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NORWICH BULLETIN, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 24, 1913 NORWICH STRIKE TO NEW YORK Committee From Local of Garment Workers’ Union to Pre- sent Situation Before General Council—Spécial Meeting Called in New York For Saturday to Consider Strike Here. - -~ The strike of the garment workers in this city, now about concluding its third” week, is still in full force, the members of the Garment eWorkers union, Local No. 168 said on Thurs- day afternoon., The strikers are hold- ing daily meetings, sometimes meet- ing twice a day to discuss and keep an eye on the situation which they say is a practically complete tieup of the garment making business in this city. The strike has been conducted in an orderly way ahd the union men say their ranks are still unbroken and there has been no sign that any are weakening in the action taken but all are ready to stay out to the-end. Organizer M Coan from New York, who was here last Sunday for the mass meeting held by the strikers, has returned to New York but orga izer J. Goldberg has come to be consultation with the strikers. A committee from the unions in New York has been here to assure the Nor- in wieh union of the support that New York will give and some financial aid from New York has already been turn- ed in here. The strike situation in Norwich in Norwich, as a special meeting of the district council has been called there for that purpose. A committee of two from the Norwich union will be sent to the council. The garment workers are strong in New York and have promised to support the union here. So far, the members of the Norwich local say, they have heard of no gar- ment workers coming from outside the city to get places here and there are not more than a dozen persons work- ing at the local shops, they say. To help out their own financial sit- uation the local union is running a dance. The local has also affiliated with the Norwich Central Labor union and the strike committee of the gar ment workers is working in conjunc- tion ‘with the C. L. U. DR. BULL FINDS MUCH TO CRITICISE Funerals, Religious Practices Other Things Condemned. and Waterbury, Conn.,, Oct. 23—Dr. Thomas M. Bull, of Naugatuck, pres- ident of the New Haven County Med- | ical ologi ing Ci munion back, opposition and auto 129th ser sociation. rites and prejudices, inciud- stian Science, cemnwn com- cups, outdoor funerals, celi- of cireumecision the viviseotion, vaccination, this afternoon at annual meeting of the as- All these, and other theo- logical practices, he declared, -were either unsanitary, harmful, unscien- tific or opposed to real Wrogress. Rev. Charles D. Dinsmore. D. D. of this city, replied to Dr. Bull The following officers were elected: Fresident, Henry G. Anderson of Wa- terbury. vice president, P. W. Gail- lard of Branford: executive commit- tee. Charles Rodman of Waterbury and Max M. house of New .Haven; censors, Willlam Sheehan of Meriden, forms to ociation, attacked various the- | { interior Labrador W. F. Verdi of New Haven and Thom- | M. Bull of Naugat Captain Pauly Retired, Hartford, Conn. Oct. General Cole of the Connecticut Na- al Guard, announces that the ap- tion of Captain Frank Pauly, Company B, Second Infantry, to be retired is approved. He is relieved from active duty and placeq upon the retired list to take effect October 31. $4,000,000 for Corneil. Y., Oct. 23.—A gift of ap- y $4,000,000 to the Cornell universi medical college was an- nounced today on behalf of the board of trustees. It is understood that the gift, the largest in the history of the university, presentéd by, Colonel was Oliver H. P e of New York. Auto Kills Jefferson Butler. Detroit, Mich, Oct. 23—Jefferson Butler, president of the Michigan Au- dubon’ society and nationally known as a lover and protector of bird life, was struck ang killed tonight by an | automobile. Mr. Butler was riding a | bicycle. Move Against Disorderly Houses. | Milwaukee, Wis,, Oct. 23—The Mil- | waukee Society for the Suppression | Vice today com- | the Linctey bill, | islature to have declared nui- disorderly and j Bubonic Plague at Seattle. Seattle, Wash t. 23—Dr. James E. Crichton, h f Seattle, | said today the bubonic plague uation in Seattle was serious, but that the health department hoped to pre- vent, an outbreak of the disease A Protest in Esperanto. New York, Oct 2 Through the dium of Esperan world-wide protest against the = s lled ritual mt ria Kiev h een launch- The pr originated in Bohe- garment. or stout drawers. BRISTOL Union Suits with TROWSERSEA] $1.50 and $2.00, in 4 weights 23—Adjutant | use | Mills Underwear. keeps you warm. MEN’S' MERINO Underwear $1.00 At the Price, 50% Exira Value See the splendid Bristol displays in any of these dealers’ windows. still, go into a Bristol store. RELIEF EXPEDITION . TO LOCATE WALLACE. Nothing Heard From Labrador Ex- plorer For Over a Month. New York, Oct. 23—Friends of Dil- lon Wallace announced here tonight that unless the explorer is heard from within a fortnight a relief expedition will be organized to search for him in which he entered in July on the start of a three months’ trip. Winter sets in in Labrador about October 1, the date Wallace was due to reach New York. Nothing has been heard from Wallace since early in September. Numerous harq storms have been reported by the natives and it is thought bad weather may account for the delay in his return. To exist it is believed he must seek shelter with Eskimo tribes. Wallace went north with two fold purpose—to make scientific studies and place a bronze tablet on the rock at the place where his friend and fel- low explorer, Louis Hubbard, dieq of exhaustion ten years ago. Judge Will- ifam M. Malone of Bristol, Conn., who accompanied Wallace part way re- turned nearly two months ago with the been report that the tablet had overboard in river rapid tions were chiseled into t stead and Wallace f panieq by Indian guic lost Steamship Arrivals. Trieste, Oct. 18.—Arrived, steamer Oceania, New York. Genoa, Oct. 20.—Arrived, steamer Palermo, Boston via' Halifax. Naples, Oct. 20.—Arrived, steamer San Giovanni, v ork. p < —Arrived, steamer New : Arrived, steam- . Montrea Oct. —Arrived, steamer Corinthian, Montreal. Havre, Oct. 22.—Arrived, steamers Niagara, New York; La Savoie, New York. Antwerp, Oct. 22.—Arrived, steamer Manitou, Philadelp! 29 Oct. — Arrived, New York. Copenhagen, steamer Hellig Olav, Chauffeur Ran Down Two Boys. New Haven, Conn., Oct. 23.—Warren S. Barnett, a chauffeur, was arrested tonight, after he had run down two small boys at Grand avenue and | Franklin streets. One of the boys, 5 razone, aged 7, is haps i njured The machine pa er his chest. John Dalvasco, a Sewage for Drinking Water, Washington, O¢t. 23.—One great rail- road system has'been furnishing drink- ing water to its passengers which the experts of the public health ser have pronounced, after bacteriolog examination, to be nothing less “diluted sewage.” Volturno Victims Number 134, New York, Oct. 23.—The total death roll in the Volturno disaster v ed tonight the .Uranium Ste: hip company at 134. Of these 102 nge ms L were | {its hinges and Be prepared for New ¥ngland’s ““frisky-risky’’ weather. These dealers are preparec—to tit you feday to your suit of Bristol It’s the kind that looks warm; fee's warm and It’s the long-wearing, fine-gauge, ciose-knitted underwear which does not set —ou bacl 5 8 Admission, 35 Cents You're Lucky IF YOUR EYE CATCHES THIS And You Read It MOTORCYCLE RACES Norwich Fair Grounds, Saturday, Oct. 25, 1913 Races start at 2 p. m. TUBBS’ BAND WILL FURNISH MUSIC Boys, 15 Cents RETURNED FROM MEXICO. James E. Harding, Former Academy Student, Discourses on the Situation —U. 8. Will Have to Fight. James E. Harding, a former 'Acad- emy boy, who has beene in Arizona and Mexico for the past four years, is here for a brief visit, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George R. Havens of Oak street. Mr. Harding, who had a position as foreman at a mine in Mexico until con- ditions there through the insurrection caused the shutting down of the mine, talks interestingly of the state of af- fairs in that troubled country, and males the prediction that in about a month the United States will be forced to have an army dow nthere, as noth- ing but intervention will be the way out of if. The stage has arrived now, he says, when talk of protection for foreign interests by the United States Will no longer suffice and they will be compelled to take up armed interven- tion. Although the United States iIs supposed to protect foreign interests in Mexico, in past this has been all it has amounted to, and he’ says that now this government must furnish act- ual protection. He was located at a silver mine 12 hours north of Mexico City and had been there two years. This was about at the lower edge of the rebel coun- try and the rebels were getting pretty close when he They had completely des of the three railroad lines to the north so that the mine could no longer get | in its supply of coal and had to shut down. He had to travel 600 miles to the south of Vera Cruz_ from which he came by boat to New York. Any election that will be held in Mexico will be a fa he declares, because all will be in control of the centr government and no one will be elected who is not under govern- mental control. As an example of what the insur- rectionists are doing to the country, he instanced his talk with a man who had been in the city of Duraggo, which has been in the hands of the rebels since June. Every combustible build- | ing has been burned; every house sack- not a door in the town stands on the insurrectos are stabling their horses in the parlors of the best mansions. They have next taken Torreon, a smaller but wealthy city and are giving it the same treat- ment. In Durango they took out 48 automobiles. He could have bought one of them, the best the Packard peo- ple make, for $250. Mr. Harding gives an amusing de- iption of the way volunteers for the vernment army are secured. The ed, firs uisite for the recruiting force is several bales of rope. Then they go out and round up everybody in some territory from the age of 12 to 60 vears, tie their hands behind them, lead them into box cars and bring them into the barracks. In a week they are turned out finished soldiers. Thig is the army of which the govern- ment has 80,000. Mr. Harding has but a poor opinion of the newspaper news that comes out of Mexico. It is all written in New York, he says, by the press bureau of the Mexican government, and not an American paper that he knows of has a correspondent in the field. > cost of the navies of the world vear aggregated $725,000,000, dell Pharmacal Co., Incidents in Soc ty. Miss Alice [, Bennett is the guest of her sister in Brooklyn, N. Y. William C. Birge has gone to De- troit after a brief visit at his home on Huntington places _ Miss Maud Carew Buckingham en- fertained the Tuesday Auction club | at the Golf club this week. The Misses Osgood are spending a | week at Atlantic City, with their sis- ter, Mrs. J. Theodore Webb. Mrs. Edward S. Gallaudet and Mrs. | William A. Norton were guests this | week of Dr. Edward Gallaudet of Hartford. Mrs, Bardwell who has been the guest for some months of her sister, Mrs. H. F. Pollock, leaves today for her home in Duluth. Wednesday Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin A, Armstrong of New London cele- brated the forty-fifth anniversary of their marriage by a trip to Norwich, cailing on Mr. and Mrs, L. O. Smith, Mr. and Mrs. O. S. Smith and other relatives her: Bartlett Will Proved. At the probate court in Salem ' the will of Francis Bartlett of*Beverly and | Boston has been proved. The execu- tors are Ralph E. Bullard of Norwood, Herbert E. Snow of Beverly d Fran- cis C. Welch of Boston. Each gives a bond of $5,000,000. The estimated value of the estate is $3,738,150. | Ambition _ Pills F or Nervous People At lest they're here and here to stay. The first time ever offered to the peo- ple of Norwich, the famous Wendell's Ambition Pilis—-the great nerve tonic that will put vigor, vim and vitality in- to nervous, tired out, all in, despond- ent people In a few days. Anyone can buy a box for only 50 cts. and The Lee & Osgood Company is authorized by the maker -to refund the purchase price if anyone is dis- satistied. Thousands praise debility, nervous them for general 2 prostration, mental depression and unsirung nerves caus ed by over Indulgence in alcohol, to- bacco or excesses of any kina. . s any affliction of w the nervous bition Pills are unsur nysteria, trembling neuralgia | they are simply splendid. Fifty cents | at The Lee & Osgood Company. Mail | orders filled, charges prepaid by Wen- | Syracuse, N. Y. ndell’s Am- ., while for cav’s wages. BRISTO MiL LS 8 gy E\J‘C _ Long or short sleeves. These Dealers Sell Bristol Underwear: Porteous & Mitchell, The Reid and Hughes Co., Murphy and McGarry, and F. A. Wells Co. THE BRISTOL MFG. CO' BRISTOL, CONN. -~ Better Ask the Bristol dealer to show you a Bristol You’ll quickly see and feel the extra value. and covered. Frills and cuffs ‘‘looped-on.*’ All seams lock-stitched Regular In the Basement Section of our Home Furnishing Department WE WILL HAVE AN - Extraordinary Sale of Genuine “Guernsey” Earthenware Guernsey Earthenware is the last word in practical and sanitary cooking utensils. For more than six years it has stood the strongest possible test—practical use by a critical public. It is light in weight, has a rich brown exterior and a spotless white porcelain interior, three points that will commend it to all housewives. 82 inch Casserole at $1.49, value $3.00 How the Sale Came About The Dry Geods Union, of which we are mem- bers, placed a large com- bination order months ago — the goods to be made during the manu- facturers’ quiet period. Because of the large quantity ordered and be- cause the manufacturer was allowed to make the goods during his dull period, he was willing to shave his prices considerably—the result is this Special Sale. 100 PIECES OF GENUINE GUERNSEY EARTHEN- WARE AT 25 TO 50 PER CENT. LESS THAN USUAL PRICES. 8-inch Round Casserole with cover 814-inch Oval Casserole with cover 8-inch Vegetable Dish, round - Choice 9-inch Pie Servers 10-inch Pie Servers fire-proof Earthenware and would sell $1.49 regularly at $2.00 to $3.00—we offer 5%4-inch Bean Pot with cover On sale beginning Today—in Basement Department 6% -inch Bean Pot with cover The Porteous & Mitchell Co. 6% inch value $2.50 Some frames have black wooden han- dles, others have nickel-plated metal handles. Every piece is guaranteed to be first quality, genuine “Guernsey” Save 50c On Your Next Hair Brush Buy the GREY IMPERIAL, the dol- lar Hair Brush at 50 cents.” We haeve another window full of them. The best value you ever saw at B0 cents. We sent 8500 miles to get splendid Hair Brush for you at 50 cents. Your monay back if not satisfied. THE LEE & 0SGOOD CO. Nerwich, Conn. this Warm, Comfortable— Yet Not Heavy, nor Scratchy Look for the BRISTOL Shield on Each Label for making cake and other nice things. People’s Market New Fall Styles, and Russet. $3.50 and $4.00. TOKAY and MALAGA GRAPES FANCY GRAPE FRUIT CRE-MALLO | The Fenton-Charnley Building Co., Inc. GENERAL . CONTRACTORS NORWICH, CONN. 6 Franklin St. JUSTIN HOLDEN. Prop. Patrician Shoes Patent Gun Maetal Hack, Livery and Boarding STABLE We guarantee our service te be the Sold only by best at the most reasonable prices. FRANK A. BILL, 104 Main St. |MAHONEY BROS., Falls Av,