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‘RIPPER MURDERS GIRL IN MAEHiNE New York Stirved by Most Brutal Crime in Years ‘ew York. March 24.—Mrs. Flor- rco Coyne, twenty-five, a stemogra- °r with the Industrial Acceptances ation at No. 41 Park Row, was ed dead carly yesterday morn- —the police and prosecutor assert, | ctim of a lier Companion Arrekted. found by ¥ hurried office at e woman's death, and aftér Assistant Prosecutor | Peter A, Hatting had questioned the | Y Artver for some time, he ordered his | arrest 8&id They Had Been Drinking. 4 _ F¥its told him that he had known * Mvs, Coyne for more than & NBIf and that Saturd ¥a had gone to her pla . @hd met her. They had lunched to- | aéther, went shoppi according to | his flnry and thcr stopped at an au- | there n\»}' e park, the! Aiger wont on. the woman ‘collapeed | ana he was t thé policemar #ent to the Br :Ild that ¥ assenger fr & got into his for further! | is wife and four- child a few Dlocks away | murdered wo home. He | line of taxicabs from Tuek- | Separated From Husband. Mrs. Coyne leaves a four-vear-old ! child. She was separated from ner | = hushand several years ago, and two | vears ago called in the police of the Bast Chester Station and asked that s be made fo keep from annoying | Ho>. District Atforney Martin, in com- menting on the case last night. said rder was of the *ripp h exolted (N6 bast ido manner similar to those. He said the medical examiner’s report gave the cause of Mrs. Coyne's death as hem- ‘P war a hemorrhage,” he ex- “but was caused by one of most brutal assaults of which I ever hear ForQurBoys Found In The Soap to Shave, Bathe and Shampoo, the Ointment to heal These fragrant, super- creamy emollients sopthe and heal eczemas”and rashes, stopitching, clear the skinof pimples, the scalp of dandruff and the hands of chaps and sores. Also for cuts, wounds, stings 0 zfmscctn sunbum kil o wasts, mnmuuan.-mwy.enmwnme daily. Ome mp {lr all uses — !hlv!ll' bathin; 1 ot iag hla porityshd health, g6 e ite delicate, 7! a medication. e s, B, nachie NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERAL HE outstanding fact about clothes is that they tell a powerful lot about the man who wears them. People take it for granted that a man’s clothes are at least an expression of his individuality. Reflecting Spiri¢ That makes clothes and Individuality ** important mat- ter in any man’s life—particularly the young man who still has his dent to make. A young man today has a great deai (0 live up to. Youth found itseif in the War —found that it is the sreatest living force in the world. : If clothes are to express the preseni-day young American, something of this FEEL has got to get into the clothes. That is just what the designers for The HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER have done in their authontatlve St’ Spring. In short, ciothes in [ 3; Tu n e' ua)*l l"h tune with the times — the Keynote of the Times Kuppenheimer Clothes success, sea§on in and season out. And back of style and fit—to make them last—the- old reliable Kuppenheimer standbys: quahty fYbrics and fine tailoring. Your Kuppenheimer dealer has the thing you are looking for. Fabrics that have life. Style that reflects the buoyancy and vim of the young man looking the world con- fidently in the face. Design that sets off the grace and strength developed by the training camp and battlefield. It’s not what clothes cost, but the service you get out of them that counts. Good. clothes are always the cheapest in the long run. 9he HOUSE OF KUPPENHEIMER A National Clothes Seroice CHICAGO U. S. A Kuppenheimer Clothes Are Sold in New Britain By I THE CONNORS-HALLORAN CO., 248 Main St. “The Live Store With a Conscience” i