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,r "» X ¢ N'EW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDA‘\I‘ AUGUST 28 1923 GOVERNMENT 10 AID INFUEL SHORTAGES (Continued From First Page) Mrs, Janc B. Austin Mrs. Jane B. Austin, formerly of [ew Britain, died this morning in the Masonic home at Wallingford. ~She | required and would obtain a settle- | \was a daughter of the late Henry|ent of the issues without a stop- /Bingham and was born in Suffield, | jage in coal supply, Governor Pin- February 15, 1546, She leaves a broth- | chot has held his peace. His atti- ‘er, John H. Bingham, also at the Ma- | tude, he said so far is that of an sonic home and a nephew Louis H., of | official who is first hoaring represen- New York. Funeral arrangements are | fations from all concerned. At the lneomplelc. - second meeting with the union lead- 3 ers which will come late today, it 1 5 Carl Emil Bergstrom, suggested that he may take the - Carl Emil Bergstrom, age 67 years |itiative and offer a compromise upon and a resident of New Britain for [ Which he will ask their view. the past 14 years, died last night at Those in Conference the home of Mrs. Charlotte Hanson The governor's call for an 11th hour with whom he lived at 86 Columbia | conference issued after the union no- street following an iliness of four tices had gone out for a suspension of months duration. He was born in|work brought him exactly the same Sweden but came to this country 52 |men who have faced each other fruit- years ago and later to New Britain |lessly in negqtiations of greater or less Where he secured work at the Cor- |duration on three occasions during bin Cabinet Lock Co. &e worked |the past weeks. They were 8, D there the entire time he’lived in this | Warriner, A. B. Jessup, W. J. Rich- city. ards and W. W, Englis for the general He leaves a brother, Ernest Berg- | policy committee of anthracite mifers, strom, of New York. He was a[and Philip Murray, vied-president of brother of the late Stonc Bergstrom, [the United Mine” Workers, and Ri- one time representative from New [naldo Cappellini, C. J. Golden and Britain in the General Assembly at|Thomas Kennedy, the unionfs three Hartford, Iuneral and committal anthracite district presidents. John services will be held this evening at |l. Lewis, president of the union, left 8 o'clock at the home on Columbia | Atlantic City last night fer Phila- street. Rev. Dr. Abel A. Ahlquist, | delphia, where he is at a hotel with pastor of the I%irst Lutheran church, | his family. Mr. Lewis is slightly will officiate. The body will be sent | indisposed. to New York tomorrow morning and interment will be in the Swedish cemetery in that city. i JUST FOR WEDNESDAY i Every item listed here is at a special reduced price just for tomorrow— WOIMANS JAPPAREL SPECIALTIES You can avail yourself of a really worthwhile saving by taking MBIDOLETOWN == NEW BRITAIM advantage of these specials. ’ . Women's - Blouses Brassieres 2 for 50c $2~00 Each (hook front models) Made of Striped Dimity Formerly sold at 39¢, 50¢, 75¢ each Sizes 32 to 42 o gl | I Froom] Tomorrow We Hold Our Semi-Anwual Odd Lot Sale In the Coat and Suit Department “Come in and see the Values We are Offering Bodice top model at (Flesh color only) Per Garment ey (Regular $2.98 values) All new styles o]} Women’s Silk Undervests $1.75 5 Hand-Made Night Gowns $1 o89 Each (Regular price $2.50) wpoints Unchanged Plenty of neat styles to choose from wpoints the miners and operators brought to Governor Pin- chot’s mediation effort likewise were unchanged, On every point the em- ployers have offered arbitration; the union demanding a wage increase of flunetalg 20 per cent. for peace rates and $2 per day for ¢gay employes and seeking the *“check-olf" system for collecting dues, has only one tentative compro- W itinm Arate mise offer standing. That calls for Funeral services for William Arate|{he granting of the “checkoff” des will be held tomorrow afternoon at 2| mand by the operators, their ac- o'clock from the home of his parents,| ceptance of the principle that wage Mr. and Mrs. Bartholomew Arate, at|jincreases are necessary and their 248 Chesthut street. Interment will|abolition of all but eight hour day be in St. Mary's cemetery. employment, With these concessions, | it was said the union officials would allow the miners to work while negotiations resumed. Onyx Pointex Silk Hosiery $1.89 . rui in the lot are (Regular price $2.25) Black only that were $19.98, $24.98, $29.50, $35.00 Suits “Nemo’”’ Corsets Very ‘Specially Priced $5000a pair Former prices $6.50 to $9.00 These are models we are discontinuing (All sizes in. this lot) “ $16.75, $24.98 o “ “ $14.98, $19.98, $24.98 $14.98, $16.75, $18.75 All sales final Nothing reserved — Extra charge for alterations —_— Dresses Silk Skirts « “ o] Rompers and Dresses Stamped for Embroidering $1 .00 Each Were $1.98 and $2.50 ATTE NTION—LADY RADIO FANS ! Station “WEAF” broadcasts Thulsday A. M. betwe en 11 and 12 a very interesting talk by Miss Lieby, educational secretary for H. W. Gossard Cerset Co. It will be worth listening in—Subject “Every Woman’s Corset Problem” ] £ Michacl Mead _ Funeral services for Michael Mead will be held at 2 o'clock Wednesday afternoon at Erwin Mortuary chapel, . Rev. Henry W. Maier, pastor of the|$90,000 Whiskey Robbery First Congregational church, will of- o 2 ficlate and interment will be in Fair- Flo'“ Chlcagfl ‘Vareho“se Chicago, Aug. 28.-—While three view cemetery. ettt armed men stood guard over three NO CABINET MEETING. | watchmen seven other robbers ecarly today loaded 45 barrels of whiskey, Washington, Aug. 28.—The semi-|yajued at $90,000, from the ware- weekly cabinet meeting again Was| house of Wakem & McLaughlin into | ot cancelled today by President Coolidge|s truck. All escaped with the liquor. and cabinet members were informed i I frmm] —_— Il o] ] that no meeting would be held for an indefinite period or until those cab- | Milford Author Mentioned inet officials now on vacations have returned to Washington. {The president has had only one meeting with his cabinet since he| Harrison of this town has For London Authors’ Club Miiford, Aug. 28.—Newton received Conn., BELGIUM WILL NOT during the war, that is, the destruction | of property in Belgium and France, shipping losses at sea and damages from air raids in England. The foreign minister remarks -that atlhough the material damage is per- While appreciating the general Jan- guage and the marked amity of the document, British foreign office ex- perts were regretfully forced to ad- mit that its financial proposals fall. far short of Great Britain's oxpeeta- took office on August 3. official notification that his name has u haps less than the 132,000,000,000 | tions. | been proosed for membership in the s s gold marks now considered as due British off Siad H et ph " | "authors club” of London. The pro- = A L S e T Al S ritish officials admitted they were | e Sovorn [ ponent of his name, Frederick Collins, e ey L conslieratlvmore | oaiihiy iy hol gl LAt (MR, iy board's merchant fleet was opposed ofiered, ‘an.can. sudoraement the:faot of the allies as the total “(I}crm:n" Fels scabinat dallenn e ything | and the plan of steamahip awnors far | that Mr. Harrison was the author of Poie s as é any [ new or any concrete or workable solu- | a number of works on electrical en- S0 A% tion of its own conception. They pro- operation. and ultimate purchase of gineering, cssays ‘Aind poem The note agrees that the negotia- | fessed to see in the note some evi- | the fleet was advocated instead by i s pRoms tions thus far show that Germany's dence of composition by Premier | by representatives of the steamship BURIE Al It the military feature of the occu-|debt can be considerably, reduced. The | Poincare of France. | owngrs and managing operators at a URIED IN CAVE-IN pation has been necessarily extended, | auestion he asserts, is how it can best | confewnoe today with members of Baltimore, Aug. 28. — I%ive negro|Jioreign Minister Jaspar continues, [ be done with justice to all the allies. [ the board. 'h“"‘":"l‘ a““]‘" a “9"°uflh‘;°"dlll°" in|the Germans alone are responsible.| In conclusion the Belgian foreign | hospitals and six men white and col-|{The occupation will be modified| minister declarcs that so long as the|BY The Associated Press, ored are believed to be buried under| whenever '{m German people make | security of the countries which suffer- Paris, Aug. 28.—The impression in | tons of ecarth following the cave-in|such a step possible by abandoning|ed from invasion is not assured there|official circles today after' reading of an embankment during excavation { their present attitude. | can be neither a real and endurable | Belgium's reply to the recent British | they thought were mushrooms, | work for the colored high school to- Six of the 22 pages in fhe docu- | peace nor a reduction in armaments, | reparation note is that the field is br!uln.g t)ée ";o!al x;‘l}frfih:hfmm tthm dim. I*‘i;t‘men and. police worked | ment are devoted to a discussion of SLwr now clear for & new start toward ne- cause in Berlin within the last 24| with picks and shovels in an attempt | Relgian ;riority in reparation pay- British See No Hope. gotiating a scttlement of the prob-| lrbnrs to 18. to rescue the men believed huried.g ments. v By The Associated Pre ; lems between the allies. | Denies Undue Favor, London, Aug. 28—Belgium’s latest| Iach Bf the most important powers | e | The note answers in detall the im- | reparations note made public today in | has stated its attitude clearly and the . Norwich, Conn.,, Aug. 28.—An un- NOTICE. plication in:the British communica-| Paris is considered by the British| difference bhetween them in actual l‘gnfified boy was drowned this noon Notice is hereby given that the |tlon that Belgium has unduly f;unrmljgn\'fl*nn\rn[ officiala to whom I Svas| mony' figures is regarded as not so | in' Mohegan park lake while fishing, | partnership lately subsisting between | Since the other allies have made sac- | addressed as offering little or no ad-| great as to preclude an agreement . . m Sall'in w&w, J. Gordon and I, Noveck, | rifices while Ther priority has re-|vance toward a solution of the Ruhr|when their statesmen take an oppor- VET S, under the firm name of The Arch Springfield, Mass.,, Aug. OPPOSE GOVT. OPERATION (Continued was intended to be an economic op- eration and a simple seizure of the pledges which the allies had a right to take under the treaty of Versailles. Trance Well Pleased, MUSHROOMS FATAL. { Berlin, Aug. 28.—Nine members of ope family died today from eating DROWNED AT NORWICH. Six-hundredths of a second. The camera had to be that fast to catch the most unusual picture of a humming pird gathering honey. “Belgian priority in reparations,” lam Shaftoe, 80, last survivor of his |on the first day of August, 1923. asserts the note, “was recognized in Olyil war command, D cogmpany, All debts owing to the said part- | the seventh of President Wilson's 14 Menth Massachusetts volunteers, and | Nership are to be received by the said | Points. It was recognized by the Brit- ast commander of the regimental|Sam Wolf and all demands on the|!sh government in the solemn docu- association, died today. said partnership are to be presented | ment giving Belgium formal assur- mained. impasse. ‘t\inity to talk the situation over. 28.—Wil- | Street Radiator Works, was dissolved WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIngS UAL TY GBUDE AT to him for -payment. ance that she was te receive, after the SAM WOLF, |war, integral reparation for the im- J. GORDES, |mense damage inflicted upon her sole- I. NOVECK. |[ly because she remained faithful to - — her engagement with the powers that NOTICE guaranteed her neutrality."” | Notice is hereby given that the In spite of her priority claims, M. partnership lately subsisting between | Jaspar remarks, Belgium has received Sam Wolf, J. Gordes and I. Noveck |in cash and kind only a little more under the firm name of The New Eng- | than Great Britain or I'rance. He then land Auto Radiator Works was dis-| gives the exact figures in gold marks solved on the first day of August,|as follows: | 1923. Great Britain 1,297,000,000; All debts owing to the said partner- | 1,175,000,000; Belgium 1,2 Last excursion of the season given | ship are to be received by the said J. | the otMer allics 642,000,0 by the Lady Order of Owls to Savin|Gordes and I. Noveck and all demands| M. Jaspar lays down the principle Rock on Labor Day. Leaves Center on the said partnership areto be pre- |that if the German debt is reduced the at 9 a. m. Leaves Savin Rock at 7|sented to them for payment. | percentages of the allied shares must p. m. Apply Mrs. W. Hurlburt, 159 | SAM WOLFE, be revised. He contends that the bal- Pleasant St., or call 1864-12. ance due from Germany must apply | Tickets | J. GORDES. $1.25 the round trip. I. NOVECK. | only to material damage done by her FAVOR “GAS” PROBE. ‘ Minneapolis, Aug. 28.—A “thor- ough and nation-wide investigation' of gasoline prices was decided upon by the national association of attor- neys general in a resolution adopted at its annual convention here today. Special Notice Irance 000,000 Lean Smoked Shoulders M) | N Fresh Cut Hamburg .............. Ibh. Lean Corned Beef ................ b, Boneless Pot Roast ...............1b. Fresh Killed Fowl ................ 1b. Best Quality Frankfurts .......... 1b. 18¢ 10 Ibs. 83¢ }ll?::,f2dcanl; k 270 umford’s Bak- 29c ing Powder, 1 Ih. \\Jlal:ll(\): 2 cans. .. 29C redded A Ring For Some Fair—lal;maid After causing her husband to be lodged in the Covington (Ky.) jail on a charge of al- I)ommo Granulated Sugar leged bigamy, Mrs. Agnes Horton, 19, bride ) b L of 25 days, tied a stone to her wedding ring, ! “ h'"‘ Rose 1 9c i 19¢ Campbell’s Beans, can .... Best Pure Lard ... 2 1bs. 25¢ Parksdale 3 7 % C (l:ancy (.leem;\gj 19c¢ | 25¢ ' 23c 25¢ THE UNIVERSAL OVEN TOASTER A REVOLUTION IN ° TOAST MAKING e e I Toasts Both Sides at Once walked to the center of the bridge spanning the Ohio river and cast the diamond set platinum ring overboard. Her home is at Jacksonville, Fla. HANDSOME IN APPEARANCE MAKES CRISP GOLDEN BROWN TOAST A SLICE A MINUTE—ONLY $8.50 The CONNECTICUT LIGHT & POWER CO. 92 WEST MAIN STREET TELEPHONE 230 \ Nucoa Nut Oleo, Ib. White Rose Tuna Fish, can.. I{z_ul 2 lbs. 25C Wedg\\ood Creamery Butter AT |1 % 49c Fancy Red Ripe Tomatoes ... .basket 59c ; Best No. 1 Natlve Potatoes ...... pk. 53¢ Red or \ellow Onions, 4 lbs.. ... Large California Oranges, doz. . ; Asparagus, can. . suspension 9¢c Fresh Fig Fresh Eggs, doz. Apples, 3 qts. Large Ripe Bananas, doz.