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Nbewich Bulletin, Willimantic Of- stamps can be cashed and a . 5105, frer. having it ol G S oo i SR pE T e 0 What Is Going On Tenight. werth more the longer they are held, American Benefit _Soeiety, Willi- mantic Lodge, No. 120, meets Main street. Willimantic Lodge, pY¢ &t 792} 5 notice Tuesday I 1 Ord: “mmh in twenty holds regular meeti 'ed Order of Golden Crofs, Wil- tic Commandery No. 256, meets. dham Encampment, No. 10, I 0. O. F., meets at 807 Main street. The report of the sale of ‘war sav- ings and thrift stamps for the thirty- five. postoffices in the Willimantic dis- triet for June, made public Tuesday by Postmaster John O’Rourke, show- ed the sale of over five hundred wer savings stamps and over eight h\;: changed his Taind. The detailed report: Ashford Ballouville Vi e aside from the sales ..ever three thotigand dollars reported. by the Wil- limantic post office. The 'sale of stamps has fallen off to a considerable extent since the armistice wi ed. “In fact it more nearly re a banking business now as people are coming in to the local office daily to buy "stamps, or to cash fn stamps which they have bought previousiy. Ten days’ notice is required under the post office regulaticns before the | Pomfret. Center Seotland, -.. Total 844 i Rev. Vernon W. Cooke, formerly pastor of the First Congregational church, who has been overseas for 15 months in Y. M. C. A. war work, has returned to this country. Work Council of the Y. M. C. A. sent the following letter to Willlmantic coneerning Mr. Cooke: “Vernon Walter Cooke of 'Willlman- tic, Conn., has returned from overseas affer fiftéen months of work with the Y. M. C. A. He has been a field sec- retary at Chateau-Thierry, Soissons, Argonne, with his headquarters _in Paris during his term of service. We wish his friends to know how greatly we appreciate the work that he has done for the soldiers, through this as- sociation. i Jur great t t Refrigerator Time at The J.C. Lincoln Co. ecretaries werd glven ~and one beset with difficul- The association undertook not mercly to contribute to the comfort and wel e of the troops-in certain convenient localities but to extend its work ranidly to every part of France and to every village where any con- siderable number of troops might be stationed. “The association did not hesftate to accept every service it was called up- on to undertake, even though adverse | circumstances might make it impos- sible to meet with maximum success. The secretaries were put to tasks which were new to most of them and were scattered over France where they had to do their work more or less without direction and under con- ditions which were unfamiliar and in other ways difficult. There were very Many styles and sizes and all of the dependable kind. Let us show you. The J.C. Lincoln Co. belonged to the great who gave unstintedly of physie and mental strength to s to which they were assign- We want his friends to know our appreciation of the service which he Furnitare Tel. 705-3 A DISCOVERY THAT BENEFITS MANKIND FUNERAL DIRECTORS AND EM- SALMERS Two discoveries have added greatly Willimantie, Conn. | to human welfare. fhady Assistant) In 1835 Newton originated the vac- ‘uum process for condensing milk with cane to a semi-liguid form. In 1883 Horlick at Racine,Wis., dis~ covered how to reduce milk to a dry powder form with extract of malted grains, without cane sugar. This product HORLICK named Maited Mitk. (Name since copied by others.) Its nutritive value, digestibility and ease of preparation (by simply stirring in water) and the fact that it ke in_any climate, has proved of muchvalue to-mankind 2s an ideal food-drink from infancy Tol. conmection | Ask for HORLICK’S —Avold imitations KILLOUREY BROS. 86 Unien St, Phons 290 DR. F. C. JACKSON DENTIET Remeoved to 715 Main Si., Willimantie Hours—$ o m %9 §$ 3 m. Fhone 44 -JAY M. SHEPARD Succeeding Elmore & Shepard Funeral Director & Embalmer 60-62 North St., Willimantic Lady Assistamt MURRAY’S BOSTON STORE Willimantic, Conn. ONLY FOUR MORE DAYS OF ur July Clearance ARE YOU IN NEED OF BEDDING? IF SO, NOW IS THE TIME WHILE PRICES ARE MUCH BELOW REGULAR. SANITARY CLEARANCE OF MATTRESSES AMEL BEDS At Closing Sale Prices - Full size Cane Combina- $8.50 White Enamel tion Mattresses , Tegular | Beds—This week $6.89. £12.50 value—This week ;. $10.69. $9.75 Wiitd amel Full size Cotton Mat- | Beds—This week $7.49. tresses, regular : $16.50 : value—This week $13.98. Beg;:?h. e QE"amel Full size Combination 4 wack $9.49. $13.00° White: Enamel Beds—This week $10.49. tresses, regular $27.50 $14.50 White ~ Enamel, value—This week $22.49. | Beds—This week $11.69. Hygeno Steel Carpet Sweepers, regular $3.00 quality - —&ocfl.l this week $1.69. y Mattresses, regular $t4.00 value—This week $11.69. Full size Silk Floss Mat- few who did not measure up to their William 2. Karczeski, 21, of u%. wich, and Miss Yvonne Derogiers, 22, C. Harley Sm 't street. groom - bride in {at his home on Pro were u nded. e a8 born in*“Poland and the Can- Norwich. Willizn A. g, 'Willimantie's-eor- poomtion | coummel - ek sixty-four years old Tuesday. Mr. King spent the day at his office in the First Na- tional Bank building and said that was feeling quite well. Mr. King tg born in Greenfield, Mass, July ' 22, 1865. He has been a member of the house of representatives several times and is at present ome of the members of th bly Trom Willimantic. From 1802 to and in- cluding 1906 he was a -gehieral of the state. = Carriers Clarence Barrows and Clarence Palmer and Clerk Edward Fagan, of the local post office, start their annual fifteen day vacations this (Wednesday) morning. Carriers John Smith and Ansen and Clerk . Walter Woodward return this mern- ing from their vacations. The vaca- 21 tion period at the local office is ‘esti- mated by Postmaster John O'Rourke to be about two and a half months. There are eight carriers and seven | clerks and two carriers and one clerk are let go each fifteen days. Mr. and Mrs. Herman F. Meyer- hardt of Prospect street have’ nounced the marriage of their daugh ter Bertha, and Harold Culpin of Philadelphia, formerly of Willimantic. The ceremony took place at 9.30 Fri- day in the vestry of St. chu the rector. Rev. Wal Borchert officlating. Mr.- and Harrison Barber were ‘be gt- | tendants. The groom is erlaged | business in Philadelphia; the bride has been emploved in a local stere. Captain (Dr.) W. P. S, Keating, for- merly lieutenant of Co. 1. of the ol@ C; N dear to all of the local boys | who went away from here with the | “mit to Aght the Hun has return ted " is the last of | tic's onal Guardsmen to return. { He arrived Willimantic on 16.22 train Tuesdav evening. jwere almost a hundred people at the ion to mect him and they eagerly ed the travelers alight from the cars. of the train. The rear of 25 near the baggagc sta- tion and there " khaki-clad, be- cled and smiling was diseov- was a rush and shouts of and “H Captain” and o srinning more broadly than ever, got into an automobiie with his wife and family and went home. Captain Keating—then leutenant- went to the Mexican border with the National Gnardsmen in 1917. Then when the kurgpean war came he went out with Co. I. He went overseas with them and when they became a part of the fargous 102nd Infantry and the more famocus Yankee Division he |staved with them, being connected !with the sanitary department. He re- ceived Fis commission as captain some months ago. Captain Keating wears three service stripes, the green fand vellow Mexican campaign - fand the vartegated aign of the A. E. F., surmounted with the {little gold star showing that he was a volunteer. He said he had nothing to say except that he was very glad to be home and was very tired. Brief Mention. There was no session of the police | court Tuesday. Hello, Doc” of motor vehicles, has notified the po- lice department that the license of | ugene Bacon had been returned to him. H. B. Porter suffered a loss of be- | tween $50 and $75 from fire when a |lamp exploded at his home in Hebron. The loss is covered by insurance. An agent was in town Tuesday con- ferring with Selectman’ James A. Smith_concerning the town honor roll.! {It will be on the front wall of the town building, east of the main en- trance, and will be ready for deliv- ery in about two months. Lijeut. Burt C. Warner, U. S. formerly employed in. a local garage, jwas appointed a substitute fireman in Hartford Monday. Miss Margaret T. Shea .who been the guest of friends here for sev- | ada. They will make their home in| | “"Robbins B.' Stoeckel ,commissioner | The New “TEA-FOIL” Package It’s soft and pliable—decreases in size as the tobacco is used—tobacco does not cake in the package—no digging it out with the finger. Keeps the tobacco in even better condition than tin. you owe it to yourself to buy a package and give Tuxedo a trial?—Not quite as much tobacco as in the tin, bui—- : Finest Burley Tobacco Mellow Plus a dash of Chocolate -aged till perfect G # Now 10c don’t INCORFORATER eral days, has returmed to her home in_Hartford. Wilfred Reberts has been discharg- ed from thé army and is employed in a local clothing stere. Inspector C. A. Thatcher of Hart- ford was in town Tuesday, in the ab- sence of Deputy Inspector Ralph Young, examining applicants for driv- ers’ licenses. JEWETT CITY Since the much mooted possibility of no trolley service has begun to look like a probabilli Jewett City have takem u nquu?nmu of de- time the tant and weighty- ciding what it is no joke with ple to a A a different scheédule in the people of the imper- day the new has{trains shall depart amd arrive. And several hundred peo- all of whom want 45 south bound trains and 65 north bound were pret- ty well settied upon late Tuesdav ev- eni a ‘Then, i train jtime for the aftermoon e {the theatres, with leeway for a lunch ibefore and time for a college ice In a|i; take them somewhere to a hurry at lett City in One thing sure, that will get the close, th again, there must be te Norwich in Bee at en make Jew- Norwich shoppers must have a train. wbich en special shoe clearance sale daye, will run in two Rev. J. with n: iattached, nerthbound. ‘Aldrich has a garden on L baggage car the Hawkins lot on Bast Main street. Monday, while walking in his garden among the stalk investigating, up the top, a ed on dame eorn, bent over to the the k. he noticed a large Upon in the blades near y of bees hed Tt w swarm- estimated ‘were nearly three quarts. The n against Kinne was melasses, - hored | white cloth at the proper place. the possible new . samapléd the treacle, an toak pomsession, followed by thousand ‘husbands. Potatoes ‘the soak- vines ‘Wil ‘comes too wet nothing as much as a barrel of iced fish. Pro- bably 50 tons of hay were down | when the wet spell began: much of it is cpoiled or greatly depreciated in valge. Local farmers think it would be a good plan tv dig the good old saint up and plant him again back iunder the eaves of his church, where the water could drip as he pre- scribed. Postmaster D. F. Finn who acted as treasurer of the committee appointed te arrange for the Fourth of Jjuly c ebration, has turned back to the town {of Grisweld and the borouzh ett City, two hundred doli: When the town and boro: this money toward defray pense, Finn stated ati t ings of the freemen that the received by popular supscriptions would be used first, and f not needed the’ money from town and borough would be refunded. There still remains in the treas- urer’s hands nearly one hnndred and doMars. It is the plan to hold this money, and when socm> o’ them other soldiers or sailors come home, ice'din- ner and a geod time, that they may share in some degree Griswold's wei- come to her heroic soms. In the Griswold town court Tues day morning L. A. Kinne and Leo [to- bichaud of Voluntown were presented before Judge A. M. Brown, in connec tion with breaking into Godek's sa- loon on the morning of July 13. Kinne was fined $50 and costs and Rabich- aud $20 and costs. Both men pro- !duced tife coin. Investigation in the case and the facts preseniod proved that the men did net intend burglaiy. A drink was needed pretty badly had it been secured, it was their in- tention to pay for it. The charge changed from in the night season, te that of damage to personal property, henmce the light fine and tiement. 13".7-; Davis, of this place, who wa< Irst class radie operato: S. submarine chaser North Sea during the wa; the Cennecticut Tray op at Put- nam, Conn., as a student in ¢ elec- trical department. A recital at the Holderness Sum- {breaking and entering i al jmer School of Music at Asqiam lake, Holdérness, N. H., i8 to be given by the pupils of that sehool Snturday af: ternoen: Doris Myott iss school, having first gone year with Miss Marian | win Vi with Mrs. C: Mr. few 1 Y ter, Mech of foundry. two classmates. Sapada and Edward Norton of West- hester, Conn. The Congregational Sunday picriic 18 to be held Satyrday in September at_the home ans Beech Pond. The committee on trns- sing al st Town births—Edmond sephine Zions and {Joseph Paul Anthony, son mene Ferris and Paul Anthony Richards, and Ovila Richards Burckersoda, McKenna ‘There were two deaths. Phoebe John- son. chronic arterio schlerosis: Cutter of are recorded ! Alice Lapoint Lydia A. Goff and Mar: Jeffers liam Refkoski and Mar: Rev. Tuesday |Island, where Mr. F mer pastor. Mr. and Mrs. Oxford, Mas: and Mrs. R. Miss Clara Desjardincs, been an army returned and is at her homs on Main street, Prof. He hert fora is at L. G. Buckingham's for days Miss and fo aa anical 3 tian i ents, son of uaranteed by M Spirit Flower, | bell, Tipton, in memory of Miss An- thony atistics for Ju Clerk Welsh Cholewa, Stefen Josephin: daughter and Max lagrippe. Five Simon Lewis: H. Hoffm: and Jennie M. Mrs. M. r two wi D. ller I ha e A ank Sco been nurse ove The names of those person are willing to take the Fresh A: dren must be handed to M Hiseox before six o'clock he Is Instructed to give her report ltwo weeks before August 6. William Moéodie, who has recently been graduated from Tufts’ engineering leaves Monday for Waterbury whe: he will be mechanical engincer in a He has had as his guests MeAffee John on Mrs. F. Dr. G. H. J place tne teachers of the it freshm. Anthony. Dur- class; Miss Sadle v. of Burckersoda. | veniences North Stonington pesple Felix P. McMahon and Brown Daniglson W Miner Pietroski. Fuller left on stay at Block Dearnle; Mathetrson a Malcolm of D ., is vis tiaz Ler aunt, Mizs I ing this year Miss Anthony has died, | and, for one of the numbers | programme at the recital, Mirs the ott Camp- on my ne, as filed show four son of Jo- of e Mary Celina marriage and Harold Wil- un’ was a for tt of North guests at has has of Mil- a 3rookly: 1 =hii- R tonight, as College departfept, ot school the second Gilbert ennings, - in school. Re- Thomps m’ bert D)n- E. Paul, Jv. nell: games, Henry The committées appointed for the Baptist Sunday scho olpicnic are time d piace, R. W, Dearnley, G, H rior, Miss Alice Brown: refresh- ments, the Eccleston clacs, Mrs. E C. Willcox, teacher; games and sports C. F. Gardner, Lemuel Green, Royal Babcock: Misses May Blakg and Esther Gray: transportstion. Arthur k and €. I Babeock; lemonade, Martin Davis. NORTH STONINGTON The trolley strike greatly ineom- The annual Tea Garden will be held next week. The Grange fair is to be held Sept 16, 17 and 18. Miss Marion White, who is il in a hospital in Philadelphia, is impreviag. She is hoping to come home. sosn. Mrs. C os E. Hillard returmed home Sun after an absence of sew- eral weeks. Charles Erncst Gray is carrving and fetching the mull between the loedl postoffice and Westerly during the trolley strike, makicg three round trips daily by autom “iile, Dewey Tayler, Otid Mongan amd Noyes Eccléston are woriking em the new state road. at | ¥ IR R A N T