New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 12, 1918, Page 9

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You can't think clearly when your head is ““stopped up’” from cold in the head, or nasal catarrh. Try Kondon's to clear rour head t no cost to you g\)oh'we used this 29-year-old re- For chronic catarrh, sore nos medy., colds, sneezing, nosé-bleedetc. {Vritous for complimentary can, or buy tube at druggist's. It will benefit you four times more than it costs,or we pay money back. For trial can free write to KONDOR MFQ. C MIRNEAPOLIS, MINN. Some broken lots of Men’s Suits and Overcoats are being closed out now at less than regular prices. You can save from $5 to $8 on a Suit or Overcoat by coming here now. This is our way of clearing out these odd lots, and your chance to get a bargain. The assortment nd sizes, It will pay you to buy now for next ason. includes all styles | MONTES REPRESENTS [ BOLIVIA IN FRANCE CLOTHING CO uEW BRITAIN, CONW. ClTY ITEMS Private Elias T. R\n"ros(‘ a furlough from Camp aphank, L. L Wiiliam Finneran amp Devens on a furlough. Edward Burke, who has been ser- | ly ill at Camp Devens, is im- roved The Cracow jon has incorporated for ill begin business with George W. Klett has been appointed ministrator of the estate of the late | ary Rice of Boston. Mr. and Mrs. John Shea of Bran- rd were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. filliam Frey for the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. George Marbin bidgeport were also the guests r. and Mrs. Frey. Mrs. H. A. Hall, Miss May Hall, iss Evelyn Smith and Alan Hall hve Yeturned from a month’s sojourn the Ridgewood Hotel, Daytona, orida. Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. lebrated the 60th. anniver: eir marriage at the home of n in Meriden, on February 4. They fil be remembered by many local ople‘as they at one time were resi- nts of this town. At present they | . . e living ac Woodmont, Conn. [ Boltvia. At the annual meeting of Daven- brt and Kecler, Inc, the following | ficers were elected: Mr. Davenport, ident and treasurer; N. H. John- | vice president; J. C. Ahlquist tetary. The firm has Teceived e ption from the United States Fuel fninistrator’s closing order. fhe New Britain Camp, No. 70, podmen of the World, will hold a eting on Wednesday evening at 8 lock urner hall. Important busi s concerning mutual aid is to be ed on. is home Upton, is home from | Polish Store corpora- 0,000 and | 2,000 paid Senor Don Ismael Montes, recently appointed min to France. shortly August othnagle ary of their ster of Bolivia He is expected to pay a visit to the United States. Oon 14, 1917, Montes finished a second term as president of He previously filled that “ office during the period of 1905-1909. As a soldier he has shown his bravery in defense of his country and attained the rank of colonel for important services in the field. Senor Montes is also a well known lawyer, and has held many important offices, among | them that of minister of war. Senor | \ | | | TRAUT & HINE ANNUAL Directors Re-clected and Same Offi- MPLAINS OF STOREKEEPER. | .. fiss Birnbaum, proprietor of a re at 628 Main street, complalned | the police yesterday that another L 4 re proprietor was not conforming Tho gueecneNo tegstocis h the regulations as set forth by | holders of the Traut & Hine Manu- fuel administrator. Investiga- | facturing company was held this af- by Detective Sergeant Rehard- | yornoon at the company’s plant on p failed to disclose any cause for | el | street. The board of direc- i | tors was re-elected and the directors in turn re-elected the same staff of officers which has served during the past year. The financial status of the concern is reported as excellent. Chosen—Financial Record of Year Reported Excellent. annual Stanley SJIGHT ‘haley JAM ON “NEW HAVEN” fo i o0 12.— htee of an east-bound ight train on the New Haven road, jushkeepsic bridge route, were de- led at place this morning, cking tracks and causing eral delay to the heavy ight trafiic into Connecticur. ecking trains were sent from Wa- bury, Connecticut and Maybrook. one Pond, cars Feb. WANT TAX REDUCTIONS. both hour Board of Relief Receives peals From Several Ap- Assessor’s Figures, The board of rolief has several appeals from the fixed by the board of a latest appeals are Victor Rymsa, thr t 392 itt str askss reduction of $1,000 Kennedy, Franklin street, ed at $6.400, reduction $1,400 Joseph Heim street, assessed at tion of $500 Swarsky North street | asks a reduction o | Charles Bonol of | asks that the assessment erty be reduced from | received figures sors. The LEBRATE 20TH ANNIVERSARY. fr. and Mrs. William speet street, celebrated lding anniversary on Sunday. The g rooms were decorated red, te and blue and the dining room in ow and white. he favors were odils. There were guests from geport, Branford, Hartford, and ; Haven. Mr. and Mrs. Frey were pients of many beautiful gi o teneme Frey of their 20th sed for $4.000, in sks of house at $2,000, 219 Monroe wants reduc- block at is $19,5 Chester Place of hi 800 to $3,000 RISO! ew Haven, ahue, cor t divorce N TERM FOR Feb. 12.—Danffel J icted of ury in Tri- vhich has been long | he here was today sen- | ed to state prison for two to four s by Judge Bennett. A stay was | \teq and bonds furnished pending \ppeal, a motion to aside the ict having been denied. He came 0 N York uured as a late detective Triplett c PERJU courts, REPUBLICANS 2 St. Louis, Feb. 12 hour of meeting of the republican n tional commitlee leaders this after- noon stated an adjournment until morrow would be taken to give time effrts to reach a compromise cn — [ the chairmanship. JOURN. Just before the set and i in the anceae ) N >F ————————————————————— PRISONER CT | Feb. FOR CLASSIFICATION. man e - 20 king was WAR. Adelbert | TOO LATE chulter | - ship fittin ORE 0 the governm taken to| be neat clean have good t DuPont, Del. under in-| references. Apply Main St. tions from Washing Ho was | 2-12-1d | hiladelphi er, g oertin r of 19 or and CLE must and K, age meds at Gloucester, N. J., last | charged with being a danger- ! encmy alien. He now is virtually isoner of war. SALE — Edison records; $5.00; Arch street. phonogra call ph evenings. 2-12-2d FOR with 447 t house | prob- | vesterday. -« [ the iand NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY FLOUR MOVEMENT T0 EAST STOPPED Sale in Some Connecticut Cities Practically Ceases Hartford, Feb. 12.—Reports sath- ered by the Federal Food Adminis- tration from various sections of Con- necticut and made public today indi- cate that the movement of wheat | flour, which has been rather scar because of transportation difficultie: yhas almost stopped since last week’s rulings on the purchase of wheat. In Hartford and some other cities in Connecticut, the sale of flour has practically ceased and the food ad- ministration officials today expressed their satisfaction at the speedy ac- complishment of their chief design in limiting the sales of flour, which was the conservation of wheat for ship- ment abroad. As in other places, Hartford known to have hoarded flour and the food administration inspectors at various times uncovered stoc from two to five barrels held small private families which were ignorant of the hoarding penalties of the Food Control Act of August 10, | 1917. Apparently these stocks of flour are now heing brought out and used because the food administration has not heard any serious complaints or any instances of want or hardship from people who felt they must have flour without an equal amount of sub. The food ad- ministration officiais think they see the new regulations working two ways at on smoking out the hoarders and also saving the previous wheat. In New Haven, where attempts at flour hoarding were common until the Ttalians were shown that their unpatriotic and ille action was sure to work serious hardship on their fighting countrymen in Italy, there has been a fair amount of flour and substitutes available, one reason be- ing that the stocks held by the Swirskys, father and son, when the food administration deprived of li- censes and put out of business for sugar profiteering, have been put on the local market and absorbed by the wholesalers. In New Haven, some of the retailers have protested against the new regulations, which have now been eased by the addition of potatoes to the list of approved substitutes—four pounds of potatoe: to one pound of wheat. New Haven, like other cities, is awaiting the im- provement in transportation which will bring in the substitutes, such as! rice, rolled oats, white and yellow corn meal and barley. Bridgeport's flour has been reduced materially, according to assistant fed- ! eral Food Administrator D. rfield Wheeler and although substitutes there as elsewhere are not plentiful, the absence of any protests and the slackening in the retail flour trade in- dicate that people have flour on hand are using it. At any rate here the food administration is be- ginning to ‘“‘save the wheat.” Potato growers in northern Fairfield county and in Litchfield county are finding a market for their potato holdings in Bridgeport and other Fairfield county cities, especially since potatoes have been added to the wheat substitutes Both flour and substitutes are short in Waterbury and the temporary rule on potatoes was timel Some Waterbury consumers have secured full barrels of flour not realizing the January 28th rulings were retroactive. is again, PURCHASED $100 IN STAMP: At the meeting held last night by the Brotherhood of Independent Lithuanian Citizens club which was held in the Lithuanian all on Park street the circulars describing the need of the buving of War Savings and Thrift Stamps was read and it Was unanimously voted by those pres- ent to purchase 20 stamps that will be equal to $100 when matured. Anthony Mikalauskas v cted to the of- fico of represcutative in regard to the selling of tihe stamps among the members of the club. John Gerdes, and Anthony Mackowskas were clected as delegates to the Lithuanian convention which is to be held in York city on March 17. PEACE. Stockholm, Feb. -The Red Guard of Finland which has at- tempted to overthrow the govern- ment is reported by the Dagens Ny- RED G heter to have asked Gen. Manner heim, leader of the White | which is supporting the to consider peace negotiations. zees from Helsingfors report that two | of the Red Guard leaders—M. Hapa- | lainen, minister of the intorior in the | revolutionary ot and M. Sirola, i g foreign minister—have been shot by the White Guard. JCE THICK IN SOUND. New Haven, 12.—Tce Island Sound e of this holding up the fleet of tugs and coal laden barges which was reported from the New Haven breakwaters The ice jam is largely oft mouth of the Connecticut river and until this breaks up it is unlikely | that any tuz captain will attempt to proceed east. Navigation between | New York and New Haven now clear water “eb. in Long harbor is in JUDGMENT ¥ TJudsc )R PLAI Meskill T the plaintifi Britain Gas Connecticut for James T judgment for of the New ainst the Roads Constructio Roche and the plaintiff, ed case o Co Glover wer BYETT-LYNCH NUPTIALS James Byett and Mary married this morning at church by Rev. William The couple were atended by 3yett, brother of the Miss Anna Lynch, sister Lynch were Mary's Downey, Hazold om, a of the bride. AVY. Russell S. Frost Is Now At Sea on the U. S. S, Somewhere Georgia. Russell . Frost, grandson of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Bailey of 49 Winthrop street, enlisted in the U. navy on SLL 9 and since that time has the naval training station at Recently he was graduated from the school for apprentice sea- men and is now believed to be some where at sea on the U. S. S, Georgia. HENNIG ON WITNESS STAND With S. FROST October been Newport (Naturalized German, Charged Treason, Declarcs He Was Foreed to Leave Germany Berause of Speech. As a witn Paul Henni today testified in court where he New York, Feb. 12 in his own defens naturalized German, the Brookiyn federal is on trial for treason, that he left Germany and came to ti United ates, because, while making an ad- dress at a May day celebration in Leipsic in 1905, he said too much against the German government He is charged with having tampered with torpedo gy ope parts in the Bliss munitions factory where he was formerly a foreman. ATRMAN RAMS BALLOON Italian Aviator Takes a Desperate Chance to Blind Fyes of Encmy and Dives Through Bag of Fire. Rome, of The aviator —(Correspondence ociated Press).—How a feels when he drives an air- planc through a flaming observation balloon is described by Giovanni An- cillotto, an Italian airman, who de- molished an Austrian balloon in fashion in an air conflict a: Rustigne balloon was guarded by three aser airplanes These were engaged by three Italian fighting machines while Ancillotto dived at the balloan, at which he opened fire with incendiary bullets at a range of about twenty yards. the same moment he suddenly r the danger he was in, for it was ly impossible for him to avoid col- lision with the now flaming balloon. “I thought to myself it means death,” he says in his report. “I closed my eves and waited. Barely second passed before I felt the shock there was a sound of tearing: flames A across my face. 1 opened my eves and found myself a few yards from the ground. “I started my cngines, steadied my machine, glanced at the wings in fear that their support would fail me. Thev were trembling as though broken and were carrying some tattered pieces of stuff. But they held: the propeller turned, and the airplane, gradually gaining speed, glided toward the Tta i lines. A few minutes. later I alighted at my camp.” Examination of the machine showed that it had- passed clcan through the burning balloon. In the shock of collision the wings had actually been broken in the middle, but were held together by the support of the machine gun. that BRITISH LABOR HEAD COMING TO AMERICA hoto by % Unton, Thorae, M. P., noted leader who, according newspaper, will come member of a William J British labor to an English to this country labor delegation which will s | vears, | city and for dozen | England. 12, 1918, DIES AT AGE OF 90 Mrss. Rosetta N. Williams Passes Away At Home On Black Rock Avenue Far Past Allotted Span. Mrs. Rosetta N. Williams, aged 90 died this I afternoon at home 131 Black Rock avenue. ‘as one of the olde: idents of this many has been a of the Iirst Congregational urch. The funeral will be held at 2 o'clock Thursday afternoon from her late residence. Rev. Henry W. Maier member | Will conduct the service which will be private. DEATHS AND FUNERALS Corey. Lucy E. Corey, who died in Mrs. Tm The remaing of Mr: formerly of this Brooklyn, N. Y this city burial. M age. She is daughter, Mi Brookly i will tomorrow Corey was survived by Josephine for rs of and- of morning 98 y one gr Corey, Mrs. Anna Staab. Mrs. Anna Staab, aged 46 years, died this morning at her home, 132 Whiting street. She is survived her husband, Severin Staab. funeral will held at Thursday morning at & church. Burial will be in St. new cemetery. by be o’clock Peter Mar: Miss Miss Catherine T. Quarter, home. She two sister and five Lynn, M Catherine T. Cobey. Cobey of Beck- died this morning at her leaves her mother and Lucy and Sussana Cobey brothers, Thomas Cobey Louis Cobey of Pough- keepsie, N. Y ank P. Cobey st Berlin, John Cobey of Rocky Hill and William Cobey of New York. The funeral will he held afternoon and will he private. ley Philip Connelly. The funeral of Philip Connelly was | held at 10 o’clock St. Mary’s church celebrated | The he: Dennis James I this A morning requiem Rev. William rers were John O’Keefe, Thomas arrell, James Reilly grose. Burial in at rden, Gunning, and James Ri St. Mary's new cemeter Farrell, James Reilly Ringrose. Burial was new cemetery was and in St James Mary's Lillian Wannerberger. Lillian, the four ter of Mr. and M ger of 154 Che morning. The fune o'clock tomorrow W. Gaudian will month old daug Max Wannerber- street, died this 1 will be held at 2 afternoon. Rey officiate. Henry Nelson. Henry Nelson, aged 63 resident of Bristol, died this at the New Britain General hospital, where he was admitted last evening suffering from pneumonia. He leaves a family. years, a afternoon Card of Thanks. to extend sincere thanks kind friends and relatives for ny expressians of sympathy and flo tributes at the time of the death of our wife and mother, M Charles Kellog. CHARLE: MYRTLE We to our their 1 wish KELLOC DIDSBURY Special 9 to 11 a. m. RUMP ROAST Beef, b 21c Special 9 to 11 a. m. NEW ROLLED Bats, 3 ths 20¢ be removed to | : court The | ot | of | Thursday | ! allegations, A. | plaintifr, ! John mass | i Steve SHOR Clerk Dan Cle; rag shor} Jo zan agal | sion to enter aj opening of judgme against New Brital pleading or defau Mink for plaintiff, J defendant; C. H. Mitel Southern New England company, more specific stat demurrer, C. H. Mitchell tiff, W. ¥. Henney for deff . Mitchell, against the e 5 tric Light and Water Co( HePC spe- statement and demurrer, . H. |tents Mitchell for plaintiff, W. E. Thomas [number of cancelled checks 1 for defendant: Frank Maietta against | pavable to Johnson have int Dominic Somenese, more particular | the town officers, who have n A. Greenberg for | record of them. A. W. Upson for defendant; - Mary Dionne against Fred Blanchette, | answer or default, . I. Rachlin for | laintiff, J. G. Woods for defendant; Pinches et al against Connect cut Motor Sales Co., F. B. Hunger- ford for plaintiff. motion to reopen judgment; Michael Pisarko agzainst J. | A. Whitney, A. A. Greenberg for |ierm o plaintiff, Campbell for defend- | ithdrawal ant, pleading or default: Dominic | reella against Louis Ferrari, M. D. | per for plaintiff, A Greenberg | bile defen nt, answer or default; | — Jacobs a Nicholas Cher- | CARL YOUNGBLAD ik, A. A. Greenberg for plaintiff. | Medical Masscur, 71 Klett & ng for defendant, order *phone for bill of particulars; Peter Twardus Violet against Michael Pisarko, A. A. Green- berg for plaintiff, motion to reopen |1 judgment; Mathew Papciak against Michael Pisarko. A, A. Greenberg for laintiff, motion to reopen judgment fen hreo estate anclift. The safc n- e taken to Hartford. A re APPEALS WITHDRAWN. Myer Berkowitz, senfnced to vs in police court recently, his sentence changed to a $50 and costs by Judge James and he paid the fine, with- appeal to the March rior court. Notice of has been filed by William s fined $10 an Decem- violation | drawing who w for law. Locke utomo- M. G. Graduate W. Main St, sidence *phone rmo-lite Bath. Neuritis, Insom- Impeded Circula atments through your by appointments only at or office. | |-'w\~u ian or ! your residence Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. A STRONG, RELIABLE CORPORATION organized and qualified through years of efficient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian, Executor or Administrator. CAPITOL $750,000. SURPLUS $750,000 Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. M. H. WHAPLES, Pres’t, HARTFORD, CONN. Special 3 to 5 p. m. Special 9 to 11 a. m. LEAN SMOKED LARGE YELLOW Stiouiders, D24 | nions 4, 10c Special All Day BEST NATIVE Mohican (‘reamerv 3 Ibs il i Po atoes, pk 44(; Butter 52c, Hoovarize The dayreach week wher, Saye your manex,; by lraqu her?e on Wednesdag_ U. S. FOOD ADMINISTRATION LICEN: SHORE HADDOCK FRESH HERRING YELLOW TAIL FLOUNDERS FANCY SMELTS . HALIBUT STEAK CoD STEAK .. SALMON ST K 11c 10c 20c 30c 18c b 28C doz. 23 (& P 2bc ER20.C i PASYD 1b LARGE RIPE BANANAS LARGE JUICY ORANGES NEW NGLISH TS g XTRA HEAVY GRAPE FRUIT Special All Day BOLOGNA and FRANKFORTS, b 188 Us 25c¢c L8¢C Zlc Z8c lic NO. G—0%535 LEGS Y LAKLING LAMB FRESIL PORI SHOULDERS FRESH OUT FRESH MACKEREL FINNAN HADDIES SALT HERRING LARGE SAL MACKEREL SALT HAKE PIECES SHREDDED CcoD . pkg BOSTON BLUE Y 21C . 1b 22C cach 5¢ e 30€ S A1 1 6¢c 21/2c 9c » 18¢ | =roarers vy (/2 ————————————————————— A DOMESTIC .1 qts 250 SARDINE 3 cans 23C ALASKA SALMON PREMIER BRAND SHAD .o . can FLAKE WHITE COMPOUND b LEAN PORK CHOPS ... SLICED LIVER BALDWIN APPLES . SOLID HEAD CABBAGE ROYAL E DATES 19¢ Special All Day NUT ib 33¢ OLED 3 Ibs 98¢ Special All Day Narragan:ett Bay Oysters, pi 32¢ ‘

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