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ORWICH BULLETIN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1913 | Willimantic, Dani‘elson and WILLIMANTIC and the supervising of the conmstruc- | town clerk's office, resumed her du- tion work. from $8,000 to $9.000; school | ties Tuesday, after her annual sum- furnishings, $13.000: heating, about | mer vacation. What ls Geing on Tenight. $12,000; thermostat arrangement, | Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Pelton, who have, Jadies’ Onthollc Benevolent A: about $300: vacuum cleaning arrange- | been visiting Arthur P. Ellsworth, Bastern Star lodge, No. 44, A ment about $1,200. Main street, have returned to their B Masonis Hell jarLlie blds foF il (hermostat reu- | home At Springfieid. Mass. 8 loag W. R. C. No. 25, G |lator were: Nationa! egulator com- Miss Minnie McCracken, cashier in P — pany, New York, $§35; Johnson Ser-| ne telephone exchange, returned to g (ounnany, New. Yok, “2_9 her duties Tueesday after a vacation SCHOOLS OPEN, \:‘;’i"x{f Regulator company, New |irjp to Westfield and other places. = — The vacuum cleaners bids were: |, Ci H. Caswell, director of music Large Enroliment of Migh School Berger | Manururtaing - company, |in. Bie public ‘schaols. of. this ‘town, Temporary Quarters—343 at Nat- | Charles W. Day, Hartford, Conn., |&nd his family, returned from Cres- T Seee ament, | 8L24280; Shencer TErbINe | Couwell resuming his - school | work Vacations gave w to vocations | Vacuum Engineering company, New | Tuesday. Tuesday The Windham High scho York, $1.749, began its fall term with Principal E. o3 JEWE'” “,iTY B e = (hrtits Jhthe | Attending Convention. SRl ings were U Town bulld | twage w. Webster, formeriy chief of | Cominga and Geings of Borough Resi- batlding s The attend- | (e Wilimantic fire department ad | = dente—Conference of Churches at ance was large from Windham and the | Ghie Thomas P. Foley, are to attend | potieres Essaading towns g o he annual convention of the Inter § Surrounding towns, the frst day beiug | {1} nal Assoclation of Fire Engineers BT o St tadi L TEAR . g York this week, the conven- | Mrs. J. E. Phillips, Mr. ana Mrs. A. Possible. T iy iy Gtores & tion ending Saturday night with a|M. Brown and family have returned e o Dook cupply stores did [0, 0t 2t the Hotel Astor. | trom Mrs. Phillips' cottage at Groton SRS E ambitions giris — | Long Point. Rev. and Mrs. Allan Spi- Preparing for a years CITY COURT. | dell “and family went to tiroton Long .y il 8 by | P ot to spend some time at the same " school, w Princ Fine for Bicycle Thief—Frank Leis |cottage. - e gE Tl oy ot g A ave T | John Biake, Jr. is spending a week in charge regls | Makes Trouble in Various Ways. |, R0 AN 0 15 Shenort” » 9, he | Judge Shea fined Frank Leis $5 and 'heen a recent guest of Miss Florence building will be | costs for taking a bicycle beloNging | preemen R o . k| T Wesahk i SoSom, Mon- | Meund Mrs. Deve Jack of Belige- oad gy e b e | . o eI b R e 5 o S Or | port are at Mrs, Jack's mother's, Mrs, o conveniences | intoxication and suspended judsment | Juh’ Haves's, for. two weeks, school opened | it v e s ShetEs e | s R Mra Avthuvr B Switor =6 P |1t yus staisd In court thet atter lLels |piGwinence were guests at Mre. B M. an unusually large |3 4 Monday night on bonds | ELqridence were su tary’s school wiil the house of Mrs. Jacob | g S pen .ne: i RS Ry or & g Dr. and Mrs. T. C. Tiffany and Miss B o My ot 2 and called her and all the | guih Tiffany of South Manchester, Iag of the bu 5 i T and Y rostitutes. | Miss Sarah Avery of Groton and Mis L H taymond, who was mixed up In | Njuo Chandler of Safford Springs are —_——— e rumpus that Chief Richmond and guests at J. H. Tracy's NORWICH FIRM e a5y e et peogdueli] i, and. Mrs. Phter Valllancoyr and Gets Contract for New High School Building at $115,000—The Bids. he new rd meeting at the Methodist awarded r scheduled for t (Wednes- 1 he ening is postponed. Mrs. Nu- bid onsin this evening and it is he station after the long trip re Boosting the Fair. e farmers, ou all going to | HIRAM N. FENN make the Willimantlc fair, this,| e BALL 1 red letter one? Let's all try | AKER and EMEBALMER| )P e tan dd. ToL fhe € aurch w maatic, Ct ‘ s th e the last vear we Lady as | n people wha we can do.i everything you can and make | = e e exhibition building look crowded JAY M. SHEPARD |07 once. Tets this one_the suc.esding EL” ORE & SHEPARD | how them all that we ity P | L funeral Ciectyr and Embalmer | - ¥4 5 Sha Tl Personal. 60-62 North St., Willimantic ’ Springfleld relatives entertilned | Lz=gy Assistant Tel. Connectior. | J Me( abor day Irs. J J. Kelley and son, “'l\-‘ e guests of relatives In Stam- | 1 Williams of Pawtucket, R. I, s e est of Rev. W, O. Nuzum and Patrick Dovle, the capitol guide at | Hartrord visted his fatbier In ihis eiey DR. F. C. JACKSON, Deatist | L Smith and family re- : g A | Monday from their summer | Fainless Exiracting and 1 Iampshir o. v s 1 El Ellia Prospect Filling a Specialty | <ure. ing her sister, Mrs. H ez in Straet, . - Willimantic B S e Telephone St e L DL U Pastor Has to Meet Wife. Johnson of Lynn, Mass. Auto &LNG DISTANCE WORK A SFECIALTY Addenmn Truflg fioving P. A, WEEKS, or "Phone 23 .2 or 4-& Willimantio Ct friends. work in New York who work fa Brooklyn, N. Y spenc his home i assistant in whose sum- Windham, has is n Wiurray's Boston Store WILLIMANTIC, CONN. Children’s Raincoats, Capes and Umbrellas FOR SCHOOL DAYS In getting the children ready for school it is a good thing to | remember the Raincoat and Umbrella. defy the vagaries of September weather. Children’s Raincoats at $3.50. Children’s Capes in blue, red and tan, at $2 ildren’s Umbrellas 50c, 75c and $1.00. CHILDREN’S SCHOOL HOSE black, tan and white, at 38c pair. It is also important to | get them before the rainy season sets in, then you are ready ta | -Mend Sc Hose for and) Children's Black and Tan School | s. heavy ribbed, fast black. 25¢ pair. | Hose, heavy ribbed, 123c pair. s Medium Weight Ribbed S ack, white and tan, 25¢| Children’s “Onyx” Silk Hose in THE H. C . MURRAY GO, Wherewithall” Everybody needs it, of course. Everybody is going to need it mors in the future, too, when the earning capacity is less than during _youth or middle-age. The best way to be sure to some THEN is to save a little —a little at a tim ofte: have How litt'e The Willimantic Savings Institute ' | H. c. MURRAY, President. N. D. WEBSTER, Treasurer, | son_of Lowell, Mas at_T. A. Rioux’s. Miss Delphine Beauregard is in Bos- {ton today and Thursday The conference of churches is held at the Pachaug church toda; STarr ORD SPRINGS spent Labor day Faulkner Mill Putnam | DANIELSON Lawyers and Expert Arrive to Examine Savings Bank Books—Prisoner Gets 120 Days—Death of Theodore Kenn dy» Who Has a Son in Norwicn, | Miss Vinnie E. Shaw leaves this week for Worcester and other cities to spend her vacation of two weeks. { James J. Corcoran has leased Co- lumbia hall in Dayville and picture shows are to be conducted there un- Hyde Park, Mass Miss Hattie Houghton of Providence | nas been the guest of Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Armington. James P. Marsh of Hartford was a visitor with friends in town Tuesday. Committee to Receive Governor. Judge Harry E. Back, Attorney Sabin Russell, clerk of the Connecticut e of representatives, and Edward A, Sullivan have been named as committee to receive Gov. Simeon E Baldwin when he comes to Brooklyn for the fair, Sept. 24. Officers Hold Over. S hout { | | The annual meeting of the Phoenix Building company whs called for Tuesday, but was adjourned without any business being transacted. officers of the company | for_another year. | 'No ane here has knowledge as to The will hold over when the $7,000 appropriated for the the last legislature is to be used for repairing the state ar- mory. but it is believed that the work will be done this fall Examinina Savings Bank Books. Attorney Stewart N. Dunning and purpose by torney Raiph O. Wells, counsel for the state bank commissioners, with William P. Landon, expert accountant, came here Tuesday to examine books of the Windham County Savings bank, | by permission granted by Judge Hol- { comb in the superior court at Putnam last Friday, and agreed to by counsel | for the bank. OBITUARY. Samuel R. Owens der his management Mrs. Mary Reed of High sireet is en- tertaining - Miss Winifred Bolles of | PUTNAM First Prisoner from Windham County Committed to Cheshire Reformatory —Guertin-Bellerose Wedding—Open- ing of the Schools. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Rich have re- turned from a vacatien spent at Gro- ton. Miss N. F. Goddard, who has been staying with Mrs. Samuel Hopkins since her return from a Worcester hospital, has gone to her hame in Wor- cester. Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Sharpe have returned from a vacation spent at one of the Rhode Island beach resorts. Mr. and Mrs. George Holbrook of Woonsocket have been guests of Dep- uty Sheriff and Mrs. George F. Hol- brook. Attorney George Hinman of Willi- {mantic was In Putnam Tuesday. Guild Meeting. Mrs, Hiram Whipple will have the {members of the Ladies’ guild of St. | Philip’s church at her home for a | meeting tomorrow (Thursday) after- noon. Plans will be discussed for the a| fat 4 Fire Throws 100 Out| mue boay of Samuel R, Owens, who of Work—Strong Evidences of In-|died at Cranston, R. L, was brought cendiarism—Third Woolen Mill Fire [ here Tuesday and taken to the under- taking rooms of L. E. Kennedy r. s U il N | Gwens formerly lived in Danielson, ner ‘mill early ‘Sunday morning has | Where burial is (o take place. The de thrown over 100 hands out of employ- ‘;"‘"‘ Sana e = e Con o8 1 o having served as a member of Com ment and has cast a gloom over the | DaVINg served os a member of ° borough. This is the third woolen in- | PaNY C, First Co ¢ ;i dustry in this town which has been Theodore Kennedy. wiped out by fire in less than three | Thecdore Kennedy, who would have | vears. "None has been rebullt and |been 88 years of age had he lived un- | there 'is little prospect of the present | til Sept. 10, died at the home of Alvero | | plant being rebuil Kennedy in Mcosup valley early Tu Louis Feddler, dyer at the|day morning. The body was taken | Faulkner mill, vy loser by |later in the day to the rooms of Funer- | the fire. He had several important |al Director Louis E. Kennedy, a rela- | formulas and recipes for mixing dye [ tive, in Danielson | stuffs burned and some of them he | The deceased was very well known is unable to replace. Mr. Faulkner | anjelson, where he lived for many has not vet made any plans for the for a long time conducting the future and probably will not until the insurance is adjusted. There is a gen- | eral feeling in the community that the fire was incendiary. The opinion based principally upon the peculi manner in which the fire was discov- ered. The fire was bursting through the windows of the picker room and ai the same iime there was a_brisk blaze in the finishing room which was |In the lower end of the wooden build- ing fully 175 feet from the picker | room which occupied the second floor of the stone building. Michael Hanni- those davs house, house known boarding boarding in the Sherman years Mr. Kennedy made his home on the West Side. | After leaving Danielson Mr. and Mrs. Kennedy moved into the Moosup valley | section.” Mrs. Kennedy lost her life a | few vears ago when she entered her burning home to secure some things ‘hat were about to be destroyed in the fan, the night watchman, is unable | flames, she evidenily being overcome to give a_satisfactory explanation of | by smoke and being unable to make how or where the fire originated. To | her way out of the building, and it was | him the fire seemed to be everywhere | beyond the power of anyone to rescue | at once and he dld not wait for cer- | her. | emony when he discovered it and did | For a number of vears past Mr. | not get a _chance to ring the mill bell | Kennedy has been so crippled that he ‘ to give the alarm, was able to move about only with great | Holiday Observance. | difficulty. All of those who knew him | The stores and some of the mills |Temember him as of very kindly dis- were closed Labor day, but as there | Position and a friend anvone would be were no local attractions many spent | Donored to have. s number attended the Connecticnt fair | George Kennedy and wa ] ) e Ol amy onneout MIC | fown. ofidsontsr, R ‘T, abolit\two jntiés Lo fhw Cuneot Tha” fterncin. aod’ sve. | from: the’ Tine store Mr. Kennedy Rt Crsatl Taks : | leaves a son, Albert. of Norwich, and a e e | daughter, Mrs. Josephine McCundler, Borough Briefs. | resident in Caiifornia. Frank S. Ken- | Harold Pierce, Walter Pease and |nedy, Charles Kennedy, Dayville, Na- | Giibert Wagner ‘of Pittsfleld were in |than W, Kennedy and William L. Ken- | town over Sunday and Labor day ‘nhd\ of Putnam are nephews of the | John Tobin of ‘Passaic, N. J. has |deceased. | been pending a fow davs with rei- | R R N atives in town | y g N | Favorable reports are received from | Mrs. Ann Marla (Bowen) R ee | Juiss Lilian Benton, who underwent|peen totally blind and bedridden for o e SPEDE the past two or (hree 'years. She P e mes Clark of Wor- | 1eaves no relatives nearer than grand- a son-in-law, Oliver Ben- | coster “Spent Labor day with refa- | children and a son-in-law, O | tives in_the borough. [ mett, tformerly of Fast Killingly, now | The Hospital Ald society cleared |Tesident in Anthony, R. 1 e’ body | g10 e Hospital Ald Soclety Sieared | was taken to the undertaking rooms of | store last week. L. Kennedy. ‘ Carl H. Mullins has entered a bus- Silo at Town Farm. {1 ollege in Hartford, At the town farm at Dayville a silo | | has been built for Superintendent | | Leavens, through an order of the se- | | lectmen” of Killingly. Since taking { charge of the farm Mr. Leavens has | Warm Days b Special Bargains this week to close out our 1 SUMMER FURNITURE SCREEN DOORS SCREEN WINDOWS Buy now for next sea- son and save money. LINCOLN'S Furniture Store Main and Union Streets, WILLIMANTIC, - - . - . CONN. relephone ATTORNEYS A,T LA\f/ Erown & Perians, iltemeys-at-lan vier it cat ok - . Lce slairway next to Thue na tank Telephome 3.3 EDWIN W. BIGGINS, Ateraes-reLaw, maride Shannan Bulldime, done much toward building it up and | at the present time has 18 head of cat- | tle there, three times as many as when I he came to the farm. It is expected | that the building of the silo will per- | mit keeping more cows and at a lesser | cost than would be possible without it, | | | GIVEN 120 DAYS. Liguor Gets Long Jail Term for Frank Lebrecque. Frank Lebrecque of Attawaugan in the town court Tuesday morning ‘was sentenced by Judge Harry E. Back to serve 120 days in Brooklyn jall, 30 days of the sentence being for intoxi- cation, 90 days for breach of the peace. Lebrecque was arrested by Deputy Sherift Martin Grimshaw, and the offi- cer says that he relieved Lebrecque and the latter's wife of the revolver they were struggling for when he reached their home, which for squalor surpassed anvthing he had ever seen. The Lebrecques have three children. | OVER $2,700 | For Town from Outside Pupils Whe Attend Public Schoal | Figures compiled by John A. Paine, secretary of the town school commit- tee, show that this town will receive for' tuition from towns and from pri- vate individuals for pupils who at- tended the public schools in Killingly | during the school year that closed last June an amount in excess of $2.700, the Ereat percentage of this coming from | the town of Brooklyn. which is repre- | sented by a considerable body of stu- | dents 1n (he high school. The town of | Foster, R. I, will also payv a heavy tui- | tion charge’ to Killingly, with smaller | amounts from persons resident in—or the fowns th lves of Sterling, L terhurs &a Clankia | Schools Open With Increased Enroll- | ment, | Al of the schools in Killingly, pub- | e and parochial, opened for the schos vear Tuesday morning. For the first time since last June the hundreds of { pupils trovped through the streets on | their way to the various buildings | where they study, While the total of registrations in the town was not avaliabis ¥ uesday.ion adgenmt af ithe widely scattered locations of the huild- ings, figures received show that the at- | tendance is considerably in excess of what it was when the schools closed in June, due to the fact that manufactur- ing concerns in town are now employ- ing more help than was the case early in the summer, the new families bring- ias in many additional childram as on | Maple street, where many of the op- eratives employed in what is now | | known. as the Danielson Cotton com- | | pany mill made their homes. In later | fall and winter. Funeral of Alice H. Keene. afternoon fun- At Eastford Tuesday eral services were held at the Meth- odist church for Alice H. Keene. Bur- ial was in Eastford Franl A. Cameron, of Fitchburg, Mass. was a visitor with friends here Tuesday. The new rails in Front street were laid Tuesday sufficiently early to al- low running the first car over them 5. Passengers were being trans- ferred over that part of the line dur- ing the da There was some excitement in th cify Tuesday forencon when it w reported that a local young man w probably a passenger on one of the trains wrecked near North Haven, but the report was soon discredited. Opening of School Year. All schools opened in the town of Putnam Tuesday. The first day was given over chiefly to organization, but the real study of the vear will mence in earnest. Minerva Not to Be Presented at This Term. seems probable that Guiseppi Minerva, held at Brooklyn jail by Cor- oner A. G. Bill in connection with the shooting of Frank Roze, will not be brought into the superior court for some time, as there will probably be no more criminal business in Putnam It iring the September term of court, tate Attorney Charles E. Searls said Tuesday afternoon Mrs. C. M. Green of 41 Fremont reet returned home after a month in the Berkshires Mr. and Mrs. George Gilbert, of Le eir children days with city. have Mrs. Mass., wi h th few parents in this Healey—Shea. Worcester, Sh ingfield, Mass, ed In this city Tuesday af- Attorney Mahlon H. Gelss- F. Heale. and John Miss Mary were m ternoon by ler. SENT TO CHESHIRE. Arthur G. Edwards First Prisoner to Be Committed to Reformatory from Windham County—Other Cases Dis- posed Of. Mareus H. Holcomb presided sion of the superior court opened here Tuesday afternoon o'clock for the disposition of isiness. Prayer was offered D. Sargent. MG Judge the which criminal Rev seph ¥ lainfel s | was given a sentence of charged with breakina and entering, on May 22, a building" in Plainfleld owned by Benjamin Tucker, was the first_prisoner presented. Attorney H. C. Bradferd was appelnted his guar- dian ad litem. The prisoner’s first plea was not guilty, but he later changed this to guilty and was sen- tenced to serve one vear in jall. Mc- Garry sald that he is single and that he was born in Louisville, P. Q. Arthur G. Edwards, 19, of North Scituate, R. I, was another minor pre- September 9, RACE PROG When ready for his final plea Ed- wards was again taken from the pris- oner's dock. State Attorney Searls stated to the court that Edwards, while employed by Jared A. Gallup of the | town of Sterling, had taken Mr. Gal- lup's checkbook from the pocket of a garment hanging in a room at the Gallup home, and had drawn a check for $8.50 on the R. I. Hospital Trust company in favor of Arthur G. Ed- wards and had forzed the signature of Jared A, Gallup thereto. Mr. Searls further informed the court that Bd- wards had taken the check to Clark | Whitford In Oneco and presented it for cashing; also that Edwards had made a confession and had pleaded gullty in the lower court. Mr. Searls also told the court that Mr. Gallup had been In the habit of paving Edwards for labor from time to time with checks. Edwards pleaded guilty. Judge Holcomb sentenced Edwards to the state reformatory at Cheshire, 2.22 Pace .... 2.19 Trot 2.11 Pace 2.18 Pace 2.14 Pace 2.30 Trot MOTORCYCLE AND RU i Edwards being the first person ever . sentenced in Windham county to serve Premiums—1st $50 2nd $40 | time in the new Institution, where he a 4 % may be kept for as much as five vears, | Liberal Premiums in All though the indefinite. Patrick sentence of the court was | Clifford, 40, Willimantic, 0 days in jail WILLIMANTIC FAIR | sented in court. He was (;‘harged with forgery, committed In the town of Steniing. ‘Tudge Oliver B Getty was TUESDAY appointed by the ceurt his guardian i 225 Tot or'Pace .... ... .. 0 ux WEDNESDAY THURSDAY AEROPLANE, WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY BALLOON AND VAUDEVILLE EACH DAY GRANGE EXHIBIT 10, 11 RAMME . .Purse $200 .. Purse $300 Purse $500 Purse $300 Purse $500 Purse $500 Purse $500 NNING RACES 3rd $20 Departments 4th $10 for breach of the peace. There was | SR s Shes e an additionsl charge of Intoxication, | if, Serve from 80 fo 270 days ecach Y onpere M, ao R A But this was nolled By the court at| ™ tiorney M. H. Gelssler. represent- though h 3ks in' Massachusetts, | S e O the Mourt “thot™tY pad |ing Morrison, said that it was evi- |work harged with obtaining | ath Musistant Prosont e had ldent that imprisonment did not help 'go sretenses, has been [{a1ked wih Seiatant Trosecuting AL |the prisonar’ to “rid ihimself of. the | most of the summer it SAg, RO o | drink habit, and that he believed that | and nderstood to be ready to | Willimantic and that there was noth- | gripiing with him was more of a dis- | stand tria Ing speclal to say against Clfford, ex- | case than a crime. Attorney Geiss- | What criminal business remains on cepting that he had allowed Uauor 19 |jer sald that Morrison was an A-11the docket for the term will probably & e best o and had struck |0 %50, "% fne worker when sober. | be disposed of at Willimantic later in e nying been In Jall await- | Judge Holcomb sentenced Morrison | the month. At Tuesdar's session ev- ing trial since July 21, Attorney Searls | LG i e rmont e A T s sesgion eV iin jail would prove sufficient punish- \dfl = f’ being & ‘common drunkard, ment, which suggestion was followed ;‘i:,nl“‘;r sun&dms % by_the court |& bt Bl oL : 182 Hllingly Macchi Carlo, Boston, arrested in WEDDING. 3 | ;pTomepn Liverty, Killingly. sentenced i anivton on June 14 for breaking and | 2 | acoieing s fotal of 120 fave in’ sari | entering a freight car that was being Guertin—Bellerose, | for having been intoxicated and for |used a8 a home by doseph Vechie and | S Mary's church at 8 o'clock | breach of the peace, he appealing from | Other waITFOAC SCLER H e st i Aldor Guertin and | the sentence, received an additional | Ing the car of wearing apparel (Wi rose, both of this city, 30 days, Judge Holcomb after Lib- |razors. a revolver ant thines (o eat it ' nuptial mass of {erty had pleaded gulty, sentencing |Pleaded gullty and was sen/Chcec (o Adrian Dykemans was ¢§l= | him to serve 30 days for Intoxication |ferve ofe VEET 1T 38 . OO €O A reception followed at the | and 120 ays for breach of the peace. | ImPosing a fine of 825 upon the o ome of Mr. and Mrs. Henri Guertin, | Prosecuting Attorney Arthur G. Bill |oner for having Been CErTVInE TORECR - | Mill street. 'Mr. and Mrs, Guertin are lof the Killingly court explained the ed weapons at t 7 2 AW m their wedding trip. | aggravated nature of Liberty's of- rested. i fensea and that the prisoner was not | At the instance of the state attorn = = particularly jealous of his liberty, hav- X bley called the bond | ing previously been sentenced in the :Vs,;-g ‘fi‘;%»dnrwlv&""{; Je fomien yaot B -‘.;_ srre Refiable Killingly court on Dec. & qli05 \when | itorney toid the court that the woman | 4k V¥ €4 Y » f 309, eIV 00 had admitted taking the mone b e - 7 T e R TG e R Bt jad Twier returned it to | Relief from the ailments caused and wh o ive L e e : : another heavy jall sentence. Liberty :'}P o iy had I T sl hond s i y disordered smmagh,' to}'pld got about 70 s additional in jail{hag QBAPPESTe® hall numver of | liver, irregular bowels is given D e e e Mener eoure " | oriminal cases Temaining it was ac- | —quickly, safely, and assur- Another Killingly man, James Mor- [ ¢ided not to have the jury come in| edjy—by the tried and reliable ris Dayville, got a stiff sentence. ml‘:" ,L\,\“f:,‘l’{“":fi‘.km;‘ffi{“f, gl He®vas charged with being a common | Planned last weck, and coun wos | ] drunkard and had appealed from a |ad e g Shart: calendaz] | gentence of 170 dave imposea on s | wharS e w5 enox \dar | in the town court of Killingly on June | Session. gl | 16. Judge Bill, who prosecuted him | The date for_vh» trial of the st |1n’the iower court, produced & record umnh Ten/ B #p sommence mext | PI of Morrison's arrests, show. n ay, has been advanced, as At- | o o had ainte Tune I 1808 | forney Frenk B Howarth of this cliv, | bes 15 times presented before the |representing Mr. e0's Interests, in- | ek 2 o court of Killingly and sentenced | formed the state attorney that he does | Sold everywhere. In boxes, 10c., 26c. | T T il il | L Uil Pure Foods save you money ‘VERY housewife in this town will jump at this chance to reduce the cost of living without reducing the quality of what you eat. All kinds of purefoodsare packed under the Serv-us Brand. Highest Quality — Popular Prices Use Serv-us Brand Foods and see for yourself the actual saving in prices and besides, get the Valuable S@'V~JIS Coupons which appear on and can be cut from every package of Serv-us Brand Foods. Serv-us Brand Foods are packed in sanitary packages and in accordance with the U. S. Pure Food Laws. Order Serv-us Brand —the kind with the orange and purple label. You can get every- thing you need and also have the benefit of popular prices and the coupons. The Serv-us Coupons Are a Profit to You Get new furnishings and new comforts for yourself and your home with them. Start to collect right away. Buy Serv-us Brand goods —all kinds. You get coupons with every Serv-us product. Trade with the local dealer who sells Serv-us, and it will not take long before your ¢oupons will get beautiful silverware, a handsome comb, a fine chain and locket, dainty china, furni- ture, musical instruments, toys, and a thousand ‘other useful and beautiful things, all shown in the Serv-us Gift Catalog. Serv-us Coupons are printed on the labels or are enclosed in the packages and you can get the catalog by writing to department C, Universal Advertiser’s Sharing Syndicate, 332 S. Michigan Ave., Chicago. Your grocer has Serv-us Brand products or can get them from The L. A. Gallup Co &’3‘.‘2"‘::‘::3‘."5‘::::’.’.‘.‘ e il and get many beautiful thingsfor yourself and your home Large List i