Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 9, 1916, Page 6

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5 wtfgfl o 6 NORWICH BULLETIN, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1916 BREAKS INTO WESTERLY BANK But Rural Carrier Eugene Wheeler Was Steering His Car Out of Danger— Getting Ready for General Caucus—De- fence to Begin Evidence in Mansfield Trial Today—Ex- plosion at Light and Power Plant. Eugene Wheeler made a determined but unsuccessful attempt to break and away National Bank in ht, Saturday afternoon, he third to make the attempt bank was formed, but the attempts were with thiev while Mr. Wheeler's w broad dayli ing the th b since two He 'is the free 1 delivery on the Hopkinton City route s automobile in his busi- Sature he was nearing the away post office and coming along . pretty lively clip. A large tour- ich contained some ladies men was coming in the op- n. Mr. Wheeler believ- t to the post office be- approaching car could get 1d he deliberately drove his au- 1 the path of the coming > to the lefi side of the road. zed that a crash was im- ‘this he drove his , over the curb- machine came to ceeded up the three of the bank and car W d gentl »osite direc buld steps to the en hed in the f Wheeler utomobi but dam- 1 and so wa o big tourin; n the damage and the occupants commended Mr. Wheeler for the way he manipulated his auto in order to prevent a_collision, but insisted that > was wholly to blame for the acci- Wheeler ma an excuse d made no attempt to place the me anwhere except with himself. ¢ 1 he miscalculated; he thought ce before him, and seeing that, he did_the tather than endan- others, he too the s mighty glad the post ¢ Rev. Samuel H. Davis, known politi- cally as “Sam” Davis, invited his po- iitical followers or some he believes ) be n favor of his nomination for presentative from the Second West- ly ict, to assemble in his law office turda; after sunset, to lay t 1 of campaign to be adopted out the votes favorable to ore Backache for Her. na Green, Ind., rom k . Gaskill, red harp - pains k until I could get up without aid. seemed to be the cause relie them too highly iy for kicney s can a, sW Natural and Colored Is made to stand hard usage, constant walking, scufing, the tramping of children. Kyanize will stand all this—and more. You ean’ move heavy furniture without marring Kanizs Kyanize s wearproof, heelproof and spotproof. Your money back it doesn’t do all we claim, Buy a 10c Brush and we give | you a 15¢ can for free trial. THE HOUSEHOLD Bulletin Building, 74 Franklin St. Auto Delivery. Telephone 531-4. American House Skecial Rates to Theatre Troupes, Traveling Men, Etc. very Connection, 8hetucket Street, ARREL & SANDERSON. Props WILLIAM C. YOUNG ceessor to STETSON & YOUNG CARPENTER and BUILDER Best work and materials prices by skilled labor. at right him at the caucus to be held next Thursday evening. “Sam” Davis has been for several years a member of the republican town committee and one of the strongest advocates of standing by the nominees of the comm e. There is also promise of a lively contest over the nomination of repre- sentative from the First district, where Francis G. Haswell has been endorsed by the committee. His opponent will be Joseph T. Mu former rep- resentative,. but who was succeeded two years ago by Has , and after Murphy had receiv committee endorsement. The general caucus will be held in the town hall next T day evening and the first bdsiness will be the nom- ination of a state senator. It is u derstood that Senator Louis W. Ar nold is not a candidate for renomina- tion, and that Rep: Albert H. Langworthy will In the Same h: cuses of the F sentative district De uce 1a the ond T Nominations will be made and then the ball begin, the polls remaini 10 o’clock, in order to cannot be at caucus at opportunity to vote. The be by check list and it that a larger vote will be at any previous caucus The Rhode lIslanders who attended the Military Training camp at Platts- burg, which includes Sergeant Bur- k, of Westerly, w be reimb: the federal government fo3 oad transportation, car fare and subsistence in camp, but nothing ch man in the senio; division from Rhode Island wi fore get back about $40. Th about 18,500 men all told entitled participate in the refund. are to The superior court for Washington county, Judge Rathbun and a juty, will reconvene in West morn- ing and the trial of Charles H. Mans- field, charged with m in causing the deaths of J and Oli Martell, in connecti the railroad wreck at Br rd be re- sumed. The defense will begin this morning, and among ters connected with the ca tempt to show that what at Bradford, from th W defence, did occur in othe a that the signal system i ble. The greater part for the state are rail they were all evide nesses. The n these witne: in their line, in Westerly of th Telephone 60 West Main St. mencement of pense to the nd it is said rensive Rabbi Joseph H ssisted by Samu Golab »nement An ipe explo; at t nd Power cc ilding at 5 o’ was 1 o’clock to supply STONINGTON “und Raised FO! Hughes and Fair- banks Banner—Clergymen Unite in Aid of Armenian Relief—Addressed | Dr. Ussher. A fund has b scription for the r of the ches and Fairbanks The week of October Sth to 14th is National Home Craft Week. The coooo That is the week Our showing of Quaker some very dainty effects and 50c a vard. Drapery Filet Laces in a sonie designs, in the new 75¢, 85c and 89c a yard. THE PORTEOUS & QUAKER CRAFT LACE ecru—Home Craft Week prices are 30c, 45¢ and in white—Home Craft Week prices are ed there. Craft Lace inchudes in white, cream and | so neat wide range of hand- drapery ecru shades | I your MITCHELL CO. THE orteous & o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o e s o The week of October 9-14 is National Home Craft Week. Our Drapery Department will be ready for you with mer- chandise and ideas. We will show you the latest vogue in draperies or furnish patterns for you to use in making them yourself. Watch our window from today on. Note the ideas suggest- Then visit the Drapery Department on the third floor. Here are just a few of the splendid merchandise offerings: QUAKER LACE CURTAINS Lace Curtains in beautiful all-over designs, al- Home Craft Week price $1.59 a pair. Lace Curtains in designs suitable for any room weaves in new and handsome designs—Home Craft Week price $1.89 a pair. itchell The week of October 9th to 14th is National Home given over to beautiful home furnishing. ] il il Ll »’Wl cluny effects in white and cream— home, including colonial blocks, filet pair. PORTEOUS & MITCHELL CO. THE PORTEOUS & to the sixth anniversary exer- he Tierney Cadets of New London, Sunday afternoon, October 29. The Sacred Heart Tierney League of Groton has invited St. Mary's Tier- invited cises of ney Cadets of Stonington to the first ann ary, next Sunday afternoon. With Cornel B. Crandall, warden of Stoningtonh borough as the demo- cratic candidate for senator from the Shoestring district, and Frank = H. Hinck judge of the town court of s the opposing candidate, triffie more activity in ics than under ordin- es. Home Missionary slected these offi Ryon, president; Mrs. vice presiaent; Mr: dall, secretary Silas P. Holmes, Mrs. Dewhurst and Chesebro directors. s Scouts who have re- from national Awin r'rmxnin::, Sdward Gilmore aret Susman, of Capia Is- Philippines, told of her work in the section, at the the prayer meeting in ptist church, Sunday ev- ‘g BRIEF STATE NEWS aterbury—The congregation of the Lutheran church celebrated | y anniversary of the of the church Sunday. for the erection brick building to ten tenements and two stores ed 0 P. Zlotink, at the office ding Inspector McLaughlin last permi new four-story Hartford—The various fire depart- U ations _are giving consid- to - Fire Chief Jchn C. aper on motor pumping en i he read at the fire cnief: nson' Paime Pro & ’ff se the b Waterbury—As soon as the pre: f1 he stEetess and trustees of the Connecticut vend the border: list Convention sign the e necessary documents, the possession nize For Armen [of All Souls Universalist-Unitarian R Dwight C. Stone | Church property by St. Jehn's parish ien, George B. Marsron a > 1 will be an accomplished fact. ford, representing tha four in ¢m]r~-fnm»»lm",7l,f{‘: Sauren New Haven—Among those entering ng to raise a fund to aid the war suf- ferers among the Armenfans In S At a meeting of these 1 wa soutlined by Dr. C. D. missionary to Van, Turkey, that will be in accord h the proclamation is sued by President Wilson in this con- néctio An_organizati formed with Warden Co: dall as chairman, Miss FLaura secretary, Mgzs. Harry H. Doty sistant secretary, and Fverett Pendleton, treasurer. The. pastors will act as a committee on progr: and arrangements for the mass meeting, which is to be held in Borough hall on Sunday evening, October 29, Dr. James H. Weeks has been chosen chairman of the publicity committee and John W. Chamberlain chairman of the com. mittee to select ushers. Breakwater Spray. Miss Gladys MacGovern sang a solo in the Congregational church at morning service. Dr. Clarence D. Ussher left Stoning- ton Saturday morning for Montclair and Jersey City, where he will deliver addresses Sunday in besialf of the war sufferers among the Armenians. St,'Mary’s Tierney Cadets have been need have no fears. By crowned or extradted A STRICTLY SANITARY OFFICE charge for consultation. DR. F. C. JACKSON 203 MAIN ST. Lady Asistant Don’t You Want Good Teeth? Does the dread of -the dental chair cause you to neglect them? our method you can have your BSOLUTELY WITHOUT PAIN. CONSIDER THESE OTHER FEATURES You teeth filled, STERILIZED INSTRUMZINTS CLEAN LINEN ASEPTIC DRINKING CUPS LOWEST PRICES CONSISTENT WITH BEST WORK If these appeal to you, call for examinatior and estimate. Ne DR. D. J. COYLE DENTISTS (Successors to the King Dental Co.) NORWICH, CONN. PA M to8P. M. Telophone '11) T the | Wellesley the pa college from New Haven t week was Miss Beatrice Can- dee Stevens, who is the great-grand- daughter of the late Rev. F. Smith, author of My Country 'Tis of Thee.” Dr. Smith was formerly trus- | tee of Wellesley college. Old Saybrook—Thomas Kerwin took Charles ' O'Brien, asged 7 to Haw- thorne Home, Rosary hill ew York state, for treaument last week. Mr. O’Brien has been in feeble health the last 20 years and has been confined to his home more or less all that time. He came here from New York over 60 5 Mining in Southeastern Alaska. The value of the total mineral out- put of southeastern Alaska for 1915 exceeded $6,000,000 and was distribut- ed as follows: pany began work. Trails and roads were built, ore bodies were opened up, a mill was erected, and electric power was brought in. One June 7 the mill began to crush ore. The Tung- sten Mines company started work on May 1 and by the later part of July had completed a mill of 300 tons daily its capacity and was rapidly opening main ore body, disclosing a lode much as sixty feet wide. This act r has greatly stimulated prospecting, and tungsten has been found in a belt 15 miles long. The ore bodies, which have been vis- ited by Adolph Knopf, of the United States Geological Survey, department | of the interior, are remarkable and in fact are of a kind not mentioned by the recognized authorities on ore de- posits as a commerical source of tur sten. The ore consists of s sociated mainly_ with garnet | and quartz. The general c | is granite, but in it are ttered masses of limestone whici came mineralized at the time when the granite cooled from a molten condi- tion. The fact that the tungsten-bearing mineral—scheelite—is associated with garnet is a great help to the p: tor and all bodies of garnet rock s tered through the great granite mas: es of the eastern Sierra slope bor ing Owens valley are being ca examined and panned for scheelite. PUBLIC OWNERSHIP An amount eeding measured Investment of other ctate b and i panies alone in the railw: according to I $2,500,000,000 | savings and 1ce com- ¥y securitie ureau of F tatisti icago. id about $1,265,000, 1d bond: of thet tments in governmen Yy, municipal, public s nd oth- er bonds of any description; these in- vestments together, next to lo d by real estate, rising by far the cts behind these banl wing of public inte probl is especially ing in view of a statement just is- sued by the four railway brotherhoods that and not the public are owners of raily shares and t ks coun- est inte: therefore the “public” has little inter est in the railway prohlem. Depositors in savings banks have interest more vital than have thos THIS TROTTEUR FOR | THE FIRST COLD DAY | Gold covas .$5,400,000 CODper s ey L as A . 300,000 Silver, marble, lead and gyp- SUM ..oeoi covececcecsone 300,000 Most of the gold came from lodes in the vicinity of Juneau; most of the copper was obtained from lodes in the Ketchikan district; the silver was de- rived almost entirely from the gold ores, though silver-bearing galena oc- curs at several places; most of the marble was quarried in the Ketchikan district; lodes carrying lead ores are known at anumber of places, but none of them have yet made any notable production, and the gypsum was min- ed on Chicagof Island. The above statements are included in a report entitled “Mining Develop- ment in Southeastern Alaska,” by The- odore Chapin, recently issued by the United States Geological Survey, de- partment of the interior, as part of Bulletin 642. The report describes the recent development at each of the mines and prospects visited by the survey geologists and gives illustra- tions by maps and figures of the lode deposits and gome of the important geologis relations Important Tungsten Deposits of Inyo County, Cal. The great demand for tungsten has recently led to an extremely energetic development of the tungsten deposits cight miles west of Bishop, Inyo coun- ty ,Cal. The deposits were discovered in 1913, but remained practically un- known until the spring of 1916. On Avpril 7 the Standard Tungsten com- | Setting the Pace. Durable navy serge cut with long, straight lines, a good walking length for the skirt and a hip smartly em- broidered in metal threads, is featured for this suit. Nothing could be morc modish than ths deep cuffs and collar of gray squirrel. The wide sailor is navy velvet. OF RAIYWAY SECURITIES | L e QUAKER CRAFT LACE CURTAINS Lace Curtains in dainty designs for parlor or dining room including filet lace weaves in hades—Home Craft cream or drapery ecru sl Week price $2.49 a pair. Handsome and Dainty Curtains for the parlor, a broad selection of designs, remarkable for their beauty—Home Craft Week price $4.50 a MITCHELL CO. dependent oh any other class of bank, | railway stocks and bonds and is en-|Ownea by railways . 69,354,781 because savir banks in a pre-emin- |dangered- when railway welfare is|In hands of publi . 6,011,404,928 irvestors in railway| subordinated to either unreasonable It is this six bi .1< of <A(y ck added In 1915 the deposi-|wage demands or unreasonable rate|to §9,7 €02 bonds that is own- nks included | deductions. banks, insurance com- r over 11 per| Besides 11,250,000 depositors in sav- and other irvest nd ren- of populati of the TUnited banks, there were, in 1914, 39,- al to millions f our pépula- Stntu< every ne of whom was vitally 73 life insurance policies in force frcm hostile railway s ies upon which his|in the United States, representing ov- s’ interest in railway s founded. Of all se-|er 40 p cent of the population, ly apart from the direct sets of these banks|though of course, one person often;ec n'\nnn flx;m ience of in 3, mptroller's report|holds more than one policy. How vital | woman and child on hea showed 41.8 per cent were railway|an fInterest these millions have in{the most vital or d bonds, against 25.0 per cent|railways was shown by a competent |life—Boston New. and trust companies: 18.7 per|estimate in 1907 that 21 per cent of et RS e cent for state banks and 6.1 per cent|total assets of life insuran~e compan- . for private ba ies were rallway securitics. Were Unanswered Questions. The 1915 o report srouvs all|that ratio still to prevail, the 1914 in-| Still among the unansweded ques- together. Put on reason-|[vest ment in' railways would exceedtlons of the war: Where dg the mi mption that about the same|$1,500,000,000. Even if life and acci-|Siles from the anti-Zeppelin guns prevailed as in 1913, the follow-|dent insurance companies held no|Come down?—Boston Herald. is compa of deposits, as-|more than in 1907, they, with the — and T ecurities held in benks would hold todsy over $2,110,-| Bridgeport—Mr. rs. B. W. g Browne of idgeport have received a cablegram from their son, Louis Ed- Deposits A}»sets_ sccur_mes gar Browne, from Bombay, India, stat- :54'%?’%%'1 $ 847, ing that Mr. Browne is on his way to s _? el T8, Saloniki, Grecce, to report war con- 204,396 5873120 37 B Moot ook 12,614,485 16,008,444 ;1,264 Indi. esopotomia, and - Arabia, in the interests of ., se two American ne papers. ties equal 17.0 per| The brotherhood statement that the O;l[.\' in savings banks|roads themselves and not the invest- nst 10.0 per cent for all|ors are the real owners of railway = cent of iotal assets| shares is best answered by the e CRildren Cry cent for all banks. One- | state Commerce Commission figures e foundation upon which | for 1914: s % FOR FLETCHER'S r thus composed of | Total capital stock ......$3630759,704| S A ST ORI A MERIT always wins. ZIRA has won its way to the top in four years on Merit Alone. “Retter tobacco made ZIRA famous.” TOBACC Isn’t it reason- able that ZIRA is worth atrialbyyou? Th Mild fsggflggg iy, BETTER O MADE THEM FAMOUS e est Cigarette e e

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