Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 23, 1920, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SEPTEMBER: 23, 1920 Kill That Cold With { Tuke no chances. Keep this standard remedy handy for the first sneeze. Breaks old in 24 hours — Relieves Grippe in3 days—Exceilent for Headache Quinine in this form does not affect the head—Cascara is best Tonic Lazative—No Opiste in Hill's. ALL DRUGGISTS SELL IT Washington Sept. . 23.—Demonstra- tlons in accident prevention and first aid work are featured in the program of the ninth annual meeting of the National Safety Council to be held at Milwaukee, Sept. 2 to October 1, which is announceud in the American Red Cross- bulletin. First aid work will be demonstrated by the Red Cross Bureau of First Aid and the metal and mining sections of the 13- tional safety council. Plans for a demonsiration siowing the occurrence of an accen: and ien- dering first aid, then an investigation to CONTEST FOR KEAD OF AMERICAN LEGION Cleveland, O., Sept. 22—Who is to head the American Legion the coming year is receiving attention in anticipa- tion of the second annual convention of ONECO Fom Brewin, Simeon Erewin and George Shepherd were in Putnam Tues- tay. Miss Mabel Kennedy and little niece Tirace of Central Falls spent Sunday here with relatives. Willard Batong of Providence was tne guest of his brother, Charles Baton, over the_week end. Mrs. Harry Baton of Moosup her mother and sister last Thu WHITE ROCK trip over the Mohawk trail. Durwood Saunders, the past week, is better. Ma, pprecht. rus and tenement houses. sited Mr. and Mrs. Fred C. Holt and son of ing in his hand. Dayville were week end guests at W. S and Mrs. Lechappelle svent Burdick’s. week end w Mrs. Mary E. Hadley of Norwood re-| Miss Gladys Lancaster and a f{riend tmned home Tuesday after visiting Mrs. | from Prov ted over Sunday with R E. Waite. Miss Idella Lancaster. Mrs. Dennis Richmond and infant| A number from here attended the fair @htighter Ruth returned home Saturday |at Kingston last week. after being cared for Dby Harry | A milking machine and electric lights Fherman. have been installed in the barm at White 7w Rock farm Yes, Alfred, matrimony has its ad- o vantages. A bachelor has to pay to| The average man thinks he sees the a but a married man image of perfection every bumps up against a mirror. time Miss Ruth Brook has returned from & who has been ill The entire mill property of B. B. & R. Knight, Inc, including White Rock mill and many other mills in Rhode Island and achusetts, has been sold to Frederick The sale includes all mills, ay. Arthur Briggs is suffering with blood he Fresh from the gardens of the finest tea plantations ORANGE PEKOE TEA Company, Stuart & Berkeley Sts., Boston. Senc us a postal card for a free sample. Salada Tea the Legion opening In Cleveland Sept. 27. Among those mentioned here for the office of commander are Milton J. Fore- man of Illinois, Emmett O'Neill, of Kentucky, Hanford MacNider, of Iowa, and F. W. Galbraith, of Ohio. Foreman was a colonel and state com- mander. When he took charge of the I linois department it ‘was 21st in legion membership. Now it is first. Foreman, who is more than 60 vears old, served also in the Spanish-Anferican war. Kentucky is boosting O'Neill for the the { leadership because of his activity in le- h relatives at Warren, R. L | gion affairs, especially as an organizer and leader, MacNider is said to have more dego- rations than any other American with the exception of General Pershing. Nine of them for valor. He is a bank presi- dent in Mason City, Iowa, and vice com- mander of the Department of Iowa. Galbraith was a colonel and state com- mander like Foreman. He was comman. der of the Ohio department until the Ohio convention at Youngatown elected his successpr last month. Colonel C. C. Chambers, of Cleveland, ! convention executive chairman, predicts ;that the convention will surpass in num- | bers any ever held in the country not jexcepting the great gatherings of the ; Grand Army of the Republic. SAN FRANCISCO' POLICE SEARCHING FOR BERGDOLL Sept. 22. lice t-lay started a search er Creveland Bergdoll, the wealthy for Philadelphian wanted for evading the draft. The search was started when department of justice officials advised the police that several people had reported |tt|ev had seen Bergdoll here. Spies and Informers Beware. Dublin, Seot. 22—“Svies and Tnform- ers Beware,” was the label vinned to the clothing of & man fourd dead in a fleld dzy in County Carlow. Twc of an escort are reported t> have buen killed and four wounded when a olice lorry was held up today in Coun- t/ Clare. *“T can use all three ovens and the broiler—at the same time” eeI VE got roast in_the coal oven, bread in that gas oven at the left, and now that I've lighted the broiler flame, this right-hand oven will be hot enough for my cake. I couldn’t do all this baking with any other stove. - “You'd hardly believe such a small - range could have so mluch oven space—6% square feet without the racks, or 13 square feet with them. And from end to end my stove, measures only forty-three inches! Y S THEN, in addition to the ovens, I can have nine kettles cook: ing all at once on the top, when I'm using both stoves—four on the coal es and five on the gas burners! flmk how convenient that is when there’s a big dinner to get—or at preserving time. “Why, last summer I did an unbe- lievable amount of canning—all i1 one day—with this wonderful stove. While things that needed long cook- ing were simmering on the coal stove, I was camning the quicl cooked things on the gar ¥ ¢t A ND it’s so nice to be able to use either stove separately. You know there’s nothing like gas when you’re in a hurry—and there are lots of times when a coal range is so much better, *] discover new ddvanhées in this Victory Crawford every day—it’s come to be one of my most treasured possessions. in your kitchen. Nothing suade you to part with it. It’s a wender.,® - Hourigan Bros. Wait till you get one could per- Accident Prevention Demonstration Company, to be enacted by officers rep- resenting the Carnegie Steel Company, Midvale Steel and Ordnance Co., Cam- bria Steel Co, and the Red Cross Bu- reau of First Aid. A new carbon mono- xide detector also will be demonstrated @8 to its accident prevention and first aid value. g A questionnaire issued by the council, the bureau of mines and the Red Cross to ascertain the experience of industrial goncerns Wwith first aid endeavors, has been sent out. The answers arc expectr ed to form the basis of an effort by the fix the responsibility, have been made by |council to standardize various affiliated J. R. Mulligan, of the Bethlehem Steelorganizations in first aid work. e e e RBEPLACING LOST BOTTLES ADDS TO PRICE OF MILK ‘Washington, Sept. 22.—Replacing lost milk botties adds tg the price of milk paid by ecity consumers, an investigation by the department, of ag $:ulture has dis- closed, although no attempt was made to fix the amobunt added to consumers’ bills for this reason. In at least 27 cit- ies junk dealers were found to carry om a regular traffic in milk bottles. The report says . milk dealers “are compelled to purchase 1.2 bottles every month for each bottle they have filled daily during that period” and contin- ue: The loss among small dealers is less than that sustained by the large enter- prises. The small dealers have greacer breakage than the large distributors, but they are better able to check up on the return of their bottles and therefore do not jose so many in that manner. “Breaking bottles, losing or using them for other purposes, selling to junk dealers, or giving the bottles belonging to one dealer to another adds materially to the consumer's bill and is an economie error which each and every consumed can help to reduce by returning ev- ery bottle in good condition.” NO DEVELOPMENTS IN NEW YORK BOND INVESTIGATION New York, Sept. 22.—While the lat- est development today in the investiga- tion of Wall Street’s mysterious cxplo- sion last Thursday pointed to an acsi- dent rather than a plot, new dew.a:hes from other cities indicated that a mild epidemic of “bomb threats” had broken out throughout the country. Cleveland, Boston, New Bedford, Tren- ton and New York were among cities which reported anonymous warnings of dire misfortune. Although authorities professed to regard these messages as the work of some practical joker or crank, nevertheless in every instance ex- tra precautions to prevent outrages were taken. The fact that New York's custom house still stands unshaken after the fake warning of an explosion to have oc- curred yesterday did not cause either federal or local officials ‘o relax their vigilance. Virtually the only progress made in the investigation of the disaster here last Thursday came unsought. While various investigating bodies were_tracking clews all over New York and New Jersey, four men employed by & house-wrecking concern working in th® 16799 DIED sgainst this trouble by taking GOLD MEDAL m% The world's standard remedy for kidney, @ver, - bladder and uric acid_troubles. Holland’s national since 1696, All druggists, three h&l—t&::- financial district, walked into the muni- cipal building on their own account and reported that ten minutes after the blast, they had been talking With the driver of the death wagon Which is be- lieved either t6 have carted a bomb into Wall street or to have been hit there by an automobile walile conveying ex- plosives across the city. The workers said that the driver had rushed up to them and declared his wa- gon had been blown up while he was telephoning his employer for an address to which he had been ordered to take some building materials. Then he is said to have disappeared. Assistant District Attorney Talley in- |dicated tonight that the September grand jury investigating the disaster would be particularly interested in the |story of these four men, as the jurors had been charged to look for criminal negligence as well as conspiracy. A hint of the former was given by the work- men, who declared to reporters that some contractors frequently carted ex- plosives in any sort of vehicle without bothering to oftain a permit. Mr. Tal- ley said he wduld summon the four workmen to appear at his office tomor- row. When the grand jury adjourned this afternoon its foreman ordered that sub- poenas be issued for drivers and super- intendents of explosive companies in this city. The subpoenas are retuMaabie tomorrow morning. Several witnesses who claimed to have seen 'a powder wa-{ gon in the vicinity shortly before the explosion already have been heard COX TURNS HIS GUNS ON FORMER PRESIDENT TAFT Phoenix, Ariz, Sept. 22.—A statement declaring that former Pregident Taft should be “ashamed of himself” for his statement regarding use of militia in Ohio during the Cox administration was issued today by Governor Cox, democra- ic nominee, during his Arizona cam- paign. Commenting on Mr. Taft's recent arti- cle which said that Governor Cox's “in- disposition to maintain order by use of the mi a is well known to local union ' BEFORE The Norwich TRY The Hoover Vacuum Sweeper /. OUR SERVICE GOES WITH EVERY HOOVER 4244 FRANKLIN STREET BUYING Electric Co. LEGAL NOTICES AT A COURY OF PROBATE MELD at Norwichi, within and for the Uistriet of Norwich. on tne 2:d day vl Sepiember, A D, 1920, . Present—NELSON J. AYLING, Judge. Estate of Minnie A. Allen, late of Nor- wich, 1n_said District, deeeased. - - The Executor eahibited his administra- tion account with said estate, to the Court Ted, That the 27 y o - ber. A D. 1320, at 5 o'clock in the after- noon, at_the Probate Court Room in the G ot Norwich, in said Bistricl, be- and same s, appointed for, hearini same, and the said Esecutor I8 directed {0 give notice thereof by publishing this or- |der once in some newspaper Having a circulation in said District, at Jeast days prior to the date of sald hearing, and make return to the Court. NELSON J. AYLING, Judge The above and foregoing is a true COPY of record. HELEN ). DRESCHER. Clerk. Attest : sep23d AT A MEETING OF THE COUBT OF Common Couneil of the City of Norwich, Conn., held Mondav, Sept 13, 1820, 1us following ‘was yroposed as an amendment 1o the city ordinances and the City Cierk them, Governor Cox made the foliowing statement : “It has been apparent for some time that Judge Taft's newspaper articles, which were intended to be the reflections of a mature statesman have been turn- ed into a cheap political propaganda. He ought to be ashamde of himself for the statement that law and order have not been maintained in Ohlo. I would like to have him tell me the instances in which he would have used troops where I did not. “I challenge him to cite the opinion of a single member of the supreme court of Ohio, no matter what his politics might be, in support of his absurd accu- sation. 1 have no objection to Judge Taft's becoming a water carrier around the old guard political camp. A great many people, however in our state, who have respecied him throughout cannot but look with regret upon the ease with which reactionary politicians still make use of him.” Application of the league of nations argument to Wwestern problems was stressed by Governor Cox in addresses this morning at Mesa and Tempe. Re- adjustment of European conditions as a result of the league, the governor said, would assist in opening up the European market to cotton and livestock which the west produces. Governor Cox prom- ised that when elected he would send a corps of engineers into the west to lo- cate new reclamation projects. He de- clared he favord the Srith-Fletcher bill for completing reclamation enterprises. The governor urged that Senators Marcus A. Smith and Henry F. Ashurst, democrats, of Arizona, be returned to the senate. Speaking of Senator Smith, democratic candidate for - re-election in the general election in November Gov Cox sald the senator could be counted upon to vote In favor of the league of leaders and explains his popularity 111 Fifth Avenue, Mew York, N. Y. IF It Sw ING C OuT Our OFrER, SenD A PromMise By THe AMERICAN ToBACCO COMPANY e iNncomPomATED nations. Senator Ashurst's seat is not WALk InTo ANY STorEe IN Tve UniTteo Starecs To-Day Anp Try THe Lorp SaLisBury TurkisH CiGARETTE. SHOULD It NoT AppeaL To Your TasTE, Tre CLerk WiLL Hano You Back Your Money On The Seor. IT WiLL Par You To Try involved in the election, his term not be- ing near expiration. Governor Cox sald the league would be a “remedy” to bring about the read- justment of prices as a result of a read- Justment of world conditions, There were two definite conspiracies in the senate, the candidate dclard, one was to prvent approval of the league of nations covenant and. the otner to pre- vent reduction of war taxation. Eoth were for the purpose of creating unrest and feeling against the administration, he asserted. COLOEADO NOMINATES NICHOLSON FOR SENATE Denver, Col, Sept. 22.—Complete un- official returns from the state primary. of September 14 as complled today by The Denver Times, gives to Samuel D. Nichol- son, of Leadville, mining man and bank- er, the republican nomination for United States senator by a plurality of 536 over his nearest opponent, Karl C. Schuyler, Denver attorney. Clemmencean Salls For Indin. Marsciiies, Sept. 22.—Former Premier Clemenceau embarked _today on the steamer Cordilliere for ‘India. He will ¥pend several week shunting in the Hima- iayas. CUT THIS OUT—IT IS WORTH MONEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mall it to Foley & Co., 2835 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, IIL, writing your name and ad- dress clearly. You will receive in return a trial package containing Foley's Honey and Tar_Compound, for_coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills, for pain in sides 'and back, rheumatism, 3 kidney and bladder ailments: and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thor- oughly cleansing cathartic for constipa- tion, biliousness, headache, and sluggish bowels. Lee & Osgood Co. —which means that if you don’t like LORD SALISBURY Cigarettes you can get your money back from the dealer. OULD HAPPEN THAT A DeaLER Reruses To CARRY The O IGARETTES. TO TH PEN PACKAGE WITH THE RemA- Tosacco With Your Name An WiLL Seno You E Ma Our PR E IN O OF THE. ¢ Company, il F-m'fi%‘-. u;%'f%’&i"""‘ D ADDRESS PLAINLY CHeck For The 4 City, oOrdered o publish the same as by law Pprovid Be jt ordained by the Court ‘of Comi- mon Council of_the City. of Norwich: Seclion 1. ~Section' 2 of an ordinance regulating trofiic adopted by the Court of Common Couscil at its meeting Held Aug. 16, 1920, as it appears on_page 69 of the Journal 'of the Court of Common, Counil for Aug. 2, 1820, Phescribing the direction traffic shall take along certain portions of Water and Commerce streets is hereby amended to read as follows: All persons are hereby forbidden to operate or drive any vehicle, horse or cther animal on Water street from its junction with Commerce street the Westerly side of Market stroet escept in a westerly direction or on Commerce street except in an_easterly direction. Sec. 2. Section 2 of the ordinance re- {lating fo street traffic regwation adopted {Aug. 16, 1920, as it appears on page 67 of the journal of the Court of Common Council for Aug. 2, 1920, is _hereby ameided to Trovide that mo vehicle ex- cept while loading or unloading, or taking on or setiing down passergers, shall be allowed to remain stationary for-a longer period than thirty minutes on the west- erly side of Franklin street from Ba street to Willow street. Sec. 3. Whocver violates any of the provisions of this ordinaace shall be pun- <ding Afty dollaj laned by a figgnot Sec. 4. A nrd"\gn < of parts of dinances inconsistest Lerew! () are hereby repes s Attest: W. R, FRISLIE. 4 City Clerk and Clerk of the Court of Common Council of the City of Nor- ‘wich. Norwich, Conn., § pt. 14 19 AT A MEETING OF THE COURT OF Common Council of the C of Norwiech, Conn., held Monday, Sept. 13, 1920, the following was proposed as an amendment to the city ordinances to be known as “An ordinance fixing traffic routes for Publ Service Motor Vehicles witiin the C of-Norwich.” -and_the -City Clerk: ordered to publish the same as by law provided. Be it brdained by the Court of Com- mon Council of the City of Norwich: Section i. In accordance with Chapter 233 of the Public Acts of 1919 trafia for public service motor vehicles; aled as such along the streef squares and highways of s city are hereby fixed as follows, to wit 1a) All the public streets, highwas enues and squares in s: city hereby specifically designated and fized as traftic routes for ail public service mo- tor vehicles while operated as such except the following, to wit: _ Main street from its junction with Water street to the line of the westerly side of Park street; Shetucket street from. its junction with Main-streel 0 the line of the northerly side of Wat street Broadway from its junction with Main street to the line of the southerly side of Bath street; Bath street its whole length ; Market street from its junction with Main street to the line of the northerly side of ‘Water street; Franklin street . from Franklin square to the line of the south- erly side of Willow street: all of Frank- lin_square, Ferry street and Hose place. Sec. 2. No person shall operate a pu lic_service motor vehicie as such aiong any other street, VEn s highway or square other ti e signated in this ordinance as traffic routes. Sec. 3. Whoever violates any of the provisions of this ordinance shall be pun- fshed by a fine not exceeding Afty dollars for each offense. }"Sec. 4. All ordinances and parts of or- | dinances inconsistent herewith are re- led. o W. R FRISRIE, | Attest: City Clerk and Clerk of the Court of of Ner- yCommon Council of the Cit wich Norwich, Conn., Sept. 14, 1 10 NEW YORK New London (Norwich) Line Enjoy this delightful over night trip down the Sound and reach your destination happy, refreshed and satisfied. Excel- lent service throughout. Leave New London daily ext cept Sunday. Eastern Standard Time, 10:00 p. m. Daylight Sav- ing Time, 11:00 p. m. . State rooms ready at 7:00 p. m. THE NEW ENGLAND STEAMSHIP COMPANY e Vital Question. 1t you buy and eat army corned beef, the government salesmen tell us, the high cost of living will bother you no Jonger; but will it relieve the family of the high cost of your dying?—Ro- chester Post-Express. Probably there is no personal sacri- fice €0 great as that of the misguided woman who Mmarries a man to:reform him. - U. S. Ambassador To Japan delphia. American Ambassador to Japan, who recently rets to this gountry dn lezve and s & at'the _right hand of Bainbfidge Colby. retery of State. more or

Other pages from this issue: