Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, April 4, 1922, Page 7

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e T — ¢ beén: réporfed in 14 Umé licanse days ae police court re. s will be recelv Ofticer ¥ unkenness, revelling tal of 186. Then an . the total arpests were 93 in in 1921 and 81 i 1918. The péeding cases have di- hed The death of Otfs Perdléton Chapman. o Summer street octurred at b Mr. Chapman had been ifi He was e 30a 0f R arfd Hi n ahd was born it Westerly Oc 7, 1845. Whén a young mdn Mr. Chap- man was employed by the Smith Granite 378 he married Sarah A have résidéd in the same Mr. Chapman con- MRS. MARY A. SPENCER, of Watertown, N. Y. dged 75, whé declares she gained fifteen pounds on Tanlac and feels just fine all the time. Was in badly run-down céf- on. WESTER_LY {h¢ Smith -Granita company. and aftér a short period opened a grocery business of his own, building the Chapman block a the corner of M. and PBroad stréet and later he w. 250 hilthe cbal business on M. After seversl yoars because of ill he #ave up &usmess and returned to employ of Orlando R. Smith His % and ofe son, Willlam R. Chapman: and two grandchildrén sufvive him. M Mr. Chapman did much good in the corh- j08s will be keenly felt by #ral wis held Monday aft- i on Summer street. pastor of tHe Paw- duetéd the store of The locnl hod carriers have refused £0 cérits .an hotr. The controversy started here about three weeks ago. wheén , tlie hyay department was looking into tiic 5 paid in the places for men reduced twazés of the Zm!’n 1aborers from 50 cents &n hour to 40 cents an hour and so the Iged] héd carriers and &ommon 1ahor- ers decidsd to strike. About 300 mien are out of work because of this actiom. The granite workers are eut én strike becausc of the granite mamufacturers be- fn wHable to comé to an agréement on the wagé sctile, so all pérations are suspend- ad in_ the stoie and granite -yards Wastérly. 0 granite workers are out, {hé new agrément which would have bech for $6.40 & day for an eight-hour day wasg refused. . The granite worikers of fhis {own would not dceépt 4 20 per cent. cut in' Wwagbs, So the open shop is to 2o in- {o éftéct hére 4t onee. Thére is Itle businé$s in this line here Westerly used to have one of the largest industries of the kind *and séveral thousind men used to be employed thére, but of Iate years. there have becn only a few hundrel at tha works and for thé past three months work on the hill has been practically at a stand still. The deéath of Walter Dugdale occurc at his home Saturday at 5 Williams str. wag the Shave With Cuticura Soap The healthy up-to-date Cuticura way. Dip brush in hot water and tub bf Coticira Soap. ‘Then fake | tather on face and rub in fot & mo- ment with fingers. Make & sécond lathering and shave. Anoint auy if- ritstion with Cuticura Olntment, then wash all off with Cuticura Soap. Nothing better for sensitive sking. e LA Ty Soostie Ofptmant und 0, TelemB e Cuticura Soap shaves without mu 1. you to this event, for we have chosen “The Frée” as the Sewing Machine most worthy of our unqualified recom- mendation. Beautiful Souvenirs Free to Ladies L2 THE WM. W. BACKUS | HOSPITAL ' Training School For Nurses A Private, General Hospital with well equipped medical, surgical and ob- stefrical departments, offers a thres years’ graded course to young women desiring a nurse’s training. Werite at once for circular of informa- Your name made with beautiful Star Twist (piece of art work) stitched by W. C. EL- LIS, Silk Artist and ! think of ft, at seventy-five f age to be. made well and zain and gain twelve pounds this s éxactly. what I ing Taflac, Not only 's younger,” said Mrs. lite-long r a own condition and I wis eo and restless I would hear the clock striki y héur. 1 was able to eat very and lost strength right along. becoming so weak I could k from one room to the sther On acc e count of my age I thought a8 \ing health wae natural, but s _proved that I was mis- can do all my own- house- now, I sleep all niglit long, wike the morning feeling refreshed feel fine all the day long. can’t he praised too much.’ e #'s0ld by National Drug Stores Pharmacy, and in Mercier; Charles R. Dearnley & . MOTHERS AND ~ DAUGHTERS Read This Letter from |& Mrs. W. S. Hughes St i Greenville, Del.—"1 was under someinter- naltrouble as ever since the first time her sickness has received gréat benéfit from it. You can use too much about what your medicine hasdone for me and formy daughter. Mre. Wt S. HUGHES, Gréenville, Del. Wothers and oftentimes grand- mothers have taken and have tea the value_of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. So they recommend the medicine to others. The bést test of any miedicine i§ what it has done for others. For nearly fifty years we have pubc fiihd mothers, - g&tm from ‘&B]fl’ ters, and women; v an Fé ommending the'V age table Compound. e 1 did for dhios ahd are glad to tell others. In your ownt neighborhood are women who of ¢4 great value. Mothers—daughters, whynottryit? f A THAN BUY st s GUR - < rRY OUR WURST % | | HomEe-MADE =3 PORK 0 ‘ SAUSAGE 2 THUMM’S D Franklin St year 1 was in_a térri- |England, many & |trid.and Cticho-Slovakia, il anticipa is letter for a testi- | monial if you wish; as I cannot eay | from preumonia. He was Born i Shrop- shire, England on Aue. 18,1882, He cam to Westarly about {wo_yéars ago and wae employed at the C. B, Cottrell & Sons plant in the foundry. Fp was a menthe of Paweatusk lodge, No. 90, F. and & M, of Granite City Camp, No. 9159, Modern Woodmien of America and of Westerly lodgs, No. 1212, Loyal Order of Moose Hé is strvived by.his wife, S.: Alics How arth Dugdale and his mother, Mrs. Esther Diigdalé and a sister, Mrs, Thomas Platt of Westerly. Pasquale Sallmeno of Westerly was be- fore United States Commissioner Arch Matteson in Providence Fi possession of distilled spir entered a plea of not. guil- ty and upon” walving eéxamination was hotnd ver to the grand jury under bail ct $1,000. The Woman’s Aid society of fhe Seveat! Day-Baltist éhurch will hold\ a meetin: today (Tuesday) at 2 o'clock. Pardon and Mary Crandall of West strest have purchased ‘he house at 21 Stanton stréet from H. A. Stahle and wifs and will reside therc. Thé Harvard club of Riiode Island has offered a $250 scholarship prize for a styd- ént of the sfate who désires to enter H. ward next fall. Compétitive examinations will bé_given from June 19-24 at the Figh school and the student at- ing the highest dverdge will be awrd- od_the scholarship. Miss Catherine. Wiaters has returned home after spending some time in Nor- wich. The next meeting of Westerly Histor- ical sogiety is fo be addfess by Miss Sal Moss Frankenstein, who has jus od from three years abroad, serv i the Y. M. C. A, in the American army in Germany and France, _ Miss Frankenste] i§ a speaker of ability. s 2 els on this trip alone have taken her {o France, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Belgium, Italy, Aus- a1 her an_evéning of compeling interest. T maeting is public and the date has heex change to the first (not the second) Thursday in the month, making this ddte £411 on April 6th. At 12.30 p. m. two trucks came to- tion. CLASSES BEING ORGANIZED FOR MAY 1. APPLICATIONS SHOULD BE MADE' BEFORE APRIL 20th. ADDRESS K. A. DOWD, R. N. SUPERINTENDENT OF THE TRAINING SCHOOL $12.0 ceéntly. The wedding cake was nsatl paCked in several containers and was pefsonally to Mrs. Donahue. Miss Ruth Wilcox ~ of West Broad street, a student at Miss MoClintock’s school in Boston has returned to her studies there after spending her vac: tion with Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Wileo Tolm Remberry of Pawcatuck married Fri Hattie Taft, also af Pawca- . . Dixon of North Stoninz- ton pérformed the ceremony. ~ Mr. and Mrs. Bemberry will reside here. STONINGTON ‘The Merry Maids class met in Com- mmunity house Saturgay. The sewing cla; has made much progress. There will b only one more reguldr session Saturda: April 8th and the final meeting of th season will be held April 22, when the ex- hibition of work and awarding of prizes will be held. Herbert West has combpleted 30 service in His milk business and lives on:the same place where he started bus- iness. A dance is being planned to be held in hiouse after Easter. Miss Irene Winkler is visiting 1 nBridge- -14] MAIN ST, Jeanne of Wauregan spent Sunday as guest of Mr, and Mrs, Severin Pratte. Rev. Amede Roy, who has ‘béen the guest of Mr, and Mrs. Bugene Dion, of Church hill, has returned to Canada. A second anniyersary high mass was sing at the Immaculafe Conception church Monday morning at 8 o'clock, for the repose of the soul of Amede Belair. fiscal year endifig next Jure 30, was n likely to be substantial, in view of col lecBion of back taxes and ineredsed col lecfions of miscellaneous internal reve- nué, But for the fiscal year 1923, Mr. Mello: declared, ths total collections of incom and. profits: taxes were likely to be abou $1.500,000,000 instead of $1,715,000,00 as estimated in the budget, or 2 falling ¢ of $215,000,000. “Collections of income and profits tax es during March 1 he said, amounted, on the basis of daily trea: statements, to be about $393,000,000, as compared +with estimated income &ad profits taxes collections for the month o about $460.000,000 and collections in March a year aso of about $727.000,000. The estimate of $460,000,000 for was based on the figures for_total col tions for the year which apseared in th budget, though the treasury has al regarded these figures as subject to muci uncertaintey because of the shrinkage in business and profits which occurred dur- ing the calendar year 1921. “It fs_intere: to mote that Mareh Sdoisi e S MONDELL TO SUPPORT THE NAVY BILL FOR 65,000 MEN Washington, April 3.—Representative Mondell, Wyoming, the republican lead- er, announced today that he would sup- port the passage of the navy bill, soon o be reported, providing for an enlit ed personnel of 65,000 The views of the leader were express- ed after a conference with President Harding and after frequent talks with Chairmaan Kelley of the sub-committee on appropriations, which is framing the measure, Upholding the contentfon of Chzirman Kelley that the 65,000 maxi- m would give a force sufficient to 0 was a patient New rch hef home héte Monday. Missés Waldo' and Elsie Momisos. who Have beenl visiting in New Loadon have re- turned. John Avéry is at his home heére from Colby college, Maine. Stinday ‘night the death of Frank Dip- pléna, 5, son of Mr. and Mrs. Manios gether on the Mystic, road and highway | Dipplend occurred at the home of its par. | cighteen battleships, the number fixed| 1923 collection in the Boston, New Yo at Industrial place Monday. A heid-on |ents on Broad street, after a shorf ill- the arms conference, Mr. Mondeli said | Philadelphia and San Franciseo federal collision was, the outcom Oné _truck | néss with pneumoniz. The boy was born | this number would keep in fighting trim fireserve districts were substant{ally in was owned by C. C. Fanshaw, a conirac- |in Stonington, Oct. 26, 1917. suffizient aux craft tb matntain :he ! acordance with expectations and that tie tor of Westerly and the other one go- | Monday affernoon the selectmen 5-5-2 ratio. Activities of all navy yards, |chief falling off occurred in the OJleve- ing towdrd New London from Provide owiled by the Narrdgansett people. T 1atter, truck was ioaded with irén, but Mr, Fanshaw's truck was light. The fend- ers and head lights of both trocks wers damaged badly, but the drivers escabed injury. The trucks were towed to a garage at Mystic for repairs, , 1t is understood tHat the nsw mdnagér of the Rhodé 1sland hotél will be Marti Clémr:ins of the Grind View Park. Stomn- ington. He takes thé place of Mr. Wil- let, who récenfly went to California fo e Dr. John Saunders of Wyeming was in town Monday, Hafry R. Milner of Fast avenue who beén spending the winter in the south returned home Mrs, Johint Parkér and son Edwin Pack- ér of Sehodl Street have been callets in Boston at thé Dedconess hospital where 3Mrs, Parker's son-jn-law, Rev. R, H Moyle, of Eastport, Me., is & patient. Rev. Mr, Moyle will spend@ the summer iiere. The Ladig€ Af@ society of Grace M. . chureh will mes this week with Mrs. . H, Ople. 3 A house for Byron N. Stillman, is to be erected on Courtland strest. Mr. and_ Mre. Otto Sfedner of Mystic will decupy the wpper tensment on West Bfoad street owped by James Robinson. ! Connecticnt Highway Commissioner Charles J. Benneet will speak this (Tues- | day) néon at the luncheon hodr at the Colontal chub. i v | Mrs. James Donohue cf Libert street he elated iposséssor of a plece -of ¥ ng cake sent to her by Princess Mary Mrs. Donohiue is employed for thé season, taking ths who dled r& | has i {pldce of Samuel Shnrmion: s e | CoMB SAGE TEA IN ! FADED OR GRAY HAIR Look young! Céfamion garden Sage and Sulphur dafkéns so_naturally i ! 1 | nobody can tell. Grandmother. kept Her hair Beauti- {{ully darkened, glosey and “attractive | with & préw of Sagé Tea and Sulphur. | Whénéver Ner hair took on that dull faded or stredled appeardncé, this sfm- | pié mixture was applied with wonder- ful -efféet. By -gsking at any drug stors for “Wyéth's Sagé and Sulphur | Compourid,” You will gét & lirge bot- | B of thig old-time réecipe; improved | By thé addition of other ingrédienits, all \;quy to uds, at very Mitle cfst. This | simplé mixture can be @épéndéd upon 1o restore natural color and beauty to the haif, A well fnown downtown druggist s 6dy ufes Wyeth's Sige and 1 Cémpéund, now bécause it darkéns #o naturally and évenly that hobody éan tell it has béén applied — iP's g0 edey fo usé, t6s. You &imply dathpén & cbiib or sbft brugh and draw it tfiaui'a.y'auf _nair, taking ofic sirdnd_at & time. By morning the griy hale Gisappéars; atter ansiher application of two, it IS réstoréd to its natural color 4nd looks glossy, soft #nd beautiful. ~This preparation is a delightful tojlet requisite. It is not in- tended for the cure, mitigation or pre- vention of disease. u ur 5 at the Lawrence hos Londos and since her discharge has been the gucs: of lier aunt in New London, returned to Borough hall and transactéd afl by for thé month of March, paying of mogth! bills belng the chief dut: BALTIC Mrs, Peter Beaucar, who for the past two weeks has beem at the home of her sister, Mrs. 'T. J. Sullivan helping care for fer mother who is seriously ilf, has re- turnéd to her home in Bristol. Oscar O. Palmer of Fort Néd was the first person to have his Gog registered -in the town clerk’s of the number of th Harvey Laliberte of River street was seconid., he sald, would be maintained on some sort of a basis, the éxact program- be- ing a matter to be worked out by the administration. land, Chicago and Rickmond districts.” —_— DELIVERY OF ASSETS OF INGERSOLL & BRO. TODAY - BEQUESTS IN WIDL OF LATE . New York, April 3.—Actual deliv $Rs. SUSAN POWEiNe BRENNAK | New Yorh S0 . et of the assets of Robert H. Ingersoll & Brother, watch makers, will be made to the Waterbury Clock company tomorrow for $1,500,000 cash, Referee J J. Town- send announced late today, despite last minute protests by Robert H. and Charles H. Ingersoll. The Ingersolls maintained the company’s assets were worth much more than is to be paid for them, and Waterbury. April 3.—The will 6f thé late Mrs. Susan Dowling Brennan, heir to $60,000 estatc of Dennis Pheldn, was ai- mitted ‘o probate here today. A codicil to the will was also admitted: “An appeal will bé taken by children to the superior court. She gives the following children $5,000 each: Mrs. Mamie Vickers of Bridgeport; Melyille Cote of Boston spént the week | Mrs, Annis Syphers of Gréemwood Lake, | termed the sale an improvident one. end with his mother, Mrs. E. E. Cote., N. J.; and James Brenman of Greenwood ‘When Mr. TD}vnsend signed the sale l Josepli Pratte and daughter, Mare |Lake N. J. She cut off three other chil- | order C. W. Wickersham, attorney for the bankrupt company, announced an ap- peal to the federal court wouid be tak- en. dren with bequests of §1 each: Daniel and Thomas Brennan of Arpan, §. D.; and Mrs, Elizabeth Cross of Greenwood Doukhobor Leader Would Kill Children And Aged St. hodpital of Waterbury re- celves $1,000 and St. Tgnatius Jesuit col- lege of Chicago is residuary legatee. ARRANGEMENTS FYOR FUNERAL OF FORMER EMPEROR CHARLES Funchal, Madeira, April 3.—(By the A, P,)—The funeral of former Emperor Charles of Anstria-Hungary. will be held in the parish church here at four o‘clock next Wednesday afternoon. Francis Joseph Otto, eldest son of the dead monarch, who now is treated by the family as 2 soverelgn, today was out gat cring flowers to place on the bier. Form- ér Empress Zita remains beside the body of her husband night and day. The fun- eral cergmony will be an impressive on. King_Alfonso of Spain has telegraohe the Spanish consul here to furnish the funds necéssary for the requirements of Zita and hér famil - STATEMENT BY SECRETARY OF TREASURY MELLON Washington, April 3.—Despite a falling off of more than $60,000,000" in the ex- pected government receipts from income and mrofits tases for March, Secrefary Mellon announced tonight that the shi age in intérnal révenue collections for the IS |BEST TO i ‘SULPHUR } CLEAR UP UGLY SKIN i Irkitation and Breaking Out Often Healed Ovér Night, Says . Skin Specialist Peter Verezin, leader of 'that firange Russian religious séct; the Boukhobors, which has §,000 set- tlers in Canada, proposes that the f#hole tribe drown its children fer 10 years of age, together with the aged as a protest against & Jfbitant taxes. Once rid of those’ Who cannot travel, Veregin wants' His followers to abandon their Any breaking out or skin irritation on face; neck or body is oyercome duickést by applying Mentho-Sulphur, says a noted skin specialist. Because of gtfier’m destroying properties, noth- ing s évér been found to take the &h_.c&o! this sulphur preparation that dtafitly brings ease from the itching, burning and irritation. Mentho-Sulphur heals eczema right up;, leaving the skin clear and smooth. i‘ farme and wander over the coun- | Lt seldom fails to relieve the torment try, préaching the coming of Christ, |0 disfigurement. A little Jar of Mentho-Sulphur may be obtained at and living as a ‘‘vagrant working A . jany drug stor It used” proletariat. my,m = = = ilks cqid Allowance for Your Old Machine If You Buy a “Free” COME TODAY — DONT DELAY KNOWM FOR QUALITY AdD S5ERVICE=S l | i people have found it to be with the comfort and cheer they thought they had secured in tea and coffee. When they came to depend on it— there was a hidden string, and nothing left but disappointment. The drug, caffeine, in tea and coffee, is a nerve stimulant. Con- stant stimulation of the nerves often produces rebellion that takes the form of sleeplessness, headaches, jrritability, high blood pressure. That's the stfing to tea and coffee. TODAY, APRIL 4th : ‘ THE ONLY LONG BOBBIN ROTARY SEWING MACHINE We take great pleasute in invitine SEWS ANYTHING FROM CHIFFON ; TO CARPETS The “FREE” is the highsst machine possible to make. NOTHING DOWN, and $1.00 A WEEK BUYS A “FREE” SEWING MACHINE BEAUTIFUL WHEN CLOSED 3. 8. RUSKAY & CO., BROKERS, TO PAY 100 CENTS ON DOLLAR George C. More, president, wifl oard: again. - The . board Bridgeport, Conn;, April 3.—The S.}8. Ruskay & Co. New York stock bri erfs whose Bridgeport branch office con- ed the Connectfcut district, and who were forced into the hands of a recetver on February 23, will pay 100 cents on the doliar, Attorney Charlés H. Shapiro, Bridgeport counsel for the firm = a nounced. today after consultation with New York counsel. Within a few day torney Shapiro stated, a letter would Phillp ; Oahu. Hawalian Islands, Mr street, is spendt his home in this city. became an army world war. Guiltord.—Two of three burgl Ny ny in: thiss ining the Suffield.—Under the will of Charles L. Spenser, Suffield school is left $5.000, to be known as the Charles L. Spencer me- morial fund. Windsor Locks. — Great interest has been aroused among local tobacco grow- res by the proposed plan to form a co- operative marketing association. New Haven—Mr. and Mrs. S. Z. Poli of New Haven sailed Friday for Naples, Taly. They wiil also go to Rome. where their daughter Lillian is studying mus.c. Waterbury.—Miss Mday V, Murnan®, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Murnane Coney Island, Magistrate Flatbush court tos s dino, The youth was a of smoking in a subw ther, who ha sbeen years, stepped ward him, but could not make hi stood. This is the age of subs none has béen discovered f e wonderful patented features that make it the easiest running Machine in the world. Special attachments for special N3O NIHM LNIINIANOD: ' 2 consists 6 ieorge Tierney, Philip Stueck, Alan W. Grace M. Coholan of South High ‘2 80-day furlough ai_ Father Cotolas chaplain during the night here were in barber shops.’ Th¢ nead the ¥ Conolds, nited States army ‘chipldin, ‘at preséni’s tioned at Fort Hamchamdha, Hono- ,- Son._ of “ aries Fri. & state, have ven 1, » the offer which has not bee bugsrr b wm}:»m::yn:d; pt s , s that when Be ') the morning he had nothing BRIEF STATE NEWS |50 Ti, DL Soerv tom s20d 2 Collinsville—Sleighs on the streets of S — 4 Collinsvilie was a new thing for April 1.|TO SUFPRESS ROWDYISM & Thomaston.—Mr. and Mrs. Anthony J. AT CONEY ISLAND 2 ratéd their goiden wedding * . -~ anniversary Sunday. New York, April 3—As the first step ., in a campaign to stamp out rowdyism ai = Brown 12 of South street, was one of ten mémbers of the semfor class of Drexel institute, Philadciphia, voted into the Key and Tri- angle ciub of that school. Hartford.—The postofiice receipts for! the first quarter of 1922 not oniy exceed- ed those of the corresponding period of 1921 by $5,000 but are nearly §13,000 in excess of the figures of the first quarter of 1920, which were $335,041.18. Middletown,—At the meeting of the board of water commissioners, the same officers wére élected for another year. croup: Foley sides and back, William found a pocketbbok But the string jerked it back 1t looked like 4 happy discovery-es it lay there . on the sidewalk—until the discoverer reached to.pick it up. 'Then the hidden string jerked it away. All William got was disappointment. Postum, that wholesome and delightful cereal beverage, is com- pletely satisfying and there’s no harmful quality whatsoever, to jerk " away the comfort which you find in this splendid table drink. Any member of the family may enjoy Postum with any meal—ang there will be no after-regrets. " Postum comes in two forms: Instant Postum (in ins) made instantly in the cup by the addition of boiling water. Postush Cereal (in packages of latger bulk, for those who prefer to make the drink for 20 minutes. Sold by grocerss Postum for Health—“There’s a Reason” nd. sluggish fihfl-l‘h-m‘lhbdfl(.mpn‘d)u‘fltwm‘ constipa-~ 1 R3027 ¢

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