New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 27, 1926, Page 16

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, JULY 27, 1926. COLLETT-ORCUTT |RELIC OF ST. ANNE |Crowds in Front of St. John’s Church, Bristol, LINER AT MERGY [™. i me Dc.‘3:?:?‘?353':',‘3?’.?;?fffl?"'i‘,iz‘.bi‘;%’fc‘ffij PLAY UNBEATABLE| ATTRACTS 25,000 Where Relic of 5t. Anne Was Applied to Infirm| (F GREAT STORM & sisin it nises i i o) guests of the President and Mrs, | charge of civil aerounatics. Coolidge for several days. In response to other questions it Th w A S[ t (Continued from First Page) | ‘egE . . gl (Continued from First Page) Both arrived on visits described as aid the president know of no 656 omen Are dlars 0 ] - i . ¢ o & — social in character but it was s sion that might call for an extra s church and about 00 boys and girls ] 8, o R ) o 4 | Island, St. Augustine, today picked |at the executive offices foday that |session of Congr this year. EaS[eI‘H POlllI GO“ left the parochial school grounds 3 g 1 B o s ’ e up an SOS. signal from the ltal- [ Mr. Coolidge would take the oppo: s and proceeded as far as the church. : k Y 4 B e gl o B T ¢ ian steamship Ansaldo San lorgio | tunity to discuss with Edsel Ford | Ty then Girrhéd AT Mdichod ns Second to the effect that she was |coaditions throughout the country as Eastern Point, July (A—Miss |far as the corner of Queen and Cen- , OS8R 7 F o ine g v 8 Mnking somewhere off Jupiter. An- | Well as the progress the Iord in-| Providence, R. 1., 5 o other inessage reported the steam- | lerests are making in the develop- | Pr. Georg Spiee ., a practic- “ollett, ational champion, |ter streets, a numt of visitin, > Qi s 0 . 5 ship Orizaba standing by. ment of civilian aviation. ing physician of this city. ended his + priests bringing up the rear. They 5 Miss Maureen Orcutt, metropol- - ¥ y ’ 5 5 e &2 * fu v hanging s ce o e s ? then proceeded to the church, where ; { : 7 : It was not the expectation of the | 1f¢ DY hanging in his office here e : last night. The body was found itan and New Jersey champlon, fin- |1 o the chilaren were placed i | SEEENS ETR s g2 4 B 4 3 v s | president, it was a , that e | ished easily in front in their respec- 'the front pews and as many adults % s i, Rt < 3§ S8 i ted by the Sava would discuss foreign conditions | M4N&INg to the avin of a high set of tive match today in the open round |as possible permitted to enter. Dur.| |3 i pe 4 . 3 ; 3 : . n ation today indic particularly with Mr. Child as the [ Platform scales with a leather strap of championship play in the eighth ing the services there were several e "y "t P t : Italian steamer Ansaldo San | latter has not been connected with | 2round his neck, by the jauitor of annual women's invitation golf tour- thousand who were unable to gain 3 £ 2o arue § Vhe 4 : : 3 ; 3 i o had been abandoned after a | the diplomatic service for {wo years | th® Office building this morning. nament on the Shenecossett course. |access, although the center and side | (B 4 . 2 s fight against the tropical [and since then has devoted most of | Medical Iixaminer Longfellow pro- M Collett, who won the evenl (uisles of the church were crowded. L K .3 A . ~ v - T i urricane off the east coast of | his attention to domestic affairs. nounced death due to suicide ap- the last three years, disposed of | Mhout 1,500 persons attended the X i B ! 3 o Florida Among the visitors ftoday avas | PATENUY Drought on by temporary Mrs. C. J. Downey of Springfield, Iservice, the others entering at the | . 4 $ ¢ o g e e ',”‘”_“* E. ( ‘”“]{\ 4 ‘M'”» A m‘ insanity. Mass, 6 and 5. Miss Orcutt, |gonclusion of the ceremonies to have | M By ) - . o Washington, July 27 (P—TheNaw York Central rallroad, and | s matched with Mrs, C. F, » Ir. (e relic applied. | . e 2 f 'l £ ne weather bureau this morning locat- [ 4egociated Justice Rowland T ‘m,M‘ DUNN — LOVELACE of Wellesley Hills, Mass., was taken | “The opening exercises consisting = N 2 i 53, £ gt ed the tropical storm as central or Gortlanis 4 enibar oF the New | The weddi of Miss Ieatrice to the 16th green before winni 3 lof the Rosary by Rev. Father Mag- ¥ 3 ' g h — short distance off the southeast coast | yop. foi Slinrente. colrt, """ Lovelace and James Dunn of Pitts- and 2. : A nell who also recited the Litany of | 3 ey tween Miami and Jupiter Inlet.| " y4'\ag said the president did not |burgh will take place August 2 Should the two continue their vic- ISt Anne. Rev. Thomas Schwertner, ¢ 3 s h A - - and moving very slowly northwest- | expect to fill for several weecks the | e tories they will meet in the finals |0, P., of New York city, editor of | [§ od £ 3 v R £ perd. post of assistant secrefary of the | READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS Friday. Miss Orcutt is in the uUD- |the Rosary magazine, then delivered e sl £ 3 No vessel reports have been re- | | per 16, while Miss Collett is in the forceful sermon on St. Anne, ex- f S E: \ L P ceived from the vicinity of the —— lower bracket. The best match of [horting all those prese: to en- | 2 jresi o 2 7 & % ’ storm center. the morning was between Mrs. |deavor to imitate the Saint. A por- ’ 3 v } A 7~ iy S Hurricane warnings remain dis- Mary Mayberry of Portland, Me. [tion of his sermon was directed to E - . > . N0 A s played between Miami and Titus- playing in her first tournament, and lthe children in particular, in which 4 i : 5 3 i A ville and storm warnings are flying | Miss Elsie. McMahon, Ossining, N. he urged them to greater devotion, s > e Lk o i . o elsewhere on the Florida coast from | Y. which was won by the latter, Following the sermon, Father PR b T 3 oo Tampa to Jacksonville and as far 1 up. Magnell repeated the pledge of St. B ; 2 v g 9 N north as Charleston, S. C. | Miss Orcutt, the medalist, went |Anne and then the choir, augmented 3 f i % ¥ j out in 40. Miss Collett took Beven |y the chorus of children in the | ¥ Y 4 « J g Much Damage Reported. more strokes for the nine holes. front of the church, sang the chant KAACRRRLT b iy R sk : Miami, Fla, July 27 (P)—High | The metropolitan champion |to St. Anne. Then came the bene- wind and waves of a tropical hurri played the third, fifth, seventh, lgiction of the Blessed Sacrament by cane swept out of the Caribbean | tenth, 12th, 15th and 16th in Par |Rev. Thomas Lynch, assistant pas- . . o " - sea last night and swept their fury figures. She had a birdie on the |tor, s Rl 3 AR on Florida’s lower east coast. Dam- | first. Apply Relic For Four Hours . s % ¢ 3 in shipping, to waterfront ho. One of the upsets of the morning | 4 numper of visiting priests werd e 3 > ;. e gty tels and to residences was the toll was the defeat of Miss Jane Brooks, |present to assist at the exercises W z R o i of the storm. | Nyack, N. Y., by M ay Lee, NeW |ang the relic was applied almost 4 3 5 Several small steamers plying be- York city. 4 and continuously from 5:15 a. m., until B T 2 tween Miami and the Bahamas were Miss Helen Payson, Portland. |about 9:30 last night. Priests per- 3 e i 2 2 e % o reported missing, while at Pompany. Me., Florida champion, who is in the lower bracket, won her match R. I, 7 and 5. Upper sixteen: Miss May Orcutt, Englewood, Mrs. C. E. Eaton, Jr., W Mass., 3 and 2. Mrs. defeated Mrs. J. J. York city, 8 and 6. Miss Marie Jenney. New York city, defeated Mrs. Rose McCain, Hartford, 6 and Miss Elise McMahon, Ossining, N. Y., defeated Mrs. Mary Mayberry, Por land, Maine, 1 up. Mr Chicago, defeated Mrs. man, Brookline, Mass., H. H. Hepburn, Hartford, defeated Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd, Phila- delphia, by default. Mrs. J. B. Rose, Shield, Penna., defeated Mrs. F. J. Dole, Phila., 5 and 4. Lower sixteen: Miss Glenna Col- lett, Providence, defeated Mrs. C. Downey, Springfield, Mass., § and Miss Helen Payson, Portland, Maine, defeated Mrs. Louise Phelps, Watch Hill, R. T, 7 and 5. Mrs. Lee, | |forming this duty were relleved |every ten minutes, with Mrs. Touis Phelps, Watch Hill. ‘ The closing exercises at 8 o'clock in the evening, which were identical with those of the afternoon, were attended by as large a throng as were present in the afternoon. Father Magnell stated this morning that during the first eight days of the novena, he estimated that about 900 persons were present at each service. Vesterday it was Impossible for anyone to saw how many visited the church during the day, but thousands pald their veneration to St. Anne, During the day luncheon was served by the women of the parish in the basement of the church, a courtesy which was appreciated by many a weary pilgrim. Three police officers were on duty throughout the day and evening to assist in the handling of traffic. Hundreds of cars from 15 different states were parked along Queen, Center streets and Bellevue avenue midway between Palm Beach and | Miami, fishermen reported eight men were drowned when their boat sank in the Gulf Stream. | At Palm Beach workmen rein- forced the New Breakers Hotel, un- der construction, with sand bags to protect it from the pounding seas. | Wreckage of trees and small boats strewn along Ocean Boulevard, ¢'s winter playground. Shipping suffered considerable damage when the gale lashed the inner harbor. Two small tughoa sank, two pleasure craft were de- stroyed by the terrific battering of the waves and three houseboats were demolished at their moorings, rendering several families homeles A large houschoat with two per- sons aboard, was carried several miles southward in Biscayne Bay, coast guard boat. Storm warnings kept all craft in port last night and early today. A message from the Unite company’s steamship Ulna picked up in Norfolk, Va., late last People who wouldn't think of going to any but a good, reputable dealer for food, clothing or furniture patronize the worst kind of “dumps” when it comes time to buy a tive. They do this thinking it is necessary in order to get a tire bargain. We'll sell you the best tire made—a Goodyear —at a price as low as you can get anywhere 0'Neil Tire & Battery Co. |during the entire day. The longest e L 4 night. The steamer, which operates distance traversed by anyone was ¥ 3 ¥ 4 : P 3 SR & between New. York and Panams, 39-41 Washington Street New Britain, Conn. from the state of Washington, this ted she was " to and head. Iparty arriving Sunday evening. s o b O pe Gl ] \ . ing north off Cape Carneval.” $13,000 Due, Gone 3 A motion picture operator was A strong easterly gale was blowing (et g o Suti Ok which | Burke, Thomaston; Rev. John Rev. Thomas J. Keena, then pastor| and conditions in the Klorida straits |- YA€ 05 NG aREs AR erInE S RRIOh [y s P . leld; Rev. John [of St. Joseph's church. The annual ” > said to be impossible. assembled . "¢ began with the reci- : = Landr; Jewett City; Rev. Peter pilgrimage to the nove ce = 4 m Beach, attendants at the | red o {ati hatrom i et the | [ S screnit for ’_’}"]““"f’l ot Cuny, Waterbury, and Rev. Walter |time has increascd cach year and at lovort of the osary and then fol- | yooy of the Palm Beach Yacht Club | L6 Drescns Tovenh ls dile [Hather oy oy Ner Rotialn, {present thousands of infirm anc L ton dnto St. Anne's | o0 fighiing this morning to 4 Magnell, Rev.*Thomas Schwertner sy ‘ os, | SOCiCty of a number of the women | o e, OENLN o ot and Rev. Thomas Lynch. ANl three | Father Magnell this morning Crippled persons atiend the services.|JoGotY of & mumber of the women |, pier where thirty to forty yachts : Rev. Th ynch. 4 Laer M ; ? There is no doubt as to the au- as ¥ Rev.| (lued at more than a half million | | worked indefatigably in the inter- |Stated that the main idea of the John Cotter of the La Salette mis- . | worked indefatigably i File e dtiag A Ooh thenticity of the relic, papers hav- n b he La Sg dollars were anchored. - - ests of those who attended, as djd Novena was to propagate the faith| S B ol T ok oain | : ? S Gl and that while many people may be |IN8 accompanied it down through | %10 in 1 FoRRngRe)ox hould the dock go to pieces |many of the women of the parish. |and that while many people may be life of St. Anne and of her high | yhqer the gale, the railway bridge A e | who dondled food and who later g | for.| In spite of the fact that large of the Ilorida Bast Coast railway b sl zeal, miracles were not looked for. f 2 3 s served it {o the visitors. zea e S Bencdiction followed the sermon ake Wort @ be mena e s He believed that many who attend- |CrOWds and many automobiles were | 10 into the secicry aog | Oer Lake Worth would be menaced Fricassee Boiling cl b: New York city, defeated M Jane Brooks, Nyac N. Y., 4 and 2. the ages which bear out this fact. ce as patroness of the home. During the afternoon services, the fat a " svidence i )y the boats st adri ne St o was crowned by |¢d due to a temporary exultation, [at all times in evidence in the vi-|{ht THPLOR Tt ipplied by Ttew, | VY, the boats cast adrift. ue of St. Anne was crowned by Ll e v ) heen. oinea ot ity of the church, there were no| " 11°, e HY SR The bridge connects Palm Beach CHICKENS her Magnell. some ailment. but time alono would | accidents and Father Magnell spoke | Charics Coppens. with West Palm Beach on the main- Vlaing Tuests (S (iR 00 S afickenariacite Telloa B e 7 The Dominican priests attending | TS0 unofficially, that one man | directing traffic. UBBER BUSINESS BAD |the ceremonies yesterday were T BAR Tal il et erA T b b Chicopee Falls, Mass., July 27 (P) Sirloin, Round c Rev. T. L. Crowley, O. P., super- (/0 180 ‘& e s | —Practically all departments of the PRI: for of the New Haven prio pvs A 1T T ite mense. ot} ((ROWDS ATTEND TRIDUUM | s company g0 on a y STEAKS 4 lb scl . land. hea after having been deaf for hearing after h g been deaf for | lule of four e | Colbert, 0. P, ven: | . e i e e e ! ! Hav. V¢ R Hayes 0 P, Wakhing, | 005 JEURC B 10 DEMCEICUESR BET0| | ginning Thursday, it was announced 2 reported although it was believed to = LA | 4 ton, D. C.; Rev. R. Carroll, O. P., be too early to confirm them offi- | O+ Feter's Church Unable to Ac- |today cut in working hours is < = ¥ ek 5 | s LEAN PORK ROASTS . Philadelphia; and Rev J. M. jBar- seasonal but the belated s rett, 0. P., New Haven. | cialiy. i | commodate Crowd at Services in | gaid also to be a factor, Other visiting priests were Rev. ‘Km»uu Brought From Constantinople| 0= 0o - —— - (Continued from First Page) RUMP CORNED BEEF ........ lb. | | | Willlam P. Laflin, Forestville; Rev. | The relic, which is a piece of the | ARRESTED FOR SPEEDING | James Broderick, Terryville; Rev. | wristbone of St. Anne, was original-| St. Peter's church was thronged | IEdward Chester of 1380 Common- | Six months of the year showing Clement ~Martin, Hartford; Rev. |ly brought to Rome from Constan- to its capacity last cvening at the wealth avenue was detected speed- | £00d conditions and the period singe FRESH CHOPPED | John ~ McGuiness, Litchfield; Rev. |tinople by Monsignor Schmidt, who services which ended the triduum in n Stanley street this noon at [July 1 even an advance in general BEEF 1 C Joseph King, Ne i i Rev. |in turn presented it to Rev. William honor of St. The body of the about 12:30 o'clock by Motoreycle | business conditions. LEAN PLATE | Frank M Mt i Rev. (Dullard, formerly pastor of St. church was filed and those who | Policeman William Strolls and was| The prosperity, in the belief of the e 10 George Carroll, Waterbury; Rev. |Joseph's church, who happened to be could not enter were contented to | put under arrest. He is 22 years| bresident, is due in part to the re. CORNED BEEF Cc Edward Cj New Haven; Rev.|in Rome at the time. Iather Dul- remain on the steps and sidewalk old. The case will come up in to- | duction in taxation, which has r , S 2 | James Kane, Danbury; Rev. John [lard in 1201 gave it into the care of | ouiside. | morrow's session of urt | teased money for private enter- WE CLOSE AT NOON WEDNESDAY. prise. ETHEL: A Vanlty Case by his cabinet members before he TEL. 483 70 W. MAIN ST. left Washingtoa and optimistic re- | s ports made especially by Secretaries Opposite New Hotel. Mellon and Hoover he has found It the United States government could find Frank Vincent, this in- jured soldier, it would give him 50,000 Fossils ESTABLISHED 1886 SHOE SPEC'ALS Women’s Men’s 8 5 ‘e All Sport Oxfords — Tan Calf Oxfords—Rope Smoked elk, black and stitched, wide toe; value tan calf trimmed; values $6.00. $6.00 and $7.00. I}!a_ck Kid, Patent and Tan and Black Calf— Satin — One-strap, Cu- Wide toe, rubber heels; ban heels; values $5.00 value $5.00. DRl e ey and $6.00. ALL OTHER SHOES Black Satin and Patent Black Patent Oxfords— || "ding B e Gore Pumps — Low For dress and street REDUCED heels; value $5,00. wear; value $5.00. Mrs. Carroll Fenton is assistant to ° her husband, newly appointed cura- tor of the University of Cincinnati o e 0 ln geological museum, She's a good X assistant, too, as she knows 50,000 fossils by name. L3

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