New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 6, 1917, Page 2

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)

SPRING CONVENTION 2 et Pt > work W s done in in- FLORIDA has more excellent Golf courses than ever before and winter vacationists are looking forward to some fine sport under nny.skies far from Winter’s chilly winds. SPORT APPAREL of the right sort is very important and Horsfall’s has never been better prepared to furnish it than now. Street, displaying . everything you will need for Sport or Gener- al Wear. See Our Florida Special THorstulls §T PAYS TO BUY OUR KIND £3-99 ASYLUM ST. Cornecting with 140 TRUMBULL SB HARFTORD k for our clea Tow. OIS Methodist chy rotherhood ing plans for a big patriotic ainment to be given at the ! High ciass photo Fox's the- ic ' ball, Fri, Turner hall.— { vestigating rural communities for the e 2 > o he w H H Vaudeville: and moving pictures, P i i T' in F ld nong the lumbermen in the forest This Dangerous Condition .c.couvs e rominent in Their Fie : i 1 the Tndi on the 632 GEgrrarD ST. East, ToroNTO. 14 o has had ex “For two years, I was a victim of dary conimittee common council, | John Stra etary of Mer- ing instructoy all. tiden's ( rities Association | N — and executive secrei of the 1917 | Nashv ! ute for Training Connecticut State Conference of Char- | Workers ities and Correction, that is to meet Besid his charvities work, he is ¢ in his home city April 29-May 1, has | director of the Meriden Bo club, g Warden John Coff is hot on Fail of a dog t has a fondness icks and has made poultry vards e E ater rodd his ecial hunting | Acute Indigestion and Gas In The Telephone s s 1o po- | Stomach. It afterwards affacked my gave reports of | Feart and T had pains all over my body, 4 that the dog re- | go that I could hardly move around. is not licensed. I tried all kinds of Medicine but Woman's Hogie and Foreign e T O el Tt | D, i bnary society of the of them did me any good. At last, I |.y> Npain street ' b Window on Asylum ran church will meet at decided to try ‘‘Fruit-a-tives”’. I | = A z 3 ; K tomorrow afternoon at the | bought the first box last June, and CoNTt B eetlioy entR I fe W oo tatin, of M Julius Sheppard of 55 ) now I am well, after using only three | Turncr hall. 3 g anc s _con- | 5 i o W. L. Morgan lodge, K. of ., meets ble important business sched- to anyonesuffering from Indigestion”, | 1o o S orsan 106 o FRED J. CAVEEN., ' L 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 250, Central Labor union, meets at 34 9 At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruite | Church’ strect. re will be a meeting of Leading a-tives Limited, Ogdensburg, N.Y. i —— lodge, O. S. B. t evening at | New Br 1\ lodge, N. E. O. P. oL e ; - meets in Jr. O. U. A. M. hall. CITY MUCH WORRIED | e Calumet club meets at 53 Church OVER PROPOSED BILL | strect up Clara. R. N. A, meets at ireh street. for transaction. dness of “Aunt Delia’s Bread. | sicia ball, Fri, Turner hall, dance orch. Adm. 25c.—advt. BABCOCK GETS CREDIT. dorsement of plans being formu- | by Chairman Edward G. Bab- | Pipe Line and Reservoir Lands May of the safety board and President Jee B. Clark of the Hartford }1 of fire commissioners; as given Isively in The Herald, whereby “lanent departments of ‘the state organize to give protection and aid to sections having no fire pro- e bn, should there be calls for aid, | might work a hardship on this city, systematic basis is given in the {in common with others, by making | nt issue of The Fire Weekly of | pom pay an excessive tax to small ! : York, an official journal of fire- | merous problems connected with the| Dr. T. Bradstreet of Meriden, | % G0 00 For over eleven years Of the business center, is contained in insurance underwriters, etc. ] work. He was born in Philadelphia, | president of the 1917 Connecticut t 4 4 S iea Tronl Drestd el B % A i ; @ roirs 5 e G phid _ | was ¢ " - sions s m President Horace B. « tan Babeock is given credit for | which pipe lines and reservoirs run, | fect Laxative Bromo Quinine can be | was educated in the public schoo ite Conference of Charities and Cor- | 1{‘;“ e :l"f““:‘.’;‘;“"“; S RCIaTk of the formerbwity'al oara ot ulating thie plan and constderable | at their financial account value. That | taken by anyone without causing |of that city and at the University rection, is to meect in his home| gaviord & 5% 5 iti- fire commissioners to Chairman K- is given to a_detailed description nervousness mor Tinging In the head, | Penngylvania, AC. the lost siaec. no| ity Anril 19-May 1, is a member opj G2ylord’ Farm Senitarium. Politl- Dfe commissioners to Sasiimnad = Cag Special atteion is called to the | . There is only one “Bromo Quinine.” | took host graduate course i one of the olde inithe stara [is2lly,s Moy is) @) republican: filie Isiya S ST C A A0 CEIOR LS S0 ST ] ¢ pay a tax, not on the value of the | . GROVE'S signat i - POSLLE L UG he state| o ber of the First Congregational received today. One of the letters e in announcement on the front 7 S GE 'S signature is on box. | chology and sociology. Although he ' and one well known Colonial his-|{ | : Meria o i Sontains Mitormall borcciationiitia land owned, but on the value of the | advt h 2 L e R e 5| church of Meriden and was, for a time, : al ' aj jon 2 5 3 s received a thorough cducation in the | tory. ] ok Promi-| i perintendent of the Sunday school. thanks. The other is to Chairman _— money put into the land. Thus, if a | e textile business under his faiher, the | nent in ‘professional, civie, humani-| o5 " ber of vears he was a mem- Babcock personally. strip of land cost the city $1,000 and TN work did not appeal and he returned | tavian and fraternal eircles through-| 20 © " Nr Nt cehool board and | The sentiment is expressed that, al- L DRUG B o e e s e DRIVEN INSANE BY to the charities and correctional field, | out the state |it s a matter of pride to nim that no though it is hoped New Britain will i Vi ay ras superintende! > Uni-| Born din Thomaston in 1852, helsalary has ever any never have need to call for aid; the 000 more, instead of having to pay a He was superintendent of the Uni Born ‘in 125 | salary has ever heen attached to any . . C tamion $1,000, the city would have to DOMESTIC TROUBLES versity of Pennsylvania Settlement, | Sraduated from Yale, academic course, [ of the honors bestowed upon him. Hartford department will always stand ¢ 0. pay a tax on $3,000. Resident worker of the Speing stieet | With the class of 1874 and from tho) Besides being president of the Merl- ready to send as much apparatus as is It will be remembered that a num- e S SRING ©t1 College, of Physicians jind Surgeons! den Organized Charities association, possible, should there be need of as- GUT PRICE DRUGS {ber of venrs ago a bill came bofore | Brond Street Man T > settlement in New York city and head-| i, 1877. Since June of the last named | he is president of the Highland Coun- sistance, to work or cover up territory - the legislature of a similar nature and | Man - Fears Mental| worker at the Industrial Home at | date he has been lacated in Meriden. 2d the Meriden Yale Alumni for the losal department. Apprecia- e provided for the taxation of pipe line | Aberration Because of Unhappiness | PiUtsburah. Later he was secretary of | His grandparents, some time back, ociation. He is an executive com- tion is also expressed for the prepara- } lands, etc. A test case was tried in the Tennesseec State Tuberculosis| were Governor and Anne Bradstreet,| mittee member of the Connecticut tions of Chief Robert M. Dame to Sal South Norwalk and Corporation Coun- Because of Home Life, Commission, lecturer and demon (he latter a daughter of Governor| Civil Service Reform association, a take two motor pumping engines ta ,fila Uf e nes y sel J .E. Cooper of this city assisted tor of the Hook Worm Commi Dudley. Dr. Bradstreet’s mother was| member of the Home club and of the Hartford in short order should the call in defending the city. The decision and a special investigator of a daughter of Seth Thomas, foundér| University club of Hartford. + for aid have come, 4 was against the bill and, as a result, it is said that even today the city has a number of unpaid tax bills charged Clan Doug 0. S. C. meets at Main street. ling Star lodge, S. of B. meets lectric hall lof the Seth Thomas Clock Co. | NEW BRITAIN THANKED. & Through his ancestry, he has been ! prominent in the Gov. Dudley Family Royal Arcanum, meets at : : o association and>the Sons of the Ameri- street X . ke : . can Revolution. i Z He is a member of the American, Hartford’s appreciation of New Connecticut and Merident Medical Britain’s readiness to give prompt re- associations, having been president of SPonse with fire apparatus, had thefe he State society in 1913. Since the been need of a call for aid, the night institution of the Meriden City hos- ©0f January 29, when the G. Fox & pital, he has been a member of the C0. and Woolworth stores were de- , | staff and is a member of the boara Stroved, with threatened destruction 4 riford Appreciates Willingness of Fire Department to Give Aid. Account Valu New Briatin people are much in- terested in a bill now before the leg- | islature which, if passed, they believe i | | | Be Assessed at Financial | | i | Daly council, K. o ., meets ,in DR. E. T. BRADSTRE JOHN D. STRAIN Hanna’s hall. - S = made a life-long study of charities | the Humane society, is a member o and. correction methods and has had | the leading Masonic bodies and is a| wide practical experience with the nu- | member of the Colonial club, The' Quinine That Does Not Affect Head towns by assessing land, throush ! pe.ause of its tonic and laxative ef- would mean the city would have to Domestic -troubles following' a separation from his wife and conduct of his children in ignoring him are be- lieved to be responsible for the con- dition of Charles Nelson, painter, of Your Choice of " Bee Soap to them by different small towns about the state. As a result of this test case the bill was so amended that a city Main street, who appealed to Sergeant T. M. Herting at police headquarters, i last night, saying that he feared he Ltagon Soap Powder | ould have to pay on an assessment | was becoming mentally unbalanced. jof “improved farm, land valuation.” | He was locked up for safe keeping Should 'a new bill tnore sjringent be | ana will { Sl be examined for his sanits ttagofl Oap @ANSET | enforced, it is said ‘In the water de- | It is expected that he will be taken { { partment office that it would cost the | to the Town Farm today for observa- | city many thousand.of dollars in addi- | tion. 6 ior 27c ditlonal taxes. The opinion here is Pathetically hel toldl o disagres > L ench s “"f'f"fifl*l it com- | ments with his wife, who lives on Tt iti pels a city to pay for privileges not | Broad street, her refusal to live with Tnlimited uantities.) > street, her refusa e t e = enjoved. him and the conduct of his children in 81c| At the present time New Britain | ignoring him. BURGLARS AT RICHTER'S shman’s Pills, e 19"iSnnthinglon. Plainville, Bristol and i i Attempts Made to Unlock Front and ns, for indigestion, 253¢ size 19¢| Wolcott, for in each of these places s Cold Compound, 25¢ size 19¢ | there is either a reservoir or pipe line 5 leading fro 5 acob's Oil, 25¢ size ........ 20c!} g U f00° -It, for corns, 25¢ ze 18¢ : ROXIDE of HYDROGEN, b bt 19¢ IRIN TABLETS, 2 doz .... 33¢ ARty 100, $1.15. {John Hill Flcvated to Presidency— | —Have Been Thicves® Reward. lorbent Cotton, 1> 39c; % Ib 23c toria for Infants, 35c size ... 22¢| ar of Milk (Merck’s) ....... "1”_“" | officers of the Stanley Works Mutual ud’s Iron Pills, 100 for . 5 *C1Aid association was held in Bar- cara Sagrada Tablets, 100 for ’s hall last evening. John Hill, low's Syrup of Hypo, $1.50 size 99¢ pColds and La Grippe, Storr's the organization, was elevated to the old Tablets s presidency. succeeding Frank Myers. An’s Kidney Pills .... 39¢c| Other officers elected are as fol- jher John's Medicine 49c-91c | lows: Vice president, He‘nr,\' Young; Bi: Erau 19e.91c | secretary-ireasurer, A. G. Bull; di- B, Bmulsion o s | rectors for one vear, James Sieath ANN HOFF M/ EX- and W. F. Costello; director for two 21¢ | years, John FL Fellows. 18¢ STANLEY WORKS M. / . ELECTS i Rear Doors--Postage Stamps Would ] Bull Sccretary-Treasurer. Mystery surrounds a hold attempt to burglarize the local brokerage of- fice of Richter & Co. in City hall building last night, in the heart of { the business section of the city with streets heavily patrolled by police. Je;m% A Corporation Maers of the Highest Grade Turkish and Egyptian Cigareltes in the World. The annual meeting and election of \ for thc past year vice president of 0 The management is puzzled as to the cause of the attempt as, had it heen successful, nothing excepting small amount in postage stamps would have been secured. All mone | including that received from *calling communications, is taken to a plac of safety at the close of each bu s day. At opening time this morning it BRAND was found that an attempt had been 3 for 50¢ made to force the lock of the front i El l -ANS door. 1Instead of unlocking it, the i Vattempt was sufficient to jam the | . mechanism so that expert attention ‘ELTZER Absolutely Removes' [IIIILY oo e oor cond i 0 o Le opened. The attempt was repeated , S DRUGEIST | IndlgeShon' Ounepa(:k.age ot the rear door the key being found | i tg, inside on the floor. According to ! + forth, the attempts have the ‘“ear marks” of amateurs. A OORNRNNX NNORN DOESNN 0 00 0% ) DO RN O W AN NI SAFETY DEPT. SALARIES. Much routine busine scheduled for the Februarye meeting of the safety board, scheduled for a week from tonight. Members of the board will meet tonight with the salary committee of the common council. Petitions of the police and fire de partment members for increased pay 1 will be considered. There may be a Droll----Quaint----Unusual [SIbeTeie e e e terwards to consider these petitions i for presentation at a special meeting { of the council tomorrow night. | The well known lines of Valland — Rust Craft— | o A RS AR ! Ernest Dudley Chase—Norcross. These lines speak Late yesterday afternoon a tele- for themselves. N phone message to police headquarters reported that an unblanketed horse had been left standing near the rail- road station for a considerable time \\\\\\\ \\\\\\\\\&\\\\\\\\\\\ and appeared to be suffering from the o cold. Aid was quickly sent but no REMEMBER_T"_’*@ horse was found. If Humane society tobacco is the world’s agents will make themselves known, Yo G most famous tobacce — DRUG CO vy ° for cigarettes. ~\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ . \\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\\ - THE TURKISH VTSI OI ISP 7SS, 7 STATIONERY DEPT. 69-17 the police will find plenty of work 169-171 for. them, especially during the cold weather. Thus far they have e | sence than in many other cities }.\ 4

Other pages from this issue: