New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 17, 1922, Page 24

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F 4 & Y 4 NEW BRITAIN DAILY 'HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1922, 4 i 'm INST Au NEW HAVENS BORROWED | Brief News Dispatches From all Over the World|i iore protesting aguinat revorted [HERMIT MURDERED, |, Fve Sttt Smee i e | 3 BEFORE LEAVING : Swiney by Trigh, privets DOGS GUARD GOLD| Jia suuet Bio%koiva tram phss. i P'remier Mussolini snaps the whip| ,Notable mark of British elections 18 Legal re [‘"..;“M"”‘ of natiofal 4. e ing peddlers, always roturning fto the house, nelghbors said, money to pay them, Ihefore Ttallan parliament and warns the his opponents that fascisti government has come to stay. apparent change of sentiment toward candidates of pacific principles who were rejected in patriotic wave o grunge at Wichita, Kas, opposes pro. to get posed consolidation of Armour and Morris concerns, y SWEI]'SH PAST"R Missing Bridgeport Broker Visited Police Have to Shoot Animal to Get . ,tors of the local churches wilt sy Exercises for Dr. Abel Abiquist Rev, Dr, Abel Ahlguist, newly ap- pointed pastor of the Swedfsh Luther. an church, will be formally installed a8 pastor at a program In the church REV. DR. ABEL AHLQUIST, next Wednesday evening. The exer- cises will open at 8§ o'clock. The principal speaker of the occa- sion will be Rev. S. G. Hegglund, of Boston, Mass.,, who is president of the New England conference, Mr. Hegg- lund will be assisted by the pastors of the Hartierd district. Joint Services Planned. Sunday afternoon there will be a combined service at the new Chil- ‘dren's Home of Rev. John 1. Kiing- ‘berg. The services will be held .in the auditorium of the Home and will; commence at 3:30 o'clock. They willl .continue into the evening. The pas- pak and the Swedish Lutheran choir will ender solos. Following the services,; ‘refreshments will bhe served and a| . general examination of the new home will take place. | | had posted securities valued at §7,000, Bank Before Leaving City, It Is Learned, 17 —James H/ for whom tife country-wide Bridgeport, Nov. Havens, stock broker, police are making a search sinee his Jisappearance two weeks ago leaving obligations — esti- mated at 1,000, obtained a loan from the National Bank of City Nridgeport just before his departure, The amount of the loan, for which Havens posted securities with the bank as collateral, has not been de- termined but the fact that he had ruised the money was disclosed stoday when a hearing of creditors was heid hefore Referee in Bankruptey John | Keogh. Because Attorney George K. Mara, representing more than 80 per cent, |of the Havens creditors, was unable [to be present the hearing will be con- tinued for a aveek, Referee Keogh decided, however, to allow testimony of those who were present so that they would not be inconvenienced, Attorney Henry G re- celver for the estate, d that he had learned from A, A. Houseman and Co., whose correspondent Havens was, that his obligations with fhat company were $12,038, and that he | Mr. Greenstein stated that he had also I learned of the loan which Havens i geciffed at the bank but the bank de- . clined to give information unless or- { dered to do so hy the court. Referee Keogh suggested that bank officlals be summoned to next week's hearing. MEXICAK BANKS situation Not Nation-wide and No Moratorium Is Sought, Huer- ta Says. Vera Cruz, Nov. 17..—The closing of the Banque Francaise de Mexique and the Eulalio Jtoman with branch of- fices here has given rise to a run on the other local banking institutions. The banking house of Viya Broth- ers, founded in 1870, yesterday sus- pended payment because ofea short- age of cash, after paying out about 500,000 pesos. Mexico City, Nov. 17, (By Associat- Drive Nets $9,000 The drive for funds for, Upsala col- lege, which has been under way in ‘this city for the past week, will come to an end tomorrow evening. The ‘committee in charge reports $9,000 ‘already subscribed. There was no quota allotted for this city and the amount raised is considered cxcellent. | It is expected, however, that this sum ‘will be increased considerahly betore | the drive ends tomorrow and the com- ed Press).—The bank failures of the last few days are not significant of an economic crisis of a general character and should cause no alarm in com- mercial circles, according to Secretary of Finance de la Huerta. He decries sensational reports of impending further failures, expressing the belief that business in general will proceed along normal lines. His statement was in response to frank dictions by the newspapers of fur- . TROUBLE || 1018, Analysis of British election shows that Lloyd George has been hit a smashing blow and that his downfall I8 outstanding result of vote, | Former premier has consolation of seeing son, Major Lloyd George re. turned to parliament by substantial plurality, Morris One communist elected to British parlfament from ‘Lanarkshire, provemn Lady Astor says signs of The time|mal point to drastic liguor legislation in Great Britain, . ganlzing cabinet to undertake Ger- many's economic reconstrugtion along non«partisan lines, 389 MAIN STREET NEXT TO MOHICAN MARKET Secretary Weeks tells Willlam Graves Sharp, former am |bassador to I'rance, reported serious- Iy 11l at his home in Ohlo, - Governmegt ofclals delay deciston on proposed meérger of Armour packing companies. nent copférence at Willie Hoppe wins second victory in championship biliard tournament de- Wilhelm Cuno gets down to job of or- |feating Welker Cochran, 500 to 160, Head of American Association for Saturday, Nov. 18, at 9 a. m. NEW BRITAIN, CONN. IF ECONOMY IS THE QUESTION HERE IS THE ANSWER The Buying of Shoes in a New Way THIS STORE IS A GENUINE SELF-SERVICE SHOE STORE, WHERE YOU, THE PUBL!Cé CAN SAVE BY OUR SELF - SERVICE SYSTEM $1.00 TO $3.00 PER PAIR ON YOUR SHOES b and racial Washington e i that about 50 per cent of men called in the draft were physically subnor- im- Prof. Bullock of - H&fvard says ‘methods used in collecting federal in- come tax here made American people n nation of Hars, Pancho Villa, Filipino holder of American flywelght title, goes out of his elass and defeats Abe Goldstein, New York bantamweight after 15 rounds at Madison Square Garden, GOING TO PERSIA, Rev, D, J, Benjamin of Kensington for the past four years working for the interests of the Near kast Rellef, plang to return to Persia. Rev, Mr, Benjamin recently sold his home, He plans to go to New York where he wlll gpend some time with a relative and then go to Indiana to visit his Recognition of Irish Republic cables | son. —————. Into House Occupiéd by Old Man, New City, N, Y.} Nov, 17.—Farmer folk of Rockland county were stirred by the death in Nysok hospital of Gustavus 1. Smith, sixty-one, found unconsclous Wednesday in a barn on his farm at the foot of Haverstraw mountain, his skull fractured with a hilllard cue, The conditien of his clothing indicated a terrific struggle. The elderly man lived like a her- mit, seldom leaving his house, which réighbors sald was guafded by two ferguious dogs, County authorities belleve thut tales of hidden wealth on the farm, which he had occupled fifteen years, led to the attack. A deputy sheriff who went to the farmhouse to investigate yesterday shot both dogs. ‘Opening the Self-Service Shoe Mart | MOHICAN MARKET LONDONERS REVEL, English Markets Are Flooded With 'ruit to Joy of the ConsuMer, London, Nov, 17.—As a result of huge shipments of fruit to London from Furope and Houth Africa, the | Bnglish markets today are 'flooded und, to the foy of the con er, the frult 18 being sold at pricéd consid. erably lower than pregwar, Algo they are 1ess by half of what they were & fow days ago, Although there has heen a good market the surplus is still enormous, and large wastage 18 foared unlegs the forelgn shipments are curtailed, The harvest of fruit in Kngland I8 estimated to be the largst n o decade, and the quality 1s excellent, e 389 MAIN STREET NEXT TO We buy in large quantities direct from the manuf:ac,turer, Cur Overhead ¢- penses are much smaller. We do not have any fancy fixtures. Our bus- EEC_AHS_E_:_ ness is done on volume basis. . —HERE ARE-SOME GENUINE BARGAINS — LOOK THESE PRICES OVER, THEN CALL AND BE CONVINCED * Starting at 9 /.. M. Saturday —Plenty of Shoes of Different Grades and Styles * v ol e g'e':efhé’sl'é'ff;‘d'f..,',‘.’{““"" to going | A Meulties following the closing i L of the Banque Irancaise de ‘lrx‘mu&-., i & N the Kulalio Roman, a Spanis nsti- : AUTHOR A SUICIDE. tution with branches in several cities, 4 New York, Nov. 17.—Prof. Hayman |and the Milmo, a private bank at - Yaffe, Hebrew scholar and author of | Monterey. . _ several books, committed suicide to-‘ A moratorium is not being consid- 'éflfly by inhaling gas in a furnished |ered according to information from f;raom. He was 56 years old. | ofticial sources. MODERN BOOT SHOP FallOxfordsand Chic Pumps At Attractive Prices _for This Saturday Patent-Colt Colonials New Spanish heel = Thousands of Pairs WOMEN'’S FELT SLIPPERS All Colors $1.50 Values - 84c R BOYS’ SCHOOL SHOES All Solid Leathers $3.00 Values $1.89 WOMEN’S BOUDOIR SLIPPERS Black Kid Leathers with Pom-Pons $2.00 values 98¢ Infants Black and Tan LACE and BUTTON SHOES $1.75 Values 98¢ One lfot, of' Children’s TAN SKUFFERS $2,50 Velues $1.59 One Big Lot of CHILDREN’S SHOES Black and Tan $2.50 Values $1.49 Mahogany and Blaey Calf ——— e e} Brogue' Oxfords WOMEN’S BLACK and MEN S' BLACK and Hand sewed TAN OXFORDS BROWN CALF, ENG- LISH and BLUCHERS Goodyear Welts $5.00 Values . $2.98 MEN’S FELT SLIPPERS $1.25 Value . 19¢ With Rubber Heels, Calf Leathers; $5.00 Values _$249 Black Satin—Patent-Colt— Strap Pumps Low and Baby Louis heels. 3.95 CHILDREN'S BOOTEES $1.25 value 79¢ SMART NOVELTY FOOTWEAR ———————— T T R e SR et Cogitats SPECIAL WOMEN'S BLACK MEN'S BLACK AND SPECIAL Patent Oxfords and 200 PAIRS WOMEN'S|| | SATIN STRAP PUMPS e hii 100 PAIRS CARPET Strap Pumps RUBBERS Junior and Louis Heels. Bahber Hoelh - ' SLIPPERS with grey suede combination Heavy Black Satin Strap Pumps with brocaded back. Patent Colt Cross Strap and Large Tongue Colonials $4.95 Pair LADIES' RED CROSS and For Men and Women 27c All Styles $5.00 Values $2.49 $6.00 Valués __$3.98 RPN - MEN’S TAN CALF ARMY SHOES ‘ i # Goodyear Welt Indestructible Soles Rubber Heels $3.00 Values $5.00 Values . $1.95 | $3.98 200 Pairs MISSES'and CHILD'S TAN LACE SHOES High Cut, Rubber Heels, $3.00 Values $1.79 |/ MEN'S TAN SCOUT SHOES WOMEN'S FINE GRADE FANCY STRAP PUMPS and OXFORDS All Leathers $6.00 Values B WOMEN’S HIGH LACE S8HOES Black and Brown Kid Leathers. All style heels; $5.00 Values $2.98 MENS HIGH GRADE BLACK ANP TAN SHOES and BROGUE OXFORDS $6 and §7 Values $4.49 100 pweic swors n wien. 7 69 §9.00 value Red Cross Shoes Dr. Kahler’s Corrective Shoes for fallen arches MODERN BOOT SHOP 168 MAIN STREET 389 MAIN STREET NEXT TO MOHICAN MARKET for tender feet 339 MAIN STREFT NEXT TO MOHICAN MARKET “The Home of Wonderful Barga;'ns” Save $1.00 to $3.00 on Your Shoes

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