New Britain Herald Newspaper, February 3, 1921, Page 3

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Boston Store " Madras Shirting There has been a great de- and for this line of goods Jthey have been very larce in the market for a Himc. | e have just received a ci assortment in lavender, green, pink, tan and k stripes; h corded stripes. also all white cCall's Shirt Patterns. LLAR |thl‘y flower for February pved by all, at all times. ashion of today Is to wear jat the theater, dinner party, | or when promenading out- | A corsage bouquet or a bou- | gives a touch of color to one's | ‘ adds life and sparkle to ity re Wiot limited to Violets; we variety of flowers and can p any combination to suit irements. us or call; if you want just ple flower or desire to place t for regular service we can pdate you. FLORAL CO. WEST MAIN STREFET. BILIOUS have bad taste in mouth, b , furred tongue, dull che, drowsiness, disturbed nnul depression, yellow- n you are bilious. ) mm DEMOCRATS PLAN T0) TO GIVE UP WEALTH AND LIVE IN CABIN | .(‘hlckon Thieves Who Thought REORGANIZE PARTY |- . ocen seoncs s s White Names Speclal Council of Sixteen Men Washington, Feb. 3-—George White, chairman of the democratic national committee, named an executive com- mittee of sixteen members and called the to meet here Feb. 17 to give ‘counsel” on ‘“‘an efficient organiza- tion of the national committee.” The sixteen members named are: W. T. Sanders, Athens, Ala.; Homer 8. Cummings, Stamford, Conn.; Miles G. Saunders, Pueblo, Col.; Miss Julia L. Landers, Indianapolis, Ind.; Mrs. Campbell Cantrell, Georgetown, Ky.; Mrs. Julia Hamilton Briscoe, Hagers- town, Md.; Willlam F. Connolly, De- troit, Mich.; J. Bruce Kremer, Butte, Mont.; Norman E. Mack, Buffalo, N. > ¢ ngus W. McLean, Lumberton, ; Mrs. Bernice S. Pyke, Cleve- land, Ohio; Mrs. D. A. McDougal, Sapula, Okla.; Mrs. Rose Heiflin, Med- ford, Ore.; Joseph F. Guffey, Pitts- burgh, Pa.; Cordell Hull, Carthage, Tenn.; Carter Glass, Lynchburg, Va. The chairman and the treasurer, W. W. Marsh, and the secretary, E. G. Hoffman, will act as ex-officio mem- bers of the committee, says the call Plans for the meeting were dis- cussed informally by leaders during the visit of ex-Governor Cox last week. As a result of this development it is generally accepted that Mr. White will remain as chairman of the national committee until the forces behind him see fit to relin- quish control of the party organiza- tion. Thus the friends of Cox will | remiain in the saddle for the present. There have been reports that sup- porters of Willlam G. McAdoo had made plans to obtain control of the democratic organization by assuming unpaid debts and throwing out White and other followers of Mr. Cox. If any such' movement was on foot it has apparently failed. Leaders who are friendly Qn Cox say that they are not worrying about the financial condition of the party and asdert that all of the debts will be paid without trouble. ACCUSES YALE PROFESSOR. His Boarding Housc Keeper Hales Him to Court on Slander Charge. New Haven, Feb. 3.—Professor Lawrence Mason, of the Yale English department, was in superior court vesterday to defend himself against the charge of slandering Mrs. An- drew Ely, at whose house he is a boarder. Her husband said on the witness stand that Professor Mason had accused his wife of steallng arti- cles from Mason’s room. Subsequent- ly an apology was demanded from Professor Mason, who refused it and reiterated his accusation, according to Ely, who said Mason had refused to pay his reht unless he was reim- bursed for the articles he alleged he had lost in the house Ely said that because of the allegea slander Mrs. Ely's health was much impaired, and her attorney made a claim for dagnages. Testifying in his own behalf, Pro- fessor Mason sald he had repeatedly missed small articles from his room, and he could not explain their loss otherwise than by assuming that Mra. Ely had taken them. She and her husband were the only persons who had access to the room, he said. GRASSHOPPERS IN MAINE. Found Jumping In Fields, While Fruit Trees Are Putting Forth Buds Portland, Me., Feb. 3.—Those who have gone south to escape the rigors of a New England winter may be in- terested in Candlemas Day reports that grasshoppers are being caught in Oxford county flelds. A. J. Rolfe of Dixfield reported that last Satur- day he found several of the “insects frolicking on a sunny hillside. To support his statemerk he enclosed In an envelope two of them which had apparently expired in transit. An- other correspondent sent from a nearby farm a fruit tree branch on which buds had begun to open. In contrast with last year's condi- tions, when ten-foot snow banks were common sights and seven feet of snow fell within as many weeks, the weather bureau reports show a totat snowfall of two inches in January this year and an aggregate tempera- ture more than 300 degrees warmer than that of last January. HARDING IS HELD UP. Finds Going Slower Than Expected— Arrives at Palm Beach This Afternoon. Lauderdaje, Fla., Deec. 3.—Delayed by channel obstructions, President- elect Harding's houseboat Victoria pushed her way slowly northward in the Indian river leg of her cruise back to St. Her captain expected to reach Augustine. Palm Beach by late afternoon. At Palm Beach Mr. Harding probably will play a game of golf and have din- ner ashore at a private home. WATCH FOR “ON ) AN today on the second | Plan to Practice What They Preach. Hartford, Feb. 3.—Mrs. Bennett of this city, an suffragist and for United States senator farmer-labor party ticket, Hartford with family join a new social settlement and live in a log cabin. Mrs. Bennett was one ardent workers for the trage amendment. The she will join is at the school, Katonah, N. Y. pose all her Y] prominent wom- candidate the Toscan recent on leave her to of the most federal suf- social order She will dis- possessions in this in Farm- hushband ana and Frances Toscan Bennett, Jr., be- ing in coliege) will live at the school in a cabin. The Brookwood of city and her country ington, and, with her daughters, Katherine (her son, M. home school is about a mile outside of Katonah in the heart of a beautiful country and comprises fifty-three acres. Its purpose is to equip and prepare thoroughly quali- fled workers for the new social or- der. The pupils, mostly from the working class, though there are sev- eral from other f-las\es, comprise those who have “seen the vision” and want a more just social order. The institution is financed through voluntary contributions from inter- ested people and labor groups, but 1t is expected that it will in time be en- tirely financed by the labor group. The tuition is optional, depending on the financial condition of the pupil, each of whom contributes what is possible towards the support of the school. The latter was originally or- ganized in the fall of 1919 by mem- bers of the Fellowship of Reconcilia- tion with the idea of preparing peo- ple for the new social order, said to be inevitable, so that- it may be achieved without force or violence. The idea of the school is based on the ethics of Jesus. It is not connect- ed ‘with any organization, church or ritualistic religion as its founders be- lieve that the new social order 1is rooted in the teachings of Jesus, who as Richard Roberts said, “did not propose to Improve the world but re- generate it and aimed not for a bet- ter world but a different - kind of world.” LYNX INVADES OITY. Waterbury’s Gunning for It After Slaughter of Hens. Waterbury, Feb. it Pa- Mayor Goes 3.—Even trolman Henry Hays and Michael J. Moran, a merchant, were drinking men (which they aren’'t), the testi. mony of their eyes would be corro- borated by tho mangled chickens and deeply scratched dogs that for tho last several nights have been at- tacked by a Canadian lynx. Moran saw the animal last night before it saw him. So he made his doorway safely. Hays saw the lynx, but the lynx is afraid of cops ana beat it for the woods. Last night, Mayor Sandland and a party set out with abundant artil- lery to bag the marauder. It the mayor makes good he’ll get a lynx collar for his coat and the full Wa- terbury vote. FATAL IRISH FIGHT. Four Arc Dcad As Result of Ambush Attack on Dublin Auxiliary Police. Dublin, Feb. 3.—Four men are dead as a result of an ambush of a squad of auxiliary police at Ballinlae near here vesterday tyo of the wounded having died late last night. Details of the attack have not been received here but it is known that one of two motor lorries was blown up by a mine set in a road. Three lorries loaded with police were attacked here last night, several bombs being thrown at them. The offi- cers on board returned the fire, two civilians being wounded. A constable in plain clothes who was along Trinity street was shot during the evening. cycling dead CROSS-COUNTRY FLIGHT. Army Flier to Go From Florida to Pacific Coast on Feb. 22. Douglas, Ariz., Feb. 3.—It was an- nounced at the army flying field here todny that Lieut Alexander Pearson, of the 12th aero squadron would Ieave February 7 to fly to Pablo Beach, Fla., where he is scheduled to hop off February 22 on a trans-con- llncnml flight to San Diego, Cal. The Haviland 4-B airplane Pearson has rebuilt here for coast to coast dash was tested yesterday. which the out SUSPECT DANCERS. Girls, Recently .‘\rrl‘ed nt San Fran- cisco, Belicved to Be Propagandists. San Francisco, Feb. 3.—Corrella and Isabella Fride, Russian girls, who landed here Monday and were detained on suspicion of being pro- pagandists for the soviet government | of Russia were freed today by immi- gration officials following the find- ings of a court of inquiry on Evangel- izing and the court deciding that sus- piclons were unfounded. The girls gave their ages as 21 and 17 and their occupation as professional dancing. will soon Brookwood | ! rooster | compassed his untimely HAUNTED BY GHOST Evi- dence . Had Been Eaten, Plead | NERWOUS STSIEM SHATTERED Ity When They Scee Stuffed Foul. New York, long since eaten has come back to haunt four outlaws who en- death, languish in for confessed the quartet awaiting sentence chicken theft. The chicken bandits swaggered into | court i belief that all the accused of stealing had disappeared | | permanently | vesterday comfortable in the 35 fouls they were from the realm of evi- dence. They planned to plead “not guilty. Then one of the four espied feathered fowl at the feet of Assistant Prosecutor Richardson. Ffle nudged his fellows, who gazed for a moment with staring eyes. “Guilty,” said the four in “Boy, take this stuffed rooster back to the taxidermist from whom I bor- rowed it,”” said the prosecutor. SAVES HUSBAND, LOSE Kentucky Wife Struck by Which Misses Her Drunken Spouse. Lexington, Ky., Feb. 3.—Her deter- mination to save her husband from being ground to death beneath the wheels of a train cost Mrs. Ota Mitch- ell, aged 20, of Perry county, Ky.,, an arm today. The husband, James Mitchell, become intoxicated and his wife found him lying on the railroaa Jtrack. Mrs. Mitchell tried to ‘lift him off the track just as a train bore down upon them. .\HL‘(‘hell'n body was almost toe heavy for the frail strength of his wife, who just as the train reached her, thrust her husband to safety. As she did so the locomotive struck her and dragged her some distance, tearing her arm so that it had to be amputated. She may not recover. ARM. ENTERTAININ G GOBS Peruvian Cities Mal to Make Fleet’s Visit Plcasant One. Peru, Feb. 3.—This city and six miles westward, shared in g Special Effort Lima, Callao, Feb. 3.—The ghost of a | a fine | unison. | Train- ! chairman of the special ! recently named by the mayor to hold “Fruit-a-tives”, of Frult Liver Tablets Gave Relief 885 GraXT St., BuFraro, N. Y. I have been Paralyzed on the whole right side since April 80th. I referred the case to a physician who wrote me, advising the use of “Fruit-a-tives”. I would not be without ‘Fruit-a- tives’ for anything ; no more strong cathartics or salts ; no more bowel trouble for me. I recommend ‘Fruit-a-tives’ to all 1 feel more like 40 than 62, which I have just passed’’. WM. H. OSTRANDER. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. Atdealersor from FRUIT-A-TIVES Limited. OGDENSBURG. N. Y. the program of entertainment arranged for the officers and crews of warships making up the United States Atlantic fleet. The feature of the day’s activi- ties was a reception given by Admiral Henry B. Wilson on board his flagship « Pennsylvania. had ' A large number of sailors attended a bullfight at the fair grounds ‘here yesterday afternoon and saw Juan Belmonte, the famous Spanish tore:dor in action. Admiral Wilson occupiea the presidential box, being accompan- ied by the members of his staff. Bel- monte was slightly injured in 'an en- counter with an especially fierce bull but courageously secured anothex sword and killed the animal. JUDGE ALLING, CHAIRMAN. Judge B. W. Alling elected committee was hearings on the death of Mrs. Charles W. Goodrich. The committee will sit in the council chamber ¥ebruary 10 and 11. \C. L. PIERCE | | i C O Hfizffl-u o - How To Put Joy In Every Coffee Cup The La Touraine Formula—A Reason Coffees are not alike. ‘There is a higher quality, a richer aroma, a glorious appetizing snap in good coffee that sets it apart. You might drink coffee all your life and not know real coffee —until you try La Touraine, “The Coffee of Good Taste” The young lady in the picture is enjoying her coffee— she is one of the millions who drink La Touraine every day. real coffee pleasure can be. La Touraine users know how different Many of them would pay, and have paid any price for coffee, but they prefer La Touraine—because no matter what the price there could be no more delicious flavor. Almost Like a New Kind of Coffee - So supremely good is the distinctive La Touraine flavor that many tell us it is a new thing in coffee flavor. La Touraine is different, but only 'because it is made according to the La Touraine formula from special, selected beans, nature crammed to bursting with rich aromatic coffee flavor. The La Touraine Formula is an ideal of coffee fection. It is a guiding principle of every step in C. L. PIERCE Opposite Monumé€ 246 Main St., New B B The Music Store | That Deals in PIANOS VICTROL The Leading Stor C. L. PIERCE production of La Tourgine. First, the formula for the finest coffees of their kind obtainable from world’s plantations. The correct type of each K is selected for perfection and maturity of bean. coffees are then blended in a way which brings out the goodness of each kind. Roast-maiters of experience supervise the roasting cylinders in they are brought to just the precise color and a required. The human hand never touches the ¢g during its passage from green bean to package. Insist on the La Touraine Package Do not accept La Touraine unless it is in the Touraine package. Buy it in the package m “bean” and have your grocer grind it fresh for You will then get the utmost flavor in your cup, W. S. Quinby Co., Boston(9)—Chicago

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