Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, January 26, 1916, Page 6

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bh b Pier 36 North Ri: Ticket Agents. maximum comfort at minimum cost. ‘New York to Jacksonville without and , Teturn six months. " tments of rooms ca suite with private é-‘:u"“'z -am""ufi.'i’nfi Mid-Winter Bookings Now Open Write for full informatien and beautiful descriptive literature A. W. Pyo Passenger Traffic Manager, Clyd: New York, or ‘ “Good morning, - How are.you teeling?’ quoth 'John McRoberts, .as he was brought into the Third District .| court. Tuesday morning, to answer to the ‘charge. intoxication. Oliver H.. foeling cont said: . “Well, I'm-tolerably fair, reckon. . There's not much, work, but'I get by, and I don’t owe much to any] »". In response to queries, Mc- Roberts: related in true southerndia- lect, that.if his memory served: him right he was born in 1872, for he.re- members reading 1872 in the book be Mallory R: all upen Local ; BRITISH GOVERNMENT REFUTES NEWSPAPER STATISTICS Concerning Increased Imports Holland and Scandinavia. London, Jan. 25, 8.35 p. m—In an- ticipation of tomorrow’s important de- bate in the house of commons w1 the blockade question, the Eritish govern- ment today issued a four column statement challenging and- refuting statistics recently published in the Daily Mail and-the Morning Post con- cerning what those newspapers have declared the hugely increased imports into the neutral countries of Holland and Scandinavia since the beginning of the war. The statément is confined to minute and figures covering all_the. ground . dealt with by the Daily Mail and the Morning Post for the pur- Pose of showing numerous cases in Which errors have crept into the fig- ures, or certain circumstances ignored, all of which tend to the great inflation S€ the Agures as given by these jour- n into Beyond this no attempt has been made to draw any conclusions from the figures given, neither is there a hint of any change in the government policy. In fact, despite very decided expressions of opinion heard on many sides that the government may decide o declare an actual blockade nothing official is known and it is regarded still possible that the government may only determine to tighten the present system to cargoes likely to reach coun- tries at war against the entente pow- ers. Meriden.—The school carpenter fis still engaged in changing the opening Girection of some of the doors at the North Cogny Street school. As the doors to the class rooms opened in- ward they were considered a menace 0 the safety of the children in case of fire and were ordered to be changed so that they would swing outward. tm‘ t.h;l:n:lgyhneord- tv.rludn destroy - 3 3 ed in. ome -outside Hamden DIVIDRND RES TR 20 City, Virginia. He had not tasted in- U. 8. STEEL COMMON | toxicating. drink for two months until Monday, had drank too much, and Total Earnings for Past Three Months | therefore was guilty of the charge of Were $51,232,788. intoxication. He said he.would prob- ably have drank even more If some New York, Jan. 25—United States |felicw bad Boe taken & pint of whiskey mm oui of his et soon Steel common shares were restored to | 0ul of his pocket soon after he came their regular dividend. status of five |OUT & Canal eruet oo o0 e vears per cent. today when the directcrs|of his life he abstained from intoxicat- ¢ deck a quarterly dis- | ing drink. e < Addressing Chief of Police Brown, bursement of 1 1-4 per cent. out of | Addressing Chief o earnings for the last quarter of 191 “Chief, don’t you think about three Total earnjngs of 351,232,782 for the|vears at the state work house, would three months were the largest for any | be a fair disposition of this case? The similar period in the history of the |change might do him good. corporation, exceeding the previous| Chief Brown: “Tt would be a good record, made in the second quarter of [ idea, for he is not much good around 1907, by $5,729,083. here.” - & : The statement of earnings, no less| McRoberts inferposed: “Judge, I'm than the action on the dividend, was|able and willing to work, and I can get in line with popular expectations, fore- | plenty of work around here.” casts_having ranged from $48,000,000 | Jud; “Just the kind of a man to $55.000,000, although the latter fi- | wanted, and there is plenty of work at ure was regarded as rather extriva- | the state farm." gant. That some fair rate of dividend |- - McRobert: was there eight vears would be declared was foreshadowed [agd; sent down by vour honor, and T in the recent decision of the corpora-|am not hankering for another trip. I tion to increase the wages of its un- [spent nearly a month in the jail at skilled laborers by 10 per cent. and {New. London, sent there from Ston- the offering of the common stock to|ington for intoxication. 1 don't ap- employes on the profit sharing ‘plan at | preciate the hospitality of the state. I 85, have promised mygelf several times not The corporation’s financial position | to drink any mw-we, but my appetite may be judged from the fact that it|proved to be stronger than my mind. no whas cash in banks amounting to|Give me another try, judge?”’ $105,000,000, while its surplus for the| Judge: “Have yoj money to pay a last quarter of 1915 amounts to.over | fine and costs?” 323,000,000 as atainst’a deficit of $5,- | McRoberts: “No, not in hand just 606,00 in the corresponding quarter!now; I have 300 pounds of bayberries of the previous year. that T can sell for $3 and that will help Total earnings for 1915 aggregated|some. /1 suppose you will do by me $130,351,296, compared with $31,746,- | a5 well'as you can, and hope it will be 518 in 1914. On the basis of returns | the minimum, $2 and costs, a total of for the last quarter of 1915 and with | $4.80. orders already in hand, it Is believed | “That's the steel corporation’s earnings for|the judge, “and vou can settle to the 1916 will run into unprecedented fig- | satisfaction”of Chief Brown.” ures. ‘Very ‘good,” said McRoberts, “Tll United States Steel common was the | pay the DIl without farther presen- all-pervading feature of the stock | tation. Goed luck to you.” market, with an overturn -of about| “Alpert Lewis, a resident of Volung e corréct amount,” said ter of the day’s total operations. Steel opened at a substantial advance over the previous day's close, made a max- imum quotation of 85 1-2 and closed at 84 1-2, a net gain of a full point. Following the dividend announce- ment and publication of the quarterly statement, bids of as high as 36 were made for the stock at private sale, Presumably by some belated bears. PREMIER BRIAND. DEFENDS GAS, HEARTBURN, INDIGESTION OR 122,000 shares or more than one-quar- | town, who is allowed a special sum for his support by his home, meander- ed into Rhode Island Monday, and was arrested as a common drunkard by Chief of Police Charles A. Fuller, of the town of Richmond. Lewis was ar- raigned before Judge _Williams ~and pleaded not guilty to the charge, as he had not been arrested for intoxication in many -months. It was - explained that_the laws of Connecticut and the laws of Rhode Island differed in that respect, and_that in the latter. state A SICK STOMACH “PAPE'S DIAPEPSIN” ENDS ALL STOMACH DISTRESS IN FIVE MINUTES. Time it! Pape's Diapepsin will di- gest anything you eat and overcome a sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach surely within five minutes. If your meals don't fit comfortably, or what you eat lies like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have Beartburn, that is a sign of indiges- on. Get from your pharmacist a fifty- eent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a dose just as soon as you can. There will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, no stomach gas or heart- burn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating head- aches, dizziness or intestinal griping, This will all go, and, besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nuuseous odors. Pape’s Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because it takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn’t there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is waiting for you at any drug store. These large fifty-cent cases contain enough “Pape’s Diapepsin” to keep the. entire family free from stomach disorders and indigestion for many months. It belongs in vour home. — e S AHERE 1o me mav tern Connecticut equai to ietin for Dusiness resuits. eas he Bui- THE FRENCH CENSORSHIP | there. was justification for ‘the €harge vf Common drunkard, for. three drunks Made an Impassionéd Spesch’ in the [ wilhin six weeks, without any arrest. Chamber of Deputies: Lewis was sentenced to six months in the state worlkhouse. Paris, Jan, 25, 5.20 . m—Premier| .A local young fellow twenty years of Briand in making an impassioned | a%e was Defore the court on a charge speech in the chamber of deputies to- | 0f intoxication for a first time, and day in defense of the censorsship by | Pleaded guilt: Judge Williams after the French government encountered |l nearnest talk for the young man to interruptions and at one time lively |Tend his ways, continued the case to Drotests. Friday of next week, and the ygung Paul Deschanel, president of the fellow.was released on probation. chamber, was obliged to request the T deputies’to respect freedom of speech try of John Allen, before the premier could resume his into dissipation and crime address. urprise to his friends. He s M. Briand's assertian that the press |[now a fugitive from justice having es- bureau, which was ridiculed and scoff- | caped last Saturday from the Rhode ed at, was composed of men -who had |Island state prison where ke was serv- been 'wounded in- war brought forth ing .a four ars’ term for burglary objections from all parts of the cham- | committed -in Westerly two yers ago. ber interspersed with the exclamations | The time was when young Allen, he is Since when now urder thirty, was an excellent Premier Briand said it must not be | amateur baseball player and one of the forgotten that France was at war. The most_opular young fellows here or government, he told the members of | hereabouts. One day when Allen was the chamber, wanted expianations sod making a quick run from first to sec- as to know what policy to pursue as|ond bhase, he was struck in the head regards the censorship during the war. { by a thrown ball and rendered uncon- - — scious. The ‘skull’ was not fractured Thompsonville—The boards of offi- | but there was consussion of the brain. cers of Mercedes Assembly, Catholic| Scon after this accident there came Ladies of Columbus, was ‘installed on |a change in the life of Allen. He took Monday evening in Knights of Colum- [to drink. committed potty thefts, until bus hall on High street. The officer in | he broadened ont into a full-fiedged charge of the work was Miss Charlotte | burclar and highwayman, directly op- AL Followay, the state president of the fposite to what he was prior to having order, of New London. assisted by Mrs. [been struck by the baseball while J. 3. Carroll of New Haven. while plaving on the Vose field. = This < incident was never written into his record of crime. If it were he would have probably been treated for mental derangement in a state hospital some time ago. His every act in his career of crime indicates sordered brair: as all were clumsily, committed, 50 much so that they-were readily. d Children Ory FOR FLETCHER’S he oqli builds it. see what is back of it ishows in the The Inside of the Hotel Is the part that counts with the guest. The architect doesn’t make a hotel, he only (designs it The builder doesn’t make a hotel, , Dor’t sclect your stopping place from the .,mm'dr.,‘ Look behipd_ the front wall and ;fln cuccess of the Hotel Martinique , i ue back 'of it, which lobby, at the desk, in ' ithe restaurants aiid in the roome. tefiect the personality back ,even the bellboys ‘tected. and, so far as known, there is no crime -he committed for which he has. not been- legally - punished. (The recent real estate transferrs in the the’ office of Town Clerk Everett E. Whiople. are James Ferraro to Jennie Ferraro house and Iot at Tow- er-and Joshua streets: Franklin D. Lawson to Emelia Benic de Gerrano, two lots at Muasicolony; Charles P. Ec- clestone et al., to Thomas Wills ef ux.. lot-in_extension of , Spruce street: Frankiin D. Lawson to Laura V. Z. Owens. widow of Herbert Owens, formerly of New London, four lots at Musicolony: Angela M. Guarino to Pi- etro. Di Perri et ux., four lots in_Oak street;* Charles B. Erickson to Cath- Here’s New Vigor For Overworked Stomachs Hundreds of tho best drugglsts who have been, in the drug business long enough to have their own -opinion of the best way of selling medicines, say the plan adopted by Mi-o-na, the great dyspepsia remedy, ls the fdirest they ever heard of. The Mi-o-na people dor’t believe that a medicine ought: to be paid for uniess it does the user some good. ~ And-mo Mi-o-na js always sold under a positive guerantee to relleve dyspepsia or to refund the money. You Simply leave 50 cents on deposit’ with don’t preach prices your druggist and if, after vou have # used the box of Mi-o-na. you decide rooms from $1.50 ip.' that It has done $1.50dp. have Yo @onie 20 T hiin s8 Nnt B Wil ur money. v 9t Deopile can tell Now they of stomach agonies mfion.'mf_‘ Mann . to Thomas 5y Judge |1 _pretty. well! ficmh X cated in a tenement in Main street. She hag hardly settled -when - Chief Brown informed her that she must leave the town of £ warning to get out of town, but to face the.threaténed proceedings. Miss. Ellon F. Pondieton, a nativ of Weaterly, and president of Welissley collesge, - has -announced that in Farnum Greene and srandss” of the late Deacon Alvin Greene, both former | residents of Westerly, has been. elected | president .of- .the board of tees to | Succeed Bishop Lawrenge. Pen- dleton also announced a gift of $100,- | 000 from s _graduate of the college to- | ward the fund for a new administra- tion building. ~ The donor does not want her name known at present. This is the first large gift since the close of -the campaign for. the rebuilding and restoration fund and is also the initial gift towards the praposed new admin- istration building. .- Miss Pendleton re- turned recently from a western trip, visiting. alumnae. Local Laconics. Jewish tag day, Thursday. ° Alice Fannie Broderick has sold to Altana J. Davis, for $2370, the stock and fixtures of store in Beach street. The Rhode Island British: Relief so- ciety with headquarters in Providence, acknowledged the receipt of - articles from the Westerly branch. Rhode Tsland has assumed as its share of the total cost of the George ‘Washington memorial, to be erected in ‘Washington, the sum of $50,000. The advicory council of the state has sent out appeals for funds. The. total cost of the memorial will be $2,500,000. The Joslin-Lena company has com- pleted ‘the foundation for a one-story frame and brick bungalow, in Beach street for the George C, Moore com- pany. . It will be 28x49 feet, with five rooms ard. bath, steam heat, one fire- place, hard pine floors, beam ceiling in the living room, and electric light. STONINGTON Pequot Council Instalation—illuminat- ing Gas May be Furnished Borough —Burial of Mrs. Denison Wilsox. Elias_B. Hinckley, judge of the court of proabte of the town of Ston- ington has for yeers 'made weekly visits to Pawcatuck on Tuesday after- noons. Those in. Paucatuck appreci- ate the court coming to them thereby saving expense. Pequot Council Officers. Past Regent Willlam E. Fanning of East Hartford, presided at the inatal- lation of these officers - of Pequot Council, Royal Arcanum: Dr. James H. Weeks, regent; Henry Scholl, vice regent; Henry B. Noyes, orator; J. W. Chamberlain, past regent; Judge Elias B. Hinckley, secretary; Warden Cor- nelius B. Crandall, treasurer; Thomas | Wilkinson, chaplain; T. W. Hyde,| guids; Samuel ‘Wood, warden; Will- | iam P. Leavens, sentry; - Henry A.| Mulled, John H. Ryan, Carl A. Koeib, trustees; James H. Weeks, represent- ative to grand lodge; J. W. Chamber- lain, alternate. Stonington Pointers. Now there is to be an effort to have illuminating gas introduced in the borough of ‘Stonington. Provided a specific proportion of the cost of con- struction and production is guaranteed, | the service would be furnished by the | Westerly Light and Power Co. = | Charles H. Davis of Mystic, read an | interesting paper to the Stonington N view of the fact that this is the “Centennial™ - Year of the formation of Mutual Savings Banks in America, and following the line of our . action in 1913, relieving depositors .in- a local “School Savings System,” we address the fol- lowing T0 THE RISING GENERATION OF NORWICH AND VICINITY: Any person under twenty-one years of age making an /INITIAL deposit, subject to own control, of ONE DOLLAR or more, in The Norwich Savings Society during the period covered by this offer, will receive a regular Savings Bank Book of this Society with the deposit credited thereon, to which amount ONE DOLLAR will be immediately added. Further deposits may be made at the convenience of the depositor. If there are no withdrawals from such account for a period of two years, the entire account with its added deposits and increase by divi- dends, ‘will become the absolute property of the depositor, subject only to the rules governing all deposits. If drafts are made on the account within the two years the ONE DOLLAR added thereto will be forfeited. The sole object of this offer is to encourage the habit of saving by the young, and it is limited to one thousand such accounts. As in the instance above referred to, this will be without cost to the Society and the thousand dollars has been deposited with us for the purpos Latin at the Plainfield High school | George Brelsford wepe fishing through Do)lu‘h.fl:h HLLLE S during ‘the absence of Miss Josephine | the jce at Mdbsup pond Tuesday and rs, ur es of New London Armstrong, Whose mother died this| ., it o fine mess of pickerel. is visiting at the home of her mother, week. rs. John Mercer. Miss Dorothy Doolan has returned |* Mrs. Theophil Racine returned to her Fished Through the lce. 3 John Newton, John A. Killips and | (o NCW York after a few days' stay at |home in Dayville after & brief stay at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander | the home of her son, F. I Racine. Travel club, in the borough Tuesday faternoon. ‘The subject was British | Studios. | Degree work was exemplified Tues- | day evening at the session of Asylum | lodge of Free Masons. £l About fifty school children are af- | fected with whooping cough in the village of Paucatuck. Dr. C. F. Cong- don of Mytle, health officer for the town of Stonington is investigating. Nina_Cuncil, Knight of Columbus is planning to hold a fair. The Sewing society of the Woman's Relief Corps met with Mrs. Lucy A. Tracey in Pearl strest Tucsday even ng. H Mrs. Carl B. Seamon is visiting rei- atives in Derby. 4 Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bingham wili soon move from Pawcatuck %nd reside in the borough, corner of Main and Harmony streets. Mrs. Abbie P. Wilcox, widow of Denison Wilcox, who died Friday in New London at the home of her granddaughter, Mrs. Rohert. Korb, was buried in Stonington cemetery. The deceased was a ~native of the borough. Mrs. Asa Hilton Breaks Arm in Two Places—Henry Roberts ~ Injured— High School Closed During Mrs. Armstrong’s Funeral, | Mrs. Asa Hilton broke her arm' Monday noon at her home on Lawton Heights. ‘She was in a hurry to pre- pare the dinner and in. some way fell, causing her injury. Dr. Arthur A. Chase, who was called, found her wrist broken in two places. The, bones were set by Dr. Chase. Wound ' Required: Three _Stito! Henry Roberts painfully’ cut ‘wrist while at' work in.the No. 2 sp ning room Tuesday morning at 9. o'clock. He was winding one of the frames when his Wrist came in contact | with -a s point, cutting it badly. He went to Dr. Chase, Who took three stitches in the wound. | Scheol Closed for Funeral. | The - Plainfield High school closed ! school_sessions at 11.45 o'clock Tu day owing to-the funeral services of Mrs, Edward of the French and La this school, Miss Josephi: ‘Miss Annie Dayon is _the if 1t e - a ‘money nm 0. O K s aseit of the g 's fascinati; h".lk stomach. iy re than tenal "Tee "Mi-0- e KoY TSk mors there 1s in ite: e or any lemd- per- e R e Ao under & positive guar- | m, atfer being confined to Weeks because of When she fell on F el e Eawten sl Harsad i e lent Tacant by the ot Wil- Amnn,( iocal ialidm fn Sacwion og were Mr. E ames Moreland, Joseph Fournler, Miss Mary Lavigne, MMra, Lister and 'm Mrs. James Ridings, Mrs. i Arsenauit and Mrs, Buckley. i Men are repairing the road on Rall- Plainfeld. street. The street at t point is in very bad condition. . Miss Hallow s tahoning Fewnch and | ¥ 5 The Great American Smoke —“Bull” Durham Fall in line with hundreds of thousands of red-blooded | smokers of the good old U.S.A. Smoke-the: ci tobacco | that's been an American institution for three generations—*“Bull” Durham. The rich, relishy, star-spangled taste of “Bull”’ puts the national spirit of get-up-and-hustle into your hand-rolled. cigarette. “Bull” is the freshest, snappiest, liveliest of smokes: GENUINE ‘BULL DURHAM SMOKING .TOBACCO = f“Roll youn own” with “Bull” Durham and you'll find far i greater satisfaction in. your clfneflk than :_';'E""'f” !:’f you ever did before. Made of the richest, aach &e - mildest. leaf grown. “Bull” has a delightful mellow - sweet flavor found in no other tobacco. And it%s aromatic fragrance is supremely unique. Men who never smoked cigarettes before are now “rolling their own™ with “Bulk’ Durham. FREE & Booklet, show- md"Ron Ym“o-_:’w cigarette papers, ':m's';ufil;.naa.fin.m ‘address is .S, request. T e Hetne clectricity is to lighting. We guaran. the very best PLUMBING WORK xpert workmen at the fariest by crices. . Ask us for plans and prices. J° F. TOMPKINS 67 West Main' Street Robert J. Cochranz GAS FITTING, ALUMBING, STEAM FiTTING, 10 West Main Street, Norwich, Con:. Agent for N. B. O.'Sheet Packiug. T. F. BURNS . Heating and Flumbing 92 Franklin Street IRON.GASTINGS FURNISHED PROMPTLY B THE VAUGHN FOUNDRY CO No. 11 to 25 Ferry Strest COAL AND LUMBER GOAL free Burzing Kinds.and Lehigh ALWAYS IN 3TOCK A. D. LATHROF Office—cor. Market and Shetucket Sts, Telephone 463-13 The office of John A. Mor- gan & Son has been removed to the -Davenport building, 10-20 West Main street, the old Elevator building. Adam’s Tavern 1861 offer t: the public ine finest standard brands of Beer of Eurppe und America: Bobemuan, Pilsuer, ‘Culmbach Bavarian Beer, bass, Pale and Burton Muers Scotch Ale, Guinness' Dublin Siout, C. & C. Imported Ginger Ale, Bunker Hill P. B. Ale, Frank Jones Nourish- ing Ale, Sterling Bitfer Ale, Anheuser. Gudweiser, Schlitz and Pabst. A. A. ADAM, Norwich Tewn. Telephone 447-12. DR. A. J. SINAY - Dentist Rooms 18-19 Alice Buildirey, Norwiek Phone 1177-8 | ‘Overhauling and Repair Work of all 'kinds on 3 AUTOMOBILES, CARRIACGES, WAGONS, TRUCKS \nnd CARTS Mechanizal Repairs, Painting, Trim- ming, Upholstering and Wood Werk. Slacksmithing in all i . St & Clark Corp 507 tc 515 North Main St. Fur and Fur Lined Coats To clean up season’s stock have cut the prices. Might have your size. I in the market take a look at them. “Own a Montana ‘Robe for the Aute.” THE L L CHAPMAN C0. 14 Bath Street,_ Nonné.‘CL American House Special Rates to Theatrs Troupes, Traveling Men; Ete. Livery Ccnnection, = Shetucket Street, FARREL ‘& SANDERSON, Props

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