Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 14, 1910, Page 6

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TUBERCULOSIS EXHIBIT AT WESTERLY' Opens this Afternoon to Continue a Week—Free to! Connecticut as well as Rhode Island Visitors—Max- son & Co's Plant Closes After 67 Years—Death of | Nicholas Craddock. After a continuous business career|terest in the business, but failed. It! of sixty-geven years the wood-working | was then agreed that the firm would plant of Maxson & Co., in West Broad | finish up all orders on hand, not take | street, Is closed, but prospect is en- |any big contracts, but gradually worlk | couraging for an early resumption of |up the stock on hand and then clos business, perhaps under new manage- | tie business. This has been done ment. The Maxson plant is a seventh , the only unfinished contract is on the day shop, and tne employes were noti- | repairing of the arber Memorial fied Friday afternoon that operationx | building, which is practically were ubout to be suspended and that |save th + headguar his is e men were free to seek employment | the build riy a elsewliare. The firm just prior 1o clos- |y g0 . ing was composed of J. Irving Maxson | Mr. Gove said Saturday that he did and C. Edwin Gove, and they did a|not believe the plant would be idle for Juge and, it was supposed, profitable | more than a week, as there were two Pusiness, although in the panic of a | parties negotiating for the purchase of few years @go they suffered financial | the plant, one of which was an organ- ineonvenience, for at that time they |ized company under the laws of the #ad many buildings in_course of con- | state of New Jersey and the other an struction in Qarden City, L. L, and |established local concern in the same work had to be stopped oh account of |line of business. Intimation was made the scarcity of momey. The firm I there were otber prospective pu constructed buildings considerable | chasers. In addition to this plant pretention In New Y. and in Con- 1as r; lumber yard 1 nectfcut and other N ‘ngland states, reet ives employment and the business was conducted on an venty-five men in the extensive scale, the sash, doors, blinds, plant and a great m more on the etc., being manufactured in the West | construction work in othier places. Mr. Broad street plant. A ove is now building a $50,000 resi Several months ago Mr. Gove en n Tuxedo, N. and the ma deavored to purchase Mr. Maxson's in- stock to The business. was Charles and stublished in 1843 and HER PflYSlClAN s one of the larges an- contractors and carpenters in the and it is said to have been the firm to erect buildings strictly by perties t has since xact the 1athan ind J. Irving Max son st new fir hich subsequ the sole property | 1. Irvi . until Mr. Gove be- | | | There is considerable interest in the | Taking Ly(ha E.Pinkham’s | | tyberaiosis ‘exihibition to be given in | esterly, commencing today (Mond: Vegetable Compound |t cloding et Saturdas. ndor (he Sabatt fne.—*You told me'to | 29ard of trale. and in ¢ take Tydia E. Pinkham's Vegetabie Iitige: sompmeUEY Compound and | Waite and Wil Liver Pills before | opening day le child-birth, and we | Dr. Alexur B. are all surprised to see how much good it did. My physi- clan said ¢ Without doubt it was the Compound thai helped you.' I thank you for your Sublic. not We ty,but of Ne kindness in advising | don co ¥ re in C'c me and give you full | cut, as 1s in Rhode Y permissfon to use “*N! e also the incid ¥ hame In your testimonials.”—DMrs. | | Pty ovey W, Mz Box 3, Sabattus, Me. |} Rl Another Woman Helped. i Graniteville, Vt. — *“I was passing throughthe Change of Life andsuffered from nervousness and other amm)m;: symptoms. Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vege. table Compound restored my health \vul strength, and proved worth mountains of gold to me. F¥or the sake of other suflering women I am willing you | should publish my letter.” — Mrs. |yl o CraryEs Bancray, R.F.D., Granite- | Smitl ville, Vt. oo ‘Women w\ho are passing flnmlyh this eritical perfod or ing from any of those distressing ills peculiar to their gex should not lose |,/ sight of the fact that for thirty years -, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- und, which is made from roots and K‘.’m has been the standard remedy for female ills. In almost every com- munity you will find women_who have n restored to health by Lydia E. Pinkbham’s Vegetable Compound t been irranged e I Buy in Weslarl; fk : eseesssssesces. Tuc r‘mu, T A INDUSTRIAL TRUST COMPANY Westerly Branch I Capit Three Million Dollars Surplus Three Miliion Dollars Over Fifty Thousand Accounts. berai, courteou efficient nt L and in its Hari Sclmllner & Marx | Clotlles D BY es B CRANDALL co. Westerly, R Iluy Your Shafis and Hcsuary to get PURTILL’S THE BRIDC o be ON Clty Pharmacy Soda and Col for your car. Try our fuge 26 Caral St. Westerly. B. |, les Cream, lces while waiting 3 tete Justment RWort ronr severn & parts sigrly, R. ant f¥ont. and bot #nd_adjoining th + reasenably price e : T S e Sigabs medern plwm pectien invited Frenk W. Coy Renl Estaie Co. febléd Westerly, i. K ¥y you weil to our | famonds, 100se &1 mounted, rchasing. . | CASTRITIUS, Leading Wasterly Jeweler. Fe exander G a On the mornir 1 LIGHT HARNESS |« iiort BY HAND, el st i» Our Specialey. |o'tohd vAth sroess Supphes car- | “Pecial dem Mede Harness | Wil e ziven ' at w. . - . Local Laconics. Remerad 09 4 § Broad Steset, = There are two cases of scarlet fever i times or hard: {urday | the | trade wi in Pamveatuck, one in Garden and one in Morgan street. There were no indications of hard p for the high cost of | living in the saloons of Pawcatuck Sat- | night. There may be change in of that particular line of saloons are in operation in public interests more difficult of pro- tection. < Mr. Mellen Admits Abuses. In his next letter to vou, Mr. Mel-, len reférred explicitly to my reply and said: “I do_not intend to seriously | criticise his (Mr. Jones') general state- Existence of center w _ | ment of evils sought to be remedied AIdmm: while attempting to‘ by proposed legislation,” but suggest- into a moving wagon in Schooll.g as the remedy for these admitted slipped and fell,break- | below the knee. He | taken to his home, in Liberty | where the fracture was reduced . Scanlon and Smith. Craddock, a resident of . where he conducted an up- died Saturday morn- hode Island hospital from of diseases. Flo was 44 ind leaves a widow, five and one son, also an adopted aturday, right leg abuses the establishment of a “Court of Commerce,” which he has now de- fined as a branch of our superior court. As Mr. Mellen agrees with me that these specified abuses exist and should be remedied, it would give me great pleasure to agree with him upon the form of remedy. But, unfortu- nately I am unable to do so. “Court of Commerce” Could Not Rem- edy Abuses. treet, da S Our supreme court has repeatedly l'decided that under our constitution the s been_impossible to locate any | i ¢ § ze. assemblv could not give the b oF Thriee crell, who died | general assembly u pital, after being run over by a rail- | power to determine = the method by o ertalior Murphy will | Which unsafe conditions should be - - The supreme courc of the tates has always held that the power to fix rates could not be ex- reised by any judicial tribunal—al- jugh the courts have power to set die ¥ until Tuesday, appears if will in the afternoon. Four more a and if | buried have been re- | 1t the clerk iication o s Al e B a rate fixed by an_administra- 1 TR ‘,'”,“.L’{’ byl tive tribunal if it s such as to de- Pt et Ol e Tices prive the corporation of a just income. 51 Plerce street; Giovenni Tureano, 84 | 1"q, 1ot know of any process hv which e gt) (ERgan e Salare 6 2 court could ordinarily compet a cor- Pierce Genereso Guarino, 53 tter nervioel or poration to furnish S which it might examine and cor- Pier 13 applicants 11 o ane 3 ect meters, or through which it could Herbert Thompson, whose premises ' c ™ (Lo capitalization, or by have been ralded several times, and of swhich it could provide for the liquors v ater publici in corporate affairs was arrested u hell Sur intaini | for the protection of the public. Public Service Commission Could as arraigned in the Third distric t| Remedy Them. _and pleaded not guilty. He i8| ¢, {he other hand, the general pow- for trial in bonds of $1,000. ers which the state business men's as- n Allisandoro was sociation have suggested should be hird district court vested in an administrative tribunal ¢ cd with stealing lumber from DT. | have been granted to simflar commis- William D. Chritche: , used in con- | gions in other states; and the laws nection with of the recently ! creating them have been held to be purchased Ha n High street. | constitutional and have proved effec- K not guilty and he ' tive. Why should not the same prove ordered held for trial in bomds of | {rye in Connecticut? Judge Baldwin Subsequently Judge Williams | governor-elect (until recently chief he accused to change his jistice of our supreme court of er- nd suspended judgment | yors) states that in his opinion “as a » three menths on condition that the | 12\ vor the act prepared by the state nber be returned and the costs paid. | ;uginess men's a dion a4 whole — e |i¢ constitutional. He apparently | s that the suggested powers are REPLY TO PRESIDENT MELLEN. |aaministrative rather than -fudicial, e a he word “judicial” is defined by President Jones of Business Men’s As- | 85 the word ‘judicia 4 sociations Cisims Ghourt 1of Oomy Questions for Mr. Mellen. merce” Cannot Remedy Admitted | | 10", ieciate if, therefore, if Abuses — Administrative Commis- | .,y would ask President Mellen to ar sion Essential. | swe jicitly these three questions: - i Which of the above specific and onm., Nov. 9, 1910, | admitted abuses could be remedied by TTiii, president, and | his proposed court of commerce or Con- | enlargement of the superior court Gatiem. | 2. By what judicial process could the remedy be accomplished—by award or mandam damages, injunction, ntlemen: i ":‘4.“-‘“ his Would not the fair and conser fo ¥ou requested "a precis - drafted by the state | im ent o he men’s : io; effec this state to need correcti Thires | Iv I suggested as some the evils ON! R. JONES be remedied,” the following ! 5 é-req{;m: “Evils to Be Remedied.” ! ST ; | . 1 ed charter rights—by rea- | Trafe in svecial chart the gest single cause of the e enc L 5 = 5 f the lezislative lohby mEs Farmington.—The new Connecticut Unsafe conditions—resulting in | DUTSery for blind and babies was for- tr or injury of many hundreds |Mally opened Thursday s many of which | Seymour—It been decided to cel- g ] > x{fih' 1y of which | aprate the te: anniversary of the Melal can now ‘inspect or | institution of Seymour camp of Wood- . men o e o g 9. Dot there. | MeN on the evening of Dec. stl ving many citizens | Danbury.— agreement entered and telephone con- | into by the majority of the local drug- t drin soda all s served at fountains [3 Unsatisfactor over- 1 are to be ten cents here- rowded cars, poor, gas, after. es—possibly causing a ar loss to the community | Meriden.—A local paper recently con- { tained the following notice: Rev. 5% \ | Wagner kindly requests the young gentleman who took the large pumpkins from his garden night to come back and get t 1sci We make cur own Lenses and can give yon better goods for one-half less than anyone else. Shur-On ; Mountings $1.00 TODAY ONLY Giilette, 0culu NorwicfiTptical Co. Wholesale Opti | Shannon Bld., ans, Main St., r Store. " You Have Used Ordinary Soaps and you know that some have harmed your skin; irritable, or worse: other ordinary soaps have seemed to have no merit. must value comfort; you surely value a radiant complexion: ped to both by the famous Pears’ Soap. And It Costs No More to Use Pears than it does other soaps. Pears corrects the harm done by common soaps: softens and beautifies the skin; is matchless for the complexion. FEvery one can afford its low price. It lastslongest, too, because there is no waste in ~_Pears’'§oap ATTENTION! Women who ride in Automobiles | made it harsh, red, You you can be 5 \cents a cake. 2ii to come in and inspect our CUSTOM-MADE Silk Jersey and ey Top with Sitk or Murcerize Flounce PETTICOATS that | to order at from $5.50 to $9.50. Made to fit and hang prop- | in weight, and at the same time tihe warm and most | obtainable for Au'omobiling and also strect wear i our attention to - TAILCR-MADE - Black Siik PETTI- | i oy time only, a verv special at $4.50, | is exa ons dofiar less than you wouid have to pay for | in the big stores in the regular way. hail’s E’u?(:ééasizafi Agency, 161 MAIN STREET, Maxwell Autemeblles‘ Established Enviable Records During the Past Season dge them by th performance : and not by what geople tell you they will do. They do not work wonders today and “lay down” tomorrow, but give their owners the same reliable and efficient service 365 days in the year at the lowest possible cost of upkeep. Call for a demonstration at The M. B. Ring Auto Co., Teiephone 23 Chestnut Streeot (CLEVELAND'S SUPERIOR BAKING POWDER Helps to Successful Home Baking Celebrated for its purity and perfect baking results For thirty years the choice of the most particular cooks. The standby of all teachers of good cookery. &reen pumpkin they forgot, No ques-| Rogers of North Main street, two|time was that epidemics would fol- tions will be asked. thira vear high school boys, are at-|jow. Wallingford—Dr. J. D. AR oy 20 | In the 54 districts’ that were flooded will fill out the unexpired term of fa: Fairfield.—Either some one was lock- | there were 44 deaths from typhoid in tory physician at the H. L. Judd com- |ed in the library the other night or got | three months before the flood and pany. The place was forme held by fin through the windows in the rear.|gniy 24 after it. In_the district that Ll All the invader got was 50 cents in|guffered the most, Gervais, there {change. He passed over several boxes | werm only seven deaths in three ;Norwalic-—Thero .are still seven or!that had mwney in them. months before the flood and only ono e o £ in 17 weeks afterward. On the other L i N et g New Britain—C. H. Woolsey, pr d, the 26 districts that wers pet boats are used almost entirely for fish- | cipal of the trade school, has more flooded had 20 typhoid deaths bhefore B tions for admission inty the even- | and 18 i an equal time after. " In ofl ! : 3 hool when it opens than the ca-|er wor typhoid diminishes 25 per = N Coc : J 3 & Smtneticl The s IR of Huv‘bmhh d apparatus | cent, in the flooded quarter and 10 per » o are r' i o close the arrant his re . ant. in the rest of the city. Statist pean tow are pr aring t Dse heir s B ics collec om England, German) resid at Saugatuck and go to New ] 2 tria in regard to 25 inundations York for the winter. 2 Floods as Tylphmd Cn:re i chandit o I ohdutlons T 2 since the flood: in, Paris 1ast|enna in 1870) has there been an in- Hartford.—The cofinty ] n ¢ tfenna ir ) e b - in ers an.rm;?"m $11,300 in liquor license | WINt the statisticians and sc ists | crease of typhoid following a flood, and fees Thursda The total received last | have Dbeen i L 2n i in a single district. week from dealers to whom licenses | ¢ 1\":! (.?‘( : iy | were issued is $40,626. of the mos s ‘wv s |that made by Dr. Jacques Bertillon, s Torrington. B. E. Lombard of | who declares that the flood has caused Children CI‘Y Tngan Hiver, Moy ccapted (2 dnminution of typhotd fever. One | FOR FLETCHER'S the pastorate of the Advent | of the wol results pradicted at the hurch, will move to Torrington with | C A :: T o R | A ¢ during this week. his fami Waterbury.—To establish a_wireless D F p outfit in the north end is what Fred o us | r. arierre % Farm street and { Lux Farm street an | removed to 204 Central avenu — | corner h street. Hours 1-3 an CRIMINAL NEGLECT Does more than clean . OF SKIN AND HAiR Cuticura soap and ointiment dc al appointment. so much for poor complexions Your pots, pans, kc“]es, red, _x'gqg\x hands, and dry l]‘:\'l‘ dishes, knives, and other and falling hair, and cost so litt] utensils need more than mere cleaning. Soap and water simply clean the surface. GOLD DUST not only cleanses but sterilizes — it | drives out every bit of dirt that it is almost criminal not t use them. Think of the suffer ing entailed by neglected skin troubles—mental because of dis figuration—physical because pain. Think of the pleasur clear skin, soft white hanc B e o e jor hidden germs which are } 8 fame e TR Tt thonghtial, timely care. viz.- boundtolurkin oft-useduten- § o danzero warm baths with Cuticura sils. It will leave your kitchen assisted when necessary things not only clean, but TARTAR anointings with Cuticura i sanitarily safe. attacks the enamel of vour teoth ment. around and beneath the edge of GOLD DUST will enable you to do your work more aux"I\]\ save your strength, and give you better results than scap or any other cleanser. 1s. Its beginnings are dis- to professional eyes gur cernible New Line of Rubber and Celiuloid Dolls, Balis, Ani- mais, Rattles, Linen Picture Books, Blocks, Rag and Ur- breakable Deils, Picture Puzzles, Tops, Ete. MRS, EDWIX HY Franklin Squara novid alone. Professional Examination NO Charges Professional Attendance Moderate Charges GOLD DUST is wld io B& size and large pack- ages. The large package offers greater_economy. 'Let the GOLD DUST TWINS do your work®" ! King Dental Parlors JACKSON, Mgr. Norwioh, Ct. DR 1] THERE Ix no advertising medium in ! Eastern Connecticut equal to The Bui ietin for business results. If All Housekeepers Knew the Advantages of the aWwjoO PRanses few others would be sold In the saving of time, trouble and labor and in superior cooking ability, no other range can compare with them. The Single Damper (patented) is the only perfect fire and oven control; one motion—slide the knob to “kindle,” “bake” or “check,” and the vange does the rest. The Two Hods in the base (pat- ented) is a wonderful trouble-sav- fe One Hod for ashes, instead he old, clumsy ash pan; the other Hod for coal. Franklin Squars, The Oven with its cup-joint flues is heated a// over alike; no “cold corners,’ scorching spots™. The Patented Grates save trouble and money. Auxiliary Gas Ranges at the end or above the range, if desired. Ask the Crawford agent to show you and write us for circulars. Walker & Pratt Mfg. Co., Zfl’Uniu ;t., E‘Mt',_ For sale hy M. HOURIGEN, Norwich Agent B

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