New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 21, 1921, Page 9

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PERSHING IS GIVEN | ROUSING RECEPTION Marshal @' Esperey and Other French Officials Greet Him Havre. Sept. 21.—(By John J of American armies dur- Associated Tresa.)—General Pershing, commander great war, returned to F The ing the today Pershi encorte r Paris on which the Atlantie, port of Havre this ikt Vhabak P EKSHING, : by the French battle cruis- Strasbourg and Metz, ten torpedo destroyers. bridge of the Paris as ain Maurrar of the liner, d a nolsy and enthusiastic o as the vessel steamed up the harbor, from palatial liners, and sounded their batteries on Cape 1 a sajute of 21 guns, escorting crulsers re- craft in the macks to their fNags sirens, while the e la Heve be tch th rench squadron met the Paris 60 miles out. A thick fog prevailed, A4 up by means squadron f the liner rocking 1ifted end the liner w uf wireless falling fn with wnd following me it by until sunrise, when th Marshal. Franche numerous staff, a ) Mott, military attache at the / aris, went down the s in a French line pilot boat to t the general egiment of Infantry lined the and a great crawd cheered en- thusiasi'cally 1. Pershing land- Ho was presented with a bouquet ot American Beauties by a delegation children and was welcomed Mayor of school in the name of the city by Meyer. Conn. Inventions Patents Issucd August 30, 1921 by the U, 8. Patent Offic Connecti- cut Inventors (List furnished by the office of Har- old C. Manning, Room N~ tional Bank building. Main street, New Britain). Kristoffer A Means of securing Apparatus Hollls B. Bagg, Watertown, assignor to Scovill Mfg. Co., Waterbury. 8 rson, Hartford dies in forging was |V . |motion to continue the case Johby Belpedio, Bridgeport. Talking [to comply with order of court; Harry | W 3 Krepshan, by Maurice Rosenberg, vs.|Albert Halpern, et al., by Kirkham, nachine. Jncob Benson, Bristol. Key-ca Hiryant H. Blood, Hartford, assig » Pratt & Whitney (o, Ne N. Y. Linear-measuring machine. Edwin W. Bullard, Whitneyville, wsslgnor to Winchester Repeating \rms Co,, New Haven. E en patents: sit-brace; 6 ratchet m anisms; 3§ race-heads; 2 bit-bra dles. John A. Canfield, Danbury, machin AL New Haven, Di- ding ter- caliper s C. Davenport, New Haven. Coin- Wiy Al Thom ’ Dean, Stamford, as- signor to Splitdorr I Newark, N. J. Ignition Harold De Clanecta, N signor to Winchester R Dry cell Albert G. Hagstrom, East Hartford, assignor to The Fuller Brush Co., Hartford. Trimmer Henry M . Fairfleld. Kettle, J. F. Lamb, °. . Carlson, New Britain, i o Landers, Frary Haven, as wting Arms urth to ng press. artford. Swah o Westinghourse Air Spring Co. Cup- washer expander. Louis A. Tactikos, Greenwich. Heat- er John J. Thacher, Whethersfield, as- r to Pratt & Whitney Co., New N. Y. Cutter-grinding machine. ander Zebrowski Stamford Shade-bracket Tony Zukowski, wrench, Bristol. Multiple Design Patents Walter F. Harold, Newark, N. J. assignor to The Bassick Co., Bridge- port. Truck-caster. Alfred G. Kintz, Wallingford, as- signor to International Silver Co. Han- dle for spoons, forks or similar arti- cles. Charles S. Mosman, Bridgeport, as- signor to th nnings Brothers Mtg. Co. Base for ucifix, candlestick, or similar artic ix patents. Frank Yokol, Hartford. Toy bank. Trade Mark Registration The Salt's Textile Co., Bridgeport, and New York, N. Y. Pile fabrics in the plece. Label Registration The Gaynor Mfg. Co. Bridgeport. “The Gaynor Light Control.” (For ouectric light control switches). Applications for Trade Mark Registration Birmingham Iron Foundry, Derby. Drop-presses for stamping and form- ing products ot metal and automatic drop lifters for lifting and operating the hammers of drop presses. The Edw. Malley Co., New Haven. Veiling by the plece. The Middletown Silver Co., Middle- town. § er-plated hollow ware and tablesw Winchester Repeating Arms Co., New Haven. Ice and roller skates. v senersil]5 CASES SLATED ON COURT CALENDAR Judge Gives Decision Favoring Plain- Ul in Case Against Ros- enberg. There are fifteen cases on the city court short calendar for the session Friday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock, as follows: Stanislaw Smolski, by J. G. Woods. vs. Felix Leszceski, hearing in damages: Willlam Wexler, by Al- tred LeWitt, vs. Bayer Brothers, by David L. Nair, judgment for failure to comply with efder of court; P. Al- a|fred Johnson, by Kirkham, Hunger- ford and Camp, vs. Joseph Landino, for a further period of one month; Solomon Sheinman, by Greenstein & Green- stein, vs. Isydor Bezrutczyk, by Stan- ley J. Traceski, non-suit for failure to comply with order of court; Klem- ens Kalkowski, by Stanley J. Traceski, vs. Peter Ba by H. H. Milkowitz, default for f; e to comply with or- der of cour alvatore Negrola, by H. P. Roche, vs. Carmello Dorato, et al, by Stanley J. Traceski, hearing in damages, and judgment for failure See ARCOLA Today! A Complete ARCOLA outfit is now on display in our store ET us demonstrate to you this wonderful new heat- ing invention for the small home, store, office, shop or CORNS Lift Off with Fingers t hurt a bit! Orop a little on an aching in- corn stops hurting, then lft it right off with fin- corn, sclls a tiny bettle of | ents, sufMeient | enllunce, wilhout seren garage. ARCOLA can be in- stalled quickly and easily and at surprisingly low cost. Ln fact it will pay for itself in the fuel it saves. Estim- ate for complete installation gladly furnished without ob- n to you. Phone 585-5 E. P. BURNS 11 Main St. pays for itself! T can be installed in your home, office quickly and easily surprisingly small” expense. In fact, it pays for itself in the fuel it saves. or store and at Come in—or phone us— and we will gladly give you an estimate at no obligation or cost. A. A. MILLS 80 West Main St. Phone 381 ard P k, pleadir Procko, Lawrisnty Uh pleading by ¢ O'Connor, by B. F Gaffney, VS. application for ceiver; - | Milkowitz vs : / y [ux., by Alfred LeWitt Inc § fendant, Lena Schupack Woods vs. Anthony Angelo, et al., e of defense, judgment, lim- |G Your Heating Engineer— you used to call him Steamfitter “During the first winter nearly one-half of their number died from exposure.” —ENCYCLOPEDIA BRITTANICA UST three hundred yeatrs ago they landed on Ply- mouth Rock. They were a courageous company— as sturdy and stout as Y the best of us. But nearly half of them died from exposure. The land to which they came was the same land in which we live; the winter was no more severe than our winters now. But nearly half of them died from exposure. Almost no one in America dies from exposure today. And why? Because of the service of a group of quiet, un- assuming men. Working without special notice or praise, the men whom you call Steamfitters and Plumbers have made the newest nation the healthiest and best-warmed nation in the world. They have done a wonderful work for America; and yet their work is hardly more than begun. Statisticians say that 17% million homes in America still have no heat except the heat of old-fashioned stoves. AMERICAN itation of time for redemption appointment of Julius Carnol by H. Tony ¥ vski NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDESDAY. SEPTEMBER 21, 1921. ; : f and |continuanc re- | Woods, vs. Abraham Gor! ing by defendant. demurrer; i. Woods, vs. Ma 5 .. by F. B. Hungerford, motion to cite in Avedis Coroglanina as co-plaintiff; Joseph Cantino, by M. the case of D. by J. Sexton, vs. George the Heating Engineer’s wonderful new gift to the small home FOR years every Heating Engineer has longed for a hot-water heating outfit that would warm the small home as perfectly as the larger heating plants of the AMERICAN RADIATOR COMPANY warm mansions, cathedrals and even the White House itself. ARCOLA—a_ wonderful new invention developed after years of cxpe‘ment—is the answer to that hope. ARCOLA is unlike any heating equipment you have ever seen. It is radiator and boiler and hot-water heater com- bined to burn any kind of fuel. Set in the living-room, dining-room or kitchen, it radiates healthful warmth to every corner. American Radiators, connected with it by small pipes carry its warmth to every room upstairs and down. The kitchen tank, too, can draw on its deep fire- pot, providing an abundance of hot water for washing and bathing. See ARCOLA today in the store of any Heating Engineer displaying the red and yellow card at the right. ARCOLA is not only a great inven- tion for the small home; itis a gift to the small home in a very real sense. For, in the fuel it saves, ARCOLA is guaranteed to pay for itself. IDEAL ARCOLA SMALL HOMI If every man who can install a heat- ing plant should work every day, it would take a generation to give modern healthful heat to those 17%2 million homes. An almost overwhelming task! But think of the overwhelming economy! Every IDEAL TYPE A HEAT MACHINE substituted for a wasteful furnace or ‘boiler means that one family’s fuel bill is reduced one-third. Every ARCOLA, supplanting a furnace or old- fashioned stoves, slashes the fuel bill of another home. Of all the services rendered to the modern home there is none which pays for itself more quickly or more surely than the- service of the Steamfitter and Plumber. Call your Steamfitter or your Plumber in now and have him go over your house and report; his counsel may save you money. Make it a point to con- sult him twice a year as you do your Doctor or your Dentist. And do not be surprised if the old name over his store has been taken down and a new one hangs in its place. For the men whose science and skill have robbed winter of its terrors and removed the breeding-grounds of disease, have outgrown the names by which you have been accustomed to call them. Their work has become a profession: the Steamfitter and Plumber of yesterday are today the Heating and Sanitary Engineers. RADIATOR COMPANY Makers of the famous IDEAL Boilers and AMERICAN Radiators 102 West 42nd Street S. W. Trader, by J. G.|A. Sexton, vs. Vakar Bogosian, ples Judgment in favor of the plaintiff has been given in the city coumt “ohen, by Michael Rosenberg, damages of $50.50 and costs of $11.58,

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