Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 27, 1915, Page 10

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OMFORT “That New England Physicians, Nurses and:Mothers have ‘used for 20 years, now put up in 2 ‘Beautiful New Box. A Dominant Feature in New York State Will be the Vote on Will Vote This Fall on the Liquor Question. although owe" congressman is to be elected to fil] a vacancy in the twenty- fourtn_district. £ In Philadelphia_the republican or ganization has - conducted. a vigorous. campaign to regain control of the city administration, ~ which was wrested from it four years ago when the ro- form elements united with the demo- cratic party and elected Rudolph Blankenburg, a lifelong reformer in politics, - as mayor. The - republican ~New York, Oct. 26,—The ,elections next Tuesday in the elght states that are mentioned below comprise all of the state elections that.will. be held in the United States this fall, and, as will ‘be_notéd, the voting .is' conflhed éntirely to states east of the Missig= sippi’river. 4 " New York ‘State. and Mr. Sykes’ si It is the unequafi:d healing powder for . This is guaranteed..to be the same old Comfort Powder m_ad_e so many years in Hartford, Ct.,, 'by E. S.'Syxes, its originator, now ‘put up in a ‘more attractive package, ature added to identify the genuine. In New York state, in-addition. to ot the election will be the question of adopung a new state conatitution as roviséd by a recent state constitutional convention, presided over by Flihu Root. The new constitution, at the Tequest of the suffrage leaders, has rot been made to include the suffrage amendment, hence the constitution and the sufrage issue will be-voted upon separately, neither: question having the suffrage_issue, a dominant featur® candidate for the mayoralty this fall is Thomas B. Smith, former postmas- ter of Philadelphia. Hix chief oppo- nent is George D. Porter. a reformer Who has been director of the repart- ment of public safety in the Blanen- burg administration. He resigned to make the canvass for thie mavoralty under the banner of the recently. form- ed_Franklin .. The ‘democratic party is running its candidates on a Skin Affections of Infants & Children Mot 2 plain talcam powder, but a highly medicated preparation, for < hafing; itch ing, scalding, eczema, infants scald head, rashes and hives, bed sores, s«in irritation caused by eruptive diseases and bandages, and to prevent the spread of infection, 25c. a box at all Drug and Department Stores—Trial Box Free. THE COMFORT.POWDER CO., Boston, Mass. xas%55 Toxx. !DIFFICULTY EXPERIENCED IN GETTING GOOD HORSES For United' States Troops in the Canal y Zone. the army specifications.- All of them were under 14 hands high. General Edwards made a trip_ to Costa Rica where he.purchased a few | animals, but ihey also'are mot quite up to the army specifications. Army ocers belfeve it will be necessary to gbtain ‘remounts from either Chile or Jamaica, but the latter market, be- cause ‘of the war, is now temporarily closed. 1 i Panama,.Oct. 26.—Much dificully is ibeing experienced by .the United {States troops in obtaining good horses ifor the various branches of the ser- | vice in the Canal zone. Very few of jthe animals raised in Panama are either high or heavy enough for the jrequirements of the army. + Recently Lieut. Joseph A. Marmon, * _ jeide de .camp to Brigadier General " I Clarence R. Eawards, commanding the | Panama canal troops, made a trip to “the_Province of Chirigui to obtain . ‘horsés. Out of more than 200 exam- Middletown.—Rev. and Mrs. Yarrow, members of the First M. E. children, after being - compelled to leave Van, Turkey, on account of the war. Both have been very ill with typhus fever. i e ined only eleven came anywhers near E. A. church ‘of this city, have reached this country- in saféty, together with" their straight party ticket. Maryland. Maryland will' elect a = governor, comptroller of the state treasury, at- torney general, a full house of dele- gates and half of the state senate. In addition four constitutional amend- ments will be voted upon and local minor officers will he chosen in the counties and Baltimore city.. Candi- dates to succeed Governcr Goldsbor- ough, republican, are: Ovington E. Weller, republican; Emerson C. Har- rington, democrat, and George R. Gor- such, prohibitionist. The constitutional amendments are for the referendum, a new taxation scheme, home rule for cities, and pa- role in criminal cases. The referendum plan is practically the same as tha’ followed in other states, except tho* the Maryland proposition inclvdes prohibition against the use of the rcf erendum in any local option or licen: legislation. If the home rule amend- ment carries the legislature will 1 anything to do directly with the fate of the other. ; The features of the revised constitu- tion are measures. designed to give ‘the cities of the statd greater latitude in the management of municipal affairs; and coincidently to relieve the legis- lature of a vast amount of local mat- ters to make the governor a more re- sponsible Individual by making the numerous executive arms of the ad- ministtation more directly responsible to him, to reform the judiciary so as to eliminate some of the red tape that is declared to handicap the prompt execution of the laws; and among other provisions the short bal- lot and the budget svstem. Two im- portant articles, relating to taxatfon and the reapportionment will be sub- mitted to the voters, separate from the general constitution question. Two other separate amendments would pro- vide for a $27,000,000 bond issue to complete the barge canal, and to per- mit the legislature to- alter the rate of interest on certain state debts al- ready incurred. Although the repub- licans were in a majority in the con- vention, they are not a unit in sup- porting the new constitution nor are the democrats standing solidly against it. In personnel, the New York election calls for the choice of a full assembly of 150 members. eleven supreme court iustices and three congressmen, as well as county and city officials in local legislation, which would be vost- ed in the city and county councils; while the taxation amendment pro- vides for the classification of all kinds of property for the purpose of taxa- tion, Ohio. There will be general interest in the election in Ohio- for the reason that state-wide prohibition of = the liquor relleved of a vast amount of purely some sections of the state. Congressional successors are’ to be chosen to Joseph A.” Goulden; demo- crat, of the twenty-third district, and traflic is an issue again this year, as it wos last year, in the form of a pro- posed constitutional amendment which would forbid the sale or manufacture : HE scientific shap- . A ingof the Firestone Non-Skid tread insures that you get all your:money* out 1n actual service. - Right-angled ‘against skid in- any direction, this massive” good measure tread . affords maximum safety as well as multiplied mileage. And only the powerful Firestone body could sustain the bulk _ and holding strain of the Firestone Non-8kid tread. All this good-measure build- ing is part of the Universal Service of Firestone Tires for any demand of road or season. W. R. BAIRD Norwich, Conn. =L : > irestone NON-SKID TIRES ) G IPEMDKINI ; PUMPKIN} SERV-US SQUPS =~ They ingredients are- the very best possible to procure. [The price is ridiculously-low-and as i the case of our Baked THE L.A. GALLUP C0. for sale of any alcobolic beverages. The “wets” have countered this pro- posal with -petitions under the initia- tive and referendum law. by which the Dpeople will also vote on another pro- vision_whica would prevent the sub- mission of any cpnstitutional amend- ment more than twice in eix years. Ohio is the only state in the union Edwin A. Merritt; Jr., and Sereno E, Payne, of the thirty-first and thirty- sixth, respectively, who died while serving in the last congress. - The can- didates are: William S. Bennett, re- publican, and Elsworth J. Healy, dem- ocrat, both of New York, in the twen- ty-third district: Bertrand H. Snell. of Potsdam, republican; William L.|4nt fhe s Allen, of Malone, democrat, and How- | roich will vote this fall upon the ard D ‘Hadley, ‘cf Flafisburgh= peo- | T ot Sewoe: 0. MGiCAD 0 the hroad- gressive, in the thirty-first district; | & duestlon of prohibition, the so- called liquor. license decentralization law, passed by the recent legisiature, will be subjected fo referendum. The and Norman S. Gould, of Seneca Falls. republican-progressive, and Louis J. e focneva, democrat, In Mhe|issue concerns largely the method of Mzssasimacite. ction ef license commissioners. Massachusetts, in_addition. 10 the | tristing. B eessea proipional | redis- 2 e T tricting bill, passed by th < & suffrage amendment, will vote on th o P by the recent leg: islature, will also be under fire by referendum, which was petitioned by the democratic state organization. The redistricting law as drawn would, it is declared, result in normal years in the election of sixteen republican con- men and possibly six democratic ongressmen. The democrats claim thac the law, which they passed’when in power, divided the districts about evenly as between the two partles. All cities in Ohio wHi select mayors and other municipal officers at the coming election, but no state officers are tc be chosen this fall. Kentucky. The Kentuckians will elect a,gover- proposition of giving the legislatu authority to impose a tax on incomes, and" similar ‘authority for the taking over of land in country districts for the purpose of establishing homesteads for those who may wish to escape from the more congested quarters of the cities. successor to Goversor David L sh, democrat, is to be elected and candidates. including Governor re: . Clark, progre Call, republican haw. prohibition Waiter S. ins. socialist, and Peter O'Rourke socialist-labor. A lieutenant governor and various other state officials, together with 40 nor for a four-vear term, all other senators and 240 members of the state | state officers, one-half of the state house of representatives, are also to senate and an entire assembly. Dem- ocrats, republicans and prohibitionists have candidates for all the state of- fices, with republican and democratic contestants for every place on the ballot, and the progressives are repre- sented by candidates for nearly all the state offices and numerous seats in the zeneral assembly. The socialist party hae orly a candidate for governor. In the last presidential election the progressive party in Kentucky polled approximately 12,000 more votes than be elected. Pennsylvania. Pennsylvania will have compara- tively little of general interest to its election outside of the vote on the suffrage question. No state officers are to be elected with the exception of three candidates to fill vacancies on the superior court bench. In general the only thing other than the suffrage issue to attract the voters to the polls will be county and munictpal elections, 3 off. There is only that are found even in the most merely smear these over. Heat Lap. é—nnd-:adm wearing et "fi flake graphite as out of these roughnesses. Tluymw one way to put a stop to. 2 i combined in Di | Shampoos with Cuticura Soap | preceded by light applications of | Cuticura Oiritment do much to |- SR | any other lubricant. Dixon’ A HAT FOR MANY OCCASIONS THAT ALSO HAS STYLE Graphite Automobile P Loulsviile man, heads the progressive ticket. Mississippi. The election in Mississippi will be merely a ratification of the nomina- tione made by the democratic voters at the state primaries held last August, inasmvch as no other party has candi- dates in the fleld. A full set of state, county and district officers will be fo well as members of both branches of the legislature. No congressmen will be elected this year. The present lieutenant _governor, mally elected, nor, succeeding, Earl Brewer, and Lee ‘M. Russell will be the lieutenant gov- ernor. Other candidates for state of- fices Include: Secretary of state, Jo- ecph W Power; attorney general, Ross A. Collins; treasurer, Dr. J. P. Taylor: superintendent of education, W. H. Smith. . ’ New Jersey. Having disposed of the suffrage is- sue at the special election Oct. 19. New Jersey has left little of general inter- est for the election of Nov. 2. Voting on this day will be confined to the election of six members of the state senate and a full membership of sixty in the house. The campalgn has been very qulet, ng state-wide issues being involved. ‘In some legislative districts local option has been lesue. GERMAN M-ILITARQ CRITICS This. modish hat has a narrow tilted brim from which mount folds of black velvet intersected with a bird of jr- idescent beads. Drooping - gracetully forward is. a black ostrich plume of exceptional grace, the republicans, but the latter claim to have regained many of those who had left the ranks. when Governor Mc- was elected, his over his republican opponent was approximately 33,000 . Former Congressman A. O. Stanley of Henderson recently won the demo- cratic gubernatorial nomination in a threc-cided contest by - the largest plurality ever accorded a candidate in Kentucky. The runner-up declared in favor of state-wide prohibition. Mr. Stan'ey favored continuing in effect the county unit law, or local option. This stand later was incorporated. in the democratic party platform. The platform also favors submitting to & vote of the people a comstitutional Central Powers, Beriin, Oct. 26 (By Wireless to Tuck- erton, N. J.).—The present military situpation is the central powers, Major Moraht, the Berliner Tageblatt, of the various campalgns is summar- ized thus by the agercy: i “In the west the Anglo-French of- tensive is ebbing slowly after the fail- ure of the attempts to break the Ger- in s Transmission and Differ- ential Grease No. 677, and put claimtoatest. AJldealersand garages who are in business to sell service as well as take your money sell Dixon’s Theodere G. Bilbo, will become gover- | REVIEW OF SITUATION. Says It is Eminently Favorable to the eminently favorable to the view of the military cridic of whose review Overseas News Buy 2 can of this Lubricants. Jersey City, N. J. Established in 1827 man lines. Political reasons are com- pelling the British and French to con. tinue_their offensive operations for & time,” Major Moraht declares. Italy, he says, desires to make her own war, and all demands from the Anzlo-French press that she send troops to the Balkans will be in vain. The true reason. he declares, is that Italy needs all her reserves in the Alps since she has lost hundreds of thou- sands of men by senseless attacks upon the bravely defended ' Austro- Hungarian positions, It cannot be doubted, he adds, .that all her future sacrifices will. be equally useless and that finally the day will comeé when the Austro-Hungarlans ~ themselves will take the offensive. In the Balkans. says Major Moraht of this new campaign, the, most AiM. cult part of the task has Peen accom- plished by the forcing of the passage of the Danube and the storming of the principal fortifications south of Bel- grade, while the Bulgarian troo through the capture of Kumanovo, kop and Veles, have made it impossi- ble from now on for the entente allfes to help the Serblana. FORMOSIANS SENTENCED TO DEATH FOR REVOLT. Their Aim Was to Drive From the Island. Taiwan. Formosa.. Oct. 26, — Ome hundreq ‘and’ seven’ Formosans were senignced to death for revolt against |the Japanese administration. The | Judge who pronounced the doom of | the revolutioraries warned the au- thoritiés that the natives were dis- satisfied with the government regula- tions under which they lived and that the revolutionary movement- start- od by the accused had a far reaching effect among the islanders. Two of the ringleaders were coun- cillors of the Taiwan prefectural of- fice. In their statement in reply te the query of the public procurator they said that since the vccupation of Japanesa amerdment that would do away with the prison contract system and per- mitting the working of convicts on the courty roads. Edwin P. Morrow of Somerset is the republican nominee. - Fregd J. Irexler, a Mrs. Finley J. Shepard, formerly|a protracted visit last February, when, Miss “Helen Gould, and' her husband | he was stricken by chicken pox, and have adopted an orphan Doy, five | was quarantined while a gusst at her years old, from St. Christopher's'bome, | Fifth . Avenue . residence. _Through in Dobbs Ferry, N. ¥. Little -John|adoption papers filed with Daniel J. Doe No. 104, as he was known at the | Cashin, county clerk at White Flains, Children’s society, pald Mrs. Shepard |the young orphan became installed as WYY G O\ Y\ AY YA\ A\ W W\ Y \§)\§ W) )\ George 4 . member of the Shepara country hame, Lyndhurst, in Tarrytown. . His name hénceforth is Finley J. Shepard, Jr. The new heir to a share.in the Gould fortune found an al - Srepe ot S mas ‘d'-fl'\m‘gnm- TN\ NYOYOYOYD NOYOY For Transmissions and Differentials Ask your dealer for the Dixon Lubricating Chart. JOSEPH DIXON CRUCIBLE CO. Oil and s and ’s Graphite G inakeratabes that fills up every surface irregularity and puts an unctuous, over the entire bearing, so that metal cannot'come in contact ‘The more it is rubbed, the more brilliant finish and There is only one form of flake produced only by the Joseph Dixon lubricated with Dixon’s Graphite A satisfaction than any car doped with riairrer it takes on. Formosa by Japan sslanders. bad constantly - suffered Foben misadmfris- tration:. that tbey had heen deprived of their industries and trade and were groaning under Geavy taxation. They declared that in the long, run the islanders woaid te reduréd to wretch- ed and deplorible conditions. Their aim was to Jdrive out the Japanese from the ‘sand. According to the prosecutor the rev. olutionaries made efforts to raise war funds by inducing the fgvorant ls- landers to_join. and _support their scheme. To carry out this pi they fabricated andcirculated ha rumors to appeal: to the swperstitiovs minds of the islanders.. They de- clared among_other things that Duddhist prophet had foreseen Japan's occupation would exirt next year and that in case the Japanese{did. mot leave the poptlation would be . an- nihilated by divine power. Those who contributed were given a tablet which. when carried on the body in case of warfare was to be effective in protect- ing from the danger of death. Furth- ermore during the Tsing-tau atwack and the Japan-China negotiations, ther circulated a rumor. that r German acropianes and a'big force or Chinese revolptionists wouid ceme over ta the island to recover the soil from Japan. Today's sentences were In addition to those imposed earlier in thé month when eight ringlead ‘were ordered shot. 2 IINAAR Pawn_Tickets. Lost.- Vic Murdock says it is the duty of every Progreseive to redeem himself. Trouble seems to be, however, that mok:’ of them appear to bave lost their ‘pawn tickets.—Philadeiphia In- foot-long alligator, sunning himself between the ties near the Ansomia Lumber. Co. siding, was discovered just before noon yesterday by Conductor Carroll, of the local witcher. Where he came from is a nsystery. i \Y\Y Y\ \Y YA\ SPECIAL For Merchants’ Week 10% ~ REDUCTION ON ALL Wines and Liquors DON’T MISS THIS SPECIAL SALE - Greenberge 7-53 Franklin Street DIDYOYOYOY

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