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City Items St. Mary’s Lady T. & 'will mecet this evening in sct American Hosiery sweaters. Tegnier lodge, Order of Vasa, will '“COME! FOR conomic catas- g injury are the ac- : A solution can_and must| The President speaks for_the NEW, BRITAIN DAILY HERALD! THURSDAY, OCTOBER 12, 1916. OUR MUTUAL WELFARE.” oG ”j“‘\]vW T I I it hold an important meeting, October ntry and commands its united Support. 16. All mem are ed to at- Q B A son, Howar r: has been | born to Mr. and X Howard V Smith of Northampton, Mass., form- erly of this city Willilam Krah, employed by the New England Paper company of Hart ford, not the police this noon that s he was driving his auto on Hart- ord avenue a small boy named ‘rank Anbachesky, 11 yvears old, of 2 Elm street steppe 1 front of ar and was knocked down. He Was not badly injured. g | With but little pcmp or ceremony | the democratic banner was unfurled this afternoon from the Leland build- ing to the Stanley building. DEATHS AND FUNERALS. a4 Mrs. Emma Louise Sanders. " { Mrs. Emma Louise Sanders, widow of the late John L. Sanders, died this morning at her home, 30 Hartford Bvenue. She was forty-one years old. | Roll Doors may be had if preferred The funeral will be held from her late | home Saturday afternoon and inter- £ s y ¢ ° ment will be in Fairview cemetery L VRIE ST, 7 5 : s th ; : -2 ; hat t e HOOSIER a Mrs. Elizabeth Heslin. g AR A A SR i a2 ' ° Mrs. Elizabeth Heslin, wife of Wil- R " ¥ ¥ g iy L S liam J. Heslin, died late yesterday af 2 i o & Fon 2 | p 4 l Ou ternoon at her Winthrop | g P 3 R > i g R PD 4 . ¥ home on treet following an illness which be- gan during the summer when she hag# Iptomaine poisoning contracted whife on her vacation at the shore. AShe as twenty-five years old. Besig€s her usband, she leaves two small sons, enneth and William, and” her par- | pnts, Mr. and Mrs. Robept’ Longzettel. | The funeral will be Held from St. Poseph’s church a § o’clock tomor- ow morning and jfterment will be In he new CatholipZcemetery. —Places for 400 articles all within arm’s reach. —40 labor-saving features, each like a helping hand. —The Hoosier will cut your kitchen work in half. —Will save you miles of steps. —Will save you hours of weary toil. —Will make it a pleasure to cook and bake. —Will save your energy and beauty, and keep you feeling young and strong. —W ill help you get good meals quickly. —Will help you tidy up in just a few moments when the meal’s over. Centralized Storehouse Prices and Terms There are over 1,000,000 Hoosier Cabinets in use. Enormous factory output makes our low prices, which now range from $00.00 to $00.00, possible. Have the Hoosier delivered at once by paying only $1.00! You may make payments at the rate of $1.00 per week, without extra cost or interest. And regardless of the room in your kitchen, there’s a special Hoosier model to fit, au a price you can easily afford. We Can Tell You About the Hoosier—But You Must See It. We can talk about these wonderful con- veniences, but to really appreciate the great amount of time the Hoosier will save you, you must see and examine these features yourself in our store. SIDENT'S PUBLIC SERVICE ~-- WHEN THAT SERVICE WAS SORELY NEEDED, AND BEFORE CANDIDATE HUGHES DISCOVERED IT COULD BE TWISTED e— INTO A MUSH-NEEDED "ISSUE"! Mrs, /Mary A. Garrett. Mrs. Mgfy A. Garrett, wife of Cyrus | BT YOS Tribune, A“S‘ISt Fifteenth, Garpét Dwight street, died at AT % P o'gifck this morning at the Hart- () hospital at the age of 60 years. ‘husband is the only survivor. The funeral will be held Saturday fternoon at 30 o'clock from the | Btanley Memorial church, Rev. J. E. | [ mnnne e Stephano Passengers Lost All Baggage When U-Boat Destroyed 1 heir Ship __IT VWASN'T _ "PLAYING POLITIUS"~-THEN! TO AID OF VILLA The Vital Part of Your Cabinet. The picture above shows how the scientific arrangement of the Hoosier makes it a real helper. Storage space is above and below. There is plenty of unhampered room above and around the aluminum (or porcelain) work-table. weir Hatred and Fear Would Not Prevent Them From Joining Him nst Americans. El Paso, Tex., Oct. 12.—Notwith- inding the sufferings of peons in the {rict in which Villa is now operat- | they would rise to a man in Villa’s | There are no useless little partitions to chop up the space and leave no room for work. | 3 ; o v i s ig table space to ehalf if the American punitive expe- 8 t i ! 5 5. 4 P 3 \\\?:;; ::b“"l‘el:e x;z’;tfi::\gver:g;t tal D! fon were to attempt to move south | X 2 3 ¢ its present base, according to the o : (o 2 R : GOME AND SEE THESE SIX EXOLUSIV eport made to his superiors today by HOOSIER FEATURES: Mexican Protestant missionary who just returned from a visit to cen- X 1 Mexico. ’ RS ; 3 4 2—The gear-driven shaker flour sifter which peons, he explained, fear and : makes flour light and fluffy. have been taught 3—Scientific arrangement—articles needed that the Americans would o after Villa only with the masked most frequently easiest reached. urpose of seizing and annexing the ountry. Many refugees, the mission- y reported, who come out of the in- ntion of going to the United Stat re stopped at Chihuahua City 1 3 :rran“x rwrfi In: agents who tell | s Sy L > B - bins, r small utensils, or John A. Andrews & Co. 132 MAIN STREET 1—The all-metal glass front flour bin. Just remember that tomorrow for only $1 you can start using these labor-saving fea- tures in your kitchen, and come in today. 4—Revolving caster (shown in center of il- Instration). 5—The ingenious, big-capacity sugar bin— Have a demonstration of its exclusive work- holds more han twice as much as most other atine L raatites s ot Tation inonti e o you don't want to buy now. But at least learn why over a million woman can't do without a Hoosier, Deming, N. M., Oct, 12.—Nineteen lexicans held by army authorities at | olonia Dublan for alleged cannec- ion with the Villa raid on Columbus, {. M., March 9, have been indicted by | he Luna County grand jury, it be- ime known today. All are charged vith murder. i THREE FIRES TODAY. 'wo Still Alarms and One Bell Alarm; : No Serious Damage. | oy : s P N : s : S — tleship Minnesota, relieving C. B. Mor- | wounded, in the battle of the Marne |asked: '“Captain Dumas, after a life gan, assigned to the naval college at |six times. No man ever liked war|of honor and lovalty, on August 12 better for its dangers or loved France |died for France, the death he had e, more, so that the official notice of |always desired.” Engine company No. 5 called ut by a still alarm at 9:55 o’clock ; _ his morning. The fire was in a clothes Sy, 3 § hEey Newport. loset at the home of A. Wenzel of i i oot i 78 East street. The damage was e sesamnane (New York Sun.) name was Dumas, Captain not D’Artagan, but there is a certain appropriateness in the fact. He was mortally wounded in the battle of Clery on August 3, and a week later he died. Captain Dumas : enlisted as a Pantifical Zouave in rd avenue, F 3 e 5 St : = 1867 when he was 19. He was a sol- B : : > o & dier all his life, fighting in the Franco- j : L s : 5 R Prussian war, in Algiers, Tunis, on ’ : > D> e R A, the Tvory Coast, in the Sudan, the CEES AssCenrion Gaboons, in Morocco, and down in When the German submarine or- | New York city with the intention of | York, with her two children, Kather- “m\!’r:hi‘w::il.nf 66 the captain again ‘ourt of Probate holden at | dered the crew and passengers off | establishing a home in that city. ine and Ettie Mari L ] n within and for the Dis- | the steamship Stephano before sink- “I lost everything,” said Mrs Kosh- | fellow passenger. Georsr® wion IS & | offered his sword to France when the ict of in the County of Hart- ing the vessel the men and women |er, “all my household goods.” No. 1 ia troger, George Kennedy.|great war in Europe began, but on rd = te of Connecticut, on the | had no time to save their baggage, Mrs. Kosher said that she had | with some of thy Of . uenodilscdint oreeaihis seovices ez Sy hith a: ber, A. D., 1916. jand all was lost with the Stephano. | relatives in Brooklyn and would go | cuing destroyer 5 (3:;:, Or\fh‘* Tes- | pathetically declined The Belgian gresent, I rd F. Gaffney, 1, | One of the women passengers, Mrs.|to live with them. Mrs. Kosher is|the Kansan, the ship which }\-:« held Z"""‘};‘L ¥‘°‘€§VG‘§'1(SZCZ‘;T§(\ l;;}:?r'ne 5,‘? e ougl in e ba 2 D 3 idge artin Kosher of St. John S e e n L E : ol No. 3 ccompanying | up by the T'-53 s _ E On motion of Carleton Williams of | Was bringing her household goods to | picture, made on her arrival in New | coed to Bostar, o+ PeTmitted to pro- | time in the Darastollongeampalen, e and at last at Verdun. He was often 1d W 3 ain, as Executor of the testament of Ellen Wil- | ; e ms, New Britain, within said COLUMBUS DAY, TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION. strict deceased | i o’clock Engine company as called out by a still alarm Volkenheim’s block at the corner f Broad and High streets. A bonfire | et fire to the porch of the block, but | Jre damage was small. | yunded from ¥ the fire be! Limitation of Claims, pretty sight in the parade, recommended In the report of the s e e 5t i ) Following the parade there was a Jjoint commissi »n legislati 3 T""; ‘:{'}’r:“;‘\'\"'!"m“ _ that = six | pnited Ttalian Societics Iave Parade | big meeting in Lithuanian hall on | matters rel mx:;"m(“hulx(g nl“,‘,tl“’." 2 z“((‘ro(‘ulur\;, of said Lm;] i “Y”M\‘hi[»';.v i This Afternoon. Par street. Prominent Italians | submitted today to the i»i.»n;nnlm(o(::x\' Homesbaking §§ Niceroomea Il : ; made addresses 3 R A Lodavitonthe st 5. 1o-12:sa B e i e e (‘l\i:)\'("(‘ld“L'\]:}:Lsr:n\d\"-ld:”s:utni;\i‘l\:| 1”( ventlon of the Protestant Lpiscopal vision street. Tel Kec 5 L i ¥ T 2 7 2 as S ar cele- c¢hurch - — = = —— socutor el Gl that public no- [ ing practically every Italian resident | bration in Turner hall, where, this WANTED— lesladies for :;nge: R \],"\','“11”-"- hbi e ut in force to- | evening there will be a banauet. Saturday afternoons and evenings, ewspz iblished in | day to pay tribute to the memory of lso Monday evenings. Good pa pid New ‘Britain, and having a circu- | Christopher Columbus on th his shington, Oct. 12.—Captain A. T. o m‘“mg R A £ Calltat “.\Cey tion in said district, and by posting | birthday anniversary. Décorations ANTI-DIVORCE RUI | Long, supervisor of naval auxiliaries | Raphael Department Store copy thereof on the public sisn post | were numerous and in the parade that | St. Louis Mo., Oct. 12.—A church | at Norfolk, Va., was assigned by the said mw"huresl?n‘; Britain, nearest | took place this atternoon the Italian | law forbiading clergymen to solemn- department today to command ‘:el{’ ace wher e flag took rw'\m" pla ; only to the |ize a marriage for a person divorced | the battleship Connecticut of the At- | WANTED—Good laundress to take & | ican uto; iles were ar-|for any cause arising after marriage, | lantic fleet in place of Ca 3 h family washing Apply 5 BERNARD F. GAFFNEY, Judge istic decorated and presented a | while the divorced pariner lives, was | Durall, who is transferred th ihe bas: el e R > i WANTED -— Gentlemen boarders. SCTICUT. 10-12-14