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DANIELSON AND DANIELSON. IBrb(hor of Patrick Hurley Located— Death of Miss Louise Fournier— Plans for Union Holy Week Services —Summer Cars Being Fitted Up. Mrs. Herbert F. Loomis of North- ampton, Mass., has been visiting with her mother, Mrs, P. B. Sibley, Mrs. Everett Maurice of Norwich has been with relatives in Danielson this week. Miss Kathryn G. Taylor will leave tonight for Warren, O., after a visit with Postmaster and Mrs. Charles A. Potter. 3 George C. Saurette of Woonsocket was a visitor with friends in Daniel- son Thursday. At Fishers Island. H. F. Glendening and Lester Bill are to spend the week end at Fishers Island. Supervisor Albert S. Ames is spend- ing this week at his home in Boston. Willis H. Shippee of the Mashentuck district is slowly recovering from an illness of several weeks. Routine business only was trans- acted at the regular monthly meeting of the Board of Trade. Hurley’s Relatives Located. Relatives of Patrick Hurley, serious- 1y injured by falling off the Cottage street railroad bridge, have been lo- cated. One brother is a resident of Kansas City. Mr, and Mrs. A. L. James, who have been residents of Los Angeles, Cal., for several years, write to local friends that they contemplate removing to To- peka, Kan., Mrs. James' former home, this summer. Mrs. Daniel T. Larkin, who has been spending the winter with her brother, George M. Wood, at New Rochelle, N. Y. has returned to Danielson. Mr. and Mrs. C. B. Hutchins of Cot- tage street have moved to the house formerly occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Danfel T. Larkin in Fast Franklin street. Close of Term. St. James’ parochial school will close today (Friday) for the Easter rec The 40-year-old horse owned by B. Stetson of Brooklyn, was given an April 1 drive and showed in surpris- ingly good condition. Union Holy Week Services. Union services for Foly Week have been arranged as follows: Tuesday evening in the Congregational churcl Wednesday evening in the Methodist | church, Thursday evening in the Bap- tist church, this to be a communion | service, Friday evening in the Congre- | gational chaurch. | Prospective Broilers, { George M. Pilling, Fredericik Shum- i | | way and A. E. Withington are among the Danielson men that have bought lots of day-old chicks from a Masss- chusetts breeder. At the EIm Vale farm in Elmville hundreds of Iittle | chicks are on hand at the beginning of April. | Fitting Up Electric Cars. | Thousands of dollars’ worth of new | equipment for the open cars of the Putnam division of the Shore Line Electric company has arrived at the Dayville barn where the cars are be- ing fitted for the coming season’s ser- vice. Will Decide Sewer Extension. The call for the annual borough meeting was issued Thursday and con- tains the fixed list of clauses as to ac- eepting reports, making appropria- tions, etc. and also calls for action on a proposition to make further sewer extensions in Mechanic street. FUNERAL. MrsMaria Feeley. Rev, Ignatiue Kost was celebrant of a requiem mass in St. oJseph’s chureh, Dayville, Thursday morning | at the funeral services for Mrs. Maria Feeley. Burial was in 8t. James' cem- etery here. The bearers were Patrick Riley, Patrick O™Neill, Bernard Moran and William Farrell.” Louis 2. Ken- | nedy was the funeral director, i — | OBITUARY. i Miss Louise Fournier. i After an illness of aseveral months Misz Louise Fournier died at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Fournier on the West Side Thursday morning just after 8 o'clock. Miss Fournter wae born in Danielson and | hes always lived here. For a time, a | few weeks ago, she was a patient at the Norwich samitorium. She was 2! vears of age on April 1. She is sur-~ vived by her father and mother and by thre® sisters, Mrs. John B. Guinois and Miss Nellie #ournier, Danielson, end Mrs. Everett Maurice, Norwich, Examination fer Fourth Class Post- masters, Tn_complience with an exscutive or- der issued by the presidemt and taken up threugh the United States Clvii Service cemmission there is to be held in Danleison on April 12, a competi- tive e inaklon for the positions of fourth class pestmasters in ail fourth class post es at whieh the an- "TTGHING AD BURNING RASH Started on Chest. Then on Left Shoulder and Arm. Nearly Driven | Crazy, Used Cuticura Soap and Cuticura Ointment. Rid of Rash: | 394 Apawan St., Fall River, Mass. — | *My trouble started mostly on the front of my body and on my chest. It was just brown spois at firs; and | it looked like freckles, and then they seemed to run in together and they i looked like rash of some | kind. It did not trouble me for almost a year and then my upper lip and my face right mear my eye broke out and it was itch~ | % =5 ing and burning all the thme. I used on 1t and it dried it up, but that was not gone good when the same rash broke out on my left shoulder and on my left arm and 1t nearly drove me crazy. I could not flecp and T could not do anything. T scratched and it made it godnto sores on my back and face. My clothing lrritated f6 something awful. T could not bear anything to touch my back at all for two weeks and it would make it itch and burn so badly I would cry out and have to take my clothes off. “T tried ——— and that did sot do any | ®ood. 1 thought I weuld g6 eut of my hSad | the way T was. Bus after I used Cuticura Soap and Ointmens they seemed 6 case me, Tonly used two cakes of Cutieura Seap and two boxes of Cutioura Olntmens and it teek two months to geb rid ef the eruptien.” (Signed) Mrs. Katle F. Silivia, Apr. 12, 1813. Cuticura Baap 256. and Cutiours Ointment 50c. are sold everywhere. Liberal sample of each malled free, with 32-p. Skin Beok. Ad- dress post-card ** Cutieura, Dept. T, Basten.” A&-Men who shave and shampee with Cu- Sicura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp. ! j nual compensation | to tour New England during {h | months ago, and N | watched PUTNAM NEWS is $180 or more, and at which the present incumbent was not appointed under the civil ser- vice regulations, It so happens that the examination | as the prescription othine—double to be held here is only for fourth- |strength is guaranteed to remove | class postmasters in the state of Rhode | these homely spots. = Island, and Danielson is the only Con- Simply get an ounce of othine—1{ necticut town named as a place for | double strength—from any druggist taking the examinations. The exam- |and apply a little of it night and inations are for appointments of 48 Rhode Island post offices of the fourth class and it is expected that a con- siderable number of candidates will come here to take the examinations. The offices at Foster Center, Potter Hill, Rockland, South Scituate, Summit are among those in the list for which examinations will be taken. SCIENTIFIC POTATO GROWING. Brooklyn Farmer Going Into the Bus iness on An Increased Scale. An increased acreage for potatoes | in* Killingly, Brooklyn and other sur- rounding towns is indicated for the season now opening. Success in gro ing and disposing of the tubers at sat- isfactory prices during the last few years warrants the increase in pro- duction. One farmer in the town of Brooklyn, a grower of several thousand ‘bushels of potatoes last year, has two carloads of seed potatoes en route to Danielson, which he predicts, will with- in the next ten vears he the scene of shipments during the fall season of § to 10 carloads of potatoes a day to the New York and Boston marKets_ This grower has made a fine cess of this special branch of farming and what he has to say about it is well worth believing. ~ PUTNAM Possibility of Mail Car Restoration— Divorce for Mrs. Florence Riquier— Thomas Baker Dead—Actress Sces Herself in Movies—Plans for Clean- Up Week in May. Harold S. Corbin, who has iting friends in Putnam, lef sted Thursday afternoon. Selig Goldman of Worcester w een vi for Win- a| visitor with friends in town Thursda John A. Rich of Worcesier was a er Wednesday. ", Averill has been a recent | iends in Worceste s M. Soper will sing the The Pi Street Tangoing Taboo. ecause he Insisted upon doing t - FRECKLES ball | amendm Now is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots i< There's no longer the slightest need of feeling ashamed of your freckles, morning and you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom ; that more than an ounce is needed to completely clear the skin and gain a beautiful clear complexion. | Be sure to ask for the doumble strength othine as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. H ing at 10.30. The docket is as follows: Louisa F. Adams vs. Edward P.| Adams; Albertus F. Wood vs. The A. . Wood Co.; & Burns Mfg. Co. Milton K. William N. Pot- | ter, imr., vs. Mary Turner; Alice) Cailouette vs. Dona igny. ! Trial list, to jury aid Haddad vs. ‘Willimantic Gas & Electric Light Co., at Willimanti To court—Lester town of Hampton; L. S, H. Burnham vs. Imogene Arnold, | s. Charles A. Capen. i gnments, to court—First Wed- | ay, April 1, Florence Riquier ‘vs. Ovid Riquier; second Wednesday,April 1, Arthur J. Maynard vs. Helen Sumner. Connelly to Have Place in Outfield. Joe Connelly, a Boston paper says, is probably the only member of the Bos- onal league baseball team of n that will have a regular po- tative stock. field for the campaign is showing in r form this hitting the ball with might nd is secure as a regular. Connelly pitched for one of Putnam’s fast teams a half dozen and at that time was ma me in Woonsocket, He was il pitcher, too, cleaning up most of the teams that came to t Smilin eity. Getting better as he went alo he was induced to go into the mi west, and for a while was with the Rock 1 land ast season he baseball and a heavy hitter, itial in a base- to stay in teamn big leag Connelly i that player that big show. Addressed Union Services. Rev. Walter E. Lanphear of Hartford | spoke at a union service held in the | ng: tional church Thursday even- | ing in the inte e proposed to the ition of the issed, will ted S COLLECTORS in Danielson We wish to announce that in future '&’N.' Green Stamp col- i lectors in Danielson may exchange their books at our Premium Par- lors in either Norwich or Putnam. By combining our displays in this way, we are able to offer you a larger and more varied display of 4*A’ Premiums, thereby making it possible for you to choose the Premium you want from a represen- You may exchange your <" Stamp Books at our Premium Par- Express office in Danielson. chandise from which to make your selection, OTICE! To All 7 STAMP lor, 37 Shetucket Street, Norwich, Conn., or 10 Elm Street, Putnam, Conn., and your Premiums will be delivered at either the Freight or You will have a larger variety of mer- and our Danielson friends will receive the same careful attention as heretofore. The Sperry & Hutchinson Co. ¢ PREMIUM PARLCOCRS 37 Shetucket Street, Norwich, Conn. 10 Elm Street, Putnam, Conn. prohibi sale of tango—a tango of the wobbly, hesit alcoholic liquors T PLAINFIELD tion variety—in the streets of the city Miss Hazard to Speak. locked up at the police station. i Al bl ington Barber Used to Catch Trout. vices at the Methodist ¢ sl An unusually large audlence for the | V' ¢ - 3 . morning and evening. Mi 30 train going west Wednes- Lenten/season witnessed the production | po sy missionary fleld ing set three fir ) of the elght reel feature picture, The Volunteer Organist, at the RBradley | theater Thursday Mail Car Restoration. A letter received by L. O. Willian secreta of the Putnam Bt Men's association, from an offic the railway postal that "the matter the railway service receives official no- tice of the change of schedule. g Divorce for Deserted Wife: Tn the superior court here Thursday Florence Riqui as granted a divorce from Ovid Riquier on the ground of desertion. The case was uncontested Trial was before Judge Mil Shumway. Riquier deserted hi soon after their marriage in this a few vears ago, and has not since liv- | ed with her. OBITUARY. Thomas Baker. Thomas at his home in Pomfre had been a resident there for about years, and had been empioved a farmer and as a nurseryman. He leav a wife and four children. Claims $175 Due for Work. A case tried before Judge Shumway in the superior court Thursday was that of Arthur Baker, aged about 60, died | Thursday. M. A here nard vs. Helen F. h Putnam. Maynard f $175, which he ims due him f work done for the defendant She claims that she made a coniract with Mr. Maynard to do the work for $1¢ tender. Atto: was counsel and ( n i and that she had made ney J. F. Carpenter the plaintiff, Tor the defendant. Deci reserved by the cour REHEARSING AT BRADLEY. | Loftus Stock Company to Remain Two | Weeks—Miss Mathes Sees Herself in | Movies. | The Loftus Stock company. which is| spring | and summer, has ¢come to Putnam to remain for two weeks for rehearsals a the adley theater during the morn- ing. With the company as leading lady Clara Mathes. Thursday Mi Mathes came 10 the theater and learn ed that for the alternoon piciure show | the feature picture The V nteer Or- ganist was to be shown. This was of | ial interest to Miss Math d for the production the drunkar'd; Mathes had not s they were not de- | for release before | 1 to go on tour. So tended the matinee and herself as many others have | watched her—in the picture— th a zreat deal of interest seen the pictur veloped and T she was obli Thursday she 1dy CLEAN-UP WEEK. | Meeting Tonight to Perfect Organiza- | tion for May 4-9. This (Friday) evening there is to be a meeting in Odd Fellows’ hall to per- fect an organization for clean-up weelk, May 4-9. The advance work that has been done to arouse interest has been | successful, but the desire is to arouse everyone into lending a hand to fur- ther a project that will be of general ! benefit to the city and its people. At this evening’s meeting it is expected | that a chairman of the clean-up organ- ization will be selected and commit- tees named to take up the work of financing the campaign, providing for teams, publicity, co-operation, etc. The Business Men's association has a com- mittee appointed to represent it in the ' campaign, this committee consisting of | Rev, C. J. Harfiman, Ulric Beausoliel and Clinton S. Andem. ('o-operation of children in the schools has been prom- ised in furthering the ends for which | the campaign has been inaugurated | SHORT CALENDAR SESSION. | Judge Shumway to Preside in Superior 1[ Court Today. There is te be a short calendar ses- sion of the superior court here this (Friday) morning, with Judge M. A. Shumway presiding, the session open- and pr that time to for several vears. er and ¢ forenoo Pro Kelley Convicted. cars Wec nd Plai Talks on Missions. 1,800 men, re of At one was | va- of St E Deacone: »on and was ionary iendly Mrs. Hudsor on missioms:- Sanford cha g addressed with y afte woman m Girls’ with a talk Club Meets. Plainfleld Woman's ¢ thirty minutes’ | T be “sen be tenced | by are " g """mw"‘w‘q | ! a pl their friends with the resuit ant literary and social mem;ng| with Mrs, Kingsley Thursday after- trip noon. { R An Old-Time Fisherman, | MISSING BOY SAID The trout ermen with their TO BE WITH GYPSI=S | Letter Saying He Was Kicked by a Horse Regarded as Hoax. nted flies, expensive poles and handy ts (often empty) herman of t The detectives of seven- line and hook in his pocke tle tin box of worms, cut a « the way to the brook and seldom r urned without a fine string n :)n”:;!urhullsu( k which he had owner of the . fearing ar- the side of the brook. He e had bu the body, is a hoax went alone. The old gentleman smiled have dropped that feature of the quietly to see a party start to this comclu- er in the same ed stating tieft hoax and that a band of gyp- modern fishing outfits and nned to them on their h a tempting string of could purchase for a small on their return to the and will be brim full of health builders if the foods it carries are made with Cottolene Pastries, doughnuts and all foods are far more digestible when made with Cottolene. Physicians and expert dieticians have passed the verdict of science in favor of this clean, food-bettering product. Cottolene is pure and wholesome and should be used in all cookery. 2-3 cup Cottolene; 2 1-2 cups sugar; can be stirred in). Order a pail of Cottolene and just try these crisp wafers. The children will adore the cook who makes this: COTTOLENE FAIRY GINGERBREAD 1-2 cup sweet milk; 3 eggs; 1 teaspoon soda; 1 tablespoon ginger; 7 cups flour (or enough to mix as stiff as can be rolled). Cream Cottolene and sugar, add beaten eggs, soda dissolved in sweet milk and ginger. Add flour (as much as Roll to about one-eight inch thickness, in a sheet to cover bottom of a large, low baking-pan, score with fancy rolling-pin or springerle stamps, sprinkle with sugar and bake to a very delicate brown. Cut apart and remove quickly by passing knife underneath and stand on edge in a pan to cool. = Use Cottolene in all cooking, always using one-third less than you would of butter or lard, because Cottolene really goes farther. Cock Book, HOME HELPS. Do it NOW. Also send to us for the valuable FREE [ERK FAIRBANK Seany] CHICAGQ