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* NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1526. —— SPECIAL SALE v i — i Believes Mother and Pas- tor Who Was Slain With Her Not Guilty of Doing Wrong. | 92 Famowns Feature e, Inc.) (Editor's Note: Does the and be loved transc A woman tied to a h she doesn't lo a man legally is it t these two, th man, starving Dickinson Drug Company Ileanor 169-171 MAIN STREET (CopyrfEht 1 Syr right to Mills, ambitio lov of i years 2 y loved each other i icitly, according to the law of m t is the law of love a higher la an t ¢ of man? They paid a terrible price, two, for th moments of & ir mor- 1 his ness, four y on a gun one night they kept tryst Jersey farm. Now, Charlotte slain wom unbedra Mills, daughter ner lips un- ble weight of tells for the first time course of that stran , and reveals the inevit s which drew these s together.) | ANNOUNCEMENT Dr. John F. Keaveny HAS EQUIPPED A DENTAL OFFICE AT 321 Main St. Where He Will Conduct a General Practice of DENTISTRY bie Loveless Marriages about a nd Mr. year Ha g nk- ir love for each other, T I thought about it, the less I could see it was wrong. T reason people say terrible and | 1 things in a case like that is cause they don't s down the surface If you should s Chowder, Clams, Steaming woman who ls marted, kissing Clams, Soft Shell Crabs, 7 V00 &0 "r e ™8 Lobsters, Crab Meat, azen thing! Shrimps THE HONISS | Perhaps it you knew her life, her 22 STATE ST. disappointments 1 unhappiness, all her hardships and trials, and also HARTFORL Under rGant’s Department Store She ought to be | it you knew her ci 4 just ap thing like {part of a flirtat you would s it all in a different light. You would feel sympathetic to those lovers, and | be glad they bad the lov | Isn't it right to expect a little hap- piness? If a woman is good and | nardworking and kind to people and does her best in every nd has a deep religion and givesgherself to |it all she can, shouldn't she be given some chance to live? It is wicked to love someone, even if the someone belongs to someone else by law? And if it is wicked, how can you help it anyhow? 1 never cou head why people b | the greatest thing in the wor yet are 80 hard on people Either they ought not to say is the stra and most beautiful thing, hey should be more leni out it, and forgive people when they really do love. Many a person com: kills someone even, for it. e DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN| got love ELECTRIC TREATMENTS ana When given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpine Sun Rays, Electric Light Bathe, Electrical Massage and Blolog- fcal Blood Wash Treatments control all nervous conditions— Coughs and Chest Diseases, Heart, Stomach, Liver and Kid- neoy Diseases, High or Low Blood Pressure, all forms of Rheuma- tism, including Neuritis and Eci- atica, or regardless of what afl- ment. These treatments are a God-send to the afflicted and to ey are marrled to, and get di-| weak, slow-growing children. vorced, and marry again, this time | to somebody they do love. Ts that{ Dr. F. Coombs | SAEA It cer- NATUREOPATH not But when some- 19 So. High St., Near Post Office | | 04y poor does it, or w 1 1y nts to do it, Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 765 | | [V are scoffed at and sncered at When this awful thing happened | years ago, and I used to read Hall's statements that know anything was going on her husband and my r and that her hushand’s le nost heautiful thing in her | my breath, man possibly be r to a man all those and not know he doesn’t love her. It he loves someone else, the wife ' must know that too. She must. Nothing else is possible. To this day, when the statements out of t stigations that Mr. Hall had sst “in the choir-singer knives in my flesh. 1 how fo express myself, denying something t ectly b utiful have it yourse ing something to pie it, and it no paragon and nefther was 1 er set h to husbtind didn’t or est ime, nd pun- And others are mur- they loved some- y couldn’t help loving brain gets numb sometimes, ust trying to think it out. 1 read the new 1pers and see the stories, by hundreds, or rich people | love men or women | ished dered jus body t ho dc tain Mrs. she In't = Oriental Rugs Al Sizes also i gt REPAIRING, WASHING & CLEANING 8. V. SEVADJIAN, 162 Glen Btreet. Tel. 1190-2—1190-3. took could for awn —_— Rudy’s Battery Service Successor to Gould Battery Service Co. 170 East Main, ncar Summer BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING Generator, Starter Repalring GOULD BATTERIES could FREE TESTING, REFILLING Phone 708—Ask for Rudy LiSEr R at it T k come ve ke know don't but it t iy e you Or like tear- 1se you else just bee: 3 bee don't w €0 noboc nev self u w my 'CHARLOTTE MILLS' BRAIN AWHIRL BATTLING WITH LOVE'S PROBLEMS love n ought wh try I nd would H ply D his peo things two | ¥ and had, and if I » cared for somebody else | cared for him, I would never to hold him, or chain him to , 1 wou want him that way. | would seem terrible undignified | eve ful. My mother have felt the same way. Now I happen to know ho all ¢ to marry. He d into it becav o provide for and t kind at nee ‘ had nothin® excepi as a minister and that isn't much. | he didn’t | 1e h. the and t he ea yhody ed t they argued and and at last in- their sakes Wy out. mother's she couldn’t things Mr. Hall | longer, &t a lit- an unkind word or the wo- for him to me ver said H married, ily | or sorry 1 for he poor i him from her t most power part of New Europe on family about the in this ent to hey ir honeymoo The night of | cesmarric stood alon: self a ¢ led into a t have done, who would benefit self or that 80 he could, he knew ho her it it But He kr he must e best way ice to her as er to show im, through with it in and be , and was hard I guess when all is said and done, was just about as hard for her. is a different type—colder, not interested In any are different from her for he )80Th! ople tha kind. etiquette I have often wonde: ed how they along together, being o ¢ opposite, as opposite as o could be. I suppose they - thing in common, religion. followed it in such differ- right was to get a big boy. . Hall's hooks. like th and dis way was Formal ind proper. people were forever watching to Mr society hem- some- bec but wys used to think and t tate neve doi wanted to do them, was considered the thing probably t {8 their a other way natural to the ngs 15 way. per- is our Anyhow, this much T know—that HaH was our kind. It always seemed to me he must hate being followed and told to pu his rubbers on, or W and v or reception. it, 'ribes how the Rev. leave the great fine house pres r a muffler, do this and and s person and go to that card par He never resented though » good man. And my mo- Tomorrow: .Charlotte Mills de- Hall used to tded | { over by his stern wife to come 10 little informal “parties” at the drab Mills home. (Including the o WAJOR LEAGUE LEADERS ames of Sept. 10). National Teague Batting—Hargrave, Reds, Hits—Brown, Braves, 185. Runs—Cuyler, Pirates, 97 Doubles — Bottomlsy, 269 Cardinals, Walker, T 20, Wilson, Cubs, 21. Cuyler, Pirate Pirates, Tripl Homers len bases Pitching—Kremer, lost 5. American League Iatting—Fothergill, Tygers {its—DBurns, Indians, 191 Runs—Ruth, Yankees, 124 Doubles—Burns, Indians, 60 Triples—Gehrig, Yankees, 20 Homers-—Ruth, Yankees, 41 Stolen bases—Mostil, White Sox, — MONDAY | (— DOLLAR, | with GHURCH SCHOOLS Estelle Dickinson, Former City | Mission Supt., Executive Secy. Mellon Establishes His Reputation in France of Being Real Art Con- noisseur. . Dickinson, former. _ Paris, Sept. 11 (M—When Andrew W. the old City Mis. Mellon, Sccretary of the United States Trea 1Y S ury, left Poris for England, it was with the cted executive sec-|reputation firmly established in official and nited Week-day near offcial circles of being an art connoisseur, Br She He also gave those with whom he came into v duties Within contact an opportunity to judge for themselves t few weeks. his skill as a financier. M Dickinson's work . il in- Mr. Mellon's call at the Quai D'Orsay clude having charge of all’records, lasted exactly half an hour, nine minutes of material and supplies, and all per- which were gi~en over to Foreign Minister sonal contact with parents of the Briand. » remaining 21 minutes were ldren in the schools. She will be spent by the American secretary admiring the 1l of the echool which meets |priceless Gobelins in the foreign office. South Congregational church Mr. Mellon stayed an hour in the Ministry f Finance. He chatted with Premie are for ten minutes and then, at his followed by an ancient us Louvre Museum in another wing Ministry Building and stood for many efore each of the famous paintings Miss nt of sion, has been el Church scho 1 assum visited of the minutes “He is a real art expert,” said the usher when he became aware of the identity of the visitor. “I don't believe a man who takes such pl e in admiring beautiful works of art can be a man to drive an impossible bar- n on the French debt. He must have been gned.” WANTS BIG MONKEY HOUSF. The town of Menton is in the throes of a bitter zoological and medical controversy. Serge Voronoff, of monke:-gland fame, has ed the city fathers to give him permission o build a monkey house for 300 simians in- ide the city limits. Listening to Dr. Voronoff, o s e.w visions of turning their quie into a famous center for medical re- But listening to the local representa- the S. P. C. A, delegates from the wurches, and to groups of mothers who feared that three hundred monkeys would be danger- 15 to the children they decided that permis- sion would be held up pending further ex- amination into the scheme. Dr. Voronoft claims that the Riviera is the only part of T -rop: where he can successfully e monkeys Alre three other cities we refused him permission to establish his farm within t..eir limits. “The more sedate fined my models are, the keener American buyers are to pur- chase them, this year,” says one of the leading Iressmakers. “The day of eccentricities, bet- e new executive secrotary {g a|l°r Suited to the music-hall stage, is over,” of the religious educational rtment of the Hartford Theolo- ry and has had consid- | peric in this line of She had charge of religious al sections E an entire parish with the exception of deliv- ering the sermon. She was connect Mission for almost 11, 1923, she was elected tendent of the Mission, Miss Caroline T and res poor he on June The wee y churc reopen this week will meet, as last ity Methodist fourth and fifth grades in the South Congregational church, and the in the First chirch on ternoor 1 ) o'clock will meet in tional church, the eig in the Young Men's Cl ation, and the eighth in the Young Women's association on Thursda September 16th, at 3 o' FOUR TON PLANF own TC oons of will te gregational addition to her other work she ) promotion work in the ¢ 1 strive towards cooperatior the churches and the tween home & re is a general agreement that the being shown represent a high order of they are free from exaggeration of any kind. LIKE SNAILS ON TOAST. America, -eprived of the wines of France, is developing an appetite for French snails. Snail exports to the United States have in- creased amazingly in the last three ye In 6 they reached the huge total of 1,000,000 pounds. Exporters say that tourists on auto- mobile trips thro:ghout the country have acquired the snail habit at the small country inns. Nuts of Dauphiny, the Anjou also have touched the American palate, d so great have been the recent exports that - local prices have risen to a high level. nd one with the City en years, N super succeeding resigned, of Dordogne and NOTED WOMA France's first “big time” Mme Jeanne Bremontier, is dead. v a record of achi ment envied male star reporter. Mme. Bremontier, more than thirty ars founding La Fronde, the first devoted to women's affairs. achieved fame as a reporter in the Cin us case when she discovered the hiding afternoon, ‘place of Major Psterhazy, who was accused lock. jointly with Dreyfus and who took refuge in England. H<r stories on the case attracted worldwide attention. French feminists give to Mme. Bremontier !much of the credit for the amelioration of women's position in France during the last quarter century. woman journalist She leaves by many a the — LONDON When Is a Man Grown Up? When He reaches Age of 26, According to London Company. 11 (P—When is a man grown up? Not until he Is 26, says the London General Omnibus company, which employs several thousand drivers and conduc tors in covering the London area with its net- work of speedy bus services. The company believes that youths normal- ly develop their sense of icsponsibility” to tuil pitch between the ages of 24 and 26 and it will not accept as drivers men who have not reached the latter age. We do "ot say anything against the young man of 24,” saye cne of the chiefs of the selection staff. “We choose men of that age to ies as conductors. But we will as drivers until they are London, Sept. POPULAR. 0 melodics have been intro- riusical program of the old wark cathedral, just across London on south side of the Thames. v recitals are given there for the bene. ters at the hops market and other nearby establishments. lections are from the ‘“negro spirit or plantation hymns, and are ex- pected to prove a potent drawing card for luncheon hour audiences in this busy district. NEGRO MELODIE:! American duced into the Noonc fit of th worl WO ER COMPF George Leader, the 23§ pound eating con- cham of Middlesbrough las declined invitation to visit the United States and in a world's champlonship event. ess in is line at home is 'ITION. an take part Pressure of I the reason, he . 1 have two matches un band,” he ex- ned, “and I want to get these over before y more."” L s won all 13 matches in which he has been engaged In the last few years. will be heavily Londicapped in his next tch by having to eat a pound of broiled ham and a dozen eggs beforé his opponent Nevertheless, he is confident of win- In easily winning his last match, in which his opronent retired after three pounds of ham nd forty esgs had bee consumed, Leader re an exhibition cf what a really good eater can do. He dispatched the 19 eggs that were and completed his feast w k and kidney pudding and cream cakes. CASTLE. MADE MORE MODERN. Ladies-in-waiting to Queen Mary no longer r miserably while on duty at Balmoral Castle in Soctland as they did in the days of Queen Victoria. The castle has been modern- ized, and the minister In attendance to the King needs no longer to use his bed as a writ- mg table and his chimney as a smoking room. The k of bringing the castle into line with modern ideas of comfort and sanitation, started in the King Edward's reign, have ist been completed. Though the interior furnishings are quite simple, the castle is home-like, and this year for the first time is not the uncomfortable, draught-riddled home Queen Victoria regarded with such he King and Queen who are spending al weeks at Balmoral have known Deeside om childhood, sporting facilities appealing strongly to the King. The Queen, whose terest in sport is not great, enjoys the peace and quiet of the estate. She p ts to personal friends nearby. The King goes grouse shooting daily and often sits before log fires In the hunting huts swapping steries with his companions. BOB-HATRED BANDIT The bob-haired bandit and other types of the woman criminal who have been operating w#th increasing frequency in London rccently are declared by investigators to belong for the part to a well-organized feminine robber gang, recruited and trained by a master mind —an ex-convict known as “Limchouse Lizzie.” recent additions to the crim- inal element, are usually well-educated—of the “girl about town by day and crook by night"” type. “Limehouse Lizzie,” described as one of the most daring of London's criminals, is ity e, Do oo TN _FOREIGN CAFTTALS BERLIN=—x< Original German Automobile, Built 40 Years Ago, Still Able to Make 270-Mile Run. credited with scouring the West End for suit- able material and then training them in a “Crime Academy” in the East End, the ecxact location of which is a mystery. Scotland Yard, focal point of England's crime detection system, admits it has a prob- lem on its hands in dealing with the feminina crime wave, which has developed in many recent cases of burglary, blackmail and other forms of law-breaking. Numbers of these activitles are attributed to pupils of the “Lime- house Lizzie’s” school. BERLIN Berlin, pt. 11 (A—The fortieth anni. versary of the invention of the German auto- mobile, was fittingly celebrated by students of Hannover Tech. They hauled out the original m ine from the school museum, filled the nk with gas and drove miles from Hannover to the home of Dr. Karl Benz, the inventor, in Landenburg. Dr. Benz is now 83 years old. The trip was made without a single mis- hap. The car at times attained a speed of 21 miles an hour with two passengers. Instead of the skeptical jeers which greeted Dr. Benz on his first ride in the same car, the student drivers received an ovation along the route. Tears were in the aged inventor's eyes and thousands of hi: townspeople cheered as the machine chugged up and stopped in front of his hom “MILLIONAIRE NUN” HER TITLE. Eleanor Patterson, young diva daughter of Joseph Medill Pattersoa, Chicago newspaper publisher, has been given the title of the “millionaire nun” in Germany. Miss Patterson playc1 the nun in “The Miracle” at the Salzburg festival plays. She arrived with two limousines, 34 trunks, a retinue of servants and occupled a suits of eight rooms i a hotel. La'y Diana Manners played the Madonna in “The Miracle” at last year's festivals. AMERICANS TOO THIRSTY. The Hofbrau House, which the Bavarian government recently established in Berlin to sell high-powered Bavarian beer to Berliners, has drawn unfavorable. comment because of the size of its beer mugs. There are steins holding eight quarts. They are intended for family parties at which the stein is passed from one member t6 the other, children and adults alike, each taking a swallow to thas th of the others. It is complained that sitors, especlal Americans, frequently insist upon testing their capacities by ordering an eight-quart stein for themselves with the result that waliters have a hard time collecting the bills. DON'T LIKE FEATHER BEDS. American travelers, unaccustomed to sleeping on feather beds with wedge-shaped holsters beneath their pillows, have described the first night in a German hotel as a struggle to escaps suffocation. A Berlin hotel is now supplying guests with cards upon which are described half a dozen ways of making up a bed. If an American wants to sleep in Amer- ican style, he checks the proper diagram on the card and leaves it to the chambermald to do the rest. MADE HONORARY ADVISOR. Dr. Otto Fischer, director of the State Art Gallery at Stuttgart, lias been made honorary advisor of the Chinese federal museums and are galleries with headquarters at Peking. As he has access to the costliest collection inese art and antiquities in the world, an honor which it is claimed has not been achieved by any other European or American. Dr. Fischer {s on a year's study tour of China and Japan. BADEN-BADEN STILI: POPULAR. Baden-Baden is stlll the most popular German health resort for Americans. Eighty per cent of the guests at the two leading hotels in the Black Forest city this summer are Americans. There has been an average of 1,300 Americans a month taking the cure. MAKES FAST TIME > 2 Tieutenant Wolfe !pr{ nl‘l 'hn'“x,\' Lieut. Wolle Pilots Cralt at 125 intive Sustanee - the. order n M][es fi{] HO[]I‘ | which they finished. Because of the sogzy condition of the field, the big hombers took | off from the Navy yard fiel miles away, flew to Model Far circled the field and crossed the | starting plane at great speed. The race was considered an im- portant one b: ¥ was the first time’ the corps has had the Huff-Daland planes in competition. The Huff- Daland machines were equipped with 800 horsepower Packard mo- tors and carried a load of 12,50 pounds in the race, while the Doug- lag transport plane was cquipped with a Liberty motor and carrled made o perfect landing and was| 800 pounds. | held down by 200 sailors and ma-| The Huff-Dalands before being rincs. | 1oaded weighed 6,500 pounds and Licutenant Wolfe flew the 120 | with the extra load they represent- miles in 58 11.94 seconds | ted nearly four tons each. | at an aver 714 miles an | Major General Mason M. Patrick | chief of the ramy air corps, was an | interested spectator. | cutenant L. C. Elliot won the race for the Mitchel] trophy, he pilotcd a Curtis Hawk Tis ' plane over the 120 mile course at a | speed of 160.483 miles an hour. by Wi ant chie killed in State mens, pt. 11 (P— Fly- race d bomber, Lieuten- of McCook field, won the Philadelphia, § ing a Huff-I ant L. M. Wolfe, Dayton, Ohio, Liberty Bell trophy in the race for large capacity airplanes at tional air race meet, The event was open to milit and the distance wa 0 miles over a 12 mile course. The start of the more than three of e Dirigible del Farms field. big air ship in tain F the an aver was thir Six pilot: d to Mo- minutes, | ! | alker, of | econd | s an | y Field, Virgini: a speed of 119.089 hour. Lietenatn X, M. Davis, Langley Iield, finished third speed was 118,6 hey aiso flew Huff-Da | in memory of his brother, who was limited to planes from the Uni- stationed at Selfridge field, Mt. Cle- Mich. the army in the Pulit Second place an hour. tiss Haw’ BUFFALD BISONS CLOUTING CHAMPS Are Apparently Best Hitting New York, season wanes in The Mitchell trophy was offered |league, the Buffalo Bisons are defi- m Mitchell, former ass 3 of the ramy alr service, clouthing champions despite the fact that weck the club has d second to fourth place ing. The thundering £ the World War. The event es army first pursuit group winner of this represented | r race: won by Cap- H. Pritchard, who flew at ge speed of 160.121 miles | Lieutenant J. J. Williams d with a speed of 159.992. "All flew Cur. |and is second with .30 | hitting for .296. The battle for indiv {honors is over for | Jimmy alsh, Bison he former years re hitting for .309. lead | time: fourth in marke of was .293. weelt. ocond baseman, who {the Cleveland Indians, ehoulder sliding into a | out for the rest of the seca’s injury ends the made for the slugging mark Club in League Sept. 11 (P —As the International the the fastest man in th G. Fox & Co. Inc. HARTFORD THOUSANDS Store Hours 9 A. M. to 6 P. M.—Come Early OF VALUES ON ARTFORD YA EVERY FLOOR OF THIS GREAT STORE ely establishing themselves as the another point to their total and now | Although Toronto is far jn over Raitimore Orloles, champions, the Leafs are but hitting prowess with Rochester, the standing, lost a point at the bat topping the hitters with a mark of {391, a loss of a point during Lew Fonseca, crack Newark of .383 if he should fail | compete further this year. !held his home run title far above any contender with a total of 41 cir- cult drives, although he failed to in- crease the number this week. Her man Layne, of Toronto, is special« izing in triples with 15 to his credit. Chic Thompson, of Buffalo, and Clayton Sheedy, of the Baltimore Orioles, have hit 29 doubles aplece, although Thompson holds clear claim to the high hit total, with 212, and the most runs scored, 146. Clarence Fisher failed to come plete a game for Toronto during the weck but leads the pitchers with 14 wins and 3 defeats for an .824 average. Hankins, of Newark, dropped from second td fifth ranke ing by adding a defeat tohis rec- ord, now 15 wins and 6 losses, Other leaders are: Ferguson, Buffalo, 1% land 4; Thormahlen, Rochester, 19 and 7; Doyle, Toronto, 14 and 6. of the circutt in the past ropped from in the stand- herd added the seven a fifth in 2. The New- e third rung, {dual batting the present. slugger, s the was sold to! dislocated his base and is season. Fon- fight he has title with a to Lew was on “POISON PEN” LETTERS Chicago, Sept. 11 (M — “Poison pen” letters criticizing the motives of Mr. and Mrs. Bror Dahlberg as hostesses of Princess Marle De Bourhon of Spain, have been turne ed over to Mr. Dahlberg’s attors e league neys for investigation, bases with 36 thefts to his credit. ——— Bill Kelley, Buffalo first baseman, READ HERALD CLASSIFIED ADS |