Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, November 24, 1911, Page 2

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OLD-TIME REMEDY DARKENS THE HAIR. Gives Coler, Lustre to Faded and Gray Hair—Dandruff Quickiy Re- moved. From time immemorial, sage and sulphur have been used for the hair and scalp, Almost everyone knows of the value of such a combination for carkening the hair, for curing dan- druff and falling hair, and for making tige hair grow. In olden times the only way to get a hair tonic of this sort was to brew it in the home fireplace, a method which was troublesome and not al- way satisfactory, Nowadays almost every up to date druggist can supply his patrons with a ready-to-use prod uce, skilfully compounded in perfectly equippved laboratories. The Wyeth Chemical company of New York put up an ideal remedy of this sort, called Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Hair Rem- edy, and authorize druggists to sell it under guarantee that the money will be refunded if it fails to do exactly as representeu If vou have dandruff, or if your hair Is turping gray or coming out, dom’t delay. but get a bottle of this remed today, and see what a few days’ treat- ment will do for you: This preparation is offered to the public at fifty cents a bottle, and is recommended and sold by all drug- gis! Special agents, The Lee & Os= ood Co., 131 Main street. e TO FORCE LITTLETON OFF THE COMMITTEE. Chairman Stanley to Ask House to Force His Resignation. Washington, Nov. 23.—An open fight the house of representatives between presensative Stanley of Kentucky, <hairman of the house special commit- iee of inquiry into the United States Steel corporation, and Representative Martin W. Littleton of New York, a cdemocratic member of the committee, cropped up today when Chairman Stanley said that he would appeal to the house to force Littleton's resigna- ticp from the committee. The fight, certain to be precipitated soon after the house convenes, will de- termine the future course of the steel committee. The committee adjcurned indefinitely yesterday after sensational testimony Dy the Merritt brothers of Duluth re- garding their loss of millions in ore land and railroad properties to John D. ‘Rockefeiler. This was done because Chairrian Stanley was powerless to enforce continuance of the hearings under objections filed by attorneys for the 1nited States Steel corporation that that corporation is now a defend- ant in a federal suit for violation of the Sherman anti-trust law. Muscular Rheumatism Neuralgia, Lumbago, ®Seiatica, Sore Throat, Lameness, Spraios, Bruises or any other severe pain will positively disappear by the application of DR. BAYER’S PENETRATINC OIL. MONEY REFUNDED IF NOT 80. 28 and 50 Cents per Bottle. LEGAL NOTICES. TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN Notice is hereby given that at a meeting of the Court of Common Coun- eil of the City of Norwich, held on the 6th day of November, 1911, ihe follow- ing proposition was submitted by the Public Works Committee, and the final resclution was adopted; and you are hereby notified to appear at the time a1l place appointed in said final reso- iution and be heard in relation to the Tuglier contained in said_report Norwich, Connecticut, Nov. 24, 1911, Attest: ° STEPHEN D. MOORE, City Clerk and Clerk of the Court of Common Council. To the Court of Common Council of the _ City of Norwich, Connecticut: ihe Committee on Public Works, to whom was referred the petition of the Henorable John M. Thayer, dated Oct. 3. 1911, by the Executive Committee for investigation, beg leave to report that it Las given' the matter its attention, and is of the opinion that the grade for the sidewalk between the points here-, after mentioned should be changed. and | it recommends that action be taken in refererce thereto as follows: lved: That the grades for the sidewalks on the southerly side of Bath Street and the westerly side F'ranklin Street in the City of Norwich, in front of the property owned by Fred and Charles Dearing and John M. Thayer, be, and the same is, hereby changed and established as follows . Begianing at a point on the souther iine of Bath Street 35 feet westerly | irom the northeasterly the | corner of m briek building standing on the land of Fred and harles Dearing, at an ele- vation of 8-10 feet above meantide, | and runnlnr thence easterly by the | southerly line of Bath Street 113 3-4 | feet level to Franklin Street; thence | southerly by the = westerly line of | lin Street 106 3-4 feet rising $-1¢ | roofdtn the northeasterly corner of the | ?:IE ing known as the Columbian Ho- | Resolved: That said sidewalk be, the same is, laid out eight wide on the mnortherly side of the f above described line. ‘and eight (8) c vide on the easterly side of the second described line. ’ ol Resolved: That consideration of the foregoing resolutions relative to the | grades and width for the sidewalk on | the southerly side of Bath Street, be- | tween a point thirty-five ) feet | vesterly from the northeast corner of ® brick building owned by Fred and arles Dearing and Franklin Street, the and | :nd the grades and width of valk on the westerly side of Franklin | Street, between Bath Street and the .ortheasterly corner of the Columbian | Hotel building. in said City, be post- poned to a meeting of Court of lommon Council to be at the ! il Chamber in City on the ¥y of December, 1911 8 in the evening. that notiee be given in the man r re- wired by law to all persons interested o appear they see cause, and be | eard in relation thereto. Norwic onnecticut, th Dated at i th day ovember. A. D. 1911 TTENRY GEBRATH WALTER W. LANG, JOSEPH F. WILLTIAMS, Committee on Public Works th da The above and foregoing is a true | opy of reco L Aftest: STEPHEN D. MOORE. Clerk and Clerk of the Court of Common Council nova4d ! | couragement. O 1897 Exonerating Oil Ma New York, Nov, 23.—John D. Racke- feller, in a statement given out here tonigh?, answers the charyzes made py the Merritt brothers before the Stan- ley steel investigating committee re- garding the methods used by Mr. Rockefeller in obtaining comtrol of the Mesaba ore mines and the Duluth, Missabe & Northern raiiroad, and he points out that these charges were de- nied under oath as long ago as 1895 in the litigation over the Lake Superior Consolidated iron mines. A Signed Paper Figures. He furthermore submits the text of a paper bearing the date of January , 1897, to which are attached the rames of Alfred and Leonidas Merritt and *all the other members of the family,” by which they declare them- selves satisfied that neither Mr. Rocke- feller nor his agents committed fraud or made misrepresentations in the matter in question. Mr. Rockefeller | next sets forth what he says are “the facts with regard to the loans,” about which the Merritts testified d de- nies that such loans were ever “called” b¥ him. “The Facts” by Rockefeller. ssued to- The statement which was night from No. 25 Broadway, is as follows: “In the maiter of the evidence of the Merritt brothers before the Stanley committee in Washington, D. C.,, re- flecting upon Mr. John D. Rockefeller in connection with some ore and rail- road properties on the Mesaba range, Mr, Rockefeller authorizes the follow- ing statement" MR ROCKEFELLER'S STATEMENT testimony of the “Referring to the the Stanley Merritt hro\hers before committee in\which the and misrepresentation by Mr. feller and Mr. Gates in connection with the Lake Superior Consolidated Iron |}, mines and that they were deprived of their interest in that means of a loan made them by Mr.|p Rockefeller of $240,000 which ke called | thom, during the panic of 188 statements were denied under oath in the United States court at the trial of the litigation in 1895, it would be a absurd to try in the newspapers of this late date the issues in that case, but it is significant that upon the set- tlement which was made at the close of that litigation. both Alfred and Leo- | gave to chase in a year at the price they had sold it to him, with six per cent. in- terest, gave Mr. Rockefeller the fol- |yvear, brothers who testified before the com- mittee, Rockefeller and he and several others difference | never endeavored to exercise the op- nidas Merritt, the two who testified before the Stanley committee, togeth- er with all the other members of the famil lowing paper: Paper Signed by Merritt Family. “‘Certain matters of have existed between the undersign- | ti ed and Mr. John D. a certain litigation ing between_ the undersigned Alfred Merritt and Mr. Rockefeller, in which {1y litigation it was claimed that Submits Copy of Paper Signed by Merritt Family in Had Made Against Him—Represents Himself as Aiding Instead of Squeezing the Merritts. were as follows: made by charged fraud | gmounts during the summer of 1893. Rocke- | Mr. loans. & A g itors, company DY | ¢urther assistance. ; all of which {They sold him 90,000 shares of stock the contributing different proportions. enough to cover his loans to them, he Rockefeller and | the expiration of the option, applied has been pend- |for an extemsion of it on their stock, | waich was given and they subsequent- cer- | 10,00 shares, of the Steel ‘corporation sold it to that gnate of the Charges They for him concerning certain proper- ties sold by him to Lake Superior Consolidsted iron mines. It is here- by declared that from recent inde- pendent investigations made by us or under our direction we have be- come satisfled that no misrepresen- tation was made or fraud committed by Mr. Rockefeller, or by his agents, or attorneys for him, upon the sale by him &f any property to us or any of us or to Lake Superior Consol- idated iron mines, or upon the pur- chase by him from one or more of us of any stocks or interests in any mining or railway company or com- panies, or upon the pledge by us or either of us to him of stocks and securities belonging te one or mqre of us; and we hereby withdraw all charges and claims and exonerate Mr, Rockefeller and his agents and attorneys therefrom. “‘Duluth, Minn., January 22, 1897. In the presence of Merrill M. Clark, Joseph B. Cotton. (Signed) “‘Alfred Merritt, Jane A. Merritt, Leonidas Merritt, Elizabeth E. Mer- ritt, Andrus R. Merritt, Elizabeth D. Merritt, Lillian Merritt, May I Mer- ritt, John E. Merritt, Etta M. Mer- ritt, Wilbur J. Merritt, Ida Merritt, Andrus R. Merritt as surviving part- ner of the late firm of C.C. and A. R. Merritt; Eliza M. Merritt; Han- son E. Smith as administrator estate of Cassius C. Merritt, deceased; Na- poleon B. Merritt, Matilda T. Mer- ritt, Eugene T. Merritt, Anna Mer- ritt, Thomas A. Merritt, Jennie S. Merritt.” “The facts with regard to the loan Did Neot Call the Loan. “The loans aggregating $420,000 were Mr. Rockefeller in various Rockefeller never called these In February, 1894, the Merritt rothers, being pressed by other cred- applied to Mr. Roclkefeller for Instead of calling is loan, as they charge, he furnished an additional sum_ of $480,000. t $10 a share, amounting to $800,000, several members of the family Gave Option to Repurchase, “For one-half of this, more than option to them an repur- Prior to the expiration of the Alfredo Merritt. one of the suit Mr. brought against on. ~Another brother and nephew, at s took back their stock amounting to and on the formation tain misrepresentations were made by Mr. Rockefeller and those acting | company.” ITALIANS MAKING VERY LITTLE HEADWAY. Correspondent Says Turks Are Well | Disciplined and Contented. Paris, Nov. 23.—That the town of Tripoli is virtually besieged by the Turks and that Homs is in no other | better situation is the opinion of a| correspondent of the Temps, who hasd | succeeded in_ joining the forces near Jouagher. Ie telegraphs regarding the Turkish side of the war under date of November 12, that it certain that after a month and a ,, after large expendi- tures and losses, the Italians |M are n) further advanced than on the day following their disembarkation. If |i) the Turkish forces are inferior ii num- bers to the Italians, they confidence what they lack in numbers. | “I expected to d disorder and d the contrary ever) where 1 met order, discipline and con- | aF tentmant. Patient and ready for ev- Dostmaster gemeral. And I, with oth- erythin the Turkish soldier is ac- |ers, brought forward the name of cepting all without complaint. If he |Governor Hoard of Wisconsin as can- suffers, I nows it is for the empire didate for secretary of agriculture. A of Islam, while the Arab knows that if |few weeks hefore McKinley’s inaugu- he dies Paradise with Mohammed will ration, upon his invitation I went to be his.” Canton to see him. I explained to him The food of the Turkish army is | What forces Payne represented in Wis frugal hut sufficien Arms are ade- consin, and indeed he had already quate, many carrying rifles captured known Payne’s work as a lobbyist in from the enemy. | Washington in connection especially w | he abominated that sorto f thing But me that he believed no other an had ever been so strongly endors- New Counterfsit $5 Bill. ‘Washington, Nov. A new coun- terfeit $5 silver certificate, a crude imitation, has appeared in circulation, and the secret service today sounded an alz The counterfeit is a poorly photograph on two pices of cheap paper, the back being colored m; in C. Hoyt being named as corespondent. | St - my we Vogel Dies of Broken Neck. !to Meriden, Conn., Nov. 23.—Albert Vo- | ca gel, 30 vears old, died at the Meriden | hospital this afternoon of a broken | neck. le suffered his injury jumped from the second story window of his home early last Sunday morn- ing. PR 02 ¢ — R Time Limit for the Fiiing of Them Ex- During the decade from 00 to 1910 pired Yesterday. it is estimatad that 210.000 Greeks emi- grated to this country. closing Saturdays at 12 NOTICE [:hange’ln Bank Hours On and after August 1st, 1911, the Jewett Cily Savings Bank o! Jewett City, Conn., will be open every business day (except Satur- days) from 10 o’clock a. FRANK E. ROBINSON th A C afl i to 3 o'clock p. m., o’clock. to St Treasurer. ;.8! | HOW M’KINLEY TURNED Senator LaFollette Mentions Incident | M. LaFollette treats of the Reed con- gress and the new national issues in the installments of his autobiography in the current number of the Ameri- Ottoman | ean Magazine. of his personal recollections of W liam McKinley. and says | tion Mr. LaFollette say thing: corrupt influences within his own par- the demands of his best friend, Han- make up in | Dba ed than the Wisconsin machine, back- | ed strongly by {he told ed by prominent influential politicians Payne for that appointment. was nearly time for me to go, McKin- ley said: when he NG SPECIAL PLEAS | murde of Avis Linne i when the office of superior criminal coyrt was L to today none hid been entered. - otion for the postponement of the | jirial, which is set for the middle of | January, was one of the moves ex] does not now intend to mak Tragic Death of Sub-Master in Loweli High Schoel. | Lowell, Mass., Frank B. | Sherburne, sub-maste the Loweil Iligh school for 25 years om tted licide today by shooilng. Fie ¥ n in {H° health for several mont 1 herburne was 57 vears o'd and z grad- | Wayne, | first ealf, last year. DOWN MARK HANNA. That Came to His Attention. ew York, Nov. 23,—Senator Robert He also recounts some In the latter conmec- among other “J know of my own knowledge that cKinley stood against many of the —that he even stood firmly against “McKinley had no sooner been elect- Hanna, demanded the ppointment of Henry C. Payne as ith beef trust matters, and I knew every part of the country as was When it requirements of perfect flour. wheat that makes it. nCotp Megar FLOVRZ started out to make flour. And the millions of housewives watched them. In the course of years one miller’s flour ~2m- far outsell the rest. The demand grew anu grew, until that miller’s flour fed 24,000,000 folks daily. The winning flour is Gold Medal. And it won by comparisons. Millions of women, watching millions of bakings, came to de- rngnd that flo_ur The reason lies here: We built our own test kitchen. Day after day, year after year, we learned the We learned the Now we grind that wheat through 20 sets of rolls. Now we sift it through 10 silk cloths. 1 sV i . And the flou: has <von millions and WASHBURN-CROSBY’S GoLD MEDAL FLOUR (125) (249) “‘Bob, I may not be able to appoint “McKinley's answer was Mark »uld do anything in the world 1 could r you, but T cannot put a man in my binet who is known as a lobbyist.’ ““And he kept hig word, | IN RICHESON CASE. ton, '‘Nov. 2 ne 1 pleas in the case T. Richeson, ¢ _ from the defense, hut- nothingd o is nature was submitted today While it is understood that William Morse, counsel for the defendant om quash the indictment, such a eding would be onen to him e ter the tr has bezun. TEACHER A SUICIDE. | te of Dartmo: leze. Another White House Calf. i Washington, Nov. 23. — Paullne | the White Ho ow. given President Taft by Senator Isaac ephenson of Wisconsin, received a ond visit from the stork today. but e calf’'lived only a short time. Her Rig Bill.” died a few weeks ter it was bor‘n, on election day of The way to healthful cooking is to start right— with Cottolene. XS Cottolene-cooked food agrees with one because Cottolene contains not an ounce of hog fat—it is a vege- table instead of an animal product. Its wholesomeness and purity are vouched for by Nature. Cotfolene is “the fat from the flower.” # All the country’s best cooks — Mrs. Mary J. Lincoln, Mrs. Sarah Tyson Rorer, Mrs. Helen Armstrong, Marion Harland, Lida Ames Willis, and a dozen others of national reputation—recommended Cotfo- lene in preference to lard or any other medium for frying and shortening. Isn’t the testimony of such experts worth something to you? You can afford to pay a few cents more per pail for Cotfolene, because it goes one- third farther than butter or lard. Listen to the Tlan who Knows tor- | l\;el;k;sgr.!e)een _ letg:rc-flor paint. The note Hoard, but I w say to you that Hen- | Hartford.—Dr. F. R. Comber, The exports of the Philippine i..me.\I Torrington.—Over 700 men of 8 y | Payne shall not be a member of | merly of Hartford and a graduate of | for 1910 were valued at $40,000,000, | Francis’ R. C, church atten the my cabinet.’ | the Connecticut State and Chicago | while their imports were worth about | mission service ut o'cloek s __ Divorce for Tnfidelity. “When I saw McKinley at the White | Veterinary colleges, has been appoint- | $50,000,000. But the export figures | morning in the church. The mervices Bridgeport, Conn., Nov. 23.—Judge louse in the following winter, he told | €d assistant veterinary of Wis- | were the largest ever known in (hvlrl.v)‘ held every morning and evening Howard J. Curtis in superior court me how the effort to secvre Payne's | consin, with offices in the capitol history | this week today handed d ision in the appointment had culminated. He said % : ’ contested divorce suit of Albertine Ly- 'that Hanna had come to him just be- {on of Darien against Ronald D. Lyon |fore his final decision was made and of Chicago, and gives a decree to the 'said: ‘You wipe out every obligation plaintiff with the c of the 1at vou feel toward me and I'll ask { minor children. The ¢ | no turther favors of you, if you'll only ed on the ground of in put Henry Payne in the cabinet.’ ’ ~ Made only by THE N. K. FAIRBANK COMPANY

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