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10 NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JANUARY morning after the 7 o'clock mass and 7 o'clock. There will be an all- and in the evening after devotions| persed Chinese Mob day exposition of the Blessed Sacra- | Mass on Candlemas Day, Wednes. REF”EEES RE[ATE day, will be at 7 o'clock and blesse: | candles will be distributed following the morning servic HARR"WING TALES Throats wil be blessed Thursday e at o'clock. : : day will be the first Friday of | Woman Tells How Rain Dis- o monn srussca it ve ‘a ind holy hour in the evening 30 o'clock. Confessions will be S attle, £ |t Thursday afternoon and eve- who President G Wash., Jan. rived he on the liner it today told how a providential rain ended the rioting and pillaging at Hankow, where British concession was d recent ly in a flareup of Chinese national- ists. How she was ni husband and 11 three day bank buil 31 (- Dt wrd Fri und Al mass will | them at § o'clock Saturday morr St Joseph’s Church iversary mass will be morning at 8 rch for Confessions parish will t Ay mo u spec said \ soco ehrated ock at § s Saturday 1 with her roon -old son for hird floor of a British conces- «ion at Mankow while enraged Chinese revolutionists sacked the 3 k lowed by distribution She is en route with her son to the | oo ‘cin A home of Knoxville, Tenn., where she China’s interr The roaring of the mob was in- cessant,” she said. “They filled the Bund, the water front street in Hankow as far as we could see, Tm- prisoned as w re, we could look lown on the heads of the wob and it was not a pretty sight. Most of { the rioters ried no weapons ex-| The ers of the cpt long bamboo spikés on which rey fastened their Joot. To add to was the news that two a been killed by the m Curiously enough 1 ives fled when it be and that was how we got away lusband tried to escape once befor ! morning i St Lut was stopped by a Chinesc or's « h for the recovery of r at the entrance of the building. | the pastor, Rev. Charles Coppens, A rain storm left the streets nt illness, clear and we hurried on to a smal Japanese steamer Many American fled from Hankow to more pe (‘hinese citics with only a small por- tion of their belongings. Mrs. John Nichols the third refugee related. Tad been in Hankow several ears with her husband an American emp! but packed and left in 90 rioting started. e Co, her mother wrsday afternoon pastor of the church, . An anniv y mass for | id Thurs- e as| relatives in plans to stay until 1 dissension abat 7 o'clock followed by Devotions at follow- sing of ) o'clock in the blessing of the th Masses on Friday Con eveni society of Mary wil ur an E . Peter’s Church pillag nass of thanksgiving, of- members of t will be cele- U rece brated Fri It will be offercd by Mrs. N Mass on Wednesday will be at § Candles wiil be distributed ollowing * MAass. Mass on lay morning will be and got hurriedly aceful in th evening morn will be at § will be and eve- er belonging cs on Friday utes when {he intends to visit fessions mass of requiem lebrate a the church t morning at ock for the lat Rev nhart Bardeck. Announcement was made meeting of St. Anne's society will he held in of the Purification of | hall Tuesday afternoon n Mary will b o'clock. brated in the Catholic chur St. John's Church Wednesday of this week. There will be an anniversary known as Candlemas Day and il s of requiem at the church of ceremony of i the candle h zelist Thursday which arp use during services will | morning Han- be carried out in all the churches in nah McGuir 1his cit: Mass on Thur is the Sae t 5 blessed and the time-honored custom and 1 ributed follow- ceremony of blessing throats will be carried out in the morning mass and in the evening . speeial devotions. lin the morning at 7:45 o'clock and St Mar,\\ Chu in the evening following benedic- Danns of ma ge were published tion at 7:30 o'clock. i ‘rday for ! ¢, the first Friday of the thie first time between. Gearg th, mass will be said : ) and Mary Blanco. nd communion will be given at the church B i will be s follows: Tue: 1d in the evening 30 o'clock. morning at-7 o'clock, second anni- [ The Altar socicty will hold an versary for Bernard Clark; Thursday | important meeting in the parish morning at 7 o'cloc o Thursday evening at § o'clock. versary for Peter Scott and T S = day morning at 7:30 o'clock, month's | President of N. A. R. I. R. mind for James Scott. To S . e o Speak in Hartford Captain Dennis M. Malloy of Chi- — Mothel's, DO Thls— cago, national president of the American Association for the Rec- When the children cough, rub | ognition of the Irish Republic, will Musterole on their throats and|be the principal speaker at a mass chests. No telling how soon ' the | meeting of the Connecticut symptoms may develop Into croup, | of the order to be held at or worse. And then's when you're hall. Lauren Hartfor glad you have a jar of Musterole at | morrow evening. Charles I, hand to give prompt relicf. sell, formerly of the editorial st As first aid, Musterole is of the New York World, will also lent. Kecp a jar ready for hoth men dealing on the use. their It is the remedy for adults, conditions in Ir oat, bronchitis Malloy has stiff neck, figure in ti dache, conge L | in this country to umatism, lumbago, ' public rec back or joints, foe of the m\ frosted fect and colds of thé ch (it may prevent pneumonia.) vis declared the To Mothers: Republic ot Irela made in milder form for A large numbe babies and small child clty who are Ask for Children’s Musterole re plannir was e Week’s Activities in Catholic Churches special o'clock for 1dlemas feast of St. Blaz's Day, throat following § 2 ves chapter s street, speak, | sons for the existence of sociation and President prominent toa silitis, croup, movement icuralgia, aches of sore muscles, Musterole Is also of people In thi interested in the caus BITES OFF® MAN'S NOSE New Yor remark made by one guests at a party in the pres- women, Saul Fernandez bit nose. of his arrested f vlonious as- Pl!fcr than a mustard plaster time, ergy my entire vhnur 1t and er been lusively to xamination of eyes and the fitting ana making of glasses. devoted the sight examination, lens grinding and adjustment are included in a sin- ¢ moderate charge for my glasses FrankE. Goodwin EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 327 Main Street Phone We Understand Eyes 1905 course is taken from the stanc countancy. The S. Howe of the Ne; « tions bilities hitherto borne by the mission at School Advanced Class In Accountancy at Y: M. C. tudying at the evening. SO G A rd educational courses in ac- tor is Ralph Britain Machine . every Thursday ‘0. MILITARY EUNTRflL ENDS INGERMANY ad- Inter-Allied Commission With-| draws Today Berlin, Jan. 3 ter-allied the mii- withdrew commission for t control of Giermany from that country today sult of the beginning with Locarno, resurrection of friendliness and the antee of peace in Burope. he vemoval was accomplished without fifes or drums or German tears. The nationalists of* Germa for years characterized the tion, created to oversee many's compliance with Versailles disarmament, as ““a ssion entrusted with military series of conferences, for ihe Wilhelm Marx’s new first time to- agreement Chancellor cabinet met for the lay and approved the »d at Paris with respect to mament and the regu- problem of German stern fron- rman disa ation of the cations on the ea: allicd awaited league of n responsi- com- “Termination of ierman disarmament his approval. The will take over the only midnight tonight. HEARINGS ON BUDGET Board, l’uhll(' Commission and City mission to Explain Their Require- | ments, esentatives of mumittee, the public a mission and the city mission will be calle rd of financ 1d morrow night to explain their 1tes of expenses for the fiscal hall com- Lefore the meeting is t in which departme studied. At an ex- ning commit- items wher- and offer a 1op- first of four budgets will be ivisable to the board for 1e common coun- HEART KILLS CHILD Boston, 31— (UP)—While ng t * his Roxbury home, | i Edmunds, Jr © was pro- a vietim of a heart i destructive and eanses w loss of money value by with w fire replace the your property The Kenneth Tuttle Agy REAL ESTATE INSURANCE 259 Main St Phone 3663-2. .\|||u~< ments | Hall Com- taxation to- | (UP) — The In-| as a re- | sniffing | | university. control of | The bug- | | = A. Woodard, Frank B. Allen Englis Arno Schubert the class are George [ Me( homas K. Bradford, Willi Cowles, Gerald M. Fletcher, Walter land Donald Freen; R. Fletcher, H. Stewart Hanes, Rich- | All but English, Rau, rd Hulbert, | 0. Ludwig. Jr., and Walter Fletcher are Kenneth Freedell, Fred J, 8. Ens- | the above picture. Members of Linne b Krause, Richard Whitmor Woodard “NED" LEWIS 15 HONORED e WITH IMPDRTANT pOSTS " e L is is the son of Mr. and Lewis of 73 Harrison *d in the West- ‘,\m‘\ Mr. Tewis personnel was eng: partment of the York. Exccutive Secretary of National « n.n‘mlml l"‘uun(hlinn and ES‘ludeni Who 'I_iit' }Eil'l Lditor of Cathedral Age, ‘ Ordered From Ithaca BY Ithaca, N. Y., Jan. 31 (P—George (Washington Burea Washington, D. B. Herald.) | \y 31.—E who received his ning on the New . was today appointed v of the National in magistrate's court today to leave tion and cditor of | Ithaca before night falls. Tloyd was to have begun fomor- row a ten da il sentence for his offense, but his departure was agreed university student, convicted of slap- Adelyn Pitzell of another win Newell Lewls, first newspaper ping Miss New York, student, was ordered the Cathedral Age. This is the most impo tive position in the organization of the Episcopal church which is build- | upon as a compromise. 1 what will be the first American | Miss Pitzell, who Lloyd slapped cathedral, on M. Saint Albans on because she broke a dinner engage- the outskirts of Washington. ment with him, has completed her Mr. Lewis is a native of Connecti- | course at the university and has been cut, and after working on the New dus W Shel 0 (omer Britain Herald he received his | hon hachelor's degree in Hnw is to enter another universi- the Pulitzer Foundation of Columbia Later he was assistant city editor of the New York Tribune and its correspondent assigned to Roosevelt in the 1916 Hughes campaign. During the war he serve with distinetion in the : was decorated for gallantey under fire. Before coming fo the cathed house ant execu- journalism at D FROM FIRE Jan. 31. RESCU Worcester Two childr Lll\ persons today when fire broke out in a Main street tenement E@ES Y CreamJarina Those healthy youngsters who live on Heckers’ Cream Farina. Why shouldn’t they be healthy? For Farina makes an ideal diet. while their tiny bodies grow and OU can tell them usually. Babies digest it with ease, strengthen under the Lindly stimulous of its rich stores of encrgy-giving carbo- hydrulc& \d " Cream Farina Raised The Healthiest Baby in New York? SAVINGS BANK OF NEW BRITAIN Established 1862 Resources, $20,294,319.70 Deposits made on or before Thurs day, February 3rd, will draw inter- est from February Ist. 178 Main Street Open Monday 57 INTEREST being paid Evenings—7 to 8:30 shown in Lloyd of Philadelphia, Cornell | “ASK A MESHKEN CUSTOMER” 1896 IMESHKEN]| 1927 170 Main Street—New Britain 58 Church Street—Hartford Need a Fur Coat? Here's Good News MESHKEN’S 32nd Annual January Sale FUR COATS Continues Two More Weeks Our 32nd and greatest fur sale is drawing to a close. The response has been record break- ing. Again Meshken's fur leadership has been amply justified. We emphasize the fact that you CANNOT duplicate these values elsewhere---or your money back. We offer these typical values backed by the name of the best fumier in the city. g $80 Brown Caraculs . ussian ‘Pony and $1 and Australian Opossum $1 Hudson Seal . . 9 $195 and up Platinum Caracul Tailored coats, sport coats, formal coats with wrapped silhouette, all occasion coats. At these prices you can safely buy for 1928. The first year's storage is free. You can arrange your purchase on the dig- nified Meshken Budget Plan. “ASK A MESHKEN CUSTOMER” 1896 IMESHKEN] 1977 170 Main Street—New Britain 58 Church Street—Hartford