New Britain Herald Newspaper, March 29, 1926, Page 2

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

Easter Favors Cards Novelties and Decorations Gift Department DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN ST. Horsfall OXFORDS FOR SPRING THE CLYDE— Tony gold or leather—the new leather that takes a very high luster. Light, flexible, and comfort e Priced at $10.00 tony black kind of THE 1 ELSWAY— A new last th as becomr ecially with a narrow , being a combina- last. 1t fits the foot that is hard to fit. Tan or Jeathors: Priced at $10.00 H( QI;DFALLS \sulum Street HARTIORD “1t Pays to Buy Our Kind” Cold Storage for Furs —_— ORIENTAL RUGS | 1ULL LINE IN ALL SIZES also BLEUAIRING AND CLEANING | 5. V. SEVADJIAN Stor 62 Glen St Tel. 11902 Residence 15 Grand St Tel. 1190-3 | . DEanr Dr. A, br. 1. N-RAY, 3. Johnson, D.I R. Johnson, D.D.S, GAS and OXYGEN Have Your | Teeth Made By a Specialist I Guarantee to Fit the Most Dif§ It Mouth Or Herbertd.Lockhart | Artificial Teeth Specialist New Britain Hartford 215 Arch St ®T Main St 70 ours: 9-5 Dr. C W Vman DENTI 205 Wost Main Stieet Extractions, Dental X-Rays Phione 308, 1082 Auto Electric Service A. ADETZ TEL. 4185 114 FRANRKLIN 8Q. New Britain \ig.. Co. “DOING BETTER WHATY MANY DO WL 31 CHURCH STREET Telephene 891 | serving NEW BRITAIN ‘PNEUM[]NIA FATAL :B"‘fi!i‘ii\:‘i?.?&‘f.fl'&m Denver, Colo,, March 20 (A==Wit} 148 automoblles stalled n snowdrifts between Colorado Springs and Den- \*r the weather man today held | out no promise of ‘Pretender 0 French Throne Dies in Exile Rock mountain March 29 (P — The death | of the Duke of Orleans from pneu- | gaya (hat more sne | monia at Palormo caused conster- | ypa¢ ¢ [pation in the royallst ranks in |y France, The duke always had post- | [ poned sottling the question of who | should be his successor, and with | his almost sudden death the royal- fst party finds {tself without plans. The next in line of succession fs | the Duke ot on of the Duke of Chartres. By many it is thought he will declds to forogo claim to | what 1 deemed the empty hon of the pretendership, elther favor of his young son, P! | Henry of Orleans, who is 16 wnur:‘ old, or to the Duke of Vendome, Duke of Nemours. The Duke of Guise owns a fine | ate in France. This, {f the law pretendership were ap 8 been n the of Orlen to lea reglon, tinual fall of enow since Wednesday. A wavo of winter, extendin south as Albuquerque, N. M., ha come over the distriet, soveral weeks of spring-like peratures. The weather Paris, vet in sight WALES UNDERGOES Guis Following Inluenza Lendon, Mare ) (P of Wales carly t went what s termed tion to relicve morning 2 slight opc { him of pain d an absesss in his ear, superindu by an attack of infiuenza Announcement that th n porformed in 15 contained in a Duke obliged ) exile Precluded Trom Service ek ne Du of Guise . precluded by law from with the French, and by | diplomatic reasons from serving v of the other ed armie palace bullet physicians H. Cheatle at Kings College hos |ictin said ards he| op g, worked with the ambulance serv- |, ice close to the front line. Ha w mentioned in army orders for de- voted conduct. Arthu pital The bul H. the Prince of Wales ha condition Leing a onza. It was that a small operation to incise th Up to the present the duke hae | qyum a5y alvays kept out of politics, which | done and r gives welght to the bellet that he | It was | will renounce his rights to the pre- ! that the heir.a tendership. | equel to the influ followed." wparent to the Briti 116d to forego Wi grand national steeple nsley Saturday omed is the publie to embodime ha pretender to the throne of France, ‘Louis Phillppe, Duke of Orleans, the grecat grandson of the ing of France, King Louis ppe I, died Sunday at villa in Palermo, sumoni at 57 spectacular career vears of cxile maintained the | Bourbons by during his f from France. ¥ traditions of the living a eolorful and'! s having be pleacure ing life. The son of |at an unusual hour car {the late Comte de Paris, he soldler, aretle explorcr, traveller author and bon- e was a| prince of sp 3 and did |ites arriving away are not aw £ the with him en glhven ou rly this morn 1 in only with sey incid, Born in 1861 Y learned Louls Phili as born at York T L n house, T ‘nham, L . on Febrn On abdica- tion ¢ Louis Philippe I hen the Public Gets Details hich illness amon been abandonc olicy adopt o confidence 4 regarding A regarding was proclaimed and Cavalgnac EORANCRMDEEES | distator uatil the return of con to Irance from Tnited ulminated with Napoleon folle people indispositic ond empire guilo emperor. The 1 a Fran- abdication 'n Trance slican form lnce shg doing ¢ tha annomncemant nday night tha helief in son late S st ble ta carry on Gibbs Piano ("nnm.l\' Opens New Sto W0 New i Rritain A )‘»wvv:h'\' “no1h 84z e's ('mfllm(c » Commercial Trust Co. ses l)nl NEW COLD CREAM POWDER STAYS ON Until You Take It Off! READ HERALD CLASSIFILDL AD FRANKE. GOODWIN EVESIGHT SPECIALIST 327 Main Street relief for the which in many places has experienced a con- as far | following | tem- observer would and end of the cold wave was |tion in the MINOR OPERATION " i Prmce Suifers Allliction of Ear s The Prinee under- 7 1 active char this me sig by ur nent cturer on ecural surgery h of the pain in the ear, the ccordingly decided This has been ant of ear tronble formerly was nd DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 29, 1926, M 1. 70 STUDY -+ TREMORS AT MAINE Machias fo Be Site for New Scientitic Bareau Mass., March 29 (®— raphic and geodetic sta. extreme section of the country 1s to be near Machias, Me 8 Cambrldge, The selsmog It will be established next summor ¢ by the Massachusetts Teehnology, Istudy of the Institute of and will spechalize n & puzzling causes of the constal tilt taward the sea The station will be equipped with modern apparatus for studying carth tremors and read- justments of the crust, according to n announcement today by Pregident muel W, Stratton of the institute. It will be located at Camp Tech- nology. » fleld work in eivil en. K on during the errain and fso dapt it for summer. lation of the spot will a seismic investigations Hosmer of the ing department, who ge of the field work, expeets 1o cstablish a bage line from which geodetic surveys ean he started this vear, It s known that relatively larg changes have taken 1 in the lati- uda and longitude of certain estah- lished points en the carth's serviee, Some of these are caused hy system while earthquakes r changes ement which cannot he known eause in- ' of the land toward Hlattribut clude tt = lthe These ehanges } in the levelin It is o whicl ve heen de orl of the coast and oy ed tha 1'later be t the selsmopraph installed at the !istation for t measurement of carthe will be one recent- 1% develaped by Dr. Harry 0. Wood nd J. A. Anderson of the Mount Wilson ehearvatory in California. 7t ew instr t differs radica rom older ones. 1t has the ad tage of vibration region ortant in measuri of earth shocks, and is high short ANfendannall Invasiabia halfasee ond pendnlum will be used in grav- ity studies and the - |servatory alres established on the will be part of the station Solution of problems in m ment of ecartl ke wayes, renomical and in geode variation in sea level, tilt of land surface and changes in gravity, t was eaplained, depend upon int ange, over a long riod, of data hered hy observatories in various parts of the country. The coopera- |tion of the T & eoast and geodstic g [survey is on t fmportant ] |[phases of st n investigation t astronomical ob- risite asure changes tie posi- POSSE SFEHING GIRLS ATTACKERS| Negros Rob Men, Kidnap and | Assat m Compamons Madisonville, Ky Three you tland th , Mar¢h 28 GP) ¥ women were attacked escorts, Chapman Merrill, 24, and” A. L. Mills, 22, robbed on the highway from here to Earlington ght when three unidenti- eld up the car in me. ere sald Al r and at pistol mg people to ter robbing the young money, one of 1 stond guard over the two voung men while the your woods and attack periit Hubert Woodruft and ities 1eft for the seene immedi- Fy un ing notified and a large : of citizens is expected to form o i dhi search for the Ne At the point nd attack f6 eral cars 1 cently from the ind a numt points fore ofit, the n of con, rable eir number o008 took the women into 1 them officers in the roes t which the robbery voods hord 116 who weére held Preventive ’lake‘f"’“ l.axaf/ve | A Safe and Proven Remedy The First and Original Cold and Grip Tablet Proven Safe for more than a Quarter of a Century. The box bears this signature G Jobpore Price 30c | sther two | er of holdups have | up last night had been to Madison. ville and were returning to thelr home in the Morton's Gap county, beyond Earlington, TRYING T0 SCALE HT. WASHINGTON Arthur Walden and Dog Sled Keyes to Give Full Data On the Taylor Mystery Los Angeles, March 290 (A==The (next developmeént in the Willlam Desmond Taylor murder case was awaited today with the scheduled return from the east of District At. torney Asa Keyes and his assistant, Making Attempt | Harold L. Davis. Taylor, a motion | Pinkham Noteh, N, H, March 29 | pleture director, was found myster- | s (P~The first attempt ever made to iously slain four years ago. | : | scale Mt. Washington by dog sled is Those friendly to the district mv\_‘;mr Aty torney say that new fnformation ob- | gl here" yun' the snow-dritted, tained by him during a 60 days visit | g hipped sides of New Eng- | to New York, Chicago, Philadelphia {1ana's nighest peak, Atthur Walder and other eastern eitles will result Yot e SUlt | o Wonalancet, bronzed veteran of Keyes. e (i | many a gruclling snaw race, and hls eves, In a telegram to Fitts, has |y, of Eskimo huskies is tolling TAQ Wkt On of DIk foR L3N Lpniard the mimmit, on arriving in the eity would be that | O\Ar 0 SIMEIE o aper. O e statue ot he miiet}¥ | men and photographers, They start. . I 4 0uLs ¢ 9 o'clock last night from the t rest numerous conflieting re- | (i) e S noxvEiat ) LR "“"‘”“\nmh which leads from this plac regarding the progress of the nVes- |, uyowm of the mountaln requires | B |elght miles of tortuous, winding as- | {cent to ¢ r the 6,293 feet of snow P. Crona Wins Medal | blanketed mass that is Mt. Washing- | As Insurance Hustler | | ton in winter time. | Through the clear moonlight of | Pefer Crona was presented with a bronze medal at the annual meeting | 'h': night they fought against a gale | at rushed down the sides of the | of the New England Mutual Life In- ),‘ ak, and into the clear brisk day | surance underwriters in Hartford o the award being made for less than . road was | the largest paid production in piled, in many places all trace | ate sof Connecticut during the ‘]\M been obliterated, and the smny“ r 1626. Mr. Crona has been with New England company for 15 1 this was the ninth con- | was hard. I It was expected here that no at- | secutive year that he had led in paid | business tempt would be made to go beyond | » halt-way house today, but that | | there the party would rest to gather | The medal, which is a fine piece of | strength for the dash to the top, {work produced by Tiffany, {6 inseril- | which probably will come late to- ed with Mr, Crona's name and data | night or tomorrow. 'There was no | concerning its presentation and | means of communication with the bears a picture of the company's | house, however, and old timers I home office in Boston | who know the hazards of Mt. Wash- \ ington predicted Walden would base movements on weather expe- | !L_\'nn I;;)l:-cssional Ball Club Is Given Sethack | his dien Walden s one of the better known | Lynn, Mass,, March 29 (P—S8pring | of dog sl racers. He won the orig- training prospects of the newly or nal international sled dog rave over league |2 course from Berlin, four years ago. seball team received a sethack to- s competed in many other y when Mayor Ralph & Bauer befors and since. decreed that no professional and ssional teams shall be al- lowed to play on Lynn playgrounds The New ngland league club |ques {had planned to make use of the | Rarre playgronnd, penfling the con- litioning of its new bali park on | W ne. Mayor Bauer said | that the city playgrounds were built \m ope | for the benefit of the city's children. [ the fall “I READ OF WHERE MY NEIGHBORS WERE RELIEVED | CF RHEUMATISM” SHE SAID | | | Mrs, C. 7. Minor, of 124 West Strect, Bristol, Conn., Tells Public How She | Took Advice of Neighbors to Her Husband's Benefit FALLS TO HIS DEATI. ton, Cal., March 29 (P—Jac- Fisheur, 43, of Mollywood, 1o jumper, fell to his death | yesterday when he jumped | n an airplane at an elevation 0(‘ 0 feet and 1 parachute A crowd of 3,000 witnes parach —— | i We want the people to Rnow the LRBIUS is and when they it will be an easy matter for |them to sce—why ERBIUS has a 1 of New England by storm. ‘Ll BJIL 18 the raw julces of fourteen selecteéd herbs which have not beén boiled, as boillng hurts tne curative propertice of many herbs. | helped so many of my neighbors, T ERBIUS has been tested and the re- , {elt it would help 2 Mr. Minor and it <ults have more than exceedsd the did. He has taken two bottles and xpectations of the makers. A sin- | feels better than he has in five years, gle trial will convines anyone of it & | It is certainly a wonderful remedy great merit. It is an honest remedy | and we both of us indorse it." and will live up to it's expactations ERBJIUS is being introduced in | Mre. Minor says: “For five years New Britain at The TFair Drug my husband has been a sufferer | Counter by a Representative of the om rheumatism and any one who | ERBIUS Co. has suffered agonies of this | disease knows what one has to en- | dure. His pain was so bad that 1ei spent many a sleepless night. He had taken so much strong medicine | (hat his stomach was &ll upset and | he felt miserable, 1 read of where ERBJUS has‘ what | | Burritt Hotel Scda Fountain Luncheonette SERVED AT SODA FOUNTAIN ONLY FROM 11AM.TO2P. M Consomme or Cream Soup, cup. .. Dainty Spiced Ham Sandwich Cheese Souffle .. Chicken Salad . A Pimento and Cream Cheese . . Fresh Applie Pie with Cheese French Pastry Coffee, cup : No Charge for (he %cond (up BURRITT HOTEL WAS BUILT FOR YOU TO ENJOY J. E. WEAKLEY, Manager the Burritt. Shop bpen until 11 o'clock elarting April & | | | | '? i “Miss America” (Miss Fay Lam« phier) winner of the Atlantle City Beauty Contest—wearing Shortoes, the Knit Athletic Union Suit. Sha s featured in the Paramount Picture “The American Venus." See her photo in our windows—and see the movie at the Capitol theater, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday. a e o for the American Venus of Today Shortees—the Merode Athletic Union Suit—knit of soft, elastic fabrics— for the girl who wants comfort for play and sports! Shortees are especially designed to give the body full freedom. They fit 'snugly, without gape or pucker, and ithey're always comfortable. The knitted fabric hugs the body like a second skin—the legs are short, and gently flaring at the bottom—the armholes are roomy and deep. Shortees steal their inspiration from Men's Union Suits; they're designed on the same senSIble lines. Yet they're chic and dainty enough to Please the most fastidious girl. Wc have them in all pink and all -hxte—- in white trimmed with pink, and in pink with white. Two styles—501, of fine lightweight combed cotton—at $1 . . . 502, a lightweight mercerized of exquisite quality, $2. Built-up shoulder or bodice top, Ten passes for the matinee performance of “The Ameri- can Venus” at the Capitol the- ater Mon., Tues. & Wed. given to the first 10 purchasers of “Merode” shortees P o2zootocioediectasnitismeapts s i starmansaientasts Individual SERVICE Helping the man behind the bank account to get the most out of his financial possibil- ities is no small part of the service of a modern bank. We seek to give our clients and friends this kind of individual service. It will be a pleasure to show you how we can immediately be of help to you. TRUST CO. UL T T TR T R B

Other pages from this issue: