New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 25, 1918, Page 3

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’ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, MAY 25, 1918. Bosten Store These cooling, soothing, standard preparations should bé of interest now that the warm weather is approaching. TALCUM POWDERS Hudnut's Viclet Sec, Col- gate’s, Jergen’s Doris, Mavis, Babcock’s Corylopsis, Men- nen’s Borated. FACE POWDERS Hudnut’s Violet Sec, ,Jergen’s Doris, Hudnut’s Rice. CREAMS Hudnut’s Violet Sec, Creme De Meridor, Colgate’s Miricle, Woodbury’s Facial. SOAPS Hudnut’s. Violet Sec, Cashmere Bouquet, Violet Glycerine, Cuticura, Woodbury’s Facial, Pear’s, Scented and Un- scented. PERFUMES' AND TOILET WATERS e PULLAR DR. CLINTON J. HYDE THE PRICE YOU PAY “I know I ought to take treatment; I have been running down for the last year or two. I am all fagged out, have no ambition, worry from morn- ing till night, don’t care whether I am dead or alive, have lost weight and cannot do the same work I used to do some years ago. If I were as strong as I was,.1 could earn good a good specialist, but I cannot afford money. I know 1 ought to treat with to pay for the treatment.” You are paying for it NOW, my friend, and dearly; yet you do not get it. Let me tell you why. Your health is your capital; working capacity is the arc drawing. A good manager never spends more than his interest. Should he begin to draw on the capital his interest would, of course, decrease. And what are you doing? You allow your health to run down more and more; therefore, you can- not work and earn what you used to. Do you see the point? You are draw- ing on your capital—which is your health—by allowing it to run down, and so the Interest (your workihg capacity) is steadily growing smaller. You used to make good money; now vou earn about half of what you used to get. To make two, three or four dollars was play to you; aad you had all your heart and soul in your work. These happy days are gone. You now barely make a living and find it almost beyond your strength. And you shudder at the thought of what will happen when the final breakdown comes. . Figure out in dollars and cents what you have lost already and you will be amazed at the amount; and what you are gong to lose is beyond estimation. The dollar don’t, is an your you MIGHT earn, but actual expense to you. You spend it. And what do you get for it. Worry, anxiety, despondency, want and deprivation for your family. The dollar you take out of vour pocket and spend for treatment with an experienced specialist is not an pense. It is an investment. And in eturn you get increased working ability, higher wages, health and hap- piness at home Which will you Can you h Dr.ClintonJ.Hyde Specialist choose? itate ? in Nervous Diseases. 873 ASYLUM ST.,, COR. FORD ST., HARTFORD, CONN, 10 to 12, 1.30 to 4; 7 to 8. Sundays and Holidays 10 to 1. and .Chronic i I interest vou | §33,000 IS ADDED T0 RED CROSS FUND Big Boxing Carnival in New York a Pronounced Success May 2 or the the World” the boxers of America landed a right hand the jaw of the ;1 Square Garden last night, The ht of the Padded Fist. appearing in York ring for | the first time since the repeal of the Frawley law, attracted a record crowd to the aged by William Fox and the Allied theatrical and motion | A record sum was ob- New York, “‘Greatest Mother in punch squarely on Kaiser in Madis Kn! a New sho pictures team, tained for the Red Cros: They still were counting up at an hour this morning. The house vas estimated at more than $25,000, and an equally large sum was obtained in donations and the auctioneering off of various obj At the last count $53,000 had been procured for the Red Cross. The ticket sale amounted to $29,000. The auc- tioning off of the Kaiser's cup netted $19,000 more, and a chest of silver breught $550. Miss Elsie Ferguson and a troupe of show girls circulated among the spectators and collected $2,000, Bighteen thousand dollars was ob- tained by Marshall Tom McCarthy’s auctioneering of the Kaiser's cup, which in 1905 was presented to Wilson Marshall, the well known yachtsman, by the German ruler for the alleged purpose of “cementing closer the friendly relations try and the German Empire. ' Among the famous boxers ‘rawled through the fiercely and aggressively, taking and giving blows and punishment, all for the Red Cross, were Battling Levinsky, Gunboat Smith, Jim Coffey, Harry Greb, Trank Moran, Bill Brennan, Augie Ratner, Jeff Smith, Tex Kelley, Johnny Dundee, Jack Britton, Kid Lewi ldie Wallace, Frankie Calla- han and Mel Coogan. All of the cheaper seats were filled when the concert by the band from the battleship Recruit started shortly before 7 o’clock. It was followed by vocal selections by Mme. Kadorin, wife of an Ttalian army officer and Miss Edna Joyce of Chicago. Gus Ed- wards and twenty beauties sang a new Red Cross song and did some special- ties. Tom Hackett with his “Daddy Mine” and Bert Rule with “At the Coffee Cooler’s Tea’ also were big hits, who Soldiers Open Carnival. “Every bout will be fought strictly on its merits” clarioned Peter Prunty, wpreliminary to the staging of the cur- tain raising bout of four rounds ‘ be- tween Ritchie, Ryan and Eddie Grover, from the 326th Motor Truck company of Camp Upton. The two went at each other like game cocks. It took all the strength of Lieut. Bull Mitchell, the Venderbilg cup autd driver who acted as referee, to pry them apart at the end of the round. Early in the second Grover hooked a terrific left to the jaw and Ryan hit the boards with a thump that was heard all over the building. Mitchell was slow in tolling off the count and Ryan had been down eleven seconds when Mitchell reached seven, Ryan tottered to his feet. He was all in, but true ta Uncle Sam’s khaki, he gave a remarkable exhibition of gameness. Rallying, he fought like a bulldog, and before the end of the round was forcing the attack. In the third Ryan handed Grover a taste of his own medicine, dropping him for a count of five with a right swing to the paw. Grover tottered to his feet, and affer absorbing a whole cartload of wild swings, surprised the fans by rallying and driving Ryan back on the defen: When the final gong rang Mitzhell once more had to pry the two apart. After sub- duing the pair he raised each right hand aloft in token of a draw. Vulgar Shades Reddy. Benny Vulgar, former amateur ban- tamweight champion, and Battling Reddy of Harlem met for the second bout. Fach wore an American flag as a belt, whereas the two Sammies in the opening bout, who certainly were more entitled to sport Old Glory, wore plain waist bands. The pair went six fast rounds, with Vulgar having a shade the better of the milling. Referee Patsy Haley rendered no decision. Harry Pierce, the baldheaded slug- ger from Red Hook, forced the fight- ing all the way against Paul Doyle of Harlem, and would have gained the decision had Referee Jimmy De For- rest given one. The gallery gods re- peatedly implored Pierce to “put one over”, Harry sent home many a polthogue, but none were Thealthy enough to floor the East Sider. Action a plenty was promised in the fourth scrap between Augie Ratt- ner and “Tex" Kelly for the middle- weights had an old grudge to settle. Kelly pumped rapid fire lefts to Ratt- ner’s face in the opening round and Augie retaliated with short arm rights to the jaw. Rattner got his left working at the start of the third and scored effectively till Kelly rallied and got inside with some stiff left and rights, Rattner had struck his gait, how- ever, and outfought Kelly in a greater part of the round. Rattner’s two handed fighting gained him the fourth round. The rounds of this bout had been shortened to two minutes with- out any announcement. The fans got wise to the abbreviation and implored Referee Billy Moore to “make 'em fight three minute rounds or get out of the ring.” Both Rattner, who is a member of the Depot Brigade, and Kelly, who is a private in the 378th Motor Truck Company, had asked for two minute rounds on the plea that their duties at } his teeth { insky ' between this coun- | ropes and fought | ‘Camp Upton had left them no time to traln, Rattner maintained his ad- vantage in the last two rounds, and earned the verdict, Levinsky Fight Coffey. When Battling Levinsky, former boxing instructor at Camp Devens, crawled through the ropes for his go with Jim Coffey of the Naval serves, he was axcorded an ovation. The usual Celtic war cries greeted Cof- fey. The pair fought a whirwind go in the same ring a few years ago and the Hlng. They got it. Levinsky started off by poking his left into Jim's nose sending his right wrist deep into the Celt’s midsecton. Coffey rallied rights, The battler stepped with snampy punches and back up. Twice the stalwart Celt had | rattled with hefty rights Jim’s knees wabbled a bit Lev- ¥ slowed down a trifle. Apparently the battler anted to give the crowd | a run for its money. It was a long three minutes for Coffey. The minute’s rest did Coffey a world of good and he came up fresh in the | second, Craftily making his weight | tell, he backed Levinsky about the| ring. The battler kept up & constant | volley on the retreat and landed hard and often. Levinsky gained the round | on point: Drops Battler in Fifth. d Levinsk with a damaging right, but failed to press his advantage. Perhaps. it was fortunate he did not, for Coffey was more astonished than hurt and he tore in, Despite his excessive poundage Coffey was standing up well. After Levinsky had shaken him up with a left hook and short inside uppercut in the fourth Coffey cut loose like an en- raged bull and backed Levinsky about the ring. Levinsky was content stand and trade wallops, but Jim’'s | weight was too much for him. The pair were in a hot mixup at the bell. Coffey took the round by a hair. A left to the body and an overhand right chop almost sent Levinsky to inside Whe rossed to | Re- s settled back in their seats in | expectation of seeinz some real mil- and | and | went after Levinsky with long lefts and | made Jim | STATISTIC WORKERS | This photograph shows two of the prominent boxing instructors at the JACKIES ENJOY BOXING LESSONS AT CALIFORNIA NAVAL TRAINING STATION Yerba Buena naval training station in four-round match while the sailors cheer them on. PUT IN BUSY WEEK the canvas at the start of the Levinsky rallied and getting with some cleanly driven punches | forced the Celt on the defensive. Twice Levinsky sent Coffey reeling backward | with combination one-two lefts and rights. Each time, however, the Celt charged in for more. Decision for Levinsky. In the last round they cut loose. Catching Levinsky off balance with a smashing right, Coffey sent the battler to his glove tips. The Camp Deveus | “Professor” got up and caught Coffey with a right that sent the Celt reeling across the ring. Again Levinsky | leaped in with cleanly driven smashes | to jaw and wind and before the end | of the round Levinsky had Coffey act- ing rather submissive. The bout went to Levinsky. The five cartoons were sold at an aggregate cost of $1,675 which went to | the Red Cross. Two of the cartoons, one by Goldberg and the other by Tad. were purchased by J. S. Bow for $400 and $425 wespect | Fox got a Ripley drawing fnri Sam Harris, the theatrical man- | purchased: Igoe's drawing of | McGovern, whom Harris man- in heyday of his career, for $150 and then took an Edgren draw- ing for $200. After the cartoon fale came the auc- tloneering of the Kaiser's cup, and then Gunboat Smith and Harry Greb entered the ring for a resumption of the boxing end of the entertainment. The pair of heavy hitters put up a slashing go, with Greb’s youth and strength conterbalancing the ringeraft of the veteran Smith, Greb was en- titled to the verdict. inside | RED CROSS GOLF AT GREENWICH. Greenwich, May 25.—An exhibition | golf match for the benefit of the Red Cross will be played on the links of the Greenwich Country club, Sunday | afternoon. The players will be Jerome Travis and Max Marston, amateurs, and Walter Hagan and James Barnes, professionals. EMMISSARY FROM ' BOLIVIA TO JAPAN Victor Munoz Reyes, Bolivian min- ister to J 1, who recentiy sailed from San Francisco to Tokyo, bearing 10 Japan greetings from Boliv s the first South American nation to break off relations with Germany, Senor Reves is expected to use Japan to divert some of her shipping for the WRTAI[OF U} WOIF U} JO uonrIodsund) mines to the United States. | City Clerk’s Office Records More | Than 100 Documents During the past month New Brit- ain’s death rate has maintained an average of about two per day and | this record continued during the past | seven days when fourteen deaths were fice. recorded The dropped | in the city clerk’s of- | marriage market precipitately veek however, only four licenses ing been granted. In statistical work nevertheles has the hav- during other lines of , the city clerk's office had plenty to do as a total of 102 deeds were recorded, of | which the following transfers: Isabelle Hyland et al., manuel Gospel churel, buildings on I'ranklin quale Tomio to were realty to The Em- | land - and Square; P; Antonio Albanese, land and buildings on Belden street; FBodwell Land Company to Wanda R. Varwerk, land on TLake Boulevard; Anna C. Smith to Daniel J. Anderson | et ux, land and buildings on City avenue; Myer Dunn to Samuel Wolf et al., land and buildings on Hartford avenue; Bessio Andrews et al, to the Bodwell Land company, land buildings on Lake Boulevard; Bessie Andrews et al., to Bodwell Land com- pany, land and buildings on Hillcrest avenue; Don J. Scott to William J. Morrin, land and buildings on East street; Julius Smulska et al., to Mie- | c w Gonska, three parcels, land | and buildings on Beach street and | Richmond avenue; New Britain Lum- ber & Coal company to Theodore Johnson et al.,, land and buildings on | Maple street; Frederick Emgel to | Charles Gasperini et ux., land buildings on Stanley street; Joseph Volek et al, to Joseph Swoboda et | ux.,, land and buildings on Jubilee | str Mary Russell Brown to An- drew F. Oliver et ux., land and build- ings on Hart street; John Maloney et ux., to Casimera Murcyzk, land and buildings on Hart street; John Ma- loney et ux., to Casimera Mureyzk, | land and buildings on Cur! street; Title Realty & Development company, Inc., to Adolph Ouswold, land and buildings on City avenue; Bertha Cryne to Edith S. Spaulding, land and buildings on Hart Antonio | Bordonaro et al, to Francesco Mar- otta, land and buildings on Daly street; Edgar C. Linn to Adam ¥ri heir, land on Richmond street; Wil- llam Hoffman to George E. Darrow, land and buildings on Francis street; The Bodwell Land company from ; Bessie, Alden and Robert W. An- drews, two parcels of land on Stan- ley street, Belvidere Manor and one parcel each on Hillerest avenue, Belvidere Heights, and Euclid avenue, Belvidere Manor, and Foxon place, Belvidere Heights. The fol- lowing transfers were also made by the Bodwell Land company to Mikalauskas, land on Stanley Belvidere Manor; Bodwell Land com- | pany to Fred J. Ward, land on Stan- | ley street, Belvidere Manor; Bodwell Land company to John H. Wilcox, et ux, land on Hillerest avenue, i- dere Heights, and Bodwell Land com- pany to Fred J. Ward, land on Wel- | lington street, Belvidere. | The New Britain Lumber & Coal company has sold to Anna W. P.!| Zink land and buildings at No. 85 | lis street, and William Hoffman sold to George K. Darrow, land and buildings on Ellis stret. and RAIN POSTPONES Chicago, May —R« caused postponement of the semi-finals in the | Western Conference tennis champion- ships at the University of Chicago courts yesterday. These events, to- gether with the finals, will be decided this afternoon, i | He i decers dread to face his and | ¢ | right | M. | NEW STANLEY WORKS OFFICE Concern Feels Nced of More Room and WL Convert Old Russell Home- stead Into Business Annex. The Stanley Works with business that more office room has become immediately imperative. The company has therefore decided to take over the old Russell homestead, which it owns and utilize it for office purposes. This house is on Grove Hill and faces the head of Lake street. It adjoins the company's present office. is so rushed ROYAL FLIER HERE. Comes to Call On New Britain Friends For Short Time. Clad in the uniform of a member of the Roval Flying Corps an aviator, known in the British army as “King Sol”, arrived here this aftérnoon for a visit with friends. Shunning publicity he hid behind his flying name. He said that he and his grandsires are Americans and he is determined to fly under the Stars and Stripes in the future. His home is in Worcester. claims that he made an aerial trip from Canada to Springfield. It was his intention, he said, to call on | friends in Hartford, New Britain and | New Haven, making the journey by air and he would have done so but for the accident that necessitated his landing in Springfield. King Sol walks lame as a result of a fall from a plane while in France in which accident his pilot was Kkilled. Mr. Hughes Summoned. (From the New York Times.) If the average citizen had been sked who is the bravest and most ful investigator in the TUnited States for a baffling case in which scandal may lurk, he woula not hes- itate to say, recaliing the New York insurance exposure, Charles Evans Hughes. Nothing that is wrong or criminal can very well be hidden from his acute intellect. No reluc- tant witness can deceive him. Evil- examination His mastery of detail, his clearne: of statement, his penetration of mo- tives, his quickness to detect evasion. and his always unruffled self-po: make him consummate trail finder in a maze like that of the aircraft fiasco. ‘When Mr. Hughes says in his let- ter to the president that he will “be glad to co-operate with the attorney general in making a prompt and thorough investigation of the charges of dishonesty in connection with air- craft production,” the man of probity d action speaks. He means every word of it; he will get to the bot- tom of things. When Mr. Hughes goes on to say t he assumes that the attorney general will advise him “of his wishes for a conference, with a view to the making of definite and adequate plans for the investigation,” it means that Mr. Hughes will be found ready to take a leading part in the inquiry and that he won't tol- erate delay or mismanagement. Where he sits will be the head of the table. In fact, the understanding that Mr. Hughes will do the inve: tigating in his own way, with the ap- proval of the attorney general. (From the Boston Herald.) President Wilson has done the right thing at the right time in the way in his designation of les Evans Hughes to act with the attorney general in investigatin the charges of graft, ineff ney and pro-German tendencies, which Gutz- on Borglum, the sculptor, has made against the aircraft administration. Hughes has a nation-wide repv tation as a public prosecutor. He is a sturdy and unvarying patriot. No man since the war began, with the possible exception of Mr. Taft, has given more evidence of a purpose to consider solely the interests _nf the country i al hour—in com- plete d party—than Mr. Hughes. He will undertake thi work With thoroughness and vigor. And Wwhatever its final outcome, no one is likely to h.” Cha now HARTFORD facture. and style. vance goes into effect. Among the sailors serving Uncle Sam and now stationed at the Charleston navy yard are found somec of the most prominent baseball play- ers of the major and minor leagues. Top row, left to right: Corkey, Har- vard; Gainer, Red Sox; Gaw, Buffalo; Gill, Buffalo; Shorten, Red Sox; Ba- der, Red Sox. PROMINENT PLAYERS COMPRISE CHARLESTON NAVY YARD BALL TEA GOSSARD FRONT-LACING CORSETS ALL ADVANCE IN PRICE JUNE 1. Owing to Greatly Increased Cost of Manufacture. Our Stock is Complete, With All the New Models, Many of Them Just Received. Better Buy Before the Prices Advance. This is an advance notice of an increase in price of ALL Gossard front-lacing Corsets June 1. The manufacturers are compelled to make this in- crease, owing to very greatly increased costs of manu- Middle row: Pennock, Car, Buffalo; McNally, Red Sox; Braves; Splaine, Holy Cross. Bottom row: Walsh, Red Shay, Chicago; Killilea, Buffalo; 1 Red Sox; arroll, orton, Holy Cross; Callahan, iyn: Gleason, Pittsburgh. In front: Witt, Red So; Red [S newspaper has invariably hastened to commend every such step that hs Leen taken, as the one thing most needful in the present situation. (From New Haven Journal-Courier.) The selection by President Wilson of Judge Hughes as the probe to be used in the aircraft investigation has automatically closed the mouths of those who had already convinced themselves that the administration was preparing buckets of whitewash for home consumption. (From the Wall Street Journal) To take the investigation of air- plane construction out of politics, President Wilson could have done no more brilliant thing than to nom- inate Charles Evans Hughes for that duty. Justice Hughes is, after all, the leader of the republican party to the time of the next presidential nomination of that par Those re- publicans who set party apove pa- triotism are playing politics; but Mr. must have known that M ghes would accept his conseri like a soldier, and serve if necessary for the duration of the war. Afrplanes are now out of politics, and Mr. Justice Hug can be de- pended upon to draw results from an inquiry which will be a standard for future inquisitions of the sort. the New York Commercial) President Wilson's appointment of Charles Evans Hughes to investigate the aircraft charges will seal the lir of his detractors. Mr. Hughes his opponent in the election of 1916, Lut no better lawyer could been selected for this work. The pres ident could have given no bette proof of his non-partisan attitude. (From the New York Journal of Commerce.) Nothing could have been wiser in obtaining assistance for the attorney general than the selection of Judge Hughes, on account of the familiar fact that while he is an ardent sup- porter of the government in doing its utmost in the war operations in wkich its energies are enlisted, he conspicuously represented the oppo- sition political party of which he was (From was wish President on and the of which he is the head would more strategic moves of this kind. They have of late begun to do things on a basis of nationality and not of party, just as other war ad- inistrations have dome. And this W party make the candidate for president the present incumbent. This makes it distinctly not a partisan matter with him or with the president. (From the Boston Post.) Of course this fine move by n the up | | airc have | president makes obsurd upon utterly futile an enatorial inqul the aircraft arge E: h a man as Hughes the inve tion by th department of § shotild satisfy every senator. fritter aw v time and effort in ¢ cate inqui The Chamb resolution, scarccly less offensi the chief executive in its am) form than before, be. § ly beaten in the today,) should senate (From the New York Heral The president is to be ©omn, ed upon his selection of Mr!" to act with the attorne; conducting ‘the investig made by the department ‘of into charges against persons co| cd with ir su. est is to be congratulated upomn Tlughes' acceptance. It gives. ance that no guilty man will b mitted to escape. the Brooklyn Bag Hughes will investigat nominally as attorney genera take the lead i ing witnesses and subjecting # examination It is obviousk president’s wish that he should (From Mr, ft scandal sociate of the will, however, Gossard Corsets have a high reputation for quality They will continue to be made with the same rigid insistence upon honest worth, The $2 and $2.50 Gossards will be $3. The $3 and $3.50 Gossards will be $4. The $5 Gossards will be $6. The $6 Gossards will be $7. The $7 Gossards will be $8. The $8.50 Gossards will be $10. Better select your favorite model before this adi. Holy (g Athletics; §

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