New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 19, 1915, Page 5

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MORGAN TELLS WILSON FINANCIAL SITUATION Financier Says Gold Pool May Soon Be Dissolved. Washington, Jan. 19.—J. P. Mor- 8an was in Washington yesterday to confer with President Wilson and at- 2terd to business of public interest. *, The business included a meeting of the executive commiitee of the Fed- eral Reserve DBoard's advisory coun- cil and a conference with Secretary of the Interiar Lane regarding the proposed sale to the government of the Copper River and Northwestern railroad in Alaska, which now s owned by the Morgan firm. Mr. Morgan's conference with the -president related to the international exchange situation and the extent to which this has been affected by re- cent trade developments. The pres- - Yident was highly pleased at the fa- vorable comment upon the interna. tional financial situation given by Mr. Morgan. Dissolution in Sight. It was said that the latter ex- pressed Lhe opinion that the balance of trade has already swung so far in the direction of the United States that the dissolution of the gold pool formed to meet our international ob- ligations is in sight. Mr. Morgan saw the president for half an hour. He walked alone to e White House "from the hotel rere he was stopping and was apped repestedly by a helf dozen phciographers hc approached the executive offices. Redeent Abont Conference. After the conference in the pres- ident’s odice Mr. Morgan would tell the general character of the sub- jects discussed. He said that among other things he had informed the ®president of the action aof his firm in establishing a bankers’ credit of $10,- 960,000 for the Russian government. This would seem to indicate that the administration has no thought of making any objection to the Russian transaction. The White House authorized this statement regarding Mr. Morgan's - visit: “Mr. Morgan came to inform the - president of the improvements in in- ternational exchange and to discuss the general trade movements as af- fecting this exchange.” . GAINS- POUND A DAY, SAYS MRS. TATUM Cows and cmcksns Naw Involved A Few of the Hundreds of Bargains: 25.00 Birdseye large bevel plate oase. Maple Chiffonier, glass, serpentine REDUCED TO $30.00 Curly Birch Princess Dress- er, top 43x22, bevel plate glass, 39x17. REDUCED TO $50.00 Mahogany Chiffonler. Ex- ceptionally well built, with dust-proof partitions, re-enforced frame, etc. REDUCED TO $45.00 Birdseye Maple Dresser, double swell front, top 44x23, bevel plate glass, 30x23, carved mirror frame. REDUCED TO $50.00 Quartered Oak Princess Dresser. Extra large top, 46x22, bevel mirror, 41x23, frame handsomely carvc(L REDUCED TO $36.00 Circassian Walnut Dresser.’ Beautifully figured, heavy colonial design. REDUCED TO $34.00 Chiffonier to match. REDUCED TO $52.00 Mahogany Princess Dresser. Sheraton design, dust proof bottoms. Large glass. REDUCED TO $18.00 Quartered Oak, Mission de- sign, weathered oak finish, exceptional drawer capacity, plate glass, REDUCED TO $15.0 $18.00 $39 $25 $29 $28 $26 $35 $12 HUNDREDS OF OTHER PIECES AT EQUAL REDUCTIONS Gentleman’s Chiffonier «clden quartered oak, "rawers, Iarge wardrobe, shaving mirror and cupboard similar to il- lustration. REDUCED FROM $45.00 TO $30.00 cent. Great Reductions 1 Choice Chamber Furnit Not only Chamber Furniture, Now is the time to buy and save money. article in our enormous stock is offered at discounts ranging from 15 per cen Were $15.00. Brass and Iron Beds 2 inch continuous post. 4 inch fillers, brass, satin finish, anteed moisturc and tarnish proof. REDUCED FROM $19.00 $ 6.00 BEDS NOW $8.00 BEDS NOW §10.00 BEDS NOW $13.00 BEDS NOW $16.00 BIEDS NOW . ... $21.00 BEDS NOW $29.00 BEDS NOW $31.00 BEDS NOW $15.00 BEDS NOW $48.00 BEDS NOW TO $1 . $10.00 $12.00 fifll_(m $38.00 GR $5.00 NOW | WOOD BEDS $13.00 Maple Bed, carved hcad and REDUCED TO $5.00, .:$27.00 Golden Quartered Oak Na- REDUCED TO $16.00. $21.50 Imitation Mahogany 1 | Bed. REDUCED TO 817.50. 1 Post oot panels. | |;fl|u()|l bed Post solid Mahogany Beds, and | Napoleon designs. §15.00 BEDS NOW | $50.00 BEDS NOow $35.00 $39.00 $63.00 BEDS NOW . $16.50 $70.00 BEDS NOW $80.00 BEDS NOW Dressing Tables and birch, AT . $60.00 walnut in oak., mahogany, to match dressers and chiffoniers. T REDUCTIONS CELEBRATED WHITTALL RUGS $60.00 ANGLO-PERSI $50.00 ARABIC 1 o $45.00 ROYAL WORCES $32.00 BRUSSELS $29.00 BRU LS 8 RU()\[ ~I14|: ARDAHAN, was 8 AXMINSTER, was $22.50 BRUSSELS, was $16.00 ELECTRA, was $26.50 SMALLER RUGS AT PROP ORTIONATE (DISC ()\Tl\l ED PATTERNS, SIZE 9x12) REDUCED TO $42.50 ZDUCED TO $39.50 SDUCED TO $27.00 REDUCED TO $27.00 St REDUCED TO $25.00 RUGS, NOW $25.00 NOW $15.00 NOW 811.85 NOW $22.00 REDUCTIONS, B. C. PORTER SONS Only a very few restricted in price by the manufacturers. 12 MAHOGANY WASH STANDS 5.75 Combination, clean and sani- REDUCED TO $8.50 Pure Selecied White o two parts, art tick. REDUC £11.50 White Cotton Felt, care tufted. two parts £13.00 Felt, Special two parts, fancy tick ion D TO fully REDUCED TO Long Staple Cotton REDUCED TO Silk Fioss comfortable, $15.00 exceedingly light in weight, REDUCED TO $16.00 Extra Quality Felt, tick. For thowe who w the Fine art best. REDUCED TO Reed Chairs Just the right design an extra bed room chair, Special $1.95 NO “JOB LOTS" or Manu- facturers’ ECONDS” in sale. Al standard first quality goods. for ouy BUY NOW. You T Bed Ro High, o cane seat, Reduce: BRASS Square and 30 PER GOODS STORED FREE WANT THEM. HELD AT GHICAGO' fOR NEW RESERVOIR Delggates Give Much Attention 10 This IS Recommendation of Waler School Extension Work. Commissioners {0 the Counci. new reservoir about 9,000,000, Near'y all the land on the Burling- ton water sked has been bought by the city although there are a few par- i cels si.11 to re purchased. It will be necessiry ultimately to Temove an rald the New York, Jan. 19.—Since John C. Tatum quit Pontica, said Mrs. Mary Jane Tatum yesterday, she has put on flesh at the rate of a pound a day. But, of course, it's only seven or ™ eight. days since he left. Asked what would happen if he stayed away about two years, Mrs. Tatum was reticent. The flesh that is returning to Mrs. Tatum was lost, she said, dur- ing her hours on the stand in the recént divorce trial. Mrs. Tatum ¢- wants to gather as many pounds as === possible, because her husband’s coun- sel will appear in the supreme court at Mineola today to ask that the ver- dict be set aside and the case tried all over again, even including Mrs. Tatum’s flesh-reducing hours on the stand. not guilty " All Charges Unfounded. {and Of race discrimination in the gov- ernment service the report said: “Quite a number of persons wrote in regard to their dismissal from the government service, owing to thae fact, as they stated, that they were Jews. After a careful and thorough investigation in each and every one of these alleged cases of discrimination |and prejudice, it was discovered that the charge was unfounded and :pat either inefficiency or politics caused In order the retirement or dismissal of the order z employe” the upper Burlington A T T water commissioners POET OF WASHINGTON |common DIES AT AGE OF 72 Kelly was then called to the stand High and emphatically denied tha Riley them and made any attempt to ring an alarm or Officer Ke 0ld Quaker ccmetery but no trouble | did ring any hrv" was rmFl[y on tHis account is anticipated as the There, are sitised with my |the fight. He last interment in cemetery” is said to | Client's innocence now?" said Lawyer | The other § have heen i 1844. It will also be “"‘]!"jn'-rnu‘h hwn‘)‘nu : and costs. necessary to change the course of a : L "'\' 'Ib“‘"”"'f' e road considerably e The water commissioners have a |V Rl ST e i s t is cded to s own behalf Ril 5:"“1‘.:1*":’}1‘:“‘:‘:;‘ i‘"‘:")"a";":(’;fi(m to | complicity in the offense other than 2 ol ot g " | being one of the party. He too theRcll ap oy MR- 'l'}lv]‘”'qq h,“;;, drunk to remember anything, he gaid L G S e ) ,d,rm‘ An¢ | He declared that he met Meyers only ask tne | climiieiing the slightest chance Ol |jaet night ana was told that he wi sk the| ont,gion from the properties. When | Jo o "0 gt e tomorrow night to { the reservoir is completed New Britain | ¢ waiked along with him,” said the petition the legislature for author.|will have a water supply second 0 | witness. to issue $200,000 in bonds. This|none in the east. WHO RANG IN ALARMS Made It is not finish you atisfled, answered the denied any was Chicago, Jan, 19.—Delegates to the twenty-fourth council of the Union of American Hebrew congregations today listened to a welcoming ad dress from M. E. Greenebaum of Chicago and the reports of officers and committees. The delegates who represent near- every state in the country, gave much of their attention to school ex- tension work. Nine Students Ordained. The report of the board of gov- ernors of the Hebrew Union Collegs, Cincinnati, told that nine students were ordained as rabbis in Israel last yvear and the establishment of sev- eral new scholarships at the inaiti- tution. The report of the board of del gates on civil rights touched partic- ularly on the status of Jewish imraj- grants at the clase of the European war., On this point the report said: Stili Greater Problems. : for the cows, it's cven worse. “Grave as the problems up to the for milk, they inquire, so it | bresent moent have been, the future is said, whother Mrs. Tatum or Mr. | throws still greater problems on the Tatum wants it. ‘There are also ru- | canvass of possibility. We must natur- more of an injunection to prevent the | ally come to the conclusion that if cows from gnlnb milk at all. Half | the government of Russia, whether s to Mr. Tatum. it wins or loses, should make good the Tatur special deputies are | alleged promise reported by the news- » still on guard on the Tatum lawn, | papers of according equal rights to and now Mr. Tatum has added some |its Jewish subjects, then Jewish of his own. Thoy are there, it is un- | migration fram that country would derstood, to keep Mrs. Tatum from | be materially lessened, if it did not walking off with any of the furni- (cease altogether; but even conceding ture. that favorable possibility, general im- migration may increas. The report added: tionists are already threatened incr lowing the war favor ofy new | Our national to prosecute the work on watershed ‘he | Warden D will good cided council Going to Europe. “I am going to Europe in a few weeks,” said Mrs. Tatum, “but I ex- pect to retain possession of Pontica. |1y On Friday I shall appear in court against my husband's chauffeur, be- cause he had no right to pull out a revolver and point it at me.” Although Mrs. Tatum continues in possession of the Tatum home at Great Neck, the battle between her- self and her husband for control of things has not let up for a minute. Even the cows and chickens are in it now. Before a chicken may be killed for Mrs. Tatum’'s table Mr. Tatum's signature must be obtained to a long legal document, which means that Mrs. Tatum has been im- porting her pouitry from elsewhere. Rumors of Injunction. [ of ity | First Case in Twenty Yoars. Ossining Osborne retu evening and rumor that given for soners Having ne |a sport, whel said, T reall holding of son might | Knowing thaf] | prison would squarely 1 @ question to @ certain if the erhood want | prison 1 1 them to do Ml criticism upol harge of th ¢ “Tonight I | receiving a @ | chairman of of the brothe saying the ¥ Judg that it were | have the exh This is of self case Prosecutor years this In summing up the Klett said that in his of experience in the is the first where a was deliberately rung and the caught, and he thought a alty should be imposed provides for a fine of $5 and a year in prison or prosecutor suggested the warning Heavy Judge Meskill discharged fined Kelly $100 off easy becaues it pearance in court viously had a good ers, Judge Meskill termed the rng leader and sent him to jall for three ) months and fined him $200 and costs Meyers has only lately been. re- leased from jail, having been sent up before on a complaint by his father Other Cascs, twenty intended to local court false alarm culprite heavy pen The statute ind costs both The imit as a Funeral Arrangements Being the . ase th ioners case work at once, the commis be- lieving, however, that a art should be made and all preliminary matters cleaned up. It is proposed to have a large reservoir and a pipe line ta the Whigville brook. Two plans have been before the commission for the transfer of the water and it has been decided that the easier and cheaper method would be to build a tunnel. One plan, that of Engineer Percy M. Blake, would convey the water above ground but the commixs sion expects to follow the suggest of Engineer D. . Crowley. that tunnel be dug under the mountain which divides the Whigville and Bur- lington water sheds. Hiram Mil- ler, the well known Boston engincer, ;Aglkpz’:g"'-\E:;““‘:f;‘mi‘.r’o""v1’(‘:;7‘* \“1’1‘ “That wasn't an alarm. The sta- e T e e enn{nflnl‘ i tute says ‘Who sh;alll m'em)on;;]‘)\- The fotnrmis 7 ‘neet: | turn in a false alarm,’ replied the ission presented a com- s lawyer” and stroke is not an munication to the common council on | ajarm because the fire department december 16 last, suggesting . s ae - ember 16 last, suggesting that o qid not respond to any box because new bond issue be asked for. The of 1t resolution which will be presented to- g s z Another morrow night is the outgrowth of tais and $200,000 is designated. Will Have $350,000. If the bond issue is authorized this will give ater department $350,000 | with which to do the work as there | [415¢ alarm of fire is $150,000 left of the 1909 issue of | , @Wver McDonough 1 2o0j000 M Chcatioriin R ias U inaa | Ea R Ol A e been spent finishing the Whigville | OF® the court shouid be cispose b : ! | first. He thought it quite irregular besTolleaNGR A= O TN i e Rerer shint s e RS ENE Sl A e e th | tr £ 3 the upper Burlington water shed in | [t @ man sho St i ety il i el sl N | committing a and before the !light, furi | cbundant st & r‘(r' rrying out the huge ! ,co was settied be charged with at- | pe {rous project of transforming it into a bIg | campting to commit that same 9 reservuir. 1 fensc hair cleanse While the Burlington reservoir will i L + | 'The prosecutor that it |a with a be twice as large in area as Shuttle | was his right complaint | carefully draw it Meado™ lake it will not deep | at any time irt gives de- | taking small strand at a time. and wiil not ctore as much water. It | cision This will cleanse the hair of dust, dirt imated that Shuttle Meadow | Well, 1 and in just & few mo- , helds 13,000,000 gallons and the and doubled the beauty of for Col. Joyce Known Through- out Country. Washington, Jan. 19.—Funeral ar- rangements were being made here to- day for Colanel John A. Joyce, known throughout the country by his poems and other writings. He died here ‘| yesterday, aged 72. Colonel Joyce had lived here for half a century and won the name of '‘Poet of Washington.” He had published more than a dozen books, mostly poems and biographies and was author also of many fugitive verses, Colonel Joyce laid claim to the au- thorship of *“Love and Laughter,” known through the English speaking world by its first line, ‘Laugh and the world laughs with you; weep, anrd you weep alone,” but his claim h been disputed and the controversy at one time attracted wide attention. During his long residence here, Col- onel Joyce made many friends among statesmen of prominence. He was a native of Ireland. (Continued From First Page) Sentences Imposed. bad he even see the alarm box. “It wa company that got me in wrong,"" told the captain. Meyers refused ment on the stand Immediately Lawyer McDonough | moved that Riley, his client, be dis- charged as it had not been proved that he rung the alatm. What about the ringing that stroke 2" ed Judge Meskill Riley and letting him his and costs was first and he had reputation to make any state- ore- Me) one Court Other which occupied was Meskill's attention th Mike Ruduka, Will John Pater, all charged enness and breach of the cases morning Kalieh and with drunk peace. At one umpk i imph son Charge Added. GIRLS! GIRLS! YOU MUST TRY THIS! DOUBLES BEAUT your hair. A d those whose or is SCragEY| thin Beside Danderine di dandruff; cle vigorates the itching and f please you week's use, fine and do! really new hi scalp. If ye hair, and lof cent bottle | from any drs and just try Here Prosecutor Klett decided, in order to make matters more easy, to another count against Riley, that of “attempting to turn in & f DR. STOLL TO Lh("l‘l’Rh The lecture by Dr. Henry F. Stoll of Hartford, which was postponed from January 5, will be given this evening in Grammar school hall un- der the auspices of the Grammar School Parents and: Teachers’' asso- ciation. The lecture will be at 3 o'clock. Dr, Stoll's subject will be, “What We Owe to Vaccination and Anima] Experimentation.” There will be no admission charge and the pub- lic is invited to attend. lnng 8. of B. will Electric hall. will report requested. The Swift & Upson Lumber com- pany has brcught suit for $50 against Louis Ginsberg through Attorney =2 Emil J Decuberg The writ was ved ioda.s hy Deputy Sherifr A, P, ““The restric- invoking thne 1sed immigration fol- as an argument in restrictive legislation. precedents do not jus- | | | add | i For 25 cents can mulu~ fluffy, You your hair lustrous, objected on be- of - Immediate ?— Yes! and abundant. Certain ?—that’s becomes and ap- and beautiful crime wavy soft, of- young just try this—moisten little Danderine through your hair, ©X} ned cloth and to amen before the ¢ i Leading Star meet this evening in The installing committee and a large attendance is be as | | | | | girl's after a Danderine . | one ORIGINAL =% : e ! . GENUINE The Food Drink for all Ages-Others are Imxtahons never sive oi havc heard of charging a attempting to do it, too” or exces | crime ments you

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