New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 19, 1924, Page 10

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JUNE 19, 1924, N. B.H. S. SENIORS FROLIC ON CLASS NIGHT e COLONISTS ON “RANGELL : ISLAND TO BE RESCUED | |Motorman Killed, Several Injured in Trolley Crash Ashland, Mass,, June 19,—A motor- n was killed and several persons XXVI—To Eari zzling diamond XXVII—To Harold $Kkin a group of good-looking girls who will The last gathering year of the pare friends of the giadi nts er we leave school Lritain High most pleasant at the school talks by st musical num and cnjoy nt speaker cast and chor part of t The unusi 5 selt T'he Ameticans litorium wus ne was orus s of and ~mu Norn song' hit, ™ housand Now man Da Putney seored Years I'rom No CHARLES QUIGLLY 'resident ese John Eyivia & Mildred Hogl song, “Three The music duet, Helen Mem rish ler to May Mex Mills tune of “Prett Brivia gung by & nd Mildied rs From to tune of High Heltoc Ailler to th Clark Charles Uo ler; Seiykai Kenoura, wif Dloom; Mat Mitler; Menousek: ¥ teacher Biria, Mildred Linn, Haro The ch Norman Dar Gierochowsli Attor. Hermun Marfayak, I NeKeo m Povern Yoshi fa Ad Hart Boper Weiant, M ban To Miss | e credit for I v « vt i I nt night prodn nas plannsd by I v wh heing v v oln hear honor in tien ort eredit snce part of rest af 1) promensds *he letta won the « In v Rhe ia cam | was aley mittea in charge ehairman: il Ha'samb, Carl ner Address of Welcome By Charles Qulqlm "On bahaif of aduat of 1924, 1, as pres and men A most ¢ . nf 1 PR W ter night ¢ xercis W this opportu tude o ents, whe possihle ors, and made 1t Weig PuP tea pare ot (Class History By John E. Butler Armand’s TESORBANIO SCHOOL Ay MASNDOLIS . GUITAR URULELE INSTRUCTION 1028 MAIN ST Phone 3.2182 Hartford, Conn, s by playing O for competent plasers at tos from 875 to will far from Hiled Veaders want Banjoitc who can Armand, of i Tenor-Panio ol your Al demand calar week, ¥ [T has crented System ihat Yo meesd in o ol perition time and mones mand's Methinl guarantecd. On mandolin and zu the quickest apypy WHte or wire and terme, W 1s etrumen! will er 1 1om't wa tench hed 4 top- vonr foor mpmerintm midh the It s y v mapicue minigcenc . v eni S N R mpio JOHN 1L Bl Class Histo pose upon uest, XXVII—To the our consolation, never be able to get “Beehive” with such as Bob Snicdeman. XXIX—To Prof. Robert Goff, head of the mathematics derart- ment, University of New RBritain, we leave book eutitled effective lass we will unior ¢ leave for they man for the “taking ways" Remington Rivere we leave a book named “The Fourth Dimen- sion Made Easy,” by Prof. Charles Campbeil, head of the scientific bu- reau of physical research, New Britain To the class of 1825, as our and bequeath our property, personal, 1o be .distri- departure by the Jawful heirs we do give all the rest rcsidue of both real and buted after our faithful faculty In witness thereof | and seal this eighteenth day of June, year of Our l.ord Nineteen and Twenty-Four. CILASE OF 1924 Per Gertrude M. Ficber. set my 7 in the Hundred Witnesses Dorothy Wairath, William Gleason Grace Unkelbach, 1926, TLER 1925, rian legiates boys ar ther members r in loose fit- adity : o 1 quite g ‘lass 0 NOL (Lo High Can Cony publisiy, nd on reviously ma 1 vise cirs as "o our prine ing v 11-—To o 1vie give Alina poct ar ide hook ¢ Iy W realize this Vor Moo 1o pr n n\] bted o “Saily" metoerial Among anid 1 and d o Ci that wil 1ord i lowe Vit ‘harles ‘arison Robert therine Calla phine Fimer et Pete Symolon Williem Barrows Wright, ¢! What ki ge Wolfer Wil the her of the izations was 1 of Whers of hoth & Membera of our cla Harald surer. After Febru ation Charles towa Doris freasurer entertainment nns Mehed for the part by me genior clAss. Miss H ngely C Iass Will Ry Gertrude M. Fieber it known to all persons that we, ipal, 5 tow ce and assistance haye Waskowitz we o mowe POSTAL SERVIGE HAMPERED mployes in Various Parts of Canada Walk Out As Result of Miscarriage of Strike Orders June Postal service in ts the Dominion was isrupted today as the result miscarriage excentives of the employes defer- o edict which s Otawa, Easny ' various wdgment, do oo of a partial wed last night by federation of postal ring for 24 hours a strik 10 | \was to have been effective at 5 o'clock yesterday afternoon. In many post office stations in Tor Montreal, Windsor, Walkerville, and other smaller towns workers had walked out before in ctions deferring the strike had heen received Later many of the kers returned to their jobs hut a number said to ont with the result that considerably hamp- a4 declare 1 testament ind codici Mr, Slade, we od wishes and on for his nev. ard us, during anto, Sandwich rs, M = Har our | w (flon considerable were tayed the service was ered In the meantime the workers are meeting with a eab et committe in an effort to ad ust arles Quig- wage differences the deferred {itled “Publie strike order goes into efiect at 5 p. m ssment the anather v us during the Mater we yejresentatives of 1 loyalty 1o be 5. before todays THREE STRANGELY KILLED ' mbar Aleo tie Dancing As leave a Women Found in Near Chicagoeossi- Man Two Qnarey Pool By Auto Wreek Victims Mysteriousiy ¥im r the vocational and ture nlteration, hat to he wory Chicago, June 19 4 in a quarry a suburh, the | 1 man and ® nude body of & been recovered The man was fdentific pool 1 lies of & mid yman and the young woman et v n drowne hurst heat race classmen and to hequent sions to | as George | women and Mrs was clad William A. in miss g dragged heen Chicagn, Th Rare Mack Townsend of Mrs. Dorothy Mack, Mra in silk underciothes husband of Mre, Barr arry 18 beh must have automobile were Emm to only nare clear- 'ing and 1he q | vings? in the helief that he be thi a member of 1h aneddy’s new [ with the * Me and other three Mrs, Pare and Mre, M n M Peorin ombe and Jo their home here to &0 A later to Teit ithori « or Toitet for a pelicre that the car with into the water whes affort turn it Ber pants plunged take, those o drive to Harvey 1y ever . Two U, S. Submarines in Accident, \o One Inju wton, Ju 19, Tno - FRECKLES p With a Veil; more Them With Othine— Donble Strength Pont 1 te- paration is &0 suecessful in g a clear, | yid under druezie of orders is- | Two Plans Are on Foot for Relief Ships to Be Sent to Arctic Regions By tie Associated Press, Nome, were afoot today to rescue a colony which Harold Noice left on Wrangell Isiand in the Arctic Ocean, north of | Siberia,, when he learned that an ex- pedition led there in 1921 by Alan Crawford of Toronto, had perished with the exceptiop of Ada Blackijack, an Eskimo. These two colonies were Wrangell Island under the.encourage- Viihjalmur Stetfansson, an| Arctic explorer ,who has gone into in- hospitable parts of Alaska with the announced intention of proving that they are good places to live. The Wrangell Island expeditions were de- gned to establish a British claim to the island Aboard sent to ment of the power schooner Her- man, which left here yesterday for the Aretic was Sydney Snow, an American hunter. 8now took a party | of Eskimos, He stated that they “ would go to Wrangell island this sum mer and that he would bring off all who yvanted to come, carl Lomen, head of a Nome trad- ing company, has heen approached by representatives of Etefansson , it was learned. Under a tentative plan a schooner belonging to this company and making semi-monthly mail trips hetween Nome and Kotzebue Sound, just north of Rering strait, may slip over to Wrangeil Island if ice con- ditions appear favorable. The colony left on Wrangell by Noice consisted of thirteen kimos in charge of Charles Wells of Nome, KIDNAPPING THREAT | Son of Trvin H. Martman, Wealthy | Chicago Man, Mentioned in Demand For Ransom, Chicage, June 19, - Police placed around the home of Ir- | vin H. Hartman, furniture dealer, last night, after a speeial delivery letter hid been received threatening to kid- nap 10.year-old son, Trvin, Jr., uniess A $10,000 ransom demand wa paid. T'he hoy is one whe his al rich men's were selected by Nathan , and Richard Loeb in jall Kidnapping and Iranks, wone, Leopold, Jr awaiting trial for the slaying of 13.year-old Robert ax possible subjects for Kidnapping. A short time after the threat received, a man's repeated the aemand over the und sald furfher communications would tell how the mon 'y was ta be delivered The method of followed that employad in making simi Robert Franks' family killed. ‘The Hart hiock of the telephone the threats Ciosely s demand of hal heen v heme & within a nks About the made, a D 4 horhood frer hie hoves the ransom demand flery tine, g vacant lot rross A e in the 1t was put out by firemen Stops Asthm Piscomfort and Annoyas Gften In 24 Hours '5() MANCHES guards | was were two the |th injured, none seriously, when trolley cars collided today near Framingham line. The collision occurred near a turnout and James E. Cunningham of Milford, driving one of the cars, was killed outright, Judge Willis Alaska, June 12.-—Two plans | district court, Kingsbury of the Holliston a passenger on one of { the cars, was shaken up but not bad- ly hurt. " | One cubic foot of =alt water welghs | 64.3 pounds. THisnewkind of laundry soap makes a thick soap- sudsy solution. Pour this into your tubs, boiler or washing machine. Use it instead of bar soap. USE enough Rinso to get good lastingsudsthatstand up afterthe clothes are put in. These rich soap-suds SOAK dirt out. No more harmfu! rubbing! SoAK clothes an hour—= overnight il you wish, Then rinse, Because Rinso dissolves completely, it rinses outthoroughlyleav. ing clothes snowy white. * o 0w Rinso is made by the makers of Lux to do the family wash as perfectly as ‘Lux does all fine thingz. Get Rinso from veur grover today. WATKINS BROTHERS I'ER, CONN Fifticth Anniversary ] etrength Othine hat money-back guarantee. SORE, TIRED FEET more tired it ie thie t swollen No more hunions ing relief, just use is magica Tiz sre your foot troul or draw mt seem er. fever | few cents Reed Chairs $13.5 with upholstered back The Jubilce Reed Chair—a regular S18.00 value—is made of genuine reeld Shronghout, finishe an harmonizing brown. The upholstering, which ineludes z a baek pad not illustrated, has a very attractive erctonne in old rose, tans and ' blues. The e¢hairs have spring seals making them very eomfortable Now on Sale at our Manchester St CThie Ie (he wnrae comanny anernting masie atereg ol Harifard snd frietol,

Other pages from this issue: