New Britain Herald Newspaper, December 7, 1926, Page 2

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e AT 0 S R S i 1 ceived at the Scout Council On‘lcéf | ; [flflv. BRAN"“N lS (" OUR SCHOOLS ]! thovs it chis troop as o reat NEW YORK CABARET OWNERS PLAN y b3 Waterman’s Fountain Pen At Christmas time no hap- pier selection can be made than a Waterman Combina- tion Set, Pen and Pencil. $4.00 to $8.50 The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREE For HER Chiistmas A S UNIVERSAL Vacuum Cleaner YOU GET FREE CLEANING ATTACHMENTS with every Cleaner purchased this monthly. ONLY $3.00 DOWN Balance Next Year THE CONNECTICUT | LIGHT & POWER CO. Rudy’s Battery Service Successor to Gould Battery Service Co. 170 East Main, near Summer BATTERY CHARGING AND REPAIRING Generator, Starter Repairing GOULD BATTERIES FREE TESTING, RE 3 Phone 708—Ask for Rudy | | DRIVE YOU NEW CARS TO RENT 23¢ an hour——10c. a mil Rpecial eates for long 1ri U-DRIVE AUTO REN N Cor Seymoar and Phone 3981-2 Day and Night Service _ ——— — ————— HEN HARTFORD | DINE WITH US. Everything we serve is the very best, If you don’t believe it come in for a test. \ Wholesale and Retail Depart- ment in Connection. THE HONISS OYSTER HOUSE 22 State St. . Under Grant’s HARTFORL Day Specia TOMORROW WEDNESDAY WE WILL SELT, Tea Sets Blue Dragon (¢ lee for cight p at $3.95 » eg. Valne $6.00 No Charges No Deli First The Burritt Gift Shop, Inc. 85 WEST MAIN ST First Come, At the Professional Blig. ZAD HERALD CLASSIFIED FOR YOUR WANTS ADS NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, DECEMBER 7, 1926, NOT ON TBIALL Friend Claims Ownershin: of Gonfiscated Whiskey Bay Minette, A D P— A o of guilty to the ownership of found when Governor W. | lon and eight friends were | tertained ¢ Charles P, n-law of gover- and Atticus | man of Mont- | s were David R.| M. Castleman, attor- , Addison R. Sm! » Louisville and Joe Seth and of guilty fined on the | cases were nol- when he es the other prossed. was ng of an hour Daniels was con | d the testimony | whiskey was not room where Go nd his friends were sts were THEODORE A, BEAVEN tant to School Superintendent. Theodore A. Beaven has enjoyed |an unusual career since the time he was graduated rom Berw Academy in his native town, South Berwick, Maine, Later he entered New Hampshire college at Durham, N. H., and was graduated in 1913. He then enroll- ed in Toronto university and was graduated in 1917. He entéred the | service, joining the Canadian forces | and fought two and a half years in the World War. He saw service in ‘rance, Belgium and Germany. He was commissioned a captain during his term of service. | scen together a | After the war, he took a post graduate course at Harvard dnd then ! became an instructor in English, biology and history at Wellesley and BEWE PR B hecame sub master of a unior high |school at Waltham, Mass. During his term of service with these schools he coached athletic teams. At Wellesley he coached the basket- ball and baseball teams and in Wal- tham he coached football, basket- ball and baseball. BOY SCOUT NEWS Feho of 1924 Brawl Occurs in Jackson, Kentucky the @ one of In the absence of Walter Charsky the Troop 8 held at the s in charge of .Senior Patrol ader August Peplau with the | Scout Executive present helping in the program. The troop is enjoy- ing a contest which is creating quite a lot of enthusiasm. One feature of this contest is emp placed on the good tu The troop will have Scoutmaster mecting of 5 Smith school Pollard Allen brawl in fired, Cockrell. Allen he back of a nd and French were riding. fired a hike on Saturday, December 11.| Edward Peplau was appointed act- L lau is acting Senior Patrol Leader. Troop 14 held a meeting on Wed- night at the home of Scout- ster Depot. There were seven Scouts present and the following ap- pointments were made: Arthur Bell oppointed acting Senior Patrol Lead- er and Edward Frawley re-appoint- od Seribe. The evening was spent in planning for real scout work in mg jury. | the troop with emphasis on advance- and repub- | ment and bikes. The troop will dismissed at | meet next week at the home of des in Mr. Depot. Troop 22 with Scoutmaster Fred Engel in charge is meoting at the alvation Army Barracks. While the number of Beouts attending the troop s small a recent report re- ; he son of A, r of Cleveland | n the were killed and s wounded. He was one of the dc ic defend- ants in t case and vietims cted of conspir trial wa A thir March A cement composi- | 1 recently introduced in England. Your Religion; Whai [fi)orYou Believe? Psychologlsts contend that man instin a ligion of some kind, perhaps no two people think exactly alike about it. Perhaps they do. Nobody knows. In an fe to d out where p stand on their religious convictions, a na- census is be taken this weck. The Herald is coope ing in ent in New 1, and for this purpose the questionnaire be- me kind of religion, tion Brita result of this questionnaire 1s problematical, but is expected | ting to the religlous interests of New Britain. Whether they a uniformity of answers or whether there will be a wide diver- s not known. to get the best answers it is necessary to have a large ser of ballots returned. Readers of the Herald are asked to fill out and return it to the questionnaire editor as soon as pos ould be signed as an evidence of good faith but they to be il will show o questionn sible, Na will not be QUESTION Do you believe in God? Do you believe in immortality? ns of personal | Do you beli vyou heliey 18 divine as no man was divin ’ > as inspired in a sense Do yvou regard t t ture could be said to be in-| o ot nd any religious services? your family grow | h ther 5 NO ( ch? to have ‘| PAINTERS _ | ing Patrol Leader of the Fox Patrol | during the time that August Pep- | Scout spirit as they furnished and delivered two well-stocked Thanks- | glving dinner baskets to two needy | families. Troop 1, Newington, whieh i3 | Will Resist Closing at 3 |made up of the boys at the Home ! for Crippled Children s having | regular weekly meetings with Frank | Boardman in charge. It i3 expected | that some of the Scouts in this troop arc gonig to earn their Second and | | First Class aghievement Buttons'ond | { work along on the Merit Barge pro- | | gram. { | | Troop 3 rcports that Scout War- | ren Brainard been appointed | Duffle DBag Scribe. Scoutmaster George Ward reports the troop is fhiking and that he has a fine assis- tant Scoutmaster Harold ¥. Miller helping in the troop work. M Miller is a former old Troop 4 Scout having held the rank of Senior Pa- | trol Leader and First Class Scout. The Flying Eagle Patrol nished the Scout Executive with a copy of its monthly publication “The 1 s " The editor is Russell 1and the printe are boys in the patrol. The most practical suggestion in the issue was the article giving full directions for the making of Christmas wreath Evidently Flying ¥ Scouts a going to earn some Christmas money in this way Commissioner Charles Morgan s helping Scoutmaster Berwood Boehm with his weekly meetings of troop 7 in the Legion Rooms. The | Scouts of troop 7 are putting in many hours fixing up their | . Dary's troop No. 2, Newington, had a fine hike on a recent Satur- day but the account of this hike was mis-sent in the mail and trav- cled to Nova Scotla hefore it “was returned to the sender. The troop is looking for a meeting place and 2 new troop committee is going to prove of assistance in solving this problem, | NADE AGAINST TWO | | Grand Jury R4 A Orders Indictments | pst Norwalk and | Bridgeport Men Bridgeport, Dee. T.—(A—Two true bills charging murder in the first de gree werc returned yesterday after- | noon by a grand jury against I'rank Pulitano of this city, and Rocco | Surgiovanni of & The cases | were given to the grand jury yester- day morning at 10 o'clock and de- | |liberations were ended at 8:80 | | o'clock. | | Pulitano f8 alleged to have shot | jand killed Drowdowski at the lat- | ters' home at 347 Willard street on | | the night of October 9, last. The | | fight between the two was the cul- mination of a drunken brawl, which, it is stated, followed a briet | | gambling game, | Drowdowski's body was found | riddled with bullets in the kitchen | of his home. Pulitano was s | shortly after the shooti; liom Surgiovanni is alleged to shot and killed Giacomo Rertino in | Norwalk on September 23 last after | a fight. The alleged slayer has| claimed that he was fearful of Ber- tino and when approached by the latter noticed a gun in the waistband of Bertino's trousers. He snatched the gun and in the ensuing struggle the revolver was discharged It is probable that one of the two will face Judge Alfred C. Baldwin | and jury in the criminal superior | court during this week. The court {will be opened by Judge Baldwin tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. ‘Yale Debaters Defeat | Wellesley College Team | V' 2 () — Dec, cd the Welles- | ley team here last night, the audi- cnce awarding the palm to the men $ to the merits of the question and the manner of debating. Wellesley spoke for the affrma- tive and Yale the negative of the | proposition: Resolved, that co-edu- | | cation similar to that in use in state | | colleges is advisable for all'the col- | leges of the ea ‘Wellesley was represented by Miss Frances Furber of Waterfown and Miss Jean Treft of Fast Orange, N. | 7. Thomas Emerson and Edwin ‘ Jenkins spoke for Yale. | | | | | Skeletons belleved to he those of | the Vikings wore unearthed re- | [cently at Reay, Calthness, Scotland. STOPS ANY COLD IN A FEW HOURS | “‘Pape’s Cold Compound” opens clogged nose and head — ends grippe Relief comes in- stantly A dose taken cv- ery two lours un- til three doses are taken will end grip and break e cold » head, body or imbs, It promptly pens clogged up air the nasty | relieves feverish. soroness s in stops @ or nose runnin eadache, duline wore throat, sncezing, and stiffness. Don't sta ing and snuff | bing head! clse in the | world gives such prompt roliet as | “Pape’s Cold Compound,” which | stuffed 1 Quit blow- e your throb- | costs only thirty-five cents at any irug store. It acts without ince. Be sure you get the gen ssist- nine. | CROWLEY BROS. INC. AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street Estimates Cheerfully Given on All Jobs — Tel. 2913 FIGHT FOR NEW YEAR'S EVE PARTY Walker sald he thought the aspecta- cle was also bad for adults, especial- ly those going off to work im over- alls, “Class chael Guinan, once of now a night club proprietor. *“And bad legisiation, too—that's what. Jimmie Walker is a good fellow. But this isn't Soviet Russia,;and Jimmie a..m. Order on January 2 and if Enforced Will Likewise Insist That legislation!" stormed Mi- Texas apd Scout | Hotels Dim Lights at Same Hour. 1 | by Assoclated Press. 2 York, Dec, 7—Curfew shall | not ring out the lights in Broad- | way's cabarets at three o'clock in January 2 unless, also | | the morning ot | their proprictors contend, it as fur~ | “qims the glims”/in New York ho-| Supply music, tels, privately owned buildings nna; membership clubs, | No heroine will dangle on the| curfew bell cord, as in the melo-| | drama of the early days. There's | neither bell nor cord in this town, | | nor very many applying heroines, | but if the board of aldermen passes| | Mayor Walker's curfew law, a emed probable today, several ca. | baret proprictors are prepared to| | 20 to court to keep their doors open | “like the other: | | Their caso will be fought out le-| | gally, in the opinion of Nathan| | Liebermann, attorney, who says| | closing the cabarets will mean driv-| |ing the after-theater crowds “into| the outer darkness” | | Trem places where $2,000 and| | $3,000 & week is spent by the man-| | agement on entertainment numbers, | patrons, he predicts, will go “into [ holes in the walls, private apart-| | ments and elsewhere in search of wasn’t raised in any monastery.” The 8 O’clock Order Liebermann explained that the cabaret proprietors are not opposed, unqualifiedly to a curfew law— what they objected to was being closed down at 3 o'clock, while other places are allowed to remain open. Among these places, he point- ed out, would be regular restaur- ants that do not furnish music he sald, and the shop's shut. Members of the Elite Restaura- teurs of America, who operate more sedate establishments, say all the night clubs can be closed for all they care. Fly-by-nights, they call the clubs. Again the cabarets object. They smile at the suggestion that an “aft- er the theater czar” be appointed to rule nightdom——or clubdom—and say that if there are any “white- collar bandits” in the early hours of metropolitan life, they can be found more frequently in hotel lobbies than in cabarets. “Besides,” said one “we are not fly-by-nights. We atay put. But drive us out, and our guests will fly by night, and there'll be night clubs and cabarets, unau- thorized, as everybody's next door neighbor."” proprietor, POLICE DEPT. GUESTS Middletown Will | rallica forces and point out that a | city every speakeasies,” which the police will| Entire Force In find almost impossible either to Attend Banquet At regulate or close down. i Tavern Oppose Cover Charges | iddletown, Dec. 7 (#—The en- Despite the opposition of the ca-|tire police department of 81 men, barets themselves, proponents of a including the chief, officers and su- closing hour, if even only a short T““".‘“"‘\Plr:\rlcts \\'=ll be g;ws:!;tr holn- Tha .. | OF tonight at a banquet a ueck's mo Lefore the dally blush-of dawn, | % otlERE S 8 AASRes at BUCCHH | nerce WM‘M&&”WWM“!DWWWO lave been active at city hall. Church | people, educationalists and the po lice frown especfally dourly on the! cover charge places of the night. Anti-curfow groups, however, hav The chamber is sponsoring the banquet fn recognition of the effl- |clont way in which the police have handled the traffic here during the that a milllon persons work in the |y ¢q noljee harracks will police the night In the vear, and| iy quring the absence of the city that morals are not a matter of the | yntroimen and a telephone will be clock, | placed at the table so that Chief of School authorifies point out that|police Charles A. Anderson may be school children are “getting the!ianched in an emergency. Robert wrong idea” of society, however, by |m, Hurley, superintendent of the | encouraging night club patrons go- (state police will deliver the principal ing home past the school houses at aadress and Mayor Frederick J. 8 o'clock in the morning. | Biclefield will extend greetings for Dacked by the churches, Mayor |the city government. ° It begins immediately to ‘take out the Inflammation and i reduce all Swelling. The first '\ 2pplication brings Great Relief. Stops Ttching Instantly and Quickly Relieves Irritation, s tests in cases of long standing have proved that PAZO omr?\?x‘p';‘fifi' can be depended upon with absolute certainty to Stop any case of Itching, Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles. | Recommended by Physicians and Druggists in United States and Foreign Countries, PAZO OINTMENT in tubes with Pile Pipe Attachment, 75c and in tin boxes 60c. The circular enclosed with each tube and box contains facts about Piles which everybody should know. PARIS MEDICINE CO., Beaumont and Pine Streets, St. Louls, Mo, Fonoe 1559 ~ GIFTS of LUGGAGE For her and for him. TFor short trips and long journeys— FITTED CASES KIT BAGS HAT BOXES DRESS SETS OVERNIGHT BAGS GLADSTONES WEEK-END CASES TRUNKS DRESS SETS TRAVELING BAGS VANITY CASES SUIT CASES SILK UMBRELLAS Drop in and look around LUGGAGE DEPARTMENT CONN. HAT CO. 6 R. R. 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