New Britain Herald Newspaper, November 5, 1928, Page 14

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LAST 0P RALLIE “ATEACTORY GATES R. 8. Brown Ascribes National Business Gonfidence to Hoover The fact that thepe has not been the usual pre-election slackening of business this year must be attribut- od to confidence that Herbert Hoov- er will be elected, Robert S. Brown, secretary of the New Britain Ma- chine Co., told a gathering of more than 100 employes of that concern | at a republican rally held this noon | in the factory yard. The New Brit- ain Machine Co. has been in busi- | ness during the last 10 presidential | elections, he said, and uncertainty | as to the outcome has always les- sened business, but this year there has been no let-up, and Mr. Brown | 1aid this to confidence that lhe re-| publican party would be continued | in power. He then introduced Col. | H. Russell Wood of Hartford, who, Mr. Brown said, would tell the as- sembled engineers about a great en- gineer, Herbert Hoover. he rally was one of the most en- thusiastic of the noon series held by the republicans, Colonel Wood re- ceiving loud applause at the end of | his talk. There w. s o absence of the cheers for which have wound up numer: publican factory rallies. Colonel Wood quoted Abraham Lincoln as follows: “If my wife buys | a coat for $100 in Europe, she has| the coat cheaper than she could get | it here but Europe has the $100. 1t she bought it in this country for| $200 the $200 would remain in| America.” .l then launched into a discussion of protective tariff, | aaying it kept out forcign goods and | produced the business for the New Britain Machige which gave his hearers their jobs. “The republican party has brgught this country from a small, borrow- ing nation in 1860 to a position as the leading nation in the world, the| center of the wWoney market and u | nation which lends to all others on the earth”” He said American manufactures and arm mo‘]‘uc: have increased in that period to the \largest in the world and laid this to republican administration. During the Wilson regime, Col- jonel Wood said, the Underwood f, if2 was put into effect, and its free jtrade provisions threw five million :men out of work by 1920. In that 'year the voters put the republicans ibick into power and within months there had been a turnover ‘and business was ' otter than at any ‘time since the World War, he claim- led. The democrats had not made |good, he asserted, so they were vot- /ed out and new “directors” put in ‘power who ~vould make good. “It Is not a question of Mr. Hoov- er or Governor Smith,” Colonel ‘Wood saild, “but of the policies of | the two parties.”” He again attack- ed the democratic nominee's New Britain statement in favor of pre- tection, saying he believed Smith ‘was sincere in his declaration, but that he was helpless before a domi- nant “solld south” which was inter- ested only in cotton production which need no protection and would Dever consent to a protective tariff. Simmons Talkes On Tarift Benefits which he sald would ac- crue to Connecticut and especially to the manufacturing city of New Britain from a protective tariff set up by the republican party were stressed by Albert Simmons of Hart- ford in a short rally at the Fafnir Bearing Co. gate on Booth street this noon. Mr. Simmons was introduced by James Havlick, superintendent of plant. am not here to tell you how | cratic party promises to protect the | | the 18 you should vote tomorrow,” Mr. Simmons said. “I am here simply to give you my ideas of the most important issue in the campaign to- | day. The republican party has al-| ways supported and advocated a pro- tective tariff.” | He claimed that business condi- tions in the country were directly a result of the tariff policy of the re- publican party. He explained that | NEW BRITAIN DAILY NERALD, MONDAY influenza period was the first, it is said. "uneral services will be held at 10 o'clock. The body of Stefan Glisciak will remain at the funeral parlors of Frank P. Duffy at 648 Main street until the time of his funeral tomor row morning. It will be taken from there at §:30 o'clock for the ser which are to be held in Russian Bright Girl! a protective tariff kept out of the Orthodox church at 9 o'clock. Bur- | country goods which are manufac- tured much cheaper in Europe than here and thereby enabled the man- ufacturers in this country to sell of cutting prices to meet those of | the foreign-made goods. “Ge to the polls tomorrow and cast your vote your conscience dictates,” he said. ut remember what I tell you. The republican party has been tried and not found | wanting and although the demo- industries of the count an unknown quantity? Mr. Simmons spoke for about 12 minutes. MANBLOWS OUT GAS HILLLY HIMSELF AND THREE COMPANIONS (Continued from First Page) why try | used candles, blowing them out when | they retired. Child Hears Coughing at 3 A, M. | At 3 o'clock in the morning, Mary | Bindas, 13 years old, sister of the | dead son, heard Glisciak coughin the sounds coming to her in hgr room across the hall on the same floor where she slept with her sis- ters. She said she thought the | coughing Indicated that Stefan was | affected by the liquor and she paid | no further attention. Policeman Lyon found that the contents of the gas meter had been emptied and had evidently shut off flow, but too late to save the men. Physicians declare that the | lives of the four men could have | been saved if one of the four win- dows in the room had been opened. | The gas jet was in the center of | the room and the two beds which | |nearly filled the small space were | placed 5o that the lower ends faced each other. Michael ~ranotsky Michael Granotsky, whose father also lives at the rooming house, was a plumber. Up to the time of his| death he was employed by the New | | Britain Plumbers Supply Co. His | |only relative in this country is his| | father. He leaves his mother, two | brothers, and a sister in Galicla. Michael Bindas Michael Bindas was also a plum- ber. He leaves besides his parents, a brother, Joseph, and four sisters, Mary, Rose, Helen and Irenc Bindas. | Peter Maxen Peter Maxen was employed | Stanley Svea Coal Co. e | 1by the! He leaves his ' ife and one son in Galicia; two brothers, Charles Maxen in Cuba land Frank of this city. Frank was S0 overcome with grief that he was unable to make the funaral arrange- ments and the task was left with a friend, Andrew Kerelyzax. | The remains will be at Laraia & Sagarino Co. funeral parlors on Spring street, until the time of the | funeral tomorrow morning. Triple Funeral Tomorrow What is believed to be the second {event of its kind will be held at {the Ukrainian church tomorrow morning when a triple funeral will be held for Michael Bindas, Grano- tasky, and Maxen. The other triple |funeral which was also conducted | dancing (1 | four 1‘“’ Larala & Sagarino Co. during the e —ETHEL— ~Com i paved to Ore “hese Modern ~ | find That The Good Oid CYony Q\fep-v ial will be in Fairview cemetery. He was born in Poland and had lived in New Britain for 15 years, 14 of which were spent in the em- was a core-maker. He lcaves his wife and six chil- dren in Galicia, BARNESDALE CLUB' HALLOWEEN PARTY 1900 Present at Auoual Event in West End About 200 people attended the an- nual Hallowe'sn party and dance of the Barnesdale Community club at the Quartette club house Saturday night. The program opened with an hour and a half entertainment for the children and was followed by nd cards by the older folks. here were a number of prizes of- fered. In the childrens party, the prize for the funniest costume was awarded to Richard Pratt, while the prize for the child's prettiest cos- tume went to Gertrude Schiffert, two and a half years old. The bean race was won by Henry Zabrensky. In the card room, bridge prizes were won by Mrs. Michael Zabrensky and Mrs. Clarence H. Barnes. Pin- ochle pri erson and George Hansen. The grand march for adults was | led by Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence C. wardson. Mrs. Edwardson was given the prize for the prettiest cos- tume for adults, winning out over Mrs. Millicent Barnes Peer, who would have heen the judge's choice for second prize. Both wore Colon- ial costumes. Prize for the funniest male costume went to Edward An- drews. Mr. Andrews wore a hobo costume. He won out over a young man in a monkey outfit. Judges for the chiliren’s costumes were Mr. and Mrs. John Radil and Alrs. Wallace Nickerson. Mrs. F. W. Radil was judge of the bean race. Judges for the adults’ party included Misses Lucy and Rita Noe, Alice Dahlberg, John Ward and Ernest R. Dechant The committee consisted of Miss Mary Zabrensky, chairman; Miss Olive Cahill, Mrs. ¥. W. Radil, Nor- man Williams and Paul B. Barnes. Refreshments were served. K. OF C. OPEN HOU Open house will be observed at the of C. home on Franklin Square tomorrow night. An invitation has been extended by the house commit- tiee to anyone in the city no marter what race, creed or political belief, | to avail themselves of the oppor- tunity of getting the election re- turns first hand. Plans have been made to Install ios in the building and re- freshments and a light lunch will be served. Entertalnment will be provided for the dull mements. DR. HULL DIES London, Nov. b (A—Dr. Eagle- fleld Hull, noted musician and edi- tor, died yesterday from bheart trouble following a fall. Largely through his efforts, Huddersfleld, his home city, has achieved a reputa- tion as one of the most musical towns in England. e Gorr/ e Goftect Jece tor e ~ s went to Wallace Nick-| | their products at a fair price instead ' ploy of the Union Mfg. Co., where he | | | | can girl this fall. Sportswomen have that has the advantage of welcom way musical show, Bright colors are doing their share toward the glorification of th. Amerf- adopted a new medium of brightness e warmth—the big woolen scarf, in checks, stripes or geometric designs. Frances Stevens, member of a Broad- displays one here. LECTURE BY M'MILLAN ON ARCTIC JOURNEYS Eaplorer to Speak at Meeting Un- der Auspices of Hartford Engineers ‘Club Capt. Donald B. MacMillan, the roted Arctic explorer, will speak on “Under the Northern Skies, or, Twenty Years of Arctic Exploration” at 8 o'clock Friday night at Bulkeley high achool, Hartford. The lecture, which will be illustrated with motion pices of the Hartford Engineers' club, which has many New Britain members, and the Engineering So- ciety of Western Massachusetts. It will be public. This lecture is new and in it Cap- tain MacMillan will tell of the ex- periences and results of the Field Museum Exposition to northern Labrador. During this time the party was kept in constant touch with the world through its radio operator, Donald Mix of Bristol, while special pro- grams were broadcast from Ameri- can stations for the benefit of the expedition and the Eskimos of the surrounding territory. Mr. MacMil- lan will also sum up the results of the many trips he has made into the polar regions. At 6 o'clock there will be a din. ner at the Hartford City club, when members and guests will be afforded an opportunity to meet the explorer. WANTS HIS LIQUOR BACK Efram Noveck, Through Lawyer, Asks Court to Return Three Gal- lons Seized By Police. Efram Noveck of 189 Hartford avenue, who was found guilty on the charge of violation of the liquor law, in local police court a few months ago, only to have the charge nolled in superior court, wants three gallons of liquor whicn the police seized at the time of the raid. Attorney Monroe §. Gordon, representing Noveck, told Judge Saxe in police court today that he has made an effort to have a hear- ing on the matter but Prosecuting Attorney Woods was unprepared. Mr. Woods agreed to proceed Satur- day morning and Judge Saxe @t the hearing for that time. According to the local police, the liquor was taken to Hartford to be used as evidence in superior court. After court, Prosecuting Attorney Woods ordered Detective Sergeant Saturday. As the amount of dust and water vapor in the air decreases, the amount of light diffused from the surfaces of these particles decreases #0 that darkness increases with elevation, pictures, is being held under the aus- | Ellinger to have it brought here by ! City Items The Military Order of Lizards will entertain members and friends Wed- nesday afternoon from 2 to 5 o'clock at the state armory. The regular meeting will be held *Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock. A meeting of the Catholic Wom- en’s Benevolent legion will be held Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the Y. M. T. A. and B. hall. A card party will follow. Mr. and Mrs. Edward Neumann of Washington. D. C., are spending a few days at the home of Mr. Neu- mann's mother, Mrs. H. D. Schnaidt of 244 Whiting street. Mrs. Neu- mann was formerly Miss Claire Max- well, superintendent at the New Britain General hospital. Patrolman Thomas C. Dolan re- sumed duty today after five weeks layoft on account of an injury to his foot, sustained when an automobile {ran over it at the produce market. Winthrop Council, No. 7, Sons aiid Daughters of Liberty will hold a regular meeting Wednesday evening |at 8 o'clock at Jr. O. U. A. M. hall. Following the meeting the degree team will meet for rehearsal. Marriage license application has been made at the office of the town clerk by Russell D. Knox of Spring- fleld and Grace M. Atkinson of 69 Church street, both divorced; Frank Holzman of 267 Glen street and Lucy Koldarfer of 205 Curtis street. |General hospital today to Mr. ani Mrs. Walter Sorrow of 343 Stanley street. A daughter born this morning at New Britain General hospital to Mr. and Mrs. James Tonene of 34 Cranston terrace, died a few hours after birth. DON'T WANT CONVENTION Hazleton, Pa., Nov. 5 (P—As the international officers of the United Mine Workers of America are un- opposed for reelection for another term of two years and as no new wage agreements are to be negoti- ated during that period, it was an- noun; at district headquarters to- day that a referendum vote of the rank and file of the membership will be taken throughout the coun- try and Canada on a proposal to dispense with the next biennial con- vention scheduled for January. Tt was pointed out that this would save the union much money. | | Bringe Instant, Positive Relief to o $ick, Sour, G A son was born at New Britain! NOVEMBER- 5, 1928, MRS, SHIT LETTER SINGLAIR LEWS CHEERS SICK GIRL| N 0LD VERMONT Wile of Presidential Candidate|He and Bride Living on Pretty Writes to Miss Glaughsey Miss Mae Clauhgsey, who has been ill at her home at 25 Tremont street for several months, was cheered to- day when she received a personal letter from Mrs. Alfred E. Smith, wife of the democratic candidate for president, Mrs. Smith had learned that Miss Claughsey is greatly disappointed at being unable to go to the polls, and she wrote her, as follows: “My dear Miss Claughsey: “I have been told that yqu are very ill and that it is a great disap- pointment to you not to be able to 80 to the polls to cast your vote for wy husband, Governor Smith, for president. I hope you will not dis- tress yourself too much about this as your earnest desire to go to the polls, ill as you are, is a very fine tribute to your candidate. “I am unable to express properly my appreciation of your loyalty and your ambition to do your part in electing my husband at a time when you have 80 much troublo and suf- fering of your own. This bespeaks a noble and unselfish heart and both the governor and myself are deeply appreciative of it. “Please be assured that you have my affection, my gratitude and my carnest prayer in your behalf. “Very sincerely yours, “KATHRYN SMITH." FIRST CHURCH WORKER IS CALLED BY DEATH Charles H. I'ox, Aged 63, Dies At Home On Chestnut St.— Former 8. B. Charles H. Fox, 63 years old, one of the foremost workers in the Iirst Congregational church where he was a leader in the Men's Bible class, died at his home, 413 Chestnut street yesterday, Death followed a long illness. Mr. Fox worked for the Stanley Rule & Level Co. for 30 years, but resigned last January and entered |the employ of the Millers Falls Mfg. Co. of Massachusefts. He was a native of Hockanum, Fast Hartford, where he was born on December 11, 1864. He was a |member of the Harmony lodge, A. |F. & A. M.; Aziz Grofto: and the New England Order of Protection. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Josephine 8. Fox; three daughters, Miss Beatrice ox of Ridgefield Park, N. J.; Miss Rose 8. Fox of this ci and Mrs. Fred Gross of Maple Hill: two sisters, Miss J. Rose ox of California and Mrs. Howard E. Bidwell of East Hartford. Funeral services will be held at the home tomorrow afternoon at | 1:30 o'clock. Rev. Theodore A. | & L. Veteran, Greene, pastor of the First Congre- gational church, will officiate. Burial | will be in Thompsonville. Relatives request that flowers be One-third of the Indian empire consists of 708 states of various size and character, governed by Indian rulers. l i | | | “They oughta let me vote. I'm pretty near grown-up. They gay, ‘Wait till you get big enough, Snooky." Well, I'll get big and strong enough pretty soon, the rate I'm drinking Ferndale milk.” “There s no substitute for but- terfat,” says Dr. Sherman of Co- lumbia University. There is a high percentage of butterfat in Ferndale milk. NDALE| NIk | 3890 INDUSTRIAL LOANS At Banking Rates The Fidelity Industrial Bank 136 West Main Street New Britain, Conn. omitted. | ham Barnard, Vt., Nov. 5.—(#—An an. cient Vermont hill farm in Barnard has been chosen by Sinclair Lewis, novelist, and his bride, Dorothy Thompson, as their permanent spring-summer-and-autumn home. Coming here from there honey- moon in England for a brief stay, before winter drove them to their New York apartment, they have been delighted with the comfortable 132- year-old farmhouse and pleased with the lack of flutter shown by the countryside over their arrival. Some might think the farm a bit lonely, but it is just what the au- thor wanted. Barnard has only 650 residents, and they are scattered over a township of 45 square miles. The village is eight and 10 miles, respectively, from the railroad lines on the north and south. To reach the Lewis place one must climb a narrow, winding road out of the village, still higher into the hills, a distance of about two miles. The house obscured from the high- way, is low and white, with a wide veranda across its front. Surround- ed by a bit of lawn and garden land amid a cluster of trees, it nestles on a slope which forms one side of a narrow valley. A few hundred feet below a brook rambles along the val. ley bottom. The old place has its historic as- sociations. The hillroad that swings past his driveway is still remembered locally as that used by Marquis de Lafayette on his final triumphal tour of America in 1825. The novelist called attention to the doorstep of his home. The big oblong piece of rock bore this inscription; “From This Stone The doorstep of Akins Tavern Marquis de Lafayette Addressed the People of Barnard, Vermont, June 28, 1825." The tavern, Mr. Lewis said, still stands a short distance down the high and is now used as & farm bouse. In thia setting, made more color- ful by the Indian summer foliage, the novelist found seclusion for work on & novel he is finishing. And with bis bride, who has a rep- utation of her own as a writer, he has planned the future of their farm home. Part of his 300 acres Mr. Lewis plans to keep wooded. The brook wil be dammed to form a natural swimming pool. The vegetable gar- den already has been moved farther from the house. The wife of the novelist has installed in fts place the beginning of a flower. garden. Here she has found enjoyment working the dark loam with her own hands. Although a report had been cir- culated to the effect that people in the vicinity of Barnard had felt they might be made subject of another Lewis novel, no confirmation of thia rumor could be found. Mr. Lewis, himself, sald he had learned of no such feeling. “If they have, I haven't encounter- ed it. No, they haven't the self con- sciousness of people in towns. People in towns worry about such things.” “It's a good place to get work done,” the author said. “I really don’t know any of the people in the neighborhood yet. And they don’t intrude upon you—just let you alone. “I'm settling down now after many years of wandering. Of course I'll go back to Europe in & couple of years. But instead of spending & couple of years there at a time I will probably cut my visits to about four months. CRUISER IN COLLISION Liverpool, Eng., Nov. 6 (®—The new British cruiser London and the White Star Liner Runic were in collision last night off Greenock. The Runic arrived in the Mersey today, showing damage above the waterline, The cruiser, which was launched only last year, was damn- aged about the stern above the wa- terlive. She was returning to her port in the Clyde after a series of running trials. The Runic was out- ward bound for Australian ports from Clyde. The strongest part of the bhody is the heart; then come the jaw and the thumbs; the weakest bone is the collar bone. READ HERALD CTASSIFIED ADS MILLINERY CO. In Our Downstairs Store Featuring or Tuesday Coats plaid linings. smart. 10 Misses’ CHINCHILLA COATS for Street and Sport Wear $10 Sizes 14 to 20 Tomorrow’ Chinchilla In double breasted styles with Swagger with leather belts which are very Children’s ™7 CHINCHILLA COA for School Wear $595. $15 Sizes 3 to 14 8 the Day to make your choice for President of this good old U. S. A And tomorrow, or any other day for that matter, is an ideal day to serve the best rye bread in the U. S. A—— Soderholm Swedish Rye Bread (Made As It's Made In Sweden.) Baked By The Kelly Bakery

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