New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 13, 1928, Page 10

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[STRONG RO GULTY LT - B T . g OF CAUSING DEATH mmsmgumr Direction Driver Whese Car Killed Stanu- of Per Olsson lonis Freed in Gourt The power of massed voices, syn- ’ i i g ® L . 7 chronized in majestic harmony found : " - s . .. Church street, who was arrested Sat- in the works of master composers, urday, February 4, on the charge of reverberated in the First Lytheran evading responsibility, and later on church yesterday afterncon. While the charge of criminal ‘megligence, fully 360 hardy Nerthmen nm-m‘ was freed in police court today, ® their throa in paens of oy, an nolle being entered by Prosecuting audience that filled the edifice sat in | Attorney J. G. Woods, who said an ¢ 3 rapt attention and awe. It was the| exhaustive investigation by the pos first appearance of the district choir | lice failed to bring te light any evie formed by that indefatigable ex-! dence that Strong was guilty on ponent of choral singing. Professor either charge. Judge W. F. Man- - Per Olsson, musical director of the gan represented Strong and will g congregation. 1t was his newest | Iso represent him when the $10,000 4 wdea, and ke all the other deas) lawsuit brought against him last that have sprung from his f d ) week comes to court. bramn, it was climaxed with suec | Strong was driving through Broad Church cheirs from Hartford, | street about 6 o'clock the evening Seuth Manchester, Feriland. Mid- in question and John Stanulonis, dletown, New Haven, ugatuck, | aged 52 of 102 Broad street was Bridgepert, Meriden, Cromwell crossing when he was struck. Strong linked with the large choir he has told the police he did pot-know his orgapized m New Britain. 1t was a) car bad struck anyone as he had grand fanfare of choral music, such| felt no impact. There were no as has rarely been heard in these marks on the car indicating that the parts. driver must have known of the ace cident and everything polnted to the innocence of Strong, according to Naturally, there of these numerous " organizatic ; fm Bt e i ~—Photo by Johneon & Peterson | the police. Stanulonis died at New Britain General hospital. frem suddenly jcining and being 100 e T = per cent perfect in all the fine rom's A nolle was also entered in thd A R o ame attention that he gave his|New York city's commissioner of po- carpets and cushions, preparatory to mony to the inherent spirit ~of e waih nosd R"flbfvn TS HFE {mind to the work or plav at hand. |lice. There very qualities made hin cleaning and ascertaining the extent |Christian friendliness and coopera- | 225 2r danes q":,'m‘::':';‘f,’,, ';{".l:,': bilitys ¢ would have Leen anim- |In life, as in football, he followed |the principal force in President of the damage there. While It was [tion which, I belleve, moves tn our | 3570 <00 O C8 Sl 0l 5 0o ueeg % eSO |one principle ‘Mit the line hard. |Cl°\fhnd's civil service commission. | felt the carpet might be saved, it is |body-politic and in the hearts of the driving after a car he was driving wsibility, But the Lutheran choirs | f:"_n well trained in what they were | Don't foul and den't chirk. But hit | Again, 1t was these qualities, that likely dozens of the seat cushions|people of our city without regard for (1.¢¢ 41q highway and struck a tree «mging. and it was astounding how | the line ha | eaused him as governor of the Em- L are ruined. race or creed. A about 500 yards north’ of Gillette's well they worked together. One FEEST Y He Never Excelled | pire state to stop prize fighting and | Although firemen were successful “Very sincerely vours, corner on West Hartford road and 4 reason for their success is that they “Though never excelling—as he [to introduce tenement legislation; | S in their strenuous efforts to save “GEORGE W. C. HILL" |{yon went a short distance and first gelect an unquestioned master- il 1 admitted—in any particular eport, |that led in to resign as istant (Continued from Fage Three) the expensive stained glass windows, s i e Rev. T. A Greene Eulogiz i e i ? £ 1 turned over about midnight Sature prece, then study 1t with the thor-} he still was able to hold his own m; — the windows are smoked and in ’ , February 4. many a contest of strength. But a. | volunteer regiment of rough riders |being of steel construction, prob- |some instances cracked by the heat. HAl[i MINE PIT ls gan appeared for. Foley. K Drunken t b Judge W. F. Mane ocughness that comes from being| . , feandinavian; then they memorize | Former President man must bs more than physically [for the Spanish war; that enabled | \\ " i vo calvaged, although the |The lead is not melted and it is ex- Eiuly ‘“?‘ N i 8 Andrew Limpezis, aged 49, under capable leadership, th remova' of the floor may make it | P ge! it:" and then, after repeated singing fit. His greatest strength always lies | him as the chief executive of our pécted they can be cleaned and sal- o get in his moral fitness, Tn the field of [nation to make possible the Panama. I® : MR Lafayette street, was fined $100 and fo “Know the piece backwards” a3| sneodore Poosevelt was eulogized | MOral prowess, Roosevelt's was a[canal, to settle the coal strikes in necessary to take fhem out tempo: [ Oyer dhe sntize dhterior (ot AhS couth.on the chetas of operating an more negative | Pennsylvania, to bring' about peace automobile while under the influence # che enthusiast expressed it e T de s positive and not a rarily. i . x Take the “Hallelujah" chorus, |PY the Rev. Theodore AWnSworth| ..~ There was nothing of |betweeni Russia and Japan, to ge-| All light fixtures will have to be e e, o of Nquor. Me pleaded molo cone (rom. Handel's *Messiah,” for in-|Greenc at the Sunday mOrnINg Serv- gcceticism apparent in his view of |cure legislation against child labor, |replaced, and a portion of the 100f | result of an ordinary fire. The soot tendere and was represented by stance, “whicli was on the program | ice in the First Congregational |ife, He placed honest character be- [and to set a premium on healthy, |will have to be restored. resembles that usually found in a 58 Li L{)S[ i se 1 I D' _|Judge W. F. Mangan, who said ha vestarday. About the first thing Fer | church yesterday. Mr. Gre emotionalism or mere in- | happy home life throughout all $30,000 Insurance on Organ metal casting shop just after the '6 lfl l'lfi 0 lS understood from the police that the Olsson did on taking charge of ths | part tellect alwaye. | America. Surely this is a man had a good reputation and it ] splendid Although there is a total of $200.- metal {s poured, and is said to be P music at the First Lutheran church Every moral leader “Hear what he has to say of the [record of unselfish service. With 000 insurance on the entire build- |the rv.sultx;( the thousands of melted as{mns Blasts was to cause his choir to study this|judged by the sfandards moment, when—but shortly out of | him, it was the whole truth, as he |ing, 1t was stated today there prob- |organ pipes. resounding masterpiece o thor-| himself. It was so with Moses. It!college-—he made his decision to en-|saw if, or nothing. He knew no iably is not more than $30,000 in-| 4 meeting of the standing com- oughly that it could be sung by the was o wWith Elijah. So it must be|ter political life | halfway measures. One is mindful |sruance on the organ. E. W. Pelton cholr anywhere and at any fime, Whh our late ex-President. As Th I suppose’, he writes, “plain, or- | of this characteristic in reading his [chairman of the &tanding commit- | grner cm:'m, ,,,,,3,;;::’:‘:,‘.1,," ,-en: —The Haig mine pit, where 13 men was unfortunate that he drank toe much wine while visiting a relative ‘ in Meriden yesterday. He will lose Whitehaven, England, Feb. 13 (® |his operator's license on acount of the conviction and this in itself will ) with or without accompaniment. At dore Rooseveit found his definition | dinary duty sent me there to hegin |maiden speech before the New York 'tor, arriv ; : ; t 4 4 { y du € ee, arrived in town and was in R be a severe penalty because he is ena Mo aume tinka e Droaght the choir |of a gentieman in thess terme, €0 In | with . - . Thoy told me that poil: | slate legialature. That speech was In [conferonce . with olher ofclals, | fraey, Aterncon st the home of|lost thelr lives vesterday in the third | gaged in the trult buainess and will explosion in five years, was sealed |be obliged to discontinue it or ems up to 150 volees, and there were fo truth must measnre him. And | qics were low, that I would find the | many w the deciding act of |n v " n the a % ts d | |Nothing can be done or no definite . > b no'weéak brothers or sisters in the | moet assuredly does he stand the | groom and the saloonkeeper there, | Roosevelt's career. 1t was by nolgoec® 20 0o ! ed to continue all the usual activis|,cai today. Tifty.six lives have|ploy a driver, Judge Mangan said I fther. Everybody was ex- | fest, Possesced of o i figures ascertained, it was stated, ties. Some adjustment will be nec- L2 ineup, either. i) st. Possessed of a genuine VM- land that no gentleman hbothered |means remarkable for its eloquence. |yney the insurance adjusters get | essary among the grad the § been lost in the series of disastrous | Officer Willlam Grabeck testified pected to do his or her duty and 45| pathy and a buoant nature, he de- | with them . . . ‘Then, said 1, if that | But it was vemarkable for ita fear-|¢opeqper, e Laniione L RSN 0 Do istants, that he and Officer. Louis E. Harper | :vthre‘:hlt.-um:mx:h:fl’:.,,.hi same tume | veloped that esmpafhy inlo a wider | is eo, (he ‘groom and the ‘alobn |less canidor! In hat sneech e | pregeris L. Fay, for seven vears|ship will e held it the lehape, Sun.| The 13 victims were members of |8aW Iimpesls duiving morh en ere follow- | range of inferest and ffort than did | keeper are the governing class and |called thieves thieves, regardless of | . e fa Saa i1 i lan explort ty of 21 who had |South Main street in an unsteady ing out the same principle in other | perhaps any other man, who has|we confess we: e | . ssistant to Rev. Dr. Hill and who!day evening services will be held in exploring party jof 51 ‘wio, 2ni bout 745 last night. nearby cities. - Thus, when the com-| acouped 1he iRt e nfess weakness. You have 'all their millions and their positions. |\ o1 6009 o Bronxville, N. Y., Jan- |the chapel as soon as arrangements | €ntered the mine in search of the n?annerl out 7:4 ’: st night. There P P al office, nn- |y hances and the education. Ypt | He fold the plain, unvarnished truth | luary 1, was notified by telograph |can be made for setting up tempor. body of a miner lost in an explosion | 38 only one light burning and bined district choir got together ¥es- | jags it he Abraham Lincoln. Coupled t when Lim , b h Lincoln 2 1 le o ant eves co fo . Limpezis was ordered out off you let them rule you. And I ‘1‘ his own indignant eyes could & nswrda\ of the fire and arrived in |ary motion picture machines. last December when four were 5 gy terday they were able to handle the | qith this sympathy was a marked ; was a ied | “And having put his hand to the 1t killed. vi 3 t T [the cit v er his ge I illed. It was the first time the b ::‘l’!oru;.:"hthz\:\t':r!k:‘l‘liht-:‘:;ffi::w‘salnqlmlr,‘v "[y(h e :“)d o ];m" political plough, Roosevelt "e"‘fl e was Uie friend ST preskicais \’\hr“ ;p‘pr;d::a'm :;:an a‘n\lfl h:‘ri““;i\l‘nm Thanks Flecmen wail Fxtioe workings hgd been penetrated since 4 4 by the inheritance high 14 . | o < o c 7 o s e i i 5 ; 0 S e St el e o d\’. inheritance of high 1deals. | tuyned back. He was ever at work |and Kings, of college professors and | &) . prillaadilon o “""”v‘.:hr::r‘r; D':;d:'\:”p\f‘:fi'c‘;; a;;;:;-:m::lr; the December explosion. Spedfl Notice | e .t Eight Left Main Party - g the yioral charac- | pimself, and he expected to find |of financiers, yet he knew the other | :’:"l"“"n,::‘;:::h:x:“’c:_"’,: ok | feristics of Theodore Tioosexelt, W« qiher polficians so. With him, o [side of life as well. He numbered |78 o Sl membere of the fira and police de-| The rearchers had reached the| Don't forget Ehepherd's Minstrel Alons i Daxt. . The Mngers 334 their | must begin with the physical basis. shirking was tolerated. No energy [among his devoted admirers and | ”m onn'ol ”p'th-‘" i m e partments for their services at the |gcene of the December explosion|and Dance, Thureday evening, Feby g laidusts, metsrs whtehing | Ihe first battls' to his credit was|was spared o make the right in supporters, soldlers ranchmen, po-|C o SO0 L L€ C0 e e T fire. Dr. Hill's gtatement to the | when four blasts occurred within 10 (16 at Jr. O. U. A. M. Hall on Glea the cenductor for the time heats | that in which he set himself to win 4 | which he believed, coma to pacs. |liepmen and laborers, social reform- _"-“] “!1:‘;""’";0:;’l:""-*' "\'r\:' "fll;‘]} Herald follows: minutes, foul air soon filled the mine | street—advt. ¢ 2 LS ®1 “May I not ask the indulgence of |balking all attempts at rescue. victory over his body. He was not a | Even in those latter days, wl o lry i aatadtil and ‘made hay' while There was no lagging behind the or-| o 7 - e n in those latter days, when %o |crs loved him, and ‘ma ay 1% = $ii; ireitliie was done ‘par ex- | ¥TUnE cuild His autobiography tells | mans friends disagreed with him in | the sunshine of his faver shone upon ('his afternoon vour columns for the purpose of giv- | The eight who reached the sur- i el “lus that from early infancy he was | jdgment, he did not falter. Theo- | them. Certainly Theodore Rooscvelt | It was learned today that J. Wil- oS ! y cellence. A few more meetings of 004 4o asthmatic attacks which | dore 'R : hem. i At il ¥ itain. ‘Worihs, maokine: iopsrator, | ob: cslonionibRliatiiot o BB ) face alive Mug lettithe mainpaziyfo dore "Roosevelt did not follow. He |was no snob. He held that it wasa |Ji Bemin, e gherator: |church to all those who in anywise | recharge their batteries and eat a [wa ercome by smoke when he SRS 2 the district choir and the bhiggest ‘flr‘rfll his vitality and kept back his | jed. He never leaned. He alwa zerous thing-—though pleasant aided in suppression of the.unfor-|Junch. They were about 500 yards and best choral society the M-lu‘ h that & ushed t . Guér’ knsw will” be able 'xlr:\\ y\ ,Bm, in tha once t‘ran l\m’l‘: meant to lift and things were sure to associate merely with cultivated, ‘:x..', info the motion picture ftynate fire of Sunday morning and [away when the explosion occurred. g fortunate listeners, d] re 'H l.-ln indomitable spirit. Huw, happen, where he was concerned. | refined men of high ideals and sm- [P0 h to remove the film “nsyflrday the aftendant circumstances. The “Just as we finished eating,” said A Per Olsson himeelf played the or- rf:vn led him in the w s of ad- | \When asked onee by a loval and |cere nurpose to do right; that it w He was assisted out by Peliceman | prompt arrival of the firedepart- |one of the survivors, “we heard a gan in some solo numbers.: As gn|Venfure. He would be a pathfinder, fjoving friend just how this came |fine, but that it was not the whole of Hanford Dart | ment ,its hard and efficient, work, the | qull rumbling, then came a second organist he “needs no introduction. |a hunter, pioneer—but a hunter | ahont, loogevelt made answer life. Tt was just fhis sincere desire Workmen in charge of W. H. Al [yvery generous and unremitting serv- | explosion and we all started to get . He recently got through giving re- |1°°ded a sound bo Therefore. to Startling Directness to know and to help his fellows that |12n were busy today closing up [ice of the police department. the |out appa ratus and go to the rescue citals on organs throughout New | | make himself stron hecame the “‘I put myself in the way of led him to invite Rooker Washin heles m the building, boarding over | splendid spirit shown by both of (of the others. A third explosion 3 Fngland; wherever and whenever | PUSINess of his life. 1o was a beliex- | (hings happening. and they happen.’ |ton to dinyat the White Houge. No broken windows and bracing the |these branches of our city's service, | blinded us and hefore he could find they want some . extra fine m;.u"r in the Gospel of will, and—to [ Ayd this, my friends, is a remark | falsifior, no pere politician would | organ pillars, which were in danger jand the gencrous aid given by vari- [ our equipment we were . knocked playing, be it in Worcester, \\mhm'}"""“’ e ends, hie ran, he rode. | worthy of eareful consideration, a |have done # thing of that sort urance on the organ. E. W. Pelton, |ous individuals all are causes for the | semi-conscious by a fourth ] or ‘Maine, they call on Per Olsson ‘1,,\ swam, cecking alwavs to Jieep his | remark commending itself to the - faith in his fellow men was | of falling Speclators were | deepest appreciation and gratitude. “Only-ane hm'" remained lighted He .nearly played at the Sesqui- | body under, o make it a fit instru- | tantion of every red-blooded Chris-|open and above heard. Jacob Riik|ordered fo remain away f{rom in|And the church through its Standing Half crawling, half walking. guided PRA] MAGAi 4 Centennia! exposition. but the desl ment for ||v»‘\...:|‘ he became a |v'|14»‘y|;“, man teday. There was a di- [fells us that in his police commis- (lnm of Hn organ ruins in cage of [committes and the committee of the | oniy by “ngt';v\ lines, we Lnggm p slipped when the Sesqui began fo| Sportsman. Boxing. fennis, polo vid- | yectness ahout Roosevelt almost |sioner days Toosevelt was buncos lesiastical society wishes 10 PULIthe two miles to fhe pit shaft. It wobble. ing, hunting and chooting-—-these | startling. His eapacity to see and |less than any of wige predeces. | .4 4x6 and a 6:6. gup. |itself on record as deeply” appreciat- | soemed ter o-" "1' ‘v"!‘ ves 1 Yesterday the organist played [were for him the wmeans, however, | know what next needed of be dene, | sore." | ported the organ pillars from li. [ive of all these services. }V\,-.-‘u,a:,l.‘.g:"‘;‘L;,.};n"‘-"l: n.'rl:;f,:fi «ome Bach~a toecato and fugue |and not the end! Tt was not with his | fogether with his ability to surround | g this morning. & ' ith ] ) i s a E | s morn Inasmuch as the chapels of the | T 7 ¢ , it Shn Pt o e, R | T AL TS| oo SOl Hanls, | e e Rt e et ety a3 g o o ok o b el s, 4 e organist's plan ix simple: he sport for strenzth’s saké True 1o his | keep them working, made him in his |~ i o litohas orasiar Al elaried Sl 3 1 ged, | a ck dust a eache e : King, 5 Rl ders. Allen started work- (it is expected that the activities and o pletely exhausted plays Bach so often that the andi- | own preschinent of 1l “strenuous | day a leader, recognized from end to | for “Phanlom’ SHNer” | vico teaiine ont the intoder of Ahe|dorsicn of (' Criren it et ?‘.22' '.-".Iu‘.- ,’\,;':::L & 5 y lears k- gots to like it. There have|life” he hoth worked hard and|cnd of this country and out across| Camden, N. J. Feh. 13 (U'T) - organ and removing what pillars a che ce R 16 e g pillars are |sumed on schedule, with the excep- " innumegable requests at First| plaved hard - no zreat emotion is|flhe seas as one who ‘worketh |The “phantom sniper” of Camden | ctanding fion of the Sunday evening worshi DIATAIRLe ienctl 0 Teach Sthis : Y 4 Untheran for Bach—and _that x| posible in _dulled and weakened | righteousnese: Thrie very qualities fll huded polir today. Tle added | 7This aftornoon Rutherford upon |1t would vi s iroadler ST RS AEsRAL :':,(,"r"‘:,'g’ N, S sanel ;’fh“"'"flt:': ounger 3 zoing some, ax the saving gocx bodies. This Roacevelt knew well. He | enabled him fo enforce the Sunday another name fo his fast growing|further in - famit: el ol o e Sund sther na E < further inspection decided it was not | ingratitude fo let this opportunity : - 1 b e mag e Tl i A pportunity | foul air. Relief work was finally ] Olsson_says himself, it fakes {1 therefora gate his museles with 'h"ldnqng law for saloons, when he was |1t of victime vesterday when the|safe to permit the organ pillars to | pass without expressing in this pub- | abandoned at noor Pl . it ar four hearings for an intelligent prdr “windoss 8 wn antenebile Biiv={empin sonding, Searing Hiat Yhey |lic way probosnd: thatks, M8 1He] maleds The. csaivbts. the mine | “J fer] Iike a new man,” declared 3 verson to hegin to realizo the power | = e lon_ by Toseph Cairons hroken | yore St £l s ek P feated. he survivers sald they|Mr. E. W. Murphy, one of the bes 4 Wht Pprevide - {lie Heirings?, Oncs D th T f T F ' “ ¥ X en was ordered ol churches who ahve come forward | themselves out, but that a third “For y 3 : | Thée attack, the twentysixth of | tear down what was left standing of |with most generons words of svm- at 941 8. 121h 1. “For many years L {3 sRouh: A congregation’s first| ea rap or Iwo m oresiviite e EhapbeEtul et BBk | 1a preail) risensing ARG pliary o | Saths st oltameTibgrar sl mr L ket have been froubled with interrupted sleep, gefting up as many as foue oae te ach o i ome | ! :.':b'.I:v:ldv:!rJM: f":ffll\tfi::l,w’s ok place in Sonth Camden | the ruina of the interior perties for the use of the people of 4 inner parts. After the third hear | SUES FOR £330 ON NOT} this morning removing water soaked |1t is all a fine and inspiring testi- | a8 been) aweak and'ached so'aily ing. however, the music begine tn Claimins that money due on a |1 could nat. straighten np. My legs B L lana feet were swollen and my eves note has not ieen paid, Julius Od- = . Steamer Hirao Marn Fired on by |igc puffed out. The slightest work plumb the eonl. Olgson has 1 Rach a0 frequently at the Firet Lutl oy Tonasy on fhis olly. Congtatilal i FOR EDUCAT'ON DURING PAST YEAR and Saflor Killed. the morning. At fimes my head 3 Nitlcen entdiiAiath: o plt ilaes i rved the pap Jtachi i, would ache =0 badly I was unaltile S et e The Lstheran i At 0in Ol orr e e N Nbllan:l;a'l.' Feb. 13 (N—The Brst |to worlk and my jointa and lims churehes, 1t can be sa1d withaut fear Suit for 8700 damazes has been g o ol A ey e racy of the nerth coasl of China |tortured me with rheumatic pains. : i i e pronght e dames ferriin, inrooeh | This Sum Has Been Dis- s goiaas o *ducation of in two years brought forth two Jab- | I had no appelite and felt like "= 1 i ! 2 Hnngerford & Epx Jinst Dom i f |anese warcraft to recaplure Japan- |yashed.out rag. 1 fried electricat ] ittenuated quartel winging of pav- EeT! / sl B : . The stafe spent 352004 for voca- | ese merchantmen from the pirates. |1y me | fiigaF Thsr o’ 8b the singing for, the inick Brizzi. Constavle tred Wimkie | persed By Board of Edu- [ional cducation during the year. 1t | The Japanese steamer Hirao Mary | ie0is with no effect, but as | CHEENIOD, Thy helirve ail the gprxed ligrEner. loRlnE Siio s . 4 | expendea. $15,551 to conduct elasses |outbonna from Shanghal encotnler- | oot reh (o Leng s Aasey L) voung peeple and all of the ald el fondant’s pool romm at 11 Hartford | cation im Is 169 TOWRS |of non-English speaking people, and |ed a steamer fiying a Japanese flag | oo 157 s 8o0d effects throush- able to sing should get i an the enin Nk [put 825,419 into Americanization | accompanied by a Chinese funk 1°ar |1 fomng 1 req rh e o ey iy musical band wagen And ac fhev | and Municipalitic e FiatemTe ok ampronehed. van |1 ound I had o get up only once or Al 15%e 40’ muslc Jike duck to Eg b The four normal echaole, at Dan- |Hirao Maru and as it neared the |\ eaeeny non 1 €20 sleep all might, ter, it only needs a dinamic leader bury, Mew Brithin! N Saven aiid | 2hlp 36 wos sean s Junk: was Allad |, LAk acks urpainin Y. o th dn the rest When ene reglizes Fariford, Feb 13 (P Connecti | Willimantic, cost the. state well over | With pirates [tire body, fecl normal all over, eat cuts through Boand of. ey $600,000} norms) sdmmer. &cliools| | The pirates Bred -on the Japanese | Lo 800 Menlk o duy And syl ikt Ppotsaecr Dhawox, in sadition 1o b {ting on weight. My trienda tell me 1 341, and the new dormitory |8teamship wounding the Japanesa playing the greatest of arzan work- caton. spent over $3,000,000 in the cost § 2% a regular fhing. has built up by fscal year ended June 3, 1927, 10 do |for the Danbury Normat achool cost |captain and killed one saflor. The |2 100king much better, but what far the largest choir in the citv | " |1ts ve o educating the pabhe |$131,515 | Hirao Maru finally escaped and ar. |} 2™ interested i is that 1 feel years has taught it to memorize most of | * ity che € i »"H v of the school elnldren of e 169 fowns and| ‘The 11 frade achools, salaries, [Tived at Tsingtao Sunday. The Jap- ""“,’,"fi“""d 5 3 H‘us “Messiah.” has atarted the Bach s v,Ha ed } m‘:n ' ‘ \ municipalities Ty m decs not an travel and cquipment, cost the state |aNese destroyer Tsubaki from Port mk'_."',‘, ?,‘,’,’r,,h,h.?q: - ':“:‘-d-:v":: chorus of southful male Soices. and | I“L I" I lRA\" 0 Temove th upants. On for 1 wav nelude (he chonling of |approximately $550.000. The echool [Atthur and the zunboat Teushima. | (S8 S0 MG e % inetigated this new dis A the fire and amoke. how- | v feeble minded and other backward |1n Bridgeport called for the largest |{roM Teingtao started on the trail |1ve at Th r Hanson Druz Co., “hoir, one cannot help admiring m | his efforts were fruit) Dehility Ikdren comintted to mstitntions | individual expenditure — $108,427, |°f the pirates 30 Church &, New Britain. ek and determination that i AT HRI\] “l 'R"S\'N‘l v § Fistes Trs. Fose i eh At e sate tramine school at [ The sum of $54,917 was expended It was reported by wireless today { : nda:::;lv No wonder he is elek in d hoen “u . i M '\mmrm nor does it include the |for the New Britain state trade |3t vhr"rs.uham rl‘vz»]v'"rm') the ship . ¢ { e ay. After a dav's recuper | nd Mr by onf ¢ 1,000,000 expendilures for the agri. |schoof, sid 355,095 for the Putanm |TTM the pivates ncar Haichow after lCIll R!I : i ‘ion, there will he other days for | i b v ho live approvimately % 1" 1t went entirely for | school severe fighting. The Japanese ('] y ves :”'"' 'rnwfl mo; 1"”‘!44“”\\\: The | IEres “"1 A5 ot the the admimstration of the hoard and Enumeration Grant Flvn‘v‘\,‘-lnn \\;m‘|j|rw|‘hlvml as the Hait . e : o ey ; ; : ! ) 5 . Aauect of tr 4’1‘ “hoe and normal {zrant for the 169 fownes amounted | Lo ™o e of tlic SHIC'E Grow | g IRNE Sl Bona $n remia: | 1 Tatth § i Aas. ) 18 et oS il i b SRRl AR #818.477, of which Hartford eax 110t repotied wd To get relief when pain fortured eal history G 11 [ re. Girorge e | flfnw watlos I e [ ““'l',”"l’ ‘,”" ": o “",“‘ TNy SR bE Previously the Japanese steamer | 10015 and muscles keep you in con- MAIL BOX DESTROVED e, ten empt 1 Pt nos Gontin and even | Tetior. vomitons it e e, e aastin. Tat |steamship fising a Japaness flag and | It is quickis absorbed and you maged and fhe o iteaith ar | V% bt ot 165 L, hegan o feet e OF (e compiroller show that the 811,406 New Haven, $58,215; New |Roger.” which is not described in | druggist in America. B et A il it ; boaefll, W § n o] 7121 expeniifures of he .l.I 1‘1: l;-n;l;n’»“SV ”v:"u'" l"la,::\ull,“."""’:: the reports S ol s 1o snaite 20 restiibiy ok 5 1 < o e g Contin 1t £ the Jasi fiscal year amounted fo | Simaby 187, Stamford, §25.- =% e bago, sore, lame muscles, lame back, Thomas Blanchetle questioned taeo Mats bell 11 1 last passenz " TRt o e Suge ity gad ,,,',, 7 L4t & '{‘ sor, $5.028:| ~Waehington. Feb. 13 (1 P)—Rep. | ing, aching feet. Only 60 cents. Tt or thres men-who were near the hox, | 8t the Whistling post near the freizht caee westward th Fo tizer and tonk Tithe aia st Locke, §: Besger, socialist, Wis, introduced o |penetratex. You can aiways get tut they knew nothing of the inri. | atation and o ¢ e Tt MK Chaphitan | o e L R " 2 -"‘1': 3":’h.’1" "": el d Ll 1:‘:7v=nhn'u:e Maa:‘- to put “teeth” | Joint-Eage at Fair Drug Dept. . dewk ' ellloer gattiers b o : 7 R ; e il Bivar. M o A8 A% b e 1n into the firet amendment to the e ¥ i ‘Y: o i (b} P nedic ‘ 'w" T‘:'"r. |"‘n|4 _ Meme of Enps rereiing 42544, that in Xew Haven |constitution, guarantseing freedom FREE . e ity Ry A S s Sy AT I e R whona B items of expenze n | €2499, and “that in Waterbury 32~ of speech The need for enforcing |Laboratories Dack 8. Hallowall, Maine T ho | od 4 11 e ot attet the accid A macerated n the CMA0d 1 thie cum ace as follows. [ g0 the first amendment “‘never was i . st 21 el sl Bect of Tuvalid hool libraries and apparatus, $17 Tor tution of high school pupils mere strikingly ilustrated than it [ READ WERALD CLASSIEIFGD Anc of o0 c 0t sEii & fol King roowis of Th PO Fre "l Pock Wine, this | . ;" .,‘ " " 1‘:' um'h :;'-’4”""1 : vv’y-.'v:; '::; v:'r::w:w: '; ,m.-| in the strike regzions of - FOR BESI RESULIS liowing the accident. He broke out|of this city, Wine Geatin, 155,515, physical v.du,‘uvn ot ¢hil- | high school students paid $53,543, l.u;.v ania and Coloradn,” Berger - PP A_S.

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