New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 28, 1921, Page 11

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 28 1921. T0 ASK BRIDGEPORT T0 HELP ON CLINIG Dr. G. Foues’ms~y-s€fil to Be Used— PERSHING WINS IN RACE OVER OCEAN (Continued from First Page.) the proper books needed for her paper on music topics assigned in the clubs. It is believed by the offices of the federation that with a music section of this kind established in every town library it wll soon follow that musc and records will find a place there also. This would constitute a decided innovation in the libraries of the coun- try beside being of utmost educational value to the people generally. air. Hays expressed fear that Rush Simmons, chief inspector of the post- office department, who had been here with Mr. Hays investigating the $1,- 500,000 mail robbery. had been more seriously hurt than this report ipdi- cated. He said he saw Mr. Simmon being treated at Manhattan transfer and that he appeared to be severely hurt. Mr. Hays and a number of other passengers on the express were brought back to New York on an in- Prussian Guards, the flower of their army, gave way under this unexpected onslaught and lateg airplane observa- tion brousht news to Foch of a =ap in the German line. He pushed in af wedge of infantry, supported by heavy artillery, and dawn found the Ger- mans in a panic and retreat. HALLOWE'EN NIGHT A Quaint Celebration in a Quaint Tavern Dining Dancing MUSIC CLUBS MAKE OUTLINE OF WORK Believe Good Books on Subjsct = ¢ W P’S TEST NOV. 14. of 10,000,000 men, successtully prac- WARSHIP'S TEST N¢ 4. Are Imperative Peorfa, I, &ct. 28. — With the thought that good books on music are imperative apd that a systematic course which will arouse public inter- est in reading the printed word on Jusic is a fine means of stimulating interest in the art generally, the Na- tional Federation of Music clubs, through its librarian, Mrs. James H. Hirsch, has outlined a plan of work. According to the plan, state chair- man of library extension will be ap- pointed and the clubs are asked to appoint library chajrmen whose duty it shall be to establish “music sec- tions” in their public libraries. A list of desirable books will be sent by the state library chairman to the club chairma nwho will compare the list with books at the library and report those missing. It will then be the duty of each state chairman to de- vise means whereby the missing books may be supplied. This will be done probably either by purchasing them, donating, or club subscriptions, pos- #ibly all combined. Mrs. Hirsch considers it of great importance that the student of music have an opportunity to study the his- tory of music, and for the club women to have available in the town library PISTOL SHOT ROUTS 7 TRAIN ROBBERS Bandits Boarded Blind Express Be- tween Here and Pough- keepsie. Harmon, N. Y., Oct. 28.—A police alarm was sent out yesterday for the arrest of seven train robbers who broke into a car of a northbound ex- press train as it sped along the New York Central railroad between Har- mon and Poughkeepsie. The thieves were routed when the train stopped for water at Poughkeepsie. Railroad Detective Frank McDevitt fired his revolver at them, and they dropped 'some bundles of silk and escaped. The attempted robbery occurred about midnight on Wednesday. Some- where the thieves boarded the “blind” express train, made up in New York city- and which carries only express cars and runs at high speed, and by means of a rope lowered themselves from the roof of the car and forced open one of the doors. When the train stopped for water near Poughkeepsie they started to throw out bundles of silk. Detective McDevitt saw them and ordered them to halt. He fired, and the robbers, according to the railroad employe‘s, returned the fire. FEW DRUNKARDS NOW May Furnish Hygienist An oral hygienist who will do demonstrating in the schools, and a part time dentist, both of whom will work along the same system as that used so. successfully by Dr. Alfred Fones, of Bridgeport, will be part of the dental clinic about to be opened up in this city. Dr. Frank Zwick said this morn- ing that he has written to Dr. Fones, asking him to furnish this city swith a dental hygienist from his staff, if he possibly can do so, to take charge of the work here. Oral Hygienist First. The engaging of a dental hygienist is the first step to be taken by the committee towards officially launch- ing the clinic. The hygienist will consult with the committe and dis- cuss several plans now under con- sideration. May Be in Booth Building. Who the dentist will be has not yet been decided, in fact the com- mittee has not as yet begun to dis- cuss any specific person. The loca- tion for the clinic probably will be somewhere in the vicinity of the tuberculosis c\nic in the Booth building. If it proves practical it may be in the same rooms, These matters will be adopted at a meet- ing of the general committee to be called by the chairman, Dr. Zwick. Committee Appointed Dr. Zwick this morning appointed bound train. no harm. Describing the crash, Mr. to the floor. he added. WEATHER REPORT. Fair Tonight and Tomorrow With But Little Temperature Change. New Haven, Oct. 28.—For Connecti- Fair tonight and Saturday; not much change in temperature; gentle to cut: moderate variable winds. Conditions: A ridge of high pressur along the Atlantic coast is producing pleasant weather in the eastern dis- A long trough of low pressure extending from Texas northeastward to upper Michigan is causing cloudy and unsettled weather with local rains ir sections. Showers during the last 24 hours have tricts. in the western and central reached as far east as Buffalo. temperature is above normal upper Mi slowly in Th in th ew England. season of the year. Conditions favor for this vicinity in- creasing cloudiness with rising tem- perature followed by light rain. HARDING BACK TO WOKR. Washington, Oct. Physicians who exam- ined the postmaster general said that aside from some strained muscles and a general shaking up he had suffered Hays sald he was just dozing off in his berth when he felt a shock which hurled him Several others in hs car also were pitched from their berths, sippi valley and is rising San Francis- co reported a temperature of 34 de- grees which is unusually low for that 28. — President ticed the strategy he had preached so many years in the French War Col- iege. The morning of November 11, 1918, found him, a marshal of France, sit- ling in his private car behind thelines smoking his pipe and waiting, in the urnatural calm that followed the hushing of the big guns, the coming of the German envoys to ask for veace at the Allles’ price. The pro- fessor's theories of strategy and moral force in warfare had been vin- dicated. In Franco-Prussian War. Foch fought in the Franco-Prus- sian war as a second lieutenant, as did Joffre They were both born in the south of France. Foch worked for the rest of his life with the shame and humiliation of that debacle in his mind. He studied the battlefields of that war until he knew them as well as his own backyard. He studied the German war machine, the psychology of its leaders, the reason for their mistakes and their successes. Later, as a professor in the War College, he wrote text books on the conduct of war and the principles of war. He worked with enthusiasm and patriotic fervor to indoctrinate the young French officers with the principle of the offensive at all costs. Battles are won morally, as well as materially, he said, and he stressed the moral element in modern warfare. In the World War. As a general commanding a force of 120,000 men, Foch fouhd himself op- pose by a German army of 200,000 men at the first battle of the Marne in e e e 1914, Maryland’s Trials Off Rockland, Me., Set by Naval Board. Rockland, Me., Oct. 28.—Word was received from the naval board of in- spection and survey that the official trial of the new superdreadnought Maryland, built at Newport News, Va., would be held at this port in the week beginning November 14. The U. S. S. Tillman, built at Charleston, S. C., will come here for a retrial next Monday. Jazz Orchestra MAKE RESERVATIONS NOW O——u0 QUINLIVAN’S OAKDALE TAVERN WALLINGFORD, CONN. PHONE 513, RENIER, PICKHARDT & DUNN 127 MAIN STREET. PHONE 1409-2. OPPOSITE ARCH STREET A Fine Assortment of Coats, Plain and Fur Trimmed, for Ladies and Children At Remarkable Prices A Complete Line of Knit Underwear for Women and Children, All Styles, Harding returned to Washington from his southern trip at 11 a. m. today, his special train completing a return from Atlanta, Ga., in two hours less than As the battle progressed aldes rushed in to warn him both his wings were being pushed back. “We must attaek in the center,” said Foch. “Or- the executive committee which wi!l look into these details and recom- mend the adoption of various sug- IN SOVIET RUSSIA At Almost Pre-War Prices ‘ FRENCH VICI KID AND BROWN CALFSKIN 'HIGH AND LOW SHOES. “Made to fit the arch — Also a full line of Combination Last Red Cross Shoes in stock. Come in and try on a pair of these wonderful RED CROSS SHOES 2 ALL STYLES ALL WIDTHS — AA to E ALL LEATHERS — $7.50 AND UP — McdernBoot Shop The way to K%'fl%n@r@ss— — Restavrants and Cafes Have No Al- coholic Drinks For Sale. Moscow, Oct. 28.—In three weeks of travel through' Soviet Russia, The Associated Press correspondent has seen but one intoxicated man. That was a workman in Moscow who was so far under the influence of liquor that he was unable to tell a group of curious and- thirsty men where he found the liquor. 'The new decres permitting 12 per cent alcohol in beverages has not pro- duced the results wine-bibbers and beer-lovers had hoped for. Wine cel- lars ‘have not produced hidden sup- plies and apparently there are no vegetables, fruit nor grain available for conversion into drinks. Restaurants and cafes have no al- coholic drinks for sale. There is an abundance of kvas and various pon- fermented drinks alleged to be made from fruit but probably largely chem- ical in their composition. If there are alcoholic stores in Rus- sia, they have not yet reached the mar- kets of central and northern Russia. The enactment of the law permitting the sale of alcoholic beverages of low grade was defended by the Soviet of- ficials on the ground that it was necessary to save the Caucasian and Crimean wine-grawers from ruin. MAKE UP OF TEAM. London, Oct. 28.—The British fenc- ing team which is shortly leaving for the United States to meet an American team at foll, sabré and epee, will be composed of Major R. M. P. Willough- by, (foil captain;) J. P. Blake (epee captain); Major H. F. S. Huntington, team captain; Captain W. Hammond, Major H. F. S. Huntington, Lieuten- ant-Colonel A. Ridley Martin, Captain T. H. Wand-Tetley, M. G. M. Burt and Professor McPherson. keep is to keep the “Univer- sal” Electric Washer in your laundry. “NO ‘Washing!™ is the batte cry of the modem maid who is requested to scrub clothes on the wachboard and parboil her hands in bot, sudsy water. The easier the g, the easier to keep the laundress. E. “Universal” Washer calms the rebellicus spirit of the tem- peramental laundress. She likes to work it just for the fun of it. She works the washer without working herself to excess. She rests while it washes, saves time while it wrings. THE “Universal” does the cleanest washing the quickest, safest way. In has every improvement that can be devised to give it enduring value. Let us prove its greater worth by its better work. We'll place it in your home on trial. Call or ’phone. Conn. Light & Power Co. TEL. 230 gestions. The committee, which, ac- cording to the motion of the general committee, must include Dr. Zwick as chairman, is Dr. B. L. Protass and Mrs. H. M. Bates, Hygienist’s Duty In speaking of the proposed hy- glenist, Dr. Zwick said: “He or she must be a teacher and be able to teach the children how to prevent diseases of the teeth and other diseases traceable to the teeth.” Demonstrations 'in the use of the tooth brush, proper care of the teeth and lectures on diet will be included in the work, General Committee. The general committee, according to Dr. Zwick's announcement this morning, which will continue until next April, when the city is ex- pected to take over the clinic, is as follows: Pr, Frank Zwick, chairman, Will S. Howe, treasurer, Mrs. Alfred Thompson, Ssecretary, Mrs. H. M. Bates, Miss Cora Beale, Miss Caro- line E, Bartlett, Harris Hodge, Dr. John S: Irvin, Dr., B. L. Protass and Ernest R. Dechant. Since the close of the “better teeth” campaign the following con- tributions have been reported: Lincoln Street Teachers . Raymond A. Catlin Citizens Coal Co., W._ L. Damon D.' T. Holmes Kogers’ Sash and Door A Friend A Friend Axelrod Drug Store . Shurberg Coal Co. . . Stanley-Svea.Coal Co. Naughton Bakery Co. . T. L. Weed .. A, N. Abbe ... L. P. Slade ... 1.00 Julia W. Hatch .... .o. LoOO Mrs. P. B. Stanley, additional 10.00 Malcolm Farmer .. 5.00 J. E. Cooper . 10.00 L. W. Young 5.00 M. H. Hart ... 5.00 R. W. Poteet . 2.00 Friend .. 2.00 Mrs. John Black . 1.00 Miss J. L. Haugh 1.00 A. W. Upson ... .50 Mrs. E. B. Stone cesee 1,00 Teachers of East St. School .. 14.00 Friend ... 1.00 Friend e 2.00 Frances Whittlesey 5.00 B. A. Hawley 5.00 G. FaDcdd .. 2.00 L. K. Pasco .. 2.00 Maurice Stanley 5.00 H. C. Ngble .... 5.00 L. A, Sprague 2.00 Friend £ Virginia Bodley ...... . 1.00 Friend ... . 50 L. Pojewski ceereen . 3.00 Broad Street Collection . . 1825 A. F. Corbin . . 5.00 12.00 1.00 5.00 5.00 2.00 2.00 2.00 teee...1.00 3.00 . 1.00 P 1.00 0. 2.00 2.0 5.00 CG. T. Kimball . 5.00 Loyal Order of Moose 5.00 Joseph R. Andrews ... 5.00 Pan Clark ....... 1.00 MIDNIGHT EXPRESS FIGURES IN CRASH Penna. Train and Local Express in Collision at Newark—None Badly Injured. New York, Oct. 28.—Postmaster General Hays and a score of passen- gers on the midnight express of the Pennsylvania line for Washington were badly shaken up early this morn- ing when the express crashed in a heavy fog into the rear of a local train at the Manhattan transfer in Newark, N. J. Pennsylvania officials declared there had been no serious injuries although PHOENIX HOSIERY Best wearing and best looking. New goods just received. DAVID MANNING’S Walk-Over Shoe Store 211 Main St. the scheduled time of the railway’s limited. Southern der up the Moroccans.” The German center, composed of PLU STERLING CLUB FEATURES New 1921 prices. Limited Memb Extraordinarily liberal Club Fees. : Range Club Plus - | Tdy and Tomorrow Onlir Never in the history of this store have we had such an enthusiastic and record breaking response. 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Come in and see the wonderful premium which is given you today or tomorrow if you join the Range Plus Club. Different Sets which retail at from $12.00 to $16.00 of Wm-Rogers & Son A 26-PIECE SET OF ROGERS PLATE FREE AS A PREMIUM WITH A STERLING RANGE S ership. Factory Demonstration. Guaranteed Prices. We buy your Double Guarantee Bond. Special Coal and Gas Broiler Free. old range. - Silverpla te . are given ABSOLUTELY FREE to every purchaser of a Sterling Range This celebrated silverware is so well and favorably known that it is not necessary to describe it. But we are pleased to say that we have been able to provide the exclusive Lincoln Pattern—so popular for its beauty and dignity. Today and tomorrow only. A A.MILLS 80 WEST MAIN ST.

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