Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 16, 1913, Page 5

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MUSHROOMS NEW POTATOES An unlimited supply of choice fruits and vegetables | at lowest prices. SOMER si Handsome and Reliable[ Fur Coats for Ladies at attractive prices. These are the new models and | made of the very best of prime pelts with good - luster, soft and pliable. Jas. C.Macpherson FURRIER 291 Main St CLAIRVOYANT Psychic Astrologist, etc., Prof. Chris tie outlines life and all its affairs in clean lang; th dates, deserip- s of pe . etc. In love, mar- (:\)‘lv troubles, lost friendship, the professor can help you. Saves moaey and mistakes. ' All readings uaranteed correct. 10 to 8 datly. 38 Jnion St., upstai Janlisd Repair Work —OF ALL KINDS ON— AU TOMOBILES, CARRIAGES, Wi QNS. TRUCKS and CARTS: ! Mechnanical repairs. cainting. trim upholstering and wood work Biacksmithing in ail its branches Scott & Clark Corp 507 to 515 Nerih Main SL « mung. SPECIAL AFew Mesh Bags at reduced prices. Finest Quality. Ths Plaut-Caddza Co., Jewelers and Silversmiths. 872, 8UILD Established CADDEN CUBA—AUGUSTA SOUTH Aflantic Coast Line '!‘ Trains Daily Steel Hcclrlc l.lyhlell Pallmans, Dinhg Cars. “NEW YORK AND FLORIDA SPEOIAL™ 6th Se.son) mow in operatlon. ew York 12.28 noon daily. For fllustrated literature ana all’ informatfon Address J. JOHNSON, N. E. AGENT, 248 Washington _Street, Beston. OUT THEY GO All Calendars Your choice for B¢ nLl(Ic CRANSTON & G0, WHEN YOU WANT A HOT | WATER BOTTLE i 16 meet an ermergency, you want a de- peirdable one. One that will not leak at a time "vhen it is worth many times its ccst. There is only cne way to avoid a | thing of this kind ana that is, to buy one of our GLARANTEED Hot Water Eottles. The quality of. rubber that enters into their composition must be the | best becanse of tile demands we make of the manufacturers. We have a standard and they must come up to that. LERDU, o™ OPP. CHELSEA BANK. WHEN you wanl Lu put your Dus Less pefore tne public, there is mo m dium beitsr than ihrough tne advertis- ing celumns of The Bulletiy iflcCrary Bldg‘ Norwich, Thurday, Jan. 16, 1913. VARIOUS MATTERS. - New tlflephme directories go into effect Sunday pext. Next Sunday is Septuagesima, about seventy days before Easter. | Yescerday was Laura Swedish speaking residents. { Are you among those who have.for- gotten to pay their water bills?—Adv. The boyvs have been enjoying very ta.lr skaxmg at Hinckley’s pond, Laurel Boxmg bouts at Baltic Friday night. ain go, Bates vs. Glynn.—adv. This week Judge Gardiner Greene of Norwich is presiding in the superior court at Waterbury. / The Griswold hotel at Eastern Point {is being improved by the addition of f verandas and a new roof. E | {at Davi ! es left. 0verhaul_ing and Friends are deeply concerned about the condition of Mrs. J. P. Holloway, who is ill with pneumonia. Farm workers appreciate the few minutes’ addition to the morning light. It is daybreak new at 5.26. Somerset lodge, No. 34, F. and A. M., had work in the first degree at its meeting Wednesday evening at Mason- ic temple. The State Agriculture society is to offer premiums for boys’ kitchen gar- dens, but the details of this have not yet been worked out. The Connecticut Colony for Epilep- tics at Mansfield, of which ‘Zebulon R. Robbins of Norwich is a trustee, will be open for patients in July. Prominent members of the local Y. M. C. A. are being invited to atlend the opening cf the new Y. M. building in Willimantic Feb. Marvin Beebe, a New London young | insane by | man, has been adjudged physicians, and Wednesday was com- mitted to the Norwich state hospital. ang tickets for Military ball Book store. Only a few box- Select at onee.—Adv. Boxes A year ago this time was the coldest of the winter of 1912, the mercury be- ing 20 degrees below zero on the 1l4th and a big snowstorm coming on the | 15th. | | i | one of the lea ‘Walter Emery Gard of Neptune park ders of the progressive party, has been elécted secretary of the Connecticut Society of Social Hy- giene. H. W. Ranger of has a summer home Noank, was one of the exhibitors at the American Art gallery in New York this weel. ew York, who Avoid additions to paying bills this week. Office open from 8.30 a. m. to p. m. and to § p. m. Saturday and Monday.—Adv. ater bills by There are bird-lovers who ha ed song sparrows nearly every this winter, there has been so little snow. crawl into brush e not- | heaps for shelter. | (Dudley) ! biult at ! | in attendance thr(m;l\out | of the general as | and polishing the ! 4’ 1 i | ana Miss Ets i { wharfage charges of $1 for each Margaret Bean has been appoint- conservator of Ms. Andrew C. by Lhe New Lm.dun probate urt, as M Lippitt the Norwich state hospital for the insane. ‘Wednesd: fu‘rnnon Comfort circle met ~ with M s street, thir- teen members 2nd The leader of the cirele, Mrs. A. A.< Utley presid- ed. Burnham who in the It was Waterman R. introduced Benjamin character of Abraham I Y. M. C. A. Tuesday .evening and not | Gen. W. A. Aiken as was Dreviously stated. Connecticut will the Massachusetts Institute of Tech- nology reunion in New York next Fri- da; d Saturday by four men, includ- ing Courtland R. Darrow of New London. Mrs. Ellen Whit 2dly Tues 5 he 1 a brothe and a sister, eside, 76, died very in Warren, . daughters, a rown of He- | Abbie Lee of | son, bron, Willimantic. Jacobs, 85, widow of Fielder e, who died at East Douglas, Sunday, from bronchiti was born in Thompson, Conn., J 3, 1828, daughter of Syril and Naney | Jacobs. or Young, formerly of ed the city of Chi ., for work on the retainin, the Center bridge, h awarded the amount of the bill costs, a total of $764.29. Mass. “Souvenir” W. H. Taylor means to be th mbly, not ing that Governor Baldwin is agains { his “picture b s,” as they were term- ed in the inaugural message. aside preudice, come and get well. The science that brings health. Dr. Beledna Worthingtoh, Chiroprac- tic Specialist, 287 Main street.—Adv. Lay At the remodeled Geer building on Broadway, now owned by the New London County Mutual Fire Insurance company, a workman who is cleaning granite trimmings with compressed air, always has an au- dience. With Wednesday evening postoffice employes were relieved of counting each piece of mail and recording the weight of the pack- age and the amoumt of stamps, figures gathered since the parcels post went into effect. Hereafter tugboats and barges will | have to find some other dockage than the Central Verment pier opposite the Union station New London, or pay boat Vermont for 24 hours, the Central Railw&y Co. has announced. The Connecticut Alumni society of { the University of Pennsylvania was | formed Tuesday evening at a meeting and dinner held in the Hotel Taft, New Haven. Among those attending were Dr. Hugh Campbeli, '04, of Norwich, and Dr-L. M. Allyn of Mystic. The two story frame house of David A. Brown of Tolland was nearly en- ! tirely destroyed by fire on Monday. | The employ of the Tolland county Jail and some of the prisoners assisted in pyttinz out the firc. The loss was | about $24000, and there was an insur- ance of $2,500. Rev. sDo and Mrs. W. L. Beard, who icut towns at g their va- in eastern Conn ionas meetings duri catlon, have written to ves from Foochow, Chin »f Dee. 1st, that they are back to their | work of teaching and traininz and find many : changes” under the new repub- He. Will Exhibit Her Dags. Domler of New London - W 1t Mrs. A. el ¢ 1 1 o exhibit Th five of her Jap:\uese aogs. ey have won nume+~us blue ribbons other s* Wy day among day | Lippitt | ncoln at the | be represented at | 1| been guests been | with | sent and received ! Witliam: Richleau of, Norwich has returned after a visit to friends im! Mystic. ; Mr. and Mrs. Emile Casavant ‘Baltic are the msta of relatives ‘Willimantic. Miss Fidelis Donahue of Ferncliffe, | i8 In New Yaven this week attendln- the Prom testivlqea‘ John W. Buckley of Paterson, N. T. | was at his home in Norwich Town ! early in the week. A. A. Robinson is in Little Falls, New | Jersey for a visit with his daughter, | Mrs. F. Carlton Presbrey. S i William M. Williams ot Church street has been kept away from the store for a day or two by an attack: of grip. W. L. Daggert has resumed his duties : at the game preserve at East Lyme, ' having spent two day: Norwich. i Mrs. Richard M. Powers, of N'Ol'wicl\i and Mrs. Anna May, of Monson were | guests Monday of William A. Buckley, } of New London. C. H. Presbrey and F. C. Presbrey of ; the Presbrey-Coykindall Co., of New | York, spent a short time in this city ! early in the week. I Edward Perkins Clark, formerly of | Norwich, has returned to his home in Bristol after a few days spent with | Telatives in eastern Connecticut. | Nathan Holt Smith of Nerwich is visiting in New London with his fath- ' | er and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Morgan Smith at their apartments m the Mohican hotel. DEATHS WERE 280 LESS IN 1912 THAN IN 1911, for the State Was 17,274— | Pneumonia First as Cause. Total According to the meonthly bulletin of | the state board of health, issued yes- terday, the death rate was 15.7 for the large towns, for the small towns 13.7, and for the whole state 15.4. The deaths reported from infectious diseases were 210, being 14.1 per cent. of the total mortality. ‘With the possible exception of a few delayed certificates, the death returns for ihe year 1812have al been receiv-' ed. The deaths numbesred 17,274, wh‘cht is 280 less than in the prevxous year. There were 1,374 deaths from pul- . monary tuberculosis, which is only 12 less than last year, but awith the in- | crease in population gives a death rate | of 11.9 per 10,000 of population. } Pneumonia with 1,704 deaths has the - distinction of causing more deaths : than any other single disease, still; this number is 18 less than last year. Typhoid fever with 128 deaths and diphtheria with 192 deaths represent- | death rates of 1.12 and 1.67 per 10,000 population respectively, are the lowest death rates yet recorded for . these diseases. Scarlet fever and whooping cough show a decrease in the death rate, while measles there were more deaths than in the previous year. | { There were 3,278 deaths of infants | | under one year of age. This is 31 more ' | than during 1911. As the birth reg- : | { istration will exceed that of last year ! by some five or six hundred births, it will be seen that the infantile mortal- ity has not increased. | LIGHTHOUSE KEEPER IS HOME SAFE Was Picked Up by Keeper of North Dumpling Light. George Hanson, keeper of Southwest j]mgun light, whom it was feared had | 2 blown out to Sea in an open boat, | back safe. He drifted to South i ing, where he was picked up ! > keeper of North Dumpling light 2nd after repairing his disabled motor ! boat returnmed to Southwest ledge >sday. Asige from being badly | illed he wag none the worse for the | | adventure. STATE GDANGE OFFICERS. J. Arthur Sherwood Elected to Take Place of Late Master Peck. f J. Arthur Sherwood, of Easton, who has been acting as master of the state grange since the death of B. A. Peck, -“d'i elected to that position for the ance of the two years term, at the »m-ex ng at New London on Wednes- Charles T. Davis of Middletown | | was® elected overseer to flll vacaney | and the vaeancy on the executive com- | mittee was fllled by the election of J. H. Blackman of Oronoque. The crack team of Farmington grange, No. | | 49, exemplifieq the fourth deeree in | | the mgning. The afternoon was de- | voted to a lecturer's conference and‘ entertainment. Du Tuesday’'s and Wednesday’s the visiting grangers have{ | | | | I ses at Shaw mansion, where | George Washington was entertained when he was in New London. The sixth degree was econferred in full foipa at the session in the eve- ning and the masters and delegates were endowed with the annual word. | THAMES PAST GRANDS. Annual Meeting Was Held Here—Mrs. Burrows of Groton Presidént. Thames Past Grands' association met ' with Hope Rebekah lodge, No. 21, here | on Wednesday afternoon, having a Zood attendance. Officers were elect- | ed and were then installed by the sit- ting past president, Mrs. Sarah Adams of New London. The following were the officers: Pres- ident, Mrs. Burrows of Groton; vice president, Carrie Parsons of Norwich; ond vice president, Mrs. Belle Stew- of New London: chaplain Theresa ewman of New London; treasurer, Ceila Burrows of New London; secre Mrs. Carrie Leeds of New Lon- inside guard, Mrs. Thornton of { Jewett City; marshal, Mrs. Annie Pahl- | | berg of New London:assistant marshal, | Miss Bowker of New London supper was served after the busi- ness meeting. FUNERALS. Rosa Marguerita Leone. 1 The funeral of Rosa M. @aughter of ' Mr. and_ Mrs. Donato Leone, was held Wednesday morning at 10.30 o’cloek from the home of her parents, No. 3068 Franklin street. There were beauti- ful floral forms. Ruriai was in St. Mary’s cemetery. The child was 21 { days old. | Mrs. James B. Lamb. | The funeral of Susan S. Wood, widow of James B. Lamb was held from Buckingham memorial Wednes- | cay afternoon and the attendance was ' | large. There were many floral remem- brances. Rev. J. F. Cobb conducted | the services and relatives acted as bearers. Rev. Mr. Cabb read a com- mittal service at the grave in- Yantic| cemetery. Church & Allen were in charge of the funeral arrangements. Patriarchs Coming to Norwich, Canton Unity, No. 19, Patriarchs Mil- itant, 1. O. O. I, com® to Norwich to- night te attend the installation of Can- ton Oneco, No. 10. The New London Patriarchs will leave that city on the 6.45 Norwich car, about 25 strong, and they will be in uniform. In the City Court. Iu the city court Wednesday morm- | in s and Paul Parser were found guilty of breach of the peate and were fined $9.47 each, which ; P was paid s at his home in | mey Hull ! went to the home off Hartley and ar ! VITAL STATISTICS FOR | Déath Rate Was 15.4—Norwich Rate | other diseases 4. | Stonington 1, e o . Gardner nt Voluntown vaa' here e superior court nnh-)h-de(! t. He is de- rommhg | fended by eys und W. Per- i kins. and IMmaJ M. Shields. In the prosecu of the case State's Attor- ' assisted by Attormey Ar- thur M. Brown. Jdury Selected. The following jury was selected for the trial of the case after Judge Shum-’ opened court at 10.35 o’clock: rt Stott, George F. Adams, Nor- wich; Arthur E. Shedd, Preston; Geo. F. Brown, John Wade, Colchester; Michaek H. Shea, Griswold; George Chappell, Lebanon; E. Frank White, Eorace D. Bromley, North Stonington: Georze Lacroix, Benjamin S. Gallup, | Sprague; Frank E. Hyde, Lisbon. Testimony of Doctors. The first witness was George E. Pitcher, civil engineer. Mr. Pitcher produced a man of the scene of the killing and explained the property. He was followed by Dr. John Hoov- | er, who attended Frazier, Dr. Fred' Rainesdalc, who alse attended the dead men, and Dr. Robert R. Agnew, who performed the autopsy at the request cl Dr. Sanford H. Holmes, medical ex- aminer, and Dr. Holmes. All of the doctors said that death ! | was due to asphyxiation. They said | ! that the windpipe was split, the aper- ture being about half an inch long. There was also a rupture in one lung. One of the physicians said that Fra- . zier's face swelled terribly, so chang- ing the expression of the face that the man was not recognizable. Afternoon Session. ‘When court came in in the after- noon William F. Hartley ‘testified to going with the accused and Mrs. Gard- ner and Frazier and others to Jewett ! | City in an auto, The party got baek ! to Volumtown late and went to the| home of Frazier and later Frazier and ' 1 | { Mrs. Gardner started for Green Farms, : but there was no gasoline and they | rived early in the morning. About 5 a’clock Gardner came to the house! | and later he said to Hartley, “There , Il . Frasier—Fight Took Place at William . Hartley's, it i, “in a short time : Mirs, " Hartley testified that ! morning at 10 o'clock. That Are Causing Your Hair to Thin Out. Parisian Sage Sl-'l Falling Hair and Does Not Contain Pouonmul&p‘lotbyes. ! wday doesn’t Pes » iwosing his hair. u.uiieaded: at 30 looks, p.aced at a disadxantafla ~uig empioyment. ‘have found them together in the same room.” Gardner left the house mfl went out and he was breathing heavily. Hartley said he did not see any part of a fixht between the men. Joseprfine Ella Belle Hartley, 14, testified that she was g’n her home when Gardner e& she did not see the two men flxhfinx- The girl testified that Mrs, Gardner slept that night with her in & bcd- room upstairs. Melissa. A. Hartley, wife of William Hartley,testified to & number of drinks the party had in Jewett City. On re- turn from Jewett City, she said, she and her husband went inlo their home, - but Eugene Frazier and lirs. Gard- e ok ner went on in the automobile. After: hair root and detailing other circumstances in the destroying its case rega_rdmg the return to the Hart- vitality. ley home, she testified that Mrs. Gard- Then ha ir ner went upstairs to bed with the girl, . falls out; Josephine.! Mrs. Hartley herself went grows thin to bed seon after and slept through the and baldness n!glifi till 8 o’clock the next morning.: She knew nothing of when Gardaer came to the house later in the ni On cross-examination by Attorney ! Edmund Perkins, sne gave testi- mony that combatted some of that given by her daughter, Josephine, and ! she had drunk nothing but beer on the night of the tragedy, and that the testimony . she was now giving was the first state- ment or conversation about the case she had had with anyone. Themas Hartley testified that he and Eugene Frazier went to bed in the front chamber. He couldn’t suy wheth- | er Frazier undressed. The next he heard was in the morning about 4. o’clock, when he heard Gardner say to Frazier, “You miserable wreteh.” Gardner then went out of the room and down stairs, followed by Frazier. At this point court adjourned till this results. Young man; put your faith in gelightful PARISIAN SAGE, it wHl stop falling hair, kill dandruff germs, abolish dandruff and itching scalp; ar | money back. PARISIAN SAGHE is oniy 50 cents a bottle at The Lee & Osgood Co., and dealers ev: shere. Girl with Au- burn hair on every carton. Ask far PARISIAN SAGE. ' We advertive exactly sm it Is MURPHY & McGARRY 207 Main Street ‘During This Week all our Hart Schaffner & Marx ' Suits and Overcoats (exeept lal opened. wout 45 vears ol mis. Piain black and blue suits) will little child cried bitterly for its father as court adjourncd after the morning . be sold » session. The child was allowed to see its father as he was led out for din You can have your. choice i from our $22., $24. and $25. The wife of the accused and their' 2 year old baby were in court when the trial opened. er, Nothing Doing in Mystic Cases. The 18 women and children witness- ! es in the remaining Mystic cases were not in court, not having been-called to attend on Wednesday. STATE IN DECEMBER Was 17.4—This City Had Only Ca of nlifantile Parllyus. According to the manlhly bulletin of the state board of health there Weeew 1,482 deaths during the month of De- evember. This was 229 more than in November and 134 more than in De- cember of last year, and 60 more than the average number of deaths during December for the five years preceding. The death rate was 15.7 for the large towns, for the small towns 13.7, and for the whole state 15.4. The .deaths reported from infec- tious diseases were 210, being 14.1 per cent. of the total mortality. In the town of Norwich there were 42 deaths from the following causes: La grippe 1, diphtheria and croup 1, diseases of the nervous system 4, heart disease 8, accidental and violent 1, all aother diseases, 16. The 42 deaths in December represent am annual death rate of 17.4 per thousand. There were 39 births in the town in November and 36 marriages in that month. In the town of New London there were 35 deaths in December, repre- senting am annual death rate per thou- and of 19.1 from the following causes: . Consumption 6, pneumonia 2, diseases of nervous system 4, heart disease 4, accidents and violence §, all other “iceases 13. There were 33 births in the town and 27 marriages in Novem- ber. In the town of Groton during De- cember there were 7 deaths, represent. | ing an annual death rate of 12.7 per thousand. Causes were: Whooping * cough, pneumonia and heart disease 1 each and all other diseases 4. i In the'town of Killingly in Decem- ber there were 11 deaths, representing an annual Geath rate of 20.2, causes being. La grippe, consumption, bron- chitis, disease of the nervous system and violence I each, pneumonia 3 and other diseases 3. In the town of Plainfield there were 8 ' deaths during the month, representing an annual death rate of 13.5 per thou- sand. The causes were: Pneumonia 4, In Putnam there were 16 deaths, at | an annual death rate per thousand of 41.4. The causes were: Whooping cough, erysipelas and bronchitis 1 each, Dneumonh 6. heart disease 2, | other discases 5. In Stafford the deaths numbered 5, the annual death rate per thousand being 11.0: two .deaths were due to diseases of the nervous system, one to accident or viclence and 2 to other diseases. i In the town of Windham there were ; 26 deaths, represénting an annual death rate of 21. The causes were as follows: Typhoid fever 1, diphtheria and croup ,3 pmewmonia 2, bronchitis 3, diseases of nervous system 5 and other diseases 12. Cases of infectious diseases reported ; in the towns in this section of the state are as follows: Measles—Bozrah 19, Groton 2, Mont.- ville 2, New Lomndon 49, Norwich (city) 12, Stoningtom 5. Scarlet fever- 'w London 2, Nor- wich (eity) 1, Plainfield 5. Infantile paralysis—Norwich 1. Only case reported in the state. Diphtheria and croup—Griswold 1, Willimantie (city) 23 Putnam 9. ‘Wheoping cough—Groton (borough) 5, Jewett City (borough) 2, New Lon- don-9; Putnam 1. Stonington 37. 'Fyphoid fever—Montville 1. New London 2, Willlmantic 2. Consumption—New London -6, Old Lyme 1, Sprague 1, Stafford Springs 1. McKinlev Association Banquet. Nerwich members have received their invitations to the tenth annual| dinner of the Connecticut MeKinley | association, which will be held on the anniversary of McKinley’s birth, Wed- nesday, Jag. 29, 1913, at 7 p. m., in the Hotel Taft. Speakers will be as fol- lows: Hon. Job Hedges of New York, Prof. H. C. Emery of Yale, District Attorney Whitman of New York city. Mayor F. J. Rice, New Haven, Attor ney C. A. Colley, Waterbury. On the ! executive eommittee are John J. Dahill, Hartford, A. P. Hayes, Waterbury, W, Bpflw, Bethel, F. B. Munn, New . B. Leenard, Roclkville, G. % Mlctg ‘Willimantic, Isaac Spear, M wn, Wfl;s gfl%e;‘flltare tl:.. o Haton, presiden .. alter, treas- urer; C. W. Pickett, secretary. Quick Time by R. F. D, Team. ! reported i Casinsky | had sone to Willimantic after being “but had then left Willimantic. . Mr. i search for him, ilines of Suits and Overcoats. These are extraordinary val- ues, but we must clean out these winter suits and over- coats. MANY GAMES PLAYED IN SODALITY POCL.! . Sulfivan Undefeated—H. Couni han Loses One in Ten—Twenty- Three Have Entered. Mogst of the 23 entered in the Sodal- ity handicar pool tournament have played off a number of their games, with Harold Counihan standing as the: actual leader on number of games played. He has lost one game in ten, but W. A. Sullivan is undefeated in six games. Both are scratch men. The standing: Don’t miss these values., £ B i H’ep. H. Counihan W. A, Suliivan W. Slattery Hynds Vla.!one Ww. The “Case” ARCH PROP F. 3 C. Riordan M. J. Coscoran J. A. Desmond J. Walsh . ‘W. O’Brien M. Sullivan R. Tarrant CODDIHDD I bt o e 12 1 15 © 4 1 b e 62 2 €0 PODUHHINONO RO NN DR MO W. Carberry T. Driscoll B Shuicn Shoe J. Fi"ea,rr?s i i N ahy . ¥ T. Bronian | FOR WEAK ARCHES. I. Boyian % i ‘W. Harrington — 3. Healey e i | The Best One Made. PROBATIONER MISSING. Casinsky Does Not Comply With the Terms of His Parole. Ferquson & Charbannza FRANKLIN SQUARE HUCKLEBERRIES IN GL--S8 = Baiéion’s County Probation Officer Richard W. Manefield went to Willimantic Tues- day to seek Theodore Casinsky, who was put on probation by Judge Milton A, Shumway of the superier court at the criminal session in Norwich last | week. Casinsky was charged with assault- {ing his wife and with breach of the peace. He was given a sentence and then placed on nrobation. It was| the first of this week that had_violated the provisions of the probatiom, and Maj. Hadlal A. Hull, state attorney, sent Probation Officer Mansfield to find Caslns(gy and WEDDING. | get an explanation. plferii-tl i) Mr. Mansfleld found that Casinsky Curtis—Snyder. Charles M. Curtis of this city amnd Miss Mabel Synder of Owatonna, Minn. were united in marriage at 8 o'eleck Tuesday evening at the home of the groom’s father, Warren Curtis, No. 88 Washington street, by Rev. Herbert J. ‘Wyckoff, pastor of the Second Congre- gational church. The affair was of a | 1912 shows that the total receipts of being present. The bride was charm- ingly attired. Mr. and Mrs. Curtis are to make their home at No. 64 Boswell avenue. Mr. Curtis is a native of Unadella, N. Y., and is employed as eashier in the plant of the Richmond Radiator The bride’s home was im released by the court and had report- ed, as directed, to the gemeral seere- tary of the Willimantke Y. M. C. A, His wife thought he was in Mans- field Center and the chief of police of ‘Willimantic thought he was in Occum. Mansfield did not have time to so returned and re- ported to the state attormey. Casinsky will be found and will be made to comply with the provisions of | the probation or will be forced to serve his sentence. SODALITY WHIST. | —_— i company. 5 3 Members "Are Showing Much Interest | Owatonna, Minn, and she _is the in Tournament—The Scores. jlamarues of M and 2. The whist tournament at the Sodal- | ity roams is proceediny with much in- | terest gmong the me Town Clerk Holbrcok expected men games have been play from the Triumph Voting Machine for recording the games conveniently | company to come here Wednesday for has been prepared in attractive form |the purpose of investigating the ma- chine that was broken in the Greene- Voting Machine Men Did Not Come. { by J. A. Desmond, which shows the 1 following standing of the teams to | ville district, but they did not arrive date: | or send any word. Games Points Ave. ! Counihan and Hynds .. 7 169 241-7 Wednesday morning in St. Patrick’s J. J. Relly and O’Dono- church relatives and friends attended W B e 1 31 31 a month’s mind requiem high mass McGrory and Walsh 6 171 281-2 |for Mrs. Catherine Driscoll, celebrated T. J. Relly and Sheridan 9 258 282-3 by Rev. John H. Broderick. W. Sullivan and MeGib- { ney 4 77 191-4 Congdon and Driscoil 5 119 234-5 Dr. Crowley and Houri~ ’ o 5 ale’s Tarrant and Mullen 6 144 24 Malone and Harrington 6 144 24 Caples and Desmond .. 5 125 25 Partially Completed East Lyme Ex- tension. ‘The public utilities commission has given a certificate that the New Lon- don and East Lyme Street Railway company has completed 25 per cent. of its ex(enu!on from Flanders in the town of East Lyme to the Connecticut river bridge in Old Lyme. St e Admitted to the Bar. the thirteen young law stu- o were admitted to the bar I dents rural free dalive team £ | in the nuperior court Tuesday at Hart- J.,“P'. B. Palmer, Jr., x:ayade ea. uvexuy ford before Judge William Case, daz’.glmc Main street about v.hg were V. P. A. Q?u!'nn of Versailles and of Wednesday u.g.emuo m Elbert I. Darbie of Danielson. n square eastward. In front o Pt o st on ot ;M er b.n the team struck a! File Their Marriage Intentions. oy =t md e thare, tossiny the t Ferins fabeyt of DRmwic ne} lver o: e o e Slm crzs nfl River

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