New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 9, 1919, Page 7

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NEW BRITAIN BERLIN NEWS White Gloves for the Graduate and the Blushing June Bride THERE ARFE WHITE SILK GUOVES, LONG AND SHORT, in all the known ayvsc make we offer 12 and 16 button lengths with choice of a full line wanted kind white Silk Gloves in of sizes for $1.50 pair TWO CLASP SILK GLOVE makes with double finger tips, 7 ind qualities. In the well in white or “Kayser” and “Ni ra’ c, $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 $2.00 Pair, WHITE KID GLOVES, fine ones of Irench make, two clasp, over seam and pigue sewn with Taris point embroider Good values from $2 to § Pair., / LONG KID GLOVES, white ones S, 12 and 16 button lensths, priced $2.50 to $4.00 pair. Satisfaction assured you if BACK UP THE BOY SCOUTS. Invest in boyhood to build manhood. EMBROIDPERY DEPT.—Offers 27-in embroidered Swiss Flouncin dainty patterns with hemstitched ruffle or embroidered edge 59¢ to $1. Yard. EMBROIDERED Voile Flouncing match for 25¢ yard. CAMBRIC EDGES 2 (o 80-in wide for 5¢ {0 98¢ yard. AT LACE DEPT—French and round Mesh Valenciennes lace and insertion Armenian, Torchon, and Cluny lace edges . A DINNER— vou buy your Gloves of us 5 in wide $1.50 yard. Banding to edges of special values at 3¢ TRY enjoy it YOU'LL FIND AT TRIMMING served in our Big New Restaurant. You will DEPT. A special lot of Dress Girdles from one of the best importers in ew York They are in b ck and colors, Knitted Silk Girdles with Tasse black. purple, taupe. na and myrtle, $1.98 value, for $1 " ck Cord with Chenille T £1.08 grade for $1.23 e kinds 98¢ ea. Another mixed lot in different color DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 9, 191¢& _PLAINVILLE NEWS CITIZENSHIP MONEY DRIVE 1§ STARTED Town Is Asked to Contribute $360 Toward the Cause HOUSES 10 BE CANVASSED Childven’s Day Observed Yesterday— WHY D0 WOMEN SUFFER | When There is Such 2 Rem- edy for Their Ills as Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegeta- ble Compound ? Mishawaka, Ind.—“I had such a severe female Weaknc‘.;s that I lfm;lg not do my work an TTZESERRITTT couta ot get anv- Brat thing to relieve me. A physician treated me, but it did no good. I had been in HARTFORD SILK STORE.” TS FOR STANDARD Woman's Sun-Ra Umbrellas PATTERNS, The drive 1o obtain the sum of § for citizenship work in this town started this morning and will be con- tinued for a week | As stated before the drive is to ab- | tain a1 sum of mon in the state and country fo he A in edu- cating the voters in cach dis This campaign is being carried the Connecticut State Su ciation, which is the representative body of the women suffrazi ts of the state. Despite the fact (hat the campaign is heing conducted by this organization it is not a suff movement or one which is intended to el votes for the women > entive aim of Mass. the drive for funds is to educate hoth the male and female voters of the state so that they will cast intelligent votes. It may mean the hrealki 2 up of the old habit que of voting because of party affiliations | Daniel and will assure the citizens of more | aqy choice officials o 1 A large part of the money which | the bi [ will be used in this town will B0 toward cducating the foreigners in | roru the means and nse of the ballot and | furlou teaching them bhetter citizenship at | pranec the same time. Plainville's popula- | 1, tion at the present tini surprisingly 1 made up of miber of for- HAVING AN AUTOMOBILE DELIVERY FOR NEW BRITAIN YOU CAN DEFEND O RECEIVING ALL DRY GOODS PURCHASED OF US. Lounshury, on Mecthodi preciation of your valuable services | rendered from October 3-6, 1918, near | sin French Govt. at Town Hall Address of Welcame Fiske—I'ormer Prrops Dead to witness ex-service cers headed at the hall werc wad played SailogsBarrett Following$s Hon of the citation Barrett mander-in-chief Ambrose sxposed place intense ith silver star, awarded vou by the rerich goyernment jicate and translation of same in ap- St Btienne a Arnes when it ix re- and interment wa cigners and it is purpose of the | jough state organization to teach and edu cate them in this town as in other | cpyupen N PROMPTLY towns wronghout the state Mrs. Frank Usher of Farmington | A" ohor avenue is the local chairman hellie s has heen busily enzaged in o | cireeees ing leams for the eanvass o i nounced this mornin L. 1‘ m\‘”‘ Doslo o theicon® Mills, Mrs, Frederick EIGERTIESHE e st church, officiated | 2dith Cook and Mattic Johnson are | yine o the captains of the four teams to | y; s in Wilcox cometer | Marin | ported you worked continually with | Bast Berlin, The ps o o [ eare for the canvass. The same i BARRETT I]EE”RATEI] [ the company. constantly going to the | Charles M. Weldon, Miller, Liherty loan camn e jaid of the wounded in exposed Places § Charles rren and IPred Schofiele the captains who arc e | under violent machine gun five and | : 2 their own helpers J intense hombardment until you were Buckley Back. ouse 1o house canvas E l] serionsly wounde 1t s requested Private Anthony 1 Kley. who has | Will be started md it | that you acknoweldge reccipt of croix | Deen overseas for over a year, arrived | 18 honed that the town will be “over | FOR 3 1(1, guerre and citation to the adju- |4t Hoboken yesterday and at present | (1 0™ by the middle of the week The town has —_— j tant general of the army, war depart- | is stationed at Camp Merritt awaiting | i A G i sl i L ient, wWabin e [ hits dischave Private Buckley is a | ME Money for good purposes and it | Scoretary of Navy. | seriously wounded and for st record in - giving for the betterment | heen 1 Ay is the son of Mr. and | few months has been recuperating in | OF (he citizens of the g el 05 !Ah rett of Worthington | a hospital I iince i e 1ol sy flandReotn Uiy and i R | Ridze. e was horn a( New Britain, | ber of St Paul's Drum corps. At el Children's Day Obscry | saiistacio i | 1o 1895, The family moved | time of his entering the servico ho was | The Children’s day exercises at the | ~ational MANY AT pRESENTATION [ 1o Ber: 1910, Mr. Bavrett on- | employed the Ruckley macaroni | Consregitional chirch yvesterday were listed in U. 8 Medieal Corps, | ractory, P Buck his brother, | 1argely attended and proved most in- e | May 51,1 md on Jan ¥ L1918 efe this morning for ( mp Merritt tg | leresting. The children 1 o N he was fransferred to the marines, | yvisit him, G [ dvilled by Miss and Mis Given Reve Mr. | ror gvers duty and was sent to | Brooks, the superintendent of the | France the following month { cecipts Turned Tn. primary nd \‘A i lepart S | Deputy Sheriff | i ! I e e s & . ) £ g SR S " | Drops Dead at Factory Tl ! 1 chairman | spectively, and rendered their sonss | Will Factory—Garrity= | Former Deputy Sherift Jumes Clark | o1 " €= on district during the fand recitations in s capable man | R e maling [l aion ‘v“m . v.iml‘\u:l‘x reported | Leila Ryder and Vinton Smith nc| With | his first vound as a watchman at g ot thal the receipis realized during st Tl i b d s Sone Rl gathering of resi- | Landers, Frary & Clark’s factory last |7 0 C00 0 8 CTC '.‘”;“I e ceihod it CENS LA i LISEIngloie [ orr ] night, The cause of his death was FRE '. B -d~ 1 r,\\. afternoon. Ber- |w(~.v‘n14~-l M: 2h ‘vvvy«uv‘IvAM ol the Go- ) e i : B due to heart failure. He was making RAGEEN U R to-Church Band After the exercises | Als. A JL Bar- | his round with another watchman and | Women's Aid (o Meet Gishigst dIRchildnan b lizec e Ridge was deco- | while half through his task he drob=| e \Women's Aid sociop: | licRalnldvch Bistencilfto uRtallcl fion "““" % hall Saturday aft- | ped dead. He recently accepted this ' Borlin cCongregation i ‘_‘n\ of the {the pastor on \wing Your Taxe L ix de Guerrc. As | position [ ol s retepogtional chureh will | the lesson of which wis drawn from | after hundred crowded the | Mr. Clark was deputy sheriff at er- 008 TERTHE m‘,mm‘r“\'".'lm devlihcaitusie it SRRt e exercises. A num- | lin, where he resided the greater Part | p “crien ot 4 oreloen. “\”'I"\' Johni f{conc, 3 : S G ey e et ving (o tarma of lour| (g gith A6 4 eiclocle ‘members Children Reccive Commumion. statement by the St Paul's | vears each. Previous Lo t e SRR R = S dlesrequestediito \ prefty sight was witnessed at [ oF lowa marched in a iployed by several railroads of New | £ the 8§ o'clock ma in the Church of | on insula town hall to Wood- | and. Two years ago he 1 hod | Observe Children's sunday. Our Lady of Merey yesterday morn- | commi o position ais Sherilf and moved (01 The local chiirehes obeeryed (p. | M When about 30 children received | the Samuel A. Katz, com- | Bloomficld where he purehssed & 10= ! idren's Sunday yestordus, Atk il | their i oL i n I NLhs nival recruiting | hcco farm, later zoing to Stamford. | dren were hiptized and ot ""'”' little girls were attived in white with | way aven also pariici- | For the past few months he has Deen | (he day's oxerois i ’.")“‘]‘ SN Gl and the boys were dressed in | t The exercises | living at New Britain [ parents had their children psotions | blue suits. After the mass (he chil- | of the in chiarze of Charles | He was 37 vears of and s sur- ey i et (T "”‘”W”' dren w y envolled in the scapu- | fure t of (ha local war | vived hy a wife and Dl v SRR S e ”‘_‘“"" ars and w \ddressed by the pis- | Cordova > opened by the sir lugene McSweeney of New Britain,i Nire A, 10 Hyde af - Dl ”' MA Y o who ke on “Obedience and [ was (il Spangled Banner,” | with whem he bas been DT 0 Tt ke e STy | and bric al-ajifliomestomottongntorning Sl INoICICCIcA Bjyi S iy B L \”‘_“,,”",r A mecting of rep ntatives of the | & and the ity-Sticquell Nuptials { Middletown, Mio and Mres, A, awk. | 1ocal Hadian society, the loly Name | n had reeeive Phticic o e Emma lins of Kenvington and Mr. and Mps, | Society, the Foresters, and the Fire- | Marsciilaise Sticquell, both of K slon, w Harry Lehman of Kensington . men was held in the vooms of the | | W"L Shaw \'««: { married morning s, dl Berlin Briefs, fire departme 0 o'clock na Jfssentalion® offdntin FSLPauks enurent g B day morning. The parade of . 0 | e AR o e I el 00 e IR 1 S T G or e T il three cheers ond venture inte | SNAINE in the docality of the Berlin | tion of the parade w he AR matrimony th the bride and | st nisht. - An investization will | tha( the Halian socicty will lead, the | 210 Of copy of the transia- oom. Ms 1 having lost cl Fores come secol the tloly | with a copy of the st life partner el years a LeChair blacksmith shop, which Name society third 1 the IFiremen | by Seeretary | ) Garrity was divorced from his | for the past several weeks has been | bring up the e of cction 1 st wire. Bellowing adinner at_(he | closed owing o Mr. Conway's moving | Ball Team's Hard Luck. ! ‘\ n| he IFrench \.\«“' e, the HH}\‘M left for ‘t.w*\ of town, ha azain bheen opened HAW i ump wias rotten and o st ' York. where they will pend their Y i New management e them the ga wis the cry of honeymoon. Fheg will reside at Kon- he St Pauls Fife and Dram Corpy | 10Ca1 basch, enti this morn- Vn"(vrv‘!'.uwnu A,‘:_\j,,.. \\)‘:4-“r"f\f‘:’ Gavrity ";"’y""‘,‘m' attended the parade at New Rritain | ing when asked ho oy e N T e e il Skwite { Mobolheat il i 1 or the game | meric e aptain Griswold Arrives, | was n Wf Plainville team | in Fra the It was learned today that “hy)’hvi PUBLIC NOTICF by the close ore of 6 1o 5 ‘ commander-in- | Matthew H. Griswe of the cond | The =Selectmen of the Town of i Speeding Must Stop. | armies of the | ['nited States cava v at Bos- [ Plainville hereby zive notice in e SN0 many complaint ey heen | order of the divi- | ton this morning and s expected | cordance with Section 412 of the Gen. | made to local authorities asainst (he | Barrett 5tl ¢ home in the near future. Capt. Gris- 1 eral Statutes, Ievision 1918, that the | speeding which is indulged in on | From October 3-6, | wold has been overseas for the past | following by-law was paksed and | West Main street | \etion will be | ienne & Arnes, when | 13 months, { adopted at a mecting of the Board of | taken immediately. The street is but | worked contin- Mi-s Graham Dies, | setectmen: newly paved and is a fine stretch for il constantly | Tiorl e e SR e | BY-1,\W. I five miles to the city of RBristol \\Hnrl the wound d e LB e } 1. Any person throwing or placing | ists usinz 1t have no vespect for life | \vr\\(‘m» chine Ridee Mins Tane A s od 756 | waste material, ga g paper, de- | or limbh and si bad accidents have | g , : | urday eveninz at her home on Norton | oo S Sreasugol e e b | . headquarters, Feb e el e st ano) inville all be punished by a | wolk-end in BRI 1 ‘ e 'm“‘“‘““:"‘ [ penalty not excesling §10. for c wh | Miss Jane A. Graham. formerly a commander-in- | o g ! [ violation of this hy-law resiglent, died n( her home in Berlin French armles of | residents of the fown having heen born | 5" A1l veaste material, garbagce, | Inre irday night. Death was due | in East Berlin in January, 1843, She | refnse o h hoeia: B el : 2 - i Al disposed of | to heart failure whic e siffered | PETAIN. [was the daughter of the late John [ ny incineration or removal to some | fron after i trip to a nearby slore | niost May 27, 1919 | Graham and is survived by one | public dump Local residents remember her for she | | brother Fenry Graham, of Norton | Dated at Plainville, Conp., this 27th | moie her home in this town for over s me great pleasure to | road; also several nephews and nieces. | day of M \. D, 1919 30 years ewith eroix de guerre | Miss 1:\'~\vvm resided in Plainville f'vr[ WM. J. JOHNSON W Warfield « ¥ P spent 1 over 80 years and is well known there. | C. H. CALOR. the week-end at the home of his par- = also citation cer- The funeral was held this afternoon FRED SPENCER | ents on Park street trom her home al 2 o'clock. Rov.| Selectmen of the Town of Plainville. | Kenjamin Danicls of Bristol was the Children Malkg this condition for three months when I | munion—Mnust Stop Speceding— began taking Lydia [ E. Pinkham’s Vege- Chonse Places for Parade. ! table Compound Practical---Serviceable---Popular are showing (tablet form) and 4it cured me. keep house and am 1 certainly able to do my work now. praise your medicine.”’— Mrs. Supa OLDFATHER, 548 West Second Street, Mishawaka, Ind. ‘Womenwho suffer from sucheilments ct. | should not continue to drag around and by do their work under such conditions, but «0- | profit by the experience of Mrs. Old- father and thousands of otherswho have tried this famous root and herb remedy, Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Com. pound, and found relief from such suf- fering. If complications exist write the Lydia E. Pinkham Medicine Co., Lynn, The result of their 40 years’ experience in advising women on this subject is at your service. Umbrellas the choicest “Sun-Rain" Unibrella, natural wood handles with At $5.50 Each Instead of $6.50 purple and loops and rin At $5.00 Each---Value $6.00 The Sun-R colors, with neat silk cord : Umbrellas A $ll()00 Each colored handles, At $13.50 Each handles of black ongratulations on ind colors, ring handles, Harold Hemigway Uter a 10-day to take back Unite Willard trician, soldiers to adjustable “‘Sun-Rain’ One Week’s Sale of Pure Linen Table Cloths, Napkins and Damask opportunity thing that for some time radio clec- its regular monthly rowed that \ppreciated. Pure Linen, In taking advantage of these s Corps last week residential Ryder condition Yard Pattern Cloths, 1'urc price $10.50. Mainville, NOMICTH ‘Columbia Carbon o : REMAINS OF AUSTRIA PORTO RICAN INTERESTS Unofticial Commission, It Is xpect of 19 representatives itepresentative committee island concluded ommissioner | strin-Hungary Shaded in population s independence ented th ADDRESS IS GAELIC, BUT IRISH POSTMANLL READ IT POSTCARD. Thelacd. : bpsamnacre (© Jeu Jope - Ay S A Da, }Aéé‘fi}g. 4750 ’}77%444{ Aze Clr, 5{/5 éfi 37 Ce i Fo Home Cooking | translation muffins. Frank Wal Thompsen Milling Co., Lockport, N. ¥ rishmen here s be delivered from the Irish American Town at the Ford e ————

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