New Britain Herald Newspaper, August 27, 1928, Page 3

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P — e ————— . W NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, AUGUST 27, 1928 3 %MMET——_—._————:‘___% | | With this were indications of a close | s | race between Rogers and Pallotti for T | second place, no definite mention for | secretary of state of any other than —— Dr. W. L. Higgins of Coventry, an inclination of a general drift towards | WOII]el] Al.e Takm M A ! Senator Samuel C. Spencer of Suf- g 4 1018 AC- | fiela for state treasurer in case the | 4 place is left open, and a renomin- | five [meres[ ation of comptroller Trederic M. Salmon of Westport for a fourth | P S—— }(M‘IIL It is claimed that there is 7 (P—This is|much individual opposi Cancus day for the republicans of the | state state and in most of the towns del &ates will be elected to the sever: o "W Haven, Aug. administrative officers {late Morris C. Webster being the name the cundidates for all places a8 comptroller in more than half on the v ticket to be voted for (& century. in November. The democrats for the most part carried through a like function last Yriday. The outlook is for quiet re- publican caucuses. The past week there was interest taken in sever candidacies for places on the state | The illness of United States Sen- ticket and it may/be that here and | there pledges will be made to sup- | 2for Mclean has deprived the r Port some particular candidate, But |Publican convention of hearing him 8s a whole the town delegates are | WhO is regarded as one of the state's expected 1o go unpledged. If there | Orators. Congressman Schuyler Me &re contests ahead they are expected | Fitt Will service as pinch hitter. hav- to be in the senatorial district con- | iNg accepted an invitation to be koy- ventions. Greater participation of |noter. It will depend upon the women in the caucuses is expected | doctor fo say whether Mr. Mclean by the republicant | will 1ook in on the convention to be Here and there they will have | held at Hyperion theater here Sept- more than an active part due to de- | tember 6 and 7. gires of some one among them to be With The Democrats Bominated later on for the legls-{ On: the demporatic aids the same lature. Other factors also have come | yrocoss of preparing candidacles for into the field |the state convention delegates to Women More Active | pass upon went merrily on over the In Fairfield county women are week-end. Forecasters were many. taking an interest in the causses be- | Some of them in analyzing the New cause no appointment has yet been Haven primary situation drew the made by Gov. Trumbull to fill the | conclusion that former Mayor David county = commissionership vacancy |E. Fitzgerald with town chairman @ue to the death months ago of Har- | McCoy squelched the “independent’ vey M. Kent of Norwalk. The re-|movement headed iy Thomas publican women asked for appoint- | hill, general registrar, and Frank S. ment for a woman ~commissioner. | Bergin, who wanted to be chairman Ernest B. Crofoot of Darlen, wants|and its influence will be, in their the place. As they have not fulfilled opinion, that the independent their desire they will try and make | “movement in the state at large has their strength felt. been deprived of its nucleus. Among In Larien they have succeeded, it |those who studied the democratic Is sald, in keeping Compensation | charts were many who claimed that Commissioner Charles E. Willlamson | through FitzGerald the hands of Na. Off the list of delegates o the sena- |yjona) Committeman Speflacy and torial district convention. It is fur- | giate Chairman Walsh had been so ther claimed the women will try 104 o0 o) strengthened that the deteat John D. Milne for he-nomin- | uoreanization” il be in & 3% ation for senator from the . e position in the race and to trict. Judge James P. Wals “put over” Charles G. Morris for others in Greenwich have put St . < " N - Governor and E. Kent Hubbard for ward Clifford R. Wilmot for the |y =oi% S00 e e but the ¢ ac- | : Dies LML tha epvermor alinot e e e | The coming week, it is expect.d, counties will begin to line up their candidates | elector, of whom there will be seven | which means that one county will he passed over. for- cede to desires of that group, | e Sal s el Mrs. Julia Emery, member of the 2.’”:“”1 “‘::( e "'d"{" i e general assembly, is expected to lw:('f:'" SvastEoic ";‘o"?,,, ,?,:'” ::3(,,,,,;. a member of the delegation from | el “' R ssind e Stamford to the state convention al- |28 #nd tha HESNENoS though it was understood that in |SUPPOTt for governor ship was big sonie quarters she was objected to. | "OUEN to challenge all the re- Senator M. H. Kenealy who will | Sources Mr. Morris might have. For head that delegation said he knew |{N® Senatorship it was claimed that of no objection to Mrs. Emery. The | While Mr. Hubbard's name latter was a delegate to the national | Peing kept in front the race was b convention and is understood to | tWeen B. B. O'Sullivan and Agustin have heen outspoken at times over | l.onergan, with Fairfield county like- delegation matters, Iy to be complimentary in its votes Pallotti is Candidate for Mayor Phillips of Stamford Over the week-end the candidac A review of the democratic of Secretary of State Francis A.;"‘di-‘fl!vd that lines have not | | | side vet ion to giving | more |sive round-up of all |than three terms—or six years—the | cmventions which as a whole will | first to be clected for a third term | each for a presidential | AKRON CROOKS IN BlG POLICE HAUL Round-up of All Occurs Follow- ing Attempted Murder Akron, 0. Aug. 27 (A—An inten- known mem- bers of Akron’s underworld was un- der way today following the second | attempt in three days on the life of Kyle Ross, vice crusading coun- cilman, who engaged in a gun due! with gangsters after his home had becn set afire last night. Ross, recently appointed by the |eity council to investigate crime con- | ditions, was fired on as he stood in the kitchen door of his home after | being awakened by his wife, who had heard an intruder coming up | | the nent stairs. The bullet | shattered one of the door pancls. The councilman switched on flood | lights installed in his backyard when his life was first threatened | and ran outside and exchanged | shots with his assailant. Meanwhile | a neighbor, Ed Hardesty, awakened Ly the firing, seized a gun and shot from his bedroom window at a sec- |ond man who had appeared near | the Ross home. Both attackers then | fled. None of the bullets took effect | In the meantime, the basement of the Ross home had become a mass of flames. Firemen quickly extin- guished the blaze and found that all of the cellar walls had been sprayed with gasoline. A large pile of papers, wood and coal also had been heaped up in the coal room and set afire Police yesterday revealed that on day night an attempt was made | to blow up Ross's home. The inci- |dent had been kept secret that a speedier investigation might be made. Officers said his home hal been filled with natural gas and the electric current switched on, evi- | dently in the idea that the council- man, finding his home dark woul: light matches. The plot failed, h |ever, when a friend accompanyi | Ross home grabbed his arm just | he was about to light a maten ana called his attention to the odor of | the ga Detectives have had the house un der surveillance then. Friends of Ross said they believed | the “attempts on his life resulted | from _the information obtained by the councilman in his investigation | Ross has charged that gambling racketeering, graft and bootlegging | are rampant here. since U. S, CONSUL STRICKEN Frankfort-on-Main, Aug. Germany, | 27 (A—Hamilton C. ¢ | iborne, | American consul, was fatally strick- en with apoplexy while on a week- | end outing near Aschafenburg. He was a resident of Richmond, Va ‘hr. Claiborne, who was 40 vears old | had served as a consular official in Pallotti for lieutenant governor, |been so sharply drawn as on the re- | England, France and Rumania. which to all appearances would | publican side but the progress of — = | make him an oppouent of State | alignment is going on speedily. The seven liberal arts, according Treasurer E. E. Rogers for that| o next week-end is likely to give | to educators in the middle age place, was brought out formally. At|avory one interested a clearer \iew | were classified as grammar, dialec- | Norwalk yesterday Mr. Pallott! said | of the situation in hoth republican | ties, music, arithmotic. geometry and he sad delayed making an announce- |, 14 gemocratic amps. astronomy. ment but before the Norwalk repub- | licans he desired to do so. He pre- | faced a statement to this effect with | the declaration that the republican | ° ! party was bigger than any man or | group of men and loyalty to party | should be greater than loyalty to | any man or group of men. He was | a candidate for second place but | would abide by the decision of the convention. Senator Milne, chair- man of the Norwalk town commit- tee, said Norwalk was for Pallottl. Albert Levitt of Ridgefield, whose wife, Elsie M. Hill, has legislative ambitions, and who himself would like the nomination for congress | from the fourth district, has an- nounced his opposition to Congress- man Merritt because the latter he claims {s-not a “dry.” Levitt says he has switched from the democratic to the republican party on the “dry" issue. o Another mid-week incident was a | Fairfleld county gathering of town leaders who announced they would | support Senator Walcott for United | States senator as against Tax Com- missioner W. H. Blodgett. It was announced in New Haven that Lieutenant Governor J. E. Brainard was debating whether to make an announcement of his posi- tion as to renomination in view of other candidacies. In West Haven opposition to return to Representa- tive John Lynch and Judge W. L. Larash to renomination for the house was seen. Lynch has always been political manager for Mr. Brainard, and at present is active in lining up towns in support of Blodgett for the sena- torship. Mr. Lynch has had three terms in the house in which he gerved with exceptional distinction twice as ohairman of the committee on cities and boroughs. Because West Haven is a part of Orange the seats in the house are credited to the latter town. Blodgett Is Strong Forecasts made public here over the week-end gave Blodgett almost strength enough to win the senator- fal nomination on the first ballot but Nurse Miller Tells Mothers How to Save Children from Skin Irritation and Soreness West Carthage, N. Y.—“I am a graduate nurse, and I feel it a duty I for the winner. owe to rs whose little ones suffer from chafing, rashes, itching, 4 scalding, or any skin ir- % ritation or soreness, to 7/ tell them that in all my / experience as a nurse | 4 r_ have never found any- thing equal to Sykes Comfort Powder to heal and soothe the skin. Habitually used after a child’s bath, it heals and vents w{lenesi afind rashes.” — Mabel E. Miller, A #e reason Sykes Comfort Powder is 80 mcmufufin such cases is be- cause it contains healing, antiseptic i ients not found in ordinary tal- cums. For twenty years it has been used and endorsed by physicians and mothers, and nurses call it ‘A Heal- ing Wonder.”’ al COMFORT POWDER CO., BOSTON, MASS. | The faster your sets of tennis the more satisfying is a tall, ice packed glass of full- flavored Diamond Ginger Ale—an ideal con- solation for the loser and a rewdrd perfect Thirty years ago this company discovered that no really fine dry ginger ale can be made without the purest lime juice as a dryer, and the best orange and lemon juices. i Cheap ingredients make a poor mixer, | Put Diamond Dry to the test tonight. You can tell the difference at once—and the next morning as well. DIAMOND GINGER ALES x Today and Tuesday are the Last 2 Days of the Big Value-Giving Warehouse Unloading Sale! “HOME’S” Is Open Both Evenings—COME—SAVE! Last two days—last chance to share in the 207 to 507 savings in HOME'S WAREHOUSE UN- LOADING SALE! No time left for talk; no tinwe left for delay; if you need furniture now, or will need it within the next few months, come to Home's tonight or Tuesday and see how much less good quality costs here than ordinary quelity eosts ¢ls R et e are listed here; hundreds of other specials equally = - budget their purchases appreciated by you. Come, see them ALL! over a period of months. [ Credit Convenience Pay monthly if you wish; Home's will be glad to ex- vhere. Some of the suites and pieces 2 waiting at the store to be seen and . ALL PIECES REDUCED 20% to 50%! End Tables, Mirrors, Davenport Tables, Gas Ranges, Lamp a thousand and one pieces are included in the sale! And every piece bears a reduced price from 20% to 50% off! All good ALL SUITES REDUCED 20% to 50%! Every suite is guaranteed by Home's to give good service in every respect—remember that our 22-vear-old reputation stands back of everything sold. Furniture at Home’s comes from the foremost makers in Grand Rapids, Rockford and Jamestown— quality; all guaranteed to give good service. ND TABLES ! METAL BEDS $1-19 $5.49 I NOW ...ovione oW ..oinieess | I | 83x 106 RUGS | DOUBLE DA-BEDS .....519°50»N0\\' $13°95 $59 SECRETARY ‘ WINDSOR CHAIRS s39.50 ‘Now $1°95 Now . ow . OAK BUFFETS WALNUT DRESSER Now ... $l7°50 Now $17°50 TILT-TOP TABLES $5.49 ! [ | REFRIGERATORS Now ..oiiesaen SPINET DESK s19'50 N(;\\ 317-50 SILK FLOSS MATTRE Now s].6'75 BOW-END BEDS ALL LAMPS Now 31975 35 40 50% Off! Quality clear through. $119 Three-Piece Suite, of Bed, Dresser and choice of Chest 87 -Piece Bedroom Suite i nut, sturdily ‘109 made. Now Reduced to 8198 Four-Plece American Walnnt Bedroo ite. s l 39 Unloading Sale Price is 8215 Four-Picce French Walnut Bedroom Suite, large sl49 design. Now at . BEDROOM SUITES Four-Picce Walnut Suite in Louis XV design. 3169 Now Reduced to ...... 5289 Four-Picce Walnut Suite with canopy Wardrobe. ‘189 Special at .... 8208 Five-Picce Massive Two-Tone Walnut Bedroom Suite. '195 Rediced £0 «o..sinisos $585 Seven-Plece Grand Rapids Bed- room Suite, finest qual- l349 B R R . LIVING ROOM SUITES $129 Jucquard Living Room Suite of three large pieces. :89 Now R $169 Living Room Suite upholstered all over in Mohair, 597 Now| 2 Room Outtit $198 Complete of 12 pieces, with fil39 $215 Mohair Living Room Suite of three superh pisces. Mohair suite. Now ‘159 NOWS . $245 Mohair Living Room Suite in splendid design, ll 67 Reduoedl 0 ..us-iis 5 $266 Mohair Living Room Suite of three large pieces. '175 rduced to Mohair Living Room Suite— finest construction. $ 79 50 Rich Mohair Suite, finest qual- ity and construction '249 Now at DINING ROOM SUITES $179 Fight-Piece Walnut Dining Room Suite, Tudor sl 19 design. Now at 8189 Nine-Piece Walnut Dininz Snite with tapestry ssl 19 oh : $280 Nine-Piece Walnut Dining Room Suite in massive sl 8 design. Tteduced to ... 7 $219 Ten-Piece Magnificent Desizn Dining 29 Ten-Plece Massively Designed Dining Suite, in walnut. s ditit e e 184 5380 Ten-Piece Dining Suite with hand carvings, superb, $ Nowat 1. oorecnreeers SO Ten-Piece Dining Suite in Burl nut. Grand Rapids $ )0 Ten-Plece Splendid Design Din- ing Room Suite, ) l349 Now Reduced to . SUNROOM, DAVENPORT AND BREAKFAST SUITE FEATURES %15 Three-Piece Sunroom Suite, close-out price is . S39 Five-Plece Breakfast suite Special Jacquard Velour Davenport Suite, 3 large pieces .. v oak $29.50 $23.95 $169 Last Chance to Save—Sale Positively Ends Tomorrow Night—Come! /Home Furnishing-. 410414 MAIN STREET (Open Tonight and Tuesday Night) 7 NEW BRITAIN

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