New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 5, 1922, Page 9

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e e BOWLING RESULTS ONLGAL ALLEYS (Continued from Preceding Page) Glllette Behenk J. Todjin Clagkson . orbla ralo E. Todala . Hunter Yarmer Nightingnbe Usher .. DPummy, 368 381 Reginters, Poasky §5 104 91 280 Haoon B 08 Bl 267 Londin AL T 71— 228 Genotte 60 77 86— 231 Vrigo 94 86 86— 260 41741 1072 Middlaton Carlson . chlleker .. Kallerman Olson. . TAFNIR'S LEAGUE, ngineers, Hewett v 820 84 84— 850 Ellagon .81 95 83— 250 Corbin ... 5 70 §2— 268 Wakesles .. 92 92~ 265 Nelson 87 92— 74 14437 443 Turning Dept, Munich ... .95 % S0 Havlick S0+ A5 88 Anderson JORE TN TN T ¥z ... £6 n on Blawehard 108 94 115 408 AB] 4481367 g SPECTAL. MATCH. Tuming Dept. Nunieh | 102 1] Murphy . 7, Hayilick 82 Anderson . ki 85 Felz R, Stewart J. Hypham . M. Lipitz . ¥. Linn J. Snedeker DRINK WATER | KIDNEYS HURT Take a tablespooniul pains or Bladder of Salts if Back bothers Teoo much meat may produce uric adld, gays a' well-known authority, who Wwarns us to be constantly on guard against kidney trouble. The kidneys do their utmost to free the blood of this.irritating acid, but § become weak from the overwork; they get sluggish; the @lbninative tissues clog and thus the waste is retained in the Dblood to poison the entire system. When vour kidneys ache and fecl like lumps of lead, and you Imve gtinging pains in the back, =~ or the uriné is cloudy, full of sediment, or the blad#®r id irritable, obliging you to seek reliéf during the night; when you have severe headaches, nervous and dizzy spells, sleeplessness, acid stomach or rheumatism in bad weatHer, get from your pharmacist about fqur ounces in Jad Saits: take 2 'tablespoonful in a glass of water be- fore breakfast each morning, and in a few duys your kidneys may act fine. This famous salts is made from the acld of grapes and lemon juice, com- bined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys, to help the acids in urine so it is no longer a source of irritation, thus often end- ing urinary and bladder disorder. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot injure, makes a delightfyl effervescent lithia water drink, and nobedy can make a mistake by taking a little oc- casionajly ta help to keep the kidneys clean and active. Drink plenty of water at all THE VWIVE Car In Front CHRISTMAS MORNING ONLY $50.00 DOWN Every Member Will Be Happy Where ¢éan you spend and what can you buy for $50 that will MAKE THEM ALL SO If you place your order NOW we will arrange to have SANTA CLAUS deliver the or Christmas_morning, but we must know at once as SANTA. cannot get around to all who, will want one. Speak quickly. ° v There was never a Christm could be bought for $50 dow! Elmer Automobile Co. 22 MAIN ST. We Operate Eleven Stores—Open Evenings 2 lagainst his client, and Judge Shenk 1| psychopathic ward of the county hoa- ?laided b neutralize | OBENGHAIN CHARGES DROPPED BY COURT Arthur Burch and Woman Freed " 0f Murder Counts- Los Angeles, Dec, b.—Indictments ikainst Arthur C. Burch and Mada- Iynne Obenchain, charged with the murder of J. Belton Kennedy, young Los Angeles broker, were diamissed yesterday by Judge John W, S8henk on motion of District Attorney.Thomas lee Woolwine, Mr. Woolwine moved dismissal of the indictments on the ground of insuficient evidence, Paul Shenk,. attorney, for Bureh, then swore out an insanity complaint directed that he be committed to the pital for observation, Will Leave Jail, | The court's action left Mrs., Oben- chain free to leave the county ’fail, whiech she announced she would do immediately. '/She sald that she planned to leave Los Angeles, but did not -intend to go very far away. She declared she would not return to Chicago, her home at the time of {the Kennedy slaying. | Mrs. Obenchain was arrested here in August, 1921, after she had reported that Kennedy had been slain at his home in Beverly Glen, where she had accompgnied him. Kennedy was killed by the charge from a shotgun. | Burch was taken off an ecastbound train at Las Vegas, Nev. a few days later and was returned here for trial. The staté's theory was that Burch| [killed Kennedy, with Mrs, Obenchain's ' connivance, ! | Ralph R. Obenchain of Chicago, di- vorced husband of -Mrs. Obenchain, her defense in her first trial. Burch's parents, the Rev. W, A, Burch | and Mrs. Burch of Evanston, 1M, ; moved here to be.near him. | Both defendants refused to admit | any connection with the slaying, Mrs. [Obenchain proclaimed her innpeence. | Burch remained silent Tried Three Times, Burch was tried three times, an in- anity detense being the chief ele- ment of the case, All juries disagreed. Mrs. Obenchain was tried twice. I;nlhi juries disagredd in her trials also. The prosecutions were promoted by Kennedy, father of the slain NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DEUCEMBER 5, 1922, Feel Wca,_ Tired, “All Played Out?” Does the least exertion tire you out? Do you feel “blue” and worried, suffer dragging backache, headaches and dizziness? Too many women blame go-called “female trouble” for this unhappy state instead of weak kidneys, which so often are the causé, You must act quickly to prevent more | serious trouble, Use Doan's Kidney Pills, They have helped thousands of wenk, tired women, They should help you. Ask your neighbor! A Case in New Britain Mrs, H. I". Blomquist, 280 Maple St., says: "I have had kidney disorder and suffered with sharp twinges of pain through the small of my "back. My kidneys were too frequent in ac- tion and I had a tired feeling in my back. After I used a few Doan's Kid- | ney Piils, I/ was ull right again.” DO AN KIDNEY PILLS 60¢ at ¢ll Drug Stores Foster-Milbum Co. MigChenButialo,NY. Joseph Hycofski last night on Grove | street for drunkenness and breach of| the peace, after his wife complained that her eye had been blackened when her husband came home drunk. He was placed on probation to Decem- ber 23, Lawyer M. A. Sexton, representing | Raymond = toote and Lawyer 1. I Rachlin, appearing for Paul Moreau, were granted continuances to Saturday | morning in charges of theft of an automobile from William McKenna. Policeman W. P. Doherty arrested | Albert Anderson on Main street, last| night, on a drunkenness charge. Wal- ter Piskowski was arrested on Myrtie | street, by Policeman Thomas Lee, and Michael Grady was picked up by Po- liceman Hanford Dart on Iast Main street, also charged with drunkenness. | Tudgment in their cases was suspend- man. Both defendants have been in jail gince a year ago last August. During| much of that time Burch has been| |employed dn the office of the county; |iall as a typist and accountant, | Mrs. Obenchain was held in the |women's ward and occasionally took | the limelight because other prisoners compiained {hat by the use of money | from relatives she supplied herself with the services of a prisoner maid, ' with extra foods and special comforts, | BOGASH DEFEATS GANS New York, Dec. h.—I,0u Bogash of | Bridgeport defeated Ttallan Joe Gans | in.a twelve round bout at the Broad- way Exhibition association, Brooklyn, |ast night. | |FAILED TO AID WIFE, | IS BROUGHT TO BOOK i Parkiniak Celebrated “Chicken Day” | and Forgot to Save Out Enough for Family. l | Because the factories clésed down on what he termed ‘chicken day,” |last week, Joseph Parkiniak explained | as much money as other {weeks, He ~was arrested for.non- support. Joseph was before Judge B.| W. Alling this morning and pleaded not guilty. Mrs. Parkinlak told ! Prosecutor J. G» Woods that she has, received little from her husband dur- ing the past six weéks and nothing ! at all last week. | Thanksgiving day being a holiday {his. wife | with its attendant drinking on ipart of Joseph, he was léft in such | a financial condition that he was un- | able to contribute to the support of his wife and family,, the court was informed. f A fine of '$10 was imposed and a |20 day jail sentence was suspended, | |the accused being placed on proba- tion. Policeman Walger Malona arrested RSAL CAR of Your Door of Your Family HAPPY? ; car the day before Christmas as in history where a FORD n. Pioneer Ford Dealers TEL. 1513 in court today he was unable to give |B the (¥ ed. Charles Gorman, liceman John O'Keefe on street, was fined $10. his third ‘appearance in months. arrested by Po- Lafayette | Gorman made | as many | MAY PLAY ON COAST Spokane, Wash,, Dec. 5. lenge for a football game Diego on Christmas Day was received | by Gonzaga University.of Washington, D. C. While declaring that Gonzaga was willing to accept the challenge, Coach Clares ¥. Dorais said' it was a matter for the San Diego Recreation and Athletic elub to decide upon, and forwarded the telegram there. The San Diego organization had extended a proposal for a game between Gon- zaga and Notre Dame, but the latter | from the hard coal regions. school rejected it, | Roalty Honors Fall Hroes King George, the Prince of Wales and the Duke of York are shown here paying their respects to the memory of the British dead at the Armistice Day cerem SHOVEL FREE GOAL FROM THE RIVERS Lucky Pennsylvanians Secm‘ej * Fuel Without Any Charge Harrigshurg, Pa., Dec. 5-~The coal problem this winter is one only of strong arm muscles and a vehicle— wheelbarrow, ho, and wagon, br motor truck-—for some of those Pennsylvanians whose homes are on the banks of streams which flow Riyer-coal—so-called because it is found in the beds of these rivers the solution. The coal, in the form of small particles, finer than the| grade known commercially as buck- | wheat, has been used for years, large- ly by manufacturing plants, but the fear of shortz<e this year has in-| creased houschold consumption, and! many persons living along the streams | in which it is found are gathering their’ own supply with the use of a shovel and a cart or automobile for transportation. Product Of Culm | The coal is mainly the product of eulm or refuse banks in the vicinity of mines further up the streams. It is faynd in the Lehigh, Schuylkill and Susquehanna rivers down which it} s | is Ll Wonder Clothes Shop Retiring From Business During the seven y#ars we have been doing business in“New Britain we have never before offered our merchandise at Sale Prices. Being manufac- turers and always selling our own product direct to the wearér we have saved vou at all times at least $10 on every garment. Now We Are Offering Our Entire onieg in London. ~has been washed in the years since anthracite mining was begun in Pennsylvania, In mamy sections of thege rivers beds several feet thick have crusted, but commercial dredg- ing and pumping operations combin- ed with greater conservation on the part of mining companies is reducing the supply. Householders who have gathered their own winter fuel from the riv- Out Goes All Rheumatic Poison Rheuma Acts on Kidneys, Liver and Bladder the Very First Day. Get a bottle of Rheuma today and wear a satisfied smile on your face tomorrow. Tt's a remedy that is astonishing the whole country, and it's just as good for gout, sciatica, lumbago and kidney misery as for rheumatism. It drives the poisonons waste from the joints and muscles—that's the secret of Rheuma's success. But we don't ask you to take eur word for it; Ro to Clark & Brainerd Company or any good druggist and | get a bottle, and if it doesn’t do as| we promise get your money back. It vill be there waiting for you. - $27,000 Stock of NEW FALL AND WINTER uits and Overcoats At 25% to 50% Reductions Which means you will be able to buy Two Suits or Overcoats for the price other retai! stores charge for one, OUR STORE OPEN EVERY EVE during this sale G Wonder - Clothes Shop 396 MAIN STREET ers have found the coal frequently in eddies near the shore, where it has been necessary only to shovel it outl: One man, living near the Susquehan- na in the vieinity of Harrisburg, has obtained a complete winter supply at only the cost of transportation, Com- merclally the coal sells for-about $3 a ton. Forced draft s required for its use in household furnaces, and when so used it produces, it ls sald, a8 much or more heat than the grades commonly sold for household use, More than a half-million tons of river coa), valued at neanrly $700,000 were recelved from the Schuylkill, Susquehanna and Lehigh rivers in commercial operations during 1021, state reports show. MOESNOTHAETD THE PITSE Frutatves” Brought Complete Rellef Asayorp, Nzw Y I tried several kinds of physie over three years and, of course, Itook it every night my bowels 3 move; but as soon as I IWM' taking physic, I would be Constipse ted and would have Piles terribly, 1 bought one box of “‘Fruit-a-tives”® and took them. Now I am nok troubled any more with Constipation or Piles. “Frult-a-tives or “Fruit Les Tablets” left no after-effocts and now I ELECTIONS IN MASS, Boston, Dec. 6,—~A new city made its formal appearance today when Gardner held its first municipal elec- tion. There are now 30 cities in Massachusetts of which 20 selected their city governments today. The first municipal campaign in Gardner has been hotly waged, the candidates for mayor without party designations| donot have to use phyalo". being Chester P, Pearson, proprietor P ¢ of a department store and Nelson Mrs. JOHN CAPom' Beaudette, a barber, who has been a | 50c & box, 6 for $2.50, trial sise 256 selectman of the town for six years. The population of Gardner in the 1920 census was 16,971, The other cities electing today are Brockton, Chicopee, Fall River and Fitchburg, Gloucester, Haverhill, Holyoke, Leominster, Marlboro, New Bedford, Newburyport, Northampton, FPeabody, Pittsfield, Quincy, Salem, Springfield, Taunton and Westfield. Mosquitoes of the yellow fever va- riety kept at the London zoo will feed only on human blood. At dealers or from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited, OGDENSBURG, N.Y, ' DE PALMA IN JAIL ) Fresno, Cal, Dec. 6—Ralph ‘De Palma, automobile racer, surrendered to the Sheriff at Madera, Cal., yester- day and began serving a ten-day sene tence for speeding at Chowehilla Tast month. He carried two suit cases = containing clothing and personal ef: fects when he entered the jail. Feed ALL Your Hens “OneFul-0-PepDryMash Self-feeder for Every Ten Hens.” Repeat that sentence over several times until you are sure you won't forget it—then P see to it that you give plenty of hopper space to your hens. Just because a few of your hens lay well does not mean that ali the hens have a chance to lay. If the birds have to fight to get Ful- O-Pep Dry Mash they can’t eat as much and therefore won't lay as well as if they have all the Ful-O-Pep Dry Mash they need ail the time. Feed all your hens all they want. By providing plenty of Ful-O-Pep , Dry Mash self-feeders, the more timid hens will get Mash as well asthe more ssive ones. Ful-O-Pep Way calls for Ful-O-Pep Dry Mash before these laying hens all the time—that's the plan that gets results. FULOPRE] If you're not feeding the FulO-PmWay,begin now. Don’t %;mblewith the hens—play safe. Why take chances on inferior feeds? hy not use feeds that are tested and watched all thro facturing process and are known to be the best prod the market? High quality feeds mean low mortality as egg production. Ful-O-Pep feeds that keep your hens laying al} the time and keep birds in good gmdt“:imth"e the feeds that pay. Feeds that lon’t do that are’ expensive at any price can't afford to feed such feeds even if you get [N RE14 them for nothing. | DRY MASH Ful-O-Pep feeds are the best investment the poul- tryman can make, because they pay big dividends. Ask any Ful-O-Pep user— ask any of the hundreds of the country’s foremost poultry raisers — the will tell you that Ful-O-Pep feeds are Manufactured by ~ TheQuakerQals ®mpany Address Chicago, U. 8. A. For sale by C. W. LINES CO. - NEW BRITAIN, CONN. — ] SPECIAL TIRE SALE§ FOR ONE WEEK ONLY | KELLY SPRINGFIELD (OrD$S ] FIRST QUALITY—GUARANTEED FRESH STOCK ! I ‘ Present Price Sale Pricelfl i . | 1 I | | | 30x 3% $16.10 $13.00 1132x3% 25.30 20.70 31x4 29.04 23.75 32x4 32.00 26.00 33x4 33.00 27.00 x4 34.05 26.80 32 x 4% 4158 34.00 33 x4% 4265 34.85 3 x4% 4345 35.75 35 x 4% 45.00 36.80 36 x 4% 46.05 37.70 133x5 5145 4215 35x5 54.15 430 FABRIC CORDS _ 30x3 9.00 11.30 30x 3% 13.09 10.50 Tires are steadily advancing so now is the time to save FEW DOLLARS. Buy NOW and get the benefit FOR CASH ONLY ‘ A. G. HAWKER 52.54 ELM ST. NEW REFATN, g e S —- I T

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