New Britain Herald Newspaper, January 26, 1927, Page 2

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A WONDER E MARSAY Hazeloin Cream 25c Bot. The Dickinson Drug Company 169-171 MAIN STREET Y OUR PRESCRIPTION SERVICE Preferred by the leading medical men of the eity | and by thousands whol|| have found it unexcelled. ||| JOHN J. McBRIARTY | Cor. Church and Stanley streets Phone 1384, Businessmen’s Lunches 5 45¢, at- the PACKARD DRUG Roger’s Soda Stands Crowell's Packard Drug Store Drug Stoni w»w 5535505555558 085508. Watches for Graduation A Wrist Watch for the girl, and a fine Pocket Watch for the boy, make ideal graduation gifts which will be appreciated. Girl’s Wrist Watch Special $12 Boy's Elgin Watch Special $12 Other Watches up to $75 M. C. LE WITT | Jeweler and Diamond Dealer Up 1 Flight 209 Main St. | tainment NEW BRITAIN DAILY EHI. Fagan, William J. O'Brien, Chester A. Maben, John J. Story, Osear E. Johnson, Luther R. Cochrane. The 35th annual meeting of the Stanley Works Mutual Benefit as- sociation will be held Saturday eve- ning, February 5th, at 8 p. m,, in the Elks hall, Washington street, for the election of officers, and such other business as is proper to come before the meeting. This assoclation, one of the larg-| est of its kind in the country, was organized in 1892 by a few em- ployes who were desirous of provid- ing health insurance for them- selves, now numbers a membership of over 3200, and has a cash sur- plus of about $23,000. The year 1926 has proved one of the best in the association’s history. Receipts for dues and amounted to $19,876.76. BExpendi- tures for sick benefits were $14,- 421.34, and other miscellaneous ex- penses brought the total disburs ments to $15,823.07, leaving a bal- ance for the year of $4,063.69. The| balance on hand December 31, 1925, | was $18,924.56, making the balancc on hand December 31, 1926, $22 978.25. During the year 27 mem- bers were claimed by death, and two declared totally, disabled, for which group Insurance, totalling $20,700 was paid thelr beneficiaries. |pianay As is customary with the assoclation | Chiscls 2 an entertalnment will follow the|Bit Braces ... 42 1t 2 business meeting, and Chatrman |, Tho ierdmere, & Sl Plant ¥ Thomas J. Meskill, of the enter- Monday Night ‘committee, promises a G. very pleasing program. Following the entertainment and refreshments, dancing Wil be en- joyed, the music being furnished by |Bennette Eddle Wittstein'’s broadeasting or-| s chestra of New Haven. The pres-|Harts ent officers of the association are| High as follows: President, Walter Broad- ', ley; vice-president, John A. Moor secretary and treasurer, Ernest J. Millerick; directos Prank A. Myers, Arthur ortin, John L.| | Butcke Cadlllaca Auburns Packards Essex Nashs Hudsons Chrvalers : High =single string, The Stanley Works' Girls’ club will hold a bridge @party at Hotel Burritt, Friday evening, January 28.! This promises to be one of the most sucoessful soclal everts of the sea- | son. The personnel of the commit- tee is as follows: Gertrude Klein, k\"hnlrmun; Mrs. K. W. Clark, Mollle} | Dunn, Signe Kalberg, Veronica No, | ble, Stella Johnson, Ruth Thayer |and Tda Rizal. P. B. Stanley, vice-president, of Stanley Rule & Level plant, had a bad fall on the ice, while getting | out of his car, on Tuesday, January | 18, breaking & bone in his ankle. He | has been confined to the house for | | the past week. | | interest | Stanley Rule & Level team standings are: L. Pot, Farmers 51 18 33 singla siring, Oldershaw, Stones, three mring, Quenk, Farmers, team #ingle, Pritchards, S48, team single, Farmers, 1,516. Thursday Night Yewgue G W. L. High Tigh 5 10 3 Faticon, 134. High three string, Faticon!, 30, High team single, Cadillacs, 628 High team three, Dulcks, 1.432 “Girls' Bowlihg League | W, Thunderbolts Live Yers Vartety Paragons Big Shots Laf-a-lot Freshies Go-Getters Whiz Bangs Our Gang ... 32 Standing of B R. & L Bowling league, January A 500 kL 219 188 156 Girle’ Mary Burkarth Bob_ Rehuits Anabell Marley Peggy Burke M. Jamot . Rose Paul . Flo. Speck M. Hazard Bort. Dennly WALTER BROADLEY, PRES. W, Conrad - THO MEN KILED | MLLION BOLLAR INARKANSASRAID, BRIDGE.ADVISED Still Owmer Opens Fire as Sherilt| Lake Champlain Toll Structure Approaches Recommended Maine, Camden, Ark., Jan. 26 (®—Dep- Albany, N. Y, Jan. 28 UP—Con- OUR SCHOOI —Photo by Johnson & Peterson. MISS MARIE E. MAY Although Miss Marie E. May, in- structor ot English at the Sentor High for a comparatively short time, she ?has had unusual Success and her every great responsibility. school, has been a teacher position has been one of was principal of Freedom, acal She WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 26, 1927, FOR INDI 25¢ and 75¢ Pkg's. Sold Everywhera ———pes principal of Mattawanikeag, Maine, High school for one yedr, first &s. sistant principal in -Danforth, Maine. High school for four years #nd Bnoglish instructor in ‘Washbiirn, Maine, High school and Keene, N. H., High school for abolt two and a halt years. She resinged from her ldst position to take the Senfor High school appointmeént in this city. Miss May has studied and frav- cled abroad. This, with the knowl- edge she had gained in study at the public high school of Tsland Falls, Maine, and the University of Maine, have been meaps of fitting her for later successes. . MISS BAUER VERY ILL, | Chicago, Jan. 26 (UP)—Miés Sybfl Bauer, reported still in a dangerous condition today. Miss Bauer was operated on and was believed recovering until this week. B. C. PORTER SONS NEW BRITAIN MENIGAN GOV, 1 EXPLAINING STAND does doto Detals on New Oil Lad Law Mexico Oity, Yhn. 28 UP—Consid- erihg that public épinfon not knéw- ing the antecedents of the case, might have been ‘surprited by‘the statement thit certdin ofl ‘compahies were 180Kihg upon the cancellhtibn of thélr drilling permits as an Act bt confiscatory character, the depdrt. melt of industry and ‘commterce says it belljeves itselt duty bound “to ex- plain the truth.” The ohly interprétation open for the oil compahies’ statement, the de- partment explained last night, is that it was inspired by passion or malevolence. All &rilling permitstas well a8 permits for the exploitatfon ot ‘ol wells up to December 8% it was ndded, were granted in “abo- lutely precarious” form and, were of a provisional, Tevocable chardc- ter, it being specifically stated in them that they would be subjected to the new petroleum law once it was enforced. ki It the companies benetitting by acceptance of such permits under- stood they were subject to the new law, then, the department's statc- 027 THE BIG metit cobtlnued, the exectuive thréugh the department of indurtry Wa3 justly entitled to revoke per- mits in cases wheré confirmatory ‘coricessions wers hot applied for, whether or not drilling work was started. Thus, it was explained, if the per- rhits Were absolutely cohditional, no right could have been created for the beneficlaries mitich less when the condition® stipulated were not complied with. Hewever, in spits of the fact that the legal situation of the case has been moditled, the compatiles faving been ‘‘cofifigned” by thé attérney gentral tb tribunals and the matter at present 18 outside the sphers of the départment of ‘- dubtry—the statémeént contifiited, “fe Have not impeded or obstructed tHe exploitation of Wells or the work at those being drilled. “With a view tb saving the rebel- Hlous companfes from serious 1oks ot work,” the statement concluded, they havé been allowed to proceed in weils thé permits of which have ‘been withdrawn. 'Thus, it can be seén the situation of the rebellious cofpatiies 18 o longer withih the Jubisdiction of the federal exécutive, but in the hands of the courts. This aspartment therefote 18 incapable of adjuisting the matter of petmits un- {il the courts say their Hnal word.” C‘fi May Police Certain 1ssClark Wast’t Slain Cape May, N. J, Jan, 26 UP—The coroner's jury having decided that Mik§ Mary 8. Clark, wealthy Pitts- burgh woman whose frozen body was found on the beach here Janu- afy 15, was murdered, police today started thelr investigation anew in an effért to Solve the mystery. Many persons, including the sta police had held the theory that death was due to hatural causes. After etamining a number of Wit- nesses, who traced Miss Clark's movéments from the time she lert Camden until her arrival here the nlght before her body was found, and the two physicians wWho per- formed the autopsy, the coroner’s jury last night returned a verdict that the woman had met her death “by strangulation by being forcibly held face down on the beach by person or persons unknown.” The two physiclans testified that they had found more than two ta- blespoonsfuls of beach sand in the woman's larynx and trachea, and in the tubés of the lungs. All in- ternal organs were in normal and healthy condition and mo poisons or other foreign substances were found in the stomach. Y NINE SAVED FROM FIRE Boston, Jan. 26 (UP)—Nine persons weére rescied here early today Wwhen fire; believed of incendiary orlgin, stafted in a three-story bullding on Tremont street, Sergt. John McArdle of the traf fic squad, who discovered the fire, aroused tenants. Two children of Walter P, Wells were cdrried out by the policeman, and Mrs. Wells was rescued by her husband. Five other persons were assisted to safety, B. C. PORTER SONS NEW BRITAIN | MID-WINTER FURNITURE SALE 1 GENUINE REDUCTIONS AND STILL GET JUST WHAT YOU WANT AT PORTER’S SALE DINING ROOM SUITES ‘AT PORTER’S SALE BEDROOM SUITES WHERE YOU CAN ACTUALLY SAVE 10% TO 50% BECAUSE OF OUR uty Sherlft Zach Horton, and Paul | Stanley are dead and Sheriff Arthur Ellis, Jack Lewis, a member of his party, and F. D. Derring, of Louann, | a bystander, are slightly wounded as REDUCED to $144.00 $179.00 $194.00 §229.00 HERE ARE JUST A FEW OF THE OUTSTANDIN VALUES AT |struction of a vehicular bridge across Lake Champlaih from Fort | Frederick to Chimney Point, Ver- mont, at & eost of $1,000,000 was recommended in the concluding re- : |port of a special commission named the result of a gun fight at Miller's |to epnsider the feasibility of such a Bluff, 20 miles south of here on the | project, which was submitted to the Oyachita river, last night. | legislature today. A companion re- Derring and Tom Smith of Smack- | port will be submitted to the Ver- over, who were among four meh and | mont legislature. A bill earrying two women held as witnesses, said | out the recommendations will be of- that Stanley lay in wait for the offi- | fered in both legislatures next week. cers behind his tent and fired point It was recommended that the blank at Deputy Sheriff Horton as | structure be bullt by the sfate af- the sheriff's men approached the en- | fected, 60 per cent of the coat or trance. | 8600,000 being borne by New York Deputy Sheriff B. M. Milner, who |and 40 per cent or $400,000 by Ver- escaped unhurt, fired five pistol shots | mont. It was estimated that by at Stanley and killed him ¢'most in- | charging tolls of onc dollar for each stantly. Horton'’s arm was flown off |automobile using the structure, that and he was wounded in the stom- [$50,000 a year would he collected. ach. He died in an automobile as at- | That money would be used to pay tendants neared Camden. oft the bonds fssued by the state and The officers went to the tent to lo- | when the debt is cleared the struc- cate a still or a liquor cache, they |ture would be thrown open without said. Deputy Sheriff Milner said he |charge. saw “three or four bottles.” A commission should be created, Mrs. Stanley and her 20 |the report said, with full authority daughter lived in a tent {from both statés to provide for the Stanle construction and financing of the Wholesale and Retail Depart. | Scveral men were in Stanley's tent, |Pridge, which would be the only ment in Connection. |including Deering and_ Smith. No |Structure across Laks Champlain THE HONISS [ i Hos oo ant™ e ™ s 35045 OYSTER HOUSE | Millers Bluff, once an old river |they should finance the bridge, it 22 State St. Under Grant's settlement, {8 characterized by of- | ¥a8 recommended that it be done by HARTFORL i % BOWLING LEAGUE OPENS REDUCED to $95.00 $149.00 $224.00 PORTER’S LIVING ROOM SUITES are well made even at T.C.Smith Sons Tel. 1799 or 202 “WHEN IN HARTFORD DINE WITH US.” Everything we serve is the very best, If you don’t believe it come in for a test. vear old next to |agreement containing a récapture clause, such as that which per- mitted the construction of the Bear mountain bridge across the Hudson river. It was claimed the bridge would be a gateway for east and west traf- fle through the scenic regions of w York and Vermont on the di- anada route by ficers as “an old field rendezyous,” | Private corporation under an North & Judd Pin Topplers Hold DRIVE YOURSELF— EW CARS TO R 250 an hour—10c. & mile. Speeial rates for long trips. AUTO RENTING 00. Seymour nnd Klm Phone 3981-2 Day and Night Service CROWLEY BROS, INC PAINTERS AND DECORATORS Estimates Cheerfully Given on Forth at Casino Alleys In Excit- ing Matches, North & Judd oper (ing season last night A up its bowl ot [alleys on Chureh streot with four : 7 |teams in the league and juaging | iichigan City. Ind, Jan. 26 (UP) {trom the enthusiasm shown, at least |~ L1F¢¢ men on the small tug Im- T soht s e , held by an lce jam about 10 Sehrlelint Soset Mait. ahies s off shore in Lake Michigan, [ plant have been very nmsuccesstul in | Were being cared for today with their bowling leagues in the past for | Provisions dropped by airplanes, somie unknown reason, but those o | DAet MEht Bllot 3, ¢, Litle, « commercial aviator, flaw over the Al Jobs — Tel 2918 charge believe that the problem has been solved, tug and dropped bread, cheese, meat nd blankets. The impriconed men 267 Chapman Street "7} oo waved back they were in good ghape, {be found in the ‘un\n. The men held on the tug are | S — Frank Jentzen, Harvey Freyer and ‘ Joe Van Kirk. { PORTER’S SALE Sefig“}::n.d Tables, o ‘$4.v5 $1.50 Oval Rugs, Now ... Poneat wow ... $29™ Ped Now - $29™ Fanty. Now ... S42%° M resr. now ... $68" Matis, Now oo SOD Mo, Now ... 834" SZ;\'::;‘G'Eplne! Desk. slg.sn $47.50 Colonlal b Desk. Now WHITTALL RUGS Reduced 209, ALL REFRIGERATORS Reduced 25% Practically Everything Reduced 10% to 509, league play will ular bowling col- MATCH | Rogers bil- | GREGOR WI) Gregor, representin liard parlors in champion- |ship pocket billiard tournament, beat | Deno of Mertden in the Stlver City last night by the score of 100 to 87, regor’'s form seems to indicate that |he will finish in thet money. Gregor will meet “Packy” Hanlon of Hart- ford at Rogers rooms tomorrow night. INJURIES PROVE FATAL Willimantie, Jan. Tingley, 83, of Windham, died in 8t Joseph's hospital today from injuries | received yesterday when felling a tres on his land. He and Andrus | Mosley had cut away a tree for ita fall and when 1t cama down ft bounded back and caught Tingl Frank E. Goodwin EYESIGHT SPECIALIST Tel. 1905 READ HERALD CLASSIFTED ADS FOR YOUR WANIS r

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