New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 26, 1921, Page 10

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10 SERVES 35 YEARS INN. B. FIRE DEPT. - Deputy Chief Barnes Has Anni- versary Today Today marks the thirty-fifth anni- versary of the appointment of Deputy Chist Eugene F. Barnes to the local fire department. Mr Barnes is a na- tive of the Hardware City and pre- vious: to his entrance in the fire de- partment he was employed at the Rus- sell and Erwin Manufacturing com- pany. Previcus to that time he was with the Bristol Brass company and also with the Landers, Frary & Clark company. On October 26, 1886, he was ap- pointed as a substitute callman to Hose company No. 1, and on Novem- ber 20th, of the following year he was appointed ‘a regular callman. Since serving in the New Britaih fire de- partment Captain Barnes has seen many changes in the personnel of the various companies. .All horse drawn apparatus was used when he first en- tered the department and the animals * were secured from the H. R. Walker company when an alarm was received. “Chief Barnes was probably the youngest man in the department at the time of his enrollment, being .18 Years of age. On August 1, 1895 he ‘was elected foreman of Company No. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY. MILWAUKEE HOLDING | BEER OCEAN READY Sevefl Million Gallons Ready to Be Dumped on Market TOM MIX, FOX STAR. BOXING WITH JACK. DEMPSEY FOX’S THEATER—THURSDAY FRIDAY AND prohibition gathering. Communications were received from 100 others who had been teetotalers for more than 50 years, GRAVE MOUND OPENED Chinese Court Orders the Above Action to ‘Seftle a Long Time Dispute—De- fendant Wins. Shanghai, Oct.. 26.—As a means of adjusting a difference between Chinese litigants who appeared in the mixed court recently, the.court directed that a grave mound 200 years old should. be SATURDAY well preserved. After the reading of the tablets the court announced the graves as those the defendants’- family and Sung’s peti- tion was dismissed. RENT QUESTION DOWNED Hopes of Shattering Prices in Shang- hai Through Municipal Council Kill- ed When Power to Act is Dashed. Shanghai, Oct. 26.—Hopes of effect- £l the writing read from left to right in- stead of from top to bottom, but the inking was clear and the placques were Milwaukee, Oct. 26—Seven Mil- waukee brewers with state permits to sell beer are ready to drop 7,000,000 gallons on the market. All they arc waiting for is official word from Wash- ington. The breweries are those of Fred Gettelman, Miller, Pabst, Independent abst-Schlitz and Cream City. All plants have been kept in operation during the Prohjbition drought turn- ing out near beer R. P. Hutton Supe:- intendent of the Anti-Saloon League in Wisconsin, today said: “If prescription beer is permitted Prohibition/will be knocked out. We might as well try to regulate a powder keg in hell. If that order stands it will provide a loophole which afl drys fear and for which the wets have been waiting.” Becr in Nine States Only ‘Washington, Oct, 26.—Prescriptions of beer as medicine under the new Treasury regulations can legally be made in only nine states, Wayne B. Wheeler, general counsel of the Anti- Saloon League said today in a state- ment commenting on issuance of the regulations. These states, Wheeler said, are California, Connecticut, Massachusetts, Mjssouri New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Rhode Island and Wis- consin. Prescription of beer also is possible, he said, in the non-prohibited portions of Louisina and Maryland. of Best' Beer to be Delayed Louisville Oct. 26.—Assuming that SCTOBER 25, 197! FOX’S SUNDAY torney-General said: “Neither can they be sold as medicine, The state law prohibits it.” Becr Ruling Boosts Barley Chicago, Oct. 25.—Federal permis- sion to manufactire beér: for imedi- cinal use caused an advance of 2 1-2 cents a bushel in the price of barley today on the Chicago Board of Trade. INVITE DENTISTS The Rotary club has extended . a special invitation to the dentists of the city and their wives, to attend the monthly evening meeting = and supper .to biz held: at the Shuttle Meadow club tonight. Dr. Alfred| - C. Fones. of Bridgeport will .be|" the principal speaker and promises to have some ‘interesting subjeets to dwell upon. formal. breweries are permittéd to make beer, it will not*be the “old fashioned” kind, The affair will be in- | &uests accommodated.. h formerly with Highland hotel, Springfield; Bond restaurant, Hartford. |SAPOLIO| Finds countless uses in the kitchen. It cleans cutlery, kettles, tins, porcelain, chi earthenware, linoleum, oil- cloth, refrigerators, tile, marble, shelves and floors. See that the name SAPOLIO is on every package. ENOCH MORGANS SONS CO. MAKES POTS AND PANS LOOK LIKE NEW DO YOU;'I(NOW"': ’ WHY GIRLS LEAVE Holf Fo'xs, 4 DAYS COMMENCING SUNDAY. ANNOUNCING \ The Opening of The Kensington Inn . Formerly Kilby House Specializing in Steaks and Chops Casy Dining Room. Renovated throughout. Transient and permanent Under the personal management of L. Paul Dower, opened, The dispute concerned the ownership of a small tract of ground. In the ac- tion Sung Chui-dong ‘alleged that Yih Woo-zong invaded the premises under controversy and erected a bamboo fence around certain graves thereon, assert- ing tha#the’ place was his ancestral burying ground. \ The plaintiff claxfl‘ed the property as his own by ancestrial grant. ‘When the grave mounds were open- ed there were brought to light the tab- lets of a Chinese and his wife who had lived and died udder the reign of the Emperor K’ang Hsi. » ‘When the tablets were brought to court it was found that the characters on them were of peculiar form and according to John T. Drane, vice- president of a Louisville beverage company. . Only malts and hops are used in making near beer, he said, whereas a cereal is required for “real beer” Even then, he said, “it will be three weeks before the medicinal product can be made. ing any reduction of inordinately high rents in Shanghai through legislative action have been dashed by an an- nouncement of the. municipal council holding that the council has no power to act on the question. This announce- ment was made in response to various proposals that have been made in re- cent months urging compulsory Yimita- tion of rental charges. “It would appear,’”’ says the an- nouncement, ‘“that the remedy, soon- er or later lies in the operation of the law of supply and demand, since if rentals are so high as to make build- ing operations; unduly profitable, the building of more houses will be speed- ily induced until the supply is equal to or overtakes the demand.” Put a fiowar hesido. a stove or over.a hc it regis Watch.it withor khd Srong. You will ‘and ' then why florists insist upon healehlul hot-mater waimtn or - plants instéad of dry, wilting hot air Illinois Prohibits Beer Chicago Oct. 26.—1Illinois physicians cannot prescribe beer or wine for medicinal purposes under new rules of the Federal Treasury Department without violating the state search and seizure law sald Attorney-General Brundage. today. “Beer and wines cannot be prescrib- ed by physicians in Illinois,” the At- : D ~ _, _..care as much for your babies it M s i as ‘a florist cares for his flowers? MEETS EVERY: COOKING NEED EVEfiYflofischov’vmfis: ‘ - ? ¢ Flowers which will thrive in air warmed by hot-water radi- ators will wilt in the heat from:a _ hot-air furnace or stove. Warm, -mois¢ air builds health; hot, dry air undermines it. . DEPUTY CHIEF BARNES. 1, and served until 1898 when he se- cured a leave of absence to go to the Snapish-American war. He had en- listed in the militia in July, 1896. He left New Britain with Company D, First Connecticut Volunteer Infantry, on May 4, 1898 and returned with that company on October 31, 1599. Chief Barnes did not immediately the department when he re- turned from war, but early in 1900 he, was transferred to the Ladder com- —pany at central fire station. On April 2, 1907 be was appointed a regular member of the department béing as- he was transferred to the ladder com- pany. On October, 1908 he was ap- | pointed lieutenant of the same com- pany and was promoted to captain on July 1, 1909. On March 1 of this year he.was appointed deputy chief under Chief William™ J. Noble. . Under Six Chiefs. uty Chief Barnes has served un- der_six chlefs in hia period of service in the department. They were Chief H. R. Walker, Chief John Carlson, Chief William" Sullivan, Chief Roy Cowles, Chief Robert E. Dame and the present head of the department, Chief ‘William J. Noble. Charles Beaton of Lexington street was chairman of the board of fire commissioners, when Deputy' Chief Barnes joined the de- partment. From September 10 to'November 10, 1917, Deputy Chief Barnes, by virtue of the board of fire commissioners, at- ténded the fire college of the New York fire department, receiving a di- ploma at the completion of his course. Upon'his return he was assigned to Handsome as a fine piece of fur- ° nitureand costing surprisingly lit- tle, it stands in the living-room, dining-room or kitchen, flooding the room with warmth, ] American: Radiators: connected with it, carry its warmth to every X o, other rqom; while the kitchen tank, Have you ever considered these 4135 connected, provides an abun- facts in their relation to the winter g f < health of your babies? e S e N The American Radiator Com-- - And we guarantee that if your pany considered them when home is now heated by stovss or conducting. the scientific. experi- g bt air furnace, ARCOLA will pay The quality of Staniford ranges, standardized and thorough, is made possible by many years of ments that produced ARCOLA. ko intructing the members of the local department in the more advanced methods of combating fire. He is at present head of the fire prevention ‘bureau of the local department. Spanish War Veteran. Chief Barnes is prominently con- experience in building ranges. -With all its improvements, it is as convenient as one can desire and certainly pleasing to look upon. You can make no mistake in a You simply must see ARCOLA. It is new and different. the Company whose larger heat- ing plants warm mansions, cathe- for itself in the fuel it will save. It burns any kind of fuel. For the sake of your babies’ health - for the Built by sake of your bankaccount— gotoyourHeat- ing Engineer and see ARCOLA today. nected with the A. G. Hammond camp, Spanish War veterans, where he has held the post of adjutant for the past seventeen years. * PROHIBITION GATHERING. More than 100 men and women, each of whom claimed to have abstained from intoxicants for 50 years at least, have just assembled here as a feature of a drals and\even the White House itself, it is guaranteed to be the most perfect hot-water heating outfit for small homes and stores which science has produced. Stamford. The red and yellow card at ‘the right is the sign of a Heating or Sanitary Engineer (you used to call him Steamfitter or Plumber) who can show you ARCOLA. Look for it in his window. It will pay you to consult him twice a year as you do your Doctor or Dentist. To have him examine and report on your heating and plumbing costs little. It may save youa very grzat deal. AMERICAN RADTATOR COMPANY Makers of the famous IDEAL Boiiers and AMERICAN Radiators 102 West 42nd Street New York City Mandolin E. C. Benson Barker Private Instruction on Mandolin, Banjo, Ukulele. For appointments apply at C. L. Pierce & Co., 246 Main St. Lessons at Pupil’s Home, 2ok BY BLOSSER A BARGAIN. I have on the West Shore Front an 18-Room House with all improvements, For Sale or Exchange for other busi- ness. WILL VA PUT NEW HAR ON, TH HAIR Cone : OFF MY DoLLS THE ROCK AGENCY 343 Beach Street West Haven CROWLEY BR:;S. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street Tel. 755-12 Estimates checrfully given on all jobs, —e———— >4 TOMORROW TOM MIX in TRAILIN’

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