New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 20, 1917, Page 2

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 201, 1917. Special Stationery for Men’s Use an be had here in all the modish varieti It pays to be careful about your stationery as it does to write. In correspondence c: be careful about what you Get your supply here and you can.rely upon it being correct form. Holiday Goods on display. Dickinson Drug Co. 168-171 Main Street i EVENT§ TONIGHT Superior photo plays, Lyceum thea- High class photo drama, Fox's thea- ter. Vaudeville and moving pictures, ney’s theater. % % W. L. Morgan lodge, K. of P., meets n Vega hall. Isabella Circle, N. D. of I, meets at 486 Main street. Central Labor Union, ‘hurch street. meets at 34 New Britain fmeets in Jr. O. ( lodge, N. E. O. P,, . M. hall. an Douglas, O. S. C., i Main street. meets at Leading Star lodge, S. 'in Electric hall. of B., meets . New Britain council, R. A., meets at 242 Main street. council, K. of C., hall. meets in DUNN—O'BRIEN. Dunn and Miss Honora daughter of Mr. and Mrs. es O'Bricn of Tremont street, were 9 o'clock this morning in church. Rev. John T. tied the nuptial knot. A re- ception followed at the home of the parents. The groom is a well known musician in Lynch’s orchestra and the bride has been employed for some time as cashier at the store of Riker-Hegeman Drug company. FINE FOR RAEUMATISM! . Musterole Loosens Up Those Stiff Joints—Drives Out Pain You'll know why thousands use Mus- terole once you experience the glad re- lief it gives. , Get a jar at once from the nearest drug store. It is a clean, white ointment, made with the oil of mustard. Bettet than a mustard plaster and does not blister. it is being rubbed on! Charle O'Bri. Jam Mo | Musterole is recommended by many | doctors and nurses. Millions of jars are used annually for bronchitis, croup, stif neck, asthma, neuralgia, pleurisy, rheu: matism, lumbago, pains and aches of thé back or joints, sprains, sore muscle; bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds the chest (it often prevents pneumonh)t 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $2.50 MODERN SAYS: “If a Man’s Feet Are Not Comfortably Stylishly Clad He Hasn’t Got a Whole Lot To Be Thankful For,” And What MODERN Says Is So OU'LI, be thankful you read this ad if you will at once act upon the suggestion herein contained—that you visit this Quality Shoe Shop and select a pair of up-to-date shoes that will make your feet thankful that their boss is8 using his good shoe-sense. MOGERN BOOT SHOP 168 MAIN STREET. * Brings ease and comfort while | CITY ITEMS Mary H. Zuk has transferred prop- | erty on Clinton street to John Man- zeck et ux. Goodness of Aunt Delia’s Bread.— advt. Edmund J. Stack, Reserves, is home on lough. The Current Events group of St. Mary's Sodality will meet Wednesday evening, November 21, in its club room at 8 o’clock. St. Anne’s society of church will meet at Thursday afternoon. Axel Fredenholm, editor of the “New Eastern Weekly,” will speak at the Bungalow Saturday under the aus- pices of Norden lodge, I. O. G. T. G. W. Berglund of Hartford, will ad- dress an open meeting of the lodge Sunday afternoon. Thé Catholic Women’s Benevolent Legion is preparing boxes to forward to the soldier boys in the trenches and at the cantonments. Nomination of officers for the ensu- ing year will be made at the meeting of the Model Council of the French Naturalization club, December 16. John Hagearty, halfback on New Britain High school football elev- en is recovering from an injured an- kle, and will be ready to participate in the game with New Haven in that city next Saturday morning. William Brown of Union, N. J., will speak at Booth's hall next Sunday af- ternoon on “The End of the World— Is It Near?” The lecture is the auspices of the Ecclesia of Meriden. T. A. B. Drum Corps Carnival, T. A. B. hall. Opens Thurs. night.—advt. Sergeant Henry E. Hopkins of 511th Field Artillery, Medical Corps, stationed at Camp Meade, Maryland, has returned to his post after spend- ing the week-end Mr. and Mrs. Willis S. Hopkins of 432 | West Main street. Kennedy's dancing school tonight. —advt. Leon Norton, of Company H, 2nd | Regiment, has returned to Fort Ham- ilton, N. Y., where he is stationed, af- ter spending the week-end with his | parents, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nor- | ton of West Main street. By the purchase of the Reinfliesch farm on the Whigville water shed in Burlington yesterday, the ‘water com- mission has secured all property ne- cessary to successfully maintain the new reservoir to be constructed at some future time. This latest pur- chase includes about 150 acres of farm land and bulldings. James Towers, superintendent the water department, has had a force of men busy today flushing out the Roaring Braok pipe line. All foreign substance has been removed and the lines are now cleaned for the winter. Several carloads of soldiers from Camp Bartlett passed through this city this morning en route for South- ern training camps. A marriage license has been grant- ed to Hjalmar Peterson, of 51 Pros- pect street, and Miss }Bertha Nelson, of 22 Hurlburt street. Aaron Pinkus has purchased prop- erty on Lake Boulevard. The C. W. Lines company has brought suit for $200 against August P. Bloom, and property owned by the defendant has been attached by Sher- iff A. P. Marsh. The Lines company | claims that Bloom was engaged to col- | lect bills and turned in but ninety-five | cents where he shauld have paid in $46.15. Rev. moved their their home on Hawkins Allentown, Pa. They were the guests | of Mr. and Mrs. Albin Schlichting of | Winthrop street for the past few days. | It is expected that a new pastor will | soon be in the New Britain field. of the Naval a short fur- Peter's o'clock St. 2:30 and Mrs. Fréd Wunder have | household effects from | street to | Keeping the Quality Up. LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE, the World-Famous Cure for Colds and | Grp, is now 30c per box. On account | of the advance in the price of the six different Medicinal, Concentrated Ex- | tracts and Chemicals contained in LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE, 1t necessary to increase the price to the Druggist. It has stood the test for a Quarter of a Century. It is used by every Civilized Nation. FELLED TREE KILLS Prospcrous Farmer, Found TUncon- scious Under Tree, Is Hurried Sandy Hook, Where He Dies. Newtown, Conn., Nov. 20.—Willis Lockwood, aged about 60, a prosper- ous farmer, was found crushed and unconscious this morning under a large tree that he had just felled on the highway near his home. He was hurried to Sandy Hool: but died soon afterward. He had lived here about 40 years and is survived by a widow and grown children. LYMAN JEWELL DIES. Hartford, Nov. 20.—Lyman B. Jew- ell, last of the famous Jewell family of this city, and vice president of Jewell Mfg. company died at his home today after a week's illness. He reached his 90th birthday August 29. He was a native of Winchester, N. H., and a brother of the late Marshall Jewell, three times governor of Con- necticut. Emssa s ) “there is more Catarrh in this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and for years it was sup- posed to be incurable. Doctors pre- scribed local remedies, and by constant- Iy failing to cure with local treatment, pronounced it incurable. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly influenced by con- stitutional conditions and therefore re- quires constitutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh Cure, manufactured by F. J. Cheney & Co., Toledo, Ohlo, is a consti- tutional remedy, is taken internally and acts thru the Blood on the Mucous Burfaces of the System. One Hundred Dollars reward is offered for any case that Hall’s Catarrh Cure fails to cure. Send for circulars and testimonials. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Toledo, Ohlo. Sold by Druggists, 75c. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. under Christadelphian | with his parents, | of | ! and to | Beware of want T. TS: Pocket Boxes of 12 Bottles of 24 and 100 CAPSULES: Sealed Packages of 12 and 24 tion, every rantee the ! 'MAY LEAVE ITALY FOR PEACE WORK Pope Said to Be Going to Spain As Guest of King Alphonso Rome, Nov. 20.—The question being asked in various quarters here, especially in Vatican circles, it Pope Benedict intends to leave Rome and Ttaly. If the Pontiff should decide upon this step it would be due to the difficulty of assuming the attitude he desires to take with regard to the war so long as he resides in a belligerent country, in spite of all the efforts made by the Italian government to guarantee his complete liberty and in- dependence. It is asserted that pourparlers have taken place with regard to the Pope's going to Spain as a guest of King | Alfonso. In the conclave which elected Leo | XITI, all the Cardinals except eight— including the late Cardinal Hohenlohe, a brother of the late German Chan- | cellor, Prince von Hohenlohe-—were | favorable to going outside of Italy for | the election of a new pontiff. Nothing, however, was done in this respect, and since then Rome and the | Papacy have seemed indissoluble. 1s It was Pope Pius IX. who called | himself “the prisoner of the Vatican.” | He and his predecessors had ruled for centuries over a territory stretching across Italy from sea to sea. This temporal power of the Pope was di minished at various times, principally by plebicitum. He thus lost to the new kingdom of Italy Romaagna, Umbria, and the Marches in 1869, and the resi- due, including Rome itself, in 1870, when his French protectors marched away to the Franco-Prussian war, the troops of Victor Emmanuel | 11 entered the Eternal City. Pius IX. regarded the Italian Gov- ernment as a usurper of his temporal power and declined to treat with it. The latter, therefore, acted alone and on May 13, 1871, passed the famous Law of Guarantee, which secured to His Holiness and his successors for i ever the possession of the Vatican and | Lateran palaces and the villa of Castel Gandolfo, together with an income of 3,225,000 lire. Pius IX. shut himself up in the Vatican, used the Lateran palace and villa for his court, but declined to touch the money. His successors have observed his policy. 1t has always been asserted by the i legal authorities of the Italian Gov- ! ernment that the Popes were tenants | and not owners of the Vatican, and | that the Law of Guarantees was not , @ contract, but a privilege, granted by | the Government, hich the Pope had declined to accept. ¥ This view seems borne out by the | attitude of the Government at the | time of the Conclave, which elected | Pope Leo XIII. in 1878. The as- | sembled Cardinals, fearing some unto- ward demonstration on the part of the Roman mob, which had been par- Pius IX. and i | | ticularly bitter against his Secretary of State, Cardinal An- tonnelli, asked the Government for lsaf(‘ conduct, to Civitavecchia, the an- “The Bayer Cross — BayerTablets Dy Bayer manuf; Substitutes ‘When you buy Aspirin you genuine Aspirin— ! "ABLE nothing else. As additional protection against substitu- every package and tablet bears Your Guarantes of Parity” Spirin The tr ) % . U. S. 3 ade-mark Azlrln (R:.xflgsl’ Ooff) isa t the lester licyli t-hl:u and TGt the Teiiable facture. cient port of Rome, with the intention of holding the Conclave there. Crispi was then Minister of the In- terior, and he replied for the Govern- ment: “Their Eminencies may go wWhere they please and be sure of adequate protection; but no Pope (elected else- where) may enter the Vatican.” Several times there have been rumors that the Vatican and Quirinal | were on the point of settling the mat- ter in a wi that would at least al- low the Pope to travel, but the official press of successive Ministries has de- clared that the Government could not undertake the responsibility of pro- tecting his Holiness outside the ter- ritory guaranteed him by the law of 1871. Pope Pius X., however, opened the !'way~ for negotiations soon after his election in June, 1903, by declaring ! that the temporal power of the Pope was not a matter of dogma, but of dogmatic doctrine, and that a Pope, like any other sovereign, might ex- tend or contract his domain at will by treaty with other sovereigns. | The Quirinal, however, paid no at- , tention to the implied invitation to acquire a Papal title to the territory whose people had voted adhesion to the Kingdom of Italy. The papal possessions of Avignon, when Popes were elected and held their court in the fourteenth cen- tury, and of the' Comtat-Venaissin, are said to offer a precedent for Italy’s action in that they were annexed to France in 1791. BOAT IS FOUND. - Survivors From the Lost Rochester Picked Up on Coast. London, Nov. 20.—The missing boat from the American steamship { Rochester, which was sunk by a Ger- man submarine November 2, has just landed at a port in Ireland, the Brit- ! ish admiralty announced today. The boat contained five men, the only sur- vivors from the boat’s original crew of twelve. PACKING HOUSE INDUSTRY. Washington, Nov. 20.—Packing houses and the meat industry gener- ally are co-operating fully the food administration announced today in support of a meatless Tuesday. Quickly Ended by a Pleasant, Germ- Killing Antiseptic. The little Hyomei inhaler is made of hard rubber and can easily be car- ried in pocket or purse. It will last a lifetime. Into this inhaler you pour a few drops of magical Hyomei. t This is absorbed by the antiseptic gauze within and now you are ready to breathe it in over the germ infested membrane where it will speedily be- gin its work of killing catarrhal germs. Hyomei is made of Autralian eucalyptol combined with other antl- septics and is very pleasant to braathe. It is guaranteed to banish catarrh, bronchitis, sore throat, croup, coughs and colds or money back. It cleans out a stuffed up head in two minutes. ‘ Sold by The Clark & Brainerd Co. and druggists everywhere. Complete outfit, including inhaler and one bottle of Hyomei, costs but little, while extra bottles, if aterward needed, may be obtained of any drug- & Patriots Enlisted in Name ........ Age ey Address ... Parents’ Name When Enlisted In Army or Navy In What Branch . Nearest of Kin r xo parents) (F1l1 This Out and Retarn to Editor of From New Britain the Nation’s Service. SUES FOR $20,000 Frank Rabinovitz, of Hartford, Claims Morris Shupack Bested Him in Realty Deals. Morris Shupack, one of the heav- iest taxpayers in New Britain, has been sued for $20,000 by Frank Ra- binovitz, of Hartford, and property owned by the local man on Main street has been attached by Deputy Sheriff A. P. Marsh for $25,000. The writ, made out by Lawyer A. W. Creedon, of Hartford, s Teturnable before the superior court on the first Tuesday of December. In his complaint, Rabinovitz claims that Schupack entered into a business deal with him whereby he was to take over five pieces of pmpe_rty in Wail- ingford in exchange for his own prop- erty on Front street, Hartfard, and the dedl was to be so arranged that he would get $5,000 cash as a Tesult of the exchange. Rabinovitz charges that Schupack told him all of the five | houses in Wallingford were in good shape and rented at $126 per month. He is also alleged to have asserted that he had a $3,000 equity in each plece and a mortgage of $1,000 cn each which could be indefinitely pro- longed. Likewise, Rabinovitz claims | that Schupack promised to secure for | him a mortgage of $2,000 on each of the five pieces. The claims of Schupack were false, Rabinovitz asserts, and 'the ‘\'alue of the property in Walllngford is daubt- ful. He also sets forth that, as a re- sult of the deal, he lost $20,000 equity in his Hartford property, as well as one piece of property in Wallingford through foreclosure. Manhattan Shirts Known as the Best — The Best Known WHEN YOU BUY a “Manhattan Shirt you get exclusiveness, distinctiveness and full value. g “Manhattans” are guaranteed as to color, texture and service. Horsfall’s is the largest distributor of “Manhattan” Shirts in Connecticut. Come here for large assortments. TorsCallx IT PAYS TO BUY OUR KIND 00-98 ASYAUM BT. comeaing vt 140 TRUMBULL ST l | Ic a word each day pays for.a classified adv. in the Herald. You get results. That’s what you want. ey Columbia Records Pz (% “When Lazaro singds - Stracciaris son& of love and hate . Lov_e struggling with hate in dramatic melody “that is the theme of . Eritu?”’ from Verdi’s Masked Ball.”” A song that requires much of the artist, and in this record Stracciari, lead- ing baritone of the qhtc:eo Opera, has given of his art in full measure.49221—$1.50. L s oz f.augh., laugh, Pagliaccio ! It is more than words or song or acting. His ‘‘Vesti 1a Giubba’’ is the breaking of a heart in music. Sor- row beyond words, hidden beneath a smiling mask to face the call of duty—what one of us has not some- times laughed with Pagliaccio? Lazaro, Metropolitan Opera tenor, in this appealing record has made his singing live. 49020—3$3.00. THE records individually mentioned are only a few & of the splendid Christmas list of Columbia Records. It in- cludes many other operatic numbers, 22 new popular song hits, 14 whirlwind dance numbers, patriotic songs, fairy stories for the children, and a number of beautiful Christmas carols and hymns. o ‘Brrien'l', cry in Lakmes Bell Song.' Soaring joyously through the bell-like notes of Delibes’ lyric, Barrientos makes music more musical by the matchless cadence of her voice. Arecord in which the great soprano of the Metropolitan Opera sur- passes herself. 49151—$3.00. “Holy Night “enshrined in Gerhardts voice. ““Silent Nizh(, Holy Night’” sings Gerhardt's reverentvoice in the very spirit of the star- li¢ hills and wonder night of long ago. A record you will surely want for Christmas Eve. 58246—$1.00. ““Idreamt that I dwelt in marble halls.”” Only the wistful ten- derness of Lucy Gates’ voice could add to the beauty of this well-loved song. A5993—$1.50. Poct and Peasant Overture. By the Chicago Symphony. Columbia Grafonola A5991—12-inch, $1.50. Price $215 New Columbia Records on Sale the 20th of Each Month Columbia Graphophone Company, New York

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