New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 27, 1922, Page 2

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BOORS for YOUR VACATION TRIP . ‘Wharton G. Gibbs R. Keable G. L. Hill M E. M. Hull M. Watts Glimpses of the Moon House of Mohun Simon Called Peter City of Fire Vehement Flame. . Bheik . House of Rimmon. .. Abbe Plerre Dances in the Dark The Shreik.... (o] BOOK DEPARTMENT The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Jw D. Speare Somerville HORSFALL'S SALE OF Manhattan Shirts STARTS TODAY Our Entire Stock at These Prices $2.50 Shirts .. $3.35 Shirts ... $4.00 Shirts ........ $4.50 and 85 Shirts, $7.00 Shirts . $8.50 Shirts .. $10.00 Shirts ..... 'HO SFALLS 95-99 syIumStmt “It Pays To Buy Our Kind"” ‘We will be closed on Wednesday Afternoons Until further notice. City Items Have The Herald follow you your vacation, 18c a week. with order.—advt The Ladies’ Auxilfary, A. O. H, will hold their regular meeting tomorrow evening at 7:30 in Judd's hall. Tickets for the annual excursion will he dis- tributed. A social session will follow the meeting. on Cash Meet me at Schmarr's for dinner,— | advt. A. G. Hammond Auxiliary will hold ~thelr regular meeting at 8 o'clock tonight in the State Armory on Arch street. Saltesea Clam Chowder, the most popular article ever put in a can.— advt Leonard-Tendler fight, —advt. BRITISH MINERS IN CONFERENCE TODAY Discuss Whether Or Not Against Exporting Coal to to Protest United States, London, July 27, (By Press).—The question whether British cogl miners will take any action against the exportation of coal to America was expected to be discussed at a meeting today of the executive committee of the miners federation. Meanwhile all the latest reports from British coal fields indicate that noth- ing will be done the miners who after a lean period in their industry are appreciating the stimulus given by to employment through the American |’ demand. It is being said that the Welsh miners whose wages have been at the minimum for seven months are keenly mindful of the situation last year when American miners increased their output to take advantage of the British position due to the coal strike. This alone it is declared prevents any suggestion for action against the ex- portation of coal to America. More- over, there are about 30,000 miners in the Weish flelds still unemployed and the American demand has opened the prospect of work for most of these. One curious remedy for leprosy, a plague of the East, was eating py- thons. —TUTORING—| F. Holmes, graduate of Wes- lJeyan University, and Principal of the Commington, Mass., Junior High School, will tutor students in High | School and College subjects during July and August. Wed. and Fri, 6-8 p. m. FOX'S—3.Days Only _Sunday, Monday, Tuesday “REPORTED MISSING” Photoplay Novelty of the Season. Deland | Hudson | scores Pilz's| Associated | Call 265-12, Mon.. | ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! 20 AUTO ACCIDENTS INTWO WEEKS HERE (Garage Men Reap Harvest While Pedestrians Learn Motor Shimmy Twenty-five automobile accidents in New Britaln in two weeks is the re- | port filed in the office of the state mo- | tor vehicle department for the period Feginning July 2 and ending July 18 Inclusive, No fatalities are reported within this period. Curiously enough | there were but two accidents July 4th, and not any the following day, while| the preceding Sunday shows a record of four, Stanley Street Seems Bad Place., On July 2 there was an auto col- lision of a minor nature on North| | street” about 2 o'clock in the after.| ncon. An hour later in front of 1475 Stanley strest two autos collided, re. sulting in a property damage of be. tween $25 and $200. At 7:30 o'clock | that night, at Hartford avenue and | Druggists also sell bottles of 24 and | Stanley street, just a few blocks away, | 100. Aspitin is the trade mark of | an auto colliston occurred, resulting fn | Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- an equal amount of damage, Eight| cidester of Salicylicacid. o'clock that same evening (W0 TS | mee———— ot o Tasrautn stas g L) YOUNG GIRL AGCUSED OF SHUGGLING RUM between $10 and 825, Monday evening, July 3, in Stanley Said to Be Alleged Accomplice of Millionaire Tobacco Merchant Quarter, autos going in oposite direc- Unless you ses the name "Bayer' on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product preacribed by physicians over twenty. two years and proved safe by millions for Colds Toothache Earache Neuralgla Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Pain, Pain Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy boxes ojgtwelve tablets cost few cents, tions bumped together and somebody had a property damage of slightly un- der $25. A similar acident occurred, 2gain on Stanley street, at the East Main street intersection, at 9:30 p. ni, or an hour later, when damage close to $200 resulted and one person was slightly injured Dog Knows Better Now. At 15 minutes after 10 o'clock on the night of July 4th a motorist was| New York, July 7.—A rum running 10lling along East street at peace with ron]aan was revealed in the I'nited the world, when, near Steinberg's, & gtates district court in Brooklyn yes- dog ran out and contested the rt:ht‘"ma‘. when Mrs. Ecith Stevens, 19, of way. The atltacking canine used| |of 458 West 1324 street, Manhattan, poor judgment. They burled MM wag arraigned on an indictment charg- later. {ing conspiracy to smuggle liquor into New York from Bermuda. The girl was indicted as an accom- plice of Antonio Cassese, millionaire tobacco merchant of Ozone park, who |is said to have financed a huge plot |to land numerous bontloads of whisky interviewed. |here. Two of the vessels have heen Mechanical Controversy. |seized and Cassese is sought as a fugi What might be caleld a “motor dis- [tive from justice following forfeiture pute” occurred near the car barn on|of a hond of $5,00Q Chestnut street at 5:45 o'clock on the Cassese wag also the alleged owner night of July 6, when an automobile|of the yacht Edith which was seized going east attempted to pass an auto- | hy the government with 1,800 cases of mobile going west without going|jjquor ahoard on Mareh 28 at Bayville around it or vice versa. Between $10 The court was told that Cassese, who and §25 paid for the damage. A sim- < 45 had named the yacht Edith for ilar occurrence happened that night at [,y Stevens. The latter was said to the corner of Main and Myrtle streets, | have heen separated from her hue- a few minutes before midnight. A |panq. garage man collected between $25 and | egimony $200 later on. [ eral attorney at the trial of Captain Booms the Repair Business. Charles Oman of the Edith was to On the evening of July 8, at 6:30|the effect that a woman had directed e'clock at the intersection of f‘hurch | the loading of the Edith at Bermuda and Elm streets, two cars tried 10| ity a cargo of liquor and fad ac rass through, over or under each|.ompanied the vessel to New York, cther, and anuth».r Barage man col-|cccupying the cabin with Cassese tected between §25 and $200 Veither was on the yacht when it was Serious Accident. captured. Oman was convicted and At 6 o'clock on the evening of July | sent to the federal penitentiary at §, two cars came together head-on| At'anta for a year and a day. along the Plainville road near the| On the same day that Cassess quarry, resulting in one ~ar being|jumped the bond of §5,000, Mr. Brar tadly damaged. Cost of repairs was|cato said, the tobaces merchant sent over $200 | the trawler Ripple from Brooklyn tc | take another cargo of liquor at At 5 o'clock on the same afternoon, | Bermuda. The prosecutor said Cas pedastrian crossing North street|&ese and Mrs. Stevens went to the failed to side step a motor car. An|Columbia street dock to see the ves inventory of the damage disclosed adsel sail. He alleges that they then collection of sprains, bruises, lacera-|left on a faster yatht and reached tions, etc. The car was undamaged. Bermuda before the Ripple He On July 9, some time during mp‘rlmrgrk they arranged for the cargo night, at the corner of Cherry Bnd“‘f liguor, helping put it aboard Ash streets, two autos collided, with | trawler. ! a damage of hetween §10 and $28. At $30.000 Liquor Seized 4 30 p. m, on Lafayette street, the The Ripple anchored off Ambrose {next day, the same thing happened, | Light on the return to New York an but the repair man's bill went consid- | half of the cargo was transferred to erably over $25, | smaller craft to smuggle ashore. Un On the corner of Main and Church|der cover of darkness the Ripple sireets at five minutes past one in the docked at the foot of Columbia street, afternoon of July 11, two autos col-|and while the remainder of the load lided and one car was badly damaged, being discharged to motor costing between $25 and $200 to re-ilaunches the vessel was raided and pair. At 7 o'clock in the evening of aptured by federal agents, About July 13, a similar accident occurred | $30,000 worth of liquor was confis at Broad and Cleveland streets with a | cated, property damage of the same extent. | Mrs. Stevens was unahle to furnish Pedestrians on the Jump. | the $20,000 hond which the court At the corner of Chestntt and EIm | fixed upon the insistence of Assi street, at 10:15 o'clock in the morn-|ant United S0tates Attorney Peter J ing of July 14, a bicycle was demol- | Brancato. To keep the girl from re ished by being struck by an anto. A | maining in however, the court number of pedestrians were struck |set the date of trial for today. She during the week of July 9 to 1. Tn|will he defended by Wallace E. J all injuries were sus-| Collins, former ['nited States attorney tained accidents ocurred as and counsel for (assese follows: July 10, ni, on High Pistol Fight in Harbor sfreet; July 12, at 12 p. m,, Chestnut| The alleged conspiracy of (‘assese and Stanle July 12, at 4 p.| Mrs, Stevens and Joseph Bartolin, , Soutt ITY Btreets; | chauffenr for (assese, to smuggle My 14, at West Main tiquor into New York was reveuled | street; July 1 m., North en a pistol battle in the harbor street; July {h the afternoon, a 2ty between federal prohibition {person alighting from a troliey car|ugents and the crew of the rum rur | at the corner of Broad and Washing- rtng trawler Ripple, resulted in the [ ton streets, was struck and slightly In- | capture of the vessel and the disclos- { jured ure that it was owned by the tobacco | merchant, | Until the seizure of the Ripple, | sese had apparently intended to| gtand trial on the indictment in con- nection with the Edith But when the ownership of the Ripple was also traced to him, despite the fact that it was in the name of his pilot, Cagsese made good his escape, taking a small fortune in cash, revealed by his bank withdrawals Mrs. Stevens denied that she implicated in the rum smuggling plot with Caesese, She admitted she had made the trip to Bermuda on the Edith, but said she had no knowledge of the Ripple, FRECKLES Re- Probably Going Yet. At 2:30 o'clock that afternoon a pedestrian stepped in front of an aulm on the corner of Broad and Curtis| streets. No damage was reported be- cause the pedestrian didn't wait to be brought out by the fed Stepped Too Slow. was jail, cases minor These streets; Stanley and He 8:16 p. m at 3 p e o a 1 WIFE KEEPS WAITING She Rents Rooms Near Sing Sing | Where Bigamist Hubby Is Ossining, July 27.—~When Frank Gibson, an aged m:.vm:r. ordered paroled yesterday, leaves Sing Sing, the state will be saved the price of his railroad ticket. The law requires that a ticket be furnished to a re- leased prisoner to take him back to the county seat where he was sen- tenced, Gibson was sentenced In White Plains to four years three | (months, for bigamy. While he was ’!n Sing 8ing, however, his second was wife hired a tenement on Hunter street, Ossining, only a few yards I from fhe prison. Gibson can be home | |in five minutes after he is set free. FENCE Mrs. Edith | MRS, McCORMICK" Don't Hide Them With a Veil; move Them With Othine— Double Strength. | Chicago, July | Rockefeller McCormick, daughter of John D. Rockefeller and divorced wife of Harold I". McCormick, does not propose to he stared at by a lot ot merg Adwellers in Lake | Forest. A real estate agent a sub-division adjoining Mrs. | mick's estate and bungalows are go- . lup on all sides of her. Mrs. Mc.| Don't hide your freckles under a Cormick summoned her architects| veili get an ounce of Othine and re- and instructed them to erect a 16- | move them. Even the first few appli- | foot wall around the entire estate.| cations should show a wonderful tm- Contractors are preparing bids on the | provement, some of the Ilighter work. Mrs. McCormick also pur- | freckles vanishing entirely. chased twenty additional acres ad- Be sure to ask the druggist for the joining her grounds to prevent fur-( double strength Othine; it I8 this that ther encroachments. is sold on the m®pey-back guarantee, This preparation for the treatment of freckles is usually so successful in | remeving freckles and giving a clear, beautiful complexion that it is sold under guarantee to refund the money | if it fails bungalow has plotted off McCor- Bprings, through leave the building. pital and his condition is critical man were slightly ter effort to arrest Fredeking. gas bombs. stood an effort ture Fredeking without loss of life, is probable stormed, three others in connection siaying of ( elected Look at this smash-up of locomotives. They were wrecked just to give a note line in the papers about it. You haven't read a of realism to a movie filmed in California. USE TEAR GAS ON MANIAC IN HOUSE West Virginia Police Forced To Re- sort To War Method To Bring Man At Bay Hinton, W. Va,, July 27.—Sheriff's deputies and state police, using tear gas, made a vain attempt last night to-rush a house in which John Frede- king, an insane man, has defied cup ture for eleven days, in which time one man has been Kkilled and four wounded. \ Fredeking, who is about 25 years old, has been insane for fifteen years but has been cared for by his family Eleven days ago his condition be- came suddenly violent. He drove his father and his family from the house Lou Matty, a prohibition officer, at- tempted to enter the house after Fredeking barricaded himself and was eghot and Kkilled, Earl Hope, forced house several d the ¢ White Sulphur entrance into He was shot managed to is tin a hos said to be o ater. but He ast, an unidentif wounded in John Atkins and a la The battle has continued mtermit tently day and night and Efforts wore made last night by state Fredeking by the The force of office been Increased and while it is unde will he made to cap- it be police to di use of t lodge 8 ha that will necess the house if sary. INDICT AGENTS IN MURDER. Prohibition Officers lnm Charges in Two Texas Cities, Austin, Tex., July 27.—Federal Pro- hibition agents here and at Beanumont were indicted on mufrder char Willlam general the | dicted charged with murder in con- grand At diviston agents, juries to RBeanmont chief of was in- A. Nit prohibition nection with the slaying of H. E lowers, a justice of the peace, shot aturday night. One of his agents was indicted in the same case, Austin of Dassett officer, and with the ‘layton Peeler, a month made public yesterday. The indictment in Miles, an enforcement P. 8. & W. OFFICF Former Poard is Reappointed at An- nual Meeting in Southington. The annual meeting of the Peck, Rtow & Wileox Company was held in the main office of the company in Southington at 1 o'clock yesterday afternoon, preceded by a luncheon of the directors in the Country Club at Farmington. The old board was re- and is: Frank IL. Wileox, Marcus H. Holcomb, Frank C. Sum- ner, | Sichthorn, 8. W. Treadway (of Cleveland, Ohio), T. J. Ray, Al- I"H L. John M George 8, The re.elected and are Sichthorn; viee v, George 8. Case; Sessions, offi- Presi Case. old S wer She's policeman guerite Philadelphia’s -only woman And _ her name's Mar- Waltz. And her job's to supervise street dances the | v Holcomb | president, | BOTH SIDES SEEH SETTLEMENT BASIS Important Conferences Scheduled Today at White House Washington, July 2 move toward settlement of the rail strike were revived tods s leaders on both sides in the dispute gathered here presumably for conferences on the situation with administration of- ficials, although definite indicatior was lacking as to whether their pres- ence here at the same time had the added significance of any pre-arrange- ment. 7.—Hope for a To Visit White House, Arriving here early in the day afte: i unnanounced departure from Chi- , B. M. Jewell, head of the strik- ilway ahopmen, and the gix in presidents of the shogp planned to go to| a conference 12t ternational crafts organization, ‘White House with President Harding though it stated taday that union representa- not heen “invited" to the, White House for a conference they, of course, it was advized, wounld be re ceived should they call to Aiscuss the strike situation, and such a confer-| ence was fully expected in the course of the day. Railroad Men Coming. At the time among the rail- read execntives, W. W. Atterbury of the Pennsylvania ard T. Dewitt Cuy- “ehairman of the arsociation of Washington today, the latter having arrvived last night and others, includ- mg L. F. Lorce of the Delaware and | Hudson, were expected to reach the capital before tonight. President Harding, who conferred with Mr, At- terbury yesterday in what was under- to be the first of a series of conferences with the rail executives, was said at the White House at an early hour to hava made no further appointments to meet them today. It was belleved, however, that tha president wonid arrange to meet oth- the w A was in official circles tives had Fame lor stood of the day | Individnal Conferences. Indications were that the president purposed to confer individually with the executives on the strike situation FOR DOCTOR, LAWYER, MERCHANT, CHIEF—-THE ers of the group hefore the conclusion | “FLYOSAN" THE KILLER OF The Filthy Fly, The Brotherly Bed Bug, The Musical Mosquito, The Frisky Flea, The Munching Moth, The Active Ant. Yau simply spray in the air with a tin sprayer. Insects drop dead. Doesn't harm humans, Get & can and sprayer loduy at the Hardware Store of— HERBERT L. MILLS Hardware 336 Main Street SEE OUR SOUTH WINDOW THIS WEEK and particularly on the seniority is. | sue now regarded as the stumbling block in the way of an adjustment that would send the men back to work. In this connection it W re- called today that following refusal of eastern executives at their recent con- ference with members of the senate fnterstata commerce committee to ac- ccde to the unien demand for restor- ation of seniority rights to strikehs, it was reported to be the view of some of the president's advisers that it necessary pressure ahould be brought to bear to secure the agree- ment of tha rail heads to this con- dition. Atterbury's Statement. Mr. Atterbury, however, with whom OWN YOUR the seniority issue was taken up by the president yesterday was under- stood today to be still insistent on the question following later conferences with a number of senators. His state- ment after the White House conter- ence was that the Pennsylvania man- agement felt the jssue must be left to the determination of the present employes of the system. v ——— PORTUGUESE REPARATIONS Lishon, July 27.—The Portuguess government is preparing to negotiate |a special agreement with Germany for the payment of war reparations in kind amounting to 990,000,000 gold marks. OWN HOME Cottages for sale in Belvidere, Fast Street, Ellis Streot, West End, and several other locations. H.C.FOIREN, Phone 1790,140MainSt. e e T——— Prices right and easy terms. GlobeClothingHouse =Skl OE — Department Special Price Reductions Have Been Made On 14 PAIR LADIES’ BLACK AND WHITE RUBBER SOLE SPORT OXFORDS $1 W 19 PAIR LADIES’ DOROTHY DODD PUMPS AND OXFORDS $1 .00 ALL THE REMAINING PAIRS OF INFANTS’ AND CHILDREN’S . $2 and $2.50 WHITE AND SPORT SHOES, NOW $1 00— 'WALL PAPER SALE 6ur : Am;ual Sale Is a Genuine Money Saver for Property Owners — All Our Stock of — Wall Papers and Borders — Reduced to Almost — 145 Price — — DON'T MISS THIS — | The John Boyle Co. Wholesale and Retail Dealers in Paints, Varnishes, Lead, Oils. 3-5 FRANKLIN SQ.—NEW BRITAIN, CONN.

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