io n
"At Gra;ndma's," Arthur
for sale was a fine coll ecti on of im- G oodwin; Thanksgiving song, g ramoorted n ec}daces a nd b r a cel e ts.
m a r s c hool; . play "The
Minister's
Dream " by ooth schools.
Mr a nd Mrs Clem ent F. Burr spent
Th a nksgiving with Mr and Mrs Frederick H . Burr and family iri E asth a mpton. Mr a nd Mrs W infred S. 11
Dra ke w e nt to Orleans, Vt., to s pend
th e h olid a y with h er parents, Mr a nd
Mi·s Wilbur Scott. Mr al'\d Mrs J oseph Wrig ht had as theil' guests Mr
and Mrs Jam e s Knap p.

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1"ir

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WORTHINGTON -

Worth ington, Dec. 2-About 35 new
pooks ha ve been added to the Frederc k Sa rgent Huntington llbrary and
will be on ex hibitton W ednesday, In
the evening at 8 at the library r eviews of some of the new books will
be given by Mrs ,yrnn Cole Mrs Homer 9ra nger, Mi ss Marjorl~ I. Bartlett, Mrs Fra nklin H. Burr, Miss Josephiq e H ewitt, Franklin G. Burr,
Miss Irene Moulton, Miss Madeline ,
T own send, R ev James H . Burckes,
Mrs Daniel R. Porter a nd two school
children. There will be vocal and Instrumental music.
'The Women's Benevolent , society
will meet on Wednesday with Miss Susa n T. Rice a t "The Maples." It will
be an a ll-day meeting.
The Friendship Guild will meet on
Thursday evening at the parsonage
for its regula r monthly meting and
election 'of officers.
T he grange will hold a benefit
dance for community service at the
L yceum hall Friday evening, A prize
will be given to the hold;-~f a
number.
The grange Whist club will meet
Saturday 13vening with Mr and Mrs
Charles A. Kilbourn.
An evening in the Williamsburg l
church under the auspices of the l
Ha m psh ire H i gh I and Interchurch l
imion w ill be1 held on the 6th with l
re presen tatives attendin g from the
agencies co-operating for the ctim.\
mon welfare. A supper for the dele.·gates will be served at 6 by the WB- 1
-!ia msburg chu rch women, There will i
be after-dinner speaking with Charles ,
Bisbee of Chesterfield presiding. Sing- I
ing will be in charge of the church '
c hoir. Su pt L. A. Merritt and Miss !'
Ann D umphy, principal of the Williamsburg Hi gh school, will speak on,
"Our Schools." Arthur ' G. Capen, librarian of th e Frederick Sargent
Huntington library at Worthington,
will speak on, "Our Libraries.'' There
will also be speakers f rom th e county
farm extension service and the
grange, to b'e announced.
,
Miss Blanche Spurr. assis tant county club agent visited the cooking club
at the parscln'a ge Saturday 'afternoon.
The cooking club girls prepared and
, served supper.

~·woRTHINGTON
Worthington, Dec. 5- Homer Dodg~
ot Northampton is ·spending a week
with his parents, Mr and Mrs George
T. Dodge of Jlingville.
Mrs Otis H. Buck is ill 9i.t the h ome
of h er son, R a ymond P, Buck of Wil-,
llamsburg. Mrs N ellie Shipma n Hollis of this town is caring f or her,
Th e following n ew b ooks ha ve been
add ed to the llbrary : "Temple Tower,"
by McNeile; "Young Mrs Greeley," by
Tarkington; "Homeplace," by Chap.
man; "Visitors to Hugo," by Rosman:
"Tragic Era," by Bower ~; "Roper's
Row," by Deep!ng; "Box Hill Mu rder"
by Fletcher; "Listening Post," by
Richmond ; "By Soocbew W a t ers," by
Miln; "Lone Tree," by Wilson; "The
Best Continental Short Stories of 19242:,," edited by R icha rd E a ton ; "Best
European Short Stories of 1928," by
Eaton; "Fish Preferred," by Wode' house ;
"Ma theson
F ormula," by ·
Fletcher ; "Ba mbi," by Salten ; "Sun
Cure," by N oyes ;' 'Six Mrs Greenes,"
by Era; "All Quiet on the Western
Front," by Remarque; "The Merivales," by McCutcbeon; "Burning
Beauty," by Bailey ; "Further Poems
of Emily Dickinson" ; "Red Silen ce" by
Norris; "Bladed Barrier," by Ames ;
"Johnny Reb," by Deml er ; "Fool E rrant," by Wentworth; "Flg hting Caravans," by Grey; "Jim t he Conq ueror,"
by Kyne ; "People W\11 Talk," by Runbeck; "Early Ca ndl'elight, by L ovelace; "Splendor of God" Morrow;
"Melancholy Tale of 'Me, " by Sothern
"Bible Talk's for !:Ieart and Mind,"
"Accident," by Bennett ; "Abraham
Lincoln," by Charmwood.

At Worthington
The first two days of the deer sea.son resulted in five kills in this town.
Sheridan Dodge shot. a doe on Mon1
day weighing 175 pounds, and Angelo 1-Iirandy of Whately a nine-point
buck. Harold Hathaway of Rfo gville
killed a 200-po411d buck Tuesday with
seven points; George Ha thawa y of
ICold street, a. fa wh ·weighing about 75
pounds, and Walter Smith a spike1horn buck of about 130 pounds.

~- -- l
l',hcst•e1· D od g e

1

Many Deer Killed

In Hampshire Hil\

Ko rth am pt n n Dec. 10- The follow- ,
ing is a li~ t o r de ~r k illing-s in Ch es - 1
tc ;•fl.c ld last ,~.1~0k, some of wh ic h bn.ve
been ,prev iously reported : ,v mia m

Brooks or F'l orence, 100-pound bu ck ; 1
W alt er 'J' o w e i• -0f W 0 1·thington , 12u p ound t.1 00: G ~ol'gC Turrey, ,Tr._, . of
')Vort lt in~ t un, J a0-po:rn d buck; Wlll -

fie]d Til1 oades , 100 -pouncl doe; l,e roy
~ t anton , 1.5 0- p o und
bu c k ;
~rn t s t
F'isJ, . ~Q O. p oun ,1 bu c k ; D a vid L cDuc,
1 2:i -po 1111Cl d oe; r :a l p h I ,0Du c o f

l:lol- \

v n kc, JO O-po un d b uc k ; Er n est Co w pe r
b u ck ; anG. J os(• ph Pash,
~luC:c

:,oo- p ou n d

Ol

Wot thin g ton shot

1

d oe a t
Wu, thi ngton
W c!\ nes day, a nu h i.s brot her, Il umer '
o t N o rt h ampto n , loll crl a JOO - p o1t1Hl
, c oe at W o, t h,n gtun Tinn sdny . Wil- '
J, n m A. \ Ve1L1hans uf E ns tl w.mpt on
n

J OO-p o u nd

k1ll ed a 100 -r,ound bu cl,
l1c1 mplo n yest erday.

a t West- ,

�woRTifINGT ON

I

.·
~ - T h e Frie nd Worthington ,
•th Mrs Jam es H
ship gui ld met WI
.
•
- Burclrns at the parsonage Friday eve.
After the ,sewing hour devo~{g;;,_l exer.cises were l~d by Mrs
Marshall Goodwin. The mission stu dy
1 for the evening was India, !n charge
of Mrs Daniel R. Porter, various
members taking part.
A business
meeting followed. Officer~ e lected :
President, Mrs James H. Bul'(;kes ;
vice-president, MISS Madellne Townsend ; secretary, Miss Irene M o ul ton;
treasurer, Mrs George E. T oney. Jr.;
committees, program, Mrs D anie l R.
Porter and Mrs Leland P . Cole ; soclal, Mrs Harry W . Mollison and Mrs
Francis A. Robinson ; project, Mrs
James H. Burckes and Mi'ss Elsie V.
Ba rtlett; to remember shut-in s, Mrs
Eben L. Shaw.
It was voted that the
members meet at the church Friday,
the 20th at 2 p . m ., to decorate the
church fdr Christmas Sunday.
An
, entertainment,
arranged
by
Mrs
Homer Granger consisted In an exchange of Christmas gifts, Christmas
carols were sung around a lighted
tree and refreshmen ts w e r e served.
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\VORTHINGTON

MRS. JULIA PORTER BUCK
D ec. 13-Mrs. Julia f'
!luc k , 77, died last night at the
h o111 e of her son , Raymond P .
Buck, of Vall ey View, Williamsburg , a[ter a f e w mouths' IIJrieas
wit It congestion of the liver, Mrs. !
Buck was born in Cummi ngton rn !
1 8 52 , the daughter of M!Hon an,J l·
Louoi Rka (Hume.} Porter . After
! h er -maniage ·i,o Otis H . Duck of
i th is tuwn, she c-cme to live at the l
Buck homest.ea·d in Worthington .
Since his death s evera l years a;g ,) , .
she h as spent h er winters with I
h e1· childr en . Sh e w&amp;s a member!
of the Women's Ben evol en t socie -1
·. ty a:1d of the, Wo r th in gton Con-·!
gr e;::·,t li onaJ church , of w hich her i
husband \. as a deacon. She took
a n actl\·e particl :·ation in the wel - :
fare c;f bo th and was characteriz(,d
'b y. a ki ndl y Interest an d consider- 1
a ti on for all w ho m she kn ew. She
\ vlll be g reatly .inissed. She leave;;
W ORTHINGTON
one bro th er , Ralph M. P orter, of
Cummington; a daughter, Mrs.
Worthington, Dec. 9-The grange
Laura B. Cla r,p of -H ampd en, Ct.;
whist club met Saturday evening at
a. so·u , Raymond
Buck , o_f Wilthe home of Mr and Mrs Charles A.
Kilbourne and played 10 tables. The 11 lia m sb urg, and two grandchildren, 1
first prizes were won by Mrs Joseph
Nancy· Buck a nd Myrti s Clapp,
E. Wright and H. Stanley Cole and
The funeral _.will he held at I,
the consolation prize by Herbert Portlie Worthington Congr egationa l
ter, Jr.
church Sunday afternoon · a t ·2
Nine members
of Worthington
• o ;cl ock, .· Rev. ,J ames H. Burckes
gr ange, Mr a nd Mrs Carl Loveland,
Mrs · Frank Bates, Mrs Henry Snyder,
officiating. Bu)'jal will be In t he
Mr and Mrs Walter Higgins, Mr and
. fa_mil y "iot in '.Ce:,.ter cem eter y,
Mrs Edwat'd J . Clark and Mrs Guy F.
•·Worthington.

i

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B a rtlett attended the meeting Of Pomona grange Saturday in Huntington ,
Mrs Bartlef t taklni:- the fifth degree.
The W omen's Benevolent society
will meet on Wednesday with ·Mrs
Charles A, Kilbourn for an all-day
meeting.
Mrs Walter Hh:-i:-lns. worthy master
of the Worthington grange, 'J!,f.rs· Guy
F. Bartlett. lecturer-elect and M.r and
Mrs Carl Loveland, b oth · past masters,
will attend the meeting o! the st4te
grange In Worcester this week.
Waite, H. Tower o! this town shot
a doe In Chesterfield Saturday weighIng dressed about 120 pounds. Chester
· Dodge shot a 100-pound doe on
Wednesday and his brother, Homer 11
Dodge o! Northampton, also shot a doe
Thursday weighing about 100 pounds.
•. Mrs John Martin or New Britain, '
Ot., is visiting Mrs T. Cornmer!ord
Martin.

J

�A/w4 ifn/JZ-~t

f/u"h~
,r/J1l1 • P:1tn; ~

~(;

tt.K,:..... -

_WORTHINGTON
, Dec. 18.-A son was born Dec.
· 15· to Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B. I
Pease of Worthington-- Cent e-r. A community tr'ee has been
erected on t h e ·c .o mmon M Worthington C orn e r s -by H afry L, 1
Bates and _W i n fred E. D'I:ak e: :Th e
. tree will _be li ghted throu gh the
generosity of Jl,J erwin F. Pactard .
Rehearsals are in progress for
the entertainment for the Su n day
school , sponsored by t h e Fri e n dship Guild, which ,vill be gh·en at ,
th e Congregational church on Sm,,
day evening, Dec. 22nd , fo1· . the , Sunday scJ1 ool.
· .·
'j
The Rain bow' club of th e Tiiverside school wiH hold its Chrisr-n.ra ~i
exe rcises on Friday aJ t e i· no l&gt;n
Dec. 20. Th e cominittee in c:1arg1:
of the program is:
C hai r man ,
James Murphy; Dorothy Co1:1Jett 1
and Donald . Pomeroy;
p rng r a m : ,
Son~ Christmas Time is Corn in g ; '
Litt!; Joy B e lls , Mab e l E&lt;l,•; ard~ I
and Dorothy Tow e r ; Santa Enows ,
Alfre d Joyal; songs, Wind Thru
th e Olive Trees a nd Sil e nt .'iig ht ,
Holy Night ; Th e Birdi es' Messa g e , Dorothy Joyal ;
C hri s t m,a ~ ,
Tim e Alb e rt Edward s ; . W he n I m 1
a Gr;wn U p "Lady , Ev e ly n C orbe tt; son gs , 0
Little TO\~n of
B e thl e h e m and San ta ' s C oming ; '
High Upon a ¥ il sid e , Donal d Pom e roy ; In B e thl e h e m T o wn , '.lfa~·I vis Snyd e r , J ean Joyal , Dorff
P om e roy 1· Th e No r th , v ind, .J a m e~ '
Murpliy ; son g , T o morrow W il l B•· 1
C hri s tm as.
1

,WORTHINGTON - ~ (
Worthin g ton", D ec. 27-Mr s T. c.
Ma rti n a nd son, Comer ford, are vis.
!Ung . r ela tives in Ph lladelp hla for a
few days.
Severa l from this t own attended the
Chris tma s ex ercises a t t h e church Jn
Chesterfield on Christmas night . . In terest wa s cen tered In t h e play, "Good
Kin g Wences las," written by M!'ss
Katherine McDowell Rice of this town
a nd g iven under t h e direction of Mrs
Lester C. Le D ue. Mrs Le Due, !orm erly Miss Alice Bartlett of this town ,
took t he leading par_t in this play when
Miss -Rice first produoed it in this
town.
T he . Misses Elsie V. and Marion L.
Bartlett are vlsi ting in Chesterfield and
Greenfield.
T h e sbbject of the stereopticon pictures to be giv en at the libra r y S unday evening by the pastor, Rev James
H. Burckes, will be; "Voyagin g Among
th e Philippines,"
.
j Mr an~ Mrs Mer.wi n F. ~ackard a_nd
th ree children sJ'fent Christ mas · with
Mr and Mrs Sidney Packard of Wil liamsburg.
Mr and Mrs Stephen Oleksak were
gu ests of Mr Olesak 's mother in W estfie ld on Christmas.
Among the holiday diners h ere were
the following: Mr and Mrs Walter
· M. Shaw enterta ined Mr anq, "M rs
Philip Gurney and daughter, Barbara,
of Ashfield, Miss D oroth y . Sha w of
Ashfield, Mr a nd Mrs Eben Shaw and
daughter, Doris, of W es t \ Vorth ington , Mr ai, d Mrs E rne st 11'.tcCloud and
three children of Cumm ington a nd Mr
arid Mrs Lel a nd P . Cole a nd son. Mr
a nd Mrs J oseph E . ·wright en tertaineo
Mr and Mrs James Knapp. Mr and
Mrs W a lter Towm· had a s their .g uest~
Mr and Mr.s H erbert T ower a nd daught er, Edith, of Springfield. and llfr a nd
J\Irs Cullen T ower a nd two children of
Thompsonvill e, Ct.
lllr a nd Mrs
Ch a rles A . Kilbourn enter tail}ed Mr
Charles W . Tower , Mr a nd Mrs Henry
Ba tes, Mrs Arthur Gra nger and Fred
F.jl-lrma n_. Mr and Mrs Guy Bartlett
A(l terta ined D r and Mrs Fra ncis A.
Eobinson of this town e.nd Franklfn
Clark of Ch ester fi eld.
The Grang e W hist club will meet
with Mrs Guy F. Bartle t t on Sa turday
ni g ht f or th e ben efit of t h e g range
Ne ..- Year pa r ty, which w ill be h eld
at Lyce um ha ll th e 31s t.

l

�··~

WORTHINGTON
TWO CHRISTMAS SERVICES
Morning and Night Programs Given
at Congregational Church
Worthington,

Dec.

23-Chrlstmas

was observed at the Congregational

church yesterday morning by a
Christmas sermon by Rev James H.
Burckes, who tQDk as his s c ripture
r eading the nlntlt chapter of St Luke.
A duet "The Stnr of Bethlehem," was
sung by Mrs Leland P . Cole a nd Mrs
George E. Torre y, Jr., and: a quartet
composed of Mrs Francis A. Robinson,
l\Irs Leland P. Cole, Mrs George E.
Torrey, Jr., and Miss Marjorie I.
Bartlett sang "Asleep in the Mange r."
A large tree decorated for the night
meeting and 12 sma ll Christmas trees
for shut-ins formed the. decorations.
The 4-H club boys and girls had assisted with the small trees, the boys
setting them in standards and the
girls making a Christmas cake for
each one.
The service at 7.30 p. m. included
the singing of Christmas carols by a
chorus of young peqple and a .p antomime, "The, First Noel'.' ; a reading,
"Holy Silent," by Mrs Daniel R. Porter; solo, "O, holy Night," · by Mis2
Dorothy F. Bartlett; motion song,
"Away in a Manger," by Leland P.
Cole, Jr., and singing, "Joy to the
World,'.' ·by the audiehce, ·and d!sfribution of gifts by )'lanta~ _.C laus. The
program was in charge of Miss Marj orie G. Bartlett and Mrs Leland P.
Cole,

Operetta: Is Given

Worthington, Dec. 23-The operetta,
"The Old ·woman Who Lived in · a
fi hoe," and the schoo1 ··Christmas tree
at the Lyceum hall Thursday evening
in charge of Mrs George E. Torrey,
Jr., music supervisor, Miss Madeline
Townsend
high
grammar • school
teacher and Miss Irene Moulton, primary school teacher, drew a crow.d ed
house. The operetta in charge of Mrs
Torrey showed much work and carefu l training and the children asleep
in their beds made a charming picture
as little eyes· strove to keep shut and
fac es straight. Dor-0thy Corbett as'
"Goody Green" took the part of the
mother, Robert Bartlett was. Santa
Clau s; mothe1· goose, Helen Pomeroy;
fairy
god-moth e r,
Donna
·wade;
fai ries, Helen Bartlett, Mary P. Burr,
Janet Simpson, Mary Ellen Read and
Irene Hathaway;
Santa
Clau:,es,
Marshall Goodwin, Arthur Goodwin,
George Brown, Roger Burn and Philip
Drake ; Plckanlnny Pete, Leland · P.
Cile,
Jr, ; the chl!dr.en . w.ho, lived in the
8
oe, Walter Mollison , Donald Mollison, Franklin Bartlett, Da:Qlcl Read,
Ruth Wright, A gullda Gagnon Eugene B arnicr, Harriet Higgin; and
Harold Brown. The danc e of the
fairies and solos by Leland P . · Cole; I ~
Jr., and Eugene Burn ler w ere f ea-·
~~rest or the pro gram. Following the
ere8 ta was t h e tree wlth a S 8'}ta
• who distributed gifts to all t h e
1~ ren.
Mr
'• .. ·· ·
visit1n
Mrs Clement F. Burr are
In . Sprg fleir son, Dr Walter E. Burr
Ill~ eld.

;~f

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'

Miss Els ie V. Bartlett, who has
·been spending a w eek in Northampton, has returned to her home.
M iss Sophie RojP, left toda y to spend
Ch r istmas with relatives at Holyoke.
Miss Ma rion ,.L . Ba rtle tt of Springfi eld, Miss Dorothy F. Bartlett and
Mi ss H a n-let Mag argal of the High
S chool of Commer ce a'nd W illiam
Gag hon of T ec hnica l High school,
Sprin g fi eld; Fo rd Ma rtin ot C'o rnell
university , H elen P a rish a nd Phyll is
P a ris h o f Hunting ton High school,
L ela nd Smith of Ch e's t er High school,
Don a ld Ma son, Clyde Byrnes a nd
Thomas · M c Ewe n ot Northampton,
and Gerald B ates o( .Greenfleld High
school 'will spend Christmas at tlieir
., homes.
.
Mrs Raymond Call enttrtained 11
g u ests . at .a Venison steak dinner at
her hom e .Saturday night in honor ol
Hugh Coleman. 'l'he elec tric light m en
who have been boarding at Mrs _Call's
prese nted her an elee!trlc percolator
·set and also presented Mr Coleman a
brief case.

.I

'\'vo rt11i1]glo n, D ec. 30- Mrs I, e nncth I
B. Pease a nd infant s on, J ,, m e8 Ed- /
win, r e turn ed from No ble hospita l.
W es tfi eld, Friday.
Miss Marg u e rit e Johnson of Dalton
called on friends in town today,
At the benefit whist par't y h eld
Saturday eve ning Mrs Daniel Port er
and '\Valter M. Shaw won first prizes
and Mrs Francis A. Robinson and
Leland P. Cole, Jr., won consolation
prizes.
·
Miss Dorothy Shaw and Miss Rena
McCloud returned · to Ashfield today 11-i'
after visiting with relatives.
·
There was a meeting of the Lo yal
Ladies Sati.irday evenin'g at Lyceum
hall. The supreme regent, Mrs Per' kins of Dalton, 'and past regent, Mrs
I/ Bromley or Springfield, were present.
· The following officers were elected :
Regent, Mrs '.\1:ay Kilbourn; vicer~gen t , Mrs Imogene Cole ; past reg e nt, lVIrs 1-larriet ' IIig-g·~ns; orator.
Mrs Ethel Parish; secretary, Harriet
Magargal: treqsurer, Mrs Ma,t,~he...
Osgood; guid e, · ·Mrs Reba vMagargal;
chaplain. i\'l.1,s,..J,,,~-0y- Mtt'111son; warden. t
Ma~ Hathaway~ trustefs, Mrs Len ,~
Thaye r, lllrs George Dodge, l\frs Ame lia Higg ins. The third Saturday in
.Janua ry has been selected as the timf'
to institute. initiat e and instal.

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                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook, 1929, No. 3. Dark grey scrapbook with flexible report covers. 'Clippings' in gold.  Contains newspaper clippings from July through December 1929 providing a historical record of events in Worthington with numerous references to town residents and organizations. The material has been processed through optical character recognition so it is text-searchable and has an interactive table of contents.</text>
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                    <text>/13

D

/
if ORTHINGTON

I

,·WORTJUNGTO~
I

. . •

.

•

.

.

.I

·, • J·'
N , y . ,8 Jc" II
.
Worthmgton, Jan.· 3-The ·gqµig e
Grang·e ,.as 1 e"
ear · ro c '
Wllis t cl-ub will meet Saturday eveJ ,
Worthington, Jan. 2--'-The gran~lo\ !
, . ,,_ nin g with Mrs '£. C. Martii;i..
'
met Tp esday eve ning a t the - Lyce um 11
•
q:'he I Fr~(lu_d$h'IP . gulld ol"_ the• C~mh . 11 f6 r its regul ar meeting and . 1: ·,
:gregat1.on:;1,i church met t his evei:nng
...,...
a
•. .
.
.
.·
• ·with · Mrs J ames · H. ·Burckes at the
N ew _Ye:ir s ev,, ll'UJ.C. A rep~t·t of t h ~
parsonage. The wor){ period in charge
._
. meetmg. _of, :he. st ate grnnge . at
o! the prn~ect coniinlttee was followed' !
____; Worce~te1 was giv en_ by t):Je wo, _th Y
'I · by . the devotional ,service. 1'1-d by Miss
i master, Mrs Walter Higgins; The n~ll
(
Elizabeth Tofrey.· th e, educit~fo ~'
was u~cun.1.ted wJLh buuouns a nd l es\
' gram in charge ' o't Miss, ?,irurjorie Barttooncl of crepe paper. After the m ee t -.
,.· . , . , .
ing an inf ormal dance with Miss. Pear l __ J_ _ _
l e~t and the social . period, 1n charge of
Fitz~oy as pi'a nist and, Walter . M.
t Mrs Har.ry \V. "Mollison. ?'he _hostSha.», prompter, was enj.Qyedt an.~..
M
e ssesLwlered lVpfr,sCr~ ,A. I Robmson ~nq,
, games were played; the ftlcora:,tions
r{l . e 8:n
, . o~~•
. ,_ ·
and programs be ing iri charge of the
___ ,_, . Mrs Hiram H1ggms ,hsl,S . received
I
- - - - - - Misses Marjorie and :o·oro thy Bai:tl~t(
., _wQrd o{ ·,the · qe~th. lai,t night ·at BelRefreshments were served. · It wab
r lows·. ;Falls, _Vrt. ,1 of . her .·brother,. John
announced ·that ori ,t h e 6th there., will
; Gcnv'ing. "Thei funer,a l - will .. be h,f!Id
be, a special meeting, when the third - - f Saturday , a fternoon -- at 1. o'cloc k at
,1 and four ~h deg:·ees wJll be conferred
' 'sta~ton's ,:ti:aII, West. Chestetfield;,."'.'_ith
on Miss · P a uline Brock of South
. 1:)unal .. at - the ·cemetery ·on · "The
Worthington by the regular ,officers '-:.= ,--- ---l Mount." ,:
,
.· · •
, · .
•.
___\ ~ and thP. ladies' degree staff and .H~\.-. .
· The t,hree ch!Jdren .of Mr and 'Iv.tr/!
\
on the 14th State Gate Keep. er _Ro]?e:rl,
"'·
Harry . w.- Mollison ·a re · ill with' hhic!{.
C. She1"'11M~f Br_imfield wilUnstal the
· enpox.,·
otfiqers, the program beirig in charge
- ~ - ~ - - ' -~~- - - - - -- - ~ ---'
_ _ _ _ _ , of Mrs Daniel R. _ Porter, ' worthy lee- ·1--- - - - --- - - -- --- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - tuter. · :,·.
.
· · .
The annual meeting and roll ·call
of the Congre.;'a tiotb.1 churcJ:i., .,_will be
- -- - --1 held at the c,hurch o.xr .Sunday&lt; ' fol- ~ -'-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -- - -- - lowing the ·m ornin ~ sei-vU::e . and .a
basket ·iunch ·a t ·n oon.
,
Mrs ·A. D. Hewitt . an&lt;l Mis$ Cath ---..I
erine Hewitt , of ·Pitts field a,nd -Mlss 11
Jan~tte Otto _of Buffalo, N . . -;f,, wei·,e
in town yesterday , and. called upon
, friends.
.
.
,:
- _ _ _J
Mrs Leland P. Cole •entertaJned ,11---- - -- - - -- - ·-- - - - - - -- - - - -- -- - - three tables at bridge yesterday afternoon at .her home. • Among: · the out "
of town gu,ests were :Mrs .Philip• G ur- - - - - - ney, Mrs .:a; .. Grau,· .'• Miss Dorot h y
' Shaw, Mrs Mlldred,. Renit'f· and :Mrs
Willla m Crafts: ,T-he first prizes wer•,
won by Mrs George E. Tone·y, ' ,'fr.,
itnd _Mrs Ph!Ilip Gurney and the con-' 11~
· --- - - -- - - - -- - - --·
ijOlation prizes by Mrs Req iff. and Miss
Dorbthy Sha~;.
,
, Mrs Charles A. Kllhourn ' and her
dn11 g·hter,. ~is~ Berni ce Kilbout'n , are
-------·---~s.pendlng a f"w days in Spt·lngf!eld .
. Mfs~ M,ar)'. P. Bun· is vi~hing 1 relatives m ~pnngfteld.
' /
'l"lw;_s
Bowr'elof Sprh'l_gfteld is
- - ·--· ~-- - - - - - - - - --o ,, 'M~ .J·.S.:....~3-:..r~·1

a

-----

--

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-------- -

- - -----

\
·-·

-

--

--·-_ 1

---····

-

-

- ---- - -'~ ---------

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,I

M~s. · John , F'~iss-etl-'- 'teturnev
i patu:r ':i4Y , froill Worcester: wher~
she Iias.·oeen spending two weeks J
: , Mr. 1itnci' Mrs. Cecil Sil'.llP.SOn , and
". I·t-wci_.. •-~hH~~A. of worcesteTi spe~t
~ -t be''. Y,~trk.::eJtd with Mrs. Simpson s,
·, ~ a re~ t~, ,,!lf.r. a11d Mrs. Jobn Frls- f
sell. . - . _.
Ii.
·_ -.Mr~-&amp;p.d l'vlrp, Victor Berfiil:)t will ', j '
'Jnt~r.~}', fn _th,.e, Gra,,ng~ whist club· at : /,-: Lyceu,n, hll.11 on Wednesde.Y. even-r · •
Ing, Janue.r,y , 8.
., 'I'h~- Gfaii-g.e• whist party was · ·1
held _iii· Mrs. T. d. Mat;Un' s Satur- ,
;;.
dily iilght: Fltet prizes were won t r•\ . .

WORTHJ~ON
- - .·· - ~ .

Clmrch H11s Annunl Rqll (;al!
Uan. 6-The annual "J.ttISiness
I meeting and roll c3:ll_Qf ~ e•Rp,11- ,.
g,regatlonat;,church wa.s Mrd ac ·,lrn
totturc·h , at .1_', J.2 ,45' following•_. "t il e
, 111'ot1Hji.g se~ Jce .and a bas\{et
flui1ch · :i~ no9,~ · Rev. James , H.
' .Burckes acted.: ·l\.S moder(!,tor. The
tpllowing ofilcers . were . elec_t_e d:
. Artb ur Capen; t reasurer,
1Clerk
1 Mrs. Eben),i: Shai&gt;r ;. church scho&lt;!~.
uperlnten\Ul.n t, :r,rrs; ];]. G. Thare1;
·• 5dc·a(l.Oll fol·.~,~ ~Y.Cars, Clemen t 1', •- Burr·' audit~ ~ 1vf rs. Franklin H .
Bq rr; .. cllnt ~ ·.. ,, co.m1nittee, Mi s_ll
S.iisau ~". Ric&amp;,, IRf\sJonary com~~t- )·- !
·• Ute, J\Irns I{,
~D . ~lee; music, , i
Jvirs. L. p ; ·Cole, Mrs. N. C. Tuttle, t
Miss N. S:. Heacock, ,Arthur,?·
______
Capen; social, Mrs. C. A. Kill)Ol)l'll, Mrs. George E . T0rrey, Jr.,
. Jll:r~. Arlin . q olc, J\lrs. Eben ~ S!ia,v·; 1urwet· comn)ittcc , MisR
Elsie V. BaJ tlett, Mrs. Geor;~
!I'on:ey, Jr., l ~
relief, Mrs. James H. Bur6ket1, '

I
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·1J&gt;&lt;iMr,s.

:gea;-;'i·;_r(;1~l'e~50: and?p.J-~"

,Dr. -- l•'rnncll'! A, ltp~u ;;on an_
u co11-~
isolatiou ·.11rizes ._1&gt;_y· M_rs. r ·Jura,.,Ru a· ,
·scll and .J oscpl1·avl r /,l,,_1L · , .,--; · .: ..' - ---. Mrs. Carl Loveland and suite inj; ·stall~d
.tile ofti ce,:·:i or High laud ·1
( Graug~_ at _lh ~ _Littl eville . c-J,a:;,ei L
~•}'1 (,: cf eve mug. • •..
.
·_
l' .· l\1rs. Ch a rle;; A : ;l!J{ilbOUi'll and
) &lt;laug11te5; i:,erntc&lt;i , ../ Jturnef1. t~da~·
' atter v_µnting ir e.p1 v,.es 1u ~pi;n~ I
1 field au &lt;'l _
W esU;!P ri n gJieW .
- /
· •;:iie . .,__.&amp;1·_r.rp un1ty s ervice cotnui it -_l ; ·_'.
- tee isr/ J i1aidng. plans to ~e, vc 1i _;-- - OY.St~r ;,llt ew af -ll&gt;e n,ext· G-r~n:ge
;~

I

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ua!;ife '&lt;&gt;ii :'j an_zyai·i , 17'. , · ~; !
Stevens and Mrs.· Homer Grang r: /
-1--· '!'Jie:. bel{ ~_oC the C6ngre3·atiouai j _,..,
upminatiil,g ccrpmittee; Mrs. C. A . t
: ~hurcn· wa's ruilr;- _,~_t · u-t&gt;~~-{')11~_,0,,
,·
-Ki1bourn . . Mrs, I;elan d. P .
• • e!c£r ·s oay l-n celel;Jratio11 - of :,ll e
Mrs, }Ierbei· t G. Porter ;'. organist,
. openip&amp;: of ti;ie tel'eeutena-i·i year:
Artliur G. ·capen. Lett'!lr'A ot with;: . 'fne omj:!n ·s 1'lci:tevu1en. 1:',c1eCy ,.
draw11) ~nd7 r ecommenq~tion to t.he.
·will 2-ho'ld, 0tneir '- annual bus.mess 1l
East _c_hnrch . . iti · S.p d9gfie! d were
me~(i_4g and _eJectiofi,,of officers at·
granted to .1\f;r- a110 Mrs,. IJ,ichard
Jh,e.':')'IJ&gt;,ll'.l~
the .,pr~sidein, Miss 1-McTighe. _ Voted to , change th el:it!sau . . '1', ·0_-,HJce, , ori. Wectnesciay I
time ·of the, -morn ing servfoe to 1- - -:; ~
1 ]»O o.'clo"ck. . The church wenV
atternoon. at i o clock.
,._,
J\1i~s- · Marjorie ;p&gt;a u-1 and Miss 1_
on- h icord as.in favor oi''iii'co'fporat:'.'
1 :rvraqode I•'i;zgeill,ld •of New Yo_i:l~ - - - '
:
- - - dilg tlie c]iµ~ h :!)-nd-1!,arish, ; ,
I'
Mi ss, Katberine -McD. Rice and ·
. ;1 ha.y.e b_
e en speiJ.dirrg a .Jew ·ct-ay5:- at
:Mrs. He-rliert Q: P&amp;rter were ap- - 1Mrs. :g&lt;\yliiond Cole 's.
-. . . ·
_, po~nted e. committee to represent
~
frs.
N. C. 'f~1&lt;
1 is •a &amp;ue.;t o,f /
the church 111 a ter.crn fena1·y cele-·
Mr ... T._ C. Martur. ·---.
.", - ,
b'raUon dU:rin ~ j'fre :'/fkf: . . A vote
Mr: _ari d J\frs L u il e n Towe r -a nd l
of thanks was given to -Mrs. Wm. ,.
~'".'. ~ clu!dre~ o.f 'r~~mps~uville, et:, L - --·•G. Rice of 'Albany, for candy for
,pent Su1_fclay w1t11 ·-Mr s. 41:owe r ' s .
the Simday ·school Christmas tree.
par,en ts, .l \fr. and Mrs. Jauie 5 I
The clerk's report showed 82
K nap p. ·
tive j iiembers, {~ of whom are lnon.:.l'esl(lent. _; The treasurer's ·'report · was as follows: Receipts,
-- - --- --- -- -- -- -$159.35, expenses $111.44 with a
balanc~ in the treasury of $47.91 ;
j
·• gilts to missions $1 02. 65 . Reports were gi,v en by the pas tor and j
- 'the vatj.ous · 15oc1'e ties ~onnectcd - - - - - - - -· - - - '-·-·
}V!th the church . A_1·lsing vote or
·
(.
thanks was g jven to th e Friendsh ip Gt1ild for the ir assistance dur- ,______ ... _
ing the year'.
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,. ~WORTHINt
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.
GTON

WORTHINGTON·.

I'
Jan. 7-Tiie Grange met at the
I . Jan. 8.-The annual . bus1?e~s
, ftleeting of the Women's Benevo· 'Lyceum hall last evening at a spe~lent society was hel~ this• after1·'.cial meeting ·and ~ conferred · the
·.nopn at the home or. tire presl· ,third and fourth degrees upon
cpl!ht," Mi~,s Susa,n ?:'- Rice. The
;r,Iiss Pauline Brock, a teacher in
following officers and committees
the South Worthington school.
-~er,e. ~lected: President, Miss Su_..if.he third degrel\.. was · conferred
/ 1san T. Ric~; vJce president, Mrs.
1by·the officers of the ladies' degree
Ina Smilh; secretary· and treasstau'. and the fourth by the regu- - - :1urer, Mrs. Helen G. Burr; qirecJar· o_!ficers. A committee of three, ,_
;-torn, · Mrs. An'na A. Cole, ' Miss
(consisting of .the worthy mast er,
\Elsie V. Bartlett, Mrs. May Kil·
Mrs. Walter Hi ggins,- Mrs . ..N
' 1:,ourn, _Mrs, Effie s_. cott Bur1ckes,
Tttttle and .t\rtlrnr G. Capen, wer."1
Mrs. Helen Johnson, Mrs .. Effit' - ;1,ppointed to work with commit-:
1 ' Voted, that the comm~t.-.·
..-tees· appointed' by other organiza-1
•tees
that
served last year fo.i; .the
Hons tn the (own for,, th ~ tercen-----.-:: - · annua\ fair serve again this y~ai'~
- - tenar.y celebration of the founding
tvote'ct. to put aside $5•0 in 1930
.of tlie . Massachusetts Bay eolio~y,
'toward the incotporator's fund. A
which will be held during the
- - -·· committee ·of three, consisting o-t•··· ·
- 'summer,
·Mrs-. Anna ·A. Cole , Mrs . Carmeli..:
Mrs. Merwin F. Packard will
;ta
entertain _the Hun gry Dozen at
. Ma,.rtin and Mi[ls Elsie V,. Bart•
...,:.;..._._ her home Thursday afternoon.
_ __
_Jett, ' was appointed ;to serve on
-Basha,_n Hill Council of Royal
the tercentenary committee. '•The
i.Arcanum will, hold an open instaltreasurer's report was. as follows:
.....!fat~
offli_er~~ j:. 1iµ,e · Lyc_eurn. .
_.,..-- ___ I}alanee in the _trea1?tiry -Januan ,__ _ _
h. ~11 Saturday · e~eni,ng,, John ·;Blair ~
), 1- 929"/$1._25A. 5; ~-_ec~ipt~ $538_·_;_, _
. _- _pf Pynchon councU; · Sv:i:ingfield,
&gt; .
• - •· ·
:will be·the_install_i!ftf offi. cer. . . _ _ _ _ _ __!'&amp;:!s~ses, $~_69.45; bala~rc: int.h e ~The s~ry1ce _at_:;,lie\ CongrggationF'ollow7ri .Tan. _ 1, 1~30'.. $16_8.51?· .
-- ·
al church on S·u·n'day morning· will
!
g_ th.e . meet1n~ refresh._
be at 11 o'clock .:~'
:
, men ts were . s.erve?·
· ., ,
____
_.,,,,._
__ _ __
_
.
_ _ _
lvfr. and Mrs. Victor Bernier en"'
_
tert~ined the Grange wl1ist ~lub l
1

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- - - - - - - --- - - - - --._i ~~ev~:c;;b~es ~~:~\I prizes were ,won, : Jiy ;;.,,;1,{rs. ' T :'

O.·

Martin and, 'F.,ranldin-'. G. Bm~r'-r{od ,

-------- -- ·rconsolatioll prizes by Mrs. 1'\.l)Y- r
_ ___ __ ______
____ _______ _ _ ____ _

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mon!l Call and Carl I,,oveland:··· !
i Mrs. Joseph :§,_mory Wrig:ht l
picked pansies in her flower gar- ~
- _
den, today.,
,
_ The extre-melv warm , w'eather
t ors this s.easou
th e year lias
-taken much frost out of toe ,_ ____ _
grot\nd and cars are being hauied
out of th e.. mud frequently.

of

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WORTBINGTON .

I

WORTHIN.GToN

•

Jan. 9-ltrs. Eben L. Shaw
gave a -card party at her home yesBoynl Arcanni;i l~stalaUon
terday afterno9n for Mrs. H~rold
Worthington, .ran: is:--Bashan Hill
Parish in c_eleera~ on of b~l' bir.th_ ___
_
cQttnciI : of Royal Aro_\num held an
day. Hearts was played, the,first
open mee~ing artd ,1nst!).1ation of offlJ&gt;fli&gt;:e being woli' ~Y Mrs. Ernes t
oers
the Lyceum, hall Saturday eve1rnay~r and th e consoia t ion prize ___ __ ___ _ _ ___ u~ng. Gran rI R egent .Tohu Blair was
- - 1 by M1 s. Frank Bates.
th in.stalling officer assisted by the
-~1:rs. Merw_i~ Ji', Pstckard enter.gtlido, Mr •Menns of Pyi1chon
tamed the Hl:in§i'Y Dozeµ at· h er
cotfncJI s;,,rl ng·fieJd. About 100 were
jhome this afternoon After sewing L
--.. pi·csent. Officers Installed were: T rus- i for an hour
· · three, ·ta·bles
•.
of cards
t ee .,J,,c t , Ch ar l os O· Wllliams;warden,
.
Sh -·dan
,Richard Hathaway ; gi,ude,
e11 . .
. were lll play. R efreslithents were
Dodge; ch'1.JJlaln, William Brown, 1
.iserved. The club will m eet next __ ____ _ - -- treasurer, Harry L . J,3ates; collector, t-i'.J.lhursday afternoon
at
Mrs.
ired Fairman; secretary, . 'fell~ lv{af 1
1Packarg's, wJth . 'Mrs. E:ilbourn I
argal; past r egent, V.:alte_r Bigg n t' i
8
_;and Mrs. D:r-ak'e actin g as . host- _ - _ ' tt!~•~1ri:~fll'l~!so~t , ~'e g:~t
sses.
.
•
· Jplly. lfo llowln'g the instalat/on, b:z:ief
. Mr. an_d :i\f.r;;._ W a \t er M. _Sha w
.
~!1\lres,ses w·e re made by tJ'!e installrn_g
111 leave Sunday to spend some
, off!'cer and by Alternate Supreme ~epee ks with their dau 6""hter
Mrs - - - - resentative Felix Scharmen ofb Pitta-[
• ·
•
·
•
'
·
field·· Grand Gu ide H en r y Rath urn
1hp Gurney, of Ashfield.
Sfocirbridge· Roy · Wilcox a nd Robert
,...T}1.e · nex t ._m,eeting of th e Gran ge
. I Rowllng' of' oncita council, Pittsfield .
- hist club will be with Mr. and
- - - - ---4 Refreshments were served a nd ~h e
rs, Arlin Coie · .on Wedrresday
·
evening ended with a dance for which
1·5 o· · F1 'd-. ·
·
'
Bates's orchestra played.
i, "' J
ven ~'" an.
.
n _n ay ev_e_ Mi· and lvlrs Howard J phn~on, How - t - - ng, J an. 17, the Grange · will ~ - -- - - -ard J ohnson, J r .• and Arthur. J ohnh , d a dance at the_ Lyceum hall,
son of 'Dalton, were in town Saturday
!for
which the -Gra·nge com munity
i
n*h( to a ttend .. the, R oyal Arcanum
1
ser_vice committee will serve a u :--- - -- -- - instalations _apd '\y'ere enter talned at t - - ---.
dinner by M.): and Mrs H arry ~ - Bates.
oyster stew.
. State Gafo. K eeper Robert C. Sher-~
of Brimfield will lnstal the offi- - - -- -- -- cers of the grang&lt;: at. an open meet- i - - ing Tuesday evenmg.
., T,h.e grange whist club will meet
with Mr and Mrs Arlin Cole of High _ _ _ __ _ _ lan d· street, W ednesday evenin,e-.
· -The I:{ungry Dozen will meet again 1
~~ith :(lfrs Merwin F. P acka rd tomor- \
::.
·row aiternoon. Hostesses Mrs Cha rles '
A. Kil bo urn a nd Mrs \ 1/. E. Drake. - -- - -k- On Friday nig ht there \Yill be a I
1grange dance
at L yceu m ha ll
____ __1which_the comrpunity service commit- '
·-- - -- -· tee will serve an oystef· stew. · ·
•
'I/here will be an• i,ustalation, of the I
offi cers of the Loyal Laqies at the 1
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ L yceum h~ l Saturd_a_:yc_e_,_•e_·11_i_ng
-=-·- -=::._--'- -

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fortL_
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WORTHINGTON ·_· i

. " Jan: 13·: -~ A Citizens' .d.ucus
- will .be 'held at the · town hall on
Tuesday afternoon;; Jan;· ,14, ·-at 2
~~lock,

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�WORTHINGTON

FIRE DISTRICT VOTES

WORTHINGTON -- -::\

·I

Samuel F. Hill - Dies at s,i
Wo,·thing ton, ,J a n : 15 ~ u e l Follett Hlll, 84, died · this
noon at 9a.111.
the h ome of his '1augl;l r, Mrs Jud- ·
son G. B lac kman at Feeding H;lll$.
He Wal! born at Worthington l!,eb . •
/ r,µary 20, 1845, {1011 · ot Jul!mi and
El,lzabeth · (Follett) Rill , - In 18'11 'he
marrl~d Josephine · Mayhew and }J'o
to
to
and' his v; ife Jived at ·. the ancestml
..·
•
home, known as tile .Samuel 'Foll et t
·p,l ace, one of the oldest .J-iomf litea~s
at Worthington. Mrs · H,l! died in
Worthington, Jan. 14-A meeting of
1907. He had · been
m~;1b c(. .of the,
the ·woii:hington fire district was held
bo_ard of selectmen many _ ye.i;rs. Mr
------' ~ ·· '
·
· t
't th t
11811 - - - - Hill leaves another daugllter, , Mrs
this afternoon a 1 a
e _own
•
: Carlton Lo.veland of Wqrth'.hgt:on. Th P,
George W, Pease was elect_e d moderai funeral will bfl.- he.Id Fri_da.y. at;tt-131~ai1
tor and Helen G. ·Burr clerk. _ The re- .
a_t . 1.30. at the Worthlngtoh ch'u'rch,
1 port of the treasurer, Mrs B·u rr, was '
,-,
~~e_v, Jal':,les. J:f· . Bufcke~ bffi_Gl.i..ti11g-.
the fol1owing:
Balance January .1, .
Bunal. will be 1:p. s;:~ntez:,,c~wet,ePy.__
' 1919, $632; total receipts, $3308.; ex-'.'
·
penditures, $2855; balance, December
- - - 31, 1929, $452. Officers were elected as
•
.
follows: Clerk _a nd tr~asurer, Helen
:1, L L J f
1
l G. Burr; auditor, James H. Burckes;
Ti / 7;,:t-_ ,,.,.,,
water commissioner for. three. years ,,-- - ---·. · .. ;~-~ --·-·· · .# --'
- - - · •- - ~ William Sinith; ·fire chief, John Fris~
FlJ
:
I!
sell.
.
.
'• 1
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The report of the water . commis-'
'., _.
_
, sioners was ~iven by Clement F. Burr, 11------ 1 .
.
·
JI
who emph~1zed the shortage of water
· . . 1
. •
·•
· ·
· during last season an&lt;J. said that., on
_
'.1-c-. '·..
·•
• ""'l'
October 4 there was only :fiOl.lr inches
of water above the .outlet-·pi'pe.' The - - e'rVICeS . SO ·· onaucte
commissioners were authorized to·take
s _teps to increas~ the water supp_Iy. _ It
' ongregahona
urc . , ;'_ at,~ .
. , was vot~d .to raise ,$800 by taxation.
- - -- - - _
r.toii .
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BIGGER WATER SUPPLY ·-

Comm1ss1oners Empowered
. --· -- .

Act -

$800

Be
Raised Through Taxat10n - - --

a

S,

NERAL Of S HJ_LL ~,.' 'n•EL
·~.· ·o·· ,,t:f .'rt"EEDING'
.. ·. ·
· H'ILLS

S ·: ·• '

A~l ,:,C . ·(' , d·. ·at
··
;·· 1· Ch h' ,, pl~_·.. · -. .
Worthin
-, F: di' ·::. -:m~/ i~n. 1 i..::..&lt;rhe furi:e;Ir
·. . ee P.!;' ,,
: ..
.· . ·, . .,. · . ,,-,

·c ·

Cltlzen!I' Caucus N'omlnatlons

A citizens· caucus wa.s-,ield ·this aft-

ernoon in anticipati?n 'of tlie' _annual 1
_
af S~muel . · Hill ,Y'.!\~ ~W-s..111~ ~&lt;&gt;~! 1'·___ _
town-meeting, whic1i wlll · be held t~e
\ of his da~~ter., -Nr s -~ I a , c~ :"
first 1111.Jnday in February. Franklin
man of 'r:J.,,,So~ ij;;..-W estfleld strell;t; _wa!l'·H. Burr w as elected moderator of · the
· held at the .home this mqi;ning at 10,
caucus, and Helen G.: Burr, clerk. The c-- - - - ~ev, ,JI, G. _B uper, qf F,eeding Hills\'
·---r,
follo}Vin g nommations . were made:
lMethoil.ist ch,urk!h officiating. .
.
Moderator for the _:yea r / Lou C. S~eet; "
~' Serylces 'w~~ also ;,.heid at the ' Con- •,
t own clerk and ·treas-qrer, Franklm H . . ,. i- _
~re_, gatjon~l -,.pli~r&lt;;h a_ t Worthl~g,ton; ~. . --==-a.in; ; s electm~n, Alden B. Cady, Her- ~ --.-- - -· - t'hLs;:aJ j;!lrn9?,11 -: at 1,30, Rev Ja~qies ~
'ff: ~ - -ber t. G. ,P _orter, Harry_L. ~ates; mem_BtiT~l{es . offlclated fand' the choir sang •.;
ber of school committee for three
twq_j selections Burial was in Center
years, fl:el en G: Burr; auditor, Jame~. •
. c,e re11teri, Wo;thlngton. 1',1:r Hill spent 1 - - - -H. Burck es ; con s table. f.o r . one year, 1- - - -- - - his ent'.!Pe life on , the farm at Worth·
Harry w . . M?llison; tax collector,
lngton, where he\was born:
Harr y ~ - Mollison; assessor for three
··
years, H a rry 0. Tinker ; tree warden,
----- - -- ---- -- - - --- ~- John F ri ssell; cem et er y commi ssioner
for three yeats, Daniel R. Porter; cauc us commit-tee, W elles Magar g-al, J ohn
F r ia.sell, Eben L . Shaw. Th e cau cua
- c ommittee Wall auth orized to fill vacan cie.~.
_ ____ ,...t_ ' _
,.,...,
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WORTHINGTON

.... 4

GRANGE · INSTALATION
New

Officer~

I111luctod

by

Statb

WORTIJINGTON
Worthington; Jnn. 17-The Hungry
Dozen met yesterday afternoon at Mrs
Merwin F. Packar&lt;l's, with ·.Mrs Charles •·
A. Kilbourn and Mrs _W infred E . Drnl,e ,,
acting as hostesses. After the sewing
. .houi· three tables or whist wePe in
play.
.
·1 -The grange Whist ~lub will meet
Tuesday
night
With
Mr
an&lt;l
Mrs Merwin F. Packard.
The grange Whist .club m et Wednesday night at the home or Mr and . Mrs .
,1 A.rlin Cole of Highland street: .N-ine
tables were in piny. The first prizes
were _won by Mrs Wi:ilter H, Tower
and John Jarvis, and the consolat.lon
prizes by Mrs Stephen Oleksak and
Leland P. Cole, Jr.

Deputy Sherman
Worthington, Jan, 16~State Deputy
Robert C. Sherman of Brlmfteld installed the officers of Worthington
grange n.t an open meeting at the
Lyceum hall Tuesday evening, followIng a. brief busin ess meeting. Mr Sherman, who Is state- gate keeper, was
asslst~d by Mrs Walter Smith, marshal; Mrs Francis . A. Robinson, reital!a bearer; M.lss Marjorie G. Bartlett, emblem beater; Miss Josephine
Hewitt, pianist; l\,Irs .Lel a nd P. Cole,
sololst, and Miss Susan T. Rice, chaplain. Tho ceremony was impressive In
Its dignity a nd bea utiful ·In lts ritual,
Mr Sherma n taking· l;lls part ,,w ith the
ease of experience ably assisted by his
suite, who· gave a very pleasing . exhibition of instalatiou work. ·
· Office1' s install ed : Master, Mrs WalJan. 1&amp;.-Mrs. Myra Stevens
ter Hlggip.s; lect.urel\ Mrs Guy F.
was called to Williamsburg Wed· · Bartlett; steward, Franklin H. Burr;
. nesday to _.attend the burial of lier
assistant steward, Franklit1· G. Bun; .
nepn~w . Charles Edwards,
o! :
chaplain, c_Mrs Winfred Drake; treas_ _ _Wes(fl'e1c!,.., Mr, Edwards had. a
urer, Ernest Q-. '.1-')1.ayer; secretary,
Arthur G. Capen; gate ke·e per, Victor·
' summer-.hO,l!l~:,.in
-Stevensville.
- : : &gt; - : : : ; - " ._ - • ---- ~
·· . ~-----'---- · · Bernier; Ceres, Mll;IS ·rrene Mc;,ulton;
~ 1rs:"tH'ai:ry: Ecldy -of Fior'ence·
· Pomona, Miss Madeline E. Townsend;
wmi-ran assistant stewa,i•d, Mrs Jame s ,~ --:_~ e guest of llej " daughter, M.rs. ·
:Walter Towe'r·. , - -Knapp;
executive . cc;,mmittee, Dr ,_
Francis A. Robinson.
T here were brief addresses by State
___ - ~ Deputy Sherman, Wilbur
Mooi;e,
ma:.s-tei:- of Highland gri,1-nge, 4ilie
Huntington, a former stal e q,~puty and
by Mrs,.Lou ·G. Sweet," master of Hill- I
·
- - - - -.
- side Pomona gi,ange. The entertain- ~-, ~Worthington, -' Jan. 197"',l'qere was a 1 - - - ment !n charge of Mrs I)aviq R.
-large , gathering Friday: ·at the ConPorter, past lecturer, co1,1sisted of a
'gregati~rial church at 1.30 p. m., ~s
one act -r;play "'Ilh~ host in the J3oa,&lt;1:• ,
J'rlends ancl neighbors m'et for,.. the
.
- ~ "Sdhop1:1• C/wt oJ characters: "Miss
f·llllera l . o'! Samu,el ' Follett Hill, ·s4, •---_..
!!Brown ;" ~princi.pii:l_ of boarding school,
-1 ·1\fe Ion'g. resident of the town. Mr
Marjprie G. Bartlett; girls, "AJlnie,",
•Hill was ·a man of sterling ciualltles,
·-- Irene MC\'!}ton ;_ ,."M~Y,'.' M:adelin~ - - -· - ."\\'fl)) iµfqPl!,fld al),il o,f ,..soun\1_ j'Jdg!l,1:~nt, , ___'f_-1-&lt;:±_
lownse~?• Lizzie, Mr.~
. I.,el!!,rrd Coje,
ino_J?\n.g _:1ip.~o-_r.t_ant_•'__ t6wp ·om~es;_ !l,~ltl . fa!
Gll!,dys, Mrs Fran()is A, - _Ilob!ns~µ.
w:as u11i·vel'BalliY liked;,.:~a:rtd r.espected. 'J1,ll,,(,;f_
F"
I
I.The play, which was . amusmg In. lts '
Borli hi the ,hous~ Wlilch h!s,\'g i:andi, If
.
plot,
v.:as
we~l
1l;cted
and
entertai11mg.
---,
~ather,
S11-mue~Follett,,' t:nilit .'o n ·. ~- plot f
•
1
FolloV\;'mg It J.ef1 eshments ':"ere served.
. ,,g(,_l~i_l:d purchasiiq . /!00n
'tp.e in. I
Tpe •Women:s Benevolent . i;ooiety
•,,yorporatlon qf t_~ e ·t!)wn,)1e_·h".ed there
rwm meet with Mrs ·John F riseeU- ' dn
__ ,J!-8 a.· boy .· a.nd, _,~al;n _·aft~r hi~ mar- Wedne$day, the 22d, · :for an all-day
~:rl11fe, .until with . Increasing : ye~rs he
riiAwin g meeting,
-- -- went to make, hi~ . hol!le with hi!,
~
- --- -·
,daughter, Mrs Carltoi;i I,.ovel;md. Services were conducted by Rev J a mes H.
Burckes. 'I'he beare.rs w'ere H oward
Johnson qt Dii.lton, Herbe1·t ·a. Portl)r,
Walter E. " Smith and Ernest G.
Thayer. Mrs Leland P. Cole and Mrs
George E. T c;,rrey, · Jr., sang "Beauticul
Valley or Eden,'' and "God Bl!''Wlth
,You."
Bur1'1,l was in the• ·center
{ cemetery.
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WORTHINGTON

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�I- J WORTHINGTON ' I an.

22-The . Grange Whist!
With Mr. i
Mrs. -~- F. Packard. Eleven
-~Jes .were: in- play, The first
'pqzeo , were Won by,· Mrs:
ComI
mer ford Martin and Walter . H
---· -· ·- - ~~wet, th,e latt4:l1\ tying with Wal~/ -- /
I·
· SIJ.lit~f, The consolation
I prize Was won by DeWitt Cady /
! . _ ____ ! The ~ext meeting will be _h eld 0
Satm day eve11ing, }t'eb. 1, . with
MJ s. Raymond Call ·
.
, · ·. •
· .
·. .
1 Th W ··
ie
omen Iv Benevolent socie• I
; .- - , ty met today with Mrs. John Fris/
;sel11 ~t the center village.
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f ~•h ss Elsie V. Bartlett is spend~- - - - --j ing a few days with h
t .· ·1!M r R •s .
er aun, • Mrs,,.
· . Y a _ · teve~ ~• in Steve-~fl''V:iHe,;

i cub met last evenin .

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WORTHINGTON

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Loyal .L adles• f! ouncfl Instituted
·-(Worthington, ,Tan. 20 - · Hllltop
uncil of Loyal L adi es was ins lituted
turday e. venlng w!t h 62 members at
•e Dyce~m hall_ ~Y Suprenrn R egent
i:s Lillian Perkms of Dalton. a~d
a.s t Supreme _R egent Mrs · Mmme
rornJey of Springfield ·:-iho acted as
1
·iider Initiation wM by the women'J1
'.g ree Jtaff of Springfield council
ter which the foll owing officers we~_e
stalled by Deputy Regent Mp1 Hazel
iishoff of Pittsfield: Regent, Mrs May
l!bourn; v(ce regent, Mrs Imogene
le; p-:ist ;:egent, Mrs. Itar~let- :Elig~
J..... _ .,, ... ., _
_
,¥ -~ .
ns; ora.tor,. Mrs Ethel Pi;trish; se_c• .
-- tary 1 Harriet Magar-g al; treasurer,
.. '
"
J
rs Marthl!, Osgood; guide, Mrs Reba
·
___. _ ·.
1·
agargal; ch,.aPl'.1-in, · Mrs Hattie ,
, .· 'Grange Meets Tuesday -N~ht
"'•
1tes; warden, Mae Hathaway ;.. trus- - - --'- : · .
•
· · · ··1: ',c .
- - -es Mrs Lena Thayer, Mrs Jenni(l
;° Jan, 28.-~he (}range W 1l ;meet
o.dge, ;'Mrs Amelia Higgins. Meetings
,at the Lyceum hall. thl~ ev.1titng
·
1/\
ill be "held the second and last Sat-.
-- ifor its regular meeting._ A pf per .
day ey,enings o!_eac_h nion~h in
~ .fill cur.rent events wifl' be read .PY i'- the ,13ch~olro~ms m the ,Lyce~m .
fMr.a; ., Francis A. Roblnfic;&gt;l!l. · T~e i·
lt'JS
11. Followmg f he bus\ness meetl.n g ,
I· remainder
-the -program
be~
e Royal Arcanum •members, -w ho
·· - -:,..
·
· ·.
eet on the same evening !l,t ~h~ - - -- - - , !n c_l!11rge o_t t~e c;q?.1ijlunHy . se~,Y.~ - - - yceum nail, and the Loyal Lad1ea 1
, ice. com.m.Itt~e. J.\,Irs, • Walter .H1g1
_,/ · which is · a branch of the R9ya1 i.f·
gins,. c.:chaifman, Dr. ··11:tid. · Mrs;
_ _
___ carium will -~0?13bine their socjal pro,- 1-~ - - ----i Fra1;1~lef A. R;&lt;&gt;bi.n~J11i,_- ~,1;:i '-and· •-__ - ~-1' grams ~~.s!a1rs m the hall. ':!;'here werfl
;M·tE!• 1¥.~U-~ r ,_j;n_Ul!, Jv~J'~: ,.~elan ~ ·
many vliS1}mg guests, 32 being_pre~ent .
Cole- a:nd Emerson .:Oavis On Fri-,
·
·from Sprmgfteld and 30 from Pitts• 1
• •
• :••
·: •
-· •
• ·&gt;
,
field and Stockbridge. f'.ast ;Regent 1 - - - --1 day eveni.p.g the Gra-~;ge .wJl t hol!),]
William Root of Pittsfield · presen'.te·d
, a dance ·· j.¼.t the ~yceum ha:U; at - -the newly formed council with a gavel
'which Bates' orchestra will '-pllliY::J
' an'd bato.n in behalf ?f. s~veral meinOn ··satuioay "e.yeq!I?,g\ t-~~ ,9;tan-ge 1.
ber~ of Oonota council, Pittsfield, at1d --" - - ·- - - Whist .clue'.; wilI · meef:wJih-.. -, ··Mvs: ~ - - t~e women of. the Springfield cou~Raymon cf" Cau.· ·
· \ ?f;;.:u,. :· ·
c1l gave them a ballot .box. The mem, · • -.
·
ti_~rs &lt;&gt;f Bashan Bill council of Rciyiil
.
·
··. · -,- .-.Arcarfum •·served i-efr~hments. • , . ·
. .re
_ · ,_ The Loyal _;Ladu,_s :.~~t Satu,rday 1___ _
1 _
The ·'\Yom,en's · _
B enev.o!ent s(lciety
~ vening ~t•the LYC!ll\!ll hall ' and
~ ill m.e~~ on Weqf!esday .with MM
!,gave the:- ~l&gt;Ji&lt;&gt;afiori. to' eight char- '
John Fr1sse11.· for ~n all(' day,, mooU1_1g.
I t'ePm'imibert.''j'i;'!;A.ftef !'- the meeting
, The gz:ange. _whist club will meet
·- - . ciinds' were enjoyed. ,
. .. .
~: tomor,rov. evenmg: ';"1th Mr and ·Mrs
Miss· M . j . · ·· ,,; -B·" ti tt: , t ft I
Merw in F. Packard. •
_ . · ![t one u . ar. e
e ,.
: . Th:ere _:wlll bl! a dance at the
yester~ai ·to finish her· course -at
.
- - - --~Lyceurp. hall Frida-y evening·!n charge - - -- - ·,t he high school of coJUmerce rat :-,--- -of Ha rry W. Mollison at which · $5
Spririgfield, · which she had to give /
in prizes will be s-iven. Batee's orup last year- because of il-1· health. ~,,
chestra will play.
Franklln' G· Burr is taking a'. ·..
- - Post graduate· cou1!s.e at the tech-,&lt; ·
n\eal high ~iic~OJ&gt;i, Sprjngfielcf;.
Miss Olive E. Cole, Miss Clarissa:1.
-Henry and Miss Mary Read
Plttsfield spent . the week-end in·
Worthington, making about eight ·
(
:io.nes of 'the twenty mile trip on_,

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·-k~~y F. Bartlett of Greenfield \
spent the week-end at !,ifs _home. j

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of
iRingime· Is ·m. at ..the, Dfoklnson·
\ifi&gt;spft~( in •No,rt:haniiJt~1_1.' ; ilob~rt
\llld~ani's, ·w,ho. 'recently ., s.µ.ff.ered .
'tff~l!}lfa br:)i'.,.f~II fr,o~i .a1 :tnioll:~ •~:
~1S!) '. at
hOSJ?lt~l- fo,r . . _
t r_e af:,; 1
h:ient:·
·· ·. · ._ .. · ' .. '.
,.,
'~'M'i~s··i'b'sephlne. -Rewlt-t·1~ ·;~(~(t-~, .
lhg :filer' sister .. Mrs. Harry-'. ··La- ·

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.ham·iit'.~olfinr.~'ii.4~~- ~- ·,_:·

.

, . !PEf t:wo children _o t , ijr:;11,n&lt;l.'

Mr~. Keljil'e th ' Pease, ~enneth .J r.,
and.. James; ·are Ill . with chlclrnn-

~~i~v.lhg :G~rney.'of G~e~h~~ii -Is 11-

,

vlsftt,ri_g his .a.'u nt, Mrs.'. lf~rbert c,.:.
J'PPJ:'ter; , a_t_ttr~-liente,r.: : '. ·' · . · ... :'
- - ·· Howa'rd Bassett, w-ho is ,-w:ork:

~~f(~f 6'1kkiiak; Bros:,, is toardiri_g
J'~ )'cy; °o/•. ~OlljEOJ_l S. · .:'' ; · .. ,
1

·/ At , a ., re.c ent meeting - o.t •,the I

_.._._ .
Electlon11 at Worthington
worthlntton, F eb. 3_:__Town officers
j
·elected: Moderator, I,ou ,C. Sweet;
'
town clerk· and treasurer, Franklin H.
Burr; selectmen, Alden B. Cady, H erbert G. Porter, Harry L. Bates; wel•fare board, the selectmen; a&amp;ess or, for
three yearl;!, Harry 0. Pinker; cemetery commissh:me,r, Daniel' R. Porter ;
board ot health, the selectmen; school 1- cornmlttee, Helen G. Burr; a uditor,
James H. Burcaes; 't ax collector, H .tr1·y W. Mollison; . tree w11,rden, .John
- - --• li'r!ssell; cons.table, Harcy W . MoH!- - ·--...
oon; almoners, Ernest G. Thayer,
Clement S. Burr, Cullen Stevens.
, App1'. opriatlons: •.rown officers, $1200
so·l_10ols. $13,200; · to wn ·ph ysician,
$950; elect ric lights in buildings, $765;
-p aupers, $400 ;" highways and bridges,
-~2895;. state roaq work, $2500; public
sMety committee, $59; street ligh ta.
$315; snow fe1t~.efu $300; tree warden,
··$25; interesf1;
· f~-?Jl'';. ~ed CtqSB dental
..work, $25; )tq ..~Ji's'/ l}onds, $50; Old ,
---.....,
f!ome day ·J(f ~jntenary) ' $,50; snow .remov!!,l, HRP,t,;,;i:p•oth' suppressiqn, $283 ;.
;..pemeteries:'\-~~•lt;} contingent account, 1
1$900; wqrkm'ens' 'insul'ance, $350; to- 1-·' ---- -t~l, $2_5,268. .
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WORTIIINGTON
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Gj•:,i:ng,i (_th'.e e~~c'µtb~ :·&lt;!o_µi~IUee. i
,
M.r-s . . Mazy -~· · LoveJand.. .-.Miss_. JA·.
Worthington; Feb. 3-'-The Grange
e.phi~e ~ew,ltt ·, and; Dani.el - ·.It:
- - - , V\'.'hist ch1b ' m&lt;lt Saturday eyening - ~ Port_er., g11ve tl)e _fol_lo.wl.n_g. r.~rmrt; :
..
·w1t_h,Mrs Raymond •{?all with 12 t_a bles
~
'I
VaJue of'' Gran·ge l)rciperty, . 1yhlcJ1 :
rln play. The flrs_t prizes were won by
11 I
~11.ver, dishes;
lpr.: ·-· .
:W,alt_er ~m!th and Ch~r~es_ Allen .,s- -- -- nittfie, :)VQr~h1g . too!s, offlqer.~ :re;a:rld~ tpe consolation prizes by Miss ·
r
'1f!J\!1,~ :,~ad~es-. ~n&lt;J; _lllisceHau~~-u;:,
_,rre:µe , M0ulton -an~ fiomer Granger• .
.
lt0,ta_h-[,$,~f10,_5 ~;., µi~m lle-rsJ!i_P.·, .m 1rn .
The ·_next meeting, will .be ,JJeld at the
1
- ,41 ' woineft, 11 . tola.J; 112i lnv.e!!t- - - l Lyceum h~ll on Wednesday evl'l with
;'. I
, }Mrs Francis A. ·Robinson and Mrs Le~ .
1'k l iu&amp;ds ''.i:,ibi{rty ·. bonde, -ti.o O;
Ir
,
• •. •,_·
•
· ~-8-4 3 6. t .
I&gt;•. C?le, hostesses. .
- •' . r•, ,
c;ish Ip .S,11,vi;µ.gs, . ban_k, '"'-, · · •..• .0
Jp~q
A c-q1J1lting bee at the home of Mrsi___ ta:I, . ~-18_4-.~~:. -~l!-S~ on hand:/Lbe• 11- - -- 1,~ells W. M_agaral Saturday :;fter.;~
,/
,gil!-:Ill'l_$:._9f;:..: !!JJ.a r,te!, _$};~.22 . .totl!,l_.
noon at which t_wo ·c_1.uilts were tiecl '
•t
,~ash.-~g'elv~~·.- .$:7·q._9.l)-;.·; tot,al «a~l.J,
, " ;raa :ais? ji, sw·11nse birthday celebra-n,alci,; 9,ljf,' $7:S,~~; &lt;:a~h- ori · :1and af
'?"'. monrr,:er m9t'lier, Mrs JuJia· Ray.
' end .of quart~r1 j!G-,:~2: .. . ·, ' ~or°$lO. o
.so years old. A. purse I
. ·,_Mt~.; OJ~on, Gµrµ~y a,n&lt;). . chree.
neighb,p'rs, g; f-:-~ g1v~~ ;her ~Y the6
~
e~H~en •. ):&gt;on,al_d ! •~itJl ~n1 ·_
R-h},t,": _____ numerous ,8',lffs from ,oth~fhJi~~b~~1
,113.v, ,of;.Gre~nfleld, are Vi!!ltlng MrA.
of her ram1Iy. There ·were ,z2 · present, 1--- - - -- 0_rs9n, s;· ,Parents, Mr; , !!ll.d Mr~.
Refreshments were served.
..
.Tames .Knapp. , ·
.
i 0Mrs Err~st G~ Thayer has ,returned· 1
- - ,:__,___
;.,_____
- - - -·{
v sit to her: sister, Mr's Gerru e ones 'Pe,a.se. in Springfield
Wo~thlngtoit now has a1\ out-'goi , ,
in the afte
•, ~"1
!@¢ ..,_._
I
- - - - - - - - --·- ,·-·•-smail
t d
~noon, Cornrnencing'
a ur ay the ' ~a11 from H t·
'
arrived at 1115 ! th
u:1 mgton• ~-- - - - -left at 2
·
n
e rnormng and)
ruling
p.l m., according to the iiew·
-·- -- l
rece ved from Washlngt
-- ----- - -·- --· - - ·- - - -[ Webb C. Stevens of R
on_.
who was called Ea.st b ock~ord, Ill.,
1 hls uncle c ll
Y the illness of
--- --------- - -·
_ ~ este_t!ay, _ u en L._ St:~ns, _~~ ~ \'I

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- !r1~1u4e,s.

piano\

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�WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

TO W N _ME ET I N ~ BUSINE SS
Worthington, Feb. 7-Cullen L . Ste- \
Several Ron«l l mproveme11t Matters
vens, who went to t he Cooley Dlcklnto Come Up Monday
.
son hospital at Northampton Mon_.
•
. f
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t
---day suffering from spinal trouble, is 1•
Wor.th!n gton, J a n . . 31-Th~ wa rra n
. repo.;.t~d more comfortable. His nephtor the .annual town - meeting, Monda.y, I
ew, •;:bb C. Stevens of Rockford, III..
:carries 43 articl es and prom!aes . a
;rih?
as called East because 1ot his
'I
d.a Y, ·Amon"'
th e proJ'ects
of In·
h ome.
_ness, left today to return to his
'busy
b
.
. •
1
'terest _Is .a propos_ed a ppropriation ~f
·' Mrs Fi:ancis A. Robinson and Mrs
'$150.0 to be ~xpe~ded on R a nd all 8 1
. Leland P , Cole entertained the grange
hill; , $1000 to 1mp1 ~ve th_~ road from I · - - (whist club at the Lyceum hall Wednestbe ·root of Randall s hill on -li..utomo- 1
day , evening. Eight tables were ln
route 112 toward Cummmgton; ;
play. The . first prizes were won by
1 bile
1$500 to Improve road ~r«&gt;m G~nter vii- '
- - ---'- · Mr and Mrs Stephen bleksak and the
!age to residence of Miss Bass1e Ames, 1---- ·consolation prizes by Mrs Edward J.
-- $500 to ~e spent on r oad above Wll- ·
.· Clark and Joseph Wright. The neJtt
!uain H. Streeter's, past the two small i
meeting will be _held: on Wednesday
bridges ; $250 to Install electric li g hts 1
,evenin~ with
'and Mrs E1"nestJ L ...__ _ _
in Lyceum hall; $200 to install same ,
-IThaY,er.
'
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·
In Town hall; t o appoint a committee
The grange wlll ~eet' at the .Lyceum
and raise money · for tercentenary
' hall Tuesd'a y _ evening for Its regular
/I
celebration ; to raise money for repair ___ _ _ _ (meetin~. ~M j~itlation pf candidates. - V - __
and painting ot bl·idge at · South
1The wog·r,a~. will con~lst of a -roll call,
Worthington village; to appropriate
~ ~en eac11_ !'n~mber will tell Which was
money for the iriiJ)rovement of road
~t,}tf! favorite . program l_n ~929 and
pa.st the church at South Worthingtol!_
_____
·- _ ~hy, and a valentine· social m ·charge
r - - - - and the erection
f a traffic sign at
_ - . , of Miss Moulton and Mjss Townsend. ,
Mrs Leland P . Cole Is substituting 1
the cross roads near .George Thrash- .,
-~
' at the Riv~slde school' for Miss Doris '
er's,
The
grange
will
have
_
sand,
_
_
_
_
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Stedman,
.w,ho_ i.11. UL-- •• ul
,__ ___ ___ _ _
1
;-wlchee, hot dogs, doughnuts and cof- r
'· Mrs Charles
recently .
on sale..
.
_burned her foot badly , fly dropping a
·
.'kettle of hot. water which -sbe was
- - ------- - ---- - -- -----------1:fgtng .on
stove, __ ls sl? ~I~, lmprov-

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' The . Friendship guild Q! the,,:Con·.gregat1onal c~u i;ch m,.gt lal!t e vening
_
.- -.~
- - - - ------'- -"---- ,at . the ,home . of t he p reside nt , Mrs
James H. J;lurckes. · Thank / Y,:01,1 let.
.
_ .
·.
., .
ters '_Vere re~d from the children's
home in Northampton for stuffed dolls·
.fr-om ·: t b«i' .Rfo Gra~de institute; N e,;
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Mexico, for a Chr·1 stmas · box · from
W or th in.g ton, Feb. 8-W.i lliaiµ L..
the.. church, f_qr coff.ee J or'r.!!Jln~! din._ __ Smith,_
. 66, _die~ ~1s
, ,mornmg
. .._at. . h.is _ ____ _ sh_~t
ne1 , from M;1s11 Coleman·, Who was the
~jn i:emembered in ·J'anuary; f r.om ,___ _ __ _
_h ome m Rmgv11le. He . W:lt~ bo_rn in,
t¥1~ · Hazel- ,\ri.a1?le of_, ~ i.i tland. for ,_a
.
South Wo rthington, the_·son ot ;~mes
t~~f!-11 Chx;ls.tmaii , t ;1!~( , w1th,..g ifts. lt.
___j G. and. .E
- (Middlebrook) . Smlth, •1--- - ~ --· j:";~ll voted t,o ,s_,e11d ,;a,_r~ri:;l~~,,to th e E d - , _ . _... JC::;l
· ... .
· . .. . . . .
·
.\\,trds . ch.~ ~clir ·,Nonttiam vton for a - - _..
J
Mr Snutli w11,,'- a, ~emb er of .the bt?ard
' ·,mi s'sion'¾kYy;bo'x-'.°. 'TIJe ,•social p rogra'in 1
'
ot watllr- com1m~l017-ers a n d had.
-)n chnr~·e- of Mt's ,Geor ge E , 'torrev.
served In the offi ce many: y ears . . He
·,J r., ~co ns isted of a contest .or'' ma k in o·
- I Ieaves his w idow, Ma bel ~Granger)·-1--- -- - -'t h .
· ~ i;-.,. ~:: ··
-·, - :
-_-:...
,
I Sm,itli'; a da u ghter, Mis€! Pearl Smit h ,.
e most w prda~from combutations of ,-,. th e. .letters co~talned ·l n ,th,e word,W!tl•
and
sister, Mrs A. ';W. 1-fichols of
~ es_terfl eld. The f uneral -wlll be held
~;~ne, th e first prize being ~ won 'by
JJ,ltia.Y aftern D°On at 1 a nd bur ial w_ Ill
·ti
Lela nd 1-. Cole. A contest, put- c
;
be in R ingvllle ce~etery.
ng together valentine postcards cut
,_
.
·- - - --- -~
Into small pieces, was wo,:i by Miss
•
1
Elsie V. Bartlett ; Mr!! F . A. Robinson, :
; - - - - - - - ---- -- --- ------·-- __ _______ cons9lation-. Then followed a hunt tor ,_ _ -~c...c- ~
hidden h eart11, _the first . prize bein g
won by Miss I r ene Moulton and the
consolation prlze by Miss Elsie v .·
Bartlett.
, ,___ _ _ _
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·
WIL··LIAM· L···.SMITH
•

DIES. -AJ:WORTHINGTON

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�The Gritige Whist club: ~ htqn 'was ) · '
have met this week Act ,.~ ., Guy /
F. Bar tlett's will meet mstl3.ldil with •
·
,.
·
--~ _
Mr and ' Mrs -Alden B. Cady ;/:tF ~est ;Worthington, Feb. U - Although
·
Worthl'ngtdn ·on Wed11esd~J •!iY~mng. ,
~udden , and extreme ch~gell ; of
•i'he Loyal Ladies' 'V3l~i,·.;9.l~q met
temperature are traditional New Englast eve ning' ll,t the home of,- Mr ·ijn&lt;l /
\ 1and weather ·from 10 below zero on
Mrs Wells ·Magargal an:d·,, .played, i ·
.
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_....,., 11 tables. The first Pi;!~e,:1 . were :
Wedne11day mor n~g to 45 above on
i won by :Mrs George E. 'Bo( i;~-s'. ifr., 1
Thursdl!Y is 11omethlng of a reqord as
. and William BNwn, and ·the :, conso- , _
i:{ also a robin' which Walter g; Tojver --- · la tion prizes by Miss Berf!lce;_'~ : Kll-f
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j)ourn and George· E. Torre~ . Jr. , .·
s~w tll:~s piorn_lng. 1n t . e .maple ttee
i !'. Miss-: ·Rcisalie S!J.lvinl 'of .chJ_J'sier ha . near Ms_house.
.
. .
been the gµe,st·.· of '~er sister1 '. M'rsJ A •. -·-. _
The .Grange Whist club ·met Jruit -- -, J , Laro ovi!r tne week ,et1,ff,: '. . ·,
eve_ning with Mr: and Mrs Ernest o:.
. ·Harry W, Mo)lieon will' :,H'&lt;_ild ·. · a
Thayer and played 11 tables. The
, dance at the Lyceum· hall Friday eyefirst prizes we e won l?;y Mrs Alden
__ _. _! nlng. Bates's orchestra :wl )l pl;;1 s;;·
1 Porter·, Jr., and the
Cady and Herbert
: ·. The town. water/at ~lrigvilj\;/,; whlch
OQnsqlatlon pr,l zes by Mrs Raymond
has been· frozen ·for three weeks, . has
I
eall and Wells 'Magatgal . ••,~r and I
just b'een thawed out, . . . .'· : , · · ·:' .
Mrs Frank Bates _will entertain the , - · A Ford •· o.::&gt;Upe· ,belonsing :,to 11,;1:iss I---- whist club at the home of Mrs G,UY I
Esther Wallace, the Red Croi;ii! nurse,
F. Bartlett on',Wednesday e.venin·g. · ,
skidde_d . .on . ~h.. e i_ce. oir' t~e•: sta1r~ roa:d,
I
The Women·s Benevolent society
between a he residences of ·M~ p. F, _______ _
11
me.t r es'terday a·t the home· of Mrs
Vaugha:ii' a"itd Walter. Buxto1( yesterWinifred E. Drake. The next meetday, afternoon, turned. c?mpletely :
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Ing ~ii! be held on :Wednes~ay, the
ar.oun.!i ~nd tipped' ov}~l'. ~;~l~f,' •Wal1
•~6th, with_ Mrs Harry
Molljson.
ta:ce ,yas uninjured. .,The · , 'ha)•,. was
1
sllghtl&amp; damaged. ·
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·, Basha11 Hill council, Royal Arca•
num
win
hold
ab.
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open
ipee~fog'
at I
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the .Lyceum hall SaturilaY~,e ~~pi,ng· 1n·L
1--"-""'-''--- - .I
celebratfon ot Washingt.::m!s ,bi.rthday,
I[I
afso iil celebration of the J&gt;lrtjlday ..of
4
. • .~- :..,
r
their 9Jdes~ rp/)~bElf, C!eII¼~nt; ;f.-}1urr,
who ,.will•, be 81. • .
,., ... .
.,.M.fss 'b!ive E. Cole, ·Miss .Clarissa.
'l'o Give Patriotic' Piogrii.°in
llenry,
Miss
M~fy
.Read
~~d
-_;frierid
I'
Worthington,, Feb. 17-Tl1e '')tifnof ,Pittsfield we,e in .towi;i, .for the
11
bow club of the Riverside, schot:11 will
week end.
. . .· ,
;
hold patriotic -exe.Fclses Friday- ,'af€~r1'
The grange will meet ,'a,t' the: Lyce.n oon "·i,n . h onor '_ .df Waslfip ~6n ~'nd
um hall tomorrow even\i;lg ,~TT~ conl.,\nc9fo. E ve1YP: · CorlHltt'. ;.~ · b!,len
fer the third. and fourth .. gegrees upon.
; '..cbosen chairman and Marvis -,Sny.de1·
__
,
three
candidates. . \ Th.!;l., t.~l~·iJI:~.g,ee - -- -- -\
~a nd Dor if! Pomeroy as help~l'!f••f~r ''the •- 1
follo wing program: · Song, , -,~~icia, ·•
wilf "e oon;(lrr.e!l. by: th_~· wom-en:'s' ®._,
_,i
by everyone ; "We Cannot, · ',:\Jj ;B~
i~re~. s~ff a?,d thi\ four'th bY t_he
'·i
H eroes,'' Do:gald P omei:oy,:. JtVisions
~ ar t
1.·.
'.".r . f ·: ~~, ·~ ·;;.; ~~··
1
- --- of L incoln," J ean ,J oyal; play,; hF 8\Jr '
' F.ebruary Days"-Februart, ' )J.j;~·M1).r ,,
VIS Snyder, . F ebrua rY,: _12.:) JY~eAll:le.rt
-------- ------ ·---------,__
·~·
Edwards, F ebruary 14 by poris 1Pom/1 --- ero. y, .Februar.· y 2Z 'l:iy- ' Alfred' Jofal.
!
February_27 by E velyn Cqr}:&gt;4Ji, "Our
,
li'_a.tt~rn." M,11-bel _E dwards :,anjj'..,).x\ro1'
_ ..., t,hY ',rower; . Lmooln song,-obY t he , ___ - 1_
scl)ool ; · '"Our · ..Flag,'' Dor{Jth t :;.JoY'll,1;
\
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dialog, "Washingt'on or ·: •~!h'col1i' "
Dorothy Corbett and Helen Pqb)'er qy;
- --·acrostic,
"The. Nation's De~il!lcilil;l," ,A.I;)I ..
. bert E dwards, Marvis Snyder, Dori:1
i
Bvmeroy, Jean Joyal, James~':M'.urphy, Evelyn Corbett, Ali'-. re~·'. \f oyal:,
"George Washington," , J /jnl.es" ;Mirr. y; Washington song, bi,,1:h~ ,~chool.
rents an d frlen
a r ·· 1/i_t~ -!li'

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Town Father Gets

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, Feb. 20.-It will not be neces- ' , Wor thington, F eb. 10-Mrs cun'to~ ,_
- F. Rea d will en tertai n t he Hungi·Y
eary for Wortbingto.Jl t o r qy.ive
Dozen at h er h ome t omorrow afterl the dncldng stool for its -· Tercen- ,
Itenar y celebratl.oil as one .o f its I
.noon,
" 's Ben evolent socJetY ,_
, The W omen
f town fathers, .Herbert G; Porter, II
will meet W ednesday w it h Mrs Wi n· fi.rSt selectman, de~onstrated . an i1
·cred- E . Drake ! ot· ·an all-day sewing
_: ex"h:tnpl~. •of · ,a perfect ducking
meeting.
The Grang_e Wnis t club " 'Ill m eet ,without appo,r11,tus, when to the
Wednesday night at the home c,f Mr -'.
vast amu sem ent of his companions
,
j
1 ,and Mrs Ernest I. Thayer..
, be fell into Goodwin's pond reA valen t ine dance w ill
held a t, I
cen tly while ..cutting ice. He good
the Lyceum hall Frida y ~nigh't under l--1 n;tturedly stood tor the -tun and
the auspices of the .grange. Bates's
sa id that if he didn't bear of it
orchestra will play.
The Loyal Ladies will h old a .public
Qver the rad!Q be 'should consider ' _ _ whist party Sa tu'rciay · ni g ht a t thE&gt;
himself l11cky: ·No: ill ·effects were
'home of Mrs Wells Magargal.
·
felt.
Frlssen rendered· firs t.r
The Loyal Ladies m et Saturda y
night at the Lyce um h a ll fo r th'Jir 11
ai&lt;l:, :~fin~ the catastrophe ·b·a s as-11regular m eeting. Two c harter mem - -- - - - - sumed its place· in local bis'tory.
bers, Mrs F«!nry Synder and Mrs Jeremiah Robin~on, took _the obli q"ation.
.,A competit1ve valentme , entertain- - ment between the Royal Afcanum and ,,_ - --- - 't he Loyal Laqies to · see who would
·furnish the entertainment !or the next'
-=- ~
--·• -- .-- - --· --~,dd~7-a
- =-=~---,~
meeting was won by the latter.
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Worthington,, '.F eb.. :?1"-Te~ , tables , · ' - -·of cards were pla,yed , at the ·lio111e .of! :
Mr · and Mr.a Alden B. Cady 'last' eve_Jnfog . whfn _the _g_range met ··the! e . f?.E:l.--..c_
-_,
.
~- its. -wee).{ly , . 'whist _party, · · TbeJ _
ttfat ' f; · y
Worthington, Feb. 13-The grange·
·
prizes were· won ·by, ·Mrs Charles . "A.
met , at the Lyceum hall last ev e'Kill:iou rn'·•a:nd· Daniet R. -Porter ' and
ning and conferred the first a.n.d sec___ _ _ .J the corisolatlon prizes by' M'tss Be'r• •·-- ·
ond degrees upon four candidates,
nice Kll\:lourn and WelJs: Magarga.l;t: •
Mrs Claude Knapp, Gordon .GarC ..er,
Mr and .~rs· Fran).c Ba tea -,wil-I · e,nter• '[
Joseph 0. Wright and -H u ston H.
tain the whisL'club at its ·next'njeet- 1, ·
_Wilson, the degrees !being worked .by ,
ing
,next -F riday even1:nst.· at 'the ihome '"'°¾
the regular officers. It was vot~ to ~ - - - -- - - ":-- hold -a · special meeting on Tuesday
?f :('dr and Mrs Alden B .' Cady.
' ·
evening · to cob.fei: the third . and
fourth: degre8'3. ~t was vqted to buy 1
-----l one do:&gt;mn folding chai_rs and to .have !- -.- l Charles M. Gardner of Westfie ld, high I
. priest of -·_demeter, as th!l iristalllng \1 officer for 1931. A repol'.t wa_s given
- - -~ oy D"r F ,' A. Robiru;on for· t he com- . ___ _ __ _
-- -' munlty· service committee on ,the proceeds trom the grange dances and
:, by Mrs Guy- F. Bartlett on the pro- - - - ---- --' .ce~s !i9m· town-meet1n·g dinner. The
program in charge o! Miss Moulton
con.sisted · or -· two contests with the \
prizes won, QY Mrs Francis A. R obmson a nd Arthu r G. Capen . R efr es h- m ent s wer e : served by the feast comm ittee Mrs H o£.l¾)_e .S. Cole and Mrs
Stephen Olek sa'k,'r""?,
Mrs sel~,ui;y·:p; :/:fo~e gave a . eurpl'lse . f;itrty, ., 11:0 l'}~t; h ome r ecerttly
fo r M~ JJ.e~e . ;r.,;oulto,n In celeb ratlo~
,.of hel'i, ,1:l"!r,t;:hd.a_y. Ga mes were pla:yed
and · .r efr.es~ en t~i 'l;l'er.e, aerV'ed.

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.J9,B!HINGTON
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Grange Co11fers Degrees
Th e Grange l\l'il t on
, Tu esday evening ,at th e Lyceum
- -- - -· -------- - - - --------- - - +ball in special session to confer
the third r.nd fourth degrees upon
four candidates, . Mrs.
Clauae
- - - --_____..,.Knapp, Gordon· G/3-rdner, Hu ~ton
..._
Wilson and Joseph 0. Wright, tbti
third degree being conferred by ·
t he ladies' degree sta.ff and theL - -------- - · - - - - - - -- - - - --, fo urt h by the regular ·.o fficers. It
was voted that the Grange O'l.lPboa rd be made larger; committe,e ,
Dr. F . 'A. Robinson, Arthur G. 1--- - - -- i·Ca pen an·d Harry Tinker. Th~ fol- ·
I-owing committee Oil -- resolutions
,:,v
-as a ppointM for ' .t'h'e year: .P f,i,,j._.--,,...:..._ _______________ ____ _
""n,4 ?'lrs.: .• Francis R~,l;!tnson_ an·d 1
:'fih ss Elsie V. Bartlett. The Grange ·
~ei1.t Q_n recorp· qpp4s~d t_o any -1--- - -- -- ------'--------- - - -;¢'?-,:ing~, in state '-l~ws·,w,hich ,would,;
. ,,,.
;ten·d to .weaken the enforcement ,
o1 tqe Volstead act and voted to ~
~.,___so inform tb!l eingressmen repre- l-- - - -== =-- - -- - - - - - -- - - - - - senting this district. The- social
f l'Ogni.m- co'nsis.ted ~i'ga111es; . cont~sts,. reading ·of . short stories by: r;.-- - -- - - - - -- - -- - - - - -- -- - _F_~ank;~in:·!f
Bm;r, han~onica
sqlos.:·bY:
Victor ·,-Bernierand the
Si?1ging c,t Grange songs: . Sand-,
....
- -·,
wicbel!, cal!:_e . an!I p_uncb were
serv._t;!d; CClmmi~tee, MTs. Aµna A. ,.
op@\! Ii«

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~ole, and· liirs_.__s_te_P_
,hen Ol!;!Iqmk.

f / i\frs. 1-felJie S]J_lpman' Hollis

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·spending some t-lme with Mrs. l\fy- /
' ra R; Stevens o! Stevensville. Miss ' - -- - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - -- E lsie ·Y. Bartlett, · who has been 1
0
staying with her, has ret urned to

~" home.

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1· · liir~·y Ed dy of Florence

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Week end with his da ughter, M'rs ;\Val.
.
.. .. ,
. ., ter '!-F, •.ro wer. Alfred C. Stevens, 'Jr., .
_, : CLEME:N'T F. BURR' HONOll'ElJ· 1 o E Northampton is also the. -g~est on •· "
- - - - -· · ·
·
Mr and Mrs Tower for a wee).!:, _.
'
Oldest Royal Arcannm Member Gnest il · . Tlie Loyal L adies will hold. JL: pµblic
at Open llleetlng .
,
whist party -Wednesday nigb.fl •!lt the ,
Worthington, Feb 24-There was a
'1:ortie of cM1· and Mrs Charles. Q. Wll• t- -- -- - - - - 1
·
hams
· ·· ·..
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large gathering
at t h a L yceum ' 11a11
"P 't . t·
. ht" · 111 b ''· · ·bs
d 11
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·B
·ii
a r10 1c nrg
·w
e·. • .o erve
i:;aturday n, .:; ,1t w en
a.sham H1l
by the grange tomorrow at. •the-· regu- r - ·- • _
council of Roval Arcanum held a n . - la r meeting at Lyceum · hall· w.ith .the
open meeting in celebration of WashProgram In charge o! thi, lecturer. I
Jngton's birthday and In honor of the lir,frs Guy F. Bartlett.
plrthda:,- of the oldest member, Clem- - , Mr and Mrs Frank Bates ,will enter- r --- - - - - - - -- /!Dt F Burr, who was 81 years old on
.tain the grange whist' cltljj ' at the
Saturday Mr Burr was a representapome' of· ~r; and M1'4il Alden,C~dl\. Fri- ,
tive in the Leo-islature for this dis• · day rijght.
.. ·
· •· ; ;,
tric:t in· 1897. Ba.rent Pease presided,
Mr , and • Mrs Cleti10nt F , .Burr at- 1 - - - -- a'iid tlie" prog-ram o'pened ,. :wit'il .. "the ,, tend~d the f'uneral at Pittstteid $.litur;lnging-, of -•s, '!cAf;et'iCa,'S.:,-,by the·, audi• •: \_.d ay ,Mtern·opn . of Mi's Bu_
r ~'li. ·,b rqther,
ence Mr Pease gave a reading on I 'flank Crosrer.
··
· •.,. .. ..
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1-- Washington .:, a.nd a poem "The Busi- :'-·-' · ·
·
- - - ,.
· ·~ ·
nesJk,c&gt;f }!'): i,mdshlp," and then ca;lled j
UP.Oil' MI': Burt for a speech. Mr Burr ,
1
'exp r"esse'd 'his ·appreciation ot the cel- t
ebration of his . birthday and •the 1
friendship• It- ·showed;· and said·· ..if, he
c_qulct . haye . tile confldenc.e and esteem
~
- Pf hi~ tg;v_qs~eo~le )ie ~~~t&lt;! ~i&gt;t what _ Worthin~ton, Feb. ~1-The gr~ge 1_______ ____ _
the rest ' o'ftl'l'e world thought"'.ot 'h im.
met last night at Lyc~u~ . hall w~th 1
1
Mr · Burr ··dwelt upon·-Washington 1 the
32 pre.sent. Walter H1gg1ns was mfar- mer, -·and •, spoke br i~fly ·o! ,ih!tt ' l1te
stalled into the office of overseer. It
- - - -- and accomplishments .:an!'i o! the powwas voted to enlarge the grange c1;1p- lb--.. ·--,._
er of . the il)flueng_e, of suc)l ,.11 ll.fe.,.
board and to go on record as favoring f
·
·
..The speech was fo)lowed ·by .the singthe grange debenture plan for farm
~g of 014 sopll'si :.!&gt;r.!E;f .. .. rtiii:iat~ by i
relief. A patriotic prugmm i.n charge ·. . ,,.,- .
- - - - ' Grand' Guide He_..nb· Ratl:i;l:).:u'.ri'c . of r - of Worthy Lecturer Mrs Guy F. Bart- . -~~
":-" .-Stockbrlage and 'Alternate' ·supreme I
Jett, followed.
.. ·
Representative Felix : :Scha'.rm'e n · ·and 1
Mrs ,Edward J', Clark has gone to
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21 s ¾;;'2~:rne~~pital at
a birthday cake mad~ by Mrs riarold
Mrs Harry Eddy of Florence is I1
;/
'91 Parish.
• . . ,, _
,; ,/'. ,;,:''
I
spending a few days at h er·:cottage
1
M, B"n
ili,·,w
light • - , . .:oh ly
he.·e
·
:\ "'
history
of tl;e
Roy;al
.'\,.l'Ci\,llUIIl ,fn. jhi~ I
...,,.. -,:
town, by s!iying_ that _tn~ ' first;J,9/1,ur- \
"'
a~ce soqiet;:. here_w.as~tl,l~ Qoi:n~erc.tl./
., - _,,.,
Life, of , which Mr Bun• is tl;le onl;i..=-,
· ··
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cllarter membe~.: 1~ow co~n~9.(e d',.yvith l
-tl)e•. Ar~anum,•, ,'l;'h1s. floups g.~~ fpr a
short . time ~1Jd thei;i the ~µig'l\ts of ,
I H?nor _took , thep:1. In . a,.s a ;,b._ogy,.' he j___ . Worthington, I!'eb. 25-The Loyal
said, with several qew.-meml)e,.,9, .,May ·
ILadie11' public whist party ,which was
22; , 1900, tl:!e . R9yal Arca,nuq:i, ·.. wa,
to have ,been l1eld at Mr and Mrs C.
- -- -...1 granted a cl'.art~r, taking ovQ1'.." the.
o. wm~ams'l!, ,tomorrow evening; has
former 01;-~amzat1on, and -. l).e~Ji.aa .,I- - been postponed' because pf. poor trav- r - - - - - -- - •me1!1bership , or. .6,3.
c, :, ..;, • · '
,
ellng.
·
·
·. A .dance end. ed
prog:ra%D,·.8J:l.d.: re- J
Mrs Alfred· C. Stevens of Northamp- - - - - freshments· :were served.
,,, ::.! :~ 'l-- ton arrived yel!terday and I!! the guest
.. ··
of Mr and Mrs Walter H. Tower for a •- - -- - -- - - - - day or two. Mrs •rower's nieces, Miss .
.Esther Strong and Miss Sarah La~e
1
·-- - --- i of Northampton, are also visiting r--- - -- - - - them.
: 1
Maple sugar makers have set their
camps ::Jut expec;:t a, _&amp;110rt . sel!:son.

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· "lf1te·-Women's Benevolent society
F . b ' 28 ·,.,
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fmet today with Mrs Harry W. Molli'. 1Vprt~lngto~ • . ,, .e ~, · -i~e oca
Ison to sew ·for the annual fair to .be
J ll aMrs -dt _the ·. J:Ia,m_pshjre county
held next sum mer. ''i'here were 11
ll~rvlce, Mrll Ar lin Cole , ~nd M r,s Er'p resent ,am,ong whom was Miss Mary
/ nest Thayer, held a. meeting :,ester- - - - --- -------/ Brown of Springfield; who is the guest
I d~ , afterp o!&gt;n. a.t _tpe .hon:,.~ o~ . Mrs
of Mrs ·.T .. c. Martin.
·
I John lrrla11el,I t or tn o~e. lnter~te_d In
Mlsa Marlon Mason of Northampton
joining t he Ha m~shlre ou11ty beaut!Is at ·her home · for a few week8 be- ------ ---- , . fylng-~he-k\tc~~n contest.
There
-- _ _
cause of poor he~lth.
·
l W~PE!.!IA'1 :P,res.~nJ, : ,• TQe contest will
.,,
-Mrs T. C. Martin Is having her ga.
1 J:iegln Mlw.fl:~ 1 ,a ~1 ql~
J-une 1 Prizes
rage converted Into a house which,
1 ·w!U be ~V~I} f&lt;!@r the Rltchen,,-mak;.whep finished, will be occupied by A. - - - - - - · In$' the greatel;t percentage improve- .:......___ - ..____
J . Ls;ro t1:nd ~amlly. George T. Dodge
-m~pt:~nd 'a ]sQ. for, the kitchen ~aklilf
·
of Rmgv11le 1s laying the foundation .
·.t .he -greli;.test.,.pe. re_entage improvement
and Wells Mag&amp;r-gaJ is the contractor. __ _ _ _ ~f ~ r,oportfon }~•.the lllO~e.r,' •l?en~ . · ___ .
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·:,_,4t'., O. Wells ,q!, Gi'eenfleld was In
··-·-l
town · ~oda.y lQ'o,~g - a.fttiif the ·inter!
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G1~ge F a ~ F llMJl · Relief
- ·Feb. 2 6.- Tbe Grange met last ,,-.-.
_:_ --tev_e ning at. the Lyceum hall- for
7
l ita regular m eet!ng ,with· 32 pres1

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ent. Ove rsee r Walter H fggiµs _wa~
·&gt;&lt;
installed In to .office. Voted, to. en~ ·
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large th e-- Grau g~ cupboar_d·; vote~. ·- - --·-- . ·worth.irig tbn; Ma rch 2--T.he •grange
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., t hat the Grange go on -reconl as
h eld the largest whist party of the
:
/ fa \'orin g t h e Gran ge de benture .
sea:s o~ F riday -night at t he )lq~JJ
ir/ -· plan to~ :-farrn rel!~_f, :.A '~a.t riotie --_- - - - - llfr and Mr s ½Iden B- Cady, with_Mr f-lc.....- - - - -1
l',
f prog raµi in cha. rge of the lecture~,
,
a n.~. ]1:_rs .Frank Ba tes. entertalnmg.
tt ' n,frs. Guy F. Bartlett,- tol-lowed: '
Thf;te~~ ' ta:!?168 . "':re . l!l P)a~., _'.];'he
· :c.
,:
'L. 1·.Song
~•My Count . •,i;,· 0 Tl: - i.
..~.r::i~
:_P,r-1z!3s ._wer_e won by_-~1.'3s Klj,t!l} r . "'
. :!'. . _.ii, •. iee,
- . ·er me Bossen and .Tohn Jar vrs and ·Ht&amp;'
;~Y a ~1~i~Jtee:;.::rol~; ~ •.Ot m._emb~r~.·
,..,
co'n rolat ion pri~es - ~by'. :Mi's ',Cliµ.t&lt;kl :
Whieh program: ij1d -you like best
Knapp · and :WS:ldo. Cole. The ~ ~t r
JL -_ -, last year? ";- .read!ngg: i. "Go-ru:g' --- - _ _ ___ · meet ing .\Viii J:Je .held at t )le home '0'£ 1
.. r
,
Ho me," " .Alld T hey ·Eat,'.' by Mrs.
I J o_h n J ar vis op: Friday night. · or,: 1-- (
1
fl' I
Charles A. Kilbou rn : ~ngiii:g: -by'.!:he ¥Ya l Ladles will-,hold,.;i; ' pul).ti:~ I
-;
µ, ___ _a udience, ' 'Battle H ymµ,_ · of .the _
w•h,i,s~. pa,,ty _-ry-ednesday ·~ !~ht :at .:t,f$j
II'
Republic";
r eading, "Lin~oln 'f3 - ---;;:= 7 ' - hom~, of !ifr ~nd, lf.~/l Cl;).ames A. K,1!~L ._ __ _ _ .J
/.I /
19 "'0 Me= ·a g t
y
,;~a.-.b l\"KI '"'
.__,~
, b&lt;mrn.
·
...lk
I
1
1 1 - / Ma"deUn e"" ,;o:n.seit~l;, ;
w.'
." T he . 18th Centu .r y G.eiJ,.tlem$h,:' 1r- - - - - -- -- --- - --- - -·- _ _ _
_ ),
by- Miss Ma,rjorie G. Ba rtlett. A
:
/ game or the· Un ited . States,
corj/1.
l sls ~!ng of a se,r ~es of questions ~o
- --- - - --· - _ __ ___
__ _
l' be,_~ n syiel·ed by . the ab breviatlo us- · - - ---' ,
for l!'tates was-- won ey Miss E ltza~
}'
:.
!beth. 'l'cirr~Y.- .A C!)n te;t of s eeing
1
~~ 0 1V· man y · worcfs couic( be ma de,
I
f•tly using the le tters conta in ed I~
..:
( t he name· George Washington wi,S'
,
, ~on _by Mrs. George E. Torre?, Jr..
~lnging _by ~b_e au.?!e_nce, '' Colu nf..,
,b~a'. th ~ 0.~1!1 or (fi~ Ocean ." ne;{
1
fres!:m ~epi~ ·w-¢re· ser ved.·
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WORTUING-TON .

WOllTHINGTON

· ·. · ·. ~Mh !)aniel
Worthl_ngto11, March er guists f6_1' - - -

J
- -/t. .Po:t~~_:;J

6-'Reynold
1 Worthington, March
~i~t~rs and nie_ce,
, Cowing ot Bellows Falls, Vt., who is
~?1
GIii and da.ughter, Caroli~~
well known here having lived many''
nn Miss Mil!'.lred Parsons of SoUt
. . - - -· _ years on Highla nd street, has had
- - \t-tnl'&gt;ton.
. H BUt'ckes will take twoJ
the misfortune recently to lose the,,
r Rev James ·
_.
·
.
sight of one eye. While -working in
w~eks of hisvaoo tion 11
t'-_ __ his woodworking shop a piece of I,
- -include · th\ su nd ays
1· .'
. wood . flew fr-om
a saw and struck
16th •
" eye, d est ro:ymg
. .
th e· s1g
. h.t . It' 1s
.
·and
William
Fitzroy of Dalton I s spe nd ·
: h 1s
i ng a week with Mr and Mrs Walter _ __ · hoped to save the, eyeball so . that it: -- - - -14. Towe_r. d v·
t M
. 0. Eween who
: need not b'e .removed. ·
Francia an
mcen
.
• .
.
''
·
.
have been spending a week _ ~t. th_e1rj Mrs Clinton F.· Read gave a c~1lhome, hav!! now returned to WMtfleld. ,__ _ __, dren's party yesterday frc?m ·4; to. 6.30 ·
- -- - 'i:'lrnothy Sweetman and Itarry W. I
. in celebration of tHe . birthdays of
on shares on ·
,
·
.
,
.v, • .....
O
M0-• 11·ison ,a re sU"aring
j
.
I
two of her childr_e:n;l'D_
was ,
the Moyer farm.
,;,, ..a1.niel,, who
.
Miss Olive E. Cole and Miss Clarissa. ,,.. ___ _j eight years old yesterdi1:y; ' ap.d Vir- - , Henry o~ Pittsfield : spent .the week; ginia1. -wh.o · wili' be- two yea,rll :old to-,:1
1
end. at Horace S,. Coles.
,..
m orrow
·
·
:-nowaru Bail,;~tt, -~9_
0 'ha~" 'li~~dl r-..
The Loyal Ladies met la st evening,_ - - - -· · _,__ - - ·
·
d 1
_ at the home of Mr · and Mrs Charles
'l working for Oleksak -Bros.,- a_n · 11 ,- A. Kilbourn and played eight tables
· boarding at Harry Moilis on's, _le:t i
of cards. The first prizes were won
today and has gone to Cummm.,- _ __ _ , by Mrs George E. Torrey, Jr., and
t ,,,...!.- - -- - -- - ~ = _ _
U
Harry Tinker and the consolation
O,!l,
::
d e dprizes
by :M:rs
A number from here· atten_
Dr
Francis
A. Franklin
Robinson.H. Burr an.,~.
·.·. ·
- - -- -I the benefit dance last nig~t- _at ~ - - ~ Walter Pratt
Stephenrown, 1,t
Norwich Bili- for David . Tmker.
Y., 1s visiting his sister, Mrs Charles
,, whose barn was lately . destroyed
, Granger.
.
"The Jolly Five''" met yesterday
- - - - ~Lb=.y
:....fi_r_e_._ _
·
afternoon with Mrs Carlton Loveland
and played two tables of bridge: The
first prize was won by ,1\-!i::s Ernest
G. Thayer :µiii t !!e consolation prize.,
by 14,t·s Frnnk ' ~ a tes.
_ _ _ _. _. - ~

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1~bert

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W()RTHTNt-•'~ON"'

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Gr1mge Whist CJnb Meets

Worthington, March 7-The Friend--·
March -iO-The Grange Wblst
ship guild met last evening with Mrs
' :Jub met Saturda_y evening at t_he
James H. Burckes, _presi_d ent, at the .
/ :;home of ·.;rohn {arvis, Altffough _
·parsonage with 12 present. A pi,.per
, .-~-small-er in iltimpet"iecause of the
onl "Work for Christian 'Missions" .was
d ,-i; ; J &lt;;,ondlt~on of the tra_vellin~ On the I
_ , read bby Mrs Geor_g e E . 'l;'orrey, Jr. lt . ; ,/ fl -W· _,I :cross toads, _Jh_e patty wa., _a vei 1
· Wll;S voted to make babie!! clothing for,'
- I' - .. · pleasant one. · The iw~w:hl _
1
the mountain people· of Tennessee.
was once _a)! _o ld ta~
• lP.J!!~un
The shut-In remembered the past
ti. ~- , .
usu~ ~ f i nris now a
__ month was CuI!en L . Stevens, who is , ~
- . cr&lt;Ssii'roan,~was on-ee the old Bo1;1ton
ill at the Cooley Di.c k!nson hospital
· l' . , ·-: to _-Aibany · p.ost~raad an,d· the place•-1, in
m Northampton.
An hour aprons
was spent
~ ,11"" J., 1,I!- relay station _vr
· h ere ·11orses· W, e r esewing on children's
Rev and Mrl! James H. Burckes·wm
Ofr' · exchanged for fr-esh o:qes tor the
!~ave Saturday for two weeks' vacll,- ' --,;/"- continuance-of the journeY:, Near
hon at the home of his parents, Mr
,r-'1/ here the ·first_: settiers of the. town
, and Mrs John W. ~urckes ot Wal,.
"&amp;.fmpea for the· .night. Here also
-- _____, tham. Mrs ~_urckes,s brother, Frank ~ , . . I
i . -1771- ., poition .0' f Bur,goyne's
R. Scott, wlll care for the place dur, -r
n
- · ' •• ·
, -- ·
·· '
Ing their absence.
r
, . defeat¢d -.ar-wy, .s ome 2700 ip.en, .
•t.J The Gra nge will meet at the Lyceum : "I' '{,/-r-- bivc;nicic.ed l&gt;n the "i'aY fr,o_in Sar°'1-hall Tuesday- evening for its regular _ ---A(_,. _ toga J o., Jfoston,;
'Jar~is, 11:ti_
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, meeting.
_
_
·
\,
/,
ex-i,ervice· tnaP..;.:
,with .:,_th_e, help of·
1
, of1{1t~nto~:trs
!ft~t~~~u:~~:~ly ~
,.J- · anotl~~r: afso_· ~,µ ex-sEfryic~f ,.;µi~n,
____ __: Fred Fairman, Mr and .Mrs Harry
'\
.cqndqc_t,s th&amp; •large ·!'.'-rm, k~:pmg
I L. Bates and Mrs_Charles A. Kilbourn
, 30· cQws;· 3QO' ·t,h~cke~s 1 et~;•· aµ~
-took an automobile trip ·yesterday to
i ,,: i_eep in -immitculate cojl.:Htioi;t the
' ~ellows Falls, Vt., to visit Reynold Cow. . f'·,
1&gt;11r 'ljouse· .. which Saturday~ -night
ftng, :who rcently ha~ .the misfortune
____ -:ivl!,s th.rQwn-open for the enteriafn/
o
ose
the
.
s
ight
of
nls
right
eyfl.
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Mrs ;Lester .1Stevens ·a nd son, L~- I
r;ne1,1J -.o.f th? club. _
. - .
ter, of ·Brookline, were in town · ~ ..'.Mr,. ,Fl!,ry~a had . as g~ests ~n the
and .visited the farm ..they pur- i r--- - ~ -.....i house, l"rs. E. N. Wortlgm and' h_e r
~ - - cently
chased here last summer. · " , .
daughter, Mfss i{athetiife ' \\:prtt;eu,"
and- Mliis . 0l'i:ristine Steinbeck" of"
; Springfield. Aithough the hfgh~
- --- est_ sc9res w.ete held by ·the host
anfl l\H·s." Wqr,tMµ, the p!,'lzes were 1,
given - to the ,n.e j;t -·highest · sco-rers,

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_ _ __ __J J\U-s~_.Eisie V -1J'~tlett and Vic.to~

WORTHINGTON
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Worthington, March 10-The .t;oyal ,
-Ladles will hold a beneftt dance ift the
, Lyceum liall on Friday, evening ,for ,
- - - - - ----1 Harold Pomeroy, who- ha.ii b,een ill for 1
- -- some weeks _at the Cooley 'Dickinson
hospital at Nort~ampton. ,..
,
Mrs Lewis Gran_ger. of Highland
-- - - - - i street suttered a· shock yesterday. Sh~,_----ls being cai:ed tor by Mrs Jame.a '
Knapp.
,
l , . ,
_______ - · , The Grange Whist .,club will meet ,I
Wednesday evenlnJ •at the- home ·
i1
Mrs Guy F. Bartlett.
·
·
"The Jolly Five" wlll meet with
~I Mre Ernest G. Tha,:er on Wednesday·:
afternoon.
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•Bex:nier. =_';rhe ~onsola.tion prl:Zes .
were """.Pll by_M;rs_.,, Q;~Y-F. Bartlett t
and '.l'iwmai Farr,a gon. Refreshpie.nts were ser ved.
·- --- - - - -- --- - -- -- - ~

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�WORTHINGTON

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March 13.-A pleasant party
was given Tuesday arternoo.n at
_ the home of Mrs. Cllnt?,n• F. Read \'
wllen she e•ntertained The Hun-1,
I
gry Dozen." Sewing was followed
b.- three tables or cards. Refresn ·
m e nt.s were served : .
Worthington, March 12-A par
Cullen L. Stevens, who has been
was given yesterday afternoon at the
ill for s ome weeks at the Cooley
home of Mrs Clin ton F. Read whe~ _ _
__ Dickinson hospital in Nortbam,p- ,
1 ton w as able to walk about the '
she entertained the "Hungry Dozen.
sewing was followed by three tables
hospital grounds ?-(londay.
of cards. Refreshments were served.
Charles Allen, who recently.
Culle.n L. Stevens who has b!'!~n ill - - - -- - · -- - - ld some standing tfIIibe.r to Sle- ~for some weeks at . Cooley-Dlckmson
soh ·01 1 ak has rented his, bo;ulltf
hospital at Northampton was able to
P en . e (fl . •
.
..
dwalk about the. hospital groun_d s
to th e. wood choppers and. l~ ~o~r
_ Monday.
.
.
- - -- - -- ing ·a:t Charles• A. Kilbourn a.• ·~ :Charles Allen who recently sold
A flock o.f wild ,geese was 11een.
some standing timber to. Stephen
here going North. •ru~esday,..
I
Oleksak has rented his· house _to the 1_ __ _ __ __
The G.ran'ge iµet Tuesil'ay even-- •
_ _ _ wood choppers and ·ls boardmg at
ing at the Lyceum· ball with a St.
Charles A. Kllb?.urn's.
'. p t 1 1 , day program in charge ,
A fl ock or wild geese was seen go'-:'
a r ct s
.
, ing north yesterday.
i . :of the worthy lecturer, Mrs. O!!_Y
· The Gra.nge met last nfght at LY---~ F. Bartlett, It w,as voted tQ i.nviJe
ceum hall with a St · Pahick:'s-day·
. the past masters'. as·s.o ciation .to
program in charge of; the-lecturer, Mrs
· meet with .tlie. Wonthin gton Grange.
_
Guy F. Bartlett. It was voted to in-.
- - -- ~ - ---.=• - · ------ · ·•·.. ···"" · .- -- vite the Past Masters' association to
: some evening ·the latter part Ot
meet with · t:he ·worthington Grange in
' May~ Voted to obser:ve . ":KeUey
; May a_nd to ob~er".e •~kelley day,"
1Day,'' wht~ !.!,J Quµ.d~r ··~- day;;. on
.which is founders day, . on May 8. H
·May 6. Voted," that the G,ranj;_e seC
was v?ted that the Grange. set aside
aside . a da-y in May for~ .the. Im.a day m May to Improve the sidewalk·
·- .
· - ·, ·
·
to ·the Center. Dr F .. A. Robinson read
provement Qi' side-.vallc· to th.e C~l]_,extracts f,ro m an at-tlcle lh. the :aos-·1-- -- -- - - ter. Dr. , F. A. ·:Ro.bt~S&lt;Jij -r~ilj'I;'
to.;1 Glob.e, ent~tled "'Lonely City F'eople
. tTacts· from an .a;~.&lt;;~~; Jn4'hEl Bo!,r
~
.~om · Grange ·m Jlearch. ot· NeighborQ_ · ton Globe,. entitle~}. . •.:i,o.nely. City_
liJ?,~ saying that. 600~ Grangers llve t--- -'-IH..J.2 - People · Join· Gr~trge 11! ·S.,m..J!!li.: _. of
- -- w1thm the commutmg zone o!
Neigliborline~~;:;:,:/ia tJ~g;.f hat 5;Q1.Q._
st
Bo on . ._ __ __ _ _ _ _ __,___ __,
,Gi:angers, 11:ve,; wtthtit 'tlfe co~mut: 1
::"- ~\!:~ zo~~ o t,.~!&gt;!l'!6n·~an d_:tha1_~ttt ~t;tY1

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WORTHINGTON
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'"''°' ·""...,,"'"°' ,•• ""''"'

'(fran"g:~r~·otr.i c,e.rs. :~o.'U·. !'!!l fJ.nd a:~ •
the State- Bouse•. ..AQiozrg pr·om,J- - - ---, nent men . mentionoo--a.s. · urangers.
•were Presi~iif Lowell ~of I!,a:rvard ,
,
----·
college, -_ex.,-'G.ov.. ·Channing Cox . .,
.
,. .
1-- - -- - - - Gov. Allen ;· ex-Uov•.;Eull~"' i!Jld
.Worthington,
Marc·h
13 - The
others. Massachusettir- al'one -.. :tras
Grange ,W hist club met last evening
60 OO·O GFahge ·.m:embers. "1in ""fn~t · t,he home of M:rd. Guy ·F. · Bartlett
' ti ·· f t. · ·:o th
pro.,.,.a-ro,
\,with Mrs · George E. Torrey, Jr., en, e!es .ng ea ure o \ ·.,- ·e .
o•.
,
- - ' : tertalnlng and played .six tables. ' Tti,e 1-- - - -- - - was a roJ l call of -~1:_mBers, each 1
·
1·flrst prizes were won gy ,M !iis Elsie, ~ -,
of whom respon_l f~' ,_with ~? .ob- '
·, Bartlett and ~~rb~rt G. Pofter and
servatlo_n regarding, -birds. ·
---ithe ;c9n11olatl,o n \Pr)g;~ by ,Mi::s Vlctor ,__ _ _ __ ~ ing ·l'n. .fhe Da~k" w.~s led by ¥r.s.
,Ber.nle al\d, J,awrence ¥a.son. · T9e·
Leland P. Coi,e;,'•4: ci,ntest. "Feed1club · w
. ill meet I W
. ednesday ev.en)ng. 11,t·
, i g the Pig " was. won by Harry
the ,Lyceum hall with M·rs. Winfred' E. ,
•
•
b f l' Drake and Mrs Joseph Errtory wr· :ht
Tinker.. Gues!3lng groc.e ries Y ee
'
,/ ' ro
IS; .- - - - -- · - - ing anu SQ'.lelling was W~Jl by Mrs.
· ·
_..._____ _
F. A. R.o15inson and . Miss Irene
Moulton. Re,freshments. in: ch arge
- · ot Mr. and Mts. F. H. :eurr, were
1
se!l"W'.ed :.
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WORTHINGTON

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__.~o~~NG}ON-,-~:

-~woitYHffiQTON.
- = -· = r
(. Wqrthlrtgton, Mar()lj, ,1 -:, The
sch(lQl8' h&amp;V(l elei!ed fs1', the ~Prl~g
.

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. Mlsa B~rnl9e E. R:ll.P.eurn left Yf!S·
tevciay . t'o war~ · for Mrs Homer
Granger o! Highland :stre11t, tqr.eug-h
the m:wle sugar ~ea~on.
.
Mr€! Joseph, Wrig!Jt ~1,&lt;1 ' :M,'.r.11 W{nl~·\l(I ;E). Prake will , entertal~ the
Gr~~~Jl Whist cll,\q 011. W~\ine!!dar ,,____ _
evep!ng 'M tqe li¥c~u.in q·an: • .
•
, . :/I-fr l!,lld ·Mr11 Ceq)t ~linpson ~nd two
:· pj1il:d'\'e\l .. of :WorceJ!ter· @nelli tho
week-end
with
Mr/!
ij1nuJ.11on's'
p11rent11, Mr l!-!'ld 11:{ri; John ·Fr-!flselJ .. ·
Mr /l,nq Mrs :Morr!.s G: $mith
~irigvll_l~ went to 'Agawim . tddl!,Y- t&lt;l
--- /,vlslt
his ~rather, Byr-on ·Smlth,~ w)lg ·I__ __ _
1!s ,repove_rill~ . from aQ. attack· ot ,

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.. , Worµtlngton, ,Marclj.,.31~The Frieil.d1ship ·g\illd ,ot t1!e : '. CongregaUoqal'
C'hlli:_c h, w-Hl ,hold lt_~] egl!lar monthly f-, meeting _o n .Tliur,!!&lt;Ja7,,, evening
_ at '.tlie
,
-pa,re,o nag~. . ·
· , ··
,
• ··
1
Mies 0,ll\!'e E, Cole and Miss Claris~
,,
.Henry
. '. ot .Pltf;.sfleld spen.t the- week•~·.n· d
_ -~
- . ·'wi_th,
Ml,s.s Cole's parents; Mr and· Mrs - .H6race $!, COie. , , .,, .
.
: T~e
.L adies - w-ili ,!told a da1i'ce
, at .· the LYce4m hall. ;.IFrJuay ev~nfng. _ _
.Bates•~ Qr~hei¾,ra will "play. . ';' . •
,.' ]4r and .}4rj William_I9eg ,of.lll,ock- .
,ford, I\!•, :wl_t9 1 have be~ , -,r9~rin'g the ·
\
SoutW, are .spending _a few · da.YS - inl - ----t -i
Stevensville on -their way home. and
:-'1
have Visited Mrs · Kieg's . uncle, Cullen
·
L. ,. Stevens, w_h o . is ill at the Dickint
j
- - - S'OD hos,pital-,ln. Nqrthampton.
------., -

v;iea,tlon - l!-llcl will reopen- .,lpr!J -7.
Thi\ ·· Women's Benevolent soclety
will meet Pll · w~l:Iqesday wifh Mrs
~~lah4 P. Cole · t'or !i-!1 11,H-dil,r m~etjng.

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WOltTHINGTON

Worthingtt&gt;n, April 3-The\ Grange
Whist club will meet Saturday night-lj
I .,tt, tlie hom.e of Mrs ,Guy· F. Bartlett .
y,lth . Mrs · Walt~r ' Higgins entertairl-::. · : \
m.g. .
'·
,
.
· ' ~mfuerfprd Mai·tin of Cornell. univ~~t_y '. is at his home tor ll: week's
_____, ·¾/l,()a,tion.
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_".•,Worthington, March 20-Lawren!?e .
~1
Randall of Hadley, who purchased
i last tall, the Guy Fitzroy cottage at
,
the foot of• Tower's hill, has com,
menced remodeling the building.
i
'
:
·. MiBB Elsie V. Bartlett is visiting
,
.
1 her sister, Mrs Lester c; :L~Due Qf
t Chesterfield.
, . ·,' .
, •-,,,~- ~ - - - -_____ ·
.
,y- - -/ mJ?~o:;m;f;~
Q;
.
---- - ---- --~
- \~
1 ,-with seven, pres.!)nt' ;i,n:d: comi1'derable
• ,.':..,
·
· 1 work was _ aS90lhPlishe.d. The efl'orts
"- :-Ceo•
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1of the ,mciety are centering on the - - ·1 making of an appliq1,1e~ qupt, aprons
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· - ·
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• and embrolaery. ·
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The Gr~nge W)lis_t club , D')et la.)lt ·,-- ~-"':,;;:-;-:;--~- -- - -- - - - -.,......-..c..c:._____;_~- - - l
, ;,( evening at the Lyceum hall with
·,
·
,
l,
v· , Mr_!! , W. E. , Dm:(ce and Mrs Joseph
"'·
;wr1,$'ht, . host ~e!i, . and played six
(t1,Ne'1, .The "t!rst ,P.Pl?:es- we11e won by 1 - - - -- Ml'i!I Aldeµ B. Cady and H. Stanley
Cole aud the consplatlon prizes by
,..__
Mrs Frank Bates a,J),dl ,J'qseph Wright.
The funeral of Mrs Lewis Granger,
64, WhCJse, death · . occurred Tuesday
evening' at ·her hpm&amp; on Highland
street, after a tew weeks' illnss fol/-lowing _a shock, will be held at 'the ,..
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Sou(h Worthington, church tomorrow
af.t ernoon' at· 2. There will be a prayer
at the house at ·i p. m·. Bur'lal 'will
b6: 1l,l the Rlngville cemetery,
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WORTHINGTON

WORTH~·GTON.

. . . C11Jlen L_. Steve ns
. Apnl 9-Cull en L. Stevens, 76, '
- - ,d ted early tli is : mornin g at t he'
,Dickinson hosp1ta:l lrt Northa!lLP·.
~on, wli ~re he waa taken F~b. · a·
'. eliffefl.pg , fro ni . · spina l t rouble
w!iich :eulmlnate d in pne umonia . ·
'He w:as born •.in Wortbingtbjl, J an .
__:t s, ·.1s:~4,. the' s,o n of Aaron and.
&lt;'Sophif. (Stone)
Steven,s,. and.
\i:ia'&lt;I Jived aH, hiidife in Stevens~
; vlUe, where d uring the Ufetime of
- 1!,;il~!l .ta.;her aµd .·brother, · Eugen:e ,
coRducted, with the1il . ·
iia.w
/ni1ii'' a'i1d inaniifactured banjo
l ho op~;" fam,l:loli1;ibe ri!J!ll lUld . d f:U~ ,___
hoops. }Je_was .a mem:be r of ' one
~f !J.l,e. -m·omineµt :famUie:{ (? f . th(!''. 1
to:wn_, , a t r.ustee of th e Frederick ;
-- .S'arg)m't H.11 ntipgton library iui°d. a
,Qlefaoer .or· the commissJQners·'. :•ot:
'the: W~it(~g Street fund: for many •yifars. '
was ,vitlefy; :, known
through business and; socla1 con'~ '
1tacts'.,, .:.H.e leav~ - .no .. im,µ1edfate
- - 'f amily-. F-uneral ·al'ra1igements wilt
ia'v;a{t t)le a rriva•1: or . his .~ephew 'l
,Webb Stevens·, from Rockf?rd, ·m .•

a·

;he

H:a

· ·worthingto~, April 14-The funeral
oi; Cullen L . Stevens wll,S h eld Saturday afternoon a t 2 at the home, Rev
J ames H. Burckes officiating.
The
bearers were Webb Stevens of Rockford, I ii; Atty Walter L . Stevens of
Nor.thampton, J ud. son Rogers of w est
· Roxbury, Ashley Stevens of Cummington, Raymon d Buck of Williams.burg and W alter H. T ower of this I
· town. 'Ilhe funeral was largely attend-, ,
led. Burial was in the North cemetery. 1
There will be a "bee" at the Con;,gregational church tomorr ow after- noon for the purpose of cleaning the
church. The loan of vacuum cleaners
1 is r equested.
' The Women's Benevolent society
r will meet on Wednesda y with Mrs
f. John F rissell at the Center.
f , M!ss-' Oliv;e E . Cole and Miss, Clarissa I
/ H enry of Pittsfield were in town for ,
;, the week end. · .
'
' -i Mr and · Mrs i,lidney J .' Smart of
, Longmeadow and Mr a nd Mrs George
1 J asper of ,Springfield . wei;e at their
- (Ji s~i;n·~ .er .. homes yes~erday; _

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Friday for ' buriaHn. the family, lot:· fu' !' 'the. N qrth bemete1:;t, ·, ; ·
·
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.Mrs -Herbert •'G: ' Porter, J\!frs' -Horace·
S,• Cole,./Mr!!, Walt.e r H\ggin's - and, Arthur G. Cap:en "were appointed,"dele. gates from th,e ·Congi'egil,tlona.I church
to attend'the· Hampshire County Ass6~
.elation of Ch.1,1rches•'t 'b be •field ·tn Ha.t-'
flel!i Saturday, th'e"i6'th: . . ' . -i , , '
The ladles•,;degree-;"staff the: G'f.artg~\ i
w,ijl worlc ·.t he third degr~e at, thJ:~~---.,
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Worthington, ' April' 21-Children's. ,empllfication, meeting at Cumm!pgton .
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night will he observed at the .I,yceum on Sl\tu rq,i!,y:
Ml~ Susan. •'.!1_', I}l'ce · Iett FrldllY a.nd;!' I
'.h all Tuesday· .evenl.ng, yVhen
,yra.,n,E1;e
wlll ,hold an open .meeting,. with prize afteq1pendf.11g Easter·wltp he~~brother, 1
Wllliam\ G. Rlce,• p! Alliany, ,wlll Iea;ve .
- -1 speaking by ~he schr/01· ch}tdre,n .
'
The boqy or Frederick' S~,Clrickerihg fqr ~ac;Ilson,rWJs., wh~re •sh~~'l\'.j!l,,v!sit ;
of , Greenfield{ a former resident of her 'nephew, Pre&gt;'! ,William -G. Rice, ,JJI',. ·
·pf&gt;Wlsccm,sil'!,•
· .· ·. ,., '
Worthlµgton, was brough·t J&lt;:&gt;."_:tgwn o·e;.' t11e·"tJJnivers!ty
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W(JRTHI

April 10.- Th e fun €'ral of ', !111- - i'fen L, Stevene, whose death c,c- - - - -- curred yesterday . morning a t the
Cooley Dickinson
hospital in
- -,Northampton, will be• held at ,the ~ home here Sal u_rday ·aft ernoon
1 o'clock, the -Rev. Jamer, H .-.
_ _ , Burckes offi·c··iating. B'\trlal w
·_m he _ _ __ _
in th.e No_rth cemetery.' .
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WOR .I GTON
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Worthington, April 28-The Grange·a--- - - - --, · ·
-1 ·
·..
· - - Whist club will meet Wedrtesday eve_- .
Wort hington, ,'\Prl 29-The lx&gt;dy of
,
~ning at the Lyceum hall with Mr and·_
Mrs Charles B radley of B-rattleboro,_,
1
'Mrs H. Stanley Cole and Mr and Mrs
,Vt., .a former -,r esident or.- South
- ,Clifford Tinker _entertai'i'ting. Th~ clUD ' - - ---'Worthington, was- brought' to -t~wn - l m et Friday night at __the home ()t Jd-rs·,
1t oda y _for _burial -in •th'e tamlly' lot' 1n
Guy ·F. B•lett, with R alp'lr ·Smith ,t,h,e . Rmgvllle cel'l)i:ltery. ,
/
,a nd Lawrence Mason enterta!qi~~:
, Mrs Stephen Oleksa k .and Mrs Guy
~ 1, Seven tables were in play. c'l'h~ ·-•:flrst,, - - - - - - _, RI Ba rtlett entertained two tables of - - -I p rizes were won 'by Mrs Franklin H.
br idge at the home of t]Je former this
:,Burr and ~eland SmiOl,_!!,n&lt;;l· t~!l..-~m;i,_,"
._ ,• a fte h 10o_n ,, 'l'he first _ pi;lze · was won
~ts olatlon prizes by Mrs -Walter' "Sinltb:
Mari?n L : Bartlett and the
- 1 a nd : ":'7ill!am.'J:!1:o!VO.:·.::;:..· . ·i: •__, - _. .
consdlat1on prize by ·Mrs Oleksak.
·
Oki
'f~h
lfare'd·-·a
arrce-s
·
witf-be·
·tea;:.•
•
M.
1
is
Nellie
, HqllJs, '. whv has ~en
-tu"'""a .,.t..-..- ·t b ...:..r~ :- ~ -- -the.
staylhg ·w_ith Mrs Myra J. Stt;vet;B for
"' --a-- -J.
u.,.,,ce
o e e;,ven .,y
·
-a number or weeks has returned to.
- - ¥Yal Ladles at &lt;the Lyce~m haH F l'i ;. - her home.
•
.,_,..
I!-- - 1day.; _
\
n:tght, May: 2. Ba®!;s: o:chestr~
,c..\ Mrs . Leland p , Cole ¢nterta ined 12
1I
,,w ill p lay'. _ ',l"hose attendt':8' ,are re~
boys a t a surprL~e party •at her home
,·quested _.~o w'eiU' old-f!l8h1.6n~~ , co~•t his evening in celebratloP: of' t'he 10t h I
- -- ---t! u~~· .:~: ;.-· ·~
:.A ·
•
: , 1-- - - bir thday of her son, Leland P . Cole, 1--- - - ,
1. °W9.rthmgtoµ ~_Grange -wlll -. ne1ghbor
Jr.
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iwith Huntington Grange Frfday'. .rtight;,
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R,ev Jo_l!R ,,C, - Wightma~:·t.:&gt;f ' N ~i-t~:_.
.,,r " .
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iF.pton preaphed at tp.~ · Co~i:-iiga-,
ittOnal , chur_c h yesterday,,_ __ _-, , ;-_ •·
•
1,
· Mills Marlon -L. Bartlett -of· Spring\ :_ _
fi,eldli
· !s S:J.?~ndin,g a week)'_::V~x9-tl~ii a.~1---~ - - ~--- - -.:-=-.:
:: ·- - - - - - -- - -- - - -1
her ome:. · -_ '
- · '-- · ' -·_- -·
j
i irss Eisle :v;'Bartlett.-,w'ft&lt;{iias;fieen ·
l
spending 'five -weeks witli :,h eJl csister; ·
'-L
·Mr.s ,1,ester C. . LeDuc - 6f ·Chesterfield, 1-- - -- - - -- - - - -- - - ---------- - ,." 1
rettjtp.ed· µo~ y esterdar,0..": ·:·; ' ,
'1 I
· A.lfred.tC'• Stevens o(.-Mu,nrl&gt;i;!,str
_eet,
.North{Lqipto:q, "is building. · a - bai::11 · at
. _ __ :his sumIµ'er Mine p,ere ;ot1•:Jt!1!l :Sl~e o,f 11-1- - - - - -- -- - - - -- - - - - - - -- - -- -- I\
_t he OJl&amp;' ·w_hleh . was btirn~d- l ~t :'Aud0
:gl.1$t, •1 O.orbett brothers- aj:'e'.,~ping t*t
degre;:: ;t~( ~i; t t ~::r·f_ _ _ _.,.:_:.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _
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!}range '"wprked the third: degr~e at.

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the ' 'e'xemi&gt;lification meeting at Curll~
mtpgtoiv .SatW-day and c- won '· '~ ~co;re
2~¾ O\/,t on he possil:/1e.' of ~~-:P()lnts. H-- - ---I1_\1- --- _!)f
·• ?tfr.: a nd ;, Mrs Frank·_· :r,ar!!OPB _.: ai:if
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daugl,{ter : ,_R ~th, of Nortfia~pfon,

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,!1..,_.- -,meadow,
,and - Mrs,)irs
-Sidnl!y
J . smar-.t
. Long-/
;Frank
Sex!o:n-;of11,nd
Mi' 1
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Jl-nd · ]vlrs ~Geor ge Jasper, : a,na'. f'1IllilY' !
of Sprlngfield1.Mr and Mrs;-.A.. G, Cali:l-1
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well -or ,Pittsfl!)ld, Guy ·F. Bartlett of ' ~ - - - ~ . [ -- ---- :Greenfield, Miss Mll&lt;lr~~ ,'P.ii,r11oqs ;of
11~·
Southampton were In ·tow,n: Sµndli.y: ,
I
'. iirs t;&gt;an!eJ :8. Potter ,hat11:,1·13t urned· •I•
. .;, ___ _ -f roin · a vJ~lt tp P laln v_ll!!l;:otf _. -.
,:
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; :;\mong' t h·e studeni$j; wl:fo__.ai'e at' 1
, ,
~ omi fof
week's · --\'.lic4tl.en :, a.re ,
I/
Franklin G. •·Bur r ot · :the 1l'echnl ca1' ·1
. ~ -~ fiigb schOol, Sprlngfl el\1; Miss'. H ip-i;iet
j ·• .
M!jgarg~I · an&lt;,l Misses. .Ma:rforie, a nd
Dorothy :Ba~lett of the Higb- :·S.chool ·
of
:cominerc¢,
Spring
field·; ....otClyde
B yrne
al,ld Thomas
M:cEw(iit
t M 11U.
Smith school and Donald Mason ot'·
,the ·-h~-l-glJ" BSchool
at _..:...
N__
orthampton.
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�WORTHiNGTON

WORTIDNGTON

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Worthington, May 1-Su:nday-school -·--- - May/,-~ ~ Miss Florence Chapin .
"rally day" will be observed !rt th~
of Camb,.rdge was in town today
Congregatlonai church · s tmday, ' from
c~lling upon friends.
12
lt. bl
i
l · t th - -- Dr. J. H. Maloney of SpringGrafge .;hi:f
w~icb a~a! he!~ ,
fi~ld, the Red Cr?ss dentist, has
at the Lyceum hall last evening with
visited the pubhc schools this t
.... · Mr and Mrs H . Stanley.·Cole and Mr
_ _
_ week.
.
------':'·--: and Mrs Clifford Tinker entertaining,
The · Grange
wift observe
'1 The first prizes were : won by Mrs
·Founders' day with an apprqpriate I i'
_
Joseph Wright a~d La"'.rence . Mas~m
pro~m at their next regular
~ -- and the consolat1 pn prizes by , :MJSs - - - - meeting· at the Lyceu
h II
·
Dorothy F, Bartlett and . Raym.o nd
m a
on
Magargal. The next meetipg· "'.Jlt be ,__ __
,Tue~da~ evening! May 6.
,
held at Leland P. Cole's on :Tb,ursday
A umon meetmg of the school
_ evening, the 8th, witb .. ¥r and Mrs
- - ·commitees of Worthington, Ches-,_
Wal~er M. Sha~ entertaining.· .' ..
•
t erfield and Williamsb·urg was
.
~1ss Fay Neil of Col_umbus, -0., :.ha~
held at · the Frederick Sarge t
arrived at her summer cottage, . .
.
n
-- - -- · The community service c&lt;immlttee 1-- - - - ---1 Huntmgton library last evening.
· of the Grange will begin Friday eveMrs. Charles A. Kilbourn and
,..: . ning, the 9th, holding dances at the.
Mrs. George E. Torre~ Jr.,. at/ -:'. Lyceum hall. These w ill be held every
_ _ __ ....., tended· the canning school by
--other week.
·. - Prof. Cole of M. A. C. at Amherst
M'ts Ruth Ormsby, Mr and Mrs
t0d
'
George Gallway, Arthm: Higgins and·
a;y. ·
.
.
Leon Jones of Waltham a re at West 1--- - - - Mrs. _Eunice Gilmore attended ,
- - - ~ Worthington for a few days.
.
- Ith •
·
-,-,,,----T;;,r-Dwight Raym~nd, who recently
[
funeral today_,at ·Hu~tfngton , ·
married Win.nifred Ford ward of Htnsof her brother, Frn.nk· T . . Li,ndsey. L/
_ _ _ _ dale, h8.ll purchased .for .pis home tb-e _ _ _ _ _ _i:,B urial will be in the- Norwicre.h
Edmund Thayer place
and is re1:~ridge cemetery.
-··· · I · 1
1 F d -Li t· ! ' b lid! .
modiiling
it. of Meriden, 'Ct., a for· ,
· Jiflln · Yale
re ·. ,s on !&gt;. _u
ng a filling
__ .
1-- - - - - station on the state road to West
mer resident;· was in town yesterday
Worthington.
·
. .....,_ __
and called upon friends. ·
· ·
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Miss · Katherine Bossen of South
_ _ _ _...J Windsor, Ct., is · spending ·the ,· week- ,
end with Mr ·and Mrs ·Clifford ,Tinker.(I-- --........,,_,c-_- - -- -- - - - - - - - - A meeting of members of the .'.'Eeautifying the K_itchen"· contest will' be.
_ _1 li~ld with, Mrs John ,Frissell on ~oµ- .
day afternoon.
·I
Mr- and · l\•1'rs Dwight - Francis 'of ,
Springfield spent the week end at th~lr
- - - - - • cottage at W. est Worthin_g ton. Everett
__ _
Francis is setting out young maple
·trees 0~ thei,r ph1ce. , . -··

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~WORTHINGT_ON~.

-·~:\. 5

Worthington, May 6-Rally Sunday I,
in the Sunday-school was observed at
-the Congftregational
church this
morning from 12,1'5 until 1 with 33 in
attendance.
1.'he
morning· servlc.~ ,
which preceded it was conducted · by '
the pastor, _Rev James H. Burckes,
who took as his text a part of the
10th vers!l of. the third chapter of Geneteis: "1 was ·afraid." It was voted
that the church be dosed on the 18th ,~that all who wished might attend the
· Sunday-school convention at Goshen I
on _that -day.
,
· I
Tho Friendship ,guild will meet at
the parsonage on W ed nesday evening. •'
Fifteen members of Worthington
Grange attended the "neighbors'
night" m eeting at Huntington Friday
evening, furnishing a part of the literary program.
A meeting of the parish will be held
a.t the Congregational churcn 01' sat-.
ui•da.t attelJ\6011, at 2.
'
Miss Evelyn Welch of Springfield
- -- • spent the- week end wiih her father,
Albert J. Welch.
,
Miss Katheri110 McDow~ Rice, who 1,1
has been spending a year in' Parii:!, will
attend the , :opening #erforrrlance. Qf
the Passion! !)lay at Oberammergau' on
the 11th, b~tore returning home. , ;
'The Grange will meet· :Tuesday e\,e-1
ning at the -J;,yceum hall with a "Ke!-. - -day" program honoring its found-

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Worthington, May 6-A . meeting o!
the . women who have · entered the
1"Beatit!!ylrtg th,e ~tcben" ·consist,
; which is being 1condueted under the
, direction of the Hampshire county ex-·
--! tension service . with thi Ma'.ssachusett.s Agricultural colleg
_e extension 1•
service and the United States depa.rtinent ,._~! agriculture cooperating, met ,
with Miss Mary-- Pozzi, home demon- 1-stratlon agent, yesterday afternoon at I
2 at the home of Mrs John Frlssell. 1
There were 12 present. , ·,
Mr and Mrs A. J. Laro and family '
have moved into their new house
at the C'enter.
·
Miss Josephine Wanat of the North 1,._
Ad~s Normal school arrived today
for the · purpo'se · ot two day,11' observation and three days practice teaching in the primary achool at the
., Corners, and Is stopping at Mril
Leland P, Cole's. The North Adams
Normal school every yea!'-. sends Its
senior students out into the _countrY
sd1ools ·toi: practical experienc'~ ,i1i' 11
r~llra~ t!l&lt;lch.! n~ . '
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·- •· ·Jf{JfiGTON
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Mr and Mrs Walter M. Shaw will'
,
· ·. · · · ,.. · ·,..,;, ,. : ;
ent~~tajn th~ · ~a-nge }Vhist' •_c!~_!)- on
Worthingtott, ' 1\:!ay: g::.._,;ieit~ , d , ,.
. /
·
·
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m honor of ' · .:
·' ,
· • y a~•
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•Thursday •even.i ng at Leland P .. C9les's.
'[
;; Kelley a n lt::ounaer-,
Oliver,Hud.son /
,
--' '.l\he Royal' Arcanum 9;nd it!!,:auxil- _ _ ,;
-!··served' a·t' aa e. ~f . Bqs!on, ~as ob- .,, /
larY, the · I,oyal Ladles, wiUhdld t4elr
.:Tuesd!l:Y nlght~~r~ngL•~~-Grange --' 'i;1regular n,feetlng .a_t -t he Lyc~\i;'!Jl_ ~'~!frI the following pro
e · _,.,,ceum hall with
; '
1
Sat:i,n·d~y ·_ evening. .
· · : -.
.by Mrs Waite gram. Current events, , ;
-- Community service C,O!DmittE!e pf thi&gt; . - - - -- Irene Moulton .r c M., Sh~w ,-and Miss ,
Grange V£:ill hold a .dance 1&lt;,riday eve·and second de hol'IJ:.~11 ~mgmf of first /L- ning _at Lyceum hall with Bates's .or,"How·.•the 'Graµ'g!r,~ e,~~; :_reading, #"
__ chestra playing,
.· · .
an's . 1~ uestion'! ,
?r~l ~r.·'~ Wom- /
. M~s .Horace s. Cole enter_tai,ned : her ·-- - --, Towrisena: ' c'hdr;us ~rn " ~isl!
, ~adellne - - 1
cousm, Edward Johnso,n of St Paul,
. gree songs · readr ,~ ,~f,9f more de- ,
.
Min,n., over the week end._.- .
--flnetl," MFs Char ng:1 _Gra~ge DeMr and Mrs Herber't Tower and __ _ _ _ _ } &gt;ee, captains, M;;s ~ _Ibo.u rn:: : spelling ~
daughter, -E dith, of SpringfleM spent ·
Mrs Walter Higgi'LeJ~:d_ P. Cole and ___ _
the week e_p q at their summer cotwinning. At a. bu.s'~s,
e,:fo_rm.er side
1
J tage.
·
. .
-preceded it Mr
t ess meetmg which I · j , Mr and Mrs Ralph • Curley, Jr., oi ___ _ _ . ·ln~talled as Flir S ephert Olek.sak was [
J
_Springfleld, spent the week end •in
•Be'rnice Ea ~-l~ke
the place of 1-- 1
town.
··
•
signed. , Refl'e.shm
ourn, who re- I
· . Mr and Mrs Cullen B, Tower and
,_ - ____ ents were served, 1
child ren of Thompsonvllle, Ct., were
---~---Sunday guests of Mr and ·M rs Walter
H. Tower.
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WORTHINGTON

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'\Vo r thlngton, May 9-'l'he Frien/
Pasic;r Reads Resignation
s hip g uil d of th e Con,gr eg a tl onal
Worthington, May 12-Mother's day
ch urch held Its regul a r monthly meetwas . ol:&gt;servcd at . the Congregational
Ing a t ' th e p a rsonage W edn esday evechurch yesterday morning with a spening with the program in cha rg~ of - - - clal sermon by the Pastor, Rev ·;rames ,
- t he fo llowi ng m embers: Devotions 1
H . Burckes, The resignation of tll'.e I:
, Mrs H ome r Gra nger ; ~du cational,
.Pastor to -take effect the first of Au-~
Miss Elsie V. Ba.rtl ett. Mtss Ba rtl ett
i gust was read. A -meeting of the ·
~ave r eadi ngs f rom t he "G ues t Book" - - -'1 ~hurch was called to b~ held on
.l ~ f th e li ves of t wo m isslqn wot ke'.s,
Wednesday · evening, the 2Jllt, at 8 at
Ella H ox ie of Sholap ur, India 1 and R ev
I the ch,u r0h to co.n sider the .lncorpora1 tlon of the -church and parish.
R. R. Shoe ma k.er, Cong regat10nal seer .
__ of t he great So u thwest. '.rhe bus in ess
Annual Parish Meeting
meet ing was in charge of Mrs James
Th . ·
h • . .
.. .
H Bur ckes, p r esi dent. Voted to pur. e nnnua1· par1II meeting Wll8 _held
chase · flo wers fo r the church f or
Satu rd fl-Y.afterpoon at the.cllurch at 2
~ ; Moth er's day. Vo ted th at the g uild [
-- - with, G:eorge W. Pe_a se elected moderaass ume responsibility for the decor a ~or. The first business .was the taking [
tlon of the ch urch, Sundays, through
m 6 f two _new members, Mrs Leland
July. Thos e r em embered wit h fruit or
f· Cole_i:tnd Ernest G. Thayer. · The
- flo wers since the la st meeting were 1
- --:; reports of the clerk and treasurer, Mrs
··
:Mi:I'! James H. Burck es a nd Byron
..f May_c;, Por~~r, were read a11-d accept- ,
·smith of 4-ga wam. The social enter. !f ed. 'Potal . receil)ts for the p~t year 1·
ta inl?ent In cha rge of Mr-:3 Arlin Cole
•f Wel'.e _$1. ~-44.~~,; expense~!' $1633,45; ~al- !
- consll'lted of a n old-fashioned . game.
,,,-- t ance. 1µ trea:sur;y,, $10.7.1. The_f &lt;;&gt;llowlng !
''Hide the Thimble." Refreshments
.;._::r
:· officers were. eJected: Clerk, Mrs May ·
were in ch a rge of Mrs Maurice Clark:
1 G. PoMep,,tr_
easurer, _Mrs::May G.' Por'-·
and Mrs Homer Gra nger." Children's
' t!!r; auditor, :M:rs Helen G: Btirr; pa.r---- aprons for the Northampton Edwards
·-·- - iJsh committee', Clement ' ·F. · Burr,
church m i§ll ion box were completed
I. George W. Pease; Mrs"' :Ernest 'G.
· during the se wing hour and work coin. Tha;ver; soliciting · committee, .. Miss
menced on babies' clothing for the
_ _ _ _ Susan T ..· Rice, chairman, ,lfrs Ernest
- mountain childre~ a; Tenn~ee.
~G. ,T~lj,yert 1,¥iss . ~ .;-:;S_:i J leac&lt;lck,,-cM r-s
Mrs . Walter . H1ggms; past regent,
Eugene . H. Stevens, Mrs Arlin C6le
attended a.s a delegate the meeting of
' Mlss ' Elsle v.: :sa·z:t le-t t, '1\:1:rs ' Leland ·P'.:
the supreme council of Loyal Ladies
. Cqle, M rs '.}'. C. ·Mart!Ii: . It Wllfl also
- - in Albany yesterday. ·
•voted' that t he soliciting cominfrtee•be
! The Grange whist met this evening
':the budget committee. It was voted
a t the"I !yceum hall with Mr. and Mrs .
tha,t the parish iii tn' iavor·· of iricoi-·~
_, w. M: Shaw entertaining_. Seven tables '-- - - -- _Pot atl~~ th~ ch_tirph arid pa,rlsh, and 1- ·
were m play The _fl~•st pnzes were won
that ~1ss _S usa.ti ·T. Rice be appointe\1 1
by Mrs Josep.h ~ z:1ght a?d H S_tanley
a special eotnmittee for repairing the !
Cole, the consolation prizes . gomg to
church windows.
·
. )
Mi.s_s Bernice· E . -Kilbourn and Walter
- - -- . - '!..r~jl_te-ptJ._sj,f :~rtJ(aiyJ~
Smith.
t~)t~~~o ,.ee~ ;yth?!f~~/'1-

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T ~~;. W pm~n•:, Benevolent society
will.':m.eet-&gt;wlth • Mrs Herb!!rt G. Porter
. on ; Wedne11day , tor an .a 1i-day meeting.
·· • ·
·.
· .
Tlre 'piiurch w in be closed . Sunday
t hat , tho.s e . Vl'.ho wlsJ:! may · attend a
~uriday~:,chool convention ··fn Gosheri.
· MiSl'J ~.u.san T. Rice, who 1 has been
_ _ visiting": relatives In Madison, ·Wis.,
Auburn, N. Y., . and Albany. N •. Y.,
ret urned home · Friday,. · ·
Mr a~\l Mrs ' Cecll Simpson and farn- lly ·' of . Worcester . are· !!pending · the
we~k , ep d \vi.t h Mr!' S\mpson's par, ents, Mr and Mr s · John Fr:issell, ~ho
hav~ h a d as guest s d l.lrlng the past
•week· Mr and Mrs ,George C$.rter and,
s on and Mrs H enry Goldie of'
field.
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~ORTHINGTON

May 13-M'!', and Mr-~. _Stephen
j . May
18.-'-Worthington was,_
\.::
1 Oleksak and_two children, James
. .
.
.
and Richard. Paul, went to . 'Mrs.
represented at the meeting of
Ol eksak's home in JJondsville on
th e Cummington · district Sunday
__ Mother's day,- where there was k school association in Goshen to, famlly gathering of twenty-five.
day with sixteen tropi here at·
. Miss Olive E. Cqle. and party of
tending. The devohol}al services
·
,.
·· .·
- ~- . - /' In the atternoon were in charge
, eight of ·P ittsfield held a picnic
, of the Rev. James . H. Burcke§i
supper tonight:at. ''Trailsyde."
f pastor of the worthington Con· /
. The Williamsburg Men's degree __ _
, gregational church, and the chll:J- - 7
t~am gave a very fine demonstras ·
i dren _
of the Worthln_g ton Su!ldaY,
·
. hon of floor work this evening at
I school took part in ,the J program,
;'\ th-:i m 0eting of the Worthington ,
J depicting the parable or the five
Grange at the Lyceupi · hall, -when
1· tal ents.
·
$,
they conferez:d the .sec,ond degree I
i Tlie 4-H club ·wl,ll hold an ex-'
"u on:
..
·
.
.
: hi,bi_t Q
t their work a~ the :r,,ycepm
P two ~an_dldates, Vincept and -----·· 7 , hall on Saturday evening at 7.30
• Valaire Bernier, ~and .were given
I o'clock. There -will' be mov in g,pfca ~ound of applause~ The firs t detures by Harold
E astman,
gree wasItworked
by tl~e
regular ,
offlcers,·
was··v oted
fore-instate·'-- -- .., -co_u·n_ty club_:~gent , .. and al!, a4- i• , as me·-m··bers ·Mr. an d , M
. rs.
. · R ober t
,, m1ss10u
of 2 5 cents for, adults.
.
_
-- and
. 1,
'C. Edw!l,rds. The , soclat pi;ogram
10 cents, for .children will be U!"Eld I
-1eonsist e!l o.f)1 co·n.t est ~Hguessing. - .-·- -- - - t)i defray__t!J..e expe~ses_ , of. the _boys _ _ _ songs, of which just a. bar of' muand girls at' the 4-H ,clu_b camp_at
rr I
sic has been J.)tayed; . RefreshNorwich0)n, J~ne: T-he; exhibit
~---- . men ts_ wer~ se_rved by the . feast· - - - - inc\ude . the wo.rk . of : the Boys'•- -- .1\
committee, Mr;· and Mrs." Clifford I
Handic~:i,ft clµb and . the Girls'
J ~ker;-:r,frs.. Charles A. Kilbourn ,
Food clu)J. .'
' .' • ·.,.
l 11
and Harry:-,,J'inker. There were 22 ·
. The_Grange whi~t .club met l~st __ _. _
:' .. , '
- pr.esent from·_wiiliafi;lsl?urg Gra n'ge - - -- - - evening at tb.e ,home c;&gt;f 1'4rs,.· (fuy
l·i~·..:·!.
.o ne ~ron':.~ · '\'fJ ndso_~; ·:1,pu~ . :froin-_
/_,_'
F. Bartlett, with ._!he entertain-:.
!r~ i,
x
Huntfngton-·_a~&lt;l -· one ~rpm? Oli'es;,,_ - - ~ rri_e nt furni_shed ,by.. Mr. and Mrs.
wr I
t erfleld::;., ; ;';'' ·,
'
.•
Edward J. Clark. - F ive . tables /
4 1
~
: •The G'rarige'
Whist club will
were in play. The first prizes were I
II'
meet_ on _Sa~qrday- evening with
won by Miss Marjoi;ie . G. Bartlett
-Ii -- "-Mrs. Guy·J['. Bartlett.
_.__-- ~ -- - and ·George H. Bartlett' and tnl'&lt; , ~
~ it:
I;-.,.,
consolation
prizes by Dr. and ,
I1
' ,;i'.
- ~- - - ..,.-,,~
. -- - - - - 1Mrs. Frat1cis
Robinson.
,·~-·- .~ .
The comJDunlty .service commitThe da te ,o! t1_1e church meet-lri-g,
tee of the Grange will bold a
ca lled to take of
actrnn
in rega rd t o the
,
,'
incorporation
the churi::Ji.
and pa~·d~nce at ·the Lyceum hall Friday
is_h, has been changed to Wednesday!- ---- - evening. Bates' orchestra will ,.' ~·
rnght, the _!$.t,h, a t 8.
_ _ ____ _ 1
,
1I~
·
,.play.
M;rs. T, Commerford Martin ts
,~---· - ___ - - - -.- --- ___ _ _____ ____ _ __ _
~i~ltlng r el!Ltlves In .Dayton , 'Ohio. 1_ _ .

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Wor thingt on, May ~~- Rev -and [J\!rs James H, Bu r ck es ha ve moved
from the parsonage to the Scott fa rm, •
Jlfrs Burckes's fo rmer home, fo r t he - ,
1
,summer,
l\frs Cl_e m en t F. Burr is s pending a
'
week with her ,sister, Mrs J ennie
Clark of Pittsfield,
Mrs Charles A. K ilbourn Ls the , - guest for a few days of ~r and Mr§ 1
Sidney J , Smart of Longmea dow.
/
A meeting of the solicitors and bud- I
get committees of the church will be ~
j1e_ld at the horn~ of the · chairman,
Miss Susan · T. Rice, tomorrow night

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WORTHINGTON RESIDENT .
D
,
JES AT SISTERS HOME

- •MfS Cl
, ement f • B'Uff, 79 ,
[ W N
• 60 th flllnlVer•
A~ •
•
:
as ~~nng
!
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W
dd•
-sary O
e mg

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_Plttsfleli;l, . M1;1y . 22---,Mrll Ella E.
- · -- Burr; ,79, ,wife . of Clement F. Burr of r - - - ,1 y-ol'thlngton, died suddenly iaet night
at the ·home of her sister, Mrs Jen.

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On account of the death of Mrs .c. - - - ·nle,- Clar4 · of
T!J,ird street, . whom
F. Burr, the 4-H club exhibit has
sh~ had be~n vl,sltlng for a ·few days.
been postponed until June 2. . ·
I Mrs ;Burr was born. ,;i,t Chesterfield,
Miss Elsie v. Bartlett is visltln~
, her maid.en; name .before .her marriage
ll!i~s Bessie E. Tro'w at Bea'ford 'lodg;, - - - 7 In 1870 being El1a, , Crqsler. She and
.• , \•!'" ~.
Northampton.
·
, ¥r Burr ha,d expected to .observe t,heir'
Hepry L. Tower is visiting hl,,s son, ,.,__ _ ___. ;Goth wedding anniversary the 31st. .
.
1
_ _ _, Herbe1:t 'f'.ower of Springfield. Before
. Beside~ , h~r husband, Mrs B_urr ~
returnmg home he will v isit an 0 ther
leaves· fo~r soqs, Rqy ot BrooJdyn, ·N,
1 ·
son, Cullen B. Tower · of ThompsonY.,, Frank and Josllph' 0~ worthing- ti ( '
vill e, Ct.
.
. 1
fun_anfi :j!'rederlck. of. Spriqgtleld. Mrs
y
The ·Connecticut Valley Association '
Burr w~; - ~ .m e_mber of the .c ongre- - , ___,_.-\M Grange Past Masters will hold fts
gational churc,11 a.t Worthington. · The
('
!
reg ular meeting at Lyceum· hall Morrfu11;eral will be ~eld_ at her hqnie in
day evening, and will ent ertain
tha:t town S_a tilrday afternoon ,at 2
- - - , Worthington Grange at -this tirne.
f---- -- --1~!~ buri!l,l !Ii · the village cemetery•
• 1 .,.TJie &lt;?raqg~ance, which was to ·be
field -Fnday night; has be·en postwned
on account of the death of Mrs Cle- 1
/.1.
,
.... - ../
,
- ment F . Burr, until June 13.
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Worthington, May 26-The regular
Past G'range Master~ Meet
\'. - meeting -of the Grange will ,be held
-· •
·•1·- :'he.:e
·
c,n. Tuesday evening at Lyceum hall.
/ Worthmgto~, MaY_~.a,s tn
The third degree will be worked -bt
~ ~etmg . of
1 ,,-a,ttendance . ?f 125 at . th;e_ '.th~ women's degree statt . ,anq , the
/ ·1 the CoJ'lnec\1cut Valley a.-;soc1atlon of ,
fourth degree by the ,regular offlcel·li
Grange, Past Master~. !l,t Lyceum: hall ;
on two candidates.
·
·.. , la.st evening.
.Ru.slf~l\ Pomeroy of ,
There will be a church ,meeting a,t
/
I Westfield, pre:s~dent '-&lt;&gt;~. the association,
the Congrega,tlonal church at. 8 -ort
. ·· 1 presideq. . : Mter tht\ . mlp;ute.l! of tho/'
Wednesday evening.
.
\ last mee;t'mg were : read by Mrs Ev~ ,
Laf!l,Yette_ lodge opens for the seaDorman ·of Westft'eld,. _s es::r_e tafy, ot th~
~son Wednesday.
association, there was chorus slnglns
...There will be memorial exercises at - of Grange song!I bY thE;•.auclJen_ce. Tli
·
the schools on Thursday.
.
welcome to Worthington,was e':,i;t~ndE!d ~
, The Grange whist club wlli meet at
by_ Mrs far-l Lov~lart\i, · follOfil}.d . by I
'· Lyceum hall on Thursday evening.
__
_ J brief :r,emarks _by Mr Crosier of ·P itts-,'.
' A Japanese maple will be .. planted ,
fi,eld,. Mr Ford , of Hi_nl!dal~, '·M r Mo?re ,
. on the lawn at the Frederick Sargent
of Hun~lngto~ and ¥,r .Frost· qf•· ~ t Hun~lngton llbrary, Saturday, •.: in '
bam'p,ton.
.Apno~nceµ:ient WR!J made :
melllor;v of Mrs Estelle Cole Bushrtian of the ,next meetlri_g at Feeding lilll.9, ~
_
. In. fom,i.~r llbrarian and member of th~
June· 30. ':Mrs .~- V/ ,'~ournier,. 9,f . E1¥t ;
!~oar4, of director&amp;
..
._
. Windsor ·read an Qi'iglnal poe~ a:i:,out I
Mr Vi~nd Mrs Richard Bartlett cif
~vast, masters.
Tµere was ;violin and'
GreeJ:i'1eld have rented Fred L t--- - -- ---J piano · duet by , Kitty )lurns:·and- E:va:
Grav~s•s cottage for the summer. .
Carmel cft 'Hinsdal~. '. :;;f.clev~x: ·cf1Y,on
• The ~Pring meeting of the Highland
J!~lk, by ,Mr Cufv/Jf &lt;ff.:, Will'll!,_m sou rg
.c ,ub, w1ll be held at the Worthington
· : -~ ·, ; ,
· ,_.. :_;.
·
·
Congregational church Saturday with
· - - - :wa,9 _ much -twlauded . . . Tw.o irit~r-~ ,t- I
the following program: 11.15 a. m.,
i?),g; r~~in,g were riven by Past
social hour -and music; 11.45, routine
,te1'.:Pear,_l of Chesterfield, '."followed,:~y
bUl!iness; ll!, address by Judge Elfsha
· mus!c J;iy tb,e· Htrusda,le J~d1es. A skit, 1
. 'Ji. Brewster qt , Boston; 1' p," m.,. din- .''J't·, §!9mtWneii Ha.p pens,.". W3.\' ._g;,ven \
: nEr; 2.15, music; · 2.30, address: Ter'Lb~" me'mbet'.s ot ~~tfleld Gran~.e; M-rs
centenary talk by Leon , M. conwE!ll,
:r,on , Ck S~ eet .or Cummingtol), _g~v,e )
, mayor. of Somervllle; talk by -. Roy· ,
i two pleas1I1g rea,dlrrgs, •A motfpn: s ·o ng,
Burr,
.
.
"!l':hr~.e Qll~e.i;s fqJ.-~M ~e~. vy;tiftel'and i- - iBlue, · wa!! sung: : .~fter refr:esl)menfs 1
l~erved ~Y! Worthington , Grange there
._
w$.S. dancmg •w1th·•musiQ', furnished· oy \
\
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·- --_.c..:"'-"-'--'-'""-- -'-'--- the Hinsdale women.
·
·
M:i,:i"Efuest Thayer ofWest\ Worth~
,lngton ent!!rtalned the I/Jolly Flve" fn.
\).. -~
'ho!3o_r of Mrs Walter ·Smith:so(rt)i'd&amp;T
,
,th\s w~k. Mrs_Frank Bat~s w.on-first
pi:1_ze -µd Mr~ Eben Sha.w tlli~r cioneo•
.
la tlon. ·
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WOR'IJIJ~N

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'Wort hington, June 2;;-The Hl i.hland \
Worthin gton, May 29- State Deputy
club held its annual spring meeti ng at
Ma rsh a ll C. Gaston of W est Stockthe
Worthington
Congf egatlona} '
bridge was th e inspecti ng deputy for
1
- - church pn Satur day. Music was !ut- \
the third and · fourth degrees which
nished by Mrs James Healey -' and
were conferred on Vi n cent a nd· Vadaughter, Olive, of Ch esterfield. T,he
Jere B ernier at the r egular meeting
))residi n g officer was R oswell Merritt
of the Grange 'l'uesday e vening. Exof Che.sterfleld. 'I'he club was v ery 1l
cellen t floor w01'k was shown ~Y the
fortunate
in securing such excellent .t
wom en 's d egree s ta ff in the third de•
s p ea kers as Judge Elisha B rewster
gree. Th e regular officers worked the
o! Boston 11nd Leon Con~
the
four.th degree.
m ayor of Somervill1r,'W1'io ·orougti t ~erAt t he chu rch m eeting Wednesday
B
enevolent
soc
iety
served
a
bol_\ntiful
even ing it was voted· to incorporate
dinn er.
the church and parish with the fo l_ _ _ _, · , A re cent marriage of local Interest I-lowing officei's and &lt;:!ommittees : ,C lerk,, •
took place Friday, Ma:y 30, in Albany
Arthur Capen.; trea.su·rer, Mrs Herwhen Anita B ernie r, da ughter of. Mr
bert Porter; standing committee, Clea
nd Mrs Victor Bernier of this town,
mei1t Burr, George l'ease a nd Mrs
_
_
_
_Jywas
married to H enry Grise of .North- - - - -, Ernest Th ay er ; . Sunday-school supertampton. The !couple will make their
j ntendent, Mrs Ernest TM a yer; r r ll~f ,
horrie in Northampton.
committee, Mrs Eben L. Sh aw; ~ us1c 1
Announcement · has · been made of;
.committee, Mrs Nenca Tuttle, Miss N. I _ - - - ~' the.
m arriag_e O,!l Sat.urday at the Con- ,._
s. Heacock, Mrs L; P. Cole and Mr
ca.lien.
·
•
/ gregational parsonage of Miss PearlMemorial exercises were held t~is
· F!tzro'y; daughter of Mr and Mrs Guy
_ afternoon in Lyceum h a ll b y the ch1l- __ .----J Fitzroy of Dalton, · and Harold Hatli-. J...
' dre.P of the Corn ers s chool with t h e
I away of thi~ town. Rev James H.
fol1'&gt;wmg prog rl:lm: Salute to flag and
Burckes performed the ceremony.
s in gm g of ''Am erica" by school; ."In I
I
The Friendship guil9- will meet on
1 Flanders
Field," Valere Bermer ; - - - Thur sday.
.
1
"America 's Answer," Mat·shall Good- ,
Mr a nd Mrf! A. J •. Laro will enter,
w in; song· by primary room, "Flag of j'
taln the Grange Whist club Wedne.s- ,
Our Nation" ; "Red Cr oss Nurses,"
day evening at. their home.
- - - - -- , Helen Bartlett; "Driving Home the 1--- - - ---j
Henry L. Tower has returned home
Cows," Mary Burr; song:,,. "The Flag
after a two-weeks' v_isit with his .sons.
They L oved So . W ell,
grli.mmar
M_r and Mrs Herbert Tower ' and
school; . "A Soldier I Will,'' Leland P.
family of ·Springfield spent the week 1--Cole ; "We ' Are L ittle S6!dier BQys,"
-- ei:ifl _at th eir summer home.
-· ·
primary roo m_; a ddr~s~ by R ev Mr
M 1:9s N. _S. H ~acock h as r etu•rlied
Burckes; S1ngmg of •_']:he Star-Span- I
and 1s openmg her summer .home.
,
-g led Banner" by au~1en~
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Mrs Henry W ilcutv, president of 1
W estfield ·w om en's club entertained 30
friends at h e r summ er h om e in West
- -- - -·t1 Worthington recen.~ly.
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Worthington; June 1- , '1
Grange
gave a surprise shower Thursday &lt;:!Ve•
n in g at Ly ceu m h a ll fr,r Miss M!!dred
Higgins who was ,m a rried Memorial
- day to Edgar 'J;'urner of Vllndsor.
,Cards were enjoyed and refreshments
seryed. . Miss ljigglns received many
·pretty gifts of 1glass, linen, ch'!na and
other useful a rticles •
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Mr. and M~s-- V.icib.r ·IfeJ:h,~ iJi -- Wor.t hingto~ announce the
riage ot their daugh~er,, .Niss Anita
Bernier, to Henry Grise, J 'r ., so~.
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry G.ris'e ot 2.8·11
Aldrich street, . No'rtham~ton; The - - wedding tqok place at the · Assumption church, Albany, N. Y.,
on Friday, May 30th, Rev. F..ather·
G. J. Gratto;q offi_ciating,__

ma~

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rugg1.11s-Tumer
-1ltg~a~d1}1ub, M~et
, Jqne 2 ,.......,A very pretty ho me
; June · 1 The Highland .club 1
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lweddi'ng took place Friday mor nheld its annual spring meeting at ,
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- 'ing at 9.30 when Mildred Ar- -- - - 'the Worthington Congre~atio_n al 1-- - - - - - - {
lene Higgins, daughter of Mr. and
church on Satur day, Music was
Mrs. ' Walter Higgins, anµ Edfurnished by Mrs. James Healy and
-~
gar · Turne,r , son of Mr. and· Mrs. --- , her daughter, Olive, of yb~~ter- - - - ~
I.'
A. L. Turner of Win.dsoi', :were ·
' Uelq, T:he presiding officer was j
)I married ~ The house was beautifulRoswell Merfltt of Chest_erf~e~d_.
I I 11
ly decorated with evergreens and
The club was very fortunate in se- = · 1
1_spring, flowers. The single ring f ___ · ·- curing such excellent speakers as
---._,:;;i I
, ceremony .was performed unde r a
Judge Elisha Brewster· of Bost.QI}
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bower of evergreen and lilacs by I
and Hon. Leon -Con-well. mai or of
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the Rev. James H. Burckes, pastor '--- - Somerville, who brought Terc-ente'"
'.1'1\
of ~he Congregational church. The
nary thoughts. Tho Women's Hebride, who was gowned in flownevoletit society served a bountlered chiffon, was attended by her ____ ful dinner.
·
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·sister , Harri1;it ~- Higg-ins, who
.•
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··\· '\ - - ·wore blue georgette, Charles T~rn, .,A recent ·mariage of local mt.er·'\
-l er of Windsor i;erved his bother
est _took .place. Friday, Mar 30th,
L
,.·
as best ipan, Arthur G. Capen, or-:- in ~ lbany. when Anit~ Berniei:,
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,ganist of
the Congregational
· -daughter of !',Ir, .11.nd :Mrs. Vktor. 1
1
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•Bernier of this town was mar;'
·church, played the ·Lohen grin - -- ried to J (e'nry Grise of Northamp- 1--- - -- - - .n.- - - l,
!wedding march and Oh Promise
to_n .. 1:he •coupJe will make their
., \f t
· Me during the cerem&lt;ioy . and -tl1 e .
home m Nortfiamptqn.
_
·
'l r- - - ·•Men-delssohn m·arch as -a· ·r!)ces. ·Ann·ouncemeriV l:ia:s ·been piade 1----- -- - -I- ___ _

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fas!: ·!he yo~ng cot~ple l e ft for a: ,
:Nst, .at ~h,~ Cong:ega t~onaJ • par__ sn o:r;t wedding ):np -to Newar~ .J ___ _ sonage if .l e_a r_l Fitzroy; dau ghter
fr ,
N. J, Mr. -and Mrs. Turner w1~l-c
of ] \f r. and Mrs. ,&lt;;J-uy Fitzroy . of
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make their ho~e . Jy( .)Vln:.95;or. '
.
D~ltoh , and J;Iarol d Hathaway of ·
: / •
' Among the relatives from ·out ·of
•this town . Rev. James H. Burckes
1
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, - -tow1;1 were : Viola Gilthrop · ol .
.iierformed .the ,c eremony. ·
·
H.,.1•
SpringfleJd, Mr-. a~d :Mrs: Ar thur I'
The F riepd's.hip . Guild will i:µeet
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Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Milnon Thursday, June 5th. · ·
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sell of Springfield, MT, and Mrs. - - -- · :(\'.f r • .and ~rs. _
A: 'J,. :Caro wiil:en~ _ _ _ _ __ _ ....,

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Mrs. Hutchmson: of P1!tsfield, Mr:,: .
Y'v"~~1:1-~.ll~,.~¥- ,e:ve,:nn_g.;' ..1~1ie. '{•th; at
1
and Mrs; N. B. ~ourd&lt;J-and'·famlly, ·_ _ _ _t ~eJr; ~? ~(!. ;, . ·, •-":' :'.,\~:: : :;:-, · . _1
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F red-and Larkii:I Darby _of _Dalton,
, . ~ .~? ~Y J.,, ·'!'o*ei:q r¢s- · i:e:t ur'il.ed
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Mrs. P . E. Turner of Wmdsor, Al•
•h?nre artE)r a t wo w.ee~~•· vi siC.with
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r bert Turner
PittSfle l-d, Mr. and·
hlS; S011S,
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- Mrs. T. C. Lor--ing, a,id family , Mr. · -- -~ ·Mr. 3;nd · .Mrs. Herbert- Tower ~ - - -- - . ·
~-and Mrs: A. L l!'µr ner and F red
,and fami~ - of . Springfield sp~n l
T111;ner of W indsor ·
·
t h e, w~e'k-ep._d · at their summ
,
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horn . ',tz.;
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-: _ +".,'!'~r a!!_g~ Jav~ .. a .s u. l]&gt; rise - - - ·
N .' d. H·ea:·cock ha
t · · - - - - · · · ~'
. , ... ~.,;;...,"':'-·.:.,..,. . . . . · "'· ,
. s re ur ned
sho wer T hUTsday eveni.ng at Ly- j
and 1s. open\n ~ l1e,_r summer 'li.ome:.
l'il - - -4---; i;~um hall fo r l\f~.,s M:ildred H!gfi,
gm s; wh o _was married Memon at
?
i 'I. day, to E &lt;!ga r Turner 6f Windsor.
____ ,Cards were en joyed and refresh,
/m~n ts served. Miss Hi·ggin s re' /
~e1v~d rn_any pretty gifts of glass,
Jmen , chrna and other ·u·seful art!-

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�WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON~-- ,

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Clubs
r- --- - - - Worthington, June · 4--The Wom.Exlubit by 4-H . .
he ,
en's Benevolent soclet'Y will meet FriTh e pos t p one d ex hibit o f t ·
, day with Miss Bessie Ames !or an
4-H clubs was h e ld Mond a y e ve n- ;
all-day meeting. .
ing at Lyceum hall . Ip th e coolr- -· - ·-- -"'1
Mrs David F,- Va.ughan and family
- ing -club , prizes were awarde d as !
at Riverton, N. J., arrived yesterday
f
. Firs t year worl{, first to
and have opened their summer home.
o 11 ows.
.
.
d to Olive '
Mrs M. R. Barrows o! Bedford terHarriett Higgin s , . s e con
. Par -'- - race, Northampton, is spending a. few
nd
- _a:nd Hazel Paris h. Seco
Y
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weeks a t Mrs Edward Jones's.
first to Mary Burr ; second to_ 1\1!;1;'"-i
Children 's da_y wlll be observed at
garet Byrn es. In ~ ,b ~... hand1cr_aft l
the Cong regational church on Sunday . . __ _
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· club prizes were {j;, '{arded as fol- - - - - I ·' Miss Elsie V. Bartlett, who bas been
low;. First year twork, first to
vi11iting h,er cousin, Miss Bessie E.
R
· d Magargal • second to
Trow of Bedforcl lodge, Northampton,
I, aym?n
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returned home yesterday.
_ -~Francis ·Grange1, thud to Wa1tef' ~- - - - - An invjtatio11 has been: extended by
Higgins. Fourth - year, -Jirst to
Miss Bessie E . Trow o! Bedford lodge,
louy Drake. In . the forestry club,
Northampton, to all residents and forfirst to Rob e rt Bartle tt; second 10 1 - - - - - - - - mer residents of , Worthington to the
.----- 7Wilbur Drake · third to Guy
third annual picnic to be held at WishDrake
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ku~t.r u, in West Pelham on Saturd._ay
· ·
afternoon, the 21st;- at 3. Those at, -. - - .
I--- - ten:dh;1.g are r~cit1ested to bring_some- Ii - _ _
_ Joseph Sena, a club cha!llp1on
- - , thing .for the picnic supper. Should
from Easthampton gave a talk. .
•tb.e du pve atonny the Jjli~ ]rill
Motion pictures of 4-H c~uh
be held
I:
___, members-- were sh.own by Harold ' -- - - - ~
_ .• _
,... - - - - I Eastman, county agent of the exWorthmgton, Jun4; 5-Mr and· Mrs l
tension scnool. Much cre dit is due
A. !· Laro entei::amed . the · ·Grange 1
.
.Whist club at their new home :a.t the· 1
1t h e local
leaders, Rev. and Mrs. _______ _ 'Center village last night . .Five tables L _ _
- - - -....,Ja~es Burckes for_ th e s uccess tile
.were in play. The first prizes ·were
,ch1ldre n have atta med. Th e prowon by Mrs Walter E. Smith and Dr ·
·
ceeds from the sale of root beer,
Franci~ AJ Robinson and the consola- ., y
pop-corn and tb e food sold, to- 1 - - - - - - ---' .tion pr1zeir by Mrs George .Russell' au,.d·..i
· 1---'·'-- --'-'
g e ther with the mon ey tak en. at I
,Roy Wheeler of Chester.
th e door will help d e fray exp~nsesj
. 1'4rs L .. A. M_osher of S. t Peters.burg;
of 4-H club ille mbers who a·Jl.~ sent
-Ila., is spendmg a few weeks. wit~
:.to Camp ~owe. . .
.
c,
,
~F _d,a ug~~er, Mfs (;}u~;_Et B~t;,~l~,t,~11---"'----Mrs . Allee nu r n ey i s vi sitiu g
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·her dau g hter , Mrs. H e rb e rt P o r ter
- - -- at the ce nter.
:. Fifty-six re.emb e rs of th e Get
Worthington, June 6-T.h•e Friend,Togeth e r club of W estfi e ld, h e ld
ship guild of the Congregational
- - - - their lai;;t medting of the s ea s on 1 - - - - - ----·church met last even~ng· with its
_
,with a banquet at Lafayette lodge
1president, Mrs James H. , Burckes at 1
,Monday ev e ning. A f eature of the
' "Cold Sp!'ing" farm for its regular
_ _ _ _-occasion was an en,te rtainment by
,~monthly 1.11eeting and elected the fol-_____ ____ _
a quax·tet _fi-olll_ New York Cilv. __J - - - --- lowing omcers: President, Mrs Homer
'
Granger; vice-president, : _,·s Francis
A. Robinson; secretary, Miss Irene
_ _ _ _ Moulton; treasurer, Mrs Leland · P.
Cole.
Committees:
program,
Mi's
George E. Torrey, Jr., .L d Miss MadeTownsend; social, Miss Elsie V.
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Bartlett and Mrs Ja mes H. Bu rckes;
project, Mrs Harry W. Mollison and•
Mrs Maurice Clark. The shut-ins remembered the past month , were .Mrs·
---·-• Hathaway and Miss Elizabeth Torry,
, voted t'1at the n~xt nleetlJ\..,i- be held I
'July 10, "{ith Mrs; ~e!'1~d
Col~.

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I- Mrs. Guy·F. -~artJet( ?ifus Il'ene·

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l Moult on O.Jl\l .Mis·s 'MadeHne

Town-·
send wm.·a ttend .the biennial meeting, and . banquet' tomorrQW of . the
No'rtl\ Adaiµs Normal sclio~, at 1 the Wmidell .h otel in Pittsfiel~~..

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~A"most enjo;~~bl~- socl;~ ;;nt
,took place yesterday afternoon
«'
w.hen Miss Bessie Trow of Bedi:1·1
ford Lodge gave a ploni'c · supper
J\1,
and a "showe·r'·!.... at "Wlsh-knm~
_i ;
__ tr u'. ' i!} Pelham for Miss Margaret
,/1. Ii
:1{!mball of· !his ·city, direct_or of,J- - -),\\ :
(;1rl Scouts ~f WeJ te:1;11: Massac~n- i
n•
setts,. wh pse · marriage to Chris,- '.!
tlan Henrichsen,. ScQut execuU.veJ- ·- of t he Hampshire· county Boy
; ,
ScoutS", also of this city, will take.
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place in the . early _.falJ ... :A:t ,t~.e
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c~uple came down· ..the winding
·1-~ , ,
·path from \he.·house to the grove
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_ ·below, where the-guests were asf
sembled at /the · picnic tables, Jh~ ,_ __ ·Iii
..straiJ!s . ot ,!lle. -.c ,w!)d,dlng . JI1_arc9,·'1·.! '
played on · ~a_ corn~t by John _A.- ,
--- R oss · of Bedford · terrace . an-1---- -- - --·
'.t 'q:·L.
iiounced -• the!r ~rnr.i_rllir. ~:&amp;ea.~lY-:.40
:·1 ,j'[
. 'enjoyed the · st!=!ak t l!upper. cooke!l
'J :·· · - - In t he open, afterf which ,- again to , -- - _______
r U::
!he strains of, mus!~·} he party ad .
' \If
3ourned: tQ~t,!J e ,la'Yn,; where a s~at.
l ;•i '
for the~ gu,ests _o_f ho,not _had ,been
,i.'1JJ
placed against · a • background · of
·•:~~[
blossoming pu'i'ple lilacs and · the~.
il~/.U .. . . . we;:e g.-iven a small Japa.nese .um, 1/f
brella .a nd warn:ed that a "sho_w.er''.'
:1 · l
was. impending:- K gaily · decorated·
wh..e.elbarrow atid .:a b'am1&gt;er \:i:den ,
r,, W /
with gifts were prese1_1ted. After
~I
t hese, had he~n; open~d_, Miss r,f ary
Gove Smi th , director uf ·the · Peo;·
•I ii,
' plf!l I~stltu,t e, with . . happy &lt; re'.1
marks a,pproprtate 't o the · occa- - - - _._ ___ - --- - - -· - ··' ,

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Ision,offered a toast which · was~
dr unjl: to their . happhiess and
'R!?~perlpr. . __ _, _ :,__

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�WORTHINGTON
Childr~n•s 8tm1l11y IJbsen-ed

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The. cbildr~n of the West
Worthington school, teacher, Mrs. I
. Clifford Tinker, gave an enter- :
tainment at the school on Frida:s- :
afternoon consisting or two plays, !
"A Dixie Noon" and •J. Motbet'
Goose play, "Out or the BooK."
a~d an exhibition of school work
• for the past year .
The Grange .wm observe "na~
ture night" at the Lyceum halt
· Tuesday evening with the program 1
-• in charge of Dr. and Mr,;. Franch;
.A. Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. George T. ])odge
of Ringville attended the wedding _1_
today of their son, Chester HardIng Dodge. to Miss Marie Sniitb,
which took place this aftt:rnoon at
4 o'clock at tl1e . hoine of th~1,

June· S.- Cl1ildren's Sunday v as
· observell this morning at the Congregutlonal church with a special
program by the members of the
•Snnrla.y schonl in charge nf tne su" p~rintcmlent, Mrs. Ernest G. Thay1er, :tnd a n address to the children
: bv th e pasto;·, Rev. James H .
,
i n"urckes. _. Two babies were bllP'.tizen, J ames Edwin Pease, parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth B . . Pease,
iu1d Cullen Sidney Pack,ird, par_ , ents, M·r .- and Mrs. Merw-in F.
Paclcard. A f~ature of the ·sen-ices
was ihe presentation ·or a Bible to
each child ·who had' r e1tched the
age· or 12 during the past year,
bride's
DrAfter
.. and 1t·wed:
.l l•r s • d..bi4:
_.m. ··.·1
given in memory of Mrs. Nancy
T.
Smithparen.ts,
of Peru.
Stone Heacock by ber daughter,
trip the coupie 1'{111 make tf.tei!'' Miss N. S. Heacock. The foll 1whome In Peru. .
. ·.~.: , . __._.~./
ing ·chiidren
received
them:
"'"
_ Charl es Fr:incis Grii.:i ; (' r, · na~--- ,-- _
mond M~gal.: Irene Parish,
Marvis ·Snyder, Albert Edwards,
Mary Burr, Doris Shaw. Mr.-,- - - - - - Burckes took as his th.~me, "P'e n'jtecost," drawing his lesson from.
_: Luke 2; 42-52d Yerses, and a ~
portion of the second chapter of i'
Acts. The children's program . was ,
,as foflows : . Recitation ; "Spi-in g," 1
- - - - by H 11-rcold Clark; song, . ~uch s. j- - -·- ----,,,,. , Splendid Secret, by the school; exercise, The Gl'.eat Book D.! vine, by 1
- - - •five children; song, Servi.ng :&lt;esus, ,__ _
!:&gt;Y Helen Bartlett and · Mary :Cllen
Read; exerciije, "The . Plant," by
three children; song. Helping On'e
Another, by the school; r ecitation.
, The EJf and the Toadsfooi-, b_y L_eslie Gole; song, Wake Up, by'tlie
sch0ol; exercise, The ·National
Colors, by the jtmior classes; song,
Our Parting Song. by ~elen ,Bartlett and · Mary Ellen Re:td. The
church was decorated , wit)l it profusio11 of flowers, both wild and
cultivated, · in · charge cf , Mre.
' George ;E. Torrey, Jr., Mrs; Walter
Higgins and Miss Elsie V. Bartlett, · church decoration .c ommittee,
7
a~si;:ited:· by ~-.lss OUv~ E. Cpl~ of
I Pittsfield,
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G1·ange Ob~rves N~ tl,ll'e Nlg~t
-\r w:or~hl~gton, June 15---:;-~i~s ~athJune ll~~Na.tu-r e nlg~t. was ober!n~ McDowelr R,tpe,,
~.n!ved in
l·s erved at .the Grange last evening _
,New:.York We4n~~dfl3:, onJ.pe Homeric
•at the i.,yce1.1m· liall with an inter- ,---- - --- - - after spertcllng· qver a ~ year abroad,
lesting program In charge , of Dr.-·
most :of -iv4}i;h' was ~p~nt i_n .Pa,rls, ar•and Mrs. F. A. Robinson, follow~
rived at her hoµie :Jl"t lday'. :
- l-ing a !!,hort business _. meeting, A - - - - "'--: Com:n:i'e rtord Martin _of C~rri~it uni,paper on Birds was r~ad by Miss
) ·ers.ltY Is home for the _summer vaSusan T. :Rrce, • who :. said thatcation. , ·'
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·. ,
when she came- to this locality lo
_, T~e schools will _close this week to
•
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.
-;reo en September 2..
live she determined that she·,
: , T 1e · woinenJs . Benevolent society ,
t_wo~I,c;l
know all t~e birds 9_9 th by I
· will rn~et _on •WeGlnJisday .with :Mrs •T.1 ;
_ their plu_mage an'il no·t:e. The ,pa-, '. .~•.iM.~ .tin ~ •:- t n allsd~y .m(\eting. . _ l
-_p ~r sho)Ved her familiarity_ _ wit h· ·- - -- --~'i' ~ir '_ a'nd -Mr_s Georg,$ E, Torrey~·Jr.. .- -her subject and was both' :.enjo-yM~;-\l-.l'.1 91 l\~rs ,Walter H. Tow~r, Mr iµid ,
\abl e h d instru~tive Walter -- H
t ~+:cS·.,J_;estElr_ C, LeDµc •_or 9_hesterfl~)d !
--JT
-~
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.
· ·
1 • 'd ,Mr and--Mrs Ralph LeDu-c of·-'Hol- L
; - owe~, · al! ~xperti. h_uuter, gave _a --- - - - ., • 9ke_'J e!_t Friday for •13ldd¢ford, Me., I ·· t:i,lk. on his eXIl#:~iences of wild
.-/Wh~lf.~, th~_y- will cal_llp f9r the week ,
hfe m _the woods which was tis·end ' ~nd. enjoy deep-sea· '. fishing.
,
-- .. ten_\;_d _to witg in_tere§_t, 4- ·paper- ____._
r,: : '.l;'J;te school _c:hildren_~f,t):Je to wn qom- I _ _
,on the flora ~of , the region was
01ne!f Friday rn .a nealth day progr9,m I
, : d- b
· '
·
'llJ1der. tl;te direc~1on of.-:th.e )j;eacher·,ana j
•
;rea
Y. 1'1rs. rr_l;l:nk I!~tes, ,~llo
Ml~~ . Estl;!er .Wal/~ce, ':. 'school .n,urse,
- ~e~t~m'erated {he 1¥,a~y .~m_ds, : also_ \}'h1cp ,w as ·sI:ven this aft!li:.noqn 'on .th·e
_gmng f~o~ personaL,exp_e1)_e_nce
;grounds ;P}lar th~ Co::ner _schoolhl'.l\i/!e .. - -- \the med1cmal values ,.of some-· :'va-·
;Two - P,l ays were g1ve,n, , a_n • Ind,:ia'n
rieties. A rising vote of t hanks
' ~~~itufJ.ay by the :ftiverside, $out)!
~•as given to_t ~ose _whq) ook part
.'a h'eaft_h-t~ra:.~g/f~~er ic3ools, ,ind _
_.i n the prog~·am .and refresh.111_ents
, sce,~t lj,t West -W:ortnlnito~. s T~fe
hv,rnre·. served. _T,h e next me.e tmg. o!
..t!!rta1nment closed l \Vith a Maypole /
- -the Gran ~e wlll be a -strawberry __ ____ ,.~ nc~ glvel)- In the Dyceum..hall. · · 1
festi~al on Ji,!ne .,24, whi_m Deppty ,
·
_'c......_ · __,,
·,~· _____.:·:.=-c::-=--= ==== -- ~ '----...JJ
,Ma rtm of _.C.n eJ;}llre w.ill be . th e
--~ state -speake1;, and ·the- . pi'og i ani
- - -- --- - -- ---[w-ill be in . c_h arge . of the. · home
ec·onomics committee: .

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A r ece~f soci;il e~ent . ~ as · tt
/ 'showef!'.which was giveh by Mrs.
Wells Magarga-1 - and Mrs. Carl
- Loveland at the hotrle of--- the for::: ,_,........_ __
,_ mer for Mrs . . Dwigh t RaymQnd l w: ho .; was · presented with · t vif~
~- - -l ch aj rs. Card? w_ere enjoyed, M~s . ., _ _
_____ _
1:Ra m ond wmnmg first prize and .
r Mr . Ernest Thayer, consolation. '
----4- :- Mr. and Mrs. Geo,r ge T. Dodge
- --- - -- ----gave a su rprise. recep tion at their·
home ll).st even in g In honor of
__ _ _th eir son and his· wife, Mr. and
~ rs. Chester Harding Dodge·, ' who' li+ -~ - - I
:wer e m:i,r rled r ecently. About one
t
hund r ed were present. Car a's and
1 dancing were enjoyed and r efresh~
·---- -- ----l,
were served. ___ , - ~ ... 1

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�AIRPLANE RIES ·. :1
'WITH INJURED MAN .
. TO WORTfflNGTON:
Washington Do~tor T~ken
There , to Recuperate..

Trip. . From Bhiladelp_hia
· Takes Hour, 55 Minutes ·, ·

- ~
pilot, - J .~Wesley Smith, well •
known ra~g ·flier and vice-president ·
-of the Aero club or Pennsylvania, lett
; \Vashington to pick up his passenger:
: Fog grew thicker along, q1e way and
' when he reached · Camd_en ·h e· could not
I 'find the .airport. H,e circled back to-, ,
1 ward Phila~elphia In the hope, o~, ma~-, I,
I )'ng a land mg_. through a . hole m the
fog, and finally caught · lln obscured 11
glimpse of the navy , field.
,
·. In attemptii),g tb 0·1!).nd he saw at_- -•r·the last ·moment that the Delaware
ri,ver - was . directly under him. LitU.ng I:
I the • nose · of the plane;
._h e swung
around and finally landed on the' edge·
of the field.
While ; Smith· aftd•· his.
plane remained fog-bound at th~ navy' ,
yard, ,the ambulance. ·an4 patitntJ .who ~ -- - - , is Dr B; B. Neubaµer, of 'W ashington,
waited ·· at · Camden for favorable · 11
weatl\er. The patient p~anned. to .go .to
Worthington to recuperate .·from an I'--- ·
I illnT!lllhse ..f og l'ft
. d t··,: d noon··;an·d the·
I e
OW!LZ:
•
plane left , with · _its . pi!,tient . at 12.45.
-- Dr Mai'tin J . costellc&gt;, :.i,nd. a nuys~ ac-._ ,
companied Iir ,N eub~uer; in' ·the. plane,
, · · · ·
0

Worthingto~.
June 14-,-:A/
Bellanca
.
.
plane piloted by Pilot J. ·Wesley ,Smith·
of 'Washington, D. c., arrived.. here at
·2,40 tliis afternoon carrying , Dr&lt;s.,, B{
··
•
··
•., .. . -·
· ··. - ,, . ..
•!""eubaue:- -_ of W:ash1ngto. n,.·D"' C.,. ,:w,q.o_
•rs· ~utte:1~g ·.from - br&lt;;&gt;ken legs and - a
,, spfijal .. 1mur:Y,,. wJ:t'o 1s ·:,to · rec?i;ierate ,
dtmng , the s1.1n:i~e1:" ,. at ·. L;i,ra:r.ette
_lodge here. The patient.: was , a:cqo~~ 1
- - •·panied in the plane by Dr l',f• .J. ;Cos- 11-- - -- - ~- - - - - - - -- -- - - -- -- - - tello ·· of ~ Phlladelphia. .-a ·mll,n nurse,
and· two attendants. . . · ·
· ·
. Tq~ Pl:111e made the .trip from . ~)llli!,~ jl
,
c,
delph1a m · oJ;le hour and 5.5 , m,1n)Jt\l,s : ,
]/
I -,
and landed on the meadow owned by ·
Mrs · Irving Chapman of_ ;New Yorko
_ __ , ~ ithoi_it dllficulty. 'Dr Neubauer · wall If-- - - - = --+- -~
_carrie&lt;l; on · a . stretcher to •the ·hotel.
The'" patient Will -b~
.fcir her.~
by Dr ,Parkhuret of-, Washmgton w.l)o
-- , with •his wife · and daughter, is here JI
~
--- - - -- - - - - - - for the· etlti:u:ner. •
·.
· -.,. ·
·
;The p1ane did
rirril!dn here· long
an.cl, ma.de a successful takeotf for th-e
~j·re~"Urn' trip to Wasl)lngton. _ _
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. Pilot Has 'Narr&lt;lw- Escape .
Philadelpbfa.-June lf-,-(A.P) r-;wpile -· - ·
- - - - - -- - - - - -- - - -a motor. ambulance waited ,!l,t, .Centr.al, II
airport in cawden, . , with a _crippled,.
patierit who was , t'o be 'taken· by'• a:ll'•'.
plane'to Worthington,' M.ass.,. the i&gt;lfo~•111- - - - - - -- - - - - -- - - - '~f
,the ,monoplane which , was going to
1
· · Camden to .act as an aerial ambulance,
• had a narrow · escape today when · a
-1. f9g fprc_ed - h.im, to ,.J:an. d o~ th~ ~avy,
I yard flymg field he~ almost I on ' the
(. · 4,g_g_~qt _the Delaware_~&amp;ver. , -1 ·
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WORTHINGTON

TOWN PICNIC IS
HELD
. ATWEST PEUIAM

\WORTHINGTON PICNIC .
\ AT PELHAM THE 21ST

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Worthington , J une 16-Sons and
daughters of Worthington w i,11 hold
theh· annual picnic at "Wishkumt ru"
In West Pelham ,on. . Saturday after:noon and evening, the 21st, at the ii:i. vltati(:m of Miss Bess ie E . Trow of
Bedford lodge, No rth a mpton, ·a fo r mer
resident of . t his town. The invitation
is gene ral to all re sidents a nd for, me·r ·r esidents. Tlios e attendin g are
1·~quested to br inf so rrie~hlng for th e
picnic lunch. H the day ·1s too storm y,
;the picnic will be helcl' tlte following·'
afternoon.
·
· ·
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Over 160 Attend fS Guestsof Miss Bessie E. Trow-

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f worthlngton, June 23_;,P~bably no

one person ever before Invited a whole
town to a picnic, but this was what
ha-~ pened Saturday afternoon_and eve- \
K'.
n ing when Ml.!!s Bessie E . Trow of
Bedford 'lodge,·Northampton, l(ept open
house at "Wlshkumtrue," In West Pelf
ham for all sons and daughters o
Worthington. over i.so attended, com,. in,:- not only ·from Worthington, but
from surrounding towns and cities .to
erijoy• the renewing of acti.ualrltance
' and the quiet, -~rdered beauty of the·
old-fashioned house and its apaclous
grounds. aani~s ~ere ,e njoyed,. At . ti _
'o'clock ·a picnic supper w~ . .serve4 .on
tho lawn, with after-d!n~e~ .speel)h~. t--------...t
- ) by Rev James · H . Burckea of WorWorthington, Juift 1_6 -Mr!I Mer/: thington, Atty, VVa.lter L . ~tevens ot,
win F . Packard gave a miscellan-eous
,i Northampton and Milo Bates of Mi~shower at her home la.st eventng·- ror
•t
' uneague. Ji,. purse of money was .~reMrs Harold Hathaway who before her
..,; sented to Miss Trow, Atty ~tevens
Fe9ent marriage w'.1-s Miss Peo.rl lT'!Fz~
. making the. presenta~o~ sl&gt;ee~p 1l.Dd•I
r oy. A box prettily decorated with I
three cheers for the Trowii1 :and Wish- ,
yellow crepe paper, with fe11toon11 ex· _l kumtrue" were led by. -M;_r ' Burclt'es.
tending to it!! from the • ChandeUe;r I
· Harriet Higgins !llld -Marg~ret
above, held many, useful and beaut;ivtill -~ tend the 1-H club -~ruµp, "
PI
j ful gifts for their new home, into
ll,Iowe, •
Greenwich, this _week.
.. ,
1 which they are moving at the Center..
- - (__ Miss Marjorie G. Bartlett and _,Miss ;
-1-i
Refreshments were s-erved.
. \
Harriett Magar gal will graduate from
~ l!loooub
M~ Homer
the High Schpol of Comnierce, SpringGranger of Highland str eet, wil).)Ieave
field, Wednesday.
.,
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tomorrow to attend the Ho.mpshire
_ ---, The,Grangl) will meet at the Lyceum '--- - - --1;'-II! _
County
Homemai¢erf . camp
at
hall tomorrow evening with Deputy 1i ,
.
Greenwich lake this week.
,
Martin of Cheshire present and the pro'!' t /
John Frissell, who . suffe~ d a fall
gram in charge of th!! home ec~&gt;nom~
'
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trom, a town tcuok l~t we_ek, w_,
_
' io, oo=ltte,, Mn EmMt Th&amp;ye,, Mn 1
taken to the · D ickinson hospital FriHorace s. Cole, Mrs Walter Tower, 1 · ,.
:}
, day suffering from the breaking_ of
Mrs George T. :Qodge and Mrs C. ·p.
_ (1::
a s m a ll bone and ether injuries to
Williams• also a.' strawberry festival
·
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his left foot.
'
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--l'h charg~ ot the feast coxnmittee, Mr
- - -- ·_M iss _O live Nell of Columbus, 0 .,
, and ¥rs .Walt~r Sµilth !l,Ild li:tt -., lll;ld
will arrive tomorrow ll.t her summer_
~rs Stanley ,C ole,
·
cottage.
.
.
,. ·· -Mr and Mrs ·, Herbei:._t Tower and
____ _ _
Mr and Mrs Walter . M. Shaw, Mrs
- -- -~family of Sprin gflel_d.· and Mr and Mrs f---- - .,---r••l
Leland ·p, Col-e and son, Leland P.
.i. Cullen To;l'Ver -:~&lt;f ~ll,IJlily of ThompCole, Jr., wm attend the graduation
.
l,sonvllle Ct. w .e re In town for the week
J
• ot Miss Dorot hy M. Shaw ot SanderI end.
'
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· .
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- ,,s o.1n a cademy, ~hfleld, on Thureday.
- 1 ,- qr,mge Sunday will be observed at - - ~
t • • Dorot~y Louise . ~~f~~.r so~ ,9l~A~! Ith1; . ,Congregational church the 29th
, South Worthington school was •· !ftven ·
(and every patron iii aakfl(i to attend,
•
first prize tor having _t he mo.st per~
church. The speaker wtll be Charles _
.::
1
--....;_,- --- . • f eet atten.~ ce for the. school Yea,i:i · - - ~
M. Gardner of W estfield, high priest of
'·_-~
l,
D.orot hy 18' seve_n. yeli.rs . of. '/.,age and
.d emeter. ·J,.. picnic lunch will bes.e rved
~•
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18 the·: pupU llvlng ,'the ~test'- .dia:at the town hal l following th" meet; ·
'
· ta.nee fr9u,._school. She will ent er. the -·- -·-· ·-- Ing and there w:lll be a social !\_our.
·
•·- -~
.t!&gt;"Qrth g-rade• in September. - ' ··
'"
• The Grange Whist club· will ineet '
'. . .
Thursday evening w ith Mr, and Mr s
Howard J ohnson of Da~ton, former ' ' . J ~
__ . _ __, residen ts of this town.
,
· Mr .and Mrs I.eon Conwell and
lly of S,om ervlUe h l).Ye ,Jl,rrlved a i their.

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t~~~ ~e::Th~ . Eagle: :'

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- ----Meeting of Grange
'\Vortbington,
June
26-:0eputy
Arthur Ma:rtlil of Cheshire wai, the
state speaker at . the Grange meeti~g
Tuesday night at ]'.;yceum hall. Deputy Ii
Martin spoke on t )le many •changes
· w'ilich have taken piace in the countrY,
since the first Grange ~as organized
I in Washlq.gto,n, D . C., In 18_6~ by 011.';er
_ ,-Hudson Kelley, a native of Bo~ton,
and · of changes which have taken
place within the Grange and some
fundamental principles which havf
I
- - ----t--- endured, A papP.r on "Beautifying my_kitchen, a:s told- by the old , kitchen
clock," was r ead by Mrs Frank Bates
who is one of foe contestants in the
beautifying-the-kitchen cqntest now:·
being conducted by the Hampshire
County Extension service. A solo, "My
:Heart is a Haven" by Mrs Lel!!-n_d . P..
Cole an.d brief remarks by · Deputy
Wilbur Moore and Mrs Moore of
Highland Grange and Western HamP,__, den Pomona, • concluded ._the Pl'.!)g'J:8,,I)l,
At the business meeting which\- preceded It Mrs Claude Knapp ·was i,lect~d,. Cerces. Notice _was giv~n of ,a meet- - - - - - -------- - - - ----,-,\ mt of the community ~ervice committee ,. at , the .Lyceum hall .- Jr.riday
eveplq.g at' 7.30. Ernest. G. Th;a.y er,
George T. Dodge, Jr., and Herbert G.
- .- 1 Porter, Jr., we,e appoJnted · a commit- &gt;-- - -- - - - - -- - - - - - - tell to 'distdbute ~our·. dozen flags
wpi_cii the Grange has. bought to :'be '
placed upon soldiers' , graves; Strawb erries, cake ;rnd creafn ,vere served.
Guests present from · out of town
were: Deputy Arthur Martin .and Mrs
Mar~in of Cheshlr!l, Deput~ -Wilbur
M oore l!,Il!f Mrs Moore of Huntingtoi;i.
•· a nd Past Master Be,njamin Ellis and
Mrs Ellis of Westfield.
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�1\, - - --- -- WORTllINGTON
Homer

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Thrasher

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-~;:;~;}::.~;~f!~:ao~

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Joyal , :\',farvls Sn
. yaer; M9:rie Grani,. I
______,
- - - - ger aiid Olive farlsh, met today l
.
i_1l 1
June ·26 .-Wor&lt;l bas been r~-,
with their J~cal__ ·leader, Mrs. G~o- l
ceived of the death. in . BOS t0 n on,
'.E. Torrey, Jr.
\
Monday of Homer o·. Thrasher of:
__
Mr. and :?drs~ StE!PpeJi Oleksak; ·----------.._
--- Springfield, a native of Worthing~and t ii-'m ilf . are'· spe~ding 1 a few .
·
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. ton . Mr. Thrasher was .the son.o_f
days at M.r&amp;; ',Oleksak s- b_oµie in , ,
1,:
the late Isaac and Samantha ,Cole
Bondsvllle. _
.
. '....--.
1Thrasher ~nd: , lived . on the P_&gt;_J ace
· /_1
. Five inem be-rs . of Wo. rthlngton • !
. .__
.;
now owned· as a Rummer hgm~- b)'.
.Grangt , ¥r, ·and Mrs. \1{1!,lter Big- :
·
Mr. and Mrs. Archfir Fitzgerala~o~
,.glnii, Mrs;, F r,ank -Bat ~.it,·,.Mlss J;Jer- . . _
1'
-- New York city. His broth~r, Ha1;ry - - - - - - ~JJie: J{Jl~ou_
rn __ an_d .~1!-~ ~ l~_l'e V. T \---Thrasher., . and Clement F. Burr
·Bartlett, attended the installation .
attended the funeral today at tho
of offlc~rs ol·the pew ··Grange _at \
,'
__ _ _
parlors of thfl DJckin~on~Stre~t~i' _ f N
_ h Ada~s; W_ednesci;t eveplng. :-·-...._
compa~y in Springfle~d. Burial was _
1· .'.l'he ~.ra~~~-, ~Jllst , -~lµb · met .
in the Oak Grove cem,etery 1~ ~h:at_
It. his eyce~J~. t ·--~tt. ...J4.r ,', .-~.3:tld.. ·. -. Mrs.
\ii · _ __
city.
· ··
___
,How!i,rd ,Tohnson:,,,f Da.,lton. Five, ,__"-,....____
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----:-itables":were .ill IJ@.Y•. F1.f ~t ~Pr-lzes· t'-:i·
\~
Ph¥lhs Parish, daught~r of Mr.
'.w ere--won' by ) lj~~::?,Ip;f_l prfe:&lt;~art-. ff\
,
an~ Mrs. Spencer Parish of WesJ
__ _ ,lett .and :Fr-i nk;Uil: .G.i Burr. and .:' .
- · -Worthington .g:raduated -yester,day -. ,. 1 ti ·
. 1 s ''·-~-·· u ' .,;" o· · F ..
I
f '
Pl k'. tt h 0011 Pitts-~onso,11, on .n.r.ze,_.
,~iY •!~,:_9.,;: - · •.
I,
l'O~ the
un, e SC
' !'- .,
fBa'rtlet(andJ'.li'i; Fran.els Robinson:
I I
field.
· · ·
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Mrs. Hattie Capen waf! , call~4
- -- - - - - - "7·.,~•-------'-- - -- - 111!
to Huntington· today by_Wii" illii.es"ii
of her sister, Mrs. George Smith.
Mr.- and Mrs. Alden B. C!!-dY at-.lli - -- - -- - - -- -- - - - -- - -- - ,;:
ten(led th~ g;i:ad,u atlon yester_qay of
:!/
their d1j.ughter, 0 H~leni, from the
.I I
Dalton high school. ·, -,. _
. _
W - - - - _. . -"The Jol,y Five''. - ~ _
e t J &gt;:~s,t er~11,y_1--- -- - t•I \
lafternoon at the Ji'ome~,'f~ .f, ~ ! s.Wa)ter Smith. Brid~:e wa0s"1&gt;Iar :itd'~,
t'T he flrst ;:P,,rJ~e '.\!~s· wq_n l&gt;Y ¥rs. 1--- - - -- -- -- - - - -- - -- - - - 1 I
tEr-,n_e~t _G_. TJ}ayer ,and .tn§;c_o ns~}~-: ,
! lon .pdz,e QY'. Mrs.
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tfon will be . h.eld at &lt;-Yl t a~tte ·
, - - -- ;
- -Lodge on-Tuesday evenfn.g11'?:uly. 1,;_j
at 7.,30. A dinner ,i',t .$J.50 ·:3~.plate
\
y.ilf be served at 6.30. T,f Q
~:plattr.'_ - '-/.,1 _ _
__ ning_to attend _
are aske* f~~ notify II
_ ______ ____ _ _ _ _
_:,_----·_Dr. F . .A•. Rob.1i;i2_~fi&amp;.~i~ ~tor, not
.
IJ at~r than _Sul! day, J. un·e~29. The
.__
pur pose of the~meeting ls · to ' ·con-1- .. - - _,sider matters of int erest to '..the
tow:ns of 'Middlefl.eld , Cummington, Worthington , NQrth Chester,
- - - - !,i~tlevUie, Oheste'r Center- JI.. nd
1
·Chesterfl.eld , including the pro:.
posed hardened
highway and
1--- _h~ h~!!JS now .!,lej ng bu!!~_: _:::,] ______ _ _ _______ _ ________ ____

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Worthlngton, July 7-A m~etlng ·of •the Congregational church
be
b,eld: at the church r.r'.hursday . evening
at 7.30, relatlve. to the incorporation - - - ------ - of the· churoh a ftci° parish; to ''elect officers and for-'t any .o ther business ~
wh.1ch may proJ)erly co\lle b.efore the
meetlng. '11hls wm · be :followed by a
meeting of the parish· at the same
place at S.30.
·.
Young: ' people's nigh_t will be ·ob- · ,_
11erved. . at the regqlar· meeting of t)ie • t
Grange at the Lyceum hall tomorrow I ·1,
1evening.
• ·•
\
· Mrs William G. Rlce of. Alban,y, N.
\y,, · and her ·. grandson; Andr,ew, Rice
,of Madison, Wis., "\Vere guests ·yester'.d ay · ot· -the Misses Rice at "The
-'Maples."
.
,· Miss Sadie · Gascoyne who .has been
spending the winter .. In 1':,ew "¥otk,
lim.s' . _
: returned arid Is stcippin_g for a
1
------ - - i - - , - - iihor.J;: time with .,¥rs HQrace S. Cole
!before going to •the· farm·. She •hopes
to be, ·joined later ' by Mrs. John Hart •1
who is .1.n poor health. : .
, '
·
·-------------·--··- - - --- T!re •·F rielidship guild WIil meet on ·
iWedn. esda:y evening with -Mrs •Leland- I
'
· P. · Cole, instead of, on'.Thursday.''
'
/
, Mrs:/Gi.iy, F. Bartjett is confln·e d to , 1-- -the house wit!): a disclocated kneecap. 1
. . Mrs :_J;iichard G. Bartlett and three )
1children·, Donna, Richard and Joan of
_ J Greenfl.e.l,\l.. anfl her ..-.. sister, Miss t----- ____
- - - - - - ------~owena ... ,Bates ·of Springfield, are
/-spendi:ng· a; fortnight at Fred Gra.yes's
cottage!· •.
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' The Gi,ange will hold a dance at
}---,
L yceum •~'ii Friday night.

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A mliislonarY m.¢et1Iig will be heid
at the .home ot Miss 1-.. S. Heacock
on •Friday after11oon, at 2.30, to reor-· ganlze the society. Mr and Mrs Wll\ 11am R. Leete and four _chlldren from
Tientsln, China, who are on furlough
at Mountain Rest, Goshen, will be
present, and Mrs Leete will be the
l!lpeaker of t1').e afternoon. All are cor&lt;Hally invited to at~end.
N6rmaJl -Maeon of New York city
i spent the week end with hll! nleoe, Mrs ,
, Walter H. Tower.
Miss N. S. Heacock wlll sail the
I 18th from New York Ort the ~ed Star
ti iiteii,mer Westernland for _Plymourn,J·
\: Eng.,, and will 11pertd a. y.e ar abroad.
r1 She will be accompanied by MIM L.
o. Douttlas of Utica, N. Y, After l!ltay. ,,
Ing· 11everal weeks In England; .they ·
wm g6 to Oberamtnergail !or the iast
performance of the Passion pll\:Y and
____1 will spend the whiter ~n
tloUthern·,. Italy. , .
. · -· , .
.. ·
Mrs W•It:er M. Shaw et1tel:'talned
1, two• tables of .bridge y¢sterday . a:fter- _j noon. T11e ftr11t prize· -iv11-s \von . by Mrs
· George E ; Torrey, Jr" ,,and the consolation prite by ¥rs Hi&gt;raee S. C9le.
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OLD HOME CELEBRATION
TO BE HELD IN AUGUST
Tercentenary Co_mmi t t&gt;~e 11
Starts Pilans for Observ·
ance

worthinttton, July 8-The meeting :
of the te,r centenary committees, repre~ \
aent!ng the various organizati,o'ns ,-or 1
the town, which was called by the se- '
lectmen, was · held ;a.st evening at the
town hall: Rev· James H. Bu.rckes was
elected chairman and Mrs Helen G. I
Burr secretary. It vya.s decided to hold \
-, an old-hoine celebraµqn on Saturday ',
and Sundll-Y, Aug·ust .- ·ao and 31. The
project of completin.g the repair.of th~, '
sidewalk ahd footbridge, oefween. the' 1
___ _____ __ Corners and the Center vlllagea, and _
the setting out of communttr Christ- I
mas trees at b,oth-villages, was grate- 1
fully accepted as the prpposed Grang,e
1
tercentenary
. -It was votedoontriibutlon.
that the selectmeit hav.e-' charge o~ arrangements f&lt;Sf speakers \
for the 30th; spoi"ts, _t}i,e Royal Ar- i
--· ¢an-g.m: dlnne_r:, the Women's Benevo- ---l~nt SO&lt;llety, l;oyal Ladles an&lt;l Friend-~ ' '
iihlp ~Ud; grounds, the Ubl"ar'Y cotn.i;nittM; music, Mrs N. C. Tuttle, and
- -Miss 'J$.ne .T.U,t tl~; pµbll¢lty, Miss Elsi~
V_. Bartlett, Mrs Gu_y -·F , :t3artlett and
- Miss KatMrlne Mc:O. Rice; _an&lt;l that
the church tercentenary committee
1 ·-- - - - - ha.v~ ciiarJe ot the Sunday program,
It wu voted that the tneetin~ adjourn -g.ntll Monday evening, August
4,- at 8, at tl'ie"town-hall. The terQ_ente-- ---·- - -- - nary· committees a·re as· follows:
the 11eiect_m en, Alden B. Cad,Y, Het\bElrt' 1,
G. Porter, Harry· L. ·Bat~; church,
__ E,ev James Burckes, .'Mrs Herbert G. :
Porter, Miss Ka~llerlne McD. Rice;
Women's Benevolfflt society, Mrs Horace S. Cole; Mrs · T. C. · Martin, Mlils
_ ____ __ _ _ Elsie v. Bartlett: -Grange, Mrs Waiter
L. · HiJglns, Mrs N. _C. T1,1tt1e; .A,rthur
G. Capen; library, Franklin H. Burri; ·
Royal · Arcanuix\, Jos eph, JollY, Sheri- - - - - - -· dan Dodge, Willi11,m . Brown; 'Fir\end' ,ship g"Q.lld, Mrs Ja:m es H . Bl)rckes, Mrs
Clifford · Tinker, Mias :Marjorie Bartlett: rpyal Ladies, &gt;{rs Fr11,nklln H.
-- -- - - ---, Burt, Mr!? Helen J ,ohnso~ 0 _ _ • _ _ I -

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�wlington 'I

wottTHINGTON

FOREIGN MISSIONS

·1

Worthlngtort, JUiy lOCThile!J\~~!i
ship guild of the
ongr h - h Ome
church met last evening at t e
ta.I'
BOARD CHANGED
· of Mrs Leland P. Cole for Its regu
monthly meeting with the prograiiln
- charge or· the following members: e•
voticns, Mrss Marguerite Johnson,
M"155 Be.ss1e
. A mes El· ected
Miss Marjorie Bartlett: e_ducatlonal,
'Miss Elsie v. Ba rtlett; bus1rtess meetp res1"d ent,. M"
•.
__ Ing, Mrs '.Homer Granger, presldentr _ __ - - - · 1ss10nary
.
sewing hour, Mrs Hai'l'Y w. MolllMnl
entertainment, Miss Marjorie Bartlett,
ress_es em ers . .
Miss Bernice Kilbour~: refreshments,
· \VOR'l'l-PN,Q TON, July i3-A
meet1
Mr~ F,rancis A. R~bmso~
~
- - - - -- J,U~A~ i:ed#anlz~i1t be l,ocaf ; 6ra.nc1f, of
11
0
land P. Cole. Mrs arrY
·
f ,.,1· _,.
"tlie'"' Womefi• ~- l3daPc! -,,;ot' F'o r e lgn M:'i.s '
was elected gecretary In place O ,u .,.
.
,
,
-.
Irene Moulton, resigned, _ a~d Ml~s
: sions w.1¥'- geld,.. F rlday , _aftf,lrn dpn a t ,
- - - - - - !E:lsie v. Bartlett was .appointed.. re- 1----- - - - - ~ the home of •Mis&amp;' N. S . a:eacock. De - ~-- - ·
il\d committee. The niixt tne~tl~g-wHl
votlonal ~xercises ,were led by Mrs·.
,be held on August 7, with. Mr!! nomer
Ja_m es 'ii. Burckes. A b usiness m ee t Granger o:t: Highland st_reet.
.
Ing· fo!iowed and Mrs. Ji"l'bert Port
Mrs L!lhan B. Upson of Ohio, a -- - - - ---·
.. , '; ,
er ,--;former teacher of this tow,n who has
was l)~IJl.e d, _rµ_od~rat.or., ·:
.,
been visiting friends In Amherst, ..is
Offloers etectetl we~e:
Pres iden 1,
:1n the / Cooley Dickinson hospital,
Miss Bessie Aines; vice-president, Mrs . \
- -- - Ne&gt;rtha~pton; sut'fer.!rig; ':trorn a ;.fr.ii.cs ! - - - -- -- 1James H., Burckes ; -seco,nd v-lce, pre!!i - c- - ·tUred hip. ·
,
dent-, J\,i:rs. H. G!, Porter ; treas u re r •·
Officers of t~e W:qrthin'gton G~ange I
Mrs. ¥Y!:~- Stevens ;"_ _ c orr~spon ding
______ will attend the m_!l!)tin!i" .of ¥ .1~dle- I
se,cretary, Miss · S .. T. -Rice: re\!ording
~eld Gran~ - '.ruesdar_ evening --_a nd l - - - - - -- 1 SAl,~-retary, Mrs. F. H , 1;3urr.
It was : - - - ,hDve bee.n- asked , Hr till the ~f\'lel!S: 1
voted that the president and v!ce-L
1
t -. ':!'hey w:iJl also furnish the 11-ter~n; \ .
_ ~resi geny-; !5)1a'.tl 'fo r.at :qie p r ~g ~a;nt.•·
- - - -- ~ ·pro!'ir~m~ , _ _ , ..: , . .
_
comw !.t~ee. · ~ e next mee t ing will be·
,,_ . ,Ml!!S , :tg~nc;y A. ';!:'_r.O}'.f .Qf NortJi!!-mP- I
.. ·
I held w1th-....the . Misses Rice a t "The
· , f_
e~n._, ~xecutlve
secre__tar_
oft
.heilamp--C
L·M;;ap
.- t_o be
ermined.
sh1re,~
ounty·br!l,nc1i
of yt~e
~ed
Cl'Olll:
:,
A. les."t
.solo•the
wasdate
·su~,g
by ·det
Mrs:
Leland·'·.
_ _ _ _ _ _ Mrs F;ef!y ~c.lc H._ Bupr of Eaetham'P, _
,
· Perr:!'. Cole. Mrs. Burc k ef! introduced ,,
,
tqn, .director, Miss Esthe~ :Wallace,
, the ~pe;a;ker., Mrs; Wll)Jam . R. Leete,
ar 1
1
~ed qro~s nurse, n_iet tl:if _nur!!i:11A' ,_
mlss10nary from '1.'i entsin, •C h ina · ·now
~ommLtte~. of-Plaln,!l,eld, . 9ummlngton
.
at Mountain Rest, Goshen .- Mrs 'teete
am" Worthtng_to~ at the library Tues,_
spoke on "The Bu I'ld r O ;_ ·0 111 : .. n d ·
day afternoon tor a business m:eet·
gav'e a vlvjo •word le t
fl . na ·· a
\ - - -Ing.
Ci .,., , fo~cesI?, of
c u re, r st , o~ ~he
Dr and Mrs . Franc,i~ ftob!p,son
evo 1, u 9Il\lrY
des
t
ruction
a:n
d
th
____ wm leave SuI)day tor a automobile
'liin of
E! ~en .. and women quietly
trip to Port Has.tings,
• ·s::·.f o , b~.
work In~ t~ bmld µp_;\a i+&lt;t. ste ~i-pJ;i°l~e.cJ l---'--all'!!Y a month. Dr .Healy ot .,&lt;:::.~m•·
her ,5 faith In thef.r . µ I,t.Jmat e tr.lu m ~.
rr,lngton and '.or Huffm!er ot ·Huni•
A rl ing v.ote, of t hap ks was -g iVE!!l M r-i&lt;.
_ _ _ _ lng ton . w!ll take charge of his ·prac. Lee-te. for her l_pferestlng ta_lk, •A'i:t; r ~
tic e at local rates wh!le he Is a'Wll¥, J .
- -noon tea· was se'r v,~.d',.
;i 1,
The , Friendship .p.-uild will hoi'd · a
!;&gt;ridge party and afternoon tea aivtha·
l' b rarY, ,gr,ounds Tuesday from 2 -gntll
4 Tl'i!s Is. for &lt;the benefit ,bf thEl :re• 1--- - - llet work of the guild. It the weather
1s ,n oj ~,\llta ble for ;i.h outdoor pl,lrty
- -- - -i it wll,1_- 'b!l h eld a t the Lyceum, hall,
Mrs George E . Torrey, ;rr., urt~er- - - - - - - - -- - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - -- - w ent &amp;fl operati on yesterd'a y
~he
re movaY gt h er t ons ils at the 'Wesson
- - -- - .1 MemorlaJ h'.ospital in ' Spring field. 'iier
little niece_. Arle11 e Cole,- al110 ,\ li\der• r--- - - -- - - - - -- - -- went a n operation th ere yes ter day for
-- ltonsi!il anti. a~nolds.
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�., :was voted, if necessary, toborrow
I in.one:, to pay the . re~ain)ng ln-

WORTHINGTON

debtedness of the parish and that
the parish favor&amp; rehiring the Rev.
James H., Brirckes ail pa.stor upon
terms which he has sj)ecffled as 1- - satisfactory to him. Under tliese i · t term.s 91e parso~age
hot be
usecl as such, Mr. and Mrs.
Burckes deciding to llve at Cold r
Sprhi.g...,tarm ;-•1t,lrit, But'clces' former ·
1h6me. Meeting dissolved. The Incorporation of the church · now
I( awaits acceptance ,o f. and return of
the 'f,apers "from Boston 11nd'· . the
turning over by the parish of tJie ri - -propertyf!.to the chu1,!h.
•. II1
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Chul'ch Is Incorporated

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J·uly 11.-The First Congrega- i
. \ Uorial church of Worthington I
met last e)'.enin~ at the church, -at I
7.30 and took its last legal steP,S .
\ toward incorporation. Present at
't !.;.
I the meeting was Horace S. Co1e,
'! \
i justice of peace, .and al.so Judge
· Elisha H, Brewster, - who ·gate
\\ I
helpful advice on technical j)oi,nts.
'. Rev. ianies H. Burckes was eli!ct- .
- I ed mo4'er!!,tO'r and Arthur• G. ·Ca.;
1. 11•1
! pen, clerk. · 'The prqposed . bylaws
I: /i 1
· ot tne incorporated church i&gt;{ere
- -- ----- __ ado,pted; also creed a'.nd·,~ovenant.
, The following Officers and comiJllt·
) tees were elected 'for,. t)le ens\)Jng
, year: Moderator, Rev~--Jamell H.
Burckes; clerk, Arthur
.~ap_e n;
1\\ ,
deacons, Clem~nt F. Burr, three
,
.
_ . .
. ~'
-IiI\ ' I
'1 year11,e
Raynion~· P. Bu~k.t.. , i w.o
:
.
·
.
_
years; Clyde .tones, on~ .; year:
- - 1. ~orthmgton, July _14-Tpe Woll}- ,
--,. r,
t~ust Clement F Burri :.G;eorge r
ens Benevolent soe1ety w&gt;ill m~et
Wednesday w1th
Charles A. K1li'
• Pease and Mrs, Erne!!{_
· )!ayer
. lfourn for an all-day sewin,![ meeting. I'
,
- - -- -- - - -~or three ,yea,rs;:-.~.Mlss • 1£_,e::t _.•! lne· - - - - . Mr and Mrs Harry Eddy of If)orenc!e ,- --!
McD.JUce ali~ ~qdge
for
·and Mr and Mrs -John McCartby of ,
, 'I•
two years, Merwin F. Pack!l,t'[ and
}1'(o~thampton ·spent the ·wee~ ~nd at ,
1''
Mrs. Franklin H. ·.J,urr _:: fQl; . one
:the Eddy cottage. ·
;
111~
· J , r - - - --- .c-- year·
church tii~
· 11siirer' :Mrs.
Her- ~eJ~_!lwho
-M:. Bartlett.,;
and having
Ma~y Ellen
•
•
- "'· • •
•
, •
Read,
have been
two ,·
. ,f,' 11,
bert G._Porter; -!~a.s urer of ben.!lvwee~a•:_ vacation at Bucksteep Manor )
f; ___ ____ ,olences, Mrs. Eb~.: Shaw:/ . {1-lJdl,,at. V.:a~hiJlg;tpn, . th~ vacatiQn·..house 'lt1
.!i I'/;,:
,_!or,. Mrs, . :Franll:Un H . .. J3\lri-:
- :c~mnectiid "'.'.1th_. tbe 'Girli;' F.rlendly so- --- -- - - 1
r,/
. - church
.sc
· iliool . 's_
u per. in.ten:de~;
c et,:. of S:t.· •P-eter. '.s Episcopal church
· ' I
Mrs. Ernest ';['llayer; oominJttees,
at,. P1ttsfl~jq; ret,1fr~~9'11_hq~e_.Satµrd/lY, /
,,i' /L I
nomina,t'ing, Mis: .Herbert G. Por• -- Th_e . Fri_enq$hIP:, l!'J:1 1q w1H l~-olµ a i_____ _
t
M ·-~Jch -- n ~ :k'lb fir . M
Ibr!ag~
pazty a:-u.d .tea on the -: lil&gt;rary I
11
er, . rs.-~ are.__,._ I o n,
rs.
. Ia.wn,.- 'Fues«;Iay ~'fterbpon;from 2 to 4 I
t, 'UI 11
L~la:n~· p ;. C?!8j,:.,cY_Ch~rch; :servt,ng
·Th~re w,,111 be a Ch8r,;'g~ i?C 25 cenj:s fo; I '
fr ~\
i.
witl_l_, mlni~~e.r !L!)-J. ~e:3-cons, M_iss S. ____ ___ _the .1?enejit of tlie _· relte.1 · fund ... Jf the 1 _ _ _
!
,:1, j
T, Rice;, mJ s~o~ar:y, Miss Elsie _V. .
.
dfyt:18ce~:my.
. :par,ty wm: be beld ,
, 1, ,.
Bartlett, music, Mrs. L. P. -Cole,
FI Y
- h~.n•..•,,., ....,___ .. _ 1
"
·
ttl;.:·
·ur
·
s
·
·
George··;'
"
E
'.,.,
o~
ers_:
'
Y
cer,E);i,l:&gt;laced,.,;,,:in
11 L1 'I
1 r·s· "N ·c.!' ·u
ir
,.,
•
•
•· ·
"•
·,.,on:gregatl&lt;&gt;@l -' 'ch • .. h · , ·. t·h'e· .•Fir.st i
,1:(1 ! !i - - - -- - : Torrey' Jr., ,Artifor G. ,Capen: )
-~~ _oj:Ii,_iug ,. in::in?rq.'ory,, d l j ~h·i-t:~rt.
' a.i~. :~
.
cial, · Mrs. C. A. ;Kl!bourn, ;:.l\4r,s_.,
· " ·· '· · · •' 1 n 1\ · ·, , .__ ,.~ • .
' '1,',·\ ,
· .. :,T
,.., .. ., 1· •·
: 1, 1I
;1 G~or~e ET
. orr~y,
.,,r., ; ;m.fS,"7~ftD
· /;
- _____ _, Cole, },{rs. Eben . . Shaw; !Jo:'lt! • - - - - ---- - - - ------ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
·. •1' I
,
, Miss Elijle' Y,;Bar.t lett, Mrs. qe()'J:~
j
E. Torre1:~ Jr., Mrs._ WaU~rl, } -••..
, I, \,·
- •-- -·•_.Burcke11,
:gJgglns; i:el~~f, ,._ .Mr:~·· Ja. m~_s l{. •
Mrs. Horace S. 901e;__M! s, .
Myra. Stevens, ·Mrs, Homer urait-~
'I
---- _ger/ Ac(?~r'd! n.r ~o , tjie new byla~ii •----- - the cbur.ch year wm now," ...encf
'•
.JJH~' 301. tttf'i4e;~n·nua,i
,
·July first lnstead0 ,of Janu!(ry flrst.;,,l
; - -- - - - ·- ~ari'«tllie_ffe:~al'yea.r will'
Ma;'1 :.1f-- - - - -- - -- - - - - -------·
l :, I
-31,. •Me'e thig adjOU'l'ned·, FoHowtnj':1
i1
. thl!! the .parfsh
held. 11 meeting:

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WORTHINGTON

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WORTHINGTON

ROYAL ARCANUM TO
~I . HOLD PICNIC THE 14ffl \
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. Worthington, .July 16-The Friend- ~
ship guild· held bridge party and I
tea on the Library lawn yesterday i
afternoon with ftve tables In play. i - I\ - -. First prl7;es were won by Mrs Win- ,
• g
.
(
fred Drake and Miss Madeline Town- send and the consolation -prizes by - Mrs 'Henry Townsend, of Springfield
O· le lJ?. _ast._ ear
and Mrs Leland P. Cole. About $6
Western Massachusetts . councils of
was r ealized. A 11econd bridge ~arty
-- the Royal Ar.c amim will combln!) their
~~d,£~:s;~~- be ,M ld at th e same l'la ce
annual picii}c with' memorial se}:vices
·Allen · Prouty ot Rustin, La., 11,nd '
tor those of , their \number ,whQ have
- - Mrs Roland Gooqwln of .G!!-rd.ner were - - - - - --1 died· duririg the ,past' year, '!:t
gat~- recent guesta of Mr i;i.nd Mrs_.Fran~
1 .erlng . to ,b,e held at WorthniJto:n. the
1J3ates.
.
..
i 2Jlth. Members. fnd th:eir friends ar;e · 1
--!. Ger~d Bates has ret1,1rned _ a,tter __ _ _ _____j Invited and" an u1i tlsually large turn- (
spending three week!! in Boston ~d
, out is expected. .. :, -. .
1 Congressman · Allen -r. Treadway of i
vicinity.
.
_
·
lll[rs Claude Knapp and ll,\tl!! ~on ~ ~-'
Lstockbridg'e; _w ~o· is a _member of the ,
...,..___=e.=-=-===="".'.- _;;·"--:--- - - ------( organ!zation; .Wlll be,, the guest of hon- -. _
visiting Mr and Mrs Orson W. Gurney
l or. 8.1,ld ."w_m · deliver -the pi;-incipal ad- \
of Greenfield. .
· •
j dr.e ss at the memorial services. Par,ticPhyllis Packard is visiting 'lier;
1 ular tribute will' be paid on , this ocgra.ndmother, ' Mrs Cranson of Con- -- - -casion :to · c• • Bates, a cl}arter m em-· - - - . way.
, ber of the· Royal Arcanum, who died
. Twenty-two members of Wor_tih~. durfo.g the past Y.ear aD;d wh_o att~ncf: ,.
~1·ton Grange attended the_ meetmg of L__
e(l •these· ann1,1al :gathermgs with un.
· Middlefield Grange last mght, the of·
't a.jling regajarity.
_, 1 : ficers filling the chairs a nd furnishing
.Among ~hose presen,t wil·l. be Gr.
. ·the · literary program·. .
,
Regent William w. Good ; W. ,~. l(:el~,- ·
' Mrs Daniel 'R. Porter and Infant I
- -- ~
grand secretary; . .Julius ~t.e cker'.\ of'
son r·e turned today from the 1,Cooley rBoston, grand' ,va 11d~n; , ,a.rid· ·- ·Pas)
-- - Dicklngson hospital at Woi;tl:iington,
GrllJJ,d Regent William _ €. · Root . of,
Pittsfield. The &lt;:rmmlttee on an;an,ge, ,
.
__ __
___ __ , ments for . this outing is m a de up :'&lt;&gt;f
- ..Joseph .Joll,ey; ·chairman, and Felix ;
-Sch!lurn;i.~~. se,c retary.
":: { :,.:. ,
. ;I ;,Other .qommitt e~ member.,i are:· re_ _ _:!_ _t reshments c;om~:ut tee, Wells , _!,fa~r-, ,-- _ ___ _
.gel, .liar~.y Bates. an!l F r ed ( lfajrma,_µ_; , 1
11ports co~ mittee, J . .J. ·M~ni'gle, F, ~-.
. B~nes and H. E. Cooley; 'and ,trani;r-- - - - - - - - -- -- - - - -- -·--- - -- .p6rtation com~ittee, R. T .. Nichol.!!, E.
-A. Bradway a•n d .J. .J. Monigle: Al)yone
wanting tran~portation to Worthing;
ton may g et In touch·· with one 'at the
- - -----:1members of, th!s latter committeei".
-- - -· -

Ou tin

Will Be Combined

With Services to ·Members

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~---- 7ARCANUM .WILL.HOLD .· -~
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MEMORIAL,SERVICE

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.-1Wes tern . Ma s s a ch use tts
. ·Councils ,o,Hav~ 'Program
af Wdrthi11_gto.n .

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. Northampton, ·.tul'y 18-'1ale ,Royal
-'ArGanum councils of '.westei:n ){11,9sa1/· ·
- -- ~ch!Tu'e t~ w.ill hold thelt: annual nit•
mortal service and basket· picnic as
guests of Bashan Hill council · ot
__ __ j .Worthln~ton Saturday afterneon, .the - - - - - - - -- 26th. The guest · bf honor - will be l
Congressman Allen. T. Treadway, wii:o l
"will make .the memorial ,. address.
'l
'Amo'ng the . high officials o.! th
. e order - --'
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expected •to be present :t re""' Grand
!.I
. Regent _William L. Good, Grap.a Secre.,
_ ___ tary William ·Kelt, Grand Warden L --------------- - - -- - -'l
Julius ~t:ecker an:d ·Pas~ Grand Re-i, ! I
giint Wrlllam C. ,Root, .. ·: . , .
i . I\
. T-he cha,irman ,of . the general cdm~
,
, , ',
' mitt;ee o! arrangements is Joseph.L...- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - -- - ----:--'--!.;
~
\
Foley, a!2,d the ~ecretary, Felix, SchaurJ ,
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,m3:.n.. "'Other commlt~ee~r are 1tp,e ., fol- 1
'.l ?wing.:~~ efr~ h~ei_lts, · swens ~f):gar-1\., . _ __ ______ _ _,.:__ _ _ _ _ __ __.;_~-+--.~al; lill-1!Y' ~ates,... ' F-~_eq• Falr n')an ;.

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ARCANUM PLANS FIELD
DAY AT WORTHINGTON~-

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_ WORTHINGTON

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Berkshire ' H·ampsh1're and'r Hampden Lodges to Be
- Represented Saturday
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Worth ington, July 19-Royal Arcanum fteld day, s ponsored l'Jy '{b;e ___ _
lodges of Pittsfield, North Ada~s.
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·. W orth in ~to n, J~ly 21-T he -Fi r s t
Con g r ega tion a l
churc h
y est erd a y t
morn ing a t a business m eetin g h eld
at the close Of the l'norn: in g·_. service, 1'--- ---- - voted not to accept the resignati on of
the pastor, Rev J a.fu es -H. Butckes, but 1
to rM!l.ln him under the : provision s
favored by the parish at Its' l.ast m ee t- L---- - - Ing. It was voted that the church entertall'l the tall meeting ot t h e U ni ted
Hampshire association of Cong rega;i1zna1 Churclles and Ministers October
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Stockbridge, Springfield, Easthampton, ,
I The Grang~ wti1 hold a dance at th e
Westfield and this town wlll be held )_
_
Lyceum hall F r iday evening. Ba t es·s _,_ _ __
.near the Heroert Higgins place, wh
orchestra will play. _ , '
· '
It took place last year, next Satur-1
_ Mr a nd Mrs :W.:lnfr'ed D rak e aqd .1
day.
·~' j
·family made a we ek- end t rip to_ Or - The members wll,l meet at Lyc_e~JP.·- - - - - - - le.a ns, Vt. Mr.s Drake and two _or ~h e t---- - - h a ll at 2 p. m. and ·a pilgrimage wUl I
c lldrep ,,- P ~ l1.J_P,A 1!4 GijY,, . ~ re ~.!im a111 ~ 1
fl r st be made to the North cemeter.y
_-· _·
- - -·• · --- •-· - · •· "' · ... -'·' •·· - 1
where a memorial service wlll be•held
i~g for a longe,r stay, prob.a.
1 b ly ,, tort-.
- atthegraveofPastRegentCharle.s / - - lll~ht;; ·- ---, .- ·-'.•'
' , '. · ·•· . _--.., ;, - ·':';_1----- - - - - F . Bates as is the custom ot J;he ,
·, Mr a:nd Mrs Wa f.t er: _1\,1. Sl_la.w haTe
lodge. The speaker ,will be_ Concresa~L
g-o M .tq ._AsJ~f!.EJld t.o v.ts1t th~1r_. ch\Ugh_
man Allen T: Treadwl y, ,:__.
._
ter, Mrs . P li1h!J -CJ Gu r p er , , : ·. _.,
- -- - Thls ·servlce will b~l tollowed by the
--..M r a~d. :'.Mrs J ap es A rmst_rong ~1\d :~
. - -Arcanum picnic at th!! picnic grounds / ·
two .\)l~il dren, Charlot t ~ _and Andrew, :
1
, and _a dance at Lyceum hall In·, t:t,.~
, of Holyok e, are spendin'g six w ee ks :
, evemng,
It, ., ,
. ,,;, J- _ ,
I at tije .,~ellef
COt ta,_g es.. '
, , ;.&gt;
. ., :
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T he G_ra nge Wliis t ·-c lub wlll ' m eet- ,..----- - l~ '_'~ e_d n~sday .eve-1:)ing .a t l\frs G ,;iy ' .F.
r i i·_Bar.tlett's . " _ . _ .
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- - -,, Wo~ .hin~ton, July 20-Mrs Leland !· - - - - -- - ' -P . Cole gave a surprise. party at her
home Thursday afternoon In celebration ot the birthday of her · mother,
Mrs Walter M. Shaw, Four tables ot
_bridge wer e - ht play. T- he first ·p-·rlzes
were won by Mrs Sidney J. Smart il.nd
Miss Katherin~ Bossen °and the consoiatio,n prizes bt M i:s H , L. ' Craft - - - ot Ashfleld and Miss MarJ9r le Bart- I
lett.
. ,
Mrs Stephen . Ol~ksak and 1
_ _ _ __ _ __
family hAve mo ved to :Westft'elq,' . , f - - - - Mr and Mrs .Frederick .H. Burr and
tam!ly, who have been spending two
~ eek's at, V1eir'' su·II!111.er ~qqie, - Mount
Ar a i'at, wm .,return home t omorrow. '
•' Pomon,.,_tp embers will be- guests 'ot
t he 1Gr ange,.,.T'uesday eve~l pg at L y .
_ _ _ c..eu qi h a ll. It will be "mys tery night" _ __

Mr,·,~a.

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fo wtµg . c9minittee : Mrs Wintred
r a k l!, ¥,lss Elsi~. t ·_Ba rtlett, H_er b ert
- _ _ c::.orter ,an.d Ralph: -a,mJ_th. ....,,,_;__, . · •· _ _ _ _

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Grange Meets
Officers of- HllJside Pomona
Worthington, July 22-A h eav y rain
Grange No. 20: Master, Mrs. L. C.
sterm with wind of g&amp;Je force visited
Sweet,
Cummi!lgton;
overseer,
Roswell H. Merritt, Chesterfield;
this locality yesterday afternoon ·and
lecturer, Mrs. A. O. Gloyd, Cumdid considerable dama.g·e to trees and
telephone lines. The big tulip t1·ee at
mington; steward, A. F. Pierce, !
I the foot of Rice's hill, the only one of
Huntington; assistant . pro ,tem, '
its species known in this section, was
Carl Loveland, Worthington; chapbl'Okeu off at the base. Thi~ tree was
lain, Mrs, . H. L. Merritt, ChesteT- , -one of the landmarks of the town , but
field; .treasurer, Herbert G. Street- , (;
had become unsound . a.t · the base, _
er,. . Cummington; $ecretary, Mrs·. :
t hough it blossomed full this year.
Older men and women can 1·emembet'
'F. v. Tournier, East Windsor; gate \
it a coveted p leasure of their youth
keeper, W.
gins, Worthington; !
to obtain one of its green and orange 1
II ·
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PAA
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, blossoms, of lat~ years an almost ImCeres:
,Mrs.
.
.
:coie,
Huntlng~
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; possible feat because of its towering
' hight.
. ' .
ton; Pomona·, ,Mrs: Walter Higgins, i . -- --- ; ,
Miss Louise A. Zogbaum of PhilaWorthington;'
,'.Flora,
Mrs.
w.
•r.
l
delphia, who ·-has spent a number of
summers at vV01·thinihon, is occupyMoore, Huntington;. execu tlve com.- l
ing, with fr iends, Mrs Forbes's cot, lttee, Mr~f -T€a'tf- Lo;veland, of
tag e at Alderbest.
,' WQrtb\ngto.n ;\ ~iiep the ome.;B at
Dr. and Mrs James l&lt;,rancis Cook of
Philadelphia on their way from Ken- _. __ the meeting 'of the Worthington ·
, . Grange_l9:,~£ evening at the Lrceum - - - - _;
nebunkport, l\Ie., to visit Mme Galli
Cu i"ci at Highmoimt, N. Y., spent last
i hall and lurnlshed -'&amp; , part· of the (
night with Mrs Cook's sister, Mrs T.
program. . · Solo!' .Miss Florence i
- - C. Martin at the Center. Dr Cook is - --, Xouinfef! ·. ·qf h 'Wirl'dsc1r; · reading,
·pres ident of Presser foundation of
' 14p: ;Miir,shall Sm\th' _&lt;:o f .H ighland
Philadelphia and has been eaitor of
Gra_n ge; ;harmonica solo, Victor
Etude · for :H yeari;;.
Jl¢rnier; reading of. the minutes 1--- -- - - -,
o,f .a Pomona meetlng held many
years ·.ago, :Mrs. F. V. ·Tournie-c. of
Wlridsor who also gave two' recita-1
, rtions; solo, Wallace LePuc ot
• . i_Ch~sterfleld; rel!,ding, .M rs . . Fran It
___ ,.; Bates; har_monica solo, Victor Ber-.
·1
.nJ~r. __ The roll call i;howed ari atI
te:q,dl\_JlC~, of 7 6 ~s follows: ·w ort-ll1
;J,ngtoh, , 3 : . Win&lt;!t:!Or,·. 3; C:tiest~r,;
fl,!lld, . .. 7..: .. Uighlp.11d: Grange; 20;_1--- -- - qum~ington; ', l'O;
Flfotsfone
·Grang~,
HiIJto_J?! ~ ..
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- - - - - -, at.te~d
A rl.s !n.
~
_y&lt;&gt;·fl
.
_
e
o.r,_aJt
wJ10
would
/
C9n'!V'ell. SUp&lt;}ay.;at South c.

Wind Snap!! Lan°llmark Tree

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Worth!Iigt~:iii -~ -- Se~t.. · 7tl!; ··was ,
,
un11-niµi.~:i½,~\i. ~~en by J;&gt;oth fourth _ _ ·_ }
and· tittl;i' ; ;de_g ree ~mem,p ers. Re- I
'h
1_!!esll~';.8re_ served. .....
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The Guild weekly bridge andl
__ _ _ .&gt;
tea--was held at the Lyceum hl!ill.j. ,
Tuesday aftir.ngon.- Tbree tabies ..
were1 in play. ··The ._..pri~~s wer.~
wo_n 'by Mrs, Leland 'P,,,Cole, first;
., Mrs. Charles A. Kilbourn:, second/
and the co:qsolation pdzes by, Ml~s. _____
{Irene Moulton and MTS. Mau:r-le'.e1
11 Clark.
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WORTHINGTON _

WORTHINGTON

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Worthington, July 29-Robert T.
Bartlett ls s pending a week at ·camp
Gllbert at M. A. c. at Amherst as th ~
Hampshire county delegate fol' the
state 4-H club forestry project.
.
Miss J. Catherine He,vl ft left Satur- ·
day for u. two-weeks' stay at Camp '
Pinnacle. Voorhis, N. Y.
The Wom-9n's Benevolent society
will meet Wednesday
with Mr/;
I Charles A. Kilbourn. All attending
will bring basket lunch.
· Mrs T. C: Martin has rented her
I •h-ouse at th-e _Cen ter vi[l_
n ge to Mr .and II
, 'j \f_rs J. R. Montgomery of -W·lndsor
Locks, Ct., for the m onth of Augos't. L
l\1r and llfrs -Chal'les Ward, Mrs
Alice Booth .fnd Master Malcom Richard Cole of Detroit are guests of l\Ir
and Mrs Joseph Emory Wright.
William__ Thornton
S impson
of
Springfield, .,who tor several summers. rind plays at the library, 11/iS ·
again agreed to give a program
Thursday afternoon, August. 7, at 3
at the Hhrary. Miss Katherine Rice
and ' Miss Olive N-eil, assi.sted,.by tho
, librarian, ?11:r Olpeh, wJII have the
! affair in ch a rge. · -. ·

Th, Fclendshlp G,lld h•M
card. party _and tea on the librar;
· 13:wn , ~Js afternoon with thre 61 --- tables of brtdge ana one of whist, !
-----: In play. The first prize at bridge l
: was vy:on by Mrs, Sidney J. Sman,
who Ued with Mrs . . Clifford Tin- I
Iker, and the consplatlon prize ·
weµtto ~rs. · Geoi;ge _E. Tor~ey, ,
_
r,_qr. ' At wll!Bt t_h e tlrst prize was
_ J~~n .~Y Mi_ss _Elsie y._,Ba!tle_tt and
t h~ coµsolatlo~ . pr!~~ by Mrs. ~- _
Maurice Clark. These outd'.oor
- - .
card pal'tles will be held weekly
]
every T:1esday _afte~nobn at 2.15 l_ _
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at the library. ·
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Among the- guests registered
Lafayj tte . fodge are _Mr. and Mr:.,.
Brown, Mi_ss . An!la Bailey ot 1- - - - /
Springfield; Prof. and Mrs. A. C,
·
Ai;mst;-ong of Middletown, C.t.;
Mr. and Mrs. · T. Shanahan of , - ~
Net York city; Mr'. and Mrs. · A,
Fish of Boston, _ana. Mr;· and Mrs.
Mitchell of Springfield, . who have
arriv·e'd wftblri 'the· past .week ailCl i
ilre here . fo:: the 's easdn:
.
I
- ' ', Miss· Ella Jenks ·and"iVliss Mil,,
dr.e d Chapman of Pr.ov1dnece',· R, ·I., are -sii'en'd fog three :weeks witli
__j 1.'1n John Fl'iss,eli at tb,e Cenier, -I
' who also has with lier her little
, granddatighter·,, J_a net Simpson of

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_ _ _ _, Wo1iceste:::.
. .
Miss Dorothy
F. •Barflett,
who _ _ _
is _spending ~he su·mmer. at East
....,,
'. R_iv.er,
ls·_ at lie( ,_ home for ~1
- - - - - - -, few da_Xs.

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�THE SPRINGFIELD-SUNDAY UNION AND REPU~LICAN~ SPRINGFIELD, MASS. JULY 27, 193,~

Royal Arcanum Members Placihg Flowers on GraVe,#F
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Of Past Regent cnarles
F. Bates at Worthington
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Worthington, July 26/-About ' · 350
members of the Royal Arcanum, from
,Pittsfield, North Adams, Stockbridg·e,
Springfield, East)Jampton, Westfield
a'nd- I&lt;'lorence, met here today with
Basnan _Hill council, f9r the arinl\al
Western
Massachusetts
field day.
There waldisappointment at the failure · of Congressman . -~lien T. Treadway, who was to have been the principal speaker, to arrive in time fo r
the exercises....eongressman Treadway,
wh·o was detained at Williamstown,
where the state convention of the
American 'Legion w11-s in progress did
, not arrive Ur'l,t:i_l evening,
'

usetts, to preside. "William L. ing, who paid a tribute to Mr Ba~t&gt;.S
+he program included observance of iassach
lelt •of Boston, grand secretary, and spoke in honor of those who died
a !Jlemorial day foi; departed me!llb_ers· l!at:ed
a wreath in honor of ·Mr Bates within the last year.
and, at 2.30 a line of automobiles
:i.h-d a ·second wreath in honor of the . The picnic grounds was the next
was for_m ed • on Main street, near LYi
0
In.embers 14 in number, who died objective-the "old orchard" at the
ceµm hall, and, following a custom
the lodge, - went to North c~meterYt Within the last ·year, was deposit~d by cro.ssl'oads, near the . Hii;gins famn.
Grand - Warden Julius 8trecker of Here refreshments were served, and a
where a memor: ial ser,vice was held
the grave of Past Regent Charles h · ~oston, the names being read by the program of sports· was carried out , -Bates, whose lifelong devotion to t e li•rand chaplain, H enry Rathbun of under the direction of F. H. Barnes
_,- r ~ , and H. E . Cooley The youngest
Royal Arcanum won this tribute. 0 Stockbridge.
I, Flowers provfde(l·.;;~y,,, Bashan Hill person presen t, Marion Pease, six
Past Grand Regent William ere~ llQ,u ncil were put _01_?, the -~i~v e o.f. Mr, \\·eeks, . daug hter of Mr nnd- Mrs -Root of Pittsfield- opened the c tM- ~~es and the gi·aves of Abner P o1·ter, R eginald Pease of Worthington, an,._d
morii,e s with a -brief, expLaila~io~ fuced
- - Qburn and Du~ley
and Murray t he ol(l,est person, Herbert P . Pierrepurp9ses ·o f the or~er-. and _mtt~ past
The mPmor 1a1 ad1ress was pont, -~9-, . ot Spring field, were photo_c __Edgar Searing of_.stock,bridg 'cil of
by Past _Grand Regent Sear- · graphed together.
~ --grand regent of the:_.,grand coun

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T•lle Friendship Gulld held .
-card
par.tY . and tea .on the librar; c-- .
Worthington. July 29-Robert T.
lawn , ~is afternoon with thre 6, Ba1·tlett ls spending a wee!&lt; · at ·camp
tables of brtdge ana one of whist !
Gilbert at M. A. c. at Amherst as the
-; in play. The first prize at bridge \
Hampshire county delegate fOI' the
state 4-H club forestry project.
, was w.on by Mrs. Sidney J. Sman ,
Miss J. Catherine He\Vlt't left Saturwho · tied with Mrs. Clifford Tin~ I
day fqr a, two-weel&lt;s' stay at Camp·
•ker, and the consplatlon prize ·
Pinnacle. Voorhis, N. Y.
lwep.t to ¥,rs. · Geotge _E. _Torrey, I
The Wom'3n's Benevolent soc ie ty
. .J'r. At whist the Uriit prize wa.s I
, will meet Wednesday with Mr,s
l Charles A. Kilbourn. All attending
t
-~y .Mi_ss _Elsie Y·. _Ba_r~le(t arid I
_• will bring basket Jun.ch.
Ith~ coµs.olat.10¥ . prizf:! by ~ rs • . . _
1 Mrs T. c: Martin has rented her
Ma.u-rice Clark. These outdoor
i house at th'3 _Center village to Mr .ailq
card pal'Hes wiJJ be held weekly
J. R. Montgomery o( Wincjsor
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every · Tues.d ay afferno'bn at 2.15
Locks, Ct., for the month of August.
1
at the· library. ·.
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llfr and Mrs ·Charle,s Ward, Mrs
Among the- gu·ests ·.i:egistered afl:
Alice Booth ifnd Master Malcom RicJ1- .
ard Cole of Detroit are guests of l\Ir II
Lafay~tte. lodge are Mr. and Mr:.i.•
- , an d Mrs Joseph Emory Wright.
Brown, Miss . Anna · Bailey ot
William. Thornton
Simpson
of ,
Spring/\eld; Prof. and Mrs. A. C,
Springfield, who for several sumArmstrong of MiddJetown, Ct.;
mers. rend plays at 'the library, ll/18
Mr. . and M1;s . . T. Shanahan of , - ".agal'n agreed to give a program
Thursday. afternoon, Augµst . 7, at 3
New York city; Mr'. and Mrs. · A,
a t the lib.rary. Miss Katherine Rice
.i&lt;'is.h Qf Bostqn, _an&lt;t Mr/ and Mrs.
and 'Miss Olive N-eil, assisted .. by tho
oCSpringfielil.; . who have I
IH:/rarian; 11:i:r Olpeh, w
.m have the • - --· - . '.Mitchell
1
arriv·ed' within 'the· past .week an&lt;l I
. affair In charge,
·
·
here Jo= the. seas61i'. ·
I
·, Miss· Ella ,Jenks ·arid 'M iss Mil.,, ;
, &lt;).red ·. Ch~P.Jll.!ln of Pr.ov1dnece,' R~ ·~\- -' r., are spending three weeks wit\:f
---· ---- _____ ____i Mn Jcihn . Fl'iss,eli at the Ceni.e1·, ·\
· who also has with lier her littla
. granddat\_g ht.e r,., _!anet Simpson· ot /
Worcester. .
.
:
i :Miss :Oorothy F. •Bartlett, who · _
·_ _ _ _
, is _spending ~he su·mmer_ at East 1
---··, fRiv.edr,
·_is _!l,~;·Jrer · :~ome for F, I
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· to you his regret at not being able
, to be present at this hour becau ~e
f of a
previous engagement whi~h
at the time of making did not seein
to Interfere with bis presence her"
1
I know, however, that . he will joi~
the .party later.in the day.
·
There is present with us today
the grand re_gent of the Grand
Council of Massachusetts, · this
-- great . commonwealth which ·gave I
I birth to Uiis fraternity, also the ----:--i grand secretary, who fs beloved by'
_ _, every executive officer !i:J.d member"
' of the RoyaIArci'j.num. T!iere are r ----. also represent,atlves fro!Il moilt .of
tho c1tle1l and .towni., of Western.
' Ma ssacijus'e tts;· met togethei::·t o eit.;,r- ----joy t iil 'c6fupanionship
each
'. other. · 'fhls bas been made rosstrbl~ b)'. tot mer ~&lt;&gt;n{itct •aP:~ a,f!s~cia- ·
..t.1.&lt;m, _,.. _'.f}j~!I_O. fJfe.n!l~h!J&gt;) :,!9,'; .D;i!E."'
:·or J:!i! ·cr,iver .a pert!!a ~( _y~rs''.Jt~:
·whlcli in most every-lnetaMe: fqu4d·1

F Id
ncl
as ie Day a
.
l\lemorial Service
_ July 28 -Three hundred and
· fifty .m emb~rs of the Royal Arcanum ~rom P.lttsfteld, North Adaµis,
Stockbridge, Springfield, EaS t ham.pto.n and v;estfleld met Satur, {lay with Iiasha1:1 H\11 council of
Wor:t.h ington for their annual field
day . . At 2.30. p. m., a .li!le. of ca\'!l
•: for~ pd on th.e main street near·
'f Lyce~,m hall. an,d .foll()wi11,g a cusr toni of the lodge · went first to the
· North cemetery, where a memorial
service was held at . the grave· ofPast Regent Charles .. F ; ~ Bates,
whose life-long devotion to .the !n,~
tere~t• of RoYal ArCl!,nUID h!l,8 w..O'!l..
for blm ihls tribut.e. All~n . T.
Treadway 9f Stockbri.,;.ge, who was
to ba.v e been the •i&gt;~akei', was un) Jl~{r\&gt;.1r,P~- w1tJ1fy'.\' ?a'~n,~Wje,1)m:- \ able to be present. ,
.
,
ot tl)e: '.j0-y,Jl'•.A-'!'ea~1um-. ·, 'ln .'. ~~9Jl"4
.
'.Past Grand Regent Wilham C.
'\rjth the· unerrfng, . lncw . of na.tu1'e.1
; Root of Pittsfield opened . the cere-"
- -·t liesl tfie!fdii,il1&gt;~ ,~re , bi o1t1fn,:,;~,q - . 'mo~les _wit~ , a bdef ;explanation ,
:\)l~sf '~.i•, !~fi ,:i~~~;J~~~:~,U.~~i~:,
of its purpose . and intr&lt;&gt;quced the ·r :'!_~;i.t;;.!Jome, to uKall, 0 It t~. m(J~t -- 1
I speaker·, C. Edgar . . Se.aring of
r·vl}~{'PF!at~ ••t:M ~',WG.l':,R~~,t).,~~~,I: . •,MJ- ;_f.l ,.r----·
Stockbridge, past grand r!lgent of.
· ·_· - · ·
.
·
.
•
th e grand council of Massachu- 1
for a moment and re;ect and abide
___ , set ts. Grand ·secretary William L. \____ with .those who .have gone . before.
, Kelt of Boston, placed a wreath :
This- w.stoJll found its _birth .in '
for Mr. Bates upon bis grave and I
the desire of us aJl to pay our
a -second wreat:h for all Royal Ar- ..--- - -,tribute of,. respect tor . one of the
-- , c::i nuni members who died during
pioneers in building a soli~ fO)ID" li--- - l th e past year .was placed there also
d.atfqn upon which,futu.r e members
by Grand warden Julius Stecker_
of this order might built. His. ox_ 11 of Boston, Graµd Chapl~in Henry - - - - ample, as permanent ·as. the · hills 1--IRa t11o urn reading t11e names, 14 in
in which be lived; his devotions
· all. ~ ' A basket_' of flowers, 'the gift •- -- --ttQ e,very · honest cause unqueso f Bashan Hill'colincil, ·wa,s pla~e~. ,
tion,ed, his influence will abide
- - u pcin th grave of Mr. , Bates, and
with. all who J.p~ew him as_;~ ~oyal
also·· upon
citizen as evidenced by hls; inte_rest
1 · the - g.r.a ves . of Abner ,
; Porter Sidney 'Coburn; an~-•Dudley
in ·every .moral and civic :inove- ---: and M~rra'Y Mason, Mt . Searing·.~, - -ment, a lovi_ng husband an1Ltather, , ·
, speech follows:
a fraternalist not oply to .Jne!llbers
: "I appreciate this considei:atiJ~
of this 9rder, but _to the whole
__ / and consider it a ,1&gt;riv1Jege .to be - - - - world. · I vaiu~ !ii!-"&amp; beJlediction,
r :req ties ted to spe~l?- bri~flY to- yo~
~y.!ong-acqllai~tan~e wtp1 ;Brother
~odaY upon the occas10n of this
Bates, who, in erety spher e of IUe,
, ··~~uioriar service. 11 however, ~eal~ _ _ _ _ by .h onest upright living· ped, 1--_ - - 3 , ; . •' ~l'A' difficulty of my pos1tl1&gt;11'
the . full ljtature. 9f 1nanho.o_d, Towitli u j ,knowledge t}1,,1.t i.t :has
4ay 'Ye ~o one- steI? fartif'e:-and
beer v~evfouslY: ai1J10f.ll. ~,e,d .tha~ -~
think of all tllose who hiyve tindist: ng ; ; 11ed· citizen o f 1;3erksh1re, - - - lshed their journey from God t.o I 1---- 1 3
you r fr ',end ; my· n~if};;l bor_ .as well
God.
·
, .. _
a a Joyal member ql, t~~!l: Of Q,!;lf, ,
I think of those immortal words 1
3 Hon. Allen 'f .. Trea,dwa,y, con, - - in Grey's Ellegy, "Human voice ~
__
t ho
, gress ma a, from \ t he fil.' ~~ ¥~ 3~~cht'hu-.
canp.ot prpvoke the sHenl ~ead ;
setts district was t o have oeen
. ,
,1,
.
. }-•·
• n tiils occasioIJ , , Br other
nor flattery stir the dull col e~r _of
.,pea 1rn1 o
,
- - -,.
h
;
d i
- - ,y ready ay !·eques_!_~ t ha t,I,e_!.P! ~
_!l~!!:!!h_~No thoug t ~r e.sse . u
·· ·

Roy.~1 Ar@J!Ulll

H

of'

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�eulogy ot ours- can ad&lt;i" to . or talte
i ..... 'The picnic gr ound was the next
from · the example ot those we
f. ?bjective and this was the otd
·h onor today, we reverence their ·
,,.o rchard at the crossroads near the
memory " offer out humble tribute
Herbert Higgins' farm . Here . a
to their' lasting contribution for
1stand where lee. cream and PO P
the welfare of mankind. Their
: bMr could be_ )lad free became
llves bi the most part s~ent. away - - - - -, very P9pular and' v.:as well patro~trom the iltrlte and glamour -_i&gt;f
!zed ~ll. the . afternoon.. Plcn;ic
great c,itleiJ and . they were truly
. groups were sp-on ·forme(l &lt;,n the
]builders and keeper of our fine~o ld- _ _
_j shady slope; and later, sports fo ._ ___
,New ·E ngland traditions. I have .
;cha~ge ~f J. ;J. 11onlgle, F, It:
been.·called o_ld-tasb.loned and I am
Baines and it::,-.~. C;!;!Oley -were enia
pr_o qa of . It, for I , believe the
'J0 J~,!l •• the co_mvany .br_e akfng up
:,strength of any nation ls not meas- - - - .ali(!~ t . 7 -i&gt;. ~ ,;, to re,t1,1rh to -. the
l 'ured by its army i&gt;r navy, Its 'genl~YJl~~IA ,.hall ·_!for a.'.'- ~ance} . The I
· ,eraJs o_r Hs ~ 11.llonalxes, l)ut bf •ts.
I ~o~n~
gest.t :!lJX~P. t~e:f! •* -~.s -~!H!OJ]
'-H1q~e J&gt;ulJders. Thee~ .men ,.bu11t11-- - - :--8 ~!1!', lie 6 ,w.eek.11 : &lt;&gt;!~:, da\}gl;iter ---·, ·their homes ii\. accord with th1e
qqteglqald
o( W,orth,lngt9n,
11: teaching of
thefr New ._~ h.glai'id
;w)l:~se P!Ct"4~e ..:, ~~-ta~Jn,.wlt_h ._ije.r~,
.,...: tore-fathers and manifested the ,ie:, _. . -- . ~,rJ ,. M:. 1~!Ie.J~~~ ~f S~!.!~~1t~ldj,t--- - l;, Bl!e h&gt;. pass on these traditions un· .l ,. was,,?-.9,, I .• - .. .·,
•
· l_mpaired to .future generations 11.s •
(; ev;ld.~nced · by !heir . -~ey&lt;itl&lt;&gt;n ,and t ______ _
., loyalty to . their great · Instructor ,
,&lt;
~hos_e watch vr,~rd 1-s_. tii.e.;ih,orii~, ,
W~ love and honor theni::fand. w.e
beJieve . that -as ·long as ':tli~ lnflu~
ence of their .· home, with all its
sweet simplicity, shaU: radiate Its
_ _ _, influence throughout t'his land , tliis
great natio1,1 will abide. There is .
no one present withilf \vhcise h·eart
einotioµs !Io not arise suggested'
... - • by these surrounding~~ thought~' of
9rokEm ties, sever!l'd ·frlen_dshlp~, .
l~tt.ely firesides; .these -though ts I
- - -,should make us h\\PPY, · for lite Is rthe greatest 'tqlilg we -kn'ow and for· I
a.Ii_we know, 1death ls. ey_en g~eater.
- - • L Elt' us catch the _spirit . or' this- - - - -- - - - - - -- bJ)_?.Utihil Pla,ce! ne:s~IE)f so bea,utl1; ·
fully lliID&lt;;mg th_ese r.ugg'ed and m'a_ _ ........... Jest~c. bll!s jµst as the great. builder _ ~a1e . h, . u~molested by th~
·hB;njl of ~an, • ll?t . even a sigl\
bq~•r,d l11, _a ny direction . to mar thP.·
- ----t l!a~q '9f ~God; surroitnq.E)fl .by,,tli·e
beauJ ~ful.: t~~es : In . whl:ch 'in tl1e·:
_qulii"{/_0C m4i-day ,ti.iii' ::b)rlfs,'s111&lt;&gt;
tJ · ··1e
. ... ·· · _. . -· ·' ···""
_ _ . . . . . .·the.Ir
,, . '.•-.,i&lt;w'
( -~· '. o~er:;i\'those
·','Vli.o?l'---- - - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - - i[sleep "b·e.'neat1t.'tlie to.*'.!gte~n ten
wh.ose . curta-1.n ·. .'i1eve;.' &lt;i,)1twi r~ ;
- -- -f hs!eav.tm
~~~·.,
,c,~a"~~-eh~ b,rt:.h·P!e_;c~1~0:P\;;,i ~;
, an w ·en · e busy·'wotnt. 1--- - - - - - - -- - - -- - - - -

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fl

1,.;.J1u,41J,ed,

a,~ d ;... 'the ..

·sh~dowi,

•!englhe~! the starii k,e ep u-p tl1el-r,,
- - -~ , vl.gtl , and a feEJllng Qf q~let anij
h_~ppil).ess co,~ es to us, and - ·we.
know that at evening time It shall
be light."
.

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�WORTHINGTON

.WORTHINGTON
'

SECOND PLANE LANDS
ON CHAPMAN MOWING

Worthington, Aug. 4-The county 111
commissioners will hold a road meet•
Ing at the town hall on Wednesdf!:¥
, rirternoon nt.2 in regard to the laying
1 out of a highway approximately six
\ miles Jong, and 60 feet wide, between
, Huntington and Worthington. tour
corners. Th e commisslo'ners will _a.t
1
j this time give a hearing to all partiei; I
inte1lested.
1 The Women's Benevolept . society
· will meet '".ith Miss Kathedne Rice
on Frida y for fl.n ·all-day meeting, inI stead of on . Wednesday because of ,
the ro11d meeting on t!}at day. An 1
- - members having unfinished wo_rk of
the society are requested to bring it as
it wiil· be the last meeting ·b efore the

Newton Flier Unable to Firtcl
Satisfactory Place at Cummington

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V\Torthlngton, Aug. 5-For the sec-\
, ond time thl's summer Mrs Irving
Chapman's mowing has been used as
a landing field ·for an airplane. Yesterday afternoon at 3.30 the plane
' Challenger, piloted by Grosvener M.
Cross of Newton, ·on hia way from
,Albany to Boston, un~ble to · find a
11uitable land\ng field in Cummington
where Cross wanted to call on ·his
cousin, Sam York, landed on th'e, ·open
field at tl).e side of. Mrs Cqapman's
summer home.
'·
·
Cross motored to Cummington and
. -qpon 'returning from his .call took oft I'
iB.t 6.15' for Boston.
1

I

fair.

'

Prof and Mrs Willllim G. Rice, Jr,,
o! Madison, Wii, and two of their
.children, Peter and Pamela; motored
_ fromAlbany yesterd~y ahd cal)e'd upon
his aunt, Miss Kateherine Rice.
William Thornton
Simpson
of
Springfield wlli give a reading· of play11
at t he library .on Thursday. ·afternoon
at 3, Mr Simpson generously giving
the proceeds to the Iibraty. Followin g the reading Miss Olive Neil
··---!
'
--hold a reception
for Mr and Mr111
:
·
Simpsoh at''her house to whjch al( 11-t•
Postmaster . and ¥ .rs Men~in F .,
tending the reading are ltlvlted. Light
;J&gt;ack_3:rd left tlrts ·mornl_ngAor , a- '1!10··
refre.s hments will be served.
itor trip In New Hampshire apd Mame.
{fl\e F rie~ship guild . will meet
---• -- Mr and Mrs Sidney J. Packard of 'WilTlhi rsday e vening with Mrs Romer j
llamsburg are Staying with the c;:hllGran ger of Highland ·street for their I
dren.
·
\ - reg ular monthly meeting. ,
'
·______
' Ml.ss Marjorie G. Bartlett has re- Miss Janl'tte C. Otto of Butl'alo, N .
turn!id from a week end spent at East
Y. , arrived yesterday and will spend
: River, Ct., with Mr and Mrs J. S.
several weeks a t Cleverley cot~age,
Lyman of Springfield.
--- Mrs Leland Perry Co'le was given a --------- A ,:neeting of the tercentenary com•birthday su rprise party Friday at 'hei'
tnittee was held last night at the town
home. Three tables of bridge· were in
ha!J/to fu,r ther.' plans for the celebra: pl_a y. F irst prizes were won by Mrs .
_ti~n :the 30th and 31st. The selectmen
Ph1hp Gurney of Ashfield . and Marreported that they have secured Wal-.
jorle Bartlett and consolation prizes
. ter .. Stevens of Northampton to be
by :M;rs Guy Bartlett and Dorothy
toastmaster at the dinner and several
- - Bartlett. Refreshnients were served ----- - -' Other good 1:ipeakers are promised, Mrs
and Mrs C,o le :r;ecelved many beaut!•
Herbe-rt G, Porter was elected chairtful &amp;:~ ~
_
--'- .
• __ ,._
man or 1he dinner committee.
It I!
was 'declde'd to include "Conwell Sun4ay," Septemb'e r 7, in t~e tercenten:.
;ary 'program, when a bowlder \ and
tablet will be dedicated to the memory
1 Dr Rus~ell Conwell. The meeting
'---lof
:wu adjourned · until August 18.

will

7

�'

WORTHINGTON

-WORTHINGTON'

( 'v\rorthingfon, Aug. 8-Dr and Mrs
F!arlan I. Creelman oc Auburn, N. Y .,
11
iu1.ve arrived ;i,t their summer home
for the month of Augµst.
The Friendship guild held a bridge,
whist. and tea on the llbran' lawn
Tuesdav afternoon. Firi:it prize Rt
bridge was won by Mrs Marion Whitney of Ashfield and the con:5.olation by
Mrs Jennie Whitney of A~hfleld. First J
prize n.t .whist was won by Mls.c;. Bernice Kilbourn and the consolation by 1·
Mr~ John F'rlssell.
The. regular meeting of ·l.hP. Frlend~hlp g-uild ba.s been postponed until L
j
Monday night.
William Thornf.on ·Simpson o! Sprin~- I
field gave two interestin~· readings :tt ,
the F'rederick Sargent Huntington li- I
brary yesterday afternoon. The first'.
was "A Game of Chess," by K. Sawyer
Goodman and J, M. Barrie's ''Unfinished Play." Mr Simpson also led a
ff discussion or the play, "Green Pastures," now running in New York. Miss
Olive Neil invited the audience to meet
_
Mr and Mrs Simpson at a · tea at her
Irhome following the reading.
Miss Marion L. Bartfett has returned to her home after spend1ng the
month of July in Springfield, where 1,she has_been takin~ a summer course I,
at Springfield college, ·

I

Worthington, Aug. 11-Mr and Mrs
George Jasper will spend the remalnder of the month at Point of
Woods. Ct. During their a~sence Mr
and Mrs Alma Sturtevant of Scarsdale, N. Y., will occupy their cottage.
The Friendship Guild will bold its
weekly bridge and tea on the library
lawn tomorrow afternoon at 2.15.
Neighbor' s night will be observe&lt;l
evening at the regular
to~or-row
' 1 Grange meeting at Lyceum hall.
Hinsdale Grange ;will be the visiting/ ,
Gr1:1,nge and will - furnish the enter- I
" tainment.
The annual fair ot ,the Women's
Benevolent society will take place on
1
the church co'mmon at the Center on
Wednesday. There will be a sale ot
useful and fancy articles betsides lee ' cream and home-made candy and a
flsh pond for the children. If stormy,
it will be 1,ostponed untWthe first fair
,
day. .
The annual meeting o! the Worthington Library corporation will be
held tomorrow evening at 7.30 at the
•
library.
Miss Elsie V. Bartlett ls spending
a few weeks at Bedford lodge in ,
Northampton.
Mr and Mrs Merwin F. Packard re- \
turned today from their motor trip
ttccompanied by Miss ;Estelle S'tevens
of Cole":&gt;rook: N. H., a former teacher L
.
in town.
Dr and Mrs_ Jrpan'cis A. Robinson
returned today from ~ month's vacation ~pent at Mrs .R _o binson's home, It
Port Hastings, Nov-a~Scotia.

A
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- WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON
,vorthington, Aug. 13-The regular
meeting of the _Friendship guild was
held at the hotrle or Mrs Grace
Granger, Monday evening. It was
voted to continue the w e..ekly bridge
.P~~ties throu g·h Au g ust and to have
th~ president, 1',frs Granger, r'ememher
Mrs Vickery as the shut-in this
,m onth.
O n acco unt of. cool weatliter' the
guild bridge wa.s h eld a t Lycc1:l'm }mil, I
Tues9.a y af(ern oon . First prl~~~ -,vere
w o n by Mrs L ela 1id P. Cole and.U'\fni
Clifford Tink er a nd con solation )iitzes 11
by Mrs Maurice Clark and Mrs "Homer
!Gra nger.
"Neig hbors' nig ht" .w as observed at
thi::! r egular .meeting of the Grange at I
Lyceum hall, Tuesday evening when I
Hinsdale Gra:nge was the guest and
furnished entertainment. A musical
program was given by the visitors
~I who also played for dancing after ice
cream and ca ke . w e re served .by the
Worthington Grange. Hillside .P omona
offi cers will fill the chairs at the Highla 1l.d Grano-e meeting at Huntington
Worthington officers will,
01;1;1Frid~
.;_ fill the chairs at Hinsdale Grange,
\ August 21 and furnish entertainment.
The annual meeting ·ot the Worth'
i ingt0n Library corporation · was held
I 'l'u~sday evening- at the Freder:ick
Sargent Hun tington· library: The following officers were electecl:· · Presid ent, Franklin H. ,·Burr; . se~retary, 1,-Miss N. S. t-Iea.cocl&lt;; treasurer, Arthur G. Capen; auditol': G}emeI~t F.
Burr. Franklip H. '.Bµrr was -:- re~iected
·
u d1r ector lor fi ve yea.rs.

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Worthingt&lt;?n, Aug. 18-The Friend- ,.._
ship guild will hold lts weekly bridge
and tea on the library lawn tomorrow afternoon, ·tr pleasant, at 2.15: It
~ stormy, it will be , held at Lyceum·
hal1. Mlss Madeli:rie Townl!lend and
I Miss Irene Moulton w111 be hoste1Htee.
A eurprise shower wa111 gl-ven Mn,
Henry Grise, Jr.; 6! Northampton,
formerly M{ss Anita Bernier ot th\s
Saturday - ~fternoon a~ ·"the
Sp,ruces." Mrs Grise received many
- gilts, including glass, linen and
money, Refreshments were l!lerved.
Officers ·e t Wortlifngton Grab.ge wlll
· fill the chairs ·at Hinsdale Grauge L .
- !I'hursday evening and memberll tronj 1· '-: · Worthington will tu.rnislt the enter- ~ -"- \
.
.
, taintnent.
_~
. ; Mr;·, and M~~ '·.R obert Coombs · and
.. ·
.~amily of Ja~fsohvill_e, yt..•_, !tsited at
~
,.. ,.;.1
. the Spruces Sunda-y.
'
; The com·~ l.lllity 11ervlce J ~j:jmmltte~
·of · ttte -Grang-e h ·~ · comrt}~nced the :__
J
,vork' &lt;!'.:f ~-~pair~__ug,..; ~l1~ •sl~:t w,alk~ on. I
. :~•:,, .
the ~enter ..road. .
Mr and . Mrs · Herbert- 't~wer · of .
trip '_:_
Srringfleld. ha·ve returned trcWn'
-thro1,1gh -the White·mounta.lns~&amp;nd. a:r.e 1
spepdln~ this week at their a\i.~mer I
1 •
.home in town. · .
.
Mr · and Mrs Harry Eddy of Flor.- -·ence, Mr and Mrs McCarthy and ~hll- ~
'
d1;en of Northampton, . Mrs 'Martna I
,Lane and two daughters ,o t Hatfield,'
-j~nd Mr Howard . and daughters or ._
,Hatfield, with · Henry . Tower and
Mr and · Mrs . Walter Tower· and 1I
daughter ot this town -enjoyed a dog- and-corn roast at Tower's ledge!! Sun,
clay.
' Mr and Mrs. Lawrence 'Randa11 or
_ _ __ _ Hadley, with their two c,hil°dren, spent
th~ .,week end at their sum5er: home.

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-- .-~ -WORTHINGTON·

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town,

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Worthington. Aug. 15-M,rs · Henry
- ------- - - -ot Northarttpton is vlsitlng h~r
patents, Mr and .Mrs V.ioto,r Berrtier.
Miss Marion :r,.. Bartlett and ·· Miss
Edna Marston ot Sprlngfteld are on n f--- - - ----motor trip to Syracuse, N'lag(f.ra Falb
and other .,points ot interest in ' New
1
/ .
Y-ork.
Miss Cather.l ne .T. Hewitt ha.a re• · -turned from a. two-weeks' vaca.ti6n .at/
.
..: ·
Camp Pinnacle.
The Women's Benevolent soclet~
cleared about $250 from theJr annual ,_
fair and aale ot fancy and u:,eful ar·
ticles.

7/ Grise

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�WORTHINGTON

PLANS ANN-OUNCED
FORTERCENTENARY

of all ·c ommittees to complete
plans for the Tercentenary celebration which is to take place
August 30 and 31 was held Monday evening a t the town hall.
R ev. James H . Burck.es presided
at t he m eeting. The selectmen report ed that the flagpole at the
church bad been r epaired. The
Royal Ar canum bas selected a I
program of races ~'f boys and
gi rls, Including : Bag and foot
r a ce, a ball gl!m~ b etween married
and singl e m en, a pie eating cont est , potato r ace, blind race and

Sports, Picnic and Other
Fea lures- Arranged
30th and 31st

~

!~~!~~~!~r!
Au gust 19. -The final meeting

for

W orth ington, Aug-. 19- The nn~::i.i
mectin;; of all comm ittees to comPlete plans for th e tercen t~nary cele- ,.
~
brntion whlch is to take place t
30th and 31 s t was h eld Monday e,· ,e-- ·
'&gt;
J
n i-"t;' at the town h aJ 1. Rev J
~~~es f · - - ~ barnyard golf, beg,tnning at 11 1i
H. Burckcs pres ided at t he
a, m. Saturday. The publicity
~l'hc selel!t men l'eported tha t ' uf~
committee bas a list of names of
fla~ pol;, at the church had b~t-~r • l'epan·ed. I he Royal Arca nu m ha:-s -~ - . - - _ out of town former residents to
whom invitations wlll be sent
pa ,·ed___a _~rogr~m of r aces fol' boy~ . I
·
·
a nd g11 Js· mclud1ng bag a nd foot r ace ('
wll! welcome additional
and
\1;otnto !'a ce, blind race, a ball gam~
n a m es of old time residents. These
\between manied a nd s in &lt;"le men a
may be given_to Miss Kathnames
y~rd
rn
ba
!pie-eating con tes t a nd
erin~ Rice. The feast comtmttee
g o}f beginn(ng at 11 a._ m. Sa t urday. '
has decided on a basket luncb
The publicity commit tee has a Ji.st
be coffee and'. dougtinut8 wtll
_of na mes of. out-o~- t~wn _for mer resi- , - h
w n
den ts to w nom mv1ta t 1ons w ill b~)
be sei:ved at the c urch common.
se nt and w ill welcome additiona l
The morning serviee will be beld
n ames ~of old t ime residents. T hese
at Congr_egatlonal _ churc~ at f_ ___ _
-'n 8:mes may ~e gi~en t? Miss Ka th- - - Worthington center at 11 o clock
erme Mcj · ~ice. The feast commitSunday morning August 31st.
te~ h as ec1ded on a basket lunch
James H. Burckes pastor ot
Rev
be
will
doughnuts·
and
~ end coffee
'
·
•
•
---1
- -.,er ve on the church common.
the ~hurch, w1l_l conduct ~}le
Th~ mornin g service on Sunday
service ·and there will be _spec1al
m_o rnmg, t he 31st, will be heliEI a t the
music. The Sunday evening_ serv-, , / ' ·
church at
Congregational
Firs t
•~ or th ington cen ter at 11. R ev J ames 1 - --- - lee will be heid at South,- ~O!~h- r · '( -- ington church and will be of "Ye
a . Burckes, pasto~ of the churc h, w ill
1
· ibl
,,
con duct the service a nd. there w ill
Olden Tyme insofar as iOSS _e.
j J~ s pecial m usic. Tim Sunday eveIt ts ~oped that all who can will
mng ~ervice w ill be h elg a t South
come m old fashioned cos_tume.
Worthmgton church a)l d will be :)f
1
All old time residents in~ite.d.
possible.
as
far
so
in
e"
tym
"y~ olden
Real old time hymns are to be
__
_ ~t 1s hop~d t? a t all who can will co me
sung with orchestra and cho.lr _,_ __ __
111 old fas hioned costu~ e. Old time
fd
1 . ·, h y mns are to be sung with orch estra
accompa.mment . . ~t s r~ques e
, .
" a nd choir acconipanim~nt.
that all residents of ·WortblngtoJ!
It is r equested t ha t a ll residen ts
decorate their homes -wi.th ~flags
homes
heir
t
uecorate
/ of_ Wor thington
and on Saturday_ and •.;. Sunday
with flag~ and on ~atu r day and Sun evenings, August · 30 arid '3·1-; Uluday. evenings, : th e 30th and .31st, il- .
lummate their ,, 119,m es more than ·_ - - - - - 1 minate tbPtr'- 'homes· more tl).an
- t t" T
,.
.!',
""- .
usual. Tlre co nclusion of the t er cenusual: T~e conclusi_on o ~e_ e
t enary program ·wm (ak e , place
centenary 'program will ta-k e place
SeP.tember 7 at Sout h W or thin g Sept. 7 at South Wortl\in~ton,
uns
well
Con
l
annua
- -... .to.n w~1en the
when the. annual Conwell '"Sunda-y .
~ay will be observed. T he progra m,.
be ·observ.ed. The program l!! \ 1
· .,
,,
is n ot yet complete.
_ _
,
complet_e. '
y~t
not
__
_
_
Mrs Gertrude E d wards and Mrs
nd
[
a
~
Edwards
·
Gertrude
Mrs.
Alfred C. Stevens have . been' spend~
Stevens have beep
Mrs. Alfred'
'
•in g a few days ln W est fi eld.
1
days in Westeftld:few
a
spending
b~en
has
St-evens
.
L
Myra
_1".r
Mrs. Myra L. Stevens has_been 1
___j
__ ___.. ~is~u~g h er daug hter, Mrs J ~d.so,n
I visiting her daugl_lter,_Mrs. -Jud,son
~~~;:rfi ~1. her s umm~ home' " 1n, I
Rogers , at her summer l ome ln
- - -- -- -.....i.- ---"------__ - - Chesterfield.
- - - - - - - - - - - - · · - - - -;

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worthington ·

WORTHINGTON, Aug. 20-Frlendshlp Guild held its weekly bridge and
tea in Lyceum Hall Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Clifford Tinker and Mrs.
'I Leland P. Cole won first prizes, and
' consolation prizes were won by Mrs.
Carl ;Loveland and Mrs. Charles A.
Kilbourn.
The Selectmen have secured t he following after-dinner speakers for the
tercentenary dinner : Toast1ttaster,
Walter Stevens of Northampton;
Elisha Brewster of Boston,
I Judge
Clement Burr or Worthington, Let&gt;n
Conwell of -Somerville, Rev. James H.
\ ,.Burckes of Worthington and ~ep ..
- 'Allen T . Treadway of Stockbrldge.
. Mi~ Jane Taylor or Westfield is at ,
Mrs. John Frissell's for two or three
, weeks, Recently Mrs. FrisseU entertained Mrs: Henry Goldie .oJ. Sprin~- •- field ·and her daughter and husband~
a.r;td Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Simpson and 1
family of Worcester. John Frlssen,
who has been recuperating from his
recent accident, has been visiting his
daughter in. Worcester, and ~Pent the
. week-end at his home.
Mrs. James Knapp suffered painful
uries Monday when . her horse
ocked- her down lin&lt;f 11t&amp;pped\ on.. her
__ --·- · · _
~ Packard's store.

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To ·-Observe Conwell Sunday

!

•
Worthington, Aug. 22-Wor~fng.
l I
ton will celebrate Conwell Sun~y,
September 7, at 11 at South Worthington. There wfll be a regular i
mornillg service followed by a. picnic 11
lunch i~ Conwell's grove. At 1.30 a. ,
bronze tablet Will · be dedicated to Dr
Russell H . Conwell, who was .born in
South Worthington )n 1843. :ftemarka
will be given by friends o;..-. :O._r Con:1
· •
wen. This occasion wm be ~ t of j
••
,,
Worthington's tercentenary: ., , bra- J
I
·, /
·
: -).
tion. .'.
Th~)~i~es ' Phyllis and H~el Par• ' - ~
·
ish ot West Wottbington have been •
visiti~g ·their au~t. Mrs Harry Bates. J
Clement F. Burr ts spending a .few r - __-'i
days with relatives tn Pittsfield,
' Mrs Alden · Cady .entertained the ,
Jolly -Five at · her home 'in West ~
' ·· _.:_J:
- , Worthington T'aursday afternoon in l
·
birth- f
11 honor pf Mrs Mabel. SQaw's
day, . Bridge was played. First prize
i
was won by ,Mrs ~bel Shaw a~·d con- ,
- -- - .
Mnl'
eolation by Mrs Frank Bates.
• , • .'
Sha.w _received many useful gifts. Re- .1
.• '
:
eshments were served.
. .,', . {
. Mrs Dwigh~: fra:qcis enterta~~ Mr / .
·and Mrs Warren c. Wade and family /
of Sprln~eld aµde 14lss/ Marjorie· G. 1
' Bartlett, m -h on6r of the ~lrthdays ~
her paren_ts, ~{r .1and,1 ?4rs _Arthur
Irving of Springfield. on Thursday at
her summer nome ·in West Worthing·I i
· r., ,
. ·
ton.
- --- __ , On Wed~sday ·e vening·Ml.ss.'Ki\$~er!ne Mc~owell Rice . will give " ~:;~~ t ~
at the library on tlie Oberam01~'1
~
..r~
II--- - - Passion play. Miss Rice attend~~ g 1
nrst performanc(l on 'May 11 an~ ~m ll ----.:!~---:-_,___ __
t_elate. her1 experiences, at the play.~ci ,
at_ Oberammergau;.,.,Thf ~tElrt~nD:len~ J
will. be for benefit o~ the· library. .t_\s
-the .room will accommodate only 70
:1' per~ons, it ls requested that persons 1
desiring to attend, purchase tl&lt;,kets. .
~ These may be obtained from Miss R\ce ··L
,1 ·~
.o f from Mr ·Capen, librarian.
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WORTHINGTON

Worthington, Aug. ·21-The Friendship guild 'held ·us weekly bridge and
tea at Lyceum~ hall Tuesday -after1 1
-noon. Four ta:b'Ie~ were.in play. · Mrs
1)•\1,I
CHtrord Tinker arid Mrs Leland ~..
I
Cole wan first pr,)z-es . and, conl(lolatlon
prizes .were won'; ~Y Mrs . Catl'\ Love,.
land and" Mrs Cliaries:. A. Kiibpurn.
The .sel~ctmen . have' se,D,uryd ·the
foll owing after-dinner spe,,kers for
the .Tercentenary ~ ebratloh :,. Toastma.ster, Walter ,.Stevfna of Northampton. Judge' 'Elisha ·•B rewster of
'.~1iili 1
Boaton, Cl"3ment Burr ot Worthington, Leon Conwell of Somerville, Rev
,----- , Jam~a H. Btir'ckea of Worthington
and Congressman Allen Treadw~y of
·
Stockbridge.
Mrs James Knapp received pain•;
1
' _____, ful Injuries Monday • when a horse
knocked her down and stepped ou
her at Packard's store.
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�.WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

i

Worth ington , Aus,r ,!Ti-M r and Mrsl
Willia m G. Rtce of Aibany are spending n few days with Mr Rice's sisters, · Misses K. McD. . and Susan · T.
Rice dt the Maples . .
Th&amp; Friend ship guild. will hold a ·
bridge and tea Tuesda y afterno on.
T~e Grang e will J)olsl its regula r
neetint\ Tuesda y evenin g at Lyceu m
1a1l. There· wm be a shadow -auctio n
. bt lunch boxes. :Each woman ls asked
to bring a box with lunch !or two.I
Entert ainme nt -will be given by those/
having birthd ays in Augus t and each
patron is asked t~ bring a penny for
each yeo.r ot age.
/ About 30 !rom 'Cheste rfield, Ashfie ld
and Worth ington attend ed a clamba ke'
at Tower 's Ledge! \,..today.
Lelafid P. Cole•~ as given' a birth-tday sur.pri se party at his . home Fri- I
day evenin g. Stunts and bridge were
enjoye~ . First prizes at bridge wfre
·won by Mrs Phillp Gurne y 8/ild Waldo -~ole, and the cons6l ationr prlzes by I
Miss Kay Bossen and Leland P. Cole.
\ butret lunch was serv.e'd. ,
1
- The annua l busine ss tne~tih g ot the · - ·
"Worth ington Gott· club •'wa.s ·held Sat1urday at the clubho use. R~qtin
~ busilneM was transa cted and it was voted
to incorp orate the club. The tollowing. officers . and commi ttees were
elected :
Presid ent, Jutlge Elisha-.
Brews ter; secre:t ary and treruiu rer, 1- - -- · George11 P. Joslyn ;· standin g commi ttee, N. A. Braine r4, '.Frank :s. Power s
- - - -- - · and Mrs Ralph Bretzn er; house committee, Roy Mccan n, N. A. 'Braine rd,
.fMrs·H . E. Collins , Mrs Walte r C. Pow'
t})
ers and Mrs
.Brews ter;
J
,. '\ I ground s commi ttee,Elisha
Walte r C. Po~rs ,
_
)
{- H. E. Collins · and Stephe n Paul.-..,' J'he
_t ,
above officers with H . E . Collins and
tllpv-r
Roy , Mccan n consti tute the directo rs.
\ 'J
The club reports better buslne ss1 and
- - - - has proved very popula r. Walte r Powers is having constru cted two new
!airwa ys which wlll be ready sometime next season .
--- - - - ----== ===

Wo1·th ington, Aug. 28-Mls s K. Mc7 \
Dowell Rice delight 'ed a large audien ce
at the library Wedne sday evenin g I
with her talk op. her impres sions ·and
her descrip tion o! scene, in "The Passion Play." Miss Rl~ attend ed the
first perform ance o! this wonde rful
play· at Oberam merga u on May 11 o!
this y~r. Roswe ll Merrit t of Cheste rfield assiste d Miss Rice by showin g
picture s of the play 9n ~ ~'creen . Miss
Rice gave this talk for the benefit of \
the librar.Y and $37.60 was taken in ,
(or tickets and A. H. Daken of Am- j
hert, an incorp orator of the library ,
who was unabfe to be presen t sent a
gift of $10. '
..
'
• Miss Evelyn Welch , who ha.s·· been
... govern ess for the Fitzge rald childre11.
has returne d to her home in Spring field.
.
Richar d Rees of N ew oYrk city is 1•
spendi ng the week end and La"Qor day
with M~ss Marjor ie Fitzge rald.
·_
Mrs Walte r Smith of West Worth ington enter~ ined "The Joily Five'..'
at her home Wedne sday afterno on.
- Bridge was played and Mrs· Erilesl ·
I ,T hayer won first prize and Mrs Frank
._Bate!! receive d th,a consol ation prize.
Superl ntende nt L . .. A. Merrit t has
engage d Miss Adelin e Hewit t of
Spring field to teach the Corner primary room. Mr Merrit t has been ver~
fortun ate· in retaini ng all of his other
teache
- - -rs· in
- town.
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�WORTHINGTON

--- --~ WORTHINGT~

11
,
·
_ __
__ _
Wort hing ton, Aug. 27-T he Frien d_
s
Tercentenary Serv~ce Plan
1
;
ship g uild h eld its week ly bridg e and
Rev J
I H WBorqikington, Aug. 29-'-day aftanies
r ot th · C
tea on the libra ry la wn y ester
pasto
es,
urc
•
Fi
.
ongre ga_
1
l chur ch, will be tlie.f
tlona
;
_
__
_
rst
play.
ill
were
s
,table
ernoo n. Four
spea ker at the morn ing s~r~~ cente nary ,
prize s were won by Mrs. Friµi cls A.
~~~i~c~a:~n~i~~ TJer e wilf' bec!
Robi nson and ¥rs Er~e st .._T haye r. aud·
dgran
itle,
eo;';
da'ug hter of the la~~
__
1
cons olati on p il&amp;zes by Mrs · Winf red _ _ _ _
well, .will be s·oloi st. Dr u:is:: ~aCon. _
·
.
Drak e and Mrs C. A. Kilbo urn.
I.
wnf
Y.,
Cree lman of Aubu rn, N.
Birth day nigh t was obse rved last
th e spea ker at the even ing servi ce be
ot
_
_
ing
n;ieet
r
e ven ing at the regu lar
·- · ~~~th Wor thing ton .chur ch. All w:t
O
th e Gran ge . a t Lyce um hall. Mrs - · - - old
in
come
1
I fa.sh iir e d r.e ques ted to
0st ume as this is to be·· ~ ·
Fran klin Ji. Burr had char ge. ot . the
-~.
c~e
servi
;
liam
p rogra m o_f , game s · ~nd. -:--Wil
tyme ''. style. Sun_ _ ; day Se ~~ ye olde
7
:
Brow n was au~ti onee r !or ·. the- t unch
to be the annu al
is
,
Conw elf S~b ;r
boxe s. Mrs . G. F. Ba rtlet t gav.e the reh Wor thSout
the
at
ay
churn
n
ingto
th b~~k et lunch , and· ~
port of the w hist comm ittee. · The
in the aifter~~l&amp;wl
Gran g e v oted to neigh bor w'ith Wil- •
~ab~ t is to be dedi.a
la~
cated to the
20.
- l liam sbur g Gran ge qn . Sept.e mber
ussen H. Conr
h
Wor~
The
well.
The n a mes , of Ml"s Ethe l· Paris h,
Gran ge will
gton
thein
ot
have char ge
Fran klin H. Bur.r and Willia m Brow n
Prog ram L'
r;~on
~~~e
anno
be
will
whic h
r
~
were adde d to the supp er comm ittee
ater.
Ce
- --Perr
nd
Lela
Mrs
'
1e g a ve a tarefor the Gran g·e fair, Septe µiber 12. The
,;
par{
rise
surp
well
ur Cape n' and Mrs Guy
tfter - i
~ name s of Arth
tor Miss Kay ~os :ets d~_
noon
atic
O eaves ,
dram
the
to
d
adde
ere
w
F . Bart lett
w
wh~
ttord
Ha:t:"
Tuel; lday for
~
- - --- -l comm ittee.
cher in., the public- 'scho /e she is a
-~ea
-r--and
Geer
.
itt
DeW
Mrs
Mr and
:was.- playe d. Mrs· Geor ge ~• Bridg e
daug hter, Ruby , wh6 .~av e been on a
~ r., won flrst prize and Mrs' J;rre y, 1
vaca tion at B:ia r ~:mtt., J~ft Tues day~
A.nRobi nson recei ved the conso l:t~c is I _
_
__
_
l.g. h ' New Ham p---- -1!or a . moto r trip thI"◊'l.
. . _..UBseU Fitzr oy won the cup of! ~n.
.
.. .- +,,~_.~:
shire
f&gt;~f !i~ Paµ_J__~n _the 9add ies' tou;~ :~ I
J;&gt;y
Geo: ge· . Danf~rth, who has bean
m~~ wliic h was r,1ayed Thur sday - . · :.\
188
spen 9~ng the summ p.r·· at ll4r~'•1·Mal"Y
Mdar.y .Elle n -R ead · is visiti ng ~!
g-i - - - - - - - her
- - - _, W itt's, left recen tly for W~ t Sprin
gra:n moth er in Pitts field .
. ·
.field .
Mr and Mrs- Step hen Paul and
- - - - --1 daug·htec i; Marj orie and Phyl lis, who
have beell t9uri ng . Engl and,-· Fran ce
and Germ any . for two mon ths, have
retur ned to their summ er ·hom e at
.
-- - ---l Rlng ville .
--- - --- -has . been r - - - --- --- - -- ---- :--"
who
,
erald
_
Fitzg
Arch er
suffe ring from an absc ess, caus ed by
the bite of a: 4 og, h a s retur ned from
- - - -- -- field and is ir -- -- - - - -- - - - - - s.pltaf at West
- - -- - 1 Nobl e ho.to
·
.
·
g.
ovin
'be impr
r e pbrte d
W illiam N eil and son, . Willi am, Jr.,
or Colu mbus , 0., ·are regis tered:·. at
·
- - --1 La!a y ette lodge .
- - - -- ·- - - -- ·- --, The library w lll keep the follo wing
hour s for the t ercen tena ry : Satu rday,
10 to 12, 8.30 to 6.30 a,nd 7 to 9, Sun---- ..
day, . 2 to 6. '.'.('he lib rarian ex pects to
have an ·iexhl.bit or antiques a n d also
a list of h istor. lcal r otnt.C( of inter est
tn: town and old Wor thing ton h ouse s
ti with a map sho wing t h eir locat ion.

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�TOWN CELEBRATI0N.
FOR TERCENTENARY',
·AT WORTHINGT0N
1

1

E. H. Brewster and
W. L. Stev~ns and . Con-

Judges

gressman Tre adw ay Are
·Speakers
Exhibition of·

Antiques

Exe rcis es In the Chn rch
Adj ourn men t waa mad e at Z to the
chut 'ch whe re an orga n reci tal wad
give n by Mrs Leo n Con well whil
the
peop le asse mbl ed. The spea kinge was
,
und er the dire ctio n of Judg
ter \
L. Stev ens or Nor tham pton , ea Wal
ye 1
of Wor thin gton , who mad e an nati
ente r- .___ _ _
tain lng spee ch of welc ome , and aptl y
intro duce d the spea kers . Judg e Elis
ha 11
H. Bre wste r of Spri ngfl eld, form erly
of Wor thin gton , spok e · ctn 1the sign iflca,nce of the ten; ente nary -eel ebra tion
whi ch he link ed with the cent enni al,
cele brat ion of Wor thin gton ,in 1868
. He , _ _ ___ _ --- ·
- spok e of the civil and poli tical righ
ts
of ' the . earl y colo nists and thei r contri.b utio n to tne p_o litka l,
and re- \
ligio us' libe rty whi ch we civil
hav e tod·a y. J1 _ _ _

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Clem ent Buh , 81; on;· or Wor thin gto'n'
s mos t prog ress ive citiz ens, gaV'e j
~ Wor thin gton , Aug . 30- An 9ld- hom e
- anec dote s of tow n hist ory -with in
day and loca l obse rvan ce or the Bay
hls
reco llect ion. · Dr Har lan Cree lma n of
colo ny terc ente nary was held here toi Aub ur.n , N. ¥., a. form er past or here , .
day, with an atte nda nce of ~ea rly 200.
'.-_ J told of the imp orta nt part ·of ~eli
gion
M:~ny gath ered befo re 11 this mor ning
- - -and 'edu catio n in Pur itan life. An ori&amp;t the sple ndid exhi bitio n of anti qu~
·
glna l poem enti tled "Ba ck to the Old
In the tow n hall , in char ge ·of Mrs
Tow
n" was read by the auth or, '
- - Nem a · Tutt le, Mrs Irvi llg Qha
pma
n
7
Cha
rl~ Rigg .ins of Wes t Che sterf ield . fand Mrs Har ris · Coll ins of Spri ngft eld
- - -- : Rev Jam es H. Bur ckes , past or
and Wor thin gton .
of the
Man y valu able I
'
chu
rch
at Wor thin gton Cen ter, spok
piec es wer e lo~n ed by the tow nspe o,
on the earl y ~du strie s ot_ the tow n. .e
ple and sum mer resi dent s.
'.
Con gres sma n Trea dwa y Spe aks · ,- _ _ _ _
Ant ique s Are Sho wn
1
f
T4e, con~ ludi ng addr ess was give ~
• .
.
' by Co,n gres sma n Alle n ;r. Trea
It was a vari ed and exte n~i.ve col- 1
dwa y ,of
1, Stoc kbri dge.
- - - 1ect ion. The re wer e man y quil
An amu sthg intro duc- - ~ - -- -ts, gat- · ~ tion conc
erni ng the prob able leng th of
lng from 1800, and Pais ley, silk and
Mr Ti;_ead;way's spee bh was hum orou s~ m!'r pide red s_haw ls of g·re at valu
e.
ly turn ed to acco unt in the
Ort~ of the mos t beau u;u1 of the
ker' s
ex. ___ open ing rem arks . Con gres smaspea
- - -- hibi ts was a bab y's d:r.ess, .fine
n Trea d- 1-- - - - ly em- ~
way had atte nde d the Mid dlefi eld falr
broi dere d, th~t h~d been wor n by
a
toda y and he s·p oke of. hls enjo yme
de,c end ant of I?~a Sam u~l Cha pin and
nt
of co~ ntry fair s and \own gath erin gs~
wu loan ed by Mrs Dan iel A. Po~ r.,_
_
and of his high opin ion of that !-un da- - ·-· A.(b eade d bag desi gn, _pict urin g
~
, men ta,t torm of tr~e gov
ernm ent, · the
hil1, with the chu rch Rl\d 0th.e r bml d1 tow
n-m eeti ng. ' Mr Trea dwa y spok e
ings , loan td by Mrs H. S. Cole, was _
· very high ly of ex-P resi den
maa e by h:!r ,,gre at-g rand mo,t her,. Amy
- - I Coo lidg e's ·dal ly. artic les for, ttheCalv in
- - - -- - - Bow en, hi 1800. Surv
Mc- I,-- -- - - - - ·
eyin g inst ru· Clur e synd icat e, and reco mme nded
/ men ts loan ed by E. J . Clar k; wer e
I them tp the
used
audi ence as cont a~ni ng
• I by his grea t-gr eat- grea t
e, Joh n
muc h wisd om and. good , old-fa.sh1oneq
__ :. . Pier ce, whe n he mad e survuncl
.,.
_ _ _ __ _
eys . tor the ---- hors e sense. Wit h
resp ect to the pres - 1
!·, gov ernm ent with Geo rge Was
I
hing ton
ent
busi ness depr essi on, lVJr 'l;'re adw ay
i} in Ohio. . , .spok e opti JOis tical ly, attri buti ng ,it to ,,
The time for thos e who stay ed out
a. worl d~w tde psyc holo gica l
of doo rs W$.S occu pied with a
ram
--1 whi ch is bou nd to improv.e. cond ition , , ,_ __ _
ot spo rts; und er ..the dire ctio nprog
1
of the
'fhe exer cise s clos ed with the slng
Roy al A'rc anum . whi le tabl!3S wer
e
lng or "Am eric a.'' by the ~sem bly, ac-spre ad on the c:11 urch com mon.
com part ied on the orga n oy Mr:9 . Her
call to lunc h waa soun ded by a The
- \ \-- - - fi(e
- bert G. Port er.
and drum .cor ps, com pris ing Cha rles
.
. The obse rvan ce tom orro w will inHigg .lns _a nd Joh n and Roy Stan ton or
f
elud e a s ervi ce a t; the Cen ter chur cp
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te~ ftel~ :
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---- ·-- 11.n. the mor ning at 11, a~d an even~n~
- --- - ·
serv ice at Sou th Wor thin gton . _· __
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CHURCH SERVICES
END OiBSERVANCE
AT WORTHINGTO,N"

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Worthingtoh, A ug. 31-Services at
the Cen ter Congregational and · the
South W or t hington Meth odist churches
lniarked the s econd day of -Worthing' t on 's observance of an old-home week
end and the Bay colony tercentenary.
The morning s ervice was h eld at the
Center, and-was conduct ed by the pa.st ar, Rev J ames -H. Burlces'," , who ~
prea ched a h istorical sermon i n , r ela1t ion to the town of Worthing ton. Rev - - - - '- W illiam Gan ley of North Wilbraham,
a for m er resident, conducted the :res ponsive r eading, and R ev. Harlan ·
Creelm an of Auburn, N : Y., a former •1----- - 'p astor, r ead t h e-s.cript-ures. Miss J a ne
Tuttle of Spring field ·and Worthingt on, a g ra ndda ughter of -Dr Russell H .
Conwell, sang two solos.
•
An old-fashioned s ong s ervice, l ed
'b y i4 in old-fashtoned cost:ume, ~ccompanied by t he· orchestra and choir, 1- - --• -·- - - 1o penect the ev ening service at the_ 9ld
colonia l church a t South Worthmgt on . The ser mon 'was prea ched 1by Dr
Creel man, who spoke @n the life of •- · - R ev Mr Pomeroy; one of the early ·
ininlsters of .t he ch urch.
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Histqrical Sermon by Rev J.
H. Burkes-Old..f ashion~d
Song Service Held .at So'uth '' ----- -Worthington

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-....-:aid

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ce~es at Worthington During the~own •
-ob-;~J'Va'n~~:__ ~h~--s~(l_te T erc~~tenO.ryJ

~f

-Judge E_:__!{: }!rewster and

pongressman~~~ T: Tread-wa£-■peakersat

the exercises.. ,

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Memorial Dr Ru
ssell. H ... Co. nwell ..
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To Be Dedicated at So.. W orthingtori,j
:,Ser'tic~ .to Be.Hel d Sunday Morning! With Add re,s by
·• ,· .Dr-Leopold ·Nie s-B oul der and Tablet to·,;·rB,~ Unveil ed "i"n ·:Aft emo on With Many .Speakers Tak ing
-· ··Part
Wort~i11-gton, Sep,_t. hA grani te
bowld er- heari ng a. bronz e \ plate will
be dedic ated on -Sund ay in memo ry of
.
-· Dr -'Russ ~ll H, Conw ell at the birth place o_f ~e distin guish ed mlnis t~r•
autho r,; or8&lt;tor.. anp educa tor at South
Worthiilgto11..:· 1t ls expec~ed that a
. large numb er of the admi rers of Dr
: Conw ell will assem ble .for ·the exer· cises.
.
The bowld er ts· one taken from the
rugge d elfrt ·called the "Eagl e's· Nest"
, overl ookin g the fa,rm lat1ds and beautifuI·. valley ··to· the south , ·throu gh
_ which x:u:Q.s a triJ:m tary of the West field i-lver. The rugge d · quart z grani~ e
bo~ld ~r br~ng s to the Conw ell birth . place a , bit of the natur al · beaut y
__ J whieh ' so · well exem plifie s the
simpl e
but .gr.ea t.. man: .it comm enior ate3; .
At.- 1). ~ - m. will be held a memo rial s~rv~ce in hono r of the grea.t
preac her. The· addre ss will be given
by Dr Leopo ld Nies•of Sprln gflel~ :

a.I&gt;:~.

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ljl,PProprla~e · ,ipusi c will Qe sung by
memb ers ·of the Grace Bapt\st choir
of Philad elp'bi a. A table t wUI be dedlcate(l. to the found ers of the
-Wort hingt on Meth odist churc h,South
fol.lowed by· a baske t lu·nch in Conw ell's
1
grove . Co~e ;will be. serve
d.
At· 2.30, under the auspi ces of .t he
Grange_ will be held the dedic ation· of
the bronz e table t to ( Dr Conw ell by
Henr y F . .J'enks , mast er of Mass achusetts State Gran ge; unvei ling by
Carol ·cath ay Tuttle , gr~at-gran d- ,,
daugh ter of Dr ' Conw ell; dedic ation
praye r by .Rev C. l:I . ..Smith of',Gr an-•·
~y; addre ss by Dr M. Josep h Two- .
mey, . pasto r ot Grae~ Temp le churc h; u-- -music. by memb ers of ~rac_e ,B aptist \
choir ; rema rks by Dr .c ~arle s
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Be'ur y,, presi dent · of T emple univeE.
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sity, Dr Euge ne Lyma n, -Unio n seminary, New York city ; ,nr Harla n~
Creel man, Theol ogica l semin ary, Au- _L
burn, N . . Y., and ✓ Dr Leon Marti n, - - -Conw ~p: forme r mayo r of Som~ ville. ·;

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Summe r Guests Leal'e
Worthi ngton, Sept.. 4-Wllli am Ncll
r guests re- 1
.Among the .summe
and son, William Neil, Jr., ot Colu'm d
.
• ·bus, o., left this mornin g to return
turning to the i r h omes .yester a.y
_
.
to their horoe.
1
are Mr. and Mrs. Sidney J. Smart
a
Initiate
wlll
Ladle:,
Loyal
The
...
A.
Frank
and family, Mr. and Mrs.
ay
-Satur.d
tes
candida
class of eight
,Sexton , Mr. and Mrs_. George - Jas· .
.
.eve:qing
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Marion
Miss
family,
per and
'° Will meet
Grange
a
Pomon
Hlllstde
Bartlet t of Springf ield; Mr. and
hall,
Lyceum
t~e
at
ay
-Saturd
here
Greenof
Mrs. J.1'rank O. Wells
~us~:
song;
The. progra:m : Opem~ g
field, Miss Olive E. Cole, of PitbRe-: ..,______
ness, current
L - - - - - solved,
Farmer Has
Averag edebate,
ft e ld , Mr · and Mrs · Alma SturteThat thet~plc!J,
.
More conven ienc~s For Doing His ,
vant of Scarsda le, N. Y., Dr. and I
Than the Wlte Has tn., the .
Work
Mrs. Clarenc e Kilbou rn o_f New ,
Afflrma tiye; Mrs H. L, ?t;r~r~ou~e."
~.
-Haven, Ct., Mi.~s Doroth y Kilbou rn ,
. F. K. ·Utley, Sr.: negativ e, : ----Mrs
r1tt,.
of
Rees
d
of Hart(or d, Ct., Richa!
, Erne$t G. Thayer , Carl Lovelan d.
New Yo;:k, who has been a weekMusic: dinner hour: . p. m. muslei 1
. en.d guest of Miss Marjor ie Fitz- __
_
_speaker , Leslie R.- Smith of Ha.a- state
--1
of
Porter
gerald; Miss Elizabe th
_Ie~he · Friends hip g~lld ·wtn : meet -0~lstorrs, Ct.; Mrs. A. C. -Steve~~ and '
e
1 fMonaa y ~vening with Miss. · Marjori
son, Alfred, Jr., of _Nort_ha mpton, ~
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Mtss Kather ine B~ssen of · South - - - church
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gationa
Congre
First
The
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1Windso r, Ct.
will be . closed on , Sunday that all
Sept. 3.-A .daugQt er, · Lois
____ _ _, may attend the · C~nwel l-day -exercfs e
- Ethel, was born, Sunday. to Mr. and
at S_ou~h . ~ort~in ~ton , Method lstt- - Mr~.- Eben L ,' Shaw ~f West'W or-- t
church at: 11 a. m.; for which a sple~;- ·
·
thingto n.
1
did :_pr-ogra ~-has be~~. pr~p3:red; . also
Mrs. Bradfo rd Skelton of Wal- - - - - - the
. dedicat ion ot . a . brenze•, rtablet :-to
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Ru~seir .H: Conwel l whJch-· wlll i,e ,- - Dr
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lex~n_
.
.u.er,
r.o
po e an . er
held at ·.·the homest ead ··•!The ' Eagie's
~amero n &lt;.,f Nee~ha1_11, w~re we~k- ,
'.at .2.30~.Jh {s is the outstan ding /
Nest'.
.,
__ _ _ e_nd gu_ests of Dr. and Mrs. :~ran-~! ·the season and marks the,'"·- - event
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els A. Robins on.
. close . of _vy-orth lq~on', tercent enary
Schools reopene d · yesterd ay af-.
. . • . ,_..:. ._. __. . r
. celebrat ion..:_ .
ter the summe r vacatlC 'n.
GTeany-, . of., I

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Mr. _and Mrs•. lJa-rqld Smith and-

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~Stamfo rd,..: ~ t., w~re.,r ~cent _:g:uests· 1

f~jflToisJ.
}l~!f
~.tf~~M.rs.:·J;
f~~-:tQiE3:t
7\n. 3:fter.no
eJand P /;~,~~1 \

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)an_d P. ~ole.
.~i~hc_J._w o_tables. in.··pl&amp;~. ·T h~ -first ,
Mr. and Mrs; •S; .A. Adams of
. ~·:. - .
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~J East Orange ,- N .- J .~- and Mr. ; and
____ _ _
Wit??•.,
a:.·-~IM
J--j,~..J&amp;
~
-.w~•
-:prl,ze_
-·
i---son';
little
~n4
Curley
F.
R.
?tfrs.
0
~ , "n4- !he ••.,~o~~ t~~ft -~~ /
i Robert~ of New Have~. , Ct., spen~
..: the week-e nd an~ h?~!day wU~; ·- - ~ aBosto . -h'o.~.-::b:~"'·'"'
Green Ha
Mrs. B. R. Green at
1¥r /
·~ -~e.n-· •l~~~
·: · -, . ~•-:~
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veil." 1
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.siit~.,~ ss~ :o~~~l ne ~ ~ t;;1teft
Miss Gladys ·Rogers of West•
i-r
t
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:-home.
,qer
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_t-od'ay t~ re.tum to
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- Roxbur y Is vls_ltlng .her grand--- - .
mother , Mrs. Myra J. Stevens .
The Worthi ngton .Grange . has··
-be·e n Invited to at~end· a meetin g
of the Htn·s dale Grange on Thurs·
,day evening .
Guests at Maple ~11 farm in
- --- ------ ----- --- - West Worthi ngton the past week 1-.'Miss
were
day
and over Labor
Cll,ther lne Loughl in of Worces ter,
,.______ - ·------ Lawye r Cheste r Prior and his
mother of West Newton , ,Allen
. Prouty of Rustin, La., Winon a
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of Arlingt on, M.~- an4 Mrs.
::
-·- - -·1LPiouty
Roland· :Goodw in of Gardne r fLnd·
'-Mr and Mrs. C. Thoma e Bate~_a-v d
_- f-a~ilY, of Greenfi eld.

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TempJe univ-erslt y ;- Dr E n.r:-cn e Ly-

TABLET UNVEILED . 1
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To.DR RHco,NWELL- I~[~~:~JI.
AT HIS B'IRfflPLACE

~:~i:la ~n~~~e :;;~n;;YA

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s: ~~n~?n r ai ~s~:il
nnd a f orm e r ma yor of Some r ville. ·,
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--ThE! m a ny !!bill ties of the m a n
! y;hom t,h ey came to h on or w ere men· ·
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tloned by· n enrl~ all the s pea k ers. Ris 1
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record a s captam of Co F of t he 46th r - - - / •
, •
M assa chusetts ·v 0Iunteers in th e C i v il ,
1
war,· hls pow~r of oratcry whlph h eld
O
• spellbou nd
thpusan..ds of a u dien c~ .
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'"articula
rly
his
speech, "Acres of D ta- ri
monds," whicb hP. delivered n early
i 6000 times cturin,~ bis ~11,reex:; his l'C C- ',
.
I ord as an educator , b eing th e f oun c'l er ,
and P:esi~en t o~ T em r le univei:si t:v,
and his career i;n the chur-ch ~hich
By a Staff. Reporter ,
.
,.;_i
he founded, w e re ·all ·'rnentfon ed.
South Worthin gton, Sept. 7.r-Lead . . The crowd, gath~red around the I
,. ers in many wal~s o~ lif,e :mingled
'gr~-nite t ablet typifying the ·r u g ged
with about 400 ~111 town friends of
cpatp.Gte r of• e ·man, and scattered
' the late Dr Russell H. ConwelJ, h~r~
[ undel". the · trees at ;his' h om e, h ear-d •
today to pay homage to bis _mem~ry
the Gra_ce otti.l!rch cl.heir , .brought from
_ ____, 'a t his birthplac e. A simple piorning
Phll~del phl.a . s ing the h y mns b e l oved
church service at the 82-rear-o l~
durin~ the s e,r~ice13.
Methodi st church, in ·honor · of tl:ie
. . Th~ T.ab]et on· the Bowltler
_ _ __ __, founders of the iristitutioJ:! whe~·e_ he
· The granite bowlder, unveil ed· biy
I r ece_
i ved his first 1·ellgio.u ~ trammg,
Dr Conwell' s young grandda u~ h ter,
' a·n d tqe dedicatio n this afternoo n _-o f a
.Car,ol Con~ .en Tuttle, w as m a rked
bronze~- inscribf:!d granite, l;&gt;owlder ori
simply as follows :1 ---- - - - - - - ---1 the ·1awn of his birthplac e, ,~ere ··the ,
"Birthpl ace of Russell H. Con well
events that marked tlie meetmg.
'
• F ebruary 1 5, 1 84 ~ .
· The tfibutes paid· this noted min·
. Mini.ster of the GosJ?el · ·
ister orator:, educator and p'Rtr-iot to'
Founder of T ein pl e !:_ti_i~ it y
day, 'flve years after his death, t~~e.~ tl
• P a triC!t," ~ ,,t;1aw.u..
1
t ed the - impression his lite_ ~nt .ch,r·_ pr , Twom e y . ment1O11ed,. d uri ng his
-~•
, acter hao, pl~g.e .not qnl~ m t~is . tiny
1 addres~, t h a t t.he c r e~t ors of t h e ta~ -:
===--•
- -,1 Berkshir e ·commun ity, but in . the
~et sp?uld bo pra &amp;ed becau se of t h e~r
world outsMe.· Men who succ_eecfed ..him_
-om~ss1011.. of t_h e_ da te of D ~· Gon well_s
a1; the Baptist Temple at Philadel phia
_deat,n. · H? .Jwill n ever di~. and h is ,
------ -1 at Temple universit y, both of ~hicll
? Pit 1t will J l\~e f9r ~vt:::r a n~ong ~h e m en - -- -- .h~ fdunded . and guided, came to add
, who came }1! . con~a ct w it h h i m, and 1
pra.isP' 0 ( the ma n to that offered by
, s~rve -as •~n .msplr at ion., t o boys a nd ,
'"i '
· hb
·a ! r iends
,
girls •of th1~ c ommuni ty, he declared •
• ♦• fl 11e1$"
? rs an
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Dr Nles's Sermon
- - - ---1 . The serv1c€.s, both at .the qua nl.
The ,l;!ermon of Dr N ies at the mornwhite church {ln&lt;l in f~ont of his home
Ing .service -was in pa rt. as l'.o\lows:
looking over the green rugged bills of
·" '+oday . we. }ia:ve con1e from widely
- - --, tlie vfcinity , were sponso1.·e·d I by the - ·- · sepa rated points to pay tribute
in i---- -tercenten a ry ·committ Pe of· the S U
memory bf one of God 's :p.obl em en. •D r
·worthin, :t"ton ~ran ge, headed by M1·s
Con well was a m an of Ja rg e ability
Walter L. Higgins, master of the
, .a nd achiev em ~nt.
H e s u caeeded i.n ,. __ _ ____
Grn~.!!"e.
,
,
ev ery sph er e in wh ich he chos e to op Speakers ,at the Ceremon ies
I er~Ht
e.
d
.
e earne g-rea t· s um s o f m oney
The spea,kers a t the cere monies in: and couid h ave amassed a fortune,
J- ___ _ __
·· eluded Dr Lecpold A. N les ot Sprlng- - - · he gave his m oney a ll awa y . H e. wbut
as
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field, . wbo g ave the address at the ,
an author o-i: \n ote, p ublis hin g , 37 :
chu rch : a enrY F . Jenks, mas ter of
volumes b u t h e di d not a spire to lit- t
____ _ _ _
1 the . l\lassach usetts Sta te G ran ge, who ' - -erature. 'He or ga nized a g r eat univer- 1-_
~ _ __
ded1catecl the bowlder t o Dr Con well:
eity ' where t oda y 10,00-0 peop le a r e
Dr M. Joseph Twomey , pastor ot I
pre.Par in g f or their li fe w ork, but h e
Gr!'½ c:e T em ple chm·ch a t P hila &lt;lold
id not p 6 se as a gr eat edl}-ca!o.!:: _
_
__
phia ; Dr- C'!h ,trl es E . Beury, presiden t
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. ' n_tat.1ves f Temple
R'eprese
· · ty, the Grange
- and,
Un1vers1

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Others Speak _. Over ·4')0
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Attend Exercises

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�"In the mea ntim e h e or ganized . an::I'
develop ed the g rea t est Protest ant
church in Americ a. But w e are not
here to recite his a ccompl ishmen ts but
to give an insight, l.f possible, into the
sou·r ces ot his n obl e life.
"F.irst notice the place of his birth.
The sternne ss of New Englan d fat'.m :
Ute was· mellow ed by the beauty of .
this environ ment. Worthin gtc.m's hills, 1
valleys, forests a~d fields ingratia ted
themsel ves into his very life. Until I
be died he never lost his _love for

I

them.

"Second , his early home was a place

of plain living and high thinkin g. The

Conwel ls early identifi ed themsel ves
- with the great progres sive r eforms of
their day. John Brown, whos e soul,
after his untimel y d eath, still w ent
marchi ng on, was one of their intimate friends.
·
"Third, his educati on and training
was .t he best of his day. The public
schools in which he took his first
lessons here still stands. Wilbra ham
academ y where he attende d was being led by great men. Yale gave the
,lad a parochi al bearing , his world
&amp;viaion.
•~' -,,,.J~~
"'G'!• ~h,._ ::~~,.
h
~~~ ~~~- -tQU~~ ~!. ~)':0,
- - the hand of God. He knew God and
could inter P,,ret him to men. Multitudes fl ock ed to hear him b ecause
t h ey w ere convinc ed that he spoke 11·
- n o t of a s peculat ive mind simply, but j - - from a n experie n ce in which God w a s
co nscioua ly present .
,
·11
_ ""\¥ e are dedicat ing toda:r a tablet _to - , the m e mory of those who gave him
· his fhst religiou s training . It is a
w orthy a c t."
_.
.
The 'founde rs mention ed oh the t a blet a s t h e builders o~, U:ie church are :
W illiam Cole, John Cole1• Con s ider
Cole, I i;aac Thrash er~ M ~rtin Conwel l,
___ L ewis Smith and Asa Niles.
,_ _ _
·
Mr Jenks'&amp; Reriiark s
Mr J enks, the fir,st sp.eake r at
afte rnoon exercise s, spoke of •th~ d'eot·
-- - - - of the Worthi ngton and South Worth- •-ington G l'anges · to Mr Conwel l. H ,e
d ecla red t hat it was not strange that
__ this lel}.der of men should have cotne
from t h e hills, from whence -ma..ny famous p oets and 1.ea ders 111 the business and ed·ucati onal world had cbme.
___ ..! ''The memori a l will sta,nd as an 1nepir a tion tb the y outh 6f.t.he country ,'\
b e said. . · .. · ·
·
'
Harvey Cr essman , pre::'. dent of the
b oard of d eacons· of Grace .t emp1e· told
the a u di ence that miles away at Phila delphia a vast h ost of p eople w ere
f thinking- of the c erem ony t ra nepir !ng
- - -~-h,er e in the hills of Mass1achu setts. He
present ed a wreath on beh a lf of, the
oh~1i,2h :_
_ .
_
• _ __ _.:.
0

••,

•

·,tne :

Rev Dr TwQme y, in the main a d-!
dl'ess of the afterno on, stated that in·
this· little tramme lled w-ay • can be
placed this montitn et1t to hio achieve m~nts. Dr Conwel l had the qua.lltie s
of the g rea test ;:;f d oc~o rl3, lawyers ,.
teacher s, preache rs and busines s men,
he said, a nd was a marvel among men
in hi§ ac.:!om plishme nts. lle was a _
citizen of all countri es anc1 'is now a
coritem porocy .of .all age::1, . b e. went, on,
and first last ancf all the time he ·was
a Christia n, lnciden t%ally being a pa- c
triot and nn orator.
'

·----

Ach1evernents ·at Teri1j;le Unfveh lty

Dr Beury told of' his achieve ments '
at T,e mple univers ity. He pointed out '
that this is now a school tor 13,000 ·
studen.t s hold\ng a .unique place,,
tho .institu tional world. The vigor and
force Dr Conwel l put into the lm1ti-·· tution is re!'lpon slble for its growth ;
now, he declare d.
Rev Dr Lyman spoke of Dr Con- I
weH as a poetic pi_oneer w'qo sa.w the; -- -- - meanin g of commo n things.
His
backgro und in tne hillR was responsible for his high intellig ence and his •
initiativ e.
,
·
',
· Rev Dr Creeh:n an, speakin g 1 of the
religiou s life. of the Berksh ire towns,:
point~d out. the danger that" ,the _ _ _
morals of the section migbt be low-'
ered_ by ·the influx ·of wealthy sum-'
mer · visitoi,s . He, 's poke of his ' re-·
_cent s e1;m on at the 150th anni.ve rsar~
of the· VVorth ington .Congre gatlona
.~h~~~ ~- a~~ ;s_t~ted' th~t ~e ·,:wa .
. haunted by ,the fear that there might • ---- - - - be no ' 200th anniver sary, because · of
the n eglect 9t ~eligiou s training .
Leon ; M.-~C~EJ.w·e11, thauk~d· the visitors, efot1_t·t11.eir' tributes t o his·. ·father;- i.--- - - -1 and -~I?~~e
_';'_f his_ history .

in/

-~~ep-~

Tabl-et .Dedi cated to
Found~;'s of South

,~
ng(on
.
.ort'1i
'
,, ' C,~~rch 1- - -.:GT*-,%':ff.§;!,.&lt;!,.,,,.!,:,:,•,:,:,.) ,.,'\:J.:;,,,,:,,M~:f
t\,,:} i,:::,:,:,::::::::::::::::zt&amp;I

~::j;::.

-I'
i----

-~

�I

I

I

I

::::~:&gt;::: ;:::;:.:

.··.\ '·•.::: }y

,',','.', ',,

:··. --:t:_. ·:-·::;··..
::~: .

·,

··;( .

~-

i00il:i ii

�rthi;;gto~ -~hu~ h~~~!:t_et !_ll~~i~_g _fJ_ervi~-~
- _::_Cr~wd a~out _the So~ h~
wlren tiiolet was dedi; ri.ted in honor of _founders pf church
~

-

�·:
'13t rtbp lace of Rus sell Her ma n Con
3
184
15,
ary
bru
wel l, 'Fe
·
of
r
nde
Fou
pel,
,M inis ter of-t he Gos
Tem ple Uni ver sJty , Pa tro it-"or ato r-.-Au th or- Ed uca tor
Hen ey· N. Jen ks, ma ster pt the
Ma ssac hus etts Sta te Gra nge , gav e
the _d edic a,do 9 ad&lt;:Jress in whi ch l,e
I
_
..
said in par t: ,
ll- -- __ _
_i!ge
gr~
'
the
~oultj:~r
t
tha
ing
, '.'It · ·Js .fitt
~~m
,
b
1
m
gra
pro
tak e par t in this
ancl
_
an.
eric
.Am
at
ory ·ot 'a gre
all We ster n Ma ssac b use tt:s owe ~o ' -muc h to him . ·Th e n~ e- oi· -Dr.
·If
:of
c-e
pla
rtl
Bi. .
Con wel l wil l eve r 1ta rid tor~atl tba t t -- - ~
..
ing
-- -- is goo d and val uab le, and in I~vlite
b#
·
of
t
par
t
tha
mem .ory of
· · ·~
,:,•- spe nt wit h us we . ded icat e thts ·
PARTICIPATES. I
tabl et, to dem :on stra te . tha t It ls ,__
GRANGE
. . --- ~- , .
' P&lt;?ssible. to be l(or n fn · the hill ~- ~n,J '
°r&gt;r,omi~ ·
-- - ·wo rthi n·g,t o-~ : .i~e pt·:-- .- s •.:. :. :. . _
.t() mak e a _nam e in the wo~ ld_, _I,t-,__ __ _
i
i~il
:ghr
~re1
:
:
d
,n·
a
--'.rij_
a.t'o
du~
e
·
.
t"
,nen
_, ls: ,.! lot-· ·, tr~ nge th-at a ~J'!~at ma:n
gat her ed · wft h · . tJ:ie · fifr met s : and · - - - - - : slio uld b~v e bee n _b~r n and re~retl
· re·st den ts _of·- 9u.tii 'wnrtb.I.qgt9 iJ .
I ~ure.~.r hOP;~·J h:~~: in y~a rs
l her~ .
~:
a,g~•n,
_y:~s ter~ ay to'_;~O lio~'?.r ·to__tJ.:1,e inem
to com ~ we sha ll cow e· her eresp
- .town~i:i':
e~ts _i---- - r
ou_
?ay
·ory , of , thi-s='-litU e Ber ksh lre .Rus
t-q-}
in
aga
y.et
a~4
-:
sell
nr.
e.ri•,
·citlz
;
iot.u
- mos t"lll usfr
to·t ~---p ie~ prr of ·thi~ ogre at ,ni'j&amp;~.!~
te·r·
H . Con we-II, dist irig 'uis h~d m·t'n:is_
- ·' ·. . . :Q ~, Gr'~ t -M~ p·. ~ji ~11c; ,:'; 1- - - - ple·
Tem
o'tef--uµdd·-!o
n
a·
,
hor
and · aut
·.- _. D,r~:_·~. - Jos ~p~ -'I_'~qmef, pas tor
r~
Nea
hia.
e¼p
ilaJl
·Phat'
.
sity
uni ver
.Rt~:~11~e~ B~p tist _,~:9u rch .of..- P}ii,la,y
m·~u
them
ng'
amp
ple,
peo
·
:0
1:90
_
_:;.
ly
.:~ _lphi~ ; o_f wJi lch ny.- -~o nwe ll\ wa-s _ _ _
~tl:rl:1:l"g ._
·o ( Jhe, va~'t. h_9 s't .or frie tids who se.
- -- ----1J&gt;.~C~ -pas_t_o r, .&lt;l:eJiV.~i~(!.' ·_~a ~f}.
fgloµ!!
_lije s w.e re. ptofoti1.3dly ipfl11:_e1foe_d
.a~d r~~ s o~ trib ut;e ·J9~b-!~ a_c,hf
~ve.
ous.
e gr_e at _~a µ., wer e_p rese nt
y-ef
by th_
mar
~ha raet er· and _
tptla
-Ba
the
of
r
the qed ica·ti.on of ~ gra~ 1te bou lder
nde
fou
the
men t of.
the
k
inar
e-to
-plat
1 -nze
o
dom
br_
a:
wis
,bea ring
~ - - tem ple. . ~e ··str~ ~~~ d - t~e:·
Dr.
of
ace
hpl
birt
"
t,Nes
les
g
_
I
"Ea
et J_n ·-n~.!
ot_ the ,-'19.~oi:.s· _.o (..t~r ~,i-.blDr.
:
.
_
- Con ;- 1
. _ . .
of
e
.dat
Con ~ell . ·
·
tl;l~
ng·.
u~J
igct
_
oi} -11---- - 2'5;
The be~ ~tif µl ~fte rno on ded1ca,r,A9
thJ: n p~ceµ_:i.be
s ·c,L -- -- - - .;ie~l.' s_~~~
_ ., 1
.:
·
fng:
s.ay
:Lion -{lervfo~s uµ;der th_e ~usdpice
_me.-tn.Qrial.
the:
er:
und
ucte
ond·
e,.c
werf.he gra nge ,
· '~H~ .'-~,~,f 'n~t, d~d , he wil r··n~ ver .)
_a _·:warni ·s~ptembet i(uh , emp ~as i~-'
lL men leave.-an lnti uen ~~ j - - ce of.' the 11---- -- --1 dfe. : ; Stf~
_- - _ _J ng the ma jest t and ,.pea
a~.d_,:, f; - vft~ l!iln_g -· t.9r ce tha f· furi"c--,the
:
ich
:-Wh
-.
l!
f-rOl
ne.
.1:io):
i
m-'ou'n tair
ti_? n~"'-t:tiro~i!i~ ·th~ . j~afs: . _ ·was- ;,
!g;
t.qtt
·.n1o
_
'.q1e
.
e
cain
r
3=de
rgre at l_e
1
a t ~en !n qne , ·a law
~ doz e~- gr_~_
:
n
~gto
rlhi"
.'\1/o
th
~ou
the
i~
.
an, of'a tor, j' -- -servic~s
- - - - _yer;-:~rea-c~~r,-. ltusf.n,e ssm
He Jov ed. ,
.
Met h?~ ~st Epi sco pal chu rch w~r e
·au~l).or and pat riot
d alte r
ia,lso in hon or of Dr. -C~ nwe ll, and
lfve
he
Am!3r~ca, and tlia t
ice:
;or the fou nqe rs . of _the :ch_ur,ch.
cho
bl~
: of'' _ _ _ _ _the ~ar was not
wor ld and of' i
the
-- ,Rev . Leo.void A. Nie~, ~upervi.aoi
ot·
z~n
~fti
.
a
.
as---.
w
_
;t~e . S~ring.fleld dist rict - -of - ttie.,l
last , and all' '
t,
firs
,
tall a~~~- But
jsti an~ · He
Me tho dist EpiSC&lt;?Pal chu i;-c;:h,_ de11-v-_;_ _ _ _ ~
Chr
a
was
e
h,
!!i,: ~!pie,
. bl\t ' be• - - -nc~
ered the. add ress ·~t the .c~u'rch s~r-.
cha
l;&gt;y
t
~io
p~t
~~~ a
Rev
by
s
ted
duc
con
was
ch
.' 11
whi
.v ice·,
/,Vas a prea che r: by the call of God I
.~
.
~·
s:
~~e
a-:.
e
B~r
bre.
H.
Jam eo
rHe _kn ew the sec r~t of' the
Rel ativ es Unv en 'l'a!&gt;l~t- ·_ " - - - -- - - iing plac e- of big ~ amb itio n:- Cag e 11--- - Car ol Cat hay Tut tle, g~e1J.t ,
tan eag le and his hea·r f l)re aks . Let
sun .
gra ndd aug hte r of Dr. Con wel l, and
) l_im ffy wit h his face In th~
n(l;:
-tbe ,_ _ _ _
do
.to
·
oµ
ngt
Mis s Agn es 9on wel l, a _1.~_-c~ra,
rthl
Wo
- He, l~tt
--~
,
r
re·
t~
ous
!am
h~
_
t
_
r
o_
- - - dau ght er
..th.h:ig_~ tha t God will ed...;1,_ _
edimb
let
tab
nze
bro
the
--'
d
~
eile
unv
bed )n the gra nite bou iaer tak en
froi µ the "Ea gle 's Nes t,". on the
- -- - ·- - - --- --- - --. ..-- -pl~f f Jn back of the .Conwell° hom e
s:
TJ!.e---"lns crj~ tion read
~- ------ - - --. ---- --

--

.1't

HONOR MEM.ORY

-o·FDR~-CONWELL

Is
Gr an ite: . ·Unveiled.in. South .. .

wort_Jli~gton--at · - fl

we

•-

·-. ·-A rith"Cff":

-~s

at /
1

He

·Hel----

I

-

�--- --- --- --- --- -

Dr. Charl es E. Beury , presid ent r,
!boul der of light _gray granJ te· was
of Temp le unive rsity, st~ess ed th e I
proba bly used by Dr. . ConweJI
work being done in the mstit ution I
many
times as it
1found
ed by Dr. Conw ell, where last ~ - - - - path and so is a lay besid e tbe
fitting· r~min der
year 13,00 0 young men and wo~ en
of the great· man it comm emora te8",
'were study ing and prepa ring for
she said.
their caree rs. He also spoke of
'l'able t P1ace d in Churc h
the fine reput ation being made by
A tablet - bearin g the- name s uf
the Temp le Unive rsity Medic al
the found ers ot the South Wort~ -.1.1 '
schoo l, which is rapid ly assum in~
ing~on Metho dist churc h was unan outstanding positi on in Amer iyelled after the morn ing service.. 11
,ca, expla ining that the Ideals of
1
Dr; Nies a'c'cepted. the tablet on. bethe found er havo contin ued after
half of the Metho dist EpiscopDI
his death and are still the vitali z- churc h·e s.· in Weste rn M-as.s aehuing ferce in the unive rsity whic~
setts. · -~t . bears the. Jnscrl ption :
gives oppor tunity to unde~ -privi ' Dedic ated to the Foun ders · of
leged young mep. and wome n.
the South Worth ingto n .Meth odist
Phila delph ia Deleg ation
Churc h.
A deleg ation of 52 prom inent
. Bµ_ildfng Cor_nm_lttee: , · '.-;
1
Phila delph ia perso ns helpe d cele'w.i fllam Cole. ,
.I~a~~ .'fh1:as her L' brate "Conw ell Day." Harve y E. - - -JoJ:i~--Cole
.. Martj n ~C_omyeH
Cress man, busin ess manag e~ of the
.
c
~
o
}
~
. , 4J!_ls Smltf
Amer ican Bapti st Publi cation so- I
. , ,·
Rev. Asa Niles •
•
ciety, and H. L. J enkin s, tr~ste es
~ii~,frc.h -: P~dlc ate~ _May ~8, 'i,8~~- ·,
of the ~apti st templ e at Pb1l~del- 1
, ., T.he . churc b was fill~d
to . ov,er- f
phia, placed a . large floral tnbul ~
flowin g .. at . the ·~ervlc~, ~undr e~s :
at tl?,e,si de of the bould er.
. •~ - - - -·_be ing t,0rced to-sta nd in the alsle!.l,
'Preli mfnar y plans are ., berng
rear of the audit orium and out-,·
,made to o"r.gani~e a soci~t~. to pe~side. . ~r. ,_Nies. delive_r~·d· th~ _main
.petua te and mamt ain the Eagle s
addre ss, sp'eak mg on the llfe of·
Nest" and the memo rial to Dr. ,,____ _ __ Dr.
Conw ell as follow s:
_ , Conwell for all tim~ and to have
:•we
hay~ come from mariy part.s !
annua l -'pilgr images to tpe spot.
of 'the- count ry to pay tribut e to...thi{
Dr. Eugen e Lyma n of New York 11--- -- - memo ry of one_
of Goa's noble men.•- -, unive rsity, Rev. Harla n Creel man
Dr. Conw ell was- a man of !arge
,,u of~h eolo gica l se~in ary, _arr.d
abilit y and splen did -achie vemen ts. _
1 Rev. C. H. Smith also eulog ized
He succe eded · in every ' spher e fn
1
the great preacher_, the latter dewhlch h~e ':cl)oo se to opera te. He.I
liv~ri ng th~ dedic ation praye r.
ea~ne d , great fUIDS ~s a ~ect"Qrer .'
Leon Marfm Conw ell, form er I
IImayo
and could 'easil y have amassed a ~
r of Somervill(}, and son of ~- - - -- fortun e, but h~ gave
all bis mo'n·ev~
~ Dr. .Conw ell, was the last speak er. \
aw-ay. He was an autho r of ·note:~
He told of the hos~ of friend s.. .,h is
publis hipg 37 volum es; but_h e did .,___
fathe r bad durin•g his lifetim e, an_d
- - - - not aspire to...be ' a literate.i-r. _He·
- -•referr ed to the sword presen t~d ms
found etl .a . unive r·s ity wher8 '. more,,
fathe r after . thet Civil wa.r by- the,_
t han. -10,00.Q yot,1ng men -and women
· ("Mo untain Boys" of the 46th Regi- _
~rf Jirel511r~,og for_th~ir life's ·~or.k. i - - ' ment of Massa chuse tts Volun teers,
Ye(, -he did not pose as . a~ exper t IJ
of which he was capta in . The
educa tor. -In · the meanJ ime, ' he.
motto on the sword is "~rue
___ _ organ ized an'd develo ped th~ great -,_
Frien dship Is Etern al.''
·
-est" Prote stant churc h in Ai;nerica,
Mrs. Walte r L. Higgi ns,_ maste r
if not in the world . ·
·;
of,.. the Worth ing-to n grang e, was
maste r of cerem onies. She told
------ --- - - --how the. grani te bould er w~~ taken
itrom the ''Eagl e's Nest" wh~re Dr.
'Conw ell liked t'o climb to · sit and
_ __,----- - rest" .liigh· ron the ·cuff overlo oking
the peacefu~ vall~y. _ The -!:_OU~d~_d J

I

r

L ---

rL

1

___

-- ---- - -

-----·--

�T
--·-- - ·-----,.,--- ,....---- -· · -,,..,-Loved His- Hills i ......·, ...
.

.

- -

'.WORTHINGTO.N, ---

"
"B.ut we are not ·her~ _td .give··an:
_ _ ___._ .
account, but rather to gain : an · hf.:. •
~et&gt;t, ~H'.lllside .p 0 •
on,
Wdrb~ingt
-·
ot
·souree
sight it possible· into the
here· rtqday.' with
ri}e,t
Grange
mona.
Fli:st,
:
hi~ noble achievem ents.
0
busirt~s rneetiqg·
1/l.
'
res~nt.
p
3.0
~bquf,
The
·
..
birth
his
of
notice the place
1
m th~. •;_JiOQf ning pt'-es.deq , over by th~
---- sternness of New England life was
l ..
master.:tM rs"~ C: Sweet o~ Cm:riming.
mellowed by the ~bejtuty of bis en11
e
c!}lcken-pi
..
·
.a
·,by
.r,ollowed
Wa.B
•
t&lt;?
-valhills
ton
Worthing
vironmeu t
dinner: *,er,ved. by vy-orthm'gt dn Gr.alnge.
• ·
·
_ , y ,he afta;r-noon.. program .at· 2.15 . was
leys, for~sts a~d fields ingratiate d
..as foll 9ws: Qt:auge song, •~stay on l J \
;
themselve s int? his regular life. ,
the ~apn,'' ;, re~41g ~ Mrs J;:'~ ) Wise
H~ never lost }?.is Ioy~ ~or them.
· of .Hup.~gto n; ·~ ar~ortlGa ~dro~, . v1c:_
H1s v~ry home· was a place of :pl~in
tor '.1;3,rt_n"lffi:; i.a dd_fr;s ~Y. .s ~ate~ Deput~
f
- living and -high thlnk~ng, _The Cont_:t '. $m1th o'f Hatlfe?.'• w1~h · rnovLeslie
/
s
·
themselve
d
e
wells · early identifl.·
·,
ing' . 1pictui•e~~ Of/~: Y9~~~mt~, ~iuona:.J
e
wi..th a grea't A'lnerlcan progressiv
,_park , ¥e1Iow..sione .park and Eskimd llf~ 'l
• •. . ~
J..
·
· two' fnlk' so· . ·1:. Grejnla.nd
sa~h·
ohn ~rown was a friend f- - - - - - _ . 'if'·
rEl f "&lt;?rm..
ngs, ,
•
• '
•
•
~• '
f
ell
Co
n;r .· Grange
B'JUJt}ngto
o,f
..
·
ise
W
·
E.
s.
nw .
, of ,-;
, '
'
I
song, , ','JI',9 0 v\1'.'i\d-', il~g;]'
- Thir4, his ed!-1cai.ional training •
"''~pge win hold a
on
W&lt;;&gt;J:thmgt
.
_
_ _
was the .best of his day. The little
7
"cp.miijp)}t r. •t~f.i{~!f1:i'ra1 r~h'.tl;&gt;it•F t;,\da.1.
s~hoolhou s_e (Ii wh.·lch • he wen.t~_to
,at the i'f~.11.rRlJ.l~. a harvest SJ!Pl'fer at ·
1
'
stands~
.
still
_.
town
..
school in this
/ lie c_o,p.gr~~~yi}pal . 9h~rQh •. a_n d·. a
Wllb_rabam a~aE!.D:lY. w~~ J.&gt;~iig iii~g .a't Byc~um~hall_. ,--- -·
&lt;lance 1Jl,.- t,l1e~f:!V&amp;W,
-,.en:.
he
when
rected by great -soul"
. M. -F . Pac~ard h as on exhtblt1on m j ,
. ,. . , _ •
. -~
.
_
}}is· s(ore · a s·~ltllt of sweet cor.ij th)), ,
tered 1t. Yal~ _g~v~ th~" -l~d~_l!l~
1
feet, two i?ches tal_I, gr~n. t&gt;i~- Wal- ,; .
was_
30ul.
~
~!~
F.~U!~h,
visldn.
W?~ld
t er E. ~m1th orr hts fa,rm, a.C,Smith L _ _____,
a1
---1
touched by the l!a-nd· of God-._ He
' __ ,,
-. •.,.
, .
c:ilfow.
H
Him
inferpret
l.4
·cthl
and
knew Go4
'
.meet?',Pen
ah
~
. · T lfe Grange will."li~lto ,othe~~-- MulHtti&lt;J es; fiocR'.ed · 'to
eve·Tuesday
-~all
Lyeeum
the
at
l~g
i·
him_, becall$e·· (he:f were,- conv1ncet
- - - / Ill11$' and a rec~ption ,. to ~cnool of- '-. •
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flcials. ,There will b e ap.· address bx, a
,_that h~ spoke n2t_-o1!-t .of a spec~
,
·
J
at
barracks
the
from
trooper
stat~
~xin~er
.from.--an
~u~
· lative mind,_
\
·
-1 'Leeds.
perience in _wnic}l_ God wa-s c·onMiss Olive E. Cole -and' Miss Clatiss~ ·
_
,,,_
sciously present. _ ·
ot_ Pit,~ ~l? left ~his afterno9n
H~nry
_
ta~
a
today
. ''We •a r~ _de4:1cJ1,ting
for an•/aut-o~~}:)l\e . tnt&gt; ·tp }"it:ain~.
let to the m~t&gt;ry of~ those .who
,.... ;. w.hete ~li.ey- will ~amp ft&gt;r two wee ~ _ _ _ _
gjl.ye tQ him h~~ -flrs.t reu,gioµp .Jm;·
press-ions . It ,i •B a worthy act."
Followin g the morning ch:,u -rch
- - - - - - -- ----·s~rvice, many enJ°o_yed 'b~x ·1unches ,
fn Conwell Grove. · At tp,e. close Qf
the . afternoon cer~niolli ~s, the
the·' Ea~~,_-s N.est''
1crowd vJs1.ted
and yjewed the sword ,:wnlch y;as
a Rrized possess.i on of D~!_. Con;
1
well. The home contains the' original ·11ouse where Dr. «Jonwell- was
~orn and ls '8. tyJ:)ical ' moun t3iin
Jarmbous e.

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�WORTHINGTON
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Worthingt on, Sept. 9-The Friend- • ship guild met. la1:1t evening with Miss
Marjorie G. Bartfett. with 12 present.
. Work on clothes for the mountain
children of4.Tennes see was completed
and they will be forwarded at once. A
business meeting followed, with · the
president, Mrs Homer Granger, presiding. Program: Devotions, Miss Adaline Hewitt; educationa l, Miss Paul ..
ine Brock-, who read from a mission
book, "All in the Day's Work," by
·Godfrey Philips; entertainm ent, · two
guessing contests in charge of Mrs
Francis A. Robin.cion .and Miss Elsie V.
Bartlet~. Prizes were won by Miss Adaline Hewitt· and Mrs ~omer Granger.
The · next meeting will be held on Ii
Thursday e·veni'ng, .OctoJ:&gt;er 2, with
·
Mrs Harry• Moilison.
The Friendship ' guild will hold a
public bridge party on Thursday afternoon at 2.15 at Mrs Leland P.
Cole's.
Miss Anna Bailey of · Springfield ,
who ha.s been spending th·e sea.son at
Lafayette loage, left today to return
_
.
to her home.
Mrs Irving Gr.anville and family are
closing their summer home today and ~
leave for Yonkers, N. Y.
Mrs Leland P. Cole ls accompan ying her sisters, Mrs Philip C. Gurney and Miss Dorothy r.S11,~w of A.ah-

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field; today .to Bridgewat er, where the
latter wlll en~er the Bridgewat er Nor- ,
mal school.
.
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�WOI{THINGTON
/Grange Has Agricultm•aJ ExhJbJt
! - Se pt. l i:i - 1Vo r ti1. 11 ,; t cn U rauge
eld, a commu n ity fair . s u pper flnct
ance last F rid ay evening. . A super at the &lt;;:ongrega ti~nal church
, ~ six o'clock dre ~ o ver Olie htio,d ~_e d v,eople n~d w3:s followed by
GRANGE I!'ETES TEACHER S
(lUI agrlcultu~-a l exhlbi,t at the town
.
I
1
(ball, whicp won the c'1fime n-dation I
Opening . ::-1 cetlug and Reception lteld
alL T h e decoration s ·werf put ·!
JOf
. nt Lycemh Hall .
1 Wor thington, Sept. 10-A social afon by Emerson D'avis, chairman of, fagricul t ural committee or· (be
fa lr t ook place last night, when the
who lg1.d charge of the .· grange,
reand
Grange · h eld a n open me~ting
i
fair. Mr. · Davis, a skllled decot a-; 1 ~
~
-'- - -I ception to ~chool offic~s, a t Lyceum
\
of
bounty
.
the
upon
drew
tor
by
_
:w-e1co1:1e
\U._
&lt;
h a ll. A bnef a ddre.ss
. · m,.
.
,
., '
W orth y Mas t er Mrs '\-'\f3'lte r H 1gg1ns
and
work
his
!or
st
forr
an~ftel~
charge
in
program
the
by
followed
was
I;
·i'E!-! ~ - ----4-1,
art1st1c
1;1-d,z
a
lt~lque
,_
a
ach~eved
_
.
_
Bart,of W orthy L ecturer Mr s Guy F..
·
sult. · Yellow birch sap1ings r£!acb-' 1
let t.
·;
tbeHa.f~
,of
ceil.1,ng
to_
floor
from
~g
f
.
TI?e progra m _;vas _as foll?~S: ~e,
room w_e re set - in ,reg.ular spacl-n g
cept!on .to ~choo)'.' offi cials, t h~ in the
.~
1 ·· · ;fl
· · · ·h
·. · d
~ ·· · · d
,.,,,,e1vmg· lm e hem"? Mrs Gu.v F . Bart .:
ar.oun . .1.,t . an across f .e . .s ~age,,
l.c.t(, ~fr. n.ua Mr::; n. J. Cla rk, Mr' 'rmd
th1e br:.a nch~s- oi ·-,. ea~h .. sapling,
inn; 1•·ra.nklin H. B urr, Mr a nd Mrs
,a::t?oye_~--~t8:lk of si~o cot.ni fr.QD:1 ·.1_2~
Walter Higgins,. Mrs H orace S. Cole I
to - 15 feet tall which was placed
·
and Miss -Madeline Townsend, Miss
In 'front-. •A ti·the. .b ase of each- ~01.:' /
.
P a uline Brock and Miss Adeline
was fea therY:°is~
uinn··:1:iius· forrtied
H ewitt, t eachers; pia no solo,· Mrs N.
'•
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· T ·.
·. ·
C. Tuttle; r eading, "Washin,g:ton
,:!
paragus. · · :h ~ ~9r.9_.-w.a1:J a.n e xh~_b•~-1
Crossing the Delaw~re,'.' F.tanklifr· G.
~il;
0.
(;!h~ffes_
P,f.
fi:tt
r
fa.
~he_
from
the
.
of
·:
Bend
the
Burr ; solos, "By
Iiams. Wild flowers in profusions;
River" Tinker a nd Tailor" and "The
ferns .a nd \1pink · hydtarlg~a s w¢re l
T.
Irving
Mr~
House,•~
White
Little
,I
used:' °"The "' exhibit . incl tided u
.also
-- - · Granville o { Yonkers, N . Y.; t alk on
-gralns;
riilt~h
l
,
vegetables
garden
'
White(;
al
r
Corpo_
Safety,"
"Highway
daftv product
grasses
herbs
state trooper from Shelb~rI1e Falls, fol¥ · • 1 • f3,
_ _ _ _ lowed by an ,open forum. Ice cream
~
~a~ned goods,. tlqwer~•. an. d . n. ee~l~~
, a nd cake were . served. Followi~g _is
.work. · •. Th_ere w ~s _a.l~o .• ~ :f!p.e ex- _,..,
, t he committee m .c harge: Mrs Arliss
}liblt . -b y the cl}ildren.-~which was ·
Cole, A. G. Ca pen and Mrs George
- - · _ given first"' CQnsidera tiori~ ·::: There
·- - IRuss~U. About •50 were pr esent. '.
, were exhibits · of · vegetables of
~ erit "fr9 w..,. -t~e fa~ms . of Vlct9r
Cliar l_e s Q . .Williams, CleB_!:l'nier,
-,-_
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~:,~ ~mt -F._; B~_rr ~nd_Me·rrick -Smith.
·
r;B.l!Lwa~d , ;- Clar~ of Hillcres t farm 1
, _. ;/, . : "
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i
it~
fr»
of
-~x.h~bit
qsom.~,
~
a
,a--~
..
~d
h
.
l!n_.
o
{i.'e.}&lt;h.
Sept. 12.-~-?r wi'.n~onif;~
,
Mr. and:·-Mf.s'f~~(ift o_n - - - ---&lt; sho~i~$' f ~O· :V~-t l~ties . -Of- apples .
1Monday t o
pears,
besides
farm
own·
.Ii.~.!!trom
.
:
·T hey·
1 Gamble of Hunting ton.\p,eaehe~ ·an9-~ ot1:1~! fruit s. · Potted
M.ll;ijf-:,,
grandsons of. ~r. and Mrs. _
-1
·-e ~ t~red by Sophi~ Roj e a,nd, 1
_Jp~ants
·
an-d:
,
·
.street
.R!.ghla~-d
•o!
Clark
ice
.J
--f
o
hy
~r.t
were
Bates,
Harry
·'f4rs,
great ~nd.so:n s of .MT. and .Mrs.
menti.on, and ~ _C hinese lily, w hose
/
•
A ugustus Vickery..
~otan~~al name is "Squh'mig eria ·•
_,
_
_
_
- - · - --, Mrs: i.ela'!l.d., P. ·C ole is .subst4tu-twas entereq by Miss H ele n F ogg •·
tng u Riverside· schooi
and was · of inte r est to a ll · a lso
.
. •
.
• ·k' e·di n
peas , a s fresh as 1'f pie
swe-et
Kil-,
_~
Charles
and...,, -MTS.-,,.,,_ Mr.~-•"_,.
}
i E T~ n-B
J• ~ -- -1'
d
Ed
- - - ·ttnd-summ er from M
• .a.a.J."111J!tn' '
,.u.OllrD,, - · ....L ..SS. ern ce
wa r J . '
r s.
•
GI k ' .
an-d, ffl:r. and Mrs. Merwin F .. Bao•
a~ , s, : princess plume fro m t h e
ar,f1lltt en1ced -Gt eentleld fairWe1l-·
of Miss Susan T. Rice, the
gar
• :::• ·
.t
~es'da,-.
"'111
e r bringi~g a lso excellen t Ii
t
t
a
· "Clinton .-~;F. Reacl-- w-l ll :drive ~ ioli,
d
a
Gl
.
Salp\lossis
of
ossoms
.
l.~;.
0.£.t.
g
n
Pl,
D
e.P·
b
.
e·,~
i
.B.iD.ail;.
dahlias; astere, zinnias and many
.~
. ,, ..:..... .
•
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- _ ,,.,
.
__ __ _________ __ . othe r _:ft9w~~rs added a br'ight n o te
~
arietJes
y
ve
of color. Sev.e.n.ty-fi
wil d fl.ow ~rs by ' Walter Higgin s,
priz~.
__ ~
won__,___
cl!°.:.!
-,
. . . - in its class . .
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WORTHINGTON

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Judges were : Mtss Mai'Y .l:'ozzi and j
Allen S. Leland of the Hampshire ,
County Extension Service, aD d
Harry Ford of Dalton. A guessing contest, as to which contained ·
the most seed, a big golden Hubbard squash or a small "Patty
Pan'' summer squash proved to be
the latter, Wilbur T . Moore of
Huntington, guessing the exact
number, 265. Many of the grains ,
grasses, herbs and corn have been
taken to the Eastern States for exhibition . A dance at the Lyceum
hall later in the evening, for -which /
Ii Bates.• orchestra played, completed
the program. _ __ _ _ _ _

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WORTHINGTON

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Clase 10-Best collectfon of
w'ild floW!ers: ll'it,. WaUer:Hlggins,
Jr.; 2nd, Mary P. Burr; _ 3rd,
.Mrs. Fred Sear.a.
Plass .11-Asters, Doris, Shaw; 11
zinnias. Mrs. Leon Conw.e ll; ca•l- ·
endulas, Mrs. -Ner1Rn F,'. Packf ard; cosmos. Mrs. Hera-ce S ..
Co1e; marigold, · Miss Strean T,.;
-rue~; . nmrturUum:s, M:Fs. Hora-ee I
S. Cole; da-hHas., Mrs. ·Merrick_ I
J smlth~ dahlias,. Charles . Leslie; ~
I gladioli, Mrs. Cha.des Grangex; .
1
poppies, Mrs. C~rles O. Wtll- /
. lams.
•
' Class 12---Any article not cov- .
ered . by ·other classes: 1st, peai:s,. ,JI
3 -varictfes, .Arthur G. Capen; J
squash, Lela.nd dole, Jr.; mapJe .
sugarf
Mrs, :P.ferritk
Smit:b;_
grap,es and . :-black.Qerries, Victo.r v
Bernier; ap.ples, 30 varietiesy· Edward -J. Clark; ·c abbage, J.ohn,
Jarvis;
muskmelons,
Ralph
Smith: calce; Hazel Parish; beans ,
_, l'ifarie ·G ranger; millet, Ma:r:ie
. .Granger; sw:eetpeas..,.Mrs. Edward
· J. Clar,k; salpiglossis, Mrs. Lepn .
Conwell; prin.c ess phime, Miss -. --, Susan ·T. Rice; potted plants,
Miss Sophie Roj-e; collection of.
_) needlewor~, Mrs. M. ' F. Packard; -- - bed set, · Mrs, Merrick _Smith; pin '
cushion; i\ifi i:is . "lsie V. Bartlett;
pressad flowers, Ruth Parish; .....
- ca-n_dy;tuft, Doris Shaw; · petunias, '
'. Mrs.· M. F:'• .I-'ackard ;' braided t~ble 1
. m_atp . and rugs, . M~s •.. H. S; Cole: r
- hooked rugs, Mrs. · F:r.ancls,...Kobin- r --. son;. pine n~edlewor.k, ¥ h ...JiorJ ace,;,,&lt;3ole.f_-,croche t; 't;ttUn~; tray, _\
Mr.s. Harold Parish; n.eed-lework, - - - -- Elsi~- BarUett; center.'.p, iece, Mrs. :
, Francis ~obinson; ch.inese lily,
Miss ·Helen Fogg.
· Seco:pd pfize, class- 1·2!:.- -Pears,
.C. F. Burr. and so~; . pie, Mrs.
Francis
R-- '.n~n :-;.- tomatoes,
, Mr s. H : O:: PQrter; cucu mber,
·Mai y Burr;. . sal_piglossis, Mrs.· E.
· .])~ C\ar,~ ;_ P.6 tted plants, Mrs. H ari vey,_~ates;
sweetpeas, Mrs. Mer- I - --- r!ck S~ith; ap~llque, Mrs._ Mer-_~
nek- Smith;
- ·
Third prize, class · 12- ·P ears, - -- · --- '' N. S. Heacock;· fudge, H a zel Par- I
ish; . squ..1.sh, Mar.vis Snyder. ._ j
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.Prizes Awarded at Grange Fair
Sept. 13·- The following is · the.
ltst o-r- · pri~es awarde.d at the,.' ~
Gra;qae agrtc.u ltnral exhibit .
the ·town .•hJ.11 Frtclay, -evening,; I
·sept.- 12. Si,ecial prizes .. (:3) for ·.
--quallty and-tbe .most polnta: .
-1
First a:weepstakea ribbon · and-.,
$ 6 in :gpld, -M rs. Merl\lck · Smtth;
·3 3 points.
·
Second sweepstakes . ribbon,
Mrs. · Horace S. ·eo1e; 28 · points.
·Third . s.w eepstake ri;bbon; Mrs.
c. o. w.nuams; 1-9 points;
Best collection -or vegetables: :- ,, 1st, ·y-tctor ·B~i:~ter; 2·Ird; (}Qarle..s_ ·" I ·o. Wltllams1 3rd;: Merrick ·So;1l'ffi;-.-·
~st ·collectton of fr).lits: 1st,
- - - , E. J • . Clf!rk; 2nd, Mr~. Horace s.. ,_
Cole.
Best collection of farm gi:ains: ·
1st, Mr,s. Merrick Sm~t-h ~ "'2n·d , , C. 0. Williams.
~
Dai-r y: 1st, Mrs. Ho·w ard · Brew,.st~r_; ~.ndr: -~rs_. H .. G. Porter.
Class ·• 4-Best collections of
canneq goods: 1st, · ~rs. . G:eor-ge
, Tor_rey, Jr.; .2nd, ?t{-rs. · charles
·- - -, Granger; 3rd, Mrs. Fred· Sears.
f-- - - - .;'-:\
;--,
Class 5-Best dozen. pears: 1st, l
John Jarvis; 2nd~ C. O. Williams;
3rd, Spencer Parish. :
·
Class 6-Best iialf,pk . .p9tatoes:
1st, Marie O:ranger; · 2nd,· John
- - ---1··Jat"'vis; 3rd, Mrs. Merrick Smith, .
Class 7-Best fruit jar of maple .a:rrup.:, 1st, Sven&lt;~er Par!sh;2nd; Mrs. Winfred Drake: 3rd,
- -- -'- Mr-s. C. 0. Williams.
\ --•- -Class 8-Bcst collection of .gar•
d-en annuals: 1st; Doris Shaw;
2-nd, !drs. Me~win -Paekard; 3rd,.
John Jarvis.
, ,
·
Class :9-Best collection Qf
per~my.al.s: . ht;. Ml$s N. s. Hea-1,
coc1E; 2-n d,. •Mrs.:.. H. ~- ~o~ . ----'' - r · - - -- - - -

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. FR IEN DS AN D NE IGH BO RS

oFDk,

CONWELL HONOR MEMORY

✓..µ:--2_1-4_3p

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- - : ~ anora~ ,n of the out~oo r_se11v-if~ i n
Worthin_gto~ fn )Jl; : ; , ~~ ~i~ ;h~~~ n:;- part
,,£ the great gath ~~ing with Rev. ('..
::Smith of Gra11hy ~ (stand in g m ro.ad)', offeni'lg the
ded1ca ~on pra!! ::J

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~~~~~~n ,l WSi!1J:ist of (;riH· c Memoria l Cbur-cb . .Pliila} ~phia, i

1ij '

' -- - - - services .·- -- -singing £avoritc hymns of Dr €onwell at the outdoor
M
C 1'~lliott, C. .
. Lef~ ; ight: Gr.or~e A. Schl!.ffte~~- B. G. Woocl,
- - -- - -- Christin e and J. Mnrvin -Hanna; c,r1umist,r· - - -- - - - - -

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:-Ifa-;:vey &amp;Cre,-s ma;;-;~;f H. L. Je.nkin~, tru~ces of the B11pti, t TernP.le q,f .fhi!•d!!lphia ~

_ __ _ !ta nd ing lie8ide ihr. memorial :~ith the wreoth tb~y placed there in me m_ory of Dr. Conwd r'- - ---&lt;

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grimo &lt;1augnti;r, ancJ 1.,aro1 . 1.,ut hay
unveiling tb11 memotial tablet.

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Exe rcis es
Con wel l Des cen dan ts f).t_

;2~:lt,-,.t.k.~

... ·• •· ·• .· ··_::::idif: :; :;~: ;: : l~~i= f

ica li on se rv ices i ii 'South J
Desce ndan ts of Dr. Co nwell pr esent at Ili c 111e111orid table , cl ecl
; turer , and Co nn er m,a yo~
11i orth inglo n. Leff to r i,:: ht : Leon Ma rli n Conw&lt;' ll , son of th e fa m ou~
IVirs. N ima Co,i w~.I Tuttle:,.
·.and
~ r:,ndchilcl ~
of s;;;,e.'.v i lle '._ Miss_ Ag;, es Co n well, ~ ha d es
a nd Ca ~ C:a thay Tutt i,:, grcat-gra ndc!aug ht c:-r ·or Dr. Cop well .

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hia·,
of Tem p!:j Univ ersit y, Philad"'l;
Dr. Cha ri;'E .B;~ ;Y, pre-~ident
.
H.]
ell
~uss
Dr.
of
e
J~ .the- ta blet marki;1 g rhr.. hiith pia-c
_ _ _ ____ _ _ stnncliug !1esi,
ell , fou 11der of Tem ple Univ ersit y.J

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. WORTHINGTON

-WORTHINGTON

Worth ington, Sept. 16- -Dr and Mr&amp;
Wortb ln!fton ~ Sept. 22-M rs, Harry
, Havla n Creelm an, who ha d spent s ix
L. Bates gave a bridge party at h er ,
1 week s at th eir summ er h ome here
home Friday a~terq oon irt celebr ation
turn; d !Oday to their homd at Auburren,
of the birthd ay of hev niece, Mias
N. Y.
.
.
.
Bernic e E . Kilbou rn. Two tables were
~liss Bessie A. Ames is entert alnmg
In
play •rJ:ie ftret prize was \yon b y
h e1 cous m, Mlss H elen Brown ot
Mrs Lelan d P. Cole and the conso laB~:1\on. N
L
h
f
tion by :Mlss
• ss . an cy
ap am O L ongw ere s'e rved KIibo urn.· R efresh ment8
;:1~a dow ~•spen t t h e weeke ~d w lth her ',
Miss Adalin e Hewit t, teache r of the
u 1t, Mlss J os ep hme Hewit t. ,
Corne Jischo ol halll--re slgned her pos iD av ,d Mc Ewa n, 4- H club m ember . I
--, is exh ibiti ng Gu ernsey da ir y cattie. at
•
tion . d _has ta k e~ o11e· . 1n H ay·d e n'•
th e Eas t~rn Sta tes expo s ition. . Marie
,I
vlll!J. Her place Will be fllled by Miss
Gra n g'ef·-ot w est Worth ington is ·'also I
Ellzab ~th Lafay e _of Not·th Adam s.
exhibi ting ·a Guern s ey ca.If.
·
L--- ___ _ Th eodbre Wazn
lak of Cold street
Dr a nd Mrs J Ross Steven son ot I
broke his elbow yester day aftern oon
P rin ceton, N,•; •J ., t'orme rly of thls town,
while: riding a bicycl e. Dr Franc is
a r e recove ri'ng from 'injuri es reoei ved Ii
.A. Robin son wa:s _c,i.lled and took the
- , in an ·:autqm obile accide nt . at Prince - - - - - boy to . the Dickin son hospit
ton, Augus t 30. Mrs St evenso n, who ,
al in
North ampto n.
r eceiv ~d a n injury to h er ~spin:e, exRev
and
Mrs
,J
itmes
H. Burck es
peels, l:109..n t o leave t he hospit al.
. •- - - - - ~ will leave .-soon"' foi, _h Vb weeks
The• F.rleud s h ip guild will h old its
vaca-,
tion. , Rev John '\Vi.gh tmore ofNo
weekly b r idge pa rty with -Mrs Leiand
rth'ampt on· will- suppl'y the pulpit SunP . Cole t om orrow _nii;ht· instea d of in
day.
•
.
the &lt;1,ft eruoon . ·
·
_ _ _ _
~' rankli n : G. Burr left yester day to ,- __
_
,e'
n
ter
the
Massa
chuse
tts Agric ultura l '
~ •
....,..-~ ~ '
·
' colleg e at Amhe rst. • .
Mrs _Gµy.
_. Bartle tt. had as her
___ .
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-1-- ---- guests on · S.u. Fndl!,Y
M'.r and Mrs Doyle
,
-' ~ ·.
·
·,
·.
·
·,
.
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and
two
, . W ortl1\n g ton, Sept. l9-M rs E tlv;a,r ~
childr en
·Mrs .John Doyle
and daugh ter ot'and
;r. Bligh and ·son and Wife, Mr and} Palme r' , and he
·
h
.
.
Bligh'; w ere · in tov.ln ' yes-.;
.
1 Mrs " Alv in
·
.,.,
. ~
I mot_ er, ,Mrs Li_lhan M~she r,,
l'terda y a nd toda'y as the g u ests ot Mr '
of Tw:_net s ,, ~all!{: , who is_ ~!ayi11g .or a tew.
~ana Mrs John Frissell. , Mr s' ;BJitm. and ·
·days _visit.
-.
, ::
' p er son -are-fo rmer r esiden ts w.ho\ liave
,. '."1~ a nd Mrs Sidney ...P'.'-ckard of
- - - .b·e en spend ing th e past -; flve
years in \
· Willla msbur g atill t~eir childr en and 1 -,
,.St Peters burg, Fla.
___ _
,. . .
_
.i grand childr en, includ1hg_ Mr a!!d
, The Frienq ship g uild h eld . a bridg&amp;·1
Mts
, M.. F.,_ Packa rd and ch tldren_ of this
.
rparty last evenin g a t the home or'¥r sl ___
_ _ _ town, , held - a clamb ake today
~~ L eland P, Cole with five tables . 1.n .p lay..
at
.T owers _ledges . There "':'ere 2&amp; presThe first prizes were won by },:lrs •H.
,ent.
•_
The
clamb
ake
was
,
in ch a rge ot
1t,, Gratt -ot AsJ;ifle l&lt;J .,anq :\\'{r\l pu'y "'.F.,
[Walt er H . '.l;'ower.
·
Ba rtlett, and tlie consol ation · 'by : Mrs
,
· Lafay ette lodge cl0:.4i!d this morni ng Ij
- - - · Arthu r Packa r d
As'bilEO.d: iffid Mrs - - - - - for ·the . season
.
Da ni ~!- R . Por ter. . ·The next •mee\i ng
- - - -- . ' David McEw an, 17, son of Peter
will be· held with Mrs Charle s /L ' Kil-·
McEw
all:
at
this t own, who won
bou rne Tl;lurs d a y evenin g, .,the -25~h. :
.
4-H club prize at the Ea'lte rn Sta t esa
For d Martin left · y esterd ay•..to re-r
exl;los
ition
last
· 'Wee k on his exhibi t ur n to Corne ll univer sity, where he
,
tlon at ·Guern sey da iry cattl e, also was ;-- - - Is a studen t .
··
·• · . .
.
the winn,e r or a free trip to St Louis
Mrs Ola Grang er· of Torrin gton, -Ct., -! ___
__
where, he will exhi bit at the , Nation al
wh o h as been spend ing a few days I
D
a l~y show Octob er 11-19. An other
~with h er brothe r anu his wife, }.,Jr and i-l-H club prize w inn er was Walte r
Mrs Augus tus Vick er y, left last night
·Grang er, son ot Mr and · Mrs Home r
- - ---+ t o, return t o h er hom e~
.
. _ __ _
1
_ Grang er ot Highl and street
, who won
. Th e paren ts or g ua r dia ns of
,all pu.!
s econd and flfth prizes on Holste in
,.Ptls in t h e sch oo:s of . t h is town
dairy cattle at Brock ton fair, thwd
_
finvl t ed t o com e to_the J&lt;' red,et'ick '•s.areJ
a rnnd _flfth prizes at Eai,t e rn States
g~nt H untln. ;ton llbra r)f Monda y· eve -,
- - - - po.!litio n, a. meda l for se condt exn '. ng , wh ere a r ecep tion , t o th!l t each- ,.
bes
ishow
ma n and a free trip t o S t L ouis
a nd a ll _scb
offi cia ls w ill be h eld •,
I.wher e h e ,..1 ,- n udll
w it h s oeak 1nP ool
"I f- ,,, ro

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\\' orthin gton . Sept. ~3- The pa rents I,
or ;;uardians of pu pils In the schools
met J::tst evening at the FL·ederl ck
. ~argent Huntington library wh er e a
· ,,eceptlon- .was . given to the teachers
~ d scl1ooi offlcinls.' n.ev -James Hf
Burckcs In a brief address of welcome '
urged school and home to mal,e use
of t11e library s peak ing of the bool,s
as their fri1mds wh ere ea ch mii;-ht
find help or entertainment as needed;
Moving pictures were shown.
Miss Olive Ni el · - Columbus, O.. who
has been s pending the season a t h er .
s'ummer cottage left yesterda y to retur n to her home.
·
'
·l
• Miss Susan T. ·Rice is spending a i
· f,ew days In New York •c ity.
"

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Worthington, Sept. 25-Miss Aman- '
da Pease, one of the oldest residents
of the town, quietly celebrated her ,
92d birthday on Tuesday. Miss Pease,
who does all the hous ework for · her
brother, George Pease, is in possession 1
of all her faculties and Is-' Interested
in c1,1rrent , events, reading the daily
papers . . She received many gifts and
cards from neighbors and friends. Her
spending a ~w da ys with M'rs Pre~ton I
brother, Charles B. Pease and wife of
1
Geer at West Worthington. ·
:
Hartford came for the occasion and
- - - - -Rev and i',frs J a mes H. Burckes' · -- - - presented her a birthda y cake decoha ve adopted a baby girl to be called
rated with her name a nd dates. Many
~ Pfiscilla Ellen Burckes. Mrs · J . W.
friends called during the d:i'y.
Bu rkes of Waltham·' Is visiting her
l\liss. Elsie V. Bartlett Is visltin;; her
son, Rev James H. Burckes.
· 1- •.,
--, sister, ~1[ ~ Les~er C. Le Due In Ch~c •Miss Marjorie G. Bart1ett has rr- __ ~--·------- ----terfield,,,
- -- ·~··,..•,_._,.
turned after spending a few days with
.. L.. -friends at Jamaica, N. 'Y,
The Friendship guild held a bridge
I party Thursda y evening at tliJJ home
• of Mrs Charles A. Ki lbourl,' First
------ - - - -prize was won ' by Mrs George E. Tor-·•·
rey, ·!r,, and cohsol,a ti on · by Mrs
. Ma urice Clark . . The g uild will hold
·
a11other bridge party at t he born e of _
- · l\lrs Kil bourn Thursda y night.

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Have Double 'Wedding
Worthington, Sept. 29-A double
wedding took place Saturday evening
at the home of Mr and Mrs K. J .
Wlttherel -at South Worthington. The ,-two couples were Herbert E . Dawson
and , Miss Viola J~quinto and Loyd
Conde and Miss Eva Gertrude Kim- I
ball of Schenectady, N. Y. They had .
licenses to be married In Worthington,
but as the, reside~ minister was oi'I a ,
vacation they · had to call Rev Irving ~
Childs of Huhtlngton, who performed
the slilgle-ring ceremony and they
left by motor for Pittsfield. •
•L
_ _ ,1 Miss Elsie V. Bantlett is s,pending a
few .days with Mrs Myra Stevens at
Stevensville.
Among the Sunday guests in towri _
- - - - , w·e re Miss Marion Bartlett, Miss Edna '
Marston and Miss '- Hazel Bot tu me of
Springfield, and Mrs Mabel Coyne /
Derrickson · of Tacoma, Wa sh.; 1 who - - ·
was a · tormer t eacher At the Corners
school. Mr and Mrs George Jasper and
family of Springfield, were at their •
summer home.
.
John l&lt;'rissell of Wprcester, s r.. .ut
the week end at his home at t.ht.: '
, Center.
·
·
:
There will be_no' service at the Cop- ,
gregational church ·sunday.
· Mrs Augusta Vickery has return ed
- - to her' home on Hig)lland street after :- -

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W or thing ton. oc\. 1-vVor t llilll;~on
...:
Gi'ruige Meets
Grang·e ·met at L yceum ha ll la.s t :,:ii., ht
Oct. 2.-Worthl ngton Grange,
with ~ llddl ef!eld officer~~ _flUlne, th e
No. 90, met at Lyce.u m hall _on
·cha i-l's. A roll-call of patrpns present
:Tuesda:Y"· eveti1ng, -Sept. ; 3 o, ,.wltb
f showed a . tie between Middlefield a nd
·-· lli'lddtefield officers filling tlie
Worthingto n, each havln~ 29, The~e .
chairs. A roll .c all of patrons preswere three visitors from Pitts field. T e
ent showed a Ue between Middle. lite rary prot;-ram in charge of the
·
' worthy lecturer of Middlefi eld Grange
field and Worthingto n, each hav. consisted of vocal s olos by Miss .Jes- ,
Ing 29 members present, and also
sie P ease, a rnonolog by Mrs . G. &lt;?Ids,
tha_t ~here were tJJ.ree visitors frgm
current events by Mrs Brecklnbrid ge 1
- ~ -, Pfttsfteld. The· literary program In
and a short · sketch. ·
·
·
charge of the worthy lecturer, HelWeirthingto li Grange • ls Invited · t~ .
en Olds, of Mfd_4Jetleld·.Gr ange CO]l·attend the regul~r mee~ing of Chester
slsted of vocal. solos by Miss J ess!e
field Grange Friday mght when Les.
. ,;
,lie R. Smith will show pictures of ·hl!i Pease, a m?;'1ologµe , . Reading Jhe
, 1 trip to the national Grange meeting
~11wspaper, by Mrs. G. Olds, c~rl at Seattle.
rent- events by Mrs. Breckenridge
Mrs Wilbur EddJI: . of Michigan is
and a short sketch, "'.l'he· Danger - visiting her· sister-in-law , Mrs Walt~r
Line." Refreshme nts were served
H. Tower. ,Mr~ Eddy ls a former resiby.Worthfn ....to'n Grange. T·he Wordent. of Worthmgto n.
,. ·
· · ·0 • .
·
Mr and Mrs Walter H. Tower/ en-. 1--- - - - , -l!;lgton Grange fs fnv!ted • ,t o at- ,- - -· - ·
tertained Fred L. Graves ye~_terday. . , ,
: nd the regular_ me!ltlng «&gt;,! ChesMrs George E . Torrey, Jr., and Mril
_erfield Grange on. _Frl~ay, evenFrancis A. Robinson- are visiting at
ng, Oct. 3,· ,vh~n. i;.eslfe )!: Smith
Boston.
-· - - - - J!f lladl~y.; will.show · pictures . of
t-rli&gt;'.'to:t!}e ·:.Na'Uonal- Gr!'n·ge fn
lseattle; . · · · •· ,. .
.· · •~--,~- ·.. - J .Mrs: W!lbur Eddy·of Micnfgan 'iii
&gt; _. ..u-·.
~er' si~ter-11;1.'-Jaw,. -. Mrs.
·; . ~
,Wa-IJet ~- Tow:er. Mr!J; Eddy Ii! ' a
.
_ _ _..,....._ ___ _,__ _ _
_ foi;w.er rel!!&lt;f~!!_t of Wortl!!Pg;t on, •
-· ,...-T
-H
-:
~
Mr. arid -Mrs;-'. Walter H •. :Tower
I
+--- - - - "ntei:talned
Fred L _- Graves iit·
,. °' . ,----,-.~
p~~st_erfleld and Worthingto n on J: . _
- --'\_ Worthinitto n. Oct. 2-1\fr• N. 0. 'T"t ·
Tuesday, Sept. 30-. . .-.
·
1 -JJ ) tie · has as her _guests, her aunt, Mrs '
•. ;Mr. l!,Ild
rs. Eqgene Surette of
.;:r , · /phn Sanbo~, . of Los A!)geles, Cal.,
;Wakefield ~sited friends in town
and her co1;1sm, Mrs Harriett Gerrish,
__ _
-J on :Wedn"sda y
,-. - - -- - "bt Cambridge. ,
✓ .
·
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•
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,
_The , Women's . Benevolent 'f.!t~ety
: 114r~- George E. Tprrey, Jr., and
\ will meet on Wednesday, th&amp;'•Sffi, With
,Mi:s .. Francis A. Robinson are vis_"lf
' Mz:s L~ter Stev~ns tor the flr!l~t ~IF -- -- ~_fting ··rriends in Boston. .
- ,,
ay se~mg meetmg of the season4: •
MI's, Guy F. Bartlett has been
-""•W~Iter Tower s)lot a 15-pound ~ n '
s
end.in
·
·
' last nfght, ..the flr,!lt ot the sea.son
-P . g a f ew d ays with relatives
be kiUed ln·.thls town.
, . . . . , - -· - ln,.'] 'u1ners Falls.
. ,
1 Mrs Myra .J. ,steven&amp;· wlll' leave Fri-•
·
day to spend 10 qays with ;, her·,,daugh.'~':i:Y~rs .Ju·dso~ Rogers,, of, West Rox-,
Icicles one inch thick .and four' o'r
(
llre inch:~·- long were found ha~1glng\
ft9.m t-he watering trough at Stevens.
~
e this_~ ~
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·Frlim,d ship Guild :ME!ets . .
- -, -rortb ini;ton, Oct. 6-Mi ss Franc es
.., 8.-:--The· ~riei:i;!l;slllp Ou~ld
Oct
.
E. Cheney of Ch e:5cen t street, North -·
. Mond ay ev.en ing ·at the ho:me
met
at
ght
fortni
a
mi;
spend
ampton, ls
- of, Mr-s . . Harry w. 1aoll\aon . . ,T h'i
?.~iss Bessie Ame's's at th e Cente r
. w_9r)cin~ hour ·vias •.~Pent . m~Iµnt
vil~~; t Mer win F. Packa rd gave a
I
~cr~pbooks . f~r- ch,11.dr.e~ _. to b!;put
•
r•.j
ch ildr_r n·s par t~•. a t her ho.m e yeste L _ - - -\7}\ a.,Chrlstma_s box for, :•.home·rnts•. _
the
____ ___, day aftern oon rn celebr ation ot
s!ons-. Devoti!)ns, 'Ye;e_ led by ·:P,frs:- 1~
fo urth birthd ay of her little· daugh ter,
~
'.Harry •W. Mollison and-the educa
,
.
-Elsl✓••eV:.jJ ---"lii
Shirley, , ·
by, . ;,Mi.s!I
·.rairt
iog
p
·
l
t"citia
arn
enter~
.
will
:·...,
ns
. .·
M,·s Leste r Steve
---- - - 1 ... •· . , ,
.,
soci ety ·C;
-- - - • the Wom en's Benev olent
Bar,q~tt. ~ ·l~t~~~-:f_ i:~m. :':-'(.•".P,j~l-_atoI Wedn esday at her home for an ~I\- .\i
ton, ,of t~e . :U~!a:Jl.d,s · say
Jihar
day meeting.
crium , PlelJ;sant :·H1lJ, .Te)ln ., was 11
Mrs Lilian Most-er who has been ,
1
ri a.4 ,thap.:ktng•.t~ ~ '. ~~i.(!l f,or,b ~pies ' 1,.....;_.
F.•1
g her da ughte r, Mrs Guy _
-- - - _J vis iti n_
clothi ng; -tecei ved;-, ,;;An, intere sting
Bartl ett: fo r th e past two weeks i e'S:-~:H eac'i)c k'
r:'.·: i-foiif . :M(ss'Jleff.'
ri\etfe
.
iii' ·, G. lld
-t
turned yesterday to Turnerrs ,Falls
...,_
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m St
OUn,_,~_l;!! · O . e· u_· ,.-,
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She will spend the winte.
9,_._.,}
_
e
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P etE)rsb urg, Fla.
;md a, mem bet, .wli'fi·. ts !!Pendiu,g~a
Mrs F. W. Bement of North amp- •
_fw:o
~bfOII:~; was, ~Iso read. Mad.~
,y:ear
14
of
rty
pa
r
,
to~ enter tained a dinne
cha;rg e: of M:iss
·:tn.'
tests
_!con
_
___
"The·
home,
er
- - .•~ Fr1da,y at h er summ
,Wer1 ~·WU;Cli .enj,oy~b-' _ _ _
nd
#:rls~
o
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ili~'e:Old Mill," in Stevemtvllle.
land/ tlref:p i:fzes •'w&lt;i~ .;lff• Miss Mai~
Cle~ ent F. Burr has retu,rn e~ after
l)'etii
fo:-1fahlett and ~-'Mi ss 'Eliza
l~of
r
his son, __
, _ ; ., ,_ _
al _da)'.S with
spend,u~g sever
~- .· . . . · , -. . .,.... .. --toi:i,,
thamp
Eas
m
I~
&lt;!i
Bu1r,
.
H
eerv~
-- - Frederick
T_orrey . · :Refte~hl!l~nt~ .were.
and atten ding the Three-County fair
Mrs.',Haro ld Hatli were
sses
Hoste
at at Nortb ampton.
Ha,'rry.,::Molifsoii : ,; _.:
·ll:n:d Mrs:
, JI.
· , -~,;,,,,.. · _ .. · :•Lincoln Bartl ett of Sprinttgfield
·
,::-•;,.
__
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_.
___
___
·,
this
o!
son of the late .Ames Bartle
ge •/ p'a rh -, wifi
.:brfd
:
iil
u
G'
e
Tb:·
,
day after
· \t
•
town, .was in town yesterand
.
d
·
·
t
I
called
years
an absence of 25 rs's
mee ·.. Thur s ay after; noon_;at .2.~ 5
I
used
he
where
Towe
L.
at Henry
witll _:~is~ ,¥-~r;~p1:_ie .~ ;,} 3arpe tt. l"F
.
- ·- - -• to live as a boy.
Da-v1d Mc'.)llw.an~ . an.d · , Walt er.
coon
l
annua
um
Arcan
The Royal
~er, ,~:q:Q\y.oxf '4fJI;·clµ_b _pri~~s
9!an
to
rd
.forwa
looked
. suppe r which Is
dairy . c:i,ttl~ .,.. at ' the _· Easte ri(
on
_
____
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severa
by
ed
a.ttend
and
every year
State's. 8XPQSitii&gt;n '.w-hich ) nc;luded a· -,•· ~ _
hundr ed pe_ople will be held on Sat-, II
the_,. Na ti_0_11.al Dairy_
.
to
·trip
.free
ette,
!,
.,
Lafay
.
.
at
..
·
25th,
...
.
_
.
urc'lay evening, the
lodge.
show · at · St Louis Oct 11-19, - exhib it, left .today
,
_ _ _ _ wh~~e, they..
f1~1:1i
'for ,·!be ~t (·i~ . in .co·m{lan,y with 't t:,o
op1er b_oys .from · -Ham pshire coun1
arld ··Harq ld W, 'Ea$t man, ··co~n •
,t:t.
1
-- - -- - -- a'. gen.L~ Th.e' Pack ard · Mo.f or
,club.
ty
' ;f
ialiy ha§' Jo,a{!ed' them a 'car ~o ~
~onjJ;
\
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stop_at. Blilf~
_ _ _ _ _______ ;- ,the .trip. _T ,\J.e -b_oys y,ill
Niag ara ·Fans on-th e ttip;
and
!a\o
I
D.-·9- \ ,
\. o'!lt and "at . Wash ingto n,
,,
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·.. comin ~. back. ·..
,-inbe
soon
.wm
lights
cic.
-Electr
---- .,
·- ---- -- - stalle d in two niore house s at £he
)I I
Corne r vfllag e, . Mrs. Frank w.
Powe rs'- and Miss. Susan T · Rice's.-'
.· ·
1 The poles were set Mond ay:· · ·

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GTON

- -- ~ Worthington, Oct. 10-There . was a
! pleai;;ant gathering of the · Women's ·- - ·Worthington, Oct. 18-The Worn, Benevolent society yesterday at the 1
en's Benevotent society will
t
summe1· home of Mrs Lester Steven11 1
W
mee on
. . - - - with 17 ptesent. Cases were made to; ~- _ ~
ed~eaday with Mrs RaYmond Call
•the new silver recently purchased by
tor an all-day sewing meeting.
r--the society. A buf'tet · luncheon was I
Th.e Grange will observ:e neighbors' i
·served. Mrs Stevens had aa her guest
night at th e Lyceum hall tomorrow 1
-for the event Miss Ellen J. Bancroft ,.
_____ nlg:ht and will have as their guests .,
·of Chesterfield. Also present was Mrs I
I 1a nd fo rd• Westfield and Wllllamsburg I
rJohn Sanborn of Los · Angeles, Cal., ,
ranges.
.
.
,
who is visiting her niece, Mrs N. c. I
....,. _
, Miss Janette Otto of Butlalo, N. Y.,
- - Tuttle. At tne clo.se of the m~etlng ,_
____ and y _ls,i Catherine Hewitt of Pittsmany went outside to enjoy more· fully
\ field, , :vfho Itave been · spending the fr the extensive view now most .' Jeautiful
I suminer at Cloverly cottage, will leave
with brilliant autumn· coloring. The
Tuesday :tor PH~fteld, · Wit~ them
-~ next meeting will be hllld on. Wednes- - i ov'er the holiday were Mrs, ..A..-~ Hew- ,
'day, the 15th, with Mrs Raymond Call.
ltt . of Plttsfleld _a nd MJss Dorothy
The Grange wiU observe Neighbors'
' Hewttt ·-and ·Miss Floz:ence Chapln of •
night · on Tuesday evening at the Lyi Ca!llbrid~. .
··
~
- ceum hall with Blandford, Westfield f - -- - - .. •:The Loyal Lad!~ and, the Bruihan
i
and Williamsburg Granges Invited.
IJl\l ·council- of ·Royal Arcanum met
.: t Each Grange to furnl.sh 20 minutes b!
last night ·-at the Ly.ceum hall tor their
_
...:__ entertainment .
1----- - - regular meetings. . ·A chicken , dinner
I
The Center Brldge . club met last eve~
was served by the losing ·s ide \n a 1--- - . nlng at the home of Mrir John Frissell
milmbership . contest;
.
;,
and piayed two t'ables. The: first prize I
Miss F!LY Nell ot Columbus, 0., who
',
- -- --;· was won by Miss Josephine Hewitt 1
' has been spending the pa.st six months 1--- --'
· and tpe consolation prize by ·' Mrs ..Ar' !Lt ·Worthipgtc&gt;1i, -will leave tomorrow
, Jin Cole, It l.s planned to·' have ,:tlils
J SQr. Sprlng~eld. ~
·
•
club meet w;eeJdy at Mrs 'F r issell's:''
Sidney J. $:mart, Jr., ot Sprlngfte1d ·
- -- - -; Mrs · Richard s. Terry and Mrs Her- 1 - - - -- --l uf spending · the. week with
his uncle, I
fl
bert w. Oviatt ot MHford, Ct., arrived
Charles A. Kilbourn.
,
today and are overnight guests at
·John :F,rlsseU. , ot Worcester was at ~
/
"The Sp_ruces."· ··
· .
.· .
his· ho{ne here· for the week end, also
j
- -- --&lt; The gulld .' Jridge party met t}lls aftMr ·and . Mrs 'Cecil Simpson and two •
___ .
ernoon ·."'ith Miss Marjotle - Bartlett
children ·o t Worcester and Dr and Mrs
with three tab_les In ,Play. The . fl!,"~t
.John Gr~y .a t Stamtord, Ct., and •
prize was won by Mrs George E. ';ror;. ;
their niece, Miss . Margaret Bradley of
- -- - --1·rey, . _Jr., and._ ~he ,consolat)on prize ~1.
Brooklyn, N.·Y.
·- - -. Mrs Yi7:. E. D,rake.
.
·
· Mr 191d Mrs Herbert W. Oviatt of
L
__
-----=
.Mlltord, Ct., ape.gt th&amp; week end at l
t
Mrs Ray,mond Cali's.
· ,
The 'Guild bridge party will meet
.
with Miss Marjorie Bartlett Thursday
'
,a .tt!lrn~n.. • . ,
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WORTHINGTON

Mrs. Em·m ~ . Colt~!l, Mrs, J. W. /1
W~tk ins _ an(j Mr. }{jcks of SyraMi:. and _,!)1rs. Josep h
~ i cuse, ~- y.;
Russ ell and son of East Long mead - .
ow and Mr. a nd Mrs. Arth ur Herl
ron and party. of two from Eppi ng,
N. H :, were recen t gues ts ot · Mrs. ,
, :
Geor g·e Russ eli of the Ce_n ter,.
f;
n
;t,
.Ji
Marti
J?hn
Mr. ~nd
· son of N~w Btlta m, Ct., ate .vlsik'. 1cirJRer 's mot her; ,.tf?s. •l ;
·1 ing·'tire' jf_
,
, Com,me_tf.9r,19,.,l\1artin. .. - , . .
/
_ .Ul llol&lt;!_: _its L~irs.~. i}J.,.~ l·a:_.f.an't e w
--4 ,.;.- _T_
-; ~ hist •pi:t,fx ohh e seaso n t.bl~ eve- .
nin"g a:·t1 'M_r ~. . Guy\! ; .B~rlie_th : · '(

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Oct. 16.- Gue sts were prese nt
fr9rµ Bla,n dford , West field , .Willi#ns burg , .Cum ming ton , Pltts fi.e ld
ail'd: Hunt ingto n Tues day even ing ·
,at a neigh bors ' nigh t meet ing of
Wor thing ton Gran ge, No. 90, at
the Lyce um hal). Th-e roll · call
show ed tlie follo"Wing atten danc e:
:Blandford-, 17; West flela , 23; Wil-_
liam sbur g, 2; Cum ming ton, 2;
Pitt!iil:etd, '4';" High land . Gra'.iige 'of
Hun' tin,g'ton ,.- :4; Wor tn[ng ton, ·~,H!',' '
State Depu ty Char les Brnw n · ,of
Pitts field wa s prese nt and brou ght
the ,gieetinks: -0f th·e State Gran ge. Ir
Ther e ,were .also brief rema rks' by ,
mast er of the
.. 1Harr y. Talm adge ,
Pittsfieic;I. Gra_n ge_; Mr. Towl e, ~as:
ter of West ~eld Gran ge; Past..
Mast er Nye of Blan dford , Over seer
- - -· --- --- - --- Leon ~rd of Will iams b~rg arid Mr.
of
Jent
presh
,
Pom eroy of We'_stfield
-Mas ters' assoc iatio n. . At
1 the Pa~t
·mee thrn:, ~hi'c h _preness~
i· the bus~
"Cede·d . a::1).. e]tce-l l~iilr-'•\literaFy. .jlroa •· - ~
\ ·:gr,am';. ~_gi:v_e n·.. '. 1ir, ··; !he~.,-y.lsi tjng
'·'Gra ~ge_
l G~a,ngr~•,. t~t ":Wo rthip gton
I - - . - - -- -- 7 -;vote d ~q-·~i ye Jl,Q. to,y~ rd the ~duSt;:lfe
.t~e
·oJ
flW4
·
aJd
j catio nal ,
, Orange:.,, Yo'ted : to · b,old a specia:i
ng.e on Tues day
1 mei tinf A,t' (!!Jig rp._
c_o)}.fer. _th~ fir_:;t
t,-g,
:f,
2
_
Qct.
iqg~_
~ven
111£Jl\,·• ~_co.nfi deg-ree11 1.u&gt;on . thl'~e
- - - --- ·- - - - ---- --- --- -can'li1dat~~; ' .Nlis_s ', El)efi · _L af4 ve,
arid
l,
schoo
ner
,Oor
- , teacl ier in, th.il
-. Ml~§ ' ~i ~ri} (J1i(Il Wert rind·B;liY'.~
-;.i\
mo~:!f ·:J V!f~eJer ~ ~r .Ches ter: ·- The
,
_a ,- - - ~ _liter ary~' pr-ogra-m cons isted , ot f
df:ori
BJa'n
by
11Pil
. must-cal-, ; selec
•. Gran ge, j · r 'e adi~g . "T4~ ~foii ,and
the Moui,e.' '. bY... Jop.ri Breg uet of·
WHi ia.m sbu_r~'. . .qr.atrge; a / s.~f;)tch, 1'
Shuf fling· Sa~- from -Al'al}iL'm,''. :bi
B·lan dford Gra:nge; r readi ngs, A.
Smac k' in ·tiie .Sctiool .aild -~ "Radio
'. R ecip ,,' eiJri!1-zi ~reg u~t ) f 'Yik ',
--- - - ~.:, . ·; i.t 1.:i.UI1;fi.11 ~~fJ-,
1 ,lia~ s~- f~ ,., ,;.G l~'D:,%
"'
..... ·ske:t.ch, Q;!1 -t'3 4~J1dfor,q Grn ~Jii~:•Qlan,
doljn !iel ~,etfd ns by,_ Tom .lila~yer. ,of .
Wes tfield ; 'who ca:11s him's.e.it , a :re~. ,Mark: Twa·i:n'e
vised : editi on
tions ' oy the ~
selec
l
·vo$)a
d
Tom, arl
"Agony 'T,r io'.' of West tleld .cyan ge_. ·
· - - - -R efres _~ men t11 were served,by.:.'Wor,-- - - -thin gtQD G!]l~ge, .

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Oct. 18.-The fall meeting of
the United Hampshire Association
of Co_ngregatlonal Churches and
Ministers for the west side of the
county will m eet here at the First
Congregational church on Tuesday,
Oct. 21. The morning session will
open at 10 o'clock with a devotional service led by Rev. S. Dale Tarbell of Plainfield and a business
meeting following . ·A dinner at 35
cents a plate will be served by the
Women 's Bimevolent society at
-1 -2-. 3·0 o 'clock, The aftemoon me eting -wil-1--be in charge of the Wom-.
en'.s . depar.tmen t of ni.'i ssion. work
.wJth the ..de.votional ·service· led ljy"
+\lrs. J3a.s i.l P, ..Hall.:.. . addre·s s, : '.'Ari
Interpretii:Uon o( t J1,e .. . ~mer~G.~tl.'
·• 1-Indian of Today," by · Isaac ci-reyearth cit Flandreau, Sou.t h Dakota;
address by Dr. 'Ciara Nutting · of
China.
·
The Guild bridge club met
Thursday aft ernoon at th" home of
Miss Marjorie G. Bartlett witll
three tables in play. The first prize
was won by Mrs. Francis A. Rob- f
inson and the con!iolatlori prize by /
Miss Bernice_Kilbourn.
,
Miss Frances - . E. Cheney of 1
Northampton. who has been spe.n(\'.;•j
Ing· two· weeks at Miss. , Bessie.
Ames', left ·Thursday to return 't'o
her home.
.
Mrs. Myra J. Stevens left Friuay and -after spending a few :days ,_
-with her nephew, Harry Graves," of
Springfield will go to Rockford,
Ill., where ·she wi.11 be the guest •-for several weeks of Mr. 'ajid Mi:J!,
Webb .Stevens. , On .'her return ·she
.wili ..spend . the wintei;- wit_h , her
, · sister Mr.s. Ed Cole, of Highland
; street. ;._.
.
·
· · · :. ·
\ ,;r,-.Jie Grange _Whist tlub held its·
., first meeting- of the sea~OI). '.fhm;s_'day night W:ith Mrs. Guy F. Ba·rt:
lett and played five tables. ·Tb!3
-first prizes were · wo.n , by Miss
,, Mo.deil,ne- Townsend and Lawrence
.U-Mason ·- and. tµ.e consolation: prizes
by Mis11 ' Alma. Eitzory and Guy
_'Nelson: Prizes were aJso awarded
.to -those p.olding the hi~h~st and
lowest scores for l~st y ear, tne
, :first ,being won by tuii, Qlw,1:)es A'.
Kilbourn and. H. ·startley Col~ -and
tlle_ lpwe_st. PY Lel~nd ·p ·,_ C&lt;;&gt;i_e 1 : J~., .
1slr~e µ _o~ ~'-'--' _ :__

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Worthington, Oct. 20-Danlc J R.
Po,·ter had the misfortu ne lo saw the
firs t two fin gers of his right h and
yesterday while sawin g wood With a
'sw,ollne sawing machine fo,· Timothy
Swee tman. Mr Po,·tel' was taken to
tho Di ckinso n hospital at Northamp- 1,
- ton, where it wn.,. f01.lnd neccs~ary to
1·em ov e the first fin ger, and the s ec--o n,J fln1' cr at the second joint.
Th e United H a mpshire Associati on
of Congregation a l Church es and .Min/ ls te,·s 1\•lll meet lit the Flrst Congrc.f gatlonafrchuHih lomot·row at 10 a. m.
'the annual bear and cqon · supper
,....--- which l.~ h eld every year by Bashan
Hill co uncll . of Roy11l Arcanum and
wlllch draws a crowd o'f several huna
clrecl people, wtll be held on Sa:tut·da.y
. n!ght at Lafayette , lodge. I-t
be
.
,
followed by dancing.
The Gran.g~ wm _hold a s6·ec~ f mee tIng tomorrow night at ·Lyceum ha ll
for· the purpose of conferring ·degr.:ees
:I-Oil three ca11didates, The _i!econ-d degree ,till- be conferr.ect :bY the Williamsburg men 's deg~ee_team.
The Guild . Bridge clqb will meet on
Thursday· -afternoon ~t ' the home or \
l\,lrs · Leland P. Cole. .
'. ) '•,l.1;11_•, ,pre~lman,' (IJf ~ l.!D~f•n;
~pJp11,,ed , over ,,Fri~a_y ' to spend the /
week end with her sisters, the Misses
Rice.
.
,
.
f--Mr and Mrs Hiram Higgins, M r s
Luey Fowl er ru.1d daug-hter and M,·s
Elzin·a Perry, with Samuel Berguet of
. Go~heri, Ct., are taking· a motor trip - to" Flint, Mich.
'. l\'liss Elsie . v: Bartle_tt was gi ven a
· surprise- party tonight in celeb1;at ion
..'. 'of her "birthday at the home of h er
' sistei~. Mrs Leste1' C. LeDuc of Ches' terfleld. The guests incJ..4de-d.. Miss
' Marion L. Bartlett and Mlss Edna I ~
- - Mal'Ston of Springfield, Mr~ 'George E .
1T9rrey, Miss Ma ry Biso'ee a nd Dr
'\ Mary, Snook of Ch~lerfleld and 11.ft:s
Ralph LeDuc of Holyoke, , The crecos
- rations· of the ,dining room were .in•
\ pin)-, cosmos anu · pink crepe paper ·
being used: llfiss Bartlett r eceived
__many pretty arid useful gifts.
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�REPEAL OPPOSED
IN RESOLUTION
I~

Hampshire Congregational
Conference at Worthington
for Retention -of Prohibition Enforcement
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with a · devotion;! service, led by Mrs j
B. D. Hall of Florence. Prayer was of- j
fered by Rev S. Dale Tarbell • of
Plainfield. Mrs C. F. Luther of Amherst presided over the afternoon t - - meeting, and the addresses were given by Isaac Greyearth, a Sioux Indian of Flandreau, S. D., who spoke
on the American Indian of today, and / ·__j
·. Dr Clara Nutting of China, who spoke
I on her worl&lt; as medical missionary,
Th.e meeting closed with the singing
- ot a hymn and benediction by Rev '-·. A . .J ;1""pyer of Cummington.

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Worthington, Oct, · 21-A resolution
I in support of the "baby" Volste~d act
was adopted at the fall meeting of
- . - , the United Hampshire, .association of •Congregational churc'hes here today.
The resolution urged that all mem.
bers of the association vote ·no ·o n the
~
.·
·.
question of repeal of the act, as th~
Worthmgton,1 Ohct; : 123-Four candlquestion will appea
th b
dates fi;-om ne g bor ng, towns, Miss.
I!,
r on
e allot of
'
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state election, and that the influence _
Beatrice Vail Wert ai:id, Raymond
I·
of members be exercised to retain the
Wheeler of. Chester and- Miss Adeline 1~
--:c\ Ain second res?lution called for efHewitt and ·Miss Ruth Hall of Wll· or . accumulation of the ministers'
,- .
· · 1
11lamsburg, took t)le first S:nd second;
____ annuity fund-, and tqe third resolu_ tlon thanke~ t~e Wqr.thlngton church •- - - - ", de~,rees at the meeting of. t~e Worth-j
\ \
· ~~~ , ~~ hosp1tah~y, and .th,e women of
lngton Grange at the L.,vcuem hall
,
~
·-q~yolent so.clety for }~tdihp er.
~- - Tues\iliy night. _Miss ~le~ J,,a,fa:ve of /_ _ ·
- -1
· ' ~ R ev J . N:. Armstrong of the Edwa rds I
, this town a41,R,•,t~P~,:-th.~ ~egrJees. ?he ,
I
church, Northampton, was added to I
: ~r:t degree 'Yas · con~er~e_
d ;' ~Y. the
the · committee on mlnister'al
el'ef
1--_ _ _. 1 e.,ular officers aq~ t,he .\l.!fco~d . by the
1
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m~I}'.~ . ~eiree t~m , cit Williamsburg. '. - - --'---l
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The attendance numbered about 175. I
R~fr~limep.tlil w:ere served. T~ey will I
Winfred Forward 1of Granby, m9d- . _____, "~El the thlrd and ·rourth ·degrees here I
erator., presided over the business _
·
'i'uesda'y night.
· .
•. .
[.
meeting in the momin.g and reports
Mrs Guy F. Bartlett entertained 1l - J·
:
were read as follows: · Minutes of last
~"J.'pe . H:ungr'y . ·Dozen" at h'er home
1
r
meeting, Rev J. P. Manwell ot WilMp~day affernoo,n at, a st(rptlse··party ·
.
___ _ _
for credentials
_ _ _ tli; cele·b.ratloµ .. o( the .l;ilrtlida'y ·&lt;df ·her ·
:
, lia msburg, , ,,s,cribe:
1
j
committee, ·Rev John S. Curtis of En,si.ster-l.:i-la~ 1_M\11s·Jjll11ie . V, Ba,rtlett.
·
i'll. '
;
field; f?zl religious edµcatlQn &lt;;:ommii:,
Cards -'!"'ere ·; P~ed . a~d refres:1iment,s
',h
tee, Miss Glap,ys Hadley of North ~
w~ra;i ~r:veJ1'1~Mls_~ ·;:J3artlett was 'P,re• .1...... - - - ampton;
for the committee on mis.a,ntli4 ~,. J&gt;~t!!~\ &lt;&gt;f ·mone~ · ' ··
. ..
1
,sions, Rev J; A. Hawley ot Amherst.
\1:,,'f.her~·:.:Wl\l :~ a Grange dance
"'
""""-..:- - - 1
,Reports on the meeting ot the inters
./
:i;,yceulll.Jiall Frlda.y n!ghl;..- ~ates's
, national council held at Bournemouth
\g1:9hestra wi'll play,
. · · ,.
- - - -- . Eng., in the s'lu:nmer were most inter~
: ·M~s Wlnfreq E._Drake gave a.· chll- 1
:1
estlngly given 1:&gt;Y Mrs J. 'G, ,Nichols
.
~'.ens_party at ~er home Monday-eve"
of South · ·'Ha:d.;~Y, . official · aeJegate
mng m observance of the 10th birth.
/
, ,from the national' ·council; Rev C. M.
day ot her s!)n, Philip,
Sa:ngr_e e of, Cummington and Rev J.
G. Nichols. Three ministers who have
, r ecently come to th e district were admitted to the ministers' association.
They ' are Rev 'f. B. Bitl er !'.If th~ First
church, Northa mpton, Rev Mr Barnard 9f Ha tfi eld and Rev Almon J.
Dyer d l h c;ummington. Rev Ralph
-=
- - -- - ' Da nforth, ' formerly of Chesterfield 1--- -- - - -- - - - ---------..::..- - - - 1
was pismjp~ed to t h e Worcester as~
sociati?n:; iat' h is r eq uest. Dinne1: was
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served . !l,t, 12.30.
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WORTHINGTON

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O~t. 21-Leslle R.
Worthington
SmlPh of Hadley will give an addre..qs
lllu,.trate'd with motion pictures, at
. tho regular meeting ot the Grange on
Tuesd a y ·e vening, ti1e 28th at Lyceum
~
hall. The third and fourth degrees
will be conferred upon five candidates.
The ladles' degree tea m will confer the
-thirtl degree and the fourth will be
by the reg ul a r officers.
The Gullet brldge club met yester1
. day afternoon at the home of J\Irs Le- ·
land P. Cole with three tabl es in play.
The first prize was won by M4'3s Marjorie G. Bartlett, and the consolation
prize by Miss Bern~ce E. Kilbourn,
These meetings are · open to the public, the admlic&gt;s ion being · 10 cents and
the receipts Ul!ed for, home missions.
Miss Helen Fogg is the guest ot
Miss N. C. Tuttle at Squth Worthing~
ton. Mrs Tuttle has al so been entertaining for. a week Mrs ·William ·
•Str'lns·field of Philadelphia, who left
yesterday to return to her llome. ·.
'The Women 's Benevolent society Will I
meet on Wedne~ay with Mrs N.
.. Tuttle for a~ all-day sewing meeting.

~

Worthington, ' Oct. 27 - William
Granger of New Cana.an, Ct., Is In
, iown visiting his niece, ~rs Harry L. ·1
'.Bates, and his sister-In-law, Mrs .Ar·
- · thur Granger.
Miss Marjorie G. Bartlett I.a work'. Ing for h~r aurtt, Mrs Lester C. LeDue of Chesterfield. .
, Much regret la felt over the resignation of Miss Esther Wallace as Red
CroM' nurse. Her place will be taken
ln · a.bout a week by Miss Florence '

The -Grange whist club will meet
Wednesday evening with Mr and Mrs
Walter Smith.
The Guild bridge party wl.11 be held
. Thursday evening at the home of Mrs
.Philip Gurney In -A11hfleld.

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--- - - - - -- - - - - -- ·worth ,ng t on , Oct. 26 - ·Cha rles'
Gra nger of , V est vVorthington met
with a n unusual s e ri es of misfortunes
Frida y aftern oon wh en his truck in
whic h he was ridin g·, n ea r his home,
caught on fire from a short c it'cuit.
\.Vhile tryin g· to put out the · flt-e, t he
ca r started to back d own th e hill. J-l~
en deavored to g e t bac h: in to the · fll,r t o
stop it but the em e .-gen c y brake fa il ed /
to work, the car str u ck a tree and Mr
Granger wa s pinn qct in the door ot the r - - - -- -- - -- - - -- - - - -- - -- - - - -- - - cab breakin g two of h is · ribs . The •
truck was ba dly d~ma g ed, the forward
end by fire and the r'car by collision '
with the tree.
Mr and M rs Vv'a lter H. 'l'ower enter,
tal n ed !\f r and Mrs George E . Torrey, .
Jr., of this t o wn, M r a nd Mrs Winfield~
-- - - - , R. h oades an d Mer rill Closson ot Ches- terfleld. and Mr and Mrs Ralps LeDue
a n d lit t le s on, Roge r , at n J·accoon nln ner la s t e vening a t t11 ci i· hom e, After
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- , th e dinner cards wen p layed,

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ROYAL ARCANUM ;
Al-WORTHINGTON I

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400 Members Attend · Bear

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anij Raccoon SupperMany High -Offic·ers Attend

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Worth\ngton, Oct.. 26-0ne bear and
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tmeat cour!!e of a 'coon ·sµppei: 11~r_v f d_
to more than 4.00 gues~ of . Bashan·
\,
:
Hill council o( the Royal ·Arc'anuin
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at . Lafayet_te lodge .t onight. All · the
.
otlier courses were l!-S generous 'M th~
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meat course. . All of · the tables were
_~
- - reset once, a n d· so_ine ot them wer·e set 1
1
the third time. The hotel was reopened
1 ·)
Spj!cially for ;thLs occa.slon bY .-ifi'e'
1
,
manager, Oliliton '.F. Read. The bounU-'
'I / I
ful menu was - prepared and Hrved •/- 1
I entirely by the men 0. 'f Ba shan council.
' The representation of some of the
,
_j larger. councils, ~Ide from I!a.shan·
. !'
council, was M .follows: Onota · of p,-- - --:::-- - -- - - - - (
,
_Pittsfield, 40; Mahkeenao of _ S~9.clc.::
1
bridge, 20; Hampden of Westflel&lt;i; ·4;
:
__ --l Eq~ity of Sprin1.fleld, 40·; Pyt!cnpn ·ot
I Springfield, ' 40. Fout New York and 1n- - --::-- - - - - - - - - - - - -I
t)lree Bqstol\ , members were pr,esent.
,C ongressman Allen T. Treadway,
'J : /
- -,, who had . 11,nother engagement,' made a
1
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· s peech betw een the serving of the fir.st ri --- - - -- -,
and second , _groups;&gt; ·being._ intrC&gt;ductd,
by PMt .Grahl). Regent . Wihlam 't:.
'j , 11, - Root of )'ittsfieic}1.C9Iigresilinan Trea:dway did no\ , touch , on politics, but
.I
·complimented the focal. cqlincil for Its
: .
hospitalfty and !)nterprise, and cop' i
·
-gratulated the town on havh1g so
~
an organiz~lon. Incld~ntally,
1 active
,
Congressman Treadway Il).entlon;.d ,
, 1 •
• (hat today ~s. t}.!e l!,°nnlversar),'/ /!if lits ·
1I 1 1!
wedding, an alfu.s\qn that w-~·-.heard ------'----c--- --. :
wi th interest and greeted with warm /
&gt;/', ·1
•. applause. After the second t~b~es had, .-,,.
been· ser-v ed, t he.re was 'more -speaking,
- - - - - -- - -- ----11
under the direction &lt;&gt;f the · t eg e.nt,
JI '
Joseph Jqlly, ·•:&amp;.lld · the pi:ogram... fw~
1' '.( ,'
followed by da.nclng. _Fred ._-·F ljs:l·~ wn'
.I~
was in charg:e of the .supper. . '•"
·
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The officers froip , N~w _Y ork aqd
', ,
' Boston, who, am_gn_g ·others were callt d
;;
, 11pou to apeak, were ,' the., following:
•ii•1 _
From , New Yor\f,, . Supreme . ~ ep_resen1
tative Charles Rulli! and wj.fe, Su,preme
1
Auditor Mlltpn 'A , wq1m ~nt; frqm
Boston, Grand, ·Regent WIiiiam Good ;
1
Grand Secretary ·William- . L. "Kett; · - - - - - - - - - - - - - - _
., ! ,
Grand Committeeman Lysson Gordon; 1
·
· -· past Grand Regent C. ,Edgar Searing
1,
of Stockbridge, Alternate Sttprelj:le
,.
Representative Frank · Baine~!' : io~
&gt;. 1: I
Springfl~Jd· and wife, Altern~te . Su1
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prcm1e Rep,r 8(!entatlve Schartnan, a,nd
wife· of Pittsfteld.
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Coon niul Bear Supper Atten&lt;led
by 400

Represe ntative
Felix Scharman
and wife of Pittsfield, Past Grand
Regent C. ·Edgar Searing of Stock 0
bridge and others, Harry Bates of
local council was presented a past
r egents' jewel, the gift of the
Grand Council of Massachu setts,
Gra nd R egen t William Good of1,
Boston making the presentati on
s pece h . Dancing followed until
midnight, Bates ' orchestra Played . ,,

Oct. 28.-Abo ut 400 people attend ed the annual raccoon and
bea r supper given by Bashan Hill
council or Royal Arcanum Saturda_y evening at Lafayette Lodge,
Clinton F. Read, proprieto r, openiug it for the occasion. Supper was
served in the main dinin g room
•
with a seating capacity of 200 and 1 Rainbow Club to Have Party
tables were relaid until all were . The Rainbow club or the River- 1,
accommd oated One bear
d
~ side school will hold a Hallowe'e n
forty raccoons · were only !~a~tv~f ~ai·ty Thursday night, Oct. 30, 1
a bountiful menu which was served rom 7 to 9 P, m. at the Riversid'~ /
enlirely by the ruen of the coun(Jl. school_ house. The offlcet§'"chosen
There were large delegat'. Jns pres- tor this year are as follows: Aleut from the .lodges of surround- bert Decelles, presiden_t ; Marv{!j
in g cities, as follows: Onota eoun- Snyder, vice president ; F,}velyn /
ell, Pittsfield, 40; Makkeena e COUil• Corbett, secretary ; Doris Pomecp, ~tock bridge, 20; Pynchon and roy, treasurer . The program t::i ,
Eqmty councils ot Springfiel d, char-ge of , Marvis ,,Snyder • ts aa -•
_.-_,,
__ about 80; Hampden council West- follows:
Song,
Two Yellow, · -..
fi eld, 4; New York, 4; Bo;ton: 3 , Pumpkins ; 1' "Ghost ~!me Again.'',,
A guest of honor at the first table Marvis Snyder; recitation , Paul
was Congressm an Allen T ; Tread- Sweetman ; reclta~ion , Grace Edway of Stockbrid ge, who made a wards ; s.o ng, "Jack-o-L antern;''
,.
bri ef afte·· dinner speech and left r ecitation, Timothy Sweetman ,
immediat ely to speak at a political Jr.; "This,,is th,e , Night,".. Dorotl;lt •.
m ee ting in Pittsfield . Mr. Tread- '!'o~M; . _Gnqme Song,
way,_ who w.aL') . intorduce d by ,Past Snyder; - Dor~.s 1:'omerQY-!_ c~v.elr.n' _
__
Grand Regen t' -Willlam c. Rbot of Corbett; rec1tation , ¥abeI · Eif.1J
~
Pittsfield, spoke 9f the day asi1 is . wares; "The Pumpkin, " Doqa-ld I _
wedding anniversa ry. He spoke Fom·e roy; "Hallowe ·en,'' Evelyn [
hi g hly pf the Royal 'Arcanum as Corbett; ' '.'Owl Song," "October ,"
an order and of the local lodge and Albert
Edwa.,rds; · "Hallowe 'en .
congratu lated them on their fine Brownies ,"
Doris
Pomeroy; - - - - - dinn e r . He also said· th o.t be con- "John's Pumpkfn ," Albert De~
side r ed that the bill towns were cell es;' ·c lub song·. Games wiil be
tbTi ving, and that endowecl with played . under the direction Gf ,i-so much of .n a tural beauty -they ·Evelyn Corbett, and Doris Pci"m- . - - - could- not go backward . Other af- eroy has charge -of the refresh- ter din!le r speeches were by Past men ts. ·Parents and friends are
R egen t Willia m C. Root of -Pitts- invited to attend. · ··
, field, Supreme. Auditor Milton A.
Mrs\ E-valine· Morey of . Lexing-'\Villment of New York, Grand ton is spending a week wi th Mri,.
Secr'etary William L .. I~elt of Bos- Homer Granger.
_..
ton, Grand Regent .J.- -Will\am . 111
_ Guild brid-ge party will be
Good of_Bos ton and _R ege nt J_osepl\' 0 .~'d ._ is week with · Mrs . Phili,1 -l, ~
Joll y of Bashan Hill council of · . i rn
of Ashfield.
r -- t h is town ._'Besid es those mentione d ,-; . ,ll\tie "'M,isses Jennie Salvini, -Ro 1
t here were present Satt1r9ay eve- .sali~
S:-.lvini, Ruth Besancor:::, I
nin g
Supreme
R epresenta tive M-ai'gare t Sturgeon, and Alfrc:! '
Cl\a rl es Puli s and wif_e and Mrs. and Randolph Salvlni of Chester
Mqton A. Willment of ~ey, York, spent the ,w ee k- en d with Mr. an i
Grand Guide Paul _Mead and Al_:. M11s. ~- J. Lai·o.
ternat e Supreme ' Represen tative · ·
· · I 1'rank Baines and ,vife, SUJ)ervising Deputy John Monigh and wife
of Spring~e_!_d, Alternate Suprez:q~

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Worthington, Oct. 31-The body of
October ' 2 !),-Mr. a nd l\lrs.
Dr William J. Parmelee of Springfield, .
Arttrnr Crandall of Dcl~by, . Vl~,
formerly of this town, was brought //
]Hrs. crandall ,a I
are . visiting
t'\
here yesterday aftemQ..on at $ for t-- DraKe.
K
Wiltred
brother
I !' \
burial in the family lot In the c1enter
- , L 11 '-. R ~Smith of Hadley gave ~
c~metery. ~r Parmelee w~s a pracegultw
es e · . .
1
,being physician here for eight years
t: J•.
a talk last ernn111g at t 1~ r , ..
. removing to Sprin'gneld in 1906. While r------.i
_
meeting of the Urange on the Nit~
111'
· li.ving here he\ and his !amiiy entered ·
·• tlonai Grange Mutual LiabililW
I
, largely Into the ll!e of the community
1\
co., which deals wli h automobiltt
and . were greatly missed when: _ they
Insurance. Mr. 8,nith illust rateu .
' 1• r
w~t to Springfl~l~. to make it ' their ,_
his talk with moving pictur.ea.
I I
home. The committal service this
1· ,, f ti road a-nc' ,
th
l .1
· /
le ,
1 afternoon was. conducted by the Rev
s 10w ng , e ru _e., 0
i
Edward Payson Berry of ~emorial
!~ow acc1d e1:ts oc~ur. 1:'h1s waa I
·
church, Springfield.
- !allowed by , ,mov-mg. pictures or I
,1
A ,Pleasant party_ to1k pl~ce l~st
liis trip through the Canadla.n I
I I j
evemng when the · Fnendsh1p gmld
Rockies to attend .the National
.
b_rl.dg.e, at the lnvitat.i on ot Mr-;1 Philip
Grange con\;ention at Seattle. _
-·
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met• at her home m_Ashc. ~Gu.e_rney,
Washirigton ·The pictures ·.w ere
lf 1
'!' party .of 12 making the trip
tWi
,
' . .
.
fropi, here... Six tables were in play.
e:xct-ll~nt and we!e much enjoy~.
A ou!jrness meetmg preceded this ,____ ___, The' first prize was won by Mrs Walter ,,___ _ _
_
1
M:· Shaw arid the consolation prize by,
with cpnferring:. of .t,he third and,
·Mrs Re_nitt ot Ashflelt.1. Refresl'!ments
Ho,urth degrees. Pump~i~ · pie..
~as ser:,ed, -Hallowee~ table decora-·
sweet cider and dou gii nu ts werE&gt;
'
- - - - t10ns ,-~~n~ IJSe&lt;l effef bvely.
,
.
.- :
- -- -.. :;er,ed.
soc!ety
- . The \Vo men ·s Benevolent
m~t to!1ay with .Mrs. N . ..C.
, ,1.
, : r- - -- ,with sixteen prese.n,t .., ~ ,comfor-t'. - - -/W6rlhirigtori, Nov. 3-Th'e Women's
able was tied and con.s iderable
'
,Bene?olent s?cl, ty wl!I . -meet on
other w~rk ~complished. Tl'le
Wedne,;day with Mrs · T. ·c. Martin.
i - - -- next meetmg will be held on NQV. for an all-day meeting ~nstead of on12 -w ith l\Ira, T. Commerfor.d I
the 12th, as previousl~ planned.
- ·
'Mart'n at the Center.
H
1
Mrs Alfred C. Stevens and son, Al·
··
••
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tred, Jr., or ~orthampton '5t&gt;ent the Jr t - - - - a:n
Ell Gll.gnon un~e~wen!
--- - -,week end with Mr' and ''Mrs: Walter
operation at the Spr,ngf!eld...hospj\.
H. -Tower, "who have bee!} .entertainta! 1vlonday for the removal of. a
'. , !
•l~g-':tor a ,week Mrs ,Tower'!5 niece,
.
.
kiµnev.
, I
~ 1llJleangr Eddy ot F_'lprence.
Th~ Gt,ange Whist club met '·
---- ·1·i'
~J\e Grange ..Wh1:1t club wUl· meet
..,nin"' with Mr. and Mn r
,
1as t eh-home
the
at
everung
on , Wednesday
bl I
. .
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John .!(arvis. ,' · · '
\Val.ter E . s ,mith . ~lt_h siX' ta es '11
. ,:p,µss ·Emily ·Mo~ely, who has been · ,---w«n
.were
prizes
1, ' ---first
The
play.
spending the au~mer with Miss.Bessie
by :Mrs. Maurice Clark and. cur~
\~ I
1A~.es, left , Thur11day ~or Spr\ngfleld.
-~ -o rd ,:Tinker . and th.e .conso.tatton 1
spt}nd tl'!e wmter at Santa
_,;l3)1e.:,
' . .. _ _ _ . "~iss Madelin" To,v1_1seo~ and
•
~i;oara Ca:!
· • ·"
· · ,r' -"' " ·
', :r,he ,Friendship g~lld of the Con- l'
;t,e}rr;4.,,P. Col!::. ~ ....,__...L-gregatlpnal church wm meet at the
i
1,1 _ _ _ _ _ _ _- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
__
_ hQmepf, J'i{rs Leland P. Cole on Thurs_ _ __ _ _ _ _
1
I
day' ,et enlng tor their regular month- ) ,
, ly meeting.
,
:Mr and Mrs George T. Dodge of
RlngvllJe entertained a family party ___ _ - -- - - - - -- -- - - - - - - - · -- - - ~
ot ~9 today a t a . wild goose dinner.
J(lenry L . Tower, who has .been
'
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' spendlnk th ree , weeks wi t h 11is sons
__ _ _
;•
- - _ ___ ,Allen B. ot Thompsonville, Ct., ~d
- - -- ' ,: _____ _ _ -- •Herbert L. of Springfield, returnM
I ,home toda-y.
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WORTHINGTON

FRANK RAMSON SCOTT
· OF WORTHINGTON DIES'~

'Worthington, Nov. 5-There w111 be
a. .llleetlng at the honf!l ot Mrs T. C.
Martin on Sunda y atternoon at 3,
.When Rev J; c. Wigh t man of Flori·ence will present a plan -o! commuWas Former Selectman and
nity cooper ation of church, Royal
.. Arcanum, Loyal La.d ies, Grang~
Assessor and Past Master
Women's 'Bene volent ,· tsoc lety and
rrlendship _guild: I~ Is hoped some
of Grange
.
_
-.·e~~m each org~mzatlon wlll be pres•w'orthlngton, Nov, 8-Frank R a n
,, Mrs Walter H . T cwc r Is visiting .,_
·•·s om Scott, 55, a lifelong r esident
1
:relatives In New York city.
Worthington, dled thl,s morning e.t 1'., ,
Mrs George H. Russell attended , the
when· vl s ltlng his cousins, Mr· and Mrs
_
tuneral in Goshen yesterday ·or. her
, 1·c11a1;les Kavana.1,1gb, at Sptlngfi'l)ld. He ,_,_ _ __
-nephew, Paul W. Packard.
had been In , pdor health for seven (
Miss Florence Berry, the new R:efl
Cross· nurse, has rented the parson:~ear,s. Mr S~ott was 11 men;iber o! the /
.age from the Women's Benevolent
'Worthington' Con'g regatlonal churc·h , :..
society, and wlll mak •3 Worthington
past' m'aster_. ot Worthington G range,
her headquarters. Mi11s l;lerry's aunt,
a former selectman and a:ssll"ssQr four /
Miss Mosf? IY, will live '&lt;\'. Jt.°q her,
' years. Hp leaves his sister', Mr11 Effi e
: Th£1:e wa-s a large _meeting ot the
'(Scott) Burckes, with whom he lived. •
Women's Benevolent s ociety yesterThe funera l wlfi be held Sunday afterday at the home of Mrs T. Commernoon at l i30• a( the W orthi.ng ton "Conford Martin at the Ce'nter. Work was ·,
' gregational chur&lt;;h, -Rev J , c. W iglit- ~~
commenced · on a rug to be used In the ,___
_
_
_
ma
n o! Florence offlcfating, and burial l I Sunday-scho,;&gt;l room of the church. A
w ill be in Center cem,etery.
t•!&gt;uf'ret dinner was served.
,
..
Mrs Charles A. Kilbourn Is · vlsltlng Mr !!nd Mrs~Sldney J : . Smart .of
. Longmeadow.
• ,
. The Orange Whl.st club met las~
evening at the home •or John Jarvis,
~ with four tables In 7.r~ay._ The flrst:
' prizes were won by Miss·; Elsie V,
. :Bartlett and - George E:'J fr,orrey, \ '.Jr., 1
,.
. ·and the consolation prizes by ·Miss 1---- - - -- -- - -- - -- - - -- - - - ~ -- - - "7 Beatrice Van Wert of Chester ana Le.
· j fand P. Cole, Jr. .
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Worthington, ·Nov . . '7-'J;'he Friend~
,11hip guild · _gave a farewell party _l~t
· evening at the home of · Mrs Guy , F.
- { •Bartlett for Mrs L_·e lana ·p , CoJc.;who
leaves Sunday to spend _\he winter
in Ashfl~ld with her sister; ~rs Pl;ll!!~-1 C. Gurney,
· Bridge anq _ w-h1~t wer e ,
pla'yed and prlze.s won · as follows:
- - - ·Bridge, flrst priz(', Mr s Joseph E.
Wright; consolation · prize,' Mrs F. A.
Robinson. In whist, wor:nen's ~§.'!;
Mrs N. C. Tuttle.; men's first, Lela'ft\!1 ·1c.-:
P . Cole, J r. ; consolation prl~~~,!i-?;1 . F . Packard and A. ,J. Lars. Mrs
CQle was given a purs e ot money from
the guild and ot her friends, the pres- IL , enta tion speech being made by Mrs N.
,,,_C. Tuttle. R etresh.m ents were served.

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vY ort hing· Lon, N ov. 10- There wa s a.
Worthingto n, Nov. 13-Mr nnd Mrs,--.
l'eprescut ati 1·c ga U1 er i11 g of towns peoFrank nntes nnd two sons, Fra nk and
ple tLt th e r.b u 1·ch y es terda y a.[ternoon
lludso 11 , of North Weymouth spent :
a t ·1.30 at, t i.l e fun ernl' of Frn.nk Ran- ·
II
'
s om !'icott, R e v J ohn· C. Wightman. of
~the week end wi~h his parents, Mr a.nd ,___ -were
·• F'loreuce officiating. Th e b earers
.....
Woz:thlng-1 .,
- Mrs Frank Bates ot West
· · ·
,W illi a m Lamnr · and ·Charles ifava,
ton.
son
John
, naU'gli of Springfi eld , Howard
. · Mr and Mra · Walter HlggJue, Mlee .
' of Da,lt_on,_ and i:Ierb E)rt ·E: P ort;\ir, H c tBernice Kllbour.n &amp;?ld Mrs '--Frank
of
Burr
H.
7 b~rt· H1gs·ms and Franklin
Bates lett ·Ye!lterday to attend the , •
lot
mily
fa
the
.in
,
lt hls' ~own . Burial · was
meeting of the National Grange at
.\
't · ,. .
Rochester, N. Y.
in ·th e ·cente1· c emetery,
Ly•
the
at
t'
ee
m
will
~ 'l'h e Gi-ange
..........
-- ceurn J,al) on Tu esdu y everi,lng fo r
th e election · of officer s. ·
R ev John C. \Vightfimn of Florence
1
prea c-hed In th e Con gr egational th.urch
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,yes te ~·day n16r ning.
'.!.',h e -Friendsh_ip ' g-uil&lt;f · wlll ,meet ·o n
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~hursda y even1_ng wit!~- .Mr$ Merwi n
,
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1 · P ac.kard at the Cornets · , for its
.·Worthmgt on, Nov.-13..,..There will-be · - ----.;,
moll;.t_l'Uy m ~eting which was' to have
.
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'movlp.g picture ~h(~ lj,t the-Lyceum \
:a
1
t:,;
was,i:ios
bi.1t
·
; b~~nt , l)eld last 1w:ek,
. ,
1.
at 8' In charge 1I_ _ _
hall Monday evening
·:
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P ~ed.
.
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· . , ~ ,, • . ,
,• ,
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· '.):he receipts from· tq.e. 'Req •; Cross
Ii '\
be put on by
wl~l
IL
'Qrang!!the
.9f
,drive. in t~lS town, just ;comJ)leted · t 0 _
;g'.. Winans · ot Sprmgfteld. · ,
.
, .. •·
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.ta led. $102;·
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. .~ri, :G~rle~ A. Kllboupi Wll.!l,giv~n
1:fr.and .,_.Mrs J.,eland, P. :Cole ·an~ -son .
11 ;'
party yester~ay
- iL elan~, JI',; have closed :their,houae :,tot· _ _ _ a ·- .. sµrp~i~e- -~~f.thday
Ij
atterno~·- by ,· •The Hup:gry D®e;o, . at
ltb:e wi;nter and left ya,.ter{lay' ;for ,,.-.i. ,1
1,
E; .Drake.
Winfred
Mrs
the home of
-~, · '- • · :- """'~ ·
·fiel d. · '··
r1
- In _pl~y
wer~
.
dge
i
br,
&lt;;&gt;f
tables
d
w
T_
.
High
:
the
of
Bartlett
F.
•
1'1\\1 ____ · l:loroth y
___ and refr~run,en ts served~ A purs~ ,Qt
School of Commerce, Springfield, will
ii''
.·
money ,_waiJ. ITT._~j!n,. . . . .
have part in the class-day .progr.i,m
I· ·l
. Wilbur ~dd_y and da\)ghter Edi;h of ,
.
.
F d day, .
IJ, 1\
B~ohana,n, Mich., former r,esld_ents of 1
F1:anl~hn G. Burr and .two classmates '
•)
th!s to~, have · been receni guests of - - - - _of Mas&amp;arhus etts Agri¢ult)Jral-"'&lt;.io1~e·
I'
his sister, Mrs Walter H r '.l;ower; .
wer e · a t his·' h onie' for,,tfi'e~w.e ek
.1. ,
.'.1'!1e .W~stfteld· River P.al'~way,. asso-,
There was ;1n _ int~rl}sting meetin g
olat1ort ·wm hold their annufll meetl~g
_y es ter.lday· a t 3 at the home or ·i\1rs
1,
, in Westfield 011 1--- -- ii- - - - · T ._ C. Mar tip. with th e . Rev John c. - - at thi;i ·Athenaeumat
5 fQr ,election of,
att~rnqon
Mqnday
was
110
There
\V1gh n_mn P:esiding.
, '\.
offlcers and ' choQSing- of directors.
open discuss ion of community activl,I
_Dinner wm, bl! s11rved at 6.30 p. m. at ,
ti ~s a nd intere~ts. and tel)tative ,Plans
.
. ·
- .tlje Pa11k •Squ11,,r.e hotel.
la id ,f or_~ clos ~r c·o oper1:1-tion o·f _.,1,1.ll or\ .
,· --'Winfred E . .Prait.e has purcba-,ed a ;
g a11 lzat10ns fo r common welta:-ne:· Aft-·
r' ,:
I h~w.e In ~ _er~ilfli!-, N.' H., and with his
·
ernoon t ea w a s. served. ,
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_ 1,fam!Jy . ~ II\ 1, t emove there· soon.

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w'or.thingto n; Nov. ll~The Friend ~ , _
guild will hold their weekly
- c !lhip
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bridgJ party on Thursday 11,fter.noon.
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at Mrs Charles A. Kilbourne's .
About 40 women Interested . hi . the ,_
·
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- ·"beautlring the kitchen" pr.oject · made
I - and
a trip to Worthingto n yesterday
I·
visited the kitchens of Mrs Carl Love.:
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Mrs
and
Thayer
G.
Ernest
Mrs
land,
_
1 _ _ _ _
J ohn _ Frissell. Prizes in this con_ test
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will ~ ~~ ar= ~~ t H_:idley next week.
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GRANGE MASTER RETIRES

by ;·----

Mrs

Walt.er Higgins ..s:uccceded
Miss Beatrice Van , Wert
W orthington, Nov. 12-The Grange
met at the Lyceum hall 13..'lt night to
elect officers. Mrs Walter Higgins,
t11e master, was unable to accept tlie
position -again. A vote was given her
expressing appreclation of her &lt;
•f- 1
forts. The Grange als o acknowledged
by vote the · services of Mrs Lela nd
P. Cole aa pianist and ass istant lee- !
turer and expressed regret at her !
removal fro,m town. ·
Officers ·: el!)cted were as follows:
Master, Miss Beatrice Van W ert;
overseer, . "'[alter Higgins; lecturer, j
Mrs Guy F. Bartlett; steward, Raymond ·Wheeler; assistant steward,
Ralph Smith; chaplain. Mrs Walter
Higgins; trea.sm:er, Ernest G. Thayer;
secretary, Artnur G. Capin; gatekeeper, Lawrence Mason; Ceres, Mlss
Ellen Lafave; Pomona, Miss Made- 1
line Townsend; Flora, Mrs Frank 1
Bates; lady assistant steward, Mrs
Francis A. Robinson; executive com' mittee, Mrs Ernest G. TJ}ayer. Mrs
Charles 4,. Kilbourn was appointed
,pianist .. ~nil Mrs Harold Parish and
Miss Madeline Towns,md ·to serve ~
with Mrs Guy F. Bi rtlett on the·
whist club committee.

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Nov. 16.-Th"e Friendship Guild
of the Congregational church met f
last evening at the home or Mrs.
-- Merwin F'. Packard with eleven 1ptes_e nt. The work hour consisted
of making foyt• for a Christmas box
for home ,Rlieslons afrer which the
:meeting_ was called to order with
1the president; ¥rs. Homer Grang, et, presiding. ' Devotions were l~d ,
by Mrs. Harry \V. Mollison. Mrs. ,
N. C. Tuttle of So,1th Worthington, ,
a ·guest of tl1e. G1;.ild at the meet- ·
Ing, had ch!+rg'e ot ~be educational r
hour an : gave an :nteresting talk
. on ·china, wher~ sl,ltc has travelled; 1
11reading brief extracts from a book t
on ·China, en,tjt1e·d "Swinging Lan- I
terns," _!&gt;Y ·11:ii~a be~h Crump E n d- ,
ers: Mrs: :T.u ttie brought ,with h er ,
roan y beautiful arul interestin g
-pieces of caz:ve_q ·_yrnoq and ivory,.
·old Chlnese ~W9JQid 7rt;L~ ~cklaces, I-_
., et.c., and ~ . Chinese -: newspaper. i
Many of the!!-e were sent to; her by i
her fiOn when · lie was .a ·ui is~lonary./
' in China., The social houi was in
charge of Miss Paui!ne Bi·ock and
&lt;;opsist.e d of . conte.sts .. . A Chinese
SPf:lli~g ..b:!f'tclf ·in: .w hi,.c h th~ words
we r.e ·spelled" .bac~ward~ was a tie
lietween'· sever"al coii ti!stants 'and
was won hy Miss ~Elsie V. Bartlett.
- ·I.The prize· for '.' stunts" performed
· was w.c&gt;id&gt;Y Mrs. Packard : Refreshnients'·Were.se:r;-ved., Hostesses, Mrs.
I Merwin F. Packard- and Miss Elsie r - - :&lt; v~ Bartlett.
The December me-e tIng -will -be held at the home ·of.
_ Mrs. Francis A. · Robinson with a
-...:C hrl st~;;:;-prog-ram~ ·Each ~emher'I
ls re·q ueste. d :to brin_g a gift for' exchange with some other member.
~ . The Women's Benevolent so.clety
will nold•\ts .~ext·.all 9-ay meetil).g
with Mrs. Herbert G. Porter .o n ._'_ _ __
Wednesday, Nov. 19.
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The Wes tfie ld Ri ve r Parkway
, association, in which a number of
- the Hampshire county hill t owns
\Vo1· tl;i11gton Nov. 17-T'~ere will be
are interested, met, at the New
aR ex hibit of books a nd pictures ap- . PQ,tk Square hotel, Westfield , last
propria te fo r child r en's b~ok week_i~
evening, ~h Gov.-elect Joseph
the sh ow win do w at M. I•· Packai d 6
j B. Ely of I'"hat own as the priiic!s tor e throu gh out _th e week, ,tlfo use of
_ pa) speaker and guest of honor
the wi ndow '.J1a vm g been loaned to - - ·
. M
T C M ti . f W
.
the Frederick ' Sargent Huntington 11- 1
·
rs.. · · ar n
orthlngto-n ·
b
l was one o.f tlle speakers. Archie 1
:
, rary.
Mrs Ra ymond Call will
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close h er Ij
· D ·. R o bl nson of Westfield
Is pres__
house this week and remove to W estassocjation , and _
1 iq~n} o'! : th,e
field for the , winter.
,
.
a_mong the.p !ficers are the follow• ·
T he
Women's Benevolent society
Ing froai,' H8:mP~hire
county:
will meet on Wednesday with Mrs
- :NQr_thef.Jf -_district s·upervfs or , - Dr. H erb ert G. Porter.
.
·
A. R_o_bip:ijeli of - Wor'thlngfon,
Ell Gagnon who underwent an op- ·
chairrii~n/ (f{:·JegiSfa.tlon •comniftera ti on
a fe w weeks ago at the
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t"
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F' - TT
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S · ~ft Id h · ·t I has returned to
' : .ce, , · .nar·d· Y o! H µn t'i ng
on, i-- - - hit~; 1"1).:.
ospi a ,
· -~
· Direct2
--•. · .~. m t~e varld11s town'!_·
A fa rewell pa rty will be given for
: v.::ere ,, , • changed fr?m last I
Mr a nd, Mrs Winfred E. Drake and l---year.. lie:v:·\nclude Dr. A, A. Stat~ &gt;---- -family a:t the Lyce u~ hall Tuesday 1
- 7 buck of Mlddlefle_11/ ,F , --J .- H~i-n e
evening-ca t 8. This will 1:Je co.nducted
o.f:· Huntington-, ;&lt;a-p-9 _··Norw1ch,
as the regular Grange whist pil,rty for
_Chp;rles· A~ :J;!_i_sb~ ~ of,phesterfi~ld', ,. _ _
this week. Mr and Mrs Dr:;tke are
Dr.; F. ·A-. :R.obinson of- Worthlngle_avlng the last of this week to make ·
t on: Directors · from Goshen and •
their home in Meriden, J:&gt;l. H.
~South: Worthing-ton ' will be elected i

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,WORTHING
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W orth ing\on, Nov. 19-The motion
'give11 at- Ly ceum h all M,on-

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\ day night were well attended, considering the stoi:mY wea ther. The rei
I port sho'Ys p5.65 was taken . ip. at
j'
II theTendoor.
,,
ta~les oJ: whis-t were in - play
r-=---yat the Gr angl) whist party at J.,y.c eum
ball last night. First prizes were won'
by Mrs Win!frE!'d Drake, and Ernest'
Thayer an d co11solation prizes by -¥rs
1\------,l Walter , Smith- and Alden ,- Cody , Th,fs t - -- -- wa.s a farew,en : party to ,Mr and·· l\'h'~
W. , E. ,Dra ke and- -:i'amilY· and ,'l\f1•s
Wal t er H ig~ins, master qf t he Grange,
presented Mrs Dra ke, -,;yh·o has' been
chaplain of tne G1·a.I)ge, with a pu,i,'.s'e
of money in behalf of the Grange and
! community.
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Schools in' t own _will be closed ·- - _
Frida~' to allow the teach ers t o a ttend
the •to;ivention at Cummington. ·
,
i Tttere r;lll be a . r eception a t the
i-- - _Congreg91tloIJ,al_ churcb
tomort.ow
/
:oight for Miss Florence ~errY, Red
(
,
Cross nurse, . who recently moved into ·
t~ parsonage
at 'the
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Prizes won by local women in
~I "Beautifying the Kitchen" project and which were awarded re·cently at Hadley were: Class
one, se cond prize, Mrs. L. C.
Sweet, electric toaster; 6th prize,
Mrs. Arlin Cole of Highland
street, W . C,, Homemakers ' Cr.eed;
class two, 3.d prize, Mrs. John
Frlssell, . set of
four Fuller
brushes; 5th prize, Mrs. Ernest G.
Thayer; of . West- Worthingto~ , ,
aluminum double boiler. ,
Mrs: · Herbert Ryther, Sr., of
·Berna:td,:,ton lJ,as peen a recent
, gifest df Mrs. Au,g_ustus '\;ickery of
; Highland street:_. w, C. _;,.

: Community Reception for Miss ,_
Berry
Nov. 21.-A community rece1&gt;tion was given ~o Miss Florence
Berry, . R_ed Crose n~rse, at thE'
First Congregatio nar -;church last I
even\ng at l'light o'clock With a
;representati ve· audience from alr
section_s of the town. Assisting· in
r~ceiving were t~-~pastor, Rev.
James H. Burckes, ·' Miss ~usan T.
H.lce, president of 1-t he Women's /
13enevolent socjetyi Mrs. 'Walter
l:;liggins, master of the. -. Grange; Mr::1. Charle·s ~. Kilbourn, regent·. ,
L'..,of the Loj•al Ladies; ·Mr~. ftoiner
Granger, president ·of the F'riend- - ----- -- - - ---- ship: :Guild; and Clement F. Burr
'' of the· Royal Arcanum. The pro.:
gram, -• in c'harge -of "'.Mrs. Gu:y .F . _,
Bartlett, was- as follows: Ad&lt;lress
of . welcome, Clemen_t F. Burr; response by ·Miss Florence Berry;
- -- - - ~--'-----' ---~
siu~ing by audie°'ce, "America,
I
the Beautiful"; reading, an- ong1-,
.paJ monolog_ue,_ ~'The Removar of
l\'Ia-rthy! s . .A'i;l'pendix/' ·. ·. by ' Mfss I - ---- - --;: Kathe~ine McD. Rice_; two~
·~;oios,,
, ..
The Big Brown Bear and Plfilosop·liy, by ·Mrs. Lester . C. LeD'iic'. · ot
__[
Ch!lsferfiel,d; two .-··r~adi_Jigs, T}ie
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Negro Wedding and A Little -Boy
I and -His · Mo.ther at -the C'ircus,' by
-~-- ·Mrs. -D'itniel -· R. -Port~r; piano
·: . ,solos,. Mi:s, N,· G~:Tuttle; two readings, Sister Simmons and Sermon
~ - - - -- J Time,.·by -Mrst L. C. Sweet; ,two ·
solos, :T.he Lfttle Dutch Garden .
and ' The Elf-. Man, by Mrs. L~ster
_ , LeDuc; comniqpity singing,. with /
Mrs. George E. Torrey, Ji.,. -. at
the piano'. Refreshment s ~ were
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served 1n the dining room' or:. the , - - - -- - - ---- - - ---1 church. Hemlock and balsam ;and
the red 6erries
black alder were.'
·'! used in protusiQn hr the decora- ~
--- tions, with two · more. ~1-a;~if{_a.te
decorations symbolizing fhet '.llfed
- ·1 Cross, which
were exc.1.i"(e·~•- ' l.&gt;'y·
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_ ______ --· · --o--Emerson Davis.
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WORTHINGTON

'fhanksglvlng Gatherings
--Wonhington, Nov. 24.- An ord e1· of
\Vorthington, ~ov. 26-An:iong ihe
1,e1·v ir,e fo1· Lhe t er centenary of the
many Thanksglvmg gatheruigs to_
.
morrow will be the following; Mr and
_
Cnuncl111g ot th e: commonwealth or.
- Mrs John Martin aJld son, Miss Jo-·
,\-l:tss::i.chus etts com piled by H enl'Y
iSephine Hewitt and, Grosvenor Hewitt
Ha lla m ~aunderso.n. was us ed in the
at Mrs T. C. Martins; i\-l:lss Elizabeth
Thanksgiving s ervice at thr. F'irst
R~ce, ?f Northampton at the, Mis.sea r
- y eRterdo y
church
_, Co ng1·cgational
R1ce_s, Mr apd Mrs Ed _PeaJte, Mrs
mornin g, Rev James H. Burckes, pasC'.1-rne Barlow and !am1ly or Mill
tor, taking as hi.s text tho words or
Ri_v er at ~rand Mrs Kenneth Pea.,e's;
John Winthrop in bis governor's proc- Miss Marion L. Bartlett and Mias Dor1 . t' . "l praise God we have . othy Bat;tlett- of Sprlngflel&lt;t;- Guy F.
;~::~ l~~~aslons for comfort here." At
Bartlett and Robert Bartlett of Greenb .· f business meeting at the close
field, Mr and Mrs Le.'!ter C. LeDuc
h t th 8
.
· .
a ue
Miss Marjorie G. Bartlett of Ch _
and
_
or the service it was voted_ t a ·
terfl.eld at "The Spruces"· Mr and Me.s
- - -· church favors the appointment. of a
Charles A, Kilbourn, 1,n;s Bernice
~ecretary ~or Co~regatlonal churches
Kilbourn, Charles W.--1:'ower, Mrs Arm .c~nnectlon with the state board of
thur Granger and Fred Fairman at
.
- -- rel!g1~us educa_tion.
Mr and Mrs H. L. Bates's; Mr and
A b1rt~1day dmner party w~ given
Mrs Frederick H. Burr and family .of
Sun?ay m honor of the 72d bll'~hda~
E;iathampton, Franklin G. ·nurr of the
anniversary of Mrs Elizabeth Witt an
tI
- - - - Massachusetts Agricultural college
___ her home. Among the 0 _u~-of-to~
and Mrs 'Jennie Clark of Pittsfield at
guests ·were Mr a nd ·Mrs William Witt
Mr and Mrs Frank!Jn H. Burr's; Mr
o~ Dalton a nd Mr and Mrs Wendell
and Mrs Daniel R. Porter and aon,
. '.
Fiske of W E&gt;.stfield.
Th ere will be a Thanksgwmg pro- - - - Miss Elizabeth Porter of ,Storrs Ct
at Mr and Mrs HerbetEG. Po;ter•S:
gram at the meeting of the Grµ.nge
1
There will be a' family ga.therfns- of
tomorrqw night . and a roll call, e3:ch
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\ - member to respond with a Thanksg1v- f -- ---1 28 at Mr and Mrs George T. Dodge's;
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Mr and Mrs Horace S. Cole will ente~
k _ _ - -- iug sentiment or pay a 10-cent t11:1-e_•
tain Mr and Mrs L. W. Pettingill and
A Tha nksgiving ball will be1 h eld
II
Mr and Mrs Harvey Billings and tamThu rsday night a tthe Lyceum ha.II
I',.
under,, the auspices of the Grange. - - --1 ily of Cummington, Miss Olive E. Cole ·
li1
of Pittsfield and Miss Katherine BosJi: -- -- ~- •-+ __;: Bates's orchestra will play.
·.
sen o! South Windsor, Ct.
~ Mr and Mrs Winfred E. Drake and
:
I A~ong those &amp;pending '!'ha.nksgiv-.
. family left yesterday for Meriden, N.
I1,
_ 1 ing otit of town are Mrs Allee Gurney
H., wh_e re • they have purchased a
at Mr and Mi's Irving· L. Bartlett's
.
home,
·
of Greenfield· Mrs John Frlssell at Mr
Two living Christmas trees which
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and Mrs Cecil Simpson's at Worces( ' I have,been set oµt near the First Con,i
ter; Ford- Martin,_ who will attend the
grega.tiona.I church by Emerson Dayls 1 _ __
,
Corneli-Pennsylvanla f?~tball . ~ e
communitr
tercentenary'
as a part of
1~
and vviII spend -Thanksgwmg with his
• service of the Grange, wlibbe ded1-·
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1cated Sunday with appropriate cere- I
aunt, Mrs James F1:ancis Cooke of
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moniel!, a detailed ' program of which : _ _ Bala, Pa,:' Mr am:f Mrs Wa11:_er Smith
and family with Mrs G~rtruue Peruie
.
1 - - - - - - - will be given out later.
11
of Springfield; Mr and Mrs Walter
Thanksgiving exercises Wlll ' be ~eld
Tower and daughter, Doi·oth y, and
tn the Lyceum hall on Wednesday-·8:ft~
.
- · ~enry L. Tower at _Mr an~ Mrs Her______ ernoon at .2 by the corner schools with . - -~
_bert Tower 1s ,at_ Sprmgfield.
the program in charge of .t~e te~chers,
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Miss Madeline Townsend ~d !';i1ss
',. 'l
Jen I,afave and th·e supe1·v1sor of rou,',
_ sic. M1·s George E. Torrey, Jr. The
public is invited to attend. The pro,_ _ ·--· - -gram: , Spe_ech of welcome by Eloise
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Packard;
Phyllis
and
'Bartlett
'".rha.nksgiving Story Book" by both
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schools· 1"Birth of Our· Thanksgiving
Day," Harriet Higgins; "That ~lnne
by Charles Mosher Bartlett; Pu
kin Pie," Harold Brown; "Pat-a-('
'j
Rita Gagnon and T elma E;at!v
song, "Happy, Glad Thanksgtv!n,
1
the first- grade pupils.

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MEMORIAL TREES
ARE DEDICATED

- j Sel' vices in connection with t he se tting

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ou t of two s ma ll ba lsam s, "Ji vin g
Christ mas trees," n ea r t h e church
will be h eld Sunday morning ns part _
of th e r eg ular mor ning s ervice· .of t h e
'l'he
firs t Con gr egati onal chu rch.
pres entation ol t he trees to t he community as a tercentena1·y g ift of the
Grange will be m ade by _Dr Frartcis A. ,,
Robinson of the Gra nge community
B.
Alden
commi t tee.
service ·"
Cady, f,!rst s elect man, w ill a ccept t h e
gif t. The .d edicat ion pray e r will be offer ed by the , ,11st...,r , R ev Jam es H .
if.
Burck es.

;Living Chr;stmas Trees Are
the
I Gift of the Grange
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W or t h ington, Dec. 1-Two balsam
trees, the gift of the Gra11ge to the
chu rch and community were ded i.cated
yeaterday at the conclusion of .the
m drnlng ,p~tvlii~ o't, · the First ·C4)n- I +
~
greg·a t lotial c;hu r ch 'as "living C!lf13tt rees" dedicated '' to - the~· m lmory
of ' t h os e wp cise li ves ha&lt;) meant much
ln the , pa.st history of the (dwn. Th i.;;
service concludeq the t,etcentenary
celebrations qt the" town dt' Worthing·
.
·
ton.
Children Give Operetta
At the m ornirig" service the piµitor, .
Wort hington, Nov. 28-The operetta,
•R ev Jantes H . Burckes~ s~e -otl the I,
raying : -of · the '.corn·e rs(ona,-:.,ot } the"'
•"The Thanksgiving Story Book" given
-- --- -, ch:urch, quotifii; prl ~fly from the -,,"b y the children of the Corner 'sch ools
speech of H enr.y S. G eve of Nor~amp'a t the Lyceum hall yesterday \after1t on, !i,tt!i of t!1e Q?,!l ·. to holier l;iv ing
noon as a part of their Thanksgivin~1
iy. } h ,e ,11pe,E)Ch .of ,R ev ·John H . Bisbee,
ex~rc ises prov ed a delightful enter- I _ ~ - -1 pastor. -of the chtirch for 28 ,yea;r,s. He
tainn;i en t showin g caref~I work on, ~h,e \
aliii,.. ii'poke of . IlPI'.ac~ ~· C9~e; o,ne of
pa r t of the · p u pils and the teache
the founders . of the cljurch at South
S_upervisor of Music Mrs George .E.
_ Worthington, and ~alle(l to m ind
i.
Townsend
T o rrey, Jr., Miss Madeline
m{l,py otbet outstanding figures in· the ' - - - - and Miss Ellen L a fave. The action ,;if (
history of the to wn and · urgeµ t he
th :&gt; s ~ ry took pla ce the day before ,
necessity of ca-r rying on the wo r k
''Ilhanksgiving, with the sc·e ne open'
··
they commenced:·ing with a group of children at a
The dedication -service was -held on ! - - - party, w ho bo_r ed by doing th() same
the lawn south of the chur-cn where
old _thing ever y day are taken by their
the trees are planted,' Dr Francis A.
i:nother to tne· "Land' of· Make· Belie:vef•
Robinson presenting them · to t h'e ,
whe'r e two Pilgrim children ar.e cap- - - - - c.hurch and community . as ,_a gift of /tu ~ed by the Indians and after thrillliving monument to
the Grange;
,
in;;- adventures escape w ith their Jivea.
:· those gone, bet qre !!,nd , fl, ~ource of en- 1
T he play closed with .a ,r ·e turn to the
- - - joyment for •the '.p r ~$ent and ·in - · ______ _
scene of the party where the children
•
, spitation for genera.tidn.!' to come. Aldecided they had m u ch to be tha_n kful
• den B . Cady, first selec tman, accepted 1
for a fter all. Cast of characters: Jack
1
orrls·
w
osen
well-ch
few
a
&gt;,::the gift in
N c rthrup, ' the hos t, Franklin Ba~~
,. &gt; --(':of apprecia tion for the -g ift .and · its ~ - - Jett; Betty N orthru·p, · the hostess;
spirit of good - wilt Th~ dedica ti on
Ma r y Burr ; B ob, Alfred ·· Joyal; ·'Jane,
prayer by the pastor concluded the ,
Harriet Hi ggins; Mrs Northrup, Jean .
I
· _ _ _ _ _ · ·1
service.
Joyal; .J ohn Allen, Georg·e Brown; · I
Patience Allen, Helen Bartl et t; 1:ndlan
on
e~t
m
w~II
ild
µ
g
Friendship
The·x-, -·
chi ef, Pe ter McEwan ; I n 4ia n war riors; I
Wednesday even ing at 7.30 wi th M rs
Russel l Hathaway, Geor ge Bar tlett, !
Francis ~- R obin son ;
·.
D 'onald a n d VV-alt er Mollison, llenry
Mr a nd Mrs Merwin F . P ack a rd
Pilgrim
e
h
t
H a t h awa y, Gen e Bernier;
will en te rtain th e Gran g e Wh ist club
p1hi
pu
,
_
ba nd and chilcJren at th e party
on _Thursda y evening a t their h ome.
_ _ ~ _ _
of bo_~~ Ch&lt;;&gt; ols.
D r ' Fra w is A. Robinson, n orthern
d istrict s u per visor of . t h e W es tfield
River P a r kway .assocla.tion will be
·glad to con fe r with anyon e inte rested
w bo, wishes t o join the organ izat ion. 'J

ma.s·

WORTHINGTON

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON
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FRIENDSHIP GUILD
,ANNUAL MEETING
~ Miss

Katherine McD. Ri~e
~ Speak 's -· · Officers Are
J Chosen

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Wort'hingto n, D ec. 4- Th e regular

r

W -0 rthington, Dec, p~Mr and Mni
Merwin F. Packard entertained the
Gra nge whist party last eveninc with
s ix tables in play.
_The first prizee
ri
were won by Mrs Cllf'ford Tinker and I
------..: .-j F rankl m H . ;Burr and the coiisolation
prizes ·by Miss . Ellen Lafave andf•
_ ___j nest G. Thayer:
--f The Women's Benevolent aocl&amp;ty
- : will meet on W~dne-,day the l0tq, with
j Mrs J ohn Frl.ssell for an all,:&lt;Iay
---~ meeting.
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monthly· meeting, of the Friendship
-;l g uild ~,a s h·e ld ·iast . evening at _
J?_e er Fall at Worthington · ;, ~
h_ome of t~·e vice-?res1dent,. Mrs Fran_:.
Worthington, Dec. 6-Very few de~r I
1
__; c1s A. R obmson, w ith a Christmas_P,rc,. _ __ have been- shot this' week. 1 Da~lel 1--- - - ·
gram , a nd 16 a t tending. The educa~
Guyette· of South Wor,t hlngton s!)ot a
t ional feature or th e ·evening was · a
: s m a ll dqe on Mon~ay and Eli Gagnon
(
t a lk, by Miss, 1'..:athel'i rie , ?vicD. Rii;:e
' f~1.1nd a' seven-pomt bu&lt;:k dead near
___ on 'Ober a mmerg a u-and' the Passion _ _ _ his · home ycsterda;v, which had been
~ Pla y." Miss Rice attended· . th~ first
wounded by David McEwan- ·and es- .
performa nce of the Passion · Play th is
c'.1-ped. ·:9!1arles A. Kilbour~e 1hot an
year on Ma y 11 and being herself a
e1ght-pomt . buck tod!J-Y, welghh\g
_ _ _ _ _ · w.riter of plays was . able to give her - - - · about 150 pounds. Lack pf snow ori 1-- -- -\/
a ud iei:ice. ·a vivi d word picture ··of tl)e
; the ~ g.und i~ co11:9idered the reaso~
play_ She also had on exhibition a
for the f.ew _k11liO:gs.
18;1"/; e ,collect ion of pictures and books ·
~ -- -_,,on the subject. ·
Making toys and dressing dolls for, a
Ch r istmas home mission J&gt;roject occupfed the wo·r k hour, i'oflowed by , a
- - - - - - ~~ - - - - - -•·_
busmess meeting. Officers elected for ·
~~
I
I
the ensuing six months w er~: Pres~1'
-✓dent, Mrs H om er Granger; v1ce~pres1•
, _,
'
'
I
dent, -1'!,irs Francis A. Robinson; secre,~
---' - - - . - - tar y,. Mrs ;~IJ.arrY.:.W. :r,t;qllison; treasWorthingt~n, Dec. 8-Fl~teen merh- 1
·
· u rer, Mrs , M,erwm F . P!!,ckard. ..The
bers of the Grange attended the meet~
cha ir a ppointed Mrs F , A. · Robinson,
:
f Pomona Grange .a t Chesterfield -~ : ·
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1
0
Mrs James H. Burckes . and , Mk-s
11g:, ·
·r
.
( .
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,
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- - ---&lt;iGeor ge E. Torrey; J r., , committee op.
yeslerdl!:Y· S!;x •-.to·q): _tAe fifth ~eg:t'ee," · ,_·
Ch ristmas mii;;sion box. Tl::\e following
I lliuss Ellen 111ave, "Miss El~e\ Bart- l \
comwittee . on church Christmas tree,
lE'tt; · Miss' Madeline Townsend, Mis., ·L--- ;..•-1-- - - I
• a nd Ch ristma~ rezpembrances., t o ,shut•. - -~ .
R '' d
,;._- - - - ins w a s . appointed: Mrs Wal,ter Hig'Beatrice Van -vyert, aymon ,- . 8f•
MM
d
1·
T.
d
M"
lei
IUld
Ra.lP.h
!:)mith.\,
·
1'
gins,
1ss . a e 1ne owns~n
,· 1ss
·Pl3~
, "' &lt;i--~waB
- •• ·r•·e·,,.,,
··•~;,;,,,.ed,: • ~'·. Arthur G, CalllSua.. ,.,•,~ · .
.
,'
•
'~
Ellen
Lafave,
Mrs.
G~orge
E.
-:?,'
.
orrey,
-!the
Women's
Benqvelent ~~ty
1
__ _ Jr., Mrs Harry !'fOl1,1son, -;MF!!,. C. F , i•"'il ' t w'th
...,_
John
Frlsaell
on...
Read, Mrs Merwm F. ~aQkl!,rd ..~d
,
" I • , II¼ee
· 1
Mrs Daniel R. ·Porter'. Shut-Iha · r e- ,
·
Wednesday.
..
t;
. membered d tirin,g the pas·t month
#'
The Grange whist ()l"qb wilt ·1!:eet L"
~, - _
wer e F orest Converse and Eli Gagnon.
Wednesday ~venlng a..t the pYC um
-t:
- ---+-- The pr ogram com m'.ittee 11:QPainted was
:t,all. The hostesses are l,\,:rs..wQha.rlea
'\.
Mrs Harr y w. Mol"fisoh, Mr!! Daniel
~
o~rn,·a-nd Mrs Joseph nrlsht._
. - - - 1, - - - -~- Port er ,. a"nd Miss Paul~ne Brock.
Social committ ee : Miss Elsie V. Bart- ~
- - - ·- - lett, Miss Ma deli ne Townsend and Mrs
: Clinton F . R ead.
.
--ir~- The proj ect" commit tee is M r s Frans I
, cis Robinson, Mrs George E. :rorrey,
; Jr., and Miss Marjorl~ G, Bar tlett.
· R elief. committee,· Miss Elsie V .' Ba r t lett. The social period ih charg e or
- -+Mrs F\ A : Robinson and Miss Elsie V. - - - - - - - Bartlett corulsted or singing Ch ristm
a s .and
carols
. d a"Iighted
Ch A
ristm
. as
tree
a n·aroun
ex change
of gilts.
word
_ _ _ _ _ _ ___ ___ _
- - - - - \ -·:contest was wo1,1. by Mrs Harry W. - - - - -Mollinson an!} Mrs Merwin ¥ :·Packard
~ Chril!,tm~ , refresh~ents ,were ,serv,ed.
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WORTHINGTON

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-P r iilsesGov XUen - Mr Cook open ed his address Ias1
nigh t by presenting the greeti ngs of
&gt;·
t h e governor :cind immediately swung
--:-In to a bri ef · dis cussion of unemploy.
m e nt. He characterized r epo rts of th e
de pression as exag-gerated a nd distortetl by the public psychology. anc
m ·ged that m embers of th e Grange
s eize onportunitles for optimism.
M r Cook paid tribute tn Gov Allen
stating t hat he per sona ll:v was sorrv that h e was le,win•g office and de cla ring tlfat h e did not believe th E
state h:ci:s ·ever .• had a man more hu man and humane as governor. "Th E
v icisslturles ot poHtics In · ··att' annua·
f
election ye1tr deprived the ·V3tat~, .o.f i
great man," he dec1ared. a'Bdlng . f hal
·j hE' ann .other .state ·o~cials bii."1 con,,Joseph B.~ El )
s;derable respect
Frederic W. Cook , • secretary or
_
ani! w'c/uld. cooper~te: -with .,him; ,
state, s ubstituted for Gov Fra nk G.
He continued. m · -p~rp ~'';l'he las1
,
•
I
•
•laci&lt;:
th•~\
·
i
demon~tr!l:fe&lt;'
0
lection
e
·
he
t
of
program
s
- ' Al en on last mg-ht
~
ol".'\ ·gi've ·t liE
nreparation. Vofers d~
Massachusetts State Grange in con- •j
intere.~t. t hat they ·sho:{f'fd1'-tot' .th ~ mi vention at the Auditorium. In a brief ,
us, who· b.elievE
- - -- - - -. speech, in which he' presented' the L- nor , ?ffices. Those &lt;M'f eel
t ila.a-t .we ··mus1
, In good government·
.
·
.
.
join one party o,r anothe:\h1anrl · worli
_greetmgs of the governor, Mr C9ok I
, -"infl.uencE
with that party ann. use-· ou
flayed "the . unlnt elllgE:'nt • gr,bup _.of ,
. en a. re.•· . &lt;:&gt;mi-n.. ate &lt;'
to see · tha:,t · goQ(l m
questions" on the last state"ii election ~ -{lnd
. ;. ~ U a !
minor
the
t!lected· for
·
,.,,
. •
. d
·
· _ · · ,.,. · ·t• ~.• ,; • .
thP major nffices "
ballot, and urge an _ameo~ment t~
:&gt;f- 1 • •
,c·.
.
'i-:
,
.
:
·
:\ .
th• : state .cons titution which will '.J)~I'-'
Crltl&lt;;l.~ es ·.Referenda ''?'t ·;•
/·
mit a simpler statement of the q1.Jes. R eferring to the r.eferendum \ ques - - - -- - -~ tions. He al~ gave warning thq.t if
tlons, . Mr Cook stated ·that he thoug h !
thp public tolerates· "abusive vilifl-ca..
· they were as unintelligently groupec
tlon" in radio talks, such ..as occurred ·
_ in the tece.n t canip'a ig'n, t!Je be~ mep ' __ a.s any gue.stions that 1he ev~ saw
H, explained that the re'fetenda werE
·
~II not rtln . for 'public office. ·
written ' in t.he only way that ·the a t
~In addltiop. to the S'e&lt;eretary •of
. torney-general could put them on th,
state's speech; interest last night cen~
ballots and have them' legal, but urge&lt;
_ _ _ __ _ __ tered · in the presentation of· the sixthsupl?ort for his bill, now b efore th,
degree ,. ritual to 190 memberi:1 of the
Lcg1slature, calling for an amendmenGrange', and · in a •list of 20 G r anges
t'.&gt; the state. oonstltution .· permittlni
named i? ·i::eco~iti,9n of outstanding
l.ll:lpler wordmg. ·
.
- - - -- - -- community service.
W o rthington Grange ·topped th_e list
in the statewide .competition.1 with
Mven other Grange,s trom western
':---- -- -- - - Massachusetts awarded places by ·the
judges. The Worthington award was i
.
.
' based on the Grange' s activity_• in .
·
connection witH the Russell C.o nweU
memorial service held at · worthington last summer, whic.h was sponsored
by the G'r ange und er th~ leadership
_
or Mrs W alter L . Higgins.
(

FREDERIC W. COOK
REPRESENTS ALLEN
AT GRANGE MEETING-

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Secretary of State Substitutes for Governor-.
Scores ·wording of Questio.ns·on Election Ball9ts

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EXERCISES WERE
VERY IMPRESSIVE
Conwell Memorial Program a
Credit t9 the Grange

WORTHINGTON

Th ose who attended at South ·
Wort hi_ngto n, . September 7th, the
/1
memorial services . and dedication of
Grunge Gh·e u Awnril
a bouldcl' tablet m memory of Dr
\7\ror t h io g ton , D ec, U-\ 'Vort hing ton
Ru ssell H. Conwell, are still talking
G r:1 nge w a.s R. l\'8 r d!'CI first prize f or
about wha~ _a m~morable occasion it .
ou_tstand ing co mmu ni ty sel' vice worl~iu , :t st a.te.wid e ' compe ti tion qy SLa.t
:nas and g 1vmg high credit to Worth- · Maste r H enry N , .J enks at t be mcetmgton Grange, No. 90, for its com- '
in "' of th e s tate Gning·e at SprlngfieJrl
mendable thought in initiating and
1
)Yallet·
Mt's
J~t ni g ht.. ':'{orth y l\laster
carrying through so successfully such
L. Rigg- ins re ceiv ed the awa:nd fqr
a significant event.
\ \, the G1·a nge with a h l'ief. 1,mee h of.
The exercises of the morning took
acce1n3nce. M emb ers from \.'V'ortiu g - .
- place at the Worthington Methodist '
t on GT'ange attendini; th e s t{l,t'e pieet- 1
church, picnic lunch at noon, and the
in: ; to r all or pat•,t o'f t he ti.me :re re:
~ 'orth~r master, -~-r'ts ' Wa lter I,, H ig afternoon program at the Conwell
ginl'l; ov erseer, \.Vatter L. Higgi ns,
farm homestead not far from the
1 past masters, Mr and ' 'l,frs Carl Lovechurch. The beautiful tablet, which
/ Ja,nd, Mrs .Juscpbi1le 'I'I ewltt; ll)ctmer,
been provided in memory of Dr.
had
.
A
Cha11les
-lJ'\1.rs
.
Mrs Guy _F. Bartl~tt:'
was unveiled by his little
Conwell,
. y m.o. nd
a pen~t
Kilbom'ii'.'. Artlna·_ G.' c_
~rt. and •"I¥.,grand-daught er, Carol Cathay Tuttle,
• \ ~{heeler, Miss B e,i p ·1f:&lt;;1', ~""
r latt.er,, ,~ and ·the formal dedication was made
~Mit s J!:Jsl'r·,V. 1Blil1nl:tet,t; .SJ't.~·
ta ld ng t h~ sbd:h d~gt°jle. • if. ,:;,',
in behalf of the Massachusetts State
Mrs Cbarles ~ ....,JI:llbot1-.r11:,:rand M:rs ,.
Grange by · State Master Henry N. ·, _
.- ent~rtuined ' t he
Wright
Joseph
Jenks, with dedication _·_ prayer by l
G ran ge Wh ist clu"li;,_at the Lyceum
Rev. Charles H. Smith of Granby, ,:
E.
hall last · evening. .'Miss . B~rni.ce
of the State Grange. The oc-·
deputy
abthe
in·
h6stess
as
acted
KilboU1·n
- · cas;on was fortunate in being able to - senc,e of h er m otJ-1.er'' .. at1 1 thei state 'have as its principal speakers Dr.· M. i
G rangc m eeti ng. Fiv~ l'.l+bles we-i-e · in
Joseph ·Twomey, · Dr. Gonwell's sucplay. The first p rlzes wer.e won. by
-:Mrs Walt er Shaw:, of Hu ntington and
cessor as pastor of Grace Baptif;t
Leland Smith .:'rid the "consolat ion
Church in Philadelph_ia; and Dr,:/
and
·p rizes by Mrs · ,F. A. jtobinson
-Charles E. Beury; president of Tern-~
Louis Za rr.
. ple · University, -wliich Dr. Conwell
founded. Other . speakers brought r
timely greetings, including Dr. - Conwell's son, Leon M. Conwell, ex-mayor '
---of Somerville.
The entire da y's exercises were
carried out under the direction of 1
_______ __ _______ __ - Worthington Grange and in charge,_ of its energetic master, Mrs. Walter 1
· L. Higgins, who has worked unceasingly throughou't the . entire sea- son to make the occasion an out- - 1
standing success.
As -a loyal friend of the Gra_nge 1

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- ·; nd. ~ stron g· ~lly ~f ' all that pertains _i _
t o rural life Dr. Conwell will ~ver· be 1held in high esteem by country peo- . ple everywhere and it was most fitting ·
that this memoria l ser vice, with dedication of a boulder tablet to his
memory should ·be carried out by- one ~of the ' Grang es . of Massachusetts,
whose native son Dr. Conwell was.

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-r"LOTS DOING ON
'~
THE WESTERN HILLS .

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Worthington Grange a Good
Example For Others
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GRANGE a ut umn event of mor e
than or dinar y interest is the
_ Grange community fair to be held at ,
Worthington, Friday, September 12, '
with the Massachusetts Department of
Agriculture cooperating. A splendid
- list of premiums is awarded, covering j
garden vegetables, fruits, farm grains j
and grasses, dairy products, candy
_ p roducts, floral department, etc., and 1
a large array- of exhibits is promised. (
Any person m the town of Worthington, or ·any member of Worthington
Grange living elsewhere, may compete,
while children under 16 years old will
have their own department and special
_ premium lists. A competent group- of
judges ·will be selected and the exhibit
will be well worth visiting.
Worthington ~ctivities the past two
mont hs have included a church-Grange
Sunday, which brought out a large
crowd, with an inspiring service; entertaining Hillside Pomona Grange
and initiating a ciass of .candidates;
sponsoring the erection of a memorial
tablet to Dr. Russ.e ll H. Conwell and
- putting through many of the active ar- 1
rangements for that event.
·
The great lecturer and preacher, Dr , \
_ Conwell, was born in Worthington and
his birthplace and f-lWt1mer home still 1
remains Jili,lamily and is occupied
by his tiL
. Though not a mem- her of the Grange, Dr. Conwell was
keenly interested in it and often publicly commended it; while one of his
- last public addresses was a ~resentation of his great lecture, "The Silver
Crown," before the Massachusetts
State Grange session a t Worcester.
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WORTHINGTON

, Su rprise P a rty For Miss Town send
.W ort hington, Dec. 12- At the in vi of Mr's Clinton F. Read the
.! Friendship gu il d met at her h ouse las t
\·even ing for a s u rprise par t y fo r M iss
;, Madeli ne Townsend, t each er of t h e
high g 1:amrpar E:c h ool, VI, h o h as tak-:n
-I a position in Agawam an,d w ill not
return after th e· · Ch r i1•i t m as holi day.
T he a ffa,tr WM a . complet~ , surprise
f a nd· a p leasant evening was spen t.
Four tab les of cards· were in :play wlth
1 t h e prizes won a.s J;ollows : ~•Brjd ge,
I first, Miss M,adeli_n e Tow nsend ;· coni so lat~q)1, M \ss E ll en L afave. Wh is t,
- first. Mrs Harry W. Mollison ; c onso lation , ' a .ti.e between .Mr~ Sta nl e y Cole
a n d Mrs Me r w in F . 'P ackard , with th e
la t ter wi.nn ing. R efres hments were
ser ved. Miss T owns end was presen teu
a p u rse of money_ as , a · f a.rew ~ll gift
o{ t h e g u ild/- - • ·
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·
F rid ay afternoon, th e 1,9th, a.t ,2' the
R ainb ow c lub, of t he ' R i:verside school
will hold its Cliristma.s ttee and e xer:.
cises. A · small · admission fee will be
charg_e d.
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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

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.1 ool's Chrlstm 118 .Program
\ Worthi ngton, Dec. 19-Lyceum ba.11
(_ .
-orner 8 c 1
was crowded last night to wltaess the '
V'{orthing-ton, D ec . . Hi- T_he Cor ner
. production of the two-act play, "A j
s chools will h old theiy Chri st m a s enJoke on S.anta Claus," by t}Je c_h lldren ,\...
ter talnmen t at the Lyee um hall on ·
: of the Corn ers school. Much credit
\ is
Thursday evening ,a~ S. 'l'l'.ere . will 1
given Mre George E. Torrey, Jr.,
(
be a Christmas tree 1n cha r ge of t_he
for th e success of the performance. 1
teachers, Miss Ellen Lafave a n d Mis!:'
_
; one of the prettlest featm;es was the ~
:
· dance• hy holly and ml13tletoe fairies.
:M adeline T ownsen d, a nd a n op eretta,
"A J oke on Santa Claus,' ' in ch arg·~ of
·Guest.'! were present from Pittsfield
Mrs · George E. Torrey, Jr., _supei·vL':l ~r
and 'Chester~efd. ,
·
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of music. The cast of characters 1s
. F nlclin G. Burr, a student at Am- r-----,
as follows: Santa Clau s. Ge_orge Bart- 1
h eri" college, arrived yesterday to .
;
spend the Christmas liolldays with
lett; mother, Harriet Hlgg:n:s: Anna,
J ean Joyal: Jack, H arold Snuth ; Bess,
his are nts Mr and Mrs F. H . B11rr..
_
Helen Ba1·tlett; Spirit of. Chrii;tmas. L ____ ·c~mm erf~rd Martin -of Cornell um- - - - :
~ Muriel Bradley ; sandman .
H a rol
verslty Is spe nding- the _v ac;i,tlo~ with
I
Brown; h olly fairies, Mary Ellen Read,
his mother. Mrs T. C. Martin. ,
Geraldine Smith, El ean or Smith, Mary
. Miss El~le Bartlett vlelted ber
Burr; Franklin, . Franklin Bartlett;
- - -, sl~ MtsJ· Bessie Trow, at Bedfai r y, Rita Gagnon; children t hat plo.y
.irud l~dge '.Northampton, this. w~e~.
i
I joke, Phyliss Packard. Eloise Bart" ~rs . Jes's.ie Fltnt of'Bouth Deerfield '
, lett, Charles Bartlett, Dorothy 1 J oyal.
visiting , Dr and- :Mrs Francis_ A.. 1
H elen Bartlett.
_
'.RO. binson•'
Mrs Myra J . Stevens is spendmg the
- winter -with her sister, Mrs Edward
~
Cole of Highland street, Chesterfi eld.
,
The Grange Whist club w ill meei ,on
t
'-- - Saturday evening with Mr a nd Mrs '
I
Victor Bernier.
··
Although
th e fi1·st week or deN
'
- b unting · resulted in 01ily three killc \
~
---lngs, the last week prove d much morP. I
&amp;, J } II 2 D
1
fa vorabl e for the hunters
a n d th.&lt;'-.,
1£.1..&lt;
.e.,c,,.
Ii.I
follo wing a re r eported: L eland Smith. ~ -- - - · .
.,
_
- -- - nine- point buck weighing abo u t 200
Mrs. He! .,n A,· Bartlelt.
·1
pounds; George E ._Torrey, J~·-, s plkP-~Mrs. Helen · •·~1 Bartleh , 83, widow
,I
, hor n buck, 100 pounds; W a lter H. 1
of Noyes B r'Uett, died ~esterday ,--- - - '
- - - T ~\ver . . h.v~-p~mt
. bµck,
' 1 ~di po~nd.t'_;- .1--- -- -1I morning
in 1er ~ome, 81 Clarendon
I·,
~yi:eet ; She was ~oi:n in Canada and 1
O
Charles G rnnoer, ~50 - pou nd doe, G~;,had lived i this city 17 y ears. ~h I
- ~- - - Thrasher. buck ; Wells Magargal, 120; leaves two sons John T. of t.,
&gt;J de
pound doe.
.
--.
. •
.
ee an ,
~r &lt;i!h ristmas ~unday wil~ •b e ob serv ed.
· ~_erbert O · Pittsfield, t w.o daughters,
I'' ,
at thn Fiest Congcegano nal nhucch
M es • . Ka)''"" Cia,k and .Mes. Oad
• J--1
Sunday m orning w ith a cburcl+ Christ- 1
Mernck,_ b oth of Sprmgfiel4, The fuueral will be held from · B~ron's ' fu- ,
, ;&gt;
·. '_ _ _ mas tree in ch arge of th e' Friendship ·
\
g uild. 'l'hern · will be candy. and tt.
ne,ral born~ tomorrow and will be pr!- 1 - {
•·
. g ift fo1• ea ch ch ild in town and i~ is: 1
vate. Burial 1 will be Jn Worthington. \
.1
h ol ed a.s many of t hem as possible L _
1 :·
~
e tiler e to r eceive their gifts.
,
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WORTHINGTON

NORTHFIELD

CHHIS 'l' MAS Tturn DEDICA'r.ED
·cere mony. 'l'nl1 es

.I' lu ce:! ~fo 111liiy 011

Cover• Whitman En8'agement

!

Northfield, Dec. 23"-Mra Helen B.
Common ut tho l:ornlirs
Cover or 186 Main :street, East North" ·ort hin gt.un, D ec . 22-- At t h e rn6rntljld has announced her engagem ent
to Franc is Warren Whitman or this
;111 g service uf t he Co n,g i•e;,;u tionnl
town. The marriage is . planned for
'·c hu rc· h :•, cstc1·da,v R e v .Jtt111es H .
early next summer as soon as con· B u ,·c l&lt; cs preac h ed a Ci1rlstm as se rm on
venient after the olose of th'e seminary
'
'n llll ther e was mu s ic ~Y th e chiJ.cl ren
t e rm, as Mrs Cover 16 engaged until
;rntl :1 s p ecia l cl1 ol r led by M1 ·s G eo rg,,
then in her Wo.rJ~ a.s instru ctor In
'E , To rre y, Jt·. A bo u l 7G c hll d rnn 1·e home economics at ·the semlna1:y. Mrs
t'eive,I C hris tm afi pre1J e nts ll'h ic h w e re .
Cover has been fof the last six years
,
a member of the faculty ot the semi1, Jaced o n th e Chri stm ,u; t ree by th e
nary, She was born In Hartford, Ct.,
1~1 le n ::l&gt;•hi p g ull &lt;.l. 1r r ecl Marti n .Play ed
the r o le or Sa nta Cla us . TJ1e ·g 11ilct
and has a brot'her ' now living in that
tdwn, Warren 'l'. ,Bartlett, secretary
it'lso d ecoi·a teu 28 s m a ll u ·ees: for s hutof the Hartford Trust company. Mrs
) ins a nd pr e.sented eac h w i t h a gift
Cover has a daughter_.. Louise Cover,
' of cand y a n ::l ,.tt1 o r a n ;:;·c . • " .
by a previouR marriage, who
a stuAr'tcr Urn oii urch s e 1' vl ces t h e audidentIn the Pine street school of th is 1'
f euco w ent fo t he co mm on a t th e Co1·towp. Mr Wl:Hpia11 \VIIS born at Mani1 e1•s · to cl edl cnte th e li v in g Chris tmas
1 chester llD/i has been a resident ot this
tree ivh ic h Dr ·Fra n e ls ' '.•\. l'lbbillson or
town for over -i~ years. He Is adjutant
th e co t'nm1.lJ.1lt y s e r v ice co h1h1ittee of ,_
· of the Haven H. Spencer post of the
t11 e G m n g e p1.'e!3ent ed t b th e c hildre n
American
Legioti. after the ceremoey
of th e -community. H elen Marion
, next summer the . eoµple ~xpect to
B ar tle tt acce pte:l th e gift f o11•-the' chllmake their home hi N"orthfield. He wp..s
dre n with th a n½-s . fo -P.r. R obirtsol) , and
with the battery F , 305 field artillery,
th e Grange. Th e c hlldre h j oined hands
77lh division . and ' took part In tho
a nd fonn ed a c ircl e 1nclos'in g th e · tret!
major engagemf!!nts of that ilivl.slon, j t
anci speak e rs a nd th eir c iv~ lil ~v·as inbeing n,entloned iri . the historY. of t he
.cl osed .IJy on e ,f o r m ed by the '11-1:lult.s. ,_ __- - - regiment
tor gallantt·y on tbe field ln ,
Rev J a m es H. Burckes ,gav ~ th e d i&gt;d ir~scufog a " wounded comrade during 1
cat ory ' pra y_e r a nd b/m editlori. · ''tloly
which action he was 'himself wounded.
Nigh t " an&lt;l · 10 .. Littl o '!'own of :a·e thleThe community Christmas tree has 1li e m / were ·s un g uhd e r dir,ectio:b of I
:~ een erected on the grass pl ot n ear
Mrs George El , Tb1~rey,· Jr.' ·.,
. the Belcher. rountain and is lighted
'
. \
. '
. ·_
i
every night. The eterclses will be held ,
Th e r egill11r m ee tihg of th e Gt'angc /tomc#row ·evening and on account of I-w ill be h eld t o m o.rro1v nlgnt· at Ly- .
the cold will be· in tne town haiL
ee um h a ll. Th e re will be a Christ- ~
hr Richard G. Holton l:,as been apm as progra m, each patron is to .'Jring
pointed;
district · d~,:i4ty grapd' ma_s ter •,~a 10-ceht ·ll;'ift. ·
·
,. · _
oNhe 14th Ma.sonic. district and goes
Word ' was rec eived today of the
tb Boston tqe 29th: to, be Inducted into "
d eath at Springfi eld of Mrs Nellie
office.
1£1_,_i&gt;
Bartlett, w idow of l'{oyes Bartlett,
both f or m e r . r esid ents of this town. Mrs B art lett · leaves two daughters,
Mrs Kathleen B. 'Cla rk and Mrs
w·
~
B eatrice B . Merzick, both of Sptlng_ _ __, "
·
fi eld, and two sorts, J ohn 'l'. Bar tlett
· of L ee and H e rbert Ba t·tlett or. Pitts~
~orth ington, Dec. 25 - Th e L oya l
field a nd severa l grandchildteh and
Ladies will serve a su pper at thE&gt; "
:---.-great-grandc hildre n. ThQ l:lody Will bo
~yeeu111 ~o.-1.I...__Tues day -i venlng, the
brou glit to this town for burlfil to- -- 30th, at 6.30. "Th is will be followed
b,v a two-act 1ilay entitled "Mrs Wig- ,,
, m orro,v aft r rnoon , a't' 4 In the .North
·
··
glesworto Gets R eligion." Cast of
' ce m e te ry.
Mts John l~rissell had a$ •· recent- _ _ _
c1)araqters:.- Mrs Elmira Wigglesworth,
gu es ts N ed Ri~e and J bsi!J,')h 'McCor-·
Wl/,lter t.. _H iggins: Dan!el Wig.
wi c k, Jr., of Pro.y ld e n ce, fL l.
.
g!esworih. Shendan D odge: ·. Mrs AnW edh cs::lay nfgh t a t 7 the Ghris tr.i,; B od'klns. Mrs C., A. Kilbourn: Mrs
m as ca m! singers ::iro• ~ k iid to tneet _____ Lucretia S impson, Mrs Walter S111 ith;
at the common a t the Corners Those
Lorette ·w1gg-lesworth, Mrs Harold
! ,vh o ca n asall!l ~~ith ailtb\'D obll~ p lease
I?ariell_; , Sa:miny .. Wiggles"ror.th, Lela nd
comm un lc1;1.te with Mrs
'If'. Bartlett.
Smith, R e v Daniel Palmer, Jo.sepb
Jolly.
,
'.• ·

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ORTHINGTON

•l\~rs

_._

----

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.,.

·- - -

---

�- Dec. ;31-The re was t Jarg; at-".
tendS:JI!,:0 last . e~en_ing at ·the · sui~J
per _and play, given by the Lo~al!
----, ·Worthiqg ton, Dec. 20.-.fh11 trusteea
- - Ladle.s
.the_ Lyceum hat!,
of the church have decided that serv100 being Pl'esent. The :two - act
1 ices will be held as · usual
at 11 a. m.
pla,y,- ''Mrs. Wigglesw orth Gets Reduring January.
, _1
.
, --~·-.J , Uglon,'' was well p,resented before}----- - A s~pper f~!l~_wed by ,a two-a~t
an , ~.p~reciative audje~ce: _ Bates: ]
play, Mrs w 1gglesworth Gets Re- I
ore:h~s-t'ra of ftve pieces turni h d
liglon," will be held ·at the Lyc;:eµm
8 e_ .
1
'
. d .
th
:
t
ha.
1
1
tomorrow
eve~lng
at
6.30
'in
mus~c _urmg e evening, 4'bout.
I'I
- - -4 charge· of the Loyal :\'.,iidies. , . _i
, $20"':'W:fS' ~ealized. ·
; ·; : -..
f The ,Grange will hold ~ew Yeat'iJ
Miss Mildred Parsons of Sou~h-:. ball 0)\ Weanesda y evef\'\hs 'at 8.30 at ·
. -am;n.;q:g,-, rs ·Visiting her 'sl~ter,' Mr s.
___ the LY;ceum h_all. Bates's ~ hestra, of
t er.
- . , ' 1;1Da.ril~t· R: Por_
\ five pieces vi,:11\ plav,
· :
, Commun ion· Sunday· -will be qbMrs Carl Lnveln~ and her f!lulte, ·
,served:a t:the First CongtilgatloifalMrs Walter El. s'm1th, mai·shal, Mrs
·
,
· .
_ _ ___,.._ ' 'Francis A. ~obinson
regalia bearer _______.lchur ch on Sunday, following
the-. - - - \I
\• Miss Marjorie G. Bat·tlett, embl&lt;'~ i
1usua.l m~rttt1:1g service. · t
_
;
.;,
I bearer, af\.&lt;1 Miss 7:leatrice van Wert, ,
. Charles W, Tower has elos~d ~IIJ"
,
. · ·chaplain, ·.wm .in'st[\J · ~_he· officer~· of 11 _
_
__ hou!:!e for the winier, ,and Is ;vi~it- _ _ __
11. - - - - Hinsdale Grange Thursclay evemng,
r.Ing-his nephew, Herbert .t:Towcr i
Mr and Mrs Roland Goodwin and
. jot Springfie ld. · - ·
-, · .. :: .:.
Allen
of ·G
.a)'1ln!?r,
W!Qonii
,1
· d .·and · . •
Prouty Prouty
ot Boston,
· :aei·a·
ld . pates
•or .
_ _ ....J Mr~. Car i L_ove1an
~er__ _ __
, , - --- Greenfield, Rena Ba:tes ,ll'nd ~rs Ruth ,
.suit~. _who are to install: the &lt;tffl•
1_
Porter. of Sprlrigfl¢.ld, were· holida}'
reers of Hinsdale Grange on Thurs•
guests of Mr and M.!'s l&lt;'raI\){ Bates .of
1
·
. day evening, will install: the qffi1
West Vf.o~thingtori. · .
__ _ cers- _pf . Plainfield Orang~ ori- Flrl~ - - 1 . •- - - - -.
The Misses M;arlon and ~l.!!le .
'day evening
,
.f .
~
Bartlett spent th'e week end with
.•
·c' M · · -_ : -· : . i" ': ·
1•;
'their sister, Mrs Leste~· C, Le.n_uc of j
I. . Mr.s. T. , - artm has cfos~d '1_,et'
,,-1_,
.Chesterfield.
·
_ __ _ ifiouse for the •winte_r, and w.ltl!-- - - 1(· t-,her son, Ford Martm, who haft: _
..1'
!been home' for - the holidays wil~
·
1

WORTHINGtON

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�</text>
                  </elementText>
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            <element elementId="43">
              <name>Identifier</name>
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                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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            <element elementId="50">
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                  <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett Scrapbooks</text>
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                  <text>History of residents of the Town of Worthington and of town affairs.</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85148">
                  <text>These scrapbooks consist of newspaper clippings largely from the Hampshire Gazette and Springfield Republican newspapers taken by Ms. Bartlett over the approximate period 1927 - 1960.  As the scrapbooks are scanned and optically character recognized, additional scrapbooks will be added to the collection. There are several scrapbooks in the archive that have not been digitized; those are not members of this collection.&#13;
Some of these items are bound books and others loose-leaf binders. Loose-leaf binders are scanned with a professional flat bed scanner with the result that optical character recognition is of reasonable accuracy. Books are scanned photographically with the result that optical character recognition is less accurate.</text>
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              <name>Format</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85149">
                  <text>Paper</text>
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            <element elementId="39">
              <name>Creator</name>
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                  <text>Elsie V. Bartlett</text>
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                  <text>1927/1960</text>
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                  <text>Worthington Historical Society</text>
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                  <text>2021-12-09</text>
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                <text>1930</text>
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            <name>Date Created</name>
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                <text>1930</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968)  scrapbook,  1930 No. 4 Bright red scrapbook with flexible report covers. 'Compositions' in gold.  Contains newspaper clippings for a comprehensive history of events for the year 1930. The attached file is optically character recognized and has bookmarks for each month of the year.</text>
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          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
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                <text>Bartlett family</text>
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                    <text>.~ b $/1--

reh/

_,c,-:::pt:
£l't$0

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L., ~JJt -

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/131
-----

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--

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON
\\' on hington, J a n. 5-Thc Wom en '!=!
B e n e volent socie ty will m eet on
\ Vedn esduy w ith Miss l•'lorence B erry
for nn a ll dnY mee tin g.
The Frien dship guild will m ee t wi t h I
M iss B ernice K ilbourn o n Thursday
ev en ing.
l\Irs George Russell Is v isiting h er '
·
1
s on Leon, i,1.1 Nor t ha m p ton .
l\l iss Ma r jori e Bartle tt · who has
been spen ding • t h e h olidays at h er
h om e has r etur n ed t o Chesterfield.
l\Irs 'l'. c. Martin has given tile use
of h er radio to the library. Schoo!
,children will com e in on l&lt;'riday mornings at 11 o'clock for the Damrosch
hour of music.
The Grange W hist c lu b w ill meet
i W edne!'lday evening wit h M r and M rs
Edward J . Clark.

- - - -- -

WORTHINGTON

I

W or; hington, J a n. 6-District D ep- I
uty Grand Regent. J ohn Mon1gle a nd
suite or Equity council, Sprlng-f!eld,
w ill inst a l t he officer s of B a shan Hill
coun cil ot Royal Ar canum a t a n open
m ettin g a t L y ceum h all Sa turday
nigh t . This will be followed b y da nc- In g. On Thursday n ig h t D istrict D ep' u ty Grand Rege nt W ells Magargal ,
und suite or B ash a n Hill council o f r
this t own will instal th e officer s of
Onota council at Pittsfield.

l======= ====-- - _j

F r iendship Guild Meets
Jan. 10-The F r1endllhlp 'Oufld
met Thursday evening with' ·M l
alri:r:s:
., R~
Francis A :.I Rob1ns'o1l
ng '
" I.'
·'
,
I
of use d ga1merrts- contr(btited' ti·• ,
relief work, to be sent ,to
Annie Bridgman of ..Nort hampton '
for a ml,s sionary batr ~l, occupied ·
the work hour-, · Devotions w ere
led by Miss Elsfe Bartlett: educa- ·
tional perio d, Mrs. Harry W . Mollison, who read from a book,
" The Leaven In Japan," by Charlotte DeForest ; social period,
Miss E llen Lafave and Mrs. Rob-;
inson. R efr eshments· were served !
in charge ot . Mrs. .Clinton •F .
Rea d and Mrs, F. A .. .Robinson. 1;
vote of thank-i! was •given t o Mrs.1
· .Willia m G. Rice of : AJban-y · 'for !
cC3J}dy for the ,. ·,Sunday school
_ChTistma.s tree, to Emerson Das-is for the gift Qf the large Christ- ·
-mas tree and also 26 small trees
'wh ich were sent by t he Guild
-:w!;_th gifts t o shut-ins, to · Mrs. N.,
C.1 Tuttle, . the .Loya l Ladies and
.others for gifts of m on ey and to
I, all wh o helped i·n any way for ·
J
the. Christmas· exercise_s._

Ml~:

X

- --- - - - ---- - -----

DR MARY SANDERSON
DIES AT AMHERST
'

WORTHINGTON
Jan. 8,-Worthington Grange
j has- b-een fortunate fn" securing
:Char!~ M; Garan-er -of West field,
-"1 high priest of Demeter, to install
\ its officers at an open meeting to
be held at the Lyceum hall on
·Wednesday evening, Jan. 14, at
8 o'clock. To those not familiar
with Grange .work t his .will •be a n
opportunity to see it conducted by
a National Gr ange officer. Th e
· event is of interest to all Gra nge I
members both here and m sur-. j
round ing towns. Ther e wlll be a ,
program in charge of the past lee- I
turers and r efreshments w ill bE- I
1
ser ved.

r-I

I

•

., A mher s t, Jan. 11- D r Mary ~a n der-1
son, 67, died y est er~ay noon a t h er _
sanit a riu m, 34 N orth Prosp ect str eet .1
f ollowing a s hor t illness She w as borr{l
'. in Sou t h Amher st, Septen:iber 24, 186 3;•
lt h e da u g hter of Eugen e S. and Marth a _
, (Pomeroy) San derson. S he g r a dua t ed.
f r om · th e A mh er s t High sch ool anc.l ·
, fr om Ann A1·bor college, Mich., in.•
pr acticed m edicine i n She
-" 1893.
1\ -Vorcester fo r ma ny y ears a n d a lso
con clucte&lt;i t h e N a hum sanitar iu m in
Sp1:11~gfleld. In 1918 s he r emoved h e r
sa111ta rlUfll a t So ut h Amherst a n d had ··b een ·a t h er p r esent location for s'e ven
years.
S he is' s t_1rvi_ve_d , by· a n u n cle, O. ·S.
Po~er oy of M1t t1neagu e a n d a n aunt
Mrs E llen French of W inches ter. D1:
San der son was a. m ember of the
T hursda?7 clu b of Sou t h Amherst u nd .
t h e l\lledwa l associa tion ot' Sprin g fi eld. ' ·
T he f un eral services w ill be private 1
antl b ul'lal will be in the S~ th Am- ·
_J
1:C-Est c emeteg,

�!-

c;

/fbl

DR MARY SANDERSON 67;·
·SUCCUM,BS A.TA.MHER'·s·1

--··

_. ·, . . . · ' ·--1::.,.,.,J '•I'!~ / _ _
Prom_ment 1 _ahys'i~i;-a·n·· -fo"•
r.
'-'
mer}y ·: Co_nducted,, Nahum
n·_ ~t',.,nr1"u' m·..,He·re' . ;.,. ,' '1 I

's
.a.

1
t!~
-S,~~:rd~ :oo:~::::si:o:~~~·~~:f:'ar~~~
- ----- nf___ - , a,t
North Prospect street at Amherst, ,w_;1,9. well. ·knQwn In ,this city,
rp-1· WhEjr~
she_ was for a t,tine mem,b er
"'_/1.,_t .
tH·~ -Sp_ringn~lq
socl,ety

J,r

.
--- -

~--~~- ~~~---,,,,Ir· '
~o~THIN~~O~ --- \
Royal Ai·danum

I~tall~ c,p~ers

Ja.n· l8,-B~shan 1 HtU ·council
of Royai ~rc(Lri..\im,.~e-1&lt;!, an ,open
I mee~tng· an&lt;\ 1.fi., ;e:pa,,uoi; of :&lt;?m-_ - - ~cer11 af·the Ly9e,u m; ba\1 .Saturclay
hight. Dl~tricl Deputy, G~and Re,gent
·,.Jc:&gt;l}Ii.. Mo:µi_gte .
.~qulty
~ou,nci~,; Springfle14, ' ·.a ~sis ted bY

-- -- -

~or,,

1
:

' Pe;~1r~~ii~ntn~i:..1::; ~ i ti~~~~ri~d'
-------~-ga-vef~ ( ~fjn,e'. :~~qJtiql( 9f _# oor
I .W.Ol;l&lt;/ jeKor.~.-~ ~l~rg~-f!ldien&lt;;~/ ~fQ
a
fl.cers D"tait:e:ii were· · T10qstees··
Q A/_I
_Qt
-Medical
and
\ charl~s Q;.WiiHa:oia' ~~ci.:' htrnest
w.J:lere, }or some :nine years she cono:.· Tnliye'f,• ' a.entry,
'ca.rlton .w elis;
, ducted the· Nl!,heim sailatarlum. -F'or
· ' ·
· ·
mariy years . before coming here she
wa:ruenf :::r..,~·o.I!i HJg$tt}S; __..g utd_e ,
practiced medicine at Worcester. In - --- - Richard , B,'.atha way; ·,:·~-· thaplain,
J918 ~.l!he removed -her sabatarhim to
.Harold .Parish; ~ reastit'er,:.-.:.nJlrry
•·south Amherst: · .
:L, :~a.tes·; col_lector, ~red. · ];"air- '
. ]),,r·. San~rson was born a,t· So.th
____...J.Jll~ti; ·s~cretary; William·_·B_r-0wn; __ _
- -- - - - - - - - - Amherst September 24, 1863, the -· ·
.:!!JfJin
_ g , p'a st .r
__.e
_gent, Ji:&gt;s_·eph_ ;r_olly,•·
qaughter .·of Eugene s. ·and Ma'.rtha
" --·
t·oi:~ Qlt , ~ar~;it ;Peas~; . y,!ce.. re' (Potjl.eroy) Sanderson. -She graduated
' from . Amherst High .school and in 1898
gil~t- ·-Law:; e.n&lt;;e ;M_asQ.ni , 'tege)).t, _ _ ___ _
from Ann A.rbor college at Ann Argor,
- - --, S~e:r_ld_aµ ', l?.odge.. ·-~!,p_
1i·py.:~-g -tJ1e_- Mich. ·She leaves an uncle, o. s. PoininstaU:a;tiQ:q , b_rlef au_dresses· _were .
eroy·. b! . Mittineague:; an 'aunJ, 'Mrs
.mli,4e·-oy, t-t-l ft( i!J:S,~Jl!n$~-:C:..~!ffcer,,
_________ E_Hen French . of Wmchester, ·; and a - -------;'Jo-h-n· -; ~&lt;&gt;~1~1~--:__.'.····~1tef Qf!ot.e., ·. S.u_- - - - - - niece, :rvt:Iss ~lice. Sanderso~, w:·h o made
l:Pr~me . :..Repi:-.eS:e~tative .:°'.--Felix.·,
her horn~ with Dr San-de1 son.
' Sc}la:rmen ·, an·« .:.-pa t -G · ·d •. ~R ·. · ~
Soqie ~1me .b efore her deatll pr San:
.
• ·· · . . ··
s
ra_q _e~ -.
derson · made arrangements . fpr, the - -·-· ·
· - 1 gent Willi~~ Root of P~ttsfteld; continuance or · he~ s~nltariuni'"•after
; ~r~_~ d ~, OpapJai~ :(!enry _.Rat):f!_
&gt;U:n
her death1 so the mst1tutlon,. · wh!&lt;:h
~.o,f : :,§roc:k_br~~g~, .: J?eJ?p;V'. Or~nd.
now includes two hou!'~s. and cares_..,ft.ti!~~ ~- J. ·smal}.ey ~li!,l , ,Alter~tor 11,om 1s to 20 patients, -will ·still
...,.n:ate , : Supreme . lt~Iitesentatiy
continue to serve the hospital _needs :
Fra'nft Baines ot. ·sxif{ngtrel&lt;!.~
ot ;:: l~~r:.1:in~fi1 be held at !l,n
Gr.aud E,eg.e nt_W.illiaJJ;_,. Root spoke·.
fl dertaki1:~s parlors at Amherst this aft- - - - - , of ~ hospitali_ty- ,sf~o~e of the
· ernoon, ; and will be privat~. Burial
1.fine , character~E!tjcs "Pf
'Basha1l
;•will be In_ Soutl} Amher~~·-ce~et~rl'_. . '
IJ:ill c~uncU l!.1'd said;-~ "It is thr,
.___ _ _ _ - ~ 1 whole. souled
hospitality which
Funeral of Dr Mary Sa.nderson
I draws 1I,s . here, to your meetings'
' The fun er al of Dr Mary Sa nde1·son~
again and again," The evening
was held this afternoon, Elder I .
closed With dancing and .refresh- :-- - - - . ---Martin or the Seventh Da y Adventist
ments were ·served.
1
church or Middlet&lt;!",vn, Ct., officiating,
The Women 's c}3enevolent sbcl·'l'he bearers were Willia m H. Atkins,
t
ill
Char les Thayer, Charles . King· and
e y ~
hold its an.nual .. business
34

-

Pas~

~ll- f

M-i-- _

Fre d Adams, all of. S01~th Amh erst.

Burial was in So ut h Amherst cemet ery.

-

-

- ~ meetu~g WitQ

J•he ~isses 'Rice. on

Friday_af.tern~·ou, · Jan 16 at 2 .
.o'clock. .
. .
·
'
· Mrs.' 1-:leli'ie Shipman ·Hollis : 'f s
helping to c'are for Raymond p
Buck, )Vho has been ill for .som~
weeks at hi-s home in W1lliam ~
burg.
_ _ __ _ _ _
s

----

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~

HINGTON
:::::R=:::::T::::::::
WO

The home economics and com- 1
munity service a nd agricultural
I committees of the Grange meet
with Harold E astman, county club 1
agent of the farm bureau, at Mrs. I
Charles A. Kilbourn's this even- f
i ng at 8 o'clock.
Miss Beatrice Van Wert and
Raymond Wheeler will entertain
the Orang~ Whist club at the
Lyceum hall, Saturday evening.
John F rissell is 111 with pneu.
mania. at the Noble hospital in
Westfield.
,

1

Officers
Insta11s Grange Gardner of
Jan. 16-Charle_s M, f Demeter ,
st O worthingWestfield, high pn~
1 0
t evening
installed the office s
'. ton Orange, No. 90 , as roost imat the Lyce um ball in ~as assistpressive manner. He S 1th m a red by Mrs. Walter E.A rnKilbourn,
l 'C Distl'irt. Meets
Fi
shal; Mrs. Char es M. arJ"orie G.
f ti
t 1·
ie r egalia bearer ; Miss . ' . Miss
Jan. 15.-A . mee ?gt .· o
.:.....-....,,,,==== =====~Wor t llington fll'e diS llct was Bartlett emblem bearer,..
Rice, chaplain; Miss LJoheld W ednesd.aY afternoon a t tl~e ' S usan
town lrn.11 at 1 o'clock. Frankhn sephine Hewitt, pianist. Mrt esf i
tcr C LeDuc worthy mas er -O
H. Bu rr was elected moderator
Chest~r.field Grange and a past
- and Mrs. :Hel en G. Burr, cle ric
master of Worthington Gran_g;,
The rep ort of th e treasurer, l\lrs.
a nd Mrs. George E. Torrey, ass1s .H elen G. Burr, was t)1e followin g :
ed in the singing. There was fa ;Balance, Jan . 1, 1930, $4 52 .40;
large audience with m any out-o total receipts, $3,233.03 ; total
Flowering plan~
total bal• town guests.
expenses, $2,69 2.07;
were used in the decorations.
ance, $540.96. The r eport of_ the
feature of the evening was the
water commissioners, Sllend an
presen tation by Mr. Gardner in beDodge and Char~es A. Kilbourn,
half of the National Grange, of a
was given by. the· form er, Expenses, $205.34. Officers were picture of Oliver Hudson Kelley,
elected as follows : Clerk- and , founder of the Grange, and framed
treasurer , Mr,s. H elen G. Burr; • by the worthy master, Mrs. Wal_a uditor, H. Stanley Cole; wate'r I ter L. Higgins, wh ich sh~ un) commissioner f9r ,t hree years, •i v~ited reading a paver on his li!e
Officers in~
Clemen t F. Burr; fire chief,, and ~chievements.
stalled: Worthy Master, Miss BeaJohn Frissell. It ·was voted to
- - \ raise $900 by taxation ' a~d · t~ · trice Van Wert; overseer, W a lter
L Higofos• lecturer, Mrs. Guy
allow the treasurer to bdrrow
Bartlett'; . steward, Raymond
money to be paid from t axes oi:
Wheeler; assistant steward, Ralph
revenue of t he present year.
Smith; chaplain, Mrs. Walter L . .
·
1 Meeting a~journed.
Higgins; treasurer, Ernest G. ·
·, Thayer; secretary, Arthur G. CaCitizens' C;,.,ucus Held ·
_
pen; gate lceeper, William !3rown;
. . A cithens' cauc us was· held on
Ceres, Mrs.: Fran,k W. Bates; Po·Wednesday ' afternooil.Jn-·anticip a:
mona, Mrs. Harold Parish; Flora, - tion o( the -annual town meeting
Miss Ellen Lafave ; lady assistant
which will' be held ·th·e first Monsteward, M,rs . . Fr.ancls A. Robin-·
day in February. Frank W. Bates
son; .executive committee for three'
was elected' niod·erator: of the eaucu-s, and Mrs. Mabel Sweet, ~ie&amp; . 1 years, Mrs'. Ernest G, Thayer.
There were brief speeches by State i
The following nomina!!~~s. ~vere
made : J\Ioderator for one year, Deputy Wilbur 1'4_oore of Hunting- ~ __________ _
ton, ' and Sfate -' Deputy Charles.
L. C. Sweet; town clerk and
treasurer·, Franklin H. Burr; se- Brown ·o f Pittsfield, and an ad- ,
lectmen, Alden B. Cady, Herbert ~ dress- ' by the installing officer, : __ _
------ --- :-a. Porter, Harry L. Bates ; school Qharles M. Gardner, who spoke of
! committee for three years, l\Irs. i the projects and accomplishments: f
· Anna Cole; auditor, Arthur G. of the National Grange. He paid ,
Capen; assessor for three years, r a. very high compliment to the reHenry Snyder; tax collector, Har- , tiring master of Worthington
r y: W. Mollison; constable, Sheri- Grange, Mrs. Walter L. Higgins,
dan Dodge ; tree warden, H. Stan- and presented her as a gift of the
Grange with a past master's jewel,
ley Cole ; cemetery commissioner
Gold p\ns were also presented by
for: three years, Clement F . Burr;
caucus committee, Franklin H. Mra. Higgins to Dr. and Mrs.
Burr, Wells Magargal , Eben L. Francis A. Robinson for securing ·
Shaw. Voted to allow tile caucus the moiit, new members throughcomm itlee to fill vacancies oc- out the year. A ~rogram, in
curring du ring the year. Mee ting charge of the past lecturers, in· eluded a dialogue, "A Slight Mis•
I adjourned.
understanding," by Mrs: Daniel R.
John Frissell, who has been Porter. an\l Mrs. Harold Parish,
Ill at his home, Cal\secl by over- and a short play, "Ethel Parish
work in harvesting ice, was ta k- Entertains the Worthington Bridge
en to the Noble hospital in Wesl.. Club," by Mrs. Parish, Mrs. Walter
~e!d \Uedroiilia;y night.
H. Tower, Mrs. Ernest G, Thayer
.. .----. ~
- and Mrs. Daniel ~- Porter, which
consisted mostly of local hits as
Q £t~
1 - ~
the players gossiped over their
game. Doughnuts and coffee were
served by the feast committee, Mr.
and Mrs. E. G, Th~ye~.

f

WORTHINGTO N

;

T

___,

3

F:

I

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t---

--

.A

�•I

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

W orthin g·tou, Jan. 18 -Th e n.nnu
busin ess m eetin g of the Wome n ~s
Bene volen t sooie ty wns held Frida y
a ftern oon at the hor'tH• of the presjdent , Miss Susa n T. Rice. The
t
I, of the treas urer, Mrs Helen G. 1·ep0r
Burr,
was as follow s: Bala.nc~ Ip tile treas 11 ury,
Janu a
1. 19ao. s1as.56; re_ _
---· · ceipts , $858.6ry
.
4: expense!!, $627.19 ; bal, ance in the treas ury, J i,mia ry 1, 193!,
S231.4 5. It was voted that the socie ty,
. g ive $50 towa rd the ' expen ses of r~- --·
pairi ng churc h windo ws . and to add
/
$60 to the incor porat ors' fund. Actio n
J h
z
Wort hingt on, Jan.
19- 0 n
was tal,en on the death durin g the
·
\
FriS!l
ell, 69, of Wort hing ton died this
_ _ _ _ past, year or Mrs
1
Ella E. Bu~·r, secre - - - ··-·- - after noon at Nobl e hosp ital, Wes ttary and treas urer of thr. socie ty from
1894 t o 1921,
' field, , pneu moni a. He was born at
a perio d of 27 years . Also .
0•
on the death of Mrs H r:l en Jame s of
Peru , son of Dwig ht and Ann (Roc kWil11amsburg. The followi11g 9fflcers . - - - - · well) Friss ell. He marr ied :Mary
were electe d : Presi dent, Miss Susa
Leslie of wes t Wort hini: ton· and had .
T. Rice; vice- presi dent, l\frs Ma y Hil-n I
lived in this town many year s.
bour n; secre taJ Y and treas urer, Mrs
Mr Friss ell lea v es his wido w; two
Hele n G. Burr ; direc tors, chair man; .------ - - daug hters, Mrs Cecii
Mrs Anna A. Cole, Miss Ellsle V.
3imp son o"f
Worc ester and Mrs Arlin Cole .of
Ba rtlett , Mrs Ina belle Smith , Mrs
Ches
terfie
ld;
three broth ers, Hom er
Effi e P eas e., Mrs Sadie Call, Mrs i:1ay
_J of Peru , Ama sa of New Bedf ord.
_ _ _ ---- --1,. Friss ell. 1 Following
and
th&lt;! meet ing ~- ~
Dt
E
.
M.
Friss
ell of Web ster; a. sisI fre.sh ment s we_re :.s_e rved,
I
1 ter,
Mrs Walt er 1S~ne, , and four
grand child ren, Lesli e' and Beve rly
- - - - - - - Cole \ and Jane t and
Ever ett Simp . - -- - -- - - - -so~h e fune ral will be held Wed nesd ay
after noon at 2 at the home . Rev E.
•- -P . Cutle r of Rich mond offici ating
---- --·- 1 Wor thing ton had a recor
d-bre aking
sisted by R ev Jame s Burc kes, asatten danc e at its insta llatio n meet ing
of
I Wort hin gton. Buri al will be in Nort h
Janu ary 14, in spite of zero weat her
.
ceme ter y.
- - and huge snow drift s. Miss Beat
rice
Van Wer t, a youn g wom an only 19 1
Wort h ing-t on, J a n. 19-T hroug h Miss
year s old, is W orth~ngto n's new masFlore nce Berr y, the Red Cros s nurse ,
a n appe al h a s b een Issue d to peop le
ter for 1931, with a stron g corp s of
of t his town to assis t the Ham pshir
supp ortin g office rs and very brig ht
coun ty chap ter of th e Red Cros s toe
pros pects .
r a ise $8000 for the r elief of the drou th
l
'!s uffer ers. Ther e w ill be no perso nal
,sollc ita tidn s, hut volun ta ry contr ibutions are as k ed for and may be hand ed to Miss Elsie V. Ba rtlett . •
The W om en's B enev olent socie ty
w ill meet on Wed nesda y with Mr.s
H atry V\7, Mollison for an all-d ay 1
m eetin g.
Mi ss Beatr ice Van 'W,er t a nd Raymond W heele r enter taine d the Gr ange
·w hist clu 'J at the L )•ceu m hall last
e venin :; wit h s ix table s In play. 'The
fl rst pl'ize s we1·e won by Mrs Guy F.
Bartl et t a nd H. Stanl ey Cole a nd the
cons olatio n prize s by Mrs Cha rles A.
, K ilbou rn a nd Ral 11h Sm ith .
.Miss Doro th y l&lt;~ull er Bartl e tt Will
, gra dua te T h ursda y from the H igh
Sch ool of Com m erce, Spring field.
T he Gra nge da nce has been post
poned until F ebrua ry 13· It will be a' va lenti ne danc e.
Mr and Mrs Law rence R a ndall and \
famil y of Hadl ey were Sund ay guest
:s
o! Mr and Mrs Walt er Towe r.
1
The Gran g e Whis t club w ill m eet 1
W ednes da y e vening a t L yceu m hall.

JOHN Z. FRISSELL
1JIES AT WESTFIELD --

Native of Peru an d Worthington Resident Many
YealiS Su'ccumbs at 69

I

\

I "

�WORTHINGTON

I

• . 21.- Tbe fune ral t&gt;f John
, ~
~ Frissell was held at the hom e
this afternoon at 2 o!clock. - :he
!Rev. Elish a P. Cutt er ·of Rrch - /
rnond, a form er past~ c, .oillc iated ,
assis ted by the Rev. Jame s H .
Burckes ot the Firs t Corlg rega- ·,
tiona l churc h, who offer ed pray er: ·
~'Beau tiful Isle of Som ewhe re"
:was sung by ~r. SQJ#fo• of Hu.nafter the .
. tington, also a-(ie?.pougf.
praye r. The t ufi~-ral 1:was very
largely atten ded. {fp.e bt _are1:s were
Cecil Simpson of -Wor ceste r, Arltn
·cole or. Ches ter,f i~~ · Eben L.
Shaw, Dani el P or! ~r, Ke.rt.neth ·
•Peas e and Henry Stfyder ot th!/;
town. Ther e were many . beau tffuJ
•floral tribu tes. Burl al"w as fn the
Nort h ceme tery.
1

----r =--- - -- --

---- ---- - - --

-- - ---

. ----- - - ---, WORTHINGTON
Jan. 25.- The Gran ge. will obNigh t" .o n
serve -''Nei ghbo rs'
Lyce um · 1
the
at
ing
even
day
Tues
Blan dand
n
hall with Hunt ingto
ges invit ed. Visit ing
Gran
ford
~
Gran ges furni sh one- half hour or
,
ente rtain ment.
. __ __ __ _
--- - - - - · - - - - - · - - - - -- --- --1 Mrs. John Frlss en · has closed ---her hous e and will spen·d the remain der ot the winte r' with her
.f\,r lin Cote, of - -- · - - - - - - --- - - - - - -- - - - - - - - - ·
- 1 daug hter, .Mrs.
_ .
,_Hig hland stree t.
Mrs. Perm ella Gran ge·r · Is con1
ss. ..
- - - - - -- - - · -- · - -- -- ___ _ __ fined to tb_e hous e with illne
enter
.
y
Berr
.
nc13.
Miss, Flore
taine d the olde r g°frls or her Sunday scho ol class at her home· -yesterda y after noon ~
The Rev. John C. Wigh tman or·
, Flore nce preacliel} in the Co1fg re-. - - -- -- gatio nal cburch. . thfs mOrning, taking as bis subJ et.L The Lord 's
Pray er and bis te·xt, lsJ John ,' 1: 1
2, "For the Ufe was manlJ.!ested, r
and we have seen it." Cont ributions, howe ver smal l, were again
- -- - - - - -- - - - - - - - - - -------- - asked for, for the Red Cross relle r
- -. each
fund, it being desir ed that
.
perso n shou ld give some thing
ed to
_ __ _ _ _ _ This Q1ay be hand ed or mall
-· - - - - - - · - ·-- - - - - - Miss Elsie V. Bart lett. The n ewly
organized Sund ay school followe!l
the morn ing servi ce.
The 'Gran ge whis t club, whic h
was postp oned last week, will
meet on Thur sday even ing at the
Lyceum hall. Host esses , Mrs. Harold Paris h and Mrs. Fran k W. I
Bates .

r- -1

�She had a gift and deilliei·atel-Y devoted her life to usi ng it for t he benetl t o! t he physically ill. She was a
devoted a dherent of the Batlle Creek
method or treatment and used h yd rothera py in the trea tmen t of her patients ' ln t he Nauheim sanitarium as
\
- - ---·-- well rui at t he local institution. Th e
1
na me N:1uheim mea)IS " water treat ment," as most reaa ers know. Dr SanI
derson was graduated !rom A .nu Arbor In l 803 and practiced at W orcester for some years follo wing. She then
went to California, where she had
F fo m Our Special -Corr~spondent
two bt·others. who were practic;ing
Amhe1·st, Jau. 2-1 -lt wlll be of genphysician s, One of them, the father eral in terest th·roughout the ',commui of Miss Allee Sanderson, coodu.cted a
nity, and ind~_ed the entire Connect!1sanitarium at Berkeley, Cat. Dr l\lary
heeded ·the c;all from home, howeve-r, __ _ _ - - --- -- - - - - - cut valie:v section, t.o know that-. the
; and came back to .-establish a practice
Dr Mary Sanderson sanita~ium: •. on.
t Springfield. From t hat to the
North Prospect s treet wili continue
IaSpringfl.eld
. sanitarium and thence to
to operate u11de1· the same ,~~neral
South Amhers t In 1916, where on the
plan . ~s when under her person,:;il sµhome farm, Range view, a n a me which
perv1s1on. Dr Sanderson ' practiced
followed h er locations to the present
m edicine at· •W orcester .and Spring.
one, s_h e set up a private sanitarium.
field and conducted the Nauheim sa-ni- . - - - - Finding he1·self a little too far re tarium in the latt1:r ci~y before
moved from the center of transport'1, ing to Amherat, and in h er a;ei!.th '
tion,. she came to a place on Northabout two weeks ag·o the 1J1edical pro~
ampton road. and finally bou:nit the
_fesslon lo~t an · earnest worker, .' Tb~
present house . on Nul'lh Prospect
annou!i,cement by her niece and sole
street.
\
,
1
beneficiary, Miss Allee Sanderson,
In recent years the barn on the
t hat the sanitarium would carry· ori'
North Pl'Ospect-sll'eet property was
- - - - - -- with the same idea ls for service and - -- - -- re1nodeled into an annex and the en- - - - - - t h e same prac tical conduct, was retire· outfit n ow houses 15 beds. Miss
c eived with satisfaction among its' ,
Jane Roberts, who has been D r
Sanderson's head nu l'se for some _ _ _ __ _
triends.
Dr Sanderson was' ' yirtuall y a pioyea:s and was also with her a t the
neer i'n her pa'rticular type of service,
S pnngfl eld place, is n ow in full
charge of nursing problems. Dt· Nelwhich amounted almost to a philanthrophy. She p :·actic!ld medicine in this
~?n C. Haskell is visiting physician.
Ihere are three nurses regularly e mstate and in Calirurj1ia, served her
ployed and special nurses attendant a t
time In the sanitarium at Springfield
~ertaln cases. Miss Alice is the busand finally found her way back to
mess manager, as she has been for her
Ylrbat she called "home" and estaba un t Ince h e ~ me from California in
lished a center for the treatment of
19?8
·
'
human ills, where th e ft1•st thou;;;·ht is
- • 'fhe _n ursmg
stnt'f ls' ca1Tyiug°
on_, the patien ts arc standi n ;;;· b y , and
always one of humanity rather than
l\'[1ss Sanderson wishes it ma de plairl
finan cial r~ward . A man a nd his wire
th a t !he same ser vice, t he s a me ti·eatof South Amherst, long neig hbors of
1 m ents and t he same Ideal ~ill be ..
the doctor, expressed their ·t houghts
vo_gue under the n ew a n angem e;~
, other and her worl{ in this wa y: "Her
Mis Sanderson \\'US in c\Qse touth wi th
first thought was or hum a nity, before
f he . manag~men t
financial reward. Sh e was a woman of
of her father's
sa n~tarium m California fo r some
great sympathy and inspiration to the
sick and oth ers whom she m et, a
1-e~r~
woman of vis ion and g 1·cat cou rage
exemplified by he1· persistence ln establishing a selt-supportlng· sauitari- 1
4...m h ere in Amherst."

' AMH~RST'APPRECIATES :
SANDERSON SANITARIUM
' - - ------- Announceinent it ·will Con·
tinue as Heretofore Received With Satisfaction

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�WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Alt'£ 1CLES IX WARR AN'r

Worth ington Grang e observ ed \
Town to Consid er ll Nnmh cr of noad
N
eighbo
rs' Night last e vening
1
Questio ns at 'l'own -Mcetl ng
_ Lyceu m h all with Bland ford
and
W C\l'thing·ton,. J a n. 27 - Wan·~mls
Hunti n g ton gran ges a s guests . The
for the a.nnua l t own -meeti ng have
roll call showe d the attend ance\
1 been pos ted wh-fcb is to be held at
a
~ •-:-foll ows :
Hunti ng ton,
22; I
the town hall on i\fonda y, ebruar y
Bland ford, 21, and ·worth ington , 1
2. The wa r ra nt co rries 38 aF1·t!cles
o~
r
which th e following- are of interes t:
f D
F
33 , U pon mo ton
r.
• A.
Article 23,
see If the town will vo te
Robin
son,
second ed by Past Masto ra ise a nd ap propria te a sum or
t er Mr s W alter L. Higgin s, the \
money to be expemled on Ra nda.II
grang e voted to g{ve $5 from the
hill a nd th e Willia msburg r oad prpwhist fund towar d the R ed Cr_oss
vlding the sta te a nd county will a llot
r elief !und for drouth suffer ers. .
- a sum to be used. Article 24, to see
Voted , that the grang e serve a
if the town will raise and approp riate
lunch at the town m eeting , Feb.
a sum of money to meet the expens e
.. _
_ __ 2 ., comiu ittee, Mrs. Guy_ F. Bartof a 60-foot layout on the main road
from "Worth ington Corner s to the
lett, Mrs. Helen G. Burr, Mrs,
Huntin gton line. Article 25, to see _it
Walte r L. Higg ins and Mr s.
~he town will approp ria te $500 from
Charle s A. KUbo ume. . A demit
tbe amoun t ra ised and approp riated
- -- -- was gr a nted to Miss Mildre d P arunder a r ticle 41 a t the first annua l
sons of South ampto n. - Notice was
m eeting a nd expend the same on the
given of a day meetin g of" Hillside
Wes t W or thili.g ton river roa.d. Article ___ _
_ __ Pomo na Grarrg e in Worth ington -: ---- ----__ , 26. to s ee if ·t~1e town will raise and
on Saturd ay, Feb.-, 7. There were
appro pria te t he s um of $;i70 for t he
b·ri·er remar ks_ l&gt;·y _ state Deputy
maintena nce and r epair -t&gt;f the 11.4
miles of the P eru a nd Huntin gton
___ ___ Moore ot Hunti
ngton ; Worth y - - - - -1·oa ds constr ucted in whole or pa rt
r;r~irte
r
Arth~
r
F.
Pi~rce of Highwith st a te fu nds; or author ize theseland Grang e, _and Worth y Maste r
Jectme n to agree with the depar tment
----· ·- ____ Charle s Wyma n : f Bland ford, The
of public works tha t i be commo n0
wea lth may proceed with the r epairs
follow ing -half-h our-pr ogram ~wnich
and improv em ents and that the town
wa.s"'."'Ttirru.shed by . the~ visitin g
w ill pay $50 per mile towa rd the cost
_ _ _ grange s was a very .enjoy able',f ea- r - - - - - - ----1 of said work a nd tha t the amoun
-t
ture of the eve_ning: Harmo nica
to be pa id may be made a part of
d uet, Charle s· ' E. Wyma n and I
the s ta te ta x. Article 29, to see if
Charle s E. Spenc er of Bland ford;
th e t own will raise a nd approp rinte
---- -- - - - readin g,. Mrs: Marga ret Wood s o f r
- - - - - - - $500 t o bala nce S500 that may be alHunti ngton ; piano duet, Miss Hart
lotted by the co unty commi ssione rs I
•
: to ext en d the Ding le road nor
,therly
and Mrs. Comp ton pf Bland ford;
from t he sect ion built in 1930. Article · - readin g, "Wom en's _Right s" by - - - - - - 30, to ~ee if th~ _o twn ~ ill raise a~d
Cha;rle s E. Wyma n of Bland ford;
approp riat e a sum of $500 f6r the road
duet, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Cole of
leading from Worth ington Corner s to - - - - - - - - Hunti ngton ; sketch , 41 Black Face" - 7 Miss Bessie Ames's .
_ _
, by Ho~a rd &lt;;:one -of Hunti ngton ;·
- ~ isong in cpstum_e, "Ol, 01, He's GQ- - ---- ----- - - - - --- . ____ ____ __ _J ing Back" -by Cµ.arle~ ~. Spenc er - - - - - - - ' of Bland ford; recitat ion, Mrs.
Gertru de Smith of Hunti ngton .
:Refre shmen ts, in. charge of Mr. ·
- - - - - - - --- - - -__ _, and Mrs. Ernes t G. Thaye r were. r
serYed , afte1· which dancin g was;
,enjoy ed.

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�-., WORTHINGTOtf ~- -

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WORTHINGtON VOTES

ROAD IMPROVEMENTS

Worthington, Feb. ;t-The close ot
' the week was marked by . a s eries ol'.J
ca rd parties. Mrs Carl A. Loveland
entertained •'• TlJe ·Jolly Five" recently ,
. with o ne table in play. The fl1:st J)rlz~
1 was w on •b y Mrs Eben Shnw and the 1
consolation-, prize by Mrs Ha1·old
Parish. Their next meeting w !Jll bel'
with Mrs Eben Shaw on February
In honor of the birthday of Mrs Frank
Worthington, F eb . 2-r-Tbe town
Bates., On Thursday evening four ,
_ ____
voted tod1:1,y all the proposals for road
____ , _,;___ t;ables we1·e In ' play · at the Lyceum
'f: hall at the meeting o f the Grango 1
improvement, the total sum being
i '\
Whist club. The hostf'S!':CS were Mrs
$6670, for work on RIUldall bill and
' ·
Harold . Parish and Mrs Frank W. ,
the William1c1burg road, 60-foot layout
_ _j Bates. '.rhe first prize:'! were 'won by \
J Mrs George E. Torrey, .Tr., and H.
from Worthington Corners to the
l Stanley Cole, and the consolation
Huntington line. West Worthington
I pulzes by Miss Elsie V. Bartlett 3fd
river
road, Peru and Huntington
1
Clifford Tinker.,
.
'
reads, · the Dingle roa&lt;l and a sectfon
Mrs Charles A. Kilhourn and Miss
. Elsie Y. Bartlett e i1t~rtjl,ined the
from '-''orthington Co1·ners to tl:\e
, , ~PIIRIJQ Bridge and Wl1is!: club y eshome of Miss
Ames. It was
~
- -- - -- - - ·J terday aftei·noon at tl~e home ol the - - - - - - - - ·•voted to expendBessie
the accumulated comformer with two tables of bridge a nd
etery fund s on improvement of the
one of whist in play. Pl"izes were _w on
several cemeteries.
•
as follows: Bridge, first, Miss Ma r.There was a conte.st for the select·-jorie G . Bartlett; _second, i.irrs Fra.n cis
- - - --· men's Offices. which resulted as folA. Robinson: consola,icnr ~1rs Homer
lows (three to be elec ted): Alden B.
/
I Granger; wbi~t. first, Mrs Harry W .
Cady, 110; Harry L. Bates, 92; Wells
', Mollis6n; consolation, Mrs M e rwin F. ,
_ _ _ _Magargal, 83; Herbert G. Porter, 73.
---- · Packard.
A contest for the office of tax collector gave Harry W. Mollison 66 vote.s
and Sherida n Dodge, 63,
'
The summary:Town officers elected: ¥oderator
Louis C. Swee t; town clerk and treas~
-urer, Franklin H. Burr; selectmen,
- - - - - members of the board of h ealth and - - welfare board, Alden B. Cady, Harry
L. 'Bates, W ells Maga rga l; assessor
'for th:ee y ears, Henry Sn yder; school
, committeeman for three yea1·s, Mrs
ff.,s. · Cole; cemetery commissioner
Clement F . Burr; auditor, Arthur G'.
(?apen; t ax collecter, Harry W. Moll hson; tree wa1·deu, H. Stanley Cole·
consta ble, Sherida n D od ge almoner~
of Whiting Street fund, Ern est G.
•Thayer, Fordyce Knapp and Clement
F. Burr.
Appropriations: Town offices, $1200; '
scbools, $13,000; town physicia n, $950;
public w elfare, $600; highways and
br1dges, $2195; state road work, $6570;
snow fences, $300; street lights, $316:
mot h s uppression, $100; - tree warden
$25: R ed Crns, $25; workmen's insur~
a nce, $350; old age pension, $500:
discount on b orrow ed mone y, $30 t. con1
tingcnt account, $900; total, 27,tl'30.

4,

A Number of Projects Ap~
proved - Co~ test For
Selectmen

L _

Mr-s. A. 0. H ewitt and ~
Catherine Hewitt of New Le110~
road, Pittsfield, an d Miss Jan e t~e
Otto of Duffalo, N. Y., ,~e re m
town today calling upon fn euds.

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�'/c)-; ~Jf 3 /_
WORTHlNGTON'

WORTHINGTON

Feb: ·8--Th~- G; ~~ge~w.ill .meet
Lyceum hall on· Tuesday
t~arge Attendance at Grange Meet~ evrenlng wi th a Valentine proWorthington, F eb. 5- Mrs H o~·a rd
'
, g am.
Mason and La wrence Mason; will en1ng
·
'
The Frie d hi
There was a good attendance at I b Id · n 8 P Guild wlJI hold
tertain t he Grange whist club at their
the
meeting
yesterday
at
Lyceum
~a
r arfe and whist party on Frihome Saturday evening.
hall of Hillside Pomona Gr-ange M.y H ernoon at the home of
Edwa rd Buxton, who lives alone at
his home on Cold street, was found
' No 20 with 'J11. present from · rs. arry Mollison.
·
•
~ from Chester- I· f Arthur Pomeroy h a d th e misunconscious on the floor y esterdWY, by
Huntington
fou,·
Wllliam Wier who came to the house
field
four
from
cummln"0 ton two I ortune to cut his foot with an
1 to
see him and r eceiving n o r es ponse
•
•
'&gt;
•
axe ~riday,
·
to his knock f orced an ent rance. Dr
frim P!ttsfleld and ,a., from
The Grange·whist club was elbI F. A. Robinson wa s call ed who found Vi orthin.,ton, total 46. A pap~r. tertained last ev l b M
I h im suffering from pn eumonia. He
en ng_
ra.
,' "Top l cs of th e Day,· " was read . by . Howard Mason and
son,Y Lawwas taken to the Spring field hospital.
1
J.dClark
11
at
-tllhe
~WhornmgI
/
rence,
at
their
hom'e
with
nine
.
Edwlard
, The Friends hip g uild m et last evesess on an _a -ro .c a ,',
Y _ tables in play. · 'T he first prizes
ning with Mrs Clinton F . R ead. The
sewing h our in charge of the projept
Belong to the Grang.e,. was re wE_:r e won by.Miss Madeline Tow~
committee, Mrs George E. T orr ey, Jr.,
s~onded to by nearly all present. / send and WilU'am Brown and
Mrs Frnncis A. Robinson and M iss _. Dmner was served by the Wor_th- the consofatfon · priz"eS' by Mrs:
Marjorie Ba rtlett consisted in the
in gton Gra.nge. Afternoon pr_o- / Claude Knaii'-6 and -t.er d• S ·Jth·
ma king of children's dresses and
gram : P~pei-, "What the Commu- '"--- - -#
· .
_an mt "
scra.p books. It was voted to give $5
nity Expects of a Teacher/ ' by
ltm\·a rd t he Red Cross relief fund for
_, Mrs. Carlton Loveland; · . duet, ,
drouth· sufferers. · 1
•
1- -- ~=== =----:= ::--:,'._____:.....l . "When You. and I Were Young,
: Maggie ;• Mr_. . and Mrs. Ralph .
1,
1r_ i·Smlth; pap~r. "What the Teacher .,.._ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
, Ex:Pects or the Community," by
t _Feb. 5.~M-rs. Howard · Mason· 1 ·.Miss Ellen Lafave, and'' read by .
~,j11 and Lawrence Mason will .e nter- ~ Mr~. Biggins, followe_d by d11- ·
-----tain the . Grange Whlst club at I l CUssion; · reading, Mrs . Gertrude
thei11 home Saturday evening.
t Smith~ . pape_
r , "Schools of Fifty·
The Women's ' Benevolent soYears Ago," by Mrs. Ed-ward · J •.
- - --·- - - cfety· met yesterday at the hom8 -·- ·; Clark/'" and read by Mrs. Sweet~- of Mrs. Charles A. · ·Kilbourn
.The next meeting
be held 1n .
,with eleven pr.asent. · Work on A
Plainfield on April -4th.
--- - - - · - - - - - - - - - -----➔ 11 1'Ug for the Sul)day school room ---·
of the church· was continued, and
4-H Cooking Club Elects Officers·
a quilt to be sold at the annual
' Feb. 10-The 4-H Cooking club
' !air. The next meeting will -be - ~et with their local leader, Mtss, 1 -- - - -· - - - - -- - - - - - h~ld with the Misses Rice on Feb.
!Carrie w_•. Porter, Saturday .for. ·
,1 8.
·
·.
the first -meeting this season. ' The
The Friendship Guild met last -- !ll,ee,t lng_ was caU_ed to otd-er . hy __________ __ _ __
Mfss Porter at 2- o'clock, a.nil tho
\ evening with Mrs. Clinton F . Read.
r The sewing hour was fn charge following· .officers elected : Presi- - - i _ , of the pr oject committee, Mrs. --·- &lt;l.e.~-~. ~ ?n~l .Bradley;
vice-pre§i:: · · - -- - _ _ _
,\ '
George E . Torr ey, Jr., Miss Mardent~ .Ma)'y ~?~.·n .ur r ; ·. iec.retary·
\
jorie Bartlett and Mrs. Fr~nces A.
i Marvjs- S3tyd~r: · t.~eal,'!Urer, Q-e_Jal d~·
_ _ j_
Robinson and consisted of the . 'ine Smith_t _song leader -Hefen M
making of childr en's dresses and ' Bart~e~t . . 'l'_ea: ,vafserv'ed a nd th;l
president p,o.ured, assisted by Ha~ I
scrap books. Devotions were led
. by Miss Lois Sn.Ith a nd the edu- 1 riet H iggins; J an ~t Wr ight .Jean.
- - - - - - -- ; cational period by l\1tss Marjorie 1 ~ Joyal ,and po:rothy Joyal. ~
,,;he..Cl'ub
Bartlett. Voted to give $5. 00
1has 11· memberii, .as follows: Jean.
jand ~orothy .,Joyal, Mary Ellen
tow.a rd the Red Cross relief fund
--- - - - - · · - for drouth suflerers. Refr esh- - 1,Read, Ger_a ld!ne Smith, H'eijlII ·--- - men ts were ser ve&lt;l. Hostess, Miss
• Bartlett, J anet Wrigh t, MurieL
Elizabeth Torr ey. The next meetBra dley,. R uth Wr ight, Mary Burr'
_____ _ l.ng will be held with Mrs. Daniel _ Har riet H iggins and Marvis Sny~ ,
der. Meetings will be h eld every
1R. Porter on March 5.
1
Edward Buxton, a n elderly
Satur day at 11
m., -the next
man, who lives alone at his home
meeting belng at · Miss Porte( s-,
on Cold street, was found un- --- when o~ cerr, will be installed.
conscious on the floor yesterday
. _____ by William Wier, who '~ame t o the
house t o see him, and r eceiving :
no response to his knock forced
__ _ _
an entrance. Dr. F . A. Robinson
'\Vas called wh o found him sufferlng from pneumonia, He was taken to t he Springfield hospital.
.

at th0

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WORTHINGTON

will

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a.

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�-I

'WORTHINGT-ON
-- -

- - -- -

-

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WORTHINGTON

.,
vv orthington, Feb. 12-A mee tin"'
.,.....,.
h
ot the Grange WM held at t -e
L y ceum ball :ru11sday evening, It "''as
-- voted to• sp~nsor the organl:iat.!on ot
a. ju'\renl!e Grange a:.nd ' Pa.st Ma,ster
I

·t o a ot f , --- - -, vor t hi ngton, l&lt;'eb. 1 6- B ec atuse
o
n
t
b·es
t
ough
th
·
s
it wa
h e cold to
tt empt
h eat th e Cong , egadt ·IOt11 al '
r
chul'ch y est er day m orn in g- a n
church ·s c hool was h eld a t the h om e ~
-- --Miss Floren ce B er ry w lt h a good a 1
ervice
e opening
t enditnce.
R lcewa!h~
Susan sT.
Miss
a rge of Th
ch
wM;~
fr~m
r
tte
Je
r ead a n interesting
H a rvey Porter of B el rut, Sy r ia,
for man y years.
· ·
ld
has be en a m issionary
Is now 90 years O '
who
Mrs
W orthington.
native of
a Porter,
-, is
Rev J ohn c. W ightman of F lor en ce
will conduct ·the s ervice ne.xt Sunday.
The Women 's Benevolent society
wlll mePt on W ednesday wit~ the
Misses Rice for an all-day meetmg.
The l&lt;"'rlendshlp guild w_ilJ h old a __
_ brid"'e and wh ist party Friday af_ter- i
~ at Mrs Byron sm'iith's in Rmg- ,
11001
ville.
-- She wlll . be assisted in ~nter- ,
tainingb y Mrs Hom~ Gran~er~ Mr and Mrs Wells Magarga~ will ent ertaln the Loyal La.dies' whist party
at their home Saturday evening.
At the meeting of the Royal
Arcanu.m. at the Lyceul!l hall Saturday
evening It was vot'ed to give $5 to the
.Red Cross relief fund.
The Grange whist club will meet
with Mr and Mrs Daniel Porter on ~·•
,vednesday evening.

- - --

he

'
Mrs "W'alter L. Higgirui was elected
8
Resolutions were Pl!J!B d
matron.
'favoring the 'export debenture plan;
t he return to a 10-cents a
and
Pollndalso
federal tax On Oleomargerlne.
_______ A valentine pr9graai in charge Qf •Mlss - · - . _
Marjorie G. · Bartlett and Mies ' Ethel
Lafave c.o n-slsted of a. short play, "A
Day on the Farm" and two contests.
- - - - - - Refreshments were' aerved.
The Grange will hold a valentine.,
dance at the Lyceum hall Friday eve·-- _ _
nlng. Bate.s!s orchestra will play.
Mias Marjorie G . Bartlett ente't-taJnat her
club
whist
Gra'.ngewith
ed the
play,
in home
tables
four
evening
last
·The first prizes were won .by Mrs _ _____
. Joseph Wright and Dr F .' A. Robinson and the cotpolatlon prizes by Miss
Bernice E. Kilbourn and William
-- - .
Brown.
A letter will be read on Sunday
which has just been received from
Mrs Harvey Porter of Beirut, Syria,
where she has been for many years as
a missionary. · Mrs Porter wa~ Julia
Bisbee before her marriage. She WIIB'
0
r - --- - - -- -- - - ~~a~ {!~~~g~;e ~~~tr~fnotf
father Rev John H. Bisbee hangs In
the su'nday-school room. · Mrs Porter's
tells many Interesting thlrtgs ot ______ .
-- - -- 1letter
her lit~ and a prize is . otrered to the
boy or girl who will write the best
description or this letter.
Edwin H. Buxton, who Is ill at the - -- - Worthington, Feb. 22-l\,frs Byron
Springfield 12,~spltal. Is lmpr·ovlng.
Smith and Mrs Homer Granger enter· tained the Frlendl:'hip i:uild Bridge
-- __ ) club Friday at the home of the for- -- - - - - mer, with four t ables in play and
as follows.: Pil·st, Mrs
1 Pl'izes won
I , George Torrey, Jr.; sec~nd, Miss Mari j ol'ie G. B a rtlett; third, Mrs Clinton F_ ,
' Read; fourth, Mrs Henry Snyder. The
club will meet next with Mt·s Da.niSl)
• R. Porter on Friday aften1oon, the : __
27th.
The Grange Whist c lub m e t on
: Wednesday .even ing-, with Mr and Mrs
~ Daniel R. Po1·ter , with five table~ in
,
: p lay. The first prizes \\'e re won by
1
M1·s Claud e Kna pp and Lewis Zarr, •·
a nd the cons olation prizes by Mrs F . ,
A, Hobi{lson nn.d Clau d e Knapp,
A part o'f the roof of what was fo 1·. me rly the Bradley pin h olcl~1·s fa c tory
at Rlngvlll e colln pse d this W'\ek from
-the weight of sno w.
The body or Mrs Ellen Wach •worth
: 82, or Spl'ingOcld, wa.s broug ht t~
town Frldny nnd Placed in thE: v a ult
in the ~lngville ce metery . .M~·s 'Wads worth was a slste 1· or the late ls!lJ1 ~
Thrasher of t h is t own.

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WO.RTl;I-INGTON

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SUICIDE SHOT IS FATAL
' TO WILLIAMSBURGMAN

WILLIAMSBURG

I

~aymond. P. Buck's Action
Attributed to Despondency
Over Poor Health

---· - - -

N ortham pton, F eb. 23-l\fc cllcal Exam iner Browu was called t o 1Vll1iam s burg this m o;ning to view the bod y of
Raym ond P. Buck, 42, who h ad com -1
mitted sui cide ,at his h om e i n Valley
View by shoo ting· himself in the h ead
with a rifle~ Mr Buck w as m issed,
and, whe n a sea1·ch wa s mad e, th e
body wa s found in the barn. Mr Buck
had been Ill two m bn ths a nd his ac t is
attribu ted to despond ency over the
conditi on of his henlth. H e left a n ot e
for his wife, the conte nts of which were n ot g-iYen o u\; The body was
fo u nd qy R:i.lph Graves , a n eighbor .
Mr Buck was a mem ber of the
Worthi ngton Cong regatio nal ch urch.
H e leaves his widow, a daughter, Nancy, a nd a sister, M1·s Raymo nd K:
l
Cla rie -of New Haven, Ct. T he f'une 1j·a
w ill. be h eld Wedne sday afterno on at
,
2 at•~the 'home.

__J~---=~=- ----,.

J&lt;'uneml of Rapno nd lluck
Februa ry 26th. -T he large attendan ce and t he abunda nce· of
f lowers at R aym ond Buck ·s funi era! were eloque nt test! mony of
' the esteem in whicll h e was held
/ by those who lrnew him. Over 1 0 0
were presen t at the home funer: al, many coming from Wortll ingCheste rfield, Cumm ington
ton,
and Northa mpton , as well as frou1
, Willia msburg . Repres entaqv es of
' the H aydenv ille Saving s ba nk, of
Mr. Buck was a trustee,
1 which
in a body, Thern was a
ed
attend
- profus ion of flow ers in I?ask ets, set pieces and loose
sprays ,
· bouque ts. Rev. Mr. Burkes , pastor of the Worth ington church , or
which Mr. Buck was a deacon , as. s isted by Rev. J. P. Manwe ll,
' ..officiated at the home and 'R e-v.
Burkes rea(l the commi ttal service. Mrs. Dolan Rowe of Northampton , accom panied by .Miss 1\1.
· Genevr a Hill, sang very beauti- · · full y, Th"l bearer s were Jonn K.
Simons of Worce ster, Raymo nd
Andrews of Greenf ield, Willia m
H,,ker, Jr., of Cheste rfield, Raya)()nd Clapp of New Haven and
and Raymo nd
Graves
_ _ _ _ _ _ __; Ralph
' Wi"rne r of Willia msburg .
,

WORTHINGTON

Worthi ngton, Feb. 24-0n e or a.• - · - - - - - -series or dairym en's . meetin gs to be
held in the county during the next
_ _ two months will be held in Worthi ng_
I ton at the Lyceum hall on - Thursd ay,
The
f rpm 10.30 a. m . to 3 p . m.
speake rs will be F. H. · Branch Pro! ·I - - -·----C. J . .. Fawcet t and Prof Ralph, Don- - --aldson trom the Mruisa. chusetts Agri- j
.
cultura l college .
_

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r egular Grau_ge _nieeti ~i - WORTHJNGTON - \Inext
March l 0. -A conum ttee ot three

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of l\1rs·.
F eb. 27-Ra y Wheel er, chair- was ap.poin ted, conslsU ug
and l\frs.
_man of• tlfe Grange d&amp;nce comm.it" . Higgin s, Mrs. Thaye.r
~-efresl ltee, an no ~nces th-aL-th ere will ,l,e, Bartle tt, to a ssist wit_h lfica~io n
e~empl
the
for
·
a door pnz~ at the dance at Lyec- , •meiits
meetin g to be held rn Worth mg- J
um hall t h is evenin g.,,. .
toll Friday evenin g, l\far ch 6. A
enter-.
l\lrs. Horace -S. ~ Cole
ing of a
taiued the Grange_._ Whist clti~ l:lti patriot ic p rogram , consist Bartle tt,
;
F
y
Doroth
Mis~
by
solo
!.t
Bartle
.
•
F
tl!e home of Mrs. G.
' readin gs by l\Jrs. Paris_h , Mrs. Carl 1
_
Th u rsda~ evenin g."
LQ._ve.land and Mrs. Kilbou rn, folWindSouth
or
l\rias K. Bossen
games, was
eor, Ct., a former teache r in the lowed by approp riate
r. l\Ii~s
lecture
the
of
charge
in
ng
spendi
is
town
this
of
s
school
of ~he
master
the
Wert,
van
ends
fri
J1er week's vacatio n •with
ic fawrs
fo West Worth ington an i:I the Cor- •Grange prov"td ed patriot hmen~s
Re!res
ror each patron .
.
nera.
At •the r egulav meetin g of ~he we~ e1Ted.
Gran ge at Lyceum --hail Tuesda y
\ e"enlu g , is was ¥Oted to initiate
'lh-e c!kss of live candid ates at the

�AA :Jt, 113 I
- ~ Losll

HOTEL MAN ffO,J&gt;ES
TO BUILD ANOTHER
--LAFAYETTE LODGE -

E"stfinated at lo0,000

The loss on t h e lodge and furnishings Is estimated at $50.000, partly
covered by Insurance. Many of the
l)eautltul trees along the highway a nd
on the grounds were .'!lo badly damaged that It" Is not likely they will sur- vive. The wln,d amounted to a. gale
and was largely responsible tor the
~anger to · neighboring houses. The
_ , wind contin,ued through today and It
, was necessary to maintain a watc h
th rough the night to guard against
s· t
new fires from the flying embers.
The lodge was bought by Mr Read
. two years ago : from F. o. , vells,
prop11letQr ' of . the- Weldon hotel. at
Greenfield. It was .lnamed for marquis
de wtayette, Revolutionary ' war hero, - -- -- - - --- - W_
x.dJ _
.
i who spent a night at the tavern that .
•
formert;r occupied OU&amp;,site . ~ e. ~ {6',....i~
Worthington. Feb. 27- Clinton F.
___ _____
·
::t ,
Bead, ·owner of ~afayette lodgE' .which L _ _________ lodge. 1 Stopped on Triumphant March
burned early this morning, .said to- ·
It was during his - triumphant
n ight that It is his present intention
, n;iarch ~htough New York and Masto rel;)Ui!(j ~he hotel. H!s plans would
depend on rnsurance adJustments and _ ___ _ _ _ sachusethf to Boston that t he general
&amp;"raced tbie town of Worthington and
arrangements that he hopes to make
the tavern _by his presence.
later, he added.
Althou.gh not damaged the ~
The so~room hotel w a s d es troy ed by
of l.\Uss Susan Rice, a. descendant or
fire of undeter mined o rig in whic h a lso ------Col Rice who lived In Worthing.ton
swept a nearby house and threatened
and who was a friend ~ Lafayette,
other puildings. A high wind, carried
w~s threatened. The dir~lon of the __ _ __
The
·s pa 1·ks- throug hout the town.
,
wmd favored the building.
flames ravaged the lodge ~o- rapidly ---:The lodge contained about 50 rooms
tl}at it was burned to the ground in j
with large dining . room and danc~
about half -an hoµ r:
hall. (. The main part of Lafayette
of W orthington ·_
m en
About 75
lodge was built by Alfred W. Trow,
fou g ht the fire " ·ltll c h emicals and
n_ow of Northampton, in 1898.) It was
with hos e on the town wate r s upply.
given the name of Worthington inn;
No o u tside he.IP was called. bu( men
a nd was the succes_s or of the Bartlett
came fr om .Chesterfi e ld and C umming house, which had been In existence
ton t o do wh a t they could. Flames
abl:lut 25 year~. before it burned In
lig h ted up th e w hole village and the
th
The Bartlett
e spring of 1898.
refl ection co uld b e s een for mlles
- ·- hou.se was built by Jacob Bartlett
a1·ound. ~!e n . f1 •on1 p ractically every
th
th
e fa er of Mrs Alfred W. Trow'.
h o m e in t h e v illa g e turned out to asnd
Mr Trow was manager some
a
sist t h e v o lunteel- fi r e d e partment.
years before It was destroyed.
'l'he large addition was built in
Alarm Spread Quickly
1916, when Willard C._ Senna, manager
The fi re was firs t seen b y Geo rge
or Plymouth inn, Northampton, and
F is h ei· of vVo rthingto n, \\' ho had been
Fra11k O. .Wells of Greenfield bought
out of to wn a nd was r eturning h ome.
the lhn of Mr Trow. The .addition
H e saw fl a m es com in g f ro m t h e lodge.
contained some 15 rooms. the dining
Abo ut the same Orne, ~ Y Knight o f
room a nd dance hall. At that time
Worthingto n , dri vi n g h o m e from t h e
the name wa.s changed to Lafayette
directi o n of Hun tin g to n, sa w t h e
lodge.
flames-. - The two men notified the
local telephone office, and It was largely due to the 1'ast work of this office,
which is in the home of Horace S.
Cole that the people in the vici nity 01'
the '1odge ,vere notified In time to
avoid personal danger and the, member.'!! or the voluntee r fi re d e partm ent
w e re called In to save neighboring
houses.
Jn addition to the Gurn ey h o use,
wllic h was burned, the hou.s e of Clinto n Read, owner or the hot e l, next
east beyond the Gurn ey h o use, caught
fire on the roof. This fi r e was ~x ~ he
t i nguished with sm a ll loss.
G u r n e y house was o w n ed b y Philip
Gurne y of Ashfie ld and was occupled
bv his brother-in-Jaw, Leland Cole.
With the house , was destroy ed a
The total loss
1 small barn and shed .
the Gurney buildings was about
1 n
$3000 . There was insura nce o~• the
buildings. but none on the furniture.
Mr and l\,frs Cole had a narrow escape
, ,.n...-. thP fl a m es.

Pl ans NeW nJCtUl'e BUt Ar-

'-rangements St1'll to Be 1
Mad,e, Says Clinton F. Read :
. .
of orthinocrton

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December 8, 2021.

·woRTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Worthington, March 2-Mr and
,Mrs H enry Snyder spent the week
end in Hartford, Ct.
, Barbara and Lena Burt of Wi\liamsburg spent their week's vacation with their aunt, M1·s Lou S~eet.
The Busy-Worke rs 4-H club met
w ith their leader, Mls:9 Carrie Porter,
f or luncheon on · S~turday. Menu
planning was ta.ken · up. The next
m eet!n_g will be held next Saturday at
2 at Miss P l)r ~ r '.s. Miss Desrocher
- --- girls' leader from the Extensio~
school will be present.
Miss Marjorie G . Bartlett is working !or· Mrs Frank Damon in Chester•

1!:eld.

.

The Women's . Benevolent society' f
will mee_t .on Wednesday for an all- ·
________ - - day sewing. meeting. at the home ot
.
M r s Clinton "Jf, Read.
The r ~gular rnpnthly Jiieeting or the
F r iendship -Guild will . be held V\7ednes- -- day e :vening - .a:t: the. home ot M;rs
' .
D a niel P.:irter:- ·
Mrs Horace s·: .Cole entertained t he
Grange whist club last Thursday. Six
tables
won ti
Dr F
solatic
L elant'
Dr i
terta il
day 1v
F . Ba
. The
last v
I
---i-- -- - - - - -~ be h e
Da nie
Mie
I
Wortl

r

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,--

-1~----~

· -i-- -/\ tro~~·
reinst
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aftE

lngj
ete,

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Hat
Wo·
or
or i
Tht
chu

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Pomona ?ra1_1ge is s_ponsoring
an exemplification meeting of the
first four degrees at Lyceum hall
Friday evening, March 6. ' High
Priest of Demet er Charles M.
Gardner of We c;tfleld will exem[pllfy the work. Worthy State Master Henry N. Jenks of Cheshire
'wlll be present and state deputies will attend. All fourth and
· fifth degree member-s are urged to
attend. There will be an enter•tainine.IJ.t and refre.shments wm
Worthington patrons :
f be se rved.
furnish sandi are requested to
.
1 wiches.
I
The Grange whist party · .has 1
f
i:lieen po.stponed o·n account · of the
death of Mi's. Granger.

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WORTHIN_GTON.
t,· / ti J

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Worthington March ...,:....'.t'he ' !un~ral ~of Mrs Pemelia Granger wa.s held this
afternoon at 2 '. at the First ,Congregational church. , Rev James H . Burckes, :
Many . beautiful'
- - - - pastor, 9ffic:atlng.
flowers ,b ore witness ·of the· love .and
esteerri in which she. :was held. Thes.e
includ.id . flowers from the Congrega--- - -· tiot).al- chui-ch:; the Friend~l"!IP Guild
and the Loyal Ladies._ The bearers
: were Orin Granger aiid Martin Dur- ___ kin of Pittsfl~ld, Harry L. Bates and \ ______ - - - - - Spencer , Parish. · Burial was In the '
Center cemetery. Owing to toe great
' quantity of snow and the fact .the '
cemetery is' situated on a 11ide· road it · was · necessary to use horses and sleds
, .tor the trip from the ch,urch to the
.
•
1 Ce~etery.
1
,,
• . 1 _ rl
The Friendship Guild met last eve(/{ d
ning at the home of Mrs D it R. ii)"~
Porter. The sewing hour was follow~
ed by devotions led by Miss Elizabeth
Torrey; etlucatlonal period, Mrs Clinton F. Read ,vho read from a bo_ok
I" The Leaven In Japan" by j:::harlotte
____ , De Forest which the guild is taking UP
1as Its m ission ·study, It was voted to
'.send a m,lsslon box to Lincoln academy , Kings Mountain, N . C. The so- ___ clal period consisted ot two guessing
contests, In charge of Mrs Harry W.
Mollison and M rs M. F. Packard. The
first p rizes being won iby .Mrs L . C.
S weet and Mi~ EIBle Ba r tlett, a nd the
con solation prizes by Miss ·Elizabeth
Tor rey a nd Mr s Geor g e E . Torref, Jr.
I Refr eshmen ts were served Mrs Cllft'.ord
The
; Tin ker assisting R.S , hostess.
April m eeting will be h eld with Mrs
Merw in F. Pack a rd.

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December 8, 2021.

WORTHINGTON '

WORTHINGTON

Marc h 10.-T he
4-H' Busy
---·- ---- ---- -·· - ---- W
1
, orker s met Satur day aftern oon - - - - - Worth ington , March 10-A mLsslon- ~---- - ary,
whom Worth ington was proud
at· 2· o'cloc k with their leader ,
to claim as Its own, Mrs Julia Bisbee
Miss Carri e W, Porte r at the
Pbrter , 88, of Beirut , Syria, dl~d
- -- - - - - - Cente r villag e "With 12' prese
nt:
- · - - · - there on Febru ary 8, after a two-d
ay
The con,s titutio n was ~ead and ac, Illness with heart trouble. She was
}
born
at
Worth
lngton
r-the daugh ter of '
c_eJ?teo. ·' The cooki ng &amp;~son. was
Rev John Hatch Bisbee and Claris sa
" __1_ _ _
-10'.n -the makin g &lt;if spagh etti. Miss ·- - - - (Lyma
n)
Bisbee, her fath_1r whos"'
,
Bessi e Deros ia •of · North ampto n,
1
pictur e stlll hangs In the Sunda yassist ant ,coun ty agent , wfll be
I school room of the churc h being '
next meeti ng.
---- -- - - - - - prese nt a~.the
j pastor of the Congregational churc h
"
for 28 years. She joined the
~ Sunda y's snowf all of. seven
h ,/
, here when 16 years olci: I{er churc
fath~r
hich~ s, coupl ed with the tempo also was a native or this section berary; disab llity of the hacto r
Ing born just over the town line at
t,no~p fow, block ed the bigllw ays
Chesterfield on a l!_lte about one-fo urth
and 'by: night fall traffi c wa-s _pracof a mile south or the Buck home.
st~ad and now a part
tlcall y at ~ st_and'
the Buck
By eveni ng
farm. In 1872 she wasofmarrie
- - - - - - · - - · , t~ SnQwp1ow .~ass tlll.
d in ~--- - - repair ed ana - - - - - - Paris, Franc
e,
to
Rev
Harve
y Porter
El&gt;en ·L. Shaw, road surveyor,
or the Amer ican unive rsity at Beiru t, /
worke d,. all ni_g ht openi ng the
srria; who di~d about
___ ___ ro~ds so:.th at :the mails could
years ago.
go _ - - - - 1 Smee thatt1;1me she seven
had made her 1- ouf- in the 'm ornin g
. .,
.
!
I home with h er daughter, Mrs Ger, · M - F. ·, k W B• t
h ·h
. tr1,1de Porter Hall, who surviv
r;~rs. ran
es her.
.• a es, w o as ;
• . ,o.. - ' - - - - - -~ ~
1be~~:t apend ing a few weeks . with !_
~!,,
.
- - - . her'!"~on, .'·Th?m as, in Gr~enfleld,,
rettfr, ned home Satur day, .
·
THere was
l meeti ng
--· ---- ---- ·.-. ot the Grang eaat specia
the Lyceu m hall r ·
last eveni ng and a. class· -of can- /.
didate s receiv ed the first and sec- t
-1 on"d degre es at the regul ar meet- t - - - - - - I ing 'this eveni ng.
I
. . The Frien dship Guild · bridg e/
club met Frida y aftern oon with ·- - - Mrs. Danie l R. Porte r, Three ta!,..__:. ·:... ~
-er,. --· - ·
bles were in play, Prizes were
\ won as follow s: First, Mrs.
Georg e Torre y; second, Mrs.
Charl es Kilbo urn; consolation,
} Mrs. Merw in F. Packa rd; a-sslstant hostes s, Miss Marjo rie Bart1.e tt, The club will meet this
, week with . Miss Floren ce Berry ,
Miss Ellen Lafav e assist ing,
The exemp lificat ion meeti ng of
the Grang e, which w::.s to have
been held at the Lyceum ball Fri. day evenin g, March 6, was postponed becau se of bad weath er
and travel ing until an indefi nite
date.
The Grang e will hold a dance
at the Lyceu m hall Frida y even1 ing.

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December 8, 2021.

APPOINTED PROFESSOR
AT TEACHERS' COLLEGE

WORTHINGTON
Loyal Ladies Elect Officc~s
March 17 .-Hilltop council of I
oval Ladles met Saturday even- ,
LI ,; aild elected the follo~lng offi- I
M rs.
.
lle,
ay. Kil- I
Regent,
cers·
boui:n; vlC'e regent, Miss Mae ;
. Hathaway;. past regent, Mr.s. Harriet Higgins; orator, Mrs. Amelia
Hi a-gins · secretary, Miss Harriet
Ma'°garg~l; treasurer·, Mrs. Marth
. Os~

lard to Take Up 1
John D. ~il_
'. New Position at Columbia j
; July 1

\

Amhe1·st, Ma rch 16-John D. Willard of -Lincoln avenue, has received
,notice of his appointment as professor of education on. the Schiff foundaisb
'tlon, by the trustees of Teac hers'
wa
college, Columbia university, his appointment to be effective July 1, 1931.
tn
Mr Willard is now visiting professor
Gl:
at Teachers college, dividing his time
a,.p
between l1is teaching at Columbia and
to
,resea1•ch in adult education as a m em- 1
thi
ber of the staff of the American Astt11
,
sociation for ;Adult E .d ucation.
gi,
Mr Willard was born in Apple10n, ·
l Wis., May, 31, 1885. H e studied in the
co:
! public ~chools of Amherst and gradthi
uated from Amherst college in 1907. ·-·
-·- - · He also studied at / the Hartford '
Theological seminary, at the Massaet~
chusetts Agric ultural 1,ollege, and the
Mr
Harvard Graduate School of Educa- da
tion, and later preached at the Pelham
and Packardvill~ churches, W orthington Congregational church and at
Sp1
Vernon Center, ·ct. During 1913
-·- her
1914, Mr Willard was a social work'.er tinder the Massachusetts Society·
W:for Prevention of Cruelty to Chil·-•--· dr~n, and during- . 1915 and 1916 wa:s
- - - - - - - Mrii
secretary for Franklin County Farm
1\Ir
bureau, at Greenfield. During the
da·
__ World war, Mr Willard was secretary __________ _
'l'...-~ _ -----•v uuua t&gt;r~dgP. ,_
__
of the Ma.ssachu::&lt;etts food administraclub met Friday afterncon at tbe ·
rron and · a member of Gov eoolidge's
bome of Miss Florence Berry,
special commission on the necessaries
, with Miss Berry and M'iss Ellen I
- - -7 Lafave joint hostesses. Three ta- , - - - - - - - - qt l_ife·. for a year. From 1920 to 1926, ~ - Mr Willard was director of extension j
service at Massachusets Agriculbles were in play, Miss Bernice
t~1ral college, and from 1.927- t.o 1928, 1
Kil bourn and Mrs. Francis A. __ _ ___
di rector of continuing edtication at
Robinson tied for first prize,_ thi,- '
-Michig~~n Statf college. Si.n ee 1928, j
former winning. The con!!Pl!LtiOn
Mr Willnrd has, been research asprize was won by MTS. Byron
sociate for the American Associat ion
- - - - ____ Smith.
for Adult Educa tion, and s ince ·1ast
F. A. Robinson
l\fr, and Mrs
·\
September has been visiting pr_'pfessor
• _ .. __ __
·
.!-S Teachers coJlege.
will entertain the Grange Whist
--- - -·- ----club to.night at Mrs. Guy F . Bart- -- - -- · - - - - - ----- - - .
•
lett·s.
Belden R. Green, who has been 1
_ _ __ _ _ __
spendlng' the winter in Somers N 1
Y., has r etu rned to Ms home ' · """ Friday · for
Schools closed
three weeks' vacation.

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December 8, 2021.

WORTHINGTON

WORTHIN.GTON

March 25.-Peter Kent, whcS, _ _
Worthington, March 18-.A. .g roup ot
--- ·--- - - has been spending several montba
South Worthington ..children wfll con- ,.ln Russell, has teturned and 1•
duct a junior worship pr~gram at the
:·open!nf 'the house ·of , Mrs. 'I\__
First Congregational church Sunday.
- Mrs Wflllam Sanderson will have - - -- --· - -·Commerford Martin vtbt&gt;' h·M beelll
- ·charge.
·
: .
1's pendlng the winter in
FloridC
The Loyal Ladlea- will hold a public
· and ls expected soon.
whlat part at the Lyceum hall Satur~
_______ - i Miss Bernice E. Kilbourn left - - - ---- - - -- day night. . ·
·•1Tuesd11,y to spend a. few weeks.
Dr and Mrs F. A. Robinson entertaln ed the . Grange Whfat club la~t
with Mrs. Homer Granger ot
ni; · ,t at Mrs O~y 'F. Bartlett's hoq'le
Hig'bla:Qd street, C1}este!f1eld,

I

- - with seven,· iables ,Jn play. The first
prizes wel'e won by Mrs Charles A .
• Kilburn a.nd Claud~ Knapp ,and the
con,solatfon pr~ b~• Mr and ~rs Vic- - - - - - --tor Bernier..~ ·
' ·
The Friendahfp . guild has given $6
more •tows.rd the Re'd ·cross drouth re- ·- - - - - ·-- - ~let ti.ind, making iti1 .totAµ oon,trlbution $10.
·
.. ,
•Mrs Herbert a. Porter returned today after spending several. daY.s with
her sister, Mrs Howard C. Bre-ister of - - -· - Springfield.

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Grange "will meet ,tomorrow &amp;t the
Lyceum ·ha.II !or its regular J,Deetlnf:
wh~n the third and fourth, deg_cyes - ' ~ill be conferred upon a cl~ . of
candidates. There will also b,e a. spring

J

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1------· J --=-..--WO-RTHIN--G-T.0-N.
I

pr~t~a~ifen~~~~~e ~:e~;fJ;!e~Iµ~
wlll meet Thursday afternoon with
Mrs Merwin F. Packard. Mrs Clifford
~.Inker will assist ~n entel'tainlng.
---- Mrs Herbert Smith ot Holyoke 1s
spending a week at her home here. I
A surprise party for Mr ·and Mrs l
Sheridan Dodge in celebration of. - - - - - - - - ·
their 10th we4dlng anµfversary .was ;
soonsored by the Royal Arcanum and
the Loyal Dadies at the Lyceum hall
la.st evening. The hall was decorated ~----- --·-- with festoons of blue and white er~
paoer and a decorated table held m any i
useful gl!ts of tinware or other
kitchen u tensils and a purse ot money.
Dancing and cards were cnj6yed and
rcfresh'ments were l!!erved.
I
Franklln G. Burr, a student at M.
A. C. Is spending a week's vacatlo:i.
a,t his home.
Miss Marjorie Bartlett has returned
to he~ home a!ter vlaitlng friends Jn
, Hol yo,&lt;e.
.
The Grange Whist club will meet
on Th~rs_d ay evening with Mrs Sadie
Call a.t P1ne'Brook lodge.
c::: Mr and Mrs George B. Joselyn of
~Priogfleld :who h ave a summer home
here were _iq town today.
There will be a Grange dance l!,t
th e 1;,Yceum h all tomorrow: evenln8';
Ba.ties s orchestl'a will play.

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Worthington, March 27 ......Mrs Mer. F Packard
and
Mrs Qlifford
·
·
,
.
Tinker were cohostesses to the Guild , _ _ _ _
! bridge
club
yesterday
afternoon ,
at
the
home
of
the
former

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with four tables in play. The first ;
, prize was won by Mrs Homer Granger f-- - - I a nd the consolation prize by · Miss
1
Flt roy The next meeting will
j A1ma
z
·
be held April 2 at Mrs Walter H.
• Tower's with Miss MarJorie Bartlett
!assisting as hostess.
.._ · 1
Mrs Sadie Call ~tertained the ,_
G,~ange whist club last evening with '
1
four tables in play. The first Prizes
were won ·by Mrs Francis Robinson
and H. Stal\ley Cole the latter tying
with Dr Robinson . The consolation
lzes were won by Miss Elsie Bartlett
~~d Vlotor Bernier.
Mrs Jamee Knapp ls spending a few
I days Jn Thompson vlllt:,
Ct., at the
home of her daughtor, Mrs Cullen
Tower.
"The Jolly F'lvo" me.; yesterday aft.
ernoon for bridge with Mrs Harold
Parish of West Worthington. The
nr1it prize w as won by M_rs Ernest G.
Thayer and t he consolation prize by
?,;lrs Frank W. Bates. · •

�WORTHINGTON

GREENFIEW

1
Wort hln~t on, Aprl) 2_A speci al
town -mee ting was held at the town ,
hall Tues day eveni ng at 7.ao. It wu
voted to appro priat e Sl700 tor Wint er
highw ay work and to trans fer $ 400
of the tract or and _truck earni ngs of
trac1931 for the main tenan ce of the yea
tor and truck for the ensui ng
Mrs Geor ge Russe ll, who has bee~
spen ding the winte r visiti ng relati ves,
at East Long mead ow, Sprin gfield
Agaw am and Holy oke, retur ned Sunday to Mrs T. C. Mart in.
Mrs Jame s F. CooJ&lt;.e ot Phila delphl/1. Is 11pen dlng a week with her
1 sister , Mrs T. Com merto rd Marti n.-

OUTING CLU B ELE CTS
, Irvin g L, Bartl ett Nam e·d Presi dent

For Comi ng Y car
Green field, Marc h 27--0 ffice ra of the
Green field Outin g club elect ed for the
ensu ing year at the last meet ing of
the club were as ~ollo wa: Irvin g L.
s,
Bartl ett, presi dent; Lelan d Cairn
tt·eas urer; Paul Bittn,;1r, audit or, . and
Arth ur Gibso n, secre tary, Mem bers
of the new boar~ of gove r.nora are
Irvin g Bartl ett, F. L. Foss , .J6se pn,
Jubb , Dana Darli ng, Thom as Field
_ Napo leon Gree nwoo d, Stran d Mikk lesen, Haro ld_ Atwo o!l, Geor ge -St Cyr;
J. Tl S elle r, R. P. Dola n, Mark C.
Morr ell, Dona ld Phill ips, L . B. Forti n,
Kenn edy, Arth ~
. ---- -- - ----- Paul Bittn er, J . B. sbrod , Haro ld r,;.
Glqso n, W . H . Weis
Dean e, Jame s J. ' Burn s, Jr., Char les
s,
Pack arq, Jame s O'Ne il, Hugh Adam
.
_
___ ___ ___
R. Stanl ey Reid and Paul C. B!!lk nap.

WORTHlNGTON ·

WORTHINGTON
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Wort hing ton, April 3-Th e Frien dship guild held a bridg e party this afternoo n at Mrs W a lter H. Towe r's ?.-: t h
Miss Marj orie G. Bartl ett assis ting as
hoste ss. .Four table s were in play and
prize s won as foll ows : First , Mrs
Byro n Smit h; secon d, Marv is Snyd er ;
er Towe r
coil,9ofation prize s, Mrs Walt
rn. The club
and Miss B ernic e E . Kilbo
at Mrs
noon
after
sday
wlll meet Thur
Clint on F. Read 's with Miss Elsie v.

Wqrt ;h,lng ton, Marc h 30-S er.vic es
werA held in the Cong regat ional ·chu..r' ch
r·
this ~orn lng .QY Rev John C. · :Wig httook
tman
Wigh
Mr
nce.
man o!. Flore
That J esus ·
ett assis ting.
as his ·subje ct, . "The Lifeceleb ratio n at ---- - - - --~ Bartl
The Jolly , Five h_eld a bridg e party
-- - - - - - - , Lived ," spea.k ing o(·. the
ning
begin
the
ot
· Chris tmas and East er
yeste rday at Mrs Fran k Bates 's. Thlde
·Jite 1f
of his life -6n · this earth and the
first prize was won by Mrs Haroby - - - - - - - .y
brie1l
ed
h and the conso lation prize
___ _ herea fter and then touch
Paris
regThe
upon the biogr aphy of J esus.
n B. Cady .
Alde
Mrs'
beg'in
ular preac hing servi ces will
ge , Whis t club met last
Gran
The
___ ___ ___ _
by the
home of Mrs Guy F.
the
at
Sund ay ·w1th an -East er ..serm on
ng
eveni
and
hes;'
Burc
H.
s
enter
Jam.e
,
Rev
Paris
r,
- -~ 1 pastq
Bartl ett with Mrs Haro ld
singi ng by ,the child ren follow ed by
tainl ng. Six table s were in play. The
·
' Sund ay-sc hool.
first prize s were won by Miss Elsie
The April b usine ss meet ing ol the
Bartl ett and H arold Paris h and the
V.
-- -Frida y
- - F riend ship guild will be heldard.
l!!,tion prize s by Mrs F. A. R ob conso
·
even ing with Mrs M. F. Pack
and Gord on Gard ner. 'rhe party
lnson
The Wom en'.s Bene vo1en t·soci ety. will
celeb ration of the blrth day of
in
was
·a. m. at
Brow n, who was given a
meet o:n Wedn es\ia y at 10.30 of
am
Willi
--1
clean - 1--- - - - - - the chur ch :for -the purp ose'
y, Dr Robi nson pres~ ntmone
purse or
to
Ing it. Thos e att.en dink' u,e asked be
A bidh day cake was -a parlf ,___ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
it.
Ing
_
wm
bring bask et lunch . Cotte e ,
___ ___ _ __ _ ot the r efr eshm ents.
,
_ ___, serve d.
Ther e will be E a ster servi ces in thec
Mrs Walt er H . Towe r ana' Miss Marh Sund ay morn ing with .musi
churc
I
the
'
1
jorie G. Bartl ett will enter tain oonchild ren.
the
by
- - -- - Guild Bridg e club Thur sday aftern
Mrs Guy F. Bartl ett gave a chil--__
.
fdren 's party . at her, home yeste rday
,___ _ __ ____ _ at Mrs Towe r's home ng pictu res at
Ther e will be movi
after noon In celeb ration ot the seven th
the Lyce um hall Satu rday even ing at
blrth~~Y. ot hei-: da.ug htel\ Elqis ~.
_
8 unde r the ausp ices -of the Gran ge
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - .- k
and throu gh the court esy 'of Mr Snooot
the use
. I of Ches terfie ld, who gives
his mach ine a nd the opera ting , ot It.
The proceeds will be used for the - - ----- --·- - - · - ---- -·- - - - - - - - --- --- --- -prlzei i for the schoo l .child ren's essay
conte st April 28.
Mrs T. c. Mart in, }Vho has betin
spend ing sever al mont hs in Flori da,
retur ned home yeste rday. Her son, ,.
- - - - ---- -Comm erfor d, w.ho is a s tuden t at Cornel! unive rsity: la' at his h ome for a
----- - -- - - -·- - - - week 's vacat ion.
Mrs Clint on F . Read , who has been 1
spend ing a week in New York, ha s
retur ned home .
Schoo l wiII not reope n next week
owing to the cond ition or the side
~oads and the diffic ulty ot tra nspo rtIng scl'iool chlld ren.
There will be a Gran ge Wl\i:st party
F.
Wedn esday evep ing at · Mrs Guy be
Mrs Haro ld Paris h will
4 Bartl ett's
the hoste ss.

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21~ ~ -

HOTEL OWNER LEASES
WORTHINGTON BUILDING

,;,;,ro rthin g toh , Apri l 6-E as
Sun day was obse rved In the ~' lrs t ter
Cong regati onal c hurc h yest erda y mor
ning
with serv ices held In the m_a~n_o
u ~le n ce r oom w hic h hasto
close d
t hrou :;h the w inte r. E aste r lilies ,
hyac inth s , r oses, potte d p la nts and puss
w illo ws were used in the deco ratlo 7
m,.
Sln g'ing was by a child renls choi
W o l'thln gton , Apri l 8-C linto n
eig ht g irls. ll'red S etu ·s , vio linis t, r of
acR ead. prop riet o r ut Lafa yett e lod F .
c omp anie d the
ge,
__ ___ __ \ and song s. The orga11 in the prt!lu d'e
whic h was dest roye d by ftre
pastor, -Rev Jam es
F ebruar y 27, anno unce d toda y on
Btu·ckes, prea ch ed an E aste r serm N.
that
on " Imm orta lity,:· p rece ded by a on
has lea.s ed the Cha pin plac e at h e
talk
the
to the c hild1·en. Tbe morn i.tig
Corn
ers
own
ed b y- A. H. Cha
serv ice
- - -- - - - - - -11 was follb ,\·ed
Spri ngfie ld, and will use it as a pin o r
oy sm\d ay-s choo l. Lilie s
.,h otel
u sed in the dec_o ratlo ns were
thli! sum mer In conj unct ion with
n to ,
e
t he follo wing· shut ~ins : Mrs giye
hote
l cottage11. It will be know n th
Anso n
as
F r ee man , :i.Vlu:;3 J a ne Geer , Edw
Lafa yett e lodg e and will
be
in
open
ed
1 next mon
Dod ge and Geo rge ,W. Peas i:.
th as an eatin g plac e and
TJle Frie ndsh ip guild ' held their regalso for as man y boar ders as can
be
ular mon thly mee ting Frltl ay even
I acco mmo date d.
at Mrs Mer win F. Pacl ta.rd s -with ing
•
This
old
hous
10
e,
- - - - -- - - -~
mem bers pres ent.
- - - - - -, was buil t in 1806 or colo nial ·d esig n.
Th'e sewi
hour
by a man nam ed
I.'
was occu pie d with emb roid ery;ng··
1
and
Woo
redbrld
ge. H was n ext own ed by
(}
I pair in:; ga rme nts. D evot ions were
'
led
Judg
e Sam uel How e. It has
by Mrs Geor g·e E . Torr ey, Jr. It
'was __
know n as the "hou se of lawy been
1
- • vote d to give the proc eeds of
ers."
---- · the,
·-·
Here
Jiext
;Will iam Cull en Bry ant stud
guild brid ge club lo ·the 4-H club
ied
and
: law unde r Judg e How e, who
to finan ce the· buyi ng of da E a ster
own
111)'
the entir e p1-es ent hom este ad and ed
for / chur ch with the c hild'r en of
the
the _
-Bate s prop e1;ty.
unda y-sc hool coop erati ng.
It waa
· • Sam uel How e, by deed on Nov
vote d to hold a supp er and e nter
er
tain4, 1820, con vrye d the hom esteemb
m e nt the last of the mon
ad to
for . the
Elis
ben e·t u of r epai r work on chth
ha
Mac
k,
a law yer. From
urch wlnpass ed to Star kwe athe r, who him It
i do wL
.
gage d to Mac k, who forec losedmor tT he ~·iris of th e 4-H club wi11
a food sale ·in Pack a rd's s t o re Wed h old
who conv eyed by ·deed to Will and
neaday after nopn from 2 t o 4.
War d o n July 28, 1836 . Mr War d iam
At the invi ta tion of .Mr and ·Mr!! ·
one o! 'the mos t prom inen t menwas
Wal ter M. Shaw of Hun tingt on
the town , a nd a repr esen tativ e to o!
the
Gran ge Whis t club will meet
Gene ral Cou rt and t o the Sena te. the
with
_
the m on W ed nesd a y .ev enin!l'· se rved as a colo nel In the war He
•
o!

I

been

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Pro per ty O'f A. H. Chapin
Be Known as Laf aye tte

- --

Lodge This Summer

__ __ __ _

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•- - - · · On Dece mbe r 12, 1836, the prop erty
was deed ~d to his son- in-la w, Cha
cey B. Risi ng , a lso a lawy er. It un1
next own ed by Alfr ed P. Ston e was
Dwi ght Ston e, late r pass ing. to. Dwiand
ght \
_ __ __ . Ston e's da ught er, Myr
a .F a y
who deed ed t o Hen ry ·M. Neil , Ston e, . - -- - from
who m It pass ed into the own
his son - in-la w, A . H. Cha pin.ershi -p o!
·
1812 .

WORTHINGTON
Wor thin gton , Apri l 7-T he Gran
whis t part y whic h was to be held ge
mor row even ing with Mr and to\Va tter M . Shaw of Hun ting ton Mrs
h een post pon ed UI)ti l Thu rsda y has
ev enin g.
Ther e will be a Gra n g e danc e
the Lyce um h all Fl'id ay even at
ing .
Bat es ·~ · orc h estra will pl ay.

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WORTHINGTON

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Wor th ing t o n. ,\pri l 8-T he Guil I
d
Brid ge club will m eet -t om o rrow
n oon with Mrs Clin ton 1'"'. R ea d.afte r- \

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WORTHINGTON

CHIWREN ENTERTAIN
AT GRANGE MEETING.
Lvceum Hall Filled by
Auclience of 150-Prizes
Awarded to Pupils

Announcement has been received ol
~he marriage or J ohn Francis Everett
.;,ri:ner!y or this town, to Miss GracE
rooking, daug hter of Mr and Mri
VVlll!am Brooking of Sa n Francisco,
on Apri1 ·4. The couple will be a t home
at the Gaylord hotel In San Francisco after May 1.
Miss Elsie V, Bartle.t t, who has been
spend1 ng a few weeks wlt'il her cousin, Miss Bessie E. Trow of Bedford
~irg~o~~~ th ampton, has returned to

Worthington, May 4-Mr nncl Jllrs
Lawrence Randall and family of Had:.,
ley spent the week end at their summe1; home.
Mr and Mrs Rfcharcl S. Terry and
d Mrs Myra J. Stevens returned Sun', ay to· her home In Stevensville.
soil, Leland, ot Mflford, Ct., were
Worthington, May 6-Lyceum hall 1-- - - -- - -__:::.~ :...:::::cc.==-- guests Sunday at the "Sprnces."
Mr and Mrs Roland Goodwin and
was packed last night with an audisou, Allen, of Gardner, and Gerald
ence of over 150 people when the
Bates of Greenfield were week-end
Grange held an open meeting in obguests at Mr and Mrs Frank Bates's
at West Worthington.
servance of "children's nigh t'' with
Mrs Pearl Hathaway is confined to prize speaking by the children of
l1er home with mumps.
school age. 'l'he' prog ram, In charge o'f.
Mr and l\Irs George Jasper and
the lecturer, Mrs Guy F. Bartlett, rolfamily or · Virginia street, Springfield, lows: Class 1, first, second' and third
spent several days last week at their grades, "The Naughty Sta rs," Eloise
sommer: home.
Bartlett; "The Bluebird," Thelma
The program in charge or the lee- Hathaway; "'[ne Clouds," Rita Gag\_~ - turer for · the open meeting of the non; "The Little R ose Tree," Charles
' - · Grange Tuesday evening Includes the ) Ilartlett; "The Runaway Brook,''
children's prize-speaking and a min- I l;lelen Wright; 'Good-Night," Phyllis
· strei show.
.
1 Packard;
"The Cow," Eugene BerMrs Walter Tower and Mrs Harry nlei:; "Singing," Daniel Read; "The
Mollison will attend the first of the Squirrel," Franklin Bartlett; "The
canning meetings to be held at the Red Drum," Walter Mollison; "My
horticulture manufactures building at Shadow," Henry :a:athaWay.
_ Massachusetts State college tomorClass 2. fourth, fltth and sixth - -··---- ----- --·row.
grades, "Where Go the Boats," AdThe Friendship guild wlll meet for Wilda Gagnon; "Matilda Jane,'' Eleat he regular monthly meeting Thurs- nor Smitq; "An Apple Orchard in the
-da y evening at the home of Mills Ber- Spring," Irene Hatilaway; "'A Good
nice E. Kilbourn.
,
Play,'' Donald Mollison; "A 'May
Mrs Francis A. Robinson and "Miss .Morning,'' Jeanette Wright; "Song of
MarJorie G. Bartlett will . entertain ·the Summer '1 Ruth Wright· "Wishes "
Guild -Bridge club on Friday .after- Mil.ry E)ien Read:· "Fracti~nal Plaini"
noon . at the home of the latter. 1
Milton· Parish; "Magnolia Blossoms,"
Dr Francis A. Robinson Is in charge J?orothy Joyal; "America •For Me,"
of the program for an -0pen meeting .Helen Bartlett; "Entertairtl·ng Sister's -' - - ---- ·- - - - of the Grange on June ~;, which · 1s Beau," Nelile Parish; "Old Iron.sides,"
to be Westfield River Parkway asso- Alfred Joyal; "Ja9k Ra.bblt'.s Scarlet
Coat," Evelyn' Corl:iett.
ciation night.·
Class 3, seventh ahd eighth grades,
"Casablanca," Jean Joyal; "Headed
for Florldy," Hazel Parish; 1'Bro,vnie,"
Dotls Pomeroy; "The Clut&gt;'!!
Secre- _ __ __ _ _ _ ______ __ _ - - tary," Marvis Snyder; "Robert of
Lincoln," Harriet Higg'ins.
.
,The judges were Miss Helen Daly
.of ~orthampton and . Miss Agµes , - - - - - - - Pelissier ot Hadley·, students at the 1
North Adams Normal school, who are ·
In town this week for observation and I
practice ' teacning in the Corner 1
- -- -- - - - - - -- - - - -- - sch,ools. Prizes were awarded a~ fol- \
lows: Class 1, first, Rita Gagnon; r
second, Eloise Bartlett; third, Waite!' .
_ __ _ _ _ Mollison. Class 2, first, Mary . Ellen·;,...,.- -- - - - -- - - - - -- - 1
Read; second, Donald Moll111on; third
Eleanor Smith. Class 3, first, Marv!~
Snyder; second, . Harriet Higgins;
third, :Nellie P a rish.
------ ----, Ernest G. Thayer entertained the
children with clog dancing by a meI
chanical t oy, which wa s followed by
a minstrel sh-0 w with 17 in the cast r - - - - - - which Included clog dancing by Ralph
Smltn and Raymond W·heeler ; tbe
"Ch a rleston'' by Gordon Gardner, a n!:I
these specialties: Mute ch orus, ''Sweet ---- - Potatoes," Mr and Mrs Fred Sears; I
. s olo by Dorothy Bartlett with chorus
humming, accordion solo by Miss ;.... _
Hatha wa y. --...,,.....,,..
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WORTHINGTON

JUVENILE GRANGE .
~TO BE INSTITUTED·----

-----

..
Worthing ton, Ma y 10 - Th e May \---m eeting of the Friends hip g uild was 1
h e ld Thursday e ve ning at the h ome of
M iss B e rnice E Kilbou rn, with J'2'
--p 1·es ent. Thos e in charg e of th e pro- ----- - .
0
gra m were as f ollo ws: D ev otio n s, Mrs i
t1
Da,n,lel R. P orter; educatio na l, M rs l
Harry W . Mollison; s ocia l, Mrs D a o -,.
-.
lei R . Porter r efreshme n ts, l\frs
B yron
l\Irs
Homer Granger and
Wor.thington , May ~-The first juSmith. Prizes i n two co11test s w er e
venile Grange to be organized in
_ won l by Mrs M. F. Packard a nd l\liss
. . Pauline B r ock . S hut-ins rem e mbered
Western Massachuse tts will · be form- . .
t he pa.st month were M r s H arrie t
}J.eld
be
to
·meeting
a
at
instituted
ally
a\'.iS, Mrs Effie Pease a nd Mrs EdD
,
here on Saturday afternoon at 2.30.
~~~- ~~; J;;:0 ;:ie;~~f1/vil~ ~=
;:i,~d
This being .'ihe first Grange of ~his
guild bridge party was h eld
Friendship
'the
sectl~n
this
in
'class to 'be formed
Friday afternoon at "The Spruces" ; _ _ _
____
______ ____ eve n t is ca using 'much interest among
h os tess es , Miss Marjorie B artle tt and
the older grangers and there 'Yill prob- '
M rs Francis A. Robinson. Three tables
ably be a large attendance- 11:t Lyceum
were in play and prizes awarded as
!hall for the ceremonies to be conduct- '
First, Mrs Homer G r anger;
follows:
Bertha
Mrs
of
direction
the
under
ed
- ---- M. -. Cady. · or W indsor, or_ganizing; - - - - - - second, Mrs Joseph \Vright; consola- - - - - - tion , Miss B erndc e E. Ki lbourne.
deputy.
,\fr and l\frs Alma Sturtevant of
All subordinate Grange members .
Scg,rsdale, N. Y., have been spending _ _ _ _ _
- - - - - - - - / in western Massachuse tts are l nvited - - - the w eek a t the Ja.sper cottage.
to become honorary members a,;id this• ·
is · necessary in order to -witness the
[ f~:.monY: of ~stitution and instala- _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ -~-~==--=-=-=:::

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• . f K'Ind In Western
FIrst
- f ormed a
M.assachusetts

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Worthl'ngton

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The officers to· _b e installed a.re:
/
· Master, Harold Smith; overseer, Mary .
_ __ _ _ _ _ ~ Burr; lecturer, Marvis ·Snyder; stew- ___ _
ard Walter ·Higgins; assistant- steward: Frederick Drake ; chaplai,il, Harriet Higgins; treasurer, H~z,e l Van
vVert; s ecretary, Jea n Joyal; gate - - - - keeper, Raymond Magargal; Ceres, .
Betty Baer; Pomona, Dorothy Sand:
erson; Flora, Doris Shaw 3:nd lady as- ,
-·
' sistant steward, Iren e Pal'lsh.
There are 33 c'harter mem'bers ' and
a good size .c lass is expected to take
the d egree in .the 1 early summer.
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WO-RTmNGTON
Edwin

w.

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Dodge Dead ,

Worthington , May 7-Edwin Walter
Dodge, 36, died at his home in Ringville at 9 thls rrorning of · H odgkin's
disease, after a !,mg- illness. B esides his
widow, Mrs Lel,i, Con e D odg·e, he leav es
· his pa r enui, M r a nd Mrs George '.l'.
· Dodge of Rin gvtlle, and five brothers,
Carvel, Shel'id_tn and George, ,1 r., or.
Rin g ville, Chesl·.?1' of Peru a nd Homer
of Wh ately . 'l.'h~ fun eral wil l be h eld
! at the home Sunday afte rnoon Rt 2.30, ;
w ith bu rial, in charge of tht&gt;. Masonic
order, in th-;; ru-;;l; vill e_ ce-m etery,
Liked by all, l\il' Dodge wt ll be g r eatI
ly missed in the community .

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WORTHINGTON

200 at Funeral of E. W. Dodge
Worthingto n, May 11-Seldom has
this hill town see n a larger fun eral
tha n that h ela: yesterday afternoon at
Ringville when about 200 persons
gath ered at the h om e at 2.30 for t h e
Masonic funeral of Edwin Walter
D odge, 35, who d ied Thursday . Rev
Irving H. Childs of Huntin gton offic iated. Burial- in the Ring-ville cemetery. w as in charge of the Mason s.
About 50 Masons wer e presen t.
The Women's Benevolent society
w ill m eet vVednesday with Mrs Henry
Snyder for an a ll-da.y mee ting.
The Grange will m eet at LY!!eum
hall tomorrow nig ht when th-e first
deg r ee will b e conferred by the regular
officers a'.nd the s econd by t he men's
degree t ea m of Willia m sburg.
Mrs Steph en Oleksak and two children, J a m es and Richard, of Wes tfield, spent the w eek e11d with Mrs
G uy F . Bartlett.
Mother's day w as observed at t h e
First Con gregationa l ch'urch yesterday
morning with sermon b y t h e pastor ,
1
, Rev James H . B u rckes, who took as
his t ext, Prover bs xxxi, 28, ' ·Her children arise up, and call h er blessed "
· Early spring flowers formed the d e~orations.
The Friends hip g uild w ill h old a
s u pper at the c hurch Saturday a t
. 6, foll_owecl by a two-act play, "Rent. ing Junm y," at the town h a ll at 8.
Tho home econ omics committe e of 1
j the ~ran g e is s 11onsoring a d emon - I
, strat1on of e lectric stoves and 1.
frl gerators und er the direc t ion c f'
Th eron Hitch cock at t he town h ~ l
&lt;
W •ednesday night, the 20th.

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A.qsfst ing _In thC' orgaul zatlon was
~tnte .TUV('ll ilf' l)f'J•ll ly Mr11 Edgar· A .
C!w mller of N C'crlham. "-'ho ls chairr•,q
man of the slat" home '!ron orni
comm ittcr. T he rn1&lt;tallin;::- nfllr.Pr w., 11
MJ·,q Berth :,, M. Cncl.v or "\VinrJs nr orgrwizing- rlep ut y. Members ,,r. th~ Jo.
Grang e nnd otlit•i s
&lt;'Ill suhord inn ti:
from surro unding- towns, 55 in a ll. :, t t P)Jrl Cd the in1=:tal11tlon and 2:'i join1:d
1&lt;Ji,zhtc cn o C
11.9 honol·a!'Y m e mbt•r·s.
these honor ary memb ers are fro m
·wol'th ington , two from H unting ton
art(! one each from Cumm ington.
and
Needh "R m. Medfi eld, Win dsor

JUVENILE GRANGE
IS INSTITUTED
TON
I ·' AT WORTHING
First in Western Massachu-setts- Many Grange Members Attend Cere moni es 33 Charter Mem bers
Vlorth ington,

May

9- A

A,.mon g th ose attend ing- torlay'11 ex&lt;'1 ·oises wer e l\lr.s Glady s Murra y Lowdi ng , matroJJ of t he juven ile Orang n qf
:Medfi eld ; Arthu r Piel'ce , maste r or
Hµ ntingt on Gl'a nge an d R ubert Tow le
maste r of Westfi eld Grang e. '
Assist ing' :1\1:rs C11dy' as 'the !nst-aling
s uite wer e rhe fo llowin g; ; Maqte r,
Miss Beat rice Yan W art, m as ter of
the W orthington Grang e ; chapla in,
Mr 11 W illiam Sande rson ; pia n ist, i\f!ss .
,To.scph ine Hewit t; soloist , l\fr,q Leland
Perry Cole ; m arsha l, Mrs Fred Sca rs1
&lt;&gt;nible m hf'ar er, M rs Cla ude K napp ;
bearer, Mrs -~ranc ls A. Robin ~}/

j uven ik

nge, a projec t s t rongly spo nsored
tional Grang e, was organ I.bGyra, thet naL yceum
J1a.Jl, W orthin gton,

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"\Vl'st fl elrl.

i ?.ed a
ttiis a(tern oon, the fi rst j u \·eni le ,
G·m nge i n We.ste r n Massa chuse tts /
'l\;,i th 33 boys a nd g irls as cha r ter
.members.
Its ma t ron is Pa.~t l\•fas te r·. Mrs,
W a ltPr L . H iggi ns of W or thingto n

;;!~Ila

@zcers In.sta lled wer 6-! M11.~ter, Harz
oll'!, Smith ; overse er, Mary B urr i lecturer, -Ma r vis Snyde r ; stewa rd, W a l. ter Higgin s ; assista nt stewa rd, F rederick D rake ; c haplain, Har riet Rig - g iM: t ~ urer , H azel Van W art ; sec- r etary, .Tea n .Toya]; gate k e.epepf R ayl mond Ma g &amp;rga l; Cer es, Betty . Baer ;
P om on a, D orot h.y Sand ers on; Flor.1
D oris Shaw ; lady assis tant stewa rn '
I ren e Paris h; m a tr on, Mrs Waite r L
H igg ins.
T he children h a d full e quipm en t of
n ew r eg alia for t he cer emon y a s well
as officia l m ember s' b u tton for eyery
me mbe r.
. Annou ncement was made t hat the
next m eeting would be h eld on Me~
m aria! , day w it h ' a s ulta.bl e progra m
.and remarks .!Vere ma de by v:sit ing
g uests. Althou g h s umme r meeting;.:i_
wp l be s hort; not interf ering w ith t h ~
outdo~ r v-a()ati on days of t he childn m,
the w:mte~ wl1! affoi·d _oppor tunity for
th e handll'l:g or m, _.,.a ny
. ... proj ects. ·,

I

her as,~Lsta nt is l\:frs
Grang e and
1
F i.lncl.c:1 A- Robin}lon. Both are t rained · I
,
·
·
Gtang e work ers. '!'h e forma tion ot a. ' juvenil e Gra n h-e
atrord s a possib ility for all ch-lldrerl's
- 1,z!ojects to coordi na te under one 1'o1
cal organf ?.atfon whose m otto is "P1 epitre in H appy Childh ood !qr In teliigebt Man hood and W oma nhoorl ! All
childre n over fi v e and u nder 14 yca!r.91
of•11 ge are · oll g lble· t o · j oin a nil can ziem:Mn me mbers until t he.v .hec9m e 16.
to s ec
I Oi\e of the obj ects , h o wever,thise age
of
how many m e mbe rs ca n a t
H be advan ced to th e s ubord inate
,
'
•
. G~ n~e.

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~ifi- WORTHINGTON

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Grange Holds Meeting
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Play la Soccess
Worthlng·ton, May 14- Worthjngton
"Renting Jimmy," a -two-act
Grange conferred the ftr~t and second
, play, given• by the . Friendship
degrees la.o;t evening at the Lyceum
i Guild at the town hall Saturday - ----- hall upon three candidates, Mr and
r
d
· 11 d house
· Mrs George ·o sgood and Mrs Arthur
r ev~ntng, · rew a well fl · e
'
l bver one hundred being present;
11
Wither ell. The regular officers co~h
. !erred the first degree, and the 'mens -- - -- - ·- - 1 $40.80 was announc·e 4 a&amp; t ~ redegree team o! WllllamiiJ:mrg the secceipts and· after expenses are deond, doing excellent work. Voted that
ducted· wi11 be giyei1 for repair
the Grange hold an open meeting on
!WOl'k on the church windows.
A '
June 9, Westfield Riv er Parkway as- -·- - - - fsul)per ,.a.t the· church ... at 6 ~pres ocia.tlon night. It was v oted that the
cAde· ~·the play a. nd·_ W""" in .charg.e
date of Grange Sunday be changed to
"' a
..,.,
July 12, and that the •service be ·held
o( -Mr,s ,- Henry Snyger,. M_rs. By- -- - - - - - ·- at 3 p. m:. to accommodiite Charle.9 M.
- - -- - ron Smith ·and · Mrs. Clinton F . ·- - · - - -· - Gardner ot Westfield, high' priest of
R~ad.. Tpe _pla:y- was a very pleasDemeter, who is to be· the speaker. 'A
ing e.nfertaiiunent~ · well, act,ed,
social hour wjll !ollow with basket
~d ·· ' l
·
t a 1 or one· - - -·-- - - --lunch. ?viiss Dorothy F . · ijarttett'" )Vas - -- - - - - an a c.~ver ·~ por r .ya
elected Flora.. The attfmdance roll call
phase .of coli~ge,-Hfe; TlH3· _cast. ~f
shOW€d 36 present from ~ Worthing:.
characters follows-:· -carol lVnite-,
_ __ _ _ __ _____ ton, 20 Williamsburg, two Cumming-- ___ __ ____ a ' pretty college girl who has ,___ _
t on and two Huntington,. ·
,.
m'a ny t-r'out(es.,~.M.~ j9rie G.~ BartThere was a pleasant gathering or·
•left; M_adge Ra._;,_; . Carol's c_ousin
the Women's Benevolent society to~ay _
,l
at the home of Mrs .Henry Snyder _ _____._ _ _ .aµd .a, -;Ir.l with,;id~as, .Mrs. Geo. 1
with 14 present. Fancy work of 'all
E. · Torrey, "Jr. ; µeorgiana Moore,
kln~s tor the annual .J\ugust !air ocforetty, rtch ,.JW.d. : §D!)bbish,' poro?up1ed the d~Y- Because of the meet- 1
~.tlfy. F. Bartlett;, Jim_~y Lambert,
---- - - - mg of the Highland club here on the, - - - - - - - a 'handsome young suitor of Car28th, the next meeting of the Benevo' ,- . G ·
d
·,
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lent soclety will not be held' until,
ol s,
ordon . Qa!, n~~ ,. college
June 3.
Jg19s, Mildrfd Owen, _Mi-ss ElizaThe home economics co~m!~tee of - - ---··
~ beth T~rrey;· J~annti; ·Day., l\Irs.
the Grange under the d1rect,on of
: Merwin Packard; Leila Day, Mrs.
Theron Hitchcock or Cu~I\1:lngton
l Clffford Tinker• . Evelyn .· Sc.oit .
s ponsors . the demon1:1tratlon of eJec-1
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- - - - - -trlc stove., and refrlgeratop1 at th"-' - Miss Lois Sm_ith '• Kat,h~rlne Tm.town hall Wednesday evening, · the·
cey, Mrs. Walter -Tower; Grace
20,t h, at s p. m.
Welch, Mrs, Francls Robinson. ·
Mrs Alice Gurney who has · been! _
Miss Katherlne·McD. Rice an au-,
·spending a number o! weeks with her'
thor o·f piays· ·'asstsfed ·1u'sta~ng·
daughter, Mrs Howard C: Brewster of
th
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M• i b f · .
Dartmouth terrace, Springfield, is vise P ay,
-U~ ~
e . ore and .eltin-g her daughter, Mrs Herbert G.
tween the acts was- furnished by
_
Porter.
l'.rr13. George E . . l'.orrey, Jr. plan- - - - ~~tr aI?-d F~ed Sears,. y~oilni~t... . .

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: ; The, . G~ild ,. ·Bridge club w1i1 - -------' mayt. Thur~~ay-' a(ternoon w'ith .
Mrs~ _Henry Snyder, ~-. Mrs·. -L. o.
Sweet will assist in entertaining. ·____ _ _
be~---,,-held
in the
. No service
-will
- ~-~
. First Congregational .church on
May 24, that all who wish to ___
. may attend the Sunday school
: convention at Cummlugton.
1 The Grange Whist ci.u) - will '
I meet on Thursday eveiun.i.; with
~ Mr! and Mrs.
Edw~r.d- J. Clark

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at Hilltop farm.
- The 4-H club wlllbold-;,~fo~d sal;at M. F. Packard's store Saturday
afternoon ·at 3 for the benefit or Juvenile Grange.
The home economics committee or
the Grange, und er the direction or
Theron Hitchcock or Cummington will .
sponsot· a demon.stratlon o! el ectric
stoves and refrigerators at the town
· ha.li Wednesday night a.t 8.

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WORTHINGTON-

WORTHINGTON

Highland Club to Meet
May 26.-The Highland cluh
spl'ing meeting will be held nt
the Congregational church on
Thursday. Program: 11, social
hour; 11.15, music; 11.30, routine business; 11.45, outlook paper by Helen Talboy, fc,llolY,ed by
discussion; 1, dinner; 2.i5, music·; 2.30, addre,s s by Rev. John
Gratton, pastor of the First _;:
-- - church of Pittsfield ; "The Church
and Unemployment," Rev. Kenneth Beckwith, pastor of 'Pilgrim Memorial church of Pitts• 1
Worthington, May 21-Owlng to !11field.
measles
German
ness in the town from
The third and fourth degrees
children of the town w!ll not attend
the Sunday-school convention In Cum- - - - -will 9e conferred at the meeting
mlngton on Sunday and there w!ll be ,
of the Grange this evening, the
services held In the Congregational
- ----- - - - - - - - _..,
church here as usual.
degree by the ladies' degreo ,
third
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_
demonThere was an Interesting
team, of which Mrs. Carl Love- 1
strat!on of electric stoves and retr_igland is master, a-n d the !ourth deerators, at the town hall la.st evening
I
sponsored by the home economics com_ __ --, greo by th~ regular . officers.
r
- - ~L- - - mittee ot the Grange,
State Deputy Ch~rles M. :Brown
; of Pittsfield will be .present ~nd
Inspect the Grange · in the ·_work·
- - - - -. ing of th'e degrees.
Mrs. 'Clinton · F. Read, assisted
1
by Miss Lois S-rµith, will entertain _
- the Friehdshlp Guild brl&lt;.lge club
L______ __ _ ___ Worthington. May 22-Mrs L. C. r - --- - - - - at her home ~n Wednesday afterSweet entertained the Guild Bridge
.. ,.. ; ·
noon.
club at her home yesterday afternoon
Because of . the prevalence of
in place or Mrs Henry . Snyder . who _________ - - German measles\ in t t;h.e town th~
_; was 111. Four tables were In play and
___
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I
prizes won as follows: First, Mrs
Memorial day ·pro'gram and meet•
Byron Smith; second, Mrs Charles A.
____ - - ing of the Juvenile Grange has -, -, Kilbourn; consolation, Mrs Elsie V. _ _ __ _ _
,.
1 been ca,ncelled~
- - - -Bartlett.
'---- - A meeting of the parish was ~
&gt; 1 A foo,d sale will be held by the
-- - - -/' held at the church this afternoon _____
\ 4-H club at Packard's store tomorrow
at 2 o 1clock to take action in re- - A ·. 1;1 tternoon at 3 for the benefit ot the
1
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·
Juvenile Grange.
;
_J"&amp;:~:rg. to~ tu~pi!f~'. o'veif tb~~-P~l?-P!'rty 1
Miss Olive E. Cole ot Pittsfield ~
appertaining t~. ,,!~I! church,_ to
at her home this week recovering __ ______ _ _ _ _
!t_h-e · First _Ci;mgr-eg'atlo~_al, C-h urch
"--- - - -- - f:,om an attack ot Jaundice.
' filcor.p orate·d. : _.-This '.fs: the final :
~step'· in the in:corporatjon of the , __ __ __ ·ot inferest in~
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -----·--- - church and
- _church history a,s· It marks. the '
passing of the pA.rish which bas ·
- - - - - - - - - - - been. in existence since March 13, , - - - - - - - I 186!;i, when th~ c~urcli and town
.
were separated an_d a parish I
formed. This meeting was pre~id-: f' ed oyer by 11.r anc~s H. Dawes,
· •
Esq.,.. a ju,s tice ' of peace.
•. ¥iss Helen Fogg, who _ bas ____ · -· _ _
- ---- - - ----115e~ii ·,, spending. winter Ip. ··: Essex,
LCt~ s returne?- to -her home. _:J

Worthlngton, May 20-The Gran~e
I whist club, "1Yhich W.18 to have m~t
with Mr and Mrs Edward' J. Clark
I tomorrow, has been postponed !ndefl, nltely.
Henry L. Tower J.g visiting his son
Cullen ~ Tower of Thompsonville, ct'.

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WORTHINGTON

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--- -- · ;THIRD, FOlJRT.ff DEG,•REES
CONFERRED s··y GRANGE
- - - -- - - -- 1· •

111 Visitors Attend Ceremonies · Frpm Neighboring
Organizatio~s
Worthin gton, May 27-Idea l weath- - - · ·-·--·· er favored WorthiJl gton Grange last
' night _when the third and fou!th de, grees were conferre d upon five, Mr
and Mrs George Osgood, Mrs Jennie
Witherel l and Miss Lois Smith· of
Worthin gton and a. candidat e from
- - · Pittsfield .
. , , .
·
The hall was decorate d by Emerson
Davis assisted by Mrs ·walter Hlg- -- - - . - - _gins, with evergree n trees, boughs, ap-

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meeu~: ri~
~ as -,
field":' T4,esday after))oo'tt at the
- - ---- · · - - church; moderat of,r,Ml.tis Elsie V.
Ba-rtlett . The reports of the clerJc
and trea'3ure r, Mrs. Ma.y G, Por - - - - - ·er, were read and
accevted . Total
receipts .for the year,. $2,169.6 0;
total expendit ures,
$1 ,870.26;
balance · 1n treasury , · $299.84.
Voted that the parish transfer all
ttie proverty -belongl n·g to the varish to the ' Worthin gton Cogrega -'
tional Cp.urch, Inc. Voted that the .
parish committ ee take the final
steps· in foruially · turnfng over - - - - - -·- - ------ property to church_. Voted that, a !f
tribute be drawn. up on the death
of our highly esteeme' d and sin- _
,c~rely mourned de.a.con, Raymon d
P,._Buclt. A moment of silence was 11
I observe~ hi memo·ry of Mr. Buck ;
I and also George W. Pease, a trus- - - - - - - - - ____ _
j tee . of the church and sexton tor .
many years as. a labor of love.
Meeting cUssolve d.
·

'pie blossolll- ' and lilacs with bouquets
of spring flowers at each station. State
De.puty c. H • .B\"OWn of Pittsfield was
the inspectin g officer. •
Fifty.eig ht Worthin gton (lrangers
and 111 from neighbor ing towns in- _ - - - - - - - - - - - eluding P ittsfield, Hi'nsdale, Hilltop,
Cummin gton, Chesterfi eld, Williams burg, Ashfield, Feeding Hills, Westfield, West Springfie ld, Blandfor d and
Becket rallied to the support of one of
the younges t masters in the state,
Miss Beatrice Van Wert, on h er first
official µ:ispect lon. The degree work
and floor work of t he women's staff
under the direction of Drill Master
Mrs Carl Loveland received high commendation from the deputy and
visiting masters w hile the regular officers gained · their approval for the
fourth degree.
Miss D orothy F . Bartlett, who was
1·ecently elected Flora, was installed by
Pruit Master Mrs Carl Loveland , assisted by Carl Loveland . Deputy
Brown gave many helpful suggestio ns
for the good or the order .and there
were short talks by the visiUng masters.
I ce cream and calce were _served_}&gt;Y
1.he feast committe e, Mr and Mrs Wa~t er T ower, and dancing was h eld with
·\ music f urnished by Mr and Mrs E'red
Sears.

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WORTHINGTON

MRS LUCY T. DRURY DIES
AT BROTHER'S HOME

WOULD USE THE OLD
CHURCH AS MUSEUM

I

Highland Club N_ames Committee to Investigate Plan

Worth~rtgton

Northampt on, . May 31-Mrs Lucy
(Thayer) Dru·ry, 76, widow of Lathrop E. Drury, died this afternoon at
the home of her brother, H. E. Thayer, . 42 Monroe street, . after a Jong mnes~. She was born in ·Chuterfiel d,
September 11, 18p4, the daughter of
Edwa-r_d ,and Emelh}e (Turrell) Thay--- -er. Mrs Drury wasl a member o! the
·worthingt on Congregat ional church,
. having
resided .in Worthingt on for
1 more than 40 .y e:frs, until the death
_ __, of her husbartd, about 10 y ears ago. .
IShe• leaves, be.,ides her . brother, two
J ni~.ce.,, Misses Mildred and Christine
Thayer of this •~ity..
·--· --- · ·· The funeral will be held at the
fNew:ell funeral home, H King ,street, ,
Tuesday afternoon at 2, Rev John c.
_ _ __ Wightman , officiating. . Burial will be j
- --in North cemetery, '\Vorthing wn.,
.1

Worthingto n, May 2n-The Highland club spring m eet:ng wM held
yesterday at the First Congreg ational
church with about 75 attending. An
organ recital by Mrs N. _
c. Tuttle Pr~ceded a business m eetmg at
R oswell Merritt of Chesterfiel d, whioh
pTesident of the club1 presided. The report
of the Jru1t m eeting by the R ev Mr
Sangree or Cumming t on and. the
tre asurer's re.port by H. L. Me rritt of
Chesterfiel d were read and accepted.
A suggestion by Mrs N. C. Tuttle
that the Highland club further a plan
for the preservatio n and use of the
ohurch at South Worthingt on similar
t o the Old Hadley Farm museum re- --- suited •in the following committee ·b e·
ing appointed
to investigate and
further the project: Mrs N. C. Tuttle,
C'hair.man; Mrs William Baker, Sr. and
- R oswell Me r r itt of Chesterfi-el d, M. C.
P hinney of Cummingt on and Rev S.
Dale Tarbell of Plainfield. The address of the mor ning was an outlook
paper by Mrs Helen T a lboy of Swift
R iver, followed by discu ssion.
D inner wa.s s erved ' a t 1 b y the
Wom en 's B enevolent s ociety in the
------ - - - - - - church din ing room . Th e af ternoon
program open ed at 2.la wit h a n organ
recital - bv Arthu r G. Capen a nd a t
2 30 a.n ·address was given by ReVj ' - - - - -.
G-.·t t- - ~ pastoro f - th-e F irst
J ohn
r a on,
church a t P ittsfield, on "'Dhe Return
f Faith." T his wa:s followed by an
- - - - - - - . - ~ddr ess on "The Ch urch and UnE:mt," by R ev K enneth Beckwith, 1
P~~e~f t he Pilgrim Mem oria l church l
1 ~f Pittsfield, who s aid t h a t . the m at- '
-t t.er of industry and e,conom1c welfa~e
1
' is one of t h e churoh challenge~ today. ~
Th e n ext m eeting of t he Highland
! club will be h eld August 5 at Cur mington.
will exR ev J a mes H . B u rckes
cha nge
pulpits on S~n d ay with .Rev
S. Dale__T~ b':!~
Plainfield. ___ _

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,Widow of ·Lathtop E. Drury
I Was Former Resident of

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�WORT-HI-NG'rON

s e·c urlty and nqt"'wiiit for a Plttlit o
be made for it, and cited as ·evils
. of . the present, day, stock -specula- - - - - ---- Highland Cln,IJ ¥ol!ls ~pri'!g.IUeet~i _fi_
cin . ,a~f ga-!11b}i1J:g, _;1~ne·v~n dlsfo.
..
· . .mg' ·
btition of wealth, the us-e or·· ma:
1
. . .June 1 - The Highland club chines 1n ei J)loiUng . hu"man Per:wring meeting Was held Th_ursdl}Y sonality 'ancL a'd vocated -old~ age ---- - · - -•····-- --- --- I~
at_ the }lirst Congregaflq~al .c~ µt c!J.. p~ftslon~ and u~employ~ ~I!t in~uiW!lth ,apo1.1 t 75 · attending. . \:n pr,- , ance. , .. A' rising wote of t'!ian·lts ·was ·
_____ _ _ _____ i gan .. r~cifal by Mrs. N:.-"-o/P J uttie' , g_ lv,eri .t.oJ}\eJJ.&gt;·el \{_~r~; to ige !!}dies __
prec~ded .. a business mj!•e ting at , for the dinner, and .to those who
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. V.:hich Roswell Merritt, 'i&gt;r~'~ ident . decorated the church . for whlc'li
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I ,of th ~ cJ~~. presiqed. TM ) _e poI't i apple blossoms, lilacs: evergreens
--- ---------- i&gt;f 1.he -last~me;etlng_by ,the 1 ~ev. Mr. ,' and tul!Ps were used in i&gt;rofuslon; -,~_angree of'.,_G~mmmgton,, a,nd t q.e Decorations were in charge of Mrs.
:tt:e*-sui'er•~ repo'rt by' H. I i. Merrit t Homer ' Grange r,- ,Emerson Davia,
L - -- _ _____ -of, Qhe_stertleld, were read and. a_c- Mrs. Walter . Higgins apd Miss
, 11
trepte.d.
A S\13gestlon · by Mrs. Elsie.· Bartlett. The next meetlQg
N._.;. c.__-T.\ltU~ ' ~hat tne }Jlgl/,~ahd of the Hlgbla11d club wlll be held
_____ .cil,'1f!;!.f(;!J~~er, , )ll~n fQr · tqe p11es~-~- Augllst 5th in · Cu~mington.
'
vatlon• ·a,nift use• 'Of · the church ·:1t
· ·
.w ortqington sltniiar to hie
The Rev . .James H. Burckes
'C!Id ,-H}Jd,l~y:' Flijin Museiint reiju)t- l,cha:nged .on. 'SURtlay .witll 1t he•.:REf,t _ _ --- ------- -- - - - ea in t_he· Iollo
_ wing committee be- S L Tarbell of Plainfield . . .,-;
·ifn'gj" ~ppol11ted. to · investiga te , ji.nd• ' . . · . '.' , .- '" ' ' ,.-,~, ' ~-,. &gt; ""
,fl{rtl1¢r the _proje,c t: · Mrs~- .N:- ; C. i

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- - - ----- - '1:-itWii, :C1t~lf~in_; '·Mfs; JYHiJaip.' - -- - - -- Bake_r, _S r., and· Ros.well · Merrl~t;'
Ch'E!ster-field; M. c. Phinney, cu·~ ------- __ _ __ ;m~gtgp.,.~t d, thii lt~v. .s.- P~le T~r~ _

bell, Plainfiel'd. The ·add-ress . of'
the mbrning · was An Outlook J'ii• 'er,- l:iy'":?dts'.- Helen ·.T!l,lboj;-,r i:;wirt .
J~ J.vcer, _foll_ow_ed' by .di~_c us~iO:-~: Mrs. i- - - -. Mrs. Lecy ':l'liayer Dmry
;r:ralboy spoke of -the ind-us1'.rial de, -.June 5-The body of Mrs. Lucy
-Pr~~sj.on_;:;,1iJ1d _t4oug_!;tt . !IJtl prigi'r
; (Thayer) Drury, widow of Lathrop _ __
factor in the present lireakdown · - - - - - - - - - iDrury; whose death at t he a ge of
1
' was ·an unbalanced load., A -.w.orld·
occurred Sunday ·i n
1_76_ years
1 mar ket, ·i'owei: tar'iff and cimstr\Ic( Nort11a-mpton, was brought to town
tion projects initiated_by the gov- - 'Wednes(Jay a fternoon for burial in - ·ernmen't were advocated, also join(the
fam1ly lot in the North cemeing the world·· court and a moratery, the Rev . .James H . Burc'kcs ·
__ 1 torium of the war debt . for five ___ ________ _ ___ _ of this town officiating.
years. Dinner 'Vas served at _l
, With her death, th e name of
o'clock by the Women's Benevoone of the old families of the town
-i,e,P- t society in_ the, ch,µjch;,piP,ing
: dies out The Drury house ba·d a l- ·
room.
'
·-&lt;
.t.
ways been in the family. .It is one
The afternoon pr~g•/ii.!Il"·oi&gt;e.n ed
of the fin est colonial houses -of th e·
a t . 2.1:5 . with· ii'ii org:an . recital ··ey
town. Over 40 years of her mar- ___ _ _
Arthur G. Capen; 2.3·0, att dress l&gt;°y -- - -ried life had bee n spent th ere. She
, Rev. John Gratton, pastor· of the
and her husband were active In
/fF~rst .~h~rch in Pi,ttsfield on· "'J:'.~e
a ll church and community work.
__ - L'R,e.turn of Fal-th.-' Mr. ,. Gr~ttoµ
__________ After his death, in 19 21, she so l:i - -- - - ·
said we had . been living in an age
the place to Victor Bernier and
,of !Ilslllusli,,riin~~~ wh_lch ca me
went to Northampton to live wi th
fi. res ult of the war. Pre-war idealI h er brother, Herbert Thayer, b nt
- ' ism didn't have a very firm founj her_ i~tere:,t in Wo1:thington r e- ,
da tion _ to starid, on, but_ the outmam ~d unabated until ber dea th. ,
lciok for religion is that we are ,
C&lt;&gt;Jl).ing again to a renewal of faith .
. Mrs. T. ·c. Martill has rented her -- --' This was followed by a'. n addreim
place at the Center village for th e
· on "The Church and Vnemploy~·
sumnie r. to Mr and Mrs. Charles ·
, men t" · by the R ev. :K:ennetb BeckA. A. Rice of Springfield, who will
, with, pastor of the Pilgrim Memoarrive the 15th. Mrs. Martin will
rial church of Pittsfield, who sald
spend th e summer at Twin Brook
farm.
that the matter of industry . and
' economic welfare is one of the
One of the larges~ meetings of cburc,h challenges today:
•rhe
the Women 's Benevolent s ocl,ity (
i;l:!_urs:h, ]!eeds to venture out of its
of the season was held Wednesday
at th e home of Mrs. N. C. Tuttle
with 20 present. Al! out of tow ~
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guest was Miss Ea'!itman of Nort ti1a1npton, wh o ls spe nding a few -days !_!). Jown a t Miss Bessie A111es'.

WORTHINGTON

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Mrii. Frank w. Bates, a ccompanled ·by her granddau g hter,
June 2.- The Women's BenevoJoan .Bartle tt, ,has return ed fr om
Jent society will meet on W edn esGreetifield . She ;had with h er a s
day wi th Mrs. N. C. Tuttle for an
gu ests over t he holida y A ll en
all day mee ting.
Prouty of Gardner, P hilip ArMi's. Walter TQwer, a ssisted by
coutte of Russell, Berna rd LoughMrs. w. L. Higgins , wiJJ enterJin and son, Robert of Chel sea,
ta'i n t he Guilil Brfdge club on
Mr . and Mrs. Roy Bates and Miss
-r
Thursday afternoon.
Rowena Bates of Springfield, Ger/The Frien.d shlp Guild will hold
aid Bates and Richard G. Bartlett
Its June meeting with Mrs. Byron
of Greenfield.
Smith on Thursday evenin g,
Mrs. Elizabeth Harris, colored,
Grange .members -are r (lni,i nded
of New Roch elle, N. Y. , has pUrof the meeting of Pomona Grange
chased the place belonging to Al"-r.
1 at
Chesterfield on W ednesday
bert .J. Welch at the Center and
· 11 evening, June 3, at 8.30. Candiwith her family has mo ved here
l!ates are requested to be present
· the past week.
at . 8 o'clock.
·
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Tower
Lafayette Lodge was opened to
held a picnic at Tower',s Ledges
_ _____
t he public on Memorial day _ for
.S aturday in honor . of Mrs. Tow---;--the season, This• beautifuL Coloer's uncle , Norman Mason, of New
nlal liouse of unusually fln.e arYork. Those present wer e Mr.
chltecture, whicli has been lea sed
.and Mrs. H arry Str ong and famby -Clinton F. · Read· and named '
ily,' Mrs. Martha Lane and famfor tli:e hotel destroyed by fire In · - Uy and Mr. and Mrs. ·Harry Eddy
the . spring, wl11 be . of interest to ' of Florence.
all for its fine design and his• 1
Mrs. Harry Mollison and Mrs.
4---- ---toric Int erest.
.
·- Walter Tower will a t tend the •----------- - - - - - - - - - - There will be a . dance Friday
:.c annil).g _clulJ ot t)l_ll . l:!ampshlre
_ _ ____ ___
i'evenlng at . L yceum - hall In . ·comity E xtension ·service !Ii. Am- - - charge of Fred Falrmeri. Bate·s•. 1 herst today.
,----- _____ _
oi'chestf a wql pla~. .
, .
-:
Mr. aµ4~ Mrs. -Herbert Tower 1
Among the guests In town for
and da ug_h "fer, Edith, of Spring•.
7over the holiday were Dr. and L_ field were at thei r cottage for the
Mrs. Claren ~e L . Kllbour·Ii of Ne-iv , ,,!J.oliday.
1· -- -------- - Have. n, Ct., and. daughter,, Doro- ;_ I Hen~y L. Tower has returned /
- - - - - - -~ t hy, of 'Hartford; Mr: and Mrl!, ,.-, a Her_a two weeks' stay \n Thomp- ,
Sidney: J . Smar,t of Longiµeadow ,
-,onV11le, Ct., and Springfield.
·- Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sexton, Mrs. 1· 1 11fr. and Mrs. Guy Fitzroy of
_ _ ___ __,, F ayette · Sturtevant, Mr; ancl ~rs. i ~Dalton', who have bou,ght the
George- J·a sper. and family, Mr. 1 7_ Cullen Stevens' . place,_ arrived on 111 an!1 Mrs. Wolcott Gumble,
Miss , Friday: - -~-~-~·-~_ _ _ __,_
Ma rion J,. Bar tlett ?f ~Pf ingfleld, ., I News has beei,-r ecei ved of tlle deatn
Mr. and M-r-s . Alma Sturtevant of -, th is afternoo n oL !\1rs L u cy J . Drury of __ _
Scarsd;1:le , N. Y., }Uss · Elizabeth
Mouroe street, Northampton. a for mer
- - --- - - - - - - -I
'.Ct.·' · "Mfss . frened. It- rguffor
es ident
Wo,rthington.
Mrsago
Drur
_. _ ___ - --- - - Porter of fStorrs
N
;,
~d aor strolie.
two yea rs
any
cl t y J /
i Moultol! 9. or t,.,\UIJ.p ton ,: M,r . _ an - had bee 11 an il.w a.E cl since. Th_c body - Mrs. H arry D. Pea:se, Mrs. Ralph
w ill pe brought he,·e for bmi al in th e
\ Bretzner, Mr. and Mrs. Pf-, .Fitzfah1i ly lot in the North ce metery to gerald a n d fam ily of New · York: I ' morrow aftern oon.
t
'
Mrs. I r vi ng Chapm an and Mr. - ------ - = - - = - -- - -- - - and Mrs. Roy Mcc ann have
opened thei r sum mer home.
Mr. a nd Mr s. Irvµ g, ~ -, B~rtlett 1'
of Green/ield were iq _.ti;,wn .F rlt
da-y.
A family gather ing of 15 was 11 - - - - - - - - - - --- - - ___ _
- ·- ·held Saturday at Lester -St evens'
with a basket picnic lunch. Those
- - - - -· 11 at te nding included
h is m ot her ,
Mr-,, Lester Stevens, Mr. and Mrs.
William I&lt;elg of Rockford, 1 11.;
Mr. and Mrs. Fayette Steven s a nd
Mrs. Steven s' moth er, Mrs. H enderson., o! Larchm ont, N. Y. ; Mr.
and Mrs. AJ!re d C. Stevens an d
\--- sou, Alfred, Jr.; Misses Clara .
and Laura Stevens , Atty. an d f
Mrs. Watter L . Stevens of North- ·
- - - - - - - ---- ·' ampton _and Mrs . Tatham of As-

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�WORTHINGTON""Frhi~

hlp Guild Meetl~g

WORTHINGTON
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·- ·· :Visits

Native

Town

After

•s

Wortµl ri.gton, June 5-Tl'le Friend·
Years
s hip guild met la.st evening· with Mrs
June 9.-Mrs. Charles A. KilBy_r on -Smith for Its June meeting
- 1- - - - -- - -- ·--1-- - and electlqn or officers. Program: De- ------- - - - -- .' bourn entertained o.v er the week\
votions, Mrs Hainer Granger; educa114 her cousin, Mrs. Nettle Bates
tlonal, ·Mrs Harry W. Molllson, who
Parsons of Fairfield, Iowa, who
a ·report
o! ' the·Council
meetinir otot Rethe ,__ _ __
-as
making her fl r st visit •o he r - - - - - - ·- ---------- gave
Hampshire
County
- ·•
1
Hg ious Educat\ on IJl Northampton on
native town 1n 48 years. She is
Ma y 26. The· treasurer's report sho,vecl
:~ J\L\!t f?htel' of t-he _late Clarke
a balance in the tr~as'ury of .$37.98. It' ,_ ______
----------·
was voted to· give th e church $35 fro!n
an d Lucy (Brewster} Bates and
th~ .mon ey eal·ned . by the r~cent supwas born In the house now owned
per and ,play -towa1d r,e pair of church
·----- ____
by ·Mrs. Irving Chapman ot New ; -- - - - - - - -- -- --- - - - 'Yij\dows. The ;onowjng officers were ·---·-·
York. · After the death ot her parelected: -'.Pr~s1dent,
·Mrs, Homer
en.ts-Mrs. Parsons made her home
Gr;;i.ng~r ; vice-president, Mrs Francis
many._years with her uncle . and ·-- -- - - - A. Robinson;
, secretary,
Mrs V.Clifford
- - - - - - -- Tinker,;
treasurer,
Miss Elsie
Bart- __ ----------- ( a unt, · tJie Jate W r. and M,r,s. ·Cal·
Jett. 'fhe .soc\a,1, · period in clv,,rge of
Vin T. Bartlett of Pittsfield, who
Mrs Clift'ord Tinker and Mrs H. Stanwere also natives of this town
ley· Cole cqns1sted of a contest wi~h _ _ __ _ ___ and well known here. ·
·
- - - - ~ the first pl'ize won by . Mrs , Harry W. ·
The -home economics
commuMollison and t~e consolation prize by .
nJty service and dance ~ommJttees
, Mrs Byron Smith. Refreshments were
____
, . •
·
; served.
,
1---c,· of the G
- ·1-1 h- - - l F'ive tables were in play : at the '.
range Wl
old a joint,
guild \)rid_ge whic h met y e~_terday aftC,C?mmJttee meeting at the Lyceum _·
ernoon at Mrs Walter T9wer's with
_ __ _
hall. this evening.
,
__________ Mrs .w . L. Higgins a.ssistfng as host/ ":Among the speaker1 wlio are
ess.
.expected .to be present at the open
The ·Grang·e will hold an open ineet/ Grange meeting at the Lyceum ·
ing at the L y&lt;;eum hall on Tues_day
_ _ _ _ _ - h,.~ IUhis eveni~g are President i .
evening. It w!II _be ~e,stfiel~ River
_. Ln. Robinson 'cit' W tfi . ld
•·
Parkway assoc1at1on- mght with the
_r,;r
.
es e , -'Secreprogram in charg·e of Dr F'. A. ·Rob- I
, htry W. 0. Johneon of Woronoco
. inson.
,,_ ___ ______
of tlie Westfield River Parkway
1
, association, and Mrs. Ernestine
Perry of Springfield.

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June_ 16.,-)'he regular Grange-}
• -ry;orthlngton, June 11-;-0n a.ceount
meE\tlng wilJ .,b,e, held this week on i
of the s tormy weather only 35 attendFriday evening, _June 19th. This i
ed the open meeting of the Worthwill be ,a meeting of much lnter- 1
tngttm Grange · -T uesday . i:itght ' · at
est because It W!lJ be _attended b,:..J
Lyceum hall tor Westnel&lt;l ·River
the state lecturer, Mrs. Margared
Parkway association night. · Dr F. A.
Sarre, o( Cheli:nsford.
_.. ,!
R obinson presld~d. The nrst speaker' - -- _
The Frien4ship Guild will hold.':___ ----/ , was Mrs Ernestme Per ry, wlio spoke
a .brid-g e p~rty .on Thursday af.. ;
In the interest ,of the beautlflcatlon
ternoon at -2.15 on the library 1
contest.
Mrs Harry E. Willcutt · ol!
lawn '.
·
·
·'
~ ' estfleld, .'Yh.° has a summer Jloine· ilt - ----- - ----The Wom:en's Benevolent
i : ·._ - - -- ----- - , ---: Wortlimgton, )IPOke enco.u rag,:"
'
.
__ .
. .
l!OC •
lug, y of the natural resptirces and ad•
ety wtll m ~~t OJI., Wednesday with ;
_ _____, vantage~ of thls_ '•,_comirtunlty. A. D. ,
M_r,s. Fran!t_lm } I, Burr for an all !
RoblJ'.!son, pre.-i)~ent of the . Parkv:,ay ------ -- - ---- day m_e eting .._•:
f-- - ------- - assoc1atlon, outl\ned th.e a.Ima and
_,-Helen .A &lt; :parish, , daughter -of.f
hopes of the organlza.t lon, ,
.
J,fr. a;n~ l\frs, Harold Parish . el ;
----- - - - - -, , Mr a 9d Mrs Hll.rold Hl!,_t)1away have __ __ ___ _ _ ·· West- Worthfngton
Ill b
·· f ,;. _ _____
bought the cottage of Mrs Myr.a J.
_::. · .
•- w
e one..__o ,th -e : gr:;;1-_duatip.g
Stevens which is across the' road from
claSJI , of · the l
h~r house and are ·makl~g'. re'pairs.
Hun_t_ingto11 hj gh /!!lb;ool Tliursday i-Fourteen from here. went to Ash• ____ _ _ __ _,. eveqipg. .,c .. ,. .. , ; .
. .
,, · -r
fteld M?nday to tqe Gmld br~dge pa;~Y
The, juveµ_il~. ,,_,Gra.nge. - held ' ifs:f --------· -- ---- enteru p n,ed there_ by _Mrs: P~i\_1p
se_c.on~ m ~e,tJn_g. . Satur·da:y aftef ~
Gurney and M~I! ( I:,ela~d
;C&lt;?!e. for,noon .at Lyceum .1ia11 with n ·il ·t •
- - ---- . - , merly , of .t his towa.
_
.
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f f! ,-:·• , · . - a , u, (,._
The Juvenile Grange ~ ill meet SatI ODE\ 0 :. ceJ ; pres~_n t _a nd ~n 1~'.ter'- ,.
urday at 2.ao at Lyceu111°hall.
,
~sting p_r.o~ram _·m _charge or· the l
T here will be a Grangf:l dance at ,
lecturer,. - M~rv,i s·' Snyder. P a st '
- - ----- --- · . Ly~e~m, hal~ toi_norrow. nlght.
- ---- -- ----- :t,faster Benjil-n;i_il).' Eli!s ,·and _Mrs. {- -- - - - - -- _
, Neighbors night · will be observed I
Ellis of Westtlimr were prese· •t'r
he 1St}l , at Chesterfield Grange.
a.rid jo" ·ci
·h
- '·
, µ ·r
1tWorthi
ngton Gr ang e will furnl11h part R - ¥ - _me as• onor~ry m ~mbei;~; {
--- - - -- - ': of .-t he en t ertainment.
·. . 1- - - - - ---- ._e,re~hment s wer~ ;s~~-ved..' .
..~ - _ __ _ __ _
' ., The stat11 'lecturer, ~{ rs Margaret !
".. Miss_N, , ~,: •.H~aoock, who . lias:
Sarre of Ch ~lmsford, will at!imd the
,be.~n- spendm~
.abroad, ar- 1
___ _ _ _ . Grange meetmg the 19th_.
.
·. L
t:i,ved.. Saturda;r at her su'm nie rt
_ Ma e ·Hathaway is wor_k ing fbr , Mr9: 1 - - - - - - --; how e; ·
_,
.-:: --~ __.· :- &lt; - Russell Sears... of Cummington.
·
Ern·e st Thayer and :ilfrs.
Alden. Cady ,of: West- Worthin g ton I
-- - ---- -- · - -- - - - ----r!)turned Sun:da.J;~ from a - week 's ; - - - - -- va_c ation •··at ; :t li e • Ifom ema.Rers "f
ca,m p; at Greenwi ch -la'ke. ·
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J un e 22. -Tb lr t y-flv e m e mbers ·
o f W ort h i n g t on g ran ge n e i g h - SCHOOL VACANCIES FILLED
bore d with Ch est e r fi e ld g ran ge
Thursday e venin g
and
g ave a
Committee Announcea Slate of Teach•
ers for Next'ircar '
- - ---,. i:otnstrel show a s th e ir p a r t o f
-- --------- Worthington, June 17-The s~ool ·
the entertainment.
Franklin G.
B urr . r e t u rn ed
committee hM fllled ... n.11 vacancies 1-n
Friday afte r spending a few day s
,
t h e teaching farce, and today announce d the following appointments for the
ln Montpelier and Fra n klin , V e r coml,._ng school Y.e!l,r._ M~ . ~lor~Cll
mont. His gran dmothe r,
Mr s.
"'"Tojirnfe r;- ,v ho has comple ted the fou r Eunice Gilmore,
who has bee n
_
_
year
course
at
the
Bridge
water
;Norstaying with · her sl-s te r In Fra nkt 'I,_
mal school, wlll tea ch at the Cor.p. era
It
lin, Vt., returne d w it h ~hi ~ fo r
,I
gramma,r school; Miss Marjorie l;l_u1°
the summer.
.
Jock, a g raduate of the Springfield
Committees appointed by the - - - - N or mal Training school, wlll teach in
G:ullcl for the n ext s ix •months }
the Corner s primary scliool.
,·are: Relief, Mrs. Francis A. Roh- .
Ax· the Ri verside school the ap_ lnson; program, Miss Florence
· - ·
pointee Is Miss M arguerite Johnson, a
7 Berry , Mrs. H a rry W. Mo!llson;
r ecent graduate of the Gorham. ("ll;le.)
Normal school. Mrs Clifford Tinker,
social, Mrs. Clinton F. Read and
a graduate of the North Adams NorMrs. Georg e E. Torrey, Jr. ;
____ _
mal school, wlll continue her work at - - - - - I pi·oject, ·Mrs.
Homer Gran g e r.
the West school. Mls.s Pauline Bt·ock,
l:'f_d _Mrs. Byron Smith.
_
a graduate of Fitchburg Normal, will
tea ch at the South school. The su. p i:rvlsor of mu sic wlll be Mrs Eliza- - - - -· --- - - ----- ,b eth T.:&gt;rrey.
· M rs George T, Dodge ot Ringvllle,
who h a s been in poor health, for some
- - - - - - - - - time was taken to the Cooley Dlclcln- -- -- - u·
son hospiial at Northantpton yesteryy
day · for observation and treatment.
S chools close this week for the sum- ,
Wort hington, June 22-Worth!ngto!I , - - - - - --·-·
' m er vacation.
,____ -d ralng e held its regular meeting , on '
I L eland P. Cole, Jr., of Ashfield is
Frida y e\·ening . The Grange ha.s ,vot,,
1ed to enter the road
beautiflc~tion
contes,t. t t was al so voted to send the
,worth y lec t urer to t he lecture rs' conferen ce at Storrs, Ct., A.ugust 10, Ths j
.. assis ta nt lecture r was chosen alter- nate delegate. The p rog ram Included
current events, a t'eading o! Edga.l'
Guest's "Ca nnin g Time" by Miss Marjorie Bartlett and a pa per on "Ca n or ·
W or t hington , June 19 - The 4-H
Buy-;Whlch ?" by Mrs Harrie t l:fig
Girls' c lub will h old a food sal e t omorgins. Mr s Margar e t Sarre, the state
row afte rnoon at M. F. Packard's
--lecturer,
w a s the g u est of the e vening --store, at 3, for benefit of the juvenile
-· -· and g·ave an Interesting talk on "T·he
· Grange.
Backbone of the H om e.I' The home
The G1.1ild bridge party on the liecon omics committee s erved strawbrary la wn yesterday afternoon pla y ed
berry shortcake a t the close o! thl!I
three tables. Prizes, firs t, Mrs L. P.
- m eeting followin g which there waa a
Cole of Ashfield; second, Mrs L. C.
m eeting oC t h e dan ce committee, the
Sweet ; con s ola tion, Mrs Horace S.
co mmuni ty s e rvice and h om e econ omCole.
.
ic
commit t ees to outline activities fol' -Th irt y -fiv e m e mbe rs o r W or t hrn ::;·t on
t h e coming- m on t h s.
Gra nge n e ig h bored wllh Ch es t e rfield
There w ill be a br id g e party at La. •
Gi·a n i;e lal' t e ventn g and f u rnls h cd a
fa y ette lodge, "Wed n esda y a !lernoon
min str el s h ow a.s their p a r t oC the
t
or
ben e fit of J u venil e Gr ange.
e n tert~inme n 1 •
ll'li ss Oli ve Neil of Columbus, p., arF'ranklin G. Bu r r r et urn ed t oday
ri ved yes t erda~· nt h e r s ummer h om e.
ta t t e r a re w days s pe nt in Mon tpeli e r '
Fred L G raves ot Chesterfield is
a n d Fra nk lin , Vt. His g ran d m oth er ,
1 Mrs E unic e G llm o1·e, who h as bee n
s pe nding a f e w da ys at his cottage
h ere.
' s tayi n g w it h h er s ister In Fra nkhn, .
r eturne d with him ~ 1~ e ~ umme r.
1,
Do 1; a IB ·M o ll iso n h as bei,°ii. -qu i te j
ill f or a wee k w i t h Ge rm a n
m e a s le s .
'
Ir vin g C urn ey of Gr een fie ld i s
v is i t in g hi s a un t , llri-s. H e rbe rt G .
Per t er.

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-l;;~•;'.•~n/,~_•mnd,a,-nt,, Me':"' M"J
WORTHINGTmr - -~

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Ju ne 2 6.-The Jadi,is will set:ve ·
a su pp er at the •pa r i&amp;l1 house Wea :~nesd ay evenin g, Jul y 1, from 6.3 0
to 8 o'cloc k: F ollowing the suppe'r:r.
play, " Th e Ql d P t :i,bod'y Pew," 'l
will be given In th e church. Cast
of charn.cters : Mre. Baxter, t he
•ministe r 's wifa', Mr, . -Wbit e ; Mrs•.
Burb a n.k , pre-,..ldfli t of the Dorcas
society, Mrs. Les Ve Ledu c; J\ lrs.
Miller, wife of Deacon Miller, th e
sex ton , Mrs. 'H , T,: 1'4er~it t; J\lrs.
1·sar'g en t,
th " village historian,'
11 Mrs. May P r arl ; Widow Buzzell,
Mrs. H erb e".'t Sut herl a nd ; Miss
Lobell a :Bre•vslllr . Mrs. H . S. na.
mon; ·Mi's~· Maria Sharpe, Hi~s·
Hat ti e Ba l· er Nan cy Wen tw orth~ '
.M rs. .H. , r . Dod ge; . Justi n Pea.
,;bod·y, ;Willla1h l-L Baker Jr.; ' lh e
·r eader , Mrs. W. H. Ba ke'r. Admts;-sion, adults, 36 cents ; ·' chi°ic:Jrcn',
15 cents.
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WORTHINGTON

Worthlngto'n, J une 23-T"ne juvenile Grange will h old its regular ,
meeting at the hom e of Mrs T. C.
Martin a t Twin Brook farm on Sa t: urday at 2.30. An entertaining pa,t rl1 ot \c
program in charge of t h e lec· ·i turer ; Marvis Snyder, will be followed by r efr eshm ents and a social time.
AU officers, an,:J as many members as
possibl e are urged t o , att end, as a
group pict ure ,yill be taken.

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A son was born Sunday at the
\1 Noble hosJ.)ital in Westfield to Mr.
and Mrs. Frank Braman of t his
town. The ·ba.by is grandson. to
Mr . and Mrs, Howard Mason, a lso
-of this town.

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WORTHINGTON

Worthingtcin., June 29-The recently
____ , organized Juvenile Grange held its
· regular meeting Saturday afternoon
·•at 2.30 at Twin Brook farm, the home
· of Mrs T. C. Mar.tin. The ' bushiees
_ _ ____ __ meeting was in ch!!,rge of the matron, - ------ __ , Worthington , June 25 - The _Red
Mrs _Walter L. :Siggins, with the
I
Cross dental clinic will be held Monmaster, Harold Sm\th, presiding.
,
day from n to 3 at th e home of Miss
Two honorary members were receivBerry, the Red Cross n urse. Any chi!- - ------ - ed Into the Grange, Mrs Franklin ------ - - - - - -dren who · were absent from school I
Burr and Ford Martin. At the close or
when the examinations were made by
' the meeting a. patriotic program, In
the dentist and who wish to ha ve
charge of the lecturer, Marvis Snyder, _ _ __ _ _ _
work done are req uested to come for 1---- - - -- en~oyed on .the porch. The next
t heir exa mination and appointment at
I meeting will be 'held on July 11 at
9. This clinic· is self-supporting and
' ·Lyceum hall,
all work is done ,on a strictly ca.sh - - - - ---,-1
The Friendship Guild will hold Its .
- - - - - · - - - \· basis at 50 cents an operation.
.,/ July meeting Thursday night with
Rev James H. Burckes will exchange
/\ ~iss Berry and a. bridge party on the
·
on Sunda y with Rev G. W . W . Camp.
hqrary ~wn ·on Thursday afternoon.
bell of New Braintree.
The women's Benevolent society __ _ _ _ _ ___ _ _
- - - - - - - - There were th ree tables in play at ', - ---- -- ·: will meet Wednes?ay •with Mrs T.
_ _ ._
":''
-~- - ·Commerford Martm at Tv.in• Brook
the benefit bridge pai:ty\ !or the Juvefarm for an ail day-meeting. . .
,
, n1le Grange at th e horn~ of Mrs C. F. ____ , · Mr and Mrs John Ames of West. 1----- - - - - ---- · - - Read yesterd_.ay afternoon. The fir.s t
fteld, have rented Fred L . · Graves's '
priz&lt;: was won by Mrs CJ!arles A. K il.
cdttage at flli e Corner village for the
bourn, and the consolation prize by
summer. Mr Ames ts employed at the
_ _ _ __ __
\ Mrs 1\-L F . Packard.
\
-- -- - - - - -\ golf links.
I
Dorothy Louise Sander,fon, a memSunday will be observed as chll(
ber of the South school, 'South Wol"f 1
\!ren's Sunday.
J
thington, has had a perfect attendance'.\
Mrs, Wells MagargaJ entertained
1 - - - - ... record tor two years.
~--------1 . meml:lers of the Loyal Ladies at cardo ,- I
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,
,
at her home Saturday afternoon. Five
,
· The Rev. James H . Burck.es
I table/I of_wbl~t were In play, A but1 a
__;
ori. Sun day Ju ne
·fet supper was served to which were
will exc :anbe
R
G·
w. · --· ·- - ----1 also invited members of the Jtoyal Ar- r- - - - - --- - --'1
28, . w1tn the
ev .. ·
·
.
1 canum, This was followed by a Jar e
Campbell of New Bram tree.,
1meeting of botli lodges at .- Lyceu~
....-'----- -- -- - - - · ------ · - - - - - - · - ·
hall
"".Ith
many
outof-town
guests
--present.
•Plans
were
made
for the
an_ ____

WORTHINGTON

was

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n1,1 al Western Massachusetts Royal
Arcanum
In
August.field day, which · be. held
An event of interest 't or July w11t,1·----be a dls_trlct meeting at the West.
t'leld River Parkway associati on
which will be held at Conwell's trov~ '
at South Worth!ngton J uly 15. ,
· 1- -Charles A. Kilbourn, contractor, is
building a camp house for Miss Olive
E. Cole and Miss Clarissa Henry of
P ittsfield on the River road,
· Mrs Lawrence Randall has invited ,
t'he • Women's club of the F irst !
llhu,rch in Ha.cile.Y to
outing at her · ,i:~e he1'11 ~h1tt~av.• . ~-u- =__: - :· __I

will

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

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.Wor;thipgton, June ·ao-The date o.t --July 6.- Mrs. Coleman, who -- --- _
the Re'd Cross dentiµ ~ linlc whll;h
sufferejl a fall at her home Thurs' was ,'to ·have been · h.eld yesterd'1Y at
day afternoon injuring her shoulthe home of M!.s.9 ·Berry, the lile,t
der, was taken Thursday night to
Cross nui:se, has been changed to - - - · - - - - - - 1the Dickinson hospital in North- - - - - - F riday from' 9 to ·3.
ampton for treatment. Mrs. ColeMary Ellen•Read'·and Muriel l3ra4man, who is 80 years old, lives
Jey are spendi~k two weeks at Buck• - -- - -- -- -- - - --· alone at her home in Ringville.
- -----st.,ep
Manor,
Becket,,
the
vaca.tlon
.
,house connected with 'the Glr!s'
J 1 The July - meeting of the.
I __ _
_ __ __
; F riend!~ sp,ciety of St Peter's EtileFriendship Guild was held Thurs-copaJ church at Pittsfield.
· .
-- __ ----.,___, day evening at the home of Miss · Daniel Read left this morl).ing ~o •
Florence Berry. The making of
;spend six weeks at Camp Summer,
Chri-stmas bags for soldiers .o f
L _,· - - - - •Pittsfield:
_____ _ ____ _______ ___ _ _ the Veterans' hospital occupied - - ---- the work period. Miss Berry, a
member of the program commit• --lr- - - - =~ ====~- -----.-,__________________ tee, gave suggestions for - educa- __
tional study. Voted to buy a book 1
on the origin of Church Hymns.
D,evq.tions were led by Mrs. Harry
Worthington,
warrant
has ,_
re-• - - - - been
posted forJuly
the2-A
a~nual
· church
' ______ " -- W. -Mollison. The treasurer's
meeting to .be held at the church \'.ln ,
,port showe·d '{35 given_during the
Thursday, th·e 9th, at 8 p. m.
1past inonth foward repairs , on
Mrs George E. Torrey, Jr., Mrs Le- --- - - -------- - church windows. It was voted
land P. Cole of Ashfield and Miss Dor'that the re.l ief committee be inothy. Shaw of Huntington left yest~r' f,structed to remember the infant
1
it:Jorwii~e~:~~i~
so;n ·of Mr, and Mrs. Fra]!k Bra- ____ _ _
0 :;'g\eiit Mt
summer.
:man, the infant daughter of Mr.
1 and l\:frs. Carvel Dodge. and Mrs.
Miss Mabel Martin of New York arrived today a nd is the guest of her
r Marie
Coleman.
Refreshments

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~! ________ ._ __ :

aunt, i •Irs T. C. 1'1artin,·at Twin Brook - - - - - - - - --- - -

fa rm.
.
.
W&lt;:&gt;rthmgton
Grange has been 111vited to Otis at s p. m. to attend their
c;elebration, • of .. '.'.(irn.n ge . __Sul;lday."
/
, , -Chai,Ies l\f. - Gardner of "'"eslfleld is to
b! 1he ~Pl1~J1r,
- ___ :_____ - - - - - -

wei:0 served at ·the .close ot

the ---------

meeting. ,
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T-he fnendsh1p Guild Bndge
- - - ------;- club met on the library law11 on
/
Thursday afternoon with three tables in play and Mrs. Henry Sny- - - - - -- der and Mrs. Lou C. Sweet as - - - - hostesse-~. The first prize was won
' by Mrs. Clifford Tinker, second by
.
"
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_ _ _ __ Mrs.·_ Elsie V. Bartlett and consoJuly 2.-Sunday, Juiy 5th, at
lation by Miss Marjorie G. Bartl I a. m. in . the Congregational
____
Jett. The Bripge club will meet
chur~ th'e ' · ch1ldren will conduct _ _
_
_ with Mrs. Merwin F. Packard
a cli.ilq, worship
service . on
next Thursday afternoon.
.
"W.prld Friendship." The prayer
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Oviatt of
was entirely forniulated . by the
Milford, Ct., were guests in town
- --- - -, children ·and the story was writ- for the week-end and holiday.
ten by Jean Joyal, who will give
It. Th·e hymns anq prayer reI sponse are in keeping with the
------------- -- ---, , theme. The order of service is as
follows: Prelude, Invocation, son g,
I, baptism, solo by Elinor Smith ;
program on World Friendsh ip;
present.ttion of Bibles to child r en
1
12 years old and a: prize wlll be
'. given to th e one who wro te the
best story on "The Life of J\iose-s,"
The public is _In vited to co me aijd
-bring fri en,ls lo suppor-t tbe efforts of th e chl!d ren a E well as
gain an lnsplra tion . fo r the ni\ selves.

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CJ11ldren•s Day Observed

WORTHINGTON

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·ANNUAL GRANGE SERVICE
SCHEDULED FOR SUNDAY

. Worthington, July 6-ChiMren's Sun- ·
:iy was obser ved In the First Con'...i::egatlonal _ c~urch_ ~erday' ~?:n- i

lng wlth a splendid chlld . worship
Eervlce on "World Fri endsnip," conducted
by the chlldren. The church
~---· was beautifully decorated with ros es
l;·
and syrlngas, also the fl ags of a ll natlon.s and th~ Christian fl ag.
!&gt;our
1
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babies and_ nme older cluldren were _ _ _
baptiz~d. B1b_les were presented to the
follow1ng chUdren w~1.o h&gt;l:v';,. become
12 years old t~ls yea! . Irvm~ Granger, Harold By, 01_1 Smith, Alfi ed Joyal, - . .
J1·., Hazel Parish, Evelyn Corbett.
T'ney were given 111 memory _or Mrs
Nancy
prize was __ _
rd Stone He~cock .
·• awa ed to . Ha,i;iiet H! 00111 s for th ~.
best story on The L1fe of Moses.

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Ch f M G d
.
ar es . ar • ner to Speak
•
at Congregational Church
p
rogram at 3

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,, Worthington, July 9-The annual
Grange and community service will
· be h eld Sunday at
at Worthingron
3 Rev Carl SanCongregational church.
~ree will act
pa.s toj; and the Ash83
. fi eld quartet will
' !ur.nish music.
The speaker will , be Charles M.
_ Gardner, pOB.tmaster of the Massachusetts.State Grnnge, whose address- will
be "The World's Most- Beautiful Spot."
Mrs Harriet Dads ls 81
I The Grange will furni~h hot and cold
Mrs Haarriet Davis celeprated her ,
. .
/ beverages. Those coming from a dis81st birthday at her home Friday, ,all
tarice wishing to eat before service
' .
of her children except one being with
are wel6om~ and will be . furnish®
\
her, also ,grandchildren and · greatbeverages:
grandchildren. Those from out of _ ____
The annual meeting of the West- - - - - --&lt; town were her sou, Walter W. Davrs,
field . River Parkway· association will
and wife from Wilmington, Del.; a
· be held 'Wednesday at 2.30 at: Con·1.brother, Frank J. Wilson from New-.
weU'11 grove, South Worthi!lgton.
- - - - - · ark, N. J., and a granddaughter, Mrs - •-·- - A. J. Laro; . who · recently . won a
.---· Edgar Turrrer, husband and child
week's vacation in i manager's sales
' from Windsor. Also with her were Mr
, contest, is spending it at :Por,tland,
J
am:! Mrs Walter L. Higgins and tam_ _ _ _ Me.
'
lly and Emerson Davis of this town. Mrs Sarah AHen of Huntington !,s
Mrs Davis· is the oldest .member of
s pending a week with her son, Charles
the Worthington Grange.
Allen.
Mr and Mrs Walter L. Higglns, ac-.
- - -----:::_-.:_-~.:=-_ ______ ______ _
- - - - - - - · • companied by her brother, Walter W. - - - - - - - - - - - - Davis and wife of Wilmington, Del.,
went 'to · Nashua, N. H., Saturday and
i
spent· the day with their sister, Mrs
_ - - - - - A. A. Fisher.
1
:M:iss Hazel Cheney of Northam!?- ,
ton is in town for a few days and 1s I
. stopping at Miss Bessie Ames's.
. f __ ______
; 'Miss Mary .Bowne of Sprlngfield 1s 1
•t he guest of Mrs T. C. Martm at
· "T win Brook farm ."
.
Grange Sunday will be observed on - -- - - -- '---·1 t lie l2th in the First Co:1gregatio~al
! church at
p. m. w!th a s~c1al
· hou r · f ollowin g and plcnw luncfl &lt;?n
the church common. The speak~r will ,_ _ _ _ _
., b!l, Charles M. Gardner, high ~r1est of
•D em eter; t opic, "The Worlds Most
B ea ut iful S pot.'' The As hfield quartet
wil! sing.
,·
·
d
T h e a nnu a l huslnea~ meet m g an
r oll call of fiie Cong-regat!onal church
will be held at the church Th~rsclay
_ evening at 8.
·
--·-- - - - - - " M rs :r,,.[erwin F . P ackard w ill , en ter. tain the G u ild bridge part y on Thu rs ;da y a ft ernoon at 11 er house.
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ONCongregational · CJ1urch Meeting

vyorthington, July 10-The annual
b~1ness meeting and roll Qa.11 of the
F1rst -Oongregatlonal church was held
- - - - - - - ---· ·- In the clJUt:!)h - last night , at 8, Rev : - -- - - -- - - - - - --- - - -James H. Bur,ckes presiding and the
fl?llowing o!fice.r s were elected: Mode_rator-, Clemi,nt _F . Burr; deacon for
o:qe Yel).r, Byron S. Smith; deacon for ------ threlh years, Clyde Jones;- trul'\tees for
three · years, Mrs Franklin H. Burr
Merwin F. P)ckard :·. trustee for tw~
--------------- years, Miss N. S. Heacock: cte-rk Ar- ;- - -- - -- - thm· G. Capen: ti-easu·rer, Mrs M;y G.
P orter: treasurer of bene,""0lences, Mrs
Mabel Shaw: · ·_augitor, Mrs Nelen G.
Burr ;, church s chool superintendent,
ll;irs . Ernest G . Thayer , Committees:
Norµlnating, Mrs Charles A. Kilbourn,
Miss Elsie. V. Bartlett, Franklin H .
Burr; missionary, · Miss Florence L. ,
:Berry; church committee, Miss Susan ·
·
·T. Rice; musjc; Mrs N. c. _,T uttle, A.
- -- - -- --- G. Capen Miss N. S. Heacock. Mrs f--- - - - - - - - - :Leland P'.· Cole; social, ..1\1:rs _Homer
Granger, Mvs C. A. Kilbourn, Mrs
G,e orge E. 'Torrey, Jr.. Mrs Eben
- - - - - - - - - - - ------ .- - - - - - lsHaw; :fl,01ver, Miss Elsie V. · Bartlett,
' Mrs Walter Higgins, l\{rs George E.
T orrey, Jr.: relief, Mri, Horace Cole, ,
Mrs M. F. Packard, Mrs Byron Smith,
Mi;s Myra Stevens -; , o_rga,~st, Arthur 1
G. Capen. :i:t was vo.t ed to accept .the
custody of the parilfh property . and _to
___ _ _ _______ • use the interest on church repair fund - - - -- - - -/ for church
windows' .r.epair bill.
1
It was voted thaf jt be lef.t,.wi,t h th e '
' trustees to ral.'!!e money f,or a cement
• floor in the church kitchen. · A . budget
of .$1814.60 present~d by the 'trustees, 1
was approved and it was voted that
th e same methods be adoptep -this
----- ---- - - .. - - -- year for raising t he pastqr's sa_l_a ry.
c . :_

The,·e were, five tables in play at .the 1
g uild bridge party w hich was held
yesterday afternoon at Mrs MP,rwin F .
Packards. Prizes w e r e won as f ollows: First, Mrs L e land P. Cole: s e c,
ond, Mrs Charles A. J9iburn; consola tion, Mrs \.Villi a rn B osc h.
The ,J u ve nll e Grange wi ll mee t Sat.- ,
urd;i. y at 2.30 p. m. n:t t h e Lyceum ·-

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HOT WAVE DRIVES
THRONG TO HILLS
~orthington Reports Nu merous Visitors .as Sun
~listers City-Many From
This Vi.cinity Listed,

Special Dis patc h t o T h e Sunday Union
and R epublican
W orthington, J ul y 11-Summer heat
is brin g in g visitor~ to the hills where
c ool breezes can 11.l ways be f ound, and
num erous fam ilies from Springfield
And ,·i cin ity are n o w to
found at
th is place wh er e they are established
fo r the remaind er of t h e summe r sea'. .son. Sever a l summer h omes ·are 1110w
· open and th e n eed of a hotel to acc ommoda t e man y ~ h o wish to 'come
Js acu t el y felt.
Amon g th c,se from S pri n g fi eld who
are established h ere are M r a nd Mrs
Emest J. D e xter of Forest P a rk avenue who have r ented fo r t h e season
I
tJhe summer home of M rs Cha rles R.
Chapman of Long m eado w.
Mrs Charles Atwater of H ot el Kimball, Springfi eld, is the g uest of h er
sister, Mrs Geor g e B. J oslyn.
· Mrs Chauncey Pease a nd children
of New York will s pend ~rlday with
_
__ Mr and Mrs Ha~ry Peas e.
-- ·
Mrs Nor m a n Sno w of 831 Sumner
avenue, Springfield, is spend iing a
week with her paren ts, Mr and Mrs
Harris E . Collins of 146 Mill s treet,
Springfield, who are spend1n g th e
summer here.
;.
__
Mrs Frank A . . S ex t on _o f 78 Vir"\
ginia street, Spnn g fi eld, 1s spe nding
·the week at h e r s umme r cottage.
Mr a,nd Mr s Sidn ey J . Gra nt and
tamtlY of South Park avenue, L ong1-------- - meadoWJ j are sp endin g th e week -ends
at th e !iflbourn hom es t ea d.
A son was born Jul y 3 a t W essOIIl
Maternity ·hospita l, S pri ngfi eld, to
·Mrs Ri c hard Sche r mer h orn or'-Montclair, N. J . Mrs Sc h e rm e rhorn , wh o
,vas formerl y J\lis s Margaret Doane,

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co ttage arc ?-! rs A. o. H ewi tt a nd I
h as spent many .summers at Lafayette drw g·htcr, Mis s Cathe rin e H ewitt, of
Pitts fi eld; nnoth er cla ug ht er Miss Dor lodge.
Mr and Mrs Charl es Umla and othy H ew itt, a nd Miss Flor~nce Cha p daughter, J a n e, or 74 Forest Park it1 of Cam bridge.
J ud g e and Mrs Eli s ha H . Drc wst er
a ve nue, Springfield, have t aken f or
tll"Q summer th e place belon g in g to of B ost on and Springfield hav e v isiting
Frank P a rsons of Northampton. T h ey them their daughter, Mrs "Windsor
h a ve as their g ues ts Mr and Mrs E a rl e S turtev;,,~ t and s on,Brev,s-~cr o! Geo rge
E . Carter a nd daughters, Florence s treet, Sprlpgfleld.
Mr and Mrs . Walter C. Power!!' of ,
a nd Jean, of 156 Kimberly aven u e,
L ong Hill street, Spr ingfi eld, a r e
Springfield.
Mrs Howard C. Brewster ls enter- s pend ing mu c h of th elr time at theu
ta,nlng Mrll Phllander Moore ot summer h om e h e re.
Miss Anna B a il e y is spendi n g th e
Spring fi eld.
Miss Nan cy Lapham of Converse summer a t L a fayette lodge, the colostreet, Longmeadow, is the g uest of nia l house which Mr an d Mrs C. F .
h e r aunt, Miss Jooephine Hewitt. Miss Rea d have leased · far use as a hotel
1:1 ewitt is expecting h er sister, Miss thi s summ er. This serv es t h e n eeds of
J~lizabeth: Hew itt of Cali forni a , who the public as a place where m eals ca n
wi ll m ake the trip by airplane leaving be obta in ed a lt houg h its sleeping acLos Angele!! the 15th, arrfving at N e w comm odati ons are limited as its spaYork the 16th, m aki ng th e ti· ip in· 30 cious rooms a r e too large to be man y
h ours. She will spend a month at Wor- in number. Mrs R ead has with her
this s u m mer her two da ughte r s . t he
Lh in g-ton .
Misses Marion and B eat r ice W il kinson
l\lrs Blain e N ic holas a nd t h ree chil- of Cali forn ia . Miss Ste rns or New York
d ren o f N ew Y ork a r e occu pying Mrs is also a gues t at t he lodge.
J oh n F rissell's . hous e f or the summer.
Her s ist er, Mrs 'Cl1 arles A. A. Rice, and L - --~========~-- ---'
da ughters, a r e spe nding th e season a t
»f rs T. C. Ma rtin's house at the Center village.
Mrs N. C. Tuttle has with !her fo r
th e summer h er da ughter, Miss Jane
•.ru t tle cif New York, and her d a ug ht er - in-la w , Mrs Ruth Tuttle and twu
children of Windsor, Ct. Miss Louise
Mace of Springfield was a week-end
g u est.
Mrs L eon Conwell of Somerville ls
at "The E agle's Nest," for the summer.
With h e r for over the week-ends are
h e r husband; her daughter, Miss Agnes Conwell, who ls teaching a.t the
- - - -----------s umm er school at Simmons college,
and h e r s on, Ch a rles, an Instructor at
the summ er school of aviation at
Hartford, Ct. Mrs Conwell gave a tea
a t h e r home this afternoon in h on or of
Mr s T uttle's guests. Al so attending
w ere Mrs T. Commerford Martin, Mr s
L ester Stevens, Miss N. S, H eacock
a nd Mrs M. L. Ston e.
Mr!! Irving Chapma n h a.~ as gu ests
her s is te r, Mrs E lli o t H. N orto n, all(!
h e r- cousin ; Mrs George G. Gl eason, of
Summit, N . .r., a nd M iss Caroline W.
L eonard of B ayonne, N. J . Her da u,rh------ -------t er and husband , Mr and Mrs R oy Mc- 11
Cann of N e w York will arrive Friday
for the summer.
Spending th e w eek ends at Cloverly

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D
AY
I
GRAN
· GE ·CSUN
· I
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ATTRA
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To 1t-lll!II
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·
' "Af --..1 ~ , /,/.

".Miss V an W ert, . mast er of th e
Grang e, -extende d a w e lcome to a ll
a ttend ing, and In t roduced t h e s peniker,
Mr Gard ner, w h o took as h l.s t op ic
"Earth 's M os t B eau ti f ul Sl&gt;Ot," divldIng i!ils address und er t h ree l1eac!.,,
.
whi ch h e called the three A 's of t he
home t own-appearance, · adve rtising
1
a nd atmo,ephere. He said, in open ing:
.
- · · e-·~ 7 ,7 •
"'' I wonder It y ou - realize how m uch
\ , '·
.,,
~
f ·
rural appearance counts today, whe11
1
-- -- ---- N }' -~
· •
:,_ ~- ; · :i all t he wor ld ls going b y t he r u r a l
I
!home a nd through the r ura l , t owns."
emoers rom any liCe5 T,! le speaker depr ecated th e blllboards,
:vy-h lch spoil the beauty of ou r road~-- ___ _______
tten _ rVICe 6 an
ear sides, but a&lt;l.vocated leg_lt!mate advert
r,,
!s lng, saying the New En gland peo·.
reSS Y (..
•
r ner, tpie
are poor boosters. A superb New
-Ji .
t
t ,
.England · honesty ·constr ains them to
- - ------ ---Ig . rteS O eme er
always present botb. sides of the pie-.
Worthington July 12---Grange sun- ture, th.e speaker said, and gave some
·'
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amusln.g e;x:amples. Atmosphere deeday and a day of brilliant suns.!11ne, pends, .'!laid Mr Gardner, upon all com_ _ _ __ _ __ , foll ciwing a week of rain, and the munity agencies
working together.
presence of Charles
M. Gardner, "You drive into a town . and get an
sp·ea,ker .o f the day, were sufficient at-. immediate Impression as to what kind
of a town it ls .. Earth's most beau- - -- - - - - ----1 tractions to drs1,w Grange members tiful spot ts the tow·n you live in."
·from far and near, until the First
Mr Gardner's wpularity as a
Cong,regational ch,\~b had an at- speakef'. was never .more in: _evldenc~,
and he held the close attention of 018
- - - - - tendance of a·bout 300 people. - They I audience. A .social hour followed the ,filled the audience room and over- meeting, with picnic groups on the
· ·.flo wed into the Sunday-school room ch:urch . common. For the picnic
, lunches, ·hot -and cold beverages were I_ _ --------- - - - ·
.adjoining. The church wll.8 elaborate- '·priwided by the ·Grar.cg e.
ly decorated, tall grasses · and feathery asparagus formil).g a setting for
- . the many ,garden flowers, of w.!lio11
red, white ·' and blue were the predominating noti in . the color s cheme.
The arrangement typified a garden
in bloom and ·was very beal!tiful .in
effect. Decorations were in charge of
- - - - -- - - .E merson Davis and Past Master Mrs
Walter Higgins.
Led · by the juvenile Grange, the
members of .W orthington Grange in
full regalia marched into the church
to seats· reserved at the front. Mrs
--------- - - - - - - --- - -Beatrice Va.n Wert, master, and
I
Charles M. Gardner, pa.st master of
I
the Massac!lusetts state Grange and
11
high priest of the assembly of Demeter,
I
having seats on the platform, witn
- Rev Carl Sangree, pastor of the Cummington Congregational church, who
' presided. The s e rvice open ed with an
organ p r elude by th e ,c!lu rch orga»is t,
· Arthur G . Ca,p e n . The Invocation was
offered by R e v M1· Sangree, who also
led the r es ponsive reading and offe red
pra yer. Th e Ashfield qu a rtet, c omprising Mr and Mrs Howard G . Shaw,
Raymond R e n!ss and Mrs Lelanp T .
Col e, s a ng two selections. A violin s olo
was pla ye d by JJ' red Sears whil e the
o tterin g was t a k e n by M ary Burr,
Geraldin e a n d H arold Smi t h a nd W a lt e r Higgins, m embers of the juvenile
Gran g e.

M.

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H·" h p •

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·d H
M Ga d
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There is a time gap between July 1931 and May 1932 in this journal.

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WORTHINGTON' .

WORTHINGTON

7

S.peclnl Town-Meeting Thurllday

Worth ington, Ma y 9-Mother's day
W o,rthing t on , MaY 10-A special ,
was obse r ved yesterd ay morning a
t ow n-m ee tin g will be held a t th e town
th e Congregational church with an a pha ll on T h ursd a y a t 7.30 p. m. to a c t
propriate sermon by th e pasto r Rev
on th e fol owing a rticles : To see If
J. H e1·bert Owen, who tool&lt; as hi; t ext
th e town will v ote to buy a tra ctor
P rov 31: 31 . "Give her of th e f r uit of
and to raise and appropria te $1500
her hands ; and let he1· o wi1 works
j ra ise her in th e gates."
t oward the payment of s a me; to s ee If
.......
There was a large gathering at the
the to wn will appropr iate uooo · of the
i'town hall Saturday evenin ;i- at a
$1617 .02 which w a s a ppro priated for .1
coffee party · which wa-s _held by the
th e upkee p of t he tractor and truck
,choi1• assi sted by the lt'ri endshlp g·uild
,I n 1932, towa rd t li!l pure;hf!Se of a new '
for the ben efit ·or the choir robes.
tractor; to see if th e t own will authorThe program was as follows: Music
ize the selectrn e1'1 ·.'t o contract for a ·
by Mrs George E. Torrey and Fred
ter'm of t\VO or three years, the trac,Sears; two sele.c.tlons by the choir,
tor work on the summer highwa y, and ~-- _i:..-"WP.-lcome Sweet Springtime" and
the tra ctor and snd'w plow for the
'-'FarPwell to the Forest"; duet by Mr
winter work, at a price not to exceed
,and -Mrs Qwen. "Sweet and Low,"
$2.50 an hour; to see what action the :
town will take ,in r ega rd to the con- -- - - - - - - - - - - - ___,.--- - - - - - -- -- ; with encore ":My Heart Is Out In 11 Iowa"; music, violin and piano, by
tra ctor giving a bond; to see !! thetown will r a ise -a,rid ,allIJropiate $1000, ,
\
_
- \ Mrs Torrey and Mr Sears; stereoptito be_ expended on the Che_sterfleld _____
___ _
- - - -- _____
can pictures of Colorado by Dr Mal colm Dana of Hltrtford Theological I 1 - - - roa d, beginning . at the Improved road,
seminary and Yale_ divinity colleg·e,
_en ding,.a,.t, ~fr C:3-pei;i's, going east:
who ga've an interesting talk on his ',,
ch urch work when in Colorado. While
_.,--- - - - - - - - the progr·a m was being given ~the
children w ere enterta ined at the
·church by Clinton F. R ead and Mr.~
H. W. Mollison with moving pictures - - - - - - - -- - - - - -· -····- - - - - - ·-·----- -- ----- - - -- ---- ----- ·
a nd stories. Refreshments w ere served at small ·tables presid!!d over by a
hoste.s.s.-·
- - - - - - - · - -- ----- -- - - ---- -, Th e women 's nwnthly missionary
m eeting wm be held on Thursday a,f- 1
I te rnoon at _ the · home of the Misses
Ric e - at 2.30. The .subject is_ "The
- -] Ma rathi- Mission" and Miss Katherine
jR ice, who has the meeting in charge,
h ~s ,!!ec\Jred very interesting matter
in the way of family - letters and
- 1photographs from Mrs James W.
Mou l ton, wife of the former pastor · o.f
t his church. Their son. Rev Joseph
L. Moulton, is one of _the foremost /
- - - - - - - - - w orkers .at this mission . He and his - - -- - - - - - - -- - - - - ---- - ·
w ife anil fou r young da,ughterB are
n ow on the ocean homeward bound
_ _ _ _ _ _ for their furlough of a year after 1- - - _ _ _ _ ___ _ _ _ __ _
s ev en yea rs of Stlrvice In India. It Is
1
\h oped · tliey will visit Worthington_. as
th ey d id seven summers ago. Every---j ? ne is cordially tnv lte_d to this me_et- , - '- --

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m ~R ev · C. W . Findlay, rector of
' · St. 1

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I•wAnithdrew's
Mrs

c hurch of Albany, N . Y.,.
Findlay is spending a few - - - -- - -- 'days at Mrs F 9rbes's cottage "Alder- :
best."
T h e W om en's Benevol ent s ociety
- -- - - - - - i w ill m eet ' a t t h e chu rch on Wednes- I-·----'' d a y f or mi a ll-day sewing me eting,
Mrs ,\ . O. H e witt and M i.~s Catheri n e H ewitt of Pi t tsfield, M iss Dor______ _, oth v Hew itt and M iss Florence Chapin
of Cam bridge spe n t the week end at I
"Cle verly" cot ta ge.
M iss F ay Ne il of Columbu s. 0 ., haa I
a r rived and op ened her summ er cot- J
-·- - - - tage,
M-r a nd Mrs Will iam Bosch of Scarsda le, N. Y. a r e' at t h eir co ttage fo r
- - - - - - - - - the s umm er.
Mr a nd M rs Cull en B. T ower and
fa mil y of T h om psonvill e, Ct,. spent
t.h e week end wi th Mr a nd Mr s Wa lter ,.
'Tower.
Mr"a nd :-.r rs A. B . Vick ery c elebrated t heir 29th wedd ing ann ivers ary
- iSu nday ,w ith a fal'O; II Y patty at the
h om e.
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�WORTHINGTON

GRANGE GIV·ES DEGREES
TO TWO CANDIDATES
State I Master Attends Juvenile Members Gradu. ate-Hall Well Decorated

- - - · W orthing·ton, i\l ay 11-Worthing·t,,n
\Grange m et last nig ht at Lyce um hall
a nd conferred t h e first a nd second ,le - - _ _ _ _ grees upon lll'o candidates, M iss· Ha1·r iet Higkins and .Miss ~'Iarvis S1iyd~!'.
The til'st-d egr ee \\'as confe n· ed by ' he
regular officers and the .second bv tn ,
1
- -- - - - - -- men's deg1·ee staff of Williamsbut·".
Th ree ev.ents m ade the e vening "a
11&lt;,tabJe o ne: Th e 111·esen ce of 1state '
_ _ __ _ _ _ _
Master Henry N. J enks of Cheshiri,;
t he graduation into the Grange of l ll'u
members of th e -Ju.venile Grange a. nu
the beautiful decoration of the hall
__ ____ _ _ __ _with h e'ml ock and t h e· red blossoms r&gt;f
m~?le by Emers o; 1 Davis,
lhere were 70 present as follows:
'Cheshire 2; Williamsburg 25; C um. n1ing·ton 2; WJndsor 3 and Worthing·ton 38. State Mastc1· J enks,spoke high ly of the p osition Worthington held
amung th e Granges of the state and
of his interest in the Juvenile Grange,, - - th e
flrs_t to be formed in W estern
Massachusetts.
Ot be1· spea kers were Dep uty Arthu r
Martin of Ch esl1ire; Worthy MastH
Roy L eonard of Willia m sb urg and Mrs
J~ S. Sweet, m aster of Hillside Pomona Grnnge, Pun ch an d cake were
s er ved by the supper committee iu
ch arge of i\lrs \,\'alte1· L. Tower,
i\Jrs Charles A . Kilbourn and Mrs
\1/ a lteL· L.

j
I

Hi gg·ins

ar ·e

attending- a

meetl n;;- or the RUpreme corw cil of
L uy nJ Ladi es at \Vas hm gt on, b. c.
Mi ss :-: . 8 . Hea coc- k ll'ho ha.s bee n
s pend ing the winte 1· with h et· ni ec~,
Mrs D. C. Markh a m at Haddonfield, N.
r e tu l'lled yestErday to her s umm "r
nom e here.

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WORTHINGTON
Special TO\nt Meeting H eld
May 13-A special town meetin g was held at the . town hall
las t evening at 7.3•0 . M_o.derator,
L. C. Sweet. Voted : That _the_town
buy a tractor, and appropriate ,
- $1-500 toward the payment of ;same. Voted: That the town appropriate $1000 of the $1617.02 1
whi ch was appropriated for the ,upkeep of the tractor and truck
in 19 3 2 toward the purchase of a
new tr~ctor.
All other a rticles
were passed. There was a large
attendance.
Mrs. Irving Chapman and Mr.
and Mrs. Roy McGann of Sc_a rsdal·e, N. Y., have arrived and
opened th eil- summer home.
The Women's Benevolen t society
met Wednesday at the church for
a quilting bee and other sewing
for the summer fair. The next, _ _ _ __
meetin-g will be held on May 2 5
at the home of Mrs. L. C. Sweet.
There was/ an interesting meeting of the· Women's Missionary
society this afternoon at 2.3 0 at
- "The Maples,: • with Miss K atherine McD. Ric e, leader. The subject of the m,ee ting was of particu'iar in terest, as letters were read ,
from the Rev. Joseph L. Moulton
(son of a former pastor, th e late,
Rev. James W. Moulton) and his
wife, telling of thei r experiences
in their work in the Marathi mission in India. Pictures of th e
Mou lton family were also shown.
The need of supporting the mii:;sionai·y budget was stressed. The
next meeting will he held in June.
Mrs. Mild red Gurn ey, R ed Cro ss
nurse, and Miss Whitaker of Boston m et the local nursin g com- mittee yesterday afternoon at the
home of Mrs. Horace S. Cole to
plan for th,e dental and free school
clinics.
Gerald Bates, son of Mr. and'.
Mrs. Frank Bates of W est Worthin gton , has been chosen historia n
1

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of t he Greenfield hig h sc ho·o1 gra dua tin g class.

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WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

W orth ington, May 15-'-The president
.Health Program Gi ven by Schools
of tqe g uUd a nd the · president of the Worthin g t on, May 19-Ther e wa s a
Women's Benevolent society- a.sk all
lDrg·e a ttendance Tu esda y ev ening a t
their member!! to meet on Wedne sday
the Ly~eum h a ll when a h ealt h p roa t the church to clean It.
It is ~eg-ra m was gi ven by the s chools unq ues ted that all bring vacuum cleandr.r th e cllref) tion of the Red Cross
ers and cleaning materials. The lunch
n u rse, Mrs Mildred Gurney, assisted
will be a , b~ket affair with cof'fee· _ __
by the tea chc,·s a nd tJhe 'iiupervl so r of , _ _
--·served.
An early start, 10 o'slock Ls
music, Mt·s G€orge E . Torrey. The hall
hoped for, with a ll members of · '::&gt;~th
wa &gt;1 most a ttractively decorate&lt;l with
soci eties answering this call: .
·
hemlock an&lt;l sha&lt;l blossoms. P rog ram :
Th e Juvenile --Gran g e met Saturcfay
---Se ng, "We' re Glad to See Yo1,1," by
afte rnoon at the I;yceum halt for their
a ll the schools; play, "What Polly
regula r meeting with the master, Mls's
E ad fo r Lunch" by the West
,Harri!! H iggins, and' the a_s.slstant
Worthington schOol, t eacher, Mrs
- --- - - - m t
Mr Francis A, Robinson in - - - - --Cliftorcl Tin,ker;
g·ymnastic exer- 1 - - - - - • ·- - --- a ro • ' s
•
clses by the corner grammar school,
c~rge. Mildred Gurney Red Cross '
teacher, Miss Florence Tournier;
_ _ ____ _ nurs:, ~v ith the coope/ation of the '______ __ __ Mother G~ose health rhymes by t_ho 1_____________ _
s chool teachers and· the supervisor 0 ~
1 Corn.er. PJ'.lmary ~c~ool, tei_,.c,?er, M111s
m usi c, Mrs George E. Torrey, ' will
MarJiw1e Eull~ck, . first aid _ demonpresent a healt h program· at the Lyst~·at1on by · R!vers1de sch_ool, tea~her:
- - - ce um hall on 'Wednesday even!n~ at 8 - --- - - - M_
1ss Marguerite J()hnson, play,_. Th. '- ,____________ _ _____ _
in whic h all the schools of the~town
, Mi r1;tcµlous
Pitcher"
oy
South
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wi~:e~~ti~fi}tt·e a dance at the L; .
. Wor thington school; ' teache;! ; Miss
ceum hall Friday evening. Bates'.s or- : - - - - - - P ersis Ritchie; Maypole dance· by, ____ --- - - ----- - - --' ch estra will play.
children selecte&lt;l from all the schoqls;
Mr and Mrs A. G. Caldwell of Holclosing spng by a,11 the schools; · a
yok e w ere '·in town Sunday.
m ovie ·health reel, "Good Fruits, Foops
- - - - - - - ··- · -- - -- - - - • Mr. and Mrs Frank Bates entertained-, - - - - - - .a nd Vegetables," was shown by Dr
over the w~k-end Miss Rowena Bates
Mary . P. Snook of · Ch~sterfleld. Tlhc
and F r ancis Blodgett of Springfield,
program was excellent and m il.ch en- - ____ _ M1: a nd Mrs William U tle y and ·two •,
,
,joyed.
:
, . · .
: . ,
) chtl!lr en of Holyoke, Mr and,. Mrs ~01 ,------ - ~1'-,,S.t ereopt1con pictures, "Beautlfymg 1--- - - - -- - - - -1 and
Goodwin a nd Allen , P r o,ity (?f
·t in Home Ground~," will be· shown. at
Gard n er and Mr and Mrs Richar:d
tlie Lyceum hall Tiles&lt;lay afternoon
Bartlett and fa mily .of G reenflel!l,
·;.. _ _ _ -----&lt; at 2 by Arnold Davis, state agri- ,____ ___ __ _ ____ __ _
, ~ulturaf 1a·n oscap!) specialist. _This will
be followed by discussion and ques'. tions.
.
,
.
. Members ·or the Women's Benevo- - - - - --- ----- -- -- - -- - -------- -- - - - - · - - ·-- -

1

rre~f ' soclet'ii

and guild ~et .at the
.i'c o ngregational church Tuesday for its i
annui.1 cl~a·n tng: The use of electrical
/
ar,pliances· and industry left the '
/
I church in good condition for tJhe
- - - f com ing sea son. A basket lunch was ~--served.
.,
.
"
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Deputy Fred B. Dole of Shelburne
- - - - , Falls will in spect the Grange on - - - - - - - - - - '.l.'u esdn y even in g in the ·w orking 'of
I t ~e t hird and four th degrees.
____ _ _ ,, W a lte r Emerson and family of - - -- - - - - - -: w est Newbury, V t., nave moved to'
"Viell s mer e" a nd w ill con&lt;l uct the ,
far m.
(

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WORTHINGTON
·- -

Worthington, , May 23-Service in _____ ----~

WORTIDNGTON

'!

May 25-Miss Margaret Ham?.
Un of Amherst and party of 16
the Congregational church yesterdaY,· ·
Massachusetts State college faculmorning was conducted by the ·pastor,
ty picnicked at Merrick Smith's
- - - --+ Rev J . H erbert Owen, who took as his
in Ringvilla Monday, enjoying the
theme, "Faith." In the evening the
wonderful view from the top of
church joined in a m dfft Interesting
the hill and the country now in
service at the South W orthing-ton
height ·of the apple blossom seachurch, conducted by Mrs Howard A ,
sou.
Moody and Miss Persis Ritchie. The
Miss Katherine McD. Rice is
•- _speak er was a J a panese girl wearing
spending a few d ays . in Albany.
the costume of her country, Miss MatThe illus trated talk on' garden
sue Fusukawa of Yokohama, Japan,
flowers at the Lyceum hall yester- _ __ _ _ _,now a normal student at the Clarke ,
day afternoon by Arnold Davis,
'school in Northampton. She was acstate agricultural landscape specompanied by Miss Wlnnlfrid C. Park1 cialist, who came under the aus.hurst. general secretary .W estern Maspices 0 { the Hampshire County
distr.ict, Y. W. C. A. Miss
t
t h 1
1 • - - - - - - - - sachusetts
Fusukawa spoke m ost interestingly•of
· , 0 Extension service, was mos
e pher work among the nonhearlng chi!b ful and a treat to all lovers of
dr-en and a nswered questions about the
d flowers. He was asisted by M~s
- - - - ~--~~- customs of her country, showin-g Jap- - ·- - - - - _ n Evelyn Stowell, home demonstraanese pictures.
tion agent.
.
Mrs T. C. Martin, who h as been
N. •.
J spending the winter at Ithaca, N. Y.,
_ ~1
Grang,e Inspected
has returned to h er summer h ome.
was in1 L I W-0rthington Grange
Mr and Mrs Fra nk o. Wells and
~spected last evening in the wor~-1
grandson, .W ells S,ellar of Greenfield,
Cling of the third and fourth deMr and Mrs W. c. P owers of S pring- - ··
¾:
F d _t,
t ---, field were at their homes f O, the week
' J ~r~es by Deputy re ...,. Dole -0
end.
f&lt; Shelburne.
The working of the
1
Miss Florence Rogers, Mrs Garlick ___
· t) third d e gree by the ladies' degree
and two daughters of North Adams ,
" staff won high commendation. Stlwel'e guests at The ·spruces Sunday.
ver star certificates were presentIrving L. Bartlett and his son, Daved to ten members having had 2 5
- - - id, who is a, student at D eerfield acad- - - - - consec utive years of · members hip, remy and three classmat es were In
the .presentation being made by
town Sunday.
D eputy Dole at the request of the l
Mrs J ohn Frlssell is spending the
- -· - _ _ \ worthy master. Those so honored summer wlth her daughter, Mrs Arlin ,
were Mrs. Horac e S . Cole, Mr. 1
Cole of Highla nd street, Chesterfield. '
and Mrs. Edward Cla rk , Mrs.
t
Tomorrow af ternoon !ion llluS rated
__ Charles A. Kilbourn, A rthur G.
lecture on "Bea u tifying th e Home
Capen, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest G.
Grounds," by Arnold D avis, . state agricultural landscape sp ecialist, w!ll be
Thayer, Mr. and Mrs. Carl A.
- given at the L yceum hall at 2 under ___ - - __ Loveland and
Miss Josephine
th e a uspices of the State college extenH ewitt. The hall was decorated
sion servi ce.
with spring flowers. Remarks
T omorr ow night the Grange will
were made by D e puty Dole of
m ee t at the Lyceum hall to confer the - - - - -Shel burne;
Deputy Brown of - third and fo ur th degrees. They will
Pittsfield; Worthy masters , Arhe Inspec ted in the working of these
thur P urce of Highland Grange
deg-rees by Fred B. Dole of Shelburne
and Mrs. r~ester C., LeDuc •o f Ches F all.~.
terfield and Hill s ide Pori10n'a maste r Mrs. L. C. Sweet of this town. ·
Ic e cream and cake w ere s erved
by Mrs. Walter L . Tower . cllairm an of the feast committe e. 'l'he
Grange was invited to Ches terfield
Gran ge June 2 to attend a ma s ked
costume party.
Geor ge Hathaw ay was operated
upon yeste rday af ternoon . fo r appendicitis at the qq~ ley, :Qi~j&lt;U\son
hos pital In No rthampto.n.

1

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�'-f-6

WORTHINGTON
----·

LAFAYETIE ELM .
___.
IS TAKEN DOWN

-- -·

--

1

_ !Historic Tree Removed to
' M~ke Way For Road Wid- Worthington,
enmg
May 26-The "La-

--------

·-------------

fayette elm". on the corner by the Ii----------- --· - -. brary !Vas taken down yesterday . to'
- ----- --- -, make way for the widening .of the new
' state road between Worthington and
-- ---------· __ Huntington. In 1825 w:tien ,Lafayette
visited Wortliington on his . way to the .
dedi.c at!on of Bunker hill monument
- - -------- -- ----- he stopped at a tavern which stood on
the site of the present library. In
the morning before continuing on his
jou rney 'iie held a reception to the 17
townspeople near. this tree. In 1925
Worthlngto~ celebrated this visit of
Lafaye.tte.
There
will be.-at
a baseball
gameformer
Sun- J•-·---- - - - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - - -- - - -- -· - - - - -----day
afternoon
2 on the
baseball diamond, .between the Worthington boys and the Windsoi- ' nine.
There was an all-day sewing mee·t- 1_ _ _ _ __ _ _
Ing yesterday of the Women's . Be- 1!
- - - -nevolent society at the home of -Mrs
L. C. Sweet. The pleasant day made
it possible to set up the quilting.frame
on the lawn where blOBBoming . trees 1
and the song of birds could be en·joyed. Luncheon was served to 16.
... Mrs Alice Gurney of G~~enfleld Is 1- - - - - - - - -- - -spending the summer with her daugh11 ter, Mrs Herbert Porter.
1
Mrs Myra J . Sievens has . returned
- -- " to her home after snendlng the win-, 1,- - - ter in Springfield. Mrs Gordon Hathawa~
eeping h ouse !or her.
t

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�There is a time gap between May 1932 and February 1933 in this journal.

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OBITUARY

HATFIELD

MRS. IDA S. TROW

Mrs. !•'rank P . .1011es

l\[rs. Illa. S. Trow, wife of Alred w. Trow, died ·e arly this J

H a t fi e ld , F eb . 1- ::\l rs. F a nnie
(W hile) J cn es, a ged 'i G, y; ife or
morning at her home1 32 Bedford ,
Fran k P . J o11es, passed away at
errnce, this city. Besides her hu sher hom e in Bradst ree t earl y
, band she leaves four daughters,
last e,enin g a ' ter a lon g illn ess.
th e Misses Bessie, Naµcy and MarBes ides her h usband she leaYes
-- J .,.aret Sidney Trow, at hom e, and · - one ni ece,
Mrs. Anni e Eddy of
Mrs. Nina A. Brooks of this city; ,
Saratoga Springs, N. Y. l\! rs.
six grandchildren and two great- j
Jon es wa s born in W hately, bu t
grandchildren. Mrs. Trow was , -- had li ved in B ra dstreet for th e
born in Worthington 1anuary 111,
past 54 yea rs. 's h e was a mem b:et·
18 61, da u ghter of Jacob and Em!of the Wha te ly ch urch. Th e (u \y P. Bartlett. Her father was for
neral serv ice will be h eld at- th'l
many years proprietor of the
h ome on F ri da y afternoon at
Worthington Inn, later known ·as ,
2.30, Rev. 0 . E. Barnard , p:1'.;to1·
the Lafayette Lodge. After his
of the Ha tfi eltl Congrega tJon'll
deat h Mr. and Mrs . Trow coi\- church , offi ciating. Burial will IJe
t tinued its management for more I
in J:!radstre et cemetery.
than 20 years, removlng to this
city in 1912. During this period
Mrs. Trow made many friends and
a cquaintances, by whom she will
be pleasantly remembered. Mr.
. and Mrs. Trow celebrated their
golden wedding anniv:ersary on
-Mar ch 8, 1932. Boeing of a quiet
, and r etiring nature, her lifetiril.e
W orthington, April 2-Mrs Euni ce
1
in terest has been almost entirely
: Augusta Gilrr. ~ ,~. 88, d-ied this m orn-yeentered in h er h em e and family.
- in,g at the home of her daughter, Mrs
· Funer al services will be held at
FrankJ.in H. Burr. She was born in
the ho me, 32 Bedford terrace,
Huntin g ton, the daughter of Sa muel
-! Saturday afternoon at 2 o'cloclr,
Ira and Electa Lindsey, and, in 1874, 1Rev. Albert J. P enner . of Edwards
m ~rr ied L eonard Gilmore of S prin g;Congregational church officiating.
fi eld. Mrs Gilm ore lived in Spr ing fi eld
until th e de ath of her husban d in
Burial will be in the family plo t tu
.._Sp~ln_g Grove cemetery, Florence . - j 1D0 4, and bas since lived with her

.MRS EUNICE GILMORE
DIES AT WORTHINGTON

t wo da ughters, Mrs Burr of this town
and Mrs Howard Brill of Franklin,
_ · ,Vt. Be.s'ides h er da ughters, she' le-aves
' seven grandch il dren an d Hli!/'grc,1turandchild _ ..- M rs Gilmore was a sis• oter of the late ·c h ,1.l'les M. and Frank
Li ndsey of Hun t in,g t on.
The fun eral will be h eld 'Mon day
-.
MI'S. Fannie Eddy
morni n g- a t 11 a t the hcm)e of Mr
April 20-Mrs. Fannie Eddv 1 and Mrs Bu rr, R ev J. Herbert Owen
officiating. a nd . burial will be i11
aged 72, widow of Henry
S.pr in;;·fi eld cem e te ry in the afternoon
_Eddy, died on Wednesday . a'fter-

i,:

noon at her_ home on Williams
stre.et: :Williamsburg, following a , - Lfong illness. She is SUI'Vived by
one sister, Mrs. Jennie Lee, of
Wllliamsburg ;
three brothers,
Walter Smith of Willia msburg,
Hu bert Smitl.J of Hav d e nvillt:&gt;·
George Sm,i th of Wes t · Ch es ter:
field . She also leavlls several
nieces and n ephews. The funeral
&lt;w ill take , place at Stanton hall
Wes t Chesterfield , on I•'riday a f~
ternoon at 2 o'cloc k. Burial will
be in Mount cem ete r y, :..t W es t
Ches tnfi P.ld .

nt 2.

Miss ·l\·IARIA.CR APrs
1'iath·e of Wli Ht; i;--;;, Co lonial ~t
i
1

Pas ses at Age or 95
O\:k i
A \\ i l' c• 1 1'( 111 1 L e ; : 111 1t r , !'1i \·t1 ,
V,1e&lt;in esda y a nn oun cin g t he ' , ' _" I.
of M i~s lVLa,r in H en rit' ti a Cra ft~a, s,n g
rPcPlverl hy h er n iece, .,-1r ~. iii'. 1rns
Robert s, of th is cit y. .\I iss" la .\[.
Was bo r n in \V ha1e l,· n • . Crafts
i n t.h e hou se n ext to, th""e ) ear 8 ago
O
sh e r esid ed s ince 1881. s1i /~"b '" ~ero
all her s ch oolin g in th e "li ttia ined
s ch oolh ou se" whi ch is now e red
of Sto rro ll' t on at t h e E ast er as Part
Ex positi on in West Sp ri ng fi e~ tates
Mi s~ Crafts co ul d t race h er ii nr
'
lo L ieut. John Griffin Craft
~ge
was bo rn on Gov. W inthrop's fl~ ~ .ho
Ar beJl(l, whil e it was an~hor; ~ 'P,
lh e _Char les Ri ver. T h e nam e
h In
famil y 1s prom in e nt
t hrough tier
pages of c;;._olµn ia l his tor y in opei::
in g up th e Massac h usetts colon y
I
Wh en abou t 20 s he went to
Orleans , where s h e tau ght sc hool for three yea rs un der h er broth er In Jaw
Eph ri a m Samuel St oddard , called th~ I
"fl_g htlng ecl ucator. " who orga nized th e I
~rst public sch ools s ,;st em in Louis - '
1ana. Afte r her r eturn t o What ely /
s h e took u p dress maki ng and fo l- ,
lowed h er tracle for m an y yea rs. •L
Last Sept em ber s he motored to
California wit h h er broth er, W a rren
P. CraftR. and a neph ew, an d it \\'as
whil e visiting- with a ni ece that she -began to fail. M1 8s Crafts ' passing
will brrn g· so rrol\' to th e hea rts of
all 1Yho -~ n ew, , her. for s he wa s loved
and est eem ed by a large circle of -fri en ds and acq ua int a nces.
No de finit e word has bee n rece ived as to fun era l a rra ngc rn cnts but in a l l pro ba bilit v th e bod ,· will
be r etu rn ed t o Wh a t el y fo r bu.rial.

or

New ,

�t.( 2---There is a time gap between February 1933 and July 1937 in this journal.

1 RE -

,+--·

~P1UNGFIELD

UNION,

I

SPRINGF1ELD, MASS.,
---

- I-

, · '---

FRIDAY, J'P~~

/)nts both died within three weeks of
oth er, and she r emained In
Haydenvllle, making her home with
' an aunt, Miss Anna Hayden,
- - - - - - - 1 MIRS Hayden made two trips abroad,
the last about 10 years ago. F or
many years she spe nt her summers
,in Cummington, where her brother,
--1 \ ~dward Parker Hayden, an artist, had
a studio. Miss Hayde n was very
talented, being ·able to speak on man Y
subjects, and she was clever in paintIng water · colors. She was public
spirited, alwaYs willing to help flnan,1 cially or In any other way. She was
a member of the Ha ydenville woman's
Club and of the Williamsburg Methodist Church, fulfilling the wishes of
her parent~ and grandparents In being
ac,tfve In this church, which they en-

1~

11each

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Williamsburg

·-1:·-

_ _

\

.i- -----

ELEANOR HAYDEN ;~o~::~
AGE D 76 DIE S
IN HAy DEN VILLE
,

·

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_

_s_ _ _

I 't----------.
..-

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('"-

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-~ t- -

'

.Granddaughter of Man for Rev. J'ohn A. Hawley, who recently I
retired
as
pastor
of
the First CongreWhom Town Was Named; :\ gatlonal Church in Amherst,
will supply tihe . .pulpit Sunday morning In
Active in Public
Haydenvllle Congregational Church, ·
Tl,le board o! dlrector,s o! tale WllAffair$

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Ha y~en lea ves two nieces, Mrs' · ·Eleanor Hayden McLean of Columbu5.
.0 .. and Mrs. Carri·, Hayden Crafts ,of
Atlanta, Ga; one nephew, Barney
Goodsteed o! Chicago, and several
-:cousins.
· The funeral w!ll be held at the
'home Saturday afternoon at 2, R i v.
C. E. ,Holmes of Haydenvi1le, offlciat:i ng. Burial will be In the High Street
Cemetery in Haydenvllle.

l...._

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I

ILLI MSBUR G , Ju 1Y 15 - M lss , uamsburg Congr~gatlonal Chu h h
A Hayden, 76, 0 ~ Main St ,; called .a meeting o! the chur~t co~~
W
Eleanor
H,
Haydenv!lle, died early tills morning poratlon for Mond!!-Y evening t s 1
In her home, after an Illness qf more the chapel to consider acti~ ' n ·
than three years. .
painting the dhilng room of
• Member of Old Family
church, and transact any o'ther busiShe was born in Haydenvllle on ness that may arise.
··
J an. 6, 1861 , daughter of Halleck and
Miss Norma Nletsche of South St.
Eliza (Goodsteed) Hayd en, and ,;rand- went today to attend· th e 4-H state
daughter of Josiah Hayden, who, witi1 junior leaders' camp tor one week
hisg brother. Joel, were the original Mass. State College. Amherst.
owne rs of the Ha yd cnv ll!e Brass Con)Five children of Mr. and Mrs. HerpanY, and for whom Haydenvtlle was be~t Nye of Wlll!ams St, are now Ill
, nam ed. AftPr th e flood sh o mov ed wi l h scarlet fever.
wi th h er parents to Columbus, Q .,
P rof. Clifford Loomis and Mrs.
where ~110 was educated ~ A few yeai~ . L oomis of Bristol, v a ., are guests of
Jate r she r eturn ed with her parents I Mr, Lo6mb' parents, Mr. and Mrs.
to Ha ydc nville for a visit. H er pa·r,- W. G. Loomis of Haydcnville, _ _ _
.

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�)1;;-y", :;_ \I (

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,1 WORTHINGTON

,

Clipping placed out of time order in journal. Original pagination
preserved.

CONWAY

',,

'. MISS SYBIL G. BROWN
j
DIES AT LOS ANGELES
,

Mrs . J ulia G. Jones

Nov. 3- Mrs. J uli a Griffin J ou es,
wife of Edwar ~ J on es , 61_ yca '.'3 _ ________
old, died at l:Ii llcr est ho spita l_ 1u
.

1

P ittsfie ld yesterday af ~erno on . l\i r~.
: Native of Whately Was Re- ----------- - J ones was in the h ospital f.or t r e;; t• _ _ ___
•
ment tor a broken collai: bone 11J.H1
scal p .wound , r eceived in a fall_\
do wn stairs i ~- IJ'er -holJ)._e 10 , d~ys~- -- - • ,0 yo
e ra uate
--------- -·-1
ago. H er dea,t h · was quite sud u_en,
Conway, July 6-Wor,d has be€n re- ;
and un ex pected, as she was so Ia i•
~elved of th~ dea t h a t . Los Angeles,
impr oved as t o be leaving ·.th~ h o'3: ,
on June 26, of Miss S ybil G. ~ rown, . 11
___ 1 pita! t o go /to, h-er •sis ter'.s ?me.,- - - - - - 8_1, a retired· mi.ssion'ary 'who had
when she dr opped ~ead. Beside~
ltriends • and relatives In the Connec. her hu sband, she I-eave s :J, s~ster~,,
tlcut valley,
; _ _ _________ __ _ _____ __ ___ _
Mrs. 'He rbe r t •.Bartle tt ,of -P-it tsh e.ld ;,;1__ _ _ _ _ -j Miss Brown --was born at, Wb ateLy,
three brothe!f Dennis ,and ' J o1m ;,
!January 29, 1852, the youn,est of 12 •
· f 'f Ol.ll nsonville Ct. and Mauncd
children of ~orge a,1;1d Altmra Brown. 1
o
,_
,
•
. . ,,
bShe became a teacher in Whately and 1~ - - -- - - -- ----:of Ma~chester , ~ - H., -~nd .a m ece,;_ _ _ - - ·{Conway, litter atteridln.g Deerfield ,
- - -- Mrs, L illia~_.P\iA'll: of _Manch ~st er,:
1academy and was- gradtil!,ted , from
D{._,H . . T h~1.f uu~;r9-1; ·1viV'. be ?, t ,_th~j
Holyo~e ,college In 1880. ,She
home -w:ea n~ day afternobn a t l'. ______taught in grammar schools ln ·Boston· &lt;o'cJoQk, '.i iUr~b urial in North cem e:
,tor many year~ and later. . Vl'.M teacher
manual tramlng in South
B&lt;lston I
te··hy.
!l'{• J_a-mes
, H Burckes
schools.
_
•
1
offi cia te. r, ,.,-,_ ·· :;:.; '
:·
,
Mi.ss ..l!rown--was later.".:aEceptecf· as:,,-- - - -- ·~'
. ~- ·
;: ·
,,:,
an lnaustrlal mLs.sloniry under the '
- ---.- Martin t , Collier : ; ,.
':i
~res_!&gt;f!erlan· bo,&lt;l.rd 'a~.d Sl!,i!e~ for In:
,-- , -:; -: ..~. :t . .:
i
d1~ :t ~ hlng ;tlje We,!!t India mission
' Ma.rbin I. Colli~r. 8'9 yea-rs o.ld;•1
i11 J{l:n:uary, 1904: ·.She was~a.ssoplated r-- - - -- - ---- - - - th e -•.la st _v eteran of_ the _Civil y;a ~.., _ jtli ~ ':William "and _l;ady ·w,an_less,,
i n t hi s town died yesterday m9r llfc•
•:PF.. a)¼q,·~:r.t;!'s: Graham :~d: the -~ :gry
.
·
.,; .·• ·
u 1
· •
u·
· Y
_H9wa,\} ,{ll,(IHIY•for more·tl)_a n20.y.ears.
i ng1:il-f·t~~ ;P,P~ ~- Pt t~ ~~~ -i!-~ggips,1
She bujlt,'"a ; µew scjlool ·toll .~,lioys ', at 1--- - - -- - - -- - - - -- - l!e •liad ~eet1 m _fa1hng. liealth - ~0.r 1- - - -7 ,• ~od,01i'. a!).d workJ)d _on the building
_-som e ti!Ji.'El • ,,, .J IJ,"ll_, :funeral ~erv1c~,'
herself .at _the a'gf of -70.
.: , _
will be· :li,iJld !3¥~9,µ, es~aY.:_ . aft~rno.0 11'fj
., ·.. Sjl~ · returned , .tc, .America in, '"'._ 1.92,7
2 o'c,ni.ek , a f t)i~~Ji'o'µ!. ~ of Hira\111 _____ _ , ~d lll ' N&lt;?vember, that Y,ear, ~et_tted --- - H " 1 ,.. ,, d'' 0 l · CT,~wlll be , in:"l
, 11~.,Glend,1Je, Cal., among t l!e mJSsion.:
· _igg ~s, an
u ia
· .~
' ary _c.~lony ~n.d -.~came a . melillber of 1
Rmg:ville ceme! ~ry. The Re_v, Cari,;&lt;1
, the Presbyterla!l church in that -city, f
['!:laJ'!$r ee or 8.~!_ll)_Jllingt~~? .•~11 offl..1
____ _, In 1930, she spent tl_l.e s_ummer -in New - --- - - - -- --- -·1 ciate' --.
't
· ;~.,- ·. ·
,;,.;
.Engl11nd, attendl_n g • the 50th -reunion.1
iv ..
•·
, _
'
• "
'·
of her class at Moil!lt Holyoke. ·
Aft!lr sustaining a broken · hip In a:;
_
fall in April ,she was cared for ·at Los,- - -- ·Angeles General hospital where - last;
m&lt;:mth ~he sµff'ered a -stroke o! para!-,
ys1s which Cll,,Used her -death. The fu- - ---- _________ neral and bur.la! took- place in Glen. t - - - - ·-- · 'dale, June 28.
·
·
..
Miss J;lrown . leaves three -nieces ,
Miss May M. Brow n of Los Angeles'
who had lived with her' for a yea1· 11snd,---,a. ha lf, Mrs Seymour ,Ha.rriB and Mr~
B. Hassell of Qonway, and two.
ws, Francis C. arown of Chi- 1
__ _ _ __ _ ____ ___
_(
and George · H, Brown ·ofji--De _ 0. ,
_ "·
_
_
•

hred Missionary an

H } k 'G d

dM

ount

/'~ nt

if , '.

4 ,

•

•

,

will"~· - -if
,

at

- ----r - - -

. Mrs. Lbzte· Oulve 1•
Mar ch 1.--Mrs. Lizzie La ws on
Culver, 95, of Goshen road, died
last nigh t a fte1· a lo ng illness.
She was born in Gill , Oct. 29 ,
1836, the daugh ter of Mr. an d
Mr,s. John Lawso n. Mrs. Culver
bad r esided in t l\l s town fo r 28
years wi th her daugh ter, Mrs,
R ufus Miner, 'rile fu ner al will
11

be h eld in t he Congregational
,church Wednesday at 2 o'clock,
'
Rev. John Manwell, pastor of the
- - fcoµg re!l'ational chu rc h , offi cia ti ng_ Burial will he in t he Village
Hill cemetery.
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�1937

L/ L/-

·Widow of Former
I\Jayor Lambie Dies ·

.Deltt h o f i\frs, Jaspe l' Lambie
j
Mrs. H e nnie tta Lambi e died
, early t h is morning in Wa shing·,
ton, D. C. She was born In New
,,
York 80 years ago last fall, the /
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James ·
Bryan and was married there to
I Succumbs in Washington at
Jasper E. Lambie of Easthampton
.
.
•
on sept. 19, 1875. Mr. and Mrs.
Sang
Contralto
m
Lambie came at once to East- 1
•
{
hampton. Mr. Lambie had a mer, Various Churc es.
can tile business on Main street. L
NORTHAMPTON, March 8 - Mrs. -----1,,ater he moved his business to ,
H c1i rietta (Bryan) Lambie, 80 years
Northampton, where his brother,
olLI,: widow of former-Mayor Jasper
John, joined him and the busi___ JI:. Lambie, formerly of this ~ity, died ,_ ____ _ __ _
ness remain ed there until the I'
In Wa.shlngton, D. c., yesterday.
·
store burned. Four children were
!14rs. Lambie wa.s born In New York
born to Mr. and Mrs. Lambie,
cit;.:, the daughter of Dr. i:s,nd ~rs.
'
Ethel and Emily
we re born in 1- - ,J a llJes Bryan.
She married . 1 fr. - - - - E
' . '
'
L ri.rhbie Sept. 9, 1875. They resided
I _asthampton, Marg~uet and Ma1;1~ ,
In i;Easthampton where Mr. Lambie
r!Ce, who were born -after their ,
co n:µucted a mercantile business. In
________________ _
I parents moved . t!) Northampton. l----·- - 18 32 Mr. Lambie came to this city, - 11 Marga1'et is a
practising lawyer In
bou_g ht out the establis hment of E. G.
Washington, with the right to ap- 11
S0uthwlck &amp; Co. and three years l'.1-ter .
b f
h
·
'to '&gt; k his brother, John Lambie, mto
-- - ---- - -- --- pear e ore t e supreme court, -·-- pa rtnershlp.
They conducted the I
a_n d Ma~rice Is a profe~sor at the
bu 9lness for , many .. years as J, ·E.
University of Minnesota· In · M,inL:,qibie &amp; co., _which was eventually
neapolls, Ethel died in Easthamp-·
so l~' to James P. Falrcl}tld and George, __ ____ __ _
ton and Emlly in Northampton. -----I F . :&gt;.ooward, who continued the bus 1Mrs. Lambie had a beautiful connes'f un~er the same firm name until
·
,
,
ths~bloclt was burned about .five years
t lt
ra · o voice, ~he sang_lll the Payar o', when they sold the property and , - - - - - - - - - - - - - -- son church for some years and in
---1 re cfred from business.
ma!ly towns nearby, giv.fog th'e
Mr. Lambie was Mayor , .. North1
~ea.test possible pleasure · with'
an1i;)ton in 1891. Mrs. Lam oie w~s a ·
her lovely :voice. Nothing is _ _ _ co ~ ra lto singer and san~ In the Pay- ~ - - - ----- - -k ·a
:6
f
.
ao n, Congreg;atlonal Church, East.. nowµ ere o arrangements for .
lll a mpton and' in many nearby towns .
t he funeral.
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si-.Ei&lt; lea;es one daughter, Atty. Mar- .
- - ----- - - - -- -- r--~==--c---"--c--- ~- --'-- ~~ =.....
gar et Lambie of Washington;. D. c:, .
1
and 'one 11,;,n, Maurice Lambie, a pr_o~
fessor at the University . ot Minnesota 10
at Minneapolis.
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____ ~Edward G. Bolter
. , Dies at -(\.ge of 88
----, . . .· - - l f 17 ,~1tes for Market _,Gardener

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Will Be Sunday

AMHERST, Oct . 7-Edward G. Bo!--', - - - - -- -·ter, 88, a market gardener of ' Middle f -- - -- St. died today in his home after a ·long
-ill ness. He wa s born in Northampton,
~ ' ---.-- ____ May ·12, 1845, son of Zlba and Christina (Padde} Bols ter.
He marri ed .
,Harriet N utt ing of ' Bel~hertown in /
j
1870. She died in 1918. In 1919 he L_ _ __ _____________ ----·- - - - - - - --- - - - - - -·----- -..-,,- - - - -married Mi ss He len H oyt of Amherst, :
who died in 1927.
I
H e leaves t wo daug·h ters, Mrs. Lil- ,
-- - ----- - -- - ------- - ----- - - lian Wales a nd Mrs. Charlotte Gall- ----ti brai th, both of Amherst; a son, Leon 1
J
of H ollywood, Cai.; t h ree broth ers, I
Robert of Oa k la n d, Cal., Da ni ()] ·or Enfi eld. a nd Arthur of Amherst; t wo ·
sisters, Mrs. Ella D icki n son of S;;ii'th
:------ - ---· - , Ha.dley a nd Mrs. Etta Dickinson or
,\mh erst : 10 g-randch ildren a nd 21
g reat -grandchi ldre n.
The fun eral wi ll be h eld Sunday at
2.30 in the Doug las fun era l home. Rev.
,1 E ben
Fra nci s, pastor of South
I
Ch urch. wi ll official-.. Bu ria l wi!J be
1
In South Amherst Cemetery.

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Funeral .of A . .H. Dakin

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SEPTEMBER 28, . 1937

Th funeral services for Arthur
Haza:d Dakin were h elll thi'~ afternoon at 2.30 in Grace Ep1scoal church with Rev. Charles H.
b a digan officiating.
The honorary bearer:;;; were
Prof. Arthur J. Hopkins, formerly
head of the
Amherst college
ch_emistry department; Prof. C.
w. Eastman of the German department of Amherst c_ollege, Dr.
Arthur H . Baxter, Prof. Orton
Clark of M. -s. C., Frederick S.
Allis alumni secretary of Amherst college; Prof. William P.
Bigelow of the -rq.usic department,
Judge Henry Field of
Northampton, Dr. Nelson C. Has' kell Herbert W. Cowan, Prof. Joseph O. Thompson,-~ form erly of
the Amherst college physics department and a classmate of Mr.
Dakin in 1884." Interment will be
Saturday morning at 11 In Wood- ,___ _
lawn cemetery, New York, with
services In charge of Rev. Milo H.
Gates of the Cathedral of St.
John the Divine.

W o,r thington
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W,ALTER E. BERRY

Father of Worthingt-on ·woman Dies
at Age of 68

W ORTHJ NGTON, Oct. 17-Walter
E . B e r r y, 68, d ied h e r e today in the
h ome of h is daughte r , M r s . Florence
B a t es. M r.~ Berr y, w hose h o m e was
in Abin g ton. had s pent the past year
with hi s d a u g hte r. H e leaves o ne
o t h e r d a u ght e r, Mrs . Carl Stud ley or
D o r &lt;' h est,i r. 'J'h e funera l w ill be h e ld
in th e Ri cP. fun e ra l h om e, R ockla nd,
Tu esday at 2 p. 111. B u ria l will be
in M t. V e rno n Cem e te r y, A b in g t on.

DIES SUDDENLY

WILLJA i\I H. B AHER

Chesterfield

WILLIAM BAKER
DIES SUDDENLY
Former Chesterfield Official
Wed 50 Years Saturday
CHE.STERFIELD, S ep t. 27-Willlam H . Baker, 72, died s udd e nl y toni g ht. Bes ides his wi fe. Mary (Ha t c h)
Ba k er, h e lea ves two dau g hte rs, Mrs .
Ch a rl es H . Bi s bee of thi s to wn , and
M.iss Lou isa R. B a k e r of D e r b y,
Conn .. one son, Willia m H ., Jr., of
, thi s town and nin e g ra nd c hild re n.
H'o r man y years h e co n d uc ted a ge ne ra l s tore he r e, · a n (] was postmaster,
to wn c le rk , a m e mb e r of the sc hool
co m rnltt.ee a nd a dea co n of th e Co n grcg-at ionai C h u rc h.
Mr . a nd :l lrs.
Ha ker obs e rv ed t h eir go ld e n w cdrl ing f
a n niv e rsary Satu rda y, with m o re
than 300 fri e nd s p r ese nt. l&lt;'unera l a r ra n g-ern e ni.s will be a nn o un t:cd. B uri a l w ill be in \:e nl r r Ce m ete ry . Rev .
Ha lph K r o ut wi ll o (fl&lt;.: iat c.

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Yearif ago Mr. Towe-: was elected to 1•
the Massachusetts . Legislature and
served in the House. At one time he
was a candidate for state senator on
th e Republican ticket. In 1924 Presi'dent Calvin Coolid ge, a close friend of
l Mr, Tower and an Amhe-:st classmate,
•sent his name to the Senate for nom/ !nation as postmaster of Dalton. :a:e
, received the appointm ent and served
112 years, his term expiring in Feb; ruary, 1936. He was r.eappointed once
by President Coolidge and once by
President' Hoover. Richard F. Pen• 1- - - - - - - - · - - - - - der, present postmaster, succeeded him.

DIES IN DALTON

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Studied Town History

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He was always Interested In town ·
affairs and had much to do with the
celebration of Dalton/s 150th anniversary In 1934. Fie was a student of
local history and could tell many tales
of early Dalton day·s. It was through
his efforts -that the new post office was
assured. He was also g,~eatly Interested ln Amherst College, and· its .
_______ _
sports.
He attended many of the ·
·
,1 major games until his recent Illness.
He was also a familiar figure at
Alumni' Day at Amherst . . He was the e-- -- ----------- ·-11 author of the book "Athletics at Am. herst" published in 1935.
.
Mr. Tower was married twice. -.Hls
;f first wife the former Mabel Leone.rd I~ - - - -- - -- •-· - --· - · - - - of Rainb~w. Conn., died several years
ago. His second wife, Ethel Wood of
Boston., who·m · he ma-:-ri"ed Nov..1 23;
1929, is the oµly near survivor . .
The funeral will be held in the home
Thursday_ at 3 with . burial in Main
, SL Cemetery. Funeral director C. C.
1

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- - ----- WALTER L. 'l:,OWER

·owER' I
WALTER
L
T
POSTMASTER LONG.

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Bartlett is in charge of arrangements.

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AT DALTON, DEAD

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Amherst Graduate Servec;l I 2
, Years; Also Was Mem·.
'
her of House
DALTON, Nov. 9-Walter Lamont
Tower, 68, former postmaster here,
The math suggests this article
died th is afternoon in his home at 131
-...-.------- - - - ~ North St. after an illpess of two years. ~-- __ _____ ____ _
H e was. born in, Dalton, Dec. 26, 1858,
, son of David Horatio and Margaret \
(Young) T ower. He was educated In' .
.LI ___ _ __
the p ut,lic schools of the town ·and at ' _ __ _ __ _
Mt . Pleasant I nstitute where he p:-eparcd for Amherst College: He was
graduated from Amherst In 1898 as a 1,
civil en gin eer.
In Coal Business
F ollowing graduation he went to
work f or his fath er. When, •the first _ _ __
---- - -·-- - - - - track s Into D a lton were laid by the 1
Be rks hi re St. , railway, ~e waiJ appointed r esldent m a nage!,', He held
_f..__
. tha t p osltlon · fo-;_ fs_ur _y ear.§, r ~slgn\ ng
' t o enter the r etau coa l business In
Sp r in gfield where he lived !or ftve
year s.
·
When his fath er 's h ealt h fa iled he
r eturn ed h e r e t o m a n ag-e his pr ope rties which included wh at is n ow k oow n
' ---- .·, .... _
as Sunnyside Farm. He Is a direct
· descen dent of J ohn T ower , who was
bor n ir. Norfolk, E ng., i n 1609 and
came t o t his country t o settle In Hi n gin 16~7. _ _ ___. . c.· . · - _ _ _

is dated November 9, 1927.

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ghue w e nt to do this a n attendant
t0ld her that l'f tfrn ca,· were to be
locked it should be moved to another
place where there wou ld be no neces- - - -- --J :1 M ~s J osephin-e E. "W ilson, 77, ofasibtsye nofe mHovelndg ' ietctdeudrinMgrsthDe oo11wognhe ru'es
Pleasant street, East L ongmeadow, ·
c ·
tr
the who
car, had
and gone
as she
did rthis
_ _ ____
died at Wesson 'Memoria l hospita l at to
herback
mother
to the
ear
__
6 ' 'yetserd ay · morning from Interna l of the veh icle, was struck by the
injuries received Wednesday, whe n right rear ,vheel and thrown to the
g r ound' .TheThe
car . passed
her
she was knocked clown by a n automo- body.
attendant
pulled hover
e r from
bile operated by h e r daughter, Mrs beneath the machine and drove h er to
- - - - - - - Zo la R. Don oghue, w ith whom the vVesson hospita l, ; wh ere she was atmother m ade her h ome. The acci - tended by Dr Erdix 'l'. Smith.
dent occurred at the Court Square
After her mother's death yesterday,
Parking pavilion on Elm street , when Mrs D onoghue reported the accident
]lr •:1 Don ogh ue w as backing he r car to C.ipt ,Joh n L . M a lon ey of the traft o place it in a p a rking space that fie bureau.
h ad been d esignated by nn attendsnt
Mrs W il son, widow or Henry P.
__ of the p lace. '.Phe mother had just Wilson of Pleasant street, East Longleft the car.
meadow, was born at Fulton, N. Y.
· Mrs Donoghue had brought he r Besides the dau ghter, wit h whom she
m other a nd two o th e r w omen t o fois lived, she leaves another daughter,
city on a shop pi ng trip and had Mrs Amy V. Sturtevant, of this city;
pla ced her ca r in th e par;_ing lot on one sister, Mrs Lena Pilch of Fulton,
Elm str eet , near Columb us avenue. N. Y., a nd one borther, Fred DeRusha,
As the party was about to leave Mrs of Akron, 0 . The fu neral will be helil
Wilson s ugges t ed to her_ da ughter at Graha m 's chape J this afternoon
that .it might b e well to lock the car at 3. The body will be taken to Fulbecause of articles of apparel that ton for burial in Mount Adnah cemehad been left within . As Mi:,s Do_n o- tery _there.

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WOMAN KILLED Bf (AR
op·ED ,.TED BY DAUGDTER
llli
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'.JAMES F. FARNHAM DIES
!! IN- SPRINGFIELD HOSPIT ALI

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Had Been Head of Northampton ;
Confectionery Company
Since 1924
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Marginal note: Died
Ja mes Full er Farnh a m, siur ,,
- 192 4 president and trea surer of •-March 16, 1932
! he Northampton
Confection er y
}
compa ny , di ed in ,vesson Memori- - - - ---- ~ ~_ALL13 2. a l hospital , Springfi eld , at ,l ' -- ---o'clock yes terday afternoon . 1lr .
Farnh a m first came to t his city ,n
1 916 as manager of the Nor th- , ---- -- - - - .am11ton branch of the Willi am lit.
Flanders co mpany, whol esal e g 1,1•
cers. He remained with that firm
1 un til
the North a mpton bran ch
1
was closed. He bought th e confec• 11
I ti onery de1)artmen t of the Flanders business and on Oct . 1:l, ----- - -19 2 4, he esta blished the Northamp tou Confectionery company, of
- - - - -- ----,- - -- - - -- --- - - --- -Which he had since bee n the head.
He was born iu· Cambridge, th e
: on of George Y. and Isabella
----- _____ Fa rnha m. Mr. Farnham atten ded
' th e Cambridge public schools and
1a commercial college in Boston. He
_,
i had always been identified with
the wholesale grocery business.
When 19 years old he went into
the office of M. S. Ayer and company, wholesale grocers, and later
1
traveled on the road for that con- ·
cern.
He later traveled fol' the wholesale grocer y firm ·of Martin S.
Hall an d Co., for several years,
__ his territory being New-- Hampshire and part of Massachusetts,
Previous t o becoming manager of
their
Northa mJJton branch in

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· 1916, -?.fr. F arnham tra-v·eled for
the -FJanders concern fo r several
ey.ears.
, •·
Farnh~W "\\';as ~ ,embet of
Mizpah Lodge :of liM a!~~Qt'i' Cam-•
_ _ _ bridge; · of 1-f~rt~am.~:u;,.,~Hapter..c'- - -- - - 1- Royal Arch l~asqns;{-'._df William
P'a rsons Counq\I; I 'of No;rtha1µpton
Commandery, Kn ights · Templar ;
- - -- - - - - - or" M:elha Temple: o(_- tu_e Mystic - - -- - - Shrin e of Spriugfie1d; { of. the
Northampton ~o dge /JJ J)}) .ks; and
--- - ·the Northampton Ghan.1bei::-of'Co m· - - - - - - -merce.
He leaves one sister, l\Irs. E. S.
- ------Bristol of 264 Bay State r oad, in
·--- -- - · Boston.
Th e f uneral will be he ld in th e
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Newell funeral hom e, 7 4 Klug , ---- -- street, at 2.30 o'clock Friday af- ,
ternoo n. Rev. Dr. Clemen t El.
--....__
Holmes, pas tor o! the Had ley)
Cong rega tional church, will offic[- ate. The committal services will
be held i n tli;e Cambridge -ceme.'· - ter y, -Cambridge;· at 2 ·o'c!'ock Sa:t'- --urday afte rn oon.
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", GREEN·FiELD GIRL GREENFIELD GIR~ \ FATALLY INJURED KILLED IN CRASH

Marginal note:
August 27, 1931

1· -AS AUTOS CRASH NEAR FALMOUTH

\Alice Seller, 16, Killed m M~ss Alice Seller, 16, Fatally -Three-Car Accident on Injured; Sister Taken to
·cape ,Cod· Sister A~ong
Cape Cod Hospital;
Six Persons Hurt ,
,
Four Others Hurt.

Falmouth, Au g . 27- (AP ) -O ne \
FALMOUTH, Aug. 2-7-(AP) One
·young woma.n was killed a nd s ix oLh er , young woman was kitled and etx
' persons were injured toni,;;ht in an ftCother persons were injured tonight -In
- cident .on the F a lmouth-Woods Hol e
an accident on the F a lmouth-Woodahighway 'in which thr ee automobil es
Hole highway In which three autowere involved . .
mobile s were involved:
&lt;Miss Alice Seller of Greenfield was
Miss Alice Seller of Greenfield waa.
injured fatally in a headon collision in
injured fa.tally - in a headon -cotl!slon wbic·h five persons were _hurt, and an
in which five persons were hurt, ancl
infant was hurt when a third car, in
; attempting to a.void the wreck ed maa baby was hµrt when ' a third car,
In attempting to avoid the wrecked _ _ _ _ _ __
chines, swerved off the highway into
a bank.
machines, s\'(.erved off th e highway
Miss S eller was ridil}g in a ca r
into a bank.
driven by Miss Cl a r ice .P a lmer of
Miss Seller was ' riding In a , car
Brookline, which collided with a madriven by Miss Clarice P a lmer ot - - -- - - -- chine driven bY V . W. H owe of Ga rd Brookline, which co-lllded with · a man er. Miss Palmer and :two other comchine driven by v : W. Howe of Gardpa nions , Jan e S ell er of Greenfield and
ner.
Mis s Palmer and two other
companions, J a ne Selle r of Greenfield _______ _
Ruth Stuart of N orth A t tl eb oro, and
Howe's p a rents, :Mr a nd M r s Henry E .
and Ruth S t uart of North Attleboro
Howe of Ga rdn er, a ll w ere ta k en t o
and Howe's pa rent's , · Mr. and Mr,.,
the Cape Cod h ospital a t H ya nn is.
H e nry E. Howe of Ga rdn er, all were _
Arthur
Oliv er, 22 months ol d-, of
t a k e n to th e Cape Cod Hospital' tn
' N e w Bedfor d, was hur t s er iousl y in
H yann is.
t he ensu ing wreck . o.f a car driven 1
Art hu r Oliv er, 22 months old, of
b y Manuel Pacheco of '.l.' ea t icket.
" N ew B edford, was hurt s eriously In
th e ens uing wreck of a car driven by
Gre enfield, A u g . 27-M iss Alice SelMa nuel P acheco . or T eati ck e t.
l er, of t h is t ow n, repor ted t o h ave d ie d
as t h e r es ul t of an a u tom obile acci d ent b etw een Woods Hole and F a lm outh la t e t h is after noon , wa s · t h e
you ngest da u g·hter of Mr a nd Mrs J.
G REENFIE L D, A ug. 27 - Alice
T . Selle r of 171 Hig h s treet . H er faS ell er, 16, who wa.s k illed in an a ccit h er is the m a n ager of t h e W eldon
den t n ear \ Voods Hol e t oda.y, was the
hotel h ere. She was b orn in Green you ngest dau gh ter of J . T ennyson
fi eld an d was 16. S h e a tt ended th e
Se ller, for m a ny years m anager o! - - - _
public sch ools here, a private school
H ote l W eldon in this city. H er s ister
at D eer field and h ad been a stud ent
Jan e, a few years older, w h o wa s a ls o
· a t th e Ma ry Wheeler s chool at Prov iInjured, wi ll recover , it Is expected.
d ence, R. I. , d uring the past y ear .
Mr, Seller left t oni g ht at 7.30 o'clor.k - S h e l eaves two s is ters, Virginia a nd
for the scen e of th e acciden t. HAs
Jane, ancl one hrother, Wells .
Mr
fa m!I Y had b een s p end in g the sum Seller left earl y this
e venin g Co:·
m e r on th e Ca pe In Me nha nt, three
Vi'oods Hole.
miles from F a lmou th Ri g h t s.
Ali ce Seller r eceived h er ea rl y edU•
cation In the pu):)lic schools of G r ee n fi eld, and wo uld h ave begu n her sec on d year , t hi s fall in the Mary
W h ee ler S chool In P rovi den ce, fron-i
which J ane was grad ua t ed last June.
B esides her paren ts a n d her sist er
Jane, s h e leaves a second sister, Virgin ia, and a bro t her, W ells .

Youngest Daughter
or Hotel Manager.

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SERVICES AT FALMOUTH
FOR MISS PALMER MON DAY,,

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FALMOUTH, _lA'ug 29-Funera l sei;v ices will be held Monday noon · fo=
Miss Clarice . Palmer, . who died Fri•
&lt;1ay ,night at Cape Cod Hospital, Hyan~
111 s of injuries received in an auto, mobile accident Thursday night on ,
the Woods Hole .state· ltjghway.
The · ser vices will be • at the Summer
hcime of her father/ Du.d ley B . Palmer,
----- -Belvidere Plains. Rev Leslie F. Wallace will officiate and burial will t-e
at Swan's Point Cemetery, Providence.
'
Miss Palmer, born Oc1 18, 1913, was
the d·aughter of Mr Pl!mer and the
late Clara Wightman Palmer, and · a
g r andd.a ug hter of Mr and Mrs George'·
Wightman. of ,Brookline. She attend·ed
Beaver Country D.ay School an(\ was
a member · of the sophomore class at
Vassar. Besides her father, a sister,·
Miss Elizabeth Palmer, a.n d a younge~
brother, Dudley Plllmer ,. Jr, survive ··
her.
Miss Palmer· was 11. pas senger In a
ca r . driven by Miss Alice Sellers,
daughter of Mr a nd Mrs J. Tennysc,n
-------·
SeHers of G'.re enfield with : ~1:iss Jane
1$~!1'/rs and Mi ss _Ruth . St~art of North
Att leboro. The car was m a hea d-on ,

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colliHsion
· one lie'Jon
g_lng Alice
to_ H enl'y
owe·with
of Gardner.
· Miss
SeJ- ·/'- - -- - - - - -l &lt;!1'S died within a few . h ours and the · .
oth er two ...girls ·are s till in a serious
oondition witlr spi,naJ'•injur ies. .
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W or thington,' Aut-. 28-Mrs George _ _ _ _ _
, Dodge ha,s returned to her home at
R in g ville a fter three weeks in the
H ouse or Mer cy at Pittsfield, where L________ _
- .she ti'ririer went a'ri . operat.lon.
Mrs M . F. P a ckard a nd two children,
P h ylHs and Cullen are visiting· at Con- '
way.
Mr a n d Mrs H. S.· Cole a•nd son_,
Wal do·, a re mo torin ,:- t hrou g h Vermont
and New H a mpshfr.e.
· ' ,
Mills Ma r ion L. Bartle t t ario Guy F . · - -- - - - Bart lett w !ll a ttend · the fun eral s erv
~ices or t h.ei r cousin, Miss Allee ~ lier,
who was kllled in a hea d -on col lis ion
- - -at Falmouth: · The r.u ne ral will b e h eld - - - - - - --- -.at Greenfield Saturday a(t ernoon .

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At Judge Henry P. Field's Funeral

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NORTHAMPTON, Oct. 3-The casket of Judge Henry P. Field being placed in the hearse for the trip
to Wildwood Cemetery, Amherst, is shown in the pie ture, with .a group of honorary bearers a t the left.
At the extreme left is President Stanley King of Amherst College. At his left is George P. Hyde, treasurer of Smith College; Joseph L. Harrison, librarian of Forbes Library and Atty. Walter L. ·Stevens
of this city. Standing behind )\fr, Hyde when the picture was taken, was Congressman Allan T. Tread. w;1

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MANY OFFICIALS
ATTENDFUNERAL
OF JUDGE FIELD

lq 11

llDWARDS'-In Wes tfi eld , the 6t h. Mrs.
M. Ge rtrud e E d wa r ds wido w o r Cha rl es
H. Ed wards, a t h er 'home. 21 Ches tn u t
S t. Funera l se r v ices will b• held at F lr tlon -Hollts tcr l"un e ra l H om e, 29 Sc hnol
St ., F ri da y nfte,rnoon a t 2 o. m . Buri a l
In \Yllll a tnsb u ri;. :M1tss.

'Services in Northampton Are

______ ,

Held in

- -- ----- - - -

Edwards

Churdf

··--------

NORTHAMPTON, Od. 3-Attencled
by educators, jurists, members of the
bar ~nd high state and local officials,
a simple funeral service for Judg·e
Henry- -P. l&lt;'leld, legal and political
counselor of...the late former President
Calvin Coolidge, was held in Edwards
Church this after~oon·.- Rev. Albert
J. Penner, pastor, •officiated, assisted
by Rev. C. E. Holmes pf Ha.ydenvllle.

Many Judges Present

- - -- - - - ------- -

- - -·-- -----

--- - -

Prominent members or the judl~iary,
Including
Superior
Court
Judges ·r _
1
-----George F.
Leary of Springfield, (
·--. ------ Thomas J. Hammond of this city ana I
William A. Burns of Pittsfield, Probate Justices Francis N. Tho'inpson of. ___ .
Gr eenfl,eld, John A. Denison of
emadow and Thomas Stapleton · of I
Spring·fleld, Judge Edward T. Esty of t
W o1cester arid District Court , ,Judges ·----·
John W . Ma son of Northampton and .
J ames Nolen of Ware were in attend- ;
a ~&amp;
I
Congressman. Allan T. Treadway, :
Frank Boyden, headmaster at Deer- 1
field Academy; E. C.0 Lin~oln,. Edwara \
Kronvall and Henry Vining, Spring- ;__
- ·---· field hankers, virtually the en'tire
m embe_rship qf the Hamp;ihlre County i
Bar Association, Amherst . College :
trustees and students, Northampton , - - --- - - - - - - - - CIVIC leaders including
Mayor Dµnn ,
and former Mayors Homer c. Bliss: ;
,vmiam H. Felker and Judge William
- - - - - M. Welch, were also present.
i~ - - - -

--

·-

-·

-·-

·------ --

- - --·----- - - - - - -

- ----- -- -

H.onorary Bearers

iHonorary bearers -..vere William A.
Neilson and Stanley King, presidents
·-- - --- ------------------- · ot Sm ith and Amherst Col\eges, respectl vely ; Judges · Rutus H . Cook !ind
Wa lter L . Steyens of Northampton, IL - - - - - ~ - - - - - - -- - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - J ohn Skinner, George P. Hyde, treas- I
·u rer of Smith College ; Joseph L. Harrison, librar ian a t Forbes Library, an(] I
P rof. Leland B. H all; James Turner o( 1-- - - - -- - - - - - - - - --1 Mon tclair, N. J., Judge James .' W. ,
R emick of W inchester, N. H ., Ernest ,
M.
Whitcomb
1,, _
_ _ __
_ _ __
_ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ __
of Amherst
. and F r ed S. Aills, both I~
- -I Active bearers, all members of Psi :
Upsilon traternlty at Amherst College,
of which J udge Field was a pr om inent /
member, were: John J eppson of If - - - -- -·
Worcester, R ichar d M. H owland of !
Kenn ebunkpor t, Me., J ohn B. P al mer j
of Par ma , Mich ., F . Sanderson Scha utfler of Na ntucket, Richard W. Poor ·
a nd Henry B. Poor, both of Passaic,
N. J., Robert T . J on es of W ebs ter
Groves, Mo., and W elles R. Wiley of I.I
----- -- - -- - ----.J Moorestown, N. J .
- ·
Members of the ch oir were Miss :
H elen M. J ohnson, Mrs. Charl es E . ·
kitreck, Roebrt Quirk and F ra ncis B.
--- ------- ---- ------- - - - - -Gustin. Thomas C. Auld was organist... Burial was In ·wndwood. Cem c- L
tery, Amh erst.
. ....

~--~ r

-

---- --------

-

--- -·---- --

-

-

.

�r'7
I
'a irectlon a nd the force ot t he impact
with the tree, _which was 2Q yards
off the road, t u rned t he car compl etely around.
Wilfred Joll y , who was killed was
\b orn in this town, Jul y 1893, and was·
,the son or Mrs Azelire Jolly.
He
/leaves besides h is mother, five sis ters, Mrs A n geline Charbonn eau, Mro
Anne tte P e r ry, Mrs Irene Cornellier
Miss Eva J oll y o r this town and Mr;
Anna Fleury of Springfie ld ; five
b ro ther s , Hector, N elson, Albe rt of
this t own, R ay m ond of F t E t h a n Allen , V t. , and J oseph of Worthington.
The f une ral arrangements will be
announ ced later.

WORTHINGTON MAN
KILLED WHEN CAR
SKIDS JNTO TREE
Wilfred Joliy Loses Life as
Machine Leaves Road at i
Huntington

I,

I-_

·1W0- BRPTlIERS

"HIS .BROTHER REPORTED
IN CRITICAL CONDITION

KILLED1N CRASH
IN,/ HUNTINGTON

Joseph Removed to Nob~e
Hospital 0;t Westfield- De~
tails of Mishap Are Lack~
ing, No Witnesses

Wilfred and Joseph Jolly Fa:
·"tally Hurt W_h en Car
Leaves R~ad and
Smashes Into Tree

Huntington, Dec. 16-0n e of th e
m ost serious automobil e acciden t s t o
occur [n t his town -ha,ppen ed on th e
Worthin ;;·ton road abo 1,1t fiv e miles
from t h e. cente r la t e this a fternoon.
Two b r others , Wilfred a nd Joseph
Joll y of Worthington, we re victim s.
Wilfred was a lm ost insta ntly kill ed
and Josepl1 wa s removed t o Noble
hospital a t Westfield wh ere hi s con-·
dltion was reported as critical la te
tonight.
J os e ph Jolly h as wMk ed for ,and
lived w ith Me rric k S1mt h o r Rm g vil le f or man y y ears , a nd his brother,
W!,red, h as bee n at t h e sam e place
sin ce sprin g, h elpin g th e m w ith t h e
farm work.
Mr
Smith
r ecently
bou ~h t t h e Ginnegan prope rt y on Pin e
' s t re~t. thi s tow n , whi ch he a nd Mr
a nd M rs J osep h .Joll y expect ed to
m ove in to soon . Th e J oll y brot h ers
h ad fin is hed r e no va tin g t he h o u se today a n d we r e r eturning h om e when
the a ccid ent occ ured.
D e tail s of t he c rash we re mi ss ing
as th e re were n o wi trl esses, bu t it
Is beli eved th e w hee ls or th e car
s t ruck an icy block at th e co r n er
near the born e o f Frank L. Ru nn ells,
w h ich ca used th e car t o skid and
· \crash into th e tree.
Jose ph s uffe red s evere la ce r" lion s
on the ri g ht sid e of th e race, and a
crushed c h est and should e r.
•
,.O u.a Dead: On o Uncon , &lt;'io us
T h e m en we r e disco ve red b y D,
Franci s A. Robin son o f W ort h in!rlon ,
I He notified Da nie! Gu yott e , wh o wa s
' wor king at a h o u se on Jn dia n Hollow road. H e n otifi ed S1a t e '.l.'roo pc rs
Edward Mi salek a nd Al'th ur B lo,•i&lt;e rs.
When th ey arrived th ey found Wil fred lying und er the r11nnin gbon l'd
o r t h e ca r, deat! . J ose ph , wh o ha d

HUNTI NGTO:.'&gt;I , D ec. 17-Two m emJers of one famil y, Wilfred .Jo lly, 43.
md his broth er , Joseph , 39, met dea t h
n an automobile, a ccident yesterday
-- tfternoon in which t he mach ine in r \'vhich they were riding struck a tree
·wilfred died in sta ntly, and Joseph
succu mbed early this morning -in
- Noble Hos p ital, Westfield.
The car occ upied by the J olly [
brothe rs, r eported by witn esses to
h a ve been tra ve ling at a ter rific rate
of sp eed, car een ed off the road after
r.:::s sing sever a l oth ers, and smas h ed into a tre e In th e W orthington Rd. 'fhe
broth ers were g oing to Wilfred's h om e
in vV ort hin g ton a f t e r a day 's w0rJ, at
th e h om e of Me rrick S mith . The a ut om obile h a d bel!,n loan ed by :VIr.

bee n d r i vi n g, (th e ca r w as r eg-iste r ed
1

in hi s
across
'l'h e
It ha d

n a m e) , wa s lyin g un con scio us
t h e f ront s cat or t h e sedan.
car was v irt ua ll y de m oli s hed
been goin g in a no r t h ea.sterly

1

~ n1i t h .

E x a m in ,ttion b y Dr. J ohn Huffmire,
m edi ca l ex a mine r , of W"il fred Jolly
s ho wed th a t dea th was ca used by a
frac t ure o f t h e sk u II.
The b roth ers lea ve their m other,
Mrs . A velia (Lafond) J olly Of Huntington ; f our broth ers , Raymond o f
Vermont, and Albert, N e lson and
Ch ester or Htm tin;;ton ., and fi ve sist er s, M rs. Angelina Ca rbonneau and
Mrs . Irene Corn c lli er of Huntington.
a nd Mrs. Anna Fleury of Springfield
a i,d Eva and A lice at home.

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                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook, 1931-1937, No.5. This is a speckled black and white book. Contains newspaper clippings from January through July 1931 providing a historical record of events in Worthington with numerous references to town residents and organizations. The scrapbook contains additional materials with an emphasis on obituaries from 1932 through 1937. The material has been processed through optical character recognition so it is text-searchable and has an interactive table of contents.</text>
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                    <text>�{)1098'

:Jlie

U/4-,.ft;:,-;J,iUH

-1Ji6lo,ical

Wortki111lon.,

Secnl'J, .Jnc,

'i.11.u:,,

01098

MISS ELSIE V. BARTLETT

ti

Worthington

Massachusetts

�1
; ;st.erd ay - ~ou , ~mn tion ed
summer as something w hich waE I
n ow on 01· rather already past. Aren' t
you a little mLxed In this ? Over in thi s
va lley anyway, we n eve r hea rd of I n ,'. ,
dian s umm er In Oc tob er .
"ln our ca'fen dai• it comes 111 N o - ,
lvem bcr , if it comes at all. H co m es
aCter there have been h ard fre ezes, 1
lon g after the· leaves have fallen ancl
well on towarcl Th~.nk s givl ng. Then,
,nrnny years, we h a ve - a fe w days,
so metlm eR a week, of mllcl w eath er
with h .izy afmosph er c anri a lm ost j
s ummer-lik e mildness. Tha t is wh a t
1f o!lrn on this side of the divide call
\ Indlo.n summer. Now h ow about g •

1 d1an

And speaking about neighbors; these
hills have the neigh't!orly spirit down I. ,,
to perfec;tlon . In fact, one can't leave
~be house these days without running I
into someone carrying a hot dish to
a sick friend. Indeed, the neighbors
• seem_ed so worried wh en I was trying ,
, to have the flu that I couldn't really
·
enjoy my sickness at all.
1

WORT HING TON

I

1
llfarch 9-The Loyal Ladies
will hold· a benefit . dance at the I
Lyceum hail on Friday evening
I
for Harold Pomeroy, who has
, b.een ill for some weeks at the
hospital in
Dickinson
C oolev
Bates' orchestra i.
North-am pton.
will play.
Mrs. L ew is Granger . of High- !
land street suffered a shock yes- [
'l- ,terday. She is being cared for by '1.;
~
,1\
• ':M)'s. James Knapp,
1
y Electric li ghts wei:e u sed in thir:
L:f-ee uril. hall for the first time last f
, -.,/
~ night. The work o! wiring the en- .
~
1
tire building has been complete_d .
•
will
club
The Grange whiEt
mee t W e dnesday eve ning at the :
home of Mrs. Guy F. Bartlett. .
Tb e " Joll y Five" will meet w1tl1 [
Mrs. Ernest G. Thaye r on Wed- "
· -------~
.:1._~J ft~e~r~n~o~o~n::.:..

\

..rJ

Iu-

l -."Now

· on my sche,~ule is a:t
The .next
· f air
Cumming ton whei-e I hope to finish
some O! th e argument s started a year
ago. That fair comes late this month.
aa d ir I am not mistaken it is about
th e la.st chance of the year .for con- 1
st ant readers -to enjoy a good old-time
cattle show and a real farm-cook ed 1
d inner, ~ved b~ the stout _!1!,.Q~ ot :
Cumming ton a nd Worthingt on and
Plainfield. If Roscoe ever gets that
1
spring dug, and if Charles Churchill
and the rest of the boys in the barber
shop can get e ~rny, there · will be '· 11, ,
whole carload of us going over.

,.,, . ·'fW0:1{THINGTON1fJl
·AnAN'Do ii°':iti'oiiE Iiun.Ns

/

I

Old '.l.'il so n Bartlett Hon se D estroyed
by Flro of U111letcrml11 cd Origin
\ Vorthi n•g tori, June 1-A fire of uni determin ed origin yesterday destroyed
the old T ilson Bartlett house now '
owned by Harris E . Collins of Springfi eld. 'Dhe h ouse, one of t he first to
be built in this town had been aban don-e&lt;l for over 15 years. It was ori
an unfrequen ted road, and as no one
li ved n ea.r the fire was· not discovered_ ;
un til the building was· practicall y de stroyed.
Illiss El s ie V. Bartlett is in N01·lh I
ampton w ith her cousin, Miss Bessie
Trow. Friends in t own will be glad ,
. to know Mrs 'l'ro w is \Jetter.
Mr and Mrs H e.rbert Tower and
daughters , Mr and Mrs R a lph K erley
an d Mr an d Mrs D esotel and son of
Springfield «pent th'e week end and
holiday at, the- Tower summer hom e.
, Mr and J).'(rs'. W a lter Tower are en' t ertainin g .Mrs' Tower's mother, Mrs
Harry Epqy , of Florence, and h er
uncle,Nor man N athan a nd Miss Agues
P endry of New York city.
1

I

I
I

·~ ~~l~hJ;g$1;1

DR. J. ft.. STEVENSON
DIES AT AGE OF 73 .

11,, -

•

I

Summe r Residen t of Worthington for Many Years

WORTHINGTON
FAIR NETS l!l:!21.18

I

Women 's Be.nevolen t S&lt;l'lilety or Co n•
gregatlona l Church S11onsors E,•1111t
Wo1·thingt on,, A\.i g. 19 - The Wom en·s Benevolen t society of t h e Firs t
congregat ional church helcl its annual
fair on the church co mmon yesterday
afternoon laking in a total of $221.18.
The receipts from t he various tables
were as follows: Food , $26.41; fancy
work, $46.00; ca ndy, $29.26; ice cream,
, $26 .05; fi s h pond, $25;
1 $2.66; aprons
j rumma:;-e, $4 .8 0 ; chine, $7.35; fl owers,
I

!

$1. 70.

.

" ·1th
sold
we r e
Handkerc hi e fs
chances 01t an e mbroid er ed sheet a nd
pail· of pll!ow ca ses bring in g $11.90.
the set going t o ;\1rs Edwa rd Jon es.
H olders were so ld with cha uce on a
quilt. netting $t 2.15, goin g t o )!rs
Frank Sexton. A g- if t of $1 5 was r ec;el ved from M rs George Miri ck of
Willlamsbu _i!·_

WORTHIN GTON, Aug. 15-The fun eral of Dr. J. Ross Stevenson , 73.
noted Presbyteri an Minister, was h eld
1
. Tuesday In the chapel of the s eminary
at Princeton, N. J ., with burial in
Princeton Cemetery.
Dr. Stevenson was tor m any y ears
a summer resident of this t own. He
was interested in all civic affairs anti
took an active Interest in the local
he
wh er e
Congregat ional Church
preach ed at least once in the s eason.
f
by
owned
now
one
the
His h ome was
1
Mrs. Irving Chapman . Dr. Stev enson
operated the · large farm and during
th e summer was often seen h elping
a nd directing the wo rk.
Besides bi s wife h e lee ves three
sons, William Edward, an attorn ey of
New York City; Donald Dey of the
r esearch de partment of Penn sy lva nia
State College and Dr. Th eoclorc
Dwight, a medi cal misslon~ry in Canton, China, and 6 gra nclch1ldren.

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, WORTHINGTON
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:, Worthington

Sites, Plans
M~t ~iA;~iioc~i~n"l~ Are Discussed

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FORi\lER RES (J) EN1• DEAD
llla m

Grau ~·er,

7;;, P as~es

A li·a i• /

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,., ~ W'IJ'·
Oct
' ol'thin°·ton
;~~~
or New Can;,~n~
ngel',
·ly of ·worthi ng- ton, di ed last ni~h t
a N ew, Canaan hospital. He ;as
n at "\ . orth ,ngton and l i,·ed here
1
1 he m oved to New Canaan 1·• I
n, _a~·o. He was a merubet· of n~; :
·th in gtn n Co n.~ Tegational c hul'ch
sang in t he c boir many years.
11 t l'it1w

Cn naau, Ct

75,

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The auxiliary class taught by Mrs
A g nes C, Reavey at the old Worthin gton -street s c hool w ill be tra n s r 0ra nge1· lea ,·cs a so n, C harl e.~
School,
ferred Monday to th e Armor'.\,--s t rnet
nnn.~•fl e ld. and seve ,·al n ephe w.,
,
yeste1·day.
, s c hool, it was lea rned
111ece.s. T h e funemJ will be held
Committe e ID
I Supt ,John M, Granl'Ud or the school
t he 1'' otth ington Co ngregatio na l
,
d e partment conflnn ed the r eports las t ·\
eets ·c h 8at urd a.v afte rnoon at ~W orth1ngto n
ni g ht .. hut &lt;' Xpla incd tha_t . this tmns! er dtd n nt m ean _ the school wou ld j WOR THINGTON, F eb. 23.-The
__ _ __.
be closed until the e nd of the school , Building Committee, composed of _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Co ~ mi ttee, the thre e
School
e
h
t
,
·
Ye;tr late ,· this mon t h.
d H a rry L Bates
voted 1,
The sc hool boal'd May 28
•
·
.
th at. the \ Vorthin gton-stree t and Dry- Se lectm e n, ~n
1"?v.;J
e t he new
investigat
bricl ge s chools shoulcl be c losed at l 11am ed to
th e end o_f th e yc-ar. The Worthington- 1 \ c h ool house proposal, h e ld its fi rst Mrs Harry L. Bates Dies
street. s tructure is one of the o_ldes t meeti n g Mon day n ig ht.
L.
The r t h ln gton , A u g. 6~:\frs Har ry
All m e m be r s were p resent.
n ow Ill use rn _t he loca l ed_u cat1on!l1
t
· d
. .
.
, w idely -known t h rougho ut _ th is
s ys t em . R edraw m g schoo l li nes w ill 1
ou as
s en c! ~o m,-, of t he pupils to th e Armory - organ1 za t10n . was carn e
n as pianist of Bates's orchestra, I
street school and oth ers t o the Tap- /fo ll ows: C h airm a n , A rthur G. Ca- y esterday a fte rnoon after a long
l lcy -st,·~et school, it is under stood. ' 'i pe n ; se cretary, F red G . ~ears _Jr. s. Born, Harri e t Granger, she
/ This was fo llowed by !t _discussion Jo n g- a resicl e n t h ere, and was
-- plan s, sites, a nd er chap lai n of t h e Loya l Ladies. I
, of arcitects,
a
meth ods of procedure. T h e next e,s h e r h usband, s h e leaves ;
er, Orrin Granger, Pittsfielcl
meeti n g of t h e comm ittee w ill be sters, l'llrs M arion Granger :Mer I h e ld Mo n day ni g ht the 28th.
prlngfield, and :\[rs Vera Grange r
,(
sh, t his t own; a lso s.e ve rn l nieces
and n eph ews. Th e funera l will be ln
t r. e Con g reg;ational church, at 4 l\I onda y, R ev J. H erbert Owen, offic iati ng ,
ctn d bu r ia l will be in ~forth cem etery.

Jd
Bui ing

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President of Teachers Club
...,-., ·~
Wh~ch Is Sponsoring Lec"ture '

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MISS MARION BARTLETT

Is pr~side~t of the Springfield Teachr rs' Club under wh~se.· auspices

an illustrated lecture on "Fiji1and Its People," will be given in Classical High School tomorrow evening by Dr. 'Albert C. Smith, noted
bo'tanist and associate curator of the New York Botanical Garden.
Tickets niay be obtained from club councillors or .at the door.' The lecture, which will begin at .8 o'clock, will be. open to the public.
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1l'lIE .SPRINGFIELD

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UNfciN, .:~T{INGF~D•. ~ . ,i

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�Rut h Eva ns Ei :te~ Vice· \
President of Physical Edu .cation A~soci~tic;m 1
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TO ADDRESS B. P. W.

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ELECTED

J\IR S. AGi'.E S L. REAv i;;y
WE ST!.i'I ELD, N o v. 1 4- T h e
Bu s in f'ss a nd Pro t'css io n a l , ¥ om e n 's C: Iu b w ill h o ld a suppe r m eet in g- M ond a y ni g ht \\"h en M rs . A gn es R eavey , ca n d idat -e- f or Co n g ress a. f e w yea rs ago.., in Spring -..:.
fi eld, \\"ill speak on " Wom &lt;c n in
G ove rn m ent." Th e educa ti ona l
and r esearc h c ommi ttee, of wh ic h
M iss Anna K e nn edy is th e c h a irman , will hav e c h a rge . A r c,gula r
meeti ng will f ollo w th e c hicke npi e s u PP er in Stra thmo rc Inn
W orono co. M iss A li ce Avery ha~
c h a rge o f r esEl_r v ations .
-

MISS RlJTH · EVAN S

WOR,THINGTON

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WORTHINGTON

CHUR,l)H MEE ETIN G HE.LD
Cong regati onal Paris h Elect s Officers
and Comm ittees 14-.et.
W o rthin g ton, July 9-Th er\! was a

PROGRAMS ANNOUNCED
AT HAY HOE MYSIC HALL

good attend ance at t he annua l m eetin g .of th e Fi,-st Cong regati onal churc h,
Satu,- day nig h t.
The fo llowin g offi cers w e r e e lect ed ;
Mode rator,
.Ta m es H . Burc k es; d eacon , M e rwinRev
F.
P acka !'d ; truste e&gt;s, • Me ,-win F. P acka rd and Mr.~ F. H . Burr ; clerk, Arthu
G . Capen ; tl'cas ure r, Mrs H erber t G.r
Porte,- : t reasu rer ol' b e n evole n ces.
Mi's Ebe n L . :,; haw ; s upe rinte n dent of
c h 1.1 ,-c h s c h ool. Mrs Ern ~st G . Thaye r
;
~ di.1:?r , R ev ,J a m es H . Burc kes ; nom
" Po mm1t tee, M,·s C. B y ron~
·,. 'I e t t an~ s-

Wort hin g·ton, Jul y 20 7~Fo llowi ng
are t h e Progra ms for the seaso n a
t
Ho e Music h a ll at Sou t h W~rt h 0
on
condu cted
l\'["
Tutt le of N e w y k b ·ty
ISS
Jane
rield Satu ii
or c t Y and Sprin
gL en~
r ay, du et recita l by Miss
.
Lacon t1 a nd Miss Marth a R e·
1
Jones of Sprin ~fie ld · 30th
&lt;
•
cital by Miss E
'
rea nd J
- v e 1yn Lloyd, , song
sopra
no
"C
os~ph Lutz, bass.
Augu
6•
th ~rmen t h e story will be told sta nd
Co~leopera sun~: by Miss M arjori
e
~ ·- Pl:
ot W es_tt_ie ld ; Augu st 13, talk
~rln gfi~ l~Y Miss Louis e Mace of the
a 1~ M " e
R e publi can ; song r ecita l
puY
iss Ma r g·a1•et Thom pson . Augu
st
~~g rec ital "Th e P e rsian ' Garde n"
uo
a L e hma n sung by n qu artet : .ugus t 27 ope1·a scen es.

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SJattst&gt; M 6t&gt;+At&gt;~

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·o:&gt; 3~n11N~n:J
l08 V: &gt;
~ ajiu~1.px3: 88Z

33d0:&gt;IH:&gt;
,
$J8'-iSI:.&gt;

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Worthing...,ton
MRS . PEASE DIES
~ AT RINGVILLE
1

WOR THIN GTON , Sept. 23.-M rs.
Effie M . Pease , 69, wife of Edwin
Pease , died at 6 o'clock this morning at her home in Ringv ille after
an Ulnes s of a month . She was
.
. town and had alway s
born in thlS
.
lived here. She has been ac~1ve in
the Wom en's Benev olent societ y of
the cang regati onal Churc h.
Besid es her husba nd . she lewav~th~
th B Pease of
o1
son, Kenn e br~th ers, Alvin
Pease
m gton , two
. Pease of Bingof Westf ield, Loms . t
?-,1rs Lucy
N
er,
·.
ham t on, · Y .; athSISNew
Berlm , N.
DeFo rest of sou
d Louis HigY . Her first husba n ,
gi11S, &lt;iied 35 years ago. held at the
The f unera l will be t 2 o'c1ock
a
home F 11··cta y afternHoon
·bert Owen of
with the Rev. _J . al e~hur ch officithe congr e~at1onll be in Ringville
a.ting . Buria l WI
eeme ter Y-

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.l\la -::hlnlst" on ce ·
- Th e "A,r. i::r ica•·111n ;Vashin
gton :ie is I
w rote of
I1kn
own aJ \ '.'&lt;J "s, t ll &lt;' _,zllge mp.n ; in the I
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f IONEER MAKER

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.\ m~rl ca ,:. Socl e l y of Mechanic al En-

;:: inec r , a.1 \:Vcl!s, t he sc re w threa d •
ma n ; i,: lh e. .'&lt;ew Englan d H otel !

OF TOOLS _DI~S .
IN··GREENFIELDI

J\Jc11's ,, S.'O~ ,ac, on, a s ·w ells, th e h ote l
' m an , :i n d ;, ino ng agri culturists as
W ell ~. th e far m er ."
I On J\l arc h 10. 1880, h e married Ali ce
! L . Gra ves of What ely, wh o di cci D ec.
31, 18 ~1. He later m arried Caroly n
Du tton of R ando lph. Vt. H e leav es
his wi fe an d a ,Jau g h te r hy hi s f ir 8t
ma rria£:c. Mrs. D orot hy Virgin ia Seller, wife of J . T e nn yson Selle r, and
three g ra nd{' hild ren .
Fun era l · .~ er vi ccs w ill he h eld Tu ell day aft e rn oo n a t 2 p. 111. in the chapel at Green River Ce met e r y with
R ev. or. Ar thur P . Pratt of the Sec ond Congrega tional Churc h offi ciating.
Burial will be at that e~ m etery. Th e
e11tir e Gre e nfie ld Tap &amp; Die Corporation will c lose a t th e tim e of th e service in r es pe ct to its foun de rs.

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Frank 0. Wells Domin ant in
Organi zation of Tap and
i
Die, Was First Head
of Concer n / f JA.,, i

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GREENl nELD, June 23- Frank O.
Wells, 80, pion eer small tools · manu- ·
facture1: who was responsib le for the
organizat ion of the Greenfiel d Tap" &amp;
Die Corpora tion, &lt;.li ed at his home at I
9 Grinnell St. this afternoon at 2.1 5 '
after four months of failing health I
whic h followed a fall on the ice this f
·
past winter.
Descenda nt of a famed old colonial
family, Mr. W ells, with h is brother,
Freder-ick E. W e.Ha, founded the tirm
· ot Wells Brothers which m erged In
1912 -w ith the Wiley· &amp; Russell Manufacturing Company to f o rm the
Greenfiel d Tap &amp; Die Corporati on
largest manufact uring concern !~
Franklin County.
Native of Shelburne Falls
He was born at Shelburn e Falls
Jan. 5, 1855, the son of Elisha and
l,Lucina (Lilley) Wells and as a youth
1c" isplayed great interest in mechanic s.
His father became associated early In
the tap and di e trade in · Greenfield , !
being one of the first salesmen for '
Wiley &amp; Russell. and Frank. O. Wells
began work at that concern after his 1
education In the public schools and at ,
)
Petersham 'Academy:
Arter serving an ·apprentic eship, he 1
left the parent firm of Wiley &amp; Rus- 1 ,
sell when 21 years old- and joined his 1
fatl)er and brother Frederick E. In oi-- !
gan!zlng the firm of Wells Brothers .
with a capital of about $1000. Among f
their products was an improved form I
of die which soon developed into the 1
presen~ form , of the "Little Giant" die, i
an Innovatio n In the screw cutting ,
tool Industry which carried the name '
of th~ company througho ut ·the world. ~
Mr.. Wells ·In 1912 , was ,the dominant .
"figure in the organizat ion of the i.
Gre6llffel d Tap &amp; Die Corporati on, a I
{'Qpsolidatlon of Wells Brothers and '.
Wiley &amp; Russell and he seryed as the f
new concern's president until ..his re- :
i
tlrement lri 1919,
His Imprint has been left on this 1
forms.
Indelible
town· In many other
1
The Weldon Hotel, one of the state's
most famous , hostelries , was . built at I
his &lt;Nrectlon in 190ii and he was pres- '
!dent and a prime · niciver In · the affairs · of the .Franklin County Agr!- I
cultural Society for years. The archway over_the entrance to the socie~y'11 1
talrgrouni:11r was built at bis qwii ex- I
. . ·
.
l)'eQse,
Mr... W~lls was a member of the
al EngiMechanic
of
.American 'Society
neers.;- the .Greenfiel d CI u b; the
GreeJlfieid_ Cemetery , Associatio n, ot
which. he was president at ..the time
o! his· death; the . Grl!,nlte. State Mowing Machine . Company of Hinsdale
N. · H :; prealdeilt of the Green Rive;
Cemetery · member of the HardwaTe
Club of New York and or the Second
congrega tional Qhurch of Greenfield.
His · h~bbie; were ga_rdening, walking, ·l!
J!:.Olf ..l!.ngJ:e~!JiS.

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t~s. ._:WELLS.·-·1.91()
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DIES AT·HOMEI:

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-~ / rq~nufa cturer's Widow Was i
/
; _,;~ .· Springfield T e·acher
.G.:REEN FIELD, ,\pr il 11
Cftbl!ne (Dutton) W ells, 82,
n~-~ Greenfi eld woman and
Springfiel d school principal,

Mrs . I
promif ormer
di ecl at
-

h ~r:-:-home at 9 Grinnell Street t onig ht
She was
the widow of the late F. O, Wells who
di et'l=-.J'.une 2·3, •1935:
f\ .. S_prlngfi!'ld P1·ioclpnl .. ,, :
~ s . ..,Velis was born in ' Randolph ,/
,Vt,;:,;:J n 1857, graduatin g from the RandoJ-i;ih Stat e Normal School .in 1873.
S~(!,l'tly a ft erward she w ent ,to Spring J
fl.~lil, where for many years she was '
PEf:!\c ipal of the Sch ool Stt·ce't' school.I
Ofi:/J uly 12, 1893, eh e married F. O.
~ i!s , pion eer tools manufact urer, and 1
h jf.~mad e her home in Grinnell Street
1
· fqf:-'.t ho last 47 yea rs.
I rJfts , Wells a t_tcnded the Second ',Con- 1
g r.e1fatlona l Church and spent rriuch
tlf j!' In cha rity work. She leaves a 1
S'if.;l!l- cl;iught er, Mrs. Dorothy· (Wells)
S~ l.¢ r or Greenfield , artd a brother
• At ~u r C. Lutto11 of Spr!ns·fl eld. · · ',
:f!ivate sen-ices, to be attend ed only '
b~b t he Immediat e ' famil y, will take
Pl,¥5.e at th ~ home $alurday iittcrnoon .,
A§\i:!lngem cnts have not been com,,
P(?'f~ d. ____ _
a~w , a . fo~r ·week~' illn ess.

�INNKEEPER DIES

Worthington .n ltv-Jl

eterans Are f r it

Given Buttons
M ay or Co wi ng
Sp ea ke r at
Ar ca nu m Ce re mo ny .

C. M: BR EW STE Rrg Hot el
sbu
~·o prie tor of Wil liam
Suc cum bs

Williamsburg

:C. M. BREWSTER
,'l'/~1F:S SUDDENLY/

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Williamsburg Innkeeper
'
eran in Bu sin ess

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W I LL I AM S Bws
ter, pro prie tor of
Cha rles Mil ton Brese
· In Main Stre et , ·
' the Wil liam s I;Ious udd
y this morn'die d in his home ln enl
Wo rthi ngt on on
in g. He was bor n ot Milt
.on a nd Eliza
F eb. 27, 186 5, son
Brews ter.
ge
·n riv er of Sta
sch ools 1n 1 •
R e a tten ded the pub lic
stag e to/
the
ve
dro
and
n
tha t tow
. ag/l or 23 he
W lll iam sbu rg, At the
a Hig gi ns of
ma rrie d Mis s Ann In
Jul y, 1no . He
Che ster fiel d, who died
n, wh ere for
gtc
mln
Cum
Jn
ved
li
firs t
ve stag·e to W ils eve n yea rs he dro t he trai n eac h
liam sbu rg, goi ng on, and par t of th!lt
day to Nor tha mp ton pro pr ieto r ot the
tim e h tl a lso was
· Cum min gto n Inn .
•wi th Wil liam
In 189 7, Jn com pan y tbe
Wil liam s
Ba r tlet t, he bou ght
th e excP.ptl on of
Hou se her e and , wit hpro
pri eto r of the
abo u t one yea r as s hor t tim e at th e
a
tel,
Ho
cld
ll
rth
l No way Ho tel a nd a fe w yea rs in
' Con
ked In t)le
We stll eld wh ore he d wor
n proprietor
bee
ha
he
,
nn
I
Mo ha wk
wh ich lie co ne,
ous
H
ms
lia
Wil
he
t
or
t he ear ly lOOO's
side red his hom e. I ntrol
ly car s to thi~
afte r the com ing of did a flou rish ing
town , Mr. Bre wst ersme n goi ng· to t he
bus Jnc, s, as all sale ir hea dqu arte rs
the
hill t own s mad e hor
ses ln his ba rn
her e, an d th e 23
. H e bou ght th e ,
use
t
stan
wer e Jn con
mob i le pur cha sed ln this
secon d auto
town, a stro me r.
ma r ri ed t o Mrs .
In 192 7 li e was W
orth ing ton an d
of
Ma ry I. Set ton he
11 . Re also
rvlve
u
s
s
d
an
eld,
We stfi
the r- In -law, Leo n H igg ins '
leav es a bro
of Bridge wat er.
fu ca l] at t tie Ahe arnnoo
I F 1·iends ma yNor
n
n u ntil
pto
m
ha
t
in
e
hom
l
n era
be held from
, Friday . The f un era lm.will Hev. N ed B.
th e hot el a t 2 p.
he Con gre gaMc Ken n y, Pas tor illotoffit cia te. Bu rial
w
,
rch
Chu
al
tion
Ceme tery .
· wlll be In Vlll ag-c Hill

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rci:! 2.WO RT HIN GT ON , Ma
twe nty -fiv 4d
dre
hun
one
out
Ab
Ha ll Sat ur•
gat her ed at the Tow n
era ns of thd
vet
or
~on
to
ht
nig
day
Gra nd Ora tor'
Roy al Arc anu m.
, ma yor o.l.
ing
Cow
.
H
nd
; Ray mo
ake r and pre spe
, We stfi eld , wa s the
s to the foI sen ted vet era ns' but ton ord er fo!'
/·, low ing me mb ers of the
·
' 25 yea rs or mo re:
me nt F;•
Cle
es,
Bat
w.
nk
1 Fra
rr, .Ha rry I.c
! Bu rr; Fra nkl in ·H. Butt, Ge org e
rbe
Co
E.
es
Jam
1Ba tes
an, . Wa lte? !
1Do dg ~. Fre d H. Fai rm
Kil bou rn,
A.
s
arle
Ch
.
s,
/L. Hig gin
rd N.
wa
Ho
ow;
ben
Lie
Mil o A.
Spe n•
,
rey
Mo
C.
J'n
nn\
' Ma son , De
se',
Pea
t
ren
Ba
.
E
h,
is
. Par
}cer .J r A. Sm it h, and Ch arle s 0,,
. W alte
Wil liam s.
Mr . Kil•
Cle me nt F. Bu rr an d e~s wheJI
,
mb
m~
er
art
1 b;o urn w ere ch org anized m 1899.,
s
/I the cou nci l wa-!
To Giv e Can cer Tal k
r Jr. wiJI
Mrs . He rbe rt G •. Po rte
aft ern oon
day
urs
Th
e
hom
her
n
, ope
of the
ing
t
ee
m
ch
r
Ma
the
for
at 2
P~
ry
Ma
Dr.
d.
l
Gui
p
Fel low shi
ill s pea k:
w
ld,
rfie
ste
Che
of
Sno ok,
on "Ca nce r Con tro J.•l
1 to the gro up
spe aki n g und er thai
is
Dr. Sno ok
nd ow ing to
dire ctio n of the S tat e a t in the '
res
inte
ad
1 the wid e-s pre
me mb ers of th!l
Isub jec t the
iety , the
Wo me n's Ben evo len t Soc iety and
Soc
Wo me n's Mis sio nar y
inv ited . .
all oth ers inte res ted are

-r.

service ol
-T he reg ula -;;; ;;;s hlp
h Wal l
urc
Ch
al
tion
ega
Fir st Co ngr
of
ium
itor
aud
the
·
ln
hel d Sun day
all
sm
the
of
d
tea
ins
the cau rch .
•/ roo m.
bou rn lef t
-M rs. Ch arle s A. Kil Jn Boston,
y
' Mo nda y for a bri ef sta le Gra ngi ,
-W or thin gto n Juv eni ay. Mr s.
urd
me t in Lyc eum Ha ll Sat ins tall ed as
Wa l ter L . Hig gin s wa s r Ch arle s
ste
ma tro n by Pas t Ma ine
ss par t of
! Edd y. Aft er the bus
rig ht rea d ,i
W
id
Dav
g
etin
me
he
t
o Bil l and a
s hor t ske tch of Bu ffal r ge Wa sh•
Geo
of
life
the
on
talk
50 lan ter n
in g ton ill ust rate d by Art hur G.
by
n
ive
g
as
w
slid es
we re ser ved
Cap en. Ref r eshme nts
rge .
cha
n
i
o
te
mit
by t he com
ed of t~
-News has bee n rec e1v rge Jo •
Geo
' dea th rec ent ly ot M rs. Jos lyn hll l
s.
lyn in Spr ing fiel d. M r
nt in Worthide
res
r
me
um
s
·a
n
bee
1
rs •
/ ing ton fo r ma n y ye a
t h e Fre der lc~
of
rian
bra
li
The
.
Lib rar y re~
Sar gen t Hu ntin gto n
rua ry
for
onzin es.Feb
Dlc tur es,
1por ts t h e cir cul a tia,rn

f

. I

l
I

I

I
I
I

�death recently ot M T .S. ucv.q,-v--v ,.. - .-lyn in Springfield. Mrs. Joslyn hal
: been -a sun;uner re~~nt in wort.bl1 ington for many years.,
·
The
liqrarian
of
the
Frederic~
·
1
Sargent Huntington Library reports the circulation for February
f-,Hm•t ibeo~ mag~~~.P l~t~ .,-~ ~ -

1
~

, pamplil~ts; .~11,cl mµalc'r\O ~ ~13@~

·:!.Ju~~nile~ books

a~d nyig~~ 6~-~
a 4 tQtal of 279 :~1th- th,t- total 1at.. -.
j tend~nce for the month of 114. TJie
.;, library was open •32• hou·r s in~ the

:f

i mon.th.
I ;__Arthur Pomeroy has tapped h~

maple sugar trees .
. -John Otto of .Pittsfield is s~nd~
,ing a few· days· with his si~ter 8.!ld
niece, Mrs. Abbie e-C;; 0 ~ Hewitt and ...
.Miss Catherine "Hewitt; "at Clovetly
Cottage.
·· _ ·
- Mr. and Mrs . C. Byr on Smith ent~rt;ained ·over t h e week-end Mr ..,
1S m1th s mot her, Mrs. N ellie Smitl¼
at thei~ home in Rin gville.
-Miss Marion Bartlett, princi-

1

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pal of W orthington Street School
in S prin gfield, is at The S pruces
f or t h e ,veek.
- S tudent s attending h igh schools
are a t the ir home s for a week's
vacation · as follows : S p r in gfield
H igh, G eraldin e and E le anor Smit h,
Arlene Cole : H untin g t on High,
Donald and Walter Mollison, Phyllis1
and Ral ph Higgin s, D avid Wrig h t 1
Robert Laro, Adouilda Gagnon,
Dorothy Sande r son ; Nor t h ampton
High, Helen a nd Franklin Bartlett.
Anit a Raym ond ; Pittsfield High .

Rit a L efebvre; Smith's School,
Harold Brow n, Dorothy Tower and
Walter L . Higgins Jr.
- The Young People'.s Society.
·w ill m eet at the home of the presi ..
de n t , Miss H elen Bartlett, Friday
n ight at 8. Raymon d Magargal
will lead the discussion on "Forward
Togeth er" from Dauber's book "Re- .
building Rural America."
"

-·

-

�I

FREDERIC WELLS,

PIONEER INTOOL
INDUSTRY,DIES

1I Pre~l dent

I

, actin g a:i j
the town 's large r cont' Crns
or Gl•Od~ll -Pra tt Com pany

1

nd a lso or;;-antzin ~ 1
j for seve ral year 8 ahi
and I
the Gre':lnfl r icl Mac ne Com r.any

.
th e Auto ma tic i\Iac hi11c Com panyElcr- eld
At the Blart of t ne Gree nfipan
y, Mr.
tric L ight and Pow er Comnlze' rs anu
\Neil s was one of the orga . In .Jan was mad e a direc tor in 18S6
of th e
uary , 1896, he hcca me pr~s ident
e until
com pany and held I.hat offic
inlst raH•05. It was during h is adm
was
lion that paym e nt of divid ends was
l't•sl'l med and Gard n er Fa lls clam
cons truct ed.
ent
f&lt;'or ~·ear· s h e was a v lcc-p rc~id
tut io11. '
01' the [? r;rn klin 8.a,·in ~:s lnsti
\~la r as
H e serv ,,u rl urin g t he Worl d
ic serv - 1
publ
her
Ot
lor.
islra
min
a(l
, fuel
mod er- I
iC"es inrl1 1dC'rl the office o f lmyn

I

'

Beg an Career as Clerk at
$14 Mo nth ly ; Formed
Sev era l Manufacturing Corporations
or
G REE NFI ELD , F eb. 13- Ano ther
stry
Indu
tool
ll
sma
the
of
eers
thP pion
t he
in Gree nfield cliecl toda y with eric
deat h at 12.15 this noon ot Frcd
res~ St.
E:. Well s at his hom e in Con~th.
·
afte r two year s of failin g heal
the
1844.
5,
Born in Buci dand May
Li lley
son of Elis h a and L ucia na
typic al
Well s, he was P,ducat ed in a
work
"littl e r ed :,cho ol hous e." F'ainrm
t t.e lata n d assis tanc e to his fath er
his
ter's bla&lt; :ksm ith . shop follo wed Fall~
e
stud ies at the old Shel burn
h e wen t
Acad emy a nd a t the age of 18 er for
to Win dsor. \ ' t., as a book keep
a salLam son, Good now and Yale at s ia te·r
ary r,f $14 a mon th. Fou r year
ufac he joine d his fath er in the man a n d
Falls
e
burn
Shel
at
y
utler
c
of
ture
fat her
then f9rm erl n com pany wi th his

.. , .. .
haj
1he tool indu stry, how evtr, and
Well s To?!
been asso ciate •! with the
tly.
ecen
r
Com pany in Hope f;t. until man y or
He serv ed as an offic er in

I

I

ator

I

FRE DER IO E. WEL LS ,
conand Sam uel T. , F'leld for the
mill In
struc tion of the fln,t pape r
ai n.
Fra nklin Coun ty, locat ed in ,Colr
cam e
Follo wing the flood of 186~ h e
pct· for
to Gree nfld d as a bool&lt;kee
1874 h e
Wile y- Husr nll &amp; Co .. and In a cor o rgan,ized tha t com pany Into sure r.
1,Joration, beco mrng Its first trea
posi tion
'l'wo yea rs later h e ' left that brot her,
to join hill fath er and h is
e We lls
Fran k 0 . Well s, to fo rm th ed th e ,
l:)rot hers Com p:rny whic h e nter year s'
tap ancl die field . Afte r four
alletl, ;
loca tion at the Noy es' p lant, so-c-St. In'
Mill
to
tl
move
was
ness
th P. busi
e rson
; 1&gt;80. and to a new pla n t in Sand
,1 e sold
~l. in 1890. Ten year s later
F. E.
out his inte rest and start ed thele St.,
W ells &amp; Son Com pan y In Ridd hine
Mac
later .ab3o rbin g the Auto
e Con1Com pan y and the E. F. Hec,c to the
pan v a nd selli ng out in 1918 pora tion
(:;rce nfl eltl Tap &amp; Die Corlou~ ly by
whic h h a t! been form ed prcv
ll Com the merg er of the Wil ey-R usse
r,nny ancl Wel ls Brq! h e rs.

se,··... ral

~·ears, an

or~ ani1. rr n(

Repu b- 1
Lhe Gr eenfi eld Chib, m embe r of.
ason s anu a mem be r t
1 1ean ~o ge o
1of All 8oul s Chu rch.
tagn e
Mr. Well s was marr ied in Mon
to j\1iss Fran ces i\l.
I Apri l 13, 1875 erst,
who died seve n
Cow les of Amh
son, Fred
year s a g o. H e lea ves one had
li ved;
'\-Vard W ells with who m he
and a 'nicc .z. •,
, a,ne phew , F ra nk A. Yeaw
d. His
l'Hrs. J . T. S elle r, all of Gree nfiel
las t
1
broth er, Fran k O. ·well s, died
June .
rday I
Satu
cl
hel
be
will
ral
ru·ne
'rhe
i;rr es·s
at 2 at Mr. W ells' h ome in Con
le, pas St., with Rev. Robe rt J . .Raib rch , of1 tor of Ail Souls Un ita rian Chu
W e lls
I ficiat ing. Buri al will be int erthe
y.
lot at Gree n R iver Cem e

I

�_...........___ _ J

Does Such a Heavy Repair
Jo'b Road Sinks Into Water

1,-1/

I on Hig hChesterfield Us esr uc klo ad s of FiI
ht
way Which Drops 10 Fe et Out of Sig

0 feet of perf ect ly
CHESTERFIEI,, D, Nov . 10- Los t-40
lost, but mis laid not
er,
rath
good macadam high way ! Or
und er 10 feet of wat er.

ter ·
Th at 's t he probl e m fa cin g L esrinL eDu c, Ches t erfi e ld hig h ll'ay supe
aJ
h
as
h
e
h
t ende nt. F or sever a l da ys
h ea vy
t wo gas olin e s h ovels fillin g e ig ht 011 a
truck s wi t h grav el to dum p
t erstret ch of hig h way bet ween Ches 143.
oute
fieltl and Wil liam s b u rg on R work
men
It s udd enl y sank ben eath
it.
wh o w er e attem ptin g t o wid en

Wo rthing ton

Mr s.
W &lt;D RTI-I ING T ON, N ov. 7 - is tin g
ass
Dake of W est C umm in gto n fs r,
who is
in t h e r.are of Clem e n t F . Bur at the
se r ious ly ill fol!o win g a fall k li n H.
hom e ot' Mr. e. n d Mrs. F ran F eb. 22,
B urr. Mr. B u rr, who \\"iii be 91
is t h e old est r eside nt of th e t own.
th e
The follo win g is th e cast of
dma? "
t h ree-a ct com ed y, :Wh e r e' s Gran
:
15
Nov.
li
a
H
wn
o
T
to be gi v en at th e
ea nor
Oha r les Edd y, Davi d W r ig ht, ElPack - I
E dd y , Caro l y n P a ttiso n , Th e lma l\Ias on .
ard, Char les B a r t lett a n d J oycehing t he
Mrs. G eorge P ack a rd is coac of the
p la y w h ich is f or the ben efit
·Juve nile Gra n g e.
in
M rs . Alfre d Stev e n s is as.sis ting
who is
th e ca r e of Mrs. Hatt ie E ddy,Mr. a nd
se ri ously ' iii a t th e h om e of
Mrs. Walt er Towe r .

I

Still 10 Feet Under

een
l\Ir. L e Du c estim ates tha t betw fill
of
600 0 and 7000 cub ic yard s on top
a lrea dy have bee n du mped
n d the i
of t b e de parti ng t h orou gnfa re. a is 10 /
s urfac e of th e n ew fill hstill
ver rse
pe
fee t unde r wate r . Bu t wit
to
a n ce, eve n t ua ll y it will be f illed
y ards
th e s urfac e, h e .said. Abou t 1200
are being dump ed da ily.
oad
Th e pa rticu la r porti on of th e wror st
a lwa ys h as been on e of t h e h a d to
ve
spots th e. r oad -buil ders ha
ates
con ten d with . Mr. L eD uc estims unk
t hat at least $8 5, 00 0 h a s been h ighin t h e swa mp h ole s ince the
wa y was lai d. ou t in 1833.
mp
It was believ ed that t h e swa
Ch apter
had been fill ed, a n d r ecen t ly a iden
e
th
w
o
t
n
90 proje c t was begu
s ide
high way by f ill ing in on eith erren tl y /
t o exten d t lje sh ould ers . Appa on a
the ea rli er f ill mer ely fl oated
e~ tra /
- ~ of mu ck, a n d wh en _t h e
dded ,
a
~-as
I weig ht of the n ew fil i
nk as t J:i e
the wli olc rnad bega n to siuck
ma ny
fill s pread "' out in th e m
·
fe e t below .
Traffi c Reto urecl
bly
LeDu c stat ed t h e high wa y proba
at least
could not · be reope n ed fQr
being
t wo o r t h ree weelrn, traff ic
en
d et oured at prese nt by way of Gosh
or W estha mpto n.
t he
Getti n g the swam p fi ll ed in lIs
lis Is
pre.Ye n t p rol;,Je m, and after _ t_ in g
decid
-don e- t h e rn - wi ll be anot hernwh o will pay for t h e wor k. T h e Wide
proj in g- was begu n a s a ClrnO.ter h90
)f th e ,
ect in - whic h t he Sta te pays a on ecoH t,- a n d t he · t own and cou nty
go ing
is
ll"ork
quar1 ez•. ca ch. 1'bc cxtr!\
exces s
to bring t h e tot a l cos t fa r in t h er e
and
of th e orl;;in a l esti mat e,
ofwil l h av" t o be a co nfer e nce a mong
t cd g ovl'l:,s
fi cial.~ of t he :&lt;evnr a l Jn tc
the
ow
h
e
in
erm
t
ern me n ta l un) ts to de
ex t ra COli l w lll be ni ct,

i

Ha 11-H op kins ,1 3 ,1
B ri da l to Be
O n Sa tu rd ay

ICer emo ny Will Tak e Placa
in Hom e of Rev . Hen ry L.
Bailey of Lon gm~ado w

/

g h.
Miss A m y Gwe ndol yn H a ll, dau
Belf
o
,
inson
Dick
G.
F.
.
Mrs
t e r of
T ay lor
m ont A venu e and Sta nafo rth d Mrs.
H op kin s , Jr., son of Mr . an t, w ill
S . T . Ho pki ns of F lo r ida S tree r ro w
be · m a rri ed a t 10 o'c lock tomo
Linc oln
m o rn ing by Rev. H e n r y m ea dow.
Ba iley In h is h o me In LongHopk ins,
D.
Mr . a nd JVrrs . Ste pha n e
r ecepwill att e n rl th e c oup le a nd a est ead
ti on wi ll f oll ow in t h e Hom
t h ey
in Lud lo w. Aft e r a wedd ing t r ip,
F lorid a
wi ll mak e the ir h om e at 124 In St.
Stree t . Miss H a ll was born
ClasL ouis a nd was g radu ated fromns was
sica l Hi g h Sc h ool. Mr. Hop l&lt;i g rad ubo rn In New Or lea ns a n d was n Hig h
a t ed fr om th e ·war re n Eas to-oft own
Sch oo l. H e is a p rin te r . Ou t In clude
g u ests a t the wedrl ing wi ll
__S)f Pitts J \ ~ l M.ni.. _ ~P.......S..l:i.l.'..d d
of
ri c lri, - ~ - -~r ioJ . --crood~
. F. W .
H ayde n vill(i"a"nc[ - :-,l~
st
~

l

on:-------

�l
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!

Sunday the chocolate- colo-;:';;:tcar
a nd the fa mily slipped over the r ldi;te
to West Cummington to drop In on
Dr and Mrs Starkweather who were
eelebrntlng their golden wedding an You s ee, gentle readers,
ni v.ersary.
go l&lt;len weddings in Cummington are
li ke baby golf courses In a big city.
Some one starts the fad and then , al most before you know it, everyone is
copying the Idea. Last month Mr ana
~!rs Wa lter l&lt;'ord entertained. This
mon t h It was the old family doctor's
turn.
The little reception on Sunday wad
in many ways more Interes ting than
usual, for Dr Starkweather has been
a country doctor in Cummington, 0 1·
So,voy, for more than 10 years. He is
one ot' the fe w remaining old family
phyioians. For well on to half a cen tury he climbed the hills, waded snowdrltted roads, taced biting winds, aml
ans.wered midnight calls In Windsor,
Peru, Worthington, Sav oy and Cum -

I

I

mington.

If all the babies at whose births he
was present now lived In Cumming1ton, that village would have more
than double its presen t population, tor
the good doctor estimates he has assisted at between 1000 and 1200 · cases.
An'd as for other calls, or the num.be;.
or miles be has t raveled In caring for
t he sick, one hesitates to venture even
a guess.
Country doctors with their kindly 1
ways are fast disappearing- from rural
•N ew England, but in Dr Starkweathe, 1
one s t ill finds the type almost' in the
prime of lite. But he stands a lone, for '
.:in al! my hills I do not know of a nother, unless it be Dr MoUne of
Sunderland, who is known from OJJe
end of the valley to the other. The
younger generation s eems to ha vP.
fiiiled to produce real m en wil ling tn
face th e world of need and su ffering, ,.
in isola tion, and in humble ci rcum -f
stance, i,nd wltli:out p rospects of great (
' t111ancial rewards.
1
Five 'taugl1ters, all livi!\g and pres'
wedding,
en
gold
z·ents'
pa
their
ent at
and a host of friends a n d neighbora
from far and ilear to wish them success, marked the little ga thering on
Sunday. Thus we left them, bu t a s WI!
s low ly climbed the hill toward .Plainfield, near the spot wh ere long ago,
William Cullen Bryant paused to note
the passing waterfowl, there kept run1
, nlng t hrough our mind the qu i;A'tioi 1
,
life.
l
· or what constituted a successfu
And somehow or other, the good doc. tol', burled from the wori&lt;l dee p in
Hampshire's hills. wit h his twosco1·2
years ot service and his· count / friends, with li!s eplendid health and
his unbrok en family circle, seeme"d t e
fill the 1deflnlflon. In his own humble I
- wny he had kept' high the t radi tions
of an !llustr!ous commun ity and when
the real history ot Cumm ington ls
written his nam e will stand withou t
blemish near that of the great poet
under whose Influence he h as lived so

l

l

long.

We lo~t a noth el' fine . old n eighbor '
duz·ing the week, I refer to Byron
Hollis fr om u p in ,vindsor BuslJ. )fr
Hollis was almn,t 71 years o!d a nd
lived his en tire li(e in the h ouse in
whic h he was born, and , if I am not
mistak en, h is fathe r \\'as born &amp;.n&lt;l
died In th e sam e house, too. but. I
notice th at t he Hem lclltng of Mr H ollls 's dea th ~ays tha t his fathe r mover!
to tho place as a you ng man .
Mr Hollis 11as a fine exa mple o!
Fol' more t han a.
th e old sc hool.
quarter ot a century he ser \'ed as
sc hool com m ittee m ember, and it "·as
in this capacity t hat I came to kno w
him first. He was a good far me r a nd
lived in on e of th e mos t beautiful
spots In B erl,shi re count.y. From his
doo rya1·d one co uld look off to the I
south a nd to the west to e njoy the
wld e -Epreading hill s.
In spite. of t he fa ct th at .M,· H oll is /
s pent a ll of h,s days in Berkshire
county, h e n ever visited Peru l1il l until we drove up t her e toget her in Old
Tlme r in the s pring of 1923. Tllat
was a m emorab le trip for m or e reasons that one and I shall long recall
· the event. There h a d been a s chool
committee meeting that day in Hirn!!•
da le at which I had tendered my re~lgnation In order to acc ept a p osition
in the W est.
Wh en we rea ch ed Peru we found
Mayor Creamer seated on th e steps
•in front of' hi s store enjoying a beautiful spri ng day. In the course of the
conversation Mr Hollis told h im that
I had resigned. In s ta ntly l\Ir Creamer,
turn in;;- to me. said: ,..What did you ·
do that for? We were satisfied with

I

your wo1'1c ''

Mr H olli s \\·as a grf:at booster for
the Cummington old follrn' gathering,
and last June, whe1i he failed to at t end, th,e event seemed to lag. for be
had been secre tai:y •of the organization
for many years. It was Mr Hollis
who COrl'ected t he spelling of 'Windsor Jambs, and who explained how
that spot got its nam e. He said t hat ,
th e huge stones in tl)e walls of ·t he
gorge are in the shape of the j a mbs,
or sides, of an open fireplace, hence
\
th e name.
My hills do not maim men like - Mr
H offis any more. Automobiles and radios and Delco light s and bakers'
bread have erased t!1e marks that dlstingu!s!Jed cou ntry fro m city folks,
and now, as one fine old citizen afte r
another passes on, they are n ot leaving behind anyone to fl!l t h eir places.

I

MRS MARY ORA YES DE A,:p
Widow of Lemuel Graves /of W h~tely
Passes Away at Daug·hter•s Homo

'.Nortlla.m pto n, April 7 - Mrs Mary
(Hlgglns) Gra ves; 66, widow of L emuel Graves, died s uddenly this m ornIng at the h om e of her da u ghter, Mrs J
Ira B. Dickinson, 71 Columbus avenue. Sh e was the claughtet· of Henry
a nd Tryphena (Wood), Higgins, a nd
was born in Whately , Au g ust 2, 1862.
She had lived with h er daughter in
this city for the last n in e years.
Besides h e r daughter, she leaves a
s ister, Mrs Arth ur Beers of Whately;
a brother, Henry S. Higgins of Spri n g field a nd two grandchildren, L emuel
and' Frank Dickinson. T he fun eral
will ibe Tu esday afternoon at 2 at the
home of Mrs Dickinson , Rev Ellery
c. Clapp officia ting. Burial will be in
Wha tely cemetery.

�I

.- S- ;
MRS. COOLIDGE WRITE
SON
TE
LA
R
POEM TO HE

f

j

MagaSends $250 Check from me
So
y
her , tha t
the poe m, or rat
zine to John, to Bu
sio n
elf as an exp res
'its
me
Ho
w
Ne
ul
Gift for
kef
wa
a
ing
hea rt, dur

(
-

whe n , ou ;~n~/efo re,
it w,o te And Iert
the ga~
of the You
r
:~ht glimpse, Heaven aJa

I~~:

0~~~
hou r of
/'ii"' afa r .
ts we re The glories g,::y h: r ace.
rish ed .
che
ugh
tho
ost
-.m
her
.the
ile
of
wh
e
,
ht
On
son
nig
d,
the
Hol
ge
and
olid
Co
ess
illn
Joh n
r:;• _along t;e ·Pat b
din g pre sen ts of Flo ren ce Tru m- cen ter ed abo ut thenge r son five
ss
and ' bis brid e, Mifor
t dea th of her you
gif
ma y \{'{;~~ffie
1
the
0,
$25
not,
.
.
bul l. fs a che ck
der ex- ~or ro,1m,to show tbe wav
brid e- yea rs a~o
Co olJ dge , the
Big elo w llk ed theeten
of Jlfrs. Cal vin
and com - Nor f . ·1lead
eiv ed it . Mr. on
lov
rec
o
hom e. ·
nal
wh
us
ter
s
r,
ma
the
of
mo
h,cb
-a ,w
pre ssi
gro orp 's
and has use d it on
ft'le d "T he Op en
f!lf ,.a poe ~, ~ot
fift h for t in gri ef,
·on
ote
wr
ber
she
num
I:!l) &lt;7l '" wh ich
pag e fa the Oc tob er
dea th of her rulel Go od ~o use kee pln g ~fa gaz ine .
arn il;e rsa rf of the
Tbche ck,
Jr.
the
ge,
for
olid
Co
·
In tha nk mg !Jim
, oth er .s on, CaJ1:in po~ m ls onl y
s
sai d tha t she wad '
dge
oli
Co
Alf hou gll the
s.
Mr
e
rot
''an
"w
in,
Jol
and
,
g
son
Jon
her
es
to
din g 1t
twe nty Jin
. it for
to Mr s. Co ofl dge , sen
ask ing hfm to use
its elf," acc ord ing
for it at the I ameth ing in the ne_w hom e, wh ich
d
pai
ers
lish
pub
he
abl ish , In
rd, sai d to be som
ate of $2. 72 a wo r bro·ug ht by I liop e he ma y soo nbr.est
oth er mi ght
y tha t his
hest pri ce eve
.wa
e
J1lg
som
the
/
sen we re he her e." s:
sucl1 a sho rt ver se.
fol low
wit h Wil- hav e cho
s. Co oli dge 's poe tn
He r cor res pon den ce her of "T he
J\Ir
lfs
EN DOOR
O.P
E
TH
/Ha m F. Big elo w, pub
e)
Ma gaz ine ,"
pin g
. (By G1·a ce Coolidg
p·
· Go od Ho use kee
Co oli dge did no t (Copyn ght, 1929 , b y G~od 1-Iouse kec
sho ws tha t 1\frs, d· for ,th e poe m
me)
pai
gaz
be
llfa
40
f,ng
ect
s~n
exp
exp res s ;o Yo u, my
" Tb ese .few wo rds ·.
s_h own me God . ek
ich Js min e 1:favc
wh
my cl,e
t
for
s uponfee
com
r kisde
the
!ou
il
l th e .gentle tou ch
, cle a rly
re
me
sha
to
ma
d
Ha s
•
t I shoifuld bed gla f
tha
o lea ds us oH. le, ,.. w he r, 1
wh
Him
Of
1t
t
·th
no t eel tha
of yo u1· smi
~1 _you .- you o :wo rth y of its The me mo ry
,
~
IS too cru de to be
young. .
". c~._ :J
.
.
i
fa ce rs com e ou ap;
;
ote
H,s
wr
ls
vea
she
r:.c
t,"
jec
nf
:~h
~
sub
t 1 o- •..w ~e, N · m eJlo wiiig,
" " _t'b,k~
lain
~l~
C::!Je e,·n
.'!!'_
..
' ""'.

!;;::!~c

•

ot!'

I

-t,,e . - ·,

/
New: Verse Composed
.
e
By Mrs Coolidg
Titled 'The Quest' I/
.

----

'=

-M rs Ca lvin
Ne w York, Jun e· 25 try , at firs t
poe
for
t
gif
s
ge'
Co olid
nth s aft er she
rey eal ed sev era l mo wh en ver ses
use
lef t the Wh ite Ho
son, Calvin, Jr.,
in me mo r~ ot her
ine , is aga in
app ear ed _m a ma gazren t i.sf,ue c,f
cur
the
m
rev eal ed

Go od Ho use kee pin g.
s :-

I

Th e poerp toll ow
TH E QU ES T
. By Gra ce· Co olid getim e,
s of
Cross_mg the , upl and
s of nig ht
der
bor
the
g
lrtm
Sk
o(. the pea 'k of
Sc alin g tile fac e
dre am s,
/
0 t lig ht,
We ent er the reg ion ith 1ea~ er in w
1
'.And has ten mg on,
ten t,
nbo w 's end
Arr ive at the rai
r tile pot ot' g old
An ~ the re unc ove
the h · ~rt ot a
Bur1 eq deep 1n
frie nd .

7

i

I

I

�..

\

"MIDDLEFOLKS" . Mr~. Emmi\ H. Dickinson
Sept. 26-:\frs. Emma Brown
Dicldn son , Ag e d7i, wife of Arthur
Dickin son, &lt;lied last evening a t
Farre n ho sp ital in l\fontague Ci ty ,
where she was taken on Sunday
ror t rea tm e nt , failing rapidly at
th e la s t. 'fh e cau se of her d ea th
was clu e t o -h ear tlroub le with co111)) li ca ti o n s and s h e had bee n , II
s in ce March , a l t hou g h not confin ed
to h e r bed until rece ntly. Mrs .
Dickinso n w a.s t h e daugh te r of l ra
an.cl Ph il a (Loo mi s) Brown and
was horn in llallimore. She ma r-.
ri e d l\f;·, Dick in son durin g Jun &lt;',
1885y a nd t h eir hom e has sin e•)
bee n in New HaY e n , li ving mor e
I.ban 40 years in th e sa me house.
Th ey haY e s pe nt th eir summers
Jicre since 1905 , ·fir s t at th Dickln sou hom sl G_ld on North street, and
later at th e homse of Mrs. Dickin soh 's un cle, the late Calvfo
Loomis. Besid es her husband Mn.
Dickinson is s urvive d by two sons,
Ira B. Dickin so n of Northampton
and An sel Dicl,i nsori of New Mil ford , Ct.; also · two grandsons ,
L e mu e l a nd Frederick Dickinson
of Northampton , and a half- sister.
Miss Alice Brown of Baltimore.
The fun e ral will be held Saturday
afternoon at , 2.:rn o'clock ' at th e
home here; wiht burial in the fam- /1
ily lot at Wha tely Centel' cemetery. Rev. Byron F. Gustin·, pastor
o f Vlhatf'IY-Congregational church,
·
will officiate.

I

The funeral of Fre~erick s. · Chick:)
Ierlng,
who died Tuesday night at the I
home of - his daughter, Mrs Mauri91&gt;
D. Howland . of Monta gue City road '
will be held tomorrow at the Shep,' ·
ard fun eral home. Burial will be tn
Worthington.

r - The-:fu n erii.l or

Samu el D- Frink 'WM
afternoon at 2.30 at tl1e
Method ist ch u rch, R ev C. Russell Prewitt officiating. Th ere was a large ,
attendance and ma ny flora l tributes
were sent. A service was conducted bY
Nonotuck lodge ot Odd Fellows · an rl 1
the bearers were the l'ollo wing mem bers of the lodge: Arthur Wood,
George Brown, Sidney Bailey, E :·n es t
Reynolds, Edward Th ayer and Clement
La wley. Burial was in Spring Grove
_,
·
~ '!'etery.

I h eld this

_ ___,__11?..1
l,
1VHATELY
/ The comnlt-tal service of_Mrs Mary .I j
Graves was ,held at, the Center ceme- 1
tery Tuesday afternoon at .2.30. Mrs 1
Gra ves- · formerly lived In Whately, l'
·She died in - Northampton, SIU_lday 1
morning, at the hom~. ~!. )ler. ,a:-ugh~ . Mrs Ira Gl'a.ves.rJ.;;):: 17 · ~1.~

I
I

Allegorical Novel by Sp1ing~·
field Lawyer

".\1iddlefo lks,'' a 11 0 vcJ hy R icha ru I
J :un es Tal '.&gt;o t, or. th is c ity (Jolm c . .
Wi ns ton co m pa ny, P hi ladelp hia; $2 .50 )
is a n all eirori cn.i plea f or t he m irldlc folks of t ho wo rltl t o a ~se rt t heir pl::i cc
In tlie RUil ancl curb th e internati onal I
autocrat cm t l,u one ha nd a nd t he ,,
[
com mun bL on t he otl 1cr.
The prin ci pa l &lt;·hRr ac tcr, J oh n :Vl 1Cl
'I

·1

dlel'olk s, ill a yo ung- engi neer

,vho

p r ecipitaterl
finds him self s udclenly
Into world politics. Th e author carries
the r eailer thro ug-h a na tional convention In which i n ternationa l a utocrats
and the communis ts i re each wor king- i
to establis h a supergovernment. T he
middlefolks dominate the situa tion and
sugges t a plan fo.r world courts m od eled 11pon Am e rican ideals. A court of
the west is proposed to adjud icate disputes upon this h emi s ph ere ; a court
of the east Is suggested to h a ndle the
probl em s of Europe, Asia a nd Africa; 1
the two courts in joint sessi on wou ld '
a ct as the sup reme court fo r man- 1
kind.
The argument is supported by wise .
sayings, as: "Washington thre-;v a
col11 a cr oss the Poto mac. His success- ,
ors have s ea ttered American dolla r s f
over th e world"; " th e ma n who says
nothing makes a typical politi cal ad dress"; "political promise represents
a hop e, like a check dated a head" ;
"the road to wa r Is paved with brok en
treaties."
A love story which begins upon one
of the battlefields o! France and extends through a politica l campaign ·is
the thread bY which the Interest of
the reader Is malnt,a.lried. The heroine,
Joy Pynchon, Is the only.one of the
characters which has a nonallegorlcal
name.
The scene of the story Is laid In one
of the middle wes tern states. T he controversy begins with a dispute :~etween
between th e commun ist, Ilkovitch; a
Stoug:1test, and
s u per-industrialist,
Middl efolks. It beg ins ,when the industrialis t su ggests that the " chain-store
Idea" mig ht be a mplified into a scheme
for an in tern a tiol;!a 1 government. This
arouses the ire of Middlefolks, who
in sists tha t the aver age citizens of the '
world are e utirely satisfied w ith sturdy
nationalism . It develops th a t Stoui; ht- '
est Is the gun rdian of Joy Pynch on,
the sweetheart of Mlddl efollrn. The sit- :
nation naturally follows that the
young woman ls !or a time uncertain
whether he1· guardian or h er Joyer are
correct and attem)i&gt;ts to compromise
their ideals which results 1n a barsrler
that threatens to disrupt either the
' love atralr or h er pleasant relations
with Stoughtest.
There are chapters dealing with political campaigning. Possibly Mr Talbot's ow:n experiences as a n Independent in polltics are more or less r eflected In the story. He was on th e
subcommittee of three, the other m embers loeing · congress map H oward of,
Alabamp, and Judg,e Clarence Shea n
of New York, who drnfteC: the Ind e1pend ence leag·ue platform 'O t th eir national conv entron in 19 08 . H e w ~s
also ::i. del egate to th e Bull · 3loo5e
an&lt;l also to
convention in Ctticago,
various state conventions. The conven tion stories are tin ged with r ealism.
One of the characters, Lawyer DePracto who manages the political
ca mpaign ! or Middle!olks, ls the moving force through a court trial a nd the
fin al protection of Mlddlefolks · from
conviction upon a. trumped-up charge. 1
The author frankly states in the
opening pa.ges that his characters a._re
composite and are intended to delineate the forc es .that are at work 1n
. . , , -. ', I
y
American polltl~ a4ailllli

�r

[ ~ , / ~ n"M

-/.i,#; JJ, j f :J(l'

WORTHINGTON
Iwrru Arcanum Celebrates
F eb. 25.,..:-.Tb er e was a large
gathering at the Lyce um ball S~turday evenini::; when Basban Hill
' coun cil of Royal Arcanum held an
' open meetiu g in celebration ?l ,
Wasl1iugtou's birthday a nd also rn
I 11011or of the birthday of t heir oldes t member, Clement F. Burr,
wh o was 81 years old Saturday. '
M r. Burr -~ one of, the leading
citizens of the town, a successful
farm er and was state representa; tive in the Irgislature for this dis- '
/ trict in 1897. O;·ator Ba rent P ease
presided a nd t l:e r rogram opened
1
; with the sin gin g of America by
, th e audien ce. .Mr. P ease gavo a
· r eading on Washington and a
; poem, "The Business of. Friend: s hip," ind then called upon the
1g uest of honor, Mr. Burr. for a
Jspeech, who, in r esponse. ex, pressed his appr eciation of the ,
. celebratiou of hL birthday aad ·
1
the friendshl.i it showed and said
if he could have the confidence.
and este.im d Lis townspeople he
,cared not what the rest of the
,,~orld thought of him. Mr. Burr in
:his remll,rks dwelt upon Washi.Dig- :
1t~u, _the _fa rmer, and br iefly ot '
his hfe and : ccomplishme.n ts and ,
.ot tqe r_ower of the influence ot i
lmch _a IIfe. Th i (l was follow ed r,y
the singing Of old songs, brief re- 1
· mark s b; Jrand Guide JMnry
Ratbbu!"n ot Stoc brid ge a , d AI- ,
ter~ate Supreme R ep re sen tative
-Fehx Scl1ar;nen and Roy w ·i
both 0f O
i cox,
nota council, Pittsfield ,
a nd by the r&gt;rer · , tation of a birth:
day_ cake nade by Mrs. Ha:·old
Parish. Mr. Burr . , ' W light up
. the ear!y hi~tory of th,i Royal lr~
i:nu~ in ~bis lvw:1 by saying that
e ~1;st rnsurar~e society here
,;as .he C_om:nerclal Life, of which
. r. Bu _r J:.; the on ly charter mem
/ber nov conn ected with the A canum. This flourished f . r'. s hort iime and then the K _01h a
of Honor took them .
Dig ts
'With several n )W me~nb:s aTb~dy,
years ago, May 22, 1900r1.he ~rty
oy/ al Arcanum was granted
, ter, taking over the f
a chariza tion , and now h ormer organs hip of 63. A dan as a m emoerin g ':· , : 1gram
ce end ed evenwer e served.
and refreshm ent.,

I

Mr. :..nd Mrs ·~
a~te nd ed th e f ~n e ···eru_ent !;,· Durr
Sa turd ay afte rn
«l l in Pi ttsfi eld
bl'other, F';·anJ Co~n ?f Mrs. Du n 's
_{ t :is1e r .

I

ANNUAL CONWELL
DAY SERVICE AT
SO. WORTHINGTON
. l73&lt;f.

Harvey Kazmier of the Town
and Country Church Commission Speaks of Work
j Done in Rural New England

Worthington, Aug. 27-Thc annual
Conwell day service was held t oday j
at South Worthington. More than 100 I
people attended the morning service\
held at the South Worthington
church. The women of the church I
served 150 people on the lawn of t he
parsonage at dinn er a nd 83 attended
t he a fternoon service on t he lawn of
Eagle Nest, the home of the late Dr
Russell H. Conwell and now the home
of his son, Dr Leon Conwell. At the
morning service, Youri Bilstln, cellist.
played ·an aria from the works of
Bach and "Prayer to the Setting
Sun," a Georgia n song from southern
Russia.
The speaker at this service was
Harvey Kazmler, chairman of the
business committee of the New England Town and Country Church commission. He spoke of the work the 1
committee is doing under the leader- 1
ship of Rev Hilda L . I zes to better
t he religious condit ions in rural New
Engla nd. He told hi~ audience t hat
on the authority or t he late Dr
Kenyon L. Butterfield, for mer president of th e commission. 100,000 children in New England had no m oral
or relig ious training. He told of the
struggle of a growing group of ru ral
ministers wh o had dedicated their
li ves to rura l fi elds who nre serving
in New Engla nd on sala ries ra nging
as low as $1000 an nuall y. He. spoke
of the n ew m ethods of cooperation
being tried in New England fi elds.
e gave a ring ing challenge to his
a udience to h elp in the t ask or g iving these men, student or p ermanent,
help that they may minister ade&gt;quately to the fi elds they serve. H e told
the story of h ow some New England
pa rish es had been built up by 1mstinted service in ~pitc ·of inadequate
support. He said t hat in these fi elds
the c hurch has been and must continue to be the backbone of li fe nnd
t he church must build the co mmunitv in order· that t he fl ow oC
worke~·s f rom co untry to city, if still
continued. will be profitable to c ity
life. The New Engla nd town and
country co mmission is working- to
g ive stron g, able a nd effici ent leaders hi p to r ural chu rches. Men are n ow
"Oing out to serve 1he rural fields
for itself instead of serving it with
one eye on the city chureh.
The aftemoon s ervice was attended I
by 8~ of tho morning congregation.
Mrs Freel Nagler sang "The L ord is
My She pherd" a nd R ev .T. H. Owens
lead a h ymn s ing. The old h ymns of
t he church w ere enjo~'ed a nd . 1.he
leader t old the stor y of th~ wn t rni::of "Oh Love That Will Not Let Nlc
Go," by Geor ge Macheson, drawi!1glessons from t he h ymn. The service
closed wit h t he h ymn, '"Blessed Be
the Tie T hat Binds."

I

�Iomen's Clubs Federation's Receiving Line
At Reception to Mrs Charles L~ Beckwith

Left to right-Mrs Walter V. McDulfee, second vice-president of Springfield Federation of Wornm's clubs ; Mi:_s Ni!Da C. Tuttle, first vice-y!_e~~l!_n_!_1__~!~ _Ch~~!es__L. Beckwith, newly elected ~resi&lt;!_ent ;

Conwell Day Group a South Worthington

_

(Pho to by Brown i ng)

Left to right: Leori Conwell, Rev J. Herbert Owen, pastor of (;ongreg)ltiorud church; Harvey E. Kazmier,
ll'p~aker of the day.
1

�/f J/

wh it e pine
\~ -~;om in ~nt facto r !n th e rsb1p , t he
Und er Ins leade
'i indu stry .
first to pion eer
I firm was amo ng oftheyello
w pine in the
ction
du
Intro
the
he al so
Nort hern mar kets and later
with
ente red the man ufac turin g field here.
mill.s in Nov a S co ti a and elsew firm
the
Mr. Rice retir ed in l!/27 from his son
of Rice &amp; Locl nvoo d and with
ber Com .
estab lish-eel the J. A. Jlice Lum
York .
pany with h eadq ua rt ers in New
ht him
An activ e care er. had brou g s of
field
In close touc h with man y
For a num ber of
lumb er end eavo r.
u fttilj te(
yea1· s he was activ e , _in arn~
Lum ber
or the Nati onal Who lesal e
rporaD ea lers' A.ssocicttiotr and an lnco er lnJum'b
eral
·1:10v
of
ctor
dir"e
nd
a
tor
I
s u rane e c:omp1tnies.

FRANK{RICE, 77,
LEADING LUMBER
DEALER, IS DEAD

1

. Native of City, Pro~ineL~: in
Banking and Social l e,
Dies in Hotel After
Long .Illness.

1

'frus t Vomr,any Director,

Ioc:a!
Mr. Ri c-e ,vas 1\'ell know n in
clor In
busi ness circl es, and was a cl!re
meln be1
, the Unio n '!'rus t Com pany , a he wai
h
i of the . Colo n y Club , of whic
a life mem ~er of th1
i a n orga ni zer, and
was s
, Sp1'l ngfie ld Cou ntry C lu b. He y fo1
trust ee of the Chu rch of the Unit s hf
year
15 year s. For a num ber of
e am
had main taine d a sum mer hom activ i
farm in Wor thin gton and was town .
in the sum m e r life of that Maple
U ntil a year ago he !il'ed at 169 Julia n
Stre et. He leav es his . son,
rand sons ,
And erso n Rice , and two g , Jr., of
Bent on B. and Julia n A. Rice er F.
Scar sdale, N . Y. ; a broth er, Walt
&amp; Lock ' Rice , now pres iden t of Rice and two
wood Lum ber Com pany ,
H. F.
siste rs, Ann a L. R ice and Mts,
Rich 1 both of this city.
be anF un eral arra ngem ents will
1 nbuil .ced.
rro w
The fune ral i rf\J be h eld tomo
Chur ch
after noon at 3 6'c]o ('\c In th;i
Sprin g'of t he Un ity. Buri al wil'i be in
~ '-' &lt;:&lt;&gt;mete ry,

f r many year s
.
.
Fran k Chap m Rice, o .
er
conn ected with the whol esale lumb In
a prom inen t .
.
.
an
city
tbI.S
In
ess
busin
soc1~~
Spril;gfleld bank ing circl es and .
life tlr:-oug hout the -vall~Y, died
a
Hote l stane have n Jast nigh t after
old.
s
year
77
was
He
s.
illnes
g
lon
,As presi dent of the Rice &amp; Locl
year s
wood Lum ber Com pany for 46
Trus t
and as a direc tor of t he Unio n

Wi llia ms bu rg
HONOR STUDENTS
AT SCHOOL LISTED

FRANK CHAPIN RICE
Widel y K1to1m Native of City Dies at
A1re of 77,
. Com pan Y since 'L s organ izatio n , l\Ir.
Rice had been al
figur e in
prom inent
t hA b ·
.
, usine ss life of t h'I S City,
I
~aliv e or City
H
:
e was born in th is c!ly
Marc h o
185! , son or Ci .
Ric~
and Lu cy Chap !~rle~ Warr iner
il'ed
his e:tr! y ed ucation Rice, and 1'€ce
t_h e Srrin gi\eJ d
Public scho ols. W,a,1n
h
life
s
hi
in
ly
turned to th e I
th:
~~-:~~ ,· h,, fo!lo~,~b~ ·n~ir iness for
t ly, and
J o,bso,~ nt e.:ed. th e cmpJo t-ece~
y 01 .Da y &amp;· '
' Pl om, ne nt I umb er·
ll1· L day
t
,.
w·
d
a,Jcr ~ of ,
J&gt;erie nce · 1 II h but a ft. w eYears
ex.
l ished
or hi 8 0 11• ie Westab
il
eta
r
a
n, hicl
·
' d . Yard
eral Years b 1 Iie or,e rat
I
sel'r
enc} or ll;o lit abandon ed e t hto
il
Wholr-saJo ,Jj . bus in ess ortoJ entee r reta
. into
the next r. stribu lion
1·, b'or
With the cw YearR he w Umbe
ated
ssoci
a
s
offlg
Je
• Currier an~hoJesa
1ll 188'&gt;
e of n 13
busines
t h.
.
Jished
,
estrd.
_
b
Be s Wh ich still
ed Bmil v e,1rs his narn e
28, 18 marri
1
• .
!\.e
rson
tss:i ~ • Who · cli ect N Ande
Pr1J
12.
th e 1 e cnterecJ i nto' ov.
In
.
,
.
er
Partn
ate \V. \V
u
. Lockwo l Shi p Wi th
ncler the fi
it I
Detro
or~ - of
ll'ood Lu ,n~r
1 1 0name
m~any, \\'~~~ h&amp;bLock~
- ecam e
-~

I

The
WIL LI.l,. MSB URG : Nov . 21 -secon d
hig'11 scho o l h on or roll for t hetoday as
!1ve -wce k ))erio d was pos ted
1 foll
•
ows:
et~~ ~s~Five subj ec ts, 'E lois e BarF
fotlr subj ec s, · c ·
sell Bisb ee ;
Sylv ia .Clar y,
~urt , Velm a Brow n,
ey
e Y Dam on, Fait h Dres se r, Shirl
, Lida
Kni g ht, Hita Ku las, Ire n e i\Ietz•Pae l,Mine1·, L ore na ·N ietsc he, 'J:helroa
ne Sabo,
a rd . Asht on Rust c rn cye r, Arlege,
Jean
Tiircrr cd ::lh a w, D oroth y Sincn
Bart Vla rn Pr : t hree s ubj ects. ,CJ-rn.cirs
J un e Bow½e r,
lett \ \li ll iam Bish ce.
Cerpow1cz,
~ t h y Carn ey, J ose phin e
Hu t h Dodg e, Gene va
J &lt;'a n Cron e,
rd -Ha t hGrav es, L e na Guve Lte. Miila
Fra n!, Munson.
awa y , Ann e Llo_,:d,
lor e n co
llohe rt lllun so n, Mar y Noyc s;-l&lt;'
on Sabo,
Pnc i&lt; a r u, '\\"i lli a m H~;a n, l\lari
L est e r Shaw .

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Chesterfield's Sinking Road
Agairt Drops Out of Sight
113

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Highway, Ne_al'.'IY Ready to Be Reopened, alls
Seven:·F e~t Below Original Surface

CHESTERFIELD, Nov. 22-This town's sinking highway,
virtually ready for reopening this week, dropped out of sight
again this afternoon as· town highway workers applied finishI ing touches to the 200-foot stretc? of highway.
1

After more than two weeks of wcirk,
during which . t housands of cubic feet
of sand a nd gravel. w er e dumped Into
the hole, otficials early today expressed the beli ef that - t he hig_h wily,
the main road from Williamsburg to
Che:,terfleld, would .be ready for travel
by Saturday .

Drop -of Seven Feet
Late this afternoon, however, the
200 feet of repair work began to sink,
and by &lt;lark had dropped seven feet
below the original surface.
The trouble began Nov. 7, when
highway workers, under Lester· LeDue, superintendent or highways, began repairs to a shoulder of the higll-

W1!:y. After 160 0 feet of gTavel h a d
been dumped a long the s outh sh oulde r
of the stretch, whic h crosses a swam p,
workmen began repairs to t he opposlte ,shoulder. Without warning the 1
road began to settle and soon was six
to 10 feet under the orig inal level.
. ,Since th a t time workers hav e I
dumped in countless loads of fill and
today had the r oadbed back above
water, but n ow t he 200. feet of hig·hway .ls again su.b merg ed.
Supt. L eDuc said that t here is noth- I
Ing to do but begin all ove'r again and
t om orrow m orning th e -process of 11
fi lling the apparently bottomless pit ~
will· be continued.

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FEBRUARY 23, 193
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· eR w a.s
1 · . t h e H ouse of Rep,·esen ta t iv
. 1"

?~

F PRES~~~T0
:~~:es
1 0 !~a ~/ \~~~i~~; ~,~~t.~\ l~ ~
ll worn
th H a"'ue
b'
ints o ut is im po1tan w 1
of the United States t o f ~al ~aw [
n~eedso to h av~ di plom a tic p1·ot e~confe rence on in tern a ,o
. ea
t ion oC a governm en t, w hen one s 1
month it w ill be t he first t 1m
,
ropcrty is con cern ed, w)1en one a p next
wi;l have r epresented t,11 s : fi1ies fo r a passpor t a !,'l.d
t 1~~~?1~!
woman
a clty And if the
oth e r ci r c umsta n ces o[ w IC 1
"'
country In such a ca.P
.
r omi ubli c ofll ce ass um ed im porta n ce to
1
influence of se;~~~~o~~i\~~~ i e~ail, to
~vom cn a ft er th ey r ece ived t h e SU [ ·
nent peopl e au :
.0 th e hon or of ! rage.
.·
Northam pton "lll 0 gt' ve daugh ter on \
Miss L a mbie attended th e 8 P:{.,111 g
sending for th aMI 5 \Iai·ga~·et La mbie,
term of the Lon don Sch oolil!Jfd ' ~~;
s uch a mission.
~nscllor at Jaw of , nomi cs in 1921. Sh e :_i.tte e
attorney a nd co, c fi rst American , L eague of N a t ion s m eel1)1 gs a nd t_h e
Washln i;to11', a nd l_\w n office for t he
Geneva sch ool of int er nat10n a l stu~l!es
woma n to open h_~\1.t1on a l la w, is r ein 192 6. 'l'he sam e yea r s h e r e ce iv ed
pra~t-lce or lntc1 indorsemen t from
a cert ifi ca te from th e Aca d em y of ln celvmg l1earty
f the futu re
- - - -- - - - - - -- - '
prominent sources as one O
t cr na ti ona l L aw at Th e H a g ue: La st
delega te~. .
b'e's s upporters is
year s h e wn.s adm itted t o pract ice b eAmong Miss La m \
been to see I for e th e s u prem e cou r t.
Sena tor GHlll ett e\rvh1~ 1~~-~ beha lf. Con - .
Allied Interests
President oov
·
J
d
ressma n Bdith Nourse R ogers 18
)Iiss ,Lamb ie s peak s bo th Fren c 1 a n
~cq uaintlng member s of . the house
Spani s h. B usy ~hou gh s h e h as bee n
with Miss Lamble's quahfication for w ith h e1· profess10nul interests s h e h as
the post. The W omen's Ba r ~sociafound t he t im e to holtl office ln v ~tion oe the District of Columbia, th e ri,o us organ izations. S he was pres1\·assa r a lumnae, the W ome1~•s Ovei:- den t of the ·w omen 's Overseas Service
seas Service league a r e lcndm g th e1r , lea gue of \ Vashi ngton fr om 1921 t o
supp ort. Miss Marion McCl e~ch, for- lfo 23 a nd ch airman of t h e committee
merlv o! Springfield, has wn tten t he
. .
--:=.-President indorsing her in beha )r of
on . th e ?ons t1 tu t1on a nd by-la ws ot
th e Na.tlonnl l•' ederation of B usmess
the National Over seas league from
:rncl P rofessional W omen.
l n28 ,t o 1929. She se r ved as president
Subjects to Be Discussed
or the I Va ssa r Alumnae association
The comin g confer ence is called by , from_ 1924 t o ! 92 6. I_n conn ection w it h
the League of Nations . The three mam I the 1mm1g rat10n of college p r o.fessors
subjects which will be dlscu~ed by ·1 she was legal counsel f or s ix w{)m en ·s
the legal experts are nattonal!t y, t er - coll eges, B yrn Maw r, Mount H ol yok e,
I ritorio.l waters a nd r esponsibilities of R a dcliffe, Smit h, Vassa r a n d W'ell es 1 states for damage to the persons, and
ley. At present sh e is a m ember of
property o! aliens. It is ·b ecause of the · 1 th_e w om en's join·t congr_essiona l com conflicting la w in . various countr_1es , m_1tt_ee r epr esen_tin g the Nationa l Fed concernmg t he nat1onahty of married , eiat 1on of B us m ess a nd Professiona l
women tha t an effort is being made to w omen . Sh e is a lso r ecordin g secrehave at least one wom an appointed to tary of t he L eague of Republican
the delega tion f rom each country.
, W on:ien ,of t he Dis trict of Colu mbia.
Mi~s L a mbie was born and brought I i &gt;M iss Lambie speaks· l&lt;'ren ch a nd
up In Northampton. She gradua ted mer ous a r t icles on in terna tiona l subfrom Vassar coll ege, received an M. A. Jtcts. She is a member of th e Sodegree from the gra duate school of the ciet
·r
t
t'
L
·
.\ mer ican univer sity and her LI. B. A Y .· 0
n erna iona1
a w, of . the
from George W ashington unive rsity.
m eu can b ranch of t he In ternation a l
She is a member of bot h th e New Law a ssomat LOn a nd a . m e!nber of t he
York sta te a nd the· Di strict of Colum- Intern a tiona l Media ry ms t1 t u te of T he
bia bars. F or a vear Miss Lambie was H ague.
director or-t he · Sou th-cnu Settlement , D espite h er achievem ents Miss L a m- i
Music school in Bos ton. _Befo r e the ' bie's is a n un assumin g n ature. The
wa r she t ravele_d 10 Ru ssia a nd h as modes ty that cha r ac tel'izes worthwhile
trave_led ~xtcns 1vely a ls o_ In Europe s uccess i s h ers . He r fri en ds p r ais e
and m thrn country. Du n ng the war h er as a studen t and a t h in k er a n d
she w a.s d11·ec tor or _cha pter eqmpmen t s pea k of th e c ha rm of her ])e l'so,{aJit~•.
oC th e Atla ntic cl1ns1on or the Amer- Sh e h as worked h a rd, b u t qu iet! .
,can Red Crnss fr om 1n 7 to ins. The - - - - Y
next year saw her in F ra nce a s director or t he Vassar r elief unit. She
was in cha rge of eight Red Cross recreation huts for Amer ican soldiers at
Savenay hospita l center and also did
reCugee work for the F rnnch a t VP.rdun, ?rgan izin i; m ilk s ta tions, dispensaries, ca nteens a nd schools.

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W ar Work i'lfa rkell 'fu rnlu g Pout

1\Iiss Lambi e says tha t her war
work ma r ked a turn ing point for h er.
1n her own words, " It was afte r mv
ser vi~e In F ra nc e th at I decided t~
s tud y _l aw and to spec ialize in t he in ter na tional aspects or it. I t setmi e&lt;1 to
me t ha t th is was one wa y in wh ich to
woi:k fo r better und er sta ndin g a mon
na tions and tha t better mach in ery fo~
settl mg di sputes, Internationa l agreem?nts and mtern a tlon al law all con tribute much toward this end"
M is~ La":bio has a_number · or cases
,.... n he, ~riv a te practice involvin ~ the
oual nati onality or a n Ame1·ican ....
a n who marries a foreigner ~~~­
s he is especially Interes ted i~ 11 1 e
co!"'pan ylng complications of th l~e
a t,on. s he hn.~ been prepa rhig j1 ~~~
fo r t h~ ;;c neral problems of int!! · e
tlona l law as well.
rn a ' A.11 exampl e oC th e dual na.llonart
tr oubles oC a n Amer ica n woman w'h~
n_,arrleR a fure ,;;uer was the rece nt
(',LSO or Ru t h Drr= Owen.
Sh I
her Amcrkt,n cit izensh ip by m e , s t
1
:i n En g-lL~llman wbi lP. the la w ~~r\
9
was In cf'l'er 1. Sh e had to be
·
izetl in order to r~gai n iL ;' a t_uralr 1e 1 s cat

•tc';r

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�[ndorse M ar ga re t ~ambie As
De leg at e to Hagu~ Conference
Appointed By Hoover to Nex t Mon th's. Sessions
On International Law
Native of Nor tham pton Will Be Firs t Woman to
Represent This Counti·y
In Such Cap acit y-W ar Wor k Turn ing Point In
Life -Dec ided to Study
Law As One Way to Work For Bett er Understa
nding Among Nations

MAR GAR ET LAM BIE

Wash ington Lawy er, Born in North ampto n, ·May
rBe Deleg ate to
The Hagu·e Confe{en~e on Intern ationa l Law Next
Month
.,,
'
.
(Hal·rls
&amp; E "'.lng)

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�f
SOCIETY WEDDING
AT SOUTH CHURCH
·. FOR MISS CHAPIN
J!i1 1 r, 1/

,1.,

Prominent~
Girl Be~
comes Bride of Dedham
Man, Joseph Morrill, Jr.Di· Gilkey Officiates
.
01

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,Jiss Ju lia Ke il c h,1µ \J1 , Jau;;·l!t e ,·
~I r a nd :11rs :\ lf1-ccl Tl. c 1t:1JJ in u ( c ,:cscent Hill :ind Josc p l1 ;\ lorril l, J r .. son
of :\! 1· nncl :1 1rs ,Jnscp h , ror rill o f c: 1_c n
Rid;c ro:Hl. J)cJlw Ill , ,~~~-8 m:i_r1·1 cd
,·esterd a ;· nrt crnou n a t , .;,0 a t s oul h
i:; n g rc;;·:ition:i l c lnirch. J~e,· J:in1es
0
Gordon
Cl ill,o· pr rr,,rm r d th e cc1
1 r_
monr . u~in .~· tllC' sin gle rin g c:r~.111 ~ ll Y,
~! iss J)nroth;' B lod;;rtt ol b ost on,
a ll r ndecl th e t, r idc n s mni rl or hono r.
an•J :\lrs :,; r il Ch;ipin oC th is c it Y was
111:1 t run of hoT1111', rr hf" bdd cn1 :1iL1 s WCI'!.!
:\! iss Bc:i•rice .-IIJ r n . :IJ.i:;s Crlcs tc Cor cu1':u1. ;\1 iss ,Tn &lt;litl1 ,1•. ' Bnt11 rl , i\! lss
Cath r rin c l·J. ,\lli s nn d :\! rs Alfre d J·L
Chapin . Jr., of th is r: it Y and :\liss r:l izn be th T elfn r c,f P itts burc&lt;·, P :-t. H., pe
Ch npi n and P.u tll Chapin 11 c rc nowcr

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! .;i ;\lris.r ·:1[01~·i!I

11:i s atl c n dcd by his
broth e r. John ]). ,v . .\ [ori ·ill o( De dha m. Th e u shers 11·c r e L a n;,;J on D curt,o r n, La wr en ce 1.' ri tc h::u·J . Ha ;- nurd
Ca nli elcl. Hu ::;·h c. Fox. 'r. Wilsun
Ll oyd. Charles Clarl,, Ga rdn e r . Cox, '
:'\ci l Cha[Jin a n d ,\ l(1·ed 1-1. Cha pin , Jr.
Th e bride worn a gown of iYory satin 11·i th ull tull e v eil urrangeJ w it h
orange blossoms a l'ou n d the race. The
j :,_ttenda nts' fro cks
we re of simila r desi::;n with lace bodice a nd ca pe antl
: Jon ;;- tulle sld rt, ·.' 1i ss B tod::;c tt's of
: deep µea ch color, :\1rS :;s;ci l Ch:1 pin 's of
; r ec n. a nd the b1 ·id e111a ids' or peach.
Th e fl ower girl~' ft-ucks ,rc rn of peac h
pint, e mbrnid PrcJ yoi le bodices with
white lace collar a nd s kirts .
A r eception fo ll ow ed th e cer e mony
at "Pai g nton," the home of th e bride's
parents. In t !JP rccC'i ving lin e with the
couple were ;\lt's Cha pin , m oth e r of
the brid e, wh o wc,rc :c .\-ow n ur bci"e
!1, la
ce with_ beige v el vet
a nd J1 o rs~ha1r hut_ m har m nn y. a nd :1-ll's l\lorrill,
11 )1 0 wo1e a gow n uf
brow n c hiffon 1
with brown lar·c h at.
The bdd e atten dee! ttio iic nn c l t

dpc

' ~~ch-emo9!berator?i1illb~
' -:--~-;;;-d jr a I
th e J u,ni u t· lca ;rn e. 'l'he
11 00m ,s a ;: raclua tc
H a rvard col- \
!'.4:! 3.
!,_ n.;c, class u( J----·
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Miss Julia Neil Cha pin Marries
Joseph Morrill, Jr., of Dedham,

�1

ers Club

Left to righ t: Mrs. Ethe l -Sam ble.
(SJ &gt;ri n11 fi " ld (.; ,,io,i l'hol o)
.
treas urer ; Miss Ann a ~- Car~ ody. retir
L. Bart lett, new presi dent ; Miss
ing pres iden t ; Miss
Mar
gare
t
A.
Trum
bull,
first
secre tary.
vice pres iden t ; Miss Lore tta E. Doy le, Mar!o
recordm

\MISS BARTLETT
NEW LEADER OF ,
TEACHERS CLUB

Offic ers for the comi ng year
Misf\ Bar t I et t, inc Ii u d. besid es
the
follo wlng : Firs t vice- presi dente
\ Marg aret Trum bull ; sec ond vice, l\liss
-pres i 8
~~~; ld~~ ~ Mfs~ t~ffl ~vt~ tvi~~ \~e~
-~~~:
I er, Mrs. Et!1e l Sam ble ; r ecord
in g scc: ~~~~ :la~v i~s ~;;et t~m~ fi~l= ;
cc rres_porid mg secre tary. Miss
Mab el
P eabo dy : and direc tors , Miss Marg
aret.
l- Year's Report Sho ~s $10 00 Ande rson, :Mrs. Fran ces Brow n , Mi,;R
Anni e Caug hma n and Miss
Mild
red
\Veil s.
Given
Groups for
R efres hme nts were s e rved to n
earl y
200 mem bers of the club
Children's Frec Milk
ng th e
socia l hour prece din g theduri
'
busin e:; s
s t-~sio n . In the r eceiv ing line were
and foo d
In comi ng and outg oing p r eside th e
A total of $1000, t h e hulk of whic
nts,
h Miss Bart lett and Miss Carm
ody, a
r,as t PrP.sl&lt;.l ent , Mi s s Lida
:"a s ,;pen t for free milk and lunch
es Mr~. J o hn Gran ru&lt;.I , wife ofNo~•e s, and
in t h e local s choo ls,
th e supe rwas dispo sed o! ir,t e nd ~nt of
s choo ls. 1''.lrs. Thom as J .
durl n;. the year U 34-1935 , acco
rdin g Carm ody and Mrs. Well
ingto n Hocl gto .\li Rs Doro thea Clark , _.i:hal rma
th e ch ild welf are com rffllte e of n o! k it s presi ded at the punc h bowl s anj
t
h
e
t
t:nch
ers f rom Van Sick le Scho ol were
Sprin :;fleld T ea ch ers Club , in h
er r e - h ost es ses and 11she rs.
po,·t g iven yes te rda y a[ tcrno on
at
the
,
Ann
ual _repo rts were
a,. :1 ual hu si n e.!ls sessi on ' and
so cia l t bP r ecord in g s ec r~t ary, pres ente d by
hou r of the or gan izatio n . Ml,;:; 11.lari
finan cial secon r etar y , c:irre spon dm g secre
~ - nrlnc jpa l of t he Wo rthln
tary, treas ~to n uror . auch tor s and sev eral
·:c;-cs cE oul1 ,vas el ected
com mitte
presiden't
· chai rm en.
'l'he . Sp r in gfiel d T ea cljenei
'l't'l':h":::c- ~~r.lt-:,tl,:l '" lo s u cceed M is s Annof
a , Club voted . to adJo u r n until
C;;.rm o dy, r etirin g pre,si dent .
the
fan :
··
-- - - -·
. nuri_n g- the year $5-tU .9:; wa s
-spen
t
·
A
Chri
stma s m ee ting w aR en joy ed
tor m ilk to be g iv en at r ecess
t
ime
b
y
the
Car
e w S treet S c h ool
~'.' sch ool ~hildr cn in n eed of
T each er Asso&lt;'iati on , T uesd ay Par e n t
Llo nal noun shm ent and unab le ad di&lt;' VP n in ;~
to pa y
~
. In th e sc h ool. :\1 r R. Ch
for it.
A total f $3n ,25 w a s sp ent
r isti a
/ J..Pr e sid ed, a nd A . Abho t.t J&lt; a pla n St otz
1
on lun ches fo r youn g8te rs who
n s
mi;.h t
I 'J
t o t_h e i;ro up on "G uid a n cr ." poke
other wise go hu_n g ry , Miss Clark
re M arion Ba rt lett . fo r mer pr in &lt;' lpa Mi ~H
porte d. Ar, prox 1mate ly 18,33 1
l , w ns
bottl es )
P rP sen ted a g ift.
or m ilk and 6~ 00 lu nch eR w er
r \7.e nffe 1- ,\ ,1 ,_
f ~ (.... 1n g th e e ven ing wAa s p rPc0
tl'lbu ted , ~he said. l n ad ditio n e di s c lv&lt;', h y J•' 111
r NI
to thi s
'M a nell nr C.:a-,·e w S tr ee t. C'1JI mmu
fr o;:e dist ribu t ion of milk a nd lunc
n lt v
h
eR
sl
ng ln!, \'u n l'lude rl I h ,~ p rn:::-rn m.
t h e chll d w elfa re comm ittee a lso
·
as s i,-!s in dlv id ua l cas es wh 'lr e t h
•
e ch il d re n am in n eed or g lasse s or m
edica
l
&lt;1.tlc n tio r. .

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by

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�Science Club, Younge st Organiz ation

-rtr~:. !

Of Student s at Technical High Scho~lj
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arion
rding

✓

First row, left to right-Franklin Bu'rr, James ·Kelley, Mitchell Kania, Harold Mosedale, Joseph Sevilla. Second row, left to right-Douglas Larson, Melvin Warner, Frank Havens, Joseph Bµckley,
Frederick Barrett and Lawrence Spaulding. Last row, left to right-Henry Frisbie, Walter Kustwan, Charles Leete and Lovell Smith.

The Technical High sc\1001 Science
club recently elected officers :!or the
coming semester. This organization
is the youngest at 'l'ech, liaving been
!armed several months ago by an enterprising group o! pupils interested
in carrying theil" science 1tudies beyond tho classroom. .Mitchell Kania 1::t
the classroom. Mitchell Kania is
p1·esldent of tiie club, other &lt;:&gt;fflcers

,.

being :· Vice-president, Harold Moseda le; secretary, Franklin Burr; trea15.
urer, James Kelley; member-at-large,
Joseph Sev1lla.
A- hlgh grade in physics and chemistry is required for membership in
the Science club. At the meetings,
the members discuss the latest deve'lopments in -the scientific world.
Brief histories of va-rious famous s.c l-

.I
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entists are a lso given, and frequ ently
interesting experiments are also included in the program.
The nine ~·ter members of the
organization n.re Mitchell Kania,
Frederick Barrett, Lawrence Spaulding, Douglas Larson, Harold Mosedale, Joseph Buckley, James McDermott, Franklin Burr I and H enry
Frisbie.

�de of
Me n tio n sh o uld . al~o be m ca olleg
e.
Pei ha nl 's inte r est 111 Am h e r sta ls
we1·e
Qua n tities of build ing m ateri nts ,. and
con t ribut ed. by Pel h a m l'esid e en to
cash colle ction s we rn a lso ta k A da?,t
r a ise fund s · fo r tile colle g e. le ft _111
John so n, a r esid e nt o f Pe lh a m,to bu il d
h is will the s um of $ -! 0 00
John son ch a pel.
home
Th e presi den t o f P elha m Old
Is leav associa tion , J o lin D . ,Vill a rd, arra
nge - I
ing for Eurn p e soo n. b ut will be
1
men ts . for th e old home day
nts, 1
e
id
th e vice -pres
by
comp leted
Al
.
W
l
a
y
Ro
·wait e r A . D yer a nd
'.
ce Col_;~rom Our Spec ial Co1·r es pond ent
drich ; th e secre ta r y. Miss Ali a m S .
plans
lve
s
xten
13-E
Amh ers t, July
li s , a nd the t r eas urer , W ilh
am Chaf fee.
are bei ng made to celeb rate Pelh
e,
urdaY
John D . Willa rd of Lin coln a venu
Old H o m e day on the seco nd S a t
t.h e exten sio n
of
tor
direc
er
14
fol'm
e
· Th
after L abo r day, Sept embe r
, and now r esea rch
-, ser vice at .M. A. C.
on
bu si ness m eetin g nt 11 will be follow
ia t e for the A m e rican asso ciati
assoc
by a for Adu lt Educ ati o n, wlll sai l with
ed IJ~· a dinn er at 12, ser ved
ra,
~. a t M rs Wi llard , his da u gh t e r , Lu t h e
cater er. The seco nd session at
r ope
lly and h is so n. John D. 3rd, for EuAft e r
th e ch u rc h, proni lses to be es pecia
n ext week .
m
da
r
otte
R
e
th
on
"The
Jnter estln g. The topic wJII be
ps ' a t Rotte1·do. m, L eyd en ,
le shor t stom, and The Hagu e, they will
terda
High ways of Pe lha m, and thers Peop
Ams
t
abou
i.: in th e Hhin e vall ey .
Ii w 110 Live d on Them ." Pape
bel ng : visit N e aint
Belg ium
Impo rta nt p laces In P elh a m a1·e
Louv ain nd B russ els in Engl
resier
and,
form
and
p re pared by p r esen t
P ar is , befo re goi ng to
nd
a
.
.
will a tte nd the
ard
Will
Mr
e
wher
den ts.
1
no.n
Woi- ld asso ·wait er Dyer wlll act as 11storials
, 1 bienn ial m eetin g of theation at Cam and cus todia n of hi stori cal mate
Adu lt Educ
for
on
ciati
nes
Jo
e
h
t
of
Afte r the c lose of
' a nd t h e firep roof va ults
ng t hem. bridg e univ er sity.h e will stud y adul t
libra ry will be used for storireq
ce
n
·e
1
e
conf
this
ueste d
pa1·t icula r
Old r eside nts of P elh a m are
ric educ ation in Euro pe, payi ng
/to sen d Mr D yer lette rs ofes,histo
's villa.g,e insti tu tes,
men
wo
to
tion
/
atten
uild
b
plac
inter est; p hoto grap hs of
ty llbra r ies, the r u ral comcoun
the
ent
omm
r
p
or
ts,
even
cou n cils
tngs, gath eri ngs,
iaries , mun ity coun cils, 1,he coun ty
li fe .In
perso n s ; jou rnals , ll)dge rs, s d w
h ic h on agric ultur al and coun try
ols in
scho
map~ , old deed s or docu ment town .
high
folli:
the
;
d
gJan
En•
the
bea r on the h istor ic life of of bette rs Norw ay, Swed e n and Denm a rk, as well
rge
cha
in
'.
Roya l A ldric h is
pre- as th e agric ultur al s choo ls in that!\
th.e
f.n g the care of ceme te1·ie s cand
Jin.s a rea . Mrs Will ard an d the r est of will
art
h
A
s.
d
recor
y
er
et
cem
ng
servi
th e Cook fa mily will tour En g land, and
already been prep a red of io
of a ll ~ail for h om e from Sou t ham pton on
cem e te ry s howi ng t he locat n
wlll the Olym pic Sep temb er 11. Mr Will ard
thing
e
sam
'l'he
es.
k n ow n grav
lghts wlll retur n la ter.
n
I..t
e
th
·
fo1
er
summ
this
done
be
ville
and Gold cem eteri es, t he P ac ke.rdov er
ce met er y, and th e ceme tery j ust
P elthe line in E n fi eld w her e manAyld r ich ha m r eside n ts are bu rled. Mr isi
on of
ts a.lso plann ing for t he p rov
1· the
a •p lace, whic h wi ll be avail ab leedfo from
bodie s whic h must be r emov.
th e P e lha m H ollow c em etery.resid ents
Man y Of -Pel ha m 's rorm er
ing
do not know that t here Is a krock
fa £m ,
s ton e on t he old H en ry Coo
oolen
a n d th a t t here once w er e a ws and
wago n work
I mill, a carria ge andeU1am
J ohn D. Will ard In Cana da
. Fin e red co f- ,
a powd er m ill a t P
D . Will ard of Linc o ln a Y~ ue.t
est
W
John
at
fins a nd t ombs ton es a r e m a de
r of the comm ittee on nLul
,
y
mbe
e
m
stor
a
ing
t
s
ntere
Pelh a m. T here is a n i
b y Pres iden t
appo inted
!
on
nd
ati
grou
educ
ing
bury
l&lt;er
abou t . a n old Qua
n o w in Ca n ada wher e he ,
i
is
am
r.
.Pelh
oove
t
H
Wes
e
t1
of
east
·
mile
1
of t:1c
abou t a
g Dr j
w ill m a k e a co:n·p a r at ive s t udryn m e nts•
Met h od is t chu rc h wli ere youn in - I
stone
do mini on and prov inc!a l g·o veWhi
Gulle y Po tter was burie u. Ae rec
l e in
ted by ,
parti ci patio n in e du ca ti on.
scrib ed to his m em ory was
e lph 1 T o r onto ,
Gu
viBit
/
a
will
only
he
as
w
e
nada
h
Ca
use
13eca
h 'e
his class mate s.
n ot of
Otta wa 1 and Que b ec. Du ri n g May
desce nda n t of a Q11ak e r and
comwas
h n s atte nd ed mal\ y educ ati onal
that fa ith h lmse lf, th e s tone
h e a tunttl
m i ttee m eetin gs . M a y 9 a nd 10,
twice remo ved by the br ethre n ly had ·
e ric an
t ende d a m ee ting of th e Am
his fa t h e1·, Dr Olne y Pott er, final
Was hin g t on,
it
at
bury
ation
and
Educ
of
body
e
cll
th
Coun
ter
to disin
m eetin g
and the ;exec utive com mitte e ittee on
elsew he1·e.
of the natio nal advi sory comm
Few of the prese nt gene ra tionn s,know
r es iden t
exeduc ation , appo inte d by P to s tudy
of P e lha m 's fam ous old taverus, Wil and Secr e tary ,Vl!b ur
over
Ho
cept perh aps the mos t famo
a l go vwhic h
lJan~ Conk 1ey·s , . in front of for
I the parti cipa tion of th e fed er
his
12 t o 15,
Dam e) Shay s drille d Ilia troop s othe
ernm ent in educ a ti &lt;;&gt;h , Maytin
rs
o f the
g·
ral
rebel hon. '.rhe1·e· were seve
h e atten ded the a nnu a l m ee
cula r:
ciati on fo1• Adul t EduAsso
n
howeve1·, two ot wh ich a re parti
r;ca
e
Am
hil l
h otel ,
ly wort h notic e, that on · Pelh am kept
ca tlc.rn at the Edgew a t e r B each
. a :1d o n M a y 16 a nd 17, th e
know n as the Hote l Pelh am and
i.:a~o
Ch
at
nd
a
on
sta t &lt;'
by Theo dore Cook from 1890
annu al meet in~ ot th e ~1 inn eEota S o uth
near
that know n as the Orie nt hous e'
coun c il for adul t edu ca tion at
r
owne
'I'he
gs.
sprin
nt
the pres en t Orie
ql l:'._a pl ,
ll
of the prop erty, Will iam Newe ral:
mini
a
uite
q
also
was
_
r,
make
shoe
or
oglst. Hav, mg fo u nd iron, sulph
s in the
a9d othe r mi1.1eral subs tance
k b
sprin gs abou t Ame thyst broo
~ e
built a s m all hous e in the ravln
k in 18
th e ~orth side of t~e broo
rs
visito
ient
1
to acco moda te tran s
r· at~
185 8 . a bowl ing a ll ey and inothe
D.
1861
and
d,
adde
1
we1·0
trac llons
t~d
Sour lo l'ger of Nol't h ampt on erec
!tu
q
ig,h
h
es
summ er hot el three stori
d~ se
a pre t entio us str u cture for tlJos~ w~r:
Civ il
D1;1 e t o tM outb1·e&lt;;'- k of th econs
tru cted
a lly
I thi s h ot e l so opt1mt .istic
ess It
I wa n e ve1· a grea linan c ial succ
·
la ~er hu!'n ed.

AMHERST INTERESTED
IN PELHAM'S REUNION

Hill Town's Old Home Day
in the Fall to Be Marked by
Extensive Program

I

i~

�.
1-Larlan F.
0
S t::,ne, a s iste r of J ~:3i~rts"si:, P ~_e 1
S t o1~iiT71'f{) ]..,'J1!1:e~ .
widow, )us
cour L He leaves his . 1. a dan;;h·
r'll6thcr, Mrs !llinna w,nni~ ' ~t, Pratt \
trr, AHthcra, a stu~e!'
N. Y ., ;i n cl
library Mehool at Bro_ol, l~cf •3d a j unior

JOHN D.\VILLARD,
ONE-TIME M. S. C.
DIRECTOR, DEAD
Former Head of Extension
Division and Congregational Minister Passes at 46
After Short Illness

a son , J ohn ,.l nson W11la 1

'

•

1

a~ Am her s t hig h school.
F ' rst Con H e wa.~ a m ember ~~ t h e u ,;e ra l w il l •.
grcg-a t ,onal chu rch . I h e f 1 3.30 :, t
be h eld Thurs da_y aftcr!: ° 0 "i;.. Wild - \
th e hom e and 'b uria l wt 11
woort cem et err.
_ __
---"-

°~

I

Amherst , Dec. 22 - John Day ton
Willard, 46, for m e r direc tor of the ext ension divis ion of Massach uijetts
State college and s ince Septem ber ..
visiting professor of adult ed u cat ion
at teachers' college, Columbia uni-

1' f/~ fJ_
_
Worthington
EDWARD J. BLIGH
: Former Owner of Corners Grocer y
Dies in S t. P et ers burg, Fla.
WORTHING'£0N, Ap ril 8 - Word
has been r eceived of the death in St.
71, fo rmerly of this town. M r . Bligh
71. ·form e rly of. this town. Mr . Blich
sold the Corner s Grocery 15 years ago
to :11. F . Packard when the Bl-ighs
moved to St. Petersbu rg . Mr. Bligh
leaves his widow, Mrs. Cora M. Bligh;
.n daughter. Mrs. Cora Merce r; a son, ,
Alvi n; and th ree gTand childr en , a ll
of S t. Peter sbu rg.
\

JOHN D, WILLARD
vHsity, d ied at his borne &lt;iln Lincoln
1 avenue h ere this afternoon · a fter a
I short illness.
Saturday he attended thii Metta1 wa mpe hike of 111:. Sl C., from Sun~erla nd to the cabin oIJ Mt Toby aµd on,
his return home was taken s ick,
He was born at Appleton , Wis.,
May 31, 1885, the only cl)ifd of John
J'ason a nd Minna (Beem a n) Wlllard.
His· father d ied when he was eight
weeks old and hi.s · mother brought him
to Amh erst when h e was three years
old. He was edu cat ed in the local
schools and was graduated from A mh er s t college in 1907. H e a lso studied
at Hartford theological s eminary a nd
did g raduate work at Mass,ach usetta
State college and Harvard g rad ua te
1.I
school of ed uca tlon.
He pr each ed In the Con gt egatlon a l
churches at Pelham and Packardville,
Ve rnon Cente1·, Ct., a~orthlngt~
until 1913. He d id social worK"'l'or te
Ma s sa cbusettll Society for the Pre vention of Cruelty to Children In 1014
a nd was secretary of the Fra n klin
Co unty Farm bureau in 1915 and
1916.
Sen-ed Under Coolid ge
During the W o rld war Mr Willa rd
wa s secretary or the Massachuse tts
food a dministra tion and a m ember or
Gov Coolidge's s pecial comm ission on
the necessaries of life.
H e was direct.or of the exten s ion
d ivis ion of the State college from 1920
t o 1926 a nd then went t o Michigan
S tate- college wher e h e was director
of contlnuin ~ ed ucation unde1· Pre:s ident K enyon W . B ut te rfield. I n 1928
h e becam e r esearch associate profess or f or t h e America n Assoc iation fo r
.\d ult Educa tion.
Mr Willa rd m a 1Tied M iss H el&lt;:,n

�,

SEPTEMBER 14, 1930'

FRANK G. CREAMER, ..
NOTED BERKSHIRE
FIGORE,-DIES-..AT 691

.,
JJ

Long Keeper of Peru's G~neral Store and Political D1c~

district ~hool and wh e n h e had cc,mpleted the cc,urses of study found m
the rural sc hools of 50 or 60 years a~o
he r 1.maincd on the farm with his
for a few y ears.
father
G•·
· Early in life h e displaye d a k eenHinsdale , Sept. l ~ - Frank
doing 'busi n ess and, by th e
for
ness
Creamer , · 6n, a 11alive or. 1he s mall
his teens, he had fl
entered
he
time
town of P e ru, but v,11·y widely knownt number of profitabl e horse and c,1.ttle
1
.
credit.
his
to
trades
.
Ya
t ht·oug·h out the s tat e, died sudden
·• l;leallzin g t he value of _educatio n , esnoon today at his old home ou top of
ess ed ucal!on 1 he to ol{ a
Peru hill. Here he was born on .July ~·ccially busin
rse in a busmess school
20, 1861, and here fot· over 4.0 y ears c'ommcr cial couAt
this periocl he ~vas
he was proprieto t· of a ge·neral s tore in P itl stleld.
a nhood. After fi111 !&gt;liln~
m
t hat was patronized · b.¼ a num ber of just entering training
h e worked fo,
the surround ing hill towns; here for this business
cial houses m
· over 30 yeat·s he was absolu te dicta- sorrle of the acommer
short time. He ther.
t-or in town affairs, hold'in g the offi- Pittsfield for for
David Geer of B os ces of .modera tor at town-me etings, I went toa work
sal~sma n, l:iis s pecialty b ein g
tow n - clerk, tax collector , trnasure r, ton as
this line that h e e!!selectma n, assessor , road. superi n t cn - hon ey. It was in
n for h imself as
dent, pound keeper, fence v iewer, tree tablished a reputatio
territory consiste d
warden, fire warden and m easurer of a salesman . His
t1ot only of Massach usetts, but he sold
wood and lumber.
Islan~ and ConIn 19 02 h e was sent as represen ta- to the tra de of Rhode
tive of this district to Boston a nd his necticut als o.i:-o from town to city and
H e would
great natural wit and pictures que perof th ese ti1ree_ !!tat~s
sonality soon made h im an outstand - from city to townand wagon ,sellmg his
his horses
witll
in
arena;
in g figure in thi s larger
said of him that h e could
1890, during HatTison 's adminis tra- goods. It was
alone than a ny three
tion, he was appointe d postmas ter, but . ,s ell more goods
had on th,e pay r oll.
in 1918 h e h a d this job shifted to his s a lesmen th a t Geer
in thts .busin ess he
wife, Mrs Bertha Creamer , s o that for While engaged
e acquain tance of fri ends
38 years the m ail was taken care of form ed a largwit
a nd his ability ~o ,1
by th e Creamer fa mily at the g·eneral -hi!! r eady always working to his
"mix" w ere
st ore that served so many -p urposes.
t ha t sel dom
Nearly three years ago when Mr I advanta ge. A amemory
lso. After 40 y ea r s, . or
Creamer 's h ealt h failed his fam ily fa il ed, was ehis
failed, ;ne
ealth
h
s
hi
e
tim
was very anxious to leave Peru to' be u p until th an outlin e t'f n P.arly eyery
nearer hi.s physicia n a nd also fo r the co uld trace
l highway s off th e
sake of their daughte r, Frances , who one of the principa
so familiar with .
was
he
states
three
High
Pittsfield
the
g
attendin
was
Iu 18~5 he return ed to his n a tive
school. 1\Irs Creamer 's resign ation as
the, gen eral !&gt;tore
pos tmaster went into etiect on April I t own and p urchased on Peru hill. This
Brothers
1, 1928, the general store was closed ,I of B owf!nwas
one t o him.
rofitable
p
a
and the family moved to 1630 Nor th venture
He s uppli ed not only the people of
,
street, Pittsfield . '
Peru, but th e surround ing t owns with
At Home Town for Week End
nd his store was indeed
This ,w/is to Mr :crea mer like tear- tn eir needs, ashop.
Everyth ing nec~osum- a curiosity
ing up old roots and during the
of that rural compeople
'the
to
sary
•
munity could be f ound i' n the star~~
many opportun i mer an d ·week ends return
old
the
to
to
made
were.
clothing , hard wa.i'e,
home. , One of these was ·made today r Grpc,l)rie s, shoee, nts and even m~farm1ng impleme
for just - the week end and the fa'mhis shelvee.
ily w.ere just about to sit do.wn · to cines were on
During the 'World war wh en sugar
luncheqn when, M\' Creamer passed \
h e had several tons
away. His last words W/!re, "Oh! It's I became scarce n ecessity in stock. He :
so good to be home." It · is felt that - of this prized care of his town during 1:
this would have been in accordan ce ' not only tool, ! i:a'e!-=;:,== ===== ==
= ===-== ==Sdi
with · his · own · wishes, as he often
the scarcity, but J1e apportio ned it ou,
said, "Here I was born, here I have
tc, Pitts fi eld me rcha nts ·who could no
,
die."
may
lived and here I hope I
get sugar at any cost. As an exampl
Frank Creamer was a Democra t and
or his l&lt;ind ness, for Ci·eamer was !
the towll of · Peru was stroni;ly Rekind man, th e sugar was sold to th
publican , · bu! very few ever quests at cos t · price.
tioned his ability to ru n ,the town I city merchan
J:[e was a J)emocr at In politics an ,
gathered
a/tail's, , and the , farmers 'store
·
nd
a
'
old.
about the stove in thewere
never tired of talking politics, wh eth e
ra'rely demade 'the sla'tes that
H
, state or town. con
national
was
it
·
h
f t d Th e
the old
was a familiar fi g ure
W O were not ' a part
OS
"
ea e '
of the Creamer machine had very litdlrec
the
vention days previous to
tie show. The Peru town-me etin;;s
prim a ry system and more than . one
":'ere noted for the amazin 6 person allhas taken the floor and "read the rlc
ties that were freely used among the
act" to conv ention delegate s whe.
voters and many from nearby towns
they sh owed ~ 1 t endency to compr~
regularly attended this annual event
mise with th~dpp os ition.
at, which the · Creamer s supplied a
He was /l- '!me mber or the Genen
bountifu l luncheon !or friend and foe
Court In 1902, r eprese11ting the ol,
alike.
"shoestr ing cli,stri ct," c onsisting 0
Store a Curlos_lty Shop
L enox and Rieb
Hi s stol·e was a c-Tiosity shop rare- , Peru, Becket, Lee, t in the electio,
mond. His oppon'ln
Jy found now but much n eeded In
Ba rnes, aJs,
James
for office wa:s
years gone by. H e had everythi n~
of P eru. A unique situation of th,
from needles a nd pins to a ~hureh
election was t hat on the day of e'Jec
pulpit. At variou~ times custome rs '
tlon he and Barnes had dinner to f0'1' fun would ask to look at ox yokes
gether in Crea mer 's home and a ,
false teeth or glass ey es aml. l\Jr
Creamer 's in vi ta ti on. The occurren ci
creamer with a · twinkl e in his eye
showed Cream er's ,;ood wil l foi
was usually nble io produce even such
Barnes, whom h e a l ways bad a fond
•
unlikely merchan dise.
n ess tor ..
After th e advent of automob iles a.
o(
front
in
,:-as pump was installed
the Creamer stoi-e and ma ny a way.
~arer who would have been stra nd ed

tator m Mountain Town Held I3 Town Offices

I

I

ties

0

in

I

�-------:.::-:----:-- -------I
wo..s
I1

~ rongly imr,lantcd in h is ma keup.
·e
ever 1·eady to a ss is t oth ers
~u d . man y a man in his commun ity
, i e~ctvecl his original payn1ent on a
fa , m, a h erd or s tock o r a t eam of
I h~rsc.
•, from hlm. o'ood soun d a d- I
1
~ c_e _ t o
Young
m en in r egard to '
, h , l(t nnc] ways of livin g w:i.s often
cl lis p,ensed by hf m too.
H e man·iec\__Miss Bertha Pomcro,y
0
!'...• W~t.hiru:tpn, -ro\Vhoiii7 iefrcq ueiTT ,y gave m uch credit for his
s ucccss. H e lenvc.s his widow, twu
c111.ug hters , Miss Haz el Cream~r, a
tea cher In one of the h ig h sc hools
of H !l;j-tfo rd, and Frances Cream t' r ,
a s• ud r "t in the Pit ts field Hi gh ,
s chool.
J

F. G. CREAMER'S RITES
ARE HELD AT PERU'

' f Hinsdale, Sept. 16-The fun~ral of '.

}' BANK G. CREA.l\IER

Plcture8qi10 Berkshire .P lgure WIi i
.
Dkd Yesterday
I

The D emocr a ts of the · county hon!
·ored him in 1912 wh en he was n·omi,
~ nated for sh eriff of B erkshire .county,
He wrui opposed to ·;rohn Nicholson
' the present sh eriff and was defeated
.i. ! It was in town poJitiq.s tha t h (
\o gainea th e tit le of "mayor." In 1897,
o r a .y ea,· a fte r h~ purchased th(
store in P e ru, h e got into town poJi.'
tics. F or a number of yea1:s 'he helc
the offi ce of 't o wn tl'ea.surer, sel~ct=
inan, town clerk, a 5r5essor and a
number of minor offices . These office,/
proved a frequ ent conttst for years.
He was oft en oppos ed on el~ctiot
day, but his skill in getting voten
to his side wh en a contest arose mos ,
always work ed to hi~ advantage. In
. 1927 he suffe red a dPfeat though'
when he lost a numlier of his offices
He · was talc-en ·ill shortly afterwarc
and did not enter the 1028 contest.I
but h a d a gro up of his frlenda 01
the ballot. Th ese men were defeate?
however.
Mr Crea m e r was a typical countr:
storekee p-er. He m a intained the on! ;
store in t o wn and for that reasoJI
had the postofllce also. An occasiona
h o ur's di vers ion for man y of h1
Pitts'fi eld fri ends was to drive t ,
P eru
and vis it w it h th e "mayor.
Am on"' th es e m e n were form e r Dist
Atty Ch;irl~ H. Wright and Att;
J. Wan! L ewl.s. Form e r Unite d State
Senator Murray Crane was also
frequ ent vis itor to the s t o re, whe ,:•
th ey w ould s it a nd li s ten to bu
philosoph y of g o vernm ent.
His ho me a cro.l;s th e r oad from th 1
store a lwa y s h el d -a hospitabl e wei
c om e to f rien ds. "Come · up and hnvl
d inn e r w ith u s Sunda y" was an in ,
vit atlon that h a s often oeen extend~~
and
acc ept~d by b is fri ends. Hi~
Ji om e was a lways open t o fri ends.
A
th o ughtf uln ess fo r ot h ers w ~

~

~

Frank G. Cream er, h eld this afternoon , at the old hom estead on Peru
hill, was attend ed by m or e than 200
who had kn own · and adm ired him.
Rev Ralph Timberla k e of Da lton was
in charge of th e simpl e s ervice. Walter Pike and David Codhrane ·or P eru.
Louis L. Sherma n and Ernest Orpin ,
of Hinsdale and Lawrence Estes and
, Willlam H. Cullett qt Dalton, all life- ,
I time friends of Mr· Creamer, acted as
bearers. Many Berkshire towns were
represented by those who came to 1
pay their last respects.
Judge Ch!!rles L. Hibbard, Atty J. Ward Lewi~, Mr and Mrs Eugene
Backman, and Dr Michael W. Flynn
of Pittsflel~, l}_arry Meacham chairman of the Dalton
selectmen and
Harry Ford of Dalton, Thomas A.
Frissell and Carlton A. ' Pierce of
Hinsdale, Dr Mary Sanderson of Amherst, and Mrs H. D. Pease and Clemenf Burr of Worthington were a few
of ,the many that came from neighboring to,yns. Thi.s was the first
death in Mr; Creamer's immediate
family and his wife and dau~hters did
not choose the windy htlltop of Peru
for his resting - place but selected a
lot In the Maple-street cemetery .In
Hinsdale. About 50 automobiles were
in the fun~ral cortege.
'
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�"The Mayor of Peru"

e
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The late Frank' G. Creamer of
Peru , "the highest town in Massa- ,
'chusetts," had entered his 70th
year before he died l)n his Berkshire ,
hilltop. His life for the most part
was lived in Peru, which now has a
population of about 100 souls. He
was for years one of the best-known
He
citizens of Berkshire county.
was also an interesting: person,
Mr Creamer for more than a
generation kept the- only store in
town. A born p~Jitician, he was
both the center and the whole circumfer!lnce · of its political life, in
spite of the handical) of being a 1
consistent Democrat in a rural Re •
publican community. For some 30
years he held practically all of the
town _offices, and was postmaster to
boot. To hold all the important
town offices at once was never burdensome to Mr Creamer, yet there
were always quite a few n1atters,·
for him to remember and l9ok aftei:.
If one is selectman, town clerk,
town treasurer, a ssessor, road superintendent, fire and tree warden
pound keeper and fence -v iewer and
measurer of wood and lumber besides being moderator of town-~eetings, whenever they are called, one
can have a fairly active life with
tending•/store and being postmaster
and county auctioneer as one's chief
·
vocation.
It was as "the mayor of Peru"
that Mr Creamer" .,became widely
known after the city newspapers
began ·play_ing up for the front page
t~e town~rneet!i;igs ?n the breezy
h11lto1? with picturesque detail and
humorous coloring. City folks grew
interested in a rural place where oje
man held all the offices and, after
t~e p~ssage of years, had to fight '
d1ssat1sfied cdtics in one end ·j of
the town or the other in order to
maintain his supremacy. It was discovered that Mr Crejmer was a
"character"-and so "mdividual," as
the summer boarders in the Berkshires would be apt to say. He was
indeed "individual," also a "char'acter"; and no one appraised the
value of being one quicker than he
djd.

The town , al so, came to appreciate
the publicity he won for it. He was
hospitable, g enerous and kind hea rt- i
ed. He had the s hrewdness of a ;
David Harum ; he had a racy wit I
1
and rare fluency of s peech. ' When
he served in the lower branch of th e
Leg,islature he made his term
memorable in town history by tie·
livering a humorous speec h on
Peru, "the h ighest town in Massa- /
, 'ch usetts" in the sense that the
village itself had the highest eleva•
tion, not to · mention the best air,
which made a hit in the House. He
prou'rlly . preserved newspaper clip1 pings of that speech for many years '
thereafter. ·
It was always suspected that the
,politica,l ti.e s between t&lt;the mayor of
' 'Peru" an·cl the late Gov Crane were
r~ther close. The gove.rnor never
passed the Creamer store on his
way down 'the hill to Dalton without
stopping to ha ve a chat. .it was Mr
Crane's way of keeping close to the
people, just as Se~ator- ii';;,ry Wilson, . l~ter ".ice-president in. Grant's
adm1mstrat1on, would drop in on
and
butchers
cobblers,
Natick
barbers,. when h,e· wa f at home, to
feel the public pulse. Senator· Hoar
in his au\obiography testifies that
Senat.or Wilson: knew what ,w:as stiring in Massachusqtts politics sooner
than any othe.r , politician in the
state. Mr Crane was apt to know as
soon as any of the leaders of hi s
1
time, and Frank Creamer w~·s oiie
of h!s feelers,. although Frank was
a Democrat and joshed Mr·· Crane •at
th e first /opportunity when Demo- •
cratic Presi?ents or governors had
'
been elected.
Most . people think of him s a
'
:ankee-;-a Yankee rural type. ;hat
is where error _comes in. Frank ,
Creai:ner, one used to be• told, was i
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.
extraction • Yet , that b mng
of
~ Irish
ue, 1ie was one Irishman who
seemed to absorb a whole Yankee
hilltop
' nat'ives, , atmosphere and all
.
·
mtoT 1115
bwn I•personality without·
'
spo1 mg wha~ was Yankee in ·t

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�OROPARMELEE, 72,

GORGE AT WEST
CHESTERFIELD IS
BOUGHT BY STATE

F orm,e r Mi nis ter Pra ctis ed
m Wo rth ing ton , Hin sda le
Bef ore Co rni ng to
Springfield in 1906.

Tru stees of Pu blic Re ser vations Ta ke Ov er Bea uty
Spo t On Wes tfield Riv~r
and 17 Ac res of For est

PHYSICIAN HERE
FOR YEARS, D~Ai

tisin g
Dr. Will iam J . P a rme lee, prac
last 24
the
for
ity
c
this
in
phys ician
sda le and
year ,s and befo re ·1906 in Hin
afte rnoo n
rday
e
yest
died
,
Wor thin gton
Stre et. He
In his hom e, l 08 Calh oun
•
w as 72 y ea rs old .
Hop kins ,
in
born
was
elee
Parm
Mr.
wa s g rad:Vlich., Aug . 13, 1858. H e
Univ errve
Rese
rn
este
W
uate d from
And over
s ity in 1880 a nd f rom the . H e en The.olog lcal Sem ina r y in l 1883
istry that
t ered th e Con g r egat iona min

th e pret B osto n, .Jun e 16- 0nc ofts h as bee n
uset
ach
ss
a
M
in
s
spot
t
ties
n of p u blic
a dded to t he stat e's chai
its bea u t y
r eser vati ons ln orde r t hat u ity . This
m ay be pres erve d l:1 per pet
e on tho
is t h e 'Nes t Che st erfie ld gorg
o f pub ees
rust
t
TJ1c
.
ver
ri
eld
W estfl
t the pro pli c rnse rvat ions h ave bo ughhavi ng been
e rty , the t rans fer pape 1·s g this scep asse d last wee k. In b uyin
edia tely
nic gorg e and t he 17 acre s imm
ees carr ied
s u rr0u nd ing !t, the tru st on s of the
o ut the r ecen t r ecom m e n datin eed s and
g o ve rnor ·s com mi t tee on
u ses of open s pace s.
est e rfie ld,
The gorg e is In W est Chsbu rg a nd
m
lia
Wil
,
on
mpt
tha
Nor
r
nea
la m C ul Cum m ingt on, w h ere th e Will
is situ a ted.
le n B ryan t h om est ead t 200 acre s
Tha t hom este ad of a bou s a.b out a
was a cq uire d by the tru stee
y ear ago.
D r Ale xOn a r ecen t can oe trips D. Cab ot
and er For bes a nd Thodm aw e r e s o imca m e t o t h is g or ge a n tha t they impres sed by its bea u ty opti on o n the
m edia tely arra nge d an to
app roval o!
cutt ing righ ts, subj ect
r,1e rvat ions, t o
the t rust ees of pub licbein
g m arr ed by
s a ve the pla.c e from
clow n of the
the con tem plat ed cutt ingc h ther e are
h emloclc s ta nd in whi 15 feet Jn cirtree s 100 feet tall, som e The he mlo ck
cum fer e nce a t the base . of
the gorg e,
s tand is on the wes t s ide ntia l to ge t
b ut it . was d eem ed .esse ea.st s ide as
s ome of the la nd o n thethe east ban k
w ell, beca use it is from
ic coul d con ven only tha t t he publ
i e ntly enjoy t h e view .
emb ers of
I n the opin ion of t h e m
the trus tees
the stan ding com mitt ee of w h o h a ve
rese rva tion s,
of publ ic
a bly' the
view ed the gor ge, "it is prob
e1·y in the
m ost beau tiful n a tural scen
The re are
c omm onw ealt h of its .kin d."rive r belo w
thre e othe r gorg es on the
al merit'
equ
each beau tiful but riot ofare con trole d
es
a nd thes e lowe r, gorgPow
er com pan y
by the Tur ne rs Fall s
or t he m a rket '.
and ther efor e are outjust
boug h t was
Alth oug h t h e gorg e
, it , yas v isn ot then p ubli c prop erty
10,000 p er ited last Year by mor e t h a n cip a lly on
. prin
sons who wen t ther
Sun da ys and holi days .
t he pur- .
A t t h n m eeti ng auth orizing
S. Rac lcem ann,
chas e .w ere . ChaJrles
s w . E iiot,
Cha r les S. B ird, r., Ch arle
2 d, W . Roge r Gre eley , Her bert Par ker
ren ce B'
Hen ry ll!L Cha nrii ng a nd Lu.u
·
---- Fle tch er. ~
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DR. W l L LlAM J . PAR1\IF ;LEE
,
24 Y eur·s
' Practisin g Physician i11 City
l s Dea d.
'
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.
l
that_ wor k
sam e yea r and cont inue d ine. peno d he
sam
unti l 1893. D urin g the wa~ g rac. uate_rl
sturl ied med icin e and
of t h e Umfrom t he m edic a l colle ge In
1800 .
' vers ity of New Yor k City
.
1893
in
y
r
t_
is
l\Un
Left
l
In 1893 .
: Upo n leav i ng the ·m i n istry lf as a
!)d h imse
E&gt;r . Parm el.ee _esta blish
re he pracphy sic ia n in H insd ale, whe
H e t h en
tised for abou t fo u r year s.re he con whe
• wen t to Wor thin gton , eigh
t year s be' duct ed h is prac tise for
in 1906. _He
fore com ing t o Spri n g fieldever Ri nce.
had ,b een in prac tise hereelee a tten d ed /
Las t Jun e, Dr. Parm
of his clas s f
the 50th ann ua l r e union. ersi
ty .
at Wes t ern Rese rve Univ
F. P arH e leav es his wife, , E m ,ily
Will iam J .
m elee of this city , two sons
N . Y.,
P a rme lee, J r ., of Cha ppa qua,
of Mid dle- '
e
mele
Par
R.
rold
a
H
d
n
' a
s, Mrs . ,
t own , Con n. ; two daug hter
Pa .. a n d Mrs .
F ra nk Doll ln of Moo res,
cit y, a n d a
Lym a n B. Phe lps of this P e r k in s of
G.
y
r
Eme
.
ther
-bro
half
Los Ang eles.
duct ed
l"un eral serv ices will be con
rr ow a ft .
in Byro n's f u neral hom e t omo
Rev . E dwa rd
ck ,
j P. rnoon a t l o'clo
of Mem or ia l 1
1P ays on B c,rry, pasi or Bur
ia l w iil be
C h urch , w ill offic iate. orth ing t on .
in Cen re r c;:e mel ery, \V

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GLEN GROVE WILD
L1FE SANCTUARY
DEDICATIONHELD
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· Tract To Be Memorial To Dr l
Russell H. Conwell-· Cere~ !
monies Conducted at Sofil'h ·
Worthington
' By a Staff );tepor ter
Sou th&gt;,.W ort:hin gton, Sept. 6 - Th e ,
Gle n G~ e Wild Life Sanct uary was
dedica ~ed here today as a m emori al
·'.ft."' the late Dr Russe ll H. Conwell,
. patrio t, orator, au thor, educa tor and
d n ative of this vlilag e.
1much belove follow ed the ann ual mt:The exe r cise,;
moria l servic e. for D r Con well held in
t h e churc h h ere. The sanctu ary dedication was spons ored by the Wortl ling •
t on Grang e.
'
; More than 200 m en, wome n and ch ila ssem bled in
! dren trom severa l states
the morn ing a t the Sou th Worth i ngton Met hodist ch urch for the m emori a l '
servi ce. F ollowi ng the ser vice baskent
luncb ei; were s erv ed in a n earby g le
and from 2. 30 to 3.30 a special eervic e
was condu cted at tbe memo ria l bowld er
to on e side of the late Dr Con well's
n ome. Servic es at Glen grove, which
is locate d ou tside of ·wort hingto n on
wha t is k nown a s t he ding le roa d off
t h e Skylin e t rail, con cl uded the day's

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progr a m.

50 Acres Set Aside for Sanct uary
Throu gh the altrui sm of Emers on
J. D a vis, a bout 50 a cres of woodl a nd
have b een s et aside for the sanct uary. 1
A m odest s tart t oward develo ping this
p ictu resque s pot h a s been made
t hroug h the cea seless w ork of Mr
Da vis and oth ers who have made
paths a nd cleared a space In which to
hold the dedica tion s ervice . It , was
origin ally vlann ed to condu ct dedica tory , servic e,; later, but friend s and
neigh bors of Dr Conwe ll consid ered
t oday the most oppor tune time, for it
was Dr Conwe ll':, practi ce to return to
his birthp lace each year th e firs t week
in Septem be,r.
Under presen t plans it is intend ed
to r eopen an old wood r oad which
instretc h es from the main highw aygood
la nd. Suitab le pa rking places,
to
r oads and t a bles and bench es are
a
be added tha.t peop\e may come to
beauti ful ,Place for peace and comfort.
M,rs Harri et Higgi ns, matro n of
the
the Juven ile G range , cha irma.n of thtr
g eneral comm 1ttee in charg e of oon I
da y's progra m, op ened botf1 aftern N.
servic es. She introd uced Henry the
Jenks of Chesh ire, maste r ot and ,
state Grang e, who spoke bri efly the
rea.d the consti tution . Follow ing
the grove
1 rea ding of the consti tution
· of 1
was dedica ted by a large bouqu etwas
·
wild flower s and cut flowllr s
.
large
a
base of
at the
laid
g
, tree on the woode d slope over lookin
the impro vised wood en platfo rm near
ere
w
. the old wood road. The flower sA solo
carri ed by Mis s Ma ry Burr.
entitle d "Only God Cart Make a Tree,"
by Mias Jane Tuttle , grand daugh ter
of Dr Conwe ll, praye r by the Rev
j,Carl Sangr ee of Cumm ington and the
, recita tion of a poem, "Natu re's Creed,"
at the grnve.
m....._____
.
I compl eted the progra
_____,,

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Some or t nc 1x uests · - :: ·
A mong t he hon ored g u ests presenE.t
at t h is se rvice were Mrs H a r riet the ,
Davi.s, 81. oldes t mem ber of
n ·
Wort hi ng-ton Grang e, a n d Mrs Mario:if
I
ol dest charte r m em ber
S mit h.
,
ow
n
e.
Grang
th e Soull1 W orth ington
be- 1
ex t in c t. Seated on t h e platfo r mwere
sld ois Mr J en ks a nd Mrs H iggi ns ngton 1
th e offi cia ls of t he W orthi er t, 1
Grang e, Miss Beatri ce Van Wrer
;
mas te r ; Mrs Guy Bar tlett. lec tu
.A.1'1 hur G. Caper. s ecre tary, and Dre
th
of
ber
em
m
on,
s
F rn nc ls A . Robin
exe,iu tive co mmit t ee.
Dr Creelman 's Sermo n
_ Dr Haria n Creelm a.n of Aubu rn
Theolo gica l s emina ry, Aubu rn, N . Y.,
: s umme r res ide nt a t Worth in gton, de-the m orn
J !ivere d, the a~~:·e ss &lt;lu l'ing
e ·s ou th
th
at
ing h9ur of worsh ip
·w orthin gton Metho di s t chu rch. In h i~·
," ,
!· ta lk on ."Livi ng ◊n th e Hig h Places
the
for
ss
kfulne
an
th
his
d
presse
·h e ex
fac t tnat the Bible an d es peci ally the
Old T es tam ent h a s been given to _th~ 1
world throu gh the m edium of a people who Ii ved on the hills and loved
.
.
t hem .
Dr Creelm an p ointed out th a t tru P-i
not
is
t
mo!'al a nd spi r it ual at!Aii1m en
so methi ng s tation arJ lik e a place, of
r esiden ce. " Norm a l relig ious living
ne l' seeks th e . ·hi g h er levels of
t hough t. of s ympa th , ·, of mor al a n ,!
Dpil'itu a l a c•hievem en t a nd ou t look,"
be said.
,Dr Craelm a n on Dr Conwell
In part D r Creelm a n sai d : "We •are
her e today thanl, ful fol' these beau t il,
ful hills w hich symbo lize the eternafe.
u nchan ging vari eties of h uma i1 li
·we are· h ere · today th a nk ful for those
.. who found ed this - town and fo r . thosere
w)lo la id the f ounda ti on s of the oth in
a nd
.!,ill towns , in revere nce to God
love of 'Chris t a n d f or all those s ince
_tbeir day w ho have believ ed t hat m a_n
can never ,attain · hi s true hight sav e
for God"s h elp.
"An d we are here today t h a nkf· ·
especi ally for 'God's gift to us- of our
Dr
dist ing u ish ed · fell ow - t owns ma n,
a nd
Ru ssell _H. Conw ell, 'wh ose life seek
worl, affec tion ately w e would
to comm em orate at t his time. This
g reat h ea r t , w h o was born h er e ; who
loved th ese high places in his p h ysical. s ta tu re and v igor in his t e11aci.ty
of ·purpo se jJ\ h is .unco-n quera bl e fa ith ;
in his ,intell ectua l, m or a l a nd spiritu al
att a inm ent em tiod ied in liimsel! the .
and :_ , the
el evatio n , the s er en ity
streng th .bf tli e hill s. F rom thiii'' town
e
h e went our to b e a citizen of th
w·o l'ld. H e was t h e cont1:i bution -of
la.rge.
t
a
y
tr
' t hes e •hills to t h e coun
He vicari ou s ly re p resent ed us.
"And it is w ell for .us a t .t his time
a nd .at all tim es t o re mi n d ours.el ves
, th a t t h e g r eat dyn a m ic p9we r which
caused h im t o wallt u pon li is 'high
places in li fe w as · reli g ion, th a t funda menta l !i1dls p ens ibl e, , old-fa s hioned
imper i~habl e r eality - r eligion . · In the
~pirit of his Ma ster he· w ent tiiroil gh '
life not . t o · be mi11is t er ed unto, but to
· mins t,:,r . His · great gifts 'li e ,held in·
th e spirit of ste\'{a rdahip for God. 'He ·
was every thing else -.but •a self-c entere d
man. His ideal wa.s· to be a worke r
with God for the. ·u1llif ting and up-·
buildi ng of his feHow men. And so he
n ,ached out a hand hear tily and efficientl y to help ot~ers r ea ch thelr high
places ip. life. fu r ej oiced to let God
for the
work in \1,nd \•h r0ugh . him
_ __ __
~ _cl o(,.ot!J~.1:s.,__ __ _ _

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�:cro up s At Co nw ell Da y and Bir d

i ·

Sancturay Exe rci ses Al Wo rth ing to

:fo-

rig ht: Mrs "H;irciet E. Dav'· .
, Je{t
Top_:D eclica tory exerciiies at Glen Grove Wild J, ife s a nctuary
er of Wor th in g ton p.·ii.i1ge ;
mast
e,t,
.W
Van
Beatrice
Miss
;
&amp;1, oldes t me mber of Wor thingt on Grange
&lt;'xt inct, anti ,~,rnry Burr,
now
Gr.ange,
ton
g
Mrs ~1ar ion S mi th, 80, charter ,membe r of Sou th Worthin
t· tlJ~ iJirthpla ce of Dr
nea
held
service
ternoon
f
a
of
e,s
-Speak
·Bottom
.
pla cing bouquet of · fl owers
gton, Hen~Y .Kjenk s of ~ hes hire, masRu sselt H. Conwe-11, le ft to right: Oemen t F. Burr of Worthin
Somcr vil!ie ; Rev James H, Burckes of
of
,
Conwell
Dr
of
son
,
Conwell
M.
Leon
;
ge
an
r
t er of t a te g
field,
Chester
of
White
Worth ngton and ·n ev Robe rt S .

! -

�''H ow m a n y fo1111d r cst orntion to
health and s tren g th ; b ow m a ny :c;ccm·ed an educn t lon : how m a ny were
·directed and quicke n ed in the wa y of
eternal life throug h his persuasive eloquence, the streng th of his p ersonal ity
and the institutions which he founded
Had he
and generously supported.
and self-seeking h e
been selfls h
could have been counted among the
wealthy of the land, but like the g reat
apos_tle he preferred to be 'poor, yet
mak1n.;;- many rich '-'rlch toward God.'
And s o this great man, whom we in
common with so many throughout the
length and breadth of our land h old in
acce ti onatc remembrance, lives on. not
onl y in the g reat h os pitals and c hurch
and university whi ch h e es tablish ed
. a:1d built up by his unflinching unselfish effo1·ts and wise Jea d e l's h ip, but
as well in the appreciation and h eart ' felt gratitude or those wh os e s teps
have been turned to the high places of
life by his words and his example. And .
so his memory and his infl-i'.ie nce will 4
I
abide."

I

Afternoon Memorial Ser,·lce
The afternoon :service on the green
1to one sic.le of Dr Conwell's home was
opened by Mrs Higgins who presented
:\Ir Jenks. l\fr Jenks brought greetings from the state Grange. He said
, he was proud of the Worthington
7.Grange · for foreseeing the need of
'e.recting a memorial to stich a g·reat 1
man as Dr Conwell. In conclusion Mr
Je.nks called upon the Grange to carry :
on its community service work. Referring to the memorial bowlder in front
of which he stood while speaking·, Mr
Jenks _characterized its placing and I
· dedicatjon last year the best piece of \
community service work throughout ,
.
the state in 1930.
· R ev James H. Burckes of Worth- 1
ington, anotber speaker, declared Dr I
Conwell's life was rich because he ap- ,
plied three rules of life, they being : Be ,
true to yourself, be true to your God,
and be true to your native town. "You
I need to make footprints-not
j and
the kind we can see, but special im - ,
· p1·ints such as Dr Conwell left.'' His
· closing remark was, boys and ~iris of
Nre hills hav~ a 10 to 1 chance of
'· reaching great hi~hts.
Clement F . Burr, one of the town's
~
oldest resident then recalled incident.c;
tt-at happened in this town before his
time as told to him by the old man
when he was a Joung man. Leon M.
Conwell, son of Dr Conwell, touched J
~he heartstrings when he simply, but l
firmly expressed his deep gratefulness r
, to the Grange for helping to bring \
I back precious m emories of the past.
Prayer was offered by Rev Robert S.
White of Chest erfield. _ _ _ _ _ ·

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GREENFI.ELD
INDUSTRY WILL COME
FROM MILLERS FALLS /
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Art Stone Company, Hiring~
65 Men,, Will Make Shift j

Within Month
Greenfield, Oc t. 18- T hc A rt S t on P
company of Millers F a lls, m a k ers of /
preen.st buil ding s t on e, •will m ov e t o '
Greenfield wit hin three w eeks o r n
month , It was announced t oday at the .
; Chamber of Commerce. The com pany
cmpl'Jys 65 to 70 m en a n d th e annnual
pay r oll is about Sl00,000.
The company is expect ec'I to loca te
in the buildings used by the Pro&lt;luc tion Machin e c ompany on upper Wells
street. Business expa ns ion was th e '
reason given by Richard G. Barrett,
sunerinten rlent, f or the change.
The W ells-stree t building h a s 16,000
square f eet of flo.a r space and t he
company p lans an addi t ion g iving 5500
more. Work is expected to start on
the addition within a · week .
. T otal tonnage of the c ompany's finished Product each y ear is estimated
New Eng land. New
, at 6000 ton·s.
York, _New Jersey and P ennsylvania
compn.se the territory in whi ch the
Art Stone company does most • of its
business, but orders have b een han' died as far south as Hampton Roads ,
Va.
The product ,of the new local indusl ~ry Is !1- pre~ast concrete stone which
Jsw an 1m1tat1on of any natural stone
. q arr)ed._,. '!he process of manufacture is s.m!lar in many respects to
~hat of an iron foundry in that sand
, is molded_ fro!Jl wooden patterns and
the matenals is then poured into th ese
molds.
. Th~ Millers Falls Board of Trad
le~rnmg that the Art Stone co~ e on
~~ftt move appointed a special
ee, consistmg ,af John C
arr?1I,
Herbert Ward and others t t
mits~
to
I duce the company
1
\ Present location
0
fie?am~;~ ~r~~~ comJ:?any, all Green1

~;::i:.

~r:;ai~Y

Ba,tJ,tt

S, . ·.

Pn•"dent. frving L j

, Bart.Jett' Jr·: vice-J?resident , Irving L.
G. Bartlett.'• super,ntenden t, Richard
---- - -

--

+

....:._

- - - .""==-

\

----

�ARTSTONE COMPANY
TAKES NEW FACTORY ·
Work of Transferring from
Mille rs Falls to Greenfield
Is Being Hastened · ·

1

nap ld work is be inG" do ne in lra nsF.erring t he opera t ions or !be Art Slone
comp any fro m Mi llern Falls to Uie
-.
prope rty In urper . ·wells street , Grneu
ll eld, forme rly used by the Prod t,c ll on
a
Mac hine comr any, T!1is co ncern has
record of 22 years as manul'arl 11 re r of
a
ce ment produ cts,. It has acqu ired
!arge build ing with walls largel y of
from
glass and additi o nal lighti ng
overh ead. This conta ins about 16,0000
squar e feet of floo r space and 550
a,
; feet wlll be added by t he erection of I
heavy frame building. A stee l shed al
ready erecte d on the pre mises will be
Appro xim ately
util ized as a_ garag e.
a
70 perso ns , will be employed in
buildi ng t hat hits lain id le tor a num
ber or years . The conw any will ·have
the adva ntage s of a Boston &amp; Maine ,
IH
rallroaii siding. Richa rd G. Bart, et t · I
mana ger of the plant.
1

IMANY.ATTEND ROTARY

CONVENTION IN CHICAGO
"

17,000 Delegates Indude

~epresen tat.ives Fro11,1 62
;-Nations of World

Chicago, J une 24-H aving witue ssed
in pagea ntry ,the grow t h _w ithin 25
years qt Rotar y Inter natio naJ, 17,_000
Rotar ia.ns ,today began the round of
busin ess ·sessio ns and social fetes
1
w hich cJ)fTiprise the progr am of th-:i.
silver ·anniv ersar y conve ntion of } he
world-Wide organ izatio n.
Deleg ates fro'l} 62 differ ent lan,ds
we1·e amon g th-:i th ousan ds of members who witne ssed the pagea nt last
night at ChJcago stadiu m whi ch dea:
picted the r ise withi n a. quart er o(
centu ry or a Chica go attorn ey 's ideal
of "serv ice" into a world -wide ethica
force.

·

Takin g par t In the pa,;reant th e first
majo r event on the co; ivent ion program were the 1"3aders who g uided
2;;
th e organ izatio n thro ug h its first s
·year s from a meeti ng of four friend
to an. orgun izatio n of 153;000 me rn
bern in 3324 Indiv id ua l Rotar y clubs
in a ll parts of tl1 e world . '
Paul Harri s, fou nder of the organ izatio n . arose from a sickb ed to gre&lt;:t
tile del egate s. Harl" is appea red on t he
er
stage to join the other 15 chartin memb ers. H'? wns escor ted by the
.
Newne
terna tiona l presid en t, Euge
ton . and 17 past presid ents.
Harri s, in hi s messa ge to the a.s., ~ mlJI)', Pxprc ssed .;rrati flcatio n at the
rprea d of Rotar y.

/
1
/
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I
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(3 l

�;,,:;
:; .:

.

· . All the pan els JU t he house arc
THn e, ~ome oC thn _boards being m ore
that'. three f eet wide. A ll t he par ti tw ns are of plank a nd a r e lathed
' with hand:s pli t laths bearinr.- plaster
Th e p~r e1 :,1i; d l the
I on both Sld~S -

COLONIAL VILLAGE
HAS GROWN SINCE
SHOW LAST YEAR

se, esp~ci:1. ll y th'l. t c;f t he.

Four New Buildings Have
Added Greatly to . OldTime Community

aR

RED SCHOOL HOUSE
ONE OF ATTRACTIONS I
Blacksmith Shop, Southwick
Church ~nd Historic Old
Hpme ·Among Buildings
Added Since 1929
The New Engla nd Coloni al village
!It the Ea.ste rn States exposi tion hls

1

grown older and bigger since last
year: bigger by . rbur 1;1ew buildin gs
and older by their aggreg ate age of 1
·
·
496 )Teare.
A histori c h ouse which ·stood Its
groun d in Spring field tor 163 y ears
Jinally r elinqu ished its site tor inclusion in the museu m villa_ge ; an old 1
blacks mith shop which for almos t 100
years kept Cheste rfield' s horses hoes in
trim, will now be in specte d yearlya
by all mann er of passin g people ;
little red-br ick school house which forg
125 years broug ht readin g, writin
n,
and arithm etic to Whate ly childre
will now bring histor y to adults : aa
ny
a
m
which
South wick churc;h in
sermo n resoun ded down th e aisles of
108 years, will now be active in t),e
duties of exhibi tion.
Mrs James Storro w of Boston, who
fir3t concei ved the model village
(thenc e the name of Storro wtown ),
anang ed this y·ear that some of th e
choice st bits of colonia l archit ecture
should be embod ied in the new addi- ,.
tions. First of all is the house built
in 1767 by Edwar d Phillip s, which has
been ;nsta ll ed in th e . "Bette r Rom e~
Movem ent" colon y. This dig nified old
dom :ci le i~ in a fin e state or preaer va-l
1ion, h a vihg i:ested on its origin a
te
founda tions on High street, opposi of
t he ·orn F ai rbanks ·ractor y fQr all
its 1 63 years.
The hrrn se has 11, name propor tiona tely . a.s,- Jong . . as -lti; • ~•ears. It · ls
Philllp s-Mckno;,_,n officia lly
Kinist ry - Russe ll - Thurs ton - Seaver Foster -Brew er-Fos ter-Re dfern house,
and in its tl1!le Is &gt;;preserved and
chroni cled the histor y of some of
the finest famili es that ever receiv ed
mail in Spring field.
It was built by Phillip s on land
purcha sed from W!Jlia m Hodge s, son
of Elder l'Ienry Hodge s, one of the
city's first settler s. Exper ts In colonia l archit ecture te,m It "a sampl e
of good workm anship ' and rugged , yet
artisti c design ."
Home to Be Proud of
Accor ding to histori ans, Phillip s was '
a man of great. desire s and went to '
much work to build a home of which
he would · be proud, s,µd which would
be og.Jed by visi tors u one or the
show places of the city. Each board
in the house was ha.nd-hevyn, each
hand n a il for ged, each windo w sill
hnnd cut, ea ch bri ck In the chimn ey
a nrl fir epla ces hand molde d. No studding was used , just pla nking with
ha nd-h ewn boarcla from founda ti on to
r oof. T her e were no br a ces to help
t he h ouse d efy th e rig ors of 163 New
f: n ,; J.1 1irl w in ter:. a nd 1!1 0 pra nks of
Cun n ec tlc ut valley wen l~1 cr.

-;;-the..

,_r,1•ofl r

hou
cupboa rd, is nil hand carved , ,,,, -1 aitt
th e price r,1 tes of pres ent. antiq ues
is w01 th t odny doub-le the amou n t
t hat t he entire huildi ni; could have
been bough t for wh en fi rst erecter!. e
'1.' he sills anrl be~m s of the cottag
are of oal,, prob::tl) !y cut from th e
very ynrJ in wh ic h stood the housP
up unti l a. f ew m onths ago, when it

t~k en dow n by G. H olc.! e n Greene

w
of Dr1dgewa te:·, C t., :rnd remov ecl to
the ex positio n gro und s. Y✓ h e n torn I
1
down the h onse was in fi ne condili o11
the o:1l y ch a nge3 in structu re bei'.lg
th e wmd ow fram es and the top of th e
chi mney. Th e frames of th e hous e
will be resto red and the c himn ey r e, built as it stood in its earlies t cl ays.
As for its occ upa nts, about th ree
years after Phillip s built th e house
It was sold to Dr Willia m McKin istry:
rector of St Thom as 's church , for 140 ·
pounds , or a total cif $700. Dr McKinlst ry r emai ned owner until 1775,
when he sold it to Willia m Russe ll.
J ohn 'l'hurs t on, a ·Revol utiona ry soldier, owned it in 1777 and in 1785
Willia m Seaver , ad jutant brigad e maMa J Sea ver
jor, too!, posses sion.
passecJ., t-h l' hou3e along- to Capt Tim othy Fost'er , who lived there and
ow ned the house until 1so:;, when it
bis son,
1 came into the posses s ion of
Col Charle s Foster , who owned it until

I

1831.

From 1831 to 1848 it was occupi ed
by Da vid Brewe r, a nd then it r everted back to the Foster family under
hy.
Charle s F oster, grands on o! ,Timot edIn 18 66 it was pu r chased b y the R
fern fa mily, in _w t'se poss~i o!:1 it rem ained until Decem ber of last year, when It was b&lt;?ugh4. by Mr Greene,
dealer In old houses , paneli ng a nd interi ors. Under Mr Green e's directi on
the house was dissec ted and moved to
!the exposi tion ground s •o be rebuilt .
n, ..•h Shop
I Old · Stone Blacks
I The old stone blacks mith s hop of
f:heste rfield was for many years a
r:nd!'.I lark of the little comm unity. Its
mo:vu!g was a slow and carefu l proc-~ss, ' smce · the stop es W11ich compr ised '
its struct ure wete 6f variou s shapes
1
, and dimens ion!\ a~d ~were cemen ted~ogeth e_r. Each minut e. part, includ
, m g the stone, rafters and rafter pins
was n1;1mbered so that it could h~~ ·
Placed m exac.tl y fts right order when
, the . shop was reerec ted last June.
Even- the slate root and the enorm ous
bellow s ~ame with the · buildin g. The
blacks mith shop was presen ted the
colony by Mrs Storro w after she hadt
purcha sed the proper ty of Ij.ober
Go9dri ch of ,Keene , N. H.
Of g1•eat Intere st to visitor s at the
village will be th~ little red-br ick·
school house which tor 125 'years was
kno~ n as the W:hn;e ly ;North Center
school . It 'Yas shaped of clay from
Whate ly bricks , finishe d ·a nd furnished 111 pine and maple from Whate ly .forests , and people d for five generation s by Whate ly childre n.
Mrs Storr~ w acquir ed the proper ty
of -South ,
j from Willia m Gass &amp; · Son,
,Deerf ield, who took down the school - 1
~ouse, transp orted It south to Spring .
. fi eld and erecte d it Jn Its presen t form.
Mr Gass had only a. short;; wh!Je be, fora bpugh t It from Frank 0 , Scott,
who 1n turn had acquir ed it from.
MontV llle L. and Murra y F. Crafts
T1$;e Crafts es had purcha sed the
sch_o olhous e from the town · In 1905,
shortl y after It bad been 1dlscon, tlnued
tor scho.ol purpos es.
The sturdy little school house was
erecte d In 1810 by John and Sa muel '
W _h ite and Thoma s . Cra.fts i out of
bnclrn made proba bly at the Cla ver-g
lck kiln at Wlia tely, The buildin
was origin ally cov e r ed, with a foursquare roof, runnl'n g to a point, ·when
it wa s r emode led th·e walls wero laid

l

I

~

�/13 1
I
1

hlghe r 'l'.'ith the gable s.
One or Early Teach ers
One of the early teach ers wns Fanny Craft s, held in sweet remem bra nce
becau s e sh e used to take childr en.
home with her t o eat maple sugar
Sophi a Morto n c1tme a little later, and
then Chl oe Adkin s, wh ose salary and
$30
board for 20 weeks cos t the t ownyear
( the appro priati on for the schoo l
being $100) . One item of expen sewhich is today fotere stlng, was as fol
lows : "For paper for the use of· the
schoo l, three cents. "
When the schoo l took Its\, first survey of the valley , Jameo Ma:dl son ivas
: in the presid enti al chair, being thefourth occup ant of that seat ; D'lroo crats were Repub licans ; th'e stw.m
boa t had celeb rated only Its third
birthd ay ; the first steam locom otive
.
(at 15 mile.~ per hour) was still 20
years off ; the consu mmat ion of
framthe
Amer ican Indep enden ce and
ing of the const itutio n were less a
matte r of book know ledge to the stu-dents than actua l exper ience, ··t or
In
many of their elders had assist edular
In the m,aki ng of that partic
bit of histor y.
Amon g the better know n pupils who
attend ed this schoo l and alway s held
old
. a stron g attach ment for the now
buildi ng were Hugh E. J. tl .:ns,
clerk o( the super ior court at Greennfield : the late Seth B. Crafts , Lyma
Irving!
A. Craft s, Georg e Dicki nson,
Allis, Georg e A. Elder , Mrs Mary
en
Warr
and
ard
Kings ley, D. L. Stodd
Craft s.
The fourth of the recen t additi ons ,
is the old South wick Bapti st churc h, !
placed \
built In 1822 and sold toe be
in the New Engla nd villag last year.
for
This edifice remai ned unope ned days
many years , but In its earlie r Bapssful
succe
most
it was one of the
tist churc hes· in the valley .
Few Records Avallable
h
Few recor&lt;ls conce rning the churcof
are a ,·ailab le. In 1805 a g,roup atbeen
had
South wick Bapti sts wb_p
Ct.,
tendin g the churc h 11.t Suffield,home
I
determ ined to ha,'it preac hing 11,t
y. ,
societ
a
and accor dingly · ' 81-ganlzed
In April. 1806, they vo_te~ to ask to
ld churc h
be eet. otr from the Suffleon
the folas a separ ate distric t, and
In
lowin g year appoi nted a deacon. , and
r
lumbe
1821 they voted to buy
built.
was
h
churc
the
within a year
After severa l succe ssful decad es the
n
older memb ers of the congr egatio
died out and the young er ones moved
ille!
-away. For a. few years the Granv
d toparish and this churc h worke
for
but
,
pastor
gethe r under a single
the past 15 years It has been opene d!
only occas ionall y. the most.I. . recen t
Augm ented by
has
struct ures, the develo pment w'hlch
grown under the gener osity , of. Mrs•
gemana
storro w and the expos ition
ment for the past three years ~now
repres ents an expen&lt;'lt.ure o~ morfl
than $250,000. The villag e now r'scom-,
of- ,
prises a churc h, mansi on, lawye shop,
flee, schoo lhouse , black smith
1
Cod
Cape
far,mhouse. tavern , store,
surds
Groun
ball.
cottag e and town
land• \
round ing these buildi ngs are grave
scap11,d attrac tively with broadns. Thel /
garde
d
shlope
walks and old-fa
,
buildi ngs also fijce 'e. · typica l small
town green o! commop, with the
Its
from
group
the
atmg
churc h domln
\
site on a rlsi:1i:;ls !'::::ill.
expec ted to attrac t .
The colony
the
g
durin
usual
than
rs
visito
more
large
comin g exposition, due to the are
In
numb er of touris t guests who pa4&gt;
particl
and
ss
witne
to
state
the
.
In Its t erc~nt enary celebr ations

I

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-,-- r

.

Wo rthi ngt on - ·I

CLEMENT BURR,
WORTHINGTON, IS
DEAD, AGED 90
Member of Old Family Dies
m His Birthplace ; Held
Many Offices
WOR TH INGT ON, No v. 13 (AP) Cleme nt 11'. B urr, HO, mem be r or on e
of Worth ingt on' s old est fa mili es, -dicr.1
this aftern oo n In his birthp lace, whe re
·~p ha d liv ed with his son, Frank lin
.n. Burr.
1
Studied at Wilbraham
P er' His paren ts were Frank lin andcduca
sis (Knap p) Burr. Hi s early
aham Acad 1lion was rece ived at Wilbr
ive
sentat
emy . In 1897 he was .a -repre
to the State L egisla ture a nd he hadg
· held marty other publlc offices, havin13
rer for
I beeh town clerk and treasu
years, select man, assess or, tax colr.
' lector and truari t oftice
, He served as presid ~nt of the Li
oration, secret ary &lt;tf Hilll brary Corp_
rer
side Agric ultura l Societ y and treasualso
of Ringv ille · Cream ery. He was
n
a memb er o_f South Worth ingtoof
Grang·e, ahd one of the found ersum,
Basha n .Hill Counqll, Roral Arcan nal
a nd a deacon of First Congr egatio
Ella
Churc h. In 1870 he· rn'arried days
Crosie r, who died only a few
.
before their 60th weddi ng anniv ersarv
of
H e leaves five sons, Roy C. this
Metuchen. N. J., Frank lin H. .of
r
town, Josep h A., ,Hunt ington . Walte
rick
E. of West Springfield, ahd Fredecbilgrand
nine
n:
H. of Easth ampto
dre_n, and five great- grand childr en
The funera l will be · held in the First
at
ICongr egatio nal Churc h Wedn esdaywill
2 p.- _m. Rev. J. Herbe rt Owen
officiate.
WOR THIN GTON . Nov 13 - Mrs
Richa rd Hatha way and · daugh ter· !
Charl otte Eileen have return ed fro~
·
Noble Hospi tal in Westf ield.
A son, Pa,ul Stewa rt, was born
on
Nov. 11 to Mr. and Mrs. Allert
Tomp kms of New Yorli City . and
in
tal
Hoopi
Worth ington at .Noble
~ el_d_. _ _ _,.__ _ _ __ __

j

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( ~• T~:r~ne:!!

::-w

! emi nt F . Burr
. held W~dn esday afte rnoon at th e First
were
Congr e.~-a tional Church. Beare rs RusWendell P. Burr of Springfield.
rd
sell A. Burr of Hunti ngton , HowaFI.
E. Burr of West SpringAcld. Fred
Burr, .Tr. nnil Clem ent F . Burr r.nf•1rEastr o( ,
hampt on and Frank lin G.
I
Worth ington .

i

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l-

REV. C. H. HAMLIN
DIES IN MAIN"

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Was Par.tvr· of P_ayson
Cori gr e g a tJo-n al
Church; ''Easthampton, for
28 Years

I

· DIES IN H~ SLEEP

Made Home in-Amherst for· Past\
I 5 Years, Where Son Is a ··
Minister

I

EASTHAl\lP'fON, . Aug. 16.Rev. Charles H. Hamlin of Amherst, pastor of Payson Congregational church here for many years,
and a pas tor emerit~s of the Easthampton Cong'l"egationa.1 chu~ch,

I

ma.de up of

I mu] -the

J

t he former P~yson
Firs t Cong 1·egat1onal

churches, u sing the form e1· Payson church edifice, died this morning in a hospital in_Farmingt?n,
l\laine. l\Ir. Hamlin went to !\Jame
about the firs t of Augl).st with
his daug hte r, Miss l\Iargaret .Hamlin. He bad been at the hospiti_il
but a $bort time and died in his
sleep. The fun eral anangements ·
will be announced later
.

Rev. Mr. Hamlin had made his
home ·in Amherst since his retirement as pastor of Payson church
in 1913. He served there for 28
years, his 25th annive_rsary ha v- I
ing been celebrated with an el_!lborate program on Jan . 6, 7 and !J";
in 1910.
_
Charles H. Hamlin was born in
Farmington, now Plainville, Ct.,
Jan. 11, 1850., the son of H.
and Cat~erlne . Cowles Ham!m.
He studied in the . Hai;tford high
school, fo Yale class of '71 and.
after a yei:.r's teaching in Unlonvllle Ct. continued ·, Yale Theo• :
logl;al s;mlnary from '72 to 'H..
In 1874 he went to · Germany,
studying al the Universities of
Leipsic and Bonn. He returned In
the ,fall of '.75 and from '76 to
'79 was · pastor of the ~econd Con- I
gregational church in Chester. He
then wen't to the South church in :
Pittsfield, . remaining there unql
he came to the Payson church . In
Easthampton in 1885. l}e was .
pastor there until 1"913, after '.
which he went to Europe for - a
year with. his wife, their daughter, ·Margaret, joining them for
the last few months. .On the r~turn from ~urope, they went directly to Amherst and Mr. Hamlin bougp.t the house on North
East s'treet, where they have tt1;1ce .
lived. Mr. Hamlin has supphed ,
the pulpits of the various churches
around here for the p~st few
y ears and_ has spent ·}ii~ spare
I time in writing and _readm g.

I

In Jan ua r y, 1877, li e was marri ed to MiRs 1-'a nny Rodm on of
New Have n, Ct ., W ll(l died in Octob er, 1 920 . H e leaves t hree
' cliildren, 1'e1·. Wi l\.iam, H a mli n,
n ow in Anil1 ers t ; Miss Ma rga ret,
\ or til e fa culty ol M . A. C., an d
1 :iloy, who
is s up erintend e nt of
schools at St. Albans, Vt. T he re '
, are also fou r gra nd-childre n.
Uelove&lt;l .by Townspeople
Mr . Hamlin was an ab le pas tor
1 and
preacher who se rvecl P a yson
church most faithfully and well
for many yea rs. H e wa s beloved by
the town speople during his · long
pastorat e, for his interest extend, ed far beyond bis church. He ·had
a keen lnteresf iu the public we!, far e. Mr. Hamlin was a leader in
the campaigu against ,gambling
a t race tracks in Massachusetts
and was successfu-1. He also -was
in strumental in bringing about
the "safe and san e " Fourth of
I July observanc_e which had its beginning in Easthampton
and
spread to Springfield and then
throughout the country. In both
of the above undertakings he colaborated with George L. Munn
of Easthampton, who was at that
time editor of the Easthampton
News.
A't the time of Mr. E:amlin's
25th llnniversay in 1910, the principa l speaker was former Gov .
Cur tis Gui ld, wh o paid high tribu te to Mr. Ha rqJi n ·s service. " For
twenty-five yea rs,"
he
s;iid,
"Charles H. H am lin has beeu a
minis ter to' th e spiritttal n eeds of
this .c bngrega tion a nd in the tri~est si;n ~e of th e word, th e pa sto r
of his churc h. For a s a shepherd· i$
the lea der of his flock , so has
clergy1Uan, in this beautiful
1 thi s _
, valley, bJ loved and beautiful even
in Colonial days, been a pastor, a
epl. e rd of lllen, as were his ·
I sn
predecessors, . when this was rio
1
h amlet,\ but the very
1 tJ,anquil
frontier of civilization."
Rev. Dr. Moxo1n, then a promi~
neut pastor in · Springfield, said
that Mr. Hamlin was a man wlio
"profoundly believes in the com' prehe'nsive mission of the- churcn.
Mr Hamlin's name is · known (and
In &amp;ome quarters -wholesoJ]lely
, feared) all over tl\e common! wealth. His succes11ful •efforts . to
' aboUsh a great evll (referring to
race traek pool selJin.g)· make . part
of •its recent history. His dev:o,tiou ·
· to a high civic ideal has been insplra tion· to followers .and· fellow-workers · and has exerted an in.fluence wider than he. suspects.
, His practical belief that 'cleanliness is n-ext , to Godliness.' and his
bi·oad Jnte1·pi-etatlon of cleanliness
· have ·worked str-on·gly f-or ·a, cleaner and SOWlder secial life. He has
earned 'the confidence and esteem
of the best elements in the com- ·
m,untty and compelled the respect ,
of all; · it has earned: for him the.
love and loyal support of the
, church for -which be has so . lon.g
be1n t , leader."
·

yv.

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�lu~ 4 ~ ..L 1, I j 3 ,-"

It was said oC Mr. Ham lin,
whe n a stud ent, that he was
to
warn ed not to go to Germ any me
stud ;· unle ss he wan ted to becoent
au infid el, but he prom ptly w
to Germ any, whe re expo sure simply toug hene d the fibre of his cou-

::-: u
Lfil.llilli= --- --- --- --- ,-:ed foi

Rev. Mr. Ham lin serv
the
' year s as a valu ed mem ber of
sem
lston
\V!ll
of
t~es
trus
ot
d
boar
.
inar y at East ham pton , and Profto
C. A. Buff um paid high tribu te Mr. Ham lin as past or and trua
betee, and the clos e r elati onsh ip
the
twee n Pays on chur ch and
g
sem inar y, the youn g men goin
the
awa y from the scho ol with
r
best of idea ls wov en into thei
.
lives
It was said of Mr. Han_1Iin , at
ary,
tl.-! time of his 25th anm vers
that he "cam e to East ham pton
at a time whe n chur ches all over
on
the land were losin g thei r hold 's
men . . . . He saw that if men it
relig ion was to be effec tive,
afmus t get righ t d'&gt;wn into m·en 's
pofairs and take hold with the
s
lice, the lawm aker s, polit icianse
and all othe r citiz ens, to oppo
all that was wron g, and to push
He
· for all that was wor th whil e. st,
has held the man Jesu s Chri xclea n, s plen did, pow erfu l , infle
us.
ible in His life, -stea dily befo re in
He has n eve r beco me befo gge-d let·
theo logi cal disc ussio n, neYe r ght
any conf usio n of mod ern thou ~,
obsc ure the clea r fact that Jesu
t
the Carp ente r, was the one grea s
anch orag e, unsh aken . by any mod
reern ques tion of the claim s of the
ligio n. His inte rpre tatio u of
mos t adva nced thou ght has beeq
bas
cons tant , clea r and hum an. He ch,'
·buil t a nota ble 'man 's chur
som ewh a t the sort of chur ch tha:t
Is com ing in the futu re. The f
chur ch's plac e in the mod ern civaI
ic life has been mad e by him out' 1
grea t forc e, som ethin g with to
whlc h men cann ot poss ibly rise
thei r best . He has labo red to keep ,
alive in men the faith that to keep
a
' stra ight was wor th whil e, at of
time whe n scien ce and free dom es &lt;
thin kin g were sl!al&lt;in g to piec
the old trad ition s of relig ion."

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Mrs. E. M. Bridgman /I
Of Belchertown Dies

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for me r Nor tham pto n Tea cher, Gif ted Mu sica lly, was T
I
77 Yea rs Old .
\l r.s _i.
B E LCH ER'J 'O W /\", .June ~0-.
~ma n
J,;Ji za bct h i\l ( Bart let t ) Uridn~an . ~Jic,i
wiUo w or Hobl.! rt L. B r id,::;
h o m e in
lat e ::;at11l'day nig h t i11 he r 7, 18.;7, I
l 'arl, :;t, !; he was bo rn No v.
ol I
:
Nol'l ha rn pt{)n , the dau;. h).l el'
vens H a r t - ,
J t1codo re a nd !1~a 11n ie (S t e
o ls ,-W tll'-l t .
lelt: a 11&lt;l _t a ug h t in l h c scl1o
iage. Com in~ I
: c.:1l y pre v 10~1:; to h e r marr
of R o b e rt I
bride
t o Belc h e rt o wn a s th e

77 1

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is tow n. :-; he
, L ong ley Brid gma n of th
n ce,

I h a c.J

her hom e h e r e e v e r si

I

made
ers d u r ing- I
a lthou g h spend in ;;- th e wint
;\Ir. I

to n.
r ece n t y ea rs in N ol'thu m p
, Bndg·m an d ied 1 4 y ears ago.
icall r
Mrs . Drid gm a n ,,·as gifte d rmus
eg-at iona I
a nd sa ng 1n th e First Cong
r h er
fte
a
d
n
a
Churc h a t Nort ha m p t on
c hoir
ma rriage was a m e m be r of rthe
ega t io nal
of the Be lc h e rto wn Cong
d in 1885 .
Chur ch with whic h she unite
of h e r
use
She was g ene rous in the
those
;tale nt. and her s e rvice s. with
ofte n in
of l\Irs. H. A. Hopk ins, were in;ne nts
d e mand for fune ral s, ente rta
and s imila r e v e nts.
Fra nk
She lea ves a sis t e r , Mrs.
ree s ons ,
Foote of C h es t e r , and th
ld W .
Phili p A. of Toro nto Can. , Dona
. o f H a rt,of W estfi e ld, a nd Robe rt L Th e fun ford ; a ls o fiv e g ranc.J c hilclren. t 2.30 in
e ra l wil l be held Tuesday a t i o n a I
•
the B elche rto wn C o n ;: r c g
nast o r,
Chur ch. H e v. Arth ur H . H ope,
be in Mt.
will
l
buria
nd
a
,w ill offic ia tr,
Hop e Ce m e t e r y .

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�MORE SILHOUETTES ADDED
TO LO!:AL EXHIBITION

li!M RA.LL-1-IE:S-RICHSE~

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Korlh a m pton, ::;ept. 4-The wedding I
of ,Hiss l\Iargai·e t Kim'.)!111, formerly of
n Henrlc h 1 Evansto n, Tll ., and Christia
/ sen of Northam pton, tool, place a t,
1 Plain field, ' N. J. , yesterda y aftern oon
at th e hom e of Jllrs Frank J·. Hubbard . Rev .-\hva C. Bond of the Scv - I
en t h Day Baptist cht:lrch officiated. eld
1
~1iss Augusta Clawson of Pio.infi
\\'as ma ld of honor, and J·ohn Cle ment
of North Ada ms ncted as best man.
Mr Henrich sen is a regional director I
of Boy Scouts. Th e bride is Western
Massach usetts divisi&lt;;&gt;n directm· of the
,
Girl Scouts of A m er,ca.
After a wedding tr.ip th e couple wiil
____ _,
_li ve in Kortham pton.

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, Tomorrow Is Last Day of the ,
Display in Bis ~orical So~
ciety' s Rooms
More Interes ting silhoue tte s have
been added t o th,e exbiblti on b eIng held by the North ampton H isto rical society at its rooms in
Memori al hall thi s w ee k . Tomorrow, Saturda y, · will be the lasf
day, from 10.30 a . m . to 6 p. m.
The public is invited to attend the
exhibit, which Is an excellen t on,e
that should not .b e missed by those
interest ed in these highly - priced
silhoue ttes.
One esp,ecia lly interesting_ to
children is a silhoue tte cut by
Hans Christia n Anders on , the writer ·of fairy tales. It is loaned by·
little Miss Joan Oak and the •story
written on the back of the picture
is as follows : I
" Jackson Armstr ong, a writer
of some note, and a · world trav,eler, was visiting Hans Christia n
Anderso n. While In convers ation
the fairy-st ory writer was cutting
a piece of paper which h e threw
down. Mr. Armstr ong picked it
1 up and open e d out this picture .
He said to Mr. Ander son, 'With
y our p,ermiss ion I wii l take this
, to my little sister who is very fond
of your fairy tales.' The sister
. die d and the picture passed to her
sister, Mrs. Penney , of Huntin g- '
ton B ea ch, Calif. She being •a.
friend of J oan's Grandm other Oak,
gav,e it to her for the little grandchild Joan . Th e picture is now in
1924 about 60 years old.''
There are three IQ:ore silhouettes by August in Edouar t, loaned
by Mrs. Joseph D. Collins.
Miss Bertha Bliss has added five
-two antique , ones and three
mod&amp;rn on es of her mother , fath ~
r.nd brother ; all cut by her .broth-

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Marria ge Intenti on s ha ,·e b e1&gt;n
take n oul at th e city clerk's · officP.
by the follo w iJ1 f: coupl es: Tl oma~
E . Su llirnn , 1S Prospec t street.
·Eastham oton, and Blanche Be rnaBoutbil ette, 25 Philt !os
dette
place, Northam pton; Cordon Ju lian McDona ld, 12 Norwoo d avenue, Nort hampto n, and Grace Cecelia Wall, !!O Aldrich stretlt.
Alfred
Nort hamp.to n : f J oseph
Snape, Burt's Pit r oad, Northam p ton, and H elen Trow Brooks, 6
Arlin g ton stre et, Northam pton;
Vi ctor Alexand er Laprade , 5 W:ilnut street, Nort ha m pton, and VivIan Thelm:r Bernier , Bald win
· house , E edford terrace, Nortbam oton.

OBITUARY
MRS. SALLY S. SHEPARD Mrs: ·:Sally • Stanton Stepard diet!
_yesterd ay at Bedford lodge, Be d!oz:d terrace. •She was the daugh, tr of Charles S. Blake and -Kate
(P~illlp s), Blake and was a member of a~ , old , Bosto1,1 family, · be- ·
.Ing a cqusln . of the late United
~~ates. Senator Henry Cab9t Lod ge.
She was a grandni ece ·of · iohn
Clarke, fo4nder of Clarke School
fer the Deaf an d principa l giver '
o_f the f1;1nd f'?r _lllen,iqri al ' ha.Ir anrl
Clarke llbrary, now ,combln ed· wl•IJ
Phillips plac:1 ,
F~rbes library,
th1 s city, was nam ed in h onoi· · of
Mrs. Stepard 's grandfa ther. l\fr::1 :
Shepard l eaves a ·daugh ter, Mr s .
Margar et K. Josselyn of Bos ton
ni:id a sister, Mrs. H aY.n ~s H .- Ch!I~
! son, of this city. The funera1 will
b~ ·held Wednes da,y , aftenioo n at 2
o clock in the Dickins on-Stre eter
I ruu,eral parfors; 22 Genter street
I this. city, and: burial will be I~
Br-ldge st reet ce metery.

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One of Josiah H, Webste r, · cou- 1
din of Daniel Webste r, i s loaned I
by Mrs. M. Webste r Smith .
Col. G. A. Taylor of Hadley has
loaned two very · fine ones and Mrs. ,

David C. Crafts exhibit s a fine one
J
her grandw other.

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8 lft~VENJS-In Boallndal c, Mass .. the 2d,
?9, Cotton
Byra. . Stevens l\.t her 1home
trect. fn her 85th year. Funl!irai sen·Ice~
1
tional Church ,
Congrega
llnflon
r~~l~~ll
aso., Friday Aui, 4 at
n,
•0
-·2 ·" 0 p.- m. R~latl,·es and friends _.I n 'ted.

{J

wJ~!,

ri;e~al ,ot Mrs. Myra Stevens ,
of tb!s town ugtn0e Stevens, formerl y
y in
the home or' ~r d dledh("' ednesda
. R aug er, Mrs..Judsoi;t Rog-e
1nd
h eld
b_e
.
ll
wi
ale,
J&lt;~riday a~s
Congreg ational Churtte ~orthm gton
ev. J. HerIll Of e ·
bert Owen
Rev. E. p_ c:uer 0 f!clate, a ssisted hy
nd. Buria l
J:tlcin1o
will be on the Mou
field. Besides h er d m h · est Chester ll y. Mrs. Steven 8 1_a ug ter_ and famsurv1 ved by a
slster .l\1 rs · Ed ward s CoJ
o o r c b este rLefeld, •and several
I
n eces and n ep h ews,
_
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HISTORIC SPOTS OF CITY
DESCRIBED FOR YOUTHS
Rain Prevents Parade, But Stories of Various Sites Are
Given in Pamphle t Form
Rain which began falling shortly before 2 o'clock Saturday afte rnoon prevented the young people's
pilgrimage to historic spots in
Northamp ton at that time. Al - .
thoug h i t was not a steady rain ,
but came In the form of a series
of showe r~, with Indication s that
it might clear off Jn time, It was
impossibl e to carry ·out the marchin g prog r am, lrnt the rain let up
long enough to permit the speaking to be held outside Carnegie ,
hall on Gothic street instead of
at . th e historic spots as planned.
The- curtailed -line of march
was from the People's Institute on
Gothic street, thi:ough Gothic,
Court, King, Park and Gothic .
streets to the star'ting ·point. The
line comprised the drum . corps
and battalion of St. Mary's troop
of the Catholic Boys' brigade, the '
Doy and Girl Scouts and school
·children. Maj. A. G. Beckmann
·
wa s marsh al.
Much of the speaking was 1
omitted, but the talks of Rev, B.
D. Hall on th e site of the first
mee ting house, and George Ely on '
th e site of th e Jonathan Edwards house on King street, were
given. The speak er s .1were intraduced by W. E . Shannon, chairman of the committe e. R efreshments w ere served to th e children and the particii:,an ts in the
parade after the exercises.
All those atten c!ing were given
mimeogra phed copies of brief
summarie s of the history of the
several spots · it was planned to
visit. Among the features mentioned were the following :
King and Main
Corner of
streets: This was the center of the
, tQWn from the coming of the first_
settlers in 16 5 4. This 'fas the site
of the First church where the
boulder is now located, and was
·known as Meeting House Hill, beIng much higher than at present.
{I')le min!ster's house stood at
about the present location of the
corner of Main and Pleasant
streets. The f\rst postoffice was on
the site of the First National
bank. A brook crossed Main street
near Pleasant and another near
lower corner of Market
the
street. These were later covered
over and connected with the sewer.
Whitney House on King Street:
This site was the home of Jonathan Edwards, third minister, and
it is said Northamp ton was the 1
·Qnly town known to England, out- I
side of Boston, · because of hi~
books and sermons. There Is a
; tablet to his memory in the cemetery, but he is buried in New Jer....,. where._he died of smallpox.

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Oldest house in town : On
Bridge street , now owned by Miss
Bliss. It was built by Cornet Parsons, whose wife was called a
"witch ," and who was acquitted
after she w ent to Boston and
pleaded her own case before the
gen eral court. The house, built in
16 5 9. was first used as an Inn.
The firat child born ln Nortbamp ampton was the son of,; Cor.n et
Parsons, afterward killed by th e
Indians at Northfield .
First store in town : Was on the
site of the present C. B. Kingsl ey
drug store. Across the street was
an old tavern, home of General
Seth Pomeroy, w)io rode from
here to Boston in one day to
fight at Bunker Hill, when he was
6 9. Hl11 home was later the site of ,
the Warn er house, where Lafayette and Kossuth were entertaln_e d,
and where the Draper hotel now
stands.
Old Mansion Hoµse and Canal
te'rminal building : About where
St. Mary's church now stands was
the red tavern In the early days
a nd la ter the Mansion House,
where many distaingu ished !2,!l.9-

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a mong
were entertaine d,
t ~1'r,m Henry Clay, Daniel W e bster
and Rufus Choate, the latter two
•wl. ec on op,poslte _sides in • the
, Oliver Smith will· case a~ · I he
.,, cou rt house. At th e foot of th e
' hill, ne,1r · what is now the corner
· of State and Main streets, was the
canaf house , the water crossing
,Main street under _th~ arches ot a
. bridge, The canal, which g_o t,- its
water from the Connectic ut river ,
was in ,use from .,-1 8 36 to 1847. l
The coming of the New Have n I
railroad, known as th e Canal road,
put th e a ctual ca nal out of business. Tbe first settle rs are be- 1
lieved to have· come In via West
I
street. ·
Smith College: Founded by Sophia Sniitb in 18.15. Miss Smith
, was a native of Hatfield, and the
: home there- is still preserved by
the alumnae associatio n of the
; college. ·she first planned to establish the college at Hatfield, but
, was persuaded that Northamp ton
'was the "' be ttiir location. The
!).aughters of Hatfjeld, she stipulated, should receive free tuition
the same as those from North· ampton.
The Manse, Prospect street:
·The house of Rev. Solomon Stoddard, which stood here and was
un ti! a few years ago a part of
ibis house, was one of the fi~st
houses built west of the meeting
house. It was .built In 1684. ·When
. the house was , repaired many
,years ago, a ~oncealed room was
chimney,
discovere d near the
bull t for protection again st the Indians, as this house was outside
the old stockade between Pleasant
and Hawley streets. The present
house was built by Col. John Stoddard, a prominen t man in town
1 and state., :!~ ow.ned the first and
for a long . tl_me ,J he only gold
watch in North.a-mpton, and · his
daughters rode to Boston on
horseback .o attend school.
pie

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�Th e B rick chu rch i s g-r ea tly I
by builde rs and archit ects
for its s uspend ed ceiling , bo \
pPws, pe r fect propo r tion s, hi gh
ma hogan y p ul pit and t e m ple- lik e
atmos 11he re . .J u st to ~it q u iet ly for
1
a f ew norn e nls in thi s his lo r i&lt;'
build ing , is a t reat to hun&lt;lr e ct s
or vi si Lors w ho come rrn n ual! y Lo

!

1prized

DEERFIELD 'S FAMOUS

LANDMARKS ON VIEW

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Historic Buildings and Copy of
Old Indian House Will Be
Open to Pl!bl:c

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Decrfif'ld , June ~. -A n OPJJO!' ·
tunlty to ins1&gt;ect Dee rfield ·s moRt
buildi ngs.
histor ic
celebr ated
Frary house , 1689 , the beauti fu ,
Brick church , 1824. and an au •
t llentic ated and almos t perfec t
copy of tlle famou s Iudiau house ,
16 98, at its forma l OJ)e ning and
in which at the same time thi:,
Deerfi eld indust ries will be di8•
played , will be _given the public
during the week of June 9. The
hours are 10 a . m. to 12 , 1 p. m
·
l O 5.
I Frary house will be publicl.1
opene d Friday and Saturd ay. 11
, is the oldest house in Frank liL
county and togeth er with the lit tie
gambr el roofed ell of Willar o
that is left of the
1 house is all
Frencl ,
Dee rfi eld of · 170 4 when
and Indian s sw·oop ed down fron;
Pine Hill to burn, kill and ear n
captiY es throug h the sno w baci,
to Canad a . It wa s built by Sarnso 1,
Frary in 1G 8 9, or b efore, a dded to
I and use d a s a tavern ei g hty yearsii
lat er by Sala!J Barna rd . In 1890
, ra s i utc- lli gen tly r estore d by Mis, '
IC. Allice_ Baker , si::tb in d esc1,n !
Samso n , \\;ho built it .
.,. from
It is i&gt;ri' ,arily a home but no t
exactl y as Frary made it in the
1
perilo us day.;; when there was .only
•. time for bare essent ials. Miss Bake r m.ade it beaut if· ', · The fllrni · ,
ture is old and there arc no false
notes. Storie s cling to it ; ghosts ,
· of course ; Bened ict A-rnold com·
ling in 1775 to seal a barga in with
;Thom as Dickin son for sevent y-five
;thous and pound s of beef_ and
drlnlk n to it either in the bar or
from the "parlo r cupbo ard; " l:ial 1
ah Barna rd actual ly l:llarry ing lhe !
daugh ter whose mothe r wa~
1baby
told to keep her from him when
be march ed off to war, and he Jall er tendin g "bar'' below , wh!le hi~
dance d i:-1 the exquiH 1pretty wife
• ite ball room above ! That bal!
· room iti faithf ully preser ved an,1
the old house !las charm s of it~
own . Both the· parlor and d;ning
room of the 1689 period and th t
bar and ball room of that or 1 76 :,
.are Intere sting and full of lovell •
.ness. The old Indian · house 1.J-oor
now in l\lemo rial hall, with it~
tornal1 awl1ed hole, thi-ou gh whi&lt;'h
the owner 's wife was sliot by In·
dlan s, sugge sts_ the terrib le night
of Febru ary 29 , 1704. ·Built in
1G9 8 and fin a lly torn down- lH
rears _!._ate~·• if ha~ b~eu acc~ ~-ly
r_eprodu~ecl by Willia ru Gass anc
Son, builde rs. The overh anging
second _story, the enorm ous let,
foot CQ1mney ,with . its fire place&lt; /
. a_nd ovens, the giant rough hew;
; limbe rs ,pegge d rathe r than nailed , ;
miten ,J
1floors laid benea th sills,
clapbo ards, weath ered sllfngl es, or- 1
namen ted gables , old · hing~'s and
latche s, slxtee u paned wi ndows
simul ated pallsa de in rear and j
three ralled fence in front, s ug- ,
gest that •the old. Indian hou se itself has com« to life. ht th e four
front rooms on this .,coasl on , tlw
famou s Deerfi e ld !u cl ustri es w ill
hit PII.-

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this sh rine. For 198 year~ . the ·
g ild ed v;ea th c r cocl1. pr e viou sly ou
th e fou rth m ee tin g ho use in l 72!J
anti uo w on tli is, has over looli e&lt;I
1
the Dee rfi eld inhab itants as cal !i,, I
to m ee tin g by til e great bel l clang ing in th e belfry , t hey have we nd ed their way Ul&gt; "~leet iu g Hou, c
Hill " throu gh th e wide o pe n
doors.
This " openin g '' is for t he he nP: li t of th e Ma rtha Go ulding l'ratt
J\lemo rial w hi ch main tain s tlJ e
comm uni t y ce n t er.

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SPRINGF IELD,- · MAJ~.-,-_; FR11'AY, ~

WESTERN MASS.
LIBRARY GROUP
ELECTS HEADS

E ~, 193a

Lead Weste rn Mass. Library Club

Miss Edith Little, Springfield ,
Is President ; 80 Attend
Meeting
SOUTH DEERFIELD , Jun e 2 - A
m eetin g or t h e '\Vestern Massa chusetts
L ibrary Club, h eld wit h Tilton Library
toda y , was ·attended by 80 librarians
a n d t ru s t ees, with 21 t own s r epresented.
\Yilcox Presides
Frank G . '\Vilcox or Holyoke pr esided. Marvin E. Ja n es, c hairman of
the Tilton Library trus t ees, gave the
welcom e.
W illiam Orr, educator and t raveler ,
s poke on "Librari es and Sch ools In the
New Republic or Poland," and said in
part: "The A m e,'lca n L ibrary Association agency wa s ins t r umenta l In put ting r eading into the cam ps during the
World W a r and the r esult of that infl uence was m or e p ublic li braries there
1l\'ith each commun it y gi ving a certain
amount and th e s t a te con~ributing the
same atno unt fo r maintenance."
H e- !llus t rat.ed with m a ps, pictures
and h a nd wo rk, some do ne by r efugees
f ro m Russia t o Pola n d. He declared
t hat P ola nd 'li! llleral.ure wa e r ich, and
while America had done m uch f or
Poland, .the Polis h p eopl!)'s contribution to Am erica was invaluable.
Mrs. Ba rbara Bugg Stevens or W est
Springfie ld, a uthor, spoke on books and
"Raw Material" on the writer' s cons truc tion and basic point s. At the
luncheon In the pa rish h ouse, with 80
at the t ablc1, the r oll •·was called and
the nomi nating committee announced
the slat e of officer s · as follows:

Slate of Otrlce1·11
President, Miss Edith L . Lit tle ot
Sprlng'tleld; vice-president s, M1·s. Ellen s. Blllln gs of South D eerfi eld and
M°i'ss Helen P. Sh acl~ley of West
Brookfield; accretary, Miss Miriam C.
·wolcott of V\TeMtfl eld ; t r easurer, Mlse
Ruth OJdft cld of Longm eadow ; arch iv ist, Mis s Lucy G, Lamb of Spring field,
Miss Bessie Leonard, former pr in cipa l of the Clarke Sch ool for the Deaf,
spdk e on th e sc h ool's work and m et h od~ of t eaching the lip r eading.
Arthur Sulli van , president of the
Blind P eople's Association of Connecticut, t old ot the. "Problem s ot the
.Blind," .He waB accompanied by his
/Jog, Boda, "Seeing , E ye." Mr. Sullivan , a. n ewspaper r epo rter, gave a
,·lvlrl description ot his training at tho
Institut e for the Blind aud Boda's
training-.
Enlaro·Nl photographs, the work ot
\VllliamcGo.ss. of South D eerfield, w ere
on display. Mr. Gass specializes In
r estori ng colon ial h ouses.
'l'he fl ora l decora tions were spon•
red bY t he Garden Club and ar80
. rung &lt;•d l)y Mrs. George Bell. Mt11, Walt er F. Gorey , ).!rs. Elsie P. Fairbank ,
Mrn, Charles \-Voodward and Mr11.
George Canning. The lu n ch eon was
.~erved by memb~rs of the ladl ~s• aid
-,,cidY, :\'lrs. R ose Davis, chair~an.
Edwi n Trn~Hdell. Mrs. I• lora
~-rrs
}.:fa;cs, M re. A Ilda Wotrram, Mrs.
c11a rles W oodwa rd, Mrs , Charles Dodge
a nd Mrs . •C:~~~

SOUTH DEERFIELD , June 2-Three of the new officers are shown
at the meeting of t.he Western Massachusett s Library Club here this ,
afternoon. Left to right, are: Mrs. · Harr:v M, Bj)ljpp. librarian of
the Tilton Library here, first vice-presiden t ; Mi'!!s Edith L. Little ·
of the Springfield City Libr ary, president, and Miss Lucy I. Lamb
of Spr ingfield, archivist.

~

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D, Mi:\SS. : FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER, 20, 1929

Worthington

domes tic arts and a nne collection of a nd Mr~ . E rnest T h a ye r: seco nd , Mrs .
qnilts on t he main floor w ere aug- El s ie V. B artl ett, th lrr!, )!rs . Ho ward
m en l.ed by a display of wild fl owers in N. Maso n, Miss J3erni co E. Ellbourn,
great variety. Garden flo wers, potf 1Jd Mrs. C. A, K llbouru a n d Mrs. S ha w.
plants a n d a v e ry fine ex h ibit of
l ' rizes to children were won by Marcanned goods were efficientl y arranged g aret B;-n:ie. Phlllp Dra'.&lt;c. M. Gran g.
on the pl atform. A fin e exh ibit from e r, W. Higgins, Gu y Drake. D o nna
Hi ll c rest Farm own ed by Edward J . , vade, Ii'. Granger, \V. Gag non . Mary
Clark, a lth c ugh not ente r ed for a P. Bm r, A r c her Fi tzgerald and Wilbu r
prize, ad ded t o th e di sp lay .
Drake.
·
T he i,upper at the church at 6 p, m .
Spec ial state a\\'ard s of me rit were
was well patronized and was in charge g-i ven to l\fr. a nd M rs. Jam es H .
of Mrs. Leland P. Cole, Mrs. K en n eth Burckes, Victor Bernier and Merrick
Pease. Mrs. Harold Parlsh; D a ni el R. Sm ith.
Port e r, Harry Tinke r and Willlam
Class H. s pcclnl prizo $10 In gold
Brown. From this $1 7.4 3
clea !·ed. an d prize ribbon lo ~xhlbltor havln i;
Th e dance at L yceu m H all a t ~ greatest varl ety of quality ex hibJt s In
o'c lock was ·well \ atten ded. Bates' O'r- the hall, won by M r . and Mrs . james
ch est.ra played .
H. Burckes.
Prizes at the fair were awara e'd a s
Cla ss 15, exhibits not li'sted on prefollows :
. / mium list, 20 entries , special prizes,
Class l, best co llection of garden veg-- t wo pott ed plants entered by Miss Sueta bles, first, Vi ctor Bernhh' ; second. sa n T. Rice and gro wn by Sophie
C ha rles 0. "Williams ; third. Mr. ancl Roje ; J ohn .Tarvis. Mrs. Horace S.
Mrs. Jam es Burckes · fourt h Clemen t Cole, Merri ck Smitl1, .John Reed. C.
F . Burr &amp; Son• fiftl; Merri~k Smi th . 0 . William s, Hom er Granger, Mrs.
Class 2, best doll ect i~n of fruits first Walter Smith, Mrs. Merri ck Smith,
Mr. and Mrs. James H. Bu rcl,es': sec~ F. Byrne, Elizabeth. Granger, I.
a nd, Victor Bernier .
·
,
Granger. C. Ii'. Bu r r, Arthu r Pomeroy,
1
Class 3, best coll ection of fai; :\frs. Frar:k Bates and li'~eda Gqrnger. '
~rains first Mr ' and 211 . J 1
A g u ess m g co nt est \las won by
B u r ck ~s;
;econ·d, M; r~f~k ~ ~:;fil h ; Charl es A ll en.
th ird , Arthur Pom eroy.
Class 4, best collection of . canned
veg-etahles, f ruits , m eats, preserve s,
con serves a nd j ellies, first, Vi ct or Berni e r ; second, Mrs. C ha rl eR Gran ger;
t h ir d, Mr. aitd Mrs., J a m.es H. Burckes .
Class 5. bes t .exh ibit of dairy p rodu cts. first, Mr. and Mrs. J a m es H.
Burckes : second, returned fo Grange;
t h ird, Victoli Bernier.
Class 6, best dozen brown eggs, firs t .
John Jarvis; second. 'C. 0. \11/illiams;
thi rd · Mr. a nd l'(rs. James H. Bu rcketi.
Class 7, best one half peck of potatoes, first, Victor Bernier and Walter
Smith ; second, Charles 0. W illiams;
third, John J arvis.
Class 8, Best pint jar of , m aple
sy rup, first, M rs. Charl es A. Kilburn ;
second. Mrs. Ho\\'ard N. ~-Jason; t h ird,
Mrs . Menick Smith.
.
Class 9. best coll ect ion of garden an- ' t
n uals , first, Joh.n J arv is; s econd, Doris'
Shaw: third , Mrs. Ho race Co le.
Class 10, best coll ection of garqen
pere nnlalR, no en tri es .
.. \
pass 11, A pri ze to best bouqu et of
.
n ot less than 10 spechn en s or each
-flower: Aste rs. M r. a nd Mrs . .Tam es H.
Burcl{es ; zinni as, Charl es O. \Viiliams ;
coRm os, Charl es 0 . '\Ni lliain s ; nwrig-o id, M rs. MeJTi ck Smith; dah li as,
Clement F. Burr &amp; Son; g laclioll,
Mrs. 1\'.[errlcl&lt; S m ith; poppies, C harle;;
0. W illi a ms .
C lass l.2, best coll ection or wi ld I
floll' e rs, firs t, i'lf1•. a nd M rs . ,Ja m e" H .
Bn rckcs ; second . Mi ss Mary P. Bu r r;
t hird. Mrs. Frank Bat e;s.
Class J:l, clom est.lc a rt s, first, Mrs.
Mc\Tic k Smith ; second. Miss Sa die
C:asc-oy nc ; t h ird, 1\frs. St Qphen Oleksak.
Specia l prizes under t hi s class we re 1
awa rd ed: First, Mrs . Frank Braman

MANY AWARDS
DISTRIBUTED FOR .
GRANGE DISPLArs
Exceptional
of
Exhibits
Merit Highly Praised;
180 Attend Show
in Town Hall.
,VORTHINGTON . Se pt. 19-More
t han 180 pe r s on s attended the Grange
F'a ir Ttresda y e vel)lng at the Town
H a ll from 6 to 9 o' clock. The exh ibit s
were of ex ceptional merit and won t h e
co mme ndation of all. The decorations
\\·ere in charge of Emersau Davis and
g rain s in variet y, aspal'a!plS, sunflowers a nd tall s talk s of c orh were u sed .
· Tl
fl
J11·b·t
dd d 1·t
t Of
1
I co!~r. ower ex
a e
s no e
•I The f~ir was in charge of the agricultural co mmitt ee of the G range:
Eme 1·son Davis, Mrs . Frank Bates,
Arthur Laro, Mr. and - Mrs . c. A.
Love land, Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Clark,
H enry 8nyder, Walter Higgin s, Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Thayer an d Charles
\ Villlams. With th e active coope ration
of the mas ter, )frs. Walter Higgins
and volunt eer w orkers , they staged
an ex hibit w h lch would compare
fa.v oq1.bl y on a s mall er scale with
m a ny a county fa ir.
The judges were Mrs. Cllfton Johnso n of South Hadley and Allen $.
Leland 0 r, Nort ham pton, both m em- '
b er of th H
11·1 c
t A'd t
.A g ;1 cultur! aan~P\.
i~~~~ ~tat~
work ers.
There were nine entr ies for the babv
sh o1L The jud ges wei·e Jl! iss Florence,
Berry, a nurse- a t the Prophy la c ti c
B rn sh Compan y in Florence and M iss
.Jean MacDonald, dist rict nurse · from
Northampton.
Prizes w e re awarded as follows: Babies un der one and o ne hair years,
fl r ;;t. Ri chard Paul Oieksa k; second.
Gordon Shadrac k Dncl ge, so n of ,Mr.
a nd Mrs. R. Carve l Dod ge ; third, Cullen Sidn ey Packa rd. so ,1 of. Mr. ancl
Mrs. Mer\\'in F. Pa ckarrl. Babie~ f rom
0 !1e and one ha lf to three yea r8, first.
,v1rg1 111 a R earl. daughter of l\fr. a:rn
Mrs. C. 1~ . • Reed ; second. K enn et h
I Bartlett Pease . .Jr., son of i\fr. a nd Mrn ,
K e nn et l~ B. P ease;
third. E ver et
S impson, son of i\fr. and Mr8. Cec il
Slmpson.
Five s tands of truits and v egetab les,
lll'o of fan c )) work , on e rcprcsentin;;·

;11

!

,vas

+---.--==========----'-.I

'

l

�l( f

1
I

CHARMING WEDDING
FOR M!SS COLLINS

ii
1

:' franees

Billings Collins
Weds Norman L. Snow al
Parent's Home--Miss Eleanor Collins 1s Maid of I
Honor

Among the.fall we6Ji ngs w as thaL
oC Miss Frances Billing-s Collins,
daughter oC :.'\Ir a nd Mrs Harrie E .
Colli;s of 146 Mill s tree~. and · Norma n Leon Snow, son of M1· a nd Jllrs
Abraham E . Snow of 36 Jrving-ton
s.trect, whi.c h took place last night a :
7 at the ·h om e of the b'rii!e's parents.
P.cv Alexander Alison , Jr., pastor or
the. First Presbyterian church at
Bridgeport,
Ct., assisted by R e v Owen
1
Whitm an Eames of the Church of the .
Unity, performed the cer emon y, using
: the single-ring service. Mrs Dorothy
' .Birchard Mulroney played the wed- ,
ding mutiic.
Miss Eleanor M. Collins, sist er of
the bride, ,vas m aid of h on or, and Mrs
Edmund Oppenheimer, cousin of the
bride, and Mrs P ercival E. Meyer, sister of the g room, were bridemaids.
, Edmund Oppenhe imer served Mr Snow
a s best m a n. and the ushers were
, Philip Snow, brother uf ~he groom. and
I Webster E. Collins, brother or the
• bride.
The bride wore a Worth model of
ivory satin, cut on princess lines w ith
train, with tulle veil made w ith cap
or rose point lace fastened with. orange
blossoms and carried a bouquet of
g-ardenins, white r oses and lilies of the
valley. The maid of honor wore a
pistachio velvet gown, ai1d carried an
a m, bouquet or rapture roses and blue
lace flowers, while . the bridemaids
wore froc ks of s unbasl, velvet and
carried bouquets o[ yeflow snapdragons and talisman roses.
A reception followed the cerem'o n'y
Cor members of the . families and
friends. In the r eceiving-' line '.\Vlth
the couple w ere Mr and M;·s Collins,
and Mr and Mrs, Meyer, . i,lster or the
groom and husband . . Mrs Colfin s wore
a gown or Luceme blue velvet w it h a
corsage M orchids. Mrs Sno,./, mother
of the groom, wore a gown -or black
velvet and she wore a corsage of gar denias. Mr Snow was unable to attend because of Illness.
The couple l eft following t h e ceremony for a brief unannounced wedding trip, ancl upon their return wfll
make their h ome at 631 Sumner avenue. They wfll be at h ome after January l . Traveling, the bride wore a
black monotone tweed ensemble \vlth
ma tching accessories.
The b1·fde attended the local schools
a.nd Is a graduate of the Emma Willard school at Troy, ' N. Y. She Is\
member or the Junlpr league. The
g r oom a.ttendcd Syrdc\.1/'e un.i.vemlty,
graduated from Boston university law
school, and ls a n a ttorney in th is city.
He Is representative from the 9th
Hampden district.

l

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                  <text>History of residents of the Town of Worthington and of town affairs.</text>
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Some of these items are bound books and others loose-leaf binders. Loose-leaf binders are scanned with a professional flat bed scanner with the result that optical character recognition is of reasonable accuracy. Books are scanned photographically with the result that optical character recognition is less accurate.</text>
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                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook,  1929-1940 No. 6' 'Scrap Book' in gold. This is a blue book with hard covers. Also has a color picture 'The Doctor Came and Felt Around More Scared than Sick is all he found'. The document includes newspaper clippings with an emphasis on obituaries from the period 1929-1940. No logical arrangement of the materials was immediately evident after scanning and review. (E.L. 12/8/2021)</text>
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4

4 |

:

dhe

Worthington

Historical

Society,

Worthington, Mass.

Se,

01098

�CHILDREN’S PLAYS
TO BE PRESENTED
BY CAPABLE CAST

Ctrtta 14, /4 7/7.
| in

the smallest

formance

means

of towns. Every per=
a

new

kind

of

au-

“These

children’s

plays

are

being

—

brought to Springfield by the Teachdience, a different stage and a com-|
ers’ club for two purposes. First, to
plete
change
of
living
conditions.
give the children
an opportunity
to
They
travel
in
brightly-painted
see real actors performing on a real
trucks,
carrying
the
scenery
and
stage
instead
of
in
the
movies,
and
properties
for
the
three
companies
second, to raise money to carry on
with them.
the welfare work of the club. Every
It is easy
to see
that
the
memyear, the club carries on several wel| bers
of the
Children’s
theater
must
fare
projects
in the
public
schools,
| be more
than actors—they
must
en‘such
as distributing
milk
to underter into the spirit of the organization
nourished
children,
providing
clothand
realize
that
what
they
are
doing
for
the, needy,
and
conducting
ing has. for greater significance than
‘pre-school
clinics.
its
surface
value
of
entertainment.
One of thé ‘actors who
is a favorite
everywhere’
is George
Thornton,
the
leading dwarf
in “Snow
White.”
Althoug -h George
is a middleaged
man,
he
is only
as tall as an cight-year
The
Clar y Tree
Major
Children’s
old
child.
He
has
been
playing
to
theater
which
will
present
“Snow
children for years in circuses, movies
White
and
the
Seven
Dwarfs”
at
and
vaudeville,
as well as with
the
Technical
High
school
auditorium
next
Saturday
afternoon
at 2 under
Clare Tree
Major
company,
and
the
the sponsorship of the Teachers’ club
children
love
him
as
much
as
he
loves playing to them.
of Springfield, has had an interesting
development.
Was With Helen Hayes
Fourteen
years
ago,
Clare
Paul Jones, who
takes the part of
Tree
Major,
president,
director,
play- | Prince Torgar, grew up in the theawright
and
presiding
genius
of the
ter.
He
played
in
a Chicago
stock
company while still in school. Coming
Children’s
theater
was
well
on
the
way to renown as an actress on the| to New
York,
he
became
a_ wellAmerican
stage.
Born
and
educated| known juvenile on Broadway. He was
in England,
grand-niece
of the fam-| with
Helen
Hayes
in
“Caesar
and
Cleopatra,”
and
had
important
roles
ous Mrs Charles Keane
(Ellen Tree),
she was graduated
with honors from
with Leslie Howard
in
“Hamlet,”
‘the
London
Academy
of
Dramatic
with Eva LeGallienne in “The Swan,”
Art and made her debut on the Eng- | and
with
Janet
Beecher
in
“Courlish stage. Coming to New York in age.” This is his third season with
1915,
she
was
one
of the Washing- _the company.
ton
Square
players
(now
the
TheaThe
Princess
in the play is Mary
ter Guild)
at the
time
when
KathFarren.
Her
father
was
the
wellerine Cornell was first stretching her
known
Broadway
actor and
produartistic wings in that group.
cer, George Farren.
As a child Mary
When
the
World
war
struck
at worked with her father in his stock
|
;
company
and
since
has
played
in
the American theater, and the WashBroadway
roles
in
“Prize
Package
ington
Square
players
were
comand
the
“Passionate
Pilgrim.”
She
repelled to dishand, Clare Tree Major,
turns to the children’s theater after
deeply
interested
in
education
for

Clare Tree Major’s Theater
Group Has Had Interesting

JANUARY

‘.

Career-——Will Come Here
Saturday

_

the

stage,

organized

her

school

of

the
theater,
with
Walter
Hampden
and
George
Arliss
as
advisers.
For
four years, Mrs Major was
lessee of
the Princess
theater,
the only woman theater manager
on Broadway
at
that time. It was here that she pro-

duced
“Courage”
Poor Man.” Each

and
the
Saturday

a
play
for
children
also
with
Broadway

leading
ing the

roles and her
minor parts.

“Little
morning

was
presented
actors
in
the

students

tak-

an

absence

of

three

hall

before

girls
of one
of the
company
the
cities,

| for

the

next

unpretentious

the

boys

and

to the

most

largest
eastern
on
move
may

performance
of school

auditoriums’

THEATER

FOUNDER

years.

Jane
Cleveland,
who
joins
Clare
Tree Major this season and takes the

part

has

|\first

a

of

Queen

Haldine

the

Marshfield

solid

with

background

in

ef

the

play,

experience

Hill

players

CLARE

| in this state and then with the famous
Barter
theater
in Virginia.
Mi-

chael

Tabard,

Prince

Thorvard,

is

Will

a

Make

producer, director and actor. He has
theater and the Germantown Theater
guild
and
went
on
tour
with
the

Philadelphia

Theater

guild

in

“Awake

and Sing.” For two years he directWins
Eager
Response
ed
and
produced
Temple
university
Immediately
an
eager
response
summer school productions.
@ame
from
parents in Mahattan and
Others To Take Part
the suburbs who welcomed entertainOthers who will take part in the
ment
for
their
children
that
was
play
are
Lida-Virginia
Parker
as
free from the clap-trap that characLady Sigrida, foster sister
to
the
terized
motion
pictures
of that day.
princess;
John
Paul
as
Hex,
the
Requests
came
from
educators
to
witch; Elizabeth M. Dodge as Lady
take the plays into the suburbs, and
Gertrude,
lady-in-waiting
to
the
thus
the
roving
groups
of
players
queen and Norton DaCosta as Count
were
organized.
The
school
for
the
Atheling
and
Jay
Belais
as
Basim.
theater
was
abandoned
and
a fully
professional
company
was
formed
to There are also various dwarfs ,pages,
bears
and
cats.
The
play
will
be dicare for the demand.
rected
by
Mrs
Major,
costumes
are
When
the depression started, there
were
two
companies
playing
from| under the direction of Marian DePew
Cleveland
to Washington.
The
de-) and scenery igs by Irving Morror.
Part
of the
fun
of being
an
acpression
grew,
but
instead
of re-|
in the Clare Tree Major
comtrenching,
Mrs
Major
expanded
her) tor
pany
lies
in
the
uncertainty
of
the
organization and added a third com-|
audience
reaction.
For
instance,
in
pany.
In appearance,
Mrs
Major
he“Snow White” the children are apt to
lies the conventional
concept
of the
whisper loudly “Don’t eat the apple,”
the queen
disguised as an old
\actress
or
director.
She
is
a
gra- when
goes to the house of
cious,
gray-haired,
middleaged
wom- begger woman
seven
dwarfs
and
gives
Snow
an who
loves
gardening
and
spends the
the poisoned apple. Some reher
leisure
time
with
her
husband White
actions
are
not
so
easy
to
deal
with,
and daughter at their home in West| chester
Hills.
As
every
organization however. A seasoned actress who had
playing
the
stern
housekeeper
|takes
on
the
character
of its head, been
“Heidi”
more
realistically
than
so it is with the Clare Tree Major’s in
| Children’s
theater;
only those actors she had known, almost lost her composure
at
one
performance
when
a
and actresses survive in her companies who
possess
inmate
fineness
of young lady in the second row caught.
and told heir
character,
sincerity and the
“human) her eye for a moment
what she thought of her by sticking
touch.”
Life with the Theater
: out her tongue as far as it would
is go.
It was
not
the
action
but
the
the Children’s theater
Life with
sublime look of satisfaction that folunexof
full
a strenuous existence,
pected adventure, with a change of lowed it that almost “broke up” the
Play- properly reproved player.
of the week.
day
every
place
or
theater
in a huge
day
one
ing

concert

30, 1939

TREE

MAJOR

Appearance

Feb..

Amherst

10

in

“SCROOGE”
Dickens’
Famous
i
Splendidly Done
Charles

|
|
|
;
;

‘

®

Al
famous
story,
Christmas Carol,” has been made into
a
an
excellent
motion
picture
by
British producing company and under
is being shown
the title of ‘Scrooge”
as the feature attraction at the Par
mount
Theater.
Sir
Seymour
Hicks |}

| plays

the

Dickens’

Ve

Christmas
Tale
on the Screen.

title

role

while

A

the

| Bob Cratehit
is portrayed
by Donald
| Calthrop. The former
played
Scrooge
more
than
2000
times on the stage,
while
Calthrop
is one
of the
oldest
and finest actors of the British theater.
Effectively directed, the film follows

the

Dickens’

tale

faithfully

and1 ni-

nutely. Settings and atmosphere ha Ave |
been
achieved — which
recreate the
mood
that
has
made
this
affect ing
story one of the best known and loved
in the English language. The acting’ is
with
Hicks
portraying
the
| excellent
Scrooge ir da
soured and mean
old
| masterly manner, Calthrop as Crate hit
| makes
the
simple
and
kind-hear ted
elerk a genuinely lovable human ch aracter. The supporting cast 1s first rate.

' “Scrooge”
j ture:

The

is by all means

associate

feature

a must

f D1C-

is “Coronado,”

_a comedy with music, featuring Eddie
Johnny
Duchin
and
his orchestra.
Andy
Devine,
‘Downs,
Leon Errol,
Jack Haley and Betty Burgess are in

the

cast.

|
|
|

|

\

|

|
|
|

||)
Ho
|

�| || “LITTLE WOMEN” TO BE
“HANS BRINKER” GIVEN
CHILDREN’S PLAY)
BY CHILDREN’S THEATER
GIVEN HERE THURSDAY

‘CAST ANNOUNCED FOR

4 |
ee

|

|

|

3)
a

i
i

“Heidi” to Be Presented
Tomorrow Afternoon

Academy of Music

Here
at

a

|
Children everywhere have come
‘to love the simple, sweet story of
“Heidi,” the littie girl who lived
\like a wild, free, happy
creature

lin the Alps, and who spread
‘and happiness wherever

joy

she went.

sara

ate

Viola Roache to Apeeat Wi th
Clare Tree Major Company
at Academy of Music

Charming - Dramatization of
Well-Known Story Pleases
Academy Audience

A charming
dramatization
of
Viola Roache, for many years a
Mary
Mapes
Dodge’s
‘Hang
prominent figure on the American
Brinker,
or
the
Silver
Skates,’’
iand
English stage,
will
appear
|:
‘with the Clare Tree Major Chil-| | Was presented at the Academy of
dren’s Theater company in “Lit-| 1 Music yesterday afternoon by the
Clare Tree Major Children’s thetle Women”
at the Academy. 6f
ater of New York under the ausMasic on Thursday, Feb. 4th, at
pices of the Children’s Aid asso4p.

| Clare Tree Major will present her
m,
| Children’s Theater company in a
:
:
‘ciation.
A larger audience
than
As leading woman at the Coppopular
dramatization
of
this
usual testified
to the
growing
ley theater
in Boston
for
four
| charming
story on Thursday afpopularity of this series of plays
ternoon, Dec. 8, at 4 o’clock
at years, Viola Roache was seen in
for the children.
| the Academy of Music, under the
The scenic effects were beautithe plays
of Shaw,
Galsworthy,
auspices of the Children’s Aid as- | Milne,
fully done, showing the
Barrie
and in many
pictur- |
of
sociation.
5
esque interior of the Brinker cot|Shakespeare’s plays, Three more
The plot to this simple
story
tage
and the
years in stock with the
frozen canals
Boston
of
eoncerns Heidi, a little girl who
Stock company, and a season in Holland where the actors accomlived with her aged
grandfather
plished some extremely — life-like
England followed, after which she
in his
simple
home among
the
returned to America
for an en- Skating. The costumes were lovepines way up in the Alps. Heidi
Jy and colorful,
gagement
in
“The
Last
of Mrs.
is called to the city
as a comNearly. every child knows
Cheyney,”
with
Ina
Claire, and
the |
panion to little
Clara Sesemann,
Story of “Hans Brirker”’—ho
“The
Woman
Disputed,”
with
w
whose parents are yery
wealthy. |
Hans,
hts
Lowell Sherman
little
sister, Gretel, his |
and Ann
Hard| With Heidi come health and sunj
Mothe
r,
and
ing.
his father who
bas |
|shine which soon restore happibeen ill. for ten years, live in
“The Bachelor Father,’ under
a_
‘ness to the Sesemann household.
little
-heuse by. the side of
Belasco’s
management,
was
her
the |
| But Heidi longs for the freedom
canal, how the greatest docto
next engagement,
in which
she
in|
'of her mountain
home.
Aeccomall Holland finally cures the r sick
;panied by Clara, she returns to also went to London, appearing
|
fathe
r,
how’
at
Hang
the
same
and
time
his
in special permother |
‘her grandfather, and while Clara
|
disco
ver
their
-forman
ces
lost
of
fortune
“Paddy
the
finds complete
Next
and|
recovery in
the
Best Thing.” Returning once more |how little Gretel wins the covet- |
bracing Alpine atm
here, Heidi
(ed
silver
skate
|to
America
s,
, she played the lead
recovers her happin
One of the scenes
in
“Dear
Old
England,”
which the |
oe}
The clean, sweet air, the eagles
the
iyout
hful
audience enjoyed
“Comedy
of Errors” for a sumand the snow-capped
most
mountains
|
was
the race over the ice
mer season of pastorals on Long
will leave a lasting impression in
when
|
the”
sWittest skaters
Island,
‘Sweet
Stranger,”
among
the minds of all who will eagerly
with
the
boys and girlg competed
Ralph Morgan,
the
watch this play, delightfully perold
for
lady
the
in
awar
d:
of
“The
the
silve
Bellamy
r
skate
Trial,”
formed by the Clare Tree Majer
s. It was
and Doll
Cameron in ‘The Alchemist,” py a thrilling climax to a delightful
Children’s Theater
company,
a
play
and
ever
Ben
yone
Johnson
, in New York.
Was glad to see
group of adult, professional
ace
As one of the stars of the Chi- Gretel come in the winner,
tors, who bring to their work u
The
cast
cago Civic Shakespeare
was ag follows:
zest
and
society,
spontaneity
which|
together with Fritz Leiber, Helen| Hans Brinker
makes
Robert Josselyn
them
popular
wherever
Raff
Brinker
Menken, William Faversham, Tythey are seen,
Will Marsh
Dame
Brinker Gretchen Sher
rone Power and Pedro de CordoThe cast follows:
man
ba, Miss Roache was seen earlier Gretel Brinker
Dorothy Major
The one who reads
Jane Eckart
—
Pete
r
this
season
Heidi
Harr
as
Nerissa
ison
in “The
Dorothy Major
Hilda von Gleck ~~ Hele Loomis.
Merchant of Venice,”
Deta
Portia
n Shea
Nell Green
in Katr
inka
Julius
Caesar and. The Queen in
Barbara
June White
Carol Thomas
Voo
ste
nwa
lbe
rt
“Hamlet.”
Annette
James Byron
Ann Roberts
Carl
The cast
Johann
for “Little Women”
Norman Stone
Wilkins Terry
Doc
tor
.
Grandfather
follows:
Wendell Whitten|
Raymond Barrett
Amy
The Pastor
Carolyn Humphreys Jacob
«
John Call|
Dwight Storm
Ben
Beth
Peter
Gene Magnus'
Harrison Loomis
Neel Heath
Spin
Meg
Brigida
Sally Gabler Judge
Helen Shea
John Bar
Scene 1 The Brinkers’
Jo
| Grandmother
Norma Nelson
Nelsa Moran
Gotecd
Scene
2.
Hannah
| Miss Rottenmeier
On
the ice.
Clare Tree Major
Norma Nelson.
Scene
3,
| Clara, the little invalid
_ Laurie
Another place on
Robert Josselyn| the |
ice.
Viola Roache
:
June White! Mrs. March
|
Scene
4, The Brinkers’
The tutor
Wendell ‘Whitten John Brook
Charles Aitken
¢
Ottage,
Scene 5, The race
Mr. Sesemann
Mr. Laurence
Terry Gray
on th e ice, :
Wilton Graf
(Sebastian, the kindly butler
Mr. March
Allen Mathes
Clare Tree Major
John Barry Aunt March
|The Doctor
Scene—The living room of the
Roy Renwick
March home in Concord, Mass,
;Clara’s grandmother
Time—During the Civil war.
Gretchen Sherman
Scene 1—On the Alm.
Scene 1.—Christmas Eve.
Scene
Scene
2—Outside
2.—The.
next
Grandfamorning.
ther’s cottage.
“Christmas day,
Scene 3—On the Alm.
Scene 3.—A summer afternoon.
Scene
Scene 4.—The following Christ4—At
the
old
blind
gsrandmother’s
cottage,
Peter's mas day,
home.
and
Dramatized
directed
by
Scene 5—-The
library of
Costumes
by
the Clare Tree Major.
Sesemann's home in Frankfort.
Marian DePew.
Scene 6—Back
with
grandfather,

�SE

725

“THE SECRET GARDEN”
|...
HERE ON THURSDAY
'Dramatization of Story to Be)
Given by-Clare Tree Major Company

|“THE THIRTEENTH CHAIR”
BRIDAL GOWNS TO BE
READY FOR OPENING
SHOWN IN PAGEANT
Six Women to Appear in Their
Own

Costumes;

Many Mod-

els to Participate

Mystery Play to Be Presented
Tomorrow Even‘ng at
|
Carnegie Hall .
=

With dress
rehearsal
already|
the
over, bespeaking a smooth
TUD- |
pag-|
ning
performance
tomorrow
Hodgson Burnett’s story for chileant of wedding
dresses
to be) night, the members of
the cast |
dren of all ages,
which will be
presented next Monday evening at
confident, and the director
sure!
| presented in a dramatized version
of a good play
in all
respects,|
8 o’clock in the Edwards church
\by the
Clare Tree Major
Chil“The Thirteenth Chair,’? mystery
under the auspices of the
Womdren’s Theater company on Thursplay by
Bayard Veiller,
is
inday, March 31st, at the Academy | en’s union of the church, will be
readiness
for
presentation
at
outstanding in the many interestof Music, is a play that is all dra8.15 tomorrow |
'ing bridal gowns of the past 125] Carnegie hall at
ma, keen and throbbing and vital.
evening.
John
Mann,
himself an’
years as well
as many
modern
Not the drama of guns and gangs,
accomplished actor,
and
having ;
wedding dresses
worn by
their
but the bigger drama of the fight
one of the leading roles
in
the}
owners. Those who will appear in
twe unhappy, love hungry
chilplay, is directing it.
i
their own
gowns
include
Mrs.
dren make to recover health and
The part of Rosalie LaGrange,
Mrs.
Harold
happiness and a normal place in |Merrill E. Torrey,
the character around which
the;
Kingsbury,
Mrs.
Franklin King,
a puzzled world.
play was originally
written,
is
Jv.,
Mrs.
Aubrey
B.
Butler,
Mrs.
“The
Secret
Garden” is the
played by
Miss Lucille E. Fine.
Nathan
Williams
and Mrs.
Harry
last play of the series of six givRoscoe Crosby, at
whose
home
Lee.
en by the
Clare
Tree
Major's
all of the events of
the
swiftly
The models will include the fol| Children’s theater of
New York,
moving
drama
mystery
happen,
lowing women:
The Misses Hazel
‘under the auspices of the
Chilis played
by
John B. Delaney.
Ames,
Barbara Brainerd,
Sally
dren’s Aid association.
That of his wife, Alicia Crosby, is
Hyde,
Beatrice Thrasher,
Jane
The directors of this association
played by
Miss Ruth L. Stearns,
-Griswold, Katherine Wright, Luhoped
to accomplish
two things
and of their son, Will Crosby,
is
'cille Plumb, Marion King, : Barby bringng Mrs. Major’s company
played by
Donald
MeKeraghan,
bara
Phelps,
Clio
Barnes,
Sophie
to Northampton. First to make a
The heroine,
Helen
O'Neill,
is
Delbraynio,
Nellie
Harrington,
sum of money in
order to carry
played by Miss Mabel Brinn. The
Olive Harrington,
Sylia
Woodon their work
with children
in
important part
of
Mary
Eastbury, Barbara Ives,
Yvonne and
Hampshire county
and
at
the
wood, a guest at the
house,
is
Jeanne Triouleyre,
Jean
Clapp,
same time give to the children of
portrayed by Miss Olive MeKeraVirginia Smith,
Gwendolyn’ Stethis
community
and
others a
ghan, and that
of Elizabeth Ervens, Erma Sisco,
Betty Brown,
chance to see plays of a high orskine,
another
guest,
by
Miss
der, written and
directed
espe- | Phyllis Beach, Ruth Ann Putnam,
Dorothy
Broadhurst.
Grace
cially for children. To judge by
Peggy Perkins, Mrs. A. J, Penner,
Standish is played
by Miss Ella
Mrs, Hobart Parsons,
Mrs.
Ted
the number of children attending
Bartley, and her brother,
HowClapp, Mrs. Merville H. Stowe and
the series and by their
evident
ard, is played by
John Banner.
Mrs. Carl J. Norton.
enjoyment it would seem that the
George Rupprecht plays the part
A half hour of vocal and instruexcitement from
the
point
of
of Edward
Wales,and
James
mental selections of
appropriate
view of the children has been a
Ryan, that of Philip Mason.
Mr,
success.
The attendance at this
wedding
music
by
Thomas C.
Mann, the director, has the most
last play will be a large factor in| Auld, organist, and
Miss Gladys
important role of Inspector Dondeciding whether the demand
is ‘Noble, soprano, and Mrs. Charles
ahue, i and assisting him
in
his
great enough to warrant another
E. Lotreck, contralto, will precede
work is
Sgt. Dunn,
Played
by
engagement of Mrs. Marjor’s comthe pageant.
Organ
music will
Dennis Clifford.
Helen Trent is
pany for the season of 1932 and
provide a background
for
the
Played by Mrs.
Harriet
Stark,
1933.
parade of gowns.
and her husband
ig
played
by
Following is the cast for “The
Eugene Titus will officiate
as
Robert
Fitzgerald.
The
butler, |
Secret Garden”:
narrator during the pageant, giyPollock, is played
by Frederick|
Mary
the women’s
June White | ing the history of
Finn.
Mrs. Medlock, the housekeeper
gowns as they appear.
“The Thirteenth
Chair”
was
Gretchen Sherman
The ushers will be Kenneth Ti- | One of. the many plays
produced
The station master
John Barry
tus, Warren Swift, Franklin King, | in Northampton back in 1915 by
Martha, the maid
Norma Nelson
Jy., and Robert Bardwell.
the stock company of the NorthJane, another maid
Helen Shea
Carl J. Norton is directing the ampton Players,
Before that it
Dickon
Harrison Loomis
production, assisted
by
Eugene
was a huge suecess in New York
Mr. Craven, Colin’s father
Titus, Mrs.
Carl J. Norton
and city, where it
drew
crowds
of
Mrs. Erie Stahlberg.
| People, Its author, writer of many
Wendeli Whitten
Ben Weatherstaff
Will Marsh
famous mystery and murder stoThe
committee
securing
the
ries, 18 NOW writing scenarios for
Colin
Neal Heath
dresses for display comprises Mrs.
Dr. Craven
Robert Posselyn
D. G. Plumb,
Miss
Mina Wood,| the motion pictures, and many of |:
those now
Mrs. Sowerby, Dickon’s mother
Miss Helen Story, Mrs. Elmer H.
being
made
come
Reed,
Mrs. Mary Goodwin
Jane Eckart
His
writings
and/ from his pn.
are
known
Scene 1—A railway carriage in| Mrs. Ellsworth Phelps.
for economy
of
words,
England, on a rainy evening
in.
The music is in charge of Mrs.| with each word significant in the
unraveling of the mystery,
March,
Leroy Ames.
and
plenty of
Scene 2—The next morning, in
action
characterizing
them.
Mary’s sitting room.
Scene
3—-Outside
the
Tickets are now on sale at the
secret
garden, a month later.
People’s Institute
and
will
be
Seene 4—Colin’s bedroom, just}
sold at the door, with
dancing
before dawn.
until 12.30, following the
play.
Scene
5—The
secret
garden,
“Jack”
Delaney
and
his
the same afternoon,
Rhythm Boys will furnish music.
Scene 6—The
secret
garden,
two months later,
Dramatized
and
directed
by
Clare Tree Major.
Costumes by Marian DePew.
Settings by
Nicolai Gelikhovs |
sky.

“The

Secret

Garden,’

Frances

A unique
splendor of

contribution
Easter time,

to
a

�HISTORICAL SOCIETY HEARS HELEN WOODS

“|

From the open lamp

evolved

light, that a lamp needs the com-

' the covered lamp of Greece, Rome
and other nations.
Various other
forms
of lamps
were later con-

| Interesting Talk on the Evolution of the Lamp, at
D. A. R. House

ceived and used.

| Dlement
of-a perfect shade.
The
shade may be simple or
élegant
as the circumstances demand,
but

The toreh, rush-

it mip

light and bowl-shaped
oil lamps |
continued in use over a period of;
10,000 years with practically no|
improvement, though it seems in-)
eredible that all this time, until)
about 200 years ago, man content-.
ed himself with such poor substitutes for daylight.

be perfection in line, color

-and.material,

priate,

It

must

be-

eee

-

The same urge — tonsciou
g or
‘unconscious
— that
Carried
man
through the Dark and Middi
e Ages,
| Constantly
|
“Lightning, when it kindled the
learning, aining
al-|°
| Ways in culture—that
first
blaze
in the forest,
intro-Bame urge
and for the want of-a better
iloas
duced man to fire as a means of
After describing: various
forms | w9 may
Call it the urge for beauheat and light; that same light-| of lamps, candles and other lights| ee
carry us on.
ning,
thousands
of years
later,
used
years
ago,
and
explaining
he little electric wire off
| brought man in touch with elec-| several of the curious contrivances
lntagbdeenpe
unkn own to man
ie
be-}
| tricity and opened undreamed of} which were on exhibition at the
ore our day.
With
it we will
lavenues
of progress,’’
Helen
J.
meeting and which will be shown } make our homes
haveng-of peace,
Woods of this city told the North- | at her studio, today and tomorrow, =
in the dignity of Hght
and
ampton Historical society in her] Mrs, Woods explained that Benjaor.
We will weave light into
!
talk on “Evolution of the Lamp,”
min
Franklin
invented
the two-} =
our eel
lives with restraiaint, : utility
jat the Betty Allen chapter house | wick
burner.
He found three
‘on South street yesterday after-/ wicks not so desirable.
In 1783)
| noon.
| M. Argand, a Swiss chemist, {n'
Mrs. Woods said she was dis-| vented an epoch
=- making
burner
cussing
the.
subject
from
the, and chimney, using -a cylindrical
standpoint of the student, rather. wick fitting closely to a metal tube
than
as
an
authority.
In
this’ that extended
down
through the
connection
she
said
there were
bottom of the oil reservoir.
This’
many

conflicting

conclusions.

were

the

Early

same-in

statements.

means

the

and

of light

Far

East|

aud the Far North.
One theory
is that lamps originated when the)!
eave man’s wife saw fat, from-an

-animal

she was

cooking,

8000

B.

C.

Burning

wicks

eonsumed
the fat -as it melted.
Similar lamps were iater made of
bronze
and
iron, with
fish and
animal fats for oil, and olive oil
used in Mediterranean countries.
Open

cup

lamps

of

this trature

are

still used in India, Sicily and other
parts of the Hast.
The same idea
of the open bow! was later used
in“ the iron Betty lamps.that came
into general
use in Hurope and
were brought to America by the
| Pilgrims in 1620.
|
Rush lights were in common use
| during the Middle Ages among the
peasantry
of
Europe
and
were
made by soaking the pith of cattails and
rush into animal
fat;
the long rushes were coiled for
; convenient handling and the ends
| pulled out from the light holder
They were
las it was consumed.
| used by the Romans to light the
‘arena for games, and they were
| also used in early colonial days.
Some fine examples of rush light

holders

are

today
and
| Woods’, 12

in the. loan

collection

tomorrow
at
Bedford terrace.

Mrs.

iater

used

in

kero-|

The first chimney was iron with
a hood over the flames.
The glass
ehimney.was

man’s.

fall onto | breaking

moss and ‘burn and light up.
“Probably from~the first forest
fire, kindled by lightning, man salvaged enough glowing embers to
start
and
keep
alive
his
own
hearth
fire.
A
burning
stick,
caught from the hearth to light!)
a short journey from his cave, may
have
suggested
the
traditional
pine~knot
for
ltonger,
-steadier
burning.
Torches
of
this
sort
were used for many
years even
after the first crude. lamps were
fashioned from clay -and stone.
Later came terra cotta lamps,
~excavated-in Assyria, dating back

to

adaptation was
;sene lamps,

the

result

accident

when

of

a

a

|

work-

boitle,

from the heat, was rested momentarily
over the flame.
Between 1800 and 1845 some 500
patents on whale-oil lamps were
granted in» America.
. Then, after
a comparatively
.brief’.period
of
gas. as an illuminant,
electricity
came into its own.
es
From Franklin to Thomas Edi-!
son events passed swiftly.
When
aldetric lights came into general
use

for

lamps

it

effected

two

extremes
— exhilaration and consternation. People, exhilarated by
_the novelty of it, wallowed in brilliance—I might almost say garishSees
no degree of light was too
| strong; no color too intense.
An

|otherwise lovely
| privacy,

|touch
On

peace

and

room

lost

charm

of a light button.

the

other

hand,

all its

with

the

people

who

'valued the mellowness of old-time
things were filled with alarm
misgiving, for after all, the
trast from soft candle light to
glare of unprotected bulbs is
maying.

Forced

to

accept

and
conthe
disnew

ways by the stress of life, these
people simply covered all bulbs indiscriminately with some colorless
material.
A beautiful lamp was
regarded as simply ending at its
electric
fixture!
Like
a human
being without a head—beautiful
thoughts
might emanate
from
a
person, but he must be considered

as having

|) neck!

no substance

This

ostrich-like

above

the

attempt

failed, of course, so distinctly out-

side the general plan of a room,
|the inappropriate shades became
| the most conspicuous points in it.
Happily we have emerged from
|
our first shock
and
violent
reactions.
We have learned that a).
beautiful room requires beautiful

sca aS

tiaalee

7

�SSNS

|{lips, Harriet Beecher Stowe, HenBRIDGMAN &amp; LYMAN’S
ry Van Dyke,
: Moody,GeorgePaul W.ye
cee:
Cable, Dwight
GOING OUT OF BUSINESS | L.wick,
Du Chaillu, Robert

Frost,

Bookstore Established in 1797 |, a host
Will End Historic Career
| women
|

Hampshire

county’s

and

gathering

for

place

oldest

many

of

years a

literary.

re-

ligious and educational
groups,
the Bridgman
&amp; Lyman
_book-

store, is going out-of business, it
was announced today, after 140
years

of

The

was

preparation
sale, which

The
Simeon

books.

uninterrupted — service.

store

closed

for
will

today

the
open

eonducted by
1827,
when

ent

in

1850,

J. H.

one

year

Butler

took

in

later

he

sold

his

Some

vocations

have
and

and

inter-

est to S. W. Hopkins and Henry
Childs.
Mr. Bridgman was connected with the business for over

tlers came
their

to

weekly

the

list

of

po-

and
his
Johnson’s

Northampton
shopping

on

tours

they stopped and warmed _ their
60 years.
! hands over the stove
the bookWith the entrance of
Mr.| shop, chatted with the in propri
etor
Childs in the firm, the store was ;| and spun homely yarns.
known as Bridgman and Childs.
Mr. Childs was a bookbinder ot
note and a bookbindery was _ incorporated into the company.
|
Sidney E. Bridgman, who was

a

noted

traveler,

Bridgman

into

lecturer,

writer

and church worker, took Clifford
H, Lyman and
Miss Annie
E.
the

business

in,

1897. Miss Bridgman who attended Mount
Holyoke
seminary,
was

for

30

years

ofiice

ciation.

sociated

most

55

the

secretary

store

years,

was

for

born

al.

A.
the

future
but it

tionery

occupancy
is «“nown

and

book

Smith
store

During

students

and

cheerful
and

were

the

service

owners.

college

flocked

CLIFFORD
|
|

delighted

of

the

the)

‘to

Homer

Mayor
season.

“The

The

24

of

—

Mayor

Northampton,

of whieh
Northampwas
named,
has sent
C.

Bliss

greetings

communication

corporation

of

of

says:

Northampton,

Old
England,
is a member
of the
English-speaking | union,
which
has
for jts object the binding together in
| the cords of peace and goodwill sand
international
understanding
the
various
nationalities
and
dominions.
of
the world that speak the Anglo-Saxon
(tongue
and
cherish
the same
ideals
jof tholght and action. Tnspired by a

matural
interest in the
townships
of the U. S.

cities and
A.
which

founded
under circumstances
of perisonal association connected with their
whief founders,
bear the same names

‘of historic towns and
old
mother
country,

cities of the
it has
been

thought
peculiarly
appropriate
to
| selze
every
available
opportunity
of
| emphasizing
the connection
by the
spromotion
of friendly
feelings
hbetween
the
inhabitants
of the
allied;
towns,
and
generally
encouraging
neighborly.
fellowship.
“The
citizens of Northampton,
Old
England, have been especially favored
by having been brought into intimate

the citizens of NorthampU. S. A., by the visit of

which

to us an enthusiastic

he

had

been

received,

a

H. LYMAN

oid home iown, and has left abiding
memories
of
a most
pleasant
kind,
which can never be effaced.”
The letter mentions that Lawrence
Washington,
an
ancestor
-of George
‘Washington,
was
twice
mayor
of
Northampton,
Eng.,
and
that
the
mother of George Washington,
Mary

was

. glorious

with the

clerks

a descendant

of a vicar

of|

inspiration

of

ChristmaStide,

help us on both sides of the Atlantic
to
participate
in and
promote
such
measures as are likely to advance the
happiness
and
prosperity
of
humanity.”
;

a

of
'and Mr. Lyman has a wealth
correspondence from the famous
among
Outstanding
statesman.

the celebrities who have patronare: |
shop
ized the little quaint
L. GarParley,

honor
state,

tthe

Dee.

Hanafy

Greet-.

a Northampton
church. The letter, in
‘conclusion,
says:
“I wish
you
most
cordially
a merry
Christmas
and
a
happy
new
year.
May
the spirit
of
fpeace
and
goodwill,
which
is. the

Coolidge Was Frequent Visitor |
was |
The late Calvin Coolidge
store
ja frequent visitor to the

Daniel Webster, William
rison, Mary Lyon, Peter

G.

ng.
in
iton, this

(Ball,

term|

to

Northampton,

(Percy

of.

‘of his experiences made a great impression on his fellow citizens of the

ing policy or enlarging the store |
to accomn.odate increasing busi-|
ness.

Hanafy

Eng., Sends.

Cordial Christmas
ings to Mayor Bliss

‘with

of
the
store,
that
tue
sta-_

definitely ended.
Bridgman &amp; Lyman’s has ever
kept abreast of the times, chang-

Percy

Northampton,

most
glowing
description
of the natural beauties of your township;
besides a graphic idea of the remarkeble
educational
facilities for higher
education it afforded, particularly for
young
women.
His
graphic
account

no
the

business has |

Mayor

story of the celebration, a record of
a gracious
and
generous
hospitality

Bidwell,
business

since August 18, 1935,
have
statement to make regarding

_ MESSAGE FROM ITS
ENGLISH NAMESAKE

the brought back

in.

Southampton, the son of Nathan
H. and Julia
Sheldon
Lyman.
Mr. Lyman started in the store
as an apprentice and in 1897 became one of the partners.
The
present
owners,
Ralph
Lerche and
Henry
vno have eonducted

;

our
municipal
representative,
S. S.
Campion, who, in 1904, was the guest
of your mayor and corporation at the
celebration
of the 250th
anniversary
of the settlement of your city. As one
of our leading
and
honored
citizens

who has been as:

with

Sse

NORTHAMPTON HAS =

touch with
tton, Mass.,

of the American Missionary asso- |

~~Mr. Lyman,

a

chosen differ-

accordance with the demands of
progress, the essential characteristics that endeared the shop to
| appreciative
patrons
remained
unchanged.
In the early part of
the 19th century when the
set-

Sidney

in the business

and

bookstore
of Springfield,
both
worked for Sidney E. Bridgman.
Although the outward appearance of the store has altered in

until
son,

J. H. Butler,
into
partnership.
This partnership
existed for a
few years when
the
son
took
over
the
father’s
interest.
In
E, Bridgman

of other noted men
in the country.

the author and artist,
brother,
Henry,
of

by!
was

Mr.
Butler
he
took
his

and

sitions attained by them is long.
Clifton Johnson of
Hockanum,

closing-out
tomorrow.

store
was
founded
Butler in 1797, and

Hawkes,

The
Bridgman
and
Lyman
bookstore
during its entire
career has always been more than
a book shop, it was in reality
a
|) literary meeti
ng place. Many
of
| the men and
women
trained by
Mr.
Bridgman
and
Mr. Lymar
nave branched out and achieved
marked success in the world
of

in City

bookstore,

Clarence

2

|

Barrie, Jenny Lind, |
M.
James
Wendell PhilRobertson Nicol,

|,

ae
ea

�Two silhouettes of special local
of her grandmother and one of her
interest
are
one
each
of
two
grandfather,
5
former presidents of
Smith colMrs. Stephen L, Butler exhibiis
jeze, Dr. Seelye
and Dr. Burton.
two, one of Pamella Barton PorBoth of these are by Prof. Alfred
Vance Churchill,
formerly of the j; ter, an aunt of Clara Barton,
and
college. One of President Seelye is | another of Benjamin Porter, both
of
Vienna,
Me.
Their years were
a large one, in a frame, and con1768-1836 and 1754-1837.
spicuously displayed on the wall.
One of
Elizabeth - Fitch eed,
An outstanding one
in a collecrelated
to
the
Fitch family of
tion
of
eight
loaned
by
Mrs.
steamboat fame,
is exhibited by|
Thomas M. Shepherd is that made
Miss Rosa Watson,
by Henry Shepherd, father of the
|
Among
others
who have kindly
late Thomas M. Shepherd.
It was
loaned
silhouettes
are
eut out by Henry Shepherd
himMrs.
P.
Stillwell
of
Belmoni
self, showing how he
looked
on Nina
ones
in black
horseback.
There
is
another of avenue; two large
frames of Herr and Frau Johannes
Dr. Leonard Shepherd,
who conbuss
of Alsace-Lorraine;
ducted a drug store at the former
the
Misses Mary and Elizabeth Mason,
Kingsley location on Main
street,
} a Bache
silhoue
tte
with
Bache's
and
one
of
Henry
Shepherd, |
| Stamp
and patent
marked
painted on glass,
on it
and one of
Dr. Joseph Osgood of
Among the works of the famed
Salem; two of the years 188) ana
maker
of
silhouettes,
Augustin
Silhouettes,
large
and
small,
loaned.
by Miss Jane BigeEdouard, a Frenchman,
the first 1835
ancient
and
modern,
foreign, |
Miss Clara Clark;
to draw directiy from his subject low; one from
domestic and local,
and in intermoderns
from
Miss C. M.
and the first
to
point
out
the two
esting variety, are to be seen in a
superiority of his artistic method Burpee; two from Mrs. Herbert N, |
Loomi
s;
one from Miss Catherine |
over the
machine-made
shadowrare collection now on exhibition
two from Mrs. Delia —
drawing of his day, is one loaned Woodward:
at the Northampton
Historical soC. Stearns;
one
from Miss Cor-|
by Miss Mary E.
Lamport.
It is
'ciety’s reoms on the third floor of
nelia
Moody;
one
from
that of John Trott Lamport,
her
Mrs, |
Robert Staab,
| Memorial hall on Main street, and
grandfather, who was a lawyer in
|
{may be seen the
rest of the week
Troy, N. Y.
Two interesting
old silhouettes
‘from 10.30 a.m. to 12 m. and 2 to
of a man and woman,
shown in
4.90 p.m.
The exhibit is open to
old frames, are loaned
by Lewis
the public without
charge,
and
N. Wiggins of
the
Hotel Northanyone having~
silhouettes
they
ampton.
would like
to
loan are asked to
Frederick A. Adams has loaned
leave them at
the
museum with
one of Joseph W. Millett, who:
Miss Mary F, Crafts, curator,
or
was stage
driver
in 1832 on the ~ ~The Northainjton
telephone
Mrs.Thomas
M.
mental hyLynn-Salem stage route. This one
giene sub-commiitee had its
anShepherd, 2427.
is of more than ordinary size and
nual meeting last evening at 6 at
Thet silhouettes
are
comparaframed and is
displayed
on the
Bedford Lodge. Reports
on vatively rare
is
indicated
by the
wall.
rious aspects of this year’s work
fact that the number on exhibition
Mrs. Florence Adams _ exhibits
of the child guidance clinic were}
is not large in proportion
to the
an excellent one which
she made
given by Miss Mary Gove Smith
many
articies
which
have
been
of her little daughter, Jane. Mrs.
and
by Dr. Rhoda U. Musgrave.
shown in
other
special
displays
exhibits
seven
old
The following officers were electheld by the society,
but
the ex- | Adams also
and one modern (two French).
ed: Chairman,
Mrs.
Henry
P.
hibit has
quality,
and
when
it
Mr. and
Mrs.
Walter E. CarChandler; secretary, Dr. G. Franopened
yesterday
the friends
of:
cis Osborn.
At
a meeting to be
bin of Florence have
loaned two
the society were still
bringing in
interesting
exhibits,
one a silheld in
May
several’ important
additions, so a considerable nummatters of policy connected with
Mrs. Zenas Holbrook
ber is expected to be added during | houette of
the clinie will be considered and
(nee
Sarah
Billings
Howard)
the remainder of the week.
great grandmother of Mr. Corbin Jat this time a general report will
Mrs. Thomas M.
Shepherd,
in
be made of the year’s work of the
and another, a pencil
drawing o
charge of the
hall,
has gathered
child guidance clinic and of the
together an exceptionally fine and | Mrs. Holbrook. This was done b
committee as well.
valued number of these
‘shadow| P. M. Wentworth in 1825.
Mrs. Robert
Williston exhibit
pictures,” and a visit to the hall is |
three:
John
Randolpu
¢
well worth while. In addition
to
Roanoke,
John
Coalter
an
the silhouettes,
there are various
other
permanent
exhibits
of Blanche Tucker,
Charles B. Kingsley has
loane
special historic interest in North-|
three,
one
of
Sarah
Phel;
ampton.
Most
of the silhouettes
Kingsley, one
of Samuel Phelj
|have been loaned
by
NorthampKinsgley and
one
of
Ebenez
‘jton people and
a good many have
Kingsley, all of the year 1769.
some special
historic or ancestral
An exceptional one by Edouar
interest. Many of them are shown
who also did some work in hai
in the interesting old
daguerreois loaned by Stanley Howe. This
type frames
so
commonly in use
a silhouette of Lydia Macy of Na
years ago,
tucket, and in addition to the si
An exceptionally fine collection
houette there
is
a
bonnet
an
of modern German silhouettes has
which
the
subject
been loaned by
Dr.
Maude
Wil- neckpiece
liams.
These
include
a cut-out wearing and which is very clevei
mysteriou
silhouette of a masted
ship on a ly done in a manner
tolaymen
and
perhaps
to som
calm
sea
against
a clouded sky
artists.
backbround.
In these silhouettes
Most of the
silhoeuttes
are i
there
is
not
merely:the black
black, but
there
are
others
i
outline,
but the ship with masts
including
one
of the st
is cut out so the details show as in white,
“hole
in ~ the doughnut
a drawing, and the same with the called
water.Another is of a sailboat near type, this white being the part ci
of a paper, tht
shore and nearby a fisherman and out of the center
dog in a rowboat, while on shore making two silhouettes at one an
is a windmill. Another is of a tree the same time when the white :
each case is
given
a backgrour
with several birds on the branches
A
and a picket
fence in
the fore- of black.
Miss Ethel W. Devon of Par:
ground,
dise road exhibits two of 1830501
:

SILHOUETTES —
ON VIEW HERE

Interesting Variety.
to

Be.

Seenin

Historical

|

|

Society’s
Rooms

PUBLIC IS INVITED

=

s

=

SS

a

ae

Din!

as

�(|

TWO PRESIDENTS HAVE
STUDIED LAW HERE
Franklin Pierce, as Well as
Calvin Coolidge, Got Legal
Training in City
death
of former
The recent
President
Calvin
Coolidge
has
igerved to call
attention
to the
\fact that one other former President — Franklin Pierce — also
studied law in Northampton.
It
was
in
1825-26
that
Pierce
studied in the former
celebrated
Northampton law school,
second
oldest in the country—Litchfield,
Ct., Law school
being the oldest.
Since Pierce, whose home city is
Concord, N. H., left
the
White
House in March,
1857,
no New
Englander was called to- the Presidency until Calvin Coolidge succeeded
Warren
G. Harding
in
1923.
Chester
A.
Arthur,
although

born

in

Vermont,

was

a

citizen of New York when he beeame President,
after the death
of Garfield.
The only other two
Presidents
from
New
England
were
the
Adamses,
John
ane
John Q. Adams, father and son.
In the 80 years between the inaugural
of President Pierce and
President Franklin D. Roosevelt,
there have been
only four Democratic Presidents.
A man of de-

voutly

religious

wards

church,

character,

Pres-

ident Pierce
as a youthful law
student, then 21 years of age, is
said to have attended
the
Old
First church, which
at that time
was so large that
the
new Ed-

about

to

celebrate

its 100th anniversary,
was being
considered.
The
Northampton
School
of
Law,
where Franklin Pierce received the legal training that enabled him in 1827
to return to
his native town
of Hillsboro, N.
H., to begin the practise of law
continued with increasing success
until the presidential election of
1852,
was founded
in 1823 by
Judge Samuel
Howe,
who once
had been a pupil at the Litchfield
Law school, and
his former law
partner, Elijah H. Mills, a lawyer
of
extensive
practise
and 4@
United States senator from Massachusetts,
In 1827
Mr.
Mills’
law partner,
John Hooker Ashmun, was added to the faculty of
the school.
The prominence of Judge Howe
- and of
Senator
Mills
and
the
great legal ability of Mr. Ashmun
gave the school a high reputation,
but in the strictest sense it was a
private law school. Though at one
|/time there was an attendance of
1/40 law students,
its average attendance numbered
hardly more
than 10, and in 1829,
when Mr.
Ashmun accepted a
professorship
school in
je
the Harvard
Law
Cambridge,
the school in Northampton was discontinued. But the
very fact that
students were so
few is in Mr. Pierce’s favor, since
he would come into close contact
with the celebrated
legal minds
|already referred to.

The method
of instruction was
unique. The professors read written lectures,
of which the students
were
supposed
to
take
copies.
There were also less formal

oral

lectures,

and

tne

stu-

dents recited
these.
The
principles of the common law and of
constitutional law were taught at
the law school in Litehfield, Conn.
So excellent
was the Northampton school of law, after the Harvard Law school was opened the
complaint was made that some of
the students were so attracted by
the Northampton
school
and its
brilliant instructors that they forsook
Cambridge
and
went
to
Northampton,
It is said that some of the most
brilliant lawyers in Western Massachusetts
received
their
legal
training in Northampton.
Judge
Samuel Howe,
son of Dr. Estes
Howe of Belchertown,
practised
law
in Worthington
for
some
years,

then

was

appointed

a

judge of the
court
of common
pleas of Northampton, George P.
Ashman was one of the brilliant
students of the sehool, with connections
in
Northampton
and
Springfield. He served three times
in
Congress
as
representative
from this valley.
t
Still
another
student
who
brought honor to the Northampton Law school was Emory Washburn,
who became
governor of
Massachusetts, and later was professor of law at Cambridge,
After leaying the Northampton
Law school, Franklin Pierce continued his
legal
studies in the
law office
of
Judge Parker ..in

Amherst.

He was admitted to the

bar in 1827
and at once began
the practise of law in his native
town. In 1883 he was a member
of Congress, in 1837 took his seat
in the
Senate
of
-the
United
States, and
on
March 4, 1853,
was inaugurated President of the
United States. He died in 1869 at
his home
in
Concord,
N.
H.,
which now wants
to honor him

more

highly

than

hitherto,

�Clubwomen
of
Have Been

Fourteenth
and Fifteenth
Districts
Invited to Attend Exhibition in That

City on Nov. 11 and 12
By

A

citing

Emily

“treasure

T.

Thompson

hunt”

adventure

is

and

always

if there

an

ex-

are

en-

thusiastic
companions
along,
it is a
delightful
experience.
Such
an
experience
has the ways
and
means
committee of the Northampton Woman’s
Club
had
this
season,
because
for
weeks
the
members
have
been
conducting
an
extensive
hunt
and
they
have
discovered not only many
interesting
treasures
but
they
have
rediscovered
interesting
facets.
about
their neighbors and their community.
A fine display of these treasures will
be
held
in the
parlors
of the
First
Congregational
Church
on the afternoon and evening of Noy. 11 and on

the

afternoon

mittee

has

of

tried

hunt

and

hobby

clubs

in the

to

Nov.

12.

show

a

make

The

com-

civic

affair

this

treasure

and they have invited anyone who is
interested in a hobby or anyone who
has some interesting treasure to participate
in
the
show.
They
expect
that
the
whole
community
will
be
eager to visit the show and an invitation has been extended to all of the

Fourteenth

Districts to make
a
trip on these dates.

and

Fifteenth

“come

and

see”’

Northampton as a city has such a
fine historical
background
that it is
. not strange that stored away in scented
wrappings
are
many
lovely
old
gowns about which cluster many inti-:
mate memories.
Mrs. William Moore
is in charge
of the
pageant
which
will feature
these
styles
of another
day at each session of the show.
At
4 and
8 o’clock on the first day the
pageant
will be shown and the final
presentation
will
be
given
at
3.30
on the second day. . There are some
very
interesting
gowns.
One
is an
elaborate
white
satin
which
dates
back
to
the.
revolutionary
period
and which has the distinction of having been worn at a reception in honor
of George
Washington.
This is the
property
of Mrs.
David
Wright.
It
may
seem
a bit odd
even
in these
modern
days
for the
bride
to wear
red, but Mrs. Moore
has in her collection two very beautiful red gowns
which
were
wedding
gowns.
There
are other wedding gowns, which will
be displayed.
No coilection would be
complete without some models of the

“Gay
take

Ralph

Nineties.”

part

in

E.

the

The

Harlow,

models

pageant

Mrs.

Nagel, Mrs. Ernest Torbet,
son B. Spence, Mrs.
Sarah

Mrs.

Albert

S.

Deane,

who

are

will

Frank

Mrs.

Mrs.

E.

Mrs. AlliFletchall,

Eleanor

Cantwell,
Miss
Marie
Sullivan,
Mrs,
William J. Short, Miss Anne Cochran,
Mrs.
Merrill
Torrey,
Mrs.
Anthony
B. Makofski,
Mrs, Arthur C. Keogh,
Mrs. Ira B. Dickinson, Miss Lois BitJer, Miss Virginia Davis, Miss Patricia
Fowell,
Miss Catherine
Wright,
Miss
Edith Robinson and Miss Ethel Freeman,
Mrs.
John
Hart
will
be
the narrator.
Old songs will be sung
by
Mrs.
Arthur
Dragon.
The
committee assisting Mrs. Moore are Mrs.
Edwin L. Olander, Mrs, Fred Crittenden and
Mrs. John
Hart.
One of the interesting displays will
be the collection of American antique
dolis
which
belongs
to
Miss
Helen

Fowler.

All

of the

dolls

have

a his-

about

these

tory and Miss Fowler will be present
during the entire show
to tell some

of

the

interesting

things

very old toys.
The
back
150
years
and
possession of a man

oldest doll dates
was
the
prized
when it was dis-

covered
by
Miss
Fowler.
He
hated
to part with
it, because
he remembered
that
he
was
allowed
to hold
it and rock it when he had been very,
very
good.
An
interesting
group
is
a bridal
party
which
is a hundred
years
old.
The
bride
is attired
in
elaborate bridal array and the bridegroom is quite resplendent in a dress
suit which is 75 years old.
The flower
girl in organdy
and
the
bridesmaid
in green taffeta complete a very attractive group.
Miss Fowler
will be
in costume
and
she will be a most
interesting hostess.
Mrs. Daniel J. Manning is in charge
of
old
coverlets
and
this
collection
will
attract
the
interest
of
many.
One of the features of this collection
will
be
the
counterpane
owned
by
Mrs.
Grace
Coolidge.
Another
very
old
quilt
will
be
shown
which
was
brought
from
London
and
the first
block of this quilt was made in Hyde
Park.
The
interesting
thing about
hobby shows is the bits of historical
information
which
are
unearthed.
There will be on display a sheet which
was woven in colonial days in Springfield.
There
will
be some
modern
spreads and altogether the collection
will be very beautiful.
There
is
not
time
nor
space
to
describe
the
collection
of
antique
jewelry, lovely shawls, old glass, fine
silver,
hand-made
rugs,
petit
point
and all of the other interesting treasures
which
have
been
gathered
together
for
this
outstanding
hobby
show. It will be necessary to see them
to appreciate them.
The
fine hospitality
for
which
the
Northampton
Woman’s
Club
is noted
will
be extended to all those who visit the display.
There
are
attractive
features
for every
session
of the
show.
The
will be the
international
tea
climax
which
will
be
the
closing
feature.
Mrs.
Albert
G. Beckmann,
president
of the club is in charge of the hostesses for this occasion. The members
of the
junior
department
will serve
and their gay
peasant csotumes
will
add color to this part of the entertainment.

“Mrs.

William

M.

Welch

is

general

chairman, The ways and means committee which is sponsoring this show
includes Mrs. Arthur J. LaMontagne,
chairman, Mrs. Arthur G. Doane, general chairman of hobbies, Mrs. William
E. Bailey,
Mrs. Herbert
Clark,
Miss
Miriam B, Clark, Mrs. Albert 8S. Deane,
Mrs. Edward Finn, Mrs. John C. Fowell,
Mrs.
Charles
A.
Gleason,
Mrs.
Paul
A. Herbert,
Mrs.
Alden
Judge,
Mrs. Edwin
H.
LaMontagne,
Mrs.
George A. LaMontagne,
Mrs. Francis
A. .L’Esperance,
Mrs. David
M. Lipshires, Mrs. Raymond D. Newell, Mrs.
Frederic A. Orcutt, Mrs. George Rapport, Miss
Marie
Sullivan,
and
Mrs.
irnest M. Torbet.
Those in charge of special exhibits
include: Mrs. Edward Finn in charge
ef
old
glass;
Mrs.
Herbert
Clarke,
shawls; Miss Carolyn Boynton, jewelry; Mrs. Albert S. Deane, rugs; Mrs.
Daniel J. Manning, quilts; Mrs. George
Rapport, silver; Mrs. William J. Short,
pewter;
Mrs. Wellington
W. Barnes,
petit point; Mrs. George LaMontagne,
dolls;
Miss
Anna
Daingler,
bells;
Mrs. Rufus Cook, weaving;
Mrs. Alden Judge, animals; Mrs, Gertrude B.
Titus,
bottles;
Mrs.
Joseph
Huber,
children’s
exhibit;
and Mrs. William

B. McCourtie
national tea.

in charge

of the

inter-

on

ot,

Treasure Hunt and Hobby /737 —
Show Feature Calendar
Of Northampton Club

�New Alumnae Building Rises at Smith

NORTHAMPTON,
Alumnae
corner

Noy.

Association
stone

of

the

24—The

exterior

adds

building

was
expected

STYLE PAGEANT

|

|
|

|
|

Nov.

10—One

ding

completed

In

jMrs.
year

sometime

the

new

in

May,

$250,000

Smith

College

1938.

Sulivan wil both wear

beautiful

W

B.

old,

with
the

‘Miss
Helen
Stowe,
Miss

of

completion,

PR

Anthony

gown,

bonnet.

train,

80-year
Dunham,
Catherine

Makofski
the

and|

latter’s

ivory

aj

silk- wed-;)

and

wedding|

LEV.

Georges Cooke
=

1 1 ]

1

B

6

ae

« k

pea

er
will be
NORTHAMPTON,
Nov.
16 — Rev.
Mildred | Georges S, Cooke, pastor of the North-

period
Miss:

Wright

Merrill E. Torrey. In the
period Miss Ann Cochran

and

jampton

Unitarian

Chirch,

175- | guest speaker at the
will of the Northampton

will

be

the

regular meetine
Woman's
Club

show
a gown
worn
by
her
mother
Thursday at 2.30 p. m., in the parlors
when
she
was
married
in
Paisley, | of the First Congregational Church,
\Scot., and Mrs. Ernest M. Torbet will
Rev. Mr. Cooke, who is
a
Syrian,
wear a lavender plaid silk gown with | was born
in Alexandria,
Egypt,
edublack trimmings.
,;cated in the
American
University
in

the
pleasant
features
of the
hobby
and treasure show to be conducted by
the
Northampton
Woman's’
Club
%0-Year Period
| Beirut, Syria, and in several European
Thursday and Friday in the parlors of
Mrs.
Arthur
Keogh
will represent
ae
the First Congregational Chureh
will
eee
universities,
He
has
be a pageant of styles of earlier days,
the 70-year period, Miss Eleanor Can- ,‘!V°¢. in many countries, has traveled
presented under the direction of Mrs,
extensively
all over
the
world,
and
tel and Miss Ethel Freeman the 65- | ©
“sei
:
William
Moore,
who
has
been
hard
year period,Willie
and Miss
Albert the
Strong
| SPC@ks
eight languages, in addition to
Te Shere
60s
reading many
at work
the past few weeks
collect- arid: Mira
mroe. He visits Egypt,
ing lovely old gowns which have been earcerbup; Miss Lois Bitler-will wear |Syria and
Palestine
every
summer,
Men: eranamotheran white * satin = feeds
and his summer home in the Lebanons
stored
away
in
scented
wrappings,
and choosing models for each gown. ding gown, 56 years old, and in the| 8 just across the border from PalesEF,
tine, He is thoroughly conversant with
Not a small part of the program will 50-year group will be Mrs. Ralph
Mrs. Ira B. Dickinson,
Miss
the history of Zionism and with Zionbe appropriate music for each period, Harlow,
Norma
‘Harlow
and
Mrs.
Allison
B.
ist aspirations, -and
also
selected
by
Mrs.
Moore.
Mrs.
is
an_
intimate
Fred
Lloyd
of Amherst
will be the Spence, tle jatter in an old-fashioned }friend and ofrmer colleague of many
pianist, and Mrs. John Hart will des- tea gawn.
(of the Arab leaders.
;
|
His 8 add ress on
eribe each gown
as it is shown.
“ TI
Reacti
p

125-Years-Old

Gown

be

Miss

Sarah

Fletchall,

who

will

show
a gown
formerly
owned
by a
Quaker girl who was put out of the
church
because
she
liked
frivolous
gowns,
and because she married the

-man of
Quaker.

|

be

Mrs.

particularly

Miss Esther Strong will sing ‘Long,
Long Ago” as the first number,
and
will be dressed in an old gown which
belonged
to
her
grandmother.
Mrs.
Charles E. Childs will then appear in
a broecaded satin gown, 125 years old,
which
has a wonderful
history, Mrs.
Albert
Deane
will
model
a family
heirloom,
more
than
100
years
old,
Mrs. Merville Stowe will wear another
100-years-old
outfit,
including
hoop
skirt and poke bonnet, and the final
model
in the century-old
gowns
will

}

nearing

| Miss
Marie
/ gowns
87
years

Will Be Feature a Show
Slated by Woman's Club
NORTHAMPTON,

to

|

10 BEOPFERED

rapidly

The
attractiveness to Elm St. at the intersection of Bedford Ter,
laid during Commencement exercises last June and the structure is

building

happy

her choice, who was
However,
the story

ending,

as

her

husband

became a Quaker and they
taken into the church.
|
;

were

not
has

a
a

later

both

No collection’
would
be complete | Arab
withou
t ee some models of the e “Gay
&lt; | |port port
iE

and

ofof the

Monten Worle tort “9 Re.
Rout CommiAue
Siti
Royal
British
ssion

is
|) on Palest
Hobbie, Miss
so Miss Peggy
\Ninetie
ine”
ens,”
i
ved
Palestin
is based on a thorough
e”
Patricia Fowell,
Mrs.
Esther
Ziff, | examination
of the
Arabic
press of
(Miss Virginia Davis and Miss Janet
|Heypt,
Palestine
Syria ann - kee
|Bitler will
vil
each appear
in a distinc
:
arcane
I t | Gooke
ooke also
also helped
helped tranc
transla
te
into
some
model of this fancy era. The collection
European languages some of the com
includes many beautiful fans, beaded
ments which appeared in the Arabic
capes,

the

pokea

and

scoop

bonnets

bonnet

bonnet. .

all

down

the

to

way

the

from

papers.

little ——

:
1{4{ 3°] Agencies’ Work Told
]
Performances
will
be
given
at
4)
Repres
tepresentatives
i
of
local
agencies ||
and at 8 p. m, Thursday, and at 3.30) who spoke this
morning,
giving brief|
Hriday. Appropriate
stage
fit- | stories of
Dp. : m.
vs
js
‘
the work
Atay
lespeaoke
|
tings have been loaned by Frederick! tions, were:
‘tise Me
tee

Adams,
dealer.

cabinet

maker

and

antique]

lia

Red

Cross:
SS}

Mice

Ap

To

OF the

Miss Marie Jester of the
Children's
Aid
Association:
Miss
Miriam
Dickinson
Hospital;
Mrs.
peers
Ee:
Rockford
of
the
Public
ealth Association;
Miss
Carrie
A.
Gauthier of the ®. P. CG, c:
and Miss
| Jean
I, MacDonald
of
the
Visiting
| Nursing
Association.

|

�oo

[FAMOUS PUPPETS WILL

RETURN HERE DEC. 21!

ES

Hastings’ Marionettes&gt; to
‘
Give Two Performances in
Students’ Building

|

|
;

|

To most. of those who
marionéttes’
| Hastings’
ihere last year, merely to
‘the date of their return
ment this month will be

for

aside

set

time

the

to have

saw Sue
perferm
mention
engageenough

man
beings and. their “emotions.
They
range
from
the
gayest
comedy to the deepest tragedy.
Since the World war, marionette
theatres have enjoyed a tremen} dous vogue in Burope, and puppet
stages have been ereeted by the
thousand.
Among
puppeteers,
Miss Hastings can take a place of
distinction.
She
has
been
very
successful throughout the country
and her performances arc popular
wherever
shown.
Indeed,
one,
might make a presumptuous guess

a

delight
The
treat.
special
“very
has
the people then experienced
evidently lingered with them, for
their enthusiastic. advice is: ‘‘Be
sure to see Sue Hastings’ puppets
On Saturif you have a chance.’”’.
day, Dec. 21, in the afternoon at
$.15, and in the evening at 8, perat the
formances will be given
Students’ building, Smith college,
under the auspices of the Mothers’

club of the Edwards
Sue

church.

her. entire

devotes

Hastings

time and great skill to her troupe
of dwarf actors and actresses who,
though made with wooden heads,

are so life-like that they never fail
to bewitch old and young alike.

To

children

they.are-those
the.
story

friends. of. all,
real
believe folk of their

stepping

out

speaking

ly.

and

To’the

on a tiny
acting

most

makebooks

stage

and

quite natural-

grown-ups,

they recall

that. wistful: long-ago
of fragile
fairies: and
mischievous
elfs so
vividly that one wonders if years
make such a very great. difference
after all. These marionettes entertain also in. the way of burlesque
and earicature..
Their slight exaggerations of gesture and action
give them rare opportunities for
comedy.
But, like cartoons, they
‘also offer an excellent medium for
sympathetic interpretation of hu-

|

SMITH CHRISTMAS SALE

NETTED OVER $2000

Over $2,009 was made at the
annual
Christmas
sale’ at Smith
college this year.
This is a slight
inerease
Eighty -

over
two

last’ year’s
sales.
undergraduates,
a

larger number than
sold articles varying
mas

wrappings

to

ever
from

before,
Christ-

sweaters

and

dresses.
The Lost and Found bureau of
the college sold all unclaimed articles

at

in $130.
expenses
plus

very

goes

low

prices

and

took

This money pays for the
of the sale and the surto

the

self-help

fund.

In addition, $52 worth of Christmas seals were sold for the Ameriean Association for the Prevention
of ‘Tuberculosis.

that not only are

these

miniature|

dramas her chosen form of art, but
that she lavishes some pretty real
affection on the little people whom
she makes to play their parts with
such a human appeal.
The
feature
of the afternoon
program at 3.15 on Saturday, the

21st, will be a Christmas play with

scenes at the North Pole,. entitled
“Boots and the North Wind.” This
will be followed by sketches. The
program
for
the evening
at
8

o'clock

will

promises

to

Follies.

be

announced,

include

the

=

and

Puppet

:

“DOOMED BATTALION” AND
NOW
“FARGO EXPRESS” AD
EMY |
AT THE AC

n 4 motion
Once in a blue moo
ed which admits
picture is produc
A blue moon and
of no criticism.
is in order this
t
tha
at
one
a full
sal's tremenver
Uni
e
aus
bec
week,
Italian

ma

of war

on the

dra
Battalion,
med
Front, ‘The Doo
engages’
day
two
which opened a
of
at the Academy
today
ment
t kind of a pictha
just
is
ie,
Mus
absorbIt is tremendously
ture.

dous

with
aerhe story deals
ween a
ful friendship pet
an
guide of the Austri
gentleman
Italian
an:

a beautimountain
Tyrol and
is,
which

of many |
perils
the
by
cemented
denly the World|
Sud
bs.
clim
ine
Alp
only to part them,
war arrives not

opposing
in
each
place
to
put
ting for
tes
con
ies
pan
| mountain com
sittaThis tense
a vantage peak.
n military orders
tion develops whe
to attempt anni\ force the Italian
ment

detach
nilation of his friend’s
of the |
top
the
up
g
win
blo
py
high!
runs
se
pen
Sus
in.
mounta
ax.
clim
g
llin
thri
the
right up to
European
‘Tala Birell, a young

| actress

of

exceptional

promise,

has

the heroic
the feminine lead as
, a role
Austrian wife and mother
her emoof
play
full
g
tin
mit
per
Varconi
or
Vict
nts.
tale
al
tion
perfecto
cer
offi
ian
Ital
plays the
perfecttion, and Luis Trenker is
guide, a
ly cast as the mountain
role

life.
Henry

he

orderly.

formerly

played

relief
comic
The
as the
Armetta,

in

real

to
goes
careless

on
Put “he Doomed Battalion”
your ‘must see”’ list.
“Fargo Express,” featuring Ken
the
Maynard and Helen Mack, is
on this pill.—
attraction
added
Ady.

�Group Hospitalization Details |)

New County Home

Told to Ladies’ Aid Association |Demonstration Agent

Plan Adopted by Cooley Dickinson Trustees Will Provide
Services for Subscribers

NORTHAMPTON,
Oct.
27—Details
of the group hospitalization plan, recently
adopted
by
the
trustees
of
Cooley
Dickinson
Hospital,
according
to an announcement
today, were explained
to members
of the
hospital
Ladies’ Aid Association by Miss Gertrude Dackener of Boston, director of
education
for
the
Associated
Hospital
Service
of
Massachusetts,
at
the regular
meeting
of the Aid
Association
held
this afternoon
in the
McCallum
Memorial
Nurses’
Home.
Fully
sanctioned
under
state
laws
and
approved
by the State Commis| sioner of Insurance, the plan of group
hospitalization
is now
being successfully conducted in several hospitals in
Boston,
Miss
Dackener
said.
About
1500
subscribers
have
joined
the
Massachusetts association since it was
officially
opened
Sept. 10. and it is |
anticipated
that
the
number
will be
raised to 3000 by Nov. 1.
Entitled to 21 Days
be entitled
to |
A
subscriber
would
21 days,
not necessarily
consecutive,
of
hospitalization
in
a
semiprivate
room
or ward
each
year.
Groups
of
10
or
more
persons
only
may
be
granted
membership,
and
the
yearly
rate to an individual within a group
is $10. Only
employed
persons
may
enroll
join,
but
a workingman
may
with his wife as a dependent
at the
annual rate of $17 for both. The rate
of $22 would
inelude a hubsand,
his
wife and all dependent children under
‘the age of 19. Other combinations of
a paired worker and a dependent, such
as a mother
who
is dependent
and
her
working
daughter,
would
also
come
under the
$17 rate. Each
person covered in the plan would be en-

titled

to

21

days

Services

of

hospitalization.

Provided

Hospital services included
for sub- |
scribers are:
Use
of operating
room
and delivery room, cost of anesthesia|

to a maximum

of $10 for each

admis-

|

sion,
routine
medications
and
dressings,
routine
laboratory
and_
pathological
service,
electrocardiograms,
basal
metabolism
tests
and
blood if
chemistry,
when
ordered
by the
attending physician, after the subscriber
has been
admitted
for treatment
as
a
bed
patient;
all
other
customary
routine care, care of obstetrical cases
is included only after 11 consecutive
months
of
membership—obstetrical
eare ineludes any conditions resulting
from
pregnancy,
care of the mother
and nursery care of the infant
during hospitalization
of the mother;
a
discount
of:
25
per
cent
off
semi| private hospital charges after 21 days
is allowed
in
any
member
hospital
|}in Which treatment has begun
within
MARGUERITE L. PETTEE
the 21-day period; private room upon
payment
by the subscriber direct
to
the hospital of the difference between
$5 and the daily rate for private room
selected—also
a discount
of 50
per
}
cent on all special charges
(such as
laboratory examinations) not included
in room and board rate. These servy-4
| ices are provided for all illnesses and
injuries
except
pulmonary
tuberculosis, venereal diseases, quarantinable
diseases and mental disorders.
Mrs.
Harold
Alden,
president,
was
Miss
Marguerite L. Pettee
of
in charge of the
meeting,
and
Miss
Concord, associate home demonMiriam Curtis, superintendent of Dickstration agent for the Middlesex
inson Hospital, introduced the speakService, will
er. Tea
was
served
by
members
of) |County Extension
the association, immediately following
take up her duties here on July
the talk.
12 as successor
to
Mrs. Evelyn

MISS PETTEE TO TAKE UP
HER WORK HERE JULY 12

New Home Demonstration Agent
for

Extension Service to
Succeed Mrs. Brown

Stowell

Brown,

present

demonstration

agent

experience

home

for

|

home

the

Hampshire
County
Extension”
Service, whose
resignation
becomes effective the early part of
next month.
Miss Pettee
is a graduate of
Elmira college in New York and |
took a year of study in ee
at the Presbyterian
hospital in |
New York city. She has had wide
as

demonstra-

tion agent in Middlesex
county
for the last five years.
Miss
Pettee
will
arrive
at
Mount

Pleasant

Inn,

Amherst,

on

' July 1, making a brief stay there
before taking over her duties in
this

city.

�MR. AND MRS. A. W. TROW
OBSERVE GOLDEN WEDDING
Former. Wartheston Residents
Are Greeted by 200 Friends - |
at Bedford

A

profusion

.

the

eclor

of!

gold, in-the baskets of
fluwers,
gold pieces, decorations and
“in
the buffet supper served, marked
the

golden

wedding

ers,

evening.

A

buffet

supper

Mr. and Mrs.
ried in Canaan,

Trow were | marN. Y., Maréh 8,

;-

Jacob

Bartlett,

who

business

with

nent families
spending their

March

many

of

the

built

of

daffofils,

of

the

prettily

decorated

decoGirls’
crepe

long
pur-

ple for contrast.
Musie
during
the afternoon
and evening
was
furnished
by a quartet
from
Greenfield. Miss Ida Bernaby, one
of the waitresses, gave an accordion solo
with
the
waitresses

ment

to

chat,

gathered in
around Mrs.
chair,

while

the
Trow

the

guests

reception room
in her big easy

DEWHURST AGAIN |
CROSSS CHAIRMAN

Swift

prowl

the old building ||

was destroyed by fire, and a new
Worthington
Inn
built
in
its
plaee, owned by Mr. Trow
until
its sale to Willard Senna in 1914,

Succeeds

Hampshire

Durfee

Treasurer

NORTHAMPTON,
Oct.
Dewhurst
was
re-elected

| of

the

Hampshire

County

as'|

27—O.
T.
chairman

Chapter,

American
Red
Cross,
at the annual
meeting
held
this
afternoon
in
the
chapter
rooms
in
Memorial
Hall.
George S. Swift was named treasurer,
who
was
then
mahager
of
the
to succeed
William
K.
Durfee,
who
Plymouth Inn,
The Worthington
is to remove from Northampton. OthInn was
later renamed
‘Lafayette
er
officers
re-elected
weres
ViceChairman,
Dana
J.
Lowd;
and
exlodge, but was destroyed — by. fire
ecutive secretary,
Miss
Nancy
|Trow.
about a year ago.
:
New
members
of
the
executive
~Mr. and Mrs, Trow came te this
committee
are Mrs.
Irving
Stronach
city in 1914, when the Worthing=
of this city, Mrs.
Whitmore
Beardston” Inn was sold to” Mrs Senna;
ley of Westhampton
and Mrs. Louis
have since resided at 32 Bedford | Shumway of Belchertown, to replace
Wiiliam E. Shannon of this city, Mrs.
terrace.
Their
daughter, - Miss
Carl
Norton
of
Westhampton
and
Bessie Trow,
assumed
manageMrs. Carl Aspengren
of Belchertown,
ment of this house called Betford |
respectively.
Mr.
Shannon
and
Mrs,
lodge. After the death of County
Aspengren were voted honorary memCommissioner C. K, Brewster, Mr:
bers
of the
executive
committee,
in
recognition
of
“their
long
and
deTrow filled the
vacancy for
the
voted
service
to
the
organization.”
unexpired term. He is a member
Miss Mary Gove Smith was named
of Huntington Lodge of
Masons
chairman
of finance,
to succeed
Aland
of Northampton
Commandbert
P.
Cushman;
and
Miss
Hazel
ery, Knights Templar.
Both Mr.
Ross was elected chairman of hygiene
and Mrs. Trow are members.
of and care of the sick, succeeding Mrs.
the Worthington
Grange.
|
E,
D.
Williams.

Mr. and Mrs, Trow
have four
daughters, all of whom were present yesterday at the celebration:
Mrs. Nina May Brooks of
South
street, Miss Bessie Trow of Bedford lodge, Miss Nancy Trow, ex-

ecutive

secretary

of the

Hamp-

shire county chapter of the American Red Cross, and Miss Sydney
Trow, secretary in the office of

the Rumford

ny, Portland,

Falls, Power compa-|
Me.

yy f rtd

were served throughout the evening, and as each guest signed in
the register, he was given a chocolate
gold-piece
covered
with
golden
tinfoil: as a souvenir.
Tnroughout the celebration Mr.
Trow moved from guest to guest
greeting them and stopping a mo-

from this
sectisummiers there. Ok

26, 1898

Ss

farming a pretty background for|
cher number.
Punch and cookies

liam C. Trow, and when a_
small
boy moved with his parents to a
farm in Worthington. Mrs, Trow
was Miss Ida S. Bartlett, daugh-

of

golden

paper was festooned on the
tables with a touch of deep

1882. Mr. Trow was born in Adams, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil-

ter

were |

house, In the dining room,
rated by members
of the
City club, golden
yellow

was

and managed the
old Worthington hotel.
In the years that followed Mr.
Trow was-a driver-on the E: S.
Burr stage lines,
running
from
Worthington to Hinsdale,
Huntington and. Northampton, and later joined with William
Bartlett
in making
of ashwood - baskets.
Later he was in the meat business
at Worthington
and West
Chesterfield.
In.1890 Mr. Trow became; manager of the . Worthington
hotel,
succeeding Mr. Bartlett, and developed
a
prosperous
summer

the

all over

served at 5.30 in the lovely decorated dining room of the
lodge,
where members of the Girls’ City
elub in Italian costume waited on

the guests.

relatives

snapdragons, the yellow and contrasting deep red of roses,
‘were

anniversary

of Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred W. Trow,
who greeted some two
hundred
relatives and
friends
at
their
home,
32 Bedford
terrace, from
4 yesterday afternoon until 10 in
the

and _

field,.and throughout the day the
telephone was ringing
with the
good wishes of
the
stormbound
Worthington
friends who
were
unable to come because of
the
drifted snow.
Many gifts were received by the
couple with a large sum of money, mostly in gold pieces. Flow-

Lodge

of

Friends

present
from,. Bridgeport,
Ct.,
Portland, Me., Springfield; -'Hol| yoke, Cummington and
Chester-

|

t
}
I
|

By

fe

2 as
3

�TROWS OBSERVE
ANNIVERSARY OF
MARRIAGE IN 1882
SSS

ee

e eS

Former Worthington Couple
Hold Reception, Friends
from Hill Towns Are
Stormbound.
NORTHAMPTON,
Mrs.

Alfred

Terrace,
ington,

this

W.
city,

observed

anniversary

March

Trow

of

8—Mr. and
32

formerly
their

today,

A

of

50th

Bedford
Worthwedding

reception

was

held from 4 until 10 o’clock when many
friends and relatives called.
A buf-

fet
luncheon
o'clock.

was.

served.

at

5.30

Mr. and
Mrs. Trow
were for many
vears residents of Worthington, where
for many
years Mr. Trow
conducted
the
Worthington
Hotel,
later
known
as the
LaFayette
Lodge.
The
hotel
husiness had been established by Mrs.
Trow’s father, Jacob Bartlett.
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Trow
were
married
in Canaan,
N. Y., March 8, 1882.
Mr.
Trow was born in Adams,
the son of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
C. Trow,
and
removed
with
his parents
to a farm
in
Worthington,
when
a
small
boy.
Mrs.
Trow.
was
before
her
marriage

Miss

Ida

S.

Bartlett,

daughter

of

when

sold

Mr.

and Mrs. Jacob Bartlett.
Mr, Trow succeeded Mr- Bartlett as
manager of the Worthington Hotel in
1890.
The old building was destroyed
by fire March 26, 1898.
A larger hotel
was built the same year and was conducted
as
the
Worthington
Inn
by

Mr.

Trow

until

1914,

he

it

to Willard
Senna,
then
manager
of
the Plymouth
Inn in this city,
After
disposing, of the
hotel
property,
Mr.
Trow
and
his wife came
to this city
ind have since resided at 32 Bedford
Terrace.
After the death of County Commis-

sioner

C,

K.

Brewster,

Mr.

Trow

served
the one year of his unexpired
term.
He
is a member
of Huntington
Lodge
of Masons
and of Northampton
Commandery,
Knights
Templar.
Both
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Trow
are
members
of Worthington
Grange.
They
have
four
daughters,
Mrs.
Nina
May
Brooks
of
South
Street,|
this city, Miss Bessie Trow of Bedford |
Lodge, this city, Miss Naney Trow, ex- |
ecutive
secretary
of
the
Hampden)
County Chapter, American
Red Cross,|
ind
Miss
Sydney
Trow,
secretary
in
the office of the Rumford Falls Power
Company,
Portland,
Me.
Many friends and former neighbors
in Worthington,
who
had
planned
to
ittend today, were unable to do so beause
of the high
wind
which
was
jiling up drifts of snow on the Hamphire hills, making
the roads impassible.

I

�EDWARDS CHURCH |
INSTALLS PASTOR

The charge to the minister was
is only partly minister, but largegiven
by
Rev. Robbins W. Bar-|
ly people.
stow, D. D., president of Hartford |
-He particularly
urged the peoTheological Seminary Foundation, |
ple to work together, and especialwho
from
time to time supplied
ly to look
around for things that
the pulpit of Edwards church for
need to be
done.
Here he paid a
| some months
when
the
church
high compliment
to Clifford H.|
was without a pastor prior to the
Lyman, senior
member
of
the’
cailing of Mr, Penner. The charge
board of deacons,
who,
he said,
| to the
people
was by Rev. Ken“sort of pushes us into things to
| neth B. Welles,
the only former
do.”
If you want to back up your
pastor
of
Edwards church who
minister and
make his years the
could be present, and who is still
most successful,
don’t
wait for |
greatly beloved by the church peohim to ask
you;
you look for a
ple through his
ten years of sucthing that needs to
be done, and
cessful and happy service here bedo it.He spoke of his pleasure in
| fore going to his present pulpit in
being back for this “fruitful and
Westminster Presbyterian church
Joyous service” and, stil! considin Albany, N. Y.
ering himself
a part of Edwards
The right
hand of
fellowship
church,
and
concluded:
“God
was extended
to
Mr, Penner by
bless you,my people, in the work
|Greetings Read
from Other Rey, John C. Wightman of Flor- that
lies before you with our new
ence, who is just rounding out 20, minister.”
Churches; Event Conciudes
years
of service
as minster-at-| : Rey, John C, Wightman briefly
Centennial Observance
large
of
the
Congregational |
Welcomed the
new
minister into
churches of
Hampshire
County
the fellowship of the Hampshire
Edwards Congregational church
The Lenediction
was by Mr. Pen-| association and added:
‘We exfive days
last evening completed
ner.
pect to be proud of you.”
anni100th
its
of
During the service the Edwards
of celebration
In his sermon
of installation
versary by the
installation of is} church quartet,
which
is
now
Rev. Dr. Mackenzie
took
ag his
new pastor,
Rev. Albert J. Penhappily complete
again with the
text the sixth verse
of the fourth|
congregation -return of William B. Kirk as ten‘ner, before a large
chapter of Philippians: “Be caremany _ pastors
included
or, sang beautifully the anthems,
iwhich
ful for nothing; but in everything
Hampshire
the
in_
“Te Deum” -and “How Beautiful
and laymen
by prayer
and
supplication with
Congregational
Upon the Mountains.’”’
The open| Association — of
thanksgiving let your requests
be
an
held
had
which
ing hymn sung by
the congregachurches
made known unto God.” He
called
the
in
council
tion was
“O Worship
the King”
ecclesiastical
active prayer the loftiest behavior
Other
o'clock.
4
at
and the closing hymn, ‘‘O Master
afternoon
of the human spirit; prayer
is a
the city Let Me Walk With
in
Thee.”
The
Protestant churches
real interchange hetween man
and
were also represented at the counorgan
postlude
was
Allegro by
|God;
the Lord’s Pra

| Rev.

Albert J. Penner

Inducted at Service
Attended by Many
of County’s
Clergy

OVER 200 AT SUPPER

cil.

Visiting

pastors

and other) Tchaikwosky.

guests were entertained at dinner
at 6, . when greetings from other
churches were
read
and _ there
were brief speeches of congratulation, followed by the
installation
at 7.50.
The
installation
program
opened with the
organ
prelude,
Meditation, by Mason,
and Evensong, by Johnston. The statement
of the council.
which
nad acted
favorably upon
the new minister
and welcomed him into fellcwship,
was then made by Rey. Dr. Jesse
G. Nichols,
pastor
of the South
Hadley
Congregational
church,
moderator of the council, and the
|seribe of the council.
Rev. Kenneth R. Teed
of
Westhampton,
read his report.
The invocation was
by Rev. R.

Rey.

Mr.

Barstow,

to the minister,
termed
cal and

in his charge

brought what he

“homely
friendly

words of practicounsel,” though

he felt they were not needed, stating

that

Mr.

his ‘complete

Penner

already

confidence.”

had

in 800

languages,

universal

eit

intercession

offered

b

groups and individuals, some cae
ish

and

all

understooq

some

is being made

lacing

Jesus,| er,

superstitutiou
by

of desire

God

t

Histor

through the fee
expressed

:

1

a-Dray=S

he said, was the
“Great Knower
Over 200 At Supper
of God” and
he
wanted the new
Over 200
attended the turkey
pastor to be
a
knower of many
Supper served at
6
o'clock
for
things—to know himself, his posok
pastors
and
delegates
sibilities, his limitations, his task,
om
the Hampshire associ
his people,
his organization, his and other churches,
Many
more! |
ee
books.
He advised him to watch
would have been
present,
but it
his health and
to
have a hobby.
was necessary
to limit the num“Know
these
fine
people,”
me ber
of
church
people
to
the
said,
‘‘as
Ihave
come to know
capacity of the dining
room. This
them; run your organization,don't was
another
happy
occasion
let
itrun
you.
In advising the Similar to the birthday
party held
new pastor to know his books, he last
Thursday
evening
at
the
added: ‘‘Why should I have to say opening
of
the
centennial prothat to a prize scholar at
Hart- Rie
Burris Edwards,
minister of the
Mrs. Calvin Coolidge last
seminary?’
In nea
New Marlboro churches, who was ford Theological
was
am ong
those at the
advising
the
new
pastor
to
know
a
neighbor
of
Mr. Penner’s in
his
books
he
dropped
a
hint
to
3erkshire
county
and a fellow-.,
The blessing was asked by Rev.
the congregation not
to call the John A. Hawley of
student
at Hartford Theological
Aisa Adios
seminary.
The
Scripture lesson pastor on the phone in the morn- the supper Rey. Mr, Penn
er prewas.
by
Rey. Stuart C. Haskins, ing, when he has his study hours. sented
Deacon Harold UL, Ames,
Rev. KK. B. Welles Speaks
former clerk of the church,
minister
of
the First Church of
who
Rey.
Mr. Welles
said
it was presided and calle
Christ in Glastonbury, Ct., a close
d upon a num“good
to
be
back
and
share
the
ber of speakers
friend
of
Mr. Penner from tucir
anl read the letnew
minister with ters of felj
:
student.days in Hartford Theologi- joy of this
you.” New experiences, he added, of the iy
cal seminary.
Me te tae ee
always bring new convictions. He from former members
who Soula
The sermon
was
by
Rev. W.
the
congregation
Douglas Mackenzie, D. D.,_presi- advised
that not come, and the names of vari‘difficult
to
train
a new ous others who were unable to be
dent emeritus of
Hartford Semi- it is
nary Foundation.
Rev.
E. E. S. minister,’ and reminded the peo- present, but had written
they
were ‘marrying &amp;@
Inthe
absence of ras
Sininas
Johnson, D. D., professor of mod- ple that
ern church
history
in
Hartford new man and taking him for bet- Bruce Bitler, pastor of First Saws
church
Prof. Ernst
Theological seminary
and
min-. ter or for worse.” He charged the gregational

ister of the
Bally,

Pa.,

stallation.

Menninite

said

the

church

prayer

of

in| people to maintain the high stand-H.

in-| ards

of

the

“Expect
Great
God;
Attempt

past

and

Mensel,. brought ‘the greetings

quoted, of the

God.”
Ho
warned
that it was served
“Tasy to
spoil
a good man” by
praise of every
sermon.
‘‘Keep
high standards
before
him,” He
advised, “‘expect
a great deal
of

him.”

worship,

Have
he

an

mother

church.

He

said it

Things
From had been hig pleasure to know one
Great Things forhaif of
the
inthistera who had

urged,

ideal for church
for

a church

Edwards

church.

He

exjae

�tended to
Mr, Penrer his greet-; wanted to be “counted among you
ings:
on behalf
of First church, ‘as one who tried to serve.”
which he said was ‘‘getting «along| Greetings From City Churches
in years,” ‘nearly
300 years old,
Letters™ “of greetings from three
but_not decrepit.
The sturdy ofi-| churches of the city were read by
spring went off because of growth
Mr. Ames.
They are, in part, as
/and First church
takes great in- follows:
terest
in
her
daughter
which
From First churehs The pastor
started as a
lusty infant and has of the mother church wishes to
grown in stature
ever since.
He add herewith a word of personal
brought from First church sincere greeting
to the felicitationgs
ex;8reetings.
He
said that it takes tended
by First church
through
;courage
to
enter the
ministry its representatives upon the happy
‘nhowadays,
but declared that the celebration now in progress, Warm
Opportunities
were never greater congratulations upon a century of
than now.
outstanding
achievement
for
the
The youngest appearing place I Kingdom, and upon the inspiring
have got into in a long while,” leadership of your new pastor, unRey.

Mr.

Welles

called

the

supper

gathering,
When
he arrived at
the church he said he was told by
“Greenie,” (the sexton) 751 last
Sunday,” meaning the attendance.
Mr. Welles said he was pleased to
come back and see what was happening,

to

see

the

affection

you

have for Mr. Penner;
it was a
deep and abiding satisfaction.
No
church that had a one hundredth
anniversary could have had a more
auspicious one as I look around
and see the good workers and how
bright the future looks.
We all
lift up crateful hearts and give
thanks to God.
He spoke of the
youthfulness still being shown by
some of the older members, mentioning
particularly
‘“Grandma”’
Sears
and “Hattie’
Hill, as he
called them, and remarking how
“chipper”
they
still
were.
He
also spoke of Mrs. Brooks, who
provides
so many
suppers,
and
supposed she was still as “‘young
as the rest.”
The church, though
a hundred years old, is still young
and full of activity and power under a new minister—a great occasion,
Rev. Henry Lincoln Bailey ot
Longmeadow,
secretary
of
the

Massachusetts

Association

of Con-

gregational Churches, said it was
a great. thing to have a church
colonized
in
the
way
Edwards
church went out—not because of
any church quarrel, but because
First church was not big enough
for all.
The churches decided to
“multiply by dividing.”
He congratulated the church upon having a ministerit could look up to
in more ways than one (the new
minister is tall).
He congratulated the church upon its hundred
years of history and its next century of progress.

Rev.

Robbins

W.

Barstow

sup-

plied the church pulpit so often
and almost continuously for many
weeks, that he came to be known
as pastor pro tempore.
Mr. Ames
said he had done excellent work
and
the church
could not
adequately
express
its appreciation
and thanks.
Mr, Barstow wanted
the people te “‘remember I am still
a part of this church.”
He said
it was ‘fone of the highest spots

in

my

life

that

I could

in some

way try to be of sérvice to you.”
He
reminded
that
“I
had
the
great honor of being in some small
measure responsible for Mr. Penner
being
here—-and
that was
something.”
He said he always

DAILY

“We

years

of

covet ‘for

fruitful

you “many

service

for

more

the

cause of God among men,
“For and in behalf of the First
Baptist church, Eaton B, Freeman,
pastor;
Helen ©. Chilson, clerk;

William
board.”

M.

Cochran,

diaconate

Council of Churches
The ecclesiastical council in the
afternoon
at
4 o’clock,
by the
Hampshire
Council of Congregational Churches, and other invited|
churches,
was
presided
over by
Rev. Dr. Jesse G. Nichois of South
Hadley
Congregational
church,
who offered prayer.
Rey. Kenneth
R.
Teed
of Westhampton
Congregational church was scribe.
der
whom
you
may
confidently
look forward to still finer things Most of the churches of the counwere
represented
by
pastor
in the years to come,
With every cil
good wish, Most cordially yours, and a layman. Those frem—North-|
ampton were: Prof. Ernst H. MenThomas Bruce Bitler.
sel of First church,
in the abFlorence Congregational church:
On behalf of Florence Congrega-| sence of the pastor, Rev, Thomas
tional church, its heard of direc-| Bruce Bitler, who is ill; Rey. and
tors desires to express ‘heartfelt | Mrs. Basil Douglas Hall of Florcongratulations to you, the officers| ence Congregational church; Rev.
B.
Freeman
and
Deacon
and members of Edwards church, | Eaton
H. Stone
of First
Baptist
upon
the occasion
of the 100th Kirk
Rev. Hobart F. Goewey,
anniversary celebration now being ehureh;
observed.
The record of a cen- pastor, and Mrs. L. C. Fletchall
First
Methodist
Episcopal
tury
of your
church’s life
and) of
church;
Rey.
Georges
S. Cooke,
work is one of the noble chapters
in the history of Christian achieve- pastor, and Hobart K. Whitaker,
Unitarian
church;
ment
in America.
The
reality Northampton
Rey. John Milton Wahl and Mrs.
of your
Gospel,
the
wholesome
strength
that
has marked
your George M. Rudy of Florence Unichurch;
Rev.
and
Mrs.
progress, the friendliness of your tarian
fellowship, and the generosity of Ellery C. Clapp of Bay State, this
represented North Hadley
your gifts at home
and abroad, city,
have been a constant inspiration church, where Mr. Clapp is visitto us and to multitudes of your ing pastor.
From the next largest town in|
fellow-Christians.
We
hail with
council, Easthampton,
eam |
joy the evidences of present pow- the
Rey. Harold B. White, Easthamp-|
er and high promises in Edwards
church,
and|
church today; we would add our ton Congregational
Edsincere welcome
to your
newly- Deacon Charles H. Johnson.
ehosen pastor; and we join with wards church is the largest Conthe many
who
prayerfully wish gregational church in the Hampassociation.
Stockbridge
for you a future ever more fruit- shire
ful in the service of mankind and church, where Mr, Penner former- |
in the followinr of our Lord and ly preached, was algo_ representMaster, Jesus Christ.
May grace, ed.
Rey. Dr. Robbins W. Barstow
mercy and peace be with you now
and always.
In His name, W. N. and other visiting clergymen who
Doane, president of the board of had parts in the installation program in the evening also sat as
directors;
Thomas B. Arrington,
part
of
the
council,
which
church clerk; Basil Douglas Hall, a
opened with the reading by Miss
pastor.
8B.
Story,
clerk
of
the
First
Baptist
church:
‘The Helen
members
of
the
First
Baptist church, of the records of the call
church heartily felicitate you on to Mr. Penner and his acceptance,
the occasion of your one hundredth his admittance into the church last
anniversary. We rejoice over your Thursday as a member, his presensplendid achievements;
the long tation of one diploma and testtrecord of faithful ministry for the mony of a number of those present

Kingdom

at

home

and

on

many

mission fields; the able leadership
God has given to you through the
years; and for your present hopeful outlook for the future.
“With the passing of the years,
many changes take place in the
world about us.
These changes
are ever challenging the church
to re-examine
its life and message, and adapt its method of service to the crying needs of men.
We
congratulate you upon your
manner of approach to these many
changes;
the whole-hearted
response of your people to the high
calle of duty;
and for your sustained loyalty to Jesus Christ and
the Bibles:

HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE,

TUESDAY,

who had seen another of his diplomas.
Mr,

Penner,

in his statement

or

experience and beliefs, said this
was his first experience in a Congregational council and he did not
know

what

to expect.

He

read

o1

factors that entered into his decision to enter the ministry; his
ancestral background
dating to
the Reformation, of his education
here and abroad, pastorates he has
held, his desire to be wu minister
more than
world;
his

word
the

anything
belief in

as a power

importance

of

unto

else
the

in the
spoken

salvation;

worship,

espe-

cially the Communion service, and
his policy of destruction at prayer

JANUARY

ce 1933.

�TI

"Mr, Penner was married in 1929.

=

_p the fall of 1930

~ Christmas Carc!_

he resigned

only, from the Stockbridge pastorate to
not
Jesus
for
but he taught. He spoke go
to
Europe
on
the
William

meetings,
preached,

of the belief in the pastoral min- Thompson
traveling
fellowship,
istry through the need of know- awarded by the Hartford seml-)
ing people before
he can help nery, spending two years studying
them,

and

the

need

of their

confi-

at

dence in him, to win them to the and
Christian life and

life, to make

expressed

to hold up that

religion

his confidence

the

need

changed

of

conditions

-abreast

in the fu-

adjusting

it

this

country

last

of the times, though

the

The

“Scrooge”

Marburg

time

to

returned

April.

Kan,

and

is a graduate

has

done

in Chicago,

matics

/Message must always be essentially the same,
On motion of Rev. John P. Manwell of Williamsburg, and seconded by Rey. Dr. Robbins W. Barstow
of Hartford,
the roll
was,
ealled for the purpose of asking
questions, and several were asked,
while others made statements complimentary to the new minister.
Rey. Harold
B. White, of Easthampton, said that. he thought ‘‘he
ought to congratulate the committee that called him.”
He called!

a B. A.

Y.

W.

Ill., and

for

two

C.

taught

years

in

summer

the

degree.|
work

mathe-|

before her

and

West

the

came here last August, occupying
the parsonage on Crescent streets
Edwards church and pastor gained
nation-wide attention early this

month

because

of

the

funeral

also at the committal

service

in Plymouth, Vt.
Mr, Penner’s paper ‘‘excellent.” In}
Rev. Albert J. Penner was graa&lt;
reply to a question from Rey. C. E. uated in 1929 from the Hartford
Holmes
of Hadley, he expressed Seminary
Foundation,
where
he
confidence
in the future of the was one of the outstanding stu&lt;
church, having great faith that the dents of his class, with a B. A. de&lt;
world
will find spiritual values. gree.
His ability as a scholar won
He spoke of plans for a mission for him
the William
Thompson
to go into the whole country te fellowship which enabled him to
aid the young people.
Rey, Mr. study for two years in German
Bailey of Longmeadow said he had universities, including the Univers
attended councils for many years, sities of Marburg and Heidelberg.
but no paper had pleased him as
He returned to this country last
much as the one read by Mr. Pen- March and early in September ac«
ner,
cepted a call to the Edwards Cons
In reply to a question from Mr. gregational church. He is a cousin
Barstow, Mr, Penner said Paul de- of Mrs. William Penner of Taftclared
we must
live up to the ville, Ct.
truth as we know it; the tragic
Rey, Mr. Penner is a native of
thing is that people wiil not live Mountain
Lake,
Minn.,
and
a
up to the best they know. A numgraduate of Bethel college, Newber of other ministers in the coun- ton, Kan.
In
addition
to
the
cil, some formerly or now at Hart- Thompson.fellowship, which he re&lt;
ford
Theological
seminary,
ex- ceived following his graduation, he
pressed satisfaction with the new was awarded other high honors in
minister, such as ‘the man is just scholarship while a student,at the
as splendid as the paper.”
Mr. seminary.
In his middle year he

Penner,

from

in

Mr.

reply

to

Wightman,

a

question)

was given a special fellowship for

said his faith|

six

weeks’

in God rested largely on a real ex-| member
perience,

the
ing

than

and

will
and

he

of Christ
teaching.

sought

in

any other man,

character

of God,

he

to

apply

chester

his preach~
Christ, more

reveals

said.

work

and

study

as

a

of the staff of the Man-

Wesleyan

mission,

in

in-

dustrial Manchester, Eng., pioneer
social
and
evangelistic
center.

the There he gained considerable dis~
tinetion

The council voted unanimously
to recommend the installation of
Mr,
Penner,
in accord with the
program that had been prepared
for the evening service.
A committee, comprising Rev. John A.

as

an

eloquent

preacher,

Two summers he supplied a pulpit
in California.
Stockbridge, Mass., Pastor
Returning as a senior at the
seminary in the fall of 1928, Rev.
Mr. Penner became pastor of the

Hawley of Amherst, Rev. Fred- Congregational church of Stockerick J. Ward
of Southampton bridge, Mass., while continuing to

and Rey, John P. Manwell of Willlamsburg, was appointed to noti&lt;

carry on his studies in Hartford.
During his final year at the semi-

action

the
New

fy

tor

Mr.

Rey.

Penner

of

the

favorable

of the council.
Mr, Penner’s Career

Mr.

installed

Penner,
last

the new

evening,

nary

pas-was

July and began
September.
The

won

the

Greek

prize

outstanding
student
in
Testament department.

Prof.

seminary

chosen by a unanimous vote of the former
church last
pastorate in

he

Plato

faculty,

E.

instructor

as

the

Shaw

of

of

North-.

close

friend

the

the

and

his ampton minister, recalls Rey, Mr,
in&lt; Penner’s
remarkable
scholastic

stallation was deferred so as torecord.
Prof. Shaw pointed out
have it during the church’s 100th the interesting fact that Rev. Mr.
anniversary and on the exact an+ Penner, reversing the path once

niversary date of the installation taken by Jonathan Edwards, outof the first pastor, Rey. John Todd, standing leader of early New Engon Jan. 30, 1833.
jand days, first was pastor of the
Stockbridge church and later went
to
the
Edwards
Congregational

| church in this city.

BS

by
Ed

mas

has

brought.

for the first

such ¢preefulness

that

and

his genius

un-

-

is being

on alf Sides has been one
gr@atest

dramatic

Carol,”

witch

is

now

stars

current

the Paramount) theater.
Hicks’s

British

accomplishments

theate’,

48.

in

actor,

at

the

manager

and playwright
have been numerous.|
Hicks,
is Sir Seymour
He actually
having been, knighted for his contribution to the drama.
He began
acting at the; age of 16 and he has
played in the United States on at
1889

of

Zcreen

for nearly 40 years.
He is Seymour
Hiciks, star of “Scrooge,” a faitnful
screen present#tion of Charles Dickens’s famous “ule story, “A Christ-

least

Calvin Coolidge, at which Mr. Pen«
ner officiated in Edwards church

and

with

of England’s

marriage. She has also done grad«
|
uate work at two European unix,
versities.
Mr. and Mrs. Penner spent part.

of

wil?

to the

acclaimed

of Baker’

A.

man

derstanding

Mrs, Penner was born in Olathe,

to| She

so it will keep|

of

Heidelberg. He

but pointed! university with

ture of the church,

to

He

vital.

Universities

the

4

At Parameunt Theater.

four

before

different

fie was

‘-was seen in New

occasions,

first

21 years

old.

York in 1894,

in

He

play-

ing in “Cina eérella.”
In 1895 he was
in “The ShoP Girl” in this country
and again
‘im 1900 he visited New
York to apr.ear in “My Daughter-in-

Law.”

Though -@ partial list of his appearances
take sup nearly four colimmns in “Who's Who in the Theater,”
Hieks is est known for his creation
of the roe “Scrooge” on the stage.
He has played “Scrooge” more than

2000 time ?The picture

with

is in keeping

the! 1j

Christme*8 Season and the Paramount
feels fortunate in being able to show
it

at

ducers

detail,

:

this

ave

with

land,
said:

attended

the

®

time.

The

pro-

to every minute

result

‘s put into “A

picker ght
este

particular

that

the

spirit)

Christmas

Carol”)

out with force in the pic

witnessing “Scrooge”

in Eng:

popular screen critic ther
“A
delightful
period
fantas’

ada Pted with great charm and r¢
ouree. » - Perfectly drawn cameos (
farfous Dickensian characters... Tl
film is not merely a flawlessly-phot
.aphed

version

of

one

qhor’s most
loveable
works; it is splendid

gainment
' glasses.”

designed

to

of

the

'

1734
‘NEW PASTOR SPEAKS

AT EDWARDS CHURC

NORTHAMPTON,

Paul

T.

McClurkin,

Sept.

called

to

10—R

the

wards Congregational Church from
pastorate in the South Congregatic
Church
in East
Hartford.
Conn,
June, preached his first sermon to
new congregation this morning, ch
ing as his theme,
“The remembr
of Christ.”
Mr.
McClurkin
succeeds
Rey.
bert.
J. Penner,
who
accepted
a
to Holyoke.
Following
a trip to

Diego, Cal., where

a

and
popu!
screen ent
captiva

he visited his ft

he and Mrs. MeClurkin took up
dence in the church parsonage
Crescent Street a few weeks ag¢

a

——-

fe

Le

e
Sati w

J

-

4
oY

�OCTOBER

6, 1937.

Married 57 Years Today

WEST
wether

at

their

CUMMINGTON,
Oct.
5—Dr.
and Mrs.
will quietly observe the 57th anniversary

home

on

the

Berkshire

Trail

Charles
R. Starkof their marriage

Wednesday.

Two

of

their

daughters, Miss Olive Starkweather, who lives with them, and M
Hazel Arnold of Springfield, will be with them for the day and two
others, Mrs. Ethel Foote of Boston and Mrs. Etta Fowler of Hartford, will spend. the week end with
their parents.
Dr. and
Mrs.
Starkweather have been lifelong residents of this town.
The former

will be

90 years

WORTHINGTON,

June

21

li Committal
service. for
DF;
Charles |1
|.
Starkweather
was
held
in
the}
| enter
Cemetery
Stnday
afternoon.|
| Dr.

home

in

Starkweather,

in

West

Ww orthington

95,

who

Cummington,

Christmas

Cummington

old on Christmas.

Doctor’s Widow
Succumbs at 91

.

7493 Worthington

/9Y3

died

was

at|

bara!

Day, 1848,|

Mrs.

Starkweather

Dies

in

West Cummington
CUMMINGTON,
Nov. 14—Mrs. Lous
ise
Starkweather,
91.
widow
of Dr.
Charles
E, Starkweather,
died Saturday
in her home
in West Cummiington,

She
was
born
in Middlefield,
Aug.
28, 1852, and
was married.on
Oct. 6,
1880.
She
lived mn Savoy
until 1899
when she came to West
Cummington,
For many years she was a correspondent for The Springfield Union.

She

leaves

five

daughters,

Mrs.

A.

Foote
of
Clearwater,
Fla.,,
Mrs.
Charles
Edson
and Mrs. Robert Arnold of Springfield, Mrs. Henrietta Lawler of Hartford and
Miss Olive Starkweather
at
home;
10 grandchildren
and one great grandson,
Funeral services will be in the West
Cummington
Congregational
Church
at 1.30 p. m., Monday, with Rey. Carl
Sangree officiating.
Burial will be in
Center Cemetery,
Worthington,

�too

Mass. Hotel Men Meet

GREENFIELD,

Sept.

meeting at the Hotel
to right, C. L. Koppel
G. J. Sherrard of the
ing, George Turain of
ton, L. G.

27—Officers

of

the

Massachusetts

in Greenfield

Hotel

Association

GREENFIELD,
Sept.
27—Encour- | Inns.
The
individual
owners
were
agement
of young hotel employes to | asked
to encourage and assist those
further
their training
by
attending
|in their
own
employ
to
engage
in
the M. S. C. hotel course was urged |the further college study available.
upon
members
of the Massachusetts |
The
assembled
hotelmen,
numberHotel Association at their annual fall ling
approximately
50
and
coming
meeting
this afternoon
at the Hotel | from
every
part
of the
State,
dis| Weldon,
uum lak) | Cussed at some length the State Reg-

$600

for

Assistance

There
are nine applicants
for the
special
training
course
at the
state
college for which the association has
set aside $600 for assistance, pointed

out

L.

G. Treadway

of the

which

Treadway

|
|
|
|

|

istry

of

Motor

Vehicles

regulations

governing 30-day permits for out-ofstate automobile registration and the
matter was eventually referred to the
association's legislative committee.

Delegates

aOR
een es

aes

appointed
et

to the

National

SS

a

(Photo

Bartlett, new

principal at Carew-street-school

ee

by

MARION

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.: WEDNESDAY , SEPTEMBER 6, 1939
Marion

its annual

autumn

Hotel
Convention
at
Pittsburgh
in
October
were
President
Glenwood
J.
Sherrard
of
the
Parker
House
in
Boston;
Secretary George Clark, Arthur L. Race of the Copley Plaza in
Boston
and
Robert
Jahrling
of the
Highiand Hotel in Springfield.
President
Sherrard
presided
over
| the meeting which was preceded by a
| New
England
luncheon,
selected
by
Manager
J. T. Seller
of
the
Hotel
Weldon who is a member of the executive committee and also a past president.

MISS

Miss

held

Weldon this afternoon. Members of the group are the following:
Seated, left
of Brookfield, George R. Jones of the Lord Jeffrey Inn at Amherst, President
Parker House in Boston and J. T. Seller of the Hotel Weldon, Greenfield; standthe Hotel Touraine at Boston, R. N. Summers of the Hotel Charlesgate in BosTreadway of the Treadway Inns and Willard H. Davis of Boston.

Bachrach)

L. BARTLETT

�oto, group of members of class of 4887 at Westfield State Teachers’ College whose 50th .reunion was
feature of the Trienfiial reunion of
the. college’s alumnifoday. They are left‘t¢ right, Mis, Emma Elmgre
race, Mrs. Gertyude “Boyce Dexter, T..K. McAllister, Mrs. Nellie Tiffany Boyd and Miss Anna

D. Maré en

|

|

|

*

.

:

:

}

Aissieiax, left, Miss Christine Sauer of this city, retiring president of the Alumni Association of the college
is shown with Mrs. Luella D. Bridgman of West Springfield, incoming president.
Right, Miss Laura Harding of New Britain, Conn., class of 1869, oldest alumna present at the reunion.
NN

ae
a

a

eee

eee
kee

|

|

Miss Christine M. Sauer
(Bachrach

eee

nls

a

Studio)

a

aes

acd

en a ee

~

a

�&lt;

roe

storic Strong House the Home

:

Of Amherst Historical Society

Strong Home Likely to Be
Pivitol Point In Tercen-

the toneetne=

OLD AMHERST HOUSE
Hi
CENTER OF ANTIQUITY

ot

toe

uw

{

tenary Program

From Our Special Correspondent
Amherst,
May
17—The
old
Strong
house, headquarters for the Amherst
Historical society, is likely to be the
pivotal point in the tercentenary com-

memoration
probable

here

that

this

few

summer.

residents

It is

of

the

tewn realize the historical value of the
house and its contents.
It is to be
regretted that lack
unusual
old
place

public

most

lack
items
ways

the

of funds
hidden

of the time

keeps
from

and

that

the
the

for

of
proper
fire
protection,
the
of antiquity housed there are alin danger.
Take, for instance,

cradle

in which

Helen

Hunt

Jack-

son was rocked as a baby in the home
of her father, Prof Nathan W. Fiske,
or the first piano ever brought into
the town, or the doctor’s case carried
by Dr C. W.
McCall
and
still filled

with

its

100

bottles

in

which

he

carried his homeopathic doses, or the
saddle used in the Civil war by Dr D.
B. NN. Fish, another of Amherst’s early
physicians. Where is there a more interesting or a more valued collection
dating
to pre-Revolutionary
times?
The‘ house \itself, built in 1744 by

retains

its original

tined

to

become

one

of

the

“An

—_Evy
straw 6r reed construction, while
Stearns
wooden.

and

Hitchcock

the

pieces

are

There is the key which once belonged to Judge Strong’s wine closet.

There

dating

pewter

of

Dr

street,

world’s

are

back

hand-woven

200 years,

candlesticks
Timothy

and

bed-spreads

Indian

from

J.

Gridley

relics,

the office

a set of weights

on

East

bearing

the seal of Great Britain have been in
possession of the town of Amherst
tonwood trees in this yard that FT} since 1740.
et
gene
eld
almed
his
first
poem, “—~
“Nehemiah Strong,
several
generaspoken in the thoughts of Dooley, the
great

preachers.

dog:—
“© had

I wings

It

was

like a dove

at

the

but+

I would

tions removed
from the original an| eestor, Was unwilling jor some reason
to settle at Northarapton, and finaliy
decided
upon Hadiey’s third precinct
| for his home, which he designed to
last for generations to come.
In 1761
he deeded the house and land to his
son,
Simeon,
who
had
but
recently;
been graduated from Yale Law school,
and
it is the
latter name
which
is
|) most
frequently
associated
with
the
old, house.
:

fly

Away from this world of fieas;
Id fly all around
Miss
Emerson’s
And

yard,

light

on

Miss

Emerson's

trees.”

The house had by that time come
into the possession of Mrs Emerson,
the widow of Dr Joseph Emerson
of
Conway,
a
family
connection
with
»the Strong’s.
The Miss Emerson
referred to in the poem lived here many
years.
The room on the second story
West front was used by Mrs Emerson
as
her
bedroom
for
more
than
50
years and has been, according to the
terms
of the wills of Miss Emerson
and
Mrs
Welch,
another
daughter,
kept
intact as to furniture and
ar-

rangement.
99.

Mrs

Emerson

lived

The

to be |

The
house is distinguished
by its
fine detail
and
permanence
of construction.
The
west,
front,
porch,
garden,
back-front,
front-back,
back
and back-doors still allow visitors to
enter or leave.
The
building shows
antiquity in every detail.
No parallel
lines are found.
The wooden cornices
fail to meet
in any
corner.
Broad
window.
sills,
little
closets,
hidden
drawers, wrought iron hinges, corner
cupboards and elaborate paneling all
speaks of the period in which it was
built.
The pioneer
ancestor
of
the
Strong family
came over from Eng-

and

18..children,
83

114

grand- |

great-grandchildren.

been

redecorated

on

are represented in
for instance, the

spectacles. which were once worn
by
Capt Murdock
of Palmer,
the button
molds found near the site of the first
house
built
at Montague
and
hardwrought nails from that same house,
old military buttons. from t he Prouty
family of Spencer, the flintlock used
by Capt Dickinson of Whately, and an

old latch
Wendell.

where he lived to be 94 years of age,
and at his death numbered among his. |
children

has

rounding Amherst
the collection, as,

land in 1630 and settled at Dorchester.
In 1659 he moved to Northampton,

descendants

house

the
lower
floor through
the
efforts
of private individuals‘and made most
attractive with new-paint and copies
of old wallpapers.
It was opened to
visitors Yesterday in connection
with
the annual tulip show of. the garden
section of the Woman's
club.
There are so many items of interest
among
the collection of antiques and
mementos
of
Colonial
times
in the
house that it would be impossible to
examine
and appreciate
them
all in
one afternoon’s time.
Eventually it is
hoped
to
have
them
all
properly
eataloged.
Many
of the towns
sur-

found

near

Locke’s

pond

at

}

old “wag-on-the-wall”
clock,

which
came
originally
from
Candor,
Tioga county, New York, and was presented
to
the
Historical
society
by
Prof John F. Genung, is bound to attract
considerable
attention.
Prof
Genung’s.
account of the
history
of
the
clock in a letter to Dr
Charles
S. Walker,
for
many
years
a resident here and now living at Darien,
Ct.
tells its story.
It belonged,
he
states, to “our extremely rural pastor,”
Rev Abraham Wilcoxen.
He describes
this same pastor as a “good old grayhaired
smooth-bore
preacher,
whose
with the}
discourses
never
sparkled
faintest gleam of a striking or original
idea.”
He
had however,
a great attachment to the boys of the Genung
family, largely owing to his talent in

whittling out “saw-boys,”
dulum-like.

The pastor’s widow eventually sold
the clock to one of the Genung boys.
It had
then
for weights
a pair
of
peaked cylinders, filled with sand, for
which
iron weights
were substituted |
later,
The.e
is in the possession
of the
Amherst Historical society a fine collection
‘of war
relics,
including
the
saddle
bags
used by Daniel
Kellogg|
as
mail
bags
by
Rufus
and
later
Kellogg,
one
of
the
earliest
postmasters at Amherst.
There is an old
3ritish cap picked up at Bunker Hil”
after
the
battle
there,
by
a
Cap
Dexter;
a
camp
stool
used
in
th:
Revolutionary
war
by
Rev
Danic
Williams,
chaplain
of
a_
regimer
from
this section,
and
many
oth«
items of interest.

of

There is also an extensive collectic
utensils of the “back door arts

A
fine old
loom
might
be
put
in‘
working
order
if someone
was
pa°
| ticularly interestec in that homely a
of the Colonial days.
There is as fi)
a collection of old wooden
cradles ¢
your
correspondent
has*lately
ser
In addition to the,one in which He!
Fiske was rocked, there is the one i
which
William
A.
Stearns,
who
manhood became president of Amhez
college, was rocked, and one from t}
Hitcheock estate, in which undoubte:

ly President Edwnrd
his daily naps when

|

known

in

it,

use at
Then

ero

ST

copies of the

human figure, that could be poised on
the edge of the table and swung, pen-

2

Strong,

4 $ Sint inhi binf a eteaton hte hint.

| Nehemiah

, Jines
and
‘stands
an embodiment
of
| stability,
a connecting
link
between
present and
former
generations.
In
1830
when
Rev
William
S.
Tyler,
father
of the late Prof John
Mason
Tyler, first came to teach at Am erst
college,
he
boarded
at
this
h/use,
| which was then, he writes, “an iateresting antique.”
The boarding house
was
kept
by
one
Mrs
7
among
the men
at her table war
a
young freshman, Henry Ward Beecher, at that time only a boy, but des-

i child’s

that

and

his

its

Hitchcock toc
a babe.
It

children

age

would

least a generation
there
are
dolls’

beds,

The

Fiske

were

rock:

indicate

back of
cradles

cradle
ca

i

thar

is. o.

I

'|
{
f

ae

�JAMES

REV.

JAMES

GORDON

GORDON

RA

Bachrach

GILKEY

GILKEY

en eee

,
7

Photo

�WORTHINGTON

) Worthing ton

“WORTHINGTON,

18

19—News

has been received of the marriage of
Miss Ella Mable Bridges, daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Clinton
Bridges
of
South Deerfield and Waldo
Chapman
Cole,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Horace|
Cole
of this
town.
The
couple
was|
married
in
the
Congregational
par- |
sonage in South
Deerfield
by
Rey.
Charles N. Lovell who
used the single ring service. The
couple
was attended
by
the
bride’s
uncle
and

aunt,

After

Cole

Mr.
a

will

and

Mrs.

wedding

live

in

trip

Fred
Mr.

Bridges.

Greenfield.

and

Mrs.

Mrs.
Jennie
Witherell
of
South
Worthington
is
visiting
relatives
in
Amherst,
Worthington
Grange
will
hold
an
open
meeting
Tuesday.
The
Juvenile
Grange
will furnish entertainment.

Worthington
Helen

|

Mr. and

Bartlett

Mrs. Guy Bartlett will

entertain a family party on Thanksgiving including: Irving L. Bartlett
Jr. of Delmar,
Irving,
son,
and
N. Y.; Mr. and Mrs. Lester C. LeMiss Marion
Duc of Chesterfield;
Springfield; Miss |
of
Bartlett
L.
Mrs.
and
Mr.
Vv. Bartlett,
| Bisie
of
Bartlett and daughter
George
Mrs.
and
Mr,
and
|-Willlamstown

}

account

at

| Charles Allen of this town and|
| Miss Lucille Lane of Northampton. |

at

of

South

rain

the

the

church

old

fashioned

300 ae
reunion

Worthington,

supper

and

in

the

was

On

served

home

of

Mrs
Nima
‘tuttie.
‘The
parade
included:
A
straw
ride
drawn
by
a
yoke
of oxen
with
children
dressed

-in
a

two-seated

Leon

Conwell

surrey

costumes
with

dressed

in

Mr

on

and

load;

costume

Mrs

of

50 years ago;
a bride and
groom
of
50 years ago in evening attire
were
represented
by Miss
Barbara
Twing,
and
Wayne
Smith
of
Springfield;
music
by
a
band
composed
of
boy

campers

—

a

Worthineton, Aus.
Aug, 9—
9—About
tended
the Conwell
academy

Saturday

from

Indian

Hollow

from

this town

and

the

attended

the

West Chesterfield fife and drum corps
composed
of
Charles
Higgins
and
Roy
and
Frank
Stanton.
The
evening program in charge of Miss Jane
Tuttle
was a reproduction
of a program
of
music
which
Miss
Tuttle's
grandmother,
Mrs
Russell
Conwell
Zave 50 years ago in South Worthington,
The
children
of South
Worthington with pupils of Miss Tuttle assisted.
Bates
orchestra
furnished
musi¢
for
dancing,

Many

funeral
of
Wilbert
Moore
who
was
well known
here,
At the morning service of the Congregational
church,
Mrs
Dorothy
Johnston
Baseler
of
Philadelphia,
a
guest
of
Miss
Margaret
Vaughn,
played
the harp.
Miss
Jennie
Louise
Graves
of
Providence,
R.
I,
was
a
guest
of

Rev and Mrs J. Herbert Owen
this
weekend,
Mrs Mae Frissell of Worcester is

visiting
Cole
.

her

daughter,

hohe

Mrs

ore a

Arlen

Worthington

JUGGLERS

Bright colored balls fly thro’ the air,
One after another, circling where
In wondering amaze the people stare
At the Juggler.
But though she instructs the children’s minds
In required skills and arts of all kinds,
The people’s amaze one never finds

Turned on Teacher.
Instructing, explaining and drilling, too

With one eye on the clock, to the schedule
true

This is not all that she has to do—
Our Schoolteacher.
There’re posture and health and eyes and ears
And tonsils, diseases and mental years.
That a one be slighted is one of the fears
Of the Teacher.
Morals and manners, honesty, truth,

Cleanliness, virtue, all traits learned in youth,

Are

left by

sooth,

the homes

on

the schools,

in

On the Teacher.

So when bright colored balls fly thro’ the air,

One after another circling fair,
I see not a Juggler standing there,
But

a Teacher.
ELEANOR

W.

CLARK,

Cummington, Mass.

WORTHINGTON,

Dee.

19—Worth-

ington Grange will hold a short business meeting Tuesday. The reports of
the delegates to the State Grange will
be given, followed by a Christmas par- |
ty. Hall decorations are in charge of|
Miss Jeannette
Wright and
Emerson|

Davis,

with

music

under

the

member

is

of Mrs. Franklin Burr and
Witherell.
George
Brown

of

games.

Each

direction|

Mrs. Jennie |
has charge|

asked

to

bring a 10-cent gift. Refreshments are |
in charge of Mrs. Stanley Mason and |
Miss Hazel Parish.
Lyceum
Hall
was
crowded Friday |
night, when
the Corners School gave|
the play, “Susanna’s
Christmas
Auc- |
tion,” under the direction of Miss Per- |
sis Ritchie and Walter Utley, assisted|
by Mrs.
George
E. Tarrey,
music superyisor,

Joseph Emery Wright received painful
injuries
Friday
afternoon
while}
sanding roads, being pinned between a
truck and a sanding machine, He was
|} taken
to
Dickinson
Hospital
for
X |
| rays, which showed no broken bones, |
;and he is at home
under the care of |
br. Mary Snook of Chesterfield.

�4

Robinson

Mrs. FA.

“Dr. and

,| were dinner guests of Mr. and Mrs.

.|George
:|

Dr.

,|son

Packard,

and Mrs.

are

moving

Sunday.

Francis

to

d

eee

A.

pope

ago

and

has

school

137

¢

=
Helen

and

St gphed in 1.30 P m. ae the ee
There

McDonald, a nurse.
Both Dr. an
Mrs.
Robinson
have
been
eetive:

| will

of the

be

greatly

is

Robinson

Robinson

\Bastern
\

was

a

Star.
=

Grange

missed

eas

;

member

a

has

the

|as

Dr.

-

sisted

neighbors

and

Congregational)

b:4

citizens.

an

guests

of

by

Dr.

|

‘Thursday

Worthington

\Mrs. Francis A.
| guests of Bence

_

pera

to

Seneehay

Nov.

at

honor

member

as

Mrs.

of

the

the

Congregational

years.

money.

|

|

She

was

an

Robinson

adult

presented

Mrs.

a

party

at

a/|

several

of

a

ieht

of|/

Robinson

church for
presented a
which

Mrs.

set were

| Robinson

|

presented
came

aad

years

ago

Nine

years

town

physician

| Florence

|

| Robinson

choirs

Hospital

where

Mason.

rehearse

will

for

5th

she was

weeks,

two

be conferred

will

degree

a pa-

at

All

degree

Grangers
are

who.

urged

wish

to

to take

attend.

has

several
sum of

read

5

fr”

generous

}

Presbyterian

Layettes

doubt.

or

pudding,

biscuits

or

to

to the couple.

Dr.)

Q;

school

and|/

shoe's

Worthington

been

has

ago

during

he

marrice

a

MacDonald,

is a Mason

tread

and

nurse.

i

else

|

the

Of

Dan

been

little

Porter’s

old hound.

“kirk”,

village

SSS | t¢ it’s singing at wedding
enate

Dr.

Mrs. Rob-

&lt;

choir

faithful to the

or fun-

Church.

And

Bs

that’s

not

easy

work.

She sang as leading soprane
Though ‘it added no cent to
purse,
:

She

The
And

went

with

the

journeys,

choir

her

on

long

fun was for better or worse,
one night coming home
she
got stranded
And had to sit in a hearse.

es
—

4

We

Our
Our

appreciate all she’s been

Flossie of big
doctor’s chief
tant

an

doing,|

golden heart
help and assis-|

In a small town where each played|

ea

his

i

Send

f

,

i

Lawrence

ae
/inson a member of the Eastern Star | She hasn’t been one to shirk,
land the Friendship Guild of the Con-| And she’s kept the choir money
! sregational

E

Mrs.

combined

At Lyceum) Hall Saturday pent &amp; | They’re all in her daily round,
public farewell reception was given | be oka aYan@acicnias kere ts
ey
ys
to the couple under auspices of the | +
are needed
trange of which both have been acAs every family. has found.
tive members and served in many of-|
and coffee) J] bet that the breezes tell her
fices, An electric toaster

|

|

i

South

follows:

yet she’s
one out

faithful beyond

Whether

the

Robinson

She’s

come?

How

|

night.

this

eee ane se
=
miss her
ate
peta your
tiBt Justo

the|| and

sum

The

the

She’s Scotch and
Now figure that

been

tient

given

night

choirs enin\their|

has

m.

of the choir of the

poem

To

p.

of

Pomona
Hillside
of
meeting
movy-||the
were
Grange
in
Cummington
Wednesday

Rev. J. Herbert Owen

{

8

home

eee
e Sens ae
hae
os waar
ia 'N NewE pidEnglan Seeaturned
from the

pre-j||

lamp.

at

and

The

Mrs.||coness

In the little town of Worthington
There lives a doctor's wife

for

,

for

was

have been |
eaten

choir

Church

honor

original

foe
Burlington | pas
will practice. Op fi 7hs

parsonage

party

choirs Friday

money.

29—Dr. and|

Robinson
pte

Mr.

Mol-

Robinson who
to Burlington,

Congregational
years and was

Leave

Tomorrow

where
Friday Dr.cRobinson:
night the combined
tertained

,

at

the

sewing

Benevolent

Worthington Church group will meet
as will
— havePrigw't
Bey: Se saeeeeee
Owen
charge.

Bertha||

who

electric

been a member

PARTIES

Robinson

Mrs.

and

farewell

parsonage.

orthington

WORTHINGTON,

the

all-day

Women’s

Florence || election Friday night in the home of

nucie

Mrs.

Robinson
:

Dr. and Mrs.
ed ‘Wednesday

|

eee

FAREWELL

a

sented

;
e349

of

Florence

of the

an

| Society, Wednesday, at
| Mrs. Herbert Porter.

Owen;
secretary,
Mrs.
Harriet
was|!Higgins.
The
entertainment
con.
isted
of
f
lienece
i

member;
:

a

Mrs.

Mrs.

treasurer,

the

of

be

Bertha
Owen — -ueS-||
The Young
People’s
Society
will
and elected officers! | hold the annual business meeting and

Pres.,

vite-pres.,

Mrs.|jlison;

in the Friehd-|

been

follows:

ison

people are}
Worthington
lose
such
good
friends, |

church.
sorry
to

~~

of

choir

the

lof

:

all.

Mrs.
afterncon

day

they)

Mrs. esRobinson

and

Guild

by

:and

Mason

|also an active worker
ship

and

will

'meeting

the|)|
of
The Friendship Guild
Nine years ago
; town physician.
Miss Florence
| | Congregational
church met
at ~their
1 Dr. 5 Robinson married
5
‘
d|||home
of Mrs.
Bertha
O

[members

ee

the anne

eee for

Bartlett

:

meet

will

Guild

Friendship

The

A

“Aves

Yate tae

Worthington

Burlington,

been

es

”

,|Mass., Dec. 1. Dr. Robinson came
_|to Worthington
to
practice 13
| years

ae

;

/f a7

Vier te?

eat

tn

ee

Yt

part.

them

our

More

E

out

with

blessing

hope

and

impart.

our

more

love

On

Saturday

ception

to|
-

We

night

given

a

public

re-

at Lyceum

Hall

for Dr. and Mrs. Robinson and, they |.
Wete given an electric toaster. and
coffee
service.
This-:affair
was

Sponsored by the Grange in charge
of

the

and|/ard.

health

was

The

lecturer,» Mrs.

Dancing
Young

Edith

Pack-

was enjoyea.

People’s

Society

mect Friday night at the .home
Mr.

and

The

Mrs.

Lawrence

combined.

choirs

-Mason.

will

will

of

meet

E
i
i
j
ee
fi

want
to
expresxs
to
our| Saturday night at.the parsonage.
|
Flossie
» Mrs.
Charles
.A: Kilbourn
who
|In a way that she always can keep/\returned last. Friday: from Boston
!'The
blessing
we’ve
reaped
from}! is: reported to be.improving.
her labors
Mr.
and
Mrs...Theodore
Tatro
|The
blessing our memories
shallj/ were guests of. .ir..anu. Mrs. Jos-

E

|So

)

‘Buy

gE

i

;

)

E

|
|

5

uaa

eee

reap.

here’s

what

“pound

note”

something!

a

Rev..
i

J.

it

takes

Dig

into

for
it

Herbert

aieaseoein

aj;

deep.

Owen.
ses

2

eph

Wright. Thanksgiving.

Plans have:been:made
and

arations

||common

a

started

’

8

-

flooding

at the Corners ‘to

skating rink “fo
;

for

prep-

the

provide

�=

ey

STS

2

Dr. Mary Snook “Just a Country Doctor,”
But She Covers Wide Field in Hampshire
7

Hill Towns,

a

:

In the accompanying photographs are to be seen the home of Dr, Mary Poland Snook of Chesterfield and
“Peter,” white saddle horse which she often uses to make professional calls in the hill towns of Hampshire
.

NN

County.

eee

eee

ns aaa

a

aoe

en

ore 5 a

so

�—————

woman doctor, Dr. Snook said, “Why,
I’m a general practitioner. Of course
I have
men
patients,
and
I’ve met!

Deep
Snow
and
Muddy
Roads Fail to Keep Chesterfield’s Woman
Physician from Responding, on
Horseback, to Calls from
Far and Near; Is First Dis. trict Medical Examiner.
NORTHAMPTON,
snowdrifts

and

June

with

fided

little

opposition.”

that

“in

Chesterfield

have

a woman

that
In

locality.
1923 she married

as

Dr.

Dr.

ard

Snook

Snook,

doctor

is

the

who

one

or none

only

must}

at all,”

physician

}
Leon- :

Maynard

travels

in

through

the

| New England territory for a company
| which
manufactures
work
clothes.
| They
have
one
son,
George
Aaron,
nine years old, who is a pupil in the

4—Winter

impassable

very

|Snooks’ housekeeper, familiarly called!
“Grandma” in real country style, con-

muddy

Chesterfield School.
In the barn witn Dr. Snook’s favorMary Poland Snook from making her | ite “Sunshine” are ‘‘Peter,” a beautiful white horse, and “Amos,”
George
professional visits to farmhouses in | Aaron’s shetland pony.
The pony is
fat
and
portly
and
is
coal
black.
Each
the Hampshire County hill towns. Two
horse has its name on a board over
riding horses, “Sunshine” and “Peter” | its stall.
Dr. Snook also. has two
roads

in

springtime

do

not

bar

Dr.

take her to the betisides of thes sick. |
when

are blocked

with

deep with mud.

Covers Wide
For

the

past

snow

years

Dr.

dogs—‘“Jack,”

English

setter,

and

a

Llew-

“Gypsy,”

a

“plain
hound,”
besides
a well-caredfor flock
of poultry
in the
chicken
yard.
é
A little building which resembles a
doll house a short distance from the
house,
with a flagstone walk leading

'
'
i
{

Snook

hunting

elyn

{

Territory,

four

lively

or |

i

has resided in Chesterfield and her '|
to the only door, Dr. Sncok identified
practise has embraced the surrounding
with pride as her “guest. house,’’ and
countryside for many miles. Her reguinvited the visitors to peek in.
A
charming
room comfortably furnished
lar practise takes her to Williamswith antiques and a sheet iron stove
burg, Goshen and Worthington, and
frequently
in

the

into

hill

Dr.

other

adjoining

had

towns

Snook

was

about

along

country

Union

representative

to leave

roads

for a

when

reached

N.

Four

their

large

new

beautiful

green

maple

leaves

a

Shade over the rambling low cottage,
and
gave
added
charm
to’ the little
cottage,
in one
corner
of which
the
the
Hall

church,
and the

B.

after

leaf

air which

reading

sign

on

the

the

desk

might

little

side

with

a

pro-

of

the

and

gold

j

Rides to Attend to Practise.
She was at first perplexed that a
newspaper reporter should travel so
far from the beaten path to interview
her and
“country
“seneral

while

talking

insisted that she was just a
doctor’
who
conducted
a
practise.” It was but a short

before
of

her

home.

try.

She

‘Hampshire
brooks, and

she

her

She

became

horses,

spoke

interested

her

of

dogs

the

in

and

rolling

hills, the cool Chesterfield
the joy of life in the coun-

told of the

winter

snowdrifts

and
the
muddy
roads
in
spring
through which it is impossible to drive

the small coupe in which she makes
her professional visits in good travelz.
Asked whether she had many men
patients,
sionally

and whether she met profesmany men who objected to a

1919

and

in

Lebanon,

was

of

graduated|

Ii:ew

from

Hamp-

the

Boston

was

Ely

appointed

as

associate

by

Gov.

1 edical

Joseph

examiner

Hampshire
District, the
to be named to such an

doctor.

During
the past winter
Dr. Snook
was away for four months, taking a
post-graduate course at Harvard Med-

ical Schoo].
She is a member of the
Massachusetts
Medical
Society, and
keeps well informed on all the new
phases of her profession.
She attends
to minor surgical cases herself.
All

house,

which
says:
“Dr. Mary
Snook,' office
hours,
2 to 4—7
to 8.” In the
yard
was a woman garbed in a riding habit
with a large
black horse
which
she
was currycombing. It was Dr. Snook.

in

|} of a country

be imagined |

black

born

and

practise includes the usual night calls,
long hours and h. -vy responsibilities

Bave terse directions:
“Third house
on the left.”
Dr. Snook was not sitting behind a
mahogany

1898,

University

office in Western Massachusetts. Since
that time she has had about 50 medical examiner’s
cases.
Her
general

conducts
the general
store in which
one
can
purchase
almost
anything!
which would be desired in rural living,

fessional

in

the

in Community.

was

}in the First
first woman

village
store,
vacant Chester-

field House, are located, it seemed advisable to inquire the location of Dr.
Snook’s office.
William Baker, who

polished

Snook

Snook

doctor maintains her office.
Reaching the top of Chesterfield Hill

where
Grange

appearance.

Years

University
School of Medicine in 1923.
After
serving
an: interneship
in the
Lowell General Hospital she engaged
in general practise in Watertown, but
being essentially a country-loving person,
she
has
settled
in Chesterfield
and is now starting her fifth year in
that
town
In
February,
1932,
Dr.

trees

threw

H.,

shire

her low-

“hates publicity,” but graciously consented to be photographed with “Sunshine,” a black mare with a white
with

Dr.

from

The

shingled
bungalow
in
midafternoon,
yesterday.
Dr Snook declared that she

face.

homey

Four

country.

canter

a

her major
Dickinson
}

surgical
Hospital

cases are taken to
in Northampton.

duties |
Although
her
professional
keep her very busy, she manages
to
find time
to indulge
in several
hobbies.
She is now engaged in making
a sunken
stone walk
from
the road
to the guest house, and has just completed, for her flower garden, a bird

bath

ornamented

soul

as

with

miniature

fig-

jures of dogs and horses.
Her favorite
pastime,
perhaps,
is riding
on
her
speedy
mount,
“Sunshine’—she
goes
for a 10-mile ride every aay, in addition to riding often with her sen.
And, to prove that she is a sociable

well

sional woman,
of
Chesterfield

Post

jary,

Club

as

a

successful

of

the

of

Northampton,

and

American

of the

newly

Legion

organized

a society

posed
of
business
and _
women.
Her
personality

combination

manner
thinking,

and
and

makes. her
community.

a

of

profes-

she is also a member
Grange,
Cummington

feminine

masculine
her
zest

valuable

Auxil-

Zonta

com-

professional
is a happy

charm

in

clarity
in
for
living

asset
.

to

the

/

en

roads

�MISS

ELEANOR

M.
(Photo

DEARDEN
by

Bachrach)

Miss Eleanor M. Dearden is cochairman of the
decorating committee for the second triennial reunion of the High School of Commerce Alumni
association

which

will

Municipal

be held

Friday

Auditorium.

night

at the

�|

Worthington

Hatfield |

|

Two Schools Join
For Graduation

‘Frank P. Jones _
|

|

Is Dead

HATFIELD,

March

é

at 87

10—Frank

of the Corners and
South
Worthington schools were held in Lyceum Hall

P,
| Jones, 87, formerly of
this town, died
ne pe
i
of his niece, Mrs. Arthur
| conte
.
nt
Bennett, 25 Maini Street,
Monson,

High

Hatfield, the s
;
| Austin S. and Electa
(Belden)
Tauen
he had lived in Monson
five years, He

WORTHINGTON,

tion

exercises

of

June

the

17—Gradua-

eighth

grades

this morning in charge of Principal
Walter Atley.
Rev. J. Herbert Owen
gave the invocation.
Principal Sidney
Osborne

of

School

the

Huntington

addressed

the

10

graduates.

Supt.
Merritt
presented
the diplomas
to
Phyllis
Packard,
Rita
Gagnon,
Thelma
Packard,
Eloise
Bartlett,
Charles Eddy,
Kenneth
Paul, Charles
Bartlett, Timothy
Sweetman
and Eugene
Bermier
of the
Corners
school
South
and
Nadine
Higgins
of
the
Worthington school.
There were three
musical
selections
by
the
school
in
charge of Mrs. George E, Torrey, Jr.
The West Worthington
school held
its
final
picnic
this
afternoon
at
Thayer's
pienie
grounds
in
West
Worthington,
The South Worthington
School
will go to Forest Park Satur- |
day.
The Corners school had a picnic
at Happy
Uplands Thursday.
RR

-* Plainfield
CHARLES

¢

A. WILLIAMS

PLAINFIELD,
|; Abel Williams,
76,

| oldest

residents,

he had

taken

June
one of

died

20—Chariles
Plainfield’s

Saturday

in

the

House
of Mercy
Hospital,
Pittsfield.
Born
in Ashfield
Sept.
24; 1861, the
son of Ephraim and Mary
(Woodard)
Williams, he married Ellen Kinney in
\1882 and came to this town about 40
years ago and had since engaged
in
farming. Besides his wife he leaves a
daughter,
Mrs. Anna
Dyer of Greenfield,
two
sons,
Fred.
of Savoy
and
Leon of Springfield;
10 grandchildren
and two great-grandchildren. The funeral will be held Tuesday at 2.30 in
Plainfield Congregational Church, Rev.
George Hawks
will officiate and burial will be in Hilltop
Cemetery.
Mr.
Williams was active in organization of
the Grange and was a member of the
National
Grange,
the
State
Grange
and
Hillside Pomona
Grange.
At the
annual installation in January he was
installed
as chaplain,
the
5ist
time)

a Grange

office.

He

had

(AP)

—

been
a selectman,
member
of the
Sehool
Board,
inspector of cattle for
40
years
which
office
he
held
at
death,
inspector
of slaughtering
for
38 years and moderator at town meetings repeatedly,
;

Dr. O. H. Tittman
LEESBURG,

Va.,

Aug.

21

RR

Dr. O. H. Tittmann, 88, former head of
the Geodetic Coaét Survey and president
of the National
Geographic
Society from
1915-19, died at his home
here today.

Born

in

North

Was a member of the Hatfi
eld Congre| Battonel Church. His wife,
Mrs. Fanty

| ago.
ward

(White) Jones, died
several years
He leaves a brother-in
-law, EdH. Eldridge
of Hatfield;
three

nieces,

E.

Mrs,

Morton

Bennett,

ana

Mrs.

and

Mrs. Gilbert

Murray

Hatfield. The funeral
ee
Bennett’s home

Graves

will be held
Wednesday

of

in
at

�ae

ee

GAZETTE,

FRIDAY, O€TOBER 19, 1934,

OLD HOUSESIN THIS
CITY ARE SCRIBED
Miss Mary Brewster Tells Betty

Allen

Chap-

ter, D. A. R., Some Interesting History of
Many of Northampton’s Earlier
Dwellings That Have Survived
the Years
Rev.

Solomon

Stoddard,

who

1

Opposite,

covering

what

is

now
betweenOld South = anc
Pleasant streets, was the Mather|
farm.
A ravine ran through it,|
ending about in
front
of
the
-Lewise«Parsons
place,
across
Lickenwater
(now Mill river).
The town
numbered
between
one
and
two
hundred — persons.
Mr. Mather died after ten years.
His widow
married
Mr.
Stoddard. She lived with
him fiftyfive years, most of them in this
house.
She
had three
Mather
and tén
Stoddard
children.
I
think it has been computed that
through husbands, grandson an‘]
other descendants,
her
eonnection with the Old church includ-|
ed 158 years.
known
letter
of
That well
daughter, | Esther,
Jers .to her

Miss Mary Brewster,
at a re- preached here for 57 years. He
eent
meeting
of Betty
Allen and his descendants lived in this
“tife of the Rev.
Timothy
Ed-,
ehapter, D. A. R.,
read the fol- house for more than 100 years,
vards, of
East
Windsor,
Ct.,
lowing interesting paper,
‘Some
for 80 of which it was a parsonOld Northampton Houses,” which -age. The central part is all that
after
the birth
of
their
son,
is published in full by request:
the
original. . The
remains of
Jonathan
Edwards,
wags written,
Solomon
by
if houses COULD
talk
that
added
was
front
probably, from
this house Dec,
would be more
interesting than
Stoddard’s son,
Col.
Stoddard.
7, 1763. It speaks of her daughanything I
have
to say
about
The rear was removed and made
ter, Eunice, wife of the Deerfield
Dr., Barre*t
them—and
more
correct.
Be- ‘Tito a stable when
minister
(‘Son
Williams
satisBecause in
research
I find
som*
bought the place in 1845.
fied that she is now
in glory’’),
tween times, it was
owned
by
conflict as to
dates
and _ othe:
who
was killed in the massacre
Seth Wright
and
by
Charles
record.
there,
Nichols, both of Boston. It was
I shall welcome correction beThink
of that
old
grave in
cause’
our old
houses
are
a
occupied for a time by the minDeerfield cemetery
that
has so
the
church,
community
asset.
and
the
more
John’s
St.
of
ister
long shielded the remains of that
that can be preserved
with
Mr. Hubbard.
3
ro Rev.
horror. and then think of Eunice |
tell of
gard to them the
more
fortuI have heard mother
Williams
when
she was Eunice |sumand
nate for us all.
the Christmas parties
Stoddard,
flitting
as
a
child
amid the haycocks
From
its
imposing
outlook,
mer parties
about this place,
think of all the’
other
houses
in the big yard here delighted in
The letter mourns the death -¢
parish.
this one, where
we
are,
has
by the children of that
son
“at
a
place
called
watched come up about it.
And,
John Hooker, fourth minister of
Brest, in France,
while member
alas, in lovely and
storied inthe Old church, lived here for 2
of a ship’s crew
waiting transtime, before
1775,
when
was
stances has seen
destroyed and
portation to London”
and closes
replaced
by structures more
conpuilt the
parsonage
on
King
with the request
that,
“When
street, which for 80 years more
venient, probably,
but often by
you
have
perused
it I would
housed ministers, including -Paror truly
no means as dignified
have you send it to your sister
beautiful.
son Solomon Williams.
A
few
Mix to read and- enclose in it a
of us recall this
pleasant,
low
The first cabins here huddled
paper and send to my son, War-’
old manse,
rather neglected betogether
for
companionship
and
jham,
with
the
news
of
my
hind its hedge,
wut yet hinting
protection.
There
were
only
grandson,
Steven
Williams, arpaths between them.
at prestige.
riving with the other captives at
The third minister,
Jonathan
In its second century, when 4
Boston.”
Wdwards,
lived
a little
below
famedly
beautiful
town
must
The
“sorrowful
mother’
then
bave been at its loveliest,
large:
here,
where
St.
Valentine’s
hastens
to close, lest
she lose
houses, suited to tne large famehurch now
stands
He
was 2
an opportunity of
sending
the
flies filling them,
were
placed
grandson
of Mr. Stoddard
and
letter, but adds, “P. S. I would
must often
have
been
in this
wider apart,
with ample yards
have sent
you
a thousand
house.
The same
may
be asof
and orchards between. This gave
pins and a porringer of marma-|
value to the houses’
themselves
sumed of his famous cousin, Jolat if I had
an opportunity. If
and beautiful
vistas
of
river,
seph Hawley. Their grandmother
any of your
town come up and)
| was
Esther
Mather,
who seems
mountain
and meadow.
would call here I would send it.|
Most of
these
are gone—reto me one of the most interestGive
my love to son Edwards|
mo@eled,
made
into tenements
ing, as she
was
the
first oi
and your children.”
Northampton’s long line of not
or barns—before
these gave way
|
Before leaving this old house |
to garages, or were absorbed by
able women.
She lived on this
(among the
the many
institutions by which
long line of callers|
spot so many
years, and muct
at which
old Northampton has been overhave lifted up her eyes to those
let us hope one came|
for the marmalat),
same mountains
we look at topowered and later Northampton
it
may be!
stated that, supposedly,
day such counttess times during
advantaged.
it orig-|
Since 1684, think
of all that
inally contained
her long and
soberly’
eventful
near the chtm-'
have passed through - this house| life that it is no
ney a good size room to be used|
digression
{o
speak
of her,
and all that it
has
heard dis
as a hiding place from Indians.
eussed.
Not’
only
folksy
talk
Born,
WHesther
Warham,
ip
Of the
17th
century — houses
pbout other houses,
shops
and| Windsor, Conn., ten years before
that this
house
looked
down
there was any settlement in the
streets coming
into
being
all
upon three are
still
standing,
Connecticut
about
it,
but ‘pompous
ani
valley
and ‘must be even older. Though
north
of
Springfield, she
learned talk,
too. - ‘Theologicai,
came
here
as
the
added,
been
has
a wing
wife of the first minister calle:
political, controversial
and mili“Cornet”.
Parsons
house
on
to Northampton,
tant topics!
For this town has
less
than six
Bridge street, called “the oldest
years after
its
settlement
teemed with these. This was the
in:
house”
in
Northampton, - mus:
1654. He was Eleazer,
Manse when
ministers led their
of that
look much as
when
built
by
historic
Mather
family
communities and were
hosts to
of Bos- | Cornet
Parsons
in 1658,
three
ton.
Inerease’s
brother and Cotthe
distinguished
from
else-|
years after-he
came here from
ton’s son.
His church stood on
where.
It was built
.for NorthSpringfield.
It was the scene of
Meeting-h
ouse.-hill.
ampton’s
second
minister,
the|
It:
was
a
|Northampton’s
one ease of al5
\
plain, thatched-roof
building
26
leged witchcraft.
by 18 feet,
with one door ang
two windows.

�The so history
of the
picturesquely

‘been

house

written

el
by

its present
owner,
Miss
Anna
Bliss, that
I
need
not
dwell
upon its long
connection
with
the trade, politics
and romance
of a developing
town,
One
notable fact is that for
all
these
276 years it has belonged to but
two families and has never been:

bought

SST ee

in
|

athan

or sold.

Edwards

in

his

Narrative

Remarkable
Conversions.
Behind
the
brick block, corner
of
Bridge
and
Market
streets, is part of
a house that
the late Christopher Clarke said
was, in its
oldest
part,
older
than the
Parsons
house.
The’
two rooms in this
oldest
part
were
almost
cabin-shaped
and
were
beautifully
panelled
in
white painted wood.
The
very |
low ceilings
had heavy wooden &gt;
beams
through
their centers.
|
At the time
of her marriage,|

mother’s

mother,

Caroline

Clapp|

Williams,
moved
from
King
street to this house,
where her
nine children
were
born
and
where she died, having lived her
entire
83
years
in
but
two
houses,
Her husband
made _ the little
house into a larger one of many
low, rambling
rooms
of different

|to

shapes;

another

steps

from

one

level

and
a tiny, curved
staircase almost in the wall, on
the Market street side. It was in
the attic here that, a few years
ago, was found a deed signed by
John Pynchon,
the
founder of)

Springfield.

If it is
true
that
the _ first
wedding
in
Northampton
took
place in that
much
remodelled
house
between
the
Baptist
church
and Forbes
library, that
must be, in part,
as old as the

two

“oldest”

Bridge

still

killed.

How?

Who

on

Wright,

homestead,

Maple

too,

street.

was

a

live with considerable independflavorsome atmos‘ence in this

— street

knows?

Wright

Almanack.
His
correspondence
was with the great
scientists of
his time,
including Huxley and
Charles Darwin.
How often have I wished that
all houses
bore
somewhere,
as
the Lewis Parsons
house
bears
on its great chimney, their date
of
erection.
And I
very much
wish that
a complete
compilation might be made of all 18th
century
(and older)
houses still
remaining here. This would be a
valuable thing for
the D. A, R.,
Historical society or Forbes
library to memorialize.
The largest
number
of these
probably would
be
found
on
\South, Bridge
and Elm
streets,
layouts that
followed
the first
three Pleasant,
King
and Mar‘ket, on none of which
now remains
an original dwelling.
The first houses were log huts.
The houses
already
mentioned
were among
the
earliest frame
houses.
Specimens of these that
may be seen
on Elm street (at
first, and.
for generations later,
largely peopled. by Clarkes), are
that of the late Miss Clara Clark
who believed hers to be the oldest, the Whitney,
of the
Burnand _ its
group,
school
ham
neighbor, Tenney house, left for|
the use of self-help students by
the last of
Mrs. Mary Tenney,
her long line to live there. Theso
keepsuccessive student groups
themselves
ing house there for

‘ing.

ally

Ansel

standing

-—a

letters of |
was born

journalist,
university
lecturer,
taught in Prof. Agassiz’s.
schoo.
in Cambridge,
where
also
he
was in the office of the Nautical

houses.
i
When - David
‘Burt
married
Mary Holton in 1660,
this Holton house stood on
one of the
first grants on King street, near
the
present
Y. M. C. A. buildThe
first
fatality
in Northampton is connected
with — this
few months
after
house,
as a
his marriage Burt was accident-

the

iChauncey

Of like
rare
record
is
the
Lewis ‘Parsons
house
on
Old
South
street,
which
remains
much ag when built in 1755 and.
has been
lived in by Parsonses|
for 179 years. One of the earliest
to live
there
married
Phoebe
Bartlett,
whose
conversion
-at
the age of four
is told by Jonof

eT

school.
He edited the
Chauncey Wright, who

i}

|,

where
phere of a previous day,
Increase Clarke and his descendants lived for almost 200 years.
Lacking the standardized comessential
considered
pleteness
for modern student houses, Tenthat nothing
ney has something
could replace. This makes it of
older Norttregret to lovers of
ampton that the college had invaluable
tended destroying this
to have its
landmark in order
up-to-date alumnae
site for an
That it has been prebuilding.
served for the rest of us a little
least,
at
something,
longer is
for which to be grateful to the

depression.
The

yellow

brick

house

at

84

a bit of old
like
Again,
if houses could talk!
At / Elm, looking
by one of
set down
one
time
this was
called’
the { Annapolis
our inland streets, was lived in
‘George Bennett
-house.
Bennett
William LyGen.
in 1780 by.
jwas a tinsmith
and
made
the
— soldier
onary
Revoluti
a
‘;man,
jlittle box
containers
for
Paycongress.
of
member
a
son’s indelible ink. Afterwards. it| and
Later,

as

the

Edwards . church

was the home
of
Miss.
Sarah
it was home of the
parsonage,
Thayer.
Her
brothers
were
Rey. Gordon Hall.
among Northampton’s
many disat. the corner. of
In the house
tinguished
sons,“
William,
who,
lived
road
Paradise
Elm and
in 1853, was
on the New York
Northampton’s
Judd,
Sylvester
Evening
Post staff,
was
afterEarlier yet,
an.
wards
consul
general at Alex- )i'famed antiquari
an _ old
location of
the
was
it
andria, Egypt.
James
was pro-}|
opposite the Jewett
cider mill
ifessor
at
the
Harvard
law
oldes*
town’s
place, one of the
houses, removed when the CochMiss
rans’ house was built, for
:
Maltby.

|-

The Allen Ularke place, near-

er Washington,
was
long.
the
most
westerly
nomestead
it
Northampton.
The
oldest
South _ street
houses, with
projecting
upper
story
for
defense
in
Indian
attack,
are
the
second oldest
New England style.
Two and a
half story frame
houses,
‘with
roof sloping to the ground floor
at the rear.
Some
of the
old
houses of this type
in
Hadley
had their
doors
studded
with
nails
to
resist
tommyhawks.
Very likely that was a style here
also.

These

South

street

houses

must be rich in data that should
be saved. The first known building on this street was in 1696;
but may
have \yeen earlier, as
the first bridge
across Lickenwater
was
built years
before
that. And
before the bridge a
ford was in use about where the
Old South street footbridge is.
It would be
superfluous here
to detail about
your
beautifui
Betty Allen
house,
but not to
rejoice that you have preserved
such a fine specimen
of a truiy
Colonial home. It is also appropriate that
this
was
a Clapp
homestead, because those names,
Clark,
Clapp,
Parsons
and
Strong, are linkea with most of
these
18th century
homesteads
and they have continued a part |
of Northampton hfstory throughout

On

lower

Bridge

street

(said

by oldest residents
to have altered the least
of
any _ strect
here)
the Shephevd
and _
Hillman houses are among the oldest, and on upper Bridge, what
is left of Rose Tree Inn, the restored Colonial house
next
it,
and the old red house almost at
the bridge,
which was a tavern
and a stopping place of coaches
on the Boston and Albany route.
Several
other
Bridge
street
i pbouses must be a century old—
even
above
“the
Plain’’—the
sandy,
pine-wooded
tract
behind
which
was
set
apart
a
burying-ground in 1661 and has
been so used ever since.
Hawley street also
has
some
of the same period, though several of these
have
been
converted into tenements and their
generous
grounds
usurped
by

short. streets

and

houses

of later

date.
The Butler house
here
‘was
considered a very fine mansion.
The third New
England
style
were
gambrel.
roof
mansions.
These
were
considered
the
“highest type of architecture of
their time’ and, quietly elegani
and truly attractive,
were
fa-'
vored by the
aristocracy.
This
town had seven of these
built
during the
seventeen hundreds.
They were
called
“the
seven
wonders of Northampton.”
Two
are still standing--the
Hubbard
| house
on
upper’
Bridge
street
and the Sessions house.
Others
were
the
Stoddard
(where
the
Smith
chemistry
building stands),
the Osbornes’,
near
the corner
of King
and
Main (where the Misses Osborne
had a millinery parlor), Deacon
Hunt’s, the Dwights’
and
Gov.
Strong’s.

�I am

sorry

not

to find

more

This reminds me of an anet-|ineirs and other

houses here

about the John Hubbard
house.
dote in our family
of
the first have
rather
it is
overheard,
I cannot understand why people
use
of
tomatoes.
Supposedly}
\vorwhelming. Not only that ot
so eager to build replicas of old
the counleaders from ali over
were
they
red,
gone by when
mansions can let such
a beautistewed green and
were equaily
try,
but
is
an
indisputable
ful, authentic one as this tumbl?
disapproved of by all save Great
fact that
many
of
the earlier
away into such
neglect
that I
Seth, who, priding himseif,—$___
eS
always am in
fear
of
its de- | Uncle
on
being
“odd,”
maintained
that i citizens
of
Northampton
were
struction
before
a
deservedly ‘he liked them.
Perhaps he did.
of unusual
character,
intellect

happier

it.

preservation

overtakes

The Sessions house was built
about 1734 by
John
Hunt, of
the Hunt family that
since the}
earliest days of Elm
street had
a lot near Prospect.
His father,
Lt. Jonathan, lived 58 years on
the first lot before leaving it to
a married son to
himself move
to the upper lot. When he diei
in 1738
he left
20 poumds to
the
town
for the support
of
schools.
His son built the present house and also set
out the |
elms in that section, from which
the street takes its name. Northampton is
largely
indebted
to
these various Hunts for their interest in beautifying
the
town
and their love of
elm trees. A
few set out by them still stand,
including those about our house
on Old South street.
‘
John Hunt’s
daughter,
Martha,
married
Judge
Henshaw,
with which name the house was
illustriously
associated
for
69
years. It was altogether
in tho
‘Hunt family for 124 years—into
the fifth generation;
scene
of,
historic
and
social
memories,
For mdny years it was the home
of the late S. E. Bridgman. Here|
died
Mme. Henshaw’s
brother,

| John

Hunt,

who

for

fotr

years

Tea

here

drinking
about

Coffee

a

little

| Deen
exceptionally
politicallyminded in the most sincere and
earlier the same year. The first
vigorous sense.
Policies that inrecorded sale
of chocolate was
to Major Hawley
in 1769.
Ail fluenced a‘newly developing namuch disthis is not so far from the gam- tion must have been
cussed here,
brel-roof houses as it may have
In reading a life of Catherine
seemed,
Sedgewick, not long ago, I noted
The Dwight house, ‘the handhow her famous
father,
Theosomest in town,”
was
such
a
dore Sedgewick, friend of George
feature
of finest
old
North-

ampton
life that,
on
this account as well
as its beauty, it
is lamentable
that
it was — destroyed when
business’
worked
its way into King street.
It stood on the grant to John
King
of the
original
sixteen
settlers. It remained in the family
for five
generations,
from
1660 to 1807. It became known
as the Dwight place when
John
| King’s
granddaughter, . Experience, married
Colonel
Timothy
Dwight.
It
was wullt
in 1724
and had a_
staircase
from
the
John King home
in
Northampton, England,
The marriage
of
John King
and Sarah Holton
was the sec
ond
in
Northampton.
Their

great_grandson,
son of Experience King Dwight, married Jonathan Edwards’ daughter, Mary.

The

Dwights,~

three

were presidents of
the town
severai

of whom

Yale, gave to
distinguished

| was beloved
pastor
of the Old
South church, Boston. One year
citizens
and to other localities,
before the
Revolutionary
war |men prominent in various lines. |
he died from consumption, “the
Several
older
residents
hope of his parents,
his native
recall
the
Dwight
house,
town, Boston and the New Engwell
as
that
of Gov, Caleb.
land churches.”
Strong, after it was removed to
Deacon Ebenezer Hunt’s house | upper
ant __ street,
This
Pleasant
stood for
100 years
on Maiz | house first stood on
what from
street next the Edwards church
earliest
times (1668) was
the
and was burned in the fire that
Strong
homestead; extending
destroyed that
church in 1879.
from
Pleasant street to Hawley
Dr. Hunt’s was
the first
store
street. There was also
a_
tanhas | yard on the lot’
on Shop Row
and_
there
for nearly 100
been a drug business on the site
years.
ever
since.
It did
a thriving
Several- generations there had}
business all up and
down
this
preceded Caleb..
After Harvard)
valley.
It also
had a book dehe studied
law in the office of}
partment.
Maj.
Hawley.
Though
handi-}
As there
always
has been 2 capped by very poor eyesight, he |
close connection
between books
was one.
of the town’s greatest
and Northampton homes it may
men,
was delegate
to the first
not be
irrelevant to
note that
Congress in the
United
States,
since
1797
there
has
always
a member
of
the
committee |
been a book store on the site of forming the Constitution of the’
United States—one of
the
im-|
, Bridgman’s.
The Hunt
homestead
was a portant rulings
in which fs at-|
tributed
to
him — and
was!
part of the commen
or highway

‘until 1776. It camé into Deacoa
|Hunt’s
possession
.{n 1730 for

'130 pounds—about
$160 in the
‘depreciated
currency
of
that
| time. . This home—birthplace of
one of the three governors that

|Northampton
(Gov.

has

Hunt

of

of

the

-produced—-

Alabama)

dis-

|puted with the Tappans, a prominent .King~ street
family, possession

first

carpet

town.

in

The first
tea
was served in
the Dwight home
before 1746.
It was not called tea,
but ‘‘bohea.”
Unfamiliar
with its use,
the family steeped the
whole
quarter pound as an herb drink
and
found
it so bitter
they

threw

it away

in disgust.

appear to hav

a practic: |®24 force. They

became

1769.

eleven

times

elected

governor

of|

this state.
During
the
eighteenth
century
Northampton
contributed
to the nation at feast
four of
its most influential
men:
Jon-'
athan Edwards
(the only Amer‘ilean writer recognized
in
Europe, and a leadee
in metaphy-

sical

thought

of

the

world),}

President
Timothy Dwight, Ma-j
jor
Hawley
and
Gov.
calen/
Strong.
Not one
of
the
homes
of
these great men has been saved.
When
I think of these men's
mentality
and
influence,
and
that of the sort
Of visitors they
drew, and
think
of the
talk

Washington

(and

also

an

influ-

ential member of that first Congress)
used to come
over from
Stockbridge to see Northampton
friends.
History
now concedes
to Major Hawley
full _ entitlement to the fact that
he
was
considered
‘second
to
none”
among patriots
whose activities
determined the
revolution from
England in 1776.
house
What
‘a_
shrine
his
might
have
been!
This
was
‘about opposite Belding’s mill
on
Hawley
street,
then
Pudding
lane.
It is described as ‘‘a low
pbuilding with
a
wooden.
latch
and
latch-string
hanging
outside.’
A former
boy,
Francis
Brown, now editor - of - Current
History,
has written
the most
authentic life of Hawley.
There was a long
and bitter
quarrel between the cousins, Jo-

seph Hawley

and Jonathan bd-

tween

them,

including

which

notes

wards.

Letters

that

passed

be-

Hawley’s

manly
later
apology
to
Edwards, are of historical
importance,
It may be
interesting to say
that some, if not all,
of these,
as well ag
other
Hawley documents
(Most
likely
some
of
them
relating
to the revolt of
the
Colonies)
were
written,
| probably, at the
same desk on
for

this

paper

were

made.
Not long ago,
at
that
desk, I wrote to a publisher in
Boston, who had
written to me
‘that her desk
had
been John
Hancock’s. It was interesting, to
me, to think of
correspondence
still passing between
Northampton and Boston from those same
two deske.
In the late seventeen or early
‘eighteen hundreds, several stately houses of the so-called ‘‘Colonial’ style. were built in Northampton.
Like houses of similar
sort in the South—houses
with
big . columns,
verandas, . high
rooms,
halls extending through
the center from front to rear—
these are not “Colonial,”
but a
fashion influenced
by
Thomas
Jefferson in the first days of the
Republic.

True

Colonial

houses

in the

south
and
middle
states
are
most often of stone
or
brick,
are low and have
small rooms.
New
England
Colonial
houses
are those characteristic of Deer.
field and other old New England
towns, of which
we.
have
the
eightesnth century specimens on
South,
Bridge and Elm streets.
White painted
wooden
houses,
with sloping rear.

�the

By

the

way,

Revolution

five painted
ampton,

at

the Close or |

there

houses

in

were but
North-

~ Architecturally fine
specimens
lof latest eighteenth century type
in
Northampton
that
are
at
least 100 years old include the
Dewey on Smith campus and the
Capen
on
Prospect,
built
by
Judge Howe,
whose law school
was
attended
by
Franklin

Pierce, one of two presidents of
the nation to live in Northamp-

ton. : Here also lived Josiah Gilbert Holland,
afterwards editor
of
the
Springfield
Republican
and then of Scribner’s magazine,
when he came
to attend school
in Northampton.
Others are the

Burnham

school,

once

home

of

Bancroft’s
History
of
the Allen house (hume of R.E. EG=|
United
States was
partly writwards),
the city’s
finest speciten in a room in
Rogers
hall,
men of a stately earlier mansion.
Clarke school,
when
this
was
William Allen
was president of
| the seat of the Bancroft-Cogswell
Bowdoin
and
instigator
of
school.
Before
that
three
of
Northampton’s
200th
anniverthese
buildings,
afterwards
sary in 1854.
joined together,
were beautiful
on the site of
Rahar’s
Inn,
homes
of members of the. Shepand
almost
on
the first
jail,
herd family.
| the site of the first tavern here,
In a tiny house on lower Mas- t kept by John Wevpd,
was built
sasoit.street, Arthur Mason, the | near the middle of the last century
for Captayn Enos Parsons,
writer of real sea stories, lived
who was one of a syndicate who
one winter about ten years ago.
bought a Hunt home that stood,
But if one mentioned
all the
with its beautiful
gardens and
Northampton
houses,
old
and
orchards,
‘where
City hall war
snodern, out
of
which
books
built. The first jail was sold in
have
come,
that
would
pe 2
1760 and for twelve years aftersubject of itself.
wards there was
no jail
here,
Another old
eighteenth
cenuntil one was
built of logs on
||tury house
that became a mod‘lower Pleasant street, about opernized
home,
is
the Lyman
posite the entrance
to Holyoke
home on
Foft hill.
Originally
street.
the Starkweather house, it stood
When Capt. Enos Parsons took
on the corner of South and High
over the land,
first bought by
streets, Built in 1787, it was octhe syndicate, -he sold the Main
cupied
for
four generations of
street corner
to Winthrop Hillthe family for nearly 100 years.
yer, founder of
-the Hillyer art
For a time,
while
still on its
gallery. Calvin Coolidge, as well
original location, it was lived in
as many other
prominent local
by one
of the
first groups of
and visiting persons, took meals
Smith girls to manage their own

Thomas Napier, The Boise, now
the James house, People’s Institute; the Damon
house, now K.
of C., on Bridge street, and. our
house, on South svreet, built by
Dr. Hunt on the lot behind the
Main
street
house
and
drug
store.
This
(long
a _ doctor's
house) is supposed
to
be
the
one described in Beecher’s novel,
“Norwood.”
J. G. Holland also
lived
in this
house,
probably
house. The Fort hill house that
when a medical student, as both
E. H. R. Lyman,
donor of the
Dr. Hunt
and
Dr.
Thompson,
academy, lived in,
and the Luwho married
Dr. Hunt’s daughcien Williams
house,
through
ter, had such young men studywhich lot Dewey court now runs,
ing with them.
were
occupied
by
the
WhitAnother charm
of the place,
marsh brothers, prominent manto me, is how well 1t must have
ufacturers here
in their
time.
been known to
Esther
Mather
An Indian fort was built by perwhen a young bride.
She came
mission of the town in
the lointo the almost wilderness when
eality in 1670.
:
this
part
of
it
became
the
The
round
house’
on Mapie
Mather farm.
street was built over
a century
Another house that always has
ago by Seth Strong, who fought
stood on Mather farm ground is
in the war of 1812 and was a
a large two tenement
house on
‘member
of
the : legisiature in |
Armory
street.
One
of North1833.
ampton’s most beautiful
houses,
the
I
should
like to know
interior »
and with the beautiful
date of that
picturesque
little
woodwork characteristic of these
red brick house
next
door to
older mansions,
it
stood
first
this, in which
a Clarke family
where the postofiice now is, and
lived
for
several
generations.
was.
known
as
the.
Kirkland
This is much
the
style of the
house,
and
berore
that,
the
actual Coicnial
houses in
Vir- |
Judge Hinckley
home.
Its garginia, including
that
of Mary,|
den also is said to
have
been
mother
of
George,
Washingbeautiful
and famed
for
Mrs.
ton.,
Hinckley’s
peonies.
Pleasant
The Norwood
apartments instreet was
then
Northampton’s
clude what was
the
home
of
“Court street,”
as the
leading
John
Clarke,
founder
of the
residential street was characterClarke school.
A little
above,
ized.
Other fine
residences are
Admiral
Inn,
is the birthplace
the Butler and
Lathrop houses
of Admiral Cook.
on Bridge
street,
and
Senator
Almost every house on lower
Bates’ house on
North - street,
Bridge street is locally historic.
which was moved there from the
The home
of Miss Jane Smith’
Butler lot,
Delano place, Bleak
was built in 1814 by her gran4d-|
house, home of grandparents of
father,
Captain
Isaac
Damon,|
President
Roosevelt.
Several | builder of bridges
and of pubhouses
of this
group could be
lic buildings in this and
Berkincluded with
the many Northshire
counties.
Originally,
it
ampton
houses
of distinguished
had a
railing
all
around
the
residence.
roof, like that now
around the
A very
old,
truly
Colonial
roof
of
the
porch
entrance.
house, that comes
under more
Capt.
Damon
built
the
Old
than one of these classifications,
church that, until burned in the |
is
‘“Tarry-a-While,”
Paradise
seventies,
was
an. architectural |
road. Mr. Cable moved
this old
glory of the
Connecticut
vaiClarke home from
Elm
street
ley. He did not build many prifor his own home when he laid| vate residences, but we have at
out Dryads
Green.
Like Rex erat | least one other of his workmanof these old houses, this has a/| ship
in
the
rectory
of
the
Mr. Cable's| French church
beautiful staircase.
on King street.
t
later novels were written here.
This was home of Erastus Hopkins, whose
eloquence
charmed
the
Hungarian
Kossuth,
whw
, Was among famous visitors here.
‘King street has, in the President

SS

ia

at Rahar’s

and

the

brilliant

con-

appearance,

may

versation
about
those
tables
then is still quoted.
Moreover, this house is where
was received the news
of
discovery
of
the North Pole, the
secretary of the Arctic exploration being a guest
there at ths
time.
The brick house next the Socony garage on
Pleasant street
was the home
of Dr. Sylvester
Graham,
an eccentric
character
and originator of Graham bread.
Before that, this was
the home
of Senator Eli Ashnum,
whose
wife was the youngest daughter
of John Hooker.
This,
though
now

altered

in

be an early
eighteenth century
house. At the time of the 250th
anniversary in 1904,
the Jame
House was arranged
as an old
time
mansion,
with
valuable;
loaned from these
old
North
ampton

homes.

Among

almos'

priceless articles were
furniture
used by
Hawley
and’
Strong
‘once, a table supposedly
, Esther
*Mather’s, and
the
cane
with
which
John
King
must
many
times have
walked
down.
the
street named for
him
in _ the
town supposedly
named
in his
honor.
Several houses here still possess furniture.
of Gov. Strong's.
We
have
andirons
of English
brass that were his and
furniture that he must have been familiar with, as he and his great

grandfather

were

intimates,

liv-;

ing on adjoining
Yots on Pleasant street, and must often have&gt;
been in each other’s homes.
As to those old homes
gone;
fortunately,
in some _ instances,

pictures

and

descriptions

sur-

vive, as well as records of their|
soeial life. On Main street alone
were the fine
old
mansions of
Judge Lyman,
two
families of
Hunts,
Theodore
Strong,
Caled
Strong,
and
Miss
Polly
Pomeroy.

�attracted|

of the scenery

to] beauty

there was time

I wish

quote more from these
records,
many visitors, . . .” She says: of:
but I must confine to one house,
enjoyment
“Social
her father:
the life
of which
1s fully and
was his. great, in fact, his only,
fascinatingly told by Mrs. Susan
recreation, and the sound of the
Lesley in
‘‘Reminiscences of My
stage horn at eventide was like
Mother,”
a book
of delight to
a war horse.
martial music to
lovers of Northampton.
I quote
His face would glow in the evefirst
from
the
Reminiscences
become
step
his
light,
ning
of the
late
Henry Gere,
long
hat from
alert. He reached his
editor of the Gazette,
as he re- | the tree in the hall and hastened
membered it:
at the tavern before
out to be
“In the
very
heart
of
the
a
With
appeared.
stage
the
;town, almest
in touch with its
would
he
shining countenance
principal
tavern,
was
Judge | return to tell of the
fine people

Lyman’s

beautiful

home, a, | who had arrived; how he had of-

square-framed, two story house,
with a wing on each side, some

tower-

among

set

back,

distance

a barn,
with
trees,
ing shade
shed and large dooryard to the
the main
west, all fronting on
easterly
the
In_
thoroughfare.
front yard ther®
corner ef the
was a large syringa bush, which
fragrance and
gave
in summer
dwellers . within
Leauty to the
trees
The
passersby.
and the
_horseand
were elms, locusts
deLesley’s
(Mrs.
chestnuts.
@
“Almost
adds:
seription
a fence In
was
There
grove.)
Lyman
Judge
front. ... Here
lived nearly all his life; here he
here the people of
entertained;
and poor
rich
the town came,
alike, as children come to their
were - peace,
here
and
home;
hapand
comfort, contentment
In|
abundance.
rare
| piness, in
Lyman’s|
of Judge
years
|the
‘prime of life, 1811 to 1840, his
best
the
of
home was center~
Mr.
social life in Northampton.”
list of the
a long
Gere gives
then notable residents, and conwas a common
‘There
tinues:
feeling of kinship among all the
respect
with
people, cemented

fered his carriage and horses to
Mr. A.
or
Mrs.
B.
and_
her
daughters to go
up the mountain. the next day;
how he had
invited this friend
to breakfast
with him, another to tea.
Most
often he came. home with sonve
person
in ill health, or in sorrow, not likely to be quite com-

fortable

at

the.

tavern

meadows,

near

Williams

trast

with

shall

return

the

to,

abiding

for

age

there.

home

was

distinguished

hospitality

Both

were

‘entertainers.

places

with

and electric light
to
enters.
one
instant
these
miprovements,
people usin
them

|wife

street.

The first
little band of settlers
that came from
Connecticut in
May,
1654,
spent
their
first
night on the east side of Pleasant street.
Did
they
rest
in
tents or in the open?
However it was,
what a con-

everyknew
Everybody
good.
body in the town. It was indeed
self
and_
a remarkably happy
respecting
community.
Judge

the

and,

‘Wouldn’t
it be well to send Hiram for their trunks,
‘and tell
them to
come right here?’ To
which my~
mother’s
quick
response,
‘Why, of course, that's
the only thing to do,’ made him
entirely happy as he hurried off
to summon his guests.”
In early days there was a tradition that
before
there
was
any settlement here
an Engiish
family in 1652 spent the winter
in what is now the Bridge stree\

we

their

va-

touch
With
are

the
al}

the wise and th® rjed decoration, latest plumbing,

for the aged,

Lyman’s

|,

worthy

maintained

the judge and

specially
Many

gifted

people

and

then. those

willingness

Times
to

the

ear

endure

his made the founding of these later
43

from

homes

safe

and

possible?

and the Berkshire hills|

Boston

peoalso the prominent
'eame;
regions.
ple of the surrounding
came from|
who
those
Among
Rey. James Free- |
were
Boston
Em- |}
Ralph Waldo
man Clarke,

and

erson

the

Dr.

Rev.

Edward |

latchstring
The
Hale.
Everett
was always hanging outside the
rarely a
was
there
door and
was
visitor
some
meal when
not present at the family table.
that the keeper of
It is related
complained
tavern
the village
that he could not make tavernbecause
possible
there
keeping
invited so many
Judge Lyman
to town to his
the visitors
‘of
house.”
Mrs. Lesley writes:
rich
no very
were
“There
but
Northampton,
in
people
many persons of elegant culture,
refined and aristocratic manners
and possessing a moderate comin much
there
lived
petence
ease, envying no one, really befa- |
highly
themselves
Mieving
vored,

ticing

ali

as

a

they

generous

times.....

were,

and

prac-

hospitality

The

at

matehless

|

eee

�</text>
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                  <text>History of residents of the Town of Worthington and of town affairs.</text>
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            <element elementId="41">
              <name>Description</name>
              <description>An account of the resource</description>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85148">
                  <text>These scrapbooks consist of newspaper clippings largely from the Hampshire Gazette and Springfield Republican newspapers taken by Ms. Bartlett over the approximate period 1927 - 1960.  As the scrapbooks are scanned and optically character recognized, additional scrapbooks will be added to the collection. There are several scrapbooks in the archive that have not been digitized; those are not members of this collection.&#13;
Some of these items are bound books and others loose-leaf binders. Loose-leaf binders are scanned with a professional flat bed scanner with the result that optical character recognition is of reasonable accuracy. Books are scanned photographically with the result that optical character recognition is less accurate.</text>
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                </elementText>
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              <name>Creator</name>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85152">
                  <text>Worthington Historical Society</text>
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                <elementText elementTextId="85153">
                  <text>2021-12-09</text>
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    <itemType itemTypeId="14">
      <name>Physical Object</name>
      <description>Physical objects other than books, documents, photographs &amp;c.&#13;
</description>
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    <elementSetContainer>
      <elementSet elementSetId="1">
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          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67675">
                <text>1936-1940</text>
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          <element elementId="94">
            <name>Date Created</name>
            <description>Date of creation of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67676">
                <text>1937</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="41">
            <name>Description</name>
            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67677">
                <text>Elsie Venner Bartlett (1878-1968) scrapbook. 'Elsie Bartlett 1936 - 1940'. This is a brown book with hard covers. Newspaper clippings of accounts of people and historical events in and around Worthington.</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="42">
            <name>Format</name>
            <description>The file format, physical medium, or dimensions of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67678">
                <text>21.6 x 27.9 x 1.3 cm (8.5 x 11 x 0.5 in)</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="43">
            <name>Identifier</name>
            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67679">
                <text>SCR08</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="108">
            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="67680">
                <text>Box 13</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="128">
            <name>Provenance</name>
            <description>A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67681">
                <text>Elsie Bartlett</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67682">
                <text>Scrapbook - Elsie Bartlett scrapbook, 1936-1940 No. 8</text>
              </elementText>
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                <text>Book</text>
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            <name>Subject</name>
            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
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              <elementText elementTextId="76914">
                <text>Scrapbook</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
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                <text>Elsie Bartlett</text>
              </elementText>
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          <element elementId="45">
            <name>Publisher</name>
            <description>An entity responsible for making the resource available</description>
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                <text>Barlett family</text>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="85431">
                    <text>SS Se

F

)

a es

StS

es

,

en ee

ony

�Rs

I

ee

Crew of Yankee After World Trip

On

the

deck

of

the

schooner

Yankee

in Gloucestér yesterday, its
months round-the-world trip.

crew

posed

Springfield

for

pictures

Union

after

Photo

an

18

Historical = ae

Wa.
orthington,

—

STORAGE

POCKET

FOR

CLIPPINGS

4}. ity Spc
+ #35,

JI

07098

—

MADE

IN U. S. A»

�‘Ate | Home Again

~ Seafaring Johnsons

It’s home

again

for members

of the

peregrinating

Johnson

family

who

sailed

Springfield

into

Union

Photo

Gloucester

on

the

schooner Yankee yesterday afternoon.
Left to right: Capt. Irving Johnson, five-years-old Arthur Johnson,
Mrs.
Mrs. Irving . Johnson,
two-years-old Robert sonra
a a
une
A. Johnson, mother of the skipper.

Bars Move

Offer

Cruises;

Secheoner

ment

By

and

Capt. Johnson

Own

Francis

Services

May

to Gov-

Merrigan

GLOUCESTER, April 27—The globe-girdling voyages of
Capt. Irving Johnson’s Yankee came to an end today as the
craft entered Gloucester in a driving northeast gale after

covering 40,000 miles, during which .the one-time Dutch pilot
pore

several

times

nations.
“The

cruises

are

Johnson
ruefully
noon,
explaining

conditions
of

faced

all

over,”

the

readied

Capt.;verse

from

hinder

said,

|his

lecture

such

the

tour,

are

but he indicated

own

services

Yankee

to

ship

of

belligerent

to shore

admitted this after-|rain.
While the majority
that
present
war|tection
in
oilskins,
Mrs.

a trip.

r

:

Actual plans for the future, outside} Johnson,
a

guns

and

the

incomplete,

he

he will offer}

the

services

Government.

skipper,

of

Hadley,

appeared

in a driving

sought proClifton
A.

Ey

on

mother

deck

of

garbed

the

in

of}

@ green ski suit and blue beret.
Carnations
for
tne
men
and

cor-

It}

Sages

sent

for

the

Women

were

could be used as a training vessel, in| aboard by Mr. and Mrs, Arthur A.
|the merchant masine service or the} Johnson of Springfield, brother and

| Coast

|

Guard,

With

that

the

a

Leen

A

a

he

said.

touch

schooner,

«f

=

ae

driving

| sister-in-law

pride

now‘

ee
4

rain

swept

he

related

44 3 years old,
ca
ao

this

fishing}

community
as
the
Yankee
sought}
refuge in the calm waters of the har-|
bor
from a
45-mile-an-hour
north-}
easter
which
blew
owt the foresail.
The storm was of such intensity that}
Capt. Johnson brought the trim white!

eraft into the harbor several hours
earlier than the scheduled 2 p. m,
Tieing

; Wharf,

up

the

at

the

Yankee

Jacobs

lobster

immediately

pool

ran

lup
the
yellow
quarantine
flag
and
for the first couple of hours the large
number
of
friends
and
relatives
of
those
on
board
were
foreed
to con-

of

the

At completion’

oo
qaoctor,

of

skipper.

the

customs

=

oe Oo=
rae e
Capt, ee
Johrsor
schooner across the harbor to Rocky
Ledge
where
several
hundred
rela-

tives,

friends

and

well-wishers

|

Many “Adventures

Yankee Ends World Trip
In Storm at Gloucester
War

|

were

jinea up to greet the voyagers. Many
came
on
board
to inspect
the Yankee
and
photographers
took
advantage of the arrival to line up members
of the crew
in various poses despite
the
pelting
rain.

Later, Capt. Johnson and drenched
Teporters
gathered
in
one.
of
the
cabins
to relate
the
adventures
encountered during the 18 months trip.
Although
the number
and
variety
of the adventures make it difficult to
high-light
any
particular
one,
Capt.
Johnson
related
with
obvious
relish
a volcano-climbing
expedition
in the
Solomon
Islands,
in which
the
Yankee cruised three weeks,
During this
time,
several
members
of
the
crew
ascended
only
a
few
hundred
»feet
from
‘the tep of Tinikula,
an active
voleano
erupting
periodically.
Admitting
that one reason
for the
trip was
the desire
to get
“scared”’
and
enjoy
the
after-elfects
of
the
“scare,”
Capt.
Jobnson
said
the
group climbed
up the windward
side|
where
the eruption
of red-hot
rocks
which
skyrocketed
into the sky and}
back into the sea was not likely to be
After
witnessing
the
belching|
felt.
phenomenom,
the inen
started
down
the mountain.
Reaching a point some
distance
down
the
mountain,
they
turned
to see a shewer
of boulders
cover the spot upon which they only
recently
stood
“It was.a, good thing for us. we got
out of there when we did,” chuckled
Capt. Johnson.
Many

Warships

Seen

War
preparations are noticeable in
many ports throughout the world, the
skipper said.
For example, many warships
were
sighted
in
Cape
Town
South
Africa,
Singapore
and
other
bases.
Two
weeks were spent in the
Cape
Town
area
and
the
types™
of
soldiers ranged from Scots to turbanwearing natives.
The Hadley
resident, who shot ‘35,000 feet of colored movies,
used special
underwater
apparatus
to photograph
a sunken
warship
off
Singapore.
The
Yankee
maneuvered
50
close to the scene of the sinking, he
said,
that
lazily
rolling
mines
were
visible from the apparatus.
Only
one
section,
Zanzibar,
was
found to be entirely blacked out during the ehtire trip, Johnson reported,
although
lights
in other areas
were
dimmed considerably,
Although
the crew
had made elaborate preparations
for their stay
on
board,
not one
boatload
of Nazi
or
Fascist ‘sailors whose ships had gone
|; down, was to be seen.
Nor were any
submarines sighted on the high seas
during the trip.

|.

�194i

“In State Tourney Opening Friday

is the group

from

ty

Students Given
Special Awards

26

Mrs. Warner Honored by
High School Personnel
June

16—At

from

with
the

Pro

hammered

pupils.

merito

were

poviez,

Mary

Culver,

Schools

Hign

Sacred

Daniels,

Faith

Dresser,

by

tificates

Mrs.

of

Warner

senatorship

included:

to

the

cer-

ton,

Na-

feé

tional Student Congress, held in May
at Lexington, Ky., to Lucius Merritt,

Jr., and

Russell

Bisbee;

degree

of ex-

cellence
for earning
118
points,
the
largest number of points ever won at
this school, to Lucius Merritt, Jr.:
oT
of h
for 75 points, Russell
, —~ omen
Robert Newell;
44
POS
its
Nee
y restee
of
merit,
Fai
Dresser
ida. Miner;

degree of merit and N. F. L. key to
Charles Walker, member of the faculty and coach of debaters and senaters.

entered

School,

Heart

Stoneham,

and

WILLIAMSBURG,

in-

24—Twen-

registered

for

of

are:

the

Hopkins

Holyoke,

Lowell,

give

|

an

oration

on

Sylvia
Knight,

Clary,
Irene

Russell
Bisbee,
four
subjects,

Ashton

Jean
Metz,

Faith
Velma

Sincage,

Mildred

¥ artlett,

William

Bisbee,

in

three.

Dresser:
Brown,

Crone,
Shirley
Florence Pack-

Rustemeyer,

Dorothy

Warner;

Arlene

Shaw,

subjects,

Sabo,

Jean
:

uc

osépltine
Cerepovicz,
Betty
amon,
Ruth Dodge, Millard Hathaway,
Rita

|

Kulash, Anne Lloyd, Robert Munson,
Phclna.._Packard
Constance
Penn,
Norma
Marion
Sabo, Lester
Shaw,
Wells.

Academy,

Springfield

Williamsburg,

Shrewsbury.~

138—The

in five subjects, Hloise Rart-

ard,

Northampton|

March

cludes:
le

South

Holden,

Dur-

——
—Williamsburg
at
students
eLoc al
with
will graduate
who
School
High
who will
honors are Thelma Packard,

|

participate

high
school
honor
roll for the
last
five-week period as posted today in-

Hadley,
Braintree,
Quincy,
Agawam,
Southbridge,
Groton,,
Barnstable,|
Rockland,
Concord,
Wellesley,
New
Bedford,
South
Worcester,
Charleton,
East
Bridgewater,
Leominster,
Graf-

Rita Kulash, Lida Miner and Phyllis
Sutherland.
Forensic League awards, |
made

Entered

March

are

attending.

Commercial,

Cere-|

will

14° At High School

ampton
High School Friday and Saturday,
according
to
announcement
today by Mark
S. Rand
of the local
faculty,
chairman
of the state
com- |
mittee
of
.the . National
Forensic
League.
It. ig expected
there will he
more
‘than
150
contestants
and
30}

award-

Josephine

schools

coaches

who

Honors Listed

eae

Richard

School

Massachusetts
state
speech
and
debating
tournament
to be at
North-

the |,

ed by Miss Anne T. Dunphy,
princeipal, to seniors as follows: Russell Bis-

bee,

Schools

State Event

NORTHAMPTON,

aluminum base |)

certificates

High

ty-six

final high school assembly Mrs. Raymond
Warner,
for 17 years a mem:
ber of the Williamsburg High School
faculty
and
who
resigned,
was
presented. by the senior class president,
Robert Newell, with a four-piece silver tea set, a gift from
the faculty|
and superintendent, and a glass fruit |

dish

High

Speech, Debating
—
Contest Planned

iamsburg

WILLIAMSBURG,

Williamsburg

League in the Northampton High School Friday and
Clary, Ruth Beebe, Mrs. Raymond
Warner, State
standing, Charles Walker, coach of debating, Charles
Newell, Miss Marjorie Damon, coach of oratory. The
Lucius Merritt, Jr, will be entrants in the declamagroups.

graduation

night;

n
Charles Bartlett, who has been chose
e
to give the class prophecy, and Elois
Will,
elass
the
Bartlett,

cmd

25—Above

eee

March

in the state teurnament of the National Forensic
Saturday.
Seated left to right, Lida Miner, Sylvia
N. F. L. sponsor, Mary Daniels, Constance Granger;
Bartlett, Lucius Merritt, Jr., Russell Bisbee, Robert
boys will enter the debating contest, the girls and
tions

feet

WILLIAMSBURG,

tthe

Worthington
Students
graduating|
from high schools include:
Rita Gag-|
./non and
Nacine Higgins from
Huntingion
last night;
Thelma
Packard,|
Eloise Bartlett and Charles
M. Bart-|
lett
from
Williamsburg
last
night;|
Kenneth
Paul from Scarsdale tonight|
and Phyllis Packard from Nor thamp- |
ton on June 23.

�APRIL 24,

1941

Leave for “Congress”

Tomorrow

Spence

LUCIUS MERRITT, JR.
“WILLIAMSBURG, April 23—Lucius

of Williamsburg High
educational adyenture

School leave Friday by
into a mock American

Representatives

Their

almost

all

everything

those

that

does.

chapters

of

the

the

real

auto for an exciting
Congress which has

American

Senate

Forensic

League

election

National

Photos

RUSSELL BISBEE
Merritt, Jr., and Russell Bisbee

was

by

and

a state-wide

and the vote was unanimous except for one chapter.

House

eligible

ballot
to

of

of

vote

They will be ac-

companied by Supt. L. A. Merritt.
The Student Congress meets
concurrently with the National Forensic League’s National Tournament in Lexington, Ky., the week of April 28 and they will stop
in Washington on their way home.

Leave for State Tournament
44a

WILLIAMSBURG,
March 25—Members of the high school Forensic
Club with their coach, Miss Annetta Barrus, and the state sponsor,
Mrs.
Raymond Warner, left at the close of school this afternoon to
participate in the state tournament of the National Forensic League
at Barnstable High School in Hyannis, Friday and Saturday. These
competing are shown aboye, except for Sylvia Clary, who was absent
when

the

picture

Sabo,

Ruth

Beebe, Betty Damon;
standing,
Barrus, coach, Audrey Jones and

was

taken:

left

to

right,

Thelma

Packard,

Charles
Bartlett,
David West.

Arlene

Miss

�941)
TOWER-S28% WEDDING |
174 AT WORTHINGTON

BRIDE ON JUNE 14

JULY 16,1 941

Worthington,
April
26—Miss
Dorothy
Eddy
Tower,
daughter.
of
Mr

and

ried

Mrs

Walter

tonight

at

BK.

her

Tower

home

was.

to

mar-

Howard|

A.
Beebe
of
Haydenville
by
Rev
J.
Herbert
Owen
with
the
double-ring
service.
Mrs
George
E.. Torrey,
Jr.,
ayed the wedding music. The bride's
| sown was white organdie and the
|
||

|

WORTHINGTON,
May
27—In-vitations
have
been
mailed
for
the wedding
on June
14 of Miss
Marvis
C.
Snyder,
daughter
of
Selectman
Henry
H. Snyder and
Mrs.
Snyder
of
this
town
and
Arthur
Rolland,
son of Mr.
and
Mrs. Joseph Rolland of. this town.
Rev. J, Herbert
Owen,
pastor of
the First Congregational
Church,
will perform the single ring ceremony in the garden of the Snyder
home at 4 p. m. Miss Snyder has
chosen
Miss
Marjorie
Stone
of
‘Springfield as her bridesmaid. The
bridegroom
will
.be attended
by
Hdward Britt of Northampton.

MRS

|

|

WORTHINGTON

Worthineton:

|

June

.14—Miss

Marvis

Selectman
of
daughter
Snyder,
\C.
Snyder,
Mrs
and
Snyder
H.
| Henry
|was
married
this
afternoon
at
4 in|
{the

garden

of

their

home,

to

Arthur

Rolland,
son
of Mr-and
Mrs
Joseph
|R land
of this town by
Rev
J. HerPpert-Owen,
with the. single ring ceremony.
Miss Snyder, who is a graduate
j}of Northampton
gh school and Mc- !
Carthy
Business school of Northamp-}
| to
re a white chiff
all-over vol-}
tapes gown
with
; eeu
Teak lerie, |
| princess front
to emphasize the slen-|

}der

jlong
and

fitted

=

puffed

shoulders,|

fitted sleeves and extremely wide|
long train with an imported. silk

jillusion

5

midriff,

veil, fingertip

length,

blue

yeil

carried

neckline,
with

pink

long

tiara

roses,

bishop

of

Miss.

flowers

Viola

BEEBE

bridemaid,
Miss
Syivia
Thayer
of}
Jaydenville,
wore
blue
taffeta.
The}
\ bride’s
flowers
were
white roses
and
car'bridemaid
the
and
peas
sweet
was
home
The
peas.
sweet
ried pink
decorated
with
early
spring
flowers.
Charles.
Beebe
of Goshen
attended
his
brother
as «best
man.
Both
Mr
and

Mrs.

Beebe

are

sraduates

of

Northof
scnool
Vocational
Smith
at. the
is employed
he
and
ampton
| Prophylactic Brush
shop in Florence.
short
wedding
trip, mMr and.
:
5
i
sbe will live with
the bride’s
parents,

-_
|

194

ENGAGED

ise
TO WED

|

scailoped

| hottom, attached to a halo of flowers.
She carried a cascade of white
rc 33,
The
maid
of honor,
Miss
Marjorie
Stone of Springfield, wore a gown
of
hive*chiffon with insets
of lace,
round

Shivved

A.

EVES. |
and

Mason,|

one of
bridemaids,
wore an aqua}
silk margt
te full
irt with tight}
bodice, Jon
jishop sleeves,
lace trim
aqua
veil,
fastened
with
flow-|
€
and earried
talisman
roses. Miss]
Barbara
Burt, a bridemaid, wore pink}
marquisettes
and
lace,
square
neck, }
full skirt, short
puffed
sleeves,
pink

| Short puff sleeves, full
skirt, tiara of}
flowers and carried a basket of roses,
Richard
Fuller, was ring bearer,
Arthur Rolland,’ a native of Adams,
was
attended
by
Edward
Britt
of]
Northampton.
The
ushers
were
Ray-|
jmond
Bradford
of
Williamsburg
and}
| William
Hall of
Northampton.
Miss
Snyder was given in marriage by her|

wae e

Roney

H. Snyder.

Grace M. Doty

Becomes Bride

march
for
the
recessional.
After
a
buffet
supper
the couple
left on an
unannounced
wedding
trip and upon
their return they will live in a home
which is furnished for them in Christian hollow.

wedding

of

Miss

Doty,

daughter

of

Mr.

|

|
|

|

|

|

-

MISS
CAROLYN
PATTISON
nae
e
WORTHINGTON,
Sept. 12--Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
T. Ames
of this
town announce the engagement of
their
daughter,
Carolyn
Marie
Pattison,
to Charles
DeAngelus,
son
of Myr. and Mrs. Joseph De-

Angelus of Dalton.
-

Grace
and

non
Doty
of Riverdale
Springfield,
and
Ralph
land,
J.

son

of

Cleveland

West

Mr.
of

Springfield,

terday

afternoon

Miriam|

Mrs.

and

Mrs.

William

Prospect
took
at

Ver-

Street,
West
Dean
Cleve-

place

the

Avenue,
at

home

4 yesof

the

bride’s aunt, Mrs. Arthur lL. Abell. of
Riverdale Street. Rev. Harry L. Oldfield performed
the ceremony,
using
the single-ring service,
The
bride
wore
a gown
of white
marquisette
with puffed
sleeves, full
skirt and short train. She had a finger-tip veil fastened to a Dutch
cap,
and
carried
a bouquet
of gardenias
centered with two white orchids,
Miss Dorothy Schoolcraft, who was
her maid
of honor, was costumed
in
pink taffeta, made
in princess style,
and carried pink roses and blue del-

phinium.

ced George |

4“.
Torrey,
Jr.,
gave
a short
music
recital before
the service and
played),
the
“Lohengrin’’
wedding
march
for
the processional. and the Mendelssohn

ay

The

Her

other

attendant,

Mrs.

Robert
Pratt
of Northampton,
wore
blue taffeta and carried yellow roses
and
blue
delphinium.
Each
wore
a
coronet of flowers matching her bouquet.
Mrs. Doty, mother of the bride, was
attired in black chiffon and lace with
bolero
jacket
and
a corsage
of
orchids.
Mrs.
Cleveland,
who
also!
wore
orchids,
was
dressed
in royal}
purple crepe, and
Mrs.
Abell.
was
dressed in aqua lace with corsage of
yellow roses.

veil with tiara
of flowers. She earried
red
roses.
Bleanor
Ducharme,
the
flower
girl,
wore
pink
taffeta,
with}
=

|

|

TT,
lonVnel
oe
AT

HOWARD
a

Miss Pattison

attended the High School of Commeree
in
Springfela.
Mr.
DeAngelus was: graduated from Dalton High School, and is employed
by the Crane Co, in Dalton,
The
wedding will be an event of early
October.

William Cleveland served his brother as best man,
After their wedding. trip Mr. and
Mrs. Cleveland will make their home
at 1716 Riverdale Street.
Both were
educated
School,

at

the

West

Springfield High

�Its) Worthington

Worthington

June

29—The

decorated

with

by

summer

Emerson

flowers

J.

and

|J.

choir,

~

|/was

this

to

be

“using

our

also

are

declared

capable

to

its

all

of

best,

the

good

The
movies

human

inspiring

yet

three

tees

L

bless-

way

Gertrude

tive

service

from
have

7 a. m. to 9 p.
become 21 since

home

has

Marston

who

will

of

F.

be

been

visiting

of

registration

draft
H.

Tuesday

Burr,

in

|

town

Earl

J.

Robinson

and

the

who

and

cannot

Friday,

friends

clerk,

who

Mrs.
Lewis
mittee, Miss

Zarr;
missionary
Elsie Bartlett, Mrs,

comHar-

she

attend

will

school

have

the

the

Miss

Marion

L.

lof the Carew

by

Hilo

the

Mrs.

and

\field,
Street

at

on

the

graduation

on

exhibition

of the
entertained
12
faculty
with
a picnic

Tuesday.

Miss

Jane

Jamestown,

mer
jand

principal

Street School in Spring-

Worthington
Ann

N.

Y.,

to

Carew)

Country

Sears

has

spend

H.

§,

Cole,

and

and

Miss

Miss Elsie

Part-

resolutions
Porter, Sr.,

Arthur

Arthur

G,

Capen.

the
i

last

comMrs.

Au-.

Women's

Bénevolent

|!

Liebenow;

supper

Club}

gone

the

with her uncle and aunt,
Mrs, Robert Clemments.

to

sum-

Mr.

orator,

WORTHINGTON,

Mrs.

May

Howard

Donald
Stanley

Worthington

Mrs,

28—Mr.

and|

Lester

Grange

C.

Tuesday

LeDuc

of

night,

Chester-|

field, a former master of Worthington
|
Grange,
assisted
with
the
singing. |
State Deputy Raymond P. Warner of
Williamsburg
was
the inspecting
officer and other speakers included Mrs.
}

Lou

C.

Sweet,

a

member

of

State

Community
Service
Committee
and|
‘the
masters
of
the
other
Granges
present.
Guests attended from Cummington, Williamsburg, Chester
, Huntington and Chesterfield,

Phillips

Girl

Will Wed

man W. Besse

and

Mrs:

Bugene

Providence;

hav

J.

‘Phillips

announeed

the

Brewster

of

Washineton.

Miss

WGYh

MISS OWENISWED
TO HILTON WHITNEY
WORTHINGTON,

Doris

Ruth

Owen,

J. Herbert Owen
this town, became

and
the

24 —Miss

of

Rev.

and Mrs.

Ray-

Owen
of
of Hilton

mond Whitney of Hartsville,
ble-ring
ceremony
Saturday
in
Hope
Congregational

in a douat
12.30!
Church,

son of Mr.

Springfield.

{

March

daughter
Mrs.
bride

R. Whitney,

|

Beebe,
Norman Eady, |
Pomeroy,
Elinor
Eddy
and!
Neil
were
initiated
into!

L.

os Worthington

Pease;

94)

mother,

engagement
of. their. daughter,
Mis:
Mary
Louise
Phillips,
to
-Kingman
Brewster,
Jr,
son.
.of
Mrs.
Edward
Ballantine
of Cambridge
anda
King-

}

Worthington
Initiates

s

Phillips
is a graduate
of the
Mar
C.
Wheeler
School.
and’
ig
now
junior at Vassar
College,
Mr.
.Brew‘ster
was,
graduated:
from
the
Bel-|
mont
Hill School and-from Yale Uni-;
versity, class of 1941. He is a grand-}
son
of the late Lyman
W. Besse ef
Springfield
and
a
nephew
of
Mrs.
John
H. Mitchell and Mrs. Daniel E.
Burbank
of Longmeadow,

Parish,

Grange

Mr.

man

past-regent,
William
Brown;
secretary,
Walter
Higgins;
treasurer,
Harry Bates; chaplain, Harold
Parish;
guide,
C.
Kenneth
Osgood;
warden,
Wells
Magargal;
collector,
Richard
Hathaway;
trustee
for
three
years,

Spencer

Wrig

nN

of

Society

Barent

Mrs.

¢

Grandson of Late Ly-

with ihe
for Con-.
in

of

Providence

for non-

Sunday

and

Kingman Brewster

Merwin
F.
C. Kenneth.

Codding;

— |

29—Mr,

Engaged to Marry

committee,

:
Worthingt
on

San-|)

children|)

Bartlett,

church

sewing meeting.
Plans will be made
for the annual fair on Aug. 13,
The
following
officers
of Bashan
Hill
Council,
Royal
Arcanum,
were
installed Saturday at Lyceum Hall
by
Deputy Arthur Codding and suite:
Tegent,
Reginald
Pease;
vice-regent,

lof children’s
work
ready
at the Lyceum Hall Thursday night for inspection from 7 to 9 p. m.
;

|

Burr;

home

Mary

C, Ken-

Miss

P.

Oct,

por BT THR

will meet at the home of Mrs. Howard
N, Mason Wednesday for an all-day

Shirley

of

Mrs,

the

&lt;

WORTHINGTON,
June
16 —Mrs.
Flora Russell was given a surprise
birthday party at her home Saturday
by neighbors and friends,

Miss Mary
P. Burr, art instructor
in the local public schools, announces
that for the convenience
of the par-

ents

committee,

Robert Bartlett and

11)!pit

selec-

schools
in
charge
of
Miss
Olive
Healy;
essays
and
reading
by
the
graduates;
address by Walter
Utley,
principal of Huntington High School;
presentation
of
diplomas
by
L,
A.
Merritt, superintendent of schools, to
Ashley
Dodge,
George
Leighton,
Jo-|)
sephine Mazza, Kenneth B. Pease, Jr.,
derson.

Ar-~

neth Osgood,

well Sunday,
gust.

11— The

music

trus-

G. Thay.

It was
voted
to unite
South Worthington Church

schools’
program
for
the
grammar
graduation at Lyceum Hall Friday at
10 a, m. ineludes: invocation by Rev.
J. Herbert Owen,
pastor of the ConChurch;

Ernest

7°

Worthington

Mrs. Stephen
Cashin,
Westfield to
observe’ the birthday
r Mrs. Cashin
and Caroline Bartlett.
‘
pee
Bartlett
Miss
Helen
M.
is visiting}
relatives
in
North
&lt;A
ns.
}
thall. are re- }
in be
All interested
quested
to meet
in Tawn
Hall Friday |
at 7.80 p.m.
to organize for the sea-

Hatha-

clerk,

Mrs,

residents,

Utley to Speak
At Graduation
gregational

Smith;

Richard

Mason;

superintendent,
er.

Osgood

Worthington ©

June»

at

read

church treasurer, Mrs.

The

WORTHINGTON,

Byron

years,

Lawrence

away;
for
the
Dingle,
Packard;
for Ringville,

town.

m. for all
Oct. 16.

com-

Tinker, and Mrs. Ralph Smith; for
the Corners and Center, Mrs. C, Ken- .
neth Osgood and Mrs, Richard Hath-

Spring-

at

all.

were

Wa?

Mrs,
Ger
QO, Packard
attending.
the
Grange
sessions
at
Woreester
a
sates fren.
Worthington
Gran
E
Springfield,
Miss Me
Mrs.
We
1 Wat ee
Oseood
¢€
IKcenneth
nd Joan
Lou
George
H.
Annes
aroline Jane;
Bart
ind daugl
and
Mays.
Adrian
sht,
and.
sony
Bobby,
of this
town,
spent
Tuesday

lett; music
committee,
Mrs. Richard
Hathaway, Mrs. George E. Torrey, Jr.,
Miss Josephine Hewitt;
solicitors for
West
Worthington,
Mrs.
Clifford

chiefly

for

C.

three

Josephine
Hewitt;
mittee, Mrs. Herbert

Miss Marion L. Bartlett entertained
at a tea in the garden of The Spruces
Saturday afternoon in honor of Miss
There

of

thur G. Capen;

Davis,

upon
the
individual
power
of
discernment; blessing; but capable of becoming
curses.

field

Rev.

annual

with a short
Harry Bates

Reports

Charles Kilbourn

of
being
valuable
friends
of
good
living,
are
yet
endowed
with
possibilities that weaken and even destroy.
Free press and free speech,
personal
liberty an deven
religious feror may
have
two
sides,
according
to
Mr.

Edna

6 —

the

Congregational

.

WORTHINGTON,

ry NoOllison and
Mrs.
Herbert
Poerter, Sr.;
flower committee, Emerson

destroys

their effect depending

years,

for

and

Mary

speaker also said the radio,
and the automobile, capable

Gardner,

moderator.

Nominating

humanity

him.

June

opened

First

Herbert Porter, Sr.; benevolent treasurer,
Mrs.
Eben
lL. Shaw;
auditor,
Mrs. Harry
Mollison:
Sunde«
1

|.

associations

oftentimes

within

the.

The following were elected: moderator, Merwin F. Packard; deacon for

the
the

,ings”
and
asserted
that
the
wrong
juse of blessings invariably transforms
them
into curses.
Illustrations given
included firewater,
marvels
of inventive genius, wonders of the laboratory
and the functions of the human body.
All gifts are designed
to aid man
in
climbing
to the loftiest heights,
yet
through misuse often drag him down
to utter destruction, Mr. Gardner said, |

He

Owen

of

mittees
and organizations
and accepted.
s

Speaking
from
the
topic:
‘‘Life’s
‘most
dangerous
game”
Mr.
Gardner |

jdeclared

Herbert

|Church Thursday night
| devotional service. Mrs,

Davis},

greenery.

opened
music by

“WORTHINGTON,

meeting

Charles M.° Gardner, high priest of
Demeter of the National Grange, was
jintroduced by Mrs. George Packard,
master of Worthington Grange after
Rev.
J.
Herbert
Owen
service with prayer and

&amp;

By First Church —

an-

nual Grange Sunday service brought a
large crowd
to;First
Congregational
Church
this
afternoon,
The
church}

Was

lg44/

Election Is Held _

National Grange
Officer Speaks
WORTHINGTON,

nd

Rev.

Dr.

John

Homer

Miller performed the ceremony,
The
attendants
were
Miss
Mona
Pardee
of
Hartford
and
Roger
A.
Whitney,
brother
of the bridegroom.

Howard

Hatch,

chief

air-raid

war-

den, reports very good co-operation on
the part of all residents’
in Malay
night’s blackout.
The director of the medical division,
Mrs.
Alfred.
C.
Stevens,
Jr.,
of the

town
committee
on ciyilian
has appointed the following

defense
to the}

‘first aid groups: Mr. and Mrs. Walter}
H. Towei,-Dr. Ernest A. Hussar, Mrs.
Harry
L.. Bates,
R.N.,.Mr.
and
Mrs.

Arthur

J. Roland,

Mr.

and

Mrs,

Fred

G. Sears,-Jr,
Mrs.
William
F. Sanderson,
Mrs.
George
E; Torrey,
Jr.,
Mrs. Merwin F. Packard, Mrs. C. Raymond
Magargal,
‘Miss
Persis
N.
Ritchie and Alfred C. Stevens, Jr.
Mr,
and
Mrs,
Wrank
Bates,
who

have

spent

the winter

with
their
daughter,
Goodwin, have returned

in

Templeton

Mrs.
home.

.

Roland ;

Miss Shirley Packard is local’ chair-|

man of the 4-H cookie drive to be held!
on April 11.
Miss
Thelma
Packard
and
Charles
‘M,
Bartlett,
local
students
in
Wil-

|liamsburg

High

School,

will go to Hy-

annis
Thursday
to
enter
the
state
jtournament
of the National Forensic
League.

i

�=

ee

ae

at Cavew Street School in Meniaual Parade

Pupils

[Springfield Union Photo
Pupils of the Carew Street School participated in mass Memorial
Day exercises on the school playground today. Parents and school
officials attended. The exercises opened with a concert by the
Hampden County WPA Band and was followed by a parade of the
classes in which banners made by the children, and flags were fea-

tured. Helen Tratiak was the announcer and Theodore V. Quinlivan,

member of the School Committee, gave the principal address. Ernest Thorning led the salute to the flag. There was singing of pa-

triotic songs

_ SPRINGFIELD,

Annual Business Meeting to

Be Held at Capt Leonard.

House, Agawam
annual

election

of

business

officers

Teachers’

club

afternoon

at

4

meeting

of

the

will

be

held

at

the

and

Springfield

Capt.

tomorrow
z

Charles)

Leonard
House,
Agawam
Center.)
\Teachers
at
the
Van
Sickle
school
will
serve
as
hostesses
for
the
tea}
which will precede the meeting. Miss|
Una D. Hiiliker is: general chairman.|
The
Springfield
Teachers’
club
is
one of the oldest and largest service
clubs in the city.
Forty-three years
ago when it was organized its purpose
was
chiefly
social.
Today
its
emphasis is placed upon
helping needy
children,
and
proceeds
from
card
parties
and
four
Clare
Tree
Major)
children’s plays have enabled the club;
to care for hundreds
of such
cases,
Some
of
the
services
given
are
free distribution of cod liver oil and
milk, free lunches, dental care, ocul{ist and optician aid, and déstribution
of needed
clothing.
The well-attended card party given

recently

at

Hotel

the audience
of

“The

and bands

Star

joined

Spangled

the

Banner.”

pupils

in the

MASS.: MAY 18, 1941

TEACHERS’ CLUB: PICKS
OFFICERS TOMORROW
__

The

and

. singing

Kimball,

the

lec-)

ture by McClelland Barclay, illustrat- or and portrait painter, bowling, bad- |
minton
and
horseback
riding, are a}
few
of the other affairs enjoyed by)

club members during the past year,
Miss Elvene Taylor of
Van Bickle
school is retir ae president.

17H(

:

Seeks Goldenrods, Finds Skunk
Edward Desjarlais, Eight, at Exposition, Runs |
Afoul of Something Foul
The

thousands

converged

on

the

of

youngsters

Exposition

who]

grounds}

denrod.

Edward

did

not

actually

see

the

yesterday obviously had a swell time.|skunk
but
the
people
who
turned
Whenever
kids
make
noise
they’ré| their heads from the blond-haired lithaving fun and yesterday the young|tle fellow on the Exposition grounds|
fellows
and
girls
made
plenty
of|and
crowded
to the rear of the bus
noise.
he
boarded
when
he
finally
headed
Even
Edward
Desjarlais,
eight-| home had some justification for their
years-old son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
actions for at a late hour last night
Desjarlais of 73 Bradford Street, made
after being
bathed
by mother
night
noise.
That is he made noise up until
and doused with sister’s most odorithe time he ventured to the bank of ferant perfume Edward still did not
the
Agawam
River
to
pick
a few
bring to mind lilies of the valley.
goldenrods for his teacher in Carew
Seemingly
unperturbed
by his unStreet School.
usual, and unenviable experience, Ed- |
ward
regretted
that
he
had
not}
Thereafter, Edward was a surprisingly reticent young man and all who caught a glimpse c? the creature that
were within sight of Edward
appremade him stand out in a crowd but !
ciated his reticence and the fact he found some consolation in the fact)
kept
his distance,
for Edward
bore
that he will not have to go to school:
strong
evidence
of
having
encoun:
today or until such time as he is once
tered a skunk
in his quest
for gol- more like other little boys.

�vidal

Apart

I2‘E 194

Guest Story Teller at Library

Is Greeted by Small Admirers

(Republican

Staff

Photo)

Guest story teller and some of her small admirers at the Memorial
Square branch library yesterday. Left to right: Joan Cole,'7; Miss
Zhenya Gay, author and illustrator; Helen Tratiak, 11, and Florence

Galvin,

The

guest

story

the
children’s
Square
branch
by

five

211,

Miss

months

material

and

in

hour

room
library
Zhenya

Costa

doing

for the children’s
Costa
Rica,”
told’

yesterday
of
was

Gay,

Rica

the

at]

Memorial
attended
who

spent}

gathering!

illustrations!

book, “Manuelito of|
of her
experiences!

10.

there

and

crayon

illustrated

sketches,

her

talk

Miss Gay was the fourth guest
thor to entertain
the children
of

City.

library

pear

Saturday,

season.

Hilda

and

yan

the

its

branches

Stockum

26th,

at

will

the

with
authe

this

ap-

East

Springfield branch and Alf Everes will
speak at Forest
Park branch, May
10.

�PEER

Te ERSTE

'144{ OFFICERS OF FAITH CHURCH GUILD

Left to right: front row, Mrs. Albert G, Rivett, retiring president; Mrs. Elbert E. Lochridge, new
president;
Mrs. Spencer F, Smith, first vice-president; and Mrs. Willard C. Fuller, second vice-presi-

dent;

back

row,

Mrs.

Frank

A.

Sexton,

Justus

C.

new

secretary;

Sanburn,

Mrs.

assistant

Lesslie

treasurer.

W.

Smith,

treasurer,

s

and

Mrs.

�_ DR. KIRKHAM IS
PRESIDENT OF
CITY LIBRARY
‘Brewer

Corcoran

After
Because

he

is

out

of

year,
of the

APRIL 20-179

Resigns

Seven Years
of Service

months
of each
coran, president

the

city

six

Brewer
CorCity Library

(Photo

MRS
|

DR.

WILLIAM

B.

KIRKHAM

Association for the last seven years,}
tendered his resignation to that body|
at a meeting
held
yesterday
after-|
noon.
It was
accepted
with
regret. |
Dr.
William
B. Kirkham,
vice-presi-|
dent
and
secretary
during
Mr.’ Cor-|
coran’s
administration,
was
elected;
president and Charles J. Bellamy will
assume
the
post
of secretary.
Mr.
Coreoran will still be a member of the
board with the title of vice-president.
Mr.
Corcoran’s
letter of resignation
was as follows:
“For seven years I have been prestdent of the City Library Association.
I am away six months of each year,
‘and at least during most of that period my task has fallen on the shoulders of one ever able and willing to
carry
more
than
his
share
of
the
load.
“An
expanding
institution
of this
size demands new ideas and changing
perspective
lest
stagnation
cripple
sound
development,
It
is
neither
from lack of gratitude for the honor
conferred upon me nor from the lack
of heartfelt appreciation of the loyalty extended to me by both the board |
and the staff that this move is made. |

“It

is

solely

from

a

firm

belief.

that, under these circumstances,
the|
| best interests of the association will|
be served by a new executive that I
j herewith
tender
my
resignation
as|

your president, to take effect at your|
convenience.”

JULY 1, 1941

|

Mrs

by

&amp;LFRED

Alfred

H.

MISS

Bachrach)

of

the

LAPHAM

Mr. and Mrs. Harry Coggeshall Lapham of Converse Street,
Longmeadow, announce the engagement
of their daughter,

H. CHAPIN

Chapin

NANCY

Finn-

jish
Relief
committee
is among
the
‘sponsors
for the lecture by: (Cark J;
Hambro,
president of the Norwegian
Parliament,
Thursday
night at 8 at
Classical
high
school
under
the auspices of the Springfield committee for
Norwegian
Relief, inc.
Tickets
may
be obtained
at Steinert’s
or at the
door Thursday.

Nancy,

to

and

late

Marshall

Eugene

Roper of Springfield, son of
Mrs. Eugene Roper of Holden,
the

Mr.

Roper.

Miss

Lapham is a graduate of Classical High School and the Katharine
Gibbs
School
of New
York. Mr. Roper was graduated

from

Worcester

Academy,

Dartmouth
College
and
the
Amos Tuck School of Business
Administration.

‘Men of Boys Town’

op

Film at Loew’s Poli:

Nancy LaphamIs _

Spencer Tracy and Mickey Rooney
again are the chief figures in “Men)}
of Boys Town,” the sequel to the ste!
eessful
“Boys
Town,”
It heads
the
Loew's Poli bill which
also is showing
the
mystery
film
story,
‘Scotland
Yard.”
Bobs
Watson,
Larry
Nunn, Henry O'Neill, Lee J. Cobb and
Mary Nash are supporting principals
in the first feature
which
continues
the
adventures
of
“Whitey”
(young
Mr Rooney) who by now has reached
the final year of his stay at Father
Flanagan's
institute for boys.
As a
member
of
the
graduating
class,
Whitey is prepared to face the world
with
ideals and
purposes
solidly affixed so that he can go out as a credit to Boys
Town
and
all it means.
Whitey,
however,
makes
a_ difficult,
although willing, sacrifice for Father
Flanagan
and
his cause
by permitting
himself
to
be
adopted
by a
wealthy
family.
In
this
different
kind
of
freedom
he
meets
disaster,
and
becomes
embroiled
with
reform
school tactics of the lower order.
He
very nearly wrecks Father Flanagan's
financial hopes and plans.
“Scotland
Yard,”
in
which
Nancy
Kelly,
Edmund
Gwenn,
Henry
Wil-/}
coxon and John Loder are principals,|
is a story of today’s blacked out London
and
a gentleman
burglar
who
“steals” the face belonging to a missing banker,

Engaged to Marry
Marshall E. Roper

Longmeadow Girl to Wed
Former Holden Man in
August Event
Mr.

Lapham

and

Mrs.

of

Harry

Converse

Coggeshall

Street,

Long-

meadow, announce the engagement of
their daughter,
Nancy,
to Marshall

Eugene
Roper
of Springfield,
son of
Mrs.
Eugene
Roper
of Holden,
and

the

a

and

late

Mr.

graduate

the

of

Roper.

Miss

Classica]

Katherine

Gibbs

Lapham

is

School

of

High

School

New York. Mr. Roper was graduat
ed
from Worcester Academy, Dartmouth
College,
and
the
Amos
Tuck
School

of Business
riage

will

Administration,

take

place

in

The

August,

mar-

�1941

(Photo

by

Brown

Studic

Members of Suffield academy graduating class are: Leonard
D. Algar,
Ernest
M. Bacon, Jr.,
Jr., Morris
Morris E
rar
mes
S. Braunig,
Francis
J. Chester,
Bacon, Lee W. Baeder, Robert H. Ball, Lawrence W. Bellows,
William
Ralph A. Christensen, Francis J. Coleman, James L. R. Costello, William | R. Crosbie, a
.
Gene
shank, Jr., Frederic D. Cutrin, Thomas F. Eagan, Michael Freedman, Irving K. Gurney, John
B,
Levin,
Lewis F. Graham, Robert W. Hamlin. Nathaniel W. Kendall, 3d; William T. Lawrence,
Edward L. Linsley, Peter Nicholson, Arthur M. Packard, Raymond L. Perkins, John G Pevear, Charles ao
Julian
.
A. Pollak, Jr.. Thomas J. Seaton, Jr, Alexander G. Theophilos, Hodges Y. Waldron.

‘SUFFIELD ACADEMY
COMMENCEMENT PLANS
Class

Day

to

Be

Held

Wednesday and Graduation

| Saturday — Junior School
| Exercises Wednesday
rom

Our

Suffield,

Special

Correspondent

Ct.

May
©31—The
(108th
jcommencement
at
Suffield
academy
jwill be held
from June
4 to 7 with

j/graduation

on

Saturday

June

day
will be held
Wednesday,
| with a baseball game between
jacademy
and
Wilbraham
at.
|followed

by

the

traditional

The
class
banquet,
fawards, will he held
jthe dining
hall Class
| will
follow at 8 p.m.
Baptist

church,

be distribution
|common
room

jand

induction

after

7.

Class

rope

pull!

there

will

June 4,
Suffield
3 p. m.,

with
athletied
30
p.m.
in
ht exercises
in the Second

which

of year books
in. the
of the
North
building

of

seniors

into

the

jalumni body.
Chaplain
O,
W,
Eames
of
Longmeadow, stationed at Camp
Edwards)
Falmouth, will deliver the baccalaureate
sermon
to
the
graduating
class
| Thursday, June
5, at &amp; p. m. in the
Second
Baptist
church.
The
faculty
}party
for seniors
will follow
at
the
Sufon West
Spencer cabin
Samuel
|field mountain.

Friday,

June.

6,

the

class

plenic

and
luncheon
will
be
held
at
Lake
| Congamond
at
11
a.
m.
The
Senior
| banquet
will
follow at 6 Pp. Mm., With
coffee at the Gay Manse. The senior
promenade will take place in the dinjing hall,
Commencement
exercises
will
be
held Saturday
at 11 a. m. in the Second
3aptist
church.
Prof
William
Yandell

Elliott

of

the

history

depart-

ment of Harvard
university will give
ithe address,
A
buffet
luncheon
will
follow at the academy
exercises
| Commencement
for
the
junior school will be held Wedne
sday,
1 June
4, at
11
a.m.
on
the
school
lawn,
Rev
John
V.
Butler,
OL
Springfield, rector of St Petey
Epislcopal
church,
will
give
the
address.
The
brogram
will be as follows:
Ad| dress of welcome, Thomas C. Edwar
ds. |
senior
master;
Orange
and
Black
| Song
address
by
John
F,
Scheres- |
chewsky, headmaster of the academ
y;
presentation
of
baseball
letters
by
Allen
H, Fuller:
reading
of Lamson
prize essay;
prize awards commencement
addres
presentation
of
diplomas;
benediction by Rev
Brownell
Gage.

&lt;A

buffet

luncheon

for

parents

and
guests
will follow. at the school, |
David Mumford, Anthony Lowe, and
}
talph
Krause, editors of the Orange |
and
Black,
weekly
school
paper and}
year book, accompanied
by Mr
Wil-!
liam
Mulliken,
Jr..
faculty
advisor, |
Mrs’ Mulliken and Mrs John FP, Scher|
eschewsky,
will have a farewell din-|
ner Monday
evening at the
Wiggins
tavern, Northampton.
|
The following members of the Junior school took part in the prize essay
|
contest,
held
in
the
Second
Baptist |
church
last
night:
Russell
Hamlin,
David
Mumford,
David
Eddy,
Ralph
Krause,
Charles Paul,
David Daniels, |
Scott Hyfield and Donald
Farrell,
|

:

�“If we are to have a durable peace
after the war, if out of the wreckage

Mass. ClosesF orests,

of the

tive

shorter

Seaside Homes to Fire’

Council

Approves

Emergency

Dec-

{
|

laration After Kenney Says Nearly 50
Major Blazes Rage; State Guard Is Held
Ready

BOSTON,
seaside homes

April 21 (AP)—Forest fires destroyed 450
and swept across thousands of acres of New

England’s tinder-dry woodland tonight, leading Massachusetts
to close its forests and hold the newly-organized

in readiness for its first action.
At

Marshfield

alone—where

the

houses and a large stone church
razed—town assessors estimated
age

In

at

an

“roughly

Emergency

emergency

$1,000,000.”

450}50

were
dam-

Proclaimed

session—the

first

@ince the 1938 hurricane—the Massachusetts Executive Council approved
Acting Gov. Horace T. Cahill’s proclamation

State

Raymond

declaring

an

Conservation
J.

Kenney

emergency

after

“nearly

fires

are

State

Guard.

raging

sections

of

in

the

widely

Common-:

Little
hope
for
relief
in the
dry
spell was
seen
by the Weather
Bureau within 48 hours.
Some showers

in

the

Berkshires

gions

were

tion

of

likely,

and

other

high

however.

Marshfield,

Wake

a

yards

leaving

blackened

wide

and.

strip

a

mile

in

their

about

and

200

one-half

Jong,
with
here
and
there
a lonely
chimney poking out of the ruins.
i

#2492,Williamsburg

At

|

‘

blaze

‘less

were

Eloise Bartlett and Wilbur
Shumway to Take Test

High

School,

because

peace,

the

and

Out

leaping

the

flames

hundreds

under

control.

when

their

levelled.

State

Police.

outskirts

of

year-round

were

posted

houses

on

high-

Marshfield,

The

roads

were
choken
with
machines
unable
to move
further forward
or to back
out
and
it
was
necessary
to
walk
seven miles to reach the burning area.
Communications
were
disrupted
when
100
telephone
cables
were

been i
Wil-

of

Forty
boys
and
girls who
Yead
in
preliminary examinations will be given
all-expense
trips
to
Washington
for
final
examination
and
one
boy
and
one
girl will be selected
to receive Westinghouse grand scholarships
'of $2400 each, $600 per year for four
years.
Fighteen
contestants will
receive a $200 scholarship for one year.
As part of the preliminary examinations each contestant must submit an})
essay
of not
more
than
1000 words
on
“How
science
can
help
wih
the
war.” All contestants invited to Washington will receive a gold emblem of
_Science Clubs of America,

Flatten

a bit

ways
leading into the town,
but
before
they
took
up
their
posts
hundreds of automobiles had reached the

WILLIAMSBURG,
May
21—Eloise!
Bartlett of Worthington and Wilbur!

their scholastic standing in scientific
subjects, to participate in the nation-|
wide science talent search,
Kdward C.
Foster,
science
teacher,
will conduct
the
first test in this
search
at
the
high school
Friday and the two studenis
named
will
take
the
science
aptitude test,
The
purpose
of the
search,’ being
conducted
by
the
Scienee
Clubs.
of),
America
and
sponsored
by
Science
Service,
is to discover
and
help
de-|)
velop. scientific talent
which
will be
valuable to the Nation in war and in|)

dusk,

A majority of the destroyed homes
in Marshfield were summer
cottages,
but Forest Warden
W. G. Ford said
about
25 families
were
made
home-

For Science Talent:

.jliamsburg

out

of
fire
fighters
from
every
south}
shore town from the Cape Cod Canal
to Scituate felt they finally had the

Chosen in Search

Shumway
of
Haydenville
have
chosen from the senior class of

Flames

about

flattened

burned

out in the Marshfield
‘Broadcasts Appeal

area.

While the Marshfield fire was still
at its height and with flames eating
@way
the brush and woods
of many
other Massachusetts communities, Acting Gov.
Cahill broadcast an. appeal
to Bay
State citizens
to keep away
from
the
fire
areas
and
not
block
the roads needed for the passage’ of
fire fighting equipment.
He estimated the number of major.

|

fires

minor

Early
hey

fires

in

in

Massachusetts

ones

the

attributed

at

day

a

at

80

“several

and

series

of

the

hundred,”

Commissioner

to ‘carelessness.”

Ken-

week-end

~~ Of the loss already suffered by New|

England, $1,500,000 was represented by
the wiping out of qa beach colony of
500 buildings at Marshfield yesterday
in a fire which had its origin in nearby
lost 15 per
town
The
grass.
marsh
cent of its assessed value after “savan appropria-.
$300 by dropping
ing’
tion to burn the marsh in early spring,
as a fire prevention measure, a prac: |

tice

of 20 years

to

a

new

be

kind

built

of

coopera-

on

a

global

standing.) / /\})

d

periods

isolate

nations

and)

illustrated.

An

split them up into separate units, the|
process is never complete because the|
intellectual life of the world, as far as
science and learning are concerned, is
definitely
internationalized,
and
whether we wish it or not an indelible
|pattern of unity has been woven into
the society of mankind.
“There is not an area of activity in

which

this

cannot

be

American
soldier wounded
on a batitlefield in the Far East owes his life
the
Japanese
scientist,
Kitasato,
to

who isolated the bacillus of tetanus, |
A Russian soldier saved by a blood}
transfusion is indebted to Landstei- |
ner, an
Austrian,
A German soldier |
is shielded
from
typhoid
fever with
the help of a Russian, Metchnikoff. A

Dutch

marine

while

a

in

the

Hast

Indies

‘s

protected from malaria because of the
experiments
of
an
Italian,
Grassi;

Britis

aviator

in

North

Africa escapes death from surgical infection
because
a Frenchman,
Pasteur, and a German, Koch, elaborated|
a new technic.

re-

All afternoon
flames
raced along
the oceanside in the Brant Rock sec-

Commissioner —

reporied

major

scattered
wealth.”

is

scale, the part that science and advancing knowledge will play must not
be overiooked. For although wars and |
economic
rivalries may
for longr or,

Marshfield Loses 450

Executive

present

life

us

“In

the

Unity

peace

as

of Civilization
in

beneficiaries

war

of

we

are

all

of

contributions;

to knowledge made by every nation in
the world. Our children are guarded
from diphtheria by what a Japanese
and a German did; they are protected
from
smallpox
by
an
Englishman’s
work; they are saved from rabies because of a Frenchman, they are cured
of

pellagra

through

jan Austrian. From

the

researches

oi

birth to death they

are surrounded by an invisible host—
the spirits of men who never thought
in terms
of flags or boundary
lines
and who never served a lesser loyalty
than
the
welfare
of
mankind.
The
iibest that every
individual
or group
has produced anywhere
in the wor!d
has always been available to serve the
race of men, regardless of nation or
color.
“What
is true of the medical sciences
is true
of the other
sciences.
Whether it is mathematics
or chemistry, whether
it is bridges or automobiles or a new
device for making
cotton cloth or a cyclotron for studying atomie structure, ideas cannot be

hedged

in

behind

geographical

bar-

riers. Thought cannot be nationalized.
The fundamental unity of. civilization
is the
unity
of its intellectual
life.
“There is a real sense, therefore, in
which
the things that divide us are

trivial

as

years

the

compared

with

the

things)

that unite us. The
foundations
of a
cooperative world
have already been)
laid. It is not as if we were starting|
from the beginning. For at least 300

process

has

been

at

work,

until today the cornerstones of society
are the common
interests that relate
to the welfare of all men everywhere.
“In brief, the age of distinct human
societies, indifferent to the fate of one
another, has passed forever; and the

|great task that will confrent us after
\the war is to develop for the com-

munity
of
nations
new
areas
and
technics
of
cooperative
action
which will fit the facts of our twen- |
tieth
century
interdependence.
We
‘need rallying points of unity, centers
around
which
men
of differing cultures and faiths can combine, defined
fields of need
or goals
of effort in
which by pooling its brains and re-|
sources
the human
race can add
to |
its own well-being. Only as we begin
to build, brick by brick, in these areas
of common interest where cooperation
is possible
and
the
results
are
of
benefit to all, can we erect the ultimate
structure
of a united. society.”

3

eee

�Named to High O. E. S. Posts

WILL

SPEAK

2

~
A

MRS.

L. B. SANDERSON

WILLIAMSBURG,

Graves,

have

MRS.

May 26—Mrs.

deputies

and

the

inspection

as

from

Boston

reception

of

1, Corona,

follows:

East

Ionic, North

Brookfield;

GRAVES

15,

6,

Star

Goldrick,

of

grand
given

Eden

Bethlehem,

20, Arcana,

RE-ELECTED

grand

Rev.

matron.

Hospital

Aid

Association

eae
be the

will

June

Chapter,

in

Ware;

13,

—

to

20— More
June
NORTHAMPTON,
isbeen
have
invitations
1000
than
of
honor
in
reception
for, the
sued
superinnew
Birge,
©.
Amy
Miss
to
,
Hospital
on
tendent of the Dickins
5 to 7 in the
from
be given Sunday
ausunder
Home
Nurses
McCallum
officers of
pices of the trustees and
the hospital.
Mrs. John H. Finn, Mrs. Fred Cary,
Mrs. Oliver B. Bradley and Miss Martha K. Dickinson will serve as ushers;
in the receiving line will be Aubrey|
B. Butler,
president
of the board
of

staff,

11.

Gymnasium

Sixteen

at

students

11

will

10 in the teach-

er education
division
and
six in
the regular division. Presentation
of diplomas will be made
by Dr.
Frank
H.
Reiter,
principal,
and
Mrs.
Grace
G. Coolidge,
trustee,
will award
prizes,

Superintendent

associated

Gilmore.

receive diplomas,

Be Guest Tomorrow

HAROLD W. ALDEN
President
of Dickinson |

Barstow,

W.

Northampton;

Hospital

MRS.
Re-elected

10 —

June

pe roneenes)
School,
it was Sheer
announcedbe
today.
The ceremonies will be conducted

Greenfield.

trustees,

Dr. Robbins

Photo

BARSTOW

matron and Mrs.
their assignments

Will Be Honored

of

Haley

W.

8) Sara
prone,
Foundation, Hartford,

Miss Amy Birge

i

John

ROBBINS

NORTHAMPTON,

Star,

Chapter, Eastern

Mary

;

DR.

the school for

for Mrs.

Sept.

ETHEL

they attended

where

Longmeadow;

Photos

and Mrs. Ethel

Mrs. Sanderson has been appointed deputy
Graves, deputy grand marshal.
They were
Oct.

Studio

Leon B. Sanderson

both past matrons of Joel Hayden

returned

Hoffman

members

organizations.

and

heads

|

�PADEREWSKI, 82,
PIANIST, FORMER
PREMIER, DEAD
World
Once

Famous
Musician,
Polish Official, Victim of Pneumonia

NEW

YORK,

June

29

(AP)

—

Ignace Paderewski, 82, former premier
of Poland and world famous pianist,
died tonight ‘at the Hotel Buckingham. |

He
.

had

Dr.

been ill one week,
Caused by Pneumonia

Asa

L.

Lincoln

said

the

great

musician’s
death
was
caused
by
Pneumonia
which
he at first was
seemed destined to overcome but from
which
day.

he

With

ter,

his

became

him

gravely

when

doctor

and

he

his

ill

died

last

was

a sis-

printipal

de-camp, Sylvian Starackacz.
Paderewski had made his

Fri-

aide-

home

MRS,

at

the hotel for more than a year, during which
period he spent his time
working in the interest of Polish defense and more recently in promoting

the

sale

of

bonds.

United

States

on the

but spent
keyboard
which he

Paderewski’s Body

To Lie in Embassy

|

Mass Will Be Celebrated To-

morrow Morning

| .NEW YORK,
| body of Ignace

July 1 (AP) —
Jan Paderewski,

Pothe
D.

The body will be placed among the
|graves
of America’s
foremost
heroes
{in Arlington, Va., National Cemetery,
|Saturday and
removed
to his native
land when war is over.
|
The Most Rev. Francis J. Spellman, |
archbishop of New York, will officiate
at a pontifical mass Thursday
morning
in
St.
Patrick’s
Cathedral.
The
body
will lie in state there
from
2

ip. m.
mass.

(BE.

S.

Paderewski
pneumonia.

|

T.)

died

tomorrow

until

Sunday

at

80

the

of

Worthington

WORTHINGTON,
March
30— A
party
was
given
Saturday
night
dat
the
home
of
Mr,
and
Mrs.
Robert
Bartlett
in
honor
of
Mr.
and
Mrs
William
TVitzroy
of
Hinsdale,
who
have
been
visiting
Mr. and
Mrs. Alfred C. Stevens, Jr.
Mr, Fitzroy, who
was a former
resident
of this town,|}
has
been
honorably
discharged.
from
the Army
on account of ill health.
The
Friendship
Guild
will
meet
Wednesday night at the home of Mrs.
George
O. Packard.
The
Huntington
library has a collection
of
books
and
pamphlets
on
home
nursing.
Wells Magargal, chief of police, has
sworn
in the following
auxiliary
police:
Harry
L. Bates,
Cyrus
Bower,

Howard

Hatch,

Daniel

R.

elected president of the
League of Springfield,

Porter, |

Morris
Smith,
Philip
S. Dodge,
Wil-|
liam
Sanderson,
Frederick
Drake, |
Carl
Cedarholm,
Arthur
Rolland,
Alfred
_C.
Stevens,
Jr.
William
-E.}
Brown
and
Theodore
Tatro,

|
|

Worthington’
orthington ”’*

The
not-

ed pianist and first president of
land, will lie in state Friday at
/Polish
embassy
in
Washington,

BENJAMIN

Inc., to succeed Mrs. Chester B.
Bulkley.
The new ofiicers will
not take office until June.
Election was held this month so that
the.
president-elect
could
he
named a delegate to the annual
conference of
the
Association
of Junior Leagues of America,
which is to take place during the
last week of April in Atlantic
City.
Mrs.
Bulkley
and
Mrs,
Benjamin
will attend as delegates
and
Mrs.
Reynolds
G.
Clark as alternate.

defense

He had not actively appeared

concert stage for some time
hig leisure moments
at the
of the instrument through
gained world-wide fame.

Newly
Junior

DONALD

WORTHINGTON,
March
27 — The
| trustees of the Congregational Church
|met Wednesday night at the home of
Mrs.
Ernest
G. Thayer.
It was
decided
to repair
the folding chairs in
the church and the trustees have obtained a license for serving meals to
the public,
The
honor
roll of the
Huntington
High
School announces
the following
local students with B average: Nadine
Higgins,
Lucille
Lefebvre,
Joyce
Mason and Shirley Sanderson,
The announcement was made of the
engagement
of Miss Ruth
P. Smith,
daughter
of Mr. and
Mrs.
Raymond
Smith
of South Hadley, to Corp. Arthur N, Tower, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Clarence
Tower
of Southwick,
at a
party in their honor at Hotel Sheraton in Springfield.
Miss Smith taught
in the South Worthington School and
is now teaching in South Hadley. She
is
organist
in
the
Congregational
Church in South Hadley Falls.
Corp.
Tower was graduated
from the Westfield Schools
and
lived
in Worthington about
five years and is now stationed at Ft. Wright.
C.
Kenneth
Osgood,
chief fireman,
has appointed the following auxiliary
firemen:
George
Torrey,
Jr., George
}Packard,
Malcolm
Fairman,
George

|Fisher,

Daniel

R.

Porter,

Lewis

Zarr,

‘Walter
Mollison,
Richard
Hathaway,
Alfred
C.
Stevens,
Jr., Arthur
Rolland,
Francis
Granger,
Walter
H.|
Tower, William Brown, Eben L. Shaw,
Clifford Tinker,
Lawrence
Dingmond,
Reginald
Pease,
Carl Cedahholm
and
William Sanderson,

a
a

4
&gt;
i
4

�IRES VISITORS

Ball Tac of Atlant Opes

Hundreds of Thousands to
oe Ports in Six States
salt tang

ef the Atlantic
ACROSS

the

can be

continent:

to check up on the
uneles. told.
them

sand

Bo to

ing

jonk-atthe
liner DiRHNS

ust
want
‘to
watch a giant

|

the

surpris:

bh. th ng and salt, Sonie ‘SE them

water

sits

whaling: ports:

learn

“ocean,...or
out from

dock.

The

nd

maritime

is one of

quality

the most

of

New

Ene.

appealing

jon's: feckeational

of

ee

he’ "S04 eu
change from ‘its
highest run, lapping farup on the
‘beaches: and amon2 the rocks, to lowest ebb, exposing
frowths
on
the

broad

eamarine

wet

life:

reaches

the sjistening plant
jeavings
reeks
and

of sand,

There avillsbe

vith

with

a difference.

of anywhere from: séven=to 20 feet im
‘the depth of the water, a phenomenon
Sthat never fails “to intrigue visitors:

from

injand.

én the

‘

Sea Magic

varying

assumes

- have

aspects

their

set,

the

.ewn~

rien

typical

Gloucester ever an inyifation

the

magic.
sunny

stand

you.can

see pat

a few feet

right In

one

place

to wielders

you

will

see

a

wh

yeu
hear
all
the itself,
thé
Charles.
W.”
Morgan,
cool eombeérs rolling|“anound- you. Bub
he sharp line of the’ cloud: noises. Of the* sea—thie loom of the served for all time just’as it returned
izon to smash in a smother|. surf, the -eerte: tohing ofa hell buoy from. its last voyage.
out by the reef, the blat.ard whistle or}:
New England's maritime life is not
“and white on the shore. Then

hoats feeting thei way,
- Mostly
you, will spend whole
days
Pi sitting, walking, si€eping on the sand,
a into. Show-capped
mountains
Soaking
up.
thes
warm
sun,
cooking
off
ushing water. You learn whaf excite:
ment can be then. On another day, with -frequent -plunges inthe
clear
r

nad

perhaps,
heathe

hen the sky looks like grey
a tighty wind piles up “

a

the

white

world.

|

silent

fog

Wherever

all of the. past,
the war, vessels

eign ports

Spicy

‘ai “hot

aip trom

or two.

off the

‘The

ocean:

same

sea.

| hWroited tive

lohster*sizaling

4) clams,
The

with

old seaports:

will

ports. Luxury liners still bear down the

for

that

sives you the appetite gives you the
food to satisfy it—fish-canent in thet
morning otit
im front of your hotel,
hutter
a
steaming
“heap. of: tasty

in'umeltedt:

engage

you

or start’ on, round-the-world

yoyages. Jn many harpors you will see
tankers froni’ Mexico. freighters from
South
.America
and
more
“remote

~‘will green water, Vou will, distover what
food can taste like, and how important
itvean be,when “you have been breath:
ine

however, In spite of
still arr ive from for

bay headed’ for the tropics, Occasion:
ally
a.majestic
sailing
snip
arrive
from a remote land,
Today, the Coast Guard's gray boats)i
stréak past the white-edge
shoreline}
and Navy planes roar overhead, Battle}
cruisers, destroyers, submarines,
Swéepers—all,
the
Navy's
ships
g0
qtietly
about
their
ce
ee
business,
Out on a rocky headland
aie will bey

their. Charming
flaver&lt; ef “the
Salen) and “Portsivouth
and able-to drive right up toa tall gleaming
asset, Gloucester, New Bedford. lighthouse. Step inside“and see what a
New London. Inthese, vou will-see the science tidiness can -le. Metal and
| trim stohe warehous
where the teas lass twinkle in“ship shape” fashion.
:
and. spices “and fabrics: of the orient Floors, and walls
and) the winding
rested afterther “jong fast trips in
jihe misht. clippers,
Vou! will See “fine
biilt- outs ofshipping
topped bya
“widow's
anxiously
Wa tehed:
oe oe &amp;; sign of the
+ towertig:
‘honiecomin
ee
aes
a long, piers of
Teoes.of

and Yankeeanade

sf plements
yee lexr

You.

Were

water

where.

and

machinery:

piled

along

will find

unite’

“rim

with

out-

“tehacco

and

fathoms

in

of

in “marine.museums

| fine
paintings
of famous
ships;
and
wheels’ and hells andespars from them;
tom hooks. of
great voyages, the har| poons and lances and. knives. of the
whaler,
finely
Wrought
models:
“of
| ships, ‘skillfivily
“iived
: imshaiw”

| work on

—

walrus
=

tusks and- whale

bone.

Staircase.
up.
the
‘tower
are
orderly
and spotless. Up top great lenses and
powerfnl Hehts stand ready for their

nightly
Below

and
the

task.

you,

of warning. to

‘stretch

the

|p

marine

brown

roc

then the broad, quiet carpet of|f
sea. Birt ihe: keeper will tell. you le

about
times When,
winter
seas; have
sprayed
the very floor you stand: on|t
and
when
anxious eves
watched
dis-

tressed Vessels fight their way
reefs.
Between
the nevis when:
just looking at maritime New.

you will want

om ithe

you, are
Emgland

|t

to have a part init, and

there are plenty of ways. Clim) aboard
an excursion boat, and eryise.the is

lands and. coves. Hire a‘ stout acith :
or a little sailboat (with. or without}
skipper)

that

will

water fora day's
with the captain

take

you out

to-deep |

fishing, Make friends
Ofva trawler and get

him
to
take you
-out—-to
Georges
Shoals, Spend tithe alone the beaches
and: roc ks in fishing,
eating, bathing,
-jloafing;-and:a lot of. time around the
docks not talking so much as listen-

ing.
You'll learn a lot, and
about why the sea means:
] New Hage

be glad to,
so tuch to

h

|)

�WOMEN:

4

|

{

Why

they

get

home

them

or

buy

don’t

|
|
|
+

CAN’T

things

they

like

keep

| complaining

WE

that

like

them,

them

and

they

|.

EXPLAIN
and

and

either

wear

don’t

when

them,

cents

when

a

they

tough

, on

plainly

say:

when

I

going

“I

to

be

Why

they
they

they

no

matter

for

the

the

paid

cash

Why

they

use

sour

milk

that’s

all

they

need

every

at

them

the

Why

deliver

sloe

gin

fizzes

like

they

the
say

they

what

their

a

pack

dirt

is

filthy,

they

why

when

open

all

are

when

and

they

save
to

they

have

never

eyed,

for

they

have

How

of

Why

the

like

this

all

they

ask
hat,

that

they

drag

that

the
of

they

salt,

own

ever

turn

the

a

at

they

stay
of

with

like

the
will

on

carefully
to

dry-

pinch

never

it,

a

news-

they

like

or how

they

the

flower

this

stores,
be

bed

or that

when

they

acquiescent,
wives

think

ac-

about
;

when
radio

of

mind

little

to

the water
when

of

woman

and
if

off

that

in
to
the
the

their

a

for

dash

deciding

they

going

recipe,

reasons

milk,

folding
this

a

their

going

it carefully,

about

mumbling

ever

get

go

sugar,

up

read

then

difference

we're

time

suffering

from

for we

all
neSs.

heard

right.
”
-

It

him

is

say,

just

an

a slight

rheumatism,
and
hearty,

“My

vitals

outside

are

lame-

cansight

in

the

the

right

background.

similarity

if they

they

answered.

thine

in

were

sit,

are

twins.

he

asked

he

asked

hoth five. and not
manage that?”

we

and

appear-

twins!

triplets,”

“Billy's

indoors.”

was

just

the

to
to

mixing

on

putting

in

of
that

beat

refer

unlisted
it

won’t

them

up

whites.

get
front
paper

up

this
porch

didn’t

morning
and

tell

show

up

Spare

That

Christian

the

Wall!
Science

Monitor

There
will be stone
walls
left.
It
wouldn't
be
New
England
without
them,
Gray,
lichen-covered
weatherbeaten,
they
run
along
beside
country
roads,
They
climb
the
pasture
hillsides
and
dip over
the brows
of
low mountains,
Sometimes,
far back
in the woods
one comes
upon
them
silent, faithful guardians of a farm
the pioneers built,

people

page.

like

the

look

find

and

hook,

any

today.

be,

people
but

how

the kitchen

sink,

and

social

they

-

quarter-cup

How
in

at

there,

they

into

the

“best,”

}

blades.

husbands

or how

they

and

must

havoc

mirror

them

for

the

the

frequently,

another

was

We
“view
with
alarm,”
nostalgically
speaking,
the
trend
toward
curved farming.
Experts tell us that
straight furrows belong to the hoopskirt era,
Contour
farming,
to prevent
soil
erosion,
dictates
that
the
;soil be plowed around
the hills, fol‘lowing
the
natural
curves.
Stone
walls
separating
patchwork
fields
must
be removed.
It is part of the
price for efficiency in farming.

lives.
is

how

are

wear,

funerals

figure

lengths

make

;

their

clothes

call.

Why

their

the

interrogation.

in

they

great

their

sir,”

answer,

From

way.

that

to

which

such

the
or

thing

know,

their

they yell from

Why

at

husbands

what

is running
friends

the

one

Z

make

that

the

movies

read

way,

a

not

their

and

know

Why

the

beer.
to

say

things

part,
all

new

to

do

wreak

all

object

the

can

when

the

dislike

as razor

in

known

here

arranged

cording

hat

cigarets

pins,

and

most

they

table

ask

‘do

inquired

“Please

if

will

show

what

many

ery

when

the

yet

and

they

bobbie

seen

they

paper

home,

by

“Five?
“Dear me,
How:do you

add

four-ounce

slips

haven’t

so

happens

Why

a

when

least, as great a problem

and

market,

to

“No,

he

slightly

ta

,
“Well, how old are you?”
| one.
| “Five,’ she answered.
“And how old are you?”
ithe other.

show,

Where

houses

and

potatoes

store

happens

not

cooking

re-

ently

attack
of arthritis,
or
but
otherwise
was
hale

on

they

What

it

they

of

janice,

view,
man.

for

struck

be

were—if

time.

Why

of

epi-

tomb-

perfect
health,
undue thought-

for parliamentary
honors
who,
vassing a constituency,
caught

a _ store

point

in
this

what

your

were standing
near two old-

jof two small children hand in hand
|before their cottage door, their mother

them

to their regular

it unsour,
carry a peck

department

be

would

dear,

on

We

timers
at
the
auction
on
Saturday
when we overheard their conversation
;concerning matters of health.
Appar-

One More Inside
Stamp—better known
as Sir
Stamp, thé economist and a
victim of an air-raid bomb—
tell a story about a candidate

Lord
Josiah
recent
used to

another

at

my

put

Above.’ ”

Anxious.

it

arrears

and

should

|Standing™

at

account;

from

the

|

they

saw

“What

| fulness.
| “Oh, that’s very simple.” she
|sponded_ briskly.
“Just—Wite of

;
a bill,

creditor's

what

I

something

charge

bought

soda to make
Why they'll

minute

something

owe

a

better—from

and

the

to

tell

by

to be sitting gazing into the
a very mournful expression.
are
you
thinking
about?”

; Stone!”
The
wife,
then
jnaturally resented

fifteen

going
could

to break

cash

have

‘I

Wife
with

itaph-

especially

they're

was

Or:

want

pay

because

much

that
it

it.”

tender,

counter.”
they never

where

knew

cooked

the
Why

store

says

|.

bunch,

Why
were

he

A’ certain worthy was observe

his
fire

jshe asked.
|
“Team thinking,

continually

when someone says: “I don’t Know.
J think it’s
kind of cute.”
Why they can’t operate automobiles in reverse
gear,
How they have enough nerve—or whatever it is
—to
offer a grocer twenty-five
cents for two
bunches,

}

exchange

them,

like

they

|

Over
them
lean
pines and birches
and alders.
Along their tops generva-_
tions of chipmunks and red squirrels
have scampered:
On them, partridges~
delight
to
stand
and
sound
their
throbbing drum ealls.
Through
gaps
where King Forest has tumbled rocks
to the ground,
the wild folk pass on
their appointed rounds.
Beneath them
woodchucks
made
their burrows
and
from them make raids on the kitchen
jgarden.
On many a farm, the lane to

‘the
pasture
is between
two
stone
walls,-atd the cows like to stop and

nibble
tween

The

a

bunch.

two

stone

of

tender

foundation
walls

are a monument

of

grass

stones,

New

to a people's

pbe- |

England

patience

and labor,
“A rod a day for two men
and a pair of oxen”
was a common
,yardstick
in
days
of
yore.
Stone
walls
represent
something
solid and
enduring—a pattern linking men
and
the New England landscape,

(hie ARAM,

}

�MISS

MIRIAM

CURTIS

Bachrach

Photo

Miss Miriam Curtis President
Of Zonta Club in N orthampton
Dickinson

Hospital Superintendent Succeeds
Delegate Chosen

Miss Keyes;

|

�Saga of Northampton Families

gave up their home and returned
to later Mrs
Dudley and Mrs’ Chilson3
Springfield, leaving the place to their the gay and
handsome daughters of
son, Jonathan, who had married Mary
Edward
Butler, one of whom
became
Clark,
and
for
four
generations
it the wife of the artist-poet, Buchanan
passed from father to son in the Par- Read,
the
beautiful
Susan
Lyman,
sons
family.
During
this
time,
~the afterward Mrs Lesley, and the dashe
—
lot
taken
by
Cornet
Joseph
had ing and daring
Sarah
Graham,
later ~
shrunk to only the homestead owned
Mrs Musgrave.

In House That Never Was Sold

in

in all.
Joseph
was selectman
of the
town,
owner
of lands here and .elsewhere,
busy
with
his fur trade and
cornet
of
the
Hampshire
troop
of
horse,

at the age of $2 brings to an
Eyil Whisperings
end the saga of a family and a
house
that
is probably
unparalleled
The
happiness
of the
couple
was
in the western part of the state. Miss soon disrupted, however, when neighBliss herself, and the home in which bors, envious of Mrs Parsons and reshe lived, the house of Cornet Joseph senting her attitude toward them, beParsons
on Bridge
street, were both!gan
to whisper
among
themselves
Northampton “institutions,” loved and connecting
her
name
with
that
of
respected by all who knew Miss Bliss Satan.
This was during the era when
witehcraft was blamed for all ills and
and had ventured
into the 282-yearwitch-baiting the popular sport of the
old abode.
Miss Bliss is responsible for a history of the ancient home, compiled in
1929,
which
gives
the date
of con-

ANNA

struction as 1658.

The

1807

by

Nathaniel

Parsons

and

his

sister,
Experience
Loomis,
and
a
mortgage
was
held on it by Joseph
Lyman and Horace Graves, who lived
nearby,
:

Maneuver

An
place

to

Eliminate

unusual financial maneuver took
when
Lyman,
as
one
of
the

ereditors
about

only

to

to

of

be

a

Daniel

seize

balked

Wright,

Wright's

by

was

possession

the

refusal

Mrs Wright
to sign the deed of sale,
which would have left her without a
local habitation. Instead, the. creditors
paid
off
Nathaniel’s
mortgage
and

CATHERINE

BLISS

AT

HOME

history of Cor-

net
Joseph
Parsons,
who
commissioned his brother-in-law, John Bliss,
to build the house, began in England,
which he left at the age of 18 in the
year 1635, sailing for America aboard
the
Mary
and
John
with
William
Pynchon, founder of Springfield.
He had known Pynchon in England
'for years and witnessed the deed by
which
the
latter
acquired
the
land
for Springfield township from the Indians.
He
remained
in
Springfield,
connected
with
Pynchon
in his furtrading activities and joined the Ancient and Honorable artillery company
of Boston,

Saga

of the

to reside

in Springfield,

ket street,

Parsons

commissioned Bliss

The

roof

ran

almost

to the

ground

on
the
north
side,
making
what
is
‘called a lean-to.
The
windows
had
|leaded sashes, probably brought from
| England, and the timbers were handj hewn,
square and put together
with
| the
pegs
used
at that time
in con| Struction,
The grooves still exist in}

|some

of

the

window

sills

where

the

|heavy
inside
wooden
shutters
could
|slide to and fro.
There was the usual
great
kitchen
fireplace’ with
cranes
| for the iron pots, the brick bake oven
and the little flip closet above.
Their
lives
were
busy
ones,
with
much
housework,
every
two years a

| baby—one

pair

of

twins,

12

children

One

door, he
and was

of

the

young

wandered
heard to

foggy

men,

night, .

|
f

constant

visitors with the three Wright daughters, Elizabeth, Anna and Mary, was
Theodcre Bliss, whose mother was a
great-great-granddaughter
of Cornet.
Joseph,

as

arrived

in

he

had

the

from

won

Philadelphia,|

a

junior

bookstore

partners

firm

of

EB.

H.

|

home

Miss

in

Bliss

Philadelphia,
put

it,

of the house

came

“the

and

thus

present

into being.”

Miss Bliss came into possession of the
house in 1910 and her only direct relative, a brother, Edgar S. Bliss, lives’
on Dartmouth street in Springfield,

Miss

the

Bliss

house

following

indication

concluded

and

she

its

of’

lived

her
of

her

families

paragraphs,

understanding

history

graphic

character

the

home

with
in

and

in

of

the

—

Ss

their

her

which

and died.
'
No Ghosts In History
“In the 270 odd years the house has

belonged to
never
been

history

Recent

death

of Northampton resident ends
which settled in Connecticut

tale of
valley,

early

families

of

only two families,
bought
or sold.

household

and
All

economics

has
the

has

passed through it.
From the candles —
of
Joseph
and
Mary
Parsons, . the
molds of which are still in the attic,
the
light
has
passed
through
the
stages of whale oil, kerosene and gas
to electricity.
The well-sweep in the
garden vanished and the pump which
brought
the
water
into
the
kitchen}
sink went, to be replaced by modern|
plumbing.
The
fireplaces
and
brick

day.
}presented the Cornet Joseph house to
the Daniel Wright family as a wife’s
A
family
nearby,
whose
members
ovens were closed, the cranes buried
had
a dislike for Mrs
Parsons,
had dower, eliminating the Parsons famthe
house's remaining
his- inside and stoves were put in front of
suffered
several
deaths
among
the ily from
cows and sickness among the children.
them, giving way in turn to the modtory.
Mr Wright’s
son,
Ferdinand
Hunt
ern radiator.
Instead of the Indians
Mrs Parsons had asked one of the
passing
the
windows,
id
older girls of the family to work for Wright,
married
Olive Ames,
one of stealthily
her and despite the desire of the girl a lively set of Greenfield young peo- the ox-cart and stagecoach lumbering
by,
automobiles
now
flash
and
dash,’
to. live
with
the
prominent
family, ple with whom the son, always known
Hunt,
associated.
The
Hunt and aeroplanes rumble and roar overher mother positively opposed it, and as
head.
charged that the girl’s desire to live Wrights promptly proceeded to make
which
included the
“In its long life, is there no ghost
with
the
Parsons
was
due
to .Mrs improvements,
There is no mention of an
Parsons’s
unholy
alliance
with
the construction of an ell on the eastern story?
devil, who was helping her to bewitch
side which contained a new kitchen apparition,
but
often
mysterious
} with
the
great
fireplace
and
bake
creakings
are heard
in the old timthe girl
be
a step
seems
coming
up
the
The final blow came when another oven of that time.
A new well, was
stairs,
there
is a sound
of a chair
|pig died, and a son of the family cried dug, the lean-to taken away, making
rocking
somewhere,
and
per= |
rooms
upstairs;
the
leaded softly
;out
that
he was
bewitched
by
Mrs better
is seeking
| Parsons because he was ill.
This was sashes
were removed
and
the
-tiny| haps one of the dwellers
|
six-inch panes of wavy glass put in. |the old familiar places.
followed at last by a summons
from
No erime or
Boston for her to appear before the
The
Wrights,
fond
of music
and tragedy has ever thrown its shadow, |
sequence of births,|
judges of witchcraft and the long and the social gayeties of that time, were only the natural
arduous journey to Boston was made.
hosts to many affairs in their home mariages and deaths.
So they bring
Before
the trial Mary
spent
three and
possessed
the
first
piano
that nothing to terrify and no change inmonths in jail in which time she pre- came
to Northampton.
Among
the side will bar their finding what they|
pared
a defense
that
was
foolproof group to be found at the musicals on look for.
So they come if they will
winter evenings were Clara Stebbins,
and tarry
a while, for they are not
and resulted in her full acquittal.
The affair
f
having
/
left too unpleas- later Mrs Clara W. Lathrop:
Senator) fearsome:
and
may
their
souls .by
ant
an
impression
the
couple
soon|Bates’s daughters, Theresa and Kate,
| the mercy of God rest in peace.”

This

museum.

house,

rich

in

his-

Bliss

and

of the
is the property
lore,
torical
Northampton
Historica]
Society,
patriotism
and
generosity
through the

the

late

Anna

Catharine

her brother, Edgar Sumner

cte

“Foggy”

too frequent
leaving, mis-

murmur,
“It’s a damned
and I smell cheese.”

their

Parsons Homestead in Bridge Street,
oldest house in Northampton and one
of the oldest in New England, is now
as ahistorical
public
the
to
open

ob

perhaps took
punch, for on

taking the front
into the pantry

owners

NORTHAMPTON, Aug. 1—Built in
1658, only 38 years after the landing
the Cornet Joseph
of the
Pilgrims,

Na

Was

Butler,
in
the
midst
of a swirling
snowstorm
in February,
1848, carry-—
ing
with
him
a
ring
intended
for
Mary.
The next day they were mare
ried
and
the
couple
went
to
make

Parsons House /74!
Is Now Museum

of

gentlemen
sips of the

He

but

to build a commodious and comfortable dwelling.
Inasmuch
as Joseph
Parsons
was
one of the most prominent men in the
settlement
and
licensed
to
keep
a
house of entertainment and sell rum,
the house was designed with a strong
cellar and a good flight of steps leading down
to it.
This
staircase was
uncovered some years ago and found
to be made only of logs.

Pantry

concerning
the aftermath
these parties forms a hue

|morous side light to Miss Bliss’s his«
|tory, when she relates, “One of the

where

Blisses

in
1655
Joseph
decided
to move
to
Northampton,
having
been
preceded
by his brother-in-law, John Bliss.
Selecting a lot running from what now
is the cemetery to a brook below Mar-

of

the

story
one of

ship

Ten years after his arrival in this
country
he
married
Mary
Bliss,
daughter
of
Thomas
and
Margaret
Bliss of Hartford.
Mrs Bliss and her
children had moved to Springfield after the death of her husband and had
taken up valuable tracts on both sides
of the river.
They
were a wealthy
family for those days and the street
names,
Bliss and
Margaret,
still remain to perpetuate their memory.
For
nearly
10
years
the
Parsons

continued

of

When
A

Bliss.

and
All the woodwork is hewn
is
house

earved

{still

in

by

Standing»

a

hand,

fine

for

283

longed fo only two
bought
has. been oe
many

notable

and

state

the.

of preservation. |

,
yearsrs,

it

has

families and

sold.
or
and0
features

be- |

never

has
It
cont1 ains

will be
many fine collections
Mrs.
of interest to 1 overs of antiques.

Carl Lange has been
of the museum.

which

named

custodian

—

Msp tida

By RUSSELL
TROTMAN
HE
RECENT
death of Anna
Catherine Bliss of Northampton

4

�= a.

OY PISTOL IS
TROUBLE MAKER

parking

caretaker

The

car

the

to

;

Town
}
|

Hugo

|

China.

Worthington
15 —

Aug.

WORTHINGTON,

Town

for
on

ie

from
students
school
high
Six
4F
enjoying
are
who
Worthington
to go Some- |
wanted
vacation
week’s
before }
been
never
had
they
-where

the
the

Hall.

$785

About

| when
;born
|

Torrey
music
f

ocean

to

Hope,

and’

southern

Call was!
when, in|

1888, on her husband’s

death

southeast

Janeiro,

of

Rio

command

de

at sea|
she

of his ship. With

a)

|knowledge gained in many voyages,
i She navigated the rest of the way to|

About

;China,

ruled

;given
| feat.

was cleared

medals

a crew

of 75

and

and

honor

was

for

her

|. No
one yet knows
all of the
things that women will be doing

Harry|
and
the
between
a

of Good

Indian

Mrs Clara (Knight)
in Maine in 1848, or

took

Henry Snyder carried
project.
campaign.
Mrs.
advertising

Cole
| Blizabeth
| Bates furnished
Bota

the Cape

the

and
now
working
in
munitions|
jplants—that were never dreamed of |

500 attended the three-act play, “Here
night at the |
Friday
Charlie.”
Comes
which, was
Hall
Town
Worthington
to raise
Selectmen
by the
sponsored
the
for
chairs
purchase
to
money

a) |

eee

Women
are
doing
hundreds
of
things—skiing, fiying, driving trucks,

Addy

Hall on Fri-

Phylis Parish, George Packard, Marvis
Snyder,
Kersey-Evaline
Sears
and
Fred Sears.

police, the men learned that the care- taker had spotted the pistol and noticonsidered
he
police of - what
fied
something suspicious.

a

by

in Town

Ship

done what no woman, even in
emancipated age and in the war

vacross

day night.
The
cast includes Edith
Packard, Richard Coffey, Mabel Sweet,
Donald
Mason,
Herbert
Porter,
Jr.,

to

the

car. From

of the

floor

on the

coached

a

| A few days ago a woman in her
|95th year died in Worcester who

around

Friday Night

is being

re is

Skippered

300 miles off the coast of Brazil,
lsailed it across the South Atlantie,

Hall Will Be Scene on

will be presented

ee

emergency, is likely to do. She had
}taken command of a full-rigg¢ed ship

The
WORTHINGTON,
Aug.
9
three-act play “Here Comes Charlie,”
which

She

| had
this

To Be Presented

police
with
a car loaded
clubhouse,
to a
subjected them
and
approached
only
produced
which
search,
routine
purchased
the toy pistol. It. had been
Tuesday
owner
car
the
by the son of
at the Cummington Fair and had been

jeft

=e

=|

Three-Act Play

to the

returned

he

after

Shortly

chat.

lot-at the golf course.
came

-

Worthington

of the Worthington
Four members
Country Club, residents of that town,
to play
are not sure that they want
Their unagain.
in Springfield
golf
eertainty arises from their experience
Wednesday when a toy pistol and an
jalert caretaker made them the object
of close police scrutiny.
they
raining when
it was
Though
reached one of the public links here,
of clearing in
a promise
was
there
in” their
waited
they
the air and
parked car for a chance to start. Phe
promise wasn’t made good in the forenoon and after some lunch at a nearreturned
they
center
community
“by

'to the

ra

ibefore

this

war

is

over.

The

story

history

when

lof Mrs Call is a reminder of the
emergencies
women
have met
in
the past, including the times in

lt

Sunday afternoon so they started for
North
Adams
to.
investigate
the
Hoosae
Tunnel,
thinking
they
could
drive through
it
After
several
un-|
successful
attempts,
they
finally dis-|
covered
the
western
portal
and to |
their dismay decided they had better
return
the
way
they
came.
It is a/|
railroad
tunnel
only.
|

New

England’s

early

more than one of them,
with her|

peers
clutching
at her
skirts,
looked down the barrel of a musket
|as she covered an Indian,

|'Two First Ladies

Now at Playhouse

'

gt

Wood

Cowl, Peggy

Jane

Citizenship Questions Raised
|
As Alien Registration Goes On

in “Old Acquaintance”

28 — The|

July

STOCKBRIDGE,

this

audiences

Berkshire

Playhouse

land little
|that the

more need
Playhouse

week are doubly favored. Two of the
| American theater's first ladies are ap|
| pearing, Jane Cowl and Peggy Wood,

theaters which will see.

lthree summer

Since
quiring

be said, except |
is one of only

ithe famous pair this year.
| Tonight saw an ovation to both

are

|

ac-

the past winter. If audience reaction
is a criterion the Playhouse should
the week

of

rest

the

for

out

sold

festival
to the

and probably will be, for the
thousands
is bringing many
county.
“Old

two

Acquaintance”

authors,
played

|ham,

_|pooks

not

|do

the

sell;

by

one

Miss

critics
and

who

Cowl,

but

praise,

Mark-

writes

which

Mildred|

other,

the

of

story

the

is

Katherine

whoj|
Wood,
Miss
by
played
Drake,
|writes books by the ream which critlics
laugh
at
but
the
public
buy.
and jealousiés |
their quarrels
Around

been

has

It

more

this reviewer
since
Wood. Then she was
edy

on

star.

the

Since

dramatic

still
Jane
Cowl
enough for this

Next

|Milés,

Lover’

week

will
by

Wodehouse,

head,

then

20

than

first saw
a musical

she

stage.

présént

Jacques

starring

director,

“Her

Duval

Miss
com+

Cowl

Cardboard

Tallulah

P.

G

Bank-

D.-Cy

A:

is

saying|

and

been

who

asked
do

not

as to who
need

to

the Federal Building and learn whether they should register.
The date of a marriage of an American-born
woman
to an
alien
deter;mines whether she lost her citizenship,
‘because if she married an alien before
Sept. 22, 1922, she would have to file
a petition for a second
paper, while
if a
woman
citizen
of
the
United
States married an alien after Sept. 22,
1922 she retained her citizenship unless
she made a formal renunciation of a
citizenship: before a court.
Another
ruling
which-appears
to
be
conflicting
is to the
effect
that
between
“Sept. 22, 1922 and March
3,
1931,
the. marriage
of a woman
to
an alien ineligible to citizenship, constituted an expatriation of the woman,
but since 1931, she did not lose her
| citizenship
by a marriage under the

/same

far

William

and

|

years

gone

has

Jane

and
that
is
famous lady.

the

re-|

another

for one

and real affection
volves the play.

aliens

have

register.
Some of the situations in
which persons find themselves relative
to citizenship
are so complex ‘that
the safest course for them is to visit

VanJohn
they played
tresses when
Drucen’s “Old Acquaintance,” in which |
during |
Broadway
on
costarred
they
be

the
passage
of the
law
reregistration of all aliens many

questions

i

circumstances,

rg

woman widowed or divorced from
an
alien
before’
Sept.
22,
1922,
re."
sumed
her citizenship by continuing
to reside
in the United
States.
An
American
woman,
wife
of an
alien,
married prior to Sept. 22, 1922, whose

husband

is

still

an

alien

or

naturalized after Sept. 22, 1922, must
be naturalized under the Cable Act.

in

Relative

the

to

United

children,

States

a

is a

child

citizen

born

re-

gardless af the nationality of his parents,
and
a child
born
outside
the
United States to an American citizen
parent
is also
considered
a citizen

of the

May

United

24,

1934,

States

in

by

birth.

order

for

a

Before

child

born
outside
the
United
States
to
have
the right
of American
citizenship
by
birth,
the
father
of
such
child
must
have
been
an
American
citizen at the birth of the child.
Now
the
child
of
an
American
mother
also has
the right of American citizenship at birth. If only one
of the
parents
is an
American
citi-|
zen,
the
foreign
born
child
is considered an American
citizen at birth,
but
in order to retain such
citizenship the child must come to the United States
to reside
permanently
before his -18th birthday,
must
actually reside continuously
in the United
States for five years before the 18th
birthday
and
take
the
oath
of
al
legiance to the United
States within

six months

after the

2ist birthday.

Prior
to
May
24,
1984,
foreign
bern
minor
children
whose
parents
became
naturalized
citizens
became
citizens
also
if they
were.
dwelling
within
the United
States,
or if they
entered the United
States legally he-

wastfore

their

21st

birthday,

—

�Si

WORTHINGTON, April 2—The pic-ary to investigate the
ture above is the architect's concep- sented a comprehensive
of whom
tion of the new
schoolhouse which ers, many
Worthington
day night
against.

voters

with

79

authorized

Tues-

in

eight

favor

to

through the efforts of the Young Mar-|concrete basement there will be a play
ried Couples
Club which
transported|room,
lunch
room
and
kitchen
and
them to the meeting place.
the boiler room,
The building is to be erected on land
Work will start as soon as possible.

It was the fourth time the voters
had met to consider the question, and
an appropriation of $18,000 was au-

' Worthington

i vet

ES

owned

by

ing

to

R.

as

is

be

Porter

for

town

Church.

north

Land

purchased
a.

of

from

First|It was

voted

adjoin-|house

Daniel

playground.

to retain the new school-}j.

committee

mittee.

Included

as

are:

the

building

Mrs.

1

com-}

Merwin

F.

Packard,
Fred G. Sears, Jr., Arthur)
G. Capen, Selectmen;
Wells W. Mag-

Plans for the colonial type putiding,
drawn hy Ralph Sizer, Westfield, argal

and

Henry

Snyder.

}

|

4

Signs

Worthington

Town Accepts

Gift of $2315.

School Fund Bill

Special to The Springfield Union
‘ BOSTON,
July 16 — The governor:
today signed into law the bill authorizing Worthington
to borrow
money’
for a new school building.

Ground has been “broken for
new school house at ‘the Center.

the

Congregational

thorized,
$17,000 to be raised by borrowing and the remainder by taxation.
The committee appointed in Febru-

SS

architect, include three classrooms, a
teacher's room with storage closets
present|and toilets on the main floor. In the

project
prereport to vot-

were

Summer Residents Donate to
Cost of School

ce

WORTHINGTON, Aug.

special
voetd

ge

town

to

322° — At ay
tonight it was

meeting

accept

the

gift

of

$2315

made

: by several summer residents who aie}
interested in the new school building |
now under construction,
There is a deficit of $4200 and this
|gift,

along

with

$1885

deficit.
A rising

vote

of

jvoted
cash,

which

the

to appropriate from the
will be used to eliminate

the donors.
Breen ees

thanks

Moderator

was

George

town

free
this

given

Jones

Are Appointed

WORTHINGTON, July 17—Arthur

G. Capen
announces the
following
|\teaching appointments for the ensuing year:
Miss Helen E. Brown of
North

School;

pointed

Adams

Miss
to

Corners,

at the Corners

Persis

primary

H.

grammar

Ritchie,

grades

at

reap: —
the

and Miss Constance Beverley

|of Williamstown at the South Worthington

School.

The West Worthington

Sch

1 will

| be closed and the children transported
to the Corners and later to the ne\
school, which officials hope will be
completed

by

Thanksgiving.

the

at

M.

The School Committee has asked
for bids for transportation for local
schools, Details may be obtained from
poster

F.

Packard’s

Bids must be submitted
a. Capen by eee
4,

to

store.—

Arthur

�: e =

NORTHAMPTON

Williamsburg

:

_ NATIVE LEAVES
$2,000,000 WILL

Patch Was Noted
For Good Memory

and Trust Fund
Sister

WILLIAMSBURG,
July 4—Charles
Patch, 74, of Searsville, who died at

say that
been the

with

!made
| lias

years.

eS]
se

Jhis

He

his

family.

When

14

he

his homme with his foster-father,
Rude,
in Huntington
for nine

He

then

of

West

returned

here

to make

home
with
his aged
mother.
leaves one cousin, Theodore

Beach

Mrs.

Springfield.

M.

i
The funeral, which will be private.
_will be held Saturday afternoon at 2
cat the Mansfield funéral home, South
Main
Street,
Haydenville,
Rev,
William
C.
Forbes,
pastor
of the
Con;Sregational Church, officiating. Burial
; will be in Village Hill Cemetery.

|

James,

former

a

died

native

of

Northampton,

were

Through 13th, Paramount

Madeleine Carroll &amp;nd Stirling Hayden are continuing in the technicolor
feature,
“Bahama
Passage,” at the
Paramount.
This
is
the
romantic
Adam and Eve fable written as “Dildo
Cay” By Nelson Hayes.
Actual backgrounds
were
provided
by
carema
crews and technicians who, with the
stars and director, spent weeks at the

tiny Bahama ‘island,

Salt Cay.

- there both Miss Carroll
‘den were
presented
to

“duchess

of

Windsor,

While

and Mr Hay-|
the duke and

the,

Bahamas’ |

‘new rulers.
The story relates the ro“mantic
difficulties Miss
Carroll, as,
the over'seer’s daughter, has in melting
the’ surly
plantation
owner,
Mr

Hayden.
Carroll

The

Flora

provide

cofeature

Robson

dramatic

is

the

and

Leo

effects.

G.

melodrama,

“Mr
District
Attorney
in the
Carte
Case,”
with
James
Ellison,
Virginia
Gilmore,
Franklin
Pangborn
and
Lynne Caryer.

Mass.,

named

to

share

equal

residuary

interests and also to receive $700,000
each. Mrs. Maud P. Larson of North-

ampton,
Mass.,
a sister,
was
given
life
use
of
the
James
property
in
that city and a $500,000 trust.

After Mrs. Larson’s death the property will pass to the Clark School

for

Deaf

and

Dumb

charities,

terests

plus

valuable

for all, and

to

employes.

C.

A.,

Named

of the will weref
inson Memorial
and

the

more

contingent

in

than

in-

$30,000

this

section

Smith College, Dick“Hospital, the Y. M.

First

Congregational

Church, $50,000 each,)the {Old Ladies}
Home and the Be'
Allen’
D. A. R.|
Chapter—all of Northampton, $10,000

each y Ge
city itself receiving $2500,
as dSes
Whately, Mass,
David W.
Davidson,
a nephew,
of
Noank,
Conn.,
will
receive
$100,000.

To

realty,

her

husband

jewelry

and

she

left

Florida}

personal

effects.

Mrs. James Leaves Sister
In Northampton
Eddy

May

Parsons

21

—

James,

York ‘socialite and wife of Com.
thur Curtiss James who died in
York City last Thursday, was a
tive of Northampton,
She was
daughter of the late Mr. and
Sydenham C. Parsons of Henshaw

Mrs.
New

ArNew]
nathe
Mrs.
Av-

enue,
and
she
was
married
to Mr.
James in 1890 in the First Congregational Church here.

' She was a graduate of Northamp|ton High School and a member of the
‘Smith College class of 1892. She was
\a

sister

of

of Round
|years
the
\fited

from

Mrs.

James

Henry

Larson

Hill Road. Within recent
First Church
has bene-

her

Benevolent
Society
the Town Hall, rain

|day from
'

/in

The

Aug.
10—The
of the. Women's

will.be
or shine,

3 until 5 p. m.

following

charge:

committees

quilt

table,

Mrs.

held
at
Wednes-

will

be

Herbert

Portier,
Jr., Mrs,
Elisha
Brewster,
Mrs, Edith G. Brewster and Meieemde.

i

aprons

and

fancy

/work, Mrs. Charles A. Kilbourn, Mrs.
Theodore Tatro, Mrs. Flora Russell
and Mrs. Howard
Mason;
food table,
Mrs.
Lewis
Zarr,
Mrs.
Franklin
H.
Burr,
Mrs,
Anna
Devlin
and
Mrs.
Harry
Mollison;
candy,
Mrs.
C. Byron Smith, Mrs. Homer
Granger and
Mrs. Walter
Tower;
grab bag,
Mrs.
Stanley Mason; ice cream anda punch,

Miss

tram

Marion
Allen

lL,

and

Bartlett,

‘Mrs.

Maud

Mrs.

Ber-

Clarke;

fortune cake, Mrs, Herbert G, Porter,
Sr.; hall committee, Mrs. Herbert G,
Porter, Jr., and Mrs. C. Byron Smitk,

at Northampton—

the institute has a remainder interest
in the $500,000 trust.
Mrs. James left $297,000 to institujtions,
schools,
municipalities
and

Harriet

|

of

last Thursday at 73.
Beneficiaries
Mrs. E. Hayward Ferry, a
sister,
and Mrs, Harriet F. Manice, a niece,

NORTHAMPTON,

‘Bahama Passage’ Stays (2

chairman

the World
Service
Council.
of the
Young Women’s Christian Association,
and

Rain or Shine

WORTHINGTON,
annual fair and sale

estate of “more than $2,000,will filed for probate
today

showed,

no other one man
friend of so many

Smith girls at one time. To listen to
his long rambling monologs is a pleasure no one should forego—the Smith
girl’s education is incomplete without
an hour's
audience
to Mr.
Patch.”
Although suffering from rheumatism
the last few years, he has managed to
jmake many trips to the college.
He was born in Worthington, Novy.
16,
1856,
son
of
Franklin
L.
and
Mariah
C, (Merritt)
Patch and lived
'there for seven years before moving

ihere

left an
000,” a

Worthington

Annual Event Will Be Held.

to

NEW
YORK,
May 21 (AP)—Mrs.
Harriet EK, Parsons James, wife of
Com. Arthur Curtiss James, financier,

the Dickinson
Hospital last night as
the result
of injuries
received
when
he was hit by an auto driven by Harry Sanderson of Haydenville, has for
many years Seen noted for his ability
}to ree] off national names and dates
with an amazing facility and connect
them with local dates and people.
For over 40 years he made regular
peddling trips. to Northampton, selling
in turn, apples, bouquets of red berries, hemlock,
pussywillows,
arbutus,
laurel, violets, maple sugar and sirup.
{Of
him
the
Smith
College
weekly
about 10 years ago wrote:
‘Tt
would
not
be
hazarding
too

ie

‘Women Prepare
Wednesday Fair

1744
Mrs. James Leaves Property

Accident Victim's Funeral to.
Be This Afternoon

-|much to
has ever

i

philanthropies.

Worthington

}4)|

WORTHINGTON,
Nov,
13 — Mrs,
Herbert
G.
Porter,
Jr..
local
ehairman
of
the
Red
Cross
Drive
has
chosen as her assistants Mrs. Arthur
Rolland,
Mrs.
George
0,
Packard,
Mrs,
Harry
Mollison,
Mrs
Stanley
Mason,
Mrs. Wells W. Magar#al and
Mrs.
Howard
Hatch,
The
drive will
close Nov. 20,
Mrs,
Morris
Smith
is’ recovering
from
an
operation
performed
last
week

at

sions

of

Diekinson

Hospital,

Mr. and
Mrs.
Herbert
Porter, Jr.,
are moving
this week
to 306 North
Street, Dalton,
O, Packard,
George
Mis.
and
Mr.
of Worth.
lecturer-elect
and
master
ington
Grange,
will
attend
the
sesthe

National

Grange

Friday

and Saturday
in Worcester
and
will
be initiated
into the seventh
degree,
Rey. J, Herbert
Owen
has chosen
for his topic Sunday at 11 at the First
Congregational Church. “Freedom,” in
recognition
of
Defense
Week.
Mr.
Owen,
also
pastor
of
the
South
Worthington
Church,
will’ conduct
a
Thanksgiving
service in that church
at 2.30 p.m:

LEMP.

�a

pe

\1741

To Be Bride

Worthineton
‘TON,

ton.

GEE ee

teat
musician,|

(Nov.
blind

La~ |
Worthington
the
blind”}
the
work.
of
He will al
NON

using

Set

ot t her
Pi oOcee
go
tor

the(

n

demon

support
fington

of the
bi

swriter. |
ition will
Frederick |

Horace

2
\¢

of
North . Adams
at
The Spruce

wugh

1

Stal

Worthington

JULY 29, 1941

Former Pastor
To Be Married

M.S. C. News

M. S. C. SENDS

MENINTO ARMY

WORTHINGTON,

Holyoke, Springfield Youths
on R.O.T.C. List
|

July 28—Massachusetts
this month sent its new-

AMHERST,
State College

est class of R. O. T. C. graduate offi-S.
cers into regular duty with the U.

of the class of
Twenty-three
Army.
a8
commissioned
cadets
senior
24
month
reserve second lieutenants last

now

are

with

the

stationed
regular

officer
as he

other
goon

the year.
1941
The

Western

in

Army

seven

units.

,
officers

graduate

An-

as
in

thorpe,

Cavalry,

Sixth

Ga.,

Carlton

from

sere

Fort

Jones,

of

Easthampton

Jr.

Prouty,

of

Springfield

was

Willimansett

Ninth
| Brage,

Reconnaissance
N. C.

assigned

Troop,

to

of

of

C,

Fort

noon

Mr.

and

and

Women's

194]
WORTHINGTON,

July

14.—

The

Worthington
Historical
Society
held
its annual
meeting
Saturday at the
| Congregational
Church
with
Walter

Stevens — presiding.

The

Bowles

Mrs.

clerk of the
has notified

all

leaks

should

session.

Dr.

{

Arthur

H.

stood

the dues

Labor Day.
from

Waresi-

the

She was

High

graduated

School

merce

of

here.

Com-

be

Smith-Moltenbrey
Huntington Bridal
Of: Interest Here

Society

Rectory of Catholic Church
Is Scene of Wedding
on Holiday

Miss
Bleanor
Margaret
Smith,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Bryon Smith of Worthington, became
the bride of George
Donald
Moltenbrey,
son
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles
Frederick Moltenbrey
of Pleasant
Street, Huntington, yesterday morning
at 9 in the rectory
of the Catholic
church at Huntington, The bride, who
is a graduate
of the High
School of
Commerce
in this city and has been
employed
by Jackson &amp; Curtis, brok-

Merritt

will give an illus“The
romance
of

Miss Eleanor
Collins, Miss Elizabeth
Brewster
and
Mrs.
Edward
Baldwin
will
be
hostesses
for
the
card
party
Tuesday
at
the
Worthington Country
Club.

ers,

was

attended

by

Miss

Gerdldine

Frances
Smith
of Worthington.
The
bridegroom
was attended by Bernard
Gaudette of Huntington.
A maroon
wool
suit
was worn
by

following

the bride

corsage

maid

of

with

black

white

was

accessories

orchids.

attired

in

a

The

light

and a

brides-

blue

matching
wool suit, black, accessories
and a corsage of gardenias, The bride’s
|mother wore navy blue and the bride|groom's mother chose a beige costume

are to be a contribu-|

to something

Mr.
and
Mrs..
Smith of Worth-

ington will marry George Donald Moltenbrey
of Huntington
at a ceremony in Huntington on

and

were elected:
President, Walter Stevens;
secretary,
Mrs.,
Howard
Brewster;
treasurer,
Sidney
J.
Smart;.
nominating
committee,
Rev.
J. Herbert Owen,
chairman.
It is undertion each year
ca] interest.

MISS ELEANOR M. SMITH
Daughter
of
Charles Bryon

Chester

Conn.

Benevolent

of New York City
trated
iecture
on
old blue china.”

Worthington

Allen

|

will meet at the home of Mrs. Herbert Porter, Jr., Wednesday
at 2 to
price articles for the fair.
It is requested
that
all
contributions
be
handed
to the
solicitors
or to Mrs.
Porter before
Wednesday.
The
Highland
Club
will
hold
its
summer session at Worthington Town
Hall Thursday,
opening at 11 a. m.
with business
meeting,
music
and
a
paper by Edward J. Clark, a charter
member,
on
‘Past,
present
and
future
of
the
club.’
Dinner
will
be
served in the church dining room in
charge
of Mrs.
George
O.
Packard
and
Mrs,
Stanley
Mason.
The
Hay
Hoe Opera Company of South Worthington,
under
the
direction
of Miss
Jane Tuttle, will present a half hour
of music at the opening of the after-

at pine Camp, N. Y., with the Fourth
rick
Armored Division; Edward Brode the
of

Saybrook,

The

of

P.

Bowles

repaired,

naisqas assigned to the eighth recon
Jackson, S. C.;
Fort
ance troop,
is
cher

and

Nancy
and
Mary,
spent
end
on
the
Nordly
as

is forbidden

Ogle-

Jr.

4—Mr.

dents
of the Fire
District
that
the
use of water for washing automobiles, |
watering
lawns
and gardens
or permitting the water to run all the time

Myer,
as follows: Third Cavalry, Fort
S. Coffey of NorthampVa., William
of HolSchenker
Hanssen
and
ton
Cavalry Division, Fort
Second
yoke;
of
Bolt, Jr.
A,
Ernest
Kan.,
Riley,

Windsor;

Mrs.

Arthur G. Capen,
ter Commissioners,

stationed

are

Massachusetts

Mr. and
daughters,
the
week

guests

states

will see active duty
comes of age later

Aug.

; Mrs. S. Park Harman,
Jr., of White
Plains, N. Y., announce
the .engagement of their sister, Miss Helen Walbridge Harman
of Rochester, N. Y.,
to Rev,
Dr,
Harlan
I. Creelman
of
Auburn, N, Y. Dr. Creelman was formerly pastor of the local First Congregational Church and has for years
had
a
summer
home,
Ashmore
Lodge,
at Worthington.

| with

of histori-

brown

accessories.

Each

had

a

corsage of roses,
After
the
reception,
which
took
place in the home
of the bride, the
couple
departed
by motor
on a trip
,through
New
York State.
They
will
jlive in Pine Street, Huntington.
The bridegroom was born in Huntington
and
was
graduated
from
the
high school there.
|

Harold

bride,

who

Norfolk,
here

==

EOS

for

a

B.

is

Va.,

the

*

Smith,
in

was

the

brother

Marine

among

wedding.

Sse

of

Corps

the

the

at

guests

=

�‘

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[Springfield Union zat
Scenes at Carew Street School as pupils make study”
ico, Central and South America, their chief project in the canes,
in

democratic

742 #

4

living.

Upper left, pupils in Room 4 put finishing touches on the model ©
a Mexican home. Leonard McCrary, Shirley Day and i

of

Cote

are

the

pupils

in

the picture.

Upper right, South American products are featured at the minjature store conducted by third grade pupils at the school. Those.

:

Siembor.
Lower left, collecting South American stamps and flags are fa- —
vorite hobbies among the pupils and a group of boys is shown |

a

in

the

here

picture

comparing

Linwood
sky

are

Joseph

stamps.

Gingras,

They

are

Costello, Albert Sepanek,

Richard

James

McNamee

Costello,

Manuel

and

John

Rappadakis,

Stella

Pappas,

Earl Klit-

and Albert Hodge.
Lower left, Eugene Girard and Walter Slesarenko are shown
working on a large map of South America, and crayon and card-

board reproductions of South American

flags,

Sample of School Pupils Quiz

Here is a sample of a South American quiz prepared by pupils
of the Carew ‘Street Elementary School.
What other countries in the Western Hemisphere-besides the

United States have red, white and blue in their flags?
What language is spoken in Brazil?
What

country

has

the

largest

forest

in

South

America?

How many countries are there in South America? Name them.
How
many
countries will the Pan-American
Highway
go
through?
What is the name of the mountain which stands in the harbor of
Rio de Janeiro?’
What does the word Pan mean?
When was the first Pan-American Conference held and where
did it take place?
Where is the Pan-American Building?
With what famous United States leader is Simon Bolivar often
eompared?

:

ss

�Maple

and

east

sunlight.

jess

a

maple

trees are tapped on the south
sides

barrel,

sap,

to

In the

or

makes

secure

maximum

“boiling down”

31

a

gallons
gallon

of

proc-

of

rock

of

syrup
into
for
the owners
of Berkshire
estates the
|maple sugar harvest is just a pleas-

}and
this may
be
transformed
jeight pounds
of sugar.
While

jant

diversion

or

hobby,

for

thrifty

farmers
the cash
received
from
the)|
Yield
helps
to
pay
the
taxes.
At
country stores in some
small
towns
maple
sugar
cakes are an object of
barter, a system of trade unchanged

in a century.
The-late
Frank
/Creamer of Peru had half a ton
maple sugar in stock at times,

_|Has Tapped S ame Sugar Orchard y
On Vermont Farm for 64 Years

C. A. Murdock of Jacksonville Expected to Start Boiling
March 20; Notes Progress in Methods
For more than half a century C. A.
Murdock
of Jacksonville, Vt., has annually
tapped
the
sugar
orchard
on

his

has

farm

yielded

and

for

longer

its treasure

Methods

of

than

that

sap.

it

Improve

Many
changes
in
the
mechanical
process
of making
maple
sirup
and
Sugar
have
taken
“place
since
Mr.
Murdock began helping in the making
of Vermont’s
famous
product on the
family homestead 64 years ago.
When
he first began,
wooden
blocks
three

feet

long

and

16

inches

in

diameter

were
split in half,
hewn
out
in the
center and used to catch the sap as
it was
conveyed
from
tree to trough
by means of a V-shaped spout.
Next
came the handmade unpainted wooden
buckets larger at the bottom than at
the top.
Customs
then changed
and
the
12-quart
wooden
buckets
were
used
painted a bright red inside and
out. . These,
in turn,
were
succeeded
by the 16-quart wooden bucket painted
white
intide.
Last
came
the
metal
bucket which, itself, has gone through
several changes as to shape and size.
At first covers to prevent dirt and
other foreign matter from getting into
the sap and
clogging the evaporator

were

of

one-quarter

inch

thick

wood

the

and

buckets

fastened to the buckets by means
of
a stiff wire.
These again
gave
way
| to the galvanized metal covers.
The first spouts were fashioned
of
elderberry
and
sumac
limbs
cut
to
the desired length and then made into
a pipe by pushing out the pith with
a hot wire.
Later the manufactured
wooden
spouts with wire hooks were
used and were
good for several sea| sons if carefully driven into the tree
and removed without cracking.
Now,
| of course, the pressed steel spout and
hook
combined
are
used
except
in
orchards that pipe the sap directly into
the sugar house.
The nails first used

to

hold

place

were

covers

handmade

by

the

in

village

blacksmith

with

a head

on

about

the

the

upper

side only.
At present, Mr. Murdock has about
3000 wooden
and
metal buckets with |
covers and spouts as well as 2000 feet
A team
of horses
and }
of pipe line.
truck are used to gather the sap.
His
largest
storage
tank
holds
about
40
barrels;
there is one of 20-barrel capacity and several for emergency use.
Two evaporators are in constant operation during sugar making time where
often 850 gallons of sirup will be made
in a single
spring.
As
is the
case
with
most
good
sugar
makers,
Mr.
Murdock
now employs a felt strainer
on
an
improved
settling
tank.
The
sirup
is
put
into
cans
and_
bottles
of various
sizes and
he also
makes
sake
sugar,
soft
sugar
and
cream
sugar.
Recalling
some
of his
experiences
many
years ago, he told of gathering
sap
through
two feet of snow
when
no team could be used.
Snow shoes, a
boat sled and a one-barrel tub were
employed.
Two
years
prior to that
he boiled sap constantly for 14 days
without ever letting the fire out day
or night or going to his home.
With
the improved
methods it is now possible
to
do
all the
boiling
by
daylight.
Half
a
century
ago
it
was
customary
to break
open
the
roads
through
the
sugar
orchard
a couple
of weeks before boiling began;
now a
team can be driven over most of the
orchard without even shoveling.
Then
he could hire good
men
for -$16 and
board for a month of 26 working days,
each day starting at ¥ a. m. and lasting until dark,
Four yoke of oxen and
two span of horses did the work, which
is
now
accomplished
with
a _ single
pair of horses and
a truck.
Mr.
Murdock’s
orchard
and
sugar |}
house is near the state road and while
in operation
many
visitors are
welcomed
to see what is going on.
He

usually

March,

begins

20th

of

G.
of

�=

_ At last the buds swell on the maple
trees,

and

jterness

By ESTHER B. STEBBINS
robin
with

; One
[South
The

city

windswept

drab

impatiently

and

unbelief,

“sugar

old,

betray

platters

ways

with

stand

the

in

down

vague

the

too,

those,

broken,

ever

|
some

tin pail

great

a

morning,

crisp

;the

on |

come,

will

chosen

the

off the

pry

|

lid i

New England
and
pail
10-pound
squatty
brown
coarse-grained
the
at
with a tiny pool of thick syrup

northern
that

of

gaze
sugar

a_

to

back
Straight
on
house
jsugar

home.

flood

Memories

at its top!

@

old
lichened
hillside.
rocky

‘Smoke pours slowly from its blackened

of burning
fragrance
The
chimney.
The
wood drifts through the orchard.

sprawis

cordwood

snowdrifts

Late

door.

the

at

/untidily

of

pile

lonce-trim

| still mass about the ledge rocks and |
Muddy
hemlocks.
low
the
under
wheel ruts mark out the tree lane
where the old sledge with its huge red
tub stands ready to gather the evestately old maple is
Hach
ning sap.
fantastically decked with a jaunty tin
The sharp tattoo of the drops
pail.
at midday has changed to a gurgling
water
sweetened
the
as
plop-plop
slowly

And
night

now, when
creeps into

rounds.

evening

sledge

on

Clambering

up

and

ledges,

and

rocks

the

over

down

slowly,
the

more

yet

the

drags

horse

pail.

the

first chill of
air, and the

the
the

and

slowly

fall

drops

of

top

the

to

creeps

the

the

pails to
farmer carries the brimming
gathering
great
the
in
emptied
With special pride he notes the
tub.
day’s run of the patriarch tree, deep-

be

on the

rooted

slope.

sunny

high

cold grows with the dusk—tiny
slow-dripping
the
from
form
spouts, as the weary horse picks his
way back over the frozen ground with
Again the storage
his awkward load.
The

icicles

filled to overflowing,
trickles down into

tub

is

sap

lazily

shallow

in

on hour.

hour

boiling

one,
beside

drowses

watcher

madder—bubbles
about,
ually

rich
upon

as

if they

the

seethe

memory

pan

and

still
fire;

the
the

becomes

tumble

escape—gradtakes on. a
mass

would

foaming

golden

and
his

shallow

the

in

The
doorway.
the misty

low

by

one

out,

arch,

lights in the farmhouse

The

warmth.

roars

through

flickers

lantern

fire

fills the air and

Steam

the

of

out

pours

low

the

and the
the long,

brick

‘The

pan.

boiling

crackles

and

go

fun

color.

is the

Imprinted
odor

the

of

strange

down

from

sirup

and
as

back

all

is
is

they

are

along

the

pouring

children

watch-

hot

design

lover

the

and

waxy

intricate

making

surreptitiously

| beloved’s
/to

roll

initials

them

all

forever

of smoulder-

ing half-green wood mingled with that
strange sweetness of boiling sap.

big

stone

pickles

jars

golden

on

the

fewer,

candy

to

be

poured

changing

ivory,
the

and

refilled.

from

made.

The

the
more

of glass

stairs,

the
is

stove

still

the

cooling

saucers
clearest

mass

dis-

from

rows

and

almost

ball

be

below

there

into

creamy

he

buttery,

but

from

until

the

orderly

to

only

unwieldy
lest

shelves

trips

grow

is

in

the

his

own,

doughnuts

emptied

The

weaving

his

an

haste,

crock

from

pitchers

with

into

sweet stickiness and shiningly | ‘in embarrassed
Let the son or daughter of| j;covered.
More

oozing
new.

thickening

spin

and

pan on
silently

highways up hill and over mountain
leven to the deep watery ravines, and

1

to

the

filled

slowly,

pitchers,

forward

deep

place,

and _

stirred,

amber

without

hardens

sirup
to

soft

warning,

into

cloying

sweetness.
Once
to

more

the

stove.

stick
the

the

into
pan

housewife

She

the
that

puts

fire,
has

goes

back

a yellow

birch

and

pulls

been

forward

simmering

at

the back, away from the heat.
The
brown
mass bubbles into new life,
foaming and seething, until, swelling,
tumbling,

crowding,

its

thousand

frenzied globes burst into tiny puffs
of steam.
Quickly ,the bright new
pails are

sirup,

set

in a row,

already

into them.

ee

So comes to
weeks of hurry

light

irksome

and

is

the

poured

an end the few jolly
and rush in the maple

sharp

because

spring,

quickly

ee

orchard—sparkling
noondays,

and

sugaring,

it

mornings,

evenings—work
so

work

sameness

surely

without

that

much of the duty of life,

warm
made

anticipates
trace

of the

shadows

so

hearth

the

is

home

the

and

brave

the

red

heart’

different

woods.

used
for
the
fire
produce
varied
-' beauties
as
they
burn.
For
long,
steady, even burning one chooses oak,
| maple or hickory.
The
flames these}
| woods
send
forth
are
reddish
tan

of

but-

except

scrambling

tracery—the

sickness.
Only.

big

of

deep
wife

up

Hastily

The

dishes

snow.

threads

and

in

with

else,

it drip

tiny
into

sirup

home-

deep

sudden

of a

manifestation

spoon.

table.

outward

the

them

for

the

passed

ties are forwhose home
so that a few boughten

are

cakes

and

air,

north

clean

until

shouting

for

table

bowls

The
jof

and

crowded

at each

ladles

lets

ing

poured

blows

that

unrest

and

and

squire

The.long

over a great
the farmer’s

anxiously

sirup,

young

the

and

bowls

and

night,

done, the
the whole

doughnuts,

well-packed

and

|

gay,

Nothing

at

rush

Some

kitchen,

fat

Bending
the stove,

to under-

care

never

and

is

gather,

pickles,

of bit-

work

It is time to]

neighbor.

of

pans» and

never seen the wee hepatica clustering in sunny hollows at the maple’s
chosen
have
who
those
for
roots,

other

shade

The

all

and

the

ternuts.

have

who

those

crowd—for

in

cucumber

are

cakes

little

pert

those

all,

the

a

farmhouse.

they

indigent

stands

themselves.

After

for

Now

the

frowning

his

shamelessly

dwellers

city

the

among

at

countryside

country-bred

the

in a twinkling,

has

sweet.

as soon as the chores are
farmerfolk will come. From

in
pauses
awaits some

her tokens.
ready
makes
‘the North
| Almost in a night they appear—those
from
cakes
sugar
fluted maple
| tiny
the generous heart of Vermont's hills.

land

off.’

bustle

So spring tarries while

‘further sign.

sap

its

the sugarhouse is done.

|

journeys back from the
of spring.
the promise

the

with

ss

Firewood

|

With

streaks

logs

curl

of

pure

tiny

gold.

flames

Near

of

bluish

It’s a quiet, meditative fire with
startling
crackles
and
almost
| sparks,
|

White

pine,

| have

been

; cane

three

which

so

burning
years

many

since

ago,

the

yields

Before
the coals

few)
no

of

us_

huryri-

flames

ja gold and russet color, shot
in
haphazard
fashion
with
steely
blue.
into pieces,

the

gray)

of

through
jets
of

the
log
breaks
glow red, gray

and
red
intermittently.
There
soft
shadows
which
run
back
i, forth the length of the log.

are
and

Gray birch is not a prized fireplace
wood,
but
it has a peculiar
beauty.
It burns gaily and ffeely, as if it were]
anxious
to give
The
orange-gold

its all to the task,
flames
chuckle
in)

cavalier fashion
as the bark
cleaves|
from:
the
wood.
Bits
of
the
main}
; body
of
flame
leap
ecstatically
up-}
j}ward

as

if

they

would

fly

up

the|

chimney and speed away through
the|
;winter
air.
At irregular
intervals’ a!
body
of flame
will
run
for a moment instead of
Elm

is

burns

noted

slowly

for

and

its

horizontally |
vertically,

russet

at

the

flame. It!

end

leaves

a

beautiful
pearl-white
ash.
Cherry}
purns
with cheerful, surprising little |
)Snaps and crackles;
the flames are a)

| moving
and

picture

of

The

center

red.

| from

one

spot

orange,

furbelows

j the
ting

of

woods;

the

the

red

background

Spruce

firecrackers

flames

for

the;

are a deep)
frills
and

trimmings.

are

tan|

moves |

around

flames
little

gold

hemlock

gold,

flame

to another;

ends ofthe logs the
intense
blue,
with
jand

of

their

are

a

sparks

of |

fit-!
and

snaps.
Old dried apple wood is the favorite
off many,
It burns
serenely
and
brightly.
Its
golden
yellow
flames
streaked
with
red and
decorated
by |
wisps
of curling blue next the
give
forth
a
delicate,
tangy,
aroma,
It is
one
fair-sized

wood |
spicy}

a long-lasting
log is sufficient

wood;|
for al

long evening’s enjoyment.
|
We
are glad, of course, that modern
science
has
done
such
wonderful
things
with
oil, ‘electric
motors, |
thermostats

and

pipes,

although

are free to. confess we do not
stand them.
But anyone who
fireplace can
be mechanic
to
It

asks

so

Even
if
dict, we
the

hearts

and

girls,

on
«

the

little

and

gives

some
day, as
get our heat
of

men

will

still

hearth—H.

and

so

much.

scientists
from
the

presun,

women,

boys |

respond

S&amp;S

we)

under- |
loves a
a fire!|

P,

to

the fire |

-

�fon 20, 194 2
Soon to Become

MISS

(Photo

by

EDYTHE

Bride

Belmont)

S. TOWER

The wedding of. Miss Edythe Sawyer}
Tower, daughter of Mr and Mrs Her-||
bert L. Tower of Sorrento street, and |
Forrest Allen Keith, son of Mrs wane
|B. Keith of Brimfield, will take place
Tuesday
night
at
7 at
Faith
Congregational
chureh, with Rev Dwight
L. Cart
officiating:
A reception
will
follow in the church parlors.
On their
return from an unannounced wedding
trip
the couple
will live at 72 Sorrento street.

Parents

to Honor

Buffet Supper Sunday Night;
She Will Marry Forrest
Allen Keith
Mr

and

Mrs

Herbert

L.

Tower

home

of

of

Sorrento
street
will
entertain
at
a
buffet supper Sunday
night for their
daughter, Miss Edythe Sawyer Tower,|
and
her wedding
party.
The
supper
will follow a wedding rehearsal. Miss}
Tower
will become
the bride of Forrest Allen
Keith
of Sorrento
street,
son of Mrs
Kdna Keith of Brimfield,
Tuesday
night at 7 in Faith Congregational
church.
Among
the many
prenuptial showers
complimenting
Miss
Tower
was
a miscellaneous shower
given
Saturiday
by
the
bride-elect’s
sister,
Mrs
|Ralph
C. Kerley, Jr., of Scott street.
, Members
of Sigma
Delta
Chi
enteri tained at another miscellaneous shownight

at

the

Miss

ARASSA
DARA
N

Jast

Anna McCloud
of White street.
Miss
Tower
was
presented
with
eleetrical
| gifts.
Mrs Ralph Kereley, Jr., will attend
; as
matron
of honor
and
the
bridemaids will be Mrs John
Hartwell and
‘Mrs Roger Sylvester.
Clarence Keith
will serve as best man.
Following a reception in the church
parlors,
the
couple
will
leave
on
a
motor
trip.
Miss
Tower,
who
has
been employed
as a nursery teacher,
was
graduated
from
Classical
high
school and Miss Barker’s school.
Mr |
Keith attended Brimfield schools and
was
graduated
from
the
LaSalle
School of Accounting and Northeastern
university.
He
is employed
as
an
accountant
at the
United
Dairy
company.

RAR

er

MRA

|

�1a Worthington

REV. J. H. OWEN
TO MARK 10TH
ANNIVERSARY
Served Other N. E. Pastorates Before Accepting
|
Call to Worthington
WORTHINGTON,
Jan.
28, —
On|
Sunday
morning at the Worthington
Congregationa:
Church,
the
pastor,
tev. J. Herbert
Owen,
-will celebrate
; the 10th anniversary of his pastorate
| here. His sermon, one in a series on
i“The
value of the
Bible today”
will
deal with a comparison
of a 10-year
| period
with
God’s
long struggle
for
| world
betterment.
His
topic
will be
| “A drop in the bucket.”
Came

From

Seminary

Mr.
Owen
began
his pastorate
on
| Jan, 26, 1982, while a student in Hart| ford Seminary, where he received his
degree

in

1988.

He

came

to

New

Eng-

land
in
1917
from:
New
York
State
where he had graduated from Colgate
University:
He
holds
degrees
om
Colgate,
Gordon
College,
and
Hartford
Seminary.
Worthington
is
his
fifth pastorate
since ordination
as a
Baptist
in 1920, He served in Watertown,
Providence, Re I., Cummington,
Beverly,
and
Worthington,
He
came
into the Congregational denomination
astor of the Villagé Church, Cums
ton, in 1926.
During
the
decade
of
service
in
Worthington
Mr. Owen
has been ably
| assisted by Mrs, Owen, herself a graduate
of Gordon
College,
and
former
istant to Dr. ‘William Towert in the
Baptist
Church
of Bennington,
Vt,
Previous
to
this
she
had
been
active
in
the
First
Baptist
Church
of Pittsfield,
In the 10 years’. service Mr. Owen
has more
than
doubled
the
membership of the church, organized a Sunday School, a choir, a Young People’s
Society, a Married Couples’ Club. The
| church
has
undergone
rather
exten-

| sive

repairs

including

| tion

of

vestry

| of a new

heating

the

the

system,

and

installation

the

redecora-

dining

room,

and
repairs
to the church
windows
Recently invested funds to the amount
of $6000 have been transferred
to the

| care

of

the

Massachusetts

State

Con-

ference,
Since
September,
193838, Mr.
Owen
has
conducted — service
during
.a
majority of the Sund
of each year}
in
the
South
Worthington
Church.|
Special
services
havé
increased
-attendance
such
as
Conwell
Day
in
memory
of
Dr,
Russell
H.
Conwell,
born
in South
Worthington,
Grange
Sunday, Masonic Sunday, and the reg- |
ular observances
of the church year. |
pErom
1986
to
1988
Mr.
Owen
also
served
as
supply
.in
the
Littleville

| Chapel

in

Chester.

The

Worthington

| church
hag
recently
celebrated
| 50th anniversary
of its building

j the

|

acs

90th,

South

Worthington

Church

the|i
and

the

Mr.
Owen
has
served
in_
official
in the Pomona
Grange,
the
| capacity
|
local Library Association and Commit|} tee on Public Safety. He is a mem| ber of the
New
England
Town
and
|
|Country
Church
Commission,
the
Tewn and Country Department of the
Massachusetts
Council
of
Churche
Liberty
Lodge AF and AM of Beve
ly, Cummington
Grange and the National Grange.
He has been active in
the rural church life of the ste
and
has spoken
in several places in New!
England on its problems.
j

OBSERVE GOLDEN
WEDDING JAN. 12
tEY

Feeding

te

Hills Co
Couple

Be Feted

Will

in North-

ampton
NORTH AMPTON,
Jan, 5—-Mr. and
Mrs. Judson G.
Blackman
of
71
South Westfield Street, Feeding Hills,

former . Northampton
residents,
will
observe their golden
wedding
next
Monday
They will be guests of Mr,
and
Mrs.
Wilber
Parker
of
Dana
Street, this city, during thé day. They
will be feted at a dinner party in the

Parker,
Mr.

home that night.
Wed in Worthington
and Mrs. Blackman weré

mar-

ried in Worthington Jan. 12, 1892, by
Rev: Harlan Creelman,
then pastor of
Worthington
Congregational.
Church.
Mrs, Blackman,
the former Miss Abbie Hills,, was
born
in Worthington
July.
27,
1872,
and
before
her
mar-

yiage taught school in Middlefield and
Worthington.
Mr.
Blackman
was
born in Worthington Oct. 19, 1870.

Following
their. marriage
the couple lived ih Worthington
for a time,
later Soe.
to Cummington,
where
Mr. Blackman
was employed as manager
on
the
William
Cullen
Bryant

place.

They

later

moved

to

North-

ampton,
and
for
several
years Mr.
Blackman was employed as motorman,
for the Northampton
Street Railway

Company.
moved

years.

to

he

In

1902

Holyoke,

was

the

and

manager

Blackmans

of

for

the

many

C.

K.

Judd Farm.
In 1924 they purchased
a home
in Feeding Hills, and
have
since resided
there.
For five years
Mr. Blackman
was superintendent of

streets

in.

Agawam.

Grange
Members
Both.
Mr. and
Mrs.
Blackman.
are
charter
members.
of
Community
Grange, and are members
of Springfield
Pomona
Grange, “ where’
he
served as master for two years.
Mr.
Blackman also has been a member of

Oak
Lodge
years,
Mrs.

grand
and

for

of

Odd

Blackman

of

president

Oak

two

of

is

Leaf

years

was

Veranus

Fellows

a ~

past

Rebekah

district

Rebekah

for

25

noble

Lodge,

deputy

Lodge

of Chicopee.
She
also
served
as
president of the Past Noble Grands Association
of Western
Massachusetts.
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Blackman.
both
at-|
tend
the Methodist
Church a
Feeding Hills.

MR.

&amp; MR

JUL SON G., BLAC RM. AN

age, Gagnon
and
Forsander,
Keefe’s,,
Lamontagne
Motors,
Northampton |
Buick, Northampton Motor Sales, Cen-| {
tral Motor Mart,
Frank
S. Pearsons,
W, T. Sheckler, G. P. Trowbridge and
Draper Gar: ge.

�Worthington

WORTHINGTON,
Feb. 3—My,
.Mrs..Guy F. Bartlett announce
engagement of
Marion, to Pyt,

gargal,

'Magargal

son

of

~ Marriage
the

of

West

will

take

Congregational

and

Mrs.

Wells

place

Feb,

28

Worthington.

Church.

wed

Helen

Saturday

Bartlett,

to

C.

0

Raymond

is

gational

Church,

The

at

W orthinaton :

N BARTLETT

IS GIVEN

SHOWER

WORTHINGTON,
Feb.
13—A_
surprise miscellaneous shower was given
last night to Miss Helen M. Bartlett
at her home by about 40 friends. Mrs.

C.

Kenneth

‘| Bartlett,

Mrs.

Osgood,

and Miss Mary
of the affair.
Many

Bartlett,

gifts

who

George

P,

were

Mrs.
E,

Burr

George

H.

Torey,

had

received

will be married

Jr.,

charge

by

Miss

Feb.

‘to Pvt. Charles Raymond Magargal
ithe First
Congregational
Church.

ock
wedding
ment with Mrs.
i} the bride, Miss

28

at
A

provided
entertainMaleolm Fairman as
Jeannette Wright as

the bridegroom, Mrs. ‘Robert Bartlett
father
of the
bride,
Phyllis
Wright
flower girl and Mrs. Arthur Rolland,
minister,
Franklin H. Burr, town
his assistants, will register

from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
day from 7 a. m. to 9

residence
all men
will
1 20.on
sor=before
Dec.

-thosé
cept

who

those

are

not

not 45

on

clerk and
on Sunday

and on Monp.m, at his

have
become
31,1941,
and

previously

Feb.

Rev. J. Herbert Owen has
for his topie for the 11 a. m.

at the
Sunday

“Cod’s

16,

ex-

registered.

chosen
service

JVirst Congregational
Church
“A
treasury’
in
his
series

promises.”

HELEN

M. BARTLETT

‘WORTHINGTON,
Helen M. Bartlett,
married

the

Feb,

28

Worthington

at

Feb, 19—Miss
who will be

7.30

p.m,

Magar-

gal invites all their friends to the
wedding and reception at the Conere-

FUTURE BRIDE

their daughter, Helen
Charles Raymond Ma-

Mr.

Miss

Worthington

and
the

at

Congregational

Church to Pvt. Charles Raymond
_ Magargal of Camp Edwards,
has
chosen as her only attendant, her
sister,
Miss
Eloise
M.
Bartlett, |
Harold E. Brown will serve Pvt.

Magargal as his best man.
The
ceremony will be performed by
Rev. J. Herbert Diven.

|

ee

.

?

��Worthington
Mrs.

Guy

Bartlett

Miss
Helen
Marion
Bartlett,
daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Guy
Franklin Bartlett of Worthington,
and Private Charles Raymond Magargal, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wells
W.
Magargal
of West
Worthington,
will
be
married
Saturday
night at the Congregational
Church by the Rev. J. Herbert Owen
with
the
double
ring
ceremony.
Arthur
G. Capen,
organist
of the Church, will play the traditional wedding
marches
and
accompany the soloists. A sister of
the bride, Mrs. Morris E. Lilly of
North Adams,
will sing “O
Promise Me” and a classmate of the
bride, Miss Louise Coffey of Northampton, will sing “Sweethearts”.
Miss Eloise M.
Bartlett, a sister
of the bride, will be _ bridesmaid and Harold
E. Brown
will
serve
as
best
man.
Ushers
will
include

C.

Kenneth

Osgood,

a

bro-

ther in law of tke groom, Leland
Smith, a cousin of the groom, H.
Franklin Bartlett and Charles M.
Bartlett, brothers of the bride and
two privates from Camp Edwards
if possible.

The bride, who will be given in!
marriage by her father, will wear.
a blue gilk-jersey dress
and
the
bridesmaid
one
of
peach.
The
bride’s corsage will be of gardenias and the bridesmaid’s will be
yellow
roses
and bachelor’s
buttons.

Miss
Emerson

Helen
J.

M.

Davis

Bartlett
has

decorated

the church
with evergreens, ferns, |
acacia, heather
and
southern
blue

berry blossoms.

The reception will follow in the!
church
parlor.
The
bride
and
groom will be assisted in receiving by the bridesmaid,
best man
‘and their parents. Mrs. Harry Mollison, assisted by Mrs. Lewis Zarr,
had
charge
of refreshments and
Miss

Mary

bray

will

Packard,
and
Mrs.

P.

Burr,

Miss

Miss
Geraldine
Eleanor
Smith
serve

the

Phyllis

Smith
Motten-

refreshments.

The couple will leave on a short
trip for an unannounced
destination. Upon their return, the bride
{
will continue to live at home while
lthe groom is in the service.
The bride attended Dalton High
School
and was
graduated
from
Northampton
High.
The
bridegroom
graduated
from
Dalton
High
School and has been
associated with
his father, who is a
building contractor, up to the time
of his going into the service. Both
bride and groom have held office
in the Young People’s Society and
both have sung in the choir. The
bride
teaches
in
the
Sunday
School. Out of town guests will be
present
from
Springfield,
Northampton, Burlington, Dalton, Pittsfield,
North
Adams,
Greenfield,
Hamden,
Conn.
New
Britain,
Conn.,
Chesterfield,
Williamsburg
and Haydenville.

�aT 142
5b

Town

Mr.

Out

Turned

and Mrs. Charles
night.
The bride

tor

Wedding Ceremony

Raymond Magaral leave the Worthington
Church after
was formerly Miss Helen Marion Bartlett.
More than
and reception.

Worthington
Couple Wed
In Chureh

Arthur
G.
Capen,
organist,)Army.
Pvt. and Mrs, Magargal played wedding marches and ac-lhave been officers in the local
oe
ee ie
eee ie. MoI-'Young People’s Society and memris
E.
Lilly o
or
ams, sis-|
sg
ter of the bride, sang “Oh Poker, at eS, Vee
ee
Me,”

and

Miss

Louise

Coffey

of

‘greens,
southern
i dragons.

a dress

of rose

a Na

roses

wool

and

;

|
The
good,

with

a

bache-

es

7

of

the

ferns,
acacia,
heather;
blueberry,
and
snap-

ushers were C. Kenneth
a
brother-in-law
of

Os-|
the}

groom;
Leland
Smith,
a _ cousin;
Franklin and Charles M. Bartlett,
brothers
of the
bride, and
Pvt.
WORTHINGTON. — More than Leonard Bean of Camp Edwards.
300 townspeople, a good share of
A
reception
followed
in
the
Refreshments were
the
population,
filled
the
First church vestry.
‘served by Mrs. Harry Mollison and
Congregational
Church
Saturday
Mrs. Lewis Zarr, assisted by Miss
evening for the wedding of MissSS} M Mar
:
;
P.
Burr,
Miss
Geraldine
Helen
Marion
Bartlett,
daughter}- sinih,
Mrs.
George
Moltenbray,
of Mr. and Mrs, Guy F., Bartlett, .|and Miss Phylis Packard. The couof Worthington, and Pvt. Charles
Raymond Magargal, son of Mr. and ple left on a brief wedding trip.|
Upon their return the bride will)
| Mrs, Wells W. Magargal of West
remain at home and Pvt. Magargal|
Worthington.
Rey.
J.
Herbert
Owen, pastor, performed the dou-| will return to Camp Edwards.
Mrs. Magargal attended Dalton)
ble ring ceremony,
High School
and graduated from}
_ The bride, who was given in marNorthampton
High
School.
Pvt.!
riage by her father, wore a street| Magargal graduated
from
Dalton
\length robin’s egg blue silk jersey
High
School
and
was
associated
dress and a corsage of white garwith his father, a building contracjdenias.
She was attended by her
tor, until his induction
into
the
sister, Miss Eloise M. Bartlett, who

wore

r

Northampton, a high school class- See eae ee
mate,
sang
“Sweethearts.”
The Adams,
brother-in-law
church was decorated with. mr bride.

Entire Town
Attends Ceremony
And Reception

;corsage of yellow
!lor buttons.

their
marriage
Saturday
300 attended the wedding

z

:
#

�_SATURDAY, MAY 30, 1942
WILL BECOME

BRIDE

Geraldine Sail

|

To Become Bride |
Of Mr. Gaudette

|
Springfield
Girl
to Wed
Huntington Man in Rec|
tory, There
Miss

Geraldine

F,

Smith

of

this)

PPS

city, daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
By-|
ron
Smith
of Worthington,
will
become
the bride
of Bernard
F. Gaudette, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred Gaudette of Huntington,
in a ceremony
this morning at 10 o’clock in the rectory
of
St.
Thomas
Church,
Huntington. Miss Smith will wear a beige
gabardine suit with brown and white
accessories
and
a corsage
of brown
orchids,
Rev,
Fr.
Fitzsimmons
will
officiate with the
single ring service.

Lae

MISS

GERALDINE

WORTHINGTON,

Mr,

and. Mrs.

C. Byron

Aitending the bride will be her sister,
Mrs.
George
Moltenberry,
who
will wear a navy blue sheer costume
with
red and
white
accessories
and}
a corsage
of gardenias.
Mr,
Moltenberry will serve Mr. Gaudette as best|
man
f

SMITH
March

31—

Smith, an-

nounce
the engagement
of their
daughter,
Geraldine
Francis,
to
Bernard Gaudette, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick Gaudette of Huntington,
The
marriage
will
take
place
in
the
late
spring.
Miss
Smith
was graduated from Technical
High
School
in Springfield
and has been employed
at Steiger's
and
Mr,
Gaudette
attended
Huntington
High
Sehool
and
Westfield Trade and ig employed
at Smith and Wesson’s.
:

12.

A
reception
will
take
place
at
Strathmore Inn, parents of the couple ,
receiving with them, Mrs. Smith will|
wear a navy blue printed dress with |
red
roses
in a corsage
bouquet and |
Mrs. Gaudette, whose corsage will be|
rdenias, will be dressed in green|
of
and white printed crepe.
Miss Smith was graduated from
High
School
of
Commerce
and
is
employed
in the office of the Albert
Steiger
Company.
Mr. Gaudette
was
graduated
trom
Huntington
High
Schooi,
Westfield
Trade
School
and
Sprinefield Trade
School. He is employed by Smith
&amp; Wesson.
After a
wedding trip to New York the couple
will live at 46 Temple Street,
{

!

rihington
To Wed Saturday

WORTHINGTON,

Geraldine

jand

Mrs.

F.

C.

Smith,

May

25 —

Miss

Smith,

will

wed

daughter

Byron

of

Mr.

Bernard
Gaudette,
son
of
Mr.
and
|'Mrs, Frederick Gaudette
of Huntington,
Saturday
at
10 a. m.
at
St.
Thomas’
Rectory in Huntington.
Mr.
and Mrs. George Moltenbray of Huntjington will be the attendants.
A reception will be held at the Strathmore
Inn for relatives and close friends.
Mr, and Mrs. C. Byron Smith have
received word that their son, Harold,
has been promoted to a corporal and}

has

left

for foreign

shores.

State Deputy Howard Olds of Pittsfield
will
inspect
the
conferring
of
degrees by Worthington Grange Tuesday night at Lyceum
Hall.
Word was received yesterday of the
death of Mrs. Florence Kilbourn, wife)

of Dr.

Clarence
and

Kilbourn

ven.

Dr.

Mrs.

leaves
bourn

a daughter,
of Hartford,

their summers in this
years.
Besides
her

of New

Kilbourn

|

Ha-!

spent |

town for many|
hushand,
aie

Miss

Dorothy

Kil-|

MISS

GERALDINE

Of

this

city,

and

Mrs.

Byron

ington

will

Bernard

SMITH

daughter

of

Mr,

Smith of Worth-

become

F, Gaudette,

the

bride

son

of

of Mr.

and Mrs.
Fred
Gaudette
of
Huntington in the rectory of
St. Thomas Church, Huntington,
8

this

morning.

�bal

HARRIETT K. ANDRUS
FIRST CHURCH BRIDE
Wed to Franklin G. Burr of
Greenfield — Rev John
Huston, Assistant Minister,
Officiates

Yesterday
afternoon
at
3
at
the]|
First
Congregational
church,
Court
square,
Miss
Harriett
Katherine
Andrus,
daughter
of
Mr
and
Mrs
Howard
Walter
Andrus
of
Benz
street, became
the bride of Franklin
Gilmore
Burr
of
Greenfield,
son
of
Mr and Mrs Franklin
Henry Burr of
Worthington.
Rev
John
Huston,
assistant minister
at the churek
formed
the
ceremony,
using
the
single-ring service.
( 1 harles Franklin
Pierce,
church
org
ist,
played
the}
iraditional wedding marches and other|
selections.
Church
decorations
were|
of summer flowers.
M ss Mary
P. Burr of Worthington,
of
the
groom,
was
maid
of|
and
Frederick
Huntington
Burr, Jr., of Easthampton,
cousin of
the groom, served as best man.
[Hd-]!
ward
H.
Sickman
of
this
city and
Frederick H. Burr, Sr., of ishered.
|
ton, uncle of the groom,
ushered.
The bride wore a floor-length frock|
of dream
blue silk marquisette, ‘with|
short matching
veil arranged
with a
coronet of flowers to match her bouquet,
which
was
of
pale
blue
delphinium,
sweetheart
roses
and _ stephanotis.
Miss
Burr
wore
a _ similar
frock
of
mist
pink
silk marquisette
with
matching
veil
and
carried
a
beuquet of Joanna
Hill roses and delphinium,
Assisting in the receiving line, Mrs
Andrus, mother of the bride, wore a
blue and white print sheer, with white
accessories, and
Mrs
Burr,
Sr., wore
navy blue sheer with navy and white
:
wies.
Their
corsages
were
of
ias.
Assisting
in serving
were
Mrs
B. Gregg
Horton
of Pasadena,
Cal. aunt of the bride;
Mrs Edward
H. Sickman, Mrs John W. Harris of
Longmeadow, aunt of the bride; Miss
Louise
Haley
ot
Chester
and
Mrs
Frank
Grosvenor.
On
their
return
from
an
unannounced
wedding trip the couple will
make
their home
at 74 High
street,
Greenfield,
where
they
will
receive
friends after August
1. Going away,
the
bride
wore
a pale
yellow
dress
with matching
jacket and yellow and
white accessories.
Both Mr and Mrs Burr were’ graduated from Technical
high
school
in
this
city
and
from
Massachusetts
State
college.
The
bride,
a member
of
Lambda
Delta
Mu_
sorority,
has
been employed as assistant to the personnel director at Forbes &amp; Wallace.
The groom, a member of Lambda Chi
Alpha fraternity, is in charge of the
Franklin
county
conservation
office
of
the
Agricultural
Adjustment
agency.
Out-of-town guests included Mr and
Mrs W. R. Andrus of Greenfield, Mrs
J. A.
Root
of Dalton,
Mr and
Mrs
W. V. Pomeroy and sons, Russell and
James,
of
Daliton;
Miss
Josephine
Hewitt
of Worthington,
Mr and Mrs
Frederick
H.
Burr
of
Easthampton
and Mr and Mrs J. A. Burr of Huntington.

MR.

AND

Following their marriage

of Christ,
Katherine

MRS.

FRANKLIN

Saturday

G. BURR

afternoon

in the First

Church

Congregational. Mrs. Burr was formerly Miss Harriet
Andrus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Walter An-

drus of Benz

Street. Mr. Burr is a son of Mr. and
Henry Burr of Worthington.

Mrs.

Franklin

�Harriett

Madre

And Franklin Burr

To Marry June 20

Mr.
Andrus

and
of

Mrs.
Howard
Walter
Benz Street announce
the

approaching
ter,
to

Miss
Franklin

field,

son

marriage

Harriett
Gilmore
of

Mr.

of their

Katherine
and

Burr
Mrs.

of

daughAndrus |
Green-|
Franklin

Henry
Burr
of Worthington.
The
wedding will take place on Saturday,
June
20,
at
38 o’clock
in the
First
Church
of Christ, Court Square,
Rev.
William E. MeCormack, pastor of the
}chureh will perform
the ceremony,
Miss
Mary
P. Burr,
sister of the
future
bridegroom
will
be
maid
of
honor and
Frederick
Huntting
Burr,
Jv., cousin of Mr. Burr will serve him
as best man,
A reception for the immediate
families
will
follow
at
the
bride’s home.
Miss
Andrus
and
Mr.
Burr
aref
graduates of Massachusetts State College.
Miss Andrus has been employed
in the personal department of Forbes
&amp;
Wallace,
and
Mr.
Burr
is
conservation
agent
in charge of Franklin County
office
of the Agriculture
Adjustment
Agency
in Greenfield.
Mrs. B. Gregg Horton of Pasadena,
Cal., who was the former Elsie Andrus
will arrive on Thursday
for the wedding.
Mrs.
Horton
will
visit
her
sister
and
brother-in-law,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
John
Whittemore
Harris
of
Forest Glen
Road, Longmeadow.
She
will remain for several weeks and during that time will visit her brothers
and sisters-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Howard W.
Andrus
of Benz
Street,
and
Mr. and Mrs. Winfred
R, Andrus
of
Greenfield,
“Wa

Miss Harriett Andrus
|

Mr and Mrs Howard W. Andrus

of Benz street announce the

fengagement of their daughter, Harriett, to Franklin G. Burr of
Greenfield, son of Mr and Mrs Franklin H. Burr of Worthington. The wedding will be an event of early summer.
(Photo by

Bachrach.)

vt

�|
|

Percy

FE.

Bassett

Photo

Yesterday, the backed-up waters
shown
at
the
right
spill- \bed.
near
the
discontinuance
of the
Worth| way is in operation to hold back the |forced
ington
highway
when
it
became
swollen
river
now
hank
high
from
|
sicoded,
and
cars
were
by-passed
to
recent rains and melting
snow, thus
unfinished
highway
now
under
safeguarding
lower sections of the val- lthe
extending
across
this
valley
view
in
along
the
mountainside
The | construction
water
damage.
the
Knightville
section
of
the
Main, ley
from
high
The dam, 159,
conerete bridge shown
at the
left of }southwest of the dam.
Branch
of the
Westfield
River,
conthe small
island, constructed
in 1927, 'feet high, 800 feet wide at the base,
trols the rampages of this river which
| has
a
6§00-foot-long
tunnel
16
feet
in
Du
did such
widespread
damage
six years
is nearly covered by the water.
cut
through
solid
rock
times
hefore
the
proiect | diameter
ago
this
week
during
the
1956
flood, jing
normal
|through
which
controlled
waters
of
and in 1938 during the flood and hur-j | Was started the bridge floor was apWestfield now flow.
{0 feet above
the
river |the mighty
ricane.
The--gate
“control: ~ tower| proximately

Floodwaters of the Westfield
River
are
now
harnessed.
The
Knightville
Dam,
War
Department
project star
ed in 1939, completed
in 1941, shown

J
,

�1742,
Worthing

|

foniay 1

IN JAVA BATTLE

|
|

|

Gunner’s Mate on Pope

— Mrs.
16
March
WORTHINGTON,
Jennie Litchfield of this town has reNavy
the
from
telegram
a
ceived
J.
her son, Arthur
that
Department
Litchfield, chief gunner’s mate on the
off
action
destroyer Pope, was lost in
Java,
In Navy
15 Years

| Howard
Fred

On

March

23

Worthington

will

has

received

lmarkers and guides
‘plotted out at once.

a request

par-

for

that

airplanes

N. Mason,
Sears,

W.

The

be

the

dirt

was

rushed

to

the

and

three

sisters,

and
| Devine of this town
Mrs. Anita
and
Laprade
of Northampton.

Mrs.

roads

auto

are

getting

|

descendant

C.|

Deerfield,
erations.
He

jwith

19—Mrs. |

hygiene
Red. Cross
L. Bates,
Harry
that elasses in
instructor, announces
a
now
forming
are
nursing
home

|the

|start

| will

of

Renett

Mrs. Vivian
Grise, both

home

hygiene

course

a

morning

and

be

March

|

bev

qe

Police,

Shimkus

B

of Troop

| Northampton,

at
Friday
Hall
Lyceum
auxiliary
the
‘fingerprint
workers.
defense
other

of the

will

will

There

class |

be

State

ae

to|
8 p.m.
and |
Police

———

Guru 1942, Died

12th,
the
Northampton,
‘ADAMS—In
63
of
Adams
(Schmidt)
Agnes
the
from
Funeral
e.
Florenc
Street,

of

her

Bridge

son,

Street,

Burial

L.

William
in

Adams

Northampton,

Vill

J,

H,.

Hill

Quinn,

at

M
Main.
home

Sunday

Ceme

educated

many

of

gen-

Academy
in

the

attended

Mt,

Sugarloaf

Besides

his

| of Greenfield

|

neighbored|
Grange
ay orthinwion
Thursday|
Grange
Chesterfield
with
a 15-minute pro-|
| night and furnished

Williamsburg.
director,

ch
arch
TON, v Mar
WORTHINGVG
the
neth Osgood are
and Mrs. C. Ken
ee
Norma
er,
ght
dau
a
of
s
parent
fiel¢
Hospital in West
at Noble
; born
:
a
j
| Friday.
ses =
and Friday clas
ir ‘phe Monday
anc
shed the course
first aid have fini
sur- |
final session 4
|
ijast night at the
the Senne
n
give
was
|
y
part
prise
A st
Jr.
s,
Sear
Fred
Mrs.
Mr “and
anc
ead
spr
bed
a
ted
Sears was presen
ney
4
.
f case
:
Mr. Sears &amp; brie

evening

Attended

family

for

South

Deerfield

Deer-

Acad-

Lodge

in

he

leaves

be

held

South

widow,

two}

{
}

brothers,
Edward
Billings
of Greenfield and George A. Billings of Washington,
D. C.;
and
four
nieces
and
four
nephews.
Funeral
services
are
in charge of McCarthy's funeral home

and 7.30 to 9.30 |
at 9.30 to 11.30 a. m.
who wish
Mrs. Bates asks all
p. m.
|
.
once,
to enroll to do so at
has sold his wood |
S. Eddy
“Wilbur
/
of WestJ. Oleksak
jot to Stephen

2.30.

~~
Worthington)ee
Mr.
5 —

which

home,

her

at

26

Billings

known

| Deerfield.
For
many
years
he
was
a memher
of Wequans
Tribe
of
Redmen.
|He held the office of clerk of Brookjside
Cemetery
at
the
time. of
his’
| death,

=e
March

the

emy and was graduated from Albany
3usiness.
College.
When.
a
young
man
he went
to California where
he
took
up a claim and
stayed
for six
years.
He
was
employed
as. a
railway
postal
clerk for 31 years, retir=
ing
in
1927.
On
May
31,
1899,
he
married
Miss Ellen
Sprout of South
Deerfield,
Rev.
Edward = Grisbrook,
pastor of the Congregational Church,
performing
the ceremony.
He joined
the Morning Sun Lodge of Masons in
Conway
and
later
became
affiliated

first
The
ses-

¢4 &lt;

was

of

well

field schools,

+064

-

Clerk

afternoon
following
a. short
illness.
He was born in South Deerfield July
26, 1864, the son of Austin and Harriet
(Dickinson)
Billings
and
was
a

Commitiee|

traffic.

Railway Postal
for 31 Years

SOUTH
DEERFIELD,
June
3—
Harry
Merrow
Billings, 77, died in,
his home in North Main: Street this’

Brown, |

Worthington

where, alMercy Hospital in Pittsfield
to the
able to walk
he was
though
shock
died from
he
room,
operating
hour.
an
‘and loss of blood within
Ruth (ConHe leaves his wife, Mrs.
small chiltwo
and
Bernier,
| gran)
a twin
his father, Victor, Jvr.;
jdren;
anSpringfield;
of
Valere
| brother,
mpNortha
of
Eugene
other brother,

‘ton,

Was

A. Tatro,

FE.

Clifford

School

WORTHINGTON,

Vin-

House

for

nee

Old Chescent R. Bernier, 26, of the
injured
fatally
was
Road,
terfield
when his
afternoon
this
4.30
about
in a circular
caught
was
right arm
saw and cut off.
to Operating Room
Walks

He

and

Deerfield

H. M. BILLINGS,
77, SUCCUMBS

Ci-)

|

Arm Cut Off, Vincent R.
in
26, Dies
Bernier,
20 —

William

_The
first class
in Red
Cross
aid lessons closed Monday
night.
‘second
class will
hold
its
final
|sion
Friday
night.

WORTHINGTON
MAN KILLED BY
CIRCULAR SAW
March

—

Schools will close March 13 for the}
| three weeks spring vacation as some}

ITE

Pittsfield Hospital

Theodore

Jr.,

Magargal

postponed

|muddy

WORTHINGTON,

10

meeting will be held Wednesday night|
at the home
of Mrs.
G. F. Bartlett. |

all

| of

fee

March

Tinker,
|
All except those authorized by the}
committee
are
urged
to remain
off,
the
streets.
No
lights
will
be
per-!
mitted.
All
traffic
will
be
stopped
and parked on the right hand side of,
the road
with
all lights
out
except)
cars on official business. Householders|
are required
to arrange
so that
no|
home
light
can
be
seen
from
ont-!|
side.
i

blackout
ticipate in the three-county
All residents are Trefrom 9 to 9.30.
same
the
with
comply
to
quested
test
in the
observed
as were
rules
blackout last week,
The local committee for civilian de- |

‘lfense

G.

Wells

Mr.
Litchfield,
36
years
old,
had
been
in the Navy
for 15 years and)
on his furloughs
had visited
his sis-|
ier, Mrs.
Fred
Sears, with whom
his
mother now makes her home,
i

WORTHINGTON,

"South

p villain
defense
officials
announce
a|
; blackout
for the
north
part
of the)
;jtown Thursday night from 8 to 8.30.|
| As
the telephone
must
be
used
for
; warning,
persons
are
requested
to)
| refrain
from
using
it
during
this|
| time and immediately after except in
jan
emergency.
|
Air
raid
wardens
for
the
sectors
of
the town
ineluded
are:
Harry
lL.
| Bates,
Cyrus
W.
Bower,
George
EB.|
| Torrey, Jr., Orman
Elmes, Jr., Alfred|
| C. Stevens, Jr... Walter H. Tower,
Arthur J, Rolland, C. Francis Grangeg.|

Chief!

J. Litchfield

Arthur
|

i

&amp; Ss Worthington
PARTIAL BLACKOUT
IN TOWN TOMORROW

|

LOST INACTION

1942

=n

177

at

funeral

and

will

in

_

home Saturday at 2 p.m.
with Rev.}
|Charles
N.
Lovell
of
Monson
and
Rey.
Frank
Cutter, pastor of the local
Congregational
Church,
officiat‘ing.
Burial
will
be
in
Brookside
Cemetery.

|

�M742
Born

USED TO LIVE HERE

|

|
|
|
|
||

j}attended

of

the

School

Street

Graduate

School, }

the old State Street Grammar
School
and Central High School, from which
she was graduated in 1914,
}
During
that
time
she
attempted
contributions
to
the
St.
Nicholas’|
league, “a mighty
good
training
for!
would-be authors,”
After four years at Radcliffe,
she
went to New York and occupied herself with
editorial work
and
various|
literary
odd
jobs.
For
awhile
she
wrote
synopses
of the
old
Famous

|

Players

RACHEL

in New York, the daughter

Mrs. M. D, Field, who
now
lives in
Farmington,
Conn., and
the late Dr,
Field,
the
family
moved
to
Stock:
bridge. When she was
10, Mrs. Field
moved onto Union Street so that Ra-/
chel and
her sister,
Edith, could
receive adequate
schooling,
Miss
Field

|

Last

Company.

FIELD

ff
i

RACHEL FIELD,
DRAMATIST AND
NOVELIST, DIES

MISS

Native of N. Y. Once Lived
in Springfield; Burial to
Be in Stockbridge

|

for

children.

She

was

born

in|

New
York
City
and
had
lived
here}
foy the past four years.
Miss Field was the wife of Arthur
S.
Pederson,
with
whom
she
col-

laborated

in

Mrs.

D,

1937

on

“To

See

Our-}

selves.” They married in 1935.
Her
last
novel
is “And
Now
To-|
morrow,”
to
be
published
in June,
It
is
now
running
serially
in
oa
magazine,
Survivors besides her husband
are
a daughter, Hannah, and her mother, |

M,

Field

of

Farmington,|

Conn.
Funeral
services will be tomorrow
afternoon
at a Hollywood
mortuary
and the body
will be sent for interment
at. Stockbridge,
Mass.,
where
the family’s summer home is situated.

Won Prize of $20
In School Here
Nearly
three
decades
ago
the
Springfield
Board
of Trade
awarded
Rachel
Field
$20 for
her
prize-winning
essay
in a
contest
conducted
among
students
of
the
three
local
high
schools,
and’
while
subsequent
honors heaped upon her were materijally greater
she always
ranked
that
+$20
as
the
most
gnificant
honor
;accorded
her literary labors.

Not

First

|

Attempt

&lt;a
“The
minute
anyone
pays 7S you.
cent
yoti’re
profe
1alized,”
she
| pointed out back in 1934, “I wouldn't
say
that
my
high
school
essay
was
jmy
first
literary
attempt,
since a
think the first thi
I was ever paid
Let
for was one of those ‘Children’s
ters,’ which
the old
Tribune printed.
{ got a dollar for that.”
The
writer
fondly
ealled
Springfield as the happy scene of nine years
1914.
to
1905
from
childhood,
of her

ES

MORAN

Daughter of Dr. and Mrs. John
A. Moran of
Sumner
Avenue
will be graduated
on
June 6
from the Mary
&lt;A.
Burnham

School in Northampton.

BEVERLY
HILLS,
Cal., March
15
(AP)—Rachel Field, 47, author of ‘All
This
and
Heaven
Too”
and
other
novels and plays, died today of pneumonia contracted after an operation.
Won Newberry Medal
In
1929, before
her
novel
writing
period,
Miss
Field
was awarded.
the
John
Newberry
medal
for the
most
, distinguished
contribution
to
litera-

| ture

HENRIETTA

ee

�5

sh

eS

Se

es

. McGregor Golf : Links

J

naists

y

Figures
season

in

the

ended

limelight
this

as

weekend

the
at

tournament
McGregor

Upper left, ‘Dickie” Callahan, nephew
ing Champion William Callahan, holds
sterling silver
club handicap

Mysch,

left,

golf

bridge Cup champion,
on the 18th green in

Links:

of Defendthe famous

is

Walbridge
Cup, emblematic
of the
championship. Upper right, Herbert

congratulates

W.

James
a~

Healy, Walchampion

of

George

Hubbard,

who defeated Mysch, one up,
the semi-finals.
Below, left,

who

lost

to

Healy

in

the

Wal-

bridge finals after defeating Dr. Robert E, Harrington, center, in the semi-finals. Harrington, a
finalist in the Rhinehart tournament, lost that
match to Lennie Cole, lower right, who is now
the club.

�SARATOGA

Y.. MONDAY,

OCTOBER

27,

194

—

TEN

Here and
There

PN

PAGE

SPRINGS, N-

UST 13, 198

a

POSSIBLY IN ACTION

Worthington

May Be in Battle

For the Solomons

with johnny jones
Lennie Cole, tiny but tough, is
the new golf champion at MeGregor Links. Lennie scaled the
heights the hard way, bucking a
“jinx” when
he
won medalist||
honors with a par round of 73,||
then knocking off George Hubbard,

A.

B.

Lesneski,

Worthington

Harold

Wright and Dr. Robert Harrington.

Steady, powerful wood shots,||
accurate irons, brilliant chipping
and exceptional putting make up
Cole’s game. Add to that a world
of self-confidence in his own ability and you have a youngster of
21,

with

his

fourth

club

cham-

pionship
(three
in
Massachusetts) under his belt, fairly hard

to

beat.

or,

the

Harrington made a brave effort to put his name on the Rhinehart trophy for the second time.
While he doesn’t have the mechanical ability nor the youth of
his chief competitors at McGreglean

doctor

must

be

ad-

mired for bulldog tenacity and
unfailing competitive spirit. Those
qualities enabled him to accomplish the tournament’s outstanding feat in licking William Callahan, the defending champion, after being two down with three}
holes to play.
Golfers who reached the semifinal are agreed
next year’s
tournament should be played in
July. Let’s hope it can be arranged, leaving the fall free for
the Walbridge golfers.

Man

Wrote

Tropical Surroundings

CORP.

HAROLD

:
Steiger

WORTHINGTON,
Aug.
12—Among
the Western
Massachusetts
men
helieved by relatives to be in the Soloman
Islands
invasion
by
the Navy,
spearheaded by Marines, is Corp. Harold Byron
Smith,
a son of Mr. and
Mrs. C. Byron Smith of the Ringyville
section.
On
Saturday,
Mr. and
Mrs. Smith
received
the
first letter
in
three
Months
after
an
interruption
in
a
Steady flow of letters from their son.
He
said
he
was
located
where
bananas and coconuts were as*¢common
as apples and blueberries that flourish in his home yillage.
; ies
his
letter of necessity
had
Photo|to
be written with an eye on the cen-

B. SMITH
=

of

sor

control,

Corp,

Smith

gave

a hint

that intensive training was under way
for big developments.
For that
reason his parents feel he ‘may be among

the
jat

Marines

Tulagi.

Corp.

Smith

attacking
enlisted

the

Japanese

in the Marines

two years
ago,
underwent
extensive
| training
at Parris
Island,
Carribean
islands and other sectors where tropical or near tropical climate prevailed
before
he
was
assigned
to
a fleet
Marine
force.
He
was
employed
in
the
Smith
and
Wesson
plant
here
, With his father, who is a foreman
at
, the same plant.

�Forest

—

Worthington Man

Park’s “V’ for Victory

Gets Church Call

ee

J. Herbert Owen May
Succeed Mr. Driscoll

PITTSFIELD,
May
3
Rev.
J.
Herbert Owen, pastor of Worthington
Congregational
Church,
has been invited
to
take
the
pulpit
of
Lenox
Congregational
Cilyirch,
succeeding|}
Rev. Edward J. D
soll, resigned,
i
Mr,
Owen
has just completed
his
10th
year
at
Worthington.
Among
ether Western Massachusetts parishes
he has served is that at Cummington.
Before joining the Congregationalists
in 1933 Mr. Owen was a Baptist.

Worthington

=

Rey. J. H. Owen

Resigns Pulpit

Worthington Pastor Accepts
Call to Lenox

Union

Springfield

WORTHINGTON,

Photo

~ Girls’ Club to Begin DrngiveFund
For $75,000 Buildi
“On

Teachers’

Committee

Carew
of the
Bartlett
L.
Marion
Street school is chairman of the teachers’ team and other schools are represented by the followin

—jassical

ee

high,

Christine

M.

|
|
|

Sauer;

G.
Anna
of Commerce,
School
High
Bugenia
high,
Technical
Carmody;
Johnson;
J. Eleanor
Trade,
Wilson;
B. Robson;
Edith
Avenue,
Acushnet
BalDostal;
I.
Rose
Street,
Armory
3arrows,
liet, Mrs Alice M. Marines;
G.
Helen
Bowles,
Taylor;
M.
Sara
Morse; Brightwood, Mary E. HarringBuguey;
V.
Helen
Brookings,
ton:
Caughman;
C.
Annie
Rifckingham,
L. Welcker;
Mabel
Street,
Chestnut
Je
Adele
division)
(junior
Classical
Effie E. LudDorman,
MeConachie;
T.
Mrs Helen
Avenue,
Eastern
wig;
J.
Lucy
Street,
Union
East
Cook:
Urban;
G.
Ella
Park,
Forest
Mack;
- Glenwood, Carolyn J. Stannis; Harris,

Ruth

Z

£
:

j

M.

Mason.

Eleanor
Sutcliffe;
Homer
Street,
Hooker, Lucy Hipelius; Howard Street
M. Call; |
Audrey
Street,
Myrtle
and
Indian Orchard Elementary, Mrs Ethel)
B. Samble; Jefferson Avenue, Eleanor
S. Vlasak; Kensington Avenue, CathBE.
Maude
Liberty,
erine M. Strong;
Burati;
A.
Florence
Lincoln,
West;
Street,
Morris, Mary U. Ruddy; Myrtle
M. Call; School Street, Grace
Audrey
|
S. Preston; Sixteen Acres, Marion Os|
good; Sumner Avenue, Mrs Rosina B.
|
CrawM.
Tapley, Mrs Kate
Sawyer;
Bottume;|
Van Sickle, Hazel B.
ford:
Washing- |
Helen B. LaRose;
Warner,
White |
tom. Mrs Emeline 8. Butman;:
Street, E, Ruby Budd; Central Office,
|
Mary ©. Pottenger.

11—Rev.

J.|

'

Herbert
Owen,
pastor
of
the
First!
Congregational
Church
of
Worthington, resigned
Sunday
morning
to ac-}
cept a call to the Church on the Hill,
Congregational, in Lenox, after a pas-

out by the
has been
re
Vietory “V” composed of fir trees
Lake
Porter
r
i
overlooking
e
‘
of a hillside
pe
Park Department on the face
ated in a flagdedic
ially
offic
l,
symbo
otic
in Forest Park. This patri
sharp turn in
is best viewed from ‘the
raising ceremony yesterday,
.
Grove
rial
Memo
at
Pecousic Drive
set

Ps

May

jtorate

of 10 years.

Mr. Owen

came

to

Worthington
in January,
1932, while
jtaking
graduate
work
at
Hartford}
Seminary.
He holds degrees from Colgate University,
Gordon
College, and}
_ Hartford Seminary.
|
During
his
pastorate
the member- |
ship of the
Worthington
Church has
ay

more

|
|

|

than

doubled.

Owen
also has been active in|
Mr.
community interests, being a director
of the Library Corporation, a member
of the local Committee on Public Safety, and secretary of the Worthington
Historical Society and of the executive
committee
of the South
Worthington
Chureh
Association.
He
is
also
a
member
of the New
England
Town)
and
Country
Church
Commission,
of
the
Town
and
Country
Department
of
the
Massachusetts
Council
of}
;Churehes,
and
of the John
Fredrick|
Oberlin Fellowship
of rural ministers
in New England,
5
Mr. Owen
is a member
of Liberty
Lodge
(Beverly) AF &amp; AM.
Mr. and
Mrs, Owen are members of Cummington Grange, Hillside Pomona, and the
National Grange.
Mr. Owen plans to
begin his work in Lenox June 15,

@++-Calvin

Coolidge

once

‘Hat it. up,
Wear
it out,
Make it do,
Do without.”

said,

'

}

�|

|

|

|

|

|

by

building.
marine

and

E.

Genereux,

East

Lynn)

Edwin F. Steffek

Mrs.

lilies

i1¥2 Williamsburs

: Worthington

4420

=~

Name Committees
At Church Session
WORTHINGTON,
June
9—Merwin
F.
Packard
was
moderator
of
the
annual meeting of the First Congregational Church
Monday
night,
Reports
of organizations
were
read
and
accepted and the following were elected:

fos)
=]

Moderator, Arthur Cadding;
deacon
for three years, Charles Kenneth Osgood;
trustees,
Arthur
G. Capen,
C.
Kenneth
Osgood
and
Mrs.
Ernest G.
‘Thayer;
clerk,
Arthur
G.
Capen;
church
treasurer,
Mrs.
Herbert
G.
Porter;
benevolence
treasurer,
Mrs.
Eben
L. Shaw;
auditor,
Mrs.
Harry
W. Mollison;
church
school
superintendent, Mrs. Ernest G. Thayer; nominating committee,
Mrs.
Stanley
Mason,
Mrs.
Daniel
Porter,
Miss
Mary
Burr;
issi
‘
j
Miss

Elsie

V,

Burr

and

Bartlett,

Mrs.

Harry

W.

Hewitt;

ze;

Mollison and Mrs,
Herbert G. Portey;
music committee, Mrs.
Richard Hathaway,
Mrs.
C.
Raymond
Magargal,
and Miss Phylis Packard; flower committee, Emerson J. Davis,, Miss Mary

Miss

Josephine

solutions
committee,
Mrs.
Harry
L.
Bates, Mrs.
Charles
Kilbourn, Miss EK.
tt;
solicitors,
Mrs.
C
Tinker, Mrs.
Ralph Smith, Mrs, C. Kk.
Osgood, Mrs. Richard Hathaway, Mrs.
George
Packard,
Mrs.
Byron
Smith,
Mrs.
Arthur
Cadding
and Arthur
G,
Capen.
The resignation of the pastor, Rev.
J. Herbert Owen,
to take place June
14, was accepted and the deacons and
trustees
were
appointed
as
a committee to,supply the pulpit.

ie

P.

(Photo
Stewart Gardner Museum
|
conservat ories of the Isabella
the
from
SOMS
in
GORGEOUS BLOS
gedd under the direction © £ William Sutherland,
Spring
which will form part of the display arran
England
New
ual
ann
the
of
re
featu
icuous
the California courtyard that will be a consp
March 16 to 21, in Mechanics
‘
cultural Society,
Elower Show of the Massachusetts Horti
W hile around her are cinertree,
ne
is admiring the jasmi

|

Program Given

For Graduation

WILLIAMSBURG,

June

16 —

|

The,

four high honor
pupils of the senior |
class will give orations at the gradua-| ~
tion
exercises
of
the
Williamsburg}
High School Thursday evening at 7.380
in the Helen
KE. James
School
Hall.
The program is as follows:
processional;
invoeation,
Rev. Ralph
Winn |
of Haydenyille; “America, the
Ag ea
ful,” Glee Club;
history of the CASS |
of 1942,
Lena
Guyette;
rophecy,
Sharles Bartlett; grinds, Ruth
Beehe;
will,
Klgoise
Bartlett;
“Ho-La-Li”’
a
fol’ song, Glee CTu 9; orations, “Pyioj
ye
ities for educatio
Packard
“Character
the
school,”
Doris
Sineage;
‘The role of today’s gradujate,’ Jean
Warner;
“Education
and
the future,’ Sylvia Clary; “Dear Land
of Home,”
Glee Club; presentation of
class
gift by
Ruth
Beebe,
president
jof
senior
class;
acceptance
of gift
iby-Charlotte Otis, president of junior
elass;
awarding
of prizes by Princi-|
pal
Anne
T.
Dunphy;
presentation
of
diplomas
by
William
G.
Loomis,
chairman
of the School Board;
“Star|
Spangled
Banner,”
and
Benediction.
Attention
is called
to the
time of
opening,
7.30,
instead
of 8, because}
of the possibility of a blackout in this |

region,

|

.

|

�—

Mrs

Norman

LL.

Snow with her
two sons, Nor:
man L. Jr., and

Paul

Snow.

1H

Williamsburg Honor Pupils

The above honor
orations Thursday
James

School.

The

ard, Jean

pupils
at Williamsburg
High
evening at graduation exerci:

School
will give
s in the Helen E.,

honor

winners

were,

left

to right,

Warner,

Sylvia

Clary

and

Doris

Thelma

Sincage.

Pack-

�Skyways beckon to Judith Worthen of this city, American International college
senior, who has become an accomplished pilot under the college’s CAA pilot training course. She is looking forward to a career as a ferry pilot and has already
entered her application for such a post.

�Committees,

Officers for 1904.

EXECUTIVE.

Mrs.
'

M. J. Allen,
Alden N. Curtis,
Franklin H. Burr.
LITERARY.

Elsie V. Bartlett,

Perley A. Skelton,
Nellie C. Shipman.~
MUSIC.

Arthur G. Capen,

Mrs. C. F. Bates,
Eugene F. Bartlett,
Granville D. Capen,

Estelle Cole.

RELIEF.

Horace F. Bartlett,
Mrs. 8. F. Bates,
Barent Pease,
Mrs. A. M. Johnson,
Alpha E. Thayer,
Mrs. H. 8. Cole.

eo

Elmer N. C.

Master,
Overseer,

:

Lecturer,

Dr. William J. Parmelee

Steward,

Howard Johnson

Assistant

Steward,

Program

Charles F. Bates

Alden N. Curtis

Chaplain,

Rey.

Treasurer,

Franklin H. Burr

Secretary,

Horace 8. Cole

M. J. Allen

Gate Keeper,

Herbert G. Porter

Pomona,

Mrs.

Of Worthington

Grange,

No. 90, P. of #.
1904,

Nelson Allen

Flora,

Eva M. Johnson

Ceres,

Mrs. F. H. Burr

L. A. 8.,

Lecturers

Bessie E. Trow

Meetings in Lyceum fall, Second
and fourth Fuesday Evenings in Each Month at
&amp; P. mM.

�Program.
Jan.

12.

Installation

of

officers,—offi-

Jan.

26.

Initiation.—-Conferring __ first
and second degrees.

and fourth degrees.

Co-operation among
—Discussion.

Mar.

Poultry raising,—-breeds
methods.

May

24.

Public meeting.
Address by
Master
of State Grange,
George 8. Ladd.

and

Good

elec-

standpoint

of committee, parents, teachers, scholars and taxpayers.

Housewifery.

July

12.

July 28.
Aug.

9.

fruits.—

roads.—-Transportation

in general,—an

electric road

Village improvement.—Landscape gardening about the
home of the farmer.

England.

In charge of the Literary Committee.

Initiation.—Conferring of third
and fourth degrees.

Oct.

11.

Dairying, creameries,—feeding
of milch cows.

Oct.

25.

Public meeting.
be announced.

Speaker

Nov.

8.

Fruit

marketing,

The future of the
man—farm help.

laboring

mittee.

Initiation—Conferring
and second

raising

and

to

—kinds and methods.

Nov. 22.

Neighbors’ night.

Dec.

13.

Election

Dec.

27.

Report of State meeting.—Possible legislation beneficial to

of officers.

Agricul-

tural
developments in the
North-west territory, Cuba
and Philippines, as affecting
our markets.

the farmer.

Aug. 23.—In charge of the Literary ComSept. 13.

Sept. 27.

The improvement of pasture
lands.—Sheep, Angora goats
in New

The practical value of agricultural papers—and experiment stations.
schools—from

night.

—Preservation of
Raising of flowers.

for this region.

farmers.

Debate,—The
popular
tion of senators.

Our

June 14.

third

Sugar eat.

te Les

Ladies’

June 28.

Feb.

Mar.

10.

cers of Cummington Grange.

- Initiation.—-Conferring

Feb.

May

degrees.

of first

(28° Members who are unable to take
the parts assigned to them will please
secure a substitute
or notify
the
Lecturer.
A question box will be
opened every evening.
All members
are urged to assist the Literary
mittee in every possible way to

the meetings interesting

Commake

and valuable.

�NY
ton sete

President, Mrs. C, Kilbourn.
Vice President, Howard Brewster.
Sec’y and Treas. Miss Carrie Porter.
Cor. Sec’y Miss Estelle Cole.

ee

OFFICERS.

1901.

COMMITTEES.
PRAYER
Mrs.

H.

Horace

Miss Estelle Cole,
LOOKOUT
Mrs.

July

MEETING.

8. Cole,

Milo Bates,

Harry Bates,

W.

J. Parmelee,

Gurney,

SUNDAY

Alpha Thayer.
Mrs.

Elsie Bartlett,

Charles Brewster.

Milo Bates,

Mrs

Walter Burr.

Aorthington,

Alans.

SCHOOL:

Milo Rates,

Frank Scott,

Eva Parmelee,

REV. M. J. ALLEN, PASTOR.

MISSIONARY.
Mrs, Alpha Thayer,
S. Stone,

Nina Trow.

MUBIC.
D. Lyman, King’n Brewster, How'd Brewster,
N. 8. Heacock,
Eva Parmelee, Edith Gurney.
Mrs.

December.

D. Lyman.
ee

Edith

-

RECEPTION
Mrs,

SOCIAL.
Burr,

-

Miss Jessie Parmelee.

AND

Perley Skelton,
Daisy

-

Bartlett,

FLOWER.
W. J. Parmelee,
Bessie Trow,
Marion Bartlett,
Olayton Beach.

FOR

CHRIST

AND

THE

CHURCH.

�‘Topics.
JULY.

5. *‘Whatever.”
Iwill strive to do whatever
he will have me do. John 15: 7-16. Matt
28: 18-20.
Leader, Harry Pease.
12. Religion and Patriotism.
Rom. 13: 1-7.
Leader, Miss Eva Parmelee.
19. Individual Work for Christ.
Acts 8: 26-40
Leader, Kingman Brewster.
26. A strong, weak man,
Judges 16; 20-30.
Leader, Miss N. 8S. Heacock.
AUGUST.
2. Missions; True philanthropy.
Gal. 6: 1-10.
Leader. H. Creelman.
9. Gaining by Losing.
Mark 10: 28-30.
Leader, Miss Emma Clark.
16. Enemies and Arms.
Eph. 6: 10-18
Leader, Miss A. Tillinghast.
23. God’s requirements.
80.

6.
13.
20.
27.

Deut. 10: 12-14.
Leader, Roy Burr.
Daily prayer.
‘‘I will make it the rule of
my life to pray every day.
Ps, 34. :1-22.
L: ader, Miss Daisy Burr.

SEPTEMBER.
Spiritual acquaintance
Job 22: 21-23.
Leader, Mrs. M. J. Allen.
Heavenly helpers.
II Kings 6: 15-17.
Leader, D. Lyman.
True honor,
John 5: 41-44.
Leader, Mrs. D. R. Porter.
The saloon power doomed.
Ps, 87- 1-10.
Temperance meeting.
Milo Bates.

"Topics.
OCTOBER.
4, Missions; growth of the Kingdom.
Ps. 72.
Leader, Mrs. S. Stone.
11, “This grace also.”” II Cor. 8: 7-9.
Leader, Kev. M. J. Allen.
18. Dark days and their lessons Ps. 107: 1-15.
Leader, Mrs. W. J. Parmelee.
25. A bad bargain.
Gen. 25: 29-34.
Leader, Perley Skelton.

NOVEMBER.
1. Value of Bible reading.

Tim. 3: 1-17.
Leader, Otis Buck,
8. God’s leading in our lives.
Ps, 23.
Leader, Mrs. C, Kilbourn.
15. Our national bondage.
Hab. 1: 13-17.
Amos 6:1-6,
Leader, Charles Brewster,
22. Missions; preaching and hearing. Rom. 10
218-17.
Leader, Miss Edith Gurney,
29. Thanksgiving. Is. 25: 1-8. Jessie Parmelee
DECEMBER.
6. Children of God.

Rom. 8: 14-17.
Leader, Miss Estelle Cole.
13, Right use of ability.
Matt. 5: 13-16.
Leader, Mrs, M. Bates.
20, Imperialism of Christianity.
Dan. 2: 44,45
Leader, Rev. M. J. Allen.
27. Our gifts to our King.
Matt. 2:1 12.
Leader,

Mrs.

Charles

Bates.

�MISS FANNIE MERRITT
WED AT CHESTERFIELD
Becomes
|

|

Bride of Alden L.

Bride of Alden L.

munity Church

bride’s
Baker,

; double

of

the

bride,

Gladys

year,
The

annual

sist at
Five
bridge

the tables.
tables were played
at
party
at the Country

The
bride’s
dress
was
mousseline
desoir
with
sweetheart
neckline
and
jlong train, Her finger-tip veil, coronet
stvle,
was
caught
with
orange
blossoms.
She carried
a shower
-bouquet
fof blue and
white
flowers. The maid
|of honor wore medium-blue faille with;
lace
insets.
The
bridemaids’
gowns
jwere aqua satin and pink faille. They
wore conirasting hats and cairied co‘lonial
bouquets.
Mrs
Merritt
wore
Inavy
georgette
with
lace
and
Mrs
Healy wore blue sheer. Each wore corsages,
|
‘The church was lighted with candles
jand decorated with flowers of the season. The people of the town were in~
vited
and
100
invitations
were
sent
out
of town, The
bride’s going-away|
costume was navy blue with accesso-||
ries and white hat.

| brief
patter

main

read.

wedding
duly

The

trip

couple

and

will

will

be

take

esses
party

ris

for the
Tuesday

E,

Collins,

Aug.

Country
at 2 will

was

Mrs.

C.

First Baptist
|

Thursday,
nual turkey

on snow.
5,

6

Aug. 6—The
second andinner with maple sugar

Tickets, $1;

10, 60 cents.

at

and

‘Church

7

children under|

Reservations
p.

m.

may

for service

be

made

at

Hopkins the Florist or telephone 730
or 160-W. Menu: Roast Vermont tur-

{

key, cranberry sauce, mashed
potato,
peas, carrots,
tomato
and cucumber
salad,
rolls,
coffee,
maple
sugar
on
snow, Pickles and doughnuts.

the
Club)

a truck

|

horse.
For

one,

Tne

Miss

A.

G.

but

|of bidders
'ed

in

as

one

a

more

were

result

colt,

of

because

especially
the

offered last night went
an average of $743 per

=

corresponding
averaged $1,289.

sale

48

a

bid-

number

interest-

yearlings

for $35,650,
head.
The
year

L.

Clayton,

was

ago

withdrawn

when no buyer would top the reserve bid of $2,000.
Tonight’s sale of 64 yearlings includes 30 consigned by Alfred G.
Vanderbilt’s
Sagamore
Farm
and
sired by such noted
stallions as
en
Questionnaire and Iden-

ify.

held

Prize

Mrs.

The big attraction was the first
colt offered, a handsome
son of
Ladysman-Assembly,
offered
by
Henry
H.
Knight’s
Almahurst
Farm,
After
some
lively bidding
he was sold to W. E. Boeing of
Seattle
for $6,700, On
the
other
hand,
a bay
filly by Pilate-Port
Weather, the only yearling offered
by Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and Mrs,
William

Hlsie

V,

Mrs.

Walter

Bartlett

if enough
winners

at the Country

Robert-

their

a

following committees

grounds,

were elect-

C.

and

Powers,

Miss

K.|

Rev. John
C. Wightman
of North-|
ampton
again will supply
the pulpit,
ot
First
Congregational
Church
on
‘Sunday at 11 a.m.
This church will
be closed Aug.
30 on account of the
annuai Conwell Day observance at the

jbe

| Wayne
Kendrick
of
Washington,
; D.C., paid $1,525 for five yearlings,

Partly

19—Arthur

Dr.
Conwell
offers
the
use
of the}
grove for all who bring box lunches}
and while no formal service is planned|
i for the afternoon,
a hymn
sing will j

in nine choice yearlings for a total
of $10,750. Another large purchaser,

|

Aug.

to,

South
Worthington
Church.
The~
committee
for
this
celebration
an-—
nounce that on account of rationing|
restrictions, no dinner will be served.j

son has been a consistent bargainhunter
throughout
the eight sales
held so far, and last night he bid

| ding,

$374

Comes

MeD,
Rice;
art
and
library,
Mrs.
‘Franklin
H.
Burr,
Mrs.
Herbert
G.
Porter and Mrs. Harry Bates.
Mrs. Daniel R. Porter was appointed to interview Miss Marion L. Bartlett with
reference
te an
entertainment to raise funds.

142

Trainer

for Year

WORTHINGTON,

ed:

overturned.

lower than they have been in years
past, there still are a good
many
horsemen
around
who
are willing
to shell out good money for a good

Pow-

Wt.

when

Budget

G. Capen
was
re-elected
librarian at
the
executive
committee
meeting of
the library corporation Tuesday night
|
at the library.
Tne
budget
prepared
for the year,
amounted
to $374.
It was
voted
to
borrow from
the permanent
fund
to
pay an outstanding bili.
Mrs, Harry
Mollison was elected to the executive
committee, and also was elected a director to serve until the next annual
meeting.

the

Although the prices at Saratoga’s
yearling auctions
are
somewhat

Host-

ers and
Mrs,
Florence
Bryant.
The annual meeting of the Worthington
Library
Corporation
will
be
held in the library Tuesday at 7 for
election and reports.
The Misses Elsie and Marion Bartlett have returned from Westminster

killed

Yearling

Club
Bridge
be Mrs. Har-

Walter

of

Boeing Pays
$6,700 for

a}

at-home |

10 —

sale

Pvt.
Charles
R.
Nagargal
of
Ft.
Rodman,
was one of the pall bearers
today at the military funeral of Pvt.
Stanley Rusczyk of Easthampton, who

Worthington #942,

WORTHINGTON,

and

|

N.-X,

|
Mr and Mrs Healy were both born|
jin town ‘and have been active in the |
{church and Grange.
Mr Healy is em
ployed in the woodworking shep of his|\/
{father in West
Chesterfield, They will
jilive at the place he lately bought on

|the

fair

174 A

Capen Re-elected
To Library Post.

C.|)

Tuesday
afternoon
and
prizes
were
‘won
by Mrs,
C. Allen Bowles,
Miss
Harriet Brewster, Mrs. Frank Sexton,
Mrs. Robert Lane and Mrs. William
Koegel.
The Misses Elsie and Marion Bartlett are visiting their brother, Irving
L.
Bartlett,
in
Saratoga
Springs,

Higgins
and
Rowena
Damon,
all
of}
|Chesterfield. Mr Healy's brother, Rob-|
jert Healy of Hartford, was best man.
jRoswell
Merritt,
Benjamin
Higgins,
'rederic Healy, Sr., and David Healy *
;were ushers.
|
|

Worthington

the

Women’s
Benevolent
Society
will be}
held at Town Hall Aug. 20 from 3 to
5 p. m. A quilt, aprons, fancy work,
;food, candy and refreshments will be
on
sale,
with
a
grab
bag
for
the
children,
a fortune
cake
and_
ice
cream, The Friendship Guild will as-

attendants
were
Miss
maid of honor, and two

cousins

12—A%

DeWitt

Chesterfield, June 27—The
Chesterfield church today at 4 p.m. was the
scene of the wedding of Miss
Fannie |
Merritt, daughter of Mr and Mrs Her-!
bert I. Merritt, and Alden Lyle Healy,
son of Mr and Mrs Gilbert B. Healy.
Rev Ralph Krout of Paxton performed|
the
ceremony,
assisted
by, the
local)
|pastor, Rev John Barbour. The single-|
iring ceremony
Was
used. Mrs’ James
|Healy played the organ and Miss Ol-!
jive
Healy
the
violin.
Miss
Harriet
Dodge sang.
The
| Louisa

Aug.

Jannual
meeting
of the Worthington
Library Corporation Tuesday night at
the Frederick
Sargent
Huntington
Library,
Franklin
H.
Burr
was
reelected
president,
Mrs.
Markham
was
re-elected clerk and),
Arthur
G. Capen was re-elected secretary and
treasurer,
Rev.
J. Herbert
Owen and Edward J. Clark, directors
resigned and. Mrs. George E. Torrey,
jJr., was
appointed
as a director
for
five years and Mrs. Daniel R. Porter
was
appointed as a director for one

Healy: in Ceremony at Com- | |

|

|

Library Officials Nawged.
WORTHINGTON,

'

'C,

Harold

Allen

at

care

Club

Stone,

Bowles,

the

on

Mrs.

to remain,
bridge

Tuesday

Mrs.

Roe,

George

jand Miss Hleanor Collins.

party

were |

Mrs.|

Jasper|

1744
Worthington

WORTHINGTON DATA
|
| IN CAPITAL ARCHIVES
|
WORTHINGTON,
Feb.
.15 —
The
| Frederick Sargent Huntington Library
| has received a letter of appreciation
from
the
Library
of
Congress
in
Washington,
D.
C.,
for
the
photographs
and
historical
data
on
the
Jonathan
Woodbridge
House
now)
known
as
the
Chapin
House.
The
photographs
will
be
filed
with
the
pictorial
archives
of early American.
architecture
and
the
data
with
the|
records of historic American buildings. |

�JUNE

|

MISS

Bachrach
cone

ice

ae

Photo
MISS

BOARD

NEW PRINCIPAL

hind Is

Transferred;
3

:

|

Shifts

Made

in

:

Teach-

| a

retirements

are

effective

at

of

Junior

mathematics
High

School.

at

Bucka

whe schectsboard voted. las ieht

also to appoint Miss Marion L. Bartlett as principal of the Howard Street
school
to succeed
Frank
W.
Doane,|
who
is retiring
from
active
service
this year.
Miss
Bartlett
has served
aS
pvincipal
of
the
Carew
Street|

the

School

since

1939.

She

is a graduate}

the school year.
~ of Westfield
Normal
school
in
1917 |
—Thandiers Voted
and received a BSE degree from Bos- |
|
The committee also voted to make ton university in 1933
| 45 transfers within the teaching staff.
Her
teaching
experience
began
at}
Mrs. Mary D, Ranney was transferred Montgomery in 1907, and she entered
from the position of assistant super- the Springfield school system in 1914.
visox of music
to that of supervisor |Since that time, she has served as a)
j of music
in the elementary
schools. teacher
in
the
Barrows
school,
as
Twenty-five
transfers
were
made
head
teacher
in
the
Sixteen
Acres)
| among
teachers
in
the secondary school and.as principal of the Worth|}schcols
and
17
among
teachers
in ington Street school, being Hradaterr ee |
4 elementary schools.
to the Van Sickle junior high Sele |
:

of

teacher

| ingham

Appointment
of
two
elementary
schocl
principals
and
the
transfer
of a third, and the retirement of two
supervisors and an elementary
school
principal
were
voted
hy
the
Schoo]
Commitiee
last
night.
The
changes
close

SHEEHAN

of How ard § Street School, whose
intention to retire also was announc ed
some time ago, To succeed him, the
School Board appointed
Miss Marior
L, Bartlett,
who
has been principe
| of
Carew
Street
School
since
1935
pus
Mary
C, Carney, who has beet
ta nt principal
of
Balliet.
Dor
a
Indian
Orchard
Elementary,
Sixteen
Acres,
Morris
and
Warner
Schools
since
1939,
will
take
Miss
i Bartlett's place as principal at Carew
Street, and the position Miss C ‘arney
43) has held will be taken by Miss Marguerite
R,
Sheehan,
who
has
been

ing Staff

and

MARGUERITE

isDeanc

APPOINTS

|

18, 1942
1942

The

retiring

supervisors

are

Miss|in

Dorethea Clark, supervisor of science
the
elementary
and
junior
high
schools, and John F, Ahern, supervi-

1938.

|mentary

r in
|

She

returned

department

in

to

1939.

MISS

lic

of

School

retirement

weeks

DOROTHEA

music

ago,

in

the

System,
was

The

tions will not
The retiring

whose

announced

two

‘Miss

Bachrach

Photo

BARTLETT

Bartlett, “who is

/and

her

leadership

in

the

supervisor

}School,+as

is

Frank

W.

I
|

JOHN

head

‘teather

AHERN

in

Sixteen

Wesleyan

Graduate

|

Mr. Doane,
retiring
principal
of|
Howard
Street
School,
entered
the
Springfield
public
school
system
in
September,
1909,
as
principal
of}
Worthington
Street
School.
He
was
| transferred
to the
principalship
of

Service With

F,

of the

'Acres
School, ‘and: as
principal
of
| Worthington
Street
*School.
When
| Worthington Street School was closed
‘in 1938
she was
transferred
to Van
Sickle Junior High
School where she
taught
one
year,
returning
to
the
elementary department
in 1939.

ard

Street

School

in

September,

Schock.

Pub-

posi-

life

community
have
been
highly
successful.
She
was
graduated
from
Westfield Normal
School in 1917 and
received
the
degree
of
BSE
from
; Boston
University in June, 1939. Her
‘teaching
experience
began
in Montgomery
in
1907.
She
entered
the
Springfield
publie
school
system
in
September, 1914, since which time she
has served as a teacher
in Barrows

impending }

several||

appointed

principal
of
Howard
Street
School
succeeding
Mr, Doane, goes to Howard Street from Carew
Street School
| where
she
has
served
as
principal
|since 1939. Miss Bartlett's service as
|the principal of an elementary school

CLARK

Springfield

be filled.
principal

ele-

MARION

| Ho

End

sor

the

MISS

FRANK

W.

DOANE

�Mrs.

Mr, and
guests

as

street,

at

aunts,

principal

Bartlett,

Marion

Bartlett

Mass.

of

day

pell and

and

Mr.

dinner

during

the

past

week

at

the

of Mr. and Mrs.

Roque

Bluffs,

and

SS

|

|

they |

|

|

summer|

Ernest Crane |
by

|Mrs, W. R. Riddiough

|

to- |

Rio-

J.

Henry

Mrs.

|

the

Misses|

The

at

guests

entertained

were

home
at

were

Miss

of

Springfield,
Bartlett of|

street school,
Howard
Mass., and Miss Elsie
Worthington,

Main

in

home

Bell’s

Mrs.

E. Bell have |

Horace
their

=

3

194 3

oe

aug Id 1943

fukBT

Rev.

andj

at Bog lake.
ie

$

Worthington

Aug. 12—Worth-

WORTHINGTON,

will
| ington Grange and the 4-H clubs
t in
} COnTHLR® to hold a fair and exhibi
the
of
in charge
Those
September.

Grange

Davis

J.

Emerson

are

John
Bates.
W.
Frank
Mrs.
| and Mrs. Lewis Zarr will have
club.
|of the 4-H

|

Mrs.

Blake

Clifford

visiting

are

Mr. and

Mrs.

and

Miss

|

|

and

|

Jarvis
charge

.

|

of

son

Thelma

Charles Peace of Hart-

r home
ford have opened their summe
at The Center.
n BartThe Misses Elsie and Mario
Maine
lett have returned from visiting
and Boston.

Mr.

|family
{ing

Adrian

Mrs.

and

of Westfield

their

vacation

Wright

{

i
|

and

|

|

have been spend-

in town.

[Springfield Union Photo
the.
FIVE-YEARS-OLD Nancy Napolitan, a first grade pupil at
from
today
school
the
at
bond
$100
a
bought
School,
Street
Howard
a considerMiss Marion Bartlett, school principal. She had saved up
who
father,
her
and
her
to
made
gifts
from
able amount of money
Mrs.
and
Mr.
of
daughter
the
is
Nancy
Armory.
the
at
employed
is

Calento

Wade Urey Sh WY

RN

sue

evidence

and the family. lives at 42 William

as

Ss

of the extra‘labors

SS

:

NO HOLIDAY
FOR TEACHERS:
tioning Board spent all of today at
ration books
for home owners who
session will be held tomorrow. The
other

Napolitan

|

Seed

g

Seventy-five teachers sworn in as deputies of the Springfield Rathe School Department offices in Spring Street “tailoring” fuel oil
filled out application forms two weeks ago. Another registration
work of the 75 deputies was described by school officials as anthat

have been added to the
rationing program.

work

of

teachers

by
;

the

datianioae

Street.

=

�[iec. 24:

Rosemary Paul ©
Wed

Miss Rosemary Aline Paul

Among

Mr and Mrs Stephen Paul of New York city and Worthington announce the engagement of their daughter, Rosemary Aline,
to David Powers Pardee, son of the late Maj and Mrs Austin
M. Pardee of Long Hill street, this city.
*

ee

me

Me

.

Worthington

[

WORTHINGTON,

Mr, and Mrs.

| York
\the

City

and

son
-Pardee,
Austin
Mrs.
field.

17

Aline,
of
M,

of

to

—~

7

=

Paul of New,

Worthington

engagement

‘Rosemary

July

Stephen

19443

their

David

announce}

daughter,

VPowers

and
Maj.
late
the
Springof
Pardee.

5

.the

to D. Pardee
holiday

weddings

was

that
of Miss
Rosemary
Aline
Paul,
daughter
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Stephen
Pau! of New York and
Worthington,
and
Wight
Instructor
David
Powers
Pardee, son of the late Maj. and Mrs,
Austin
Pardee,
and
indson
of the
late
Mr.
and
Mr
Frank
Powe
9
which
took
place
1
evening
at
o'clock in the home
o
and Mrs.
Edwin
F.
Collins”
of
1dowbrook
Road, Longmeadow.
Rev. James: Gordon Gilkey,
p
of South
Congr
gational Church
iciated, and a reception for the families
followed.
The bride, who
was
en in marriage
by
her fathe
wore
an
aqua:
marine afternoon freck and her
sister,
Mrs.
Allerton
Tompkins,
w
was
her matron of honor, was dressed .in
powder
blue.
Anthony
Paul,
brother
of the bride w
best man.
Miss
Paul
attended
the
Spence
School and
Mr.:Pardee was educated
at
the
Wilbraham
Academy
and
Washington
and
Lee University.
Vin

�144

199 3

Worthington 49#3
’

WILL

WORTHINGTON,
Sept. 6—The Women's Benevolent Society will meet at
the home of Mrs. Howard Brewster on
Wednesday
at 2 p. m. to quilt,
Mrs. J. P.
MeDermot
of Byracuse,
N. Y.. is visiting Mr. and Mrs. A, E.
Albert.
Frank
Hammond
of Mechanicsville,
N.

Y¥.,

was

a

Jeannette
Mrs.

week

Wrights,

George

E.

end

guest

Torrey,

of

Miss

Jr.,

will

Worthington

BE. BRIDE

'WOMAN’S SOCIETY
OFFICERS ELECTED

WORTHINGTON,
Jan.
21—At
the
annual business meeting of the Women’s Benevolent
Society
held Thursday at the home of Mrs. May Porter,
these officers were elected:
President, Miss Hlsie Bartlett; vicepresident,
Mrs.
Agnes
Mason;
secretary
and
treasurer,
Mrs.
Helen
G.
Burr;
directors,
Mrs.
Mary
Smith,
chairman,
Mrs. May
G. Porter,
Mrs.
Eurma
Tower,’ Mrs.
Helen
B. Tatro,
Mrs.
May
Kilbourn
and
Mrs.
Hilda
Ames;
nominating
committee,
Miss
Josephine
Hewitt,
Mrs.
Frances
Childs and Mrs. Lucie
Mollison.
Plans were made for the celebration
of the 50th anniversary of the incorporation
of
the
society
during
the
summer.
It was voted to add $110 te
the incorporators fund and to hol a
fair in August.

open her home Thursday at 1.30 p,m.
fora
demonstration
of
Canning
chicken
with
Alden
Tuttle of Massachusetts
State College in charge.
The regular School Committee meet
ing
will
be
held
Tuesday
afternoon
at
the
home
of Mrs. G.
F. Bartlett,
Schools open on Wednesday
with Mrs.}
Laura
B.
Deane
as
principal
and}
teacher
of the
grammar
grades
and
Miss Persis Ritchie as teacher of the}
primary room,
Miss
K.
MeD,
Rice
has
gone
to)
Altamont, N. Y., to spend the winter. |
Miss
Persis
Ritchie
has closed
the]
Worthington Country Club after a successful
season.
i(

EI

se

North Adams

Dec. 21—Mr.
WORTHINGTON,
and Mrs. Merwin F. Packard anof their
engagement
the
nounce
to
Arlene,
Phyllis
daughter,
of Mr.
son
Eddy,
Charles
MMM
of
Eddy
S.
Wilbur
Mrs.
and
Springfield, formerly of this town.
of
is a. graduate
Packard
Miss
and
School
High
Northampton
is
and
Springfield
in
Path
Bay
employed at the Federal Bank in
Springfield.

FIRE FORCES
20 FAMILIES

FROM BLOCK

North. Adams

Music

Blaze

and his wife, 75,
down a ladder.

were
a

Dr. and Mrs. Harlan Creelman |
of Auburn, N. Y., have presented |
a framed map of Worthington to},
the Frederick
Sargent
Hunting-|!
ton library. This map gives the
names of the roads and houses as|

Shower for Miss Packard

they

were

the town.

in

the

early

years

3

of]

# The Women’s Benevolent society met Thursday
afternoon
at
The Spruces Miss Elsie V. Bart-

lett was the hostess. / -

|

Worthington

WORTHINGTON,

Phyllis

ter,

Mrs

Packard

Shirley

has

Feb.

chosen

Harriet

13

—

|
Miss

Phylis°
Arlene
Packard,
daughter
of
Mr. and Mrs, Merwin
F, Packard
of
Worthington,
and
Mo.
M.M.
2-c
|Charles
Eddy,
son
of Mr,
and
Mrs.
Wilbur
S. Eddy
of
Springfield
and
Worthington,
were married
Saturday
night
in the Congregational
Church
by
Rey. Arthur
W.
Childs with
the
|double
ring
ceremony.
Arthur
G,
Capin, organist of the church played
the
marches
and
accompanied
the
soloist,
Mrs.
Richard
Hathaway,
a
sister of the bridegroom, who sang.
Mi
Shirley
Harriet Packard
was
her
ter’s
only attendant
and
Mo.
M. M. 1-e Robert Pisani, a shipmate of
{the bridegroom,
served as best man,
Ushers
were Cullen 8S, Packard, brother
of
the
bride,
and
Richard
G,
Hathaway, brother-in-law of the brideThe bride, who was given in marriaze by her father, wore a blue crepe
dress and her corsage was of orchids.

sur-|
Jan. 31—A
WORTHINGTON,
- prise miscellaneous shower was given|
Saturday night by 50 friends and rela- |
at}
Packard
A.
Phylis
tives to Miss
the home of Mrs. Guy Bartlett. Mrs.|
Raymond!
Mrs.
Maleolm Fairman and
wed- |
A mock
had charge.
Magargal
Kenneth
provided by Mrs.
was
| ding
Mrs. |
Bartlett,
George
Mrs.
|Osgood,
| Lewis Zarr, Mrs. Daniel Porter, Mrs. /
BartRobert
Walter Tower and Mrs.
married
be
will
Packard
Miss
lett.
Feb. 12 in the Congregational Church
was
who
Eddy,
Charles
MMM.
‘to
| present at the shower.

Morris Lilly, owner of the shop, is
stationed at Ft. Eustis. Va., and during his absence
‘Warren
Bramble
‘is}
in charge of the store. He said every-|
thing was
in perfect order when
he
jleft at 6.30,
Among articles destroyed: were: sevs|
eral
costly
and _ irreplaceable
victrolas.

Feb.

groom,

Worthington

led

Feb 17, 1944
WORTHINGTON

Bride in Worthington
WORTHINGTON,

ychurch parlor,

Contined

Firemen.
laid several lines. of hose
and
confined the blaze to the Music
|}House. Norman
Kronick of the Berkshire apartments,
directly across the
street,
discovered
the fire and. summoned
firemen,
Two of the occupants, Harper’
Gra-

ham, 76,
to safety

Federal Land Bank Employe)

Worthington

Blaze

-

To Charles Eddy

20 — Miss
Jan.
WORTHINGTON,
of Mr.
daughter
Phyllis A. Packard,
chosand Mrs.. Merwin F, Packard has
wedher
for
en Feb, 12 as the date
son of
Eddy,
Charles
ding to MMM
of
Eddy
8.
Wilbur
Mrs.
Mr. and
Springfield, formerly “of this town, at
al
7 p. m, in the First Congregation
the |
invites
Packard
Miss
Churen.
friends of both families to the wedding |
and reception which will follow in the |

NORTH
ADAMS, Jan. 20—Fire discovered tonight at 7.05 in the Music
House on Bank Street caused damage
unofficially estimated at several thousand dollars and caused 20 families in
the four-story Martin block in which
the Music
House
is located to leave
their homes
because
of smoke.
The
cause of the fire is unknown,

Worthington

Miss Packard Wed

ee

House

Is Heavily Damaged by
Evening

|
|

PACKARD
Steiger Photo

PHYLLIS

MISS

8 —

her

Miss

Packard

Sis: |

to}

be her bridesmaid at her wedding Feb.|
12 in the Worthington Congregational
Church,
The
bridegroom,
MMM
Charles
Eddy
will
be
attended
by}
Foresto
Pisani,
a
shipmate.
Mrs.|
Richard, sister of the bridegroom, will
sing
“Ave
Maria’
and
“O
Promise
Me.”
She will be accompanied by the
organist, Arthur G. Capin,
I

The reception was held in the church
parlor where the couple were assisted
in receiving
by the bridesmaid,
best
man
and their parents.
The couple left on a brief wedding
trip.
Upen return the bride will make
her home at 15 Clarendon St., Springfield and the bridegroom
will report
for duty at Millville, R. I.
Mrs.
Eddy
was
graduated
from
Northampton
High
School and a defense
stenographic
course
at
Bay
Path in Springfield.
She is employed
in the Federal Land Bank there.
Jiddy attended
Williamsburg
High
and
Smith
Vocational
School
in
Northampton
and
then
joined
the
Navy.
He has seen action as one of the crew
in a
PT
boat
in
the
South
Pacific
frem which he “has recently returned:

�DAY, JULY 14, 1942.

The

Mrs. Mary Baker,
|
75, Dies in Home

13

| Mary J. Baker, 75, widow of
| H. Baker,
former postmaster,

—

grandeur

made
ago

Mrs. |

His

William
died in

C.

BICKNELL

C.C.BICKNELL,
VILLAGE SAGE,
DIES,
AGED 82
1443

West

Chesterfield Patriarch
Known to Thousands
of Tourists

jher
home
here
this
Baker
was
born
in’
daughter
ter

Hatch

Member

of

Lawrence

J.

CHESTERFIELD,
Aug. 29—Chandler C. Bicknell, 82, the “Sage
of West
| Chesterfield”
Who
became
known
to
| thousands
of persons
for his bucolic
views
on political and social affair
s
and
who,
upon
the
passing
of
the
Volstead Act, promptly erecte
d a mon| ument
to John Barleycorn, died Sat;urday in Georgeanna
Inn, Ashfield,

BAKER
afternoon.
Mrs.
Springfield,
the
and

Sarah

and

lived

here

55

Por-

of

the

Congregational

years.

Chuvch,
she
leaves
two
daughters,
Miss Louisa B, and Mrs. Charles A,
Bisbee and one son, William
H. -Baker, Jr., all of Chesterfield;
two sis-|
ters,
Mrs.
George
T.
Murdough
and
Mrs, J, Eliot Bliss of Springfield, and
one
brother,
Homer
lL.
Hatch,
of
Hampden and nine grandchildren, The
funeral will be held at the Congrega-j}
tional Church Wednesday
at 2 p. m.
tev, John Barbour of this place and
Rey. Ralph
Krout of Paxton will officiate. Burial will be in Center Cemetery.

the

born

sage

not

were

in-

far

from

and

he

never

failed

to tourists.

to

point

the Yankees

famous.

funeral

was

of two
held

generations|

today

In

the

Congregational
Church
of which
he;
was
a member,
Rev,
John
Barbour
| officiated.
Burial
was
in the Mount

CHANDLER

MRS. MARY

was

He
was
highly
respected
by
the,
townspeople,
despite
his
outspoken
manner
in matters
political and
S0-|
cial. They regarded him as a scholar;
of the old school. In him was com-'!
bined
the
native
ingenuity,
naive}
philosophy
and
temperament
which}

Cemetery,

|

and

out its beauties

Former Postmaster’s Widow)
Born in Springfield
July

He

'there, the son of John and Matilda
Rhodes Bicknell and never left what’
to him was the most beautiful spot
in the world.
For
generations
his
people had lived near its majestic

Chesterfield

CHESTERFIELD,

gorge

geparable.

Known

to Tourists

the place
hand-made

in search
souvenirs

For years the bearded old patri
arch
presided in his gaily-decorated
workshop, “The Nutshell” near pictu
resque
West
Chesterfield Gorge and becam
e
‘known
to thousands
of tourists who
visited
of his

sawed

from

native

woods.

of some|
cut and

When
the sage
erected
his monument to John
Barleycorn
in 1920 he
didn’t do so in any spirit of sorrow
at the loss of an old friend. On the
contrary,
the
sage
was
definitely
a
“dry,” a knight
conducting
a single
handed crusade against the forces of
evil and darkness and when Congress ;
éaw eye to eve with him in the matter of liquor he promptly buried John

Barleycorn

in

the

Chesterfield

was

also

inventor

Hills,

quickly shaped a concerte shaft over
the grave
with
the lettering
“J. B.
1930—I am Here to Stay.”
When
the amendment was repealed
in
1938
Mr.
Chandler
was
bitterly
disappointed but he stuck to his guns.
Prohibition
would
return
again,
he
predicted.
In Kis woodworking shop, the sage
turned out hundreds of wooden
nov-

elties,

He

and

sole

to

the

producer of the diamond
brush hook
which
is used by many
farmers
for
clearing brush. Those who have used
the implement claim that it is more
effective than any other such tool.
In addition to his woodworking activities, the sage was something of a
poet. Pasted on the. walls of his shop
were
dozens
of
poems
which
have
been published from time to time by
The
Union,
most
of
them
in
The
Firing
Line. One of them,
“The Old

Man

of

east

side

human

the

face

Valley,”

that

of the

can

Gorge.

related

be

seen

on

the

|

��</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="76923">
                <text>Bartlett family</text>
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            <name>Date Available</name>
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                  <elementText elementTextId="85110">
                    <text>A Handbook of
Questions and Answers
Relating to the
History of Worthington,

TOWN

Massachusetts

HALL

Compiled

by

Elsie V. Bartlett

�FOREWORD
The following questions and answers do not aim to be exhaustive.
They merely attempt to give briefly such essential data as to make it
a handy reference book, and as an aid when a more ample History of
Worthington shall be written.

anil

To all who have helped to build this book I am most grateful.
E. V. B.

Histories

and Books

I Have

Quoted

from

History of the Connecticut Valley in Massachusetts
By Louis H. Everts, Philadephia, Pa.
Published by J. B. Lippincott, Philadelphia, Pa.
1879
History of the Town of Worthington, Massachusetts
By General James Clay Rice

Published by Weed, Parson &amp; Co., Printers
Albany, N. Y., 1853

Secular History of Worthington

By Charles K. Brewster

(This was added to a reprint of the Rice history)

Recollections of My Mother
By Susan I. Leslie
Published by Houghton, Mifflin and Co.
Boston and New York, 1899
The South Worthington Parish

By George R. Moody, 1905
(This book does not give the printer’s name)

The Hampshire County Gazetteer, 1654-1887
Published by W. B. Gay and Company
Syracuse, N. Y.

�ee

INDEX

Question No.
B
Bartlett. Artinah! vieii alla
eee. ok deveta ci ee 61
IES GCAVSERUN Git seston izes ce tase diecls Bulezecacvaconcd cates tots sabeg egiecassasal op es 145
AZZ ELE a2 sekseteles case avescssaeeseassecsenis
casts spit eee iseaee that dare
149
BOUNGAVICS Uevcccestscosccal, decsvoscatscasdacevocdecestesersterestevteccatavectnciett 5
Bryant, William Cullen ...........ccccssscssssscesssscccsessssssssscsesesevens 25
MES GUE OUCH
.c5ncisensoscszascsevvstestazcassetsasvasbaves ensshegeasvevexecsssss

Burgoyne’s

Brewster
Benjamin ...
Curtis dadedsuasecNsenacvaedeveevosecd dun chedooreseaen see
BOTTI (oh Bc vecdccsrvassariacrstbenininee
na clits Us Rieianlen eels

Eager sa Bove cb ¥a6s ssabesos ens dehic toe ety Mee eH nee eee:

Army

Burton Funeral .........
se
SOUIG GTS cos els lees loccoosndesesey SucssueetawedSeseltes slupetecuaceseasectssussaceceees

Colonial Church Interior ...cc..ccccccsssccccssssecssccccessesccsssseesses 157

Center Of TOWN .........ccccccccccsscssscccsessssececscsosseccsssesssssccsscesessceeess 4
Churches micas darth mee ila i oe
Rive tae te SI
sortess 10
Church, South Worthington ............ccccscssceesseeeeee 11, 160, 161

Church, West Worthingt0n ...........c.cccsccssccssccessessseeseceseeeees 12

Conwell, TRUSSELL ELy . ieteascdaceslest sszcselocsecosinosboccdlczeacesies 26, 73, 74
Corner Village te obevecauneaans Seaucloutaelachdesucdce das esaspuncediylviretseeall toons 39
COETE VEST ETAL Pr cels aece sees tos teeee vere aee avesne aT rete crhanceeevesabannese Al
UTTER CED eee ce cacea toca beavasetsecore ee cuonss clsee titee ceases teats 10 &amp; 47-61 inc.
Cheese FactOry .........cssccccssssscssseecessecessssascecsececesesecseeees 122, 68
Cattle Show uc... cccssessssceseees ge
separ
areca
150
TD GOCTORS irs tees techs dick cetes tes cadnelavubiacepueceedeestecdeaves 89, 90,

91,

94

Evergreen Trees at Church ..........cccsssssscecsssssecccessnsceceesenes 142
Wavy TIOUSES) coccecscecsecdss
sacs cvsascvasnococsses-cnseccrscsescoetie 114-139 ince.
Question No.
First
First
Wrst)
First
First
Kirst

Schoolhouse .........cccccccccssessssccesssesseecescssseseceecsssseeecessenes
Town Meeting
PArSONALES ci xcdececsssesescsssisseus
coovsssssseters revacdiatvesssaescteee
Selectmen ..........cccccscccccsescsecsnssssssesescessesccscccoccececaccesccsesees
Frame House ey
cis Salicn sce tdicsadetadedescvetsctseccseseoes
Piano. sic:

First Telephone

Families,

Three-\i

Line ....

oc .crcccccceccassesttettrncscoceretle
yncsb tess;
eee cosses

GYATIDO! bosoisc czas ceecsse racecar

a eses Fanon pesca

nett econenaeeeeeyse

Gideon Liee® .ciccdecscteisheie
eee eee ae anes eee
ree teeee
Golf Clu 2 bas scoscenleteuert
tere eens eres tees ieee eee eat 85 to 88
H
Houses:
BUrT So... cacceseuscesnevossetecbcnsrucsseeacniocceesstevancseeeccssaceases 99,
BALES Gi euedbsesheceveose tee Geece sear eaevevatbentbevenesbsaususseeteesssinsavavers
PBAPtIOGE ce cceivhcceveachenersenca
cls ceecee renee t exer ster esevstracemtitesseeset
BSUn COs sca ee ocecccl sadevcchbesecunssseaceerebeedvasasesveteeanesselanessce

Parsonage, First ......ccccsscsscsscescesssscseccsccesceccscesecscessesee
Porter, J ACO 2h esis scsibacsotsostnaduceestuscavetroasiecs
eens
ERICON Sie cay tel cae gerne cea
ell wa sere
a ae
DLEVENS Vile) Aces eee tie eRe an zeae: 238,
LOWED, csdeneccesechussteneees
sotsrdia rested ctaacetcten hustler caniFeee
NAV OR
ms. cali eee erie
erat wet a piers a dialled
WAU DAN lcs secsadicss eres ch scncsccussoselsevegvelseneees
mu
Woodbridge ...............

Huntington, Ralph ..............

Histories of Worthington
Health Association .......cccccccsccesscssssccserssesecsscecscsees

John Worthington ........ccsccccscsssesssscescessssscsscsscssceccesscessaceacene
Kilbourn. House

iieccschecszsetachaciticalgivereetiisvenstcaicsteeece

Diy Cetra alles cn. cc... ssrsetsetesvsees ¢actsvrs lagasend civluvelecesuadsielets
Lafayette, General
TLD TARY oe otal ass catacvove es oeSeeeeeeesei cok cna aeee cee

Mountain Seminary .............ccccscsssscssscssscsscsssccscerseccesesscesseseeees 20

23
inc.
100
12
122
138

Mittens, Anna A. Cole wc... cccescssssccesecsscscssccesscccescsssceesces 151
IMCCARNIS ROY Ailes lotiveseus ite calectests lee ten eee etaeieuate reals 120
IN SIME WO Le VOW

cosascecenseacelcassecsenedatoar
sds cdescite aloes item ulelne aes 12
Question No.

OV RANIZALIONS fcs e. senressssceeessacceciecse«ceievesessssetessocssticene 75-88 Inc.
GAPANGGi icoresscidestts- caceves toned svueaede Moved aeleelesi wissen ei ae 76

�GUI

.o.ccccccscscssessccssesscsscncnsacssssacsseecenseansanesseseseeessessorennss 77

Women’s Benevolent panes

ate vaveVacavaanedeaishasseonanes

Worthington

78, 79

IW ALEN SY SCOT

Parent-Teacher . desheesisses
Palettes and Trowels
Worthington Historical Society
Volunteer Fire Department ..........csssscccesssseeeesnreeeeeees

Yearly Events

LEO LDPilteeseeniquertnelaeaegusentessaarcsvane csusauraarrsunansosstetenteae

Worthington Realty Trust ........cccscccsrecssenecesees v.. 86, 87
Oldest House .........c.ssccccessessers ? a dea t¥ate tess deka vathencetcsteratereners 163
skin 4, 78, 158, 162
(PAT SORARS levis ces Werks ent sueeserrvessevedvapeanspnneanne
ssceesseeecsnegereaeees 3
sscsscescessessser
.........ccsssccse
Township
Purchase of

PODULAG ION: cacicnssvesscresesterscosoroncsatncieesannyssenetenseeansaeewernecraeense 8, 154

Pota Sl W OPES ssvecscscesesseccensa. svesansiperisasececesdoaratevnohubeetoety 68, 146
PAGAL’ S) SEOLE liliciswiscssshissavsosestessnenodacoonsencencrsengwaseoeeeybants 152
Pastoral Register .....sccsscsssvesccsscccsssevsseessseeesseccarenseseeseeonses 164

Q

R

Rice, James Clay ....cccsscssssssssesssceeseesecsnessaeeesseneeeseseaaessenseres 141
peun 98
anda eg reharenieryies
PRG OS Sure eect lee wivatacesessnees ev eubapventeamorsdersr
Rice, William Avs iicsssisssccccossecsececessecne 121, 134, 146, 154, 156

Ss

vxeder 123,124, 125
evan ee &lt;esessoresecsntves
GS Ge venS Valle crerse du scsredstsandesiesser
Sexton of Third Chur chi ........cssscccccccccccscccssssccessssssnrranesesssees 19
cleus 28, 32-35 Inc.
SOIAI@NS estiesccscsssesesteiadantscdacaacansesosescaseceenensenesen
Stage Coach ...ccscccsesscssssscesssssesersesessesssessessesssesssssrsessesecseens 45
SChOOlMGUSES cavsssisisessscsvtessecdtseyecsvenvesteleedoesorsannecborseen’ 70-74 Ine.

Tl envy a

aie ern

Stoner Homestead:

cl cease sacar sua sitar eale Gu cteps deltelad lete mea set dans dean

144

cadence
s 132
2... .sccsecseccveessectecsesseassosesoseunncrsesente

Stores i scecssvetseccsttedcesesaeconssccsase 12, 109, 114, 118, 128, 152, 153
T

Question No.

Thayer Homestead ......ccccscesesscesteecereetesetscereereseseessneerens 131
Tower Homestead .........cccccccscrsssssssssascsecsecccccessereeeensessesssees 130
VDT EL OU ease eerste dca dh oi cue nseVedeevecdwersnasavensatnonewenensscdede 13, 14
Town Hall, early .......ccsscccsssesccssccenscescseesscesrersssrccssesesrenesnensss 17
MTV OPTUS: oiisadscccgcicecds esisasssdecdectavesesseyocecsdasacevenesesonannaedceetecdcativens 21
TPATATIOV IOS © coi siececensiaaditesisedesvosbus tdessesessscavpoveseoos eseosenauteseneatestss 146
kostlées shot sadetne 142, 148, 156
th needaeweece
RY GES eicesiceestescezicd Ai esd sldssil
Underground
Voters,

Railway

registered

U

........... pti ee

maton

159

batbawcbae vavashsdecobspusvensoscietie lees

9

Ward, William «.0.....ccccueesccssesssoerevsreseseenceonsensenes 114, 115, 116
ge ........scescsssesccerseerseeseteeeeneeseeonees 120, 128,
Ward, TLOWDrid
Woodbridge House ......ccscsssssesseessscssssecsssessceeeceeensesensersaesennes
sovesineen
estise
setescenosatatesess
testes
sseiissos
Wool Industry scscssesesestester
Wool, farms paid for in ...ccesecseseesesseecereneeneeenestarseeeeeeeees

John:

156
127
147
148

Question
Answer:
Question

Answer:

Jciiiiie net RGR

eink le eee

43

21.5005 e sas cvtenst cecum wisseistcsvaceeacnectuseea
cvs sssvbneevens 165
xX
Y
esti athi
etal dane
desi
desta 69
Z

1:
By what name was Worthington first known?
Plantation No. 3.
2:
To whom was the land granted, and by whom?

A recorded deed shows that Aaron Willard, Jr. of Lan-

caster on June 2nd, 1762 bought of a committee of the General
Assembly of the Province of Massachusetts Bay the new township
number 3 for the joint interest of himself and four others, for the
sum of 1860 pounds. He represented Selah Barnard of Deerfield who
had one-third, Josiah Dwight of Springfield one-sixth, Timothy Dwight
of Northampton one-sixth, John Worthington of Springfield one-sixth,
and himself one-sixth. Recorded at Springfield, Massachusetts, Book
#6, pages 548-545.
Colonel John Worthington of Springfield and
Major Selah Barnard of Deerfield subsequently became sole proprietors. In honor of the former gentleman, who donated twelve hundred
acres of land and early induced the settlers to occupy the land by the
erection of a church and a grist mill at his own expense together with
a generous assignment of ministerial and school lots for the use of the
town the plantation was called Worthington.
Question 3:
Where was the purchase made, and what was the
date of the first settlement? When was it incorporated?
Answer:
It was sold at public auction on Boston Common on
June 2nd, 1762. In the spring or early summer of 1764 a company of
people who were the first settlers of the town made the journey from
Connecticut on horseback. The first night was spent on the hillside
east of the present (1952) John Jarvis place. The incorporation of the
town followed more closely upon the first settlement than in the case
of certain other towns, because the pioneers moved in nearly at the
same time. The act of incorporation was passed June 30, 1768.1
Question 4:
Where was the center of the town?
Answer:
In the early years of the town West Street was thickly
settled and considered the central part of the town. The first parsonage was the house now (1952) owned by Herbert N. Higgins and was
built by the first minister, Reverend Jonathan Huntington (June 26,
1771 to March 11, 1781). The first church stood nearby on the site
of the Lincoln Stewart place with the first cemetery around it. The

first John

Watts’ place was opposite.

This place was

torn down

by

Lyman Granger, and the Watts next lived where now is a part of the
center cemetery.
Question 5:
What were the early boundaries of the town?
Answer:
“The territory of the town when incorporated
(June 30, 1768) was considerably greater than at present. It extended from Cummington, on the north, to

Chester on the south, and from Peru on the west to the

north branch of the Westfield River. This embraced a
portion of what is now Chesterfield, and also a portion

of Middlefield.”

�Question 6:
Where was the first town meeting, August 1, 1768?
Answer:
At the Inn of Alexander Miller, on the corner across
from the front of the house now owned by Mrs. Wade — known as the
Buffington place. An old well marks the site.
1 For early settlers see Rice’s history of Worthington

Question

7:

Who were the first selectmen and town clerk?

Answer: Selectmen—Captain Nathan Leonard, Captain Nathaniel
Daniels, Mr. John Kinne. Town Clerk—Nahum Eager.
Question 8:
What was the population of the town in 1850 and

1860?

In 1940 and 1945?

Answer:

Question
Answer:
Question
Answer:

In 1850 it was

1,134

1860 ............ 1,112
1940 ce. esse
AT1
94D tain
363

1950 05.00.00.
462
(See Question 131)
9:
How many registered voters in 1948?
Two hundred sixty.
10:
How many Congregational churches have we had?
Four. The first church was on West Street, in 1771.

The second was back of what is now Franklyn

Hitchcock’s, in 1792.

The third, the old Colonial Church, stood on the site of the present
church from 1825 to 1877. It was burned April 2, 1887. The fourth
and present church was built in 1888.
There were two hundred twenty-six members on the roll of the
third church in 1853. In 1870 it was thoroughly renovated within,
making it more attractive and comfortable.
Its pastors were:
The Reverend Jonathan Pomeroy
1794-1832
The Reverend Henry Adams ...........
1833-1838
The Reverend John Hatch Bisbee
1838-1862
The Reverend David S. Morgan ................ 1867-1869
The Reverend Joseph F. Gaylord .............. 1870-1873
The Reverend Samuel Hopley ................06 1879-1882
The Reverend Frederick S. Huntington .. 1883-1888
(See Question 134)
Question 11:
When was the first church at South Worthington
completed?
Answer:
It was completed and deeded to the Methodist Episcopal
Society September 30, 1828. That building is now the upper story of
what was later Conwell Academy. The present church was dedicated
May 18, 1848.
Question 12:
When was the Methodist Episcopal Church erected
at West Worthington?
Answer:
In 1849.
“The old store at the corner was moved to this spot,
a front and belfry added, making the neat church of
today.” (1904)
“Services were held in this church from April to January. After 1870 preaching was continuous.
(See History of the South Worthington Parish, by George R.

Moody).

The church was discontinued in 1920.

“The Reverend Steven Wood of Peru preached his last
sermon there November 30th, 1919, and the Reverend
Mr. Gifford preached last September 26, 1920.”
— From records of Mary Yale (Mrs. John Yale)

The old store was the store of Russell Bartlett, which Mrs. John Yale
nae

stood on the site of Willard Jones’

Question 13:
Hall is located?

Who

gave

barn.

She

the land on which

gives the date as

the present

Town

Answer:
William Coit, by deed of December 25, 1854; recorded
January 3, 1855, Book 158, Page 19. Consideration of $25.00. The
Town Hall was built in 1855.
Question 14:
What stipulation was made?
Answer:
‘That “the town maintain a good fence around the same,
4 feet, 4 inches high.”
Question 15:
Who built the Lyceum Hall?
Answer:
Horace Cole I, about 1860.
Question 16:
What stiuplation was made in regard to the use
of this hall?
Answer:
That it should be used for religious or educational

purposes.

Question 17:
What do we know about early Town halls and the
present one?
Answer:
The first town meeting was held August 1, 1768 at the
home of Alexander Miller (See question 6). Meetings were held here
until 1770; after that at the meeting house until 1827, when it was
held at Isaiah Kingman’s. Mr. Samuel Hill could remember that the
first Town Hall (1828) stood between the end of the horse sheds and
the Center village. Later it was moved between the homes of Miss
Josephine Hewitt and Benjamin Alberts (1952) and used as a blacksmith shop, and was finally destroyed by fire. Mr. Hill remembered
when the present Town hall was built, 1855, and that a man named
William Coit (See question 138), who lived on what was once the old
Tavern of Lieutenant Timothy Meech on the post road (Site of home
of Paul B. Fowler, 1952) was instrumental in having the hall located
not exactly opposite the old church, but a little to the south, so that he
could view the church from his place.
Question 18:
Who built the first frame house in town?
Answer:
Nathaniel Daniels. It was nearly opposite the site of
the Tilson Bartlett place.
Question 19:
Who was the sexton of the Third Congregational
Church?
Answer:
Narcissus Shepard, a shoemaker, who lived near the
Hewitts at the Center village.
Question 20:
What Seminary was established here?
Answer:
Mountain Seminary was established in 1837 on the
common at the Corners. It flourished for several years supported by

�tuition fees. It had one hundred forty-three pupils drawn from here
and surrounding towns. Its first teachers were Alender O. Clapp and
Mary Strong. Later, T. A. Hall, EK. A. Hubbard and J. H. Temple taught
there. Board was $1.50 to $2.00 per week.
Mrs. Horace S. Cole’s
father, Dwight Perry, was one of the pupils.

TAVERN
BARTLETT’S

HOTEL

Question 21:
What were some of the names and locations of
the earliest Taverns in Worthington, and later hotels and inns?
Answer:
“The taverns of Revolutionary times or earlier were:
(1)
Alexander Miller — Inn-holder
(2)
Nathaniel Daniels:
(8)
Lieutenant Timothy Meech
Very early, too, on the same general route was a
(4)
Tavern opposite the present schoolhouse, north of the
“Hager” place (Drury district) ; also,
(5)
on the town-line at the “Partridge” place;
(6)
the Isaiah Kingman House (side of Judge Brewster’s)
(7)
the Pearce House at the Corners (site of Library) kept
in 1879 by Mr. Winslow, one of the oldest houses in town
(8)
The Bartlett House at Worthington Corners (Jacob
Bartlett) was built soon after his marriage in 1858. A
part of it was originally a wool warehouse, used by
Horace Cole I. This hotel burned Sunday, March 27,
1898.
(9)
The Worthington Inn (Alfred W. Trow) was built in
1898 and burned February 27, 1931.
(10)
Also, early, Lindsey Tavern, the Eugene Cross place at
West Worthington.

Later

OF
the

NOAH

PEARCE.

Lafayette

House.

Photo by Sidney J. Smart.

Question 22:
What distinguished foreign guest was entertained
in Worthington?
Answer:
The Marquis de Lafayette spent the night of June 13,
1825 at the tavern of Noah Pearce at Worthington Corners. General
Lafayette was en route by stagecoach from Albany to Boston to the
laying of the corner stone of Bunker Hill Monument.
The following
morning he held a reception to the townspeople. Worthington celebrated the centennial of this event June 18, 1925. The tavern was
later known as the Lafayette House. It stood on the site of the present
library.
In 1901, when the building was about to be torn down, Dr. Harlan
Creelman, who owned the house next door, became the possessor of
the historic inn and incorporated much of its fine material in the
construction of the south wing of his home, Ashmore Lodge.
In all of the rooms of the wing, various parts of the old woodwork
have been used. In the dining room, which measures 16 ft. by 20 ft.
are to be seen cased overhead and corner beams, mantelpiece, oak
flooring and doors of fine paneled design. Many of the same features
are to be found in the second story sleeping room of the wing, which

measures 20 ft. by 27 ft.

The staircase balustrade on the upper floor is made of the one
from the tavern, as well as a very interesting door used for the linen
closet. This door is said to have been a part of the old church built

in 1792, the second religious edifice built in the town.

In the old tavern, under
found a Colonial buff plaster.

layers of wall paper in the parlor, was
This same color — Colonial buff — has

been used on the walls of Ashmore Lodge.

�The “Lafayette Elm” which stood on the corner by the Library
and near where Lafayette is reputed to have stood when he held a
reception to the townspeople, was taken down May 25, 1932 to make
way for the widening of the new state road between Worthington and
Huntington.
Full accounts of these events are available at the Library.
Question 28:
What Worthington man became Mayor of New
York City?
Answer:
Gideon Lee.

“The

life

of

Gideon

Lee

has

the

elements

of

a

romance. Originally a shoemaker in the shop of Clark
and Bardwell’s tannery, he is said to have one day thrown
off his apron and declared he would do such small business no more. His after career in New York as a leatherdealer is simply marvelous. He rose to wealth and municipal honors, being chosen mayor of the city. When he
retired from business he met John Jacob Astor in the
street. Mr. Astor said, ‘I hear you have retired, Mr. Lee,
how much did you save?” “About three hundred thousand dollars,” replied Mr. Lee. ‘‘Well! Well!” said Mr.
Astor, “That is just as well as if you were rich.”
Gideon Lee married Lucy, daughter of Major Buffington.
Question 24:
What man, born in Worthington, was instrumental
in the development of the Back Bay district of Boston?
Answer:
Ralph Huntington, born November 28, 1784, in the
first parsonage, now owned by Herbert N. Higgins. He was the child
of Simon and Priscilla Benjamin Huntington. Huntington Avenue in
Boston and Huntington Hall at M. I. T. are named in his memory. (The
story of his life is in a notebook owned by Elsie Bartlett).

Question

fing}
“

ee
‘e
aa

2

4

25:

What noted poet lived for awhile in this town?

Answer:
William Cullen Bryant, who studied law under Judge
Howe in the “Woodbridge house,’”’ now owned by Mr. Jay Gangel.
“In December 1811, William Cullen Bryant was put
in charge of Judge Samuel Howe of Worthington to be
initiated into the mysteries of Blackstone, Stephens,
and Coke.”
Of his birth his mother wrote in her diary, ‘“November 4, 1794:
Stormy, wind northeast; churned. At seven in the evening a son born.”
Question 26:
What noted minister, lecturer and philanthropist
was born in Worthington?
Answer:
Russell H. Conwell was born in South Worthington,
Massachusetts, February 15, 1843, the son of Martin Conwell and
Miranda Wickham Conwell. He died December 6, 1925, aged eightythree years.
Pastor of Baptist Temple, Philadelphia, Pa., founder of Temple
University and The Good Samaritan Hospital, noted lecturer and

This

award,

founded

by

Edward

W.

Bok

in 1921

consisted

of ten

@ philanthropist: recipient of the Philadelphia Award, March 7, 1923.
x thousand dollars, a handsome gold medal in a beautiful casket, and a

parchment scroll stating that the award
service to the good of the city.
i
The Russell H. Conwell school built

onor.

was

given

in 1941

for outstanding

was

named

in his

Stories of his life are available at the Library.
Question 27:
After the British took possession of the port of
Boston in the spring of 1774 what special town meeting was held in
Worthington, and at what place?
Answer:
At the meetinghouse, Tuesday, June 28, 1774 at two
o’clock in the afternoon to see what the town could do “for the relief
and encouragement of the town of Boston.”
“Worthington and Ashfield raised seventy-one minute men, who marched to Cambridge on the Lexington
alarm, under Captain Ebenezer Webber of Worthington,
with Samuel Allen and Samuel Bartlett of Ashfield as
lieutenants.”
(See page 97 in Secular History of Worthington, by C. K. Brewster
in Rice’s History of Worthington).
Question 28:
How many known names of Revolutionary soldiers
were from this town?
Answer:
Forty-two.
(See Rice’s History of Worthington, Page

22)

Question 29:
Is this number complete?
Answer:
“There can be but little doubt that this list falls
much below the actual number who joined the army.”
Question 30:
A small portion of what large British army passed
through Worthington in 1777?
Answer:
Hessian
soldiers
from
Burgoyne’s
defeated
army. .“Oliver Lyman was Captain of a company that
went far as Lanesboro when a number of Hessian prisoners were delivered to them, which they guarded to
Northampton.”
Question 31:
How greatly was Worthington depleted of men
during the Revolutionary War?
Answer:
“So few of the male inhabitants, at this period,
did patriotism leave in town, that at no time during the
interval between the years of 1778-1782, were there
above ten or twelve men, out of over seventy families
living in town, who attended church on the Sabbath.”
Destitution became so great that on October 10, 1777 a state law
was passed obliging town to care for families of soldiers.
Question 32:
How many known names of soldiers in the War of

1812?

Answer:
Twenty-four, of which William Ward and William Rice
commissioned officers.
Question 33:
How many enlisted from Worthington to serve in
the Civil War?
Answer.
Sixty-two.
(See Rice’s History, Pages 77-80). The
Selectmen’s report gives eighty-six. (Page 8).
Question 84:
How many went to World War I, 1914-1918?
Answer:
Twenty-six.

were

�Question 35:
How many
Answer:
Fifty-two. (See
Question 36:
What man,
Brigadier-General by Abraham

the Battle of Gettysburg?
Answer:
James Clay

boulder at the Rice Homestead

birthplace.

men went to World War II, 1941-1945?
Town Report, 1945).
born in Worthington, was appointed a
Lincoln, the appointment dating from

Rice,

born

in Worthington

(Dr. Mary P. Snook’s, 1952)

in 1828.

A

marks his

“General Rice fell mortally wounded while leading
his troops May 10th, 1864, in the series of battles in
Virginia. He was buried at Albany, N. Y., May 16, 1864,
with military honors.”

Question

37:

Where was James Clay Rice educated?

Answer:
At Yale College. He graduated in 1854. During his
college course he wrote a Secular History of Worthington, which he
inscribed to the old people of the town — a work valuable as a matter
of record and history.
Question 38:
What
three
houses,
built in 1806,
are
still

standing?

Answer:

William A. Rice’s .......... (Dr. Mary P. Snook’s in 1952)
Jonathan Woodbridge .............. (Jay Gangel’s in 1952)
Major Samuel Buffington .... (Mrs. Minta Wade in 1952)
Question 39:
What account of the Corners do we have in a letter
dated October 31, 1813?
Answer:
We have a letter written by the wife of Judge Samuel
Howe, who lived where Mr. and Mrs. Jay Gangel now live (1952).
“The house we are to inhabit stands on one corner of
two roads which cross each other, but not near enough
to either road to be incommoded by it or to look ill; the
other corners are occupied by a tavern, a store, and a
dwelling house; and this is the most considerable settlement in Worthington, there being a few other houses in
the vicinity.”

See book in Library, “‘Recollections of My Mother”

Extract

writes:

from

the

‘Worthington

same

book,

by Susan I. Leslie, Pages 106, 107
pages 99, 100:
“My Aunt Catherine

is a mountain

town,

much

higher above

the Connecticut valley than the hills that immediately
overlook it. It is approached by the ascent of long hills,
over rough roads; and the transit, about twenty miles,
with their own horses, as the two families usually made
it, took much longer than a journey of one hundred miles
now does.’”
“There was no village, or centre of things about it,
more than a tavern, a store, and half-a-dozen houses,
where were gathered together such conveniences as belonged to the place. In the midst of this year uncle’s

house was situated; a large, square house, with an ample
yard open to the south, with a very pleasant aspect. It
was much the best house in the place — built by the
lawyer who preceded Mr. Howe in the town. Opposite
was the public house, where the Albany stage stopped
each day, going up and returning on alternate days.
This coach brought the mail, and such travellers as came
there, and afforded the chief interest that they had outside of the house. There were two or three families with
whom they kept up a friendly intercourse, and a church
a mile distant, which sent forth the hardest and dryest
kind of doctrine, and was a penance to attend. It was in
1813 that your aunt went to live there, — in the middle
of the war of that period. Everybody was poor, and they
furnished their house with plainness simplicity, but still
comfortably.
And here they set up their household
gods, and began life on a simple plan which afforded
many enjoyments, at the same time that it brought some
important privations. Mr Howe usually had a student in
his office (adjoining the house), who lived with them;
and I think it was in the first year that William Cullen
Bryant was with them in this position.”
Question 40:
What do we know of Mills’ Tavern?
Answer:
It was the house long owned by Walter C. Powers and
now owned by Commander Harold F. MacHugh
(1952). William
Cullen Bryant in a letter speaks of it as ‘“‘a comfortable lounging place.”
The Mills’ orchard was once the upper part of the M. F. Packard
mowing. Horace Cole I, bought the lot and cleared it to raise tobacco
and built a very long tobacco barn. When it was found that a fine
grade of tobacco could not be grown here, he made part of the building into a cow barn, and moved the other half away to become a cheese
cre
factory.
(See Question 64. &amp; ¢
Question 41:
Where and when was a court-martial held in

Worthington?

Answer:
At the home of Sanford Mills on Tuesday, February
12, 1811 at 10:00 A.M.
(See scrapbook of Elsie V. Bartlett).
Question 42:
Who had the first piano in town?
Answer:
Mrs. Elisha Mack, who lived in the house where Mr.
Jay Gangel now lives (1952).
Question 48:
What do we know of the life of Colonel John
Worthington?
Answer:
Colonel John Worthington, an outstanding man in the
early day of Springfield, Massachusetts, was born in that city November 20, 1719. His father was Lieutenant John Worthington, who came
from Hatfield in 1701 and accumulated a fortune. In deeds recorded at
the registry office, he is styled in 1729 as “Innholder’: in 1736 as
“Shop-keeper,” and in 1738 as “gentleman.”
On April 16, 1812 he
bought of the widow and heirs of Elizur Holyoke three tracts of land,

the second and third lying on the east side of Main Street, between

�tthe present Bridge and Worthington Streets. The first tract, seven
and one-half acres, is described as bounded north by John Pynchon,

and

south

by land

of the Parson’s.

This

became

the Worthington

homestead. It was a little south of where (in 1905) is the Springfield
National Bank Building. In this rambling, wooden structure he kept
the finest tavern in town.
The emigrant ancestor, Nicolas, came from the south part of
Lancashire, near Liverpool, England, about 1658 and later from Hatfield, then part of Hadley, to Agawam.
His residence was where an
old tavern once stood, which was in the south part of the town, on the
car line. There is a sign ‘Worthington Corner” on the spot.
Colonel John Worthington graduated from Yale in 1740, studied
law and returned to Springfield in 1774 to begin the practice of his
profession. The son and father accululated large land holdings the
number of deeds to both being about two hundred fifty.
Colonel John Worthington remained a bachelor until he was forty
years old. On January 10, 1759 he married Hannah Hopkins, a daugh-

ter of the Reverend Samuel Hopkins of West Springfield, and Esther

Edwards Hopkins, who was a sister of Jonathan Edwards.
Mrs.
Worthington died November 25, 1766 at the age of thirty-five years,

—

leaving four small children.

On December 7, 1768 he married Mary Stoddard, daughter of
Colonel John Stoddard of Northampton, and Prudence Chester. She
died July 12, 1812.
In politics he was a Tory. He and Colonel Israel Williams of Hatfield and Major Joseph Hawley of Northampton soon became known as
the “River Gods” from the fact that they dominated the military,
civic, legal, social and political life of the region. Worthington Street
in Springfield is named for him, as is this town. He died April 25,
1800 in the eighty-first year of his age.
(See Question 2).
N.B.
For further information see scrapbook of Elsie Bartlett.
Question 44:
What three books give Worthington history?
Answer:
(1)
History of the Town of Worthington, by James
Clay Rice, 1854, to which has been added Secular History of the town
by C. K. Brewster, 1874; and Ecclesiastical History — Reverend J. H.
Bisbee, 1854-1874.
(2)
The South Worthington Parish, by Reverend George R.
Moody, 1905.
(8)
History of the Connecticut Valley in Massachusetts, 1879.
(See Library for copies)
Question 45:
What was the earliest stage coach line through
Worthington ?
Answer:
“The great thoroughfare from Boston to Albany
was through this town. There was a constant flow of
travel through the place. Stages, private coaches, whitetopped emigrant wagons and other vehicles were constantly passing.”

See address

by Reverend

J. H. Bisbee

in Secular

town of Worthington, by C. K. Brewster, 1874.

History

of the

Question 46:
How many families of Bartletts, Burrs and Brewsters were living in the town February 15, 1833?
Answer:
Ten Bartletts, Seven Burrs and eight Brewsters.
(Selectmen’s list, owned by Clement F. Burr).
Question 47:
When
the old church was burned
(the third

meeting house)

what was saved?

Answer:
Only the bible and hymnbook were saved by George
Russell. The bible has been rebound and is still in use (1952).
Question 48:
Have we any picture of the third meeting house?
Answer:
Yes.
Mrs. Nathan Dickson of Albany, a cousin of
Miss Susan T. Rice, gave Miss Rice an ambrotype of the church
(1825-1887). An enlarged copy now hangs in the present church.
Question 49:
Who gave the church clock?
Answer:
Frank E. Ladd of Springfield, Massachusetts.
Question 50:
Who gave the first furnace of the present church?
Answer:
The Hampshire County Conference (1888). It costs
upwards of $200.00.
Question 51:
Who gave money to purchase the deacon’s chairs?
Answer:
Mrs. Coskey, of Michigan.
She was formerly Miss
Coit of Worthington.
Question 52:
Who gave the pulpit lamp?
Answer:
C.G. Hine of New York raised money by entertainment
and selected and gave the pulpit lamp.
Question 58:
Who gave the old communion set?
Answer:
Miss Mary G. Rice of Albany, New York.
It was
pewter, and later silver plated.
Question 54:
Who gave the pipe organ?. (It cost $1,000.00).
Answer:
Chauncey D. Pease, $500.00; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis
Warner, $350.00; F. S. Bailey of Springfield, Massachusetts, $125.00.
Other gifts amounted to $25.00.

Question..55:

When

was

the Corner

Stone laid to the present

church?
Answer:
August 3, 1887.
Question 56:
Who gave the granite foundation?
Answer:
It came from the Calvin Tower farm
(now
Vaughan’s) and was given by Mrs. Calvin Tower.
Question 57:
When was the present church dedicated?
Answer:
May 28, 1888.

Question

58:

When

did its pastor, The

Reverend

Miss

Frederick

S.

Huntington die?
Answer:
September 4, 1888.
Question 59:
When was the church incorporated?
Answer:
July 10, 1930.
Question 60:
What is the history of the present church bell in
the First Congregational Church?
Answer:
The bell was the gift of Arunah Bartlett. It was purchased by Colonel William G. Rice of Albany from the Meneely Bell
Company of Troy, N. Y. and cost $300.00. It was hung in the steeple
November 10, 1887. The church was dedicated May 23, 1888.

�“When he was eight years old he dug and put into
the cellar over three hundred bushels of potatoes that

fall. He said not so hard as it might seem. The potato
piece was quite near the house and he arranged it so
he could roll the potatoes in through a cellar window to

a bin

where

brothers

were

his

away

father

kept

at the time.

them.

His

I knew

father

not where.

must have been about the time of the War of 1812.”
“He

and

It

was very particular about the spelling of their

name, emphasizing
(thus, Barttlett).

the

two

sets

of

double

“t’s.”

“They were cousins, but I do not know how near.
Some of Aunt Amanda’s relatives lived in Lansing, Michigan, and they decided to see the “West.” Uncle Arunah

built the carriage and equipped it preparatory to their

camping expedition. As soon as the ground was settled
one spring they started and returned late in the fall —
later than they had hoped to, for Aunt Amanda got sick
with a cold on the return trip and they had to delay until
she was better. She never recovered from the cough that
followed this cold.
ARUNAH

BARTLETT

Sketch by Mary

Question

61:

Burr

HOUSE.
Hitchcock.

What do we know of Arunah Bartlett?

Answer:
He was a descendant in the seventh generation of
Robert Bartlett of Plymouth, who came over in the good ship Ann in
1623. Arunah was the son of Edward, Jr. (6) and Mary Farr and was
born March 30, 1797. He married Amanda Tower May 13, 1824 and
he died May 9, 1894, aged ninety-seven years. His house was the
Alden Tower place. Amanda Tower was the daughter of Nathaniel
Tower.
“Uncle Arunah was a real Yankee genius. Anything
they needed he seemed to know how to make.’
“Their home was a well kept house with an eastern
and southern exposure, situated on a rise of ground not
shaded by trees. Adjoining on the north and west were
his workshop, water power, and storage for wood and
vehicles.”
“He was very fond of music and he made several
musical instruments. The only one I know for sure was
a violin, but there were others.”
“Aunt Amanda had a nice melodeon, but I do not
think he made it. I recall her telling how she used to
dance all around their living room while he played. I
wanted to see her dance, and I couldn’t understand why
if she could do it before she couldn’t do it then. He
played by ear, which he said was the best way.”
“They were early to bed and early to rise. As Elsie
oer
said, “I can remember his coming to breakfast

with

us.” ”

“One

of the things that they brought

home

with

them was the roots of some rose bushes. It must have
been a very hardy kind of rose, because one of these rose
bushes is still giving joy to its owner in another
location.
“He lived to be past ninety years of age and Aunt
Amanda nearly ninety.
“At the time of the blizzard of 1888 Uncle Arunah
did not get out to the barn for three days to care for his
cow and sheep. Not so bad as it might seem, because

the sheep were in a barn that was especially prepared

for their healthy existence by having an opening for freedom and fresh air. He filled their rack full of hay and
they helped themselves to the snow when they were

thirsty. I do not remember so well about the cow, only
that she survived.
“A short distance from the house were some graves

where

I think his father and mother

were

buried.

He

visited this spot frequently in his later years.
(Arunah
Barttlett’s father and mother, Edward and Mary Farr
Bartlett, are buried in the North Cemetery.)
“A brother of Aunt Amanda’s came to live with
them, as he was poor and not able to support himself, but
their healthful way of living did not appeal to him and
he soon made other arrangements.
“Bread and milk was their staple diet in later years,
with plenty of baked sweet apples.

�“He proposed a wind break for our home which was
near by, and helped my father set out several hundred
little spruce trees.”
From Childhood Memories of Mr. and Mrs. Arunah Barttlett
By Elizabeth Jones Mann
Question 62:
When
was electricity installed in the present
church?
Answer:
In the summer of 1929. It was used for the first time
Sunday evening, September 1, 1929.
Question 63:
For whose death was the new bell first tolled?
Answer:
The new bell was hung in the steeple November 10,
1887. It was first tolled for Miss Jennie Robinson of Cold Street,
November 28rd, 1887. The last time it was ever tolled was for the
passing of William A. Rice, who died June 17, 1906, at the age of
eighty-six years. The custom of tolling the bell had been given up
some years before then.
Question 64:
Whose mother was born in the first frame house
in town?
Answer:
Mrs. Sidney J. Smart’s mother, Mrs. Alfred Kilbourn,
(Millie Bartlett Kilbourn) was born in the first frame house (built by
Nathaniel Daniels). It was later torn down and some of the timbers
used in the Tilson Bartlett house near by. She was Tilson Bartlett’s
oldest child.
Question 65:
When was the first telephone line to Worthington?
Answer:
It was from Williamsburg, and was built in 1885 and
put in operation by Dr. Munroe Crosier and John H. Bartlett.
Question 66:
For how many years has there been a church in
this town?
Answer:
One hundred eighty one years (1771-1952.
For its
first one hundred years only seven ministers heild pastorates.
The
longest pastorates have been the Reverend Jonathan Pomeroy —
thirty-eight years, and the Reverend John H. Bisbee — twenty-nine
years. Its first pastor was the Reverend Jonathan Huntington.
Question 67:
Where was church held the day after the 3rd
church burned?
Answer:
In the Town Hall. Deacon Lafayette Stevens read the
sermon, The text was Isaiah, 64th Chapter, 11th verse — “Our holy
and beautiful house where our fathers praised Thee is burned up with
fire and all our pleasant things are laid waste.”
Question 68:
What were some of the early industries of the
town?
Answer:
The principal business was that of agriculture. Grist
mills and saw-mills met their immediate needs. Located in Stevensville were the grist-mill, saw-mill and turning works of Aaron and
Lafayette Stevens, later conducted by their sons. There were many
grist-mills, saw-mills and wood turning shops. Other industries included potash works, brick vards and tanneries, bedstead factory, children’s sleds and wagons, penholders, blacksmith shops and basket
shops. Wool was a big industry at one time, also cheese making and
boots and shoes. Tobacco as a money crop was tried.

Now, in 1952, the principal money crop is potatoes, and only a few
families depend upon the farm for a living. Many men work on the
roads and many motor to nearby cities and work in plants like General
Electric, or in factories. The whole industrial life of the community
has changed.
The Hampshire County Gazetteer, 1654-1887, lists the following
industries: A. Stevens &amp; Sons saw-mill and hoop factory; about 1836 it
burned; rebuilt in 1837; again burned in 1857 and rebuilt in 1858.
Wm. C. Sampson’s mill, was built by Fordyce and Philo Sampson in
1841. Fordyce died and Philo carried on the business alone until 1855,
when his son, William Sampson, became a partner in the manufacture
of lumber, lath and factory supplies.
J. &amp; H. Benton’s saw and grist-mill, built in 1840, and came into
their possession in 1871. The saw-mill has a circular saw, planer and
shingle machine, and the grist-mill one run of stones.
David Jones &amp; Son’s bedstead factory was built by Bartlett, Jordan &amp; Company for the manufacture of bench screws in 1846. The
factory had two planing machines, five circular saws and turning
lathes.
They manufactured bedsteads and lumber for agricultural
implements.
Oliver B. Parish’s factory was built in 1873-74. He does a prosperous business in the manufacture of loom fixtures and factory supplies
of wood.
Hayden &amp; Son’s sled factory, built in 1858 upon the site of one
burned. E. &amp; T. Ring long carried on the business here, hence the
name Ringville. Mr. Hayden has been identified with the business
since 1878.
George H. Miller’s saw-mill does a general woodworking business.
Lyman Higgin’s saw-mill does custom sawing.
Theron K. Higgin’s basket factory, at South Worthington, was
est eblished in 1883.”
There is an interesting map of Hampshire County, published in
18€0 with the following business directory:
Horace &amp; Samuel Cole: Merchants and Boot and Shoe Manf’r’s.
E. H. Brewster: County Commissioner.
Sidney Brewster: Merchant
Rev. John H. Bisbee: Congregational Clergyman.
Russell Bartlett: Bedstead Mfg.
D. W. Beals: Saw Handle Mfg.
Charles Smith: Saw Handle Mfg.
Nathan S. and Aaron Stevens: Sieve Rim Mfg. and Grist Mill.
Hersey E. Tower: Basket Manufacturer.
Marcus A. Bates, Mfg. Shafts, Broom Handles, etc.
L. Higgins: Saw Handle and Toy Carriage Mfg.
Philo Sampson: Turning Shop.
William Stevens: Blacksmith.
Lyman Randall: Distiller of Essential Oils.
Question 69:
What were some of the yearly events of the
1880's?

�Answer:

The

Gypsy

caravans

with covered wagons,

the danc-

ing bear; Sugar Billy; Comical Brown; Kickapoo Indians! and
year a play “Uncle Tom’s Cabin”, given in a large tent between
Corners and the Center village.
Question 70:
Where was the first schoolhouse?

one
the

way between the John Adams house (1952, Carl Joslyn’s)
Ames Burr place (1952, Nathaniel F. Gliddens).
Question 71:
How many school districts were there?
Answer:
In 1857 and 1867 there were 12 schools.
In 1878 the town had 11 school districts.
No.
1
The Corners
No.
2
The Center
No.
3
Pease District
No.
4
Drury District
No.
5
Ringville

the

Answer:

The first schoolhouse was a log cabin built in 1773 half-

No.

6

and

South Worthington

No.
7
West Street
No.
8
Osgood’s
No.
9
West Worthington
No. 10
Cold Street
No. 11
Capen District
There was also a schoolhouse near the Almon Johnson place now
owned (1952) by Robert Lane.
Question 72:
Where were high schools held?
Answer:
Inthe Town and Lyceum Halls.
Question 73:
Where was Conwell Academy?
Answer:
In South Worthington. It was founded by Russell H.
Conwell, D.D. in 1894 and continued for several years.
Question 74:
When was the consolidated school built?
Answer:
In 1941, and was named “The Russell H. Conwell
School.” In 1946 a kitchen was equipped in the basement and a cafeteria lunch room added. The building has three classrooms and cares
for children from the first through the eighth grade. High school
pupils have tuition and transportation paid to out-of-town schools.

ORGANIZATIONS
Question 75:
What are some of the organizations of this town?
Answer:
Worthington Grange No. 90; The Friendship Guild;
The Women’s Benevolent Society ; The Rod &amp; Gun; The Parent Teachers Organization; Palettes &amp; Trowels, and the Worthington Historical
Society.
Question 76:
When was the Grange Organized?
Answer:
It was organized March 29, 1875. Reorganized Nov.
11, 1903 as Worthington Grange No. 90 with 75 charter members.
Meetings are held the second and fourth Tuesdays of the month.
“The Old Granite” Grange #49 was organized in David Blair’s house
and existed for a few years. It was reorganized in 1900 and surrendered its charter in 1915.

Question

Answer:

77:

The

Who

organized the Friendship Guild?

Friendship

Guild

of the Congregational

Church

Women’s

Society

was organized by Mrs. James H. Burckes, Miss N. S. Heacock and
Mrs. James C. Wightman. Its first meeting was held at the Parsonage
November 1928, with 24 charter members.
Meetings are held the
first Thursday of each month.

Question

incorporated ?
‘ Answer:

officers:

78:

When

It was

was

the

incorporated

May

8, 1894

Benevolent
with

the

following

Pres., Mrs. Lucy Gibbs; Vice-Pres., Mrs. Celina B. Eager; Clerk
&amp; Treas., Mrs. Ella E. Burr; 1st Director, Mrs. Lida D. Stevens; 2nd
Director, Mrs. Eliza C. Randall; 38rd Director, Mrs. Anna A. Cole.
Previous to its incorporation it was known as the Ladies Society. It
built (1890) and owned the Parsonage and gave the use of it to the
Church for its minister.
Question 79:
When was the Parsonage turned over to the
church?
Answer:
At a special meeting of the church which was held at
the church October 8, 1945, the church voted to accept a gift of the
Parsonage together with a trust fund of $2,000. The W. B. S. pledged
themselves to give continued help in its upkeep.
Question 80:
When was the Rod and Gun Club organized?
Answer:
A newspaper clipping shows that it was a going concern in August 1942. Earlier records are lost. Meetings are held the
first Monday of each month.
Question 81:
When
was
the
Parent-Teacher
Organization
formed?
Answer:
The first meeting of the P. T. O. was held at the Town
Hall October 14, 1948 with 44 present.
President, Edith Alexander; Vice-President, Franklin G. Burr;
Secretary, Eleanor Porter; Treasurer, Joseph Sena.
Meetings are held at the Russell H. Conwell School the second
Wednesday of each month, except during July and August.
Question 82:
When was the “Palettes and Trowels” organized?
Answer:
“Palettes and Trowels” was organized by Mrs. Nathaniel Glidden and Mrs. Dewitt C. Markham and held its first meeting on
June 23, 1950 in Mrs. Glidden’s studio. Meetings are held the last
Wednesday of each month. Members are artists and gardeners. An
exhibit of paintings, flower arrangements and photography is held
annually.
Question 838:
When was the Worthington Historical Society
founded?
Answer:
The first meeting was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
James H. Burckes (Ransom Scott Place)) on Saturday afternoon,
August 12th, 1933, with 18 present. Moderator, Walter L. Stevens;
Secretary, Lester F. Stevens; Mr. Burckes was appointed to draw up
a constitution and by-laws. At a second meting held at the Town
Hall August 23rd, 1933, a Nominating Committee was appointed. At
a third meeting held August 29th, 1933 at the Town Hall with 17
members present the following officers were elected:

�President, Elisha H. Brewster; Secretary, Lester F. Stevens;
Treasurer, Dr. Francis A. Robinson; Editorial Committee, Walter L.
Stevens, Edward J. Clark and George Hinckley.
Question 84:
When
was
the
Volunteer
Fire
Department
organized?
Answer:
The Constitution and By-laws of the Worthington
Fire Department were adopted on September 26th, 1946, which marks
the formal organization of the Department. However, on August 17th,
1946 a meeting was held at the schoolhouse “for the purpose of organizing a volunteer fire department”.
24 men were present.
Wells
Magargal called the meeting and presided over it, pending the election
of a Fire Chief. At this meeting the following were elected as officers:
Chief, C. Kenneth Osgood; Assistant Chief, Leon Palmer; First
Lieutenant, C. Raymond Magargal; Second Lieutenant, Lawrence
Mason; Secretary and Treasurer, Carl Joslyn.
They were instructed to draw up the by-laws which were adopted
at the first regular meeting on September 26th, 1946. In addition to
the above, the following signed on as members at the first regular
meeting or shortly thereafter:
Horace F. Bartlett, Charles C. Eddy, Fayette R. Stevens, Merwin

F. Packard,

Harry

L. Bates,

George

E. Torrey,

Cullen

S. Packard,

George H. Bartlett, Arthur J. Durcharme, Eben L. Shaw, Richard
Hathaway, Theodore A. Tatro, Warren E. Howe, Malcolm I. Fairman,
Emerson J. Davis, Stanley S. Mason, Arthur J. Rolland, Walter H.
Tower, Franklin Hitchcock.
The equipment consisted of a 4 wheel drive Chevrolet one-half
ton truck with a front mount 500 gallons per minute pump, and
equipped with axes, shovels, ladders, hose, etc. In 1951 a G. M. C. two
and one-half ton truck with 1500 gallon booster truck was purchased.
A fire phone was installed at the home of Mrs. Guy F. Bartlett, who
had charge of it. Construction of a firehouse was started during the
summer of 1949 and was finished (so far as the Town’s share of the
work was concerned) by the end of the year. Total cost to the town
was $7,100.00 (See 1949 Town Report). The land on which it stands
was donated by Henry H. Snyder. The overhead doors were donated,
as were also many hours of labor.
Question 85:
When was Worthington Golf Club incorporated?
Answer:
September Ist, 1930.
Officers: President, Elisha Brewster; Vice-President, Walter C.
Powers; Secretary and Treasurer, George B. Joslyn. Directors: Roy
W. McCann and Harris E. Collins.
The following people were present at the meeting of incorporation:
Walter C. Powers, Elisha H. Brewster, Leon M. Conwell, George
B. Joslyn, Harris E. Collins, Austin M. Pardee, and Arthur G. Caldwell.
It is a non-profit sharing organization.
Question 86:
Previous to its incorporation, who owned the Golf
Club property?
Answer:
The Worthington Realty Trust, who leased the property
to the Golf Club.
Question 87:
Who organized the Worthington Realty Trust,
and when?
Answer:
October 1, 1923—Harris E. Collins, Elisha H. Brewster,
Walter C. Powers, James W. Hubbard, Edward D. Clark, Mary I. Starr,

Frank S. Parsons, Eugene Langdon Parsons, William B. Kirkham,
George B. Joslyn, Frank O. Wells, J. Tennyson Seller, Dorothy Wells
Seller, Theresa W. Powers.

Question

Worthington?
Answer:

88:

How many years has there been a golf course in

It was made

a 9-hole course in 1924.

MEDICAL

HISTORY

Question 89:
Who was the first physician?
Answer:
Dr. Moses Morse, one of the early settlers, whose
house stood betwen N. F. Glidden’s and the “Harry Witt place’, and
near the latter, on the same side of the road, with the barn opposite.
Dr. Morse was educated at the University of Cambridge and practiced as a surgeon in Liverpool and London. He was a notorious Tory.
He was elected to the Provincial Congress in 1773 and representative
to the general in 1777. He was buried in a little cemetery near the
“Guard Place”.
Question 90:
Who was the next physician?
Answer:
Dr. Ezra Starkweather, who came from Stonington,
Conn. in 1785 and built the house later owned by Lathrop Drury, and
still later by Victor Bernier and in 1952 by Robert Lane. Ezra Starkweather was married in Stonington, Conn to Esther Buroster (or
Brewster). He practiced many years and was almost continually in
public life. He was a Revolutionary soldier and lost four brothers in
the war. He died July 27th, 1834.
Question 91:
Who were some of the subsequent doctors?
;
Answer:
Dr. C. Starkweather
Dr. D. Pierce
Dr, A. G. Pierce
Dr. Marsh
Dr. H. Starkweither
Dr. Erastus C. Coy
Dr. Moses Brewster
Dr. Wheeler
Dr. Barton
Dr. Porter
Dr. Bois
Dr. James D. Seymour
Dr. Richards
Dr. Coit
Dr. Charles Parsons
Dr. Dwight
Dr. Church
Dr. William G. Kimball
Dr. Spear
Dr. Brown
Dr. L. V. Gibbs, 1885
Dr. Rodgers
Dr. Lyman
Dr. William Parmelee
Dr. Case.
Dr. Prevost
Dr. William R. Lyman
Dr. E. Pierce
Dr. Knowlton
Dr. Francis
A. Robinson
Dr. Meekins
Dr. Freeland
Dr. Mary Poland Snook
Dr. Holland (two)
Dr. Smith
Question 92:
How many non-resident physicians?
Answer:
Four: Dr. Harry L. Crafts
Dr. Walter T. Zimdahl
1949
Dr. Herbert Perkins
Dr. Eaton E. Freeman
1950
Question 98:
When was the Worthington Health Association
organized?
Answer:
&lt;A formal opening of the new Health Center was held
on December 10th, 1950 at the Lyceum Hall. The east room on the
first floor had ben converted into a waiting room, doctor’s office and
consulting room, an examining room, dental room, laboratory and
toilet facilities. It is incorporated as a non-profit organization under

Massachusetts laws.
Question
Answer:

94:
Who serves it professionally?
Dr. Eaton E. Freeman, of Florence, Mass.

�pot

Dr. Harold Stone — School dental work.
Dr. Frederick Foster — (of North Adams) — adult
dental work.
Dr. E. Richard Post, of Amherst, Mass., Optometrist.
Question 95:
Who are the officers?
Answer:
President, Clarence A. G. Pease; Vice-President, Carl
S.J oslyn; Secretary, Fayette R. Stevens; Treasurer, Merwin F.
Packard.
2 nurses — Mrs. Florence L. Bates, R.N., Mrs. Barbara
Dunleavy, R.N.

Question

Answer:

96:

Who are the Directors?

Clarence

A. G. Pease

Carl Joslyn

Fayette R. Stevens
Merwin F. Packard
Leroy Rida
Mrs. Esther Sena

Mrs. Florence Bates
Dr. Lawrence N. Durgin

Leslie L. Porter
Question 97:
What is the purpose of the organization?
Answer:
‘To create, administer and promote such health faciltties for the Town of Worthington and surrounding communities as
may be deemed necessary and feasible, and to be ready at all times
to conserve or promote the health of the people of this area or of any
persons desiring to use its facilities.”
Question 98:
What two Worthington women have served this
town as Red Cross nurses?
Answer:
Mrs. Mildred Gurney — January 1924 to March 1926.
Mrs. Florence Berry Bates — Nov. 1930 to Feb. 1932.
There has been Red Cross service from 1920 to 1982.
Question 99:
What three houses were built in 1842 by David
Jones and Russell Bartlett?
Answer:
The present Burr homestead, now owned by Franklin
H. Burr; the old parsonage, which was burned, and the home of Miss
N. S. Heacock.
Question 100:
How many years has the Burr farm been in the
family?
Answer:
Since 1800.
Calvin Burr, who was the first Burr
owner, emigrated from Bridgewater to Worthington in 1800.
The
deed is dated June 20th in the year of our Lord 1800, and signed by
Rufus Marsh and his wife, Mary Marsh.
Question 101:
Where was the Rev. Jonathan L. Pomeroy’s
home?
Answer:
Near the Burr farm, now owned by Carl Joslyn. The
Rev. Jonathan L. Pomeroy, August 6, 1794, was called to settle in the
ministry at Worthington.
It was later known as the John Adams
place, the P. T. Radiker place, George B. Joslyn’s and in 1952 the
home of Carl S. Joslyn.
Question 102:
When was the Frederick Sargent Huntington
Library organized?
Answer:
“The Library was organized in 1884 by the efforts of
the Rev. Frederick S. Huntington, pastor of the First Congregational
Church.
The library was formally opened in December of that

year in a large room over the store of Mr. Samuel Cole (now M. F.
Packard’s — 1952) he having offered the room for this purpose. The
library started with 256 volumes, of which exactly one half were
donated and one half purchased. The library remained in this room
for about seven years. In November 1891 the library was moved to
a room in the house of Mr. Ames Bartlett (now Arthur Capen’s —
1952). Here it remained for a little more than a year, when the town
gave the use of a vacant room in a schoolhouse at the Corners. It was
moved there January 5, 1893, where it remained until 1914. In the
spring of 1914 the room was needed for a school so the books were
boxed and stored in the old Casino. For about eight months only a
limited library service was available. In 1914 it was decided to build,
and in March 1915 the present library was opened to the public.”
Question 103:
How was the Library financed?
Answer:
During the years up to 1909 a fund of something over
$2,400 was raised by entertainments, by gifts and by an accumulation
of interest. When Mr. Huntington died in 1888 he left a sum of money
in the care of a self-perpetuating board of trustees to be used in the
educational interests of the town for an academy or a library building
according to the judgment of the trustees when it had increased to a
sufficient amount. This resulted in the erection of the present building.
It was dedicated in September of that year.
Question 104:
Who gave the land on which the Library stands?
ay
Answer:
The descendants of Col. William and Wealthy Cottrell
vice.

Question 105:
When was the upper floor to the library finished,
staircase made and the children’s room added?
Answer:
In 1938. The Rice room was finished in the fall of
193% and was a gift from Miss Katherine McDowell Rice.
Question 106:
What considerable gifts has the library received?
Answer:
From the town of Enfield, Mass. in July 1938, 728
volumes and $5,353.08.
From Edward J. Clark, an endowment of $2,000.

THE

BREWSTERS

IN WORTHINGTON

Question 107:
What early tavern was located at the Center?
Answer:
“The Isaiah Kingman House, at the E. H. Brewster
place.” See “History of the Connecticut Valley in Massachusetts”, Vol.
I, page 456.
“The home of the Brewsters. Capt. Elisha Brewster
bought this place and kept a hotel. About this place was
the old training ground where formerly the militia
trained three days in each year.” See “History of the
South Worthington Parish” by George R. Moody.
Question 108:
Who lived in the homestead later?
Answer:
The Hon. Elisha H. Brewster; his son, Charles K.
Brewster, and Judge Elisha H. Brewster, who died April 29, 1946. It
is the present home of his family.
Question 109:
When was the Brewster store built?
Answer:
It was built at the Center in 1842 by Judge Brewster’s
grandfather, Elisha H. Brewster, in company with his cousin Sidney
Brewster. They ran it together for ten years, then E. H. sold to Sidney.
In company with his son Sidney kept the store for fifteen years,
when E. H. bought it and in company with his son, Charles K. Brewster

�in 1868 ran the store until 1878, when C. K. bought his father’s
interest and continued business under his own name until 1904, when
his son Howard C. Brewster took it over.
In 1906 the store was
leased to Franklin H. Burr. It is now (1952) the home of Franklyn
Hitchcock.
A very early store at the Center was kept by Francis Benjamin
on the site of the Elisha H. Brewster home.
Question 110:
What is the history of Jonathan Brewster and
his family?
Answer:
From records left by Judge Elisha H. Brewster we

have the following:

“Jonathan Brewster was the first Brewster to settle
in Worthington. He was born in Preston, Connecticut,
June 8, 1734, the son of Jonathan and Mary (Parish)
Brewster. He was the sixth generation of descendants of
Elder William Brewster of Mayflower fame, his ancestors
being Jonathan, Daniel, Benjamin, Jonathan and Elder

William.

He came to Worthington in 1777, bringing with

him his wife, Zipporah (Smith) Brewster and eight children, two of whom died in the month of September
1777. Their graves are to be found in the Hazen cemetery, so called, located in the southern part of the town
just off the Kinney Brook Road.
Jonathan served his town and church as selectman,
Representative in the General Court and deacon. Zipporah died January 19, 1794 and Jonathan died April
18, 1800, aged sixty-six years. They were both buried
in the Hazen cemetery.
The sons who came to Worthington with Jonathan,
and who lived and died there, were Jonathan, Jonah,
Moses and Elisha. All were farmers except Moses, who
was a physician, and all, with the possible exception of
Moses, owned farms in the Kinney Brook section of the
town. The house where Jonathan firét lived is no longer
standing, but is supposed to have been located near the
dwelling now owned by Mrs. Honor Paul. There is reason
to believe that Dr. Moses Brewster lived in the Center
where Harry Mollison now lives.”
Question 111:
What interesting record did Judge Brewster
leave of Capt. Elisha Brewster?
Answer:
“Capt. Elisha Brewster was born in Preston,
Conn. February 25, 1755 (see Rice’s History, pp. 22-238,
footnote). On April 24, 1788 Elisha married Sarah Huntington, daughter of Jonathan Huntington, the first pastor of the church in Worthington.
Shortly after his
marriage Elisha acquired from Nathan Leonard 100 acres
of land, being all of lot 51 of the original layout of the
town. This lot was in the Kinney Brook section of the
town and could very well be where he is supposed to have
lived and carried on his vocation of farming. It is believed that his house is still standing, although materially
altered. It is the house on the east side of the Kinney
Brook Road and the first inhabitable house north of the

road leading to the Dwight Prentice place, so called
(Foresters). He had previously acquired — 1784 — sixty
acres from Jonathan Brewster, a portion of the grantor’s
farm, and later his brother Jonah deeded him twentyfive acres.
Capt. Elisha and Sarah had nine children, two of
whom died young. They were Minerva and Hannah, and
their graves are marked in the Hazen Cemetery.
The
Brewster Genealogy mentions another daughter Hannah,
who died in infancy, but there is no record of this. Three
of his daughters, Theodocia, Sally and Zipporah, in that
succession, married Eliphalet Parish and lived in Bergen,
a small town near Rochester. A daughter Eliza married
Benjamin Mills, a lawyer. His widow died in Worthington November 12, 1867, where Com. McHugh now (1952)
lives. Another daughter of Elisha was Lucy, who married Elbridge Hazen. Capt. Elisha’s only son was Elisha
Huntington Brewster, father of C. K. Brewster.
Capt. Elisha Brewster died September 25, 1883,
leaving a will, some of the provisions of which would
now be regarded as unusual. After devising a dower
interest in the real estate and certain bequests of personal property, he gives to his widow outright ‘one
good milch cow, six good sheep and a sufficiency of firewood for one fire delivered to her door of her dwelling
house in Worthington so long as she shall continue to be
my widow, to be delivered and cut fit for her fire by my
son Elisha H. Brewster”’.
“Capt. Elisha and his widow were buried in the
Hazen Cemetery.”
Question 112:
What record did Judge Brewster leave of his
father, Charles K. Brewster?
Answer:
Charles Kingman Brewster was born in Worthington
Center on June 11, 1843. That he attended the public schools of
.Worthington is evidenced by letters written by him to his sister in
1853. In one he wrote ‘We like our teacher pretty well. He hasn’t
liked (licked) any of his scholars yet.’
About the 26th of August 1861 he entered Westfield Academy
and was there in 1862. Other Worthington boys were there at the
same time. Among them were John Kelley and George and John Ring.
His roommate was John Ring. They boarded with a Mrs. Ferre. They
had to furnish the wood for the stove in their room. There was military training at the Academy and he was promoted ‘from high private
to head sergeant’.
After two years at Westfield Academy he went to work for
Horace Cole and Son in Worthington Corners in 1864. On February
22, 1866 he married Miss Celina S. Baldwin of Windsor, Mass. They
began housekeeping in Worthington Corners, occupying a portion of
the house in which his aunt Eliza Mills lived. (now — 1952 — Com.
McHugh’s). On March 21, 1867 they moved to Worthington Center
to the ‘Cooper Place’, so called, (now (1952) Henry Dassatti’s) opposite the Center Store. On May 28, 1879 they moved to the Brewster
homestead.
They had seven children, Sophronia, Grace, Elisha H.,

�Sarah Harriet, Charles Huntington, Howard Chauncey and Kingman.
The activities of Charles K. Brewster from the time of his mar-

riage to his death followed rather closely the patiern of those of his

Question

standing?

Thomas

Answer:

Six.

December 20th, 1851.

Her

death

occurred

December

14th

and

his

on

many

houses

of

first

settlers

Clemmons

Fred

W. Brown

Franklin H. Burr
Margaret Vaughan

Zephaniah Hatch

Ralph

Daniel Morse
Daniel Morse, Jr.

George Hull
Harry Pease

Gersham Randall
Asa Cotrell

Benjamin Albert
Lawrence Mason

Branch

Robert Lane
John Kartashevich

Samuel Buck
Edmund Petingill
Asa Spaulding
John Howard
Nahum Eager
Nehemiah Proughty
Samuel, Robert and
Amos Day
Jonathan Brewster, Jr.
James and John Kelley

Roy McCann
Robert J. Lucey
Julian Rice
John Jarvis
David Tyler
Walter Tower

Robert Lanes
Cecil G. Gaston
Donald E. Ergood

John Kinne

Huntington

Higgins

William Corbett

James Benjamin
Beriah Curtis

Jonathan

still

Leslie G. Hickling

Joseph Marsh
Jeremiah Kinne

Nathan

are

1952
Nathaniel F, Glidden

Thomas Kinne

1946,

William Ward and Elizabeth Gove Ward?

How

Answer:
Ebenezer Leonard

father. He was merchant, counsellor in probate matters, conveyancer,
town officer, leigslator and county commissioner.
In 1886 he was elected Special County Commissioner for the
County of Hampshire, which office he held until he was elected County
Commissioner in 1898. He served in that office for ten years, or up
to the time of his death. In 1888 he was elected to the Massachusetts
House of Representatives and served during the session of 1889. He
died September 30, 1908.
Question 118:
What Worthington boy became a Judge?
Answer:
Elisha Hume Brewster was appointed a Federal District
Court judge by President Warren G. Harding, October 23, 1922 and
served until his retirement in 1942.
Judge Brewster was born September 10, 1871, the son of Charles
K. and Celina S. (Baldwin) Brewster. A graduate of Williston Seminary in Easthampton in 1898, he received his law degree from Boston
University in 1896, in the same year beginning his law practice. He
became senior justice in 1933. Serving three years in the Mass. House
of Representatives, he was Clerk of the House Committees of Public
Service on Banks and Banking, Taxation and Corporation
Law
Revisions.
He was the author of a treatise on the Mass. inheritance tax
which has been regarded as an authoritative work. He died April 29th,

Question 114:
What do we know of the life of William Ward?
Answer:
William Ward was born in Cummington, May 18,
1781. He removed to Worthington when he was 14 years old (1795)
and became a clerk in Mr. William Gove’s store. When he was 17
years old the entire business of the store was entrusted to him (1798).
In 1805 he married Miss Elizabeth Gove of Connecticut. Soon after
he removed to the Corners and did business in his own name which
he continued with little or no intermission until within a few years of
his death, December 20, 1851. His pioneer home was the Kilbourne
house, now owned by Dr. Lawrence N. Durgin (1952).
Of William Ward’s children, Trowbridge and William Ward II
settled in Worthington; Levi, a physician, in New York City; Artemus
Ward went to Canaan, Vermont; Elizabeth became Mrs. Eben Hollis,
of Lynn, Mass. A grandson, Daniel Ward, lived on the Woodbridge
place, now owned by Mr. Jay Gangel (1952).
Question 115:
What public offices did he hold?
Answer:
He was postmaster for 46 years, or through 11 administrations, when Worthington was the only post-office between Northampton and Pittsfield. He served as Colonel in the War of 1812 and
representative to the General Court in 1816, 1817, 1831, 1834 and 1851;
Senate, 1836, 1837. He also held by the appointment of the State, a
prominent place among that body of distinguished men who were called
to alter and amend the legislative enactments of the Commonwealth.
Question 116:
How many days elapsed between the death of

117:

Golf Club House

Question

118:

What

house

Question
homestead?

119:

What

do

Herbert N, Higgins

at the Center

has

always

been

in

the family?
Answer:
Miss Josephine Hewitt’s home. Her great-grandfather,
Cyprian Parish, owned the land and a house on it. The present house
was built by her grandfather, Daniel T. Hewitt, who kept a general
store in 1837 in his home and continued in trade for a few years. The
store was in what is now (1952) the kitchen and dining room.. The
place passed to his son, Cyprian Hewitt, who was born and died in
the house. His daughter, Miss Josephine Stone Hewitt now (1952)
lives there.

we

know

of

the

Nathaniel

Glidden

Answer:
It was owned by an early settler, Ebenezer Leonard,
before 1800. It was later owned by Ames Burr, Heman Burr, Isaac
Thrasher, Harry Pease and Nathaniel F. Glidden (1952). It is one of
the fine old houses of the town.
E ae
120:
When was the house where Roy McCann lives

uilt

?

Answer:
Rice’s “History of Worthington” says — ‘Samuel Buck,
who owned the farm, and erected the house in the year of 1780, now
occupied by Mr. Silas Robinson (1854)”.
Trowbridge Ward about
1815. In 1860 Capt. A. Bates lived there. Later David D. Powers,
John H. Bartlett, Calvin T. Bartlett, J. Ross Stevenson, D.D., Irving
F. Chapman and Mr. and Mrs. Roy McCann (1952).
Question 121:
What
three houses, built in 1806, are still

standing?

�Answer:
The homes of William A. Rice, Jonathan Woodbridge
and Major Samuel Buffington.
Question 122:
What house was first part of a tobacco barn, then
became a cheese factory and later a basket shop?
Answer:
“The Spruces”, home of the late Horace F. Bartlett I.
It was part of a tobacco barn in the lot west of the house. In the
winter of 1874-1875 Horace S. Cole I moved it to its present location
and made it into a cheese factory, having facilities for using the milk
of 150 cows or more. About $3,000 worth of cheese was made annually.
A man named Scott Jinks made cheese there for two years, and later
Henry Homes and his son William made cheeses (1876-1877). Charles
Kilbourne could remember seeing the big vats in what is now the
living room, and the platform on the front of the building where the
farmers brought and left the milk. On July 23, 1880 the place was
deeded to Horace F. Bartlett and baskets were made there and about
16 men employed. John Kinne was in partnership. It was made over
into the present house by Horace F. Bartlett I in 1882.
Question 123:
In which hamlets of the town are descendants of
the first settlers still living?
Answer:
Stevensville. Aaron Stevens, great-great grandfather
of Fayett Stevens was born in Brookfield in 1790. When Aaron was 14
years of age his parents removed to Chester, and a little later he joined
them, making the long journey by foot. In 1811 he married Miss Sarah
Spellman of Sandisfield. Soon after the marriage they went to Worthington and the first deed of the Stevens property bears the date of
1812, the year of the second war with Great Britain. Aaron Stevens
had four sons and one daughter. Upon his death the mill property and
a few acres of land went to Aaron, Jr. and Nathan Spellman Stevens.
Later Aaron, Jr. bought out his brother’s interests and the latter
went to Cummington. Lafayette Stevens built a gristmill in 1818 on
the site of the mill owned by Aaron Stevens, his sons Eugene H. and
Cullen L. continued to conduct a sawmill and manufactured hardwood
banjo and drum hoops. The lower mill of Lafayette and his son,
Alfred C. Stevens, was a grist mill and machine shop. The sawmill
is said to be the site of the old Col. Worthington gristmill.
Question 124:
Which Stevens’ descendants are still living in

Stevensville?

(1952)

Answer:
A.C. Stevens, Jr. on the Lafayette Stevens place, and
Fayette Stevens on the Eugene H. Stevens place.
Question 125:
What became of the mills?
Answer:
The sawmill was torn down, and the gristmill has been
converted into a summer cottage.

Question

126:

What is the history of the Kilbourng house?

Answer:
It was the pioneer home of Col. William Ward. He sold
it to E. C. Porter, who sold to Alfred Kilbourn¢g in 1870. In 1947 it
was sold to Dr. Lawrence N. Durgin of Amherst, Mass. The house is
one of the lovely old houses of the town and was in the Kilbourn¢
family for 77 years.

WOODBRIDGE

HOUSE

Question 127:
What is the history of the Woodbridge Place, now
owned by Mr. Jay Gangel? (1952)
Answer:
According to the town history, ‘a log cabin originally
stood near the site and was lived in by a man named Samuel Clapp”.
The present house was built in 1806 by Jonathan Wodbridge, a lawyer.
It was next owned by Judge Samuel Howe, and here William Cullen
Bryant studied law.
Samuel Howe, by deed dated November 4, 1820, conveyed the
homestead to Elisha Mack, a lawyer. From him it passed to Starkweather, Kellogg, to Starkweather, who mortgaged to Mack, who foreclosed, and who conveyed by deed to William Ward on July 28, 1835.
On December 12, 1836 the property was deeded to his son-in-law,
Chauncey B. Rising, also a lawyer. It was next owned by Alfred P.
Stone, and Dwight Stone, later passing to Dwight Stone’s daughter,
Myra Fay Stone, who deeded to Henry M. Neil. The next occupants
were Mr. and Mrs. Alfred H. Chapin. In 1933 it was sold to Clinton F.
Read, and is now the home of Mr. Jay Gangel (1952), who bought it
in June 1945.
Question 128:
What is the history of the house where Harry L.
Bates lives?
Answer:
It was originally the Ward Store. There is a deed of
December 28, 1815 from Judge Samuel Howe to Trowbridge and William Ward of the land on which the store was built and carried on.
The store was conveyed to E. C. Porter by William Ward, by deed of
March 21, 1850. Porter sold to Samuel Cole in 1859. In 1870 it was a
basket shop, owned by Horace F. Bartlett, who about 1877 made it into
a dwelling house. In 1893 it was owned by Charles F. Bates, and in
1920 by his son, Harry L. Bates. Samuel Cole at one time had a shoe

shop on the second floor.

There were outside stairs on the east side

�—e—

eee

leading to it. Mrs. Horace S. Cole could remember as a girl going up
the stairs and getting bits of bright leather.

Question 129:
What is the history of the Drury House?
Answer:
Rice’s History says, “Among the early settlers were
three families, Samuel, Amos and Robert Day”, who all settled on that
farm. There is a deed dated 1793; recorded December 14, 1802, from
John Worthington to Jonathan Drury for lot +38, also an earlier deed
from Joshua Foster of Peterborough, Mass., under date of October 31,
1766 to Jonathan Drury for lot +10 in the 5th range of lots. The
present house was built by Dr. Ezra Starkweather in 1785 (see Question 96). He came from Stonington, Conn. He sold to Elijah Drury.
Later it passed to Abel P. Drury, to Lathrop Drury, and in 1921 to

Victor Bernier.

It is now, in 1952, owned by Robert Lane of Westfield

and Worthington,

who

has named it “Drury

of the fine houses of the town.
home

Question
?

Answer:

130:

What

According

is

the

history

Lane’.

of

to Rice’s History,

the

This, also, is one

Walter

Nehemiah

H.

Tower

Proughty,

a

first settler, lived there. One of the first Towers was Joseph Tower
who came in 1777 and probably built the log cabin which Mrs. Lawson
told Mrs. Henry Tower she could remember.
It stood between the
present house and the road. The back side of the present house was
originally the front side of the house. At that time there was no road
between Howard Beebe’s and Charles L. Day’s (Granville Capen’s).
The children from Stevensville, going to school, went there by way of
the Tower place. The owners were:
Nehemiah Proughty
Joseph Tower
Ezekiel Tower
William Tower
Henry Tower
Walter H. Tower
After William Tower, Ames Bartlett lived there for a short time,
but did not own the place.
Question 131:
What do we know of the Ernest G. Thayer place?
Answer:
Lathrop Reed lived there in 1829 —
Jonas Bennett

Andrew B. Medbury

Calvin Robinson
Dwight Thayer
Alfred Thayer
Ernest G. Thayer
Mabel Thayer Shaw and children and grandchildren.
Six generations have sheltered under its roof. The first road was

back of their house.

Question 132:
What is the history of the home of Dr. Harold
Stone?
Answer:
The main part of the house was built by a Mr. Watson,
whose home was what is now the ell part of the house. He owned a
big tannery near by. Later owners were Andrew B. Medbury, Cephas
Thayer, James Leslie, Ernest Thayer, Harry Wilcutt of Westfield and,
in 1934, it was bought by. Dr. and Mrs. Harold Stone, who have made
it into a beautiful estate and named it “Brookstone”.

Question 183:
What it the history of the Curtis place?
Answer:
In 1768 lot 52 was sold to Beriah Curtis by Selah
Barnard. From Beriah Curtis it passed to Elisha Curtis; to Alden
Benjamin Curtis, who died in 1899 and then to his heirs, Alden and
Elmer Curtis and Mary Curtis. Curtis sold to William Gagnon in 1923,
who sold to the present owner, John Kartashevich in 1942. The farm
consists of 250 acres.

Question
came?
Answer:

184:

What fine old house was standing when Lafayette

The Rice homestead.

It was built by Col. William Rice

in 1806 and he and his wife Wealthy Cotrell Rice lived there with their
twelve children, Lydia, Lucinda, Rebecca, Wealthy, Susan, Emeline,
William, Mary and George and three sons who were born later. Nine
were living when Lafayette stayed over night at the tavern near by.
Col. Rice, with 40 mounted men, met General Lafayette at the Berkshire line and escorted him into town. William A. Rice and his wife,
Hannah Seely Rice, had four children, William Gorharn, Katherine
McDowell, Susan Tracy and Josephine Rice Creelman.
Upon the death of Miss Katherine McDowell Rice, December 4,

1945, the estate was sold to Maynard

L. and Mary Poland Snook, the

present (1952) owners.
Question 1385:
What do we know of the history of the Benjamin
homestead?
Answer:
John Worthington in 1770 sold to James Benjamin lot
#4188. James Benjamin married Eunice Bromley. Later owners were
Ira Johnson, his son, Almon Johnson. Upon Almon Johnson’s death
his heir, a Mr. Avery of Pittsfield, Mass., sold the estate to Mr. and
Mrs. Robert Lane of Westfield, who use it for a summer home. James
Benjamin and his wife were Miss Josephine Hewitt’s great grandparents. Priscilla Benjamin, James’ daughter, married Simon Huntington, and lived in the first parsonage (see Question 4). Ralph Huntington, their son, was instrumental in reclaiming the Back Bay
district of Boston (see Question 24).
Life was rugged in the days of the James Benjamin’s. So isolated
were they in the winter that they kept a pine coffin in the attic in
case of need with no help available.
Question 1386:
What early settler located on the farm long
known as the James Pease farm?
Answer:
Thomas Kinne, whose house stood a little to the west
of the present, house which was built by Jonah Brewster. The farm
consists of 260 acres.
Thomas Kinne
Jonah Brewster
Edward Sampson
James Pease
Horace Pease
Robert Lane
Warren Howe
Question

Clark’s Hill?
ren.

187:

What

Leslie G. Hickling
old

house

is still standing

at the

top

of

Answer:
The old Porter house, now owned by Bertram B. WarIt was built by Jacob Porter, a descendant of Richard Porter,

�a

who came from England and settled in Weymouth, Mass. in 1635.
Jacob Porter was born in Abington, Mass. July 23, 1737, a son of
Jacob Porter. The father was a prominent and influential citizen of
Abington and Representative of the General Court in 1753 and 1757.
Jacob Porter II married Rachel Reed. They had ten children. Seven
were born in Abington, Mass., three in Worthington, Mass. One of
these three (Jacob) died at the age of sixten, and a son born later was
named Jacob. The house was built by Jacob Porter II soon after the
Revolutionary War. He dug the well by the house, which is thirty
feet deep, and blasted many feet in solid ledge. It is known as ‘“‘Jacob’s
Well”. Enory Whiting bought the place in 1860. Later, Waite Smith,

Elisha Tower, Charles E. Clark, Dwight Clark and Rachel Boyd.
Question

138:

James H. Burckes?

What is the history of the ancestral home of Mrs.

Answer:
“In the spring or early summer of 1764 Mary
Kelly, with her two sons, James and John, aged 19 and
20 years, and twin daughters, Anna and Anstis, came
to Worthington with a company of people who were the
first settlers of the town. They made the journey from
Connecticut on horseback, following the trail by marks
on trees, as most of Worthington was then an unbroken
forest. The Kelly’s took up the lot two miles southwest
of the Center where the present house now stands. It
is on a gentle slope and well watered. The first house
was a log cabin; a few years later a frame house was
built and the log cabin was used for a woodshed. John
bought and cleared off other lots of land until he had
400 acres. In 1774 he bought 100 acres from Dr. Moses
Morse. In what is now our spring lot brick was once
manufactured. The farm was said to be one of the three
best in town and the field to the east, containing 60 acres,
was the largest mowing in town.
There were three
large barns on the place, one for horses, one for cattle
and one for sheep. All travel was on horseback, and all
work was done with oxen.
My mother, Ellen Kelly, married Ransom Scott in
1874, and for 49 years the farm was carried on by him. It
was named Cold Spring Farm by my mother, because of
its abundant springs of pure cold water.”
(Condensed from a paper written by Mrs. James H. Burckes, a
descendant of the original settler, for the Springfield Sunday Union
and Republican, April 29, 1928.)
This place was lately owned by Charles Alexander.
:
pestion 189:
What do we know of the history of the Eager

arm?

Answer:
In an article written for the Springfield Republican,
September 30, 1928, Clement F. Burr said —
“In 1763 or 1764 Nahum Eager emigrated from
Northboro to Worthington and settled on what has
always been known as the Eager farm. His first house
there was a log house on the meadow, but in a very few
years he built a house near the spot where the present
house stands. He had two sons and several daughters.

The sons were Nathaniel and William. Nahum divided
his farm between his two sons and built a house for William on what is known as the old Scott place. Nahum
Eager, a Mr. Leonard and one other man were the very
first settlers of Worthington. The farm, until within a
few years, has always been kept in the Eager family.
The present house and barn, which are magnificent farm
buildings, were built by the late Jonathan H. Eager, and
the farm was named by his wife, Celina Buck Eager,
‘Meadow Brook Farm.’ Jonathan H. Hager, son of Nathaniel, was born in 1822.”
The farm is now owned (1952) by David Tyler.
In 1764 John Worthington sold to Nahum Eager lots 98 and 100.
In 1768 Selah Barnard sold to Nathan Eager lots 96 and 99, and in
1764 lots 111 and 76. 1774 Timothy Dwight sold to Nathan Eager
lot 18. In 1798 Nahum Eager bought lot 97.

Question 140:

Who was the early settler on the place now owned

by Miss Margaret I. Vaughan?
Answer:
“Jeremiah Kinne, who resided where Mr. Calvin Tower
now lives.” (See Rice’s ‘History of Worthington’’).
5-13-1771
John Worthington deeded to Jeremy Kinne 100 acres
4-13-1779
Jeremiah Kinne of Voluntown, Connecticut, to his son,
Daniel Kinne of Preston, Connecticut, ‘the farm on which
my son Jeremy Kinne lived (100 acres with buildings) and
of which he died possessed.”
I have no record after this until:
2- 5-1833
Calvin Bartlett to Calvin Tower
11- 4-1885
Calvin Tower to wife Amanda and daughters Elvira M.
and Grace I.
2-18-1890
Trustee of Calvin Tower for benefit of wards Elvira M.
and Grace I. to Benjamin Ayres
11- 9-1891
Benjamin Ayres to Selden Blackman
12- 4-1896
Selden Blackman to William G. Rice
9- 5-1927
William G. Rice to Jennie Laura Zimmerman Vaughan
8-19-1931
Jennie
Laura
Zimmerman
Vaughan
to Margaret
I.
Vaughan
It is thought that Jeremiah built the kitchen ell and that the main
part of the house was built by his son Daniel. There is a built-in plaque

in the chimney

of the main part of the house

which

reads

“Daniel

Kinne, 1789.”
In 1883 Calvin Bartlett sold to Calvin B. Tower, who lived there
fifty-two years or until he died, May28,+835. His family lived there
until 1890.
OCTO GEAR 13; /FT5-

:

MEMORIAL

BOULDERS

Question 141:
What four memorial boulders have been erected in
town, and for whom?
_ Answer:
On October 12, 1925 the Lafayette Boulder on the
Library grounds was dedicated. The program was in charge of the
George Washington Chapter of the Sons of the American Revolution.
The bronze tablet bears this inscription: “General Lafayette, friend of
America in its struggle for freedom. Visited Worthington June 13,
1825, and stayed overnight at the tavern then located on this site.
Erected by the George Washington Chapter, Sons of the American
Revolution, and by the Town of Worthington, 1925”.

�On September 7, 1930, at the home of Dr. Russell H. Conwell, a
The tablet was marked simply as
granite boulder was unveiled.
follows:
“Birthplace of Russell H. Conwell
February 15, 1842
Minister of the Gospel
Founder of Temple University
Patriot, orator, author and educator.”
On August 7, 1923 a memorial, consisting of a bronze tablet,
mounted on a yellow quartz boulder, was dedicated to Brig. Gen. James
Clay Rice at the Rice Homestead. The inscription reads:
“In This Homestead Built In 1806
James Clay Rice
Was born Dec. 27th, 1828
Graduated from Yale College 1854
Admitted to the New York Bar 1857
He entered the Union Army 1861
Became Col. of the 44th New York Vol. Inf. 1862
Married Josephine Thorp Dec. 10, 1862
Was appointed Brig. Gen’l. 1863
An ardent Christian, an Able and Brave Commander
He was killed in action at Spotsylvania
May 10, 1864
His Kinfolk placed This Tablet Here In 1923
In the summer of 1946 a boulder bearing a bronze tablet inscribed
with the names of the soldiers of World War I and World War II was

placed on the common
It reads:

John T. Ames
Frank W. Bates
Irving R. Briggs
William E. Brown
Walter H. Buxton
Leland P. Cole
Charles L. Cudworth
Stillman S. Cudworth
Elisha P. Cutler
Homer D. Dodge
Maleolm I. Fairman
Orson W. Gurney
Albert E. Haskell
Philip F. Arcouette
Philip B. Anderson
George Bartlett
H. Franklin Bartlett
Eugene Bernier
Howard Beebee
George Brown
Harold E. Brown

in front of the First Congregational
Town

of Worthington
Honor Roll
World War I
Wallace C. Higgins
John Jarvis
Merwin H. Jones
Emery M. Knapp
Dudley H. Mason
Jeremiah J. Robinson
Guy H. Russell
Leon Russell
Wiliam E. Sanderson
Ebenezer L. Shaw
Russell B. Shaw
Michael B. Tobin
William Zack
World War II
Frank Hathaway
Ralph Higgins
Cortland Higgins
Stanley Higgins

John

Kartashevich

James Knapp
Rene A. Lefebvre
Peter A. McEwan,

Church.

Rev. Arthur W. Childs

C. Raymond Magargal

Robert E. Codding
James R. Coffey
Donald Coffey

Donald Mason
Glendon Mason
*Donald W. Mollison

Leland P. Cole, Jr.
Frank R. Curran

Chester H. Nichols
George H. Packard

*William Coffey

Stanley J. Neil

Warren R. Dalton

Orin A. Parish

Frederick I. Drake, Jr.
Ashley O. Dodge
George T. Dodge, Jr.
Charles G. Eddy
Earl H. Eddy
*Norman C. Eddy
Albert E. Edwards
Arthur P. Fitzgerald

Arthur G. Haskell
Herbert Haskell

Question 142:

common?
Answer:

Kenneth Paul
Kenneth B. Pease, Jr.
F. Donald Pomeroy
George Rhoads
Ernest Robinson
Gurney W. Skelton
Harold B. Smith
Richard Smith

Guy Thrasher

Raymond C. Wisner, Jr.
In Memoriam
William J. Coffey
Norman C. Eddy
Donald W. Mollison
When were the maple trees set out on the church

During

the pastorate

THE BEAR

Jr.

of the Rev.

F. S. Huntington

(1883-1888). A newspaper clipping, a few days after his death, says:
“Many a landmark has he left behind him. The Library,
the trees on the church common, the Village Improvement Society — will serve to endear his memory in the
hearts of all’.
Mr. Huntington solicited the trees from all over the town. Some
of them came from Mr. Fordyce Knapp, who helped set them out after
the new church was built, it seems probable in April 1888 or in early
May. In Mrs. Horace F. Bartlett’s diary is the following: ‘May 5, 1888:
Set Mr. Huntington’s trees”.
Question 143:
When were the group of evergreens set out near
the church?
Answer:
In Lafayette Stevens’ diary it says: “June 3rd, 1884.
Set out evergreens at the church”.
Question 144:
When was the sidewalk built between the Corners
and the Center village?
Answer:
Lafayette Stevens’ diary says: “June 9th, 1887. Fred
and Eugene worked on walk from Corners to Center’’.
This walk extended from the Library corner to Lewis Zarr’s as a
built walk with a stone foundation much of the way. The walk, from
there on to the Center, was across the north and south commons near
the church. It was made by the Village Improvement Society and
during the Rev. Frederick S. Huntington’s pastorate. A newspaper
clipping says, ‘“He was a prime mover in many of the improvements
that have rendered the village so attractive.”

HUNT

Question 145:
When was the bear killed?
Answer:
Sunday, September 20th, 1885, by George Dodge in
George Jones’ woods. The bear supper was held in the Town Hall,

�Wednesday evening, September 23rd. The bear skin was stuffed by
Davis Bartlett and eventually placed in the Library, where it remained
until 1914, when, it having become motheaten, it was discarded.
Mrs. Flora Ring Cooney said, ‘““The Sunday the bear was killed the
Elisha Hayden family came to church (South Worthington church)
and told about the bear climbing the wall and eating apples under the
apple trees across the road from their house”.
(Where Mrs. Donald
Thompson lives now — 1952). Judge Brewster: “I didn’t go to church
that morning. A lot of people started for church but they never got
there. A bear had gone down back of the Town Hall through here and
people who started for church started in search. I didn’t participate
until the afternoon. We went down the road and the party were down
nearly to Ringville. We were waiting for the party to come up, and
there, a little, not a great ways from us, just north of the road was the
bear, and he was heading our way. We didn’t stay. We came home.
They got him. The bear was shot back of the Town Hall. He went
down and came back. They headed him off.
Mr. Huntington, the
minister, didn’t feel peeved because the people didn’t come to church.
They brought
He said we would have a good time and a bear supper.
the bear (they shot him down in the woods) up in front of the church.”
Mr. Alfred C. Stevens: “My recollection about that bear dav. I
was in the hunt and my dog was one of the dogs they used. Mrs. Witt
gave the alarm. She saw it first. It was crossing the road down below
what was the old blacksmith shop then, (between Josephine Hewitt’s
and Benjamin Alberts). She came up here and was telling about it,
and someone from over at Mr. Wright’s (John Wright’s), I don’t
remember the name, agreed to go home and get his dog if I would go
home and get mine, and we would chase him. Well, we did.
We came
back and when we took the dogs down to where the tracks were first
they would neither of them follow it. They were both frightened of it.
We knew where the bear went and we followed it along ourselves, and
finally one of the dogs did begin to take up the trail, and then the other
one joined, and they chased it down across and back up through the
woods almost up to Eager’s, and there it took a turn and headed back
down again through the hollow between that and the Drury place. We
followed down there and on down towards Ringville. George Dodge was
the man who shot the bear finally. And then it was a great question of
whose it was? He claimed it because he had shot it, and this other man
and I claimed it because our dogs had been chasing it all the forenoon,
and we had quite a set-to about it, but finally it was decided that we
should have it for a supper here in the Town Hall, and we did. Then
there was a great question about who should have the skin. I have
forgotten just how it was decided. Davis Bartlett down here, who
used to mount animals and birds, agreed to mount the skin, and it
should be kept in the Town Hall, and it was there for awhile.” (It was
later kept in the Library.)
From Worthington Historical Society meeting August 21, 1934.
Question 146:
Where were the old tanneries and potash works?
Answer:
East of Benton’s mills in West Worthington was the
extensive tannery of Clark &amp; Bardwell — 1820-1830.
Later, Clark
established another on or near the site of the mills of Jones &amp; Son.
There was also the Andrew B. Medberry tannery at an early date.
There was a tannery at the Corners at the foot of Rice’s hill on the

west side of the road and across the brook where the Leonards
homes.

Extensive

potash

works

were

carried

on near

that point

had

by

Col. Ward. These were between the Creelman house and brook. Mr.
William A. Rice, in a letter of olden days, worte, “Tanning also was a
formidable industry. The original forests here were largely of hem-

lock, and the making of leather a very important trade. Down through
to my youth there were as many as six or eight flourishing tanneries
in the township, giving employment to scores of men and support to
many households. In addition to the native skins which all found their
was to the tan vats, the main supply was from South American hides
that were sent here by New York importers and leather dealers to be
tanned and returned to them, the Hudson River being available to
Albany for transportation.”

;

Question 147:

What does Mr. William A. Rice say of the wool

Question 148:

What two farms were paid for in wool?

industry?
Answer:
‘In those days the farms of these hills were devoted almost entirely to sheep: Just enough only of grain
and cows to supply family needs. Every farmer had his
flock up to its capacity, varying from 300 to 400 down to
50 or less. The sheep were of a fine grade known as
Merino, yielding fleeces of 5 or 6 pounds, and bringing
about 60 cents per pound. There were always plenty of
buyers.”

f Answer:
The Lucius Bartlett farm (now Dr. Hu&amp;fr’s on the
Ridge Road), and the farm of his-bretkhex, Tilson Bartlett (house now
gone). It stood where the north cemetery road joins the Ridge Road
and the old road to Cold Street.
The Tilson Bartlett deed is of April 17, 1832 and from Horace
and Charles Burr. The payment in wool was without interest, so many
pounds yearly.

:

THE

BLIZZARD

OF ’88

Question 149:
What do we know of Worthington during
blizzard of 1888?
Answer:
The diary of Lafayette Stevens says:
“March 11th, Sunday: Old Mr. Streeter’ (Oren Streeter
— home on site of Howard Beebe’s house) — “died this
morning, aged 74 years.
March 12th, Monday: Snowed great guns all day. Came
2 ft: deep and drifted badly. Stage went with one horse
and did not come back. The hardest getting up from the
mill I ever had at night.
“March 13th, Tuesday: Snowed and blew hard all last
night and all day. No one passed to-day. Carried our dinners to the mill. Could hardly get there. Could only get
out at the front door without shoveling.
March 14th, Wednesday: No team passed to-day. Fred,
Cullen, Eugene and Otis and oxen got up to Mr. Streeter’s,
but the oxen could not draw the sled home. No one could
get to Mr. Streeter’s funeral to-day.
March 15th, Thursday: Four men and span of horses got
up through from the Hollow. No team passed to-day. No
mail since Saturday. Thawing some.

the

�March 16th, Friday: John Burr made out to get through
home to-day horseback. First team passed since Monday.
Saturday, March 17th: Gof three mails to-day.
Sunday, March 18th: Went up and officiated at Mr.
Streeter’s funeral. Eight days dead. No woman there
except the widow.”
From diary of Mrs. Horace F. Bartlett:
“March
11th, Sunday:
Deacon
Lafayette
Stevens
preached. It isa stormy day. Mr. Streeter died to-day.
March 12th, Monday: Largest snowstorm of the season
and it drifts as it comes. A dreadful night and the snow
is piled mountain high.
March 13th, Tuesday: Snowed and blew all day, the snow
piled up to the roof of the piazza and runs to the north
end of the shop.
March
14th, Wednesday:
No
mail since Saturday.
Cleared off this P.M. and the men are trying to break out
roads. Snow clear up to the limbs of the elm tree, nearly.

Dear Madam:

“Buckington Palace
1st Dec., 1948

Princess Elizabeth has received, with great pleasure,
the charming little baby’s mittens which you were good
enough to make and send Her Royal Highness, and the
Princess has ask me to thank you warmly for your kind
thoughts and for the good wishes which accompanied
your present.
Yours truly,
Margaret Hay,
Lady-in-Waiting”’

Horace worked on road 14 day.

March 15th, Thursday: Huntington stage got up tonight. No mail. Horace worked on the road all day.
March 16th, Friday: Williamsburg and Hinsdale stages
got home at noon. Horace worked on the road all day.
Irving went down to see Lida.
March 17th, Saturday: All the mails went out and came
back.
Hinsdale mail was carried on foot from West
Worthington.
No such storm known for years. Snow

5 ft. to 514 ft. deep on a level.”

Question 150:
When was a cattle show held in Worthington?
Answer:
“The Sixth Annual Cattle Show and Fair of the
Green Mountain Agricultural Society was holden at
Worthington on Wednesday, September 30, 1857. The
weather was very favorable and a larger collection of
people were present than ever before. The show of cattle
and stock was held on the spacious common north of the
church. There were nearly 350 head of cattle on the
grounds and 46 yoke of working oxen.
Chesterfield
farmers were there with 67 yoke, drawing a colossal
car 36 ft. long. The string reached a full quarter of a
mile in length.
The car contained Bryant’s Band of
Music and 100 persons, with a flag waving high over their
heads. The exhibition in the Town Hall was in almost
every respect superior to the former exhibitions.
At
12:30 P.M. a procession was formed near the Town Hall
and, escorted by the marshals and the music of the day,
marched to the hotel of A. J. Tinker at “The Corners”
where about fifty persons sat down to an excellent
dinner”. There were addresses and music in the church

in the

afternoon.

(For

full account

see

Worthington

Scrap Books, Vol. I in Library.
Question 151:
What Worthington woman knit a pair of mittens
for a Royal baby?
Answer:
Mrs. Horace S. Cole, for the little Prince Charles of
England, and received the following letter:

COLE’S

STORE

Question 152:
When was the store of Merwin F. Packard built
and what stores preceded it?
Answer:
It is thought to be the site of the old Gove Store, and

later, William

Ward’s.

History

says

that “White

and

Daniels

were

proprietors, before 1820, of the old Gove Store on the stageroad.”
Mr. Samuel Hill could remember when Bagg and Parish had a
store there. In 1845 Horace S. Cole I and Simeon Clapp had a store
there and ran it for four years.
1849, Horace Cole I and C. C. Parish, 614 years.
1857, Horace Cole I and son, Samuel Cole.
In 1859 the store burned and was promptly rebuilt.

�o
1860, Horace Cole I and son.
1875, Samuel Cole and son, Horace S. Cole II.

was not a single shade tree in this village (The Corners)
except the two elms in front of the old Trowbridge Ward

On November 20, 1888, Charles K. Brewster leased the store of

Samuel Cole and ran it for five years. During the period he was postmaster at the Corners, being appointed by President Arthur. Fayette
Sturtevant was put in charge of the store.
(Samuel Cole died November 19, 1906)
1906, Horace S. Cole II.
Walter Shaw leased the store from Horace S. Cole II and ran it for
awhile.

November 1, 1914, Edward J. Bligh.

September 1, 1925, Merwin F. Packard, the present (1952) owner.
September 30, 1925, appointed acting postmaster.
December 12, 1925, appointed postmaster.
There is evidence that Clarke Bates ran a store in Worthington
Corners and that he sold it to Horace S. Cole I in 1864 and that Charles
K. Brewster worked in the store.
Clarke Bates died October 4, 1865.
In 1866 Charles K. Brewster again worked in Cole’s store.
Question 1538:
What other stores were there?
Answer:
Andrew B. Medbury and Russell Bartlett, at West
Worthington.
Isaac T. Thrasher and J. E. Witherell, at South

Worthington.

Question 154:
What were some of Mr. William A. Rice’s memories of Worthington in his boyhood? (Born March 18, 1820).
Answer:
He wrote, “In my boyhood Worthington had
become a thriving place. It had over 1400 population.
All farmers implements were hammered out by hand
blows, axes, shovels, hoes, pitchforks and plows were all
made by the village smith. Wagons, sleds and cutters
were all home made.
There were but three covered YERICLES
§N town.”
“A tailoress came to the home and made the families clothes out of homespun, and a village shoemaker
made their shoes in the kitchen. The skins of the animals
that supplied the family beef, veal, mutton and lamb
went to the tanning and after some weeks’ treatment
came back shining leather.
Open fires were the only
means of making the house habitable, and the only means
of cooking.
There were very few books and only a
weekly newspaper.”
Question 155:
At whose funeral did the corpse have to be drawn
from the Corners to the tomb by hand?
Answer:
In Lafayette Stevens’ diary is the following:
“April 10, 1873: Lester and I went up and dug out
gravestones. Snow five feet on top of them”.
“April 12: Mrs. Burton died this morning at five o’clock.
Laura watched with Mrs. Burton last night.”
“April 14: Went to Mrs. Burton’s funeral. Drew the
corpse from the Corners to the tomb by hand.”
Question 156:
What did Mr. William A. Rice say about trees?
Answer:
“My memory goes back to the days when there

place (now Roy McCann’s), and four poplars in front of
our own

house.

About

the spring

of 1825

were put out upon the different roadways.
quota was

fifty maples

My father’s

the 25 on each side of this road eastward

of

the four corners. In a few more years we cut down our
poplars and set out the maples in our yard”. (Set out by
W. A. Rice in 1839).

Question

look like?

Answer:

in the

1860’s,

157:

What did the interior of the old Colonial church

The late Mrs. Henry Tower remembered the old church

before

doors and numbers.

it was

remodeled.

The

pews

were

high,

with

The two stoves were box stoves, inside, with long

stovepipes going into one chimney at the back. The high pulpit was at
the front end, and it seemed to her as a child a magnificient affair,
with draperies and tassels. It was entered by a door at the left at the

foot of the pulpit stairs.

At the right was another door which opened

into a little library in a space under the stairs. The ceiling had an
oval design and the round wooden decorations around the edge looked
to her like cookies. There were only two aisles and the pews next the
walls were known as “wall slips’. In each back corner there was an
enclosure something like a box seat, with seats on three sides. Mrs.
Tower used to sit on a little corner seat at the inside end of the pew.
The first organ had to be pumped, and Charles F.. Bates, as a boy, used
to pump it. It was played by Sarah Brewster, sister of C. K. Brewster.
The second organ was played by Fannie Bartlett, and Charles Starkweather sang tenor with Sylvestor Bartlett. People stood during the
long prayer. The choir sat in the gallery at the back of the church and
ve congregation when they rose for the hymns turned and faced

em.

According to the late Horace F. Bartlett, the choir at that time
boasted 20 singers and a stringed orchestra, with Abel Drury playing
the double bass viol; Clark Bates the single bass viol; John Campbell,
first violin; Osmond Watts, second violin; Major Pierce the flute and
Aaron Stevens the clarinet.
Question 158:
Was there ever a house on the site of the present
parsonage ?
Answer:
Yes.
It was owned by William Starkweather.
Dr.
Charles Parsons, who married Helen True, also lived there and a family
by the name of Humphrey at the time it burned (previous to 1890).
Question 159:
Was there an “underground railway” in this town
during the Civil War?
Answer:
Yes.
Martin
Conwell
(Dr.
Russell
H.
Conwell’s
father) used to take produce to Springfield and brought back slaves.
They were shipped out via Ireland Street (now Highland Street).
Question 160:
_Who made the pulpit in the South Worthington
church?

Answer:

Lewis

Higgins

(Hiram

Higgins’

father)

Ring in the old sawmill at Hiram Higgins. It was built
nut with black walnut trimmings cut from logs around
ington. The church had a high pulpit in those days with
for the minister and old pedestal lamps each side of the

and

Lyman

out of chestSouth Wortha double seat
pulpit.

�traestion 161:
Wortnington?

What

was

the

minister’s

salary

at

South

Answer:
$500 and
donations,
and
a chance
to preach
in
West Worthington. Mrs. Flora Ring Cooney said she remembered a
donation party in the old church when her father laid a floor over the
tops of the pews, and steps leading up to it, and the tables for the
supper were set on this floor.

Question 162:
When
tional Church built?
Answer:

Huntington,

Higgins).
Question

Answer:

and

was the first parsonage of the Congrega-

It was built in 1771 by the pastor, the Rev. Jonathan

168:

is still

standing.

(Present

home

of

Herbert

N.

Which is the oldest house in town?

The Nathan Branch house where Edwin Fitzroy lived,

now owned by William Corbett (1952). Nathan Branch was a first
settler in 1768.
Question 164:
What is the Pastoral register?
Answer:
Jonathan Huntington, June 26, 1771 to March 11, 1771
Josiah Spalding, August 21, 1788 to March 1794
Jonathan Pomeroy, November 26, 1784 to November 238, 1832
Henry Adams, December 25, 1883 to October 23, 1838
John H. Bisbee, December 19, 1838 to March 18, 1862
David S. Morgan, June 26, 1867 to May 26, 1869

Joseph T. Gaylord, August 3, 1870 to April 1, 1873

Samuel W. Hopley, August 20, 1879 to March 15, 1882
Frederick S. Huntington, 1883 to September 4, 1888

Harlan Creelman, September
Edward C. Camp, October 10,
Melvin J. Allen, January 1900
William F. Markwick, July 1,

17, 1889 to September 1893
1894 to December 18, 1898
to August 1, 1905
1906 to October 1, 1909

John D. Willard, May 1, 1910 to January 1, 1913
Stephen Williams, September 14, 1913 to April 1915

Elisha P. Cutler, November 7, 1915 to June 8, 1919

Newton I. Jones, April 11, 1920 to
James W. Moulton, October 9, 1922
James H. Burckes, May 1, 1926 to
Herebrt J. Owen, January 24, 1932

August 27, 1922
to December 1, 1925
July 10, 1931
to June 15, 1942

Arthur W. Childs, November 15, 1942 to July 15, 1945

William P. Barton, September 1, 1946...
Question 165:
What water systems serve the town?
Answer:
The Town reservoir, made in 1911, to which was added

an artesian well in 1950. The town reservoir was the project of the
late Rev. John D. Willard and was accomplished during his pastorate
in Worthington (May 1, 1910 to January 1, 1913).
Water Commissioners, appointed April 28, 1911 were:
Alfred W. Trow, for 3 years
Horace S. Cole, for 2 years
John D. Willard, for 1 year

The artesian well is one hundred feet deep, with a six-inch casing
and siclds 75 gallons per minute. It is needed only in times of extreme

drought.

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                    <text>xu :

Fi

Son

iittS1
id

canoe

en
ees

esos
ee Seo,
Liee Sa

as a

oeSear

ne
se
BNoon

=

pares

es sa
Lawa
r

sear

os es
Geen

�“crystallizes and drops to the ground, where
the Israelites found it. Without debating
the divine intervention that the Bible
clearly indicates, Keller points out that this
secretion has all the appearances and properties of the manna the Bible describes
(“and it was like coriander seed, white;
and the taste of it was like wafers made
with honey”). The Israeli government,
relying on the newly confirmed stature
of the Bible as botanical expertise (“‘and
Abraham planted a tamarisk tree in Beersheba’”’), recently planted 2,000,000 tamarisk*trees there.

Tumbling

14
MANNA

ON A TAMARISK

How nice of lice.

Ursula

TREE

Kohn

Biblical Detective Story

Christians revere the Bible as a treasury
of divine revelation; skeptics regard it as
an unreliable collection of fable and folklore. Over the past century a host of scientists—archaeologists, geologists, astronomers, botanists—have added a third perspective. Beneath the barren plains and
foothills of the ancient Biblical country,
they have made discoveries revealing that,
whatever. else it may be, the Bible is a
remarkably faithful chronicle of history.
In The Bible as History (William Morrow
&amp; Co.; $5.95), published in the U.S. next
week, German Scientific Journalist Werner Keller skillfully sifts and summarizes
the recent archaeological and scientific
discoveries relating to Biblical times and
places. The result is a lively blend of
drama and reporting that reads like a detective story grafted on a history book.

Walls. At the turn of the

century, a German-Austrian expedition uncovered ancient Jericho, and by 1936,
explorations had proceeded far enough for
a British expedition to determine that the
walls of Jericho had indeed fallen with
great violence. Reported Expedition Leader John Garstang: “The space between the
two walls is filled with fragments and rubble. There are clear traces of a tremendous
fire.’ Says the Bible: “When the priests
blew with the trumpets . . . and the people
shouted with a great shout . . . the wall
. and they burnt the
fell down flat
city with fire, and all that was therein.”
Scientists conclude that an earthquake
may have tumbled the walls.
From

1899

to

1917,

a team

of Germans

worked to excavate Babylon. In the process, they unearthed the remains of the
Tower of Babel. The scientists were able
towcalculate that it had been 295 ft. high,
or about as high as the Statue of Liberty.
The Queen of Sheba’s visit to King Solomon with “spices, and gold in abundance,
and precious stones” had often been
thought a pious tale until archaeologists
uncovered the ruins of Sheba in Yemen
in 1951, found indication that the kingdom’s chief trade route ran through Israel.
This threw new light on the Queen’s visit:
it was probably a high level business
conference.

Significant Mud. Digging through an-

cient rubbish at Ur near the Persian Gulf in

1929, British and American archaeologists

came upon a 1o-ft. layer of mud far beneath the surface. Underneath the layer
they discovered artifacts from the Stone
Age. Excitedly, the scientists flashed a
message to the world: “We have found
the Flood.” Tests in surrounding areas
showed that the layer of clay was the
residue of a vast, catastrophic deluge that
had in about 4000 B.C. covered the river
plains of southern Mesopotamia, the center of the known world of that time.
Such discoveries may disconcert the
skeptics, but other findings are bound to
upset Biblical fundamentalists, who insist
on miracles where science is ready to offer
natural explanations. Many scientists are
now convinced that the rocks which Moses
struck, “and the water came out abundantly,”
were
water-storing
limestone,
whose hard crust was*broken.by the blow.
The bush that “burned with fire” .ande!

yet “was not consumed” could have been

_either the gas plant fraxinella, whose highly volatile oils sometimes ignite if approached with a naked flame, or certain
mistletoe twigs whose

crimson blossoms

in

full bloom resemble flames. As for the
manna that nourished the Israelites in the
desert, an expedition in 1923 confirmed an
old suspicion: the manna was doubtless an
edible white secretion of the tamarisk
tree. When the tree is attacked by a species
of plant louse, the substance oozes out,

OL

climate of Israel has not changed very
much in the past 2,000 years, meteorologists know that Bethlehem was in the grip
of frost in December. In Palestine, no
good shepherd would think of keeping his
flock in the fields under such circumstances.
In general, Keller reports, science’s discoveries have proved the Bible startlingly
accurate in many checkable details. Keller
cites

the

case

of

a

Bible-reading

fr

British

nee

major who surprised and decimated a
Turkish force in Palestine in World War I
by attacking through the same narrow |
mountain pass which Saul and Jonathan
had used to fall upon the Philistines centuries earlier. The Bible told just where
to find it: “And between the passages. . .
there was a sharp rock on the one side,
and a sharp rock on the other side...
the forefront of the one was situate northward over against Michmash, and the other
southward over against Gibeah.” A few

years ago Israeli Businessman
mann

began

to brood

over

the

Niel Federaccount

of

the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah
(“and, lo, the smoke of the country went
up as the smoke of a furnace”), guessed
such conflagrations might indicate underground gas—and underground gas meant
oil. He

was

right.

In

1953

Israel’s first oil

well went into operation near the ancient
site of Sodom and Gomorrah.

|

1 @ ae
i] of

WORTHINGTON
Shoots Wildcat

Worthington,
Jan,
30. George
E. Torrey, in company with some
other hunters and a dog, experienced a long time desire Monday
jmorning when he shot a wildcai
in the Clark Hill area of town.
The
animal
weighed
27 pounds
and
is on display
in Mr.
Torrey’s shed
on Chesterfield
Rd.
Worthington Briefs
| The selectmen will meet with
|the
Finance
Committee
Thursday

evening

at

the

further discuss
the
|to be proposed at
jon

Feb.

4.

Town

Hall

to

appropriations
town meeting

Both the girls’ and boys’ basket|ball teams of the Russell H. Con-!
|well School will play teams from}

|Hinsdale

at

the

loca

Town

Halll

\Friday
evening
beginning
at
7|
|with
the
girls’
teams
playing|
| first.
3
~|
Mrs. George Humphrey of Ches-|
terfield Rd. who will teach ballet}
dancing
to school
age
girls on!
Saturday
morning
in the Town|
Hall

was

a member

at Radio

American

THE

Shooting

WALLS

Schools of Oriental

OF JERICHO

Research

Hot trumpet.

Planets. Scholars have long

before

of the

‘her

Corps

City Music

marriage |

de

Hall.

Ballet|

She|

also has performed at the. Roxie!
Theater in New
York
and was}
an advanced ballet teacher at the!
Mable
Coleman
School
for the}
Dance in Red Bank, N. J.

disputed the year of Christ’s birth. Some
astronomers argue that the star of Bethlehem was actually an uncommon conjunction of the planets Jupiter and Saturn.
By calculating the position of the planets
backwards for centuries, they place the
conjunction in 7 B.C. More recently, climatologists have also disputed the convention of accepting Dec. 25 as the date
of Christ’s birth. One reason: St. Luke’s

mention of cattle in the fields. Since the

=a

eS |S

PRV2S

UtLth:;

Historical
Wothington,

Jk IL

fo

See iely,
=

&amp;

Mass,

Ose

-

�DAILY HAMPSHIRE GAZETT

#

By LOIS ASHE BROWN
WORTHINGTON — At”

the

Denworth Farm home of Mr. and)
Mrs, Nathaniel
F.
Glidden
in
“Vorthington, the maple sugaring
season has officially opened with
the first of a whopping
22 hundred buckets already set.

Unofficially, it is maple sugaring time all year ’round at Den.

worth Farm, The reason for this
is a giant mural depicting
the
whole
sugaring
operation
there.
even to including the members of
the family in various roles.
The
mural
which
measures
13% ft x 342 ft. was painted by
Mr. and Mrs. Glidden’s son, Gevrmain Green Glidden,
a_ portrait

fe

ae

‘

E, NORTHAMPTON, MASS., WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1957.

painter

and

muralist

fairly

seems

of

note.

It

was painted especially tor a wall
in the family
dining
room
at
Denworth
Farm and there it is
attracting
attention
from. beth
townspeople and folks from distant points.
Painted in
great
detail,
the

mural

and the slushy snow
looks really wet. Mrs.

now

considering

of

to

breathe

underfoot
Glidden is

the redecoration

the rest of the dining room.
The mural is of particular in- |
terest at this time
because
the
maple sugar season
is
at hand
and partly because it is distantly
related to the news last week of|
William
Negley’s trip to Africa|
to shoot an elephant with a bow

and

arrow

It

was

on a $10,000

for

Mr.

bei.

Negley’s

home

in San Antonio, Texas, that Germain Green Glidden has recently

|

done several
murals
depicting|
scenes from the glorious historv
of Texas. Unlike the. proverbial]|
shoemaker,
Mr.
Glidden
has
found time to paint for his own

family,
He

sioned

too.

has

lately

by the

been

State

of

commis-

Island to paint an
official
trait of Governor Dennis J.

erts

fo

be hung

in

Rhode

the

pcrRob-

State

House at Providence.
A graduate of Harvard Univer/sity in the class of 1936, Mr. Gildden majored in
fine
arts.
He
also
studied
at
Art
Studenic
League of New York
for
fou
and one half years,
and
at the
Metropolitan Museum — concen_trating on .old masters, especially Rubens, Rembrandt, Vermecr
and Van Dyck. For
two
anda
half years, he was a naval officer With
15
months’
overseas
with a carrier
aircraft
service
unit.

_

Since his first
commission in
the late ’30s, the artist has paint-

‘ed

several

hundred

portraits

of

which
many
involved
distinguished subjects
from different

|parts of the
country.
Some of
‘those who sat for him
are August G. Pratt,
chairman
of the
board of
Babcock
&amp; | Wilcox;

Frank

Pace

the Army;
tice (Mass.)

‘Jr.;

Robert

Jr.,

as

Supreme
Edward

Heller

secretary

of

Court JusCounihan

of Heller

sociates of Cleveland, and
Judson,-music leader.

As-

Arthur

The
maple
sugaring
season
here is. off to an early start and)

with the
maple pulses — already
throbbing, Mr. Glidden Sr. anticipates a-good year. The purchase|
of a new gasoline powered tapper is serving
to greatly-speed
up the preliminary operation.

With

the woodshed

at the sug-

‘ar house piled full of slabs and
the buckets all washed spanking
clean, all is ship-shape
for the
sweetest season of the Year,
—_——

WORTHINGTO\—Using a gasoline-driven tapper. Sianley Thayer “officially” opens the 1957 maple
sugaring season at the Denworth Farm-in this hill town witle
Set—tlitdes
tho ormple sugar king of
Worthimaton, stands by ready to lend a hand. The Denworth Farm target for the new season is 2,200
buckets. It may be—no. it definitely is—cold here and the snow is on the ground everywhere, but
this springtime business of maple sugaring already has been launched in earnest.
(For detailed story, |
as

dhe de

Divight-

ee

:

a

�DAT.Y

HAMPSHIRE

First Of 2,200

GAZETTE,

NORTHAMPTON,

Buckets

MASS..

WEDNESDAY. FEBRUARY

20.

2

ee SS eee

Farm,

Set At Denworth

As Maple Sugaring Gets Going In Worthington

(Above) “There I am working.” says Nat Glidden of Worthington as he points to himself in the
mural of maple sugaring at Denworth Farm.
.
(Left)
Mrs. Robert Nelson demonstrates how she labels
shipped*all over the country from Hampshire County.

the

maple

syrup

cans

(Below)
Nat Glidden. popularly known as the maple sugar king of Worthington,
with some of his Black Angus at his, Denworth Farm.

that

:

will

proudly

be

poses

�F9he.

"Springfield Teachers Clam Holds Tes
\

:

WORT

HING] ON.

FIRE

le

DISTRIC

WORTHINGTON—

&amp;

ie

92, 7

annual

j

'meeting of the Worthington Fire
District
was held Monday
evening at the town hal! with eight

voters present.

Ail officers were

~&gt;.

otiamanst

reelected as: follows: moderator,
Charles C. Eddy; clerk-treasurer,
| Arthur G. Capen;
auditor, Mrs.
George E.
Torrey;
and
water
commissioner for three years, HB.
Franklin
Bartlett.
The
water
commissioners’
report
showed
replacement
of the water main
in Ringville, three new
connections made for the new homes of

The

Springfield

Museum
Sumner’

Teachers

of Fine
Avenue

Club had

its annual

winter

tea yesterday

afternoon

in the

Springfield

Arts. Shown having tea are, left to right:
Miss Jean Barry, a teacher at the
School, who was cochairman of the event; Mrs. Thyra Ferre Bjorn, guest speak-

er; Dr. Ruth Evans, retired teacher and a past president of the club; Mrs. Evelyn H. Gunn of the
Kensington Avenue School, also a cochairman. Mrs. T. Joseph McCook, wife of the new superin-

'Ziemian; and hydrants
flushed
twice during the past year.
The
sum of $800 was
apprepriated|
from current 1evenue for general maintenance;
als» from. current revenue, $525 Was appropri-|
ated for payment on water main
loan and interest on same; and
/ $80 was voted for the vontingent

ice

ne,

ee

reservoir in
an
effort
crease the water-supply

action

was taken,
——

2

on

i
but

.
no

tendent of schools was among the guests,.and pourers were Mrs. M. Marcus Kiley and Mrs. Joseph E. Buckley, wives of the assistant superintendents.
Several retired teachers, all honorary
members,

were

special

guests.

Members of the Sumner Avenue
ing staffs were hostesses.

ce ae
iets te

]

;

Ada

I.

Davenport

of

West

Branch

Cemetery,

Colrain,

pee.

Avenue

i
'

convenience

Worthington,

|selectmen

of the

Feb.

8

of Worthington,

}
;

teach-

this!

family.

—

The

Wind-|

lsor and Cummington met tonight}
lin Cummington with Rep. Bisbee}
‘of Chesterfield and Rep. Turner}
of Lee to propose that the road

connecting

t

Route

143 and

Route

9 between Worthington and East |
Windsor be accepted by the State.
The
Board
of Assessors.
has|
organized with chairman, Henry |
H. Snyder;
clerk, David Tyler,
and
third member,
Richard B.
Smith.
|
Mrs; Maleolm I. Fairman, assistant chairman
of. the March
of
Dimes
drive,
reports
that)
some
cards have
not been
.re-{
turned and requests that they be,
turned in before Feb, 20.

og

With

the

sun climbing higher, the days getting longer and the temperature going into the 60s, some people began thinking
park picnic table in terms of the use at the left. Then yesterday dawned and the table looked like the right,

ea tet aie eat ”

}

}

tow7,
|
Private funeral services will be|
held Monday at 2 p. m. at. the|
Leslie Porter funeral home, Cummington.
Burial will be in the,

at the

i

{

e
:
3
Left to Right: Fond Dream to Cold Realty

Worthington, Feb, 8—Mrs. Nel\lie (Davenport) Hull, 84, died to-|
night at the home of Mrs. Harry
L. Bates of Buffington Hill Rd., |
where she had been a patient for
he last three months.
Born in New York City she was}
a local ,resident
for
about 12|
years.
She
was
the widow
of}
,George Hull, She leaves a sister,|

iMiss

and

pases

|; Norman
R. Hallowell,
Walter
Czerwonka and
fir, Stefan
S.

of a

�—

Lent Study Course

Rev. Bruce T. Dahlberg, theologian and member of the religion
department
at
Smith
College,
will conduct
this year’s Lenten
study course at the First Church}
of Christ,
Congregational.
The |
first session will be heid Sunday
night at 8 in the parlors of the

Ingrid Bergman On List
Of Actresses; Norman
Chosen for8 Writ-|
Corwin
e
ing ‘Lust for Life i957

historic

Hollywood, Feb. 18 (P—Ingrid
once
who
a woman
Bergman,
stunned the world by deserting
Hollywood and her husband for

love

the

.
®@

:

of

Roberto

es

woe

Nominated

Candidates

Oscar

oN

eae

ee

eee

Se

Main

St.

church.

Rossellini,

was
given
a coveted Academy
by the monomination
Award
tion picture industry tonight.
top
for the
competition
Her
award in final voting will be Carroll Baker, ‘Baby Doll;’’ Katharine Hepburn, “The Rainmaker;”’
Nancy Kelly, ‘The Bad Seed,”

and Deborah Kerr, ‘‘The King and
Nominees

ance

for the best perform-

by an actor are Yul Bryn-

ner, ‘The King
Dean,
James

Douglas,
See

“Lust

and I;” the late
Kirk};
“Giant;”

for

Life;

Rock

OSCAR CANDIDATES
Page Nine

DEBORAH

“The

King

NANCY

KERR

and

L’

“The

Bad

Seed’

Under

' “Christ

the Word,”

| Savior,”

“Mediator

sion

fs

“Anastasia”

@

“The Rainmaker’

i

CARROLL

HEPBURN
i

‘Baby

in

order:

topic

of

then

will

of a New

Co-

of

the

University
——

and

“Christ.

the

evening’s

Seminary,

:

topic.

1

}course has been planned by the
Christian
-Education
con
ttee
of First Church, under the chair-|
manship of Clarence Hudgins. It
is open
to all interested
adults
in Northampton
and vicinity.
|
Mr,, Dahlberg
came
to Smith
College jast September from Union Theological Seminary in New
York City, where
he took graduate. studies leading to the degree
of doctor of philosophy,

A graduate

BAKER
Doll”

general

ivenant,” “Christ the Lord,” “He
|Who
Is Coming—the
Resurrection and the Life.”
At each
3
Mr.
Dahlberg
will lecture for 30 to 45 minutes|
;and will allow at least.15 minutes|
for questions er general
discus. }

‘

KATHARINE

the

“The Person and Work of Jesus
| Christ,” the course will be divided
}into five parts, The first part wil
|be
devoted
to consideration
of
follow,

INGRID BERGMAN

|

REY. BRUCE T, DAHLBERG -

|

KELLY

and

he

of both’ Syracuse
Union

served

Theologicé

any

|

es

years as pastor of Lefferts Park
} Baptist Church in Brooklyn, N. Y., |
jbefore deciding
to continue
his
studies and to enter the teaching
profession.
,
/The course he will lead at First
Church this Lenten season is in
|\line with his principal interest as
a student
and
teacher,
Biblical
| studies. Meetings will be held on
lsuecessive
Sunday
nights
at 8
o'clock, A large enrollment is ex- |
pected.

�School

Union

7

|

|
‘ment of J. Walter Richard as su-|
‘perintendent of
schools
for a)
lthfee-year term
was announced|
‘Jast night by the School Commit- |’

‘tee

ee

representing

the

‘Vi

.

ee

five towns,
i

le

The

|

under

the

29, GK

TF

University

Confer

Degree |

On Famous Poet

AMHERST—Robert
Frost, noted
poet and Simpson lecturer in_literature- at Amherst
College,
will

| fly

to

England

this

spring

to

read

\from his work and to be honored
by
both
Oxferd
and
Cambridge
He will remain’
in
| univers ities:
Great Britain for a month.

leader-

| ship of both Mr. Merritt and Mr.

Richard, has been up to date in
adopting
improved
teaching
techniques
and
aids,
and has
been quick to take advantage of

)

|, aid offered by the state in special
| areas,

ance.

including

health

and

guid-

It was among the first school
districts in the state to act under
the law passed
in 1955 providing
for school adjustment counselors
the
primary
and
elementary
grades.
In addition, recognizing
the growing need for a carefully
integrated guidance proram, Mr.
Richard last December inaugurated a special guidance
program
| for study in two towns
of the
Union,
Williamsburg
and
Hay-

7e0 ee ae

|
|

Union,

Oxford

To

School in September 1955, while
Southarapton — opened
its new
Junior High School to classes befinished
fore the building was

!ast September.

rte

|

[ro “Justly proud ef its tradition :
\| good schools and superior teach‘ing .staff, the Union
has made
| unusual sacrifices
not
only to
for its
| provide school facilities
Headed
| Oo Be
| growing population,
but to pro°
» vide the best in educational servBy
Riehard
ices, it was pointed out.
Williamsburg.
opened
the modern
tand
attractive
Anne
T.
Dunphy
WILLIAMSBURG
— Appoint75

Fs

ie

te

&lt;

denville.

In co-operation with
the State
Department of Public Health, the
Union acquired
its cewn
equipment
for testing the vision. of

\ichildren

J. WALTER

RICHARD

Among the
state to hold

youngest
‘&gt;.
a position

comes

post

in

in the
|
«|
of this|

appointment,

responsibility, Mr. Richard at 32,| to further
to
the

with

the

sehpol

system,

|

and towns in the Union hope also to have in
the
near future
similar equipment for testing of
hearing,
“We shall make every effort,”
Said Mr. Richard in accepting the

unusual|

viding

qualifications and experience.
A)
graduate
of
Fitchburg
State)

the

“to

keep

this tradition

best

alive

and

of' pro-

possible

educa-

tion for the children of the area.
We have always felt that educa.

| Teachers College, he also attend-|

cation

(ed the University of New Hamp-|! everyone

jis the

in the

responsibility of
community and

shire and.the- University of Mas- | it is our intention
to maintain
sachusetts where he received his! the close and
cordial
working
master’s degree.
He has been) contacts with ‘parents and lead
both teacher and principal in the jing citizens in our
communities
Amherst elementary schools, has
|| which we feel are essential to a

taught

school abroad,

Libya, and
in English

Information
In

the

in Tripoli, || forward-looking

was special instructor |
for the United States|

Services.

Williamsburg

since 1955, Mr. Richard

district|

the

death

of Lucius

A.

ritt, he was appointed acting
perintendent of schools as of

| tober

1956.

educational

sys.

AN

|

has risen |

rapidly to the position to which
he has. just been appointed.
In
the 1955-56 school year
he was /
,elementary supervisor.
The following year he was appointed asSistant superintendent
in charge
of elementary education. Follow-

ing

tem.”

Mer-

suOc-

One of the largest school districts of its kind in the state, the
Williamsburg
Union — stretches
from Worthington
and Chester| field in the north,
through Williamsburg
(including
Haydenville),
to
Westhampton = and
Southampton in the south,
Not only is the union large in)
area, it represents also a
wide
variety in population and economy, including rural and
suburban population as well as industrial, small and large-scale farm.'
ing as well as a wide
variety of
business enterprises.

Bow

and Arrow 1357

Hunter Back to

‘Collect Big Bet

New York, March 15 (p—
William
Negley, 43, San Antonio, Tex., oi! man who left
here recently for the Belgian

Congo

bet

by

ephant

row,

to try to win a $10,000
shooting

with

returned

lect his bet.

a

bull

a bow

and

today

to

2

el-

ar-

col-

“T shot two bull elephants,”
he told reporters at Idlewild
Airport.

Negley said he had wager
ed
$1000 against $10,000 with
Wil-

lam
K.
Carpenter,
Wilmington,
Del.,
could bring down an
by archery,
He said the first
he killed with bow
row weighed
four

the second

Jr., of
that
he
elephant

elephant
and artons and

three tons.

ROBERT

FROST

Mr.
Frost
will
fly from
New
York on May 19. He will speak at
Bedford
e, London Universiat Durham Univeri ty on May
sity on May 27, and also will address th e Manchester
Luncheon
Club. Oxford
University will con| fer an honorary degree on him on
June 4 and Cambridge
University
on June 13.
While in England Mr. Frost will
visit with. many
of his
friends
among them poets Wilfred Gibson,
Robert Graves and C. Day Lewis,
publisher Sir Alan Lane, and Prof.
Gilbert Murray
of Oxford University, who once held the same Simpson lectureship at Amherst that Mr |
Frost now holds.
He will be present at an exhibition of his books and manuscripts
at the American Embassy in London and also will journey to Edinurgh and to Dublin, there he will
with U.S.
Ambassador
.William Howard Taft II.
Mr.
Frost’s
first two yolumes,
“A Boy’s Will” and “North of Boston,’’ were originally published in
England (1913 and 1914, respective-

ly) before appearing
States. This is, his
Great

Britain

since

in the United
first visit to

1928.

�Me fe + ¥,

19.35 7]

_

Electronic Oven Cooks in Minutes

WORTHINGTON
Worthingion, Feb. 21—The
following
appointments
have
been
announced by the Board of Selecta
road superintendent, Eben
Shaw; forest fire warden, Har-

In

L.

Bates:

fire

jneth Osgood;

'er of weights

and

thur’ Ducharme,
defense director,
dy;

for

the

chief,

C.

Ken-

dog officer and seal-

measures,

Ar-

Sr.;
and
civil
Charles E. Ed-

Planning

Board,

Ray-~

mond K. Dunlevy, chairman; C,
Raymond Magargal, Roy W. McCann, Chester W. Wronski,
and
Joseph LaHaie, A vote of thanks
was given to Donald I. Thompson,
former chairman who has served
on the Planning Board for three
years
.and
who
resigned.
Mrs.
Feter Tuttle of South Worthington was appointed the representative for town government
to the
Westfield River Watershed Association.
Mr. and Mrs. C. Kenneth Osgood attended a dinner meeting
ot the Westfield River Watershed
Association
Tuesday evening at
the Strathmore Community House
in Woronoco,
The Spicy Beavers 4+H Cooking
Club demonstrated chocolate cake
|at their meeting this week at the
|home
of co-leader, Mrs.
Philip
Arcouette. At the meeting of the
|4-H Merry Beavers at Mrs. David
Tyler’s milk shakes were demonstrated,

ne
h
|

Mrs.

Roy

McCann

of W-~thington

places

a leg of lamb

in her new electronic oven.

Mahan

In about

half an hour it will be fteiy cooked, with only the meat itself hot—oven will be cool to the
touch. Note grill-on tie front of oven; it is open as no heat is generated except in food.
*
Can you imagine a ‘six-pound energy released by micro-waves many foods previously prepared on
standing rib roast being overcooked can be reflected, transmitted or surface units now may be cooked}
jin 35 minutes? Well, it can, and absorbed. Only when it is absorbed in the oven) are manufactured by
‘did, happen in an electronic oven.
The firstsuch oven, in this area

does it turn into heat.
stuff, which absorbs
en- cooks in itself, but the
for or
china plate on

several companies these days, but
the initial producer and originator
utilizing high frequency. radio
was the Raytheon Co.
ergy, Was
installed recently
which it is
Because they are still fresh from
domestic use. The Roy McCanns of placed is cool because it transmits the
experimental
stage,
these
Worthington are the first around the energy.
ovens are not inexpensive. But the
here to have an electronic range
Metals, on the other hand, re- day is not far off when the houseplaced in their kitchen.
flect the energy. so. that steel or wife can dash home at 5:30 p.m.
cookware
can
not be after a shopping spree and have a
With this range a potato bakes in aluminum
four, minutes, an egg cooks in 20 used. The oven walls, made of five-course dinner on the table by
seconds, a five-pound roast is done stainless steel, are cool to the touch six. If she wants to save herself
in 30 minutes and a precooked fro- —even after you bake a pie or tur- dishwashing, the foods will come
glass or china off the oven on paper plates right
zen meal
thawed
and ready
to key. The paper,
from
the onto the table.
serve in about four minutes.
The plate can be removed
McCanns’
six-pound
roast
was
slightly overdone; for their taste,
in, 35 minutes.
An entirely new conception
of
cookery has come into being. The

Thus a foodthe energy,
paper, glass

oven without the aid of a potholder
—it, too, is cool. Cooking dishes do

not

burn,

hence

chores.
The built-in

ovens

no_

pot-scouring

for ranges

as

At the present time, Kinne Brook
Kitchens of Worthington, the firm

that installed the McCanns’ Tappan
electronic oven,
are
not exactly
swamped with orders for the builtin wonder, but Franklin Hitchcock,
proprietor, believes that it is the
coming thing. Hotels, inns and institutions
would
find
electronic
cookery the answer to many
of
their problems.
| And
if you’re
worried
about
‘throwing away all your old cookbooks, the oven
comes
equipped
with a small file drawer containing
the times needed for cooking all

| ordinary

foods.

Constant

research

;develops new recipes, and oven
Owners
are periodically
supplied
with the newest hints in electronic
cookery.

|

|” voRmaNGtO 7
|

Wi

a

Ae

Worthington,

March

G-

The|

Board .of Selectmen has opened |
|bids on a new truck for the High-}

ee

Department.

The

contract

truck was awarded to the low bid
|der, Henry H. Snyder of this town.
Dog licenses for 1957 are avail-|
able at the office of the town
clerk, Wells W. Magargal.,

A record amount

totalling $21.65

was dedicated in the annual love}
gift offering at Friendship Guild
Thursday in the home of Mrs. C.
Kenneth Osgood.
At
the
First
Congregational|
Church Sunday at 11, Rev. Bruce
Dahlberg
of Smith College will;
preach.
|
The volunteer fire department
will meet Monday at 7:30 in the
fire station.
|
There will be a rehearsal for|
the

Grange-sponsored

‘‘Mixed

Up |}

Minstrel’?
Monday
at 8 in the|
Town. Hall.
Funeral
of
Mrs.
Charles
H.|
Brewster,
who
died
in Middle-|
tewn, Conn., will be there Satur-|
day
with burial in the
Center
Cemetery
here at noon.

�[Sars -

ba
4
ae

IY aNVeGRA-OK,

Pu,

IN

»

oW AL Lefton Nag

17736

�Eee my

__

F

——OF THE —

LR Ln

METHODIST

(3 uwhr.

\

ery
ee

CHURCH

nn

LT)

WORTHINGTON |
MARCH 64957 |

Plaque To Honor
Mr. Burr, Son

bronze
WORTHINGTON—The
the
|plaque
to
be _ placed
on
boulder in the little park at the
junction of Huntington and Witt
Roads as a Burr memorial
bear the
following
inscrip tion:
“In Honor of Clement
F. Burr,|
1849-1939, and his son, Franklin
H. ‘Burr,
1875-1955..
Born
and |
lived one-third mile northwest of

vi

this

corner.

Elected

officials

of|

over |
their town and
state
for
this
sixty years.”
The gift
of
memorial plaque by Mrs. Ro y W. |
McCann, Nathaniel
F.
Gli dden}
and Germain Green Glidden was |
announced at the annual
town
meeting
and
was
accepted
in
| behalf of the town by Chai rman
Henry H. Snyder of the Board
of Selectmen.
The plaque is to
be installed in the near future.

A

bronze

memory
|Burr
| Burr,

plaque

the

and
his
longtime

officials,

|boulder

of

junction
ton Rd.

in

was

the

of Witt
today,

late

honoring

Clement

the

F,

son,
Franklin
H.
Worthington town
placed
on
the
little park 2 the

Rd.

and

Hunt

;

-.
:

ao

FRANKLIN H. BURR
_ Born in Worthington, December 21, 1875

_ Died in Worthington, December 31, 1955
: A loyal town official and a beloved citizen

- who served his town for forty-six years as
Town Clerk and Treasurer.

�|

- Wed in Florida
pR57 |

Marries Mrs. Joseph
Hawkins of Sebring

W.

Worthington,
April
16—Word
jhas been received of the marriage
of Commander
Harold F. Mac-|
Hugh, U. S. N. (ret.) of Buffington Hill Road, Worthington
and
Mrs.
Joseph Washburn Hawkins
of Sebring, Florida on April 10
at 11 a. m. in the manse of the
First
Presbyterian
Church
in
\Sebring by the Rev. George Stulting in the presence
of a few

friends.

gardenias

A

mantel

flanked

by

banked

by

Mr.

and

daughter,

Ann,

Sunday

in

Beth

Israel
Hospital,
Boston,
to Mr.|
and Mrs, Frank Feakes of Bos:|
ton and Worthington.
Grandpar:|
ents are Mrs. Robert P. Lane of}
Sr., of Perth, Australia. William
Cummings of Montelair, N. J., is
the baby’s great-grandfather. —
The
Women’s
Benevolent
So
ciety will meet Wednesday at 1]
jin
the
home
of the president,

\Mrs. Leroy H. Rida.

George Humphrey of Old Post}
Rd. has been appointed official}
photographer for the Miss Massa:
chusetts
pageant
in Boston’
on|
July 5 and 6 for the purpose of]

with!

tall pedes-|

Mrs.

a

23 — Word
the birth of

this town and Mrs. Frank Feakes, |

tal baskets filled with gladioli and}
phlox formed
a background for
‘the service.
The bride wore a
blue linen suit with matching lace;
jacket and’ white accessories with|
a corsage of gardenias,
After
a
wedding
breakfast

given

Worthington, April
has been received of

choosing a candidate to represent|
this state at the Miss America|

| pageant in Atlantic City on Sept. |
|2. He is presently working with
the Pittsfield chapter of Jaycees
to help them in selecting a Miss
Pittsfield.
Applications
for
the
contest to be held in Pittsfield on
May 31 may be procured at Eng:
land Brothers.
|
Harry
L,
Bates,
forest
fire

Dorsey

Leith of Coopersburg,
Pa., and
‘Sebring, the couple left for New),
Smyrna
Beach,
Florida.
Mrs.
MacHugh
is
the
former
May
Wheatley of Americus, Georgia.

=arden,

announces

\¢

FGomdr. MacHugh

that no burn-|

ing permits will be issued unti]
sufficient rain has fallen,
The volunteer fire department
was called to West Worthington
Sunday at noon to put out a grass
fire.

WORTHINGTON

William

April 3—Funeral|

H.,

Squires

will

be

in}

the
Congregational
Church of}
| Belchertown Thursday at 2.
The, men’s chorus of the Sing
For Fun Club will meet Wednes.|'

day

at

8 in

the

church to re-|!
music.
The Friendship Guild will meet},
Thurs
hearse

Bees

Easter

day

Mrs.

Center.

Harry

at

Mrs,

Cummington.

ee
‘i

8

W.

}Russell
4speak.

H.

Master

at

the home

Mollison

Olive

art

Conwell

Robert

at

Thayer

instructor

of |

the)

of|

School,

will}

hasjj

Bolles

the}

I

called a meeting of Grange
offi-|
cers
Thursday
at 7:30
in thet
Town Hall to rehearse
the first}
and second degrees.
1
A large gathering of Rod
and:
Gun
Club
members
and
their,
guests from the Deer Hill
Club}
‘of
Cummington
heard
Messrs. |
“MeG

ranahan.

and

of

of

Pittsfield,

district

wildlife!

manager for Western Massachu-;
setts, and discussed relations
be-/
tween
landowners
and
hunters
and posting. The Middlefield rec|reation dam
‘plan was explained

iby

Olaf

Dyer.

~ Committal

|B.

Cagnwell

— See

services

of

South

for

Charles

Worthing-

'ton and Glastonbury, Conn., whi
, Passed
away
suddenly
Tuesday

| Morning

| will

|12.45

be

at his Connecticut home, |

held

in the

here

Thursday

Center

with
Rev.
Allen
H.
| Chesterfield officiating.

at

Cemetery
Gates

of)

born

25

—

A

Wednesday

to Mr.
and
Mrs.
Raymond
K.
Dunlevy
of Huntington
Rd,
in
Cooley Dickinson Hospital.
Mrs.
Harry
W.
Mollison”
announces that there are a few of
the
Hampshire
County
cook

books, ‘‘Favorite Recipes” available at her house’ from the first

printing.
George

ton,

Bamforth

April

was

Bergin,

Northeastern

at

‘Westfield River Watershed.
Association discuss stream impro
ve-}
ment: and related subjects
at ill
April meeting in the Town
Hall
; Monday
evening. Eugene Moran

Worthington,

daughter

|Mrs.

is

at

the

Merwin

a

student

University

F.

home

of

Packard

in

Mr.

at

Bosand

for the

summer vacation, He will be employed at the Corners Grocery.
The East View home of W. G.
Ball on Ridge Rd., near the golf
club, was sold Wednesday’ afternoon at sheriff's sale to Henry
H. Snyder of this town for $18'000. plus taxes due.
|
The 4-H Agricultural Club will
leave
Saturday
morning
for a
farm
tour
in New
York
State.
They
will
be
accompanied
by
Mrs. Howard Beebe, Glen Wickland,
and Mr, and Mrs, David
Tyler,

\e

Worthington,

of

WORTHINGTON

�*

rarett

fp

PRE

ER

=

AGS

i‘

*

WORTHINGTON
RL

¥

L

Mr. and Mrs. Walter H Tower,
i€avhose Sugar. orchard
W aS.
tured in a recent
issue
of The
Saturday
Evening
Po
have
been invited io
ppear
and be
on Springfield Telelinterviewed
lvision Channel
2 on Wednesday

}eveni

7:15

we
iusefts.

uC

Mass

on

the

Western

Highlights

— pro-

gram. They
will be accompanied
by Mr. and Mrs. Linwood Lesure
of Ashfield.
T
scribe and display some of the
antique.
sugaring
equipment
including wooden
buckets,
spouts,
a tapping gouge, and an old dipper
whi
have been
in
use in
their family
* more
than
one
hundred years, The Lesures will
show
modern
sugaring
equipment and - describe
present day
methods.
:
New building continues in this
hilltop town with the latest new
home being a
ach type,
three
bedroom
house
with
a_
view
presently
under
construction
near

the

pond:

at

the

junction

of

Nilliamsburg
Rd., and Christian
Hollow Rd. It is being
built by
Healy, Pittsinger and Mason, Inc.
The pro
me
for the
World Day
of Prayer service in
which

the

local

church

join

with
eight
othér
30
in the
churches.
Friday
Village
Con
tational,
of
Cumnington
¥
be
“Who
Shall
arate T
?”
It will be repeated
over

the

world

for

* Hiouts
of
that
Christians
everywhere
for this observance
t

Bartlett

at
h

ture,
owned
&amp; Sons rolled
Hill

twenty

day
as
gather

underwent

Springfield
has

returned
treatment
inson Hospital,
ided
with
furniby
A. E. Albert
backwards
down
Tuesday
evening,
d

coming

to

rest in a hemlock
grove
at the
foot of the hill.
The
truck had
run out of gas,
and
the driver
had
gone
accident

damage

to get some
when
the
occurred.
Only
slight

was

done

to

the

truck,

�Pe
i
Ff
z

en

ire

Burr Family History In Worthington
Dates To 1800, When
By LOIS ASHE
WORTHINGTON

eation

of the Burr

der in
caused

historians

fully

boul-

Worthington
this
week
the old-timers
‘and local|

mence
town
tury

memorial

ers Came

4 Broth

BROWN
-— The dedi-|

to

recall

of that

the

family

promi-

name.

in|

records for the
past cen-|
and a half or more.
Care-

Elsie

kept scrapbooks
V.

relate

Bartlett

of

Miss|

many

of the}
active|

events in which members
taken
Burr family have

Burr,|
Helen Gilmore
part and
widow of Franklin H., has filled|
in the details of other occasions

dimmed

Early

the year

by the years.
show
records

of.1800,

Burr

Jonathan

of

that

four sons

in|

of|

Bridgewater |

Jeft that town in the eastern part |
of the state and came to Worth-|
four of them|
ington, where all

a
being only
settled, the town
30 years old at
little more than
that time.
There were Ansel, who bought|
the so-called Thayer or Coy farm |
on the back
road into
Stevensville and who was father of Joseph Burr, who'is referred to as
Worthington”;
of
“the banker

young

Jonathan,.

who.

purchased

Rd.

now

owned

Old Post Rd.,|
on the
the farm
Fred}
by the
owned
presently
Browns; Israel, the third brother
on}
the farm
over
-took
svho

Huntington

by |

Mr. and Mrs, Nathaniel F. Glidof Ames|
the father
den, was
Burr, a prominent family mem. |
per frequently mentioned in local
accounts; and the fourth brother,
Calvin, took title from’a Mr. and|
Mrs. Rufus Marsh to the present
Burr farm on Kinne Brook Rd.,
where his progeny still live.
The deed to this farm is dated
bounds+
and the
June 20, 1800,
given in the deed show the names
of persons owning adjoining land
forgotten.
long peen
who have
farm in
only Burr
This is the
were
though there
town today
many of the family here a cenIt was Ames and his
tury ago.
wife who had 11 children, seven
boys and four girls.

In

1800,

when

Calvin

|

pur-

BB

H.

Burr,

Joseph

Burr,

He held many

fices, having

been

of the
en

Burr

Mary

town

13 years,

treasurer

for

tax collector,

ny

te

Hitchcock.

salectman,
and

truant

tary of the Hillside Agricultural
treasurer

of

old

the

.

7

©

i.

:

.

Clement

here
in

Academy

clerk and

officer. He served as president of
secrethe Library Corporation,
Society

)

other public of- Academy

assessor,

and

| jurr

tis

:

Ee

family, gathered
,
ees at the memorial boulder dedicated Sunday by the town o £ Worthing
members of one of ils most distinguished and oldest families, are, left to right, in front of boulder, Frederick H. Burr HM Chastes Cletncat
Burr, Betsy Hitchcock and Martha A. Burr; rear, Mrs. Franklin H. Burr, Dale Hitchcock, Franklin A. Burr, Franklin’ G. Burr Prederi k
WORTHINGTON—Members
ee
;

+

I. Burr and Mary

Helen
him

later,

years

M.

and

Gilmore,

who

alone

lives

who

married]

he

his

the

his

father and grandfather|
46 years as
served

Gre
tion at

the

The

ree

survives| the last day
-in

taking

H. Burr,

place in the civic life of the town

and,

in 1903, he was married to Susan | i did
ee
G. Streeter, who passed away in

1907.
Two

s

Burr.

Lindell

Franklin

at Williston|

and’

Easthampton_

8s

|

—.

and
FOApULET.
ae for re-elec-

a To5e

his death on

searcae

houlder
big old house that has felt the this week is ote
en
outstanding
famfull lives || members of this
ing
the | /pulse of many: busy5
ea
pata
:
w
4fjjyv

Ringville Creamery.
of
a member
He was
Grange,

and through the years.
them,
To
chased the farm, the house stood | South Worthington
lives in servtheir
| icily who spent
ani
;
e
Bashan
ofArcanu
founders
anc
the
‘
of
one
zi
m.
n
,
Pr
ino
Frankli
Gilmore
and
4} ice
to theirci town and the present
$0
|
the
from
the driveway
across
Rte cart
d descendants.
Royal
day Oe) finds. their
(Mrs.]
Persis
Mary eels
|daughter,
still
;
present one, It was in 1842 that Hill Council,
sir
eet|
pe
ankly Faas
serv
Congrega-' py
vere
Hitchcock)
W.
Franklyn
the and a deacon of First
had
Franklin,
son,
Calvin’s
offices of trust
public
in
Serving
|
y
me
on Kinne | tional Church.
big house built facing
now living -224 honor.
In 1870, Clement F. Burr was! born, both of them
Early pictures show |
Brook Rd.
|
families.
their
with
nearby
|
died
who
Crosier,
Ella
to
the house without a porch which| married
years, both)
postwar
the
During
60th
their
before
days
few
a
was added some years later and | only
the Hitchcocks and the Franklin|
To them
anniversary.
the lines are recognized in sever-| wedding
Roy C.,, |G. Burrs lived. in the old homeborn:
five sons were
thus
al other
houses
in town
which.|
Walter | Stead with their children,
were built in the same
era and} Franklin H., Joseph A.,
on to the
generati
sixth
a
@dding
|
living
all
H.,
ck
Frederi
E., and
very
likely by
the same
men,
now with the exception of Frank-| history of the farm from the time

David

Jones

and Russell Bartlett, |

who were at
the time
doing a|
Jand .office business
in the contracting field.
Ji was here in the new house |
that
Franklin’s
‘son,
Clement|
Franklin, was born in 1849 and}
in the same house where he died
90 years later. His education was
received at Wilbraham Academy
and in 1897 he was a represénta-

tive to the State Legislature.

with
lini H., who shares
ther the honor conferred

that So great-great-great1800:
fa-| | in
Burr
took
ae
i Calvin’
&gt;
the} grandfather

his

by

to the property,
in the dedication of| title
townspeople
the family
Tracing
memorial plaque.
the

;

ire

a

ek. wan

2

|further,

store

He

a mile

was

A.

se | A. Burr and their Hitchcock cous- |

ae cake die

fel shel (hare Of fla Maetieed eh
there, too, with
when
12 years

Franklin

;

back still
and Martha

ie gece

the exception Of| tion in direct line from Rev. Jon-|
-he. operated a lathan Burr, who came from Red-|

away

educated

at

the

at

Center,

grave,

Conwell|t&gt;9

Suffolk

America

Dorchester.

in

County,

1639,

England,|

settling

in}

s

mse

�DAILY

HAMPSHIRE

GAZETTE, NORTHAMPTON,

MASS.,

WEDNESDAY,

APRIL

24, 1957,

WORTHINGTON—Deed to the Burr farm on Kinne Brook Rd., the only Burr farm in the town
of
Worthington today, is dated June 20, 1800.
It was deeded to Calvin Burr, one of the four brothers
who came to this town when it was 30 years old. Big old house now is occupied by Helen Gilmore Burr,
widow of Franklin H. Burr, who died Dec. 31, 1955. He served Wérthington as town clerk and treasurer for 46 years.

CLEMENT

FRANKLIN

(1849-1939)

BURR

IM ahs

FRANKLIN H. BURR
(1875-1955)

�.

Le

Reema apie Tes

-Worthineton Honors One Of Its Oldest Families bo a

afternoon

in this town

was

dedicated

in

when)

a bronze plaque
the park at the

west

cials

of

of

this

their

corner.

over 60 years.”

town

Elected

and

state

offifor

Chairman of the
Board of Seneighbors of the late Clement
F.
lectman, Henry H. Snyder, spoke
Burr and son, Franklin H. Eurr.
briefly and then introduced Atty.
In photo, the four youngsters
Walter L, Stevens,
a native
of
are Franklin A. Burr, Dale Hitch- Worthington
who now
lives in
k,
Martha A. Burr and Bets} Northampton and who knew both
Hitcheock.
Adults are the three Burrs well, having been a classselectmen, Henry H. Snyder, C. mate of the younger Burr both
Kenneth Osgood and Franklin G.
here and at Williston Academy.
Burr; Nathaniel F. Glidden, who
Mr. Stevens
called for a moment
of
meditation
and
then
three donors
of the stone,
called
upon
the four grandchilAtty. Walter L. Stevens, a native dren,
Franklin
Andrus.
(Andy)
and
Martha A., children of Mr.
ampton,who gave the dedicatory
and Mrs. Franklin G. Burr; and
Dale and Beisy, children of Mr.
The plaque bears
and Mrs. Franklyn W. Hitchcock,
to unveil the plaque which was

said,
that
friends
and- neighbors
had taken it upon themselves
to
provide such a suitable memorial.

Mr. Stevens spoke of the value
of friends. and neighbors and of
he high ‘regard
_in which
they
were held by the
Messrs. Burr.
He recalled that on the occasion
of Clement
F. Burr’s 81st birihday, when he was honored by the
1 Royal
Arcanum of which he
a charter member,
he told
his
lodge
brothers
that.
if he
could have
had the
confidence
and esteem
of his townspeople,
he cared not what the rest of the
world thought of him.
Mr. Stevens said that the des-

land before the state }
cut through and had
up on the little park

Davis,

eription

of

the

man

who

worked

as

if he would live forever and who
lived-as if he would die tomorrow
was
applicable
to .either of the
Burrs. It was fitting, Mi. Stevens

The

boulder had

construction

about

been’ on the Buri

25

yr

3

;

:

Was

ned
the

The.
bronze
plaque
i
suggested
at the
Febru
town
meeting by Nathaniel
F. Glidden
Was provided by him, his son Germain’ and Mrs, Roy W. MeCann.
At the close of the cer
ny, evefyone present was invited to the
Denworth Farm home of the Gliddens for tea.
P
Among:
those present were
two
sons of Clement F. B
Joseph
Burr of Knhightville. and Frederick
H. Burr of Westhampton. Two. other sons, Dr. Walter: Burr of Blandford and Roy
Burr of Oxford,
N.Y.,
were un:
to be here.

at

day

covered with a spread of ground:
pine and laurel laced with pussy-|
willows made up by Emerson J.

a

WORTHINGTON, — ‘two mem-:
Burr,
1849-1939,
and
h
son,'
bers.of one of Worthingion’s old- | Franklin H. Burr, 1875-1955. Born
est families were honored yesier- and lived one-third
mile morth-

ie

‘cat

�ek

Artic,

‘Mayfiower

In

ST.

KEVERNE,

II

Open Sea

England:

2

—

Mayflower
II -——- replica
of the
Pilgrim
fathers’
ship—sailed
out
of sight of the English. coast today
as
She
headed
for
the
United
States.
Soon after dawn, the little wooden sailing vessel Was spotted by
ithe coast guard 15 miles out. from
The Lizard, southernmost point of
England’s
coast.
Half
an
hour
later she was out of “sight.
Coast guard offical William
| Knight
said, “On-her
course she
has seen the last. land until -she
approaches
her destination.”

The

ship

left

Plymouth,

Eng-

land,
Saturday,
bound
for
Plymouth,
Mass.
For more
than 24
| hours she dawdled in the English
Channel with hardly a breath of

} wind

to fill her

Skipper

S.

Alan

Villiers,

Austra

lian seafare#,
hopes
to land
the
ship
in Plymouth
in
about.
six
weeks. He has
said it all depends
on weather conditions
in the Atlantic.
There
is.a
crew
of 32
aboard

The

wind
flower

s

weeks

first Mayflower also was deby calm and storm in 1620.
expected

vhen
II’s
or

some’

he predicted
trip
would

less.

adverse

the Maytake
~six

The original trip took 66 days as
it was
in September,
about. the
worst
month
for a westerly
passage

has

there

under

chosen
is

the

east-fo-west
lantic.
Press=

Telephoto)

today

to start her

=

transatlantic

4)?

trip.

|

|

ta
faterintinciniiipseocssithesie

(United

sea
Wind fills the sails of the Mayflower I as she undergoes
England, in preparation for her voyage to
trials at Torbay,
The replica of the
Plymouth, Mass., scheduled for tomorrow.
Pilgrim’s ship will be taken under tow to Plymouth, England,

sail.’

the

The

time

highest

wind

in

Mayflower

of

year

proportion

the

North

IT

when

of | }

At-

�‘Little Girl's 5,000-T

ee

WORTHINGTON—The

faiih of

a little child is a beautiful thing
te see, and that of seven-year-old
Cynthia Sena of this town is no
exception, She believes that wishes do come true and her experi-

‘ence

backs

it up.

Even since Cynthia
saw some
trained steers performing at Cummington Fair two years ago, her

dearest.

~a pe

o-l Wish Comes True

For a iong
t..e he had told
her “yes, sometime”
as daddies
do, and now there was no reason
to delay further. The new arrivals have been
named
Jeremiah
and Ebenezer,
These
particular
animals
are
of unusual interest because they
are
not
only
fraternal
twins
against which the odds are great
enough, but-one of the caives is
red and white and the other is
black and white, which is said to

Waiting

the

was

little

almost

girl

to

too

bear

much

and:

for

she}

would
make
hasty trips to the}
barn early in the morning and as
soon as she came in from school.
Charles
J. Thayer,
‘president|
of the Hillside Agricultural Soci-

ety and the Littleville Fair Assn.,
knew about Cynthia’s wish and

Wish has been that she
told
her that
if she could
get
might have a pair of her own to
the steers,
he would
see to it!
train.
Wishing
at every -opporthat she had the yokes to train|
them with. Now
with both® the
tunity, she has at last been re- be about one chance in 5,000.
Ever
since
Sweetheart
was ,animals and the yokes, it may be
warded,
for Sweetheart,
a big
Holstein
owned
by her father, bred last fall, Cynthia has wait- expected that tiny Cynthia, pic- !
Joseph W. Sena,
dropped twin ed impatiently hoping and wishtured with her equally barefoot-|
ing
but
getting
no
encouragebull calves early Friday morning,
ed but
delightful little brother
ment from her parents since the Timothy,
will
be
showing her |
and it took but litle persuasion
for her daddy to consent to her odds were so great. When Sweet: prowess with a yoke of-oxen at
\heart was five days overdue, the ithe fairs this coming Season,
having them for her very own.

�et

eee

he

___ DAILY HAMPSHIRE GAZETTE,

NORTHAMPTON, MASS,

5, 1957,

Colonial House In Wo rthington Has Electronic Oven
Soe

OT
6
iy
WORTHIANG1IG.s-—2.00
i: iif “orne PS £2rpy
inside and out, for it has an ‘electYonic oven which
modern “cook stoves
feats include readying an egg
leg of Jamb-in 30 minutes. Gleaming white kitchen
with .built-in oven, visible behind Mrs.. MeCann, and

Se

ae

end

Got

is believed

irs.

buoy

W.

Mean,

a

to be the first installed

restored

more

than

one

have

been

no

good

ceiling

and

that is what happened in the McCann kitchen, else
there might

motive

for

chang-

ing the room over at this time.
Taking the
situation
in hand,
Mrs. McCann called in a mas er

at the art of building either “antique” kitchens or modern ones.

The MeCann home, |
After
a
consultation,
it was;
found that repairs to the ceiling |
vould involve such a big opera-|
tion that it might
be an
oppor-|

time

to make

some changes!

yuilt in 1780,

world,
radio
waves
transmitted

turns

into

heat

only

when

as well. Step by step,
the plan apsorbed, hence food cooks.
evolved for the kitchen, includ:
sef while
ing the magic oven,
china plate holding it is co
transmits the
The alectronic oven, which is cause it

the

latest

thing

belie

s ils 177 years both
Massachusetts.

The

convenience,

what

with electronic cooker (above, right) is the Jast word in modern
built-in shelves and drawers that provide a place for everything,

c

tune

house,

use in Western

fér the table in 20 seconds, baking a poiato in 4 minuies and roasting a medium sized

By LOIS ASHE BROWN
WORTHINGTON
-—
People
driving through this
quiet hill-

top town often turn to look again
at the big white house set back
behind a stone wall near Worthington Coyners, and to admire its
fine
lines.
They
might
never
guess that under the roof of this
exquisitely restored
old
place
built in 1780 there is one of the
most:
modern
kitchens
to
be
found in America.
This is the
Four Corners farm home of Mr.
and Mrs. Roy W. McCann.
The‘remodeling of the kitchen
has been recently completed and
is
attracting
wide
attention,
partly for its sheer beauty and
its convenient appointments, and
partly because
it contains
the
first
electronic
oven
to be
installed
in
Western
Massachu-|
setts for domestic use.
A leak from above has ruined|

colonial

for domestic

in the

kitchen ' Steel

‘cannot be used because. both reflect the energy.
The walls of the oven are made
of stainless steel and are cool to
the touch even after
sustained
use, Potholders are not needed,
for the
cooking
dishes
themselves are cool. It takes onl four
minutes to bake a potato in this
revolutionary new range and an
(egg will cook
in 20 seconds.
A
medium-sized
leg of lamb
will
| cook in
out half an hour and a
pre-cooked
frozen
meal
can
be
heated and served.
in less time
than it takes to spread the table.
_ Alongside
the electronic oven
is a conventional
electric oven
for such foods as cannot be baked
in the other one, such
as those
that depend
upon the white . of
an egg for
ing. Adjoining the
ovens, a countertop range with
five units has
been installed.
The countertops are ‘done in a
formica of a sand tone
mosiac
pattern and the cabinets.
above
and below are of steel.
One esit
pecially appealing feature is the
in it- installation of recessed lights under the upper cupboards to light
the counters
below.
Recessed
lighting in the ceiling controlled
iby sil lent mereury. switches is a
far cry
from
‘the eandles
and

| Kerosene lamps

of an earlier day.

_ The ceiling itself has @ plasti
c |)
finish which is claimed to never
!
need repainting.
The
floor
of!

cork ‘with
a transparent
‘overiInge suggests
wood
giving

A

With

the comfort

stainless

window

of rubber.

steel

garbage

vinyl |
while”

‘sink

disposal

is

equipped
under

which looks out upon a wide

tree shaded lawn, There are exten.
sive counters
at either side and
next to the sink is the dishwasher
,
A small commercial type refri¢era-

tor

with

double

and

Java,

has

doors

has

been|

fitted in convenient to both stove
and sink,
Cupboard space undreamed of by
most homemakers
is. provided for |
in this latest mode! kitchen—cupboards for everything and everything in its place. Even the food!
for
the
family’s
cockers
Mocha!

its own

niche,

One section of the room is gi
en over to laundry equipment so}
cleverly
built in. as to be hardy
noticeable. This includes an auto-)

matic

washer — with

nlumbing,
‘oaps and

concealed |}

a dryer, cupboards for
sundry items and @ spe-

cial cupboard

for the ironing board

and another for the iron. Between!
‘he kitchen and dining. room is the|

butler’s

manner,

pantry

Passerby

done

in the same

would be surprised 40.

know that all is not
nial
in this two and
house which, is one

standing
ton.

y

a.

in the

town

strictly ¢olo-¥
a-half story.

of the oldest|
of Worthing-|
:

[

|
|

J
|
¥

�pests

Sed May bb /957

F. J. Hillman, Business,
Civic Leader, 78, Die

Former

and Vance Hillman Carlisle; and
4 sister, Mrs. Charles E, Burge
r
of Longmeadow.
The Dickinson-Streeter funeral
‘home
is in charge of arrange-

N. Y. Management Consultant,
C. of C. Of.

Frederick James Hillman, 78,
In World War TI he served as}
New York management consult.
a major attached to the general
jant and civie Jeader in Spring- staff as assistant
executive offifield for many years, died sud- jcer of the
Purchase, Storage and
denly late last night at his home. Traffic Division.
“Hillmanor,” on the Old Post Rd.
He
was
active
in helping to
‘In Worthington as a result of an bring the
Bosch Magneto Co, to
attack of coronary thrombosis.
Springfield. Soon after that comMr.
Hillman
was
active
in pany established itself here, its
public

and

private

organi-

zations
in Springfield,
and
for
15 years prior to his retirement
in 1953 he was associated with

officials complained against odors
from

Co.,

the

Springfield

threatening

location.

and

to

move

Rendering

abandon

the

elsewhere.

This resulted in the formation of
a Citizens Committee of One Hundred of which Maj. Hillman was
chairman,
The
committee
brought
the
matter before the State Board of
Health
in Boston.
The
hearing
called for the appearance of hundreds of witnesses.
The upshot

was

that the Rendering

Co. was

ordered to rebuild its plant so as
to stope the escape of offensive
odors.
Urged One-Way Traftic
Mr. Hillman was a pioneer in
advocating
one-way
streets
in
Springfield and successfully represented
merchants
of the city
before the City Council in a some-

what

bitter

controversy

which

ensued when such traffic restrictions were proposed by a citizens
committee of which he was vicechairman.
;
He was born in Hawley, March

23,

1879,

the

son

of. Franklin

J.

and Georgianna (Braymon) Hillman. The family moved to Norththe management engineering firm
ampton in 1892. He was graduatof Stevenson, Jordan &amp; Harrison,
ed from Childs Business College
jine., of New York City. Follow-| in Springfield in 1896, was em‘ing his retirement he purchased
ployed in the office of the United
‘his Worthington home.
Electric Co, until 1898 when he
| For 30 or more years prior to returned to the Business College
|his removal to New York he was
as an instructor, later becoming
active in Springfield civic affairs.
principal of the commercial deHe served as a director of the
partment.
Springfield
Chamber
of
ComIt was then he became intermerce
more
than 20 years, as
ested in the study of higher acits
executive
vice-president
10
counting
and
engaged
in
the
years, and was primarily re-| practice of public accounting outsponsible for the erection of the] side of school hours. He was one
of the group that passed the first
present Chamber
of Commerce
building,
examination
for the degree
of
| certified public accountant given
Headed Regional Unit
From 1913 to 1916 he was presi- by the commonwealth,
or 22 years he was president
dent of the Western New England
.|Chamber of Commerce. He car- of the New England Audit Co. of
.|vied on an aggressive campaign | Springfield,
Worcester and Bosfor the development of a similar ton. Some
of his clients began
New England organization before ‘soliciting his advice with respect
the formation of the New Eng- to management problems. Subseland Council,
quently
this
counseling
service
He
was
a past
president
of was developed
under the name
Wesson
Memorial
Hospital,
the of Frederick J. Hillman &amp; Co.,
Automobile
Club
of Springfield one of the earliest firms to enand the Layman’s League of the} gage in this type of professional
Church of the Unity.
practice.
During
his career
in
He was active in the promotion Springfield he was an officer and
of the Eastern States Exposition, director of a considerable numand was prominent in the group ber of industrial corporations in
which
succeeded
in having the New
England,
New
York
and
Federal Land Bank established Chicago.
in Springfield,
_
Married
in 1900
He was married Sept. 26, 1900,
Was AAA Director
He was a past president of the to Cora Maude Watters, daughter
American Autornobile Association }of Thomas D. and Ellen Watters
Mrs.
Hillman
|and had been active in the good} of Longmeadow.
roads
movement,
He had been died Dec, 23, 1940. On April 17,
a member of the Nayasset Club, 1943, he married Mildred Norine,
Rotary
Club,
Springfield
Coun- daughter of Edgar N. and Jessie
try
Club,
the
Realty
Club
of A. Higbie of Hartwick, N. Y.
He is survived by his widow;
Springfield, the Army and Navy
Club of New York, and the Illi- a son, Frederick J. Hillman, Jr.,
Conn.;
three
nois Athletic Club of Chicago. He of New Canaan,
Patricia
Anne
was a former chairman of the granddaughters,
Denise
Hillman
and
Board of License Commissioners. Hillman,
Lynn
Watters
Carlisle;
two
FREDERICK

J, HILLMAN

;

a

DELEGATE

S ments.

ficial Here Stricken in Worthi
ngton

;many

)9e7

‘grandsons, Bruce Robert Carlisle

|

i

Lge 4
Worthington,

nual

Aug,

meeting

and

4 —

election

The

an-

of of-

| ficers of the Worthington Library
|Corp., will be held in Frederick
Sargent
Huntington
Library
Thursday at 8.
Neighbor’s
Night
will be ob-|
served
by
Hillside
Pomona
|Grange here Monday night with
a
Valley
and Hampshire|
County Pomonas
as guests, _.

¢/ Mrs. Frederick J. Hillman has
|Sold her home on Old Post Rd.,

to Mr. and Mrs. Robert C. Adams
of Evanston, Ill., who previously
bought two lots across the road
from it. Mr. Adams
is a sales
representative for the’ Hampden
Glazed Paper Co., of Holyoke in

the

Chicago

office

and

will

MISS

PRISCILLA A,
Worthington,
June

Priscilla

not|

live here until after his retire-|
ment in five years. In the meanwhile, the house will be leased.
Mrs.
Hilman
will be with her
parents, Mr: and Mrs.'A. B, McDaniels of Huntington, until] her!
plans are definite,
-» ee re
Dr. E. Richard
Post of Amherst will be at the Health Center
Wednesday
for
afternoon
and
evening appointments which may
be
made
with
Mrs,
Harry
L.
Bates,
Edward
Choate
and children,
Jennifer and Jonathan, of Irvington-on-the-Hudson, N. Y., are at
Mrs. Stanley Shirk’s cottage on
Witt Rd., for 10 days.
Mrs.
Bernice
Kilbourne
of
Thorndike is visiting friends and
Yrelatives here for several days.

She’ was

&amp; member

College

rey

and

seven

tery

Tuesday

family

asked.

omitted,

Tr)

4

at

that

2

ing E

p.

m.

flowers

14-21,

a junior

High

Miss

at

Tor-

Northamp-

School,

taking

the

WORTHINGTON: 5-7

Two Get Awards

At Graduation

Fg

Worthington,
June 13 — School
Supt. J, Walter Richard awarded
diplomas
to eight
members
of
the graduating
class tonight at
Worthington Tovn Hall.
Because two students tied for
the
annual
Glidden-McCann
Scholarship
prize,
two
awards

were

given

by

Mrs.

Robert

J.

Lucey of the school committee to
Miss Judith Ann Magargal
and
Daniel Dunlevy. Both will enter
Northampton High School in September.
The award
presented the two
students was $25 and an engraved
Silver tray,

grandchildren.|

committal
services will}
in the Hillcrest Ceme-}

|

dauch-

college
preparatory
course,
She plans to enter the nursing field.

of}

Private
be held

June

is

ton

Merey Chapter of the Daughters}
of the American
Revolution
of}
Springfield.
She is survived
by
a
daughter,
Mrs.
John
Drew,
, Pittsfield, N. H.; a son, Sidney
Smart of Blandford;
a brother,
Joseph
Kilbourn,
Grants
Pass,

Ore.

Torrey,

ter of Mr. and Mrs.. George
E. Torrey of Old Post Raby
has been selected by American
Legion
Auxiliary
Post
304°
to
attend
the
annual
Massachusetts Girls’ State at
Bridgewaier
State
Teachers

Mrs. Mary K. Smart
Mary (Kilbourn) Smart, 83, of
Pittsfield,
N..H.
formerly
of
Longmeadow
and
Worthington,
| died yesterday in Pittsfield. She
was
the
widow
of
Sidney
J.
| Smart.
Mrs.
Smart
was
the
| daughter of Alfred and Millia |

Kilbourn.

Ann

TORREY
7—WMiss

CHESTERFIELD

The|

be}
1u= So

“Chesterfield,

;classes
3.15 in

‘with

will
the

Mrs.

Aug,

$72 ho

start on Sept. 6, at
Davenport
School,

Jean

Humphrey

of

Worthington as the teacher. Anyone interested in having children

entered

should

contact

Mrs.|

Helen Healy.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Bowen, Jr., and family of Farmingdale, Long Island, are spending
this week
with
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Charles M, Bowen, Sr. of South
St.
pl
yMr.
and
Mys.
Lester
LeDué
and
Miss
Marion
Bartlett
of
Worthington visited Mr. LeDuc’s
brother and
sister-in-law,
Mr,
and Mrs. Ralph LeDuce, in Pitts-

ford,

Mrs.
turned

‘

z

,

3

Vt.

recently.

Elmer
to her

-=——~——*"

Coleman
has’ re- |
|
position in North|

eT

�Ft

To Wed April 27

Will Be Bride. of Lae
Hoey of Woronoco

Worthington,
April
ie —Miss
Patricia Ann Magarzal,
of Mr. and Mrs. Wells ‘W. Magargal
of Old North
Rd.,
has
announced

her

attendants

for

her

wedding to James J. Hoey of Woronoco on April 27 at 9 in St.
Thomas’ Church, Huntington. Her
sister, Mrs, C. Kenneth Osgood
will be her matron of honor. Mo~
niece,
Miss
Mary
Lou
Osgood
and Miss Nancy Shaiier of s-.ttsfie'A will be bridesmaids and another niece, Miss Christine Ma-

gargal will be flower girl. Richard “Hoey of Woronoco will attend
his brother as. best man and Walter Carroll of Woronoco and Raymond
Doyle of Springfield -will
usher. A reception will follow at
11 in the Worthington Town Hall.
Miss Magargal was honored at
a miscellaneous
shower
in the
town hall given by friends and
relatives, also at a dinner party
by her business associates at Ida
and John’s Restaurant in West
Pittsfield. A greenback shower in
the Strathmore Community Club
in
Woronoco,
was
given’ by
friends and relatives of Mr. Hoey.

Sige.

19-5

Patricia Ann W alls
To Wed Saturday
WORTHINGTON—Town

Clerk

and Mrs. Wells W. Magargal
invite their friends and neighbors
to attend the wedding of their
daughter, Patricia Ann, to James
J. Hoey of Woronoco, on Saturday, April 27, at 9 am. in
St.

Thomas’

re

THURSDAY,

Church

JUNE

in

18,

Huntington.

1957

Graduating at Worthington
SRS: SERIE: AORN: SRR

Becomes Bride

ReReeIOR mene. Sete te:

Miss
Patricia
daughter of Mr.

W. Magargal

Ann
Magargal,
and Mrs. Wells

of Worthington,

| ployed

Dunlevy, Henry Bartlett, Jr., Allen Moran, Jr., and Larry Mason.

and

of Worthmatron of
Lou Osand Miss
WorthingRichard

for his brother. Ushers were Walter
Carroll
of
-Woronoco
and
Raymond
Doyle
of Springfield,
cousin of the bridegroom,
The
bride
wore
a gown
of
white lace and tulle, with scalloped
scooped
neckline,
long
sleeves
and full skirt,
and
an
illusion veil arranged to a scalloped lace cap.
She carried a
modified
cascade of white glamelias and pink gladioli petals
edged with lemon leaves.
The
matron
of
honor
wore
white
lace
over
pink
taffeta,
with a pink headband and short
veil, and carried pink glamelias
edged
with
lemon
leaves.
The
bridesmaids’ gowns were of white
lace
over
blue
taffeta.
They
wore blue headbands with short
veils and carried bouquets like|®
| that of the honor attendant.
|
A reception was given at the
Werthington
Town
Hall.
Assisting in the
receiving
line,
the
bride’s
mother
was
attired
in
gray. print shantung
with
pink
accessories, and the bridegroom’s
mother,
in
powder
blue
with
white accessories,
The couple left on a wedding
|trip to Florida, and after May
| 12 will live in Mountainview Ter.,
Woronoco.
1950

Left to right, front row, are: John Stevens,
Judy Magargal,
Boiinie Bartlett; rear, Dan

le

RECENT

BRIDE

Hoey of Southwick was best man

| High

Thursday night.
Carol Hathaway,

Strathmore Paper Co., Woronoco. |

James Joseph Hoey, son of Mrs
,| Catherine Hoey of Armory
St.,
'|}this
city,
were
married
last
Saturday
at 9 in St. Thomas
Church, Huntington.

Mr.

Eight pupils will graduate from the eighth grade in Worthington

missiles and ordnance department
of General. Electric Co., Pittsfield,
Her
husband
is
employed
by

|Worthington Girl Weds
James J. Hoey

Mrs, Kenneth Osgood
ington was her sister’s
honor, and Miss Mary
good, the bride’s niece,
Nancy Shaffer, also of
ton, were bridesmaids.

WORTHIN (; TON

re

Patricia Magargal

wow.

Patricia Magargal

ey. = SoS

and

Mrs.

graduates

School.
as

a

The

Hoey
of

are

both

is

em-

Huntington

bride

stenographer

in

the

|
MRS.

(Kanter

JAMES

Photo)

J.

HOEY

Who was Miss. Patricia Ann
Magargal of Worthington before her marriage.

||
|

�z

Burma Trail

of Hampshire

, JULY 31, 1957,

County’

WORTHINGTON
E

OLD

DIARY

WORTHINGTON—A.

diary

|
writ |

ten in 1860 by Dwight Perry,
a
prominent citizen here a sore

ago,

was

the highlight of the

pro- |

gram at the annual meeting of the|
Worthington Historical Society Sat-'

| urday at the home of Mr. and Mrs. |
| Roy

W.

Was

worn

; copied

McCann.
and

by

The

diary which|

faded,

Miss! Elsie

| and

selections

| Life

in this town

| at the
meeting
'grand-daughter,

from

was carefully |

V,

Bartlett|

it were

read|

by
Mr,
Perry’s |
Miss
Olive Cole.|

in that day

was |

| depicted as considerably different|
| than now with all-day trips being

,made

by

and

quaint

team

to

neighboring

| towns
and
of
leisurely visiting |
| back and forth, of husking bees |
| and
barn
raisings,
of
evenings
spent at the store at the Corners,
|
all-day church
sessions, of debts
| being paid promptly, of service on!
| the town roads in lieu of taxes,

expressions

seldom

| heard today. The descendants of
; Several persons mentioned in the
| dairy were present at the meeting.
| Mrs. Carl S Joslyn presided and|
| all officers were re-elected as fol-|

;lows:

Mrs.

Walter

L.

Joselyn,

Stevens

| Vice-president;

Route 143, extending from Williamsburg line to Chesterfield, has heen closed for several months
now and people have wondered what work was being done on the highway that is often called the
“Burma Trail of Hampshire County.” This view taken on one section of work shows how many
curyes have been eliminated by blasting right througk
solid rock for 60 feet high as seen here at

i

the left.

and

of

president:|

Northampton |

Arthur

G

Ca-.):

| pen, secretary-treasurer. Mrs. Tho| mas J, Byrne of Florence, Miss Elsie V..Bartlett and Mrs. Harold E.|
Brown were appointed as an edit-|

| orial

board.

Mrs,

Herbert

|Mrs, Allerton Tompkins,
| Louis C, Hyde acted as

,at the

social hour

Tower,'

and Mrs.|
hostesses |

which

followed.|

May 2b, AGT

f

See

to

Worthington, June 3 the
L.
Sears, blind piano and accordion
teacher of Cummington, will present his pupils in a recital in the
‘Town Hall on June 19. A 10 piece
accordion band will be a feature.
The Lions Club will meet Tuesday at 7:30 at Hilltop Rest Inn
in South Worthington for dinner
and installation. Outgoing president is John Green of this town
and the incoming president will
be Fritz Moltenbrey of Huntington.
Dr. and Mrs, Harold A. Stone
of ‘‘Brookstone’’
in West
Worthington
are
home
following
a
six-month trip to the Far East
and Indonesia, They came home
via
Hawaii
and
Seattle.
Miss
Jean
Gallaway
of London
has
been
a guest of Dr. and Mrs.
Stone,
:
Mr. and Mrs. William Kronenberger of Williamsburg Rd. are]
entertaining Mr. and Mrs. Erle

Hermann

of

Hewlett,

Long

end

The

new

jbar- at The
jevery

day

’ Mondays,

cee

ll

“Hav-a-Cup”

Corners

from

11

9 except

Was Teacher Here
179,

Mrs. Ella B. (Webster) Collins, |
of 146 Mill St., widow of Har-|
FE.

She

Collins,

was

born

and

A

at

her

home}

in Northfield

Aug.|

%
a
Ae

|

the daughter of Henry}
and
Amanda
(Smith)

Springfield

|years.

died

‘afternoon.

| Webster

\of

had been
for

graduate

the

of

a resident |
past

60

Northfield

|School
for Girls.
and
Westfield
|Normal
School,
she had taught
\in the Springfield Public Schools|
j until her marriage. Mr..and Mrs. |
\Collins had
been summer
res
|dents of Worthington, since 1916.
|Mrs. Collins was
a member
of}
ithe Church of the Unity.
|
She leaves two sons, Webster|

| E. Collins and Edwin F. Collins of |

j
:
|

i

| Longmeadow;
_|Mrs. Norman
|meadow
and

Werner

two
daughters, |
L. Snow of Long-|
Mrs.
Eleanor.
C,|

of Springfield and eight|

| grandchildren.
|
A private funeral

jat

the

will

Dickinson-Streeter

be

held}

funer-|

jal home. There will be no visiting|
jhours and friends ate requested
ito omit flowers.
|

{

will be open

until

Mrs. H.E. Collins
27, 1877.
Williams

Is-

snack

a Stroll

| Sunday

—

Farm,

Takes

irjs

land.
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Frank
Feakes
and
daughter,
Ann,
have
returned
to Boston
after
a few
days with Mrs, Feakes’ niother,
Mrs. Robert P. Lane at Hi-Lane

|

don Umbrella

|

-

nt

icles

|

yee

WORTHINGTON =
i

�TURBSDAY, MAY

THE ROYAL GAZETTE,

7, 1957-

he Porsonalitics Jn Bermuda
“MAY 14, 1957

After Century, Automatic Heat

Miss Dorothy Hewitt
school

the

as a business

business

(left) and Miss Florence

Chapin.

and gone on

world.

The school was started in a room

in the Twentieth Century, Club with
15 courses
.intended
to cater
to}
about 250 people.
When the first
term opened 350 people registered
and as many were turned down.
Through
the years it has continued to cater to all ages, most of

them

over

25 and

walks of life.
About
the
money.
Only
he

under 80, in all}

only
problem
60 per cent of

e's needs
from

a

comes from

million

fees,’

friends.

|

be partly alleviated

may

Miss

when

Svea’ “'yege,
plans
silver

t
is |,
the‘

contrioutions from

the studeAts or interested

his

eh

|

the
to celebrate
anniversary with

drive.

fund

dollar

Hewitt

Centre's
a half a:

is successful, the Centre
be bigger: xthan €ever.

will

it

Tf

soon

_t

that man

knowledge

must

go

dead on his
pert Dorothy

ae learning, or be
feet, came early to

:

ewitt,

ago she put it
EP peatly 25 years
the |
founding
by
practice
into
t Education,
Boston Centre for Adul
designed of
a unique kind of school
is finished |
anybody of any age. who
ae
n.
with formal educatio
whelming,
The response was over

and

today

Hewitt is Seer

Miss

series of |
a day
184hour
have
that most of the year
four
from
students
2,000

of an
classes
nearly

has|
start
the
from:
her
stevith
director, Miss |
e
ciat
asso
her
been
k the

Florence
two

are

Chapin. This wee

at “Scarrington

fifth Bermuda

graduate

|

for

their

holiday in six years. |

Vassar,

of

Miss |

A
afer
her centre
started
Hewitt
adul
of
ctor
dire
as
s
seven year
g Women s
education, for the Youn
4
Boston.
in
ion
ciat
Asso
Christian
=
es
cipl
prin
est
firm
One of her
wanted woul
that the centre she
any pene |
not be governed by
any |
to
ce
creed
or
ae

or school.
was

that

she

ould)

to aaah 3
attract people who wanted going
10
people who had stopped
t

by

LOIS

BROWN

/wood burning furnace.
This exWORTHINGTON — The voters | tension also included a huge fieldlappropriated
money
at
their |stone fireplace, perhaps not
so
|town meeting last February for {much for auxiliary heat as for at‘the installation of an
oil
fired ‘mosphere,
heater in their 101l-year-old town
The selectmen’s room
on
the
| hall, this to be the third type of ;second floor of this
part
was

|heat in its history.

The Board of ;heated

‘| Selectmen
recently
;opened bids for-such

| system

met
and
a heating

and the contract has been

from

that

time

until

the

|present with a chunk stove, givjing a homely touch to the
offi‘cial meetings held
there.
Now
with the
coming
of
automatic

jawarded to Gladwin &amp; Lane
of
| Westfield.
Installation is expect- heat to the hall, this ancient box
ed to start shortly.
|stove will likely go the way
of
In the beginning, when the hal? jall good box stoves as the new
was first put into
use
back
in ‘system will
include a hot air
| 1856, a big chunk at the left rear | duct for this room, too.
of the hall supplied all the
heat
There will be’ no more
of the.
and the pipe
from
it ran
the |aroma of wood
smoke
drifting
length of the hall to a chimney | through the hall now that. therjat. the other end. The woodshed
|mostatically controlled heat is at
was the room now occupied by a i;hand;
no
more
wood
to be
modern kitchen,
'i} worked up and
piled,
and
no

Emerson

the

has
the

J. Davis,

town

hall,

loeal

scene,

spent

and

most

of

a

custodian

his

man

recalls

years
that

of |;more will the basement be crowd|ed with the winter’s
supply
of
on |fuel. This will mean more room

who
the

basketball baskets were mounted on the side of the hall instead

|for
{and

expansion; — possibly shower
dressing rooms since this is

|the town’s

gymnasium

among

its

of at. opposite ends as they are to- | other uses.
|
With the advent of
automatic
day, and he says that on’
more
jheat, there may be expected to
than one occasion, the ball would
ibe fewer “hot” times in the old
lambast
the pipe,
knocking
it
| town hall and more comfort all
galley West, and that a
smoky,
around.
sooty intermission would
ensue!
while a ladder was, obtained and
the pipe put back.
No doubt, some
quick
footwork was required
in
dodging
the hot stove occasionally. Up un-

til 1933-34, when

a WPA

modernized the hall
chunk stove served

It was
hall was

an

35

at that time
that
the
extended at the back of

addition.

ft.

with

it allowing

the

project|

some,
the}
admirably,

measuring

an

for

installation

16

excavation

a basement
of

a

big

ft by

under |

hot

and |
air|

�‘Canton Blue, White China
| Was Originated in Persia

Kenciehinle is
a

Lao

2

| Groupof Canton China

By THOMAS ORMSBEE
of
household.
ceramies.
They
One of the few things which did| ranged
from
dinner services to
not
originate
with
the Chinese} barrel-shaped
garden
seats
and
was
the rich indigo blue
color| from quadrangular vases: to oval
characteristic of Canton blue andj foot
baths.
Among
the
table
white china,
It came from Per-| wares were drum or cylindrical
sia, the discovery of an unknown|teapots
with bent twig handles,
| potter there
sometime
between} pitchers with loop or bent twig
| 700 and 900 AD. Eventually pieces| handles. and_ snout-like lips, tu| of Persian ceramics, decorated injreens
‘and
covered
vegetable
this
new
hue
against
a whiteldishes
with
knob
on
cover
in
background
reached
the Orient. shape of a helmet, peach or nut.
There
the
Chinese
potters|Cups without handles were made
claimed
the Mohammedan
blue|for Chinese use; those with hanas their own and developed it fur-|dles were for export, especially

; ther over the centuries,
\for the tea
drinking
English.
| In the late 15th Century Euro-| Bowls ranged from the handleless
pean traders were grudgingly al-| CUP size to a punch bowl 15 to 18
lowed
at the port of
Canton| inches in diameter,

where they bought and brought}
At Mount Vernon Museum the
back home what they called blue|Washingtons
had
a set of. this
and white Canton ware
because china for daily use.
There isa
that was where they found it, A tradition
that
it
was
George
;contrast to the dull-bodied ware Washington’s favorite china and
|then made by western potters, it that food served on other than
|was popular almost at once and the “blew and white’’. tended: to
|from then on trade with the Occi- put him out of sorts for the day.
|dental
world
continued
to . in-|Few pieces of it have survived
‘erease.
Not
that
the Chinese;but examples of a corresponding
‘liked

the

traders

or

the

trading|service,

given

to

Mrs.

|

Top row, left to right, tea
pl ate and open vegetable dish. Bottom
row, fruit : bowl, nine inches
infdia
diz meter and sme
small teaa cup and
saucer, Ali have the deep blue bands
but the g arden scene lias a
number of yariations with each
piece,

Samuel

companies
that developed
from | Powel
by
President
and
Mrs.
‘them,
but
they
did
like
their|Washington in the 1790s, are on
|money, liked it enough eventual-|display in the pantry at Mount
ly to. decorate their hard white] vernon.
porcelain especially for ‘the foreign trade.
|
|
Best known of the china so dec-|
jorated

was

a

scenic

|

pattern

showing a garden within the compound of an Oriental nobleman
or governor.
Details varied but

‘characteristic ones
included
a
|tea house on an island in a min-

:

otire Take,

|

|as

This

{from

Common

blue

|better

design,

and

about

commonly

white

1770

quality

People

to

Canton,

china,

1840

No Steaming for This

known

for

|

dates|

although

Convoy

the|

|

it}

.{eontinued
to be made well into}
.ithe 20th Century.
Very popular
\with the Chinese themselves,
it
1{
as used on poorer quality ware
j|for the common
people and on
-|finer ware more carefully deco-

s|rated

for

the

well-to-do,

Shapes

Penarth

also varied according to the size
&gt; of
purse, such as round plates for
»|plain
people
and
octagon
ones
»|for the rich.
Articles made included all sorts

(Associated

‘

Press

Papa and Mama Swan, with seven cygnets in convoy, stir up a cooling ripple as they
shady spot in summer’s first heat waye, Temperature was past 90 degree mark when
made at a pond on the John F. Kappel farm at Wexford, Pa.

Wirephoto)

swim for a
picture was
*

ie

:
|

.
1

‘
;
:

’

d

&gt;

k

wes

;

2

�ae
Youngsters at Firemen’s Musier

| JULY 15, 1957

“WORTHINGTON.

CUMMINGTON

FIRE FIGHTERS
MUSTER DRAWS
CROWD OF 3000

Cummington Department
Is Sponsor of Hilltown
Event

Cummington,
July
14 —
An
estimated crowd of 3000 attended|
the
second
Hilltown
Fireman’s
Muster, sponsored by Cummington Fire Department and held on
the fairgrounds.
“Future Firemen” Lead
Charles Hall was chairman and
Robert Hull was master of ceremonies. The parade was led hy
three ‘“‘future firemen” of Worthington,
Gerald
Bartlett,
Wells
Margargal, and Mark Hallowell,

to be caught unprepared,
Youngsters from Worthington, not
ency during the Fireemerg
of
case
in
just
elders
stood by their
3000 spectators and
the
Among
men’s Muster at Cummington.
and
Gerald Bartlett,
gal,
Margar
W.
Wells
were
participants
a
ent,
equipm
of
piece
one
Mark Hallowell, commanding their

baby carriage complete

with tank and hand pump.

a

followed by the
Band of Adams.

Polish

Alliance

Forty pieces of fire equipment
besides
the
Pee-Wee
baseball
team were in the parade.
Judges
for the
contest
were
Chief Charles Martin
of Northamptons
Robert
Ulm
of Easthampton, and George Cavanaugh
of Amherst.
Winners Listed
Winners for events were:
Best appearing equipment, Williamsburg.
Horse
drawn
fire equipment: |
Hadley 214 seconds, Hatfield 39 |
seconds.
|
Oil fire contest,
Goshen
26.2
seconds;
Chesterfield,
26%
seconds; Worthington, 2912 seconds.
Special portable. pumping contest: Hatfield, 29 seconds;
Amherst, 32.7 seconds; Hadley, 54.1
seconds.
Regular portable pumping contest:
Worthington,
18
seconds;
Williamsburg,
22 seconds;
Mid-}
dlefield,
25 seconds;
Cumming-|
ton, 26 seconds,
. Regular pumping contest: Williamsburg, 1 minute 19 seconds;
Cummington,
1 minute 28% seconds;
Chesterfield, 1 minute 32
seconds;
Williamsburg all~vomen pumping contest: 1 minute 13 seconds.
A demonstration of fire equipment was put on by Westover}

‘Air Force
|

Base

personnel.

between
game
baseball
A
Goshen and an all-star team was
won by the all-stars, 9 to 5. The
Goshen team. won the trophy losing one game in the season.

ee 14 57

\Driver Escapes
Injury in Crash

Worthington, Avg. 25—Paul F.
Sanford, 28, of Peru, escaped in\ljury tonight when
an accident,
believed to have been caused by
a blowout in a right front tire,
jdemolished his car.
He was driving east on Route
143 in West Worthington
where
the road
passes
through
rocky
ledges
when
the
accident
occurred. The car was thrown into
the
ledge
on
the
right,
then
bounced
across
the road,
completely turning over, coming
to
rest upright and headed west on
a sharp turn,

Trooper

Russell

Dino

State

G.

Police

jvestigated.

Ciocci

of the

Barracks

in-

Worthington,
Aug.
25 —
Dr.
Leighton
A. Kneller’s. office at
the Health Center will be closed
from Sept. 11 through 25 while
he is on vacation,
me
YThe
Misses
Olive
Cole
andl,
Clarissa Henry
have
purchased
the former
Sullivan
cottage ‘on
Old Main Rd. from the Misses
Eva
and Mabel
Moynihan
and
their brother, Harold Moynihan.
They took possession last week.!

Miss

Lorraine

Paléekt~daugh-

ter of Mr.
and Mrs.
Anthony
Palecki of Harvey Rd., has rejturned from Pittsfield where she
was employed for the summer.
Mr,
and Mrs. Howard
Hallowell and Mr. and Mrs. Matthew,
Kozik of Greenfield visited their
children and grandchildren,
the
Norman R. Hallowells, over the
week end.
//At the meeting of the executive committee of the Frederick:
Sargent
Huntington Library this:
past
week,
the
following
were
appointed to the art and library
committee: Mrs. Harry L. Bates,Mrs.
Harlan
Creelman,
Mrs,
Clarence A. G. Pease, Mrs, Law-.
rence N. Durgin and Mrs. Ralph
A. Moran. They will meet again
Wednesday at the library to or|ganize the Friends of the Library

drive

ton

the

Mrs.

and

to

consider

insurances

building...

Newton

Armstrong

and

son, Newton, Jr., have returned
to their home in Houston, Tex.,
after
spending
several
weeks
here with her mother, Mrs, John
Allen,

�OUT AT SEA on second day, Mayflower is photographed about 26 miles from
Plymouth, flying British merchant flag, the “‘red ensign,’
which was actually
—

.

created 68 years after original Mayflower voyage. She lay becalmed most of the
first night, but now wind fills her sails and gives her about three knots speed.
aaa.
mma

!___

�oe
Py
.
Elsie Venner Bartlett.

Born October 20, 1878, the daughter of Horace F. and

Caroline (Graves) Bartlett. She is the author of A Handbook of Questions and

Answers

Relating

1952.

to the History

of Worthington,

Massachusetts,

published

Has devoted her life to gathering and recording local history.
121

in

�pas7

SAILING WESTWARD WITH A CARGO OF HISTORY
Mayflower II, “‘a good

tough ship of Devon

oak,” was working her way west across the Atlantic to Plymouth, Mass., trying to duplicate
a famous voyage of 337 years ago. Aboard the
180-ton replica of the Pilgrims’ ship was a crew

of 27, commanded by Australian Alan Villiers,

and a Lire photographer-reporter team. Built
as a reproduction of the first Mayflower—with-

out, however, copying “one of the main beams

in the midships bowed and cracked”’ that Governor Bradford noted—the Mayflower makes a
bow to modernity by carrying radio and radar.
When she sailed April 20, Captain Villiers

had hoped to make port by late May, but last

“LIFE'’ TEAM, Photographer Gordon Tenney (left)
and Maitland Edey, check their pictures aboard ship.

CROWDS

ASSEMBLE

ON

THE WATERFRONT

week the crew seemed to have need of their
Elizabethan sailing orders to “‘preserve your
victuals.’ A radio message said she had altered
course southward to pick up trade winds and

could

AT PLYMOUTH,

not

ENGLAND,

reach

Plymouth

SCENE

before mid-June.

OF ORIGINAL SAILING, TO WATCH

ook,

sie

ee xe

CSS
ae

CAPTAIN AND
and Plymouth’s

THE “MAYFLOWER”

GUEST, Villiers in Pilgrim garb
Lord Mayor Oats, stand on deck.

WAITING

FOR FAVORABLE WIND

�wee)
ee

Mayflower II, an exact replica of the original ship
. Massachusetts,

is shown.

as

2»

JUNE 9, 1957

which

brought

it approaches

its

the

Cape

Cod

first

Englich

colonists

te

destination.

Mayflower Bobs in Triumph
Off Coast of Provincetown
Replica of Pilgrim Ship
Expected Tomorrow;
Saluted at Sea

assembled

at

tary air and sea craft saluted

her.

On

The
@cross

Last

last
the

Leg

leg
se¢a

of Journey

of the journey
from Plymouth,

high

squalls,

and

speed

Ault

“This

visit

sent

vegetables

welcome
Crews

© Nantucket!

Lightship as civilian and mili-

and

cheer-

USS
Ault, came over,
presenting
magnificent
sight, steaming
past

lantic swells about 200 miles
of

stations

gifts of fruit and wines.
“Before
Italians out of sight,
four
U.
§.
destroyers,
led
by

Provincetown, June 8 (INS)
-—The Mayflower II bobbed in
triumph today on the Atsoutheast

at

ing loudly,
Slowing down
ahead,
both cruisers dropped
boats with

of

in

strong

boats

which

rain

with

fruit

were

very

Exchange

Cheers

aircraft

carrier

morning

giant

came

stirring

|\Royal
(British
Navy)
and
|Daring
class
destroyers.
jsteamed
closely
by
while
\lighted,

crews

exchanged

Ark

two
All|
de-|

cheers

jand helicopters whirled overhead
and all around.”
The
Mayflower
had
heen
rejported doing seven knots as she

Eng., to Plymouth, Mass., found
the replica of the ship in which
into
the
Transatlantic
the
Pilgrim
fathers
sailed
the |headed
steamship
lanes,
but
latest recenter of attention in the waters
|ports indicated she had lost some
off the American coast,
Comdr. Alan Villiers, the © lit- j}of the windy punch.
tle galleon’s skipper, who hopes|}
The British-built galleon, is exto arrive at Provincetown Mon-||pected to arrive in Provincetown

day

afternoon,

radioed:

|Monday

afternoon. This would

as-|

“Been
exceptional week
with)|sure her arrival either Tuesday}
ship greeted by four vessels of||or Wednesday
at Plymouth,
the
nation
emers.
not
34].| |
Pil
the; original

Oi

ot

‘.
offer
salutes
“Near
Bermuda,

erlcrine ys
noises

pe

landing

ue dinatiag
:

Italian

aes anaes Sache
Ht

oh

place

jsesenne
i re
DA
cruis- | |
ss dint eee
ae

coms

lon crewmen

|

of

“urbe

Relaxed
elaxed

ak eas

restrictions

of the Mayflower

IL}

a
|
was announced tonight following |
a conference between Walter Has:|

[kell,
\for

director

Plymouth's

of

relations|

press

Mayflower

committee,
lception
\Lowe of London, one
el’s owners

II

re-

John
and
of the ves-

Haskell said Lowe has arranged

a general

press

conference

shortly

lafter the vessel's expected arrival |

|
ihere, Monday or Tuesday.
| Haskell said taking part in the}
will be Lowe, |
conference
inews
i Warwick Charleton of London, an-|
the
lother of the ship’s owners;
Comadr.
skipper,
\Mayflower’s
Alan Villiers; and Joe Meany of |
Waltham, the vessel's American |
cabin

boy,

@ |
j

�JUNE 13, 1957.

Mayflower II ‘Sailed Fine,
Skipper

Sa

S

After

Young

Cracked Boom Only Trouble in 5000-Mile, 53-Day

V

Oo

;

Pe As reporters boarded, Charlton

a

said ‘‘we have passed
quarantine, agriculture customs, and im-|
migration, and now we hope we
can pass with the press.”
“Don’t get the idea we are trying to hold back anything about

e

this wonderful

Yankee

On Pilgrim Ship | .,i"3429
cy today. The only
problem secre.
was
syidencs,of

| that so many Provincetown zesi| dents clambered aboard there was
jreal danger of being crowded over-

| board.

| Mrs. Villiers, wife of the skip} per who flew from England, was
the first person to board the vessel after the yellow quarantine
flag was hauled down from the

foremast signifying it had a clean

Provincetown, June 12 (AP)

Comdr.

Alan

bill of health.
Mrs. Villiers, whose husband re-|.
fused to let her sail across on the
voyage, hopes to become the first
woman to sail any distance on the
Mayflower I by making the crossing to Plymouth tomorrow.
Seasick Two Days
Joseph Meany, Jr., the 17-yearold
cabin
boy
from
Waltham,

Vil-).

liers, who has spent most of
‘his 54 years on the wind-s
highway, brought Mayflower
II to port today after sailing |”

the

replica

of

the

he said.

er their arrival].

Journey; Signing of Compact Re-enacted;. Ship
Heads
for
Plymouth
| Today
/—-Robust

voyage,”

There had been reports that the
crewmen had been warned against
talking to newsmen for a year aft-

historic

Pilgrim bark over 5000 miles
‘of the western ocean in 53
days.

reached

Boom Repaired
Viellers told reporters that the
only trouble experienced during
the voyage was a cracked boom.

‘It occurred during a storm about

three weeks ago. The boom was
lowered to the deck and repaired.
Altogether,
Villiers
said,
the
Mayflower II ‘‘sailed fine with a
fair wind.”
Coast Guatd Photo via UP Telephoto)
Urgency forced him to take a
(
tow line for the last short leg of
Joseph M. Meany, 17, of Waltham, the only American aboard |
the voyage and the soul of the
the Mayflower Il, displays the Mayflower Compact inscribed on
famed
master
of windjammers
the bulkhetad in main cabin of the ship in Provincetown Harbor.
must have been sorely tried,
Newsmen Board Ship
The signing of the historim May-|~
Business Transacted
~| flower are notoriously poor at
flower
compact
was
re-enacted
Then health, immigration and |working to windward, which she

over the

rail as soon

as

our boat came
alongside to receive a letter mailed from his girl
friend,
Ann
Barry,
16-year-old
' Waltham: High School junior,
!
Meany hopes to greet his mother and his girl friend when the
Mayflower II arrives in Plymouth,
“I was only seasick the first
two

days,

crossing

the Bay

of Bis-

cay,’ Meany said.
Most of the
crewmen agreed the little vessel

||42d @. bouncy
ae
: motion. that made
S!¢ep difficult in story weather.

four hours after the arrival to customs officers boarded her and|Would have been compelled to do
signify the ‘common heritage”’ of transacted the business required |under prevailing conditions.
the British and American people. when a foreign vessel enters anThe signing of the Mayflower
There was one American, 17-year-|other country’s domain.
jcompact highlighted today S$ acold Joseph Meany Jr.,of Wal-|
Later, a local reception com| tivities aboard anes
ee
es
made

and

trip/Mittee took over.

the

signed

compact with the British crew.

the

| company

Newsmen, barred at first from
the ship, swarmed aboard for the
signing and found the crew willjing to talk, though they were re|ported to have been pledged to
silence about the trip so the story
could be sold.
Meany said ‘I was seasick for
two days’’ at the start and was

glad

friend.

to .get

home

to

his.

All 22 members

j

were garbed

in Pilgrim | —

costumes upon arrival.
Although the Pilgrims logged
only about 3000 miles in 66 days, |
eontrasted
with
Mayflower
II's
5000 in 53, the figures do not lend
themselves
to comparison
as a}

test of speed.

Went

far

| original

of the ship's! Pilgrims

South

n

compact,

Nov.

ore

orld.

U,

oon

16: ta

majority

oe

an

ie

rule

Crew Shows Willingness
'To Talk to Newsmen

Provincetown, June 12 (#)—The
of the Mayflower IE said
today that his craft experienced
no serious difficulty in
its 53day, 5000-mile crossing of the Atlantic.
In a joint interview aboard the
Mayflower,
Capt.
Alan
Villiers
told
writers
who
clambered

| skipper

Vielliers, a windship veteran of
girl- the grain races from Australia |
to England, after departing Plym- |

| nuth, England, took his vessel far |
Fiying Home
Second ship’s cook Dick Brensouth to pick up the trade winds,
nan of London,. said ‘‘it was a} on which he rode to the West Ingood voyage—but I’m planning to, dies. Then he came up the coast aboard that the only trouble ex-}
fly back to England.”
on
the
northerly
flowing
Gulf perienced was a cracked boom.
Can’t be Close-Hauled
Tonight Mayflower swung to a Stream.
His strategy paid
big
Because the Mayflower’s sails
mooring buoy in Provincetown
dividends.
be
close-hauled
like
a
Harbor, where the original rested
The Pilgrims worked and wor- cannot
modern sailing ship,. Villiers said
after her long and wearing voyried
their way
almost
directly
he could not go closer than about
age of 66 days back in 1620.
across the Atlantic. Probably they
Villiers said he would leave at knew little or nothing about the 75 degrees to the wind. This made
it necessary to make long zig-zag
5.30 a. m. tomorrow for Plymouth,
trades and the Gulf Stream.
tacks against a head wind.
24 miles across Cape Cod Bay.
Mayflower
IL
is
something
of
an
The Mayflower’s
cook, Walter
He said he would sake a tow if
ugly
duckling
and
she
appeared
a
he can’t sail and hopes to arrive
very
unhappy
one
when
‘she
arGodfrey,
said
he
had
no fresh|
at 1 p. m. when the tide will be
rived here, bobbing and plunging food
after
the
first
four
days
high.
at the end of the Coast Guard tug since the vessel carried no reA fleet of about 50 yachts and
Yankton’s towing hawser.
frigeration.
other craft greeted the 180-ton,
Might Still be at Sea
The
newsmen
were
‘invited
92-foot bark
at the harbor enHad she not taken the tow, she aboard
by
Warwick
Charlton,|trance—-only a few of the hardier
might still be facing days at sea originator
of the’ project, after}
braving” the rough seas and 40knot wind outside. Thousands of | waiting a favorable slant of wind. doubt had been expressed earlier
Square rigged craft such as May- that anyone other than officials
spectators lined the shore.
L
would get aboard.
|

“

who

boy

7, er

Mass.,

a cabin

ehR

as

bie

tham,

�1437

U.S. Coast Guard

INCONGRUOUS WELCOMERS meet the Pilgrim
vessel as she nears the land. Here the square-rigged

Navy

training ship Eagle and a sleek

blimp fall in to form an escort for Mayflower.

‘

‘

.

oe

'

3

ee

epee

mncnensiestrs

emer

OE

'

LIKE

THEIR

FOREFATHERS

BACK

IN THE

WINDJAMMER

DAYS,

i

“MAYFLOWER’S”

i

%

SAILORS

HANG

INDECOROUSLY

OVER

THE

YARD

TO

ADJUST

SHEARER

THE

SPRITSAIL

�SO

eo

})91

ateronipekoun

Naval Reviews — Three Centuries Apart

Unite

ress

Telephotos)

Some 600 land miles and three centuries in time separated two news
ke
saya
cere ignite
on
the Atlantic Coast. yesterday. In Provincetown, the Mayflower II (top photo) rides snugly at her
huoy in the harbor with the Coast Guard tug Yankton alongside, The Pilgrim monument stands in

the left background beyond
(lower

right)

Canberra.

Ship

reviews

the

the village. In bottom

International

in background

Naval

picture,

Review

at

Defense

Norfolk,

Secretary

Va.

from

is the USS Northampton. Next to Wilson
commander of the Atlantic Fleet.

Charles

the

is Adm,

deck

E.

of

Wilson

the

USS

Jerauld Wright,

�LYING

AT ANCHOR

IN PLYMOUTH

HAR BOR “MAYFLO WER"
i

:

me

IS CENTER

gec

OF ADMIRING

FLEET OF SMALL CRAFT. PLYMOUTH

ROCK LIES ON SHORE UNDER

COLONNADE

�7
,
of spectators
line
the harbor at Plymouth

approaches

her

mooring

basin

off

historie

yesterday to greet the Mayflower

Plymouth

5000} mile, 54-day

voyage

Rock,

shown

re-enacting

in background.

the

Piyeath’S

historic

trip

-owrlership

nug Haven
For Seafarers Again

of

and

Wirephoio)

Press

(Associated

II, replica of the original Pilgrim ship, as she

The
the

Mayflower’s

Pilgrims

become

in

arrival

marked

the

end

of

a

1620.

a perma;

nent exhibit at a reproduced
grim village.

Pil

Two minor mishaps occurred op
the run from Provincetown.

\

Pilgrims of Mayflower II Land On Rock in 1620
Style, Cheered by 50,000, Flotillas of Yachts

A Coast Guard vessel towing
Mayflower became unmanageable
and barged alongside.
It became}
necessary
to cast off,
leaving
Mayflower.
temporarily
unmanageable.
Again at Plymouth Harbor entrance, a Coast Guard craft
assigned to tow her to a mooring
briefly fouled Mayflower’s bow‘ sprit with her signal mast.

Plymouth,
June
13
(P)—MayThen he and his company nurs
flower
II,
reproduction
of fhe| ried to hot baths, first in nearly|’

pbark

in which

the Pilgrims

ar-| ‘two months, and fresh food, first

rived here in 1620, was snug in:
port tonight, her ship’s company|
of 33 enjoying the comforts and
graces of life ashore for the first
time
since
she
left Plymouth,
Eng., 54 days ago.
|
She sailed 24 miles across Cape
here Bay today after remaining’
there
last night.
The
original
Mayflower also called at Prov-

incetown

before

dropping

at Plymouth,
Instead of Indians,

as

anchor
in

1620,

Mayflower II was greeted by thou-

sands

yachts

of

visitors

and

other

and

flotillas

small

craft

of

as

Haskell,

first four days out.
Villiers described

Mayflower

“MAY 26, 1957

as

“a good, strong, sturdy ship,’’ but

when
home

asked if he preferred to go}
on an ocean liner, he re

plied:
“You bet.”
He added, however,

‘I

am

in|

no hurry to go back.”
The captain’s sentiments did not
jibe with
those
of Joseph
M,
Meany, Jr., 17, only American in
the crew who shipped as cabin

relations,

estimated

that

close to historic Plymouth Rock.

veyed

from

British

to American

and®prints that will be apterial
pearing for the first time in
,

rint,

promising

to

make

this

a

“Mayflower Days and Ways, |souvenir edition and collector’s
official] publication of the May! item.
“Mayflower Days and Ways”!
flower Reception Committee of
aus
Plymouth, will be released for|;. Gaited by E. B. Garside,
the

on

sale

30th

thor

of

‘‘Man

From

Brazil’””

and

transand
Red,”
| throughout a ten-state Wee: Pub- “Cranberry
llished by the Memorial Press| 1.14. of “Gods, Graves and Scholof
Plymouth,
it
is
a
32-|
»
Tt is
anticipated — that
:

“T’d like to do it again; it was
| wonderful.”’
50,000 persons along the coast witPlans call for Mayflower’s denessed Mayflower’s arrival.
parture for New York in about
Church bells pealed. Strains of two weeks with substantially the
the Star Spangled Banner and the same crew.
A few must start for
British national anthem
carried home earlier.
out across the water to MayflowMayflower was towed up the]:
er’s mooring.
A minister offered difficult, winding harbor channel] '
a prayer and a hymn was sung.
by a 64-foot Coast Guard
boat.
Comdr. Allan Villiers, Mayflow:
Presumably she will require the
er’s veteran
windjammer
cap- Same assistance when she leaves.
tain, and other members of his
After a summer as a tourist atcrew were introduced. on a plat. traction
in New.
York,
she
is
form flanked by reviewing stands,
scheduled to return and be conpress

ship
Mayflower
I.
Extensive
research has uncovered text ma-

| MAYFLOWER VISIT
SOUVENIR EDITION

newsstand

boy.
After being greeted with a hug
director — of and kiss by his mother he said:

‘airplanes and copters soared over‘head. A cannon salute was fired.

Walter

in almost as long.
Mayflower has no refrigeration
and fresh food lasted only ‘the

lias

ee

oe Mi

PRs
Hat ee

Throngs

:

9}

people will visit
page tabloid size special edition) (15:6 49 500,000
during the ship’s 12-

od weakly jday say in Sure
156 year r,
newspape

jof

the

| Colcny
Old

—

J
3
mouth area,
and Ways
Days
“Mayflower
lis a collection of pictures and
text of the Plymouth colony with
|sections devoted to the clothing,
/ eating and living habits of the

‘ settlers. A section is devoted to
| the building and sailing of the

Plymouth

‘

�|

“WORTHINGTON

.

‘The Worthington School Com:

mittee
ment

announces

of

Leroy

the

H.

Worthington, June 13 — Hampshire District Fellowship of Congregational
- Christian
Women
met in the First Congregational

appoint:

Rida

as

cus.

todian of the Russell H. Conwell.

.

School effective July 1. Mr. Rida!
will fill the vacancy made by the
" retirement of Theodore A. Tatro,|

Church

first

grade

in

September |

should register them with Princi-|
_ pal Norman R,. Hallowell at the)
school no later than May 24,
|

__ The volunteer fire department

‘is making plans for a scrap paper
‘drive later this month at a tim
tg be announced.
|
_¢/The Misses Eva and Mabel Moynihan and their brother, Harold’
Moynihan of Holyoke have purchased the Sullivan cottage on
Witt Rd. and are making renovations, ——~—__I
The spring meeting of the Highland Club, with
members. from”
Chesterfield, Cummington, Goshen, Plainfield and Worthington,
=

Dwight

president
her

&gt;

of

|

halters will be demonstrated. This

will

include

showmanship,
trail rides.
Acting

jard

indoor

judging,

Supt.

extends

a

J.

fitting

Walter

cordial

|

meeting

program

equitation

|shop

and

at

the

and

Anne

‘T.

|

Rich-

Book-

ae

ee
tte
ee

class

Funeral

Home

a

oe

The sympathy of the commun-)
ity is eXtended to Mrs. Frederick
J. Hillman inthe loss of her husband late Friday evening at their|
home
“Hillmanor’ on Old
Post}
Rd. . Funeral services were held
Monday at the Dickinson-Streeter

in Springfield. &lt;

Town

Hall

exer-

tonight.

are

staying

with

who

is spending

the

week

Teachers

College.

leaving for

Tex-

Fire Fighters’

Cummington Pair
Injured in Crash

-

Third in Muster:

Worthington,
June 14 — Two
women
suffered
painful
injury

Worthington, July 14—Worthing-|

this -afternoon when their car
went out of control and struck. a

ore

near

and

the

junction

of

Crosby

and

Old North Rds.

Mrs.

Dora

Ethel Clough,

mington,

the

when

were

said.

returning

Health

Crosby,

Dr.

who

from
driv-

Leighton

A.

Kneller

of,.

Judith J. Dunlevy, daughter of
(Mr. and Mrs. Raymond K. DunJevy, will be graduated from
Pittsfield High School on Sunday.
A buffet supper will be served

st
the
Worthington
Golf
Club
Saturday at 7, for which reserva-.

will

are requested.
wil] follow. The

play

Dalton

Sunday.

Robert

T.

St. Luke's

Roy

W.

Scotia.
Mr.

kins

and

opened

is a patient

have

returned

Mrs.

Mrs.

their

on

.-—_..

camera

and

Dalton

Hospital.

McCann

a

Entertain-.
local club

at

Bartlett

Kronenberger
from»

and

William

trip

to

Nova

Allerton

Honor

home

in

Paul

Tomp-

have

Fairman

Rd. for the summer. Mrs. David
(Pardee and two children of New
Canaan, Conn., are with them
this week. Mr. and Mrs. Tompkins’ son, Paul S., who was graduated from Berkshire School in
Sheffield on June 1, leaves tomorrow

for

Silver

Springs,

Md.,

avhere he will be enrolled in Bullis School for the summer.
Guy

F.

Bartlett of The

Spruces

‘thas received word of the birth of
his 23d- grandchild, a_ son, : SteCharles

|

Center

was

Mosher

Bartlett.

was

well

represented

Hilltown Firemen’s

Miss

Worthington treated the women
at the scene and had them taken
in the Huntington
Lions
Club
ambulance to Cooley Dickinson
Hospital. The car was demolfished.

tions
ment

ton

both of West Cum-

Worthington
Mrs,

Dingle,

ing, lost control of the car, police

Mrs.

will meet Wednesday
at
7:30
p.m, at the fire station under the
direction of Hubbell
Allen
of
Plainfield.
Commander and Mrs.
Harold!
F. MacHugh have arrived
here!
from Sebring, Fla., for the season.”

graduation

WORTHINGTON,

phen Broeks, born today in Oyster Bay, Long Island, to Mr. and

Dunphy

aid

on

as, is spending some time with
Mr, and Mrs. Harry W. Mollison.

mittee will be
the
Worthington
delegate to
the
Lenox
School
'Committee Conference to be held!
son May 30, 31 and June 1. ser |
re
The
School
Committee
an}
nounces
that children who will
be six years old by Dec. 31 may
enter first
grade in September
without taking any entrance test. |

first

in the

last fall before

;

chairman of the local school com-)

Cross

emphasis

Arlin T. Cole; formerly of Highland St., who sold his farm there

Northampton,
will
speak
on
“Comics, TV and Reading.”
gf Mrs.
C.
Raymond.
Magargal,

Red

School

field State

| School
in
Williamsburg
on
| Wednesday at 8 p.m. Lawrence{
'E. Wikander of Forbes Library,

The

new

in Chicago.
Miss Caroline Bartlett, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George H.
Bartlett, is at home for the summer from her studies at West-

and

invitation

Hampshire

the

“A

Huntington

man,

to the people of Worthington
to |
attenda book fair sponsored by
the
Haydenville - Williamsburg |

| PTA

Reading,

Massachusetts

Mrs. Charles E. Burger at Hillmanor
in the absence of their
daughter, Mrs. Frederick J. Hill-)

/-The
Mountain
Rangers
4H |
Horse Club will meet with
Mrs.|
Howard Beebe Thursday evening
at 7:30 in the Russell H. Conwell
School. The making
of
Yrope
last

of

the

dent, Mrs, A. Leland Smith; vicepresident,
Mrs. Clarence A. G.
Pease;
secretary,
Mrs.
Harlan
Creelman,
and
treasurer,
Mrs.|
Lewis Zarr.
E
Mr. and Mrs. A. B. McDaniels

| WORTHINGTON

The summer

of

Officers recently installed by
the Friendly Guild are:
Presi-

ey.

the

residents

to Judith Magargal, Bonnie Bartlett,
Carol
Hathaway,
Daniel
Dunlevy,
Henry
Bartlett,
Alan
Moran,
Lawrence
Mason,
and
John. Stevens at the Russell H.
cises

were guests of Mrs. Fairman’s’
brother and sister-in-law.

be

Dwinnell

subject

Conwell

home from a three-week:
Dallas, Texas where they

will

100

spiritual life,”
School Superintendent’ J. Walter Richard presented diplomas

Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm I. Fairman of Huntington Rd. have re-

j wntil fall.

about

Fellowship
of
CongregationalChristian Women who chose for

be held in Chesterfield on May

turned
trip to

with

of women’s
groups
and church}
Jeaders in attendance, Following
the
morning
service
seminars
were
led
by Mrs.
Osmond
J.
Billings of South. Amherst, Mrs.
Harold Grousbeck of First Congregational Church ih Northampton, Mrs.
Theodore
Parsons
of
Southampton,
Mrs.
Charles
E,}
Brooks of Goshen, and Mrs. Ernest
Paluca
of
Southampton.
Main
address
was
by
Mrs.

Parents of children who will en-|

ter

~—— WORTHINGTON

eee 19RD

in

Cummington.

Under

at

Muster

the direction

the)

today)

of Chief C.|

|

Kenneth
Osgood,
they
gained
‘third place in the oil fire contest,
and first place
jn
the portable
_pumping contest# The parade was
marshaled by the future fire department
of Worthington,
comprised of Gerald Bartlett, Wells
W. Margargal 2d, and Mark Hallowell with their homemade firefighting aerate)
Later in the pr6tfvam, this Tom
Thumb department with their gi-

ant

garbage

can,

mounted

on

aj-

baby carriage chassis, equipped
with a hand pump, put on a firefighting
demonstration
in
front
of the grandstand to the delight
of the crowd,
While most of the department
)Was participating in the muster
| contest, Lawrence C. Mason and

|Carl
as

S. Joslyn volunteered

a home

to act

guard.

‘Church Fair Nets
Fund Over $1000.

Worthington,
July 14 — Even|!though ‘early
morning
showers
and threatening clouds drove the
annual church fair from the vil-|}.
lage common
into the cramped
guarters of Town Hall Saturday,

the Women’s

sponsors

most

of

Behevolent

the

successful

fair,

fair

Society,

reported the

in

its

his-

tory.
Mrs. Leroy H. Rida, president,
announced net proceeds were in
excess of $1000, which will be applied to the parsonage
building
fund. A luncheon was served in
‘the school cafeteria to 150.
At the close of the fair, names
were
drawn
for the
doll
and
wardrot?,
and
the winner was
Donna Sears, An imported sports
isweater was won by Cecil Gaston,

|

�lt Leben fF A

Pa CURATION

NW

fe

|Connecticut River Journ

ee
Award Presented

|

To Miss Donovan

Worthington,

Charlene

June

Donovan,

19

—

daughter

Miss

of”

Mr. and Mr. John Donovan, Sr.,’
of Ireland
St., was
given
the
John and Ellen Ryan Dwyer Memorial Fund award at the Cooley
Dickinson
Hospital
graduation
exercises. This award is given to:
the
junior
student
of
nursing

“who has displayed the compas-.
sion, the understanding and the
nursing skills necessary in caring

for

the

tionally

ill;

physically

and

outstanding

ship,

growth

loyalty
in

who

qualities

her

and

and

has
of

emo-

shown”

leader-

promise

of

profession.”

/ Mrs. Ernest W. Robinson, act-ing superintenderit of the Con-

gregational
Sunday
school
announces ‘that the postponed Children’s Day program will be presented on Sunday at the 11a. m,
‘lservice. The program will be rehearsed Saturday at 2 p. m. and,
-|all the children are requested tabe at the church at that time.
George Bergin is at the Albany
Veteran’s Hospital where he will
undergo a knee operation.
Miss
Charlotte
E.
Hathaway

will graduate

from

Northampton

High School Friday evening and
will enter Lowell State Teachers:
College in September.
The funeral service for Mrs,
May Cranson of Conway, widow

of William

J. Cranson,

was

held

today in Shelburne Falls... Mrs.
Cranson, who was the mother of
Mrs. Merwin F. Packard of this
town,
passed
away
early Monday at the Ashfield Nursing Home
where
she had been
a patient
since last fall.
Leslie G. Hickling is at home

from

month
Brook

his work

in Venzuela

for a

with his family at Kinne
Farm. His daughter, Jill,

\will return with him to spend the
jmonth of August.

eons
WORTHINGTON
Worthington,
June
27--Miss
Mary Carney, retiring principal
of Brookings
Scnool ia Springfield, was honored by a group of
friends at a dinner party at the
Worthington Golf Club, Miss Carney was presented a bracelet and
all guests had corsages of summer flowers made by Miss Mari-

ay Pere

err

os

##Mr. and Mrs. H. Franklin Bartlett are the parents of a daughter|
born
late
Tuesday . at
Cooley)
Dickinson
Hospital.
She
is the
24th grandchild of ‘Guy F. Bartlett of The Spruces. Her maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and}
Mrs, Preston Sage of Manchesier, |)
‘|Connecticut,
and
her
maternal
great-grandparents are Rev. and
Mrs.
Edward
H,
Newcomb
of
Buffington Hill Road...»

The

Little League

basketball

‘lteam will play a Plainfield team
here Friday at 6 on the field back
‘lof the Russell H. Conwell School.

;

- AUGUST 11, 1957_

Worthington,

held

carry

past

the

on the same

36

town

as

stage

of Salk

for

years,

former.

of

Dr.

Nursing

and

September.

* Word

will

has been

received

from

1926

Mr,

inj}

and

Mrs.

William

leave
Saturday
Pittsfield Airport
son, Colo., where

the summer
sister.

P. Barton

will!

morning
from
to fly to Hudshe will spend

with her mother

and

Miss Joan Osgood will be maid

of honor
for her cousin,
Miss
Marjorie
Parsons
for her wedding on Saturday to Harry Mc‘Neil
in
St.
John’s
Episcopal

|Church in Massena, New York.
Mr. and Mr. C. Kenneth Osgood,
the Misses Norma and Mary Lou
Osgood

and

Judith

in

he

be

re.

Magargal,

Mr. and Mrs. James J. Hoey,
and Howard Pease will also attend the wedding,

this year’s Interstate Ex.
program, —~——____-/
jg and Mrs, J. G, Dunn
back from Long Beach,

and Mrs.
d

Francis

Blodgett

Gwendolyn,

have

of

uessts

heen

Mrs. Frank Bates on Sat il
Rd. Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Bates
and two children, who have also

been visiting there, have returned
to their home in Cazenovia, N, Y,.
Mrs.
Arthur
Ducharme,
Sr.,
accompanied
by
her son-in-law
and
daughter,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Carver
of Dalton,
are
spending several days at Reho-|

—

Beach, Del. and Ocean City,|

Mrs,

Peter

Tuttle

judged

the

showmanship contest of the 4-H
Mountain Rangers this week and
the
Misses
Sandra
Sena,
Ann
Rida,
and
Linda
Sarafin
took

a|

{4daughter, Priscilla,
;
Mrs.
A. Leland Smith,
president of the Friendship Guild, announces
that the guild will assume
full expense
for a week
at the Northfield Conference on
Christian World Missions for the
Misses
Joan Osgood and Charlotte Hathaway
from July 1 to
July 8. This conference will attraet
delegates
from
co-operating denominations
all over the
country.
Daniel Dunlevy, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond K. Dunlevy and
|R. Allen Moran, son of Mr. and
Mrs, Raph A. Moran, left Pittsfield early Monday
with
Scout
Troop 2 of First Baptist Church
for a week
long,
50-mile
hike
over
the Taconic
Skyline Trail
‘te Mount Greylock and onto the
| Appalachian Trail back to Pitts-

‘field.

that

;and
g daughter,
Springfiel

of the

until 1931,

m,

Cal, and are living in New London, Conn,
where
Lt. Dunn
is
stationéd at the submarine
base,
ae i
eapent
visitors here
Co
y
Mr,
Dunn’ S parents at the

death of Effie Scott Burckes, 73,
in Reading Center, New York on
June 12. Born in this town, she
was the daughter of Ransom and
Ellen
Kelley
Scott.
The
KellyScott
- Burekes’
homestead
was
one of the first places settled in
this town
and is the farm
on
West
St.
presently
owned
by
Ernest Rackham. She leaves her
husband,
Rev.
James
H.
Burckes, who
served
as. pastor of
the First Congregational Church

here

réquested

there in
change
Lieut.
Jr. are

Chris-|,

enter

Pp.

of Kinne
Brook
Farm
are
in
Grand Traverse County, Michigan
this week
as guests of 4-H’ers

for;

topher in Hinsdale.
Miss Judith Dunlevy who graduated from Pittsfield Iligh School |
this month,
has been
accepted
at the Springfield Hospital School

of

8

noons at the Health Center,
YMiss
Priscilla
A, Torrey of
Old Post Rd. and James Hickling

A. Kneller reports |
now
a sufficient,

office

at

placed,
Dr. Leighton
A.
Kneller
resumed office hours Friday after-

this town so that anyone desiring
it has only to contact him. He
also announces -that beginning on
July 5, his office at the Health
Center will be closed Friday afternoons to enable him to serve

‘\the

Wednesday

has

the

polio, vaccine

‘The

gin, a director for the past seven
years and an original corporator,

service

has

consecutive

Dr. Leighton
that there
is

supply

he

—

town hall, Dr. Lawrence N. Dur-

and there will

continue to be a 7.30 a. m. mail
out of town as there has been
for
over
90 years.
Henry
H.
Snyder
will carry
it and
also
to

|

27

annual meeting of the Worthington Health Association will be

Worthington,
June
26 — The
Post Office Department has rescinded the order for a proposed
change
in mail service in and

out of Worthington

July

first,

second,

and

respectively.

# Mrs.

H, Ward

third

places,

Se,

Arnold has sold

her home in Christian Hollow to
Mr.
and Mrs,
John
Horton
of
Pittsfield who will take possession
in
ay
i late in August.

By CAL CAMERON

Marlow, N. H., Aug, 10 — The
Connecticut River, New England's

longest, touches four of the six
states in its 350-mile journey.
In
early times it was
a_ highway,
provider of food and source of
power.
Today New England powjer plants utilize almost its entire
length.
From where the. light on Say‘brook Point marks
its southern

|extremity

Even
the Connecticut
sloop-ofwar Defiance was built in Wethersfield in 1741.
It was
here the West Indian
trade originated
and
for years

brought

Whaling

|well

as

&lt;a

mescial

WORTHINGTON
Worthington,
Yr

.

Seow

eo teapot

Aug.

Worthington

Library

sence

president

of

the

}

Ye

9 bi:

if.

Corp.

held

and

vice-

president, the clerk Mrs. Larry
W. Mollison presided until Mrs.
Barry L. Bates was elected president pro tem. Announcement was
made
of the gift by Walter L.
Stevens
of Northampton
to the
local library of his personal library which he has had packed
and delivered here. Other large
collections of books given during
'‘|the past year were acknowledged

,jfrom

Mrs.

William

L.

the

to New

were

also

Neptune,

England.
built.

the

as

first

navigation

above

Hart-

see

nothing

on

it larger’ than

Cowles

of

Amherst and from Mr. and Mrs.
Roy W. McCann of town. All are
being
processed
for
circulation
Which will be delayed until additional ‘shelving is provided. Officers were
elected as follows:
| president, Mrs. DeWitt C. Markham; vice-president, Mrs, Harry
L, Bates; clerk, Mrs. Harry W.
Mollison;
treasurer,
Arthur.
G.
Capen; auditor, Mrs. George E.
"!Torrey; executive committee for
three years, Mrs. Daniel R. Porter and Miss Marian L. Bartlett;
executive committee for one year,
Carl S. Joslyn, Mrs. L. N. Durgin and Mrs.
Robert J. Lucey
were proposed for membership,

a

motorboat.
Yet until 1844, when the railroad was built, the river was the
highway of the valley.
Its lower
section,
the
highway
of
commerce;
while
from
Springfield
north, it served both settlers and}
their enemies, who came down in)
the days of the French and Indian
War to raid and pillage.
A most vivid imagination is required to picture the waterfront of
each little town on the lower 50
miles of the river a veritable for-

est of masts, with incoming boats

offering their imported wares for
sale
at dockside,
while
others

horses,

cattle,

brick

and

so in demand in the West
Yet that is what you would

have found had you journeyed up
the river before the Civil War.

ifs annual meeting and election
of officers Thursday evening with
11 members
present. In the ab-

|

ships

ford, at one time
the Ledyard
steamed as far north as Bellows
Falls.
Driving up 5A you have
many views of the great river, but

onions,
Indies.

ee

riches

|American
vessel to circumnavigate the globe.
Although today there is no com-

loaded
no

and on up to Hartford,

|the small towns show little to remind you of the busy valley that
ithis was from before the Revolution to the close of thee Civil War.
Once Valley Highway
Although East Haddam
seems
to have been the largest shipbuilding
center,
practically
all the
towns
were
turning
out
every
conceivable type of sailing craft.

saciid
ft

ey

�ey

ae

THURSDAY, APRIL 25, 1957.

Goshen Church

GOSHEN—Reminiscent of éolonial days is the high pulpit includeed in the recent restoration program at the Goshen Congregational
Church. ‘Said to be one of the three remaining high pulpits in New England, it has been utilized in the last-half century only on special
occasions. Now Rev. Dr. John A. Shaw. pastor, will preach each Sunday from. “on high,” instead of from the low pulpit, at left, now
used by the young people's Pilgrim Fellowship. At right are chairs for the 10-member choir.
By

HARRIET

GOSHEN

lovers

—

DRESSER

Cormoisseurs

of the colonial

and

period who

seek
to restore
the furnishings
of old buildings. to their former
beauty will take pleasure,
it is
believed, in the restoration of the
interior of the Goshen Congregational Chureh recently completed.
The
first :service
after the re-

decoration

was - the

Maundy

ate the new
ary.

beauty of the sanctu-

Thursday
communion ~- service.
Sunday the Easter service, with
its many flowering spring plants
in’ the church, served to accentu-

|tracting one’ bit from the grace-|
ful austerity which is a_ salient
characteristic of the architecture
of the colonial churches.
The
white
paint
reveals
the
lovely paneling and calls attention
to the
baiconies
so
the

curved

sweep

is

more-

evident.

Experts have said-that the curve
of the gallery indicates.a master
craftsman.
The new. color.
scheme is, authentic, and found in most of the
early
New
England
churches.
Without
a
doubt
Goshen
an- _. The
church,
dating back
cestors would recognize it now as colonial days, was moved to
their.
church,
for which ~ they present location a year after i
made so many sacrifices, The in- roof was blown off by a torna
terior years-ago must have had in 1834. In 1859 it was paintéd inthis same. friendly
appearance, side
and
out,
and
the
color
else why did- the community life, scheme ‘with the artificial. wood
apart from the religious, center graining adopted; Since then .un-

Before the recent improvement,
the woodwork,
pews
and pulpit
were a drab color, finished- with
varnish over an artificial graining much in vogue
in the las
century.. This graining was said’ in the church building itself?
to have been done by an expert
For
this
they
built the old
+ in this artificial art but, none the churches with balconies, that all
less, since the color of the -walls aftairs of the town which brought
was a tint of this drab or “dirt” all citizens together at one time,
color, as it was called, the dver- might be conducted. under one
all effect was to make ‘the Jarge roof. For 51 years
town
meetchurch seem
even larger,
and ings.
were held
in the Goshen
tend to dwarf any congregation Church,
which could be furnished by the
The wine velvet hanging back
present population of the town.
of the pulpit softens
the lines,
Now
‘the. ceiling. is white, the the new chandelier with its gold
pews and high pulpit are white, topped candles, and the gilt overtoo, but with a mahogany trim. head
balcony
lights add to its
The walls are a warm’ gray with beauty,
A
decided
new~ cona pink tinge which is intensified venience
are
the
new
hymn
in the rays of the sun on it, so racks, two on each pew, made

that it takes a glow and adds to by some
the

friendly

aspect

‘without

de-

A
glassedin niche. for
the|
three old communion
sets. has
been inset between. the. doors .as
one enters the church, Two sets
are of pewter and gne of. silver,
and they have the large cup that
was. passed from one to another
in the olden times when
germs
were not feared. This cupboard
was given in memory
of Miss
Lurane.
Packard
by. Mis. Ethel
Packard, Mrs. Rachel Ashwanden,
Mrs.
Frances
Cuiver, / Arthur
Packard and Henry Packard.

church,

of.

the

men

of the
;

til

the

present

time

the

only

changes. have been
in renewing
the old with varnish or paint
The projection: on the front of
the
church,
.in
architectural
terms, called “# porch,” and the
shape of the gallery. inside,
are
said to. have a Buillfineh touch,
thus linking
the church
with
what is regarded as the best of
the postcolonial.
Trustees of the
church
who
directed the work and also per-

formed’ a great
tual
labor
are

deal of the acRichard Know-

land,
chairman, . Edgar.
Charles Brooks, Mis. Ethel

‘ard and Maurice Howes.

Judd,
Pack-

Those who
made the suggestion as to color which was voted
on by the
congregation . were
Richard Harry, Mrs. Ethel Packard,
George
Duensser,
Mis.
Richard
Knowland,
Mrs.
John
Barrus, Mrs. Francis Dresser and
Dr. John, Shaw
(ex-officio).
These” and many
more
members
and friends of the church:
vorked very hard for ,this .end,
| that the
sanctuary.
may be a
place of. beauty,. where
wopship
may take place in beautiful sur-|
roundings, Much
remains: to be
done,
and
already
money
has
been raised toward a fund for a)
new carpet for the church. The:

Ladies’

Benevolent

Assn.

is work- |

ing for this, too,
!
An organ fund also has a good
start, with the Couples Club giving
some
each
month
for
the
purpose.
Since Dr. John Shaw,
pastor of the church, began ‘the|
work here the church has been|
painted on the outside: the parsonage has been completely renovated and now the interior of
the church has been restered to
former -peauty, At all times he
has given his tine and, ¢tfort’ to
the. material. work as well as the

spiritual growth of the church.
Thus the Goshen Church, joining

‘the

‘churches,

proving
sana

rank —

marches

its
a

of

progressive|

on, and is im-

{i

material surround. , &gt;
:
Pee
ib

�TUESDAY, MAY 28, 1957
At 50th dnintveleoe

of WSTC

eae

WORTHINGTON

Class of 1907

_.
Nor
1—The sing.

| Worthington, May

jFor Fun Club will meet Wednes-_
}day evening at 8 at First Con-|
gregational
under
the

Jane

Conwell

Church
tg
direction

rehearse
of Miss|

Tuttle.

The eighth grade of Russell H.
Conwell School will hold a rec-

ord

hop

Friday

evening

at

the|_

town hall to. which the public is
invited. Proceeds will go. into the
class
treasury
to
be
used
to-

_ward

the

class

trip

to

Boston
scheduled for May 12, 13 and
14.|

Mrs.
Charles
C:
Eddy — an-!
nounces that there will be door
prizes and refreshments
at the

‘demonstration

el

to be

Holiday

ae
=;

Spruces

Oe Ee ee te ee Os oes

Marion
retired

L. Bartlett,
last

year

and

second
returned

from

left, former principal

to her

native

who

benefit

Organiza-

is spending

is

on

this week

Va.,
with
a teacher

vacation

from

Frank

Herbst

and Miss May

'BELCHERTOWN

is

shown

School
renewing

in Springfield,
acquaintances

Scully, also of Pittsfield.

ia}

Para

Belding Jackson Feted
-. For Community Service
the

church

and

at

University

the

Jackson

of

Massachusetts,
whose
wife was
editor of the Belchertown Sentinel a member with Jackson of the
and moderator of the town meet- class of 1922 at Massachusetts
ing,
the
testimonial
dinner State College, and Prof. Donald
marked the quarter century an- Ross, horticulturist at the uniniversary
of Jackson’s
column versity,
“The Steeple’ in the Sentinel.
A poem from Dr. Arthur WestAssistant principal of Technical well, formerly of Belchertown,|
High
School in Springfield
and now living in Wyoming, was read|
previously at the High School of by the master of ceremonies, and}
4Commerce
and
Classical
High Andrew Sears read verses of his
Jackson has been for many years own
for
the
occasion
as
did
a civic, chureh and educational Blackmer,
leader in Belchertown where he
Testimonial Letters
was born in 1899.
.
Principal Guy Harrington of the
Letters and telegrams of con- high schoo] paid tribute to his
gratulations read by Blackmer, friend and neighbor as a fellow
who was master of ceremonies, educator
and
churchman,
and:
came from friends and readers in Michael
Mathras
and
Charles}
11 states
in
all parts
of .the Austin spoke for the selectmen.
country. Introduction followed of
A packet of testimonial letters
two
previous
ministers
of the and a purse were presented to
Congregational
Church
whose Jackson along with best wishes
steeple is the symbol under which to him and to Mrs. Jackson for
Jackson writes,
the trip to Mexico on which they
will start July 15,
Ministers Speak
Rey, Richard Manwell, lauded
In thanking the guests Jackson .

the guest of honor for his ‘‘stew- said that ‘‘to be loyal to a nation|

ardship of his talent.’ Rev. Frederick Charrier spoke of the services to the churches which
the
Sentinel performed and the vari, ety of subjects its columnist reviewed. Rev. Paul Varga, present pastor, gave his impressions

one must start with something |
smaller, start where he is.”
i
A turkey dinner preceding the
program was served by the Wom-!
en’s Guild at tables decorated in
harmony
with
arrangements
of

varicolored

summer

flowers.

Rachel

McDonnell

Mrs. Rachel (Barton)
nell, 51, died Thursday

for many ‘years.
Among guests from a distance
who
spoke
were
Prof,
Harold
Gore,
for many
years
director

of athletics

957.
ie

as a newcomer and Rev. Walter
Blackmer
his
as one who has

known

Crag. (8

Mrs.

|

Belchertown,
July 8—A
hundred
friends
and
neighbors
of
Belding F. Jackson, met tonight
at the Congregational House
to
honor him as a devoted citizen
of Belchertown and a chronicler
of its events for 25 years,
25 Years of Column
Arranged by Lewis Blackmer,

in

Miss
friend

the

‘been under way in this town for
the past two weeks, the earliest
date on record,.
—~—~___.

at the 50th anniversary class reunion last Saturday at Westfield State Teachers College. Members
of the class of 1907 attending included, left to right, Miss Gertrude A. J. Peaslee of Pittsfield, Miss
Bartlett, Mrs.

at

of

Springfield school systtem.
i
Potato planting operations have

of. Memorial

Worthington,

Teachers

Williamsburg,
Edna ‘Marsden,

thet

who

for the

appar-

at 10

“Miss Maiian L. Bartlett of The

oi

Miss

Thursday

House

Parent

ion,

of Wearing.

given

McDon-|
after a

long; illness, She was born Feb.
25, 1906, in Groveton, N, H., the
daughter of Lewis S, and Cora
(Sheridan) . Barton. ~ After
two
years at Plymouth Normal School,
She taught two years in Litileton,
N.H., and came to Springfield in
1930.
Mrs. McDonnell
taught
at
School
Street
School,
Homer
Street
School
and
Memorial
School, where she was teaching
when taken ill. Her husband, Edward A, MeDonnell died in 1953,
She made her home at 459 Forest
Hillis
Rd.
with
a
friend,
Miss
Georgianna. Marshall, She was a
member of St. Barnabas Episcopal Chureh,
Fadueation
Association, Massachusetts Teachers Association.
NEA
and
Springfield
Teachers’
Club.
She leaves” her

father,

Lewis.

S,

Barton

of

74

Walnut
St.;
two
brothers,
Raymond Barton of Plainwell, Mich.,
and Roger Barton of Orleans, Vt.;
and several nieces and nephews.!

The

funeral

will

Dickinson-Streeter

be

Saturday
afternoon.
organ
‘prelude
at

held

funeral

at 2.
1.30.

at

the

home,

Rev
Rey.

George
Donnelly
will
officiate.
Burial will be in Hillerest Cemetery, Friends may call at the funeral
home
today
from 2 to 4
and from 7 to 9 p» m.

}

�2

Fire Equipment in Use

| WEDNESDAY, JUNE 12, 1957
|Lawder-Glidden

ENGAGED»

| Engagement Told
Announced at Dinner Par-

ty in Worthington

Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel F. Glid-

&gt;

den, Jr. of Englewood, N. J. announced the engagement of their
- |daughter,
Elizabeth
Carvel,
to
Douglass Ward Lawder, Jr., son
of Mr, and Mrs. Lawder of Fairfield, Conn.
at a dinner party
Saturday
night
at
Denworth
Farm, Worthington.
Miss Glidden attended Dwight
School for Girls in Englewood,

and

spent

last

year

in

Paris

studying at Sorbonne University.
She was graduated from Smith
College: Sunday. Miss Glidden is
the granddaughter
of Mr.
and

Mrs.

Ariz.

“|F.

Cecil L,

and

Glidden

Mr.

L. Drew

and Mrs.

of Denworth

of Mesa,

Nathaniel

Farm.

Mr. Lawder attended Williston
Academy and js in the graduating

class at Kenyon College where he MISS

ls a member
ternity,

A yariety of equipment was used during a practice session this
week of the Brookside Volunteer Fire Company at Greenfield.
Shown with the Scott air pack are, left to right, Lt, Robert
Lovett, Lt. Richard Tetreault and Capt. David Bartlett. Wearing
the mask used to enter smoke filled areas is George Lapointe.

of Psi

Upsilon

fra-

(Arlene

ELIZABETH

Photo)

C.

Whose engagement to# Douglass) Ward Lawder, Jr., has
been announced,

Exeter Academy to Show

Auction Afoot}

Greenfield, July 16—Instead of
the block dance that has been
given in past years, the Brookside |
will
Company
Fire
Volunteer
sponsor an auction on July 24 at
7 p. m. at Gebhart Field. George!
Bean, ‘#he Yankee
auctioneer,”’
will conduct the sale, proceeds of
which will go into the organization’s fund.
Engine 2, followed by a convoy
will call at}
of station wagons,
the area on
homes throughout
July 21 for donations of articles
for the auction. William Cleary)
and George LaPointe will be in
charge of the drive.

|

Germain Glidden’s Works
(72

Volunteer Fire_

GLIDDEN

Worthington Artist Interested in Revetidy
sonality’ Through Painting

Per-

~~~ “portrait Painter
May 27 will— Phily
Worthingto
Exeter n, Academy.
preThe scope of Germain Glidden’s

lips

sent an exhibition of
mural
designs
and

portraits,
selected

career as a portrait painter is
and the several hun-!
extensive
works
:
S by :Germain Green Glidden
:
dreds of portraits he has paintNorwalk,] og are included in private and:
and
of Warwunay
Conn,,
upon the occasion. of the
this
across
collections
| public
25th
reunion
of Mr.
Glidden’s country and
abroad. His work
Exeter class of 1932, from Tuesranges from the tender portraits
day to July 31 in Lamont Art! of young children to works that
bee als Alumni
Hall, Exeter,
depict in paint and canvas the
personalities of
and
r
‘Mr. Glidden, or “G3” as he is characte
prominent
of our most
some
often called,
has been honored
citizens. In recent years, he has
a8 both | devoted some of his talents to
ents
for his.and gehievem
artist
athlete. His success is mural painting.
shared by his wife, Nancy EsAs a change of pace from his
cher, and their three children, serious work, the artist has crePamela, Christine, and Elaine.
drawings enjated a series of
Studied in New York
Inc.” picturing
titled ‘‘Groggs,
After graduating from Exeter
frogs as humans. With a jolly)
and Harvard, where he majored
sense of humor, he satirizes our)
in the fine arts, he studied five
0th century society not exclud-|
ears
at
the
Arts
Students
@
expressing
thus
ing himself,
eague of New York, There he
light side of his own personality
was
a
student of
Alexander
and giving many a good chuckle.

Ables, Charles
Arthur Lee and
was

ga member

Chapman, and;
for three years!)

of

the

Board

of

Control, Of particular importance
to this long and thorough preparation for his profession, were

“several years spent at the Metro-

politan Museum, where he studied the techniques of the masters,
concentrating
on
the works
of
Vermeer, Titian, Rembrandt and
Rubens.
Mr.
war years,
the
During
served with the U. §.
‘|Glidden
Navy as a recognition officer of
service unit
aircraft
a carrier
in Maui, Territory of Hawaii.

Accepts Challenge
4, one catalog of his portrait-

ure, 1954, he states the following :
“To reveal personality in a convincing fashion through the medium of painting and canvas ig &amp;
prime inchallenge—it is the
terest of my life to accept this
challenge.”’
He has met another challenge
|
jwith equal vigor. While at Harvard he set a record of winning
of the
captain
}12. letters, was
Harvard tennis team in 736 and
victorious
the
of
a member
Harvard-Yale combine over Ox|ford-Cambridge in England, 1935.
in the
only player
is the
He
to
racquets
\history ‘of squash
win the three national singles,

36,

°37,

°38, retiring undefeated.

He wag. again victorious in the
‘national doubleg “52, and the Na-

| tional Veterans, | ’55
eer

through

’57. |

�Tret

FRIDAY, JUNE 28, 1957 |

HUNDREDS FETE
BOYDENS, WED
FOR 50 YEARS

y——

2

=

OE

a

Ses

=

eer

le ee

of his influence,: experience

Smith College Graduate

—

qva~e—

=

and

Worthington,

School

in

her brother, Samuel)
from|
graduated
She

joining the academy
Deerfield Academy Head-| fore
lof which she was a member.

master and Wife Hon-

faculty,

and

ment

lend

they also

social

the

to

an

church affairs
en

in

and

Alger;

encourage1

their married life,
in 1913 and has won wide recog-|/¢2™ly daystownof was
quite different
of

field

the

in

nition

in-|

science

S2id

from

the

*{mona,

Academy and Mrs. Boyden member of the Monday Club
joined by more
than 400 until recently was a member

friends and relatives on the cam- the
pus
of Deerfield
afternoon for the

their

50th

wedding

Franklin

County

and!

Branch

Academy
this the American Association of Uniobservance of versity Women. She is a member!

anniversary.

of the

Gay Occasion
had planned to make

and

Deerfield

has

served

as

Woman’s

alumnae

qynita

yi

hurch in a chartered

of hep alahts from
of} home, The church

Club!

pres-

brated

under

yyytchins,

Deerfield
period

of

an

the

the Wapping
had been dec-

direction

artist

who

and Greenfield
years.

The

of Will,

lived

over

in,

a

ceremony

was performed by Rev. Andrew
They
it a ident of her Smith College class.)
Gardening Chief Hobby
Campbell of Cambridge, at one
quiet
event amid
the natural
One of her chief hobbies is her} time
jjme minister
minister 0of eee
the Congregasplendor the campus which has
for so long been their home, but!gardening, both here and at her
and Rev.
here,
Church
their friends came from far and/summer home. Her greenhouse! | tional
wide

to make

it a gay

occasion.

been

has

source

great

a

of

hap-|

The campus area was colorful- piness to her and her friends dur-|

ly decorated for the festivities
and a feature was the presentation of the “Kids From Home”
show under the direction of Dr.
J. Clement Schuler.
Guests included two memvers;

of

wedding

the

ago. They were Mrs.
of

terson

50 years|

party

Duxbury,

ing the winters.
Dr, Boyden, a native of Foxboro and graduate of Amherst
|College in the class of 1902, was
jheadmaster at the academy for
five years at the time of their
marriage.

Paul C, Pe-, building
who

Signs

up’

the

evidenced.

was ready

of

his

school

ability

were

in

al;

|Richard

E.

Birks,

at

that

|pastor at the Brick Church.
in

the

old

school

building|

which stood under the buttonball
way!
tree and which later made

for the new school building.

most of the jtle in a home before the opening
has driven over
country roads in, this area, stop- of the school term.
John,
children,
Boydens’
The
ping to chat along the way and
friendships Theodore and Elizabeth, have all
many
thus forming

Fuller, Miss Rachel Hawks, Paul and making new acquaintances.
Hawks, Mr. and Mrs. Carlos Al- He has also taken pleasure in

had their own places in the life
jot the community and now their
grandchildren, Cary and Kathy,
Miss having his horses at his summer
Brown,
Mabel
Miss
len,
are proving to be. good predicHarriet Childs and Russell Cowles home in New Hampshire.
all of Deerfield.
_ His horses have been a bond of tions for the continuance of the
One of the highlights
of the friendship between him and chil- | Boyden tradition in Deeftfield.
day was during a family lunch- dren of the town for the stable!

eon at noon when Dr. Boyden has been a focus of interest for)
was presented a figurine of his Many of them. His sports ‘interfavorite

horse

and

his

carriage

with him seated, reins’ in hand
and wearing his dark cap with
the white D.
It was
complete

even to the white streak down
the horse’s nose.
"Tr War the SwOracor sculptor

Prescott W. Baston_ ofon Marble-|
a stone
head and was placed
pen holder with fountain

hore

the

Boyden,
aitante
g

inscription

Deerficld’s
clannnieseaawt?
;

pen,

‘Frank

most

ji}

est

is

ancther

ve

pete

with

‘the

games and
—
on ie
nave. Desh made availteres

ee other schools in :emer-

:
Dr. Boyden

served as chairman

L. of the Franklin

unfor-|

bond

young folks. for he encourages all
projects for promotion of sports
in the town. Grade school children have been permitted to use

County

Chapter,

his
American Red Cross, until
resignation last year, and was
able to be of great value because

C.

Rica.
‘school
year’s
‘lacting

time

To Springfield by Auto
The few remaining in the area
maid of honor and Mrs. Jean}
Groups of Smith and Amherst;
Greenough Krogh of West Hart- who were here at that. time will
recall his youthful appearance College mates of the couple alterford, who was a bridesmaid.
There were several persons of| when he arrived in town. Some inated in singing and cheering
life of the{members of the academy board for the bride and bridegroom. At
inthe
importance
academy, in education in general! expressed doubts as to the ad- :9 p. m. the family returned to
as well as in politics and busi-| visibility of having such a youthcouple
and the happy
, Wapping
ness but there were several who } ful appearing and inexperienced
attended the wedding who were| young man try to cope with the
field by autoBut they soon found ltraveled to ‘Spring
situation.
regarded as special guests.
they were mistaken and -at the mobile.
Special Guests
town ; It was the first ride in a car
the
of his wedding
They included Mr. and Mrs. Al-| time
bert Childs of Pittsfield, Mr. and gave him a token and statement for either of them, adding exciteof Deerfield, of their appreciation of his fine
Childs
Sam
Mrs.
ment to the day. After a honeybrothers of Mrs. Boyden, Mrs. work in the community.
{ moon month in Duxbury, they
Interests Are Manifold
Bessie Clark Gaskell of South
Dr. Boyden’s hobbies and inter-; visited in Foxboro before return-|
Deerfield, Mr. and Mrs. George
. Cary of Haverhill, Mrs. Jose- ests are manifold. Chief among
ing to Deerfield on Sept. 1 to setHe}
phine Starr of Conway, Miss Ber- them are horses and sports.

of Brattleboro,
Davenport
tha
Vt., Miss Louise Partenheimer of
Greenfield, Harry Brown, Miss/
Harriet Harris, Miss Elizabeth

‘Charles

A reception for 600 guests and
folHall
Dickinson
in
friends
This hall|
‘lowed the ceremony.

was

Mrs.

Walter Smith;

Flora,

uw

44
(Picture On Page One)
past
the
during
struction
The wedding party, numbering ‘a
\
Deerfield, June 27—Dr. Frank years.
the Old
L. Boyden, headmaster of Deera_ charter; SCOT or more, arrived at
was
Boyden
Mrs.
field
were

Everett;

Mrs, G. H. Ridgway; lady assistant steward, Mrs, William F. Sanderson; pianist, Miss Jane Conwell Tuttle.
Scheduled speaker for the Par‘lent-Teacher
meeting Wednesday
*|was unable to be present so Mrs.
*|Robert J. Lucey, program chair‘lman, invited three persons who
are active in the 4-H Club work
to speak
on
that
organization,
Mrs.
-H.
W,
Mollison, - Mrs.

day Deerfield.

the present

assistant steward,

Pratt;
chaplain,
‘Mrs.
Howard
Mollison; treasurer, Mrs, Stanley
S. Mason;
secretary,
Arthur G.
Capen;
gatekeeper,
Roger
Rob‘lerts; Ceres, Janet Fairman;
Po-

financial

of the church. |

un- ‘functions

12—Worth-

as follows:
master,
William
F.|
Sanderson;
overseer, Mrs. Robert Pratt;
lecturer,
Mis,
Willis
Alger; steward, Miss Marcelline

in recalling their
Mrs. Boyden,
marriage in 1907. She reher duties on the faculty \wedding of 50 years ago and ae

til her
sumed

ored by Over 400

in Church Affairs
Mrs. Boyden take

Active
Dr. and

taught}active interest
a
i

|Smith College in 1904 and
Catheri
year at the
jone

ai

«

Sept.

ington Grange has elected officers

\than 200 years and which is now of the community.
by

-

WORTHINGTON

Mrs. Boyden, the daughter of}executive ability.
e has served in a number of
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Childs,
offices
‘during her girlhood lived.on the) town, county and_ state
has|and his influence has been felt
homestead in Wapping which more||direct
ly or indirectly by residents
been in the Childs family
jowned
\Childs.

&gt;

|

the DOOKS,

“Dr,

Eddy

and

Leroy

H.

It was voted to start aj
reference
library as the
project with the teachers
as a committee to select

mmm

Mary P. Snook fell in her

home Monday morning and is receiving treatment for a back in-!
jury in Cooley Dickinson Hospi-|

|

i
T

Mrs,
ing..in

A. FE. Albert is recuperat-{
North
Adams
Hospital’
surgery!
underwent
she
where
She is expected to relast week,
turn home in a few days.
Schermerhorn
Richard
Mrs.
has returned to Montclair, N. J.,
at the
a week
spending
lafter

1

{Worthington Golf Club.

is spending
Secor
Holt*
Mrs.
two weeks in New York with her
husband,
has _ reFitzGerald
Richard
turned from a trip to Denver and
Alberquerque, N, M., visiting sel
sister, Marjorie Rees, in Denver, |

and

his

brother,

in

Archer,

the}

latter place.
and
of Mr.
son
Alger,
Todd
Mrs. Willis Alger of Christian Hollow, was a member of the Smith
cattle
dairy
vocational
School

judging
award

team

that

won

at the Tri-County

the

state |

Fair last|

week. Todd won third place in the
all FFA judging contest.

�;
z

r

Silent Cal Speaks Out

Plymouth,

1797

,

Vt., Key to Coolidge Enigma

| JULY 17, 1957

operated as an in-/~
sion
and
‘mis
Where He Was Born
fington after announcement of the]
Awesome Point
n center and inn, it origG.
Warren
In the back of the general store|death of President
Standing at any point in Plym-| formatio
Hirof
d
homestea
the
was
Plymouth, Vt:—Some of the an- outh, Plymouth Union, which ‘‘is|inally
There was and is no|!
in the village is a room pointed|Harding.
wife
homestead
swers
to the enigma that was} down
the
in
to as the one in which President|telephone
the road a piece,” or|am Dunlap Moor and his
and
Calvin Coolidge, for whom Grace Plymouth Notch, re: is oe Abigail, whose daughter Victoria| Coolidge was born,
the: street. Framed
thejacross
«on
Across:
and
red
:
ee
Col.
married
Moor
Goodhue was the perfect coun-} east,’”’ the surrounding mountains] Josephine
sags bill up giv:
cre oe Se
visitors

the President’s
That| Coolidge and was distance
block sight of any horizon.beyond)
away,}
mother. A short

along
the _ political
are to be found by

to

this

isolated

awes

is what

hills

the

hamlet

a horizon

viewed

Coolidge

lost
among
towering
who neither saw nor knew the
Mountain peaks,
| President and think of him in,
has
that
legend
of the
‘terms
Better Understanding Gained
|
Many who came here to attend} built up.
According to Orton, the populathe committal services for the}

almost
Green

widow

of the 30th

President

of) tion of Bkymouth when Coolidge;
was a boy was about 12, mostly)

the
United
States
and
burial
alongside
her husband,
his ancestors and her younger son left},
with a better understanding of}
what made Silent Cal.
A great deal of the credit for
the intimate view goes to gracious,
generous Grace Goodhue

Coolidges and relations; when he
took the oath of office as President the population was about
12: today it is about 12, There

are

and hay

fields

corn

fields

galore here, but no trace of a
baseball field. There are yeenty
of barns, sheds and out buildings,
Coolidge, her
like-father
son
hoops
basket
peach
but no
John, and the Vermont Historical
against a smooth barn wall to
Sites Commission, of which Vrest
There
at.
a basketball
throw
Orton of Weston, Vt., is chairday
Coolidge’s
in
none
were
man.
either, villagers say.
Last year the Coolidges turned|
More visitors are finding this
over the homestead here to the
remote village in Vermont every
all sections ‘of the
commission
which has restored
from
day,
it, as nearlyeas possible to the), country. Down the hill in Plym-

conditions

during President Cool-

outh

idge’s boyhood and the night of}
Aug.
2-3, 1923, when
the vice-|'
president was administered
the
oath of office of President by his
father, Col. John Coolidge.
It is almost as it was on that
historic night and is sufficiently
so to give an insight into the

austere,

frugal

life

of

ing

Vermont

the
all

of the homestead,||

piano

according

purchased

to Orton,
in

B

Los

shipped

Col. Coolidge

Sieg

for the day

“it might

ey

Plymouth 70 years or more ago.
The box was stored in the barn

come

in

handy.”
Still available but not on display are some
20 bushel
bas-]
kets
of birch
bark
and wood]
chips, picked up and saved by
Miss Aurora Pierce, Col. Cool-|
idge’s
housekeeper
for
many|
years,
who stayed on at
the
homestead at the President’s direction until she diedin 1956.
“We didn’t have room for pub-|
lic display for all things
that

were

jgood
was

saved

over the years. In a

Vermont
home,
nothing
ever thrown away,” Orton

the former President

&amp;

association.

gatercs

Except for necessary
alterations to accommodate a flow of
tourists through
the place,
the
Coolidge homestead, Orton says,
has
been restored to the exact},
condition it was the night Cool-/

LAMP

COOLIDGE

idge was
rooms,

inal

condition,

thing

the

3

anniversary

85th

Coolidge

Se

Highway
ESAT

of

his ed,

modern

building

and,

to

its

site.

present

Off Route 100A, opposite the|
ce al
aees Pie
aaa
leading into this village, two|
turn
in-|
*
tained. On the day of Mrs. Coolsmall signs marked ‘‘cemetery”’

idge’s burial here, when
many)
might
have
been
coming
over
the road, the State Highway Department
was
resurfacing
a
stretch near Bartonsville with oil
and chipped stone which delayed
traffic a bit, but otherwise the
traveling was smooth.
Coolidge Highway is Route 103
out
of
Bellows
Falls,
and
to
Plymouth is 40 miles. The road
'to this community leaves Route
103 just north of Ludlow,
Vt.,
and Route
100 leads
to Plym-'
outh Union. There, unless motor-

, ists

miss

the

relativity

small

point up .a dirt road. It is the
Pl ymouth Notch Cemetery where
last week
Grace
Coolidge was

the 23d member

of the family to

be buried. One of the 22 grave
markers bears the name ‘‘Cooledge.’’
Whether
the stone_ cutter made a mistake or the Presspelled his name
ident’s ancestor
that way is not known.

First Coolidge to be buried in
the family plot was a Calvin who
lived from 1780 to: 1853. Another
Calvin there was born in 1789
and died in 1856, while the Pres-

‘ident’s

grandfather,

Calvin

Gal-

«

ze

et

ee

i

shades

are drawn in the

the

way

the

it was

rooms

and

with

illum-

electri-| .

The
actual
‘‘Coolidge
Lamp’
that lighted the sitting room for
the ceremony is not there, due
to the foresight of the central
figure of the occasion who apparently recognized the historical

| significance of the act. If any in|

this town know the whereabouts,
of the original ‘‘Coolidge Lamp,’
of which
hundreds
of replicas)
_have been turned out, they don’t
| indicate it. However, Mrs. Helen
| Woods
of Northampton,
Mass.,
prominent artist and lamp-maker who
was
commissioned
by

B Coolidge

to

replicas,

says

manufacture
she

was

the

told

by!

‘the President he intended to turn|

|}

“The Jamp that lighted the
path to the White House” was
similar to the one pictured.

the original over to the Smith-;
-sonian Institute in Washington.|
Presumably it is there.
Guide Book Quoted
Through the courtesy of Orton,

a word

above, which is an electrified

original,

of the
replica
in Smithsonian

|

kerosene
the

copy

Institute.

from

lamp

made

was

as it now

The

took
the
oath
as
from
his
father,
Coolidge,
Several

reproductions,

all electrified,

now
light the home
which
has been opened to the public,
Mrs.
Helen
Woods
of
Northampton
was given the
exclusive permission of Mr.
and Mrs. Coolidge to reproduce the Coolidge Lamp.

book

say

is

the

one

in

Ce

peace bas

has

been

excerpts

a

made

from

book and history he has

g

eee

g

ee

opens into the barn. There
two stalls, one for the lign-

ut

are}
|

‘for work around the place and
\| the’ other for the driving horse

which

the President was born on July
4, 1872. The second floor of the
store is a combination
general
hall
dance
and
place
meeting
and it was in that loft that President Coolidge conducted affairs

oe

through

eae

lighted

of the homestead

appears

ee

the scene in the Plymouth,
Vt., homestead when Calvin
Coolidge
President
John
©.

picture

NOW | possible

which

sign pointing to “‘Coolidge Home‘usha Coolidge, was born in 1815
says.
stead,” they turn off on Route
schon
:
and buried in 1878. The President
In a guide book and history of 100A that leads to the hamlet of
of state while ssidvacationing here.
make
Jr.,
and his son Calvin,
tables
rough
original
the
of
the Coolidge home, which came | Plymouth. The route, only com-j
| Four
five of that name to lie in the
On Which: Work&lt;Wwas done by the
off the presses in time for distri- | pletely paved road leading into
ees
Pathe
a
president and his ‘staff are still
bution last week when Mrs, Cooland
out
of
Plymouth,
winds )straight line lot, The first John)|
is set up to
idge
was
buried
here,
Orton | through
to be buried in the |in the room. A fifth
the village,
to Calvin Coolidge
and
comments that the home and its Coolidge State Park in the hills eet.
ke 1866, i tas | permit visitors to sit down same
pees.
E
and} | writ
e age 0
a
surroundings make it more un- | and. connects with main Route 4 ond
in
derstandable how President Cool- ;at Bridgewater Corners.
are.
:
e
summering here.”
idge has become ‘‘a symbol of
A half dozen gleaming white,
is) | wrote at when
&gt; pan from 1845 to 1926. 3 There
those classic old American and ‘clapboard buildings and one large
no further room for expansion of | | In the general store building,
a
gases se | also, is ts wall Motes
Vermont
virtues
of
austerity, ‘farm,
painted
gray,
make
up
Sie ae Sue te
the operator,
to get
was cranked
abiding faith in God, personal in- Plymouth. Wilder House is one
L
:
eneve
by Cooltegrity,
unpretentious
frugality, of two buildings dominating the
the last of the famous family to | which was ‘borrowed’
|| idge to communicate with Washindependence
of
mind
and center. Now the property of the
rest there.
Vermont
Historical Sites
Comspeech.”

ee

the

glass

there.”’

in Ver-

from|mont tradition, was ‘‘saved” by|/

——=jmoving

of

fied
kerosene
lamps,
we
have}
tried to make you feel that, on!
that
night
in 1923,
you
were

ernment. Only a few drove over|the story and a half homestead.|!
paved roads last July 4, which |The addition is a well-construct-|
was

by

presidential oath,
|
Says Orton, ‘‘by placing every-

| inating

ad-

now

first floor rooms to simulate the
darkness
of the early morning
hour when
Coolidge
took
the

which is now

two-story

furnishings

protected

Window

and all but

the

in as Président.

and

partitions, have been placed in
the exact position as recalled by
eye witnesses to the oath-taking.

at the cross
roads. A dead-end dirt road runs}
downhill to the farm of Calvin
/Galusha Coolidge, grandfather of

faith

to reaffirm

sworn

Furniture

A bungalow home with four
cabins for tourists complete the

| President Coolidge,

the

of

use

for

idge

phone,

the one surviving member of the
distinguished
family,
his
son,|
John,
are buried.

hav-

regis-

sktaciation,

where
the
GOP
powwow
took
place a score of years ago, From
it can be seen the hillside cemetery in Plymouth Notch where

:
i
i
;.tn4 Coolidge
doctrine
of gov-|dition wag out of place alongside

the|'Ditth.
y

and

death

dent’s

not yet -opened
to the public,
stands
a
large
wooden
box,
found
in
the
barn
when
the}
historical agency
took it over.

In it,

with

a

istorical

Beyond the factory and up the};
dirt road a ways is the knoll}:

‘operated by Charles Hoskinson,
as caretaker for John Coolidge.
political chieftins, in their anx- On one of the higher knobs inj
jety to win a presidential elec- the village is the summer home
home of John and Florence (Trumbull)
Coolidge
the
used
tion,
and family.
The twosite here to shore up the political) Coolidge
platform, the state of Vermont’ story home was moved to its lo-|
has taken steps to make Plym- cation from the original Coolidge
homestead to which it had been
outh accessible to tourists.
built. as an addition by President
Faith Reaffirmed
Two decades ago, hundreds of Coolidge after his father’s death.
the
Vermont
Historial
the party faithful: came over dirt When
roads to this village to ‘‘honor’’ Sites Commission decided to rePresi- store the homestead to its orig-||
of the
anniversary
the

of Northampton, legislator,
lieutenant governor and governor of
Massachusetts
and chief execu‘tive of the
United
States
are
visible,
Piano Box Saved

atti ic

automobiles

seen

report

of the country, most occupants
of which have missed the turn
and are looking for directions to
“the Coolidge place.”
Since the day about 20 years
national Republican
when
ago

the factors that influenced the
youth who was to become mayor

In the

natives

factory,” is the Coolidge homestead. Across the road, which apparently
separates
more
than
from},
one side of the highway
Plymouth
the
is
the other
Church, while across from Wilder House is the Florence Cilley
village store operated by Mrs.
Violet Pelkey.
Cheese Shop Boarded
a good
factory,
cheese
The
sized building,
once
a thriving
business under guidance of the
Coolidges,
is now
boarded
up.

oe

tration plates of nearly all states cluster of buildings

Yankees who seek to make a liy-

ing from the rocky soil of
mountainous
state. But not

Union,

Fe

visitors up the road toward the ‘‘cheese|°_

f

aZh

terbalance
glory road,

ck a apa

a

‘By A STAFF REPORTER

used by Col. Coolidge for trips -in
his buggy, which is also on display. The saddle used by young

Calvin

to

learn

to

ride,

which)

was

a

master

was one of his favorite recreations when President, is in the
barn, along with equipment for
horses and passengers
in
the
buggy or sleigh. Stairs lead to
the shed attic, where everything
not needed at the moment was
stored. It was there the piano
box was found.
The tool room
has not been
restored but is used to display
the various tools used by Col.

Coolidge,

who

eraftsman
among
other things.
The room was originally part of
an apartment for Mr, and Mrs.
Eugene
C.
Aldrich,
about
the

‘turn of the century, after Aldrich

had been hired as cheese maker
in the nearby Coolidge factory.
Later it was used by Col. Coolidge, when he was deputy sheriff, to hold prisoners overnight
‘before taking them to the jail in

| Woodstock.

mt

I

�The shed bedroom

contains the! The

four-poster bed on which Presi-|
dent Coolidge was born,
cov-|
ered by a quilt he pieced togeth-

which

after

he

became

of

the

homestead,

the

President when

home

he was

of

—

the.

four, ait-_

er his father
purchased
it, a
blacksmith
shop
and
several
acres of land for $375, ends at
the parlor. The piano from Bos-|
ton,
a black
walnut
horsehair

er: as a 10-year-old boy. Other
garments worn by Cal’ before
and

tour

became

President,

like a woolen frock worn while
working in the fields, are to be! suite of furniture, a corner what- |
seen.
not with rare pictures of the fam-_
Ax Still in Block
The woodshed where the President learned at an early age to
split wood is filled with wood and
the ax used by Cal
has ~ been
stuck into the chopping block to
‘give the impression there is but
a temporary lull in activities in
the fuel-wise important section of
the house. The laundry, the kitchen pantry
and even the privy
are other rooms reached before,
visoitors get to the kitchen, which
according to Orton, was the center of home life of the future
President.

Of

the

Sites
quotes
“Most
in the

kitchen,

the room.
The Orton
visitors

concludes

book,

through

the

the

which

guides|

homestead,

tour in true

idge tradition,
“After .you

i

with:
leave

this

Cool-

room)

(the parlor), the exit door to the

outside

Please
go

is to your

close

through

this

it.”

aid

left

door
:

going

out.

after you

ND

espe

oe

Historical

chairman}
Commission
Mr. Coolidge as saying:|
of the visotors would sit}
kitchen with Father and

| Mother
the

the

ily and the only known
photo-/
graph of Calvin
and his ‘sister
Abigail
together,
taken
some
time before her death as a young
girl, are among furnishings
in

and

world

the hardest thing

for me

was

in}

to have

to}

go through that kitchen door and],

greet visitors. By fighting hard
| I used to manage to get through
that kitchen door. I’m all right}
now with old friends, but every
time I meet a stranger I have
to stand by the old kitchen door
a minute. It’s hard.”
Hanging
plates
decorate
the

é

Mrs. Coolidge in 1930

| kitchen walls, including a pewter
plate cherished by the
as one that belonged

Coolidges
to Sally)

Thompson, said to have been an
{Indian
and a relation of the
President’s grandfather,
Calvin
Galusha Coolidge. Between the]
two
the

windows
in the kitchen
shaving mirror and on

is}
a

shelf is’ the shaving mug that be-

longed to the President with his]
name
embossed
on it in gold
Whether it was the mug being
used
by -Lawyer
Coolidge
in
Northampton
the morning
he
first
noticed
school
teacher
Grace Coolidge is not
known.
That morning the young Clarke]
School for the Deaf teacher was

in the school garden and noted a

i

young man in the window of a
nearby
house,
completely
at-|)
tired even to his felt hat while |
shaving, The hearty laughter for
which she was noted, as she saw]
Calvin Coolidge for the first time
attracted his attention to her,
As On Night of Oath

Center

of tourist

attraction

is

the oath of office room, which
was considered the sitting room
as distinguished from the parlor
or best room.
The table,
the
chairs, the Bible, portraits and

pictures,

Se

are all in the exact po-

was

awakened

announce

gram
death

by

his

arrival

father

of ‘a

containing news of
of President Warren

‘Harding

Mr.

the

is

there.

Coolidge’s

are on the floor.

Two

shoes,

pairs

size

to

tele-

the
G.

of

7%,

a

_ (Associa

Mrs, Coolidge died yesterday in Northa
mpton

in the downstairs bedroom which.
actually was the ‘room of Col, |

Coolidge. Because the
commiss |
sion has been unable to arrange
public.
access
to the
upstairs
rooms, the bedroom of President
and Mrs., Coolidge has been re- |
stored on the first floor. Everything that is known to have been
in the upstairs room when Cal

ag

ted Press Wirephoto)
This picture of Mrs, Calvin Coolidge
was taken in Tene. 1930,
on the grounds of the
,
then ‘new Coolidge home at Northampton,
as the former President and his wife
posed with their pet dogs.

sition of the night the oath was
administered,
One major deviation from the
original pattern of the house is

}

|

f

t

at 78.

�JULY 9, 1957

MRS. COOLIDGE

her

and

believing her

condition] section of Washington Ave.
and!

| grave, John requested ‘his moth\er’s physician. be- summoned, He
drove his family to their home
| and returned here, arriving short-

RITES IN HAMP
SET TOMORROW

ly before

President Names Salton_ stall as His Representative at Funeral

his

mother

died,

James Ave.

Avid Baseball Fan
_ On’ her return here from

ington,

Mrs.

Coolidge

Wash-!

retired!

from nearly all social activities.
Mrs. Coolidge first was stricken She
retained an avid interest in}
with a heart attack in 1952 and baseb
all and made frequent trips|
was confined in Cooley Dickinson ito
Red Sox games in Boston and
|
|Hospital for some time. She re- |to
Worlds Series contests as the
;entered
the hospital
early
this guest
of the president of the Na‘year
and
spent- several
weeks tional
League:
|
there for treatment of her heart
She also continued te work ac-|
condition and a kidney ailment. lively
for
Clarke
School
for
the|
Tn recent weeks she had been. at

'her_ home,

“Road...

Forks’

at | Deaf,

of which she was

president

of the trustees and Edwards Congregational
Church,
where
she
|Eisenhower
today named
Sen. nurses in constant attendance,
worshipped for many years.
“Most Gracious”
|Leverett
Saltonstall,
Republican
During World War II, when the
|
'senior
senator
from
MassachuOften
described
as the most WAVES
training school was essetts, to represent him at the fu- gracious
First Lady
since
the tablished at Smith
College, Mrs.
neral
of
Mrs.
Grace
Goodhue
days
of
Dolly
Madison.
Mrs, Coolidge
surrendered her $25,000
Coolidge,
78, who
died in her
Coolidge was born in Burlington, home to the
commanding officer
home here early this morning,
Vt., Jan.
3, 1879,
daughter
of of the school
and resided with her
Capt. Andrew I: Goodhue, a Ver- close
Tributes Sent to Family
friend,
Mrs.
Adams
in
mont
Democrat
and
a United
As
tributes and messages
of
Washington Ave,
inspector who
condolence showered on the fam-]) States steamboat
Her death this morning came
served on Lake Champlain.
Her virtually
ily, funeral arrangements as unon the 33d anniversary
ostentatious as the life she led in|) mother was the former Lemira of the tragic death of her younger
Barrett
of
Hancock.
son, Calvin, who died July 7, 1924.|
this city were completed for the
After her graduation from the She leaves only her son John,
/Vermont
country
girl who
beher|
University
of Vermont in 1902 daughter-in-law, the former
'eame the nation’s First Lady.
Flor-|
with
a
bachelor
of
philosophy
deence
Trumbull
and
The funeral of the widow of Calher grand-|
gree, she came to Northampton as dauchters, Cynthia,
vin Coolidge,
30th President of
23, a secrea
teacher
at
Clarke’
School
for
tary
at
Trinity
College
the United States, will be held at
and Lydia,
the Deaf,
18, who will enter Bradford Jun:
2 Wednesday in Edwards Congreaior
Colleg
It
was
here
that
she
met
e
in
the
fall,
gational Church, with Rev. Richyoung Amherst College graduate,
ard Linde, pastor, officiating.
from
Plymouth
in
her
native
state,
It will be the third time in 33
who was studying law in a local
years that the historic church at
law office. She became Mrs. Cal{Main and State Sts. has been the
| scene of funeral services for ajr vin Coolidge Oct. 4, 1905. Their
honeymoon in Montreal lasted on-|
i;member of the Coolidge family.
ly a few days because Coolidge
In July,
1924,
services
were
Was
campaigning
for a School
held
theré for Calvin Coolidge,
Committee post against the late
Jr., younger son of President and
John J. Kennedy,
who defeated
‘Mrs. Coolidge, who died of a foot
the future
mayor,
governor
of
jinfection resulting from an injury
suffered while playing tennis at || Massachusetts and President. in
the local election, It was the only
the White House.
' election Coolidge ever lost.
In January, 1933, with the great
The young couple rented at $26and near-great of the country in
a-month a duplex tenement at 21
attendance, the funeral of PresiMassasoit St., which was to be
dent Coolidge was conducted in
their home until Coolidge retired
the church.
from the presidency.
In accordance with her wishes,|
Helped Husband’s Career
Mrs.
Coolidge’s
graciousness,
there will be no calling hours at
charm and ability to make friends
the Charles
R.
Dutton
funeral
were
qualities
that
helped,the
pohome where Mrs. Coolidge’s body|
will remain until time of the fu-| litical career of her tight-lipped
neral. It also is requested that} husband, who rose rapidly from
mayor.
to
lieutenant-zovernor.
flowers be omitted and contribu-|
governor and. vice-president and
tions made, instead, to the Heart}
from
which
office
he succeeded
Fund, Cremation will follow the}
to the presidency on the death of
church services. and Mrs, Coolidge’s ashes will be buried Friday
Warren
G.. Harding
in 1923, It
was said that few. women
ever
at 1 p. m. alongside the graves
went to the White House with less
of her husband and son in the hillside cemetery at Plymouth, Vt.,
experience for the job as Washwithin view of the Coolidge famington’s leadine hostess but Mrs.
ily homestead.
Coolidge
quickly
proved
as
charming and graceful a hostess
Periodically ill for more than a
as
the
Capital
ever
had
seen,
year, Mrs. Coolidge died at 12.50
Her mother’s
illness. that
rethis morning of coronary disease
auired
frequent trios away
from
and congestive heart failure. At
jher bedside when she died was Washington is believed to have
been one of the reasons for Cool‘her son, John and Dr. James Averill, who was attending her in idge’s famous: decision, ‘I do not
the absence of her regular phys- choose to run’’ and the couple relician, Dr. Hugh Tatlock. An au- turned to this city and their rent| topsy showed,
Dr. Averill said, ed duplex home in Massasoit St.
\that Mrs. Coolidge suffered cur- in 1929, Soon after, however, they
“The
Beevhes,’”’
a
;vature of the spine, an enlarged purchased
\heart and congestion of the lungs modest estate overlooking Pynch‘as well as the heart ailment and eon Meadows south of Northampton, where the former President
a kidney disorder.
died in 1933. After her husband’s
Son Week-End Visitor
ideath, Mrs.
Coolidge sold ‘‘The
John Coolidge, only surviving son of the late former President
After week ending in Vermont, Beeches”’ to Mr. -.and Mrs, Sidnev
Calvin Coolidge and Mrs. Coolidge, displayed the steicism which
John Coolidge, “Sis wife, the for- Bailey and made her home with
characterized his father as he left Edwards Chureh yesterday
mer Florence Trumbull, and their Mrs. Florence Adams
here and
\two daughters,
Lydia and Cyn- in South Carolina until she had
with his wife, the former Florence Trumbull of Plainville, Conn.,
\thia, stopped yesterday to visit built “Road Forks,” a three-story
|

Northampton,

July 8—President

Washington

and James

Ave.,

with

Son ae Mrs. Coolidge Rites

jhis

mother

en

route

from

Ver-

mont to their home. in Farmington, Conn. Noting that his moth-

‘er had failed since he last visited

white

brick

home

at

the

inter-

following the brief and simple funeral of his mother.

�=

sae

eS

pantieta

=~ =&lt;

JULY 1, 1957"
| State, Federal Officials

ne lines

a Feuera

for the Deaf, members of

the Smith
College
faculty,
and
George Bean ‘‘The Yankee Auc_ tioneer,” who was
among Mrs.
Coolidge’s
close
associates
in

Northampton.

.Two

the

and

national

of:

ficials
of
Pj
Beta
Phisorority, 10 Which Mrs. Coolidge bejionged while an undergraduate at
the University of Vermont, were
present.
They
were
Mrs,
George W. Westcott of Amherst,
northeast
province
president of

Federal and state governments were represented at the 17-minute funeral yesterday in Edwards
Congregational Church, Northampton, of Mrs. Grace Goodhue Coolidge, widow of Calvin Coolidge,
30th President of the United States. In front, left to right, are: Sen. Leverett Saltonstall, personal representative of President Eisenhower} Massachusetts Atty. Gen. George Fingold and Mrs,

Fingold.

BRIEF SERVICE
IS TRIBUTE. TO
MRS. COOLIDGE

~ Displaying
the ‘same
/mer Florence

Church

/and neighbors

July

and

10—Friends

a sprinkling of

dignitaries paid final respects to
|Mrs. Grace (Goodhue): Coolidge
this afternoon, honoring
to the
last her desire to remain inconspicuous in death as she had in
life since retirement as the nation’s First Lady.
17-Minute Service
Fewer than 400 persons sat in
historic Edwards Congregational
Church for the 17-minute service
during which Rey. Richard Linde,
pastor, pointed up the life, love,
character,
and
service
of the
widow of Calvin Coolidge, 30th

President
From

of

the

the

United

States.

flower-banked_pulpit,|

dominated

by

gardenias
President

a

cross

of

white|

and gladioli sent by
and Mrs, Eisenhower,

the youthful minister paid tribute

to her life and character with an|
adaptation from Proyerbs 31.
“A virtuous woman is precious
| far above rubies.
The heart of}

her husband trusteth in her and!
he

shall

have

no

lack

of

gain.

She doeth him good and not evil
all the, days of her life.
She
spreadeth out her hand to the
poor;

yea,

she

reacheth

her hands to the needy.

and
. She

dom;
She

forth

Strength

dignity are her garments.
openeth her mouth with wis-

kindness

looketh

is on her ‘tongue.

well

to the

ways

of

her household and eateth not the
bread of idleness.
Her children
rise up and call her blessed; her
husband also praiseth
ing:
many have done

her, sayvirtuously

but thou excellest them all.
A
woman that loveth the Lord, she
shall be praised: Give her of the
fruit of her hands and let her

_ works praise her in the gates.”

of Plain-

ville,-Conn., and their two daugh18.
ters, Cynthia, 23, and Lydia,
gat in the front pew in the right
center of the church to hear Mr.
explain that ‘‘Mrs. Cool| Linde

taries at Rites in ‘Hamp
Northampton,

Trumbull

Rep. John J. O’Rourke, left, and
Lerche, both of Northampton.

ad tongues of men and

| characteristic of his father, John
Coolidge, with his wife, the for-

Friends, Neighbors, Digni|

At rear are former State

of

angels

former

State

Sen. Ralph

W.

As the ctowd outside the church

and have not love, I am become srew to an estimated 500, lining
as sounding brass or a tinkling the sidewalks and-taking up vancymbal,’”” and ending, ‘‘And now tage points aeross Main St. on the
abideth faith, hope, love, these ‘lawn of the Academy of Music
three; but the greatest of these jand the old high school, the only
is love.”
survivor
of
the
former
First

The

congregation

touched as the
Na-|,4n
spoke,
ae
Ct
fam-

was

visibly Lady

sorority,

Miss

Sophie

Greenfield,
who
{Woodman
of
served on the national board with
the former First Lady.
Today’s
weather
contrasted
sharply with the cold, raw January day in 1933: when the same
church was the scene of funeral
services for Calvin Coolidge, The
difference was most marked by
the fact that a lone policeman,
» Cornelius Doyle, was all that was
required to keep pedestrian and
motor traffic moving today, compared with the entire Northamp| ton force augmented by state police who were on duty when serv-|
ices were
held for the former}

and his wife and daughters

President.
|)

|}

e

There was no procession to the
church. and none from it.
The John Coolidge family was
left alone in the church to gaze
on the unopened
casket as the
congregation filed out. The bearers, who included, in. addition to
Mr, Hill, Harold L. Ames, banker; George T. Pratt, principal of
Clarke
School;
Librarian
Lawrence
Wikander
of Forbes
Li-}
brary, Franklin King, Jr., insur-}
ance
man,
and
Dr. ~ Stephen!

i

officiating clergy- entered unnoticed through a door
‘Brown of Amherst, lined up at
jdge belongs no longer to her
in conclusion,
:
of e
the
State
St.
sidei
of the
or
h
churc
John
Trumbull, 1he main entrance as Mr. Linde,
y,
tion, communit
\‘‘Mrs.
Coolidge's climactic dee- church,
Mrs.
jly alone.
She belongs now to the laration of faith,’”’ contained ‘in a John’s mother-in-law and wife of carrying a red-covered Bible, led
the
mourning
family
from &lt;the
ages.”
poem she wrote on the fifth an- the
former
governor
of
Con“The pastor alluded to her TeIniversary of the untimely death necticut, was among the later ar- chureh, John Coolidge helped his
wife. and daughters into his twoturn ‘‘to her beloved hills
fin 1924 of her 16-year-old son, rivals,
tone green
station wagon
as the
Calvin,
Jr,
‘
Vermont where her ashes will be
Hampshire County was repre- casket was lifted into the hearse.
“These are the words of Grace sented
buried in the Plymouth cemetery
by Commissioners
Rayalongside the graves of her hus- Coolidge,’ Mr. Linde said and he mond Lyman of Easthampton and The hearse and the station wagon,
band and younger son, Calvin, Jr., quoted,
John Callahan of Hadley, Treas- driven by John and containing his
“You, my son, have shown me urer Howard
with the passage from Psalm 121
Banner,.
Clerk
of family, made up the cortege that
which begins ‘“‘I will life up mine, God,
Courts Merrill Torrey and Ray- turned from Main St. into South
eyes unto the hills from whence
“Your kiss upon my cheek has mond Warner, register of deeds. ISt. en route to Springfield where
cometh my help.’’
made me feel the gentle touch of
Seated directly behind the John leremation of Mrs, Coolidge took
Burial will
Coolidge family were employees iplace this afternoon.
Mr. Linde paused in the service Him who leads us on.
Coolidge
“The
memory
of your smile? of Mrs.
at her home be Friday at 1 in the cemetery —
as Dorie Alviani, church organist
near the Coolidge}
and director of music at the Uni- ywhen young, reveals His face, as “Road Forks” and close friends, in Plymouth
1
Mrs.
Florence
B. homestead.
versity of Massachusetts, played| méllowing years come on apace. including
“And
when
you went. before, Adams at, whose North Carolina
one of Mrs.
Coolidge’s favorite!
Church Is Doomed
thymns,
‘‘Holy Spirit, Truth, De-! you left the.gates of Heaven ajar, estate Mrs. Coolidge spent many
Fittingly, the funeral of Mrs,
that I might glimpse approaching winters, Mrs. Ralph Hemenway,
vine.”’
Coolidge may be the last in old
from
afar,
the
glories
of His widow
of
President
Coolidge’s
Senator
Leverett
Saltonstall,
Edwards Church where services
law partner
and
Mrs.
Kenneth
personal representative of Presi- Grace.
were held for her son and hus-}
Hemenway,
“Hold, son, my hand, guide me
whose husband con- band. Within the next few weeks _
dent
Eisenhower
sat
alongside
Col.
Joseph
T. . Benedict
of along the path, that, coming, I ducted the Coolidge &amp; Hemenway the red brick structure with its!
Worcester,
military
aide,
who may stumble not nor roam, nor law office until his recent death. | white woodwork chapel is to be)
Mayor James Cahillane and his
way for aj
represented Gov. + urcoio, jin the fail to show the way which leads
torn down to make
immediate
predecessor,
Pierre | new and modern church, with the
front pew-at the left center, in us. . .home.”’
The fiower-draped
casket was
ge Memorial Fund,
tront of whieh was the. polished
Drewsen,
headed the delegation Grace. Coolid
to help
eherry
easket,
draped
with
a borne into the church by repre- lof former mayors that. included started today, expected
blanket of white flowers from the sentatives of the.Charles R. Dutsubstantially in the new construc:
Probate
Judge
William
M.
Welch,
ton funera] home, fully an hour
John Coolidge family.
Jesse A, G. Andre,
Charles L. tion.
“Mrs.
Coolidge
has
been
de- before the scheduled start of the
of the 21 floral pieces
Some
Dunn
and
Luke
F,
Ryan.
MemThe church was empty
Scribed as“ warm, gracious, rev- service.
were sent despite wishes 0’
that
bers
of
the
Northampton
City
and only a few persons stood sierent,
witty.
and
loyal,”
Mr,
such tributes be
Council, department heads, Post- the family that
the sidewalk
near
Linde
said,
‘‘But
whenever
a lently along
omitted and contributions sent to
eaers
John
F.
Murphy,
Police
the
church
fronting
on
upper
pe.
1
is
described
in
these
or te Clarke
Fund
Heart
| Chief
George
J. Bernier,
Fire the
warin,
human
terms,
there
is Main St.
, will be sent to Plymouth,
/School
Chief
Charles
Martin,
Mayor
Dignitaries Present
usually a quality of life behind
will be the blanket!
Admiyal Joel T. Boone (U. S. Leonard J. Warner of Westfield, |Among them
all of the adjectives.
The quality
and family and the)
son
her
\from
|State
Senator
Otto
F.
Burkhardt
who was
President
of life which best described Mrs. Navyy,~ret.)
cross of President and Mrs.
\white
of
Westfield,
State
Rep.
Jereat
Coolidge is love—love of life, love Coolidge’s personal physician’
Others, on instruc|| Bisenhower.
of friends, love of being useful ithe White House, and Mrs.. Boone |miah Foley of Northampton, for- {tions from John, will go to Cooley
were
among
the
early
arrivals.-|mer
State
Senator
Ralph
W.
and helpful; love of God.
Dickinson Hospital, the U. S. VetThey were accompanied by Mrs. /Lerche, former State Rep. John
“She herself has said that one
Administration Hospital,
erans’
|J.
O'Rourke,
filled
a
center
secR. B. Hills of Haydenville, longof the unforgettable thrills of her
and various
rium
Sanita
Leeds
time close friend of Mrs. Cool- \\tion of the chapel.
life was in teaching the children
this city.
in
homes
g
{nursin
idge, and whose son, John, served |
Coolidge Associate
of Clarke School, that little chilx
today as one of the bearers.
| Rufus Cook, associate judge of’
dren who could not hear were
Senator
Saltonstall
arrived ‘probate
in
Hampshire
County,
able
through
her
teaching
to ;
speak the word love and know ‘alone, soon after Col. Benedict i was among the few political assohad entered the church.
Atty. Eee
of Calvin Coolidge in atwhat it meant.”’
{
Gen.
George
Fingold
and Mrs.
tendance.
He served as city so“Greatest Is Love’
Fingold
were
ushered
into the i licitor when Coolidge was mayor.
The
Apostle
Paul,
in Corinchurch and seated in a left cen- | Also
attending were directors
‘hians,
Rey.
Linde
said,
desevibed that quality in life when} ter pew behind the representa- jand faculty members at Clarke}

�ere

H

rat

oe

Ps. RP esiidee Is Buried by
isband’s
Side in Simple Vermont Ceremonies
By A STAFF REPORTER
|, Unable to attend because of tne}
Plymouth, Vt., July 12—Rites |Civil Defense alert in this state’
s simple as life in the Green |today, Goy. Joseph B. Johnson of
Mountains that surround this lit- | Vermont
delegated Howard _E.|
tle village where the 30th Presi- Armstrong, secretary of state, to
dent of the United States was |represent him here. Judge George |
born and is buried marked the \F. Jones, who was a bearer for}
|committal
of Grace
Goodhue |the
services;
Dr,
George
T.
Coolidge “‘to the hills and soil of | Pratt,
headmaster
of*- Clarke |.

SEPTEMBER

i Lady,

her son, Calvin,
the former First

in a bronze urn, were Ga.,

placed

in

an

close
vault| Coolidge’s;

underground

to the left of the former
‘dents grave, To the right
grave
of
Calvin,
Jr.,

=o

z

.

;

:

»

School trustee, attended.
Mrs, Robert Lyman of

Presiis the

of

the

John

whose | Coolidge was a member at the)
- marker is the 22d and last in the | University
of
Vermont;
Prof.
hillside Coolidge family plot.
' Myra Sampson of the Smith Col- |
Rev. Richard Linde, pastor of lege faculty, who is vacationing
_ Edwards Congregational Church| in this area; Vrest Orton, chair-

in Northampton, stood on a knoll} -man
of the Vermont Historical
overlooking the Coolidge ' graves, | Sites
Committee;
Mrs. | Violet},
and conducted the services. John| Pelkey,
long-time friend of the+)Coolidge,
only
survivor
of the
Coolidges who runs the village!)
former First Lady, stood with his store;
and
Charles
Hoskinson, |
wife, Florence, and two daughwho operates the Coolidge farms
ters, Cynthia and Lydia, close to here; were others at the services.
Business Suspended
the grave on a loose flagstone
Business here, which. is mostly |
walk that tops a stone wall forming the fence of the Coolidge fam- of the tourist variety, was sus- |)
pended until after the rites, On
ily plot in the ancient cemetery.
“A-few close friends of the fam- the shed door which is the main
entrance to the home where the
- ily, including Adm. Joel T. Boone
30th President was
born. and
of Washington, D. C., who’ was
President
Coolidge’s
personal |Which is now a historical shrine,
physician in the White House, and ‘a penciled note on the back of a/i
that had advertised a
Mrs, Boone, stood with John and | placard
his family, In small groups, no jcountry dance read, “Closed unmore than 100 persons, the ma- \til after funeral services for Mrs. |

jority of whom were tourists who|

“were

in Plymouth

today,

Coolidge.” Shortly after the rites |

stood in;

~ the unpaved road that runs past,
the cemetery into the hills, As
he had during the simple funeral
services

Linde

\

friends

Mr: and
Atlanta, |

Miss Erminie Pollard
of Proctorsville, representing Pi
Beta Phi sorority of which Mrs.

in

quoted

Northampton,

from

the

Mr.

121st

Psalm,
beginning
“I lift mine
eyes unto the hills from whence
cometh my help,” and then recited
a
special
version
of
the Congregationalist committal
prayer, which read:
For
inasmuch
as
the
spirit
“of the departed has entered into
the life immortal, we therefore

commit

her body to the hills and

soil of Vermont—but her spirit we
commend
to God, remembering
how
Jesus
Christ
said on the
cross, ‘Father, into Thy hands I

at the nearby
cluded,
the

cemetery were con-|
home
was
again)

opened to tourists.
After dining at the inn which)
is one of the dozen buildings that’

make up this village, John and
his family began the return trip
to Farmington, Conn. Guests at
the luncheon were Adm. and Mrs.
Linde, |
Boone,
Mr.
and
Mrs,
Charles R, Dutton, Northampton
funeral director, and Mrs. Dutton.
An hour after the burial, tourists were
still arriving
at the
cemetery.
Many
climbed
the
stone steps to the Coolidge plot
terracé..
The
grave
of
Mrs.
Coolidge was marked by houquets
of carnations from John and his

family

and

Adm.

Boone

and

a

basket of gladioli sent by ‘‘Plymcommit My Spirit.’ ”
outh neighbors.”
Bright Sun Shining
The former First, Lady’s markA bright sun shone down on the |
er will be the 23d td be erected in
hill
that
forms
the
Plymouth
the straight line of graves and is}
Cemetery
swhere
the
forebears
said io be last available grave
-and the loved ones of the former
site in the family plot. All mark-}
President are buried, A Cooling
ers are plain, and plainest are i
breeze
rustled
the
grass
and
weeds that grow from the rocky {those of Calvin, Sr., and Jr. Only
soil as the youthful
officiating } a small seal indicated that *Cal-|
vin Coolidge, born July 4, 1872,
clergyman
concluded
the
fiveminute
service by reading
an- | and who-died Jan.:5, 1933, was |!
other of the poems
written by | |President of the United States. |
Mrs,
Coolidge,
entitled
‘The ||Today the headstone was decor-|)
||ated with three wreaths of artiQuest.’’ The words are:
ficial flowers and greens.
' “Crossing the uplands of time,
*Skirting the borders of night,

*‘Scaling

fa

the face of the peak of

dreams,
*We enter the region of light,
|
“And
hastening on, with eager|
|
intent,
“Arrive at the rainbow’s end
“And there uncover the pot of}

gold
*"Buried deep
friend.”’

in the
if al ee Bie

heart

of a
ais

————S=—=

| ly

‘live

high

and

didn’t

let

the

&lt;=

eee

Humphrey

was

after-in-a

| where

:

le

arrested

nearby

he was

short-

night

waiting

| Officials said.
|
Chief Allen

club|

for Marbet, |

said Humphrey

| stigated the counterfeiting

in-

scheme

||because of the burden of debts
|| that were piling up on him daily.|

By RICHARD STEWART
', fmade repeated visits to her home
Secret | Service
agentS
were yesterday after agents completed
staying in Worthington “for more
than a week” and two of them ja room-by-room Search of the
The children, two of
lived at the Worthington Golf pitmises.
/Club for two days. and nights whom attend school, were not at
keeping tabs on the comings and home and were being cared for
goings of 39-year George W. Hum- by friends in the town,
phrey of Worthington, arrested | Agents ‘said they found counvlate Thursday night for printing terfeit money from “‘the top to
counterfeit money.
the bottom” of the large house.
Humphrey, described by inves- Some was found in a pair of old |
,tigators as a man who wanted to trousers hanging in a bedroom

}/He
contacted
_ friend, and the

fact

became a reality.
Worthington residents, most of |
whom
were familiar with the}
‘Humphrey family, were flabber-|

|, gasted when the news of the ar| rest reached them.
|.
Most:
‘people
of Worthington |

| thought

highly

of the couple,

es-|

| pecially Mrs. Humphrey,
whom
\they described as a fine mother

his way, was arrested in Boston,
along with two alleged confederates in the bogus money plot.
The other two men grabbed by books, including the University of || dren” when she gave ballet les)the T-men were Mark A. Marbet, | Massachusetts, Amherst College, isons at the Town Hall.
86. of Wayland, proprietor of a American
Probably the most surprised of ”
International
College H
in the community
wae
/camera
shop, and Paul Collins, and Pittsfield High School. The janyone.

36, of Cambridge,

an employe

Marbet.

of} business was
Plat,

Secret Service agents, with the

/assistance

ii his cel- {| Mrs. Lillian Hagberg, manager of
|the Worthington Golf Club. Mrs.

operated

ee

Agents said Humphrey and his

of State Police in this alleged

accomplices

|| Hagberg didn’t know of the arrest until contacted
by the Gacoun- ,zette this morning.
way, | | Mrs. Hagberg didn’t know until

apparently

jarea, had been watching Hum-|were planning to go into the
|phrey’s residence for nearly four |terfeiting business in a big
months,

to

oe

it

was

learned,

me

ely

ysnar
e trio
Humphrey
and

waiting
| perhaps

te

ursday
Marbet

pained

on an international, scale.

|this

morning that
Fitzpatrick

the two men
and Sweeney

-men said none of the money is jnamed

hight.! in circulation.
| who
were’
This was evidenced by the find- \day

stayed at the club Wednesand Thursday
were Secret
jheld, in $20,000 each and Collins ing of plates for printing stock | Service agents checking on Humin
9,000 at an arraignment in | of the American Telephone
&amp; | phrey.
| Boston yesterday afternoon, Col.
Telegraph Co. and Canadian cur“I ‘thought they were sales.|
|lins was‘described as a “runner”
rency. None of this type of stock /men,” she said. “When they left
| of the phony bills and engraving or currency had been printed as |Friday
they
said
they
might
i equipment.
Seta
__j yet, agents said.
|bring two other men back with

Humphrey lived well above his |

means in a home
he purchased

Maurice

in Worthington | agent

$50,- | Boston,

for a reported

of

the

Allen,

supervising

Secret

gave

this

Service

account

of

them and I told them there were
in ‘rooms for them. They never did

the /show

up

that

| very nice.”

night.

They

were

000 a year ago. The large white / event leading to the arrest of the
house with a two-car garage and trio:
first
tip
came
from
a
300 acres of land was built in 1778 | The
,and had been restored by a for-) Brookline service station attendant who noticed a counterfeit bill
|mer owner.
:
T-meri checking through the ,and notified police who in turn
house said they found piles of un- }informed the Secret Service. The
paid and overdue bills amounting jattendant furnished police with
‘to large sums of money. Even the 'the registration number of a car
rinting
press said to have been}; which agents later learned was
ell pe Hanphrey to print the | operated by Marbet. The bill was

j/home there were agents from
| Boston, New, York, Providence,

‘to-have been repossessed Monday. |

| Police

_money was not paid for and was’! 4 $10 counterfeit.
The

-

schinery

Vatching

Marbet,

and

‘photography

T-men

equip- relationship

between

determined

offset press and other ma-)jually

there
him

even-

was

and

‘home.

The

equipment,

cret,

Service

agents

most

their

of won

dt second-hand, was valued by Se- | chased
‘

The

father

of

four

at about’ on

children, | agent

‘two beys and two girls, ranging

first

was

sale

made

of

money

by

to

dancer

with

the

well- |,

Capt.

the

‘known Corps de Ballet in New
‘York. She has given ballet lessons.

‘to Worthington children at $1 per

‘Jesson.
_ The

slim,

attractive

-Marbet

at the

in

and

a

and

Collins

prearranged

Boston

were

hotel

grabbed

with
by

up|

D.C.,

and

New

Ha-

Sullivan,

com-

detachment

assigned

to as-

with the

the outset of the
in
this
area
was

ring was bigger than the usual
rings that are turned up but not

“spectacular size.” Agents said |

phony

| such bills.

place

$77,000)

waiting)

woman | agents as soon as the supposed
sale to the disguised agent was »
made.

Treasury

counterfeit

Sgt. James V. Molloy of Northampton, in charge of the Russell |
State Police barracks.
j
One agent said the counterfeit |

on/f

showed

meeting

the

the

Frederick

agents
from
jinvestigation

Sept. 6. The agent then asked for|the

have been $100,000.

of

|manding State Police in Western.
| Massachusetts, headed the State

‘in ages from 11 months to 15 more money—this time a layge| Would have
uyears, Humphrey’s wife is a for- | amount said by investigators to|NoOt anyone
ballet

in

was pointed up by the fact
yesterday at the Humphrey

ven.

the

Marbet

interest

| Washington,

about $4,000 for 25 cents

the dollar.

The

| Ying
that

pur-

and

confidence

The

| Department

a |sist the agents. Working

fnertt necessary foy the printing other two. The next step was to
“of counterfeit currency were lo-| have an agent pose as a buyer of
ycated in the basement of the ‘counterfeit money. The agent

|

Marbet,
an
old)
idea of Humphrey

/and wife. T-men said there was|
jno evidenge that Mrs. Humphrey |
| Was aware that her husband was
closet.
| Humphrey officially was: presi- | printing money.
dent of Christopher Publications, / One man said Mrs. Humphrey|
“very good with the chil-'
Ine., and had contractéd to print twas
eT
Bete
Sean
Bee
VU Mssce aang y
oe
many college and high school year wha

that he couldn't afford it stand in

“mer

rte

14, 1957.

Agents Say Bogus Money
Found Throughout Humphrey
Dwelling In Worthington

Vermont”’ here this afternoon,
| School for the Deaf in NorthampAshes Placed in Vault
tton; Mrs. Pratt, and Mrs, Rus-}"”
' Alongside the graves of her hus- lsell Magna
of Holyoke, Clarke

‘band, Calvin, and,
Jr., the ashes of

_

'

=

©

currency
probably
fooled a layman but »
trained

to

look

for

;

�Secret

Service

Cracks

Down

ase ag

Cou nterieiters

we Ne

it

ade bia

ie

Headgnarters For W’ orthington

Sle a

On Counterfeit Money Ring
Operating From Worthington

In cellar of this rambling old home on Old Post Rd. Worthington, George eTnapre}

is said by Secret
Service officials to have printed counterfeit curreney. The house was purchased by Humphrey a year
ago for a reported $50,000 and includes 300 acres of land.

Pee off-set printing press, being removed by employes of a Northampton rigging firm from the cellar
of the Humphrey home, was the machine which turned out the bogus bills.
About
$4.000
worth
of
equipment for printing the money was found in the cellar.
Left to right the Northampton truckers are.

Don Whitlock, Mike Pushkin and Don Gleason.

�ay:

NEIGHBORS BACK’
WORTHINGTON’
FAMILY IN NEED!

shacued

Bedi’

wife

and.

four

children

charges

%

of

counterfeiting,

;munity

|

fun

and

of

with
ed

us,’

They'll

hopes

was

Under this storage
agents and State
denominations.

shed
Police

about
discove

1.000
red

yards
“many

from the Humphrey
home i t Wordingrsn' Secret Service
thousands of dollars”i kis
currency, in $10 and $20

ways.”

a housewife

Stay’’

they'll

stay

comment-

Mrs. Humphrey, who moved to
Worthington
with
her
husband
and children only last year, was}
described as taking the situation|’
“bravely.’”?
Sympathetic
neigh-|
bors were helping the family, in-|

cluding

an

11-month-old

child,

in|

every way possible. The oldest of|
the four
Humphrey
children is ||
12

vears

old,

citizens,

new

“Mrs,
Humphrey jis very capa-|
ble and a fine mother,” a friend|
said. ‘‘She’l] get along very well.’
Humphrey
himself
was
de-|
scribed by friends as ‘‘the most||
ideal father ever.’’ He reportedly
combined
discipline, when need-|
ed, with
loving, devotion
to De
youngsters who ‘idolized him.

Humphrey

was

which

ambiof its

born

Secretary

of

the

Treasury

|

been

raised in New|

York City, and met his wife when
he was employed at Radio City
Music Hall.
He was arrested
in a Boston |
for
bar
where he was
waiting
soon after Secret Service
had raided a room
in a
hotel where
they picked}
alleged associates,
|

Private assistance, including financial help if the family desires,
will
be
extended
this
week,
friends
said,
to aid the family
unti] they are better able to care|
for themselves.
“Hopes

fines t

publisher had

they needed help, we would all
pitch in, They were such wonderful people
and
had
helped
the

“Worthington

community

the energetic,
publisher one

1

activity,

in so many

-the

end and
allegedly
$50 bills,!

George M. Humphrey. The Wor- |
thington man had reportedly told
acquaintances he was the secre-|
tary’s nephew,
Friends of the family said the |

“Mr, and Mrs.
Humphrey
op-|
erated the plant by themselves,”
a neighbor
said, ‘but whenever

community

pitchedi

considered
tious book

Although

| being held in a Boston area jail
\for lack of $20,000 bail. Two dssojciates,
Mark
A. Marbet,
f
pavemGs
and Paul ‘Collins,
35
iCambridge, also were arrested by
| federal
agents.
Assistant
U. S.
| Atty. Thomas O'Connor said the
jcase
would
be presented
to a
igrand jury in Boston within two
weeks,
The doors were locked on the
rambling
white
house
on
Old
|Chesterfield
Rd.
where
Hum|phrey’s
firm,
the
Christopher
| Publishing Co., was located,
Equipment Seized
Federal authorities had reportedly seized the equipment inside.
| The telephone was disconnected,
|and there was no sign of life at
| the
attractive
plant
which
had
| previously been the scene of com-

had

in Cleveland, according to close}
friends, he was no relation to the}
Ohio Humphreys who include for-|

}a
debt-nidden
Worthington
publisher who allegedly made money
—most
of
it
forged—were
in-|
formed yesterday that friends in
the community will help them in|
any way they can.
}
“Just a Little Help”
This is not charity,” a friend
| of the George W. Humphrey famlily said,
his is just a little help
ito some neighbors who need it,’
Humphrey, 39, arrested Friday |
on

'

Humphreys

1
||

to help in almost every
tee + |
ty effort; and he had aided in the}
publicizing of the Miss America
pageants with the Springfiéld and}
Pittsfield
Junior
Chambers
of!
His arrest last week
distiosire that he was
orging
$10, $20,
and

Aid, Praise

The

The

Publicity

Commerce.

Wife, Children Offered

|

’

at

ee Ata

|Alleged

Bogus Bills Found Under Shed

Worked

Pe

Graphic

evidence

the counterfeit

of an attempt

currency

cated them in the rubbish
money

they

printed.

are

the

by Humphrey

metal

plates

to destroy
scattered on

barrel at the rear of the

home.

some of the aluminum plates used1 eae
the ground by Secret Service agents ae 0Some
ol
the plates still bore imprints of the

;

i

�Real Frien ds’ in Worthington

:

HELP

GIVEN

52/1, 25% 14 3 E

A

jis the timeWwe can be together
as a family again. I want to stay

,

jhere,

|

REPORTER
She has been among the many]
to aid
came
who
Sept. 24—“All of | bank was down and he was very _ townspeople
a suddenI discovered the best! nice. He let me take along our /Mrs.
Humphrey and- the four
_ friends I have eyer known.”
;bed
and
an overstuffed
chair.
children.
In New Home
The
wonderful
people
in town
Suspicions Arise
Mrs.
George: W. . Humphrey)Y contributed
i
the rest of : the furni-i ' Jt was about six months ago

She

autumn brown.
2 Mrs. Humphrey moved into the
new” home the past week end.
The plain, white frame. cottage
| renting for $50 a month replaces
the
$75,000
restored Colonial

house the family

had

lived

in

tal expenses.

“We

don’t

person

to

to

get

ask

need

they

When

ble.

stop

happens

how

;

a

Worthington

new

$10,000

black

_tinental Mark II,
place to establish

business.
He was

the

Lincoln

Most

and

in

a

Con-

looking for a
his home and

of school

and catalogs and

publicity

work.

year

a publisher

yearbooks

did

last

press

also

agent

to-do.

were

:

very

well-

and looked

wonderful

are,’

she

his

wife

and

:

said.

|\an

Former

|,

“T asked him if he really was the

Among the mementos of a happier day Mrs. Humphrey took to
the new home is a bronze medal,

about the size of the palm of her

hand. It bears a likeness of forHumSecretary
Treasury
mer
has the
the back
while
phrey

with the Corps de Ballet at Radio
York
City Music Hall in New
City. She organized ballet classes L official Treasury seal,
here and at the insistence 0
“Tt was sent to us from Washtownspeople, conducted her reguington,” she said. “‘I really don’t
lar class the day after her: hus- know who did send it.”

band

was

Tt was

arrested.

while

she

was

at Radio

George © Humphrey,
handsome
of the
assistant manager
‘then

Distant Relative

Mrs.
wife

i

Her husband’s father, she said, |
was related distantly to the for-|)

mei treasury secretary.
apparently, re- \i
Not everyone,
George|),
by
impressed
mained
Humphrey.
runs|}
who
Sears,
Raymond

George W. Humphrey,
of the accused counter-

feiter, stands on the steps of
the house
on Old
Post
Rd.,

Worthington
that
neighbors
helped her move
to during
the week-end. Left penniless
after her husband's

has been assisted
people who
found

arrest,

of school

a salesman
jewelry.

rings jin town and elsewhere.

i

she

by townsthis home

:

the house
had
even
“They
wired. I’m sure they must have

in town
one fellow
“There’s
quesme
asked
here we don’t pay much atten-|! because
they
on io who tried to tell us this': tions about things they couldn't
| phrey when he first came to this 'summer he peeked into the cel-|! have heard any other way,’’ Mrs.
town, His expensive automobile,
lar and saw Humphrey printing} Humphrey said.
his friendly manner—women call money,” one resident’ said. “He |
The people in town who helped
him ‘charming’? — his natural told the story all over, but no- |them are still my friends. They
(Dr. Hollis W., Huston of First
ability as a salesman kept him
body believed him. It was a big |} were in the middle on this, and
in the limelight.
Congregational Church) to head
joke.”
I certainly couldn’t blame them
“Not a Worry”
Sees Equipment
up the drive.’’
for doing their duty. My husband
“T thought he was quite wealthy
First problem was to find a
Herbert N. Haskell, who runs
did wrong, there’s no doubt about
a
go lucky, with, not
—happy
house for Mrs. Humphrey.
The
a rea] estate and insurance busi-},
bank had set last Saturday qs the worry in the world,” Mrs. Ernest ‘| ness here, recalled the time Hum-| | -“J-yisited him in prison last
Robinson, a neighbor, said.
deadline for quitting the 15-room
phrey was showing him his equip-} |week. This all has helped to get
Pete Packard said: ‘I guess I} ment ‘and the printing press in!
colonial home, a half-mile down}
feet on the ground, What he
i his
Old Post Rd, from where she ‘was impressed to a certain ex- \ the cellar.
did wasn’t for his own gain, but
now. is living.
3
‘tent. I guess I thought the pub- |
Haskell jokingly said there was to pay off people who had been
Neighbors,
friends
and other
lishing business must be pretty / enough good equipment around to kind to him.”
volunteers
began
to move
the | good.”’
‘yun off a stack of $10 bills.
‘Mrs. Humphrey said she did
Humphreys
Friday
night,
con- |)
Mrs. Robert Lane, from whom ' “He said, ‘Oh yes, that’s right,’ not realize until about six months
‘tinued
through
Saturday
and
he bought the 15-room house, said _and passed algng immediately to ago ‘there were financial probwound up on Sunday. ©
today: “He had a fabulous gen- ‘the next room,” Haskell said.
} lems.
Mortgaged to Bank
ius.”
' “As T was leaving, he told me |
“Something Quite Serious”
money
for
| There wasn’t much furniture.
ressed
Mrs. Lane said it had cost her
hard-p
he was
believed everyone in_busi#*E
All that, and Humphrey's print$75,000 to purchase and restore
and he said, ‘Things are going |\ness got bills, so I never thought
ing and photographic equipment ‘the Revolutionary era homestead,
1o be different from now on. The ‘much. about it,”’ she said. She
was under chattel mortgage to a
and the 130 acres adjoining it.
aver suspected how her husband
| es
is transferring _ 100 shar
family
|
bank in Adams.
Humphrey bought the house for
to raise money
to my |

when
they
sealized
was penniless.
“So many people tried to help
they were getting in each other’s
way,’
Collin
‘Pete’?
Packard,
owner of the general store, said.
“We decided to ask the minister

But

there were other things—
personal objects that}
had accumulated in the 13 years
the Humphreys had been married, odds and ends of memories
clothing,

of happy days.

Residents
they were

$36,000,

here admit frankly
by Humimpressed

giving

gage to Holyoke
while Mrs. Lane

mortgage
000.

for

a

the

$26,000.

mort-

National Bank
took a second

balance—}10,-

iz

of American

name.’ ”
Plates for

Tel. &amp; Tel.
printing

American}

Telephone &amp; Telegraph Co. stock
the|
among
were
'eertificates
equipment Treasury Department

agents said they
Humphrey home.

seized

at

‘might be trying
49 meet those bills,

‘good
|

suspicion

but

something

serious was wrong.”
Townspeople

Humphrey

the | mother.

describe

had

‘a

quite

| Mrs.

as a devoted wife and
:

~

real

found

perfectly
and it compared
with the one on the banknote.”

Dancer

the

‘‘That’s

just pitch in and help,” one wom rit

children ' and
the family | and

four

people

said.

.-the kind of people we've
hére in Worthington.”

=
Humphrey, 39, now is in Suffollk theater.
for her. Mrs. Humphrey helds
“We were practically engaged
County Jail in Boston, awaiting
her youngest
child, -Richard,
after the second date,” she said.
tria] on charges of counterfeit11 months, while Robin, four
The family lived in New Jersey
ing. Government men claim he
stands by.
coming to Worthington. Ray’s Worthington Garage, said,
was printing bogus money in his} hefore
Humphrey started his publishing “Tell you the: truth, he struck
basement pressroom here, to try
Agents Tour Town
| business there and later opened me as a bull artist. He looked too |)
_ to bail himself out of debt.
an office in Boston. He previous- ‘big for his britches, riding around
Humphrey's
arrest
in Boston
men were in town
federal
The
ly had served in the. Marines in in that big Lincoln.”
earlier this month stunned ‘vesibefore Humphrey was ardays
World War Il, was a. Westchester | Sears has a check for $182.50) rested, watching the house and
dents of this small town of about
/ County (N. Y.) policeman, an Humphrey gave him that was re- enlisting the aid of townspeople
515 population.
pilot, former manager ‘turned from the bank last week.
_ Help Comes Quickly
‘airplane
in cracking down on the alleged
of the Morrisville (Pa.) Airport | Others told of Humphrey’s debts counterfeiter.
Quickly, though, they rallied to
help

over

trou- »nephew and he said, ‘Sure. T can
help, -you! ‘even sign his name.’ He signed
into

townspeople thought | City Music Hall that she met tall,

Humphreys

friends

was

tary of the Treasury (George M.
said.
woman
one
| Humphrey,”

Mrs. Humphrey* made friends
since coming to Worthington in
jquickly in this Hampshire Hills,
June of 1956,
.
town.
_ George Humphrey first drove
She formerly “was a dancer

into

there

available to him from
money
f
wealthy relatives.
“He was introduced to me as
the nephew of the (then) Secre-||

stood

smiling.

“What

and
washing machine
on the front steps of her|ture, the
most of Worthington began
s
Ratt
: fiver
Hum- _| when
home on Old Post Rd. as she
Mrs.
ae
to suspect George Humphrey was
spoke. She held her youngest! fee
pressed for cash, But many were),
impression

Now that Mrs. Humphrey ‘has
found a new home, she expects
the two older children, staying
with relatives in New Jersey, will
return in a few days, to resume
school.
hills

stood

the

friends

I have

where

‘on the children this way.”

STAFF

under

It’s

jand where everything is out in
everybody
.where
open,
ithe
iknows. I think it will be easier

Worthington,

child, 11-month-old Richard, in
Townspeople
also stocked the
her arms, while daughter, Robin, cupboards and refrigerator with
_ four, played nearby,
| food.
At present, a drive for funds
A brisk wind whipped through|
this hilltop town, rustling leaves ‘is being conducted, to raise monthat had begun to show traces of ey for Mrs. Humphrey’s inciden- |

that all I’m going on for

(much

Family of Alleged Counterfeiter Finds.
Nothing Artificial in Neighbors’ Help
By

She said today: ‘I love him so

_.

�TIME,

SEPTEMBER

30,

1957

The Publisher

Folks in Worthington, Mass. (pop. 515)
are as tradition-prim and Yankee-proper
as any other New Englanders, and they
usually have a cold and suspicious eye for
strangers. But right from the start they
accepted George Humphrey, a nice fellow
who last year bought a big, 15-room colonial house on 130 acres, and moved in
with his wife and children.
Jean Humphrey, 34, a slender, lively
woman who once danced with the corps de
ballet at Manhattan’s famed Radio City
Music Hall, opened up dancing classes at
Worthington’s Town Hall. George, 39, was
a publisher, ran a little printing firm that
turned out school yearbooks and similar

furniture, food. “This,” explained one
woman, “is not charity. It’s just a little
help for some neighbors who need it.
They were such wonderful people and
helped the community in so many ways.”
Said Jean Humphrey (who plans to continue her dancing classes): “I want to
stay here in Worthington. All of a sudden,
I have discovered the best friends I have
ever known. It’s where everything is out
in the open, where everybody knows. . .
We'll start all over again.”

HUMPHREY'S WIFE
REFUSES OFFER TO.
SEND HIM TO OHL0

publications. He liked to drive around in
a $10,000 Continental Mark II, and wes
known to be a mite expansive about his
moneymaking prowess; he also gave the
impression that he was related to former
U.S. Treasury Secretary George Humphrey. He had a little printing press in
his basement, and a friendly real-estate
man who saw it once joshed: “You could
make a bundle of ten-dollar bills on that

Accused
Counterfeiter
“ Will Not Attend Mother's
Funeral Rites

machine.” “Yes,” laughed George, “that’s

right,” and he hustled his visitor into
another room.
E
Fortnight ago U.S. Treasury agents arrested George and two other men in Boston, then sped to Worthington to coniiscate a complete counterfeiting setup in
Humphrey’s cellar, including $5,500 in inexpertly printed $10 and $20 bills, as well
as negatives and plates for making Canadian currency and American Telephone

‘

Worthington, Sept. 28—The wife
of accused
counterfeiter George
A. Humphrey today refused to accept money to permit him and |
guard
to attend
ee
a federal
mother’s funeral in Ohio, saying,}
“The
people of this town have
been so wonderful to us already, I}
lean't permit.a penny to be spent}
unnecessarily

and

I

don’t

believe}

any useful purpose can be served.
My husband would feel the same
way.”
|
Friend Offers Money
The money was reportedly offered
to Mrs.
Humphrey
by a
friend who had heard that Hum| phrey might be allowed to leave
Suffolk
County
Jail
under
an
armed escort to attend his moth-er’s funeral.
Humphrey's
mother, Mrs. Estelle Bergh,
died Friday
of a
cerebral
hemorrhage,
She
had
collapsed two weeks
ago when
told of her son’s arrest on charges of printing money in the basement of his Worthington home.
U. S. Marshal Thomas W, Gray

said in Salem that in all likelihood

GrorcE Humpurey

&amp; Son

Twenty-dollar plates.

and Telegraph Co. stock certificates.
Worthington was shocked. Of late, everybody knew, the Humphreys had been
terribly short of money: their phone had
been disconnected and bills had been piling up in the house for months. Ingenrously, George had been carrying on. assuring his creditors that he would soon make
good his debts; George’s word was good
enough.
With George in jail, the Humphreys
lost their mortgaged house and most of
their chatteled belongings. But the townsfolk, though they do not make friends
casually, rallied to the friends they had
made. Neighbors called on Jean, o~ ered
shelter for her and her four children,

Humphrey would be permitted to
attend the funeral. ‘‘In such cases
the Federal Bureau of Prisons extends permission for a prisoner to
leave for the funeral. The stipulation is always that he pay his
own way and the expenses of the
federal guard who must accompany him.”

It had been reported

that Wor-

thington residents were proposing}.
to raise the money before the funeral took place Monday at 2 at

Harder

bard O.
oe

funeral

aes

home
ee

in

Hub-})

|
|Worthington
|

Man Is Indicted; |

Humphrey Will Face 20 Counts

BOSTON
(UP) — Three alleged and $20 Federal Reserve Bank of
counterfeiters were under federal Boston notes; unlawfully concealing
and
passing
phony
money
indictment
today.
with
intent to defraud and
sale
The
jury
returned
a 20-count of counterfeit
currency;
making
indictment Friday against George
plates;
photographing
and print|W. Humprehy, 39, of Worthington ing
$1, $5, $50 and $100 bills and
who had been described by Treasa Bank of Canada note.
ury Department
agents
as the
The
alleged
offenses
occurred
ringleader
and
engraver
of the from late July through
Sept. 12.
| gang.
Similar charges were contained
| Worth $77,000
in indictments against Marbet and
Collins.
! Also
indicted
were
Mark A.
‘Marbet, 36, of Wayland and Paul Still in Jail
|G. Collins, 35, of Cambridge. All
Humphrey is confined for lack
ithree
were
seized
Sept.
13,
al- of
$20,000
bail
but
Marbet
and
legedly
in the
act of disposing
Collins have been free in $5,000
' $77,000 worth of bogus
currency. bond
each.
The
three
will
be
The
indictments
accused
Hum- arraigned
in federal
court
here
'phrey
of counterfeiting
$10
and next week at a date as yet unset.
1

HUMPHREY DENIES
FAKE MONEY CHARGE!
Boston,

Humphrey,

Oct.

39,

14

of

(®—George

_OCTOBER 13, 1957

Wa

Old

Chester-

was

held

field
Rd.,
Worthington,
today|
pleaded innocent to making coun-|

terfeit

money

and

in|

$7500 bail for Federal Court:
U. S. Judge George C. Sweeney
set the bail after defense counsel
|pleaded Humphrey had lost his
home
and
was
destitute,
The

U.

S.

$10,000

attorney’s
bail.

staff had

Humphrey

has

asked |
been

in custody since his Sept. 12 ar-|
rest, unable to furnish $20,000)
bail.
Pau]

bridge

G.

Collins,

pleaded

36,

innocent

of

to

Marbet

Service

agents

of Wayland,

who

Albany Printer Arrested in!
|.
Worthington Case

sell-

proprietor of a Boston
camera
shop,
on
a
charge
of selling
_ counterfeit money.
| The men were arrested by Se-|

lcret

- TOPHONY MONEY

Cam-

ing counterfeit money
and was
held in $5000.
Scheduled for arraignment la-

ter was Guy

| N.Y. MAN LINKED |

said|

/counterfeit $10 and $20 bills were |
| manufactured in Humphrey’s cel-|
lar and that money with a face
valuation of $80,000 was seized
' there.

=&gt;

Albany,
employee

lwas

‘N. Y., Oct.
of a printing

arrested

today

as

12 (1h An}
firm here|

an

alleged

jmember of a counterfeiting
operating in Massa¢
eits.
|

North

|

Schodak

|

sidence

ming!
|

William
E. Mayhew,
40, was|
picked up at his home in nearby
| North Schodak by two state troop-||
lers and a-secret service agent.)
| They held a bench warrant from}
| the U. S. District Court in Bos/ ton.

Mayhew
was arraigned before
|U. S. Commissioner Bender Solomon
and was: released in $2500
bail to await a subpoena by the} |
court in Massachusetts.
| The secret
service
said
the
|phoney money was printed on a
press
in
the
basement
of the
home
of George W. Humphrey, |
39, in Worthington, Mass.
|
Humphrey is being held in $20,000 bail in Boston, Mark A, Marand
bet, 36,
of Wayland,
Mass.,
Paul G. Collins, 35, of Cambridge,
Mass., are each free in $5000 bail.

�Ma

Oprt %, [FSP

ae
INDICTED

IN “BOSTON

Two Worthington men were indicted yesterday in Boston by a!
federal grand jury on charges of;

| conspiracy

to

counterfeit

United|

on

the

conspiracy

charg-

At Boston

67,

ADAMS
of

Alberie

Worthington,

2

stand~ trial

at Boston |!

i

ton.

his

neighbors

at

other

Conspiracy

Collins

BOSTON—Monday
Court before Judge
iSweeney,

Asst.

8S,

|

Atty.

|George. H, Lewald informed the
leourt that Alberti E. Albert, 67,
of Old Chesterfield Rd., Worthington, had died. Judge Sweenjey ordereq Lewald to draw up
ja certificate to that effect and
that he then would dismiss the
‘indictment. Albert, who died on
\Friday
at
hishome, , w3
lcharged with counterfeiting si0
| George W. Humphrey, 39, also
lof Old Chesterfield Rd.,
pleadled guilty to a charge ‘of con-|
lspiracy
to counterfeit
money.}
‘Humphrey had previously plead-|
ed guilty to a charge of coun-)
|\terfeiting money, The only re|maining

def fendant

in

this

have

plead-|

counterfeiting

$10)

testified

that

he

knew!

ae that he took no part per son-|

in Federal
George C.

U.

dealer,

allv

Mark

Charge!

to

Marbet, who was his boss, was |.
trying
to
peddle
counterfeit}
bills to a New York syndicate,|

TUESDAY, APR7,I195L9_

Humphrey Admits

camera

guilty

and $20 bills. They are awaiting|
disposition of their cases,

Worthing-

detendanis,

Bogus Bills Case

|

BOSTON '(Pi—Paul G. Collins,|
36, of Cambridge, was néntiior|
in
Federa}
Court
Tuesday
of|
aiding and abetting a $100, 000 |
counterfeit ring which extended |
into New York.
George W. Humphrey, 41, of|
Worthington, a publisher of colton

E sderal
authorities
had
charged the ring produced about
$100,000 worth of fake bills.

Two

_

Worthington

In

ed

pital, A potato farnier, Albert
had
been
accused
of being a
member of a counterfeit ring.
Albert, who pleaded innocent
to the charges, was scheduled. ta
stand trial Monday
in federal
court at Boston on the charge.
He was seized in 1957 by federal
agents
and
accused
of
being a member
of a counterfeiting ring allegedly y led by one

of

|3

One Is Cleared

lege year books, and Mark A,|
Marbet, 37, of Wayland, a Bos-,

E.

died

jand $20 bills.

&gt;

to

radey Saiuedey in North Adams Hos-

Worthington, Jan. 3—The cases
of two Worthingion men, charged
With six counts of conspiracy in
connection with the alleged counterfeiting of U. S. currency, will
be
heard
in
Federal
District
Court in Boston the first week in
March, the U. S. attorney’s of-j,
fice announced today.
Both Plead Innocent
Defendants
in the
cases
are
George
W.
Humphrey,
39, and
Albert E. Albert, 65. Both have},
pleaded to charges
of counterfeiting following his arrest with||
two other men from Greater Bos- |}
ton Sept. 13. He is awaiting dis-|)
position of that case.
Humphrey was released in personal
recognizange
pending
the

es. Albert posted $2500 bail for
his release.
Edward
McLaughlin
of
Bosjton
is representing
Humphrey
and Gerald Mahoney, also of Boston, 4g counsel for Albert.

| uled

Worthington Man Faced
Counterfeiting Charge
Albert,

hearing

MONDAY

SCHED

§

W

NORTH

Worthington Pair |
To Face Charges|
At Hub in March

ON

TRIAL

|States and Canadian money. Alberi E: Albert
and
George
W.}
Humphrey, both of Old Chester-|
field Rd., Worthington, were arlrested early this fall when Secret}
|Service agents said they seized
| more than $86,000 in curreney as
iwell
as
printing
apparatus
at
| Humphrey's home.

. Marbett
of
Wayland
and)
|George W. Humphrey of Worth-|.
guilty
to the},
jington,
ple aded
lcharges. A third man, Paul G.
pleaded|'
of Cambridge,
&lt;i:
4
innocent
and
also was
sched-|

ALBERT DIES;

A. E.

case,|

iPaul G. Collins, 36, of 20 Pres.|
cott St. Cambridge, will go on
| trial this morning before Judge|
Sweeney and a
jury.
He
is
charged with possessing, pass-|
ing and selling about $80,000 in|
counterfeit _ bills,

He
told
Judge
George G.|
Sweeney that he accompanied|
Marbet
to a Boston
hotel on
the night of Sept. 12, 1957, when
Marbet was arrested after turn- |
ing over $100,000 in phony bills}
to a New York man. The man!
turned out to be an undercover|
agent for the Secret Service,
Collins
said
he
went
with|

Marbet
the

only because he feared|

latter

by the New
resentative

would

be

beaten

up|

York syndicate rep-|
and it was his job)

to seek police protection if nec-|
essary,
The

jevidence

government

that

presented

Humphrey

print

ed the phony bills in the base-|
Iment of his Worthington home}
and that Marbet was to sell the}
| bills in Boston,

| (Marbet contacted Frank Bis-|
jtany of Boston to help dispose]
of the bills. Bistany turned out}
to be the Secret Service under-|
cover agent,

�WEDN ESDAY, DECEMBER

Forgotten for Awhile

4

ie

$, 14

4

Christmas Spirit Unites
~ Family in Worthington
ed

Tribulation

Wadena

25, 1957

Worthington, Dec. 24—A true-|
to-life Christmas carol was enacted on Monday, in the U. S.

District

Court

in

government
had
presented
its
arguments through Asst.
U.
S
;
é
S
Se
ee

Boston.

avy.

bie at PEST
;

PY OR

-esaang

tose

ea

leged

a

gaunt

six-foot

blond-haired

counterfeiter,

from

Yule

robes,

Spirit

took

his

The

United

States

weeks’:

the

clerk
of

St.

on

it

As

the

was

of the

the

charge

legal

evident

coming

out the
was

and

in

asked

Gia

was

drama
that

that

his own recognizance.
Justice George C. Sweeney of
the
Federal
Court
conferred
:
:
e

and|

|

It was

Defendant

to permit

unfolded, | to be released

the

fact

completel

the| Priefly with the assistant U, S.

read.

Christmas

«for

aisinecmeie:
that he be released

“ ‘‘The| | @ attorney and the
America dent court, then made

intoned

attorney

and | without funds and could not 4

=
the court as
in his black

place
:

Humphrey

im-

Charles

sus George W. Humphrey’

then

tye pointed

al-|14r.

Evident

A hush fell over
the judge, somber

bench.

pale

fifteen

risonment in
vail in Boston.

‘the:

Worthington so that he might be
with them for Christmas.

Standing at the bar of justice}

was

Lewald,

the defendant, Edward McLoughlin, Jr., asked that the defendant be allowed to go home to his
wife and four little children in

The characters in the drama
were not in the true Dickens’
tradition but the setting caused

spirit | of the

was

at, turn

U.

S.

when

clerk
of Seats
th
:
his decision. |!

Weeps
the

defendant

from the custody

marshal

summoned.

and

to re-

The

de.

work. A relaxed atmosphere per- | fendant bowed his head as tears
vaded the courtroom. After the | rolled down his cheeks. Within
a few hours, the defendant, once
again
a husband
and
father,
walked
into his home
to the

armsef
ones, |

his.wife
We Bigs)

The ‘living room
high. with sgifts

and_his little
Pye

was stacked|
the
kind
poets OF Cortana hae
:
obi this
earts.

little

family

to their

Home for Christmas
Plea Granted for

Worthington Man

It was a happy Christmas for the Humphrey family of
awaiting trial on counterfeiting charges, was released
Federal Judge so that he could spend Christmas with his
the Christmas tree opening the many gifts given to

Worthington. George W. Humphrey, 39,
from the Charles St. Jail in Boston by a
family. Here the family is grouped around
them by neighbors. The children standing

are, from left to right, Russell, 11, Robin, four, and Roberta, seven. Mrs. Jean Humphrey is shown
in the foreground with little Richard, one, watching his father open a Christmas present. The
family will also celebrate Robin’s birthday on Thursday.

|

Boston, Dec. 23 (P—U.
8.
Judge George C. Sweeney today took notice of the Christmas season by a legal maneuver which allowed George
W. Humphrey, 39, to become
reunited
with his wife and
four children in his Worthington home,
Humphrey has been in jail
for counterfeiting since last
September,
unable
to raise

bail. He pleaded guilty to the

|,

charge two months ago and
his case has not been concluded,
His counsel today pleaded
for reduction of Humphrey’s
$7500 bail contending the defendant was unable to raise
any money.
The U. S. attorney’s office
agreed
to
a
reduction
to
$5000.
:
Judge Sweeney set new bail

j|-

and all Humphrey had to do
was sign his name to a bond
before leaving court.

(|)

of

$10,000

without

security

|{'
‘

=

{

�54

(954

HUMPHREY
NOW ADMITS
CONSPIRACY

Collins Acquitted By Jury

Case Very Close, Says Judge

(Special to the Gazette)
| Springfield and
turned
over to
BOSTON — Paul
G. Collins,| Humphreys at the Park Square |
36, of 20 Prescott St., Cambridge,| Terminal in Boston,
|
was found not guilty by a jury:
Humphreys turned the money|
yesterday on a charge of aiding| over to Marbet, who took it to! |
and abetting in the sale of coun-| the Hotel Essex, where he had |
terfeit money. Trial was in Fed- |} made arrangements to turn it
eral Court. The jury deliberated| over to the New York contact.
for an hour and a half before ac: |
There was evidence that Frank |
quitting Collins. Atty. Frank Jug- Bistany of Boston was the go-|
gins of Boston was defense coun- between in
the
deal.
Bistany|
sel.
turned out to be
an lindercover |
The
government
sought
to agent for the Secret Service. He |
prove that Collins was
tied up posed as a Frank Newell.
| |

with George W. Humphreys
of
Old Chesterfield Rd., Worthington, and Mark A. Marbet of Wayland, a Boston camera dealer, in
the distribution of $100,000 worth

of

counterfeit

bills

which

were

printed in Worthington.
Humphreys and
Marbet

viously

had

pleaded

guilty

pre-

Bistany testified that he
Marbet at.a Back Bay hotel

phony

feit

his

client

money

had

sold

or caused

sold. He said that when

Special

George

H. Lewald

was

to

ing about
counterfeit

Lewald

that |

in

that when

of

Collins|

made a brief statement to Secret |
Service agents after he was arrested on the night of Sept. 12,
1957, he
was
only
telling
the
agents what they already knew.
The prosecutor charged that Collins went
down
to
the
Essex
Hotel,
Bosten,
with
Marbet
to!

render

Judge

what

assistance

Sweeney

told

he could,}
the

jury.

that they would have to find beyond a reasonable
doubt
that.
Collins was involved in the deal|
to

sell the spurious bills.
Collins testified that he knew|
that Marbet
was involved in a,
scheme to dispose of phony bills|

but that he was interested only in ;
protecting Marbet, who was his|
employer ii
the
camera _ shop,
from physical harm if possible.|

He said that he and Marbet ar-|

ranged

roughed

that

up,

he

if

Marbet

(Collins)

was),

would|

run for a policeman,
According
to the prosecution,|

the counterfeit money was print-|
ed in the basement of a “palatial |
home” on Old Chesterfield Rd.,|
Worthington, occupied by George|
W. Humphreys, who was publisher of college year books.
The
money
was _ brought to |

Boston

by

a

News

Hump-

messenger

from|

terfeit money.

Mark A. Marbet, 36, of Wayland,
has
pleaded
guilty
to
charges of possession of counterfeit money.
|

The eases
Marbet will

hrey, 40, Old Chesterfield Rd., the
’ Worthington, who had previously trial.
pleaded guilty to a charge of
counterfeiting
money,
pleaded
guilty in Federal Court yester-|
day to a charge of conspiracy

|

bills|

of
be

Humphrey. and}
disposed of at|

conclusion

of

the

Collins}

|

to counterfeit money.

when
Agent
Motto
wee seen
himself as a Secret Service agent.

Judge George
that he would

C. Sweeney said|
dismiss the in-!

457

aes eta
ne Sate

Counterfeiting
(Special

to The

be

senténced

in
Federal
Court
George C. Sweeney.

‘to

jae

bills,

4

U. S. Atty. Tells How Auto Was Used to Transport Counterfeit Money

Snrecial te The

Also

Daily News

awaiting

court

action

is

pleaded

guilty

to

BOSTON—A libel for the for- George W. Humphrey, also of
feiture of a 1956 Lincoln sedan, Old Chesterfield Rd., Worthingused

in

a

counterfeit-

ton,

who

has

ing racket in Worthington, was
filed yesterday in Federal Court federal charges of conspiracy to

by

Asst.

U.

S.

Atty.

George

H.

Lewald.
- The machine is registered in
the name of Alberi E. Albert of
Old .Chesterfield Rd., Worthington who is under indictment in
Federal Court on counterfeiting
charges.

counterfeit money
and possession of counterfeit money.
Humphrey
pleaded
guilty in
Federal Court, Boston, December, 1957 and is now free on

bail.

Disposition of his case is expected
in Federal Court sometime after April 6. At that time,
Albert and Paul G. Collins of
Cambridge
are
scheduled
to

~ Lewald told the court that the
machine was used on Sept. 12,
1957 to transport 2500 counterfeit $20 bills and 2000 counter- stand
trial on
counterfeiting].
feit $10 hills to Boston from charges.
The trial date has been postWorthington.
The

Jan..

machine

agents.

.23,.

\was

1958 . by.

seized

on poned

Treasury

several

charges

dating

back

to September of 1957 in which
T-men smashed a_ counterfeit
ring

book

headed

by

publisher.

a

Worthington

times

the illness of Albert.
Some

Albert is involved in the coun- bills was

terfeiting

Both men
charges

United

Car’s Role Beser bod in
Worthington Racket

allegedly

Case.

Union)

BOSTON — George W. Humphreys
of
Worthington
and
Mark A. Marbet of Wayland, involved in a counterfeiting plot,

will

.

ae

Sentencing April 27

acquir-

$100,000
worth
$10 and $20 bills.

said

W.

be}

conviction
S.
Atty.

argued

interested

Daily

Marbet,|

the defendant assisted Marbet in|
the accomplishment of the: sale
of the bills to special agent Carmine J. Motto of the Secret Service. Motto had posed as the rep-}
resentative of a New York ring|

which

Charge

counter-|

it

have nothing to do with coun-!
terfeit scheme
when
he_ knew |
that Market was involved,” Jug:|
the
U.

to The

BOSTON—George

the camera
dealer
in
Boston,|
passed $450 to
an
undercover |!
agent for the Secret Service, Collins deliberately
left
the
room.
“Collins even advised Marbet -to |,

gins stated.
In pleading for
of Collins,
Asst.

Pleads

On Counterfeiting

charges of counterfeiting money | Immediately a half dozen more
and
conspiracy
to
counterfeit agents, headed by Chief Maurice |
money: It is expected that Judge | R, Allen of Boston, poured into
George C. Sweeney will dispose the room.
of their cases shortly.
Outside
the
South
Station,
When
the jury
returned the across the
street,
Collins
was
verdict in favor of Collins, Judge taken into custody by Agent Al. |
Sweeney
remarked
“It
was a fred Wong.
i
very close case and I think it is|
The phony bills seized in the
a fair verdict?’
jhotel room were
introduced
in
Atty.
Juggins
argued
that evidence by the government,
there was no evidence whatsoever |

that

Man

Guilty to Second

told him that the
deal was all|
ready to go through.
At the Essex
Hotel,
Marbet|
started to bargain for the sale of:

$100,000 worth of

to

met.
and}

Worthington

dictment against Alberi E, Albert of Worthington when Asst. |
U. S. Atty. George H, Lewald}
files the proper certificate. Al-|
bert, a defendant in the counter-}
feiting case, died over the week|
end. Lewald said that he had
planned to dismiss the charges
anyway.
Paul G. Collins, 36, of Cambridge went to trial. today before Judge Sweeney and a Jury |
on charges of possession of coun-|

$80,000

seized

in

because

of}:

counterfeit

by the

federal

men when they broke the counterfeit ring in 1957.
Conditions of Humphrey’s bail]
are that he has to remain in
Massachusetts,

- _

had
of

States

on

by

April

27

Judge

pleaded guilty
counterfeiting

and

Canadian

�_APRIL 30, 1959,

George Humphreys —
To

(Special to the Gazette)
BOSTON
—
George W. Hum{phreys, 40, of
Old
Chesterfield

|Rd., Worthington,

and

Mark

A.

isentenced

for

counterfeiting

—

Parey,
nad

The
defendants
were to have
been sentenced last Monday, but
the
probation
report
was
not |
ready.
i

Asst.

U.S.

Atty. George H. Le.

Wald will appear for the govern-|
ment.
:
Judge George C. Sweeney will
be on the bench. Both Humphreys

Judge

charging

them

ants are free on bail.
It is contended by Secret

ice men

that

the defendants

George

George :

W.

Hum-

C.

Sweeney

:in
,

$10
z Humphrey,
||910,000 for

McLaughon a counterfeit-|/jin pointed out that Humph
rey
ae.
Ae
was in jail for 91 days before,
Pee ada tt aed Neh
Judge Sweeney released him on
het, 37, of 270 Co,
=| =
at-!ipersonal
recognizance,
Judge
joel ie
ere eons hte Sweeney did not comme
nt on

-phrey,.

|

In the case

Judre

of Hum-

Sweeiey

mas —s

“also

tacked on a three-year probatio
n

con-

acquitted in Federal
Judge Sweeney cut the recom.|| Court
April 7 of aiding and abet-Mended term to 18 months after||‘i2g
a plea by Atty. Edward F. Mc-||WaS in the counterfeit ring. He
employed
by Marbet, a
eet
—_...-.__ “=

‘Humphrey Handed
18 Months’ Prison

©

As Counterfeiter

||

BOSTON
-— George W. Humphrey, 40, of
Old
Chesterfield
Rd., Worthington, was sentenced
to
18 months in a federal penitentiary by
Judge
George
C./
Sweeney
in Federal
Court
yes-|

charges,
A. Mar-

bet, 37, of Concord
Rd.,
Way-|}
land, proprietor of a camera shop
in Boston, was given a one year|

sentence.
In

the

case

Judge Sweeney

of

Humphrey,

|

also directed that

j}he be placed on
probation
for
| three years, the probation to be|gin at the completion of the jail
| sentence.
|
|
Execution
of Humphrey's
sen-|
{tence was
deferred
until Friday.|

| Marbet will start his jail sentence|
|

on

Thursday.

Atty.

Edward

F. McLaughlin

|

for |

‘Humphrey made an eloquent plea |
for a suspended sentence for. his|
client
but
Judge
Sweeney
said
“the crime is too severe to -per-|
mit of probation.”
j
Asst. U.S. Atty. George H. Le- {
wald had recommended a two year |
sentence for Humphrey, but Judge
Sweeney sliced six months off the
“recommendation
after
McLaugh-|
lin’s impassioned plea.
|
Humphrey stood motionless while |
sentence was pronounced, but he
was very pale.

Boston camer;

told Judge Sweeney that Humphrey printed $80,000 worth of
counterfeit money in the basement of his home in Worthington. He said he also had printed
some American Telephone and
Telegraph Co, stock certificates.
Lewald said the case broke in
Marbet
when
1957,
August,

cashed

Gazette)

~ terday on counterfeiting
A co-defendant, Mark

EF.

North Adams Hospital, three
oa
pele. fe was scheduled

Laughlin, Jr., of Boston, Lewalds

the

Alberie

Asst.d U.recom
S. mende
Atty. dGeorg
Lewal
“2° ma||_ ve
Paul e
year sentence for Humphrey, but bridge, G. Collins, 36, of Camwas

agents.

to

ed

Albert, 67, also of Old Post Rd.,
Worthington,
died
April
3 in

the probation
to begin
Humphr
jail sentence. ey completes the

Serv-

hla

;

A third defendant,

term,
wh
when

spired to pass
$80,000
in phony
bills toa
New
York
syndicate
which turned out to be a group
‘of
undercover
Secret
Service

(Special

(Special to the Gazette)

BOSTON—George
W.
Humphrey, 40, Old Chesterfield
Rd., |

Friday and Marbet’ until]
‘of : Old ; Post Rd., until
dai
, |hursday y totc begin: theirir jail
ane given an 18-l\tences, Both men have been senJail sentence Monday by|!on bail, $5000 for Marbet out
and

40,
ee

sentence,

with

counterfeiting phony $10 and $20
bills and with conspiracy to counterfeit phony bills. Both defend-

—

ooo

|

and Marbet have peladed guilty to
indictments

Surrenders, Taken
To Conn. Prison

George W., Humphrey Sentenced On
Counterfeiting Charge; Also On 3-Year Prob
ation

Pha Gst, 37, of Concord Rd., Way|Jand, will be
in Federal
Court
/next
Monday
afternoon
to be

/money.

George Humphrey

Worthington Man
Jailed 18 Months

Hear Sentence
In Boston Monday

a

phony

$10

bill

at

&amp; Sener:

a

as station in Watertown.
According to Lewald, the gas
Station
attendant
also was
a
printer and realized that the bill
Was a counterfeit from the feel)
of the paper. He said the Secret|
Service agents were called in|
and they found that Marbet’s
job was to sell the counterfeit
money. He said that Marbet got
in touch with a man whom he
thought was a representative of

&amp; New York counterfeiting syndi-

cate. But actually, Lewald said,”

was a Secret Service undercover
agent, Lewald
said that when
Marbet tried to sell the counterfeit money
in a Boston hotel
room he was arrested and that
;Humphrey
was
arrested
the
same night in a Boston cafe.
Both Pleaded Guilty
Both men previously pleaded
guilty
to
the
counterfeiting
charge,
McLaughlin
told
the
court that Humphrey is well on
the road to rehabilitation, that
he has a wife and five children,
that he has a job as an interior
decorator which pays him $200}
weekly and a promise of a $10,-/
000-a-year job with a plastics

concern

in the

western

part of

the state. He said that despite
all the
disgrace,
Humphrey’s
family
continues
to reside
in|
Worthington. He said it would |

not be in the interest of austioe|

to send Humphrey
to jail because his wife and family would
|be the sufferers,
Judge
Sweeney
commented, |
“this erime is too serious for|
probation.’’ In order to permit

|Humphrey and Marbet to wind
lup their business affairs, Judge

iSweeney

is

allowing

Humphrey

;

:

:
:

*

Worthington,
surrendered
to
United
States
Marshal
Ralph |
|W. Gray yesterday.
He immedi- |
|ately was taken to the Danbury

| Correction

Institution,

Danbury,

Conn., to serve an 18
months’
| sentence for counterfeiting.
|
The Worthington
man
arrived
lat the Federal
Building
in
the
|company of a magazine
photog|'rapher and a magazine writer to
‘cover the departure for prison.
|
Humphrey
informed
Marsha!
| Gray that his life story is to be
told in a magazine article. Mar|shal Gray refused to permit any
‘photographs to be
taken
inside
|

the marshal’s
Mark

cord

A.

office.

Marbet,

Rd., Wayland,

387,

of

Con-

left for Dan-

|

bury to serve a
one
year
jai}
term for his part in the conspir-,
acy to peddle counterfeit money
to a New York syndicate.
|
4

�ait"
*
be

BOGUS MONEY |:

:

\; done

es

||De-icer

a

,
Magazine

5000

May

was

whose

field,

took

on

the

safeguard

money,

another

de-icers

the

furore

had

been

and

pub-|

Humphrey’s

arrest in 1957 on the counterfeiting charge, his Worthington
neighbors rallied to his cause.
Humphrey’s
wife
and
children were informed then that
friends in the community would
jhelp them
in any
way
they
could. ‘‘This is not a charity,”
a friend of the Humphrey family
said. ‘‘Thigs is just a little help

'

bizarre

turn here yesterday. at Danbury.
Correctional Institution.

Arriving

to

|- licity that followed

last venture!

counterfeit

the

Despite

Have

:
Writeup

man,

in

of

||ordered.

Special fo The Daily News
DANBURY,
Conn.
—
The
strange saga of a book publisher, inventor, and one-time pub-

licity

designed

vehicles by keeping the windshield wipers free from ice and
snow. Humphrey said then that

Worthington Man Arrives at!
Danbury;

Worthing-|)

inventions,
of
field
the
In
Humphrey turned his attention
to an auto windshield wiper deicer. In 1956, he announced the
production of a Humphrey E-Z

|

=

in Humphrey’s

to some
it.””

at the federal priSon’

neighbors

who

need

‘to begin an 18-month sentence | Just before Christmas, 1957,/
for counterfeiting, George W.| |Humphrey was released from
Humphrey of Worthington was} |Charles St. Jail, Boston, sc he
accompanied

by a photographer]

could

and writer, both from a nation-!|

al agaZine.

'

The life story of the Worthing-|
ton man reportedly is to be told}

Born

a national magazine.
Humphrey,
40, of Old Post
was _ senWorthington,
Rd.,

Monday

broke

The

in Boston Fed-|

in August,

Worthington

1957.

man

had

pleaded ‘guilty to the counterfeit-

ing
ae

|

ae
a

fior

term

a New
ring

completes

j

is

to

ae
otha Pabst
| Humphrey home:

the

h
fail

federal

The

Georse

have}

appeared

was

jail

Atty.

sentence.

aru

J.

recommended
a
tone
Be. Tium-

5

attorney

C.

Sweeney

th,

told

the road

Judge

that

ad én

EHum-

rahabils

to rehabili-

tation and that he had a job as}
an
interior
decorator
and
a
promise of a job with a plastics |
concern in the western part of

poets]

chapter

another

still

‘be

prison

Humphrey

plea by Humphrey’s attorney.

The incident here yesterday at} the state.

the

Humphrey

a three-year vrobato. begin when he

=

counterfeit-| phrey is on

said

with

phrey but it was reduced by the
judge to 18 months following a

iSae

England

U.

Cotas

neapeegees
the!
ae che le

which

Monday,

at

|dren, was reportedly the brains), (
ing

in Cleveland,

,also given
|tion term

many months.
Humphrey, father of five chil-

of

holidays

of the former Secretary of the}
Treasury George M. Humphrey. }
Sentenced to the 18-month jail

eral Court as the climax to the]
sensational counterfeiting case|

' which

the

had reportedly told friends at}
Ome time that he was a nephew

in

tenced

spend

his family.

to|

Also arriving

in the} rectional

5

at Danbury

Institution

Cor-

yesterday

career of Humphrey who at one! Was Mark A. Marbet of Waytime owned the Christopher Pub-\!and who pleaded guilty to coun-

‘lishing Co. in Worthington.
terfeiting
charges
and
was
At the time of Humphrey’s ar-|/fiven a one-year term. A third
Camof
rest in 1957, the publishing firm'|defendant, Paul Collins

he headed held the contract for;bridge,
publishing the American Inter- | quitted.

was

previously — ac-|

national College yearbook.
The fourth defendant, Alberie
Apparently, turning his atten-|E. Albert of Worthington, died
tion to the publicity phase of his/last month,
three days before
career
yesterday,
Humphrey he was scheduled to stand trial. |
wanted the photographer from
eer
ot oe
the national magazine to take
pictures
inside the jail quarters,
However,
U.
5S.
Marshall
Ralph W. Gray flatly refused to,
allow the photographer to take
any pictures in his quarters.

|

It

was

reported

unofficially

| that the writer and photographer
were representing a well known
national magazine which has its
offices in New York City.
The

Worked at Pittsfield

phrey’s

in
{at

publicity

phase

career was

Pittsfield where
one time worked

teer

publicity

man.

of

Hum-

|

well known }
Humphrey
as 4 en

In 1957, he!

reportedly worked closely With |
the Pittsfield Junior Chamber of |
Commerce
in a Miss pneiee |
pageant.
Humphrey’ s volunteer publicity work in Pittsfield is also said

to have included the offer of his |
services for the Hancock Fair.|
A fair director said then that)

Ste for me
%

fair had been!

�el

ick ve waitiats ck ie | 2 eee tee ee

Heberts Buy 120-Acre Worthington Estate

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph O. Hebert

owners of the Gazette Printing
| and Bookbinding Co:, in this city,
as
have purchased the 120-acre es- plans to occupy the premises
when
tate on Drury Lane,
Worthing-| his home with his family
ton, which was formerly owned 'the legal’ papers are recorded.
The entrance hall, with a graceby George W.
Humphrey, who
faces charges of counterfeiting in ful stairway, opens on the left to
right
the spacious 11-room house which | a sitting room and on the
was built in 1780 and was_
re- to a master bedroom with a den
stored in 1950 by William Gass, /and Jeads on to a 30-foot-square
Jr. of 122

famous

for

the

his restorations

St.,

Florence,

of iliving

authenticity

of the storied

homes in Deerfield.
Mr. Hebert, who is one of

PTs

a

SALE

Worthington,

| interested

in

| Sale of Drury
Road,
'phrey

17—Persons

the

mortgagee’s

Lane

on Old Post

the former George Humhome, met there today at

11 a. m. After

| seve

In. Worthington

|

was

consultation,

postponed

j 23 at 11.
{

until

the

Dec,

Worthington

Briefs

,and sons have returned to
i; home on Highland St. from
‘dleton, Conn., where they
| called by the death of Mrs.
;pa’s mother, Mrs. Lucinda
vens Fisk Burr. Mrs. Burr,
formerly lived in this area,
stricken with a cerebral

orrhage

Middlesex

and

died

Hospital,

Dec.

their
Mid.
were
KruSte-|
who
was
hem-

11

in

Middletown,

at the age of 55. The funeral was
held

in

Middletown

was

Cemetery

Besides

in

Mrs.

on

the

14th.

in the Burr District

Haddam,

Krupa,

Mrs.

Conn.|

Burr)

leaves three other daughters and

i
;a
son.

Pic

=

Sa ae

Dec. 24
O, Hebert, Jr.,
St., Florence,
the 120-acre esLane, Worthingformerly owned
Humphrey.
The

Spacious 11-room house was built

in 1780

Mrs. Charles C. Eddy of Buf.
|fington Hill Rd. has filed nomination papers for the office of
tax collector.
‘
A
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Krupa

‘Burial

Northampton,
and Mrs. Joseph
of 122 Chestnut
have purchased
tate on Drury
ton, which was
by George W.
and

was

restored

in 1950

by William Gass, famous for the |
authenticity

of

the

Mr.

owners

of

his

old

homes

of

the

Hebert,

who

in

restorations|

Deerfield.

is one

Gazette

of the

Printing

and Bookbinding Co., in this city,
plans to occupy the premises as
his home with his family when
the legal papers are recorded.
The property, located one mile
from the center of Worthington,
was purchased
by Mr. Hebert
at a foreclosure sale yesterday.

Mr.

Hebert

bid

$390

and

as-

sumed the mortgage on the prop- |
erty. Prior to being purchased|
by Humphrey, it was owned by
Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Lane
of

Westfield

and

In

that

_ ficient modern equipment.
The
second floor has four large bed|rooms, a Well appointed modern
| bath, a lavatory and two
servants’ rooms and bath,
|.
The property, located one mile
from the center of Worthington,
was purchased by Mr. Hebert at
|a foreclosure sale yesterday. Mr.

| Hebert bid $390 and assumed the
the ; mortgage on the property. Prior

room

|} huge original fireplace has
an | to being purchosed by Mr. Humold |original Dutch oven and crane.
| phrey, it was owned by Mr. and
|The 30-foot kitchen has antique | Mrs. Robert Lane of Westfield
the ‘pine cupboards and the most ef- ;and Worthington.

Heberts Buy Home|

POSTPONED

Dec,

room.

Pot

WORTHINGTON

a
ee
ee — ae oe

ee
‘

ee_—

ee

asae

Chestnut

Worthington.

1g a

Jone 3,

| Worthington Men

Face Trial July 21

In Federal Court

(Special to the Gazette)
BOSTON —- Judge George

Sweeney

day

in Federal

ordered

|Humphrey,

| Albert

of

39,

Old

Court

that

and

C.

yester-

George

W.

Alberi

_E,

Chesterfield

Rd.,

Worthington, stand trial on July
21 on charges
of
conspiracy to
counterfeit.
United
States
and
| Canadian money.

On
the same
day, Pail G.
|Collins
of Prescott
St.
Cambridge will stand trial

on charges

of possessing counterfeit money. |
set the trial |
Judge Sweeney
with |
a conference
after
date
Asst. United States Atty. George|
various defense|
and
H. Lewald

i
counsel.
Lewald estimated that the trial |
would last for two days.
previously|
had
Humphrey

pleaded

guilty

counterfeiting

Canadian money.
Mark A. Marbet
Rd., Wayland had
guilty to a charge

‘ing money.
Secret

Service

counterfeiting
Humphrey’s

charge

toa

States

United

home.

of

of|

and)

Concord|

|

also
pleaded |
of counterfeit- |
agents

apparatus

a

|

seized |

in!

|

|

�ee

aan

|

WORTHINGTON
Worthington,

2

BOSTON CENTER FOR ADULT EDUCATION
5 COMMONWEALTH

.

18—Russell|

Oct.

THE HOME OF

fe the annual
Gane Mently

BOSTON, MASSACHUSETTS

parent-teacher conference.
At the fall meeting of the Highland

Club

the

following

AVENUE

officers

were elected: president, Mrs. Mil-

dred
Hamlen
of Cummington;
vice-president,
Owen Dilger
of
Plainfield;
secretary-treasurer,
Arthur G. Capen; executive com-|'

aa

BI Oe

ee

Ee

mittee,
'

in addition

°

"

at

:

—

oe

to the above

officers, Roswell Merritt of Ches-

terfield and Mrs. Frank Dresser
‘}of Goshen.
Master W. Todd Alger has been|}.
chosen
Grange

to represent Worthington}
at the sessions of
the],

Massachusetts State Grange
iny
Springfield Oct. 21 to 24. Arthur
G. Capen was chosen alternate

delegate,

Local television viewers report |

having seen George Packard, Jr.,

nephew of. Mr. and Mrs. Henry
H,. Snyder and a former resident
now living in Augusta, Me., as
he .took part
Wednesday
in a
give-away program.

Edward

K.

Porter

will

leave

Sunday for Ft. Dix, N. J., to begin six month’s National Guard
training period.

The Rod and Gun Club will have

a turkey shoot at the club grounds
in Christian Hollow Sunday at 1.
Laymens’
Sunday will be ob-}
served in First
Congregational

,Church

at

11.

Miss

Marian

L.

‘Bartlett and Clarence A. G, Pease
will give the messages and the
service
has
been
arranged
by
Dr.
Leighton
A.
Kneller
and
Charles C. Eddy. Caurch school
also will be in session at 11.
The Grange will meet Tuesday}
at 8 in the Town Hali for the
annual ‘‘youth night’? program.
Mrs. Clarence Carey is in St.
Luke's Hospital receiving treatment for injuries received in a

fall in Pittsfield on Thursday.
Miss Jane Conwell Tuttle has
been named organist and choir
director for the Village Church in

(Cummington.

:

:

ne

:
}

�BT

CONES TIERS ert

ave

ae

)957
PORT

if =

{95-7

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON—James
ling, son of Mr. and Mrs,

Wed ‘Boy Next Door in 1892

HickLeslie}

G. Hickling
of
Kinne
Brook |
Farm has been selected by
ne
selectmen to represent this town |)

Tuesday at a Constitution
Day|
celebration in the Hall of Flags}
at the State House,
Citizenship|
awards

will be made

by

Incorporated,

sponsors

Northampton

High

program.

Jimmy

The
Church

Freedom

of « the|

is a senior

|

at!

School.

First’
Congregational|
is
planning
a_
public}

|

baked ham dinner and dance on}!
October 5 for the benefit of the|
new

furnace

fund.

f

George

Bergin

enrolled

Herber

N. Haskell

at}

|

North
Adams
State
Teachers|
| College today as a freshman, He
}attended
Northeastern
Universi-|
{ty in Boston for the past year|
| where he majored in accounting. |
ber

of

the

Temple

in

in

Shrine

day.
Miss

class

was

which

ceremonies

at

Springfield

Jennifer

a mem.- |,

initiated

on

Melha

|

Fri-

\
Glidden,
|,

Lee

granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. |,
N. F. Glidden of Denworth Farm,
was presented to society earlier |,

this month at an informal
din- |
,ner-dance in New Canaan, Conn. |
| Miss Glidden finished at Emma |,
‘ Willard

j}and

rado

will

School

begin

University

in

Troy,

studies
this.

at

N.

month.

Y.,|

Colo-

C

WORTHINGTON

Mrs,
Rd.,

.—

Ernest J. Thayer
West Worthington,

Mr.

and' has. held

their

met

at

Monday

Baldwin's
Road with

tank

Eastern

fire drill

night

truck

States

at

was

Dr.

the

Ex-

staged

played

at the

all!

first of a series|

of six progressive whist parties]
Saturday at 8 in their home in|

|Christian

Hollow.

These

parties

hare for the benefit of the Grange
and in charge of the home and
community
service
committee
and the lecturer, Mrs, Alger.
Mr..
and».
Mrs..
.W.
“Warren
Rausch
have
returned
from
a
trip through
the
White
Mountains to Auburn, Me., where they
visited Mr. and Mrs. H. Clinton

Kline.

The
Misses
Alice
and
Betty}
Porter
hav:
returned’
to
New
York and Hartford, respectively,
after having been called home by}
the death of their mother, Mrs.
i
G. Porter, Sr,
Mrs, Edward H. Newcomb who}
is spending the winter with her}
json-in-law and daughter, Mr. and|
|Mrs. Preston R. Sage
in Man-|
chester, Conn., will observe her|
88th birthday Thursday. Mrs. ey

Warren Rausch will
|mother that day,

be

with

her

in

which|School

superintendent

also

for

the

wedding

march.

|On

their

65th

wedding

anniver-|

Mr, Thayer, who was a dairy | sary they are still much interest-|
farmer, Was never too
busy
to}ed in all that goes on at home)
take an active part in both townj|and abroad and especially enjoy|
and
church
affairs
and
he 'having callers.
|

being used. Following the drill,|
Dr. Baldwin put on an archery |
exhibition
and
served
refresh-}
ments to the firemen.
|
Mr. and Mrs, “Villis Alger will}

entertain

life and

50 years. Rev, Ketchen, who
ati
Within the lifetime of Mr. and}
that
time
served
both
the | Mrs. Thayer, six generations of|
Methodist
Church
at
South!both sides of their family
have}
Worthington
and
the
one
at/|lived in their house and in
the
West
Worthington,
performed | house down the road where Mrs.
the ceremony. Mrs. Leon M. Con-| Thayer was born and from which|
well, who now lives in Wakefield | she married the boy next
door,|

Edward

pumper.

married

the town, too, she was a
of First
Congregational
for 25 years and Sunday

of
the
Cummington
Fair
-—jgoing to the dance at the
town
which he missed that one time|hall, “not only going but dancing|
for the only time in a period of|every dance.”
|

home in Kinne Brook
the portable pump, the

and

in

Mr, Thayer has lived since
he!25 years.
|
was a little boy.
Both
always
have
enjoyed)
They were married in 1892 atidancing
and were
regular
at- |
the home of
the
bride,
just
ajtendants
at the Saturday
night}
short way down the road
:from'dances up until Mr. Thayer was
their present home.
Mr. Thayer|83 and he relates that they cele-|
recalls that it was the last day brated their 59th anniversary by |

Worthington,
Oct,
16 —
Miss
Mary Lou Osgood of Cld Post Rd.
has returned from Ottawa, where
she
saw
Queen
TElizabeth
and
Prince Philip on two occasions.
Miss Osgood and Miss Pat Budden of Springfield drove to Canada last Thursday and were entertained there by ‘ohn Ginter, a
member
of the Roya! Canadian
Mounted Police, whom Mary Lou
position,
A surprise

offices

the
years,
Mrs,
former
Delena

serve their 65th wedding anni-' Jones, taught school in Chesterversary tomorrow.
No special’ field prior to her marriage.
Accelebration is planned but -they tive in
will receive callers in the home
| trustee
where
they have
lived
all
of |Church

had

various:

of River both through
will ob-;Thayer,
the

|

�WORTHINGTON |
‘MRS. MAY GURNEY PORTER|

WORTHINGTON — Mrs. May
Gurney Porter, 82, died last night |
at Pine Rest Nursing Home in|
Northampton.
She
was.
born
April

came

and

2. 1875. in Clinton,

to

Worthington

taught

school

here

K. Clapp, formerly of Westhampton, died suddenly
at his home

in, Storrs,

Conn.,

Hartferd,

and

Conn.;

as

a

to

sons,

Health

Porter

mington

Center.

funeral

home

The

is in charge

ments,

of

of

Leslie

Cum-

of arrange-

‘“Timesaving

|
js

Meals”

in the Town

Hall Tuesday from 10 until 2.
) Annual meeting of the Worthington Golf Club was held Saturday with about 30 members
and stockholders present. Officers
were elected as follows: president, Merwin F. Packard: vicepresident,

Bertram

B. Warren;

|secretary-treasurer,

|Sturtevant;
Henry

W.

H.

directors

Warren

Snyder;

Almer

V,

for

one

Rausch

and

directors

for

two years, Roy W, McCann and
Lawrence M. Porter; directors

for three years, A. V. Flint and

Allerton DeC. Tompkins. The club
officially closed on Oct, 1,
Fred W. Brown of Old Post Rd.

WORTHINGTON

has

Inson

MRS. H. G. PORTER, SR.
Worthington, Oct. 1i—Dr. Hollis W. Huston
officiated at the
private funeral of Mrs. Herber
t
|G.
Porter,
Sr.,
today
in First
| Congregational
Church,
Mrs.
| Porter died Wednesday
evening
at a nursing home in Northampton. Burial
was
in the Center
Cemetery.
Since their marriage
}99 years
ago,
© Mr.
and
Mrs.

had

lived

in

the

went

r of

the

Aid|

County.

145]

CUMMINGTON

_

|
ORSON PLAUS
| CUMMINGTON—Orson
Plaus,
85, formerly of Cummington and
| West Springfield,
died
Sunday
;morning
at the
home
of his
| daughter, Mrs. Marjorie Peterson
| in Orange.
He is survived
by
a widow,
Rosalind
(Mason)
Plaus
of
Orange,

‘of

two

Springfield,

| Brooklyn;

sons,

one

Harley

Calvin

Plaus

Plaus

daughter,

of

Mar-

|jorie Peterson of
Orange, and
|Sseveral grandchildren.
.
|
The funeral
services
will be
held at Village
Congregational
|Church, Cummington, at 2 o’clock

| Tuesday
1

in West

afternoon.

Burial

Cummington

will be

cemetery,

surgery,

from

Cooley

where

‘

he

Dick-

She

was

| N. ¥., where

born

in

Piermont,

she spent her early

years and in 1887 was married
to Harry D. Pease, son of the
late
Chauncey
D.
Pease,
who

founded

the

Pease

Piano

|/

he

was

also

Co.

in

Bretzner, all of whom live with
her, There are six grandchildren
and 13 great-grandchildren.
Finding it hard to believe that
she has lived so long, Mrs. Pease

sae

a er,

a voter.

He}

was a member of the Royal Ar-|
eanum of Worthington and of the }
Worthington Rod and Gun Club.
Besides his wife, he leaves a/|
daughter, Mrs. Russell Borst; and |!
two sons, Ralph W. and A. Leland, all living in Smith Hollow;
a
granddaughter;
and_
several
nieces and nephews.
The funeral will be Friday at 2
in First
Congregational
Church
with Rev. Hollis W. Huston officiating. Burial will be in North
Cemetery.
The Bartlett funeral
home in Dalton is in charge and
there will be no calling hours.

and

among

the

guests

New
Jersey;
and
a
nephew,
Sherman Ackerman of New York
City whom Mrs. Pease’ has not
seen in many years as he has
lived in Argentina until his recent retirement,
Also, her son
and daughter-in-law, the Chauncey D. Peases of Bear Mountain,
New York and a grandson, Richard FitzGerald ‘of Stamford, Connecticut, will,join the family for
the celebration.

Worthington,

Nov.

29—The

Rod

New
York
City.
Her husband, and Gun Club will meet Monday
who was in business with his fa- at 8 in the clubhouse in Christian
ther, died in 1952.:The elder Mr. Hollow and hunters in the area
invited.
Russell
Phelon
of
Pease had the house here buiit are
will show
a
as a summer home and the fam- East Longmeadow
of an African
safari in
ily has summered here for many movie
years, living in New York and which he and his wife took part.
Teams for the deer killing contravelling in the winter.
test will be completed ‘and the
Mrs. Pease has a son, Chaunannual victory
supper
will
be
cey D. of Bear Mountain, N. Y.;
and three
daughters, Mrs. Hoit served by the losing team in the
Secor -and Mrs. Mary FitzGerald Town Hall Dec, 7.
Mr.
and
Mrs,
H..
Franklin}:
who are twins, and Mrs. Helen

under-

Worthington, Dec. 18 — Walter
Asa Smith, 82, died today at his
home in Smith Hollow, the same
house in which he was born.
+
The son of George and Julia}
(Bartlett)
Smith,
he was
a retired dairy farmer and had lived
here all his life. In his latter
years he was a stone mason. He
was married to the former Bessie M. Jones 57 years
ago on}
Christmas Day.
}
Mr. Smith was a former asses-|
sor in the town of Middlefield,

where

so

Mrs. Cora Pease

W. A. Smith Dies,
Former Official

same

Children’s

of Hampshire

Hospital

WORTHINGTON

ppende
at Worthington Center. Before and after her marriage,
Mrs,
| Porter was active in church
and
; community
affairs. She sane in
the choir and was organist
of the}
| First Congregational Church
. For |
; many years,
she was treasurer|
| of the church and alsc served
as|
| church clerk for a time.
She was |
| 2
charter
member
and
later|
| President of the Women’s
Benevyolent
Society,
a member
of the
| deal -8chool board and
a county|
| Girecto

| Association

returned

occasion

“|will be Mrs, Charles Gleason, a
girlhood
friend
who
is_ being
brought-here from her home in

Worthington, Nov. 29 — Mrs.
; Cora Ackerman Pease of Hunt, ington Rd. will observe her 90th
| birthday on Dee. 1,

Worthington, Oct. 14 — Mrs.
Zack Donovan and Mrs, Arlin T,
Cole will be in charge of the
Extension
Service
meeting
on

year,

|Porter

ne WORTHINGTON |
Is 90 On Sunday

i437

Her-

|bert Jr. of Dalton and Daniel R.
,of Worthington; four _grandchil| dren and one brother, Philip Gur;ney of Cummington. A private
| funeral service will be held Friday
in
First
Congregational
Church.
The
family
requests
flowers be omitted and that gifts
be given instead to the Worthington

fu-

girl

prior

Betty

two

The

N.J, She

her marriage in 1898 to Herbert
G, Porter.
She
leaves, besides
her
husban¢.
three daughters,
Alice of New
York,
Carrie of|

| Coronado, Calif,

today.

‘neral. will be held at Storrs,
on Monday at 1 p. m. Burial will
be at 3 p. m. in Westhampton.

MRS.

CORA

A.

PEASE

says that she owes her long life
to the fact that she has never

had to work hard and has never
| taken life too seriously. Married
ito Mr.

Pease

for 65 years

at the

' time of his death, she says they
' shared everything, enjoyed travelling, and had lots of fun within
their family. With excellent sight
and hearing, she takes pleasure

in

reading

and

visiting

and

is

looking forward to her birthday
party.
A family party will mark the

Bartlett and four daughters have|'

returned
from
Manchester,
Conn., where they spent Thanks-|.
giving with Mrs. Bartlett’s par-|’
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Preston R.
Sage.
Mrs,
Mary
Haskell has been
discharged from Noble Hospital
and is staying with her son and
daughter-in-law,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
| Herbert N. Haskell,

�QUEEN RENEWS
CANADA’S TIES
WITHUN, NATO
Glittering

Immediately in front of the two
thrones sat the judges of the Su-

preme

All through
was a rustle

almost

the Senate
of silk -and

like

hats

there
polite

there when the queen
.and her
consort, preceded by representatives
of the military
and
the
prime
minister,
entered
the
brightly lighted chamber.
Prime Minister’s Speech
The queen began her speech,
holding the pages on her lap and
turning them ever so elegantly,

Ceremony!|

ing of Parliament

es

outfitted

talk. But a tomb-like silence fell
with a thud on the 400 assembled

Marks Elizabeth’s Open.

Ottawa, Oct. 14 (INS) —~|
Elizabeth
I, speaking
as
queen of Canada, opened her
dominion’s
23d Parliament.

Court

Santa Claus with Eugenie
rather than stocking caps.

|

as she spoke from a throne flood-

lighted
by
TV
and _ newsreel
lights, The address was written
for her by Prime Minister John
Diefenbaker,
the
Conservative
who recently upset Louis St. Lautoday with a pledge that the | rent, long-time holder of the post.
nation would stand resolutely | Two women became faint during the reading by the queen.
with NATO and UN.
The speech was, in effect, Die:
Speaks From Throne
fenbaker’s announcement to ConWith unparalleled and unpreceservatives,
Liberals,
the
Social
dented splendor, the queen spoke
Credit Party and the Co-operative
to the 265-member
Parliament, Commonwealth Federation as to
while
seated
on
a_
glittering}
his legislative intentions during}
throne in a Senate fashioned after! the coming session. Political writ-'
the House of Lords in London.
ers here expect it to be a lively
She wore the glittering white
session,
when
Parliament
gets
gown and pale blue Order of the
down to business instead of pomp
Garter
sash of her
coronation,
on Tuesday the 22d.
and read her 13-minute speech in
More for Farmers
both English and French.
Elizabeth, speaking for Diefen-|
The Prince Philip, as handsome
baker, made these points:
as a screen actor in his uniform
Canada will continue its active
of a colonel in chief of the Royal
participation im NATO and UN.
Canadian Regiment, also adorned
It will endeavor to strengthen
by the sash of the Order of the
its already strong finances, and
Garter, led her to her throne deliextend benefits to the old, halt
eately holding her hand shoulder
and blind.
high,
Pensions to veterans will be
he beamed and smiled encourupped.
agement
at his wife as, seated
Farmers will get a fairer share
and her head
illuminated
by a
of the national income,
Price
blazing diamond tiara, she studiSupports are contemplated,
ously read her prepared remarks
Canada
needs more rural elec-'
in her schoolgirl’s soprano.
The historic scene, first time a trification,

reigning queen had opened Canada’s vigorously democratic congress,
highlighted
a
long
day;
which began with
ithe Privy Council
ip is the newest
jcluded a reception
matic corps, and
with, a state dinner

late reception
To

crowd

miles

from

a meeting of
(of which Philmember),
infor the diploended tonight
for 100 and a

for 500 more,

more

into

the

day,

Philip was in a shooting blind 30
Queen

Elizabeth

holds

written

speech

(Associated

Press

Wirephoto)

as she addresses

t

Canada’s

Parliament in Ottawa yesterday afternoon. Address formally
opened the 23d Parliament. Seated on throne beside her is Prince
Philip.

Ottawa,

his limit of ducks,
teal,

Fly

to U.

and

bagged

mallards

S. Tomorrow

Elizabeth and Philip,
to the U, S, Wednesday

day
day

by

stay, rode
in a fairy

four

horses

and

who fly
for a 6-

to Parliament totale coach pulled

and

flanked

by

clattering red-coated mounties,
The crowds were more plentiful
today (it was Thanksgiving here)
and a
bit less restrained
than
earlier.
The presence of a daz-

zling

sun

lent

additional

glamor

to a scene that was an explosion
of color against the gray drab-

ness of the old Parliament
ings.
The
steeped

_ Parliament
in ritual, almost

build-

opening,
equalled

the coronation itself at times dur-

ing: the short session. The paneled
and
marble
room
was
a
great jewel with its beautifully
gowned women, men in glittering
uniforms,
bearers of the mace,
Protestant and Catholic hierarchy
in their scarlet robes, diplomats

and

and

their wives
the

two

in native

speakers

in

dress,

severe

black with their tricornered black

hats.

�“THURSDAY, OCTOBER 17, 1957
val Elizabeth inspected full size|

Happy

Couple in Jamestown

of

the

three

tiny

ships

Philip Outshines Queen
In College Balcony Scene

in which they came—the
Susan
Constant, the Godspeed and the
Discovery.
=
Prayer rae Peace
At the court of welcome on the
festival grounds, Elizabeth again
prayed for peace. Responding to
‘|Stanley’s welcome there she
|
horted:
independent na-|
between
“As
tions—free and sincere co-operation in the search for a just and
lasting peace for mankind.”

For

paused
church

18

minutes

her

Williamsburg,

majesty

‘at the quaint red brick
on
Jamestown
Island,

whose ivy-clad
to 1639.

tower dates

back

She bowed her head solemnly
as prayers were offered up for
the
President,
the
queen
and)
peace among nations. And as a|
gift, Elizabeth received a hand
wrought
copy
of the
church's
silver
€ommunion |
‘original
service.

kept

Elizabeth

smile

throughout

her

her

tight

the

crammed

formation=3

delta-wing

visit

to

Oct.

16

(INS)

—

microphone, ‘‘but there are more|
presents.
|
“As you know, I am chancellor
of Edinburgh College, and therefore a sort of super-president,”’
he
said,
addréssing
Chandler.
“So here...”
Clowning Gesture
From behind him he pulled out
a half-dozen colorful books and,
with a crowning,
clowning gesture of eloquence, pushed them
into the hands of .the president.
The audience, crowded over an
acre
of campus,
laughed
first,
drawings of his campus build- then cheered.
The contents of Philip’s gaily‘ings.
“It’s not Christmas,’’ said the colored books was not immedi-)
prince, stepping abruptly to the ately known.

\A _glib_
off-the-cuff
speech
by
Prince Philip stole the spotlight
from his queen today, when the
,two_ staged
a balcony, scene at
| William and Mary College.
|
:
Historic Gift
| Elizabeth, high on a festooned
| balcony at Wren Hall, formally
| presented the college with an historic gift, a copy of the Statutes
of the Order of the Garter. In return,
President
Alvin
Duke
|Chandler formally presented the
‘queen with a portfolio of original

Anis

|

replicas

littie|

hour-long|

festival

3 Valiants

and

screeched

past

Air

(4

(Associated

|

|

Press

Wirephoto)

hapQueen Elizabeth and Prince Philip presented this smiling
Va.,
n,
Jamestow
in
Park
Festival
the
toured
they
as
picture
py.

yesterday

afternoon

shortly

arrival

after their
States.

Young Monarch, Prince Philip Start Six-Day Visit
At Jamestown (Va.) Festival
Va., Oct, 16 im!

At

point,

one

as Elizabeth

re-

IL arrived to a sponded to the official. welcome
United from Virginia’s Gov. Thomas B.
the
in
promptty Stanley, a small section of the
and
in a prayer for crowd jumped the rope barrier
been
for a closer look. Some had
a ‘just and lasting peace.”
for her there for eignt
Crowd of 30,060
ing
wait
{
the hours.
monarch,
shy young
The
to,
queen
21 Gun Salute
first reigning. British
the
her)
A 2i-gun salute boomed at
| visit North America, started
the
took
Elizabeth
six-day U. S.. stay in storied Vit- airport.
guard
;
ginia.
salute, inspected the honor
at Patrick and—speaking for herself and her
it was
Tronically
dePhilip,
Prince
Henry Airpor(—named after the husband,
i
tred-haired
firebrand
from
ithe clared:
“We are. . .particularly happy}
land where
Britain gained and
stop is in the beaulost her first colonial possessions that our first
tiful Old Dominion state.’’
in the new world.
Tt was at the picturesque old
But the irony was lost on the
stown Island, 25
thousands—estimates
centered church on Jame
Queen
royal
States
bowed

Elizabeth
welcome
today
her head

around 30,000—who turned out to
greet her. The airport reception

was restrained; as though the
crowd felt it bad manners to yel!
at so demure a queen. But at the
Jamestown
Festival, where
she
took part in the 350th anniversary of the founding of Britain’s

first American
ment took hold.

colony,

miles

motor-

by bubble-top

away

her
cade, that Elizabeth bowed
op
head in prayer. Episcopal Bish
of Norfolk
Gunn
P.
‘George

prayed with Elizabeth for ‘‘neace
which
ness.”

Her
excite-} where

founded

after

Janded

the

is

visit

the

the

fruit

righteous-

of

honored

Episcopal
in America

the

spot

Church was
one montr

Jamestown

in 1607. Later

and

Navy

Vulcans,

American)

jet craft--|

overhead.

&gt;

United

in the

Oueen Ebeabeth Gets
Royal U. S. Welcome
'» Williamsburg,

Force

a dozen

pioneers

at the

festi-

is

eae

grounds. She was completely. unperturbed when the crowd surged
forward at a couple of spots to
cut her off from her entourage.
for
unheard
something
Tt was
it with
she accepted
but
her,
cool aplomb and kept on her way
—on
schedule.
.
She was piped aboard. the biggest of the three ships, the Susan
Constant. And in minutes the oid
thrillingly
were
new
the
and
blended when 1% jet bombers in

�|

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

|

Worthington, Nov. 5—Two half!
grown orange and white kittens,|
tied securely in either end of a
potato sack, were cast up on the
Jawn of a vacant house to die. |
They were found wet and cold |
and close to starvation by Mr. '
and Mrs, Richard Clark who were
walking on Guard Rd. when they
heard feeble calls which had attracted
their dog.
Investigation
showed that the animals had been
tied in so tightly that they could
;M0t move and eight of their nine
|iives were far spent, Clark, a
|noted cat lover, took the kittens
home with him where they are

Worthington,

T.

Bartlett,

and

Farber.

Rida

Thanksgiving program.
Miss Marion L, Bartlett enter-

Dec.

7 in the Town'|!

field teachers.

30.

pital.

Pease, who have been patients in
Cooley Dickinson Hospital, have
returned to their homes.

Mrs. Franklyn Brooks of Parish
Rd., West Worthington is a panat at Pittsfield General Hos-

Worthington, Dec. 2 —
lunches for the balance

Zoning Plan Debated
Worthington,
Nov.
20—Raymond K. Dunlevy, chairman of

the

with

tending.
Place

with

Town

Hall

cobbler with!
Wednesday,|!

Heated
most

debate

persons

beans,

butter,

at-

took

‘‘Wildcat

Willie

Raymond

rets

new

Inc,

Mr.

home

and

Mrs.

Neil

Chapin

of)

formerly

lived

here,

were week |)

end guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rus-')
sell Borst of River Rd.
i
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Webb

C. seventy

of Rockford, Ill. were in town
this week calling on friends and
relatives including Mrs. Ernes‘
G. Thayer, the Misses Elsie and

ie

Bartlett and Guy G, Bart-

lett.
Mr, Stevens’ father was}
‘Anson Stevens and the family's

_ancestors lived in Stevensville,
he

which

given

patients

at the

which

will

include

State

Hospital.

Marion

L.

of

Congregational

First

it was

Smith

and

Dr. Holiis W. Huston, récently
}returned from England, where he
was
engaged
in research
‘in
Queen’s
College,
Oxford,
on a
Fulbright Scholarship, has
been

engaged

by

Trinity

Methodist

Kenneth

;

jleave from his ship.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles
iwhose apartment was

Bartlett,

voted

to

and

approve

Mrs.

meeting}

Church,}

the

rec-

equipment.

}

Raymond K. Dunlevy presided
at the second public hearing on
the proposed zoning bylaws Sunday afternoon at the Town Hall

with

30

persons

present.

Sampson,
damaged

iby fire a month ago, have made
\repairs and moved back in,

The

ommendation of the trustees to
increase the heating facilities of
the church by installing additional]

to be built there |

Springfield haye moved into the
former William Ball house on
Ridge Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Bamforth of Johnson City, N. Y., who |

at

Leighton A. Kneller.
At a special business

and
for

Briefs

tuna |

Christmas
readings
and
music
with Mrs. Richard G. Hathaway
as soloist, will be in charge off
Mrs. C, Raymond Magargal, Miss

Pittsinger and Mason,

Worthington

to be

program,

Is Sold

their

by Healy,

Magargal,

Northampton

Mr. and Mrs. Henry Dassatti
\have sold their home in Worthing-|)
ton Center to Healy, Pittsinger,
lot. facing on Sam Hill Rd.
ground was broken today

and cheese,

Friendship
Guild
will
meet
Thursday
at 8 in the home of
Mrs. Daniel R. Porter. Members
will bring hard candies and ciga-

Parish, Jr., will play the leads
and the proceeds will be used to},
purchase filmstrips for classroom

Mason,
Inec.,
contractors.
have reserved
a_ building)

cake; Thursday,|
roast pork with}!
sandwich, tossed
Friday,
tomato

Mr. and Mrs. Cullen S. Packard}
are parents of a son born Nov. 30}
in Cooley Dickinson Hospital, —})

and)

and
They

Leland

Worthington, Dec. 22 — Rev.
Hollis W. Huston has accepted a
call to become
associate pastor
of Trinity Methodist Church
in
Springfield and will assume his
duties there Jan. 1. On Monday
the Hustons will leave for Oxford,
N. C,, to spend Christmas with
iMrs. Huston’s parents.
Worthington Briefs
Dr. John E. Modestow will be
jout of town until the day after
Christmas.
Fireman
Richard
Sampson,
}USN, is at the home of his par‘ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Ferjrell on Witt Rd., for a 10-day

mid-|.

considered.

pils of Grades 5 and 6 under ‘direction of Mrs. Carl §. Joslyn.
Herbert Haskell, Jr., and Milton

Home

green

time the budget for 1958 will be}!

the Bearded Lady”
and ‘Wildcat Willie Swears off Swearing,”
to be presented Friday evening
at 8 in the Town Hall by the pu-

use.

.meatloaf,

and

The school board will have al
Tuncheon meeting Tuesday at the
home of the chairman, Mrs. C.

appear-

but not without changes in the
proposed bylaws. .
School Plays Set
Tickets are on sale for two one

plays,

potato,

bread

juice, macaroni

ing to favor zoning for the town,

act

1968

Springfield Post
Taken by Pastor

salad sandwich, peas and carrots, |!
peanut
butter
cookies.
Milk
is
served with all meals.

Monday

about 50 persons

te,

Huston Completed
Fulbright Research

WORTHINGTON

School
of the}

and butter, cherry
whipped
cream;
night chocolate
mashed potato,
gravy, egg salad
salad,
fruit;

the zoning planning commission,
was moderator at a public hearing on the proposed zoning by-

in

A,

WORTHINGTON

|

mashed

laws

Jom:

Dr.

i

week follow: Tuesday, spaghetti,
cabbage-pineapple
salad,
bread|

evening

Hol-

NEW ASSISTANT

Mr. and Mrs. Cullen S. Packard have named their son Bruce
Alan. The baby was born in Cooley Dickinson Hospital on Nov.

|Thursday
at luncheon at The
Spruces. All are retired Spring-

|!

20—Dr.

‘TRINITY NAMES

held in the vestry.

tained the Misses Eivene Taylor,
Nina Jordan, Bertha Richardson,
Lesley Stent ana Grace Knapton

|

Dec.

sermon
Sunday
at 11 in First
Congregational Church, where he
has been interim pastor for several
months.
Dr.
Edward
U.
Cowles of Westfield has accepted |
the full-time pastorate of the local church as of the first of the
year.
Following
the
morning
service,
a coffee hour will be

likewise,
Worthington Grange will meet
Tuesday evening at 8 in the Town
Hall. The lecturer will present a

and |i

i Hall,
| Winners in the Rog and, Gun
{Club turkey shoot were William
LaFleur of Williamsburg, Reino
|[Liimatainen of West Chesterfield
and Ashley Cole and Jack Tinker
of this town.

Worthington,

lis W. Huston will preach his last

the local Ground Observer Corps
has been discontinued. Two other
towns in this sector are effected

| Richard A. Bartlett were elected
|captains of the opposing teams
|for the annual deer supper which

is scheduled

Pastorate Sunday

bert Porter by her daughters.
Civil Defense Director Charles
C. Eddy has received word that

treasurer,

Alan

com-

en
to
First
Congregational
Church in memory of Mrs. Her-

ment,
The
Rod
and
Gun
Club has
elected officers as follows: president, Howard Beebe; vice-presix
| dent,
David
Tyler;
secretary,

;Harman

22—A

WORTHINGTON.
Hustonto Close /

| munion glass filler has been giv-

responding to food and kind treat-

| Robert

Nov.

|

The

question will be voted on by}
secret ballot at a special town]
meeting scheduled Dec. 11,

DR.

|_

Taught in Chester
Mrs,

Elizabeth

(Jones)

| 75, of 61 Euclid Ave,

Higgins,

died Thurs-

,|day in Wesson Memorial Hospital. She was born in Cummington,
daughter of the late Warren and
Annie
(Mackey)
Jones and had

been

a resident

| 45 years.

She was

of this

city for

a retired school

teacher, having taught in Chester.

She was the widow of John B.
Higgins. She leaves several cousins.
The
funeral
will
be held

| Saturday
at 2 at the

Healey

hours

home

fu-

neral home, Westfield, with Rey.
Wilfred
J. LaPoint
of Chester
officiating. Burial will be in Pine
Hill Cemetery, Westfield, Visiting

at

the

funeral

are

today from 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p. m.

W.

HUSTON

Tda.,

and

attended

college

at

the

University
of Idaho and Willamette University in Oregon, His

B.D.

degree

and

colna,

and

the

Ph.

D.

degree

are from Duke
University
in
|North Carolina. He has been a
member
of the faculty at Amherst College, Southern Methodist
University
and
Ohio Wesleyan
University,
and
has
served
churches in Oregon, North Carin

towns

of

North-

bridge, Hadl#y and Worthington||
in this sta"e
;
He is a member of Alpha Psi
Omega,
dramatic honorary fra|ternity,
Phi Delta Theta,
Blue
|Key scholastic honorary society,
|Phi Beta Kappa, Society of Biblieal

Mrs. Higgins, 75,

HOLLIS

Church as assistant minister, He
will assume his duties this week
and will preach from the Trinity
pulpit next Sunday.
|~ Dr, Huston was born in Burley,

Literature

and

Exegesis,

Na-

tional Association of Biblical Instructors,
Araerican Association
ot University Professors, and the
American School of Oriental Research. Articies
from
his pen
nave
recently
appeared
in the
Zournal of Biblical Literature and
the Journal of Bible and Religion.
Dr, Husten is married to the
former Arnie Laura Cotten of Ox-}
ford, N. C, and they have two}
children, Holiis W. Jr., and Re-|
beeca Ana, The family will reImain in Worthington, where Dr.
Hiuston has served as the interim
pastor
of
the
Congregational
‘Church, unt'l living arrangements
| have been made in Springfield.

�SPRINGFIELD,

LONGMEADOW
FLYNT
TO AID
LONGMEADOW
.

]

Student of

rectors,

Miss

Rachel

DECEMBER

14, 1957

At Longmeadow Historical Society Meeting

Lawton,

Mrs. Warner Buxton, Mr,
and Robert L. Medlicott,

Leete

Flynt, showing pictures of high-

His-

lights of Deerfield Village, said
there was much in common between
Deerfield and Longmeadow, particularly the fact that the

first

and

famed

minister,

Rev.

Stephen Williams, came to Longmeadow from his Deerfield home.
Heer for Safe Keeping
Flynt revealed that for years
Longmeadow, Dec. 13 —-Pros-jan object has been sought in repect of expert counseling by a|lation to Deerfield has been the
nationally known student of early|ancient
pistol which
John
Wil
American history in development/|liams, father of Stephen, attemptof
the
Longmeadow
Historical|ed to use in repelling the Indian
Museum in the Storrs home, next| attack of 1704, To his amazement,
to the Storrs Library, was given|he said, he found out today that
the original pistol is in the Longat the annual meeting tonight,
meadow museum in safe keeping.
Flynt to Assist
Telling
in picture and
story the
iring
es
7
Bradford
W.
Leete,
retaring way in which Deerfield was prepresident, announced. that Henry served over the years, Flynt conFlynt of Greenwich, Conn., law- cluded
that
knowing
the
past
yer and nationally known early gives light on the present
and
American
history
collector
and courage for the future, ‘‘Surely,”’
student, will work with a Long- he said, ‘‘when we see the courmeadow committee in developing age and faith in God which our
the historical society’s property.
showed
in
meeting
forefathers
Members
named
to the com- their problems, it should give us
mittee are Mrs. Roger B. Estey, renewed
courage
to
face
our
Mrs. Lucy B, Mitchell, Frederick problems
teday
and
know
that
B. Robinson and Flynt.
they, too, can be overcome.”;
Alan
S. Lincoln, president of
Storrs Library Association, was
elected president of the historical}
elected }
society.
Other
officers

tory Active in

SATURDAY,

Simons; corresponding secretary,
Mrs, William W. Yerrall; custodians, Mrs. J. Bushnell Richardson,
Miss Burbank and Mrs. Wallace;
historian, Mrs. George Goodman;
auditor, Lawrence R. Flint; di-

i

Americar

MASS.,

Deerfield

,

are:

vice-president,

Philip

W.

Simons;
secretary, Miss Eunice
Burbank;
treasurer, William P.

History moved on in Longmeadow

last night as the Longmeadow Historical Society elected officers

and heard the story of making Deerfield one of the major centers of early American history from
a man. who has played a large part in its restoration. At the annual meeting are, left to right:
Bradford W. Leete, retiring president; Alan S. Lincoln, elected president; Henry Flynt of Greenwich, Conn., speaker, and Mrs. Douglas V. Wallace, who entertained members in her home.

_

~ WORTHINGTON

ther, Stanley S. Mason, who is

~~ Ballot Shows

meeting Tuesday at 8 in the Town |
:
Hall.

Two Contests

Nathan Palecki has received his
Worthington, Jan. 24 — Town discharge from the Army at Ft.
meeting will take place in the Bragg, N. C., and, with his wife
town hall on Feb. 1 commencing and daughter, has arrived at the
and
at 10, with Moderator
Carl S. home
of his parents, Mr.
The polls will Mrs. Anthony Palecki, in Harvey
Joslyn presiding.
be open from 10 until 7.
There Rd. where they will make their
are only two contesis, one for a home.
three-year
term
on the School
Committee, and one for the of- Mrs. Theodore Roberts of Ring- |

of edhonor
by

arrang
of tax collector to succeed'yijje was guest
fice
Mrs. Fayette R. Stevens who is stork shower
not a candidate

Franklyn

j

,

|
i
ke

W.

for re-election.

Hitchcock

Phylis

the

and c.| home

OPPOare
Raymo
nents nd
for theMagarg
officealof school
committeeman.
For the office of tax collector,

.Mrs.

at a
women

and ‘held in the
Grange
of Mrs. Stanley S. Mason.
Funeral of Mrs. Cecil G, Gaston who died Wednesday in New
,.ochelle, N. Y., took place there

of

Packard

Eddy,

today with burial here on Saturday at 3.30 in the North Ceme-

daughter of Postmaster and Mrs.
tery.
Merwin F. Packard,
and Mrs.
Judson D, Lowd, son of Mr. and
Marvis Snyder Rolland, daughter
Mrs, Dana J. Lowd of Old North
of Selectman and: Mrs. Henry H.
elected vice-president
was
Rd.,
Snyder,
are
opponents.
Both
a member of the board of diand
young women
are graduates of
‘rectors of the National Tank ComNorthampton
High
School
and
pany of Tulsa, Okla. at the annual
have lived here all their lives.
;
this week,
meeting
Mrs. Eddy attended Bay Path InA. Leland Smith is a patient in

stitute in Springfield.

WORTHINGTON
BRIEFS
Worthington,
Jan,
24—Miss

Mary Lou Osgood is recuperating
in her home, Old North Rd., from
injuries received Tuesday when

her car skidded on ice, struck a
tree and turned over. She was
taken to Noble Hospital for treatment and released on Wednesday.
A new 4-H club was organized

this week
Smith

ting

with

as leader.

projects

Mrs.

Richard

Sewing

were

B.

and knit-

chosen.

Offi-

cers are: president,
Katherine
Moran;
vice-president, Christine
Margargal; secretary, Nancy Albert; treasurer,
Marcia Hixon;

and news reporter, Betsy Hitch-|
cock.

Cooley Dickinson Hospital for the
second time
Mr. and
Coxsackie,
Thursday to

THINGTON

aj

patient in Noble Hospital,
Mrs. Willis Alger, lecturer of
a
that
announces
the Grange,
cake contest will be held at the!

this winter.
Mrs, Glen Mason of
here
were
Y.,
N.
visit Mr, Mason's fa-

Worthington, Jan. 30 — hiitistde
Pomona Grange will meet Monday

House
per

mona

night

served

‘at

the

in Cummington

will

be

served

Youth

Night

and

the

the

young

Community

at

when

will

6.30.

program

clude skits, pantomimes,
sic

by

The

and

Gun

be

will

Po-

ob-

in-

and mu-

Club

will

‘refreshments served.
Mrs. Ernest W. Robinson

won

meet
Hall.

Rod

people.

sup-

Monday at 8 in the Town
Movies will be shown and

:

first prize in the cake
contest
Tuesday evening at the Grange
meeting. Mrs. Bessie Smith and

Mrs.

Russell

Borst

took

held

in April

for the

second,

and third places,
respe2tively.
Plans were made for the open
house program and supper to be

benefit

of

the muscular dystrophy fund. Two
movies were shown and refreshments were served by Mrs. Vera
Parish, Mrs. Lewis Dodge, Mrs.
Ernest W. Robinson,
and Miss)
Gloria Frew.
j
|

- The funeral
of Miss
Thrasher,
a
fornver_
whose family lived on the
N. F. Glidden farm, was

Minnie
resident
present
held on

Tuesday
evening
in Springfield
and the body will be brought
here for burial
in the spring in

the Ringville Cemetery.

&gt;

THRASHER—In
nie

BE.

Funeral

this city, the 25th, Min-||
85, of 40 High St.

Thrasher,
at

the

ickinson-Streeter fu-

St., Spring305-207 State
neral home,
with an
m.,
p.,
7,30
Tuesday,
field,
t in RingIntermen
7.
at
prelude
organ
Visiting
ton.
Worthing
Cemetery,
ville
Monday
home
funeral
the
at
hours

2 to 5 and

See
Sol

7 to 9 and

Tuesday

2 to

6

�=

DANCE

fORTHINGTON

INSTRUCTOR

New Pastor, Wife |
To Be Honored

Mr. Cowles Accepts Call
As First Church Pastor

Worthington,
Nov,
21—The
board of trustees of First Con-|;
gregational

Church

announces

that Rev. Edward U. Cowles, pastor of the First Congregational

Reception at Worthington

For Dr., Mrs. Cowles

Worthington,
Jan, 9—A
public
of Dr, and
_ reception in honor
Mrs. Edward U. Cowles will be
held in the town hall Wednesday, | |
Jan, 15 at 8 p. m. Rev. Cowles,
who has been pastor of the First
Congregational
Church of Westfield for more than twenty-eight
years, has accepted a call to become pastor of the Worthington)
Congregational Church
and will

|}

Church of Westfield, has accepted):
a call to become pastor of the lo-|5

cal church. This church has been
without a full-time pastor
for);
more than a year.
'
Born in Kensington, Conn., Dr.
Cowles

graduated

from

New);

preach

Britain High School in 1911, from
Trinity College in Hartford in
1915 and from Hartford
TheoHlogical Seminary in 1920, later

Bureau

The

i

eation

|

ANNA

square

has

Evening
resumed

7.30.

Adult

of

announced
classes

dancing

le Junior

t

assistant

AN DERSON

Miss

nna

thaf

in the

at

course.

She

is

well

known

as

square dance caller.
An advanced class for couples only will meet Monday

|
|

|

|

a

while

evenings,

|
|
|

beginners’

¢lass will be held Tuesday
evening,
beginning
dan. 14,
This class will be open to single men and women as well
as couples. The classes will
7.30 to
from
be conducted

9.30

and

fee

registration

&amp;

by Miss

&lt;
REV.

EDWARD

Springfield residents is $1.
Other evening adult centers
also will re-open tonight. Persons interested in openings in
or
school
any
at
courses
are
center
neighborhood
asked to call High School of
Commerce at RE 2-0218 after
6.30 p. m. Persons interested
in evening trade courses may

in Montevallo

*|Wyoming;

ard

a

Mrs.

.| Edw ward A,; Toscarella
s
of Hamden,
Conn, TheyThe also
four cota
grandGiutien
calshave
at tele
fee

Ree nok Yel

Been

nek:

|

Franklin

efeats Magargal

W,

ceived 148 votes
membershi

mittee

@

;

ington,

10

Jan.

Worth
will be
Chalmers Coe of Hartford
in
preacher Sunday at 11

the office of the
regis
register before town

;
4

;

’

‘

van, Patek _ Ss
passed

|

1

examl

Ss

a

meeting on

Robert Spiess
Bartlett, Winston
Dono ,
RichardHigging
Raia
ona.

Northampton,

Ic

h

oS

|
=

Joslyn,

Ee

Wells

Boe

: ee
e a
ails
ioe

business,
leaves two

c

movingee here
in
retiring
nieces, The

Bisbee

3

W.

ea

a

;.

police

{

cap

includes

athaniel F,

marveled
ea.

|

winter high-|
protection,

ape

reports,
voce

e, $8000;

ry
and

and

ae

=

in-

$2000; :
$130;

see
$400; ie
veterans
administration

that

-Clhad

and

Glidden,
the

teach-.

higher

speaker

townspeople

service

at a

public welfare,

:
workmen’
enss

Boe

the new

‘received such good
trifling expense,

*

$99,we

Sens ao
for schools,|
arges Single appropriation,
$2700 higher than 1957. This

ers’
salary schedule
ute pa
ce
costs,

%

benefits

S4bAib tac. Rokwola

increase

:

town e
Du-ltag

“OL,

ul

5

é

Shee

ry ie
=
ida, Clarence,
truck;
$2515;
a
welfaree adminisas
sss iecitr
eee Ben
e,
Dana J. Lowd, Cul-|tration,
$220;
aid to dependent
and Richard G.| children,
$1500;
old age
assist-

Total The
appropria
1.40,
yetions
gi were

i
| Was

:

J,

j

away.

anne

home, |,
funeral
will be ; in}!
Burial
| Chesterfield.
Wortiti
~
iy
North Cemetery, Worthington
at

ee

rese

R. Porter, cemetery
tow
:
sry| | (own
,
‘hall, cs maintenanc
e, f
commissioner; Almer V, Sturte- aT n_
officers’
bonds,

ee
around Boston

a
until

buildings,

‘and. interest,
strect
G- Burr, select-|jights, $546; disposal$2160;)
arva, $300;

astypatient
since ailWednesday
He
seal Ittea
his lite .in andl

a

:

a

$50;

moderator;

Daniel
sor; ; Daniel

where he had been

funees) ill * ieee

tet

Naval Trainor the Great Lakes
:
ie Station.

et

on town

; Chap. 90, $2000; Chap, 90
C,|™aintenance,
$3000;
machinery|

polled wane

pedis

eharme. auditory:
constable,Arthur
vant,

hardware
1930. He

Navy and all left by air Thursday
|

a

who

|Magargal, town clerk and treas-/jond
mans Rasim

CHARLES D. PRAY
Worthington, Jan. 18 — Charles |
Dane Pray, 84, died this morning’
pital,
at
Cooley
Dickinson
Hospital

New voters will be registered
noonof until 10 Saturday in
from
the office
the. toe
clerk, It
town ey

flowers

in ther town officers: unopposed) shire Cr a + aHe
:

WORTHINGTON

guest
h.
First Congregational Churc
teer
Annual meeting of the volun
ay at
Mond
be
will
tment
depar
\fire
:
8 in the fire station.

fire insurance

defeating

Magargal

:

}'

and

Hitchcock _ re-|$2%5;_ bridges, $500; Chap.81
for School Com-|*1625

p,

Paes

6
195
&amp; ‘Rev.

settings

Town Meeting Votes $99.175.40

where

daughter,

table

and Emerson J. Davis will decorate. the hall, Mrs. Harold A.
Stone and Mrs. Roy W. McCann
will pour and the young women
of the church will act as ushers.

TAX COLLECTOR
IS MRS. ROLLAND

‘|she was born, Dr. nd Mrs. Cowles
| have a son, Edward L. who is a
math
teacher
in
Carpenter,

during
School
eall
4
fas’ Trade
day orHighevening.

and

ship
award
of $25 and an inscribed silver tray again will be
given this year to the elementary
school
pupil
with
the
highest
grades, by Mrs. Roy W. McCann,
according to Glidden.
Regional School planning committee progress report was
given
by Franklin G, Burr.
=
Lucey Wins Prize
|
Robert J. Lucey won the award |
offered by selectmen for translating
the Latin
motto
on the
state flag,
Worthington,
Feb.
1 —
Mrs.
Women’s
Benevolence
Society
Marvis
Snyder
Rolland
was served
dinner
during
the noon!
elected town tax collector today adjournment,
in one of the only two contests
Other
town
appropriations
in town meeting
¢
election, : Mrs.|were
f
: ‘ cemeteri
teries,
$450;
ivi
thes
received 133 votes. Mrs. |fense,
S250: chicane
sito,
us
Packard Eddy,
her op-|/Fire
Department,
"$1200:
fire
ponent,
adi
79 votes,
house
bond
and interest,
$630;|

Cowles is a native of Aland a graduate of Ala-

‘'|}bam College

Jane Conwell Tuttle

WORTHINGTON

Conference.

Mrs,
abama

the

U. COWLES

FEBRUARY 2, 1958

Within the denomination, he has
served on the World Service Committee and the Committee on the
Ministry of the Massachusetts

for

on

Mrs,
William
P.
Barton.
Mrs.
Joseph W. Sena is in charge of

:

been pastor of the First Congregational Church of Westfield, a
period of more than 28 years.
He has ‘been recognized for his
work with young people and has
been adviser of the Pilgrim Fellowship of the Hampden Associa-\
tion of Congregational Churches,'
Absorbed always in the work of a
large parish, Dr. Cowles says he
has not had time to be a ‘‘joiner,’’ |
though he is a member
of the
“‘Get-Together Club” of Westfield.

Anderson,

here

The pastoral supply committee
and the Friendship Guild are in
charge
of
arrangements
with
Clarence A. G, Pease acting as
general chairman. Mrs. C. Raymand Magargal is in charge of
the program and is being assisted

Haven

he served as: pastor from 1923/}
until 1929,
Since that time, Dr, Cowles has

girls director of physical education,
will
‘conduct — the
a

New

ordained
to the Congregational!
ministry in the First Congregational Church of Spencer, where

Edu-

gymnasium

in

| from 1922 to 1923. In 1923, he was | i

Adult School will be
tonight at Van Sick-

a

pastor

first sermon

27.

School. He was assistant pastor in
Bridgeport from 1920 to 1922 and
MISS

his

January 19. He and Mrs, Cowles
moved into the parsonage on Dec.

attending classes at Yale Divinity

=

:
|

forbs 156

i

insurance,
ce,

$500;

$800.
$800"

�PaaS

tribute of the children and the

172 se

Greenfield,

Mrs.

David

Brookside

Jan.

W.

Ave.

10—Mr.

Bartlett

have

of

and

23

announced

the engagement of their
ter, Judith Bess, to Pvt.

daughDaniel

young
The

H. Lane, son of Dist. Atty. and
Mrs. Myron N. Lane of Wollas-

ton.
Miss

Bartlett

was

graduated

Our

from Greenfield High School in
1956 and is attending Fisher Jun-

C. No

the

date

has

wedding.

been

friend,

Brimfield

had no idea that he was

ior College in the class of 1958.
Pvt. Lane was graduated from
Gould Academy in Bethel,
Me.,
in 1956. He attended Boston University and is serving with the
Marine Corps at Camp Lejeune,

N.

auctioneer,

about

Gordon

Reid,

undoubtedly

to put us smack in the midst of a

column.

At

the

{the Albany concert and did not!
Sireturn to the Connecticut Valley}

Dr.

and

Mrs.

Edward

U.}

fire

fighters |

; were called to the home of Court-|
land
Higgins, Cummington
‘Rd.,|
Saturday
afternoon for ‘3 chim- |
ney fire which caused only smoke
damage.
|
Mr. and Mrs. James Hoey. of |

|Woronoco are parents of a son,
|David James,
born Feb. 8 in|
'Noble

Hospital.

Mrs.

Hoey

is the/

|former Miss Patricia Magargal,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wells |
‘W. Magargal of Old North Rd.
|
Miss

Jill P.

Hickling,

daughter |

jof Mr. and Mrs. Leslie G. Hick-|

ling of Kinne Brook Farm, is on.

(the

dean’s

list

at

Russel]

Sage |

|College in Troy, N. Y., where she
|
is a freshman.
}
| Miss
Dorothy
Hewitt
reports |
|that her aunt, Miss Janette Otto,
|
|remains
at
the
New
England |
| Deaconess Hospital in Boston and/
|will have to be there two more
|; weeks,

ent

|

|

ficially

enlisted

the

aid

of

Lloyd Williams, librarian of
The Springfield Newspapers;
Juliet
Tomlinson,
and
the
wonderful
archives.
of
the
Springfield Library
Association. All three proved to be
excellent sources of information whose combined research
efforts resulted in the follow.
ing Jenny Lind particulars:
=

*

*

Jenny Lind spent a week
in
Springfield in 1851.
She arrived
on the local scene on Monday evening, June 30, following an outing at the seashore in Newport,,
R. I., and took up residence as a
guest in the home
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Jeremy
Warriner,
which

stood on the southeast corner
Howard and ‘Main Streets.

of

Historians
of the time report
that Miss
Lind’s
visit was
an!

event that thrilled every resident!

girls

engaged

Pond—a

for

to become

on the

banks

tradition

of-;

of}

which

lege to fulfill, for it is said
engagements.
contracted
on
shores of the romantic little
are certain to result in long
happy marriages. It is also
mored that engaged Smith

Society, but many others were as’
much
as a half-century off the
JENNY LIND
track in their surmisals as to the
(Circa, 1820-1887)
date of Miss Lind’s Springfield
of the growing town. It is obvious
concert,
*
*
*
that they did not exaggerate
One elderly lady called to
| importance of the occasion the
for
tell us she was certain she, as
Old First Church, the Setting
for
a child, had heard Jenny Lind
the concert she gave on Tuesday
Sing from the balcony of the
evening, July 1, was jammed
to
Jeremy
Warriner
house
in

we

it is traditional

graduates often return to the col-)

Miss Juliet Tomlinson, director of
the Connecticut Valley Historical

So

and

College

|Paradise

lo-

Howard Street. “That would
be around 1889,” she informed
us. But she turned out to be
in error too,
Around one o’clock,on Tuesday afternoon, after we had
discussed Jenny Lind with at
least a score of well-intentioned telephoners, we decided to do some historical reSearch on the singer to see
if we could sift out some of
the actual facts pertaining to
her
Springfield
appearance.

day

Smith

cal appearance, as we later discovered when we checked with

| Cowles are in New Britain,
Conn. |
| having been called there
by the
|death of Dr. Cowles’ father
, Sidiney M. Cowles, Saturday
at the
age of 89. A memorial
service
|was held tonight in the
Congre‘gational
Church
of Kensington,
Conn..,
with burial to be in the
Spring.
Besides
‘his
son,
Mr.
Cowles
leaves two daughters, |
Mrs. Harold F.
Hamilton
and!
Miss
Lois
H.
Cowles,
both
of

New Britain.
| The
volunteer

until the following year when she!
made a honeymoon trip to Northampton and endowed a little lake
on the campus of Smith College
with
the
magically
romantic
name ‘‘Paradise Pond,”
The name survives to the pres-|

readers who kindly offered to set

Lind’s

*

ment,
She
spent
the
night in
|Springfield-on her way home from}

us straight on the details of Miss
Lind’s Springfield appearance.
Our telephoners weren’t 100 per
cent correct, either,
Some had

the exact date of Miss

*

N. Y., to fulfill a concert engage-

singer’s
Springfield
appearance
and
erroneously
surmised
that
she probably sang in Springfield
sometime in the late 1890's, That
Was where we made a big mistake for, ever since, we've been
deluged
with
phone
calls from

WORTHINGTON

readers.
*

same

form us of the actual date of the

}

interested

Miss Lind remained in Springfield for a period of one week,
after which she left for Albany,

time we also reported that there
was nothing on the page to in-

fet

|

Warriner

more than happy to show it to

We mentioned Gordon’s gift of
the time-yellowed page from Miss
Lind’s concert program
in last

Sunday’s

admirers.
old Jeremy

the

rafters

when

Miss

Lind

—if

they

listen

carefully

balmy spring evening—will
the golden voice of Jenny

that
the
lake
and
rugirls

of

a

hear
Lind

singing a har or two of the wondrous

song

There

|Smith

‘‘Oh,

are

students

Promise

Me.’’

practically-minded'
who

claim

-that'

anyone who hears the voice of
Jenny Lind actually hears noth-

ap-

peared onstage to receive a thunderous welcoming ovation,
We
think we
should
mention

ing more

than

the sighing of the

wind in the willows, but there are!
others who cling to the belief that
the charming melody they hear
is i8.rea!
really the voice of The Swedish
Nightingale blessing their be-

here that tickets for the historical

event were priced at from two to}
four dollars—almost: a week’s!
wage in those days—an
d that the t trothals. We like to think so, too.,

majority

of them

were

|

boug

ht up
_ by speculators who had little
dif.’
ficulty in disposing
of the

$10.00

per

ticket,
*

*

.

soe

There hangs on the wall
of
Miss Juliet Tomlinson’s offic
e,

at the Connecticut Valley Historical Society’s headquar
ters
a wrought-iron baleony whic,
h

is perhaps the only major
surviving souvenir of Miss
Lind’s
Springfield appearance,
And
thereby hangs a tale,
It seems that it was the custom of the school children
of
early Springfield to Sere
nade
important visitors to the
growing Valley town. Henc
e, on
July 3, 1851, about 100
school
children assembled in front
of
the Jeremy Warriner hous
e to
Serenade its illustrious
guest
with the singing of “Hom
e,
Sweet Home.”
The children had comp
leted the singing of the
song and
were in the midst of
a@ rendition of “Should Auld Acqu
aintance Be Forgot”? when
Miss
Lind—touched by the
sincere
rei

ED

{

©

house has long since vanished
from
the
Howard
Street
scene, but the balcony from
which
Jenny
Lind
sang
is
proudly
preserved
in
iss
Tomlinson’s office, She’ll be

spirited controversy when he recently sent us a page from the
original program for the concert given by Jenny Lind, ‘'The Swedish Nightingale,” in Springfield, many years ago.

set for

Worthington, Feb. 10—The bad
weather of the week end forced
;cancellation
of
the
service
in
First Congregational Church
and
also the meeting of the Pilgrim
Fellowship.

—

+ loveliness of their fresh young
voices—stepped out upon the
wrought-iron balcony of her
second
floor
room
to sing
several
stanzas
of ‘Comin’
Through
the Rye” for her

A

Announce Engagement

© cree

eee

�FEBRUARY
6,
FUTURE

1958.

BRIDE

Mary L. Osgood

Rd., Agawam. They will be mare
ried

on March 29 in St.
in Huntington,

Thomas

To Be Married |“xi.
Migs

Osgood is a graduate of
Northampton High School, class

:

and is employed at the
Eastern
States
Farmers’
Exchange in West Springfield. Mr.
Vaillancourt
graduated
from

Paul

High

Vaillancourt

of Ft.|the

New

‘MISS OSGOOD IS

Worthington Girl Is Bride
In Huntington Church

Who will become the bride of
Pvt.
Arthur
Paul
Vaillancourt of Agawam on March
. ne 29:

A wedding of local interest took|
place yesterday
morning
in St.

Thomas

aseinpinies
bon

Sie

ep

=

a

Miss

Mary

Lou

Osgood

was

honored at a bridal shower
Friday
night in Town
Hall.
About 60}

friends

attended

turned

to her home

the affair which |

was given by Mrs. Edward Por-|
ter and Miss Carolyn Bartlett.
Miss Janette C. Otto has
re-|

on Old

Post

Rd.
from
New
England
Deaconess Hospital, Brookline.
Stanley S. Mason has retu
rned
to his home
on Huntington Rd,

from Noble Hospital, Westfield.
Mrs. Michael Babiak of High-

Jand

turned

-St.,

Chesterfield;

home

from

has

+e-

Cooley Dickin-|

son Hospital, Northampton.
_The
Women’s
Benevolent
Soclety will meet Wednesday at 11

at the home of Mrs. Clarence A.+

Pease, Old North Rd.
The adult ballet class will meet{
in Town Hall Wednesday at 8:
School lunch menus for the re-!
mainder of the week are: Wednesday, macaroni and cheese, tuna
juice,
tomato
sandwich,
|salad
fluff;
chocolate
beans,
}green
potato, oven
mashed
Thursday,
peas and
thighs,
chicken
fried
earrots, bread and butter, peanut!
baked|
Friday,
cookie;
|butter
beans, egg salad, sandwich, citrus
juice, whole kernel corn, honey
date bark, Milk is served at all
meals.
G.

Miss Loraine Palecki, a student

High School, has
at Huntington
left with her senior class on a
'
trip to Washington, D. C,
‘The board of direators of the
Association |!
Heaith
Worthington
will meet at the Health Center,
Wednesday at 8 p. m.

atte

si

SF ei ahsMs SiLZ

= be
leer

“cite5

Rin&gt; a

del

a

Church,

in Spring-

and prior to
employed
by

England Telephone &amp;
-Company in Spring-

Announces

Attendants

Yesterday
To Tech Graduate

three-tiered

of nylon)
finger
tip-length
veil
tulle fell from a matching cloche |
edged with pleated tulle and seed
pearls, and she carried a match-|
ing lace and tulle fan with white |
orchids.
Mrs. James Hoey of Woronoco
was her niece’s matron of honor, |
and the Misses Joan and Norma

were

Flebotte of this city
best man, and Louis

|

|Joan

and

and

29

to

Pvt.

Vaillancourt.

James

J.

Her}

Hoey

of}

will be her matron
her sisters,

Norma

of!

the Misses

Osgood,

will

be|

| her bridesmaids. Donna M. Plante|
| of Agawam, niece of Mr. Vaillan-|

field will attend

man

|his

the groom

as best

and Louis Plant of Agawam,

brother-in-law,

and

William

/Cullen of Palmer will usher. Miss

|Osgood has chosen Miss Caroline
| Bartlett to be in charge of her}
{| guest book. Rev. Joseph F. Gagan
11
in

am.
in St.
Huntington,

Thomas’

WORTHINGTON
Worthington,
‘WBS
benefit

| Wednesday
Roy

with

as
of

at the
on

attending.

served

home

of Mrs.

After

a home

Old

North

Rd.

a chicken luncheon

followed

over $100.
The ‘Dining

by cards

in

Nine”

4-H cooking

class met in the Town Hall with
leader Mrs. David Tyler, Wednesday afternoon. They demonstrated
a lunch menu that included’ hamburg and rolls with potato chips,
cocoa and milk and strawberry
sundae.

Miss Mary Louise Osgood’s wedding party will rehearse at St.

’

Thomas’ Church on Friday night.
After the rehearsal the bridal parity will be entertained at the home|},
iof Mrs. and Mrs. James Hoey in

brides-

served
Plante

35

March
27—The
party
was
held

the afternoon. It was a huge success netting
the WBS
treasury

:
:
:

McCann

products party

was

: Woronoco.

(Quinlivan

MRS.

A.

P.

Photo}

VAILLANCOURT

Agawam,
brother-in-law
of the
England
Telephone
&amp;
bridegroom, and William Cullen by New
Telegraph Co.
of Palmer ushered.
The matron of honor wore a}
The couple has left for a wedgown fashioned with lace bodice
trip to Niagara Falls, the
ding
and Nile silk organza
bouffant
traveling in a gray wool
bride
skirt, with shirred cummerbund,
suit with red hat and red accesand matching headpiece. She carsories. Pyt. Vaillancourt will be
ried a matching
lace fan. The
Gordon, Ga.,
to Fort
ed
-assign
bridesmaids wore similar frocks,
where his bride plans to join him
in yellow and orchid, with match- 1
soon.
ing headpieces,
and
the flower
The bride is a graduate of
girl wore pink organza. They all |
and
School
High
Northampton
carried matching lace fans.
prior, to her marriage was emMrs.
Osgood
chose
for
her
ployed by Eastern States Farmdaughter’s wedding a light green
ers Exchange, West Springfield.
shantung dress, with white accesin
born
was
The bridegroom
sories, and white orchid corsage.
this city and is a graduate of
. Mrs. Vaillancourt, Sr., wore royTechnical High School. Before enal blue print nylon chiffon, with
tering the Army he was employed
white
accessories,
and
similar
corsage. They assisted in receiving at the reception, music for
which
was_
provided
by
Dick

band.

Mrs.

|be
at
| Church

maids. Donna M. Plante of Agawam,
niece of the bridegroom,
was
flower girl, and Wells W.
Magargal,
2d,
nephew
of
the
bride, was ring bearer. Robert

Duda’s

‘aunt,

_Woronoco,
‘honor;

March

— Huntington,

lace. Her hand-rolled

sisters,

on

Paul

| will officiate at their wedding,

when Miss Mary Louise Osgood,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C; Kenneth Osgood
of Old
Post
Rd.,
Worthington, became the bride of
Pvt.
Arthur
Paul
Vaillancourt, | :
USA, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jean
B. Vaillancourt of Sterling Rd.,
Agawam. Rev. Joseph F. Gagan]:
performed
the ceremony
which
was followed by a large reception in the Town Hall, Worthington.
Escorted
by
her father,
the}:
bride wore a floor-length gown of
nylon tulle over silk taffeta with
a fitted bodice and long tapered | :
sleeves of rosepoint lace. The Sabrina
neckline
was _ re-embroiseed
dered
with
sequins
and
( | :
pearls, and the four tiered skirt
had bands of matching
beaded

Osgood,

wedding

;court, will be flower girl and!
| Wells W. Margargal III, nephew |
of the bride-to-be, will be ring| bearer. Robert Flebotte of Spring-

Married

WED TO SOLDIER

OSGOOD

School

of their eldest/field, class of 1953
Louise, to Pvt.|/his induction was

Dix, ‘N, J., son of Mr, and Mrs.|Telegraph
Jean B. Vaillancourt of Sterling ' field,

Worthington, Feb. 25—T
he Pilgrim Fellowship elected
the following officers at their
Sunday
meeting; president, Joan
Osgood:
vice-president,’
Richard
HathaWay;
secretary,
Ann
Rider :|
treasurer, Judith Diamond:
social
committee
chairman,
Priscilla
Torrey;
refreshments
chairman,
Sandra Sena; news reporter,
Norma Osgood,

|

| Arthur

Arthur

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Kenneth]
Oo sgood of Worthington announce|Technical
the engagement
daughter, Mary

MARY

|

18, 1958.

Worthington Girl Fiancee! ot 1955
Of Pvt. Vaillancourt

MISS

|

MARCH

| Miss Mary Lou Osgood has anjnounced her attendants for her

i

j
ie
Fr:

TUESDAY,

|

�sae

Sno
S

b

d

ne

oe

Bue

.

i

ORT

ee

wo

a5

4

Ty

Blizzard Sidelights
In _

—

WORTHINGTON

years

in-

will recall

local folks

to come,

cidents of the blizzard of the past

weekend and it is more than likebely that they will remember,
sides the mountainous drifts that
held the town snowbound, mostly
the inconveniences caused by the

Charles C.

the.

of how

'storm:

:

)}Eddys returning from a week's
vacation spent with:-relatives in
Michigan

tel outside

a mo-

at

stranded

were

4

N. Y.,

of Amsterdam,

so that they didn’t get home “un‘til the middle of next week”; of

getting|
W. Huston
Rev. Hollis
his ears nipped as he walked to
the

store

from

Hill Rd.;

fington

half

way

of Donna

Buf-

up

Wade

Taliaserro stranded overnight in
Hartford where she had gone to
participate in the dog show, then
a six-hour)
arriving home after
trip from Connecticut's capitol to

‘find the. water

pipes

had

frozen;

Billy Knapp arriving at the post
office with the side
of his face
men
the local
white; of
frosty
working on the turnpike for 32hour stretches who arrived back

=
Z

in town to find they could only
reach their homes by hiking from
the center of town.
sun Shines
When the

;

a

°

ue

-

and the wind
all roads are

SE

E
hi
This home
located on Route 143 5in Worthington was snowbound
levels.
g
window
to
yesterday with drifts reachin

Bei ceu

ye

itr,
;

Peace

‘44

Good Reason eeefor No

5

t

as

‘? of

it will

;

battling

fae

the

praise

Much

superhuman

The Russell H. Conwell School

was

the

partly . because

closed,

have navigated
buses could not
the routes to pick up even those

ee ee Bee ee

org

Ay
School in Worthington
:

the storm.

is-due them for
effort expended.

‘

e

the

forget

are

hours in almost unbearable cold
that the road
workers spent in

Sears

;

be

again,

stops blowing, and
plowed wide open,

enough to get out, and
sause the school drive

=

:

with

was- filled

F

;

_

partly beand yard

snow drifted

to

Meetlepths of 10 and 12 feet.
ngs were cancelled, including the,
Sunday worship service in First
Dr. EdCongregational Church.
called
pastor,
ward U. Cowles,

the

parishioners

out

of

suggested

and

to inservices
worship
‘family
clude Psalm 139. Many who work,

town

found

it impossible:

——

to get to work on Monday morning, but it should be mentioned
“The Great
for the record that

Western” as Ken Osgood's daily
trip is popularly referred to, did)
and re-)
go through to Pittsfield
turn on schedule.
No account of a great

complete

without

the’

storm

is

anxiety

caused by impending visits from
the stork. Over on Highland St.,
impenetrable drifts,
isolated by

Mrs,

Kenneth

Krupa

might

have

had she
anxious one,
been the
a friend’s in
not been taken to
Chesterfield ahead of time. After
a full day of relentless winds and
almost
it would
no new snow,
Worthington’s snow
that
seem
next
into the
be blown
would
county, but such is not the case!

One reason why school was canceled in Worthington yesterday was the fact that the school itself
was snowbound. The drifts in front of the door are nearly eight feet high. Worthington was
among the hardest hit Hampshire County towns.

j

�“TUESDAY, FEBR UARY 181958)

CHESTERFIELD
———

ar

BLAZE LEVELS
FAMED HOUSE

DAILY

ame

HAMPSHIRE

GAZETTE,

e

NORTHAMPTON,

Drought-Ridden

|Old Homer Granger Place
Was 150 Years Old;

MASS.,

WEDNESDAY,

FEBRUARY

Hilltowns

Hit

Barn Is Saved

_ Chesterfield, Feb. 18—A raging
fire whipped by savage winds
this afternoon leveled the home

of Mr. and Mrs,
in Highland St,
Motorist

The

Daniel

By Too

Selvatico

Calls

In

2%-story frame

house

was

more than 150 years old and popu-

larly known as
Granger place.

torist,

terfield,

Norman

spotted

the Old Homer
A passing mo-

Lapointe

the

of Ches-

blaze

Much

‘Precipitation’

|:

and

thinking no one home, went to the
home of Mrs. John Donevan, Sr.,
and called the Chesterfield Fire
Department.
Mrs. Denovan notified Worthington’s
Fire. Department, which was already on the
way, having received an earlier
call.

Two

Worthington

fire

trucks

Chief

David

reached the scene first and hoses
and equipment were hauled by
hand from the road to the house
over
snowdrifis
clogging
the
driveway.

Chesterfield

Fire

Healey, who directed fire fighters
of both towns, said when he arrived with two trucks neighbors
were
shoveling
snow
into
the

eg

|

WORTHINGTON
Worthington,

March

Friendship
Guild
Thursday at 8 at

Mrs,

1

3 —

The}

‘will
meet!
the home of|

Jane Hallowell on Old Post}

Rd. Mrs. Marilyn Kneller is in|
charge of the program.
Second|
mile offerings will be received!

at the meeting,

Miss Marion L. Bartlett, Mrs.
William P, Barton, Mrs, George
H. Bartlett and Mrs, Harold F.|
Brown attended the flower show|

in Springfield,

Sunday.

|

Mr. and Mrs. Daniel M. Selva-|
tico and-children are staying at!

the home of Mr. and Mrs, Robert!
Healy

of

Pittsinger

Highland

and

Mason

St,

have

Healy,|

been|

engaged by Selvatico to build al
seven-room house near the site
of the old home on Highland St.
Walter H. Tower of Williams- |
burg Rd. has started sugaring,|
being the first in town, Nathaniel
F_ Glidden of Huntington Rd. will

begin

two,

within

the

next

day

or|

|

This unnatural bridge opposite. the Worthington Town Hall attracted photographers from a wide
area on Sunday.
Created by Emerson J. Davis. and his trusty shovel, the Gothic arch is a duplicate of the one cut by him at the same spot in 1947, when another storm blew up deep drifts and
the plows pushed up great banks, and as before, this was the only entrance to the First Congregational Church.

26, =

�f

This is Worthington

Four

Corners

Peru and Pittsfield at the right.
had a law office in days gone by.

looking toward

Buffington

Hill

Rd.,

the road

leading

to Huntington

to the

left, and

At the far right is the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jay C. Gangel, in which house William

the road

to

Cullen Bryant

�Looking down Sam Hill Rd. toward Worthington Center from the Center Cemetery, one gets a good picture of rural roads throughout
the area following one of the most intense and prolonged storms in more than 10 years. This road, which serves five families in the

winter,

was not opened

until Saturday, six days after the snow started.

The

predicament

of

Hampshire

County’s

hilltown residents is well illustrated by these
photographs from Worthington and Chesterfield, where all last week many families were
isolated by snowdrifts piled high by strong,
almost unceasing winds.
Their difficulties changed with dramatic
suddenness, for quite a few families had been
hit by the drought of last summer and fall.
But
elimination
of the
water
shortage
through the Feb. 15-16 blizzard which left
10,

15

and

even

20

feet

of snow

brought new headaches — and
Boston for state aid.
The hilltowns’ troubles were
over

the weekend

as more

snow

in places

appeals

to

heightened

fell, but the

climbing temperatures of the first half of
this week are easing matters and spirits are
rising as warming sunshine eliminates more
and more of the piled snew.
:

(

�ee

Dr. Mary P. Snook’s home at Worthington Corners stands serenely behind the snow. banks thrown
up by the plows which worked around the clock to keep the traffic lanes open during the past
week when heavy snows, whipped by relentless winds, snow-blasied the town for more than four
Traffic lights at this intersection blinked ineffectually behind their snow masks while drivers strained even to see the road.

WORTHINGTON
| prt
+449 53
+

SUGARING

:

| WOR THINGTON
{

OVER

i

:

ry

‘

MARCH

1

Zea

£2 | 92

| ple sugaring season is.over for an, other year. The largest sugaring
| operation in town this year was

}
HOME DAMAGET
|
WORTHINGTON
«—
Several
jthousand
dollars’
damage
has
|been done to the summer
home

| Denworth Farm where all records’
were
broken
for the number
of
Franc produced. Furthermore, C.
Francis
Granger,
who
boiled for
| Mr. Glidden this year, reports that
| every drop of it was first. grade.
Nine men were given employment
in the various parts of the sugaring job in addition to those who
worked to open the roads to get to

Foerster on Kinne Brook Rd. by
lan accumulation of snow on the
roof which caused
the
roof
to
cave in. The sidewalls of the long
icottage were pushed out as
the
roof collapsed gradually
during
\the past week,
The
Foersters,
| who live in
Holyoke,
were- in
\town over the weekend to view
| the damage.

|

. WORTHINGTON—The

| that

of

Nathaniel

the trees. The

F.

work

local

ma-

Glidden

outside

at

of the

sugar house was in charge of jovial
, Daniel R. Porter who kept every-

one in good humor

and helped

to}

make the work fun. Much of. the
gathering had to-be done on skis
and snowshoes and even the trees
along the roadways were reached
only by climbing up steep snowbanks. The longest boiling period
in
any
one
day
was
fourteen
hours when 65 gallons were drawn
off. Mr. Granget says that. this is
the first time in his memory that
the sap buckets have ever been all

washed
snow

and

still on

put
the

away

ground.

with

Rd.,. who has been making maple
syrup and sugar longer than most

folks

in

town,

has

“|

Lt. Col, and Mrs. William: J.

Private

Town Clerk Wells W. Magargal
announces that dog licenses have
|been veeeived and all dogs must |
| be licensed by April 1.
Arthur G, Capen, local weather observer, reports that the precipitation

for

February

washed

his buckets and put them away,
too, reporting the best season in
‘many years and a complete selljout as of a week ago!

Edward

“Ted”

Porter,

home

for

the weekend

from

the

Army’s Fort Dix, N. J., poses in civilian clothes with his wife,
Shirley, after a walk in the snow to see how
their neighbors

are faring.

amounted

|to 3.68 inches with 34.75 inches of
|snow. Last year in February it
| was 1.35 and. 5,50 inches, respec-

| ~ WORTHINGTON
1956

tively.

|

deep

Walter H. Tower of Williamsburg

other

lof

||

Worthington,

L eter

bloom,

{

,
5

of

spring

Henry

March

H.

is

30—-A

crocuses

Snyder,

sure

in

select-

man, reports three feet of snow
in front of his house, yet there
are crocuses in blossom in the
back yard.

�CoS ee
Ce ae

A

NS

vm

e

ee

a

FEBRUARY 26, 1958

FEBRUARY
27, 1958

Tells of Terrifying Time

In Program at Old Deerfield

On Road in Middlefield

Back in Springfield again from
Middlefield with pictures of 20foot snow drifts in that town, A.
Sumner Crane of 61 Dartmouth
St. said yesterday it was a terrifying experience to be walking on
a road there the night of Feb. 18
when he visited the town after the
big snow of Feb. 16. He had gone
to the town where his family has
a summer place with the expectation of passing only’a few minutes on his way back to Spring-

the Bell Farm
and they were
very reassuring
but short-lived,
The wind was filled with particles
of frozen ice and snow that stung
like hail, the snow cut down visi-+
bility to zero and the cold was a
numbing 10 below.
“. . «I lost my way and wane
dered off the curve between towering walls of snow that I later
measured to be 35 to 40 feet high,
and went down a slope into Ralph
Bell’s pasture, across a swamp
in to the edge of some woods where

field from Dalton-

Abandons Car
his car became

When

heavy

snow,

Crane

Blossom
Corner and I headed
north., I picked up the lights of

stuck

abandoned

it I finally got my hearings. Then f

and: started’ to walk to a nearby turned north with the wind on the
farm.’
Normally
such a_
walk right side of my face and I knew
would take 15 minutes but .this I was OK.
one finally consumed nearly an
“IT
erossed
two barbed.
wire
hour. Said Crane, ‘It was one of fences, really exhausted by now,
the most terrifying nights I ever and crawled on my knees to the
spent and the first time I ever home
of George
Bell where
[I
experienced near-panic.”’
banged on the front door that had
“At first
walking was
fairly been nailed shut since fall. Finalgood but soon the path in the ly the women folks dragged me in
eenter of the road narrowed and and slowly thawed me out. I rethe sloping sides caused by the member my father always asked
swirling wind that surely must my mother for
warm milk and
have hit at least 50 miles an hour ginger when chilled, and I congrew stronger. On leaving the car sumed a quart or so.
I put on a long coat, then tied a
“No
man can tell the truth
short one over my head, breath- more fully unless he has experiing through the sleeves—an old enced the unbelievable. I persontrick up north in Vermont where ally have changed the name of
I used to visit.
‘Blossom Corner to Little Siberia,
Spots Farm Lights
“T left town the following Thurs“Finally I reached the curve in jday afternoon on the first milk
the road better Known locally as: truck in nine days.”’

WORTHINGTO
ter,

CAPEN

26144

9 y

Mrs.

ELECTED

of the Worthington

District

was

held

Fire

Monday

eve-

ning in the town hall with Carl
S. Joslyn presiding
as
moder-

|ator

in the

place

of Charles

C.

Eddy.
‘Arthur
G.
Capen
was
elected to his 25th term as elerk
of the water
district,
having
commenced the work on January

17, 1933.

Mr. Eddy was re-elected

auditor;

and

moderator;
Mrs,
George
Torrey accepted another term

William

E.
as

F. Sander-

son was re-elected
to a_
three
year term as water commissioner.
It was voted to employ the

water

commissioners

at the

f

o

The Hampshire
County
Red
Cross office in Northampton has
announced
the appointment
of

WORTHINGTON—The | annual
meeting

\|

Elizabeth
Stephen G. Maniatty portraying George Sheldon and
among sev~
Herlihy taking the part of Little Mary Hawks were
nment proeral Deerfield residents who took part in the entertai
Valley
gram at the annual meeting Tuesday night of Pocumtuck
based
was
program
The
,
Deerfield
Old
at
on
Memorial Associati
on historical data of the association,

gc-

Ralph

Robert

of the

J.

A. Moran

Lucey

local

as

drive

and

Mrs.

co-chairmen

for

funds.|.

Worthington’s quota is $200. The
following solicitors
have
been
appointed and will meet
Thurs- |:
day at 8 in Mrs. Moran’s home|.
at the Center
for
instructions: |;

Mrs.
bert

Clifford
Hoag,

Tinker,

Mrs.

Mrs.

Leighton

Her-

A.

Kneller, Mrs. Hollis W. Huston,
Mrs. Ernest W. Robinson,
Mrs.
Chester W. Wronski, Mrs.
Howard Mollison, Mrs. Richard Fair-

held tonight in the|
Deerfield Academy

the

ers

Alger.

School

encouraged

to

school as Junior

children

will

contribute

for

elected

man, Mrs.
Harold
E.
Brown,
Mrs. Edward Arhtur, Mrs. Howard Beebe and
Miss Marcelline

'

one

Charles
Vv

be

at

Red Cross mem-

bers.
ing rate for
comparable
work
The Grange will hold another
whenever necessary.
A request| military whist party Friday at.8
from Dr. Leighton
&lt;A. Kneller in the town hall with prizes and
for permission to connect onto an refreshments.
existing water main on WilliamsMrs. W. Warren Rausch is visburg Rd. for a
proposed
new
iting her mother,
Mrs. Edward
house was approved.
H.
Newcomb
of
Manchester,
Conn.
The collapse of “the
old
tin
garage” on Old Post
Rg.
has
opened up a splendid view of the
Golf
Club.
Folks
are
saying
that “It’s an ill wind” ete.

7

nual mee
foyer of

we

Herlihy.

etty

John

2

Boyden,

Hai

Stenhen
| Russ Miller. Paul Ha
Wy
hy, &gt; Mrs.
Mrs |
|Maniatty, Elizabeth Heriihy,
Richard Cobb, Bruce Nichols and|
Henry Flynt.

�Repetetoer
ce

_ SATURDAY, MARCH 15, 1958.

| WORTHINGTON

Z

LEEDS

‘Three From Here

End Boot Training

At Great Lakes

WORTHINGTON
—
John B.
Diamond, son of Mrs. Dorothy B.
Diamond
of» Huntington
Rd.;_

|

Richard A. Bartlett,
and Mrs. Robert T.
West St., and Ronald
son of
Mr. and Mrs.
Higgins of Huntington
| Worthington,
have

r

from

recruit

son of Mr.
Bartlett of
G. Higgins,
Wallace C,
Rd; all of.
graduated:

training

at

the

| Naval
Training
Center,
Great
Lakes, Ill.
The
graduation
exercises, |

marking
of “boot
dress

the-end
camp,”

parade

and

of nine
includéd
review

weeks!
a full!

before|

military officials and civilian dig-!
nitanies.
!
. In nine weeks
the “raw recruit”

to a Navy

duty

with

of
instruction,
is developed in.

Bluejacket,

the fleet,

rea

y for?

Leeds Parent-Teacher Association
in past years, Deep sympathy has
been expressed for Mrs,
who ‘has recently been

LYMAN B. PHELPS
LEEDS — Townspeople
were
shocked and saddened to learn
of the sudden
death
yesterday
morning of Lyman B, Phelps ot
River Rd. Although not in robust
health recently, Mr. Phelps_drove
to Florence, with
Sunday to attend

Florence
and was
on

incapacitated, by the people
of
this’ village, who appreciate the
happy

ing

WORTHINGTON’
KENNETH

7

B,

PEASE ||}

Worthington, March 29—Funer- |
al of Kenneth Bartlett Pease, 56,
of Kinnebrook Rd., who died Friday evening in Westfield Sanatorium, will be held Monday at
2 p. m. in First Congregational
Church, Rev. Edward U. Cowles
officiating. Mr. Pease was the
only child of Edwin and Nettie
Bartlett Pease, Before his long
ilIness he was employed on construction
projects
and
in late
years was
with town
Highway
Department. He leaves his wife,

Ethel
Clarissa
(Zarr)
Pease;
eight children, Kenneth, Jr., of ||
Blandford, James of Westfield, |;
Mrs, Donald Watson of Hunting- |}
ton,

Richard

and Howard

E,

of

Worthington,

A., Nancy

M.,

Rob-

ert F. and
Mary
Ann,
all‘ at
home; seven granddaughters and
a grandson, The body is at Leslie

b. Porter funeral home, Cummington, There will be no yisiting hours. Burial will be in Center Cemetery

for

ay

this

ready

communi-

activities

which

was

always

to participate

of

found

in local,
interest

expression

in

the

Se) jit

LYMAN B. PHELPS

Lyman

B.

Phelps

died

at his

of

50

River|

home

this|

|

| Rd., Leeds, husband of Mrs. Ruby |
He

in

was

born

April

Northampton,

son

,/Phelps.
He
‘Northampton

3, |

of)

graduated
from)
High
School
in.

|} 1904 and from Clarke University,
|Worcester,
in 1907. He was a
|science
teacher
in the
high
| schools of Bernardston,
North-

;ampton,
and,
for
20 years,
inClassical High School, Springfield. |

| He retired in 1939 and_ since has|
|made his home in. this city, He!
| was

a member

of

the

WORTHINGTON

[

YER C
‘
} | MRS, ERNEST G.
:
ee
April
| Worthington,
83s
'Delena E. (Jones) Thayer,
‘died tonight in her home on River
wat
Rd., West Worthington. She
se
born July 20, 1874, daughter

Mrs. Thayer leaves her
band, Ernest G. Thayer;

Mrs.

Bessie

ton;

Florence|

Church,
be

in

There

will

West

will

Congregational|

officiate.

be

Farms

no

Burial will|
Cemetery.|

calling

hours,|

Friends are asked to omit flowers
but may make gifts to the floral|
memorial
fund at Florence Con- |
gregational Church.
Cards
may |
be obtained at the funeral home
or at the church office.
|

Gertrude
Smith

of

Pease

sisters;

and

Mrs«

Worthing-

West

and

eens

two

great-grandchildren.

e

She as married in the house
where she was born Sept. 28, 1892,
and last year celebrated her 65th
wedding

member

She

anniversary.

naan

than

of Sunday

20 years

was

5)

2

Congregational

of First

Church and the Women’s
was
She
Society.
olent

Phelps
of Springfield.
Funeral,
services
will
be
held
at
the!
|} Charles R. Dutton
funeral home|

Florence

two

Springfield;

West

Clyde of

2 brother,

Worthington;

PAS

hustwo

Eben Shaw and
West
Britt, of

daughters, Mrs.
Raymond
Mrs.

|in Springfield on Aug. 17, 1915. }
Besides Mrs.
Phelps, he is sur-|
vived by one sister, Miss
Jessie |

the

all her life.

Worthington

_ Congregational Church. He mar-|
| vied the former Ruby E. Parmelee |

Thursday afternoon at 3:30. Rev.|
Walter G. Couch Jr., pastor- of|

and Debora
had resided ut

the late Willard
(Cole) Jones, and

school

Benev- .
supers

more.

and was

4 member

Grange

90

of the board of trustees for 25
years. She also was a member of

| Worthington

j

for

50

years.
vPonéial will be held Tuesday.
‘afternoon at 2 in First Congregaitional Church with Rey. Edward
wil
U. Cowles officiating. Burial
. be in North Cemetery. The Leslie
L. Porter funeral home in Cume
mington is im charge of arranges
ments, There will be no visiting’
hours.

Es

re

PEASE

daughter of Edwin
(Greene) Zarr.
five sons, Kenneth

of
Westfield
Howard
A.
Worthington;

and
Richard
E.,
and
Robert
F.
of
three
daughters,

Mrs.

interested |

community

B.

boro, N. Y¥.,
and Minerva
She leaves

+ B.,.

Timothy W. and Dora (Spooner) |

f c er

life enjoyed

Phelps

Congregational Church,
at the
local
postoffice

nature,

and

/1886,

Morel

companionable

by Mr. and Mrs.
many years.

KENNETH

Worthingion,** May
2— Mrs.
Ethel Clarissa (Zarr) Pease, 51,
died suddenly in her home in
Kinne Brook Rd. this afternoon.
She was the widow of Kenneth
B. Pease and was born in Lewis-

Mrs. Phelps on
services at the

Monday.Among

/ morning.

iKizd

MRS.

Phelps,
partially

ties esteemed citizens, Mr. Phelps,
a Christian gentleman of
retir-|

|Phelps,

; :

co WORTHINGTON

MARCH 12, 1958,

ape

Jr.,

of Blandford,

Nettie

Mae’

James

Watson

E.

of

Huntington, Nancy M. and Mary
Ann of Worthington;
two brothers, Edwin Zarr of Tampa, Fla.,
, and Louis Zarr of Worthington;
a sister, Mrs.
Cary
Barlow of
Bristol, Cona., and seven granddaughters and a grandson, She
was a member of First Congregational
Church
and
a charter
member of Friendship Guild,
The funeral will be held Sunday
at
2
in
First
Congregational
Church,
with
Rev.
Edward
U.
Cowles officiating. Burial will be
in Center
Cemetery.
Leslie
L,
Porter funeral home is in charge
of arrangements,

Worthington,
May
2—The
Pilgrim Fel’»wship of First Congregational Church will.meet Sunday
afternoon at 3.30 at the church.
Hillside
Pomona
Grange
will
meet Monday in Huntington. Supper will be served at 6.30 with the
meeting at 8, The program will
include a hat contest ‘‘Millinery
Hazards.’
Three prizes will be
awarded for the best hats. A Find
It-Fix It contest is also scheduled. There will be a roll call of
officers, each of whom
will respond with a safety slogan,
a
Mr, and Mrs, Frank A. Sexton
will spend the week-end at the!
“Spruces” with Mr. Guy F. and
se Misses Elsie and Marion Bartett,
The
Rod
and
Gun Club will
meet Monday
at 8 in the club-

house

in Christian Hollow,

�BUCKLAND
Rites Tuesday
en

\

;

eas

eae

WORTHINGTON
ss¢

For Miss Clark

Buckland,
May 4 -— Funeral
services
for Miss
Eleanor
W.
Clark, 55, postmistress and well
known. resident who died Saturday at her home at the Wilder
homestead,
will be Tuesday
at

1:30 p. m. in Mary Lyons Church
|with Mr, Donald Morrison. offi+
ciating,

Burial

will

be

in

the

Worthington
Center’.
Cemetery.
Visiting hours at the Smith fu-

neral home
in Shelburne Falls
will be Monday, 7 to 8 p, m.
Miss Clark was born on Aug,
24, 1902, in Williamsburg, daugh&lt;
ter of Dwight;T, and. Harriet
Wilder Clark. She was a meme
ber of Mary Lyon Church, where
she
supervised
the
Sunday

school.

land
A

High

She had resided in Bucks

16 year's,
graduate

School

mal School,
'Greenfield,

Ashfield:

been

since

and

and

of

Williamsburg

Westfield

Dalton.

1944,

Miss Clark
and president

Weavers

Nor-

she taught school in
West
Worthington,|

postmistress

in

‘She

had,

Buckland

was the founder
of the Buckland

Association

and

cone}

ducted a workshop in weaving)
for a number of years, She was|
a representative of the board of
the Massachusetts Association of|

Handicrafts Group, a member of)
the Hampshire Hills Association)

of

Northampton

the

committee

Historical

Society,

remembrances

Church.

and

for

She was

for

and

the

Buckland!

served

on)

book

Mary

of!

Lyon|

also a member}

ofthe Buckland Grange and the
Deerfield Valley Pomona Grange,
Miss
Clark was
editor of a
weekly
newspaper,
‘‘Our Bucke
land Weekly,”
a former
corres
spondent for the Greenfield Re-|
corder Gazette, a member of the)
Worthington Historical Society, a
member of the Shelburne Falls

Women’s

Club,

the Buckland

Las

dies’ Club and the Dorothy Quins
cy Hancock Chapter, DAR.

She leaves several cousins, and

her

aunt,

Mrs.

Bertha

pase
WORTHINGTON

Wilder.

Ralph

Red

Moran,

Cross

drive,

chairman
has

the goal

of the

announced

berg

of $200,

The baseball groups of the Hill-

town Mutual Aid Association met
in Cummington Tuesday night to
discuss
this season's
plans
for
the Little League baseball teams,
Howard Pease, Raymond Magargal and Robert Hixon of Worthington attended the meeting, The
Little League teams
are sponsored by the Fire Departments,
=&lt;
W7 Richard Bartlett and Robert

Spiess
|Lakes,

‘| training

left
Ill.,

to

school.

today
for Great
enter machinists
Winston.

and Ronald Higgins

Donovan

leave Thurs-

day for aviation training school

Pensacola,

and John Diato the naval
‘| base at Jacksonville, Fla.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred LaRoche
‘}mond

will

Fla.,

in

&gt;&gt;port

-|of Harvey Rd., are parents of a
son born Tuesday in Cooley Dick«
inson Hospital.

Emerson Davis
is recovering
from injuries received from a fall

he suffered
_|Town Hall.

while

decorating

|

|

Rd:

Mr.

Paul

is employed

Local

civil

defense

Mr.

‘and’Mrs.

Lambert

have opened their home in Souths,
Worthington
after spending
the
winter in St. Petersburg.
~~

(Miss

Carolyn

J.

Bartlett

nual

Rita

Star

Tuesday

Alger,

Grange
night

lecturer;

of

were

Miss

GreenMrs,

Marz

cellene Alger, steward; and Miss
Janet Fairman,
lady assistant
steward. Mr..and Mrs. Herman
Cowing of Bellows Falls,
Worthington members, also attended.
Any person wishing transpor-~
tation to the Easter sunrise service in Chesterfield should contact

Mrs.

C, Kenneth

George

Torrey.

Osgood or Mrs.

afternoon

and

evening

meeting

of

Association
Churches.

the

of

Congregational

Periodic

paper

er

for

the

ment

done

as

in

also|

will

drives

the

formerly.

in the town

local

observ-

Massachusetts

of Public

Depart:

Health,

reports)

that rainfall measured 4.58 inches|
for the month of April as com-|
pared to 2.80 inches
last
year.|
There were 5.75. inches of snow|
for

the

month

as

compared.

to)

7.75 a year ago. The total snow-|
'fall for the past season was 102)
inches as compared to 75.75 for |
the winter of a year ago.
The

vass

annual

of the

Church

will

every

|
|
|

member can-

4

First Congregational|
be

held

during

the |

week of May 18 and the annual
business meeting
is
scheduled
for June 6. Mrs. Ralph W. Smith
is chairman of the every member
eanvass.
The
trustees
of the

at the an-

Hampshire

of

station

evening of June 18
| hall.
Arthur G. Capen,

:

field

re-

f
be held.
Clifton L. Sears, piano and ac-|
announces that
cordion teacher,
the annual recital for Worthington pupils
will be
held
on the},

of

Englan

them

leaving

instead
fire

Westfield
State
Teachers
College has been elected senior class
representative for next year on
the executive committee
of the
Student Fellowship at the college.
The Fellowship is an affiliate of
the Student Christian Movement

in New

are

of the
paper

papers s@scrap
quested to tie
curely or pack them in cardboard
cartons and deliver them to the
convenience
truck body at their

personnel

Caspar

Householders

storage.

met in the Town Hall Wednesday
night
with, Director Charles
C.}.
| Eddy
and received
instructions
for the national operational alert
on May 6 and 7.
The Little Leaguers sponsored
by the
Fire “Department met
Wednesday to organize and practice with Howard Pease; Practice}
Sessions will be held every Tuesday and Friday at 6.

rear
scrap

at the
set up
for
garage

been
town

house in Christian Hollow.
Worthington officers attending
the visiting officers night of the

Guiding

WORTHINGTON — Fire Chief
announces
Osgood
C. Kenneth
that the fire department has pro-|}
has
which
body
;eured a truck

by the Shell Oil Company. Mr.
and Mrs. William Kronenberger
will take a trip to Mexico, Colo|rado and California.

Delegates
r.
and
Mrs.
C,
Kenneth Osgood, Mr, Arthur G.
Capen, Mrs. George H. Bartlett
and Rey. Edward U. Cowles will
represent
the . church
Sunday

The Rod and
Gun Club will
meet Monday at 8 in the 'club.'

WORTHINGTON

dren, of Manila, have rented the
Kronenberger home in Williams-

that $177 has been collected in the
drive now ended, this being $23
below

st

| church

have prepared

a budget|

of $5,015 to be voted upon at the
annual
meeting,
A
budget
of
$4,925 was approved a year ago.
At the annual dinner meeting

of School

Worthington

The Grange will hold a card
‘party Friday in Town Hall,
The Rod and Gun Club will
meet Tuesday
in Town Hall.

instead

Worthington,

Feb,

of Monday

26—The

Rod

and Gun Club will meet Monday
night in the fire station at 8.
Hillside
Pomona
Grange
will
meet Monday in the Town Hall
with supper at 6.30 and the meeting at 8. The Agricultural Committee is in charge of the program,
Mrs. Barbara’ Dunlevy,
chairman of the Heart Fund drive, has
made an appeal for intended contributions as the drive is nearly

over,

Mr. and Mrs. Neil Chapin have
rented the Cullen Packard
cottage on Chesterfield Rd. for one

month,

The
annual
Worthington

held

this week

lyn

acting

Charles.

C.

as

meeting
of
Fire § District

the
was

moderator

for

with

Eddy.

Carl

S,. Jos-

Arthur

G.

Capen jwas elected to his twentyfifth year term. as. clerk, Other}
officers
re-elected
to
one-year |
terms are: moderator, Charles Ed-|

dy; auditor, Mrs. George Torrey;

commissioner
for
a three-year
term, William F. Sanderson.
_ Miss Carolyn Bartlett is enjoy-

Ing

a

week’s

vacation

home,
from
Westfield
Teachers College.
-

at her |
State

52

of

is a part,

Mrs.

which

Rob:|

ert J. Lucey, chairman of the lo |
| cal school committee, was elect:|

Worthington, Feb. 26—The Red
Cross drive will open March 1 and!

will be conducted during the entire month.
Chairman
is Mrs.
Ralph A. Moran. A meeting of
solicitors willbe held Thursday
at 8 at the home of Mrs. Moran.

Union

} ed

secretary.

| Hoyt

7

| ance

was

O’Neill

Dr.

N.

re-elected

counselor

will

and

Deming

school

continue

Mrs,

as_

guid-

panel

secre:|

| tary to Superintendent J, Walter|

Richard. The meeting was held|
in Smith’s School, Northampton,|

last Tuesday

evening.

j

|

Hilltown choir fes-| darn
| tivalThe willannual
be held Sunday evening|
at

8

in

the

First

Congregational|

Church of Williamsburg,
under|
the direction
of Mrs.
Roberta|

‘

| Cowell. More than 50 voices will |
| participate from the churches of if

t

Haydenville, Goshen,
Cumming:|| '
‘ton, Plainfield, Ashfield, Chester|/
field, Worthington and wee)
burg. From
the
local
church,
Mrs.

C,

Misses
Osgood,

Raymond

H. Franklin
part.

Magargal,

the

Judith
Magargal,
Joan
and Priscilla Torrey and

Bartlett will take |

Mrs.
George
W.
Humphrey|
will present
her
ballet
pupils|
from
Cummington,
and Worthington in

Chesterfield,|
their annual|

recital on May 30 in vhe Anne T.
Dunphy School in Williamsburg.

|

�:

‘went

’

CHURCH'S

to

ifrom

CHOICE

Second

Holyoke.

for

the

New

.a 10-year

York

pastorate

Congregational

seven

Prior

to that,

years

as

—
at

ee

of

minister.

of

leader

be-

he

~ WORTHINGTON

the

Church

H

served

Congregational

.

g

|

Ps e

. Fire Leveis Barn,

Edwards
Congregational Church
in Northampton, from 1932-1939.

The

e

i
\

gan his duties as a clergyman at
the First Congregational Church,
Stockbridge, where he was pastor

{

from 1929-1930, after serving for)
'two years as a student assistant.

|

Home Is Saved

| WORTHINGTON—A

fire which|

is believed to have spread
from
a burning rubbish pile consumed |

, a 60 by 40 foot barn last night at |
the A. E. Albert &amp; Sons potato|
farm on Huntington Rd. here.
Damage
is expected to exceed

$10,000.

|

Sparks from the bonfire are believed to have dropped in grass
near the rear of the
hug
barn,!
‘burning to the structure and then
sweeping up the
back and into
the loft.
By the time firefighters |;

‘arrived

J. PENNER

ALBERT

REV.

'DR. A. J. PENNER
| TO HEAD STATE
CHURCH GROUP
‘|Nominated for President of

Congregational Christian
Conference

Boston,

April

10—Rev,

Albert

J. Penner, minister of one of the
historic
downtown
Manhattan
churches and who formerly held
three
setts,

pastorates
in
Massachuhas been nominated for the

post of president of the 585-church

Congregational
Massachusetts
Christian Conference.
Succeeds Dr. Coe
The conference board of trus-

tees

unanimously

recommendation

of

accepted
a_

the

special

committee appointed last year to
find a successor for Rev. Albert
Buckner Coe, who has headed the
and
for nine years,
conference

on April 16 will be honored on
his 70th birthday at a testimonial
dinner in the Hancock Building,
Boston. He retires May 21.
Official action on the nomination of Dr. Penner will be taken

clergy and
by several hundred
laity representing the 585 Congregational churches in the state at
the 159th annual three-day program of the conference May 19-21
.
at Plymouth.

Dr.

Penner

probably will begin

; his new duties Sept. 1. He has been

minister of the historic Broadway
Congregational

known

as

the

Church,

Broadway

nacle, since Sept.
Previous to his
torate, he served
|in
Massachusetts,
Northampton and

the fire

had

gained

con-|

|siderabe headway.
|
Firefighters were
on duty
at!
the scene
throughout the night
and the supervising salvage oper;ations today at the still smoldering fire.
A bulldozer operated
by
firefighter Zack Donovan was used
to pull down a shed that connect-

_ long

Taber-

1, 1949.
New York pasthree churches
at
Holyoke,
Stockbridge. He

‘\ed

the

house

and

barn.

This

'’maneuver is credited with
&gt; ing the farm office, parts
- age and the home.

|

About

1500 feet

havstor-

of hose

{Cummington
| their prompt

was

Absence of wind, unusual
| this hilltop town, was a boon

| firefighters.

/not

needed.

measure.

tank trucks
tosthe main

was
used. [
Cummington

made frequent iripst
road for water.

barn.

wind

There

blowing

was

away

from

a

the: barn and other out-buildings,
| which aided in preventing the
fire. from spreading.
Fire crews tore down

|necting

in}
to |

'
A Jarge crowd
gathered
and
‘\ears lined
the
main
highway
&gt; nearby.
The five was.reported at
, 7:45 and was under control about
) two hours later,
State police from the
Russell
‘- barracks directed traffic near the
,{scene and the resusciatator from
|{the Health
Center was
brought

,/aS an emegency

dfy,
and
another.
Worthington, and

strong

that only
and . help

| prevented a greater loss.

Worthington, May 10—Fire partially destroyed the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Clarke W. Clemer in
Thrasher Hill Rd., South Worthington, this afternoon. Mr. Clemer was at a pumping house, a
short
distance
from
iiue main
house, and saw the roo. burning
around the chimney, There was a
fire in the fireplace, and a spark
had ignited the wood roof shingles. Mr. Clemer telephoned the
Fire Department, When they arrived at the scene, the roof and
upper story were in flames, A}.
call was sent to Cummington for
assistance.
Fire
fighters
were
hampered by the shortage of wa‘iter as the house is about three
quarters of a mile from the main
| road,
‘|.
One spring well was pumped

attached

by
-the_ departChesterfield
and

and said
response

Destroys Home
In Worthington

2 All furniture and furnishings in
the second story were destroyed,
but firemen saved everything on
the ground floor, taking it to an

‘layed to one of the farm’s fire
z:ponds so that an adequate water
1}supply was
assured.
Chief
C,
t! Kenneth Osgood praised the as-

-'sistance given
1jments
from

Blaze Partially—

It was |

\{

As soon as the fire threatened |,
to spread to
the
home,
Mrs. |

Joseph W. Sena, who has
been}
[through
three previous fires at)
‘her farm, took five of the seven)
| Albert children to her home for,
ithe night.
|
In spite of the
proximity
to)
‘the burning barn, the house and|
office escaped damage,

{

breezeway

a

con-

in a success-

ful attempt to halt the flames,
Estimated
camage,
set
by
Chief C. Kenneth Osgood, is $8000,
The house was covered partially by insurance The home, build
about 50 years ago, is known as
| the ‘Old Nathan Bill place.”’ Mr.
jand Mrs. Clemer summer here,
from their home in East Longmeadow.

�APRIL

11, 1958.

18

CHESTERFIELD

Three Count: Fair To Be Held ea e, 31. Sone 4

LESTER

C. LEDUC
LEDUC ~
|
ELECTED
PRESIDENT |
CHESTERFIELD
— Lester C.|
LeDuc, superintendent of streets
in
Chesterfield
for
nearly
30!
years, has just been elected pres-!
ident of the Tri-County Highway

Superintendents

Association. This

association is comprised of street|
superintendents and highway officials of the counties
of Franklin, Hampshire and Hampden.
This
group
was
organized
about eight years ago to further
the highway program
and _ pro-|
vide for exchange
of ideas
on)
highway
.construction and main-|
tenance. With
a membership of
over 150 highway officials,
this

group

has

become

invaluable

to|

the successful
operation of the
highway program in the Gonnec-|
ticut Valley.

Mr.

LeDuc

has served

for

four

years as a director of the association, two years as vice presi-|
dent before being elected as president.
|

The Three County Fair will be|
The group, meeting for dinner |
held Aug, 31 throwgh Sept. 6, it ,in Hotel Northampton,
voted a
was decided
last night’
bythe| | donation of $5,000 to the Cooley
board of directors of the
Hamp- | Dickinson
Hospital Development
shire,
Franklin
and
Hampden | Fund.
Pictured: are, left to right, seatAgricultural Society.

John L. Banner;
secretary;
ed,
He nry H. Snyder;
Worthington,
president;
standing, J. J. Kelle| her, vice president; W. Briceland
| Na sh, past president, and Charles
' E. Stearns, treasurer.

WORTHINGTON
ee

Principal Resifte

i
i
t
|!

WORTHINGTON a
MRS.

|

I

W.

Rd.,

.

|church

3.6

The Student Fellowship of West-|

grounds,

|

ee

| gers

followed by |

ee

of Buffington

in

Lena

Mrs.}

Hill|

Manchester,

where

hef

late

husband |

Burial will be|
Cemetery.

and

Mrs.

Harold

F.}

|MacHugh
have
returned
from
Sebring, Fla., where they spent|the winter.
Children’s
Day
service
will |
take place in First Congregationjal: Church
at 11 Sunday,
under
the direction of Mrs. Richard B.
Smith,
superintendent
of
the

installation of the newly-elec- |

ted executive committee
of the
Student
Fellowship,
to be conccted in the Worthington Church
by Rev. Edward U. Cowles, Pas- |
toral adviser
for
the college
group.
Miss
Caroline Bartlett,
who will be senior class representative next year, is one of the
officers to be installed.
Mrs,
William
FF. Sanderson,
chairman of the Salvation Army|
fund drive, reports contributions
are in excess of $85. This is in
addition to private contributions
already
made,
including a gift
of $1000 from the late Charles "D.
Pray before his death in January.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Werche|
of Ringville have returned from|
Nokomis, Fla., and plan to sell |
their
house
here
and
make
Florida
their year-round
home.
Barbara Hixon, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert Hixon
of Old
| Post Rd., fell on steps Thursday
and sprained her ankle.

today

of

Worthington, June 6—Raymond ||
Coffey of East Windsor Rd. en-|
tered
Noble
Hospital
Tn
for knee surgery.
Mr.
and Mrs. John Barry wl
New York City have opened their
bene
in Harvey Rd. for the sea-

field State Teachers College and
the
Protestant
Fellowship
at
Westover Field will have a picnic
supper Monday at the Red and

Club

6-Mrs.

mother

served as minister,
in the Kittery Point

| School.

the

Rausch

died

en

June

Conn., in the home of her son- -in-|
law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. |
‘Preston R. Sage. Mrs. Newcomb/.
was born in Boston and was 88.
years old. Funeral will be Mon-|
|day in Kittery Point, Me., in the |

Worthington May 23 — Norman
\Hallowell, principal and teacher
‘|o£f Russell H; Conwell School, has
eed
his resignation to the
School ‘Committee, effective June
30. He has excepted the position
| of principal and teacher at the)
jEast
Templeton
Elementary|

Gun

Newcomb,

Warren

|

LENA
ce W.

Worthington,

|

|

| chur ch school.

Pilgrim Fellowship
invites all
young people of high school age|
end above to their biweekly Sun-|
day meeting at 7 in the churen|
parlor. The program will include!
|a film strip and discussion, de| votional period,
business meeting |jand
social
hour
with
refresh-|
iments. On the program committee are
Richard
S.
Hathaway,
Samuel
C. Borst and Judith A.
Magargal.
The volunteer fire department
will meet in the fire nouse Monjday at 8.

i

|

�MAY

Retiring at Mount Holyoke
=

e

14-1955

MAY J1-

WORTHINGTON

BRANCH

|__WORTHINGTON-—The

composition.
In recent years, in
addition to the freshman course
in
reading
and
writing,
she
taught
descriptive
writing
and
advanced composition and has directed individual student projects
in writing,
Miss Branch
was
for several
‘summers.
an
instructor
at the
Bread Loaf School of English established by Middlebury College.
She is the author of a volume of
critical analysis, “The Training of]:
Literary
Judgement,’
and
of
poems and articles published in
the English
Journal
and
other}:
periodicals.
She is a member of}
the Modern
Language
Association and the American Association
| of University Professors,
After she retires she will live
|in Northampton,
where she has|

|for a number
{home

during

of years

made

the summer.

her'|

annual|

| Sunday School convention for the
| Hilltown
churches
will
be held
lon Sunday in Plainfield with the
|morning
service
beginning
at!
110:45
in
the
Congregational
Church.
Those
attending
will
bring box lunches and coffee and
cocoa will be served.
The
busi-

ness

meeting,

and

||
||

programs

j

|
‘

LEONORA

1/945

fag erg

wc

iary

OR Paltae

Miss Branch
Miss Branch joined the Mount
She took
| Holyoke faculty in 1918.
her B.A. at Smith, won two fellgwships for advanced study, and
received an M.A, from Wellesley.
Since then, except for three years
at
as an instructor in English
| Vassar, she has taught at Mount
Holyoke.
Her major field of interest has
always
been
the
teaching
of

by

the various Sunday Schools will
begin at 1:15,
There will be
no
church service here on that day.|
|
The
Mountain
Rangers
4H}
i horse club will stage a gymkhana |

lon Memorial Day at the

Little.|

ville fair grounds.
This club
is}
made
up
of
members
from|

| Worthington,
Chesterfield
and}
| Huntington under the leadership|
|of Mrs.
Howard Beebe of Wil-|
\liamsburg Rd,
jof
Charlemont

|gymkhana.

H.

Parker
Smith|
will
direct
the}

All events are sched- |

luled for 1 p.m.
The woodworking
|

\late

Charles

jmen

of the

shop

Kilbourn,

jlandmark in this town,
| favorite
gathering
place

town

in

days

of

long

expert

cabinet

a

and
a
forthe}

jby, has been torn down and_
remains will be burned by
fire department tomorrow.
Kilbourn
built
a
number
houses here in his day and
an

|

the}

maker.

gone|

the|
the
Myr.
of
was!

The!

Kilbourn property on Buffington
Hill Rd. is now owned
by
Dr.)
and Mrs. L. N. Durgin.
td
School lunches for the coming|
week will be:
Monday,
Spanish|
rice, carrot and
celery - sticks,|
}cold
cuts,
bread
and _ butter,|
|cheese
wedge
and
applesause;|
| Tuesday, spaghetti, hamburg and|
| tomato, green beans, cherry muf-|

|fins, coconut
cookies;
Wednes-|
|day, macaroni and cheese, carrots |
jand

|wich,

peas,

|}cookies;

peanut

tomato

Thursday,

|hash, tossed
;saidwich,

juice,

|sugar cookies,

egg

Friday,

cheese

whole

sand-|

cornmeal|

corned

salad,

pears;

beans, baked

citrus

butter

juice,

beef|

salad|

baked|

sandwich,|

kernel.

corn,|

|

bey,

°

�Ws

"Abraham

Soe

Charles

Dickens and Jenny Lind slept here" tanger-Chartes

pe

-

1”

ee

‘|

Lol

,

DISTINGUISHED PEOPLE

Lincoln,

a

HIS TORI

POT

The nation's greats and near-greats visited this famous edifice---the Mount Holyoke Summit House~--for more
than a century.
There is reason to believe that the famous landmark may be restored.

�JUNE

25, 1958.

ae

-BDNA SKINNER,
DEAN EMERITUS
ATU. OF M, DIES
Succumbs _in Kalamazoo,
» Mich., While Visiting
:
With Relatives

"Amherst, July 11—Miss Edna
Il. Skinner of 195 Butterfield Ter.,
dean

emeritus

of

the

school

of

home economics at the University
of

Massachusetts,

died

suddenly

ceived a B. S. and M. A. degrees
from Teachers College, Columbia
University, and helq an honorary
degree from her alma mater.
She was a member of Phi Kappa Phi, the Mortarboard and oth-!
er honorary organizations.
She
had held offices in the Massachu-}
setts Home
Economics
Associa-!
tion;
American
Association . of
University
Women
the National
Association of Dean
of Women
and was a coauthor of a widely
used book in home economics.
She taught at Teachers College,
Columbus University, and at the
University
of
California,
She
was head of the Department of
Household
Science
at
James
Millikin
University
at Decatur,|
Ill., before being called to the

University

EDNA

L, SKINNER

this
afternoon
in
Mich.,° where
she

Kalamazoo,
-was_ visiting

relatives and. had attended
wedding of a grandnicce.
Native

*She was

ahd was

of Michigan

born

in Cooper,

the

Mich:

a graduate of Kalama-

zoo High
School
and
State
Normal College.

Michigan
“She _re-

Massachusetts

in}

1919, then known
as Massachu-}
setts Agricultural College.
Organized Department
Here she organized the department of home econdmics which}
she headed for nearly 30 years,
acting also as dean of women.
Miss Skinner engendered a spirit of fellowship and co-operation

and

MISS

of

Makes Denial

through

her

unselfish

en-}

deavors she overcame any exist-'
ing prejudice against coeducation}
on the campus,
At the time of!
her retirement in 1946, she had}
seen the original department of!
home economics grow into one of
the university’s schools which she
served as dean.
|
In 1949, the beautiful and. modern building of the school of home
economics
was
built
and
the
name of Edna L. Skinner, Hall
was given to it in recognition of;
her achievements,
Educators at}
the university said tonight, ‘‘with;
her passing,
Massachusetts
has|
lost. one of its most distinguished!
pioneers in higher education for
women,”’
}
As a citizen of Amherst, Miss)
Skinner was held in highest es-|
teem, being a member of First
Congregational Church, the Amherst Women’s Club, the League
of Women Voters, and the Tra-|
velers Club.
!
She was interested in foreign
relations and several foreign students at the University have lived}
in her home,

She-leaves

a niece, Mrs.

Helen|

jLarson
of
Boulder,
Col.;
two
nephews,
Harold
O. Skinner of
| Kalamazoo and Joseph Skinner of
Fenton, Mich. and two sisters-in-}
law, Mrs. Ethel Skinner Meyers
of Louisville, Ky., and Mrs. Leah
Harkley Skinner of Fenton, Mich.,
}and .several
grandnieces
and
grandnephews.
The funeral will be held Monday
at
the
Truesday
funeral

home

Cooper,

Kalamazoo
Mich.

with

burial

at!

Edward

N.

Gadsby,

chairman

the Security and Exchange
mission,

speaks

from

of

Com:|

witness

|chair of House subcommittee
on|
| Legislative Oversight in Washing:|
|ton. . Gadsby hotly denied that the
SEC favored
Bernard
Goldfine,
Sherman
Adams’
friend.
after

getting a White

1956.

(AP

House

Wirephoto)

call

in|

�MAY

21,

1958.

casion

Frost Named

| of

day,

|- To Congress |
| Library Post
Librarian of Congress L. Quincy Mumford announced today the}
appointment of one of America’s!
best-loved and best-known poets,|
Robert Frost, to be consultant in

poetry in English to the Library
} of Congress in 1958-59.
|

of Mr.

Frost’s

extended

this

nation

him

75th

birth-

“felicitations

which

he _ has)

served so well.”
No stranger to the Library of
Congress,
Mr. Frost's Jast visit
was on Oct. 24, 1955, when
he |
gave a public reading of his po-|
etry
before
an
audience
that}

overflowed the Coolidge Auditori-|
um, His reading marked the open: |
ing in the Library of Congress |

of a major exhibition devoted to
the life and work
of the poet, ||

In it the library displayed more
than
100 photographs,
original|

manuscripts,
and
rare
editions,
-accompanied
by
a
phonograph
from
which visitors could. hear
Mr. Frost reading his poetry in|
the recording
made
by the Li-!
brary for its “Twentieth-Century|

Poetry in English” series of rec-|
ords, Since then this popular ex:|
hibition has traveled widely in
other cities.
\

Born
in
San
Francisco
on}
March
26,
1874,
Robert
Frost |
was educated at Dartmouth and
Harvard and holds a long list of|
|degrees from a variety of distin: |

guished
He

‘lish

has

institutions.

and

been

a teacher

psychology

at

h

of Eng: |

a number|

of colleges and universities and|
is Simpson Lecturer in Literature |
at

Amherst

tinue

his

College.

association

He

will

with

con-|

that|

institution and will give lectures|
there in the coming year as he|
has in the past.
Among
the
celebrated
poet's}

books

are

A

Boy's

Will

(1913),|

| first published in England, where|
ROBERT
FROST
{ Mr. Frost lived in 1912-15; North|
of Boston
(1914); Mountain
In-}
|
Mr, Frost will assume his ‘post| terval
(1916);
New
Hampshire |
|at the Library of Congress early| (1923);
West - Running
Brook|
in October 1958, His appointment| (1928); the prose play, A Way|
lis for a single term, and during| Out (1929); The Lovely Shall Be |

its

two

course

public

he

will

lectures

give
in

least! Choosers

at

the

(1929), a poem; Collect:|

Cool-/ ed Poems (1930, 1939, 1949); The
\idge Auditorium of the Library| Lone Striker (1933), a poem; A|
| of Congress.
Further
Range
(1936);
From
|
The
position of consultant in + Snow to Snow (1936); A Witness|
Tree (1942); Steeple Bush (1947) ; |
poetry in English was established
A Masque of Reason (1945); A}
in
the Library
of Congress
in
of
Mercy
(1947);
and|
}1936
through
a gift
of
funds | Masque
from the late Archer M. Hunt:| Come In (1943), edited by Louis|
Untermeyer.
|
|ington. The consultant gives adMr.
Frost’s
next
volume
of
vice on improving
the library’s|
‘collections
of
literature,
recom: || poetry, And All We Call Ameri- |
early in|
mends the purchase of new mate- i can, will be published
|rials, assists in acquiring impoyr-|| 1959 by Henry Holt and Compa:|
of all Mr.
tant
manuscripts
and
books|| ny, U.S., publishers
through
authors
and
collectors,| Frost’s poetry.
advises on bibliographic and ref- |!
erence work.in his field, confers|
| with scholars and poets using the|
|library’s
collections
and _ facili| ties, and provides editorial super-|
| vision
of the library’s program
|of recording 20th century poets
}in readings of their own -works. |
To
these duties Robert
Frost
brings
the distinguished
experience of a long and vivid life in
| the field of letters. No eontempo- |
;rary American poet has received|
more
honors.
Four
times
his
| work has won the Pulitzer Prize
|in poetry—in 1924, 1931, 1937 and |

|1943, In 1922 his poetry brought

|him the Helen Haire Levinson|
prize and in 1931 the Russell|
Loines Memorial Fund prize.
Among
his
medals
are
Mark
Twain
Medal
(1937),
Gold Medal of the National

stitute of Arts and Letters

|the Silver
Society
of

|the

Medal of
America

Theodore

(1954).

In

1950

(1938),

the Poetry
(1941), and}

Roosevelt

the

the
the|
In-

United

Medal|

States|

| Senate, in a resolution on the oc:|

Tague

HUSBAND AND WIFE received honorary degrees from
Williams for first time yesterday when Mr. and Mrs. Henry
N. Flynt were given doctorates of humane letters. Mr. Flynt,
a 1916 graduate and a trustee, is best known

as an antiquary.

The couple’s restorations of early American homes include

those at Old Deerfield and, shown here, the Mather House
on Williams campus.
They live in Greenwich, Conn.

�ee

ee

NT

THE
TROUBLE
WITH BEING
LFRIDA

Rich but tense, TV champion

:

;

-er-

Jack

was

the wife of Uriah

the

Hittite.

If only she pressed to find bottles enough

Sa tned

had been able to follow that startling lapse bythe Elfrida-powered boom in tire ess it from
hard to gue
&gt; har
ch iti would be
failing to answer the next question too, she
See
:
a
:
i
ar
orhaps
the weariest blood
a
would have been through with the televisionlooking
at her, - perhay
to
Elfrida. She has always
show Twenty-One, richer by $135,000—and around belongs f0 Se
and her will to
2
x
=
3
.
si
pe
a¢
se, ¢
thoroughly relaxed for the first time in weeks. wanted the money, Xllions who have seen her
the millions
But ignorance rarely strikes Elfrida twice, and win is clear to
round.
after a successful
on the next question she knew very well that triumphant
smile
-e exhausting each week.
“hac
.
:
:
Hank Greenberg, Jimmie Foxx, Hack Wilson, But it has got more exhe
;
ie
ied me &gt; t througgh at first,”
carr
carr
nt
i teme
exci
Ralph Kiner,-Willie Mays, Johnny Mize and “The
:
a
wwnlained.
““Now
I’m tire d most of
falas explained.
Mickey Mantle were the seven other baseball Elfrida
N
I want iP. tae
players who had all hit more than 50 home the time. Every week
t
make
o
t
ave
acide
:
mé
:
;
Babe Ruth hit 60 I decide I have to
season since
runs in; a single
oa aun
of
sort
a
is
in 1927. After this dazzling rally Elfrida has chance. There
ous
I used to try anc
gone on to win a quarter of a million dollars, sion. In the early days
ea
it’s
find
|
Now
.
an all-time TV quiz record, which speaks as up on possible subjects
figure out ways to forg
to
ant
ort
imp
e
mor
much for her endurance as for her intelligence.
For 17 consecutive Monday nights this leggy and handsome young woman of 32 has
tugged at a scissored forelock, frowned into a
high corner of her isolation booth and destroyed all comers, most of them men whose
popeyed stammerings belied their impressive
intellectual credentials. And as she prettily
knocked over questions whose degree of difficulty sometimes seemed to invite public outcry, Elfrida, who quit her good job as a personnel manager to devoie full time to being

@

TELEVISION

=

NE unusual evening this spring Elfrid: Wiich was just fine wan Pee
ee aa!
nia ry with
von Nardroff did not know that Bathsheb: Barry and the makers o! Geritol,

�More

t

Oo

N TV, ELFRIDA

VON

NARDROFF

PUitweERS

MUSIC

QUESTION

(ABOVE),

PREPARES

22
(“
s
d
n
E
n
g
i
e
R
0
0
5
,
0
2
2
$
_-———-

(BELOW)

TO

ANSWER

ae

|
winnings, about $174,000
federal taxes.
on the
Leicester is continuing
of |
winnings
his
with
| program
Of her

$33,000.

He. is

assistant

Elizabeth
the
| School in New

Elfrida von Nardroff

Defeated

On

21st Appear-'

ance; Uncle Sam Eyes $174,000 of Winnings
New
queen
defeat

York, July 7 (UPI)—Quiz
Elfrida von Nardroff met
tonight on the television

ner of tonight's contest by identi-|
fying the man.
who,
after the|
1936 landslide victory of Franklin
re|D. Roosevelt over Alf Landon,

program
‘‘Twenty-One,”
but
mained the biggest quiz program

winner in history. She took home
$220,500 in previous winnings,
Trips On Goering
Miss von Nardroff, a native of
Northampton, Mass., was defeated by Robert Leicester, 48-yearold engineer.
The question that threw Miss
von Nardroff
of the Nazi
committed

sentenced
burg

war

gave

as

“‘As

Maine.

‘night,

defeated

goes,

so

goes

| Vermont.”
This
comment
was |}
jmade by James A. Farley, then|
+Democratic national chairman,
|
2ist Appearance
4|
Miss
‘von
Nardroff
first
ap!
peared on the ‘‘Twenty-One”’ pro-|
gram last Feb. 17 and, until to-|
all

comers.

Iron-

called for the name ically, her defeat came
during|
war
criminal who |her 21st appearance on the quiz|

suicide

to death

crimes

at

after

trial.

being

the NuernShe

toyed

with the names Herman Goering
and Joseph Goebbels and finally
her

|}said,

answer

which was wrong.
Leicester then became

Goebbles,

the win-

| show.

:

After her defeat, she described
jher experience on. the show as
‘“‘a fabulous and exciting time”|
jand said she wil] take the sum-}|
jmer off and return to Columbia;
| University in the fall to resume |
her studies. The Brooklyn woman|
| hopes
to earn
her
doctorate
|exnerimental
psychology.

in

|

director

Norman
York.

of |

High

�|

aN
alte
aan

ee

WED RECENTLY

=

Worthington
|
Girl

WORTHINGTON

|]

Hurt

and only son of Mr. and Mrs. Al- |;

and
Jr.,

where

home.

followed
Bride’s

bride,
Rev.
officiating. A

at the

Gown

Given in marriage
ther, the bride wore
antique

illusion
crown

ivory

satin

veil was

bride’s|

he was

broken ribs.
The

accident,

|
|

following
several

believed

blossoms

wer.
year:

elected
president,

i

been caused by
excessive
speed,
left his
automobile
demolished.

|

The

youth

was

pinned

|

in the| |

secretary, |
Mrs.
George
H.
Bartlett; and|
reasurer, Mrs. Lawrence Mason.|

Amherst
on

are at the Durgin

Buffington

Hill

wreckage for some time before he | - | summer.

Rd.

for

N.}

and |
of|

home|

the;

Lt. and Mrs. Edward J. Mac-|
i | Donald
and daughters of Spring-|

was extricated,.

An

HY

Ti

‘and

\

for
the}
Mrs. A.}
president,|

Dr..
and
Mrs.
Lawrence
'Durgin and two daughters
|, || Professor William J. Newlin

iH

to have

attached to her].

of.orange

seniors,

officers
coming

taken last night fol- |

ed as good this morning
broken
left leg
and

by her faa gown of

brocade.

and

on Kinne |‘ Leland
lowing
an accident
Smith;
vice
Brook Rd. iHs condition is report- |, Mrs. Carl §. Joslyn;

of Englewood, N. J., and Douglass Ward Lawder, Jr., son of
Mr.
and Mrs. Douglass Ward
Lawder of Fairfield, Conn., were
united in marriage Saturday at
reception

:

In Accident |

;|lerton Tompkins of Fairman Rd., |;
At the recent meeting of
the!
is at Cooley Dickinson Hospital| ' Friendship Guild, the following|

Worthington, June 24—-Miss Car-

of
the
Mitchell

4-H)

Annapolis Appointee

Miss Glidden, D. W. Lawder Have Bridal

the
home
James A.

Rangers

horse club of Worthington
and
Chesterfield under the leadership
|-|of Mrs, Howard Beebe will stage
a gymkhana at the Cummington |
Fair grounds on July 4 in con- |
hection with
the horse
and
ox)
Open
to everyone for |
WORTHINGTON.
—
Paul S.| é drawing.
registration
fee,
there|
Tompkins, appointee to Annapolis H a small
will be 12
classes
for
juniors|

Married at Home|

vel Glidden, daughter of Mr,
Mrs. Nathaniel F. Glidden.

‘

“The Mountain

}

field have opened their cottage on |
Witt Rd. for the
summer
and
have brought their horse, too. ‘|

pearls, and she carried ivory cabbage roses.
Mrs. Peter LeRoy Sylvester. of
Montclair, sister of the bride, was
matron of honor. The other at_|tendants were Mrs. James Proche

tor of Englewood.
Mrs. Robert
Clawson of Gambier, O., and Miss
Kay Lawder, sister of the bride-

OR

groom. The mratron of honor wore
sage green and yellow flowered
chiffon and carried a sheaf of

=

LAWDER,

JR.

studying

|

at the Sorbonne and Universite
de Science
Politique and was
graduated from Smith College last
June, She is the granddaughter of}
Mr. and Mrs. Nathaniel F. Glidden of Denworth

and

Mrs.

Cecil

Farm

L.

L.

Drew

of

wie

.

Worthington,
June
29—Worthington Pee
Wee
baseball team
won the game over Williamsburg
friday mght by a score of 16-6.
The local jeam will play Cnesierfield on Monday at the Kod and
Gun Club Grounds at 6:30,
Mr.
aud
Mrs,
William
Rice}

were

in

town

tor

one

| Tompkins

|.

are:

and

Mrs.

Lawrence

|Bullis School
Ma.

Norman

Hallowell

at the Coltsville store of the
Friendly Ice Cream in Pittsfield,
tor

the

summer,

Mr. and Mrs. Wells W. Magargal have sold their home on Old
North Rd., to Mr. and Mrs.
neth Holly of South Hadley
will move here soon with
two children. Mr. and Mrs.
argal have moved into their

| home
|

on Old Post
rae

Rd.

Kenwho
their
Magnew

in

Silver

parascs

at the

home

and

Betsy Hitchcock,

are spending
Camp

of her

Spring,|

granq-

|parents, Mr. and
Mrs.
.Merwin|
F. Packard, on Buffington
Hill
Rd., for a “getting-out-of-school”|
celebration on Saturday evening.|
She

was

and

her

Doreen

| Hathaway,
|

assisted

Albert
aunt,

by

the

and Linda
Miss

Town

|Magargal

|

in

Worthington.

Clerk and Mrs. Wells W.

have sold

their home

on: Old North Rd. to Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Holly of South Hadley
who will move
here soon
with
their two children. Mr. and Mrs.
Magargal have moved
into ‘the
new house on Old Post Rd., which

E. ||

lvariety of
homemade
sundaes|
|helped to make it a memorable |
| party.
|

at 4H

| Rd., for the weekend.

the |!

oes
dancing,
ping pong|
and a variety of games.
Toasted |
marshmallows,
popcorn,
and a/|

week

in Goshen.

Mr. and Mrs. DeWitt C. Markham of Haddonfield, N. J., were
,at their home on Buffington Hill

Misses ||

Charlotte

chaperoned

Mrs.

Katherine Mo-

this

Howe

| stopped

Sarafin i

|party.
Miss
Hilda
Landa
of|
Hinsdale,
who
formerly
lived|
|here, was a special guest of the|
|classes.
Entertainment included|

of

Prof. and Mrs. William Rice of
Madison,
Wisconsin,
were
in,
‘town this week calling on friends.
'Following
a sojourn
in India,
|they returned
to the States via
|Europe and were on
their way|
|home to Wisconsin
when
they

f

early | I

eighth|

home

ran, Paul Dunlevy, Russell Humphrey,
and
Herbert Haskell Jr.

scheduled | ‘

Academy

|of the local seventh

Wik- |.

is employed

day at 8
at the
Richard B. Smith.

WORTHINGTON—Miss
Sylvia
{Eddy entertained the members|

Paul

St, lor the summer,

be reached.

was

WORTHINGTON — The
evening unit of the Women’s Benevolent Society will meet Wednes-

| Sheffield, he last year attended the |

ander and two sons of Northampton have opened their cottage in

Capen

could

18-year-old

WORTHINGTON

}in July, and he was
vacationing | !
with his family here. A 1957 graduj|ate of » the Berkshire
School
in

| Dunlevy, Russell Humphrey, Herbert Haskell, Jr., Katherine Moran and Betsy Hitchcock,

Mr.

The

(to enter the Naval

Friday — visiting

week

8S. TOMPKINS

called and a car was used to pry |!
|the car from
the tree
so that

friends,
‘They
are
reiurning
to
their ome in Madison, Wis,, naying
sojourned
a
number
otf
months in India. Mr. Rice is professor of law at the University
of Wisconsin,
Local
boys
and girls leaving
for Camp
Howe
in Goshen on

' i Sunday

PAUL

|
According to local police,
the|
| Tompkins car careened out of control for approximately
1,000 feet |
before
finally
crashing
into a’
| large maple in front
of the Dr.|
Baldwin home.
A wrecker was |

and of Mr.

Mesa, Ariz
Mr. Lawder attended Williston
Academy and was graduated from
Kenyon College. He is ‘associated
with J. Walter Thompson in New},
York where the couple will live.

1458

mT AH

W.

Oo ee eet rn mn

a year abroad

D.

Whose
marriage
took place
Saturday.
at
her
home _ in
Worthington.
She was
Miss
Cravel Glidden of that town,

tt

She spent

MRS.

SPL

Standish Lawder was best man
|for his brother. The ushers were
_|Peter Levens of New York, Robert Clawson of Gambier, and Nathaniel F. Glidden 2d, brother
of the bride.
Mrs. Lawder attended Dwight
School for Girls at
Englewood.

nq

variegated ivy. The bridesmaids
wore graduating shades of sage
green and carried yellow carna| tions.

.

they built last year.

.Norman

R.

Hallowell is’

em-

|ployed for the summer
at the
|Coltsville
Friendly
Ice
Cream
store in Pittsfield.
Miss
Dorothy, Kilbourne
of
-Hartford

will

be

the guest

of Mr.

and Mrs. Frank Sexton of Buffington Hill Rd. for
a few days

this week,

�JUNE

WORTHINGTON
M

The
o'clock

hour
of worship
morning
Sunday

at 11
in the

‘The

service

First Congregational Church
both graduation
recognize
Day.

Father's

and

25, 1958.

*, JUNE

18, 1958.

‘Old Pease Homestead’ Sold

will
day}

will be conducted by Rev. Edward
U. Cowles, assisted by the Misses
Joan Osgood and Priscilla Torrey, Mrs. Richard G. Hathaway
(contralto) and the chorus choir.
with Arthur G. Capen, organist.
Miss Osgood and Miss Torrey are
respecand secretary,
president

tively, of the
and both are
ior class at
School. Miss

Pilgrim Fellowship
members of the senNorthampton High
Osgood will read the|

scripture lésson and Miss Torrey |

will offer the prayer. Mrs. Hathaway will sing “God of My Life,”
' written by Rev. Cowles’ mother to’
the tune of Carl Bohm's “Calm as)
the Night.” Craig Mason, Smith’s,
School senior, and Miss Lorraine
Palecki, Huntington High senior,
| will escort the graduates of the
| Russell H. Conwell School, vari-;
/ous high schools, and college and
| nurses’ training schools to a re| served section of the church.

| Sunday

school

classes

}the

junior

high

school

groups

from

PRISCILLA

WORTHINGTON
--_
Kinne|by Jonah Brewster early in the
Brook Farm, long known as the|19th
century.
The
families
of
James Pease place, changed hands|James
and
Horace
Pease
lived
last week
when
Mr.
and
Mrs.|there for many years and the late
Robert
Mason
of Blandford pur-| Robert
P. Lane modernized
the
chased it from Mr, and Mrs. Les-|place, making it one of the fine
lie G. Hickling.
{farms in town.
|
Thomas
Kinne ‘settled on’ this|
Mr. and Mrs. Mason and their
farm
prior
to 1800,
his house|three children will do diversified|
standing a little to the west of the | farming. Sena Sales of this town

will re-

|/sume their work in September,
'and older boys and girls are invited to attend the morning services with their parents this summer.
Advance notice is given of a
| dance the evening of June 21 In
new

Southampton

| young

people's

|churches
sociation.
{.

Pilgrim

for

all senior

in

present

high

the

Fellowship

L.

Mrs.

will

and

S.

president

built|handled

the

transfer,

attend.

Ziemian

A

15h

Ludlow

of

the

of

was}

Valley|

and Mr. and Mrs, Philip |

‘Genter

WORTHINGTON

WORTHINGTON —Friends of | grandmothers
are
Mrs.
Mary
of Forrest Frew
of this
town|Haskell of Worthington and Mrs.

prime

soshen

West

objective

Springfield.
of

the

The |

organiza.|

tion is to give financial assistance|
to

worthy

dental

students

from)

Hampden, Hampshire and Frank. |
lin counties.
Cited for perfect attendance for|
the school year just past at the
Russell H. Conwell School were
Sharon Packard, Paul and David
Bartlett,

Anne

Bartlett,

James |

Stevens and Russell Humphrey.|
‘Sharon, David and James also)
had perfect attendance last year,|

oF
Mason,
son of Mr. andj
awrence
Mason
of Wil-|
Mrs.
liamsburg Rd., will graduate from |

Smith's

School

in

Northampton

next
Wednesday.
Craig
is em.
ployed by Healy, Pittsinger &amp; Ma-

son, building contractors.
Mrs.
Grace
Donovan
who

has

Ned

at

pital
year,

been

working

in

Jalbert}
a

hos-

in California for the past!
has arrived with her son
the

home

of her

parents,

Mr. and Mrs. John Donovan Sr.
of Highlarid Street, coming especially at this time to attend her
sister’s graduation from
ley Dickinson Hospital,

j

was

District Dental Women. at the |
final business meeting of the sea- |
son this week in the Storrowton |

Tavern,

ie

which

}

Bates.

Stefan

Worthington.

elected

house;

in the Hampshire AsMembers of the local!

Dr. E. Richard Post, optome:|
| trist of Amherst will be at the
Health Center on June 18 for aft-|
}
ernoon and evening appointments|
which may be made. with Mrs. jt
Harry

TORREY

Pro Merito
Achievement Award

the CooTraining

Schol. She and Ned will remain
here for the summer.
{
Mrs...Harlan Creelman moved
| this week from her home of many |
years at Worthington Corners to |
an apartment in Cambridge, Her |
home is for sale.
|
Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Selvatico|
and children are living temporati:|
ly in the Fred Emerson house |
in South Worthington
pending|
the completion of their new home |
on Highland Street: They plan
to move in awithin a month. ‘
~

eae

Marjorie Poe

are

invited

to

sett wedding Sunday at
,
‘i
At
Mr, and

ee
Robert

Mrs.

nt

sec

Guy

Pon ac

Shr

ee

Huntington.

eee

“rs.

Great-

ee of Wessels

Maurice

Laurin,

ot

JOAN

CHT | echeduied for Saturday
E. Mason | the school.
Mrs, Zack

= 10 in
Donovan,

have | Carl

ae

a

iers.

S. Joslyn

Miss

will-act

Barbara

as

(Bunny)

in|daughter of Mr. and Mrs.

cash-

Read,

Wil-

the near
future.
The
Masons/|liam G. Read of Worthington and
have been active in Scout,
4-H |Needham, has been selected as
and church work in Blandford as Needham’s representative to Girls
at
Bridgewater — State
well as in town
affairs
there. State
They plan.to do diversified farm- Teachers College and is attendjing
the
activities
there
this
ing.
The
Read
family
will
Mrs. Leslie G.
Hickling
and week,
on
daughters Jill
and Ruth,
and soon open their home here
James,

who

are

e

Geof-|Mrs. William F. Barton and Mrs.

Hickling and will move here

son,

OSGOOD

Pro Merito
Achievement Award

a

2:30 in | re Hee ereens of a
y for the
rumm.
sale

of Blandford,

i

of

or een

attend;

and three children, Linda,
Pica

|Sanders

living.

in

Williamsburg

Rd.

' JUNE

18,1958.

bed

school ¥” Mrs. Charles C. Eddy will
of
year, will sail soon to join Mr. hostess to the first meeting
Hickling in Venezuela
for
the the newly formed evening unit of
summer,
Jill will return to: Rus- |the Women’s Benevolent Society
Hill }
sell Sage College in Troy, N. Y., ‘at her home on Buffington
Northampton

during

as a
sophomore;
graduates
from

High
wich

this week,
University

September

and

the

James,
who
Northampton

will enter Norin Vermont
in

Ruth

will

return

to
Northampton
High
as
senior,
Mr. and Mrs. Harley Mason
Huntington

son,
16

in

are

Philip

Cooley

the

Nelson,

parents

born

Dickinson

of

Rd. Wednesday evening at 8. In
lieu of dues, it has been
suggested that members
use
that,
money
toward
materials
for
items for the annual
fair
inas-

a|much

of

\close

as

at

the

an

fiscal

end.

year

is

so

a

June

Hospital.

Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Stanley Mason of Worthington
fd

CRAIG

N.

MASON

Worthington

RMI

TILLER ALE

STEROL

LOR

A

�a e

ast

_ Saturday
in
Worthington’

‘ington

the

Grange

Mrs. Malcolm I. Fairman, Mrs.
Leighton A. Kneller, Mrs. Ernest

Sears.

Robinson. Mrs. Charles
|will be cashier.

C. Eddy

Refreshments
'. Throughout the afternoon a refreshment booth will be in charge
of Cmdr. Harold F. Mac Hugh

and Dr. Harold A. Stone.

As for years in the past, Emerson
J. Davis
has
mowed
and
trimmed the common for a suitable
stage for the booths
and
tables that comprise
a church
jfair. Miss Jane Tuttle will play
|her usual role as gypsy fortune
teller, holding. forth in her tent
garbed in convincing attire.
A variety of children’s games
under the direction of -Mrs. C.
Kenneth
Osgood
and = Mrs.
George
E. Torrey,
assisted by
the
Misses
Judith
Magargal,

Judith

Diamond

and

Norma

Os:

good will keep the young generation busy. Pony rides will be offered by. the Misses Mary
and

Katherine

MacDonald.

Members

of the Rod and Gun Club will
sponsor
horseshoe
games
and
James
Stevens
has
been
persuaded to be the target in the
popular wet sponge game,
A Clown
A fair is never complete without.a clown and Mrs.
Maurice
Laurin will play the part and will
sell balloons, Mrs. Harold A. and
Miss Marion L. Bartlett are in
charge of the drawing man.
The food table will be in charge
of Mrs. Harold A. Stone, who will
be assisted by Mrs.
Henry
H.
Snyder, Mrs. Car] S. Joslyn, Mrs.
Lewis Zarr
and Mrs.
John H.
Ames,
Mrs. Dana J. Lowd will preside over the gift table, with the
assistance
of Mrs.
George
M.
Jasper and Mrs. Frank A, Sexton.
Mrs.
Helen
Bretzner
and
Mrs. F, R. Stevens are in charge
of the
knitted
goods
table.
A
booth of costume jewelry will be
presided
over
by
Mrs.
Ralph
Kerley,
Jr. Milton
Parish,
Jr.,
will play his accordian for the
musical cake walk, which is in
charge
of
Mrs.
CC.
Francis

The

apron

Raymond

department

eee

Mrs.

will be

man

manned by Mrs. Herbert Tower,
assisted
by
Mrs.
Edward
U.
Cowles and Mrs. Walter H. Tow-|-

er. Miss

the

mer
are

Marion

aid

of

yf Mr.

Mrs.

Clark

W.

attie corner.
Greeting
cards

for

Clem-};

all

occa-|:

be presided over by
ter W. Wronski and
ard B. Smith.
Mrs. W. Warren

eral

that

go

chairman

proceeds

to

buildine

the

fund.

Mrs.
Mrs.

Rausch

and

from

society’s

the

E,

Richard

of

Amherst,

optome-|

the |

August as he will be on vacation,
The

Misses

Jocal

annual

Elsie V.

were

Historical

meeting

and

hostesses

Society

and

Post

Marion

to the|

for

election

Bartlett,

Elsie

and

Kate,

C, Raymond

be

Mr.

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Jay

of}

WORTHINGTON

—

Carl

V.

as

jteam will
liamsburg

at

the

mond

League

and

Christian

{Plaque

Mrs.

year

table

Cecil
of

June

Cy

the

mentaries

on

life in those

days

philosophy

as

recorded in Dr. Ashley’s dairy}.
were both enlightning and amus-| ;
ing. Officers elected for the com-|ing
year follow:
President,
Dr.
William B. Kirkham;
vice president, Walter L. Stevens of Northamptan; clerk and treasurer, Arthur
G. Capen,
and
hospitality
chairman, Mrs. Lewis Zarr. The
prospect
of storage for the society’s records and items of historical value in a proposed vault
to be built in the near future by
the town for town
records was
discussed. A social hour followed.

|°

and

mathematics

all

Mass

a

dia-!

bronze’!

memory

The

it is hoped

by

memberships

will

will be celebrated

of}

fiscal|

ends

on)

then|

be|

Sund

|
at 9:30 in the local town hall ay
by
a priest from St. Thomas’ Church||
in Hunt

ington
and
thereafter through

on
July

gust.

Sundays
and Au-|

Mrs, Franklin H, Burr is il] and
}
confined to her home
on Kinne

Brook Rd. Her daughter,
Mrs,
Franklyn W. Hitchcock is staying |

with her,

;

Raymond
Coffey,
who
under-|
went knee surgery at Noble Hos-|

pital recently is at home

to get around

with

and able!

a crutch.

|

ADTUINCTOHR

WG RIHING

re

bony
“+A
14 ELECTS
_
|
HEALTH
GROUP
|.

WORTHINGTOP
—At the«
meeting of the Worthington Healt!
|Association in-the Town Hall cn
|Wednesday evening, officers were
jelected as follows: secret
Mrs
iFrank

S.

N.

|Tyler,

the

|\H.

Davis;

both

for

treas

one

at!

Kone

directors

unexpired

terms

of

year,

It

was

voted

1

M

th

;president should appoint
| mittee on Financial
St

| study the financial situat

“Only the jncome from the $5000
may be used for the general purposes of the Health Center.
Ii|
the corporation acquires a build-|
ing, either by purchase or oath
struction,
the principal
or any!
portion thereof may be used to

Worthington
Health
A
atic
and report to the directors no
later than Sept.
5
4

|

Worth

A buffet supper will 1

;at the

help defray the cost of such an
| acquisition. If Worthington Health

Golf

|
p.~m.
|made by

Association, Inc., ever ceases to}
exist the fund, or as much of it)
as remains, will go to the trustees|

in|

Rida;

y

Charles C.- Eddy and Merwin
F;
Packard, David Tyler and Donald
ji. Thompson,
|. Mrs. Charles C, Eddy- will conSecre {
| inue as membershi

ago.

Hospital

a_

in

association

30 and

that

paid.

Amherst College.
Prof. Newlin spent his summer
here with Dr. and Mrs. L. N.
Durgin and died here four weeks

of Cooley Dickinson
Northampton,

|

Wil. |
6:30!

Club

Hollow.

G. Gaston.

;the

cine in Worthington in 1774-75).
and after that in Deerfield. Mrs.
Miller’s
explanations
and
com-

baseball |

Gun

bears

inscribed

Health Center will receive $5000
from the estate
of William
J.
Newlin,
professor
emeritus
of

notified

Li. |

Har.

Herbert G. Porter. The new exam.
ining

}

excerpts from
the diary of Dr.
Elihu Ashley, who practiced medi-

been

the |

ment chair for eye, ear, nose,
and
throat cases in memory
of Mrs.

jtors for three year
| Sena, Leslie L, P.

he has

Mrs,

play a team from
here
tonight
at

Joslyn, president of the Worthing-|
ton Health Association, announced

Friday

Marion

is hospitality chairmeeting and will be|
committee of young |
whom can claim an. |
lived here at least |

Rod

in

with

and

hostesses.

officers
on
Saturday
afternoon.
Mrs.
Carl
S. Joslyn,
president,
presided
and
introduced
Mrs.

- Russ Miller of Deerfield who read | ,

that

_The Worthington Health Asso.
ciation has been given a_treat-

and

$5000 to Center

the

Elsie’

100 years ago.
The Little

ANT
5
Newlin Leaves

|:

commencing |

hot

Spruces”

old E. Brown
man: for this
assisted by a
ladies, all of
cestors who

and

at

“The

Misses

visit-

in Williamsburg Rd
Mrs. Robert Gangle
N. Y., are spending
at the home
of his

a

announces

Bartlett

and

Magargal,

_ With

refreshments

an.-|
nual meeting will be held the
on July |
26 at

Mari-«

Peter,

aunt,

12:30

Society,

Rd.

two weeks

ang

presiden

Benevolent
So.
that the annual

luncheon. ;
will be
Sale throughout the afternoon. on |
Mrs. Carl S, Joslyn, president|
of the
Worthington Historical |

Gangle, Buffington Hil] Rd.
Mrs, Harry L. Bates, member
of the local committee on migrant
ministry
of the
Massachusetts
Council of Churches, attended a
meeting Friday in Northampton.
The
bookmobile
is offering a
hew Service, .record lending,.
Mrs. Maurice Laurin, daughter
of Mrs.
John T. Ames
of Old
North Rd. is visiting her sister,
Mrs. Walter Hales, in East Longmeadow.
Miss Darlene Hayden, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Freeman Hayden of Mexico,
Me., is visiting
with Dr. and Mrs. Leighton Kneller at their home, Old Post Rd,

Health Center on Wednesday and |
appointments may be made with
Mrs. Harry L. Bates, Dr. Post will
not be here again until the end of

L. Bartlett

Karen,

parents,

parsonage

at

F.

dren,

home
r. and
of Babylon,
two weeks

will

be

Guy

the Misses

nbgir

is gen-

Post,

at

Albert N, Hardy,

aunts,

|Mrs.

announces

will

and Mrs.

jing their uncle

WORTHINGTON |
Dr,

of Old

Scott will spend

paky aed Se

trist

will

Rida,

fair will be held on July
the village
common at|

Light

on Bartlett, Their other four chil«

:

Ches-|.
Rich-|

fair

Hallowell

father,

sions, as well as Christmas wrap-|’
pings will be offered for sale by
the Friendship Guild, with Mrs.
A, Leland Smith, Mrs. Ralph W.
Smith, Mrs. George H.. Bartlett
and
Mrs.
Ralph
A. Moran
in
charge.
A table of articles made by the
Evening Group of. the WBS will

Her subject

H.

Worthington Center

Tuesday.

Jr., and son David of Kenmore,
N. Y., are spending a few days
at The Spruces with Mrs. Hardy’s

L. Bartlett with}:

and Mrs. Harold MacHugh
assembling goods for the

church
19 on

fill

are spending this week in Green«
field visiting grandparents.
—

Poe

assisted by Hitchcock . and

wil]

Shatteracls

Excerpts from the diary of a
rural doctor.”’
Cheryl
and
Leslie Hallowell,
daughters of Mr. and Mrs. Nore

bee

Arthur Rolland,

the speaker.

tte

Mrs.

in Russell,

21—Worth-

Marion
Bartlett
and
that Mrs.
Rus Miller of Deerfield will be

|+
se

Granger and Mrs. Zack Donovan
with George M. Jasper as caller.
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Chaplin . re
in charge of the cheese table and
Mrs. Holt Secor, the candy table,
assisted
by Mrs.
Franklyn
W.

officers

for Mount

Leroy

of the Women’s
ciety, announces

Mrs, Carl §. Joslyn, president
of the Historical
Society,
ane
hounces that the annual meeting
will be Saturday at The Spruces,
home of the Misses Elsie and

Summer Highlight Will Begin at Noon On Village ;
Green
Worthington,
July 16—The
annual church fair, a summer high
light, will be held Saturday. on
the village common
at the center, begining at 12.30 with a hot
luncheon under the direction of

July

Grange

chairs

27, 1958,

WORTHINGTON
Mrs.

| Worthington,

JUNE

‘the club,
| *Mr,and’)
|\Magargal

|

Club

‘on

Reservatior
calling Mrs.

Mrs.

will

(end with Mr.

i

C.

spend.

and Mrs,

Mason

at

&gt;

“Raymond

the

weel

Albert

N,

| Hardy, J.:, at their home in Kenmore, N..¥.: Karen, Kate, Peter
and Scott. Hardy haye been visit«
\|ing at the Magargal home on Wile

ee

Annual Church Fair to Be

FRIDAY,

~

te

fh
lah in ted

1455

-

�Crawl Saymday ) Meg.tT 1456
Worthingten
|
€

WORTHINGTON—tThe | sleepy
| village of South Worthington will

just
below
the
emy
building
church ‘on the
opposite
side of
come to life Sunday
for the an- the road. They are those who at|/nual Conwell Day service which
honors the memory of the town’s tended classes there back in the
| most famous son, Dr. Russell H. gay nineties when Dr. Conwell
there | was very much a part of the vilConwell,
who was ~ born
lage.
land went forth to attain national
In 1893, Dr. Conwell bought the
|recognition as a teacher, preach| building from the heirs of Isaac
er and lecturer.
raised
it
up to
Often when he returned
home Thrasher and
build the academy rooms
below.
|for rest and vacation,
he would
open the
church
and_
preach. The original structure’ had been
built in 1825 for a church. When
|Since
his
death,
the
South
| Worthington Church Society has Dr. Conwell opened the school in
| carried on the practice
of open- 1894,
the
main
school
room
30 x 65
would
ing the church at
least
once a which measured
year. This year’s service will be ‘seat 75 scholars. It was
finished
conducted
by
Rev.
Edward U. /in pine and there was no plaster.
Cowles
of the
First
CongregaAn
old account
of the classitional Church at 3 p.m.
with
a room
says, “Everyone
who
has
social
hour
following
on
the been in the building says it is the
lawn to afford an opportunity for best
lighted
andpleasantest
reminiscing and visiting.
school room
they were ever in.|
A few of the
folks
who will
Seats
are
of the latest
design
{come for the
service
will
also
and finished in wood. The second
feast
nostalgic
glances
toward
floor is designed to be used in
the handsome old Conwell Acadconnection with the school with

a matron in charge to look after | Misses
Elsie V. and Marion
L.|
those who
boarded
and roomed | Bartlett,
Mrs.
Belle
Witherell|
there. A large hall for entertain| Brewster, Mrs. Gertrude ; Jones |
ments with a kitchen and ante
and Guy F. Bartlett of|
rooms
completed
the
establish- |Pease,
ment.”
|town; Mrs. Minnie Kinne Talbot
Joseph
Burr
of|
This same account claims that |of Springfield,
and
Fred
Burr
of)
the auditorium had a seating ca- | Knightvile,
pacity
for 800, but this figure Westhampton.
|
The
Academy
is
©
presently
appears
to be considerably
ex-|
by Walter
I. Fox,
who
aggerated,
though
the hall is a owned
large
one
and
nearly
twice as conducted
the “Club Lafayette”|
big
as
the
Worthington
Town |there during the 30s. That was
one of the early dine and dance|
Hall.
When Dr. Conwell founded the establishments that followed_pro-|
academy, it was his intention to | hibition days and there are still)
put up a building purposely de-| many reminders around there of|
signed for a school if his initial the life and times of that era.
experiment was well patronized.|
Mr. Fox is proud
of the old
He opened the school with an en- building and keeps it in a fine
of preservation.
He welrollment of 25, which he said was | state
an encouraging
number,
but
it |comes visitors to it and is well!
appears that that number did not| informed on its history. One of|
increase substantially, since the the reminders of the school days
school
was
discontinued
after | there is a small step-up platform
three or four years.
j}used
for the
Friday
afternoon
Among
those still living who |recitations,
which Joe Burr re-|
attended classes there are the 'ealls as agonizing ordeals.

�&amp;

a, Te

sk

Annual Conwell Sunday
Service Attracts Many
WORTHINGTON
—
Conwell
Sunday is an annual event which
is attended
by many
who
remember Dr. Russel] H. Conwell,
Worthington’s most famous
son.
Some
even
attended.
Conwell
Academy which he founded and
_| which stands opposite the beauti,}ful
old
New
England
church}
where the service is held.
Remembered
At Service
Dr. Conwell is best noted for
Temple
University
and Temple
University Hospital
in Philadel-

phia,

which

he

established

booming

topic

for

his

|man of hope” using that portion
|of Scripture which describes the
crippled man who waited by the
pool of Bethesda for 38 years hop| ing someone would lower him in| to the pool at the precise moment
the waters were stirred and thus
he would be cured. The church
was attractively decorated with
several baskets of gladioli placed
in memory of all those who have
worshiped here in the past. The
choir
sang
‘Beautiful
Isle
of
Somewhere’
with
bass solo by
Horace F. Bartlett.
Descendants Attend
The Misses Priscilla and Cynthia Conwell, great-granddaughters
of Dr, Conwell, took the offering
which will be used for maintenjance of the church. This is the

|

a .22 rifle and a

presented

in charge of Arthur Rolland and|

Zack Donovan.
Cummington,
in
Born

Shaw

ton

ever

came

as a boy
since.

the town

was

to

He

live

and

. Mr.|

lived

work

here}

for)

went

to

road

superintend-

after World

appairted

|

Worthing-|

in

has

|

were|

arrangements

Party

purse.

Sept. |

is retiring

who

Shaw,

Mr.

1, was

fellow
x

as
me

well

as

office
field
townsmen.

and

‘The

|

men, acted as toastmaster at the |
party, which included__ the localj
road superintendents|
‘selectmen,
and |
towns
surrounding
from
the Pittsstate engineers from

voice.

sermon,

retiring road superintend.-|
this town, was honored at

a testimonial dinner last night by|
100 friends at Tod Morden’s in
:
Cummington.
Henry H. Snyder, chairman of|
the Worthington Board of Select-

only service held in the church
and frineds were asked to support
the
South
Worthington
Church
Association to insure the upkeep
of the building.
The social hour following the
service is enjoyed
by everyone
for it provides an opportunity to
renew acquaintances and to reminisce. Among the 67 in attendance were
Mr.
.and Mrs.
Alva

Rhines,

lay

minister

of Norwick

Hill,
Dr,
and
Mrs,
Oliver
J,
Black
of the Second
Congregational Church in Holyoke, Walter
L. Stevens of Northampton, Mr,
and Mrs. Brousseau of Boylston,
and others from New York, Cone
necticut,
Westfield,
Littleville,

Huntington,
Windsor,

Chesterfield

and

setts Sand and Gravel
_
ed a shovel =

Sam

Sailla

and operat-|
eS
Rigi

Greenfield,

in

:

I and)

War

ent in 1925. For a period of five)
World War II, he
years during
Massachuworked for Western

Annual Event Held
|.
At the annual Conwell Sunday
|service this year, held recently,
Dr. Edward U. Cowles chose as

|the

L.|

Eben

-—

WORTHINGTON

Shaw,
ent in

for his famous lecture ‘‘Acres of
Diamonds.’’ But those who come!
back to this little church where
he preached remember,
too, the
Sunday when rain was threatening so he cut his service short
and went out with the farmers
and helped them get their hay
in.
Most
people
speak
of
his|§
row of gold teeth which was so
fashionable
in his day and his
thundering,

Worthington Highway Head 2
Feted At Testimonial Event’

the rest|

_
EBEN

are

road

as

as

good

75

the

ae

Thayer,
milesof|have two

injard

best

Se
SHAW

is a man
one, for he
really liked his job.

sy
of the years being employed here| _ Sree Mr,
as road commissioner.
That Worthington’s

L.

has)

who

shui

ans

ee

and

Mrs.

ale

ron

Shaw and his wife
daughters, Mrs. Leon. |

J. Tufts

Bradford|

In re-}
these parts is no accident, for Mr.| Fisk, both living nearby.
keep|
to
Eben plans
recognized|tirement,
Shaw has long been
| busy around his home on River|
as an expert at getting the most
| Rd. and to give more attention to|
.
eut of every road dollar.
His last major project has been | hunting and fishing than he has |

the replacement
Bridge on River
ern

cement

inated

an

of the old Geer) been able to before.
—_
Rd. with a mod-}

structure,

old

iron

which

bridge

elim-

at

a

sharp angle to the road. He says
project
that his favorite bridge

was the River Rd. Bridge near)
home}
Stone's
A.
Harold
Dr.
which was
under
construction|
of 1938 poured|
when the flood
torrents down
over the
abutt-|

ments. which were
anchored to
ledge and unusually high.
Bridge from
one
end of the)
town to the other have been built
under his supervision and a little|

of Eben’s

heart

is tied into

each

|

|
|

�i 4 ' avAEat Ssaea EBOe,
=

i ik aE
“Ae

gt

ay ce

ae |

COUNTRY STORE

Barbara and Chipper Eddy, children
of Charles Eddy, proprietor of the oldfashioned country store that serves the
needs of the populace of the town of

Worthington,

are

frequent

visitors to

the institution which is the socialcenter of town life. They're shown
making a selection of penny candies
from authentic old-time candy jars.
(continued on pages 2 and 3)

�Old-Fashioned
Country Store

ita
eajied ss ich
Oa oo
Reaisaee
ae

oe

Time

was

when

the

old-fashioned

country store was a familiar sight at the

crossroads of sleepy Connecticut Valley

|
|

=
eA

a. ate

~~

towns.

c
s

‘,

L

ler mu
MAIL see
SERV,r
x
V6 20NE uae

ZONE |

EE.

BE hal :
ay place when the

The town postoffice, located in a corner eat the store, isa
mail arrives each morning.
Here, Worthington old-timer Charles Alderman
chats with postmaster Merwin Packard.

er
Ta

The

venerable

building

It was an important institution,

for it stocked every conceivable supply
---from penny candies to kerosene lan-

terns---in

social

The

addition

to

serving

old-fashioned

country

store is

rapidly disappearing from the American
scene, but a few---such as the Corners
Grocery of Charles Eddy of Worthington
---continue to remain but little changed

by the passing of the years. Roto photographer Frank Usin recently spent a day

at the Worthington Country store to ob-

tain these nostalgic pictures ofa vanishing American institution.

ah
aad J

ned county store is
tha t houses the cpatents of Worthington’ s ids faslzio

nearly a century old.

as the

center of the entire community.

ts.
It is a favorite gathering place for town residen

�at

DTT ss
a

4

ts

= ih 43 Sout

a

PE.

Much of the equipment with which the store was stocked in its
early days is still in active use. This old dye cabinet is considered anantique. The lady, making the selection of a dye color,
is Miss Ada Davenport.

vt

|

5

;

i

Ae

7

e

Glass chimneys for old-fashioned lanterns,
are among the stores “best seller" items.

clerk John Eddy.

Miss Marion L. Bartlett, (left) widely-known retired Springfield educator, and Mrs. William Kronenberger make a selection of spools of
thread from an antique thread cabinet.
The store stocks just about
everything conceivable.

&amp;

j

still in use in the farmhouses of the Worthington area,
Here, Arthur H. Pomeroy (left) buys a chimney from

�oe

Kerosene

of

the

for kerosene

fuel

for

2

-

lanterns is a "best seller" too.

SS

Pumping a jugful

Maurice Laurin is store proprietor Charles Eddy.

stove dampers and lid lifters on wall in background.

Note

�</text>
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                <text>2007-03-27</text>
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                <text>Black leather bound scrapbook #16, Elsie Bartlett, primarily newspaper clippings from 1957 and 1958. Pages and navigation bookmarks on the attached PDF file appear more or less in chronological order. A counterfeit ring that was broken up is the subject of a group of pages appearing in order from the ring's discovery in 1957 to the disposition of the court trial in 1959. Also of interest was the acquisition and demonstration of an 'electronic oven' which is now (2021) the ubiquitous 'microwave'.</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="67761">
                <text>Elsie Bartlett</text>
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              <elementText elementTextId="84560">
                <text>1957/1959</text>
              </elementText>
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            <description>The topic of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
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                <text>Historic Event</text>
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                <text>Elsie V. Bartlett</text>
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  <item itemId="5411" public="1" featured="0">
    <fileContainer>
      <file fileId="2903">
        <src>https://worthingtonhistoricalsociety.org/omeka/files/original/12ea2be27a83fe797ba85f5a19201e51.pdf</src>
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                <description/>
                <elementTextContainer>
                  <elementText elementTextId="85619">
                    <text>wAhe

Worthington

ret

Soci ely,

Gre.

of

copy

Frees

historical

the

from

taken

indenture

an

Worthington:

of

Bartlett

V.

Elsie

a

is

following

"The

of Miss

6

RS

on "Dependent Children Aid” Written orthinstena dUaRco wp 1908
Published in the Newspaper on January 28, 1959

An Article

files

47

This Indenture Witnesseth that Jonathan Brewster, Jonathan
selectmen and overseers of the poor of the
Woodbridge and Nathan Hazen,
town of Worthington in the County of Hampshire by virtue of a law of the
Commonwealth in such cases made and provided--and with the assent of two
of the Justices of the Peace for said County have placed--and by these
presents do place and bind out as an apprentice a poor child named Terza

Jones,
able

(Peru)

and serve
until the

to dwell with
of an apprentice,
from the day of the date hereof

in

be

will

which

of October

day

the

thousand

One

Lord

our

of

year

the

yeoman,

(now in Berkshire County),

in the County of Hampshire

after the manner
said Terza,
the said Thoram and his wife

tenth

Thoram

her--with

maintain

or

support

to

not

Partridgefield

of

Billings

is

who

in Worthington

resident

late

Jones

Cyrus

of

daughter

eight hundred and sixteen when if the said apprentice should be living
she will be eighteen years of age--during all which time or term the said
her said master and mistress well and faithfully shall serve,
apprentice,
and their lawful commands everywhere readily obey.
their trusts keep,
She shall do no damage to her said master or mistress nor
and if any to her knowledge
willingly suffer any to be done by others,
she shall give her said master reasonable notice thereof.
be intended,
dice, or any
She shall not waste the goods of her said master at cards,

unlawful

she

shall

not

well

and

truly

find

shall

she

Fornication

play.

games

commit,

not

nor

ale houses or places
Taverns,
contract during the said term.
she shall not haunt or frequent.
From the service of her said master and mistress she shall
but in all things and at all times she shall carry and
not absent herself,
behave herself as a good and faithful apprentice ought during the whole term.
And the said Thoram Billings on his part--doth promise and
agree to teach and instruct the said apprentice or cause her to be taught
sewing,
spinning,
and instructed in the art or business of housekeeping,
by the best way and means he can--and also
knitting and common weaving,
to teach and instruct the said apprentice or cause her to be taught and
instructed to read and write unless the said apprentice is unable to learn.

matrimony
of gaming

And

shall

one

suitable

and provide

the

for

good

apprentice

said

and other articles fir and
lodging,
drink, clothing,
and sufficient meat,
convenient for such an apprentice during the term--and at the expiration
thereof shall give unto the said apprentice two suits of wearing apparel,

changeably

year

of

Days

Lord's

for

In testimony
puts their hands

one

our Lord

and

the

suitable

other

whereof the said parties
and seals this sixth day

thousand

eight

and

hundred

who
his

Signed by the three aforementioned selectmen
who made
of the poor and by Thoram Billings,
write his name.

was
in

common

the

annual

type

of

aid

century

in

this

This

19th

town

practice

reports:

in

the

to

dependent

early

town,

days

of

reports

children

this

like

was

town
the

as

for

four."
were
mark

following

wise

and

as many
were

interthe

overseers
could not

also the
since he

deemed

well

days.

working

have hereunto
of January in

proper

others.

made

in

and

Later

the

"Our paupers remain the same as last year with some little
Patch who is supported at the insane hospital at NorthFordyce
addition.
and Halibut Peacham and wife
hampton, Ben Jacobs at Mr. J. M. Clapp's;

LC

�a3
who

have

been

boarded

in

town,

will

all

have

to

be

supported

by

the

town

as long as they live, and likewise Betty Custis who is boarded at the home
of her brother, John Custis.
The wife of Flag Bernard,
whom it is rendered
necessary to provide for is improving and we hope she may some time be able
to take care of herself.
We have reduced her expenses during the past year

by

25%

and

if

desired.

at

less

hope

for

a still

further

reduction

soon.

A new pauper whom we have had to look after this winter is the
wife of Lorenzo Potts,
son of John B. Potts who formerly lived at Worthington
Corners.
She was taken to the Danvers hospital by the board of State
Charities who kindly asked us to pay the bill which we could find no way to
get rid of.
We have the correspondence in this case and can make it public

Her

insanity

was

caused

by

the

demon

of

this

world--Rum.

The

last we heard early this month she was nearly ready to go home but we may
expect further trouble from that family as there are four children under
twelve and they are very poor.
Mr. L. J. Power was taken to the insane hospital at Northampton
under a law for the relief of poor soldiers.
Whether it will be necessary
for him to remain in the hospital is a matter to be decided.
We are of
the opinion that could the right man be persuaded to take the appointment
of guardian over him and what little property he has, he might be supported

expense

to

the

town."

These cases were reported on in the town report of 1879 when the town
appropriation for "paupers" was $700.
Forty years later,
in the town report of
1919, a degree of refinement had been reached and the report of the Overseers
of the Poor simply stated expenditures of $86.43 used out of an appropriation of
$100.
This appears to have been a period of postwar prosperity.
Still

40

years

later,

in

the

year,

1959,

a figure

of

approximately

$10,000 will be appropriated to cover the expenses of old age assistance, public
welfare, and aid to dependent children in the town of Worthington, with every
Persons who benefit will be receiving
penny of it spent in strict confidence.
only

what

is

justly

theirs,

according

to

modern

day

thinking.

�</text>
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          <name>Text</name>
          <description>Any textual data included in the document.</description>
          <elementTextContainer>
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            </elementText>
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              <text>21.6 x 27.9 cm</text>
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          <element elementId="93">
            <name>Date Available</name>
            <description>Date (often a range) that the resource became or will become available.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61715">
                <text>2021-12-31</text>
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          <element elementId="41">
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            <description>An account of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61717">
                <text>Original typewritten paper by Lois Ashe Brown. Two pages.    Re: taking care of the poor, titled 'Dependent children Aid', published in Gazette(?), Jan. 28, 1959</text>
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            <description>An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61719">
                <text>390/B/#685</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <name>Is Part Of</name>
            <description>A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61720">
                <text>Box 30b</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="128">
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            <description>A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61721">
                <text>Harold Brown</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="50">
            <name>Title</name>
            <description>A name given to the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61722">
                <text>An Article on Dependent Children Aid</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="51">
            <name>Type</name>
            <description>The nature or genre of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="61723">
                <text>Document</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="40">
            <name>Date</name>
            <description>A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="84011">
                <text>1959-01-28</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="49">
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="85620">
                <text>People</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="39">
            <name>Creator</name>
            <description>An entity primarily responsible for making the resource</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="85621">
                <text>Elsie V. Bartlett, Lois Ashe Brown</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
          <element elementId="117">
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            <description>The material or physical carrier of the resource.</description>
            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="85622">
                <text>Paper</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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            <elementTextContainer>
              <elementText elementTextId="85623">
                <text>Worthington - other unspecified</text>
              </elementText>
            </elementTextContainer>
          </element>
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