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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. FRIDAY, AUGUST 21, 1914. The Present European Trouble Has -~ ter as the imported. Stopped the Import of High Grade Beer to the United States. CREMO BEER brewed from the best selected material and our absolutely pure Artesian well water. Our beer is brewed according to the same methods as the famous Munich beer, and has the same charac- It is of good age, as we have beiween 7,000 and 8,000 barrels or about 250,000 gallons in stock. It has about as high a percentage of exiract as any imported beer, and contains only about 5 per cent. ot alcohol, which is about as low a percentage as any good beer can have. Lovers of a good and pure beer should call for it at salocons, or order a dozen or more bottles from the bottler. CREMO BEER THE CREMO BREWING COMPANY., INC. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. / NOTICE ! e In view of the enormous loss which we suffer annually on our packages, especially the quarter kegs, which are being used as receptacles of so called home made wine, cider, or to preserve cucumbers, or cut in two halves used as flower pots, or being burned up, etc., we are compelled to warn everybody against making such an illegal use of our packages. Below you will find section 1252 of the General Statutes: Section 1252 of the General Statutes reads as follows: “Using or injuring receptacles for sale of malt liquors. Every person who shall use, traffic in, sell, dispose of, convert, mutil- ate, destroy or detain after demand shall be made by the owner, any butt, hogshead, barrel, half-barrel, cask, half-cask, quarter cask, or keg used in the manfacture and sale of malt liquors, without the permission of the owner or owners thereof, or unless there shall have been a sale in express terms of any such receptacle, exclusive of the malt liquors contained therein, by the lawful owner or owners, shall be fined ten dollars for each and every such receptacle so used, trafficked in, sold, disposed of, converted, mutilated, destroyed, or detained; and for each and every subsequent violation of this section shall be fined twenty-five dollars and imprisoned not more than three months.” ‘ FRANCE ACCEPTS AID OF ROUGH RIDERS Hngle-American Corps Will Act as Scouls and Interpreters. Paris, Aug. 21 (1:30 A. M.)—The ministry of war has definitely accepted tle service of the rough riders corps formed in Paris. The men will act as scouts and inter- rreters, for which latter service they are particularly well qualified, as most of them speak four and some seven languages, it is announced. All have seen actual service and are expert horsemen. They will provide their own uniforms and mounts but a fand for their maintenance in the field has been made up publicly. Five automobiles have been given them, One of the machines is fully fitted as 2 hospital and will carry surgeons and nurses. $100,000 for Genoa. Major Hedekin, U. S. A., will leave for Genoa with $100,000 for the relief af Americans as soon as he receives instructions from Henry S. Brecken- ridge, the American assistant secre- tary of war, who had been expected in Holland today. It is said that the bulk of the $2,500,000 appropriated for re- lief work by the American congress, will be kept aboard the cruiser Ten- | nessee and be drawn upon as needed. The American ambassador to Spain, Joseph E. Willard, who is a passen- ger on the Tennessee will leave for his post at Madrid as soon as he can get a train. Difficulty of Transportation. William P. Pixotto, a member of the American committee appointed Yo as- sist American tourists in Paris, and _Bernard J. Shoninger, formerly presi- dent of the American chamber of commerce in Paris, informed the minister of commerce that they would like to see Americans place some orders with French industries, but there was the difficulty of transporta- tion and also an inability to . miine that such orders could be filled in yiew of restricted transmission facili- fies. Minister Thompson said that stepe were being taken to re-establish th enormal freight services from the principal industrial centers, and that the bank of France would offer the * fullest possible facilities for the dis- icounting of commercial paper. ‘400,000 ACRES DESIGNATED, + Washington, Aug. 21.—More than 400,000 acres of arid and non-irriga- ble lands in the west have been de- signated for entry under the En- -larged Homestead act, Secretary Lane ~% the interior department announced signor to A. C. Fairbanks, Anglo-American | deter- | today. The areas are in Wyoming, ‘Washington, Arizona, New Mexico and Colorado. LIST OF PATENTS. List of patents issued from the U. S. Patent Office, Tuesday, Aug. 11, 1914, for the state of Connecticut furnished us from the office of Sey- mour & Earle, solicitors of patents, 129 Church street, New Haven. Conn.: H. A, Adams, East Hartford. As- trustee. Pliers. (2 patents). C. H. Armstrong, Bridgeport. tachable ratchet for die-stocks. J. T. Austin. Assignor to Austin Organ Co., Hartford. Organ-actions. (4 patents). A, W. Case, Highland Park. chine for smoothing fiber-board. R. B, Cooling, Bristol. stretcher. H. B. Cooley, New Britain. As- signor to the American Paper Goods Co., Kensington. ing device. 8. Danenhower, Bridgeport. Signal- ing apparatus. ‘W. F. Desse, Somers. Car-replacing device. J. Dunn. Co., At- Ma- Shoe- Assignor to the Warner Bros. Bridgeport. Paper-box blank. D. Higgons, New London. side-rolling window shutter. J. Kohn, Bridgeport. Automatic stop for talking machines. 8. Lake, Milford. Battery, F, L. Langhammer and C. G, John- son. Assignors to Warner Bros. Co., Bridgeport. Buckle. A. J. Lewis, Stamford. Assignor to the Baird Machine Co. Tandem press. A. L. McMurtry, Sound Beach. Control-pedal for automobiles. J. McTammany, Stamford. matic typewriter operator, ‘W. J. Monaghan. Assignor to Wa- terbury Mfg. Co., Waterbury. Port- able electric lamp, A. A. Page, East Haven. Assignor to Sargent and company, New Ha- ven. Padlock. A. A. Page, East Haven. Assignor to Sargent and company, New Haven. Saw-vise. E. Rogers, Glenville. vice. E. R. Sargent. and company, New Haven. handle. F. E. Seeley. Assignor to the Bryant Co., Bridgeport. Plural Out- Auto- Signaling de- Assignor togSargent Casket- Electric socket. J W. J. Smith, Assignor to Waterbury Clock Co., Waterbury. Alarm clock. B. F. Walker, Bridgeport. Dental- floss holder. V. B. and P. H. D. Walker. signor to the Charles Parker Meriden. Swivel-vise. E. C. Wilcox. Assignor to the Connecticut Telephone and:. Electric Co., Meriden. Tgnition system. Designs. T. B. Lasher, Bridgeport. Assignor to the International Silver Co., Meri- den. Handle for spoons, forks or similar articles. As- Co., Feeding and creas- | FIFTEEN WOMEN KILLED BY SHELL EXPLOSION | Steamer Captain Tells of Bomb:rc- ment of Russian Seaport. Stockholm, via London, Aug. ish steamer which has just arrived | from Libau, tells the following story | seaport by the German fleet: “It was on a Sunday evening that city. The townspeople were thrown into a panic. They ran iInto the ialreets and other open places because their houses were falling and burn- ing. “Fifteen women who were seated on a pile of lumber were all killed by the explosion of a single shell. The Many buildings and bridges were de- stroyed.” Calm at St. Petersburg. Advices from St. Petersburg indicate that life in the Russian capital runs in the ordinary way. ,The streets, cafes and amusement places are crowded as ever. No additional mili- tary precautions have been taken, it is said. The food supply is said to be vlentiful. The destruction of the harbor works at Hango, Finland, by German war- ships is reported by the master of the Swedish steamer Bifrost.,, which has arrived from Hango, Steamer Alcor Dynamited. “We received orders from the port authorities at Hango on August 2 to moor with the Dutch coal steamer Al cor, across the entrance to the ha bor, where our ship was to be dyr he said. “Later the authorities permitted us te anchor outside in security, but the Alcor was blown up according to the rrogram, together with three -valuable cranes.” Grand Duke Michael, the younger brother of the Russlan emperor, has left St. Petersburg. Steamship freight traffic Finland and Sweden has sumed. between been re- FORECLOSURE NOTICES. Notices of foreclosure proceedings on mortgages have been filed by Judge B. F. Gaffney, attorney for the plaintiffs, with the city clerk. M. T. foreclose on Rudolph Feutl and the case is returnable before the superior court at Hartford on the first Tues- day in September. 21 | (7:10 A. M.)—The captain of a Swed- | of the bombardment of the Russian the rain of fire began” to fall on thfi‘ bombardment continued for two hours. | mited in order to close the channel,” | White and Adam Maier are suing to | | | | ways. The records at Shuttle Meadow and three inches. Last year at this show that the rain fall was .78 inches | time the water masured nineteen feet ond eight inches, shert time the *streets were flooded During last night's thunder shower | With water and pedestrians caught in the rain fell in torrents and in a |the deluge crowded into vacant door-'and the present depth is twenty feet Sugar Sale Saturday UNION TEA CO. Pure Cane Granulated Sugar 7c¢ Pound 25 lbs. in Cloth Bag $1.75 | 10 Ibs. in Cloth Bag 70c BUTTER AND EGGS Finest Fresh Creamery Butter 34¢ Ib. | Choice Fresh Creamery Butter 32¢ Ib. Eggsat . . 27c¢ and 31¢ dozen. | Pure Lard at 13¢ Ib., 2 Ibs. for 25e. Challenge Brand Condensed Milk 9¢ can. TEAS AND COFFEES The fine quality of our Teas will please you. Try a pound. All kinds at 25¢, 35¢, 50¢, 60c, 70c and 80c Ib. Our Coffees, always fresh roasted and high grade, 25¢, 30¢, 35¢, 40¢, 45¢ 1b. Cocoa in 1-2 pound tins, 15€ a can. UNION TEA COMPANY 317 MAIN STREET.