Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1926. 1 Guaranteed Hot Water Bottles and Syringes $2.25 to 4.00 The Dickinson Drug Company 162-171 MAIN STREET % D We Accurate Favora A. PIN: KU TH CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Sireet Estimates Cheerfully Given on All Jobs — Tel 2913 AUBURN TAXI J PHONE 611 J e DRIVE YOURSELF— NEW CARS TO RENT SUNDAYS AND You-Drive Auto Renting Cor. Seymour and iim o mile. A ORD “WHEN IN 1 DINE WITH US.” Everything we serve very best, If you don’t believe it come in for a test. Wholesale and Ret ment in Con THE HONISS OYSTER HOUSE 22 State St. Under Grant’s HARTEORT is the Depart- n. Rudys ) Battery S Successor e e rvic 0 Gould 170 East Main, no BATTERY tery Service Co. CHARGING AND REPAIRING nerator, Starter Reg GOULD BATTERIES FREE TESTING, REFILLING Phone 708—Ask for Rudy v Summer | | s Patronize \lfl(n |n(~ \‘ hn Deliver Your Purchases AUBURN Parcel Delivery Service (1nc.) by Auburn Transportation Co. l’hnm D.D.S. R. Johnson GAS ] D.D.S. OXYGE Rupture Relieve suff torture tured Many by m which d with the G tion Free ( \ READ HEEALD 1 FOR YOUR W SSIETED ANTS ADS HAND SIGNAL GODE MAY BEMADELAW Stockel Cwflsidsrinfi Incorpora- ting It in Statutes m as AUTOHOBILE DEATHS THREE KILLED WHEN CAR GOES OYER BANK oman, Huosband and Her Brother Victims of Auto Accident Near Westboro, Mass. » | Tfi ‘w’l NESS HEJNT , nien Wflle s ho mits 1 not shootin SHOW BI6: TNCREASE | Report of in 78 Large Cities For ’ Pour Weeks Excecds Any Like Period Hrmm mooners Hmted I;.mc Has tnL I‘lu 21 Skm filseases For 35 Cents Ointment L B e 1 Auto Electric Service A. ABETZ New Biitain “DOING BETITR WHAT MANY DO WETLY 31 CHURCH SIREET Telephone 894 HAL[ LS JORY DEFIES SIMPSON - ol Refuses (o Delay Heavings Tor Tardy Witnesses re existed te term gr FLASHES OF LIFE: JERITZA NOW IS DECIDEDLY PEEVED AT MARY GARDEN G rbigny. — Of & den to 315 in this hamlet refully have passed 80 years. heads of women fortunate ' ci is hard work in the have beautiful long lain food and red wine. Maria, are be- y makes her that omen L are fools. population 12 persons Their re- flelds, v York — Maria Jeritza is out Yonkers, ing each each year of his age. walk was 71 miles. hday hikes a mile for His latest Is the world she will never nor does the consider N York. — Doris Kenyon's honeymoon has been interrupted by influe ch caused her wedding | Mi 13 to be postponed. She is in a sanitarfum but hopes to leave for sunny Hollywood with hus- | 1 before the week is out. za, to 1, Belglum. — A treasure of 9,000,000 francs stolen from iational bank of Belgium lies 5,- | ir No a, it a German sol- to is correct. He has written of- ves | fering to reveal place for a five cent commission. f Fl Glaowi - 1 the bride's| Norwich seph W. accidentally killed when m goes off the heir ed by s 11 be married to pasha of Tiske, 17, shot- as he climbs wall Family dog arouses Wright, farmer, when ks out in barn which is Radium thrown iwse in a phy- Jestroy Bridgeport — Religion “means we have ourselves under control, that| we a law to live by, and try to live up to it Bishop members of Bridgeport e societies, have best D te Holy Nar B port — Dr. William Gutler to e , for 43 years a practi- g tioner of miedicine at same address, xample to idle suddenly. Hartford — Robert Cleaves, 18 ar old Amherst student, is in hos- cring from Joss of memory of being hit in jaw with 2 Jack. Bricn has named automobi: | nothing more. — Explosion of gas seriously, Bridgeport t water heater injures Isadore Sayin, 35. Bridgeport - F ing with match- es nearly proves fatal to Florence Howard, 4, when dress catches fire from match set off against kitchen stove. | with his strong in San shiner in Ho- » count, who | Bridgeport — Robber hits woman all hi d, grabs her purse contain- keep in downpour of Perhaps vas a hof and esca VALE STUDENTS ~ MELLON WARNS OF ATTENH SERVIGES ~ TARIFF SLASHES I Sermon on Sumcct of Says It Would Drive Manufac- Sell-Saceilice | turing From Country Washington, Oct. 25 (P—Applica- | tion to the United States of the the some America P — Rev. | Richmond to Yale o pro- posals contained in economic | man ind E: ing of tar! uld reduce rather than increas: American purchases abroad, in the t0lopinion of Secretary Mellon of the| esto sig | for a lower- rests of trade rs in the in com- e A\ud in- 1ds yrecious formal notice on behalf of the administration that the man- ifesto would bring about no change If in the present tariif policy, he ap- D proved its application to European . It s on the ground that it would civili- there a condition similar to Our 'that existing here—free trade among t es of the union. reduction in the tar riff rates would act not as a stim- but as a boomerang to Lurope’s export trade to the United he contended, because it| d *occasion unemployment and tion |reduce our purchasing power, will ortgage | jiminish the country's cansumption weing crushing loads [of commodities and cause large sur- backs of unborn genc pluses of the world’s principal prod- wlo out of un to endow t nobler se sta American c to full livine bou pon the ger d, is selling in- ntitles of prod- States, mostly of ses of commodi- in the United pagan farr sucks the a lecch : who fol out ofthe es o desert t non-dutiable ¢! s not produced Y.—James H. Hock- | W lover financial losses, {the loss BISHOP NILANIN TALK TO SOCIETY Preaches on Sell-Control to Holy| Name Organization Bridgeport, Oct. 25 UP—"Religion means that we have ourselves un- | der control, that we have a law m; live by and try our best to live up to it,” said Rt. Rev. John J. Nilan, bishop of the diocese of Hartford, in his address before members of the Bridgeport Holy Name societies who filled the Palace theater yes- | terday afternoon at the Bridgeport | Holy Name convention. | “God has lighted the way so that can the pitfalls and miss | roads which deviate and to destruction,” said the bishop. | “Those who leave the straight, lighted road often say, ‘I'll come back before I die’ but do they? Do they come back into the right in time? Some don't. They the road and will not come < until the hand of God s reached out to them to help them back. The byways lead far and are devious. Keep to the path lighted by the Son of God. “Every life has its dutles and man must realize that Christianity 1s practic: It must be brought into our lives every day, every hour, every moment. We must try to learn our lifely duty and follow it. | the “For finstance, those in upper circles of this society have dutles to which they must be faithful and they must be trustworthy. Every one of us has his own duty to per- form and must try to do it better cach performance. Give to Caesar | the things which are Caesar's but| The government has powers and lays down laws which | we should observe. It is up to us !0 obey them.” INSANE MAN LS FIVE AND HIMSELF Goes on Mererous Rampage at Marion, IIL ‘ Marfon, TIL, Oc (P—Durlng | a sudden fit of insanity late Satur-| day nignt, W. O. Potter, 56, state senator and United States dis- | trict .attorney, killed his wife, two |daughters and two granddaughters, | one a three-weeks-old bahy, and J'Ln drowned himself in a cistern at | he rear of the Potter home. Th skulls of each of the five victim, ad been crushed with an fron fu nace shaker. The dead are: Mrs. Potter, 5 Mrs. Lucille White, 25; Elolse Potte 16; Phyllis White, 4, and Cynthia three weeks. bodies, all in night clothing, | i n, Morris Potter, a Marion attorney, who d been to Murphysboro, a neart town, and who returned home ab. 2am The bodies of the wife and the {younger daughter were found in one bedroom and that of Mrs. White in | |the bathroom. The grandchildren were killed as they slept. Evidences of a terrific struggle were found in several of the rooms on the second floor of the home. Jury Blames Tnsanity A coroner's jury late today return- ed a verdict that the victims “were | killed by W. O. Potter while tempo- rarily insane.” Neighbors, who testified at the in- quest, said they saw a light in the Sy Rt (i At ean that they heard a commotion about | that time. Relatives declared that Potter recently has been brooding 1ll-health and .t his position as United | States district attorney about four months ago. He s said to have lost money in a St. Louls insurance company and in Tlorida land devel- opments. A brother-in-law, ! Spiller, testified that Potter recently had told him that he planned to take |his own life. American tariff would drive a acturing away United States to countries | where the costs are less,” “The United States 1s the largest customer in the world today,” the secretary asserted. “If we were not prosperous and able to buy, Europe also would suffer. It s inconcelv- ble to me t merican labor will ever consent to the abolition of pro- tection which would bring the Amer- ican standard of living down to the level of that in Europe, or that the American farmer could survive if the enormous-consuming power of the | cople in this country was curtailed | d his market at home destroyed.” | NEWINGTON NEWS Reyv. Morgan King of Hartford | again preached as a candidate at | the Congregational church yester- | day morning. the argued, on v . hare of mar 1 with inds > pagan in rve ural resources o died leaving his name 1 lovers of to ¢ of §3,000 s the honor of example ot us not | will be 150 | mpathies | . no highly pol hope lies in a love es to | L The regular meeting of the Grance {ED ADS | will be hield at the Grange hall Tues- day evening. The Litchfield degree ecam will put on the work of the 1ird and fourth degi Mrs. Wil- liam Byrne will be in charge of the ux in connection with the de- work. A harvest supper il served after the meeting, with rs. E. P, Schmidt and Mrs. Everett u)\\r” in charge. RALD CLASSI FOR RESULTS A bl IF STOMACH IS TROUBLING YOU Others brought out that Potter |had been suffering from hallucina- tions that he was removed from the ;’19 KILLED IN MASS. ‘T“n number convicted of lead | after drinking intoxicating liquor |and 121 for defective equipment. AUTO CRASHES IN WEEK Blackjacks Woman | To Get Loot of $39 Six More Than Corresponding Week | Bridgeport, Oct. 24 (P—A robber night after striking a woman over the h with an improvise blackjack, atched her purse co taining $39 and made good his es cape in the do our of rain. The victim was Mrs. Albert Donchi who was treated at the Emergenc ital, where two stitches °n in a scalp wound. The woman told police t v walking on Sewett street Connecticut avenue alone at mi night when a 1 man weari | a light overcoa pproached her an with no warning struck her ov the head and ibbed her pocket book. The woman screamed fc help and a night watchman in tory ran to her rescue but nt had already escaped. Last Year, State Motor Sta- last ad tistics Show Boston, Oct. 25 (P—Nineteen per- sons were killed in automobile ac- cidents in the state Jast week, seven less than i the week before but six more than in the same period of 1 year, according to the report of th registrar of motor vehicles today. operating while under the influence of liquor was 86, a drop of 36 from the_ pre- ceding week, and six were commit- ted to jall Suspensions and revoca- tions of licenses and registrations jumped 265 from the week before to a total of which was 205 more than in same period of 1925, Of these 138 were for driving M. J.KENNEY & CO. 563 Main St. (Opp. St. Mary’s Church) Telephone 314 and 36 CONNECTICUT'S MOST COMPLETE RELIGIOUS STORE Medals the Pictures Statues Beads Crucifixes Little Flower Novelties Statues Delivered to Any Part of the City FUNERAL PARLOR Night Service 36 Telephone 314 HEADACHES of headaches are caused Have your eyes examined Over 50 per cent. from eye strain. every two years, FRANK E. GOODWIN EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 327 MAIN ST. TEL. 1905. SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN Is a Mutual Savings Bank Its business is confined to the investment of the funds of its depositors. The earnings of these investments are divided only among its depositors. That is the distinctive feature of a MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK. It is a bank having no stockholders to share in the earnings of its deposits. This is the reason a MUTUAL SAVINGS BANK is able to pay a higher rate of interest to its depositors than other banks. This bank is paying 5% interest to all depositors. In- terest begins the first of each month, computed to Janu- ary 1st and July 1st of each year. Deposits made on or before the 3rd of any month draw intercst from the 1st. BANKING HOURS Saturdays: 9 A. M, to 12 M. Monday Evenings: 7 to §:30 9 A .M tod P M 178 MAIN STREET o e e et e e e e e John | | Have your Typewriter repaired by skilled mechanics, we absolutely GUARANTEE our work Let us OVERHAUL your typewriter office of United States district attor- | 1se of irregularities in of- flce and that he was “being hound- ed" on account of the affair, al though a check of his records r vealed no {rregularities. BAYER ASPIRIN PROVED SAFE Take without Fear as Told | in “Bayer” Package ney beca Halloween dance in the form of a masquerade at the hall vening, October 30. Instantly! Erd Indigestion or Stomach Misery with “Pape’s Diapepsin” e TRk Mrs. E. A. Elliott will go to! Bridgeport tomorrow evening as a 1 e to the state corvention of W TU Miss W. C. T. U.s. Miss Esther Hart will, enter the gold medal speaking con- your [test in which school children from all over the state will enter. Mrs. Elliott plans to be gone about two | days. * your in- is gone! Heavy flatule . palpita- any ¢ a Pape’'s D tion pain, irn sour, a few ed by The Grange will hold its annual | Saturday | sther Hart will | |24 and 100, T BB OABA AP Sy Tt L P st e e g i e Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on package or on tablets you are not gefting the genuine Bayer Aspirin |proved safe by milllons and pres- t‘rl\)rd by physicians over twenty- five years for | Colds Neuritis Toothache Neuralgia Headache Lumbago Rheumatism Pain, Pain Each unbroken “Bayer” package |contains proven directions. ~Handy boxes of twelve tablets cost few | cents. Druggists also sell bottles of New Britain Typewriter Exchange 96 West Main Street Phone 612 THE NEW BRITAIN COOPERATIVE SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION A local thrift corporation, organized April, 1836. (40 years). For the ptrpose of helping its share- holders to save their earnings and build homes. Home ownership is the nation’s greatest safety valve. A man will fight for his home, but not for his land- lord. The swiftest, surest way of establishing credit, as well as community standing, is to own your own home. Subseriptions can now be made_for the October 1926 series. Shares maturing, will be paid October, 1926, at the association office, Room 210, National Bank Building. Y. J. STEARNS, Secretary.