New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 11, 1921, Page 1

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)

ews of the World \ 3 terald “Ad : IMean 3y Associated Press \ ) 1k ) / Better Business ESTABLISHED 1870 NEW BRITAIN, CONNECTICUT, .FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1921—TWENTY PAGES PRICE THREE CENTS W ‘x; TE@F S}QAT” ' Edwards Of Famous 26th Division Is ‘;@LERGYM AN H AS " HUSKY GRIDIRON MEN WHO EXPECT TO TRIM HARTFOR ey s s A DOTIC TFIFQ MO s'"?omrrary Pall Bearer — Solemn Procession ARMAMENT IDEA ST N it ivg s sl 1.;/':«;; o BOWS THIS I\‘I@@N Wends Its Way From Capitol To Cemetery, iHead of Michigan Methodists| | o M’ A G SN Sl Pays Silent Tribute to Soldiers, ! E,.P V:vr HEWEBQL: ‘Yz;)g:gr“glvpiamfle:ls V‘Vva:l-l Fears for Outcome of Coxiference aves of Many Service Men. All Honors Allied Nations Gen. Pershing in Procession [ Both Yale and Wesleyan Hold .\pr-‘ Could Bestow Are Ac-| to Final Resting Place by Bishop Henderson of Detroit Also | Says “If Militarist Heads Meeting, | cial services—Monument Dedicated | copded Yankee Soldier. | the Potomac. | B i s ; L SR B ; i Nortolk—Old - Lyme Dedicates Ghosts of 10 Million Dead Will | 2 £ » x i § 5 & 2 L 3 | Haunt Session.” i ] R rabn’ YL WY ; Buildiag, [ ton, i . 7 ston, Nov. 11.—The national ; Ty } ; e Nov., 11.—Silently re ik I the nation today in doing Detroit, Nov. 11.—Unless the va- y % with 2 A all: Connepticut, to homage to the unknown soldier from cant chair at the world conference : ¢ y : PR o Ve i i 5 CGdithe Ankiown o dionw 1ge a gre > ‘rance. : on limitation of armaments is oc- s 5 i 4 ? e S his resting place : e o * It was litle more than broad day-« i / ¢ i e . fhoon I him a people stood at pause a|jjght before the tramp of marching cupied by Christ, the conference will oy 4 i i _ Goawaed | oS joes | Htt ace, the rush and tumult of | men, the clatter of hoofs and the adjourn without any hope of perman- § 3 : s hurrying life stilled in rev-| grind of carriage whels on the ! : % mark the day, t ] lent peace, Bishop Theodore S. Hen- ; SR ek : 4 " i \ e initey Tn some | cFence. e et gre; ¢ y t_he capital told {derson of Detroit, head of the Meth- £ R : # . s of consider ! a president -gladly ged | that parade for the dead was odist Epis opal Fnbinia Aty ;. A 4 T 2 s | “anc vas to be gh the streets, chict mour-| eqpy Up past the gray mass of the ydis Ipiscopa I Vc an, | 3 ¥ % 0 3 5 = & i 4 « yeople' prou S0rrow ler res v said today in an address before an b ; 3 % 3 ¢ i % 4 ¥ t wit n more impressive- [ 21+ (0! people’s proud sorrow [ bui under trees where only a armistice day mass meecting of all re-| B A ' . ; 3 i % ' t ; rked Memorial Day. |['°" U A ._ ~|yelowed leaf here and there lingered, iigious organizations in the cit | L . . - A - g in New Haven or hir mirals and generals and | {he khaki tide of a funeral escort for “There will be a vacant chair at the v S e s A SaLRam an T offt the |, general of the army rolled to its | nce table and the occupant of | Bottom row, left to right—Davis, right haifback; Mahoney, left halfback; “Dixie” Griffin, [ Ha as this alob fChied B o) Sl ‘:nv:)i[ A 4o |piRee: Giing Boom Al L‘”"fir'”‘;““]"“_‘:’:}“".4‘1"_,'[’“\':,‘,“,'.“1“ “{“‘Y"_ I’I“""'l:; q‘u;n'tm'l)z;cl\'; Murtha, {ul]lmc]\'u Standing—Meu cke, right end; Capt. Feineman, right tackie; | fhe i shin SH 2 el | him honor., e o tha EahosE kakRkead i Ter e e i, i o minitariet wits 1| Cooley, right guard; Bentz, center; Schaefer, left guard; Williams, left tackle; Landino, left end | i families | O 1 O s hreClous |march. to the grave, the first, far s I‘h“ ffiw;v‘(.m“:l o 1”'7}’“'””“‘ Lead by the Foot Guard band and | the annual ¢ with the New Brit- ( the completion of the Manager | b M > ervie | i bier; crosses and lals and ”'"w'\‘ll.lv“vl'r :im{“xlly\‘»Il]r‘ll\‘-:‘rphr:k‘;nin:tm}o‘:rl\-f HIAIEN L0 0 RE L e SN OLA0 SVl {fa SRt B [ e 1% son abne ar I S and the GEtD & moth- |3 RE i1l haunt 'the confererica and 16 wil | suna soatecs AL of awhom have chars | G Gtarts ot 2:15. i gt et otamps. 2 iop | Yoices slaelie ve, ot b {0 e standing apart. smong |0, Alence: Through the Hous gt row sounded in measured interval, War Is a Carse, inder of whom will come to this|Mary's playgrounds hefore an an Officials Selected, 4 kil rage alone might touch his cask i city tine | ip to Arlington. The knell of the guns var is too costly, then the | vade this city tomorrow aiternoon for | danger of darkness interfering with | (continued on o 14) ) Brotherhood of Nation P10 ; S 8 with glee. Vot until we declare war TR E R k ¢ oy C omeé yattl 4 1 1 b bat (iirce crashing salvos the last soldier ome to na b tered a special train and the re-| The game will he yed at St.|o'clock. oLy wen for their high-hearted deeds of | an economist sits there and ar-| city by automobile, the foothall team | dience that it is expected will run into | After much dickering between the | i t; OR roardl e iset wlariann| BiorOne elosen and glosapile HtEk gl > lords of the world will chuckle OngWes Munphy I alisenogaofst for him a shattered, name irked the way of the funeral train is an unmitigated curse and a denial 9 ES!DENT iddres LY Was eV, DI | pance where his great r U s of the gospel of Christ will war ever CITYS NIEMGRIAL PR LUL@GIZES AIWER}CA rville € ormer ¢ e Garhah i | farewe ther 1 louder as the cortege wound its w: that we must reduce armaments | of the Hartford High school will in- | five f . So that there will be no o Sl OPLLER! Yy A Sk AU, has bee A i 3 ““lstep by step and culminated in the fiahxoene) Irom 8:30 a. m. until far past noon, e i it so ot 10 SOLDIER DEAD UNKNOWN, BUT NOT UNHO NORED| _ servisavwme |k S Vi 05iel™ fi |t ssant vooming wise ne wory service at Yale university was |all, after all, there was littie of sor- cach, if America cannot afford war nple but i ive. Major D. A.[row. There was pride and circum hecause cents out of each dollar : g ‘y: S A bl e e Mt et s i thecnationalSbud Eetigocsitol Sipny FRE SRR ardi Als s Tri o ods i heyps | W. H. H 1 E. L. Lord of the |martial pageant; but over and under | Tl war bills: if that is all that the con-| Services at Noon and Pa- Harding Also Pays Tribute to Hundreds of Rothers ) ' 1! L el NLgDUEoa SeRae oK Casket in Capitol ference delegates can say, then kar “vh() Fi'l(l %01 4, Tl oucl t Tl o s Today | acet S it v el A eaei e 3 il !]\ 'm.flm x"n.mn:]v;t m\ (\.\(\ r:xpl}ill will be delayed only until the ma- rade This Afternoon na »oiace mn nougn nat INatie oday | P A Shhronr memshiall tablelatin| bratt Tt jo. | resting on the catafalque where Lin- tions have enongh dollars in their cof- 2 ety : oriale hall, Thesa it (S8henr Ia i : s ‘f-.mw. G . . and McKinley s to start another war. Not until e Eeatines Bows Over Her Son. i il e e R L Sl e B ad stood amid heap- he prime consideration of the reduc- & s e i Bresl oA Ta e ) the unknown sol.|in& piles of flowers with its silent fion of armamen 1d abolition of SRR SR Rowiand Aneellior the university andi aleriwha seve histail for She Nag uard of honor, a soldier, a national var passes from the zone of econom- Arlington National Cemetery, Nov.| “He mig \ me from any or it AE e SRR ¢ nothing Incking in _ the [Euardsman, a saitor and a marine, erence delegates can say, then war| New Britain took on her holiday [ 11.—President Harding, in his ad-fof mi f erican homes il e Tha e iminttes e o the moment when |through the night at the four cornera ver cease.” attire tuday. And yet, it was not all | dre: Arlington Cemetery today, at | mother g im in her love and e 3 vt he Do mInE ' N o Vet art dhn peered in through | ©f the .4_ hen there began to gath- rejoicing. The crowds who thronged | the ceremonies in observation of | derness, with 1 most ¢ tional & from a Yale bat-|the hi windows of the capitol ler a little group of fellow soldiers, I the streets in the afternoon rejoicing | Armistice Day and the burial of the d s. md of mothers |{ery posted | d High streets. | tunda where the d soldier lay in |cach wearing a hero's drrom!Inns. to LOWER FRhIG {T RATES {1 the successful culmination of the [ unknown An an soldier, brought | & 1 finding a touch g Cotetionlas [ state, until the shock of a hattery |[Pear the casket to the waiting gun World War and celebrating the anni- [ iome from France, spoke as follows: | of solac ssibility th - e it fic i tha T riag and East of Mississippi Planning | came to an end, presented a striking | pay the impersonal tribute.” The | be, f 1 ity contrast to the heads bowed and un- [ name of him whose body lies before | tc : § General Reduction, covered which stood at attention dur- | us took flight with his imperishable | chords are touched, fon ing the silent fwo minutes for mem- | soul. We know not whence he came, | there ce glowed the New York, Nov. 11.—Reductions in | g joq noon, and the unshed tears| but only that his death marks him reight rates which will reflect the | ) pohy faces as the memorial serv- [ with the ever ing glory of an “[the nation stood sileft for two min- |utes just after midday in honor of the War Heroes They were led by Sergeant Samuel . first mentioned in Pershing’s ir heroe nd with him were s Harry Taylor of the caval- e homas D. Saunders of the en- neers, Louis Razga of the Coast Ar- ry, James W. Dell of the Field ut in the v of nearly 750,000 | oo were held by the ex-service men [ American dying for his country. (Continued on Seventeenth Page) s and for the navy, Chief Torpedo mployes of railroads north of the |4 he center between 11 o'clock and § Shich baars thi Everywhere about his simple tomh, [Man James Delaney and Chief Water - e e L whic JEdIS | g slopes or in the|T Charles Lee O'Connor and Phio and Potomac rivers and cast of | joon. Mingled with the happy feel- |~ : & 5 1 he Mississippi will probably be tak- |, that lh- country was at peace A S e fdent |shaded: 1 Arlington Nation- | Sergeant Ernest Janson of the carts. tl AK\I) 1 Sha si monuments and | M ] rolden stars. [ over th ommission by executives of the lines [ Jicarts awho felt keenly the xmuln.ll‘ e graven | omorrow. A committee was appoint- | jresence of loved ones who had |mp o Casdi ES e addr s gu At s gl A Gt he great rotunda the ho: i vtk o eATeR o e R e e e b o | (homes iR dassid v, BBt coR oTaTLod nl‘ KH‘L GGVT p API\B Olin : k. To ol | nam are written imper In the great g::(lm_m onoriry e best n s of bringing about the | inswer to the call of duty and pa-| Teacher, Was On Return Trip i L liad LAt A i ¢ : ey i side the gun carriage up Pennsyl hment of lower freight tar-|iriotism. | | i e el : ediio h Pag a 4 le. At their head was 0 s o e Business W ctically at a From the Philippines. } < 3 : " s B |Tator General Harbord: exeoutive ins was expected here today that |siandstill. After 11 ock there was | iec mie Recom- ; ekt i jstant to General Persh as chie btices of the wage reductions would | pardly a store open and not a wheel| Thomas Cassidy, a brother of Reject Premier’s Recom- i oo et o 2 I BRIDGEPORT RULING ot o f; himse nl ;'. :nt»u‘x‘\y.nr ‘r‘nl“::ll‘f; e posted within a week, cach road |turned in many of the factories, ex- | George C, Cassidy of the High school mendationsiotiseithing h b ; s o i man and glad to walk beside his iking individual action. The execu- | cept, possibly, that necessary machin- | faculty, passed away on high seas, ac- : 0 T TERN honored comrade rather than ric ves have directed statisticians to vx.\" \\{w h could not be stopped. The |cording to information received by BT T S Mulle el A, IO GOVERN OTHERS 1 RER b ],‘ :,,‘:,Z,v‘h l\]\lv,,'l‘lh;m“: repare data for use in the hearing|post office was closed to business, | the local man. Trish Problems Henry L. Jon CLEANALT e skl figlor gensrels | whuew ey expect to be called by the rail-| pank doors were shut, doctors, den- The deceased had been engaged in . Pa., both Eragu R s R Rl T HsmArioaor thal ey ‘r sad labor hoard relative to the jus s and lawyers closed their doors [governmental work in the Philip- | listinguished service csand ot | ppie Utilities Commission to Have [ 00 M arlo iR AwaT R hE Neb ce of the wage cuts. las ght and did not open them this | pines and was about to return to| | o N 2y ) I G6th Division; there was ning s country. The vessel « emovi cdicn O Cities in Mind in Mak- tl : morning [tnis country. The vessel which is| ‘0 g ther Citi ruled at Hobgken while D DI I\ | Apprehensions regarding the |bearing the body is expected to arrive t d ) : i TGO R OF 1 e TRl S UEra VRV tere BAIL FO[{ RH)HARDQON weather and the probable rain‘or|at the San Francisco port today or|jected the gove ‘ play i : \ ) 1y : ing Fare Ruli oy o S | snow storm were dispelled when O1d | tomorrow settleme More | human ba trive to do this s than 500 members of the faculty and | dier ho en left undonc I aceful Setting. High o1 oded ridge bes Yotomac merica’s nameless hero ndergraduates stood ot attention Memorial chapel at noon. Two min | utes dater the chimes e tower | America’ | wil p bivouacked with the bra ed at the hasc ey, O'Ryan of and Rlckards of the navy walked i 5 ) e Y : 1 < R rear admiral and va\w t T Siliae - 7 o elut ter- | &b \ e ¢ bl n » of the battle fleet that Sol broke forth in all his glory | 'The death is the second in the Cas bright and carly this morning | sidy family in less than two weeks for One Son of Former Detectiv Practically all husiness places | The local man's sister was opened at the usual time and all but | jast week Sergeant. a . smaller stores closed at o s e K 8 L few of the smaller stores closed a Wever are p g fo \ o ; n's 1 lo W : 3. Wilson former After having been locked up for | T ":“""mm, o F[ND ANOTHERSTILL ‘1\\, : ‘ SR R wers of the JAre i SRR et of ‘_””“-\”‘ tic fleet, and le past six weeks, with his father, el ! | marines, was Major yrmer detective sergeant of the lo- | At 11 o'clock the ex-service men | 1 Al police force, and his brother, | Marched to the center where there | (gyone Arm Squad” Visit Oak Street | govern hou ’ o8 | the it S iad 1 « A i ien. Pershing while he | followed a military service, cor ting 1 allace Richardson probably will be | i > i jeounter sals ot ¢ 5 ’ it g t to er trolle ) road was named as grand 3| 1 on bonds tomorrow or Sun- | 9f & flag salute, laps, music and a renement This Morning and Selze | o000 I and o cost it $45,000, . 3 nar [ military ceremonies, silent two minutes for memories. S : 10 g : y e was | S5 : CIAA Gt e et At 2 o'clock in the afterncon the| Hoach Device in Full Blast. cabl raise \ i ) : . 1 ! L : i o T ¢ AT 1 unique gaid: | p, g t ) ) i 4 e v ort but this program T ) yarade formed a “rank Ve i The angements are said to have ””1 . ‘M B tter it| Armed with a search warrant, Po- . estions put forward by | who serve he ¢ T . t the former commander of square and a ha ur ‘ I t on the een made by an attorney for the m‘my] Major M. H. Pease acted as | llcemen Patrick O'Mara and Thomas | the imperial s ¢ were t noon t S Nneove | ! 1 he too walked bes fchardson family, who found a 5 o a A3 | Pecney, of the so-called “strong arm |ceived lat v ¢ 1 v 3 ¢ « ! ¢ casket going afoot all the it T % 1 | chief marshal and was assisted by \ 1A he ( fend who was willing to go bail uad,” visited the home of Max | sidered Vhine raw ; veside the ‘ Schiideliand I8 ' capitol to Arlington br Wallace, The fact that Wal ”-"; "l‘l“““”‘I*‘»”-”‘]""“ h"fll"l;l-‘l I,’;;”‘,’-"," jchmond at 28 Oak street this [ing up lotaile eply B | esans w ert Knox |1 ! Smetery g son, Silas Lynch, Josep cinge y N 1 time the only married son explains the : morning, and seized 6 “moonshine |hoped fo forwa ort ¢ s. |1 ; y Grand Marshal of Parade \ John Janaitis, Willlam Hopkins : et . f ason for his being selected from | t . . f B tio | IWEVCT ind i The ‘delcol 6t it t 1 he v t the o P lovieta ¥ S5k | Frank Pinches, Harry Hargraves, [ SUll” In full operation ; sche i f th Sedric. Powers 5 Rogers an The “still’” was discovered on a gas | princi r ed ( o Boulevard in Bristol 3333 \ ' sandhoitz, The amount of bail in Wallace's | Codic Powers, J. I\ Rogers and C.) ooy bathroom, and was hoil- |tions which noil ibin sl A aa st kT2l Totile i i ol ¥ict ot ol hse in $15,000. The brother also is ing hot when taken from the police |stance ‘ tainment, [ vard which wi € t 88 A oS r ien. Pershi 21d under §15,000, while the fathe patrol at the station 1 3 the [Sir Jam: for) with | roc ery S AL g 1 1t President il is $50,000. t \ ) riends Come [orward With DBail lay, according to a well founded ru- or. The first division formed on Frank- lin square, cast, with the head at | : : ‘ Pearl street, and rear towards the | Stil”, the police seized about three | th imo ¢ « i ice hy 39 « e : gk i ! ing who were flanked by their gallons of mash and three pints of |leagues, he premier houlevard was tur er o e g oelnld @ Vice-President Coolldge formed on Franklin square, west side, | @/cohol. Richmond was hooked for | that f « v \iral Coontz, chief of thelr Run to Game Saturday | ;.. i the rear towards the iigh | tion betwer e o lic derad bt i (ing in his place as former The New York, New Haven & [school. The third division formed on | Agk Foch to Visit | Waterbury faieE &b e { f e United States and artford railroad will run extra | Bassett strect, heading north, with | | (Continued on 'l ] : terbury exere « ' ex- | pair h Admiral Jones commands | | | High schoc The second divisior | ach trains to New Haven on Sat- | the head at Rockwell avenue. The | Allentown Hospital oll cail of Croic i the ¢ of | er Atlantic fleet. ay for the Yale-Princeton foot- | fourth division formed on Rockwell New Haven, Nov. 11 Marshal | % * |at or roll 1 the cing | ¢ ¥ bl ] detert | 1l game, leaving Berlin (New Brit- | avenue, heading east, with the head | Foch will probably asked during his ; there of a flor oss. Just ore ; " i (Continued on Fitth Page)s n Jet,) at a. m. and 11:25 a. [ at I'ranklin square | stay here to pay a visit to the Alling- | | THE WEATHER 001 \ ervic en o went : i = E ., due New Haven at 10:35 a. m. first Division—Platoon of police [ town hospital Sunday morning and ¢ After the m S o bd 12:10 p. m., respectively. Re- aded by Chief Willlam J. Rawlings, | greet the 450 former service men who | Hartford, Nov. 11.—Torecast t silence the chimes of Ll 1 i tishenbe ol e rning trains will leave New Haven rshal Maurice H. DPease, Assistant | are under treatment there, John Gun- || for New Britain and vicinity: n ) forth “Nea WiILL HAVE o ne very pretty feature of the ex 5:30 p. m. and 6:30 p. m. People | Marshal Cedric Powers and staff, | shannon of Hartford long active in Increasing clondiness tonight. My God " ce” In the afternoo The i xliary ! cises this morning was the ringing 1 the chimes on the South church, ey being played by Professor Joe Be ing to the game may avoid delay [ Philharmonic band, National Colors, | tuberculosis work has been asked by || or Saturday. th L parade of former purchasing round trip tickets in he men to express to the marshall | 34 vance, (Continued on Third Page.) | their desire to sce him. (Continued on Third Page.) g at K. of ! g. | seph Clair

Other pages from this issue: