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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDN : SETTLE THE SPRING HAT QUESTION NOW--- SAVE MONEY AT THIS OPENING SALE Now is the proper time to buy your Spring Millinery. respeot—the colors are ultra-fashionable—the trimmings are harmonious. Just look at the pictures and note those low prices! deal of money. splendid bargains. this department. The styles Hartford to see all we offer you. WISE, SMITH & CO, THE GREATEST $2.98 $2.98 All the new regular $5.00 Spring colos value only $2.98. Hemps, Milans & Rough Braids 98¢ The very newest shapes includ- ing the Poke fects. stunning, § Bonnet Come in biuck, army blue, »herdess, and Mushroom green, purple, sand, old rose, shapes perfectly values. blocked. $2.00 Opeurag including ASSORTMENT OF $2.98 We picture four of the nmed millinery. These hats at .93 are wonaerful bargains. Included arve the new Poke effects, Tur- bans, drooping mushroum and sheperdess styles, small, medium apd large sailors, made .in the new rough or fine straws. Some are silk and straw. Artistically trimmed with feathers, wings, small flowers, wreaths, velvet ribbons, silk ribbons, novelties, quills ete. A style for every woman. No two hats alike. black, brown, army blue, battleship gray, very latest It will be well worth your while to HARTFORD King George red, purple, we ofer you are correct in every Best of all, we save you a great Nowhere else will you find such We are determined to make this Spring Opening Sale the greatest in the history of We can pleast you because we have such an extensive assortment, also because our ex- pert milliners will help you select the most becoming hat. come to TRIMMED HATS ) $2.98 green, ete. A $2.98 Milan Hemp Shapes, $1.98 You will readily appreciate this great bargain because Milan hemp shapes of this Zne quality are scarce nowadays. Our price saves you money and gives you the best obtainable. These Milan-hemp shapes at $1.98 come in the new sale . All fashionable colors, including black, sand, old rose, battleshi uine $3.00 only $1.9 Remember the Name— ] Wise, Smith & Co., Hartford. shape—Opening it will be alone worth your while to see these flowers we offering at only 19c. s of tiny flowe ¢ and novelt branched of- fects. Many attractive com- binations. Al colors. Your choice at our big Sprin, Opening Sale, only We have Hundreds of Bar- gains not shown here we have effects. what you want at a price you'll like to pay. $1.98 Fancy Feathers and Stick-Ups popular ete. A ge p gray. Sale Price Are quite now. We have all the latest ef- fects fn a wide assortment. Your choice at our big Opening Sale, only 49c in the very latest style when shapes and trimmings are purchased here. This expert service costs you nothing, vet saves you considerable money. B R i s ittt dbnibaadh i MAKE YOUR OWN PAINT You will save 54 cts. per gal. THIS IS HOW @ Buy 4 gals. L. & M. Semi-Mixed Real Paint, % at $2.00 per gal. -« - $ 8.00 And 3 gals. Linseed Oil to mix with it at estimated cost of = = 2.25 You then make 7 gals. of pure paint for $10.25 It’s only $ 1.46 per gal. Anybody can mix the OIL with the PAINT. Whereas, if you buy 7 gals. of ready-for-use paint in CANS, you pay $2.00 a gal. or $14.00. 'The L. & M. ‘SEMI-MIXED REAL PAINT is PURE WHITE LEAD, ZINC and LINSEED OIL, the ‘best-known paint materials for 100 years. ‘Use a gal. out of any L.&M. PAINT you buy and if not the best paint made, return the paint and get ALL your money back. The John Boyle Co., New Britain; H. C, Thempson, Plainville, Bristol Hdwe Co., Bristol. B Rug and Drapery Co. 100 Trumbu!l Stree’, Opposite the Aliyn House, (Made in a few minutes - - Hartford SEE Our Fine Line of Upholstery Goods and Draperies, Tapestry, Velour and Net. A remarkable and pleasing showing indeed. Curtains of every de- scription—Scrim, Marqusette, Etamine, etc. In Over- Draperies we are displaying all the desirable and re- _liable Sun-Fast Materials which are not affected by the action of the sun or washing. These never fail to give complete satisfaction. Inspect our unexcelled showing of the following: Lamps, Mahogany Candesticks, Sofa Pillows, Screens, Wicker Furniturdf Cedar Chests, and Fine Line of Wall Papers. Remember—*“Bigger and Better Values are Al- ways Found at Barbour’s.” Ask us about XD WO .. . EXCELLENT PROGRAM AT L. T. T. DANCE Large Sum Realized at Affair Last Night for Benefit of Hebrew ‘School. The vaudeville entertainment and dance given by the Ladies’ Talmud Torah last evening at Turners hall was a success both socially and finan- cially. The entertainment rendered was. of high order and reflects much credit upon the directors, M Helen ner. The program Carrousel Directed Flag Drill . Directed by S. Marholin ‘Washing Dance ... ...Early Ri Directed by Miss A. Rosenberg. Horn Pipe .By Rose Swarsky Minuet ...Daughters of Zion Directed by Miss E. Aisenberg. Yama Yama Dance... American Beauties Directed by Miss J. Pouzzner. given follows: .Tiny Tots Directed by Miss S. Marholin. Creatore’s Band .... Burlesque Directed by Miss A. Goldsmi Chorus 0Old Veterans Directed by Miss A. Pouzzner. The committee of arrangements were: Mrs. M. Schupack, Mrs. F. Nair, Mrs. B. Bessoff, Mrs. Roth- feder, Mrs, A. Aisenberg, S, Pinkus, Mrs. I. Pouzzner, Sherman, Mrs. M. Allison, Swarsky, Mrs, R. Siderowfsky, 1. Segal and Mrs. R. Myerson. Mrs. Mrs. FOR HAWES. 10.—A INJUNCTION New Haven, March porary injunction was Judge Gardiner Greene perior court yesterday Alonzo A. Hawes, aged 92, John O. Roland, the M nic Home in Wallingford. Tt restrains Roland from crossing tem- in the su in favor of against was claimed by the petitioner Roland had men who were trespass- ing on his land in carrying logs to a saw mill. " | RENIER, PICKHARDT & DUNN 127 MAIN STREET. OPPOSITE ARCH. TELEPHONE 311-2 New Spring Models in the Lingerie Section A Jarge and well selected assortment of Ameri- can made goods present the very latest models made of the vheerest and daintiest materials as well as the most practical for general wear, NEW SPRING MODELS IN CORSETS Corsets for Slight, Medinn: and Well Developed Yigures. (Full range of prices.) BRASSIERES A large assortment of the best makes, plain and dantily trimmed with lace and embroidery, rang- ing in price from 25¢ to $3.75 ecach. THE NEWEST MODELs IN WAISTS in Silk and Lingerie, Prices ranging from $1.00 to $13.50. ;W SKIRTS, NEW GLOVES, NEW DRESSES 1'0R CHILDREN, NEW NECKWEAR. HIGH CLASS INJURED BY TRAIN. Derby, March 10.—Thomas L. Col- lins, aged 16, of 43 Wharton street, West Haven, was found tracks half a mile east of the Derby Junction station, yesterday, by chil- dren who were using the tracks as a “short cut” to school. Collins was terribly injured. He was taken to the Griffin hospital. No hope is held out for Collins’ recovery. for New York looms up among the possibilities discussed at the city hall here yesterday where it was said Eunolficially that the present city ad- { ministration would favor the passage of such law by the legislature. Reducing the Cost of Living. When you can buy new laid Con- necticut eggs for 27c doz., the cost of living doesn't seem so high. RRussell Bros., 301 Main street.—advt, KEZRA STEARNS DEAD. Fitchburg, Mass., March 10.—Ezra 8. Stearns, former secretary of state of New Hampshire, died yesterday in his seventy-seventh year. Three Men's Reel..Lads and Lassies | land | of Hawes adjacent to the home. It that beside the | | Scarborough, _the Tangistan to the Given | THREE BRITISH SHIPS SUNK BY SUBMARINES Thirty-Seven Lives Lost in German Raid in Nerth Sga. March 10, 12:25 hours of London, | During the early Tuesday merning German submarines made | their presence known at three wide- Iy separated points on the British coast, and it is stated officially, without giving warning to their crews, sank three British merchant steam- | ers. | In one case, that of the steamer Tangistan, = which w; torpedoed off in the North Sea, thir- ty-seven men of her crew of thirty- eight are missing. Only one man from the vessel was picked up, he by a passing ship. The attack which sent bottom was made half an hour after midnight. At 6 o'clock in the morning anoth- er submarine sunk the steamer Blackwood, off Hastings, in the Eng- lish chanel, while a third submersible sank the steamer Princess Victoria off Liverpool at a quarter past 9 o'clock. Official Statement. The official statement follows: The steamer Tangistan was sunk by a German submarine off Scarborough at 12:30 o’clock the morning of March 9. Only one man of her crew of thir- ty-eight men was saved. “The steamer Blackwood was sunk by a submarine without warning, off Hastings at 6 o’clock the morning of March 9. Her crew of seventeen was saved. | Sunk Without Warning. i “The steamer Princess Victoria of Glasgow was sunk without warning by a German submarine at 9:15 o’clock the morning of March 9, off Liver- | pool. Her crew of thirty-four was saved.” The steamers Tangistan and Black- wood were cargo boats and the Prin- cess Victoria was once a coastwise passenger ship. As each of the boats was torpedoed in a period of less than | nine hours, it would that all three were sunk by different ‘ under-water boats. Scarborough, off which port the Tgngistan was sunk, is on the North Sea In Yorkshire; Hastings is on the English chanel in Sussex, and Liver- pool is virtually on the Irish Sea. Tangistan Largest of Vessels. The Tangistan, the largest of the sunken ve: 1s, was of 2,393 tons dis- placement. She was built in 1906 and was owned by the Strick line of Swan- | sea. &, Welinsky presided at the piano for | the entire numbers in a capable man- | The Blackwood was built in 1907 and belonged to the Tyneside line of North Shields. She was a 741-ton ves- 1. The Princess Victoria was owned by M. Langlands & Sons of Glasgow. She was a steamer of 616 tons dis- placement and was built in 1894, Steamer Escapes Submarine, The Clan line steamer Clan Mz was chased by a German subm boat off the Mersey bar in the Irish Sea yesterday (Tuesday) morning for twenty-five minutes, The steamer es- caped by ziz-zagging at full speed. The Clan Macrae left Port Natal Jan- | uary 21 for Liverpool. | the British public sued Dby | The news of the latest exploits of the German submarines came just as was congratulating themselves that the threatened Ger- man sea blockade had been a failure. Sunk During Snow Storm. New Haven, Eng., Via. London, March 10, 1:30 a. m.—The captain | and crew of the steamer Blackwood, whch was sunk off Hastines at ¢ | o’clock Tuesday morning were landed | here Tuesday night. They =may that their vessel, laden with coal and bound from Blyth for Havre, was tor- pedoed during a snow storm early ‘n the morning eighty miles south of Dungeness, without warning. Fortunately, in view of the sub- marine sea zone menace, the men say they had their boats swung out and ready for launching and that, there- fore all of them were saved. Nobody on board the steamer . was injured. The vessel sank within ten minutes | | after she was struck and the men on superintendent of | | (hirty-eight board lost all of their effects. Accord- ing to the men, a submarine was ob- served just awash of the Blackwood, but her number could not be seen One of the officers says he saw the periscope of another submarine closc by the steamer. Dragged Lifeboats Down. West Hartlepool, Via. Tondon, | March 10, 1:59 a. m.—The crew of men of the British steamer Tangistan all were drowned except one man, according to the statement made by the sole survivor of the vessel, who has been here by the steamer Woodville. “The Tangistan,” said this man, “was torpedoed off Scarborough. | She was struck amidships and went down almost immediate All the members of th ecrew were in lifeboats but they were unable to disconnect the lowering tackle before the ship | sank and dragged down the boats with | her. I caught hold of a piece of wreckage and clung to it for nearly three hours in the icy water until I was rescued.” . Crew Lands at Liverpool. Tiverpool, Via. London, March 10, 2:25 a. m.—The crew of the steamer Princess Victoria, in two small boats, were towed in here late yesterday af- ternoon. The men were suffering from exposure. Telling of the sinking of his vessel by a German submarine, the captain said: g ‘The submarine discharged a tor- pedo at us without even showing her periscope, as the weather conditions were excellent and a number of spe- cial lookouts who were posted to keep watch saw no submarines. “At 9:15 o'clock the steersman sceribed suddenly shouted: ‘A torpedo is com- ing!” He had seen the white swirl of the missle. HBven as he spoke it hit us and a violent explosion followed which caused the vessel instantly to list heavily. “I ordered two boats overboard and into them the crew scrambled Our disappeared in about fifteen We rowed in the direction Five hours in the open ship minutes. of Liverpool boats did us up.’ PHILIPPINES SUFFER TRADE DEPRESSION Lack of Ships to Handle Commerce Paralyzes Business Conditions in the Islands, 10.— Washington, D. C., March ' Trade between the United States and the Philippine Islands has been vir- tually paralyzed and business condi- tions in the islands seriously de- pressed by lack of ships to handle the commerce since the European war began. This situation revealed in a letter from Secretary of Commerce Redfield to Secretary Garrison of the war department to whom Governor General Harrison had appealed for re- lief for the shippers After reciting the wae conditions de- by the governor genera] the letter says: “So long as there is no law giving us any power over any shipping, the government is powerless in the mat- ter. Private and corporate interests are in control of the situation and we can do nothing.” Reports of congested conditions in the islands said freight rates had doubled in the past ten days and that ships could not be obtained to move Yy the products awaiting shipment at Manila. Prices were reported to be on account of short tonnage creased rates. falling and in- ic HEAR THESE NEW COLUMRI A1697 1693 A1695 A]?."U‘ ON Double Disc “I Didn’t Raise My B Peerless Quartett “Good-bye Virginia” Sam Ash Quartet! “At the Mississippi Cabs Geo. O’Connor, ten “Roaming Around” Geo. O’Connor, tes “There’s a Little Spark of | ing”—Coombs and A “Somebody Knows” e Peerless Quartette ( “Let’s Settle Dowa in a One: | Fisher avd Gillette | “The Little House Upon { ( Reed and Harrison, BRODRID & WH get seem probable | landed | | Pay Only 100 138 MAIN ST. = a word each day pays tfor a classified adv. results. That's what you want DECIDE TONIGHT $2.50 in money is only a small part of yo if you buy a “WHITE BEAUTY” Hoosier This Hoosier saves miles of steps, saves hours of time, saves cd suppiies, saves nerves, saves health and makes your Kitchen “WHITE, BEAUTY is Hoosier mzde. This $ the pany to double the sales never come again. have to pay the regular price. finest 50 reduction off the low fixed cash price is made for one week in'1000 towns by the Hoosier Com- The chance may Next week you will $1.00 Puts It in If you are delighted wit balance of $1.00 weekly cleans up the balance that] tra to pay. If you're nof] get every penny back This Picture of gives you only an its convenience few of its 40 You rangement and its great capacity, but incomplete idea of You can pick labor-saving out a devices get some idea of its handy ar- you can't tell its beauty of its rigid construction finish or Come in right away. Let us show for corner i you how casily it comes apart cleaning; how every nook and 1bsolutely sanitary This fast nearing’ it Judging from the first few davs of the sale, our entire allotment will be gone sooner than we expected, possibly by tomorrow night. Decide Now While You Can Save $2.50 Another Day May Be Too Late can afford to which you and sale is end Decide whether go on wasting energy vour family cannot afford to spare. 800,000 women already Hoosiers. Women in your neighborhood making up their minds now up your mind, too. Come down and before you let slip by. It is the time. you own are Make look this cabinet this opportunity chance of a life- over JOHN A. ANDREWS & CO. TO THE PUBLIC: We authorize this sale, to "white Beauty" Hoosier cabinets, at $2. than the fixed cash price of these cabinet week only. THE HOOSIER MFG. CO., New Castls