New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 21, 1919, Page 5

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ATTENTION!| If you are considering a Business Education for Your Boy or Girl get the very best education you can—it will pay big dividends all your life—ge to ihe best school you can find—it will not pay to attend any other. We invite you to visit us, to ask full information about the course in which you are interested—to interview bankers and insurance men, all classes of business men who know of our school and its work, ask them where they get their best employes, what school gives them the best trained young people, ask them where you should attend school in order to get the most for your time and meney. We are proud of our record, proud of the young men and young women who have gone from our halls into the field of business. When you have made a real investigation you will be prepared to say “There’s a Good School—and to be a Good School is our highest ambition. It pays to attend a Good School—keep this fact in mind. i ENROLL NOW SCHOOL OPENS SEPT 2d. | SMITH BUSINESS SCHOOL FOR SALE Forty acre farm, 7 miles from New Britain, d Well stocked. Middletown and Meriden. 5 miles from A two-family house in Plainville with good barn and one acre of land. A Cottage in Belvidere. A Bungalow ¥or particulars sec in the West End. DE WITT A. RILEY and Insurance. Natl Bank Real Estate Room 208 Bldg. Loans Negotiated. Main Street. Let us place your Heating Apparatus in good working order for the winter or install new. We are agents for The Forbes Down Draft Heaters and Glen- wood Furnaces. ERICKSON & JOHNSON 34 Dwight St. Tel. 512 New Britain . SUSPECT ARRESTED | ‘ IN $15,000 ROBBERY Police Capture Man Two Years After Valuable Jewels Were Stolen by Missing Butler. New York, Aug. 21.—A man de- scribing himself as Arthur Gerard, a chemist, living at a house on Seventh avenue between Thirteenth and Four- teenth streets, was arrested yesterday as he got off a municipal ferry boat at St. George, Staten Island, and is held | at palice headquarters on a charge of | ham Manor, N. grand larceny. The police say the man is the missing butler of Fred- erick H. Allen of Bolton Priory, Pel- Y. and he is being held in connection with the $85,000 | robbery that was committed at Mr. | Allen’s house in the spring of 1917. Mr. Allen was in Allen had ac- It was while Washington and M | companied Gen. Joffre and the French | May military commission to Newburgh on 11, 1917, that some one stole thousands of dollars’ worth of jewelry which had been left locked in a draw- er in the dresser in her roam. At the time it was reported that the robbery totaled more than $200,000, but later some of the gems first thought to have | been taken were discovered in a safe deposit box. One of the butlers employed by the Try this_/or one c}y/ After You have ermint in Your mouth. and let, It will relieve the nervour Tri it dizrolve e Pe owly. fenrion belween Jmolief and inished a cigar, put a. Ve You a. (Ereater appreciation of the nexf cigar: That delghyhl taste lingers Wi pEPPERM il Vinter:green Clove Cinpamon. that | Allens disappeared just after the rob- bery was committed, and the police began a hunt for him which until last night, when, they they got their man. Among the valuables lost, whish were reported to the police of various cities in the United States at the time. were two pearl neckla valued at $20,000, a diamond ring worth $10,000, and a braoch, pearl and diamond, also valued at §10,000. The robber opened the drawer with a skeleton key. Mr. Allen is a personal friend of President Poincare of France and dur- ing the war was accorded a privilege which few ci in an official posi- tion_enjoyed, £ ta visit a sector at the front as a spec- tator during a bombardment which was in preparation for a grand a: on _the German lines. Mrs. comes of a French family. Gerard will be taken to Pelham Ma- | nor to be identified by members of the household. -KAISER TO MOVE IN FALL. Expected Take Huis Doorn in Early The Hague, for the to Possession of the Autumn. Aug. 21 purchase of the Ex-Kaiser's new residence, the Huis Doorn, have been completed. It is not yet known when he will move, but it ably be in the early Fall, as former owner of the estate, Baroness von Heemstra de Beaufort, has stipulated that the new house which she had purchased shall be ready by that time. There has been consider- able excitement in the vicinity of { Amerongen and Doorn for some days in view of the rumors of the a Kaiser' intention of buying the | estate. He visited Doorn last week | and since then the negotiations have | een proceeding quickly. In well informed circles here | idea is prevalent that he has chax | his mind regarding his plans for | turning to the Fatherland and Jd(:rul('fl on a policy of “wait and see’ in the hope that the project for his trial may finally fall through. The Huis Doorn is a beautiful es- tate dating from the fourteenth cen- tury. It has changd hands many tim but has always belonged to people well known in history. will prob- the ex- GERMAN BISHOP OUT. sbourg Post to French- man Named by Poincare. Surrenders Str Strasbourg, Aug. announced, the resignation of the G of Strasbourg, and has appointed him 21.—Pope Bene- I dict, it is has accepted srman Bishop Archbishop *in partibus. President Poincare ap- pointed Mgr. Ruch, Bishop of Nancy, to be Bishop of Strasbourg in cession to the German The appointment of a new Bishop for Strasbourg and also one for Metz caused an animated debate in the French Chamber of Deputies on July In answering charges that the overnment had engaged in unofficial diplomacy with the Vatican, Foreign Minister Pichon explained that the. policy of the government con- template the upholding of the Cor- cordat in Alsace and Lorraine. He said the Bishops were appointed be- cause the clergy had asked (hat French Bishops succeed the German incumbents Last April suce THEY GO AS TH Straps Chicken Auto. Y LAY, Pastor Beach to His Vacation Coops When pastor of Middletown, Rey First the the and his fam- auto they the Aug. 21 William D. Beach, Methodist church. ily, left on their vacation in their for North Woodstock N H strapped their chicken coops back of the auto. “The high cost of tates it," explained sh y As the auto sped over the roads, Rhode Island Rads and White pingtons flapped their wings of amazement. It was a new sensation in chickendom. on necessi- minister, living the permitted in 1916 | | soni said the ceremony would be per- ! anothe: | she had never seen but Bishop there. | 278 MAIN STREET TEL. 1729-2 éEES FIANCEE FIRST TIME AS SHE LANDS Italian Girvl, Wooed by Mail, Comes to Be Bride—Another Roma Aboard the Argentina. New York, odd Aug. romances 21, on ‘There were Ar- from two the liner gentina which arrived yesterday Mediterrancan ports. Miss Carmen at y Pasquale Cassoni, a con- Bridgeport, Conn., whom to whom she had become betrothed. While visit- ing his brother Cassoni saw a photo- ph of Miss Tortino and wrote {o | her. Their corresponcence led to h proposal which she wccepted by lette They went to Bridgeport, where Cas- Tortino, an Italian girl, was met the pier I tractor of formed at once. Mis ilia Benderelli, passenger, was chacl Nicholas, a be Leaves, Pa. Tkey had not seen each for sixteen yaars. Miss was then eight vears old s sclected by the parent to be married to Nicho e came to this country, prospered and sent | tor her. They hurried lo Oak leaves Nicholas Sihwetzoff of Moscow and his wife also came on the ship. He banker and said the Bolsheviki took all of his $100,000 fortune in tribute except $10,000, which his wife saved by sewing it into the collar of her Pomeranian dog. s of Salonica, met by Mi- | 1ker of Oak | Ben- | and of the two | Hibcrnians f v t 1 c Nationa v Ancient mandad {hat the T It DEMAND U. AID IRELAND. Nenounce Britain and Gompers On League. | Atlantic City, Aug. 21 ervant appeal for Ireland’s oiced by Harry Boland, secrelary he Sinn Fein organization and ary to President de Valera, of sh republic, and Patrick McCarton »f Philocelphia, envoy of the Irish the fifty-first znnual con sention of the Pennsylvania Order of Hibernians, denounced Great Britain and de- Urited States extend erial aid to Stirred by freedom, of division, vester- lay moral sympathy and ms Crin. the action of I the American ing indis league of its bearing o1 esident ederatio riminate Gompers of in u support of without Ireland's »f Labor, the, regard to hopes. nations FOOD PLACED ON SALE IN NEW YORK, York Aug 1 of| foodstuffs were on salg schools| throughout the under direc tion of the department of marke Figuring on ilation of 6,500,000} ! offic hat there would be| food for| ARMY New army upplies place today at 58 here public the ls able 15.44 reside Save the Babies INFANT MORTALITY is something frightful. We can hardly realize that of all the children born in civilized countries, twenty-two per <.ut., or nearly one-quarter, die before the reach one year; tuirty-seven per cent., or more than one-third, before they are five, and one-half before they are fifteen! We do not hesitate to say that a timely use of Castoria would save many of these precious lives. Neither do we hesitate to say that many of these infantile deaths are occasioned by the use of narcotic preparations. Drops, tinctures and soothing syrups sold for children’s com{)vlmnm contain more or less opium or morphine. deadly poisons. They are, in considerable In any quantity, they stupefy, retard circulation and lead le quantities, to congestions, sickness, death. There can be no danger in the use of Cas- . H. Fletcher as it contains no opiates or narcotics of any kmd,M—‘ Genuine Castoria always bears the signature of M toria if it bears the signature of Chas "'Wll | 1 : mii!iil ‘ il i I i i i hm.i.nl i | | i I il i Hi...mul?ifliw.mss"h' i i AY, you'll have a streak of smokeluck that'll put pep-in-your-smokemotor, all right, if you'll ring-in with a jimmy pipe or cigarette papers and nail some Prince Albert for packing! Just between ourselves, you never will wise-up to high-spot- smoke-joy until you can call a pipe by its first name, then, to hit the peak-of-pleasure you land square on that two-fisted-man-tobacco, Prince Albert! Well, sir, you’ll be so all-fired happy you’ll want to get a photo- graph of yourself breezing up the pike with your smokethrottle wide open! Talk about smoke-sport! Copyright 1919 ¥ R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Quality makes Prince Albert so appealing all along the smoke line. Men who never before could smoke a pipe and men who've smoked pipes for years all testify to the delight it hands out! P. A. can’t bite or parch! Both are cut out by our exclusive patented process! Right now while the going's good you get out your old jimmy pipe or the papers and land on some P. A. for what ails your particular smokeappetite ! You buy Prince Albert cverywhere tobacco is sold. Toppy red bags, tidy red tins, handsome pound and haif pound tin Aumidors—and —that classy, practical ponnd crystal glass humidar with sponga moistencr top that keeps the tobacco in such perfect cond/tiea, R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winsten-Salem, N. {

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