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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1023, U, B Navy A-6,608 (Lawrence and Relohelderfer), 150 kllometers. Margaret of England (E Allea and Caplain Berry), covered more than 0 kllometers but was disqualified, @8 It fell inte the sea near Bkagen ~ STOKES CASE NOW NEARING CLIMAN 75755 Puscaton o Tose W Py~ CITY ITEMS. | Iy Accused Woman AP Chicago, Sept. 27.—In the invest of charges by Mre, Helen Ei | Lunch at Hallinan's—advt wood Btokes that her husband, W. E The regular meeting of Landers D, Stokes has sought to deface her camp Modern Woodmen of Ameriea. character, one witness was placed In [yl he held tomorrew evening at & | Jall here for a short time yesterday |g'alock in Bt Jean de Baptiste hall Another was arrested "'"”:‘ ""d" | New fox trot hit, “Love Is Like &/ rival at New York and polles orders | o v viotor Record. C. L. Pleres | for the arrest of a third here urre!“ O addi tnsued. | " Howard Miller, negro, was the wit.| Dr. Marry lasch of 352 Main pess Jafled here. His wife, Nellie | street reported to the police last even. Rose Miller, was taken into custody | IN€ that while driving his car past in New York after fleging from Chi- | the Dixie Filling station on Main cago. Polica here are looking for | street, a boy named Demasy of 31 Lee Joe Brunner, taxicab driver alleged |#treel, who was riding a bicyele, fell by witnesses to have bheen the “pay. | In front of his ear. The car struck off" man in the alleged attempts to the bieycle demolishing it but the boy obtain affidavits swearing that Mrs, | escaped uninjured Stokes was Helen I'nderwood, a fre. Free——onec 260 jar cold cream With quenter of a “elub” here several | every $1 purchase., Helvidere Drug years ago. | Bhoppe.—advt Miller admitted, according to As.| Judge Willlam ', Hungerford yes. sistant State's Attorney Charles Whar. | terday algned an order for the release ton that his wife “did a lot of stuf™ |of Kostantl Wisolmenske from a jall tor Btokes. He denied knowledge of | sentence of 60 days to which he was what that was, but said recently she | sentenced on September 21, The or- N"“"Y“ :rdm to hide and left for der places him in charge of Probation ‘sw York. | Offieer Bdward C, Connolly for six Exonerates M;--hfi'":t'u [ months, during which time he must 1t was also reported that Mr, Whar- | pay a fine of $30, which he was or- ton had .!m:lv;;dr:n(on:atlouh(rnm A |dered to pay when he received the ‘woman, Ave een the pro- o fetor of & “elub” run | 0 |‘|In | potancs: . prietor of a n oppogsition Noonday luncheons at Crowell's,— to that mentioned in connection with | aayt, Mrs. Btokes that Mrs. Stokes Is In-| New Victor Records out every Fri. nocent of the charges made against | qay at Henry Morans’, 365 Main St her and that agents of Stokes came | _aqyt to her with a plcture of Mrs. Rlnkfl: Joscph Bender of 07 Hartford and wanted her to swear she had seen | yvonue complained to the pollce yes- the same woman in the other club. |terday afternoon that his bicycle. had This woman is declared to have | heen stolen. Shortly after making ::::1 ‘:'::1‘1 .:f"::o';;sht:r:k hx nf:"‘t;"’)’;!tlm complaint hpl turned an 11 year 3 | 010 boy over to Motorcycle Policeman girl known as “Bricktop Helen,” had | Willlam 8. Strolls, claiming that he coples made and spread them abhoul | found the boy in possession of the the underworld. Then they would say | pieycle, The hoy will answer to the :‘nu it w-l- :-lor;"?:ok'e; :nd”“'.l’d charge in the juvenile court Saturday ave people sign avits to that ef- [ morning. fect she is sald to have stated. Boston Symphony FEnsemble, 9:15 Richard Westbrooks, said to be[p m, Sept. 27th, Central Junior High Etokes’ attorney here, and his client, [school Auditorium. Tickets $1.00, at Millle Phillips are expected to testify (v 1, Pierce Co.—advt. before the grand jury today. The jopog Porter reported to the police Phillips girl made an affidavit that | vogtorday that an attempt had been she saw Mrs. Stokes drunk in New e during the night to enter the York but later failed to ldentify Mrs. | jo o of the Citizens' Coal Co. on Btokes while in her presence. | Dwight Court. The matter Nas been Ay 5 | put in the hands of the detective BALLOON RACERS PLACED I upean b % | T.A. B. Fair, Oct. 12-22,—advt. Beigians Are First ‘“('7" Second in In-| o A\ Clarke of the Vulean Iron ternational Contest | Works complained to the police last By The Assoclated Preas. | evening that an auto driver narrowly Brussels, Bept. 27.—The balloons escaped running down a young woman eompeting in the James Gordon Ben-|on Pleasant street. Policeman Wil- nett race have been placed provision- | liam §. Strolls was sent to investigate. ally as follows: | Guibransen Player Pianos, Morans. Belgica of Belglum (Demupter and | —advt. A Denocin), 1,174 kilometers. | Prince Leopold of Belgium (Veen-| 950 | " Miss Dorls Sadis, who 18 In training at the New Britain General hospital training sehool for nurses, underwent | an operation for appendicitis Bunday. | strat and Lieutenant Guersin), kilometers. Helvitia of Switzerland, (Armbruster - and Dr. Bachman), 550 kilometers. Espheria of Spain (Licutenants Guillen and Tato), 525 kilometers, Picardy of France (Bienaime and ' PALACE—Starting Sunday |[ENEMIES OF WOMEN 7 Months in New York S — It will help you start every day righ g gt e ULL beef doesn’t make ten= der steak. You cannot turn an old rooster into, a tender broiler. No more can you make good coffee out of poor coffee. The way to make good coffee is to begin with good coffee. You might spoil good coffee in the making, but you cannot make good coffee from coffee that's ‘‘bad’’ to begin with. Begin with Putnam —and if you follow the simple rules below you will agree with the experts and the home folks who proclaim Putnam, of all coffees, their ulti- mate choice. Putnam is chosen for its appetizing aroma, distinctively rich color and flavor and its zestful, pleasing ‘‘after- glow", Putnam always fresh in the VAC-SEALED tin —80 you can purchase a half-dozen at once and have this delicious coffee always at hand. And it will not cost more than just ordinary coffee. Get Putnam today—then make it this way: 1. Measure carefully 60 RISK LIVES T0 SAVE BOY'S L w Yok Youmgster Tumbls! Into Sewer . New York, Sept. 27,—One little east | side sparrow didn't come home flo supper last night, About 6:80 in the| afternoon he was havipg a grand time swinging on a traffie sign at Attorney | and Broome street, hik tatters blow- ing in the breeze, Then he jumped and landed on a manhole cover, It was a broken one, | and a second later the boy waas at| the bottem of a twenty-foot sewer| leading to the East river, HBut prob- ably he never knew what happened, When they teok him out, three-quars ters of an hour later, there was a | deep gash in the back of his head where he had struck, Mothers Are Frantic, Instantly Broome street was in -nl uproar. Five thousand mothers n.-w‘ to take Inventory of their broods, Patrolman Sam [Rosenblatt rang for | the fire department and a minute| later Engine No, 156 clanged up, with | Capt. Tony Poggl In command, =y When the firemen entered the sewer, there was no trace of the child in the dank, fiithy, narrow tube, reek- ing with polsonous fumes, In another minute or so Engine Companies Nos. 17 and 11, Hook and Ladder Nos, 18 and 6, and a rescue squad, sixty men in all, were at the| scene, KEvery manhole on Broome | street below Attorney street was un- | covered. Every man of the sixty went down and crawled through the flith and fumes, Clinton street reserves held back the mob on the atreet, Every mather | who couldn’t find a child was sure| the missing boy was hers, Firemen Rescues Body. At quarter past 6 a shout went | up. From a manhole at Broome and Lewis street two brawny arms lifted a bedraggled, gray little body, args and legs hanging limp and dripping wet. Then the brawny arms flopped back into the sewer, and a minute later firemen were dragging Fireman | Jim Landers of Hook and Ladder No. | i8 out of the hole. Landers had found the little chap's body floating seven blocks from where he had fallen. Landers and the child were laid side by side on the walk, while the police fought to keep back thousands. | For an hour and a half six husky men worked over the lad, who looked to be five or six years old. The pulmotor was applied and four tanks of oxygen exhausted 1in the effort to restore him, but in vain. In the meanwhile Jim Landers had collapsed. Dr. Gale, the am- bulance surgeon from Gouverneur | hospital, was kept busy running from the child to Landers. They hastened Landers to the hospital, ser- | For a Cool Refreshing Drink Phone 127-1 And Have a Case Delivered The Nearest You Can Get “Orry, eli g Distributor MORRIS ROTSTEIN 348 Park Street 0 NED Ky pewiNG ¢ Newkma s 1oual (rom sewer gas PoLORINE. The , & was earvied to the hospital, Where surgeons preneunced him dead, He had net been ldenti. fed ¥ STARS BOY OF 8 OVER GIRL. Boston Youth of 11 Had Acoused Fim of Waiting for Her After School, Boston, Bept. 27.—An argument be. tween Robert Finney, 11 years old, and Frank Barrett, § years old, over a little girl friend yesterday led fo the stabbing of the latter, according| to the pelice, Matthew Slater, aged 11, an ae- quaintanee, was listening while Fin- ney aeaw L of waiting for “his girl" after sehool, it was sald Finney sald to Barrett: "Aw, go on" he told the polies, and pushed toward him with a knife he had in hig hand, eutting the younger boy in the abde men. | The wound seriolfs, is not believed to he SAYS SUITOR BEAT WER New York, Sept, 27.—~When Joseph Durkin proposed marriage to Marjorie Manthey, an actress, and she refused him, he struck her over the left eye with an empty whiskey bottle, kicked | her and threw her unconsclous out of the taxicab in which they were riding This was the story Miss Mantheéy, | 25 years old, of 200 West Forty-fifth | street, told Magistrate Max Levine | yesterday, when she charged Durkin | with felonlous assanlt, He was held in $3,000 ball for examination Sept, 28, He I8 26 yoars old and lives at 442 West Thirty-first street, | Miss Manthey sald that she has| known Durkin only a short time, but that last Friday he called to take her to a theater, In a taxi at Forty-fifth street und Ninth avenue he proposed and afterwards assaulted her, She was | found unconsclous by a passer-by at | Forty-fifth street and Twelfth avenue, | | | PALACE—Starting Sunday SALE 8:30—12 a. m. and 1:30—5 p. m. Daily Except Saturday Which Closes at Noon ' Knitting Yarns Underwear Sleeping Garments and Miscellaneous Supplies ENEMIES OF WOMEN 12—Startling Parts—12 The Sensation of 1923 We Clean Everything Under the Sun General Housecleaning A Specialty NEW BRITAIN WINDOW CLEANING CO. 338 Main St.—Tel. 888 Stromberg Carburetor PLAINVILLE, A. G. Hawker SUITABLE 272 MAIN STREET —DRINK — AYERS’ SODA WATER Take home a bottle of cream soda —Something you will like—it's deli- clous, Three size bottles—3c, Ask Your Grocer For Krueger’s 10c, 160, Open Until 8 P. M. Shrimp, Crab Meat, Scallops Lobsters. - We Have the, Goods | 24-30 State St, Visit Our Dining Room htful! New Britain, Conn. FREE EVENING SCHOOLS Open Monday, September 24th. AT 7:30 P. M. WHERE TO GO TO LEARN ENGLISH— Central Evening School, 2. Use fresh grounds only 3. Don’t boil-——but make with boiling water. 4, Serve at once 5. Scour the pot =) 6. Keep tin covered William Boardman & Sons Co. Since 1841 Hartford, Conn. Putnam COHee saques the day Corner Main an d Chestnut Streets, Elihu Burritt School, Corner North and Lee Streets . TO EARN A GRAMMAR SCHOOL DIPLOMA (Go To the Central Evening School—Grades V, VI, VII, VIII FOR SALE! 'ENTRALLY LOCATED, 2. 1I'"OR*A ROOMING HOU FOR PARTICULARS SEE H. DAYTON HUMPHREY All Kinds of Oysters and Clams, | HONISS’'S | —The— Bristol Manufacturing Company ; . High Grade Furniture RUGS AND FLOOR COVERINGS Sole Agent for PREMIER RANGES A. D. LIPMAN | 32-34 Lafayette St. “Tel. 1329.3° CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2018, Estimates cheerfully given on all jabs LY HOUSE OF 18 ROOMS, E OR. BOARDING HOUSE, NATIONAL BANK BLDG CINDERS FOR SALE | ‘ A. H. Harris ~=General Trucking— |90 WEST ST. TEL. 1233.3 | w | +Two family house in a superb location on ’Wallace street. ' Nice large roomy house with : fplenty of grapes and other fruit. Two car garage {built new. We buy second mortgages. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. Hartford | 'THE OLD HOME TOWN 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg, S e £ e ——— BY STANLEY TO LEARN A TRADE Go To the New Trade School—161 South Main Street Wood Pattern Making Printing Brick Laying Drafting Auto-Repairing Tool Making Die Making Machine Work Electrical Work Shop Mathematics THE LAST BARREL OF CRACKERS AT ggfvfl ;:%ERBWN USUAL — THE OPEAING WAS SO SMALL OYS COULD GET THEI WERE EULL OF R ACKERS R HANDS OUT WHEN THEY NEA SERVICT, XTERS STORE LASTED e S s \ 'Y } | 4 )