New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 30, 1922, Page 3

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BARONET SATIN, white, 40 inches wide ......... NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, BOSTON STORE SILK SKIRTINGS ... 8215 BROCADED SATIN, white, yard wide, in stripes and beautiful desighEn: ittt oo s $1.98 yard NATURAL and WHITE SILKS in brocade effects, yard wide . ... $1.00 yard SHANTUNG SILK, Welght. ©u i iisvaviimenioss wide natural color, yard — medium and heavy ceeesiienees, 31,00 yard PLAIN PONGEE in Domestic and Japanese makes, natu from ral color, SILK JERSEY stitch LINGERIE MATERIALS , tubular in white and flesh — plain and drop- .... $1.50 and $1.62 Yard blacketn LAUNGERETTE SATIN, yard wide in white, flesh, orchid, blue and Ot R S L ST R T S o kv ad) DIANA SILK, DOTTED, yard wide in blue, flesh, oréhid, rose and IS Gonntiasnanooaas @b G000 ron o onnbo G o L A I ey SKINNER’S SURF SATIN in navy and black—is a classy material for bathingisuIts R S s e e a0 los Ry ard KIMONO SILKS, yard' wide, figured in a variety of styles, 75c and $1.00 yard PULLAR and NIVEN ATTENTION FOX TROTTERS the new JULY VICTOR RECORDS are out and they contain some of the snappiest dance records you ever heard * C. L. PIERCE & CO. 246 MAIN STREET OPPOSITE THE MONUMENT UNION SERVICES Two Congregational and Baptist Churches Join in Combined Meet- ings for Summer. Union services beginning this Sun- day and continuing throughout the summer will be held by two Congre- | gational churches and the First Bap- tist church. The program will be as follows: July 2, 9, 6—In the First Baptist Women's White Oxfords and PUMPS Very Fine Stock to Select From —0— Some Big Values in White Nubuck Shoes For Growing Girls HOSIERY For Men, Women and Children — The — W. G. Simmons Corp. 85 WEST MAIN church, Rev. William A. Ross, speak- er. July 23—First Church of Christ, | Rev. Herbert Gesner, formerly of At- |1antic City, speaker. July 380 and August 6—First Church |of Christ, Rev. Henry W. Maier, |speaker. / August 13—South church, Rev. Theodore A. Gregn, associate pastor of {the Brick church, speaker. August 20—South church, Rev. | Watson Woodruff, South Manchester, speaker. | August 27—South church, |Herbert Gesner, speaker. September 3—South church, Rev. Von Ogden Vogte, pastor Wellington |avenue church, Chicago, speaker. Rev. Mr. Maier starts on his va- cation June 26th, and will be back| for a period of time, beginning Julyi 27th. i Rev. terday of the bandit raid were ‘“not |not held.” It was not stated whether | the bandits had withdraws from the company orwhether any payment had | been made. | & TO BOX IN PRELIM. Cleveland, June 30.—Jack Wolfe of Cleveland and Frank Jerome, | York bantamweights, have | matched to box ten rounds semi-final to the Johnny | Lynch championship bout York, July 10, been in the Buff-Joe at New Week-End | HOSTILITIES IN CHINA | { | Chiung Ming Forces Are Rl'pnrwdl About to Attack Sun Yat Sen's Men. i Canton, June 30.—By Associated | Press.)—The hostilities which Dr. Sun | vat Sen, president of the overthrown government of China, has been prom- ising as a result of his ousting from that city, seemingly are about to be- gin, but the aggressor, it appears is to be Sun's conqueror Chen Chiung- Ming rather than Dr. Sun. Chen, it is reported, has sent a reg- iment of men under the leadership of Brigadier General Chung Wing-Sun to attack about 5,000 of Sun's troops| who have been operating some dis- | tance southwest of Canton. Chun, who is a Yale graduate, in a statement yes- terday, declared that Chen had re- frained from action up to the pres- | ent because he desired to have any aggression that might develop come from Sun. AMERICANS RELEASED Others Held by Mexicans Also Reput- ed Liberated Washington, June 30.—Dispatches !to the state department from Consul Shaw of Tampico indicated that the| 85 employes of the British owned La Corona 0il Co. including the half doz- | en Americans held yesterday for ran-| som by outlaws had been released. | The message was very brief and not| clear and the department telegraphed | immediately for an explanation. | The consul said merely that the 85| persons referred to his in report yes-| Special ASSORTED ki 39c CHOCOLATE PEPPERMINT 1y 3 9 (o PATTIES ... SUNDAY DINNER 11:30 A. M. TO 8 P. M. $1 00 Dill Pickles Olives Crcam of Tomato Soup Choice of STUIFFED CHICKEN or SIRLOIN STEAK Mashed Potatoes Fruit Salad Choice of Pies or Ice Cream Coffee Tea Milk 289 Main Street RO Peas | E guard on the University of | | property at the Pece camp of the oil | New | STRIKING MINER IN COURT TODAY Lakowski Ordered to Get Job and | Case Is Continued Vincent Lakowski, who told Judge | B. W. Alling that he is a coal miner thrown out of a job on account of the strike and who is now peddling pa- pers to earn a living, was ordered to- day to properly support his wife and" family. He plans to go to work when | labor problems are adjusted. His case was continued to July 15 in bonds of | $200 so that he may have an oppor- | tunity to prove to the court that he 18 really willing to work. ! The Lakowski's live at 32 Booth | street. The wife has received but $15 | this year from her husband, and has received nothing in the past three} months. They are five months in ar- rears in their rent and grocery bills remain unpaid, she said. Vincent rarely allows a day to pass without | | acquiring a load of liquor, and some- | | times comes home three time a day | under the influence, Mrs. Lakowski | said. Occasionally he brings in some food, but always eats it alone, Katherine Liepitz, a neighbor, add-| ed to the charges against Vincent. She told Judge Alling that the accused | takes his own food to bed, placing it | under his pillow. | Condemnation proceedings, uncon- tested, were brought in the cases of | Rose Kozloski, Alex Bellini, Peter Buchi and Mary Wisk. | The case of Steve Walt, charged | [ with assau)ting his wife, was contin- | ued until July 25. Walt was arrested at 5:30 o'clock this morning by Po- liceman John Tnderson, He had| trouble over money matters, accusing | his wife of theft. When he refused | to go to work, she threatened to strike him with a milk bottle. He grabbed | and twisted her arm, causing her to scream and the neighbors called in| the police. | Tony Albanese paid $100 and costs for selling beer with 1.14 alcohol. His basement in the rear of the Park ho-| tel was visited by Sergeant W. P. M Cue and a detall of police last Satur- | day night. Sergeant McCue took a| sample of beer and sent it to New Ha- | ven for an analysis. Tony admitted | selling the stuff, but said he bought it at Haggerty's bottling establish- ment on Spring street believing it to be near-beer FAMOUS FOOTBALL OFFICIAL IS DEAD “Tiny” Maxwell, - Former AL-| American Guard, Accident Victim Norristown, Pa., June 30.—Robert | W. (“Tiny") Maxwell, former all- American guard, weight thrower, sports writer and one of the best known football officials in the east, died in a hospital today as a result of | injuries received in an automobile crash early Sunday. Percy Sander- | son, golf writer, who also was in the | wreck, still is unconscious. | Maxwell was sports editor of the| Philadelphia Evening Public Ledger. Although he had seven fractured | ribs and a dislocated hip, his condi- | tion did not become critical until yes- | | terday when fever and congestion of | | the lungs set in. Maxwell was born in Chicago 38| yvears ago where his mother and a sis-| ter, Mrs. Katherine Doust, live. He came into prominence in 1902 as a Chicago greatest Swarth- | football team but won his honors as a member of the more college football eleven in 1904/ land 1905. While in college he was |one of the foremost weight throwers in the east. After leaving Swarthmore college, | Maxwell became conected with Chica- | g0 newspapers and came to Philadel- phia about ten years ago. In the last| few years he officiated in some of the| {most important football games in the | cast. 'DEATH REVEALS HIS WIFE AND FAMILY | Alexander McKenzie Had “'eddedj Second Time and Left a Family in Yonkers. §t. Paul, Minn., June 30.—The fl- | | ing for probate here yesterday of the | will of Alexander McKenzie, one-time | “political boss" of North Dakota, dis- ciosed for the first time, even to many | intimate friends, that he had married a second time, and had two sons and a daughter living in Yonkers, N. Y. | His second wife, Mrs. Elva McKen- zie. died in Yonkers on May 23. Mr. | McKenzie died here last week, closing | an adventurous career | Specific bequests, totaling $265,000, are made in the will, and the residue is left to two daughters by his first| wife, Mrs. Anna McKenzie-McDonald of Regaud, Quebec, and Mary B. Mc- [ Kenzie Foster of Westmount, Quebec, | | who filed a petition | Bequests of $30.000 are made to his second wife, now deceased, and ! equal amounts to Jeanette McKenzie, an unmarried daughter; Alexander J.| | McKenzie and Thomas O. McKenzis, | | sons, all of Yonker | DR. BIGGS SILENT. Saratoga Springs, N. Y., June 30— Dr. Hermann M. Biggs, state commis- | sioner of health, today refused furth- er details regarding his announcement | that a new serum for the prevention | of pneumonia has been discovered. | | and has had "astonishing success’ in experiments on humans and animals. | | c—— 7-Styles LADIES’ LOW WHITE SHOES $1.98 KINNEY’S JONE 30, 1 922, HOSIERY | FOR THE | FOURTH ’ E————— Duetlet Williwery G e 257 Main Street Booth’s Block | UNUSUAL OPPORTUNITIES HATS FOR THE FOURTH AT OUR —SEMI- ANNUAL — PRE-INVENTORY SALE WHICH CONTINUES SATURDAY AND MONDAY TRIMMED Yalues to $10.50 —SA HATS LE PRICE — - TRIMMED HATS Values to $7.50 — SALE PRICE — 53 BANDED SAILORS Values to $3.95 $l SALE PRICE .... 25% DISCOUNT on all Hats over $5. Also on all trimmings. | Values to $5. TRIMMED HATS SALE PRICE ..... $1 SPORT LEGHORNS With Crepe Bands . $1.95 -— 0 — $3.95 Values to $7.50 The popular hat of the season. SPORT HATS, $1.95 — and — $2.95 Values to $5.75 K Every wanted style ¥ and color. HOSIERY GREATLY REDUCED FOR PRE-INVENTORY SALE Wonderful Values in Stockings for the Fourth. 79¢ Gordon Fibre Silk Stockings, black and cordovan .... 500 $1.29. Gordon Pure Thread Silk Stock- 95c ings, all colors Full Fashioned Silk Stockings, black and all colors ...... $l.75 EXTRA SPECIAL Venus Full Fashioned Silk Stockings, lisle tops; all colors; $2.75 YV.an Raalte, heavy ingrain Silk Stock- ings; black and * all colors . ... $2’19 Kayser and Van Raalte full lei)?hi}o\ned Silk Stock- ings, black and white .. $l .95 Kayser and Van Raalte Fanc,\'lGlove Silk Stock- ings, all ) colors $2 a39 $2.49 Van Raalte Plain Glove Silk Stockings; black, . $1.98 15% REDUCTION On All Gloves SOLDIERS ARE HELD READY FOR ACTION May Be Sent (Into Colorado Coal Fields to Maintain Pecace and Good Order Denver, June 30.—National Guards- men and state rangers today were held in readiness to move into either the Colorado and an e northern or southern [ fields to order” in accordance with tive order issued by Gover s late yesterday following disturbances in the mining areas. Col P. 8. Hamrock, “maintain peace state adjutant v, Price On All Silk and Leather Bags general, author nor to mobilize nine com Colorado National Gua to re-| cruit the state ranger force from its present strength of 50 to approximate- ly 400 following receipt of reports of Ythe burning of two railroad bridges and the damaging of mines in the coal fields Wednesday night. | The most ous damage was in the southern field near Walsenburg, where two railroad bridges, both in the vicinity mines owned by the Colorado Fuel and Iron Co. were burned. The de tion of these s cut off four mines of that| 1y from railroad communica- zed by the gover- anies of the | b mpé "ltion with the rest of the state . ‘I have given into pressure of my friends and I want a classified ad in the Herald,” is the sense an oft repeated sentence made at our classi- of fied counter, grey ... 1-3 Off on the Silk Scarfs PNEUMONIA SERUM. Doctor Claims to Have One That Wl Prevent Disease. Saratoga Springs, N: Y., June 30— The annual convention of New: York state public health officers and nutsés closed yesterday with an announce-, ment by Dr. Hermann M. Biggs, State Commissioner of Health, that a new serum for the prevention of pneu= monia had been discovered and had had “astonishing success’” in experi= nients on human beings and animals. He said that it would be ready for further experimental test by early fall. i Dr. Biggs made only the announce- ment, declining further details, When questioned, he said that the dcpartment was not prepared yet to announce them. Here’g_ where you and your Family buy Apparel that is meritorious — tailoring that is trim — styles that are smart — at prices that are little. We sell you on our convenient TIME-TO-TIME PAYMENT PLAN because we trust you. Trust us to give you values absolutely without parallel today. Wash DRESSES Fine quality Voile and Ging. ham: Regular $10 and $12 values. $85_0 S Men’s SUITS Single and doublebreasted styles in both medium and light weighta, 185 Wash SKIRTS Boys” SUITS Pigne, Gabardine and novelly materials of the bester variety. $229, “Voile WAISTS 31 Mannish looking, sub- atantially built clothes.

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