New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 11, 1918, Page 11

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)

All o1 the cxtras have been trimmed ' I* of men’s suits for this Spring by | rder of the government in ovder to mserve cloth and wool. | No belts, pleats, flaps or other un- | sessary trimmings—all of this fved and the cost of it put into the oth and make. This helps to keep the cost of lothing down, and our prices are just low as it's possible to scll good othes. Good suits as low as $20 and up o 85 for best. | STEIN-BLOCH & SHUMAN. ‘ is | | | sFAR! | CLOTHING €O ' abw BRITAIN, CONN. "CITY ITEMS | The directors of the Y. M. C. A will | eet at 8§ o'clock Monday cvening. The Shepherds of Bethlehem, No. 9. | ¢ill hold a special meeting in their all this evening at 8 o’clock to take ction on the death of Mrs. Kohnle. A son has been horn to Mr, and ps. William Rittner of Denver, Col. ormerly of New Britain. Mrs. Ritt- er was, before her marriage, Miss Mabel McKnight of this city. William Hartman, formerly of this | ity, but now of New Haven, is vis-} ting here. " A large truck owned by the New | ritain Lumber and Coal Co. partially sollapsed under a heavy ioad in the ‘ard of the New Britain Machine Co. \ddition this noon. Tt required con- iderable. work to get it out of th rard. | | | § | | LIEUT. MINOR OVERSEAS. son of J. B. Minor Recelves Cable- gram From Son. J. B. Minor, of the Minor & Corbin aper company, received ableg from h T.ieutenant bohn, B. Minor, informing him his | fe arrival over: Mr. Minor has bavo other sons in the service, James fana Richard Minor, both of whom are n the Box has m on eas. armv. TO INSPFCT RESFRVOIR SITE, A delegation of council member: h.ccompanie members of the water hoard, will go to Burlington and Whig- | \ille tomorrow to inspect the territory hats they may be more familiar with | .onditions: and he hetter able to vote | lintelligently on the matter of develop-| ng the water system when the ques- tion arises at the meeting on Wednes- | day evening. 1 | RVERY SOLDIER EQUIPPED lordnance Department Able to Furnish | Complete Supply of Arms, nt\plini Increased Demand. American troops are going overseas in large numbers, the Ordnance Depart- bment has been able to keep up Wit | he new program, and oldier who boards transport fully | squipped with arms, the Ordnance bu- reau announced toc Artillery and machine guns ready in France in sufficient tles to meet immediate was said | Washington, May H.—-.Uthou:hi ! every | are al-| quanti- | demands, it y i BARERS MUST REPORT WEEKLY, | Be Given Shops ta | Watch. i Deputies . Will —Ev. licensad | baker in the state beginning today is | required to make a weekly r-[mrt of | his baking operations in addition to | the monthly report which he has been | fixing up for some time. The weekly | report will b ein triplicate, one copy being retained by the baker, another sent to Mr. Scoville and the third handed to the local inspector, i The new state bakers' vice-commit- tee has named district deputies who in turn will name local inspectors, each of whom will have about dozen bakeries to look over ! "The lcensed hotels, clubs and restaurants. factories are excluded Jartford, May 11 i | include also | Cracker | bakers OVER THE y TOP. Britain MEGEA received word that the apportionmeht of the for the pansion work for the coming y $1,500. There forwar the past few days tto the headquarter. of the International Y. M. (. A mittee, a check for $1,500 New recently association foreign ar was | within | ex was com- [ Mansur CLEARING HOUSE REPORT. New York, May 11.—The actual con- ditien of clearing house banks irust companies for the week thgy hold $102,807,730 reserve in cess of legal requirements, This is increase of $65,608,000 from last week. i their { with | inary ! March 2 last notified the publishers of | to repair the dams | country ! ously | confirmation | master ROOSEV T0 BURLESON DEFI Insists Discrimination Has Been Evident Aainst Publishers | ed States Department of Justice, | whose name, shicld number and ad- dress he gave, (all of which I will give in my formal letter to the sen- ator). called him ith copies of the letters this hicago man to him and of the replies and asked if Mr. Mansur had stopped advertising, and wanted to know ir he was going on advertising next year. and then if he were an American citizen. iast query taken in connection the first two contained of implication that was threat. This shows ment had knowledge tolonel Theo- i the attempt, and ient its offirial pow- into | town further it, unless the man Postmas- | qyestion had stolen the special agent's challenge | ghield which he possessed and forged that the name and The above nment was showing favoritism Mr. Burleson cannot truthfully enforcement of the Espionage and they absolutely demon- sued statement vesterday in | gqrate the exactness of my statement, he cited the government's at- far as the administration's effort upon certain publicAUtions | ¢4 pyunish the publications which up- had patriotically upheld the noiq the war hut have told the war, iile other newspape SUCh : tputh about the administration’s s the Hearst publications, which had | fajjure to conduct the war efficiently opposed the war or attacked our allies or dircctly or indirectly aided ! Germany” were allowed to maintain | position unmolested by the post office department and the ad- ministration in general, Colonel Roosevelt said his ment was merely preliminary to a further and fuller discussion of the subject which he intended to submit | in a letter to “some senator” for a | permanent record. The victims of | certain unfair discrimination cited by the| a very wealthy man, reputed to colonel yvesterday were the Metropoli- | much more than a millionaire, own- tan Magazine, Collier's Weekly, and | ing a dozen newspapers, more or less, the New York Tribune, which publi-|{ and a half dozen magazines in differ- cations, cording to the colonel, | ent parts of tie countr At the “have consistently upheld the war, | very beginning of the war the govern- but have also told that small portion | ment proceeded succes against of the truth which it was absolutely | Tom Watson's publication in Georgis necessary to tell about the adminis- | Yet Tom Watson had done nothing tration’s failure to conduct the war | that was anything like as dangerous to efficiently.” On the other hand, he| this country and our allies and as maintained that the “prime example | helpful to Germany as Mr. Hearst of failure by the administration to pro- | had done, ceed against really Hostile and dam- “It is interesting to romember that aging utterance” was afforded by *“a | the administration had full warninz failure of the administration to deal|about Hearst's probable attitude e Mr, Hearst’s papers it has | his previous cditorials attacking Ger- dealt with certain other papers.’ many's foes and defendinz Germany. The colonel cited some of the|1 have before me at the moment Hearst editorials as cvidence of sym- | copy of The New York American edi- pathy for Germany. and as evidence | torial of June 6, 1915, signed by Mr of “Hearst’s continued offort to excite | Hearst himself, saying that we have cite hatred the United States and|no right to ask Germany fo England.” He doncluded his state- { from submarine warfare against the ment by pointing to the “ardent| commerce of her enemics and that the tribute” paid by a German corre- | Lusitania was an English vessel and spondent to Mr. Hearst and Arthur| Vas properly a spoil of war :mn‘m‘:n Brisbane, in which the German cor- | it$ der"f.lion by the lvv} man subma- i % rine was in accordance with the auth- respondent is reported to have de-| TN WS U EISNIIR Lo cartare, seribed them as “auxiMaries of valusd | ®T 720 (B4 08 TR, L R0 L oo influence o] Germans April 11. 1017, Mr. Hearst wrote The Statement. Stripping our country of men. mone The colonel's statement was as fol- | and food ix a dangerous policy. Our earnest suggestion to the congress is that it imperatively refuse to permit the further draining of our faod sup- plies and our military supplies to Europe.’ Attack on England. on « with course, an in effect a that the depart- of justice of New dore from ter that gov in it act, i whi tack “whic York, May Roosevelt, comin Oyster Bay to answer General Burleson's he prove his charge 11 £ er to £z “h s0 Failed to Stop Hearst. Now for the sécond part of my statement. The prime example of failure by the administration to pro- ceed against newspapers whieh op- the war or attacked our al or directly or indirectly aided Germany is afforded by a failure of the administration to deal with Mr. Hearst’s papers as it has dealt with other papers. Mr. Hearst state- is he as Postmaster statement was the office of General Burleson's issued formally from information of the post office department. 1 shall, there- | fore, answer it completely and at length in a letter to some Senator, £0 | wrpic of course, was equivalent to a as to have it appear permanently in|{ qo .o o arier going to war we the records, precisely as Mr. Burle- | B 1€= | should turn around and help Germany son's statement appears. Meanwhile, | - 100 S0 U R 4 eontinued to re I make the following brief prelim. | oot oieral on April 24. 1917, The statement New York American said: “The painfui “The Metropolitan Magazine and | (ruth is that we are being practically Collier’s Weekly and The New York | yged as a mere reinforcement of Eng- Tribune have consistently upheld the | jand's wartare and England’s future war, but have also told that small| aggrandizement.’ This, of course. Was portion of the truth which it was|ap effort against our ally and an of- absolutely neceseary to tell about the | fort to pander to anti-English preju- administration’s failure to conduct the | dice in the interest of our foes, and war efficiently, and have only told it nothing else. On’May 17, it advocated when it was imperative so to do, in{ our spending all our money on pre- order to speed up the war. Collier's | paring our here at has been attacked by Mr. Creel, offi- army and navy home ‘and so compelling Germany if cially speaking as President Wilson's rerresentative, and as giving a mes- | she wants to fight to come to us,’ which sage from the United States govern- W of course, equivalent to answer- ment to the American people. He ing that we would render no aid to defeat Germany until she had defeated has also attacked the Metropolitan and The New York Tribune. our allies and was prepared to attack “The Post Office department, ug single-handed. “On May 25 the same paper said of through the New York postmaster, on the efforts ot float the Liberty Loan: “If you want our food and wealth sent abroad to help suffering England, buy a Tiberty hond, furnish the sinews of war.’ In view of Hearst's continued efforts to excite hatred between the United States and England, the impli- cation of this sentence eannot be mis- taken. In the very next sentence he subtly attempts to appeal to all men with a feeling of affection for Ger- many by intimating that whoever pur- chased a Liberty bond desired to sce Germany not merely defeated but ‘dismembered n July 27 The New { York American spoke of our soldiers being sent over to he offered up The Metropolitan that its March issue was unmailable under the espionage act. This action was widely published throughout the country. Tt was cal- culated to do great damage to The Metropolitan. The Metropolitan im mediately asked the postmaster for tio grounds of his action, but got no an- swer, On March 9, it telegraphed the postmaster-general asking whether the action was taken by order of the post- master-general, and, if not. what steps the postmaster-general would take to repair the damage done to The Metro- politan. On March 11 the postmaster of New York wrote to The Metropol- tan, reversing his action of March tending nations on foreign (.';‘)t,lfl‘:‘d'l:)‘.; poanciosvaanaiEiinEeaoll S8R e e e of our : ‘interfering in Europe’s quarrels’ It Burleson Ignorant of Charge. | is abeolutely impossible to rcconcile “Postmaster-General Burleson. o | the governmen action In proceeding March 11, replied to The Metropoltan, | against Tom Watson's paper with stating that accusation had heen made | fajjure to proceed against Mr. Hearst's that an article in it was & traitorous; paners on any theory that justice was STon IRl e tienonl ol el oneiatikelioi i clations tand P whether the complaints were justified, | o v 097 a hat no orde a Deen issued | B e S R e e hurnine g L SRoL o | Tribune of May not answer The Motropolitan's ques- | o 3 ) | General Burleson tion to what steps would be taken | tribute made ge done by tie con- oL duct of the New York postmaster. On | SOTrespondent of i March 12 the editor of The Metropoli- | MM to Mr. Hearst, and Mr. Hearst's tan wrote to Mr. Burleson, saying,; Citer in chief, Arthur Brisbane. o E R e s having been ‘auxiliaries of valued in- member that there are n great number | fUence’ to Germany. especially be- of pacifists and pro-Germans in this! CAUSe of ‘the editorlals in the Hearst ho would willingly put The NeWspapers.” T commend this to Mr. Metropolitan Magazine out of husiness | Burleson and also to his view of their Because it is the strongest pro-Ally a recent telegrams of conzratulations to inti-German publication in the coun- Mr. Brisbane. these telegrams having try,” calling attention to the fact thay | Deen published in Mr. Hearst's paper. . statement attributed.to the solicitor- | The Evening Journal. Mr. Burleson general of the department was ohvi- | fays of Mr. Heart's alter that he not in accord with the facts, ang Ccongratulates the people of Chicago The Metropolitan could not ac-| hecause they to have the benefit newspaper statements without ' of Mr. Brishane's ‘able and unselfish from the postmaster- efforts for justice and freedom neral, and asking for a written staté- [ true democractic zovernment.' ment from the postmaster-zeneval in | Mr. Daniels goes Mr. Burleson one the matter. He has received no suci better in expressing the belief that statement, nor has any attempt been Mr. Brisbane will preach patriotism made by the Post Office department to ' and civie righteousness. remedy the wrong it did by the “The quotations above at New York prive Mr. Burleson and the same time one of the tration of which he is part vertisers in the Metropoiitan, . shred of ustification In this of Florai Park, N. Y. a good deal more to A letter from a man in Chi- | pecially about one or two IZnglish and ) suggesting that he withdraw his | German newspapers in the West advertisement, because of the odi-| which Mr. Burleson left unmolested torial in the Metropolitan Magazine, | at the very time of the action of his Mansur declined to withdraw it. | department against the Metropolitan: On Apr he notified the Metropol- it will be said in my letter to the sen- itan that a special agent of the Unit-j ator for permanent record.” i i battle- to The New York 8, 1918, Postmaster will find an ardent by the former German of the Koelnische Zei- dep! re- that cept are and And post- | ziven the de- ad- 5 1 of any matter. T have sy, es- cetved The in | refrain | in | bloody sacrifice to the ambition of con- its | for | adminis- | | I——_C-I—z—urch Notices First Baptist Church. Regular morning worship olelbckE Prof S AP, Bérkeley of Newton Theologica] Séeminary will be the speaker. Bible schooi meets at 12:15 with classes for a Prof Berkeley will lead the Brotherhood class. Evening service at o'clock under the auspices of the s, b} | T Y i Trinity Methodist Church. The morning service | at | odist church tomorrow | the Meth- will be Mothers' Day service. The church has been heautifully decorated in | honor of the oceasion by flowers that i are given in honor and memory ‘of many mothers, and the music !wr non will be appropriate to the { occasion. Evening services will ba resumed this Sunday night. Mr. Cook will preach from the subject. “Life’s Unconquerable Forces.” Sunday schoo] sessions at 9:45 and 12:15. Young People’s meeting at 6:15. led by Mr. John and Miss Mar garet Grobstein. The | are studying an interesting little | home service book of the American Red Cross ecntitled, “This Side the Trenches. The public vited to all these i i | | | { is very cordially services. 1 ; in- ! Church | First of Christ. i (Center Congregational.) | Corner of Main and Church streets. { Henry W. Maicr, minister. Morning iss-rvirr at 11 m.. with sermon by | Rev. William 8. Beard of New York. BitAe school 10 a. m. for ail de- | partments are invited to thess | service: Thursday 0 meetin Cross work. a at You evening for from 7:30 ta devotions and Red Here is an opportunity | for al' men and women to help with | war work. The Girl and Boy Scouts meets in Walnut Hill park on Friday cvening at 7:15 a Universalist Church. Hungerford Court. Come spend a cheerful Sunday night at church. Ti- lustrated lecture. Southern TItaly, Naples Pompeii. Many. heautiful colored views at the First Universalist church, Hungerford Court. Sunday evening, 8 o'clock. Seats free, silver collection expected. Emmanuel Gospel Church. Booth hall, entrance 259 Main S§t,, Corner Church. Milton S. Anderson. pastor. The pastor will speak at 10:45 a m. and 7 p. m. Morning sub- ject “Salvation to the Uttermost for Spirit, Soul and Body.” Evening sub- Ject, ‘“Neglecting and Forgetting Christ.” Bible school 12:15 p. m. Short address on Jerusalem hy an eyve witness. & p. m. Young mecting. Open air meeting 6:30 p. m. Children’s service Tuesday. 4 p [ Bible study for Christian worker Tuesday evening. A cordial welcome to all. m. South Church. Sunday, 9:30-—Boys’ division, athea class, Italian school. 10:45— Morning worship, sermon by the pas- tor. 12:10—Church school. 4:30-— Organ recital. 6:00—Assyrian wor- ship. T7:15—Italian worship. Tues- day )0—Junior Boys' club. 7:30— | Boy Scouts, troop 2. Wednesday, 7:30 H B ; —Boy Thursday, i % Scouts, troop 5:00-—Git Scouts, Red and Surgical Dressings work. Patriotic lecture. Friday, 9:30 { —All day work for Ited Epis- copal parish house 1:00, Little Tourists. Cross | 8:30— Cros Baptist Church. at 9:45. Mr. Free- man will give an address. Morning worship at 11 o'clock with sermon | the pastor, A True Mother, n Swedish Sunday school by the { man will give a {and he will also in the evening. lecture preach on the Bibie at 7 o'clock Stanley Memorial Church. Preaching at 10:45 a. { Rev. W. F. ¥nglish of Hartford preach a sermon appropriate to | occasion, *Mothers' Day.” Sunday school 12 m Young Feonles' society v o'clock. Leader, Miss Topic: Sducation Scrvice.” i servic m. will the at meet Bessio the at | Wiliams, ! Road to First Church of Christ. Scientist. West Main Sunday morning service at 10:45 o'cloc Subject: ! “Adam and Fallen Man. Sunday school at 9:45. Wednesday evening meeting at S o'clock. The reading room open at the same address daily 2 until Sundays holidays, Chapel, corner of and Park Place. is from and 5 o'clock, except A. M. E. Zion Church. Rev. (i. H. Staton, pastor. Mother's day will be observed at the church to- morrow. especially at the worship. All mothe wre asked to be present with their children. The pastor will *speak from the subject: “Motherhood and Its Worth in the Present Conflict.” Sunday school will convene at p. m.; Supt. W. H. Brewer. At p. m. the V. Y. P. society of C\. 13 meet. You are invited to attend and take part in diseussing the topic, and the othor exercises. At 7:45 the eve- ning service; the pastor will speak the subject: “Why Be a Hero?” On Monday night trustees requested to meet night a parlor social the residence of Mrs. O. B. Digas. Wellington street, New Britain, fo- the benefit of the church. morning 12 6: will 30 a the On are Wednesda; will he given at $33.000,000 DOCTOR'S BILL, Washington, May 11.—An appropri- | ation of 333,000,000 to provide for the medical necessities of the forces now under arms and about to be assembled under the new draft was asked of con- {gm‘ s today by the war department. at 10:45 | and | Young People | People’s | Phil- | | afternoon at 4 o'clock, Rev, Mr. Free- | street.} on | SOLDIERS' LEAGUE OPENING . Local Draft Boards Receive Official RICHTER & CO. YORK STOCK FEXCHANGE NEW BRITAIN, CONN., Notice of Date—Quotas Are 113 and MEMBERS NEW 31 WEST MAIN STREET TEL. 2040 KEEP YOUR LIBERTY BONDS GOODWIN BEACH & CO. Room 410 Natignal Bank Buildwng, E. MCcENROE, Manager, NORTH & JUDD BOUGHT AND SOLD 4 , Financial QW’W e TRADING CONTINUES IN LARGE VOLUME of 60 days jail in city when | U' S S[eel Regams S[eadmess ullivan —— and will ship it bacl! 94 Men, Respectively. The first and second district exemp- ! tion boards today received official ad- | vices from the War department in- forming them. that the next draft quota will be called to leave New Brit- ain on May 23. The original date was between May 25 and 30, but this date has been advanced. Tt is presumed that the men will leave on the 8:04 train and their destination is Camp Upton In the first district board the call 18 for 113 men, it is officially announced. The call in the second trict is for 94 men. This is a slight reduction In the figures originally sent out from the adjutant-gencral's office when the | first board's quota was fixed at and the second district's at 8¢, Oscar V. T5. Christensen. o r i street, has applied for voluntary in-| duction into the service and will e | sent by the second hoard to Fort Slo- | cum on Monday morning at £:38 | o’clock. IMe has enlisted in the Tauk Corps | | | | { | | { ‘Felephone £120. PRISONER LEAPS FROM MOVING TRAIN AND FUNERA Astrid Bristol Man Escapes Through Win- | DEATHS Ls dow While Being Taken to | Dahlgrean, The funeral of Astrid Da ren will take place at o'clock Monday afternoon from the undertaking rooms Erickson & Carlson and 3 o'clock services will“be conducted al the Swedish Lutheran church will be in Fairview cemetery. Jail in Hartford, Hartford, known there were around to observe John Sullivan’ spectacular jump from a moving train’ within the confines of the vard | about 1:30 o'clock this aftérnoon Sullivan s being transported, un- | der guard. from Bristol to the Hari- ford county jail. In the Bristol lice court this morning, he charged with malicious injury May 11.—So far no witness Buria. Carl dsaton w Carl Eaton city from | ployed for Britain Machine ing at the New He was at 51 Son po- a recent arrival Ellsworth, Mainc short time o. in t and by the this was em New niorn- hos- an « to a died sritain in 1 this early General 3 years of age treet. B, of body <o his native city Prospect times during the journey complained to PPoliceman who had hjm in charge. that | ‘not well.” e asked and| day continued given permission to go to the! lavatory Just before the train reached | YPWard movement in equipments and | funeral of = Mrs. a point opposite tie armo He was | SPeclalties including oils, sugars, to- | Kohnle will be held sfonday gone so long that the oflicer became | baccos, Marine pfd., distillers, and less- | at 9 v'clock from St. Peter's uneasy and looked him up. The : | er values at 1 to 5! Burial will he in Fairviesw | lavatory window was wide open and | o i the prisoner gome. Tt was assumed | WEEICRARIA that the man jumped as the cars be- | the greater of e e day’s moderate reversal, then reacting, t‘ion, Hartford patrolmen were but strengthening again fied. dealings. and heavy, causing some gains at the was strong. 000 shares, Liberty ord, have charge the Wall Street.—Trading in in stocks to- he was large volume with Mrs. Josephine Kohnle Josephine morning church er cemetery. extreme S. Steel gains of SILLY BRADY ENLISTS. William P. Brady, son of Mrs. T. H Brady, of Washington street, enliste¢ | vesterday in the Naval Reserve at the New Haven recruiting station and now awaiting a call for service. Mr Brady is the fifth member of his fam- ily to tender his services to the gov. ernment in its fizht against the auto. cratic rule of Prussianisn Ty brothers nov France another brother is witl the radi school ctudents in Vermont 1 the fourth brother is stationed at the nava base at Newport, R. I, whenr circulation manager of the published by the sailor Kieley, of Winter street vesterday in the Naval New IHaven points. re- covering part vester- | sta- noti- in the later Rai coppers were 1 5 reduction of gen- The closing Sales approximated 500, QUEEN MARI eral cn 3 ena German Brought to Rumania, | The signing of | between Germany Bear in 11-4 declining The 31-2’s sold 4's at 95.44 to at 95.68 to 95 made a new from 9%.40 at 98 95.82 low rec- are serving in to 98.20 99, first 1 London, the treaty of peace and Rumania will by no means the last action in the Rumanian trag- | edy. ording to the view rent May 11 ‘s to second be . and ac ct S New York Stock tions “urnished by members of the New change. ne here. The announcement by (ierman newspapers that Queen Marie would rather abdicate than reign over the] coutry under the German peace con- ditions neld be a case of the]| wish probably being father to the hought. The queen was largely in- strumenta inging Rumania into the war on the side of the Allies and has stubbornly for many monti peace. Even now | that n it is pre- | dicted continue to be a midable the path of the German penetration.” | Exchange quora- Richter & Co., York Stock Ex- May = ik IR is to K. OF C. CONVENTION. Am Alas Am Am Am Am Am Beet Sugar ka Gold Car & Fdy Tee i Can Loco Smelting Am Sugar Am Tel & Tel., Anaconda (op Baldwin Loco B & O B R T | Beth Steel | Canadian | Central & Telegram Be From Sccretary Read Hartford, May 11 convention Columbus, which wich Monday night, gram which Seccreta nt tinfield of of the publicity Connecticut State who had arranging convention reccived todasy Wt e Knights with the abroad Baker Will Norwich. in b o -Delegates of the opens will hear v of War William A national lecturer of the Columbus, and a mem- committee of the 1cil of Defense large share in the the program for Secretary Baker's by lather Keefe, to Knights in Nor- a tele- Saker Keefe fought to avert peaec has e will ohstac she Bl he state of heen sizned, s for- | le in to Itev has plans “for LABOR Bridgeport, the number ¢ ing organized tions the AND May 11 PROBATION. —Delegates to at least 200 represent- labor unions in all sec- state will mect in New Haven tomorrow to and de cide the part orzanized labor will take in the proposed federal prohibi- tion amendment which scems likely to furnish one of the big issues of | 110, G the campaign this fall. There also | Hilo was a gathering of members of sev- | !v"r\‘o eral unions New Haven last Sun-| o day, at which it stated, plans for | pushing the campaign for adoption of the amendment made Cot has a Paci Leather Ches Ohio | Chino Copper | Chi Mil & St Paul. {Col F &1 . Crucible Stee task this 00t of discuss war-time ¢ of rvices of the connection ments here and co- Columbus in army canto heen rs o that 1 of g occnsio o constantly ¥ icitation 1514 503 148 9134 operative s word to this it pfd s Genera!l Flectric t Nor pfd Nor Ore Cetfs Inspiration Taterboronsh Kennecott Cop Lack Stecl | FURNTSHED OMS for rent e ! Maple street Sl NYC& NYXNH Nor Pac “ Norf & West Pac Mail § | Peoples Gas | Pressed | Ray Cons and | Regding G and on s the their state conve Gre ton.” KILLED BY PLOSION. was TOO LATE FOR CLASSIFICATION. Bight Men in Building Blown Plant, p Nitro-Glycerine | | i | West \ sburg Weli May number m an explosion in Hud H deae cerine plan ‘owl Co. af om he & to the re TWO first-c o by the John work, painte Boyle are required | Co.; steady 5-1 = | ui niles f owned Cross Creck five oceurred 5 ac port i the explosi { -Boarding home, prefer. tholic, wanted for 2 broth- and bright ay placed to- kp. 1 g 1 Babics, sev-| «o ' pae eral up to 2 years, need hoarding |, ny homes at once. Fome, preferably | Catholic, for attractive boy of eight. Apply Connecticut Children’s Aid { Society, Hartford, Conn. -11-2d TO REN Parnes, Steel ably ers s be aged 5, 6 ON PHILIPPINES COMMITTE Washington, Ma 11 roth, Colorado, wi o ced Hitch o Ry pfd ..... as chairman of the Studebaiker committee, Senator Texas Oil succeeded Union Puc and Porto United Fruit tor Saul Utah Cop U = Rub U S Steel . U 8 Steel pfd Va Car Chem Westinghouse Western Union Willzs Overland well-hehaved gether or separat S co Scnator Sh of hosen to sue Senator Nebra Ty il acif senat Shafroth chairman of Rico will he the as committees Sons — Delawa room flat, Main street. 1302 bury, of ~Five 131 Tel, FOR SALE—Six Momanguin on £2.400 Buildins in E L. NEW BONDS AT 98.30. New York, May 11.—The new ferty 41-4 per cent. bonds sold at new low of 95.30 v, the day of the trading them, stock exchange here. Later block sold- for 98.24 c Barnes, s L1091 s 3 11025 Lib) th secon: on thi larg| oom water Philip New cottage front, fur- | Reilly, Bx- | flaven. | 5-11-64 at | in nished, a change WANTED—Two girls pay, for out dential Store Co., Cigar Store. WANTED young e s Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co A STRONG, RELIABLE CORPORATION for of next housework, town. Pru- to 5 Thoroughly woman who Uhnited | 11-2dx | —_ ) competent | understands Stenography and weneral office and steady work | | organized and qualified through years of efficient, trustworthy service, to act as Conservator, Guardian, cutor or Administrator. Capital $750,000. Surplus and Profits $1,000,000 Connecticut Trust and Safe Deposit Co. M. H. WHAPLES, Pres't, HARTFORD, CONN., e work. good Apply Trumbull salary e P. Dunn, T4 Hartford. Andrew cet, | 2 i | TWO FURNISHED [ housekeeping ] center. Address Office, ligit from Herald 5-11-1dx Rooms for two minutes S

Other pages from this issue: