New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 9, 1928, Page 11

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L] ; NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1928 . NSTSUS N GEEssiss rommsyre mmunm T ¢ (OPANES . SECLUSININN. Y. e ANNUAL MEETINGS R S N | D e W Paely Banquet, Speaking and Eatertaime : .+ Mysterions Young Woman May | e v e | OMoars Rolectad by Boards Bo Late Caar's Danghier —Fulnir Bearing Co. Meos Mme. Tchaikovsky is the Grand | Polish-American Political Organiza- Hall Noxt Wednoaday. New York, Feb. 9.—(M—The si- Directors and officers were re- Duchess Anastasia. The Grand tion of Connecticut. Duchess Olga, sister of the late czar, I — Ladies® Auxzillary, A. O. H, will oelebrate the $1st anniversary of its u:t and mysteriol young woman elected at the annual meeting of who been the enigma of Europe Hart & Cooley Co., Inc., yesterday visited Mme. Tchaikovsky while she | was & patient in a German hospital, the statement says. i founding with a banquet in the Y. ing saloon a few times but did not M. T. A. & B. soclety hall next Wed- mingle with the other passengers. | il neaday evening. One of the stewards who served her A = Toho Bk been the caleme of BUrone | mid that a waiter was rorcea to cat| SUACK O Bills Up Dealing With |, Durios te tens extance, ehe ua. kovaky, said by many to be the afternoon. The directors are H. 8. daughter of the lats Crar Nicholas [Bave suffered a complete paralysis That Mlm', santmtion has besn o bring help |Hart, N. P. Cooley, R. C. Twichall, | 10 of Russia, was in seclusion here |Of the right arm. He described her to the unfortunate and to alleviate | G00rse P. Hart, E. N, Stanley, E. as & slender woman of medium a5 distress. H. Cooper, M. 8. Hart, Willlam H. height who seldom spoke. He re-| Washington, Feb. § (UP)—King owing committes Hart, Stanley Hart, J. H. Robinson, marked that she did “not seem quite | cotton s going to have his day in e (o1l pe nder -3 he t Uary, wil Goes. e officers are: Chalrman of on about her” Sho always thanked | Demands were® heard 10 both | neve inecee o the e >, |the board o directors, H. 8 Hart: him for the meal, he said. | house and semate for action on & |Julla Moorehead, Mrs. Catherine |President and treasurer, N. P. Mume. Tchalkovsky is 26 years old | stack of bills and resolutions de- | Humason, Mrs. Elizabeth Mangan, |C00l€Y: assistant treasurer, R. C. and speaks only in German. Mr. signed to cure ills in the industry, | Mrs Anna Knight, Mrs. Katherine she suffered a loss of memory from | the New York cotton exchange and | Jacobs. No action was taken on the pre- the terrible experiences she went | agriculture department price predic-| The following singers will take posed purchase of 200 shares of the through when she escaped the fate |tions which are said 10 be harmful |part in the entertainment: Kathleen | MPany by the directors and the of the rest of the imperial family | to the growers. Walsh, Irene Walsh Leonard, John |Meeting was adjourned to February | and does not remember her Russian. | The resolution of Scnator Smith, o ! O'B ), ason, all well schooled in German and of the New York exchange will be g.,;? .fl,‘.‘;r fim‘};‘,‘:‘, state, ::: At the annual meeting of the English, in addition to their native |followed by & similar one in the |county officers and priests from all |*i0ckholders of Hart & Cooley Mfg. tongue. house, which Represcntative Ran-|the parishes in the city will be |CO the stock of which is owned by kin, democrat, Miss,, is preparing. Hart & Cooley Co., Inc., held Tues- Crann will be the princi 3 for permitting certain alleged prac- LD he grindlee Pal-#pcaker. | 4 the hoard. They are H. W. Maler tices. He declared there is being and E. 8 Johnson. Other directors thrown onto the exchange to “bat- | elected are J. H. Robinson, R. W. ter down” the price, low-grade cot- | Blanchard, R. C. Twichell, William | ton that cannot be sold for apinning. | "¢y Geueral Sal H. Hart, Stanley Hart, Frank P. Twichell; assistant treasurer, Btanley | board of directors, E. H. Cooper; {and New Britaln buses, effective en ' Hart; secretary, Frank P. Usher. | president, Maurice Stanley; secre- and after Sunday, February 12. Fafalr Bearing Co. tary and treasurer, A. G. Way; vice ! Buses will leave Hartford at 6 a. Officers and directors of the Faf- i presidenta, R. R. Searles, E. R. m, 7:15 a. m. and hourly ustil 11:15 nir Bearing Co. were re-elected at|Carter, Jr, and R. M. Hemenway; | p. m. They will leave New Britain at the annual meeting of the stock- | assistant treasurer, George F. At- 6:10 a. m. and hourly until 13:10 p. holders followed by & directors| water; assistant secretary, C. F. m. A “Shop Extra” bus will leave meeting yesterday. | Stanley. Gold street, Hartford, for New Brit- Directors are: H. 8 Hart, E. . | |ain at 5§ p. m., Monday te Friday. Cooper, N. C. Cooley, F. G. Vib-| OHANGE IN BUS SCHEDULE | inclusive. berts, George P. Hart, A. G. Way, | BSuperintendent Willam J. Bryan | R. R. Searles, Maurice Stanley, E. of the New Britain division, Con- | The boiling of water removes N. Stanley and W. H. Hart., | necticut Co!, has announced a |very few of its chemical impurities, Officers are: Chairman of the|change in the departure of Hartford | but it does kill the germs. LOOK!! in B. C. Porter Sons’ Window AND SEE THE SPECIAL BARGAINS REED = FIBER CHAIRS = ROCKERS THE BIG SALE She and & companion Miss Agnes QGallagher were on the fogbound liner Berengaria, held in the lower harbor since Tuesday night. 8he was on her way to be the guest of Mrs. William B. Leeds, the former Prin- ceas Xenia of Russia, at her home in Oyster Bay. Her identity unknown to fellow passengers until the arrival of ehip news reporters on board the steam- eor, Europe's mystery woman re- mained in her cabin during the lin- or's delay in the lower bay, refusing to grant interviews. Gleb Botkin, who says his father was physiclan to the czar and was killed with the imperial family in 1937, acted as spokesman for Mme. Tehalkovsky. Newspapers have said he is the agent for Mrs. Jieeds, who 18 absent on a cruise in the Carib. Here For Rest | Mr. Botkin said that she was com- | ing to this country for a rest and | to receive medical and dental treat- | ment. Her jaw had been broken at one time and badly reset. She says it was caused by a blow from the Tchaikovaky took dinner in the din- her meat for her, as she seemed to been sucoesstul. The aim of the or- ) the @irection of Mra. Catherine Ke. | W. Blanchard and Stanley T. as if she were aware what was going | congress, it was apparent today. Twichell; secretgry, Willam H. Kotkin explains this by the fact that | including alleged manipulation of Kalinowski, and Mrs. Margaret 17. Kiniry, jJoseph A. Haffey, o The children of the late Czar were | democrat, 8, C. for an investigation | O'Biren. = i 7. 30kn Hart & Cooley M. Co. guesta of honor. Rev. Walt Me- Rankin criticized the exchange v avalter A MC- | 4oy, two new directors were elected ‘THE BIG SALE . WANTS TO TAKE LAND Washington, Feb. 9 (UP)—Attor- nt recommended bean sea. Asked by reporters it he believed her to be the Grand Duchess Anas- tasia he said: Says She is 1 do. there is she s Duchess nothing else I eould belleve, knowing as I do that butt of a guard’s rifle in Siberia. Aligned on the side of those who | ey the woman is the Russian grand physicians of the imperial family who was in attendance upon the Romanoft children. Cable stories duchess is Dr. Rutneff, one of the | Recently, he sald, between 140,000 and 200,000 bales of poor cotton were thus used by manipulators. It | is a “mystery” to him, he added, | why the exchange permits such op- | crations. He promised to bring the | names of the manipulators before | to congreas today confiscation of more than $100,000,000 of forest land held by the Northern Pacific railroad under old land grants to be followed by submission of the entire controversy over the holdings to courts for adjustment. Usher, H. §. Hart, N. P. Cooley, G. | F. Nightengale and H. 8. Covell. | Officers re-elected are: Chairman of the board of directors, J. H. Robin- | son; president, R. W. Blanchard; Willlam H. Hart; treasurer, R. C. | vice presidents, R. C. Twichell and |} with prices on everything re- duced 20% to 50% |8 is the place to has many odd & | pieces, such as Dressers Vanities Chiffoniers buy good fur- niture and rugs and save } | This Great Healing Oil Must 3 U Bedroom Suites p > Chairs Toilet Tables Bedroom from Germany have quoted Dr. Rut- neff as asserting that Mme. Tchai- kovaky and the grand duchess are one and the same. for regulation of cotton exchanges Deuy Claims { by applying the grain futures act to | It is said that the Grand Duke | cotton training. Cyril, a kinsman of Mrs. Leeds, and | The senate already has passed & other Russian refugees in Paris also congress. A pending bill by Representative Vinson, democrat, Georgia, provides Mr. Botkin played with the Grand Duchess Anastasia when he was 8 and she was 7. He was with her ‘when the imrerial family was exiled and later killed by their Bolshevik guards. The grand duchess was sald to have been saved by a young sol- at dier named Tchaikovsky with whom she fled to Rum( nia and whom she later married. W. W. Bouimistrow, ‘New Way to Relieve Tired, president of the Russian Refugee Reliet soclety deny Mme. T¢haikovsky's claims. ‘Through special arrangements the medical and immigration authorities Interviewed the Russian woman in her room, instead of with the other the length of her stay in this coun- |try. S8he said she would be here | “elght months.” All other questions | she wearily referred to her nurse. TO ATTEND POLISH BANQUET A large delegation from the Po- lish-American Republican club of thin city will go to Hartford Satur- | day, to be guests at a banquet given |by the Polish-American Republican club of that city, at the Hotel Bond. The delegation will include Joseph { Kloskowski, B. 'A. Grzybowski, | Stanley Karpinski, Martin Stempien, ‘m-nley ‘Tracesk! J. Monklewicz New passengers. They sald she answered | only one question direct, that as to| bill to prevent the agriculture de. partment from making price pre- dictions, and several similar bills {are pending in the house. It was| charged recently by Representative | McDuffle, democrat, Ala., that south- | ern cotton growers lost $10,000,000 | last year by one/statement forecast- ing lower prices. The market re- acted quickly downward, McDuffle | said. Representative Blanton, democrat, | | Texas, proposes a market for the low | grade cotton which Rankin says is | | being used speculatively to the hurt | of the cotton farmer. He has a bill { to prevent importation of jute, used | | for bagging. i J.ow grade cotton can be used for | this purpose, he says. 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