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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, TUESDAY, FOG CAUSES BAD RAIL ACCIDENTS | circus although aMicles of merchan- | LAST OF PICKETS Nine Hurt in New York—2§, TEOMINSTER SHop | Liners Are Delayed New York, Dec. 14 (P—A dense fog, rolling castward before a cold wave from the west, and blanketing the New York region in gloom, was blamed . today for two railroad dise were won at these places last | night. Prosecutor James C. Shannon and Assistant Prosecuting Attorney Clar- ence O. Lister reported that no com- | |plaints against any of last night's | laffairs had been received in their | department and no action would bo taken by them. HAS AN EXPLOSION LEAVING PASSAIC \Once Familiar Personages at| Mill Gates Disappear * Passaic, N. J., Dec. 14 (P—Drab picket lines of men who for ten |3 mnmm stood daily at the entrances the Textile Mills in this district | |salc Worsted company. |include many of the demands made DECEMBER 14, 1926. their leadership, meet representatives of W. A, an organization affiliated with the Ameri n .'ederation of Labor, declaring his mill had enough employes for operation. The Botany mill is in Passaic and th Garfleld mill in Garfictd. Both are controlled by the same firm. The settlement arranged was the same as that agreed to by the Pas- It did not | o still declined to he U, T |early in the strike. Among these were an increase in wages; allow- ance of time and one-half for over- time; return of money lost through wage cuts last year, and establish- | four how week. RE Survey Shows Host Rmericans New York, | possibly is more religious than Eng- lana, | religion | rest of I published in the questionnaire in this country and in nearly every| | case was somewhat higher than the | parts of same ratio In England. | In comparison to 89 per cent in| the country as a whole, only 68 per | cent of the residents of New York | believe In God. In like manner .| ity and t hile returns show per cent, of 2 " | much the residents of the entire country A ln elieve in the divinity of Jesus, only 16 Religious People ~ |=™ ver cent"or New vork resients {share that belief, and while 70 per cent of the country at large are ac-| tive church members this is true of | only 22 per cent of New Yorkers. tion-wide | | and i in religio) LIGION 15 NOT DISGARDED THIN tionnaire. r Dec. 14 (A—AmPrica first returns in a census indicate the th the Charles Stelzle, “the people | in their view | cepting su s pf the rger ¢ indifference wers to other quest questionnaire showed 80 gures indica ve the Bible an inspired works n differs grea 0 per cent regularly attend church { services; 79 per. cent would not want their family to grow up in.a churchless community; €7 pér cent send their children to schools for religious instruction, and 90 per cent believe religion in some form a necessary element of life for the individual and the community. “In the sou he «nd extremely orthodox very generally ac- doctrines as immortal- he divinity of Christ, and e small- But in returns show a toward reli- are middle west, fes the Between New South Wales and nd runs a fence 50 miles It was built to keep tick-ine cattie out of New South | 1ong. fested Wales. s in the per cent and exharted workers to joln their |Ment of e fort ranks, today disappeared from the vicinity of the Garfield and the | Hartford Woman KIHS | Botany Worsted mills, which, (ol-‘ Hexself Fears Blindness llowing the action a month ago o | the Passaic Worsted mills, has set- | Hartford, Dec. 14 UP—During an attack of melancholy due to fear of tled the s‘rike. 0 The settlement was announced at |l08In§ he- evesight, Mre. Geraldine | a meeting of the workers last night |3° \\:1')"- i e d" (" gt hroughout the city were put ouf of by Thoma, F. MeMahon, fterna- L: Withe, assistant director of pub- commission temporarily and dam- | tioaal vice-president of the United ic'(‘)r"“‘n"nv. ‘(v"om;“;"‘(‘mx As"‘idd:s‘;:”-:"fir ed belief in a “pergonal god.” Com- se estimated at $15,000 done early | Textile Workers of Amerlca. It was |SomPaDY: commited e at et | mentat all attention to the more this morning when a dryhouse at|effected through the efforts of a l'{om{ al‘ {fl »"'ifl""“m road, lm"‘h limited definition of the London the plant of the du Pont Viscolold committee of five citizens appointed |\t conccot my feine o ot through | 1SHonnalre Company, Inc., blew up. | at the suggestion of James Starr, in- h:: ;\:‘1‘ f m"hl”‘l’f":”;o’m' . h’-:r The Americarf questionn Arthur Pike, 61, was take to the tdrnat onal vice-president of the U. |por & iy e e out the Commercial Express, St. Louis | Leominster hospital suffering from | 7T, W, A. Wiihes mother. Mus. - Loulee 31, |Paign on religion by the church ad- to New York, ~derailing the front |head injuries and shock. He wa: The settlement between the work- | yoaccon of Boston, who e ising department of the Interna- truck of the Atlantic City locomo- | found unconscious in the yard near | org i iPasats Wortea il Fe L 10 V¢ nal Advertising association and | tive, and the rear truck of the last |the dryhouse runs and it is believed | was considers1 merely as an “ice Zicher AviTtad by 100 et e tian T car of the St. Louis train. | that in making his rounds as watch- | hreaker,” but yesterday's agreement | FALLS IN MERID! questionnaire is to be printed an- Mrs. Barbara Steinmetz, of St. he was in front of the bullding | affecting two of the largest mills, | Aoriden, Dec, 14— ard | Other k and the committer Louis, a passenger on the Commer- | when the explosion occurred and | which at peak times employ a total | A ShonE v e R O T | points out that the first returns arc cial Express, who was on her way to | was strusk by bricks. of 10,000 workers, was considered | org, was taken to the Meriden hos- | o rily conclusive. visit her daughter, Mrs. Elsie Beffa | Tt is'believed that the flre started | by leaders a real measurddot peace. me late last night atter svstalnlng | ¥ to the question “Do you| of Madison, N. J., was taken to the jin the engine room of a nearby| "Colonel Charles F. H. Johnson,|paintul injusics to his brak “hm e | believe in immortality?” brought Middlesex hospital where she was |building where fans are used folleaes president of the Botany con-|gjipped and fell on a st ng. | Lesponse of §5 per cent in the af- found to have several body bruises. | clear the It is thousht that as|cern, has long been consldered the |The extent of his injurle e ative, while this question Nathan Williams, ncgro pullman |the flames gained headway theY most re alcitrant of the mill officials. | termined by an Xoray examinat m“\m the London Daily News brought porter, was taken to St. Peter’s hos- | were parried out by the fans and at- | He hag repeatedly, refused to deal |tomorrow, 10,161 affirmative rs and pital for lacerations of the arm tacked the dryhouse. The explosion | with the strikers or the ground that | 17 nswers. Several other persons were slightly | resulted after tho building had he- | they were led by ~ommunists, When | READ HERALD CLAS 1" mo Sty o injury and after receiving treatment fi b IFIED ADS| belie to come filled with fumes from the |he alleged communists surrendered | HERACDIOUA-Stuh {Sizhelratlo et nelioriion continued their journey ‘on other | dying celluoid stock | trains. L explosion wrecked several Five persons were slightly injured, ers outside the build- two of them women, when a Wash- the lights throughout | ington-New York train of the Balti- ' the city to go out. After a short pe- more & Ohio rallroad was derailed riod the clty service was resumed | at Hopewell Junction, near Tren- | but no lights could be operated in | ton. Elght of the nine cars left the the plant and the night workers rails. Railroad men said the dense |were sent home. fog caused the enginecr to miss a signel and run into a derailment 30 000 Parrots Arrive A S switch. . Fifteen hundred persons aboard For Christmas Trade New York, Dec. 14 (P—The Pan- the municipal ferryboat Richmond were thrown into a panic when ama Mail steamship Ecuador ar- the boat, plying between rived yesterday with more than 30,- | Island and New York, collided off 000 furred and feathered pets for @he Statue of Liberty with the light- |the Christmas trade. | er Sagamore. Twenty-five feet of | Besides its 0 of some 4,000,- the ferry hoats port was 000 pounds of Colombian coffee, the smashed and the guard rail ripped lor hore 4,000 cases of rare away, but the boat docked safely and specigs of pets m‘v shEss ’;-_‘mm no one was injured. E A number of macaws and more than 70 monlke: country has gre | than has New Yor God. Eighty-nine per cent of 50,000 ‘rw:vlvm of 150 newspapers in 40 wve replied in a question- they Dbelieve in God a similar campaign fn Eng- land only 73 per cent of the readers of the London Daily News express er faith | wrecks, a collision of river craft, and Hiatilioe i5a the detention off New York harbor ot 3,500 passengers aboard in- coming ships, # Nine persons were injured in two railroad accidents in New Jersey last night, one a rear-end collision be- tween two express trains of the Pennsylvania railroad near New Brunswick and the other a der One Man Injured and Lighting Gircuit Broken ¥ naire { while i at Leominster, Mass., 14—P— | One man w red, lights DELIVERS THIS NEW METHOD, ALL-SOUND REPRODUCING SONORA TO YOU FOR CHRISTMAS a beautiful instrument in two-tone mahogany C.L.PIERCECo. 246 MAIN ST. OPP. MONUMENT ail ment of a Baltimore & Ohio railway train near Trenton. The second sectlon of the Atlantic City express, moving slowly through the gloom near Howe's Lane, ran into | ires were ! sent in connection with a cam- | pa were C Sonora $95.00 Other Models up to $275.00 See Us Early Abut These answ negativ side Bridgeport’s Wae Against Lottery Is Short-Lived Bridgeport, Dee. 14.—(P)— No nc- tion was y ay by local police in the drive drawings for prizes which are being conduct- ed by fraternal orders, theaters und churches and which commenced aturday night when the rlrl-‘.‘vn\p‘ for cash, prizes of $5,000 which was | to have been held by the Bridgeport Fi was postponjed after the ap- pearance of detectives. The police said that they had received no or- ders to make arrests at Poli's thoater “country store,” the IFourth district Democratic club, or the Tenth and Twelfth district Republican clubs engers who came travelers’ with *the birds | ind monkeys reported with com- | mendable restraint that at no time during the voyage had they heen un- aware of the presence of their co- voyagers. fellow FINE SILK UNDERTHINGS For Xmas Giving READ ;‘('m‘ “"',“ ‘"' ASAIRIHD ans is still the right word. Shop EARLY in the week EARLY in the day! It means much more satisfaction. oslon Stor _Qz/ lzz‘y Jerz/zce fld/ue -\ The Catholic their Christma cake sale Thu 16th, at Jud | invited. s Charity whist an afternoon, Dee. | 25 Public | —for your approval we are showing a of Silk Slips, dainty line $2.95 DOURT 0! PLI silk wool GIVE SIZ genuine radiunette HOSIERY, COME TO THE HEADQUARTERS KODAKS-ANSCO NDGIMPORTED CONTTESA-NETTELC CAMERAS NAP-SHOT AND AUTOGRAPII ALBUM ARCADE STUDIO with plain or scalloped bottom be ¢ Ho: nzing You will fory in to find every color that will surely pl price —several pretty styles in Silk Chemise and $2.95 Step-ins, priced low to Neckwear $1.15 . $2.50 50c to 95c Ty v encourage early shopping ull fashioned. —Imported Philippine Gowns, A wide and large hand em- $1.98 Gloves $1.98 to $3.95 broidered. assortment of pretty designs. R AR REAAT AT I."BE CLOTEING HOUSE ESTABLISHED 1886 —these have charm and are brand with 980 new, silk Jersey Chemise contrasting color trimming ... —Silk Jersey Bloomers, scalloped knee, the Most men know Hosiery 48¢c to $1.50 quantity is limited. Shop early and do not wait until these are all gone as they are & real bargain. $1.95 2 " $3.75 this Store for its quality, its style, vice and in- —these will keep you warm cn the cold nights 23 pro 1l give o1 identally its val- to come. Flannelette Gowns made of the cx appropr will give you cidentally its val $1.29 i Heatyigrads & happy so many names on flannel .. vour list ues. It's a Store Genuine kid g DOLLSand o 50(: erywhere you vears of customer 25 BRING THE CHILDREN TO TOYTOWN Handkerchiefs Siveaters $1.98 to $7.98 Windbreaker 1.79 to $3.98 caters to men's desires 365 IN TIME FOR CHRISTMAS! A Sale of Gift Handkerchiefs Ladies’ vear ough Swiss Embroidered Hand- $1.00 Ladles’ Pure Linen Handkerc . $1.00 —Tadies' kerchiefs, Ha cfs from !x land three in a box ... —Men's Initial Linen Ha kerchiefs; 6 in a box. Each OHS! ling faces! and eyes! hiefs - AH spark ! —Children's Novelty from Scotland. Dox of 3§ . vith wide lace edge, smiling what he wants. Havpi bound- 1 b trip for you e delighted the midst of all thes mas tc There's a realm of Their vivid imagina round every toy all of its own, ont abundant}, ed those t boy and g mak morn . OP! LOOK! LISTEN! Everything going full blast in Toyland. Bring vour kiddies here tomor- row. made in Germany. ed! oy- 1 watch And by the same in hrist- token is the logi- A Silk or Wool Rcbe—Luxurious Enough for a King A Rich Wool or Silk Robe, patterned with Oriental Brilliancy. It's just what a man wants for his Dres ing Room. He'll like the luxurious, restful feeling it gives him. Not very costly cither $5.00 .. $15.00 GLOBE CLOTHING HOUSE : COR. MAIN & WEST MAIN STREETS world chi apart—a ireams. ions Sur- sh . 01 et 'al Store to con- of Pearl, Amber, carat gold, hoxes. $6.98 .. $69.00 —Richard Hudnut, Denney & Den- ney, Mello Glo, Djer Kiss, Toilet Sets, Compacts, Tollet Water, Bath Salts and Dusting Powders, in fancy hoxes, 50c .. $10.00 with And they're, You'll discover provid 1 story —Mother sider his gifts. veaty, ilk lined LaRose -Manicure carat gold, boxes. $3.98 .. $8.98 —Military Sects, genuine ebony amber, three and four pieces. $2.98 ., $6.98 ~Atomizers, a complete line of col- eome are hand painted 89c . $4.98 Sets trimmed set in fancy with 22 set in fancy silk i so happy! also to we pleased how Herewith we pre- hav ngs fo make ev and 1 happy on Christ- sent only a few $1.00 to $3.45 Pajamas $1.29 to $1.98 suggestions worthy of con- sideration, ¥