New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 1, 1915, Page 5

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o st —— Y - e b e . e et et 7 8 R B S} St i more a part of Fourth of July than the fireworks. that everybody wants—likes! The Cream of All Ice Creams- creates the right spirit in you to enjoy Independence Day. The twentieth century pyramid of delightful joyoasness, is pure, sweet, rich, whole- some Ice Cream. MNow it's A safe and sane Fourth is incomplete unless you pro= vide the one timely dessert—Ice Cream— Therefore, for your own sake, be sure it’s . MISS CLARK BRIDE OF J. M. THOMSON Speaker's Daughte; United in | Wedlock to New Orleans Editor Lo Bowling Green, Mo., July 1.—Miss | Genevieve Clark, the twenty year old | daughter of Speaker Champ Cllrk.: of the national house of representa- | tives, was marriéd yesterday after- noon to James M. Thomson, editor of the New Orleans Item. The ceremony took place on thef lawn on-‘‘Honey.Shuck,!’ the Clark | homestead—sc-called because of the large honeéy locust trees that adom‘ the grounds. The brida] party stood unler a. white pergola, built under | the honey locust tree and almost hid- | den in: the foliage. Speaker Gives Daughter Away. Promptly at 4 o’clock the orchestra concealen in foliage, began the Lo- hengrin wedding march and Miss Clark, léaning on 'her fathér's arm, and precédell by eight ushers, eight maids of honor, and the bridesmaid walked from thé old fashioned house to the pergola. Speaker Clark gave away his daughter and the wedding ceremony was performed by Rev. Robert §. Boyd, pastor of the First Presbyterian church of Louisville, Ky. Never before in the state has thsre been a wedding like that of the speak- er's daughter. A general invitation ‘had been issued to the people of Mis- souri, and from all parts of the state { they camé by train, carriage and au- tomobile. Thousands of Missouriafs mingled on the lawn with social and | | political notables from all sections of the country. Like Royal Occasion. This town of two thousand inhab- itants celebrated the eventas though it was a royal occasion. From every window a flag was flying, the streets were gay with bunting ‘and the towns- | people vied with each other in making the wedding guests feel welcome. Wedding cakes were baked by scores ' of- Bowling Green housewives and ‘hundreds of cakes were sent from other towns. Tables were set on the | lawn and in the house for the wed- ding supper. The maids of honor were Misses | Anne and Susie Bennett of Kansas | City, cousins of the bride; Misses Imogene and Dorothy Thomson, sis- ters of the bridegroom; Miss Helen Morton Robnett of Columbia, Mo., fi- ancee of Bennett Clark, brother of! the bride; Miss Murray Sanderson of Bowling Green; Miss Agnes Wilson, 500 Beautiful Presents e, Y MASON'’S BEACH, CLD SAYBROOK FRONTING ON OYSTER RIVER AND 500 FEET OF SHORE Saturday, July 3, Monday, « Tuesday, July 6, Wednesda} COMMENC SACRED CONCI 10 Per Cent. Down.' 10 Per Cent. in T Presents Consist of Ladies’ 8. Gold Watches, Gent’s Gold Watches, Clocks, Manicure Sets, Carving Sets, Opera Glasses, Artistic Bric-a-Brac, Imported Rare Vases, Hand Painted Placque, Fruit Dishes. COME, BRING YOUR FRIENDS. PONSISTS of about 40 acres of choice land which is just be- ing sub-divided in large lots and on one of the fastest growing beaches on Long Island Sound. We have over 500 feet of shore front lots to offer at this sale, with frontage of 50 feet or more, two: excellent front corner lots will be offered the first afternoon, about 80 lots fronting on Oyster River, which is an unexcelled place 4or boating, fishing, clamming, or oys- ters. Mason Beach is very acces- sible to trolley and steam cars and very convenient to get to from all points of the compass. The best of well water can be obtained at a depth of 10 to 20 feet. This is a grand opportunity to buy a shore site at your own price and on a beach where your money will double in a short time. EACH DAY AT2P. M. SUNDAY, JUL) o W EASY Fruit T SALE K JOHN MASON AND EFFIE CLARK MASON, OWNER X Easy Terms 1026 MAIN ST., HARTFORD, CT. OBERT M. Auclioneer RE' s » 203 MAIN ST, Salesmen On the Ground Daily From Now Until Sale I daughter of the secretary of labor, and Miss Vera Holcomb. The brides- A " maid was Miss Jean Roberts of Alex- | B " andria, Va, Many Guests Present. | | ¢ay, “nor was he ih the city &t the - A i HAW PRESENTED WITH AUTOMOBILE New York Staw>5qflnfl;t"" Give Car to Leader Who Is Returning to Her Home' for & Rest. : New York, July 1.—Dr. Anna How. ard Shaw, president of the National “ Woman Suffrage association, left New ‘. York yesterday for her home at Moy- 1an, Pa., in a new automobile, the gift _of the suffragists of New York state. The car was presented to Dr. Shaw yesterday in front of national suffrage headquarters on fth avenue and Chrigtened the Eastern Victory. “This is a long way,” said Dr. Shaw esccepting the gift, “from the days when Susan B. Anthony and I com- paigned together with one suit case i Ubecause we hadn’t clothes enough to < = s fill two; when we rode in buckboards and ramshackléd wagons, any kind of’ ~ wvéhicle we could get.” . Shaw, who has made seventy compalign speeches in the last six | weeks, sald she hoped to rest at her heme for at least a week. ENROUTE TO GERMANY, - ..8ap Francisco, July 1.—The last of the German doctors and hospital nur- ses from Tsing Tau, China, captured by the Japanese early in the war are on their way to New York today en- route for Germany. The party is “headed by Dr, L. Foerster of the Ger- » man navy, who was surgeon general of the German forces in the Far Fast. Several of the doctors are ac- companied by their familles. OSBORNE NOT AT EXECUTION Sing Sing Warden Refuses to. Attend Electrocution cof Joseph Ferri. Ossining. N. Y., July 1.—As a pro- test against capital punishment Thomag M. Osborne, warden of Sing Sing Prison, did not attend the elec- trocution of Joseph Ferri at Sing Sing yesterday. Mr. Osborne went to New York last night, and his place at the execution wag taken by Deputy War- c¢en Johnson, ' “I am leaving because that is the only way that I have to protest against the law wnich makes the execution necessary” said Mr, Osborne before going. Ferri was put to death for shooting and killing, on August 24, 1914, his brother-in-law, Florent! DiGiovanni, with whom he works at times as a gardner at their home in Inwood, I« I. They had a dispute over a debt and after a fight with fists on the street, Ferri went home got his revolver and shot Giovanni througn the head. REV. DR. MESICK DEAD. York, Pa. July 1-—Rev. Dr. John Frayer Mesick, who claimed the dis- tinction. of being the oldest college sraduate in the United States died at his home here yesterday at the age of 102 yars. . He was valedictortan of the class of 1834 at Rutgers College. The Effects of Opiatss, HAT INFANTS are /prepara fl.u-qs2 ‘continued, hfiox-n;growt:‘ct the oalls which becility, mental perversion, a ora: Nervous diseases, such. 88 ictractable’ are B2 hetr in ancy. Vol " other J nervous a result of dosing with opiates or Tte rule among physicians is that children should never %@m‘mmgw doses for more than v if unaveidshie. 5 peculiar] moegfiblewo lum and {ts various' flm,nllotvlgiahagwoo o, is well known. Evenr:‘?ht , these opiates cause changes in the funo- are likely to becom: wving for alsohol or @ permanent, causin, narcotics in later h‘!ef and lack of stayifig narootics to keep children quies a day at a time, and GUESTS AT AMHERST Eighty-five Graduates Reoeive Degrees at Commencement Exercises—Lan- sing Gets Honorary Title. Ambherst, Mass.,, July 1.—Secretary of State Robert Lansing and Gov. Charles §, Whitman of the New York were guests at the commencement ex- ‘ercises of Amherst college vesterday. Both are graduates of Amherst. It was expected that they would deliver addresses at the commencement din- ner. : The graduating class numbered 8% men, of whom 67 received the de- gree of Bachelor of Arts 28 that of Bachelor of Science, ‘Honorary degrees were awarded as folls: Doctor of Laws—~Robert Lansing, 86’, secretary of state; Sir Herbert 3. Ames, Montreal, recently knighted by King George for distinguished ser- vices in rafsing a fund of $5,000,000 for families of soldiers; Rev. Willlam H. P. Faunce, president of Hrown university; Professor B. K. Emsrson, '65; of the Amherst college depart- ment of geology. Doctor of Humane Letters—Alfred . Stearns, prineipal of Philliphs-An- dover academy. Doctor of Divinity—Rev. D. P, Bliss, '78, New York. William . AT PARTING OF WAYS. Socialists of Germany Should Cease Fight Says Dr. Kolb, Berlin, July 1, By Wireless to Say- ville, N, Y.—Among the items given out by Overseas News Agency yester- day was the following: Dr. Kolb, the socialistic leader. has published =2 pamphlet in which he says that the socalist party ic at the parting of the ways. He declarcs the war has tied 4 new band around the whole German people and the monarchy. Socialists, he says, should cease to fight against so-called militarism as they should be convinced their advo- cacy over a militia system for the army is no longer tenable. They should realize that their task is, above all national; that they must become capable of parliamentary action, as the party is otherwise doomed to bsolute and perpetual lack of influence.” Among the guests were Col. George M. Harvey, the magazine publisher, { and Mrs. Harvey; Mr. and Mrs. Hen- ry Watterson, James A, Mann, publican house isader, and HMann. . After the festivities, Mr. and Mrs. Thomson Wwent north on their honey- moon. Their destination was not ar.- ounced. VERMONT UNIVERSITY HOLDS GRADUATION Te- Mrs. | Several Honorary Degrees Awarded— Governor Gates Receives Tie of' Doctor of Laws. ‘Burlington, * Vt.,, July 1.—Com- mencement exercises a} the Unversity of Vermont were held at University | sity gymnasium yesterday. The f61-} lowing were announced as recipients of honorary degrees: Doctors of Science: Willlam Allan | Orton, Plant pathologist of the de- partment of agriculture at Washing- ton and Thecdore Newton Vall, presl ident-of the American Telephone and | ending May 31,” Telegraph company. Docor of Laws: Charles Winslow Gates, governor of Vermont, and Al- onzo Baron Hepburn of New York, banker and former comptroller of the currency. Doctors of Letters. James Rowland Angell, professor of psychology at the University of Chicago. BIG TRADE BALANCE, tory of U. 8. ‘Washington, July 1.—A billion dol- [ lar trade balance—the greatest in| ‘American history—in a year: which has seen commerce depressed by eleven months of world war, is the | commercial record of the United | States. Officlal announcement was made yesterday at tae department of commerce that with the closing of | the fiscal year at midnight it was | certain that the billion dollar mark had been passed. | “The figures for eleven months | it was announced, “show a favorable balance of $983,- 117,479. As thirteen ports which or- | iginally handled 90 per cent. of the country foreign trade show for Junel‘ an export balance of approximately $60,000,000, it is now known that ths | excess of exports over imports has at this date exceeded $1,000,000,000, surpassing nearly '$400,000,000, the | highest record heretofore made.” GASOLINE 2 Billion Dollar Mark Greatest if His. | At Meeting of America lety’; Madison - Square 3§ New York July 1.—. Vor} Nuber, consul general of J Hungaty, took occasiofi $esterday to point out that a general amn impression existed that Dr. Con Dumba, the Austro-Hungarian am- bassabor, was present ar the recent meeting. of the American Peace so- ciety Madison Square Garden, this city, ard that this impression had given rise to unpleasant comment. “Dr. Duymba/ did not aitend niesting,” Mr. Von Nuber said yester, Racklifes Fillng Stafion, 13¢ galon, 250- the i tap at Charle§ I, Dehm, Hotel time it was held BEQUEST FOR BRIDGE, Winsted, July 1.—~Provision is made by the will of Edward Clark, filed for probate yesterday, for the erec. tion of an ornamental bridge for ped- estrians ‘and vehicles vver - the first narrows of Highland 'Lake. The residug of the estate, emounting to &ho! $10,000, et aside for this 2 It 1 rovided also that if ils to construct the bridge jen years the money is to go 1d County Hospital. keloin, Wcevers, W. J. McCarthy. Hermay 256 Park This beverage is a malt product of exceptional excellence. All that skill in brewing and bottling the choicest materials can accomplish is embodied in every sip. y If you prefer ale, our ale is the same exceptional excellence, You will please yourself, your family and guests and thoroughly enjoy the holiday if a case is in your home, not for the Fourth, but every day in the year. Order a case of your dealer or us NOW-— The Hubert Fischer Brewery, Hartford, Conn. schmarr,

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