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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 20, 1028, the United States they will make | MOTHER OF 1418 NORRISON-THOMPEON |2, "o, ® ", ot dulle sxnent up)to the Unitnd Sber She f RE["QF M”RDER [t odugrarngpead | :; ‘ e “i‘:ii‘:..'l.'i“fi?'i‘i‘ (.'" Office | viage by Rev, Henry W, Maiey :\ e aak v Tha - Sabver George E. Whatnall, for 25 years| ) | treasurer of Sir Prancis Drake lod J A I The ge of John Duniep Me B arried & basket of sweel peas. Wy Acquts Mrs, Longengan), roe mersings of tovs Dusier Nov. . e \ Sons of Bt. George, last evening was Jersey The gift of the hride to the brides. Alter 12 Hours Get Your Vacation Needs at Home Writing Paper Fountain Pens Wash Cloths Face Powders Soaps RENIER, PICKHARDT & DUNN 127 Main St. Opp. {rd St Tel. 1409-2 3&%; Suits Bathln88hoe; Bathing Caps installed as supreme treasurer of the Isabel Thompson .daughter of Bart maid was a string of pearls and the| national organization. Mr. Whatnall 1 | Thempsen of A England, was gift of the groom to the best man was one of the most popular officials of | solemnised Wednesday afternoon at 4 traveling bag the organization and has just eom- Mary jr.. oek at the Pirst Chureh of Christ owing the eeremony a reception pleted a period of 12 years as grand Rev, Heary W. Maier officiating e home of Mr. and Mprs, | secretary of the lodge in Conneetieut, The bridesmaid was Miss son of T4 Beiden street at At the meeting last evening there for the murder of} Reynolds of Portiand and the 0 friends of the couple were| were visiting delegations from ail over y Lonergan, on May was John Beggs of Je present Connecticut and other nearby states, was acquitted by a Jury at|Miss Isabel Law of 112 Austin street fr., and Mps. Morrison left on a|Jt was the largest meeting the local ast night. Mrs, Lonergan, | was the flower girl. The gown of the wedding trip to England and Scotland, | order has ever held. Practically all of +{bride was of white canton erepe and ' by way On thelr return! the grand lodge ofMcers were present, shot himself while ! wiek New York, June 25.--Mrs . All At Quality First Prices and Best Styles Have Just Received a New Lot of IMPORTED WASH DRESSES At Prices Less Than It Cost To Import Also New Voile Dresses, Linen Dresses, Ratine Dresses of the Most Exquisite Shades and Lowest Prices Lonergan, on trial in in Breokiyn supreme Loretta hest sey Ojty court Sunburn Lotions wer hushand mar Cold Creams Tooth Paste Safety Razors Kodaks and Films Cigars and Cigarettes of Canada ed that Lonergai she was with him aroused great interest and & was largely awalted, 3 ; both hee Tooth Brushes Rathing Caps —The— Dickinson Drug Co. | 169-171 MAIN ST, | Suggestions FROM OUR STORE FULL OF COOL CLOTHES, THAT COMFORT MUCH AND COST LITTLE, YOR JuLy i/ JAUNTS White Oxford Collar Attached Scotch Sweater Jackets — $7.50 up. Linen Golf Knickers—$6.50 up. Sports Jackets and Flannel 'Irousers., Palm Beach and Tropical Wors- ted Suits, One-piece and Bathing Suits, FHose For Tennis and Golf, ‘White Buckskin Oxfords—811. British Sport Print Neckwear— $1.00. Bathing Belts—Caps for Golf. Panama Hats—Sport 'Kerchiefs, HORSFALLS 93-99 Xdsylum Strect Martford. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” “Life - Guard” 3 keep him from shooting her. PERSONALS J. P. Thomas left last night for Akron, Ohio, where he is to visit his daughter, Mrs. George D. Andrews. George Saunders, Willlam C. Bent- ley, Jack Street, Waldo E. Gilbert, and Robert Merriam will leave Saturday for Montauk for a flve-day fishing trip. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cubit and daughter of Ellenburg City, N. Y, have returned to their home after spending three weeks with Mrs, Cu- bit's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Henry Terry of Park street. They were ac- companied by Mrs. L. M. Robinson of Boston, Mass. POLICE COURT CASES. Judge Balock, arrested yesterday afternoon by Policeman Thomas Storey on a charge of assault, was fined $7 and costs when arraigned before Judge George W. Klett in po- lice court this morning. Judge Klett later suspended judgment. Policeman Storey testified Balock struck Abe Kolodney, proprietor of a store on Stanley street near Francis street, following an argument over empty milk bottles. Judge Klett continued the case of Frank Yamnos, charged with non support, for an Indefinite time and | placed him in the care of Probation Officer Edward C. Connelly. Yamnos was arrested last night by Policeman Thomas Feeney. ——— | The truth isalways the strongest argu- | ment. And it Is true that no flavoring extract excels Baker's in purity,| strength, and delicacy of flavor. k " Don't Short- Weight Yourself Just as there is a standard for weight there is a standard test for eyesight Only a modern eye-examination can tell you if your slght {5 up to standard Have your eyes examined now! Frank E. Goodwin Eyesight Specialist | midnight g mother of fourteen ehildren, conte | foreign ships to bring | United States, | had reason to helieve dry as well as | may be a big 1 | keeping of the land is ends VATER JOHN OFFICERS ELECTED | ficers were elected | Ainancial secretary, of the unusual plight of a4 mother of fourteen children, who 1is 46 years old, and hecause a jury in| the Bronx had returned a verdiet of | EUllt earrying the death penalty in the ecase of another woman, Mrs, Anna Juzzl, in the Bronx en Wednesday, | Mrs, Lonergan faced a terrible or. | during the leng hours the jury | deliberated, Pale, gray, emaciated, préematurely aged, she sat slumped In A chair in the prisen pen in the court. house basement, 50 near collapse that restoratives had to be administered at intervals The jury returned to the court room three times to ask Justice Hagarty to have parts of the testl. mony read it, Each time, Mrs, Lon ergan almost was carried into court, hor presence being necessary. The third time she fainted while the testimony of her fourteen.year-old son William was read. Willlam, who was In his father's bieycle shop at 261 | Bridge street when the father was shot to death on May 16 was a star witness for the prosecution, and though he admitted under cross-ax- amination that detectives at police | headquarters had frightened him by ' threatening to slap his face, he stuck to his testimony, insisting that the po-,| lico had not actually laid hands on | him and denying that they had coach- ed him in what to say. The jury returned for the first time at 2 o'clock, having been out for near- ly two hours. It came back again at 4 and when it flied in a third time at 0:45 Mrs, Lonergan had been waiting nearly nine hours for it to declde | whether her life was forfeit, | 8he made a visible effort to control | herself until the foreman made it ap- parent that the twelve men had not come in with a verdict, then she gave a low moan and collapsed, Sh2 was unconscious long after the jurors had returned to thelr deliberations and it was some time before she could be revived and carried back to ihe pricon pen to face more hours of walting. Ldward J. Reilly who with Willlam McGuire defended Mrs, Lonergan, made a herculean effort to win ac- quittal for her in his final address to the jury. Mr. Rellly dwelt upon the woman's testimony that Lonergan held the pistol when it went off while she was struggling with her husband to He laid particular stress on the prosecution's failure to introduce the weapons, ar- guing that if Mrs. Lonergan had held the weapon it would have shown her fingerprints, and clinched the state's case. Much of Mr. Reilly’s address was a plea for sympathy for the mother of fourteen children, who, he sajd, had endured for thirty years “a hell of constant work.,” ‘“How long do you think it is,” the lawyer asked, “since John Lonergan bought this little wom- an a new dress, or a new hat, or a box of candy?" DENIES ANY TORTURE Most Rev. Dr. Tikon Insists That He Was Not at All Maltreated While in Russian Prison. Moscow, June 29.—The Most Rev. Dr. Tikhon, released from prison to await trial by the civil authorities for counter revolutionary activities, de- nies the reports that he was tortured while in jail, asserting that on the other hand, he was well treated. The former patriarch of all-Russia, who plans to conduct services in the Donstoy monastry where he i{s now living, says he cannot recognize the action of the fiving church congress in unfrocking him, pointing out that it tried him for political misdemean- ors while only the soviet government had a right to do so. M. Krassnitsky, head of the living church council quoted by the officlal press as saying that if Dr. Tikhon is willing to repent of his alleged coun- ter revolutionary activities before the council and the government it will be possihle to reach an agreement per- mitting the former patriarch again to take part officlally in religious work. LASKER PREDICTS CHANGE Congress Will Adjust Bring Thinks Next Law Permitting Liners to Liquor Into This Country. Expressing be- Chicago, June 20 congress will llef that the next change the Volstead act to permit lquor under| seal into the territorial waters of the Albert D. Lasker, re- head of the 1. 8 Shipping tiring statement here, said he | Board, in a wet Juwmakers would support such a measure. 4 absolutely wrong" he said, “to hat the rulings that prohibit ships to this country a suffi- amount of liquor for the return trip was done as an aid to American shipping. Instead it is a blow and he said, “that in orean dry the ngered, 1 beleive the dry advocates will see it that way and take steps accordingly.” “The point is, trying to make the At a meeting last night of Vater| John lodge, ). of H. the lollowing of- | President, August ! Stitchenoth; vice-president, Jacob Zeigler; recording secretary, Otto Rechenberg; treasnrer, Adam Zeigler; | Herman A | months, Peter N trustee for 1% delegates to the grand lodge, Georgs 327 Main St.—Tel. 1905 { Arendt and Charles Firnhaber. It was | planned to hold an outing of thel lodge at Lake Compounce goon. Out tomorrow “HIS M/.STER'S VOICE” New Victor Records July 1923 Popular Concert and Operatic v Romeo and Juliet—Ah! ne fuis pas encore! Lucrasia Bori-Beniamino Gigli 87581 $1.50 (Ah! Linger Yet e Moment) (Gount In French Ginseppe de Luca 66158 1.25 Rosa_(G. Ronilli) Cavalleria Rusticana—Voi lo sapete ia Jeritza 66147 1.25 Jobn McCormack 66146 1.25 Well You Kaow, Good Motker) (Mascagm) I Tralian The K;ng“dyon.lh Within Yko)urwlliye';) (Dertihichab Tito Schipa 66067 1.25 Ernestine Schumann-Heink 87363 1.25 rincesita (Litle Princes) _ (Palomero-Padilla) In Spanish Rock Me to Sleep, Mother (EntLeic) Melodious Instrumental Naiads at the Spring—Etude (Paul Juon) Piano suie Olga Samaroff 66148 Midnight Bells (Vieanese Melody) (Heuberger-Kieisler) Polin Solo Fritz Kreisler 66149 Rondo Capriccioso—Presto (Mendelusch) Piano sots Alfred Cortot 74810 Nocturne (Chopin, Op. 27, No. 2) iolin Sols Jascha Heifetz 74811 Gypsy Love—Concert Waltz International Concert Orchestra (fromthe operetta *‘Gypey Love™) (Franz Lehr) 35725 Gypsy Baron—Sweetheart—Concert Waltz Susu International Concert Orchestra Danse Macabre—Part 1 ((Prcsol D) (Suii St Guy Maier-Lee Pauinn} 55198 Danse Macabre—Part 2 Dustfor Two Pianos ) Guy Maier=Lee Pattison {Under the Double Eagle—March (Wagae) Sousa’s B"‘"}mos 4 High School Cadets—March (sou) Sousa’s Band Sacred Numbers Eili, Eili (God, My God, Why Hast Thou Fortaken Me?) (Sandler) I Jousteh Die Neuer “Kol Nidre” (TheNew “KolNidre") (A J. Roseablatt) 2n Hebrecw Cantor Joseph Rosenblatt {Saw Ye My Saviour 10 Tender Loving Shepherd {Shepherd Show Me How to Go Blest Christmas Morn 1.25 1.25 1.75 1.75 1.25 1.50 J5 ]55197 Trinity Mixed Quartet ?:nity H:::: 8urt:l 119067 rinity Mixed Quartet Trniy Mired Quarct 19075 Light Vocal Selections {l Want What I Want When [ Want It Royal Dadlnun} 45350 Rolling Down to Rio Royal Dadmun {Down Among the Sleepy Hills of Ten-Ten-Tennessee Billy Murray-Ed. Smllle}l 9065 1Beside a Babbling Brook éeouie mce eorgie Price Billy Mumy} 19066 }eom {Bnrney Google Alice Green-Edna Brown e Me {Undernenth the Mellow Moon Charles Hart-Lewis James River Shannon Moon American Folk Songs {Cowboy Song—Whoopee Ti Yi Yo Glenn-Shannon Quartet 1Levee Song—I've Been Workin’ on de Railroad Shannon Qurlet} 19059 Dance Records {Swinéin’ Down the Lane—Fox Trot The Great White Way Orclmm}moss Beside a Babbling Brook--Fox Trot _The Great White Way Orchestra Little Rover (Don't Forget to Come Back Home)—Fox Trot International Novelty 0rclmtn} 19063 Runnin’ Wild!-Fox Trot The Great White Way Orchestra { Yes! We Have No Bananas—Fox Trot The Great White Way Orchestra Morning Will Come—Fox Trot (i “Benbo") Zez Confrey and His Orchestra International Novelty Orchestra 19068 { When Will the Sun Shine For Me?—Fox Trot 19069 Gone (But Still in My Heart)—Fox Trot The Great White Way Ordmh'l} Louisville Lou—Fox Trot Arthur Gibbs and His Gnng}19°7o Beale Streot Mamma—Fox Trot Arthur Gibbs and His Gang { You've Got to See Mamma Ev’ry Night—Fox Trot Tennessee Tm}19073 Nuthin’ But—Fox Trot Paul@hiteman and His Orchestra { Saw Mill River Road—Fox Trot The Great White Way Orcllesh'a} 19074 Everythingis K. O.in K-Y.—Fox Trot Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra {Thnt Wicked Tango International Novelt’y Orchestra } 19076 My Old Love—Tango Max Dolin’s Orchestra 4‘[Wild- Flower—Medley Fox Trot rrom ““The Wid.Flower) The Great White Wa Orcllenh} 19077 Dreamy Melody—Rocky Mountain Moon—Medley Waltz The Troubadours Tut-Ankh-Amen—Fox Trot (e Vaies of the Kings) 3. S, Leviathan 0"‘“""}19078 Down by the River—Fox Trot S. 5. Leviathan Orchestra == L - Look under the lid and on the labels for these Victor trade-marks Victor Talking Machine Company, Camden,N.J. _______.————-—___#== —_————— BELBER BAGS AND SUIT CASES CORSETS, HOSIERY AND CHILDREN'S AND INFANTS' WANTS CHAS. DILLON & CO. HARTFORD End-of-the Season Clearance SUMMER MILLINERY — Trimmed Hats — Hats of Satin, Taffeta, Canton Crepe, Georgette and other fabrics. Specially priced for this sale, $2.95 $3.95 $4.95 SPORT HATS $1.00, $1.95, $2.98 Excellent Hats for vacation wear. Combinations of felt and ribbon, hemp and ribbon. LEGHORNS and MILANS §£2.95, $4.45 Sport Hats, attractively banded with crepe, velvet and silk ribbons, in all colors. 200 HATS at $1.00, $1.95 Trimmed with feathers, flowers and ribbons. to $7.50. Immediate Clearance. Vé.lues Formal Opening of Our New Store at 43 Main Street Saturday, June 30th We would like to meet all our old friends and custom- ers as well as the general public of this city and sur- rounding towns. We have one of the most up-to-date tailoring establishments in the state. Come in and look around. As a special inducement for our opening day we are going to offer the follow- ing:— A0S $37.50 A $45 SUIT $42.50 A $50 SUIT $47( 50 e London Sho (TR TR 43 MAIN STREET New Britain “Let Us Clothe You, We Know How” SO-E!Z ENER Never cuts the thread or wears loose. Quickly and easily sewed on—and once on, it is on for good. Avoid the annoyance of loose unsightly enaps. Insist on the So.E-Z Snap Fastener. |10c fortwelve. Atnotion counters everywhere. THE AUTOYRE CO. [t Stays Sewed”! Himberg & Horn Established 18 Years 10 R. R. ARCADE, £ SNAP 392 MAIN ST. WRIST WATCHES, WATCHES, DIAMONDS JEWELRY OF ALL KINDS