New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 6, 1926, Page 22

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ARCHBISHOP VISITS SPRINGFIELD HAY LITHUANIANS HERE | GRUESOME MURDER Rt Rev. Matulevicius Refurp:| ccomove? from ¥ P2e2 ing to Homeland Soon | Archbishop George Matulevicous, representative of Lithuania to the Eucharist convention recently held in Chicago, is visiting this city today and was scheduled to ad the congregation of St. Andr twice during the day. At 3 o'clock Arch- bishop Matulevicous talked to the | children of the parish and at 7:30 o'clock First Friday' services and \enediction will be held after which he will address the adults. The \rchbishop will stay only one day plaind of not sleeping nights and fell p in a chair. He left to visit an| in an effort to seek employ- asl office ment. Is College Graduate. g Bearse was graduated from Northwestern Ur y in_ Boston | 1924 after h school h [tive in athletics, |school teams. and Mrs. Bearse were divorced o but Mrs. Bease and her to occupy the Bearse and he An un- You ress Mr. supported her there. shed check made out by MMr. arse was found in the house by the police this morning. Mrs. Bearse was between 50 and 55 years old. An autopsy was performed on the y this morning by Medical Ex- {aminer F. D. Jon CHICAGO CHANGES GOLORS WEEKLY ' | This Summer Has Seen Many Gay Decorations by bod: D. | | | Chicago, Aug. 6 (A — Not since |the world war has Father Dearborn had flags and bunting on his store |fronts and houses in such protusion for o long a time as the opening |weeks of this summer. And perhaps never before have many pulled the latchstring to [spend a few days. Since early June, when flags were mingled with white and gold bunting for the eucharistic ongress, the city has been gayly decorated continuously. Even before the twelve cardinals and 750,000 other Catholic visitors had departed, the yellow and blue bunting in honor of the Crown ARCHBISHOP MATULEVIOIUS. in this city, as he is making a tour of the parishes in this section of the country. Archbishop Matulevicous reside: in Rome where he holds the posi- tion of general superior of the Ma- rion Fathers, a Lithuanian order. He i also apostolic visitor for that country, where he has recently re- organized the dioceses in the nation. |Prince of Sweden had replaced the He was born in Lithuania in the [papal colors for a week. Then post- year 1871 and was educated at Mari- [ers welcoming 150,000 Moose blos- ampole and at the Catholic Uni- |somed in every window, with the versity at Petrograd where flags still flying. Next came 200,000 he was ordained in 1898. |Elks and the bunting was changed He served as a professor and rector [to purple and white. at the Catholic university and later | The city fathers entered officially took up special studies at the Uni- [into the race for the title of “con- versity of Frieberg in Switzerland |vention city,” by ordering an elabor- where he was granted the degree of [ate court of honor around the block doctor of philosophy. occupied by the City-County build- Archbishop ~ Matulevicous was |ing. As one set of visitors succeed- bishop of Vilna for seven years and |ed another, the big plaster plaques when the Poles took over the city [on the forty foot pillars were chang- he was made archbishop and ap- jed to the coat of arms of the current pointed head of the Marlon Fathers. [group. The festoons of electric He 1s an accomplished linguist |lights joining the huge pillars were | speaking French, German, Russian, |dyed each week end to display the Polish, Lithuanian and Italian. |colors of the latest arrivals. | False Bottom in Auto Hid Supply of Liquor | Albans, Vt., Aug. 6 (P) false bottom in a light delivery truck | was found to contain an assortment gin and whiskey bty cus- toms parole men, according to a re-| port received this morning by Col- Few foreigners are affected |jector of Customs, H. C. Whitehill army is suffering here. The truck, registered in New | | Hampshire, ,was seized and the l driver, Harry I anson, sald to be |of Colebrook, N. H, arrested. Two London, Aug. § (® — The British | hundred eighty-eight bottles of "ale colonlal office today announ 1 ‘,1 in an abandoned car be J 1,000 DYING DAILY Shanghal, Aug. 6 (B — It is un- officially estimated that 1,000 Ch nese men are dying daily from cholera and the excessive heat With the epidemic at to- day was the hottest day 3 years. The temperature reached St its peak, here in | f brandy existing provisions regulating v, another report ad- Malayan export of rubber will continued until further notice. vised. this | | tinanced by Amer I fall will t \ | !is being held by police | | | the capitol's “Miss athlete, and only 5 ay, to be “Miss No bobbed halr here. Marjo. Joesting. Washington” for 1926, is a good swimmer, good feet 5 inches high. A pretty good chance, d America” at Atlantic City! e ) we - | She A | through the it the I3 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FATAL PLANE CRASH One Flier Killed and Would-Be Rescuer Fatally Injured at Ca- nute Field Today. Rantoul, Ill, Aug. 6 (# — One flier was killed at Chanute fleld here today and another who flew to his assistance crashed down be- side him receiving injuries expect- ed to prove fatal. First Lieutenant C. E. Partridge, Chicago, was flying at a height of 500 feet when his biplane went into a tall spin and fell. Flying Cadet Harold C. Wilson of Selfridge fleld, Michigan, flew his plane to Partridge’'s assistance, went into a side slip at the same place, and altitude, and crashed | less than 150 yards away. Wilson was taken from the wreckage un- conscious. Partridge was dead when extricated. Lieutenant J. R. Wolf, Chicago, Wilson's passenger, was injured se- riously. Both Partridge and Wolf were reserve officers, here for their two weeks' summer training. MISS EDERLE 1§ NEARING COAST (Continued From Page 1.) English channel was not Gertrude Ederle’s first introduction to this rough waterway lying between the coasts of France and England. The one time amateur champion, who | is now a professional, trled last summer to negotiate the some 19 miles of water which Neptune al- ways has barred to women swim- | mers. After long training, Mt Ederle started from Cape Gris Nez, the same point from which she set out today, and was within 6 1-2 miles from the chalk cliffs of Dover when she became exhausted and collapsed in the arms of the Egyptian swimmer Helmy, who had plunged into the water to res- cue her. ‘Miss FEderle was in the water eight hours and 46 minutes, and the first part of her performance was regarded as among the best ever seen in the old channel. She attributed her defeat to large quantities of salt water swallowed repeatedly during two miles of the journey in a choppy sea in mid- channel. Broke Speed Records When she started, the American champion broke all speed marks until she had to give up. Almost without warning and just as the cheers for her wonderful endurance for eight hours had ended, the | swimmer faltered, as if in pain. | was given beef tea by her trainer, Wolfe, but her hands shook as she took it. Then she went bravely on after a minute's rest towards the English coast, which was just coming into sight haze. Stubbornly she was winching with pain. She had to stop every few hundred yards, roll over on her bank and massage her bod Then came the collapse. The limp and crying girl was hauled aboard the tug. She was discon- solate and cried out, “I just could not do it. The salt water was too much for me.” [TALIAN CULTURE HOME IS ERECTED Golumbia Has Bit of 0Id Ifaly t Morningside arried on but New York, Aug. 6 (P—A bit old Italy, pure in form as a Medici palace, soon will stand the crest of Morningside Heights, The cornerstone of the Casa Ttaliana, controlled by, but removed from Columbia university, will be laid August 5. It then will take its place among the architectural gems on the heights as the only strictly individual repr as | America. Paintings, art mens of the work of Italian artists richest periods of history will interior of proper, erected and an architects and extraction, will form, with a cost has been ace the The building builders of Itali pure Italian in Florentine loge. The estimated at $300,000. All corners of the world will be represented, for gifts have been promised from persons wherever there are Ttalians. King Victor Emanuel heads the st of contributors with two paint- ings, The ¢ n ication exercises in the orating Saint Francis, the Friar of Assissi, whose order, the Krancis- was established in Italy responsible for much of the artistic progress of the cou IS HOLDUP SUSPECT Greenwich, Conn., Aug. 6 (P)— Lafalci, 21, of Newark, N. J., here pending investigation of a story of a holdup vesterday of a truck bound for Dan- bury with $7,000 worth of furs. La- falci, who drove a truck owned by Newark company did not report the hold up until returning to that city cans, hecame Patsy a NOLAN DIES Norwich, Aug. 6 (P Michacl Nolan, 55, for the last 12 years supervisor of the Connecticut Farm for Inebriates here, and constable for the Preston, died home in Preston today as the result of a heart attack. He was born in Lynn, Mass., and is survived by a daughter and a sister. MICHA town of at his SENT TO JAIL Hartford, Aug. 6 (P)—Stanley Lockhart, 29, salesman o Myrtls street was presented in police court today on charges of drunkenness and attempted assault. He was sbn tenced to jail for three months by Judge Day when he pleaded '“ll}" \ RUM RUNNERS' FEUD | his fellow of | at | g Al objects, and speci- ke the form of commem- | and | FRIDAY, AUGUST 6, 1926. ANSWER TO TRAGEDY (Continued from First Page) ‘ she knew little. Demolin said he | was going to drive from New York |to Providencs, declaring he would |’ |be back Tuesday. On Tuesday at| 12:30 p. m. she said he telephoned to her from some long distant point | and said he would not get home |until the next day. She believed |that he was killed ¢n his way back | from Providence taet night. Authorities here and Rhode Ts- land polico declare there was no|: | doubt that he had been in the lat- ter state on business connected | with his operations as a rum run- | ner. R Aug. call through long dis from this city to Al-| bert Demolin, “the Dixie Kid,” at |a resort near Jackson Heights, | 1. is believed to have started on the trip which ended slaying by gunmen at Wa Conn. This is the view held by the Providence police, who have learn- | ed that Demolin we lled from a pay station telephone in a Mineral | Spring avenue resort, Pawtucket. | Who made the call has not been | determined. The information has been turned over to the Connecti- cut state police at Hartford. | Providence, 6 P — A telephone tance lines WITH THE POLICE | The police were notified today by | C. D. Willlams, manager of Miner, | Read & Tullock's wholesale groc- { ery house, that the place was en- | tered during the night. Complaint was made to the po- lice today that boys steal apples in the Stanley yard on Stanley place. | Officer Patrick Meehan brought to the police station a bicycle | which was reported stolen by Wil- liam Richards of 43 Glen street, the corner of Grand and Arch| { streets, Frank Kovalezyk of 80 Grove | street rcporlc’d the theft of a spare tire and rim’ from his automobile. John Ansenka of 443 East street | reported the theft of his bicycle. | TAKE PRISONER AWAY Three members of the Chicopee, Mass,, police department came here this afternoon and brought back John Hershel, who was ar- rested yesterday at the Stanley | Works by Sergeant P. J. O'Mara on a warrant charging non support. NEWS OF DUGGAN Buenos Aires, Aug. 6 (—La Na- n's Grande Do Sul ro|rr~pondcnl‘ reports that Bernardo Duggan and aviator missing since Monday arrived there unexpected- ly today. Fear of Storm Sent Dirigible Home Eallv Lakehurst, N. J., Aug. 6 (P The dirigible Los Angeles' hurri |back to her hangar ahead of sched- | |ule, on advice that there sibility of storms today Atlantic coast. The ship compl her radio comp tests with England static yesterday afternoon and plans were to remain at the mast ship Patoka in Boston harbor until this morning. | She left Boston at midnight east- | ern standard time and proceeded | slowly through heavy fog, the of- ficers gulding her course almost en- tirely by radio compass. The trip was reported in every respect. was a pos- along the eted y successful 0 e M ldown the with his |}, lingfokd, | {tion in personn at |2 | for s40 e 0BJECTS TO CHANGES Senator Bayard Urges Against Tam- pering With the Constitution of United States. Vt, Aug. 6 ) — A | wi arning against a “deliberate intent and desire to accomplish” by mending the federal —constitution, certain objectives which must |destroy the purpose of the declara- tion of independence and eventuate mn a centralized form of super-gov- ernment at Washington,” was given here by Senator Thomas F. Bayard, democrat, Delaware. I cite particularly the 1Sth ndment, the proposed child la- | amendment and the pending ef- to establish a department of ation in the president’s cabin- added that “the cabinet will develop into another deral government” and this “super government would be wholly at vari- with the basic liberty of the so well preserved to us by the first ten amendments.” “All these are efforts to strike liberty of the individu continued. “Nay, they are mo they are direct, positive and logi- cal methods of establishing a super- government at Washington which in the long run must suppre all rought of personal freedom and with it the basic spirit which de- clared, fought and won the battles of the American revolution.” Hot Spring: bor fort edu ly anc hersol Reduction of Personnel To Keep Expenses Down Washington, Aug. 6 (P—Reduc- | will be relied upon | by Director Lord of the the budget to offset reased governmental ex- |penditures necessary next year un- er the tive estimates complet- ed today, under his direction. The tentative estimat on which hearings will be held later, will be | presented to President Coolidge next week by General Lord who has arranged to confer them with (hfl executive at his summer home at White Pine camp. tent HICE Y IN TOWN Detectives Edward J. Hickey, John Kelleher and Gerald Risley of Hart- ford were in this city this afternoon on business that was not disclosed. They conferred with Captain Kelly and Detective Sergeant McCue and later Officer Kelleher went to the office of Prosecuting Attorney J. G. Woods. Up to press time, no ar-| rests had been made by the trio. SUES TOR 840 Leo Levinson, through Waskowitz s amages on a bill for $28. | Acting on a writ returnable in the city court the third Monday in August, Deputy Sheriff Martin H Horwitz has garnished wages at Landers, Frary & Clark. SUIT Samuel Cohn ha damages molon. Deputy s breught suit for t Jozef and Eva Sheriff Martin H. aga forwitz has garnished money in the | the American Hardware Lander, Frary & Clark is returnable the third August in the city court. of n writ Monday in SMALL SUT John and I Nordquist v ton have been sued for $ s by Harold Guy, doing business in Middletown as Guy 6& Rice. The papers which were issued by Israel Poliner of \iddletown, wre returnable on August 23 before Justice Stephen Puglisi. Land in ewington Manor has been attached Deputy Sheriff Martin H. Hor- of has sued John Ausenko | ROOSEVELT SCHOOL READY FOR PUPILS ;New Building Will Be Finished Before Fall Term Obstacles which have been in the | h of Architect Henry Ludort in | his efforts to have the Roosevelt school in the eastern section of the | |city ready for occupancy by the opening of school in the fall have |been overcome to a considerable e: |tent and due to feverish activity on |the part of the contractor in the ast few weeks, the school will be ready on time, Mr. Ludorf announc- ed this afternoon. This is one of three schools now under construction which were to be ready in September. The other two, | the addition to the Nathan Hale | |Junior high school on Tremont street nd the Lincoln school on Steele | et will not be ready until the latter part of October or the first of November, and for a time it was |feared that the Roosevelt school would be delayed. | The latest hold-up was the a nouncement of the board of public works that it would not grade Good- | |win street on which the school faces. | |Tn order that the school would re- |ceive its water supply and the pro- |per sewerage system could be install- | |ed, the street should be graded. The mn:\rvl claimed it did not recelve an | |appropriation for this work and {could not do it. A conference be- |tween a representative of the school |board, the hoard of public works. the cily engineer, the architect and | [Mayor Gardner C. Weld was held | vestera Another conference be- | tween City Engineer Joseph D. Wil- ‘ |1tams. Architect Ludorf. Reginald | Towers, public works board chair- | {man and a school board representa- | [u\o will be held this afternoon at | which the matter is expected to be | settled T0 INHERIT FORTUNE Married and Father | | Nlinois Man, ! | of Four, Says He'll Have $5,200,- | 000 Given Him Scptember 18. | | tice on ward of $5,000 for the arrest and| §5,000 REWARD OFFERED Connecticut Brick Mfg. Association Will Spend Large Sum for Con- viction of Dynamiters, The “Connecticut Brick Manufac- | turing association has posted a no- its property offering a r conviction of the person or persons responsible for the dynamiting of brick company property. The reward offer, although com- ing on the heels of the destruction by dynamite of a sand dredge owned by the Berlin Brick Co., on July 14, is felt to have been pro- voked by a series of depredations of which the above Incldent was 'bul one. Property in other brick | yards 1s alleged to have been dam- aged from time to time. The reward offers $2.500 for the | apprehension of the guilty persons land $2,500 for conviction, of the persons who attempted to dynami'] a brick shed at the Tutile Bric ards a short time ago. ! MARRIED IN MAI Me., Aug. 6. Wholean and Miss| aer Henderson, | were ma-ricd | Mr. 5 Bar Harbor, (#— Joseph Edward trice Von Ren both of Washington, today at the Henderson. home. Wholean was graduatea from F vard and is in the diplomatic ice at Rome. Mr. and Mrs. Wholean will sail Wednesday for Rome, \ 7 cooked some cold veaf| s ffiécrean saure gng |7 USAroors and Jokn i.g'i- ]rés chicken fiiy dldr/l,asf night \ &efivendf l Another The New Britain Market Com- (‘hallcnge best money can| MILK pany’s veal is the buy. Morning Qpecials 7—12:30 Best No. 39 c POTATO L , peck | | Smoked or Fresh SHOULDERS, 1b | | | Fresh Cut |HAMBURG 23c 2 e 250 2w 2DC PORTERHOU SIRLOIN SHORT Steaks Ib. 39¢ Kewanee, 1., Aug. 6 (P John | Cooper, an iron worker, expected | |to come into a fortune and greater | happiness for his wife and four children when he attains his 33d | birthday on September 18. On that day, he , he will inherit a huge Virginia estate, reported by Wil- | mington, attorneys as con- of $5,200,000 in cash and curities, and 1,600 acres in 1hc‘ Shenandoah valley. The family now | grocery. The fortune, is the Bradford estate, left him by his grandmother, Mrs. Mary Brad- | ford. | lives above a | Cooper says, | Textile Exports From U. S. Show Big Decline Washington, A 6. (P —Ameri- 1 exporte of textile commodities declined in value nearly 12 per cent the 1is L 1 June from 1,275,104,000 fiscal year to uring 0, dropping for the previous | $1,126,207,000. A decline in shipments of raw | cotton, the department of commerce | | eplained today, accounted largely | | for the decrease. ports of cotton including lin- mounted to 7,991,000 bales as | August Sale A. Cieszynski & Sons entative of Italy in | the structure. | REFRIGERATOR BREAKFAST SET LAWN SWING REED FURNITURE COUCH HAMMOCK GAS STOVE BABY CARRIAGE 513 and 517 Main Street Our buyer has just returned from a Grand Rapids and Chicago buying trip, where he has placed huge orders for immediate delivery. room for the incoming large shipment, we are closing out the entire balance of the items below, allowing you to TakeOff 20% —on any — In order to make Tel. 601 — A\»llrljay Special:s‘ BIG VEAL SALE This Veal is the Best Grade Obtainable Veal Chops .. b 25¢ Roast Veal .. b 18¢ | Veal for Sle\\ b 10é Legs to Roast 1h 16¢ Veal Steaks .. 1h 35¢ Veal Breasts 1h 12¢ SPECIAL Thics™ LEGS Genuine Lamb Ib. 35c ROAST PORK CENTER CUT PORK C LAMB FORES HOPS GOLDEN WEST FOWL, . Tean Corned Beef .. 1h 12¢ Boneless Pot Roast II) zlzlc _Prime Rib Roasts Ib 28¢ | Sugar Cured Bacon 1b 38¢ S‘l"GAR 10 Ihs 61¢ — 20 Ibs $1.51 "EVAPORATED | S MILK | 3 cans 29¢ | SWE CORN | 3 cans 29¢ T | CAMPBELL'S BEANS 3 cans 25¢ bolld Packed Tomatoes Premier Dr bottle Pure Cocoa Sauerkraut Good Luck Jar Rings 2 dozen 15¢ Early June l’ea< 2 cans 25¢ 2-1b can 25¢ 0ld Dutch Cleanser . 2 cans White Meat Tuna Fish Pure Fruit Jam Royal Lunch Crackers 21, Ibs 35¢ Sardines in oil 4 cans 25¢ Sliced Pineapple 2 cans 35¢ 15¢ 19¢ jar 25¢ WEDGWOOD CREAMERY BUTTER wade 2 1bs. 87c Made Parksdale Fx‘esh EGGS 2 dozen 81¢ Best Pure | LARD ... 2 Ibs 35¢ Good Luck OLEO N 32¢ b Nucoa Nut OLEO First Prize OLEO 29¢ b 29c 1b FANCY ELBERTA PEACHES .... basket 35¢ LARGE RIPE BANANAS .... NATIVE EVERGREEN dozen 25¢ CORN dozen 19¢ Sweet Sunkist Oranges .. Native Beets or Carrots Calif. Sunkist Lemons dozen tive Grzen or Wax Beans 3 quarts dozen bunch 25¢ Red or Yellow Onions . Native Squash .. Native Cukes .. IFancy Cantaloupes .. 2 Fancy Apples 2 quarts Native Head Lettuce 4 1bs 23c 4 for 25¢ each 5¢ for 25¢ 25¢ 2 for 15¢ Opportunity Knocks at Your Door The fine property of L. L. Redick, at Newington Center has been subdivided into fine building lots, well restricted. Build your home in this fine location. The property is located right on the trolley line, one fare to Hartford or New Britain. Just stop and think of the value you are offered at this sale. If you don’t care to build, we offer one house of 9 rooms with 3 open fireplaces, big lot and beautiful shade trees. Come out and inspect this property Satur- day, Aug. 7th or Sunday, Aug. 8th. Salesmen on property from 3:00 to 7:00 p. m. CARLSON & CARLSON TEL. 1817 163 MAIN ST. NEW BRITAIN

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