New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 14, 1916, Page 17

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NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, APRIL 14, 1916 “Some Long Cut tobac- cos look puffed up and fat—but when you get inside the package — what do you find? X 5 g 5% Ko X———? “Gee, what a difference in LIBERTY Long Cut!” All clean, pure Kent:icky tobacco, made from long, ripe, selected leaves— no loose, hard stems in it. Cool-smoking in a ‘pipe, lasting in a chew— with a rich, satisfying relish and fragrance to it. Man dear, it’s real tobacco! Makes you feel that chesty you could hold two jobs with one hand; and that good-natured you could kiss your landlerd when he calls for the rent. Take Mike’s advice. You can’t go wrong. Try LIBERTY for a week. Compare it with any other Long Cut you ever used. At all dealers. TR IS We know now wh hot going to the Chicago convention. He's afraid of being attacked by the man-eating bird and the whiskered fish—New York Evening Sun. Mr Barnes is GREAT BEAR STARTS LONG TRIP IN MAY Pleasure and Profit Chicago, April 14—When the schocner Great Bear sails from Seattle about the middle of May, on a fishing and hunting trip to the far north—a trip which has been planned partly as a summer vacation and partly as a commercial venture—she will start on a journey that will take her about 5,000 miles from Seattle and will not end till about the middle of Novem- ber. Incidentally John Borden, Chi- cago capitalist, sportsman and travel- er, and one of the vessel's owners, will help the explorer, Vilhjalmur Stefans- son—if Telp is needed—re-locate the the continent he discovered in the po- lar regions. Mr. Borden on his journey will be accompanied by Captain. Louis Lane, long time a resident of Nome, Alaska, and for years a gold miner, fur trader and whaler, and by three Chicago puests, who are going just for sport— Norris H. Bokum, C. K. Knickerbock- er and R. B. Slaughter—and the schooner will carry a crew of twenty- four sturdy seamen. With Mr. Borden, Captain. Lane is joint owner of the vessel, which, in- cluding her equipments, cost $75,000 and is 137 feet long, 32 feet beam, with 4 draft of 14 feet and a speed of seven knots per hour. three sails and, as an auxiliary force, an oil- burning engine of 160 horse power. Her oaken hull is sheathed in iron- wood, a heavy timber from the Philip- pines, almost as impervious as its neme indicates. 25.000 Gallons of Fuel Oil. The Great Bear will carry 25,000 galions of fuel oil, and about $3,000 worth of provisions—canned vegeta- bles and fruits, sugar, coffee, flour, meal and salt meats—enough to last the entire journey. A complete kitch- en will be provided and will be in charge of a chef of long experience. A medical chest fitted up according to the list authorized by the government for its vessels will be a part of the ship’s equipment. No physician will accompany the expedition as Mr. Bor- den says his experience in northern waters has given him sufficient experi- ence to handle any ailments peculiar to the northern country that might come to himself or his men. There will be private state rooms for each of the guests and comfortable bertans for each man of books and a big phonograph will be among the things on board to provide entertainment for the long Arctic nights Captain Lane, though only 36 years as much at home in a boat eas of the north as would be a landsman in an automobile trav- | the crew, ; Five Thousand Mile Voyage for TOMORROW SIGNALIZE:! THE BRINK OF e ET AND AN ENORMO NTIRE STOCKS, ON » are suggestions: room outfit special. This handsome Dresser, solid oal only $18.50 Dressers, Now 25.00 Circa eyve Maple, Bevel Mirror. Sale Price $35.00 Circassian Walnut Dresser. Sale Price $23.50 Quartered Oak Buffet. ale Price . St $29.50 Quartered Oak Buffet. Sale Price $32.50 Quartered Oak Buffet. ale Price §38.50 Quartered Oak Buffet. Sale Price $49.00 Quartered Oak Buffet. Sale Pric2 $55.00 Buffet. Sale Price SEGOND GONVIGTION | eling city streets. He has- been a dweller in the Alaskan country since he was a child of twelve and has spent much of his time on the water.. He will be in active charge of the boat as captain but will co-operate with Mr. Borden in all matters of management except the actual technical details of handling the vessel. It was Captain Lane who last August came to the res- cue of the plorer Stefansson with timely supplies when Stefansson and the remnant of the original party that went to the northern regions with him had been given up for lost. Borden an Explorer. Mr. Borden is well fitted by experi- ence for his proposed long journey. Though he did not go but half as far north as his present plans will carry him ,he made a notable vovage in the summer of 1913 in his 100 foot sailing vacht, Adventurer, from the coast of Maine, around the American conti- nent,, through the straits of Magellan, thence to the Pacific coast and on to a point about 300 miles north of the Aleutian islands. It was the delightful experience that he had on this trip t got the salt of the sea into his veins and caused the lure of the north to call him again, a call so insistent, he said, that his forthcoming trip is the result. The route of the Great Bear will take her through the Pacific ocean for a distance of about 2,000 miles on the first leg of the long journey from Se- attle, on which she will reach the Aleutian islands, where, as she turns northward she will expect to encoun- ter much floating fc This however is not expected to hamper her as her three great sails and her powerful oil burning engine are regarded as ample to make the handling of the boat easy, though the desired speed of seven knots an hour may be attained at all times. Another thousand miles will bring her to the Gulf of Anadyr, off the Si- berian coast. Then she w pass into the Arctic ocean and will circle Point Barrow through the Beaufort sea and having added another 2,000 miles to the distance traveled from Seattle, she will reach Coronation gulf, off the northern coast of Canada, where the journey will end. The return will be made over the same route. The travelers on the Great Bear are going to harpoon the bowhead whale, which is valuable for its oil and whale- | shot guns | bone, and will hunt with the eider duck for its valuable down. Thousands of dollars’ worth of game is expected to be bagged. OGS GO WILD. of The Associated Press.) EVE (Correspondence April 12.—Domestic hogs let loose at Gerbevillers at the time of the German invasion of Lorraine wandered into the forests after living tor a time on the refuse found around the soldiers’ camps and the said to have become entirely savage us the result of their contact with the wild boars of the region. ants of the neighborhood. say they £re even more ferocious than the wild Paris, boars and hunting parties have been are now | The peas- | | was followed by a ver organized to rid the forests of them, | and by countless Germanias, FOR ljéliKlLLlNfi? Frank Ferrara, Driver of Murder ! Car, Is Found Guilty 14.—With and sister chauffeur New the sobbing of his wife York, April in his ears, Trank Ferrara, the who drove the Baff murder car, wi led out of the Criminal Branch of the Supreme Court yesterday convicted of | murder in the first degree. Although he had put up a stubborn defense at his trial, it took the jury only an hour and twenty minutes to reach a verdict. On April 20 he will be sentenced to the electric chair together with Gius- epe Arichiello, the young gunman who | one of the shots when Barnet Baff was killed in the West Washing- ton Mz 24, 1914. i Now that he is actually confronted | fired ket on Nov. with the death sentence Ferrara, who | is the most intelligent of the four men arrested for the Baff killing, is ex- | pected to make revelations which will uncover the ‘“men contributed to higher who the murder fund of | $4,500. Two more men, alleged to have been members of the murder squad. remain to be tried. They are the brothers, Joseph and Antonio Zaf- arone who acted as lookouts at the poultry market when Baff was lured out of his shap and killed. Assistant District Attorney O'Mal- ley, who prosecuted the Baff slayers, is convinced that Ferrara knows and | can reveal the identity of the poultry merchants who procured BRaff's mur- der in order to be rid of his compe- tition. This was one of the grounds upon which Mr. O'Malley in his sum- ming up yesterday urged that TFer- rara be convicted. up” WILL PROHIBIT ANY COSTLY MEMORIALS Germans Do Not Look With Favor on Fixtravagant Monuments For Those ‘Who Fall in Battle. (Correspondence of The Associated Press.) Rerlin, March 31.-—Mindful of the experiences following the Franco- Frussian war in 1870-1871, the Academy of Arts and the Royal of Agriculture have jointly is Royal Acad- emy sued a warning to Germany at large, cautioning against extravagant mem- orials for the fallen, and urging that (he greatest conservatism be used in fittingly honoring the dead. ADDING THEM >T() 2C Values Are So Extraordinary That You Save $2.00 to $6.00 o with a large French Bevel Mirro an Walnut, Mahogany, all have large French GOLDEN OAK BUFFETS ! ger "ana deed have helped to make The war of 1870, says the appeal, ble flood or statues and monuments to Williamn 1., nardly | | TR i A g K N W, 1} ‘\,\:/,IIA\ 3,[],(\},\ i it ki 4 0 ./J OF ONE OF RATIONS AND AND IMPROVE TAL PURCHA Every room in the home has been considered and provided for by ba [ C have, in many cases, notwithstanding the tremendously advanced cost of labor, woods, stains, varnishes and hardware, reduced prices to Less Than the Old Wholesale Cost. 4 Room OQutfit ¢omietsy §198.00 A Carload of $30 BRASS BEDS at To those who are going housekeeping this Spring, we recommend an immediate inspection of this It contains superb values, and can not be duplicated for less than $245.00. 4- Two-inch po throughout and " $10.98 50 All Oak or Birds- T $16.98 Price ale Price National Sale Price $6.00 sale Price $8.75 . $14.98 $18.50 Ticking. $16.50 Silk Flos: Sale Price Our - $35.00 LOUIS HERRUP, any of which have withstood the test | of art or time. The members of the | {wo academies profess to see the dan- of a repetition of this same lack | of taste in connection with the present | war. The danger is impending, the academies believe, thot every German city, big and little will try to outdo | every other city in immortalizing its | fallen sons, whereas it is highly de- | sirable that efforts in this direction be | combined rather than working in | competition. The academy members suggest rather one national memorial which in solemn form shall expr gratitude to Goa and patriotic inspir- ation. Toward such an end, they de- clare, the art of the sculptor in its i st form would be called into re- ition to honor suitably in stone u:d metal all those men who by word ! Ger- y unbeatable. 1 T it 7t TN |\ L)) l)y }‘ i) .lh L * [T i [ THE ADDITIONS, REA MADLD them is guaranteed for 5 years. more to manufacture them now we are selling them for. Combination All Cotton $12.98 All Felt Mattr Sale Pr entire Parlor Furniture at MOST REMARKABLE INVOLVING 12,000 I'OR SALE AN DISPLAY, LONG AGO WITH zains such as you may never sco again, $13.95 each 2 cross rails and one-inch fillers; Iach SPRING AND MATTRESSES Steel Spring, National link. Englander, guaranteed Mattress, Mattress, reduce covered w Mattre: stock of Upholstered Living 259 Complete Homefurnisher CHINESE RFBELS Seeking to Bribe Prominent Residents With COoncessions. April 12. Cheng-hsun Peking, State Councilor Chang rated by the Chinese government to proceed to Hong Kong and Singapore htening the rrominent Chinese in those places concerning the present crisis, and to discount any assistance they might be prrompted to giv to the Yunnan revolutionists. The gover has been desig- for the purpose of e ment charges that rebel \gents are offering prominent Chinese in Singapore and Honk Kong all sorts of concessions in return for financial assistance, and are represeting the rccess of the revolution if sufficient funds can be realized. he Heart of the iiome The heart of the home is the cooking range. No range is too good for you. You and your family donot want ordinary cooking. You demand food that is perfectly cooked. The bestrangeis a lifetime investment. ryawjord Ranses are different from all other ranges because they give you twenty Crawford advantages that make good cooking a habit. S8 feki Go and see that wonderful Single Damper which “Kindles"—* Bakes"—“Checks” with one simple motion. Your Crawford Dealer will give you at least twenty good reasons why you should own one. AW i FOR SALE BY J. 0. MILLS & CO., WEST MAIN STREET SALES THA Wi THIS WONDERFUL the lacquer on A wonderful value as . $3.75 good quality Ticking. . $4.25 . $5.50 e $7.98 $12.9 " e guaranteed 1007 pure. toom, Reductions During This Sale. All new Spring Coverings, Tapestries included. Come Early for Choice 1058 Selections as assured | T AR ANY FURNITURE MORE FLOOR SPACE, AK G HAVE DEC BV HARTFORD HAS EVER IT A TOTAL 30,000 RADICALLY HELD. SQUARH ON OUF and to secure it wi He To facilitate alterations we MUST have space, Going Housekeeping? Gontemplate Moving No betcer opportunity than right nov Furniture A small deposit r buy until August 1st, provided the furniture be wanted until then and stored free 0 White Fnamel Beds. of charge 1g8: 2-inch post, full sizes $6.2 50 White Enameled Beds, with brass ] e e $4.98§ White Enameled, all Steel Bed, 2-ing with © heavy fillers 7 5 . considered value at $8.50. DINING TABLES $13.50 Solid Oalx Table. Sale Price ... $16.560 Quartered Sale Price Quartered Price $21.50 Quartered ale Price .... $27.50 Dining Table Pedestals. Sale Price . $29.00 Diring Table. Sale Price ‘Main St., One Mllllon ahd rhree und Thousand Ford Owners Now Encircling the Earth to bu all will nc you! needs. rves yo it costs ¢ Sale Price ts, Sale Sliding g00d Sale Price Couch $5.25 $2.49 Oak Table. Sale Library and Oak Table. Near Morgan, HAT OR There Must Be a Reason--There Is a Reas It Is Economy--First, Last and Always BUY YOURS TOMORROW THE.UNIVERSALICAR Economy—in low first cost and small cost to operate and maintain. Strength —ability to stand up under the hardest sort of wuse. Simplicity — a plain sturdy motor is a wonderfully strong and light car, easy for anyone to run and care for. The Ford car—your necessity. Runabout $390; Touring Car $440; Coupelet $590; Town Car $640; Sedan $740, f. 0. b.Detroiot. On sale and dis- mer Automobile C 22 Main St., New Britain Headquarters Hartford Branches: ‘Willimantic New Britain Torrington M Winsted e lca word each d;y bays for a classified adv. in the He You get results. That’s what you want.

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