New Britain Herald Newspaper, June 16, 1922, Page 3

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BOSTON STORE S WHITE PETTICOATS A new assortment just received, made of fine muslin, trim- med with val lace. Special ................ $1.25 to $3.00 cach — Cotton Challie in cretonne patterns for novelty dress, yard wide s e S R e ] R o ivard NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, FRIDAY, JUNE 15, 1922. Middy Wz.tists,' a large variety in all_white and white with ‘col-or- ed trimmings ........................ $1.25 to $2.50 each Charmeuge Satin, 4031. wide, in navy, brown; black and White.A D e e 8200 0lvard Wh_ite éateen Petticoats, hemstitched and scalloped bottoms R s S e 1 D 0t R 200 each White Skirt Flannél, 54 in, wide, washable ............ $2.75 yard White Spanish Over-Lace, Special. i e B S S W e e e e e Ttk S U Mol v o Laungerette Satin, high lustre finish in white, blue, orchid, pink and black, yard wide ............ L s ervard e b S S ) 10 e SN I b T e Sash Curtains, in a variety of patterns .................. 38¢ pair ee..... $2.50 yard Black Surf Satin for bathing suits;also black and white stripes and dots and plain colors for trimmings . ... . 33¢ to 98¢ yard Ribbons, two tone, in all color combinations; also picot edge in all de- sirable colors. PULLAR and NIVEN THREE OLD GRADS, TOTAL AGES 267 YEARS Former Senator Cole, 100, of Califor- nis, Oldest at Wesleyan Exercises. Hartford, June 16.—Three lively alumni of Wesleyan University, whose ages total 267 vears, arrived in Mid- dletown from the West yesterday, ~Yooking for the excitement expected of commencement and class reunion Pesky Devils Quietus ¢ P.D.Q, Pesky Devils Quietus, 1s the name of the new chemical that actually ends the bug family, Bed Bugs, Roaches, Ants and .Fleas, as P. D. Q. kills the live ones and their eggs and stops fu- ture generations. Not an insect powder buta chemical unlike any- thing you have ever used. A 35 cent package makes one quart and each package contains 3 patent spout, to get the Pesky Devils in the cracks and crevices. Your druggist has it or he can getit for you, P.D.:Q.can alsy 1be purchased i led bottles, double strength, liquid form. days. The most noted of these spry young college lads is former Senator Cornelius Cole, whose 100 years make him Weslevan's oldest alumnus. He made the trip from California, accompanied by his grandson, and said he felt fine after the trip. He makes little of his longevity, explain- ing he doesn't think an exceptionally long life is anything especially desir- able. He says: “I don’'t know how and why I have lived so long. I don't have any spec- ial rules. I smoke, I eat what I want and I have drank considerable liquor in my time. He was born at Lodi, N. Y,, when Monroe was president, and was grad- uated. from Wesleyan in 1847 with twenty-two others, taking the degree of bachelor of arts. He was admitted to the New York state bar at Oswego, and just before the gold rush of 1849, he and six companions went to Cali- fornia, which he represented in the thirty-eighth congress. He was active in the passage of anti-slavery legisla- tion, and recalls frequent conferences with President Lincoln in Civil War days. Senator Cole was accompanied by former Senator Watson C. Squire of Seattle, Wash., eighty-four years old, a trustee of Wesleyan, from which hc graduated in 1859. He was gover- nor of Washington when that territory was admitted to the Union and be- came the first senator from that statc The Rev, Dr. John Merrill Caldwell of Valentine, Neb, who was gradu- ated in 1862 and was Wesleyan's first ———— e Saturday Shirt Sale That Will Long be Remembered— Most of 'em are “PARKER SHIRTS.” You know what that means. All from our regular stock. alumnus to enlist in the Civil war, is East to attend the sixtieth reunion of his class. ARE BEING HELD But Little Excitement Marks Early Hours of Polling Dublin, June 16. (By Associated Press)—Polling in the parliamentary elections began at eight o'clock this morning and in all the Metropolitan districts the election clerks reported an average activity., There were few crowds and no excitement. Steady streams of voters of all classes and both sections filed into the polling places. No interference with the vot- ers was reported. The property classes were in the majority in the morning’s voting, and the inhabitants of the fashionable squares in the southern part of Dub- 'in who had been expected to abstain were out in considerable numbers. The workers are expected to poll largely in the evening and the voting time has been extended to nine o'clock for their convenience, Treaty Signed in December. The Anglo-Trish treaty, signed last December, under which the Irish Free State is being created, provided for the formation of an Irish parliament. The act to give the treaty effect, passed by the British parliament in March, stipulated that elections to a provisional parliament for the Free State should be held ‘“as soon as may be" after the passage of the act. These are the elections being held in Ireland today. The parllament so elected is to pass upon the constitu- tion for the Free State under which a permanent parliament for southern Ireland will be chosen. Lacking any constitutional division of the country into districts for the present election, the act of the Brit- ish parliament stipulated that the prospective membegs be nominated from the constituencies which elect- ed members to the parliament chosen under the Government of Ireland Act of 1920. Elections were held in southern Ireland that year under this act, but the parliament never came into being. Instead the members elected were declared by the Irish republican government at that time to constitute the membership of the Dail Eireann, or republican parlia- ment, which, since the adoption of 'Have You Piles? de Valera provided, among other things, for a cabinet of eleven mem- bers including the president and the minister of defense. The nine other members will be selected five from the majority party and four from the| minority party, each party to choose its nominecs, The factional agreement of May brought about a halt in the aggres- sive fight being waged by the de- Valera faction against the provision- al government. At the same time it was received with something like consternation in British governmental circles. It was believed in England that it struck at the hasis of the treaty in preventing a free expression of southern Irish opinion on the pact and that it might represent also the ylelding of the Collins faction to the militant anti-treaty party, which has been insistent that the fight for a re- public be kept up. In this situation the British auth- orities asked the leading representa- tives of the provisional government to come to London for a conference, and lengthy conversations hetween cabinet members and the Irish repre- sentatives took place there during the week of May 28, As a result Colon- ial Secretary Winston Churchill, in a speech in the British house of com- mons on June 1, announced what was virtually the decision of the British government to let the elections pro- ceed as arranged by the two factions in Ireland. This was coupled, how- ever, with the warning that if any of the members of the coalition govern- ment for Ireland, representing both factions, constituted upon the basis of the new elections, should fail to subscribe to the declaration of ad- herence to the treaty, the British government would consider that this constituted a violation of the treaty. The British government would feel free in that case, he said, to resume full liberty of action as to reclaiming the powers ceded to the Irish authori- ties under the treaty. It was broadly hinted by Mr. Churchill indeed that this might mean a military re-occu- pation of southern Ireland by the British. Mr. Churchill said also it had been explained by the Irish representatives that they considered it virtually im- possible to hold free elections at the present time. They expected mili- tant opposition from the opponents of the treaty, and this would pre- vent voters from registering their frce choice. The list of candidates for election, issued in Dublin, leaves the present composition of the Dail Eireann only slightly altered. 128 Seats in Counties. There are 128 seats in the counties, boroughs and universities of Free State constituencies, for which 124 candidates appear in the panel. The other four, forming the constituency of Dublin University, are left uncon- tested by the coalition on the pre- sumption that they will be returned unopposed. Although 125 seats are represented in the panel, only 124 candidates will be nominated, because Commandant General Dan Breen was selected for botit sides in the division formed by East Tipperary and Waterford County anl City. The panel gives 66 seats for pro- ponents of the treaty and 59 for Re- puliiicans. In County Monaghan, Dr. McCar- bill» was selected by the Republicans in place of Sean McEntee, who is stron; opponent of the treaty. P, O'Kelly was nominated in Dublin County for the seat made \vacant through the recent death of Frank Lawless. Independents probably will contest 20 constituencies. The Irish Farmers Union has between 20 and 30 candi- dates ready; the Labor nominees number 20, and half a dozen candi- dates will run in the cities of Dublin, Cork and Limerick on behalf of busi- ness interests. The Republican list for Kildare and Wicklow contains the names of Rob- ert C. Barton, Erskine Childers, Art ('Connor and Dan Buckley, the only pro-treaty candidates in that constitu- ency being C. M. Byrne. Several Ratepayers' candqidates will appear unattached, while the Independent nominees in- civde the Lord Mayor of Dublin, Ald- erman Alfred Byrne, for the City of Dnblin and E. MacLysacht for County Clare. Association REPEATS HIS CONFESSION Staub, Self Confessed Murderer of Michigan Woman, Again Describes How He Killed Her. lLansing, Mich., June 16.—George Straub, ex-convict, probably will be taken to Jackson within the next few days for arraignment on a charge of murder in connection with the death of Miss Alice Mallett as a resuit of a second confession to the slaying, au- thorities here announced today. His return to Jackson, where the woman was killed with an ave a week ago, will depend largely upon public feel- ing in that city, where an attempt - Butlet Millivery Ca /e 257 Main Street Booth Block New and Attractive Trimmed Hats For Summer Wear At Special Prices for Saturday 6.75 Black Hats White Hats Black Hats with White Facings White Hats with Black Facings e e Canton Crepe Hats Baronet Satin Hats Taffeta Hats Hair Hats Leghorn Hats Maline Brim Hats For Best Values For Correct Style Come to the Outlet Come to the Outlet CLASSY SPORT HATS Special for Saturday UNEQUALED VALUES IN Felt Hats, Ribbon Hats, Leghorn Hats, Embroidered Hats. All attractive Hats adapt- avle to every rieed for Sport Wear. The shapes are widely varied so that becoming choice —HOSIERY— $1.29 Gordon Fibre Silk Clocked Stockings, black and cordovan .. ... $1 Lehigh Pure Thread Silk Clocked Stock- ings are known for length of wear and ankle | L:%;;)‘?;:le’_ ‘w.lflte ik SLEE): $1 ‘95 Come Here For Your WHITE STOCKINGS 75¢ * $4.25 AIDS MAN WHOM SNAKE BIT. Van Raalte Pure Thread Silk Stockings and Glove Silk Stockings. Van Raalte Stock- fit; tlack, white and colors. $1 )9 And Up and when he took hold of the bush { the snake struck him. Physicians at Straub's second confession, accord-|Son's Action in Sucking Wound Prob- | Warwick Emergency hospital say the ing to O. l. Smith, assistant state :-17“ ably Saved Warwick Man's Life. son's action probably saved the fa- torney gen made Jate last| oo e 1631, .| ther's life. night and was similar to his previous| Alliletowh, & vo June 16728, B statement that he determined to at- | MeConnell of ':"‘]‘;'"m"‘m‘_‘:"l‘fnp"p:r" tack a woman, hid behind some shub- | UEGLITE, HEPR. & ok 7 Wery AAT Erawned With Miss \m_‘,‘mw snake, and the prompt action of until she was ahout to overcome him,|his son William, in sucking the poison then struck her on the head with an | /oM wound probably: the axe he had picked up on a wood pile “"‘_I'_“‘“‘ saving him he to lynch him was made earlier in the week. was DAN O'LEARY VERY ILL. Chicago, June 16.—Dan O'Leary, €9, dean of Chicago police reporters and nationally known sporting man, was fighting for his life in a hospital today. He is suffering from weaken- ing of the heart. the was clder McConnell was clearing mowing field. He approached s about a small bush, breweries|UD, & Persia has no distilleries, la clump of wee or saloons. All guaranteed fast colors. : There are woven madras, silk stripes, woven cords and Repps. ; Saturday morning—the first thing—out they go at the ridiculous price of one dollar and seventy-seven cents, or better still three for five dollars. the Anglo-Irish treaty, has been al- | lowed by the British government to|Then You Have Something to Learn. | function as virtually the recognized | Thousands who have piles have not | legislative body for southern Ireland. | learned that quick and permanent re- | It was the Dail Eireann, for instance, | lief can only be accomplished with/| which passed upon the Anglo-Trish|internal medicine Neither cutting | treaty itself, ratifying it, as will be|nor any amount of treatment with recalled, by a majority of seven votes. | ointments and suppositories will re- | Contests Were Predicted. move the cause | It was contemplated by the Brit-| Bad eirculation ca ish government, and originally by the [is a complete stas: Irish Provisional government headed | the lower Lowe by Michael Collins, that today's elec- | the parts. Dr. J conhardt was | tions should be freely contested and | first to find the remedy. His preserip- should virtually constitute a plebis- | tion, HEM-ROID, is now sold by all cite of southern Treland on the ques- | druggists. Dr. Leonhardt tried it in| tion of the treaty and the proposed | 1000 cases with the marvelous record | constitution. The opposition to such | of success in 98 per cent, and then! a plehiscite on the part of the repub-! decided it should be sold under a rigid | lican faction, led by Eamonn de Val- ack guarantce i era, was so determined. however, that Don't waste any more time with late in May an agreement was reach- | outside applications. (et a package ed between the Collins and de Valera | of HEM-ROID from Clark & Brain-| factions that candidates previously | erd Company today. 1t has given safe | agreed upon should be nominated by and lasting relief to thousands and the two factions, comprising virtually | should do the same for you—it sel-| an official slate, the members being|dom fails. | chosen in the proportion in which the two factions are now represented | in the Dail Bireann, or with a slight n preponderance for the Collins party. PALACE The new parliament will form a | Sun.. Mon., Tues., Wed. Coalition cabinet, drawn from the NORMA TALMADGE y arvizon Ford in lins, and the anti-treaty forces un- 3 R Jder Eamonn de Valera. An agree-!$§ “The Wonderful Thing” ! lmen! reached in May by Collins and $i. il . e st smaniiod ON YOUR VACATION You will want the news from home. Keep in touch | v.ith New Britain while you are at the shore or in the mountains by having es piles. There| ion of biood in! a weakening of | money- THE HERALD Mailed to you daily Get here early on this for they won't last the day out and remember the more you buy the more you save— figure it out for yourself. BESSE-LELANDS 18¢ a Week. This includes mailing. Cash must accompany order pro-treaty faction under Michael Col- | | [d &1 03 i

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