Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
+ B NEW RRITAIN pAT® HERALD. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 102, Day By Day He Grows Richer - It that persistent cough or cold h! fastened on you at this seasen of the | yéar it may lead to serious veswis. | | Your doctor would tell you that the ' BUY AT YOUR would prescribe for such adondition, The value of Father Joh Medi- cine has been proven by more than sixty-seven years of success, It soothes and heals the breathing pas- sages and, because of the nourishing food clements it contains, helps fo rebulld wasted tissue and gives new strength with which to rebuild health, Get rid of that cold or cough now, before it Is too late, FAILSTO FIND HEN WRO KIDNAPPED NON Baltimore Police Canmot Locate Houge~She I Yery Ill Baltimore, Feb, 14,—Sherift Jones of Frederick, who came here to ald in solving ‘the alleged kidnapping of Sister Cecllia from Notre Dame con- vent in Frederick, says the nun prob- ably will come to Baltimore as soon as her condition permits to try to lo- cate the house to which she was taken. ¢ The police have searched every , house within four blocks of Camden station in the hope of finding the sister's garb, which she says was taken fpom her by the man and the woman who chloroformed her in the convent in Frederick and brought her here. They failed to find any trace of it. ‘The hat and the coat Sister Cecllia wore when she returned to the con- vent and which she said she picked up in the house of her captors after she recovered from the effects of the chloroform were taken to the home of Thomas M. Rogan, conductor of the train which left Frederick at 3:45 o'clock Monday afternoon. Rogan said the only persons who boarded his BILIOUS? 1f you have bad taste in mouth, foul breath, furred tongue, dull headache, drowsiness, disturbed sleep, mental depression yellow- ish skin—then you are bilious. quickly relieve this disorder, which is the result of liver derangement and severe digestive disturbance. Purely vegstable. _Plain or Sugar Coated, EARS’ CONTINUOUS SALE 2, ;novu THEIR MERIT. Dr. J. H. Schenck & Son, Philadelphia, Corns? to your druggist The simplest way to end a corn is Blue-jay. A touch stops the pain instantly. Then the corn loosens and comes out. Made in a colorless clear liquid (one drop does it!) and in thin plasters. The action is the same. Pain StoP.s l!_mtantly Don’t Let That Cold Turn Into “Flu” Rub on Good Old Musterole That cold may turn into *Flu,” Grippe or, even worse, Pneumonia, unjess you take care of it at once. Rub good old Musterole on the con- gested parts and see how quickly it brings relief, Colds are merely congestion, Mus- ®terole, made from pure oil of mustard, camphor, menthol. and other simple bnedm‘ ts, i6 2 counter-ifritant which 5" "hg’ld circulation and helps break up the L, pAuflective asthe messy old mustard plaster, it does the work without the Just rub it on with your finger-tips. }’:nfill fcel a warm tingle os it enters the pores, then a cooling sensation that welcome relief. and 652, in jars and tubes. Better than a mustard plaster ® - Henry Fo ot to Detroit, showed him his vast train at Frederick'were two men, and that he saw no one wearing either a coat or a hat resembling those shown him, . Confors With Archbishop. Father Willlam J. Kane, in charge of Notre Dame convent, was in touch over the telephone with Archbishop Curley, who wanted to know why the nun did not seek refuge in some Bal- timore convent. [Father Kane ex- plained that Sister Cecilia wished to return as promptly as possible so that there might be no hostile report that she had run away. Father Kane teld in detail the story of the nun's experience to the archbishop, “I have not seen Sister Cecilia since her return to Frederick,” said Sheriff Jones, “Her disappearance. was rec- ported to me at 2:05 o'clock Monday afternoon and I immediately began to try to find her. “After she returned to the convent| and I asked to be allowed to see her, I was told it was impossible, and I haven't seen her yet. Dr. W, Mere- dith Smith says she has the marks of a blow on her head.” . Dr. Smith has the bottle which Sis- ter Nola, the superior of the Five Sisters of Notre Dame at the convent, thinks contained the chloroform which was used in drugging Sister Cecilia. Father Kane gave the details of the disappearance of Sister Cecilia sub- stantially as told in the press yester- day. She told the priest that when she awakened iif the dingy room she heard voices in the adjoining room. “How much ought we get for the damned thing?” a man said. His companion answered: ought to get $500 for her,” Says Men Were Drunk. i “We reeting Emile Coue on the Frerichman's visit he had been using the Coue recipe for many years, OWN PRICE! That's just about what it means. Thursday, Friday and Saturday we place on sale all our women’s broken lines of high shoes, oxfords and pumps. To avoid confusion several numbers will be sold out each day. “Here's our idea: PRICE REDUCTION EVERY HOUR flivver plants and explained how —— T the next largest fleet, 31 boats holding 9,915,891 bushels of wheat. Toledo had 13 storage cargoes and Port Huron 11. Midland had the biggest storage fleet at Canadian Ports—18 vessels holding 1,807,317 bushels, MAY ISOLATE ASES OF WHOOPING COUGH Board of Health Sees Need of Ad- ditional Precaution in Public Look in Our Windows. See the “Economy Clock” and Shoes on dis- play. Certain numbers will be sold out each day. This is your chance to save, because we are not afraid to cut prices. TOMORROW, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY “Every Day a Bargain Day”—Real Values. New Britain children afflicted with whooping cough, may be isolated henceforth if recommendations made | to the board of health last evening by Dr. Gertrude J. Kinsella are adopted. Dr. Kinsella proposed action to safe- guard the health of others by isolat- ing cases of whooping cough that the danger of its spreading is minimized. She reported that she has seen children on Main street coughing so hard their parents were obliged to hold them up, while other children were close ‘enough to catch the in- fection. She reported that children with whooping cought are barred | from the schools but are permitted to mingle indiscriminately with other children on the street. In: some placdes she said children with whoop- ing cough are required to wear a bana cn their arms as a warning to others to observe precautions. She said as a mother, as well as a physician that ‘““Seated mear her cot were two men,"” said Father Kane. “They were sleeping. Sister Cecilia thinks they had been placed there to guard her but, being drunk, had fallen asleep. She said all the men she could see were foreigners. She said they, as well as the man and woman who looked through the convent windows at her, had the appearance of being Italians. “When she awakened she found that her nun's garb and headgear had been removed. She was dressed only in her petticoat and underbody. Near the cot was a coat and hat. The coat was of cheap material and dark red- dish-brown in color. It looked, I am told, like the coat worn by the woman who looked through the convent win- dows. "“Over her petticoat she wore a small apron, fine in texture, that looks Hke veiling. She tore the apron in half and put part of it oyer her face as a veil. It also coverfd a portion of her head. Nuns have their hair shaved off, and she wished to hide the fact that she was a nun, She then donned the hat and coat and went down the stairway before the men arguing about the money for her noticed she was escaping. “When she got to the street she saw that she was in an alley just off a wide street. She walked and half ran until she .reached Camden sta- tion. She does not know, she says, how far she was away from Camden |station, but she thinks the house in {which she was confined was not far from the station. Hid Fact That She Was a Nun. “She met a policeman there. She asked him about the trains and bus {line to Frederick, She told him she wanted to get back 'to Frederick quickly., She told him there was a sick friend in Frederick who needed her. She said that because she did jmot want him to suspect she was a |nun. She feared she would be ac- cused by enemies of the Catholic church of being an escaped nun. She was also ashamed of her appearance and lack of clothing. “You ask why she did not go to a convent in Baltimore first. Archbishop Curley asked that question. I asked Sister Cecilia and she said she feared she might be accused of running away from Frederick, and to dispel any such thoughts her main desire was to get back to our convent as quick- ly as possible, “When she reached the convent she was in a highly nervous condition, Her hands and face were soiled and her clothing was dirty. Her petticoat looked as thugh she had been dragged through the dirt. The bruise on her head pained her terribly and she suf- fered pains in her body. She had | beén recently operated on for appen- dicitis. 4 “I, the nuns and her physician ques- tioned her Monday night. She was not able to tell as clear a story then | as she did yesterday afternoon. We | did not press any questions because the physician refused to permit it. She is much improved. MUCH GRAIN AT PORTS Cleveland, O., Feb. 14.—Two hun- dred and one storage vessels were holding 52,616,704 bushels of grain at Port Huron, Goderich, Detroit, Goor- glan Bay and Lake Erie ports at a-—d) she dreads whooping cough worse than the measles. Dr. Henry T. Bray, chairman of the beard, agreed that some steps were necessary to preventthe spread of the disease, but he said it is difficult to stop it because there is no way to as- certain who the patients are and doc- tors do not report their cases. The matter was left in,the hands of Dr, Fred P. Lee, who will make further investigations. Dr. Bray reported that a new sup- erintendent had been engaged for the Rocky Hill sanitorium and that there were other improvements in the man- agement of the institution. Monthly bills totalling §$2,672.98 .ere approved with sanitorium bills totalling $1,524.79, a total of $4,197,- 72. Those present at the meeting were Dr. Bray, Dr. Kinsella, Dr. M. 8. Dunn and J. J. Erwin, FLUING NOT PAYING - Is Popular But Not Profitable As A Means of Commercial Travelling— WORL 267 MAIN STREET Opposite West Main lative bureau and will be introduced |agreement has yet been between the in the forthcoming session of the Diet |two countries. According $o the authorities tht‘ An indication of the trend of company will be established with & |events is seen in the recent visit to gross capital of sixty million yen, half | Denmark of Doctor Ossinsky, direct- of which will be set apart as flowing | of the Russian commissariat for ag- capital and raised through gcneral | riculture. Replying to the Associat- public subscription. | ed Press correspondent’s query as to The company will be placed under |which feature of Danish methods in- the direct control of the chief of the | terested him most, Doctor Ossinsky Saghalien administration. The new|gaiq the way in which one of the big concern has in view the _prloltat\on | country estates, formerly owned by a of the coal fields for civil purposes. | Danish nobleman, has been split up These have long been sealed by theinto small holdings greatly appealed military authorities fer exclusive mili- | {5 him, tary uses against the time of emer- gencies. The bill when introduced in | the Diet is expected to give rise to| BEATS PRE-WAR RECORD an animated dvbate, [ ed Christian Missionary society here. This represents a gain of 161 per cent for the ten year period, it was said. Seventy-four new foreign missionar- ies were sent out in 1921 and 1922, the announcement added. \LONDON'S WINE VAULTS COYERING MANY ACRES GREAT BRITAIN T0 PROTECT TRAWLERS Armed Ship Will Be Sent to the Murman Coast 24 Miles of Gangway Run DBetween London, Feb. 14.—The British Places Where Drink is Stored, trawler Magneta, out of Hull, went fishing over a year ago in company | with other vessels off the Murman coast, 600 miles north of Petrograd in the Arctic ocean. She carried a|jis gctivities for so many generations crew of 12 men. Early on the morn-|tnat today. it is possible with a little ing of December 31, 1922, when nine |imggination and_ enterprise, to bring miles off shore, she was arrested by [tcgether interesting statistics compar- a Russian patrol vessel for fishing|ing the big, modern city of the pres- within territorial waters, The patrol [ent time to the London of the days | took on board two of the Magneta's'of Queen Anne, when coaches and crew as hostages, ‘and sent two of (chairs were the popular means of con- her own men on board the trawler|veyance. to act as an armed guard. The| In 1700 the foreign trade which | Magneta was compelled to head for|passed through the port of London the port of Murmansk, but a violent amounted to 10,000,000 pounds sterl- storm arose and the fisherman was|ing; in 1922 it was over 1,000,000,000, wrecked on the beach and all on|according to Sir Joseph Broodbank, board were lost. who recently delivered an address Thereupon the British government here on the rise of the city as one of protested to the Soviet authorities. | the great ports of the world. P It advanced the argument that the He mentioned an interesting fact loss of the Magneta was due to her|concerning the type of Dutch eel boats | arrest, as other vessels near her, |[which have been anchored off the | keeping to the open sea, rode out the | Customs House since the days of storm successfully. The British pro-|Queen Elizabeth. These boats had tests have been in vain, and the So-|been granted certain privileges and viet government has refused any were similar to the first ones used, guarantee that the incident would | but in the near future they are to not be repeated, or to assume re-|be replaced by motor vessels. sponsibility for it. The claim pre- Among some curious facts Sir Jos- sented to Russia amounts to $125,- [eph mentioned that the river Thames, 000. The unfortunate widows and|which carried twenty million tons of famiiies of the English fishermen | commerce every year, could not af-| who were drowned are reduced to|ford to run steamers to carry pas- charity. sengers, In former days wool wns.l he Russia replies that only Russian [largest export from the port. Now vessels may fish within 12 miles of |Wool is its largest import, about 700, the coast. This claim is contrary to|000 bales passing through the ware- the general usage of the seas, and |houses every year. England refuses to recognize it. The An idea of the size of the London Soviet government's argument in-|Wine vaults is conveyed by the fact volves the closing of some three|that there are 24 miles of gangway | thousand miles of fishing grounds |running through them. Millwall, the which are rarely fished by Russian|largest granary in the port, with a ca- vessels, and used only by Norwegian |pacity of gl,frflfl tons, nnl,\" holds and English vessels. enough grain to make London's bread Now the British government has|for one week. sent an armed ship to the Murman AR WOULD EXPLOIT FIELDS coast to protect British trawlers. To Japanese Authoritics Contemplate the Compiled Statistics Show ‘l.‘ormany Has Ship Building Output of 625,000 Tons in 1922 London, Ieb, 17.—Germany has |beaten her pre-war ship building rec- ord; according to figures published |here. Her output in 1922 was 625,- {000 tons, as compared with 509,000 tons in 1921, 440,000 tons in 1914 and Trade Agreement Yet. 465,000 tons in 1913, | The German shipbuilding industry Copenhagenf Feb, 14.—Danish an-|does not seem to have suffered from tagonism against re-establishing |the general depression and, owing to commercial relaticns with Russia is|the low cost of production, it appar- gradually decreasing, and regular ently has become a formidable com- trade on a moderate scale is proceed- | petitor to the industry,in the United ing despite the fact that no trade|States and Great Britain. London, Feb. 14.—London has been London Reports. keeping official records of many of| London, Feb, 14,—The popularity of flying as a method of commercial travel may be judged by the fact that 12,828 passengers arrived and departed from the Croydon Aero- drome, during the year 1922. To carry this number of passengers 4,193 flights were made. Flying, nevertheless, is not yet a paying business for the airplane com- panies. The government allows them subsidies which cover their actual losses. In the future all airplanes flying over England at night will carry white rear lights on each wing tip and on the tail. This is a new regu- lation of the air ministry. The ministry is about to establish a permanent gliding station at) Itford Hill, where the gliding contests were held last October. Sheds and’ work- shops will be erected, and the sta- tion will be utilized not only by the Royal Air Force, but by private ex- perimenters who will be able to try out their gliders, and use the work- shops and hauling trolleys attached to the station. HAVE,COLOR IN CHEEKS Be Better Looking—Take Olive Tablets Denmark Resumes Commercial Re- lations With That Country—No NO MORE BLUE MONDAYS THE EASY ELECTRIC WASHER Makes Wash Day a Pleasure Economical Efficient Convenient Easy on Clothes ! Hard on Dirt ! Phone 2504 for Demonstration. © BARRY & BAMFORTH © reach this part of the Arctic ocean the route is roughly 1,400 miles north from England, then around the North Cape to the eastward, and 300 mileg down to the fishing grounds. Establishment of a Semi-Official | MILLIONS DONATED Mining Company. | St. Louls, Mo., Feb. 14—A total of Toklo, Feb, 14.—The authorities in | $25,089,419.68 has been donated in|the Saghalien administration contem- the close of lake zsvigation. More than half this grai. was afloat at Fuffalo, 96 vessels holding 28,883,200 bushels at that port. Erle, Ps, had the last ten years for missionary and |plate the establishment of a semi-of- benevolent work by the Diseciples of |ficial mining company. The bill rela- Christ (Christian Church) it was an-[tive to the proposed organization is nounced at headquarters of the Unit- mow under investigation by the legis- 19 MAIN STREET PHONE 2504