New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 29, 1926, Page 3

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BLISS GLARK HEAD OF N.E,DE MOLAY New Britain Boy Named Master Gouncilor at Convention Bliss Clark of New Britain, son of Bliss W. Clark of 54 Trinity street this city, was unanimously elected master councilor of New England at the third annual New England con- clave of the Order of DeMolay, ‘which came to a close at Springtield, Mass., yesterday. Other officers were elected as fol- lows: Senior councilor, John Noble, Concord, N. H.; Junior councilor, Carol Pingree, Newport, Vt.; scribe, Arthur Jennings, Providence, R. I.; treasurer, Lawrence Smith, Boston; state representative from Massachu- setts, Winfield Brown, Melrose; Rhode Island, Kingsley Read, Crans Photo by Johnson & Peterson. BLISS CLARK ton; Malne, Charles Hall, Dexter; New Hampshire, Andrew Hastings, Portsmouth; Connecticut, Reed Eddy, Middletown; Vermont, Har. vey Butterfield, Burlington. Among the movements proposed at the conclave was a $1,000,000 | educational fund for De Molay and | a summer recreation camp and training camp for De Molay leaders. The new master councilor is a former master councilor of Nathan Hale chapter of New Britain and is a son of Bliss W. Clark, one of the founders and sponsors of the local chapter. He is a graduate of the ew Britain High school and dur- the summer is connected with he park department as life guard at Willow Brook park. NEWINGTON NEWS Arno Schubert returned yesterday to Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute after spending the Thanksgiving hol- idays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Arno Schubert of Robbins avenue. The regular meeting of the Grange will be held at the hall tomorrow cvening. The program will consist of a musical number in charge of the music committee, a sketch, and & reading by members of the Grange. F mouth college, has returned eafter spending a few days with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Elliott of the Center. The time for the hearlng on.a pe- tition of the Maple Hill Water Co. for approval of a proposed sale of the physical assets of the company to the Maple Hill Fire District has been set for 11 a. m. tomorrow at the capitol by the public utilities commission. The water company has signified its intention of ending its corporate existence following the sale. Hclena Doane, daughter and Mrs. of Mr. Royal B. Doane of Fred- erick street, has returned to the New Jersey State college for Women, after spending the holidays here. Frances Sorrow returned to Pratt Institute today after spending the past weel with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Sorrow of Maple street. Mr. and Mrs. Burton Whitney and family of Day street have returned after spending the weck-end at Westerly, R. L. Maynard Anderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Daniel Anderson of the Junc- tion, who has been ill at his home, vel Elliott, a student at Dart- {§ TERRIFIC BLIZZARD Fully 500 Hunters Report- ed Marooned in Woods— Shipping on Great Lakes Vessels Wrecked. Saulte Ste. Marle, Mich., Nov. 29 {M—The upper Michigan peninsula district continued today in the griy ot a blizzard which has trapped huireds of hunters in the storm area as well as tied up shipping along the St. Mary’s river and the Lake Superior district. 8o severe has been the blow to navigation that marine men cast a premature end to the lakes | shipping season. With weather bu- | reau officials predicting much cold- | er weather for today accompanied by a continuation of the snow storm ,some anxiety is felt regarding the safety. of acores of hunters snow- ;bound in the district. A fifty mie gale which blew the snow into great drifts along roads made thosc lanes impassable for automobile traffic and hundreds of hunters who jour- neyed to the wooded district machines were forced to abandon them and were reported. attempting to make their way on foot to the nearest railway centers. It was e€" timated that more than 500 hunt- ers were trapped in the settled 4istricts by the storm. Heavy losses will be sustained by lake shipping due to the storm, it s believed. As the result of low visibility caused by the snowfall, practically cvery ship In the region yesterday was forced to tle up at anchor. The ' treighters George H. Ingalls and the Willlam K. Fields were | still hard aground last night—the Ingalls off Point Aux Pines, Ont, at Standstill — Several | fore- | in} sparsely | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 29, 1926. IS RAGING IN MICHIGAN; HIGHWAYS ARE BLOCKED and the Fields off Pipe Island, Mich. Tugs and lighters were working frantically to free the ships before they are imprisoned for the winter by ice formations. The steamer Cottonwood laden with copper is on the rocks at Cop- per Line point, where she grounded. The steamer Herman Lettler, which went aground at Grand Island has broken up. {ATHLETE MAY RECOVER FROM GRID INJURIES Hope Increases for Carleton Walker, Still Unconscious at Hospital in Roanoke, Va. Word, from Mr. and Mrs. Fred | Walker, who are at the bedside of |the varsity squad of the Virginia | Military Tnstitute who Illes uncon- | sclous at the Jefferson hospital. Roanoke, Virginia, as the result of an injury sustained at a Thapks- | giving game played in that city, states that hope is being held for his recovery. Although stil] unconscious as the result of a blood clot on the brain, |attending physicians view young Walker's excellent physical condi- | tlon hopefully and are awaiting his | return to consciousness when further | reports will be forthcoming. Mrs. Walker's letter further stated | that Roanoke as a city and the state {as a whole were sympathetic re | garding the unfortunate occurrence {and that the hospital is literally b: sleged with calls and visitors w} {are anxiously awaiting some definif: | report from hospital officials. | Clippings from Roanoke news papers show to some extent the re | gard in which the city holds the |local boy. Each item deals sym- | pathetically with the eituation and Hickey-Freeman Customized Clothes Starting Today—A Unique Exhibit of 99 Special Size Suits Loaned Us by Hickey-Freeman | their son, Carleton Walker, former | | High school captain and member of | hopes for the boy’s recovery In sin- 'cvro terms. The accident occlirred near the |end of the annual contest between | V. M. L and Virginia Polytechnic | Institute when Walker was running the ball around the end. When | | tackled, the local man fell on his | | head, incurring the injury that has | kept him unconscious since that | | day. Upon learning of the extent | {of his injury, Roanoke physicians | operated after wiring for the con- | sent of the boy's parents who, after | giving the needed permission left for | Carleton’s bedside. Further reports | have all been hopeful of the former :ngh school captain’s recovery. | New Britain i3 anxiously await- | ing news which will more definite- |1y reassure it that Walker's in- | jurtes will not prove fatal. Being |'one of the most popular men of his | graduating class hers, he has a legion of friends to whom his in- | juries have proved a hard blow. SINCLAIR OIL LEASE Washington, Nov. 29 (M—Despite a request that the Sinclair ofl lease cancellation proceedings be suspend- ed untl the Doheny cancellation sult s declded, the supreme court today ordered government counsel to fle thelr papers in the Sinclair case | by December 9. | Great Britain will have a cooper- tive national theater, sald to be the rst of the sort ever aftempted in| gland. The first production will | be launched about Christmas, fn| London i Miss Lange Is Bride On Thanksgiving Morn Miss Gladys Edith Lange, daugh- Mr. and Mrs. William F.| of 182 Glen street, and| s Chatey, son of Mr. and Mrs. “harles Chatey of West Willington, tock place Thanksgiving morning at 19 o'clock at the home of the bride. | ‘The ceremony was performed by | T. A. Greene, pastor of the Tirst Congregational church. The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore & gown of white | rhinestones and carried chrysan- georgette over white satin with a |themums. The bridesmaids were vell of duchess lace caught with | Miss Marjorie Chatey of Hartford, orange blossoms. She carried a bou- | quet of white roses. Miss Ruth |georgette, and Miss Pauline Lange Lange, sister of the bride, was mald | of Springfield, a cousin of the bride, of honor and wore a gown of peach | who wore a nilo green georgette colored georgette trimmed w\th"gown. They carried bouquets of ter of the groom, who wore pink | | chrysanthemums. The best man was | Albert Semerak of Hartford. Miss| Mr. and Mrs. Chatey left om a | Alice Forsell sang “I Love You.” |wedding trip to New York and About guests were present | Philadelphia, and upon their return | from Boston, Springfield, Hartford, | will reside at 152 Glen street. West Willington, Rockville, Burn-| Mr. Chatey s employed as an was served. side and New Britain. Following the ' clectrician by the Hartford Electrie dinner | Refrigerator Co. Winners THIRD $2,000 HEADLINE CONTEST | ceremony a Thanksgiving “Don't be stubborn,Sir /- Give Old Gold a smoking chance Solomon was the first wise man who said “Nothing ventured . . . nothing gained.” America was discovered by a man who’d try anything once. We Know that OLp GoLb is a better ciga- rette. ‘We Know that it is the smoothest and most satisfying cigarette ever parked between a pair of lips. But the proof is in the smoking. How can we ‘‘make good’’ our claims if you won't test them fairly with your taste! Here's what a fair tryout of Otp Gorp will prove to you:—That a cigerette can have plenty of punch without any punishment. That it can heave all the aroma ‘and fregrance in the world without taxing or tiring your tongue or throat. That you can smoke it morning, noon or night . . . 83 many as you like . . . with maximum enjoyment and without regret or after-efiect. Now we leave it to you, Sir:—Isn't it worth a few cents to make these great discoveries? PLENTY OF PUNCH - BUT NO PUNISHMENT OLD GOLD THE SMOOTHEST CIGARETTE A'c.' ‘ @W 20 Sfor 15 cents The Product of P. LORILLARD CO. Est. 1760 N FIRST PRIZE .. .... $1,000 Won by Paul S. Conover, Cor. Hampshire & Methuen Sts., Lawrence, Mass. Winning Title. . .“Don’t be stubborn, Sir! Give OLD GOLD a Smoking Chance!”’ SECOND PRIZE ......3%500 Wonby .......... Wilbur N. Haines, Newmarket, N. H. [Box 351] Winning Title . . . “Don’t be stubborn, Sir! Let OLD GOLD prove my claims!” INETY-NINE suits and no two the same size! Men four feet ten to six feet two, men under a hundred or men weighing 250 with waist measure up to 52 inches will find suits in this special exhibit to fit them. is improving. Miss Viola Ericson of New Ha- | ven spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Carl E. Erlc- son of Elm Hill. THE 50 WINNERS OF %10 PRIZES James Allen, 92 Broadway, Lawrence, Mass. Mrs. E. Betterley, Hall Hill Road, Somers, Conn. R. E. Beals, 49 Fountain St., Worcester, Mass. Geo. A. Bingham, 3 Exeter Park, Cambridge, Mass. G. A. Boland, 476 Main St., Worcester, Mass. Paul T. Burke, 11 Fenton St., Dorchestcr, Mass. B. Campbell, 95 Audubon Rd., Suite 19, Boston, Mass. C. R. Church, 24 Summer St., Easthampton, Mass. Michael J. Curran, 28 Blake St., Wollaston, Mass. G. E. Curtis, 19 Temple Ct., Waterville, Maine. Lloyd T. Dunham, College Ave., Brooks, Maine. Parkman Edwards, P.O. Box 356, Woonsocket,R.I. A. L. Fearns, 1671 Cambridge St., Cambridge, Mass. Mrs. M. Green, 43 Evans St., Dorchester, Mass. Miss Jessie Harris, 109 North St., Danbury, Conn. A. A. Hilferty, Maynard, Mass. MissM. E. Huber, 38 Young St., New Haven, Conn. T. M. Jordan, 41 Pearl Street, Lawrence, Mass. Miss C. E. Jennison, 66 Bank St., St. Albans, Vt. J. H. Keith, 374A Columbus Ave., Boston, Mass. F. N. LaMontagne, 34 Orchard St., Northampton, Mass, E. L. Lapham, 32 Converse St., Longmeadow, Mass. Miss Jennie Little, 25 High, Ipswich, Mass. Miss Marion Locke, Box 13, Endfield, N. H. R. Longfellow, 162 West Newton St., Boston, Mass. Richard H. Erwin, Jr., son of Mr. Richard H. Erwin, has re- 0 Troy Conference Academy at Poultney, Vt., after spending the liolidays here. E. Lopatin, 14 Concord Sq., Boston, Mass. J. B. Lynch, 21 Cortes St., Suite 5, Boston, Mass. James L. Maher, 26 Brahms St., Roslindale, Mass. Robert H. Marshall, 39 King St., Holyoke, Mass. H. McDermott, 47 Eagle Street, Providence, R.I. Alex Melrose, 30 Summer St., Leominster, Mass. J. C. Mott, 14 Beach St., Rockport, Mass. Wes Noble, Box 675, Fall River, Mass. Mrs. J. O’'Hea, 482 Medford St., Somerville, Mass. T. Oneto, 863 Woodward Ave., New Haven, Conn. J. G. Pollard, Harverd Business School, Cambridge, Mass. E. J. Power, 18 Park Sircet, Hyde Park, Mass. H. R. Preston, 120 Long Hill Street, Springficld, Mass. Y. Rolicheau, 359 Alden Rd.,No. Fairhaven, Mass. R. Scott, 220 Hartford Ave., Hartford, Conn. Edward Shay, 41 Excter Street, Wollaston, Mass. R. E. Shoup, U. S. N. Hospital, Portsmouth, N. H. D. W. Sproat, 131 Phoenix Terrace, Springficld, Mass. 1. Sullivan, 82 Carolina, Ave. Providence, R. L. C. W. Tozier, P. E. A., Box 428, Exeter, N. H. F. M. Tyler, 51 Franklin St., Westfield, Mass. Vernon R. Walker, 65 Lowell St., Andover, Mass. Gaius F. Warner, Skowhegan, Maine 1dyl S. Way, 25 Westbourne Terrace, Brookline, M ass. Miss J. T. Williams, 172 Clark St., Portland, Me. These suits are not for sale—they are for you to find == your size, so that you will have a guide for buying the Miss Evelyn Kranich, formerly of & . ip own and now of Meriden, spent | right size suit in the future. the week-end with relatives at the| Center. Hickey-Freeman have developed this set of 99 distinct sizes in men’s suits. These suits are at our store for the next three days. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Athearn of the Junction have returned after spending the week-end at Oyster River. Clarence Nordstrom has returned to Trinity college after spending the holldays with his mother, Mrs. M. Nordstrom of Robbins avenue. Miss Zullette Tucker, formerly of Maple 11l and now of Bloomfeld, N. J., and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Tucker of Daytona, Florida, ~also spent a few days with Mrs. Nord- strom. Come in and find your size Fitch-Jones Co. Miss Margery Ames has returned atherine Gibbs Secretarial schiool in New York city after spend- a few days with her uncle and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur O. Ames of Elm Hill ALD CLASSIFIED ADS READ HE!

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