New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 7, 1927, Page 6

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EPIDEMIG THREAT FAGES WHOLE TOWN People of Unalaska Likely to Be Wiped Out [wave 1engths are avaitable for good ing at present. Canada six exclusively and shares 12 United States, leaving 177 e American expected Mexico fight for exc nferen and Cuba isive wave | ¢ and C i to ask or 12 ad wave lengths. It | ea for this num to sider | & conference ! in a FIREEN RESCUE BOY WHO FELL INTO SEWER Shovels Was hundred ment of of Alaska 1 tion 1 sweep Rapid Work With Saves quarters 1 The c Small Child In Portland, was st in ans The Nor Maine, ot TR Tommy | playing in his | et late vester- | y. One of | William | cries h of an eight- dicular- dropped feet | Jothes rolled was three wedging | abovo the from t} only station rest of the w commun mann 1 by 1t by the called | caxes, crow- | minutes they m the eans of in upon it BAGGISH RETURNING Convalescing From His Violent Men- TRIAL MOST SPEEDY tal Tines, Young tn Attorney Route to New York from West. 7 (F)—Som a violent menta what Hartford, Oct Tecovered from Bess during which he w unahle his father, Benjamin the young attorney gust 31 and \ western eity ew York et he will undergo a me lon to determine whet t to return to h to 0 Gets 30 Years at Hard Labor n 3 Less Than 24 Hours After At- RSt tack on 16 Year Old Girl on his train wh tal exanii er he here, er-in- Mr. learned from Be 7 ftar he Jordan Morrison, 2 as on his way to today to se 30 labor for attacking 16 Monerif it citizens, aroused brutal attack on Ros r Woodl would t ir own hands, coun well-known * s o limit. It was one of the most Iy cases ever tried in Cumberland county. The =irl had just taken lunch to her father, employe at the city 1sphalt plant and wag returning to her =0 Irving avenye, this city, when Morrison approached her it a lonely point in the rallroad Oct. 7 (P)—Less had commit- | hor Z broth A d id he has not et Baggish disappeared nsonhurt, L. I, but it is his opinion Le was probably rled away and drugged by “persons fterested in hay him removed." Baggish 1s heing escorted to New York by Nathan Baggis) Federal Radio Board To Talk Wave Lengths Washington, Oct. 7 (UP)—The Federal mmission will con- fer with « Mexi- co and C over division longths in t ern hem- isphere, it was announced today Experts have decided that only 95 ov t o n law into th ficials pus justice 1h car- fathe trac Despite her pleas, the negro tore the girl's clothing and beat hery Aft- rward she ran to her mother, who otitied the police. o We Ave the Sole Distributors of GOTHAM SILK HOSIERY in New Britain COIOI’S: BYO\\'H Nfl\'\’ Blar I‘Z Sizes Our dress buyer has just returned chase a _[arge assortment of new dresses. 1 care- | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1 Leader of Russian Church Choir Sings Many Operas Without Book ' | | 927. condition, 1 the and and expan- along in his sick while strugging death he walked across sive Baikal lake After the war he went to Harbin, China. His talent as an opera singer became known and he was invited to join the T where he great su His success in the mus between g three scasons with world | did not alter his plan to co study of chem and for t United States Seattle, la Serebrennikoff plans w Britain as a choir leader until such time o can complete s edueation, whereupon he will return to his native Itussia as an instruetor. Reception for Mother Of Pastor R. N. Gilman Following its regular meeting yes- he Ladies’ Aid so- ley Memorial church d a reception in of the pastor’s mother, Mrs. G. L. Gilman of Mission Hill, S. D. About 60 ladies were present. In the receive row honor | E. A. SEREBRENNIKOFF | A. Serebrennikof?, leader of the , perial soclety where his talents were choir of the Russian OrthodoX soon realized and he was awarded a church here elaims to hold a posi- "0 tion unique in the musical world in ;IV'],‘;'S?”””’ entitling him to further that he can sing 45 operas without { In 1316 his opportunity to con- a book. i an artist, but a soldier of note, hav- |, € ("0 B wu"m”‘od“ l‘y":o ‘:“:: g h(.')n anfofcergin ’h g Liussian army I/F ll'nm‘mlsslf‘nrd fll:‘ army in its campaigns in Siberi ficer. At the conclusion of the war | decade ago, end again in 1919 w Halentars iR T el g ic entered Ruesian opera where he the now famous 5,000 mile trek |waq at opce acclaimed as a leade through the icy wastes of Siberia in his field. Tn 1919 when the Rus. was successfully undertaken el e BT Since early childhood Sercbrenni- ;gain called to the Russian colors. koff has been a talented singer. He | Hig voice was threatened the follow. was born in Siberia, the son of 2 ling year when his detachment joined | clergyman who had hopcd to have the division of the Russian forces his son join the clergy. After re- ' Gespatched 5000 miles through | ceiving ccclesiastical training in a snow and sleet across Siberia. | seminary, he joined unjversity of Kazan and at the same’|the great hike, Serebrennikoft was time enrolled for further musical |given his choice of dropping behind, | education with the Russian lm-‘\.roblbly to perish, or continuing Materials: Velvets Satins Crepes Satin Combinations Jerseys from New York where she was able to pur- In this beautiful selection you will find the leading styles, colors and materials at our two moderate prices of $10 and $15. recipient of seve | school has becn ing line were Mrs. Arthur H. Petts, he Mrs. Arthur H. Knapp, the tor's father, pastor, Rev A buffet h and Mrs. Albert W n of the re ired. The table decorations ellow and whits Petts presented Mrs. Gilman with an electric percolator from the Mrs. Gilman was also the Al individual gifts. group was taken Mrs. A picture of the by the pastor. CENTRAL JR. I S. NOTI The ninth grade of the Central Junior high school met in the audi- torium yesterday afternoon. The program, which was arranged by Mrs. Babcock was unusually inter- It consisted of motion ple- developed by the home and school sisted of Col. Lindk New York, Hopi Indian life Canyon of Colorado, and the tional cowboy rodeo at Chicago The school paper club of the turnishing the pu- pils interested in the world series games with information during the passing of classes by posting bulle- tins of the scores in the hall and will continue to do so as long as th games are played. MUST SIT PROPERLY Washington, Oect. 7 (UP)—Mrs, Ross M. Keller and with her all women of Washington, today lost t)e right to'sit im public parks in Le pictures con- 's arrival in na- lany manner pleasing to themselves it at all circumspect Hereafter they m in such a way that sit, the Jmperial [Seized with typhoid fever while en |men sitting opposite them will not | bar stare at them in a way the to attract Tlat Sale Off the Face Models Chic Vagabond Styles opera in the Orient | attention of equally circumspect | DIPLOATIC BREAK LOOMS INBELGRADE General B 7 The J teen 5, Jugoslavia, Oct oslav minister to Sof 1 to inform the Bul- government that un t measures taken to dis. band Bulgarian' groups oper in Macedonia, the Jugoslav govern- ment h con t o re- call h nd to break off A has authoriz irian re ) diy " Jmatic protest over the activities of irian Comitadjis, or irre me as ilt of the ition yesterday of Brig General Michael Kova one best known ofticers in the Jugoslav army at Istip, the 1z attributed to Coniitadjis. lie Serbian-Bulgarian-Macedon- ian frontier has been closed by Jugo- slav rment troops and gen- ho arc halting all traffic insit in Macedonia, un- martial law measures taken csult of the assassination Addvices received in Belgrade this afternoon said that a band of Bul- Comitadiis, attacked the donian frontier village of carly this morning, throwing nine bombs . government huildings later fighting the gendarmes 1 riflos and hand grenades. king party, the advices ally was repelled after a attle lasting from one o'clock this morning until dgybreak. The casualties were not given in the message e a res of the crime gov irian Klisura The territory of M livided slav acedonia, now ¢ and Jugo- been a source of Balkans, between long fon in the cedonia clves to the division of the district between and Jugo- slavia after the World war. Forces of Bulgarian irregulars known as Comitadjis, alleged times to be in the pay of Macedon cxiles, have made numerous raids along the borders of Bulgaria's (1 immediate neighbors, Jugoslavia, Rumania and Greeee, The Bulgarian government has consistently disclaimed any conne tion with these irregulars and h asserted that it was doing everything I possible to compel these *Ma donian revolutionar ' to 2 ies likely to create hostility be- Sulgaria and her neighbors. DECKHAND SUCCUMBS Stamford, Conn.,, Oct. 7 (UP)— Thomas Savage, 54, of Norfolk, Va., {who fell into West Harbor yester- day while attempting to board the ge Alleghany, died in a hospital today from the e t the nt. He was employed as a “hum! on the barge. grave s never an cea tween Altermath of Assassination of Ve Bul- | reconcil- | VANDALS THROW ACID ON FACTORY SUPPLIES Damage to Shirt Company In Derby | Lxpected to Excoed $15,000— Grudge Against Pirm Blamed 7 (—Acld thrown by lals on shiris, stock and materi- s in the plant of the Superior Shirt during Wednes v Thursday morning stimated at hetween §1 i was stated ard Abrams, Derby, Oct owner, today. fr. Al d he had no i4ea o the vandals were, where they me from or how they secured en- to the plant. His opinion 1t they were New York ga «mployed by someone who hand in labor troubles in the Mr. Abrams himselt said he 0 one who might have had inst 1} or trouble kind company ran \ o e company of any iperior Shirt company out a hundred p thrown on piles ts s of worked up which ys 1eid he was complet on sta ma- terial which was being nd upon he 1 Mi cloth us dications, r to Abr must have had in the vandalism. The plant closed of the holiday, the thought ms we sev- 1 hand was and to don shut down on their W BULDING RALS, WANY CASUALTIES One Body Recovered in Apple- ton, Wis., Disaster Oct. 7 (P—Ofe and morc b buris ins of part of the mill plant of the Kimberly-( Kimberly, r Appleton. The room collapsed Appleton, Wis, man is known to be ny at e ot floors Aithor in building. Otto Krueger, 1. hospital ‘here Twenty others were ied in the ruins nen worked feverishly Kimberly, in died ed bur- 1 belia and a crew to ext v mill is the largest country. The beater rocm 1s section of the large plant Both floors of the two story sec- fon collapsed and the roof collaps- and one wall fell in The rescue crew worked feverish- other walls threatened to SEES LAW MAKING AS RAGEIN 0., 1,900,000 Statutes Now on Books, Editor Declares v York 7 (UP)—Th in America is between laws o There statute Oct | N race 1 are 1,000,000 books, Mer he Nation's Busi current issue of 1nd these are b mass prody Litomobiles. |laws on our Thorpe, editor of Tk i re in the Colliet's Weekly, ased on incre a basis nety per cent of legislation has to do with bus A shot an intell thinking man in a middle-west ci ‘asks my in getting a law 1 to limit the styles of shor i *“'The curse of the shoc busit £ says he, den style changes. | “He suggests a law forhidding any shoe manufacturer to have more than four selling seasons a year aml more than fifty styles ny line of shoes.” “The Texas state aericulture proposes would prohibit Texa from working more than cight hour from breaking land with a tractor plowing with a cultivator, or pick- ing in any other way than by the lhuman hand. In the government printing offic 17 tons of type metal, cor g a codification of United Stdtes but congress fears to author- printing because it would be in- cte before it could come from pro- posed " e Says. iler, support | passe ‘Is su to show ir commissior 2 law which cotton farme law com the ! bir “If a w York policeman read rapidly and steadily eight hours a lay all the laws with which he is quired to be familiar, it would take ‘}' . im over seven we s to read them As a mild relief measure to this aking, Thorpe propos: 1 law might be pass it obligatory on any le or federal, introducin to provide in it for the re- ady existing law. | READ HERALD ASSIFIED ADS FOR YOUR WAN GIGANTIC REMOVAL SALE {ury See Our WINDOW DISPLAY of the Latest Styles Cut-Out Effects Irregular Brimmed Hats Cleverly Tucked Crowns / Every Smart New Shade Every Hat is Chic and in keeping with what is the very newest for early Winter wear. Striking new silhouettes! smartness! Captivating fully smart! Sophisticated and youth- Every hat is a beauty and at this low price they will go quickly! $4.95 IN OUR BETTER HAT SECTIO —HATS, $7.50 TO $15 IN OUR DOWNSTAIRS STORE | FULL-FASHIONED SILK HOSE Large assortment of Felts, Velvets, and Velvet and Satin combinations. $1.95 ., $3.95 Original Clara Bow Ta ms, $1.95 | for $2.00. $1.09 | These are variables of a \.\'ell known manufacture, and are ordinarily sold | AT THE BEE HIVE Cloak and Suit Shop silk and others with plaid linings—made up in man- nish materials, and also with beautiful fox col- lars. Regularly priced at $39.50 SPECIAL $24.50 Also a large as- sortment of lower priced Coats. Regularly sold for SPECIAL $15.00 THE BEE HIVE Cloak and Suit Shop =

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