New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 15, 1919, Page 5

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S NEW BRITAIN DAILY HE ) I The Merchants Are REAL Il Be Worth Your Whi h Their Ads in the Paper. to Offer. MERCHANTS Farrel & Co. . e to Buy It Will Pay Y@ WHO ARE TO TAKE PART: = b Abbe Hardware—THardware. 1 Boston Store—Dry Goods. -Gent's Furnish- Lazarus Company—DILadies’ Ap- S. W. Menus—=Shoes: . L. Pierce Co~—Musical John A. Andrews Co.—Furni- Boston Clothing = Co.—Ladies’ ings. ’ parcl. E. Meshken—Furrier. struments. 3 )\ tur Clothing. | Long Shoe Co.—Shaoes. A. P. Marsh—Music, Picture . Porter Co.—Furniture. Ashley-Babeock—Gent's Far- - i o > s Gately & Brennan—Clothing. | Logan Bros.—Buttcr and Eggs. Framing. B. C. porter Sons—Furniture. Sample N nishings. o s o aeg® . | 7. Goldsmith—Dry Gooas. | Torraine Shoe Co.—Shoes. McMillan’s—Department. Store, . Sloan BrocW Adkins Printing Co.—Station- Cohh i Halloian Clomies bl Great Western Market—Gro- Leonard & Herrman—Cloaks Miller & Olson—Groceries, M. I.aphacl—Ladies' Clothing. | Sovercign Trading Co.—Meats cry. T, T b e cery. _ ] ‘ and Suits, Mohican Market Co.—Meats | Reed Jewelry—dJewel and Groceries, Alling RRubber Co. — Rubber ad boes Goldenblum Millinery Co.—Mil- | and Groceries. Jos. Ryan—Leather Goods. Goods. | clark &leno‘rd—-nmgs linery. | Modern Boot Shop—Shoes. Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn— Union Tea Co.—Butter and Gomntoial Treke Co ——isanl—- Globe Clathing House—Men’s | Morgan & Kingsley—Painters. J. J. Naughton—Bakery. Ladies’ Specialty Shop. Eggs. Bowen & Co.—Milliner; = . = Furnishings and Shoes, | ¥F. C. Monier & Bro.—Sporting New York Sample Shop—Gent's Roseben Hat Co.—Hatter. M. Bloomberg—Dry Goods. S | Goods. Furnishing. J. Rubin—Ladies’ Clothing. Albert: Volz Co.—Flowers. John Boyle Co.—Painters. Dickinson Drug Co.—Drugs. Hoffman’s Bakery—Balery. | Mills’ FHardware—Hardware. National Butter Co.— Butter | Rackliffe Bros.—Auto Supplics, & Bamforth—Electrical Damon's Shoe Store—Shoes. Hallinan's, Inc.—Bakery. f A. A. Mills—Plumbing and and Eggs. Hardware, Wilson Co.—Clothier, i00ds. | The Fair—Department E. Hultgren—Jewelry, Sta- | Heating. Russell Butter Co.—Butter and | Theo. Wilson—Gents' Furnish- Big Store — Department | Fine—Shoes. tionery. | ©. 4. Murray—Photography. Porter & Dyson—Jcwelry. Eggs. ings. Store. | Eastern Millinery Co.—Millin- | S Mariow & Co—5 and 10c¢ Post & Lester — Automobile | George Rapelye—Plumbing and | Woolworth Co—5 and 160 . Birnbaum—Dry Goods. Leonard’s—Confectioner. ! Store. Supplies. Teating Supplies. ] Stote. DEATH SENTENCE IS IMPOSED ON COTTIN 31emeuoeau’é Assallam Must Pay With His Own Life Parig, March 15.—Emile Cottin, the anarchist who recently mdde an at- “hempt upon the life of Premier Cle- ! enceau, yesterday sentenced to ath the court-martial, which ched a verdict after a trial of one verdict of the court-martial was unanimous yuring his examination Cotton de- clared that if he had escaped after attack upon the premier he would have tried to take M. Clemen- life if he thought he might The ah Vin zeau’s succeed. Cottin shooting according o first conceived the idea of the premier in May, 1918, to an official record read his court-martial. Fe practiced ooting then, it was said When the court-martial opened the lerk read the report describing the attempt on the premier. The report howed that Cottin fired five times while running behind the automobile. Tt s <hown that Cottin aimed at seat in which Premier Clemen- 1 was sitting and fired so accurate- that two bullet holes almost hed Rarely has a crime id the re- po ‘heen accomplished with more sustained premeditation, more ma- ture design and more implacable ien- al itv, with certainty of method o a fatal Cottin 35 primit elieving ibhle ndin lesirous W scribed in the report vain and conceited and himself omniscient. He earn $9.25 a day casily, society bhadly organized, of destroving everything The document gave expert medical pinion unreservedly holding Cottin responsible for his actions TRAINING AIDS CRIPPLE vas ye Discharge Was Averted and Increased When Factory Where He Worked Fistablished System. Philadelphia, March 15 FI. Mitchell, 28, single, former railway trainman who had lost both legs in an accident, has found a job at good pay in which, despite his handicap he can earn as much as any other worker. He found a job in a Philadelphia machine shop. according to a note was | Income | —William | tha department of labor field superintendents. time, however, the s commended that the ground that zood. A training department had mecan- time been established in the plant, however, and the manager decided to placc Mitchell in the school. The maimed man, though :ntelligent, was not particularly rapid in his work. After a few weeks of training, how ever, he was able to carry on succe: fullly several important mechanical processes, and within a short time he had doubled his normal day's output. Mitchell declares that the training department proved his salvation. It not' only saved him his job, but in- | ereased his pay and his opportunities. IS COURTEOUS MAN; HE “MINDS” HER BABY from one of its After a short | iperintendent re- he be dismissed, on | he was not maling Eventually Bridgeport Doctor Who Met Dark Woman on Train Had To Call Policeman. Bridgeport, Mar 15.—When Dr. M. Carl Beck of No. 330 East Main St., boarded a New Haven railroad train vesterday morning for glimpse of the tall buildings and the bright lights he thought he had left dull care be- hind. But when he alighted at the Grand Central terminal he had lost his blitheness and buoyancy. He car- ried an infant, registered later on the blotter at the Twenty-ninth Precinet | police station as “name unknown, ad- dress unknown, nativity unknown, age a The DIET During and After | The Old Reliable Reund Package Made by the from careful Endorsed has reached the-training service, | dressed in hlack, asked him to “mind | the baby” while she went into the wo- man’s wash room, he accepted the trust in a spirit of kindness, but when she failed to return he felt aggrieved. At the station he met Patrolman Murphy, who guided him to the po- lice station. Then the child was sent to Bellevue JUST LIKE A STORY. Joseph Arch Rose From Humble Plow Boy to Paliament Member. March 15 boy to member of Parliament, was the h, 92. He was London, remarkable rise of Joseph Ar who recently dled at the age of a unique gure in English parliamen- tary life, being in 1885 the sole work- ingman member of the House of Com- mons. Ait that time there was no kind of labor party in existence here. Mr. Arch achieved fame as the champion of the English farm laborer when the tiller of the soil reared his family on a wage of $2 a week, sub- sisted chiefly on barley bread and hardly knew the taste of tea or sugar. In 1872 he enrolled 200 farm workers in an organization that came to be known as the National Agricultural Laborers’ Union, whose leaders the Bishop of London wanted to duek in a horsepond. “Adult baptism Mr. Arch rejoined to the bishop's state- ment, “is not the rule of the Church of Bngland.” Mr. Arch is credited with having done more than any other man to improve the condition of Eng- land’s peasantry He was popular in Parliament. One of his constituents was the Prince of Wales, afterward King Edward He referred to Mr. Arch as “my member. about one yea The baby had come Mr. Arch also was a Primitive | { to Dr. Beck as a reward of politeness. | Methodist preacher. He was fond of When a tall, dark, foreign looking | his pipe and an occasional ass of woman about thirtyv-five years old, ale INFLUENZA Horlick’s Malted Milk Very Nutriticus, Digestible e REAL Food-Drink, instantly prepared. ORIGINAL Horlick process and 1y selected materials, Used successfully over 1 century. by physicians everywhere. Specify HorIiCk’s The Original Others Are Imitations | —From plough- BRIGHTEN VP Yo ur Dining Room With an Artistic Gas Dome. A Large Assortment Which We Have Just Received is on Display at Qur Show Room. Moderate Prices Easy Payment Gas Light Co. City Hall Bidg. New Britain 25 West Main St.

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