New Britain Herald Newspaper, September 15, 1926, Page 2

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1926. SPECIAL SALE of VASES GIFT DEPT. The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MATN STREET __’______—._J - —————— Il HerpeRT E. ANDERSON Teacher VIOLIN - VIOLA ENSEMBLE PLAYING Studio: 242 Main Street —— DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN ————— — ELECTRIC TREATMENTS When given in connection with the Ultra-Violet Rays, Alpine Sun Rays, Electric Light Baths, Electrical Massage and Biolog- fca) Blood Wash Treatments control all nervous conditions Coughs and Chest Diseases, Heart, Stomach, Liver and Kid- ney Diseases, High or Low Blood Pressure; all forms of Rheuma- tism, including Neuritis and Sci- atica, or regardiess of what all- ment. These treatments are a God-send to the afflicted and. 1o weak, slow-growlug children. Dr. F. Coombs NATUREOPATH 19 So. High St., Near Post Office Lady nurse in attendance Tel. 765 | New Britain Sign Co. “DOING BEITER WHAT MANY DO WELL” 34 CHURCH SIREET Telephone 894 —————————— JOHN J. TARRANT 288 East Main Street UNDERTAKER and EMBALMER UPHOLSTERING ! Phone 4010 Battery Service successor to Gould Battery Service Co. 170 East Main, near Summer BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING Generator, Starter Repalring GOULD BATTERIE FREE TESTING, REFILLING Phone 708—Ask for Rudy N MOORE BROS. SANITARY FISH MARKET Is the Place to Select Your Sea Food. Large Variety and Fine Quality PORT NORRIS OYSTERS First of the Season Live and Boiled Lobsters Live and Boiled Shrimp Large Deep Sea Scallops Prime Soft Shell Crabs Eastern White Halibut Fresh Swordfish Fresh Salmon Fresh Mackerel Fresh Codfish Fresh Bluefish Striped Bass Silver Bass Large Native Eels Large Butterfish Large Shore Haddock Round and Long Clams Salt Cod 18c¢ Ib., 3 Ibs. 50¢ 30 COMMERCIAL ST. Open until 9 p. m. Thursday Telephone 1199 READ HERALD CLASSITIED ADS FOR YOUR WANTS She and Hushand Were Like Strangers Toward Each Other, Charlotte Mills Says. !(l‘oryr\""t 1928, Famous licate, Inc.) (Editor's mote: What did James Mills, poor church sexton, think of the love f: between his wif d Rev. Edwal 1 How did he | teel when M ills told him of her affection for ctor? Did Mrs. Mills he ny guilt or | shame? drama of human he ed in all its tragic details | | lotte Mills, daughter of the w | who was murdered with Rev. | Hall on a lonely New Jersey farm four rs ago. No one interested in life can afford to miss a word of this | throbbing story . Features Mr. . LOVE UNASHAMED I can never remembgr t er took an attitude of sh: guilt in regard to the love I | ed between her and Mr. Hall e never made a secret of her { tondness for the church and I has | heard her say dozens of times th she would never give it up until sh died. Neither did s| at home of her ad for Mr. Hall tection f My father's attitude, know ation and af- s far as I could judge, was a curious one. His nature is peculiar; I never under- stood it very well; always wondered what was passing in his mind, and why he did certain things the way he did them, he might have seen it wonld lead to trouble, There were few actual between mother and father subject of the church or the pastor; the quarrels were usually about money or how we children were to be brought up. Mother insisted I should keep on at high school, and father didn't think it necessary. He had to go to work as a young boy. He didn't see why we should do dif- ferently. What was good enough for | him was good enough for us. Mother used to ba wild She used to say I shou on at high school till I gra d stay away from wor might bring in a few poor dollars a k, € if she had to go out scrubbing or cooking in somehody's family to keep me there. And mot er won. Mother always won. She was positive - in character and | couldn’t be walked ove | For years my parents were out of sympathy and almost like strang- And yet that isn't quite true | either, for mother was a great stick- ler for our bheing spectful and obedient to fat She was fond of him, I in a way. Anyhow, she knew she owed him a certa kind of loyalty if nothing else, and although they got terribly on each | other's nerves and went their sep- larate ways as much as possible, there weren't any real battles b tween them, as has been ridiculously sald in newspaper stories | throwing plates and vases and hit- ting each other! I confess I saw mother's slde bet- ter than father's. Mother and I | thought alike about ically | everything believe father | intended to be cruel, but he must have felt mother's indifference and disappointment In him, and her contempt for his lack of ambition d get-up-anc 1d he liked to ease and oy her sometimes. He has irritating ways of saying and doing things. If you ask him to stop, instead of secing you aren't in any mood for silliness, goes right on re wild. ver used retimes, who ca quarrels on the sout keep we guess, some pra to “slap back" n blame her? 1 re limits 4 a endur- I hated to see her flare up, son cor Buy them ’most anywhere EVEREADY Columbia Dry Bat- teries are almost as standard as They’re sold by dealers These packages of ready-to-serve electricity give long service at low cost. sygar. everywhere. gas engine ignition ells heat regulators New York Popular uses include— MRS. MILLS WAS NEVER ASHAMED OF | CLERGYMAN| )R little fi body An as shocked as ! you might exp to. You see, I Ioved Mr. Hall myseit | s0 much. For a long while after the murders T had the strangest feeling SureRelief VACCINATION 1AW FOR INDIG ¥o INDIGES] 25 CEW ESTION TION, 7S 6 BELLANS - |Hot water to go out to the ceme. | 25¢ and 75¢ Packages Everywhere = he is burled r and talk to him. If I could lown into the ground n from his very grave : y arms around him and loved t would have been a relief. | is a wild idea, But you | wild ideas and crazy thoughts v | you stay night r i I had to thir s thought of Mr. was a kid as a man who perfect daddy. They say “born mothers."” “born father.” Li been just one long hap- fate could have bro nd I together nd kneel | nig n T uld be some worl r Well, he wa X piness it him let ind mother us stay that w T have thought about it so much 1at I have come to believe in fate —that ever happens by an ir that it has noth sound to say she is “a fatalist have been me o. nay foo | tiss nd cups for their fc used to feed them s and or On tot rapped bananas | q flies and ants 1 it fell down a steep place and the smallest of the two cham ns died. We thought they were both dead and when we picked them up, one wasn't and mo- ther but vas that i that died, to dle, and other (who was in to live. But he broken witho was hurt. He got his tail and couldn’t seem to move his tail down son cotton and tail with bound it all up with | gauze, and he was the £ t looking thing I ever . His tafl was n fectly straight after that, worked ,and he live vear. Till it was his “fate guess, It was the t er and th she nd per- his 5 But ver per- but it for over a to die, I » got wel ble fate who loy of my an a her loved die by from somehody in a fury h. to be. If they had would have been too and whom pistol sh to e always felt that whoever em did intend to at maybe not 1 think they ed them, whera they 1 started e, One word nother till a terrible killed t Bt at all. follo 1owin row I can just picture my ch a situation. I know d have done—that having made up her mind t yur had come to 1 every ¢ and take the. con- quence spoke up boldly and told th ruth. I believe they both did 1 believe | d su who that what.they said ious anger and re- sentment that before the others lized it, the shots had been fired 1 nothing could have prevented it. talism. . . for the cufting of my mother's hroat, no one could ever convince I never be able to prove it, il always know, just as s it my mother had told me. @ they pushed the leaves up around their bodies, thinking that in that spot where so few people ever % it electric ki | Mother 1B Hall a strange drug that wil hen injected rapidly. calling Pullman porters firing blasgs lighting tents and outbuildings running toys Manisfsctured and guarantesd by NATIONAL CARBON COMPANY, INC. San Francisco eVEREADY COLUMBIA Dry Batteries wthey last Jonger to walk, ybe th fou for more, and away together They would Mrs., Hall not n if been how they They couldn't (Tomorrow: Charlotte her Mother look on day before Mrs ed with T was fri Mrs are cial liver extract is chemicals as been lower m s, de , W have they, 1 wouldn't be months or gone ar 1 to hurt The town people would think a . ly [ to- was ashamed kn peo- Mills tells fr rtened by Hall's face Mills was mur- Hail.) 1 from into a lily blood 15770 BE TESTED | Rloorn to Prosecute Two Hart- ford Parents 5 (/) — Whether ween the ages of seven must be vaccinated be- |fore they can attend school is a ques- ch will h an airing on nal as well as the civil side , with the re sept. vac t applies to school childre tely have an airing in the su- @ court of errors. s seemed assured today Attorney Hugh id that he would t e of 646 New Britain avenue, John A. Mallett, of 240 Broad at the inal next el for failure to r chil- to school as required by law. the civil si ction seek- when On ing an eorder to compel the super- intendent of the board of health to issue a certificate to permit the !children to go to school, the case is on appeal to the supreme court after Judge Malloy refused the or- der, Bridgeport Firemen Are Injured Fighfinz Blaze Bridgeport, Sept. Two fire- men were overcome by smoke and to St. Vincent's hospital and others were inju 1 yesterday atnoon when a two hour blaze aicen destroyed a furniturs storehouse on | was owned by the Hoffman Coal |{J, y and leased to the Bridge- | port Chair compan 2 East Wash- avenue. According to the the damage will be nearly ington Hoseman George 8. Shea, 43, and Hoseman Harry L. Hill, were overcome by smoke; Hoseman Ed- ward J. Thompson, 40, had the tip of a finger nearly torn off; Captain |Clifford Durea received lacerations | from broken glass and Hoseman Frank J. Ludford, was slightly injured when he nocked from | a bicycle while returning from the | fire. Chief Johnson slipped on a ladder and Lieutenant John Kane fell a short distance when a hose turned on him. Neither was injured. Condemned Murderer Absolve Sacco and Vanzetti Dedham, Mass, Sept. 15 (P—A cear-old condemned murdered, awaiting death in the electric chair, has come to the ald of Niccolo Sacco and Bartolomeo Vanzetti in | their last ditch fight to escape a sim- ilar penalty for the murder of a Braintree paymaster and his guard six years ago. | | Celestino Madeiros, convicted of JAIL MAN FOR FRAUD | the murder of an aged bank cashier | ept. 15 UP) — After |In Wrentham, yesterday shouldered buying three radio sets from as many | the blame for the crime of which {firms on fhe installment plar Sacco and Vanzetti stand convicted ling small initial payments, J a confession covering 132-type-| |Miller, 37 years old, of Bridgeport, | Written pages. The confession w lis declared to have re-sold the sets |read before Judge Webster Thayer lat substantial profits to himself. He |4s an affidavit in support of a d was arraigned bef Judge L. P.|[fense motion for a new trial. | Waldo Marvin in criminal superior| Madeiros declared that early in the| court yesterday afternoon, pleading spring of 1920 he drove with four| | guilty to violation of conditional bills | other men from Providence, It. 1., to| of s Judge arvin sentenced |2 spot near the Rice and ch)nus; {him to jafl for six months. factory in South Braintree. There he | was left to guard the car. He heard | shots and the men, c ng a bla bag, came running back, with the gleeful announcement Bridgeport - |in OFFICER JAILED AS FOR Bridgeport, pt. 15 (P—A former member of the Pittsburg police de- pratment, and who yesterday ac- ‘l\nm\‘]fdy:ud he been suspended lindefinttely on charges, Oliver Lam- ibert, 36 years old, was arraigned be- | |tore Judge L. P. Waldo Marvin in | jeriminal superior court self con- fessed forger. He was sentenced to {iail for ten months. that there | would be $4,000 or $5,000 apiece for| | members of the gang, although they | had o shoot two men | They then drove back to Provi- dence, the confession concluded, but Madeiros refused to say if he shared | in the loot and absolutely declined to ‘“squeal” on the men m\plxr‘alcd’ Over two billion smoked a month!. —natural tobacco taste has the “call” these days! BRAINTREE CASE Would ’ | with him The scle reason he made the con. fession, Madeiros said, was the sight of Sacco’s wife and little children coming to see him in the Dedham 1. He ma ained he never saw cco until both were thrown to- her in the jail | Willlam G. Thompson, counsel for Sacco and Vanzetti, played the con- | fesston as the trymp card in a hand that contained 62 affidavits in supe | port of his motion. Others charged that U. S. ment of just agents had worked [to secure’ the conviction of his {clients as the best way of disposing of them after failure to cure h evidence to deport them as . Attorney Thompson sight= fact that the Boston bureau of the department refused to open {its records of the case to him as | proof of hisvassertions. The governmen filed a dozen affi- | davits, most of which were designed trovert defense statements, of which specifically denied tempt had been made to the convicted men or m “open up” to “stool ed in the Dedham Jail depart- dic ed the that any railroad” make ih eons” pl BABY’S CHAFED SKIN INSTANTLY RELIEVED BY 2 FOR 30 YEARS NOTHING AS GOOD Men have certainly made their preference clear! EMEMBER just a few years saw but few Chesterfields? back you Mighty different today! You see them every- where! But it’s not that fact, but the reason, that's the interesting thing. Natural tobacco taste—a taste secured by matching one fine variety against another, a taste which retains tobacco character—that’s why Chesterfield is America’s fastest-growing cigarette, and has been for four consecutive years. Not much doubt nowadays about what smokers want! Such popularity must be deserved d

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