New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 10, 1922, Page 5

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HAVEMADE A HES ~OFLAND BUSINESS Big Proprietors of Land in Eng- land Must Do Better London, Oct. 10.—The big land- owners of England have been told, in substance, that as a class they have made a mess of the Jand business and that if they did not do better in the future the country would take the land from them and turn them adrift. The speaker was Lord Bledsloe, Bimeelf a big landowner who, during the war helped ihe government man- age the food supplies of the country. The occasion was an address before the British association. “The British agricultural landown- er today is on his trial,” Lord Bled- sloe asserted. 'Unless he justifies himself as such, the nationalization of the land is inevitable Public opinion will demand his extinetion, and parlia- ment will endorse the demand. “Many landowners have heen for two generations nothing more than rent receivers, ana they have pos- sessed neither the knowledse nor the inclination personally to administer their own estates, still less to cuiti- vate them on commercial lines for their own and the nation's benefit. . "“So far as they have been organ- ized as a class of the community, they have been organized, not as produec- ers of wealth, but as defenders of property, and as such their organiza- tion has, in a highly democratic coun- try, afforded them but a small aud steadlly decreasing measure of se- curity. They have thus lost their political power because they had no economic basis. They have, not whot- ly without justification, been stigma- tized as ignorant, reactionary and despotic.” “THELMA” MISSING, MURDER MYSTERY Phoenix, Ariz., Police Seeck Woman Who May Be Implicated in Strange Killing. Phoenix, Ariz., Oct. 10.—Search for “Thelma,” a mysterious woman who is supposed to have attended the fu- neral of Guy Dernier here, and efforts to locate one of the men who have figured prominently in the investiga- tion of Dernier's death and who is re- ported to have lefi the city, today oc- cupied most of the attenton of local officers rying to solve the riddle of who killed Dernier Dernier’s body clad only in his un- der clothing was found in the Arizona irrigation canal eight miles north of Phoenix on September 12. His body was found two hours after he had called good-bye to a friend and had driven away from a local club in his automobile. Police and attaches of the sheriff’s oftice have visited many cities in Arizona and California in tracing down clues as to Dernier’s slayer, but without success. “Thelma”” had disappeared from her famillar haunts in Los Angeles since Dernier's death. TO CONN. PEOPLE ———— Patents Issued by the U. S, Patent Office Oct. 8, 1922, to Connec- ticut Inventors. (List furnished by the office of Har- old G. Manning, 211 Main street, Walk-Over Store, New Britain. George W. Beadle, Stamford, and 8., Kohn, New York, N Y., assignors to Columbia Graphophone Mfg. Co., Bridgeport. Two patents for auto- matic stops. Louis T. Bulley, New Haven, as- signor to C. Cowles & Co. Window regulator. Richard F. Dalton, Ansonia. Ap- paratus for polishing metai articles. Harold DeOlaneta, New Haven, as- signor to Winchester Repeating Arms Co. Three patents: two for manufac- turing of dry cells; one for machine for assembling dry cells. Emil De Stubner, New York, N. Y., assignor to Columbila Graphophone Mtg. Co, Bridgeport. Making molds and apparatus, therefor. William M. Fowler, Receptacle support for chines. George H. Hart, Hartford. tric switch. Frank C. Hinckley, and J. F. Skane, assignors to Columbia Graphophone Mfg. Co,, Bridgeport. Stop mechan- ism. Frank C. Hinckley, and J. J. Scully, Bridgeport, assignors to Coiumbia Graphophone Mfg. Co. Automatic stop. George E. Hulse, New Haven, as- signor to The Safety Car Heating & Lighting Co. Belt connection. Norman B. Hurd, New Britain, as- signor to The American Hardware Corporation. Door lock. Samuel Kohn, Bridgeport, assignor, by mesne assignments, to Columbia Graphophone Mfg. Co. Automatic stop. Louis G. Larsen, Bridgeport, as- signor, by mesne assignments, to Columbia Ghaphophone Mfg. Co. Au- tomatic stop. George B. McCracken, Willimantic. Reamer. Anker Peterson, Winthrop, Mass., assignor to American Wiremold Co., Hartford. Contact device for brald- ing machine stop motions. Edwin C. Rowdon, Sound Beach. Gold Washing and saving apparatus. John J. Scully, Bridgeport, assign- or to Columbia Graphophone Mfg. Co. Stop mechanism. Stephen P. Shukie, Westport. ball machine. Louis R. Spencer, Hartford. gine piston. Sound Beach. filling ma- Elec- Soft- En- Design. ‘William J. Gagnon, Bridgeport, as- signor to The Bead Chain Mfg. Co. Neck chain or similar article. Trade Mark Registration. The Glazier Mfg. Co., South Glas- tonbury. Woolen piece goods. Label Registration. The Bassick Co., Bridgeport, New- ark, N. J., and Meriden. ‘Bassick Casters.” (For Packages Containing Casters.) Trade Mark Applications. Ethel E. Belmore, Bridgeport. Bak- ing powder. Leonard R. Carley, Watertown. Ci- gars, cigarettes, smoking and chew- ing tobacco. You breathe out enough carbon in one hour in the form of carbonic acid gas to make a diamond worth over $75,000. What One Gallon of Kerosene in a “Z” Engine Will Do for You Do you realize how much work the “Z”’ engine will do at the low cost of one gallon of kerosene? Let us tell you about these many big advantages : 1=—Economically uses kero- sene as well as hot sperk, quick starting. 8—Throttling governor as- sures steady speed and close speed regulction. 4—8uction fuel feed—no pump — simple and posi- tive. S—Convenient speed con- troller gives change of speed while engine s running. 6—Renewable die-cast bear- inge. 7—Positive lubrication. #—Automatic in operatiof, requiring but little at- tendance—easily started. 9—Fairbanks-Morse quality throughout It will pump 10,000 gallons of water for your stock, for your home, for fire protection, It will light 10 20-watt, 16- candle power lamps for 15 hours from your light plant. It will grind 40 bushels of feed to fatten your stock. It will saw over 5 cords of wood for you. It will run your churn—cream separator— milking machine, It will operate your family washing machine—your grind- stone, corn sheller, clover huller, shredder, hay baler and other machines about the farm. Over 300,000 “Z” engines have " been bought by farmers every- where, They saved labor— got more work done. The many big advantages of the “Z” were convincingly demonstrated to these farmers before they bought. Note these features at the left and then you, too, come in and see the “Z.” Allf.0.b.factory; add freight to destination. Rackliffe Bros. Co., Inc. Agricultural Dept. Phone 1075 Park & Bigelow Sts.-New Britain WAGING FIGHT T0 ABOLISH DISSECTING Physicians on Tour of Comntry Against Vivisection Law Washington, = Oct. 10.—American anti-vivisection forces have announced Ithe reinforcing of their cause aimea lat adoption of laws abolishing the practice. Dr. Walter R. Hadwen, head of the British Unlon for the Abolition of Vivisection, has been en- gaged and is making a speaking tour of the country opposing vivisection. Dr. Hadwen opened a tour of the western states last month in Chicago, Minneapolis, St. Paul and lother cities, going then to California where he will ald the campaign for the passage of an anti-vivisection amendment to the state constitution. Sentiment is strong in California for such a measure, according to officials of anti-vivisection societies, despite the defeat of a similar bill two yearl ago. After a month's work in Call- fornia, Dr. Hadwen will visit eastern cities. Advocates of the practice who be- lleve in its value to the human race and to the medical sciences, did not discuss the question publicly with him, it was said, when he visited this country several years ago. He is mak- ing the present visit in answer to those proponents of vivisection who chal- lenged his right to speak for oppo- nents. The doctor was formerly a believer in vivisection, it was said, as well as vaccination and inoculation. Dr. Had- wen claims that 75 per cent of Eng- lish children are unvaccinated, and attributes to that fact the lowest smallpox rate in the entire history of that counry. TEMPORARY LICENSE CARDS ARE ISSUED This Branch of Motor Vehicle De- partment Brings in Five Times Total of 1921, A statement issued vesterday at the motor vehicle department showed that 752 temporary registrations were issued for motor vehicles during the first nine months of this year, as against 426 temporary registrations for the corresponding period of last year. Receipts fromv this source to- taled $2,100 this year, nearly five times the toal for a year ago. Of the temporary registrations is- sued this year, 574 were for pleasure cars, 114 for commerclal cars and 74 for public service vehicles. Most of those for public service cars were issued to persons desiring to operate Jitneys over specified routes only for the duration of certain agricultural falrs and similar events in different sections of the state. The majority ot the temporary registrations for pleas- ure cars were issued to vacationists spending part of the summer at Con- necticut resorts. The motor vehicle law leaves it to the discretion of the motor velicle commissioner to issue temporary reg- istrations to owners of motor vehicles, provided application is made in the proper form. The law authorizes the commission to require a deposit from each such applicant of a sum equal to the cost of a yearly, registra- tion for such motor vehicle, such sum less the proper fee to be returned on the surrender of the registration and the temporary number plate. HARVARD DEBATERS DEFEAT OXONIANS Audience Decides in Favor of Team Opposing U. S. Entering League. Boston, Oct. 10.—Harvard univer- sity debaters arguing in opposition to g:e immediate entry of the United States into the League of Nations de- feated the Oxford university team in Symphony hall last night. The de- cision was returned by the audience which gave Harvard 1614 to 1,000 for Oxford. Owing to the sudden illness of Ken- neth M. Lindsay, of Worcester col- lege who is in a hospital suffering from indigestion, two speakers pre- sented the case for the English col- legians. The Harvard team contended that the United States, in justice to its ideas and to the smaller nations of the world as well as in the interests of security and peace, should not join the league. 4 The Oxford debaters argued for the participation of the United States on military, economic, moral and in- tellectual grounds. They appeaied to American ideals to help Europe. The Oxonlans will debate against Princeton tomorrow night. Former Gov. Samuel W. McCall presided. Death Rate of Nation At Lowest in 1921 Washington, Oct. 10.—A record low death rate was established last year in the United States, according to an announcement by the Department of Commerce. The 1921 rate was 11.7 a thousand population as against 13.1 in 1920. The infant mortality rate also decreased, the rate for 1921 being 76 a thousand as against 86 a thousand in 1920. The figures are, for the reg- istration areas of the country and cover a population of 70,425,000, The birth rate for 1921 was 24.3 a thousand as against 23.7 a thousand in 1920. There were 1,714,261 births in the registration area for the year. The total of deaths was 825511, of which 129,688 were of children under one year old. TO BE A BANKER. New York, Oct. 10.—Wm. H. Van- derblit, son of Alfred Gwynn Vander- bilt, who lost his life when the Lusi- tania was torpedoed by a German submarine, has decided to becorge a banker, it was learned today, and has started at the bottom of the ladder as a clerk in the United Stdtes Trust Co. In Wall street. The heir to the great Vanderbilt fortune will be 21 wvaara ald naxt month. ER IN FIFTH AVENUE PAYING BET | New York Chorus Girl Who Bet On Yanks Also Gives Police- man a Kiss. New York, Oct. 10.—Part of police force of the city got kissed the performance of Its duty yesterday. That was because a chorus girl was concerned. Bhe was Miss Nellle Breen of “The Passing Show of 1922," who bravely clenched her teeth, powdered hre-nose and went through the pay- ment of her wager on the Yankees, the | 1n ER 10, 1922, along Fifth avenue, in front of the public library. All reading was sus pended In the library while she tec tered along In winter garden attire, but the lions on the front porch main- talned thelr bored air. Policeman John Menkin of Traffie A surged through the crowd, whispered something to Miss Breen, which was Interpreted to be an | junction to go heme and get more warmly wrapped up, But before going Miss Breen threw her arms around Menkin and Kkissed him for those sweet words, while sev- eral camermen strained thelr wrists trying to immortalize it in cellulold. And the press agent, ‘Who was there in the interest of a world which was hungry for such news, says it was all done as neatly as if there had been by walking on her toes for a block a rehearsal. der————————ee Only they called name in the old days. mothers of many of t “B. 0. & G. C. Wilson' “Winsol” is simpl to compound these sple country. Time has wrought B. 0. &G. C. Wilson’s as headquarters for the changed. remedies they have alw: Wilson family are com bound to answer ever medical aid, so B. O. Wilson, Inc., felt that t times, Winsol Agents, who complete line of over country can get these from his jobber or who ply house. gists are wide awake portunity for building ood-will offered by t remember, if you shoul into a store where the remedy you want is no through his jobber. When you want a t ment, cough syrup, toi a hot water bottle or specialty, insist on Wi To Wholesale and Retail Dru ingly large numbers. chandising idea today. remedies should be at the service of everyone—everywhe So, although there are special numbers, any druggist in the And because non-agent drug- WVinsol policy, you'll find Winsol remedies obtainable everywhere. Traveling, or at home, Winsol is always at your servi ducts. They are absolutely guar- gists—write your jobber. | questionable | from T ———— DRUG ADDICT HELD, now extends westward from within a square of the customs house, will be shunted out heyond the race track. Driven Out of Mcxico, They Are Placed Under Arrest in Texas, El Paso, Oct. 10.-—Several patrol wagon loads of undesirable Americans including drug addicts and women of reputacion, expelled | Chihuahua, across the from were under | arrest here today on charge of va grancy. 'Deportations began late last night after Ignaclo Enriquez, govern- or of Chihuahua, publicly announced plans for a clean up campaign. The deportees were selzed as they reached United States soll. The 150 saloons now operating in Juarez will he reduced to 75, Govern- or Enriquez sald, cabarets will be regulated and the vice district, which Beggar's Bank Account More Than Magistrate'’s York, Oct. 10.—~Magistrate McGeehan sentenced Harry Sher, a mendicant, to thirty days in the work- louse yesterday, finding him gulity of begging in front of the Pennsyl- vania hotel on October 6. “You have more money in the bank than I have," announced the Magistrate after a probation officer had reported Sher's savings as $1,000, with a quantity of miscellaneous cash found in his home and varlous pockets, Juarez, New Rio Grande here, ‘REG-U-S-PAT: OFF: A GUARANTEE OF QUALITY Three Generations of New Englanders Have Known and Trusted “Winsol” this family friend by a longer The grandfathers and grand- he men and women who today keep their medicine chests stocked with Winsol prepar- ations as a safeguard against illness and accident, used to send from alf over New England to Boston for the "’ goods. y an easy-to-remember, easy-to- say trade-name, built from the letters forming the name “Wilson,” when increasing demand made it necessary ndid remedies in large quantities and place them on sale in drug stores all over the Four Generations of Wilsons Have Made These Remedies many changes since 1845, when little shop in Boston was known finest obtainable pure drugs. But the formulae—all the prescriptions of eminent physicians, and many of them used in private practice for twenty-five years prior to 1845—have never been Physicians are today prescribing the Winsol ays found so beneficial. And today the third and fourth generations of the pounding these time-tried medi- cines from the old formulae, whose merit has been The OneTrade-Marked Line Sold Everywhere Just as physicians are in duty Three Famous Numbers in the List of Winsol Preparations y call for & G. C he Winsol SANALT tive blood purifier. tonic that re—at all i it in carry the a healthy appetite. a hundred clean. down. remedics lesale sup- —The Sensible Tonic—is a general reconstructive tonic and an effec It is the popular big-sell comprises Quality, Prepared upon the formula of a famous England physician more than 90 e finds thousands who testify to its value nic constipation, nervous_ debility. gish liver and kidney troubles. in_the fullest meaning of the term By inducing tharough elim- ination it makes and keeps the w An effective agent in purify riching the blood of people who are “all run NEUROPATHIC DROPS —the great, Emergency Medicine. tion used for over 75 years throughout this East or West, North or South, wherever you may travel through this great country, you will find people in all walks of life to whom “Winsol” is the name of a friend— a friend who has never failed to help them; who has stood guard over their health and the health of their families for years. proved by over seventy-five years of faithful service— one of them even having a century of use to its credit. No line of medical specialties used today can point to a longer or prouder history of public service, or claim so wide a friendship, won simply through having proved always helpful, always reliable, always the same high quality. Before the Massachusetts State Board of Health established its present well-equipped laboratory, pow- dered drugs prepared by the founders of the Winsol business were adopted as the State standard of purity. This distinction was peculiar and significant in that it was enjoyed by no other house. A And when the United States Pure Food and Drug Act went into effect in 1906, to meet the new require- ments, not a single change in B. O. & G. C. Wilson preparations or labels had to be made. Winsol products could not be better or purer than they already were. “Winsol” Means Complete Equipment For Every Family Need All the remedies most people keep on hand for emergencies and for use in the minor ailments—as well as some of the finest known tonics for convalescents and weak, “‘run down” anaemic people—are included in the list of Winsol specialties. & Every one is compounded from the finest and purest drugs—and is entirely free from opium or other narcotic drugs. Absolute purity, absolute freedom from harmful drugs, absolute certainty of satisfaction or a refund of the purchase price are guaranteed by the Winsol trade mark. To test for yourself the Effici- ency of Winsol Medicines. We Will Send You, Free, a Sample Bottle of Neuropathic Drops That you may judge for your- self, at first hand, by actual test in your own home, whether the claims we make for Winsol pro- ducts are true—that you may have personal evidence that Win- sol medicines are effective and quick to relieve, we will send you, without charge and postage paid, a sample bottle of Neuropathic Drops, in return for this coupon or a postcard or letter giving your druggist’s name. g Quantity and ars a0, Sanalt is a tonic It restores A prepara- country and in England, Australia and Canada. For Cramps or Coll a cold. to the op- eternally.” sales and his liberal Applied minutes, ces. ac hundred uses And Id happen particular t in stock, ice. —for Coughe. ing and soothing. that druggist can get it for you onic, lini- let goods, any drug insol pro- The franchise for selling the Win- sol line is not confined anywhere to the Winsol Agent. ggists Jobbers—write to us. it acts almost instantly, No opiates, narcotics nor harmful drugs. Can be used “internally to burn Drops removes all fire and sting within a fow and prevents blist It quickly takes away the hurt, an against discoloration. No family medicine chest should be without a bottle of Neuropathic Drops, CERIZANE BALSAM Not a syrup, but a balsam which aids expectoration, relieves the feeling of tightness in the chest, removes congestion from the lungs and imparts strength and tone. Contains no opiates, cotics, nor other harmful drugs goods are sold in the open market. Any jobber can get them direct from us. Any dealer can get them from his jobber. Druggists and drug jobbers awake to the selling possibilities of an established line of first-class merchandise, backed by the most aggressive advertising ever conducted on a group of drug special- ties in New England, are joining hands with Winsol in increas- And retail drug- Get in on this big and successful mer- Breaks up , externally and Neuropathic Use the drops as directed on the sample package, for any acci- dent or ailment mentioned there- in. Then judge any Winsol pro- duct by the result of your test of this one member of the line, Send for this free sample today, and keep it handy in case of need. Fine for H g. The remedy of Heal: nar- B. 0. & G. C. WILSON, Inc., 192-196 Cambridge Street, Boston, Mass. anteed by a house known for over three- quarters of a century for the purity, high quality and proven efficacy of its medical preparations, and for fair and square dealing in ‘every transaction. Winsol remedies contain no opiates, narcotics nor harmful drugs. Winsol mebns — your satisfaction or your money back. (COUPON) B. 0. & G. C Wilson, Inc, 192 Cambridge St., Boston, Mass. Winsol You may send me, without charge and postage paflxd. a sample bottle of Neuropathic Drops. (Coupon MUST be filled out in FULL.) Your name... Street address Town and State My druggist’s name is

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