New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1920, Page 11

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 1920. 9, SIMONS’ NEW PLAN OFTIMES THINGS ARE NOT WHAT THEY'RE CRACK ED ontiaucd from First Page.) owners were losing money too rapidly 10 continue under the old rentals and consequently an increase is needed. Whe asked if members of the asso- ciation expocted to be assessed lighter if the factories were given a higher rate, Simons said such was not the case. but pavments of taxes would be made lighter by veason of the fact that but 19 mills en the dollar would be due the city ost swell dressers ave from Missour The Brummel modern Beau has to he shown. We jest MOB FIRED ON BY STATE TROOPS First Page) can show you the class- line of cravats that ever hugged a collar into shape. We' comes an authority when it to ~different The Farrell Clothing Co. 271 MAIN ST. dignificd.” yet (Continued from Zachary Taylor to form two Pprovi- sional battalions of 160 men each and send them to Lexington. The troops were 10 be commznded by G C. Marshall and were to 5o by special train if one could be secured Lack- ing railroad facilities, it was said, the troops woud be sent by trucks. Lesingion is nearly 100 miles from # Louisville BERNARD SAID T0 BE RETURNING Los Angeles Explorer Made Effort | to Go Around Continent CONSIDER EXTRADITION Meets of Committee on Today—No Reply Foreign Affai Until Policy Entente Is Announced. Berlin, Feb. 9.—The committee on foreign affairs of the national sembly will meet today to consider the extradition question. It ,seems improbable that a reply will be made | to the Entente demand for the sur- | render of the Germans whose names are contained in the list recently de- livered until a response is received by the German government to its note of January 25. (In this note Germany asked the Allies to renounce the execution of the extradition ar- ticle of the peace treaty. affirming that it would inevitably cause politi- cal and economic troubles, the al- ternative Leing proposed that the trial of the persons involved be held in Germany with the participation of Allied representati ) The newspapers declare that the attitude of the government toward the extradition question is unchanged. The ociation of German sol- diers carried out a biz demonstration here terday against acceptance of the extradition demand. Simi demonstrations were held in the provinces. as- Los Angeles, Cal, Feb. 9.—Joseph . Bernard, explorer and former res dem of Los Angeles. is returning from the North American Channel, accord- ing to word just received here. afte: an unsuccessful effort for three vears io force his way from the Pacif to the Atlantic ocean. north of the Am- | erican continent. Lernard has twice defied the ice _ficlds in a ten-ton schooner, the Teddy Bair, accompanied by anly one man. on first trip in 1908 he went to the Siberian coast and was absent for uearly five years. His assistant died | on this voyage and the explorer sailed his boat to the ice fields alone. n 1916 he again sailed north in l'eddy Bear this time in the hope of drifting from the Pacific to the At- lantic. Recently David H. Hurley. a friend of Bernard here received word timg the Teddy Bear had been cited natives Banksland and. that Bernard was zain headed south apparently unal 1o negotiate U\L'l o pagsage between the two oceans. 1 — | Has his ve the 3 50 YEARS AT S. W. S Dunlay, of West Main Street, Been in Company’s Employ Half a Centuvy. rounded out the Stanley John fifty vears Wor and he as been partment, the No. f which he has been several vears. He service of all Stanley Workers, C. E. Hart ‘having two years on him and Iterman Fleisher several months He entercd the employ of the Stanley Works February 7. 1870, and has seen the butt industry grow from a small undertaking to a work that employes scorcs of hands. A clock with an inseription. “February 1. 1866--The last man goes takes ithe cloek now possession. Dunlay has of service in during the half century connected with one de- 3 Batt department, foreman for third in line of | } has sold property at the corner of Milk and Lawlor street 1o Barnett Hobermen. auline Kindt hus transferred prop- ty on North Burriti street to Frank Gronko, Theodore H. Dudjnk has purch 1afid in Industr park from the well Laud company. Attorney Alhert A -d Liod- Greenbers. who been ill at his home on Winter <treet for the past week. has resumed | his duties in his office Therc will mecting the nights of Columbus minstrels in the hall tomorrow eveninz at 8 o'clock } <harp. All members are urged to at- (gnd the meeting. 8 Samucl Schmitman, aged street, and Miss F 21 MoC 153 marriage be a of that his is in UND. £1.000 FOR of 156 Leit- reet this ances Maple license hurch ner, aged were granted 1fternoot Leon Remembers the Here w Southington Woman a Children’s Home Throush a provision the will Julia A, Bradley Luilding fund for the dren’s Home in this city vichs! £1.000. Rev. J. was taday notified of the gift by the carity Trust company of Hartfor Jr. Klingberg also stated that the months of December and January 51 donations were made {o the building fund of iwhich several were in Liberty Bonds. The $10,000 will re. | donated in the will Darius Miller - | has been- turned over to the building meeting | D T committee. The building committec council. K. SOR™ S s S of Gl THe' orzanization’ aiimaking S0l S00TLITLCEE SRECIII00 L ONE s plans which have been rearranged by plans for a concert and ball to o B Id on Easter Monday night. 2 AFGALS LIKE PERFUME \ a in of been at the police station since |1 Saturday, | unable to procure a bondsman, was ! t:dken to the Hartford county jail this afternoon to await his trial here next morning 2 Officer Thomas Wouds att tonight * after ilness patrolmen of the police depart- | ment being supplied with the new vesuluation badges. A class of 30 ceive the second desree at Wednesday night of Daly Dailey. who has proposed Chil- has been en- E. Klingbers Suturday 'olice resume weeks' The will a_ two fre andidates a a be b COUR case of Joseph H. Smedley for mages as the result of an mobile accident between the plaintift nd the defendant severnl months ago given a hearing by Judze John Kirkham at the city court rooms afternoon at 2 o'clock. Lawyer TS appeared for the plain- Attorney Broder for the de- CASE HEARD, Feigenbaum vs the recovery CITY The George uto- 1 Their my Oh, Officy Boy ! Arven't They cetly Ndorable | gy 1 this David tiff and fendant Now: Feb. 9 Human- the «i Bucharest, at {y resident. pertume, scented ¢ ind other arti- figial aids to hea This applies not to the wome to the men voung Rumanian army rouged | rseted! His | deal of part icers n s fault- | Brummel and in man- | | jan. a MUST CLEAY Policemen have heen o tify property holders on their beats that sidewalks must cleaned the entire width of the walk or they will into court. \Vhere on the ashics mu the consequence will WALKS. red 1o no- cosmetics The averaze officer scented. powdered. often. it mark is be is said, cc for a of ¥ him zood ther be spread the same. summoned e is ice raillery on the foreign and visitors. jess as u Beau ner as polite He is scen at Sunda (the Dre saudily nt-leather Heits walks, ' or e as a Lord Chesterfield his best on Saturday or on the Calae Vie- MA avenue of Bucharest.) Murcin Ch sky-blue uniform, | and St-iania trimmed with red high p:n,"a\eu boots with silvered spurs | 1he hat ciink musically as he walks, gli 1y tening sword at his side. white kid [ Main guves and me military decorations. | e add i he makes a striking figure | permit marry. ‘“There she goes,” remarked a| and Josephine Redell. both of young British officer with mingled | Providence, R. L. were granted i | sarcasm and humor, “Isn’t she a per- | cense todey, They filed notice of the at dudwht | intent (o wgardy, February 2. IRIAGE LICENSES. Sexton street Kryzik of i Farmington applied at the office of or a i ¢ to mar- roh of 415 South 1rrie Gianini of the been granted a Charjes L. Gorey afternoon Fifth in dzik of have toun clork Teter M street and ( e 1y e to a ir FOR LOWERING TAX {a | row of Southington. the { dur- ¢ Deaths and Funerals. | Lena Ottavi. Ottavi. 17-months-old Mr. and Mrs. Termano of 127 Wilgox street. this ing. The funeral will row and burial will be new cemetery. daugh- | Ottavi, | morn- Lena ter of died be in e 1 Florence C. the impassable of the roads, the funeral of C..T. Olson, of Berkley place, Hill, has been postponed Nathan Javtman. The funeral of Nathan Jartman was held yvesterday noon and was one of the largest Jewish funerals in thi city in some time. ‘Burial was in Beth ‘Alom cemeter: conditinn Florenre Eim Owing to William H. Northall. William H. Northall a former resi- dent of this city, was buried this afi- ernoon at 2 o'clock in Fairview ceme- | tery. The body arrived at the An-| drews & Doolittle Funeral Home on Walnut street last night from Evans- | ville, Ind., where Mr. Northall died on Kebruary 4. Funeral services were held at the funeral home with Rev. | Samuel Sutcliffe, pastor of St. Mark's Episcopal church, officiating. ing to the information received from friends of Mr. Northall. he has but few relatives in these parts and has not resided here for over 40 vears. Ho was 67 vears of age and was an in- ventor. The first wife Mary Stroazzi, who died about vears ago. He leaves one daughter by that marriage. Mrs. A. . Wood of | Rockford, 11l. His second wife and | a daughter, Miss Gladys. survive him. of the deceased was John Edward Hartzell John Edward Hartzell. aged vears, died this morning at the New Britain General hospital f6llowing an illness of several d duration with pneumen Mr. Hartzell resid- ed at 352 Arch street and took sick while operating the electric crane at the Stanley Works plant last week. | Besides his wife he leaves two sons. Charles and Edward, a mother, Mrs. Emma Hartzell, and a brother, Paul. | of Reading, Pa. He was a native of | that city and belonged to several fra- | ternal organizations in that place. { Owing to the illness of his wife the body will be kept at the Andrews & Doolittle. Funeral Home until such time when Mrs. Hartzell can travel Lieading. Pa.. where the hody will burjed to Mrs, James Ferris. Mrs. Pelagia Fervi Ferris. of 33 Union street. died this morning at her home. She gave birth to a child vesterday which died few hours later. wa old and beside: husband children survive. funeral of mother and held tomo will wife of Jame She her The child will afternoon and burial Fairview cemetery. John Fiora. The funeral of John Fiora held tomorrow morning at 4 o'c from Larai and company’s undertalk- inz rooms. The Fratellanza societiy, of which the deceased was mem e will have charge of the arrangemen:s. will a rs. Robert J. Croshy. funeral of Mrs. FRobert was held at 9:30 o'clock morninz at the church of St. the Evangelist. tev. John J. gerald officiated at a requiem mass. The bearers were. Peter Duffy, Ma tin Foran, and James J. Graham, of Tlainville; John David. of Cromwell; Teter Cabelus and John 1. Ro; of this cit The flower bearers were. Ralph Kelley of Hartford and George Pierve, of Plainville. During the ss. John Kelly of Hartford, sang. s the body was Deing borne the church, he rendered. “Near- er My God to Thee.” The burial was in St. Mary's cemetery. lHen T David. of Plainville. father of the de- ceased, was called Detroit, Mich., The, T this John | Fit from to { Saturday, to the bedside of Mrs. Trene another i1l McGrath, critically daughter. who is s. Della Ladbu The funeral of Mrs. Della Luadbury s held this morning. The remains were placed in the vault at the Fair- view cemetery Annuntia F The funeral of Mrs. Annuntin Pal- was-held at 9 o'clock this morn- at Paul's church. in Kensing- ton. Rev. Francis Ezan officiated at the mass. and the burial was in Mary's new cemetery. Fdward Petin, Edward PPetin, of 214 Aluin street died this morning at the New Britain General hospital. He was admitted the institution Saturday night. The funeral arrangements are incomplete. Vito Massino, Vito. the one-year and 11 old son of Mr. and Mrs. Avu sino. of Z Franklin street. morning. The funeral will morrow, and the burial Mary's new cemetery IMPERIAL PRESS CONFERENCE | Wili Mrs. ing St. months’ lio died held be in this 10- St be will Representatives of Newspapers Gather in Domi of Canada Afairs Next Summer. Feh, The Conference during Several London. a second I perial Press in Canada Septembe Leading newspapers is to nest August representatives ol the British b en invited the Canadiar to attend the conference cuss {heir common aims and i and also o obtain, means of | tour throughout Dominion, first-hand lif' litess 0 dis terest. the a knowledge of its and reso The Kingdom from the G proprietors at prominent daily new papers, Lord Burnham. of London Daily Telegraph, as chairman. Lord Northeliffe, of he Times and other newspapers, has also stated hi intcntion of attending | delegation will include ihe editors of ;__FINANCIAL ¢ I ! Pan WALL STREET STOCK EXCHANGE REPORTS Wall in the firm Josses. Street, 10:30 stock market understone sains With o few changes were confined Several of the oils and specialties ad- vanced 1 o 1 1-2 points with moder- ate reactions in shippings. motors and equipments. Rails were steady prob- as w result of developments in transportation legislation over the week-end. Foreizn the London rat Wall Street. Noon such leaders as stec became extremely i hour high priced nervously within 2 Specialties displayed cies and weakness was shown by kn- dicott-Johnson, leathers, Internation- al Paper and American Woolen. Ship- pings continued to decline and rails cancelled their gains. For the bul- ance of the morning trading resolved itself into a drawn battle between the long and short accounts. another re- action ensuing at noon Call loans opened : Wall Street. 1:30 p. liquidation mid-day pings, oils moto Extreme ot o\ companied additional off, Atlantic Gulf. United Fruit, Amer International. General Motors, Good- rich, General Electrir. Mexicon Pe- troleum, Texas Co. and Industrial al- | m.—~The week opened with a outnumbering exception to fractions a exchange as reported by improved. —The conrse motors and oils ular after first issues fluctuating to 5 point limits. similar tenden- also 14 per cent. m.- - Further affected and losse { vohol. Wall Stree:, potent factor in the last lies of 2 to 1v points following the drop in call loans to § per cent. The closing was irrcgular. Sales appros imated 750,000 shares. New York Stock ®xchafige quota- tions furnished by Richter Co., members of the New York/ stock Excrhange: cose—Money was a hour, ral- Feb High Low it 133 sS4 400 9. 1920, Close 14 Alis-Chalmers Am Beet Suga Am Can . Am Car & Fdy .. am Cot Oil Am Loco Am Smelt Am Sug Am Sum Toh A g & Am Woolen .. Anaconda Cop AtchAteh P & AL G & W Baldwin lL.oco B & O G h Steel B ... Pac cather & Ohio Mg N3 &g Ref. . com 1 & Can Cen Ches Chi il & Chi Rock 1 Chile Cop Chino Cop Col F&I ... Cons Gas ... Corn Prod Ief cru steel Cuba Cane Sugar. . 13k Horn ( indicott-Jolinson o Paul & P ble dsiip A ston W W n Motors Gooidricin 7o Nor pfd Inspiration Int Mer Mar Tnt Ing pfd Kennecott Lack Steel Lehign Vaj Max Mot Mex Petrol Midvale Steel Missouri Pac . Nt v Con Cop Air B N v Cent NV N r Pac d Ohio Vitics Ga Am P & R R »urgh “Coal Ca Cop N ¥ o Penn Pitt Pressed Stael Day Con teading Rep T & Royal 1 Sinclair Oil Sloss-x Steel ‘0 1 Studehaker (« Texas Co Tob Prod Union Puc United Froit United Tietail U S Food Prod S Indus Alco Rulh Co Stec Cop) =t “tah Cop ‘a Car Chem Villys Overland Steel prd 1 t 1 1 t \ \ Snowbouhd, Town Found in Desperate Need Northampton Feb. 8. —Ener- getic measures were adopted today the Hampshire county led ¢ chapter for the relier of the bound hill town of Cummington where, out of « pulation of 700 there are reported 163 il with influenza with and medicine | short and the blocked by drifts A load of breuad, canned goods md medicine was sent from here this morning and supplies will =0 forward | the cmergeney | htman county wissionary. will head a relief expedi- tion to the town tuday. The two re dent doctors @ reporterd exhausted Ly their Every effort is being | made to er scs for duty there, | Mass.. iy snow- total | food voids s long as constantly ists. Restiz W lubors. ' Landers, i RI D) {ing tpretty LOCAL STO_CK TIARKET | QUOTED (Furnished Stanley by It Richter Lddy, & Mzar.) Bid 195 a7 Co., Asked Harttord 200 Southern American American American American Billinas & Spencer Bristol Brass ... Colt’s Arms Co Iagle Toc Elee Light N E Tel Co Brass ..... 230 Hosiery Hardware silver Golts rary & « Rights . National Marine Lamp New Britain Mach Niles-Be-Pond com .. . North & Judd Mfg Co . Stow & Wilcox ssell AMfg Scovill Standard Serew Stanley Rule Stanlex Works Traut & Hine Union Mfg Co E IN OIL PRICE MEANS OTHER WELLS Co com & Level 17 5% 107 t Hunt for New Supply Since Early Days of First Di coveries, Pittsburgh, Feb. 9.—The advance the price of Pennsylvania cr to $5 a barrel will result in widest search for petroleum this tion has known since the early of the “oil excitement.” according authorities in the industry here. Already it has started. and taken on territory over more than ago and then al productive fields. Drilling commenced in some of leases, and results have been as to encourage nthers. One Allegheny county. abandoned in the early seventies because 1he one well drilled proved to be a ‘“‘duster,” has produced of the past few months. “The in oil 1de the see- days 10 leases which halt a indoned as century nmore been for has these zood field in a numbet wells greater part of this develop- ’ RICHTER & CO. Members New York Stock Exchange 31 WEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN, CO STANLEY R. EDDY, Mgr. Telephone 2640 Manning and Bowman Bought and Sold - Rights Adjusted L. JUDD, ¥F. G. JUDD W. T. SLOPER jUDD & CO. Investanent Securities Rooms 309-310 Nat. Bank Blde. Telephone 1815—1816 Own a share in the factory where you work’ 50 Stanley Works. 50 Union Mfg, Co. 50 N. B. Machine. 50 North & Judd. 50 Colt’s Firearms. 50 Bristol Brass. 50 Landers, Frary & Clark. nnsylvania the which for tern 1 explained tion territory was only a bring in paying SR ells, | ba ment and will be i We West Virginia,” héad of a large corpc hhs been developing oil many years. “When oil dollar a barrel had good well he ha sition. with oil at harrel it pays to difill a lot of even though they only produce a ove to before Now w 50 American Hardware. 100 Landers, Frary & Clark “Rights”. From 1137, 0 77 on your money. reduce e small nd pumping While the high. about n the old operation and the of make hwunt- Pennsyhania grade protitable investment. companics engaged are 1y old-time which have and - which cover leases all the territory diate neighborhood of tions rel two a day. We by connecting these ne power plant, very ihoroughly drilling times as much & cconomies of neely price for the or penses to them initial three days, webs crude in 1his orzaniza- no stock for salc thoroughly with in the imme- their opera- The work tions MEN RETURNING TO DUTY. With the coming of improved weather conditions, the Connecticut compan beginning to et on its “feet” again, several of the regular Crew men returning (o their posts t day after a week ss with the Huenza. Supt. F. L. Beardsley stated today that there was only onc line ! now that could not be ope ed on its full schedule, but that he hoped that with the good weather promised there would be a complete force at work by tomorrow. Trolley schedules be- inzg hindered throughout the city, Mnr Beardsley expluined, duc to the trucks and automobiles keeping to the tracks which is the only cleared right of way is iiln in- are IRED ON SKIS, One of the mail carriers on anc of the rural delivery routes solved the delivery problem last by going his territory on With the of th he covered his entire and maintained the service as in weather. It as learned today number of the linemen the and telephone company used last week in order to country repairing MAIL DELIV week over skis. aid routc 2ood that clectric se snowshoes the around broken wires. ILS TO GIVE DANCE the Berlin iving a hall held m it This irls BERLIN ( The girls employed tion company dance this evening at the in I lin It was ta have jast Friday, but duc to the tponed until this evening. is the first undertaking of the and they hope to make it successful Music will bé furnished by the Alpha orchestra 1t Constru are Grange been stor was po TOO LATE FOR \NGENC CPERVISOR sirare into 1 men can make in thein experienc CLASSIPICATION. Turn \inbitious 100 vour tinue oney at least pe Previ- sary. T Pary and \dddress and month spure time ous nmnece school of “tion time sty full men wanted. Massi- Inst tHealth Michizan., Cap- 2-9-11 chusetts Bonding A Suginaw ance Company, ident De- partment, ital £1.300,000 Tel. 1625-2 Any Hour, Day or Night TARRANT & HAFFEY UNDERTAKERS B MYRTLI St., Jubilee =t Lady Attendant—iree Orders st End Oflice, 1 FUNERVL DIRECTORS Andrews & Doolittle, Inc. THE FUNERAL HOME ‘tors 15 Walnut Street. Telephone. Offic and P H i tire | | zaraze GOODWIN BEACH & CO. CONNECTICUT MUTUAL EBUILDING. HARTFORD Room 410, Natl. Bk. Bldg., Tel. 2120 T. FRANK LEE, Local Mgr.—— Landers, Frary & Clark Stocks and Rights GHINESE WISH INDEMNITY BAG . Boxer Chargbes_ Asked for to Used in Education _ © GOOD MOTHERS Irish Jewish Cave for Best, and The best Side, the poor dis- trict. are Jewish, in the opinion of Dr. W. Saleeby, chairman of the National Birthrate commission, as ex- | pressed in an address at Universiiy} college. Dr. Saleeby added that Irish; were not a bad second and that the English mother ranked as a very bad third. i He explained that in the the Jewish and Irish mothe L direct result of race ethic feeding was virtually universal among them and there w minimum of that dreaded disease arising from im- morality. He declared that infant mortality was not really a medical problem, but social of motherhood and a yuestion morals. During hi quoted figures bad housing, bad sanitation and vir- tually no child welfare efforts, infan- tile mortality in Western Ireland was about per thousand, as com- with 133 in 1,000 in Bradford, which has the best equip- infant welfare in the wor London, IFeb. ¢ mothers in London's East mothers a Shanghai. Feb. s of influence in China recommended in a resolution adop) at a recent meeting here of the sociation of British Chamber of € metce in China and Hongkong. association includes representatives important British commerd interests in the Far East. Its action is regarded here nitficant because ~it ha long i claiimed that Great Britain'has b able to obtain a dominant position) trade in China chiefly by the vast extent of British spheres, influence, whtch is said to evers dow thosc of all ofher countries. conference resolved that the tif had come to reaffirm the abolition) the “open door’ as an essential cg merc principle and that abolit of spheres of influence should complished by international i ment 9.—Abolition case this was = renst s u most 1 as 3 probiem of racial a address Dr. showing that reason only 3 England, al ment for be az} ritish government was a by|the association to remit a port] of 'ty xer indemnity and devotd to the cducation of Chinese ald British lines The association expressed its sy pathy with the desire of the Chin| to abolish the plan of ra-te toriality. But declared a stable g ernment should first be establisi satisfactory code of laws enac] and that the Chinese judicial svs should be reformed. It asked also that the British ernment should put into Lmmedi eifect the measures adopted International Opium convention 1912 restricting trafic wit narcotic drugs. It demands racy on Chinese rix suppressed Verde Blaze Is Now Copper Mine \bout Over. Ariz., Feb., 3.—The fire| more than twenty vyearsj in the upper levels of the Copper mine here, ted by a drastic the entire sur- 100-foot extinguish it United Jerome, which has burned United Verde abou elimin, lowerit property attempts for is to be of 1 c All process fuce of to a o @ that 1 the heat It zeneral by opinion slip in sufficient friction the ores rich in sulphur. throuzh sulphur rock to | hasA of was started producing ignite by barned its way veins and process of suppressing removal o copper. zold The involves the fire 14,000,000 material. The area roughly estimated Monster ployed in the cubic yards of to e f00 N0 Teet steam the NSOR MEXICAN MATT. Un shovels vork Feb task of re- sa the mine S PLAC Kinz of announce been chosen for of the municipal commence 1V AN v rience Lic BEATTY GE o today Chai the police conumission Alex Beatty position man that has the s manager He will duties next Wednese had 10 yvears exp mobile <ervice man Divisic Bea BEPORT. CLEARING HOUSE ' Y has : 1 —New aut business P vin with France

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