New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 19, 1926, Page 2

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SEGRETARY DAVIS AT PLATTSBURG Addresses Citizen-Soldiers and Lauds General Wood July 19 (P— Secretary Dwight F. Da was in t Military 0 50 Camp of 1915-16, the germ from ‘I which the whole American mobili- 20- e c zation plan for s World war Citronella for Mosquitos sprang, came b lay to e Bottles |/ with the pride with comed his appointment as corporal a decade ago. The occasion of Mr. Davis' ad- Training | ¢ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JULY 19, 1926. City Items SENSATIONAL FLOP Martin Berkowitz of 30 Talcott street was notified yesterday to be in Wolcott town court Tuesday morn- | Fall of Ministry Immediately IR ictous sanawtcnes at Growews | RENCCted 10 Exchange —advt. Camp Clara, R. N. of A, will ht at 8 o'clock | w York, July 13 (—Another | hold a meeting to: sensational collapse in French francs St. Jean's hall. | Hot cheese and steamed hamburg {t00K place today in all the leading of the world as a re- sandwiches at McCarthy's, 71 financial cent 4 ;Sull of the fall of the Briand-Cail- of |1aux ministry. The demand rate in New York droppe new low record for all time at 2.15 | Church strect.—adyt . The members of the Sons Union Veterans of the Clvil War, [Auxiliary No. 'L, Wil attend the|cents. The preliminary rate, based { Grand Army exercises at the 5, 1 "HiaiaviiTal Cani! Gronnda Thussiay | oD Jailed jiuropaan quolaiiors, v [t - ¥ as low as 2.13 cents, hut no trans- B = |actions were reported at that figure. | Lawn fete and bazaar, St. An-| ‘e French frane, with a nominal reyq s nazish, iton gt & par value of 19.3 cents each, or JUDGE m‘E |roughly five to the American dollar, quoted at approximately 46 MRS. SARAH L. ATWATER DIES AT AGE OF 8 Mother of Jesse F. Atwater Passes Away After lllness of Three ! i 1 | Days Mrs. Sarah L. Atwater, 85 years | old, widow of Lucian Atwater, died | Sunday evening at the New Britain | General hospital following an ill-| ness of three days' duration. She| was a resident of Forestville for | over 55 years and had been mak- ing her home with her son, Jesse | F. Atwater, transportation manager of the American Hardware Corp. MAY INCREASE STAFF IN BUILDING DEPARTMENT Need of More Clerical Assistance Result of New Ordinances Recently Adopted. [ Increased clerical duties brought about by the enactment of new or-: dinances requiring the payment of fees for plumbing and electrical permits and filing of applications and copies of permits-may make it | necessary to increase the clerical staff in the building department. since last March. She had been in the best of health {up to the time she was taken sud- denly i1l with severe pains Friday morning 11 o'clock and con- tinued to grow worse until the time of her death. Born in Bolton, Dec. 12,1840, she spent the early years of her life The bullding commission is con- | sidering the department’s needs in this direction. The department has | one clerk, the same as when it was first organized and when buildings | amounted to but a fraction of its | present figure. There was no in- | crease in the clerical staff when the bullding commission was created HOT WEATHER HARDWARE Reliable Garden Hose 12¢ to 22¢ foot. Lawn Sprinklers, $1.00 to $3.50 Screen Doors, $3.00 to $5.85 Window Screens, 35¢ to 85¢ dress was the celebration by mem- dollar. In the space of one | and plumbing and electrical Inspec- of the (regular) infantry, there. She received her prelimi- Fiyosan the Great Fly Killer L e, DICKINSON | :-: ing of the gri against the marine sal regiment ¢ h first on on- , as it had at Catigny made ~ » first offensive gesture, the secre- said, giving the Germar - their fal taste of the fight 169-171 MAIN ST. 1ality of the American doughboy. an ex-doughboy I renew comradeship with the those high ideals this — a notable exponent, added. Referring to the present C The Smart Summer || ainie aetiiiics of the comp, secretary recalled that Major G Leonard Wo had pionee “To General Wood and the Mili- E ining Camps Association, he nation owes a debt of gratitude [(Ov‘ the idea which should al where his son olled, the war for the “Plattsburg idea. e of Platts- With Knickers or Flannels ciated with the n PHILADELPHIA HAS NEW HILLING CASE Male Companion Missing combine beautifully with flannels Soft camel’s hair coats in the natural color — fan gaberdine coats—knitted coats in plain col ors and tweed effects. You've or kuickers. Moderately priced HORSFALLS 93-99 Mdsylum Street | Philadelphia, July 19 (P) — A | woman was found shot to death in a small hotel here yesterday. Polic e seaching for a gray haired man | the woman last night. He left during | notel he was going out fo buy food. | The owner of the hotel said that after directing where he could buy sandwiches he did not see the man again nd did not appear to be excited. ard the body was found by Peter \otel employe. aid he was taking another | couple to a room when he noticed Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. |the door of the woman’s room ajar Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S, = |and a light burning. He looked in and found the woman crumpled at X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN |the foot of the bed. There were four bullet wounds on the body, one in the . hand as though the woman had raised her arm to shield herself. Two lstters found in {led to her identification. as postmarked Elmer, N. J., signed “Larees” and the other Dunellen, N . sigr ‘larence.”” The Elmer letter spoke of the writer coming to Philadelphia in a few days and pay- ing a visit to Mrs, Van Alyston. | “I knew better times are in store |for you,” the letter read. “1 al- | ways predicted things would turn {out all right.” At the rooming houss where Mrs | van Alyston lived, it was said sh | had been there for three months That's All We Do—Txamine Eyes || ghe had not been home since Thurs- and Make Glasses. But we do |l gay, the landlady said. om the it Right. Satisfaction Guaranteed. 4 osiription of the man given by the | police, the rooming housekeeper I | said it answered that of a who | frequently called upon Mrs. Alyston . ' { He said he lived in Trenton, N. J. 7 HARTFORD “It Pays To Boy Our Kind” il DENTIST en minutes Thorough Eye Lxaminations Glasses Fitted Accurately Henry F. Reddell Optometrist & Optician Raphael Bldg. 99 W. Main St. KRYPTOK THE INVISIBLE BIFoCaLs She understood he was helping her with some sort of a deal concerning | business in Bangor, Me. ght Specialist 300 Mai- Phone 570 Trying to Link Up Case Against ¥ A Chowder, Clams, Steaming | yg\a,"N ,lr]s,“,(,‘pph,e‘:,i,of‘ Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, istigating the Aimee Semple M Tibeters:Cral Meat, qIhn onstiil o Shrimps the evangelist purchased clothing THE s e Gk o OYSTER HOUSE 22+ STATE ST. HARTHORY =l Mexico, 1 venes tomorrow. Throu of the sto in which a corset was purchased for Mrs, McPherson the distriet ftorn« h B lish location Auga Prieta, g Leld cap Under rGant’s Department Store 4N 7y s FTANK OPEN TO BOYS Patronize Merchants Who a Wb Rl bl S Deliver Your Purchases by | 4 « t W ]-1 )'m urned o Pt L ne ovs from AUBURN Parcel Delivery Seerce RIOTING ;\ CALCUTTA I'ransportation Co. y July 19 (P (lne) | v lem riot ¢ Phone 611 morning sor of Auburn wounding continning this Oriental Rugs All Sizes I| Eyes Examined SEVADJIAN Glasses Fitted 162 Glen Street ' and Repaired | | Fran'c £, Goo'wn RPN I NSRS ———————————— Esesight Specialist REPAIRING, WASHING & CLEANING sy WEDDING RING SHOP DIAMONDS 140 Main Street, Room 11 Upstairs MAIN ST. Phone 1606 {about fifty, who had registered with | count and jury when it recon- | Docket Too Heavy In New Haven and Automobile Collision Goes Over |was the docket in city court today that the cases of Judge Milton C. Isbell, of Ansonia and KFred W. Hen- ninger of this city, whose automobile were in a collision yesterday was not called before noon. Colonel Tsbell, oresident of the state police commi on and a cousin of Judge Isbell at court early in the interest of |the 1atter but was told that he would be notified when the cases were called. It was what court officers called yusy day” and no one knew when collision cases would be reached. Judge Isbell in his car met Hen- *Ininger in his at i ection of Norton and Goffe streets, wh a block from the Whalley avenus {home of Col. Isbell. It was at this |street corner some months ago that {a car, in avoiding anot cut the corner so sharply tha mounted |the curb and pinned Probation Offi- |cer George Hills to a tree fatally | hurting him. With Judge Isbell w |Cora, and her father, ¥ {less, 70, who were given attention at Grace hospital and later went home. The exact nature of the accident |was expected to be dascribed in the | Judge Isbell's machine was spun | around in the impace. The judge Isaid the other car struck his. " STRICTER BAR EXAMS !Hereafter Students Will Not Be I'the night telling the owner of the | Permitted to Take Test After Test Until They Pass. carrying an umbrel- | | Bridgeport, July 13 () — A new nove to raise the standard of mem- bership in the Connecticut Bar asso- clatlon is contained in a ruling {adopted last month and just inserted !in the Connecticut practice book. | 1t concerns the examinations tak- en by students desirous of being ad- mitted to the doing away with |the former practice of permitting a [student to take, without restriction, examination after examination |despite the number of failyres {against him in the past, The new ruling permits only two examinations and if an applicant |failes to pass them both he may not [take a third until a semi-annual ex- |amination has intervened and he {proves in the meanwhile that he has |applied himself diligently to the study of law. DRIVERS HAVE THEIR WOES Automoblles operated by John Elair of 53 Belmont street, this city :.md Edward Sunnenberg of 31 Eas! troad street, Plainville, collided on | Park street yesterday afternoon, The amage was slight. Automobiles driven by Mrs, Clara Johnson of 48 Main strect and Roc- co Marino of Kensington collided 2 the corner of Rot Main streets yesterday Slight damage was done. | An automobile driven by Charl P. Grabowski of 5 Concord street struck Virginia Russo, aged 5, of 20 Tremont street, in front of her t evening. The girl became confused as she ran across the street and retraced her steps directly into the path of the car. ski said she w Joseph Hayes of 486 All I notified the police Sunday that his automobile struck George Amb tiogler, a bhoy, of 120 Comme et, injuring his knee. Hayes w driving south on Main street and in ront of Raphael's store the boy ran in front of the William J. Raber of 23 ton avenue reported i automobile bet registration A8950 struck the front nder on his car, near the rer of Main and Clestnut sireets the driver did not stop. arming- night that Jonnecticut ! READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADs | O'Brien Boy Gains 11 Pounds With not natura ren to be 1 serawny. If they are well ealthy, they should be gainin T up to their twentieth Many children, however, with cir young delicate digestive organs om their daily food the s of life itself—the im- vitamins and the of lime, iron and phosphorous. > son of eorge G. O'Brien of Mahwah, N. J., was thin and pale «nd did not get enough nourishment {from his food. 1In a little over two |months he gained eleven and one- half pounds and feels and l0oks one indred per cent better. And what brought him back to sturdy strength was the new coneentrated form of Cod Liver Extract known as Me- Coy's Cod Liver Ol Compound Tab- latk Livery physicla knows that as rody appetite creator that | and mother, too builder and nothing can Fine Watch Repairing s compare with Cod Liver Extract New Haven, July 19 (A—So Ln’»!“‘ Mfr. Grahow- organic | | ing around 4.70 cents. ss of the currency reflects the difficulties encountered by the French government in funding its |gebts and balancing its bud It |has been accompanied by a so-called flight from the franc,” or the trans- .r of huge sums of capital from ce to other fi centers vith a gold standard currency, par- | |ticularly to London and New York. | ris. July 19 (A—The op: ng ation on the frane this morn- | n was 45.22 to the dollar. TLater it dropped to 4T. nd still later to 48.30. The quotation on the pound sterling opened at 220 and later went to 2 | Tondon, July 18 (P—The French franc went to a new low mark at the opening of the London foreign arket today. When fit was quoted at 232 to the pound {sterling. The Belgian franc was |quoted at 217. On the stock market, French five |per cent bonds declined from 8 3-4 to 8. | The franc later improved to 46.65 [to the dollar and 227 to the pound. Brussels, Belgium, July 19 (®— Reacting to the French cabinet isis, ling exchanged opened here today at 210 Belgian france, and by noon had reached 216. The dollar was quoted at 43 francs. J The drop of the French franc to 48.30 to the dollar takes it closer to the 2 cent mark than it has yet been. The last previous official quotation, on the closing of the Surse ay, was 42.40. Some im- | provement was shown on unofficial quotations Saturday, a gain being made from 42 40.50. The Belgi while lower in sympathy with French exchange, at 43 dollar, did not lose =6 The unofficial ques ALL SAINTS CHURCH HOST 0 BISHOP OF SLOVAKIA Distinguished Visitor Bestows Pon- | tifical Blessing on Father Grohol's Parishioners Rev. Stephen Grohol, pastor of chureh, entertained a dis- d guest vesterday In the 1 of Bishop Marian Blaha of who was in attendance at recent Buc tic Congress in Jiengo. He was the first bishop te be consecrated in Slovakia and he recelved a royal welcome in this city. He officiated at vespers and bene- diction and preached a sermon. At |the conclusion of the services, he gave the pontifical blessing to the congregation. In uttendance at the cevemonies were the following: Rev. Matthew J. Traynor, pastor of St. | Mary's church; Rev. Charles Cop- pens, pastor St. Peter’s church: Rev. Walter Nowakowski, assistant at the Sacred Heart church; Rev. Peter Kaczybski of Terryville, and Rev. | Lawrence Carny of Westfield, Mass. During the procession from the rectory to the church and return, s the hoys’ choir sang. Bishop Blaha left last evening for Westfleld. Howard’s Buttermilk The Buty-Bring Cream Keeps Skin Soft, Clear and Pliable ve this to your complete satisfaction, ge a packa, at yeur usual toilet goods counter. The di- rectfons are simple and it costs so little tha women can afford i ed to satis- fy yon in way or the pur- chase price will be cheerfully re- funded, iply ask at your favorite or toilet goods counter for a or jar of Howard's Buttermilk Fair Dept. Store sells lots of it, Thin Children Are Sick New Form of Natural Flesh Bullder. I its nasty, fishy taste and odor have, prevented many children from cnjoying its benefits. Now science #has removed all the disadvantages for in McCoy's Tablets you can give them all the vital food factors of Cod Livers and at the same time other valuable and well-known bedy results from the use of M- Tablets have been so remark- in literally thousands of cases it they are now sold by all drug- gists anywhere with a specific gyar- antee that if you do not add at least 5 pounds of healthy flesh after 80 jays' use your money will be in- |stantly refunded. | Don't lgt the lack of the vital elements of strength and health poil. your child’s future lfe. Re- member as his health is built in |youth depends his health in old age. Assure him of a soynd foyndation, for a strong virlle body, by giving him McCoy's Tablets today. 60 tab- lets 60 cents, | tery. | | native town and completed her studies in the state normal school | of this city. Surviving her besides her son are two granddaughters, Mrs. Waiter Wright of Bassett street and Miss Haze! V. Atwater. Funeral services will be held at the home of her son |at 29 Trinity street tomorrow after- noon at 2 o'clock. Rev. Samuel uteliffe, pastor of St. Mark's Epis- copal church, will officiate. Tnter- ment will be in Forestville ceme- The female of the paradise tern, a beautiful bird, is equipped by ma- ture with a wedding dress. When| | she accepts the advances of the male, g e e S WL S [For Quick Returns Use Herald Classified Ads i {it relieves this Piles Clo_ Quick | i Piles are caused by congestion ol‘( blood in the lower bowel. Only an | internal remedy can remove the | That's why salves and%eut- | Leonhardt's Hem-Roid | tablet, succeeds, because | congestion and | strengthens the affected parts. Hem- | Roid has given quick. safe and last-| ing relief to thousands of Pile| Sufferers. It will do the same for| vou or money back. The Fair Dept. | cause. ting fai a harmle: White Mountain Ice Cream Freezers Croquet Sets, $3.60 to $5.25 Herbert L. Mills The Handy Hardware Store 336 MAIN STREET ADopes BEROTHERS SEDAN ] THE S. & F. MOTOR SALES CORP. TELEPHONE 731 1129 09D F. O°B.. DetFoit People are surprised to learn that this beautifial and sturdy car now sells for *895. They have heard so much about its exceptional valae that they are under the impression. it sells for a higher price. Moreover, the Sedan possesses afl the roomiress and character of closed cars that call for a muach greater investment. It is substantial in appearance because it #ssub- stantiaBin fact. And serves its owners far beyond the period usually expected of a car at any price. The body is all steel—safe, sturdy, fireproof, and smartly finished below the belt line in coolis blue lacquer, with cartouche yellow stripe— upper body in black lacquer—shields and fenders inb!aek,oven-bakedepamel. Biue Spanish genuine leather upholstery, remov- able rear seat-back, and optional wood ar steel wheels are included among/many other features thatcommend themselves forcefully to the buyer. Many who expected to buy a cheaper car, now find that Dodge Brothers product is well within their means. Many who had expected to buy something more expensive, now find everything they could possibly desire in these smart and dependable vehicles. See the cars for yourself —and investigate oor attractive time-payment plan. Touring Car - - - Roadster - - - - f. o. b. Detroit STANLEY STREET

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