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— SPECIAL ALE —of — SERVING TRAYS The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREET e e e e ANNOUNCEMENT | Dr. John F. Keayeny HAS EQUIPPED A DENTAL OFFICE AT 321 Main St. Where He Will Conduct a General Practice of DENTISTRY MRS. MILLS BECOMES SUDDENLY ILL AT GARDEN PARTY AT HALL HOME NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1926. GERMAN ENVOYS Accepts Refreshments and: Drops in Faint—Queer | Incident Causes Family | to Think Hard. (Copyright, 1926, Famous Features Syndicate, Inc.) | (Could Charlotte Mills have pre- vented death of her mother, who was slain with Rev. Edward Hall on a lonely New Jersey farm? For four years fears and doubts have haunted her. Now she reevals the sccrets of her heart. She tells, too, | how her mother was a great admirer | ot Mrs. Hall, wife of the man she | loved). A STRANGE HAPPENING I have told how wrapped up in | the church my mother always had | been, long before Mr. Hall came to New Brunswick, and how it all b gan with mere friendliness which | | gradually—oh, got for a long time | | was it anything but friendship—be- | came something more. Mother was always an admirer of | Mrs. Hall because, as I have also | is'\ld. Mrs. Hall was very much of | a lady, very refined, very reserved and very much respected even | though not so very much loved. | | For a good many years my moth- | er used to make presents to Mrs. | Hall, of fine needlework. Mother | | was an expert in embroidery, Me can drawn work, evelet work, sorts of beautiful and difficult pat- | |terns. My aunts and my dad often | | would say: | “Why do you give all those things for Mrs .Hall? She has so much. | You work your fingers to the bone, jand never keep any of it for your. | self. And mother would laugh and Have Your Eyes Examined ia and Glasses i Fitted by A. PINKUS Eyesight Specialist Satisfaction Guaranteed 300 MAIN ST. Phone 570 Chowder, Clams, Steaming Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, Lobsters, Crab Meat, Shrimps OYSTER HOUSE | THE HONISS 22 STATE ST. HARTFORL Under rGant’s Department Store Hersert E. ANDERSON Teacher VIOLIN VIOLA ENSEMBLE PLAYING Studio: 242 Main Street e New Britain Sign Co. “DOING BETTER WHAT MANY DO WELL” 84 CHURCH STREET Telephone 894 JOHN J. TARRA 288 East Main Street DERTAKER and EMBALMER UPHOLSTERING Phone 4010 House: 1451-2 Emma N. Miller Resumes Teaching Saturday September 11 PIANO COURSES SIGHT READING EAR TRAINING 475 Arch Street Phone 2064-3 —_—— All Colored Shoes Cleaned to look like new by the Reglazing Method N. Y. Shoe Repairing Shop 145 West Main Street T A. ABETZ TEL. 4185 114 FRANKLIN 8Q. TAXI PHONE 611 promise to “keep some of it in the tamily.” But always when she made a new piece, off it would go to Mrs. {Hall for a Christmas present, or | Easter or birthday, and mother | seemed to enjoy it more that way than by keeping it. Mrs. Hall seem- ed to enjoy it more that way t n | by keeping it. Mrs. Hall seemed | pleased, too, and always said nice | things She knew mother was crazy about | flowers and used to invite her to | her gardens, for she had every kind |of flower and shrub there, and | sometimes gave garden fetes and | had lots of guests. A strange thing [happened about a year before | mother died— | Mrs. Hall invited her to a small garden party. I remember how I | tried to make mother dress up, for once, and put powder on and a touch of lipstick and rouge. She said she'd let me ‘“play around” with my make-up and put it on her. | { I had a tiny box of rouge and a lip- | [stick. And once in a wild burst of | adventure mother had bought a box of face powde up to that time she had always used talcum, which every woman knows i wors nothing on your face. It |take the shine off, and it alwa | shows and looks silly. But mother | wouldn't have anything else—until ‘she got reckless and heughl the box | of face powder for us both. She | | made that box last three years, till it was a family joke. | Well, anyhow, she let me fix her |up for the garden party, but when | she gave one look at herself in the | glass, she wiped off every bit of | stuft T had put on, and “went Just piialiee . om s Bhals how she | put it. She had a new cotton voile dress, though, that she had made | herself, and she started off as gay as anything. After a while she came home— | in one of the Hall cars, with Mr. | Hall—and she looked like a ghost. | Mr. Hall almost lifted her out of the machine, and she walked sort of tot- | tery and lightheaded. { She had no more than got inside the house than she was taken vio- | lently -sick and we were nearly | scared to death. Between | she told me not to wogry, that she'd | be all right in a little While, but she | looked queer and I didn't know | what to make of it all. Mr. Hflll‘ | stayed downstairs a few minutes | | with father and then went ~home, | with a queer exprefion, I thought, | on his face. I felt like rushing and | putting my arms around him :\nd‘ | spa | asking him what it was all about, | for he was always strong and kind, and you felt he could help you, no matter what was happening. Moth- er stayed sick like that for three ems that when mother had | n shown around through the er beds, she was invited up on he porch and asked if she would | » something to drink—iced tea or I think Mother two or , turned dead white, and in a faint had a hard time bringing 1 when she got her senses had a feeling of death— 's what she told me after. ere was an odd look for days—quiet. and fright- ort of, and dazed. We dic what to make of it all. 11l called up very often, and c around two or three times the next, and Mrs, ffee again she ne Hall u or something I think he was too puz- d upset to say thing. all tried to put it out of our minds as soon as possible. Mother got all right at last and never spoke bout it again a he explained to what had happened and how felt This whole to by sh cplsode was testified and is in the court mention it here for what it 1s worth, Whatever I might ink would be brushed ai in court as mere prejudice and sus- picion I have had to stop writing tw times because T can't see the rs. Nobdy knows what this wful thing has done to me. ause I manage to go about my business without crying all the time, people think I am hard. If they v how I spend some of my in that upstairs room where Mother and T used to gleep for te ~thinking, thinking, thinking about | g | me with 'added, alth about | [8 that frightful night of the murders till so! imes I'm almost ¢ and absolutely sick from crying. Could I, I wonder, have prevented | anything if I hadn't gone to my | unt's? Would Mother have taken her, maybe? Would she have told me anything? Had she | e thaitor whel s o s & ng to happen? I have turned this | Sept. 10 UA—"“The cur- over in my mind ten thousand |tain has risen for the play.” This Is| times. . | the view of Dr. Gustav Stresemann, | But this T do know—that where-1y,09 ot the German delegation ever my mother is now, she would |~ " i i not to grieve, but to puil | Which henceforth is to sit in the myself together and o on, trying |league of nations and its council as omething, trying to “get|fnll members and on equality with + as she used to the representatives of the other na- REACH GENEVA {resemann Now Looks for (hange in European Complexion Geneva, me to be ‘g omewh and a li tions of the world. fear of death delegation arrived in G peak of dyi last night after an uncomfo: n you see me in | warm trip from Berlin and T You can mly greeted by a crowd at th it, and that I am | station from it all—in a The last three or four years in perhaps. Don't ever | Europe have been the overture to| the play which is now beginning,” | Dr. Stresemann told the newspap correspondents, and added “I hope | |that the play will lead to the re construction of Europe, 0 neces- | sary after all that Europe has suf-| |fered during the horrible war.” The Reich foreign minister thinks | that reconstruction of Europe is only possible by cooperation and good faith. “I am glad to be here,” declared ann with a smile on his face as he stepped from the train. | “I am glad to be back In Geneva. | a such an optimistic | kind of had no ed to “Kid, wI live some Mother en she d say my coffi be sure all 1 d to be aw ter place pity me.” eneva | bly was | e (B3 PRR C y il S L | (Tomorrow: C ents a startling mother's romance ward Hall. And she tells some % mate details, which she learned | Dr- Stresem from her mother, of the marriag the rector to the stern M pres- Wiie of Gov. Fuller . Stresemann ndlcted the be- | Influenza Sufferer lief that a new era hod dawned for | : Europe — an era in which old rivals | Boston, Sept. 10 (P—The 1liness| g ey o9 France and Germany, would | of Mrs. Alvan T. Fuller, wife of the bring more and more their prob- | governor, has been diagnosed as|j;gganq those of their allies tol e o Geneva for settlement. B - sized that Germany, which previous- ] JRNG o . BYEHE ly had expressed views against en- | ough it probabiy will pre-11, ceament of the league council | vent her participation in the Massa-| foo aac reconciled to the solution chuseits day ceremonies at Phila sk g i a”September 27. je. He sald his country would | Fuller was taken to the hos-1,)0 *part actively in the council's | pital yesterday and occuples a T0Om | ory g9 well as that of the other adjoining that of her eight-year-old, poti #% E 08 Lo | son, Alvan, Jr, who broke his Dr. Stresemann scrupulously re- | frained in his talk with the interna- shoulder in a fall from his por last Tuesday. Doctors said the Doy's| yjona) journalists from mentloning | condition was satistactory while his| gnt Y00 C S Dartictpat. | in the present assembly. He father pointed out that it was * ed the ne papermen for the houlder, not his spirit” that brok: The governor ha of impartiality in which he| confined to his summer home at| g thoy had judged Germany's for- Rye Beach, N. H, with a severe| .oy policy in the past-and hoped | cold. for a continuance of this attitude in the future. Demands of Longshoremen | e | For Increases Are Made MURDERS GIRL'S MOTHER | o ot durngaten - tepresencims| 1N ATTACK ON DAUGHTER| ference of delegates representing more than 50,000 longshoremen to | draft demands for higher wages and shorter hours ended yesterday. Joseph P. Ryam, president of the Atlantic coast district of the Inter- nationa] Longshoremen’s assoclation announced at the close of the session that the demands would be present- ed to the employers today. | Michigan Man Is Being Sought To- | | day by Poose — Young Girl | Tells of Crime. | | Muskegon, Mich., Sept. 10 (P)—| A posse was searching the woods Delegates refused fo reveal the|ncar here today for Elmer Wood- | demands of the association, but it/ ward, 30, mechanic, who last night was earlier reported they would be i alleged to have clubbed to death for an increase from 30 cents to $1| Mrs. Cecila Barnes, 34, when she| an hour and from $1.20 to § an| sought to protect her daughter, hour for overtime, Isabel, from an attack. | According 1o the girl's story to| of | police, Woodwardy appeared at the | its| Barnes home and declared his own | of | small daughter was dangerously ill and was calling for Isabel. She 1 Though the surface area Bolivia is 560,000 square miles, population does not exceed that Chicago. RS e Y Improve Your Puddings and Sauces with BAKER’S Delicious True Fruit FLAVORINGS The women who now use these supremely good ex- tracts are giving their families the most delicious tast- ing desserts. They are buying economically because of the unusual strength and certified purity of BAKER'S Orange, Lemon, Strawberry, Raspberry, Pineapple, Peach, Vanilla and all other popular flavors, Buy of your dealer. Refuse substitutes, FREE Sample BAKER'S VANILLA will be sent to House- wives, Write Baker Extract Company, Springfield, Mass. Every Bottle Guaranteed Satisfactory ANNOUNCEMENT We are now located at 559-563 Main Street (Opposite St. Mary’s Church) Larger Quarters Better Service M. J. Kenney & "o Telephone 314 TYPEWRITER SERVICE Phone 612 “RENT A TYPEWRITER” New Britain Typewriter Exchange 96 West Main Street He empha- | d sald he asked permission to take| her to his home in a suburb in| his car, and Mrs. Barnes declded | to accompany them. | Atter reaching tle clty outskirts| she sald Woodward stopped the | MISS AMERIGA TO e e e BE KNOWN TONIGHT them. As he grappled with the girl ‘ YDR’,S 10 Be GOllIlted-Olll 0[ the dazed mother attempted to in- tervene and he struck her again, | . crushing her skull, Isabel said. | ],am When an automobile gpproached | Golden Apple by Fay pmer later, Woodward fled into a nearby | wood. The girl was brought here | suffering from a deep gash on the |F head. Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 10 (P— teen beauties remained today of 73 competitors for the 1926 title of s | “Miss America” and these faced re- N 9 duction to five in the afternoon and | Edison’s Son Succeeds |55 winner tonighe. ‘ Him as Head of Firm | There were three favorites entry ~Orange, N. J, Sept. 10 (P|in the day, however, the three heing, Charles Fdison Tas saceceded his| the Winners in an evening gown con- father, Thomas A. E , as presi-| o hu Lfse Sul dent of all of the Edlson companies, lwoad) taok : The inventor has become chairman | . Lok (Es Sedpbe il {Patterson), second, and Miss Wa R. H. Allen, vice-president of the '}fif“y({\,xf; );’,({,L,"I,D‘L:‘ll:l(']’h;.mr{!,'ws lison companles, sald last night| smerica of 1925 (Fay ],.mr,,,}fi ) he change, which went inco effect - prom . and boardwalk gossi romptlydi in July, has resulted in no change|placed a forme rgl \'(?nf‘n \(lmymn. in policy of the compani §Ghita e ce ke ver, t0 hail them as chief con- From now on,” he said, “Thomas| tenders for the title. Miss Tulsa wore Edison will more and more spend | gelft blue gown of v and the his time working in his laboratory,|other two white satin trimmed with and will relinquish more and more| rhinestones, the administrative dutles to his| The other 12 who we s | toda; Miss Greater o in the race were Miss Bridgeport, Yon- kers, Newark, Orange, J., Phila- delphia, Denver, Seattle, Lansing, Kansas City, St. Louis, Dallas and Norfolk. Jach of the 15 artists and illus- | trators who are judges picked a | beauty ¢ bathing suit bri- Pollution of Costal |Bade that posed and piroustted T Waters Now Forbidden | ore them yesterday. Reduction by first and second choice votes will Montreal, Sept. 10 (P—Word was bring the contestants down to two received here today that the United|tonight, and then the votes will be States government, in order to pro-|Placed in a golden tect the fish and birds of coast!America of 1925 will waters, had decided to prohibit the apple and count the vote arge by steamers of waste oll| decide the 1926 model of beauty. thin 0 miles of the shore. | After the 15 were ccted yester- The decision is the result of co-|day, King Neptune, impersonated by operation of the United States gov-|the much-married actor, De Wolfe nment with the research council|Hopper, led the beauties down the of Canada, and was announced after| board walk in the first bathing suit L meeting 0 the councll by Dr. R.|Darade of the pageant. Mayor Wil- R. Rutan, dean of the School of|liam Bader, the town council, the Graduate Studies and Research of|fire department band in bathing McGill University. | suits, and others joined in to make | Announcement has been received a Pprocession five miles Jong. from the research cbuncil of Great| SRR Britain thatssimilar regulations will READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS A Charles Edison, who s 37 years old, became financial director of 33 Edison Industries and companies in 1924. For several years he held th¢ position of chairman of the board which his father now assumes. | Their opponents assert Canadian Candidates May Not Run for Office Ottawa, Sept. 10 (P—The right ot two candidates to run for parlia- ment in next week's elections may be challenged on the ground they were born in the United States and have not been nationalized in thjs country. The facts of their citizen- ship have not been legally estab- lished. One of the candidates is L. K. LaFlamme, who sat as a liberal member of the last house for Mont- magny, Quebee, and is again a can- didate; the other is.Joseph Graham, liberal candid#te for Cariboo, B. C. they were born in the United States and that there 1s no record of their, having Dbeen naturalized in this couatry. = ————————— | | Both have lived in Canada for many years, Mr. LaFlamme's conservative op- | ponent has already published his | protest, but Mr. Graham's oppo- | nents have merely asked thelr head- | auarters for guidance. The Dominion elections act pro- | vides that only a British _subject, which Includes Canadians, born or | naturalized, may sit in the house ot | commons. CROWLEY BROS. 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