New Britain Herald Newspaper, October 20, 1927, Page 17

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| . Thirty-Six Send Delegations to (Cheshire the a hat S use th the clubs held in the Congregational |1} church here. The morni session | saw 100 delegates registered with fore 25 of the state officers, and 36 out of the 78 clubs were officially en-! tered as present Later cars brought in other gates and speakers for the noon session The local club as ho . entertained more than President Emily Lonise Plumley jis presided at the sessions. Mrs, Ward | Church of North Haven. chairman Calls of the common public walfare w members of her committee, h much of the work of the morning ssion in hand The Invitation of Br to have the fede that city on January ed The pointed after- s Alles committes ap Howard of Sey mour as chairman and Mrs. . v Pickett of New Haven was one of the members The grecting to made by Mre Wern of the Cheshire clu sponse was by Mrs Stoughton of Mrs. Church © a report for her commiftes outlining the work which had been undertaken. In am- plification of her talk th principal topie had been made Mrs. Edith V" jels morning's for consideration tto three parts Cook of New Haven, on “Child’'s Welfare Work Mis: Katherine Root on. Therapy” and Miss Mar, on “Public Health Miss Root, who had just returned from the Mir described the ¢ ngly on tn. work in fhat institution emphasiz g tha of room andh are on the waiting list Miss Elizabeth tendent of State Farm for Women, told of the work in that institution, the reasons why women are sent to it, and the need of room Speakers all laid stress upon eupational therapy out that lack of o of the chief Munger, superin the Con it e reaso committed to tha institution They have not been properly train. ed in the first place, have not hag prover emplovment and so have finally drifted ¥s which have | led them ir ns of are 18 said training has feeble mindedness | lack of proper contributed to and juvenile viciousnese Rev. Morris D. Allin; ent to speak on the house at Storrs, and M B. Green, dean of the School of Therapy in Boston, Axpected for the afternoon to speak on the subject. was pres ommunity Marjorie was e Bl | Mystic Infant Strangled | To Death in Its Crib New London, Oect (PreCarl Zimmerman six s and ten months old =on of M nd Mrs. Paul G. Zimmerman, of Cliff str obic, dlel ot strangylation yestar: day when his neck became caught in the straps of his crib in which he had been sleeping. The lirtle boy, during his sleep had previously shown symptoms of convuisiveness, | following fllness, and his pa sought to protect him in by strapping his blankets over him to keep him in be State Acts to Recover i Money Given to Woman | Wallingford, Conn., Oct. 20 (P)— | Mrs. Rose Lissnyal of this tfown | #ince 1915 has been iving state aid under the widow for her children wh nsti- a count of 25.000 wh 1 h i had in a bank here. State aid had been given to her, it Is claimed. hecause she st up indigency as the need for aid. This is given in ing amounts ' from $2.50 to $18.50 per week per child. One of the children is in the | county home and the other is in the Norwich hos: “.UP AGAINST IT” No reason for being up against it. When we will gladly make you A LOAN months or less if you so desire, EASY TO PAY THE PHOENIX WAY PHOENIX FINANCE CORP. United Building Room 212 308 Main St. Tel. 5255 Now Britain, Conn. Open 9—5:30 sat. 9—1 Licensed by State Bonded to Public WOMEN'S CLUBS ALD. JUDD BERSERK ':::: OF STATE MEET HITTING MINORITY - (Continued from TFirst Page) to When he ha mayor wa ont of orde lotsky house. Mayor Weld did not ed with the parliamentary ob- ction raised by the alder lallowed Sablots fsixth ward con ty benefit ioners and Hldings, 1« Allee Petition A communication frem J. B asking that the city purchas ions for the s “It is rumored that there is "AS C trifling = thi oncluded his remarks of the still calling, “You're |for a * to which Judd merely said, “Oh, is that so?" Cheshire, Oct. 20 (#) — \\'flr.";rn~ A minutes prior to the out- clubs of the state were largely rep- |burst, Alderman Judd had been un- ving reported resented today in the fall meeting |successful in choking off discussion tormine what of the State Federation of Women's|of the tablet. He raised the point cilman W, D, could not speak be- be repaire] as no resolntion be- an and to continue. The ilman asked what |7 14 possibly come from the names of ing them in called attention the school board this custom to save “Buffoonery” ts provided for the council cham of a junk yard old ant ibled without STAY OF EXECUTION IS SOUGHT FOR WOMAN About To Dic isoner On Galiows, Scems aworried 20 (Ui a SLAP in the face!/ That’s What He Got For Getting “Fresh”... She Was Beautiful—But Not So Dumb (e Better > | 1han l A Picture So Fast That It Makes on Modern A . L Comman I Medern Jazz Sound Like Slow Music ments -—and Figures Don’t Lie al Values + 1200 Pairs of Women’s New Fall Pumps and Oxfords 3. From $10 to $300/ 2 At Lawful Rates of Interest || i The Payments spread over twenty a $6.75-—$7.75—$8.50 How New Britain Women Save Britain women from $1 to Some of the Styles Are Shown Below Patent or gun metal and genuine alligator. Genuine Alligator Shoes w89 85 Regularly Priced from $12.50 to $15.00 Black or brown suede. Black or brown also patent leathe Patent leather., Patent leather brown kid. or Therich brown lustre of genuine alligator makes it the most fashionable for Fall foot-wear. Brown alligator har- monizes with other colors and may be worn with any day- time costume. % al. black kid, brown Kkid See the Live Alligators in Our Window Foot-Craft Shoes Walk-Over Shoes Manning Brothers Our plan of combining with shoe stor cities in buying shoes in large quantities other ves New > on each pair. Patent sucde, or brown 8. Gun metal or tan calf. © ¥ nt leather, gun m 1 or genuine alli- gator. Brown or black suede. Patent, tan calf or satin, Genuine allizator or patent leather. 211 MAIN ST. ~"FIGURES DONT LIE” Presented Twice Sunday Evening With Smnecial Jazz Musical Accompaniment 4 DAYS Starting SUNDAY STRAND | And a Carload of Coal ~ Goes Back to the Mines The Berson standard of excel- lence never wavers. | Years of experience in judging | quality coal, and a rigid inspec- 1 tion keeps that standard high. The carload of coal that fails to meet the Berson requirements —is sent back to the mines. i Even the carload that gains the stamp of approval is sent through a triple screening be- fore being carefully stored away in one of the six giant silos. A 604( p IS 7 | oL’ When you get the coal it’s ready for the furnace. T4 It’s good, hard, quality coal. It's clean. 1811 NGTI ney Telephone ys—Holidays BERSON BROS. Coal - Fuel Oil - Gasoline ’ Heat Till the Last Unit When may we fill your bins? A call to 1811 gets rapid service.

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