New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 11, 1922, Page 14

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14 — Stock and Fixures Must B Regardless of From the Well Known B LADIES’ FALL COATS Assorted Sizes .. $8.95 Georgette Waists ...................... $1.98 Woolen, Silk Flannel SKits oonooneonenn.. S1.95 LADIES’ FALL SUITS Poiret, Twill, Tricotine, Broadcloth, Duvetyn. Popular Shades and Styles—$19.00 Al Full BOLIVIA WRAPS Finest Quality ....... French Serge Wraps .. CANTON CREPE DRESSES Latest Styles ... SERGE DRESSES Real Nifty Styles ... to $19.00 Army Wool Blankets .............. $2.50 each $9.75 ankrupt Sold Cost Stock ‘ 4, ) of the ' New Britain Clothing & Dry Goods Co. 381-383 MAIN STREET, WE COULDN'T SECURE A LEASE. MUST NEW BRITAIN VACATE IN 14 DAYS. FOLLOWING ARE SOME OF THE ITEMS WE OFFER TO THE PUBLIC AT A SACRIFICE OPEN EVENINGS SALE NOW GOING ON McCall Patterns—Half Price 36 inch Percale .. 27 inch Gingham .......... 32 inch Gingham ................... 19¢ yard Ladies’ Cotton Hose .. LADIES’ SILK HOSE Fashioned, 'All Silk, Black only,. Ladies’ All Silk Hose, gray sand.. Ladies’ Silk Hose, black, brown, white. . Pair 69¢ LADIES’ SILK LISLE HOSE White, Sand, Brown, Black ...... Ladies’ Extra Size Vests ... Ladies’ Union Suits .......... SILK UNDERWEAR—ALL COLORS—STYLES Shirts . . Bloomers ... Chemise . Union Suits ........... who claimed that Dr. Bibber did not give them a square deal and com- ‘r.’am"i that his methods of examin- ;a'xon looked as though he Mad de- termined to exonerate Major Foltz no matter what the facts. As a mat- Mlingtown Surgeon I Givenr‘h AT e L | further =a action by carrying on Requested Transfer MAJOR FOLTZ BAS e men are not likely to get any | the campaign against Foltz Case of Morgan Yates, The last attack upon the major was made by Morgan Yates who was committed to the Norwich Insane re- treat from which he escaped. Yates claimed that he was sent to Norwich by Foltz for no good reason and that he has no signs of insanity As a matter of fact Dr. Deifendort, the expert, examined Yates and declared him to be suffering from maniac de- pression and moderately advanced tuberculosis. He comes from New York city (CHICAGO FLIERS BURNED TO DEATH New Haven, Aug. 11—The serious unrest at the United States Post hos- pital in Allingtown caused by fhe drive of some of the inmates against Major J. C. Foltz is likely to subside from now on as Major Foltz has left the institution on regular leave at the end of which he will take up duties elsewhere as his repeated request for| transfer has been finally granted Friends of Major Foltz state that he will be assigned to a larger hospital as a reward for his work here, This action probably will not jus- tify some of the radical patients at allingtown who have |Insisted that the major should be removed from the service altogether claiming t he had neglected pgtients and cruel in his manners inasmuch had told some of the men that they had not long to live. Major Folit gaid to have denied this to his super- hat | was | Aviators, Attempting To Do Nose as he Dive, Crash—Machine Bursts Into Flames. Chicago, Aug. 11.—Edward Schillo, head of th illo Motor Sales com- of Chicago, and Le Roy Keller perville, were burned to death ast evening in a falling airplane in have been made recently, Surgeon | NAPery They had started only a shor before the accident to Joseph Ridlon left last week having been recalled to work in the reguiar | Make ght, with Keller driving public health service from which he at a considerable height, was detached to work in the veter. ing to an eyewitness, when Kel- an hospital service. He has been attempted a nose dive. The air- succeeded as head by Surgeon L. H buddenly leaped from control, Prince, who is considered a most|fell headlong and burst tnto flames. The flames, fanned by the tremen- able man and specially well fitted dous speed of the plunge through for administrative work such as that at Allingtown. Dr. Prince comes|3Pace, enveloped the whoie machine. from Philadelphia. He was profese. | An instant later the jlane, a mass of twisted steel and burning cloth, drop- or of pathology in the Jefferson Med- ) ical college and is an X-Ray expert [Ped into Water street of note. Hundreds ran and drove to the v, cene, b t was . e e- Men May Not Be Satisfied, - it B VA RUMO mDmsne L8 7 fore the blazing wreckage could be Whether the men will be satisfied | approached, owing to the flerceness now to let the Foltz matter drop is|vwith which the gasoline burned problematical but it seems certain|\when finally the fre that the auth ’}'\”= at \HK'N;‘L}‘W% the spectatora were ahle to approach will take no further action. Direc- |1t was found that neither of the avi- tor Forbes of Wshington, here | ators had bheen ahle to escape but a short time ago and burned to a crisp. At- personal inspection of the {tempts at identification seemed futile tion. He is sald to have expressed|,pnti| the initials on the belt buckle pleasure at the conditions prevailing |worn by Keller were examined. Then although he did say that it Wwas 4| tpe fdentification of Schillo was made very costly institution to run. It is|complete by a watch found hanging not at all unlikely that the govern-|in the wreckage. ment will give it up when the con-| jeljer employed tract expires when it will revert to|gehiilo firm and was an the New Haven hospital {man. He frequently piloted Inquiry Not Satisfactory To Men |yiane which was owned by Schillo, to Director Forbes was here the same| 5| Park ere Koller lived, the time as Inspector Ribber who nu‘ plane being usually parked near Na- gent to Allingtown to make a thor-| ey ough inquiry into the charges of the gchille, a well known automobile men. The result of this inquiry was| icer a few years ago, was president not at all satisfactory to the men, |o¢ the Fehillo Motor Sales company and waz manager of Checkerboard Flying Field doctors at the institution and a the nurses have earnestly defended him. Further Changes at Hospital. Further changes at the hospital . ille, time a fi v were The [ 1er | | plane was made institu- Bl ava almost with the any W CASTOR IA For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years S ot Tt the 7 Sigasture of CHILD IS KIDNAPPED. from Curb—Grandmother Warned. North Bergen, N. J, Aug. 11.—8ix- ‘\ra—rnVl Pearl Fleischmann was kid- | nepped vesterday by an unidentifiea subsided and | Both | ex-sarvice | lnld@mlficd Woman “Snatehes rmldl | woman as ghe sat on the curb in front | cliff waiting to join their way to a party. An hour after Pearl was gpirited away in a taxicab, Mrs. Margaret Fleischmann, her grandmother, was warned over the phone: “If you people don't keep quiet about this we'll kill you." After Pearl's birth her mother left home and has not been heard from since, the grandmother said. FIRES ARE RAGING INCITY OF GORY (ueenstown Also Reported With Many Blazes--Troops Press on playmates on London, Aug. 11 (By Assoclated Press).—All the military and police barracks in Cork are burning, accord- ing to the report of a government aviator who flew over the irregular stronghold late yesterday, says a Times despatch from Dublin. The national troops at that time had con- solidated their positions near Pas- sage West six miles east of Cork but had not yet invested the city. The pilot flew over the town at a height of only about 200 yards. Lit- tle rifle fire was directed at him, he reports; much less in fact than when he passed over Dungarvan although the irregulars have evacuated Dun- garvan proper. Attack Expected. London, Aug. 11.—(By Press.)—The correspondent of the Dally Mail telegraphing his paper | Thursday from the headquarters of| the national troops says “An expedition is on the Kerry coast which will close all the gaps and hem the rebels on the Mallowfermoy-Mitchellstown line where they must make their last last stand. There are many desert- ers from their ranks. Assuclat-d All Wires Down. Dublin, Aug. 11.—(By Press. )—Communication except by sea, the exact results of the fighting be- tween the irregulars and the provis- | tonal government forces are unknown here. It is variously stated that the nationale have entered and that they have not entered the city. There also is divergence as to the extent of the fighting. Some of the wounded brought here on a steam- ship say the irregulars were strongly posted at Passage West and that the [ nationale had to f their way | through intense fire, a number being w“‘Nm’!fll] and one killed They re- ported that the government troops who landed at Unionhall also are Assoclated with Cork fighting their way through the hos-| tile districts Firezs Are Reported. The crew’ of another vessel arriv- jing from Cork said the admiralty lhfius- and the British naval hospital jat Queenstown, both of which be- came familiar to American naval men overseas during the ‘war, were blaz- ing when they left, as well as two other large buildings in which tre- nuent explesions were heard .X‘ 1s reported that the irregulars™ have evacuated Clonmel. landing tonlghl\ is still tmpossible and | ce..... Pair 9c .... $1.98 each ... $2.45 each | | | named by | day Children’s Hose, all colors, sizes. ... et i i ; K, Toiyard Ladies’ Fleece Lined Union Suits, high nec 15¢ yard Amoskeag Flannel, all colors .... Brassieres ............c0000000 . Pair $1.69 Pair $1.29 Serpentine Crepe, all colors ...... Full Size Sheets ................. MEN’S SUITS Pair $5c All wool, shades, styles, from. Each 29¢ Each 39¢ Men’s Palm Beach Suits ................ All Wool Pants ............. $1.39 each $1.75 pair BOYS’ SUITS ——W of her grandmother's home in Wood- IBI PARTE BOARD IS country similar situations threatened. Switchnien joined the trainmen in their protests against working under guard and the situation on the Santa Fe at Needles, Barstow and other California points was further aggra- vated when the entire yard force at Fresno left its post, the men notify- ing the company they would refuse to return until armed guards were removed. Two Murdered. Two non-union employes of the New York Central lines in Colling- wood yards at Cleveland, one a dis- patcher amd the other a call hoy, were shot and killed on a street ®r- ner. Their slayer escaped. At Birmingham, Aia., an attempt was made to blow up a dining car used for feeding shopmen and labor- ers in the Frisco yards. The bomb missed its mark and blew a holé in a nearby box car. Dynamite Is Used Dynamite was used in an attempt to blow up shanty cars and a diner in the Southern rallway vyards at Asheville, N. C.,, windows were ghat- tered in a car containing 11 workers. Marvin Oxfner, a car repairer em- ployed by the St. Louis and San I'rancisco railroad at Memphis, Tenn., died from wounds received when he was attacked and robbed by two ne- groes while on his way/to work Conferences were arranged between rallroad and union officials in Chi- cago today in an effort to avert a walkout of 2,600 maintenance of way men on the Chicago, Milwaukee ana £t. Paul MINING RESUMED IN INDIANA REGIONS LIKELY TO SUCCEED Special Commission to Settle U. S.- German Claims Has Re- publican Backing. ‘Washington, Aug. 11.—Agreement between the United States and Ger- many to set up a bi-parte commis- sfon to pass upon American war claims against Germany and German citizens apparently had the general support of republican congressional leaders today as a practical method of removing one of the issues left be- tween the two countries as an after- math of the world war, Democratic leaders were said to be of the opinion that the commission as provided under the agreement cigned in Berlin yesterday could not proceed without authority from congress, and even then could only determine the fact of a clalm and its amount with- out passing upon the method of set- tlement Some senators on hoth sides held that the agreement would not affect the status of German property now controlled by the alien property cus- todian. The claims commission would con- slst of one American and one Ger- man member with an umpire to ren- der a deciding vote on any question on which the commission failed to agree. Assoclate Justice Willlam R.| Day of the 1. S. Supreme Court was| President Harding for the position of umpire on the request of the German government that this | post be :hsn to an American DEATH AND RIOTING FOLLOWING STRIE, "™+ |1ying on top of the shafts taken over by the state well under way officlals today were endeavoring to secure steam shovel operators in order to begin the digging of coal at the strip mines. All Quiet At Stanton—Operators Are | Trylng to Get Steam Shovel Men to Work. More Onthreaks Oconr--Tie-up May Be More Extensive i Chicago, Aug. 11.—(By Associated A small supply piled near the mines Press.)—Berious threats to traffic by |Part of which was moved yesterdiy retusal of trainmen to move trains at|%e8 dug by union workers before tie points where troops are on guard;|Sirike and will soon be exhausted renewed outbreaks of violence result-|SiX cars were loaded yesterday and state institutions. The ing in several deaths and possibility Shipped to of walkouts by maintenance of way force of* workmen at the mines still men on various roads marked the|lS insufficient to obtain quantity pro- progress of the strike of shop crafts|duction. employes as railroad heads and unlon| Although quiet relgned in leaders gathered for conference to. Martial law area disorders were to consider separately Pregident|Ported early today at the W. F. Wag- ending the |N*r mine near Terre Haute where at- tempts to dynamite the shaft were Members of the big four transpor-|frustrated by county officials. Eev- tation brotherhoods upon whom train eral sticks of dynamite had beén movements depend, were authorized exploded near the mouth of the mine by their chiefs to suspend work if before the arrival of the authorities. they consider etrike conditons and the presence of soldiers at terminals and Driver Of Death Car Gets Year Sentence junetion points “unbearable.” Tie-Up Threatened. Western divisions of the Atchison,| Worcester, Mass, Aug. 11.-—Na- Topeka and Santa Fe were threaten- |than Longworthy of Boston was sen- ad with a tie-up of trans-continental’|tenced to six months in the House of trains by refusal of engineers, fire.|Correction for driving his car reck- men, conductors and trainmen to op- |lessly July 25. When he knecked down erate traine while troops were st and fatally injurey Mre. Mary Mor- tioned along the line where outbreaks| eau, and six months additional for occurred earlier in the strike |leaving the scene without making AP Ua other centers throughout the‘htmull known, He appealed, the Harding's proposal for strike . ... 19¢. pair Jow sleeve ...................... 15¢ each ... 15¢ yard 1 Ib. Roll Niagara Cotton ................. 20¢ Ribbon~—All Kinds and Shades—Half Price . 18¢ yard . $1.10 each .$10.00 to $19.50 Mohair Suits ...........coieeveine.... $9.00 $5.00 .... $1.25 to $3.50 Men’s Khaki Pants .................. 85c pair All Wool—Popular Styles .............. $3.98 BOYS’ SUITS—2 Pair Pants All Wool, from ... $4.75 to $7.50 Men’s Straw Hats ... 50¢ Children’s Straw Hats—silk lmed 10¢ MEN'’S SHIRTS With or Without Collars Pongee Shirts .......... AMERICAN LISLE HOSE Blue, Brown, Blfek ............ 15¢c to.50c pair Men’s All Silk Hose BGTRIE BB b sl | [ Men’s Heather Hose ..... 2 pair for 35¢ BLEACHED AND UNBLEACHED MUSLIN 10c Yard 85¢ ALL WOOLS AND SILKS Reduced to Half Price McCALL FASHION BOOK ............... 5¢ STUDENTS ON ADVENTURE o R Enginecring College Mates On Eng- land Will Sail For Uninhabited Is- land to Make a Living. Police Act On Information Given By Whitney's Butler. Salem, Aug. 11.—The hiding place of currency, furs and jewels of & total value of $20,000, which disap- peared from the summer home of Payne Whitney, New York financler, at Pride’'s Crossing on Monday, was revealed yesterday, Harry Ingalls, as- sistant butler, after a conference at police headquarters here, accompae nied Detective Lehan to the estate and showed where the valuables were concealed No one at the Whitney estate would discuss the affair, and the family re- ed to prosecute Ingalls. $ London, Aug. 11.—Discouraged at the outlook in this country, dissatie- fied with the after-war Britain, but actuated mainly by a love of adven- ture, about a dozen engineering stu- dents of Loughberough c¢ollege are setting out on September 1 for an un- inhabited Pacific Island belonging to Ecuador, Most of them are ex-officers. Among them is an author, D. L. David | % " Special for Saturday find in the new settlement work for his pen as well as his hands. A 90 Legs of Genuine : Spring Lamb 35¢c Ib. ton vessel {8 being made ready for the expedition. The chief means of existénce they hope to find by utllizing the resurces of the island f{tself; the uszsvelopment of fruit-growing and the breeding of Fancy ROaSt Yeal 350 lb. Fresh Fowls . ... 40c lb. Lamb Chops, Rib 40c¢ 1b. Lamb Chops, Lion 50c Ib |Lamb Stew ..... 15cIb. Heavy Beef Steaks and cattle. All hands will be required to work, Roasts at Reduced Prices at aithough climatic conditions, it has been ascertained, are ideal and all | they will need for food can be ob- tained without worlking, if they are content just to “loaf and invite their J Qualit — Market — neglect to regulate the governor was responsibie for the high speed of the| : pump. The night watchman gx-npnd‘“rhlte FI‘Ol’lt, 3l'd DOOI' his way through the room at 4 in From Main St. . souls."” the morning, until his hand struck Free Delivery Tel. 285 the Panama Canal Turbine Feed TPump Blade Wildly Killing Attendant. Flies Fitchburg, Aug. 11.—Frank Bou- vier, aged 47, was killed instantly at his work in a Parkhill manufacturing company mill here early yesterday when a blade on a turbine feed pump | broke through a half-inch iron cast- | ing, decapitated him and buried it- self in a steam pipe, flooding the room with steam. State inspectors sald Bouvier's Their destined home, the adven- turers say, is' about 500 miles from| the head of Bouvier, a few feet from the body. American Legion Field Day Berlin, Saturday, Aug. 19 Bascball, tennis, track events and band concert. Four-mile mara- thon from City Hall to grounds at 2 P. M. Dancing at Town Hall at 8 P. M. Admf{ssion 35¢ FOR SALE. Two new cottages in Belvidere. All improvements. Steam heat. Large 1ots. These cottages are in the course of construction and will be sold for about $4,600. Easy terms. H. J. FOIREN 140 MAIN STREET | PHONE 1700

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