Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 8, 1914, Page 10

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SUIT AGAINST D. L. & W.DISMISSED No United States Law That Forbids Individuals Holding Stock In Two Distinct Corporations Engaged in Kindred Bus- _Iness. Trenton. N. J. April The United States ®ourt filed an opinion here to- Jday. @ismissing the suit of the United S & government against the l\el}t- ware, Ladkawanna and Western Rai road company and the Lackawanna and Western Coal com- pan:. for aleged violation of the com modities clause and ‘the Sherman an ti-trust law. The court holds that there: is mo Uniied States law or de- on prohibiting the same set of in dividuals holding stock in two distinct corporations even though they mhay be engaged in kindred business. The decision was handed down here by Judges Gray, Buffington and Mc Pherson. of the third judiciai circuit The actidn was brought in the federal court hers. but through a certificate of expedition flled by Attorney Gen- | the | eral McRevnolds was heard by judgas of the court of appeals at Phil- adelphia in January. The case is considered of the righest importance by the government as it is one of the steps planned by the de- partment of justice in its efforts to break up what it alleges to be a mon- opoly of the anthracite coal irade. The case which was brought under both! the Sheman anti-tru law and the commeodities clause of the THepburn railroad law in all probability will go direct to the supreme court of the United States. A somewhat similar suit was cently instituted against the Lek Valley railroad and its subsidiaries in the federal court in New York and an- i Delaware, | other government action against the| rate it from the Jersey | and other sts in the United States court at Phila- delphia. Today's decision Is the second that this court has handed down in a com- modities clause case The fir: case volved all the anthracite and reached the supreme court de- cided that the commodities s constitutional, but that a d might own stock a bonafide cor- poration which ow the commodity the railroad is transporting. After the supreme court decision the Delaware, Lackam: and Western road comp: red an extra dividend of fAfty T E kholders were giver use half of ti ividend to stock of the Delaware, lLackawanna and Western Coal company which was rganized to take over the of the railroad’s coal. The raliroad made a contract 1 coal company to sell on price received for anthracite at New York tidewater. Under this contract the railroad, which continues to mine ECZEMA SPREAD ALL OVER HANDS Could Hardly Do Housework. Pim= ples Full of Matter. ltching and Burning lntense. Cuticura Soap and Qintment Cured. —_— P. O. Box 25, Alburg, Vt. — My hands were 8o affected with eczema that I could hardly do my house work for all summer. = The eczema broke out as pimples full of matter and the itching and burning were so intense that I scratched and made it spread all over my hands. They itched and burned 80 1 could not sleep. [ tried differens kinds of salves, pills and liquids but to no success. Then 1 used Cuticura Soap and Ointment. [ washed the sores with Cuticura Soap then let them dry and then I used the Cuticura Ointment. In a few nights I could sleep well and in two weeks my hands were completely cured.” (Signed) Mrs. George Pelkey, Oct. 14, 1912. A generation of mothers has found no soap o well suited for cleansing and purifying the skin and hair of infants and children as Cuticura Soap. Its absoltte purity anc re- freshing fragrance alone are enough to recomimend it above ordinary skin scaps, but there are added to these qualities delicate yet effective emolliont properties, derived ‘from Cuticura Ointment, which render it most valuable in overcoming a tendency to distressing eruptions and prorioting a nor- mal condition of skin and hair health. Cuticura Scap (25c.) and Cuticura Oint- ment (50c.) sold everywhere. Liberal samnpie of each mailed free, with 32-p. book. Ad dress post—card * Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston. AF-)Men who shave and shampoo with Cu- ticura Soap will find it best for skin and scalp. PLUMBING AND STEAM FITTING PLUMBING Why not atttend to it now? It will fully as easy and convenlent for to have the work domy now as when it may be freezing weather. Bstimates #~heerfully furnished any work you need done. J. F. TOMPKINS 67 West Main St. PETROSILO The new sanitary and fire proof flovr- ing. All purposes. Very attracilve and durable. Ask for particulars. C. k. WHITAKER, B85 West Main 8t T. F. BURNS cn Heating and Plumbing 92 Fra+" "n Street ROBERT J.COCHRANE : GAS FiTTING, PLUMBING, 8TEAM FITTING 10 West Main Street, Nervilch, Conn Agnt for W. B. ©. Sheet Packing MONEY LOANED on Diamonas, Watehes. Jeweisr and Secyrities of any kind at the iowest Rares of Interest. An old sigablisita Arin to deal HE COLLATERAL LOAN co, 132 Maim Seveer, Upstairs, [(Establisaed 1872} marketing e basis of 65 percent of the average | { Western railroad was admittediy en- | saged srting over its lines F of coal shipped by Lackawanna and West- any. ed at the h e stock of company W largely, if not entirely, owned by stockholders of the raiiroad company. bui it was contended on the part of the defendants that there was a bonafide distinction between the two ies. while it s contended on of the government that the ] Just e the coal from the land it owns, sells it at the mine to the coal company and the railroad transports it for the coal corporation. "The government attacked this ar- rangemrent as a ‘“mere lawyer's dtvice, claking old facts under new fictions,” that it w “mere subterfuge and fraud under the law and the public” and that “each corporation is in fact the same group or body of actual per- sons working the same end uncer different names The government’s that the Delaware, [ackawanna and stern Railroad company and the Delaware, lackawanna and Western Coal company were practically one and the same corporation and that they were violating the law for the reason the Delaware, lLackawanna and contention was meintaining of the two companiés with the coal company, was a subterfuge to evade liability un- - the statute prohibiting a coal com- pany from carrying zoods manufac- tured, mined or produced by itself. PLAINFIELD Mercier Trial Postponed Indefinitely— | Closing Lecture by Rev. J. H. George | —Village Stirred by Liquor Violat- ion Inquiries. Mrs., Jer ry road h Sullivan of the Canter been in Brookiyn, N. Y this week attending the funeral of her | nephew, Jeremiah Beardan | Miss Mamie Sullivan spent Sunday with friends in Danielson Mrs. William Roode is ill with ner- Vo trouble. ! Dorcas Club Meets. | The Dorcas club met Monday even- | ing with Mrs. Jerome. Indefinitely Postponed. The trial of Bdward Mercier for the illegal sale of liquor to Samuel Whit- | ford which was to have been held on | Monday was indefinitely postponed. | is the much talked of whiskey or | parilla case in whici. Grand Ju- | ror Mathe 1, while looking Into the window of Mercier's drug store. | claims to have seen Mercier sell to| Samuel Whitford a pint bottle which he thought was whiskey, but which | Whitford and Mercier claim was r's Barsaparilla Final Holy Week Lecture. sixth and final illustrated lec- Holy Week—was given in Spin- i day evening by of Dani on "hese lectt 1ctive and he The ¥ Rev and w hav: well attenc P heen very in Visit From Canterbury Grange. Plainfield grange held their first reg- ular semi-monthly meeting for April| Tuesday eve Canterbury grange | furnished the prosramme. Refresh- | ments were served by the yvoung peo- | | ple and committee connected with the | ainfield | ; ‘,.' p l Mi 3 Hall is home from | ’ Al A Brown un Providence, for you the spring vac i & i CATALOG OF PREMIUM Through the co-operation of the purchasers of Serv-us Pure Food Products, we have been enabled to greatly increase the value of the Serv-us Coupon making it possible for you to obtain a premium for ' about one half the number of coupons formerly required. : This means a great deal to the thousands of Serv-us { consumers. If you are not one of this great army, you 4 owe it to yourself to join the ranks and begin to ask your grocer for Sed_rv-us first, last and all the time S IS NOW READY FOR MAILING ! ,” \: f il It is of vital importance that you bacome familiar with the largely increased value of the new Serv-us Coupons and also with the many Pure Food Products which are sold by all the Leading Grocers. You will receive a valuable Serv-us Coupon from each Serv-us Product. This information can be obiained by writing for a free copy of our new Serv-us Premium Catalog. GIFT DEPARTMENT SERV-US PURE FOOD CO., Inc. 332 South Michigan Avenue CHICAGO WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS NORWICH. CONN, A. GALLUP CO.. : ; e (Wednes at| eircle of The Kihk's Daughters on | LEGAL NOTICES Authorit lliegal Liquor Sellers | NORWICH TOWN ik g il 4 home of Miss | : been a living moving | — . s after 1 home e on Wa reen for the past few weeks. | Death of Mrs. Patarick Kivlin—Plan Wig i Tl( IE l“‘ liam A. Keefe ;i“"w‘”y_‘— to Give Play In Esperanto—Humane shutins. | 3 iquor selling in the no-li- - Mr. ard Mrs. E st Tryon of | business was transacted. | of Plainfield in a se Agent’s Visit. NV TONBoh Whte “tecant . pteats ot | | Al Milkmen, Peddlers, Junkdealers me weeksgs ago, 3 ? SR > ate ‘;, tives on Town str | = —==sw=—=—=————= ! and Hucksters doing business in the % i A farmer returning from the pruning 1 | B i x Norwich are hereby notified A b on on the West Side Monday = % e | LEGAL NOTICE Albie L. Hale has been ap- i c i00stip there i Doten TRE: W thankes in| M Natalie Har Hatlond | et e i Sealer of Weights and Meas- ! Rk ¥ a court of, pa places with which he was famiiiar | road is spending he m W | ! . and for. the Town of Norwi | inq to which half the town was gt _ ok her grandpa | and he will be found at h { summoned and Some examinea in | IEW vears ago. Owners of ssveral T | | fice at Police Headquarters, City ‘W.,;( session. Nothing was given out | JarMs have died and other forms of| i on Tuesday and Friday of each week S eSS b S A e L g T re being carried on. In one Miss | | a. m. to 4.30 p. m., for the pur- | fo .,‘.,Iyl.‘\ tion but th ‘re Were rUmOTS | iance g filg farm has given place to] don tu of testing and sealing all weights. o cell and a backroom for bad Windk scales, etc., used in the sale ey 2 - ot & poultry plant. Many hot beds are indh : , ete., | the e boys who could not rtmemb: Next | 3 : T it ts pikos T chase of ‘any commodity in_ o came a great argument whether a|Deing made on the Winship place. In| i W, AnS Foitle deen thrangh o window was| otnes localities thitfy, $ekss . whould | r e ey o Iedaiare ey sarsAphriNe. then ihe rosinot show so many changes in a dozen | street or weighing or measuring device that whi or ohrilla, then the re- | fi & cently, t has not been sealed by a seaier of | F T ad been arrested in ish s 2 g weights and measures wnh;n «-{\o‘,\'enfr |1 and other places for| is subject to a fine for the first of- n they \‘.‘.”. mply OBITUARY. fense not less than $20, nor more sked what they Mrs. Patrick Kivli | ¥ IR gt Y Far o rs. Patric ivlin, € 7 three months, or 9 so far was Mr afnan Burud K06 N | hants, both wholesale and re- He wornen gby Mrs. HERRALSRIRA: A, SIA0H8 il be oalled upon by Mr. Hals ¢ tnd heard] death occurred Monday at her hbme on | ble for the purpose of hing about,the | Town street was born in Norw thie | ng their equipments. 2 | dz f Mr g Mys." 7 as Mr. and Norwich, Conn., April 7, B rs ago she mar- | Washingtc i3 & Village Interests. i wiack fiotisd at 6 T W, A\‘ul,RGA.\l 5 1 and family spent Sun- | diec Mrrs, Ki bridge v _ Sealer Weights and Measures, es in Ste : and lved me house on Town street apr8sWM New London County. . ever since her 'riage. She was a; (George Randall a X - arber and Masters Al- | devout memt red Heart parish. | ynivers oW TIAvSE > h NOTICE TO CREDITORS. Wewhe were visitors| Underneath a calm and quiet na-!home on West own oday | Ap 114 AT A COURT OF PROBATE HELD urda, {ure was unusual strengih and beanty | (Wednesday) fe he wcation. E. DRAPBR h. within and for the Distriet Re y ip of Norwich preached : of character. She had been ill for over | HI E. DRAPER on the 7th day of April, Sunday morning at the Congre- a vear, suffering without complaint and | There was a meeting of r Ready| aprSd Deputy Sheriff. SON 1. AYLING Jndge ational ‘church here The Sunc her hopeful outlook. During | | orge—G. Powers, late of children and t ung peo- fe she made many friends who ! In said District, deceased. Y are rehears for an ize with her sister in her great | That the Brecutrix cite the creditors of said deseased to bring o t des h iste i in their ciaims against said est { T Lo shoth | B N - Ranas within six months from this date, week nd the spring | Burng of Norwich Town, Mrs. Kivlin DOStiRE & notice to that effect, Logother | work of putting in ties hs begun. is survived by a brother, Philip Burna with a copy of this order, on the sigm- of Terra Haute, Ind., and by four]| post ncarest to the place where sald deceased last dwelt, and in the same iater | nieces and by four nephews. Ravages of Winter's Storms. Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Vergason took a trip recently to a part of the beach | between Weekapaug and Quonochon- | taug, R. 1, to look at a cottage which tast fail they thought of purchasing. | They found that fifty feet of the beach was washed away, the house turaed three gquarters around and rmoved twenty feet from its former location, the piazza gone and the steps for down the beach in the opposile direction. issionary Meeting Today. When the Lathrop Memortal Forelgn Missionary soclety mects In the First SAIL FROM BOSTON Congresational chapel this (Wednes- DAPIS Phat Nakt in Tirkey? Wil e con LONDON, PARIS, HAMBURG sidered, the mite bo¥es opened, and new life members cnosen, Assuring Arrival in Parig by Day Palatinl Steamers of the Hamburg-American Line Visit Frem Mumane Agent. town, aud by publishing the same once a newspaper having a cifcuation in i District, and makKe return to tais 502:£ Bushels Potatoes NELSON J. ATLING. sudge. . From One Acre of Ground The aubte and Torekoing s & irus “®Attest: FANNIE C. CHURCH, Clerk. creditors of said de- WENTY DIFFERENT FARMERS in 20 different parts of New England to present tate the within the time lim- competed the past year in growing §§8din the abovs &ha foregolug order. potatoes. The crops were widely separated Shrad. N i E as to climatic and weather condit 1S. TO THE BOARD OF COUNTY r New London C g missioners one planted, cultivated and took care of his hereby app: W ticense ~ , . iquors, alé, I b R crop in his own way; but all used Hguors® aie” lager ‘beer & Street; 'K‘ndwn \""A\'wv."“-u'bl. ex 4 F ‘1’ any part ot parts of wa Bowker’s Fertilizer B 6 place o iss % My BVOLATY 3 > two ot in & | _Miss M. E. J. Laily, secretary of the And No Other Dressing e s o NEXT SAILINGS { Constecticut 'Humine' society was _in ublic or parocnial achool, or the preme “Ck“lll‘d"A 30 IOAM orwich and New London last week pertaining thereto, or any post- o - 9, WIVE investigating cases in behalf of (he W sas 502.6 b Thé sve ice, public iibrary. of cemetery “Rhaetia” - ay 9, 10A.M society she represents for the relfef The winning crop was 502.6 e average i at'Norwich, this 1tn day of April | | steamers le;'.“c,n..,.,',.,,,,“m | of disabled and suffering animais of the twenty crops was 322.8 bu The average ) 0 ) 2 J “‘r:dgr‘!‘,;gfg: aps ler, Sou nston, b SR For Information. 607 Boylston Street, | | Play in Esperanto. The Hsperanio class met ,Monday afterneon with Mrs, C, J. Abell of East Town sireet. Plans for a play In HKs- peranto accompanied by songs in that language are being mude. Spy Wednesday Devetions, At Sacred Heart church there will be lenten devotions this (Wednesday) evening at 7.30 o'clock with sermon and benediction, Boston, Mass. or Lneal Agents - COL. EARL N. GALLUP AUGTIONEER A graduate from Jones' Nat. School ot Auctioneering. Specially of Farm and Pedigteed ~ Stock. Merchandise and Real Estate Sales. Address R. F. D. No. l’ Mmup, CL oh Town s'rev\.r e Telephons 1.3 Local Jottings. Miss Ida Thurston of Hallville was a guest of Mre. C. H. Lamb at her homu Mizs Anna McNamara leaves today yield in New England is 131.6 bushels, and for the and fagxpayers. owning real es- Tni : he Town of Norwich, and United States 89 bushels. Our crop-growirg rm‘.‘:ss;s A “r"r"‘“(’:";‘:"o_i‘“mwr}?xrx'i‘"énx : = : % tely vation of Walter J. redge of the past four years have been so fairly and accurately Benitionor T per e, conducted that they have been accepted everywhere as authentic. Henry Wallace, Editor of Wallace’s Farmer, s a suitable person to icant said appiican o 4 70 be licensed pursuant u tion ‘Dated at Nerwich. thig ith da ites: i 2 April, A. D. 1914, James Ellis, P. writes: ‘There is no guesswork about them. QAL - & fronton, Henry Lo Ban: nett, Patrick Cassidy. 1 hereby certify Send for our Book of the Contest. Also tell us what your i that the above named signers and em- crops are, and your fertilizer requirements and we will send Orser re eiectors and y you our helpful book on Plant Food and our new Hlustrated gy R B o T g e g 3 Catalogue. Norwich. Dated at Norwich, this Tth of April, A. D. 1914. Chas. 8. Hol- ok, Town Clerk. aprsw FERTILIZER COMPANY BOWK 43 Chatham St., Boston. Also New York, Buffelo, Philadelphia and Baltim 2> NEWMARKET HOTEW, 715 wel. mve. First-class Wines, Lijuors and Cigars. Meals snd W Rarebit served o erder, Joan rrop. Tel -8

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