New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1927, Page 2

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JOHN A. MOORE t the 35th annual meeting of t ley Works Mutual Benefit asso- | dustrial league by defeating the New |School of this city she has studied at ciation which was held at the Elks hall last Saturday even: 5, John A. Moore wa tdent. Mr. Moore has always # keen interest in the Mutual Be fit association having served as i vice-president for two terms. He has been employed at the Stanley Works for the p s. At present he Is in charge of the piece work department. Other officers elec! at the meet- ing were: Vice-pre , W. 8. War- ner; secretary-tre: # Mil- lerick; directors, F. Ar- thur E. Fortin, William J. O'Brien, Walter Broadley. After the business meeting the committes furnished a pleasing en- tertainment consisting of several acts of vaudeville. Wittstein’s Col- leglate orchestra of New Haven furnished the music for dancing. George W. Gauer, foreman in one ©f the butt departments at the hard- teel plant completed e with the company on ¥ebruary 5. In recognition of continuous service he was presentc with a gold watch by the company. The presentation speech was made by Vice-President Walter H. Hart in the presence of a number of his a sociate foremen. Mr. Gauer also be- came a member of the Stanley Quar- ter Century club and was welcomed into that organi: dent, T. L. Weed. John F. Connors, formerly em- ployed at the steel plant has been made superintendent of the stecl di- vision at the Stamping plant. Catherine Robinson @ivision will leave the employ next I 3 hospital to tra Her positi of the steel comp: will be taken ployes who have ice with the nted with Dad- following en ed ten years' s v have been pr: . W. Pelton sailed February a Mediterrancan cruise, from New York on the Hol- Jand-America 8. “Rotterdam.” After touching at Madeira, they will d in Spain to spend four days in & le and Granada. Their next stop will be Algiers and five days will be given to a trip by rafl back to Biskra, a large oasis inthe desert, and on to Tunis, where thiey again join the boat. ‘They will spend two days each in ‘Athens, Constantinople, and the Holy Land, and then 10 days in Egypt, including a trip by steamer Dole and back last spring, will b | up the Nile and a visit to the tombs of kings. then to Velbert, a little town near | Dusseldorf "in Germany, where Mr. Pelt will spend two weeks at the arley Works' plant. 3 From Velbert they will go to Hol- land and sail for home on April 26 ter' Thorp, employed in de- nt 18, was presented a gold heand a 25 year service pin on ruary 1. P. B. Stanley, vice- ident, made the presentation nd, with J. M. Burdick, general . and C. L. Benedict, ntury club secretary, ex- tended congratulations on his years of service, and his becoming a mem- cr of the Quarter Century club. Peter Buczko who came to work for the Rule and Level plant, Feb- ruary 3, 1917, was presented with a gold ten year service pin on the tenth anniversary of his entrance, FFebruary 3. J. M. Burdick, general superintendent, presented the #pin. Peter works in Department 15, . The Stanley Rule & Level girls’ asketball team opened up the In- Britain Machine girls in a very ex- citing game. The score belng 10 to The team as a group worked won- derfully well together and with a lit- tle more practice they hope to even excel their previous exhibition, | Their uniforms are indeed quite nappy, being of the same color |scheme as the men's team. Many de- | partments were 100 per cent in at- tendance and next week's game will be just as exciting when the team plays the Corbin Screw girls. Miss Nan McKeon of the §. R. | L. bookkeeping department s rest- |ing comfortably after undergoing an operation, Plans are well under way for a |Joint bowling banquet and theater party to be held in Hartford, Febru- | Committee in charge: |ary 24th. | Burkarth 1 Bob Miss Mary “Sc)mliz | he ana ling ot tion by the presi- | ' American Tube & ! 'BYRD WILL ATTEMPT 10 U NONSTOP FLGHT | Conqueror of North Pole Plans to | Try New York to Paris Hop | In Spring. New York, _‘eb. 9 (P—Comman- der Richard Evelyn Byrd, air con- queror of the north pole, will com- pete this spring for the $25,000 prize | offered by Raymond Orteig for the first non-stop flight between New York and Paris, the New York Times S today. loyd Bennett, naval aviation ma- {chinist and Byrd’s pilot when he flew from Spitzbergen to the north with Byrd in his new undertaking. Lieutenant Bernt Balchen of the MISS HELEN N. WOLSKL | Miss Helen N. Wolski, & native of | this city, has had all her teaching | experience In New Britain at the | | juntor and senior high schools. Beginning with her education in | the public elementary and high | Mount Holyoke college, where she | recetved an A. B. degree and at | Columbia university from which she | will receive an M. A. degree this | year. { |, Entering the service fn 1021 sh has been an English teacher In the Central and Junior high school since | then, ‘Guard Against ‘Flu’ . With Musterole Influenza, Grippe and Pneumonia | usually start with a cold. The mo- ment you get those warning aches rub on good old Musterole. | Musterole relicves tlie congestion and stimulates circulation. It has all the good qualities of the old-fash- |foned mustard plaster without the blister. | First you feel a warm tingle as the healing ointment penetrates the pores, then a soothing, cooling sen sation and quick relief, Have Mus terole ndy for emergency use, may prevent serious illness. To Mothers: Musterole is also made in milder form for babies and small children. Ask for Chifren’s Musterole. 'Varicose Veins Reduced or Money | Back, Says Falr | Simple Home Treatment That Is Giving Amazing Results | 'The world progresses. Today all- | ments that took wecks to treat can I now be ended in a few days. If you have varicose veins or bunches you can start today to bring them back | to normal size, and if you are wise you will do so. get an original bottle of merald Ofl at any dispens- s pharmacist and apply it night and morning to the enlarged veins. | Tt is very powerful and penetrating, | and only a little is required. | After a few days' treatment the veins will begin to grow smaller and NOVELIST'S WIFE ‘Wilson, their two children in a suit fow di- vorce on file here today. Mrs. Wilson is seeking the tody of the children, Harry Leon, Jr., 13, and Helen, You can see that in his attire. He is dressed in the same high peak of fash- appointment of a receiver pending a community property settlement. She charges that her husband concealed community assets when separation a year ago. ed $50,000 as her share on her hus- Harry Leon Wilson Sued AlS0 mevaiey properts was worth sion01. Jor Estate Acconnting Los Angeles, Feb. 9 (® — Harry Leon Wilson, In seeking a new property settle- ment Mrs. Wilson says Wilson's Monterey county estate alone is worth $100,000 and that her husband has an income of $100,000 a year |from his profession in addition to novellst, short story|.,niracts for royalties from plays writer and humorist, is charged with |and novels valued at $100,000, be- having deserted his wife, Helen Cook |sides owning stocks and bonds worth and falling to provide for |$30,000. Mrs. Wilson declares that her hus- band is now in Oregon and is about cus- |to dispose of his properties. The Wilsons were married in San temporary | Francisco, June 13, 1912, and sepa- alimony of $500 a month and the rated February 1, 1926. LIBERALS DRIVEN have had 150 of their men killed in the Chinandega region. The number dega, Key Position fighting between the liberals |days ago. who hear that the railroad station is in the possession of their troops. The conservatives, who are fight- ing for the cause of President Diaz, of killed in the liberal ranks, sup- porting President Sacasa, is not known. Forty-seven wounded of the Conservatives Regain CRINAD- | conservative army rencnea Mansaus last night. They bear wounds from |machettes, bullets and clubs. Earlier reports from Chinandega which is situated 60 miles from Man- Managua, Nicaragua, Reb. 9 (P)— |agua, were that the liberals had en- Chinandega, an important key posi- tion between Corinto and Managua, |the conservatives. and the scene of much hand-to-hand | placed four machine guns in the and | towers of Calvario church. |conservative forces, is again-reported ative headquarters {trenched i1 the center of the town | whereby they were able to hold off The liberals had Conserv- here, however, to have been regained by the con-|announced that General Diego Var- servatives, who were forced to re-|gas, was attacking from the south- |tire from a part of the town several |eastern part of the town with several | The report s made pub-|hundred men and that a further 350 lic by the conservative authorities, men had been despatched from Que- zalquaque, not far from Chinand:za. President Diaz learned of a ru- imnr that Ricardo Lopéz Callejos, his prime minister, had been killed by the liberals in Chinandega; there was cdnfirmation of a report that the Callejos home had been burned. Managua is under nilitary rule, Ihotels and cafes being closed at o'clock last night, at which time {cabs and vehiclea disappeared ‘rom |the streets. Among those conscript- ed by the conservatives for services | with their armies are many carpen- ters who have been assigned to build barracks for the soldiers. The pie- {dominance ¢/ women in Mana;.a is noticeable, most of the men whe are not serving in the army have been organized into a home guard and are doing picket duty on the outskirts of the city Four flags have flown over the |state of Florida, those of England, | France, Spain and the United States Spring Has Come After a short stop in Venice and |Norwegian navy will probably he a | by regular use will soon reduce to Naples they will land in southern member of the tr Atlantic crew. | o o) 2 & France and leave the cruise. They | vA l‘fl;i‘lx"r monoplane of the Jose- [ gy s mrmarala Ol will go to Paris for two weeks and | Phine Ford type ,in which Byrd arve 1 [Teached the top of the world, pyt | Marvelous healing agent. ion, the same refined point of style, reached by those New Britain men who is also a One ap- plication for instance stops the itch- At The “Handy Hardware” Store -H. L. MILLS 836 MAIN ST. Howie Comring WEATHERSTRIP v to Apply. Simply Tack On Will last for years. 8¢ Foot, price includes tacks. Flexible and fills up the crack % Wfi‘%‘@‘?@?'f"‘@’f'fi‘@’f@"%"“?"“ Businessmen’s Lunches 15¢, at the PACKARD DRUG Roger’s Soda Stands Crowell's Packard Drug Store HHLOHI L 5L L9 4 PPPIPTOTPCPPTEOE Drug Store $ |larger, is now being bullt for the fiver. Tt will be driven by three ght whirlwind engines horsepower each. It is believed the start will be made late May or carly June. The |plane will have a radius of at least 4,000 miles, providing a fair factor of safety in the 3,600 mile trip from New York to Paris. One third of the distance will be over land. apt. Rene Fonck, the French ace ho was pilot of the Sikorsky plane Y it crashed and burned at fleld, Long Island, last fall, of 225 ing of eczema, and a few applica- tions cause the eruptions to dry up, ale off and completely disappear. It is equally as effective In barber's |iteh, salt rheum, redness and in- | flanfmatory skin trouble, | People who want to reduce vari- yesterday visited Mags Spring display at the Burritt Hotel. It's still on—showing under the best cosmopolitan conditions our newly received cose veins, or get rid of eczema, ul-. | cers, or piles in a few days should not hesitate to get a bottle at once. It is so powerful that a small bottle lasts a long time. Any pharmacy can supply vou. Fair Drug Dept. sells lotg of it. | ng off on a trip to T‘.’\rii.‘ and Lieut. Commander Noel Da 3 officer in charge of naval reserve activities of the navy department, jaxe reported to be contemplating en- It : race. nett, says the Times, has heen | granted six months’ leave of absence {by the navy department. Comman- d on the records [r!vr Byrd is carr |of the department as a retired officer duty, although he 1ded leave of ab- |Heavy Snowstorms Cause | 35 Deaths in Japan Feb. 9 (UP)—Heavy snows 1 at ches said to- priest and four others i when the under the now on the roof, marooned | ring in Use Cop’s Whistle fo Stop Car, Rob Driver Mass Feo, 9 (UP) Us- icer's whistle, three | On Every | Continent | QNevery conti every country | to the r r corners of the earth—Beecham's gentle laxative pills have®een famous for nearly 100 years, Only merit has made them win such great fame—f{or nearly 100 years count- less substitutes have been offered. But fadsand fancies pass—Beecham's Pills grow in popularity. These remark. able pills offer quick, positive relief from constipation and resultant biliousness, sick headache and indigestion. B: m'’s Pills scientifically cleanse the bowels of poisonous substances 1z them from the syst / protecting you from the count- which result from clogged in es. For sale at drug stores every- where. 25¢ and s0¢. obile on | v ghortly 1 the driver | after hearing the whistle | Interpreted as a police signal, BEECHAM'’S PILLS DENTIST Dr. A. B. Johnson, D.D.S. Dr. T. R. Johnson, D.D.S. X-RAY, GAS and OXYGEN ADLER - ROCHESTER CLOTHES Drop in today. Inspect this array. Convince yourself that here, in New Britain too, you can buy the same quality, the same fabrics, the same style found in the finest shops in America. ~.E MAG &ESONs EAST MAIN AT KNOX HATS SEASONAL HABERDASHERY MAIN EAST Collegiate Sport Shoppe You Can Come as Late as Ten o'Clock Tonight MAIN AT MAIN I

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