New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 28, 1927, Page 4

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4 T Lady Godiva ¥ o SEEN IN MURDER Worcester Police Trace Rumor in Murder Probe | 25— iP—A | SUPREME COURT REFUSES REVIEW Upholds Lower Court in Rail- road Reorganization Worcaster, Mase., Nov R in Serbia ) ugo is ved by the police to have led | murder last night in Holden | of John Bobvic propricior of a hoarding ho! 1aft No. 4 of the Metropolitan project whose lood coversd body was carried to and and dropped in front of his «n stabbed to bian. is held Washington, Nov 28 (P'—The su- preme court refused today to re- view the reorganization of the Chi- cago, Milwaukee and St. Paul rail- road which was approved by the lower courts. Edwin C constituting the fense committee, sent about $18 irs Jameson, and ond holders' de- ming to repre ) of th s ested the plan failed e the rights of el police and another aleo a They contended who mpolice want on a S rge, 18 being sought ‘ SR throughout the state. o facts existing at the time the 3 Plhe man held for murder gives | i 2 s ¥ eyl his 1 as Peter Mandich, 50, a | shaft. The r sought believe 1s hid- is night foreman irder ¢ properly to p 0 the bondholders. that the decision courts had not b approve me urt on he rece . urged the court to refuse to review ng that eve v olice say they have evidence Mandich swore ve ago in 8 oo oL e that he would kill Tobvich aslane ey e 1o was assisted in 4 be deprived of Caiid oy urn their investment ed that $6 per cent of af- | holders had approved 7 8 per cent that rhia The interest alo reorganization once the receivership curity holders wou on irs Y. W. C. A. NOTES Pinnacle Club The club will meet on Mond: evening at seven o'clock to mak Chrietinas cards for the bazaar, Business Girl¢' Club The club will meet at Thursday evening. Every memt urged to come to put t touches on the bazaar articles. | Girl Reserve Notes bi I for the First D 1 every afternoon nes nnder the direction of Mrs. ton Bickford, and Mrs White. The play will be given Sat- sulind Hightower, who, as Lady | have led the aris| didn't do her 100 r cent Godiva-ing after all. At last minute, it was decided to| a nice wax model do the heavy | The Guarat to New York any whomt ended that road was 1 in Chicago, the hay HAINE MILL WORKERS =l ACCEPT WAGE SLASH REGORD YEAR FOR MOVING | reve onrates mrum w0 wor Assuming Duties Without securitiey railroad to and reor- as the bond- had as- point of mileasge 1 affected was th 50 through zanization olders serted r s su he club girls will week in finishing up their work for the Pirates Fair to be held Decem- ber 3, 5 and 6. Besldes all the handwork, such as | tled and dyed scarfs, handkerchiefs, hand tinted Christmas cards, em- | I and without any demon- broldered articles, painted wa aceepting the wage reduc- | children’s toys and -novelties m St for the by the girls themselves, t ds null | be a large selection of bra: | Tea, watfles, sandwiches and ic istrars Smith and Ziegler Pind | Any Demonstration Migrations From House to House [7; - lo- Lewiston, Maine, Nov. 2 Textile operatives in the five mi | cated in this city and Auburn changed their place |Sumed their respective duties today Highest in City's History. More residece people Juring this year than |5 ust * within the memory | stratio nd | tion of ten per cent, at o | present, as did the tax | Operatives, in Augusta. This was in line with reached at yesterday's mass mecting | in City hall, at which protest was | voiced. A resolution “to accept the | wage reduction and entcr a protest, but to go to work and ask the or- | ganizers be sent” was adopted. Locally some 4.000 or more mill 18 become affected by the cut, | s first announced a week ago today by officials, with the posting of mnotices outside the fol- lowing mills: Continental Mills, | Bates Manufacturing company, Hill i Manufacturing company and An- droscoggin Mills, and the Lewiston Bleachery and Dye Works, the last owned by Pepperell Mills of Bidde- ford, Announcement . same effect at the Edw s pastor emeritus of | Augusta, at that ti Congregational society of — any otiier y of Registrars Thomas J. Smith William J. Zicgler, the two offic have found in the personal enumeration which they are now completing. There are also more vacant tenements now than in any their check-up will re on of the gym which will be decorated | to represent a Spanish Tea Garden. | U. P. D, club will hold a reorgani- zation meeting on Thursday affer school. Thanksgiving baskefs were packed and deliversd by members K. T. G.. Jolly Juniors, | . Golden Eagles and Cluga. Hikes were enjoyed last Wednes- !day and Friday by members of the Golden Eagles, Sunshine and Jolly Juniors, recent show. The year, fact that the wh'y has been building up rapidly is given as the reason for this condition. Apart- | ment houses have also drawn from the habitation of one, two and three amily houses, Father of James Dole Dies at Jamaica Plain Boston, Nov. 2§ (UP)—The Rev. r. Charles Fletcher Dole, es D, Dol for the dicd Physical Dept. Swimming, gym and tenn seey | will be held the usual time this week. The schedule will be as fol- low cnjors—Monday and Fridays, fight, home yeste Dr. Dole v e First Jamaica Plain was made to the rds Mills, in | classes; Plunges Juniors: Monday, 4:15, Junior life | saving. Tuesday and Thursdays, 4:15 | = AL Junior plunges. Wednesday, 4, :Ha]f Million Alien vior tennis. Friday, 4:15, Tiny tots e - Entered U. S. in 1927 g Ve | Washington, Nov 28 (A—>More 3 | than a half million aliens were ad- mitted to the United States during {the 1927 fiscal year, the Labor d ! partment announced toc and the number was considerably greater Scrawny Women Petition for Bus Line Maryan Zaleski's application for a | NeediMcgoy’s than during the previous year. The bus franchise to operate public ser- | ires were 538,001 admissions What i< the use in going through et 5 ! and 496,106 admissions ife minus the pounds of good firm flesh that will ma you look [ oI iRl half of all United States in 1 ¢ from the American «da and Mexico now bring #st source of immigrants, produ s are all you is happy result. Your out—the hollows disappear—you flesh ring ahont )Iallchésiel', N. H, Girl 1 chest and take on flesh w MeCoy fakes lad New York, Nov. 28 (® regional winner in the lition of the Atwater Kent fo ion to discover °8 Was announcs Healy, 18, of N Miss Healy sang i irone boxes Me- = Dollar boxes n or wom- | d , pounds | VOic tisfied in | Marie T MeCoy's Cod Liver Oil |15 other s s from ¢ en shortensd—just 1 was judged the Itching Skin Peterson’s Ointment ro tl s who know over ™ ot judges, Nine other winners and g First p ingers free m regional to 1. the total posed equally of hoys ey will meet in finals 811 mighty healing power Welsh Miners Go Home Singing Rebel ¢ 28 (P—The About heat... you always .. need expert advice o ind the question was brou, the of commons chafing ite 1t plight st omewa today singing hoped to obtair it the ted to parliament lead coal ta (COLD radiators, chill rooms, house high fuel bills—these are signs that something is wrong with your present heating equipment. 7 ‘Why “guess” at the trouble when mauntin 5,0 you can have, free, the advice of 1P in New York city experts—men who have made pros Whits home-heating problems their life Brothers, work. 1eir sale h to carry ¢ subways and sew BOND ISSUE s last AKEN TP of b Jay hy atives of dy lias vork, buildir |and extend The knowledge we have gained from 40 years' experience in de- signing and manufacturing heating equipment—wegladly placeatyour service. works 1 Phone or urite te Ired Campbell of 28 Whiting f has filed a claim the cit R. E. LUND Jamages to his antomobile which, Central Ave, Waterbury Waterbury. 8261 7 VIERICAN RADIATOR CO, 31 Conn. damaged through a road defect Osgood and Farmington aven The claim will be forwarded by |mayor to the common council. the new- ontinent. Wins Radio Song Contest The first nation-wids omising radio d today as Miss nchester, N. station ition \\Hil: winner by vo i a board com- at then it attracted S CLAIM AGAINST CITY states in a letter to Mayor Weld, was |vice cars over a route extending trom Central park into the north- | western section of the city, will be heard by the public utilitics con mission Thursday afternoon at 2| o'clock at the State Capitol. Attor- | ney Harry Ginsburg will present the | {application, | Opposition will be volced by | Theodore Wagner, owner of another line operating in the district. Mayor | Weld who is opposed to increasing | the number of bus routes in the city, unless necessity is proved, will at- tend the meeting. in 0 the u; READ HERALD CL. ED ADS N FOR BEST RESULTS Howard G. Kre prominent loon atte Young University carrying three bo a bottle |coat, according to customs officials, and a protruding bottle was noticed by an in Hear Leg Laden's T on | orchestra at St. John's : and Tuesday nights he finishing Admission Harold McDougall, | class, Tnited States navy, is a 15 day furlough on leave with the printing shop aboard ship and expects to be class printer the first of ne MeDougall men enlisted fn this city by [ Dordelman, in charge of recruiting for the navy here. New Lunch {advt. | E o, | United States navy " | Haven, spent the T +will | days at his home in this cify. | Fair Drug Dept., will compound your a decision |cream will be served In one corner [PTescrip DR. OHMA York, for five vears pastor of the| | First Lutheran churcl will speak in the loc day line Ohman, inister, prano, T Norway THREE WOULD CHANG A meeting of the board of adjust- ment. will be held December 14, at Opens Checks the Bowels the Fever Stops the Cold o8 are irls. 1l rize will | 4 Things You Must Do for a COLD (1) Stop the cold. (2) Check the fever. (3) Open the bowels. (4) Tone the sys- tem. HILL'S Cascara-Bromide-Quinine does all four at one time. That means the end of the cold—and safety for youl Get the genuine HIL in red box, 30c at druggists everywhere. HILL'S Cascara-Bromide - Quinine to ght ken eld & Co, el BEEF #/CABBAGE i I HAMBURGER PORK CHOPS GULDENS st., for | he at | ies. the | e | g Mustard 4 |ig i sTREET 7:30 o'clock to hear three applica- | tions for changes of zone. {in outlying sections of the city. ) Take : } | BRONZE MEMORIAL ! Woman Who Saved Them Bristol, Nov. 28 (A—Claiming 40 Arn n students as “her sons” by writing her name after theirs the |l s. Anna Harlow Birge, of this gained their escape destroyer lying in the harbor. Turkish military offi- |ctal in cha aw the humor and rolc pathos of the act, and grant- {cd Mrs. Birge and “her | permission to board the vessel. Today, in recognition of her act, bronz tablet walls of the Episcopal church gift . Birge's 40 Ar- mer “s0 The presentation was mode by Haroutoun M. Ca prian, a law student at the Univer sity of Virginia and one of the youths saved When hundreds of Armenfans and 8 were being massacred as the drove them out of Smyrna, and Mrs. Birge were of the faculty of the International college | i { with her to memc son of sge > magnate col agne funds, was fined $55 for mpting to bring liquor across cr at Detroit the ot r day. is a student at the Michigan. He was| - s of whisky and | ' champagne under Kresge of The grateful memorial tribute of the students reads as follows: | ‘In loving and grateful memory ot Anna Harlow Birge, February 12, 10, 1925, a missionary in from 1914 to 1922, placed wer boys” to whom she a protector and friend in the hour of peril. Who shall separate us fro mthe love of Christ? Shall trib- jon or anguish or persecution or mine or nakedness or perils or sword? Nay in ail these things we are more than conquerors through Him that loved us.” { his of ector. City Items scontinental air, Mon T. A. B. 25c.—advt seaman first | home on | from the | Seanant R §. 8. Florida. He is connecied | BOY, 19. COMMITS SUICIDE Watertow N. Y., Nov. P Two hours aftyr Harry J. - |aged 19, had left home disappointed | was one of because bis father would not buy a w automobile, the youth's body was found in Riordan farm yester- day. There was a bullet wound in the head body. When Joints rated as a third torpedoman Specials, Crowell's.— | chief yoeman, | ationed at New | mksgiving holi- | dward Markham r. Clarence W. Brainard, at The tior PEAK HERE | or. 8. G. Ohman of New| | Db ca, oimeno Just rub on Joint-Ease it you want to know what real joint coms | of this city, | " fort is. shurch Thurs- | evening at 8 o'clock. Miss Ade- | I Ohman, daughter:of David and a nic of the will sing on the same pro- | tion and reduce the Miss Ohman, who is a so-|lase is the one urned from a tour of Joint troubles and I abs N and all live druggists are dispensing it daily-—a tube for 60 cents. ZONES rub it in—it penectrates, Joint-Ease len, or pain-tortured joints. | It helps to subdue the inflamma- nedy for most n. All are | 'Armenian Refugees Remember, - time of the Smyrna mas- | children’ | rests on | | Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ney of 63 Cot- | | were married 11902, Riordan, | & and a rifle was near the th_gainful | It's for the reilef of lame, swol- | @ swelling. Joint- | @ ir Dept. Store | @ Just | @ NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 28, 1927. SERBIAN FEUD [§ Young K:esge Held 4() ‘SON§’ ERECT { dren, 'HOSPITAL ATTENDANT | IS SENT T0 PRISO Sullivan Gets Jail Sentence ] evening. | city. !Edmund ! for Cruelty to Inmate in Connec- | ticut Hospital for the Insane. | | Sullivan, 22, formerly of Cambridge, | Mass., an attendant in the Conncc- ticut State Hospital for the Insane, was sentenced to three months in Haddam county jail for assault by Judge S. Harris Warner in criminal superior court today. Sullivan assaulted Emil Boltz, 70, | | of Newington, an fnmate at the in- | stitution for three years last Friday. The physician who examined Boltz |sald that the man had received a brutal beating. He had two black | eves, a bruised ear, fractured nose, | smashed lips and two fractured ribs iand his condition was reported to ! be serfous. | The sentenced attendant claimed | | that Boltz was lying on a bench. | |He sald that when he grabbed the { inmate's legs to make him get up he | | was kicked in the shin. Sullivan | claimed that he struck Boltz once | | after being kicked and that the old {man fell against the bench receiving | the injuries listed by the physician. | {Mr. and Mrs. Otto Ney | | Married for 25 Years tage place are celebrating their 25th | wedding anniversary today. They | on November 29, The couple have three chil- Mrs. Helen Barrows, | Gertrude and Hugo Ney, all of this |John E. R. Keevers presiding. The They have one ;'The couple have received many use- | President Club,” be formed here ha | ful and beautiful gifts. e at home to all their friends this | DEMOCRATS TO ASSEMBLE The weekly gathering of BT 5 | crats will be held tomorrow night at Middletown, Nov. 28 P—Edmund | g g'clock at the party’s headquarters )Ii!s‘in the United Building, Chairman grandchild |proposal that an “Al Smith for been placed in the hands of Chair man Keevers and Judge Willlam 1 Mangan, state central committes man, who will formulate plans for ‘sm‘h a club., They will demo- Two Franchmen have invented an lwngine that uses fish oil as fuel. Oil Burners 1 That Depend on Berson Service to keep them constantly sup- plied with Fuel Oil. High’ grade and Fairly priced are the oil burners that never R FREE DEMONSTRATION DUCO . Dries quickly R All popular colors and stains Try it yourself November 28th and 29th “The Handy Hardware Store" H. L. MILLS 336 Main Street “Electricity!— fail to meet every demand for comfort and eccnomy. 1811 brings fuel oil promptly. Call 3050 for emergencies— Nights, Sundays. BERSON BROS. Coal - Fuel Oil - Gasoline “Be Warmed In Time” We give you this opportunity to see It’s Yours with your own eyes the miracle of the New Easy Washer. Phone us today and make an appointment for our demonstrator to call on you with this wonderful New Easy Washer and do your week’s washing for you. Without cost or obligation we offer you this opportunity to see the New Easy in action,—wash- ing your own clothes! Do Your Next Washing the Easy Way It will delight you,—the ease with which it operates, the gentleness of the famous Vacuum Cups a8 they move up and down, 60 times a minute, flush- ing air, soap and water through the clothes,—the helpfulness of the New Easy Dryer as it spins the clothes dry, without breaking buttons or forming deep squeezed-in wrinkles, Do not miss this oppartunity to own an Easy on easy terms! EASY wasHer BARRY & BAMFORTH NEW BRITAIN PHONE 2504 The Master of Mass Production” Says Dr. Henry Mace Payne Consulting Engineer, American Mining Congress “America’s prosperity is the fruit of in- telligent power development, with skilled direction and mass production, paying the highest wages in the world, her work- men enjoying a higher standard of living than ever before. Wherever we look about us we find the evidences of the co-part- nership between brains and business.” LECTRIC power may rightfully be regarded as one of the world’s hasic industries. It is mankind’s most tireless and efficient servant. By means of its magic cur- rent, forces are unleashed that free labor from excessive bur- den; homes are made happier and more comfortable, and the wealth of the nation mul- tiplied many times over. The wealth is that not taken from others by trade, but new wealth, rung from the treas- ure house of science, enhanc- ing individual production ca- pacity forty fold and increas- ing wages proportionately. It is obvious, therefore, that the well-being of everyone de- pends upon the accessibility and abundance of electric power. Through the foresight, initia- tive and commercial daring of the electric power companies of this country, American in- dustry today is supplied with more power than all the rest of the world combined—twen- ty-four times more power than was available twenty- four years ago—and at a cost less than the pre-war price. To the degree that the princi- ple of "individual initiative, under which these companies have functioned is maintained, will the continued prosperity of the nation as a whole be as- sured. “The complete text of Dr. Payne’s address will be furnished upon request. The Connecticut Light and Power Company

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