Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 8, 1910, Page 2

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)

llol atty M:Ik Tusl Sophle e a!e Msf’ bury the Ln:t Wit:__:?n for the State. < day night; th-.t she came ‘New Haven, Conn, March'? -—Snort.- again the 1y before adjourmment of today’s ses- | same: night and pulled a knife out of sions of the trial of Sophie Kritchman | her stocking and cut him in the neck. and Joe Mitchell for the murder of | The next day, he said, she came and Bronislow Kulvinskas, the state an- | threw a stone at .him, and that Joe nounced that they rested their case | Mitchell put a revolver at the back of and the defense will begin putting on | his head and shot him. Anton also Benefaction. _ William Marconi gave the forfeited lives of 47 men back-to their families with all the possibilities of support, comfort and protection appertaining therewith. Mr. Marconi’'s benefactions are pe- culiar in that they are chiefly con- cerned with the physical salvation of the able-bodied. rather than with the ailling and decrepit In this Mr. Mar- coni himself is singularly rewarded. Immeasurable gratification must glow within his consciousness with the news of the consummation of each of his marvelous gifts to his fellow men. Somewhera on this globe there should stand a noble monument to the inventor of wireless telegraphy. It should be in the form of a mighty choral hall, and called, perhaps, the Hall of Joy, held sacredly in waiting for only great gatherings of human beings, thriilled with the one Inspira- tion of thanksgiving for some immense benefit—like the end of a war, or the saving of a ship, or the invention of anesthesia.—Kansas City Star. Gladness comes wiLh a better under- standing of the transient nature of the many physical ills which vanish be- fore proper efforts—gentle efforts— pleasant efforts—rightly directed and assisted by the pleasant laxative rem- edy Syrip of Figs and Elixir of Senna. Its beneficial effects are due to the fact that it is the one remedy which promotes internal cleanliness without debilitating the organs on which it ects. .To get its beneflclal effects al- ways buy the genuine manufactured by the California Fig Syrup Co.« GEO. A. DAVIS Easter Cards Easier Post Cards| BOOK MARKS AND NOVELTIES. DENNISON'S EASTER LUNCH] BETS AND NAPKINS. WE HAVE THE BEST REAL EASTER DUCKS IN THE MARKET, 10¢c EACH. WE RECEIVED TODAY A NEW LINE OF THE POPULAR CLOIS- ONNE ENAMEL JEWELRY IN BELT BUCKLES, BAR PIN BLOUSE SETS AND CUFF LINKS. New shapes and new designs. These make pretty Easter gifts. SAINT PATRICK'S DAY POST CARDS, TALLY CARDS AND NAP- KINS. A SPLENDID ASSORTMENT OF THE NEW FICTION. POPULAR COPYRIGHT NOVELS 80c cach. GEO. A. DAVIS, | 25-29 Broadway marsdaw | | | ‘Wouldn’t it be interesting if you could record all the funny con- versations you overhear? No eavesdropping, of course, you understand—but just those you accidentally happen to stumble onto. Well, you just ought to overhear “*Conversations’’— that’s the name of the song. It's March Amberol Record No. 368. Ask your dealer to play it for you on the Edison TPhonograph Fommiey oy Fite o Natinna] rwhm e edde Avenue, Orange, N. J. THE PLAUT - CADDEN CO., Plaut-Cadden Building Main Street, Norwich, Conn. Headquarters for Edison Phenographs and Records -— EASY TERMS — Special rooms for demonstration. Boyad { has been accumulated will be laid be- | terstate commerce commission because the | which | regarding n | therein was its testimony at the ovnening of court tomorrow. morning. <Counsel for So- phie will-present their side of the case | drink and sucked the dew" from the first, and it is ex—ected that the re- mainder of the week will be taken up | 80 to thé spot with him and how after with the evidtnce they will present. "~ Resting of the State a Surpri John F¥F. MacGrath, prosceuting at- torney of Waterbury, was ‘the last witness put on the stand by the state, his testimony having to do with a | mal statement made by Kulvinskas as he lay dying in the Waterbury hospital. The resting of the state at that point was somewhat of a surprise as the prosecution had asked the court’s per- mission to put in for identification a bullet which was found ameng the clothing of Kulvinskas as they were being shown to the jury at Water- bury before the case was transferred to this city. Mr, Kennedy objected, and Judge Williams stated that if Mr. Alling would present evidence to show that it was of the same calibre as the revolver found near ‘the dead man’s body that he would admit. Mr. Alling then announced that the state rested its case. Monday’s Evidence. The evidence presented b-— ‘the state today included a conversation between the murdered man and his brother Anton as the former lay in the woods and as he was being taken to the Wa- terbury hospital in an ambulance. In that talk the dying man told his brother that Sophie shot him on Fri- | told of how his brother said that as he lay on the ground he wanted a grass; of how Sophie asked him to they reached there she told him to lie down and had him put a handkerchief over his face to keep the flies and sun off, and then, after asking him: “Why do you go with me? Do you want-to separate me - from my fellow, my ?” she shot him three or four times with a revolver. Chief of Police Schmidt of Nauga- tuck told of how he remarked to An- ton as they stood beside Bronislow: “Your brother must have committed suicide,” and on Anton’s asking him, the dying man saying: “No; no; So- phie Kritchman and Joe Mitchell kill- ed me, and Sophie cut my neck.” Attorney MacGrath, who took the dying statement of Kulvinskas at the hospital, said that while be was there Mitchell was brought in and Kulvin- skas identified him and said he was the man who shot him, and in reply Mitchell said: *“T didn’t do this; didn’t know anything about it.” Mr. Lynch asked Anton if his broth- er had at any time told him that So- phie had said that she would kill her- self and witness replied that Bronis- low told him that when Sophie left him for the first time she said “she would sh herself or make death for hersel and that she also said, “There will be three funerals, a bar- tender, a saloon keeper and a piano player.” FUND OF $1,000 GIVEN TO ENCOURAGE STORK. Income to Be Divided Among Marble- head Women Who Become Wothers of Twins. Salem, Mass., March 7.—A funi of $1,000 to the town of Marblehead, ihe income to be divided annually am.ng the Marblehead women who have be- come mothers of twins during the jeur, is one of the unigue provisions in the will of the late James J. H. Groegory, = wealthy seedman, who dfed rec:atly. The testator's widow is the p 2 beneficiary under the will, and ul her death the residue is to go to the Amoar- ican Home Missionary society to es- tablish a fund for the purchase cf “character-building books” for distri- bution among the children of he mountain white people in the south. Declaring that each “in its own way is doing its best for the improvement of mankind,” the will provides sma'l bequests to the Episcopal, Methodist, Roman Catholic, Universalist and Ton- gregatiorral churches of Marblehead. COLEMAN’S CHAUFFEUR FREE ON GRANDMOTHER’S BOND. His Connection With Bank Case Not So Important as Supposed. Boston, March 7.—Wilson W. Lock- hart of Cambridge, who was arrested on Friday for alding George W. Cole- man in the alleged looting of the Na- tional City bank of Cambridge, con- vinced the federal authorities today that his connection with the case was not quite so important as was first supposed, with the result that his bail was cut In halvés and he was released. The bond was furhished by his grand- mother. Lockhart's attorneys were emphatic in their declaration that the young 'man knew nothing of Coleman’s meth- ods, though they admitted that he fre— quen!ly substituted for Coleman in his position as bookkeeper at the bank. Both the federal and Boston authori- ties continued their investigations to- day into the charge of wholesale gambling around Boston, especially in connection with the stories that Cole- man lost much of the bank’s money through faro banks. What evidence fore the grand jury both at the federal building and at the courthouse during the present wee U. S. SUPREME COURT ANNULS IMPORTANT ORDERS Of the Interstate Commerce Commis- sion for Exceeding Authority. Washington, March 7.—Dwice today the supreme court of the United States annulled important orders of the in- the commission exceeded its authority. One of the orders required the Northern Pacific Railway company to join with competing railroads in estab- Hshing a through route and joint rates from the »mst to Puget sound points via Portland, The other order re- al conneulmn with ‘the Rahway Railroad company at Summ J. In the other decision it was held lat the commission did not have pow3a:r to require a railroad, subject o thz ‘r— terstate commerce commission’s order, to grant a connection with a branch railroad, upon complaint of the branch railroad itself. The court relrained from deciding what was a branch rail- road, one of the points in the ease. MRS. LILLIAN GLOVER OWNED ONLY ONE SHARE In the Laundry Company Which Her Murdered Husband Conducted. Cambridge, Ma March 7. the advantage which Mrs. Lillian M. Glover gained last Friday over the brothers-in-law who are seeking to set aside the will of her murdered husband was lost today when she admitted that records s that Some Ol’ owned she only one share in the laundry company whicl B l‘u%uanfi Glov red nJ Betd & bl of const tive for brea Mrs. Glover’s sixth a stand_and again she “was questioned She said the a. Mrs. remembered ‘that her husband had had a quarrel with Mrs. Hills. She did not learn that Hattie Leblanc, the girl later arrested on the murder charge, had been accused until the police came to the house, Figure of Spsech To illustrate the house of lor zon’s father id that his first speech ike addressing sheeted tombstones by torehlight.” grave and ghostly.—Nashville can. A Poor Husband. In a St. Louis divorce case the wife testified that the husband forced her to How him to cook his own meals.- Pos- sibly it wasn’'t a hard matter to do, and maybe the poor fellow has some regard for his stomach.—Louisiana News. There are in Alsace-Lorraine 35 champagne factories. Of these Metz has 13. , . Lac )\aw'mna and i l ROBBED OF $35,000 WHILE HYPNOTIZED. Philadelphia Dairy Manager Tells a Strange Story—Falls Under Glance of Man and Awakes to Find Money Gone. S ‘Washington, March 7.—With a story of having been hypnotized and robbed of $35,000, a man who gave his name to the police as D. J. Telfair and said he was manager of a dairy company of Philadelphia, came to his senses in the emergency hosvpital today. Telfair told the police he arrived here to close a deal for a 700 acre dairy farm near Seminary, Va. The ,price was $50,000 and Telfair declares he had $35,000 In his pockets to make the first payment on Friday afternoon. According to his story he started for a bank, but found it closed and took a walk on the Mall around the Washing- ton monument. There, he says, he met a man who had hypnotized him ofte: and at a glance he fell.under the in fluence. He says he remembers turn- ing the $35,000 over to the hypnotist, but as to what transpired after that his mind is a blank. The police supply the story of his movement from the time a sheriff of lexandria county, Va., found the man asleep on the right of way of a su- burban trolley line. At the he ital the corps of surgeons finally awaKened the sleper and today he told his story. The man's mind is not clear and while he was telling of being robbed of his $35,000 a surgeon was shaking him to keep him awake. GUARD FOR PASTOR. Police Fear Another-Attempt on His Life. New York, March 7.—Several police- men were put on guard about the home of the Rev. Frederick F. Voeglin, pas— tor of the Manh#ftan Park German Presbyterian church in Irvington, N. J., yesterday, followihg an effort to poison the minister and his family by sprink. ling white arsenic on the rolls whic! had been left on their doorstep by a baker. Although the police have obtained a warrant for a man who was at one time a deacon of the church, they ad- mitted that there was no direct evi- dence to connect him with the at- tempted murder. ‘The pastor said that Henry Rallstab, a former deacon and a contractor who has not lived in Irvington for some time, was the only man whom he knew to bear a grudge against him. It was on this statement that the police or- dered the man’s arrest. POSTCARD ANNOYS IRISHMEN. It Showed an Intoxicated St. Patrick Dancing on Harp. Pittsburg, March 7.—A postcard eari- cature of St. Patrick circulated through the Pv[hhurg district yesterday caused a lively meeting of the Ancient Order of Hibernians, presided over by Mi- chael P. Deasey. The postcards which offended represented St. Patrick danc- ing on a green harp. The Hibernians issued a call for all Catholic societies in Allegheny county, irrespective of nationality, to meet with them next Wednesday here, when steps will be taken to stop the eirculation of these and similar cards. Leads the World. A German visitor to this country declares that the American workman ieads the world in gkill. If he can manage to make both ends meet at this time he also leads the world as a financier.—Joliet Herald. No Need To Fear Nature If one does not set up unnat- ural epposition. The eaffeine, in coffee, opposes nature — handicaps body and brain — reason enough to quit coffee and change to POSTUM the natural food beverage. It nourishes and strengthens body and braln— “There’s a Reason” Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich. WASHBUR N-CROSBY CO American agriculture shows a strange contrast. With the price of farm f!roducta higher than ever before, farm nd has depreciated In value, and the number of abandoned farms steadily increases. TFigures gathered by the conservation commission are surpris— ing. It is shown that there are 16,000 square miles of abandoned farms, chiefly in New England, New York, the southeast and the middle central states. ‘That is, there are in the United States at present 10,000,000 acres of aban- doned farm land—an area as large as the cultivated part of the Canadian northwest, fifteen times the size of Rhode Island, four times the size of Connecticut, twice the size of Massa- <chusetts or half as large as Ohio, Of the many reasons advanced to explain this desertion of farms, two or three are especially worth noticing. Most important of all, perhaps, is the wasteful system of cultivation that has so long prevalled in the United States. A fertile soil has in countless cases been exhausted by taking everything from it and returning nothing to it. Add to this the fact that there is a marked trend of population from coun- try to city and that farm labor has be- come so expensive as to leave little profit from the work of a laborer, and it Is little wonder that so many owners of farms do not care fo cultivate them. ‘Thousands of these deserted farm however, are not beyond reclamation, and proper methods would doubtless draw from them a profitable yield. American farmers have much to learn in the way of intensive cultivation. In New York state 2,000,000 people are supported directly from the soil in an area that would support 30,000,000 to 40,000,000 if worked to its full capacity. Our yields of staple crops per acre are notoriously low. The farmer must learn to get the most out of his land, and when he does there will be fewer abandoned.—Cleveland Plain Harbor Improvements Abroad. The “harbor board” of Soupthamp- ton, Eng., recently decided to deepen the channel of -that port from 32 to 35 feet, to give sufficient water .for the two great White Star liners, now building, the Titanic and Olympic, This decision was conditional, however, on the beneficiaries defraying a part of the cost of the improvement. The White Star line’s share was- fixed at 20,000 pounds, payable in ten annual instalments of 2,000 pounds each, such payments to be exclusive of ordinary port dues, charges, etc. The South- western railway, as owner of the docks, is also to bear a part of the burden, thus proportionately assisting in re- ducing the public expenditures for the completion of the project, which will cost in all about $500,000 (100,000 pounds). Such contributions by inter- ests and corporations benefited will strike Americans accustomed to see river and harbor !:mprovements defray- ed entirely from taxatio: as some- thing novel. The idea is old in Great Britain, where it appears to have worked very well. Uncle Sam would appreciate its introduction in the Uni- ted States even in a modified form. If. for instance, the ambitious towns which now secure $200,000 public build- ings were charged one-half the cost of construction, and the rivers that drain nothing but “the surrounding treasury” were improved only on con- dition of local contribution in cash, the federal finances would be all the better and the nation none the worse off.—Boston Transcript. Labor Not a Horse. The United States consul at Notting- ham thus explains the new labor ex- change act of Great Dritain: “The theory of the law is to treat la- bor as a commodity which can be found at some known place when wanted, and its object is to reduce unemployment and to improve labor conditions gen- erally by bringing together men who want work and employers wno want help. The exchanges to be operated under the new law will not touch ques- tions of strikes, lockouts, or other dis- putes. Employers will register the kind of labor they want; men (and women, but not domestic servants) who want work will register, indicating the kind of labor they can perform. So far as possible the exchanges will exclude the unemployable, leaving them to be pro- vided for by existing charities. The movement is of a purely business char- acter.” In this country we are just passing | out of that stage where labor is looked | upon as a commodity. Tt doesn't work. | It lacks the essentlals to peaceful re- lationship between employer and em- ploye. Labor is not a bullding ma- | terial, or a breakfast food, or @ horse. | Where it is obtained at the cheapest | price it is usually found to be the most | costly in point of production. The | American railroads are acquiring the right spirit which should exist between worker and capital. They are getting | the men to say: “We work with the | company, not for it.” | The test of time will show, in every likelihood, that the British labor ex- | change act is valuable only as a tem- porary expedient, provided that ‘“com- modity” theory remains the basic ele- | ment.—Toledo Blade, | Mornings After. Speaker Cannon Is quoted as saying that he has more than once had as- pirations to be a reformer. There are mornings after In the lives of most great men.—Louisville Courfer-Journal. Could Compete with Him, Thomas A. Edison says there is enough light in a bit of radium as big -as the head of a pin to illuminate the state of Rhode Island. We suppose he means when Aldrich isn't there.— Chicago Record-Herald. Limit of Cruelty. There may be a few young Matthew Quays growing up in Pennsylvania, but we don’t believe the story that a father in New Hampshire has named his helpless infant son Jethro Bass.— Chicago Tribune. The indications are that at no «is- tant date there will be more Ga-man students in America than “American students in Germany, Modifying Injunction Power. An administration measure -which may pass during this session of con- gress is the bill which Representative Moon has introduced, which seeks to modify the issuance of .injunctions by ‘the federal courts. Following the | pledge made by the platform of the last-held republican national conven- tion, President Taft urged action upon congerss and it is belicved his views are embodied in the Moon bill. The main provision is that before a judge shall grant a permanent or pro- longed injunction against any person, firm, corporation or organization, both parties to the dispute shall have an opportunity to present their argu- ments before him, in order that the facts on each side shall be fully set forth for the guidance of the court. ‘When, however, it shall appear to the satisfaction of the judge that “im- mediate and {rreparable injury” may follow failure on his part to act at once, he may issue a temporary In- Junction or restraining order on the application of one of the parties; but this mandate shall continue in effect only for seven days, at the end of which it becomes void, unless both sides shall have had an adequate hear- ing. Moreover, when a judge has granted a tentative injunction of this sort, he shall publicly record his rea- sons for believing that grave damage would have resulted if he had omitted to do so.—St. Paul Despatch. Roosevelt's Perfect Health, No American will be surprised by the statement that Theodore Roose- velt has been found proof against the various type of jungle fever; for, ac- cording to his friends, the ex-president is stalwart enough to throw off any contagion and, according to his foes, he is in himeelf a fever of a special type. On the latter hypothesis, Mr. Roosevelt’s escape from the pestilence which has stricken down veteran ex- plorers and missionaries is logical enough, for. is it not a maxim of medi- cine—or, at least, of a certain school —that “like cures like?” And would it not be monstrous to suppose that one species of fever could prey upon another? The real explanation of the great faunal naturalist’s perfect health prob- ably lies in his complete knowledge of the latest discoveries in this branch of sanitation. It was not for nothing that he sent a body of experts to Pan- ama to round out the record which a similar body of experts had made in Cuba, If men of European stock could live and work on the isthmus, why should they not likewise hunt with impunity in the wilds of the Dark Continent?—New Orléans Times-Dem- ocrat. Things Perfectly Safe. J. Pierpont Morgan must have a clinched hold on things here. He is going to Europe.—Milwaukee Sentinel. | use. As a Man Grows Older. ‘When a man is real young there seems to be so much going on in the world that he regrets the loss of the little time he has to devote to sleep: but in time he learns that sleep is about as interesting as the rest of it, and more satisfactory.—Atchison Globe. New Brand of Trouble, Probably. Mr, Roosevelt has finished his hunt for big game in Africa. Bverybody s interested to know what he will go hunting next.—Boston Globe. DON'T EXPERIMENT You Will Make No Mistake If You Follow This Norwich Citi- zen’s Advice. Never neglect your kidneys It you have paln in the back, urinary disorders, dizziness and nervousness, it's time to act and no time to exper!- ment. These are all symptoms of kid- ney .trouble, and you should seek a remedy which is known to cure the kidneys, Doan’s Kidney Pills is the remedy to No need to experiment. It haw cured many stubborn cases in Nor- wich. ¥ollow the advice of a Nor wich citizen and be cured yourself, Mrs. Charles H. Whaley, 9 Tread- way Avenue, Norwich, Conn., ~says: “Ever since my first experience with Doan’s Kidney Pills, some six years ago, I have valued them highl Their use has ‘saved me a great deal of suffering. My experience with various remedies has taught me that many of them while doing good Iin one way will cause distress in another. Such is not true of Doan's Kidney Pills, which I procured from N, Sevin & Son’s drug .store. They act solely upon the kidneys, and do not affect the stomach, heart or other organs in any way. 1 consider it = pleasure to recommend Doan’s Kidney Pills to other kildney sufferers.” Remember the name—Doan's—and New York, sole agents for the United States. YFor sale by ail dealers, cents. Foster-Milburn Co. Price 50 Buftalo, Worth a Dollar a Drop. Fred Patchen, Manlius, N. Y., writes: “For a long time I was affected with kidney trouble which caused an almost constant pain in my back and inflam- mation in my bladder. Other remedies did not even relieve me, but two fifty cent ‘bottles of Foley's Kidney Remedy completely cured me.and I have not had any symptoms of kidney troubla for. over two years,” The lee & Os- good Co. KIDNEY TROUBLE SIMPLY VANISHES The Most Severe Backache and Bladder Misery and all Other Distress Caused by Disordered Kidneys is Ended Before You Realize It. Hundreds of folks here are needless ly miserable and worried because of out-of-order kidneys, backache or bladder trouble. If you will take seyeral do of Pape's Diuretic all misery from a lame back, rheumatism, painful stitches, inflamed, -or - swollen, eyelids, mervous | hendachg irritability, dizzin , worn- | out, sick feeling.and other symptoms | of overworked or deranged kidneys | will vanish. ‘ Uncontrollable, smarting, frequent urination o (especially at night), all bladder misery .ends, This unysual. . preparation goes at once- to. ihe. disordered kidneys, blad- der and urinary system, and distrib- utes its healing, cleansing and vitall ing influence directly upon the organs and glands affected, and complétes the | cure before you realizé it and The momeni you suspect any kidney | — What and Where $3.50-BOSTONIANS--$4.00 Most. theoti. PBostonians rank among the b made Slioes the world, Special Agency, P. CUMMINGS, (Premiums) 62 Central Ave. Custom Grinding| TUESDAYS and FRIDAYS at YANTIC ELEVATOR. men concede in A. R. MANNING, Yantie, Conn. ‘Telephone. decldd OUR WORK ' rr.utl the approval of the critical Rogers Domestic Laundry. | Tel. 958. Rear 37 Franklio Str sept27d QUALITY in work should always be considered, especlally when it costs no more than | the inferior kind. Skilled men are | employed by us. Our prices tell the whole story. STETSON & YOUNG. maylid I | less medicine, disorder, or feel rheumaes g, begin taking this harma with the knowledge that or urinary tism comin, there is no other remedy, at any prica, made anywhere else in the world, which will effec 80 thorough and prompt a cure as a fifty-cent treatment of Pape’s Diuretic, which any druggist can suppl Your physician, pharmacist, banker or any mercantile agency will tell you that Pape, Thompson & Pape, of (yi cinnati, is a large and responsible med - icine concern, thoroughly worthy of your confidence, Only curative results can come from king Pape’'s Diuretic, and a few days* tment means clean, active healthy t | kidneys, bladder and urinary organs-— 4|ul you feel fine. Accept only Pape's Diuretic—Afty« | cent treatment—from any drug store uny\\hfl e in the.world 1o Buy In Nerwich Joseph F. Smith, FLORIST 200 Main Streel, Norwich. Ivia Sweet California Navel Oranges 15¢ doz. OTTO FERRY, Tel, 703. 336 Framklin St. Free delivery to all parts of the city, DR. JONES, Dentist, 35 SHETUCKET ST. Room 10 ’Phone 32-3 maylia -Here We Are At 235-237 West Thames Sireel. Why not come and see our store, er, if you are busy, telephone your order, The best attention giv C. 8. FAIRCLOUGH, Propriotas

Other pages from this issue: