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NEW BRITAIN - DAILY HERALD, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 8, 1914 BOSTON STORE. GLOVES FOR EASTER (AS USUAL WE CLOSE GOOD FRILAY AT 12:30. Come here for your Easter Gloves, all the latest and best styles are rep- resented here. OUR PERFECTION, 2-clasp Kid Glove is the best glove on the market for the money, white, black and every desirable color; every pair guaran- teed, $1.00 pair. ‘WASHABLE DOESKIN, one of the biggest sellers. of the season, |sightly and serviceable, can be washed and cleaned any number ‘of times, $1.00 pair. CHAMOISETTE Gloves, natural, all white, white, black stitched backs, 2-clasp, 25¢; 16-button, S50C. 16-BUTTON Pure Silk Gloves, double finger tips, black orwhite, all sizes, special at the price, 75¢ pair. 2-OLASP Fabric Gloves in silk and lisle, for ladies and misses, all the latest colors, 25c¢ and 50c. MEDALLIO Silk Hose for lldles and gents, big assortment colors, the best stocking on the market for the money, 25¢ pair. LADIES’ Pure Silk Thread Boot Hoslery, deep lisle garter tops, double sole, toe and heel, all the latest colors, 17 shades to select from, 50c pair, LADIES’ All Pure 8ilk Thread Hose, double sole, tge and heel, black and tans, all sizes, a $1.09 valus, 89c pair. SILK UMBRELLA SPECIAL, La- dies’ Pure Silk Taffeta, fine assort- ment, mission handles, green, navy, black' and wine color, this fs a §8.00 value, $2.25 each. OPERATION TOMORROW. - ‘| . Stockholm, Sweden, April 8.—King Gustaye of Sweden, -the. gmflgony ‘atter e e-hav m 5 the day on which the oneratlon is’ to be performed on his ‘majesty, Who ' Is suffering from an ulcer in the stom- ach, Prof. Wilhelm Fleiner, the ‘Heldelberg specialist, remains at the palace. Native Eggs, 27c doz. Russell Bros. —advt. DANDRUFF ON HEAD: HAIR GANE OUT Head ltched and Burned All the Time. Rash Formed a Crust. Cuticura Soap and Ointment Cured. i R. F. D. No, 1, No. Waterford, Me, — ‘ “I had dandruff in my head for & year. | My hair came out. My head itched and burned all the time. The dandruff scaled | off and could be seen plainly in my hair, ‘There was a rash on my head and 1t itched | terribly and ran yellow matter which would form a crust and itch and burn. My hair came out in handfuls. “1 tried and a number of other tonics and they did no good. I sent for a sample of Cuticura Soap and Ointment and X used them and after I used the samples up 1 bought a cake of Cuticura Soap and & box of Cuticura Ofitment. I washed my head | in Cuticura Soap and then used a lttle | Cuticura Ointment. T ‘was eompletely cured.” 10, 1918. (Signed) Miss Luella Lord, May ' —_— RINGWORMS COVERED FACE 35 Hall 8t., Winooski, Vt.— "My child's face was covered with ped ringworms that would prick and itch and keep her from sleeping. At the time her face was all dis- | figured. I tried all kinds of remedies with- | ‘out any success. I wasadvised to try Cutl- | cura Soap and Ointment and in a short time my child’s face was all well.” " (Signed) Mrs, | Laura Barber, May 26, 1013, For more than a generation Cuticura Soap and Ointment have afforded the most eco- nomical treatment for affections of the skin and scalp that torture, ftel, burn, scale and destroy sleep. Sold everywhere. Sample of each mailed free, with 32-p. Skin Book. Ad- dresspost-card ‘‘Cuticura, Dept. T, Boston.” A@-Men who shave and shampoo with Cu-~ ‘ticura Soap will find it beat for skinand. You Should Secure Quarters at The Hotel Washington Corner Lafayette and Washington Sts. European Plan. Best rooms in New England. 1It's some-Mke. cheerful and has a com- \ortable atmosphere, . Single. rooms with use of bath, $1.00 per day and ap. Special rates by the. week. 1legular Dinner 25¢c, from 11:30 to 13 | haustive review of the evidence. | to earn | stands, CUNMEN'S PETITION DENIED BY GLYNN Governor Says Stay of [xwulm Would Ee M scarriage of Justice Albany, N. Y., April 8.—Governor Glynn last night refused to either com- mute the death sentence of the four gunmen who were convicted of slay- ing Herman Rosenthal or to grant them a reprieve until after the second trial of former Police Lieutenaat Charles Becker. They now ' must die by electrocution in Sing Sing pri- son some time next week, probably Monday. The court of appeals, in denying their motion for a new trial, set the week of April 13 as the time for their execution. The exact date is fixed by the warden to suit the con- venience of himself and his assis- tants. It would have been a miscarriage of justice to have granted commu- tation and an improper exercise of. executivé power to have granted ‘a reprieve, the governor said in a state- ment. The case of the four gunmen does not depend In the least on the result of the Becker case, he contin- ued, and no evidence has been of- fered him tending to show that there is any reasonable probability of any- thing developing in the second Becker trial which would change the resuit reached in the gunmen'’s cases. The full names and nick names of the condemned men are: Frank Cirofici (“Dago Frank”). Harry Horowitz (“Gyp the Blood"). Louis Rosenberg (“Lefty Louie”). i Jacob Seidenshner (“Whitey Lew- s'). Whitman for Execution. Included in the governor’'s statement were the text of letters he received from Supreme Court Justice Goff and District Attorney Whitman, who acted in the case. Both men strongly op- posed the granting of a reprieve. The district attorney declared that “to de- lay or prevent the execution of the judgment of the law against them would, in my opinion, tend to destroy the sense of security which every law- abiding citizen should feel.” ' The jus- tice declared there was no doubt as to the prisoners’ guilt. “I have carefully reviewed the rec- ord of the trial, and the opinions written in the court of appeals on the affirmance of the judgment of convlctlon in this case,” the governor said, “and T am unable to discover any reason that would justify the granung of a reprieve. “The judgment of conviction of these defendants was unanimously af- firmed by the court of appeals. Judge Chase, in writing the principal opin- lon of that' court, makes an ex- The court found no error had been com- mitted In_ the trial; that the defend- ‘ants had'a fair trial and that theré ‘Was; nothing "1 the ddse . at" to require or to justify a new trigl Judge _Chase. distinguished . the: cases of ‘thesé “meh from the Becker: case and in this connection says: “ ‘The fmportant issues in this case are entirely different from the issues in the Becker case.’ Identified By Four. “Judge Miller, -who strongly as- sailed the verdict in the Becker case, concurred in the' opinion of Judge ! Chase in this case and called par- ticular attention to the evidence which shows that four witnesses in addition to those in the Becker case positively identified one or more of these de- fendants as participants in the shoot- ing of Rosenthal; that three of these | defendants were confessedly at the scene ofl the murder, and that the story that the fourth was not there at the time was extremely difficult to believe and that the flight and “con- cealment of the defendants after the commission of the crime, together with the evidence in the case, left no j doubt in his mind as to their guilt.” How Justice Goff Saw It. Justice Goff wrote the governor as follows: “As near as absolute certainty can be attained by human means in a human tribunal, it was attained when these four men were convicted of murder. The conviction has been i unanimously affirmed by the court of last resort. “It was proven that these men did not even know Rosenthal, that they were hired to murder him, that they did murder him, and that the only motive which could actuate them was their price. Their = guilt, therefore, did not in any manner de- pend on the prior conviction of Beck- er, who, it is claimed, through his agents, hired them, nor would it be affected if the identity of Becker had never been discovered, “The person who procures another to commit a crime and the person who commits it are distinct entities, and the conviction of one in no sense is | dependent on the conviction of the other. As the whole matter now it is settled beyond perad- venture that they physically shot Rosenthal to death, and the question whether' Becker Instigated their act may affect him, but it cannot af- fect them. Even If Becker on his trial should be acquitted it might leave to doubt and conjecture the identity of the instigator, but it would not raise any doubt as to the identity of the men who fired the shots, “A respite, therefore, to Becker’s trial, no matter what the outcome, could not operate in the slightest degree to detract the truth now demonstrated, while in all prob- ability, it would tend to undermine all public confldence in the administra- tion of justice. I have endeavored to separate the truth and governing principle from the confused and loose thinking which confounds the gun- men’s case as in some way Intery laced with or dependent on the view that a respite could be of little avait except to delay and create a almaw await tion that would be fraught with dan- gerous consequences.” ‘What Whitman Wrote, This is what District Attorney Whitman wrote: “The crime of which these men are guilty was assasstnation in a pub- fic place, of a witness for the state and was the boldest challenge and defiance of established law and order in the history of criminal justice in this state. To delay or prevent the execution of the just judgment of the law against them would, in my opin- ion, tend to destroy the sense of se- curity which every law-abiding citizen should feel. “As a sworn official 1 would be recreant to my duty if I should fail to point out the grave danger in. volved to the community and to the administration: of justice in staying the operation of the law for reasons so trifling as have been presented on this, application.” At first the governor was inclined to grant the reprieve, but after studying all of the evidence and the decision of the court of appeals his view was changed. 5 Gunmen Receive News, Ossining, N. Y., April 8.—"It seems, boys, that every time I come into the death house ] am the bearer of bad news,” said Warden Clancy of Sing Sing prison last night as he stood close to the cells of the four Rosen-~ thal gunmen, and told them that their appeal to Governor Glynn for clem- ency, or a new trial, had been in- effectual and that the governor had declded not to interfere with the carrying out of the death penalty. “Gyp the Blood” Horowitz was the coolest of the four when the news was broken to him. “We don’t blame you, warden,” he said. “You can’t help carrying us the bad news, but we are sorry that the governor turned us down. We won't give you any trouble, warden, We'll take our medicine.” “Whitey Lewis"” Seidenshner said he would go to the chair an innocent man. With his last breath he woula insist he was innocent, he declared. The other two gunmen, “Lefty Louis” Rosenberg and ‘““Dago Frank” Ciro- fici, had no statement to make. They seemed stunned by the news, but showed no empotion. THE DA NT IN HARTFORD. Wise, Smith & Co. Plan Free Exhibi- tion of New Dances. Realizing the/ popular demand for authoritative information and instruc- tion on the latest dances, Wise, Smith and company, -of. Hartford, ‘have in- vited experts to -give demonstrations in their restaurant on the ninth flgor of their bullding. The exhibitions will be held -every ,afternoon mext week. There will be The Dansant, and a lecture and: demonstration under the direction of Miss Gladys Lewis, pupil of Isidora - Duncan. Mile. Luxane and Qherles Stewart, the orig- inal Sherr% \@uo, .will render the Maxixe, Brasziifenne, one step, tango Argentino, 1 nnv_mo hesitation valge, ha&! and i e \yotte Min- | '14, Frank Stevens, '1T: OPEN EVERY EVENING UNTIL 9P M. OUR LIBERAL CREDIT TERMS 375 Worth 35 00 Down®}:°2¢° Weekly $ Poc° Weekly "&” Weekly Our terms Apply to New ank. New Ji . - necticut, Massathuseiis and ‘Rhode Tsiaedr”" 0o This home conaists of the accompanying articles, and {s on show in our ware- rooms, showing you mwny as they would appear in your Rom PARLOR ine Velonr Sult, vleces: Pier Mire wre ‘h b hg a BEDROOM t w-v.- Write for our Free Pre- S mium Book No. 15, con- ‘~ining a list of our I'ree Premiums with every purchase. Catalog O DlNlNfi ROOM Oak_Sideboard. bev- elled ollltsfi.lfl KITCHEN o "dbor loek: Rl 40 s of T4 Blesq nwarer _12 yards Enghl\der o DAWA B o yards Matting. f(ouc]’\Bed THE WESLEYAN GOSPEL TEAM WILL BE AT Trinity M. E. Church, New Britain, Ct. April 5-12, 1914, inclusive Afternoons at 2:30 Evenings at 7:30 | THE WESLEYAN GOSPEL TEAM Harry K. Miller, 14, Captain; Row- land Tuttle, ’'15, Chorister; Wilson Fisher, '17, Soloist; Raymond Hall, A week of good music, earnest mes- sages, life decisions. Are You a Christlan? Help ‘Are you not a Christian? Come and be helped: ‘This {8 your opportunity! §1417-1423 THIRD AVE~80~ST I Sage, Allen and company millinery fashions are distinguish: for their individuality as well as their correctness. Real elegane and moderate prices are factors in the upbuilding of our millinel business. A splendid showing of the smartest hats for wear with-walk: ing sults and semi-dress in all the new colors and trimming :id at low prices. Charming, dressy hats that are distinctly Parisian in style and yet very moderately priced. And, in addition to our exhibit of trimmed hats a complete as sortment of untrimmed millinery and flowers, showing every ni shape, in every fashionable color, with a marveleus garden of flow: ers and plumage at a minimum of cost. For perfect satisfaction, get your millinery here. fiagz Allen & Qo. Hartford, Cenn. EASTER RUG SALE Prices Cut In Two HIGH GRADE WILTONS, BODY BRUSSELS AND TAPESTRY BRUSSELS We offer three of the very best high grade Wilton Rugs, size 9x12 that sell regularly for $60.00 each. Our Easter Sale Price .. $30.00 Here’'s another big bargain. Choice of six best Royal Wilton Rugs, size 9x12, which sell regularly for $45.00 each. Pick out the one you like best and pay us only . $27.50 We have six of the best five-frame body B that we will sell at such greatly reduced prices that nobody who wants a re- llable Rug CHEAP can afford to miss the chance. Four Rugs, 9x12, regular price $32.75, Sale Price ........ $19.50 Two Rugs, size 9x12, usually $25.00, Sale Price . $15.00 Still cheaper—pretty nearl glving them away. Three Tapestry | Brussels Rugs, 9x12, usually $14.00, Sale Price .......... $9.00 Two Tapestry Brussels Rugs. size 7x9, usually $12.00, Sale price ...... 7. See us if you want a good Rug for little money, TI.'IE BEST WALL PAPERS AND DRAPERIES, '894-902 MAI 5 HARTFORD . FANCY DELAWARE SHAD Fresh Caught Native Blue Fish LIVE LOBSTERS. Full Line of Fish. W. E. HORTON & SON Telephone 223. 58 CHURCH STREET Opp. Herald Building THEY WERE TO BE MARRIED SOON Came to us to see what it would cost them to furnish a modest home of four or five rooms. Th able, yet the amount ey wanted their home to be attractive and comfort- of money which they had available for the furmsh- ing of their home made expensive pieces prohibitive. The stock. e offered a spent considerable time with us looking through our large few suggestions and gave them some ideas. They were much pleased with what they had seen and took memorandums of what they thought th After looking aro ey should want. und in other stores to make sure they were doing the best possible with their appropriation they came back and placed their order with us. This is’'a typical example of hundreds of homemakers whom we are pleasing. We carry an extensive stock of serviceable, attractive homefurnish- ings grading from the Your appropriation for furnishing your home may be anything lowest priced which are good, to the very best. from $175 to $1,000 or more—you can make the most ‘of it with us. C. C. FULLER COMPANY, COMPLETE HOMEFURNISHERS. 40-56 Ford St , Hartford. Overlooking Capitol Grounds HORSES _ HORSES HORSES Car of horses advertised last week sold in two days. PRIGES SOLD THEM Our Next Carload No 5 Will Avrive Tuesday, April Tth, 1914. A Horse Suitable For Any Purpose 1 pair Bays, 3,100 Ibs. 1 pair Blacks, 2,700 1bs, 1 pair Browns, 3,000 lbs. 1 pair Greys, 2,900 Ibs. Several chunks welghing from 1,100 to 1,600 pounds. Several horses taken in exchange, worth the money. A complete line of wagons found at our Repository. Dump Carts; Auburn, Milburn, Tifin Farm Gears; Express and Grocery Wagons; Concords and Carriages. Also a complete line of harnesses and Horses' goods of every description. OUR POLICY—Once a customer, always a customer, is our idea of conducting business. With every horse goes our guarantee of = satisfaction. P. H. CONDON & CO., INC. 22 LAUREL STREET, - Special Notice ..For the benefit of those of our patrons, who wish to get their supply of 2 Hoffmarn’s Hot Cross Buns On Thursday evening we will have a special late baking Thursday afternoon and evening—Our HOT CROSS BUNS are all that high grade, pure materials and cxpert baking can produce—Both our stores will be open Thursday evening until 9:30 o'clock. Friday morning we are open from 5:30 until 12:30 noon and from 4 p. m, until 6:30' p. m. =