Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, October 9, 1919, Page 10

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e?. I s e New York, Oct. 8-—George Agnew berlain, novelist and big game former United States consul to Micaico who in a cable mes- . to Washington last Aug. 1 relin- uishod o career covering 17 years in consular service to devote his time E *“writing,” was found by a repre- {gmtative of The Amsociatsd Fress hers i busily engaged in revising the Bnal proofs of his forthcoming book SNot All the King's Horses which, said. is a fresco portraying actual tons in the country south of the Rio Grande. 3 Mr. Chamberlain served the Ameri-| #an government at Bahia, Rio Janeiro. Pernambuco, Lourenco Marques and at Mexico City, going to the last named in May, 1917. His experfences in Mexican capital, covering a period §¢ two years, he sald. and what be re- as an “individual moral obliga- " to tell the American people sthe ots, | precipitated his restsmation #Bince that time N has been in practl @al seclusion In New York. He said iBe had no political or commercial af- fliations whatever. that he wrote as & {mere American citizen and that the {ftate depertment was in nowise fmpli- ted ir Lis “radical private views.” < The former consul general declared fhat the Mexican problem resolves it- $eif into two major divisions—exposi- Yon und solu present he was — SAGE AND SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR faded, streaked become dark, youthful. glossy, that Sage compound- 3 ly way to - $ arge of other in- 3 . No one = - T . s > ' = BAth sy ———— DOCTORS EXPECT RETURN OF ‘', INFLUENZA rip comes back this as doctors say it is likely to, germs by teking Father John’s Medicine now to build new re-| sisting power. Remember, this pure food| Medicine is guaranteed free| from alcohol and dangerous drugs and has been successful- iy sibed For 60 years for colis, be ready to fight off the! “The present government has tried | {to establish a popular illusion that it | stands by Madero's altruistic prinei- | ples. Nothing could be further from | | ihe truth. Madero never had a chance | * institute | interested in tu ng the light upon the “chameful years” during which his government and fellow countrymen had lLeen subjected .to indignity and outrage. Every American citizen, Mr. Chamberlain” asserted, is vitally con- cerned in the “intolerable” conditions which have existed in Mexico the past cight years if he does not wish to see ‘the American conception of justice, allegiance and patriotism made laughing-stock of the world.” - One other circumstance that caused him to resign, he said. was Ambassa- dor Fletcher’s ‘“recent haling before the senatorial committee,” which he ‘rhlrncllflled as both “unfair and ab- {surd.” He said it was like putting the | ambassador to Mexico “on a tightrope ! with a bucket of water in each hand.” | Mr. Fletcher, he sald, came through | the ordeal well only because he is a finished diplomat and because of the | “indulgence of his questioners.” | __“If the first question had heen,” said | Mr. Chamberlain, **‘Can yon ‘name one | friendly act on the part Of the'Mexican | overnment toward ours during your two years in Mexico City’ and had been followed by ‘Can you recall five 1 ss breaches of international codr- | tesy in the same period? the cross-ex- | amination would have come to a sud- den close or everybody would have had | a batn The former consul general explained that by “friendly and unfriendly acts™ on the part of the Mexiean government he did not mean casual actions arising from racial antipathy but a systematic policy of estrangement. He charged that efforts were belng made by the Carranza administration to capitalize hatred against the United States and that this included distortion of friendly American motives, the suppression of by news eensorship, the expulsion patriotic Americans who had lived in Mexico as long as 50 years, and the | extraordinacy breach of international | ourtesy” in publishing an unanswered { diplomatic note with the deliberate | ntention of counteractine President | Vilson speech made to visiting Mex- ican rewspapermen. The present re- me, he said, was endeavoring to; sounteract at all costs any symotoms | nf rod will toward the TUnited hamberlaln insisted that condi- n Mexico were “worse than the reports Indicate” He cited the a traln carrving 80 Teadine = 0f Mexico being held up bv < in the suburbs of Puebla, the | industrial cavital of the countrv. of 1~ conches heine burned and tha enst- secnnants, men. women and chil- ariven ke rattle for 0 miles” sabhers and then tnrme? lanse warder In Aslirtns to thei- hames tn11 ~# anatha holdun on the e-t- Rl ity whare nrominent Taer < fn am antamahile b 2 Rad And thefr charfenrs A tamm b heine hask A ransam ~~mhe= of the narty chaotic conditions obtain in Mr. Chamberlain said, he was opinion_that the situation was o He said he had a possi- Iution” to the problem but that culd not “countenance the backing “nited States of any of the ss in Mexico, for that rsally corrupt. 1 hold a | ny special interest.” he even for the Americans poiled in Mexico, nor who starve under oppression, but for the right every man to reyolt against rage wherever he finds ons consul general would net than s “solution” is other t It embodied the id tes sending Mexico t recourse tn hat in it lay the nossibility of estab- " of all “such conditions as | 1ha and the Philippines.” He at the Latin rusttation” the “damnation of Mevico.” ‘ms” and >r again 2,000,000 or | 4000 000 Loving had “used the jznorant v 4 €T 12.000.000 Indlans in a sort e “anfroz to vault from the the peon into the saddle srips with past master: Turkish art of procrastinatio i Mr. Chamberla “Left to them- s, the present Mexican authorities | will 1o more than they have during | wo vears take a step toward | with the United States ey stop the murder of Amer- izens nor, relinquish a stra erip on foreizn-owned properties ugate completely the innumer- le bands of outlaws which almost ¢ zive the lie to government claims £ pacification | ny factor of government | During his brief tenure of | power he was the most bewildered and reifictual mortal on earth. The pres- nt rulers of his unhappy country | « profited by his Inentitude. onty | cxtent of holding up his inope coughs and as a body builder. | WELDING mas as a screen to a govern- at stands by the srace of ban- | | 17e. international affronts, red and the major, tenets of | | Bolshevism. At its heart is eating the | | e2ncer that has hrousht death fo | o of its Jong Une of predeces. | raf: on such a seale as is boyond | eption of the Anglo-Saxon iy i} T 0xicaTING NO LK VITAINS 12 FLUID OY Sun ripened grain, pure’ hops and = mai give that refreshing, dclightful flavor to B vescent TRADE MARK REG.US PAT OFR the new brew with the old namc. _product of nearly a third of a century’s ex- perience on the part of the largest brewing establishment in New England in the mak- ing of pure food brews. it welcome - winter drug stores and grocery stores. Try a glass of it today. Order a case of tv to your home. NORWICH TOWN Scored Cylinders | The Dorcas Home Missionary society | 10 1S home in East Killingly, after a| of the Tirst Methodiss ehari C ol | few weeks' stay ne home. of his| 10ld a rally meeting this (Thursday) | YA¢le, Walter Greene. afternoon at the parsorage on West| (eorge Moore and Walter De Wolfe Town street. of Salem, were callers Monday on Earl | At the First Congregational prayer|De Wolfe of Plain Hill. Mr. Moore re- | ervices this (Thursday) ect will idren. Dr. Robert A. Hume of India, who is ssing some time in this country be- 1= located for the present at Hartford, evening the be “What We Owe the and wiil supply the pulpit of the First Con- | °f NeW London. Sir. and Mrs West Town street, spent Sunday at the | home of Mrs crossing M i recent ijguests also of Mr. Walter Claussen of Wethersfield. Miss Katherine Morgan W tional church Sunday morning. Albert . Gireene and Walter Greene West Town street, spent a day re- cently with Charles Hopkins, of Plain- ement Mathes of Suffield, was a caller Sunday at the home of Mrs. Mary Geer Welch of:76 West Town |Miss Alice Helena Kennedy, are to en- | street ter a down town dancing class Iriday Mrs. Thomas Buckley, Mrs. Robert | €vening. — s Seven representatives from the First 2 e Congregational Sunday. school, attend- ed the anntial New London County NERVOUS ischool convention, held Tuesday at Park Congregational church. m\:u its forms can be relieved g Nerves are the safety-valves of the body. When disease attacks the system,” Nature signals a_warning, and the result s nervousness in some form or other. .Nervousness is a cry for help from a debilitated constitution which 1xdisaster unizss the high tension' is relieved tored. b tarts at the foundation on the brain, nerves, muscies and blood cells: rebuilds wornout nerve tissues and, by vir: tue of its antisepti roperties. prevents the decay of tissues and nsequently tends to repel disease. KALPHO Tegulates the gray matter in the braln and is therefore indis- pensable to all mental workers. Containe no harmful _nor habit- forming drugs. At droggists, $1.00. Refuse substitutes. Insist on the genuine KALPHO and observe its magical effect. | and | Wooamansee spent | Master Daniel cently returned from ove Mrs. P Miss Florence Smith of went recentiy of the marriage of Miss Hattie Philipps and M. James Sexton } of Boston. Miss Phillips who isa cousin 7 Mrs, Alfiert I. Greene of West Town | sireet, as formerly of Packerville and ihas a Jarge list of friends among The { ulletin readers. | Miss Mildred Amelia Kinney of Town | street, was among those accepted Wed- nesdayfor the Giris Glee club of the Norwich Free Academy. Bridgeport.—James J. Murphy of $6 iberty strect has. been unanimously elected treasurer of the New England club at the University of Notre Dame. ‘The New England club is fhe largest at the university. eenior in the college or arts and letters | at Notre Dame. | ah Snow | ana Mrs the week end in Providnece. Greene has returned | e Sunday at the| Charies Baum, Thomas Smith Miss Alice M. were visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Albert F. Greeme of | Jlary Bishop of Bishop's and Mrs. Greene were and Mrs. sner ard tives here received announce- most active sectional organization Mr. Murphy is a Should your supply vou, write or telephone the Narragansett Brewing The result is a wholesome, sparkling, effer- beverage, summer as a zestful thirst quencher and a delightful table or social beverage. On sale in hotels, restaurants, clubs, cafes, is the | . and I l U ! T If i i (il il _citvered _it0 c unpre, Company, Providence, Rhode Island, and we will see that your order is filled. HOW STATE GAVE RELIEF TO CANTERBURY FAMILY (Special to The Bulletin.) Hartford, Oct. 7.—In looking up data for a special article on Stafford’s 200th anniversary Souvenir William H. Tay- lor came across the following from Colonial Records of Connecticut for family day: At a2 meeting of the Things eh? are dome said Canterbury. and by him delivered | going the relief of said poor distressed different these “SOUVENIR" TAYLOR. the leader and several others | for the circle and the > COMFORT CIRCLE MEETS WITH NEW LONDON MEMBERS Comstock, fourteen members were | Comfort Cirelc of the King’s Daugh- T. Utley leader, son’s work Wednesday by going to New lLondon for a mect- its members, Mrs Canfleld, Miss Emily Guard Comstock. at the 720 Williams down with Mrs. Herbert F. Dawley in her car and the remainder | by motorbus. | To create a fund for the chapter's | charftable work the luncheon was on | the cafeteria plan and this netted {about 35. Later there was an auction | of articles contributed by the mem- bers, the sum of $0.75 being raised. rs. William H. Baker made a capl- tal auctioneer. were asked to observe the first week week in October as Win-One Week, in the effort increase the general membership. Comfort Circle decided Wednesday to continue this member- ship campaign throughout this month. delightful one vich mem- 1 | Everywhere the King's Daughters i | to i | The outing proved a 2 overnor and | council (now the sencral assembly) on 16th day of October., Anno Dom.,|'ers. Mrs. Albert . *lopenca the “Upon the praver of Anmma Mot wife ‘of Gershom Mott of Canterbury,|is With three of in the county of New London, in be- | Walter F. Canfic half of her said husband, now con- |and Mrs. Frank 2 fined by sickness, and hersclf, setting|home of Mrs forth that about 4 year since she was | Street. In all delivered of three children at a birth, | Present. which through God's mercy are all still living, and ever since lan- suished under distressing and very | xpensive sickness, viz. first by pleu- risie. socondly a_ dropsie, and lastiy 2 dangerous imposthumé. of which she is not cured. successively seizing on her; her said infants most or all | the while ‘out of nurse at a great ex- pense: and lastlyher said husband being by sore sickness in the sum- mer past, from which he is not- yet fully recovered. brought very low and nigh the dust of death: by which se- rics of adverse providences the.holy and all wise God has exercised them withal, they have been and are re- duced to great want and straights: and praying that a brief craving the contribution and charity of the good people in_such and so many towns as the zovernor and council shall see meet. might be sranted for their re- lief in this distress: Ordered, That a brief be therefore | feeling granted, and that it be directed, and | coated right—who tongue, bad Stop Headaches, Bilious Spells, Colds and Constipa- tion with “Cascarets”—Ideal Physic! Tou Men aad WO.ied WNO Cadl get have taste headache, and foul it is hereby granted and directed to|preath, dizziness. can't sleep, are bili- pa respect into and through the towns and ive congregations ' in London, Groton, Stonington, Preston, |a sick, Norwich, Iebanon, Canterbury. Plain- | colas. field, Pomfret and Killingly. for the end aforesaid; and that the ‘money collected by said brief be transmitted to Reverend Mr. Sam'l Eastabrook of gassy, Are you keeping bowels clean with Cascarets, or mere- ly shocking your insides every New |Ous. nervous and upset, bothered with disordered stomach and your liver and| few was tn Caiomer, Saits, Oil or violent Pills Cascdrets work while you sieep: they cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested, fermenting food and foul gases: take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poi- son in the bowels which is now keep- ing you in corstant misery. Cascarets mever gripe. sicken or cause inconveni. ence and Cascarets cost so little too. - bers thoroughly erous hospitality, ] appreciated the gen- of their hostesses. Supreme Court in Session. The October term of the supreme court opened in Hartford at 10 a. m Tuesday with twelve cases listed for argument. It was the first term of the new court nlan and Judge \Wil- liam S. Case’s first term as.a s g ome court justice. o cas on” the docket were appealed from judgments directed by Judge Case in the super- ior court of Hartford. Consequently he will be disqualificd when these cases are considered. Judge Howard J. Curtiss will take Judge Case’s place on the bench when these cases are argued It's better to believe all you say than haif you hear. Aspirin for Headache NAME “BAYER” IS ON GENUINE ASPIRIN—SAY BAYER in a per directions for Pair an, Neuralgia, matism. Name uine Aspirin prescribed for nineteen ye: of 12 tablets cost. trade -mark of Bayer package,” Headache, Lumbago, and Rheu- containing Colds, “Bayer’ means gen- physicians tin boxes Aspirin Is by Handy few cents. Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Salicylicacid. lets of Aanln" pro- | wVPOETR‘( 1E ST SMALL VOIC The Tit'e brn = their s Tiie Bt the movris'ns stard fn wisnee- they may not. cannot spes AIl Nature seeke 35 tow o seaveis e ar weddis HUMORS OF THE DAY Arid days con The worm wi “Some sav ont u falr article of ho Louisville Courier-Jo “Making a study You never took mu fore.” 3 N “Got to be able to talk to my wife, haven't I now Singleton—Your wife seem to be up-to-date woman i Wedderly—Huh! She's awa of the date. Why. she has trouble borrowed for next year.—Bo ton Post “Did your rich uncle remember yo in his will?* “Not personmally. But he endowe a home for the indigent. 1 expected ‘me to collect my share tHi "—Detroit Free Press P T. Barnum said the put K to be humbugged “Quite true,” admitted the man W was doing sums in arithmetic. it cost rhuch less to be humt when Barnum was alive."—Washing ton Star. There was fire in Mrs. Nagg's eyes as she met her hubby “I caught you flirting exclaimed. Joseph!™ she “That's right.” responded Mr. Nag “That's just how'you landed = Answers (London). Bacon—1I.hear the bakers are em strike in your town. Egbert—They are. ) “What do they want—more money “No; they want to handle dough”—Yonkers Statesman “How are things, now, Colonel? remember you used to have a pret taste in' liquors. Drank importe stuff with ginger ale for a chaser. “En-yah. Now I drink bootleg be hind a barrel in an alley with a c for a chaser.”—Kansas City Journ. The curtain had just gone down o the first act. “I think I'll go ou get a breath of fresh air said Guzzler. “ Ywish you'd bring some of it bac with_ you, instead of the breath usually. bring,” suggested Mrs zler—Philadelphia Record Mistress—Sarah. I saw man kiss you today. I have fo take the bread the future. Guz the really in my self in baker Sarah—Twouldn’t be no use, ma'an He -wouldn't’ kiss you 'cos he promised he'd never kiss anybody else but Pearson’s Weekly KALEIDOSCOPE The science of bell casting has been practiced in one English foundry for Tearly ‘35 vears A coffee pot on the vacuum prin- cipal, the lid of which serv as'a stopper, has been invented An inventor has de inum ironing board ea and carried in a suit case Japan has 2,500 establishments ufacturing various kinds of ages, 500 of them being in Toklio An Arkansan has patented a swim- ming pool in which a gentle current of water carries bathers thro and narrow parallel channe! after another until the start is r ed again. . A European record for the most heavily laden freight train was e e olished by a Russian railroad whe R merican locomotive hauled a rhin 2800 feet long, with .a load o 4424 tons The world’s record for accuracy of timepieces vz + established at the last annual fi >me .- competition in Switzerlar 4, whe.. one rier Smied but ‘six - one-hundredths of second »' & day A strip of land eight inches wid and 40 feet long, in the central part of Hasleton, Pa. hag just been t 3 ferred by deed to a man who neede this small piece of ground cess to his large tract of land behind it. Ry far the most costly map in_the world is that kept among the Per sian crown Jewels at Teherar in the form of a hollow globe of goic the various countries seas and othe physical features bein ned ir ems, Its value is estimated at near ¥ five million dollars From the Consular Reports. The population ~of the common- wealih of ‘Auetraiia is oMcially Eiven as 5 030 000. . Prominent business men in Java fee that it is important for the develop { ment of trade between that istand and the United States that experie representatives of American f <ent there, to remain jong eno learn the Dutch language and stud cond:tions suficiently .to he al adapt present American commerci methods to local needs The munic’pality of Canton. China is offering a franchise for the econ- struction of a trainway fen miles long around the city, upon the t the ©0ld_city walls, which are e molished The Fukien Union univers'tv of Fo show Is ahont ta erect a million dolia group of build ngs. Roumanian citizens have experfenced much diffieulty in imnorting =ood from cther countries he~auca of th depre~iat'on of Roumanian nes | caused partiy fantast'c rinabe of paper monev by, the SGermane whe they orcupied the country. The tofa shue of RansT Mmose= hv the Serman js about 2500000000 let (~nwmal ex change rate. 183 cemts), whirh pract! re volume ian currency. American concer crimrespandin with the far east aftan 1se lettar hea®l which do not show the husness which thev are e T gested that a cloar ~tateweng of i) princinal lines carried may lesf 't dex’rable hbuminers from 1 Stea sources. Tngreasine dawasl fon fon has induced a group of o e to organize a company w'th a o pieet ©of $250,000 to engage In the raising of foxes.

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