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Groton Times from Groton, Vermont • 8

Publication:
Groton Timesi
Location:
Groton, Vermont
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Page 8 THE TIMES Woodsville, N. Friday, Feb. 24, 1939- GRAY PAGE TIMES MARKET PLACE LITTLE ADVERTISEMENTS EVERYONE READS Low Cost lc a word 1st Zi price, Cash woek, minimum 30c, with order. Extra charge for booking. Big Results Mrs.

George Corruth is among the ill ones this week. Mrs. Nellie Johnson passed away Sunday morning, Feb. 19, at Heaton hospital where she Went about two weeks ago for an operation. Her condition seemed hopeless at that time and efforts to save her were of no avail.

More particulars will be given later. Fred Hayes finished his carpenter work for Bowen Hunter at East Corinth and returned home Friday. Elizabeth Welch and Mildred Thurston of Hanover spent the end of the weeks at their homes. Friday, Feb. 24, is the Worlds Day of Prayer.

The ladies of the Methodist church are to be the guests of the Baptist ladies in the annual observance of the day. The meeting is to be held at the parsonage at 2:30 p. m. Let Us Put Our Love Into Deeds, and Make It Real, is the theme for this observance. The devotional meeting will be followed by a social period.

All ladies of the community are invited. TRI-C CLUB GROTON Mrs. Emma Smith and daughter Pauline are spending some time in Boston. Mrs. Emma Robinson went last Friday to Montpelier where she will be the guest of Miss Carrie Willey for a few days.

The Homemakers group met last week at the home of Mrs. John Hatch with eight members and six visitors present. Miss Bertha Lee gave a demonstration on what food would do towards giving the proper posture to our bodies. After the close of the meeting several games were played. Mrs.

Crawford Adams spent the past week with her husband in Pittsfield, Mass. Harold Taylor Jr. and Ross Taylor of Woodsville spent the week-end with their grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. W.

W. Pillsbury. The Ladies Aid society met Thursday afternoon-, with Mrs. George Millis. The meeting was presided over by the vice president, Mrs.

H. Goodine. The usual order of opening was carried out and the business matter was then taken up. Definite plans for the colonial supper Feb. 22 were made.

Refreshments were served. Members of the Methodist Young Womens club were entertained on Tuesday evening at the home of Mrs. Alice Goodine, assisted by Mrs. Helen Benzie. After the devotions a short business meeting followed.

Then valentine games were played with two sides competing, those having white hearts with those having red hearts. At the close of the game period the white were found to have the larger number of points and they received a small heart shaped box of chocolates. Refreshments were then served and valentines exchanged. Mrs. Walter Main gave a party last Friday evening in honor of her husbands birthday.

She served a dinner to twelve friends. Mrs. Lynn Hill of Northfield is the guest of her mother, Mrs. Francis Wilson. Saturday evening, Feb 4 a very pretty wedding was held at the home of Mr.

and Mrs. Burns Page in Groton when their daughter Irene Lillian was united in marriage with Mr. Raymond Wallace Gray, son of Mrs. Vira Gray and the late Edmund Gray of Ryegate. The ceremony was performed by Rev.

E. H. Nickerson, the bridal couple and their attendants, Miss Elizabeth Page and Mr. Forrest Page, standing before a banked bower of evergreen with decorations of silver crepe streamers. In the dining room the color scheme was blue and white and there the snowy white, three-tiered brides cake, surmounted by the traditional bride and groom, was displayed.

After the bride had cut and served her cake, souvenir pieces of ribbon tied, fruit cake were given each guest by the bridesmaid, Miss Elizabeth Page. These cakes were made by the brides aunt, Mrs. Clinton Page and the lovely decorating on the brides cake by her cousin, Clarence Page. The brides gown was of teal blue silk with rhinestone trimmings' and her traveling costume was grey with blue accessories. After the refreshments of ice cream, cake and saltines were served, the young couple spent many anxious minutes contemplating their get-away; but in spite of the collaboration of kind hearted mothers and the grooms brother they were not very successful in evading the usual confetti shower.

Two cars were being closely watched and one, which proved to be the right one, was very appropriately decorated. In both cars they entered, they received a generous shower of confetti, also when they were stopped a short way from the house by a car across the road, after getting by that, they were met by a piled up bank of snow, but from there on went happily on their way for a weeks trip to Massachusetts and New Hampshire. These young people both attended Groton high school and the bride was a graduate last June in the class of 38. Both are much respected and liked by their many friends in the town and community. Kind and hearty wishes for their happiness and success are expressed by many friends as they start lifes journey together.

COTTAGE HOSPITAL Mr. and Mrs. Steve Batjiaka are the parents of a son born Feb. 19. Mr.

and Mrs. Nelson Staples have a son, Melvyn Bruce, bom Feb. 18. A son, Roger Carl, was born Feb. 14 to Mr.

and Mrs. Carl Mitton. Miss Laura Reynolds of the Home for the Aged is a patient. Edward Pelleren of Lisbon is a patient, ill with pneumonia. The following patients with their babies have gone to their homes: Mrs.

Paul Smith to Newbury, Mrs. Waldo Emerson to Topsham and Mrs. Perley Butson to Newbury. A TIMES ad will sell it far yon TIMES The Tri-C club held its February meeting at the home of Mrs. Geo.

I Vance Wednesday afternoon with several members present. At the business meeting conducted by Mrs. John French, plans were furthered for the Father Son banquet to be held Mar. 17. The following com-jmittee chairmen were appointed: I Dining room, Mrs.

Burton Brown; tickets, Mrs. Vern Frost; kitchen, Mrs. John French. The following committee will serve the dinner to be given town meeting day Mar. 7: Miss Irma Renfrew, Mrs.

Vern Frost and Mrs. Ulric Legare. Plans for the galloping teas were announced. By this plan one person calls for three others who are supposed to drop everything and go just as they are, to call upon another member of the club, who is supposed to serve the tea. This serving may consist of anything edible the hostess may have in the house, for she is not supposed to cook anything while her guests are present.

Upon leaving each guest leaves 10c with the hostess and this money is turned into the club treasury. The program for the afternoon was in charge of Mrs. Vern Frost who conducted a question box The questions were written on heart shaped bits of paper and were in a prettily decorated valentine box. Mrs. Ulric Legare and Mrs.

John French being the winners of the contest, were each presented a large chocolate heart. All of the contestants were given a small chocolate heart for participating. Mrs. Frost then gave each one present a number and they hunted for hidden valentines that corresponded to the number given them. Other games were played and refreshments served by the hostess, Mrs.

Vance and Irma Renfrew. Wherever you go the TIMES will be your weekly visitor for $1.50 a year IS YOUR SUBSCRIPTION DUE? If you have not renewed your subscription to the Times recently, and your paper label is marked 2-39 after your name, your subscription is overdue, and the Times will stop very soon, as we do not continue it unless you pay, or ask for further time. Additional time will be gladly given, if you just ask us. If your paper label reads 3-39, and you have not yet renewed, you will receive a card notifying you, and renewal should be sent at once, to avoid missing copies of the Times. Gives Reasons Why Ft.

Wentworth Here Kenneth Roberts Says This Was on Direct Waterway Route of Rogers Recent events have given strength to the feeling of local people, who started last year a movement to place a marker of some kind here to commemorate Fort Wentworth, rendezvous of Rogers Rangers, that somewhere here, at the mouth of the Ammonoosuc, is the correct site of that fort. This was questioned even denied by folks in the region of the Upper Ammonoosuc, who claimed the fort was there. As a matter of fact, one or more markers have been placed there sometime or other. Local people relied considerably on the word of Kenneth Roberts, well-known historian and author of Northwest Passage, but also found support for their contention in various old histories. Now Mr.

Roberts, besieged by pros and cons, has published in the Middlebury College News Letter an article titled Bothersome Vermont, in which he decries the fact Rogers did not safeguard to posterity his route on the St. Francis expedition and reasserts, with reasons, his statement that Fort Wentworth was located here. It will interest local people to read a part of that article, quoted below, and it is the Times opinion that action to build a log fort here next season to show to tourists and historians, should be taken right away. Mr. Roberts explanation is as follows: I have been verbally assaulted, but with considerable amiability and restraint, by inhabitants of the Upper Connecticut who have taken exception to my placing of Rogers rendezvous, after the retreat from St.

Francis, at the mouth of the Ammonoosuc, and particularly to my statement that Rogers had ordered his men to rendevous at that spot because he had built a fort there four years earlier. I have been told and told and told that Rogers built his fort at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc. I have been told that there is a marker at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc a marker in bronze or some similar durable material which states clearly that Rogers and his men rendezvoused at the mouth of- the Upper Ammooosuc after the St. Francis expedition. My correspondents insist gently but firmly that I am also cock-eyed when I made Rogers and his men meet at the mouth of the true Ammonoosuc, opposite the mouth of Wells River.

Why, they tell me, old Eben Stiles and old Herman Tucker and old Efcra Kennedy REMEMBER the log fort that Rogers built at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc in 1755. They SAW the logs, and can take you right where the fort used to stand. I feel that the time has come for me to make a slight defense of my persistence in causing Rogers to appoint the mouth of the true Ammonoosuc as the place where his men should meet. In the first place, General Amherst, when he received Rogers message, understood and said that the provisions for Rogers relief were to be sent to Wellss River. Wellss River is opposite the mouth of- the true Ammonoosuc.

Consequently, when Rogers appointed the Ammonoosuc as the meeting place, he meant the Ammonoosuc opposite Wells River. In the second place, I dont believe markers and old inhabitants to the contrary notwithstanding that Rogers ever built a fort at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc. He built a fort Fort Wentworth on the orders of Governor Benning Wentworth of New Hampshire. That fort was, when built, thought to be on the direct line between Salisbury Fort in Franklin, New Hampshire, and the fort at Crown Point. If Benning Wentworth ordered Fort Wentworth built at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc, he was an extremely stupid man; and if Rogers carried out his orders and built the fort there, he was crazy.

In order to understand the situation, the student must provide himself with a map which shows the Connecticut River, Crown Point, the Upper and Lower Ammonoosuc, and the town of Franklin, New Hampshire, where Salisbury Fort was situated. If a line is drawn from Franklin New Hampshire, northward to the mouth of the true Ammonoosuc. thence northwestrly up Wells River across a small strip of land and down the Winooski River into Lake Champlain, he has what seems to be a roundabout, but thoroughly feasible route to Crown Point. Not much was known about that territory in 1755; but even on the Langdon and Blanchard map of 1754, there seems to be an almost all-water route from Salisbury Fort to Crown Point by way of the true Ammonoosuc, Wells River, the Winooski and Lake Champlain. If however, the owner of the map should draw his line to the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc, that line would be pointed in the general direction of Labrador and Greenland.

The line would run northeast, AWAY from Crown Point, AWAY from Lake Champlain, AWAY from the Hudson River or any other part of America that New England troops might want to defend. Nothing even faintly resembling water courses ran from the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc to the westward. There wasnt the remotest chance that troops could get from Salisbury Fort to Crown Point by way of the Upper Ammonoosuc. The Langdon-Blanchard Map of 1754 a map with which Benning Wentworth and Robert Rogers must have been familiar shows this clearly. There isnt even such a river as the Upper Ammonoosuc on the Langdon-Blanchard Map.

Rogers knew that part of Vermont and New Hampshire as no other man knew it; and I firmly believe that no orders could have led him to do such an idiotic thing as to build a fort at the mouth of the Upper Ammonoosuc. I believe that he built it at the mouth of the Lower Ammonoosuc and nowhere else. As for those who claim they can remember the logs of old Fort Wentworth at the mouth of the Upper Day Old Chicks For Sale Single Comb Reds from S. Approved Flocks, Blood Tested for two years without a trace of Pullorum. Flock improvement has been carried on for several years.

They are extra good layers of large eggs and almost free from setters. All my hens are headed by cockerels from R. O. P. Parents and my price is less than you would pay for this quality.

Price $10 per hundred. Hatches weekly. HENRY G. ROY West Barnet, Vt. Tel.

Peacham 6-13 Ammonoosuc, I can only say that a log fort built in 1754, in a fertile and unsettled country, would have rotted to the faintest moss-covered irregularities in the underbrush by 1790. CARD OF THANKS To my friends and neighbors I wish to express my sincere appreciation for the beautiful basket of sunshine which you so thoughtfully and generously gave me; to one and all I thank you. Josie Putnam The Noble Guards The Noble Guards is the highest ranking corps of the papal military service. It originated in the Cavel-leggieri (light cavalry) which formed the mounted guards of the popes. Reorganized several times, it assumed its present name under Pius VII, 1815, new regulations being given by Leo XIII.

The pope appoints the commander, always a Roman prince, and all members must show a 60-year line of nobility recognized by the papal states. Their only public appearance is with the pope at public functions. The privilege of conveying the tidings to newly appointed cardinals belongs exclusively to them. ST LUKES EPISCOPAL CHURCH Rev. Forrest L.

Eastman, Rector First Sunday in Lent, Feb 26. Holy communion, 9 a. m. Church school, 10 a. m.

Morning prayer and sermon, 11. Monday, Feb. 27 Meeting of the Church Boys club at the Parish house, 7 p. m. Wednesday, March 1 Holy communion, 9 a.

m. Special informal Lenten meeting, with hymn singing and a short discussion of the church and the Christian creeds, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. M. W.

Held, 7 p. m. Choir rehearsal at the same place at 7:45 p. m. Methodist Episcopal Church A Friendly Church Rev.

O. M. Polhemus, Pastor Sunday: 10:00 Meeting of the Epworth league in the dining room. C. Murray Sawyer will be the speaker.

1100 Morning worship with sermon by Rev. Burton G. Robbins of Warren, How Much Are You Worth? 12:15 Church school. 7:00 Evening worship with sermon by Mr. Polhemus, The Fullness of Time.

Monday 7:00 Young peoples choir rehearsal at the parsonage. Tuesday: 7:00 Adult choir rehearsal. Wednesday: 7:30 Lenten service, the first of a series which will be held in the church. Hrst half hour will be a song service of old Gospel hymns. The second half of the meeting will be a Lenten study in the Teachings of Jesus based on the Sermon on the Mount.

Thursday: Regular meeting and covered dish party at the church. Hostesses: Mrs. Forrest Currier, Mrs. A. H.

Burton, Mrs. H. R. Wiimot, and Mrs. John Neceleson.

Lent is here, let all disciples place the Kingdom first dining these weeks of preparation for Easter! Is anything more important than God? Three things are urged: daily devotions, regular attendance at worship (there are three opportunities each week) and invitation to neighbors and friends to worship with you UNIVERSALIST CHURCH Rev. A. W. Altenbern, Pastor 10:00 a. m.

Church school with classes for all. 11:00 a. m. Morning service with choir directed by Mrs. Adine Far-well.

For the first in a series of Lenten sermons based on the daily meditations for the Lenten season, the sermon subject will be We Avow Our Faith. 7 p. m. Illustrated drama Sorrell and Son, under the auspices of the Lague of Youth. This service will close early enough to allow all ample time to get to the Community building for the N.

H. Federal orchestra concert. Monday at 7:30 p. m. in the vestry scheduled meeting of the Leagaide.

All members to bring sandwiches. The Womans league of the Unl-versalist church will hold a food sale at the Mary D. Randall home Saturday afternoon, this week, from 2 to 5 oclock. Orders solicited. Advt.

No. Haverhill Methodist Church Rev. E. C. Williams, Pastor 11:00 a.

m. Rev. Delphas Barnett of Lisbon will be the preacher. This is the North Country Methodist ministers exchange day. Vested junior choir.

10:00 a. m. Church school. 7:00 p. m.

Epworth league. STEADY WORK GOOD PAY RELIABLE MAN WANTED to call on farmers in Grafton County. No experience or capital required. Make up to $12 a day. Write FURST THOMAS, Candler Baltimore, Md.

INTERESTED IN NEEDLEPOINT LADIES? Come in and see our lovely new pieces, small, medium and large just in. Also gimp in white and colors, bag-tops, Cut work and simple embroidery. Phone 62-4. WORKMAN ART SHOPPE TO RENT: 3-and 4-room furnished apartments with private bath, for light housekeeping, on Locust Woodsville. Rent $3.50 and $4.50 per week.

C. E. BASSETT, 9 Locust Woodsville, N. H. Tel: 224-11.

BABY CHICKS for sale. Single comb Reds from pullorum tested flock. Extra good laying strain. $10.00 per hundred. WHITEHILL HATCHERY, South Ryegate, Vt.

Tel: Groton 54-33. FREE! If excess acid causes you pains of Stomach Ulcers, Indigestion, Heartburn, Belching, Bloating, Nausea, Gas Pains, get free sample UDGA, at E. B. Mann Co. drug store.

STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Grafton, 'ss. Court of Probate To the heirs at law of the estate of Louise A. Robinson late of Haverhill in said County, deceased, intestate, and to all others interested therein: WHEREAS Bernice R. Craig administratrix of the estate of said deceased, has filed in the Probate Office for said County the account of her administration of said estate, and whereas upon the settlement of said account she will present for allowance her private claim against said estate and ask that the same be allowed, said claim being for moneys paid out and expended by the said administratrix from 1926 to 1935, for rent of deposit box in Woodsville National Bank from 1930 to 1938 and for personal services and expenses as co-trustee with Horace B. Knight under a voluntary and living trust made by said deceased April 29, 1930, total claim amounting to $2,150.34.

You are hereby cited to appear at a Court of Probate to be holden at Woodsville in said County, on the 21st day of March next, to show cause, if any you have, why said account and claim should not be allowed. Said administratrix is ordered to serve this citation by causing the same to be published once each week for three successive weeks in the Woodsville Times a newspaper printed at Haverhill in said County, the last publication to be at least seven days before said Court. Given at Haverhill in said County, this 18th day of February, A. D. 1939.

By order of the Court, Charles E. Dixon, Register STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Grafton, ss. Court of Probate Citation on petition by Conservator to sell real estate. To Ina W. Tilton of Haverhill, in said County, and to all others interested therein; WHEREAS, Lewis C.

George, Conservator, of said ward, has filed in the Probate Office for said County, his petition, the original of which is on file in said Court and may be examined by interested parties, praying for license to sell at private sale or public auction all right, title and interest of said ward in and to a part of certain real estate situate in Haverhill as conveyed said ward by Sidney D. Tilton, see Book 575, Page 126, Grafton County Registry of Deeds. You are hereby cited to appear at a Court of Probate to be holden at Woodsville, in said County, on the 21st day of March next, to show cause, if any you have, why the same should not be granted. Said Conservator is ordered to serve this citation by causing the same to be published once each week for three successive weeks in the Woodsville Times a newspaper printed at Haverhill in said County, the last publication to be at least seven days before said Court. Given at Haverhill, in said County, this 21st day of February, A.

D. 1939. By order of the Court, Charles E. Dixon, Register STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Grafton, SS. Court of Probate Citation on petition by Administratrix to sell real estate.

To the heirs at law and creditors of the estate of Mary J. Moulton, late of Lisbon, in said County, deceased, and to all others interested therein; Whereas, Beryle M. Aldrich, Administratrix C. T. has filed in the Probate Office for said County, her petition, the original of which is on file in said Court and may be examined by interested parties, praying, to sell at public auction or private sale all right, title and interest of the said estate in a certain parcel of land, with the buildings thereon, situate in said Lisbon, known as the Mary J.

Moulton homestead. You are hereby cited to appear at a Court of Probate to be holden at Woodsville, in said County, on the 21st day of March next, to show cause, If any you have, why the same should not be granted. Said administratrix is ordered to serve this citation by causing the same to be published once each week for three successive weeks in the Woodsville Times newspaper printed at Haverhill in said County, the last publication to be at least seven days before said Court. Given at Haverhill, in said County, this 16th day of February, A. D.

1939. By order of the Court, Charles E. Dixon, Register THE WOODS VILLE-GROTON PROBATE COURT AND LEGAL ADVERTISING Probate Notices 3 Insertions Administrators notice $3.00 Executors notice $3.00 Guardians notice 3.00 Above when non-resident, with local agent named 3.50 Commissioners notice giving dates of sittings 4.00 Guardians citation 5.00 Citations for settlement 7.00 Other Probate and Legal Advertising Petitions for sale of real estate, libels for divorce, mortgage foreclosures, etc. First insertion per inch $1.00 Subsequent .50 The above prices are based on setting type in 6-point, 12 ems wide. Times per inch rates will be revised to equal 6-point.

Probate Court Calendar Woodsville 3d Tuesday in March, June, September and December. Littleton 1st Tuesday in May and November. Plymouth 2d Tuesday in February and May, 4th Tuesday in July and 2d Tuesday in November. Lebanon 3d Tuesday in January, April, July and October. Judge Henry A.

Dodge, Littleton. Register Charles E. Dixon, Woodsville. FOR SALE: One set Singer Vacuum cleaners used as floor models, $30.00 discount. Fully guaranteed.

R. A. LaDUE, Box 54, Groton, Vt. SUPERFEX OIL HEATER like new. Heats four or five rooms.

Cheap for cash. M. L. GRAY, Bar-net, Vt. Telephone 49.

MATTRESS WORK All kinds, including roll-feather and inner springs. Feather beds bought. W. A. HUTCHINS, The Mattress Man, Lebanon, N.

H. EXPERIENCED NURSE wants work, or would do housework. Good cook. MRS. LILLIAN M.

GALE, care of Raymond Hill, RFD. 1, Woodsville, N. H. Tel: 45-2. FOR RENT: Downstairs apartment, 4 rooms, furnished or unfurnished.

All modern conveniences. MRS. H. G. SMITH, 16 Pleasant Woodsville, N.

H. Tel: 33-3. Wanted: Calves, bea and lambs of all kinds any time. Phone or write. JAMES H.

ROWE, Woodsville. Tel: 182 CONSERVATORS NOTICE Notice is hereby given that the subscriber has been duly appointed by the Judge of Probate for the County of Grafton, conservator for the person and estate of Mabel A. Weare of Plymouth, in said County, decreed to be in need of a conservator upon her own petition. All persons having claims against said Mabel A. Weare are requested to exhibit them for adjustment, and all indebted to make payment.

February 14, A. D. 1939. Rosa H. Smith, Conservator STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Grafton, ss.

By the Honorable Judge of Probate for said County. To the Creditors and Heirs-at-Law, and all persons interested in the estate of Walter C. Downing late of Haverhill in said County, deceased, intestate: You are hereby notified that Reginald R. Downing Administrator on the estate of said deceased, will present his account of the administration of said estate, for examination and allowance, the same having been filed in the Probate Office for said County, and will ask for a decree of distribution upon any balance found due on said account; that the same will be considered at a Court of Probate to be held at Woodsville in said County, on the third Tuesday of March next, at ten of the clock in the forenoon, at which time and place you may appear, ana object to the allowance thereof if you see cause. And notice is hereby ordered to be given by causing this citation to be published three weeks successively in the Woodsville Times a newspaper printed at said Haverhill the last publication whereof to be seven days at least before said Court.

Given at Haverhill, in said Countv, this 8th day of Feruary, A. D. 1939. By order of the Judge Charles E. Dixon, Register STATE OF NEW HAMPSHIRE Grafton, ss.

By the. Honorable Judge of Probate for said County. To the Creditors and Heirs-at-Law, and all persons interested in the estate of Louena A. Childs late of Piermont in said County, deceased. testate: You are hereby notified that Palmer H.

Childs Executor on the estate of said deceased, will present his account of the administration of said estate, for examination and allowance, the same having been filed in the Probate Office for said County, and will ask for a decree of distribution upon any balance found due on said account; that the same will be considered at a Court of Probate to be held at Woodsville in said County, on the third Tuesday of March next, at ten of the clock in the forenoon, at which time and place you may appear, and object to the allowance thereof if you see cause. And notice is hereby ordered to be given by causing this citation to be published three weeks successively in the Woodsville Times a newspaper printed at said Haverhill the last publication whereof to be seven days at least before said Court. Given at Haverhill, in said County, this 10th day of February, A. D. 1939.

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D. State. Same.

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About Groton Times Archive

Pages Available:
11,987
Years Available:
1897-1944