New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 14, 1919, Page 8

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IDAY, FEbal... ICATED. | THE NICMIILLAN STORE, Inc. @8 me to present the fol- Bte. & “ALWAYS RELIABLE” year 1910, Frank D. An- h ; s - 5 IN—9 A. M. TO 6. P. M. ar M & former resident of New Brit- | f SIOREICER SATURDAY—9 A. M. TO 10 P. M. it now of Vineland, N. J., pub- #& pamphlet entitled, ‘Names of ts of New Britain, Connecti- [ the Year 1799 Who Paid Taxes, i the Amount of Their List.” A of this pamphlet may be seen at B€ Institute Library. BiThe total amount of their lists was 82,713.83. The three highest tax- Payers were: Oliver Stanley, $553.88 ad Stanley, $544.46, and Elnathan #Smith, $504.27. The assessments for Bl the year 1800 are recorded in the Berlin Land Records, Vol. 2, and show | i 0 | that Gad Stanley’s list was increased $95.20, making it $639.66, the highest e 00/ list, besides having (%) 5 0 ] ’ . on e 1o i penes vone | A Sapsational Sale of Women’s and Misses’ Skirts a title which applied in the 1799 list | [ to James North aldne, while in 1800 e e Seiected From Our Regular Stock and Placed on Sale well as to Stanley and North. The - P a i e s R at Our Exceptionaliy Low Price B¥ing, | Levi.Andrews, his list having been in- fids blow | creased from $440.58 to $505.89, while | i MATERIALS. v BV Va COLORS. e | James North's list was increased from | § Serges, Navy, Playing. $344.23 to $403.43, his being the third |l s, aC B "of busine highest. There is nothing in the An- H L] Sluce S = Poplins, Copen : drews pamphlet or in the Berlin rec- s & i > aring, | ords which clearly indicates whether |# Mixtures. Formerly priced at $4.98 to $6.98. Grey. P80 Laughter Days | the figures given are on the grand list, S e, s 8 are faring. or the amount of the tax to be paid. This is an opportunity to secure a well tailored Dress Skirt for less than the cost of the ma- In Camp’s History of New Britain, the terials alone teday. Sthrough the old delights | amount set to the name of Levi An- fiitime fancies bringing drews is called “a grand list,” which Bices up from summer nights is probably correct. 1 e JOT strayed off echoes singing. Gad Stanley, Esqr., lived on the EXTR 7 Wawarads, 3 o PP "Let's find the long lost days of Gone, | present Stanley farm in Stanley Quar- | f§ ARY REDUCT ONS ON Uil bé%more appropri B e ving' s 8 Folil with bappy laughter ter, where Levi Andrews was also liv- Rt rere instdfed on the capitol tion" to %kdep our’ industries ex- That sunset raced before the dawn ing on the present Andrews farm. gk 10 Harttordane ORI Da(\\?‘!:‘x t thelr normal rate. With gladness romping after. James North, Esqr., was a combined | g VQ OMEN ND MESDE S’ COA l S % e 3 immigration stopped and 5 farmer and manufacturer and lived on | ¥ ds has replied that the War De- om{ErEMON "oh alarge s6al8 soon And we shall know what we'Ve not | the east side of Franklin squar i ment made the assignment and to begin it is evident that we are known g > . list of New Britain taxpayers for the | § B without authorily to change the not going to have enough men Since we strayed up from DIaying | year 1773 is published in Andrews Rl D o for our industries. even on a pre Where down the flelds the dreams | Genealogical and Ecolesiastioal His- N @ war basis, and allowing for no were blown : 2 ~ » 2 v rita age 75 tha roversy. Connecticut wants the srowth. Like children out a-Maying feryiel ewaDpall Dese b ihel ; - o S B o R s || 0, IPAEIR ISR ] (900 Sl and should hav Mr. Sprague may be denounced as | Care would are to follow there, | ,an in the place and “Left Gad Stan- Nor heavy thoughts come after, T ) e e In Pleasant Lands of Playing where | 1o Sécond, his list being only five t Battalion of the 102d Regiment | 1o may be questioned by the Crape T e AT S R shillings less than that of Booth. It vhich Connecticut soldiers bpre- | pancors' League. Yet his prophecy JAY B. IDEN, thus appears that Gad Stanley, in the z - . | year 1800, had been one of the richest inated advanced aguinst the Ger- | geems reasonable. 1If it is true that in Kansas City Star. r 2 ! men in New Britain for 27 years. In 9 . . s on the Trugny-Epicds road | ene remainder of the world is beg- 1800, his list included 17 head of cat- WOMEN S SILK HOSE Th S l l f FACTS AND FANCIES. ; 4 in ree peCla MR ugh a wheat field. The enemy | oo for American goods industrial | tle, 7 horses, 1 brass wheel clock, 1 held his fire until the advancing | , osperity may descend on us like an _— | silver watch, 8 fireplaces and 294 acres As these are all below the market prices quoted fqr future deliveries it would be n was half way across the field | ;vajanche. One of the meanest ways to spend | of 1and, and vet, there was not a car- | i stock up now. an afternoon off is to bother a friend | riage, wagon, cart or house in his list, who is busy.—Toledo Blade. unless the eight fireplaces designate a sidered in attempting to lift the veil house or houses. It does not appear 6 Yanke The First Battalion | piging the future. England has al T T ek ;.:;;g”;,?. i:“c: of his assessment that F bl-e Sllk Hose Slik and Flbre Hose o face to face with the 220-milll- | reaqy placed an embargo on certain | Whatever happens, he sassed the En- | 1y b :“THM;M 1\“]”e . br piece at a bend in the road, |\, eq from all countries in order to | tente good and plenty.—Manchester "f)y:’()“’)’“‘;ywfl”_ffm‘ OM:AMF o Black, White and All Desirable Colors, White and All Desirable Colors, e O (L, e Union. ; ble yuble H. T 7 d the crew and took the gun. But permit hér own industries to become have wrought some changes in New 3 Double Heel and Toes 65c Double Heel and Toes, Pair Pair C Your unrestricted choice of any was on Jul 1918, that the | o gGreaming eptimist. Hven his san- Winter Coat in our stock. Formerly price to $80.00. economy to then directed a scorching machine el are ey ractorstiofbetcor torrent that decimated the ranks I the sun had set, although the | .o cctoblished. It is true that the Sitin broiorty 4 16 ciianeed by Valte 79k s s Vahte 98c . oot il bon was still in possession of the | gipargo does not begin to scratch A while ago was hard-hitting = our present grand list of over fifty- ricans, the valiant band that had | (ne surface of American exports but | thal was needed.” Now the need is two million doilars and the old grana for clear thinking, and it seems to be | list of less than twenty-three thou- ted the capture had been wiped | it may be taken as a warning of sim- o e a harder need to fill than the first.— | sand dollars, or by the individual as- | § . . It was taken by Connecticut |jja; measures to follow if the product | Charleston News and Courier. | sessment on the Horace Booth estate Spun Sllk and F!bre Hose who died on the soil of France. | o labor menaces the wel- of over three hundred and ninety- American is why Connecticut believes it | far6 of the British Isles. Erecting Great Britain is having more trou- b1d be located permanently On |{rade fences is novel business for | ble with her scattered family than the J Rictiont soll. Governor Holesmb | mnelana bt she had expert instrues |/0ld woman who trled to live in | 207 forty dollars In the year 1800 Black, white and all leading shades to match shoe tops. : ; shoe and work down-town.—Knox- ; there were four open carriages and 1a not desist. He should write t0 | tors in the high tariff advocates of | Li0° Phe MTTRNOX o top carriages in New Britain, Also or Peters of Boston and to GOV- [ aAmerica. et x brass wheel clocks, 11 wooden seven thousand dollars, and by Gad Stanley’s list of less than six hundred With fashioned back seam leg, high spliced and double woven heel and toe. NI LG e i a a6 s aEe GaaaEaan o0 e GaRaEE s a IeaaaED5E §o br Coolidge of Massachusets ex- | 1¢ has also been pointed out that 1 wheel clocks and 14 silver watches. . : b ) It’s an unpopular man who can’t There was not an automobile in the ing the situsiion. Both will un- e T S here wa b the workingmen in the United States | 1,3 some excuse for attending a ban- list, but there were 183 horses, seem- 7 tand the sentiment that attaches | myust be prepared to fight stiff compe- | quet these days.—Baltimore Ameri- ingly a sufficient number to draw the FEBR ARY SALE PRE‘ ES he 220-millimeter and, no doubt, | tition., Japan has come to the fore | can. six carriages we then had. Our pop- | | U agree to surrender the prize if a | jnqustrially and her sagacious and s ulation at that time was 436 males, ituce can bo found. 1¢ necessary. | enrawa manutacturers aro propared | It has just about motten so in this | FUS fomalos And four Hlacks, making To clear away all odd lots and wiater gloves, mittens, etc. lernor Holcomb should send a del- | for commercial war. As the average | country that an oil weil that doesn’t S ShhTanD s fon of military men and civillans | japorer in Japan receives only ffty guslh ovcrktho d;;x-;]ok_ i regarded as o NS X - O S nterview the Massachusstts O |locnts's day it can be asen that Amer- | ™ Cleapiskate—Dallas News. — ’ . — W e G B e R R e : Saturday at our 3rd floor Drapery and " start when they begin to distribute v R e o REPRESSIVE LEGISLATION. labor's contention for a universal | the post offices among the adherents | oV Dedford is setting a good ex- ovices and experts appeared be- | eight hour day is conceded it will | of the party in power.—Des Moines | ample to other New England cities hy Rllg Depa{tme“t L the judiciary committee of the ; have a serious effect on production in | Register. iisadontion) ofan astrectiie pmoves s eral Assembly vesterday and ex- | this country. | ment f('lv' the Americanization of the Febfllal'y Sale Pl’lce on Rugs Loed their opinions concerning a bill | Thomas A. Edisow’s advice to The old republican idea is begin- | forelgn-bora population engaged In bidding the display of the red flag | American business is “Go ahead.” | Ning to shoot at the democratic ad- j"”"‘"‘”“"‘.“”'k re "“f" proportion | f§ J ministration with a hoss pistol in | Of the mill operatives have no knowl- PESTRY SSELS e o the right hand while trying to har- edge of Iinglish or of the duties and EAED BEY S I NINEL o Imeetings and in parades. That | Here is wisdom not to be disregarded, ‘e should have been any opposi- | wisdom worth millions of dollars | poon the presidency with the lef responsibilities of American citi- 6x9 12.98 ’ to the measure gives the man in | ziven freely to his countrymen. We | hand.—Louisville Courier-Journal. zens. The plan for the establishment e siaie o . Size ) A erica zat asses has the & - street a peculiar sensation. The | have the plants. We have the me- gf o mmericaligdiion ol has 8-3x10-6 ; . support of the chamber of commerce, | St G e $27 00 wiedge that the red flag has | chanics. We have the money. We | [\ o v o0 0 the school department, the Y. M. C.| & B $21.00 Formerly $32.00 . mpions in the Connecticut Legis- | have the raw material. Have we the | spirit of the people subsides the men- | A | : ; : 8 i “ 9x12 | re will not provide an increased | courage to roll up our sleeves and | tion of General Pershing for 1920 is ufacture School bulldings and g & $30 00| rooms in the textile mills are used as 2T 00 3 Formerly $35.00 . | = Bl fraternal societies and the man 3 ationa ndividual se- | smash forward? less frequently heard.—Kansas City i | # (otimationaliand individuay s Al meeting places for the classes and| ty. = among the instructors are persons of | & = = o enator Hemenway of Hartford, THE SOCIETY OF NATIONS, foreign birth who have learned the M UTILITY RUGS at special February Sale prices. The February crop of grammar language of this country and who| DRAPERTIES showing new Scrims, Marquisettes, also Curtains all ready to hang with school graduates may miss the June ~appreciate the meaning of the twoi § complete. oses, but looks very promising, for | word American citizenship. Patri-! J i he does not believe in ‘“repres- | MOSt progressive stride in interna- | all that.——Manchester Union tic instruction also is given to foreign- e ~ born children by the Boy Scouts and As an additional argument for |the Girl Scouts, troops of which are i A O | their recognition, the Bolsheviki have . stationed at each mill - tens our national institutions un- | Stituted, the organization is not a So- | ;,6zun to use poison gas.—Springfield This program of a great textile city What Is a e S e Pl Jneluds practically all of tha the country is to be kept in con- | ¢iety of Nations in the broadest | Republican and the earnestness of the workers (Boston Transcript.) czars and Kings, nobles, merchants,| mountains in the anthracite region e i 5 27 |sonse. ™ fs still a balance of et indicate that at last the seriousness| rhe word is now familiar through artisans, even peasants—all who have| have been denuded of timber. Ship= t turmoil. It was repressive leg- 8e s an el oLerom e of the problem of assimilating the|the attacks of bolsheviki and Sparta- accumulated a few roubles or marks,{ ments of gangway, slope and shaft but a power of comstruction rather | 1¢ the world isn't plumb topsy-tur- | foreign-born population Is recognized | cus people upon all the elements of aad who hope by their industry to| timber from the south have been than destruction. The five major na- | vy, how can we account for the fact H and there is no doubt that two or|goejely except their own. —Another “'L;i‘““'m‘«' {" ‘““‘ puos e largely cut off by demands of the gov- tions that co-operated in the defeat | that Yankee soldiers are facing Chi- = three ye: of educational endeavor|ord, in their hostilc and hating We are, f'fi"j- r“ '»\_mf;“‘! : vm?«‘]'; ernment. In instances, timber shipped troops away up in Russia near will make New Bedford a better city | sense, is flagrantly misused. In strict- = e eyl /L“m»\ on the| from Georgia consigned to the mines i east it Oynn’V“l ork ?‘n;p?\mf Cen-| was commandeered by the govern= Transcript. It is a0t encugh to amend immi-| qgle class citizen. Anclently tt:includ- ters of lmported ~disconten’. —HX ment. Concrete is coming more and relations between peoples are sration laws. The thousands of for-|eq artisans as well if they dwelt in Wilson down to the poorest farmcl,| more into use, but at the present cerned, avoiding any decrees cign-born population is recognized| cities and lived in comfortable houses. aad including Ara.vmfl_.vivd_ tockefol -t time timber is required and it is nt that is suppressed must abide Tl T e ey o R All Testrictions on the price of coal | and there is no doubt that two ("‘I’I‘\m ord distinguishes certain people ler and the man who sells apples and| searce. Without the decree. The legislation against | ™& e interpreted as interfering | j,ve been removed by the govern- | three vears of educational endeavor|from rovalties, from the nobility, the oranges from a hand-cart, We are| pe made in effor L red flag may be likened to the | with domestic policies. me Now we will see whether it | will make New Bedford a better cily| gontry—or at least the upper gentry— nothing but bourgeois. “I thank thee, | put of coal pression of the flag of piracy and The charter has been made public. | will go up or down.—Portland Press. than it is today. on the one hand and from couatry Jew, for tf_‘gmhmz me that word /3 ¥ —— t St G e noo 1 poor tawn laborers on the ‘‘Bourgeois’ has become a term of oy had no more reason for ex- | Immediate criticism may be expected. | Z e Lsisjnotienctis hito amendiimisraiiipeoplefanc (G 5 " the highest honor. It rep-csents A 3 et el e who Delive & | What starving Burope wants first is | tion laws. The thousands of foreign-|other. It is the same as “burgher.”] the highes o < i Mocioilol b 4—J. W. Kimpe ng than has the I. W. W, who | Small nations ) LR ey have | ;' jeague of rations.—Chicago News. ers who neither read nor speak Eng-|or citizen and Shakespeare used “citi- erica’s triumphant struggle \‘\‘(‘1 Tl S e i e, m the red flag as their emblem | been discriminated against may pro- | = lish after long residence in this coun-{zea” in exactly the same sense, as:forces o:’ el Tt D U Sl Sl e e ; o 3 e SHLrial There are no Bolshe ir Sl RS G : Theis labor] akes Jaques speak of the est life-long endcavor of honest men it L 1S PULIORE Of S8 whose tactics are not dissimilar | test. Small men will shriek. The ST ) )1 R B o 'i'“)‘ ith. Fhu; Imn;! ne m\y‘ ‘!"H': e b pae. It stands for thrift, improvement,| tablishing a bank to provide mines count Merely plair ieves and | is desirable and there is no demang 8 ing along ) S- 4 e i ith | long unworked with sufficie : | burglars.—Lawrence Tribune for the deportation of the orderly o as "“fat and greasy citizens,” ov, duty and the helpful sympathy with| o0& m‘“rm.‘“] “‘1h & ”.%.My KLl 4nd the tndustitons. Dut they Camumer|when Imosen, emplovine the word | and folovadlon of all whose Honest ofy) | UL 8088 BReiin o oo Blace [d@ the rights of private property | some of the regulations. The small Women's next . will be for | become identif vith the hest inter-| adjectively, as we do “bourgeois,” de-| forts are like our own. We can all ba emselves on a profitable basis. It Von L T i i adj vely 5 & 2d to be bourgeois on the Lenina, | iS also stated that the British capi- it on After she | ests of the country until they have a|clared that she is “not so citizen a! proud 3 sentt , ! d i T ne iu he e e e e e e TS | S uniin i asl tolseom KforatelisrelRiciory) rotzkyygldebknecht i John i Reed i) falistsiiisiendeavorinE | to SRsecUreltiay d. The statute books teem with | point of exhaustion © one cxcept | Sitson o o e z 3 N g < ks Moliere's “Bourgeois Gentil-| sis. It means that we are just plain; concession for constructing a railway® oS 16 tochester | instruction of these people N hliere's urgeots ] - | sis. g 4 vad : ; T L Americans | hetween Tabasco and Yucatan to fa- I cilitate the movement of sisal and nocratic leader in the Senate, Vith the announcement of e valance ke against the bill on the ground | charter of the Society of Nations, the | | legislation” and yvet we must re- | tional history toward the abolish- ss and suppress any element that | ment of war has been taken. As con- | BOUIEEOIS? malkes the hated classification include; the reason that Ltion that freed the negroes and one will question the advisability such action. Prohibition, by fed- | 5¢ the Central Powers will, in the fu- | 1'€Se 1 amendment or referendum, is | tyre dictate to the world in so far the Arctic Circle?—Boston Evening | than it is t6dz | ness the term means the trading n ressive le lation but if the ma- ity of the people favor it the ele- it, progress cannot to increase the out= ENGLISH BANK IN MEXICO those of the corsairs of the deep, | protests of 1all nations may o had no more respect for liberty | make necessary the amendment of n their legitimate successors on | men may shriek until they reach a | the right to A‘f‘ 1 delayed too long; it is necessary to|homme,” the meaning of the word is ve: 3 3 r e on 3 hey rot t {1 < v u 3 ost t na leislati = ize i a comec f the at- 1 that menaces the welfare of the | attention when they froth at ¢ 1k v for lost time, and legislation | aramatized in a medy o n i . b sy % S rit; mouth equiring anvone to leave » coun-| tempted evolution (oftea accomplish- SCARCITY OF MINE TIMBER ther products of that region | The ha t vet declded | try who refuses to learn English|cd) af “citizen™ into the “gentle- Bressive legislation but it represses | other small men will pay the slightest Martin Plunkett, a Wallingford So- President Wilson was told he could Eh Lh st o MAYBE THEY WILL. wheth zue will cav within a reasonable period ought to|man.’ all this true and ancient : % i 3 ! e timber is a serious problem that list, had a better argument against | not organize a Society of Nations. So confetti or guns FExchange be passed by congres | ning is swept aside by the bolghe- MiN T b bill than did Senator Hemenway. | he proceeded to do so. It is not per- There is no need, however of wait-{ vist who malkes the word signify all confront v: TRl © nining | Gazette savs Germ preparing to fl the emblem | fect, nor is Berfection claimed for it In Oregon the temperature of each |ing for new laws. Much car be ac-| people but himself. For him, there| industry today. _‘umber = JUSt 2 raise a large loan in the United States said the red flag was the e L g Jegislator will be taken as he starts , complished und isting conditions, | are in the world but the proletariat| necessary in mining coal as is the!qs soon as peace is sign T the Socialist party which should | Tt is not impossible that even the W8S FE - 0\ " 1¢ might be wiser to | The New Bedford way is character- | worker, the moneviess industrial wace drill, the blast, the motor engine 1:x;l‘~;m~ h adds that the mar . ‘ t be deprived of the privilege of | United States, through its treaty ap- (.. em out after busincss gets under iized by patriotic sentiment and com- | receiver, on the one hand, and ~the the mine car. Every foot of freshl| ysed to pay for expected raw ma=- 5 3, o Hand i ALl ha Boo. | mon sense, urgeois” 02 the other. anc wood is being jealously husbanded for terials from allied countries, fplaying it at meetings. While the | proving body, the Senate, will ask for | way.—Omaha Bee mor e d bo 5 onal e

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