New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 14, 1915, Page 5

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lattecg Specialty Store, 904 MAIN STREET, Secotid Floor, Dillon Bldg., Hartford, Conn. JULY CLEARANCE SALE After Inventory We find an accumulation of broken lines, odd‘and part pieces,' and remnants that must be closed at once regardless of cost. vertise. 20¢ IMPORTED NOVELTY CREPES FOR 12%c. 29(: Woven novelty Crepes—a splendid quality that will wash perfectly in a big range of styles to select from. They will make up into practical ' and charming dresses. Imported to sell at 29c per yard. Our Clearance Sale Price, 1 VArA . ..iiaeseaan 1220 50c EMBROIDERED PLUMPETS FOR 23c. A fine fabric that launders perfectly and considered one'ofithe best: materials for the present season wear; department stores’ price b0c yard 25 , Our Clearance Sale Price, yard ... :. C 75¢ BROCADED CREPE DE CmNES SDc. A very pretty material for afternoon ahd evening wear in all the desirable: colorinn, anade to retail 50 at 75¢ yd. Our Clearance Sale Price, yard C ‘We mention a few, as some of the lots are too small to ad- ‘We must have the room for our greatly enlarged Silk and Dress Goods lines: FANCY VOILES - FOR 17c—40-inch Fancy Voiles, including the new cretonne pattern effects, stripes and dainty floral patterns stylish and inexpensive summer frocks; goods that have sold all season at 29¢ yard. Our Clearance Sale Price, yard ... 59¢ Silk OHALLIES FOR 30c—=an ideal fabric: for Waists; Dresses and Kimonos, all’ desirable colors in this assortment; goods that have retailed all season at 59¢, per yard. Our Clearance Sale Price, yard ..... 45-INCH RAMIE LINENS—all pure range of all the wanted shades and white; sold all | sedson in the department stores at 59c yd Our Clearance Sale Price, yud which make 30¢ flax—a full 45¢ CLEARANCE SALE OF SILKS { 40—11\(7]1 ALL SILK: .CREPE DE GRINES—EXLH. eavy quality in a complete assortment of street and evening shades: A standard gquality that re- tails in the departmfent stores at $1.25.yd. 90 Our Clearance 8alé Price) yard, ... C INCH CHIFFON DRESS' 'I‘AB'FEYI‘AS-—the most . ored fabrie forifrocks and Dressy Suits.: In no other material can the presept styles be so perfect- 1y- developed; regular u.so quumy $l lO Our Clearance Sale Price .......... light 38-INCH CHIFFON TAFFETAS—both and dark effects in hlln‘une stripes. - Just the silk for the present season Wear. Standard quality that . sold 41l season at $1.00 yard: 68 Our Clearance Sale Price, yard ........ C CHENEY 36-INCH A SUMMER DRESS SILKS—A variety of weaves in novelty Chiffon Taffetas check and stripe Print Warps and Crepe de Chines. Silks, the standard $1.50 qualities. Our Clearance Sale Price, yard .... SHOWERPROOF A FOULARDS, nized as one of the best Silks for. summer wear, both stylish and serviceable. ment to select from; sold all season-at 85c Our Clearance Sale Price, yard . .....:. 36-INCH OCHIFFON FAILLE—A standard very much in demand this season for Suits and Dresses; full range of colors to gelect from; de- partment stores’' price 89c yard: Our Clearance Sale Price .............. 58(: choice in embroidered Taffeta All high grade $1.05 recog- effects, “A splendid assort- 55¢ fabric BLACK SILKS 36-inch Black Messaline, all pure Silk, reg. $1.00 quality ..... _36-inch Black Messaline, firm, heavy cwtllty. reg. $1.25 quality ..... '86-inch Black Peau-de-Sole for Bathing Sults, reg. $1,25 quality . 36-inch Black snun de Chine, Superior quality, reg. $1.50 quality . e ch Black ’x‘n!{eu Chiffon finish, reg. $1.50 quality .. ¥ 36-inch Black Taffeta, Chiffon finish, reg. $1.25 quality :.Clearance Sale Price 65c Clearance Sale Price 90c .Clearance Sale Price 85¢c .Clearance Sale Price $1.15 . .Clearance Sale Price $1.10 . .Clearance Sale Price 90c Clearance Sale of Dress Goods -INCH wo'mn WXTUBES—-AH wool in de- .-sirable culoflm forCoats, Separate Skirts .and. | mluiw department stores’ price $1.50. $1 10 yhrd: Qur Cléarance’ Sale' Price, yard ° m-m STLK "AND 'WOOL' POPLINS—Black and’ colors in dréss and“skirt lengths; the “standard | .25 quality. Ohr Clnru.noe 8ale Price, ’-;-:M s o peirbead 80c¢ |- 54-INCH mmfim all wool Iund.ard 9 5 $1.25 quality. Our Clearance Sale Price, yd. c regular 58c o !S-WOH ‘WHITE OORDUflO’Y, fast pile; $1.00 quality. ¢ 'Cleu-tnce Sale Price, yard .. ... ... 50-INCH, ALL: WOOL SERGE, firm, heavy quality in navy blue only, a ‘standard fabric that retails at $1.00 yd. Our Clearance Sale Price ...... 50-INCH ALL WOOL BATISTE—A fabric for Suits, Separate Skirts and Dresses; very serviceable, regular $1.25 quality. Our Clearance Sale Pr‘lce, yard $6.INCH . COVERT SUITINGS—A stylish weight fabric for seashore and ‘' ‘mountain wear; regular retail price 59c yard. Our Clearance Sale Price, yard ... DOUBLE WARP, 58c light weight ~ 85¢ light e —————— st S B M e S : AS MILLS REPRESENTATIVES WE SELL TO YOU DIRECT AT WHOLE- SALE PRICES - ¢ - EGYPTIENNE "STRAIGHTS’ .. The Uniformity of “STRAIGHTS” compares favorably with any high- ¢glass Turkish Cigarette at any price. STRAIGHTS” are made with greater care than many higher-priced Turkish brands. ‘The same choice types of 100% Pure Turkish to- "W are always used. “‘STRAIGHTS’’ smokers ‘will tell you that ‘‘STRAIGHTS’’ never change— ar after uthey afford the same mild, delight- 8 t\dy;fg smoke of Turkish tobacco at its best. 10 for 10¢ ~ S N R T TR — ALL SPACE KEPT FOR !. JAPANESE SHIPPERS An Oongricu and Agreements With Foreign Traders Made During June and July Revoked by Tokio Order. Washington, July 14.—8erious con- fusion in the entire shipping trade of the far east was reported yesterday by Consul General George H. Ander- son, at Hong Kong, to have resulted from the order of the Japanese gov- ernment reserving for Japanese ship- pers all space on ships operated by the Japanese subsidized trans-Pacific lines. ( Under this order the consul ‘gen- eral said, all space in the Japanesé ships heretofore allotted shippers at Hong Kong, Shanghai and Kelung, having merchandise for the United States, now is withheld. All contracts and agreements made for space dur- ing June and July are revoked, even steerage passenger space being taken over for Japanese use,.and arrange- ments for'space in August are being made with the possibility of the ex- tention of the order in view. | “It is of extreme importance to | Japanese manufacturers and export- ers,” says the report “that Japanese products - pass more freely and promptly to the United States at this Ium.. and the Japanese governmeént is using the advantage it has in pos- marine to serve the interests of its producers.” | CRASH INTO TELEGRAPH POLE. Jr., Injured in Auto Mishap. Roslyn, N. Y., July 14.—Dr. Philip Van' Ingen, a well-known New York physician, was seriously injured, and Mrs. Cornelius N. Bliss, Jr., wife of the New York banker, was badly shaken up and bruised near here yes- terday when the automobile in which they were riding to New York crashed into a telegraph pole after being run into from the rear by another car. The ,chauffeur was slightly hurt. The driver of a passing car took all three to a Mineola hospital, where it was found that Dr. Van Ingen had sustained a possible fracture of the skull. - The occupants of the car which s caused the collision disappeared. segsing a large subsidized merchant | Dr. Van Ingen and Mrs. C. N. Bliss, | 'STLANSF; didn’t you?” ‘right man had been arrested, Wojelt BUTTHAT’S NOTHING Mazza Thinks it Odd That Hné— band Should Get Angry. “] didn’t do anything to him at all. It's true that I took his wife to New York and lived with her there for nine months, but I didn’t do anything to him,” protested.Joseph Mazza in police ‘court this -morning as he told of an assault on Joseph Tareti lagt night after the latter had threatened to kill him. Thomas and Pasquale Magza, two other brothers, were also charged with the assault and each man was fined $10 and costs. Lures Wife to Brooklyn, Tareti, who lives at 263 Olive street said that a year ago this month Jo- seph Mazza stole his wife from him and by threatening to slash her face with a/knife induced her to go to Brooklyn with him. They were gone nine months and the erring wife re- ‘ned only.a week ago. Last night Tareti was returning from work he passed the Mazza home on Sexton street and the three-brothers pitched into him and gavé him a bad beating. A complaint was made and Officer McCue arrested the trio at 2 o'clock this morning, awaking them from a sound slumber. One Takes BEntire Blame. After spending the night together in the cell room at police headquar- ters the three brothers evidentally decided to place the entire blame on one of their number so the other two might get off. Therefore Pasquale, aged sixteen, came into court and said that it wag he and he alone who punched Treit. He explained that Tareti was about to draw a knife on Joseph when he, the witness, inter- fered. The youthful witness looked upon the affair as a! joke and laughed as he spoke. “You' think this is a funny thing, don’t you?” asked Prosecitor Kleet. ‘‘Yes, it was funny,” lied Pas. quale. Thomas Mazza disclaimed any par- ticlpation in the fight. He said he was eating his supper when he heard the rumpus and rushed out in the role of a peacemaker to get his brothers into the house and prevent further hostilities. Stole Wife—That's All. It was Joseph, however, who proved the statr witness. Joseph said that lately Tareti has. been telling people he was going to kill Mazza and his whole family and so last night he stopped him to ask him wh the trouble might be as he did not know he had done anything to him, “‘Well, you ran away with his wife, the .prosecutor asked. . “Oh .sure, .that's. right.- .1 went to Brooklyn with her and lived:‘with her for nine months but I didn’t do any- thing to him that he should want to | kill me,” Joseph replied Asked why he stopped Tareti last | night Joseph said ‘because he looked | at me funny.” As the yictim of the assault iden- tified each brother as having taken a punch at him all three were fined. Fined for Assault, ; After first denying that the ac- cused was the man who assaulted him and’later declaring that the Sturnick appeared in court and exs plained that Frank Noursick had as- saulted him in a pool room last night. The accused admitted having a little trouble with Stournick and said he shoved him on the floor but denied hitting him. He was fined $5 and costs. MEDICAL STUDENT SAFE. Neéwport News, Va., July 14.—Offi- cers of the British steamer Victorian, which arrived here yesterday with some survivors of the British steamer Armenian, sunk by a German subma- rine June 28, asserted last night that J.. 8. Vivo, a medical student from Richmond, Va., who was reported among the missing Americans on the Armenian, was safe in England. The officers said they left Vivé in Liver- pool. Vive, who is a’ Porte Rican, shipped on thé Armenian as a mule- r teer. Be Good . To Yourself by keeping in glyswnl trim and you wi friend to yourself and a pleas- gz«; to ot:hex'tsli Mt:it: smknessesd n in the ordinary an minor ailments of the digestive organs, and for these ailments \ have become the most popular remedy, because they are so safe, so certain, and prompt in their beneficial action. They tone the stomach, stim- ulate the liver, regulate the bowels By cleansing the tem and purifying b they prove . that they Are the Best Of Good Friends Largest Sale of Any Medicine in the Werld. Sold everywhers. In boxes, 10c., 25¢ | niitted throughout the army. | brought her to pert. MT. VESUVIUS READY FOR AN ERUPTION Prof Malladra and Assistants Descend Into Crater and Are Slightly Burned—Get Several Photos. Naples, July 13, via Paris, July 14,'1:50 a. m.—The activity of Mount Vesuvius is becoming more marked. Professor Malladra, director of tha Royal observatory on the volcano, to- day descendsd into the crater with three assistants to take yhoton;ph. and make observations. Professor Malladra found the tem- perature of the lava at the edge of the crater to be 100 degrees centi- grade. Thirty yards down the crater water falling on the lava turned into steam and quickly evaporated. An electric pyrometer nearby registercd 565 degrees centigrade. The heat scorched the feet of Profssor Malla- and his assistants, making it nec- cessary for them to stand on asbestos mats. The explosions were deafening and falling cinders burned the explorers slightly. At a certain points lava Sprang up in jets a yard high, these incandescent fountains turning into large bubbles of white or gray gas. Below the observers was 2 subterra- nean lake of boiling lava, similar to those found in the hawian Islands. 'TO 'MAKE WAR MUNITIONS, Middletown Company to Open Plant Soon. Middletown, July 14—As has been expected for several days, Midletown will enter the manufacture of war munitions, the Consolidated Equip- ment company having filed a certifi- cate of its incorporation with the secretary of state, which allows it to manufacture various kinds of . ex- Dlosives, shot and . amunition, as well as aeroplanes and chemicals. Among those interested in the com- pany are stockholders in the Noiseless Typewriter company, and it is ex- pected that the new concern will eith- €r occupy a portion, of this plant or lease the factory of the old Middle- town Bilver Plate company on Hub- bard street. The capital stock of tae new concern is fixed at $100,000 and of this amount the certificate of in- ;:orponuon states that $2,000 is paid n. The incorporators are Earle H. Russell, the treasurer of the type- writer concern, and two of the em- ployees of the office, Raymond F. Byrne and H. C. Perry. Mr. Russell said yesterday that he would not sev- er his connection with the Noiseless company. He added that Joseph Mer- riam, the president of the company, was interested financially in the new company. He expects that within three months the company will be employing 100 hands while later more will be employed. ‘The Noiselesg com- pany will contine in business . EMPIRE TRACK OPENING. L. H, Thompson’s Borrow Picked for ‘Winner. New York, July 14.—The finest flield ¢f handicap horses raced here in sev- eral years were carded for the subur- ban handicap at the opening day of the Empire City Racing association’s meeting at Belmont Park today. The event was for three-year-olds and up- ward, and the distancé a mile and a quarter.. Of the eleven entries, L. H. Thompson’s Borrow, winner of the Kentueky handicap, was picked as fa- vorite, but the entrants were of such quality and the weights so adjusted that turf followers were puzzled. The list of entrieg included August Belmont’s Stromboli and Top Hat; R. J. Mackenzie's Buckhorn, winner of the Brooklyn handicap this year; W. J. Weber's Hodge, which ran second in the Xentuucky handicap; the Greentree stable's Gainer; F. B. Le- maire’s Norse King; 8. L. Parsons’ Sharpshooter; J. W. Messervy's Addie M. and T. J O’Brien’s Sam Jackson. Borrow carried top weight with 126 pounds, The race was for sweep- stakes with $5,000 added. ABSINTHE BARRED, Not a Single Drop Has Entered French Fighting Lines Since War Began. ‘Washington, July 14.—Not a single drop of absinthe has beén admitted within the French fighting lines since the beginning of the preseént war, ac- cordng to statements of officials here who profess thorough ascquaintance with the French military regulations now in force. Moreover, they call at- tention to the fact that in an official Gecree dated March 17 last, the FPrench government prohibited the making, sale or transportation of ab- sinthe, It is stated at the French embassy here that the French troops in the trenches are permitted to drink only water, and even that 1 aimcult to get at times. Soldiers in the rear, who have been éxposed to peculiar hard- ships, are permitted to have each one- quarter of a litre of ordinary wine caily, There is absolutely no con- sumption of tiquors per- aleoholle FOUR TRAWLERS SUNK. Lowestoft, Eng., July 14.—The crews of four Lowestoft trawlers, the Woodbine, the Purple Heather, the Speedwell and the Merlin, which were sunk by a German submarine, have been landed here. The crew of the Emerald, which was attacked by a | submarine and was abandoned, but | did not sink. After leaving their own | vesel the crew of the Speedwell sight- ed the Emerald and, boarding her, CHILD IS SCALDED, Four-year-old Walter Makolowski, gon of Mr, and Mrs. Jcseph Makolow- ski of 144 Grove street, while playing ubout the kitchen yesterday afternoon tipped a kettle of boiling water over. The child was badly burned about the hands, arms and legs and was attend- ed by Dr. H. T. Bray and later taken to the hospital for treatment, | } | I\ '__._’ l“" ing eyes—one hungr) tummy belong together!. You just can’t keep the kiddies away from the good stores, that serve their fonds est favorite— oo Al Zanesville, O., July 14.—The Dres- den National Bank of Dresden, near | g, here, was closed yesterday while Na- tional Bank Examinér Bachman was trying to untangle the mystery of the disappearance of the cashier, John Hornung, who left Dresfen Monday night. The examiner does not believe that there is a shortage of any con- siderable amount and attributes Hor- nung’s departure to fright. Mrs. Hor~ nung said yesterday that she "feared her husband has committed suicid Hornung and his wife are assessed on $40,000 of property which is un encumbered. INCREASE OF 140,000 PEOPLE. Boston, July 14.—An increase of 140,000 in the populatibn of Massa- chusetts in the last five years is in- dicated in the preliminary tabulation of the state census, taken this spring and made public today. It is expect- ed that the total population of .thé state will be found to exceed 3,600,000 compared with 3,846,416 in 1910, VLN e e cent. in the last compared with cunt. in the and 7.1 per cent 1965, OF e m pe 949 e sening in the 1y due to the tion. 1 D given as .'lf'. There’s a bod);, a cris the and {rue corn fltvoc, that are unequaled by other corn flake. Ordinary, common-p “corn-flakes” to one after not having enjoyed the surprising g ness of these superior toasted eom meats. Try theNewPou your grocer hls %

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