New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 4, 1915, Page 2

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itable Gifls For The ~Fall Bride o “A select line of Silver Tableware, Pickard Hand - Painted China. Tuthill’s Rich Cut Glass, also a selection of Jewelry, suitable for +Bridesmaids and Ushers. 'Wedding Rings made to order. e Porter & Dyson Co. MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. treatment at Miss Nagle’s sanitarium and at Dr. Waterman Lyon’s office. The Hallowe’en club visited the home of Miss Anna Lardner of 35 Oak street last evening. The house was decorated in black and yellow and games were.enjoyed throughout the evening. Refreshments were served. This club held its first meeting Sun- day evening at the home of the Misses Ringrose at 325 Chestnut street. A son has been born to Mr. and Mrs, Norman S. Barth of West Main street. A supper will be held Saturday eve- ning by the Working Girl’s club. A meeting of the publicity com- mittee of the Chamber of Commerce was held this afternoon at 5 o’clock. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Gunning of Tremont street are receiving congrat- ulations on the birth or a daughter. The Peerless club will furnish the entertainment this evening at a fair in Plainville- The weekly meeting of the board of compensation and assessment will be omitted this evening. The New Britain Mason Contrac- tors’ association will hold a meeting November 15. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Grauer of Cottage place left today to spend a | two weeks’ vacation with their son at Cape Cod. i A number of New Britain society folk attended an enjoyable chamber | concert at Miss Porter’s school in Farmingtn last evening. The concert | was rendered by a New York quar- 3 tet, whose choice of numbers a nd (Y og : % execution was excellent. Luncheon C. W. Lines company has sued | was served. Fukpot for $100 and property President Rodney Miller of the fer of Rhodes and Chapman | Kenilworth club ha.i' appointed a com- [ hds beer attached. mittee to make arrangements for a cleaned at the Union Laundry, | concert to be given by the Wesleyan hstreet., Tel 904.—advt. Glee and Mandolin club during the g early part of December. The com- ext Wednesday evening Stan- | mjttee consists of Eric Erickson, John , G. A. R., will tender a recep- - | A. Martin, Harry S. Jackson, Barl the members of the citizens' | g. Eqwards and Howard A. Timbrell. ry. Invitations have been received by per Copeland, formerly em- | president E. W. Christ and Secretary in this city, is being held by the | Andrews of the Chamber of Com- for safe keeping. The man is | merce and City Clerk A. L. Thompson ly deranged and was arrested | o attend the Clvic and Industrial ex- ght after he had tried to get | hipjtion in Danbury next week. Mr. Andrews has called a meeting as | secretary of the Connecticut associa- tion of Commercial and Civic Excu- tives to be held in that city on next Wednesday. City Items circle, N. D. of I, will meet dd’s hall and will for the coming : Bryan, who is stationed. on 8. S. Constellation at the alning station, Newport, R. isiting l,ua parents, Mr. and H. BrYan of 295 Chestnut ve Boulets for fireplace use at er ton. * These make an excep- . good fire in a grate at little 'ew Britaln Lumber & Coal Co. —advt. Zimmerman today moved his rom the city building to his bile: headquarters on Main He has had an office in the lding since it. was taken over municipality. ninth annual giving Eve, Nov. avt. . Cahtolic Choral union will in' Tabs’ hall tonight at 8 barn dance, 24. Admis. jhaih Josefson of New York has hed for $75 by J. Greenberg of ... .Josefson is a traveling man hen he comes#to this city again bé made acquainted with the it 'he has been sued. s Growe; ‘son’of Captain James of Engine company No. 4, is jy (il at hig home on Curtis ONSTIPATION he big trouble in every serious i causing depression of uflnblh » Dervousness, | tfect vision, loss of memory, T D dges of appetite, etc.—stop | GOING TO PHILADELPHIA. Mayor George A. Quigley will spend | the coming week in Philadelphia. { The mayor and Mayor Rudolph ‘_ Blankenburg of the “City of Brother- ly Love” are close friends and the { local executive anticipates many pleasant hours in the company of the Philadelphia executive. Mayor Quig- ley attended the dedication of Hart- | ford’s new city hall this afternoon. and freely, but cleansing the i stomach, stimu- | ‘mr un llver— A- fnr i:::fi- | i icusness, he: tukncy. 6.~ Plain or Sugar Coated. CONTINUOUS SALE THEIR MERIT. nck & Son, Philadelphis n t.ly, thorougl P}z‘{ I8, eomfortm ANNUAL LADIES’ NIGHT. Preparations are being made for : holding the annual ladies’ night at the | First Congregational church on Fri- | day evening at 8 o’clock. All mem- | bers and friends are expected and cor- Idie.lly invited to attend. . CHRISTMAS CARDS Yare Eh‘t‘nved Personal Greetings for - CHRISTMAS 'dg’flgm ‘Now for Choice Selection v and Prompt Delivery 3 fed o ¢ Ay Stationery Department "The Dickinson Drug ~C0 169 & 171 Main Street WEALTH OF MUSIC INNOV. CONCERT Elaborate Affair at Russwin Lyceum for Charity Organization Great preparations are being made for the choral concert at the Russwin Lyceum, Monday evening, November | 29, which will be given under the auspicies of the Woman's club. The Catholic Choral Union, which is train- ing for the event under the leader- ship of Professor F. F. Harmon, will number one-hundred voices, and their work already promises a rich treat for lovers of good music. The con- cert will also include numbers by the | l‘Id!‘lfOrd Philharmonic orchestra of pieces and Mrs. Rose | O’Brien Milcke of New York, whose work as a soloist here merited the | highest praise, will also take part. One of the most attractive features of the concert will be the group se- lections from Handel's ‘‘Messiah.” Writing of this famous oratorio in his book “How to Listen to Music,” Henry Edward Krehbill says in the chapter on choirs and choral music: “The most successful choral con- certs in the United States are those glven by oratorio societies. Or- ganizations of this kind differ from instrumental in being composed of amateurs and amateur choir singing is no older anywhere than in the United States. When Hndel wrote his oratorios, he could only dream of such majestic performances as those works receive today and it one of the miracles of art that he should have written in so masterly a manner for forces he could never hope to control. Who would think when listening to the ‘Hallelujah Chorus’ from the ‘Messiah,’ in which the voice of the composer is as the voice of a great multitude and as the voice of many waters and as the voice of many thunderings saying ‘Alleluia, for the Lord. God Omnipotent reign- eth,» that these compositions were never heard by Handel from any chorus larger than the most modest of our church choirs?” At the last performance of the “Messiah” at which Handel was an- nounced to appear, for the benefit of his favorite charity—the Fondlings hospital, May 3, 1759, the singers in- cluding the principals numbered but twenty-three and the musicians but thirty-three. Handle never heard this concert, however, as his death occurred before the time. With a chorus nearly five times as large and an orchestra nearly double P the concert at the Lyceum ovember 29 promises to be a most shed and delightful event. This concert, too, will be given for the benefit of a favorite charity—the New Britain Charity Organization. The officers of the Catholic Choral Union ar President, Mrs. Mary T. Crean; vice president, p Campbell; secretary, M Kelley; treasurer, Mrs. gaertner. Tickets for are in the hands of Mrs. H. M. Bates, Miss Flora Humphrey, Miss Mary Campbell and Miss Frances Whittle- sey and the prices range from fifty cents to two dollars. Baum- the concert OLD TIME SOCIAL SESSION, The committee of the New Britain lodge of Elks has made ar- rangements for a gala event at the home on Washington street this eve- ning, when an old time social session will be held at the con- clusion of the regular business meeting. Daly’s quartet will be the principal entertainers, but a number of other performers will add to the features of the evening. house For Women in Their “Forties” System Needs a Bracing Nerve Aid. Somewhere between tic ages of for- ty and fifty years, every woman's sys- tem has to undergo important fur tional changes that are seldom under- stood and rarely prepared for. Iew realize that during this changing time they are subject to many physi- cal and mental trials that will tax their nerves and strength to tae | breaking point and may easily leave them semi-invalids and nervous | wrecks. To the woman whose nervous sys- tem is already weakened, this period is doubly dangerous as in this cowdi- tion she is more easily affected by ds- orders which her now overtaxed or- gans are unable to throw off. Women during this changing age need and | must have some quick acting and harmless remedy that, taken into their systems, will strengthen and invigor- ate th2ir overworked nerve cells and help them to stand up under the try- ing strain. Wonderfully effective results ave given in such conditions by the simple use of Margo Nerve Tablets, a skillful combination of six of the best vitaliz- ing elements known to modern chem- istry. These little tablets contain no dangerous habit-forming drugs and are entirely harmless in their action but they act quickly to build up and strengthen the entire nervous system by feeding directly to the tired, de- vitalized merve cells, in artificial form the very necessary elements of which nature is depriving them. If your nerves are worn out, have lost confidence, feel blue, are despondent and all tired out, Margo Nerve Tablets will help you at once. The Clark & Brainerd Co., New Brit- ain, Conn., and other leading druggists in this vicinity sell them with the posi- tive guarantee that they must produce the Deneficial results expected or the if you | tle-cock. Upright Inverted Gas Lamps, etc Alsu Usalyte Mantels Reflex HERBERT HARDWARE I.. MILLS 336 MAIN STREET ANNUAL KSGIVING AT THE QN THAD DAY PICTURE, AND AND 1IF, CAN'T 173 Main St. -:- HOME-COMING WILL BE GLAD TO HAVE PERCHANCE, HOW MURRAY — Photographer New Britain, Conn. THE YOUR YOU THEIRS. YOuU GO HOME THIS YEAR, PICTURES WILL HELP. LOGAL STUDENT IS IN RIOT AT YALE Marshal S. House Acquitted [ori Lack of Evidence Marshall S. House, son of Mr. and Mrs. William A. House 17 place, a graduate of the local school with the class of 1913 and now a student at Yale University, ar- rested, but later acquitted for lack of for complicity in riot New Haven of Lenox a High was evidence, a which occurred in Tuesday night The riot was ons in which only Yale students participated and was-not es= sentially intended as a law breaking act, but was more of a celebration in which the students’ enthusiasm ran away with their better judgment. The occasion for the exhibition of joy was a revival of enthusiasm for the foot- ball team and anticipation of a bright- er future by the advent of the new coaches. All Traffic Blocked. The trouble occurred at 8 o'clock Tuesday evening at the corner of York and Elm streets where over 1,000 un- dergraduates had assembled follow- ing a cheering squad meeting. As the enthusiasm of the students grew, so did their violence. Trolley cars were stopped, trolley poles pulled from the wires, signs were stolen, passengers jostled and automobiles were stopped while the shouting students gathered about the machines jeering at the on Events Tonight in “The theater. TAndrew Mack Trish Dra- goon,” Lyceum Plays, High Photo theater. Class Vaudeville and Moving Pictures, Keeney's theater. | Men's club of Swedish Lutheran | church meets in church parlors. el | OIA | hall, council M-, M. Britain ts in O. U. A New me New Britain Turner meets in Turner hall. society Lexington lodge, I. O, O. F., meets in.Jr. O. U. A. M. hall, O. Socialer Verein meets at 142 Arch street. Coui1t Charter Oak, F. of A, meets in Electric hall. i Isabella circle, N. D. of I, meets in Judd’s hall. Court Progress, F. of A, meets in Eagle’s hall BEE. session, 0. E., LElks’ old social homte. fashioned Vater Jahn lodge, D. of H., meets in Bardeck’s hall. St. Jean de Baptiste society meets at 34 Church street. PROPERTY OWNERS LOSE- Corporation Counsel Docsn’t Belicve | i They Can Collect Damages. occupants. All traffic was blocked on York street. Mayor to the Rescue. A large touring car containing a man and three ladies was stopped on York street and to add to the discomfort of the lone man and the three timid wo- men the students grabbed the sides and front of the car ' and literally pushed it about the street it a shut- They were rocking the car like a boat on an ang a, as well as shoving it forward and baclk when Frank J. Rice, mayor of New Haven, ieaped from a passing trolley car, and ran to the asistance of the autoists. He grabbed one student by the coat and turned him over to a policeman With orders to lock hm up. The student was Thomas L. Stix of Cincinnati, who later fined $5 and costs for the offense. Although Stix offered no resistance, his friends were not as docile, but he was finally taken to headquarters. In the meantime His Honor was sur- rounded by the gang and was being manhandled when the officer returned. It was necessary for the police to charge the mob with drawn clubs in order to disperse them. But three arrests were made. Stix, House and Earl Naramore of Bridge-| port. The latter was permitted to go | on suspended judgment. Dean Jones Inc ed. Mayor Rice in court termed the af- fair as one of the worst demonst tions of rowdyism he had ever wit- nessed. Dean Jones of Yale univer- much incensed over the action of his students and states that a thor- ough investigation will be made and the guiity men brought to jusice. He ; has given the authorities assurance that such a demonstration will not oc- cur again. The arrest of Mr. House was not for the assault upon Mayor Rice. He was arrested with his two companions, charged merely with general breach of | money paid for them will be refunded. the peace and creating a disturbance. | man | unae After holding another session last | night the council committee on the Mill street problem was unable to reach a final decision as to what | damages, if any, the property owners | should rcceive for land taken when the street was straightened at the South M reet cnd. Corporation Counsel J. E, Cooper and City En- gineer H. Hall were present and the former expressed the belief that when all was done and said the claim of Wiillam Behnke was the only valid one. The action of the cauncil was never clear, whether the old section of the street w really abandoned | When the changes in the street were made it was little better than a sand road and owners of property at the South Main street end received ninety feet of land for only $75. This land has greatly enhanced in value since then. Judge Cooper doubted whether the property owners should obtain any redress from the courts as the situation is so tangled. Councilman May thought the com- mittec should see what damages the property owners are entitled to. Councilman Dolan said he understood William Behnke would accept the award made by the board of compen- sation and ssment. It appeared to Councilman May that the city put one over on the property owners when the work was done and the old street abandoned. The property owners sup- posed the old road was ta be fixed but the first they knew the city cut through with a new layout. Alder- Anderson said the people didn’t wid the situation until it was | too late. Councilman Pohlman sug- gester cutting up the old street for the benefit of adjoining propery own- 1914 carlier The vear one week vear In provided snow just than the present 1914 the first fall was on | October 27. This year nature’s first contribution wag \(>~lcr(lfly Men Like to Shop in Our Haberdashery Department because we make it a point to please them and make them feel at home. Of course, the distinction gained by the sheer excellence of our wearables more than repays them. —and with our large stocks and unex- celled service reducing buying to a mere mat- ter of choosing, this department bids fair to become the shopping center for Connecti- cut’s smart dressers. Special courtesy is extended to our women patrons. We invite them to benefit by our painstaking service. Skitts, Neckwear, Vestograms, Initial Belts. Scarves made to order. 9899 ASYLUM Horvsfalis “IT PAYS TO NUY OUR KIND* NARTFORD, 8T. Oonneeting with 140 TRUMBULL ST, Delightful Short Sea Tnps Affording Pleasure and Rest NEW YORK TO OLD POINT COMFORT, NORFOLK & RICHMOND, VA. Special 4-Day, All Wltev Tour 888 miles of all § " E k day at 3 P. M, from Pier 25, North Kive North River, New York. Send for illustrated pamphlet No g6 J.J. BROWN, Gen'l Pass, Agt. ‘W. L. WOODROW, Traf. Mgr. WE GiVE HOYA[S.LI& TfiABIHE STAMPS—ASK FOH _THEN i SOLID PACK TOMATOES —A&P— PEAS Can 15¢ BEST CRE BUTTER —H-O— OATS Pkg. 12¢ Newly Selected | EGGS: T Fancy, NO.l Fanc; 3 ibs, in 10 1 can Sultana 1 pkg. ghettd 1 can A&P Corn Syrup. . Stamps Free With Any of the Following ——————— (roceries — Macaroni Special Cut Prices for Week of Nov. 110 6, In D SULTANA EVAPORATED APRICOTS Lb. 10c b33c¢ SARDINES | SAL SODA 3Cans10c | 21-21pke.5¢ Iunph and every -«43¢ BROOMS s, e, e 10 RASP- BERRIES Can 15¢ Remember we never sacrifice our quality to make a low price. AMERY What do you pay? CONTINENTAL (xunrummd Strictly y Head RICE buk 25¢ Spice or Spa- 1 bot. Liquid Blue . 1 bot. Onion Salad . 1 Mason Jar Mustard 1 can Kleensweep 1 1 pkg. Jelly Powder A&P Ice Cream or... can Campbell's Beans. 1 1 can Spinach 25 STAMPS with 1 can Crab Meat. . . . . .30c 20 STAMPS with 3 cakes Colgate’s Soap. 25¢ 25 STAMPS with large can Kleensweep.25¢ 10 STAMPS with small can Kleensweep.10c Free Delivery Tel, 135 WE 184-186 MAIN STREET. If You Want Goog Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, {185 Arch St. Lottied | BOWLING Accommodated, Hilding Nelson, ’Phone 482-2 172-174 ARCH STREET. Ciubs and Private Pariies

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