New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 4, 1925, Page 2

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DICKINSON' DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN Primarily a Drug Store, we want you to feel assured that your | Prescriptions will be filled with accuracy | and dispatch—as your doctor I would have them filled. our window. See In an Emergency, Immediately Phone i 330 el Those Smart Collar-to-Match SHIRTS | —you'll like them! Of fine printed madras. in small neat figures, checks and stripes — unusual in every way—typical Horsfall values. Lavender, Blues and Tans— Starched Collar to Match— $3.00—83.50—8§4.00 HORSFALLS 93-99 Xsylum Street Hartford, “Tt pays to buy our kind” \Louis Geidel Piano Instructor | Pupil of Guy Maier—Piano | New Fngland Conservatory of Musie— Theory, Harmony, Solfeggio. Address—196 Otis St., Hartford, Conn. Phone Charter 1170-3. In New Britain Tnesday of each week oniy. Lessons in your own home if desired. COAL The SHURBERG COAL CO. DR. LASCH Dentist Quartz Light For Pyorrhea 353 MAIN ST. HOTEL WASHINGTON Corner Washington and Lafayette Sts. AMERICAN AND EUROPEAN PLAN Room and Board—=S10 up Transient Rooms—S§1 up Our New Grill is a Nice Place to Eat 1 you have with our us supply yon PURE—RICH GRADE A NURSERY MILK PASTEURIZED & CLARIFIED MILK vou can feel assured of avoidin any dangers from discase germs for our milk i obtained from selected, healthy cows, and i | hapdled with exacting care Safe for haby's use, also he for grown-ups. ]} ‘ STUDENT ‘ORATORS' | Sure Relief FOR CONTINUE SOURSE Vote Additional Five Weeks | | Study-Diplomas on March 24 | jon for five addi- | the cluss in put AL e AL wasi o! the class | t the montt ing March 1 that date and ill be March Professor John W. next session of 1t requircments i ndance class has voted to for ) a per nt organi mhership of t Stole 1‘; rom Nc\vsbb_\'; C\ - APPEAL 10 ALLIES FOR Austrian Vier nand ratists, today be main in order to permit the " Ipine provinces to sever politieal re- latic "Bhe politiclans in inc Changed To Permit Own INDIGESTION 6 BELLANS Hot water Sure Relief The Asso Berlin, public, BERLIN MOURNS. EBERT'S PASSING Memorial Fand Will Be Used for Fducational Purposes rted March capital today bids farewell to Mried- rich Ebert, first president of the re- Pres. | whose body special train tonight REVISION OF TREATY | vii'in vesido ehat ot s mother n |the Berg cemetery. NESDAY, MARCH 4, 1925. 4.~The German | will leave by for his boy- | The funeral servics in the execu- separatists Want Test | (o mansion ittended by about 250 s and diplomats, begin | ck this afternoon, with act- Government na, March 4.-—Baron Ferdi- | Pantz, leader of the Austrian | announced (ILI" wratlsts were appealing 10 | o lies to revise the treaty of Al wd The Dol ock of the s with Vienna. | sepuratists, who inelude lead- the s, declare t it the league of me will inevit the Pos! fin will be alofuc apportunity to ral gover LR I its authortty in of the Vien- hich will b - |young 1 the wor aimed a free — , its favor- position would particularly if, by r proc electoral system, the socia . is useless for preservation of orc entenced to Prison ..; h 4.—Tt t and the $4 saw Husten, but | by a ruse. W took no cha Manila Fanali&‘fi;fitle Constabulary, Many Dead B, 1 Press | ‘(‘himpractnrrs Must Have License in Philippines SIN-DAY HILD SUICIDES 1IN JAPAN 1 P 1 in n is re- MARTIN - TIERNLEY 8 A ' United Milk Co. |~ 49 Woodland Street New Britain Phone 1610 UM PROTE i~ rt memorial fund,” devoted to occialized unusual talent from | j(‘oolidge (m'e; Bl;rial | Plot as Inaugural Gif ter, Ohio, it Luther as the orator c by the chiestra of the stute opera | will be r military escort to the Relchstag President Loebe of the leg ody will deliver a eulogy. | ocession Wwill then move to | imer station where the cof- | placed ( so0 the public v h | | chorus and or- | Their active, energetic, taken at 4| building, | \’? k.o on a high cata- pects hefore | (B s for Heidel- | announces the REG.U3. PAT. OFF. ' Walter Baker&Co. ESTABLISHED 1780 Dorchester Mass. BOOKLET OF CHOICE RECIPES SENT March 4 WELL CHILI CONFER T! March “Well Child ucted by the L ne of the state ‘When r of a one a west of this eity, se for his burial to court Al on Fri as ime proble 1th and welfarc N will be taken up. ceessors in thelr burial edge and 1d from before birth |four 1 child ternal ics of con- sen and le nxiety ally and to be V. LAW SUICIDE EPTDEMIC M 4.—The wav Lawyer Wa “Mother— can’t I have \ five cents %2 FIRM ORGANIZED orney 8. Polk Waskowitz of this and Attorney Herman A, f Wa opened offiees in Hartford ‘onnceticut Trust h d the practice in I3 towns. Sinite e organized the lolnstanct owitz & Goldstein THROWS 01D “hicago, March 4. ) a wrestling mat ko here Ia the pole with a fack k scissors hold, ‘‘Bobby's mother gave us some money to go to the movies,” the child lisped excitedly, “and could I have five cents to buy some candy to eat at the show?” “‘Here's a better idea,” the mother said. ‘‘Father brought home some Life Savers st night, and I'll give you some of them. They are the best candies for children.” How true it is! These china-hard circles of pure goodness are just the thing for sugar- hungry little tummies so easily up- set by sweets that are too rich. And for tiny teeth that fare best with candy very carefully chosen. The ideal candy for children The active bodies of growing boys and girls crave sugar. Their blood requires it. But children’s candy should be pure; also you must control over- eating. Life Savers answer both problems: Be generous with them Rich sweets, hurriedly eaten, upset little stomaths. Not so with Life Savers. Children eat them slowly be- cause they are so hard and because they want to enjoy longer those delicious, delicate flavors. You may conscientiougly be gen- erous with Life Savers; they are so pure and wholesome. It is far better to let children have the right candy regularly. They are less likely to overeat than when they get it only now and then. Also, Life Savers leave no sticky, sugary debris to start tooth decay. They are safe for children’s teeth. Have Life Savers always handy at home when the youngsters call for sweets. There is no candy better for them.—Life Savers, Inc., Port Chester, N. Y. Six flavors dis- played at all &ood stores so you may heip yourself: Pep-o-mint, Wint-o-green, Cinn-o-mon, Lic-o-rice, Cl-o-ve, and Vi-o-let. Good for little tummies and tiny teeth bodies frequently require a large amount of nourishment and much of this is suppliedby Baker’s i, | Cocoaina readily v assimilable form. Montreal Can. will be held in Y. ] to mothers. CATHOIG CHURCHIN | MEXICO' HAS SPLIT| It takes three things to clean a rug thm:oughly— Beating, Sweeping and Air Suction— THE HOOVER combines all three Abolition of Celibacy of. Its l‘rl(-al.s1 e 1 Jhe HOOVER Chihuahua City, Mexico, March 4. | . —Priests of the Roman Catholic | It Beats .. as it Sweeps as it Cleans . chureh here are earnestly nrcuch-| |ing against a division of the faith hut the separatist movement seems to gain headway according to gov- crnment ofileials watcling the situ- | |ation. Additional followers, they | are being added to the new sep- st party headed by Father Joa- quin Perez of Mexico City, but as yet no churches have been taken over, The constitution of the new church as promulgated in Chihua- | Liua reads: That the Independence of the Mexican Catholic church from the Roman church is recognized. The payment of the various kinds of taxes by the Roman Catholic chureh. The celebration of all kinds of ceremonies in a humble spirit ac- cording to the spiritual doctrines of | Christ. | The absolute acknowledgement of | apostolic (new ‘church) dele- | Tel. 2240 Tel. 2240 THE SPRING & BUCKLEY ELECTRIC CO. 75-77-79-81 CHURCH STREET little th gates. | Abolition of the celibacy of the | priests. The construction of hospitals and | sanitariums for poor people. | Spiritual life hnd consolation for the suffering people. i The moralization churches and priests. All of the tenets of the platform | were written by Perez and his fol- | lowers in Mexico City and have | heen forwarded to various parts of the republie, it is said. Zoning Fracas Blocks $20,000,000 Hotel Building New York, March 4. tion of a hotel and two the resenting an investment of § in the Times Square theatr retion, was announ he result of the sale of an Eighth | MOORE BROS. SANITARY FISH MARKET Is the Place To Select Your Sea Food SPECIALS Fancy Shore Haddock Rockport Codfish Steak Boston Bluefish Steak Scrod Steak Large Lake Whitefish Large Fresh Water Eels Large Newfoundland Herring Scallops, Shrimp, Round and Long Clams. Qysters open and in the shell. Little Neck Clams for half shell. Mocre Bros. Fish Market 30 COMMERCIAL STREET Open Until*9 P. M. Thursday Lid. of al the| LARGE DELAWARE SHAD LONG NATIVE PICKEREL LARGE NATIVE PERCH Eastern White Halibut Pnebscot Salmon Large Cape Butterfish ' Large Flounders | Large and Small Smelts Fillett of Sole { Finnan Haddies FREC arch af- | the The of hood, to | mer] and in- | jort g the Criterion Holding compa Postponement of the construction | 20,000,000 hotel proposed to and e the Savoy at Fifth avenue | morally land Fifty-ninth street because of a | lessened }Aonfliv( with the bureau of buildings | nhattan over the zoning law, o announced tonight by the al. 1t and builders, Lucien M. snces in | Boomer and T. Coleman Du Pont. awaiting | ce and ss sick It has given | iction in mental hy fon, and Let There Be No Misapprehension Deposits of School Children Can Be Made { InThe Savings Bank Of New Britain nife This bank has been accepting the deposits of school chil- dren during the whole time of its existence of more than sixty years. It has now the accounts of a great many school children and will be glad to accept the accounts of others. Interest at the rate of 5% per annum is now being paid upon deposits. The deposits of schbol children receive the same rate of interest that all other deposits receive. The resources of this bank amount to $17,173,645.46. Its surplus and undivided profits are $1,208,892.36. It has been in continuous operaticn since 1362. It has paid semi-annual dividends to its depositors unin- terruptedly since the first dividend after organization. Any amount from $1.00 to $5,000 may be deposited at one time. It is located at 178 Main Street. It is the bank the pic- ture of which is shown here. Hours of Business—9 a. m. to 4 p. m. Saturdays, 9 a. m. to 12 m. Monday evenings, 7 to 8:30 Brese

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