New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 4, 1928, Page 4

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CHLDREN'S HOME FOUNDER PRAISED Speakers at Anniversary Pro- gram Laud Rev. Dr. Klingberg Tributes to Dr. John E Klingberg were paid by spea & meeting in the First Congregation- al church last evening at t of three services in celebration of the 25th anniversary of Home which he founded. Proicesor John H. Strong of Ne York city, connected with the White | Bible school, was one of the ers. Professor Strong was T the First Baptist church 3 _#go when Dr. Klingberg etarted his home. He and Rev. Lyman S. John- son were the spiritual advisers of the kers at cond the Children’s speak- stor of founder, and through their couns:! encouraged the proj Rev, Mr. Johnson was pres spoke briefly on the carly day New Britain churche In his addre Professor Strong bespoke his thanks giving for threc things on the occasion of the anni- versary, the first the proof of the power of human faith in God, the second the Power of true prayer, which is not “a convenient means of reaching our «nds by harneesing supernatural power, by making God wecomplice in our selfishr and the third the beautiful light thrown on the character of God through I ald to the New Britain Home for Children. In conclusion he said, “T have a holy envy of my brother in the work for which God has called him. 1 profoundly belicve that God, who has atepped into this city through the wonderful work that Dir. Klingherg ‘as done here and the monument | he has erected, will continue to aid that home in the future Children from the home were pres- ent and took part in the program Early days of the home and it beginning and incidents in his own personal struggles were recounted by Dr. Klingberg. SHOT BY BANDITS Burlington. Vt., Dance Hall Proprie- tor Wounded When He Refuses to Give Money. Burlington, Vt. June 4 (P - George Clar proprictor of a dancing pavilion at Mallet's Bay, eight miles from here was wounded early yesterday when he resisted two masked men who at- tempted to compel him to turn over | his Saturday’s receipts. ! The men fled after firing a bullet into Clarey's log, and he pursued | but was unable to overtake them. | Last night he tempted to identify two privates at Fort ¥than Allen who were held un detention for over- staying their leaves of absence Sat- urday night. Clarey thought he recognized one of the men hut was unable to iden- tify the other | 4 (UP)—=George! Lauderda tford hospit tng struck Windsor, nton, 61 ¥Fla., dled at several hours er i by a trolley car here last night. Glen-| ton was forme of Mass, rly Springficld, | Buby speclalists agree nowadays, that du v<t six months, 1 bies must hate ounces of fluid per pound of body weight daily, An eight pound ba twenty-four or on the rule is per pound of amount of fluid fed baby is g him be give him a few drops of | Castoria. For 1t o ri cholera, diarrhea, o on and howels, consiipa ach, loss of leading pl ing =0 effec v & —and millions of moth pended on it in over th use. 1t = him s ba car nourishment from h creases n each packag Motherhood iner v's howels rig enables him fand ight a vou get a word of cautior nature of Chas. packs get the genuine tles contain thirty-five EVES EXAMINED =———) Frank E. Goodwin Eesight Specialist 337 Main St Tel 1905 = GLASSES EITTED 0 5 FLASHES OF LIFE: MRS STILLMAN NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, JUNE 4, 1923 Dr | Hartford Theological seminary, ALSO HAS THE AVIATION DESIRE o s D. D, 81, Alexander nder Hamil great-grandson o Hamilton, Potter will become d-an of the wies! [N BUILDER'S SUIT CHURCH DEFENDANT B Associeted Press | Boston—: for John Tartar, patriot and first secretary of the| New York—Mrs, Jar A. Stll- former taxi driver wanted for kill- treasury of the United States is dead ! | nman would love to be the t wo- 'ing of Mary C. Mahan, 21 year old his home here. He was rector! . c[ 2 Bl] [ | man to fly fr this country to Eu- cabaret singer found shot 1o death emeritus of Christ Episcopal church‘mvm llms flllce 0 | rope, but she has tamily to in Milton sand pit, continues with-| Westport., i American lescribing a fhight | e New London—The west side of | ue 0n nno | she had with Thea par- | Cambridge. Mass—Harvard oars- New London harbor is being dragged n—— | haps, she conclud after Imen leave tor b lop. Conn, 1o for the body of Herbert Weeks, a| mp. Evangelical Lutheran ehurch this she can got a job porter, |train for Yale member of the coast guard, SupPOs-| . 1. Reformation is defendant in a | “Wouldn't T 3 Ve | — 4 to have fallen from a bou: and | lLondon—S8ir George H. Wilkins is Bosto—Mrs, Mary Donevan Hap- drowned. ' good. wife of Powers Hapgood, nom- the well-known flyer who recently imated for governor on socialist King Georg: has made him a| | knight. —— | Nickerson. truck driver, found Aviator, With Tools Dropped From Rome—Trust Mussolini to be up-|in South Yarmouth pond under sus- s He made a flight to re- |picious circumstance Above, Makes Daring Repairs and view seaplanes back Irom a long| | Lands in Satets. our | Boston—Jack Slattery, depbsed manager of the Boston Braves sails| Gettysburg, Pa, June 4 (®— St glrays. stunt Hor Burope. After the pilot of anothef airplane an beat this. A pilot looping the| loop was thrown from a plane and | Rurlingt had dropped repair materials to him, parachute Hyannis, Mass.—Body of Frank H his ot Paul Cha ver proprictor of flying instructor at the $£1,000 suit brought by A. P. Leavitt | in which the plaintiff claims that | certain construction work was done | for which a balance of $600 is due. | According to the writ issued by | Attorney Frederick B. Hungerford, | the plaintiff constructed a bullding | for the defendant on Court streat | prior to December 27, 1926. On that | day disputes arose between mn“ parties in which the defendant claimed that there was a leakage in | the west wall of the bullding, !)\e. cause of which was unknown but | which was attributed to a defect in | materials used in the construction, | An sgreement was drawn up between | be vlaan 81} nlans shihils soannd Gettysburg landing ficld urday . e e mien e o AL oUn LR e o s ot by the two parties whereby the de- | it just in time to land nicely, e e s R D e in e ava al fendent veturax fio sum ef B08 o e ‘(“Tk under scrutiny as possible . ”; S ’;‘ !'l fromn the total hill of $2,048.97, | h i—"Long may sl - -mile wind'crawled five times trom | V1O SUtH, was to prdeld out nad) | wave uch is the World's headline | ~ow Haven—Mrs, He the plane’s cockpit to the landing | oy % s ';”" Slilina over an item deseribing a woman of | 1000 o Beserly, Mass gear o repair a broken strut so that el apaL N i 5 walking 17 miles 10 g2t @ Der- |0 woman's national committee for @ sife landing could be made 128 110 & determing (FLhrough expenial 1A ek looUtu: law enforcement, forwards 1o Sl and eAtplier! fook (A for|LLor, o anee OF Uhe leakines was | Caro—Tioya)] siumlen e sars | ESK £ FOrter otjihig sltyia oull| Ehursmont 1L, the alterial hame o 1p aiiac ths povstrustion) 4 e to the women onnecticut *t \ere they ¢ e ers of o hs - 5 ara | from {dle curiosity now. They are |y ut'in prayer for the natlon” on|graves of War veterans during me- | ge o, Soniites was empowered to not to be kept in a special room ! June 10 3 r‘h : | o riall exarains = fix the defect and Qeduct the amount of & museum fecessible only to mot. | Sunda¥, June 10, which is prior to| morial exercises due for the work from the $600, The | Mes and scientists nd the inv simpla thing for Mr, T. | height of w English, Choctaw or what will you. Boston—>Mrs. Mary Donovan Hap- [with a sermon on ood date bride, for go New York—Miss Mary | blind teacher efelve a ma Geraldine BUENUY | ohool at 15 to work in o dress fac- tory, has won a scholarship at Bryn Mawr by st Kaual, Southern Cross hops for Fiji Islands |28 years has tendered his resigna-| murder of Avis Linnell of Hyannis, |Tablets has been shortened—just | on second leg of flight from Cali- |tion to take effect October 1. Fol-| Richeson later was sent to the clec- |ask for McCoy's Tablets at any drug | fornia to Australia. ’ —_ o B98O republican national In taking off convention 1t axle stru 2 {in Kansas City, Mo. and on June | broke, but the damags was not dis- | one until that time by the defende 4 . 5 |24 which precedes the democratic| covered until after the plane was New York—The Sun Blas Indis ¥ s a 1?“." “\\*'mflli’gl‘_""’l‘: convention in Houston, Texas. headed back toward Gettysburg. Jtaming American jaza, They learn €41l has been sent to the women of | The two aviators dropped a note | it by radio. Fay Lockridge, actress, |€V€rY State. | ficld explaining their difficulty 0 IS e back from Panama, says she found | Sk {2nd J. H. McKenny, assistant in- | cxcellent set working in a village | Waterbury — Miss Kate T. Ryan | structor at the field, succeeded in | leep in the woods reached only on |Of Hartford was reclected presidentpassing the rope and wire to the | ® 2 Sl e e of the Connecticut Federation of | dumaged plane. | les an ¥ Business and Professional Women's o & | “w York—And now the mechan- [¢1Ubs at the annual meeting in 4 : | joal man can talk and answer gues]ton. all other officers are also re- Dr. Howard A. Lothrop i w d tions. The televox, which in re- |clected. Dies in Boston Hospital (4 or . sponse to sound waves, does such Boxton i D T iings as throw a switch of blow | Fairfield—John P. Holman, presi- 4 “f g R eI Hanaig | horn, is cquipped with talking |dent and the entire slate of officers 1o g0t b E e | 1f he lives in this town you ought movie film. ~ Already he dientified of the Conneeticut Andubon £0ci:!s |jiocpiial” His hlaod becamo infected |10 ¢iP 0ut this notice and send it to | himsel verbally over the telephone |are reclected at the thirtieth ann@8 (rongh a ent i his hand while he | Bim entor says it will be a meeting of the organization. to tell the | | in a reservoir in| New Haven—Dean Charles R. |Brown opens the 106th anniversary | exercises of the Yale Divinity school was performing an operation recent Iy and his arm was amputated las veek in an attempt to save his life Dr., Dee ter — 31, 1564, and was graduated the candi- | vernor, S0 Bristol—At the summer wm.n‘iflf, ':‘ - of the Connectlcut past exalted rul- Bierman, [ers' association of Elks held at of dancing is to re- | Lake Compounce, James F. Degnan ter's degree at Columbla |of New Haven, 18 lary Saracco, ree from the Harvard Med} ool in 1891 and for ry there. For 30 years he was on who left |deputy for Connecticut west and | chi ]John J. Mack for Connecticut east. | operation which Hartford—Rev. Rockwell Harmon | Clarence V. saved the life o udying night. D Hawaii — Monoplane |torical First Church in Hartford for | Juting himself while under arrest fo {lowing an extended Europcan trip | tric chair. SPECIAL SALE AND DEMONSTRATION “Wear-Ever”” Aluminum All This Week Here for a few days is your opportunity to get, at remarkable savings, something that every kitchen needs— “\\‘ear—l;vel" quality aluminum, which means long wear and economy. Miss Beatrice Gotham, representative from the great “Wear-Ever” factory, is vou with your cooking problems, “Wear-Ever" ANGEL CAKE PANS This cake pan is inum, tdeal baking, | s thiek '} everything ‘t”‘”‘h""d a perfect the tightly “Wear-Ever” || cake pan rolled rim COVERED SAUCE PAN should be. adds Nothing would be handier for The alum- strength, cooking vegetables., i Bakes to & d-licious, crisp, brown, | Deep stape, snug fitting cover, | poguiarly $1.50. Special % 980 ! strong retinned handle, substantial : L | rivets, 1 The size, 3 quarts, is just right. tragtive Regulrly $1.40. 98(: They're New—And Handy Too! ey - i Wear-! fat. INDIVIDUAL E Enjoy steam outlet, for holding egK. snug fitting cover. One-half pint Speclal lower pan, handled top pan with Wear-ever SAUCE PAN SET At ideal 5ot for most uses. Strong, durable, heavy gauge metal, wide Regularly 65 47 substantial handle with rivets; | | Special ... .. (4 that are on the job to s 1': and Z-quart sizes. 5 ! Cake Lovers—Take Notice? " §: Complete Set . “Wea | “Wear-Eve = LAYER CAKE PAN i DOUBLE BOILERS Il tinest cake bakers that ‘ Extra large bottom, little dan- v ¢lid into an oven. ger of boiling dry. The cover Thick, hard metal, strong with rivetless no burn knob; ivaded edge, beautifully pol- fits both sections; lower part BREAD PANS isbed can be used as a separate 0 of hard, thick, purc 1% inches deep—215 Inches in dinmeter. | cauce pan. 13-quart size. tegularly 45c Special loaf cake, meat 4B,x513x2% inches. i 330 ‘ U7 47€ potiace utensils that wear out fi utensils that “Wear-Ever” W “aer” WINDSOR COOKING KETTLES hard metal; tightly led edge; wu- b silvery polish. Low- by the r- Spe “Wear-ky A handy size—5 quarts gularly § ©$1.49 €« Lothrop was born in Sharon, Moral Renewal.” | srom Harvard in 1857, He received | flesh to gain in health, vigor and at- | | 2 ilrur-lnn-n <. many | Me i ars was assistant professor of sur- [this ironclad guarantee. 1t after & the staff of the Boston City hospital, Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any elected district refiring a year ago as surgeon-in- |thin, underweight man or woman In 1911 Dr. Lothrop performed an |feel completely satisfied T. Richeson, who at- | your druggist is authorized to return | | Potter, D. D., minister of the his-|tempted to commit suicide by muti- Foods cooked in deep fat are at- wholesome, and do not absord the prepared in this manner. 3-quart pan with wire bracket. Regularly $1.65. Ttegularly $2 plaintitt claims that no work was Perhaps he has never heard of | McCoy’s Tablets or read of the fair | d square offer McCoy's is makimg | ito all underweight men and women few more pounds of t i!who need a the risk—Read ak. ) |ing 4 sixty cent boxes of McC doesn’t gain at least 5 pounds and with the | ¢ {marked improvement to health—| |the purchase price. r| The name McCoy's Cod Liver Oil | store in America. with us again to help “Wear-Lver” FRE H FRYER and delicious. are crisp, delicate and the many dishes 8o easily 98¢ . $1.59 Who Does Not Like a Good Pot Roast or a Goo soup With Strength In It? “Wear-F COOKING AND PRESERVI KETTLES Made of thick, hard evenly rolled, highly polished aluminum. Note the bail rest ears and the handle for tilting, also the strong, sturdy rivets; 8 and 10- quart size: Regularly, Seqt. $1.50; 10-qt. $2.20. Speclal, each $1.69 ant and that more than reasonable time has elapsed. On the force of the agreement which is signed and at- tached to the writ as Exhibit “A," the plaintiff claime $1,000 damages. The writ is rcturnable in the court of common pleas in Hartford on the first Tuesday in September, Con- stable Fred Winkle served the papers today. Suit for $800 was brought today by John Karbet against Paole Puzzo through Attorney A. S. Aharonian. The plaintiff claims that the sum of $500 is due him for work done and Constable Frank Clynes on the pro- |at the home of her parents, Mr. and perty. [Mrs. J. Ravizza of 391 Arch street. Buit for $500 was brought today by | Miss Raviza celebrated her birthday |the Tnion Shoe Co., of Brockton, and was presented with numerous | Mass., against A. P. Osteika, Peter |gifts by friends who prepared the {Bruzauskas and Jossph Balchunas. |surprise in her honor. through the firm of Nair & Nair. | ; | Property on Church street was at.| ATO78SR0se present were the |tached by Constable Fred Winkle to- | Mi€es Ann Anthony, Rose Palmicri, day. The case is scheduled for the Mo Satteline, Angels Doyle, Hiclen | 4 y unning, Elsie Anthony, Helda |third Monday in June dn tue ity (SO e A Poe Julia Kordack, Stella Jachimezyk, court. ati . _ Irene Baretta, Johanna Rapposch, CELEBRATES BIRTHDAY (| 0.icc anthony and Ida LaFlamme; ! A surprise birthday party was held | Messrs, George Pola, Prosper Lacava, labor performed on an apartment | Saturday for Miss Yda Ravizza, secre- | Paul Bartus, Joseph Roy, Anthony house located at 58 Prospect ave-|tary to Judge Morris D. Saxe and |Cretella, William Anderson and Pat- nue. Attachment was made today by | Attorney Frederick B. Hungerlcrd,’rick Maseoro. 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