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" Where to Trade in Jewelt ity DR. J. M. KING, DENTIST ALL WORK GUARANTEED. Finn Block, Jewett City, Conn. Office hours 9.30 a. m. to 8 p. m. Painless extraction. Telephone 40. deci3a SBLLING AT ONE-HALF PRICE. I am closing out everything in my store at ona-h:lf price. Come and take advantaxe of these bargains in milli- nery. aiile. Beauregard. FOR SALE. Automobile and boat. Both in first class conditien. Price each, $95. 8. J. Bottomly. WE ARE HEADQUARTERS for the Columbia indestructible records. We also e.rr; a full line of 5¢ and 10c goods, school suppli fancy goods, confectionery, tinware, eroekory Geo. Lapoint, Jewett City. vad — The New Fashions in Fall Millinery. We have the very newest ideas in shapes, up-to-date colorings and de- signs that <vill be in great demand this fall. L. A. Roy Millinery Store, Me- chanic St., Jewett City, Conn. octisd L ASK To SEE THE Souvenis Ching ow . .c E‘:‘; :rg" Sties. G. J. BLANCHARD. JEWETT CITY CANDY KITCHEN. You will find In_connection a first elass restaurant. Home made try of all ki Meals served at nll ours, Oy eu and clams served to order, Try lce cream. Jewett City Cand ‘ Kitchnn near St. Mary’s hall,” Has] block, Jewett City, Conn. QUIOK LUNCH AT ALL HOURS. Berved In first class shape. Prices jow. Tobacco and Cigars. W. J. Brick- ley. g sepéd ICR URBAM at wholesale and retall. Parties churehes, etc., supplied. Agent for the MecKinley music, 10c & copy. William Johnstone, Jewett City. WHEN READY TO BUILD. ¥our -nn:ll.l from our choice stock o T, -.inu Cement, Glass Nails, ete. We carry a complete_line of masony and bullders’ supplies. R K. Chureh, Jewett City. JRWETT CITY HOTEL, New and Up-to-date Hotel in every particular. TRA ¥. LEWIS. Proprietor. M. HOURIGAN. Jewett City. FUNERAL DIRECTOR. Purniture and Crawford Ceoking Rang-s. *Phones—Store 61-2: house 35-5. S — MOOSUF HOUSEL. S. J. King, Pfl'. H 8. King. Mgr Sample Reem conmected. Spenial attention paid to Commervial Meesun, Commn Tel 08-1% Buy the Best HALF OF THE CURE Is THE Quality That is why you should be so partic- ular that your Cough Syrup bears the name of The Lee & Osgood Co. It is guaranteed to cure. After using it you will general opinion “IT NOT ONLY RELIEVES, BUT CURES THE COLD.” voice the Por the child—DONNA SYRUP— price 25 cents. For the adult—LEE’S WHITE PINE AND TAR-—price 25 cents, The Lee & Osgood Co. Drugdists and Manufacturing “hemists, 131-133 Main Street, NORWICH, CONN. If your druggist does not carry The | Lee & Osgood Co.’s preparations, will send by mail on receipt of price. janigdaw BUSINESS DIRECTORY Of Eastern Coanecticut. NORWICH FIRMS AUTCMOBILE STATION, ¥. J. Colt, 6 Otis reet. A\nomoih'ili and Bicycle Repairing. General chine work. Jobbl—“ “Phone. BOTTLER H. Jackel, cor. Market aml Water Sta. A complete ilne of the best Ales, and ines, speciall boltlad tor fam- iy use. Dellvery. ‘el. 136-5. REAL ESTATE AND INSURANCE. Gen. E. Bl‘:helfl r, Room 2, 65 Broad- Real Est: investment Broler. Notary Publle Aualun and Expert Acccuntant. Telephone fl& b WILLIMANTIC FIRMS STIMPSON’S STABLES, rear Young's hotel Mailn stree! Tho: oughl; ul;‘w Aate service 3 a, Trucking and heavy teaming clalty. ant a spe- —_— JOSEPH BRADFORD, Book Binder. - Blank Books Made and Ruled to Order, 108 BROADWAY. 282 Fortieth Annual Mark Down Sale Now Going On “Trade with U5 and Savs Mongy” ISAAC CHAMPEAU, Mgr. Putnam, - Conn. Agents for Standard Patterns. Lewando’'s French Dyes and Cleanser. Telephone 19-3 Annual (Clearance Sale ~—AT THE— Boston Dry Goods ' Store DANIELSON, - = -. CONN. The Entire Stock goes in at Bargain Prices. Sale begins Friday morn- ing, Jannary 2lst, and con- tinues until Monday eve- ning, February Tth. Just fifteen business days fer o* L customers to buy the piwmessse of ti goods at 20 to 50 per cent. less than the real value. For prices and particulars write for advertising bill. We invite every family in Windham County to share Cut Price Sale. in this great Those who can come in the fore- noon will find it a good time to do shopping. The Annual Fifteen Days’ Sale has | always been attended by crowds uf{ satisfied customers, and we are bound to keep our mark. Store will be open Monday and Sat- | urday evenings. TERMS STRICTLY CASH. The Boston Ory Goods COMPANY, Danielson, Conn. JAMES E. KEECH, Manager. Have Your Watches and Clocks Pat in Fmslvclass Condition T by FRISWELL, The Jeweler, 25-27 Franklin Street. janlidaw WHEN you want to put your busie ness before the public. there is N0 me- dlum better than tnrough the advertis- Ing columas of The Bulletin. reputation to the high | on Thursday ana the first hopes of his recovery since he was stricken on last Saf ‘were held out. ter Katherine of % tives in_ Danjelson on 3 Mrs. Pierre Mrs. Francis Vaudry, Miss Mailhot l.l!d Mrs. Julian Benac won the honors at the weekly meeting of the Bijou Whist club. Whist at Lafayette Cilub. The members of the Lafayette club entertained a party of friends at a whist party in their rooms in the town hall building on 'flmrldzy evenin. Exit Old Roundhouse. The old roundhouse at the railroad station has disappeared; the materials of which it was constructed has been loaded on cars and carried away. A big pole carrying a cable of tele wires across the tracks is the only blemish that now remains in a clear areaway at that end of the station, and this may be removed. DANIELSON Borough Telegraph Operator Trans- ferred to Taftville—Social Notes— Rev. C. H. Barber Heads State Tem- perance Union. Mrs. Andrew Crumlaf and daug] laer. Miss Laura, were visitors in Pro dence Thursday. Frederick E. Colvin is confined to his home by an_attack of tonsilitls. Frederick E. Bitgood was in Boston on a business trip on Thur 3 Mrs. Moses essette s visiting with friends in Willimantic today (Thursdny) Chalm . Lord of Oakland Beach called on Irlends in Danielson Thurs- day. Miss® Barrett Going to Taftville. Miss Marie Barrett, who has been the telegraph operator at the Danfel- son station for several years, is to leave here to be operator at Taftville. Up-to-Date lce Harvesting. Charles B. Wheatley Better. The ice garnering machinery has ali Charles B. Wheatley was reported | been installed at the ice plant near the as better at his home on Broad street | Hygeia reservoir at Bast Killingly and — e 'ATCHES Howard, Hamilton, Waltham, Eigin, for men, and some extra nno, especially fine Imported Ladies’ Watches. DIAMONDS A dandy selection of Pins, Buttons, Scarf Pins, with Rings from $6.00 and $15.00 to $500.00. Geo. E. Shaw, PUTNAM, CONN. If You Want the Best Try WOLF DEN RYE WHISKEY $1.00 for full quart. E. C. ROGERS, Wholesale and Reiail Liquor Merehant, PUTNAM, CONN. We're Fighting For You! Our War is against high prices and it means money to you. With flour prices kiting, we are still clinging to the old figures for the very best goods. The famous “GOLD MEDAL” Flour at 95¢ bag The unequalied “LITTLE BEAUTY” Pastry Flour at 85¢ a bag Ve want to help you to help ourselves The Danieison Cotton Go. Store, MAIN STREET, DANIELSON. $Phone orders filled. Cars stop on the corner opposite store. C. 0. ouick . 0. For the Big Bargains g § T T Mark Down Cut Price Sale +..OF... Enamelware, Tinware, Crockery Stationery, Etc. THE3 KEYSTONE STORES, Danielson, Puinam, Moosup. Od runnlng omr will Iundle from to 200 tons a day. A new beiler also a double steel endless chain ar- rangement for carrying the cakes of jce from the reservoir to the two houses. The houses will probably be filled next week. REV. C. H. BARBER Elected President of State Temperance Unioy The presldonqr of the Connecticut Temperance union comes to Dznielson for 1910, Rev. C. H. Barber, pustor of the Westfield Congregational churc having been elected to fill that offic Rev. Mr. Barber has for years been ai actiye worker in the cause, of temper— ance. Danielson alsp gets one of the vice presidents of the organization in Attorney Arthur G. Bill, elected to represent Windham county; all of which ought help to maintain Daniel- son's reputation as a storm cepter on the temperance question up to its es- tablished standard. The license issue is each year the basis for a stubborn fight at the polls in this town. It is no-license this year and President Barber and Vice President Bill will undoubtedly endeavor to see that it stays so. Dayville Parish Ends Balance. The annual report of Rev. J'\J. Pappilion, pastor of St. Joseph’s church at Dayville, shows that the total re- ceipts for 1909 were § 2.54. Of this amount $965.30 was derived from pew rents, $825.50 from separate seat pay- ments and $124.18 from offertory col- lections. The total expenses of the parish for the year, including the salaries of the pastor, organist and sexton, amounted to $1,786.87. Therefore the gain the past year in receipts over expenditures was $545.67. The parish now has a balance of $1,216.63 on hand. The parish at Dayville includes the mis- sions of Willlamsville, Attawaugan and Ballouville, there being no resident pastors In those villages, the ministra- tion bemE by the pastor at Dayville. Canadian Winter No Colder Than in Connecticut. Damase Boulias, who has just re- turned from a visit in Montreal and vicinity, did not find the Canadlan winter any more rigorous in that part of the province of Quebec than the season's weather that is being experi- enced in this part of _Connecticut There is no more snow in Montreal and vicinfty than there was here before the Year With recent rain and the temperature is equally as favorable, or was so last week. Water was dripping from_the eaves of the buildings along St. John street last week, when the mercury was registering around zero in Daniel- son. Instruction for Thirteenth Company. Capt. L. S. Miller, U. S. A, contin- ued his series of instructions to the members of the Thirteenth company at the armory on Thursday evening, when the range section men were giv- en special attention. The men are taking a great deal of interest in the work and the knowledge which they are acquiring 1s expected to be of great value to them when they go into camp the coming summer. News Briefs. Many persons enjoyed themselves at the dance given by the firemen in the Phoenix theater Thursday evening. The rivers have risen about eight inches as the result of the rain and melted snow that came into them fol- lowing the storm of the early part of the week. County Commissioner and Mrs. Charles L. Barber have gone from their home in Central Village to spend the remainder of the winter at New Smyrna, FUTNAM Nightingales Want $16,000 for High School Site—Special Committee to Make Contract With Water Com- pany—Decision in Case of Carpenter vs. Perkins. Attorney J. F., Carpenter, Richard Gorman and Charles Bradway, com- posing the sub-committee of the com- mittee on the new high school, did not close the deal for the purchase of the proposed site for the building at the corner of School and Providence streets Thursday, when they were in Providence to arrange for buying the site from the Nightingales. The own- ers want $16,000 for the property, The committee made them an offer of $10,- 0. There the matter stands. The ghtingales do not seem inclined to sell for less and tha committee does not feel that it should pay more than the price offered. E. C. Rogers was in Boston on a bus- iness trip Thursday. Mrs, N. M. Parker has gone to Nova Scotia for a stay of several weeks. Dr. J. B. Kent is spending spveral days in New York. To Organize S. of V. Camp. J. Harold Bowen, as secretary of the temporary organization, has been in- structed to secure the proper papers for making application for a charter for a camp of Sons of Veterans in this city. There seeems to be a unanimous opinion among those eligible to be- come members of the organization that a camp can be successfully con- ducted here. Derailed Cars Block Tracks. derailment of freight cars at Abington early Thursday wmorning blocked both tracks of the Midland di- vision for a time, necessitating the sending of the early morning trains, eastbound from Willimantie, via Plain- field to Putnam. SPECIAL COMMITTEE Appointed to Act as Agents of the City in Contracting With Putnam Water Company. There was a special meeting of the common council Wednesday evening for the purpose of making some ar- rangements for renewing the contract of the city with the Putnam Water company. Present, Mayor MacDonald, Aldermen Dady, Capente: Hawkins, Joslyn, Broduer and LaRue. The mayor was authorized to ap- point a committes of five, three of whom shall be members of the com- mon council who, together with the mayor, shall act as the agents of the city to nepotiate a contract with the Putnam Water company, said commit- tee to have full power and authority to investigate the needs of the c all respects in relation to its relation with the Putnam Water company the matter of fire protection, and the matter of both public and private water rentals, and the supply of w ter for public and private uses, and the system of piping within the streets of the city, and the necessary exten- sions or modifications of the same, and especially the requirements of the city as to hydrants for fire protection with proper pressure at all points, to be shown by a recording gauge properly located, and report back its findings and its negotiations with the Putnam ‘Water company to this council, togeth- er with its recommendations and a form of contract to be entered into between the city and the Putnam Wa- ter ¢ompany. The following committee was ap- pointed: Aldermen Dady, Hawkins, La- rue, Messrs. J. ¥. Carpenter and B, D, Bugbee. The council makes an interesting de- parture from recent custom in appoint- ing two member of fhe committee who are not members of the common coun- part ?ol:n of the supreme court decision fol« SUPREME COURT ‘ Gives Decision in Case of Carpenter, Trustee, v-_._ll_-_ry Perkins. of Conn t. The memoran~ Smith Wilkinson Will Case. The superior court is advised that one moiety of the trust as it now exists, on September 30, 1908 m Mnolutely vested, one-third in Perkling; one-third in the estate 3 ancl. W. Perkins, deceased and one-third in the estate of Bd- mund Perkins, deceased; and that the other molety became thuse vonad one- third In the estate of Elisabeth H. s0n: one-third in the estate of Horac W. Whitaker; and one-third in the es- tate of Mary, A. Mason. The facts in the case are substan~ tally as follows: Smith Wilkinson died in 1853, possessed of the property now owned by the Putnam Woolen company and a large amount of other property. By the terms of his will and codieil thereto, he gave and devised to his son Edmund two-fifths of his estate absolutely, to three daughters he gave the life use of the remaining three-fifths of his property and ap- pointed his son, Edmund, as trustes. Previous to hiz death, and after the execution of his will, one daughter, the wife of Edmund Perkins, had died, leaving three children, mentioned in the above decision. On the death of a daughter, the share to which the mother had the lite use was to be pald over to the surviving children of the said daughers, in equal shares, u less the mother by will directed a different division among her children. Nancy W. Mason died September 30, 1908, in Pomfret, and was the last of the 'daughters of Smith Wilkinson, leaving no children, although two h.d been born to bar. The amount of the fund to whick she had the life inter. est was upwards of $60,000, In case any daughter died withowd leaving children, then her share was to go to the surviving daughters for life, remainder to their c ren. The court decided that the children of the sisters of Nancy ™Mason took vested estates in the trust fund of which Nancy had the lfe estate, at the time of the death of Smith Wilk- Inson, and subject to be divested by the survival of children of Nancy, and that it made no difference that in some cases the children of the sisters of Nancy had been dead for many years pefore the death of Nancy. John F. Carpenter of this oity is = successor of Edward ilkinson nas trustee of the property in gquestion. Seven firms of lawyers represented the different claimants against the estate. As trustee of the fund, Attorney J. F'. Carpenter brought the matter before the superior court for Windham coun- ty, by a bill in the nature of fnter- pleader, aski to whom he of which Nang; life inter: is question was re served upon an agreed state of faels for the decision of the supreme court. Smith Wilkinson hes been dead 613 years. ‘There are many heirs and other cases will probably be heard In court hefore reach: the final &fs- tribution of the parts o which it hax been divided. Rev. F. D. Sarsent Delivers Address, Rev. F. D, Bargent, pastor of the Second Congregational church, attend- ed a meeting of the direotors of the Missionary soclety of Connecticut, held in the Congregational house in Hart- ford on Wednesday. Upon the ove- nin~ of the same date lr Bargent gave a talk n California in the Congregational church in Franklin, Mass. { Noted Here and There. Mrs. Herbert Smith of Lynn haa been the guest of her parents, Mr, and Mrs, G. W. Holt Miss Carrie Fellows of Danielson was the l o! Mise Bertha Sar- gent on The Ladies’ Bwhl clirale of the Sec~ ond Ceongregational church is to ten~ der a banquet to L. O, Willlams, chor- ister, and each member of the Con- gregational choir, in the Congregation - al banquet hall, Wednesday evening. A meeting of the Woman's Mission- ary society of the Congregationa! church was held at the home of Mrs. L. B. Durfee this week. The tople was The Story of Italy, and the read- ing was from Chapter first of the text book, Mrs. Clara Willlams of Willimantio is visiting her daughter, Mrs. J. Tatem, Jr. Miss Mary B. Danfels is visiting rel- atives in Yonkers, N, Y. Miss Ruth Daniels, a graduate nuress in New York, returned to her dutles Wednesday, ‘after visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. J, ols. JEWETT CITY (Continued from page nine.) and his furs readily sold, and after taking a cargo of tea on board he sailed for the Cape of Good Hope, and on the 10th of August, 1790, the Columbia entered the port of Bosten, the first vessel to circumnavigate thea world under the U. S, flag. He died while in command of coasting vessel In nu summer of 1806, at Charleston, S. At the close of the afternoon Mra, Jennings served refreshments, ELLIS ISLAND. New Britain Audience Hears How 1§ Got | Name. John Ernest McAfee, assistant homs missionary secretary of the Presby- terlan board in the United Ctates, gave an exceedingly interesting lecture the ¥irst church chapel, New Brit- ain, Monday evening on Conditions at Ellis Island, ¥is spoke under the aus- pices of Esther Stanley chapter, D. A, R. Mr. McAfee related many personal experiences In connection = with his work among the immigrants, He told how from legend the and got its name. They could believe it If they saw fit. A man named Ellis, who was & pirate there, was canght on the hin an is mtill to the island The tres seas and brought hanged to a tree, pointed out e d steamers are cited the immigrants are brought tenders. Those who are all right ordered to step those detained are ordered to the left, He urged a more even distrfbution of immigrants throughout the country, He spoke in high terms of the effi< ciency of the immigrant seryice, re to the right while MAY DISBAR THREE ATTORNEYS Grievance Committes of New Haven County Bar Brings Charg Tuesday's New Haven Journal-Cou~ rier said: Charges have been preferred by the grievance committee of the New Ha- county ven bar against Attorneys James F. Torranc and John Be nett, both of Denby and Attorney Franklin W. Cohen of Ansonia. The matter has been placed in the hands of the state attorney and will be presented in the superior court on January 26. t the specific charges against James F. Torrance and John Bennett are will not be known until the matter comes up in court, as by the rules of the grievance committes they are kept absolutely secret until the cha tried in court. In the case of Frankiin W. Cohen, the fwot of his having re- cently been fined in the criminal su- perigr gourt abaut $375 for illegal vot- ing would be a sufficient ground on which 8 chnri“r resulting in Ris re- jection from New Haven countm bar might Le preferred,