Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
<ty 2 WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 1, 1922, —_—————— e e————————— ey b Al ' NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, m&* A ) |BANKRUPT SALENEWS| — - WORTH BROADCASTING e MEN ! —HERE IS SOME NEWS FOR YOU — FOR PEOPLE TO WHOM THE SAVING OF DOLLARS IS A MATTER OF INTEREST-OR NECESSITY - TO | THOSE WHO REALIZE THE TRUTH OF THE PROVERB “A PENNY SAVED IS A PENNY EARNED” THIS STORE ‘! THE NEW YORK SAMPLE SHOP “IS ACTUALLY CROWDED WITH REAL GENUINE BARGAINS—LOOK THEM OVER AND RUB YOUR EYES WITH AMAZEMENT — WE HAVE SAVED A 'GOOD MANY WISE MEN DOLLARS “NOT MERELY ONE OR TWO” BUT MANY. VERY MANY TO THOSE WHO HAVE MADE PURCHASES OF CLOTH- ING AND FURNISHINGS HERE. / THE THRILLING +%%: TREMENDOUS \vics I BankrurT | NEW YORK SAMPLE SHOP | BANKRUPT | SALE | = 357 MANST. BRISTOL STORE—135 MAIN ST. ‘SALE E—E . hfloo YOLYS IS ) J {3 [x) Agcuses Dead Preacher platform 'she walked behind, appar-|the ‘serious ilinéss of his wife from Saffff's statement was regarded & = % aln ector Of All Outdoors (3 “I wonder did his reverence know |ently pushing it. She was assisted in- | eating pcison cake have set out to|an indication that there is little = op- FATAL TO YOUTH i y when he had made the statement|to the baggage car and a moment la- [find the typewriter used to address|position in western conference official . i above referred to, that this pastor, |ter, when four baggagemen were hav- [the death dealing delicacy. sent| circles to further Inter-sectional PS5 < TSGR who, it is now claimed, maintained |ing a little trouble in getting the box|through the mails to the Sterett|games if played during the regulai only a friendly and ministerial inter-|through the door, she sprang forward [ home. season, # They have few clues upon which to work but the character of the type leads them to believe that they know the make of machine used. They al and assisted in the task. CASE UP T0 JURY est in the Carleton family, had writ- ten letters to Margaret Davenport, my wife’s malden name, and sent them cdre General Delivery? !l')etails Of Tragedy Incomplete Husband of Woman Suicide Said to Have Shot Him, Says From: Wall to Track—Hit ! ¢ By Engine. s the Bronx, just as an electric engine "' epproached. ¢ ‘The engine struck the body and tossed it to one side of the track, thé brakesigrinding sparks as John Rapp “Let it be well understood that in to state unqualifiedly and unreserved- ly that it is a fact that this preacher had led her to believe that he re- turned that love.” dramatic sermon to the jury, declar- ing that he shot his wife because of her indiscretions. on the commandment “thou shalt not Padrick closed his defense with a His text was based 80 believe that the person addressing University of Chicago Not Averse to Having Another Princeton Contest Next Year. TO REPAIR EVILS By New York, Nov. 1. — Twenty-two His Wife Had Admitted Ipve For C]ergyman.‘ making this statement I intend to the package was a novice for “the /. thousand volts, shooting through his cast not the- sHghtest reflection or|Fate of Elliot Padrick. Former| “touch” was irregular. The abbrevia- SR TR I T e #ody from a heavy feed line cable 2 condemnation upon my wife, for no| orerman, Who Killed Wife and tions “Penns” for Pennsylvania and | Fnglsh rg i A of the New York, New Haven & Hart one knows as well as'1 do the ‘in- 2 the mispelled street address ‘‘Berke- Wrongs Father's Money 3 4 % fluence which this man held over her| Mother-in-law, to be Decided Early|ley" for Berkley also are considered . ford R. R, instantly killed an uniden-| and which could reasonably be important although the ' authorities a8 Dok tified boy, about 15 years old, last termed hypnotic. Statesboro, Ga., Nov. 1.—The fate|admit that the person writing" the London, Nov. 1.—Mrs. Beatrice fiight and hurled his body from' the | “I have known of Margaret's love |of Elliot Padrick former minister|label may have done so with intent|Cadbury Boeke, daughter of Sff A8 ot ‘arataining wall ingo the railFoad | tor this man for several years, and|Who confessed the slaying of his girl|to deceive. George Cadbury, the wealthy cocoa 3 . x {1t is only fair to her that she con-|Wife and mother-in-law, Mrs. Mamie .manufacturer who died last week, at Tremont and Rosedale avenues; | fessed it to me. I will not further |Louis Dixon rested with a superior WILLING To CONTINUE GAMES does not believe in the capitalistic iviolate her confidence, but I do want|court jury today. system. She is giving her share of her father's fortune to the employees in His factories, to correct the evils of the system under which the for- tune was accumulated. Mrs. Boeke, one of six , children, of 55 Unlon Place, Newark, N, J., the il commit adultery.” inherits over 30,000 sharés ofistock is ' ¢ngineer, tried to stop the train. § :lialf a dozen playm?ate’fol the dead Widow's Lonely Vigil. Chicago, Nov. 1.—If Princeton b it ident Chicago, Til., Nov, 1.—Halting trom | , Defense attorneys introduced evl-| wyjing to continue football relations | in her - father's buslness ' These oy, the only wilnesses to the accident ; ‘cago. e "7:]‘.\ the,' & & Tl | dence tending to prove that Padrick | ith the “nig ten” and should pro- | Shares are estimated to be worth WearLlaas, ANC N © % Oib was insane at the time of the double 2 5 - $1,000,000. \ycried for help as they ran fromn the ! 2 i s hich she wore only partly conceal: pose another game next year, the pro- FHISH . PATRE killing and has been of unsound mind “every consldera- Sir George was the founder of the . - ,{;ene. Patrolman “Quinn, ‘of the e ot 3 estchester station, seeing the body ing the tired look inher eyes, Mrs. posal will receive o & of the boy beside the tracks, descend- Margaret Christler, widow of the Rev, | M8t of hisaife. In completing hls|(jon* by the Maroons, according to | Bourneville Model Village, where. Hils e oo ot Hwere, Mont. |charge to the jury last last night| ™) ‘Staze atnletic director of the | blant is situated, His daughter, in Judge J. B. Park gave instructlons| yiversity of Chicago. renouncing her inheritance, directs ‘. 'ed into the cut, Picking up a red lantern he carried it with, himsto sig-| ' nal any approaching trains that might approach. 4 that the Bourneville Village councils of men and women shall administer the estate to further education and public health, to develop better indus- last night again took up her vigil in the baggage car which is bearing the body of her husband east for burial. She has not slept since Mrs. Mar- that if there was any doubt of Pa- drick’s sanity at the time he com- mitted the crime he should be ac- Mr. Stagg expressed his attitude on future inter-sectional games when he learned of Yale's: invitation to Towa i ¥ Carrying the boy to the far side of + “4hd cut, the Patrolman telephoned for garet Carleton-shot the “bishop of all | duitted, but if there ilelied doubt, alt; play another game in 1923, “ansambulance. Dr, Levine responded outdoors” and. then committed sui-|8ullty verdict with or ‘without a rec-| “.wo are -willing to continue foot. | trial relationships and to help end ! from Fordham hospital and said the . leide. Mrs. Christier persistently re.| ommendation for'mercy should be re-|ya); reiations witn Princeton, ~Mr. | labor disputes. 'boy had been killed instantly by the fuses to rest. Since the coffin was|turned. Stage said “but in view of confileting | Mrs. Boeke and her husband live loaded into the baggage car of the| Padrick shot his wife and mother-| foports regarding the Yale-Princeton |in Holland. She says Boeke., ap- proves of her disposition of her for- in-law while the three were in an | automobile near here on Juné 18. He has not yet stood trial on the indict- ment charging murder of his wife . } and Harvard.agreement I would not care to take the lead in arranging for future contests. If the proposal " electric shock. The dead boy was feur feet 1 inch tall, ‘weighing’ 90 pounds, and had light brown half.and bfe eyes. He Oriental Limited at Havre it has not been out of her sight. Mrs. Christler left Havre with the tody three days ago. Despite the tune. Both believe money the root, of all evil, it it is in wrong hands, and that the present economic system should come from Princeton we would K ¢\ _gue difclosed a piece of paper on S SIREG OR Y, which w; written £George Winder, Episcopal church at Dearborn and G Cluhont ardhay.” | Gorie streeta e wee: Norman| SEBKING TYPEWRITER w The police said they thought the Hutton, pastor of the church, at- - S \ tempted to prevail upon her to rest, wore a blue hlack shoes an cloth cap. il Bearch of the clothing, when the "% pody was taken to the Fordham mor- boy had climhed to the top ef the 12- fopt retaining bridge over the railroad cut and dcci- { dentally touched the electric wire. GIRL’S VENGEANCE shirt,”* knickerbockers, d stockings and a dark wall from the street ’ REV. LEONARD CHRISTLER. the coffin. SENDS DAD TO JAIL ‘When Father Ousts Lover She Tells Police He is Escaped Life Convict. J Memphls, Tenn, Nov. 1.—“Turned “up” by his daughter because he ran % ot one of her sweethearts, Jesse (9" sanderson of Caruthersville, Mo., is B0 on his way to the Loulsiana state penitentlary after tasting the sweets of freedom fof nineteen years. San- derson goes back to serve out the re- mainder of a life sentence—a term broken only when he escaped, went north to a “new country” and re- habilitated himself “Twenty-one years ago Sanderson killed a man who, he said, had stolen a plough from him. In 1901 he gas gentenced to serve the remainder®of later | ¥ his natural life. Two years Banderson made a dash for ll|\tvr(.\'} He outwitted guards and dogs, | Saturday he was arrested in Car-| uthersville after his daughter, anger- e, had told the authorities who her father was and what he had done. Monday he was brought to Memphis and carried to the police station for| gafe keeping. Yesterday morning, in) custody of a Louisiana police official, | he stared on the trip to Baeton| Rouge Sanderson, since his escape, has reared a family, joined the church, and from his statement was, “eeptin’ fer occasional family troubl * doing | well. | The BandriProphaiactic Kt forMen | | EVENTIVE 3 Atfords Utmest Protection | | Tube 356, _KIt [said she did not have sufficient evi- Havre, Mont, Nov. 1.—(By Asso- ciated Press.)-—Unexplained details of the double killing of Rev. Leonard Christler, outstanding churchman and orator, and Mrs. Margaret Carleton, a member of his congregation, still. puz- zled authorities here toddy. Mr. and Mrg. Joseph Pyle of Butte, Mont., to- day took the body of Mrs. Carleton, | their daughter, to Helena, Mrs. Pyle| dence to demand that the case be re- opened bmt sald either she or Mr. Pyle would returfi here tomorrow to | centinue their investigation. | When'a coroner’'s jury Saturday night returned a verdiet the effect that Mrs. Carleton did the shooting while under the influence of an over- dose of sleeping powders, the matter appeared closed, but Mrs.. Pyle was not satisfied and started a further in- vestigation Within the past 24 hours it shawn that the bullet which killed Mrs, Carleton had been fired down-| ward, not directly in’ or upward as| had heen testified at the coroner's in- quest. Ownership of the pistol used in the killings is another mystery. . It was not Mrs..Carleton’s as far as is known. | Investigation thus far has failed to disclose that it was the property of the Christiers Mrs. Pyle also has claimed that diamond rings which Mrs. Carleton was seen wearing Thursday evening had not been found, | and has suggésted that if the rings were taken from Mrs. Carleton's hand after the shooting, the revglver might have been placed in the open palm at the same time. § AR 4 Wife Confessed Love. ,Los Angeles, Cal, Nov. 1.—Mrs Margaret Carleton, who with the Rev. | Leonard J. Christler was found shot to death in the Christler home at Havre, Mont., last ¥Friday, had - con- fessed her love for Dr. Christler fo| her husband, Frank E. Carleton, for-| mer judge of the distriet court at| Havre. Mr, Carleton declared last - IL was | night in a signed statement to The Associated Press. “I can no longer remain silent = in the face of the startling statement of Bishop Faber given to The Associat- ed Press that ‘I belleve as a result of the imvestigation I have made of the tragedy which occurred in the Christ- ler home early Friday morning and after questioning those who knew about it, that if this woman had been able to work her will on Mr. Christ- ler he would be alive today, unfaith- ful to his wife, but still living","” the statement said. “This attempt”to make it appear to the ,world that Margaret threw her- self upon this man and that he tried to remonstrate with her and lead her into a spiritual path has goaded me into' expression Stylish, Distinctive impettant factor in your personal appparance, Carelessly fitted, from" your looks. Adjusted with the precision that characterizes out sérvice, our glass- es will add distinction to your ap- pearance and bring real comfort to your eygs. We Welcome the Opportunity Serving You. A. PINKUS EYESIGHT SPEOIALIST 300 Main St. 'Phoné 570. thay detract fact that she had remained in the baggage car during the two-day jour- ney. she refused to be separdted from the coffin and rode in the ‘hearse whieh carried it to 8t. Chrysostom's but she refused and all Monday night and all day yesterday she sat beside At 5 o'clock when the Eoffin was taken into the Lasalle street station preparatory to being loaded on a New York Central train for Waterloo, N. Y., she was in close attendance, and as the truck was wheeled down the WALK- Novel modeling ofa two-strap pump Exceedingly fine .SHOE STORE i Philadelphia Police Tracing All Clues who declared in a letter to a friena that she had left her husband be- cause she found she “had married a crazy man.” in Emrr‘m Find Who Sent Poison Cake. Philadelphia, Nov, 1.—Detectives and postal inspectors seeking a solu- tion of the mystery surrounding the YES, indeed, it is plain and just as simple as the clever Walk-Over designers could make it; but in its shaping and poiseful looks on your feet it is supremely See it in fine patent death of W. W. Sterett of Devon, and e David Manning’s Uitk Cver 211 Main St. give it every consideration.” usually, puts it there, THE MAGIC | OF FURNITURE A house or a home—a good deal depends on the proper selection of Furniture and the furnishings of the rooms. Furniture is the medium that transforms cold space and bare walls into warm friendly surroundings. Our business is not simply to sell Furnitare, building homes. This doesn’t mean you wi We like to think of it as il Inive to spend a lot of money to furnish the new home. We have different grades of fur- niture but each is of thoroughly dependable quality. | It doesn’t pay to get anything but the best in furniture, 1f you buy good furniture at the start, you will always have it. The furniture you buy here today will satisfy yot just as much in the years to come as.it does now. Whatever you buy here is guaranteed to satisfy, that is always our first thought. C. C. FULLER COMPANY | 40—56 FORD STREET HARTFORD _Overlooking Capitol Grounds