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DANIELSON AND DANIELSON, Judge James N. Tucker rises to the de- fense of the republicanism of the Third | voting district of home village of ¥ Buch back-sl! party experienc- *d In Tuesday’s election is mof. to.Dbe tharged against his district, Judge Fuck- irs says, and he has the figures to dem- snstrate the validity of his claim. Judge Tucker calls attention: -to- the tact that only 291 voters, men and women, are registered in the Third distzict. - Of this number 22 voted last Tpesday. In all of KiN voters, Governor-ele Templeton given a majority of oniy 114 and the’ old third district, with about ten per ‘eént. of the total voting strength of the town, gave an even 50 of this majotity. . In that district the vote for Freeman .far congress was 127, as against 34 .for Jo- dohn.. Up there Darbie and Williams, for representatives, received respectively 117 and 115 votes, while their democratic opponents, Wetherell and Sayles respec- of which his ingly is a part. he to SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY ONLY ABOUT FIVE DOZEN EACH $1.50 SHIRTS $1.0p NECKTIES “SFFERED IN COMBINATION SHIRT and TIE AT THE SPECIAL PRICE OF The shirts are mostly “Emery” make, of fipe percale, neat check and stripe patterns. " The ties are beautiful knit grenadines and cut silks. Plain and faney colors. Saturday Only $1.85 :JAllen’s Men’s Shop 18 CENTER ST, DANIELSON Opposite Orpheum Theatrs What Training Have ~Yoi1 for HOW Wlu,. YQu RE,PLY TO THIS QUESTION ? Man\ youag men have found-a course at the State “Trade Schdol a. sat:sfactory answer, Eours;s are givén in’ ths following :—~Cotton Manu- facturirig” Architectural Drafting; Mechanical Draft- ing; Catpentry; Elctricity; Machine Shop Practice. Sl 4er 1y, with approximately 2500 | was | | cord of the pgople of Danielson and vi- PUTNAM NEWS | tively received 92 and 102. For state { senator, Childs, the republican candidate was given 115 and Bitgood, democrat, 94. In the sherif contest Gates, republican, lead Fox, democrat, 119 to 92. Judge Tucker has much. more ammu- nition to refute the clafm-.that the Third district should bear an odium for the fall down of the repgtblicans in Killing- ly. -He ‘points.out that all- of the Te- publican candidates were given a higher percentage of majority than they received glsewhere in the townm, ‘yoting strength considered. And as an aftermath of the elecilon, e explanation that the demo- republicans’ in- the hour day agitation on the part of demoeratic ecandidates during the pre-election period. And there is good reason to believe there is much in this claim. Several big manufacturing cencerns are located in the Second vot- ing district and the employes of them are almost a unit in asserting that eight hours is ample for a day's work. Most of these mills arc operating 54 hours éach week. The promise that democratie candidates would labor if elected to the legislature for an 8-hour day without doubt shifted many votes from the republican to the democratic ticket. The issue is a live one and holds a special appeal to workers. They want an 8-hour day and few wiil dispute that they are not entitled to it Representative-elect Williams, republican, of the second dis! is an avowed sup-{ porter of the S-hour day program, is fact might have been played up to better advantage than was done for some reason not quite clear, 2hd the republican party in Killingly suffered because of this tactical error. ‘What was true In the second distriet was more or less paralleled in this, the first distriet, where the normal republican majority was reduced, but not wiped out. It may be s little rbugh on some of the 6id boys yho are trying fo stick along with the modern cxponents, but it is con- fidentially asserted that the stiffening and rheumantic o are puiting bird seed in their céreal every morning to pep up their hopping apparatus for the fall and winter season. We would never admit it, but there most be an impression among sorhe of stock selling concerns is a hick tawn. About brings a bale, more or less, f allurlng invitations to invest in some nterprise paying from 30 per cént. an- nually to a $1.12 cents a minute. All the solicited one has to do is I'follow the printed instructions mail in & chegk and wait for the return How of lividends. Everything is offered from ol stock to shares in an acrial subway com- any. 1t appears that the stock-sellers have ‘earned that Danieison has money—oodles of it. Therc is evidence that Some of t has slipped away, never to return, but ‘he great bulk of the literature dealing with stock investments that comes to Danielson goes into waste baskets, some Jf it Tight mn the lobby of the post of- “ce. -1t has been broadcasted many times shat local bankers will impartially advise jinyone and without cost as to inyest- ments. The service is free for the ask- ‘ng. This being the case, there is little 1se for an incxperienced investor los- g his savings for lack of expert advice” Gurdon E. Withey has broughf in bis | Gfth fox Of the scason. As a successful pursuer of Reynard, Mr. Withey is in & (air way to be rated as the season's champion. With such a good start and with all the winter to hunt in, he should eome close to makifk 2 record during the present season. Foxes are said to bg plentiful herchouts and no man knows their- haunts -or their ways better than Mr. Withey. Considering the remarkable savipg re- «inity, as shown in part by the deposits @ local eavings institutions during the vast year, it is amazing to consider that evén the vast amount of money that has jpeen laid away against future need rep- resents probably less than 10 cents on every dollar paid 1‘ wakes in thls and uearby communities Yuring the past year, The habit of thrift given such a big boost by the Liberty loan campaigns dur- ing the World war has endured. The peo- ple have not become penurious, but have fortified themseives sgainst possible fu- re periods of stress and misfortune and 8ir savings are a tremendous underlying source of safety and strength for thi§ and the Job? but | the mrroundmi eomamnmel ‘that the de- posits represea OB, yes. Theylre back again. ¥sqm- mo pies ar¢ again the rage and an évi- dence that cold weather is here once wore. ' One- wholesaler of ice cream in Danielson said Friday that the pic busi< aess is going along With such a swing as w hold his genmeral sales up close to the mid-ssmmer record. The first of the mud that will have te be endured until after the warm sun of the late spring of 1923 dries it out thor- | oughly has made its appearance about | the passenger station of the Néw Haven {road.” The busy approaches to the sta |tk need to' ba irsproved with ameis ar ccment or something equally good. With fts trunk line highway system practically completed, it seems to many that this improvement might be under- taken as a matter of civic pride. The tmprovement is badly needed and could be completed in a very short space of time. The Armistice day observance will have | s its finale in Danielson a dancé at the state armory at which scores of the éx- seryice men will be in attendance. 5 The New Lady Bantock, dramatie production, by Danielson Gir! lub, Or- vheury- theatre, Tuesday evening, Nov 14. “Tickets, 58 and 87 cenis, tax in- cluded, exchangeable today at box office. —adv, Mechanistic Methods of Education will be the subpect of an address by Supt. Leon M. Farrin of the schools in Killing- Iy and Brooklyn before 2 ageeting of teachers to be held next Thursday after- noon at the Danielson graded school. Miss Mayme Duna is visiting with rel- atives in Bridgeport pver the week end. Plainfield High school and XKillingly High school will emgage, through their respective teams, in a football yewe va Quinebaug. fiefd this' Armistic ddy after- ngon. - The game praomises to be one of the most interesting of the season. Victor A\ Duquettc of Fitehburg has entered the employ of Henry A. McEwen, Richard A. Sanders of New Bedford is spending the week with friends in Danielson. John Phillips has returned*to his home on Academy sireet after spending the sumamer and early fall period in Massa- chusetts. Rev. C. C. Tibbetts of the Methodist church has Invited members of Xuehux= lodge and membgrs of Doreas Rebékal lodge, L O. O. F., to attéend the morning service at the Mothodist ehurch on Sun- day. The Good Samaritan will be the pastor’s subject. Mark O. Burns has been appointed an assistant branch manager at New Haven by the brush concern with which he has been associated for some time past, gad his family is now located in that eity. Can it be that some of these who are given to deceit and spite are using the current penchant for distilling as a basis | for entering false complaints against persons whom they wish'to see raided by officials, in order to disoredit thosg rajded and to bring disrepute upon them? Fhis appears to be the belief of some officials, and one raid conducted just outside of Putnam this week may have bgen instl- gated by false and malicious epmplaint. For many moutbs some officers have believed that emong the mass of com- plaints always figwing in are l- certsin percentage ®.at are” hased mal rather than upon fact, and e cave ¥ exercised in iuvutlggung them, though | erroer ig apt to ogdhf at times. It-is not the intention of officidls to raid inngeent persons. It is a taet, though, that a very | large percentage of the -complaints re-| ceived, ususily through the mail, are of an anonymous nature. A difficulty that confronts the officers is to sift the real information from the false and act 2e- cordingly. Human nature is as mean in streaks 33 i3 the situation that makes possible the invasion of the premises of | innocent persons, bt that is the condi- tion existing today and it is bound at timés to refult in injury being done fo gome' itrocent person, Relative to illicit distilling, ‘it appears the indylgence in it on 3 commercial basis | is being driven farther out into the coun- try than was the eule a year or two ago. | The big stills are rarely ever found now in the more densely populated sections of this county, but out in the back copntry districts, where the risk of deteétion or “squealers” is less. In the death this week in a Worcester hospital of little Ralph Stewart Deane what appeacs to be the final gurtain fell upon the Bnscived mystery of the child's parentage. The infant was abandoned | on the night of Sept. 5 on the doorstep of | 2 home In Woodstack, and eventually wds taken for adoption by Mr. and Mrs. | Georse Deane, for wham the chilld was | named. From the hour the abandoned child was found until the present time, not an ink- ling has ever come as to who left the child or from whence it came. Polige in- vesflgated the case and exerted them- selvés to get clufs that might lead fo the | identity of either one or both of the par- epts” but found the clves completely "It now seems established that the chfld was prematurely born. From theé time -it was abandoned, jiust over two: months ago, it Is said never fo Nave given prom- ise ‘8¢ thriving and developifi. apd fe- cently became so ill that it wag desmed best ‘to take it to a ‘Worcester hospital for special treatment, but even the best care “the institution afforded failed to save its life. While there can be nothing cpnjecture as tp wherp the brought frem to the Woodstock - home where It was abandoned, there is a poszi- bility that it may have been from Squth— brifige ot Wehster or some othér Magsa- chusetts point as Tikely as from ormeothuwbk” oo 4 ‘clue that the 1 time might lead tp fhe mothér of of spme Woman w Tratning for hand and mind, /Full particulars on request, State Trade School i 4 PUTNAM “THE BB.,OOKLYN SAVINGS BANK EBTAILISHED 1872 — —:DANIELSON, CONN. $3,778,336. .4,i04;836f © following are the mewly figers of Wolt Den grange of Ku{g, Leonard Watson; 6v ur Gallup; lecturer, Mrs. wuun Hisksy ;};%uumm Fhite ; assistan “Some of the Americans be blown up into the-air.” TON SUNDAY A The Truth! \l The Tnbute' To the Valor! of the Heroic New England troops in the World War! From Whom? By Whom? At Last From None Less Than The German High Command Confession of the German Generals that “It Was the American Soldier That Whipped Us”’ Read what Gen. Von Gallwitz, General of ar- tillery, who was in personal command -of German forces opposing the main body of the Amcncan army and Yankee Division, says: , - when surprised in their trenches, rcfuscd to surrender, prefcmng to “One man, taken on April 17th;~26th ' (Y: ankee) Dmslom Siray, fought betolca!ly and llndo- handed against zh'nnger forces and.refused- to talk after being disarmed.” .- “An attack against the American (Yankee)- Division at the Forest Ricmxcres.'und:rtaken June 19th, led to little success-on account of their fierce resistance.” A Bead what the Armed Foe says of the Brave Yankee Division— ONLY IN TOMORROW’S BOSTON Sunday Advertiser Tell Your Newsdealer to Surely Get You Tomorrew’s Boston Sunday Advertiser ‘The Tribute! here the ‘majority of in the mills of the ra- tHe ‘history 6f the the fact is pleasing 1o and other members sreisills, T Eet ot 1he oot . tW0, out on tl - Wmfl, the eement tops will be broken the filfer beds naxz Mvnday prepara- - "h interest for uuyue'mbafln the work of moving -from-the present quarters of the bank te the quarters to be occupled in the. old Thompson bank in Union strest 'during the several nionths in Which "the Fiest National's business blogk is*undergoing remodeling. It is-anticipated that wopk on the building will be in full swing within a very few days. sawe eyeavat- ing has been done this week £ lar for an-extension ‘of the buildi Dolegates from towns hery be in attendance when the ueond'.hnl'nnnu convention of “the Connecticut o of Wameu Voters meets or Thursday and Friday of dext week at'the Hotel Strat. fleld in B: p:&t. Mrs. 5 Harg. I:H of A ret, Mrs. S. Nikoloft of Putnsm are “among those 'ME this ucuou who are gxpeeudu n in A oo e edblthe peojected plan of New Engiand Milk Producergaspogiation to fotm the hrlen mn; m company doing m""gumb..mm-.' wumhmmmm Sharpe, who becamie a meém- in Jaungary, 1859, aud who rendered Bnd unselAsh service’ to 1t had been ‘s teadher and 3 MM of the" !‘;nd-y ;fl;aol. Te- xiemp.r e stapding 5 “ gdirector . helpful worker. it 1‘. Angeies, where he has 3§ of undertakers, ot mmm &&yfllhhmfifmwu:u RImMY equipment at the present tims, the - suits -in many mw The Valor! umpl.u.ln‘ making s trip to the sowth ¥ January. Frozen ground was noted’ by t.h-"‘. Were out early” eno! vhm the ummm:{h u " ae- sreds. Mrs. Warren W. As members of St. Vulhfi 1orlmetl‘.n:’l‘u nfl‘l’am Tou i mam a few days nd Mrs. Loveland “are hbme in Putnam. “"Dr. and Mrs.' Joseph C. fret are in' Boston Hervard