New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 5, 1915, Page 13

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§ ARROGANT CHALLENGE MONEY SAVING SATURDAY SPECIALS LEGS OF YOUNG LAMB FORES OF YOUNG LAMB ..............Ib 8¢ FRESH PORK ROASTS ...............Ib 13¢ SQUIRE’S FRESH SHOULDER NSy s SOLID MEAT POT ROASTS ... bijEe FANCY CHUCK ROASTS h12¢ CHOICE STEWING FOWL ... .. b 20¢ 11b LIVER, !5 Ib BACON for 15C 13c 28c | oy Buaranteed large Red s gz LOC|ghons “I’I(my fresh Monhican Ureamery EGGS, doz. 33G BUTTER, 336 Oranges 2 doz 1 5 c Large Ripe 1 O c 15c ~15¢ LEAN PORK CHOPS .......... FRESH GROUND HAMBURG ....2 lbs BONELESS ROLLED FANCY SILICED HAM ............1b 15 1b pk Potatoes 4 ats Turnips Heavy Grape Fruit .6 for Fancy B'fldwin Apples 13c 5?:;1??‘"1(?5; ..2 bs 25C 25c LOIN LAMB 18C CHICKENS 1b FANCY SALT PORK . Hour Sale---9 to 11 A. M. STE]%KS,dShort, Sirloin, Porterhouse and 1 6 c ound e vas 120 GRANULATED SUGAR with 25¢ $1 .00 purchase . 20 Ibs GUARANTEED EGGS .................doz 290 MEADOWBROOK CHEESE ............1b 21¢ 25C l Sunkist 25C Bananas . .doz Green Curly A MOH. PREPARED BUCKWHEAT 3 1b Package .. .. 13¢ 5 1b Package . ... 20(: Granulated, Sugar . . 91bs 47C bt Y 5B Fresh Fig l;afge Califor- Q[ nia Prunes 3 lbs Lonle(tlonery Sugar ... .21bs New Rolied Oats .6 lbs 1 Can PEAS 1 can TOMATOES 25¢c l_L(fliil_:‘()RN : . for 23 c Grocery Combination 4 1-2 Ibs Sugar 15¢ t pkg Corn Starch 10c 1 1b Prunes ...... 10c lbag Salt ........ 5c 1IbRice ......... 9c 1 can Corn or Toma- toes . S 0c Market Basket Free ALL FOR 59c¢ Dinner Blend Coffee .1b 1 9 Cc OHIO NOISELESS 1 5c MATCHE ac boxes PEF“LLS; E\, AP. MILK .3 cans 15¢ 5 ™ PORThI) llhA l) 2 Ibs 15(: EVAPORATED PEACHES rows everything I can get hold of and i (annol get an accounting from him.” Mr. Young went on the stand at the GONTEST OVER FIRST | |aflern00n session and admitted that | the letters from Mme. Nordica to the | " i s wife's Baldwins seemed to be in his handwriting. He added, however, that he doubted the signatures because of ’lhe sentiments expressed above them. | After the hearing counsel agreed to | { exchange briefs by February 20 and a decision is expected a few days later. Faflw Qd%?fi S?fiflfi[ & Leaving Ker &ufib;. Banker Young. Freehold, N. J.. test over the first lian the bhegun here yesterday and counsel for 2,116.000 PERSONS ASK AID. Paris, January 23 of the Associated Press).—Official sta- tistics give the number of applications for the government aid at 2,116,000, under the second Wwill took | of which 261,600 were refused. At of the first session in at- ) $?:$%tn{?aggr:;:;vanfif: :\r:r:Z;d :’? W A0 GONE B | e e e 0 Gees (L cents). The daily outlay is 3,900,000 francs ($780,000). 5.—The con- of Mme. Lil- singer, was Feb. (Correspondence will Nordica, opera the heirs up much tempting to get certified copy of that document, William Hamilton Oshcrn, who rep- | mesents the heirs under this will, said his purpose was to establish that | Mme. Nordica claimed residence in New York, and that as a result the probate of her will New Jersey . George W. Young, her Deal was their in was not legal. husband. claims that legal home All Efforts Fail. make a home for myself. George bhor- ES SUFFRAGE BILL. | Question to Be Submitted to Voters in New York. Albany, N. Y., Feb. an suffrage resolution, legislature in 1913, was adopted in senate yesterday by unanimous Tt previously had been adopt- led in the assembly. The resolution provided that voters may determine at the polls next fall whether the constitution shall be amended so as to give votes to wam- sen. An effort also will te made to | have the constitutional convention take some action on the question. By \h&vmg the convention provide an tamendment a better position will be ‘nbtamed on the ballot, suffragists think. By law it was necessary that ;!he resollition be adopted by two dif- | ferent legislatures before being sub- | mitted to vote of the people. 5.—The wom- passed by the | the vote. R. LaBranche--0.]. Selander Corner Fairview and Dwight Streets Efforts to get the copy of the will vefore Surrogate Slocum failed, be- | cause he held that as the original | was in existence a copy could not be used evidence. tobert S. Bald- | win, who saw the original will when it was being brought to this country, and Westlake Tomlinson both testified | that the copy was a true copy, and ! Emil Dreyfus, of counsel for the heirs | under the second will testified that “urorgate Cohalan of New York would not permit the original to be en from the state. William F. Baldwin of Boston, a brother-in-law of Mme. Nordica, was the first witness in the attempt to show that the last will reflected Mme. Nordica's desires and identified let- t#rs written to him and his wife by Mme. Nordica. They were admitted in | evidence, but were not read. Mr. Baldwin said Mme. Nordica talked with him on business very often and | to'd him on a visit to his home in RBoston that one of her objects in tak- ing the trip around the world was to get away from her husband. \ George Borrows Everything. “George says he wants to go along,” Wy. Baldwin said she told him, ‘“but I don’t want him, although I tell him | o come on. He never does as he says | ;m will. I will get away with as lit- | Mo fuss and row as possible and | Solid Packed Tomatoes. . Eastern Cut Pork Loins Sirloin Steak, Prime Beef 3 packages Snow Boy ... Best Porterhouse Steak. . Sauerkraut Pk Potatoes 2 qts Onions 3 1bs Parsnips Value 40c 29c Large Grape [ruit 2 Ihs Lard 5 Ibs Flour 1 box Baking Powder 52 c 65 Value Extra Large Oranges, sweet and juicy Pettijohn Breakfast Food Special For Saturday e e B CARS 256 .... 30c doz ..... 28cIb cew 120 35¢ 1b 4c 1b .2 pkgs 25¢ 31c 1 can Cocoa 1 can Tomatoes 1 bot Catsup 40c Value Home Made Sausage Meat and Beef Sausages. 6 for 25¢ 41c 1 doz Eggs 1 can Beans 1 can Corn Value 52¢ | reading | the | L ment of educational institutions by the | | foundations | svstem ! He i labor | Machias today | train drew out. | with a full cargo of cotton for AGAINST GOVERNMENI; Hikiquist Terms lavestigation by Rockefeller Foundation. New York, socialist Feh. 5.—Morris Hill- uit, writer, continued today his testimony in- His resuming the interrupted that before the federal dustrial relations commission tirst declaration, on of his statement, vesterday by adjournment, was investigation by the Rockefeller Foundation relations the into industrial at time the government was con- ducting its own investigation was fone arrogant caallenges an individual and the people. attacked John D. his lack of knowledge in Colorado and industrial rela- be estab- 1y with in- igute on the r the most ued nm ever is hy e gove nt The witness Rockefeller for of Jabor conditions advorated that the tions commission should lished a permanent 1wzed powers “to inv and publicly all industrial dis urbances.” that the powers of the foundations should limited. They were now, he said, through en- | dowments of educational institutions, | “making a bold upon the tellectual independence of this against as be <ot also be assault in- coun- D.. John D. that the is the up a pro- Quotes John Jr. Hillquit quoted reller, Jr. as sayving form of philanthrop: ment of money in building ductive indusiry.” “That character modern capitalistic benevolence mirably said the witness “It is-not ari is investment.” | The termed the endow- Rocke- “hest | Mr, invest- of ad- the spirit it witness ! influenc the pen “insidious mentioning in particular of the Carnegie IFoundation. | pointed also to the fact that Dr. Kliot, as president of Harvard, had received gifts for the university from Mr. Rockefeller. Influenced Ry Gifts, “It was Dr. Eliot the strike breaker a hero,” he said. “Ig it not possible that his views, whether right or wrong, were uncon- sciously influenced by such gifts, and | that his notions of ‘good’ influen were formed in the same manner Speaking of the Rockefeller | Foundation'’s own investigation into conditions, he said: “To the unsophisticated observer it may seem that Mr. Rockefeller was not ple: with the methods of the commi particularly its curiosity about Colorado situation and that he cided to punish the government pitting its millions against the modest | government appropriation, thus over- | shadowing, if not nullifying the work of the commission.” Carnegie to Testify. Seth Low, former mayor of New York, was down as the next witness | Andrew Carnegie was to testify be- fore the commission closed its hear- ings, which had tentatively been set for tomorrow. It was sald at the forenoon session that Mr. Carnegie probably would testify this afternoon. an | on who proclaimed | GERMAN DYN TAKEN TO MACHIAS | Werner Horn Begins Thirty Days Sen- tence in Jail for Damage to Prop- erty at Vanceboro, Me, Me., Feb. claims be a that capacity up the | here, was removed to | Vanceboro, Horn, officer, tried railway bridge 5.—Werner who and to blow German have international to in to a sentence of | to serve ! thirty days for the damage which the | explosion caused on this side of the border, | Deputy Sheriff George W. Ross put his prisoner ahoard the train leav- ing for Bangor at 9:45 o'clock this morning. At Bangor, after a wait of two hours, the trip will be con- tinued on another line east to Ma- { Britain Medical | some of them successfully, | be of interest. | | times and has found that SMOKE-WA' ——SALE— Commencing Saturday, Fe B. MILLE N " 421 Main Street Hotel Bronson Building, New Britain, Conn. Our Entire Stock of Men’s and Boys’ Suits, Overcoats, Shoes, Shirts, Underwear, Gloves, Mittens, etc.; at this Sale for less than some for one third the regular price. Remember we had no fire in our store only smoke and water. aged, all new, up-to-date goods, only a part of our stock that was s ter damaged. We put our Entire Stock at fire sale prices and will give you benefit of the money we got from the Insurance Companies. EVERYTHING MUST ¢ Men's Gloves Men'’s Men'’s Men'’s [ Men's Shoes . ..., i . $2.98 up‘ Men’s 15¢ Hose, 4 pairs fo $2.00 to $7.50 Overcoats Men’s Sweaters ..... . 98¢ to $2.98 | Men’s Union Suits Men’s Underwear ........ 15c and up | Ladies’ and Boys’ Boys’ Sweaters Men's Overshirts .......... 19c and up \ Men's $8 to $24 Suits, $2.98 to $11.98 Boys’ $1.75 to $7.50 Suits, Now Men'’s 79c to $3.98 | Pants $8.50 to $23.00 Overcoats Boys’ Shoes fo You Will Get Hundreds of Other Bargains T Will Remember for Years TWILIGHT SLEEP IS USED IN THIS CITY | SERIES OF ON G ISAYS CO-DEFENDANTS KILLED ALBERTSON Dr. Waterman Lyon Uses It Effective- | Luigi Grassadonio Held As Accessory ¢ Berlin Newspapen to Murder of Lawrence Jeweler of Von Gott 1y at New Britain General Makes Confession. tivities of Hospital. Feb. 5.—Luigi as an accessory Cambridge, Mass., Grassadonio, on trial to the murder of Lawrence A. Albert- son, a Lawrence jeweler, at Wake- field on December 20, made a New n, Feb, § of the association at Dr. Julius Hupert read a thorough paper on ‘‘“Twilight Sleep” has aroused considerable interest about the city |fession before a jury vesterday, and the fact that a few of the local | claring that the crime was committed | physicians have experimented with it, | by his co-defendants, Biagio Fal- will also | zone and Ignazio Marello. Grassadonio testified that son visited Falzone at the latter's in- vitation, believing that he be This week's meeting which m.—The newspa begun the publicd con- the € ities by Otto de- | ot kne is his purpose vn German to of engag first of his p descriy January | | { | | | | Albert- | COUNts While many of the physicians are | | the skeptical about this new hyperdemi- cally injected anaesthetic Dr. Water- | zple to sell some jewelry. When the man Lyon has tried it a number of | jaweler entered the hut upied by it works | Falzone at Wakefield, Marello threw | » €Nt down use of a would | ment of ) in which the Ger 1= obl chias, where the party is due at 6:20 o'clock this evening. The departure of Horn, who has gained notoriety by what he calls his act of war against Great Britain, at- tracted litle attention. A small | crowd of men and women gathered | at the station. The prisoner, who | was not shackled. smiled upon the | women and waved a good-bye as the The case is now end- | ed so far as the state is concerned. The next move, it i{s expected, will be by the federal autnorities, who | are concerned with the application | for the extradition of the dynamiter | to Canada, where he is wanted to | answer for the little damage which he | did to the bridge by operating on that | side of the boundary line, i | D | DOCK. ! == | American Steamship Being Converted | Into Cotton Carrying Vessel. New York, Feb. 5.—The Steamship Zeguranca, recently chased from the Ward I.ne by ZEGURANCA IN DRY | American | pur- Ed- | | ward N. Breitung, who also purchased the steamer Dacia, is now in dry dock | here and is being converted to a cot- According to rep- | resentatives of Mr. Breitung the Ze- | guaranca will be taken to Galveston within two weeks and there loaded deliv- ton ecarrying ship. cry at Bremen. Reports that the take the cargo of cotton Dacla were denied today. Zeguranca will now on (\Il‘l | she | membered nothing of her trial. ler officers of who tool W er, the cr His most successful case | 4 noose around his neck and Falzone ook part in occurred on November 26 Wwhen a |stabbed him repeatedly. The body ith the child was born to Mr. and Mrs. | was buried in the cellar of the hut George Baker, of 11 Griswold street. | where it found later the po- at the New RBritain General hospital | jjce, under conditions brought about by Grassadonio first Twilight Sleep. Both Mr. and Mrs. | gistrict attorney at Baker are enthuslastic about this dis- | gay night and later covery and the latter declares that |nhome in Wakefield. There the officers remembers nothing of what oc- ' qug up the frozen earth at points in- vet at no time while under the | djcated by the prisoner and found a anesthetic was she | hlood stained stiletto, a bunch of keys to all | jdentified as the property of Albert- aues- | gon, and some ring sizes such are used by jewelers. These | nio told the officers, were Jeft at his home by Falzone and Marello, after they had killed Albertson beautifully. exce S sel 1 ult o German ve was by bardment from Herr Von firing af kept at thi ted frox ondary batteries. | reason that the sl Seydlitz and the battleship D) tually without fo to the Wednes- was taken his confessed the jafl to They be protec curred, influence of the unconscfous. She responded suggestions and answered all tions, but under the influence of the drugs, she straightway forgot all. About a year ago Dr. Lyon tried the Twilight Slep on another woman on Hartford avenue She was a for- eigner and could not explain her feel- ings to the doctor but through an in- terpreter she told him that she re- Grassado- RAVE 50 Wl heen plates The were necessary t4 shell whid pier and on boar of life § Sevdlity fighting as this fi an squ that “he not found it hip. Th itz took onlyl th f 1 Britigh heen veral vessels well the 1 [ THREE MILLION MEN 1 of turret munition That Number Now in British Army Exclusive of Troops in India. P M The parliament of next number of Serving and los wise the Lyon is very enthusiastic about | Sleep and although he does | London. Feb. not use the same two drugs that are ; army estimates, used by the German specialists who | Will devote the discovered it, he uses two drugs that, | week's session according to chemists, are physically | the form of the estimates, as no to the same and produce exactly the | those serving in India, at three mil same results. lion R | There is this year a novel change | the form of thhe estimates tals of estimated expenditures | given The cost under each of fifteen headings is set at the figure of 1,000 pounds Dr, Twilight 1:09 her which first part give the to n iern o little had ngle Continuin tional det n as n LADIES' ATD OFFICERS. The following are the newly the Ladies' Aid of St. Joseph's church: President, R. B. McLaughlin; vice-president, | house of commons. opportunity for Mrs. John Igoe; recording secretary, ‘ll\n discussion of each hearing, while Miss Mary Farmer: financlal secre- | the government may spend Mrs. -'"rrmmh Riley is necessary under these vario James F. Kenney, ings to prosecute the war the | of nominal | of se the | as elect- society Mrs. | hich has his gives as by a eves saw t writes Hj 4 too many i ces reported bility of an errom many eruiser " ar Il whatever tary Mrs. ; treasurer, us head

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