Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
DAMNTEYLSON Fewer Bay State Couples Come to Marry—Death of Mre. Samuel Hutchine—Accident to Motorcyol —A Wauregan Write-Up. George Heneault left Monday to spend hi? vacation of two weeks in the Saranac llake region, New York. Miss Maude Phillips, Hartford, Miss Agnes Neville, Hartford, Miss Clara Murray, Hast Hartford, Miss Belle Scott, Ware, Mass, Mrs. C. H. Drab- ble, Auburn, N. Y., make up a party océupying the John A, Paine cottage at Alexander’s lake thls week. Miss Marie Barrett, telegraph opera- tor at the Danlelson station of the New Haven road, "is spending a month at her home In Norwich and in other citfes, Oscar Grachen of Clinton, Mass., is_the relief operator, Mr., and Mrs. Frederick Sibley of Providence were guests over Sunday of Sheriff and Mrs, Preston B, Sibley. At Ashford House Party. A. P. Woodward has returned from a stay at the Church homestead in Ashford, . where he has been a guest with a party of friends of Hemry E. Church of Hartford. Fewer Hurry-Up Marriages. The new marriage law has put a stop to the influx of Rhode Island:couples coming here to be made man and wife. Dr. Sheppard’s Clinic. A number of Danielson children were aperated upon at the clinic conducted at the Day Kimball hospital at Pu nam ‘Monday by the noted New York throat specialist, Dr. J. E. Sheppard, who has a summer home, Sonnie Doon, in Woodstock, this opportunity for Bbaving adenolds or tonsils removed being given once or twice each sum- mer. Baths and Toilets for Company Houses The Danielson ‘Cotton company con tinues to expend a great deal of mone; in improving and developing its prop- erty here. Daths and toilets are oeing installed in the company. houses on what is known the ite row. The company’s object is to make Danieison an. attractive e for mill operatives to come to, and to this end it has spent a fortune in repairing the mill, equip- ping: it" with new machinery, and im- proving the dwelling house OBITUARY. Mrs. Samuel Hutchins. | M#s. Elilen Maria (Weatherhead) Hutchins, widow of Dr. § H. Hutchins, died at the Hutchins home- stead on -Main stre before 9 e'clock Mon mor; The end came’ ' unexpectedly, thoug N Hutchins had been ill since about Christmas time. Mrs. Hutchins was one of the oldest residents of the town of Killingly, in which town she was born, at Attawau- | gan, March 25 She "‘was - the | da hier of George atherhead, rly owner o awaugan. Her marriage futchins, who died in 1886, took.place in Attawe March 27, 1850. Ior hins of 1ome D hysicians ing his exten- an and vicin- old New devoted Wis the of an Fngla motl ' famiiy ol membe ch length of North a and merm- Kil- Mrs. Ners Danielson: Wayne K. Lein- Charles Enos itchins Tayntor, muel Hutchin Back. Jr., Daniel- W tchins. died of 19. Mrs. N. Y, is a F amuel Mrs Hut WAUREGAN hins WRITTEN UP. dren educations, numbers of them get- ting college eourses, have saved their surplus. earnings until in many cases these funds have now grown to big amounts and have supposed they were ‘well content and happy until someone. came along and-discovered ;them, and told them publicly that they are living under unbearable conditions. It's just something fierce to be discovered, es- pecially in the twentieth century, and without the right to pick,6 out your discoverer. Within the week the residents of ‘Wauregan have been informed of many things which have escaped their ob- servation; peculiar, that, isn’t it? In style of architecture they Have learned that the mills do not compare with the classic decorative styles of the renais- sance. That's pretty 'tough, too! No grand staircases adorn the interior of the structures,” where. also there is a total absence of paintings by famous artists and an abominable.lack of rich tapestries exists. There is not a trace- of artistic mosaic work .in the build- ings. 1 There has been utter disregard in the matter of providing limousines for conveying operatives to and from work. The village contains no grand opera house, and its hotels -are. not to be compared with those of New York and Paris. The whole village cannot bqast as much as one Fifth avenue palace for operatives. | So cunningly contrived is the scheme of things in the village that a system has been figured out for making the' moon light the streets on a certain number of nights each month and the sun itself has been buncocd into heat- ing the beautiful surrounding country during the summer months, .thus ef- fecting. a great saving in the cost of | fuel consumption. g { Even the one-time free and untram- meled river has not escaped coercion and subjugation. It has been har nessed, diveried from its course made (o turn the wheels in the great factories—and without cne cent of ompensation, by heck! Will the river strike or joln the union? This is tco much to answer here. Licensed to thé privilege must be the birds that sing in the air or the fishes that swim in the ers about the newly discovered land, though no one in Wauregan suspected this until the village was so recently discovered. It's a mighty disuppointing propos! tion to be crushed back from the be- iief, founded “on vears of experience. that you and content, and the knowledge you are getting alone nicely someone comes aleng and di vou and tells you are happy that when you are all in your figuring— but.that's what has happened to Wauregan, and the people there or the peovle that know them dre not elated over it—that's one safe bet. Motorcyclists Run Into FTrolley Car. At Kelley's corner at Dayville at Sunday afternoon two-men riding on one motoreycle took a header into the beside the street when. ihey ve their machine o th 1 f a northbound ele: > car as it w swinging around the curve. The tr ley car was in charge of Motorma Larose and Conductor Childs. Motor man Larose did not see the accid wut wa n the bell signal for stop by Conductor Childs, and.imme ately halted the car. The cond: inquired of the men if. they jured and asked for their v o~ { they did not.answer. It judging from the number on v that the mem were f Haven They were quite © but proceeded in & short 8ensational Sunday Paper Discovers Things Which thc Village Never | Knew About. has been discovered by a | Wauregan Waterbur Sunday (not Sunday | school) paper—deliberately discovered. Tt meth ter-ri-ri-b-bubble—the discovery, not Wauregan, which is all right. A waiting world has been told that the mill operatives there actuall 20 to work at about 6.30 a. m. ev weekday, working until § p. m.. with an hour for lunch, every weekday ex- Satnrda when the plant %’at noon. This will be surprising information for mill operatives in rn Connecticut towns where th are from 2 a. m. to 2.30 p. m.- there are any such, Tsn't 1t just simply awful? ten, twenty, even forty years, capable, industrious operatives bave peacefully followed their manufacturing occupa- tions in the village, have married, raised families, have given their chil- For five, The Man Who Put the EESImFEET — Look for This Trade-Mark Pic. ture on the Label when buying ALLEN'S FOOT=EASE Antiseptic Powder for Ten. Aching Feet. Sold every. Sample FRE Address, . Le Roy, N. Y. Mme. Garvagh Taft PALMIST AND CLAIRVOYANT _ Truthful in her predictions, reliable in her advice, no matter what troubla you may have with yourself or cthers. Come and she will guide you. 204 FRANKLIN STREET Up one flight, over Avery's stors. BOSTONIANS FAMOUS SHOE FOR MEN All the Newest Styles The der, ALLEN S. OLM: M. J. CUMMINGS 52 Cemtral Avenue, Norwich, Conn. Btore Closed Tuesdays and Thursdays at 6 p. m. % Telephone. Take It To Lincoln’s He Deoes All Kinds of Light Repairing. Typewriters, Keys Umbrellas, Cam- eras a speclalty, Now. located in the Steiner Block, 265 Main 8t, rooms over Disco Bros. Established 1830 FATENTS Protect your ideas. Handsome 60-page Gulde Book Free. HARRY E. BACK, Attorney-at-Law, Windham County Savings Bank Bldg. Danielson, Conn, sctiTuThs that the two men w Co. cablemen, working ir cinity. One had two bones hand broken in the aceident. othe? sustained an injury to his an. Probable Closing Aug. 14. Monday afternoon and evening A. P. s Woodward ured many signatures from business men agreeing to close their stores at noon on Aug. 14, that all may have an opportunity to attend | the gathering of the Business Men’s | associations of eastern Connecticut at | Wildwood park. i Charles Conwell of Meriden was a| yisitor with relatives here Monday. | Tyler Andrews has gone to Greene- | ville, Me., where he is to be eémployed | for the summer, with his father, Chris- | topher Andrews. RASERIT e el i PUTNAM i preia ] Mills Delayed by Low Water—$1.10 Taken From Arnold’s Market—John B. Dubuis Conmmitted to Norwich State Hospital—Long Jail Sen- tences For Stone Trowing. | Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rich motored | to Springfield, Mass., where they are | guests of relatives. I old Bowen was a visitor over | Sunday with his mother, Mrs. J. B Bowen of Laurel street. Mrs. Frederick Wells from a serious illness. Vacation Ends. After spending three weeks at her home here, Miss Verna Fuller reurn- ed Monday night to Worcester, where she is a nurse at the City hospital. Mrs. Henry F. Holbrook and Mrs. Abby Long. Woonsocket, are guests | of Henry Holbrook in Abington. is recovering Robert Brock, Abington, recently injured when hit by the tines of a horse hay fork, was a visitor in Putnam Monday. George T. Morrisson of Cambridge, Mass., was a visitor with friends here Monday. Low Water a Disadvantage. Mills in Putnam that depend on water for a part of the power. for running the plants are inconvenienced by the low water in the rivers, caus- ing some loss of time in operating machinery, Scouts to Camp. It was stated here Monday tha thirteen names ‘of boys have been r ceived for the first or second week of camp life that the Boy Scouts of Putnam are to.have at Old Killingly pond. To Decide School Consolidation, There i3 to be a regular .monthly meeting of the town school com- mittee this (Tuesday) afternoon. One of the things to he considered . will | be the consolidation of grades in the Smith Street school so that two teack ers, instead of three, will be re- | quired there, one of ‘the teachers to he transferred to the eighth grade school at the high schoel. Burglars Got $1.10. One more break has been reported to the police of Putnam. This time | the market of C. D. Arnold on Front street was entered, the guilty parties getting “through a window on the East side of the building. From the cash register, which was open, a dol- lar bill'and a dime were taken. The breaks that have occurred here re- cently are believed to be the work of_boys or yourig men. Committed ta Norwich State Hospital. At the regular monthly meeting of the selectmen Monday afternoon a de- cision was reached to commit John B. Dubols -to the Norwich State hos- pital for the insane. Dubois has been confined .in a state institution at Dan- vers, Mass., but would not be kept there on account of the fact that his heme is in Connecticut, Dubols ar- rived in Putnam, his former home, on Menday and was locked up at the po- liee station, ~During the short space of hime he ‘was kept there he tore up seme bedding-in one of the cells and set it afire. He was, then kept | under guard, : During the afternoon Dubely was talkan te WNarwich im ah - af e Sl Sy e B o Pure Food Products THE BEST 2 QUALITY ATPOPULAR PRICES Reduce the Cost of Living CUT THE COUPON FROM EACH LABEL,SAVE AND SECURE VALUABLE PREMIUMS riTemosm s mmees = = - — e — = lectmer ¢ nd. Lather { 1am found themselyes about as | lice ha ted. found the hoys, | Keith, the made in an au- | come ns a plague of smallpox. They | the nts of the latier s ! tomobile. { had little chance to work theri nefa- | that the wold west 3 & e {rious games here, though they did ap- | properly trounced, (he OFFENSIVE STONE-THROWING. |proach a number of persons and | number, taken siekhl | pleaded to be allowed to tell fortunes. 1 smashed. Befc £ Patrick J. Roach Gsts Seven Months | Telephone cals from objecting ! abou . In>Jail ‘For 'His Oftende. | in the Grove swreet shooters boy | petiv in Murray on their trai in the forehead. hap- | Tn the city court Monday morning |.° he ficer could locate { pened in the No city, | Patrick J. Roach, 35, was sentenced | they Dlad encountered Mayor where there™has been com?- | to serve seven months in jail for being | Pald Macdenald, who prompt of the reckle: Lol drunk on Saturday and for throwing | °d them out of town. ‘The i Henley o o Stones through two piate glass wine | Which had seven or eight < ade the cor in an effort | dows in a Livery Street saloon. Ior | tried to make arrangements for ed to save from being | intoxication Judge Fuller serrtenced | Bear the fair grounds, but were re- | | Roach to serve 3 ga while the s | fused a location and continued on to| One of the coinc es of Monday | tence for doing-injury to . private | Danielson, where they were again |in Putnam w { a German | property was Six months, with costs | hurried along. ; | string band, anotner one, playing in | amounting to 9.09. | Biue Books Arrive. front of the Bradley theater at the | Roach’s stunt of throwing stones The long awaited and much need- | &X s Eniay ¢l showigg the through the windows of saloons IS an | ed “hlue books” contalning the acts | Sunis of a German bund was being old one. Twice previously he-has been | of the general assembly of 1913, were | SROWR on the screen insid arrested for the same offence, once in [ received by officials here on Monday, Three Named Mills Die. Putnam, once in Danielson, and he re- | when Town Clerk IFlagg got a s A i T ceived heavy penaities each time. and distributed coples where urs [ Atamics thenl e, M1 Andrem i To. Another man sent to jail for 3 l[yx ded. st BT sidents of the | i days, from the city court Monday | ~In reading the law regardipg . the | SoP™: Jerome, -all old residents of the | A saving of from 10 to 25c on James Noble, formerly of Central Vil- | placing of lights on vehicles from one [ [OFf- have =died there withh | articl |lage. " TTe was picked up intoxicated, | nour afier sundown to sunrise _tho | PS¢ JE%, months, the, voun | every article Noble has only one leg, having lost | next morning one local attorney gave B 00 ok eRige: | the other, he in a railroad acci- | his opinion that in Putnam lights will fi"a",{efl",’]j{” o of oz, pud. FOR ONE WEEK ONLY dent in this city several years ago. | pe nece: ry on spring vehicles and 2 s s hil- | rubber-tire vehicles, as the exemption | amiliar Scenes Pleased. Dr. J. E- Sheppard Operates on Chil- | {13, 00 ights are not Fequired on such | At the Empire theater at - Mon- | dren. | vehicles in streets or portions of | gay’s shows a reel picturing the cir- At the Day-Kimball hospital Mon- | “lighted all night” by a municipality, | cug in Danielson, scenes in day morning Dr. J. E. Sheppard, the | In Putnam the street lights are turn- | that views of places and | noted throat fpecialist. who has a|ed off at 1 a. m. The terms of the | sports at North Grosvenordale proved | summer home in Woodstock, held a |act allows the court such latitude of v pleasing attraction for the aw- | — SRR RS L clinic at which the tonsils or adenoids | discretion in passing upon cases, how- ! 3 3 i A € of about a score of children were re- | ever, that it seems likely at only ‘bfi { L JALKBQN Be“ust moved. Sn,;_ral physicians from Put- | bald violations of the law might be £ 4881 U N, sUrrow towns were | punished in a city like Putnam. o A At nSny Snd Aol BE L DRI T oD ; y : ARE YOU PARTICULAR kainless Exiracting anl present. Dr. Sheppar S SUCh | wild West Boys Deprived of Air el it Rl lag o clinics every summer. the opportunity | i about your personal appea Fiiling a Specialt being a rare one for the afflicted chil- | ifles. | ance? “Your hair cut to con- illing a Specialty dren and one taken advantage of by | Following a report to the police form with the features of Z Main Straet, .+ - Willimani : their parents, who send the children | from .Dr. G. P. Perleyv of Woodstock your face by experts at Telephon not only from Piutnam. but from sur- | that he had been shot at and hit in ELLIOTT>S ot rounding towns as well the back by a missle from an air rflle BARBER SHOP, A B = | in the hands of a boy who was using ek = e g FRERE 15 00 WAL ising meduis: | Gypsy Band Hustled Out of Town. |, . Syeapon decklessly, while Dr. Per- c°'}'7\r,.’mn::f“ s | Bastern Connectiont equal to Tne Buaie A band of gypsies that visited Put- | ley was dri 2 ietin far 1o siness result ng near tnis city, the po- | For wervousnews, frritability, headachs, Sacknche, pressing- @wp palns, end other symptomo of genars! femals weakness, this compound has deen found qmick szd sife “1 think Viburn-O-Gin is the best remedy for weak wemen, It does me more good than any medicine I bave ever taken. eannot praise it stremsg enough. I think it is the best woman's medicine on earth.” 1 F¥ou'll feel ilke writing a simflar letter if you try R, Woman’s Relief Dr. Xpugers Vibura-O-Gm Compound, the womaw's remedw, 808 been know for yed¥s as “Woman'’s Mellef™ einca f#t has positively provem its great varce (o the trestment of womanly diseasés. It will belp you if you are a eufferer from eny of the fils peculiar to women, which can be reached by medicine, It has helped thousands of other sick women, as grateful istters from them cloarly describe. It econtalng =me poisonvuas drugs. 1,25 a bottle with directions: Franco-German Drug Co., 106 West 129th Street, New York AND ALL DRUGGISTS.