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[ DEEISTIED |FRENCH SPY PHOTOS N WILHELM, WITH CITY BLERK: WILLIE AND VON HINDENBURG 36 Warrameé Déed;;»7 Marriages and 10 Deaths Recorded | The past week was a busy one fnr‘ the city clerk, deeds being re- | corded. Of this number 36 were warrantee deeds Neven marriage | licgnses wer nted and ten deaths Were recordec The following real estate transfers | were filed for record: Meyer Lifshitz to Morris Shekef- off and other land and buildings . on Belden street. Charles L. Barnes to Emil i Vogel, land on Raymond and Wooster | 5 5 streete e Charles Balawskos to Wladislaw | THE K Stmkiewicz and others, land and =buildings on Rocky Hill avenue. ! Bodwell Realty Company to An-|{ drew . Bengtson, land and bulldings | on Winthrop street | Josephine Luty to Vietor Grabow- ! ski, land and buildings on Albany | avenue | John Mieczkowski to Joseph San- Koski, land on Brown street. Johin M. Brady to Antonio Palmino, land on Daly stree Georg D. Channesian to Joseph M: n nd and buildir on Elm Equitable Realty Company fo ¢ seppi Lucietti, lJand on Belmont street. Henry F 211 to Anna . land and Duildings on Belden strect J. J. Erwin and others to Abraham Meltzer and others. land and build- | ++ ings on North street. City Realty Corporation to Cather- | ine A. Brown, land and buildings on | Lincoln court. William L. Hatch, trustee, to Domi- | nic Calderone, land on East street. Bodwell Land Company to Timothy Woods, land on Brighton strect. Louis J. Welch and others to Mil- Kkalois Jenuszonis, land and buildings | Won Kelsey street. Catherine Walker to llie M Johnson and others. land and build- on Esther strect. Carl Johnson to John R. Peter- | son and wite, land and buildings on Sefton Drive. Petrunella Murzin to Char gay an dothers, land and buildin High street Joseph R. Andrews to Ithel K Zoomis, land and buildings on Forest street. Daminika Sinkavick to Pius Bar- | land and buildings on Belden | rmine D. Ventrano ar jrving I Rachlin and and buildir on Church Mary Wind to k nd buildings on Belden strect. > August Anderson to Celia Olson, and and buildings on Hart street. Carl Huber to Charles Milish and wife. land and buildings on Hart Tony Albanese to Angelo Canna- ralla, land and buildings on Dwight i J’nsmp.h Caslowitz and others to| His majesty, Wilhelm IL, his chin- Fannie Aronson and others, land and { jess son, the Crown Prine Gond buildings on Hartford avenue. | John Bergin to John B. Smithwick, and_and buildings on Stanley strect. | Lillian . Kingsley to Samuel Ber- G S cnelhs Bet e kowitz and others. land on Main | gbservant eye of the camera that tnok i pictures. . As it happened, they beth W. Wilcox and others to notilnoy thal & Brench civillan and build- | in the crowd of spectators, leath would probably have been eral Von Hindenburg would nave been deeply annoyed had they known Otter nberg to Myer Greenberg | his fate had it been discovered that | others. land and buildings on W A small eamera conesaled wnd Maple streets about his person. Linn to Leon Grabloski, The pictures were taken in 191 Overlook. The Kaiser is seen delivering one ate of Carl Ohman to Anna ELSRET SR Py 2 M. Obman, land and buildings on Eorme SEEK INJURED MEN Ernest . Billian to Max Bloom- Werz. land and buildings on Maple PR B i street Willlam Kiewstwetter and others tc Letter Is All Necessary to Bring Albert Frauscello, land and bulldings | sytention ¥rom the Federal Board | on East street John L. Lorenius to Michael Ma- | for Voeational Education. is Jand and buildings on Henry Etrcot iington, May 3.—There are John L. Lorenius and wife to Mich- rteen disirict offices of the fed- e hd ana | erai board for vocational education [ i i sablished in as many difforent cities E"”“‘“’(’” ® % Carlaon to Andvew Bla- | of the counury in order to facilitate A and wife, land and buildings | contact with disabled soldiers, sail- A or and r s, and to ki the ge number of cases handied b each office i« 1,472, Out of the large number of applications made to the | federal hourd of trainine only 65 have f been definitcly disapproved, while 3 > LG 841 have been recommended for SHIP IN AT LAST { training by the district boards, and pis] of this number 2 been ap- serect. rerman to Rafael Jugo, huildings on Francis street. Hills to Frank Grabois, land and buildings on Fairview st - oot B Transport Canandaigua Has Been | proved by the fode 1 o These serict offices are organized Inyo Broken Gears. Long Delayed With Brolk to facilitate getting in fouch with Boston, May 3—The nsport Can- | disabled men, nor is it necessary for ndaigua ~with 1,345 soldiers and |a disabled to call in person at i wo civilians arrived here today from | the branch office. If he is at a dis- Bordeaux, France, after repeated de- | {nnce and will notify the office of his | “-lays due to broken gear. district that he is disabled and pre- Included among the units on | vented, either by lack of funds or oth- board were 700 officers and men of | erwise, from coming in person, board the 302d field artillery of the T6th will send a vocational adviser to see givision, whic g d nim, make the preliminary investiga- Camp Devens and consisted largely | tion at his home, and if it is neces- of New England men. e rest of | sary for him to before the the regiment arrived on Jie trans- | local “case board” his expenses are port Santa Rosa on April 26 and has | of course def just been discharged. Other units on ollowing are the branch offices of lhe Canandaigua were the headqu deral hoard: Room 433 Tremont ters company, ordnance and sanit | buiaix loston, Massachusetts detachments and Companies A, %, | Room 711, 280 Rroz v, New Yo gnd D, 145th m gun baftalion: | 1000 Penn Square building, Phila frst army artiller motor s¢ phia, Penny mnia: 606 10§ tion, headquarters and truc S W pany D; photo sections 17 ¢ 23, | building, ’ and -casual company ! son Blanche Annex Orleans, suisionn; 1212-14 Mercantile libre Missouri; Room ik building, Min- 909 Seventeent air service, 70 % o PRAERTPRTET, ilding, WASHINGTON GETS HALF OF 100,000-WORD TREATY s, Minnesota, 909 Hovents £ =-The Rocate wilding, fan sl Gl ¥ o May Waeshinston, Jom 539 Contral building, sived morc than | department has rece ; 50,000 words of the peace treaty and ! Sea ‘ P rwas cetimated that the length of thie | Tndemnity Luilding, Dullas. Texus. was estima of ; trenty would exeeed 100.000 words. 5 ¢t has sted the | 'he department ha reques! ¥ i i X : T riean delegation at Paris to make| T e fhoon ¢ firs {ble moment | bury college won « dunt trck meet T uy be roleased for { from Tufts college veviorday, 613 1o he treaty may Dbe reles e Eication. [ e HIN DENBURG. Seatile Washington; and $10 Western | N WIN. | AISER. <his bombastic war talk He is in full ['uniform with gold braid running up {and down his chest. The second pic- | ture is that of the Crown Prin with his troops. The third is that of | “ Von Ilindenburg reviewing the Boehe | army. Those were the good old dag | When the German junkers were plan- | i ning how they would spend the colos- | fal indemnity they were to wring | froni the defeated Allies The Herald obtained the pieture from a returned soldier, who re- | ceived them in Paris from the :py. | Tt is said there are only three sets | of the photographs in stence BIGHT HOUR DAY Governor of Panama Canal Zone E: tablishes New Schedule for Labor- ers—Wages Arc Slightly Increased. Panama, May Lieut.-Col. Ches- { ter Marding., governor of the Canal {zone has established an eight-hour | day for laborers on the piers at Chris- | tobal. This has been done without {any change in the pay of American { emploves who work on a monthly | basis. West Indian laborers who lwork on an hourly basis, refused to {'work this morning, being under the {impression that their pay for a day’s | work would be reduced. They were I wred their wages would be in- |'creased from 17 to 19 cents per hour, { which will be sufficient to give them {the same compensation for an eight- ihour day as they have received for | working nine hours. They are ex- | pected to retnrn to work tomorrow. Litile work was done today in i moving cargoes, but no further de- is anticipated |33 PEOPLE HURT IN | MADRID MAY DAY RIOTS Madrid. May -One lieutenant colonel, captains, thre licuten- jants and gendarmes were injured {and four persons enzaged in May day | | demon rations wenre wounded Ti- | ously during disorders here yvesterday. i The ministry of the interior says that | |the untoward incidents occurred when .a crowd demanded that all shops be {closed in the business section of the city and tried to break inta the Bank | of Spain. The gendarmes charged on the erowd anc persed it hat Our Soldiers Captured | Visit the War Relic Train, Sunday 10 a. m. to 8 p. m. Band Concert and Speaking at 3 p. m. on Commercial Street Siding NEW BRITAIN, CONN. SEE THE FAMOUS HINDENBURG “PILL” AND MANY OTHER TROPHIES OF VALOR OF OUR ARMY Glie Most Beautsfid Car in/Imerica HE American family for its week-ends, its holidays, its recreation, again takes to the open road. Victory, Peace and Prosperity, this summer, all combine to give us heart and leisure for the greatest outdoor season we Americans have ever enjoyed. The beautiful drives, the picknicking nooks, the fishing places call to us again. The new Series Linwood “Six-39,” with its ample accommodations for five passengers, has been universally accepted as the soundest, safest and most enduring motor car investment for the family. In addition to its Beauty—intrinsic Paige Beauty—the basic worth of the New Series Linwood, the latest in design and the very best of materials and workmanship, has won for it the appreciation of those Americans whose appreciation counts. 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