Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 8, 1909, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

(I R T L MINDAG . S O ¥ emsier | Hartford, July 7~~The senate was called to order at 10.30 by PnllMl Ppro tem. Brooks. Prayer by Chaplain Sexton. 4 Calendar. »~ Passed-—Appropriating $109,200 for of the it i the current expenses Norwich hospital for the insane; that when a ':' appointed by the su- | N perior court to hold & on en Sugar Refining company; e e e S Brin e gy g et rles ¥ AR Do haid ok Guok i6oe Frazier, directors; John E. Parsons, and and with director and chief counsel, and Thom." notice to those interested as the court ds H. Harned and Gustave B, Ki i & - co-defendants. Judge -Hand ac Kissel s charged with being in- of §91,490 for the executive depart- ed the pleas and granted counsel two | volved in the conspiracy as the nego- » ments for the two onding B&r- weeks' time to demuf or .take other |tiator of the loan to Adolph Segal, temaber 30, 1911; appropriating $107.- paper read: “The stomach/'—Every- |action regarding the indictments. president. of the Pennsylvania com- 1 for t'? ;nn. mfm:‘lll‘ 8‘91%-‘ that. eminent domain was v 29 5 Atv.ornle:i'- tg; %f 7;:;1 d‘:‘t‘:n:::‘tg I:'nfih‘;% hv: ’#::‘n 'lh;::u::; "fi'.g ; & L . .| that bail for the indiv: fec 3 Da‘ for & nurses’ bome the -Con- | conveyed. be fixed :t, $10,000 each, but Judge | nett was the attorney for Segal and is Mr, Tingler of Vernen gaid that he Hand announced that he did not con- Presidents of Savings Banks. Whe following bill was explained by Senator Goodwin and paseed: Py a year; those exoeed two million not emoceeding seven dotlars a year; those dollars pay ing _one thousand dollars a year; those whose deposits exoeed fve jon dallars may pay Rpot exceeding en hun- dred dollars a year; those whose de- posite emceed sewen milion five hun- dred thi d dollars may pay not oxceeding ?vo thousand dollars a year; and those whose deposits exceed ten million doMars may pay Dot ex- -five hundred doflars a provided, that in oases where sation shell exceed three hi lars a year, it shall be de- termined by an affirmative vote of three-quasters of the whole number of directors, managers, or trustees, as the case may be. Reports of Oommittees. Incorporations—Favorable on resolu- tion incorporating the Killingly Power company and naming Timothy E. Hop- kins, Frederick A. Jacobs and George 8. Brown as, incorporators; ecapital stock $6,000, which may be increased to $100,000. Calendar. Foot of Calendar. Concerning grownds of the stase nor- mal school at Willimantic. Savings Banks Deposite. (Senator Luther in the chtalr.) The senate disowssed at some length senate DMl No. 127, Introduced by Senator Blakeslee, coneerning the eschest of bank deposits to the state that hewe been unelaimed for thirty years. The committes on banks had made an unfavorable report on the bill. was opposed By Senator The bill Brooks. The amendment of Senator Good- win, chafrman of the committee on banks, which was practically the Mas- sachusetts law, was rejected by a vote of 10 to 1L The amendment increasing the rate of interest to be pald by the state on eschoated deposits to 4 per cent. was ndgsud. nator -~ Seards offered an amend- ment that the presentation of a de- K:tbaok to be written np should be n as evidence of iden tion. The senator withdrew the amendment a moment later to make it broader in its meaning, so that the owner of the ‘book will not be compelled to present it. While he was preparing the amendment in writing, Senator Fenn offered an amendment that the statements of the bank officials shall be accompanied by an itemized state- ment showing the expense incurred and that the state shall pay the bank or trust company the amount of the expense. Senator Fenn explained his xmé(mdmemti3 . enator Brooks moved the adjourn- ment of the senate. 4l Senator Blakeslee thought the mat- ter ought to be disposed of before ad- Journment. Senator Fenn rajeed the point that a motion to adjourn was not debatable. . The motion to adjourn was carried. Adjourned to Thursday. ~ THE HOUSE. Speaker Banks called the house to order at 11, and Chaplain Countryman offered prayer. Unfaverable Reports. Appropriations—For the Woman's Rellef corps home, incorporated, ta- ‘bled temporarily; for improvements at Fitch’s home for soldiers,” tabled temporarily; _ concerning additional protectio nin ¥ase of fire in the Con- necticut hospital for insame; report accepted and bills rejected. Finance — Concerning appointment of special officers for the assessment and oollection of poll and military taxes. Concerning judiclal proced- ure in the collection of poll and mil- itary commutation taxes; reports ac- cepted and bill rejected. Insurance — Concerning insurance on state property; report accepted and bill u,)ooted.‘ Appropriations—To supply a de- ficiency in the appropriation for mil- {\nrys:g:pom fg; the two years end- ng o 5 report ol D aocepted, Agriculture — Concerning the in- spection, tramsportation and sale of nursery stook’; tabled temporarily. Pnance — Concerning taxation of legacles and successions. Concerning taxation of personal property; report acoepted and bill rejested. Favorable Reports. Hxetse—Substitute bill concerning the sale of spirituous end intoxicatin, liquor by hotels. ar. : Mighway Peormanent Structuree. Me.' Fufler of Sufeld reported Siemmbtes o recal ot &R0l e ing with railway obstrugtiom. The'bfll ths Bmits the ¢ 1 local authori over the o e I"& n 8. ) t = pu hug amendment to pay for p cemain re-! o dptfla: Rme:!'m Misocellany. A r a ent was made in & bfil regarding the catttle 86 hludu s been '“ T. Savage called from the table the unfavorabie Nyar: of the committee on egricuiture conoerning t:umrmon and séle of nursery stock, report wes acoepted the bill was rejected. an Calendar, * or q-rlu i le places. Judges of emendment | did not like the looks of the things. Out in Tolland county polite soclety M) ards’ from the PO, bottom of the pack wished power to condemn a small plece of land not worth $§0 and the company had tried to play a erooked game, Mr. Hall of Willington declared that it was the duty of the general assem- bly to protect the whole people. (Ap- plause.) Mr. Johnson of Newtown argued that the amendment would do what the house did not like in the matter of the Bridgeport electrical fight and the Howlands company. Mr. Dunn n made a strong attack on the amend- that there had been a sajd that the TUncas ¥ selling power at 'three cents a kilowatt hour, which was un- equalied in Connecticut. Mr. Dunn sald that the price was ten cents and Mr. Dupn said that the price was ten Mr, Bennett of Norwalk said that in tewn pewer was furnished at three and four cents, which was equal. Mr. Parker said that a in the manger, who had been an employe of the compapy, had bought land and would not sell, The resofution was lost. Petitions. A favorable report came in from the gommittee on the judictary on a peti- tion concerning age of consent and on a petition against chenge of Sunday law. At 1.32 the house adjourned till 10.30 . m. Thursday. Pagan Idea of Death. Death—a stopping of Impressions through the semses, and of the pull- ing of the cords of motion, and of the ways of thought, and of service to the flesh.—Marcus Aurelius. Great Enemies of Peace. Five great enemies of peace inhabit us, namely, avarice, ambition, envy, anger and pride, but if those enemies were banished, we should enjoy per- petual peace—Petrach. = Pride. Pride that dines on variety sups on contempt. Pride plenty, dined with poverty and supped with infamy.—Benjamin Franklin. The Only Way. The Woman—If I asked you how old you thought I was what would you tell me? The Man—A darned lie, of course. A Neediess Warning. Very often the friend who slaps you heartily on the back is getting ready to make a light touch.—~Dallas News. Psychology of Dreams. Dreams go by comtraries, but they nearly always agree with what we eat. —Birmingham Age-Herald. Power of Environment. It 1s & true proverb that if you live with a lame man you will learn to balt.—Plutarch. Exhibit Dangerous Machinery. Europe has nine museums for ex- hibiting the dangerous parts of ma chinery, Beware of the Usurer's Toils. Goethe: To borrow on usury brings sudden beggary. i England’s Coal Fields. The coal fields of England cover 13,000 square miles. Frenchman's Philosophy. ‘What the eye sees not the hLeart rues net—Hugo. Yy Yy Yy Yy Yy Yy rYY neighbers 2ed friends. | breakfasted with Inveterate Fos of the Weed. Swinbusne dsiested the practice of It is sald that one day at the Arts club, after going from room to room in the vain hope of finding 8 clear atmosphere to write in, he ex- claimed: "“James 1. was a knave, a tyrant, a fool, a liar, a coward. But { 11ove him, I worship him, because he slit ‘the throat of that blackguard, Raleigh, who invented this flthy smoking.” Relics That Will Be Missed. In one of the towers of Notre Dame, Paris, 2 museum is to De es- tablished, devoted entirely to the his- tory of the famous cathedral. Unfor- tunately, there are _no ’identifiable relics of Esmeralda and her goat, Quasimodo and Claude Frollo, the livest personages that ever haunted the ancient purlieus and followed the gargoyles. Apparently, It appears to be pretty hard for one to get along very fast or very far in this world without being willing to | make promises. 2 Locatios of Happiness. It you ever find happiness by hunt- ing for it, you will find it, as the old woman did her spectacles, safe on her own nose all the time.—Josh Billings. How It Happens, By following the line of least re- sistance a good many men get mar- ried. But How Few Do. Horace—Everyone ought to meas- ure himself by his own proper font and standard. Grades of Meerschaum. To the casual observer all meer- schaum looks alike, but there are 13 recogmized grades of this material. Women Brick Workers. Prussia’s brick yards employ nearly ! 20,000 women. % .- * Through Strife to Higher Things. The law of worthy life is fundamen~ tally the law of strife. It is only through labor, painful effort, by griad energy and resolute courage that we move on to better things.—Rooseveit, Paid in Advance. Barber—"“Much obliged, sir. I don’t as 3 rule get my tips before I start— | I—~" Customer (sternly)—"“That ain’t | no tip, young man. | méney!”—Bohemian. That's hush Thett, Whether we force the man’s prop- erty from him by pinching his stom- ach, or pinching his fingers, makes some difference anatomically; morally, | none whatever.—Ruskin. Nothing New. “To paraphrase the old gag about | gratitude,” said the, boarding house philosopher, ‘“penitence is a lively sense of punishment to come.” Has a Right to That. “Man wants but little here below,” quotes the philosopher of folly, “but he wants to be allowed to pick that little out for himself.” Tranquillity. It you wish to live a life.free from sorrow, think of what is going to hap- pen as if it had already happened.— Epictetus. The Waiter's Turn. “Will you set up the drinks?” said the reveler as the walter knocked over his bottle of wine.—Exchange. Frightened Away. When love fiies out of the window to hustle for a job, poverty never comes near the door.—Life. Chinese Proverb. ~ A diamond with a flaw is better than a commea stome-without any im- perfections. charged with being similarly involved. Pigeon Burglars, A cgorier pigeon letter “S. A. 66, 386,” was placed on the police station blotter in Milwaukee,Wis.,, the other day, as guilty of a semes of thefts l/ an exclusive apartment building. The bird had been around the court for days entering houses and helping it- self to food and articles for a nest, in- cluding & gold chain. - In the Fertile Azores. Ponta Delgada; with a population of 23,000, is the largest city in the Agores jslands. The climate is very even, | and European and tropical plants thrive to perfection. The productive {ness of .the soil is remarkable. Oranges, lemons, pineapples, fige and other frults are cultivated with great success. For Over Thirty Years Nature’s Compensation. Love and religion, the twin lights ) that shine across the darkest seas, ghine as brightly for the poor man as for the millionaire, and the joy which ambition gives more often lights the | pathway of the lowly than the boule- 4 { vards of the plutocrat. A Yankee Revival. Americans are more eager than Lon- dopers in searching out historical | places, more keenly interested in them, | and have brought to light and popular | recollection many shrines which Lon- | don had forgotten—Butte (Mont.) Miner. The Sixth Sense If the power to put oneself in connection with a distant point at any hour of the day or night—and this has been made possible by the - telephone. It makes no difference whether you wish to talk with some one in . Norwich. or some other city in this state or another, the telephone makes In Praise of Versatility. On a member of parliament being accused of bad spelling, Disraeli hu- morously defended him by declaring { that “a man must be ah idiot who could not spell a word more ways Hall Cajne is In Switzerland working on his long novel to be published un- der the title of ‘““The White Prophet.” He spent several months in Egypt in pursuit ‘of color for his story and re- turned to Switzerland to write the re. sult-of his experiences. A short busi. ness trip to London made him ali and delayed his work. at Else Please? WASHBURN-CROSBYS GOLDMEDAL Nothing ElseThank You Just GOLDMEDALFLOUR ‘ GOOD Ladies Everywhere are glad to know of the wonderfu. benefit that Viburn-O-Gla bas always been to suffsrers of their sex, Thousands of ledies spread the good news emong thely Others writs lothevs fer publieation, thet suffeging sisters, ‘ unimewn to them, may leern abowt i in the newspapers. S0 the peod workc goes on. Viburn-O~Gin s & purely vegetable ocempound, contaiming -h—gmumnmhm“nm on the wemanly engens sud functions. To youny and eid 0t is highly recemmenéed for the tres:- ment of all forms of famalo trewbies. o NEWS Viurn-0-Gin. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT $1.25 a bottle with “I hadt been a great suffever for 1 %ed misplacement, faintimg headache, and other female troubles, which made me feel weak I trled different doctors, but none gave me took Viburn-O-Gin and it velieves me 5o much that I want to spread the news of what it has done for do as muech for other sick women.” " FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO., 106 West 120th Street, fer’s Viburn-0-Gin b d N > 2 it easy, anywhere, any time. You accomplish all the advantages of personal contact and personal com- munication when you TRAVEL BY TELEPHONE. The Weather WE HAVE HAD FOR T™EE DAST THREE OR FOUR DAYS HAS BEEN VERY FITTINGIZ TERMED “HOT WBATHBR" BUT WE EKNOW IT AS “"REFRIGERATOR WEATHER. BUT NO MATTER THE NAME, THE FACT REMAINS, TEAT IF' WE ARE TO HAVE THIS WARM WEATHER FOR THE ORLE- BRATION, THE SUCCESSFUL PRESERVATION OF PERISHABLE FOODS REQUIRE THE USE OF AN IMPROVED COMD MR RE- FRIGERATOR. AT Barstow’s YOU'LL FIND AS COMPLETE A LINK OF REFRIGDRATORS AND 10K CHESTS AS YOU'LL CARE TO SEB. Baldwin and Jewett REFRIGERTORS ECONOMIZE ON ICE BECAUSE THEY ARB-CON- STRUCTED WITH THAT END IN VIEW. SO REMEMBER-- “A Penny Saved--Is a Penny Earned” TXIIX] years - ALL DENTAL WORK can be done without Dentists who KNOW HOW, We prite 1 ourselves on KNOWING /HOW. Good Dental work nowadays is anly X possible Dentists of éxperience. We have been 20 years that. -z of our staff of operators has made some branch of Den- tistry his particular speclalty for years; and whether you moed A erowning, extraction or bridge work, we have a SPECIALIST to do it for you, and do Mt positively without paln, and at from d to one-half the prices prevailing at other offices for the same of work. : : IT WILL PAY you to Invesiigate and comsult us before elsewhere.. We make no charge whatever for examination andé oe. Sets of teoth that fit, from §8:00 Gold Crowns, 22 karat....§8.00 Bridge Work ,8peocial— our own system — abeolutely impossible for teeth t Fillings .... from 800 AN work’guarantsed for 10 years - King Dental Parlors, Dr. Jackson, Manager. . Franklin Square. Ity full directione. Dew Yorks.

Other pages from this issue: