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OVT. INSPECTOR 1S USPEGTED OF THEFT John Shaul May Have Stolen at Corbin Factory Here New Javen, Nov. 29.—John Shaul, Yo. 8 Sfevhns avenue, Milford, a gov- ernmens the Rockwell W erday inspector at Marlin- corporation, s arrested Ofii- police at Repeating Co. eonte: it is alleged, to steal- @ quantity of valuable tools from the Winchester people, while recently n their employ. A lange quantity of \45 -doar knobs and lock found 's_home yesterd: fternoon helieved that Shaul thefts from the in New Britain. recently vl ingpector at the factor He has lately been trans- forred to the Marlin works in ime capacity. | During his inspector $hip at the Winchester factory the theft of mate was discovered and After investization w weed to | Shaul. As a result, Offic tyan went out 1o the m house yesterday and | found the missing material, together with' other goods to have been | tolen from the Corbin people. Ryan cordingly went to the Marlin fac- | fiory, arrest¢a Shaul and confronted | him wilh the facts in the case. Shaul | fldmittec I 1lt. The worth of tha | material stolen from ‘the Winchosier dompany 64.14, while the valic of the locks and laimed by the iCorbin Lock Co.. has ot yet been ascertained. Shaul stated that lLe! Workea two, vears in the employ .of | tihe Corbin Co : | Shaul will face Judge Samuel E.| Tout in the city court this morning, né it depends upon the outcome of | Iiscirial whether he will also be pros- ecuted by the Corbin compar I fne should be let off with a fine instead | of a jail sentence, it more than | likely that Shaul will find himself | facing another trial. BOY SCOUTS WANT afternoo: Thomas by Special Ryan, chief of 1wehester Arms Wi and it i feommiticd Lock Co., ¥ Until [drnment also Cort w Winchester the n Lrass TO REPAIR TOYS | Wil Collect Them, Do the Work and | Give Them Away for Christmas to Deserving Familics. 0. Couk, Boy Scout - executive, has 'sent the following letter to local clergymen . requesting their co-opera- tion in aiding the boys to secure old | Ltoys, to be lat Christme “The Boy ve expre Christim. [the ‘daily Seout law. it is fitting plans, for repaired and s time: Scouts of given away New Britain sed the .desire to do a good turn’ in addition to good turn’ required by We feel, therefore, at this time to the Christmas season It has been sugzested that one way doing this would be for the Scouts to collect from New Britain homes all old toys for which there is no further use with the object of distributing Bem just before Christmas to such families as cannot afford them for their ~children. Strange as it may seem there many such famil in New Britain in addition to the many children in homes. “It is proposed to zather toys and such ones as may aged will be repaired by the Scouts and the carpentry class at the New Britain Boys' club. It is requested that all families having such toys ‘notify the Scout headauarters either by telephone or in writing and « Scout. will call their homes and collect them.” that our are up be dam- at OWNERS TO AID N PROTECTING MINERS Will Meet With Sproul of Pennsylvania to Tale tionary Measures. Washington, Nov. 29.—Ope Western Pennsylvania, which part of the central competitive field will meet Governor Sproul of that state at Philadelphia Monday to dis ors in is | emptied the { these a | 1 like i 1 Lake Zion City. day authorities of this 17.000 gallens of the con yeverage do its sewers w lead to the lake. Barrels and barr | filled with the boltles of beer were down a drain to the sewer. | Mayor W. H. Clindinen, Chief'of Po- | lice Theodore Becker, and Wilbur . | Voliva, enemy of beer and to arted the drain to the lake, as Jove. Michigan, and smelled poured cated acco, hown | ZIONIST MASS MEETING SUNDAY Local Hebrews to Attempt to Success- fully Close the Linen Shower For Relief in Palestine. will N A Zionist mse held on Sunda Talmud Torah s of New 1ss meeting cvening at § o’clock hall under the au Britain chapter, Hadas- be The purpose of the meeting will hci to bring to & successful close the linen | shower for Palestirian relief which been in progress for some time. | Samuel Menus will be chairman | of* the meeting and Dr. Samuel J.| Abrahams, of Bridgeport, will be the | speaker of the cvenir Mrs. Joseph | Soltz, w prominent Zionist worker, will also address the meeting. The committee in charge feels. that the resvonse 1his year has been fairly | 200d but that it docs not conform (o { J. Nilan NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1919, LAKE MICHIGAN IS “LOADED” last year's standard. Those who have not yet contributed may leave their donations at Talmud Torah hall . on Sunday. If the donors prefer, ‘he contributions will be called for. If this arrangement is suitable, persons wishing to bave the goods called Zor may call 2232-5 and some one Wil collect “he dci ations. Rev. Francis Kého;AIs Assigned To New Office Rev. Francis Kehoe, formerly of this city, has been notitied by Bishop John of his appointment to the Propagation of a Faith to be stationed at St. Agnes’ the be a diocesan director of home, Hartford. F: son of Mrs. Mary Kehoe of str chial schooel and in amateur athletics here. Since tioned in St. Rose's church, Meriden. “ WANT SECRETARY'S POSITION. Tuwo. applications for the position of | secretary of the Chamber of have already been the secretary of | merce Those wanting | Arthur L. Manufacturers’ position Brown, of association New Haven, who is connected the Westinghouse Electric No applications have been from local men. Modern Circuit Rider Uses Flivver “ THE KING’S BUSINESS REQUIRES HASTE” cuss plans for protecting miners wish- ing to return to work, according to | information received here today by the | committee. : Those in close touch with the sit- fuation regarded this as the first dication of an attempt to break strike in the highly organized central fleld. It was expected that gene plans for all four states included in this field would be discussed when the operators’ wage scale committee re- convened here Wednesday The ¢all for the meetin purpose was to harmonize de the proposad 14 per cent wige vance but methods of bringing strilkke to an end were expected the most important subject widered operators’ said the 1 of ad- the to be con- ALL TO WIFE. entire estate of Daniel late of Berlin, has been left to wife, Mrs. Mary J. Flann in his last will,and testament which has heen flled for probate. Mr. Flannery Was proprietor of roadhouse Flan- out recently. He died about Weeks ago. two APPRAIS A report S REPORT. the & 1 of estate Angela M, vlor has filed in probate court by the praisers, James J. Watson and E. Schultz, The report shows the de- ceased to have property valued at $4,000, consisting of real estate on South Main street. on ap- W. n | Berlin for a number of years and sold the been in- | the | CIRCUIT RIDING--OLD AND NEW The twentieth century circuit rider who has congregations scat- tered over from ten to fifty square miles of territory does not travel from place to place on horseback. Instead he makes use of two of the latest methods of transporta- tion, immeasurably faster than the slow-paced Dobbin. He either mounts a motorcycle and pfut-pfuts his way from one village to an- other or climbs into a moderate priced antomobile and whirs about. Probably the only reason why he does not use an airplane is because his congregations refuse to have him risk his life by becoming a “sky pilot” literally as well as figurativcly. The number of strictly up-to-date circuit riders will be greatly in- creased as a result of the Nation- ‘Wide Campaign of the Episcopal Church. In the surveys of the needs of the variogi parishes and dioceses returned to the general headquarters of the Nation-Wide Campaign at 124 East 28 Street, New York City, many requests have been included asking for aid in buying motorcycles and auto- mobiles that the cffectiveness of the rector in the sparsely populated sections of the country may be in- creased many times. The Right Rev. Hugh L. Burle- son of Sioux Falls, S. D., Episcopal Bishop of South Dakota, in includ- ing the item of aitomobiles in'the survey for that diocese says: “A priest with a machine can do just four times the work out here as a priest without one.” The Right Rev. Clinton L. Quin, Bishop Coadjutor of Texas, with headquarters in Houston, asks for automobiles for the clergymen in his diocese as does Archdeacon Garner of Amarilio for the Diocese of North Texas. There the territory in charge of each clergyman is large and the distances he has to cover so great that it is deemed in- dispensable that he be supplied with ‘motor transport. The Right Rev. James Wise, Bishop of Kansas, wants motorey- cles instead of automobiles for a number of his clergy. With them he will be able to supply a preacher for a number of small towns within sixty miles of Topeka every Sun- ay. ’!J('hc Right Rev. Frank Hale Touret, Bishop of Western Colo- rado, also asks for automobiles while the Right Rev. Paul Mat- thews of the Diocese of New Jersey wants, in addition to motor cars, a motor truck large enough to trans- port a priest with all the accessories needed for holding any kind of a religious service—communion, fun- eral, morning prayer or wedding— s0 that out of the way communities in -southern New Jersey may en- joy the religious advantages of more populous communitias. y As a result of the Nation-Wide Campaign, which is to raise both money and workers for ghg _expan- sion of all Episcopal activities, the dealers in automobiles, motorcycles and gasoline will find a new custo- mer for their wares and one whose trade is entirely likely to keep on expanding as the vestries learn how much modern means of transposta- tion add to the amount of work which their rectors can accomplistr, | Beaver ot, o graduate of St. Mary’s Paro- formerly prominent his | ordination Father Kehoe has been sta- Com- received. are the | Hart- | ford County, and H. P. Chamberlain of with ; company. | received | RADICALS WEAKEN WHEN HUNGER GNAWS |.\l| But Five of 68 Hunge Eat Breakfast and Ask More. —The Strikers for Nov. | 2 Slis 1 New York, strike of the was broken today. All the 68 radicals who had refused to eat since last Monday evening eagerly | answered the call to the dining room ! for breakfast. | After a five day fast they were avenous and were first in the immi- | i dining hall. They devoured prunes, mush, bread, substitute but- ter and coffee and asked for more. | Sccond helpings were refused them, i however, not only one ’ wag considered adequate but also because the radicals might have made them- | selves ill by eating too much i The irreconcilables who continued the hunger strike in an effort to have removed an iron barrier separating them from tors included Ethel Bernstein and Dora Lipkin who were ed in a raid on a New York i headquarters. They were the only women on hunger strike. The silence strike of the 68 al has collapsed. Word that the depart- ment of justice was providing the island with eight husky guard force them to attend depor ngs before immigration ins brought to the radicals by their counsel. The guards had not arrived today but the inspectors found no difficulty in getting radicals to go from the detention room to the hear- ing room once they had been identi- | HELD FOR CONTEMPT hunger i nd “Soviet” | but five of | nis’ because Obey Legal Order—Will Be Sen- tenced Next Wednesday. New York, Nov. 29.—Comptroiler Charles Craig was adjudged guilty of contempt of court n a decision handed down in Brooklyn today by Supreme Jourt Justice Manning. Punishment will be announced Wednesday. next | Globe Clothing House Established 1886 The only place in this city where you can buy Hart, Schaffner & Marx Clothing is at this store.; There’s something about our Velour Hats you'll like, $7.00 and $9.00. Children’s Overcoats, $6.00, $7.00 and $9.00. Boys’ Toques, all worsted, at $1.50. Justice Manning found Mr. Cra had been guil of contempt in violating provisions of a restraining order obtained in a taxpayer's action to prevent him from putting intor effect a resolution adopted by the | board of estimate authorizing an issue | of .$4.500,000 corporate stock of the ity of s set forth in the resolution. The plaintiff contended issue of the stock and use of its proceeds exceeded the legal powers of the board. MILITARY POLO LEAG Is Now Approved Sport—Regiments to Have Picked Teams. Washington, Nov. - polo ieague in which va ments may be represented dividual teams is expected outcome of an order iesued ¥ | making polo one of the approved { athletics for the military establish- | | ment. Completée equipment, includ- | [ ing mounts, will be furnished by the | | Dby to be to in- the department, which expects to obtain ' good “dividends” in the improved | physical condition of those * who | participate and the training in horse- | manship. A central polo committee will be established here to ‘“‘coordinate all | matters pertaining to polo activities | throughout the army. “The com- [ manding officer of every camp, di- vision or station where the practice of the game is possible will designate a representative to handle the sport in his command. i Gl{()('l‘:l{fi‘ TO MEET. The Grocers and Butchers' tion will hold its regular the Chamber of Tuesday evening at & o’clock. iness matte of importance isen and President William shaw has been compelled to cail the meeting. Acticn will be taken on ‘re- ceiving new members into the asso- | ciation. It is expected that a speaker rom out of town will be present. associa- meeting in Commerce rooms NO GENERAL STRIKE, Sargossa, Spain, Nov. 29.—The gen- ike here has been called o calist labpr union leader: est and deportation to Bar- s the cause of the strke and tion ot martial law, 2 released, the workmen sume work today whose ar celona the declar ing been cided to 14 de- Money Trust C Park In returned, by the Commerciazl if you are not satisfied with Reserve Sites.—Advt, all the Catholic churches of the city tomorrow morning, a collection will be taken up for the Catholic University at Washingtor, D. (. The collection in annual contribution to tution Peanut Brittle EXCELLENT QUALITY ONLY 39¢ LB. TODAY. WALNUT DATES, 60c LB. BUY OF THE MAKER AND SAVE MON McENROE’S 8 West Main St. New York for municipal pur- | GLIDBEN TIRE CO. Office: 108 Franklin Square. | " Phene 1339-4 5,000 WORTH OF TIRES AND TUBES TO BE SOLD IN 10 DAYS. Sale $61.02 51.48 50.18 39.83 38.48 37.37 35.41 29.29 23.08 20.41 21.34 15.98 -~ Reg. Springfield Cord: :... $71.33 Springfield Cord .. ... 60.18 Springfield Cord ... ‘3867 Springfield Non-skid- - 46.53 Springfield Non-skid * '44.98 32x4 - Kelley Springfield Non-skid . 31x4 Kelley Springfield Non-=skid . 32x3-1-3 Kelley Springfield -Non=skid 30x3V, Kelley Springfield Non-skid . 30x3 Kelley Springfield Non-skid . 28x3 Kelley Springfield Non-skid . 30x3 Plain e e ] 15% off on all other makes. COME EARLY." 35x4l, 33x4 32x4 34x4 33x4 Kelley Kelley Kelley Kelley Kelley FOR QUICK RETURNS USE? HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS;: The only co"my'xrnh}o substitutes on sale in wood at most leading’bars, and in ‘botiles whérever bottled goods ar sold. Ask for them by name inferior imitations. and reject If you'cannot get what you ask tor, Telephone 722 Rx. ANZAC CO., BOSTON MINER, REED & TULLOCK, Local Distributors.