New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 7, 1924, Page 24

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——— T, L PUTNAN BANK WILL FISHING ENRCHES - OPEN WEDNESDAY REDL Will Occupy Quarters Formerly This — Summer They ~ Have Held by Delunct Bank i Gatbered 750,000 Pounds Putnar National ba ity to op ness in First National R Wednes Currency Da bank its At ers of t Reynold Vaughn ander G The dir Joseph ¢ ward J Wil Bdgar Mayor \ H. Willa this city ton and M Putnam Mrs. € Grosve ber cf the and her ings of Mrs. C perience in The new wrecking of ot Fuwam by G. H ke and to When the PREDIGTS PRESIDENT i'* WILLDRYLP COUNTRY (Fontinued From Fir ing of the holdup came rushing out of the @& revolver in his stood that quently obta tails from F As a A kept in the ja is in an out of the changed. to the Dedhar guarded, rst Page) [ j ha w TEA PRICES WORRY WORLD MAN DIES William F as Cost of Necessary Beverage Goes Up (o Stay Simmons, 75, Has Been | On New York Newspaper For Great Many Years, New Y N gimmons, 75 of the staff of His specia sea storics races and 1 joined the Wao chase zer, an done Hittlc He and serve 1fo of paralysis 32-HOUR WHEK to decide the 1ICE CRY Longon, Nt ing ice cr has organ clas: to | 5 Poland for Extension ()t Fmde to Near East The policy of AM ON WHEELS | out the city y to buy ice printed eards ice chambers fit wheels of t cream s JAP NOBLE IN MOVILS Tokyo, Nov. Asun #hibojo h This young n Viscount ] his back on to enter the T to Kyoto, Jana become the | his countr: matie roles S LAXATIVE Children Love Its Pleasant Taste e\ Your Sick, Constipated Child Needs “California Fig Syrup” bilious or plesgsant Byrup.” T tive nev #eh and of epoon’ #hild tomo AKE INDIANS Tnglishmen Fearful of Harl Winter 1 quate r NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER? 1924, LEGION SUPPORTS RMISTICE DAY Commander Sends ~ Coolidge Letter of Endorsement “l'DRGET -ME-NOT” GIRL Washington, No ( ¢ today made public a letter from Jumes A. Drain, national com- v of the American Legion, sured him that “your senti- as to the observance of Arm- Dy are the sentiments of the Mr. Drain's ter was in reply to ition from the president, 1 that the Ie 1 of peace » Day celebration on em- | in its glon desires peace, its com- jor wrote, and for ce” @s its opportunitics for ac- inting t with “the alterna- peace hiave been exceptional.” Dirain said e leglon “is do- t it cd advance the day rmamen y be reduced nd hopes tha ahors may help isten the time when a conven- the powers will be called to all military establishments, ntil that day does come the insist that the Unfted steps of its own to put o prospect of war more ives \ wi end.” hie continued, “the as long advocated and will | & for enactment at the coming | ssion of congress, of what I8 popu- universal draft place on all citl- ation in war by the government 1 power to fight, man power factory power to produce, rce. This 150 It places the hurdens of war equally upon all It is a preparedness meas- les the nation fending ftself n of efficiency and rly known as the ich would equal ion throug ey power to 1 peace measure bee o it pro cans for ds es will | asting peace until wo have that some world court, Tt all efforts to attain ere ever be ns, and t 1 on o 1 concord fis | on of arma- dication of con- s must ma ual of any in th competent arm nsion, adequate al guard and ade- air, land Furthermore, indus- t ntly {nformed ce time for its taln a navy the eq world, a small but capable of quick ex air forces, a natio rve forces for ty will emphasize eon | gubstance of your anity has more rea- n for discor INTEREST IN MINERALS | words tha son MISS VIRGINIA LELAND Miss Virginia Leland, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Walter W, | Leland, was selected as the “Forget-Me-Not” girl by the Dis- Japan Secks to Secure Tomg Term ! abled American Veterans who will have other pretty girls sell- ling forget-me-nots on the streats tomorrow. The money thus obtained will be used to defray the expenses of disabled war Concessions In Northern Saghalien | veterans and to promote legislation favorable to their interests and the interests of all men who fought in the World War, Teases for Ol Wells and Coal s determin- Russia long- | essions for ol | right way te CERONINETI any | & the steam line ‘Steam and Blectric Traffic Suc- s for the addition nce of monthly and in mainter pro-rata Be- e electric to Denton h line of the ns at Peking cost liscoveriea of r ],‘n”vfl -- was just cording to sev ‘,\-'\ nese news- not a paying it since the proposi- ising the frack, the line has e assert | ved by pany located rich | outh of the Tym | Saghalien coast.| D*/3% however dispatc gincers emple Tex of an electric Nov. SMILES AT MISFORTUNE ast yorts. are e value of the | and the reg fic upon a si Tapanese | nounced 1 he after 1 A Intoibeingl Aayalo 3 e 1880-Jap- Famons London “Cabhy” ls Out of Joh With Advent of the Auto- is cooperating wit mobile. A t nd Denton, & col of here. oint the int aperatic when ng a co decide ywn i acq bhy said refle micro- a and ipposed s good for the con rls here are ch sunbuin with a de just off the tree cessful on One Texas Line ey | | CHANP. OF WONEN GIVES 0LD HANOR (Mrs, Viora Mard Martin Donates ‘Home of Washington's Ancestors London, Noy. — The gift to the Anglo-American Assoclation of an ancient English manor house to be used as a hostel by American pilgrims to Sulgrave Manor, the home of George Washington's an- cestors, ‘brings out of obscurity a woman once known from one end of the United States to the other, Ifor the donor of the manor house 1s the venerable Mrs, Vic- toria Woodhull Martin, candidate | for the presidency of the United ates in 1872 along with Gen, Grant and Horace Greely. Mrs, Martin, then Mrs. Woodhull, was the nomince of the KEqual Rights party. That was the year President Coolidge was born; Mr. Davis was not born until the following gear; Gen. Dawes was learning Sunday school texts and Mr. Lalollette was a youth of seventeen, Famous for her marvelous beau- ty not less than for her radical views on all questions respecting woman's status in soclety, Mrs. Woodhull made a spectacular fight In a campalgn which closed with the re-election of Gen. Grant and Greeley's tragic death. But she had | demonstrated that a womanscould run for president, even though the women of the nation as a whole were not to receive the franchise until nearly half a century later. But Mrs. Woodhuil Martin has lived to see the suffrage fight won, not only by the women of her na- tive America, but by English wom- en as well, and from the retirement of her beautiful home at Norton Park, Bredon's Norton, up in Wor- cestershire, at the age of 56, she looks out npon a world which to- day cheerfully accepts for women the enlarged horizon for which she was fighting two generations ago. To many the news of Mrs. Wood- hull's latest gift will come as rather a surprising reminder that one who took such a prominent part in | American politics of such a fara- way time is still alive. Born in [ Onio in 1838, she was the widow of Dr. Canning Woodhull when she a speaking tour of England. audience in old St. the late John Bid- dulph Martin, English banker and philanthropist.. Their marriage fol- lowed, and the woman who had startled the United States by run- | made | One of her James Hall w in examining your eyes and ahility to fit you with the cor- rect lenses and frame, go hand in hand. Your eyes are your most pre- cions possession. Safeguard them, Have them examined now— FRANKE. GOODWIN Fyesight Specialist 327 MAIN ST. Fhone 1005 ning for the presidency came to England to reslde, Through all the subsequent years, Mrs, Martin has lent her influence and expended her fortune liberally in all projects to cement friendship botween the country of her birth and that of her adoption through marrlage, She was a moving spirit in the purchase of Sulgrave Manor, the old, Washington home, as well as a generous contributor to the necessary fund, The manor house, which the aged lady now glves as a hostel where Americans visiting Sulgrave Manor can find lodging, was built about the timo of Shakespeare's birth, It will ‘afford accommodations for some 30 visitors and will supply & tvant at present lacking In this his. torle neighborhood, Extraordinary VALUES These are truly unusual savings because they re- present clothes of the highest quality at lower than elsewhere prices, and on the easiest of 2art Payment Terms. Women’s & Misses’ COATS Handsome mid-season styles that effect simple and slender lines, trimmed. . . . i T mostly fur- Men’s & Young Men’s SUITS and O’COATS Unusually serviceable styles at new low level prices . .31698’ And Up 2450 And Up Boston Clothinz Storz 63 CHURCH ST, (Next to Herald Office) Again comes rev- olutionary news of the shoes. In spite of the prediction Shoes would have the field to themselves that Black this year. There's a Growing Demand for Tans And as we constantly keep our ears to the ground vogues to sense before they a tan Fashions. the new ve — of course, we're ready with Smart, New, Vogue Shoe Shop 236 counter- MAIN ST. Opp. Monument

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