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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1916. | request, probably because he realiz- | | ea ne was whipped. In spite of theix | cries of protest he called for a vote | oni-the original resolution* ahid de- “ared it passed, while thie crowd ar Then he disappeared. £ | Mayor is Denounced. oy - ¢ | In a moment the corridor was in (Continued from First Page.) la turmoil. A few ‘expressed their ¥ - | views in unpolished and unrestrained g He; claimed English. Fists were shaken under g year by buying noses. It secemed as if everyone wis rates and the net shouting at cveryone else. Tho: would be $4.40. Municipal ice per- who had felt the lash of the czar's mits people who could never get a knout remained for half an houv five cent piece of ice from private airing their opinions.and many who | dealers to do so now, he said, and attended the meeting without any he thought thé city was doing a char politicdl attachment or -any. political | ble act to go into the busines: | axes to grind denounced the ‘mayor | for nis tactic It .was taken for | granted that George A. Quigley had | sounded his own death knell so far the republican primaries in the spring are concerned. Jester Dissolves His Army. that he saves $5 ice at municipal income to him Ice and Mortality. “Whether a child has ice or sometimes means life or death,” Mr. Kehoe. “Health department sta- tistics for last summer showed that there were twenty deaths less among *thildren than the previous summer. Both sides made frequent chargs Whether municipal ice had anything ' after the meeting that their oppon- to do with it T don’t know. But I ' ents had “packed” the gathering. A do know I would rather pay my humorous incident in connection share of the tax than to see a little | With the affair is related by friends white casket being taken to the cem- of Mayor Quigley. A Hartford news- étery.” Applause followed Mr. Kehoe's | paper announced Wednesday that the speech | meeting would be held that night. | A Mr. Sullivan his pro- | Immediately there was a scurrving test against Curtis’ | 2mong the mayor's lieutenants to amendment | ruster a big crowd. Alderman Jester, ¥ Mavor Quigley jumped into the ; who has been described as the mayor’s | fray at this point and reminded the A crrand boy, is said to have recruited audience that it was not voting $4,100 | a large invading force to march on the to repair the ice house but to com- | city building Wednesday night but he plete an ice house that had never | was forced to countermand the been completed. | order when the mayor warned | him that the meeting was twenty- o 1 four hours later, not said as registered Councilman “Crime to Divert the Money.” T. W. Weber Ppostponing said the bu at a loss for two vears and a third | \enture would probably mean an in- | ¥reased loss. Any sane man \\nmd\ spoke in favor action indefinite BY CHINESE PRESS say it has been a failure, in his opin- = ion, and he considered it a crime to divert money to such a proposi- | tion when it was needed so badly for | schools. He did not believe the city | fas any business cutting ice on | Shuttle Meadow and polluting the | Water the people drink, thereby jeo- | pardizing the health of the city. | Alderman Parker remarked that he did not believe any man present would be in favor of abandoning the municipal water works in which thousands of dollars had been sun He believed in doing something fo the working people instead of for the | aristocrats and auestioned the wis- For Indifference to Importation Of | Arms, Ammunition and Explo- | sives Into China. tCorrespondence of The Associated Tress.) Peking, Dec. —Chinese papers are loud in their denunciation of what they regard as Japan’s indifference to importation of arms, ammuni- tion and explosives into China. The recent seizure at Shanghai of a large quantity of dynamite found in the baggage of a Japanese passen- ger, who arrived on the , Japanese dom of spending so much money for | ship Sakaki from the Japanese-con- | %arks and other purposes as 1| trolled port of Dalny, is attracting been done in the past, thereby giv- | much attention. The Chinese press | ing Mayor Quigley's administration | is charzing that the Japanese are | an unintentionaj, knock. | indifferent to the activities of Chinese | City in Hole $14,000. assassins and trouble-makers located | Councilman’ Curtis said : the board | . te forelgn concessions, and would of charities could furnish ice to the | (o, B84 Lo fnteshalistroun el feedy or the council could authoriss | CHiN2 Which would afford an excuse the water commissioners to buy for mif wiin and dispose of it for not more than | The Peking Daily News in discuss- B - hundred pounds {o | iNg the Japanese who brought the | Poor. people. The city has gone in | r]\'nann(eri to Shangha says: “An the hole about $14,00 on the ice | AMount of dynamite sufficient to blow project, he said, and the end is not | the international. settlement off the in sight yet. He said he had been | face of the ecarth can hardly be informed by the superintendent of | hawked from place to place without the water ‘works that the runway | Officials of some kind knowing any- leading from the dam at Shuttle | thing about it. Dynamite is not Wil (o tho i House must | manufactured in Dalny, and the a Fepaired before it can be used. This | SUmption is fair that it was brought repair work had not been included | there from Japan But, whatever in the $4,100 estimate. the place of origin, there should be some record in the customs office at Dalny. A Japanese commissioner is 5 ¢ in charge at Dalny, and the first step Mayor Quigley, standing on a chair, | {5 pe taken is for the Japanese gov- | informed the audience that it was ! ernment to instruct him to submit a Yoting on Councilman Curtis’ amend- report of any recent movements | full ment and he asked for the aves Who | or cxplosives and of the persons con- replied with a roar that shook the | .orped Bpilding. The mayor called for the | uiyp no’s and another roar rang forth. The E i i ° orded Japan of showing the sincer- mayor ruled that the amendment had | 1or 268 I?‘“{n.- '.r] MRS Besn eaten and. it was st this poipt | 7 Of her friendship for China. - ; . 8 DOIN | g1 and explicit exposure of the in- that he started up the steam roller | LV and crushed the opposition. Thoge | [oTMAtion upon which she bases her who had voted for the amendment | LClIef that disturbances in China are g er fof alcountiofifhempbtesiby: iy IV BSNL ARG BoDERTe SRAGRESE division of the house. Mayor Quiglpy €Nt of her resolve to use a ,.;’ g to listen to tholr lagliimate [ICRDS Sfaior Giepase) b0 D e any 7 kind* belngs rendedb N 5t A - het - ilitionals, her of country united to Ja- by hinese . anarchists, b > removing the “It is remarkable that Japanese of close friendship.” the ice Then the Steam Roller. Several voices called for the vote. excellent. opportunity is af- (f&Wduld go far towarc {Epud of susp in which "recent Ction” anid’ inaétion*'has enveloped HERRINU GLASS) [ e oo o i of Chinese anarchists and even fixed O HOTMATER [ 0 e e o e | government pan bonds GOVERNMENT OWNED RAILROAD SUCCESS I Wash the poisons and toxins from \ ‘ system before putting more I food into stomach. Says Inside-bathing makes any- one look and feel clean, sweet and refreshed. | Line tends Twenty-Five Miles From Yuma, \ Wash yourself on the inside before | ican Lreakfast like you do on the outside. This is vastly more important beca RMASTOn, the skin pores do not absorb impur ation ties into the blood, causing illnes: Iroad while the bowel pores do. | For every ounce of food and drink | taken into the stomach, nearly an ounce of waste material must be c ried out of the body. If this waste | material is not eliminated day by day it quickly ferments and generates poisons, gases and toxins which aro absorbed or sucked into the blood siveam, through the Iymph ducts | which should suck only nourishment iolsustain the body. A splendid health ¢rink, before breakfast each day, glass of real hot water with a t spoonful of limestone phosphate in which is a harml way to these poisons, gases and toxins from | the stomach, 1 kidney ana | bowels; thus cleansing, sweetening | and freshening the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. ‘ A quarter pound of limestone phos- phate costs but very little at the drug gtore but is sufficient to make am'(mel en enthusiast on inside-bathing. Men and women Who stomed to | wake up with a dull, aching head or have furred tongue, bad taste, nasty | preath, sallow compleXion, others who Border. Jan. T.—Successful of a government-owned which private interest could not be persuaded to build, is causing satisfaction to De- The line, extend- | Yuma, much Interior partment officials. twenty-five miles from 2 to the Mexican boundary line | through the Yuma Valley, has been | in operation daily since Iebruary and | has carried 300,000 tons of rock be- | des frequent shipments of other freight which are increasing. Pas- senzer traffic has been light owing to the unpopulated region through | which the road runs, but considerable | progress has been made in the settle- ment of the country and a townsite 18 miles from Yuma has been opened. Construction of the railroad, the second government-owned line, was deemed a necessity by officials of the United States Reclamation _Service. They had been unsuccessful in efforts ! of interest private capital which con- sidered the prospect doubtful for the payment ever of its expenses. As a system of rock revetment was re- quired by the Yuma Valley reclama- tion pfoject the engineers decided the | material could be placed economically | only by use of a track laid upon the bpve bilious attacks, acid stomach or | levee which protects the Yuma Val- constipation are assured of pro-|ley from the overflow of the Colo- nounced improvement in both health | rado River. ~Work was begun April end appearance shortly, v 9, 1914 and the first spike driven ing measure is to it, wash are ac YES, SUN AND RAIN DO IT! HEN Gram’ma built a pun’kin pie, it was pun’kin pie and you knew it as soon as your teeth sunk into a wedge. She didn’t need any French recipe to make it, either. Because every- tning she used in it was real—real pun’kin — real top-of-the-milk — real sugar—real spices. You’ll know that Perfection Cigarettes are real smokes as soon as you've smoked one. Nothing fancy or dolled-up about Perfections. Every tender leaf of the golden Virginia tobacco in every Perfection is JUST NATURALLY GOOD S —with all the original full-flavor that Lotta Sun and Enuff Rain helped Mother Nature put into this tobacco. .. '« . May 1 of that year The anncal summer of 1914 delayed construction work but it was completed to the Mexican boundary in February 1915. The line is 253% miles long including sidings. Equipment of the road a gasoline motor car bearing in bold letters the “United States Reclamation Service, o Valley Line.” The car carries “1] passengers and makes regular trips dally to the boundary and return from Yuma. A contract has been made with a transcontinental railroad for joint use of tracks at Yuma, Carload shipments destined for the Yuma Valley are taken over by the _ Reclamation Service and carried on consists of it: Jine, charges being regulated by the TInterstate Commerce Commis- sion Yuma BAN Berlin, Jan. > officer’s sword, Whose ugefulness had long since van- ed and whise sole remaining func- tion was to trip its wearer cpportune ally emperor mitting | exception o dotachments and staff officers, to wear offi inseription: a short app: est ves a blished quiescence Of ties., You’'ll know it. You'll taste it. Not in an occasional puff. But in every puff today, tomorrow and every day. And because the golden Virginia tobacco in Perfections is so natur- ally good—you’ll get a smoke every time that will just please you right down to the bottom of your boots. You can’t get better tasting tobac- co anywhere in the world, at any price, than the golden Virginia to- bacco in Perfections. You'll try them sometime. Why not get acquainted with them today —NOW? Yes—right NOW while your taste hankers for a real smoke. They’re JUST NATURALLY GOOD SAMUEL J. FLEMING DEAD. Terre Haute. Ind., Jan. 72, for trainer of following an Virginia, up at in- times, is now to disappear | ; the German front. The | as just issued an order per- ¥s at the front, with the the commanders of large —Samuel Fleming, many years a breeder and race horses, died yesterday, Barones here who a operation few years ago was a sensation knife or bayvonet. The order | thrée year old, winning the Ken custom which had already ! tucky Futurity, the Western Horse- itself with the tacit ac-|men’'s and other big stages totalling the military authori- | more than $20,000, was bred and owned by Mr. Fleming. A plain, plum- colored pack- age but—real JEWISH RELIEF DAY. —Senator Mg the presid: Jewish rel | Washington, Jan. 7 | tin’s resolution asking | to set aside a day as | day for Jewish ~war sufferers W | adopted yesterday . after ~ Chairmi | Stone, of the foreign relations cof | ;nittee had said that while he | pjroved such a cause .in. relation the Poles and Jews, he saf were without a government of th own, he hoped it would not extend any of the organized nations. who