New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 23, 1928, Page 5

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| WATER New Britain Man Gets New Haven Court Post T.H. YARROLL DIES AT THE AGE OF 87 Yeleran Employe of L. F. & C. Former English Soldier Themas Henry Yarroll, 87 years old, who was sent over to Canada in a British army division for the purpose of fighting the North in the Civil War, died at his home on Jef- ferson street late yesterday after- noon. A fall at his home two weeks ago which caused a slight concus- sion of the brain, together with the | infirmitics of old age, were believed | causes of his death. oll was born at St. Leon- ard’s-on-the-Sea, England. When he | Was @ young man he enlisted in the British army for 12 years and was assigned to duty in Ireland. During the Civil War, the sympathies of England were with the South and | word came to his regiment that vol- | unteers were needed far service in North America, He was among the group who volunteered and the arm HARRY BRADBURY Harry B. Bradbury, who has been embarked on a British man-of-war appointed assistant clerk of the for Canada. court of common pleas ut New The ship arrived at a point where it was to attack when the news was |¥0on. He i6 the son of Mr. and M received that the war had ended. Al- [Henry J. Bradbury of 17 Wi most at the same time the news strect. his father being ussistan came that Presldent Lincoln d |superintendent of the Corbin Screw been assassinated. Mr Yarroll stay- |Corp. ice a few months long-| Mr. Bradbury wus graduated from er and with money saved from pay |New Britain High school with the as a top sergeant he bought his class of 1920 and for the next two lease. years took a college preparatory He came over the Canadian boi e at Cushing academy. He der to the United States in 1865 and | matriculated at Wesleyan universit stopped at points in New Englund |and was graduated with the class of for short intervals, He stayed at 1926, Colchester and Thompsonville for a| While ut high conalderable length of time. It was [member of 1he in the latter place that he married | faternity Haven, expects to take up his dutie school he was & Alpha Delta Sigmy 1d Was husiness managet In_about 1870. nearly 60 years|of the athlctic association in his ago, ho came to New Britain where |sonjor year. AL Wesleyan he was he had lived since. He entered the [huiness manager of the “Wasp.” & employ of Lander y & Clark | college publication, and mander of the Sigma Nu fraternity He was graduated with the degree of hachelor of philosophy. and was a member of ifs Mutual Aid society. He was awarded o pension from the compuny several vears ago Iier mung yenen of uplive and tevel| 3. Boosubury has Besn wtadyiig service. Fraternally he was asso- || e orh g clated with the 1. 0. 0. I, Lt E R e SRR S | B appol L. as clerl 1 SEPTies Lo e o Bristol. His appointment as elerk of the common pleas court was made Mrs, Joseph L, " y by Judges Walter M. Pickett and Charles 1. Rossberg of thix city, one | e d e | Robert L, Munger. He will succeed fon; Peadesiok W, arroll, - pom-| 28 Pk THIERE e WL Bucceed positor at the Herald; two sisters, | ¥ R kel Mrs. Harriet Lee and Mrs. Esthe Hood, both of London, England; two | brothers, Henry'Yarroll of Philadel- | phia and William Yarroll of Mount | Vernon, N. Y., and four grandchil- | dren, the superior court His salury will he 5,000 a year, BARDECK GOING TO CAPITOL | Reinhard Bardeck, son of Mr. and Funeral services will be held Sat- | Mrs. Philip J. urday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the| Meadow avenue, home. Rev. Samuel Sutelifie, rector | sition in the office of Commissioner Lestie 12 will 1. M, Landers, i fore he was appointed e retary to former H [left the position durin r dininistrations last April. he b Connecticut Light & Power Co. of 8t. Mark's Episcopal church, will North officiate. Burial will be in cemetery, Thompsonvill Bar ek WANTED IN FARMING Andrew Dorbuck of 1 street was wanted by the Farming- ton police on the charge of operaf- ing an automobile while his licens. was under suspension, according to | word received by the loea police | last evening. Sergeant Stadler, who MISS I v.as assigned o the c: reported oronto, later that Derbuck’s counsel, T. 1. | Gertrude McDonough, had arranged with the | first woman 1"armington authorities for a contin- | channel, Sinc TO Aug. of New the ont., Bderle to vross has entered the | vance of the cas: | of aistance swimmers in the ten- — e | mile women's marathon of the Can- DEMONSTRANTS ARRESTED | adian national exhibition, here Aus Kansas City, Kans, Aug. |20, Ten members of the International | Defense Labor Union which sponsor- | ed a memorial meeting here last | night for Sacco and Vanzetti, execnt- | ed a year ago for the slaying of a | shoe factory aymaster in Braintree, | FALLING HAIR Mass.. were under arrest tod Au- | STOP IF YOU WILL USE thorities said they would he prose- | cuted under the Kansas criminal | LEA’S HAIR ToNlc syndicalism law for uttering sedi- | tious specches against the govern. | Alse Restores Besuty and Youthful Color ment i o Faded Hair L | ES A BOTTLE FISH STRICTLY THE = Fi MoOHICAN I MARKET 391 - 401 MAIN ST, FRESH FROM FROM THE THE B DALY HADDOCK ih.l”l:und 8c ((:l':('?l "l' ’:y e lsc 5 MACKEREL 'ORDF! ANCX “:1'::;;:!" - < 39¢ LARGE 1 6c . FILLETS ...... Ib 21 c FRESH FRESH BAKED MOHICAN FRESH Il;\KI‘I"W RAISIN BREAD BREAD Made with Sunmaid food value, Raisins, There is rance and no better or more c o AN c | e favor when you healthful bread to | buy Mohican tal eat. ] weight loaves, 16 oz OUR g9 w7 1b, 49 TUB L d c 7pia,v of l"rtrmcy Imported & Domestic Cheese Y pprg | MORICAN P D CABBAGE FREE| " BUTTER | | Has gone over with {# bang! Pure fresh' SPARE,RIBS | (reamers { Best i ‘:’1-':-:;:1’ 59c Genuine Corned Ih l 7C DA ring "’39(: BUTTER See our big d LOIN LAMB Wi CHOPS BANANT :;Erf: 19c doz. FIG BARS Fresh Raked PEAS Early Junc RED BUTTERFL TEA ... ERLY All Flavors Rouletts . 3c Ib. 21¢ e 10¢ | 27c | Boned Lean SMOKED SHOULDERS moted to the assistant elerkship of New Haven, Bardeck of Shuttle has accepted a po- State Bank Shippee and begin his dutics on September was cmployed in L R e e e e v ey e Weld. He the changa s heen employed by the NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 23, 1928, [ ] om 1431, when the Turks cap- :d Yanina, until November 23, when its independence s proclaimed at Valona, Albania con- stituted part of the Turkish empire, save for two brief periods of auion- my the first of which was achieved MG OF ALBANN =225 o e 33 Year Old Mountain ChieTtain »sis:md fs s o o, 2443 v | Is Ready teenth century under the Tosk Ali Tepelin of Yanina in the south a~d the Bushat dynasty of Scutari in the north, London, Aug. P—Ahmed | On December 20, 1912, the Lon- | %ogu, 33 yeur old former mountain |don ambassadorial conference rec. | chieftain, and more recently pres- | ognized the principle of Albaniun {dent of the republic, will become | King of Albania Saturday when the | constituent assembly announces re- | storation of the monarchy. Albania | independence and approved the of- | fer of the crown to Prince William of Wied, | After the outbreak of the greut| | has been a republic since 1917, war, Prince William and his ad-| Zogu will be known officially as|viscrs Jeft Albania which relapsed | | Scanderbeg 11, preserving the en- A state of anarchy. On Jnne 3, deared name of the ruling housc the commander of the Ttaliun tounded by the prince-gencral wWho |yilitary forces in Albania proclaim- | |led the country's successtul revolu- | g the pation independent and a | ton against Turkish rule in 1443 |and ascended the throne as Scan-|jighed ar In 0. A republic sub- erbeg 1, scquently proclaimed and a bu- Announcement that Zogu will be | cameral constitution adopted pro- | proclaimed king Saturday has been|viding for a popular chamber of 39 made at Tivana, the Albanian s of 18 meme provisioal government was estab- members and a |tal. 1ublic demonstrations w bers, | | stay in various parts of the r gu, who has a strong buck- | | public to show that the people are | ground of fighting ancestors who | jin symputhy with the movement. | relied upon the rifle and knire to That this consent is not unani-|yight their wrone mous, however, s indicated in a | syimpathizer cispatch from Helgrade, cupitul of | He insists that he s ingerosted i Jugosla which SCrts 0t is Pos- | he oy, Itare of Albania alone sible that tribesmen of castern a0d | trying 1o protect those intoriste | northeastern Albania may attempt | war he has left himseit| [0, Anteriuns theamthapnementiceresiopan fot ChurgeR At 1ai1b briinas monies, Th tribesmen de- | thetic with Ituly at one moment and | clared 1o be bitter enemics of Zoga | iy : i |and to be in sympathy with variou Was an Austrian during the great war . but in since the Jugoslavia at another, Soviets Refuse England’s | Request to Send Warship Moscow, Aug. P —The Sov ot | government las retused Gro at Brit- permitted a warship, for the remains | crew of the ree submarine | former deputies und ministers now | im | | isoned. ie opinion is expressed frankly |in official circles at Belgrade that laly is creating the new Albanian kingdom to constitute a perpetual [ K0¥Crhmer menace to Jugoslavia, which Alban- |“1'S Fequest that she be |fa flanks on the south. Jugo- |10 send | slav government, it is declarcd un- | the 5, sunk in | officially, will not ohject it Zogu is tussian | crowned “King of Albania.” but in | Wlers i 1919 while assisting 1 case he assunies the title “King of | "While" Russians in their _ | the Albanians” it most assuredly |28Mnst Bolshevist rulc | ernment announced it would not ob- Jiect to the bodies being taken buck con- |10 England ahoard the warship of Isidered objects of King Alexander [@ friendly nation, Not and any effort to bring them even |OF on a British merchantman, ' | nominally under the rale of King|refusal of Russia follows in Scanderbeg would be considercd | tional custom in cases wher cause for objection. matie relations ruptured | Both Italy and Jugoslavia look | | upon Albania in its present state as A\l(em[;i t;i“(;l; (;éne,.al 1 men e to their frontiers, thus in | g oo . . . Strike in Riga Fails |the eyes of the Belgrade govern- ! ment Rome, by creating the Alban- | i, Latvia, Aug. 23 B—An at- ian crown and extending its influ- [ tempt by communists to force a will voice profest. | Upwards of 500,000 Albunia [ siding in Jugoslavin now such ax are ence over hte country, relieves it- |general strike here has come fo xelf of this menace at the same time | naug Police were in complet [leaving it a continual source of |control of the cify toduy after 1 worry to Jugoslavia Invaluable services to the coun-|casualties were inflicted, try constitute the announced reason | The communist attempt grew out for Zogu's sclection ax King. He has | of dissolution by the government of been prominent in the nation's extremists trades unions, for alleged fairs for years and assumed the (revolutionary plotting. Large mount- presic Junuary 31, 1925, also|ed police patrols, armed with rifles | marous ey s in which only minor commander in chic lic's hout of the repub-{ The strike call consisting of | proved by the more moderately in- clined unions, armed forces, 10000 men, 52,000 | EY know! They must know how to get the whitest, cleanest wash possible. Quickly. Safely. The very sale of their washing machines depends upon it. That’s why demonstrators of washing machines J They know that Rinsc alone brings clothes from No wonder demonstrators use Rinso! No wonder the makers of 34 leading washers urge women to use this granulated soap for safety and for a whiter washs Get the BIG package of Rinso now. It’sall you need in washer or tub. You get your full money’s worth when you buy this granulated soap—it's so compact. For best results, follow the casy directions. For tub washing, too For those who do the wash by hand, Rinsoisa marvelous work-saver. Soaks clothes whiter than they can be scrubbed. Saves clothes—saves hands. ently raised | had been disap- DEMONSTRATORS OF WASHING MACHINES SAY “Clothes wash whiter —with this safe granulated soap” Big 3 Speed Qucen Blackstone Atrow NOW IS SEEKING > HER FIFTH HUBBY that she could go around the world married her the following year. “| with 325 as her stake. She Mexican Bandit Chief Wwon |lived with the colonel fourteen l s Reported Slain $25,000, and Count Latassl. Who be-|years,” she told interviewers, “but |came her husband. He died. |“ hen he wanted to settle down and| Mexico City, Aug, 28 (P—Dis- Then she wrote her autobiography |1 wanted to keep on living I told |Patches from Vera Crus say the The Belle of Bohemia” and subse- |him he was discharged. He doesn't|’3Mdit chieftain Meliton Rodriguez ntly met Edward Mohler, who want to divorce me until I find a |29 killed by federal troops while qu | Was then a leading stockholder in | new husband,” she aaded. ;’*”‘;:"P“'l'l !; escape after having o ined |11c, Nickel Plate railroad. Edward| And the qualifications for tne| ‘S c2Ptured. Belle LlYIDgSlOII Delerlllllled; Viohler, Jr.. of Cleveland was born|“new husband” Belle says are |, Ln¢ Pandit leaer Pedro Mepdora, She'll Have One ind he is NOW prominent in the af- | the {200 by ] ::c::t‘:zf,‘“;:: 299 fede (o O ot e, Mus, Livinesion|| g must be Suman, esmenalian] - pis military authorities say - no {and understanding and he must have | rebels are operating ‘in Vera Cruz or make as much money as I do," state and promise that the few seat- but she failed to add her formula |tered outlaw bands still active there Belle and Mohler separated in 1912 and Col. Walter James Hutch- Chicago, Aug Belle Liv- ingston who was found beneath a huge sunflower plant years ago in| the back yard of John R. Graham, | then the n is here today o of Imporia, Kans., | 1g her fifth hus- band. And she declares she will go to California or China to “get her man,” if she can't find him here, Belle was adopted by Mr. and was educated Oldenburg, Ind Graham a convent at e ran away un rcome & musical comedy troup- . .There she met her first husband Richard Waring of Chicago, A di vorce a year luter and a lemoent )00 aiforded her a trip to where she coined the phruse “spend it while you hav With her finances cepted the stipulations of she ac a wager gone | those, pains that in a hurry! Dhy it, and approve its frce use, for it | does not affect the heart. Every drug- | gist has it, but don't fail to ask the | druggist for Ba And don't take | any but the box that says Bayer, with the word genwine printed in reds fans prescribe | Asplrin 48 | the trade mark LIy Yaver Manufactu of Monoaceticacidester of Sallcylicacid = The makers of these 34 leading washing machines say, “Use Rinso” yw! — f— Rinso, the A.B.C. Laundry Queen everywhere — 32,000 of them!— use Rinso, iy e granulated soap., No time to stop for boiling. No fi;&:mn Beauty ;;:1‘33: B time to bother with bar soaps and powders. e 1900 Catarace One Minute Prima the washer gleaming and snowy! it 10 Verso ] Coffield z-l\*{SC Surk Sunbeam Su You never saw such suds! Conlon s{ifi_msual‘ Rinso suds are thick, creamy and lasting. Soapy E::me {,:("‘;f?r".p suds that loosen the dirt and stains. Cialbaday Yo Watch clothes come from the washer bright E::(gpm wk”é‘:; and sparkling! Even cuffs, hems and edges come Horton Whirlpool spotlesa, with little or no rubbing. 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