Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
' one of De Valera's best fighters. He " Biirgess was elected to a republican FREE STATERS ARE MAINTAINING LEAD Complete Refurns From Ineland Several Days Away By The Associated Press. Dublin, Aug. 30.—Compilation of the returns from the parllamentary ‘elections up to noon today gave the government 33 seats, the republicans 20 the laborites 7, farmers 8 and in- dependents 9. Eighty-two seats re- mained undeclared. ‘Wexford returned two republicans against one each for the government, labor and farmers. Cork city re- turned two government and two busi- ness candidates and Mary MacSwiney, republican. Miss MacSwiney is the fifth woman to be declared elected, four of them being republicans. Delays Likely By The Assoclated Press. London, Aug. 30. he tedious task of ascertaining who has been elected to the new Irish parliament has de- veloped into a long drawn out affair. Under the proportionate representa- tion system the counting and recount- ing continued today. Final reports may not be available until next week. The government party with nearly 30 seats so far, continues to maintain its plurality. ILess than one-third that number are available for the rival céngress which the republicans have threatened to establish for their victorious candidates. President Willlam T. Cosgrave and other government leaders have deemed the situation safe enough to Jeave for Geneva to prepare for Ire- land's entrance into the league of nations, Republicans Win Two By The Assoclated Press. Dublin, Aug. ¢30.—The election count from the North City was com- pléeted at 4 o'clock this morning add- ing two seats to the republicans to- tal. These victorious candidates were John O'Kelly, former Sinn Fein rep- resentative in Paris, and now in an internment camp and A. O'Malley, also is in jail. Willlam Hewitt a leading Dublin coal merchant was elected as a rep- resentative of the business interests. P. T. Daly one of the Larkin candi- dates was defeated while the regular labor candidate, Alderman O'Brien who sat in the last Dail also failed to get a seat. In this constituency of eight mem- bers the government won four seats. The returns for Dublin county have also been completed. Johnston, = labor leader, obtained his quota on the 16th count. The last three seats wetr gained by John Good, a leading unienist contractor; Major Bryan Cooper, independent, and Darrell Fig gls, independent. Of the eight seats in this constituency the zovernment won three and the republicans one. Mrs. Cathal Brugha (Mrs. Charles seat from Waterford. Mary MacSwiney Elected Cork, Aug. 30.—Mary MacSwiney has been elected to a republican seat in the next Dail from Cork city. A O'Shaughnessy, progressive is also victorious, N Shows Govt. Winner .. Dublin, Aug. 80.—The Freeman's Journal makes the following tabula- Hon of the latest election returns: Government party 30 seats; republi- icans 14; labor 8; farmers 5; indepen- dents and business candidates 11. Cosgrave’'s Policy London, Aug. 30.—President Cos- grave, outlining his future program to the Daily Mail said: “We shall build up our commerce and agriculture as far as it is in our power and we shall start that hard work our country needs so badly.” The Daily Mail cites the over- whelming majority given the minis- ters as indicative that popular opin- Jdon in Ireland supports the policy of imprisonment of the “republican plot- ters and of corporal punishment for those taken with arms"” pointing out that the men responsible for this policy won the largest vote. The Westminister Gazette says Mr. Cosgrave and his associates have an opportunity of establishing a firm government in southern Ireland and, High Grade Furniture RUGS AND FLOOR COVERINGS Sole Agent for PREMIER RANG A. D. LIPMAN 32-34 Lafayette St. Tel. 1320-2 CINDERS FOR SALE A. H. Harris w~=General Trucking— 99 WEST ST. TEL. 1233-3 »CROWLEY BROS. INC. PAINTERS AND DECORATORS 267 Chapman Street TEL. 2918, Estimates cheerfully given on all jobs Stromberg Carburetor | A. G. Hawker | We Clean Everything Under the Sun General Housecleaning A Specialty NEW BRITAIN WINDOW CLEANING CO. 338 Main St.—Tel. 888 sl NEW BRITAIN DAILY HERALD, THURSDAY, AUGUST 380, 1923. . by the justice and efficlency of that regime, of preparing the way for the union of north and south. The labor party, according to most of the English correspondents, has suffered badly because of the split oc- casioned by the Larkin faction. JOBLESS HUSBAND PUT UP FOR SALE Haverhill Woman, Destitute, Pats Him on Market Haverhill, Mass, Aug. 30.—Mrs. Anna Stella Woodbury O'Coin of 447 offers to sell her hus-| River street, band, Ardella J. O'Coin, into slavery. Mrs, O'Coin works in a who is 50, box factory making between $20 and | $22 a week, which O’Coin says is not enough to support them. He «does the housework because he cannot get a job. He is a shoe worker. They have no children. Mrs. McCoin’s advertise- ment reads: For Sale—A reliable man of good characters “No, reader, there is no mistake in the above caption. The offer is bona fide and means a good bargain for some one. The days of slavery are over, you say. The days of the slave whose master had the power to sell him are over. The days of the indus- trial slave who has to find a market for himself will never be over. The negro slave of days gone by many times found he had a hard master, but he was sure he would have a place to eat, a place to sleep and at least what clothes the law required. He was never without a master, so he was sure he would never suffer cold and hunger. “This particular slave of industry at the present time {s without a mas- ter and unless he finds one who wants to buy a good, honest slave he may be cold and hungry ere the long New England winter is over. The slave without a master is willing to work at anything a man of middle age is able to do. He is intelligent and he is fairly well educated. His character is above reproach. If you need a slave of this type, now is your chance to obtain a bargain. No reasonable offer will be refused." IS PRIMITIVE COUNTRY With Section Oceurred, Americans Familiar Where Assassinations Consider It Dangerous, By The Associated Press. London, Aug. 30.—American trave- lers familiar with the region of Al- bania where the assassination of the Ttalian members of the Greco-Alban- fan frontier delimitation mission oe- curred describe the country as ex- tremely primitive and desolate and the people as illitrate and unversd in ordinary amnities of life. - The rifle and dagger is the rule of the road there. Grivances of all kinds are avenged by swift death The natives who were under Turkish rule for centuries, scarcely know the elements of civilized life. Th vendetta still persists among them and the only authority they rec- ognized is an ediét from a patriarchal chief or the héad of a Klan, LAW FIRMS CONSOLIDATE Waterbury, Aug. 30.—Announce- ment was made here today that the law firms of Carmody, Monagan and Larkin and Thoms, Ells and Hincks will consolidate on September 1, un- der the name of Carmody and Thoms. The two firms are among the lead- ing law firms of the city and are widely known. Judge Arthur F, Ells a member of the Thoms, Ells and Hincks firm will retire from the ac- tive practice of law to assume his Jjudicial duties on the superior court bznch. |an approaching car. AGED RISK LIVES TO Illinois Girl Hit and Hurt by: Coney Island Man Pushes Hound to Safety and May Die. New York, Aug 30—Dogs that give their lives for their masters are not ncommon. A master ready to lay own his life for his dog's appeared at Coney Island yesterday. Frank Stravel, 89 years old, was out for a walk with “Prince,” his Newfoundland pal. Prince stepped on the car track, apparently oblivious of Like his mas- ter, he was old, and a trifle deaf. Stravel rushed in front of the car and pushed Prince to safety. But he was struck and his skull fractured. At Coney Island hospital it was said he probably would die. FAMOUS PAINTING REPORTED STOLEN Entombment- of Christ Taken From Sacramento Gallery San Irancisco, Aug. 30.—Wnhile the curator of the E. B. Crocker Art Gallery at Sacramento was lured to an upper gallery by forbidden smok- ing, art thieves last Saturday cut Guido Reni's priceless “Entombment of Christ” from its frame and escaped The absence of the picture was discovered by the janitor, who noti- fied Curator W. F. Jackson, Thirty vigitors had been in the gallery be- tween its opening and the discovery of the loss. The theft was kept se- cret until yesterday, when the direct- ors of the gallery decided to circu- larize the country.in an effort to trace it. The gallery now {s the property of the city of Sacramento, having been given to the municipality in 1885 by Mrs. Margaret Crocker, widow of its founder, Judge E. B. Crocker, retired railway attorney and former supreme court justice, who gathered the col- lection in Europe shortly after the Franco-Prussian war. The "Entombment’”. was one of the pictures obtained by him at that time, The gallery would set no price upon it, but Curator Jackson said that such a picture would readily bring $500,000, The masterpiece, by a recognized master of the Bolognese school, is 8 by 10 inches in size, and the central figure is the body of Christ being placed in the tomb, while gurround- ing the body is a group of six fig- ures, Some experts believe that Reni in- tended it as a model for a larger reproduction. That it was stolen at the instance of an art expert is indicated by the fact that a larger reproduction of the picture, in the same gallery, was un- disturbed. Other larger but less precious paintings also were found intact. Al efforts to trace the have been without resuilt. Public Auction to Be Held On Indian Oil Land Rights Washington Aug.’30.—A public auc- tion of all exploratory rights on the Navajo Indian reservation in New Mexico will be held at Santa Fe Oc- tober 15. Secretary Work issued or- ders to that effect today and at the picture same time denied applications filed by | nearly 100 oil companies since the completion twe weeks ago of the first big oil well on the reservation. DEPENDABLE | SCHOOL SHOES REASONABLE PRICES David Manning’s Yith-Crer 211 Main Street 2 _Z 7 q i i ] Shoe (2] & AT Store RESCUE DOGS Train, But Saves Animal From Death. Chicago, Aug. 30.—Miss Inez Tal- bot of Desplaines, I, was soverely in- jured yesterday in saving a stray dog from being run over by a train. The girl was at the railway station when she saw the dog on the tracks. Sev- eral persons attempted to drive the dog away as a train approached but the animal trotted along slowly. As the train seemed certain to run down the dog, Miss Talbot leaped for- ward and pushed the dog off the tracks. The engine struck and hurled her aside. She was unconscious and suffering from cuts and bruises and internal injuries when witnesses went to her aid. CANNOT NUMBER MONEY German Marks Companies Too Busy Turning Out Currency To Bother Abont Numbering Each. Berlin, Aug. 30.—8uch a minor de- tail as numbering the two billion mark notes is now being dispensed with by the Reichsbank to. expedite the output of fresh currency. The ap- pearance of the packets of the freshly printed and gaudily colored 'certifi- cates which resemble American cigar store coupons has aroused suspicions among many persons a8 to their geu. uineness. The Reichsbank teday apologized for omitting the numbers, saying that the printing shops are too busy to add this finjshing touch. Arrest of Eraig—fi(ed % By Com. Hirschfield New York, Aug. 30—David Hirsch- field, commissioner of accounts, an- nounced today that he had applied to the supreme court for a warrant for the arrest of Comptroller Charles L. Craig for disregarding subpoenas requiring that he give an accounting to the city employes pension and the teachers retirement system funds. Hirschfield asserted that Cralg had supervised the collection of millions of dollars for the two funds since 1920, but had persistently refused to disclose what disposition was being made of the money, ‘IDEAL’ World’s Champion Lady Swimmer and - Acrobatic Diver Appearing at the PALACE All Next Week WANTS LOCAL BOYS AND GIRLS TO ENTER _SWIMMING AND DIVING CONTEST AT THE THEATER -FOR THE CHAMPIONSHIP OF THE CITY. COSTLY -SILVER TROPHIES TO THE WIN- NERS. LEAVE YOUR NAME NOW WITH THE MANAGER AT THE PAL- ACE. Tl 'AN AND YOUNG WOMAN | FAVOR NEW PARLEYS Responses of Opinions Sent to Ameri- can Legion Show Majority Want Arms Limitation Meeting Indlanapolis, Aug. 30.—Responses recelved at national headquarters of the American Legion in reply to that organization's request for opinioné in regard to the convocation of an inter- national air disarmament conference show a preponderance favorable to the project, it was announced today at Legion headquarters. A tabulation has been made of 252 replies from U, 8. senators, congress- men, governors, editors, college presi- dents and private citizens, This tabu- lation shows 226 favoring the confer- ence, 14 against it, 9 undecided and 4 expressing qualified approval. Twelve senators and 47 congressmen have endorsed the move. Many leaders, according to the Le- gilon announcement believe that a con- fetence should be called before it be- comes necessary for the United States to undertake a costly program of air- craft construction. LEIPSIC FAIR- CLOSED. Leipsic, Aug. 30.-—Lack of forelgn buyers, the disturbed money condi- tions and exorbitant hotel prices have resulted in the premature cloging of the autumn fair here. M'CRAY TO RESIGN Indianapolis, ' Aug. 30.-—Governor McCray of Indiana today announced his resignation as president of | the Discount and Deposit Savings bank of Kentland, Ind. AXE up your mind that when you need another bat- tery you are going to have the best, fot it will pay you in every sense of the word. ¥ . There is an Exide , Service Station near you. The Electric Storage Battery Company Philadelphia Exide BATTERIES CLAMS FOR CHOWDER CLAMS FOR STEAMING SHRIMPS—CRAB MEAT SOFT SHELL CRABS LOBSTERS Dining Room Connection HONISS’S 24-3) STATE STREET Hartford —DRINK— | AYERS’ SODA WATER Take home a bottle of cream soda —Something you will like—it's deli- clous, Three stze bottles—3¢, 10c, 15c. You don’t need to bother with bar soap any more The hardest part of washday—rubbing, rubbing with bar soap. Extra rubbing on the dirtiest places. Heavy rubbing of the wet clothes on the wash- board. What a cruel drudgery it is! Today you don’t have to go through all that back-breaking, hours-long labor. A new kind of soap is freeing women from washday drudgery. With this new soap—Rinso—soaking takes the place of hard rubbing. Just soaking the clothes loosens the dirt and a thorough rinsing leaves things white and shining as you never could get them before. Only spots where the dirt is actually ground-in such as neckbands, cuff edges, and so on, will need a light rubbing with a bit of dry Rinso. Then these obstinate spots disappear. You don’t have to change any ot your washday habits with Rinso. Just use it wherever you used to use bar scap—for soaking, for boiling, of in washing machines., Rinso is made by the makers of Lux, the largest soapmakers in the world. Get Rinso today. It comes in two sizes—the regular size and the big new package. Atall grocery and department stores. Lever Bros. Co., Cambridge, Mass. Rinso takes the place of bar soap We are NOT SELLING THIS COTTAGE—We are giving it away. Here is a fine, attractive one- family house in East Berlin, right across from the school which cost $14,500 to build. We will GIVE IT AWAY for less than half cost. See us about this wonderful bargain. CAMP REAL ESTATE CO. 272 Main Street Phone 343 Rooms 305-6, Bank Bldg, FOR SALE! Two good lots on Steele Street, just off Harrison Street, can be bought cheap, if taken at once. H. DAYTON HUMPHREY 272 MAIN STREET NATIONAL BANK BLDG THE OLD HOME Ll . TOWN BY STANLEY HEADQUARTERS FOR CHURNS - COFFINS @ HORSE COLLARS -~ BIRD SHOT® PJANOS) HIGHEST PRICES New E:g / /// ED WURGLER WHO DELIVERS WASHINGS FOR HIS WIFE, BREAKS /NTO A RUN EVER TIME HE HEARS HS WIFES NAME MENTIONED HERE LATELY