Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 14, 1914, Page 9

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—Turk Rev. Alferie Chartier, M. S, main with relatives in this vicinity for about two eeks before returning to r “where he is to be stationed. Burdette C. Hopkins left Monday for a vacation to be spent at Quonochon- ‘taue. Prescott Smith of Boston is spend- ing his vacation at his home in Dan- ielson. § At the Beach. . __Mr. and Mrs. Harold Bigelow of ‘Worcester, who have been visiting here, have gone to Quonochontaug. - Rev. J. P. Guinet, M. S. Hartford, wae in Danielson over Sunday. Mirs. Chester Hutchins was at Willi- mantic Sunday to visit with her hus- band, who is a patient at a private hospital in that city. Peter Bonneau left Mcnday on his vacation trip, which will take him to Springfield, Pittsfield and toe Albany, from which city he will go down the Hudson river to New York. S Gaston Maindon and James. Day weére visitors in Willimantic Sunday. Motored to Salem. Mr. and Mrs. John Jaeger, Miss Em- ma Rivers and Fred Goulias, motored to Salem Sunday.to see the ruins capsed by the big fire. & Mr. and Hrs, D. E. Jette and their an ~ argument in After having tried ‘man, and failed to make a hit. his batting average with a gun being less than is Ty Col ) leth a club, the fellow fled the vii- Camps at Old Killingly Lake. Old Killingly lake, cne of the most beautiful of the smaller sheets o water in Conmectic is becoming = great attraction for ielson people. Chester and Archie Hutchins have just completed a smail bungalow on west shore of the and one, near Camp Wh ing built for Alton Other permanent tablished at favored borders of the lake, being Danielson people. ~D. Horton has the most pretentious’ of ail the camps, this being on the south shore. Mr. Horton recently had -‘a garage erected near his cottage. The Dodger Pest. The nerve of some distributors of advertising matter in Danielson for out of town concerns is not in ihe least affected by the hot weather; in- deed it seems to be at its best about t! time of the year. Probably to save themseives from the undue exer- :on that would have bieen entaiied by alking around the side or rear wiors to deliver their printed messages = gang that 'was in town Morday after- daughter. Miss Georgzette, motored tg'| ncon indulged in the practice of ring- New Bedford Sunday. Everett O. Wood has had as guests Mrs. Charles Martin of Riverside, R. I, and Misses Bessie and Ethel Gardner of Warren, R. 1 E. H. Hammett is spending a few days with friends in Providence. Charles Adams visited with friends in_ Willimantic Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bosquet, Jr., ing front door bells—iettinz those i side make a trip to the door with ‘né expectation of greeting a guest .r a friend only to find a mess of near-rub- bish to be rid of. FUNERAL. William W. Sherm: of Dyer street entertained William Chartier and Miss Ida May Fraser of Taftville over Sunday. Condition Critical. Charles B. Wheatley, who has been 111 at his home on Broad street for the past week, was reported Monday as being in a critical condition. George Baribeault of Norwich, form- erly ‘of Danielson, was a visitor here Monday. Peter Bassett of Providence, who is studying tc become a chemist, spent Sunday at his home in Danielson. $45 For Salem Benefit. Council Margaret De Roberval of the Union St. John Baptist netted $45 from a whist for the benefit of the Salem fire sufferers. Mr. and Mrs. Veneramd Chartier of Boston spent Sunday_with relatives in Danielson. = “Practice Game: That little notice in The Bulletin of Saturday about the All Stars and the Sachems of Norwich coming to Dan- ielson and Attawaugan for practice games, in view of the trimming given both the Norwich teams, has caused no little amusement among the fans in this town. With “Bachelor” and the man he quoted, they are saying “It is to laugh!” 4 Five Prisoners in Town Court. Out of a bhatch of five prisoners pre- serted in the town morning, on charges of intoxication or camping-or both, four were sent to jail two of the men to serve 90 days, two to serve 30 days, each. During June | and July to date there have been 54 cases in the town court, this probably contributing a high record for six weeks. Thirty-six appeared before the tribunal during Jumne, 18 during the elapsed part of July. No Morning Milk Car. There is to be no morning milk car service to Providence qut of Danielson during the summer months, as many milk producers hoped would be the cage. Milk distributors in Providence have agents in this territory to look over the proposition of sending a milk car, which now runs to East Killingly each morning, to Danielson, but the railroad. charges of $10 a day are con- sidered too heavy. So the plan is off for the summer. Meanwhile the milk producers hereabouts have the 3 cents a q the milkman TURK WANTED. Fer Firdng Revolver at' Williamaviile Acquaintance. Officers In the northerly section of ARKABLE CASE of Mrs. HAM Vegetable Compound -Saved Her Life Shamerock, Mo.— ‘I fe,el. it my duty to tell the public the condition of my health before How'd you like to be bear the medicines Purifier, and I cer- court Monday | other members of his team checked up Funeral services for William #W. Sherman, 78, who died at the home of his ‘daughter, Mrs. Walter Caswell, at Meirose. Ma: Friday, were condust- ed by Rev: B. Goodsell of the South Kilingly Congregational church in the Westfleld Cengregational church here Monday at 12.30. The deceased W member of the South Killirg The service was attended b gation of members from post, No. 27 G. A. R. Burial was in . Westfield cemetery cemetery. A, F. Wood was the funeral director. ¥ a Ge McGregor DANIELSON RIDERS FINISH. Burnett and Colvin Were Among the | Twenty-Five Motorcyclists Who Have Perfect Scores. Out of the 68 riders who left Worces- tar Saturday evening on. the 24-hour arrual run of the Motorcyclle club of that city over a course of 520 miles through Connecticut, - New York and Massachusetts, only 5 finished wich perfect scores, on the return ta Wor cester on Sunday evening, da <z the number were Wil'iam N. Bu:p-tt and Alanson Colvin, tha two Dania'son riders who went in for the long grind Burnett rode as a member of the Harley-Davidson No. 1 team of four men, Colvin as an individual through- ott the run. Due back in Worcester at 7.02 Sun€ay evening, Burnett and the at ‘554 more than an hour ahead of tme. ' Colvin, due-back in Worcester at 7.12, checked in at 6.19, also ahead of hia scheduule by a safe and easy ! margin, Both riders went through witheut any trouble and stood the physical test in a grand way. They spent Mon- day in Worcester resting up and re- turned here late in the day. FIRE AT CONNECTICUT MILLS. Socn Extinguished—Loss Merely a Lit- tle Yarn and Finished Duck. i There was a lot of excitement stir- red up about 7.50 Monday evening when an alarm for fire came in from the private box of the Connecticut bones.” Sargol is safe, pleasant, mills ot Tndustrial place. The fire was LEE & OSGOOD CO. IR Cegiod and other in the boiler room of the upper mui and was quickly extinguished by the sprinkler system and the Mill There was no work for in 23 _“I was all run down to Gagnon. “I had to quit thanks to Sargol, I look like a new man. pounds in 23 days.” “Sargol has put just 10 states W. D. Roberts. “It and pleasure.” Sargol. adds: year. from 150 to 170 pounds.” dreds with more coming ev have done? me plump. Sargol, you do not and cann Sargol has put pounds of healthy “stay there” flesh on hundreds who doubted, don’t have to believe in You just take it and watch and and your figure round out to pleasing normal proportions. You weigh yvourself when you begin and again when you finish and you let the scales _ Sargol is absolutely harm tablet. producing ingredients. menis in an ez readily absorb and carry all developed persons don’t need Sargol to produce this result. y Their assimilative machine out aid. But thin folks’ assimilative organs do not. fatty portion of their food now goes to waste through their bodies like unburned coal through an open grate. days’ test of Sargol in your or not this is true of you. If you want a beautiful and well-rounded figure of sym- metrical proportions, if you want to gain some solid pounds of healthy stay-there flesh, weight to normal, weigh straight to your druggist today and get a package of Sargol Sargol will either increase your and use it as directed. weight or it won’t, and the test. absolutely guaranteed to inc you have paid him for it. 2 Pauuds joy what I ate and enabled me to work with interest “l weighed 132 pounds when-1 commenced After taking 20 days 1 weighed 144 pounds. Sargol is the most wonderful preparation for flesh build- ing 1 have ever seen,” declares D. Martin and J. Meier “For the past twenty years I have taken medi- cine every day for indigestion and gét thinner every I took Sargol for forty days and feel better than I have felt in twenty years. When hundreds of men and women—and there are hun- and corner of this broad land voluntarily testify to weight increase ranging all the way from 10 to 35 pounds given them by Sargol, you must admit, Mr. and Mrs. and Miss Thin Reader, that there must be something in this Sargol methold of flesh building after all. Hadn’t you better look into it, just as thousands of others Many thin folks say: “I'd give most anything to put on a little extra weight, but when someone suggests a way they exclaim, “Not a chance. I'm built to stay thin.” argol to grow plum You take one with every meal. food you eat for the purpose of separating all of its flesh It prepares. these fat making ele- sily assimilated form, which the blood can A single package of Sargol easily enables you to make this Sixty days’ use of Sargol, according to directions, is tory degree or your druggist will refund all the money Sargol is sold by leading drug- gists everywhere and in Norwich and vicinity by 2 ey Days the very bottom,” writes F. work 1 was so weak. Now 1 gained 22 pounds on me in 14 days,” has made me sleep well, en- || Siciaat" Tae'® Geyoos and s efficient. druggists of have it and will refund you are not satisfled, s antee found in Caw W Taking cellent dyspepsia and general stomac! How Thin People A NEW DISCOVERY men and women, hearty, filling dinner you My weight has increased Thin ate o3 ] that I B 1 ] 'h and vicinit, your money the guar- troubies it should not be taken by those who do not wish to gain ten pounds or more. Can Put On Flesh big, l"t night. t became of all roducing nourtshment it ou haven't gained ounce. body like open grate. Py - . i ery day—living in every ‘nook = K unburned coal and the piaip truth is you hardl true of thin folks the world oy need reconstruction. | sawdust diets. Ieuls you are sating e Al Nothing will make Until you have tried ot know that this is true. | let. Five to elght healthy food and easily in spite of their donbts. You from its use. ollows vanish takin, ut. ination of six a month while . new flesh stays weight pile up, | a scientific com to chemistry. a package, are pleasant, inexpensive, other dealers harml sell them tell the story. less. It is a tiny concentrated It mixes with the or money back. over your body. Plump, well performs its functions with- §| 1 increase their welght with 16 This ]| pounds of healthy, “stay should try eating a little Sargol | their meals for a whil sults. A few case will surely prove whether Isn’t it worth trying? yourseif. Then weigh and measure or what if you want to increase your what you should weigh, go five to eight pounds in the first teen days by following this rection.” And best of all, the stays put. - Sargol only way to know is to try it. § rats, sugars ana nourishment for the tissues and —prepares_it rease your weight to a satsfac- All this nourishment now cept. - But from your body as waste. stops | of the v | now des lop pounds and there" l?h. isn’t a question of how you look or f=sl your friends say amnd think. Thé scales and the tape measure tell their own story, and most any thin man or woman can easily add from the fat- contained? weight one That food passed from your through an The material was there, but your food doesn’t work anu stick, ¥y gct enough nourishment from your meals to pay for the cost of cooking. This is Your nutritive organs, your functions of as- similation, are sadly out of gear and Cut out the foolish foods and funny Omit the flesh cream but the eat with every one of those a single Sargol tab- In two weeks note the difference. good solld pounds of ‘stay there” fat should be net result. Sargol, too, mixes with your pares it for the blood in aseimilated form. Thin people | gain"all ‘ae way from 10 to 25 pounds g‘su‘*ol. and the rg0 uhl;t.'- are | best flesh-producing elements known TPhey come 40 tablets to the the and and Lee & Osgood and bject to an | absolute guarantee of “weight increase Thin men and women who would like or 16 * fat with and. note re- Here is a good test worth try- ing: First weigh vourself and measure Then take Sargol—one tab- let with every meal—for two weeks. It will four- L does not of itself make fat, but mixing with your food it turns the starches of what you have eaten into rich, ripe fat-producin, blo in an easily assimilated form which the blood can readily ac- Eareot the waste and does it quickly and makes the fat-producing contents ry same meals you are eat] pounds healthy flesh between your skin and £ effi- leading druggists sell it In large boxes—forty tablets to a package—on a guarantee | of weight increase or money back. department when they er a run of about a mile, and for this every one was duly grateful. The damage was small and was oconfined to some yarn and finish- ed duck. The mills are running nights as well as days, but there was very little excitement among the employes. cemetery. Six nephews of Mrs. Rem- illard acted as Mearers. T WEDDING. Lucier—Beuthiaume. Miss Regina Berthiaume and Joseph Lucier, both of this city, were mar- ried at St. Mary's church Monday PUTN Attendance of 800 at Salem Benefit Concert — Lucier-Berthiaume Wed- ding—Jury List Drawn by Commis- sioners—Room Being Fitted for Bar Library. i were the attending couple. After their wedding trip Mr. and Mrs. Lucier are to make their home in this city. Attended Church Dedication in Web- ster. A number of Putnam people having relatives and friends in Webster were in that place Sunday for the dedica- tion of St. Joseph’s R. C. church. The dedication ceremonies were conducted by Rt. Rev. Thomas D. Beaven, bishop of Springfield. The new church is a beautiful structure. The churcn cost $100,000 and has a seating capacity of 1,200. Milk Producers Dissatisfied. Like their brethren of other county towns, milk producers in Putnam and vicinity are not elated at the low price they are receiving this summer for milk sent to Boston. Some of the farmers who make shipments say there is barely any profit for them at the price they are being paid. LIST OF JURORS. At St. Mary’s church this (Tuesday) morning there is to be an anniver- sary requiem high for Mrs. Mark ‘Wilson, whose fune; took ,place a year ago today. Funeral of Mrs. Charles Underwood. At Woodstock Sunday afternoon the of Mary E. Underwood, 68, wife of Charles Underwood, took place. Mrs. Underwood was a resident of the town for 24 years, Attorney Fred I. Norton of Bos- ton was a visitor with friends in Put- nam Monday, Mrs. John C, Flannigan of Water- bury was a recent visitor with friends héré. She was formerly a resident of this city. Confer on School Matters. P, J. Trinder, representing the state beard of education, was here Monday Commissioners in Session Monday to meet members of the tcmwn school| Draw Names from the Fifteen 1 ;ordnmltteo at a special meeting of that Towns of the County, ody. S Charles H. Brown, E. M. Warner, Salem Benefit Conocert at Bradley. About 800 attended the benefit con- cert at the¢ Bradley theater in the in- terest of the Salem fire sufferers. Fitting Reoem for Bar Library. The room in the court house block formerly occupied by the public - brary, but soon to comse Into use as the bar library for Windham county, is being decorated and made ready to fit the purposes for which It is intended, A doorway has been cut through frem the court reem, making aecess from that part of the building convenient, The library is as large ag the court roem itself and seems ideal gquarters for the law library, both of this city, and Charles S. Hyde, Canterbury, jury commissioners for Windham county, were in session in the superior court room in this city Monday and drew the following list of jurors from the fifteen towns of ‘Windham county for service from September 1, for a period of one year: Windham—William P, Allen, Clif- ford J. Alpaugh, Henry E. Anthony, Napoleon Bacon, Jr., Edgar E. Bass, Joseph Berard, J. Octave Blanchette, Clarence A, Bowen, Louis Bonin, Frank D. Blish, Walter T. Chamber- lin, Daniel 8 Clarly Arthur S. Cotter, Fred Rosebrooks, & Arnold Peckham, ‘William B, Elliott Everett B. Hopkins, Flint, Albert L. ¥French, ‘| John M, Gager, L. Edwin Backus, James F, Twomey, Henry A: Larkin, D. A, Griggs, F, ouis Hall, Charles R. Harris, Henry 8. Harvey, James Jehnson, €. Wigfield Noyes, Frank M. Linceln, Fred W, Gerrick, George A Bartlett, Frank H. More, Samuyel esbro, Arthur . Stiles, Willjam §L P, Sweet, Charles’ H. Bradley, Thomas P, Foley, Frank Deming, Charles P, Milligan, Timofhy H. Bullivan, Abel R, Burnham. Roderick Young, Irank FUNERAL. Mrs, Cyril Remillard, At St. Mary’s ehurch Menday mern- ing there was a high mass of requiem at the funeral services for Mrs. Cyril emillard, 8r., who died at her home i The service was by the members of St Aune’s which the deceased was morning. Mr, and Mrs. Pierre Dalgle | Brick, Willlam J. Sweeney George R. Tripp, Albert C. Scripture, Charles Gleason. Ashford—Henry Woodward, George O, Balck, Bert H. Gardner, Ransom B. Tifft, Frank W. Mowrey, H. C. Bar- low, B, A. Wilbur, W. L. Durkee, S. L. Case, Fred B. Bebbington, W. H. Lamphere, E. M. Grant, H. P. Amldon, | George Lipps, C. H. Wright, J. A. E. { Knowlton_ Alexander Bassett, Ired Wright, E. L. White, J. W. Armitage, A, C. Squire, R. D. W. Knowiton, Arthur James. Sterling—George F. Plerce, John E. Grifiths, Arthur E., Willams, B. D. | Parkhurst, Henry R, Brown, Joseph | Shippee, George Pine, Nelson Bennett, (John Garvey, James McManus, James Turner, Harvey C. Barr, Joseph Haw- kins, Robert J. Sherman, Samuel Rhodes, , Earl D. Gallup, George H. Gallup, Elmer Fenner. Putnam—Leon T. Wilson, E. Warren, Edwin L. Wood, John P. Sabin, Arthur J. Shippee, Alex. A. Houghton, Joseph Plessis, Hector Du- vert, John A. Dady, Walter S. Car- penter, John D, Converse, Walter J. Bartlett, Newton A. Ballard, Arthur Tourtellotte, Frederick J. Daniels, George W. Baker, J. Richard Carpen- ier, Olin D. Farrows, Clarence M. Kent, J. Herbert Marsh, Fred A. Mar- yott, Frederick W. Seward. George E. shaw, Henry J. Thayer, Fred R. Wil- William 1i Elbert C. Kinrfey, Alex. Gilman, l"h?sler E. Child, Adfer M. Towne, John B. Byrne, Chester M. Billott, Harry E. Meinken, George F. Locke, J. Harry Mann, Alfred Bonneville, Re- gis Bouthilette, Eugene E. Brousseau, } Isaac Champeau, Ernest L. Davis, Charles E. Dean, Napoleon. Jette, Jo- seph Lapalme, Armand Magnan, Eu- gene J. Mignault, George Potvin. Pomfret—Charles M. Arnold, John Ash, Frank A Arnold, M, A, ger, Arthur C. Botham, John Chapman, B. A. Colburn, ¥, W, Cunningham, H. H. Davenport,’ Charles Danlelson, William ]L. Darling, J. H. Elliott, M. A. ©£dding- ton, George W. Fuller, Andrew Fur- long, John P, Grosvenor, A. G. Griggs, Charles E. Griggs, A. T. Grosvenor, M_E. Gallup, T, A. Hanley, James H. Hutchins, George M. Lowry, Willlam R. May, D. N. Medbury, P. D. Momtt, George S. Platt, E. E. Sanderson, J. E. Stoddard. Herbert Slye. Thompson—Hthelbert Aldrich, John A, Anderson, Joseph Baker, Herman J. Barnes, John M. Blid, Joseph Bonin, Alfred Bonin, Edmund 8. Backus, Frank J, Bates, George V. Ballard, Winthrop Ballard, Eillsworth Bixby, Floyd Bewen, Frank W, Carison, Ran- dolph H. Chandler, Harry C, Ceman, Joseph A, Cruff, Louis E. Converse, Edward Cassells, Frank Chandler, Al- bert Copeland, B, H. Corttls, Danlel A. Eliott, Marcus A, Elliott, Burten W. Eliett, Dery S Eliett, Clifford Green, Ernest (i, Gustavsen, Claus A. IHagstrom, Bverett Hunfingten, Ar- thir W, Johnson, Charles J, Johnsen, Mnlumcb;rlulfinhh M. J. b Kinney, Bdward J. Keegan, }Vuuu unyan, | Everett E. Kimball, A. G. Moffitt, J. ‘Everett E. Rhodes. Chester L, Rob- bins, Luther D. Robbins, Vernon Rob- Fernando Z. Ross, Thomas P. ) Frank B. Ramsdell, Warren R. Spencer, Freq O. Stone, J. B. TO\:II"- telotte, Wilfred Trudeau, B. L. Up- ham, George Vaughan, Merrick Walk- er, Lewis E. Walker. ‘Woodstock—Charles A. Anderson, George W. Butts, Frank D. Bowen, Charles B. Cox, George C. Clark, John E. Clark, George Frink, William M. Gallup, Robert E. Harris, Alfred E. Harvey, Harry Johnson, Bert John- son, Willlam H. Lester, Delbert Lyon, Frank H. Miller Harmon Morton, B. R. Rich, George M. Sampson, Albert H. Williams, John Williams, Thomas | Bradshaw, Frank E. Barrett, F. Olin Chaffee, Willlam H. Chandler, George Dean, Byron E. Eddy Ernest Hibbard, Harold Hibbard, Chester E. May, Charles M. Berrin, Irving A. Paine, Howard Peckham, C. Allison Potter, Charles Potter, George Snow, George ‘Wetherell, Gilbert Upham, John Al- drich, Edgar E. Trask, Arthur EI- dridge, Allen Kenyon, Albert Ham- mond, Emerson Morse, Prentis Morse, William Smith Everett Howard, Henry Bradford, Byron Bates, Mowrey Ross, George Lyon, George Sumner. Scotland—Willlam M. Burnham, William H. Hayward, Henry O. kins, Albert S. Kennedy. Main, Arthur H. Mathewson, 8. Miller, Edward C. Palmer. Killingly — Amos H. Frank J. G. Bailey, Charles S. Bill, P. C. Ryan, ing Bullard, William T. Baile: W. Burlingame, George W. Call, ry' D. Crosby, Thomas C. Clarie, E. Danielson, Simeon Danielson, lard S. Danieison Kent A. Ennis, John W. Gallup, Gilbert, Frank H. Gilbert, Greener, ward H. Hammett, Joshua Hill, C. Leavens, Ira D. E. Sheckleton, George 8. Shippee, A. A. Tillin, Byron Wood, Clayton F. Wright, Wi A. Dorrance, . H. Gallup, L. H. Spencer, Horace F Main, John L. Bass, J B. Ashcraft, D. P. Walden, Caleb Anthony, George S. Carey, Leon J. Moffitt, J. C. Taber, Gerald Waldo. Brooklyn—Oscar F. Atwood, Arthur R. Bell, Charles H. Blake, J. Herbert Briggs, Irving W. Chapman, William B. Clemons, Thomas P. Clemons, Wil- llam H. Clewly, Oliver F. Downs, Charles B. Emis, L. J. Fanning, George F Genung, D D., Frank E Harris, Dan- iel B. Hatch, Willls A. Kenyon, John T. Kinney, Arthur B. Lapsley, Clark G. Lawton, Alfred Mason, George E. Prentice, Theodore D. Pond, C. F. Rainville, Benjamin Russell, L. J. Te- treault, George W. Talbot, Deforrest ‘Wells,, Albert B. Webb, Nathaniel G. ‘Williams, Willlam T. ‘Whitman, George B. Weaver. Hampton—C. A. Glazier, Jerome Woodward, E. B. Phillips, D. T. Phillips, I W, Hammond, B. A, Col- vin, C. Jewett, R. R. Porter, Fred Burnham, F. W, Congdon, A. H. Fuller, Edward Kent, E. S. J. Hyds, M, F. Avery, William Wade, A. L. Hills, C. E. Burnham, 4 Plainfield—Fred Austin, Stephen R. Babcock, Herbert ¥, Barber, John A. er, Hart, Clinton Frink, A. N. Clark, Burr Smith, Nelson Stanton Vallette, Charles Richmond, Eugene Perry, Graves. Lee, George Howard. Davis, Fred A. Baton, Elmer E. Battey, Willlam H, "‘;:fl French, Sr, A. G. Morse, ‘William Bellevance, John J. system has Canada’ $104,122,277. Sxy William H. Kenyon, Frank E. Lathrop, Howard E. Eastford—Fred Bennett, A. H. tier, Caro P, Latham, Roy E. Latham, George S. Bowen, Leander Snow, Jo- seph Gurley, "Elery Bartlett, Welcome Hop- Clyde Armington, John P. Barber, Bliven, George C. Boswell, Thomas Bradford, W. Irv- James en- ol P. Chase, Henry M. Danielson, George wil- A. Darbie, Frank A. Davis, Waiter F. Day, Alfred John A. Frank H. Samuel R. Gillette, William Gilhooley, Theodore E. Hammett, Ed- Bur- dette C. Hopkins, Charles B. Hutchins, Frank L. Hopkins, Leonard A. James, Erwin A. Jordan, James E. Keecch, Herbert C. Keech, Fred Kenworthy, James Kent, Wilfred L'Heureux, Fred Martin, Edward McRoy, Elmer O. Mathewson, Eugene S. Nash, John A Paine, John H. Perry, William H. Pray, Patrick Riley, Arnold P. Rich, Willlam H. Shippee, Robert Sylvanus D. Sheldon, Canterbury—George Barstow, Lewis Baker, Albert Bennett, William Bark- Henry Saltsana, Andrew Clark, Frank Coffey, Henry La Craw, Michael Shea, Willlam Towne, Frank Miller, Henry Larkin, Henry Hawse, Truman Bennett, Edward Barrows, James Gaskell, Levi Lyon, Charles Barstow, Herman Steven, George J. Wheeler, Charles Herrick, Fred Hyde, Hubert Chaplin—Frank Platt, Henry Knapp, John Clark, Henry Baton, Frank C. Lummis, Pel- G. O. cost

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