Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 31, 1911, Page 2

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30.—Several N ore spe- m invelflg:t- nflk mm diluted tp a lars a e m in the m bffll“ht out at the hearing. Admits He Diluted His Cream. Moydmer B. of New Haven, twenty Years ler, in response Sommitine. stid 16 ttee, sa e per er He maintains from a depot at New Haven for retail trade. Most of the Mbusiness, however, is wholesale. He had at times diluted his product ‘with skimmed and fresh milk ‘because of its heaviness. Water and Condenssd Milk Used. A“ i diluted mn are sold la- r. Hubbell answered negative- ‘but not with very A combdination of wa- During’ & ast flscal year 260,000 quarts of cream had been three-fourths of which hed been down, Mr. Hubbell said he used gelatin as an aduler- Ryan Does ‘Not Dilute His. Dennis Ryan of 213 Park street, New Haven, who for 26 years has bough and sold milk, testified that he buys all his products and separates it at his of business. Some of his cream from Vermont and is sold as it All milk is comi is redeived, not diluted. pasteuriged. . Diluted With Condensed Milk. Charies G. Morris, president of the New Haven Dairy company, said that the company buys milk in New Hamp- As Quickly As Water Dissolves Sugar Abeut the Time It Takes for a Stuart’s Dyepepsia Tablet te Work on the Feod and Bring Relief. . TRIAL PACKAGE SENT FREE. wait between the Spuart'’s Dyspepsia of relier it will stomach. It Pusy in a Jiy and gquickly sets % to flm- 4n theat tired and dis- ordz’od It goes ri‘hx at_the o L} ing the i it finds there and in no timeé 4t all has on ths meve-—the gases: cem , the jereath 1s sweetened, ‘the on the tongue disappears’ and Jou are no longer eensciolis that you e .for. which you -need Q- i you putan ex- ork . wien continu- h and expedt is_going to gat rebellious -p‘ mlk.v .mr a while snd rmn to {o on beimg driven to. do double worl You must rest it occa- sionally—not by s nd thersby 'fihnln yourself Mc:fly—-but"by mh:g vart's a Tablet to e work of digesting your food. 3 'n.m teblets contain “all ‘the active oln,m.nll of the natural stomach juices e will alens and unaided food ju-t the same as the g e juices. % mothing conm be more: barmiess an do not affect the n any w! not cure any ailment elcept as they digest food. Use freely. Stusrt's .)-pe’sh Tablets’ are sold Sats pe Ariay packags witi be st;" will wrijl e e A. Stuart Co., Biag., Marshall, Mich. v age, ‘Mum shire, Vermont, sometimes in Phi for a week last duct was not labelled. Th; voked & smile when can't afford to pa; from Vermont. out and addmonn are made when the product arri Deaths Duo u Aduiterated Mitk. He asked the committee what the question had to gf with the incregs- ed cost ¢ understood that the inveltlglwbn Was t.r that pur- pose. Attorney Holden answered: “Statis- ties show an increase of deaths in cities from typhoid fever, res fmlr'? the consumption of adulterated e 3 Raised Milk Pries Last Fall. The witness denied that his company adulterated milk. He snid that nothis istaken from the product thlt is restored, therefore it cannot be adulterated. ‘“The price of id, “has advanced bécause of es from » He un.l remote aware mc milk has increased in pi 25 per cent. since 1881 and that mahd- cuticns for ssles of adulterated milk have materially increased. His com- pany raised the price from eight to nine cente ‘a Bome dealers lowed suit and ofihflrl, who were foolish, did not. 3 Cream Diluted With Pure Milk. Fred Tuthill, manager: of the Rober Farm Dairy, Bridgepert, for 1§ vears; teld the committee that his milk is not pasteurized and that tlte cream .is di- Tuted with pure milk. ~ Walter Bngles, employed in the Dr-- ident’s office of the Borden Condensed Milk company of.New York, said that the term evaporaied cream is not used now. It was ' changed. to evaporated milk when the pure food law went in- to effect. He declared that the Borden milk is met subjected to mechanical processes, that is taking frem and add- ing ingredients. .Cream Contained Gelatine. Dr. Arthur J. Wolff of this city testi- fied a8 te the samples of milk and cream. he had analyzed. He examined four samples of cream and three of milk, procured about the state by the state police. Where the sainples came from he did not know. All the cream nwas found to contain gelatin and a high percentage of ash.“Cream should contain about 2 per cent. of ash,” he said, “and one sampile contained 12 per cent. The milk was up to the stand- ard.” 2 ' TOLD TO SUPPORT HERSELF IN STREETS Lenden Girl Tells of Her Treatment by Her Former Lover. Boston, March 30.—As the result of the story which Mrs. Vera Katsef, whose maiden name was Vera Vivi- nnne,,nd who says she is the daugh- ter of a Lendon banker, told United States Commissioner Hays today, Phillp Marks, a hotel bell boy, was locked up on a charge ef bringing the girl ints the eountry for improper purposes. Yo She said that she met Marks in Manchester, Enpgland, two years ago, and that three months ago, as the re- sult. of ‘his letters, she came to this country: e clainfed that he refused to marry her and tried to force her to .support herself on the streets. Later she married Katsof, a ‘Greek. Marks sat directly in front of the woman while she wag testifving, and geveral times burst inte tears. You rieedn’t cry,” she said to him, s 101:“ know you brought it all on-your- self.” Marks was held federal grand jury. insane Man s Thres. Burlington, Wash.,, March 30.—Wil- liam Weegin, a ranchsr eof South Prairie, became violently insape today and taking a rifle went out on a coun- try road and shot and killed the first three passersby, who were John Ranke, ‘William Ranke and John Ware, all of Burlington. in $1,000 for the Maayie ,ll.d.fflur Apparently Healthy; . is; Slowly Starving to Death ; e oad e o e hair loses its color, ...:z:?"'.:::'z.., WY E T in ular to u". containing , — ‘5 SAhqf )“ Pl YRR mh.““ 3 W SR o'fi'?h':"fi e _W..u.._...... FEMEDY l! ALL m 4 ‘ii‘ ll:v fl':qg'_-. Y. will muil this adver- lufl!!ehuh | et :$10,000 to - dressed that lay ‘| victs and jail The eomm!ttee on_edu- mtmn. whe were uxunlmoualy opposed | passage of the measure, o mltg:fl thnt it t::m re(uke‘.l.n‘ 3:..;- 90 to meet lts réquirements, ntative John H. Noble of :Old Lyme, who -wag -taken suddenly and seriously ill Wedne-day at the capitol, was .r Thursdey as rtably at - the howpital, it which mmmu.n he was ing basiness in Conni tkmt 'onnecs robe-led ‘made it optional with the ex- press companies to pay & lump sum of ‘meet the taxati them, but whereas the Adams }u been paying the state at fll.muymmov‘ the nywanuhvohlm Danisl (Reraback); Dunn! the. manner in which a letter was ad- on Representative Dunn’s desk- Thursdey morning. And perhapg the ho “n't hear about it. The missive, postmarked New Haven, was of the anonymous. type, and while ype, ‘the mayor refused to- ll‘t out the ‘con- tents, it is presumed what he said that it had something te do_with his having voted for Howard C. Webb ifor judge' of the city court of New Haven. Mayor, Dinn, ‘with chlr-cmlnlc viger, told the house that he was will- ing to meéet the New' Haven people in ithe open, that he did net get behind a door to say what he had te say—and, furthérmore, that his middie name not Roraback. There was much laug! ter and joshing of Willimantic’'s may- or abeut the incident—but. the letter is still a mymflou- thing as far as the public is concerned. The senate galleries and all availa- blé ficor space within the chamber was crowded at noon “on Thu when the resolution appointing How- ard C. Webb judge of the city csurt of New Haven was set dewn as the order of the day. This judgeship has been nrodueuve of =0 much and so lurid & display of oratorical fireworks that more was expected, but it did not materialize. SBenator Brinsmade moved to appoint a commitiee of conference, which pacific’ procedure sidettacked the possibilities for further debate. Senators Weodruff and Paddack have hsd enouxb ‘of Friday sessions.’ The GONVICT LABOR .lLL MAY BE MODIFIED. May Permit Pfissners to Work at Market Rate of Labor. (Special to The Bulletin,) Hartford, March 30.—Representative Mzltzer of Bridgeport told -the com- imittee on labor Thursday afternoon that he would preparé an amendment to his bill regulating the employment of convict labor so that prisoners in county jails might continue to be le to do o de owrk at a rate ot waj equal to that pald to frae laber for the same ciass of work. Mr. Meltzer ex- piained that this concession was to meet demands from Windham county, where the prisoners in the county jail are.found to be a valuable asset to the farmers, quite necessary, in fact. In reply to a question ~of . Sheriff Preston B. Sible& (Danielson) of Wind- ham county, Mr. Meltzer sald that he would not insist on the clause of his bill limiting ‘to eight hours the time that prison laborérs may be employed, as far as the jails were concerned, as he understoed that, especially - in ‘Windham ' county, they worked on farms and in other oceupations that are not confining and in which it is the custom of all employed to work more than eight hours a day. Hits the State Prison. Sheriff Sibley told the committze that he had come before them with the idea of opposing the bill, - but after heuring Mr. Meitzer's agreement: to make the amendments as mentioned above he felt that it was more of a drive at the state prison than at, jail labor and would make littie protest. Mr. Sibley did, however. pay & tribute to the management of the stata prison nd the system of administration vegue there, characterizing it as the best in the country. ative to the Windham county jail, over which he bhas- supgrvisien, Mr Sibley said that the practice of letting out labor had prevailed there for 2 ; that it had never caused any ; that it was done with the ap- proval of the pesple @f the county, and that he had never had a protest from a prisener about geifg out to werk. Laber Unions Sheuid Not Interfere. Representative 'Hyde of Canterbury appeared in oppesition to the bili. He dld not believe that the laber unions should interfere with th2 affairs of the county s or state prisons. e said he believed that every man in ‘this'state could get employment 4n this state at a fair rdte of wages. He did not pelfeve that the pesple of the state should be called upen to suppert pris- eners and conviets in idleness. He told the committee that . they should go slow in the consideration of the bill. ‘In reply ta ah inquiry from & member of the committee, Mr. l!ydu said he_di@ not think it was tal to the state at large te allow. con- risoners to be worked. Several other spéikeérs were heard, b«is‘m in favor and n.oppositien to the b ‘% : TWO WIFE MURBERERS . @ . HAVE SENTENCES CUT DOWN President “Taft Acts. F-v-uuy Apon 'Wlfilll‘ton. lmh “—-P’nlld.nt “Taft today-reopened -pardon in- the general assembly, will have au- thority to hold public hearings and employ other means necessary to se- cure the necessary informatiom imci- dent to their work Senator Al.p secured the of a resolution Thursday in the u branch of the legislature . pro that the. judiciary committee recom- mend some methed under which the | - general assembly will be relieved of the duty of electing judges of minor courts in the state. This resolution has Such was | | it seemed to’ be in ac- wing sentiment ‘and that several bills now pending before the judiciary committee, some of W will probably be reported next week,- cover about the same ground. The tendency seems to be to place in the hands of the governor the pow- er of appointing the judges of the mi- nor courts in the state. in behalf of a bill concerning the employment of women ana minors Ma- ‘'ord appeared be- ‘Thursda: mentioned are caused to work a great- er number of hours than is' for their best physical interests. Reform and advanced legislation to prevent the exploiti; childhood in uvnncin. commercial enterprises was by representatives of the Hartford era- tion of churches. Particular stress wag laid on a demand for a restoration of the law regulating the hours @uring which women and minors work to the same basis as that upop which it rest- ed up to t¥%o, yéars ago. when an amendment w4 enacted allowing em- ployes of such labor to work them longer hours during the holiday sea- son if an equivalent ameunt of extra liberty from employment was given in the way_ of compensatio: GERMAN CONFESSES THE Cyclono Cut'a Plfll 200 Threugh Gainssvil lo. Mobile, Ala., Y.arcl; Ala., was practically wlped’ tornado that swept throu county Monday, ac% rding % lwwia that relchat% ere .lv(v )1 cyclone cut a path of mip un- dred feet wide through the settlement. There were no casualties there but many persons were .hurt by flying umbers ‘from ,wrecked houses, reports tell .of ‘re;E mperty dflmnse, Fields were swept cl new and growing crops, forests wene leveled and hundreds of farm huflg» ings were torn down by the wind. area of the storm is remote from rail- road and telegraphic communieation. It is computed that there mdn thla ‘ooun valids,"and half of them. are affifeted with preventable diseases. 4 SLAYING OF LITTLE GIRL. N.grc at Oné Time in Peril of Lyrch- ing for the Crime. Freehoid, March 20.—The mur- der of little Ma.rle Smith, whose muti- lated body was found in the woods near Asbury Park last November, and for which & negro suspect was at one time in peril of lynching, was confessed by Frank E. Heldamann, a German, before Justice Voorhees today. He en- tered an unexpected plea of guilty. The court, however, ordered that the dafendant change the plea to mnot guilty, and after ascertaining that the prisoner had no meney to defend him- self, appointed counsel. The plea fol- lowed an indictment returned today, charging murder in the first & The trial was fixed for Monday, April Heidemanns arrest! was brought about recently by a German detective who gained his confidemce and had traveled about with him for months. It is alleged that he lnally obtained a confession from the man and that a stenographic copy is in the hands of e state’s prosecuting officer. There are over 40,000 foreigners in Portugal, -including some 2,000 Eng- lish people. The tetal population at the last census (1909) was 5,423,000, just a little over the poulation of Lon- don, which was eqfimted in the mid- dle of 1909 at 4,833,938. e——‘—_"—'——,_" Te Preveat the Grip. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE re- moves the cause. There is only one ROMO k for signa- ture of E, W, than : try today an srmy: of3,000,900 in- { RAIBE THE AGE LIMIT Minors Over 14 Can Still Work in Mmachuutu Factories. Bosmn. March . 30.—Minors more urteen years of age will be ai- lowed to work in factories and mer- cantile establishments in this state in ‘the future: as -in the past, the house today killing a bill which provided that ‘all children under the age of sixteen vears should be barred from such employment. The senate has not yat acted on this bill. Miss B M. Boynton has been elected cashier of the Bay Side (N. Y.) Na- fonal bank at a salary of $2,500 a year. ---—-—'—-———-—'———_ 5.CQhildren Cry FOR FLETCHER'S CASTORlA The Distinctive Hat Looks Well Fits Wéll up-to-date man ;vha demand®'a hateof d.lsfinctmu and. char- acter. Supenor forhnanshlp and the’ hsehf the famous L. & H. Fur-Felt are reasons why L. & H. hats hold their shape and never crack gives-a lasting; lustrous: o;‘gmw soft. The L. & H. Fast Dye nish/that never fades. FOR ‘SALE BY : P. J. MORLEY Costolene is pure in its source; it ,comw from thc cotton fields of the Sunny South, and is niade from purc,‘?cfmcd cotton oil. . Gottolent is manutnctured ina cleanly manncr, amld the most favorable sanitary surroundings. - . Gortoleneis packed in a manner that absolutely msures its freshness and prevents it from absorbing dust and odors of the grocery. s We have such faith in our’ patent air-tight; friction- top pail that we guarantee Costolene t6 be fresh and satisfacs tory, and your grocer: will refund your money 1f you find 1tadzemme. lmlthm 't'mnbmm & & Hehes. eill 45 aneq-dmd,tam (= F 4 and is}most “economical. Why _tafic*

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