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T Lo ;A.T SALT PORK 130 FORE QUARTERS - LEGS OFLAMB _ ]g, U 13¢ TURKEYS:.x ‘;‘i“:m“:u'zfi‘..‘?',‘:'ZOI: qb. 5 i OKEDFINNAN fi;fil OUR OVENS DALY "HOT BAKED BEANS RYE BREAD ynowumu smnwxmmn 5 GER“ANCOFFEEQK! turned from a visit to Miss Madeline Marquardt in Groton. Howard Hunter of the New York college spent the holiday here. Miss Mary Bacon of Boston is here !m- a few days. Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Swan of Provi- dence opened their summer home here for the wéek end. M. B. McDonall, ill from sbock, is much worse. . ‘Wallace MecDonald of r\ew‘o is visiting in the village. Mrs. les Palmer has returned from a visit in Westchester. Mrs. Willlam Patterson and sdn Charles are in Eest Hampton for & visit. Guests from Ansol Rev. and Mres. E. E. Gates and chil- dren of Ansonia are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A V. Morgan. Miss Phebe Stinson of Mystic has been visiting Miss Charlotte Morgan. Mrs. Minnie T. Vallette has returned trom a visit in Providence. Miss Abble Fish is the guest of friends in_Southington. Lester Smith of Kingston has been his home on Linwood avenue for the holidays. Joseph Bigelow of East Hampton is | visiting his ts on Norwich ave- nue this wi Miss Sylvia Brown of Marlboro is There is no capital unishment in | opposite the home of his pl.renll Mr. | ther Wood were in Danieison Thanks- Rhode Island, except when a life pris- |and Mrs. Alexander Taylor, }lish giving and attended the dance there. oner commits murder. street, ran directly in front ot a.n au-| Mrs. F. I Racine and Derilda Cas- £ S tomobile driven by John Nichols of |abon were recent visitors in Dayville. There was a a fire, from some | Potter/ Hill, was struck and knocked | Henry Roberts is unable to attend . cause not kmwm on the Alfred Perry |down, receiving cuts and bruises in|[to his duties at the Lawton mills on place, owned by George Rose, in South | his face and shoulders, and it is fear- | account of iliness. (:gugh in Bed—] eld 1 sso() Bonds ngmwn Thursday, causing damage | ed was injured internally. Mr. Nichols| The woodwork on the First National Henry Men t in I. H - F" to dthe extan: of $15,000. Fo!\;r h:;!el }:lrrhd !lee :o{‘(a !é’l.e‘ office o'l.dDr. F;. bank is being P‘"“ . and twenty-four cows were burned to | I. Payne and, after treated, too] Attempted Break at Dodge Store—Fire Loss at Perry |dcoin, ana a barn and outbuiling, | him e bie home Ty moiaent 1o satd MYSTIC 2 % with contents of forty tons of hay, |to have been unavoidable, Place $15,000—Granting of Licenses:Today. a ton of grain, wagons, harness and Funeral of Mrs. Mary Ann Cerey— farming implements, were destroyed. The fire had gained much headway be- | John F. Powers of Pawtucket, or- :Q::!lngzltc.(.‘ Patriok’s Chureh— shop E. C. Acheson to Confirm at her home in Norwich avenue for a tew days’ visit. Harry Friedman of New Haven was :‘1;.9 guest of his parents oyer Thanks- ving. David Carver of Hebron was a Col- chester caller l-‘fldl! S. H. Kellogg, and Mrs. R. K. Brown and Miss laulu Weeks were visi in Norwich Thursday in Mr. Kellogg's car. James R. Case, who is attending Connecticut Agricultural college, is home for the holidays. Charles M. Bailey of New Britain ‘was the guest of his parents on South Maeain street Thursday. Supervisor J. A. Young was.in South fore discovered and it was impos- | ganizer for the Phada. Ihiand brasch of the United Textile Workers, ar- Henry Martell, who figured in_the|that wondow nor could he have forced |fible to rescue the animals Mr. Rose | L eg' i Weaterly - Friday night in| Class. theft of brass and other metals from |the additional heavy lock, and it would | © <. by the carelessness of tramps, | Connection with the strike that is now 5 the 0ld Steamer Westerly and who was | 1aVe been almost {h"g"’g:'};‘“':g; BIm | Who had been sleeping in the barn |90 amons the employes of the George “’l;h'emf‘gn;x\;ln of Mrs. Mary :G:n df:‘:;:_ also connected with breaking and en- |door or. window and gain admittance | Waere the fire originated. There was | & Moore Tlastic Tubric company. The | F28 el 388 T8 hoe o Bon Water tering and _committing larceny from|to the store. 7 #$400 insurance on the barn. but the|Sttikers sre members of local branch |0 B o fternoon. ot 7 oclogk the C. W. Willard store ad Who was| “When Policeman Mitchell called at|Cther Property destroyed was not in- | No- §15 of the Elastic Webbing Work- | 0 e o o nded. fev. Wil penalized in each case, and who figur- | Martell's home and found him in bed, | S4red- an address upon the situation in West- | lam Crawford, pastor of the Old My ed also in similar cases in Pawcatuck he at first denied any connection with erly at a meeting held in Caledonian | tic Methodist Episcopal church, con- is in the tojls again. He was arrest- [the attempt to break into the store, When the superior court for Wash- | ;.5 "1 1o Claimed that 100 of the 125 |ducted the service: Burial was’ in ed early Friday morning by Police- |yt when the officers told him that | ington county reconvened in Westerly, | omrioves are out on strike for less|Elm Grove cemetery. man Frederick T. Mitchell, while in : iaa: Friday, the hearing was resumed be- 3 z 2 one of his hands hidden under the hours and increase in pay. Married at St. Patrick’s. bed at his residence, and taken to the|peq clothes was cut by glass and that |fore JudgSe George T. Brown and a arri b Mr. ana Mrs. C. C. Barton and two S police station. He was arrested for |some biood from the wound was on |Jury in the case of Mary S. Burdick T Miss Adala Zukowska, daughter of| ' F € Barcford, 57¢ guéets of I visiting at his home here. attempting to break .into the E. M.l|ihe steel bars in.the door of the Dodge | 28ainst William A. Wilcox. This case Local Laconic: Anthony and Zophy Zukowska and |$00S. Of = Ts-] Mr. and Mrs. John C. McDonald of Dodge and company clothing store and |store, he at once related a different | Was tried at a former session and re-| Tne Birth of a Nation drew large| Wicenty Krussensky, both nflde-u,h;:‘;’:km;,“‘cé:w g r“’;v:’::rm; 1 | Newport are visiting in the village. Coventry Wednesday visiting the sce schools. Rev. B. D, Remington, who sprained an ankle two weeks ago, is able to be on_ the street again. the George Williams' barber shop, lo- - |sulted in a disagreement. 3 of Mystic were married Wednesday Dorothy TRathbun has gone to cated In the Dixen House block, and |for) ‘insists ‘that he was ioné in' ihe|COX. acting as agent of land owned by | *Udiences to e DeTe house: | morning &t 3 o'clock at St. Patricics |the Euest of relatives n town, | Bridgeport for the winter. confessed his gullt to Chiet of Police|trangaction, that he had no accom- |Mrs. Burdick and located in Pawca-|, Ensign L. D. Pickering of Vesterly | church. The ceremony was witnessed the Gaiit oF his mmcthir. on. Broadwa: To Build Garage. Thomas E. Brown, as Well as to Po- |plice, direct or indirect, and that he |tuck. about 17 mcres of meadow and t“h'eegkll;;’" erred from the Yankton | by "3 “large circle of relatives and e b e reon Croadwarl * willlam Patterstn- Wit go Stonday to liceman Mitchell. was ‘through with shielding any other | Woodland, plotted the property so as | to the s : friends. Rev. 0. P. Hart performed | L3, 274 Driscoll of New Haven was | East Hampton, where he. will build a It was past midnight, when Frank|fellow, as no one ever shielded him. to diepose of it in building lots, and | The cholr of Grace Methodist church | the ceremony and celebrated the nup- | Fdwar “'”w ver Thankagiv. | garage for his brother-in-iaw, Dr. Fred Furpass manager of the Rhode Is-| “Martell was arranged before Judge | With the consent of Mrs. Burdick, who | commenced rehearsing Friday evening |tial mass. After a wedding trip the |® o A s A 8! Fitch, Sl land hotel, in the same bullding, heard |gjjver H. Willlams in the Third Dis. |resides in New York. A number of |the music to be rendered at Christmas. | couple will reside in Mystic, the groom “{;-dw.m Risiae or- ThE- Conet. ol the noise of falling glass, in_the rear, |(rict court and pleaded guilty to the | LFees were cut down, soil carted away | George A. Clark has returned from |being employed in the velvet mill. e Iy B ot R e and immedlately notified Policemen |charge of attempt to break and enter|2nd stone walls removed. Without [a hunting trip in the Maine woods.| Mr. and Mre. Willam Greenhalgh |le€® I3 the ‘zu _e Mitchell and Ferguson. The latter|,;q steal from the Dodge store. He | 12king demand upon Mr. Wilcox for | He brought home two fine bucks with |and son have returned from a visit in | NGRSV o = o o = o went through the alleyway behind the | \cag held for trial in the superior court | 2, a@ccounting, Mrs. Burdick brought|almost perfect antlers. Carolina, R. I tain, formerly of this place, was a Mr. and Mrs. W. Backus and daugh- N posed of at t tist church, but Martell succeeded in regular acenion Friday ‘morning ‘of the|ter are visiting at Rocky o e of Mr. and Mrs. H. J. $500. ik %;flg’m}‘gwogci“;;?: Tl ey e Q?flb;he,,::“c;:‘,"“’:“ Stome WaIL | Thira aistrict court, Judge Oliver H. [, ,S,S:. Brown MacKenzfe has return- Joseph Kraft retufned Wednesday An examinatifn of the premises, and | Under the new criminal laws of | DTODerty. Hence the suit. The evi- | Viliams presiding. ; Rev. W. H. Dunnack has returned [ SVening from Newark, N. J. wl e L the confession of Martell shows that|Rhode Island, which became effec- | dénce was not all in when the court| Licenses to sell intoxicating liquors|from Brodkton. Mass. £ l; ey chege e he broke out a pane of glass in the|tive September 1, there are two de- |Addjourned to next Monday morning. in the town of Westerly for the ensu- | Miss Emily North Murphy, of Proy- |father. rear of the Williams barber shop, sup- | grees of murder, first and second, while ing year will be granted at a meeting | idence is the guest of her parents, Mr. posing it o be a window of the Dodge [under the old law there was but one | _ Louis J. Reuter was high man at the | °f ‘?e town council this (Saturday) |and Mrs. William Murphy. store. THen he went to the door b® |degree of murder. The punishment | Thanksgiving d-y shoot of the South | eVening. Mr. and Mrs. Eduard Staplin are vis- vond, pulled the sleeve of his over-|for first degree murder is life im-|County Rod and Sun club, winning the | The Red Cross seals were placed on |iting their daughter, Mrs. John Spof- coat over his right hand and smashed | prisonment, with no alternative, while | Sheldon trophy and the young pig, just | sale in Westerly Friday and Postmas- | ford, in New York. a ‘pane of glass. His hand was cut|for murder in the second degree the |right for the oven. Mr. Reuter hit 65 [ter Butler has given notice that they| Bdward Schofleld of Sl{finsfleld is in_the operation. Across this window | penalty is not less than ten years' im- | out of a total of 75 in four events. In|must not be placed on the addressed |the guest of his father, E. A. Scho- arc small steel bars at close intervals, | prisonment and it may be for life.|the first event of 25 targets he got 22, | side of letters. fleld. and with the ald of the.stick,-he was|IUnder the old as well as the new law, | in the second 10 straight, in the third| There are more elective officers in To Confirm Class. cndeavoring to pry these bars off [any person under sentence for life im- |11 out of a possible 15, and in the | Connecticut than in ‘Rhode Island, but At the morning service of St. Mark's when he espled the policemen and |prisonment, who shall again be con-|fourth 22 out of 25. Robert Adams|in the number of court officers in the | Episcopal church, Bishop E. C. Ache made his escape. ~These bahs are|victed of murder, shall e hanged. In|stood sedond in the high shot member. | superior court of Rhode Island, Con- |son will be present and will confirm blood-stained and there were a few |Connecticut conviction of murder in PRI necticut is beaten to a frazale, n class of candidates. The choir will blocd stains on the doorstep. He could |the first degree means death and in| Alexander Taylor, aged 6, while| 1, washington county in the supe- |furnish special music. a0t have reached the door catch from |the second degree life imprisonment.|chasing ducks into’ a brook, nearly |rior court, while one set of jurere is| Mr. and Mrs. John Eckstein and 2 determining a case in the jury room, |family have returned from a visit in another set of jurors is hearing an- | New York. other case in the caourt room. _~Mystic encampment, 1. O. O. F., met in Masonic hall Friday evening, when the Royal Purple degree was confirmed BALTIC The bridge on Railroad street in front of the Shannon building is un- derging repairs. Vincent Lynch of Worcester spent ‘Thanksgiving as the guest of local friends. John Magna, of East Great Plain, Y.. spent Thanksgiving with lcbn.h friends. A Ralph ©ldham, 6f Providence, was a local visitor Thursday. -Dennis Coughlin, of Palmer, Mass., was at his home here Thursday. obert Love of Waterbury spént Thanksgiving with his parents on De- pot Hill. Miss Rena B. Smith iIs Miss May McManus/in New Haven. Mr. and Mrs. James T. McGuire and family are visiting relatives in East Hampton. Miss Ruth Nicolai of - Pequetanock is visiting local friends. Liberty councll. Daughters of Amer-| Miss Celia Smith of New York is ica, good of order committee for |visiting her parents at Riverside View next month is Mary C. Latham, Minnie |farm. T. Vallette and Lillian Lamb. Mr. and Mrs. Worden Potter have returned to Brooklyn. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Fiich went to Ridgefield Park, N. J, to spend the winter. Mr. and Mrs. S. P, Searle are spend- ing the winter with their daughter, Mrs. Wood, in Springfield. Miss Evelyn Luce has returned to Fisher’s Island. 3 Ruth Fitch, who has diphtheria, is recovering. Mrs. John Grey and children of Bridgeport are guests of Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Sawyer. Miss Florence Fitzpatrick has re- Dixon house block and the First Bap- suit to recover from Mr. Wilcox the P- |for Washington county, in bonds of money Re received from the sale of ed_from a visit in New Haven. NOANK News from the Fishing Fleet—D. of A. Names December Committee—Per- sonal ‘Items. Schooner William A. Morle Capt. Henry Langworthy, has arrived here from the south and will be laid up in Rogers' basin for the winter. Sloop Peari, Capt. Willlam Musanti, has returned from a codfishing trip to Nantucket. This is to inform the people of’ Baltei that J. J. Brown had nothing t¢ do with Thursday's Baltic news, and in therefore not responsible for the er- rors contained in same.—adv. Rdiph Oldbam, of Providence, was s local visitor Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Stevens of Moosup spent Thanksgiving with Mr, and Mrs. John C. Stevens. The' annual meeting of the Wes- terly fire district will soon be held and | S1€ FOY it is expected that action will be taken - that will result in the purchase of a motor-driven hook and ladder truck. COLCHESTER = The department will be completely i 3 motorized. Auction at Allen Place—Dr. J. M. b} . n Instructs Scouts—Children En- STONINGTON tortain for Parish Benefit. Dangerous French Curve Being Re- | There was a large attendance at L . the auction held Friday at the home 3 moved—Bishop Achesen to Visit Cal- | of the late Jonathan Allen on South vary Church. Main street. All the stock, farming - tools, etc., were sold. Matt Tinker French curve, the location of at least | was auctioneer. two railroad accidents within the past| Mr. and Mrs. Ronald K. Brown of year, one resulting in lo: of life as|New York were guests of relatives in well as heavy financial loss by damage | town Thanksgiving. to rolling stock and the other con--| M. Klingon was calling on friends Secretary Redfield denies that he je to leave the Cabinet. It looks as though he might be the last one to Press. fined to loss in roiling stock, is being |in _Middletown Thursday. . gradually taken away, and when the Miss Cora Carrier left Thursday for will he a husy one with us, so do your shop- |||, i i, s vre ot | "sis Cors"Carrier eft Thyraaay tor siding will not only be on a etraight |tives. line but will be of material benefit to Manager L. E. Smith of the Boys' : th in 1 f the N k, N d: Y vl ping as early as possible if you want to get | :: =i il oo xew vork New | cwp (o rriday tors few daye Vs moval of the curve opposite Ledward's Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kell ye and Island is another big improvement.|child, of Deep River, were guests of These ch: , the ith th k lativi in t Thursd: d ¥ri- New Winter Apparel at much under price. || :: i wxbt: v b | Sl 2w Thuray between Stonington and Westerly the Addressed Boy Scouts. - equal of any in the big system. Dr. J. M. Klein gave a two hours’ Nofe the prices helow, and bhear in mind that Plasiadet Paintors: tecturs o s Al o fhe Wounded gan bla‘:‘;ptol the Pipiscopal alocses. of oneatey SYenlag. of predar Jihe As usual we are here with the goods, there are lots of others throughout the Store. ||| oz xv = e v e | 5o Sl i ot sy sind offer & fow N iion church Sunday. tooll(( ; &ng{sdr-uons v;hh them xmd There was a general home-coming | {PO1¢0 thelr qinner and supper. larvin took them to an old lndhn it remain over’ Sundag® "o CAME | camping ground and save the boys OET BUSY 9 - ’ The annual fair of the Ploneer Hook |®.fine history of the place. Women's and Misses’ Coats |t somrsms meis Children Entortain The Anclent Order of Hibernians A large croww attended the second Will have an open meeting Sunday af evening’s entertainment for the ben- ternoon. State and county officers will | .ot of St. Andrew’s church Thi be present and an Interesting order of | 5 e o ks $6.85 58.95 $10.00 ciercises has been arranged. e e D e Ladies’ and Misses’ Suits $1250 $1500 $19.50 en, from Louisa B. Alcott's celebrated book. It was produced by lhl chil- PLAINFIELD dren of the Sunday school and was very well given. After the play a so- o - . Manager L. H. Wilcox Resigns at Lily | Fitchville, Moodus and other - nelsn: etticoats .Derge and esses Theatre — Local People Attend | boring towns attended. Moosup Bazaar. Holiday Week Notes. Miss MadelinesBrown of Cromwell is Clar. ‘Winsor was in Cen o v $1.95 $2.50 $2.98 || $4.85 $6.45 $8.45 [l rmmrm e grm o SRR Sl ‘school . Manager Resigns. wxuu.m ne:B e L. H. Wilcox, for many years man- | were (um af Miss Nzllh ‘Wade over X ager of the old Babcock theatre, ksgiving. ~ resigned as . and llr- ‘Walter Wheeler left Black, White and Colored || Black and Colored Velour Hats R e B R by Providence. relatives in Danielson and Boston. - i and Alice, t‘?z‘rwfl hlohvm: of 3 Ostrich Plumes, 95¢ $1.98 et e B. GOTTHELF & CO. [Ffsizorea “The Store of Good Values” 94-100 Main Street