New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 13, 1914, Page 2

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)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 13, 1914. ];The New Colonials | The NEW COLONIALS are easily the most popular as well as the most beautiful LOW CUT SHOES of the season for Wo- men’s wear. Leathers of PATENT COLT and GUN METAL CALF. A variety of smart toe shapes and heels. Prices. from $3.00 to $4.50. Hosiery to match. BOOTH'S BLOCK NEW BRITAIN, Protect your health, Starve the fly. -advt. The Misses Edith Meyer and Alice tler are spending a two weeks’ va- ation at Cosey Beach. A small party from the’Y. M. C. A. fpent Sunday at the camp on Lake ongamond. | Automobiles will ‘be the chief topic lor discussion at the meeting of the fety board this evening. . Some time between 3 and 6 o'clock terday morning some one broke into the restaurant owned by Alexan- der Hill and made‘away with $12. ' Ex-Representative and Mrs. Thomas Kehoe, the Misses Mary and IKatherine, and Joseph XKehie are upying the Forget-me-not cottage Indifan Neck. . Mrs. T. F. Higgins and son, of this city, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. F. McIntyre, also of New Britain, t Cottage Alberta, Indian Neck. | Mrs, Louis Benz has been entertain fag Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Edwards,. is “city, ‘at "hér ~shore cottage Indian Neck. Joseph Fleischman is having a new cottage erected at Indian Neck. It is llocated at Sound View ‘Heights. H. C. Bowers, and family, are occupying their cottage at Chapman’s Beach. Mrs, George M. Landers of this ly, and Miss Frances Ogden Jones, of New York, gave charming dinner parties at their shore home in New 'London last week. ‘Water Commissioner P. J. Egan spent the week-end at Indian Neck. Edward H. Prior spent the week- end at the Sachem’'s Head Yacht club. The preacher at the South church yesterday morning was Rev. Dr. Asher Anderson, of Boston, Mass. Next Sundey Rev. Paul D. Moody, of St. Johnsbury, Vt., will preach. The next communion service at the Center Congregational church will be held on September 6. Through Judge B. F. Gaffney Miss Mary A. Gaffney has brought suit for 2,000 against the New. Haven road for injuriles received at the Clayton wreck on April 11. Captain Charles H. Beaton has been staying at the Montowese House at Indian Neck. A meeting of the committee in charge of revising the building or- dinances .will be held tomorrow even- ing, ! Miss Maloney of Waterbury is visit- ing her aunt, Mrs. Mary Murphy, of Lincoln street. It is probable that a meeting of the 1 board will be held on Friday oty e 2 e Mayor Géorge A. Quigley has fe- turned from Suffield where he sepnt the week-end with his family. F. V. McDonough, of No. 8 Con- nerton street, informed the police last night that he ran into a team owned by a man named Bailes, of Oak street, near the Clayton crossing. The shafts of the wagon were broken and wheel was demolished. Protect your health. —advt. one Starve the fly. PERMANENT TOMB FOR BED MARTYRS” Anarchists, Viewing Ashes of Bomb Victims, Favor New Project. New York, July 13.—All day yes- terday, from 10 o’clock in the morn- ing until late at night, anarchists—— men, women and chjldren—focked to the office of Mother Earth, the reds’ publication, to pay tribute to the ashes of Arthur Caron, Carl Hansen and Charles Berg, the bomb victims. It was a sort of continuance of Saturday’s demonstration, which was kept within bounds by the police, who excluded the urn containing the ashes from the ceremony. Yesterday the urn, a pyramidal affair surmounted by a clenched fist, was placed on a red and black draped bier in Editor Alexander Berkman’s back vard at 74 West 119th street and nearly 2,000 persons went to view it. Berkman’s House Decorated. On the front of the house was a quantity of red and black bunting and on the doorpost was a wreath of flow- ers with the inscription, “You Have Not Died in Vain.” In the back yard, which also was liberally deeorated with the reds’ color, were other floral offerings, the principal one being from the Mother Earth office. This was in the form of a flaming torch and bore the names of the dead anar- chists. Directly back of the urn and over- hanging it as a sort of canopy was a large red banner with the wotds in black, “International Anarchist Com- munist Federation of America.” It went sent by Chicago anarchists, and radical bodies in Boston, Providence, Baltimore and other cities also seut banners. Cards on Fence. On the fence walls,, surrounding the urn, were printed cards bearing such messages as these: “They Who Die for 4 Cause Never Die. Thelr Spirit Walks Abroad,” and “You Want to Do Away With Violence? Do Away With Capital and Government That Provoke and Breed Violence.” One of the principal exhibits was a telegrafm from California signed by Emma Goldman and Dr, Ben Reit- man. It said: “Deepest sympathy with the op- pressed whose devoted and upright spokesmen were our dead comrades. ‘We honor théir memories as martyrs to the cause of humanity.” Leaders Are Pleased. Berkman and the other anarchists professed great satisfaction with Sat- urday’s demonstration and referred to it as “most extraordinary” and “magnificent.” There was still a spirit of rancor because the police re- fuped to allow a parade or an ex- hibition of the ashes, but most of those present were too busy talking about a new plan that has been evolved to think of anything else. This plan is to build a permanent mausoleum, designed by Adolph Wolf, sculptor of the urn, in which shall re- pose the bodies of all anarchists who meet death for ‘“the cause.” The idea had just been suggested yesterday, but it met with great favor and in a day or so a committee will be ap- pointed to carry it through. A great s T’S GOING TO BE HOTTER THAN--- this, when you are Ironing, unless you use an Electric Iron. Don’t wait till it’s too late. Electric Ironing means healthand happiness. It means best results and true economy. It means more to the modern housewife than any other appliance. Not a woman in New Britain or vicinity can afford to miss this opportunity of a “Thermax” Electric Iron. s $2.5 The Guarantéed 5 Years Remember Two Weeks’ Free Trial before you buy. Phone s NOW. UNITED ELECTRIC LIGHT & WATER CO0. 92 WEST MAIN STREET. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. Il'e'.urned to Torreon with most of his! Have You Given the Season’s “Clean-up” a Serious Considera- tion? Our many years of experience Remember: is cheerfully given to assist you in these problems. We meéntion a few: Exterior and Interior House Paint- ing, Interior Decorations, Wall Paper, Va rnishes, Brushes, Floor Stain, etc., etc. JOHN BOYLE CO. 3 and 5 Franklin Square, New Britain deal of money will be needed, but Berkman said he was sure that could be raised. Simply of Clay. The urn on view yesterday was simply of clay. It will be there to- day also, but by next Sunday tne bronze container will be ready and will be on exhibition in the back yard. Among the visitors vesterday were ‘Wila Joe O’Carroll, Elizabeth Gurley Flynn and Carlo Tresca of the I. W. ‘W. and many prominént anarchists, including Leonard D. Abbott, Ludo- vico Caminetta, Becky Edelsohn, Adolph Wolf and Charles Plunkett. Near the door was a dish in which visitors were asked to put money to help pay the funeral expenses. The Mother Earth company also did quite a business disposing of boks by Berk- man, Emma Goldman and other reds, MYSTIC LAY MONK ' STABBED BY WOMAN Assailant Olaims Victim Was False Prophet and Was Leading Every- body in Russia Astray. St. Petersburg, July 13.—Details reached here today in a despatch to the Courfer of a probably fatal at- tack on the mystic lay monk, Gre- gory Raspulin, whose influence over the emperor is said to be very great. Raspulin, who has been one of the most prominent figures in Russia in recent years, was visititng his native village, Pokrowsky in the province of Tobolsk, Siberia, when a woman, a stranger to the locality, approached him pretending to be a beggar. After accosting him she stabbed him in the abdomen with a long military dirk. The assailant was arrested and con- fessed she had waited two weeks for the opportunity. She said she had decided to kill the monk because he was a false prophet and was leading everybody in Russia astray. Doctors who examined the monk’s wound declared it was likely to prove fetal, Villa, | CRIMINALS BELOW MENTAL STANDARD Prison Physician Claims Twenty-five Per Cent. of Lawbreakers Are Fecble Minded. Chicago, July 13.—“Prison popu- lations are composed of individuals who fall below the average physicat and mental standards,” declared Dr. Paul F. Bowers, physician to the Indiana state prison today at the convention here of alienists and neu- rologists. “Twenty-five per cent. of habitual criminals are feeble minded,” he said. “The feeble minded, however, are not inherently criminal, except as they are easy victims of environment. The difficulty here is in the recogniz- ing and control of high grade feeble minded persons. “Alcoholism most the part of contributing factor amd not the immediate cause of crime, It serves to intensify the defect al- ready existing.” Dr. W. 8. Lindsay of Topeka, Kan- sas, declared that sterilization of male and female incurable defectives was the only logical step and that the medical profession had not given up hope that such a law might be so safeguarded as to become operative. frequently plays SURPRISE PARTY. A pleasant surprise was tendered Mr. and Mrs. James Curtin at their home on Farmington avenue Satur- day evening, the event being in honor of their fifteenth wedding anniver- sary. Guests were present from Bridgeport, Hartford, Bristol, Farm- ington and New Britain. The hosts were the recipients of several choice | pieces of cut glass. 1 will leave where she 1 | Miss Barbara Moore Wednesday for Chicago, will spend a few weeks. Will He Be in At Mexico City Finish? This striking picture of General Villa, the victorious Mexican rebel leader, was taken after the battle of Zacatecas. It is now reported that Villa may not participate in the at- tack on Queretaro, toward which Gen- eral Obregon is hastening. He has army. It is said in some dispatches that Villa has been the victim of clerevly played politics. He was kept from pushing on to San Luis Potosi by his row with Carranza. Other re- ports, however, indicate that he may vet leave Torreon and be in at the finish at Mexico City, (From July 10 to Sept 11 (Inclusiv: ¢) Will Close Fridays at Noon.) Our Alteration Sale GrowsBetter As It Gathers Headway The Proof isin These Splendid Bar- gains that We NIGHTGOWNS, VALUES UP TO PRICE 49¢ Here's a splendid bargain in Nightgowns that you They are made of fine soft finish Nainsook and Cambric, laces, insertion and ribbon beading, lace miss. full length, and net yokes, all sizes, trimmed with 15 to 17. Mention Here $2.50. ALTERATION AND 79c. SALE should not DRESSES, VALUES UP TO $5.98. ALTERATION SALE PRICE $2.98. Handsome dresses, made of Voile and "Crepe, striped effects, edged with neat embroidery, of contrasting colors, the choicest in figured and with crush silk Belts Summer Styles. CHAS. DILLON & CO. Importers, Wholesalers and Retailers of Fine Millinery Hartford. MEN AND YOUNG MEN— Buy Yourselves An Extra Suit, at These Reduced Prices. A Large Assorl- ment to Select From. $15 and $16.50 Fancy Suits, now $12.75. $18, $18.50 and $20 $14.75, $22.50 and $25 Fancy Suits, $28 and $30 Fancy Fancy Suits, now now $18.75. Suits, now $23.75. $32, $35 and $38 Fancy Suits, now $28.50 Similar Reductions Suit and Wash Suits. in Boys’ Two-Piece Horstalls | RARTFORD “IT PA¥YS TO RUY OUR KIND” 03-99 ASYLUM ST. OConnecting with 140 TRUMBULL ST. MARSAY ‘MOSQUITO BITE - AND IVY LOTION For Moth Itch, Insect Bites, Poison Ivy Rash. Your vacation outfit not complete without a bottle THE DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169 and 171 MAIN STREET CELEBRATES FIRST MASS, Local Boy, Ordained in Nebraska on July 3, at Sacred Heart Church. Rev. Frank Nilynarski, a former New Britain boy, who was ordained in the priesthood by the Right Rev. Bishop J. A, Duffy at Tierney, Nebras- ia., on July 3, celebrated his first mass yesterday morning at 10:30 oclock at the Sacred Heart church. There was a processional from the old to the new Polish church in which the altar boys and priests took a con- spicuous part. Father Nlynarski at one time worked in the local factories and then, after saving up enough money, left and went to school to study for the clergy. ' FOX IS IMPROVIN M. I. Fox, of Hartford avenue, who fell from a cherry tree in his yard lust week and sustained a badly split lip and face as well as minor inter- ral injuries, is reported to be rapidly recovering at the hospital and will be able to leave the institution in a few days. Dr. Waterman Lyon is attend- ing him. Ebents Tonight Keeney's theater, vaudeville and motion pictures. motion Special meeting of the public safety. Fox's theater, pictures, board of Mattabessett Tribe, 1. O. R. M., meets in Judd’s hall, Installation of officers Charter Oak, F. of A, of Ceurt Gerstaecker lodge, 1. O. O. F, meets in Turner hall. Court Prosperity, ¥. of A. meets at 7 Main street. New the Meeting of Companions of Jean's hall. Britain Forest, Circle, at St Harvey lodge, Ancient Order Arch AW United Workmen, meets at 187 street,

Other pages from this issue: