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™ TEACHERS PROPOSE NEW LEGISLATION Teachers of the public schools of Nor- rested in the legislation t te Teachers' nt to the legis Among the fea- proposed leglsiation are a the requifed term of ser- 20 to 15 years before a teach- by the pension law; in- ald, better -galaries, and e of the provisions of slation follow GROWING DEAF WITH HEAD NOISES ? | THE KNOWLTON HYDRAULIC ARMOTOR I WILL REVOLUTIONIZE THE WORLD ! GIVING LIGHT, HEAT AND POWER mum cost to Railroads, Industries and the people, possible Lower Rents and Taxes. mak American should be dollars and receiving in a proposition with brains. Moving pictures e Universal Tide estigatic n at treet, City. willing to help by investing a few ;n return What lhat mofley is wo’fil PThc arguments in the suit of Martha | ~URWICH BULLETIN, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER, 23, 1920 the state board of education. To provide that the secretary of the teacher retirement board shall submit annually to the goveror a detailed state- ment of the membership, investments, in- comes and expenditures of the retirement |I°W the final post-war phenomenon, -ac- Proposed Legisiation. 1 The services of all teachers, prin- cipals, and supervisors to be during good behaviour and efficiency after the expi- ratlon of three consecutive years of em- ployment n & town or school district un- less a snorter period is fixed by the employing board. : 2 "The period of service any téacher y the istrict in which she is now employed to be counted in determin- ing such period of employment 3. smissal or reduction in the sal- ary of the individual teacher to be only for inefciency, Incapaclty, conduct un- becoming a teacher or other just cause {0 be determined after & hearing and by a vote of two-thirds of the. school com- Teacher to be represented by option and the right to issue vrits of subpoens s 4. Appeal provided Yor from the deci- sion of the local board to the state board of education without coat o the teacher, involved. —This act to become mandatory on all school districts not later than Sep- tember 1, 1922, (1t will be noted that although the present law requires thirty-five years of service before retirement, under the pro- sed disability clause, a teacher physi- lly or mentally incapable of rendering: rvice may be retired after thirty years vice and receive full pension.) is proposed change has the approval the teachers' retirement board and assoclatipn, which statements, if approv- ed by the governnor, shall be printed by the board of control To reduce the required. term of service in Connecticut before a teacher may ben-| efit by the pension law from twenty to fifteen years. To provide a peralty of 9 per cent. in cases whero town or district school committees fail to transmit promptly o the feacher retirement board the as- sessments which they have deducted from the teachers’ salarles for the retirement fund. From this fine, the teachers de- prived of interest by such delay to re- ceive reimbursement of such interest and the remainder to go to the funds of the retirement assoclation. * Allowance on retirement: 1.- To raise the minimum =allowance to a teacher on retirement from the present $300 to $400. This increase to apply a'es\to all teachers now retired in payments tb be made after the passage of the act. (1t will be noted that teachers already. retired will share in the increase of allowances proposed above.) 2 To authorize any town, clty or school district to establish a local teach- ers’ pension plan providing for allow- ance on retirement of not less than one- half of the average salary for the five years preceding retirement but not to be reimbursed from the state by the amount that would otherwise be Daid directly to the teacher, Assesement: To raise the minimum as- sessment of §25, for each teacher to §40, and the maximum assessment from $100 to $150 at the present rate of 5 per cent. Tie increase of the maximum has the epproval of the state board of edu- cativn and of the retirement board. ity clause: To provide for re- case of disability so that any teacher, whose service in the pub- 1 schools of the state co lea or mare y s the last five of which shall Lave heen corsecutive, and who becmes permanently incapable of rendering {1sfactery service because of physionl mental disability, may be retired and re- c®72 fc: each completed vaa~ of service E on eth woLiG ery true §|hwve received if retirem:nt age of yery: 80 years. Arguments in Wilcox vs. Karoll. . Wilcox, trustee, - against Henry P. of Ledyard, are to be made erior court here next Monday t 10 o'clock. It had been ex- would be made here Monday but there was a misunderstanding on the part of some of the attorneys, so that the * the arguments was put off an. . We invite the fullest in- of plant in actual operation Power Co.’s office, 22 Bath " v i before Judge George E. Hinman and involves a claim for an injunction and Uamages of $2,000. ! & " Food For Thanksgiving At Really Wholesale Prices ON SALE TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY : Fresh Little Pig SRR Shoulders, Ib. . 27c Fresh Little Pig Pork Loins for Roast, Ib...... 37c Rib Roast Beef ound ....... 28¢c Lean Beef for Pot Roast,Ib...... 20c Best Chuck Roast Beef,Ib....... 24¢ } Fresh Hamburger Pound ....... 24c Best Prime Rib Roast,Ib...... 35¢ BONELESS—NO WASTE Armour’s Sugar Cured Smoked Shoulders, Ib. . 25¢ FRESH FROM OUR OVENS MINCE PIES § MADE FROM GRAND- MOTHER’S MINCE MEAT 35¢45¢c Each Plenty of Bread Poultry Dressing You Know, of Course, We Have Lowered the Price of Bread to 8c and 12c per loaf ns) 1 3. Desmond were called Stiff GREAT PRE-WAR DEMAND" % FOR TECHNICAL TRAINING The ‘greatesy demand ever witnessed in thjs country for technical training is For Stomach Agony! Ask Your Druggist About M O-N-.i It Gives Relief in Five Minutes Your druggist will tell “you that | Mi-O-Na is . guaranteed to relieve] quickly and sately, upset stomach and | indigestion, or your money will bel refunded. Have you gas on stomach ? One Mi-O-Na Tablet and the misery is ended. Are you bilious, dizzy or nervous ? | Na_ will help to put you right| gives relief in five minutes. | Now, dear reader, don’t go on suffer- ing with stomach trouble, Be fair to | yourself; throw aside prejudice and Ty Mi-O-Na. ‘And money back if you don’t say . Mi-O-Na is worth its weizht in gold. | Sold by The Lee & Osgood -Co., and leading druggists everywhere. : “In Now Yok one of our schools.. has HLW) i become 5o overcrowded that we have had | Ends Catarrh or money back. Just to open another to take care of the over- | breathe it in. Outfit inciudes inheler, flow. We had intended to restrict our ac- | Extra bottles at all i tivities everywhere, but instead we find ourselves extending them in order to cope with the demand The K. of C. system s an entirely new frowtn, pirt | of our employment and_general recor | struction work. The great number of i . v 3 night schools, private and nub(lkz; arl‘deld! ' “«;2:?:1:0.2 M on the rapidly expanding, K. of chain oA g : By Sive proof thiet ‘the demand for | Of HATLOtd, has ruled that surpins technical training is - widespread and _ in most encouraging from the standpoint of national progrese.” cording to the Knights of Columbus, Wil- llzm J_ McGinley of New York, supreme secretary of the K. of C. and director of their educational organization, states that the requests made on the Knights for ad- mission to their free night schools for former service men are more. than double the number received last year. . “We have had ‘to . open thirty new 68,000 former service men in these scho and we shall kave to open more schools under the auspices of the K. of C. coun- cils in order to_care for the men who d¢ sire technical training. ‘By far the most popular course |Is automechanics, because this trains a man for_business and pleasure both. But there is an Increasing demand for -spe- cial training in' the sedentary occupa- tions—in expert sceounting particularl and’ we have more than 3,000 former ser vice men taking courses in income tax law and_operation. HOSPITALS MAY B EFIT % BY SEIZURES OF LIQUOR may be very popular places | institutions for medi Auliffe stated that the liquors found to be satisfactory beverag: sold to those agencies which le, liquor under the law and the remainder donated to hospitals for use among the ck. While there is nothing def yet upon which to base that opinion, it is the general impression among federal men that this course will be tuken. There are two warehouses i the state in which liquors are beu government agents, the: port and New Haven. All Lquor this section of the state is take Haven. The warehouse in Bridgeport is to overflowing. The approx value of liquor seized and stored 1n tiese two cities is about $500,000, according to McAuljffe. a COMMITS STICIDE I3 FIT OF DESPONDENCY Miss Mollie Ruchick, 22, of 28 Maple street committed sulcide sometime dur- Ing Sunday night by drinking carbolic acid. Miss Ruchick, who had made her home with her sister, Mrs. Ireal Ruch- ick, on Sunday night had aitended the performance of Rumoresque at the Davis theatre and had returned home in her usual good rpirits. She had played with the children and then gone to bed. When Mrs. Ruchick went to call her sister on Monday morning she found the irl dead in bed. Dr. B. J. Sohn ana Dr. H. E. Higgins were called but th girl had passed -away. Medical Exam- iner C. C. Gildersieeve and Coroner J.| When the prop n and after in-|liquor will be sorted and fhe p Vestigation decided that the girl had died|tvpe will be allocated to hosi from drinking carbolic acid. suro death moonshine will A note to her sister said -that she|probably by wished all the money she left be sent to her papents in Russia. . Of late the voung woman had received letters of a Qopressing nature from Russia and it is thought that this may have had somel thing to do with her taking her own life. Al of the girl's eople with the| exception of her sister are in Russia. A brother who has tried to get to this country has been detained in Germany. Funeral services were held fro 3 late home on Monday afternoon and burial took place in_ the L O. B. A. ceme- tery at Brewsters Neck. Church and Allen wére in charge. e destroyed, an. WERE OTHER PLACES That the operations of Alvin L. is wife, Bernice, and his brother: dward and Leon Shackett, of Wor- be 301 WOEKING BUT T g ot < |nesday_evening. When one feels always tired working, or suffers from backache. I rheumatic pains, sore muscles -ur ts, it is not always easy to 1 ! dications in the middle west and in Ph | or diseased kidneys. and Edison Sts., Juicy, Parson Brown, Florida 3 Oranges, doz. . 45c¢ § Cape Cod Cran- berries, 2 gts. . 25c § English Walnut ~ § Meats, Ib...... 50c £ Jonathan Table Apples, dozen. 35¢ | TURKEYS We Have a Supply of Fine Birds — Tender, Plump, Young Hens and Toms. Ib. 55¢ Plump, Young Chickens, Ib. ... §5¢ Fresh Killed Fowl,lb....... 50c Long Island Ducks, Ib..... 50c Native Geese Pound ....... 50c Guinea Hens Paif .00 3200 N. B. C. Soda, Milk and Oyster Crackers, Ib. .. 20c Fresh Grated Cocoanut, Ib. . 27c Potato Chips Package ...... 15¢c Pure Lemon or Vanilla Extract 2 oz. bottle. ... 25¢ Mince Meat Package ..... 16¢c Best Mohican COFFEE Ib. 25¢c-45¢c-48¢ Alaska Pink Salmon, Ib. ... 16c Sugared Dates Pound........23c Celery Hearts 2bunches ..... 25¢ Mohican Creamery BUTTER Pound 55¢ Swift’s Pure Silverleaf LARD 2 Pounds 49¢ Cooking Com- : pound, 2 Ibs. .. 35¢ A LARD SUBSTITUTE Mohican Selected EGGS Large, Meaty, Wholesome. Right for Every Purpose. Dozen 65¢ This Store Will Open Until Nine P. M. Wednesday—Closed | All Day (Thursday), Thanksgiving Day. » . 0 the source of trouble, but very frequently | nd. disposed . of 100 Providence, it can be tra Springfleld, Doston and Wdrcester. d to overworked, Mrs. L._Gibso: La Junta, Colo., writes: xidneys were giving me a great deal ouble for some time. I took F Pablic Sehools’ Thanksgiving Reeens. The public schools will close Wednes- day noon for the Thanksgiving holidays to ‘The ordinary every-day life of most women is a ce 8 these two women whose letters follow. ¢ land will open again Mo THANKSGIVING DI nounces a: Thank will be the best Wi and will be served at $2.50 per plate. Reservations may be made by telephone of work. How much harder the tasks become when some derange- ment peculiar to her sex makes every movement painful, and keeps the nervous system all unstrung until life seems hardly worth living. » Every women in this condition should profit by the experience cf Read the Experience of These Two Women 'MUSIC FOR THANKSGIVING DAY Three hundred years ago, the sturdy Pilgrims planted their standard cn the New Eng- land shores and dedicated thzmselves to freedom,—religious and political. A few years late, the little colony, in dire nzed, devoutly prayed that relief might come. When, just at harvest time, a sailing vesssl from England sions and clothing, that day was consecrated to Ccd for the blessing He had sent. - In this day the greatest blessing of the homs is music, with its power to comfort, cheer and refresh mankind. Have music in your home on Thanksgiving day ! BRUNSWICK PHONOGRAPH It brings you all the music reproduction. completely. played by the famcus artists, instrumcntalists, and or- chestras. Unsurpasscd in beauty of tone and accuracy «f Prices are from $115 up, and the terms will satisfy you The' Talking Machine Shop 24 FRANKLIN STREET PIANOS, PLAYER PIANOS, MUSIC ROLLS, TALKING MACHINES AND RECORDS. appeared, laden with provi- of all the world, sung and lay. There will | popular soci g school Wed- | evening in hotel, be; 2 are to be given Wednesday Sa evening and promise to bo largely tended.—ad no session of the eve ER AT MOMICAN HOTEL| The Mohican hotel at New London an-| RED CROSS EOLL CALL 18 g dinner which| s amborattonn] SLOW IN NEW LONDON The Red Cross roll call in New Lon- S | don has four more days to go but is still e hotel. | oaohles 5 e Moniean Is also to give one of its] CORSIderably £hort of reaching the $5,000 it is aiming for. Detwecn now and Thanksgh mittee, of W is chairman. efto member and every Officials of the the publ 1o realt ate. e fou roll cull wil memberships, the ch close its doors and s activiics will be- Driven Wild by Eczema “The leg was like & pisce of liver Enee to the ankle and burned cond writes E. Horan of Veaice, Ca! “Prom the @3t applicat stopped the itching. sad three bottles tie trouble and it pever came back.™ Tho proof of the podding 1o in the esticy. When & prescription for kin disease has lstiers teling of cures from every part of the United Stakes, surely it is enoueh to copvince the mast skeptical. D. D, D. relieves itching termest immediately. Just try onc bottie on our movey- back gusranlee #5c, 00c and §loa. Try D.D from the on, D. D. D, after -ome a memory. repoms from | year of 600, | SALESWOMAN CItan ' EMPLOYER WITH Six charges of si . ferred ugainst Miss Ma of 49 Garfield avenuc, New the .police court there Momday S. Victor Prince, following 4 dengiy THEFT hearing, wi- 3 would decisio Lond at $500. Three of the counts againsl Miss M- son were examined by the court and theg \ttorney Grorge C 1 for the mccured, w ing. Attorney M {the - defense admi | rome errors jn | oks of i there, was no cr part of the accesed and Ot wene been brought out In court Miss Nelson was arrested a few weeks azo, following the filing of a compl hy Samucl Ogeenes, proprieto: Shon, In which he ull time of her arrest she had resigned fron. his employment and was about to 0w apparel establshment. Kind Words, Charjes Q. Eldredge of Ol Mystie har issued”a booklet containing commenta e ceived from readers of his book. Tht Story,of a Connecticut Life, 2 it shows how favorable an impression it has m aseless treadmill | | Reading, Pa.—* I had organic inflam- mation, pains in the side and back which were so sharp that they pulled me to my knees, and I could not walk. Thad an operation and still I failed,and. in the eight years I suffered I had four doctors and none helped me. My mother-in-law advised me to take Lydia E. Pinkbam’s Vegetable Compound. I v_n'!jtben in“bed, and after the first bottle T could be.out of bed, then I took Vegetable Compound Tablets and E. ham’s Blood Medicine and also used the Sanative Wash. I still take the medicine and am akble now to «do my own housework. My friendssay, ‘M{! but gm ook well—what do you do? Who is your doctor?” And there is only one answer, ‘Lydia E. Pink- ham’s medicines which Iyglsdly Tecom- mend.’ >—Mrs. W S.z1x, 560 Douglas Street, Reading, Pa. ydiaE.Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound Gainesville, Tt “TFor théee years 1 suffered untold -agony each month with pains in my side. 1 found only temporary relief in doctpr’s medicine thing else I toek until my hus- band and I saw an advertisement of Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com- pound. I mentioned it to a neighbor and she told me she had taken it with good results, and advised me to try it. I was then in bed part of the time,and my doctorsaid T weuld have tohe oper- ated on, but we decided to try the Vege- table Compound, and T also used Lydia E. Pinkham’s Senative Wash. Iama dressmaker and am now able to go about my work, and do my housework besides.” You are welcome to use this letter as a testimonial as Iam always glad to speak a word for your medicine.” —Mrs. W. M. StePHENS,202 Harvey Sty Gainesville. Texas, , Prunes, stuffed with Nuts— Pound $1.60 Stuffed Figs and Dates — Pound 80c Salted Almonds— Pound $1.50 Bitter Sweet Peppermints— Pound 39¢c Mixzd Nuts, salted— Pound $1.25 Candied Cherries and Glazed Fruit for the dinner table, pound....... $1.25 WE TAKE ORDERS FOR PIES AND CAKE AT A DAY’S NOTICE. : The above prices are for cash only<full prics will S.F. PETERSON, Inc. 130 MAIN After Dinner Mints— Pound 79¢ be 5 '-_ "“.