New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 24, 1914, Page 12

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)

8 the slgnw- jde under his ‘Allow no one mitations and nd endunger the xperiment. TORIA for Castor Oil, Pare= ps, It contains neither- z otic substance. It de- rishness. For more than nstant use for the relief of Colic, all Teething Trou= jtes the Stomach and Bowels, ¢ healthy and natural sleep. he Mother’s Friend. ave Always Bought theSiznatureof ’. *% Over 30 Years COMPANY, NEW YORK CITY. fILSON Sideration. —President ul consideration tion of govern- next year becau ar, it was learned aiming toward a o-ordinate expen- s to give more at- priatio- to do s of othoer b Lefore he focated a budget s fhe presence in con- etary of the treasur @dministration AsL year be- It in Message. f that the president uestion in his fortn- O congress and will ntion o 1t in con- is to begin soon | leaders with re- fam for the short already discussed al cabinet meet- on the secretaries “economy. Heé has Ver. that thne begin- ernmental activities, ade commission, and erve bank system, will o new appropriations. ctivities Begun, of the short session yesterday when the committee began istrict of Columbia on bill. A sub-committee work. next Thursday on the executive and judicial ap- hill s b fion pian itteo is to h GsUres re the we these two sup- 1y by the time con- December 7. The leg- aet forthe current fiscal year ated $37.500.000, and the o for the coming ar exceed e current appropriation by 0, wiliich is exactly the cstimate Q prupvm»d agricultural census, :‘ 2,000,000 Appropriatior R 5 & "'I'hv district current appropriation utive Frhate s for hereafter | appropriations | $3,000.- ] is $12,000,000, and estimates for next wear approximate the same figur Hearings on the naval appu-prla- tion bill begin next Monday. Chairman Fitzgerald of the house appropriations committee, Républi- can Leader Mann and others who have been inspecting the Panama canal, are understood to be on the ,way home. STORES WILL BE CLOSED THURSDAY | Majority of Merchants Will Be Open Wednesday Evening Until 10 o'Clock, A general decision to close omn Thanksgiving Day has been made by the merchants of New Britain. The principal dry goods stores will cpen Wednesday evening until o'clock and will be closed all I'hursday. The banks. brokers’ public and public ut.lity offices will be closed all day as usual. Most of the factories will close Thanksgiving Day only, although in a few cases the em- ploves will be given a vacation for the rest of the week. The barbers have decided to keep their shops open until 10 o’clock Wed- nesday night and will close all day Thursday, Even the grocery and meat markets will follow this plan closing. The drug stores will be 10 day o open for the rest of the day. Andrews, the secretary of the Cham- | sleres and the response to the sug- gestion of closing in the afternoon | was practically unanimous, A few stores will be closed Wednes- day night and will be open until noon Thursday. The Delicatessen store and | the Globe Clothing store are among these exceptions. this evening, it will not- be opened agein until Monday of next week. The Y. M. C. A. will be open in the morn ing and evening and closed for the af- ternoon. The “Herald” will not be { published. DISCUSS CREDIT Washington, Nov, 24. tate, rural and personal credit systems formed the topics of discussion at today's conference of the executive commit- tee of progressive state granges with representatives of farm organizations. Invitations were sent out last eve- ning to the annual dance of the Alpha Delta Sigma fraternity December 28th at Booth’s hall. Call On schultz & Costello, Inc. 242 Main Sireet. For FIRE INSURANCE 674 WEST MAIN STREET Sal Price $3,800. Only $300 Cash Required 2 tenements 12 rooms, 2 furnaces, 2 bath rooms and gas. Apply, to THE W. L. HATCH CO. 29 WEST MAIN STREET. When the Woman's Exchange closes | | | | I | | | |ing on : | ought, perhaps, to report formally that | | form BEEN ABAND(]N[I) lanman Brooks, of Park Boam LXpains Suiation to Mayor. will be constructed this year at the North End park and skaters will have to seek elsewhere for amusement. This has been prac- No dam | tically decided by the, park commis- sioners, who find that they will be unable to build the dam because of the lack of funds. ‘W. F. Brooks, chairman of the park commission, has sent the following ex- planatory letter to Mayor Quigley: “Having asked the council to al- low our board to transfer $500 of our ' funds to restore the pond for skat- the Stanley Quarter park, 1 this sum is insufficient, that our board can spare no more and that you in- me there js no other source from which we can draw in time to undertake the work this autumn. We regret, theretore, to be obliged to andon the project for the pres- ont. “The circumstances are that since his previous estimate on a repair basis the city engineer has found that all dam construction is subject to state supervision and that naturally the state will not give its sanction to any- thing but a permanent structure. “To go ahead without his appraval would not be impossible under the , conditions of that small stream, never- : theless, such action would seem a dif- ficult matter to justify and in the event of any accident would bring this city into considerable contempt. There would seem, therefore, to be no way of providing skating in this section this winter and nothing further to Go but prepare plans acceptable to ourselves and the state engineer for this dam and ask the ci for the | money at the next appropriation.” ‘GARRISON SAYS PUBLIC be | offices, ' HAS AVAILABLE FACTS Sccretary of War Will Not Attend Hearin? ¢: Nat:onal Defense. Issue. D. C., Nov. 24.—"“War ss no infor- ‘Washington, department officials po: mation which they may feel free to disclose,” as to the state of the na- | tion’s defenses which has not already | contained been made public, is the statement in a letter addressed by Secretary Garrison yesterday to Rep- resentative A. P. Gardner of Massa- , chusetts. stores | clcsed from 1 to 6 o’clock and will be ber of Commerce, sent out a circular | durlng the proposed hearing. letter regarding the closing of drug i gurison’s letter says in part: | Mr. Gardner introduced a resolu- tion providing for congressional in- vestigation of the military situation in the United States at the last ses- A H. |sion and had written the secretary regarding his appearance as a witness Mr. Thinks Plan Unseemiy. “I note that you express the hope that T will be the first witness before the committee, that Assistant Secre- tary Breckenridge will likewise con- sent to give his testimony and that i you have invited a number of army | | assistant secretary | they become overworked officers to testify. 1 do not think it seemly for me to offer myself to the committee nor do I believe that the should think it proper for him so to do, and I feel sure that officers should not place themselves in position of volunteer- ing information or views to congress or to one of its committees. Will Do Proper Thing. “I am not, as you must be aware, standing on any question of technical procedure, or insisting on any partic- ular form of red tape methods. 1 am simply endeavoring to do what seems to me to be the proper thing to do in HE.\VY MEAT EATERS HAVE SLOW KIDNEYS Eat Less meat if you feel Backache or Have Bladder Trouble— Take Glass of Salts. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority., Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, from the strain, get sluggish and fail to.filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheuma« tism, headaches, liver trouble, ner- vousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from slug- gish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any phar- macy; take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimu- late the kidneys also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes {rritation, ' thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure; makes a delightful efferves- cent lithia-water drink which every- one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active and the blood pure, thereby avoiding seri- ous kidney complications. CASH IN ADVANCE. FOR QALIL FOR SALE—Six welight 1,400 Ibs, once. Color Room 304, National ing. year old Must be sold black. Attorne; Bank build- 11-24-3d MINIMUM CHARGE 10c ONE CENT A WORD EACH INSERTION. | REST V.ORK AT MODERATE PRIGES | . Brayner amous All-wood Air-tight Weather Strips. put on only by A. M. Raymond Tel. 37-3, Plainville, Conn. -dix SALE—Several two family houses of nine or ten rooms, mod- ern improvements, also building lots on or near trolley lines. W. P. Steele, 260 Chestnut street. 1-24-d6x FOR Apply 11-24- LIVE DUCKS for Main street. sale. FOR SALE—Kitchen 4 heater, hot water front. Price $3.00. J. O. Williamson, 21 Winthrop St 11.24-d good | | I‘;\)lt MRS SETH BARNES—Private work rolicited in chiropody, manicuring and scalp treatment. Tel. 508-13. 10-6-1f TO RENT. RE. Kitchen, chamber, pantry, set heat. 82 Church strect. Two furnisked rooms 42 Prospect dining room, tubs, eam 1l-2Zd-dex ) REN housekeeping. FOR SALE—Lady's aul()mulul\, raccoon fur, worn but little. & Thompson, West Main St. 1-24-1dx coat, Nelson FOR SALE—Nice Baldwin and Pound Sweet apples. Also single comb white Leghorn roosters and hens. Maplecroft Farm, Stanley Quarter. - Tek 154-2 1-28-3a FOR SALE—Walnut upright piano. Just the thing for small apartment, Price only $40 which will be allowed on the price of a new piano within 2 years. Sedgwick & <Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hartford, Conn. * 11-21-104 FOR SALE—Shoninger upright piano. In good condition. Tone and action almost like new. - Cost $350. Will take $80 for quick sale. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hart- ford Ct. 11-21-104 FOR SALE—Mendelssohn upright ma- hogany piano. This has been used so little that it is just like a new piano and is one of our best bar- "gains for $180. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hartford, Ct. 11-21-10a FOR SALE—Smith-Barnes upright mahogany piano. Been rented few months only. Very handsome, full rich tone and elegant up to date case, Originally $375. We will sell now for $225. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hartford, Ct. 11-21-104 FOR SALE—Fischer upright piano. Beautiful mahogany case with brass fittings. Was owned by prominent family in Hartford who seldom used it. Now in perfect order, tone and action irreproachable. The original cost was $500. Tan be bought for $175. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asy- lum street, Hartford, Ct. 11-21-10d4 mahog- FOR SALE—Very handsome any player piano (88-note) manu- factured by the largest concern in the world. Used only four months. Fully guaranteed. With $15 worth of rolls, bench and scarf will be sold immediately for $350. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asylum street. 11-21-104 FOR SALE—Emerson short grand piano. Cost $700. Condition per- fect. San Juan mahogany. So little used that it is appayently new. Just half price, $350. Casey, 139 Asylum street, Ct. 11-21-104 FOR SALE—31 used upright pianos must be sold at once. $25 up. These pianos will be most given away. Sedgwick & Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hartford, Ct. 11-21-104 ——————————eeeeen. of the between one partments and congress. Whomso- ever and whatsoever the committee expressed a desire to have from this department will be immediately fur- nished it. Until otherwise advised, 1 will not offer myself to the committee or approve of any one else under me doing so. Public Has Available Facts. “With respect to your suggestion that the testimony of myself and the officers will disclose a state of facts so astonishing as to challenge the attention of the country, I can only say that practically every fact which 1 or any officer would feel free to dis- clase, is now available to the public, and has been so for a long time. I do not know of any fact which it is necessary to cansider in order to reach a wise conclusion, that is not the subject of reports or communic: tions readily obtainable by you or by anyone else interested in the subject matter. any matter Will Act Promptly. “While dictating the above, letter dated from Hamilton, Mass., November 7, 1914, was handed me. It reached my office this morning. The purport of this latest communi- cation is to ask me to go before the committee. What I have said above fully states what I believe is the sition that 1 should take in this spect. Immediately upon being ad.- vised by the committee of its de- sires, T shall as above stated, prompt- ly comply therewith.” our re- ALL advertisements for the classified column must be in the Herald office by 1:30 p. m. on the day of issue. | de- Prices from al- | TO REN’ roam tenement, floor, all modern improvemen 33 Wakefield C Ullll rooms, rux lu'&hc(l 232 Arch St. 11 TO RED Two unfurnished. -4dx TO RENT—Four room tenement, 21 Winthrop street. Kugene W. Park- er, 27 Winthrop St. tet-s-tf seven water work H. 2dx TO lthT—At Electric l‘ll‘ld room cottage; elecwric light, in kitchen, concrete walks, shop and large garden. Apply Forshaw. tenement. 11-23-3dx room street, TO 463 Stanley TO RENT—Modern four ment, 551-2 Trinity room tene- street. Tel. 11-23-6dx TO RENT—Five room flat, most mod- ern convenience: Also 3 offices. “The Barnes,” 131 Main Street. TO RENT—Five room modern conveniences, Inquire Beach, 139 Tel. TO RENT-—Two five-rooni tenements, all modern improvements. Inquire J. M. Curtin. 11-12-tf tenement, 53 Trinity. Black Rock. 11-19-6dx TO RENT—One five, one four room tenement, all modern improve- ments, 130 Cherry street. 11-11-tf Two four room rents,with corner Cherry and Pine streets. Two flve room rents, 40 Maple street. Modern, P. J. Mur- ray & Co. Telephone 1116-3. room tenements 2382 Arch street. Inquire Mrs. 11-9-tf TO RENT—3 five and 1 four room at All improvements. Marr on the premises. NT—Very desirable furnished 10 rooms. in- 10-31-tf TO RE: house, 6 Lake Court. quire W. L. Hatch, TO RENT—Room 40 by 160 feet for light manufacturing, Elevator ser- vice. 266 Arch street. Inquire Union Laundry office. Tel, 904, 0-22-tf WANTED. WANTED—Woman en, also girl waitress Broadway Restaurant, helper in kitch- for Arch street. 11-23-da3 D ROOMS. JRNISHED ROOMS-—Heated, Sep- arate conveniences. Light house- keeping, use of Kitchen. 16 I’rospect street. 11-24-4dx URNISHED ROOMS-—Two front rooms, furnished for light house- keeping, steam heat, electric light, gas, Arch street. 11-24-1dx TWO ROOM 3 " turnished for housekeeping, including pantry, set tubs, hot water, steam heat and clectric lights. Private and central. 45 Walnut street. 11-23-3d light TO RENT—Board and room for two gentlemen, All conveniences, Pri- vate family, 2 Wilson street, 11-23-1w TO RENT—Large front room, steam heat, electric light, modern im- provements. Central. 45 Walnut street, 1-20-ds $5 0 a \VePk Black Diamond Self-Light- ing Gas Mantles and Simplex Gas Lighters. No matches required; just turn on gas; lights itself. Sells on sight. Send for proposition be- fore it is too late. AUTOMATIC GAS APPLIANCE CO., 1 Union Square, New Yor! 11-14.17 KGENTS MAKE Selling UELP WANTED—-F WANTED—Girl to help care dren during day Apply tis street. MALE. r chil- »—Agreeable home work: $8 to $12 weekly; send dime far samples and complete instruc- tions. R. G. Brown & Co., Box 884, Bridgeport, Conn. LADIES WAN 11-24-1dx EY FOR W ()‘\ll‘ ness Woman's Magazine tells HOW., 100 sample copy 20c. De- scriptive matter fre Subscription solicitors wanted. Myrtie Ave., Bridgeport, Conn e, 712 noons. | | | Charter 7574, nightly || LARGE mu T0 RENT STREET. Apply to THE JOHN BOYLE CO. 3 and 5 Franklin Square PHILADELPHIA 193 Main Stroet | ™2 BOWLING Clubl and frivate Carties modated. “P | RILDING NELSON, 172174 ARCH ETHERT P. J. MURRAY & C Real Estate and t Insurance FOX’S THEATER BLDG 88 West Main St. Insurance of All Kinds RealEstate BoughtandSold H. . HUMPHREY SITUATIONS WANTED, WANTED—By German woman, to go out washing and ironing, or it home. 130 Glen street. Kn 11.24 Registered Optometrist and Over 30 years cxpericnce in Any hour, Oflice Open from 8 A. M. to 8 P. M Sundays by Appointment F.E. MONKS, D. D. S. Georgiana Mon%ks, D. D. @ 7,200 sq. ft. Floor Space. GARAGE STORAGE Keep your Car in First Condition Over Winter in HAHIS Up-to-Date GABAGE Lowest Rates in the City, 189 Main st. Tele. 221-4., Cl Nat Benk Buiot -1ldx is a good place to get a good busis education? There is no better place than Huntsinger's—ten experienced teach ers—excellent location—good h and ventilation—tuition $15 , p: HUNTSINGER month, . THE BUSI SCHOOL, INO. 3¢ Asyinm Street, Hartford, © Hartford Art Schoo! Saturday Classes for Children and Teachers. Instructor: Robert F. 28 Prospect Street, w What a Little Pull Will Do A sweep of the hand finds the little hang- ing chain. A pull Apply to The comes the light. Whether you’re short or tall, the Hubbell Pull Socket brings all lights within reach. The chain is always on hand to meet your hand. THE HUBBELL PULL SOCKET is an artistic addition to any fixture or table lamp. A handy helper wherever light is needed In home, storc or office: Let us fix your fixtures with Hubbell Pull Sockets. The cost will be little, the satis- faction will be great. ’*Phone us today. G. K. Spring & Co. 79 Church St. New Britain DETECTIVES 1f you are a investiza uon in any matter where secrecy. integrity and results ‘are essentlal write A Brown. 26 Stav. rireet, Hartford. *Phone ll Elizabeth 1t you I'vut the BEST, ge! 12 Quarts Milk $1.00, SEIBERT & SON, 1t 70 639 Stanley St., 5 min. from center, ———— The Quality Print Shop ~=&= Printing done in many GOOD WORKMANSHIP — ATE PRICES, Tanotype Composition. EASTERN PRINTING AND PUB.. LISHING , COMPANY. 53 Church Street. w.cu Uvipaiing 108y DEH A Grand Opportunity We are offering a two family house and three extra lots, located on Bel- den street. Price very low, terms casy. WIll furnish money for houses built on the unoccupied lots. The Home Banking and Realty Co. “The Dickinson,” 193 Main Street. T "~ ‘ BEST COAL THREE BAGS o s106 % TERMS CASH, OFFICE 24 Dwian? Gounr ALLUSTRAT # ENGRAVER Wall Papers—Room Monldings— Wall Papers. WALL PAPERS OF NE' and NOVEL DESIGNS al grades, prices right. Sign Makers. & 304 MAIN St. 'Phone 534 MORGAN & KINGSLEY, ESTABLISHED 1854, the oldest Wail Paper and Paint Shop in the Oity,

Other pages from this issue: