Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, December 3, 1909, Page 10

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It Makes Wrinkles.~ over {ill-health does your no good, and merely causes that make you look older are. repeat the former sufferers from woman« lar to yours, when we say, Viburn-0. - will admit if try $, w;lm for 'C-n— are printed In st s with every bottle. Price $1.25 at druggists. FRANCO-GERMAN CHEMICAL CO, 106 West 126th Street, New York. mar3ld Rose Bowling Alleys, LUCAS HALL, 49 Shetucket Street. ectild J. J. C. STONE. Prop General Contractor All orders nc:lvo prompt and careful sttentlon. Give me a trial order. Sat. isfaction guaranteed. THOS. J. DODD, Norwich Telephone 343-2. Norwich. STABLE and STREET BLANKETS We have a large assortment to choose from at lowest prices. The Shetucket Harmess Co 283 Main Streel. +' WM. O BODR oct2d is we g Take - iy Telephone 865-4. MisS M. C. ADLES, Hair, Scalp and Face Specialist WHY BE ANTIQUATED ? In Paris and New York puffs are as much out of style as hoop skirts; why, then, will women wear them ? The fashionable hair styles are radically different from those of the summer, Have Miss Adles explain them to you. Bhe will be in Norwich all the week of November 29th. WAUREGAN HOUSE, Norwich New York. Telephone 704. Individuality Is What Cousts In Photography. Bringing out the real personality, fhe fine oints in character, the little fraits that make us what we are. Toned down by the natural spirit of an artist into perfect -accord. Not a thing of paper and pasteboard with a ready-made look. If you want a photo of your rea) self, or what your friends see to love and admire, call on LAIGHTON, The Photographer, Norwjch Savings Boston. nov29d opposite aug18d LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident ouz Ples, Cake and Bread canaot be excslled. Give us a trial order, movad Soclety. 20 Fairmount ‘Streest. Electricity_fgr Power CHANGE IN PRICE The price to be charged to persons and corporations for alternating cur- rent electricity for power has been changed by the undersigned to take effect on September 1st, 1909, that is to eay, all bills rendered as of September 1st, 1909, for ulternating current elec- tricity for wer as Shown by meter readings taken August 20-24, 1909, to have been used since the last previous reading shall be according to the fol. lowing sehedule 1 10 500 Kllowatt Hours, 5c per kilo- watt Hour. Ov 508 Kflowatt Hours, 5c for first 800 and 2c for each additional kilowatt hour. EXAMPLE, Nuymber of K. W. H. used 500 K. W. H,, at 5 cents. 500 K. W. H., at Z cents. Norwich, July 26, 1909. JUHN McWILLIAMS, GILBERT S. RAYMOND, EDWIN A. TRACY, Board of Gas and Electrical Conrmis- sloners. Jysoa Evening School IN CITY HALL NOW OPEN TUITION and SUPPLIES FREE Aise in Taftville Schoelhouse oct26d 1647 Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer to the public the finest standard brands of Beer of Europe and America, Bohemian, Pilener, Culmbach Bavarian Beer, Bass’ Pale and Burton, Mueir's Scotch Ale, Guinness' Dublin _Stout, & Imyported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B, Ale, Frank Jones' Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitter Ale, Anhevasr Budwelser, tz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM. Norwich Town. Telephone 443~12, Jyaaa k, won“. but 1f To shout If to maks fiur:-d' o'f'. thouunE f New York, Dec. 2.—Control of the Equitable Life Assurance society,which was secured by Thomas F. Ryan soon after the insurance scandals of some years ago, has passed to J. Plerpont Morgan, with the $472,000;000 of assets which the company declared in its last statement. The transfer, apart from its magnitude as a chapter in the his- tory of finance, marks a complete re- versal of the old order under which the insurance companies controlled the destinies of the banks and trust com- panies. . News of the transfer was contained in the following brief statement issued from the offices of Morgan & company: “Mr. Morgan has bought the ma- Jjority of the stock of the Equitable Life Assurance society, formerly owned by Thoma# F. Ryan. This purchase is subject to the trust under which Grover Cleveland, :Morgan, J. O'Brien and George Westinghouse were made voting trustees for the benefit of poli- cyholders, and it covers ail Mr, Ryan'y interest, including all the stock pur- chased by him from James H. Hyde.” eyond these bare facts Mr, Morgan and his partners declined to give any details,* The exact amount of the stock houaght by them and the price they paid remain for subsequent announce— ment. Nor would they disclose if any other interests are allled with them, although it Is commonly understood in ‘Wall street that at least one large trust company may take a hand in the deal, if the conmsent of the Equitable is ob- talned. Under the terms of the trust agreement referred to in Mr. Morgan’'s announcement, the Ryan stock could Control of the Equitable Life Assurance Society with $427,000,000 of Assets. —_— X not be sold without the consent of the surviving trustees, whose terms held until June 15 next, and who might have | continued the agreement for another five years if they saw fit. Both of them are very busy men afid as they have served the society without pay it has_long been taken grant that they would be wflunfhgg pass on their responsibilities to of shoulders, if they found they could do so without prejudice to' the policyholders. Prior to confirmation of the transfer neither Mr. Westinghouse nor Mr. O'Brien would discuss either its details or its probabilities. ‘Mr. Ryan’s holdings in the Equitable were bought in large part from James H. Hyde, although Edward H. Harri- man had laid plans which he supposed were to assure him the control which went instead to Mr. Ryan. It was during the hearings,of the Armstrong insurance investigatidn that Mr, Harri- man, when questioned on this point. coined what subsequently became a national byword. He was asked if he had settled scores with Mr. Ryan, and answered tersely “Not yet” and the public added with ready intuition “but soon.” At the offices of the Equitable so- ciety President Paul Morton professed ignorance of the transfer and news of the change of control seemed to come as a surprise to other officers. It is known, however, that the direc- tors of the society and that the princi- pals to the deal were in conference vesterday and until late today and there is authority for the statement that the transfer met with their ap- proval. NEW HAVEN MAN Invited to Test Now_Y;rk Machine for Weighing Sugar. A representative of the Standard Weighing Machine company has just visited New Haven to ask Edward J. Maroney, the local sealer of weights and measures, to attend the test of the new device just preduced by his firm for the weighing of sugar. It is an electrical contrivance and will in all probability replace the present method of weighing sugar, which of late has caused 8o much talk owing to the ex- posures that have been made in the system as practiced by the customs in- spectors in New York city. According to the Standard man this new machine is run by electricity and in such a manner that when once put in operation will continue to weigh for any length of time. If any attempt to meddle with it is tried the machine | stops working. Should the new ma- chine prove to be what it is alleged it will eliminate a numbér of men em- ployed by the government to weigh the sugar. The test of the “sugar weigher” will be made the latter part of next ménth. Attending will be the state sealer of weights of ew Yok, Masachusetts, and of Washington and other places. These men are asked to attend for the purpose of trying if possible to beat the machine. The Standard company wants to find out if there is.any way by whieh the new weigher can be under weighed. Mr, Maron is saving a choice assortment of tricks with which he intends to “break” the ‘machine.— New Haven Palladium. Wallingford.—The members of Wal- lingford grange went over to Cheshire Wednesday night to visit the Cheshire grange and furnished the programme. When The Stomach Stops Working Prbperly, Because There Is Wind In It, Use Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tablets to Set It Going Again A Trial Box Free. THE DOCTORS call it flatulency, but unprofessional folks know it as “wind on the stomach,” and a most distressing state of things it is. It is a serious condition of this great mo- tor organ. Always annoying and painful in the extreme, at times often leading to bad and fatal results. The stomach emba ssed and hampered with wind, cannot take care of its food properly and indigestion follows, and this has a train too appalling to enumerate. The entire system is im- plicated—made an active or passive factor in this trouble and life soon be- comes a questionable boon. ALL THIS IS EXPLAINED in doc- tor books; how undigested food causes gases by fermentation and fomentation in which process some essential fluids are destroyed—burnt u vasted by chemical action, fol- lowed by defective nutrition and the distributfon through the alimentary tract of chemically wrong elements and as a consequence the stomach .and entire system is starved. Plenty of food, you see, but spoilt in prepara- i than worthless. *ED STOMACH is the nothing too had to emanate from it, but the gas it gen- erategs is probably its worst primary effect and the only way to do away with this § tion and wo A DERAN ome of ey g0 to the rodt of this trouble. They at- tack the gas making foods and render them harmless. Flatulehcy or wind on the stomach simply cannot exist where these powerful and wonder- working littie tablets are in evidence, THEY WERE MADE for this very purpose to attack gas making foods and convert them into proper nutri- ment. This {is their province and office. A whole book could be written about them and then not all told that might be told with profit to sufferers from this painful disease, dyspepsia. It would mention the years of patient and expensive experiment in effort to arrive at this result—of failures in- numerable and at last success. It would make mention of the different stomach correctives that enter in to this tablet and make it faithfully rep- resent all. STUART'S DYSPEPSIA TABLETS are not alone intended for the sick, but well folks as well; for the person who craves hearty foods and wants to eat heartily and run no risk of bad effects, they ‘act like a charm and make eating and digestion a delight and pleasure. They keep the stomach active and energetic and able and willing to do extra work without spe- cial labor or effort. Don’t forget this. ‘Well people are often neglected, but the STUART DYSPEPSIA TABLETS have them in mind. A FREE TRIAL PACKAGE will be sent anx one who wants to know just what they are, how they look and taste, before beginning treatment with them. After this go to the drug store for them; everywhere, here or at home, they are 50 cents a box, and by getting them at home you will save time and postage. Your doctor will prescribe them; they say there are 40,000 doctors using them, but when you know what is the matter of your- self, why go to the expense of a pre- scription ? For free trial package ad- dress F. A. Stuart 160 Stuart Building, Marshall, Mich. P. S. Better send today for sam- ples of the tablet. You will get quite a box of them. $400 IN REWARDS i b v Must Go Into Police Pension Fund at Hartford. Two long envelopes bearing the seal of the federal government, each con- taining a check for $200, were received at the police station Monday, being addressed to Detective Sergeant Frank Santoro and Policeman D. B. Ahern, says the Hartford Courant. These two public servants will get no more than a’ decent look at the checks, for they are in payment of rewards offered by the government, and all rewards re- ceived by members of the local.police force must go into the pension fund, but the two men must feel somewhat richer in spirit for having received the checks. The rewards are for the arrests of James Howard and James F. Blake, folowing many burglaries in the );“OIL]"IIY}' postoffices in the state last all. i o R HONOR TEACHER. Miss Margaret Croft, 41 Years With High School, Made Vice Principal Emeritus. | | AThe board of education Monday eve- | ning -voted to appoint Miss Margaret Croft, for fifty-five years a teacher, forty-one of which ;she has devoted to the high school, vice principal em- eritus of the high school. The appoint- ment becomes effective January 1, 4910. While Supt. Berlin W. Tinker, upon the advice and approval of May- or William E. Thoms and the commit- tee on teachers, recommended that her salary be fixed at $750, the board made an additional recommendation that it .be placed at $1,000 per year. Miss Croft's salary at present is $1,500 per year. It was voted to make Miss Lena Qowan, now a teacher of elementary Latin at the high school, Miss Croft's successor.—Waterbury Republican. NO GAMBLING BY BOYS. Judge Foster Makes Statement From Bridgeport Court Bench. “I want it distinctly understood that young Roys who are brought into the city court for gambling are going to be punished,” declared Judge Foster &mm the bench in Bridgeport Mon- ay. “For the first offense it will be a fine. I realize that this will fall on the parents, and I believe it should s0_so.” The cases before the court were those™ of Alexander Bakos and Max Ansel, boys of 16, who were arrested for shooting dice. RBakos was fined $5 and costs, and Ansel $6 and costs. The extra dollar was added in the latter case because the court didn’t ;hirt\}l\; the boy had told the whole ruth. SCHOOL SAVINGS BANK Furthers Habits of Thrift Hartford Pupils. in East Principal Jonas M. Tompkins of the Center school, FEast Hartford, says that, during @ctober and November the pupils of his school have deposited $175.60 in the school savings bank. During the past three years the chil- dren of this school have deposited about $1,900. Nearly all of this amount has been ‘credited to the in- dividual accounts of the pupils, while Mr. Tompkins still retains about $100 in the school bank. of Fairfield County Make Yearly Report. County Commissioner Simeon Pease, secretary of the Fairfield county com- missioners, on Tuesday mailed his and the treasurer’s report of the county for the year ending September 30, 1909, to the secretary of the state. The total expenses show $96,300, which does not Include- the expenditures on the addi- tion to the jail on North avenue. This expenditure for the year was $27,997,50, bringing the entire expense up to $118,314.11. There is a balance on hand of $20,744.51, which is the largest amount ever, with the exception of last year, when' the appropriation for the jail was on hand. The appropriation for the state for the new jail was $37,500. With all the contracts now returned and all bills paid, the tqtal cost was $88,165.24 which will be reduced several hun- dreds on a few outstanding bills.— Bridgeport Farmer, Commissioners Receiver for Bankrupt Liquor Com- pany. Thomas J. Spellacy of Hartford has been appointed by Judge William S. Case of the superior court, receiver for the New England Retail Wine and Liquor Dealers’ Distributing company. The concern is incorporated with an authorized capital of $300,000, but only about $42,000 of stock was issued, the stockholders being principally retail liquor dealers. The liabilities of the company are about $9,000, and the assets about the same, so that it is expected that the debts of the concern will be paid in full. Helps to Explain. After a consolidation of ice compa- nies the price was advanced from 35 cents to 50 cents per 100 pounds. Per- haps items ke this would heln explain the increased cost of living.—St. Louis Globe-Democrat. a7 e R G ‘The magnificent memotial church be- ing erected in Birmingham, England, through the generou$ contributions of ;orldwge ul!zurenl of the late John enry Newman, is nearing completio: It has been built ouu!d:‘tha ofl ur: tory so dear to the heart of the late cardinal. % KN & OF | Cottolef;e is made from cotton seed oil. distributors of cotton seed oil in the world dons producing the best seed. This seed 1s made. fat, upon whose purity and cleanl could say the same of lard, made from ho are too many uncleanliness. go back to lard. COTTOLENE is Guaranteed not pleased, after having given Cottolene a fair test. Never Sold in from catching dust and absorbing disagreeable odors, such as fish, oil, etc. 'We Know That Cottolene Is Pure. - What Do You Know About Lard? . { Being the largest producers and | we can select oils from the seov‘ 1 is crushed, and the oil by our exclusive process, and made neutral in taste and field to Kitchen—human hands never touch the oil from whi J i e result is that when you buy Cottolene you get a cooking | iness you can absolutely rely. ] fat; there hances for it to contain germs of disease and Cottolene will make food delicious, nutri- tious, and healthful. - Give it a fair trial and you will never Your grocer is hereby authorized to refund your money in case you are Cottolene is packed in pails with an air-tight top to keep it clean, fresh and wholesome, and prevent it Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY odor. From No one Taft May Come to Meriden. Dr. E. W. Smith of the Meriden Colonial elub was appointed & com- mittee to arrange for Mr. Taft to visit Meriden, and he recently heard from the president’s secretary, Frank Car- penter, to the effect that the president might be able to come to Meriden some time in January or February. His dates for December are all taken vp. His postponement of the contem- plated visit, the Meriden Record says, “does not mean that he loves Meriden less, but congress more.” Yale Students Must Not Be Absent. To check the persistent evil of Sun— day absenteeism in Yale college, the college faculty has adopted unanimous— 1y the plan submitted by the new un- dergraduate senior eounsel. Hereafter outside Sunday church papers will not be allowed, and Sunday absences away from the city will be granted only rarely and for exceptional reasons. Parents of students, if they persist in asking that their sons be allowed Sun- day absences, will have to face the contingency of the student’s dismissal. The senior council has asked the fac- ulty that the new rule be rigidly en- forced. The evil of Sunday absenteé- ism has been particularly marked in the case of students living in New York city. Not So Bad, After All. Out of 89,000 bookworm patients treated in 1909 only 93 died. We hope to treat fewer next year. — Cleveland Leader. Protestant Federation. At a meeting of the Connecticut fed- eration of Protestant churches at Hartford, the following officers were elected: President, Prof. W, N. Rice, Middletown; vice president, Rev. J. ‘W. Green, Middletown; secretary, Rev. J. F. Johnstone, Hartford; treasurer, Rev. E. DeF. Miel, Hartford. The constitution was so amended to allow two representatives for each 5,000 communicants of each denomination in the federation. prévtsmiRi S A Up to the Architects. If the directors of the new airship company are correct in their predic- tion that within a few years aeroplan- ing will be as common as motoring, the time may be near when the archi- tects will have to go to school again and learn thelr art afresh. Is the city of the future to be looked at as much from above as from the ground? Then plainly the architect will bave to add a new dimension. Already he has to learn not to conceive of things in the flat and sacrifice to a plctorial fa- cade. His next achievement, when the port cochere is removed to the roof, will be to make the bird’e-eye view as pleasing ds the perspective. “Dispective” may come to be the tech- nical term for bird's-eye view, a phrase which will be rather ridiculous by that time. “Haven't the bir eyes like people’ pa?’ Brighteyes will ask, as the family volatore glides over the parapet of the up-to-date landscape-gardened roof. There will be large opportunity for decorative ef- fects in summer or in warm climates —flower gardens, mosaic pavements, roof pergolas, ornamental landing stages. Some thousands of years ago we crawled out of the ocean and im- provised lungs out of . a swimbladder. That was a rather important change —is (flying to be'as revolutionary? Springfield Republican. Hartford.—There are six uncontested divorce cases on the list to be heard by Judge William S, Case in the superior court Friday. The Southern View of General Lee. In an article against the south, the New York Evening Post discusses the reported effort by the Confederate vet- erans to have a bitter inscription writ- ten by Robert G. Ingersoll, the famous orator, removed from the walls of Arlington. The erection of a “statue to Robert E. Lee in the national cap- itol,” says the Post, “cannot free him from the reproach of having chosen to lead the forces that battled for human bondage.” The Post is sufficiently intelligent to | know that Lee never did this. He was not in favor of human bondage, as he proved by manumitting his own slaves. The Post knows that Lee took com maad of the scuthern army not to sup: port human bondage, but to repel the invasion of his native state. The Pos knows that when Lee took command of the army slavery was not the issue, | and Lincoln had given the distinct as- | surance that it was not the purpose of the north to interfere with slavery. Hi purpose, he said, was to preserve the Union, and that alone. The south was | fighting for the right to leave the Un- jon_and the north was fighting to keep it from leaving the Union. Emancipa- tion was merely a move in the game of war, which had no official indorsement | when Lee took command.—Baltimore Good Blood Means good health, and Hood’s Sarsapariila has an unapproached record as a blood-purifier. It effects its wonderful cures, not simply because it contains sarsaparilla but because it combines the utmost remedial valueg of more than 20 different inj ients. There is no real substitute for it. If urged to buy any preparation gaid to be ‘‘just as " you may be gure it is inferior, c less to make, and yields the dealer a larger profit. ' 1 . i usual I g B e e iads Ewn s Dot DR. C. R. CHAMBERLAIN Denta/ Surgeon. In charge of Dr. 8. L. Geer's practwe ‘:nrlnx his last iliness. 161 Main Street. Norwich, Conn, nov26d AMERICAN HOUSE, Farrell & Sanderson, Props. SPECIAL RATES to Theatre Troupes Traveling Men, etc. Livery comnected l—_'l'llfll'l STREET. $10.00 20 year Gold Filled Case. and old-established firm. D. J. McCORMICK, Local Agent. Buys a Gents’ Waltham Watch In a $12.00 Buys a Ladies’ Walthamm Wateh in & 20 year Gold Filled Case, Thess are all New Movements in New Cases. No shopworn stuff, and fully guaran teed. FERGUSON & CHARBONNEAU, Franklin Sq. Bear in mind that Sanitation is one sort of insurance--- AGAINST disease and sickness as trace of many serious cases has been made to the plumbing system. Join the National, and in fact Universal, movement for Sanitation and have YOUR plumbing systems over- hauled or estimates furnished on new ones by a reliable Barstow & Go. do all kinds of work coming under this head and their experience, together with the best of material and labor, is bound to result in a thoroughly satisfactory job. Agents for the Standard “Green and Gold” label bath room fixtures, also headquarters for nickel-plated bath room trimmings and sundries. LARGE ASSORTMENT CONSTANTLY ON HAND, Waterbury Teackers Must Not Tutor. Charging that 50 per cent. of the pupils of the Waterbury High sechool are tutored by the teachers who are hired by the city to instruct them and that the practice has extended into the lower grades to such an extent that children who are not qualified are pass- ed by the instructors, Commissioner Edward B. Reiley, Jr. at Monday even= ing’s meeting of the board of educa- tion labored for the amendment that “teachers shal!l not tutor for pay to pupils who recite to them"” until he had it adopted. The only negative vote was _registered by Commissioner Wal= ter E. Monagan. Bridgeport Carbarns Contract. ‘The contract for the superstructure of the new carbarns in Bridgeport, to be located near the station, has been awarded by the New York, New Haven and Hartford road to Charles W. Mur- dock of New Haven. The work will cost $150,000. $15.00 Buys a 17 Jewel Hamilton Watch in a 20 year Gold Filled Case. because it insures you |

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