New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 20, 1923, Page 5

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

1923, planned iver, proposed 1o s bid for support both for renomings NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 20, tlon ald re-election — PONE STRIKE WIL N * Gy Reli@f PRESIDENT T0 GIVE 15375 AFFECT NEW BRITAIN e FOR INDIGESTION Phe ronorts subsidsd 204 the pratl Local Distriet Manager Eaplans How g \7) I FIRST—I@l-_K_THURSo Sont BRatly. Gemed '“"“:EEE"‘:.:E:"'::E ;) Will Stop Over i St. Louls on Hot water Sure Relief Trip to Alaska DELL-AN in faver of & return by waler A EREIEE 25¢ and 75¢ Packaies Cverpwhers the M for } nepvice Would Not Be bmpaired i gh the Panama and by way of Porto Rico Approximately ene third of the president’s trip will be made by mil train of ten cars leaving here taday, The voyage to and from Alaska will be de on the naval Hender and the voyage from San Diege, Cal, to New York will bhe an two shipping heard vessels, L néxt twa weeks, ¥ ever, are to { for. Do spent almest altegether on the 4 rain as the pre tial party will not polths for A until Thursday, Wash Jled stop of the press 1 ¥, Louls late toe seven hour visit plans and with the first of rmal eddresses there ight 1t was considered \ probable however when the day that the presis 1 the speaking portion or more rear Lefere arriving in 10 Any Serious Estent Washingten, June 20.-~President Harding was on the way today toward aved m ma ger of the transport ern New hopes he has Whit realization of one of the he nearly @ ehief exes y ¢ whe ars ag entered 1 y stive has held sinee hous T ward practiea 1821 to the time the eapital long enoug vast terpitory Alaska first hand the problems feols are st will make for the tervitary That time eame today 1 Para. Brasll, Is known as the| Parture from Washington of a specinl | oo “gateway of the Amezon," traly ying Mr. Harding, Mres, | 00 [ Harding and a party of 10 with «| Alaska as the ultimate destinatior | "Pwo years ago this summer My Juisitic enough trained rators ut the country te handle the Probably five girls would be from New Fritain, two or three and upwards of a dozen New York would be 10 take care of almost all the shortage in Bosten and other towns where serviee was normal would be called upon to supply the vacancies. Reports which reach New Hritair ure to the effect that enly per cent of the operators are of strike and that the telephone com pany will take care of its toll servies oven if the loeal service does hecome crippled, Mr, MeAuliffe says Theee is little danger of the strike | seriously affeeting business acording Restored | to Mr. MeAulffie, who says the Am- | \ erlean Telephone and Telegraph eom whieh controls the subsidiary would immediately re. Mare to visit the to study which al ] rafflc or siv embark July & at Tae The Arst sel tdential special is morrow wit i for that eit the § s f tamorrow, 1 th oft rom Rriste from Hartford at he ition that able Acking the » proper elopment of oside with 1e mor here t A op trly platform addre pany companies, wou Him To Complete | By The Associated Press, 8t Louis éuter into Atraet with allewed to New Britain, at per [cent discount from list and 5°per cent diseount for eash at 15 days fre Be autherity be given to construct a sani o ed cost heing $3, graph company W totalling §181,706,88 |# sanitary sewer ahcut 320 feet long England Telephone Co committes, It is planned to make| of 9 o'clock as at present, | “ORKS OF ART ARE FAKES vdations ! west side, 40 minutes; on the - east! utes; Main street, west side, from | Wales Lines Co., of Meriden lineal feet of 24 1nfh standard eltrified [date of invelce after deduction o freight, the net cost to he §2,917.64, | |tary sewer in Myvtle street extension | New Hritain will have [tram Armistice street westerly, a dis- | worry in :»: the .,,.“. ator At this evening's session of the eom«| The board of public works will alse men ecouncil, the finance committes |make recommendations as follows 'lulnul-; lu"\'u 1.““‘| ® cAuliffe, distrie A revision of the ordinance govern.|hetween Myrtle street and Riehard ing parking in the center of the city | street, the estimated cost being $475. | warking ruies imoperaiive st 030 WITNESS TELLS HO Following are the recommer of the ordinance committee: 1 Walnut street; south side, no park- |y H \ Dese| y ‘ Ingi north side, uniimited; Arch|Docrives How Keulpior Missing Parts of Statues Given side no parking: Church strest, north, side, no parking: south side, from West Main street to the railroad tracks 40 minutes from the rallrpad COUNCIL TO ACT ON sewer pipe, three foot lengths frelght Ordinance Committee Report Will [T b Vi camatnd i tanee of about 1,000 feet, the estimat. | New England Telephone will recommend payment of bills| That autherity be given to econstruet | local | oh of the will he submitted by the ordinancé | “ ock on Saturday evenings, instead w HANY | gtreet: ‘rom Walnut to Grand, on Main street to Corbin Place, 40 min- tracks to_ Lafayette street, 15 min- utes; Main street: east side, from EIM |00 the restorations of some pieces street to East Main street, 40 1ine of Myrtla street: Hartford ave- nue; from Fast Main street to North street: east side, unlimited; west side, no parking; Franklin Square: north end of park to Rockwell avenue, | Boutron's name, west side, unlimited parking against!hy Demotte unti) the 'when the establishments were hived the curb: no parking alongside park; Main street: west side of Cen- tral park, 40 minutes; Main street, from Franklin Square to Arch street, both sides, 40 minutes, Southi Main street: east side, no parking for 60 feet north and b0 feet south of Ash street; west side, no parking for 50 feet north and 50 feet south of Roberts street, West Main street, north side, from National bank to Washington street, 5 minutes; from Washington street to High street, 40 minutes; south side, 5 minutes in' front of post office (ef- fective 24 hours): from east line to post office to a point 0 west of Globe Clothing Co. corner, 6 minutes; from point 50 feet west of Globe Clothing Co. corner, easterly to said corner, l\fl‘ parking. Court street: utues; south side, High; from West Main west side, unlimited; east side, no parking; High street; from West Main street to Lake street, west side, no parking; east side unlimited; Lake street; unlimited on’ hoth sides; Washington street from West Main to Lake street, west side, unlimited; east glde, no parking; Chestnut street, from Mair street to Elm street, no parking, -both- =ides; Central Park; north side, 40 minute jitney station, 5 minutes; Commercial ‘street, south side, no parking as far as Center street; Myrtle street, Main street to Washington street, north side, no parking: south side, unlimited. +The committee also recommends an cordinance that prohibits parking of vehicles within a distance of five feet from street corners and closer than three feet to any other vehicle, The claims committee will present north side, 40 min- unlimited; South to Walnut, | | | | | min-| now in the Louvre wers by M, Bou- utes, except no parking from raflroad [y0n 5 sculptor of great talent, La tracks to a point opposite the SOuUth|iaein savs today. 2 from|quary, to work in shops rented Paris, June 20,—Jean Vigoroux who testified yesterday at a magistrate's hearing of charges that various seulp. —— American museums are spurious, sald INVURED IN AUTO CRASH Man's Car Runs Into tures in the Louvre and in prominent ‘ | | New HRritain Vigoroux testified, according to the newspaper, that Boutron had been en- | Fence At Dangerous Milldale Curve | gnged by Joseph Demotte, the anti-| in The rent was pald | Boutron's death and Topples Occupants Into River Germano Tordo of New Britain 18 | in the Meriden hospital suffering from {euts and bruises about the head re- In the antiquary’'s name. |celved when an automoblle he was These workshops were nine in num- | qriving crashed into a fence at Dicker- ber and In them Vigoroux affirmed, |man's corner in Milldale and plunged numerous fake pleces were made and |into the waters of the Ten Mile river. sold subsequently in America. How-' rordo and three others who wera ever, comments Le Matin, it will take | with him were rescued by means of a the services of a justice to determine | ader lowered from a bridge over- whether these declarations are tound- |yead, The three others were unine ed so that Demotte and others cited |jypreq, by’ Vigoroux will be examined. Charles Camp, a Milldale garage The widow of the sculptor Boutron nan, gays he has been called to this {old the newspaper that her hushand |corner< 30 times to take care of ac- himself on finding his work in the|cigent victims. It is regarded as a Louvre, informed her he had supplied | yery dangerous corner. the missing lower part of a bas-rellef | found in the Parthenon and that he | had also restored other “turnips,” as High St_a;l-tlal'd of Ethics f he called the shapeless remains of the statues entrusted to him by Demotte. The woman sald her husband took no interest in what became of the work he did for the antiquary consid- ering this none of his business. Shé a®ded that she regretted his abandon- ing original work and feared that some scandal would arise from it. Mme. Boutron will testify in the case, MARRIAGES. oUT OF TOWN fice of City Clerk A. L. Thompson in four marriages performed in the city of Hartford recently. Raymond George Crowley of 14 Brook street, a student, and Miss| Mary Elizabeth Christie of 17 Madi- | son street, Hartford, were married in Hartford May 16, by Rev, Michael A.| Sullivan of the Immaculate Concep-| tion church, | Robert Lester Hinckley, an elec-| trical contractor of Springfield, Mass., | and lannie Waller O'Brien of this | city, both divorcees, were married in/ Returns have been filed at the of- Is Essential for World | St. Louis, June 20.—Employment of the highest standard of ethics in bus iness co-operation of capital and labor | |and cuitivation of friendship between employer and employe were urged at| today's sesslon of the 14th annual convention of Rotary international | here. “The danger to clvilization is I not the mob or the raging multitude| but the weakling citizen, the spine- less businessman, the person who stands for nothing and will do noth- ing,” President Raymond M. Havens of Kansas City asserted, From _ royalties on phonograph | records alone, Caruso, famous Itallan tenor, received more than $2,000,000, Bernice Hart, leading lady in a Broadway musical show, elop- | Twor Stars N;w Sbi;e 7A; 70ne— ed with Harold Bridgeman, captain of the University of Pennsyl-| vania polo team last May. Despite Miss Hart's publicity agent | they were able to keep their marriage a secret until after the close of the college vear. Bridgeman is a son of a Flint, Mich., banker. | Harding was too busily engaged in { getting his administration into | ning order to think of making to Alaska although even then he convinced there was a problem rather a series of problems there, that required solutior Last summer he went 50 far as to consider preliminary plans for mich a trip but congress con. tinued in session through the summer months and he finally decided to post- pone the visit until this year The president had the Alaskan trip in mind throughout the winter but it was not until two months ago that he finally decided to make it Then reports began to spread about that the trip {f made was to be more or less of a political tour and that the president through the specches he| run W trip was the same Passive liesinlince Ends Only if Indemnity Is Paid A tod 1'ress. Elberfeld tance Ruhr the ny H Passive resise will be abandoned in the valley on elght conditions, one important of which I8 indemnification by the French and Belgiuns for all products of private industry which they have seized, says a memorandum to the Berlin governs ment reported to have been drafted here by rey atives of the eme ployers and employes. most Russia there 4 cstimated to 9 women to every 1,000 men, In be Thousands of car owners will tell you Geta 66 = Phinney-Walker Clock putonyour car” ALF an hour after a man has a Phinney-Walker Clock put reports as follows: That the claim of | Hartford, May 30, by Rev. L. BRH.! George H. Carter for injuries gus- tained by being struck by No. 2 fire company truck be settled for §15; that the claim of Miss Elizabeth Egan for damages for injuries sustained in a fall on an icy sidewalk be settled tor $400; that the claim of Thomas J. Rouskie for damages sustained in & fall on an icy sidewalk be settled for $165; that leave to withdraw be voted in the petition of Matthew Mansworth for relief; that leave to withdraw be voted in.the petition of Mrs. Moillie Barry for damages for injuries sus- tained in a fall on an icy sidewalk. ‘'The ordinance committee will rec- ommend an ordinance prohibiting the sale of fireworks sooner than five days prior to Independence Day; also an ordinance to retire without pension supernumerary policemen when they become 50 years of age. The board of public works will rec- emmend that authority be given to Dorchester. Simon_ J. Valentine, a railroad guardsman employed in this city, and Jennie Mierjeski, matron, living in Hartford, were married by Rev. J. J. Broderick, in Hartford, May 26. Maurice Moe Gordon of the Na- tional Paper Co. of this city, and Miss Edythe Edna Orenstein of Hart- tord, were marrled by Rev. I. Hurewitz in Hartford, June 5. WELLS TAKES OATH Ex-Alderman George H. Wells call- ed at the office of Qity Clerk A. L. Thompson this morning and took his oath as & member of the garage com- mission, ‘- The former council. member does not intend to remain a member of the commission for long, he ex- plained to the town clerk, but will ac- cept his appointment until the new system is well established. THURSDAY — SPECIALS — FRIDAY THE VERY FINEST FISH Fresh Block Island Mackerel.... Lb. 18c SHORE HADDOCK ROCKPORT STEAK COD .. BOSTON BLUE WHOLE FISH ... BLUEFISH FANCY WHITE FISH .... SAYBROOK FLOUNDERS . ... LARGE BUTTER- FISH . Lb. A 25 28¢c FRESH EASTERN SALMON ........ Lb. 28¢c FANCY WIITE HALIOUT oo oy, th 40€ LONG ISLAND PORGIE:! ; FISH ... LIVE AND BOILED SHRIMP ........ Lb. CAPE SCALLOPS ... FILLET OF HADDOCK ROUND CL. IN SHELL 50c 24c 22¢ MS 8. ‘There is a way to prettier teeth, and millions of people have found it. To their homes has come a new dental era. Not only whiter teeth, but cleaner, safer teeth—new protection, life- lolrl\fc benefits to many. Results which all desire. The way is at your call Your dealer will give you a ten-day test. This is to urge that you accept it and learn what this method means. Film makes teeth dingy Your teeth are coated with a vis- cous film. Feel it with your tongue. It clings to teeth, enters crevices and stays. No ordinary tooth paste effec- tively combats it. So, under old methods, much film remained; and 49 in 50 people suffered its effects. Food stains, etc., discolor film. Then it forms dingy coats, Tartar is based on film. That is why teeth grow dingy.. Film also holds food substance which ferments and forms acid. It holds the aeid in contact with the teeth to cause decay. That's why tooth troubles come. QGerms breed by millions in film. They, with tartar, are the chief cause of pyorrhea. d that is ly common. FREE At Stores Named See Coupon Now easy to combat Dental science has sought ways to meet this situation, Two meth- ods have been found. One acts to cqrdle film, one to remove it, and without any harmful scouring. Able authorities proved these methods effective. Theén a new- type tooth paste was created to ap- Fly them daily. That tooth paste s called Pepsodent. For years leading dentists all the world over have been urdging its adoption. Now it is used by careful people of some 50 nations. Old mistakes corrected Research also proved that old- time tooth pastes did two things detrimental. They reduced the al- kalinity of the saliva. That is there to neutralize mouth acids, the cause of tooth decay. For You and Yours The prettier teeth that millions now enjoy They reduced the starch diges- tant in the saliva, That is there to digest starch deposits which may otherwise ferment and form acids. Pepsodent corrects those errors, and does mora. It multiplies that alkalinity, multiplies that starch digestant. Thus every use gives manifold power to those great tooth-protecting agents in the mouth, These results have brought to millions a new conception of what clean teeth mean. And the enemies of testh are fought as they never were before. For careful people Pepsodent is for dainty people who want whiter, cleaner teeth. It is for careful people who want bet- ter tooth protection. You meet them everywhere. You see glistening teeth wherever you look. Now we urge you to learn how folks get them, Present the coupon for a 10-Day Tube. Note how clean the teeth feel after using. Mark the absence of the viscous film. See how teeth whiten as the film-coats disappear. Watch the other good efiects. Do this now. The test is delight- ful. Its results will be a revelation to you got along without rect time always the exception. low as $5.50. him do it today. T RN AR NS 3 o M T Novrunst? MANHATTAN Big and important looking == just on his car he wonders how he ever one. A motorist can’t beginto realize the convenience of having the cor- right in front of his eyes until he experiences it. Phinney-Walker Automobile Clocks are being bought by the hundreds every day—inside of three years the car without one will be Your accessory dealer has five different Phinney-Walkers for you to choose from. The highest priced model is only $12.40. Others as He'll put one on the dashboard of your car in a few minutes. Have Get Your Phinney- Walker from your Local Dealer—He Can Installitin 16 Minutes. the clock to keep company with high grade equipment. The hattan has been lfl“nl the time for years on all the best cars made. A T""v piece of mechanism. Finished in black lacquer or all ni Rim-Wind, Rim-Set, 8-day. Price $12.40 PHINNEY-WALKER Automobile Clocks “They DoKeepTime" Phinney-Walker Co,, Inc. 246 West 59th Street New York City ’ lO-lg_lay 'I;ul?e:)Frez Insert your name and address, then prasent this cou- pon this week to any store named below. You will bs presented with a 10-Day Tube of Pepsodent. 1t you live out of town, mail coupon to The Pepso- dent Company, 1104 So. Wabash Avenue, Chicago, and tube will be sent by mail. OF SMOKED, PICKLED, DRIED AND CANNED FI Avoid Harmful Grit Pepsodent curdles the film and removes it without harmful scouring. Its polishing agent is far softer than enamel. Never use a film combatant which contains harsh grit. ALL KINDE THE VERY BEST BREAD PLAIN OR MERINGUE CHERRY PIES BUTTER and EGGS are LOWER HERE!! Your Name .. PAT.OFF. Pepsadént REG.U.S. The New-Day Dentifrice A scientific tooth paste based on modern research, free from harmful grit. Now ad- vised by leading dentists the world over for its unique effects. Liggett’s Drug Store The Fair Dept. Store No B WL 6-20-23 e e

Other pages from this issue: