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— IF IT'S IN THE DRUG LINE We have it in stock, « get it or it isn't on the market. In our Pr seription Department, no expense spared to sccure drugs and chemicals of the highest standard of quality. The Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 Main Street Smart New 1S0ft Hats for Spring in New English Brown $4.00 HORSFALLS 95-99 Xdsylum Street Hartford “It Pays To Buy Our Kind” UNION WILL TRY T0 PLACE TROLLEY MEN Local Representative Sends Names oI Laid 0 Employes to Hartlord John J. Kenney, local representa- tive of the Hartford branch of the Trolley Men's union, today sent the names of all local employes of the Connecticut company who were laid off, due to the installation of the one man cars in this city, to the main office in Hartford. This was done in an effort to secure work for those who have heen drop- ped from the payroll of the New Brit- ain division. Mr. Kenney, when seen this morning, stated that about 10 men were affected by the new ruling. These men were be given work by the Connecticut company and were on the spare lists. other In Hartford, Waterbury and large Connecticut cities, the Connecti- cut company is hiring new men daily, it is claimed. The union has been names of the local men been laid off, in order that they may be given preference in these other cities over new men secking jobs and who have not had any trolle: experience. Mr. Kenney believ work would be securcd for the men. Reports from the office of the Con- necticut company* to the effect that the one man cars proved satis- factory in this city for the first day which was Sunday and superinten- dent I". L. Beardsley was well pleas- ed with the result. The Hartford, Meriden and Plai ville troll are the only lines in Britain that one man trolley cars are not operated upon. given Sun and Moon Sacred Anointing Ointment 1 For External and Internal Use A Food for the Body to destroy Disease A.W.LOWRIE, Inc I ur rale at Dickinson Drug PALACE--Next Mon,, Tues,, Wed. The Biggest Musical Act In Vaudeville B. A. ROLFE & (O. 11—People—11 thealtest ones to the who have VICE SQUAD ACTIVE OVER THE WEEK-END (Foir Alleged Olfnders Ave Belore. * Court This Morning Mrs street, trafficking Helen Kupetski of W hose uctivities resulted two months ugo, ugain | vesterday by the soquad | additional evidence of liguor sales | Vwas procured pleaded not guilty land her case continued until l\\'wm/.«‘m morning. 255 Myrtle in in - her liquor arrest about visited Yand was viee Previonsly Warned, When the woman was in court last, | [Judge G. W. Kilett warned that an other appearance would result in a jall sentence, The® police, at that time, testified that the offense was her second although it was the first rest, they having dismissed her with a warning when she was first appre- handed Axel Wellin and August Olson, hoth 256 Kensington avenne, were A with the manufacture of li- Through their counsel, Lawyer P, 1% McDonough they pleaded not guilty, and asked for a continuance until Saturday n Demetri Miasnik, ‘proprietar of a loring establishment at Broad strect, was charged on intent and rep- utation A, LI so went over to y morning under a not guilty plea Patrolman IFred Wagner arrested homas McCarthy, on a drunkenness saturday afternoon. He was quor. fined $5. Policeman Joseph Moore arrested William Anson Saturday night on Elm street. He was fine $5 and placed on probation, Stéve Gozda, drunk, was taken in by PPoliceman William Smith, Saturday night on Sexton strect. He paid §10 and costs. Autoist T'ined. Ernest W. Freidlick, aged 20, was al +dl and $10 for driving with- out a license and with fmproper lights. Policeman David Moore brought in the accused Saturday night, He was driving a on South Main street. Guiseppe D'Olio celebrated his 47th birthday yesterday by taking his friend, P Oddi, out on drinking party. The duo was cele- brating on West Main street, attract- ing the attention of passersby, when Policeman Thomas Rouskie appeared on the scene. Guiseppe and Pasquale were booked on drunkenness charge Judge Klett found both guilty and dismissed them with a warning to celebrate future birthdays at home. U, 3. WANTS SHARE OF GERMANY'S DEBT Dogs Not Interd to Lot Allies Take All Washington, March 13.—Jt was stated on the highest authority today that the American government does not intend to allow the allies to take all that Germany can pay in reps tions and leave nothing for the Unit- ed States as recompense for expense incurred in the occupation of the Rhineland. Propose Deferring U, S, This pronouncement of American government policy was occasioned by a press dispatch from Paris to the effect that allied governments contemplated deferring payments to the United States for the Rhineland occupation on the ground that ihe Amc 1 government had not ratitied the treaty of tilles. ich a position on the part of the s, it was stated, would be inde- ible as it could not be maintained a.moment, cither morally or I The further statement was made that under the terms of “the armistice ’h(‘ American forces r mained inkthe Rhineland at ox- pressed request of the allied govern- ments and there was an explicit agrecement that this country should ca for gally. ihe Senator Kenyon’s Successor Des Moines, | Rawson of Senator W. S, | Senate, when | job as fed- | Charles A. Ta., takes the place of | Kenyon, in the U. 8 Kenyon leaves for his new cral cirenit court judge. Rawson was chairman of te Republican state cen- tral committee of lowa, Aid of your for their supper If the Ladies' wants suggestions menu suppose you write the Raker Extract Company, Springfield, Mass., forsone of their new and novel cook book folders.—advt. —————————— To Cure a Cold in One Day { Laxative BROMO QUININE The genuin® bears the sig- Grove. (Me sure you | soe. Take tablets, nature of BE. W get BROMO.) | | ar- church | NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, MONDAY, MARCH 13, 1922. POLITICAL CALENDAR Thursday, March 16: for applications to Last day be made Saturday, March 26 file petitions of for G, O, I, primasles, Last day to candiduey March 26 and and city clerk make voters, Selectmen in sion to reh 31: tepublican prima- April tion 11: Annual city eclec- Saturday Night Democrat town committee meets at head quarters in Booth's block, at 9 o'clock, Fyents Week: be reimbursed for the cost of Keep« ing its troo Rhine, Suggests Sharing, | Under the Versailles treaty, it | explained, the cost of occupation the avarious allied armies in Germany was made a first charge against w COSLE & se upon Germany. It was agreed by the allies, it was said, that the United hould thare equal- {1y with the s in those puyments, | The United States has been “extreme- ly indulgent” in the matter of pay- ment of its army in Germany, it was ald, and intimations in press dis- s from Burope that the United States was applying undue pressur in seeking payment of mon fully ac on the was of said that while the tes does not want to create a sitnation that would be inimical to the best interests of all it will stand on its rights under the terms of the armistice. . SCIENTIST HAS NEW SOLUTIONOF GHOST Beligves. Wireless Waves Have Gaused Queer Phenomena Boston, March 13. — Edward J. O'Brien, scientist and author, declar- ed today that the ghost of Antigonish was in reality the product of electrical energy. After a month’s investigation in the Nova Scotia country, where he was lecturing at St. Francis Xavier uni- versity when the ghost stories first came from Antoigonish, O'Brien said 1e found that strong wireless cur- rents between the two great radio sta- tions at Wellfleet, Mass,, and Glacc say, N. 8, ran through the valloy of (aledonia Mills where stands the home of Alex MacDonald, scene of the eeric events. it “The MacDonalds,” = said ~O'Brien, will have to have their house out of range of these powerful radio cur- rents if they wish to avoid the ghost- like incidents. 1f not, the house may he burned down witen the atmosph ic conditions are just right, as théy arently were when the fires were :t around the barn.” The braiding of the tails MacDonald cows which has be: sidered another of the m of the unseen influence, Mary Ellen, the Antigonish farmer's foster daughter, because it was good fun, in the opinion of O'Brien. Harold Whidden, the reporter who Lad experiences of his own when he went to investigate those of the Mac- Donald family, continued Mr. O'Brien, was completely carried away by his enthusiasm and really believed that ghost slapped lim.” But, “Whidden slapped his own face when he suc denly waked in a temperature of 2 Lelow zero and his numbed arms be- came suddenly suffused with good warm blood,” was O'Brien’s explana- tion, of the ations done by “Take the map, trace the line, ap- vy your scientitic knowledge of wire- the curious ef- s of electrical currents in fires on ships and on land and you have solution of the fires charged against the ghost of Antigonish,” Wi s O'Brien's summary. He predicted :that Dr. Walter Iranklin Prince, N York, director of the American society for scienti- fic rese: spent the past week in the house" would fail to find cause of the phenomena. “haunted any other She’ll Bake Pie For President | Mrs. Mary Moore, 67, of Westficld, Ind., is the only woman thus far found who can bake crumb pies just as 1 ident |made ‘em. Her ability came to light |when the wife of ator Harry ¥. New addressed a group of Westfield president’s fondness for and lfs bility to find make them. Mrs. Moore crumb pie anyosre to says she'll Imake a pic for the president. right- | xng to it were characterized | N Pre the | Harding's grandmother | United States Sfuv‘ women and told of the | P When the ticker tape tells you that your fa- vorite stock has gope up ten points . . . —you know what 8 lucky strike is. - LUCKY - STRIKE, The discovery of toasted tobacco was a lucky strike . for us, g | If you will buy a package of Lucky Strike cigarettea | yourself you will sce why millions now .prefer the toasted flavor.* It’'s Toasted %Do this today and notice the delicious toasted Burley when you try Lucky Strikes INDIA NOT EXCITED Arrest Of Non-Cooperationist Leader, Gandhi, Fails To Cause Any Stir In Principal Cities. London, March 13.—(By Associated )—Press dispatches from Mad- ras, Bombay, Calcutta and l.ahore concur in declaring that therc s little excitement in India after the ar- rest of the non-cooperationist leader, Gandhi. The Morning Post's Madras ccrres- pondent says that the Gandhists there organized 2 meeting and made a bon- fire of foreign-made cloth, hut the gathering wag not large and the dem- onstration caused no trouble. A Calcutta dispateh to the Times, says the leading non-cooperators in the Bengal provinces welcomed the arrest because they say Gandhi will w0 longer be charged with escaping punishment while. compelling others to suffer.. ‘A demonstration in Bengal is declared to be unlikely. I.ahore advices to the Daily Tele- graph report that Gandhi himself welcomed his arrest as b zing pro- tection from his over-zealous dis- ciples. The Morning Post's Calcutta correspondent believes that he will be held under the ordinary penal code and not under any special acts al- most all of which owing to former Secretary Montagu’s faith in concilia- tion, have been removed from the sta- tute books. THE McAULIFFE CASE Arguments to be Heard Against the Quashing of State's Casc The case of Thomas McAulife, the former prohibition enforcement officer under indictment for. accepting a bribe to influence his conduct in office, is scheduled to come up in the su- preme court at Washington, D. C. this week. The matter is on the ap- peal of State’s Attorncy Hugh M. Al- corn, against thedecision in quashing the state’s case against McAuliffe by Judge Thomas in-'the United States court, 'he state will be represented. by . Alcorn, while Mr, McAuliffe’s in- s will be looked after by Lawyer Walter J. Walsh of New :‘Haven and Lawyer Henry J. Calnen of' Hartford. McAuliffe is present ‘laid up with an infected jaw, and his condition has been for some time considered seri- ou Panama canal zone is 436 miles in area. square Some geese are known to reached the age of 40 years. have Fatigue, low vitality, constipa- tion and worry make you an easy victim of deadly influ- enza germs. The present emergency de- mands commonsense and cau- tion, Strgngthen your resistance by taklm.g Hill's Cascara Bromide Q.ummc Tablets morning and night. Have C. B. Q Tablets handy.Use themregularly. Pre- vent colds, headaches, grip-pe, constipation and keep yourself in the pink of condition. Use Hill's regularly and:you will do your bit toward check- ing the present epidemic. Al all Druggists, 30 cenls CASCARL &3 QW|N , W.H.HILL CO. DETROIT. PAGIFIG MILLS T0 - MAKE WAGE SLICES 8,000 Workers to Be Allected- Rhode Is, Situation Unchanged Boston, March 18-The FPacific mills which employ 8,000 persons in their plant at Lawrence, largely on cotton goods probably will announce a4 wage reduction within the next week or two. This statement was made toduy by Edwin Farnham Gireene, treasurer of the corporation which Is one of the largest in the country., The cut appears inevitable, he sald but final determination to im- pose it and on the amount of it, have not as yet been determined. It was probable however, he thought that it would be the same as the reductions | in Rhode Island and New Hampshire twenty per cent—and that other cotton mill interests would find * it ne ry to make a similar cut, Such action by the Pacific Mills would be the first in the important textile center of Lawrence which like the cotton mill centers of Iall river and New Bedford have been unaf- fected as yet by the recent wage cuts. Threat at Mills Providence, March 18.—The elghth week of the Rhode Island textile ke opened quietly today in the awtuxet valley where the first textile workérs walked out January 23 in protest against notices of a 20 per cent wage reduction and an increase in working hours. Military were on guard at the Natick and Pontiac mills, where riots occurred February 20. James M. Dick organizer of the amalgamated textile workers, and of the leaders of the strike organization in the Pawtuxet area declared today that the action of B. B. and R. Knight Inc.,, Satur- day in announcing an indefinite shut- down of these mills was not to be taken seriously. “The company has money invested in these plants’” he declared “and they will not keep them closed in- definitely.” By advertising daily you v'dll eventually see your volume of busi- ness increase daily. A.Want Ad in "The Herald will do it. Call 925. It isn’t necessary to come down to the office to put a Want Ad in The Herald. Just phone it to our Classi- fled Dept.—925. | Passershy pursued a LEGATION IS BOMBED American Headquarters at Sofia Are Believed To Have Been Threatened By Madman or Red, Sofia, March 18, (By the Associat- ed Press)—The explosion In the Am- erfean legation Saturday night is be- lieved by the authorities to have heen caused by a bomb thrown from the street Into the legation conservatory. man who may the out- in the have been responsible for ruge, but he eluded them darkness, Both the police and ithe American minister, Charles S. Wilson, believe the act that of a madman or of radicals seeking revenge for the Am- erican policy in regard to soviet Rus- sia. A person dressed as a workingman twice recently had attempted to see Mr, Wilson and the ‘American con- sul renewing his attempts Saturday. 'he fact that the bomb was thrown into the conservatory instead of into Mr. Wilson's residence suggests that it might have been an effort to dis- eredit Bulgaria. Mass meeting held as a demonstra- tion for the autonomy of Thrace yes- terday was turned into a procession which went to the American legation and cheered Minister Wilson. A mem- orial condemning the bombing of the legation was delievered to Mr. Wilson, BEAUTY IS ESSENTIAL Pretty Girls In Hotels More Import- ant Than Efficient Service, Reports Indicate. New York, March 13. — Efficiency runs second to prettiness in hotels where tipping prevails, the consum- org' league announced today after an investigation the league dcclared it considered all tipping bad, with come- liness playing a large part in its de- cision and recommended that hotel patrons holster their moral courage to the point of stopping the practice. “It is pleasing appearance and manner, rather than service that brings in tips,” said the report. “Tips do not increase with efficiency * in service, and neither do wages.” Whereupon the report went intp details tending to show that attrac- tiveness of maids and aggressiveness of men attendants earned gratuities denied less prepossessing or ‘‘nervy" scrvants. Tipping patrons also cause an unjust discrimination against non-{ tippers, the report declared. It also Walter A, Unger, 27, assistant treas-* urer of the Thomas W. Evans Dental Institute of Philadelphia, recently dis- appeared. Pofee are makipg a na- tion-wide search for him. Institute officials say negotiable securities valu- ed at $190,000 are missing. recommended passage of minimum wage laws for women, including ho- tels in their application. Wages are based on the expectation of tips and are too low to live ony" the report continued. COUGHS THAT PASS GRAY'S{SYRUP RED SPRUCE GUM _Ease and Comfort ‘come with the very first spoonful New Yook Montrea! D:WATSON £/(0 The Only Organization of Its Kind in the World Examines and Veri- fies the Circulation Records of the New Britain Herald Experienced auditors from the Audit Bureau of Circu- lations go over our records every year and check the figures we submit. to adver- tisers. This data is furnished in A. B..C. reports.. There is no substitute for an A. B. C. report—it is the only rec- ognized authority on circu- lation verification. The HERALD supports the cause of Truth in Advertis- ing which is the ideal of the A. B. C. Organized seven years ago as a co-operative organization of advertisers, publishers and advertising agents, the A. B. C. is the only agency with the aim of furnishing verified informa- tion on which to hase an ad- vertising campaign, There is on file in our office a complete report which has been checked and rechecked by A. B. C. auditors in which you can find the authentic- ated figures on wpi How many papers are bought and paid for? Where are these dis- tributed? - Many other facts you should know before buying space. No o'!her report provides authenticated information. No other organization ex- ists for exhaustively check- ing circulation figures. The HERALD has by far the largest circulation of any New Britain Newspaper. The HERALD is THE ONLY Newspaper in New whose circulation is audited. Britain . OVER 8,000 Circulation Daily. - ~DEMAND CIRCULATION AUDITS BEFORE BUYING SPACE.