New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 23, 1914, Page 2

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"hy Are Ten Tons of Quinine Used Every Yeoar? This enormous quantity of Quinine alone (representing about 1=30th of all the Quinine produced in the world) is required for the preparation of Laxative Bromo Quinine, Seven Million (7,000,000) Boxes of which are used every year because of its extraordinary merit. After reading the accompanying label from the box of Laxative Bromo Quinine, telling whatitdoes and how it does it, you can understand why this remedy is used so effectively by so many millions of people. Whenever you feel a cold com- ing on think of the - name Laxative (Fac-simile of label on back of Lazative Bromo Quinine box) Bromo Q“ inine. —but remember there /s Only One «“Bromo Quinine’’ ¢ To Qet The QENUINE, Oall For The Full Name axative Bromo Quinine USED THE WORLD OVER TO OURE A OOLD IN GNE DAY % Lack for the sionatere RTY PANHANDLERS CHASED OUT OF TOWN Juio Fined §1 for Assaulting Garbage Collector. Judging from the appearance of 0 of the prisoners in court this jorning a bathroom with plenty of ot water and some scouring powder a needed addition to the cell room. phn 8mith and Edward Horan, the 0 men arrested by Sergeant Kelly pd Rallroad Officer Fulton last ht for sleeping in a box car, were e dirtiest and toughest looking pecimens of suffering humanity that ive been seen at the local station ; puse In a long time. Dirt and filth s plastered thickly over their faces pd bodies and their clothes hung to em in shreds. Judge Mangan, who fecupied the bench, thought the ty needed their room more than revenue that might be forth- pming from a fine so told them to out of town and stay out. No sooner had he uttered the ords than they both jumped to er feet and sald in unison, “Yes An excellent remedy for Coughs Cough and also the feverish condition: which are usually associated with col | { move the bowels well within 8 or 10 hour: will be relieved. In treating colds it is ve: the bowels should move well every da: moves the liver and all the secretions to action. Direction: two tablets is apA should be tak iately after, 'going to bed. sons, who g sufficient to just kee op¥n freely until the Cough and Cold is relieved: then take ome-half the dose for a few }5 days. Children whoare not old enough to swellow pills. the tablet can be broken or cut in half and given in proportion ¢ to age. To be swallowed not chewed. For headache, take 2 tablets every 2 or 3 hours until relieved Some per- sir, thank you judge,” and then started to climb out of the pen. Young Men Arrested. ‘While inspecting passing freights in hopes that he might capture the Bristol man who assaulted a police- man in that city last night Sergeant Kelly apprehended Sidney Hopkins and Franklin Stellar, two youths who were stealing a ride from Water- bury to East Hartford. They told a straight story this morning and as they looked to be a couple of clean young men the judge suspended sen- tence. Before leaving the pen they both voiced their thanks. Garbage Man Assaulted, Joseph DeJulio 'was fined the nom- inal sum'of $1 .and costs for a slight assault upon Heérman FKFurman, the garbage collector. Furman claimed that his man stepped lightly on a new concrete walk that DeJulio was building and when the latter got mad he interfered in ‘his behalf. He was then assaulted, he claimed. DeJulio’s story was the‘same except that he denied hitting Furman and said he only pushed him in the face. Did Find Scrap. An investigation proved that the wheelbarrow load of &scrap iron which Anthony Bolcunzas had when arrested at the corner of Park and John street by Officer Quinn Tuesday night was really found by that in- dividual, as he claimed in covrt yes- terday, the case against him was nolled -by the prosecutor. Avoid Impure Milk for Infants and Invalids Ask For HORLICK’ It means the Original and Genuine MALTED MILK o The Food-Drink for all Ages. Rich milk, malted grain, in powder§orm. More healthful than tea or coffee. For infants, invalids and growing children. Agrees with the weakest digestion, p nwibn.ll_Phfldl'lfiGthebdv. Keep it on your side board at home. | Invigorates nursing mothers and the aged. A quick lunch prepared in & minute. : Take no substitute. Ask for HORLICK’S | The Best Investment IN THE SILVER BLACK FOX IN DUSTRY OF ISL AND. PRINCE EDWARD Fox ranching is an industry a quar- br of a century old. ‘The Prince Edward Island Silver sck Fox has been bred to a dis- type. 0’30 has been paid for a single “I. Black Fox skin. {ndustry is well managed and 3 CI.;‘ REILY, government protected, The average dividend to be paid by the first forty companies to report for this year is sixty-one per cent, There has never been a failure of a Fox company. Now is the time to invest to secure next year's dividend. Producers Limited” ' One of the Best New Companies. Special Reépresentative . BELOIN FOR A FEW DAYS Boston, Mass. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 23, 1914. ROUNDUP OF CITY OFFICIALS AT SHORE Aunual Cuting of Goverament Big- gest Success in Histery. When New Britain’s common coun- ci! and city officials returned last even- ing from their annual outing at Light- hcuse Point and Savin Rock, all agreed that the day had been well spent and that the athletic man, the inner man and the mental man had been well treated. There were forty-nine seated at the shore dinner served in the Colonnade. They were: 3 City Engineer Charles F. Dehm, Humphrey of the board of public works, Alderman M. T. Kerwin, ex- Representative Joseph Towers, Judge B. F. Gaffney, Chief of Police Willlam J. Rawlings, Councllman Charles May, Deputy Town Clerk Harry Har- greaves, Alderman M, I. Jester, Water Commissioner W. B. Rossberg, Coun- cilman Henry G. Voight, Attorney M. H. Camp, Councilman J. A. Dolan, Councilman Frank L. Conlon, Council- man Theodore Wagner, Reginald Towers, David Ellison, Assistant City ingineer Edward A, McCarthy, John Dunn, Assistant Sanitary Inspector John T. O’Brien, Councilman J. J. Riley, Tony Paonessa, Registrar Thomas J. Smith, Water Commis- sioner P. J. Egan, Frank Naples, Su- perintendent John P, Hemingway of the city building, ex-Councilman George H. Smedley, Superintendent J. H. Towers of the water department, Personal Tax Collector Charles J. Elliott, Registrar Willlam H. Scheuy, Councilman Emil J. Danberg, Coun- ciican D, B. Marwick, Councilman Albert Anderson, Building Inspector. A. N. Rutherford, Public Works Com- missioner John A. Anderson, ex-Coun cllman Willlam J. Farley, Health Su- perintendent T. E. Reeks, M. D, ex: Councilman Thomas J. Kehoe, Coun- climan F. A. Parker, Sealer of Weights and Measures James J. ‘Welch, Alderman Willlam H. Spittler, Health Commissioner M, W. Daven- port, ex-Councilman Pickop, C. J. Bence, Herbert V. Camp, Howard A. Timbregll, Alfred E, Magnell and A. E. McEvoy Democratd Trim Republicans. The opening event of the day was the ball game between the democrats and republicans at Lighthouse Point. The democrats won, 17 to 16. The score was 16-16 in the ninth when Councilman Frank Conlon scored the run that won the game. The batteries were: Democrats, Conlon, Bray and Riley; republican, May and Voight. Councilman Dolan was umpire and Water Commissioner P. J. Egan was official scorer. Judge Gaffney and ex-Representative Towers composed the officlal cheering staffs. After a dip in the deep the party rendezvoused at the Rock where an excellent dinner was served. The post- prandial exercises were conducted by Mayor Quigley, who acted as toast- master. Responses were made by Commissioner Egan, who read his an- nual poem; ex-Representative Towers, Dr. Reeks, President Humphrey, Thomas H. Kehoe, a member of the board of finance and taxation, and Judge Gaffney. The others merely spoke a few words to show what a good time they were having but Judge Gaffney’s talk was of an im- pressive nature and he urged his au- ditors to co-operate with the govern- ment and Mayor Quigley for the ben- efit of the city. He concluded with the toast, ‘“Our mayor, may he al- ways be right, but whether right or wrong—our mayor.” After dinner the “boys’ started out to see the sights at the Rock, Presi- dent Humphrey rounded them all up to pose for their photograph and then led the way to a ‘‘whoop-la” game where he took possession. Others went in the “Old Mill,” on the roller coaster, ‘*he shoot the chutes and through the various amusement booths. Keeney's theater, motion pictures. William H. President E. vaudeville and Fox's theater, motion pictures. Meeting of the municipal ice com- mittee. Lexington lodge, I. O. O. F., meets in Jr. O. U. A. M. hall Meeting of Luther league of the Swedish Lutheran church. Anniversary celebration of Star of Good. Will lodge, O. §. B. in Electric hall. Sir Francis Drake St. George, lodge, Sons of meets at 59 Arch street. Meeting of Court Friendly, F. of A., at 242 Main street. Landers camp, M. W. of A, meets at 34 Church street. Meeting of New Britain Aerie, F. O. E, in Holmes and Hoffmann's block. 1887--House of Hallinan--1914 Hallinan’s N. E. Bread The Food For The Body. ‘Some people make a good meal with the ad- dition of Butter for this N. Bread. It is so pala- table, rich with flavor, and nutritious as it fur- nishes all the require- ments of the body. Our aim has been at all times to furnish the Public with the Best. Try Our N. E. Bread! Hallinan Bread & Ice Cream Co. 142 MAIN STREET. - CONVICTS TRAVEL 10 PRISON IN -AUTO Mcthod Will Be Used Instead of ’ New York, July 23.—Sheriff Grif- enhagen gave eight convicts an auto- mobile ride to Sing Sing prison yes- terday, and so successful was experiment that he has decided to dis- card the old method of using train transportation as soon as he can get an automobile to suit his needs. It ordinarily takes two hours and thirty-five minutes for the trip from police headquarters to the prison. The time yesterday was two hours and flve minutes. This will be short- ened by at least half an hour when the sheriff gets the new steel van he has ordered, which will carry twenty men. Yesterday's experiment was prompted by humanitarian motives. Under the present system the con- victs are taken handcuffed through the Grand Central station. There is no privacy on the train, for the men are usually put in the smoking car. An 18-horsepower auto, with heavy wire screens on the sides, was used for the test vesterday. Into it were put eight men, among them Antonio Buano, who was sentenced to from twelve and one-half to twenty-five years for kidnaping. They were hand- cuffed together. Two deputy sheriffs were locked in the van, while Deputy Joe Miller, who takes all prisoners up the river, sat on the front seat with the chauffeur. Sheriff Grifenhagen followed in an the | It Revealed with Sam Sostman and Pasternack, Dr M8 automobile Emil M. Abrams. At 12:30 o'clock the auto pulled up in front of the prison and the con- ts were turned over to Warden ormick. As they left the van they expressed themselves as delighted with the trip. Most of them had nev- er had an automobile ride. Although the trip through the city was made along Fifth avenue and Broadway, comparatively few persons were aware of the kind of passengers in the van. Mc DOG FINDS RING. Secret of Wedding. New York New York, destiny the lLiome of the Herman KFeigenbaums, in The Bronx, with the following results: Mr, Mrs. Feigenbaum heard July 23.--Gyp plaved other afternoon in the and their daughter’s wedding last March there was a belated but happy wed- ding supper last night, and the bride- sroom presented Gyp with a collar elaborately trimmed with solid silver. Gyp.was playing in the room of the Feigenbaums' twenty-year-old daughter, Henrietta, when he espied her silk handbag over the side of her bed. He seized it and, holding it be- tween his teeth, ran downstairs and laid it before Mrs. Feigenbaum. Out of the bag rolled a diamond en- gagement ring and a gold wedding Inscribed on the latter was: tta from Max, March, When the daughter came Llushingly admitted that shy Brenner, a shoe merchant of 854 In- tervale avenue, The Bronx, had been secretly married in Brooklyn last March. The bridegroom was sent for, and the parental blessing was followed hy the wedding supper. The Effects of Opiates. HAT INFANTS are peculiarly susceptible to opium and its various or | preparations, all of which are narcotio, is well known. Even in the smallest doses, if continued, these opiates cause changes in the func- tions and growth of the cells which are likely to become permanent, causing imbecility, mental perversion, a craving for alcohol or narcotics in later life. Nervous diseases, such as intractable nervous dyspepsia and lack of staying Kwen are a result of dosing with opiates or narcotics to keep children quiet their infancy. The rule among physicians is that children should never receive opiates in the smallest doses for more than a day at a time, and only then if unavoidable. The administration of Anodynes, Drops, Cordials, Soothing Syrups and other narcotics to children by any but a physician cannot be too strongly decried, and the druggist should not be = party to it. Children who are iil need the attention of a physician, and it is nothing less than a crime to dose them willfully with narcotics. Castoria contains no narcotics if it bears the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher. Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of O L D R S S P T O JULY MONEY-SAVING SPECIAL OFFERINGS REDUCTIONS IN WOMEN’S WASH- ABLE DOESKIN GLOVES. Regular $1.75 Slip-on Doeskin Gloves re- duced to $1.25. Regular $2.59 White Doeskin Gloves re- duced to $1.75. Regular $2 16-button Doeskin Gloves re- duced to $2.00. Regular $1 duced to 69c. 69Regulm- $1 Long Silk Gloves reduced to c. $5.00 Misses’ and Women’s Dresses, mus- fins, dimities, tissues and ratine, all sizes and colors, long Russian tunic reduced to $3.95. Twenty-three Silk Gowns worth $35 to $55, crepe de chine taffeta and charmeuse, reduced to $15.00. Hovstulls “IT PAYS TO RUY OUR KIND" HARTFORD, 140 TRUMBULL ST. Natural Chamois Gloves re- HARTFORD 93.99 ASYLUM ST. Connecting with Summer Necessities Pyramid Fly Catcher, the proper bait for flies. 2 for 5¢. Hang them anywhere. Kalamazoo Ice Blankets save your ice. 10c each, 3 for 25c, Mosquito Cream, an agreeable safeguard against insects bites and stings, 25¢ tubes. THE DICKINSON DRUG GO. 162 and 171 MAIN STREET THE OTHER KIND GLASSES furnished by us relieve the defects which our examinations, detect. Bring your eye troubles to us, if you wi style, comfort, neatness and guaran- sl -y il Registered by Examination S. Stanley Horvitz Optome?'rist & Optician 821 MAIN STREET Auto Goggles, Oculist's Prescriptions Filled, Eye Proteciors, Artificial »s Insterted. Telephone, Closed Wednesday Afternoons and Evenings During Summer Months, A Concrete Garage Ends Fire Dangers The floor of a concrete garage cannot become saturated with oil and the walls cannot burn. Your valuable automobile will be protected in an everlasting coacrete building. We advise you to use only PHA%' CEMEN for all concrete work. Our customers have found that it is easy to do good work with ALPHA because it has exceptional binding-power. We guar- antee ALPHA to more than meet all standard tests. ALPHA goes further than cements, because every ounce is and active. Chemists test it every hour while it is being made, and guard its strength and purity. We will tell you how to use ALPHA to secure the best results, Swift & Upson Lumber Co., New Britain, Conn.

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