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

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1922 Cross studies college and at the attended Holy finished his priestly ELNCITY MYSTERY (vorces v ae are ) " APPOINTED PASTOR gt i L . — - St. John's church In New Haven. At Friday, September 8, 1022 ke o the age of 23 years, he was appoint- | ed professor of Latin, Greek and Ger- WGI Selected to Succeed the Late Rev, man in St, Thomas' Seminary, Hart- Medford Hillside, ford. He remained there three years Family Refuse to Believe Youth,t:c0, »., m—Evening program: R e I Miss Amy Lowell, 0 ¢ I’ poet and author, will read choice 81, Batrick'y "N‘”m L R e ) Committed Suicide {passages from her own works. Music| The Right Reverend John G. | the bishop Mur- | ) : recital by Miss Maude MacIntosh, con- His excellefit work n that capacity, IS IT A VICTROLA? The advent of fall will prompt you to spend your evenings at home, and much pleasure is to be had when music is one of your chief entertainments. In contemplating buying a talking machine, it Mass. William Rogers as Head ot ray, auxiliary bishop of Hartford, Wil | Lrougnt him to the attention of the School Supplies School School School School BTATIONERY The Dickinson Drug Co. I 169-171 MAIN ST. Emrenees = { Supplies Supplies Supplies Supplies DEPARTMENT The Premier Outfitting Store of Connecticut Offers Exceptional Values For Tomorrow— DOLLAR DAY! SHIRTS ! Woven madras and white Ox- ford with and without collars. Values to $2.50. Dollar Day $1. A few dozen Foulard Bow Ties, $1 grade, . 2 for 31. Pure Linen Handkerchiefs, < 3 for S$1. Manhattan Soft Collars, values to50c ....... .... 6 for $1. One Lot !nflmnl Chain Cuft Links. regularly $1.50, $1. $3.00 Woven Madras Shirts. Dollar Day .... $1 off. $3 Italian Grenadine Scarfs. Dollar Day $1 off. One Lot of Caps, special $1. 95~ IumSmcl “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” City ltems A regular meeting of the Auxiliary of the W. this evening at hall. ing. Victrolas and Pianos, Henry Morans. —advt, Stanislaus Malineofski, of 148 Farmington avenue, escaped being struck by an automobile last evening | at the corner of Main and Myrtle | streets, only to receive a punch in the nose from the driver of the ecar. ‘When he saw that he was not struck, | Malineofski says that he accused the | driver of failure to sound his horn Thereupon, he received the punch on the nostril. He recorded the numher of the automobile in his mind and the police are investigating. Mr. and Mrs. Clifton Wilson en- tertained at a party at their home on Forest street last evening. Post season Closing, Lake Com- pounce, Sept. 6, 7, 8, 9.—advt. | Mr. Harry Indell of New York city | is the guest of her sister, Mrs. Dud- ley Walker of Roberts street. Sebastian Fomella, five years old, of 605 East Main street, was struck and | badly bruised last evening by an au- | tomobile owned and driven by Walter | J. Sorrow of 30 Maple street, Maple | Hill. The boy was removed to the local hospital, where examination | showed that he had suffered a frac- | ture of the leg. Mr. Sorrow re- ported the accident to the police, | who allowed him to go. He said | that he was driving east on East Main | street and upon approaching Olive | street, the boy ran into the path of | the car and was struck. Have The Herald follow you your vacation. 18c a week. with order.—advt. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Stanley of Forest street are enjoying a motor trip to Canada. Ladies’ | 0. H. will be )*_f'l 7:30 o'clock in Judd's A social will follow the meet- ROSENBLUTH MAY ATTEND Captain, Accused of Implication in | Major’'s Death, Due for Heaving Tacoma, Wash.,, Sept. 8.—Captain Robert Rosenbluth of New York, booked for a federal grand jury in- vestigation here this month. on a charge that he was implicated in the shooting of Major Alexander Cronk- hite at Camp Lewis on October 25, 1918, may come here for the inquiry, it was indicated in a telegram Rosen- bluth sent here to G. S. Malstrom, a | friend. | Rosenbluth in the message said he | had been refused permission to ap- pear before the grand jury. Herbert E. Anderson Teacher of Violin STUDIO 242 MAIN STREET | here yesterday. | was on a honeymoon trip. New Haven, Sept. 8,—A statement by Coroner Eli Mix today does not clear up the mystery surrounding the leath from a bullet of William Aug- cstonowitz, a Lithuanian, previously called Augustine, who was found in a lying condition on the Middletown bridge late Wednesday night. The facts which have been brought out in the inquiry are stated. They add little to what the police had previous- y said. When the lad was picked up the officers thought he had fallen in a fit and hurt his head. At Grace hos- pital a .32 calibre bullet wound was 4 in the temple and a .32 calibre bullet wound in the chest. There was no hole in the clothing. The lad died yesterday. The chest wound seemed to the surgeons an old one, The police found that the lad was of good habits, industrious and well liked Recently he left his employ- ment and went to a camp at Bantam lake under the guardianship of Fath- er Finn of St. Rose’s parish, this city. Wednesday evening he left home with a chum and during the evening walk- ed about with two girl friends. At 10:15 the chum went to Branford and the girls to their homes. Augustono- witz remarked to his chum on parting that he had a ‘“date” and departed in a different his home. An hour later an autoist found the lad on the bridge. No pis- tol was found at the time but yester- day an officer picked up a .32 calibre one at the bridge abutment One of the girls says the youth told her that while in camp he had been shot. S8he thought he was joking. Father Finn says he knows of no shooting incident 'while the hoys were in camp. The chest wound may have heen the one to which Augustonowitz referred. Death was caused, the sur- geons believe by the one in the tem- ple. The bullet probably came from the revolver picked up. The coroner closes his statement at this point. fou Some people are geniuses. One oe- casionally finds a cook who can make perfect desserts without Baker's Cer- tified Flavoring Extracts. All gro- cers.—advt. DEFENDS LEAGUE Earl of Balfour Makes Vigorous Pro- test Against Criticism Geneva, Sept. 8. (By Associated Press)—A defense of the leaguc of nations council against criticisms which have been directed at it was made by the Earl of Balfour at the opening of today's discussion in the assembly of the work accomplished by the league. The adverse criticisms of the coun- cll for its method of directing the ad- ministration of the Saar valley said the earl, were the result of intense propaganda being carried on not only in the Saar but even among the mem- bers of ths assembly, influencing the plebiscite in 1 the district. to be held | FIVE KILLED BY TRAIN. Sept. 8.—Four| Luxemburg, Wis., persons were killed instantly, another | at Bath, was fatally injured and died, in a Green Bay hospital and three were seriously injured when hit by a train Marion Lesnoka of Cedar Creek, Mich., killed instantly, WAS FAMOUS TWIRLER. Boston, Sept. 8.—Friends of Dr. lHaro]d S. Ernst prominent bacteriol- ogist who died yesterday at Plymouth recalled today that during his col- lege days at Harvard in the was one of the greatest pitchers who ever wore a Crimson uniform. He had the distinction of winning ten games from Yale from 1876 to 1879 inclusive. W LST MAIN ST. direction from that to | ith a view to Jagaln become threatening. to decide the sovereignty of | HATED BUNKMATE; KILLS SELF.! i of a dislike for a veteran of i icmmnnx CROSS OCEAN 70's he |land making the entire trip National Meat Stores Co. Largest Retailers of Quality Meats in America tralto, of Copley Club Singers assisted by Mrs. Vivian Frazer, Bellows, plan- WGY Gen. Elec. Co., Schenectady, N. Y 6:00 p. m.-—~Produce and stock market quotations; baseball results; news bulletins. 6:30 p. m.—"How the Whale Got His Throat” from Kipling's stories, Kolin Hager, reader. 7:40 p. m.—Health talk, “Measles" by Dr. Herman M. Biggs, New York state health department. 7:45 p. m.—Concert program fur- nished through the courtesy of Little Falls Post, No. 31, American Legion. 10:30 p. m.—Late musical program. WBZ Westinghouse Elec. Co. Springfield, Mass. 7:30 p. m.—Baseball scores. Wigglly Bedtime Story. 7:45 p. m.—"The Human Side of the Automobile” by Frederic D. Thompson, lubrication engineer of the Vacuum Oil Co. Fashion talk from Vogue. U. S government and state market reports. 8:00 p. m.—Basehall scores. Musi- cal program by Edith Toelken and Harold 1. Hudson, asisted by Mrs, Harold Hudson. MILLIONS CRYING FOR AMERICAN FOOD Uncle U. S. Investigator Finds Poverty is Appalling in Moscow and Vicinity Moscow, Sept. 8 (By the Associated Pr —The American Red Cross commission headed by Major Allen Wardwell appointed to investigate Russia’s famine needs for all the Am- erican charitable organizations has |arrived in Moscow to find millions of empty mouths crying for continuance of the American relief administration rations which have just been cut off. But at the same time reports indicate that the harvest will be sufficient to supply most Russians with food. Col, William M. Haskell chief of the American relief administration’s organization in Russia said work of | feeding was being rapldly reduced to care only for the most needy partic- ularly refugee children. Th Russian government has also ordered a reduction in its famine re- lief. Officlals say the problem of | feeding the hungry in the spots where th harvest s bad, has now become a | task of transportation as obviously, there is enough grain in the country. | Col. Haskell declares the program of medical relief is to be much ex- [tended as the typhus epldemic has 8—Because the Spanish-American war whose bed was next to his at the Soldiers Home near here, Frank Becker, | 81, of New York city, who served with the Union army throughout the civil war, is dead in the home hos- pital. He swallowed poison Tueqdayl night. H Rochester, N. Y., Sept. ALONE. New York, Sept. 8.—Phyllis Knight nine years old, of Chester, N. Y, and her brother Raymond, five, have re- turned on the Homeric from a holi- day with their grandmother in Eng- alone This is the second time she has act ed as sole escort and companion to her brother in a journey abroad. The | children were met at the pier by their lraren(& TELE- LEAN FRESH HAMS ARMOUR’S STAR HAMS PRIME RIB ROASTS 1b 28c 1Ib 32c¢ 1Ib 28c CHOICE NATIVE CHICKENS lb 42¢ CHOICE FRICASSEE FOWL Ib 29¢ PRIME SHOULDER ROASTS b 22¢ LEAN BONELESS ROASTS 1b 18c BEST BRANDS PRINT BUTTER —lb 44c Tel. 1322-5 ’S4 Com. Sun. -Days Only--4 66 succeed the late Rev as pastor of St. Ist. Hartford, He will assume his duties as head of one of the oldest in the diocese immediately, ment of his succession to held for so long by the Rev. was made at a month's mind mass in honor of Father | morning. Bishop Bishop of Flavias and auxiliary bishop of the diocese of Hartford at St seph’'s Cathedral, 23, February 286, from the Crosby Willlam Rogers Patrick's church in | entire clergy of the dlocese, so that when a successor to the late Bishop Tierney was to be appointed, his name was sent to Rome. During the late war, he worked un- ceasingly for the state council of de- tense and spoke for the welfare or- ganiz:xl‘on in their numerous drives. churches Announce- | the post Rogers, | Rogers FROST BITES ADIRONDACKS. Saranac Lake, N. Y, Sept. 8.—A blighting frost visited the Adirondack region last night. Late crops in many gardens were destroyed. It was the coldest night of the early autumn, the mercury well below freezing. yesterday | Murray was consecrated Jo- Hartford, on April 1920, He was born in Waterbury, 1877, was graduated High school there, SATURDAY SPECIALS "BAKING DEPARTMENT :‘Large Loaves of Wheat Bread 13 2 for 25c Coffee Cakes, Round and Square ........ Each | English and French Ib, 18c }BathBuns. inglish and French ........... 25c N THE CANDY DEPARTMENT _" We have stalted to make Our New Chocolates for the| | season—no left over goods. i New Chocolate Marshmallows ............ 45¢ 22c¢ ;Peppelmmt and Wintergreen Patties ...... lb. i Tl 0 L ORERE DELICATESSEN DEPARTME | Fresh Newport Sausage ........ Special at, Ib. 42 (o Russian ‘ Roasted Stuffed Chickens Salad o lb.35C | (2Y and 3 lbs.) | Roast Seotch i 85c Boiled Ox Tongue Chicken 5 .. each. C | Hams Ih. 45C Croquettes . 1.20c ‘F1e~h Native Fresh Hot Sauer {Butter:, ..o, lh.60c Kraut .... Moorland Farm Milk and Cream Store Closes at 6:30 P. M. - HALLINAN’S CHIC NOBBY SNAPPY FALL MILLINERY SEE OUR FOR VALUES Largest Variety in Town WINDOWS BEAUTIFUL DRESSY HATS All the latest styles and colors. and Special for Saturday ...... $4'95up FELT All colors, all styles. SPECIAL: . . . cvssssn s ironps SPORT HATS $1.98 FOR SCHOOL GIRLS $1.98 v HATS CHILDREN’S HATS $1.98 w oldenblum Millinery Co. 188 Main Street New Britain is well that you determine the make, price and service. The Victrola is the standard of the talking machine industry. No other instrument will give you the tone, durability and honest returns for your money, and it would be well for you to examine the merits of the Victrola thoroughly before deciding on your purchase. Our terms are quite moderate, giving you the advantage of possessing a Victrola at once while your payments are deferred for a liberal length of time. Our service is all that could be desired. “Promptness and Courtesy” is our watchword. BE SURE IT IS A VICTROLA HENRY MORANS JEWELRY MUSIC 365 MAIN ST. Directly Opposnte Myrtle DlStrlb!l‘Ol‘ of the Gulbransen Piano- Player CHAS. DILLON & CO. HARTFORD New Autumn Millinery in Splendid Array Colorful — Gay — Beautiful. And Best of all. Attractively Priced! READY-TO-WEAR HATS In duvetyn and velvet hats, all the new colors, $1.95, $2.95, $3.45. NEW FELT HATS Becoming sport shapes, in blue, Trimmed with smart feathers, ribbons, etc., $1.95, $2.95 and up to $9. SILK VELV. AND DUVETYN HATS TFor dress wear these hats are especially desirable. They are of the very latest style, with metallic, ribbon and feather trimmings, $3.95, $14.95, $5.95 up to $15.00. CHILDR HATS FOR SCHOOL WEAR Felts in two-tone e $1.45, $1.95. Plush in colors, trimmed with tassels and grosgrain, $2.45, NEW DRAPEP GOWNS—S$16.50 up to $45.00. Navy, black and all the new shades’of brown are included. They are trimmed with silk ta IMPORTED LISH TOP COAT $20.75. $35.00. These are ideal coats tor general autumn wear. They are in smart mixtures and warm, serviceahle materials. Ideal for motoring, and all out-of-door wear. brown, navy, black, white, etc. Renier, Pickhardt & Dunn 127 MAIN STREET PHONE 1409-2 OPPOSITE ARCH STREET 209, Discount on all Muslin Underwear For Three Days Only We offer all Musltn Underwear at 20 per cent off regular price. Now is the time to select your New Corset for Fall and Winter Wear. We are ready to supply your wants in any of the following makes: R. & G, Nemo, W. B,, Gossard and P. A. front lacing; C/B, Bon Toan, ‘Warner's, American Lady, La Resista, Fervis and Ideal Corset Waists, Treo Elastic Girdles and Girdlettes. Prices range from $1.00 to $12.00 pair. True Economy In Furniture does not mean furniture that is cheap, hut the best furni- ture at a reasonable pricg. The superior quality and design of Fuller’s furniture together with our moderate prices make an irresistible appeal. C. C. FULLER COMPANY 40-56 FORD ST. HARTFORD THE FAST MAIL” and Vaudeville

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