New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 9, 1925, Page 3

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BY [iREAT ST“RM “A fine kermon,” commented May |0f 2 torthcoming shooting affair. ity of education and breeding would he comment on his alleged (el o Wy nob s |weeks after serving part of his four RCSUM to preside over the house of repre- tl who was not known by her first » {ko 11" hauo: Glore i had turned state's evidence Minneapolis, July 9 (P—Wind, Liltlghaiopenyicrline fsheisouaht rain and hail took & heavy toll ki d hi Wednesday in several districts of | Can a girl, crushed by her tellow 5 S women, They ted individually |oystody, but a search of his belong yet you know you need nouris| ing The Herald, G i ¢ at odds with the world | T T y > NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 9, 1925, Heppline, a girl who Interested me| 7The former convict would not o . §m talk about a shooting Twin Cities Suffer Serionsly as| wimieres ssuson sruck, former Mrs, Flagtier, a wiite-haired pris- (141§ €bout @ St year prison term for bigamy, Ro- senfatives, got herself sentenced to naine, declared, “It was a good ser- | % ) e |agatnst Mrs. Obenchain did not HEN the heat makes you feel answers to the questions— 3 i s Suchiwereitheicomn 1 could Minnesota, including the twin cities. | MeN, regain her place In soclety? » 5 to the sermon tantipeonle " on [ ivza as ordéred food—drink a glass of Borden’s, killed, 18 v i a % i - |the jury disagreelng In each case. | wonderful lunch in hot weather. illed, were injured, and one was | Ry WINNIFRED MASON HUCK A i o B é ol ¢ epted the services with | She | ) . t kind of slush.” eald one girl. |Roman was alleged to have been / some loud speaker, I'll say,” |lurking in the nelghborhood several from the first by her manner of |U!SCuss his reasons for loitering uring Sensa 1ona ermon| o i e e el congresswoman and the first woman oner, ang the only woman fn the | S0 COMINE | okl o e ———— prison, it mon, and we ought to man told acquaintances that the fact ’ : ot n g mean he no longer cared for her that you can’t eat a mouthfu Are our prisons humane? % 2 % y kot no uniform epinfon from the |}ye wag not armed when taken into i In Minneapolis, four persons were | ThIS 18 the tenth story written for B d o Ars, L Obsnchain! was trisd twice the Improved Malted Milk, It's a was released after a third jur reported missing in a terrific wind Former Representative 1o Congress 4 i y & v % hardness or sentimentality, accord- |had disagreed in the case of Burch A glassful of Borden ‘_MfllffdMllk and rain storm which struck the from Tlinols AR St iF b Ing to their individual nature | Both gained their fresdom in De has the food value of a light meal. It south part of the city shortly after | ona Saturday morning 1 heard s 8 | o M a J 1 congratulate any preacher who | is nourishing and sustaining, but not 6 p. m. A trall of wreckage repre- i groar commotion in the porch cor- i 3 J courage to stand up hefore 3urch and Mrs. Obenchain heating. More satisfying than ordi- senting more than $100,000 property i e 0 ridor. I was in the art class room, ; o 1) o RS 9 ¢ Eliiofak uhsas URfortun |slidenls e Noriishl0 Wy atel nary malted milk, because it contains damage, was left. sewing, as usual, and wishing for an ApdiiAvaeRHareRanegm et A entiad | Streets were flooded and for sev. ( ( : | S il more milk. excuse fo get out into the fresh alr 2 ' opyrig NFA Service Ine.) Jand her husband, Ralph Obenchain 2 eral hours during the evening were | oy o o . : A i € Aftes her divorcs she met Ken- Yet it is extremely easy to assimi blocked by hundreds of uprooted | .y oyl are out T heard some-| | . . - 5 i Tomorrow: 1 fearn a shoplifter's [nedy in the west, and the state late, because the casein is partially ’r':;’].: e et s p oo Hniast Am«mM' opinion of street walkers |charged that she wn; ”"‘\v' hof predigested. Borden's Malted Milk e Laks Ha pal p TRk gllalaretont i The volee L ; 7 n: admi LU does not overtax the digestion. vilion, one of the most popular of [ : : o it i 5 o aftection cooled. Obenchain v 4 ; the city's playgrounds, was the scene | {911 """;"" e ‘;‘9 “’”“";‘r' K [termed “the man in a mitlion.” stood And you'll be delighted with the i n electric thrill passed across the i s e in the tri " f Y e | of the greatest catastrophe of the | A% S 20l (AT Pases t U, L by his fo wife in the trial anl flavor, for Borden's has no nauseat. storm. A section of the building I offered fo re ’hen we I¢ i o » i oy | ing sweetness. It appeals to the most collapsed on fifty persons, killing | When we left the class just before , i !“f N b D N e ~ i 2 R N ppeals tc Mrs. Emma Mitler, her three-year. |the dinner hour I felt that 1 had j : B i Ly " [trial. Roman. then under 1nicky hot weather appetite. old daughter, injuring six othe suddenly coms upon a bolsterous | | o ; y 13 5 4k AL |tiary sentence for bigamy, n Order a pnckage from your dealer sons and throwing 200 persons in an Yfl{;_l)!ll' T 'H‘V'Hl ' o % L e W — ;”, portant witness. He told of th Packed i two con. today and make it at home for youte adjoining room in a panic here was hugging. There was | |8 it 7l / e [aftection which sprang up between venientsizes—7and self and your family. The Bordea ‘Among the several smaller bulld- | prancing. There was laughter, i ¢ \ Claims Former Convief b L e zes—7 ings destroyed by the wind was the |There were tears. Loud and joyous & ] ( n Hflfi ‘ T e T an 150z Both sizesat Company, BmdenBldg.,a:OMadxson drug stors not far from the Lake |giggles resounded the length of the | |48 (R p ) \7 ThlealeHP(l HF]v GELONGITEn LTI 6 et all drggiite ESGING Harriet park operated by Charles R. hall A B0 HE Tiester, 47. Fiester, although he| “I am so glad you are out, and e ' \ K@iyl escaped infury when the bullding [*“Oh, how thin you ar “But 1 ns Angeles, Julv 9 1. 1 Notes which had passed bet n crashed, collapsed outside and died [am o glad you are ont,” they were x B} Iynne C. Obenchain has sought and |the 10 at the jail were read into | 1) of heart disease a few minutes later. | ying, ; - y obtainsd protection of the law record 2 The fourth person killed was Wil- In the Dungeon > against - aavel wdier The — tard J. Ford. 30, who was hurled At dinner one of the girls who| |g AN 2 1 : e HEAT KILLS TWO N ul Koman, for- 50 feet Yrom the cab of a traveling |weors just “out” sat beside me, Her 161 e time witness | Piftsburgh. July 9 o deat! THE IMPROVED crane at a local machine plant three . B\ hree days in the dungeon, on a| | : {1alnst her cond tria) for | from ceurred In The fury of the storm had abated | jiot o¢ pread and tea, bad left her| || P : . murder of 1 Bellon Kennedy, | burgh rlct yesterda he vic- by the tims it crossed the river into | Lo "ot CO T R / e R | Adolph! ScHack: 1. and \ St. Paul. Minor damage was done | %5 S0 R O Y rardiy | : o el 2y Roman 1 3‘, over" a framed up story in order to | acqnit her of the murder charge there hy'the wind and four persons|, . ;.4 fo0d. I gid not eat my 5 1=puty sheriffe as he were infured In a series of aceldents |,/ 50 Sl o0 ey that she p o . 3 |the front door of Mre O L :-q—— P g Obenchains | weather burean announced 2% | incident to the driving rain and i i ¢ S i 5 wind. The most serious of thesa was a policeman who was struck by a plate glass window which was blown was not eating all of hers. ; : suburban bungalow in Ann S L That night che tried to eat, and R ohe several hours after ehe had appealed | Warmer when her butter was gone 1 offered | > K to the sheriff's office for protection otk her mine, She did not want it Ally BOVE THE HOME OF 3UFFEINTENDE TTENDORF Ol Local storms of varving intensity. | 2FRCC ¢ 68 B28€: girts | THE MARYSVILLE KEFORMATORY; BELOW, MRS, L. M MITTEN. from mild summer ghowers fo fer- | Th3. A1eINOOR BYe move g pope WHG LEADS SUNDAY SCUOOL SERVICLS rific bombardments of hail and tor- | P 1e dungeo hey had | : rential rains were reported from |broken a new rule, rest of the day in solitary other girl, who was always lett ey sectlons of the state. At least | “And Mary is one of them,” sald| Superintendont Mittendort led the|it be known that she hated evers per cent crop damags was suf- | Stella, with traglc eves, “Just out|S schooli e canlalnly undsce | Uilis Abont ctat s red in Wright and Eastern Meeker [0f the dungoon for unother offense, | stood prisoners, for most of say, " m“\' county, according to early estimates |thin and with a bad cold. She'll dle, ce was singi a5 1 told her bv the wind, hail and near-torda- |She didn't know about the rule. It And such sin vas th and most of does which swept that section. ain't fair!” | congrogation | Another girl was joining the | Everybody g and san oS SVETINT sl MissRVanderbiliiiinds SN SR INER o el G R S Lups = A 0 L tt t Her ("lr:t!lei Bunz‘lira'!ed‘,-:m»i S .ny’l' S i | S g aliowed {0 cho | Soon the bell 13 e weue n pen e er 0 weather was forecast for tamorrow New York {thing tor her, but to do all we could own sonzs, T cuelo Vanderbilt s perturbed be- | for Mary." tothat we were n anse her exclusive Parisian frock | T did not see what rould be qone No Comment vas duplicated and old in New York | for Mary, but 1 did know that 2en tendor before ghe returned from Paris Superintendsnt Mittendorf or his & v Bouncing down ths gangplank of |wife would e i B s T s the lner Olympic vesterday, Miss | whenevor a request was made lnge Pate \ ot ' T — ; Vanderbilt, wearing a frock of hlack | But the offense had not been se- T g ¢ FL § el : 00 ou nd yellow printed silk, ran inta the | fious and the next morning found nyihine ‘ecoms aceust s : [ i Ad o arms of a girl friend h fi rls “out” in time for &un They! kissed many times Then | day s Miss Vanderbilt noticed that her | Breakfast on unday was the TrlenAin i Areast noak enticaliy c et eatm asia e baRad Bt after ame as her own | breakfast were free until 10 afternoon m the mbly Her frock is the same as mine.” | . 1 in the sun porch or dressed for this. Fach pri 2 aid to her mather, Mrs, William |10 walk in the court a white dress " mat il K. Vanderbilt, “They told me in Cle rons e, one, ¢ 2 dittle ere e ed her and Paris lfh’]' min was th vy o of | 1 EIVI \‘ ) g eaal r ) i “‘\ : g , DP?! )Ifl’i;”fl s kind but nons of us s or caps Mrs. Vanderhbit fled and eatd fany kind. e . o lon f ! eouldn’t be help While Miss [blue denim uniforma Vonsuslo was buying gowns in Faris | whaol, but we dil . . t 1 my Ty Permit me to make a few remarks on a subject er sister. Muriel. dressed in chups | white aprons. d one gir ¢ tan nar 1 E § 3 T i R e | R R e e i etly il ) Cacept f ter chur ¥ t1 B that chould be of vital importance to every woman who west., Consnelo and her mofher re- | was too mueh for fwo of the girls the eala e ] T . ' turned ta be present at Muriel's | one day and they broke ranks to do fram | opinians 1 has a home to manage, “It's a per: <onal matter.” wedding at Newport, . 1., July 27, ja f profane steps of a bunny ol Faerytl A (=) L) ta Frederick €. Church, Jr | wiggle on the eide, They spent the | 1e an't th \ t J | WWW My experience in the laundry business has con- vinced me that to the average woman the methods of the modern laundry are somewhat of a mystery. Qur business, which is really a branch of your own home, is so fundamentally necessary a part of every day life, that it should be thoroughly understood hy every woman who expects full return for the money invested in clothing I am going to try and show you how easy it is for vou to understand what we do with your washing, and why it is no longer necessary forany woman to hesitate about sending her entive washing to the laundry, I know that you will realize after you have thor- oughly reviewed these articles that the women who Now GOING ON! | send their washing to the UNION are benefitted i b phrsically, mentally and financially. No Need to Tell You That This Sale Will Break F All Records in Value Giving b | : ‘ HUNDREDS WILL BUY AND SAVE[| i e e my humble efforts, permit me to be 1 tell you the whole Come In Now—The Bargains Are Big ctfully vours, Values Up to $45.00 %NYSAMPE SH P : s Union Laundry Co., Inc. David §.Segall, Pres. 357 MAIN ST, NEW .BRITAIN 135 MAIN ST,, BRISTCL

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