New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 6, 1915, Page 11

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g FINAL CH.AIiANCE SUMMER MILLINERY INVENTORY PRICES INCLUDING PANAMAS AND ENTIRE BALANCE OF STOCK OF SUMMER TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED HATS AND TRIMMINGS. Panama Hats 95¢ Fine Hemps 75¢ FREE TRIMMING SERVICE. Colored Hats Including some shapes that sold at $5.00. 25¢ EASTERN MILLINERY CO. 183 Main Street Up One Flight HORGAN BILLIARD CHAMPION. San Francisco, Aug. 6.—John Hor~ gan of St. Louis today is champion professional three-cushion billiardist, having defeated George E. Moore of New York, title holder, last night, twenty-five to seventeen. The match was played in twenty-three innings. Horgan had a high run of five and Moore of four. Horgan is a former title holder. McDONALD CASE POSTPONED, Ossining, N. Y., Aug. 6.—The ex- amination of Fatrick McDonald, con- fidential agent of Superintendent or ©risons Riley, charged with having struck Thomas Mott Osborne, warden of Sing Sing, at the railroad station here when the latter recovered cer- tain prison papers in the possession of McDonald, was called today and put over unmtil August 12 VEW MILFORD CHILD DROWNED. New Milford, Aug. 6.—Howard Soule, aged sixteen months, wandered | from the home of his father, Willilam Soule, at Wellsville yesterday, and the body was found under a bridge cross- ing the Ashpetuck river during the night. The child had fallen into the water from the bridge. BERLIN GELEBRATES 'FALL OF IVANGOROD Gapitulation of Warsaw Is Disap- pointment to French = » Berlin, Aug.'6, via London, 12:12 p. m.—The Berlin morning nows- papers today publish - no. additional details whatever concerning the fight- ing which preceded-the fall of War- saw and Ivangorod. Warsaw’s fall had been discounted in advance of the event, and the news evoked no demonstrations in the cap- ital. When the report of the capitu- . lation of Ivangorod came, however, ~impromtu processions were formed in Unter Den Linden. One considerable body marched before the palace of Crown Prince Frederick William last evening, and the crowds were address- ed by extemporaneous speakers. Not End of Conflict, The morning papers comment ju- bilantly on the news, but on the whole with restraint. The Local Anzeiger, says: “This, unfortunately, is not the end of the contlict, but it is a new promise that our cause marches on.” ¥Fall Disappoints French, . Paris, Aug. 6, 5:256 a. m.—While the fall of Warsaw had been discounted here some time ago the delay in the capture of the city had given rise to the hope that the Polish capital might still be saved, and its occupa- tion by Germans is something of a lett 8; Landers 2, East 4; High Smith 6. disappointment to the French public. The military necessities dictating the abandonment of the city are fully recognized, but it also is realized that the Germans will claim a great vic- tory, from which the people of that country will derive much encourage- ment. The press points out, however. that the victory is in no way decisive hecause the Russian army remains in- tact. No Permanent Influence. London, Aug. 6, 3:28 a. m.—The Standard this morning declares that the fall of Warsaw, while likely to prolong the war, is not likely to have 4 permanent influence on the course of events. Speaking of the enormous sacrifices of the Germanic allies, it says: “Lost legions cannot be replac- ed, and meanwhile there is formid- able work for the surivors. Unless a real decision is obtained by the destruction of forces surrendér of the main Russian armies, Germany will be little better off than before.” INTER,PLAYGROUND RESULTS. Boys baseball, senior—Smalley won. from Bartlett, -7: Landers won from qus" by default; High beat Smith 21- Boy’ baseball, Junior—Smalley 14, Bartlett 12; Landers 10, East 6; High 18, Smith 6. Boys’ dodgeball—Bartlett won from Smalley; Landers won from East and High won from Smith, Girls’ baseball, —Smalley 20, Bart- 11, . Girls’ captainball—Smalley 11, Bartlett 4; Landers 11 East 0; Smith 11, High 8. Girls’ relay race, senior—Smalley defeating Bartlett; Landers won from East and High from Smith. Girls’ relay race, junior—Smalley, Landers and High won. LIST OF PATENTS. Following is a list of patents issued from the U. S, Patent Office, Tuesday July 27, 1915, for the State of Con- necticut, furnished us from the office of Seymour & Earle, solicitors of ratents 129 Church street, New Haven, Conn, J. H. Cowlishaw, Folding bonnet-box. B. M. Des Jardins, West Hartford. Type-writing machine, W. H. Gates, New Haven. opening adjustable die-head. B. Loomis, Hartfard, assignor to Loomis Utilization Co. Netting and New Britain. Self- i ungumming fibre-plants. A. L. McMurtry, Sound Beach, as- signor to Lovell-McConnell Mfg Co. Duplex-diaphragm horn or signal. J. N. Macdonald, Hartford. Cain repairing implement. (Reissue.) J. Sachs, assignor to The Hart & Hegeman Mfg..Co., Hartford. Anti- theft device fof. }ncandescem lamps. E. G. Schleichgr, Stamford. Run- ning-gear for vehicles. A. F. Schefield, Stafford Springs. Lug-strap holder. W. H. Sears, clutch, W. E. Sparks, assignor to Sargent & Co., New Haven. Night-latch. F. C. Spencer, Guilford. Lifting- Jack N lamp. Ansonia. Friction- Szamier, Terryville. Safety- GEN. TRACY N R DEATH. New York, Aug. 6.—General Ben- jamin F. Tracy, secretary of the nav department in the cabinet of Benja- min Harrison, was at death’s door to- day, it was said. For nine days Gen- eral Tracy, who is 84 years old, has lain unconscious and without nour- ishment in any form. “Gee, | never Flakes like these New tasted any Post Toasties They're absolutely new—made by a new process that brings out the true corn flavour and that keeps the flakes firm and crisp, even after cream or milk is added. N New Post Toasties are made of the hearts of selected white Indian Corn, cooked, seasoned and toasted; and they come to you SEALED—as sweet an FRESH- d appe- tizing as when they leave the The little puffs on each flake are characteristic of the New Post Toasties Your grocer has them now—get a package and give your appetite a treat. Society’s Outcas! (Detroit News.) Most of the prisoners who appear in police court are pitiable. They may be repulsive, degraded, undesir- able, but at the same time there is an aspect of helplessness and hope- | lessness about them. Few of them are deliberate foes of society. They are the weaklings. Of these, the women, sullen or shrinking, are the most wretched. They come to pay their toll into the coffers of the L and depart to earn more. Judges, like all scientists and moralists and lovers of mankind, have no definite notion of what is to be done with the sisterhood of the street. It is a problem not yet solved. Skulking among these unfortunates are the creatures who earn the under- world’s worst epithet, “a crook’'s crook.” They prey upon the feat's of petty wrongdoers or those undcr suspicion. They drag from them their soiled dollars. They whisper false promises into their ears and, without the court’s knowledge, pretend <o peddle justice for a cheap price. They are hard to land, too, because they are not out for big graft. They are greasy and complacent; i"braz-n when caught. Their offenses cannot be measured by the amounts they wrest from their victims. Their “sure thing” swindling harms directly only those who are accustomed to preying and being preyed upon, but their prac- tices throw into discredit, the courts and the integrity of judges. Therefore it is for judges to guard themselves by ignoring the whining importunities of those parasites and by exposing them emphatically at every opportunity. Training and Efficiency. (Philadelphia Public Ledger.) With the breakdown of the appren- tice system, for over a generation boys in the trades, despite all efforts of trade schools to mect the emer- gency, have received a training which only by oourtesy can be called ade- quate. What is true of boys in trades and industries, that call for special knowledge, 4s extravagantly the case in the matter of boys who have no special outlook in the matter of man- ual expertness, and who simply, as the phrase goes, want ““to earn a liv- ing.” While night schools and con- tinuation schools, private and public, have essayed to solve this problem, everyone knows that it is still a very open one. Thus the movement for a nation-wide vocational system of edu- cation for boys has come at the right time. Elsewhere, and of course in this matter, Germany has led, the ef- fort to offer every boy an opportunity or a training that will give him some grip on that much abused state of things called efliciency has led to all sorts of co-ordinated night schools with manual training feautres, as well as the general rudiments of culture, the special aim. In certain manufacturing centers abroad, in Birmingham, Eng., for in- stance, the night system so interlocks with the general public day schools system and with the higher school at the top, that anyone employed in busi- ness and industry can carry on his studies up to the university itself. And at every stage vocational training is possible, directed to. a given end. This is as it should be in the United | States, particularly in Philadelphia, which may very well be the center of a pioneer movement of this kind through a training which does not postpone efficiency as a tost-graduate qualification. To Stage Struck Girls. (Waterbury Republican.) New York papers yesterday told the pathetic story of a girl’'s experiences in search of a stage career. She had gone to New York from Buffalo, with confidence in her physical charms and her offer from a theatrical firm on Broadway of §18 a week for a job in a chorus. She looked less than twen- ty, though claiming that age. Arriv- ing in New York she reported to the manager who had sent her the tele- gram. His answer, after looking her over, was, “I have too many girls now. Can't employ you.” Without any more money, no friends, no place to go, she reported to the police after sleeping on park benches two nights. The po- lice have taken steps to send her back to her father, providing a place for her in a home for girls during the in- terim. Whether it be the millionaire’s daughter, or the poor laborer’s daugh- ter, the world is the same to the girl who starts out fo conquer it alone. The stage is as much a treadmill, if not more, than the factory, the dry gods store, the school room, the kitchen in the farmhouse. It looks different only from the outside. To those who can succeed it is no more kind than to those who cannot suc- ceed, until they have fought the long, hard, bitter fight to popularity with here’s the Wanderlust Leading You? Is it months in the Orient or a week at the shore? Wherever you go keep in touch. There is no use in losing track of your friends at home. With Uncle Sam’s help THE Herald Will tellyou what isgoing on wherever you roam. Fifteen Cents a Week Will Bring You the News | ! e ] the fickle public and a commanding position over the individuals and cor- porations which have control of the The Usual Big Saturday Sale at The GREAT WESTERN MARE THE QUALITY STORE OF LOW PRICES employment of stage talent. Girls who believe they have the talent for a stage career can best make use of it at home. Once they have established their ability the stage will seek them if they have the stock it demands. Summer/Clotiing ¥o¢, Mo L SMALL FRESH PORK LOINS ....., (Meriden Journal.) FANCY RIB ROAST OF HEAVY STEER BE Men are always supposed to be FRESH CUT HAMBURG STEAK free from burdensome trammels of FANCY CHICKENS AT COST style. Yet those who work in stores NIOE LEAN SHORT SHANKS SMOKED SHOULDER | and offices usually wear through the SMALL LEAN STRIPS OF AR CURED BACON hot weather clothing that adds to the FANCY TENDERLOINS discomforts of the season. The crea- EXTRA SPE ture that wears tight starched collars 10 1bs, OF FINE GRANULATED SUGAR and heavy wool coats on a warm day HIGH GRADE 2 can never say anything to women WHITE LOAF FLOUR ........0v.00cestssssass about subservience to absurd fash- HECKER'S SUPERLATIVE FLOUR ........... A ions. 3 1bs. CRACKERS FRags Farmers, mechanics, teamsters and GLOBE BRAND MILK, other out-door workers do not submit to these tyrannical restrictions. They strip to their tasks, and perhaps suffer less at their vigorous effort than the swathed and swaddled man in the swivel chair. 014 fashioned people always used to have light linen or alpaca coats, in which they used to pass the warm weather in comfort. Many men of simple habits wear them still. But the fact that they tend to get shape- Jess condemns them with some of our tailor made men. A neat and trim appearance is a fine thing for a busi- ness man to cultivate. But it does | not pay to look in the mirror much with the thermometer at 90. SATURDAY . SL0N . 81 10c CAN, 3 CANS ' Bach 25¢, 3 CANS TOMATOE 3 BUNCHE! 3 BUNCHJ NICE LARGE POTATOE 7 CANS EVAPORATED MILK vone . HIGHEST GRADE OF OLIVE OIL . soee shes . Former Price qt. OUR OWN BRAND COFFEE, SILVER BRAND, GROUND ROASTED ESPECIALLY FOR US ........000 it Fancy Silver Spoon With Each Pound, | The GREAT WESTERN MARI ctta, Prop., 63 Main St. e ;

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