Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, August 26, 1914, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Awarded. Miss G Beébe. of Bast Great| ' Qut—Had Bave Thive- Posolan Lk falr at Berlin this gm:uh&?wm-aflw—u 3 1 Ten Eventful Days ® WMW ‘The-d>wn room of the ] E Miner of Norwich Town. T 7 7Y iy s % quilt mill s closed for a short time. hkt?:%m & two weeks' visic reservoir ‘built on its mml Pe-| Mrs. e H, Bruce was with Mr. ut | Drinki: . 3 quot. T IR et e, Saerh 3. leide a% Fleast} - About Poisoned Drinking Water. i akat ant View cottage, Tuesday. ; oy o Florence and Helen of New London i e 3 TR i)t . rned after a ai in the very thick of the great|Soon after all the restaurants made it ¢ X : 4 The annual fair ot the Staftord | Laviresin shie oy T e with Emh and_first-hand ex-|a point to see that people had the : , = e and 14. and Mrs. . Charles % of | be its capturé by the invading| He met lots of Americans who were Tetum ‘were brought to his Nor- |in the same plight—with lots of money The axrfcnlmru.l vear is to-be helq Sept. 23-21. New Haven. i Wit Telativas tn Harttord. ... Ordered From : t e e rainfal n.; Friday was 2 ; 2 ; . i 5 o L e T i o TP t] o iria) picturos e thie sabtiing oom:Thia Fasat' (bt 0epait. witiout Basmment:| B tives in this city.' Spri; Itural e S ust a few days |correct change before the f¢ saiiv g e, R 3 A llen” E. McCarthy 69, who Springfleld where - they visited thelr|wich friends on Tuesday when Adolph | they couldn’t use. At Cooks’s office — - ~ - at ' Springfield, Monday, leaves a n Frank May, for the past week. [DeVries, accountant of the American|Mr. De Vries couldn’t get cash and at i - daughter, Mrs. C. P. Waits of New | e e LT - | Thermos Bottle company, returned to|the bank where the American Express z i A y London. . . . Mr. and Mrs. Fred Smith and fam- | this_ after a seven weeks' trip|company’s checks are ordinarily cash- tfl]e t E. ? Bllllal'd R R SR e ily of New Lohdon ::d Mrs. Arthut to Holl and Belgium. od.“ha found a crowd of 5,000 people g S| § g among the speakers who wili be heard .- In the Midst of Mobilizing. Sty i eanpat: z:hezz silver and 2 at, the Baptist Sunday school eonven- | Prospect street. .4 < Mr. De’Vries" experiences started|pwy it for future use. His brother 3 - V!o!:m : i R Wedusiday. when he sailed from New York on{was well known and the Nor- 3 \ b 5tk nts |, William Dixon_of Waltham, e stéamship New Amsterdam of the|wich man got along famously. A judi- Members e Groton Heig! is visiting for a few “with olland-American lite on July 14.|cious tip to the waiters, who seemed TB ACHBR 3 BM.‘ t church.and Sunday school are [, Christman ‘in the apman build- | They followed when he revisited his|ts have accumulated considerable A planning to attend the Baptist Sunday | {ng on Broadway. . This is -the first | family and his old home In Amste change facilitated matters. Later, - Sohool convention at . Preston City. |time in eight years that the two|dam, but his adventures first began In Wiliimantic two dvys each "fim . young- men have seen each other: Yo réally shower wpon him in Brus- S enal’ Mre it T weeh " Tom Moore and Alice Joyce Serial sels just. before and after the declara-|notes and these printed on ordinary % lon of war by Germany. The Nor- 1 le of days’ re- For appsintments "address E. §| eEitis at Colonial theatre today.—adv. | ESCORTED. THROUGH STRAITS ~ |ton of war by Germany. ne Norc|paper in a couple of days’ time, E. BULLARD. Bliss Place, Nar- Congressman Augustine Lo BY BRITISH WARSHIP | midst of mobilizing troops, with rail- ‘~ Conn B Tartiora Tosthe Tlomis of Torres ; way communications almost cut off,| _Reached Holland With Difficulty. sentatives has introduced a bill call- | Mr. and Mrs. Wm. H. Shields Home | with Austrians and Germans ordered | ‘When he got ready to dej from | ing for a monument in Washington| From London on Steamer Minne-|to leave the country within 24 hours|the Belglan capital, Mr. DeVries end to Nathan Hale. K under pain of arrest or even death, |his brother, with a party of about RN WAth all the turmem*and upheaval of |others Were at hand at 4 o'clock in a gigantic war going on bewilderingly | the morning at the station and they 4 b all-around him. pulled out on a train crowded with thorough campaign of three years, are | Waska from ZLondon, _England, to Told at Dinner Party. Selliesn: ot '§ o'closk, - Thay Taached N ntwer, rs and there again becoming manifest in farms|New York, Mr. and Mrs, Wiliam H. His 533 o8 BF tinle: gerieh of Un- P in two houw 'y L ¥ . waited half a day, before they could afiout L mipte Shields reached the latter pert ‘on|,cuel incidents; in getting into the | continue to Eeschen, to et from thero The potato crop has reached that | Monday evening at 8 o'clock. Mr. and | war zone and then getting out again |ty Rosendasl, over the border in Hol- stage, where. some growers are com- | Mrs, Shields came on to their> home | to the executives of the Norwich|jang only a six or seven minutes'| A DOZEN MEN mencing to dig .the. tubers and they | here Tuesday eveni: . {he |Dlant of the Theérmos company st &|pyn by - rail, was the prob- . Teport plenty of potatoes In a Bill | 1 orclot teate e totae 5o inac |dinner party at the Wauregan House|lom. The Reoh- TRANSACT CITY'S BUSINESS. of uniform size and so far no signs|home at No. 170 Washington street, | Tuesday evening, kept Mr. DeVries |peq: an the | $30,000 to Be Borrowed For Current The wild carrots which a few years R ago were negrly exterminated after a Passengers on the steamer. Minme- of rotting. - |auditors at a fever heat, almost, of 0 th a trunk and two THE Automobilists have been complain- | FEToNCTS FOROSS PO *scapes followed upon the discussion|started out on foot. The walked half —= T e ing of the condition of the bridge near | = 3 of this excellent menu: h nd then the former gave up. That the city's finagces do not at- Yantic on the road from Norwich to (i Shields bad been away since A e ‘would rather sleep on the road|t2in by any means the importance and Willimantic. The condition of the dw’;me‘: Mrs. Henry S. Haskell of Cherry Stone Clams all night than carry his baggage any “?’““‘mfl’ the interest of the town’s NORWICH bridge is such as to make the passage | Now York, had gone about & month Cream of French Potatoes farther. But they fell in with a farm- | POItCS would seem to be eviden .1 by over it rather precarious. " | before. Mr. and Mrs. Shields had in- |Brofled Blue Fish, polaitre de Motel |er and for 15 francs aplece 12 of them - '“'y‘“’:“,‘::m"* e ity Westia: oof : 5 tended to stay until September 1sf Jullenne Potatoes were conveyed to Rosendaal, in Hol- called specially to at night. 'here ti slept unti W 4 . draftsman, the entrance salary for|Germany, intending to spend eome |, ... es en Surpriseo e g claas it oom, Seith | expenses of the eity and the which is from $3.28 to $5.04 per day, |ilme in study there. It was a strange Natlve Corn on Cob | 1o anird class walting room, with |falling due on bonds in September and and for copyist ship draftsman, who S, J Lettuce and Tomatoes, French Dressing | them enjoying the same conveniences,| OCtober: The commodious benches of will receive from $2 to $2.80 per gay. |Sailed from Genmoa or an Italian Iiner, m enjoying the i the ball were occupied by twelve g z F8Y: larrived in New York on Monday Neapolitan 1“ka Summoned to Court. il the beabiets Sen ufi"“l"‘ Secretary of State A'bert J. Phillips | morning and upon telephoning to her ey Tonss Taking a tip from an official, - Mr. |transacted in about six minutes after : hla Basded dofent s destiton. i the [futhote in Noswlelsoundtaate St e s De Vries climbed into the baggage car| Mayor Murphy called for order at § gets, for its graduates,|case of Charles Wilson. chaufteur of | her parents were due In New York with his baggage, and came safely to|o'clock. Clerk Modre read the call f C: G, Tavlor, of New Cansan, in which {the seme day, ‘and attes ;they Had..Ten Eventful Daye In Bruseels. W00 50, MEENEE B SRS, P01 and the mayer el Cievmtma: o that which all the work-|he finds Wilson suiity of violating | landed there was a happy meeting. When the cigars were: passed and, [Amsterdam. Thers he didu't have a|o0S LM TNy e e -t . . . the automobile laws and revokes his| Mr. and Mrs. Shields sailed from |quite appropriately, La Hollande cig- || hanc: the train, | eral de; nts ing world is seeking— |iicense. Tondon a week ago Saturday on board |arettes, Mr. DeVries launched into his | V25 10 chance to get one on the train, | &ra depsrtments had spent $8000 more |the Atlantic Transport line boat Min- | narrative, in which he combined, with ¢hat et — LARGE SALARIES Joseph G. Fournler Who was drown- | newaska, but their departure was not | irrepressible humcr, some incidents|UNJer arrest |He aent so far as fo| UISt the interest on Stony B this year g A ed at Plusfeld, Mass, leaves his par- | without considerable uncertatnty even |that were distinctly amusing with |Jeive & BONce ©oF ME Do Trles o apt| DSt ySar b Novemher, ' Sue this year rpand Mrs, Snthony Fourmier |atier they had. bogrded the. sieamer |others: that might casily have been | YL, "L, SO S0, *Ein B, 0l Dorrowed at the ananal mesting 1 mot 4 others, Anthon Norise |4t the Tilbury docks in the Thames |embarrassing. After & pleasant nine - b 1o ‘evpensen 2ni L We are able to do this|and o rister, Miss Amy. all of Moo:- | »n Sunday. They were on board for | days ocean trip he reached Hotter-| it @ Dutch tribunal. Anvway, he| sufficient to meet = up. The body was taken to Moosup | n considerable time before the boat |dam on July 23 and at once went to g because the employers of | tor burial. left the dock to drop down to the | Amsterdam where he spent three cays Had Letter That Helped. This resolution was offered by Cor- . R mouth of the Thames where they |with his father and mother and the| Before he eailed Mr.\De Vries took | " heocieq mpey arins: Norwich and vicinity Godard State Librarian George S. were held up over night by a British | other nremb ily. i Nesolved, Thet the Bolfpwhis of ers of his family. The|one precaution, and it helped him on d of Hartford is on an automobile trD | war vessel and ordered not to go to|first day he landed his mother’s sis- |several occasions in the course of his | he e, OF irty ?:;u.“ncfi:"mm know “that they can de-|to Malne, agcompanied by his family | sea until permission was given. It |ter died, he said, and that seemed |travels. Although he has been a resi- e g Frongs s A e N I eweY. wiht|was a measure of safety adopted by [to inaugurate & whole series of un-|dent of this country for a number of | 25 WM&y be necessary to pay pend upon our grad-|party will motor to the Morgan camp | i, : : rent exrsises of the city and the in- at Readfield, where Mr. Godard's Son | piace encent by andor of thoPsginie [lucky events. From Amsterdam he|years owing to his frequent change of | terest on bonds which falls due in journeyed to Brussels and there his|residénce he had never taken out his| g uates for is staying. alty. : ‘l“y oo g e ey B gl final citizenship papers. He had de- mgflm.”ddofi:b:;nfilf;,ficwm;:: One section of the state highway | pf0f, tR0 da¥s after leaving the| Wrhen he arrived, fighting was going |clared his intention of becoming &|conncil 1 hereby authorised co ACCURACY that is to run from Clark's corners on | puames they were accompanied by a|on at Liege, three hours distant, ond |Citizen of America, and in May, hav-|JROUS. o, TOC0O SUCIORed 10 o8- the New Haven turnpike to Orange | onish war vessel, which steamed|ne made up his mind that he would- (ing been a resident of Norwich for a | i 0 0 expenses and sald in- ; b ¢ | along about 4 or 5 miles distant from | g former | vear, he filed his application with the RAPIDITY Center and eventually beyond this | 2 oM | 't go there this year, gs on former ) P terest; it being understood that point to the Milford-New Haven |tlem through the Straits of Dover|irips, Two days later, war was de- |clerk of the superior court, Judge | STest: It belng undersicod ihat the d the British channel. Then it left Srus- | George E. Parsons issued to him a let- oLt ] turnpike has been completed, and is | . clared, on August 2. At first in Brus 3 - 2 authority shall be repaid upon the col- GUOOD JUDGMENT now in use. them to proceed and fhey 2aw 10 |sels the populace didn't think much |ter that was displaved by Mr. De Vries | jofomity, shall be repast upon the col- pecia ale the regular carriers. COURTESY Plans are being perfected for the |'V Grhostil o omicn fs a big |Ie8ched @ party of friendf of whom |German in Belgium. Ar. DeVries will| i, resolution was thrown open to % annual Mason’s Island day to be held Mr. DeVries was one that the German n TR e e ISl e e T = on Saturday, Aug. 29. A.program of | frelght carrier would have been & |hag stopped all through trains on the|he felt this Jetter was worth a million Corporation Counsel Fanning cast it. S ml m EFFICIENCY Interesting events has Deen prepared, |Tich prize to capture. ~Every night|frontier and he went to the station |dollars to him at times. X madion T e ma g e 3 - which will include motor boat, match | 11l the Windows were blanketed, leav- o find out his prospects of cctting Sailed Suddenly. Corporation Counsel Fanning made it.| MASON PINTS races, a -bang and go back race for 0€ S0 ONG OF CWD uavisation MEWtS lout of the country. At the station he| o was'in Amsterdam st home five| Then the gathering filed out. silently, Call motor boats. i Soagu g ol B K )t |found soldiers, about five million, he|gavg Defore he sailed. And he sailed|after a session enfirely harmonious. |MASON QUARTS . i Fhcatiy e ,mpu o5 tdea of | thinks, mobilizing and blocking up all | rather suddenly. In fact, he sailed at JAR RINGS ....... Phone Mrs. Katherine E, Foley of New n&])s 9, wm-f V?llfi og; ru mym eni of | the approaches so that he could hardly 3 G'eloek; oft: 11hs ORI (o Mktaray; FUNERALS. Haven, | Who - . was re-elected state [the sixe of tue. vetawl from the f6w{yiske his way in.. He was relieved 10| Ay 147 and he SAnt kucw he Wee - Other styles at reduced prioss, - O president of the Ladies’ auxiliary, A.|lights that showed. The boat makes it afl the s beck to Hol. | U8 ? 3 3 e i) i Write H. at the state convention held | the passage in about mine days. and [fInd that all the trains back to ol |zoing to sail until the day before at 9 Mrs. John P. McDougald. oluding the celebrated wide mouth last week, has been endorsed t?r s c:tu'rl;s c:nlflyo: fl:nt liua.; pastenaer et § oL e irn passase, engaked on the Sflc'l't‘)v04 J«.{: g*:}g?::t‘i 5’;‘,,‘.’;’5,',’;’5;‘:; The funeral of Mrs. Ellf Adams Mc- |Jare. omventlon. which wil be held in 1916 | - The Itallan * bear on which Mrs. T (O AU eiopied, 25 | tho steamship office to find out ~nis | D2ASTL, Wife oF JoUn T MEOOUSTL | Thess prices save you the inersased oF Boston., Haskell sailed was overhauled once|Smied, As a matter of " on Augast | cnances. Friday morning while Mr.|j.q taken carbolic acid with suicidal|cost of sugar. . y left on the Noorddam, on August|De Vries was paying his customas . Ono. of the thibgs patroms’of ‘the |0 oo by Britial woomt crulsers. |y, “But that will come, later. VISt 5 Vo in e e b o A e D%i-| Also Preserving Kettiss, Moasures, 99 to 105 Main St. post office are requested to bear In From his headquarters at the Pal-|ticket for the next day that he could | 1T of Church and Allen Tuesday att:| o0 0 "eot Lty N aolk ofice Devostment ot BILL DINNER. ace hotel, oposite the railroad station [not use, and it speedlly changed | SOon &€ 3 ¢ Mra McDougaid ope, Washington, is that all perishable Mr. DeVrles had fine chance to se¢|hands. Mr. De Vries rushed home and | (133 been acting queerly of late en Fall Term Opens Monday, |parcel post matter should be mailed |47th Annual to Be Held at Ledyard—|the troops departing —for the front.|then over fo The Hague to say good-|is, believed that she was deranged Ghe > h for deli on Friday They were the dirtiest looking soldiers|hye there, and he was safe on board | VN'en she drank the poison. . early= enoigh itz detivery Y| Address by Rev. Edward Chapman. i i on the Mason Gray farm in Franklin. August 31st. afternoon or Saturday, because the he ever saw. The Belgian ~ uniform | the Noordam when it safled under cov- |21 the Mason Gray farm in Frapilin government wants to avold the trou-| An annual event of Importance to|includes white trousers and the fact|er of darkness, instead of at 9 o'clok, | phefe her husbs e N, S > blo incidental to the arrival of parcel | Lcavard and this part of the atate|ilat campaigning had somewhat soil- |because of the war. Mines were fear- | Rer In the yard neag the house. She W. E. Canfield, P; 2 post matter too late for delivery by | takes place today 1 the 4Tth annual|Sd these was one reason for their ap-|ed by the officers and so Mr. De Vries| o5, alive and was hurrled to = the H\{ - . , Proprietor. Bill dinner and anntal meeting of the|Pearance. They were fighters, though. staved up. 1f he was golng up, he| eiodh and o, OE-AE W5 o 2 > g tru associa- § wanted to be awake and see W was - : v Jhpos "y Gon"* The Geuatees. Ioeeting (ukaa| 10 swas-four o ve dave pesore the| cappening. it nothing did happen. | et Trarinte Kmiy SEoeq S Company : 0 ° wire- > NO NEWS FROM WIRELESS. | Dace o et toe pamic. wnak, s | people of Brussels got really excited.|less that ho sent back o his father: | Suicide, 2 o e morning and the public exercises are|mpnen they would march through thie | Bod. . bleas + the: Hollsnd-American Rev. George H. Strouse conducted 129 uflm st" “mu. Steamer on Which John Porteous|bheld at 11 o'clock in the Congrega- avenues and everything that bore a the services and read a committal ser- line.” - °|tional church. At these the address T ; vice at the grave in Maplewood cem- Traveled Was Cyt OF from Informas | of (b das 1 to i ivw by Sve St eonen Sl Jrae Sipnel ., AL _the Ship Searched by Engfish. etery. The bearers were Henry John- , tion. ward Chapman. The full programme|were not thus patriotically adorned| UP to noon that day they did not|gon Dwight L. Allen, Tracy R. and e for the exercises is as follows: see a ship in waters that ordinarily | James N. Burdick. There was a large | TRY THOSE It teous, who had been in v were stoned. Pilsener and Munchner e . & J,‘l“;’;m”;’&, e eavly part of Tuly | Chorus. Blok Soft Winds (Charles| ™ S0l Cere too German to be tol- | 27 thick with craft. Then an English | attendance of relatives and _friends. Vincent. ’~| battleship hove in sight after they had | gp, the daughter of Johm C. F P H l‘m reached his home here on Sunday|ggo—A Tittle Love, a Little Kiss,| STated and they were torn down ev-| ogeeq Dover, and after exchansing | smme ot &n“':gur;_ e ;erefly ly aper Q ing, having sailed from Glasgow S erywhere. The great Tietz department q. o :;e:;;‘sg. 15th, o (Lao Silesu), Henry P. Hallock, | o™ "0l o os Tny in New York, had | 5.61als the Noordam, obeying the bat- | resided in this city on East Baltic = i Jr. tleship’s orders, turned around and put The boat left on its schedule time|yyords of welcome. all its big plate glass windows on the ity Dover. where Bngish. oMcers| """ Miss Julla MoCarthy. at uLm with 1,000 passengers on board. All| Sronay Ckaeicome. first two floors smashed because its|!nto Dover, where English = officers the trip across the passengers were| CPOUs—Solo (a) Wilia Song (from|oner was a German. The smashing Sc3Tohed her, The woman on board| rne remains of Miss Julia MeCartny. shut out from all news as the wireless| A1¢ Tike Unto & Flowen) (Frnoy|Stopped and the bullding was saved |50 e™oing back to Hetterdam, . bus|Who died from cerebral hemorrhage, operator refused to give out any in- only when it was offered for the use | Cre EOINE Dack Howed to 56 o |in Derby, on Saturday in the Griffin formation or to take any messages.| pragers’ e R J. Henderson. of the Red Cross soclety. e arted, in Deralowed fo08% 50 | hospital ' were received in this city MISS M. C. ADLES When some of the passengers thOUEMt|pyet Mother Machree (Chauncey | Forelgners Left All Possessions Behind. | Vries counted 26 of the largest type of |0 dinterred in St. Mary's cemetery on : that a bribe might help to get just a| ' Oloott), Henry and Orrin FHall Mr. De Vries' brother who is in the | battleships, and he took some pictures | Monday afternoon by = Undertaker| g » - CARRY AN Hthe Jaforsition abont the war. thofAddress by Tew. Bdward Chapman, dtamond business, knew many of|of them. as well as of many of the|Fourigan The funeral -;.;e{'a RE mafi 1 :i”‘?em“"; told them he had nothing £ solo—(a) = Solveg’s Song fren Peer|the wealthy forelgmers, the majority |other things he saw. o By e v, Bl R ! : ! ||| "[S““ w t | |® Al outside lights of the steamer| Gyt (Griem): (1) A Love Song|of them Austrians, who were ordercd Satisfied to Be Here. s J alc! waye extinguished at 10 o'clock &t |y lNome) Mrs. R, J. Henderson. |to leave the country in 24 hours and| he most delightful and restful parts| aih 5 : 1Rt and the smoking room lights| Gorus—O Worship the King (Nichol) | who did leave, without & cent and with | o nis trip were the tee veysses mce v when you o Were dimmed sofnewhat, but there was | Bacdiction. all thelr possessions behind them.|and back. And the best thing on the Eilen | Ifke your own hair. Also call and get y £0 on b o ot oF Theh tay tth. Chavasn Dinner under the tent on the green|Thres Austrian brothers, whom the¥ Yoat, he says, was the Dutch flag. One | Ahearn, but for & number of years|her to educate you how to take cie outin. and P 3 st.ivom. knew, every one of them worth a mil-|of his fellow passengers in the first|she had lived with Miss Ellen Me- hair, scalp and face She e g8 WRESTLER WILLIAM COLLINS jnhe officers of Bill Library ssso-|lion francse Mr. De Vries said. re-|cabin was Count von Bernstoff, Ger-|Carthy in Derby. She was stricken e istate poday save risk of dam- clation are: mained contrary to orders over the 2¢|man ambassador, on his way to-Wash- | Friday while at her work 8s a sewing tell you right way B 5 RESCUED FROM DROWNING, &:S;’:;‘W““::“M} v?“gin hour limit. B “Pm!;xp&yu_thnly Weng |ington. whom he met and had several | machine operator in the R. N. Bas- or crow's e —Fred A on. thrown into jail an eir wives and|conversations with. age to your valua- Rowboat Capsized in Rough Water| Treasurer—Billings T. Avery. childran were placed in another prison. | feecly and denrosated the. soilii oy | et e ™ Near East Greenwich. - iss Mary i One guard was heard to say by one of | 1,3stility toward the fatherland. ble timepiece. TRUSTEE FOR BANKRUPT. the prisoners that the three would be| The Noordam made New York Mon-| . The funeral of Mis Mary Yuaick, (Special to The Bulletin.) shot as sples. Eventually one of the|day morning and Mr. De Vries spent|¥ho died at the State Hospital on Ingersolls $1.00, i Bast Greenwich, R, L, Aug, 25.— 3 brothers got free through a Jawyer,|Monday in showing the sights of the held . | Willlam Collins, formerly of Central| Telley E. Babcock Appointed For{after 6 daysy imprisonment and Mr.|city to two delightful young ladies N ! $1.50 and $2.00 i |Vilese and Westerly, weil known as a| Bankruptoy of Dwight A. Beebs. |DeVries talked with him in Schevenin- | from Wisconstn whom ho et 1y b GAREFULLY GREENED ¥ ! | wrestler and boxer throughout eastern e gen, Holland's famous bathing resort,|sage. Tuesday morning he put them N Connecticut, had a trying experience| In the Involuntary bankruptey pe- |before he left. The two other broth- |on th etrain for Chlcago and then he |ducted the services. She was $2 years IT today when his rowboat capsized in | tition on account of Dwight A, Peebe, | ers were still locked up, came to this city., Mr, De Vries was|0ld an 8 a £ e OAL 78 8eCknam 2 58 Thames Strpet N rough water and he had to fight the[Telley E. Babcock was appointed port i asked if he wouldn’t Iike to be back | Mary G“w waves for 20 minutes before help came. | trustee by referee A, A. Brvv?nuu at F.'.:‘R‘;, m:;m;"'""“ ri- |in Brussels now, He laughed and his leaves a brother, Timekeepers i |He was rapidly exhausting his|a hearing before the fereree, at the |, O7® e ¢ two dags betore|friends laughed 'as he repied: “Do I|Jewett City and & aister Mrs, s il |strensth in his losing fight when the|Tefere's office Tuesday mornin®. | 1o qon Brorle Tho mthodies ron |100k 1£77 He most certatnly did not. | Burlingame of ) = | |passenser steamer Elsie of Fall River| The hearing opened with the Inves- | D¢ left Brussels the authorities sen after- lulgomyn 5 . . The flaut- adden Go.- Dore down upon him off Sandy Point | tigation of disputed claims against the | 2roUnd at three o'clock in the morning TR ¥ - agden uo. !l |and drew him aboard. Collins was in | bankrupt estate and then the mattes | 2utomobiles filled with soldiers to pro- City Court Cases. HAVE YOU TRIED bad shape. For three hours Dr. Dag-|of a trustee was taken up. On a vote | Clim the tidings lm:d“" drinking | In the city court on Tuesday morn- k Established 1872 ! | et worked over i mat East Green. |taken on two hamey for trustee. one R e e e o ins. Frank Gingras, accused of breal D 's R Beér? ‘Wwich, and at length Collins came out|hag & m: y of fund: ting o e peace, was found gullty an . 1 Plaut-Cadden Building safely. His fine p‘}:ync:\ e Aiting o [ he areattbra A the other had moss | Streets to find out what was going on | was fined §2 and costs, He got_into unn s oot g a thing that saved him from an early | ballots, so that the referee dectared |374 there Was general confusion At|troubls with supernumeary John Done = L death. He is training here in prepara-|no choice. He therefore appot: 7 o'clock word was sent around that|ovan in the blg democratic cauaus the coolest most refreshing bevesage ton for work this fail and winter :;r‘.w Babcock as trustes Under Bonds of | the g ":'h‘:‘“:(‘.’;’;;;“ga:‘ on Mosohy Rghts 5 for day. It's iom oonind ' SRE e ,600. Dpallf = leven other men were each fined ng o Sprague Schools, The Dbalance of the morning and ali | Fied out into the middle of the streets|and costs for Intoxication, ks and snap that appealp In the schools of Sprague, teachers'|the afternoon was occupled with the|2nd the soldiers drank. Joseph Rosaski accuseq of violat- jaded appetits paid service begins with the Teach-|eXamination of the bankrupt, under Monoy that Was No Use, ing the butter law had his ease go "fi quenches the worst osse of thirst. AL i ers’ meeting at 9 a. m., Tuesday,|o8th. Mr. De Vries had experience of | OVEr to September 1at, i P . September 8. The afternoon provides having several thousand francs in his| The continued case against I'rank ppportunity to get all schools in per-| Thomaston.—Notices were ted i vt § e gt e b e ] ALL GRADES OF fect readiness for the opening of the |in all the factorles of the Seth Thomas| s meal e Sle0, hiTL A, AlEeniy SoPepiet ST ettiog the has 4 . - schools, Wednesday, September 9. |Clock Co. that, commencing the week and Iaripd - yank ol ene it up the superioy ] ; 2 Hamllton W atches o of August 24, the factorles would work cs and was not esncluded by the time ver for which | 80 MAIN" STRERT 4 Westport—In an endeavor to put|only four days a week. This notice exchanged for a 20 franc note.|court adjourmed late in the afternoon.| ol Carbon 3 Al a stop to automobile accidents in this|was a surprise to the employes in most :{.‘ De Vries told how he got a free vicinity, State ~Policemen Rowe|of the departments as it was believed | mi He went into & restaurant and| Representative Underweod introdue- ¢ m FRMELL'S Wheeler and Anthony Fellow invaded | that the company bad sufficient orders|ate the flve franc ed a resqlution te withhold pay from | of A .. the town and. arrested 11 violators of [to keep the plants zoing full time 'a#|fered absent membe~+- end ecancel all t hefo; Shannon Buflding Amre~, Roam A . 23 and I7 Praaidin St ths au‘omobile jawa B werksd for time pai.i : cge. it and te of alncace. % ' Teiepaons 843 | Ay

Other pages from this issue: