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NEW. BRITAIN DAILY HERALD. SATURDAY, JULY 8, 1916. Make Your Wedding Gift Selection From Our Choice Line of STERLING SILVER, HA D PAINTED CHIN AND CUT GLASS, Also we have a large stock of fine Jewelry suitable for brides, bridesmaids gifts and ushers. =l Porter & Dyson Co. 54 MAINS TREET Where Quality is as Represented. City Items | company the team, leaving on the 7:20 dinky. Your Neckwear always at Wilson’s n anniversary high mass was cele- ftedt at St. Mary’s church this morn- for the deceased members of the es' Auxillary, A. O. H. olumbia tires give unusually long fice because they are toughened or a.secret process—at Rackliffe's, Park street—advt. fiatteo Clarizia has made applica- to the county commiseioners for fuor license at No. 10 Main street. earing will be given on the matter 81 at 10 a. m. in the county missioners office. [he fourth anniversary of the Vi- A. C. club will be celebrated b a picnic at Hart's Pond, Kensing- its at Wilson’s—reduced prices. fivt. e degree team of Sir Francis e lodge, No. 429, will go to Bris- bn Monday evening to initiate a b of candidates for Friendship o of that city. About twenty bers of the local lodge will ac- DELL-ANS bsolutely Removes digestion. One package bves it. 25c at all druggls Developing and Printing that Look Fine Bring your nega- tives .to us and get back the best pic- tures we can possi- bly make from them. Our prices are fair, Our work Is bettered * by the use of Ansco Chemicals and Cyko Paper, the photo ma- erials which always give best results. Load yev;r camera ith Speed: wri lark & Brainerd Drug Store 181 Main Street lex reduced prices.—advt. The various Masonic orders about the city have decided to discontinuc their meetings during the months of July and August. All active work will be resumed in the fall. Samuel Wray of 849 East street, as- sistant superintendent of the local Prudential company, is recovering from an accident he received the Fourth when a firecracker exploded {n his face. At the first monthly meeting of Phoenix Temple of Honor, held last evening, it was decided to keep all members of military companies in god standing while away. Carl G. Carlson of 51 Trinity street has returned from the DuPont Powder company plant at Hopewell, Va., where he wasengaged in Y. M. C. A. work. Mr. Carlson is undecided about returning as he finds the weather rather warfn in that section of the country at this time of year. Genuine §1 Athletic Union 60c, at Wilson's.—advt. Miss Mary C. Gorman reports an enrolment of 410 pupils at the vaca- tion school in the Grammar school and an expected increase of from forty to fifty soon. Last year the en- roliment was about 380. Miss Helen Clark, ( in charge of the vacation high school reports an enroll- ment of sixty-four and that sewing is taught with excellent results. Norman P. Cooley is ill at his home on Sunnyledge where he underwent a slight operation yesterday. Andrew Leary of Hartford, tripped and fell on Church street last evening, inflicting an ugly gash in his head. He was taken to the hospital for treat- ment. Benjamin Pereau of Stanley stree complained to the police yesterday that a dog owned by Charles Palmer on Stanley street had bitten him. Three $1.50 Shirts $3.00, at son’s—advt. Suits Wil- The Goodness Bread advt. Howard Kinne, Ralph Campbell, Wm. Scheye, and Wm. Gaudian are spending a couple of weeks at the W. A. Kinne's cottage at Farview, Mil- ford. The Chamber of Commerce and the credit bureau will be closed Satur- day at one o’clock during the months of July and August. The paint to be used for the im- provements at the post office has ar- rived and will be stored in the base- ment until the arrival of the paint- ers. of “Aunt Delia’s Four applicants for the clerk car- rier service of Plainville were given cxamln'\tlons by Secretary Frank . Cadwell today. PURE AND WHOLESOME ARSAY Pure, Imported Oil for one Better. OLIVE OIL medicinal or Table use. 30c, 60c and $1.00 Bottles HICKINSON DRUG CO., 169-171 MAIN STREET BRISTOL BUSINESS MEN PLAN MEETING Local Manufacturers Will Attend; Ohject of Series of Talks Business men of Bristol have ar- ranged to hold a special industrial conservation meeting at the rooms and under the auspices of the Bristol Chamber of Commerce on Tuesday evening, July 11th, (1916.) The fea- ture for the occasion will be an ad- dress by John T. Kirby of New York, Special Representative of the Nation- on “Insuring Conservation Movement, on “Isuring Prosperity by Conserva- tion and Co-operation.” More than 200 invitations have been issued and from the present prospects a capacity audience is already assured. Some of the prominent merchants and manu- facturers of New Britain, Waterbury, Hartford, Southington, Meriden and Windsor Locks have promised to at- tend. The meeting at the rooms of the Bristol Chamber of Commerce is one of a series which will be held by trade bodies in practically every industrial center of Connecticut and is part of a nation-wide educational movement inaugurated a few months ago by prominent industrial interests in all sections of the United States. Presents Business Side. It is hoped by such a means to eliminate the misapprehension which exists in the public mind to a large extent, concerning the methods, mo- tives and principies on which Ameri- can business operations are conduct- ed. The business man’s side of the case against the flood of unfair and unnecessary legislation intended to restrict business men and industrial interests will be brought before every citizen. The inter-dependence of em- ployers, wage-earners and the pub- lic in general, together with the need for greater co-operation and a better understanding between all factors in industry is to be demonstrated in a natfonal publicity campaign. Tndus- trial preparedness for the competi- tiver following the European war is also to be carried far and wide as a national slogan. Mr. Kirby, who will speak at the meeting In Bristol, has long been a public speaker on business problems. In his experience along this line, Mr. Kirby has visited no less than 190 towns and cities, preaching the ser- mon of better business by co-operat- ive methods. Suitable resolutions on the subject of our present industrial needs will be drawn up and presented for adoption at the conciusion of Mr. Kirby's address. HIGH SCHOOL SCRAP IS NOT ENDED YET Alumni Council Members Will Principal to State Reasons for His Actions. Ask Determined to stand for what they conslder their rights, the alunini members of the High school ataletic council, Howard Timbrell, John . Curtin and Willlam S. Judd, are pre- paring a letter to be sent to Principal Slade of the High school asking his real reasons for demanding Dr. Frank Zwick's resignation as coach. This step is being taken as in his lectter demanding the coach’s discharge Prin- cipal Slade preferred no charges against the man and simply asked that he be let go because of publicity given a meeting of the council, at which the coach was not even pr ent. The alumni members have decided that in case they get no sat! tion from Principal Slade they will take the matter directly to the board of education and ask that the prir pal be called before that body next Friday and explain his reason. Dr. Zwick states that he would be only too glad to appear befors the board and hear charges against him. The discussion has not passed en- tirely unnoticed by members of the school board and already some of them are informally taking sldes on the matter. The alumni members have thelr backers on the board as has the principal. SHUTTLE MEADOW CLUB. Recently Incorporated Organization to Adopt Above Title. The recently porated Country organized and Club of New Britain has decided to change its title and after Tuesday night of next week when formal action will be taken it will be known as the Shuttle Meadow club. Several other changes are proposed and will come up at next week’s meet- ing. It is proposed to change the charter so that stock transfers will be valid only with the approval of a majority of the directors. The direc- tors will also ask that they be author- ized to issue all of the unsigned au- thorized capital stock. The certificate of incorporation will also be changed to permit of a larger scope of activity. Several applicarions for stock in the corporation have re- cently been recelved and in order to accommodate them it will be neces- sary to issue more stock 3—FINE—3 2-FAMILY HOUSES 1 ON MAPLE STREET 1 ON CHESTNUT STRE 1 ON LINCOLN STREET CAN BE BOUGHT RIGHT. Other Bargains in Real Estate. Office To Rent. Camp Real Estate Co. 272 Main St. N. B. Nat. Bank Bldg. *Phone 305-6. incor- T R {7 Revolvers HERBERT HARDWARE 336 MAIN STREET L. MILLS = dJ. M. HALLINAN, Inc. Successor to Hallman Bread & lce Cream Compan =- Our Ice Cream Special for Sunday will be: Maple Pecan . . ...60c per qt. The Delicatessen department will = supply you with cooked meats, salads, and specialties for Sunday’s Lunch. for 11 a.m masf be umeredh iveries Del Events Tonight High class photo drama, Fox's the- ater. Vaudeville and Keeney's theater. moving pictures, @) 185 U, hall. Chamberlain council, Jr. M., meets in Jr. O A. M. Vega society, meets in Vega hall. Burritt Grange, meets at 242 street. Main PLAN FOR BAZAAR. Special Committee Meeting to Be Held at Teutonia Maennerchor Hall Tuesday There will be a special meeting of the committee in charge of the United German societies bazaar in the Teu- tonia Maennerchor hall on Tuesday evening. The following are members of the ladies’ committee. Mrs. Jacoh Baumgartner, Mrs. Phil- ip Bardeck, Mr Christian Berg, Mrs. Fred Mautner, Mrs. Fred Zwieb- elhofer, Mrs. Bruno Hentschel, M Gustave Kraus, Mrs. Gustave K wig, Mrs. H. Vogel, Mrs. KElizabeth Heinzmann, Mrs. Paul Koehnle, Mrs. Richard Young, Mrs. W. J.|} Nelid, Mrs. W. Harman, Mrs. George Froeba, Mrs. George Hagist, Mrs. Mary Ellinger, Mrs. A. REichstaedt, Mrs. Richard Schaefer, Mrs. Marie Witz. Mrs. Bucholz, Miss Emma Beerg, Mrs. Henry Ramm, Mrs. A. Schick, Mrs. R. Stumpf, Mrs. Nuss, Mrs. Joseph Weber, Mrs. E. E. Muecke, Mrs. Verena Leist, Mrs. George Schenk, Mrs. Edward Egan. MANY REALTY SALES RECENTLY RECORDED ] " | Property Transfers For First Weck in | July Nnmber 21—Promise of Banner Year. Real estate business for the first week in July shows no falling off and in fact is an indication that the 1916 will be a banner one in the recal- ty field. During the week twenty-one warrantee deeds were filed for rec- ord at the town clerk’s office. The list follow! G. A. Quigley et al,, prow et ux., land and Allen street. Sven J. Johnson to John Thoma et al, land and buildings on Trinity street. William J. Sanders to Adolph Wag- | ner et ux., land and buildings on Fairview street. Louis Pape to Adolph Keller et ux., | Jand and buildings on Oak street. | The Bodwell Land Co., to Carl E. Lantz, land and buildings on Allen street. to Felix Kas- buildings on | J. M. HALLINAN, Inc. Successor to Hallinan Bread & Ice Cream Company "Phone 906. R. | Arthur J. mick, street. Mary ko, land street, Charles Weigand et Krish to James McCor- | land and buildings on Garden | Wickrowski to Charles Sour- and buildings on Willlams ux., to Mrs. A. | ‘d SPUE NV II S?’!19"“9(] &9 B. Cadwell, land and buildings on 3-99 ASYLUM ST. Shooting Game Out of Season—That’s what this Horsfall Sale of Men’s Fancy THREE-PIECE SUITS amounts to! The natural thing to do in a season of such abnormal woolen prices as this would be to mark up the price of every Suit in this sale. The generous thing would be to hold them for regular prices. The unusual thing would be to reduce them and give the public the benefit of values, which under the circum- stances it could hardly expect. But we have done the unexpected—the un- usual —We’ve put our entire line of Three- Piece Fancy Suits on sale at Four Prices, $14.75, $18.75, $23.75, $27.50. HHorstalls iT PAYS TO BUY OUR KIND Connecting with HARTFORD. 140 TRUMBULL 7 dividual vertebrae out of line. NOTHING but palpate the spine it will cost you nothing. THE BARNES Hours 9-12, 2-5. Evenings Subluxations or displacements caused mostly by jars or falls, or they cular contraction, caused by poisons in the body, pulling Many ladies hesitate to be examined by doctors. ING IMMODEST in a Chiropractic analysis of of the spinal vertebrae are may come from great mus- the in- There is NOTH- the spine. We do No local examination internal or external is necessary, as all causes are located in the spinal column There can be no harm from talking your case over with me and G. W. Van Alstyne, D. C. (Grad. Palmer School Chiropractic.) 131 MAIN STREET till 8 o’clock. Phone 1732, Barnett ‘tponski and to Joseph buildings on (r‘nll’\l Realty Co., to Rose Terraro et ux., iand and buildings on Cherry street. Peter Miller to et ux., street. W. J. P. Moore to Clarence Maxon, land and buildings on street. Axel F. lor, land street George land and George Lumber avenue. The Bodwell Land company to Ar- thur Wiberg, land on Stratford road. Peter Krostrzosky to Jacom Kra- wiec, land and buildings on Bond street. Stanley Nichols to E. land on Steele street. E. C. Nichols to land on Steele Edward P. Miller land and buildings on Linwood B Hart Nelson and B. Tay- Wallace to George buildings on I.. Smith to Lena Gorbach, buildings on City avenue. I.. Smith to the New Britain & Coal Co., land on City C. Nichols, Stanley Nichols, ASSAULTS SMALL: BOY. Patrick Devitt Pays Fine of $3 and Costs in Police Court Today Patrick Devitt of Brook street was fined $3 and costs by Judge James T. Meskill in police court this morning on a charge of aulting thirteen- year-old George Weir of Brook street. Devitt pleaded and made no statement. Assistant Prosecutor J. G. Woods told the court that young Weir went into a neighbor’s yvard with permission and picked some cherries. Devitt came along and punched himgin the nose. George Raduna, John Berusick, John Nove and Tilford Guida were each charged in chambers with steal- ing a tent belonging to Ira E. Hicks of West Main street. Raduna and ‘ 14 guilty You need it- We sell it Berusick were let go. Nove, a former inmate of the reform school, was sent back and Guida was sentenced to the school but judgment was suspended during good behavior. VOIGHT-BRAY. . Wedding Will Take Place at Metho- dist Church on Next Friday Noon. Announcement has been made-of the approaching marriage of Howard Voight and Miss Anna Bray which will be solemnized at the Trinity Meth- odist church at noon next Friday. Rev. Warren F. Cook, pastor of church, will perform the ceremony. Both Mr. Voight and Miss Bray are known to a large circle of friends. The former is a son of former councilman H. G. Voight. Miss Bray is the daugh- ter of Mrs. l.ouisa Forsman and is an accomplished musician. WAKE UP WINSTED! of Connecticut’s Fish Story Seriously Endangered— Read the Reason. Laurels Center (Bangor News.) From Houlton, comes the strange story of an infant prophet who, just before her death a few days ago, announced to her start- led parents that the Kaiser would com- mit suicide in August and the great ber of this year. The child, about six months old, had never uttered a distinguishable word up to the day of her death, and so, on the morning of that day her mother was electrified to hear her distinctly ;, when the mother had dropped and broken a dinner plate: “Mother you have broken a plate!” that evening the mother told him the strange story of what the baby had sald. The father laughed increduously | and remarked that his wife must bc‘ | dreaming. “Well, you try it, suggested the wife, | whereupon the father dropped and broke another plate. “Father, you have broken a plate!" | At this the parents became alarmed, THE"POCKET SFLE FILLING" ADRINS PRINTING CO., Fountain Pen Headquarters 66 CHURCH STREET {of | mental or lingual development. | startled | store and gifts shop now and sent for a neighboring doctor, who | never had heard of such an instance ! juvenile abnormal | How- | ever, he said that he would try the | experiment of dropping a plate him- | self. | At once the baby admonished him, | as it had the parents, telling him, with a little more emphasis, that he, too, had broken a plate. ! After a slight pause, the infant all by declaring solemnly. “The Kaiser will commit suicide in August and the war will come to an | end very suddenly in September.” | A few hours afterward the baby | expired, from no cause that the doctor | could discover. precosity or Hargreaves Decorating company open daily from 8 a. m. to 6:80 p. m,, and Saturdays to 10 p. m. Telephone | at store.—advt. the | McGill MAINE’S AFTER YOU | in Aroostook County, | war come to a sudden end in Septem- | | f | j { | Mr. and Mrs, Mondays | B Personals Mr. and Mrs. Charles F. Kuper of Maple street are week end guests of Horace Reynolds of Manchester. Charles Young of Danbury is visit« ing Fred Monsees of East Main street L. Young of Franklin Square with Mr and Mrs. Meehan of Waterbury left today by automobile for Baltimors, where they will attend the Elks' con- vention. South Mr. and Mrs. E. and Miss of 41 Grand s E. D. Tracy Donald F. Tracy is visiting his brother, Larchmont, N. Y. Mrs. for her Point. John Pinchers, summer home Jr., at left today Saybrook E. D. Case and family Blackhall for the remainder summer. have gone te of the H Miles has gone to home, Hitchcock for the remainder his summer Branford, summer. Grove, of the NAVAL V] ERANS MEET. The thirty-third annual the Gideon Welles Naval Veterans' Wi Tuesday, reunion of as-, be sociation will held Rock at the lcox theater at Savin on July 18. All naval veterans of 1861-85 are welcome. Officers will be nlected as delegates and alternates to the nual convention at Kansas City from August § to September an- Mo. When the father returned from work [~ Semi-Annual SALE at Wilg on's City Hall Only the Best at Reduced Prices