Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 29, 1915, Page 10

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BECOMES COATED IFCONSTIPATE . WHEN CROSS, PEV SH AND : = ¥XRUP ek oy ocpA';-‘:!os“leA ¥ New York, Oct. 28—Testimony on tho political activities of the New st York, New Haven and Hartford rail- Childen love this ‘fruit laxative,” |road in the Connecticut and Rhode Is- and nothing else cleanses the tender|land legislatures to prevent the con- liver and bowals so nicely. n_r:;slo:ed eomyetmv; trolley. llne‘, A chlld & ly will not stop playing | introdus o new - an sensational te empty t)w“au. and the result is, | chapter today into the story of hovr in - les paralleling } ey be tightl ed with waste | the New Haven acquired its alleged| “I- willl . understand . Fo iiver ru“";l.unguh Y foasen Sours, then | monopolistic. £rip on the transporta- T 1IN 1& an — your little one bocom(]: cross, hnzll l!tck. tmnt 5 “gt ‘t:ev h;;‘l:.l:: t:: pre- = {everls t act natu- | sente e vernme: . o 100 2T, *Ful” ot | 3¢ the slevey former. directors ot tht : ; s‘hortemn_g an g_( otto. enc is, supremh : cold, has sore throat, stomach-ache or|road under the Sherman ln"-!!‘\l!‘ diarrhoea. Listen, Mother! See i [law. sponsibility of the bill as a_matter of tongue is coated, then give a teaspoon- | Eforts to Prevent Trolley Parallel. justice ‘and {t must be e bill of his t O B rmla By o Tk 472 | SToteink wmen e, tme o Aaed e e, : Cottolene is an exact combination of the purest, richest, mos waste, sour Dbile and undigestsq food | OBSht L0 be ready to have music by 0200 | "ol pand™ wrote Joum . el | thraugh the commities sad in i’ carefully refined cottonseed oil and the choicest beef. stearine - passes out of the system, and YOU| i . ‘sresident of the New Haven, to|lslature. We will undertake to Pave 2 well, playful child again.” that he has some help on ‘the ected, igh uet. -Cottolene ls, Millions of mothers give “California o O Peiing him tolbut I halieve that it he will take hold | obtmned from sel h grade leaf beef suet. B o o dren ave It, and it mever | use his efforts in'the Connecticut feg- | 9F 1% he, fas the force anc, Lo o ey to put -the bill through- with:the-as- of the purest of pure foods. alis (0 act on the stomach, liver and | Isiature to prevent the repeal of & law | | nce he will have on the itself one P P lines from floor, < bowel- - | whether the committee reports in favor . . . . building routes that paralidled rail e et o e | oad, lies. e A O N e o Cottolene makes foods more digestible—more wholesome— which has full directions for babies, “Blind Boss of Rhode lsland.” - ought to pass. Please see what you children of all ages and for grown-ups| ‘“Please nip this project in the bud nllaren of all ages aad for grown uba |, “Fiease nip thia prelect B {8 bugifoan sotwirt: Mo AGia enrty by fnd makes them taste better. Use it for every kind of ing -, of counterfoits sold here. Get the gen- | to the late General Charles R. Brayton, 4 2ok . . s . O N alitorais g Syrun | th blind bose of Rhode Island~ i | . Opposition to Parallel Lines. and frying and for making cakes and pastries. ks Company.” Fefuse any other kind |reference to a bill in the Rhode Island | William Rookefeller, one of the de- with comtempt. legislature to authorize the construc- |fendants, ‘“especially was strongly of A tion of competing electric lines in that | the opinion that our policy should be state, to oppose all extensions paralleling our DECLARES MAN EXECUTED Work in the Legisiaturs. lines”’ according to a letter Hall wrote WAS NOT A GERMAN SPY| ‘“We will make it all right with Mr. | L0 the late Heary C. Robinson of Hart- ford, Conn., who was-then one of the e Tucker, if necessary,” read a letter ' ol Colonel Miassoyedoff, Interpreter of | from Hall to Charles F. Brooker, one | NoW Haven directors and whom the New Haven vice president described as Tenth Russi Army. of the defendant directors, requesting having ~a general Overaight' Over mat- J . Brocker. to. Induce ‘Representative | [ o8 und the capitol.” Berlin, Oct. 28 (By wireless to Tuck- | Tucker” to push a n the Connec- A . orton, N. JA)—De(niil that Licutemant | ticut legislature in behalf of the New | Offensive and Defensive Legislation. Colonel Miassoyedoff, an interpreter on | Haven, - ‘which will strike a blow in| Hall wanted to know what ought to the stafl of the Russian Tenth army. | the right direction and sive the elec- |be dohe in the way of “ofensive and . U third less of Cottol than of who some time ago was hanged as a |tri ccompanies something to nk | defensive on.” It appeare t Cottol less en an' German spy. was ever in fact a spy |about besides paralleling opr lines.” |in 1393 & Connecticut law had been . For a quarter .Of a °°fltmy. lene sea . olene any DoE o) e mane me L Documentary Testimony. L diiatied tolley Sinee has been growing steadily in favor. It other shortening or frymg fat. You can | This documentary testimony, which leling 3 : : . : meine Zeituns. was identified by Charles S. Mellen, | they. could show in court proceedings is not offered as a substitute or as being use it over and over for frying. Cotto- The newspaper, as quoted by thel|wag introduced by the government in | that public convenlence demanded it. e » odots. Overseas News agendy, refers to a|iis efforts to show that the New Ha- | [he interests behind the electric roads just as good” as other shortening and lene does not absorb tastes or new discussion regarding the case re- | o, “hencned ma cempetition. from any | Were apparently seeking to have th gently opened n-:i the rtl;)né‘klllsth 1204 | source. It consisted almost_entirely Ezill {:ptcll!e!fl.brnd on Jan. 28, 1897, Hall fats. It is an origmal product Always heat Cottolene slowly. . ench press and asse at Lieu-|of correspondence written by - Hall. | WEUte to Robinson: tenant Colonel Miassoyedoff “was in- | x “The Bridgeport Traction company and than an lse that i 1 nocent Ifhe really was sentenced for | ety cgoore Of,thS missives Wert |uas been placed ahead of all other ything e y"“ Pails of various sizes, to serve your spylng in the German service, since |Pnc New Haven was threatemed by o |Matters, as the question which we can use for shortening or frying. Insist venience. Arrange with pelther he nor those assoclated With| yroposition ' to conuects-troliey roans | PIoBase: to " fght: comes 1o & heed in 1 con your gro= m ever gave information to Ger- New that ‘company—the proposed exemption on gethng real Cottolene. w many or Asiria-Huncarv” e ahrough line from New York to)of"the paraliel clause. I am confident cer for a supply. e Nore utsche gemeine Zei- i 5 . b that: we have a good many (friends e tung adds that it would have been use- Opposition to Electric Roads. about_ the capitol.. 1 think you should Cottolene is ready for use ou tak W our General Offices, Chicago, for less to make any declaration of this “Wherever these electric roads are |shape the -fight before (heycom!mnlac tt°1 e 1S as y . o ‘t nm C nature before the execution of the ac- | projected we should be found oppos- |on a straignt. repeal of the parailel from the pail. It creams up beautifully a free copy of our real cook book— cused. ng them,” wrote in one letter. | clause of the general law. I think > “ The most dangerous of them appeared | when the time is fixed we ought to be an ds readil our. ME HELPS, Waterbury.—The open air school|to be the Stamford street railway,|rcady to have music by the full band d blends r y with the £l HO! . classes are now being conducted in the | which was to be connected with the |against the ropeal. . . rooms set apart for them in the new|People’s Tramway of Norwalk, Conn.| 1In a letter to Edward D. Robbins, Clark school. The New Haven, according to minutes [another defendant, addressed to him | CEERC FAIRBANKZSREART] of the directors, loaned money to Wil- | in Hartf Hall wrote in re!mncel ——=————|Tlam . Barnett, secretary of the New | ts logislafior ! Haven, to acquire the Stamford prop- 2 crty. When this was done, P. S. Gree- | . 1o Influence Legisiation. {lev, whom Mr. Mellen described as a T think I'should have given Sena- ownership for a time concealed, ac-|©on this. If "you have any means of cording to one of Hall's messives. getting to people inside-in these mat- | Btamford:Nocwallc Line. ters, it seems to me we ought to be ze(ung ready to take care of them.” “I suppose if anybody should ask Came on Face. Then on Ams. iou if the New Haven .ownen ‘the | iuant objection to:the reading of ftched So Would Scratch, Used Stamford railway vou would deny it.|on the mrovd toat ety oqionse L tor’ Lounsbury letly without tt ett e e e | e b iolation ‘o the Sintots. oltoiene maRres gooa COORIN er AN“ “IsF“}UHlNG dent of the trolley line and its real|I think the senate will stand all right - |LEFT sa.ooo,n. talling $4.600,000 to his surviving | estate until his grand-nephew, Amos Y on the ground that. the indictment |® vimt! e Cuticum Soal d 0i tment 1 which you and I know to be true,” he |made no charge against the New = or any PUlLlc INSTITUTIONS brmht)n (\}lln:nnl: Ei’l::}‘}:s"\‘\;;s-h‘:‘" B. Ena, attains, mq:. of 30. . p and Uingment, In ‘wrote to Greeley. Hall suggested to|Haven in the matter of legialative ac- | FUmber AETYStE™ Setart th teel — Mrs. Antoinette E. Wood, of Sims- Three WBBkS Healed him that the Stamford build its own | tivity. A Yy hi complet: ree steel | 508 F. Eno, a Pioneer New York - N e E. . TURKISH TROOPS REPULSE r . connection with the Norwalk line, ex- | “I; shows the general intent and |%hells with springs and clockwork . bury, Conn., and to the descendants of 3 ‘ending it to Darien, Conn., and that|purpose’ said R. L. Batis the gov.|mechanism ready for attachment to a Merchant, Who Died Oct. 21. his deceased brothers and sisters. ANGLO-FRENCH FORCE. 68 Poplar St Boston; Mass.—“My ihere ought to be some scheme to|ernment attorney, by using improper| *#8el and had the explosives prepared | . Oct. el ol e T B e g i Turkish Artillery De SecabisDagn Witk pitbls t the selectmen of Darien at once.” | {ifiucnce In-the legisiature, to change | i0 Piace into the shells was expiained | ew York, OC 28—7he Wil oflamong the descendants of his deceasec | Bulgarian and Tu o et i spreading oRIY 1ja)1 agdvised in another letter that|(he lawe in pursuance to - the - con- | MY Delice oficials today in answer to | mmoR F. FRo. pioneer merchant and | sister, Mrs. Anna B, Pinchol, as fol- Great Execution. arms. They were very reddish and they .verythiug possible should be done “for | sairacn s questions whether arrests of Fay and |OWner of much New York city realliows: To_her sons, Gifford Pinchot s itched so that I began to scratch them and - the purpose of harassing the enemy” | "Pric s, A 2 ¢.| Walter L. Schols, his brother-in-law, | ¢state, who died on October 21, was|Amos R. E. Pinchot and her daughter,| Berlin, Oct. 28.—(B§ Wireless to that caused eruption. They first camo on and to Charles F. Brooker, of Ansonia. | pack: when Jodee. Hunt raled. sut 435t Sunday, had not been made before | filed for probate today and showed he | Lady Jobnstone, $260,000 each; & trust | Tuckerton. N. J.) — Turkish troops Iy face nd they wers so red &d disfigar- . Conn,one Of the defendant divectors, | jetter. by ‘which the government an- e e e Ppe poiea e | of more than ~$5.000.000. Of This | of s Dot and 1he el pataces | pore snganed and e Ane- fng and my tched 50 at night that T ik X nounced its intention to show how| e that had the arrests been delayed |amount nearly $3,000,000 was be-|to Lady Johnstone's son. The sum of | in: to o despateh from Sfia &lven out would scratch them until [they became Bill for Legislature. much General Brayton received from| i would have given Fay an opportu- | dueathed to public institutions. $1,000,000 was also left to be divided wgn by the Overseas News Agenc: bleeding. I would get to bed about nine = “I enclose herewith a bill for a pub- | the New Haven for his alleged activi- | ity to carry out his threat of placing | After all legacies are paild the trusts |among several relatives of Mr. Eno's| - JHan and Turkidh Hountain o'clock and fall asleep about twelve. “ic act which I wish you would quietly | ties in the Rhode lsland legislature. It{, Lomb on a ship. established under the will, the General | deceased brother, John C. Eno. If any | arein) has d t execut “I used remedies and creams but in the hand to Representative Tucker of your | was shown that the evidence in this|® yOyP® &% G0 o jigiant United | Soclety of Mechanics and Tradesmen |of the beneficiaries, except Lady John- m.'-‘:’:! d‘;u:’:; N aausend ;";‘ ‘morning they would be worse. After abous 2!ace With a request that he offer the | respect was unearthed by the govern-|giates district attorney, was sent to|of New York is to receive $1,800,000. |stone, cease to be residents of the|oner. “ariong whom Tt re fraops of all five or six weeks I saw the Cuticura adver- il Quietly and see if you can enlist|ment after the flling of the indictment. | weehawken to examine the scene|New York university, Metropolitan | United States they will forfeit their | o h arrived at Softa”™ ety . oris o his influence and put the bill through | To expedite the case, Judge Hunt|yhere Fay carried on his experiments, | Museum of Natural History and the |share of the estate. e - - o Daper. I used the Cuteura -he Jegislature. - We would make it |announced today that In order to give |Fia visited Fay's rooms and the boat- | New York Association for Improving| Columbia university will receive the Soap and Olntment three weeks and I all right with Mr. Tucker if that is|the- government time to prepare the|pjuse on the Hudson fiver, where ex- | the Condition of the Poor are to each |residuary estate and also the remain- | China has an area of & million and was completely healed. The trouble was 1ecessary. . What 1 want is to have |remainder of its case so that it could | pIttit S Uole COTCq" The cases of the | receive $250,000. der of an $80,000 fund which Mr. Eno [a halt square miles, and & pops gone.” (Signed) I Rammer, Oct. 16, 1914. him offer this bill and back it before | be presented with more speed, the trial ! fve men are to be presented to the| Mr. Eno left legacies and trusts to- | established to maintain his Simsbury |of 300,000,000, 1t is easy to claim to speedily heal itching 'he committee. It is a bill in which | would tomorrow be adjourned over|federal grand jurv next week. - skin troubles and to promote and maintain ! think he will be very much interested | election day. Dr, Herbert Kienzle, charged with good complexion, clear skin, clean scalp; S he Was opposed two years ago to 3 T complicity in the conspiracy, obtained good hair and soft white hands but quite D€ electric roads getting permission | BRITISH DENIAL OF his rhelease on $25,000 bond tod: ‘o cross the Washington bridge. - - another thing to do so. Cuticura hasbeen . + « The point is that the Wash- PEACE NEGOTIATIONS successfully doing this work throughout the ington bridge is less than 30 feet in - T TR INTERNATIONAL VERDICTS ‘world for thirty-six years. ';ulam and you will observe that this Made in the House of Commons by ON BRITISH PRIZE COURTS. bill would compel the electric com- David Lloyd-George. —_— Sample Each Free by Mail ouny before usin it to bear the ex- s Sir Edward Grey Admits Justice of With 32-p. Skin Book on request, Ad. PCVSe Of Widening it London, Oct." 28, 4.06 p. m.—An em- American Demands. . - fress postcard “Cuticura, Dept. T, Bog. e | phatic denial that Great Britain was [ d ton.” Sold throughous the world | engaged In any peace negotiations, di-| London, Oct. 28, 3.55 p. m.—The for- -’ rect, or .indirect, ‘'was made by David | eign secretary, Sir Edward Grey, said 4 Lloyd-George; the minister of muni-|in the house of commons today that = tiong, in reply to a question ‘in the v Stop At Our Place and 3 the American government had the house of commons t right to demand the submission to an Mr. Lioyd-George spoke for Premier | international tribunal of verdicts of Asquith, When the question, of which the British prize court. Sir Edward Annan Bryce hdd given notice, came | made this admission on being pressed | See What You Can up. The query was as to whether un- . ns to the power given to the Ameri- | g b T : official exchanges “of views had been Buy For Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's | 57568, 5 S5n heri ot fonion | SRS Rl sl Shareert = For Merchants’s Week V. 1 d R in she v“;,wbl?y“m.t Srthe Sonc| 17 a dispute arose with the United | (IS egetable Co Clusion whe . ONE DOLLAR e Compound ‘Re- | clusion ot w olulFpHars dnd whither States” he said, “after il legal rem- b Bost Tea. e stored Her Daugh- made by oMclal representatives of any | oubtedly we should refer it to arbi- b, Coffee.... . 23c . tration.” er’ Healfl] “Certainly not,” was.:the re L Ib. Baking Powder...... 12¢ ter's i b e 1b. Peanut Butter.. B 't?xi: l;‘rei‘;n:t :l‘:nfilt‘eormimulnfi:l: "‘;?,:{5 g‘fl:‘:‘:;fi ’“’”"“’g:..a ‘i:::‘n‘l’l; “the ) . o . nm;:w;-d- Fm;rl hflu}o&nfl 2:10 ;gg:do lmflge;fi.gg‘l‘{ g’m_“:; nmu.u?n?:fl:n;'m; e ll’-N .‘Z‘E’. E 3 this Gulld hall speech that Great Bri- | MANY BREACHES OF AT S e tain’should not sheathe her sword “un- ol the ar' of . Barope ‘: < INTERNATIONAL LAW. cured.” Mr.: Lloyd-George continued: > ia E. Pinkham o Great Britain Under No Obligations to United Tea imperters Co. || |8 ML et Sl S TSR | Oleere Asremats With Gormapy. REDUCTION ON ALL : o’ eoisi &= T a3 Semtamber, 13| Lendon. Ot % 43 . st 5a- |8 ‘ward Grey, the secretary of state for A : FAY’S WORD THE ONLY TNt alvalis: x. She -handy of com- ]S 3 = Wines and Liquors £ f _EVIDENCE OBTAINED gfitfid Government Convinced the Real Story | that bt-@- oy ey “many “of Plot Has Not B“h U . iternati ll.' Gl‘t tca —_— mrthol : n was under.no obligation to ob. declarations and von- the two countries. ik F. L. FARRELL (CONCERT PIANIST) Instructor of Piano, Har. mony, Counterpoint and ] HEA il 1tf Compositi her dress e B HL T R < 3 Shos e e & DON'T MISS THIS SPECIAL SALE Beptember 5th, 1915 y. " — Mrs. . i Studio: 36 Central Building Towa. | GERMAN PAPER BELIEVES SERBIAN CAMPAIGN WON. NN NN OOV NN (] sorge Greenberger & Co. 47-53 kalin Street NWOYOYOYOYNY J\Y\Y) \‘J‘K'J‘\'/\'J_\'/\'J Upholstemg and Repairing |’ in all its branches. E CARPET LAYING at lowest prices. |‘emedy. 28, 7.42 p. m.—The Telephone 1196-3, g " {5y ung is q::ud. in com- JAMES W. BLACKBURN, 2 R Balkan sttuation 8 Stanton Avenue, GEORGE G. GRANT Undertaker and Enfialm 32 Providence St., Taftvllh mnmtfiouwu‘.yw?untm, n-n TN\

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