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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1916. as at Greene’s! Ex,perlenu?, and ccmmon sense say |‘Reserve your Christmas Gifts of Diamond Platinum and Solid Gold Jewelry, Diamonds, Platinum and.Solid Gold Rings, Watches,Clocks and Silverware, at Greene’s early.” Come to the modest Jewelry Stpre while there is elbow room at the long show cases, all bright with Jewelry that we guarantee. All marked in plain figures with prices that save moyney. Come before the Christmas crowds; come while there is plenty of time to give your orders for engraving the most careful attention; come before shopping is impeded by bad weather; come while you can make deliberate Jew elry Selections at Greene’s, so as to satisfy yourself and delight yourself and delight the hearts you have in mind at Christmas. DIAMONDS AS LOW- DIAMONDS AS LOW- PRICED AS THEY PRICED AS THEY EVER WILL BE EVER WILL BE ' Eveln if it were announced tomorrow that large quantities of in- ferior Diamonds had been discovered, American buyers in general Short supply and great demand that spread like a prairie fire cause Diamond prices to go up, and they are going higher. You save would not be interested, but they are interested to know that despite hard conditions in the market, Greene’s direct importers of fine Dia- money when you buy from us, because we import our Diamonds direct and mount them here on the premises—no middleman to pay. A »monds (no middlemen to pay), chosen by our experts, are supplying small profit satisfies us because we sell so many Diamonds. SOLITARY DIAMOND ENGAGEMENT RINGS §25.00 {0 $1,500.00 b Christmas needs as usual. QUAINT GOLD SIGNET RINGS Beautiful fashion of Signet Rings which began when a seal was a signature continues and gives opportunity for the rich carving on Greene’s Solid Gold Signet Rings from 98¢ up; with Diamond, $10.00 up. No charge for engraving monograms, but please give your orders early. PREFECTION IN WEDDING RINGS Sentiment revolts at the idea of an inferior Wedding Ring. And Old family jewelry remod- eled in the Greene factory et into fresh forms of beauty at 18-karat . up up it welcomes Greene’s Seamless Solid Gold Wedding Rings, the ship of which cannot of course be 1y represented in apy picture. Every style and shape. sale makes at least two friends for the housc. lustre and splendid workmar fa Every 22-karat . 14-karat . 18-karat . 22-karat . 5 up up up factory expense. remounted, cleaned, settings Diamonds Solid 14-karat green gold signet ring, lined sides $5. Conventional design, solid 14-karat green gold signet $7.50. ring Grecian design, pierced sides; solid 14-karat green gold signet ring .... $10.00. Plerced, entwined design sides; solid 14-karat grecn gold signet ring $12.00. out charge. ! DIAMOND AND SOLID GOLD CHRISTMAS BRIDE. GIFTS FOR BRIDESMAIDS, BEST MAN. Engraving with- GIFTS TO HONOR U THE- 14-karat . . 18-karat ., 22-karat 14-karat 18-karat 22-karat .. up up up up up up up > Solid 14-Karat Gomf Bracclet Gold Bracelet (steel spring.) sion Bracelet Watch has movement. Case de $14.98. 14-karat exten- welled is engraved and Watch is chable and can be jvorn on pin or chain, Silver Bracelet $19.00. Solid 14-karat Watch and Solid 14-karat Swiss extension movements . and silver buckles Silver Watches with Bracelets of extension Gold-filled Watches, with guaranteed Swiss movements, Bracelets of extension links $6 to of extension links links and guaranteed ‘Watches, with leather straps .$8.00 to $12.75. .$8.00 to $18.00. Gold Watches wtih Bracclets $15.00 up. Gold Watch Bracelets with ‘Waltham . $17.00 up. made firm. Ladies’ Solid 14k gold signet ring Other Solid Gold Christmas preser up; Knives, $2.98 up; Cigar Cutters, $4. Gold 7-Jewel Watches The movements are 7-Jewelled and in guar- unteed Solid 14k Gold Cases. Every Watch wold with the distinct understanding th will refund cver your money within one year from date of purchase if not satis- ‘actory. or Engraved sides, antique shield; solid 14-karat green Solid Gold Lavallieres, 98¢ up; with Diamond, $2.48 up. Green gold solid 14-karat Hepplewaite design signet $10.50. ring $15.00. ats for men; Scarf Pins, 98¢ up; with Diamond $2.48 up; Tie Clasps, $1.35 00 up; Monogram Fobs, to order, $15.00 up. NEW LAVALLIERES All Platinum hand- made Lavalliere and CObain, 8 full cut, fine Diamond $75.00. Full Cut, fine Dia- $75.00 One fine Diamond, neatly set in solid 14-k gold Lavalliere, $5.98. Solid 14-karat gold plerced Lavallicre, set with one fine Dia- mond . $9.98. 17 Fine Diamonds, mounted in hand-made platinum Lavallicre of original design. Very attractive . ... $135.00. Complete assortment of brilliant Lavallieres includes remarkable settings of directly imported Diamonds and other precious . stones. Prices are as remarka- ble as the designs. In buying Lavallieres or other Christmas jewelry you have the benefit of our many years study of cutting down need- less expense of business, Platinum and Diamond Lavallieres, $33.00 up. 811 MAIN STREET, HARTFORD PEACEMAWERS GET USUAL TREATHENT { And Several Face His Honor in| ] Police Gourt ]’ of Peacemakes had a | in George W; Epps’ Main street restaurant early Sunday morning, according to testipnony of geveral defendants before' Judge James T. Meskill in police court to- day, with the members receiving the neual fare accorded those attempting to interfere when several decide to gettle their differences in a lpugili manpner. The session resuitkd in visit ‘by ‘the police and seveh arre: 'bose accused of shattering lthe early Sunday morning quiet and taiking part i# the trouble solemmly testified that they were only trying to dheck the conduct of others in the restaurant. Judgment was handed dowh as fol- lows: George Van Epps, proprietor, charged with asdault, dis charged; James Rouland of Beatty street, charged with assdult and Prgach of the peace, fined $20; Wil- jiam Delaney, 58 Main street, charged with breach of the fined $10 and costs with probation, allpwed last February following aignfnent on intoxication and breach of fhe peace charges, revoked; I’rmlrn('l} Green, 458 Main street, charged with breach of the peace, fined $10 anld costs; Thomas Birmingham, Newington, eharged with breach of the peace and assault, judgment suspende bian, Main street, breach of the peace, judgment sus- pended. : The Order lively session peace, 0 days in jail for as- | He took | At- sentenced to ault upon his wife Sunday. an appeal under bonds of $100. | torney Daniel E. O'Keefe appeared | ‘or the defense. Mrs. Kobelus com-\ plained to Chief William J. Rawlings | that she had been beaten over the head | and arms with a strap. In court, the | latter tesiified that the complainant’s | arms were much discolored from ~rists to elbows and that one hand was lacerated. Policemen Willlam McCue and Frederick Wagner made | the arrest, ‘ Mrs. Kobelus, who works in a fac- | tory days and does the housework at night, testified that it was the third time within five months that she has been assaulted. She said that the latest trouble began when she asked Kobelus to use some of his money for groceries instead of using so ruch for liguor. Kobelus, who appeared in court well dressed, denied that he had started the trouble and claimed that s wife had been abusive since he objected to her taking boarders. Tollowing adjournment of court, Kobelus was given warning by Chief Rawlings that conduct of the type complained of by his wife will not be tolerated Non-Support Charge Nolled. A non-support charge brought against Albert Borducka of Orange street by his wife was nolled. The ac- ppeared in court with his right m in a sling.| It was explained that he fell down a flight of stairs at his home Saturday night and received a fractured wrist. Mrs. plained that she does not wish to have him sent to jail but desires some method whereby she will be better provided for than she claims to have been. Amazons in Row, Mrs, Annic Savage, 141 Chestnut street, was charged with assaulting Mrs, Helen Janowicz, 53 Pleasant street, vesterday with a pan of scald- Borducka ex- | and she was transferred to the hos. pital in the ambulance. Mrs. Savage were arrested. mer was fined $5 and costs for intoxi- cation in court today. l May Settle Pittsburgh Case. | Phillipa Pignatarro and Frank | Mairne, wanted by the Pittsburgh au- thorities on charges brought by an in- stallment house in that city, were | held until tomorrow with bonds con- tinued at $500 each. Franklin T. McQuaide, detective attached to the | secret service djvision of the Pitts-i burgh department, and Police Detec- | tive John T. McCullough of the same | city, were in court. They do not an- ticipate that extradition papers will be received before Thursday. Judge B. F. Gaffney appeared for the de- fense. While reticent whether extra- dition will be contested, those con- nected Wwith the case intimate that a satisfactary settlement may be made. Many Needed “Medicine.” Today's session was not without by those Janowicz and | The for- | | who vielded to John Barleycorn ovef No pleaded that illness was responsible for their conduct. the week-end. less than five They could nat ex- plain why the “medicine” had such an unexpected effect. Judgment varied | with the past record of the accused. | | Entrance of the excuse caused little | attention at first. Those giving it at | I the tall end of the docket received curious inspection by court officials Angelo Berti. 142 Qak street, | charged with operating a motor | vehicle without proper lights Saturday | was discharged after receiving warn- { ing to be more careful in the future, ‘novel excuses being offered i WHEAT FROM HUDSON BAY, New Route Expected to Be Opened by Autumn of 1917, | had | cepted ! American regulation could | as outlined by the murderous having Added Precantions May Be Taken Against Submarines nate destruction by submarine “Herr Zimmerma ates that the Germans are not sinking neutral ships defensive measure, ammunition tran: ports and other contraband shipment a neutral ship carrying a neutral cargo to a neutral country, or to ves- ca ing relief for Belgium, which they destroyed in defiance of all their | l | | i London, Nov. 20.—Under secretary ant ves- | per se, but that they are sinking, as a | Does this apply to the Rlommorsflijl(,‘ Jid City Hall IS BURIED IN SOIL FROM HOME TOWN Aged German Slesps in Earth Blanket of Beloved Land New York, Nov. 20.—The little town helped him, pouring double handfuls of the warm earth into the open chest. That was the chest over which the worn old couple now dreamed. With the war came the knowledge to old Christopher that he would ney- er look again upon the pleasant streets of which he had dreamed. Yet as his strength waned his longing for home incres Only a few days be- fore he crept to his bed for the last time he had sat for hours beside the chest which held all of the fatherland that now remained to him. Christopher A. Hinck rests in the earth of a Montclair cemetery, but he lies with the soil of Germany about pledges? Does it ‘mean that any neu- tral ship with contraband on board may be sunk without warning, or if ! with warning with no more safety | provided for the crew and passengers Zimmermann's statement claiming the right of Germany to sink unarmed ships, which was cabled here in part, coincided Wwith the renewed appeals to the British government to bestir itself , than that afforded by taking to the in the matter of arming all merchant | hoats? Are the same principles ap- ships for defensive purpose: | plied to allied ships, and is it on this Winston Churchill’s assertion in the ground that the Germans justify the House of Commons on Thursday that, | sinking without warning of the pas- roughly, four-fifths of the armed ships senger steamer Arabia, of the Sussex, beaten off submarine attacks,!or the outward bound liner Arabic, or while four-fifths of the unarmed ships | of the Lusitania? | attacked perished, is generally ac- “The reference made to the rules as accurate, and forms the of cruiser warfare is curious. Those basis of an argument strongly ad-. rules lay down that neutral prizes vanced in some quarters that British v be destroyed, if at all ,only in and allied merchantmen should have cases of exceptional necessity. Did guns mounted not only aft but fore that exceptional necessity e: in the as well, seeing that the best method of cases of the William P. Frye and the defense against the submarine is the Maria, two ships sunk by German offensive cambination of ramming and cruisers at the beginning of the war? gunfire. The rules of cruiser warfare also de- Advocates of this -extreme view | mand that ships should not be at- admit that ships so armed would not ' tacked and the lives of those on be allowed to trade with American board endangered unless the ships | ports; but they urge that, while the offer resistance and that the passen- be . com- | gers and crews should be put in plied with in respect to vessels plying places of safety, if, owing to excep- to America, no such restriction need tional circumstances, the prize has to | apply to ships touching only at British be destroved. or allied ports. This, of course, is “It is indeed only an individual view, and no official years of German submarine sanction has yet been given to it. on record, to be told that it The British official view of the de- | tised in conformity with these laws. velopments of the submarine question, | German under surprisir with two MINE FIRE STILL BURNS, | Pled street, of Kehdig Bruch, near Hamburg, in Germany, always lay just beyond the mortal vision of Christopher A. Hinck. His fading eyes looked out indifferently upon the steep streets and new houses of Montclair, N. J. He had lived and hod taken an hon- orable and prominent place in the community here for years. It was here that his wife had borne him children and he and she had reared them. His son Ernest C. had been Monteclair’'s mayor. Christopher Hinck felt proud of this and yet, often when he looked out up- on the pleasant leafy vista beyond the window pane, he saw instead a cob- and square stone houses with red tiled roofs, and a clean swept market square where red cheeked peasants laughed together | and clattered over the cobbles on wooden shoes in the bright German sunlight. That was home. That was Kehdig Bruch, where he had been | born, Kehdig Bruch, which he had left to seek his fortune in the New him. Before the coffin was closed vesterday his wife had the chest ought to its side. Then with her own withered hands she poured half of its contents in about the body of her husband, even as a girl more than 2 half century ago she had poured | this same soil into the chest and had laughed at her young husband’s talk | of death. When she goes to join him again the chest will stand empty. She will lie at his side in all that remains on this side of *:e Atlantic of the soil of | Kehdig Bruch. ksl ) | BELGIANS TOLD TO REBUILD. Residents of Dinant Must Reconstruct Houses, Germans Announce. via London, 72920 the Tele- graaf, the Germans have ordered the | owners of houses which were wrecked World! Afty-seven years aso. | in Dinant, Belgium, in August, 1914, 1d then sometimes when the old | to rebuild rapidly as possible. If were dim, and the longing more | they are unwilling to re-erect thelr ieartbreaking than usual, Christopher | houses they must remove the wreck- Hinck would steal away to the attic |age and make the site into a garden. and opening a heavy chest thn3-5tood | mhe town of Dinant, the Telegraaf there, plunge his hands deep into its | cavs has been ordered to rebuild the contents. Perhaps his wife would find | pelfry of the church taward which the him there, and sitting down at his | Gormans offer a subsidy of 600 pounds side over the open box the two would [ g Cp ot T udget, 7 N m.—According to Amsterdam, v, 20, According to the testimony, the sev- en were in the restaurant and trouble started when Green and Rolland en- gaged In a friendly boxing bout. Hpps testified that he separated them =T 2nd had no more than got to the | dition tinued vear of the room when more trouble started, In the mixup, 2 and TRouland received discolore Green suffered a cut upper. ing water. Mrs, Janowicz wa: spital, and chest. until Thursday. {to ga without ball. According to police ported to be in New Britain General | seriously burned about her |lief that the export of Because of her con- ‘fhearing of charges was con- Because of { her children, Mrs. Savage was allowed information, Mr. and Mrs. Janowicz called at the s re- St. Johns, N. F., Nov. 20.—The be- wheat from Western Canada to Eurape by way of Hudson Bay may be begun in the autumn 1917 was expressed by officers | of the New Foundland sealing steamer Nascopic, which has just returned from her last trip of the season to woeants 'W. C. Hart and Gedrge Kelly with Policemen James Skglly, Wil- llam Grace and Patrick Quirk figured fa the arrests. Several were located at the restaurants while the others were picked up on the street. - Beat Wife With Strap, John Kobelus, 68 Booth street, was 1 t Savage home Sunday morning. There were differences and trouble followed. Echoes of it were received by Police- man Walter F. Malona at headquar- ters and Policeman Willlam McCue was sent to Investigate. He sum- moned Dr. J. L. Kelly. First aid treatment was given Mrs. Janowicz Fort Nelson. They said that the construction of the railway from Winnepeg to Fort Nelson and the building of shipping terminals at that port warranted the explanation that a start on the use of | the new route would be made before the close of navigation next fall. secretary of state for foreign affairs, is sented in a statement from the h foreign office. This statement s not to be understood to be a com plete reply to Herr Zimmermann’s in terview, but only a rejoinder to that portion of the Berlin interview which was cabled here. sh state- ment follows: “It is claor that one of the objects | of Herr Zimmerman's interview is to | dream together of Kehdig Bruch. Together, the two Four Years’ Watchful Wz to Be Failure, ting Proves chest. Their marr | a thrilling event of topher was brave, After being sealed and barricaded from the outside air for nearly faur years for the purpose of extinguishing | a fire, surface indications in a coal live over again the day they filled the | young and stalwart and their steamer tickets were bought and on the morrow they were to leave their native s long past and | pag protested against the old people would | RECITAL organist at ‘the Herbert . a PLEASING ORGAN e was then still | | Theron yesterday. Chris- | W. Hart, and ' First Church, ass ted | Anderson, violinist, by very en- | joyable organ recital in that church village for the | This recital is the first mine at Corbin, B. C., today showed that the fire had not exhausted itself and was spreading underground to an alarming extent. Assistance was summoned from justify the torpedoing without warn- ing of defensively armed merchant ships. The arming aof ships for de-| fense is well recognized and is pe fectly legal, and it is a matter of | here, and mine inspectors left with which it is effrontery for the Germans | general equipment to make an exami- to complain, in view of their repeated | nation of fhe mine. | 1ast evening. | of a series of monthly recitals to be given by Mr. Hart at the church and from the attendance that greeted his efforts last evening the success of the series is guaranteed. A very pleass ing program was rendered in excel lent style. new world. “Tt is sad to leave,” Christopher had said, as he drove his spade into the soil, “but we will take the earth of | Kehdig Bruch with us wherever we g0, and when we die, we shall be bur- | ied in it, is it not so, liebchen.” And the girl had laughed as she