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WE HAVE JUST | RECEIVED \ ANOTHER SHIPMENT OF YOUR | Hard Candies The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN STREET With Christmas Only 3 Weeks Away It's time to secure your gifts. We're on time as usual with the finest array of gift wear- ables in Hartford. o o o SILK MUFFLERS STREET GLOVES ‘WOOL HOSE SWEATERS KNIT VESTS UMBRELLAS BSUIT CASES PAJAMAS SILK SHIRTS JRSFALLS ~99 um Street ‘Women's Shop 140 Trumbull Strect Hartford. NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, D 4 e e e e SI00300 CAMPAIGN 1S LAUNGHED T0DAY State Tuberculosis Commission Begins Drive fo Lower Death Rate The State Tuberculosis Commission, working in conjunction with the local tuberculesis units of the citles and large towns launched today a cam- paign to raise $100,000 to continue the struggle to eut down the death rate from that disease in Connecticut, Annually for 156 years, this effort has been made in this state and throughout the nation by the Christ- | mas Seal Sale, the oldest national| fight to be waged against my definite | disease. For several years it has re- | sulted in about $4,000,000 being raised | in this country, about $80,000 in| Connecticut whose per capita of about six seals sold is ene of the largest in the country. . This year the commission, which consists of Dr. Stephen J. Maher, | chairman; Arthur R. Kimball and Wallace 8. Allis, has perfected or- ganization plans for a total of $20,000 more than ever before, believing that cutting down of the number of deaths and the discovery of lurking cases in the state is one of the mest pressing health problems of the times, palgn agalnst tuberculosls, organized, the death rate from pulmonary tuber. culosis has fallen from 128 to 83, In 1011 there were 14568 deaths in the state, in 1921 only 1186, Similarly the campalgn has resulted in hun. dreds of cases in an Inciplent stage being discove Last year, for in- stance, 1136 rs were discovered dnd treated in New Haven alone, A corresponding number were cared for In other Connecticut cities and towns, Everywhere the campalgn has result- | ed in hundreds of eases being found in an Incipient stage, The early treat- ment which has thus bgen possible has not only saved hundreds of lives of tuberculosis sufferers, but has pre- vented the disease from spreading from the person affected to those in contaet with him in tenement, factory or school. The campaign to suppress tubercu- losis, as planned and carried out by the commission, has consisted of ganatoria treatment which is pro- vided by the state clinies in the prin- cipal cities and towns, tuberculosis nursing, open-air schools, material re- lief for patients and physical exam- inations for sufferers or suspects. The latter features of the campaign are made possible by the Christmas Seal Iund, 86 per cent, of which stays in the city or towns where it is raised, | the remainder being used by the| State Tuberculosis Commission and the Natlonal Taberculosis Association for their part of the campaign, Tuberculosis Clinics, During the past year tubercu- losis clinics have been maintained in the state by the commission, and tu- berculosis nursing by more than 40 In 10 years with a definite cam- nurses either part or whole time has POPULAR CONCERT AND OPERATIC», ¢ f Boris Godounow—In the Town of Kazin ' (Moussorgsky) Star of the North—Prayer and Barcarolle (L’Etoile du Nord=Priére et Barcarolle) /n French been financed through the Christmas Seal Fund, For the coming campaign the Em- ployees' Tuberculosis Relief Assocla- tion will, for the first time, conduct the sale in New Haven, and a simllar association will raise the fund for the first time in Bristol, In Hartford, the Hartford Tuberculosis society, of which Dr, Edward B, Hooker is chalr- mage has chosen the Rotary Club to (‘O*Cl the campalgn, This is the first®ime the Rotary club has directed the local sale in any Connecticut city, Last year Hartford led the state In its scal sale by about $1,600, Bridgeport the Visiting Nurse Asso- clation, of which Mrs, Elmer H, Ha- vens is president, will conduct the | eampalgn, 1,000 Workers Take Part. It is estimated that more than 1,000 workers aside from school chil- dren, will take an active part in the seal sale, which began today and will close on Christmas eve. More than 60,000 school children will be en- rolled among the canvassers. The campalgn will take the form of securing Individual contributors to the Tuberculosis fund of the different confimunities from persons especially Interested in the movement of a mail sale, which will be quite general, in which one dollar's worth of seals will be sent to possible purchasers of booth sales and sale by school chil- dren. The state headquarters of the cam- paign are the rooms of the commis- sion in the state capitol. Hubert M. Sedgwick is the state campaign director and Miss Mabel Baird, cam- paign secretary. Beniamino In| Feodor Chaliapin Kmelita Galli-Curci ECEMBER 1, 1922, ASSAULTS SPECIAL COP, 1S FINED $15 Belligerent Dancer Fined Upon Com- « plaint of Andrew Zemanski— Autoist Freed With Warning, Struck five timeg In the eye before 2,000 people, Andrew Zemanski, who is a special policeman at a hall_ on Gold street, complained to Sdper- numerary Policeman Walter Kozlow- ski last night and caused the arrest of Anthony Guido on assault charges. Anthony was fined $15 and costs. Guido had entered the hall with a young woman and proceeded to dance, Andrew claims a sign posted in ‘the hall prohibited dancing and he called ‘attention to that fact, mean- | while opening his coat and flashing | his special policeman’s badge. He as- Iserted that Anthony declined to ac- jcz-pt thisgas sufficient proof of |authority "and struck him five times (while the entire assembly looked on. |Dr. T, B. Rasquier attended the in- Jured man, The accused told Judge G, W, Klett |teday that he struck in self defense isince he thought that Andrew might hit him first, Tony Gabriel, a Wethersfield black- smith, was arrested by Policeman {John Liebler last night on Hartford avenue for lights, license and registration papers. Tony sald he broke the light several hours prior to his arrest and had forgotten the papers, Judgment was suspended. = B B 3 TS =3 = E] E3 H = E3 = Ed = Number Size Price 87349 10 $1.25 74784, 12 1.75 66102 125 . Gigli = his | driving without proper|@ SATURDAY SPECIALS Baking Department Large Home:made Bread 130, 2 for 250 New Baldwin Apple Pies 200 New Squash Pies . ...ioouiuviinirsniniiinen 250 Assorted Coffee Cakes .......covivveininnins 180 Assorted Bath Buns dounzsc i " In the Chncolgte and Bon-Bon Shop Assorted Cream Chofiolnk Walnut Caramels 400 1) ?lain Chocolate Caramels ................ 4OC mn ' Peppermint and Willlergreen Patties ...... 200 m Delicatessen Department Roast Fresh Pork Baked Scotch Ham Home-made Sauerkraut .................. 150 n Knockwurst .. 350 b Mettwurst , .. 406 b Roast Stuffed Baked Young Chickens Pork Pies 130, ‘2 for25c Potato Chips—Large Dill Pickles—Small Sour Pickles Imported Camembert Cheese in portions New Minced Stuffed h 3 0 C pint| oses At 6: .,3OCn> LINAN'’S Meat ...... Olives tore HAL CHAS. DILLON & CO. HARTFORD - Dillon’s Special Ladies’ Guaranteed Silk Hose, full fashioned, with lisle top and foot, in black and colors $ 2 ; 2 5 Ladies’ Silk and Wool Hose in gray, camel, brown and navy, with fancy clox, i allveifee b e $2°75 Silk and Wool Hose in plain and ‘with clox in brown, el 2 1 -$1.50 $1.00 pair LRSI RS S A Full line of Puré Silk Hoes in black, cordovan and colors; all sizes, at, ... ... Pair Serenade (Rimpianto) (Alfredo Silvestri-Enrico Toselli) Jn Jtalian Tell Her I Love Her So (F. E. Weatherly-P. De Faye) Go, Pretty Rose (Beverly-Marzials) Louise Homer-Louise Homer Stires On the Road to Mandalay (Rudyard Kipling-Oley Speaks) Reinald Werrenrath Don César de Bazan—Sevillana : (Fair Maidens of Seville) (Massenet) Zn French Nellie Melba MELODIOUS INSTRUMENTAL Fond Recollections (David Popper) Violin Solo Nocturne (Grieg) Piano Solo Secret of Suzanne—Overture (Woli-Ferrari) Salut D’Amour (Love's Greeting) (Edward Elgar) Violin Solo Hungarian Fantasie—Part I Piano and Symphony Orchestra * Arthur de Greef and Royal Albert Hall Orchestra Hungarian Fantasie—Part 1 Arthur de Greef and Royal Albert Hall Orchestra Hungarian Fantasie—Part III Fiano and Symphony Orchestra i Arthur de Greef and Royal Albert Hall Orchestra Arthur de Greef and Royal Albert Hall Orchestra 3 Victor Symphony Orchestra Victor Symphony Orchestra $ The Goldman Band The Goldman Band “It Pays to Buy Our Kind.” 66100 125 87580 1.50 - 74783 175 88662 175 Orville Harrold = = Renier, Pickhardt 127 MAIN STREET -t OPPOSITE ARCH STREET 7 o City Items 5 Guibransen Player Pianos, Morans. o —advt. % Clara Camp, R. N. of A, has moved % from St. Jean's hall on Church street to Junior Mechanics’ hall, Hungerford i Court. It will meet the first and third Tuesdays of the month. / Meet me at Schmarr’s for dinner.— { Headquarters for Girls' | Besse-Leland’s of course.—advt. ‘Worthy Temple, Pythian Sisters, . will meet in Judd’s hall tonight at 8 “.o'clock. All members of the degree team are urged to be present. Smart Millinery at Rothfeder’s.— advt. GIRLS HURT IN STAND CRASH. Broken Ankles and Bruises Result From Oollapse at Football Game. Melrose, Mass, Dec. 1.—Several hundred girls, the cheering section of Melrose High school, were thrown to the ground in a tangled heap of bodies when a temporary stand col- lapsed yesterday during the a foot- ball match between the Melrose and Arlington High school teams. Sev- eral girls had ankles broken and scores were cut and bruised. Melrose had just scored a touch- down when the collapse came, and the dancing about of the cheering girls was too much for the temporary structure. Police who investigated the accident said that the solid pack- ing of the stand saved the lives of many. The girls were all standing and came down feet first. What is a Birthday without a birth- day cake flavored with one of Baker's delicious flavoring extracts! Sold by grocers everywhere.—adv Dunn PHONE 1400-3 = 1.25 1.75 1.25 125 1.50 Mischa Elman Olga Samaroff Toscanini and La Scala Orchestra Efrem Zimbalist 66099 74785 66081 66101 55158 = (Quality First) EXQUISITE HANDKERCHIEFS * For Christmas Giving Now' Ready = E3 Coats. Ed 55159 1.50 For Your Inspection SILK HOSIERY (Always Acceptable to Milady) cre in all the wanted shades, Prices—8$1,00 to $4.50 a pair. . French Kid, Mocha or Chamoisette Gloves, Silk Lingerie, Woolen Underwear, Kimonos, Bathrobes, Leather Goods, Corsets, Jewelry, House Dresses, Silk Petticoats, Make Your Christmas Gift a Use- ful One, T Hungarian Fantasie—Part IV Magic Flute—Overture—Part 1 Magic Flute—Overture—Part 11 Chimes of Liberty March Sagamore March CHRISTMAS RECORDS Creation—With Verdure Clad Elijah—Hear Ye, Israel Christians, Awake, Salute the Happy Morn - Witk Woadwind Choir, Organ and Chimes Trinity Male Choir Watchman, Tell Us of the Night W:tk Woodwind Choir, Organ and Chimes Trinity Male Choir Santa Claus Tells of Mother Goose Land—Part 1 Gilbert Girard Santa Claus Tells of Mother Goose Land—Part 11 Gilbert Girard LIGHT VOCAL SELECTIONS Mnri', Dear While the Years Roll By Yankee Doodle Blues Childhood Days When You Long for a Pal Trail to Long Ago Hot Lips All for the Love of Mike DANCE RECORDS Toot, Toot, Tootsie! (Goo’bye)—Fox Trot Do 17—Fox Trot Blowing Bubbles All Pay Long—Fox Trot (From ‘‘Better Times”;‘l i} Just As Long As You Have Me—Medley Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra (From *‘The Gingham Girl’’) Carolina in the Morning—Fox Trot Cow Bells—Fox Trot Lovely Lucerne—Waltz (Yodel Chorus) Romany Love—Fox Trot SPECIAL ISSUES DURING NOVEMBER Three O’clock in the Morning Nellie Kelly, I Love You (From “Little Nellie Kelly’) American Quartet You Remind Me of My Mother (From ‘“‘Little Nellie Kelly’’) Henry Burr Tomorrow—Fox Trot The Great White Way Orchestra You Gave Me Your Heart—Fox Trot ‘The Great White Way Orchestra I Wish I Could Shimmy Like My Sister Kate—Fox Trot The Virginians Gee! But I Hate to Go Home Alone—Fox Trot The Virginians Homesick—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra All Over Nothing at All—Fox Trot The Great White Way Orchestra jast night. The woman said she sk sight e woman it she Victor Talking Machine Company, Camden,N, who answered the description of UL James Martin, who are under arrest = — = in Columbus for the crime. EIE 18951 18952 e TE E3ES Lucy Isabelle Marsh Lucy Isabelle Marsh 55178 18958 18953 3k TEE 3 b3 e & 18955 18959 18961 18967 _dna Brown-Elliott Shaw Billy Murray-Ed Smalle American Quartet Lewis James Lewis James-Elliott Shaw Miss Patricola Miss Patricola 3 e ' DO YOU KNOW what Cherry Bark will do for your cough? ... If you want a cough medicine that will relieve you and ;vxlé'noz upset your stomach, you should try our pleasant~ asting ’ REXALL CHERRY BARK COUGH SYRUP . We guarantee this Cough Syrup to relieve you, andwe will return your money if you are not satisfied with the results. 25 and 50c the bottle CANDY SPECIALS FOR SATURDAY Nougatine ............. Cherries in Cream . Peppermint Patties . Saturday Candy vr 39 b Chocolate Fruit Fudge ... V5. vl s vy GBI WEEK-END PANTRY SPECIALS . Opeko Coffee ......... vvees 2for 52¢ Opeko Tea ...... .. 2 for 5lc Symond Inn Cocoa .. .. 2 for 26¢c Symond Inn Chocolate . .. 2 for 26¢ Chocolate Pudding .. 2 for 16¢c Extract Lemon .. .. 2 for 4l¢ Extract Vanilla cieeiiaeses 2 for 36¢ Clark & Brainerd’s Drug Store 181 MAIN STREET E I3 X E EIE 3 The Benson Orchestra of Chicago The Benson Orchestra of Chicago Paul Whiteman'and His Orchestra 18954 FE 3] E3 18960 E3E 353 EH = Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Zez Confrey and His Orchestra The Great White Way Orchestra Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra WOMAN REVEALS FUGITIVE. 18962 18966 = E3 .. 39c b .o 49c oo 39 b = Fourth of Alleged Columbus Murder Bandits Caught in Cleveland. Cleveland, Dec. 1.—A man giving the name of Frank W. Willis, aged 28, said to be the fourth member of the gang which early Tuesday ‘shot two policemen, one fatally, in Co- lumbus, was captured here yesterday and held on charges of first degree murder. He denied he was in Co- lumbus or that he was implicated in the shootings. A woman who told detectives she had been living with Willis said that she had not seen him from Monday morning until Wednesday evening. She was held as a material witness. The couple were taken to Columbus 1 % 1 S Jo‘ McCormack 66109 18957 18964 18965 18963 =: 10 10 10 10 = E3 = =: DI Y £ * F e MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY e~ PRISCILLA DEAN in “UNDER TWO FLAGS” PROGRAM “Garnival of Happiness™