New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 13, 1914, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN" DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, APRIL 13, 1914. LLIOTT EXPLAINS WHY HOAD CAME 10 TERMS dent Issues Statement to Stock- holders Concerning Agreement. New Haven, Conn., April 13.—Presi. nt Elliott of the New Haven road as issued a statement to the stock- olders of the New Haven road ex- laining the negotiations with the overnment and giving the reasons Fhy the directors of the road have oted to recommend that the stock- iclders accept the agréement of ffarch 21 between President Elliott d the attorney general, He also refers to the North Haven 'reck and the trouble with the em- loyes about that time,, After detall- g the failure of the effort to issue 67,000,000 in debentures, he says: “There were $40,000,000 of notes to neet on December 1, 1913, and $5,- 00,000 of bonds on February 1, 1914. ‘herefore it became necessary pend- g the decision, to borrow on No- fember 18, 1913, these sums and later ther amounts to pay for new equip-. eént and for improvements which ould not be stopped or postponed. day the eompany must prepare to reet notes maturing prior to July 26, 914, of nearly $54,000,000 of ‘which jhe most important are the six per nt. notes of November 18, 18913, fmounting with -interest and discount n May 18, 1914, to $46,550,000. “The general business conditions in New England and particularly on its Iroads have been most unsatisfac- ory, resulting in large decreases in poth gross and net earnings. For the jight months ending February 28, 914 there is a decrease in net iIn- me of $4,735,478.83, compared with ke previous year, after allowing for jperating expenses, taxes, interest, ntals and other fixed charges. Based on the results for two-thirds of He vear an estimate has been made or the fiscal year ending June 30, 4, which indicates that for this period there will be only a small sur- lus after paying fixed charges. GOOD LITTER OF PUPS. Herbert Bell, of the New Britain s Light company, is the owner of leven valuable Airdale pups. About week ago Mr. Bell purchased the nother dog in New York. She is reg- lered in the A. K. C. and the father s.a champion. row Away Your Eye-%sses ! “A Free Prescription Can Have Filled and Use at Home you wear glasses?/ Ape you a ietim of eye-strain or other eye- reaknesses? If so, you will be glad o know that there is real hope for fou. Many whose eyes were failing, @y they have had their eyes restored hrough the principle of this wonder- ul free prescription. Oné man says, ? ler trying it: “I was almost blind; uld not see to read at all. Now I n read everything without any sses and my eyes do not water any jore. At night they would pain jreadfully; now they feel fine all the lime. It was llke a miracle to me.” lady who used it says: “The at- nosphere seemed hazy with or with- glasses, but after using this pre- ription for fifteen days everything eems clear. I can even read ne print without glasses.” It is leved that thousands who wear lasses can now discard them in a leasonable time and multitudes more vill be able to strengthen their eyes o as to be spared the trouble and ex- ense of ever getting glasses. Eye roubles of many descriptions may be onderfully benefited by following the mple rules. Here is the prescrip- ion: Go to any active drug store nd get a bottle of Optona. Fill a two unce bottle with warm water, drop In one Optona tablet and allow to dis- olve. ' With this liquid, bathe the eyes wo to, four times daily. You should otice your eyes clear up perceptibly ight from the start and inflammation 11 quickly disappear. If your eyes re bothering you, even a little, take teps- to save them now before it is oo late. Many hopelessly blind night have been saved if they had ared for their eyes in time. omb Sage Tea in Lifeless, Gray Hair. 2 Mixed With Sulphur It Darkens So Naturally Nobody Can Tell. Grandmother kept her hair beau- ifully darkened, glossy and abun- jant with a brew of Sage Tea and ulphur. Whenever her hair fell ut or took on that dull, faded or jtreaked = appearance, _this ‘simple nixture was applied vith wonderful ffect. . By asking at any drug store or “Wyeth's 8age and Sulphur Hair Remedy,” you will get a large bottle bt this old-time reecipe, ready to use, or about 50 - cents. This simple pixture, can be depended upon to gre mnatural color and beauty to * and is splendid for dan- fl dry, jrchy sealp : and falling uA well knowu downtown druggist ys everybody uses Wyeth's Sage nd sulphur because it darkens so 7. that nobody imply damp- aml looks glosay, ' M!t and (Continued from First Page.) duced and then a second shock was given, The prison physicians, Dr. Farr and Dr. Mereemo, with several other witnessing doctors, applied the stethoscope and made other tests for | 1ife. “I pronounce this man dead,” Dr. Farr in a low voice. It was 5:43 o’clock. The group of witnesses left the death chamber and the body of “Dago Frank” was taken to the autopsy, The doctors said Cirofici had made Httle resistance to the electric cur- rent, which registered 1,920 volts and between nine and ten ampereg. Of the four he died the easiest. He had intended making a statement, but his mental processes had failed him. “Whitey Liewis” Second. filed in. said A new lot of witnesses Through the little door presently came “Whitey Lewis.” He was garbed in black as “Dago Frank” had been. finished was on his lips as he entered. A current of 1,920 volts, with a slightly higher amperage than had been used on Cirofici took his life after two contacts. The switch was first closed at 5:47:36 and he was pronounced dead at 5:52. “Gyp the Blood” Third. Again the chamber was emptied and again filled with witnesses. At 5:56 “Gyp the Blood” was brought in. He had a Jewish prayer book in his left hand and Rabbi Goldstein walked by his side. ‘“Listen, Israel. There is only one God,” mumbled Gyp in Hebrew. His staring gaze swept the faces, but aslde from the prayer he made no statement. The preliminaries’ were quickly ar- ranged, the current was applied. Two shocks were given and at 6:02 o'clock physiclans pronounced the man dead. “Lefty Doule” Last. “Lefty Loule,” the last of the four to die, entered the chamber at 6:07. The first contact was given at 6:08, but it was not until 6:17 that he was pronounced dead. Three contacts were necessary. The only relatives of the gunmen who were in the prison at the time of the execution, were “Dago Frank’s” mother, sister and brothers, John and Paul, and “Whitey Lewls’ " brothers, Morris and Louis. Mrs. Cirofici was borne to her car- riage in an almost total collapse, ah hour after the electrocution. The convicts as they flled by the green-barred windows shouted words of cheer to the Seldenshner brothers as they 'left. To a stranger who offered to pay the cost of “Whitey's” burial the brothers replied that they had enough money. All the bodies of the gunmen will be claimed by relatives. Mother Proves Heroine. Mrs. Cirofici remained with her son until four o’clock, hoping to the last the governor would grant a re- prieve. innocence. Mrs. Cirofici pleaded with Frank in Italian to confess, but he said he had told all he knew, and he was not pgesent when Herman Rosenthal was killed. One of the last things Frank said before he left his cell was to Father Cashin: “Take care of my mother,” he admonished. Hopes Were Overthrown. The last avenues of hope for the four gunmen were closed when Gov- ‘ernor Glynn refused to grant a stay of execution and Justfce Goff refused a respite pending the second trial of Lieutenant Charles Becker, who was convicted in the lower courts of hav- ing, plotted the murCer of Herman Rosenthal to prevent him from mak- ing graft revelations to District At- torney Whitman. The court of ap- peals, in reversing the decision for Becker, declared itself unconvinced that he had directed the murder, but upheld the judgment of the lower court that the four gunmen had been the instruments. Motions for a new trial, on the ground of new evidence, made by their attorney, were denied and they were sentenced to die dur- ing the week beginning April 13. Four days before thelr execution a delegation of New York rabbis visit- ed Governor Glynn and pleaded in vain with him to postpone the execu- tion until after the second trial of Becker.. The governor remained fixed in the opinion that he had already expressed that Becker’s guilt or inno- cence could in no way affect the guilt of the gunmen who had been judged gullty by two courts, Real Names of Men. The real names of the men who have been known as “Gyp the Blood,” “Lefty Louie,” “Dago Frank” and “Whitey Lewis"” were Harry Horo-~ witz, Louis Rosenberg, Frank Cirofici and Frank Seidenshner. The youngest, Lefty Louie, was twenty-one; the old- est, Dago Frank, twenty-seven. All were Jews except Dago Frank. As the nickname implies, he was an Itallan. Gyp the Blooa and Lefty Loule were married. Their young widows survive them. Not only during the trial but in statements given out at S8ing Sing, three of the gunmen persisted in the declaration that Dago Frank had not been present at the time of the mur- der, ‘and was not in any way con- cerned in the plot to murder Rosen- thal. During their stay in the death house all four maintained an atti- tude of martyrlike innocence, tem- pered with an optimism growing out of their belief that their fate hinged upon Becker's and that if he were not guilty, they must be set free. The news crushing hopes of this na- ture as announced by the warden was reocelved with stoical calmness. History of Crime. The crime for which the four gun- men paid the death penalty started a wave of police reform, from which the ripples have not vet subsided. Throughout the revelations made at t.hs time and subsequently, stalked The statement that he never ! She believed in her boy's| the vague, sinister monster known as the “police Rosenthal the morning of July of the Hotel Metropole in the heart of the Tenderloin. On receiving an announcement from a man who came into the hotel,. he walked out and felt dead before a fusillade of bullet: The murderers leaped into an auto- mobile and escaped. Weeks later | after Becker had been arrested the gunmen were found in a flat in Brooklyn. ] Their conviction and Becker's were | based chiefly on | three go-betweens who turned state evidence. These men—Jack Rose, Bridgie Webber and Harry Vallon declared that they had hired the gun- men to kill the sambler, Rosenthal, Becker's request. Sam Schepps, a little gambler, co roborated their testimony and v not adjudged an accomplice. Becker Behind Traged) | Becker lieutenant charge of arm squad whose duties were to keep in subjec- tion the gangs of the city and to regulate gambling houses and places of ill fame. Rose, Webber and Val- lon said that Becker had made use of his position to collect money from these houses, Rosenthal, according to these same witnesses, having a griev- | ance against Becker, was about to | give evidence against Becker to the district attorney. Becker was arrested July 29, 1912, but nearly two months elapsed be- fore the apprehension of the gun- men. Their trial hefore Justice Goff marked a record of speed in criminal procedure. Gunmen Flectrocuted at Dawn I | s shot down early on | 16, 1912, in front was a in the police “strong “Confession” Was Made. Albany, N. Y., April 15.—Some of § 1 i | i i i gunmen are beljeved to have con- fessed before they died. Superintendent John B. Rlley of the state prison department said that statements would from Ossining today show that “No injustice had done by the executions.” He nothing of the nature of the ments. The statement is declared to impli- cate no one but the men who died to- day. No word was forthcoming as to whether the ‘“confession” was made by all or one of the condemned men. It was given to Warden Clancy about four o’clock this morning: No promises were made to the writer, it is said, but in the last hours on earth there was a voluntary change in the attitude of some of the condemned. Came from “Dago Frank.” The report that the statement came from Cirofici was strengthened by a remark made by Supt. Riley: “The men had the same opportunity to make this statement when I was down to Sing Sing last week,” he said, “but; they did not choose to avail them- selves of it” Mr. Riley said he would issue a formal statement as soon as the mes- senger arrives. He knows, in the | main, what the communication con- tains, he said, but he dexlrea to make it public in full, today here would been khew state- arrive which MT. PLEASANTS ELEOT. Popular Athletic Club Plans to Or- ganize Fast Baseball Nine. At a well attended meeting of the Mt. Pleasant Athletic club held yes- terday the following officers were elected: President—George Applegren. Vice President—John Burns, Recording Secretary—James Roche. Financial Secretary—John Mangan, Sergeant at Arms—Joseph Meskill. A call has been issued for the base- bzll candidates to report next Satur- day and under the managership and ccaching of L. P. Mangan one of the fastest teams in the state is expected to result. ‘‘Red” Campbell, Thomas Smith and James Roche will also help in coaching the team. WEDDED FOURTEEN YEARS, Mr. and Mrs. Olin I. Oldershaw of Stanley street were married fourteen years ago yesterday and celebrated ‘the event with an automobile trip down the river. Mr. and Mrs. Older- shaw have two children. Mr. Older- shaw is a well known grocer. DON'T TRUST GALOMEL Thousands Experience Bad After Effects From This Dangerous Drug. A Safe Vegetable Substitute is Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets for the Liver. Dr. F. M. Edwards, a prominent physician of Ohio, has discovered a laxative and liver toner in a combina- tion of vegetable materials mixed with olive oil, which is in effect almost exactly like calomel, except that there are none of the bad after effects. Dr. Edwards has long been a foe of calomel, though he recognized its value along with its dangers. His distrust of the uncertain drug eventually started him, years ago, | towards experiments with the view | of discovering a .substitute, and he has been for several years in posses- sion of the long-sought-for combina- tion, which is in the shape of a little sugar-coated, olive-colored tablet. The results of 17 years’ experi- ence and practice are embodied in these marvelous little tablets. They are called Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets. And their effect on the liver has been the means of relief to many of Dr. Bdwards regular pa- tients as well as to . thousanas of others who have suffered and were afraid of calomel. There is no necessity, when you take Dr. Edwards’ Olive Tablets, by fol- lowing them up with nasty sickening, griping salts, or castor oil, as you do after taking calomel. Try them: 10c and 25¢ per box. The Olive Tablet Company, Columbus, O. All drug- gists, “Acid-Mouth” Always Results in Tooth Decay There’'s no mystery about the cause of de- cayed teeth—it's ‘“‘acid- mouth.” As to whether you have “acid-mouth” ! Well, authorities believe that 95 out of every 100 havethisresult of modern, civilized diet.” Pebeco Tooth Paste is made to give you more than the ordinary “toilet article” dentifrice. It cleans, polishes:and whitens. And then— gets at “acid-mouth” and overcomes this ‘“well- nigh universal” cause of decay. That's why Pebeco is the dentifrice p/us. The one preparation we know of that scientifically beau- tifies the teeth and saves them. Ten-Day Trial Tube and Acid Test Papers to Test Your Mouth for Acid—Sent Free LEHN & FINK 120 William Street = New York STYLES, HOLIDAYS, GUNS AND KNIVES ANl These Figure in Polwe Couit Session Ths Morming. A man who didn’t like the style of his wife’s shirtwaist and bedt her, a free for all fight in a house that net- ted $97 in fines, a man who didn't think it was right for a friend to beat his wife on a holiday—these were ‘a few of the featunes at today’s session of police court. Beats Boarder 'With Bottle. Joseph Pivalski, a boarding house keeper, denied being drunk yester- day, but admitted striking Peter Nowack, a boarder, in the face with a beer bottle. Nowack pleaded guilty to drunkenness. The men had a dispute yesterday afternoon in Pivalski’s boarding house on Broad street. The voarding boss grabbed a beer bottle and began to beat on Nowack’s head. He cut a deep gash In his left cheek and also received a laceration of the scalp. It was alleged that Nowack had at- tempted to strike Pivalski with a beer bottle, but was restrained. ‘When Officer Willlam Grace placed Pivalski under arrest me was forced to use his club on his hands as his prisoner put up a battle. Pivalski was flned $10 for drunk- enness and $10 for -assault, and Nowack was assessed $7 for drunken- ness. $97 in Fines in One Case. As the result of a mixup at South Main street yesterday, John Stalmack was charged with assault on Peter Hider, Hider was charged with assault on Stalmack and also with indecent exposure, and Steve Bender was charged with breach of the peace. Mrs. children vard. 126 Stalmack was told by her of Hider's actions in the She remonstrated with Hider, WHAT’S INDIGESTION ? WHO CARES ? LISTEN ! “Pape’s Diapepsin” Makes Sick, Sour Gassy Stomachs Surely Feel Fine in Five Minutes, Time it! In five minutes all stom- ach distress will go. No indigestion, heartburn, sourness or belching of gas, acid, or eructations of undigest- ed food, no dizziness, bloating, foul breath or headache. Pape's Diapepsin is noted for its speed in regulating upset stomachs. It is the surest, quickest and most certain indigestion remedy in the whole world, and besides it is harm- 1 Millions of men and women now eat their favorite foods without fear —they know Pape’'s Diapepsin will eave them from any stomach misery. Please, for your sake, get a large fifty-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin from any drug store and put your stcmach right. Don’t keep on being iserable—life is too short—you are rot here long, so make your stay agreeable. Eat what you like and digest it; enjoy it, without dread of rebellion in the stomach. Pape's Diapepsin belongs in your home anyway. Should one of the family eat something which doesn't agree with them, or in case of an attack of indigestion, dyspepsia, gas- tritis or stomach derangement at dsytime or during the night, it is handy to give the quickest, surest re- lief known. March 16. cit of New the fiscal year ending March 31st. 1915, with estimate of the income and taxes necessary to meet said expenses. Prepared by the Board of Finance and Taxation in accordance with the charter of the City of New Britain, and published March 16th, 1914, Estimated Income. 1st. Dist. Britain for Cash in Trea g 1914 . ) .00 $ 3,000.00 State of Conn. Enumeration State of Conn. ing Schools........ . State of Conn. Library and Apparatus State of Conm. Tax on Bank and Insurance Stock .. . State of Conn. count Consol Tuition = Town _Deposit’ Tncome Liquor Licenses. 3 Town Clerk's Office Rlews . . ety Police Court 310.00 i 11,000.00 Dog Ac- s 1,000.00 School Dist. 9,000.00 Fund 3,000.00 6.000.00 $00.00 Licenses. 2.000.00 Cemetery Committes Miscellaneous ... Subway Department { Bullding Permits. Street Rprinkling Assess- ments Sewer City Interest Personal Tax. 2 1-4 Mill Tax on 1 Taxing Dist. (Mu cipal Tee House). ... Sale of Ice. 1.000.00 2,000.00 2,000.00 500.00 100.00 700.00 £.500.00 Dept Tncome Proper S . 600.00 1.000.00 2,200.00 . 18,500.00 117.934.43 26,300.00 11 Mill Tax—I1st T: Taxing District 231,388, $590,689.65 $257,688.85 Consolidated School Distrl 1st. Dist. 2nd. hing Day Schools. .$145,000.00 tors, Day School. . 12,000.00 ‘Evening Schools. 3.000.00 State Board of cation Buperintendent Schools Clerks General Su . Janttors’ Supplies. Kindergarten Supplies Printing Text Books. Stationery and Material Dist 24,000.00 3.600.00 1,900.00 . 4,000.00 900.00 300.00 1.100.00 4,800.00 Light and Power Cens: Insus Truant Officer Library and Apparatus Furniture Repairs and ments Nurse : Medical Inspector. Miscellaneous . ... Vacation School. Open Air School. Tmprove- 2,000.00 $245.000.00 Board of Public Works. 1st. Dist. 2nd. Dist. ++$72,125.00 27,250.00 4,000.00 22,500.00 15,000.00 5,000.00 Street Street Btreet State Catch Sewer Parks Department. Lighting. Sprinkling. Highway Accz-unt 2.000.00 11,000.00 1,600.00 Fire Department. Payroll Supplies ‘for Horses Fire Alarm Repairs Lighting Repairs to Apparatus Incidentals Supplies 39.000.00 400,00 500.00 | Notice is hereby given that, at a meeting of the Common Council of the City of New Britain, held March 26, 1914, the foregoing estimates of the income and expenses of the City for the fiscal year ending March 31, 1915, as prepared by the Board of Finance and Taxation and published March 16, 1914, were unanimously adopted ‘and referred to the Annual 1914, cstimated expenses of the Dist. | Repairs o Bufldingfl. Coal and Wood. . Insurance Telephones Subway Rental . €00.00 120.00 300.00 Bell Rental. 100.00 \ $47,395.00 Police Department. Ist. Dist. 2nd. Diat Payroll Regulars. . $98.900.01 Payroll supernumcum- Tire Detail Incidentais Ambulance Signal rvice Repairs. . Lighting ‘ Care of Quarters Revates to Bulldings. Fmergency Telephones Subway Rental . Clerk's Salary . Revolver Equipment. . Motor Patrol and Am- B §IX Additional Patrol- Estimated Police Expense Estimated Police Expens Charities Town Home Repairs Outside poor Office Expense | Salaries Miscellaneous $41,800.00 Health Department. ! ist. Dist. @nd. Dist. Garbage Collection . Garbage Wagons and pairs Drugs and Incidentals, Tnspectors i 1.150.00 isinfectants 5 including all $2,500.00 $7,500.00 ! Special Appropriations. 1st. Dist. . .$12,500.00 2,000.00 150.00 1,350.00 2nd. Dist. N. B. Institute. N. B. General Hospital. Stanley Post, G. A. R... Police Pension Fund. Firemen’s Association. . Cemetery Committe Military Tax ... City Buildiing Fund... Public Amusement mission e Park Commb (Walnut Hill Park). State Tax . 1,000.00 14,000.00 45,000.00 $59,220.00 § 1,000.00 Interest and Discounts. Sewer Bonds Street Bonds Park Bonds . Refunding Bo School Bonds Town Deposit Temporary Loans .. New School Bon Payments on Principal. 1st Dist. 2nd. Dist. School Bonds due 1914. . 00 Refunding Bond: Park Bonds HISking “Fnd Sewe smmnr Fund Bonds Sinking Bonds | Sinking cipal " 'Street 2,000.00 Fund " Sehool 5.000.00 Fund — - Bldg. Beadst, 2,000.00 $36,500.00 $1%,000.00 Incidentals. 1st. Dist. Print- 3.000.00 1,000.00 2, 0 2nd. Dist. AsvePpluk and ng offea Supplies 1,000.00 i Elections { Telephones Indemnity 400.00 Bonds. 200.00 200.00 City Meeting to be held in lower | Turner Hall, rear of Arch Street, on the 21st day of April, 1914, for rati- fication or chan¥e. A tax of eleven (11) mills upon a dollar was laid upon the ratable es- tate of the First Taxing District, and an additional tax of five and one-half (5%) mills upon a dollar was laid upon the ratgble estate of the Second who by that time was standing at the top of a flight of steps leading to his own room. He poured a pitcher of water on her. Just about then he: husband arrived and he and Hider flew at each other. Bender jumped into the fray, flourishing a revolver and a knife. He pointed the gun at Mrs. Stalmack and threatened to shoot. She dared him to fire and he changed his mind but did try to stick the knife into her chest. During the fracas Hider was struck on the head with a flatiron, and later Dr. Joseph Walsh took several ttitches in the wound. Stalmack took refuge in the kitchen and locked the door, which was promptly broken in by Hider. The house was in an uproar when | Officers Lyon, Cosgrove and Super- rumerarits Kennedy and Litke ar- rived. Kennedy found Bender’s re- volver on a lawn two houses away. Bender was fined $560 for breach of the peace, Hider was fined $25 for indecent exposure and $7 for assault and Stalmack was fined $15 for as- sault. Didn’t Like Wife’'s Waist. William Duke, of 205 High street, wanted his bride of three months to go visiting yvesterday. She did not feel like going out and said so. William struck her on the head with his fist and she had him arrested. That was her story. 3 Peter Simoleon, who lives in the same house, testified: “I saw Duke strike his wife and 1 =atd, ‘Don't strike her, don’t you know this is a holiday and it isn't nice to strike your wife on a holiday? » According to Duke the fight based on his objections to the style of her shirtwaist—he thought the sleeves were too short. He gave her to understand, he said, that he let her make that waist to wear to church and not to the moving pictures. Duke admitted to Judge Meskill that he did not know it was wrong to strike his wife. The judge save him a lecture and suspended judgment. Jail. Paul Cabrera, who is not related to the “Cabbage,”” of New Britain baseball fame, pleaded not guilty to assaulting Stanley Jones in a Spring Cabrera Sent to street saloon last Friday. Jones was with a friend and warned him that Cabrera, who was standing near by, was an undesir- able person. Cabrera became angry and struck Jones in the left eye was | either with a pool ball or the pool rack. Officer Meehan, who arrested Ca- brera this morning, gave him a bad reputation_ Cabrera was sent to jail for fifteen | davs. “BIG STEVE” BOXES BEFORE Y. M. C. A.| Nearly 150 Members See Gospel | Preacher Demonstrate Manly Art —Other Associafion News, the Young Men’s Christian association heard an instructive lecture on box- ing on Saturday night in the gym nasfum of the organization, Frank E. Stevens of the Wesleyvan Gospel team gave a demonstration of the “manly art.” | Mr. Stevens had as his “opponent’ { Charles Orsie, also a member of the | Bospel team. After a brief talk on foot work, body swings, rough house and clean sparring styles, they donned the gloves and got work. The first round consisted of demon- strating foot work and blocking; the |secona clinching, breaks and close body punches; the third clean boxing. They were loudly applauded. Ac- | cording to Physical Director Andre My Cleansing, Healing Fa'm Instantly Olears Nose, Head and Throat— Stops Nasty Caterrhal Discharges. Dull Headache Gocs. Try “Ely’s Cream Balm, Get a small bottle anyway, try it—Apply a little in the nostrils and Instantly your clogged nose and slopped-up air passages of the head will open; you will breathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! the catarrh, cold-in-head or catarrhal sore thrmwfll be gone. i End such misery ! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug store. . This sweet, fragrant |, | Street $6.250.00 | | 15,000.00 Nearly 150 members and friends of | when | punches, | to | | just to CITY OF NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT. ESTIMATED EXPENSES 1914-1915. . Reporting Births and Deaths ... Drinking Trurnn!r\ Munieipal Record Examining Land ords . | Personal Tax : Printed Land Sundries 600.00 . 700.00 Rec- Index.. $ 4,900.00 $10,476.00 Recapitutation of Appropriations. ! Dist. 2nd. Dist Total Street $99,375.00 26,500.00 Sprink- 15,000.00 5,001 2,000. oo 11,000.00 W e state Highway Aceount teh Basing Mainten- 2,000.00 11,000.00 1.600.00 sehool ..243,000.00 Depart- 1,600.00 5,000.00 ment .. 47,395.00 Police Depart- mant 5.600.00 | Charities Depm. ment ... 1iealth - ent Speetal Appro- priations . 89, Interest and Dis- counts ... 36,568, Payments on Prin- cival ... 86.500.00 Ineidentals . 18025.00 Salarfes .... 35.735.00 54,895.00 41.300.00 41,300.00 10,000.00 1,000.00 90,220.00 41,750.00 78,318.75 53,500, $590,571. $848,236.75 In accordanee with the amended charter of the City, this Board estimates that the Water Commissioners will have an income for the fiscal vear of $130,000 and recom- mends that ap ne for their depart- ment be made as follows: Constructions Meter Account. Salaries > Burlington Roaring Brook Interest .. Shuttle Meadow Purchase of Land Miscellaneous Sinking Fund. $129,950.00 To the Common Council of the City of Néw Britafn: A# indicated in the above estimates of income and expenses for the year ending Mareh 31, 1916, the Board respectfully reec- ommends that your Honorable Body lay & tax of eleven mills on the ratable estate of the first taxing district. and an additional tax of 5 1-2 mills on the ratable estate of the second taxing district, both to be made payable July 1, 1914, Respectfully submitted, Board of finance and taxation, J. M. HALLORAN, Mayor, F. 8. CHAMBERLAIN, Pres. P. C. McINTYRE, RICHARD SCHAEFER, JOHN F. MEEHAN, . N. BSTANLEY, AUGUST E. WALLEN, BERNARD F. GAFFNEY, A. N. ABBE, W. E. ATWOOD, E. N. HUMPHREY, P. F. KING, J. P. SULLIVAN. Taxing District, both payable July 1, 1914, All of the above subject to ratifica-, tion and approval of a city meeéting to be hell in Turner Hall, rear of Arch Street, April 21, 1914, Attest: ALFRED L. THOMPSON, City Clerk. the members learned a great deal, and the exhibition was one that will be remembered for a long time. Tonight the junior indoor baseball league teams, Chicago and New York, will cross bats, Teams of the senior | ind0or baseball league will meet next | Thursday. | A. O, Washburn, educational secre- | tary. has prepared a supper and lec, | ture for tonlight, for the men in the | English classes. Slides have been ob- i tained from the State Educational de« | partment® The board of dire:tors of the asso- ciation has postponed its meeting until rext Monday night. The directors of i the library will meet tonight. SPEAK AT LODGE. Mayoralty Candidate George A. Quigley, his political manager Coun- | cilman Arthur N. Rutherford and Tax Collector Candidate *Bert” Loomis addressed the members of the Jehuda Halevi lodge after the regular meeting last evening. The German Rifle club will meet Wednesday in F, M. Zimmerman and company's offices and pian for the outdoor shooting and the Southern New FEngland Schuetzenfest to be held in thig city on August 2 and 4. The Hartford Rifle club will celebrate its golden jubilee about this time, but an effort will be made to have the fesiivities postponed BREATHE FREELY ! OPEN NOSTRILS AND STUFFED HEAD AT ONCE—END CATARRH! balmm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals’ the in- f.amed, swollen membrane which Hnen{ the nose, head and throat; clears the | air passages; stops nasty discharges nd a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don’t lte ewake tonight struggling tor breath, with head stufied; nostrils closed, hawking and blowing. Catarrb or a cold, with its running nose, foul mucous dropping into the throat, and raw drynesg is distressing but truly needless. 4 Put your faith—just once—in “Ely's Cream Balm” and your cold or catarrh will surely disappear.

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