New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 14, 1916, Page 12

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, - MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1 4, 1916. 'G. FOX & CO. Hartford. THE ' NEW SILKS SOMOL, THE PRACTICAL LIQUID SOAP. ASK FOR IT AT THE DRUG DE- PARTMENT. FOR PRING Initial Opening Display Tuesday and Wednesday Raw Silks have never been so scarce. send us any and France will soon stop making them. Of course these of all silks, both foreign and do mestic. Nevertheless, in spite of such overwhelming obstacles, collection of 1916 Silks. to come. our foresight—and so are our A § Pussy Willow, Georgette Crepe, de Luxe, Faille Francaise, Tub 3\ fects for evening and party frock: of colors and designs; » \ and beautiful two-tone effects. favorite. In all probability such a collection a Evening Silks Novelty weaves, tinsel brocades and two-tone ef- also Chiffon Crepes in plaids, stripes and plisse. Chiffon Taffetas All the desirable spring shades in fancy stripes Always a popular G. Fox Chiffon Taffeta, | Charmeuse, Satin Silks, Shauntungs. Satin Khaki Kool, Soie de Luxe, La Por Tussah ites of fashion th cludes these silks navy and oid s; a rich profusion and Georgette Popular prices. For which we The scarcity of dyestuffs is notorious. Tub rose, the manufacturer Germany does not conditions have advanced the price & Co. have assembled a wonderiul s cannot be duplicated for many a year We made heavy purchases before the rise in silk prices and are now reaping the reward of customers. HERE ARE THE NAMES OF THE SILKS Old Favorites Crepe de Chine, Crepe Meteor, New Weaves Stripe Taffeta, ‘Will-o’-Wisp, Soiree, Jacquards, Tussah Mandarin, Jerz, Armure, Plisse Voile. Pongee Tussah and kindred weaves will he favor- is season; our new collection in- in natural, oyster, white, black, Prices 39¢ to $2.00. Moneybak Silks are Hartford agents. Silk having 'S guarantee. Ask to see it. THE GREAT FEBRUARY FURNITURE SA Is This all important sale has excelled all past events. manship and variety of desisn the Furniture assembled here cannot be equaled at the sale prices, need not dwell upon the importan restricted. PROVING TO BE GREATEST OF AL From the ce of making your purchases here during L. viewpoint of desirability, wor e the month. 1s Nothing WITH SOCIALISTS hat Is Opinion Expressed by Hon. "‘ Carl D. Thompson | Hon. Carl D. Thompson of Chicago delivered an able address on “Christ nd the Workingman,” in Calumet lhall Saturday evening before a fair ed suxdience. Mr. Thompson is a ongregationalist minister (a gradu- te of three universities) and in his opening Temarks said that having tudied very thoroughly the ancient hanguages, also working conditions for e past twenty years or more, he | onsidered he could speak as one in thority. He said: 'Jesus was, in the first place, a workingman—Ilikewise his parents, | land He lived in the environment of orkers. His followers were of the | orking class. It is not customary ifor most religious workers to thir lof religion as being in any way con- f ected with the struggles of labor, rightness is religious, and that t my religion. Moses a Walking Delegate, } “Moses was a labor leader and went | into Egypt on a distinctly economic working class mission. The men | working in the mines near the Red | Bea, and those making canals to the Sea, were laboring under most in- tolerable conditions. Moses was, s to speak, the walking delegate for | the unions of his day. And as the king had ‘Nothing to arbitrate,’ 600.- 000 people walked out, taking with | them their tools—a feat that would | be impossible today. | “Jesus concerned himself about the | physical needs of the people—He fed | the hungry and clothed them. And after all, the test is ‘Whether or not ter the church social idea. get right with your fellow men. | He also | pointed him had they remaineq }and he would be unable to work. The ‘conditions n Europe before the war began were “Now, in this great struggle for bet- living conditions, which side is to be on, I would ke shamed to be on any side but that of the socialists. Jesus taught a great | To get right with God, | Mr. city Thompson was at one clerk of Milwaukee, served that state. time | Wisconsiy in the legislature of COOLEY MAY GO Councilman McDonough May Be tho | Next City Electrician. | Tt is rumored t City Electrici George Cooley may lose his officia title when the fiscal year comes to an | end and that Councilman Francis T. | McDonough may be chosen in his place. The only objection that might | be raised to Mr. McDonough, should | he seek the place, is that he is a demo- crat and therefore is not entitled to an office ‘which pays a salary. Electrician Cooley voiced his senti- ments regarding the old safety board | several weeks ago and it is said the commissioners would not have re-ap- in office. BOUT CALLED OFF, Columbus, O., Feb. 14.—The twelve round bout scheduled between Willie Beecher of New York and Milburn | Saylor of Indianapolis for this city to- night, has been called off at the re- quest of Joe Greenbaum, Beecher’s manager. A message from Green- baum to the boxing commission late iast night said blood poison had de- veloped in a wound in Beecher’s lip | COLLEGE REOPENED, Storrs, Feb, 14.—The Connecticut Agricultural college had been closed since January 16 because of a arlet fever epidemic, reopened to- day. The victims of the fever have practically recovered and the other students who had gone to their homes which you have ministered to the needs of | the people.’ “ “We have come that you may have | life more abundantly,’ said Jesus. Are ‘¢ having it? 'The average income today is from five to six hundred | dollars a vear and the best authori- ties say it costs from eight to nine | hundred a year to live decently. The | igh cost of living makes it nece i for children to leave and enter the mills at a very When the hour of sickness comes few nr~] sble to meet it properly. Under the | existing system—being unable to buy all wo produce—it is necessary “Big Business to find foreign markets to dispose of the surplus goods. To protect this foreign trade a big navy geems to be required. These cond tions result in international complica- “hool | Barn on West Main Street. | Telephone 451-2. MARRIED 25 YEARS. Mr. and Mrs. George E. serve Event at Mr. and Mrs. celebrated Brann Ob- Home on Hart St. George E. Brann the twenty-fifth anniver- sary of their marriage yesterday at their home at 14 Hart street. Friends and relatives were present from this and other nearby cities. Mr. and Mrs. Brann were married in Thomaston, formerly M: Brann’s home, but have lived in this city for the past ten years. They have one son, Herbert A., a draughtsman at the New Britain Machine company Mr. Brann is employed at the Corbin Screw corporation. Dr. William Holtz, M. T., MECHANO-THERAPY Massage Specialist and Spinal juster. BOOTH BUILDING 259 MAIN ST, NEW BRI Phone 1710 Consultation Free. Ad- AIN, CT. FOR SALE OR TO RENT. New 7-Room Cottage at Barnes- dale; 12-room House and large Also a fine Chicken Farm of 100 acres with trout brook. C. L. BARNES, 192 Chestnut If You Want Good Bottled Beer, Wine or Liquors, Order Same from PHILIP BARDECK, 185 Arch St. ’Phone 482-. -“\'Tfi DETECTIVES If you are anticipating tavestiga- ton in any matter where secrey integrity and results are essentia] write A. G. BROWN, 268 STATE STREE HARTFORD, CONN. ‘PHONE CHARTER 413. have nearly all returned. 1 use the Detecta Phone. h to you that you need GLASSES. p and fit you to the P su TIRED EYES eadaches, etc. are nature’s warning Why ut it off? Come here and have me EXAMINE YOUR EYES. right GLASSES. rompt attention now may save you iffering and greater trouble later on. F. L. McGUIRE, 254 3 OPTOMETRIST Main Street. ercial T Upstairs over the LeWitt’s Bloc TO RENT. | "0 RENT—Two furnished rooms for light housekeeping, 280 Arch street. Three minutes walk from center. 2-10-tf six-room flat, all reet. -14-4d TO RENT—Heated, improvements, at 718 Stanley TO RENT—Four rooms, §8, $10, $1 five rooms, $10, $15. Lockwood, 86 West Main strect. 2-12-6dx CASH IN ADVANCE. MINIMUM CHARGE 16e ONE CENT A WORP EACH INSERTION. i e IR e s ALL advertisements for the classified column must bhe in the Herald office by 1:30 p. m. on the day of issue. TO RENT—TFive room tenement, Electric light, Gas, Furnace, First floor. 1 Wallace strect. 2-12-6dx TO RENT—Five rooms, first floor, modern improvements, 14 Olive St. F. & S. tf TO RENT—One four room and three five room tenements; modern im- provements; on trolley line, W. P. Steele, 260 Chestnut street. 2-11-6dx Inquire, 51 Wal- 2-10-4dx TO RENT—Barn. nut street. TO RENT—Garage with lights, cap- acity two cars. Price reasonable. Geo. Bean, 3 Trinity st. 2-9-wix TO RENT five rooms Venienc Tel. 941-3. Second floor tenement, and bath. Modern con- Inauire 65 Lincoln St., 1-25-tf TO RENT—Apartment of four rooms, second floor, with improvements. 210 Chestnut street. 1-25-tf TO RENT—Two modern four room tenements, corner Cherry and Pine streets. Inquire P. J. Murray & Co., 325 Main street. 1-24-tf WANTED. WANTED—Boarding places for in- fants and young children in private families. Apply Conn. Children’s Aid Society, 60 Brown Thomson Bldg, Herald. 2-12-4d SOLICITORS WANTED—Catholic, to introduce best Catholic proposition on the market. Big money can be by hustlers. Benziger 36-38 Barclay St, New % 2-11-3dx MEN-WOMEN, WANTED. $75.00 month. Government jobs. Va- cancies constantly. Write for list positions now obtainable. Frank- lin Institute, Dept. 36L, Rochester, N HELP WANTED—MAL and New Meri- WANTED—Toolmakers on fixture work. Apply the England Westinghouse Co., den plant, Meriden, Conn, Jig 2-11-3d Blow-pipe solderers for soft metal. Also hand-turners on br Address P. O. Box 336, Meriden, Conn. 2-10-6d SOLDERERS HELP WANTED—FEMALE. FOR SALE. closed type, assortment short time. weekly. Addr very latest of records. tyle, with Used only take $1.00 L Herald. {For LI — Autopiano Player Piano. Although months used practically Cost $650. $400, with $15 worth of rolls, bench and scarf. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asylum $t,, Hartford, Conn. few new. a -10a FOR SALE—Haines Piano (original Hz Just overhauled, varnished, Cost $450. Here is the piano you have been waiting for. Only be- cause we are overcrowded with used pianos. $160. Sedgewick & Casey, Hartford, Conn. 2-7-10a 3ros. Upright Bros.). FOR SALE—Stock hay. Inquire Mis: E. H. Brown, Worthington Ridge, Berlin Tel. 2-14. 2-10-6dx ¥OR SALE—Steinway Upright Piano. Full size. Cost $700. The tone and action of this instrument is very little Qifferent from that of a new piano. Has to be sold for $200. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asylum St.. Hartford, Conn. 2-7-10d FOR SALE—Weber Upright Cost $650. One of the best makes in the world. Has been carefully used and in A1 shape. Will be sold for $205. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asylum street, Hartford, Conn. 2-7-10a ¥OR SALE—Aeolian 88-note Player Piano. Built to order. Used only 4 months and good as new. Price, worth of rolls, bench and scarf, $450. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asy- lum St., Hartford, Conn. 2 SALE — Chickering Grand Piano. Cos $1,100. It seems im- possible that a Grand pos sing the qualifications of a really good piano be bought for $150. Look at this if you want a bargain Sedgewick & Casey, Hartford, Ct. just @ with $15 FOR n 2-7-104 FOR SALE—New England Upright Piano, little used, very handsome and in condition as perfect as_ it can be made. Originally costing $350. Can now be bought for $150. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asylum St., Hartford, Ct. 2-7-10d WANTED—Woman to room rent Saturday Address, Help, Box 6, Britain Herald. clean five mornings, care WANTED--Stenographer at City Coal & Wood Co., 141 I3lm street. 2-14-2a WANTED—A cook, 26 Russell St. 2-14-44 LADIES—Earn $2.25 dozen making neckwear. Home busin Exper jence unnecessary. Mail dime for pattern, instructions. Needlework 613-D7, Amsterdam avenue, 1 York. 2-14-1ax WANTED—Girls for making anq - sorting at the Union Laundry, » Arch street. 5 2-7-tf WANTED—Kitchen Beloin girl at Hotel City Advertisement CITY ESTIMATE. Prepared for the Common Council hy the Board of Finance and Ty ation. February 11, 1916, RESOLVED: That this board es- timate that the school board will ro. quire the sum of $25,000 for t{he purchase of land for a new school building, and we recommend to the common council that instead of lay.- ing a tax, the city issue its bonds for $25,000, dated February 1, 1916, pay- able August 1, 1929, with interest at the rate of 4 1-4 per cent. BOARD OF FINZ AND NCE TAXATIO FOR SALE—Crown Upright with Banjo-Mandolin o In perfect shape. Cost $400. It goes for $185. Sedgewick & Casey, 139 Asylum St., Hartford, Conn. Pi attachnm This piano lent condition and ha of tone. Price $80. Casey, 139 Asylum St., Hartfor: To the Board of County Comu ers for Hartford County. I hereby apply for a transfer Hilding Nelson’s license to sell sp uous and intoxicating liquors, ale, lager be rhine wine, and cider at and 174 Arch street, town of New Britain. My place of business is not located within two hundred feet in a direct line from any church edifice, or public or parochial school, or the premises pertaining thereto, or any post office, public library, or cemetery. Dated at New Britain, this 11th day of ¥eh. A. D. 1916. JOE OLSOD Applicant are elector real estate, We, the undersigned, and taxpayers, owning of the town of New Britain, and hereby sign and endorse the fore- going application of Joe Olson for a and hereby certify that said nt is a suitable person to be ed pursuant to said application. New Britain, this 11th day arlson, Aaron Daniei- E. Morton, John A. Andrews, Horvitz I hereby certify that Aaron son, . Hyman the above H. L. Curti Have Your Eyes Examined and Gl _; fitted by A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Over 30 Years Experience. 306 Main Street "Phone 570 AUTOS TO RENT By Hour or Day. J. M, Finnegan Stables Telephone 302 named signers and cndorsers are electors and taxpaye 139 Asylum St., {I"OR SALE—Columbia Grafonola, en- ! 88-note | Can be bought now for | ete. | Piano. | ino | | | Price $100 (In Canada ““The Typewriter of Perfect Presswork’’ HE flawless presswork of the nmew Royal Master-Model 10 carries the high-grade busi- ness message in as fine form as your thoughts themselves | Royal presswork reinforces the result- getting power of your business-letters—for it adds the forceful stamp of quality to every letter you sign. Heretofore, you have been obliged to accept a standard of typewriting inferior to high-class printing, yet you would not accept poor printing. But with the new standard of “typewriter presswo’r,k_" created by the new Royal “10,” it is no longer necessary to accept *The Type That Telis” Pick up inferior typing in your office. the letters you have signed to-day. Examine them—then see a sample of the faultless presswork of the Royal! On which kind of typing will you send your signature to represent YOURSELF ? Which one will you trust to convey unmistakably to the world the character of your house ? Get the Send for the “Royal man Investigate the new master-machine that takes new brochure, g—with a handsome Color-Photograph 0—all sent free to typewriter users. writing. Or write us direct for our and book of facts on Touch-Typini of the new ROYAL MODEL 1 “Write now— Facts! » and ask for a DEMONSTRATION. the “grind” out of type- Y P! « BETTER SERVICE,” right now!”” ROYAL TYPEWRITER COMPANY, Inc. YLUM STREET. FOIR HARTFORD, CON! 3 Family House, 423 Church Street. Large lot, plenty of i fruit. Well rented. H. D. HUMPHREY, 272 Main Street ' NATIONAL BANK BUILDING EW BRITAIN Call on & THE A. PINDAR CORP. 516 Asylum St. .. .. Hartford, Conn. gravings STORAGE—50 Cars For the Winter $3.00 per month HART’S GARAGE Horace I, Hart, Prop. Livery Scrvic., Repairing, Tires and Supplies, Cars bought and sold. Tel 221-1, .89 Main St MaKers of Photo and Wood E L = b nNe b Illustrators for All Kinds of Ad- vertising Purposes - CARS TO RENT CLOSED AND OPEN CAF FOR WEDDINGS, RECEPTIO} ETOC. TEL. 943-2, MORRIN’S GARAGE 200 E- MAIN STREET. i Denison Garage Storage. Supplies and Repairing. AG'T REO AND MAXWELL PRINTING In Many Different Languages BY SKILLED UNION MEN Moderate Price: LINOTYPE COMPOS Office Hours | | | s to 8 p. m. Foreman 3 THE EASTERN PRINTI 53 CHURCH STREET, EBBE estate in the town of New i 1) Dated at New Britain, this 11th day | of February, A. D. 1916. | ALFRED L. THOMSON, | Town Clerlk. "A. B. JOHNSON, D.D. S. DENTIST National Bank Bldg. Open Evening BOWLING. Hilding Neison Ciuhs and Private Par | Accommodated, 172-174 ARCH STREET, HFor Livery Cars for hire, day and pight 2| DWIGHT MULTIGRAPH LETTERS Fac-simile of Typewriting uoue 1-2 and 3 colors with signatures. Letter Heads Printed. [ HARTFORD TYFEWRITER EXGHANGE, Ing 26 State St. Hartford, Coniil For Your insurance and Surecy Bonds | Avold troubie by heving your insurs ance written by a man who koows how. Go to A i Booth's PARSONS, Biock. - Williams Auto Co. Agents Hodson Motor Cars. New & and 7 Pussenger Autos for hire. ¢ Repairs, Supplies, Storage. "PHONE 246, 287 ELM STREFD CHOICE GLE HOME With large lot and barn and every improvement, price below cost as owil= er wants to sell H. N. DOCKWOOD. Real Estate and Insurance 86 West Main or 793 East =ale FARM---Within 3 miles of New Britain containing 12 acres BY schuliz & Costello, Inc. 242 Idai n

Other pages from this issue: