New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 21, 1926, Page 10

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FLASHES OF LIFE: JEWS INJURED IN RIOT OF GALSWORTHY'S “LOYALTIES" nnes=—Helen Wills college study method of tennis laurcls. Khe notes in a as playing in he ‘\,‘:m, quest nna 1§ brulses Loyalties" he r nting tocrat ¢ his Jov beat ult of & the depic s thief Was GOVERNOR SMITH LIKES THE OLD TIME DANCES Real of Adriculturists, Jan talph row in the Enjoys Old- New dads did in 1 Dinner it his nan i in th 1 tid- crnor ion neient for Go arriving of | society for the Yori in the Ten which he took 1he ‘Wi 8 pper icultur any Y Ar when he retires to priva will be sundry elk win and AL Sn loms nest J phrasin nuary gold now nit il the diners old-tims will Vvork city lis- Me- for the avernor John A Y ctive has hin n by (Democrat, & ntior Blac) L conve 1s for 1ree Griff w inist or vited With or ar ishioned way table, the to the ssine, cooked in or diners City county Dew il jury W the drinkin hool nizatio to in- oys 1nd vo hotel zirls ir portions floors. my Na- ot Colds-Flu OLDS are d something w Don't let catarrh develop they often develop into V't let a cold get hold of yeu 1f you have it, don't use KONDON'S CATARRHAL JELLY. Gua ¢ to miilions of users. The £ rou rse. D it hy 35y d do Cetat ears servi Catarth, Ask your D em recommend KONDON pe in KONDON'S; safe for and 60c sizes. lu,” Coryza, Hay Fever Nurse or Dentist; tt to patients 2 2 you paid for NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, < COUNCIL OPPOSES BUS FARE RAISE "Will anwal‘d Resolution 1o/ - e o Public Utilities Commission TED STA THE UN! vote, the comn cord as in jltney hus twent an re resolution or imanimous- | utilities com ' service on New the | * sery- | EXTR IN MILITARY OF OF THE UNITED STATES AT ny's declaring xpres unsutisfac- Approve Deputy Bullding Inspector AS had been predicted, iion ding departme L committes the led to impre reported ne n in com- ! Smith 26 Smith received a cer- award of the Croks for ex- the Amerd cortificate and ment at pre 1y, ha council o the lust cmploy il and one will whic ting night votr S rvice g % by offic i salary ebruary is set comes mec Wash- been the viously ompany s TR “This building states and comm with t report by committee commission, the at the request of the in former building commission piteh hrough L. J. H building ul bmitted w's lot Numb d: Y met Il known athlete wing been a base prominence when flourishing on An tive of all of Smith com mite er of 1ossey was the He Vs is ar orn ion A permits vear he regular signed to Co regiment of the ond Division. He ¢ng: all of the battles in wh Gern war, he enli tion 150114 var army year 1 he ing i ye " was ¢ uml s infantry year year clectrical permit year 19 num- 1.601; G50 aboye numi repuls: 266 lord tolal dow Thivrry th deeds just Soissons to Chateau into Paris 1 soldier performed the valor for which he n i b e SING SING LOOKS | FOR EXECUTIONER One Man Slated to Gn {0 Death Chal Tomgm 1 \n nalty of bui lies no ul Frenel 2 mor spection 15 is accon or by the servies additional te e inspector. rmits is than mporir, numbye hi 1 in 102 1924, a jons w plum Jat ) more imber of vw than in 14 cicetrical permits \“n while o The numbe e in 1 trical permits 124 ar [ u will ne inspeetion Yon thanin 1 ther 5 will that ) mercase in N r 1921 Pponent mssion I 1 w Al fl'V Warden prison ion of Capital P'unishment, wis I L 3 nay e cutio 1924 althoug required on b nately s he picks time today vieted of Ambrose the bond salesman durd in Warden “ted an aed John zned the during dule ton Lmildi 1 v v ficinl exeentioner 1t not the \iakr . who 1 umiing and years of cuted 140 m How- ttery zoning as Ttoss, will not he so tion o <0 Gove bt commuted his sen- imprisonn know t in- rday in- ; do it at said when carry out ter thres days ago Ward Inpeovements itth hoped to ypltcants expectad 1k to Enow pub. 0y whi eall men to month itfon nutil Spanis PHILADELPHIA T0 HAVE GREAT CFLE EBRATION @ Plans for® Sesqui-Contenniall Will Continne, ittee In Charge Decides - Con- support ngress tation, | tenntal 1. ¢ with original after visory sider t the ARICA ¥ xt G LASSITER AT t mor Smith Gets Certificate Of | Distinguished Service Cross TEQ /umu/ et THE DISTINGUISHED JERVIC’E Cross | FOR | AORDINARY HERQISM | RATIONS AGA]N'TAN ARMED ENEMY to carry ont | THURSDAY, JANUARY B OF AMERICA TO ALL WHO SHALL SEZ THESE PRESENTS, GREETING: ) THIS IS TO CERTIFY THAT THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA ! PURSUANT TO ACT OF CONGRE HAS AWARDED TO APPROVED JULY 9 £ adice s full retreat beforoc » and a call for armies were in the German mach lielp was sent out, Gener Pershi mander-in-chie ng, com- the American troops, was called on to stem the | tide and he dispatched the Second | Division, compoged of the fifth and «th and the ninth and | 3rd into action, The stand made by the divislon tn this batt will live in hlstory as one of the| greatest stands ever made by an American division i any war, News despatehes coming from the front, hecause of the censorship reg- ulations, told of the bloody battles ! wvhich the Marines took part at | is, the real turning point in the | var, but it has been clalmed that the Sccond Diviston with the two ! nts of Marines and two of ighboys with the Second kngin- s that stopped the German ad- © and paved the way for the ul- downfall of the ing this battle, Smith was se- wounded, but despite this, siick fo his post and in the face of almost certain death, he fought on grimly shielding his comrades | mtil he was able to do no more. He spent several months in a hospital recovering from his wounds, 5 riously 4 thiy year, the commission adopted a resolution that it “ac- pts and approves the judgment of the aesqui-ccntennial exposition | officials to open In 1926 A second olution urging congre to take Iy «teps to make @ sultable ap- riation was also adopte COAL BOOTLEGGING ATEST INDUSTRY Eiiorts to Stnp Practice Meet With No Success hosp cularly in t ing mpm_\, part mining region, Star mall way in one or 1 also to distant re engaged in it | Lootleggers' supplies from the banks, permitted by nearly coal companies restric- the use of trucks and the recovered coal. These | are ignored who deliver most night and collee Some of th ve picked t f supply and old wor Fleets in the vi- nd Hazieton | ict of their raids is | t made 19 mi early 1n first ts ithracite mines, Approximately 100 tons coal is sold there daily. coal is broken instead aker and 1 oticg by means | s ges from to buckwhes : toy going ra low at $18 been ma United Mine vored fo stop | rrests have ers of the amfon'th Coeé South On Non- ant this morning for Cc B 1a, he will where S New in, for who non BUSINESSMEN TO 1) Ins! -A yn will ALL. ers of the Pol- usiness Men's assocl- 1ke place at a meeting of ization tonight at § 49 Grove street. The President, B. A. Grzybow president, C. Cichowski; Valentine ion of offi merican B! ski re vice- ) Is planning ar future REDS TAKE Peking, Jan. OVER § 21 B — rom A customs Swatow, in | ont me customs adm a native by Kwantung has been t reds who ership of stafl the on gove German ef- | tion to tmprove e | we have 21, 1926, in 96th Year Worcester, Mass, Jan. 21 (@ {David H. Fanning, and founder of the Ro; Corset company dicd guddenly morning in his home here in 96th year. When it ! Worcester his | acently hecame the fash- fon for women to abandon the use | of corsets to so great an extent as | formerly Mr, Fanning maintatned | that it was a flecting notion and th women always would wear corsets, For a time the business wi ously affected but lately ness has-been prosperous, Mr, Fanning had been feeble for ome time, but had shown no sigus of iliness until last night. Tl expected Before the papers were last Saturday transferring his ings In the two milllon dollar plant of which he was president and prin- cipal owner, ho was sald to be tl oldest man engaged in active manu- tacturing in New England, ande one of the oldest in the world, He wa Lorn August 4, 1830 In Jewett Ci lln on goven he became an or- e came to Worcester when s 16 years old, the city having a population of started in business hoopskirt maker ing corsets and in 1888 {ncor- | porated the Woreester Corset com pany, and in 1901 the R0 wster Corset company. JARDINE HOPEFUL, FOR AGRICULTURE, Predicts That Prosperity I, Bound o Return to Farmers 21 (P vsped, Agri- but it s and in the long| measure of pros- | Jardine, secre addressing the Urbana Tl perity sald W, tary of agriculture, annual meeting the Tllinos Agr ural association to & “When the tide turng badly against it. but sets in motion those forces which ultimately will CORSET HING OF } WORGESTER DIES ... ... = : {David H. Fanning Passes Away | the philanthropist n” a bill, this | Next week, | thusiasm for | me I pie _nh-m 0's first pr then | Foreign swing it In favor agaln,’ he sald, g experiences of Jons teach us anything, it| one of the best times to buy @ farm s when farming scems in poorest repute.’’ On the farm must be solved a substantial part of {he problem of agriculture a fair national Income, he | ial to have the hest ustment produc- tion to requirements,'” continued. “Rapid progress Leen made in recent yeors by lic agencles I collecting and possible ot has pub- dis- their production mand — to give him in his planning. | fa essential to have the ut- efficlency in farm opcration farm management levh" nge tion and . On line man or expertly, who from hls fields and the other side of the neighbor may worry haphazard Dasis, one who gets RN vields his animalz, On fence his tong on a crop yields below mn'n ? a liability t an asset. sere i3 mo formula under the t ean guarantee the well-being ineficient producer.” nd angle of approach to e problem he termed tho puk which must function w put \en his agri- in angle, the rulm must be erms of national han merely partisan In a program for lamental welfars gain. improvement agricultural | ne consid- | s of outsts nnrl“uz co-opera- surplus rmer's whole | ging it lllnum* s presi- lopment the s farewell Agricultura t a review rming in forts of the assoclation of the de America an m bureau federa- rural conditions. sald Mr. Thomp- extended “*Agriculture,” son, * been previous | his | par, his lvestock | sun | through | decades when expansion of the | dustry and its production was the chiet national policy for the farm- | er, to the point that there is a nor- al surplus over what the home market consumes, which sets the price on what the well as that which Protection of such ordinary tariff dut “Some people talk as though the surplus is a new thing, due over-production brought on by the war. Nothing could be further from the truth. We have been a farm exporting nation, as long been a nation, “This normal surplus and her forms of surplus which a crop hy the is a farce. the ot ap- | pear in the farming business have L great problem deal to do with our farm How can we dispose of it the farmer can get an price for w he se at and thus afford him the of P ity to market his crops un | der the same highly protected con- | ditlon as that under which he is compelled to produce them.” so Amerd home to | rome market as | 1s exported. | almost as | at the reopening of the diet uphasized the cordlal Taly betwoen Japan and expressed with China, They “In principde ymy and the abalition « itoriality NEW YORK FIRM LIKELY 10 GET COINAGE J0B today, Hons ex ot sting nwers (thy 1 toms Free State Plans to Have Tts Money Minted fn This Shidchara declared the GoREITT] ent's s regarding the elaug he, ptes fmmigr IUUH act 21 (P11 s » n s unchange, contract for mintin ting the ox Irish ree s drrecon- be pluce of internas second reading istice.”” He added place in the dai Japan in th is adopted arently gro Thers seems 1o b of RO’ Jan the Dublin, that new likely \\ln here State coinn New York of which erieann in rules s to Mh no special on- in the financial « fved, loo) $2 promisc a ch ge and in some i belng codly roce {, however, (ahout coin- AlEAST agrocable re-* ¢l as witl 5" sald Baror no - pl izuificance in iny of thesy vever, thut afforded ther nterprises of our N that the We ide from Iver in t %, although with quite been the he proportion r col fdenti British col different innou d of Av ident new onomi value designs e Griffitl replace v words with . 1t is not our rants to any ich they would not ho onstunt desire is to 1o undevelops d 10 pro- not, and ot t i side may show ha or Soma reports s » 10 be Trish el region varlil a given to th i yrosper JAPANESE DIET REOPENS Rato coins wemselves b which they ¢hoose Janvnt homes are prepared Ity also in Minister Lmphasizes Peacetul Relations With the Va I'res State April 18, hands of and ious orcign Powers, Tokyo, Kato, Jan, 21 (®) the p the listribute Vi mier, and Proved safe by millions and prescribed by physicians for Colds Pain Headache Toothache Neuritis Neuralgia Lumbago Rheumatism ceept nulv “Bayer" Backn:c \»!ndn Contains proven directions, Handy “Bayer” hoxes of 12 {ablets Also hottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. of Bayer Manufacture of Monoaceticacidester of Saticylieacid Asplrla (5 we (rade way ot Breads~Cake ~ More Delicious not only is the rich flavor of your good butter, eggs, flour, ete., more fully devel- oped by using RUMFORD but in ad your foods are made more nutritious. If vou would have your hot breads and cake delicious and nourishing use " RUMFORD THE WHOLESOME - BAKING POWDER Gives Perfect Satisfaction Through Dependable Leavening Action LARGE FULL PIES .25¢ Absolutely The Best 7c FOR FRIDAY HADDOCK. - 12¢ FRESH CHI y 14c 20c¢ . 18¢ F30C 48¢ 2lc 40c 25¢ pt. 60 16 oz Loaf. . FRESH CHILLED MACKEREL PRES FLOUNDERS FANCY NO, 1 SMELTS PRESH STEAK BLUE .., PANCY STEAK SALMON FANCY BUTTERFISH 15¢ . 15¢ .25¢ . 18¢ .32¢ FRESH COD KS H COD AK FANCY WHITE HALIBUT BLOCK ISLAND SWORDIISH BONELESS .25¢ SALT COb 2 Ibs, FRESH OPENEL 25c Y N or ) LONG CLAMS ... pint 28c ROUND CLAM IN SHELY AM. SARDINES 6 cans 835¢ SOLID MEAT D OYSTERS pt. STEAMING “LAMS it ED SCALLOPS SPECIAL SOLID PACKED TOMATOES ., PURE TOMATO CATSUP ® FANCY MOHICAN PEAS Ige. 3 bots, cans 35¢ 33¢

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