Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 28, 1910, Page 2

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NORWICH BfiLLETIN‘ FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1910 R e L ONUOA MaN] Slasdap maN OIRIR o e T R 9 09 . 008 » SLT 0822 » 002 6 . SF . 00F s 06F s 02T 5 0ST 02°88 B0 SE§ THOM QPSS APIOM £7°78 Bmod 0TS WHOM 0TS “upld ‘yuswied Aseq InQ Joj SuppAioay pue soppdeiq ‘Surppeg ‘sfiny *sjodae) ‘amjpumndg spidey ” » . - he anoye =A0) elquy Anwe pew . Spazop 5§ dou ‘wurenmy eowy “x010 Potuioseq sIVa 7 $ean) T & s, v oweix Ao - >[I MMy eqeeAL WSO W ‘eurieonIof T drenby 4 | =p1oD T *aeews( | N ‘qomoe) punoyy I ® yu0 WOPIOD L.ANold @ *Iny enuwa) LowIoq Spuiraos femng Xox) TN N1PSFNIg 0IL B T IOMNN T WMOTIIA 3 iyeeg passpsioq D98 TOM 0W) LY do 0dn oum /. = ) 3 0 0 MR WY s Xom Sewd 1 3R 14 T oe D TR0 Lonyn @ fuea ~art 23 A 9°0TXTS “mg 10jivy ewopg-g 0 ‘m e Y spauy ~Swan FUHAS iy agog posas T exi WIMOM ¥ i_jogay “waowsony X WISUD wmINCR YL yenswy fuwd g PIW 8 mowmmame0 X 4 WOOU DNIAFT | -8 PRO Wis 3ug WO JO 9OY) IOHEI 00J-§ WL YN PPE g, T . NAHOLIM ~ W00dG3d ¥O0 AYVIEIT WOON DNINID JOTAVd 10018 onpe ] AU G : Aeq A Ag..“ sm | HO0HE D TIV NO adMOTIV "ENID d"d 01 e T Animal Oddities. Crabs can cannot hear. The West African water shrew h the fur and shape of an otter, a ike an eet lie habits of an aquat see and smell but they | cincinnati is lat club, Marvin Ha 1st, is a detec the heavyweight pugil in Louisville. ive Nutwood, 2:1 bhave 148 4 record trotters and d snail if kept in a moist place will iu a few days grow a new | PPN s head, ard the new head will be quite 8 0 rie Hungarisn phe s a means of as serviceable as the original one was. restocking its game haunts, | | lifornia Kennel club will send An 2 | The C; Bir Au king more | g carload of the best dogs on the coast seedy than ¢ entered the tallor’s | to the east, with the purpose of creat- shop and was met by the tailor him- | ing greater interest in future Califor- self, who welcomed him with a beam- | Bia shows fog sm | The Ariels of Baltimore claim that M sald Sir Au-| their x clubhouse is the mc ik 2l merics (he club enje gustus, ave allowed him | fect in America. Tt 3 enie | of their most successful rowing s to for three years. ‘1 have % & | sons last yea | efore Facts From France. r Augustus,” interrupt- | vowing with politeness, | ¥ mot the slightest hurry, | you slished a high school that returned the knight | 1 therefore 1 have come n futuré 1 want to get $140,000,000 0 & man. at my elothes from you too.”—London | ance there are 300 poetesses, Telegraph | 840 women hion w s and 1,500 ———— | women novelists. Sixty women are He Had Learned It. members of the Society of Dramat, “1 heard a good story the other day,” | Authors, and there are 300 women began the groceryman, “about a cer- | writers on educational matt lafn politician.” “That will do,” Interrupted the dis- appointed office seeker. place, there s ~Chicago N far from being the child- that some writers picture t census shows no fewer in that countr ten or more chil- 1,250,000 families five children each. | Iess countr, it. “In the first | ain politiclans.”* i ; France is 000 familie which rejoice 1 dren each 5 having at | X English Etchings. “ Depositors fn the British postoffice | savings bank were credited last year | with £ Juries ir with iuterest tngland may now nd uplifted e Sworn 7 S | instead of by Kissing b //}‘3 % U< | ou fhe London 2 .- nearl 10.500 1 Premature Grayness | i on vos raiees wnier toue | Is an usnatural disfigurement anda 'F29° bandicap in social and business life. In fast > west end of ,Lon Those who care for their personal ap-| 900 the fair and skinned | pearance, use HAY'S HAIR HEALTH. overed It removes all tra storing es of grayaess by re-| the huir to its natural color—used enocessiully when all others fail, S NOT A Brn Rivalry in -the South, | Send 2. for books “The Care of the Hair and o X G Sin.” Philo Hay Spec. Co., Newark, N. J. r ore es some o REFUSE ALL SUBSTITUTES ; Cbarleston News #1 and S0c. boitles, at druggists Smit Jsgood Co., Chas. Os > limewater- added to 2004 ¢ ey & J w will st easier. Buick! As Buick! Automobile Co. the uthorized agents of the Buick we have re- d a limited number of NEW 1910 BUICKS of various models which we are positive can be placed here within ten days. The discounts on these cars will surprise you. ORD TO THE WISE IS SUFFICIENT. M. B. RING AUTO CO., Telephone 553-5 21 Chestnut Street Hardware Specials STAR HACK SAW TRY AND MIT STILISON WR MONKEY WRENCHES, STHEL TRAPS DOLI.AR WATCH TIN BNIPS e DOIILAR RAZORS (this week only) ..... FULL: GROWN AXHE WITH HANDLE K. K. AXES, warranted, only.. BIL. 50c—8 6 inch incl 6 inch PLATFORM AND SCOOP SCALES, slantiig dial to 24.%s, only ........... soveeg e RATCHET? DRILL BRACE ... L MOUSE TRAPS, four hole _.. THE HOUSEHOLD, Bulletin Building 74 Franklin Street | ana Jobnstone of the Wright THE MOST DARING AIBMANSHIP' That has ever been Shown to an American Crowd— Fifth Day of the Aviation Meet at Belmont Park. New York, Oct. 37.—Such are the caprices of O¢tober weather that Ralph Johnstone and Arch Hoxsey of the Wright team of aviators went up for altitude at Belmont Park this after- noon and brought down the record of the day for distance. Howling Wester Ended the Day. The fifth day of the international aviation meet opened full of promise and closed with a howling wester that filled the air with whirling autumn leaves, slammed down benches in the grand stand, riped out the canvas screens that bar the view of those who have not paid, but hope to gaze; tore a string of flags from the grand stand and seut such a skirmish line of dust deyils dancing around he track that thé flare lamps had to be lighted out- | side the hangars for the mechanics to find their way about. It was a furious end to a day of postponements, disap- pointments and scattered feats of the most daring airmanship that have vet been shown to an American crowd. No One Dared Try for the $10,000 Spe- cial Prize. Officially, flights for the Gordon Ben- nett elimination trials, to pick an American team which shall defend the international trophy won at Rheims last year, opened at 9 o'clock this morning, but nobody cared to come ouf for them in the wind that w blowing. At 1.30 o’clock the special prize of $10, 000 offered b; for a flight from the field to the tatue of Liberty and return was open to any | aviator, but none of them dared try. They chose to take advantage instead of the latest largesse allowed them by the committee—perm between 1.30 and 3.45 o'clock any after- noon during the meet, provided only that they should finish before 5.30. Proved a 25 Mile an Hour Gale. That narrowed the programme down | to one hourly event for distance and Antoinette and Hoxsey team, in standard model Wright biplanes of the new headless tvpe, were the only ones to brave > of from 20 to 25 miles an hour. It was stiff altitude. Latham in an monoplane, for distance, a Johnstone and gol Hoxsey tried to imitate the gull, to set their wings and soar into the gale without effort, but S 1 that the “way of *is still one of the four s not vet understand. They kept their pois beautifully. but though the speed of il they were flying is normal- mil 1 hour and their engines vere running w open, v were pushed steadily down over the edge of, the horizon, and finally vanished from he range of the most powreful glasses. The upper gale ti were jamming must have been more than forty miles in hour, but neither v willing to come down before the other, and they it out until forced to nd by r compulsion of the element Driven Far Off Their Course. Bot iven miles off the from Hoxsey fir: iplane 5 % were d men Wor he had landed etly at Brent- L. sout miles stant te, still resolute that he wwul e down before that fellow * stuck it out longer and was 5 miles to Middle Island V heirs was the two 1o . L RESERVES END SEASON. Whaleboat and Steamer to Be Taken from Water on Sunday—Gun Arrives. e local division of the Connecti- aval militia will go out of com- sion, as far as actual navigation on Saturday and Sunday of this ek, when the whaleboat and the steamer will be hauled out.for the vinter, s walk Hour The will be taken to the srwalk iron works dock, where the ., the boiler and the piping will >moved and will be given a th rhauling during the wintes The steamer will then e hauled ou ship yard. Anderson’s The new gun for the division was prought down from the gunboat Ma- chias last Sunds and will be re- moved to the iron works dock w n the top is off boat and will then be mounted at the Norwalk armory for use Old Maid should T want hu and? I h e a cat that but »ses all nine Matron— till night n't be a widow Thomas Fortune Ryan | ion_to compete | \ | | | i | | | | i amus flights of the day. Boin telephoned in that they hoped to fly back to the course tomorrow. Straight Forward Progress Backwards. Neither of them could be caught on the telephone again after they had re- ported to Wilbur Wright, and from him came the details of their adventures. “Incidents?” said - Wilbur. “There weren’t any. It was just one straight forward progress backwards. When they got up,a thousand feet or more they struck a wind blowing about 25 miles an hour faster than they could travel. I estimate that it must have been between 65 and 70 miies an hour. So they just drifted. That's all there was to'it, but I guess it's the first time in the history of aviation that any- body ever made a flight tail-end fore- most. The Nerve of Latham. For the first hourly distance event, the only routine number remaining on the programme, th ole entrant was Latham in an Antoniette. He fin the hour with only 14 laps, 21.7 mileh, in 55 minutes seconds, and the figures show how persistent was his battle with the gale. but they cannot bring out the visual image itself, his beautiful manoeuvring one thousand feet above the grand stands. He joc! eyed his way around the turns by she: resourcefulness and nerve. was S0 obstinate that he had to poin: head into it and steer due north in or- der to edge sidewise, like a ferryboat in g run on tide, and make distance to the west. Easy Money to Brookins for Distance and Altitude. A special event for distance and alti- tude was added to the programme to the crowd, but it was long be- fore anyone e out for it, Finally Audemars, a in a tiny Dem- oiselle, danced over the course, but was no weather for a butterfly. after two rounds Audemars learn prudence and went back to the ha ars. If he had started just one minute earlier he might have won the easic money of the meet—$ for f hourly distance—with one lap, but the | bomb banged before he was thre quarters way i T'o Brookins, fell the easy money. With 1t Jasting only minutes, in wkt > rose to a minor altitude of he brought down $500- for first pr for altitude and di be called a contes: competitor, bhut ned the money.™ a special event it could he hi felt he ockins “Pwenty-fiv lars a_ minute may seem high pz Diider 5 this 15 piainb | he said, “but T went out to prove mark, consisting of a | ability of an American machine to ride | S b a gale that no foreig would dare.| under the circle are the initials { I think I proved my point, and the | demonst: it to be worth the| Mr. Aston says the violin has been price to t public.” in the pos f his family for | Furious Wind Storm Ended All Events. | many years, ing had it himeelf | . N anaR o | about forty vears, was given to = o be janded came | him by his father, who he said con- | nts were called oiv, | ducted an old tavern in the west of | that time neither Johnstone no | that his father purchased | Hoxsey had been heard from, and the from a gypsy. He said they used | oo s e o o B hold dances in this tavern and that | phone brought news from them. Their | ¢ 1t was used by one of the | records for altitude will mot be avail- | 2ld sies to furnish music. The able until their barograph lines | violin he said was kicked about the ht back to the aviation and examined tomorrow by the als. ve been brou field offic FAIRFIELD COUNTY HOME Here are the Helps that Cooks have wanted (rawford Acan hed | The gale does lard, and digest Cottolene is a the tissues of the body. It won’t harm them ! Made only by | duct—made from pure, refined cotton oil—and every bit as digest- ible and nourishing as olive oil. Cottolene makes food which any stomach can digest, and builds up Let your children eat all they want of food cooked with Cottolene. THEN. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY Cooks FYREE | Cookisa are dood for him\ Your children can eat Cottolene made cookies and other pastry because it never makes food greasy as stomach _can easily ! assimilate and the it. Lard is an ‘animal product—just plain hog fat. “Nature’s Gift from the Sunny South” vegetable pro-‘( | STRADIVARIUS OF 1723. | | Ansonian Possesses Famous Make of | Violin; Which Today Are Valued at $2,000 at Least. | state news of the Sentinel | appeared an item about | ius violin being owned by | In_the y woman in Winsted, whicn | re the date of 1729. The item at- | tracted the ttention of Thomas on of Sevmour avenue, this city, ho produced evidence in the form of > make, but which, it apon it was > violin is the | inscription: “Antonius | Cremons Faciebat | place for some time, and when his fa- her finally purchased it, it was pret- much o pieces. He says his family cen in possession of it for over fifty vears at least. While not caring to sell the violin, he says according to prices which have been Reports Presented at Annual Meeting | Paid for simifar I truments it must ansWednesday, |is nin & musician of some little : = Jility and he performed upon it to The annual mee g of the board of | gemonstrate the quality of i tone, management and the committee Which is unquestionably of a very high visitors of the county home | character and sweetness—Ansonia was held in the on Westport e D e ue Wednesda 1d ma RGPt e e ! GOING TO AFRICA. are at present eight e | ik belny carcd for le home, and over | Mr. Cousins and Family Are to Lo- 120 are out ivate homes and in | cate in Johannesburg for at Least 1 the county, mak- | Three Years. than 200 children S the A week from to Mr. and M George Cousins and daughters, MI Dorothy and Marjorie, will leave Nor- walk on long journey to Johan- s neshurg, Africa_ where they will fm . Leen i : reside in the future. Mr. Cousins is shown by the various reports made. | the son of Thomas Cousins of Mott Tihe fotal compfore the earnilof dhe | ue a is employed by the In- Lty 2 oiiE At | zersoll’Rand company. manufacture fenance for the | of mir machinery, who have offices ¢ . dpEsl 1 | a1l over the world. Mr. Cousins has were | been sent around to a number of the B | offices in the {United States, his last | 5 of | place having been E! Paso, Texas, | st | where he been located for the | : | past three year: | Al S has signed a contract | with 1 overs to stay in South | Africa for at least three years and | . end of that time he wishes to | in the place he can do so. - The | vere to have started on their on September 1, but has been ill with typh i ver. She has recovered, however, and | is now visiting in Meride The ty | sail Novembe 2 New York | on the steamship Corona of the | ard and will_go viirectly to | Ireland. From there they ges supply them—no others can! The Single Damper (patented); one motion—push the knob to “kindle,” “bake” or “chcA Damper mistakes impossible. does the rest. '—the range The Ash Hod in the base (patented). The ashes fall through a chute into a Hod, @/ of them, making their removal safe, casy,cleanly. The Coal Hod is along- side,out of the way. that heat it in eoery part alike. No “cold corners,” no “scorching spots.” The Fire Box and Patented Grates enable a small fire to do a large baking. 3 agent to Write us for cir- Walker & Pratt Mfg, Co, 31-35 Union St., Boston M. HOURIGAN, Norwich, Agent. - pe Town, on the south- rica, and from there will go inland to Johannesbt where they will reside. e company < a large office in that city and do g in the gold k llour SILENT 18 YEARS. Providence Bank Wants Information Regarding Josephine Davis of Wa- bank account or of her father vith the the names were futi to discover or mother the 22 at Marl- ived held no one took ification b examination v, Nov. 5. purpose on that date be discontinued. Bridgeport.—Much displayed Wednesday night at the 'xl\ ng of the joint committze of the ix local lodges of the New England | ('rcer of Protection following one of lda lodge N. E. O. P. and details re- zarding the celebration in, honor of the fwenty-third anniversary of the o were settied upon. be If no one ap- to aturday that enthusiasm w as , bund, an or, Have you seenit? to all the latest requirements of fashion, it is especially designed for stout figures, has nosuperior as an abdomen reducer, and is guaranteed not to break The “RENGO BELT, frontof this corset is responsible for—T"he comfort it gives, the style it produces, the way it wears, the hygienic support it gives the figure, and the modish swing it gives the gown. Ask the corset departmentof any leading store to fit you with a THE NEW “Rengo Belt” CORSET Conforming on the RENGO BELT CORSET of the proper model and size and you will find the first real comfort you have ever known in a corset that makes the medium and stout figure shapely withe out pinching. Rengo Belt Style 43 has HighBust and Style 47 Style 49 High Bust, and Style 500 Medium Bust Exts Coutil. Law Bust $2.00 $3.00 quality Imported For Sale By ~ DAMES AND DAUGHTERS. An Italian journal says that Adelina for $100,000 it Patti has sold her threat to an American, who will after her death. exhibit The Couuntess Bathurst is woman in England who owns s newspaper. She is the sole surviving child of the late Lord Glenesk, pro- prietor of the Morning Post, who died the other d The only wo the world is Brazoria, Tex., tion of surgeon Brownsville and Mexican railroad ever since that line was built, several years ago. | Elizabeth Hirsh of Liegnitz, Ger- many, Is the first woman to be elect to the governing council of the H financiers and German tr is the m and the election is | ilroad surgeon in Herzog of who has held the po- for the St. Lo 1an 1 Dr. \phie d capitalists to and commerce of a large facto! promote She in recognition of her remarkable busi- | ness ability { Miss Betsy B. Winslow of New Bed- | ford, Mass, who began her thirty-| fourth comnsecutive year as a member of the New edford school board re cently, record ¢ 5 a uf- fragette,’ \e has not ounly served in public elective office longer than any other woman, but at each recur- | ring election she has gone to the polls | &nd cast her ballot. | terbury. , ; Train and Track. What has become of Josephine Da- vis 1 Providence institute for 2 = savings yuld like to know, sayvs the In the TUnited ates the percentage Waterbury Republican. On the books | of rallroads which are not engaged in of tiis tution Josephine Davis is | carriage of the mails is very small s s The New York public. service com 1892, a4 money mission will make an extensive inves from Waterbury through the tigation of cencrete as a deadener of e s ated railroad structures, Phe. savings institution yesterday | Dolse on elevated railroad § appealed to Town Clerk Robert Palm- | Of English railways the Northe for help in locating the ern holds the record for the fastest S George | 1ning between stops erage of er. failed to give | running between stoy verage of mount of money credited | sixty-one and seven-tenth miles an hour over forty-four and one-guarter wil There are mual ineom Short Stories. Six -hundred workmen weve killed af their labors iu during past year, { A 2,000,000 ton hill in Clncionati is being moved three miles to make a | railroad £li | Early historic times in Norway are | to be illustrated at an exposition to be | Chicago held at Bergen next summer. 11 The caribou of Alaska travel north | every year fn large herds. Sowme of | these droves number a thousand ani- mals. the | His Reason. “You say Colonel Dawson can’t see demanded little Blinks indig- ntly. )" returned the colonel's sec- retary. “And son for may I ask if he gives any rea- this extraordinary behavior?” . trembling with emotion. plicd the secretary coldiy. he doesn’t want to strain his 1arper’s Weekly. Rheumatism Is A Constitutional Disease. It manifests itself in local aches and pains,—inflamed joints and stiff mus- _but it cannot be cured by local applications. It requires constitutional treatment, and the best is a course of the great blood purifying and tonic medicine : : Hood’s Sarsaparilla hich c the acid condition of e blood d builds up the system. Get it today in usual liquid form or ted tablets called Sarsatabs. A Wise Precaution 1 every day by thousands ious housewives. They Ives labor, insure per- fect cleaniiness and expel discase from their homes by adding a tablespoonful of that wonderful germicide and “Liquid Cle~ali- | nees,” Gahot's Sulpho-Napthol to every pail of water which they use in making their homes clean and healthy. Besides lesseriing their labor one-half and cleaning better, thi. | wonderful antiseptic dispels and kills all dise and makes the hom which it used delightiully refreshing and P u © thems germs of se in is sitively healtht low_packages by gtsie ana abe ana $1°00 Be SULPHO-NAPTHOL COMPANY Torrey Building, 14 Medford Street SAWYER CRYSTAL BLUE CO., Selling Agts. | 55 Broad Strect, Boston, Mass. '3 no advertising medlum in anne it eqnal to The Bul- business results THE Maste letin for

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