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Valentines Children Party NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY 26, 1025. PASTORS REPORT FOR YEAR 192 Fathers Laden, Grohol aud Cop- pens Give Anoual Statistics ANNUAL MUSICAL REVUE FOR PALESTINE RELIEF Production Under Auspices of Hadassah Soclety Makes Hit ‘With Big Audience . Surpassing any previous attempt, the New Brituin Chapter of Hadas- ECLIPSENOT SEEN AND SHOCK KILS 80 Year 0ld Weather Se¢r Dies of Disappointment Week’s Activitlen in Catholie Churches St. Mary's A month’s mind mass for Mrs, Susan Hartney was held this morn- ing. There will be a nronth's mind mass for Mrs, Michelina Frigo to- morrow morning. On Wednesday morning there will be a month's tlon becams critical yesterday and the police were called upon to help move her, INCREASE BUILDING FEES The proposed new bullding code to be submutted for ratification at the March meeling of the common councll will increase fees for bullds | ing permifs from $1 to $2 per thous- and dollars of estimated cost and flx the maximum at $500 instead of $75, which is now maximum, If the in- Outfits. sah put on its annual musical revue yesterday witernoon at the Lyceum theater, There were two acts di- vided into 18 scenes, cach one a de- clded success. Among those featur- ing wer The Serenaders” whose creage are approved the department) will be placed on a self supporting basis, | mind mass for James Smith, An anniversary mass for Patrick 8. McMahon will be held on Thurs- day morning, On Saturday morning an anpiversary mass for James Long will be held. 5 St. Joscph's Rev. Patrick Daly, the pastor, will present his annual report. at the masses Sunday morning. - 3 St. Peter” s 1 St. Anne's soclety will meet at the o church at 2:30 o'clock Thursday Chapped or: reddened afternoon, skins — quickly respond to the | Resinol treatment, The purity and sooth- ing qualities of Resinol Soap tend to prevent dryness—the most fre- quentcause of chapping' —but where exposure to sun or wind has al- ready roughened and burned the skin, the healingtouchof Resinol Ointment stops the your £marting and helps to druggist restore skin health, Lree from all harm—heals like a charm" RESINOL | A reduction of $7,000 In the out standing debt of the parish of 8 John the Evangelist was made dur- ing 1924, Rev, Thomas J. Laden, ll\\!“ pastor, announced ut the masses |inoeprotution -of “fhe Shooting of yesterday. The report also stated [y "MoGrew” was accorded rounds that during the year there had been | ., Pplutse Other specialties were 20 marriages, 41 baptisms and 19 | Me-Not," led by Mrs. deaths, The parish now has a mem- |y oo he. cparcfoot Days,” *“Old- bership of 1,600, This was consider- | ;b oiong Waltz” Mac ed an excellent showing, and Father | (o' ¢horus, Ukulele Chorus, Mr. | Laden thanked his parishioners for || 5, (g girls; “Follow the their support, urging them to con- llow,” Rose Swarsky and tinue it during the present year 10|, 5 “We'vo Got Something,” makp 19 the most successful in Rose Bayer and chorus. the history of the church, T sairaast It caeh All Saints' Church ° were Impressive and those ssful year at Al Saints (NG RRDEOE SR e shown by the annual re- | (© particularly pretty, port read at the masses yesterday | "'y bt Hashkow prescnted by Rev. Stephen A, Grohol, the pas- | ..o,5"0¢ songs which made a good tor. The reccipts during 1924 Were |}, oggion on the audience, Opera- $16,609.33, including the balance on | [Pt 0 0 T ored by Miss tand at the beglhning of the year. |yi ) gwarsky accompanied by A loan of $15,000 was sccured for |y 'poue Swarsky and a trio com- the bullding of a rectory, wWhich | 0;"¢ Misy Rose Miller, soloist, | was begun in January and completed | ypio "y my Miller, planist, and Max | in October, when Father Grohol be- |}/, ongiein, violinist. Joe Ruben- gan occupying it ; Expon}rl!hvlr"w stein as a colored § baby was were §27,851.02, leaving on hand & | . ;ocially pleasing. Miss Kiemowitz balance of $T.84831. The debt 45 | WO MROTE ¢ 00 iad In dance now $35,000, while the parish prop- | {7 e erty is appraised at 0,000 The | ™"\ " tan010 10 the first act, | parish now embraces 70 familles and | 2% & BIERTO ¢TI S 525 individuals, Durlng the year| ... tn, ehorus acting as models. there were two weddings, slx deaths | 10T U BT BN O8O ired and 30 baptiams. Mrs. Henry J.|Fhp CORl CIC ER8 e e d Bollard is organist and cholr direc- |\ "y, king part were deserving of o Ratiohael Buavaty injeexton: much credit as were the director, e L eraiCHuECh Clement H. Lewls, Miss Zoe La Har, The debt of 8t. Peter's church was Manageriileot Komisll andl The reduced during the year, according ‘“Alod“y st wio s fulitisd s to the annual report read yesterday | = 0¥ “TCT eo et morning by the pastor, Rev, fharl:s The proceeds of the affair will be Coppens. The recolpts during 1934 4o 1107"ty rellet work in Palestine were $11,000 and the expenditures|4° e $8,800. The debt was veduced by $1,500, leaving on hand a balance of | $600. There were 70 baptisms, 35 1weddings and 13 funerals during the year, Hackensack, N. J,, Jan. 26,~—~An- drew Jackson De Voe, 80, nation- ally known amateur weather prophet, died at his home of heart discase yesterday, disappointed by failure to realize one of his life's greatest ambitions. For years he had been looking forward to view. ing the eclipse of the sun; but when the great solar spectacle came yes- terday he was too 11l to behold it. De Voe prided himself on the fact that, unlike most amateur pre- dicters, he made his weather prophecy pay. For more than a grouping |quarter of a century he had earned in the |several thousand dollars a year by number | providing copyrighted forecasts to * | patent medicine companies on issu~ ing yearly almanacs. In addition he prepared weather predictions for farmers, cotton brokers, and speculators who ap- plied for his services. De Voe Is said to have won his first reputation by his prediction of the blizzard of 1888 that burled New York city deep in spow. He is re- ported to have foreseen that event by two week Trimimngs Favors Prizes Life-Time Service There is sound logle back of the wlm:“aw povss g TP s e It SHOULD better—and oy serve you. longee—AND For the G. R. to Raily Gift Dept. Sacred Heart Rev. Lucyan Bojnowski, pastor of the church, announced yesterday that he will read his annual report at the masses next Sunday. THE 1 |DICKINSON DRUG CO., 169-171 Main §t. 6. has been engineered and buile Signal standards—the most result. And this fai P fln—hb-wlfiklhqu Here is invitation to to in G. R. &o‘;fldflfih— dg:rhnna y= own h“ &l‘{ us do a wishing for you—no charge, no - You sy when! YONAN ELECTRIC SUPPLY 321 Main Street Tel. 1754 ‘(Upstairs—Just Across the Tracks) 500 Pound Woman Dies as 10 Cops Try to Move Her New York, Jai. 26.—Ten police- men spent an hour yesterday in car- rying Mrs, Hilda Jacobson, who|* welighed 500 pounds, down one flight of stairs on her way to a hoapital but despite their efforts to save her, she died of heart disease on the sec- ond floor landing at her home. Mrs. Jacobson, who was 55, had long been suffering from heart trou- ble, and had not been out of her apartment for six years, or out of her bed for three years. Her condl- Say Resinol to NOwW! There is a “walking stick farm” at Surrey, England, devoted exciu- sively to the growing of sapling ash and cherry for manufacture into sticks and umbrellas, You can’t be backward if you “do it NOW”! But spell.it backward— see what happens: WON a tidy saving by buying NOW! = Y. M. C. A, BOYS' DEPT NEWS Great Interest was shown in the pooi, checker and croquet tourna- ments for the champlonship of the boys' department, which took place |1ast week. ELECTED P. E. R. OFFICERS | crampion it sear; was succemiot | in the Think of it — Suits with "2 pair Trousers — $29.50 — i and they sold formerly high ! | as $45. in defeating 8. Copeland | Big Heavy Warm Over- A ! finals this year and he is now con- coats reduced, Buy Today.'|Erme® X Humphrey Chosen Vice- |sidered champion of the Y. boys' ) ; President' And Harry O, Brown UcPArtment. | 8. Alpert defeated all comers in | Secretary of Elks Organization, | the checker tournament. Loren | Larson gave him a scare in the Ernest N. Humphrey of this city ! finals but Alpert finally came was elected vice-president of the |through as champion, Past Rulers' Association of Connec- | In the croquet tournament Henry ticut, B. P. O. Elks, at the annual | Recano proved without a doubt that meeting held in Middletown, Satur- | he is the undisputed champlon in day, and Harry C. Brown of this|this game. Fe defeated Vincent | city was elected secretary. John A. | Squillcote in the finals, Condon of New Haven was clected | About 50 boys participated in the | president and Louis Brock of |tournaments and the winners will | Bridgeport was elected treasurer. | be presented With their prizes at the | The meeting was attended by 150 | movie show on Thursday night, | past exalted rulers and state depu- | A large crowd of boys is expected | | ties. to attend the radio elub's mgvie | Luncheon was served at the Elks |show Thursday evening at g:so; liome fn Middictown and was fol- |o'clock. An interesting program owed by the business sesslon. In | has been secured from one of the | the afternoon a banquet was held | well known film companies and the in the Arrigoni hotel. Among the | pictures will' be shown through a | reporls submitted at the meeting | modern movie machine which s | was that of the welfare work car- fowned by the Y. M. C. A. Any ried on in Allingtown, Wallingford, | boy in the city, whether a member | New London and Middletown Where | of the Y. M. C. A. or not, is invited «x-servicemen are' undergoing treat- | to attend this show, i ment, To provide entertainment for | Several bo ready signified ese men about $2,600 has been | thetr intention of going to camp this spent during the last year, A fund |summer and the local secretary is |has also been set aside for cemetery | taking the names of prospective | piots for those who die and | campers, Last year over 40 boys | | relatives, [ took advantage of the Y. M. C. A. | — summer camp and in almost every West Haven BO)' Badly case they are planning to go again | Hurt in Auto Crash this year, | New Haven, Jan. 26.—Charles Wilson, eight years old, of T4 Court | ret, West Haven, was seriously in- d yesterday afternoon when he Destruction of a part of the village | automobile on . on, Conn, was averted yes- cenue, near the trolley ELa car barns. The boy was taken to the morning when members of | New Haven hospital, where he is| POURNKkeepsie Orientals, said Sanc- | suffering from lacerations of torum, discovered fire in the Casino | B N Gt L A A DI E Eat e theater a two-story buflding and | the akull: warned the villages. The theater | | tomobile, which struck him, | 204 two adjoining dwellings were | was driven by Frederick T. Benja. | d¢troyed, but the local department |min of this city. Benjamin was|and firemen from Amenia and Mil- held on a technical charge of reck- | !ér8ton were able to save a fourth | less driving and was relcased in | dWelling. | bonds of $1,000. The driver clams that the bo; out from the stde- walk and declares that the dent was unavoidable. HORSFALLS 9399 Xsylum Strect Hartford, “It pays to buy our kind” No Cold ever neadache or grippe ~ Colds break in a day for the millions who use Hill's. Headache and fever stop. La Grippe is checked. All ina way so reliable that druggists guarantee results, Colds are 00 important to treat in lesser ways. Aldoggine (VLG Price 30c uscmé‘gum E Get Red Box. with portrait (] Where will you be—financially? . Will you have a bank account and will the balance be a sizable one? In Obtaining UNITED MILK Co. BUTTER Churned Fresh and its taste will tell the quality Destruction of Village Averted by Lodge Men Poughkeepsie, N. Y., Jan. (| We don’t want to “preach” about saving. All of us know we ought to save., Our mission is to help you—by encouragement—and by paying compound interest. the of —e —— A good cook would no more think of using an imitation flavoring extract | than she would of making ple crust out of cake batter. She insists on Baker's Extracts.—advt, acci- ANNUAL MINSTREL SHOW Washington L. Morgan lodge, 71, K. of P, will hold its |nual minstrel show and d niorrow night at Junior O. hall on Hungerford court. T} is known as the “Happy Hour Min- | strel of 1925, and is directed by Arthur Hayes with Waldorf Peter- | son and Albert Helm as assistant | directors The program includes the follow- ing numbers: Buck and wing dance, Eleanor B. Burns; “Innocent Eygs,” | Mary Wallach; “Where' | Hiding,” Lillian Lak | er of Dreams,” An | County Down,” tenor Henry | Kristopher; “Down Deep in the | Cellar,” bass solo, Samuel 1. Cole Pal That I Had,"” Arthur | Hayes. Madeline Stewart, loeal uvenile entertainer, who recently d with the “Checker Girl levue” at the Bristol theater, will 0 entertaln im a character mct A\rthur Hayes will be the iiterlocu- tor and C. F. Kopack and Robert indine will be the endmen, The committee in charge consists Roland Ripple, Paul Kalen, Henry istopher and Samuel I. Cole. The "Happy Hour Minstrel” will 0 appear at the Young Women's an Association Thursday eve ing of this week, assisted by the Melody Men. MARRIED NINE YEARS Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Regi he guests of honor at a surprise party given at their’ home, 24 Mar ket street, last evening, the oceasion being- their ninth wedding anntver- saty. No. Be sure to get our butter, we can serve you with sweet or salt butter, Call 1610, for prompt de- livery. ¥ United Milk Co. 49 WOODLAND ST. 1610 For Colds, Join the thousands who prefer “Commercial” safety and service. My Sweetia Tel. DENTISTS A. B. Johnson, D. D. S. T. R. Johnson, D. D. S. Gas—Oxygen—X-rays National Bank Bldg. NURSE IN ATENDANCE EAD THE HERALD CLASSIF1, ADS FOR YOUR WANTS Bereficial joans CONFIDENTIAL LOANS UP TO $300 quickly arranged on house furni- ture I'gi,. your home. Long time t pey. Lawhdl interest. ve your applicstion today. 1 Societ Many games were played and vio- lin selections - were rendered by 87 West Main St. | Blanche Doty. Friends who were Prefession: 04-5. o e T ™ present from Torrington, Hartford ind this city presented Mr. and Mrs — s Qowe9te 83 Satmrecrs |Regis with mamy gifts. Luncheon | was served. The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century. The box bears this signature C. Vrore