New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 1, 1922, Page 3

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WARNING! Unless you see the nam Say “Bayer” when you buy Aspirin. e “Bayer” on iablets, you are not getting genuine Aspirin prescribed by physicians over 22 years and proved safe by millions for Headache Toothache Earache Neu Colds Lumbago Rheumatism Neuritis Pain, Pain ralgia Accept only “Bayer” package which contains proper directions. Handy “Bayer” boxzes of 12 tablets—Also bottles of 24 and 100—Druggists. Asplrin is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Moooaceticacidester of Sallcylicacld FIX BABY'S CAREER. the convention from all parts of country could see and hear pointed out, the him, in response to questions DAILY HERALD. THURSDAY, and the girl's artistic and musical, To gtide the vocation of the un born the parents must concentrate tice it to a certain extent For in- stance, If a musical career s selected, the mother should each day perform at different times, upon some musical instrument, whether or not she s adept at it, Types of vocations that can he sc lected include, said Dr. Lucas, agrar- {lan; domestic, trades people, mechan- fcal, business, professional’ seientifie, philosophical, literary, artistic and musical, Dr, Lucas declared that not only kad the sex of his children been de- cided, but that there were ninety-five other cased that had come under his direction, in each case a girl or a boy being born, according to the wishes of the parents. Dr. Lucas said he would g0 more fully into the pre-determina- tion of sex later in the convention when a paper on the subject is read by Dr. David H. Reader of lLa Porte, Ind. The speaker told the importance of selecting a vocation for the unborn, because, he said, influences might be brought to the children in their early routh that would affect their vocation. It should be decided before the child was born, he said. He declared that it was well known that many black- smiths should be dentists and that many dentists should be blacksmiths and that the proper vocation was of the greatest importance . Dr. Frederick Dugdale of Boston retiring president of the association, in his annual address, told of the pro- mind and heart upon it and also prac- | refleshing LIFE SAVERS THE CANDY MINT WITH THE HOLE The |nw§ontmg tingle of a cold }) unge—that’s the effect o ife Saver on yourtongue. Proveittoday. | destroyed, | —-advt. JUNE 1, 1922 lish, 28, and Betty Lou English, 3, all of Danville, Ill, The injured hoy is Edward Hardin, 18, of Winslow, Ind The two women were almost fin- stantly killed. Mrs. Xinglish vus car- ried on the engine wreckage eight car lengths. Mrs, Hardin's head was sev- ered from the body. Hardin and the baby daughter of Mrs. English died five minutes later without regaining consciousness. The automobile was wrecked, The pilot of the engine was . City Items Vietor June Records——Henry Morans Miss Eleanor Lewis of 72 Russel) street, reported to the police last night that her automobile had been damaged when a car driven by J, Truscia of 179 Washington street, collided with it, at the corner of North street and Hartford avenue. Wedding gifts reduced at Morans'. —advt, The fire department was called out at 5:12 o'clock yesterday afternoon by |an alarm from box 32 at the corner of Grove and Orange streets. The blaze was in an air shaft of a six tenement block owned by C. Karpeuj of 103 Grove street, It was quickly extinguished, and i loss will not ex- ceed $10. Let us shampoo your rugs and car- pets. Unfon Laundry Co.—advt. Alderman Peter J. Pajewski of 161 Broad street, told the police last night that his automobile and an automobile driven by Mrs. John W. Lockett of 54 rel over the price of phonograph rec ords when they were cell-mates. At the request of Marone, he was re- moved to another cell last February, but the quarrel apparently never was settled, the warden said ASSAILS TOBACCO TRUST Senator Reed Also Criti- S. Supreme Court as Being In .Mw'l\. cizes U, One for “Trust Builders." Mo., ABS0- Palmyra, June 1.—(By clated Press.)—James A. Reed, can< didate for the democratic renomina- tion for United States senator, in & speech here assalled the United States: Supreme Court in referring to the an- nouncemnt of the $157,000,000 tos bacco firm merger announced in New. York ““We had cut the tobacco trust ser- pent into 4 or 5 innocuous pieces,*s declared Mr. Reed, "and now we seé it 18 gathered together ngain wagging its tail. And the serpent will un« doubtedly approve Of late our sus« preme court has been lurmn‘ its “‘l tention to trust building.” i BESSE-LELAND CO. Friday Is Always ¢ Day of Special Interest to ‘Women and Misses Sweaters What is more essential Garden strect, had collided at the to summer dress than a sweater? corner of T.ake and' High streets. Both machines were somewhat dam- aged. June Victor records now on sale, L. Pierce & Co.—Advt. from his father, every important bone in the body and described the func- tion of the principal organs. Dr. Lucas, who is the founder of vocational theraphy and is a doctor £ress of the association. The plat form for which the association standa he said, was that it be non-sectarian and composed of graduates from medical schools. *‘Out tenets are free SILK_ AND WOOL SLEEVELESS TUXEDO WOOL JERSEY TUXEDO BEFORE IT IS BORN the court erred in sustaining the plaintiff's demurrer to three para- Physician Also States Sex of Child Can Be Predetermined Atlantic City, N. J, June 1. — A brief lecture on anatomy was deliver- ed yesterday before thc eleventh an- rual convention of the Allied Medical aksociation of America by the four- year-old son of Dr. Alzamon Ira Lu- cas, of 347 West Fifty-sixth street, New York city. The boy, standing on delegates to a chair, so that the 10( of psychotherapy, besides being an ordained Baptist minister, told the | conventien that the sex of the boy and of the boy's sister, who also was present standing on a chair, had been predetermined, a girl being the first thoice of the parents and a boy the second. The girl, Marguerite Vivi- fdnne, was born March 9, 1916, and the boy, Alzamon, 2d, March 6, 1918, Dr. Lucas told the doctors that ft was a simple matter to determine the sex of an unbarn babe and that it al- so was simple to select the vocation of the unborn infant. His boy's vo- cation is philosophical and scientific and untrammeled and our member: are unfettered and can belong to and read and discuss papers before any other medical association, club or so- clety.' SUTTERWORTHASE IN SUPERIOR COLRT graphs of the defendants' special de- fense. Local Man Involved. James D. McKenna of New Britain and Charles E. Lockhart of New Haven—American l.egion men—have disappeared as plaintiffs in the case and State Comptroller Harvey P. Bis- sell of Ridgefield is now the plaintiff. The defendants are Frank S. Butter- worth of New Haven, treasurer of the American Legion, Connecticut depart- ment the American Legion, Connecti- cut department; Governor Lake, State Treasurer Gilpatrick and Attornéy General Healy, as members of the The mid-week service at the’ Elim Swedish Baptist church tonight will be in the interests of Foreign M sions, especially China. There will be a special program, beginning at Wet wash prices reduced to for 25 lbs. Union Laundry Co.—advt. The members of the Kacey baseball nine will practice at St. Mary's field this evening at 6:30 o'clock. All men are requested to pe present. KILLS CELL MATE IN $6.45 " $6.95 stripes. vogue. $4.95 Very unusual colorings in checks and multi colored Some are figured Indian fashion so much in T ailored Shirt Waists Lawn and Batiste Very simple in design and finished with Bramley collars Hearing Will Take Place in New Haven Tribunal state board of control. scontrol : PENITENTIARY YARD Proper administration of the inter- est accumulationsof the state aid v fund for ex-soldiers and sailors, which fund is $2,500,000 ,is obviously the issue. $1.95 * $4.95 Silk Underclothing Radium and Crepe de Chine Silk Envelopes I $2.95 © $4.95 Many are trimmed with very fine delicate lace Silk Hosiery McCALLUM f It’s all silk and it’s Black and it's less than the G regular price $ 2. 4 5 Tomorrow Tomorrow Morning—3rd Floor BESSE-LELANDS Prisoner in Pennsylvania Institution | The Choice and Quality of our Straws are unusual. At your service for a good hat and a correct fit The Conn. Hat Co. The Arcade The Butterworth case—of interest to all ex-service men in Connecticut—is to be heard by the supreme court at its session in New Haven in June, the case having been transferred from the Hartford district and advanced from the October term. The record has been printed for the supreme court and the case goes there now pragtically on an amended com- plaint, amended answer and demurrer sustained and judgment against But- terworth rendered by Judge L. P. Waldo Marvin, May 2 in the superior court at Hartford. The appeal was taken on that day on the ground that Buckley For Bissell Stabs Fellow Com‘lctfiln Full Major John Buckley, house leader at the“last session of the legislature and framer of the amended act con- cerning the fund, is chief counsel for Comptroller Bissell. With him is associated the law firm of Cramer & Howard of Hartford. Shipman and Goodwin of Hartford are chief coun- sel for the defendants. Judge Advo- cate Philo C. Calhoun of the Ameri- ¢an Legion of Bridgeport., appearing for that organization, and Attorney General Frank-E. Healy appeearing for the state officers defendant. 40 PRIZE FIGHTING . GAME COCKS KILLED 60 Biids, Pick of New England, Stage Battle, 20 Survive i View of Hundreds. | | Philadelphia, June 1.—A convict| stabbed his former cellmate to death| yesterday in the courtyard of East- | ern Penitentiary as the prisoners were | filing from the workhouse to the| dining hall. The stabbing took place in full view of several hundred pris- oners, but the accused man, Peter Marone, denied the crime. The knife with which the killing was done was passed quickly from the hand of one convict to another until it eventually disappeared. | The slain convict was Frank Saris, who was serving a sentence of 12 years fon aggravated assault and bat- tery with intent to kill. "Marone had ; four months to complete his sentence of a year and a half for assault and battery. Warden Robert McKenty said the killing probably grew out of a quar- ! Special 10 Day Sale On a High Grade Well Known Tire (Manufacturers name withheld on request) e i ictor Records FOR JUNE See Victor Ad Opposite ON SALE TOMORROW A Great List They Will Play On Your Phonograph C.L.Pierce & Co. 246 Main Street Springfield, Mass, June 1.—Sixty gamecocks, the pick of the fanciers from Rhode Island to Vermont, held a battle royal in a henyard on the west side of® Springfield Tuesday night, and the next morning the yard was littered with the dead and dying. Forty of the fine birds were dead and the twenty that remained alive were badly wounded, but they were still able to strut about the field and crow their challenges to the world. They killed John Alden, just an or- dinary rooster and master of the hen yard until the invading game cocks were thrown into his domain who raided what was to have been the greatest fighting main ever held in this state. John is not a young roos- ter, but he became furiously angry when he saw the spruce and caucy gamecocks strutting around the yard, with hens fluttering coyly beside them and he waded into them, determined to wipe out the bunch. He didn’t, of course, but he must have put up a stiff fight, because the body of the old family rooster was foudd lying beneath a pile of five or six of the gamecocks. He had liter- ally been ripped to pieces by the spurs of the cocks, but that they had got almost as good as he received was evidenced by their own jagged wounds and their lifeless bodies. 0Old° John wasn't quite as good as perhaps he thought he was, but he did his best to protect his hen yard and his harem 1t did not occur to the authorities | | who confiscated the birds and flung | them into the hen vard that it is a gamecock's nature to fight, and that he fights with or without bets befng| made on his prowess. But the birds: vere left alone, untied, free to roam |and develop their mutual jealousies and dislikes .and crow their chal- | lenges. 1t is likely that the young | hens of the hen yard stirred up the| | trouble, but it required few coy flut- terings and clackings of the roosters to get to fighting among themselves. Men who would have gone miles to | see two gamecocks striking at each | | other in the pits of the fighting maini slept peacefully within a few blocks of the biggest cock fight it would have ever been their fortune to see. And| they slept through it all, snoring per- | haps while John Alden baltled with the intriguers and the intruders bat- tled among themselves, and the hens gathered i na frightened cluster at the end of the yard and clacked their| champions on to a more or less glor- | fous death. OYSTERS | v o Boy Also is Injured at Grade Cross- Never better than ing Smash in Indiana. Now HONISS’S 24-30 State Street Hartford Visit Our Dining Room i i e s T With the prices we are offering on a tire that enjoys a fine repu- tation for quality with uniformity there should be no inducemenit in buying cheap tires that are built to be sold at cheap prices. This sale offers the car owners of New Britain an opportunity to buy a high grade first quality tire at prices considerably less than the tires are worth. The manufacturer has gone a long way to help us meet competition and the man who takes advantage of thissale will get more than he pays for. 7 TIRES FULLY GUARANTEED BY THE MANU-{ &% FACTURER AND OURSELVES—TO BE SOLD AT ; W THESE PRICES FOR TEN DAYS ONLY W Size | FABRICS ~____ CORDS E | List Price | Sale Price || List Price | Sale Price $11.75 $ 8.90 14.15 9.60 $17.50 19.15 14.25 26.00 21.20 15.80 | : 30.00 25.50 18.60 ‘ 33.00 26.80 19.50 35.10 27.40 20.90 36.20 42.70 43.70 44.75 46.15 47.10 53.20 55.90 58.75 Opposite the Monument 'NOTICE We have a special built Cadillac for towing and wrecking jobs. 24 hour service. Cadillac_repairing a specialty. Live and dead storage. Prompt servico is our motto. TheJ. B. Moran Garage 16 - 18 BOOTH STIEE‘I Tel. 822-1i House Phone lul-ls. Is Your Car Ready For That Long Jaunt This Summer? ‘When you and the folks go to the country with the machine will you be wondering if the rear X is going to give way or the differential cause trouble? Will you travel in perfect comfort and contentment or will you forego a good time for one encumbered with worries simply be- cause of a trouble that can be remedied on short notice and at little expense by consulting the advertisers on our Classified Advertising Pages? 30x3 | 30x3Ls | "'))\3]/ o ! 31x4C1 | 31x48SS 32x4 3 33x4 34x4 32x415 33x414, 3dx415 35x41u 36x415 33x5 35x5 37x5 Rackliffe Bros. Co., I PARK AND BIGELOW STS. PHONE 1074 $12.20 19.80 20.90 23.00 24.15 24.50 24.80 32.75 33.05 33.45 34.20 34.90 38.50 40.00 2.30 A. PINKUS OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN Our new quarters gives us greater facilities to render you the best of OPTICAL SERVICE. Our examifations of the eye are { most thorough, accurate apd scien-||! tific. | Bstimates furnished, competent men will make the re- pairs and you and the folks will have a REAL TIME this if you will but help yourself to what is yours! ) 300 MAIN STREET vacation, FOR THE MAN IN NEED OF AUTOMOTIVE REPAIRS, CLASSIFICATION 17. Read Herald Want Ads For the Kind of Service That Satisfies Vincennes, Ind., June 1.—Four per- | sons, one man, two women and a three-year-old child, are dead, and one, a boy, seriously injured as the result of a Chicago & Eastern Illinois passenger train striking a touring car at Busseron, seven miles north of Vincennes, late yesterday afternoon. I The dead are: Lvin Hardin, 45; Mrs. Fannie Hardin, 40; Mrs. Leslie Eng-

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