New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 7, 1923, Page 2

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B Bath SPONGES Window SPONGES “Take ry of e amused Automobile SPONGES MOTHERS LOVE FLOWERS FOR FLOWERS have a means of expressing a feeling in no other way possible. The flowers must be right however, and we can offer many suggestions to meet the occasion and sentiment, —The— Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Phone orders given special attention. Order early and get best selection, Among the most appropriate flowers for Mother’s Day are: Carnations Daffodils Roses Snap Dragons Sweet Peas Flowering Plants New Arrivals in Imported DIES, CAUSE UNEXPLAINED P ) C | Tallahassee, Fla, May Jerry aw e excited | ew k, M "harges tha him av was ¢ soited | N Yord fay SO S result of an investigation into the standers. will be answered this afternoon by | {to Pensacoln to testity before & fed- cating goat, Haid Mr. Billy Goat, or lsumed on the government's appliea- | Hobart A, Wamner Was For 26 Yenrs | coding hin death muttered he had | [ but presun ised, not on i EOAL fart {trol of the commodity, The govern- Bristol, May 7.—~Hobart A, War. | fering from a mental allment for sev- horses, Maybe he, she or it, thought Golng to Supreme Court the state, died at his home here yes. death, alleged to have resulted from | dier's wagon and thought there was the U, 8 supreme court for finallton and was early identified with | In that connection mentioned lha! be, tired of a diet of empty sardine cans It was belloved here that the su-|clected president of the Bristol Sav. | rrest and conviction of vagrants who | cdible greens, the fall term, of this city from 1898 to 1001, being | the committes he recolved $20 for| |the invitation, bleating a good na- tures case in which Chief Justice |known as an athlete and was the | TUPnIng board of thelr automoblle, | Neither does he like assoclating with |/modity exchange and that price dom- years during the '70s and 80s, when | FElectrical Inspector Cyril J, Curtin NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MAY 1028, | n BILLY GOAT GETS ~ SUGAR MEN DEFEND ' Sure Relief | re keler | ¥ Jerry Poppell Expives While on Way I ; : | N\ /23 ‘ to Testify Against Vlorida Finally Prefers Sardine Cans and Jobn W, Davis Makes Reply in | Poppell, ohlef witness for the prosegu- tlen in & peonage case against two d Beaver strect |operations in sugar futures on the o - Haturday atternoon, “Take him away,” New York coffce and sugar exchange | 28¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhers ‘ ::'l‘f:“fi"’c‘;‘."‘\‘l’::"l':.:I';j":-‘:"‘":“'“"):";‘m: B e The “him" referred to was nothing John W, Davis, former ambassador | e mare or less than a common home- to Great Dritain and senlor counsel A lanat Keee Pasnell .sald her said Mrs, Nanny Goat (the peddier tion for an injunetion to restrain | neve Annad fay # . | President of Savings Bank in Bell | been poisoned, the attending physician | CHAMOIS was z :.\I.lr ..lu :-.-Im;::n; I lucon|tediag in_ susst fulures _unless iy, | sald the former Tallahassee jailer died Iy 1 @ livery stable, At {mone will answer Mr, Davis' argu- |, 2 4 me or O e moat famil L . er, for 20 years president of ‘the | eral months, | least sald member of the goat family [ nenes hefore decision is made by the Bristol Ravings bank and probably| Whilo appearing before a legialative I\'t‘:;:”:m'.:.h.‘fi: :::-llz:;l;(r:frufi:;:'i The question of the legallty of|torday after a month's iliness, He | brutal treatment recelved at the camp | . 2 . | trading In sugar futures as carrled on | wag 91 years old, | of the Putnam lumber Co, Poppell | 1§ 1o be a goat banquet or possi- $ ,‘,:‘\": ,'““;“m‘ :' he ‘;“_:::“.“::I_'r':,":'p judgment, it was indlcated, whatever |the clock manufacturing Industry in names of Sherlff Jones and Judge v | the decision of the clrenit court may | this state, conducting his own busi.| Wills. Poppell testifiod the sheriff | and old newspapers and thought the | weddler “ preme court would not come to \l\"flnn bank in 1897 and had served When sentenced were put to work in ’|. ddlers, his horse and his wares erved the convict oamps, Sherift Jones told | e 0 t there, At any rate the goat Invited him. The government based ity case on | firet selectman the last four years of ©Ch man sen i !M! to Join Hm. cavalcade and the recent decision of the U, 8, su-| his service, Mrs. Poppell sald her husband be- | |tured “thanks” to himself, through n;Talt asserted that Interstate trade and | last surviving member of the Bristol . N [set oL venerable whiskers. commerce may be burdened and re- wicket team which held the state|Electrical Inspector Curtin goats, Possibly he gets people's goats |Inates trade between the states, The | wicket was & popular sport, | occasionally, but he does not like |government charged that only a rel- Mr, Warner is survived by a son, | began his dutles in the building de- partment at city hall this morning. WITNESS IN PEONAGE CASE THE PEDDLER'S GOAT ~ THEIR HIGH RATES fOR INDIGESTION | ‘ County Oficlals, Papers to Cucumbers and Onions | Injunction Proceedings kb s 1#on county officials, that came as a eried execitedly ta by« |are a conspiracy in restraint of trade Fla., Raturday night while en route BRISTOL BANKER DIES grown, backyard, whiskered, tin-can for the exehang en hearing is re- | s o husband during a Jucld moment pre | L hAd tear He, she or paoked by actual ownership or eon- % of apoplexy. ‘Poppell had been sut- scomed to be partial to the soclety of |7 g cirouit Court of Appeals, the oldest active bank president in|committoe Investigating Tabert's | uf oucumbore and onlons on the ped- |y, "ing exohange will be carried 0| Mr. Warnes was born in Thomas.| admitted his habitus! drinking and || the street. Possibly he, she op it had ness here for some time. Mo wag!And Judge conspired to profit in the | made an appetizing combination of |¢&8e however before the opening of luntll his fliness, He was selectman | promptly and with dispatch accepted Premec court in the grain trading fu-| In his youth Mr., Warner was weil| ¢AM¢ 11l at Quincy, falling off the | But the peddler was not a goatherd. |strained by “paper’ sales on a com- | champlonshlp in that sport for ”""",Starts on New D“ties Today [ |the four footed variety, the sugar| George A. Warner, and a daughter, | Inspector Curtin succeeds Willlam He ordered |atively small amount of Scotch Golf Hose The smartest of designs— all weights— fine qualities. SFALLS [sylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” o City Items | New: Split-top Victrolas, at Morans’. —advt. After a winter spent at Indian | Beach, Sarasota, Fla, Mrs. Mary L. Wells and Mrs. Helen H. Hart, both of Farmington, have returned home. Mrs, Wells is to spend the next two weeks at the home of her son, Eugene Wells, of Lincoln street, this city. Her daughter, Mrs, Taylor, and Mr, Taylor or Farmington, are to drive home by auto and expect it will take them two ‘weeks for the run. They will have with them Mr, and Mrs. Edgar Pen- field of Wilson, Conn. Open alleys at the Casino tonight— advt, New Britain Nest of Owls will hold‘ a regular meeting tonight in Odd | Fellows' hall at 8 o'clock. | Tickets for the Hartford to New York rallroad excursion, May 12, on sale at Pilz's sporting goods store, Railroad Arcade.—advt. L. W. Truslow of Bradley street is visiting his former home in Fred- ericksburg, Va. Open alleys at the Casino tonight— advt, i The Misses Anna and Elsie Bailey are undergoing treatment at St. Iran- cis’ hospital, Hartford. Tickets for the Hartford to New York railroad excursion, May 12, on sale at Pilz's sporting goods store, Railroad Arcade.—advt, There will be a meeting of Daughters of lsabella tonight at o'clock at the club rooms. French Hat Shoppe, St., Prof. Bldg. Exclus —advt. the 8 West Main millinery. o Te— BAZAAR and Dance Under Auspices of New Britain Chapter Hadassah TUES. EVE,, MAY 8 ODD FELLOWS’ HALL (Old Turner Hall) Music By Sullivan’s Rex Mere Orchestra Adm. 50c Tax Free DR. BENJ. L. PROTASS DR. HARRY PROTASS DENTISTS 252 MAIN ST. (Over Globe Clothing Co.) the goat to move on. The order was | Interpreted as an Invitation to join| the party, and again the unwelcome attache bleated his thanks, | He wandered underneath his friend | the horse, and the steed immediately proceeded to do a dance on two feet, The peddier called for help and a group of would be Buffalo Bllls start- ed out to be cowboys, or more correct- | ly “goat hoys" and endeavored to coax the wily animal into capitvity. But the “mocking bird of Beaver street' was too wise, He eluded the grasp of his pursuers untll they began to anno him. Then the worm, or rather the | goat turned. A well developed pair of horns were brought into play in traditional goat style, and Mr. Goat emerged from a head-on collision vie- | torious, while one young man sat in| a convenient gutter and indignantly asked, “Why the thunder didn’t the guy that was drivin’ that car blow his horn?" Aid was in sight. The owner of the goat appeared. His Goatship, prob- ably figuring that three square meals of newspapers and tomato cans, with an occasional rubber hoot on the side, was better than one possible meal of | cucumbers, onions and a few bites out of the peddrér's wagon for dessert, gave one challenging bleat and de- rarted from the scene of the disturb- | ance., GAS KILLS TWO IN FAMILY Children’ Dead, Four Others Suffering in Bridgeport. Bridgeport, May 7.—Two children were asphyxiated and four members of their family were made dangerous- ill yesterday morning when jlluminat- | ing gas fllled bedrooms in which they slept. The dead are: John Liston, 10 and his eight year old brother, Edward. Their mother, Mrs, Mary Liston, a widow and her son Richard, 17, and daughters, Rose, 12 and Agnes 14, are In critical condition in St. Vincent hospital, traded in by members of the exchange was ever actually delivered to refiners and that such transactions established the price of refined sugar to the con- sumer, Evidence was offered to show | that most of the big refiners, and| other large buyers of raw sugars did | not use the exchange in any way in| thelr bu. Exchange Is Important, Counsel for the exchange answered that the exchange was an important factor in the country's economic machinery and was g ankers, refiners, exporters manufacturers of sugar products protect themselves against loss their sugar dealings by means “hedging” transactions. It was admitted that about 75 per cent of the sugar transactions on the exchange were never closed by the actual dellvery of the sugar dealt in. Such transactions were settled through the clearing assoclation of the exchange by means of offsets and clearances and ring settlements, it was stated. The recent rise in the price of sugar | had been brought about by the | operation of the economic law of | supply and demand and a possible shortage in the Cuban sugar crop, it was asserted. Health BoarTi to Award Garbage Contracts Tues. Contracts for the collection of gar- bage will be awarded tomorrow after- noon at a meeting of the board of health at 5 o'clock. The board has received several bids for the first and third districts, but there were no bid- ders for the second district. The board has advertised for proposals for col- lections in this territory, bids to be in by tomorrow at noon, and at a spe- cial meeting in the afternoon the mat- ter will be dosposed of. and to in of First typewriter was produced in 1867 by Christopher L. Sholes of Milwaukee. than $3000 in a for the future, You ask how? count in which deposits. For 10 You C This Man is Independent He is not rich nor has he ever made more He is independent. For thirty years he has had a savings ac- more than the deposits. He’s independent. New Britain National Bank Open Monday Evenings year. Yet he has no fear he made small but regular years the interest has been ‘an Do the Same New Britain Plumbers Will largely by | Attend State Convention A large delegation of New Britain Master Plumbers will attend a con- vention and.banquet of the Maater Plumbers’ association of Connecticut tomorrow at Bridgeport, Sessions will be held in the morning and after- noon, eoncluding with a danquet at| the Stratford hotel. act| 1r | Graybeck, | Paonessa has reappointed | bullding commission | Thomas J. Quinlivan, who has been | past two weeks. e cakes, try Baker’s Extracts once and | find out how much better they can be. ~—advt, Mayor A. M. to the Commissioner resigned. ing electrical inspector for !hel VOLZ FLORAL (CO. 92 WEST MAIN ST. TEL. 1116 you think you can make good — Special Mattress Sale — AT B. C. Porter Sons | FOR A FEW DAYS ONLY ALL-COTTON MATTRESSES, At $12.95 Full Size Roll Edge Good Tick COTTON FELT MATTRESSES, At $16.95 Full Size COTTONF Full S SILK FLO Full Size Roll Edge Good Tick ELT MATTRESSES, At $19.45 ize Roll Edge Good Tick SS MATTRESSES, At $23.75 Roll Edge Fine Tick THIS IS A REAL MONEY SAVING SALE All Brand New Mattresses— Just Received Our quantity buying for our big Bedding Department en- ables us to give these fine mattresses at these dinary Low Prices. A DRAMATIC THUNDERBOLT THE WHOLE TOWN WILL TALK ABOUT THE FACE on the BARROOM FLOOR Smaller Sizes of the Above May Be Had Ask to see our Derry-made Orange Blossom Mattresses. Also Simmons’ Slumber King Springs, Box Springs and Na- extraor- tional Springs. B. C. Porter Sons “Connecticut’s Best Furniture Store Large Cast Headed By < HENRY B. WALTHALL

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