Source, Rutland (Vt) Daily Herald--Wed.Dec. 11,1918. MARRIED RUTLAND MAN BUT DIDN'T KNOW IT. Burlington, Vt., Dec.10--Mrs. Charles E. Miller of Winooski, whose petition for divorce was heard in Chittenden County court today, claims as the ground for separation that her marriage certificate was obtained under false pretenses and that the wedding was brought about through the use of drugs and undue influences. She testified she was living in Winooski seven years ago with her mother. She became acquainted with Miller, who brought milk to the house. One night he brought some liquor with him. Her mother took a drink or two and Mrs. Miller also drank, but rather against her will, she says. She said she drank from a different bottle from the one furnished her mother. After that she remembered little or nothing. She had a hazy idea that MIller went out and returned with a clergyman.In the morning she saw the marriage license but could not believe she was married and in a hysterical mood she tore the license up. Later she pieced it together. The clergyman's name on the certificate was Rev. F.O. Winans, she stated. She said she never lived with MIller and that she had always had her doubts as to whether or not she was married to him until last summer, seven years later, she investigated and found that she was married to Miller, the marriage been recorded in Winooski. The woman's mother told practically the same story. Miller, who is being sued, is now in Rutland, working in a hotel. He does not contest the case. According to the statement of the attorney for Mrs. MIller, the man admits everything except that the whiskey was drugged. He says it was good rye whiskey. Judge Slack, who is hearing the case, expressed a desire to get more evidence and an effort will be made to get hold of the minister who performed the ceremony so as to find out just what took pace. Mr. Winans, the clergyman named, was formerly a Methodist pastor at Winooski.