New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 10, 1915, Page 4

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)

B - 23, 1915, tesian well water. to have it analyzed. llowmg report of the analysis made by Messrs. Davenport and Keeler, chemists for the City of New Britain, § verything clear: ' O BREWING CO., ol by volume . ...... by weight ....... in original wort .. -above_analysis.shows this beer to be of excellent quality and free from the preservatives sometimes found in beer. cer e cs e beaesen o “We have analyied sample of bock beer secured at your brewery on the 20th inst., with the following resultss Specific gravity of original wort ......._ . .. . . .. . . 1056 Degree of fermentation ................ . ... AIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, MARCH 10, 1015. 1.0144 ©5.65% . 5.13% 4107 13754, Total acid ... Ash . Appearance o BO s Cremo Bock is now on draught for all our customers. CK! Respectively submitted MIRVOE- . Gy JUSN e s it .. 60.0% : : .___.0_159% Benvoit Acilsid, 5., . o0 il oL . s DAVENPORT & KEELER, Inc., Demand in salcons and Order of your bottler. CREMO BOCK BEER MO BREWING CO., Inc., (Signed) H. L. Thompon, Sec’y” BOCK! For the next few weeks their popular brew ck beer is four months old, brewed carefully according to the German method, from the best materials The brewery has spared no expense in making this beer of the highest standard and New Britain, Conn. Tel. 284-3 may and has Excellent .. Absent the on land and able to the . Confident are finding war ing another irement of fiburg’s army id to be im- poservers; .in @ he ascend- although no f are being ftans and in “interpreta- ifrom these clamoring e of Great A This 1s Greece and fact that the cling outwardly to the policy of neu- trality. Crisis in Greece Bridged. The crisis in Greece seems tempor- arily to have been bridged by the for- mation of a new cabinet, hut whether the new prémier will have the ability to control the chamber of deputies is a matter of much speculation. Though officially denied, reports in- sist that a ministerial crisis has arisen in Bulgaria, where the premier, favor- ing intervention, was opposed by King Ferdinand. It is said the Bul- garian prime minister stepped from office at the same time ‘that Greece’'s leading statesman retired. Bombards Turkish Forts. Paris officially confirmed what London heard unofficially last night, namely, that the superdread- nought Queen Elizabeth slipped into the Dardanelles proper on Monday and bombarded the Turkish forts, an- other one of which, on the European side, has been partly demolished. Correspondents at Petrograd of English newspapers say that the Ger- man failure to reduce the Russian fdrtress of Ossowetz, together with the reported German .defeat at Grod- no and Przasnysz, mean the definite abandonment of the German offensive in north Poland, thus making, in the opinion of these corresponden Marshdl Von Hindenburg’s rush over the frontier another costly failure. Russians Holding Line. today The Germans, though unable to ad- vance in Rus , are reported to be holding a line some thir miles | buntries still behind the extreme limit of their for- PAIN :hha. 25¢c., euralgia Stiff Neck Sore Throat IMENT » Inc., Philadelphia, Pa. Instantly Relieved by (Guaranteed) St. Louis, Mo. 50c._and $1.00 Fiela } ward dash of a month ago. In central Poland both the Rus- sians and the Germans are attack- fng alternately, without affecting ap- preciable change in the situation. The same is true in the Carpathian moun- tains and generally along the west- ern front in I'rance and Belgium UNDERWOOD DISCUSSES RAILROAD SITUATION Declares Government Stoud ~ Aid Leaders of Industy and Finance. New York, March 10.—In a speech on the railroad situation Sphinx club here last night, Oscar Un- derwood, house majority leader in the last congress and now elected senator before the with the fronts us, vexed problem that con- the people will accept gov- ernment ownership as the next step { ahead.” ! Discussing the present system of regulating business, Mr. Underwood id the time had come when the gov- ernment should aid and assist the ‘ leaders of industry and finance. Must Be Helped. “It not enough for the government to permit these men to rise from the prostration which has overtaken them and their affairs,” he continued. “We have reached the point on our way to ial betterment where sound pro- n must recognize that the proper regulation of business requires that it must sometimes be helped and not always hindered; must be some- times assisted and not stricken; that must occasippally P ‘you may’ not alw g shall not." " Adequate provision for capital to maintain and extend the transporta- tion system of the country is the prob- lem confronting the government in its regulation of railroads, Mr. Under- wood asserted. He added tha “our present system of regulation is break- ing down, in so far as it has super- vised the finances of the railroads with we and a view to allowing them properly to their protect their securities that The Home Remedy colds, hoarseness; for coughs, pleasant to take and sure to help when needed. Hale's Honey I Of Horehound and Tar A tonic, expectorant and laxative Contains no opium nor enything injurious. Sold by all druggists. Try Pike's Toctbache Drops RRIDNERY. l from Alabama, declared that “if gov- | ernmental regulation is unablg to cope 1 forever ! credt may be maintained to aid present and future development.” Interest of Country. The regulation of Mr. lindel“oocl said, should lake into con- sideration the interests, not only of the railroads themselves, and moqo a|~ rectly interested as shippers, bu the entire country whose commercml prosperity is dependent upon adequate shipping facilities. “We have undertaken the problem of goverrment regulation of rail- | roads,” ‘he continued, “and the gov- ‘ernme‘nt will not turn back. Regula- | tion of practices and rates is here and here to stay. But let us stand for wise and just regulation and not for ill-considered and dangerous reg- ulation. We must regulate so as to en- sure all neeessary railroad facilities both for the present and for the fu- ture. As the public in the end must pay the bill, it is primarily interested in the rallroads securing the money needed for their maintenance and de- velopment at reasonable rates hna equally interested in seeing that it is wisely expended. Never Move Backward. “Revolutions never move backward. | It governmental regulations ablée to cope with the vexed that confronts us, the people cept government ownership next step ahead. It therefore a matter of great importance that we should earnestly endeavor to reach a fair and reasonable solution of the problem of regulation at as early a day as possible.” After discussing the difficulties of dealing with the railroads through the varying jurisdictions of the state and | federal governments. Mr. Underwood | said. problem will ac- as the Has Reduced Rates. It cannot be denied that public control has reduced the rates charged for transportation and abolished un- just distriminations given to favored shippers. ! But the greater rproblem remains unsolved. Can the money be provided to expand and develop these | great public works in a manner com- mensurate with the expanding needs of our commmerce under the present sstem of public control? If railway investment cannot made attractive to capital is not the nation threatened with an inevitable breakdown of its transportation sys- tem?"” be Watch Your Step. See that it leads to “The Busy Lit- tle Store” where you can buy strictly fresh Connecticut eggs for 27c a doz- en. Russell Bros., 301 Main street.— advt. McHALE STILL A HOLDOUT. Savannah, Ga., March 10.—With the arrival of Matty McHale from New York yesterday the of the Yankees was completed, though there possibility that the pitching not remain here long. round.-up is “thrush’ may He is still listed as a hold-out, ana a conference with Manager Bill Don- the evening failed to bring into line. Marty declined to sign for Donovan, declaring that he must first see l‘.um_um Huston in regard to the salary he is to receive, a ovan in McHale | | are un- | | bouauets which bore no “|MISS LILLIAN M. COOK BURIED IN BROOKLYN “Mrs. Dudley” Not Present at Services but Sends Message. New York, March of Lillian May Cook, 10.. the old filing clerk employed Radiator —The funeral twenty-vear- at the Mayo company in New Haven, wio suicide the home in Brook committed on hela parents vesterday Tribute By *“Mrs, Dudley.” Among those who paid a final tribute to the memory of the girl was Elois Waterbury, the woman known as “Mrs. Dudley,” in whose home Miss Cook was employed as nurse, Miss Waterbury was not present, but sent to the dead girl's parents, 25, was at of her yn. with her flowers, the following mes- sage: “My heartfelt sympathy and I re- gret that I can’t attend I but in view of the publicity been aroused, I feel that better for all concerned that I be ibsent. Belleve me, I will be with | you in spirit, though not in the flesh, Nothing can alter my opinion that | Lily was alw a good girl. | “'Sincerely, “ELOIS DUDLEY. fune that ha it would be | February | none of the friends of the family could s whether or not Mr. Mayo had sent any himself. Notice. P. H. Condon & Co., of Bristol, will have on gale, at their stables, 25 Ohio | horses, ranging in weight from 1,100 tc 1,600 1bs., as good as money can buy, on Wed., March 17.—advt, GIANTS WANT NO FARM. | S———e President Hempstead Will Not Buy Interest in Jersey City Club. New York, March 10.—Although the various plans for the construc- tion of the Jersey City club of the International league have involved the 'CASTORIA For Infants and Children, The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of The body of Miss Cook was buried in Greenwood cemetery, after very simple services. The Rev. Frederic J. Keech, rector of Christ ' Episcopal church, read the service, which attended by only a few members the family. was ot Curious Onlookers Gather. Union street, where the parent the dead girl live, was crowded v the funeral services were ' going with many Iixtra policemen from the Butler street station had to be detailed to keep the block upon which the house stands as clear as possible. All morn- ing hundreds flocked through the street. % ‘The dead girl's sister, Laura Cook, on people who were curious. who took a most active interest in the efforts to find her, was so badly overcome as the hour for the services drew near that she had to be t- tended by a physician. Mrs. Frank Cook, the dead girl's mother, | also very near a breakdown and would see no one before or during the funeral, Many Flowers Sent. A great many flowers were sent to | the Cook home by friends of Lillian | or the family. One of the most con- | spicuous bouquets was a large one of roses and lilies, sent by Mrs. Dudley, ¢ f 546 Fourth street, the woman who admitted that she was the mother of Mayo's children, and who had em- ployed Lillian for two years as a nurse girl, To the flowe! ched small card reading “Sympathy of Mr Dudley.” There were seve Y cards, large but We Are Showing a Large Assortment of At{ractive Patterns in Famous Heywood-Waketield Baby Carriages and Sulkies The Reed Hood C \ges are very popular. We show these in the natural, brown, and white enamel finishes, ranging / in price from $17 to §33 The Stationary Dasher Go-Carts both with and without hoods make excellent carrlages children from two to six years old The Sulkies with folding handles are very “trappy We have these in various finishes, including White Enamel and Irench Gray Prices from $4 to $9. C. C. Fuller Co., 40-56 Ford St., Hartford, Where Quality Is Higher Than Price. | | ! Paint ake New York - | durability and superior value New York club as an interested party Secretary Foston announced yester day that the purchase of any of the Jersey City stock had never even be consjdered by President Hempstead In fact, the Giahts are not consider ing any minor league club to be used as a farm for their excess players Reducing the Cost When you can buy new laid Con- necticut eggs for doz., the cost of 1iving doesn’t seem so high. Russell Broe., 301 Main street.—advt e — of Living. To the Citizens of New Britain Vicinity, fully thirty-five L. & M. Semi-Mixed Real Paints have been extensively used throughout the United States and also in South Amer- ica. They have therefore been sub- jected to the tests of every sort of climatic conditions—most successf{ul- 1y thereby proving their extreme and For 36) years the See cur advertisement on ' other page, teling property owners how to make their own paint, and thereby save sixty lon cents a gallon on every gal- AN & MARTINE; the Overlooking Capitol Grounds.

Other pages from this issue: