Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 21, 1910, Page 2

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I 3 ; h gd g- il Gh 2! i i : i Ut e ] 25 ; g ga &8 5 by 5555 d?: How New York Dames Kegp Young. Recently a young New York soclety woman recely- 4 hes, menthly bill from a downtown beauty parlor This particular bill amounted to Fifty-two dollars for the month, which wes, prehaps, & litle lower than the average monthly accounts rendered by this shop. It contained such items as Turkish Baths, $2.00; Vicist Water Rub. $.75; Faclal Masssge, $.75. The atiendants at these exclusive “beauty paslors” fre- quently make as much as ten dollars s n tips. Occasionally some ‘“‘grand-dame” In sables extracts a perfumed ten dollar plece from her gold bag an tosses It to Nnncy with an air of lofty grace. One of these stendants confded to -a friend in an un- gusrded moment that among the many. lotions and beauty restorers used in such estal aration for Il tle. under s fancy name, formuls as HAT'S HAIR at anl 50 cents and a dollar per bottle, and _is HAY S X e R AR Sk used_aifferent s agree that HAY'S HAIR HEALTH s the most effective and safest. vvay Pharmacy, Lee & ©Osgood, Chas. Osgood, Utley & Jomes, Dunn, Herrick, Finn & Son. S U S CORSETS $1.00 to $5.00 N.S. Gilbert & Sons ANOTHER BARGAIN OFFER ON Parlor Furniture One High Back Sofa in green velvet, | value $38.00— Special price .....c.ceeee..... $28.00 One Mahogany Divan in cream Tapes— try, value $30.00— Special price ................ $20.00 Xarge Easy Chair in Verona, value $28.00— Special price ........c....... $20.00| Wing Chair in Dresden valus $27.00— Special price ....ccocvvien..., $17.00 Two Rockers, value $16.00— taspestry, Special price .....ccii0nena... $12.00 CORNER SEATS Upholstered in stripe color, value $13.00— Reduced t0 .....c.c.civee.... $10.00 Upholstered in denim, value $13.00— Reduced to Box Couch, value $12.00— . $800 Reduced to HEAVY AXMINSTER MATS | ©One bale, 27x54—only .......... $1.68 | ¢ { MATS i This season of snow and mud you| may need door mats. We offer 1 Fiber Mats, large size, 30x36, at $2.50’ Metal Mats, indestructible, three sizes, | $1.00, $1.25, $1.50. Rubber Mats, 30x36 only, Emaller sizes only $1.75 $1.25 .. Gilbert & Sons 137-141 Main Street jan204 NOTICE! I will repair, remodel, redye and clean your furs at & very reasonable price, and all my work is guaranteed. Drop a postal and I will call for work. Telephone 254-3. BRUCKNER, The Furrier, _. 85 Franklin Street. | Criss of New York and SRS (Special to The Bulletin.) ‘Washington, Jan 20.—At the urgent request of Representative Hill, the department of agricuiture will send an inspector to Connecticut, with orders to visit all oyster men of the state, and to instruct them how to comply with the pure food law regarding the shipment of oysters. Mr. Hill recently has received complaints from shippers of oysters that an inspector, who has visited several Connecticut plants, re- fused to give any information to the shippers as to what is and what is not a violation of the law regarding oysters. Floating Oysters in Norwalk River. One case in particular came to Mr. Hill's notice from his district. An in- spector visited Norwalk lately. He found that the Norwalk oyster men were in the habit of floating oysters in the Norwalk river, which, accord- ing to the rulings of the department, Is a violation of law. Instead of noti- fying the oyster men, ‘who were will- ing to comply with all the require- ments of the department, that they | ‘were acting contrary to law, the in- spector allowed one man to ship twen- ty barrels of oysters to Chicago, but before they were shipped the inspec- tor marked them with the letters U. S. He then notified the department here that these oysters were not of the prover standard, and the depart- ment instructed the authorities in Chi- cago, the place of destination, to seize the oysters and begin criminal pro- ceedings against the shipper. Case Placed Before Secretary Wilson. Mr, Hill at once had an interview with Secretary Wilson and placed the case before him. Mr. Hill did not ob- ject to the regulations as to floating oysters, but he did object to the ac- tions of the inspector, and Secretary ‘Wilson agreed with Mr. Hill. The re- sult was that orders were given to stop all proceedings against the oys- ter man, but of course the oysters were condemned, and this could not be wafved. To Avoid Future Complications. To avoid future complications of a similar nature, Secretary Wilson gave Sent by Department of Agriculture to Instruct Ogyster Men Regarding Shipment of Oysters, with the Pure Food Law. So as'to Comply orders to have an expert sent from here to Connecticut, and this man will visit every oyster establishment along the Connecticut coast and will instruct the oystermen what they can and what they cannot do under the law. - Mr. Hill insisted that a man ought to be sent who would not try to get evidence to convict the ship- pers of violations, but one who would use some judgment, and to this Sec- retary Wilson agr Pure Food Act Violation. The principal violation of the de- partment’s regulations in Connecticut pertains to the floating of oysters. It is unlawful to float them in any wa- ters that are not of the same consist- ency as to salt and temperature as the water from which the oysters were obtained. It frequently happens, too, that the oysters are floated in rivers into which sewerage is emp- tied, and this is also a violation the pure food act. There Is no objec- tion to washing oysters in ordinary | water, as it is claimed this in no way affects them. When, however. they are left floating they open and absorb some of the water in which they float, and if this water.is different from that in which the oysters live, it ruins them and according to the department they are unfit for food. Liable to Prosecution. Any oyster man who is found violat- ing the law is Hable to criminal pros- ecution, but the department will here- after refuse to prosecute in any case where it is found that the inspector neglected to point out any specific violation that came to his notice be- fore shipment. After the inspector has visited all the Connecticut oyster men and given them the necessary in- structions to comply with the law, the department will be more strict in the enforcement of their regulations, as there will then be no excuse on the part of the Connecticut oyster men that thty are unfamiliar with the re- quirements of the department. Secretary Wilson would not dis- close the name of the man to be sent, but it is understood he will leave for Connecticut in a few days. DECAPITATED BODY OF WOMAN FOUND In a Notorious Resort in Chicago—Po- * lice Make Six Arrests. Chicago, Jan. 20.—One of the smost atroclous murders in the police history of Chicago was unearthed today when the decapitated and revoltingly mutil- ated body of Anna Furlong, also known as Jennie Cleghorn, 24 years old, was found in a resort on West Seventeenth street. Little is known of the mur- dered woman_except that she came here from St. Louis seven months ago and that she was married, but living apart from her husband. She had been an inmate of the resort several weeks. The head was evidently carried away by the murderer in an attempt to con- ceal the identity of the victim. A long knife was found concealed beneath the mattress. An open trunk showed that perhaps the murderer had made an attempt to conceal the body. A basin of water and & newspaper stained with blood were also in the room. The police have six persons in cus- tody, and it is said more arrests will soon be made. Those wunder arrest are: Tillie Taylor, colored, proprietress of the resort; Lilly Dale and Lottie Wilson, said to be inmates; William | Anderson, a negro hanger on; Thomas Gildea, a porter in the resort, and John Edwards, a halfbreed Indian. The Dale woman admitted that she and the murdered woman quarrelled yesterday and that she struck the Fur- long woman. STOCK EXCHANGE BROKERS FORCED TO SUSPEND. Result of Collapse of Hocking Coal and | Iron Company. New York, Jan. 20.—Roberts, Hall & | Cincinnati, were forced to suspend as members of the New York stock exchange today, | consequent upon the two failures yes- | terday brousght about by the collapse of | the Columbus and Hocking Coal and | Iron company pool. Hugh F. Criss was | the board member of the firm and had | charge of the Hocking pool on the exchange. He estimates the liabilities of the firm at $3,000,000, but is quoted | as saying that he hopes to pay *“100 cents on the dollar unless the govern- ors of the exchange permit welching | on the part of other members with | whom I had contracts.” In announcing the failure of Roberts, Hall & Criss, the president of the ex change . sald that peculiar circum- stances were involved which call for | rigid investigation. These circum- | stances, as Cris¢ declarations indicate, imply bad faith by other members of the so-called pool. A petition to re- | move the stock of the Columbus and Hocking Coal and Iron company from the list of the stock exchange is said | to be under consideration. ! FOR ONE MONTH, | Beginning January 15th, 1 We will make you a Suil or Overcoat for $20. We still have a good line of OVERCOATINGS in Fancy Stripes, Plain Black and Ox- fords. In SUITINGS, Biack, Plain and Fancy Blue Serges, Light and Dark Cheviots and Wors- teds. We will make and trim these Suits in the best and latest styles. D. F. PULSIFER & Co., 33 Broadway AT THE MERCY OF JAPAN IN CASE OF WAR So Far as Coast Defences of This Country Are Concerned. ‘Washington, Jan. 20.—"I do not an- ticipate any war with Japan, but if such a war should come we would be absolutely at the mercy of Japan or any other invading force. so far as the coast defenses are concerned,” de- clared Repreésentative Humphrey of ‘Washington, before the house commit- tee on merchant marine and fisheries today. Mr., McKinlay of California corroborated this statement. The committee was considering the Hum- phrey ship subsidy bill. Mr. Humphrey urged favorable ac- tion on his bill. He sald it would take from three to five months to get the battleship fleet from the Atlantic to the Pacific coast and that éven then the fleet would be useless without sup- ply ships, which condition would be remedied by the provision in his bill for conversion of the merchant craft in time of war. The authorization for an auxiliary fleet to meet exigencies of war was even more important, he contended, than upbuilding the merchant marine. TESTIMONY OF VICTIMS OF BLACK HAND PLOT. Fourteen Sicilians on Trial at Toledo —Private Detective Testifies. Toledo, Jan. 20.—Testimony of al- leged victims was the feature today in the trial of fourteen Sicilians, charged with a Black Hand conspira- cy. This covered the discovery of a bomb at the front door of the home of Charles and John Amicon in Co- lumbus,~accompanied by a letter which is said to have demanded $10,000 and the receipt of three letters by Vin- | cenzo Purpura of Dayton, signed “La Manu Nero” (the Black Hand) A private detective told of routing from the yard of the Amicon home a man whom_he qualifledly identified as Salvatore Rizzo, one of the defend- ants. Charles Amicon said he had seen most of the defendants in the vicinity of his home, excepting on cross exam- ination, Pepino Galbo and Giuseppi Ig- noffo. He said he had had business only with Ventola and Demar. CONGRESS. House Ignores Democratic Protests— Defense of Kentucky in Senate. ‘Washington, Jan. protests of the democratic members, the republican majoritv in the house today ratified their caucus nominee for the Ballinger-Pinchot investigating committee displacing Representative Rainey of Illinois, one of the demo- cratic selections, and naming in his ad Representative Lloyd of Mis- souri, who indicated his unwilling- ness to serve on the committee. Consideration of the urgent defi- ciency appropriation -bjll was re- sumed, but was laid aside until to- morrow after three hours’ debate, The senate had a brief session, the only incident of which was a speech by Senator Bradley of Kentucky, in which he defended Kentucky, and harged that the “Tobacco trust” was responsible for the acts of violence etuated - by the so-called night riders in that state. The senate ad- journed until Monday. Woman’s Supremacy. They do some things.better in Aus- tria. That advanced and up to date country has just declared b{ law that a man may not go ballooning or use any other method of aerial navigation without having obtained permission in writing from his nearest female rela- tive of the first degree. This healthy sign of the awakening of Austria to the real position and stat- us of man should commend itself to the suffragists and their leaders, as showing that civilization has not been entirely cornered in the United States. Let any American rise and mention such an enlightened law upon the stat- ute books of this country, if he dare. We have yet to learn of an ordinance anywhere which obliges the masculine contingent of this land to ask permis- sion of its nearest female relative to do anything at all, and why some of | the influential American women in pub- lic life have not thought of it and put it through calls for another interroga- tion mark. If the men of this country were oblig- ed by law to acquaint their nearest female relative of the first degree with their whereabouts, the latter would at least know where they were, at times, even if they merely went up in a bal- loon; and this would be a decided ad- vanec on conditions as they are at present.—St. Paul Dispatch. His Principal Mistake. Young Brokaw wrote ti his wife that the proper way to treat him was to let him do as he pleased all the time. It is evident that this young man shouldn’t have married at all. A wife should have her way semi-occasional- ly—Philadelpbia. Inguirer, of | 20.—Ignoring the | kerchiefs and with their heads crushed with a hammer or an they were left floor with a whim- Dering SUIL tarries. the dead. a well" to_do young Italian barber, his wife and a middle aged woman, believed to hawve been Mrs, ipone’s , were the unfortunates. His failure to appear at his shop today started an investigation which resulted in the discovery of the crime. P summoned by the janitor of the tenement, which is at Nos. 10 and 12 Montgomery street, en tered the lock flat by way of a fire es- cape. In the kitchen, which is the first room off the fire escape,! pone’s body was found. It wag tied to the door with the face battered beyond recogni- tion, and lying in a great smear of blood. Near his master stood the bull- dog, cowering and blood-spattered. The animal had aimlessly from body to body, sniffing %;;e and then the oth- er, staining the floors crimson with his footprints and waliting for human aid. In the next room.were the corpses of the women, gagged as was the man, the handkerchiefs being similarly knot- ted and the heads battered as if the | same instrument was used on all three, But no implement with which such wounds could have been inflicted was found in the flat. Inspection by the officers revealed <ire confusion; drawers were dumped out, cupboards ransacked, mattresses ripped open and every conceivable hid- ing eglue for money or valuables was pri open. In a little hallway last traces of the murderer or murderers were found. There, concealed under a potato sack, was @ basin half filled with bloody water, a bloodstained vest and a pair of overalls, also blood spat- tered. The water had apparently been crimsoned as the slayer washed his hands' before securely locking the apartment and making his escape by the fire escape. ‘Whoever took the three lives worked quletly, else next dor neighbors are confused in their statements. Mrs. Rebecca Rosenblum, whose flat is sep- arated from the Scalpone’s by the sheerest partition, says she heard nothing unusual late last night. It was then that the crime was committed, for Scalpone worked as usual in his shop until 10 o'clock last night. Joseph Jingo, Scalpone’s assistant barber, alarmed at the failure of his employer to appear for work today, gave the first clue to the murder. He found the flat locked and summoned the janitor. The two tried the door, but with no avail. Then the police were called. A Gouverneur hospital surgeon said all three of the dead succumbed to wounds inflicted by a “blunt instru- ment.” The police are convinced that more than one person took part in the murder, but there is no direct clue to the murderers. Woman Suffrage in Oklahoma. Apparentlyeit. will soon be time to cut another notch in the stick to rep- resent another state which has adopt- ed woman suffrage. ‘The women of Oklahoma have now filed with the sex- retary of state a petition containing 38,000 names demanding that an amendment to the state comstitution be submitted to the voters of Okla- homa striking the word “male” from the statement of the qualifications for voters. It so happens that such a ref- erendum is, in Oklahoma, mandatory in its effect, so that if the women, backed by Senator Owen and the 38,- 000 signatories, can secure at the next election a majority of the votes cast upon the proposition, woman suffrage will be a fact in Oklahoma, as it is in four other western states of similar social conditions, It is not very strange that the wo- men are confldent of success, Tt is true that they were defeated at the time of the adoption of the state con- stitution, but the argument which de- feated them then has much 1less weight today. At that time the vot- ers were told that ‘“they”—meaning the powers at Washington—regarded woman suffrage as a highly irregular form of franchise, and that it might seriously jeopardize the newly acquir- ed statehood. Some years before the Orrine Does Cure 'DRUNKENNESS Ta‘.‘h‘- is .dw‘tuv.i fact k‘r'mwnt lto r:er‘n& O s of wives and mothe: g ko, of this They know Orriné is a reli- able for the cure of drunken- ness, because it has restored thelr loved to lives of sobriety and usefulness. Every one of these women bought Or- rine with full confidence that it would effect a_cure or their money would be refunded to them if it failed. This guarantee is in each box. No other remedy for the cure of drunkenness is sold with this liberal guarantee, but Orrine has been so uniformly successful that the makers want the buyers to know that they have full protection if it should fail in any instance. e never publish letters of patients, but recently this letter camé to us from Dr. Nolte, Eighth and Race streets Philadelphia, Pa. Read it and you will readily lpgrecl te why Orrine is so well thought of: “I have had a remarkable case of In- ebriacy under my personal observation. The patient drank heavily for fifteen years and reached a degraded -eondi- tion, which caused the breaking up of his "family and separation from his wife. .Bvery hope was given up of ever saving the man from his strong desire for drink, and only a mother’s interest finally persuaded him to voluntarily take treatment for his diseased condi- tion, It was my pleasgure to recommend Orrine, your liquor habit cure, and the treatment was taken faithfully. This was two years ago, and the patient is now in a healthy condition and still abstains from the use of stimulants. I have sold Orrine for a number of years and have always found it to be satis- factory. 1 believe you have an excep- tionally good treatment for this dis- ease.” Orrine is prepared in two forms, No. . a powder, absolutely tasteless and odorless, given _secretly in food or drink. Orrine No. 2, in_pill form, is for those who wish to cure themselves. Orrine costs only $1 a box. The guar- antee is in each box. Write for Free Orrine Booklet (mailed in plain sealed envelope) to Orrine Co., 947 Orrine Building, Washington, D. Orrine is for sale in this city by N. D. Sevin Son 118 Main Street. They know Orrine is a reliable and efficacious remedy for drunkenness and they will not offer you a substitute. ————————————— Arizona legislature adopted woman suffrage, only to have it vetoed by the territorial governor, who, presumably, represented the Washington point of view,—Chicago Post. A Hard Rap. ‘The Boston Globe gives a hard rap to the judge who sentenced James Pullman of Belleville, IlL, to imprison- ment for life for killing his child. The reasons for thé crime was the father's inability to find a home for the in- fant. In passing sentence in the case the judge is quoted as saying: “To be haunted day after day by the cries of his murdered child will be a punish ment more terrible than death. “The purpose of the judge,” says the Globe, “is hardly less barbarous than the crime of the prisoner, horrible as it is. We should be past the stage of imprisonment considered as anything else than a profection to those who are disposed to do right.” Punishment inflicted by courts is not based on the principle of an eye for an eye, but rather as a deterrent against the fur ther commission of crime, thereby pro- tecting soclety. The Belleville judge apparently only had the prisoner in mind and leid it all on to him. It Is Very Odd. Oddly enough none of the muek- raking magazines enlightened the pub- lic as to the great burden they are to g;e postal gervice. — Milwaukee Free es: The average load of nectar carried to the hive by a bee consists of three- tenths of a grain. The Red, White And other constituents of your blood are powerfully enriched and vitalized by Hood’s Sarsaparil It increases the red corpuscles and makes strong the white corpuscles, and thus protects and restores the health. 1t cures scrofula, eczema, jeruptions, catarrh, rheumatism, anemia, nervous- ness, that tired feeling, dyspepsia, loss of ;&gefiw, general debility and builds ap whole system. Get it in the al liguid fe m‘n usu q nmo?ln If your meals don’t fit comfortably, or you feel bloated after eating and you believe it is the food which fills you; if, what little you eat lies like a | lump ©f lead on your stomach; if thers is difficulty in breathing after eating, | eructations of sour, undigested food and acid, heartburn, brash or a belch- ing of gas, you can make up your | mina that you need something to stop | food fermentation and cure Indiges- tion. To make every bite of food you eat aid in the nourishment and strength of your body, you must rid your Stom- ach of poisons, excessive acid and stomach gas which sours your entire meal—interferes with digestion and causes so many sufferers of Dyepep- sia, Siek Headache, Biliousness, Con- stipation, Griping, etc. Your case is no different—you are a stomach suf- | What and Where I COMFORT The Acme Cushion Sole Boots for Ladies contain a soft, sprin cushion | of Australian wool felt built into the | shoe which absorbs moisture, keeps the | feet dry, saves tired feet and prevents headache, the result of foot jar. P. CUMMINGS, Sole Agency. 52 Cenmtral Ave. janizd ‘Custom Grinding TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. A. R. MANNING, Yantie, Conn. ‘Telephone. decl4d OUR WORK [m.-t. the approval of the critical people. * Domestic Laundry. Rear 37 Franklin Street. ‘Rogers’ Tel. 958. sept27d QUALITY in work should always be considered, especlally when it costs no more than the inferfor kind. Skilled men are employed by us. Our prices tell the whoie story. | STETSON & YOUNG. may2id FIRST DOSE MAKES INDIGESTION GO Heartburn, Gas. Dyspepsia and all Misery Caused by an Out-of- Order Stomach Vanishes Before You Realize It—Just a Little Diapepsin Will Make You Feel Fine. ferer, though you may call it by some other name; your real and only trouble is that which vou eat does not digest, but quickly ferments and sours, pr ?‘ucing almost any unhealthy condi- on. A case of Pape's Diapepsin will cost fifty cents at any Pharmacy here, and will convince any stomach sufferer five minutes after taking a single dose that Fermentation and Sour Stomach is causing the misery of Indigestion. No 'matter if you call your trouble Catarrh of the Stomach, Nervousness or Gastritis, or by any other name— always remember that a certain cure | is waliting at any drug store the mom- ent you decide to begin its use. e any out Stomach within five minutes, and digest promptly, with- out any fuss or discomfort all of any kind of food you eat. tp Buy In Norwich Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main-Streel, Norwich. Jyia Sweet Florida Oranges, 20 for 25 cents. OTTO FERRY. Jan15d DR. JONES, Dentist, 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 17 ’Phone 32-3 maylia We All Havz Troubles of Our Own. so we know how to sympathize with others, but we will give you the best service possible so to help you out with yours in regards to your sable. THAMESVILLE STORE, janlsd C. 8. Fairclough, Prop. COAL LUMBER. 'GOAL ~18KARAT FINE- Chappell’s Coal T e Good for either furnace or range. You will like this Coal and our de- livery. E. CHAPPELL CO. Central ‘Wharf and 150 Main Street Telophones. Lumber Jan21d " J. A. MORGAN & SON Coal and Lumber Central Wharf. Telephone 884. . dec24d LUMBER The best to be had and at the right prices too. Remember we always carry a big line of Shingles. Call us up and Jet us tell you about our stock. H. F. & A. J. DAWLEY. novisa GOAL Free Burning Kinds and Lebigh ALWAYS IN STOCK. ‘ A. D. LATHROP, Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Ste Telephone 168-13. & oct29a CALAMITE COAL Well Seasoned Wood C. H. HASKELL . 489 'Phonss ——- 402 27 Franklin St 58 Thames St mayéd Leaders for 1910 in the AUTO LINE Pope-Hartford ~—AND THE-— Maxwell ORDER NOW. We have the cars In stock and can make Immediate delivery, Call for demonstration. M. B. RING, 21-26 Chestnut Street. dec3ld It Is Very Interesting where you Mn‘gnt first-class aning and Dyeing done at short no- to know tice and at reasonable prices. An in- spection of our windows will show you some of the samples of our work, and will indicate the care we take with the most delicate and expensive fabrics. Send your Cleaning and Dyeing here, and we will assure you positive satls faction. Lang’s Dye Works, Telephone. 157 Framkiin S janlld New Spring WALL PAPERS Just Received AT 'errington’s ON SALE NOW. Jan17& GEORGE G. GRANT, Undertaker and Embalmer 32 Prowidence St., Taftville. Prompt attention to day or night calle. Telephon. 39-3L asrldMWIawi LOUIS H. BRUNELLE BAKERY We are confident our Ples, Cake and Bread canaot be Give us » trial order. mov2d T £ 20 Fairmount. Stresh

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