New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 13, 1926, Page 2

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If You Are =—LONDON Londoner Makes Living Slipping on ‘ Planning a Banana Peels and Then Suing 4 ) St. PatrICk s Owners of Fruit Stores. party we can help R RS T T S complete line of |10\t mns Chumnen i Favors, Candles | "\l and Decorations || sz Vinden, vice-pros mada against fruit Stationery otaf]l Frulta The Insurance covers not DlCKlNSO Ifails, but also protects the dealers In the case 7 ¢ clalms arlsing from ptomaine poisoni 1 & aven from suits over the tearing of a wom 5 . dress on an orange or onien box. 169-171 MAIN ST. |damage snce of this gent was rovenled by E. L. 150 disc that 80 many dam onest 1 as gpurious, are dealors that they h sch up to £10,00 16 its traditic but Mr. Vinder pips also are famous 113 there are real risk ybage and even a tiny bean P to causa a hard fall Department only mhunl' IS BUSY MAN Lent {8 an especial Bishop of London. He eclal services, and the royal family obse e Lenten season with such precision that he must give much time to Buckingham pal- ace Ths Sunday morning service at the palace lis at 10 o'elock. The bishop preaches a ser mon and concludes the service in exactly 40 minutes. This service is very simple, and e |mora like ceremonial family prayers than the 2-Trouser Suits church ritual. The queen and other ladles of | $38 50 the palace attend in simple dress and wear no | { | | |hats, for they are at home and are just as in- Emart y e for is in great demand Horsfall household assembled for family worship All merabers of the royal household who ave {not detained by dutics are expected to attend this Sunday morning service in the palace chapel. {tormal in their devotions as any countr ble Woolens 11 Ta flared PETER PAN GROWN UP Peter Pan has grown up and becoms a pub- lisher. He {s Peter Day e foster N ir James M. Barrie who i Collar-te-Match |/sr s o Madras Shirts | e ot o contury first book pub $450 | rint of AEW KANOX HATS Kensin he tale th over for a Brillat t'A'er threo ¥ others v Llewellyn Davie P Or HORSFALLS | 93-99 Msylum Sureet || HARTFORD It Pays io Buy Our Cold Storage Another 3 I N l" 154 fcottsik born bnt a resident Kind" | of the Uni p i St et for Furs te 1 1 was not he said, Ameri- dollars a year on there ns of Have ceth Your Findlay tiied i authori- ankhas- arkhat ialist Hartford Maiy W I\n lsTo Blame!? ns > 18 to 20 WALNUT STREET | NE\\' BRITAIN AR | Radiation urce of Life and Means Whereby Life is Maintain- ed According to French Scientist, L — is 16, March 13 (A he Briand family has a it does have tho distinct 1 Queens' for the At Pornichet, In § i Arlstide Briand v jestles of a Regardless of whether fme minister or not, ion of having provided mid-Lent celebrations itiany, near the spot 18 horn single day ted the car old twin n “vielet gliters of a 1 Briand, wvhere Yvonne “Mimosa isters, HE, SOURCE 01 Ra on 18 1he LIVE ource of lite a he by life 1s maintained, the of Goorges Lakl ky; laid be the Academy of Sciences r d'Arsonval. 1A4fe, according to t ends when the vibration of rays is One ot the! tas( in supy yeans theory fore says that inseets birds live, ving mat L Are sup- and plants t out rays into space just as docs. Migratory birds wit i ien alle these rays just a > antenn post intercepts or n waves of light cir food, guided by the same certainty in the dark towar vhich these 1l tor takes SHALS LOSIN marshals of I't are in danger of los war minfstry 18 co rejuvenation of 1} r to make staft and ingpeetion work it is ne rid of some of the older The s for the , and in cers in to get ¢ moeasuro Marshals supposedly in act e task 1s his 0wn persc rey, ho of inspec tion to perform and cach } 2 important n ea army i gnaled to command a group of council il he row they members as lor - are in ¥ wied on ctive to who llent au himee 2 only tion for s thotigh it s rey in ioner ubliched in lan- (e likely to tal mission, and there en be is modern Norweglan eloquent cing eloquant nother His 1uine leather to ma in U DAILY HERALD, sxn'rm),\\’, M 'DOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS e B RN —" Roval Guest Makes Mistake But 18 Good Time Dancing With American Girls at Party. o in connection with a swindling case. He has a ecomplete set of doecumenta glving him 18 lifferent identities, and the poilce have not n ahle to get the right one Among his effacts were wigs and materlals for make up to go with each one of his allaves. I'he enly conclusion the police have been able to arrive at thus far 1s that the name he was | wrested under, Delormel, probably s not his | right one, though they produca no proof. He 1as worked at almost all trades and occupa- jons, it seems, and his v the arts s well an the trades. He plays the violin lika & virtuoso, paints well and amuses himself during hls hearings by drawing car- toons of his judge. He declarés that he has a Aiploma in law, and proves a knowledge of jurisprudence by his replies to the judge's auestions, BERLIN March 15—An éntérprising American m salesman was responsible for the of an unexpected royal guest at a recent ball given by the American colony of Berlin I'm Prince Henry, I'm looking for a party,” sald the stranger, Although douhtful about the princely vmc-," the the salosman ushered the prince into American ballroom. unaware that he was anxiously awaited at anothér ball tn the same hotel by a distracted Gerraan hostess An n consular officlals recognized the stranger as Prince Henry of tlie Net#erlands, made feverish efforts toward his entertainment d introduced him to the Ameritan ambassa- dor and Mrs. Schurman. s prince 1s a evidently enjoyed himself so much that he forgot his other engagements. In fact, he stayed until 2 o'clock in the morning. And on another floor 6f the hotel the wife forcign office officlal wondered what had | | her roval guest SF. STILL USEFUL > iorse, which is rapidly losing i's use- in most large cities of the world, is han holding its own in Berlin. A fed- 1 census fust completed shows that here are 45,918 horses in the republic's capi- tal, an inerease of three per cent over the pre- ce ar. rsatility runs into | | danced with several American ARCH 13, 1826, Haven, used in eto. Y. Burner plate, .“ml Stelnman, Shelton, assignor of Connecticut People | 13 to M Kusak. 8ign holder. | (List furnished by the office of |Harr Tatoslun, Bridgeport, as- Harold G. Manning, \\'nlk-()wr“ slgnor to lee Oream Cone Machine yi}’a(enls hxued (o Tacks. Shoo Store, 211 Main street, New | ery, Ine. Ice-oream-cone-rolling |The Veco Britain,) machine, |Howard M. Barber, Stonington, Albert ¥ | slgnor to C. B. Cottrell & Fons | signor | Applying antloffset material to the freshly-printed sides of travel. ing webk Alfred C, Cooke, Hartford. Spoon | holder | Benjamin M, DesJardins, Wost Hart. | ‘ ford. Mechanism for use in grind- | Al floors will be besch and the | ke | Rollie B. IMageol, Oakland, Calif., | slgnor to American Chaln | | | | g Welse, Bridgeport, as- to General Electrie Co. Electric fuse and making same, Trade-Marks Reglstered The Ansonia Brass and Copper Co., Ansonia, and N, Y, N. Y, as- signor to The American Brass Co.. Waterbury, Rods, sheets, wire, plates, ete, Bilt-Ityte Battery Co,, torage batteries, Thompson & Co., Hartford, Hostery, The Rryant port. Electric tlon, N, Y. vanity The Hart Britain, The E. Clocks. The O. ¥ and N. New as- | Brown, Ine., Bridgeport, Bumper. Harvey Hubbell, Bridgeport, | ing lamp. | Arthur A, Johnson, | slgnor to The Dayton, Ohfo, ter, |Samuel H. Poge, to The America }I\)ulfl R. Spencer, Piston ring. |Charles W. Sponsel, Motion-convertin Ll etric Co., Bridge- insulating composi- |Remingto Lock- The J. B. Bridgeport, as- Hand ¢! Egry Register Co, Autographic regls- 3. Clark, Bridgeport, doing business as Bridgeport Stone Co. | Mfg. Co, Torrington Sheet-metal and asbestos gaskols. n Fabries Co. Lace. rt & Hegeman Mfg. Co., Hartford. West Hartford, | cetrie pull sockets, {Tha E. Ingraham Co., Bristol. regs.) Clock nd watches, MeLachlan, H., & Co., Danbury. Felt hats in the rough. e Seamless Rubber Co., Ine., New Stratford, assignor Q@ Wethersfield device, slgnor to Domeatic Etoker Co., N. iv"h‘lr!ts W. 8ponsel, Wethersfield, as- | | The Shelton The Napier Co., Merlden, and N gear cutters, Beamless rubber bladders footballs, striking bage, Co., Tack Bhelton, Mfg. Co., South Norwalk, Electrie condult fittings and elec- trie wir ing devices. Prints Registered For Palm Beach Vanity, boxes. ade-Mark Applicants & Cooley Co, Inc., New Structural toys. Ingranam Co. BEristol K. Tool Co. Inc, Shelton, Y., N. Y. Boring bheads, hollow mills, ete. n Arms Co., Inc., Bridge- port, &nd Nlon, N. Y. Ammunition, Willams Co., Glastonbury. leaners. FRANKE. GOODWIN EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 327 Main Street HTING FIXTURE SALE March 15th to March 27th high cost of metor cars, heavy taxes and | § « selling from 35 to 40 cents a gallon factors which may keep tha horse out ir i, for sorce istry remains virtuslly unmotorized. only 256,000 in Germany, ons for every 244 inhablit against one for every six persons in the In fhe country as a wheln nd There friiek: nis, MOVARLE Movable ish nss eves, which are hard to dis- the con of optit muscles, heen stully fitted by Dr. of Jena. noted artificial speciallst, Tr. Mueiler found that in 90 out of 100 cases tha loss of trolling the ininpaired He said he fastens connective muscle tissue nlmals to a glass eye and grafts these tisenes onto the rem of the human eye The extréems ahout an hour, <ful in from 80 to 90 per cent of his cases. PoT: movement of the eve were (useles, uires onds 10 a largs extent, he aseerted, | ndltlon of the eye the eye, socket after 0ss of CLEVER SWINDLER in police are eearching windler who has *‘m several w vears old, Iked into a shoe shop and for a clever been muleting shop Ke. This lad, said his mother v oo 11l to leave for the house. her to try on, He obtained four A tew to ined Tnvestigation revealed that the boy must out fifty matched palrs of shoes, most expensive ballroom slippers, stored 're, probably waiting for an op- to sell them, hours later another shoe dealer re- the police that the same lad had m con hodv ! oth cars fs | teh the sh Traveling Shows l ml( I’\(‘spel ous Times | rel 13 () 1EN TiP* SCALE CHILDREN GIVE AT TON ork from normal eyes because they are | have | Carl Mucller | delicate operation re- |8 and he has been suc- | about | well-dressed and apparently wel) | nted to buy a palr of shoes but was | promising to re- four right shoes and failed to come | rs to come. The browing | @ i automobiles and | AN EXCEPTIONAL OFFER! an eys the muscle and nerves | Seldom if ever is a complete line of To reduce our stock and to keep our fixture men busy for the next few weeks we have decided to sell our lighting fixtures at exceptionally low prices. high-grade lighting fixtures offered at reduced prices. This is an opportuni'y for you if you are building or if your present fixtures are old and inferior to your furnishings. Our reduced prices will include installing in your home. See them now, while our stock is complete THE ELECTRIC CO. SPRING & BUCKLEY 75-77-79-81 Church Strect, New Britain 75% of All Franklins Sold Since 1902 Are Still In Uss There’s a reason FRANKLIN MOTORS OF NEW BRITAIN R. H. Richards G. C, Kotzbach 449 West Main Stre et—Telephone 3696 See Our Display at the Automobile Show

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