Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, July 24, 1917, Page 8

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£ & ECONOMICA Whole W heat. More Nutritious than Bread KRUMBLES fs the whole of the wheat with all of the protein, the phosphates, the mineral KRUMBLES is the first wheat food that gives you zll the delicious flavor of the wheat—a sweetness that grows saltsandbran—thethings richer and richer the the doctors sayall grow= more you chew it. ing children need. One Cent a Dish for Meeting of White Cross At a special meeting on Monday evening the members of White Cross council, No. 13, Knights of Columbus, completed arrangements for the local campaign for the million dollar war tund being raised throughout the country by the Knights of Columbus for the welfare of our soldiers in the training camps and in the trenches. Nearly a thousand dollars is ex- pected to be raised in this locality and the following teams have been ap- pointed: Central District — John Carney, chalrman; Daniel Shea, William Har- rington, Dr’ T. A. Crowley, Michael C. Higgins, W. Jordan, William Bob- sei William Kay, Joseph C. Bland, William McKugh. (Andrew Caples, James Quinn, M. H. Shea, Edward Mc- Kay, Paul Bellefleur, James Madden, Charles Drew, William Carberry, John J. Foley, Riordan. Laurel Hill—John J. Corkerv, H. Desmond, John Counihan, Daniel Hin- chey, J6seph Desmond. Greeneville—Charles _ 0. Murphy, Willlam McClafferty, Dr. E, J. Bro- CAMPAIGN STARTS District Committees Were Appointed Last Night at Special Dollars to be Raised Locally for Huge War Fund. P Council—Nearly a Thousand phy, Cornelius Downes, John Sulli- van, Joseph Portelance, Joseph Gadle, James Mullen, Jeremiah Downing, Thomas Caffery, Joseph Farrell, Nich- clas J. Spellman, William Fitzgerald, P. H. Connell, William Brennan, Wil- liam J. Carroll, William Carey. ‘West Side—Joseph Pfeiffer, chair- man, John Fitzgerald, Frank Silvia, James Sullivan, Thomas Brennan, John H. Sullivan, John Sullivan, Wal ter Casey, Fred Buckley, William Mec~ Guinness. Norwich Town and Falls — M. J. Curran, chairman, John A. Curry, Thomas White, P. T. Connel. Eugene Comers, Thomas H. Beckley and Frank McIntyre. ‘Fast Side—George Dolan, chairman, Daniel Sullivan, John Corcoran and F. Plante. Colchester—James man. Faithful Navizator J. A. Desmond has been appointed general chairman cf the committee and Michael C. Hig- gins has been appointed secretary and treasurer, Purcell, chair- GERMANY’S CRITICISM OF AMERICAN SKY FORCE General Says T Only American Big Talk and Tall Figures. Copenhagen, July 23—The com- manding general of the German aerial forces has issued an interview to the German newspapers in which he at- tempts o discount the prospective par- ticipation of American aviators in the war for mastery of the air. Despatch- es from hundreds of aviators who are to be ROBERT M'NEELY IS ! NOMINATED LABOR MEMBER!' | sECRETARY HAZARD WRITES Even Greater Been Anticipated. ary Committee of State of Defense. County Auxi Council Officers have been selected by the! rd of N New London County Au y Com- | 950, L. O. ticut Council of the natio Pittsbu. friend t greater t A ; | week, at conver ce delegations have their |eral, “need not be disturbed by cwn band w hem and on every|foolish stories which show all the been named as |corner there w he some sort of an acteristics of American tongue npromptu para a delegation being He adds that America’s pres- Brown; | orted to © m somewhere, or 2a|ent supply of army and navy airplanes ; Leb- e of some sort is negligible. He cites the London Lyme, the ope of the international | Morning Post to prove that the Amer- Hayne , Henry A.|convention of Lo Order of |jcans have not developed a practicable dyard, Gray: | Moose, i close on Thursday |iype of military plane and savs there- G. Stebbins; Griswold follow: address and | fore they must begin from the begin- H. Shea; Waterford, Albert H. Roosevelt, the | ping. 1 ere. ity t. Louls as the se to a communication the Moose convention | prINCE OF SONGKLA . Morris E. Alling, _state the 1 Minute Men,” irnest E. Rogers of New Lon- s been named as chairman for Lou he New London district . the like of The New London County auxiliary been heard of e will hold its state meeting | i Tom. >n_Tuesday of each week. s Joseph Ryan of the Putnam INDUSTRIAL WASTE. mber Commerce has been ap- of the Windham Co. ect Has Consideration at M Committee, and the perm- ; ; : 3 ing of Counc ttee. anent office of the committee has been 9 neil’s Committee. blished in the Chamber of Com- of the matter of In- ms. Being unable to serve o et o mgy tate were made Defense Counc OF MOOSE CONVENTION. Success Than Had officials will . the have planned graduated weekly and of the thous- ands of airplanes to be constructed Anglo-American bluff and American scoffingly of what he terms the usual American fliers, he says, undoubt- weakness for big talk and tall fig- ures. or-| American fliers, he says, lnodubt- edly will appear at no distant date in O.lincreasing numbers on the western nal | front but the American aviators thu: been r encountered have not pa his he | ticularly dangerous opponents of the the | Germans and a new squadron would €SS | merely augment the already numeri- Jeeley of | than ha ited cal superiority of the allies and not nominated as 1z | e lc_various con-|laffect the question of aerial mastery the committee. In org: 1d Dbetween degree | which he asserts is dependent on the ing the town committee in the smaller | marching clubs and |morale of the fliers and not their ed has been to | will be awarded in the | numbers. an and the I “The German people,” says the gen- Gives His Personal of Siam in War. Boston, July 23.—National necessity and moral pressure forced Siam into the war on the side of the entente, in the opinion of Mahidol, Prince Songkla, brother of the reigning king, Vagiravudh. Neutrality upon the part of this small but long independent na- tion in the far east- had become in- creasingly difficult and there has been a growing sentiment that freedom and il's S ODPOE NS 0 8 ial Surv justice for states not strong from a ¢'s war work without compen- Cheney presided | military standpoint were not to be se- rship of the com- | cured through the policy of the central — The committee|Powers. Sympathy for Belgium, that PUTNAM HAS PROPER SPIRIT. information from{besan with the invasion of that coun- = nts jn the state, and|try, had taken strong hold on the Leads Whole State in Per Capita En- the members of their | Siamese and the popular aversion to listments for Regular Army. t the| Teutonic methods, solidified by Presi- ome n the: near e state, accordin es, in per capita enl nteers for nce the beginnin Week, twenty-five 599 Short For Regular Army. he offics arm ecruiting ve been accepted there. Chairmar ¥, ecticut is now | completed his first year in a Spe H. Gilpatric’s home town of its reg course at Harvard university, express r fifth place in the state totals state wi ed his views tonight, after explaining fecruits by towns quota when the spe-fthat they were purely personal and in number equal to was begun tse|no wise official. He had not received | by imbered only d its cou with committ with forty-six adjourned and New Ha The Reichstag n September to m ven with important 1 report made dent Wilson’s message asking congres to declare war, left no doubt as to the duty as well as to the path of expedi- ency of Siam Prince’s Views Personal. The Prince of Songkla, who has jus fu- ny word from Bangkok and learned of ‘the action of the Siamese govern- ment through The Associated The Siamese minister, Phya Prabha Karavongse, who is spending the sum- mer at Gloucester, also was without eet The Kind You Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for over over 30 years, has borne the signature of and has been made under his per- sonal supervision since its infancy.’ Allow no one to deceive you in this. All Counterfeits, Imitations and ‘‘ Just-as-good ” are but Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Chfldxen—EErience against Experiment. What is CASTORIA Castoria is & harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Paregoric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other narcotic substance. age is its guarantee. For more than been in constant use for the relief of Constipation, Flatulency, ‘Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverishness arising thet:fmm! and by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. The Children's Panacea—The Mother’s Friend. GENUINE CASTORIA ALwAys Bears the Signature of (4 In Use For Over 30 Years The Kind You Have Always Bought THE CENTAUR COMPANY, NEW YORK SITY, official advices today. Consults With Advisor. The prince and the minister confer- red during the day with Wolcott H. Pitkin, Jr., acting general adv. the Siamese government, who ha in this country on leave of absence since February. The part that will play in the war will be insig cant so far as aid to her allies is con- cerned, in_the opinion of the prince. Germany, however, he said, had more to lose than the allies would have had if Siam had cast her lot with the Teu- tonic empires, for Germany lost her last important harbor of refuge in the far east. MOST EFFICIENT MEN SELECTED FOR FIGHTING. Others in the American Force in France Will Do Camp Work. American Training Camp in France, July 23—(By The Associated Press).— The American troops began today in- tensive bayonet, hand grenade, trench mortar and machine gun practice and will devote two hours daily to these ches of modern warfare. The in- al regimental officers have de- cided to adopt the French system of selecting the most efficient men for fighting, the less efficient for the more onerous’ camp Quties, such as cooking and cleaning up. Accordingly, each corporal will be allowed to bid for fifteen men who, in his estimation, are the keenest and most alert, and have the best records, to compose his squad. Each company’s best men will be determined in this manner, and those not asked for By the non-commissioned officers will be elegated to camp duties. Icebergs Off Cape Race. Boston, July 23.—Icebergs have be- gun to work their way free from the Arctic pack and drift southward in the Atlantic. A steamer which ar- rived from a European port yester- day reported that a berg estimated to be 100 feet high and at least 300 feet long, with several jagged peaks, was sighted off Cape Race, Newfoundland. Canning Demonstration. A free canning demonstration win be given in the Attawaugan Social club hall Wednesday evening by M®s. Nickoloff of Putnam. One fruit and one vegetable product will be canned. Captain Brandenburg, who conduct- ed the air raid over London on June 12, has received the Order, pour le Aaian the United States telling of these A HARVARD STUDENT Views on Entry of Press. | MOONEY MURDER TRIAL ENDS IN SAN FRANCISCO, Jury Had Reached No Verdict at Three This Morning. San Francisco, July 23.—After sev- eral hours of deliberation, no word had come tonight from the jury room as to whether a’verdict was near in the trial of Mrs. Rena Mooney, charged with the murder of one of ten persons killed in a bomb explosion during a prepared- parade here last July. The un- ial jury appointed by organized labor to hear the evidence in the case retired at the same time as the court jury and in 35 minutes returned a ver- dict of not guilty, which will be trans- mitted to labor unions throughout the country. Mrs. Mooney appeared entirely un- concerned as the trial drew to a close. After chatting with friends, she re- turned to her quarters in the jail. Her Fusband, Thomas J. Mooney, was con- victed previously of first degree murder in connection with the explosion and is aiting th eoutcome of anappeal. Demands by the prosecution for the infliction of the death penalty, rarely before asked in California in the case of a woman; widespread in- terest of Jabor unions, public con- trover involving credibility of states’ s and charges by the defe t important evidence bhad been fabricated, were features which marked the trial of Mrs. Rena Moon- ey for murder resulting from a bomb explosion in San Francisco last July. N Mooney, a music teacher, wife of Thomas J. Mooney, was arrested a - the explosion, which m. in the course v parade, July 22, s and wounded more women and children. same time the Mooneys the, arrested, Warren K. Billings. Is- Weinberg and Edward D. Nolan were taken into custody by detectives. The state contended that the explo- i wa the culmination of a con- <y plot of wide ramifications, with bomb murder defendants as leaders. I Billings was tried, convicted of mur- der and sentenced to life imprisonment. Mooney was sentenced to death on a verdict of murder in the first desree | without recommendation for mercy. | Both sentences have been held up rending appeals to the state supreme court. The others ares now awaiting trial Nolan is at liberty on bail Dissatisfied with the verdict in the case of Thomas J. Moorey union labor organizations, which contributed large- iy to the defense fund through the In- ternational Workers' Defense League, | caused the appointment of a “silent jury” composed of labor men, to hear | evidence adduced at Mrs. Mooney's | trial ana render an_independent ver- dict to organized labor. Mrs. Mooney was brought to trial May before Superior Judge Em- |met Sewell, of Santa Rosa, and a jury. The specific charge against her was the murder of Mrs. Myrtle Irene Van Leo. one of the ten victims of the ex- plosion In addition the defendant was charged with having been a mem- ber of a “murderous conspiracy” to overthrow the government and bring about a state or anarchy. Much testi- mony and many exhibits intended to support this theory were ruled out by well. Various letters written Moonev, extracts from an publication called _the edited in San Francisco about the time of the explosion by Alexander Berkman. an associate of Emma Gold- man, and other documents, which the state contended showed designs of the Lemons Whiten and | Beautify the Skin! Make Cheap Lotion The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re- markable lemon skin beautifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach-and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan and is the ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautifier. Just try it! Make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It should nat- urally help to whiten, soften, freshen, and bring out the hidden roses and beauty of any skin. It is wonderful for rough, red hands. Your druggist will sell three ounces of orchard white at little cost, and any grocer will supply the lemons. alleged group of conspirators, were ad- mitted. Alibi was the defense which the de- fendant’s attorneys sought to estab- lish by a source of witnesses. who de- clared Mrs. Mooney and her husband had been on the roof of the building in which they made their more more than a mile from the scene of the ex- plosion, throughout the afternoon. Mrs, Mooney and the four other defendants told of their movements in detail on the afternoon of the bomb murders. The defendants sought to prove that others rather than the defendants wera the persons who had been seen®in the vicinity of the explosion by the state witnesses. The state’s contentlon was that Mooney and the others sought to pre- vent the parade because it was a mil- itary preparedness = measure which might interfere with their alleged plot to overthrow the government and that Billings, accompanied by three of the other defendants placed a suit ca which, the state contended, encl the bomb, at the spot where the bl occurred. One witness said he Billings, accompanied by Mooney, place the suit case on the sidewalk. The defense contended that the bomb was hurled from the roof of a bhuild- ing and witnesses testified that they had seen a black object coming through the air before the detonation aw Americans k Submarine. Paris, July 23.—An American steam- er recently sank a large German sub- marine, according to_a despatch to Temps from Havre. While on a voyage from the United States the steamer was attacked by a submarine plying to its fire, sent underwater boat, which assumed a perpendicular position and disappeared beneath the water. Missouri Fills Quota. Washington, July 23.—Missouri was added today to those states whose quota in the regular army been has filled. The daily statement of recruit- ing showed her to have 6.620 with a quota of 6.586. The total acceptances was 153 Saturd: of recruits since April first 037. The total enlistment and Sunday was 1,230. STOMACH TROUBLES ARE DUE 70 ACIDITY Tells Safe, Certain, Speedy Relief for Acid Indigestion So-called stomach troubles, such indigestion, gas, sourn stomac ache and inability to retain food, are in probably nine cases out of ten sir ply evidence that excessive secretion acid is taking place in the stomac causing the formation of gas and acid indigestion. distends the stomach and causes that full oppressive burning feeling sometimes known as heartburn, while the acid irritates and inflames the deli- cate lining of the stomach. The trou- ble lies entirely in the excessive devel- opment or secretion of acid. To_ stop or prevent this the food contents of the souring of tomach = to neutralize the acid and make bland and harmless, a teaspoonful bisurated magnesia, a good and effect- of acid mach, should quarter of a glass of hot ive correct be taken a or cold er after eating or whene gas, sourness or acidity is felt, This sweetens the stomach and mneufraliz the acidity in a few moments and is perfectly "harmless and Inexpe remedy to use. An antacid, such as bisurated m: nesia, which can be obtained from a drugeist in either powder or tablet form. enables the stomach to do iis work properly without the ald of arti- ficial digesten Magnesia comes in several forms, 80 be certain to ask for and take only Bisurated Magnesia which is especlally prepared for the above purpose. $5.00 PANAMA HATS COOL SUMMER UNION S The Live Shop - MORAN & CONNORS Straw Hats $2.00 and $2.50 HATS_________NOW $1.00 $3.00 and $3.50 HATS_________NOW $1.50 Bates-Street Shirts $1.50 SHIRTS________________NOW $1.15 $2.00 SHIRTS________________NOW $1.59 $2.50 SHIRTS ________________NOW $1.95 $3.50 SHIRTS________________NOW $2.85 $5.00 SHIRTS________________NOW $3.95 NOW $3.75 Kindly hand to any member of committee Act Quickly’ UITS_$1.00 and $1.50 157 Main St. - WANTED Sfl)flfl in two days. To be divided equally between 3rd and 5th Companies Connecticut Coast Artillery, N. G. No Solicitation your contribution H. R. BRANCHE J. P. SHERIDAN ORRIN W. PRICE CHARLES W. GALE Committee Do It Now! (Signed) ALLYN L. BROWN FRED A. FOX MILO R. WATERS CHARLES A. HAGBERG ANSON R. GROVER Missionary Society. The Ladies’ Missionary the Bozrah Congregational will meet Friday afternoon, vith Mrs. Edwin E. Latrrop. Announce Engagement society of| Mr. and Mrs. lIsaac Gail church | Ledyard announce the en July their daughter, Florence Ernest Everett Smith of Frank Vacation Luggage When you pack your trunk don’t begin to worry about whether it is going to stand the strain of vacation cam- paign, or whether the nice clothes you pack in it are going to be properly taken care of. Establish your peace of mind by buying your luggage at The Boston Store—you won’t have to worry about it. Everwear Trunks ARE JUST WHAT THE NAME IMPLIES Of course they won’t last forever, but they will come pretty close to it. They are made on honor. The best materials, the highest grade of work and scientific con- struction have made them leaders. And beside their strength and durability they are stylish in appearance. EVERWEAR CANVAS TRUNKS $6.00 to $11.00 The wood over which the heavy canvas is laid will not split out yet pliant slats add strength. A very heavy fibre binding is riveted on by hand, and the corners are protected with heavy brass. bination gives you a trunk which is light in weight and very strong. carry many sizes and styles. EVERWEAR FIBRE TRUNKS $9.50 to $12.00 As handsome pieces of luggage as you have ever seen and of a lasting strength. They will stand the same handling that the commercial travelers trunk must stand, but have the refined and stylish appearance that is de manded for the critical woman or man. Heavy brass is used in the finish. MATTING CASES GENUINE LEATHER 75¢ to $2.69 SUIT CASES Light and durable and just the $5.50 to $9.00 thing for the woman who desires BEACH CASES Made of Fibre or Matting Only 29c MATTING BAGS With clasps and vnap locks 59¢ to 69¢ FIBRE CASES In a variety of sizes and styles. They are strong and light and have largely taken the place of leather. 75¢, $1.29, $1.75 to $3.25 Heavy Wa whols lightness above all. $1.50 BOSTON BAGS Special $1.00 These Bags which are offered in black only are waterproof. They hold more than you would imagine. GENUINE LEATHER TRAVELING BAGS From $5.50 to $12.00 G2}

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