Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
MURDER IS PING IRELAND D Dublin, Sick in Bed, Shot d, Oct. 26.—Thomas r of a public house at shot dead at his home by waMers after the - d him of complicity of Frank M. Shaw, a o last March. d In Dubtin . 20, ~Throe men were d by masked men who 10 be wearing khaki un- O The shooting took hurles district, one of the the registrar of the local court, Michael Ryan, of the slain was shot bod where he had been poeumontn a weok. od tonight that a polit- Mncarcerated in Mount i dead. The Mentity of Mot announced. ! In Oork 26~(By the Associated wlong the Grand Par- the principal thorough- €ity, weve thrown into a when aeeveral shots & miitary loery and armored car. So however, there were no #he car hel. turned its on the Sinn Feim club- Mrge number of people surrounded the ma- pants, fearing an at- the crowd somttered. by— W supply you h all your . ding Sowers on everything fof the utonnieres for groom and bouquets for the bride malds, floral decorations # church. Floral Co. {EN FATHER IN ROLE OF MURDERER Kills Two Sons, Then Commits Suicide . —ree Meriden, Oct. 26.—John A. Taylor and his two sons, Arthur, 14, and Frederick. 10, embarked in a row- boat at Blank Pond early yesterday afternoon and started out into the pond on a fishing trip. An hour or so later three boys fishing from the shore around a bend heard three re- ‘volver shots and then a splash as something fell into the water. They clambered to theér feet and looked across the pond and saw the Taylor rowboat, drifting about without any signs of life in it The boys notified the Meriden po- lice who rowed out to the boat. Lying In the bow on a sweater, with a bul- let wound in his head, was Arthur Taylor. Frederick lay in the stern, alsdé shot through the head. Both boys were dead. Between them lay a revolver. There were no signs of the boys' father. His body was re covered from the lake after the po- lice had seafched with grappling irons. He, too, had been shot through the head. The police belleve that Taylor shot the boys and then killed himself, plunging into the lake after firing the third shot. His wife has been dead for several years and Taylor and his song have been living at a boarding house on Tremont street. Recently he was arraigned in the city court on charges of not supporting the children. The charges were brought by the principal of their school At that time Taylor was put on proba- flon. Tt s also sald that Taylor bad previously threatened to kill his sons ind commit suicide. l Brooded Over Disgrace. The bold-blooded killing by John A. Taylor, 36, of 3312 Tremont street, of his twa sons, Arthur 14, and Fred, 10, while they were enjoying a holiday at Black Pond fishing from a boat, followed by his suicide is attributed, upon the completion of an investiga- tion today, to /Maylor's brooding over his disgrace recently into being haled before the police court, on complaint of school teachers, of not properly supporting his boys. Taylor protest- ©od that the boys were “wild” and de- Bled that he did not care for them. He had since vowed that he would kill them but the threat was not taken seriously. With a bultet hole in each of the heads the bodies are at an undertak- ing shop and one funeral will be | held for the three, the day depending on the result of a search for rela- tives. Taylor was a skillea silver worker but often idle. His wife left him some years ago and is believed to be in England. FHe and the chil- dren boarded with Mrs. E. R. Olm- stead. On pretext of taking the chil- @ren to a doctor the three went fish- ing yesterday. Boys near the pond heard shots and saw Taylor go over- board from a row boat. His body was dragged from the lake. He first shot Arthur through the head with a 32 calibre revolver as he lay sleeping in the bow of the boat Fred, terrified and struggling. next was shot in the head. Then the father fired into his own temple. Fish lines were stil} set and Arthur lay as though sleeping, with the bullet that had passed through his head, in the sweater that he had used as a pillow TEACHERS, TAKE NOTICE. Ohicago School Marm Lets Kids Settle Own Disputes, Chicago, Oct. 26.—~Schoolroom dis- putes among the boys at the Web- ster school here, where children of 12 nationalities attend classes, are not wottled by the arbitrary fiat of the teacher. Instead, the principal of the school, Miss Alice M. Hogge, believes in letting the boys decide their griev- ances with their fists, it was learned today, and in the latest quarrel she acted as second to both combatants and referee. it was a fight to tne finish in the school basement between Salvatore Sortino and Abe Selon, both aged 12. Time was called several times to en- able the combatants to rest and rinse out their mouths and after 15 min- utes Salvatore had an unquestioned decision. “Letting the boys fight out their troubles is the best way in a school such as Webster,” said Miss Hogge. “Of course the fights mut be fair. “I never permit any serfous injuries. A black eve or two such as Abe got. is usually the lmit. Abe was inclined to be a buHy and got just what he needed. They will be friends now and we will have no more trouble from them.” — WEARS HE'S A PAPA. — Conveyed to Diver Working Beneath Water. News 26.—Tidings of wireless from New York, Oct. parenthood sent by Brooklyn and received by Frederick W. Whitehead in a diver's suit several fathome undersea off Cape Henlopen, brought him from the deep to rush bome today to neaflhis new born baby girl. Whitehead who was chief mechan- ic's mate on the submarine §-15, which went to the bottom in September was. engaged in salvaging the bulk of the ili-fated craft when the message, picked up by the S-5, was relayed to him by a telephone attached to his diver's suit Have You Forgotten Anyone? REMEMBER that while the Greeting Card which is sent may be accepted as a trifie, the one which is forgotten will be magnified a thousand times. Do your Christmas Card shopping early to insure an ap- propriate card for every per- | Adkins Printing Co. 66 CHUROH ST. Scatter Sunshine with Christmas Oards oo Training School FOR NURSES AT NORWICH, CONNECTICUT The W. W. Backus Hospittal, a general hospital with well equipped medical, surgical and obstetrical departments, offers a three years’' course to young women desiring a nufse’s pro- fession. Books and_uniforms are furnished the firsi year. The Backus Hospital is de- lightfully situated in the best residential section of Norwich, about one mile from the heart of the city, on one of the main trolley lnes. it is one of the most modern and up to date institutions of the state, and is fully equipped _for the teaching of students for the profession of nursing. For information, ad- dress K.A.DOWD,R.N. Superintendent of Nurses, Norwich, Conn. Coffee Flavor Without a Sting P arance, % none of coffee’s injurious NSTANT POSTUM A meal-time drink that brings happiness instead of harm. And its economical since the cost is modersie, there is no waste and you can make a or more at atime, ins: - and strong or mild to siit individual taste. There s a Reason’ A\ delightful, comforting, inmiie ating table beverage of coffee-li taste and ap or- cofFe . but containing elements. < —— - Postum CeriAal NI Yade by Postum Cereal Company, Inc. // 4 NEW BRI TAIN DAILY HERALD, TUiSSDAY. OCTOBER 26, 1920. | HELPLESS WITH RHEUMATISH Until He Took “Fruit-a-tives” Or Frult Liver Tablets R. R. No. 1, Lozxz, Oxr. *“For over three years, I was oonfined to bed with Rheumatism. I treated with doctors and tried nearly everything without benefit. Fiaally, I tried ‘Fruit - & - tives'. and do light chores about the place™. | ALEXANDER MUNRO, 50¢. & box, 6 for $2.50, trial sise 25¢. At dealersor from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited. OGDENSBURG. N. Y. R “DANDERINE” Stops - Hair Coming Out; Doubles Its Beauty. A few cents buye ‘“Danderine.” Aft- er an application of “Daaderine’ you can not find a fallen hAi*¥ or any dandruff, besides cvery hair shows new life, vigor, brightnéss, more color and thickness. wellfilledwith tasty sand- wiches made of their favor- ite Angelus Bread brings smiles of plea- sure to the faces of the children. Angelus Flour is sold ix . Cuticura Healed Water Blisters On Little Girl My little girl four years old had breaking out of water blisters areund N o=t her eye and then on complete mass of blotches. Theblisters = “C_OMS" Lift Right Off Without Pain Doesn’t hurt a bit! Drop a little “Freezone” on an aching corn, in. stantly that corn stops hurting, thes shertly you hft 1t right off with fingers. 1 Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of “Freesone” for & few cents, sufficient to remove every hard corn, soft corm,, or corn between the toes, and s the “Tell us, are you advertising In the same old foolish way That your grand-dad did before you And persist, It doesn’t pay’? Think the whole world knows your address " “Cause it hasn’t changed in years?’ Wouldn’t the pathos of such logic o Drive a billy goat to tears? i Just a card is all you care for? Hidden, lonesome and unread, Like the sign upon the tombstone Telling - folks that you are dead. - Wake up, and take 3 tonic, . Bunch your hits and make a drive, Run a page and change your copy, - ~ Advertise and keep alive !” " "' These lines were taken from some verse -called, “Are You Up-To-Date?” They were shown to us by one of the city’s progressive “Advertise and keep alive !” William C. Kranowitz Advertising and Publicity Writing: 140 Main 8t 54 Church St. New Britain Hartford ~ “Our Written Word Spells Service” makes delicious bread. And nothing tastes so good for the recess luncheonfjat school. 2 Many wives and mothers ‘have known for years of the extraordinary nourishment in Angelus Flour. They use Angelus for all “" baking, and their bread, rolls, biscuits, calee doughnuts, pies and pancakes are the pride and =N delight of their homes. / New Britain by leading merchants who testify that it's uniformly high quality is winning new friends every day in homes where baking is’an. art. THOMPSON MILLING COMPANY Lockport, The C. W. Lines Co., R R i 70 N M