New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 3, 1914, Page 3

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e NEW BRITAIN "AILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 3, 1914, BOSTON STORE PARASOLS '$1.00t0$4.00 Fine assortment of’the latest styles ‘and shades to select from, colors to carry with all costumes, plain and, fancy, $1.00 to $4.00. Misses’ Parasols, a big agsortment to choose from, plain, figured and fancy trimmed, 25¢, 50c and 75c¢ each. WAISTS At 98¢ New styles arriving every day, hun- dreds to choose from. Among the latest are the fine sheer Organdies, some in fine cluster tucks with laun- dered or soft Gladstone collars, others ruffled and embroidered. Crepe, voile, ratine, plain and fancy colored, all at one price, values up to $1.50, 98c each. Middy Blouses, all the latest styles to choose from for ladies and misses. Among the new styles are the Jap- anese and Chinese Middy, 75¢ and 9#8c each. Big Values in silk and lisle Gloves. “Kayser” and “Lehman” silk, double finger tips, 2-clasp, 50¢ and 75c. 16- button, 75¢ and $1.00, Lisle thread, 16-button, 50c. Chamoisette, 2-clasp, 25¢ and 50c. Chamoisette, 16-button, 50c. Couch Covers in the latest patterns, a distinctively fine line, big variety to select, from, all new and exclusive patterns In the latest colorings in tapestry, repp, bagdad, stripes, etc. $1.38 to $5.00 each. Agents for McCall Patterns, the best pattern at any price, 10c and 15c. It is your guarantee of Reliable Laundry Work. "PHONE 904. “Our Wagons Go ,Eyerywhere” * AUTOS TO RENT { By Hour or Day. J. M. Finnegan Stables Telephone 302. ‘I mite, four half pound sticks of the SHORT CUT TO FAME AND FORTUNE FAILS Capitol Walchman Piaces Dypanils in Building to Be a Hero. Washington, June 3.—Daniel Vin- ton Jauch, a watchman in the depart- | ment of agriculture; tried a short cut | to fame and fortune yesterday and | failed. He tried it by attempting to save the { acting secretary of agriculture and | ''the hundreds of employes in that de- | partment from 'a threatened dynamite explosion, but instead of being hailed as the preserver of his fellow man and . honored by his superiors, he was, af-| er a brief interview with a heartless | desk sergeant, locked up in the police | station. Suffering From Depression. | Jauch—the name is pronounced | Jowh, not Joke—had been suffering | from a depression and he took the psychological method of readjusting [ his status with his superiors by mak- ing the attempt. to pose.as a hero| by saving the entire department of | agriculture from.dynamite, which he | had himself planted. The noon hour had passed in the department of agriculture and all of | the clerks in the old red brick main | building had returned to their desks when through the high ceiled halls | of the offices rang Jauch’s wild cry: “Run! Run for your lives! For God’'s sake get out of the building as fast as you can! There’s a ton o dynamite goin’ to go off in a min- ute.” Through the corridors he ran, and in ‘his wake -he left a panic. From office desks, from the library,” down the stairs, up from the cellar, away from their laboratory tables, the em- ployes scurried. Men and women in | an inextricable mess clogged the steep | iron stairways. Every one was in a state of the wildest alarm. Waited for Big Doings. Out in the park surrounding the big building the frightened officials, clerks, | watchmen and messengers poured. And then they waited for the big build- |ing to vanish with a loud report in | |a cloud of unpleasant dust. i | When the panic was at its height | some one less timorous than his fel- | lows grabbed Jauch. 1 “What do you mean?” was the de- | mand roared into his ear. “Why, there’s enough dynamite | down in the basement to blow every- | body in this building to kingdom | come. It's right under where Sec- retary Houston sits. I think I put out the fuse, but I wasn’t sure and I wanted everybody to be safe.” Taken to Scene. i Jauch, after a long wait, was taken | forcibly to the scene of his self-con~ fessed herofsm in the basement room | directly. under the: dffice "of the seec- | retary. There, sure enough, was the dyna- strongest composition of the explosive, | wrapped together with the percussion | cap inserted in one of the sticks and a snubbed out fuse burned to within two inches of the dynamite . itself. Beside the fuse lay a burned match. The department official held Jauch for the police, and the police came on a hurry call. With the arrival of the police the examination of the would be hero| began. At first he endeavored to ex- plain that he had heard the fuse sputtering and had nipped it just in time to avert an explosion. - He A Bottle of Duffy’s Pure Malt Whiskey is the nearest doctor in case of an emergency. Take no chances. Keep a bottle near at hand, always. Sold by most druggists, grocers and deal- ers in sealed bot- tles only, at $1.00 [ a bottle. Medi- cal booklet and doctor’s advice FRENCH BERI OLIVE OIL A pure, Olive Oil that will please you because it is of ~super§or‘quality. TRY BERI . and in the future you will insist on having this brand. i Best for Salads. OLIVE OIL » Best for Cooking Purposes. Best for Medicinal U se. Price 60c pint, $1.00 quart, $3.50 gallon. RE UMBERTO BRAND . PURE ITALIAN OLIVE OIL, 85¢ quart ark 8 Brainerd’s DRUG STORE TheRexall Store 181 MAIN STREET Prompt Free Delivery Service showed two fingers of his right hand | blistered as with fire. Confesses He Did It. Then he was put under a stricter cross-examination and began to flounder and finally with tears chok- ing his voice he confessed that the | danger to the department had been little or none, for he started with a view to-its psychological effect upon his superiors. There are two promotions in the corps of watchmen due with the con- | clusion of the fiscal year, June 30, and Jauch wanted to be assured of one of them. He is a republican and felt that his heroism might weigh in the balance against his politics. Little by little the story of how the hero had staged his play was wormed out of the unwilling. Jauch. He told the detectives that the fuse had not’ even been lightéd in the' basement of the building. Prepared at Home. He had prepared the properties for his little. drama at his. home Monday and had burned the end of the fuse to give it the appeardance of having been started and had laid the burned match beside it to make the prop- erties more convincing. Secretary of Agriculture Houston was not in Washington yesterday. As- sistant Secretary Galloway was acting in his stead, but his office is across | the hall secretary. The police were satisfied that with the plant which Jauch had set in the event of a real explosion there was enough dynamite in the package to have done serious damage to life and property. Two pounds of the com- pound which Jauch had used in his pseudo-psycho heroic effort to gain official approval was sufficient, In their opinion, to have blown a tre- mendous hole in the old building. Nearly 300 clerks are employed in the building, which includes also the departmental library of reference and statistics, the bureau of publications, the offices of the secretary, assistant from that occupied by the ! and chief clerk and the photographic division, The charge made by the police | against Jauch, who had a preliminary hearing today before the district gov- | ernment authorities, was “attempting the destruction of a public building." Under the district code convictions for this offence may be punished by imprisonment for ten years. LEPER DISCOVERED IN WASHINGTON HOTEL John Barly After Eluding Authorities Secures Apartments at Capital— Recognized by Reporter. Washington, June 3.—John R. Farly, who for five years has made many enforced journeys about the country in boxcars and been held under quarantine in many cities, while medical experts have disagreed as to whether he.is a leper, turned } up in Washington again yesterday. Before his identity.was .discovered he took quarters at a fashionable up- town hotel, the home of Vice Presi- dent Marshall and others prominent in capital life, Barly’s identity was not learned uritil after he had telephoned to a newspaper asking for a reporter to interview “Mr. Westwood.” The newspaperman recognized him and informed . the authorities, who wok Early back to his old place of 1solation on the city limits. The fashionable hotel and its gBuests were thrown into commotion when informed of the facts. Early escaped May 18 from the Diamond Head quarantine station near Port Townsend Wash. and was traced to Victoria, B. C., where offi- cers lost track of him. SHOT BY FARM HAND, Danbury Man and Wife Injured By Negro Employe. Danbury, Conn., June 3.—Mr. and Mrs. John Harrison of Paterson, N. Y., were brought to a local hospital = last night, suffering from serious bul- let wounds, said to have been inflicted by Samuel Haynes, a negro farm hand. Mrs, Harrison has a bullet in her abdomen, and her condition 1s regarded as critical. Mr. Harrison has four bullets in his body, but he has a chance for recove: According, to a statement by Mr. Harrison, he reprimanded Haynes because he had been drinking and Haynes opened fire on him and his wife with a revolver. A posse of citizens is said searching for Haynes. to be ‘COMMITS SUICIDE. Bridgeport Man Drinks Carbolic Acid While Talking to His Wife. Bridgeport, Conn., June '3.—Ed- ward Erickson, & well known auto- mobile assembler and demonstrator, of ' this city, comimitted suicide by drinking carbolic acid while talking with 'his wife in a private room at a local cafe last night. The couple had been estranged for the past year and meeting each other yesterday ar- ranged to talk over the situation. Erickson was 27 years of age and was employed at a local garage until some three weeks ago, when he accepted a position in Waterbury. He is survived by a widow and daugh- ter, who reside in Naugatuck. INVITE GLYNN. Suffragists Want Governor to Address Mass Meeting. Albany, N. Y., June 3.—Five wom- an suffragists invaded the executive chamber yesterday and requested Governor Glynn to address a mass meeting here next Saturday night. “Will I be treated as Mayor Mitchel was in New York?" the governor asked. “We are not militant,” his callers. The governor then promised to take the proposition under advisement and give the organization his answer Thursday. chorused ROYAL BAKING POWDER Absolutely Pure Used and praise competent and d by the most careful pas- try cooks the world over CALLS TRIAL FARCE. Justice Miscarried in Case of Gianini, Says Rev. Mr. Beecher. Auburn, N. Y., June 3.—"The farce at Herkimer,” or the ‘‘miscarriage of Jjustice,” is the title given by the Rev. ‘W. A. Beecher of Sennett to his opin- ion of the trial of Jean Gianini, the boy who murdered the preacher’'s daughter, Lida Beecher, and who was acquitted and sent to Matteawan. He says the real motive of Gianini was not revenge, but notoriety. “This desire has been fostered by the yellow literature which he had read, and the moving picture shows, which he had witnessed,” said Mr. ' Beecher. “The prototype of Jean Gianini, who is to be found in every school district in the land, is taught by the | travesty on justice that he, too, may kill his teacher on some slight or fan- cied provocation and so get his name ana picture in the papers and make himself notorious, “How long will our courts pervert justice and make law a mockery and so invite mob violence? How long will smart lawyers sell themselves for mgney or glory, to defend the violators | of the very laws which they are sworn to maintain?” APPLY SULPHUR IF SKIN BREAKS OUT SULPHUR DRIES UP ECZEMA USE LIKE COLD CREAM TO STOP ITCHING Any breaking out or irritation on the face, arms, legs or body when ac- companied by itching, or when the skin is dry-and feverish, can be read- ily overcome by applying a little bold- sulphur 'cream, says a noted der- matologist. He informs us that bold-sulphur instantly allays the angry itching and irritation and soothes and heals the Eczema right up, leaving the skin clear and smooth. Bold-sulphur has occupied a secure position for many vears in the treatment of cutaneous disorders because of its parasite-de- stroying property. Nothing has ever been found to take its place in treat- ing the irritable and inflammatory skin affections. While not always es- tablishing a permanent cure, it never fails to subdue the itching irritation and drive the Eczema away, and it Is often years later before any eruption again .appears on the skin, = Those troublea pshould obtain at any pharmacy an ounce of bold-sulphur cream which is applied to the affected parts in the same manner as an ordi- nary cold cream. It isn't unpleasant and the prompt relief afforded, par- ticularly in itching Eczema, proves very welcome. THE “NEW PERFECTION” LAUNDRESS Though she works next to the stove, within easy reach of her irons, she keeps cool and comfortable. That's be- cause she uses a New Perfection Oil Cook-stove The New Perfection No. 5 Stove, with the Fireless Cooking Oven, is the latest addition to the famous New Perfection line of cook-stoves. this fireless oven and fireless cooker. start the su Pull the damper of it becomes a perfect It uses only one bumer —saves half the fuel cost. r night after lunch, and let You can it cook itself, while you spend the after- noon outdoors. New Perfection Stoves bake, broil, roast, toast—everything any other stove will do, and they cost less for fuel. No handling of coal and ashes—all the cooking heat you want, just when you want it. New Perfection Stoves are made m 1, 2, 3, and 4-burner sizes. No. 5 with broiler, toaster, and fireless oven. oven, broiler and toaster rately for smaller sizes. stove is sold complete Regular can be obtained sepa- Sad-iron heater and cook-book free with every stove. At dealers everywhere or write direct for catalogue. S'@ ' STANDARD 0 IL COMPANY of New York Buffalo Boston NEW BRITAIN AND PL N Notable June Sale Undermuslins BIG VARIETY OF NOVELTIES AND ALL/THE WANTED GAR- MENTS. Sweeping Cuts in Prices—-Junc Brides Take Notice. Varfety and novelty are the two watchwords in Undermuslins this season and our stock is fally up to theéminute. Surprisi.agly prices are quoted af our big June Sale this week. This is a sale for whi¢h we plan long in advance. Every garment is offered at a price surprisingly low for the guality, The display of Paris lingerie is exceptionally attractive. The fins quals ity of the materials, the heauty of the designs and the perfection of the embroidery make them admired by all. Then there are Ameri- can garments of the softest, finest materials, shiowing laces and em- broideries of pleasing designs. All our garmerys are woll made and fit well Sage-Zllen & Co. Hartford, Cena. Goods Delivered in New Britain BDaily By Our Own Motor Oar CRETONNES LARGEST STOCK IN NEW ENGLAND. i ‘:’ - 18c t0.$5.00 a Yard LIBERTY OF LONDON SUPPLIES SOME OF OUR BESP DM« 3 . PORTED DESIGNS. 4 This is the season for Cretonnes and we are confident that we hawe the largest stock in New England. Among our new displays are many beautiful Cretonnes which we have imported from the famous house of Liberty & Co., London and Paris|. These are exceptionally choice and attractive. And you will not find them at‘any other store. Come and see us about— . Cretonnes for hangings, for cushions, for piliows, MIMI slip covers, fancy wotk, ete. 4! You will find Cretonnes heresat all prices from 16c to 35 a yand. Scrim Special We offer 300 yards of canvas mesh scrim for window curtains in white, cream and pongee color at 18c a yard, Just the thing for summer homes. This material holds Ju dwn in all kinds of wea~ ther. . FREE DELIVERY DAILY IN low 894-902 MAI HARTFORD WALL PAPERS, DRAPERIES, PAINTS, HORSES---HORSES---HORSES - PRICES SOLD THEM HORSES WELL BOUGHT | ARE HALF SOLD.- Next Car Will Arrive Wed., June 3, 1914, A choice lot of horses. Among them will be several matched pairs, ranging in weight from 2,600 to 3,200 Ibs.; good grocery and . business chunks, 1,000 to 1,400 Ibs.; well broken and clever, ready for work Remember every horse will be as represented and must be sold quick to make room for new arrivals. Also several acclimated horses that we will sell worth the mon: QUICK SALES AND SMALL PROFITS, P. H. CONDON & CO., INC. 22 Laurel Street. ‘Phone 58-3. Bristol, Conn. HOFFMANN’S _PURE _BAKING Which Do You Choose? The Kitchen with fits unbearable heat of Kitchen Range, and an ocoasi mpishap, with home-b bread, taxing one's usual good position In these warm days your or The Veranda— with breezes and com: fort, by using Hoffmonn's “Al Della’s” Home Made or Raisin Bread? Our bakeshop is clean, our materi and its cooling al pure, and our bread sweet delicious. TOMORROW'S SPECIAL:~ Milk Rolls eess.per don T ’

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