New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 26, 1925, Page 15

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MR, SANTA VISTS POLISH ORPHANAGE Tree Provided by Knights ofl Golambus Couneil The orphans at the Polish hm\m‘l enjoyed thelr first Christmas tree at the North Burritt street hmnutlon' Thursday afternoon. It was furnish- | ed and decorated by the house com- | mittes of Daly council, K. of C.| through voluntary contributions by | the membership at large. There are | over 100 children at the orphanage | and it was 2 real gala day for them. The tree was one of the most com- pletely decorated of its kind In the city and everything possible to make Christmas a bright and memorable occasion was furnished. The com- mittee was greatly alded by the generosity of the Donnelly Co., pro- prietors of the Boston store, which donated a large number of toys, and the F. W. Woolworth Co., which do- rated tree trimmings and toys. Banta Claus visited the scene com- ng down the chimney and a pro- Yonged shout of joy greeted him on his appearance. He ofliciated at the ceremony by passing out gifts and every single child received enough toys to last him for some time to come. Besides, there were gifts of sweaters, stockings, caps, little dresses, shoes and other articles of wearing apparel and candy, oranges, nuts, ice cream and all the dainties that make Christmas such a happy occasion. It was the first time since the or- vhanage was started in this city that the children there had ever had a Christmas tree and to say that it was a success is putting it mildly. About 100 members of Daly council attended the party and the results of their generosity were evident on every side. Officials at the institution safd that it was the most successful | party ever given at the homse and the happiness of the little inmates ‘was proof enough that the purpose of the celebration had been attained. BRISTOL NEWS (Continued from Page Seven) o'clock. A solemn high mass of re- quiem will be celebrated by Rev. OMver T. Magnell and burial will be in 8t. Joseph's cemetery. Powers leaves beside his parents, Mr. and Mrs. James Powers, six rothers. Peter, Thomas, Harold, | Emmett, Patrick and Russell Pow- ers and a sister, Kitty Powers, all of | this city. He was born on August 20, 1905, in Placentla, N, F., and lived in this city only about two years. He had been employed at the New Depar- ture Mfg. company as an inspector. The accldent in which Powers was killed, happened on Christmas eve when the car which he was driving crashed through the railing of Johnson’s Bridge on the road be- tween Cobalt and Easthampton, and | dropped to the rallroad tracks 60 | teet belw. Clarence Beasley of 90 Falrfield street, who was in the car with Powers, was only slightly in-| Jjured and will be able to leave the | Middlesex hospital in a few days. Nckel Plate Operations Show Gain in Revenues Cleveland, Dec. 26 (A—Nickel | Plate operations for the eleven months ended November 30 last shows gross revenues of $30,017,024, an Increase of $456,515, and net| raflway operating fncome of $9,513.- | $26, an Increase of $1,186,536, com- pared with the corresponding period | of 1924. Net Income was $5,0 339, an increase of $777,030 over | the eleven montss of last year. Gross revenues for November | were $4,528.002, a decrease of $16 733 under the same month last year. Net railway operating income $763,149, a of 8338, while net income. after all charg was $415,863, a decrease of §3 072 ! Tla\els }00 Mllei Is Married in Hospital Hartford, D 26 ® After traveling nearly three thousand miles from Virginia, ( marry Miss Laura Rocky Hill, on Christmas day, Page Sharp of Boston did not intend to have his plan frustrated even though he was preventec 1 from participating in the previc 1 cere- mony by an inf s which cessitated immed the Hartford hospital and service was hel bedside, They will leave for Guat =oon as the gr WITH THE A pockethook w was found by the daughter of Elmer Wood, 39 S°xton Drive, at the rail- road crossing on Main street 3 days ago. 1t was reported yesterday to iatemala, to cheldor of ed 1 te treatment at c0 the is able to t POLICE police. Saying that a man was choking her hoy, yesterda oon. Mrs. Joe Aimfort, 90 oot ask to her ho for an offi ome Sergea Kk O\ investi gated, but found no cause for ar- rest, Isaac Huekille claims he was assaulted yes nfternoon by 4 or 5 men at the cor- er of Broad and High Offleer Rapponetti invest ear with the No. 36-107 was stolen yes- ternoon from Geo Riley, 7 South stre according to his ort a cadquarters. John ported to police yes crday \e ono en- street cigars. at 44 yesterday I"rank entered irove street was ternoon. WATCH NIGHT SERVICE The Reformation Luther vill hold a *“Wateh Night ~t Thursday evening at the church t street. n chureh service | during the | Edwin Newdi | for a s < | with City Items Home cooked lunches at Crewell's, ——advt, A 1028 Art Calendar for every rusmmer at H. L. Mills hardware —advt. \h and Mrs, E. J. Clerkin of 21 | Winthrop street had as their guests hollday Mr. and Mrs. James McBride and Ruby M. Lynch. Don't forget Firemen's Ball New Year's Eve. Btate Armory.—advt, The placo for a good time is the | iremen’s Ball, State Armory. New | Your's Eve.—~—advt, The members of the Catholic Women's Benevolent legion will meet at the home of the late Mrs. Mar. | arct Sullivan of 458 Myrtle street, tomorrow evening. George Rotherforth, son of Mr. |and Mrs. Frank Rotherforth of 84 | [Prospect street, is spending the ! Christmas holtdays with his parents | He is & student at the new echool of Leslgn in New York oity. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas H. Toner nd sons “Jack' and “Billie” of New ck, N. J., are visiting Mrs Toner's mother, Mrs, Mary Cusack of Howard street. Mr. and Mrx. Fred Stevens and son, Marshall, of Holyoke, Mass,, are Mr. the latter's parents, W. Marshall of Attorney Da\ld L. Nair {s spend- ing the week-end in New York city. St. Mary's Sodality will visit the town home tomorrow afternoon to sing and spread Christmas cheer among the inmates, Members will take the Chapman strect bus at 3 o'clock. A daughter, Frances Gregory, was born December 21 to Mr. and Mrs. F. Montano of 27 Day street. Miss Winfred Kehoe of 63 Tre- mont street is confined to her home with scarlet fever. Constable Fred Winkle, by order of the city court, sold the stock and fixtures of Myers Bros.' store at 356 Main street at public auction Thur: day. T were purchased by W. Menus for $530 Joseph Lentina of New Yorlk is visiting his parents at 167 Washing- ton street Judge Gives Driver Freedom for Christmas Aft driving, evading responsibility driving an ualicensed driving an unregisterad automobile, vesterday morning, Edward clek,, 61 Knowledge avenue, leased by Judge Alling in court the day with his wife and two chil. was re- dren. His case December 2. harles Stanwelez, who was charged with drunkenness and | breash of peace, was given a gus- pended jail sentence of Michael Kornefski, cl d was given a suspended judgment. 30 days, and arged Policeman Tierney Gets being charged with reckless'| and | |ington avenue last night, RUM ORGY CAUSES FREE-FOR-ALL RIOT Liquor Cases in Police Court Alter Holiday Demon rum had a devastating ef- |fect on the Gaced family at 23 Farm- when Mi- chael, aged 18, was arrested on a charge of drunkenness, breach of peace, and assault, and his brother |Jacob, aged 30, was arrested on a charge of breach of peace and as- sault, following a free for all fight at the Gaced home, in which two ;mendn, Walter Spane, aged 28, of | Farmington avenue, and Louis Rasz- kowski, aged 21, of 40 Overlook ave- nue obligingly engagod. The latter two were charged with ault, while Raszkowski was additionally charged with breach of peace, Jacob Gaced recelved a suspend- ed judgment by Judge Willlam C. Hungerford this morning in police court, while Michael was fined $20, Raszkowski was fined $15 with costs |and Spane was fined $10, omitting the costs. It was alleged that Michael who was drunk, ecauscd the trouble by treating his mother improperly. His older brother Jacob objected twice, and the second tima it is claimed Ja- cob struck him. The other two men claim they intervened in order to separate the two, but Jacob said they joined in the fight. To support his claim he gports an ugly looking laft eye which he said he obtained when Spane struck him with a stove lifter. Spane denled that he struck the elder Gaced, and Raszowski also de« nied having seen Spane sitrike the man with the lifter. Stanley and John Gaced, aged 15 and 14 respec- tively were present to testify, but both sald they did not see Spane strike Gaced with the lifter. Michacl admitted being drunk, but said he ]“GHM not remember much about the fight. Sergeant O'Mara and Officer Wagner made the arrests. Altred Bowen and Elgin Bronell, both*of 59 Fast Main street, were fined 35 each on a charge of assault. |t is alleged that the two were fight- ing yesterday. faying that her husband struck Shur- |was drunk, polica (by Officer esterday, so he could spend |charged with being drunk, and the was continued until |assault placed ag: with |the Hartford car. inkenness and breach of peace |the car said his trolley was held up | her in the nose yesterday at their thome, 85 Smalley streat, while he \m'm Sinsky was instru- g William arrested | “arrol. They were both Imental in additional charge of inst him. The wo- |man was given a suspended sentence and the man fined $5. Carl Brown of Bristol, was fined $5 on a charge of being drunk, and evading paying earfare last night on ‘ The motorman of man had an gued with the |13 minutes while he man about the fare. Atter destroying two beds, a stove ard a sewing machine with an axe Suspension From Chief (at nis nome. 325 Eim strect yester Policeman Thomas Tierney suspended this morning was Willlam C. Hart, pen'nng actlon by |and breach of peace. Tierney is charged while been the police board. with being intoxlcated duty yesterday. He has fore the 1o fractlon of police rules Policeman James Sullivan, who | was also charged with infraction of | the rules was not disciplined by Chief Hart, He has not been hefore the board before. be- Haverhill's Neutral Arbiter Again Chosen | Haverhill Ma Dec. 26 (A — for the past two years neutral arbiter and chaire nan ‘of the Haverhill shoe board of arbitration, t cond term of Vhr\r years, The choi: was made by eneral President John D. Dolan of the Shoe Workers' Protective and Fred L. Cooper, manager of the Shoe Manufacturers’ associa- tion. The new “peace plan' provision end of that ti years. will run three ye for rencwal at the for two addlitional Deaths corge H. Kimball, G H. Kimball, 6S ycars of g mer resident of this city, 1 ast Friday at his late home in | Peortland, Oregon. He is survived by A dang Martin Clickman of Altorment Y. and three sis- vs, Mrs, Ella Goss of Okio, Mrs. A \. B of eding Hills, Mass., I V. A. Singerland of Port- nd. Oregon. He also leaves two grandchildren, body will be brought to ti Tho fu for burial harge of B viees will be from t t compa Monday parlors on Court st morning at 10 o’clack. Burfal will be in Fairy Herbert W, Hatton v was eclected | union | er Sons, nnfl‘ ce board before for in- (3% !day afternoon, Michael Glido, was | by Chict fintd $10 on a charge of being drunk Glido said he became enraged when he came home on |and asked his wite for some dinner. and she told him to get out. He was ted by Officer W ve Kaminsky, 21 Horace strect ntenced to 30 days in jail with ion of sentence suspended, and nlm* d on probation for a year, fol- er. Hold-Up Men Scare Youth Into Hysteric After taking $3.15 from the cash | reglster at the store of A. Kdelson, | 605 Arch street, at 8:15 o'clock last night, two hold up men #o| frightened Hyman Berman, 17 vear old Juolor High school stu. dent, who was in charge of the store, that he became hysterical and a doctor had to be summoned to treat the boy. He later recovered sufficiently to give Sergeant Patrick | J. O'Mara a complete account of | the affair, Berman sald that shortly 8 o'clock two men cigarettes, The taller of the two men held the pistol, and told Bere man to tell them where the mouey was, and to “Come on, make it| snappy.” The boy was orderad to lle | on the floor, for a half an hour be- | |tore he moved. He sald the man took the money. TORELL T0 CLAN BE 15 INSOLVENT {0ath, Then Go Tnto Bankruptey < Johin § T. Torell will appear at |the office of Attorney Solomon Els Iner, a justice of the peace in Har | ford, Monday morning to take the ““poor debtor’s oath” as the first step 1o relleve himself of the obligation of a $1,600 court judgment for | |which he is now in the custody of the sheriff of Hartford county. His application for the oath will be opposed by Attorney €. Gerard Casale, counsel for Charles Dro- | bhegg's estate, in whose intercsts the | [ indgment was vendered as the after- | math of an automobile accident In | which Torell's car figured. It the oath is granted, 15 days [will bo allowed for a review and | {should appeal be taken Torell will | | be held for that additional period in | the sherifi's eustody. Torell, if he is successtul {n having | |the sheriff release him will at a lat- ér date flle a potitioh in bankruptey listing his assets as nothing and his | |liabilities as $1,600, the amount | represented ‘n the judgment. | It was originally planned to have { Torell appear at the office of Attor- rey A. L. LeWitt in this eliy foday | |for he ng on the oath. Had this | procedure b followed out it | | would have required his leaving the | |dail limits, which s prohibited un- der his hnl\fl STILL 19 PART OF ‘SADIE THOMPSON Star “Rain” Does Not Show Siggs_ @igue 26 (A—By con- and rounding out | Chicago, Dec. | stantly enriching | her characterization of the role of unhappy Miss 7 Eage ves the Sadie of today is a far more human and 1i lowing his arrest last ht on a yln); ps\l’snn.(hvu\vnuvh‘vvm\f‘ nll\n\.:-.‘\‘ll.' charge of breach of peace and n ears ago as the ” itular | drunkenness. His wife clalms he [part in the stage play ain. |eroated a disturbance. He was ar- [rested by Officers MeCarthy and Rapponnetti. 4 working agreement or | { planned to be a & | ’ Plotters in hcuddm | eral will be | (51YES 510,000 T0 FUND |10 BUILD NURSES' HOME Bristol Man Makes Large Contribu- tion Towards Extension At City Hospital. il to the H (Spec alt) Bristol, Conn., Dee. 26—An an- suncement was made this morning les 'T. Treadway, president f stol National bank, has iven $10,000 worth of shares of the | Bristol Realty Co., to the Dristol | nospital. This will go towards the fund for i{the erectfon of a nurses’ home in | connection with the Bristol hospital nmouncement was confirmed The | by Fuller Barnes, president of the | hospital. 1t is expected that further an- | nouncements will bo made in the | near future of additional contribu- tions towards the home, which 125,000 structure. De(enhon of Political Gauyaquil, Ecuador, Dec. Dotentions of poliifcians ».,.W-J plotting against the govern- iment continue witi undiminished | activity. The latest arrests include General | S| Aafrel Puente, Commanders J. Se- ibastian Vasconez and J. Antonio | Cobos; Alberto Munoz Vernaza, for- ster to Argentina, and Re- { mer mir | o Tamariz Crespo. exiled . Herbert W. Hatton, 68 Tl " Altredo Baquerizo Moreno, presi- | dent of the scnate, and’Rafael Maria Narizaga, formef minister to the t of this city f tu 20y mason trad 1 by his wif and Maud and n of Timbioke, broth 1wo Mair Fur e of John rviccs in ehargs | 7. Tarrant of East Main street are incomplete, but it is expected that hey will be private and that buria) ake place in Timbioke. Benjamin 8 Renjamin, aged &5. of Concord street, died this morning the New Britain General hospi Funeral arrangements are in the hands of M. J. Kenney. d In the | ‘Joseph A Haffl' UNDERTARKR howe 16252 Opposite St. Mary's Chuteh Residence 17 Rammer St — 16253, e { [vearing nis name United States, are also under arrest | Alberto Larrea Chiriboga, minister of the interior, has been urgently | recalled from Chile, where he rep- | resented Ecuador at the inaugura- |tion of President Figueroa-Larrain anard-;'ille Man Dies_ At Age of 66 Years Hazardville, Dec. 26 (P—Thomas F. D'Arsey, who died at his home here t night was repre- sentative from Enfield in the general in 1923, and was long in the grocery business at Scitico, a village in Enfield. He was born here and for 35 years worked at the pow- der mills in this place, His wife and six children survive. EDWARD assembly AY RUST DIES Youngstown, O., Dec. 26 P— Ed- ward Gray Rust, 56, widely-known steel engineer, died at his home her esterday. He Invented a boiler and was a fornm member of the United States S ping board. All will be | Miss Eagels is approaching her twelve-hundredth performance of this name Sadie, and she is not tired | | of the part. Although it is an ex: |ing role, one demanding an emo- tional intensity and nervi concen- tration beyond the average, the por trayal of this cha come r has not be mechanical. Sadle is alw »d by inspirational small | in the wording of her lines. Since the play opened at the Gar- rick theater in Philadelphia on the t of October 1¢, 1922, Miss cls has not missed a perform- ance. Her only vacation came du ing the Actors’ Equity strike in New York in 1024, when S: > was fdle or slightly less than four weeks. The same ast of fourteen persons | which opened the play, with one e ception, is playing today in Chic go. Even Jim, the monkey who makes a brief appearance in the { third act, never missed a per- formane | Miss Eagel is on tho stag form of Sadie, almost the in the during entire play but expects to “do her eight times a weck for a long time to come. and still not ba bored “Rain” ran for 4 in New | York, was stopped strike, returned for sixteer | weeks' engagement after the strike, | and has since been played in twelve of the la The the {inimitable Sadie before the foot- lights as on {a children's perforn let,” in Boston, when ‘\("H"! of age {One Woman Burned to | Death in Fierce Fire Minneapolis Dee. 26 (A) — Or woman was belicved have 1 burned to death anmd 2 person: | were rescued by in 13 be- low zero weather today when fire destroved a three story brick buil |ing. Two stores ated on ground fioor were destroyed. Th loss was estimate Be he { Frances, a cripy was based on th could not be found | SANTA SENDS DIAMOND New Orleans, Dec. 5 () nt Claus yesterday emissary to Mrs. Premos wa T n or Chistmas r purct ed by her husband, when she fe an unusually I bird's gizz hard substance in the | It was a diamond |dicted on charges of after turn the offender™ in connection with came in the [the lynehing of a negro here Sature store and purchased a package of |day ulght, Dr. 8 W. Glass, deposed |deputies were at \Student Will Take Deht ors, | mandeer LAt | by the vocational ¢ stata Normal school here, Negro's Death Dec. arksdale, Miss., Coahoma county sheriff, and ti on bonds of $1,000 each. With $5 Hutehinzon, terday a slim, 2ed to play 1 felon, Kan confessed leader of an tempt 1o rob the same bank. Such is the status of Dale 17, arrested with Mat Charles Grounds, 18, and Harold | the ease of the Tsarkoye-Selo palace Donald R Hart. Mgr. Grounds, 17 and Clyde Marrison, 41, | Which was tho favorite residenco of conviet, for the robbery ' the late emperor. Here every detail ? OFRR ernoon of the Cheney |connected with the life of the im- WE OFFER % of Cheney. perial family is laid bare, and the Last fall Matkin came here to en- | Public, which all over the world has T ] I C ter by ol He did not pick |an insatiable curiosity to know how ravelers insurance Ompany the best of associates, and when he ToYal personages live, can gratify its D i : : R AT rae i e T Price on Application fmas and ny miles, it was he | gosted to the Grounds brothers they rob ) C. O, Nlomholt, pursued the 1 fas assistant cas hbers in a car ¢ fled, forced r car to take a turn s they | rapidly, with the result it went {a ditch. The four occupants ju ed out, but Matkin, sick of the w affair before the actual robbery, been perpetrated, stopped and ‘]ppr]»‘tlf] Harrison also was cau «pn. sdily with the hg dark-haired boy, priv- about the band, today NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1025. 'SHERIFF INDIGTED | AFTER LYNCHIN ‘Southern Grand Jury Acts Alter | 26 (P)~In- e 1o ro- | ReSidences of Russian Czars \ree Iiberty last night | at kin, ‘0 other boys, parated from home who sug that ier, om the too into mp- holc £ ight | 8605 taken from | nk, Later Matkin named his m\ T two associates and led the pa- lice to their home, where they were |arrested. Nearly Century on Job Ends in Death at 110 | Pau, France., Dec., 26 (P — ce goes to “Nava Carlc born in Mexico in 1815, died Ch mas day at the village of age of 110, serving as a domegtic hold of descendants of for which she She entered t ily in Mexico in 1 followed members to France and rer with them until her peaceful she was originally o sory Prismw-rgi(rv'ci Bible And Story From Jud The alm for span of life and length of rist- Escout.” | still | the hou the family worked. of this fam- its od ige Knoxville, Tenn., De 26 (A — City Jud Robert P. Williams gave a e to each of the 42 prisoners brought bhefore him in police court this morning, told them the story of Christ and then said, “Go and sin no more.” The Judge also sent candy and flowers to 50 delinquent women he rec ly sentenced to th Dies .‘\ia{mtiné t;) ent- Camp home, Save Child’s Glove Sanford, Me., ing by his le 1 an attempt to rea cost 14 year old ( his life here yesterday Jipped and he pl thin ice, on which the glove resting, into the Mousam river Kept afloat a few minutes, but before bystanders could rescue 1 Firemen recovered his body halt lour later Dec. 26, (P—H 1 chil Blanch ed through Fire at State \mnml School at l\oonc, N Keene, N. H., Dec. 26 (B vesterday troye & building u partments of $15,000. The build by the mannal automotis and woord painting Work working cl which students of these ¢ s had done si ptember was 00l ope royed. Pr Masc to find 1 ma wrters b TeOPANIng ¢ Christmas vacation. New Gun Will Shoot San Pedro, Cal, Dec. 26 (A mobile rifle m the East MacArtn ngest ran el on ing will fa oximately o complete pon has a normal range of hut an elevation of 100 feet MacArt X 110 add miles o mechan fforts wo ing- from a bridge girder ove ette 1en his hold the ik vim an cansing Over Twenty-Five Miles II.IIII TS BORN l\ I\\\\\\ 26 (P Perry Wade on known yesterday NO STOCK MARKET following Christmas day, there was 1o sesston of the stock ge. OLD PALACES NOW PUBLIC MUSEUMS| - PUTNAM & MEMBERS NEW YORK & HARTTORD STOGH Co EXCHANGES HNWEST MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN= 2040 MARTFORD OFFCY G“Nrm OV T tene WE OFFER Are Gonverted | Conn. Electric Service Company TULATIVE CONVERTIBLE PREFERRED STOCK Leningrad, has become a nation Dee, 26 (P—Russia | Another true bill chargos Dr. | o museums Yield over 6 per cent o with “misdemeanor and crime | Al over t#e country former imperial {while an officer,” the ar war. | Valaces, private residences, churches, rants showed | monasteries and summer homes hay o M. 1. Hopson of Clarksdala {s |P*eR appropriated by the state and | = ing as sherlff during the inves. |CONVOrted into muscums for the B e e B R N S R S e tion of the Iynching EICIL L ] hr {hnctivaiuniilithe resumption of } fons 1{{] nlmka of art the government | {& o ,‘h ”' .‘“\II',’:,‘:"HL"W‘::NPI“‘ al | S e e il MEMBERS NEW YORK STUCK EXCHANGL mamed in four indietments returncd |HOrMitags Fine Arts Gallery is one Av[l l:ll‘b‘:;lrl ll‘i’l‘\“l”l‘}“(l‘(l : \'LI:X(I.“AM’B Lk s e sk JU LDING, PEARL ST., COr. Lowls St, !Y\'\:Hflll")\r“nn Lea Matthews and 1 !\:“r'\‘:l':l\:n.' yi?lfl«i‘ l‘(;xl‘r.“v\u)‘:n".l HARTIORD, CONN, TELLEPHONE 2-6281 A Frasior aratilin Asnitiss. whora |olkiori Dich and Wiemshimastorsiin New Britain: Bureltt Hotel Butlting. Tel. 1818 {ndictmsnt was announced fn thelr |tho world Meriden: 33 Colony St. Tel. 1340 rest. Four men, J. T. Traynham, [ The sumptuous Winter Palace, Hm.‘,,. Nicholas, G. 0. Cane and 11, | Where all the Czars for the last 160 Blockley, are in jall awaiting | Wears guided the destinies of stat ring on murder charges in con. [!§ NOW a national museum. The |} i nection’ with the slaying of the negro |Apartments formerly occupied by W E t d th Sl iy, { Nicholas I, Alexander 11, Alexander (4 X en e BOY ROBS BANK N {111, and Nicholas 11, are preserved | as far as possible In their original 9 . conc l\HfiH G TR — Season’s Greetings 50 many brilliant festivities in the ‘vmd. now has been transformed into Three Youths And Negro Quickly | the Museum of the Revolution, The . (former living rooms of the late Czar Caught After Flecing Nicholas IT and his family, including | == {the boudoir of the empress and the nursery room ef tha childrel, arc roped off for public inspection. | The former imperfal palaces at Peterhot and Tsarkoye- carefully prescrved and are in much the seme state as when occupied by their former tenants This is partic: elo also are Thomson, THenn & To. Burritt Hotel Bldg., New Britain Tel. 2580 MEMBERS NEW YORK AND HARTFORD STOCE EXCHANGES noticeable in All the furniture, I personal belongin czar and his fami thetic than anythi toys of the litt] viteh, including a miniature tobog- gan slide and an American teddy bear, remain intact and undisturbed ADYVOCATES USING SCRAPPED VESSFLS Proposal Is to Convert Them | Into Wellare Ships clothing and of (he slain and—more 5 else—even the murdered ezare: WE DO NOT ACC. EPT MARGIN ACCOUNTS IEDDY BROTHERS &G § HARTFORD NEW BRITAIN Hartford Conn. Trust Bidg. Burritt. Hotel Bldg. Tel.2-7186 Tel. 3420 WE OFFER peka, K United States ave milifons of d e. 21 A— T nment would llars and give a 100 shares of Torrington T st T 100 Landers, Frary & Clark words into plo in the arles M. Sheldon, istian Herald and gational opini editor n of Dr, ( of The CI or thirty y warch Doctor use of disc = s advocating the ed navy ve " and a * cls as cost fons | r the dl*«rh‘t- ment conference at Wachington,” he i ping board ves- destroyed. How ould have been university ships, to ng <nr\"r"‘1 into take the pick of out college students wound the world on an ¢ ) tour. “Wouldn't it he fine to removo | the guns and munitions and fill the with provistons and merchan- | take aboar 0 students and | protessors, and go srom continent to ontinent studying da | would at home? Tt 1 for rayed in this trading. | “Perhaps there would be as e c nd the exy quake in Greece. The ship would go ¢ and Jeave provisions. A 1a liicninaeo i initoraty woula hatt en to Chinese ports with food in th 1 It is really the best time to begin, membership for 1926, just after a Happy Xmas this year, and you can appreciate would coms " Jumps to His Death as how easily it is done if you ‘ Orchestra ]h\ Jazz g s Manor, ¥, X, Dec, 1 begin now and put away reg: lodzo u ularly a little each week. Don't L o e o allow a single week to go by : o —Start Now. ' Horwitz \nc~(cd on ( h'ns:c of Rnhhcn After being wich. Edward Horwitz, know ' 1s under Come m Today and Start New Britain Trust Co. of The Tobbery. Llt e al that he took the money f cash register. it sty

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