New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 5, 1926, Page 2

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SA —_— Gl for the JUNE BRIDE Can be selected and sent with a feeling of satisfac- i 3 A tion when you make vour i purchase at the GIFT DEPT. of The DICKINSON DRUG CO. 169-171 MAIN S { OUR G)VERNMENT DONALD L. BARTLETT Councilman, ) the ¢ no su ity char ilman , Dor from t is often refe Ba connected Stanley Works in that hie third 1o assist n. In the of municipal conl or's judgment through the of coal pur- He was ap- ws chairman of committee ember of the | and in | or two | the chair- \on coun- cil nittee on printing and supplies, and he is also a mem- the ordinance committee, | cilman is with the acity ler huse Horsfall 4-Piece Suits For the Man About Town and o the Man About the Tinks— eh 438,50 *40.00 “45.00 e the two || s man ed on the wa h ol stores, was prove E may ind ses by Dartlett coal purchase ame held com \ip has At $388.0 the pairs of long $40.00 trous- and knicke ned of mart woolens opriate sports or business like them Patcnts Issued to Connecticut values—you'll (List furnished by the Harold G. Manning, Shoe S 11 Main street, 95_99 hl)‘nSl)’tcl‘ | mhomas M. Allen, Torringlon Suco-Lowell People office uf’ Walk-Over New as- | |signor to shops, Bos- ton. Creel, | Harold E. N. Y, Re mounting. Reuber roneck wyef Hall Searing Br assignor BARTFORD wring Co., Hartford “1t Pays to Buy Our Kind” : Ha as ng machines, Mig DENTIST Dr. B. Johnson, D.D.S Dr. 1. R. Johnson, D.D. RAY, GAS and OXYGEN ELECTRIC TREATMENTS ction with Alpine Baths Biolog- given In Ultra-Vio Rays, [ M When the Sun Electrical Blood nbury Co. Appar w ver High or Low forms of I ird lood enma- 1 8ol Me abrics Dr. F. Coombs Sumusl I Tage, Sira NATUREOPATH ; Febie ) R Near Post Office Lac New B Works. (2 S Lady nurse 8 $500,000 First Mortgages At Low Rates of Interest High St in attendance e Dals. dale Grosvenor Corp., Hoy filling-replenisi w Hau Allis, Reed, Ne to H. 8. ven, Tracto rd, as ewrite Tyy nderwood Tyy Y. (2 patents) maching New Haven, Plrearms Co Marlit wrtford H Hi Trade-Marks Registered | First Bond & Mortgage Co of Hartford Applicants New e L T e e e Lu Women \\xll H.n\(- Their Own Dress Parades Ha 0. Br Y PLAY TWO GAMES. WO ARID DROWNED Thaw all," she poace.” Rus [her say game tn know residents meteor, {minute. tragic |ing |not scaped with Veniee s been see precedents ed t York of thess Cockley t cuts towe who found } nacle of t not want to Atlantic City, it and her ct that the twe N former husband, friends, & paint brusl married are “just good 1 in commen Rus her nd i dinner together in “We've buried last nigh hicago who o cre for Hm sbit sald, Washington they do not aved. Senator sked to ompared Glens Falls, N, have It was Chica drama g0 und ciu D. Tillman, hed in veral how know xplain t filibuste of draw pok ning wild." He s In your hand you what you are playing.” " twith dences . been — aene vans Slale 15 Expected to Yield ™ thrilled b visible wl ildren 1 her stand Jif San Antonio, men have ers along 3 rum runners with eattle fever Hagerstown hol, who has the m over agal New York- w Cowan, Hig Tent Harry ton. W Miss York—T nts have A note A copy “A Doll's House,”" was hands of Mrs. Killed the f sald she longer. Lorses are hir by against Mexican border ticks, forts of stockmen to stamp out Md, worth in his hand. And \FLASHES OF LIFE: WRECKS CAR AS HE TAKES HIS FIRST AUTO RIDE ana Gondoliers | Iropped explai iring erched smoking the was much over published reports of a apparently attempted | (v the \|n|n:n~mm that he was Russell has be last three wer of for J. — Evelyn Nes- | Ha ting on el Th utk en w ks, M senat pok 1i said “you have 1o nearl, The her adn s Texas cat iquor cove ering Alcohol alcol their thougt the will ¥ 1it (ving Cowan we bison s Buff rk to virtually 1 700 stocks broug sold deuler bonght vin Londor why. She U or e Princess Mary 1 engagemer $1 s 11 5 for s o We Derhy Al ating are not. over for anything me," bother 151 York—If crown 1€ of Sw ¥ e 1 der da 1 n D 1ext Jto¢ mo but worry und o 1vs ol “Id ne." woulg position in an Jolet, T Lrry 1ed hid to the in Varden brink going to be and it 1 b hat's enough,” we com all in dynar A ~Two convicts, [ like nieric piot pr Elm some anyhody is id it carried the r Washington movies of filr hia Hix mi 1o i professions ind their s, ic | 1 Patrick n. dies New Tave Join Baltimore aliia mate n is d presic until 30 foot bhank; A Adams Donnell - De nt of Decemt t 1eke 1in the W 1tbuck, 1 in ~Foes four t 1 toot e Wil- battle son, is in his inc er Arm t urig $18 Niblek's 1 who has nev r rhree deatl J. Haylo: astern base boys dic tower ths apart- pipe concerned y a “eould an ar two other TURDAY, JUN 9y 1926. work shop of Hartford eounty is quickly contrelled with Slight mage HUPES 10 EHMPETE (Continued from Firgt Page) hin | Aswociat “But unfortunately morning added, “that, will too late for Win lon. Helen I8 doing so well il will be able to leave the two we but she will the ful oft | LC ned ro- on 1hl at she K ret hospital in not. play be Unite Sta This would Mrs. Wills fore she returns to seem to indicate that of the opinion that, inless therc arc complications, | Helen will be to defend her American ehamplonship in August. In the opinion of followers of | tennis here Mrs. Molla Bjurstedt At’s | Mallory, former American cham. | the [pion, will take the place of Migs | haw [ Wills in the Wightman cup matehes | in Ingland Mrs. Mallory iy in England s to parti- elpate In th Wimbledon | m Wight nan on fry the of at the ing Sllows the an cup Howe of the ith | cable 2 1 Miss Mary Browne American team, tted States Lawn ation, and it as to a euhsti t with the b in cup- has Ten- liss assoc is her ion | Miss Wills will re nn ! = GOLDEN DS OF . WHEAT N KANSAS 50 no! |up ya Bumper Crop fields ripple g plays over the Southwest of yellow is becoming no- spols in field: here and yon. golden glow of is Impending. Soon it will ull the land und from duwn to fading day tha the harvest will be heard. Texas plaing and in Okla throh of hurvest time al is belng felt. Then, as the ripens farther north, the will push on into Kar wheat will be ready ¢ the last week in June. This winter wheat state will be roes of harvest it full | by middle July, In these three 100 acres of 1, according experts. Th age of two the ter- the great prairics of A tinge I in fle- harvest burst o'er 1 of of hreak song of th On the loma the ready at Uoiliiare the mowe premic in th about will be governt eds the other ling | winter wheat states. In Kansas alon 10,688,000 & will be harvested, with 4,500,000 1n Oklahoma and 1,- 4,000 in Te The latest official tion [« for th vast 0,000 1 states whe! to 5 exel the rop ned acr nere Xu8, rritory nearly half the of winter wheat country, Kan! estimated production the entir was 18, the ta produce com. and rels this ye 74,750,000 in 1 prospective vield nth, cver, has been exeeeded 1 and 1924, eks the coting ears on unt v 10-year , how 1914, in s have il sl moving the to mill and | 5 estimated | eded In move- will be fahotia, nis harvest, is on. K 1 40,000 men from ou state, lahor ummnrm e} vy little outside he eded in Texas ol For rallros n eoll pre eat erop from )y to farm It on parstory to market that 1,000 cars will alone for the Additional thonsands in T\ and O Tnx r s the from mill Kansas ,my 1 net the ting 1ide ison | #11 nit- e rvest his mented by much No | men! ¥ [Huge “combines’ “|thresh at a single on tha gr thousands of hinery hias besn aug- n machinery cut 1 oparation, are | at groin farms | acres must by sted. Pulled by tractors, these ‘hines rapidly transfix the ficlds into vast ex- and. | | | o w | that used wher har huge ma roling wheat panses of stuhble mes ball for for- | th red Vermont Man Haled Before Ottawa Court June b (@ <lford, owner of house Vi, who was arrested morning on a charg wed his opposi- an examination of witres the ms investigating n released from smugeling to bis re- the choice or appears ise of hid 1our ade, (o g 1 SMuUgE as e ion to his nmission glven hdrawn, Telford wus disobedi him to opening his ware fore the | to r of the the n stated th alcitrant 1 in th commor of the orde testify before sion. It has be ord proved T ikely to he con parliament. Dutasta Art W orl\s old at Auction 5 (P sale of the works e late Dutasta, ¢ Versailles peace € fere ended last night, Some 19 million francs were realized. The South American collector, |Jorge Ortiz Linares, bought perb tapestry by Boucher, payving for it This was the ouls XV sLelin tay of Hamilton British ind and t per cent r for answ for customs commis- at it Tel- he Was tower of of | paris The his lart Paul secretary of nee, n 18 all in lighest price arm chairs, cov formerly -ction, pestry col s paid READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS of | Iready | president I puntica a su- } panel, after o design | 1,655,000 francs | r Stettin | ——LONDON Prince of Wales Watched by Mer- chants, Who See in Him Last Word tyles—Melba's Farewell. June p—How widely the f of Wales for sartoria] ¢ a4 copind has just come men discussin London, the Prince d an of business l It was related that the heir to the throns occasion was Seen wearing r Isle swoater. Overnight this fac enormous demand. The b in the Rhetland Tslands off 1, suddenly were so swam s that some of them had to b to Donegal knitters. Leieester manufacturers ev made a fine imitatio Furopean demand muchines going day a ieh and hich kept the onthis, MELBA'S FAREWELL Dame Nellie Melba's farewell per in opera will take place at Covent next Tuesday night. King George Mary have promised te attend and 1 last time to the melodious voie Australian diva. o will be June 2 ause of the general stri ried that Melba's farewells will 1 Adslina Patti type—that they w lity farewells, postponed be asse UPSET on wag se badly that many of the postponed SOCIAL SEASON London's gocfal he general strike and dinners be glven. There will not be nights sufficient ¢ late all of them before the middle the social season ends. Some wready h the broken strands in an effort thelr original dance and dinner p ring the strike ballrooms were erracks for volunteer workers Mayfair. Mistresses and servants ali {doned their routine to help in the Ih le park and Regents park, utantes joined hands in distribu selling newspapers, m into YONTS" BY “Don’t smole, THE BISHOT* on't drink, creise” These are the London says are the esentiale for w apy to be young throughout their Addre i take nur sed in.white, tha bis a young man should t out to dine snd offer them should never go out with again. a cock thut R TRESSES k Campbell whose long I+ CUTS OFF 1 Mra. Patr wus considered one the days when she was playing “The Mrs. Tanqgueray,” For several years Mre. t little in London. Now at gatherings of stagh folk sci that she expects shortly to cw play in one the theatc Bnd of London, FLYING VERY POPULAR NOW lying hus become 0 popy facetlous obsepy the marrieds" Pat had he 18 pre i of West vs of are d & "Heneymoon Spec vrway sehedule. Two or tantly not long since af fhe not Infrequently to be found trave 10 the Continent e men are usually hoarding the air expre The Lrides seldom s at essaying the three are the es, alrdronic show any perience. say halkine NOT EXCLUDED to exclude J, H. the Royal Colonial Inst THOMAS orty nd knitters in formance and Queen Melba's farewell concert ap- in Albert hall. cert was to have heen given in May but wag » decided not to endeavor to take aperones and regular ex- things t Bi ng @ room filled with young women, advise ¢ of them young lack hair ot her greatest char has joined the army been seen and to take 5 it soon will he nceessary to al" to the Continental couples, hymeneal more backward jn PR LN ey Jazz and Thrill at Dinner in Tower 429 Feet in Air Now at Hand— Foreigners Buy Art Treasures. Paris, ors alon parison seck glon, ranked Germ pla Berlin, June §-—Jazz and a thrill at dinner 420 feet up in the air atop the Kalserdamm radio tower is now at hand, Fanped by breezes on even the hottest days, diners in the which {s nearing completion, will oibles of flect are out at a g trade tower cafe, bright t created be able to dance to the strains of jazz picked out of the air a few feet above thelr heads. The cafe will have a seating capacity of 50. It will be partly enclosed In glass. Lower down, on the 166-foot level of the tower, a res- taurant seating 250 persons is being built. From both eating places diners will command eilonsa :% of the entire eity of Berlin on one nd night and of Potsdam with its castles, lakes rivers on the other, :d f this stat "Am the Riv amount left the const ped with e turned . se o n of ® inter side “But it and S sances, BLAMES BOBRED HAIR i S Although it s estimated that less than 20 Y per cent of German women, ineluding school girls, who still wear braids, have bobbed their hafr, an ornemental feather manufacturing company has given the abbreviated hair styles as the reason for flling a petition in bank- ruptey. The petition aswerts that in keeplng with shorn locks, hats have becoma mo small that there i& no longer any room on them for fine feathers. In response to the court's question as te whether the businees could be conducted @ receiver until styles changed, an official of the firm morosely replied: *The hobbed-hatr craze s just starting.” RAID ON ART TREASURES Fo Gardens and Mor isten for consider e of the GYPSI This tion ke. It is m 10t be of ill be in Chstiz hall 1 Along by near Ma upset by hundreds probably to the F whose h signers have t is called anothed “'raid” on German art treas- ures. In Leipsic &t an auction of black and white drawings of famous masters, American lish, Swise and Holland collectors obtained every one of the offerings, paying about $50,000 for them, Rembrandt's Hut with a Thatched Roof went for $3,025 to an agent for Netherlands gallery. Representatives of German museums were unable to outbid competitors because of limited funds. succossfully « o accom- of July, hostess Presid to ecarry rograms turned all over ke aban- relief in daclines “You why he leave Ra ting and lowed to 879,410 WAR CASUALS There are 679,410 casuals of the World War wholly dependent on the federal government for support. They are so badly maimed or di- scased that there earning capacity, it any, is fess than 25 per cent of normal. Included in the total are 1,160 women, chiefly former Red C'ross nurses, The War ministry, which publishes the sta- tistics, caMs attention to the fact that 65 per cent of the incapacltated were more than 30 vears oid when they entered the service. Near- ly 20 per cent are now over §0. In the pro- vince of Hessen-Nassau the war casuals total 2.2 percent of the entire population and in Buvaria 1.4 per cent. callg the person t alas, 1 } shop of police.” omen to lives, OBJECT 1 them r fam ust ¥ Many she man tail walk art a few m the sale Second: y of the to business, Pai at the cf that (hei ngin or u cause of hls part in the recent general strike in Great Britaln have proyed unsuccesstul, When Mr. Thomas' name was mentioned at ing of the institute, one member object- 1 moved that it might be deleted. Lord Stanley of Alderley, chairman, said that while he belleved it was true that the re- cent events were {n the nature of an attempted vevolution, he doubted whether, in the minds of the ordinary rank and fila there was any intention to subvert the political conditions of the country. Other speukers auked that the motion should ie withdrawn and this was subsequently done. PASS VOTE OF THANK The Free State senate has passed a vole of thanks to Cornelius Sullivan, of New York, for presenting to the National Gallery in trust for 3 the nation, poriruits of six distinguished Irish. men—John O'Leary, Penian leader; George nt every- an- reappear tistic edv “What gone to ist nnel rlously i It was P i pa- altar, ling in a Tt wa officials ' ha signs of side, Ameri ns and ri there fowed the erous of many of the st spende the most Marle de Saintes Marie, new questions are being put. THOUGHTFUL OF GE dent Doumergue h; darmes out of bed. dential summer residence at Rambouyillet he So, I prefer not to go out, Montmartre and y against the city of Paris's proposal to tax made his det ng w of pub The artists add that the fairs help In the ar- of finance ling com iDOINGS IN FOREIGN CAPITALS - PARIS ican Visitors Along Riviera A Called “Tightwads”—Gypsies Ar Asked to Give Tips on Markets. June 5 ~—Individually American vis: g the Riviera are “tightwnds” in ¢ with persone of other nationalities w yment and rest in that salubrious rc s good spenders the Americans fourth, coming after the Russlan: Egyptlans. British visitors w iith. Leading hotel and restaura proprietors along the Riviera are authority ans and British are so numerous on fera that their total expenditures to more than half of all the mon. by foreigners,” mays a writer w purveyors of food and frolic a myth that they are the most ger the visitors, Despite the fact tha Russians are in poor elrsum- when they appear in public they arc of all foreigners. During year Germans have occupled m ny of lururious hotel suites in Nice, Cannes nte Carlo and the hotel proprictors them excellent guests.” is 3 ASKED YOR TIPS The young French glrl of today is net pro- pounding to the Gypsy fortune teller the ques of the rry soon? steryear. Then it was or, “Whom shall I is “Is the franc golng to buy oil er rubber?” the ronds leading foward Saintes la Mer, at the mouth of the Rhope, reellles, still are to be seen some of the gypsies who made the annual pilgrimage Black Virgin, their patron saint, in onor fetes are held ecach year at It is to these gypsies that the NDARMES ates to keep the ge When he is at the presl- all invitations which would keep him awny from the chatcau in the evening. see,” says tha president in explaining has to decline an fnvitation, “when 1 mbouillet after dark the gendarmes all along my route are called out and are not al- 0 to bed until T am back home again. It is not T who m out. It {8 & far more influential han the president, and over whom, have no power, It is the prefect of TO CURTAILMENTS Montparnasse are in full 10uS cpen.air art marke ir' and the “Turnip Fair. a painter, since become colebrated, ut at one or cther of these “side. gallerles” and paid his way through onths or years of additional study by of his works there. Wares of the dif- s—the “Bread ferent exhibitors are exposed on certain well- Xknown thorou stop and buy ares and (he public is invited on the way from shopping or e of the two quarters have protested (v bhall against the tax on the grounds v use of street space does not involve rK, costly installations, cleaning, ¢ utilities such as water supply 1cation of the publie, Y SEASICK would have h Washington ?"* ppened to me if I had M. Raoul Peret, min- distressfully asked one of his aniens to London while the steamer was rolling and plunging fu- n pne of the worst seas of the year. eret’s first crossing of the channel and first venture at sea. s a violent introduction fo a seafaring remarked with a sigh of relief when {he steamer approached the dock on the other adding: “After such an experience the Thomas as a vice- irady, Doug- 1 George Moore. Cornelius 0'Sul- & born in Kerry and is a lawyer pr stormy way to a debt settlement is bound to appoar simple and easy, Happily thers are aeroplanes to ge back on, but they tell me itute tielng in New York city, bes KINE’S [STATE 1S v LEFT T0 HIS WIFE i owa: Amount Unknown--Estimates (- High as 7,000,000 Bridgeport, June 5 (M—The will | of the late John T. King, former re- | national committesman from Cennecticut, was admitted to probate yesterday afternoon when presented by Lawyer Charles Stuart Canfleld, eounsel and close friend of the repu a score of years. The entire esta in left o Mrs. Eleanor J, King, hl:ll widow, Mr. close family | admit, his friend There 2l circles, Cunfield, who was perhaps as | to Mr, King as any ontside his | in this eity, was forced to| that he has no idea of what | might have been werth. | is considerable speculation in | particularly politieal, con- | the valuation, os #s high as 00,000 | have becn mad bt all are of doubtful natyre and those who know most about him say they would not be at all gurprised whether the value is in the millions or hundred | thousand dellars or Al are at a loss cerning tim, a Insurance of mere than $100,000 a8 carried hy Mr, King on his life, but this is not classed as part of his estate. Alderman ward R, Price, now on a western the underwriter for one pelicy of $100,000 taken out a year age in March. There was other life insur- ance, it is reported, | ' GERMAN STAR COMING Dr. Otto Peltzer, Premier Cross Country Runner to Make Invi Cnited States, June § (® which already sent to |this year three of its greatest ath. lotes in Hubert Houben, sprinter, Fric Rademacher, breastroke swim- mer, and Gustay Froelich, back. stroke champion, has approved a trip fo the Unjted States hy her premier cross-couniry runner, Dr. Otta Peltzer, | of | Berlin, Germany, | has | WILSON |Sample Shop Inc, trip, was | Ameriea | Governor Wood Opposes Pensioning of the Fit Manila, P. I, June § (A)—Hopes of evaral thousand government em- ployes for retirement on pension at |an early age were blasted by a rul- {Ing of Governor Genera] Wood that inone may retire unless unfit for further serviee, General Wood said that by virtue of the discretion permitted him in {the Retirement Act he would hold {lhat Fillpinos who are able, physic- ndieate, .may be the last (nrmdnl |athlete to invade the United Btates. | Champlons of the I"atherland whe fiave made previous trips across the |Atlantic have wanted to remain their, and athlctic officjals are ba- giuning to doubt the wisaom of such invsalmvu you give “the shirt off | )aur hack” to BROS.' someone-—huy New Yeork 357 Maln St.— here. advt, SNAPSHOTS OF A BABY SUCKING HIS THUMB ) WELL SUCKING ONE'S THUMB 15 ABOUT AS 620D A WAY OF PASSING THE TIME AS ANY LIES WONDERING HOW LONG IT B TLL Hi6 NLXT BOTTLE FEELS ALTTLE BORED Wity 'IFE WELL WHAT DO YOU KNOW ! IF MOTHER DIDN'T MARCH 0~ VER AND TAKE HIS THUMR RIGHT QUT OF HI5 MOUTH ! WONDERS DOE® SHE MEAN BUSINESS . ONLY ONE WAY TO FIND OUT DEBATES BEST MEANS OF 6ET- TING HIS OWN WAV, SHALL HE CRY OR USE TACT 2 VEELS 'S A 600D PRINCIPLE TO YRY PEACEFUL MEANS FIRST. CLOSES EVES. Peltzer, a doctor of philosophy Iwho is not as old as his title might , Ball Syndisat thote are rather rough on sensitive npatares” (ally and otherwise, to continue at work will not be permitted to retire on pay although service and age re- quirement of the law's provisions may have bheen met, SOME, COMFORT Paddy was asked if his twins did not make an awful nolse in the wee hours, “Well,” ke said, “not so bad, You ses, one makes such a din that you can't hear the other.''~Tit-Bits. GLUYAS WILLIAMS THERE, THIS 15 BETTER LEFT THUMB I AND BRACED IN PUACE WITH RIGHT ARM. VERY SNUG VES SIR SHE TOOK [T OUT AGAIN WITH A LOT QF FOOLISH TALK OF HAVING TO PUT MITTENS ON HIM THERE, SHE THINKS HE'S £5LLER AND HAS TIPTOED OUT. NOW TFOR A PLEASANT, UNDISTURBED HALF HOUR WITH THUMB I i

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