New Britain Herald Newspaper, May 8, 1922, Page 2

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MAGIC HOODOO PAPER ANTS' WORST ENEMY A Trial Will Convince You The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 Main Street 40th Anniversary Men’s Wear] Specials $3.00 Woven Madras Shirts in neat stripes at $2.10, $2.50 White collar attached, Oxford Shirts— 2 for 8$4.40. Our Entire Stock Of Neckwcar— $1.00 Scs .50 Scarfs, 2.00 Scarf 5 HORSFALLS 9-99 Ydsylum Street Hartford “It Pays To Buy Our Kind" City Items “Anchor Brand"” club invites you to Minstrel and Dance, Thurs. eve., Y W0, Chapman’s Major String Orch.—advt The police received a complaint last night that a man had been poisoned at 102 Gold street. Investigation closed that the man had heen d ing hooch, and a physician wa tending when the police arrived St. Jean de Baptiste night, 34 Church St Peter Jacobs of complained to the police las that he had been assaulted men at Walnut Hill park. ferred to the prosecuting attorney Miss eBtty Towr of 52 Toc street, a local High school girl, visiting her home in Walden York. Joseph Genthner end at his home in s of the Junior and cake The food will he danc 371 Main ady street, ing. the week ork. club spe New Y Mothe High Bale at schooi wi the la\n a food school Friday nated by the children. The Arbor Day planting of trees and vines at the Cent Junior H school, planned for and pc poned on account of rain again. It is likely it will be morrow. Stanley }lo]ll an all da A. R. 1y done to Woman's Relief corps wi meeting on Wednes, hall. As many mem fair closes to- | VEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRENCH STATESHEN HAVE WAR RECORDS {Next Generation o Politicianis in France May Be Veterans Paris, May S§.—The debates in the chamber of deputies on the military service hill diselosed the fact that 85 of the 605 of that bhody | served as officers in the French army. | Most of them have scarcely reached | middle life and few were active in | polities prior to 1014 Observers predict that French poli- ties for vm next generation will be in the of men with war records, much the same manner as the congress was after the Civil 0 rembers ] Cigarette It's toasted. This one extra process gives a rare and deiightful quality ——Iimpossible to duplicate. Guaranteed by %Mw JQ@ contro ery America v General the most notah bat his influer [than that of | 'abry, on his visit 1017 | Vicomte | known as De (! whom were France decided de Viscount de is soldier in parliament ¢ is searcely greater Iieutenant Colonel Jean who was Joffre's c} taff to Washington April, Castelnan 2ef of in de Castelnau 1 general than as the emencea be marshais of it is said, fir reluctanc v general bees appointed one Catholic, marshal and he did not like to name a second Catholic, de Cas- telnau. The general is a devout churchman esides Castelnau, there are 40 oth- ers in this republican chamber hold ing titles of nobility. (iis de Dio uty, is a manufacture Baron Maurice de Rothschild is well known as an owner of race horses. Two dukes in the house are Duc d'Audiffrey Pasquicr, whose title goes ‘)‘m'k to 1750 and the Duc de Dalma- tie, a de dant through the female line from Napoleon's marshal, Soult. Another poieonic name is recalled by Deputy Prince Joachim de Murat. Baron Albert d'Aubigny has specializ- ed in aero 1 hetter ment anl maintenance of a labor press Previous conventions have lasted about five weeks, but an effort will be made to conclude the b 1ess of this gathering within a month. BERTINI—DIXON ; Popular Young Couple to Ix-..\lnrriwl the 28th of This istelnan was on Premier C entitled Clemencean, with reat Casteln, leave be had to be a in Pasadena, Cal., another dep- automobiles, Month—Honored Last Evening. of Mrs. Cora Hunn Eddy of 242 Chest- nut street entertained last evening in honor of Miss RRuby Dixon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Dixon, of 444 (C'hestnut street, who is to become the bride of John A. Bertini of Pasadena, Cal., formerly of this city, on May 20 The ceremony will he performed in the All Saints' Ipiscopal church (ir Pasadena. The home was prettily decorated for the event with white streamers and festoons. A delightfu lunch was served during which the wedding announcement was made. fruits. But an easier, more econom- “.'\I ]'rf.']mtlnm m]prpsmf( ik 1‘,“.‘ 2 fcal way, which is just as sure, s to| Varren Slater, physical cdirector use Baker's Certified Flavoring Ex-|the Pasadena Y. M. C. A., who was [N ptaicsa v formerly this city. The young it 3 couple plan to go on a wedding trip MAY JOIN FORGES to Catalina Island, after which they will reside at W Villa street, Pasa- dena. Brotherhood of Railway Firemen and B. to get perfect flavors for the finest | One sure wa your desserts is to buy of Bertini left New Britain only jshort while ago to accept his position in Pasadena, and up until the time he left, he was assistant physical di- rector at the Y. M. Gk A. here. Dur- ing the war he was a member of Co. I, 102nd U. 8. Inf, U. 8, and served 20 months {n France. Mr. FEngineers May Affiliate With of L. Il May 8.-—Probably question to come convention of the Houston, the most press before the triennia Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engineemen, which will open|gocioty of | here tomorrow, is that of the pro-|wi; fhold annual convention posed amalgamation with the Rrith-|nfiqdietown ' on Wednesday. erhood of Locomotive Engifieers. The | 0iil be gy jaint meeting of the atter brotherhood passed a resolution | paven and Hartford distriots avoring such ar imation at its include & delegates ‘from e land ¢ ntion las & ER 1 slevelal onvention last year and|pjtain The delegation the s now devolves upon the |,..ce on the 7:38 (standard fireman | train Wednesday morr Further issues it are pro- E —e posed alliance with niiners; par- | ! i £x : S5 ; ticipation in political campaigns; the MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER. A miscellancous shower was tend- attitude of the brotherhood toward | decision and practice o¢ the Unit- | ered Miss Reha Hoch, Saturday night, Ada Katzman Of States Railway Roard; co-opera-|at the home of Mis: " | tive buying’and distribution; erection | Clark street, Hartford. Miss Hoch is |of a brotherhood building: and es-|soon to become the bride of tablishment aintenance of a tu- | Rosenblatt of the cngineering depart- berculosis sanatorium, and establish- |nient of the board of public works. " WEDNESDAY. Missionary TO ME The I"oreign Methodist Women's the its in | will will time) decision before the and 1m of IH‘ churches | s [ gom, d [sent to an Edward | MONDAY MOSCOW PEASANTS ARE EATING SEEDS Every Four Cars Must Have Car of Corn to Save Seeds Moscow, May § Ivery londs of seed grain chiefly sent to the famine distric of Rus- sla, are accompanied by » load of cafn or other food to prevent the eat- Ing of the seeds, by the hungry peas- ants, In an interview published here just prior to his departure for the Genoa conference, Leonid Krassin, commis- sar for foreign trade, said the famine districts were supplied with seed grain not only from the United States but also from the interior provinces of Russia, additional geeds being pur- chased in Poland ;‘\\r len, the Raltie tates, Ruman and Bnlgaria, The ribution According to Krassin the total amount of seed grain supplied direct by the commissariat for foreign trade, American Relief administration and the organization headed hy Fridt- jof Nansen is 13,418,000 pouds, (36 pounds each) to be distributed as fol- Russia, 10,490,000 eastern Russia, 1,034,. 000 pouc the Ukraine, 1,584,000, Just how much of the sceds will reach destinations in time for the wring planting will searcely be known before some time in M I'reezing of the Raltic ports caused three weeks ! said, and in February and March the Russian railways were congested at various points. On some line he said “many thousand of cars'” were held up, while the return of empty cars to the Baltic ports and the Black Sea shipping points fell to : minimum, Recent reports from various rail- way centers showed little, if any, im- provement in Russia's transportation, and there has been much speculation among the railway managers and ex- perts as to how much of the sced grain would arrive in time for the spring planting. DIES ON TRAIN, four car wheat, pouds; & Founder of National Register Company Expires Suddenly. May §.—John H. Pat- Dayton, Ohio, chairman of and founder of the Na- tional Cash Register company, died of heart d shortly before 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon while on a Penn- ania railroad train on the way to city for a two weeks' stay to im- his health. The train was at Kirkwood, a short distance from At- lantic City, and Mr. Patterson was talking to his valet, William Roberts, when he became unconscious. Roberts notitied the conductor and the conductor went through the |coaches and Puilmans searching for a He found Dr. Saranac Lalke, ician worked over Mr. Patter- but svithout succ: As soon as |the train. reached here the body was undertaking establishment |and Mr. Paterson’s family in Dayton was notified. ash Atlantic City, terson of the board ase this prove Y., and the Pecans and English walnuts are be- ing grafted on native black walnut stock. “We're in the same used by a Chinese The expression, | boat,” was first | writer. The daisy is the American Legion's |official flower, New Flood Pictures! is postponed | ble are requested to come | ew and hring somet for the dinner which will be serve noon. The regular meeting will begir promptiy at 2:30 o'clock A meeting of the Christian Er or Union executive committee held in the Y. M. C tonight. abead. Don't play with » Cold—care it immediately with Hill's C. 8. Q. Tablets. AL the first sign of infection, take Hil'—best by test, the standard remedy the world over for Colds, Coughs, Headaches, and La Grippe. Hll's C. B. Q. acts at once. Disistegrates and starts wark in ten seconds, giving quick refief and caring the Cold. Demand red box bearing Mr. s portrait and sigmtare. At All Drggists~ 30 Cents LT T T T T I T\ W. % WTLL COMPANY, DETROPT over which the photograph shows the waters of the Missis! no hint of danger. It was hardly more than an instant after en through the dike before the gap was 250 feet wide. a large scale. This picture shows a relief camp established near sippi rush the first trickle of water had brok- at the point illus-| trated, is flooding the Poydras plantation, U mllm below New Orleans, in St. Bernard parish. The swollen With an area of 4000 square miles under water and 75,000 people homeless in the Louigiana, from the flooded Mississippi, relief work among the refugees has been necessary on and reported that he saw stream, Natchez by the American Legion, T. T. Tru-| Twenty minutes hefore this picture was taken a levee watchman had walked across the spot|Miss Gertrude I MAY 8, 1922, The New Britain Choral Society Seventh Annual —Spring Festival Concert— Fox’s Theater, Tonight 8:15 P. M. Daylight Saving Time Hiawatha’s Wedding ‘Feast.........Coleridge-Taylor INBECISBUB Y. v o e i aostos s nnmises M1agsenet Assisted by Paul Althouse, tenor; Josephine Simpson Koch, soprano, and the Boston Festival Orchestra Ticketg on Sale at Crowell’s .Drug' Store Prices $1.00, $1.50 and $2.00 CHICAGOTO HAVE GREAT CITY TENPLE 141 Contractors Submit Plans for Non-Denominational Church Chicago, May 8.—Plans for “Chi- cago's City Temple,” as the colossal structur> to be erected by the Metho- dist faith in the heart of the city's great loop is called, go on apace. This unusual downtown place of worship will be built on the ruins of the old Ilirst Methodist iscopal church, wrecking of which will begin soon, it is announced. ¢ Bids for the erection of the new huilding, plans for which are now on view at the old church, are being wken, George W. Dixon, president of | the trustees s one hundred and cleven contractors have already sub- mitted bids. The church aims to cling to its pol- icy of the past by keeping its doors open the year round for the visitors on the loop, holding its regular serv- ices each Sunday as formerly. It is expected that the Sunday school, which for long has been considered one of the most interesting in the land, will prove even more popular in the church’s new home. Non-Denominational While the property will be held by one denomination, narrow sectarian- ism will be forgotten. Its service and ministry will be irrespective of creed or race, with contemplated humani- tarian policies and social service work day and night throughout the year. The basic idea of this downtown temple is set forth in the *“City Four- square,” a church periodical: “Front- |ing the sky in this great business center, this temple will be a constant reminder of the upper and eternal meanings of life, as does Trinity church standing at the head of Wall street in New York city. The.market places of old England have a stone cross in the center. So in the heart of Chicago's commercial loop this “City Temple” will speak to men of God, and of the larger outreaches and moral sigpificance of life, and that the spiritual values are ever paramount. While men are sceking gold it will remind them of God. It will be the most significant focus polnt in the | loop." |Ttvo Divorces Take Out Marriage Licenses Today The following marriage llcenses were issued today at the office of the town clerk: Clifton R, Smith of 45 Main street, a divorces, and Miss Anna W. Hennig of 10 West street, Hartford; Andrew John Revay, a dl- vorce, of South Meriden, and Miss Katarena Buloczak of the same town; John A. Fitzgerald of Kensington and Bucholtz of 22 | West street, | in the U, | after noon. state of | WEISSMAN TRIAL DELAYED, “New Haven, May 8—As two defend- ants were not on hand, Judge BE. 8. | Thomas delayed resumption of the trial of Joseph Weissman and others, S. District court today until The charge {8 a conspir- acy to conceal the assets of a ban- | ssman), Moses Rankoff, | had been subpoenacd 0! appea York and so could not get hera in | time. before a grand jury in New | The fire at Lynn, Mass., which destroyed several blocks of tenements but was checked just before it reached the shoe fac- tories which make the town famous. FREIGHT THIEVES HELD Probable Cause Found in Three Dan- bury Cases and Mcn Are Put Under Heavy Bonds. Danbury, May 8,—Probable cause was found today by Justice W, H, Blackman {n Prookfleld, in the casecs of William Lavelle Shields, Charles Waltz and Albert Waltz, threo of the seven men arreated two weeks dgo to- day for theft of goods from freight cars, The three were held for the next term of the suporior Shields under $1,000 bonds, Albert Waltz under $800 bonds and Charles Waltz under 3500, Edwin Payne was fined $10 and costa and placed on probation for two months, Julius Da- ving recelved a similar sentence. Garage and New Car Burned in Torrington Torrington, May 8. — Firn beiieved to have boen of incendiary origin de- stroyed a private garage and a new touring car owned By Frank Maloney of -the Connecticut Iiectric Mfg. Co, in Bantam last night, The state po- llee have been asked to inventigato this and other fires which have oe- curred in Bantam and Litchfield with. {n tho past few months, ARRESTED AND FINED IN HOUR. New Haven, May 8-—-Speed was @ characteristic of polico work in one instance today, ang Judge Hoyt of the city court Loneh ko remarked, One hour after a saloonleeper had been caught coloring a liquor with burnt ‘nunr hoe was fined $100 and costs, Fifteen per eont of coal mined ia | the United Btates la used to heat "dwellinge. A “dog-gone” good one made from Pure Barloy Malt For Sale By All Grocera BELKIN 49-53 Commercial St, court, | | begins at once to sooth irritated akin SULPHUR CLEARS ROUGH, RED SKIN Face, Neck and Arms Easily Made Smooth, Says Specialist Any breaking out of the gkin, even flery, itching eczema, can be quickly overcome by applying a little Mentho- Sulphur, declares a noted skin special- ist. Because of iis germ destroying properties, this sulphur preparation and heal eruptions such as rash, pim- ples and ring worms. Tt seldom fails to remove the tor- ment and disfigurement, and you do not have to walit for relief from em- | barrassment, Improvement quickly shows. Sufferers from skin trouble should obtain a small jar of Mentho- Sulphur from any good druggist and use it like cold cream, It your littlo girl re« veald any of the symptema of what {s commonly knewn as “weak oyea" don't delay giving her the ald of a palr of spe- olally fitted glasses much aa we are equipped to give her, Qur glassea eo-eperate with the FRANK 12, GOODWIN Optemetri 827 Maia Rt Open Evenings

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