New Britain Herald Newspaper, July 12, 1923, Page 5

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NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, JULY 12, 1923, RIVE STARTED T0 |17 s [ENFORGE DRY LAWS, SAYS [ ANERIGAN PAPER MAKERS |/URORS WIVES RESENT Inspected By The General! - i i e K05 | BNRIGHT TON. Y POLICE| FORM NEW ORGANIZATION. GALLONS FOR WOMAN MBI away with the 12-hour day butis UBT e = not making any real effort to do it.” | | New Rules Require Inspection of | Motive Is to Keep Alive the Industry | Mate of Foreman Threatens to Leave . FACToRY FoREmN Is . Places Suspected of Violations— ‘ in This Country, Threatened | Him If Penalty Is pu B“smfis ]s selected a's Goal SURPRISED AT HOME Laxity Implies “Tribute” by Embargo | Executed 101‘ Ol'gallizel‘s New York, July 12.—Police Com-| New York, July 12.—With a view| Chicago, July 12.—Wives of jurors| ; . A is 54 Years Old and missioner Richard E. Enright yester-|to solving problems raised by tnp;who on Monday gave the death pen- Stephen Sergent day 1lssued an order requiring the|threatened embargo on pulp wood ex- alty to Mrs. Sabelle Nitti Crudelle ¥amily Celebrates in True Style members of the police department of | Ports from Canada to the United |tried for the killing of her former New York city to enforce the Vol-|btates, a number of leading puporrhushanrl, were reported today to dis- | stead act and the Eighteenth amend- Panufacturers from all sections of - 4 - 5 o Lol Msuk" all former | the country met today at the Union|®BTee with the penalty recommended I regulations promulgated by the police 1-€ague club and organized as the by their husbands. The foreman's ,‘cofnm!ukznel; for 5:9 enr:rceme‘:'tt of | committee for the perpetuation of the | wife was reported to have threatened |the Mullan-Gage law, which was re- Paper industry in the United States. |[to leave her husband if the sentence |pealed on June 1. | __Henry W. Stokes of the York|was carried out. Mrs. Crudelle is the In issuing the new order Commis-| 'iaven Paper Co., Philadelphia Wnfi;flrs( white woman {n Cook county sioner Enright verses Corpora m“nlected chairman of the executive|sentenced to hang. enev I8 - DAraL committee; A. G. Paine, Jr., of thel Mrs, Lenora Z. Meder, attorney and | Vashington, July 12.—Following statement by Judge Gary that the . P B, Steel Corporation was taking the Wih.8 4 steps to abolish the 12 hour day, When Stephen Sergent of 38 Camp uel Gompers, president of the)gtreet, a foreman in the engineering erican Federation of Labor, has|gjepartment of the Corbin Screw di- ounced a campalgn to unionize the | yigion of the American Hardware 000 employes in the steel indus- | sonporation, punched the time clock and to obtain an eight hour wWork-|,¢ the latter place last evening and for them. wended his way thoughtfully home- he drive already has-opened, said ngs were uppermost | Counsel George P. Nicholson, who ¥ ; - C 5 » g Gompers. There is available for :’,B;(‘Is’ :,“:;;onzh:efi the hone‘a‘; work- | held that the police were only moral- | ;‘::,‘:;.; 0:‘::‘:2?1:;:::2:‘ ::Iiml):‘o"'h‘:::“’;,fl""r tfil the fi”{‘?g\(i: ":'r" :':"i:“;ml; " > | | 5 3 zh | of capital punishment, is epar he $70,000 remnant of the fund ing man’s relief at the end of a th‘Yy obligated to enforce the nntlonm“,' Baker, executive secrettary of the | protest the verdict to Gov. Small. At- d for the unsuccessful campalgns | jav's work and his mind was rumin- | Prohibition law. The Corporation| = oul o Joid i el t similar purposes in 1919 and ;n)r'u; on the scenes and incidents|cOunsel ruled that in the absence of American Paper and Pulp association |torney Eugene Moran, Mrs. Crudelle’s | w cretary. ! e e| 5 i 5 0. This will be added to if more |p olon which he had passed, during |® State enforcement statute there was was elected secretary counsel, said verdicts in trials of | The new organization will not con- | women were inversely proportional to ey is needed, sald Mr. Gompers. |yho 54 years of his. life, the anni- | 10 ‘;i‘]‘x‘ce"‘:‘;flzz’:r"‘ch°"r;:’° s‘:‘;;'mfg fine its membership to the American |the charm of the defendant. [ he unfon leader stressed the fact| g v e | i v i - g versary of which he observed by - Paper and Pulp association but will| Mps, Crudelle attempted to commit the present drive is in thel oo uine as usual, |against violatots of the national pro- include nearly all the big companies|suicide in her cell yesterday, beating ds of ‘“conservative labor lead- But when Mr. Sergent stepped mw‘l:lhletlt::da:;, mgfi::‘ie;}t‘:yoxwlx:}l be Hath oxganised andianorranised. Iertsad g ettt b e atanaltying xp Y eran! Manufacturers already enrolled |to choke herself. Only Intervention " and that radicals of the W. Z. the dining room of his home, pre- Y | ter‘type Xw“il ha\anc;t part ’;‘ lh}'_P pared to eat his evening meal, read ::‘::;‘Z:r:h:cl?\:”y witnesses of viola-| . ocent more than half of the total | by the matrons prevented her from palgn. It ts on Foster and his|pe copy'of the “Herald”, smoke his| el productive capacity of the country, it | dping sorious fnjury to herself, erents that the consorvatives in pipe and then go to bed, he received | The latest order of Commissioner {5lanld 2 3 § : L union ranks lay the blame for the surnriasior his: lite 2 Enright says that the Volstead act “is 32 | Farlier in 'lhfl morning it “.1“ failure of the strike three years The glnin room wx;s eluborutely““"“ the law of the land.” He warns TR RR T : |learned the woman }’md a high ts;m« b decorated wfth flowers and foliage. |members of the police department| WESTERN ELECTRIC SALES perature and had refused roo;x. hg Gompers Silent on Drive. P ¥ dded to the that if they “neglect or omit” to per-| oy i1y 1% During /the first| 22 removed to the jall hospital an | ‘estoons of crepe paper adde hicago, July 12. g a strict guard established. ] he plan for a new attempt to 1 t- | form their duty under that law they - > 2 ; floral trimings and gave a gala af iwill be guflty of misdemeanor and>SiX months of 1923, Western Electric | e onize the steel industry was made t i | | h recent conference of labor lead- :‘:;’;h"t‘;f;g:n"t‘}’:‘eptzg:’: repast Which | ople to indictment. The order re-| billing totalled $114,800.000 which| LIGHTNING KILLING MANY. | at which the proper disposition ' . |auires them to investigate places sua-fwas B ' more an e cor- . —Lightni is strik- | he $70,000 left in the treasury| Seated around the table ere Mem-| posteq of violating the Volstead act,|responding period of 1923, officlals| Beriin: July ekl j ] e g X discussed. The proposal was| S0 O T Chters from Middle.| Commissloner Enright credits the|announced here. The billing is at the | ing more people in Germany today Three thousand Boy Scouts of New York and New Jersey will roved and already is being put|f " SO . |administration with having driven|rate of about $$230,000,000 for the|than ever before. Experts are un- ;' remol 5 icture re—General Pershi in- b execution. The headquarters, 0w N. Y. Worcester and - Bridge- o, ang orime from the city and with |year as compared with $211,000,000 | certain whether it is due to the long remember the event pictured here—General Pershing in which the drive is being direct- F”;'pleflsa"t evening was spent. Mr, |"aVIng suppresed 10,000 saloons. He|for 1922. On June 80, 1923 unfilled | greater electrification of modern in- specting the mat their camp in the Palisades Interstate park. Gov- are Chicago, Cleveland and Beth- A = 'lcharacterizes saloons as breeding|orders totalled $89,084,000, having in- | dustry and traffic or to the heavier| Qi ; sev. Governor Smi Jew Yor! e f;!rlgentr:ru fpre:]a‘;lt:d ‘;’:Zh s:l::tb!tan- places of crime and says they must|creased $27.915,000 since December|clouds of smoke which hover over ernor Silzer of Jersey, (’Oy‘mnm Smith of Ne Yo k' Thffi'fl AL puredotis! A4 Lpbakd not be permitted to return. 31, 1922, industrial clties. Roosevelt and other notables were there, m All T can say is that tlie cam- n is now under way, under the ction of conservatlve labor lead- ELKS' BIG PARADE " sair the Federation president. is obvious I should say nothing e, the great money power behind | 8,000 March in Atlanta—Plans to steel industry will stop at noth- in such a cu:’e." P Build Memorial Headquarters r. Gompers expressed his belief t the steel company officiais| Duilding This Year. Id take every step to combat the Atlanta,- July 12,—Elks over-ran pnization and predicted wholesale [ Atianta today, It was the occasion 'dlrfll;f "‘"’l‘ known to ‘h: ’"‘:"" of thelr grand annual parade, the il pd in the unifon move. "Any in-i.joging event of thelr 1923 grand T ation as to our plan would help | 5450 convention and reunion, and ihr— A i Jm rather than us,” he concluded. thousands of members of the order ) 1 \N‘“-‘, Gt i ‘ Directors of Campaign - with two score bands, drum corps and ; . = \‘J;J 3 WL M % - he ‘work of "r"""“"(’nfi“'"] be | Gther musical units plcturesque floats ” T ? S A\ = foted by officers of the 16 unlons|, . handsome unitorms of purple and / ’ § ¢ 3 T ::h:smuclh|f\:-fls§::1"?;:l[u<‘t]:y‘?vrnfl: I white recelved resounding ovations as . i in cooperation with Mr. Gompers. t;zycun;nrchm thicUshRth ot heart HOt hael F. Tighe, international presi- 4 t of 'the Amalgamated Association Charles H, Grakelow of Philadel. Hiron, Steel and Tin Workers, is phia esteemed grand esquire of the i il order, had charge of the marchers, | ittee which lr(r‘r;::"ofmtph:“:‘r;‘r;:“ and Wil- | Approximately 8,000 persons were in Hannon, executive council mem- | line. of the Ir?lernatinnal Association of | With the approval of the grand lohinists, is secretary. lodge, contracts for the constructlon hile the announcement of the | of the proposed memorial headquar- paign will be viewed as the an- |ters building in Chicago will be let r to Judge Gary's recent an-|WIthin the next few weeks, according hncement that the sterl industry is | to the report of the commission in king toward the eight-hour day |charge. The bullding will cost replace the present 12-hour shift, | $3,000,000 and work is expected to be Gompers asserted the unioniza- | started this year, the report sald. ! would go on even if the shorter The installation of the new grand were Eranted, y exalted ruler, James G. MacFarland ‘Now is the psychological time for [ of South Dakota, and the other new | officers will take place at the final session today. MURDERS HER OWN SON STORE Bl Casey, Ill, Mother Shoots One, Makes Another Take Poisoh and Wounds Him Too—Kills Herself, Casey, I, July 12.—Paul Shoe-| R h maker, 12, is in a hospital today at| W | 1fingham, 1il, probably fatally in-| jured and his brother Herschel, 9, 1ui dead as the result of having been shot by their mother, Mrs. Marshall A. Shoemaker, 34, who committed sai- | tde after killing the younger boy. Be- ! ore she shot Paul she s said to have forced him to swallow polson tablets. | o y The mother of Mrs, Shoemaker wit- nessed the shooting. She was held | at bay with the revolver. Paul| @ | crawled more than a 100 feet and be- | i | tween gasps for breath told neighbors Tomorrow - = . Apex . Bluebird . Coffield . Gainaday . Getz.- Haag . Horton . Laun- WILL AID OLD NURSE. Peekskill, N. Y., July 12.—Governor P2e i wnci - Dry-Ette « Meadows . “1900” Cataract « One Minute . Rotarex | eld, who said she had cared for him e have closed our Boi.i: bttt Sunnysuds . Surf - Trojan . Voss R T Edward, T York yesterday by her son tore tO rearrange | who refused to support her, declared he would give the matter his per- M Mark Down e et immadisiay e G2 > . 3 b 4 'I.m\n\v the \\;on:‘ann:v:;;\z well in- Prices for the Big [ ccoi: vo auia e governor adana N a Say S e ln S O ark Down Cloth- Welcome, Maria ! ng Sale which starts R They all agree there is no soap like it~ “1900” CATARACT says: “In solution it~ Get Rinso today. At all grocery and Saturday Moming for washing machines ! permeates the water so evenly that ts cleans- department stores in two sizes — the E . i d ing action reaches every garment.” regular size and the big new package. P ° X m i « 9 o'clock . Bl P erdx cnta terbexpfirlment “(‘iabe, ROTAREX writes: “ We have tried out Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass 8 o cloc i 3 | y laundry experts, by chemists and by - Rinso and other soaps—many of them good & % : practical washerwomen have resulted —in our machine, but for all ’round satisfac- in an endorsement from these washing - tion we recommend Rinso.” machine men that is enthusiastic and SUNNYSUDS states: “We found that unanimous. there was no necessity for rubbing at all. We could run the clothes through the wringer APEX says: “Our conviction is that the direct into_the rinse water after washing best partner Apex could find is Rinso.” them with Rinso.” . . e Friday Evening L y § . ; i COFFIELD says: “Tried out over a period You, yourself, will share the enthu- sq;xvnlent to seven years’ weekly use, Rinso siasm of these leading washing machine id not corrode or injure the machine in any manufacturers as soon as you try Rinso. way. It can be used with absolute safety.” I : 2 The GAINADAY people say: “Rinso suds t will give you cleaner clothes and 4 G Bl starid up permanently, They penetrate the whiter clothes in less time and with less S water so that every garment is saturated with ~ bother. Rinso solution.” Rinso is made by the makers of Lux— atch Newspaper ; i A Y . LAUN-DRY-ETTE writes: “We found the largest soap makers in the world. It 4 & / no little soapy particles floating around in is as wonderful for the family wash as < the water in our tests with Rinso as we did Lux is for silks and woolens. And so with some of the other soaps. Twelve min- . y utes was the average operating period with simple to use—no bothersome shaving Rinso and not a single article had to be ©Of cake soap to boil up and make into 396 MAIN ST. & PAErY hand rubbed.» fely: Maria Asti, Russian dancer, has conquered European audiences, so she is planning a tour of American cities. A

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