New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 5, 1926, Page 4

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUF DAY, OCTOBER 5, 1926. - PRAISES RED CROSS : IN MIAMI CRISIS transpor . 1 on the rail who wanted many a them to come [ocel Woman Back From m Devastated Area Mrs. J. & Woo who before her ma Rose Koplowitz and Mrs. I. §. ey ‘street this home of her par atar daughte lowitz of 38 ¥ onous insects One son, recovered from t infection, but anot child will recoy rs. Wool has been a resident of Miami for the past year. Her hus- band is the president of the Miami Roofing Co. pany vice at homa aiding struction whi storm. The family lives in the tion of the Florida ci are among the few whose were not totally mqrnn 1 in devastating wind tha P over the southern pen Mre. Wool at that when the v husband nalled boards acr windows and the wind was una penetrate and lift the roof o hnm- t did in other homes the « T‘\é st orm started ab Saturday morning ar without interruption for 14 F Mrs, Wool believes that a tidal way accompanied the storm because of the fact that boats, both large and small, were car into the he the eity and deposi ‘s thoron about ut 1 o'clock contin picture the stor golden r ed on the scene in the uns given by the American Red “I never thought people coul g0 good,™ “said -Mrs. Wool conldn’t believe that in a catastr like that which swept over our city, that the Red Cross could do so much. T am unable to describe the work those women and men accom- plished.” Everything W the comfort of the continued saying and hope @ after the st serum to be used i against typhoid fev ming inta the stri “it was nerve wracki came hum- those sirens keep & all night woman. “Ambulances belis clanged and a con of moise kept opl through the ing hours, dead injured the Red Cross—I can’t be vou what those people did for all.” arloads of doctors were from Chicago and other cit in the relief. The hosy and other build ! with the all other standing W 1 People called residents of Miami homes and occupy ther season in the 1 and the follow- It was awful, but gin to te 0o0d into the was no poor The Red ( ber and the peor e har d was unable to come ssed them jeclares | in nts | said t liable eaalinersltor akilled| Mrs. never live Wool states that she would else but in the clima r in Miami than it| in. She said that nd go the people here ar. ves that she will make in Hartford for three mon then return to Miam th only for p”Hr\l‘.m hom CASFS IN CITY COURT (Cases have been assigned as fol- the city court by Judge Ben- Joseph Perrot- m. Rath- witt for defen- a vs. Otto Kal- at 2 p. m. Casale . Woods for defendant son vs. Charles Gul- 7 at 2 p. m. Ginsburg Mangan for defendant. Morris Wisnef- 1. Ginsburg r defendant. & Herpst, D. Gaffney for f defendant Santi (Hr i et D. Gaff- for Donnel- v, Kirkham, Coop- and Camp for others. Britain, Board of Water hers, vs. A. Gorbach et t 2 p. m. Kirkham Gaftney for de- o Tomasso vs. Jo- ot al, October 13 at Gaffney for plain for defendar defendant. Isadore . m Wood Kirkham, nd Camp for plai pough for defendant. BODY HANGING TO TREE Concord, N. H., Oct. 5 (A—The of John Russell, a state high- way patrolman, was found hanging from a tree yes u 1 the maln road from Roby h Sutton. the hellet that e life aithough no as known, Officials expr had ended his ow motive for his act HEIR STOMACHS BEHAVE! h- loss after-eating would_give bm a little harm- rt tablet—or two 2 I‘O X Now n of Stmart’s tabe it filled from the ry drugstore, or Staart Co., STUART'S DYSPrFSU\ TABl ETS TR Proper w o you money in d! tor bills this Autumn, ‘WE LEND UP TO $300 TO HOUSEKEEPERS Buy the coal and warm, comfortable clothing now and repay the money at your convenience. Note the easy repayment terms 35 montbly, ph $8 nhuthly, plus Jawinl interest $7 monthly; plus la whul interest, e $3_monthly, plus lawiul interest. repays $ v, pins lawful interest, re hly, pius awful interest repays $300 cash §19 st Every repayment reduces the interest cost c s Jawhal interest, 73 $60,$75 or $100 cash [oxn 40 cash loan cash loan s $200 cash loan I, write or phon BENEFICIAL LOAN SOCIETY Raphael Blig Open 9 10 5:30 H9 West Main St Phone 1-0-4-3 Room 101 - PRISONERS ASKING | boara of pardons for their release |, ; Mok [ leased from the state prison cently claimed before son in the superior W - when he 70 BE PARDONED 7 pleaded hat u his own la Beckett, Becker and Evanoli Among 63 Petitioners or st Detective e nd was Dot REE Becker are among an C. | and Hartford Beckett, Arthur DML Glovanni Voturrl this time the ¥ ¢ 9 and thro sixty-three convicts at the state kilc Joseph D’Ang: have petitioned likiladoneph DA the : i stember 21, 1 prison who at Its session on November 1 ured in C: are from Hartford | On June 4, 1925 he pl ven are from |murder in the v Haven county, fifteen are from | was sentenc ield county, three from New | s 41. 1 teen petitioners inties of Middlesex, Tolland Windham. The names of the tioners were released yesterday Par clerk of the | from Hartford County. | Joseph Ferraiola of Hartford, shall 8. Thompson of William L. Tessi ches William 8 and George Motu who pleaded guilty the second de tion, es E. Taft, f Ma March 1, er of CAN EUROPE PAY OuR PRICES ? It has been proposed that we sell our sur- plus crops abroad —but can the Europeans payfor them? Read The European Consumer, by Asher Hobson, in the October COUNTRY GENTLEMAN. 6 Suort S10: 1 SERIAL Dorothy Canfield—Remembrance Konrad Bercovici—Sirocco George Marsh—The Judgment of Achille Breault Ida M. Evans—A Husband for Illya, the Blue-Eyed Howard Brubaker—The Wagon and the Star Harris Dickson—Plantation Nights Albert Payson Terhune—Counterfeit (Part 1I) Judge Nicker- court th. and asked for comes from 924, in | field r a woman. He anada ded guilty to ; artford, con- | years; second degree and i to life imprisonment. | the night season, third off De- 1e first | cember 4, , 2 to 30 ye e and will be represented by Hayden § to 2 first Miller, | thirty Waterl 44, was convicted Octo~ | and is making his nine- | appeal convicted Ferraiola ber 9 He re- 1906 Water- | at he guilty co Trar ; Giuseppe Martino, v Haven; Custode DI Lucia, Haver s H. Ha tano, four y ind Bessier were involved in the The rder of William l‘. Madden New Haven Madison; ton Other New Have £ his fifth appeal. Aniello Criscuola to 20 Evanoff Appeals / aughter, ten Lvanoff, w B iaetano Montini Sidteaan , ten to fif ten to fifteen years, third e Harold B. P John Overus, 33, man rtford convicted I'.mlmn gh a n fteen tonio Shavon of motor veh b T Egbert Thrall, jr., theft of motor vehi elo in ncenzo Bedella, 40, of Wethers- convicted of assault with in- nt to kill, third offense, three to 0 to four years; New Haven, e, three to s Fioranante Aprono, 35, New Haven, theft of poultry, one to thr 3 William T. Curt New en, robbery while armed, five to | ing an t ‘yea Michael tore, 48, Hart con- | West Haven, carnal k and and enter 1/a buse of minor female ve to o counts, ht years; William 27, Meriden, robbery wt five to ei years; O'Connell, w Haven, bu while arr ve to sixteen | statuto years; Max Rosen, 40, New Haven, | Hen burglary for the third time, fifteen | ber w Haven county, to thirty years; Frank L. Roberts, | W W rving lite terms for mur- | 59, Orange, theft of horse, four to | one to four heltor years; ars, first fifteen Bridge five ford, . 40, H Mar- | convicted of est, June 2, petition. | New Haven Appeals the twenty-s rko of m N Water- Ho u"r\( years; outhington, eld county are dgeport, m amford, manslaughter, Rosario Di Profrio, 31, blackmail and unlawft _\-nar William Kyauskas, 24, | 31, Stamford, manslaughter, seven statutory burglary, one [ to twelve years. Jacob Tilman, 46, Petitioners from New statutory rape, two to|county are: George A. Frank Ustik, 37, Water- [ Norw embezzlement, ape, four to ¢ mon A. G. son, 38, murder to twenty-five London Finn, 35, five to Salbury, in the se ; Diratoo C murder in the second ears; baudo, Norwich, gree, life Alexander Dembroski, 51 second | Milford, murder in the second Hristos, 36, | gree, 1 Giordano Candido, 34, Torrin, murder in the second fifteen petitioners from Joseph Maran er in the Dimitri , murder in John the second Niol degr murder in the second | Ch hony White, 81, utory rape, five Manuel Rosario, 3 statutory rape, two to years; Harry Minerly, n, statutory rape, two to fiy Gus Sclafani, 34, Stamford, ten to twelve years; Bridgeport, y transport- losives, twelve to A. Beers, 30, Middletown, es Henry Bishop, 39, Tolland, der in the ond degree, afe; Tedeschi, € Williamsv.Ve, rder in the second degree, life. vea Septic Sore Throat Epidemic Clearing Up Hartford Oct 5 (A—I twas given out at the state department of calth yester that the septic sore 3 L “einberg, 48, t situat in some towns in port, statutory 0 to| New Haven county had been “prac- tically cleared up” and that out of 312 cases including five which ter. minated here, there were only four one to three | or five which still required medical 3, Bridgeport, | treatment. ry arson, two to five years; | There was » slight increase in the Krout, 28, Bridgeport, robh- of communicable diseases nine to ten years; Milton | reported to the state department of orth, 36, Westport, burglary, | health during the past week, as compared with the previous' week d using e: number ten ye William Richman, What the Tariff Does for the Farmer in the October issue of THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN FARMERS THEMSELVES Say“No!” Any plan that presents more credit as the chief instru- ment for farm relief will not meet either the wishes or the requirements of the majority of American farmers. The farmers themselves say so in the leading editorial in the October COUNTRY GENTLEMAN, I3 The circulation of THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN is more than 1,300,000 a month and is growing rapidly among the leadership farm families of the whole United States— those who live in good homes, who have modern conveniences, who have money to spend for what they want. A recent survey in eleven :tates shows that 93 per cent. of THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN'S subscribers have automobiles and 14 per cent. have more than one car to the family—giving them quick and easy transportation to towns where goods are sold. With such a circulation among modern farm families, THE COL'NTRY GENTLEMAN offers an unparalleled opportunity to those manufac- turers who are seeking to extend their markets among rural people, who number nearly half the total population of the United States. INDEPENDENCE SQUARE, PHILADELPHIA, PENNS YLVANIA ) ol Is it true that the American farmer buys in a protected market and sells in a world market? Does the tariff favor industry at the expense of agriculture? Or doesthe farmer share the benefits of protection? Would free trade help? Would higher duties boost the farmer’s income? E. V. Wilcox has figured the debits and the credits of the tariff as it hits the farmer’s pocketbook—what high protection costs him and what he gets out of it. Read WrERE 40,000,000 PeoPLE Buy Scattered over the United States are thou- sands of towns, large and small, that are actually service stations for country people. Read The Farmer and His Towns, by J. H. Kolb, in the October COUNTRY GENTLEMAN. 117 FEATURES FOR FARM FAMILIES Every single item in the 192-page Oc- tober issue of THE COUNTRY GENTLEMAN was chosen because of its particular appeal tothe men, the women, the boys and the girls on the farms of America. That is equally true of the feature arti- cles, the fiction, the women'’s section, the technical farm departments. o The Country Gentlewoman, a big section for women, is in itsclf a complete women's magazine, with fashions, cookery, health and beauty, handicraft, home furnishing, enter- tainment, care of children—all directed toward women who live in the country. <Quniry (gentleman THE CURTIS PUBLISHING COMPANY Publisher of The Country Gentleman, The Saturday Evening Post, and The Ladies’ Home Journal Advertising Qffjces: Philadelphia, New York, Chigago, Boston, San Francisco, Detroit, Cleveland gunn ed a used fire tree some! winds the fl back- and culty halt

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