New Britain Herald Newspaper, April 12, 1928, Page 4

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Face Charge of Killing Conn. Trooper Nelson Springtield, Mass, April 12 (®— Roland Lalone and Albert Raymond of Worcester will be charged with | the murder of Stat rolman Irv-| ing H. Nelson of New Haven, Conn., | {who was shot to death when he| tried to stop a speeding car in Pom- | tret, Conn., last Friday night. a | On Their Way |+ Connecticut authorities, Who have ! rotified Springficld police they are MRS, LIZZIE HITCHCOCK * 'routed springiicia poice ey are EXPIRES AT AGE OF 83 v are coniaci tho righe men are | | being held and that they will en- | { | deavor to take them back to Con- aby well so that ng and sturdy of the Visiting » Keeping the well it may grow into voungster is the t: {will play the leading woman's part. | The sccond play is titled, “One I Love, Two I Love,” by Miss Doris ‘play the part of Paul Grant, a er Teporter. This play is' one of the players taking a dual role ]mn Treatmem of mother anl daugbter. | 1 “Hearts,” and was writ- Alice Gerstenberg, the scene e and Beans,” is being | by Mrs. James Reid of | Campbell of by Mrs. Golda bfliv presence of women and is a sa- | | tirical farce. It is of local interest | | | that Miss Dorothy Hart of this city | { | Holsworth of Windsor, who ne (‘,opper Found to Be Better Than comeas of & romantic maturc. with The last play is famous for 1ts dia- | e at an afternoon card “One 1 Love, Two I Love” 5. George M indsor and “Heart ss of Hartford, M 1 1S acting as stage director to teach bibies cor correct Fla mether : Passes Away in Maple Hill as she Decticut to face the killing charge. balies hat are not gain- | Yollowing identification of the e ieht o e H _—“..‘”;!,m Was Planning Return to | two suspects by Connecticut troopers o T o : o |in Worcester yesterday and the later e eie S hansas City. identification by the son of a filling and he thorouzhly. | ns of Mes. Lizgle . Hitchoeck | f13tion proprictor, District Atterney A 1o o o o e heme of her son, |Howard C. Bradford of Windham | county, Conn., announced that war- rants for the pair's arrest for the on the proper Lcock of Kansas City after food in propec deses s pre sit of nearly a year with s % 4 ¥ fo]l(‘m e ck the is un)' v«). thwarted by | murder of Trooper Nelson would be weighed n and usually deat died at the home of her | Prousht here today. He sald extra- i i Fawim R “Hitehcook of | dition proceedings would be started | Babies borm du Hill vesterday following an |at once if the men resisted arrest. | nionths cannot get e Iness of four months. She intend- | Meanwhile the pair stugk to their e hine. ; b e i City this | Stout denials in the face of an all| Blented with ey | night grilling. They stolidly re- - g S T il o | tused to admit any connection with “ice box" list of identi- often term the knowledge of the Should any baby show any cal defects while under of the doctor, the n vised to take it to h tlie asgociation notifics the phys nerd at the same time. meved When home treatment in the way | he of sunbaths is prescribed or making of a supplementary formula is ad- vised by the doctor, a nurse visits Waterhury 83 years ago. For years previous to her marriage sh taught school in Bridgeport. Follow ing the dec*™ of her husband she Are Singled Out to this city and made her hor They had been singled out by Pa- 1 10 years ago when shetrolman Raymond P. Gallagher as to Kansas City to live With | the pair who engaged him in o gun T son. { hattle here last I'riday afternoon, by She is survived by her son, A. B.|Harold M. Lester, 15, of Willimantic, Hitchcock <ansas City, and two | Conn., as the men to whom he sold stepsons, Hitchcock and | bandits despite a long fications. e doctor in the home to assist the mother in Charles E. Hitehcoek of this city. carrying out the doctor’'s recom- uneral services will be held at 1he mendations. Imeme of I 1. Hitencoek of Mapte| STANDARD OIL COM The home of the association is Hill tomorrow afternoon at 2 o'clock. well farnished with demonstration Burial will be in Ilantsville, l equipment, which is always on ex- I hibition for the mother, | street from 2:30 to 4 in the after- | East street school on Fridays from | RABAlM | | the Maryland Tubercular sanatorfuni N has been added to the staff. of | of sunburn, in spite of the best precautions I can Nurses. | had to stand my share of euflering, I ean tall | | ‘burn bas no more terror {or me. I never ssw any- | several days befors the rednems is all gone, the These well baby conferences are suNB“RN VIcT I“ held Wednesday at the Visiting | noon; Washington street school on 3:30 to 4. | and the Montgomery County Tuber- | “An unusually tender skin eoupled with s love nursess Miss Ferdman is a graduate | take. 1 don't believe anyone has tried more you. That is, with all ezcopt Rabalm, Since 8 |~ GO[LEGE CLUB To GWE thing like the way it soothes the skin. Its bene- | pain and smart go almast instantly, And sines Nurse Assoclation home on Center | Is GRATEF“I. ]'0 .l Thursdays trom 2:30 to 4 and at the i Misg Rose Ferdman, recently of | cular hospital in Amsterdam, N. Y. | of the out-ol-doors makes me & frequent victim . of the Yale University $chool for | remedies than I bave, but with them all T bave | friend rocommended Rabalm, the pain of oua- PLAYS FOR SCHOLARSHIPS | 5k o moocs i ot Three One Act Presentations to Iic| I bave ued Rabalm my skin bas sever blis- Produced April 25 at Camp 1t you also sufler from sund you, too, ean obtain quiek relief with Rabalm. It requires Bo painful rubbing in. Will ot stain elothes or Three one act plays, with musicai| bed linen. Pleasantly fragraat. Two sises, 50- intermissions, will be pry ted at | eents and $1.00 eontaining 3 times a8 much. the Camp school auditorium o RABALM is for sale by all druggists. April 25 in the evening for the hene FREE fit of the scholarship fund of the Proof School. New Britain College club. The plays | will be given by members of the Hartford Emerson College cluh. Two | of the plays were written by merm- | 4 Lers of the Hartford club. [ 3¢ you nave Epiler 5, Falling Sick- The titlo of the first play la: “Pease | o0, or Sovuione o matian hew bed and Beans,” by Pauline Phelps. The | wopped over night fn many. cases. NO theme of the play revolves around| NARCOTICS—no harmful drugs. Satisfac- an absent-minded psychology pro- | lion or mon oy fessor and his inferiority complex in| . DR S your crankcase means diluted, dirty More than | FUR || STORAGE | oA unique SPECIAL CLEANING | | and GLAZING Service 5 s ¢ WITHOUT EXTRA CHARGE # now. Let him flush + gasoline or motor oil e Tn addition to storing your furs under ideal modern conditions, we subject them toa thorough cleaning, redressing, and glazing ! ptocess. This process restores to them ! the glossy lustre and softness they had when new—yet with this invaluable spe- cial service our rates are as low or Jower than those usually charged. , Write or phone. If you are in the met- ropolitan district, suburbs included, we will call for your furs. Otherwise, send us your furs by express insured, charges collect. ®Storage rates: 37, on valuation up to $700; 20}, on valuation from $700 to $5000. Special rates for furs of high value. C. C. SHAYNE & CO. STRICTLY RELIABLE FURS 126 WEST 42nd ST., NEW YORK Phone: WiSconsin 4360 ESTABLISHED 1805 .. . STILL UNDER THE SAME OWNERSHIP | FOURTH WARD REBEL BLOG |at his home and he was clected ward | | chairman. | WINTER' CHANGE - YOUR OIL TODAY That is the question every Socony man is asking the motorists at his station. It is a vital question, for winter driving ! the use of the choke in cold weather lets ex- | cess gasoline seep down into the crankcase. Dirty, because dust from the air gets into the oil through the air intake. | Let the Socony man drain the crankcase Flushing Oil, and refill with Socony Motor Oil. Tt takes only a few minutes and costs only two or three dollars, depending on the amount of oil you need. No charge for the 1 service ; you pay only for the oils. ! Important. Your car represents an in- vestment of hundreds of dollars. Poor ment. Standardize on Socony, backed by fifty-four years of refining experience. | gasoline before th “Trooper Nelson local store owne as members ot Robert Asher as the men to who she sold the ha found in Dudley where the bandit car was abandoned. | The pair will be arraigned this | morning, charged wi assault and vobbery while armed with a revolver for cach of the robberi making nine counts; with carrying a revolver; for assault with attempt to murder in the Gallagher angle of | the case; and with the murder of Trooper Nelson in Connecticut. They are being held without bail. HELPS PAONESSA T0 WIN, De Facto Leader Thanks Residents ‘Who Loancd Cars in Drive For Democrats | Louis Horwitz, claimant to the | chairmanship of the Fourth Ward | Republican club, today issued a! statement expro ng his thanks to those who donated automobiles and | personal service in the drive con- | ducted by his group to turn the | fourth ward over to Mayor-Lilect A.| M. Paonessa, the democratic | nominee. The ward was carried by | Paonessa by four votes, although it is normally a republican district. 1 months after the election of | ; Horwitz organized an anti-organization bloc of the repub- lican party in his district. The chair- | manship being va: . he called a meeting of fourth ward republicans Although he has never| been recognized as chairman by the | town committee, he has continued | the use of the title, even on the oc- | caston of his announcement that his | group would work for the success of | Paonessa. Nearly two years ugo | PANY OF NEW YORK $ OVER ready for spring?” oil. Diluted, because | it out with Socony can ruin that invest- Socony Motor Oil and Gasoline must pass 13 rigid tests before they reach your car, ARD OIL COMPANY OF NEW YORK l i of Horwitz ealled on the mayor-clect ! )y and assured him of ward’s support. On clection day Hor- the trio that had held them up in Witz had a fieet of cars working for pastor of the HEIJ] F"R MUR“ER\(M last two weeks; and by Mrs. | Paonessa. | m | s that later were Missionary Strachen Engl nd Christian Fundamentals as- sociation wili be held in the German committed, | Methodist Jefferson | campaigns in all the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 192s. the The April meeting of the New |Jose church, 101 street, Hartford, April 18, The aft fourth lnnon Mmeeting wil' commence at 2 o'clock when Fe Evangelical Free church of B \ port, At 7:30 p. m, Harry 8 Strachan |r ~~~tly conducted a successful evan- b of th To Speak in Hartford |ion campaien, president of the San | Nicara~-1 and w. speak. Mr. Strachan conducts evangelistic - ' Centrul and South America, hol-hn;,j ! Report Attempt to Bomb ) thesc meetings in theaters and tents. | s A Many different times he has n| Mussolini’s Train n | stoned and left for dead. He arrived | London, April 12 P—A Reuter's ge- |in this c~ntry only a week ago for dispatch from Lugano, Switzerla a brief tour of two months. He quotcs a Como dispatch, to the Cor- riere Del Ticino as stating that a .geliza- | gelization campuign in powerful bomb was found on the in Managua, Nic- ruilway line over which Premgier will | aragua at the time of Lindbergh's Mussolini's train was to pass on his visit to that city. recent return to Rome from Milan. Everybody 1s welcome to these! A man hiding near the track was republics of |incetings, l:\rrca(r 1 Ivar Sellev Danish-Norwe Conn., will bring the message. torn Latin-American Ev: war Bible Training school, Standing makes back and legs ache | How % of the workers in the Straus Silk Mills relieve tired muscles «, .. I's as good a job as any mill worker could ask —nice people to work with, good pay, fair conditions—but a factory job anywhere is bound to be hard work."’ NLY the mjll workers themselves know how legs and feet can ache and how lame backs can be after a long day walking up and down a spinning frame. Something they must have to take the ache out—to relicve the stiffness and fatigue which might otherwise make it necessary for them to miss many a day's work. The workers in the Straus Silk Mills in Trenton are a particularly fresh, wholesome-looking lot of wo- men. And so we asked them what they do to prevent aching and strain from standing at a spinning frame all day. From three-quarters of them came promptly the answer, I never use anything but Sloan’s.” Everywhere the leading remedy Jor muscular pain .Everywhere you go you hear the same story from people whose work brings a strain on their muscles, Read the experience of this New York woman— “I had such a backache I didn’t know what to do. I used Sloan’s Liniment, and in half an hour I was SLOAN better. Now, when anyone has 2 pain, I say, ‘Use Sloan’s.’ ” Another woman writes— “The pain in my back was like a knife stab and it left me helpless. Sloan’s Liniment was given me to ease the pain and I am now able to do all my own work.” Sloan’s Isniment is scientific—ab- solutely reliable because it works by the quickest, surest method known 10 relieve pain. It stirs up the circu- lation—brings new blood right to the spot where the pain is, sweeps away e cause of the trouble. You can get it in any drug store., A bottle that will last you a long time for 35 cents. Use it for— Rheumatism Lame muscles Sciatica Stiff neck Lumbago Colds and Neuralgia congestions Sprains and bruises A company doctor who cares for hundreds of workers every yoar says: ** People whose work expeses thems to strain or to damp and cold usually suffer from @ gosd deal of mus- cular soreness, We find that Sloan’s gives them quich, positive relief."" One of the workers in the Strous Sitk Mills. 34 of these workers said that after a long day o theirfeet they find Sloan's their best kelp for tired backs and lrgs 9 Endorsed universally by those who do the world’s hard work T Lead in Value Always Hudson firt Prinaiple SON leadership of mode extends to every detail and marks a new Hudson supremacy, as definite as its mechan- ical dominance through the Super-Six principle,and its companion invention which set today’s standard for motor performance. Every item of finish, construction and equipment expresses value as tangibly as its new Super-Sixes. motor values. 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Sedan, *1950 AR prices |. o. b. Desreis, plus war escise tan m:mmlnwamdmnm“hfllmlormm handling and insurance THE HONEYMAN AUTO SALES CO. 200 East Main St. Telephone 2542 e

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