Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, March 17, 1914, Page 10

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RESPONSIBILITY S NOT DETERMINED Both Captains Blamed For the Sinking of the Monros—One Inspector Places Entiré Responsibility Upon Monroe’s Captain While the Other Charges Nantucket's Com- mander With Negligence in Not Reducing Speed. Philadelphia, March 16—The two United States local inspectors of steam vessels who investigated the disaster o ffthe Virginia coast on January 30, Berry included negligence in_not re- ducing the speed of his vessel'in a fog and with neglecting to ascertain through the wireless operator the in which the steamship Nantucket | proximity of other vessels. No charges rammed the steamer Monroe, causing | were brought against Capt, Edward the loss of forty-one lives, rendered a | K. Johnson of the Monroe. elv divided opinion today, one helding the | davs were devoted to hearing witnes captain of the Nantucket guilty of neg- | es and after counsel for Captain Ber- ligence and the other charging the |ry had argued his case today the board commander of the Monroe with respon- | rendered its decisions sibility for the disaster. | Inspector Sargent Blames Johnson. The report of the Investigation and | Tne opinion flied by Inspector the two decisions were forwarded 10 | goni'“was voluminous, going into Henry M. Seeley, Supervising inspect- | construction of the ships, the collis or at New York. It Sar- the is not known here a > o and the conduct of the crews af what the next step in the case Will be, | i1 jmpace. The report concludes th but it is believed e coucIumlam 1 | Cubtaln \Bearry anduall Bilver It spector will consult th of | officers of the Monroe are exo pommerce at Washington before mak- ;‘r‘:!n:‘l;,ll Xrl :I‘" Monroe are exoner: ing further Smove s Sargent’s report then Berry Charged with Negligence. i Captain Johnson with “incom- ; spectors who inve: negiigence and on are C. R. A, Sar- He is charged or of hulls, and D. H H e violation of the pector of bo The de- s for prev e commerce designated them a wrong wr the charges again h negligence captain of the Nantucl because the local inspectors at < ter a preliminary examina- | the vessels came in sight of each charges against nd with incompetency and unsk s because proper dis or zation was e crew in an pline t maintained a effort to on hoar was n assistance On the last in Sargent said Inspector Howard Blames Berry. Captain , did every- is to be re- ties which he attended t ect the | and be- | mptly from the | ‘ 1 ‘ WHAT $10DID FOR THIS WOMAN The Price She Paid for Lydia E.Pinkham’sVegetable Com- ves of all per: pound Which Brought ZSome of the other Good Health. ne to devote to matters of | > | importar Inspector How Danville, Va.—*“I have only spent ten dollars on your medicine and 1 feel so much better than I did when the doctor | was treating me. I don’t suffer any bearing down paing atallnow and I sleep i well. I cannot say - and was exper enough for Lydia E. | gation. while Inspecto Pinkham’s Vegeta- e ble Compound and Liver Pills as they have done so much forme. Iam enjoy- ing good health now and owe it all ta your remedies, 1 take pleasure in tell- friends and neighbors about Mrs. MATTIE HALEY, 501 Coi- quhone Street, Danville, Va. i No woman suffering from any form of female troubles should lose hope un- til she has given Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound a fair trial. This famous remedy, the medicinal ingredients of which are derived from native roots and herbs, has for | forty years proved to be a most valua- ble tonic and invigorator of the fe- male organism. Women everywhere | bear willing testimony to the wonderful virtue of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta~ ble Compound. | If you have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta= ble Compound will help you,write | to Lydia E.PinkhamMedicineCo, | (confidential) Lynn, Mass., for ad= vice. Your letter will be opened, | read and answered by a woman, and held in strict confidence. | SURPRISE AT WASHINGTON, Case Now Goes to Supervising spector of District. n in of the mem pointed appeared onl been quitted no appea ain Seeley the skippe be made t I BRIEF STATE NEWS I‘ Saybrook Junction— en received at »m Harlem R Middletown—Ar Ju PLUMBING AND STEAM FITTING Plumbing as it ebould be dome is | the kind we do. Open, every jolnt dght, sanitary and latest siyle plumb- ing. Sest of bath tubs, Waterbury. livered by R ireh latest devicea !n | New Britain—Plans water closets, sinks, aud everything | for the organization vou can thisk of in the plumbing line. | litical club. n ) Call us up on the ‘phone, write ot | Srogi and Gec h ®ee us. We will fix you up im good | ganizers, sbape at a4 moderate price. | Bloomfield A J. WHOI—:E—} & CO., | Georg: accused of robbing tri d Fred Coc me he con- oomfield- Hartford fessed and are held bonds of felephone 734 12 Ferry Strest | $5,000 each. | Haddam—The Granite Rock Spri {"Bottling Co.. Haddam has brought | against the Gra-Rock Spr | Works of Canton for ng infringement of SUPPLIES Torrington—The senior class of the for Plumbers, Steam Flt-;;;i‘\”:; e o wen - | nating exercises to he held in ters and Mills | Sa:braok“:l"s\ H \-’ IF::“ud Saybrook Point, wife of Cond Leonard on the Valley branch * ], . has bee: fail E health h (hs Norwich Pumbing Supply Huuse‘,\‘-?ar_ oS et aetnarito pital last week for treatment. Phone 13. Central Wharf AL S i Danbury—At Wellesville the foun- dations have already bee for a {large mill for the Tobacco P | tion company, a New Yc | tlon A wooden building, and 80 feet wide is to | equippea with machinery #hy not atttend to it now? It will be | Brigtol—Susie t of ully as easy and convemient for you | the Women's R © have the work domo now as later | Gilbert W. Thompson shen it may be freezing weather, ]nwmlwrfi of the W. R. ¢ to be g} | guests at her home, arns street Estimates cheerfully furnished cn | 51"V “Uoening and the wy work you need done. mvitati G J. E. TOMPKINS |, 67 West Main St. ! PETROSILQ. | Grosvenordale—Mr. and Mrs The new sanitary and fire proof floor- | Menche are spending two week ing. All purposes. Very attractive | eV Bedford. Mr. Menche graph operator at the North and durable. Ask for particulars. ‘ % ordale station. place being G [:. WH“'AK[:R| filled by M. R. Brewsters, formerly % empioved by the Boston and Maine 55 West Main St raiiroad. S Hartford—Mr. and Mrs. Dwight §.| Case, who were married at Barkham- | F BURNS sted, March 16, 1864, will gelebrate | L] L] their golden wedding jubliee at their : = home, 493 Prospect avenue, Hartford, dea"n and Plumbln Monday. Mre. Case has been con- | fined to her bed the past eighteen ‘months. - 92 Franl"n Street Hartford—At the bi-monthly meet- al ing of the Connecticut Horticulty society it was announced that Th dore Wirth of Minneapolis, who was for ten years superintendent of parks in Hartford, will speak In Saenger bund hall, on March 20. The lectur rated with many colored ROBERT J.COCHRANE GAS FiTTING, LUMBING, STEAM FITTING 10 West Main Street, Norviich, Cann, | slides. Agent for . B ©. Bheat Packing Naugatuck-—Roger A, Marti nof this JALIY /§Exceptid| That A] the Dox| _ “Patric berty or ved a king st za ) as fo last minut! man s wally e me an p Billig! 1 to use. darted aftl made for Five minutes 1 dred persons W but the strangd head down and ing ten feet to £ the entrang fugitive ran [Policeman B w him down! until Cop Bil ien stood on anger was unru ed a cigare E s the cops of ou vays treat me with est courtesy I fancied that alli to ask for a I had to do wa igarette—an cigarette, pr Oasis E /pti n regret that I have caused all 1sion.” at first suggeste with han strolled § ous to tif rowly e patrol w4 “| HOPER Sir Thon' hamrock She will b stest en % pmas i 50dy P, ide vorld ir the load full length alloy of th p was lecturing on and Its Habits” Ia Pihe town hall g “What is an Oasis dad blamed Smythe kid chirped up “The exceptional in cigar- Strong hands removed after all, the right. % ) AN DASIS OF AN OGCASION Gertrude McGruder e an Oasis Party last even- nt her home in Elmview e lanterns, am, chocolate cake and y J. B. White’s orches- e the place a fairyland. int of the evening was ing of Oasis cigarettes| Miss Mc- . looked % being tllgqmost Te- ette: the disturber but, Smythe kid w Miss h1e. Japanes nen guests. 'S parties T. Smi. € st evening at when he asked and the are d that| Foas nouncing Te of July 1 No Talk Lost. “So Kate and Alice are not on ing terms.” make up for it by about each other.” what When in George er nt tree i a pine tree shilling dated 1652. r found legram speak- “No; but they more than they say heart cementing between | uniting them by strong pressure into Oasis home a day earlier than he ex- i pected. “I can’t be happy with- out Oasis,” says Bill. | cHarged Dunn, wake up th tell then e really uigarette.” the great-|A tentmaker named O. Kyam Fell out of his cot with a slam. He lit an Oasis, while murmur- ing “Gracious — ferably—to get it.| To-morrow I'll get a divan{™ EVERYBODY Wier —oiu C'i'garettes. |YELLS “QASIS™ AT 2A. M. Walges Broadway, But Excep- tional Nature of Outcry Wins Discharge Thomas Terwilliger, forty- one years old, appeared in the |night court yesterday evening | with disturbing, {peace. It appears Thomj |yelling “Oasis, Oasis, at Broadway and Tweni{$® enth Street when captured. i know that Oasis is something|h} e exceptional,” said Magistrate|connecte o hereafter Reighborh . —grwilliger day but he di “but Bill missed his He SAYS AT Kvow p Mean Green Spot eans Exception- W 'o-Day xidual halte% in stor yesterda, nted his hang “What D’ye Mean— d observed in Oasis?” es: “Our lan- e ansitory stage.” nded him and “The days of ., of Miltonian onian simplic- Hay words and words mean by in Vienna jpean. For in- go the word tile spot in a the word|er is Su-| the Alienist Says Unknown Man Has Been Doing a Rip Van Winkle—Will Examine Him Some More ‘A mysterious looking strang- dressed in clothing such as late, Edwin Booth might Ml 0711 grabbed a bell-boy g, Hotel Mc- weLai ;;‘the sho meanwhile ear that B, the place forts “Thank individuaj in the ne t Soakem, 1} fice Court,|endeavored T dusky pris- ¢ 5 word Oasis had attained a T o P;"_q};z‘ts ‘bv?[g_imeaninq owing to the mceil—i b decrads | ence of a new cigarette that had| lWOthZEH' een named Oasis. “A pretty “Oasis”—;g‘fl is an Oasis,” he continued,| gari ten dollar bill is very much/| gais Villa is enjoying| En get| oy sdi@ la dining at th “Yes, I knov is better tha the one thi this great de: for the stran ceptional’ g studies.” e 11e came ~ don’t| Mr. Hoozus saig 3 9od to| Oasis was worth four =8 WHAT OASIS MEANT Asked Startled Bell Hop, IN PSYCHOPATHIC WARD £} some A Traffic Cop Jumpe) Stranger was Only 2\ ing for Cigarette Thomas Todhunter, of quahanock held up traffic half an hour on Fifth Ave late yesterday afternoon wyj he explained to Policeman Lancy that he wanteg Oasis. Todhunter was six fi inches tall and cor ingly broad and even Fif nue stages went arou with respect as he argu the policeman. The pol went back on his geogray and explained that an Oas een spot in a de: and I call fo i squad' Mr. Td im to t perfectl: pntinued t stated tha Ftling peac, the way . | i were “so s. 4 er at the use was for the When 4 stay all “What do hbu hand 1 then.” The{\ Ih to the W e desk officer he prisoner mig) er of some secr In used Oasis_ as, Todhunter ind Jd this and stated t fed was a few “I have tried said, “and T tell at Oasis are th - cigarettes. You pay more money, but thell nothing like Oasis. T kin got lost in the big town and I wanted was for the big at the cross roads to tell glace where I could g QOasis er was released Can't Splinter the Giass. a single pane. The man machine to fer The area in- British ' Lo 17,331,00 up reminds us of the way | Murphy plays politics.—Euffaio Col | Much thy Same. who mailed an himself and bu Swise Rainbow After Sunset. ! Filling a Fountain Pen. A non-splintering glass has been| A French astronomer recently had | perfected by a French inventor by | the unusual experience of beholding! vent annoyance from air bubbles, use | a clear plate of celluloid | @ rainbow in the Swiss Alps after narrow, iapering pieces of blotting par two glass plates and then | gsunset. It spanned a valley between | per, cut small enough to reach easily into the barrel of the touched with one of two mountains to the eastward, com- plete and brilliant, 25 minutes after the astronamical sunset, and portions of it were visible for a half hour. pen. ers do not form. veere right.—Chi agoc 1 When filling a fountaia pen, to pre- | When these blotter points the bubbles disappear and oth- | fords more diverse material for the ! Why She Felt Safe. A little southern girl who had had a quarrel with her sister was very angry and was vowing all sorts of vengeance. Her aunt said to her: “You must not feel that way. Remember, the Bible says, ‘Vengeance is mine and I will | repay, saith the Lord.’” The child | studied .a moment, and then said: | Py “Yes. but you know, auntie, God’s & nfe nai | R sty e e e 5 himself | What Max .o 7 gonlleman, aud Gssoouldn’t o, dage L We note thar i t Interesting Fleas. thing to a lady! | ation Mr. W m There are many hundreds of species - 5 | States “can wait. and varieties of fleas, and the fiea at- Man's C» In winter a ma Is alw. realy for f rice probably harvested ; v spring, and in sumr @t < collector th; es a other livin ) un s always India this y amounted | Constantinople is nding $4,500,000 | an does any B | ready for winter, & Fp - iodd i in city inmprovements. creature, K contrary as a maie. w.ason Glode.

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