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ALKYHOL RUBBING BATHING MASSAGE and other external purposes for which grain alcohol is used, Full Pint Bottle 59c¢ —The— Dickinson Drug Co. 169-171 MAIN ST. Step Out With the Season with a new SPRING TOPCOAT Horsfall - Made Don't let the first balmy days catch you in an Ulster — step out with Spring in a new top coat, made by Horsfall, of the favored soft - toned plalded . woolens. They are Hartford's finest top coats, bringing to you a combination style and quality that {s without worthy competi- tion in all ready to wear. Every one a model of perfection in talloring, carefree in their lines and revealing the hand of the master designer in thelr grace- ful draping. Scottish plaided effects, tweeds and light weight Coatings with plaid backs. Colors from light tans to bonny heathers. Moderately priced. ORSFALLS 93-99 dsylum Strect Hartford. “It Pays to Buy Our Kind” City Items. The claims committee of the com- mon council will meet next Thursday evening. Victrolas and Pianos, Henry Morans —~advt. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Halloran of Grove Hill have announced the ar- rival of a daughter on Thursday, April 19. Meet me at Schmarr's for dinner.— advt. Mr. and Mrs. Edward K. Dunn of New York city, have announced the arrival of a son. Mrs, Dunn was for- merly Miss Margaret Martin, daugh- ter of Dr. John Martin of this city. French Hat Shoppe, 87 West Main 8t, Prof. Bldg. Exclusive millinery. —advt. To complete the file the following Heralds are wanted: Oct. 17, 1922, and Feb. 2, 1928. Phone 925. Radio sets and supplies at Morans, ERE S WHAT | Souneto? 4 Friendly Advice—If you feel all out of sorts and don’t know just what is the matter with you—if you are nervous and don’t get the proper rest—your doc- tor will tell you to drink plenty of pure milk. And the Farmer Boy agrees with him. Milk Is Your Best Food Angel Drink is Refreshing United Milk Co. 49 Woodland St. New Britain FOX'S NEXT MON. “THE TOWN THAT PROHIBITION AGENTS USE THEIR PISTOLS T00 MUCH Haynes Glves Gun Wielders a Lesson and Several Are Given Suspensions, Washington, April 21, enforcement officers who are too free with thelr side arms were given an object lesson today by Commissioner | Haynes. | including the | risked their lives to Because of shots fired at an nmn- | mobile carrying two women Y, M, A, workers in South Carolina cently the commission suspended four prohibition agents in that state acting state director, They will be off the government pay- roll for 60 days, Would-Be Hero Admits His Story Was Simply a Hoax Northport, Mich,, April 21.—Ed- ward Horn, one of three men who travel across slush, ice and open water early this | week and who reported nine men and a woman on South Fox island were in danger of starvation today admit- ed to newspapermen that his story |was a hoax, City Items. At a meeting of the officers and di- |rectors of the I Porter company last {night it was voted to change the rame of the company to Erickson & Carlson, Inc. John A. Erickson is | president, vice-president and assistant treasurer. Aaron W, Carlson is treas- | urer. ngine Co. No. 5 was called out at |1:45 o'clock this afternoon to extin- guish a grass firc at the corner of Stanley and Bain streets, Jacob 8. Bendu was arrested by Po- liceman Thomas Feeney this after- noon for violating Section 42 of the motor vehicle law., The New Britain police have been notified that the operator’'s license of T'rank Curmo of 29 Locust street has been suspended. Licenses have been returned to Stanley Dziezyk of 5 Ly- man street and Anna Vetrano of 402 Church street. ALLING INVENTORY FILED Berlin Farmer Had Nearly $7,000 Out on Loans, and Had $4,711.2; posit in Banks. An inventory of the estate of the late Isaac Alling, of Berlin, has been filed in the office of Probate Judge B. F. Gaffney. The inventory is as follows: Land and buildings in Kensington, 22 acres; nine acres improved, 12% acres pasture, 1¢ acre, house and lot. One frame house and lot. Total value $6,156. Deposits Bristol Savings bank, $2,- 927.11; Burritt Savings bank, $647.53; Berlin Savings bank, $524.80; New Britain Savings bank, $596.32; Com- mercial Trust, $15.40; Money loaned, $6,800.00; farm tools and equipment, $1,310.65. Entire total, $19,385.40. 5 on De- EX-FILM ACTRESS BANKRUPT Miss Juanita Hansen Files Petition— Liabilities $1,157, No Assets New York, April 21.—Miss Juanita Hansen, a former moving picture actress, living at 341 West Forty-fifth street, filed a petilon in voluntary bankruptey yesterday afternoon, in the United States District court, ad- mitting debts totaling 51,157, and no assets. Nineteen ~ creditors are acknowledged by Miss Hansen, chief of whom are Stern Brothers, with a claim of $1,128; the Clark Texicab Co., of I.os Angeles, $2,000. She also owes The Morning Telegraph, $805, and Wid Gunning, $108. For the last ten years Miss Hansen has figured in daredevil roles, and is said to have had a weekly salary of 500. One of her last appearances was in a fllm serial, entitled *“The Secret of the Subway.” She came to New York recently, and while visiting a friend was arrested. charged with having drugs in her possession. Evidence offered by herself and sevs eral doctors proved that she was cured of the drug habit and she was acquitted. She is now lecturing on the drug evil. Her attorney in the bankruptey case is Fred E. Gold- smith, 1640 Broadway. SEES CRAZY WORLD Specialist Predicts Everyone May be “Cuckoo” in 25 Years. Montreal, April 21.—If nothing is done to stop the rapid increase in mental derangement nearly the whole civilized world will either be insane or on the way to insanity, in the next quarter of a century, in the opinion of Dr. A. H, Desloges, director of health. The past year, he reported today, has been a record one in the number for the province of Quebec throughout the world, the reason he believes was the extraordinary inten- sity of life today. ANOTHER PRISON SCANDAL. Prisoner in Michigan Institution Al- leged to Have Been Beaten. Orlando, a., April 21.—~Request for an investigation of the death of Frank Patterson, 21, in a reformatory at Tonia, Mich., will be made, it was stated here today, by his father, James Patterson. The father said he had received two letters from inmates of the Michigan institution concern- ing the circumstances of his son's death. One signed a “good friend” told of an alleged beating adminis- tered young Patterson. “Dairy Sunday hped-l" This week is Banana Ice Cream and Coffee Ice Cream, New Haven Dairy NEXT MON. TUES. AND WED. Direct ment —Prohibition | asylums of the department of public of cases of insanity treated, not only | [{iil but | Hil Months’ Engage- JAZZHOUND DURING HIS EVENING HOURS But Was Only an Ash Man During the Day Time New York, April 21,—Albert Fuga- zy, twenty-seven, a street cleaner, the police charge, hustled ashes for the e« | ¢ity during the day but blossomed out Cinderella-wise at nights as a gay man-about-town until the check book he is alleged to have used in lieu of a fairy godmother brought him to grief. | It was an existence of strange con- trasts—driving a nolsy truck mer rough streets in working hours, and lolling at ease in limousines and cabarets when he played, Fugazy lived in a three-room apart- ment at Nos, 120-122 Sullivan street Manhattan, with his parents, his wife and their two small children, He was arraigned yesterday in Fith Avenue Court, Brooklyn, on a charge | of forgery and held in $2,500 bail by Magistrate Rayfleld for hearing April 25 when he pleaded not guilty. He was arrested Thursday night in an apartment at West 109th street and Columbus Avenue, Manhattan, on complaint of Gerald De Sapio, No. 87 Varick street, a former employer in the trucking business, whose name he is alleged to have signed to checks totaling hundreds of dollars. He is also charged with having passed worthless checks on Ward Bros. Ga rage, No. 137 58 street, Brooklyn, for automobile hire. The police say Fugazy told them he went to Thomas Ward, a ‘“build- ing contractor,” and obtained his motor car and chauffeur, so he could have a good time and sece the gay side of life for a few days. He rep- resented Ward as his personal friend, the police say, but said he was to pay the cost of gasoline for the borrowed car. The Ward brothers sald Fugazy scraped an acquaintance with them as he passed their garage daily on his way to the dump with ashes. He asserted he would have some business for them some time. Last Saturday he hired a car with John Ward as driver and kept it a total of fifteen hours, they said. Fugazy had a man and two women with him, Ward said, spent some time doing Greenwich Village cabarets and then went to a house on Schermer- horn street, Brooklyn. Thomas Ward said Fugazy gave him two checks signed with the name of De Saplo, and one bearing Fugazy’'s signature for cash advanced him and for auto hire. All checks were dishonored by the bank, the Wards said. “I wag¢ tired of my ash cans” Fugazy is said to have told the police, “and wanted a taste of the gay life. I would like another chance to get back with the ash cans." He was still in Raymond street jail last night. GOVERNOR DECIDES Hartford, April 21.——The state high- way commissioner would remain the central figure in the reorganized state highway department according to an explanation of the plan made last night by Governor Templeton. His salary would be left at $8,000 a year and he would be supported by a “highway advisory board” of three members, only one of whom, the sec- retary would receive a salary. The secretary’s salary would be $4,000 a year. ILL. MAN FOR RESERVE BOARD. Washington, April 21.—The ap- pointment of Eugene Funk of Bloom-n ington, Ill, as the “dirt farmer” } member of the Federal Reserve board was urged upon President Harding by Senator McKinley ot Illinols, who also discussed with the executive the location of a veterans’ bureau hos- pital at Dwight, L From A 3 At Astor Theater, N. Y. Areaths Mrs, Daisy R. Fablan Daisy R, wite of Roy E. Fablan, died last night at her home at 226 South Maln street. She leaves her husband and two sons, a sister, Mrs, T, 8, Anderson and a brother, Charles Lavarene, She was a member of Trinity Methodist church, Funeral services will be held at the home of the sister, Mrs, Anderson at 84 Greenwood street Monday after- noon at 2 o'clock with Rev. John L. Davis officlating. Interment will be in Fairview cemetery, PARENTS ARE JAILED Court Takes Action After Baby is Found Bleeding and Without Any Food, New York, April 21, — Because of brutal neglect of their three-months old baby, Elizabeth, George King, 38, |a jobless plumber, and his wife, Mar- garet, 27, were sentenced to terms of one year each in the county peniten- tiary at Laurel Hill, N, J,, by Judge Driscoll of second criminal court, Jer- sey City. The parents, who live in a $3 a week flat were arrested after Andrew King, 17, one of King’s sons by a for- mer marriage, summoned an ambu- lance when he could endure no longer the sight of the tortured infant. The child’s left ear was torn from lobe to lobe, her right cye had been blackened and her face lacerated. Although starved since birth, she has a chance for life, physicians say. The mother told conflicting stories trying to pass the blame to others. Finally she admitted she had neglected the child. Dr. M. W. O'Gorman, chief of the division of child hygiene of Jersey City, said the couple had two other children who died in infancy and in circumstances which indicated dire neglect. Dr. O'Gorman recommended that the woman, whom he considers subnormal, be placed under observa- tion as to her sanity. This will be done. HONOR CONNEOTICUT VALOR. Cornerstone of Fountain Laid at Scene of Seicheprey Fight. | | Seicheprey, France, April 21.—The place where the 1024 regiment of Connecticut Infantry, with other ele- ments of the Twenty-sixth division, fought 8,000 picked men from von Findenburg's storming battalions on April 20-21, 1918, was the scene of a commemorative ceremony yesterday, when Mayor Ferville of the Commune of Seicheprey laid the cornerstone of a memorial fountain in the publlc square. Governor Templeton of Connecticut was represented at the ceremony by Taniel Bidwell of Hartford, who made an address and presented to Mayor Ferville a letter from the governor. Mr. Bidwell also present- ed flowers from Robinson Post of war veterans and a letter from Mayor Kinseila of Hartford. ‘' The funds for the memorial foun- tain, which were raised among mem- bers of the Twenty-sixth division, ex- ceeded the requirements, and the surplus will be devoted to improving the water distribution system ot Seicheprey. MAN SLA] WITH HAMMER. Wilmington, Del., April 21.—Elisha Hudson, a business man of Selbyville, Del., was found dead in a pine thicket near that town yesterday, his head badly battered, apparently with a hammer which was found beside his body. Hudson, according to residents of the town, had about $1,000 in his possession last night. No rensedy =hm|nhg it unyen's Rheumati and then bid nu canes nd disense to system, lcl uu hnm, and au‘- "E.: MUNYON'S, Scranton, P, WHOLESALE MARRIAGES AMONG MEMBERS OF GULT 14 Couples Married Last Night—Be- lieved Scheme to Avold Giving Court Information. St. Joseph, Mich,, April 21, — (By Assoclated Press) — Licenses for the marriage of 14 couples from the Is- raelite of House of David colony at Benton harbor were issued last night by the county clerk here. It is un- derstood the marriages were per- formed last night. Information that another large number of House of David couples had wed on the eve of the state's grand jury investigation into the cult activities to begin here Monday creat- ed a stir in official circles. Ticense records showed the girls married ranged in ages between 11 and 21, The state has charged that whole. sale marriages in the past at the col- ony were for the purpose of thwarting the state authorities in investigating alleged immoral practiées against Benjamtn Purnell, leader and founder of the cult. 15, SHE'S A GOOD SPENDER. Chicago Girl. in Nine Months Squan- ders Father's $5,000, Chicago, April 21,—Mary MeDon- nell, 15, has squandered in nine months $5,000, her father’s savings of a lifetime. Her mother had left her $2,000 for a business education and this is also missing. Her father trust- ed her to attend to their joint banking affairs and she drew the money out without his knowledge. She had confessed that she did not attend business college, as he sup- posed, but says she spent most of her time entertalning friends in chop suey resorts. Gets Three Years’ Sentence For Stealing $38,000 Taxes Montreal, April 21.—Frank H. Dunn, former inspector of racetrack licenses and collector of pari-mu- tuel taxes, today was sentenced to three years in the penitentiary. He was convicted of stealing $388,000 tax money he recelved from the Con- naught park jockev club of Ottawa. €, WAk SENFoRceD et E MORE THAN WOODEN BOXES Delivered anywhere at shord wokice ol (0422 receipts for bills HECKS are the re- ceiptsforbillsyou have paid. Courts consider checks as legal evidence of payment. We return your can- celled checks to you every month so you may keep them for reference. Open Tonight 7-9 “THE TOWN THAT FORGOT GOD" EVERYTHING FOR THE GARDEN SEED, TOOLS, BARROWS FENCING, GARDEN HOSE HERBERT L. MILLS Hardware and Seed 336 MAIN ST. WALL PAPER — 1923 STYLE — The new year’s newest patterns in WALL PAPER are here. 3 We invite you to come in and see them now. Never before in the city has such a remarkable array of Beautiful Decorations been shown. We can show you Papets as low priced as any in the United States. We can show you Papers which will be used in the finest homes in the city this year. STOP IN AND LOOK THEM OVER QUALITY DOMINATES FRICE NEXT The John Boyle Co. — Paint Engineers — The City’s Leaditig Decorators 5 FRANKLIN SQUARE TEL. 359 A Cozy, Comfortable Coupel ! for Three : This Buick 3-passenger Coupe is economical and at the same time exceedingly comfortable for bmineu professional and family use. Its wide doors open to an interior with every refine- ment and convenience for perfect comfort all the year. Its fine plush covered seat is low and comfortable. Disappearing door windows and adjustable windshields enable occupants to catch the summer_ breeze or ex- clude winter's cold. Notable improvements in engine and spring suspension have materially increased roadability and stumina. Sixes 2 Pass. Rosd. $1175 4 Pans. Coupe $1008 S Pass. Tour, - - 1195 7 Pess. Tour, - 1438 § Pass. Tour. 7 Pass. Bedan - 3198 Sedan - . 1935 Sport Raed. - 1628 - 1085 Sport Towring - 1675 tax C. chase Payments. D-18-33-NP NEW BRITAIN BUICK CO. 231 ARCH STREET PHONE 2007 When better automobiles are built, Buick will haild them e e O T TE . luzs b. Buick Factories, bkd‘cd Ask about the Plan, which provides for A Distinguished Appearance isa pleasure enjoyed whenyourRes- idence is attmctlvely painted with L &M SEMI-PASTE PAINT For 50 years has given utmost Valuo- PAINT FACTS K ars_of wear because cost White Zinc is added for dura ility — Least Cost—because in semi- paste form; to make ready to use, add 3 quarts Linseed Oil to each gallon of Paint and 80 make the Best Pure Paint for $2.82 per gallon. Ask our Agent for Card showing many beautiful Colors. FOR SALE BY John Boyle Company, New Britain. Plainville Lumber & Coal Company, Plainville. Bristol Hardware Company Inc., Bristol. vy muum lone. Saves you Money The Greatest Storm and Flood Scene Ever Shown. A Whole Town Wiped Off the Map By a Terrific Deluge. Life in a Small Town Where the Ten Commandments Are Broken