New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 2, 1920, Page 18

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

R Large Variety Of Sport Hats For The Seashore SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Fourth Anniversary Sale We have made scores and scores of new friends and ci t you must act quickly to get some of the attractive tomorrow is t h we are off catest millinery event TRIMMED HATS, pretty trimming Special for our Sale RN vory 16 Anniversary $7.50 GAGE HIATS, and white nd . all Special sary Salc $3.50 and value Fourth navy black tor our in high-grade in New Brita Come to the some time. Both GEORGETTE HAT Distinctive dress value $10.50. Special Fourth Anniversary $4.98 TRIMMED HATS. of attractive values up to 85 Fourth Anni- TRIMMED Hats; for our One Trimmed Hats Special for our versary Sale, $1.00 tab sale tomorrow and take advantage hats and prices wili mcet with your ORGANDIE An attractive HATS. collection of Orgahdic Hats in all colors; value $10.50. Special for our Fourth Anniversary Sale, $4.98 CHILDREN'S HATS. All colors; value up to $3.50. Special for our Fourth Anni- ors All Colors, Values Up To $5.00 . f $2.50 Ribbon and Straw Sport Hats brims are fine Rolled Brim and Side @ colur combinations quallty hemp, Roll models. Values up to $5.50 feaete SO Plenty of solid white, and the soft crowns are of row and row as well as all sorts of ribbon. Mushrooms, $2.98 OLDENBLUM MILLINERY CO. Branch Store—863 Main St., Over Harvey & Lewis, Hartford. New Britain, e Glorious et Into a Pair of Our 2, Comfortable calfskin, Goodyear welt; made to all styles and sizes. sell for At Our Manufacturer’s Shoe Sale While They Last $3.95 \A Pair. HAS. MOSS 294 MAIN STREET. OPEN SHOP FIGHTS UNION. Labor Committee and Advocates of Open Shop Both Claim Vi Quincy, 111, July 2.—The open shop struggle is now well under way in Quincy, The annauncement of the Quincy American Open Shop association has been followed by the appointment of a committee by the Trades and Labor Assembly of the city to resist the open shap movement. Quincy is a strongly organized labor city, the assembly counting a mem- bership of over 4,000 and embracing even the fire department. The labor copmittee has succeeded thus far ‘n securing the withdrawal of several of the original signers of the open shop agreement. On the other hand. the open shop association reports the re- cruiting of some 50 names in addi- tion to the original list and these, it is said, mare than offset defections. Retail houses thus far have been “low to endorse the plan owing to the large number of union men. DRIVING July AUTO. k —Miss Cath- erine Van Ness, prominent member of the “millionaire colon at Hutton | park, West Orange, died at the steer- ing wheel of her automobile here day after driving about the city with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick L. Van Ness. She became faint and | turned the car into the curb, stopping the motor. Then she leaned on the wheel and lost consciousness. N. J., to- Importance of Good Sight An tained senses: your knowledge is ob- through five Sceing, hearing, fecling, tasting and smelling. The most importaut of these is the scnse of sight. your You only have two eyes. they should fail \ little ser impres you i you—what s thought with giving now, then? should the importance of proper attemtion them betore they give evidence of impaired zht, Davis & Goodwin Registered Optometrists, MAIN 327 ST, TEL. 1905 “We Grow Because We Know.” | only r U i | LEADERS ON LIST | { | Villa and Diaz Refuse to Espouse | Mexico July Diaz City —Francisco | Villa and ‘tually the Felix are vir ible exceptions to the list of who have espousell the latest liberal revolution- y cause Guillermo tormer rebel leaders Meixueiro, the Oaxoca : leader, was in possession of the capital for a time after President Carranza 'S eVad ted the cap- with the new move- lacz, the oil district Tampico, was feasted and interviewed to the as n L perpetual rev- ww in the liberal rev- ionary movement a united coun- He said the Cedillo brothers and former rebels in the TamPico ¢ with him. r. Pedro Mexico C pede tra to I Diaz, 1 his follow ital, in accord ment. Manuel f chief, entered and toasted effect that he olutionist and ol try other Gabay and y'and Vera the advance of but while they inder the leader- his mame has not mentioned in connection with operation The successors of Emiliano Zapata in Morelos, Genevevo de la O and Valentin Reyes came into the capital with General Obregon. It is stated that on the isthmus south of Vera Cruz, trains are operating with- out guards for the first time in years. Major E. W. Burr, attached to the American embassy, had the pleasure of meeting in the capital after, the revolutionists entered the citys Gen- eral Rafael Pimienta, the former Zapata leader who captured him, to- gether with several other Americans, on the train leaving Cuernavaca, Morelos, for Mexico City, on March 28, By feigning Jameness, Major Burr manmaged to drop behind his guards and then made a successful dash for liberty. Both he and the other members of his party praised Pinienta’s courtesy when they reached the capital. Pim- ienta, slight and boyish for all his six vears of guerilla life, now commands 1,500 former Zapata adherents at Xochimileo, a suburb. He is conceded to be the brains of the army from Morelos and has the ful! confidence, not only of Genevevo de la O and Valentin Reyes, but of “General Obre- FOR INSANE Experiments of Dental Surgery to Be Conducted in | others between Cruz, helped the Carranza are supposed ship of Felix been the Missouri Hospital by Several Prominent Specialis St. Joseph, Mo., July 2.—Experi- ments in the application of dental surgery to treatment for insanity are being conducted in the No. 2 Mis- souri hospital for the insane, here, according to Dr. G. E. Ford and Dr. Walton E. Taylor. Several St. Joseph dentists and a throat specialist are conducting the research, according to the announcement. No provision is made by the state for dental serv in the state hos- | the dentists with the re- sult that the experimental work is at the expense of the men engaged in the work. The institution does not contain dental equipment, nor X-ray, nor has it ever had such equipment since it was established in 1874. Dr. Ford said 724 patients have been treated. Sufficient improvement has been noted in a number of pa- tients to convince the researchers that with state co-operation they could effect a radical improvement in the condition of many of the patients. Drs. Ford and Taylor explained that in their work they were follow- ing the lead of Dr. Henry A. Cotto: medical director of the New Jersey State hospital at Trenton, who had developed and to a considerable de gree substantiated a theory of rela® tion between diseases of teeth and tonsils and insanity. Germs incubat- ed by such irregularities, Dr. Cotton maintains, produce insanity. WOOLEN MILLS TO CLOSE. Mass., July 2.—The prin- cipal mills of the American Woolen, company, now operating only three days a week, will be shut down com- pletely for an indefinite period July 10. President William M. Wood an- nounced today. Cancellation of orders filled and curtailment of orders, he said, made the stoppage nece Andover, “COME IN” Is the cheery greeting for the boy with the order of ANGELUS FLOUR Baking made easy and bread made better. Sold by D. S. OHMAN 716 Stanley St. Mexico’s Richest Exile to Restock Large Ranches Return to That Had Been Confiscated. <1 exile zas, once Paso, of son Tex., seven yea Alberio Terra- of General Luis Terrazas, of Chihuahua's wealthie July razas ranches in an effort to racoup the family fortune. At a conference here Senor Ter- razas was assured by an official of the new regime that the family would be given every protection by the de facto government if they desired to recain possession of extensive lands from which they were driven by rev- olutionists in 1913. It is said that the Terrazas lands in Chihuahua cover tem during the early days -of the revolution. p ———e— - Topeka, July 2.—More private stills have bieen seized in this state by the federalsagents in the past year, according to diley Dooljtti, federal prohibition:erforement officé for Kansas. YOU'D BETTER HURR &6 = FOR THAT $10 ONLY 5 DAYS MORE : g Are you dressing up for the Fourth? Let us help you celebrate our freedom in the gqeil old U. S. A. by giving you a $10 bill free! With every suit in our stock you get $10 — - and there are plenty of blues and grays and mixtures from which to pick. For three safe and sane savings — $3.00 on every Boy’s Suit. $1.00 on every Shirt. » $1.00 on every Pair of Trousers. Tomorrow is Saturday, and Monday you celebrate. N 2 You'd better hurry for that $10 bilk - Get it tomorrow. o 1 NEW YORK SAMP] NEW BRITAIN 357 Main Street i35 M . ’

Other pages from this issue: